The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, August 27, 1922, SOCIETY WOMEN'S FEATURES, Image 27

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    7-C
D Q O Q Q O Q"5"'0 c
IE
O
g o
Omaha Day September
At the Fifty-Fourth Annual
THE SUNDAY T.KK: OMAHA. AUGUST i!7.
7th m
FAffif
So
4
v
JL
IF
Y
I
i
1
1
I S
sue
1. qo
I Neb
311 la
3 ojp Esi?
RASIA
FTT
kit
HE business and professional men of Omaha,
Nebraska' Great Marketing Center, join with
the entire state in making'the State Fair the great
success it deserves to be.
People from all parts of Nebraska will meet at Lincoln
during this great pageant. The farmer will rub elbows
with the merchant, the dairyman with the broker.
New acquaintances will be made, varying opinions will
be discussed, new and broader views will be taken of
the many influences that concern the community as a
whole. Widely divergent ideas will be harmonized,
and the many elements that go into the make-up of this
great empire of grain will be welded into a smooth
running unit a well-oiled cog in the wheel of progress.
Omaha is going to Lincoln on Omaha Day to meet the
men from the great agricultural region Omaha was
built to serve. , Omaha will seek their opinions, will
strive to study their needs and will return home to put
into practice, so far as'pc-ssible, the things the people
of Nebraska feel will benefit them.
Omaha must and will clo this because the future of
the "Gate City" can be great only insofar as it serves
Nebraska well.
M
A
O
The Gateway of the West"
Population, 191,601.
First in butter production.
Firt in pig lead production.
First in per capita automobile ownership.
Second in per capita telephone users.
Second live stock market.
Fourth city in home ownership
Fourth corn market.
Fourth railroad center.
Seventh in per capita bank clearings.
Terminus of New York-Omaha aerial mail.
Center of thirteen national highways.
Commission form of government.
Twenty-three parks connected by 35 miles of boulevard
Ten trunk line of railroad -22 branches.
Omaha has the best one-mile race track in the west, with splendid stables and a grandstand Beating 10,000 people. Special trackage and
street railway facilities show perfect efficiency in handling the hug,e crowds that attend the races. Nearly 200 acres are included in the
grounds, in which $1,00.0,000 has been invested. Aside from the races, which are an annual event, the grounds are available as an entertain
ment center and place Omaha among leading cities for handling, large numbers of visitors.
Be Sure and Visit Omaha3 s
Ak-Sar-Ben's Fall Festival, September 12 to 23
The Great Historical Pageant
CQRON ADO IN QUI VERA
Will Be Shown at Ak-Sar-Ben Field September 18th and 19th
This advertisement was contributed by the following prominent business and professional men of Omaha
FRANK W. JUDSON
C. E, WALRATH
J. E, DAVIDSON
GEORGE A. ROBERTS
NELSON C. PRATT
GEORGE II. PAYNE
Pay IdimIom! C.
CHAS. II. PICKENS
BEN S. BAKER
NOURSE OIL CO.
ROY SHtPARD, Vic PrURl
OMAHA OUT-DOOR ADVERTISING
COMPANY
C, t. GRIFFEY, rW U W. TRESTER, 5. Ti..i
NEBRASKA LIVE STOCK INS,
& INDEMNITY CO.
A. J. IIASSON. !'. 4 G M..M"
EPSTEN LITHOGRAPHING CO.
GUY L SMITH
H4 m4 t Ct
OMAHA LIBERTY FIRE INS. CO.
NEBRASKA NATIONAL INS. CO.
r. r. ZIMMER, Pr... C. Mai.a.f
P. MELCHIORS & SON
Math!. Wr.a
II. A. WOLF & CO.
TOM KELLY
Tli !( Ma
BRAILEY & DORRANCE
! DiU., t, J Cnmi
o
o
jJO Q n Q n
o o 0 ord Q Q
A n
Home of the largest Building and Loan Association.
The gateway to an immense wealthy inland empire.
Half-way station on New York-San Francisco airway.
No slums or tenements, a city of comfortable homes.
Leading retail center between Chicago and Denver.
Healthy, dry climate. Annual mean temperature 50 degrees.
Seventeenth in bank clearings, although thirty-fourth in population.
JAMES II. HAN LEY
Candidal far C'
G. H. BREWER
Fuatral Ptrlr. 4(09 9tlH J4t
STELK-ATKINS OIL CO.
Ktalia BUf , Wilt a4 IUrf
HOLT MFC, CO.
Hit faraam
R. BEECH EP. HOWELL
aulta Candidal lar I'ailad $!! Sat
W. B. T. BELT