J Street Fair an Accessory to the Carnival I r2 a a SLT r-u. m rx ' J ill M ii a r .. i ! i; ? . ,kC j AT TIIK ENTRANCE OK THE CUINIVAL iTREET fairs, such as have within thrrt years become one of the at tractions of the annual festival of the Knights f Ak-Sar-Hen, form oni' of the features which doci Hh origin back to tht Lathi race not trace of Knroii' hut which comes from tht Teu- tonic races, and In to lie found In Its glory In England of the. middle ages, In Germany of the mime time ami Hi ill continues In the north of France anil In Ireland, where the fairs" are held annually, and where the native not only bring their wareH to Hell lint exhibit such produce of their xk III and Ingenuity as may eaiiHe comment. The. Htreet fair became a fad In the weal about nix years ago, and for a year or two it wax a poor county beat town which did not hold a street fair. Like all other fads It Hpeedlly dropped out of Bight, but It was caught by the Hoard of Governors of the Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben as an Idea which, properly developed, could bp made an attractive feature of the annual festiva'. Four Good Short Stories English nobleman in ill health I I was out one morning early, 1 I wenrllv takloif n constitutional. Walking along his game pre serves, he turned a sharp corner and came face to face with an Irishman who had tho reputation of being an invet erate poacher. Putting his hands and what they held behind him. he preserved a perfectly virtuous aspect, while the gen tleman hailed him cordially with. "Good morning, Pat." "Good uiarnin', yer haner. Au" phwat brings yer haner out so airly this mar nin?" 'I'm lust walking around. Pat, to see if I can't get an appetite for my breakfast. And what brings you out so early, Pat?" "Och, bejabbers, Ol'm Jest a-walkin' around te see if Ot can't git a breakfasht fer me oppetlte!" j "Justice Shiran has a collar button story which he tells with a great deal of gusto," says the Chicago Record-Herald. "A man in Pittsburg, where he used to live, had a wife who win complaining of dyspepsia, and she heard ft a certain remedy that was put up In capsules. Her husband bought a dozen at a drug store and brought them home In a pill box. At the Bame time he bought a doxen collar buttons made of a metallic composition that looked very lira h like pearl, and the druggist gave him a pill box similar to that In which th capsules were put up to carry them In. He took both boxes home, handed them to his wife and the Bame day she began to take the medicine. After she had taken twelve di si 4 she was entirely cured and adver tised the wonderful remedy all over the neighborhood. About this time her hus band lost his collar button, and, opening I'lTnni '4 GROUNDS. Photo by a Stuff Artisl. There was strong objection at the time i f Its Introduction because of its name, "strict fair," as the public, with one of its cus tomary changes, had become tired of thi word and some had come to decry the street fair as the Innovation of his Satanic majesty, where a year or two before they had hailed it as one of the most nannies ami elevating of amusements. For this reason the members of the Heard of (Inv entors and their active assistants spoke of the "street fair" under their breath, ami did all they could to keep the words in the background while doing their best to advance the Idea. The result was thu In Phmi the people of Omaha were given an i nti rlaliiini lit tho like of which they had never seen. There was set apart for them a district In the city where the spirit of the carnival was never stilled from th' earliest dawn until the clock sounded th hour of midnight. The space was smnl-. but the fun was more fast and furious f r that, as the crowd could not scatter. T'.:e his pill b':x. found It empty. A brief In vestigation showtd that tho capsules in the ol In r pill box were still there and that his wife had swallowed twelve composition cellar buttons, two n day for six days, and been entirely cured f dyspepsia." John II. Converse, president i f the Bald win Locomotive works, was interviewed a few weeks ago by a newspaper man who was looking for a "feature." He asked Mr. Converse a good many tiresome questions and some which, to the interviewed, seemed decidedly impertinent. Finally he wound op with: "Now, Mr. Converse, what do you find most difficult to get out of your men?" "A day's work!" emphatically replied the maker of engines as he rim tied for his hat and signified that the Interview was at .in tnd. After General Scott captured the City of Mexico, during the Mexican war. Colonel Childa was placid in rommand of the troops In Puebla. Among the officers ther-) were Major II. L. Kendrick and Lieutenant Selden. Kendrick was dry In humor and quaint In speech. After the fall of the city Santa Ana hovered around Puebla with a large command of cavalry, keeping Colonel Childs in a elate of alarm. In one of the forts Kendrick commanded and Sei dell under him. One morning the enemy was reported rapidly advancing on the fort. Childs rushed to the fort, shouting to Ken drick: "The crisis Is coming the crisis is coming! Why don't you fire?" Kendrick turned to Selden and quietly said: "Mr Selden, commence firing." Selden asked. "What am I to fire at?" "Oh," said Ken drick, "fire at the crisis." So Si blen'a guns thundered at the crisis. PAHAUE COUNTERMARCH I N'G IN tarnival spirit might pervade the entire city at times during the week; might pen. trate the busimss districts on the days and nightn of tin- pil.idtn. nlid lnii;!it lie Mil. in the homes and in the workshops at cer tain times, but in t lie district set asid by the Hoard of Governors, with the consen of the city authorities, for the street fail that spirit was ever present from the da;, before the carnival opened until the di after it closed. To enter the grounds was nn Invitation to all persons to make a victim of one if possible and it was also fair notice to all to look out for themselves. The men he came small boys ami dignitiid matrons laid aside the years which had passed them on the Journey of life and all became chil dren until they had passed finm the gates. Within the walls of the district dignified city fathers toyed with confetti and screaming deices which they had often ballistic. I from their hotin s w hen Introduced by Boino youthful member of the family. Ki vi lend divines f ergot thtir profes sional expressions and faces habitually as li ng as a elm li.vard sh ift became as round as the full moon under the hilarious influ ence of the. carnival spirit there Intensified and localized. There was no objection to the loud shrieking "barker" who on one side told of the wonders concealed behind the canvas of the tint and endeavored in drown the alleged music performed by the mechanical manikin who stnnl upon the axis f the mei ry-go-i und. Staid men of business, whose faces are more oft n seen behind the windows of the counting house than in the streets, forgot their cares and were boys for the time and such a time it was! Never hail Omaha Been Its equal and never had Omaha seen assembled in one body the crowds which filled that space during the week of the street fair. r Inii tier iew of the Ililler Liquor coin- pany's esialili.-hmeiit at l::' F.iruam street. Omaha's new up-to-date family liquor house. I he only place or the kind in the west and undoubtedly the hand- t '! :z" EH " o-. ." 7 - ft;, a I ;ffi LA' HittMlT-W vl FRONT OF MAIN ENTRANCE TO CARNIVAL G ROUNDS. Photo by a Staff Artist. There Is a tendency on the part of the American public, which is not found to such an extint in other countries, to carry 1iiiIimT they do to extreme. It l.i r.ui.l that we take our business too seriously, our pastimes too intensely, and the street fair at Omaha was no ixceptinn. It was a democratic crowd and there was a certain amount of license allowed by the authori ties; therefore it was no wonder that there could be found among tho multitude' those who forgot the responsibility which follows upon liberty and that from fun the jostling and "horr.e" play would become malicious, especially when someone so forgot the time and place as to enter serious objections to what was intended at first as mere pleas antry. When the lirst street fair ended there was a strung feeling that il would never be repeated, but when the second year had rolled around the demand on the part of the men whose cash made the annual carnival possible and upon the part of the public who annually visit the city to attend the carnival was such that the Hoard of Governors could not nsist It and the sec ond street fair was projected. That year more attention was paid to order and cer tain restrictions were placed upon the merriment of the crowd. A highrr class of attractions had been secured and every thing promised one of the most successful fairs ever held anywhere. On the days In fore Thursday of the week of the fair the attendance had been in excess of the preceding year, when the dread news of the death of President McKlnley came and from that time the fair was a failure from a financial standpoint. This will be the third year of the street fair as a part of the carnival and fall fes tivities. Wilh years comes experience not only to men, but to institutions and the JjSHl !HHwf sonusi store in Omaha, Visitois during the Ak on this firm will be ,, suited with a hand- some souvenir glass The assortment of high-graik' wines, NX tC5r. Heard of Governors has profiled much by their past experience. The street fair has been placed in the hands of a professional i mi l laini I . In ill ' spring Hie manaui i selected and Waller Jardine. the chairman of the committee having the work in charge, made a trip to New York, where they spent a week r more at Coney isla'id and other popular resorts of the metropo lis. The result of this trip was that ih-y secured some of the attractions which which were on exhibition there at thai time and they had an opportunity of se.'iin; what was the latest In the form of su li amusements which might be duplicated at Omaha. The trip resulted In the commit tee securing the best line of variety at tractions which has ever been seen in Omaha except during the Transmississippi.." exposition, and some of the attractions then here, improved and modified, are to again he seen in Omaha. One of the best features of the coming fair will be the presence of Sorrent ino's Handa Rossa, which was hero last year. This band will give daily concerts free to the people who attend the fair. In addi tion to this there are many other free attractions which will be presented during the afternoon and evening, while the part set aside for concessions, for which we have invented no better name than the "midway," will be filled with shows of more than usual merit. The street fair is not intended by the Hoard of Govt mors to be a source of revenue. If it takes care of its own ex penses the board Is satisfied, but those expenses are considerable and the admis sion fee charged is but nominal. What ever money may be left at the close ot the fair is turned into the general fund of the society and Is applied to the legiti mate expenses of the organization. M m .... rMKMYii liquors, i hami agues, etc.. kept by the Hi' i r- II n w lin call b r I . 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 inn 1 1 i-.i li v -:imi(it 1 1 f i ill II tl O'lf - side of ,. York Citv. Don't forget th'' address. It jn . WOrth your while to call.