THE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER P. 1010. 3 Army Week Brings Soldier and Civilian Into Close Relation It t - r . l. v V Ui " it IslQILT J3ATTMZH.Y Ofir way TO D&ZZZ, S OLDISH boys came lind con- (piorcd- i-onqiiered the hearts of the people, aroused patrtnt ism to hlyhrst pit. Ii, am in. i-Ulentally fliirlnK a week of Bitlon Ht I'nit (MnaliH. Includ- mi.i n-u ii ii.iriulc Tliursday after n.M'ii, fni-niihrd thi .k-Sar -V.ru rarnlval Its iiniHt Imixirtaiit. must jiatriotii! and most hixlrurtivc fen lure. ThruiiKlioul the wrrk, a milfmlid pro Krum of military cv-tit and Htliltiti.: gtuntH offered at the furl every afternoon, nd (itlzeiia of Omaha joined tliouHund.i or out-of-town vlKitom in pa.-klnK tha Ftand tand t the viy limit. Never be fore in time of poa.-e was Murli Interest 'aroused concerning the army- never be fore was the army and the people brought Into such closa touch, and neer befoia did the army do Itxelf Kieater credit oy ay of clever maneuvering. Soldiers, soldiers, sole Hers they seenw-d to conio into Umaha from every direction. Hlg, brawny, Railant fellows, the finest typra of physical manhood, they made a splendid appearume. Hy reason of thi.s nillitai- tournament, tlie pnplo of the Missouri valley know more about thi army than they ever knew before, and as a coiiHCiiuence thereof, the public apprecia tion Ims been greatly increased. The uianeuveia at Kort Omaha during the week far surpassed ordinary drills. Tuke tho sham battles, for instance. There, the action was so realistic that even the most phlegmatic spectator was aroused to en thusiasm. As tho men, women and chil dren In the grand stand watched the en gineers build bridges under fire, as they watched tho agile regulars scale the wall, as they watched tho artillery in awlft action and the cavalry dash, it required no abnormal stretch of Imagination to fancy that a real war was under way. in fact, It was an absolutely faithful repro duction of actual war, as war goes in these daya of aclenUflc fighting, with tho one exception that blank sheila were substi tuted for deadly mlxailaa. Almost every maneuver known to army life was given at Fort Omaha. By way of variation from the grim u spectacle ahown in sham battle, there was the beautiful and rythmio Butts manual-as pretty - '1 J. iV. .i . things ndlita.. Tet, If the kaiser bad sat on the reviewing stand In front ot Omuha's city hull, within the welcome an il shadow as Uncle barn's mighty army pusMcd, phlegmatic as his Teutonic make up Is, he would undoubtedly have been impressed to the point of exclalmingi lloch der t'nole 8am." While the greutness of the German army is conceded, the fact remain that tho new army of the L'niled Sta'es is the greatest, the best drilled, the mightiest all-around army In the entire world, and It Is Ger many's tribute to l.'ncle Sam that a perusal of the roster at any of the United State army ponts reveals many a name be tokening ancestry from the land of th Hhine. Every soloOer in Uncle Sam's army Is first ot all an American. If he were not Intensely American in sentiment and gen eral characteristics, there would be no place for him In the army. Yet, many of these soldier boys date their ancestry & generation or o back, to some country In the old .world, and statistics shoyw that Get man and Ills t ancestry leads among the enlisted men. The German may not be. so quick to begin fighting as tho Irl. but If the, Irishman begins the fight German is there to help finish it and in the heat of the battle, when battle does come, ancestry la forgotten for the time and It ! on all-American affair. Omaha and Omaha visitors were atuned m 1 79it omi ' "' in inn Mtf i y;J"t '. I ' ... M r ;.. . .-. IV. I CAVALRY CROSSLIN TEtFOKART nZirZHZS '3 IB jr- . 'ii 1 " -V i. . - . I , t A' VTfCLE. S AMI'S miW FIELD EQE VVHiZr SCALING " T&El START ami as was ever slatted in anv v.i.i -tr-if . . h nurnrlA i . IV HID llintli4 av av B Playhouse, fancy a hundre-t more ath- n,oved through the streets, and many a jeuo soiaiers. each standing alert and fluttering handkerchief held -iraigin prime inuian chief. kecDlng r.,.r,ii. hnn.i I..1.1 a torv of admiration time to catchy music, with bayoneted gun, for Uie brawny, sun-tanned fellowa whose going through fancy motions that would iwes are devoted to the service of their excite the envy of a pallet master, the country. The gold lace of the army offl- gllnt of pollBhed bayonet flashing in the Cer glitters, but the roufch-and-ready garb sunlight fancy this, and you have a mind of the enlisted regular Is even more im- plcture of a Butts manual exhibition. presslve, for he is after all. the real fighter Monkey drills, rescue races, signal coip when fighting is to be done. Almost any exhibition drills, artillery drills, cavalry man would be glad to be an army officer. onus, a fact that there Is an element of personal gray-streaked temples told of encroaching sacrifice in the enlistment of nearly every age. These, perhaps, entored the- army private. He is ever on duty for the govern- when they were mere lads. But the old m.m iithmu.h h mav off on fur- soldier la as spry as the young soldier, fluttering handkerchief held aloft In dainty f)ugli he h,g army mBnne wltn and )t was remarked very generally by him and he is so drilled In army life that spectators that the elder men or ootn in- he is a soldier all of the time, whether fantry and cavalry were as agile as thalr working, playing or sleeping. Many dlf- Juniors. ferent deals of fate send' men Into the S'V much has been written Into frontier army as privates, and many a romance history concerning the Invincible Seventh, is held secret beneath the khaki blouse cavalry that when a fluttering banner of the army boy. Sometimes it is a girl proclaimed the coming of that branch of who marries the other fellow, sometimes the army, cheers rent the air. Mem It Is defeated ambition in some civilian orles of Custer, and others ot that ln- Wall It1! Iln r utiH tract...- .. , u . . . . . , . i . I V, . .utlllr.o' tn n Ulliri III.IO DUL QUI CVCU UUV Twui. n.ia.iiQ v - . of war knt th. .,n .,.. ... ' .1,- .i..,....nn.rt 01 uie. sometimes 11 is one mum. Tiepiu Dana 01 eariy-uay guaiuiaos cumo on the alert. private, and it was a pretty little echo of Visitors especially remarked the skill of commoner patriotism when thousands of the cavalry as riders and the beauty and fashionably gowned women sent up dainty mettle of the cavalry horss. No finer ag gregation of horseflesh was ever assem bled and no more skillful horsemen ever rode in the west. The week at Kort Omaha was a week of army triumph and a week of along the route matchless entertainment ard instruction pat-'otlc animation cheers from the reviewing stands as enlisted boys marched by, the sometimes it is another but every soldier thick and fast, and the all-Amerlcan audi ts human, every soldier has his memory ence that lined every street along th of other days and bciii.th the fighting route gave vociferous utterance to its garb of every man in the army, whether patriotic gladness. he be a dashing cavalryman, an elastic- And the Fourth cavalry Omaha's own W M ' " Z z.:."'.-- -) " ; "" i I Ml 11 IH 1 nil ifWIi Ml I 1 T 11 nil e J a ...... th unnlause was more marked tPPing infantryman or a bronied mule came in also for round after- round of for the men chimed In. and when the band whacker, there beats a human heart, and cheering. In fact, there was not a feature wagon through tha parade on Farnam so with tha aoldler. They merely halted was attached a pony driven by two Uttla played "Star Spangled Banner," every face " h8 ts atory. of the enUre procession that was not street In front of the Bea building tha a moment, opened ranks Just enough to girls, came close to the edge of tho pa was Illumined wltu Among tne soldiers wno passea tnrougn cneerea at various points. marching soldiers side-stepped the Inter- permit the pusbage of the vehicle, caught rade, but aguin tho w hltc-glove.d officer! Omaha s streeta Thursday afternoon, per- laken in mo aggrega.e, no more splen- ruption so clsverly that there was no the rythmic army step again where they Interfered and tho childish drivers wera ror the thousanda who attended. It would be Interesting to .know Just how many peo ple visited Fort Omaha during the week. Kvery day was a big day and every day the grandstand waa paukad and Jammed to the limit of capacity. General Smith, commanding, and Major Burnham, chief of staff, along with vari ous other officers of the Department of tho Missouri, executed the supervision with the Infallible system and precision character. Istlo of United States army perfection, and tha aoldtera performed their various parts free from even the elighte.it blunder. "What a wonderful organisation: what perfect system!" many a spectator ex claimed. Thursday's parade was great the whole week was great ut the fort-but the parade came as a downtown pinnacle In a season of military triumph. It was America's day in Omaha when as a feature of the Ak-Sar-Ben autumnal fetj the United States army moved through the Wiiiie U U-m tut private Sn U.a r.aps every state in tn union wr repr- am 00a y 01 aoiaiers, an tne way 110m gen- breaking of ranks. The mall man, of had left off a minute before and on they sent around to Douglas street. Chief Dona United States army are well cared for in sented, for enlisted men come from all erftl down to privates, ever pussed through course, was fortined by tne badge ot wv- moved as calmly as if noUm. had liap- hug and hia men, soldierly enough thenn" all things material wholesome food, medl- directions. Many of them have perhaps city streets, and the entire parade, attest- ernmental authority, and that was per- pened. selves to wear 'the fighting garb, hundled cal attention when needed, clothing and as enlisted several times, for it Is true that Ing the perfection of drill work and sys- haps hia excuse for breaking Into the Numerous automobilists attempted to the crowds admirably, and the chief, leud- much money net as the average salaried the average soldier re-enlists after his first tematlo organization, was free from blun- parade. Any ordinary procession would dash through Farnam street, but vigilant ing a platoon of police mounted on horse man has after paying the expenses term of service is ended. In Thursday'! ders of any kind. Even when an over- have been thrown out of line by the dash- policemen kept them back, and at' Seven- with ginger in their veins, made a uplerhii incident to civilian life. It Is nevertheless parade waa many a grizzled veteran whose enthualaatlo mail wagon driver rushed his Ing of a wagon across its route, but not teenth and Farnam a phaeton, to which appearance, reflecting credit upon tho city Quaint Features of Everyday Life CJ Jolly Old Tat A ard 10T. APTAIN Bill Maccabee, with a few old cannons and such things, about the only rello left to the the government from the van-ls'it-1 fleets that went out early to win sea fights, made himself heart of th city, and no' American could good and cozy In a corner of the dining hall view the lmpres.tive spectacle without a at the naval home. Gray's Ferry road and swelling .wave of pride and a re-kindling Frltzwater street, near Philadelphia, Scp- of the patriotic embers which glow In the tember 22. ami cussed his happiness, while breast of every country-davoted el U sen. every one from Admiral Harris, the gover- Tersely told, It was an Index pointing to 'r down to the hospital orderliea took a the mighty strength, perfect diacipllne and band in the big fuss that attended the cele- physical magnificence of the United States bration of ilia one hundred and seventh army. Not all of the army was here, of birthday. course, but it came e' ft" strong, and made Cap'n Bill waa about the most pampered an impression that time will not easily old party this side of Fifth avenue, for his efface from the memory of those who bat government evidently thinks a vast lot of or stood in review. There was a pretty him. It supplied, with money sent up from n1e 8o sUep were ,he grBdet or s0 deep found was tne weddnf rlllg Dienning ot tne oiue. maue aacreu d "siimiiuh iui ma puipunc. m wu- dese,. SH1)d3 irsurtlon, and tne Diomii. which came on wmcn wi canuies 01 rai, a a result of the Spanish-A meriau white and blue glimmered throughout the wur-iwo colors marking plainly, the special dinner that was served in honor m inai. atlon betw cew-vlie old army and of the occasion to the 100-odd inmates, ti e new army. It uas a glimpse of Cap'n BUI presided from his rolling chair, army life which gave to the onlooker a with an orderly on one side and a waitress fiM-ther IrittiKht than could be obtained by n th other to run his errands and do his J(,Md b months uf ra.iliiii. it was. first of all, a uiooing generally. The tllmtiT was remarkable for other things than the com eiuloiiaPchecr. Cap'n Hill is a master of the ruund, rolling so norous, full-rigged profanity that once was aJniokt as Important later in fighting ships o' the line, and one discharged honorably after reaching tha he shot all three, but the mother bear was age limit, early in the seventies. not killed, and falling to the ground she took after Ramsey before he could reload Vlall of Faithful Siinaw. his rifle. To remain for three days and two night hu dog, however, pounced upon the Iri on the California desert, keeping weird furiated animal and kept it busy until vigil beside her dead, was the pathetic lot Ramsey secured an ax, with which he of Ulalla Boniface, whose brave was acci- killed the brute. He says It was the most dentally killed by the discharge of his exciting hunt he ever had. shotgun. The accident occurred far out on j the desert. Miners, .attracted by the Lost Wedding Hing round, squaw's wailing, found her standing be- Mrs. Ruby Hayes of Beverly, Pa., Is In side the body, her two small children Possession of her wedding ring, which she asleep near bv. lo8t twenty-five years ago. Immediately A long ride was made to the nearest tele- after her marriage she lost the ring, which phone point, and Coroner C. 13. Van W'le as recovered five years later, only to be of San Bernardino notified. The long, os' a second time within a short time, rough ride over the mountains and desert L-ast week her husband was repairing the occupied three days and nights. At some trough In his yard, and digging up a spade- stage It required three hours to cover a u' of dirt saw a shining article, which he tabs $400 for the privilege. He was as sisted by nine men and the seine was over a mile In length. All carp and buffalo, styled a undesir able game fish, were removed from the seine and the remainder replaced In the lake. Some carp and buffalo were secured weighing nearly twenty pounds. One carp weighed twenty-four pounds. Safeguard Against Cholera Safety of .Airship Preferred N a paper on the cholera epi- patients, finding their way in food or drink demlo In iaia of Russia and into the mouths of healthy people and la Italy, Dr. John B. liuber, in absolutely 110 other way. Cholera 1 not the American Review of Re- an air-borne Infection It 1 a contact liv views, tells how America la fection; there is no danger from the all safeguarded. ' as, for example, la smallpox), or front There Is no cause for alarm among us simpiy ueing in tne vicinity ot cases. N with regard to the present European epi- tod Is eaten in the sick room by tike at. demlo; this is Important to observe for a tendant. nor is water drunk ther; ami blue funk Is wonderfully predisposing. everv time the hands touch the patient's W should have among us no lgnobl " caret uuy waaneo. wringing water .vi r. Wright is not the nerveless man that he is pictured by most persons who look with awe upon his aerial achieve- cases of psychic cholera. Our coast auar- 4nd ,ood r carefully chosen. Th water antme authorities, especially at the harbor " l"u'u"" wwaeo. ana menu. He merely is at home and com fortable in his own business. This fact 'of New York, are known to be cautions. Lung before lie arrived In sight of the corpse, the siuaw's wailing, as she chanted Hi J ulia or the Piute, were heard, in the gray of th morning the coroner 1 cached the body. The sight of the Indian woman, standing erect at the fool of her Urar-linlreU loaogilrr, Walter Hunter Covington, aged 7, sou of James C. Covlngit.n, a farmer living near BowiIng Giitn, Ky., has hair which Is whiter than that of many a man of 5. His father says Ills hair Uh 11 ttk turn tried and most adequately able to cope with anv possible dangers and this es pecially in view of the tact that the incu bation period ot cholera (from the time o Incurring the Infection to the manifesta tion of symptom) Is from one to five days, so that, case should have developed suf ficiently for diagnosis aboard ship and be- pali-iotlc, educational event, excelling by far any tmllur military demonstration ever attempted within the Jurisdiction of the Department uf the Missouri, and as a re sult of the presence here of th military In such numerical strength and the brlng- ave, her black hair flying In the '", v",t:" wu3 "m mt 3 yeans breeze, presented a dolorous picture. heightened by the chant uf the uirge. The sjuaw had broken all the brave's crockery agaliiM a tree, had flattened out his spoons, (orks and other uteii.-lis on tne olid shot and can- rutks. and had staked the two horse near the body, preparing to slay them over hit- old, and that since that time it has ur.iwn whiter every year. fore reaching our shore. Of course. It must that the cholera may mitigate Its activities; be elated. this will .not 'eliminate the then it simply goes Into winter quarters, "cholera carrier" (who may carry tlm In- to be as regularly expected to go murder- fcctlon, though not himself il!i, nor tlm !"g Its hots with the melting congenial cholera contact., warmth of "j vernal nun. Kverjr year And the authorities at Washington give the melting snows come the warning as little reason for fearing the (ransmls- which as regularly find the hosts moit slon to us of this AHiatic guest. The I'lil.lie limdoqiia'ely prepared for the "visitation." ing together of so many different branches "f the counting peiugatlves of his uniuua ,aVe. Uurlng the long vigil the Wunuu of army service at a time when Omaha I packed with visitors from half a dozen tributary slates the United States army and the people of the Missouri valley a a whole hav been brought Into a closer re lation than ever before a realization of comprehension which cannot fall to beget revived patriotism and a clear apprecia tion of the army's untold usefulness to this republic. The pet lection of German army l.siplnli rlit uf a ( uirnarinn. Thomas Sheridan. 103 yeaj s old. who came to America from the south of Ire Isnd In a sailboat which took ity-two days for the journey, and who described IKa rnnlutia at u-i . .1. . .. . ...... no kind, and -...w,, u.eu ratnu) ... In Chicago. Mr. Sheridan settled r,...riv seventy ) ears ago in Saginaw Valley. Mich., as a lumbal mait. and lived at various times in Detroit, Marquette and Marine City. HrmovUs I aUealrable fish. The Cm draw of undesirable fih from Clear I .a We, la was made In the presence Of laCUA ri'DIAft rHllltinff I n . i th. u me iuiviiiuiil vi ins uuK, leaiusev s jc..,, . t . , .. posiiion Is the privilege to eud It crashing haJ taken nourishment of right ana nit after every ons at home wttn wouid 0lv eat a,,,, ,1., Uodv had k..,.,. the single exception of th admiral himself loVered In the ground. and even this is a roint which the Cap'n waives with obvious reluctance. sed by 111 Doa. Ther is good reason why Cap'n Bill's Kbenezer Ramsey, Ki years old, killed government should buy him a birthday three bears near hia horn In Long Valley rake, as it did yesterday, and supply th on th line between El Dorado and Placer red. while and blue candle and th fancy counties, California, a few days ago, but dlrner. He ias worn th uniform ot its escaped possible death from one of them navy for ninety consecutive y every variety of the uiu iiamaey, wnn an nociem aingi suul kln,1 ti. a minted out as the avem of jrf.tlon In " v oev"r "1 "" nil went to investigate, tooting Ui ueax. of Harper' Ferry, la.. covering al fesh water was demonstrated early after Aviator Brookins eliail risen from ChlcaKO for his long flight and was circling about the lake front getting his bearing.-! before starting for the distant capital. The newspaper men, hastening to board the wailing passenger train. hustled Wright and his agent. Hoy Knabeniinue, Into an automobile and, with a policeman on a motorcycle for a guide and a special dlKpensalh n from the city authorities, started a hurried trip to the Sixty-third nlreel station of the Illinois Central rail road. Before the flist corner was turned Wil bur Wright shnwec! signs of uneasiness. As the motor car wound round the cornel Ins trepidation increased and when a sec ond corner was turned he voiced a protest: "There's no need to hurry; we have plenty of lime." he appealed to Henry Barrett Chamberlain, the newsiutper man in charge of the party. Lifting the lid on automobile speeding is not a common thing with Sir. Chamber- ltiin lhal irt. not ttilii a-suiance ef im- them to take ship to our ports. The guaid iiiuiuo and he did not purpose surrender- at our ports of entry is being doubled; every ing the oppoi lunlty just because of tiie quarantine officer in the service has re- mere fail Uiut there was no occasion for eelveil special instructions for the examln- in bL i'ete-rsburg taking advantage of It. Heiu-e. no response ation of vessels from ports suspected of to th "intrepid aviator's" appeal. infection or of carrying passengers from On more, swish around a corner and Mr. suopei ted district. We are not to rely eniliely upon quaina tirie measures for our rimlria pi ophylaxni. Such prophylaxis Is lu thorny ino,.t simple. ( liuleia is strictly an Ingestion Infeilioii eaten Immediately; flies are to be kept from lavatories; such precaution are of course essential only In Die Immediate presence of an epidemic. The people of St. Petersburg recognize In the cholera their "Asiatic guest" which has come annually to make It more or less Insistent and always unweloom visit. Kvery fall those unhappy -people pray (doing little else) for an early winter, so Health and Marine Ifo.-qiilul service has had orders sent to the American consuls at Hamburg. Bremen, Antwerp. Rotter dam. Marseilles. Havre, Cherbourg, Genoa, Palermo, and other cities to de-lain sleeraKe Iassangers from all parts ot Russia, with their, baggage, during five days, for ob- Those mlfceiable, benighted people of Bt. Pi tersbui g, especially the poor in the over crowded districts hav had to die of cholera, precisely as they are dying today, because they hav been drinking th polluted water of tho Neva, and of tha vibrio-permeated canal traversing th city, i.od-giveii. crystal water which, if It wers seivatlon and disinfection before allowing aqueducled at a cost of but a "Wlety of the sains those pitiless grand duke batten, uiM)ii, i.i. t a single death, nor one hour of suffering, need be til tribute to cholera V.'iiglit could f-tam' it no louder. "i say," he shouted, clutching fianlically for a hold on something stationary, and w ide-e) e-d with fear, "this Is dangerous. is a matter of world-wale comment, and un w,v - Uu wru uu uer -mo euua, niost eno army ot WUUel-n has Olletl Deeu " - - wi kiui kind. Th drsw u maAm. i. t ... .. . ... ...... . " - " f , m.t ' 1 n It . " a - m i' u oioojfii iiiu lllOICra ll.l0. fiom lb excretions or the vomit ot who baa paid th safe." Ill niois SUU Journal Juat for Vum. Time locks gray hair. A liawl t.arn-l wins. Iruon ih-Mot tlto osrsimag. hotel lift- imiiv enlr :ns. Pino language - Tin r!ollai and Costs." in. I, si coin r-iin,ver tho crow. A popular short story "I'm dead broka" Tne Jiiack I land -holding five spade. Buried li.ajiure-your wif first t,L. band (let her tell u:. Boolou Tiajiacrlpl.