6-B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 29, 1912. Ak-Sar-Ben and . Its Work for Omaha and Nebraska H yri B 6 POKE truly. If not ele gantly, who said that what the average man needs is not sympathy, but a couple of good, swift kicks prop erly placed. Many a man who has gained his . full portion of success and more never would have ar rived, but for the hard kindness of that ofttlmes paradoxical old damsel, Mls3 Fortune. If there be no worth, no power In a man, there can be no hope for him; but In some of those elements lie hidden deep and sleeping and some good, stiff punches are required to Jolt them into activity. Men are apt to be content with ordinary success, easily gained; whole some failure then is a blessing if they are. real men. . The same is true of all things made by men and made up of men, of commer cial institutions, of social Institutions, of political parties, of nations, of common wealths, of cities. ' In appreciation of the admirable spirit of persistency which the reader has mani fested by "staying with" this article through the rather abstract and entirely - unnecessary preamble, the, writer now 'will plunge at once Into the subject and ,announce that it is the origin and de velopment of Ak-Sar-Bcn. , Omaha received a considerable number 'of well-aimed kicks that were tolerablj swift, together with the same number of .punches or maybe more. It viewed the (Aurora Borealis, all If Pain's pyrotechnic t productions, and all the planets that lever have been mentoned in the books (Ensued a period, of complete unconscious 'nesg. ' When Omaha awoke it smiled a (forced smile, then gritted its teeth dlagnored its case, prescribed for itself jand made up its mind that what had Just happened would not happen again. It hasn't. The first prescription was the state fair It belped-some. The next was Ak-Sar Een. In the late '80s and very early "90s ' Omaha prospered too well. It suffered with the same disease that ailed many 'other towns of the west and cltlos and (towns of the east to some extent Every thing boomed. Land values went up and fup and up. Fabulous prices were reached prices that could not be genuine value prices. The bubble burst in 1892. Values went 'down. Money became tight, properties that had been bought for thousands were old for tens and the sellers were glad to get the money. Omaha was In a 'hard way. Trade seemed to be almost ,paralyzed. Something had to be' done, "But what? The Commercial club member pon dered for a plan to bring Jhe country into (Closer relations with the city. The pon dering developed a proposal to bring the ;state fair from Llacoln' to Omaha. A committee was instructed to take this matter up with the state authorities at Lincoln. The fair was brought here. lOmaha thought the problem was solved. It wasn't The., fair grounds was located several miles outside the city. From all around 'people went to the fair, but they didn't come to It The, ratlroadt ran to ths 'fair grounds. The people saw the fair, enjoyed It, and went horn. Borne passed through Omaha on the j trains; some never even did that A comparative few did drop into Omaha when they came so near and the city revived to some considerable extent The problem had not been solved, it appeared; ', though ths Commercial club was on the right track. In 1S94.' those who were striving for the solution agreed that,omethlng must be done to attract people to the olty 'itself, something . to entertain them, (something to make them owe and some thing .to make them go home thinking jand talking about the "good time' the had. The result of this decision waa the sending of a committee to St Louis and New Orleans to Study the Veiled prophet said Mardl Oras festivals of those titles. On the committee were Dudley iSmlth, El M. Bartlett and W. B. Ben sett Ct Louis was visited, the commit tee was entertained as lords might be entertained, they learned something of the jmethod of bringing people Into a town to show them ,a good time. On to New (Orleans they went . to receive similar treatment Jn both New Orleans and 6t (Louts elaborate parades were features. .They pleased and charmed the crowds 'and between the times of their passing Board of Governors of Ak-Sar-Ben 1912 Samson's Strong Men ,, A i f n U it 1$' H vwv J fA H ; fvjM I V comma! ti 4 - ) zzetz p V '"'-".rl iiJl f S SQSE?Z mxZEX 4 CJZAS.V.BEArC2r C2MS.E, "BLACK mzzji,iZTzzs cms. z ko xmrzZi the visitors and the city's people made merry with each other. Bo favorably was the committee im pressed with the New Orleans parade that they purchased the paraphernalia of one of them for use in Omaha. By the tflma the committee took the train for home they were thoroughly agreed that a permanent organization would be necessary. It roust have a name, Dudley Smith proved the cleverest thinker in this matter and he evoked Ak-Sar-Ben, Nebraska spelled backward. Now here we come to the part played by a Roman Catholio priest Father En right, who lived in Kansas City. The committee met him on the train. They told him where they had been and for what Me was interested. He gave ad vice and suggestions. It was he who sug gested that the domain of Ak-Sar-Ben be known as the Seven Cities of Cibola, which Coronado sought Father Bnrlght's knowledge again served in the suggestion that each syllable of the word Ak-Sar-Ben. be given Its meaning In another language-Ale being Syrian for head of a household, . Bar treanlng household In Arable, and Ben being Hebraic for brother In the household, the whole signifying the king, his domain and his retainers. When the committee reported In Omaha Us work was approved and the KnDghts Of Ak-Sar-Ben became an institution. L. M. Rheem, then the local mannager of the American District Telegraph com pany, prepared the ritual, making it up largely from. suggestions of Father En right On April 21, 1305, formal announcement of the organisation of the knights was announced. The executive committee, the first board of governors, was composed of Dudley Smith, R. a Wilcox, C. C, Balden, W. L. Dickey, L. M. Rheem, C C. Chase, It & Bryson, T. A. Fry and M. A Fenfold. The second year of the state fair near Omaha saw the Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben ready to' entertain the visitors, and they sent them awy happy In a new Idea of Omaha and Its people. Contrasted with the elaborate j entertainments of later years, those of 1&96 and a few that fol lowed appear to have been rather crude, but In those days they were not consid ered so. They were sufficient to amuse and entertain the people, which was the object of their origin. After five years the state fair vent back to Lincoln, but Ak-Sar-Ben did not die. It flourished and waxed greater with the passing years. Each fall festival was greater than Its predecessor. The en tertainments given at the Den during the summer served to acquaint thousands with the city and to teaoh them that Omaha was really rich in the spirit of good-fellowship and fraternity. Gus Rense, working with the New Orleans floats the first year, learned enough to be able to design new ones for the following festival. He has been doing this ever since. He has made the making of floats a profession or. an art in which he stands alone. During three years the wagons purchased with the New Orleans floats were used. Then W. S. Jardlne suggested that wagons could be built with wheels gauged to fit the car tracks. This Idea waa put into execution with admirable results. Thla was the first forward move In the development of the old-fashioned parade of floats into the modem brilliant pageant. The first electrically illuminated float appeared in 1898. Theretofore all - the illumination was produced by kerosene v torches, a few of which were fixed won the floats, but most of which were carried by footmen in dominoes. While this method served and the grim-looking footmen with their austere garb and ancient-looking torches gave an effective suggestion of archaic daya of chivalry, something better waa needed to bring to the eyes of the throngs all the wonder ful beauty of the floats. City Electrician Shurig set to work on the problem of an electrically Illumined float. In 1898 two of these, the Illumina tion planned by Shurig, were placed in the parade by way of experiment They were successful. The following year every float was Illumined by this method. The effectiveness of the floats was re doubled many times. Their' beauty, enhanced by the myriad and varicolored incandescanta, 1 held the spectators breathless as they passed. The electrlo Illumination plan was patented by Shurig, who assigned the patent to the knights. iStnoe then the fame of Ak-Sar-Ben's electrlo floats has spread far and wide. Hardly a year passes but that Samson receives from some city a request for permission to adopt this plan. The re quests always are granted. Torch bearers still have their part in the parade, giving that splendid and thrilling atmosphere of ancient days. Bicycles were more wonderful In 1835 than automobiles are now. Comparison of the parades of that year and of this show not only the great development of Ak-Bar-Ben, but the changes In the great world Mat time has wrought ' In 1835 the first parade of the festival week was on of bicycles. In the column were S.50Q wheelmen and wheelwomen. Nearly every bicycle In the city was prssed into service. The "wheels" were elaborately decorated with flowers and flags. One body of riders were garbed entirely In white and the bicycles, as far as possible, were wrapped with white cloth. These riders constantly changed from close formation to expanded order, producing a delightful effect. This parade was a revelation and a glorious treat to the people of those daya This year Ak-Sar-Ben sees a parade of automobiles, products of years of experi ment and development of the horseless carriage idea, some of them palaces on wheels, all gorgeously decorated. The second parade of 1896 was one in which the towns and counties of the state were represented by floats. This was ef fective and served well the purpose of evidencing Omaha's appreciation of the state's value to it The third parade was a civic and military affair, in which com panies of the Nebraska National Guard and other military organisations, and drill teams of many fraternal orders and lodges participated. On the fourth night there was the triumphal entry of King c;o" vK i - Li HIS HIGHNESS THE MUFTI. JOHN D. WEAVER, Secretary to Ak-Sar-ben. Ak-Sar-Ben and his knights, followed by the coronation and the coronation grand ball at the Den. E. M. Bartlett and Miss Melioria Woolworth were the first king and queen. In the years since those early ones of Ak-Sar-Ben some of the moat elaborate parades the world has seen have been features of the fall festivals, United States government troops, many thou sands of them at times, have them selves furnished great spectacles, stirring patriotism, educating the people, and yet they have been but one of many features. The Transmisstppi exposition of 1808 and the Greater American exposition of the following year were years of great development in Ak-Sar-Ben and thou sands upon thousands of visitors from all all over the continent were entertained and charmed by the summer entertain ments and the fall festivals. The original purpose of Ak-Sar-Ben, to create and foster a spirit of good fellowship between Omaha and its tributary territory, was ac complished and more. The same spirit, was established between Omaha and all the outside world. . In 1905 the knights purchased the Den. The building had been occupied for years, but the knights were only renters. In 1904 they wereypaylng J600 a year for use of the building. In the fall of that year a movement for the purchase of the prop erty was launched and in 1905 it was bought for $11,500. On improvements 13,000 was spent. Then Ak-Sar-Ben had a home equal to its vastly increased re quirements. . The first street fair or carnival way held In 1900. From the financial view point this was successful. Its recenpta helped defray the heavy expenses of the elaborate street parades and other en tertainments. This' feature has con tinued since 1900, though of late' years there have been Indications that It may be discarded for something of a higher order and equal if not greater drawing power. - , From a small organization, facing a future not altogether cloudless, Ak-Sar-Ben has developed In eighteen years into a well established rock-founded institu tion, regarded as one that will be as lasting as any In the city- Its annual re ceipts and expenditures now are near to $50,000. Ak-Sar-Ben is not a money mak ing scheme. All the proceeds are ex pended In , providing entertainments through the summer and during the fes tival season in the autumn. The hopes and ambitions of the little body of men who bad to do with the es tablishment of the organization have been more than realised. As the years G. A. RENZE. Designer and Builder of Floats. have passed Omaha and Nebraska, west ern Iowa, northwestern Missouri, Minne sota and the Dakotas have developed a co-operative spirit that has resulted In wonderful development for all. There have been good times and hard times, but on the whole the tendency has been upward to better living and greater pros perity. There has been a steady growth of Omaha commercial Institutions, those catering to the retail trade and those engaged in wholesale business. Thai peo ple around about do not regard Omaha, as an enemy and the merchants fef tributary cities and towns are Us com mercial harmony with those of Omaha. We move on and everybody la happy- Just how much Ak-Sar-Ben has had to do with the upbuilding of the city never can be known. It Is enough to say to the credit of the order that through, the years of development no organization has struggled harder nor more faithfully for the advancement of every good enter prise. Eighteen years ago the city Was a giant frontier town; today It la a metro politan city. The last traces of the early-day town of the wild and wooly Wnd the last evidences of western provin cialism fast are disappearing and the city is one whose most Impressive charac teristics are the peculiarly western spirit of progress and genuine, solid growth) and the eastern quality of culture and refinement, the two blending Into a great new quality of life that Is found, nowhere else. i Eighteen years ago The Bee building; and the New York Life building, now the Omaha National Bank building, were local wonders; with old-fashioned, low; buildings of rambling construction clus tered at their feet, they presented a picture of incongruity. This picture now is only a memory. A million-dollar county building graces the -old court house square and the building that waa built for the county's home at a cost of $200, 000 has been given away with a bonus of $5,000 as a premium for its wrecking. Sixteen and eighteen-story buildings oc cupy the ground that eighteen years ago was not too good for residences or churches. Such buildings even in Den ver cannot be found. Plans for other huge structures are being made. Great wholesale houses and great commercial Institutions make the business district one of which the dty should be proud and is. In a few more years the business district will be as much greater as It Is now greater than In the years past If Ak-Sar-Ben contributes as much to the municipal advance In the future as It has In the past its name will be written high among those of the institutions that have made and are making Omaha. Pageants That Have Made Ak-Sar-Ben Famous Throughout the World ; Twenty glgantlo floats, blazing with lelectrlo lights, flashing with gems and 'precious stones, and smiling as a wilder 'tiees of v art-colored flowers, are to swing onto the streets of Omaha Wednesday evening, October 1, the occasion of the jannual electrical parade of the Ak-Sar-Ben festivities. . Gus Rens and his force 'of a dozen men have spared nothing dur ing the last weeks In their steadfast ef- forts to make this group of floats outrl Ival anything In the past for magnificence. "Gems and Flowers" will this year be the theme of the parade and every float represents some gem or some flower, the general effect of the mythological signifi cance of each gem or flower being held throughout the decoration of the float This has brought together on the floats a panorama of Mstorlo and mythological lore in allegorical form that Is pleasing, spectacular, cultural and awe-striking. Heading the procession will be the title, float of the parade: "Gems and Flow ers." A huge Jewel case rests high on the float while the entire structure is fes tooned with a profusion of flowers. As the rose' eternally suggests love, the whole theme of the float entitled the "Rose" is love. Bluing doves, a cupld with his ever ready bow, are here and lastly Romeo and Juliet In the famous balcony scene, thus bringing Into promi nence what is recognised as the greatest love scene of all dramatic production. Those who are particularly fond of f diamond, the richest of gems, will have a treat In the Diamond float Many parts of this float are literally encrusted with diamonds that flash forth their prismatic colors under the flood of light The mythology of tV relation of . the dlety Saturn to this gem Is carried out In the scene. Under the blase of colored lights, two giant tigers head the float entitled "The Lily." Dlreotly back of :Mz ' " ' TITLE FLOAT, lttl them the tiger lily has place, being in perfect harmony with the color of the tigers that glare aggressively ahead of the float. Farther down in a sedate and glassy pool great pond lily leaves ride quietly , at anchor. The purity and beauty suggested by the Illy Is personified in a number of beautiful maidens that go to make up the scene . The goddess Venus Is one of the chief characters on the float "Emerald," as Friday is the day of Venus and the emerald Is the gem of Friday. Shamrocks are numerous carrying out the idea of the Emerald Isle. All the wonder and luxury of ths Flowery Kingdom of Japan are brought out In the float, "Chrysan themum." Buddha is there with Jap anese kneeling In awe at his feet The lover of Shakespeare, when the float "The Opal" appears, will Instantly think of the witch , teen from Mac beth. "Double, double, 'toll and trouble, Like a hell-broth, boll and bubble." For in the tenter of the scene the three wlerd sisters are hobbling about a boil ing caldron mixing their deadly brew of human woes, while the noxious fumes of the "helj-broth" writhe lazily Into the air. Why not? The opal was the hoodoo atone of old. A great rainbow and an opal star then brighten up the scene by carrying ths Idea of hope that is also a part of the ancient significance of the opal " Everything that goes with spring, even to ths frogs dreaming by the water's edge and the storks wading and fishing. Is embodied In th float, "The Violet" Gentle water-falls and a pair of lovers are not forgotten, and with an abundance of violets the spring scene Is complete. "The Pearl" float carries numerous sheila each dotted with its pearl and two great fishes arising from the depths are each carrying pearls In their mouths "The Pansy," the flower of thought comes In on Its float with a pile of books at the head of the float and a young woman reading In the background. A Burmese effect with the elephants and other oriental effects come in when ths float "Ths Ruby" appears, tor this gem oomes from, Burma. Hideous drag ons with forked tongues shooting from fiery Jaws head the float that Is entitled "The Poppy." This brings China at once to mind and the whole effect is Chi nese. Then comes Thor, the great dlety of ancient Teutonic mythology, true to tho attributes given him by the ancient Ger mans, wielding the great hammer, with which he was believed to strike thunder, while In his left hand he holds, a bundle of snapping lightning. The float is the "Amethyst," which mythology has con nected with Thor. The peasantry of France arrives with the coming of the "Carnation." The owl peering wisely from the hollow of a tree carries out the idea of wisdom in the "Sapphire." Greek figures in the costume of the clasaio days when -Greece was in her glory further the idea of wisdom found here, and the dlety Appolo figures here. With the "Sunflower" comes the idea of sun worship and in is ushered a group of Aztec Indians, the civilised Indians of ancient Mexico, who were the arch sun worshipers. ! In an Instant the scene is changed for the next float Is . headed by a great Thanksgiving turkey gobbler. This Is the 'Topai" float, and as the Topaz suggests November, the next thing to be thought of In America is the turkey. Then comes Holland, for the next float is "The Tulip," and the tulip is the flower of Holland. Dutch windmills and Dutch children In wooden shoes are numerous, while the whole is profusely lighted. A sub-marine view brings the idea of the coral with It as the "Coral" float ap proaches. Coral growths and countless fishes bear out the deep sea idea while the lighting effect is exquisite. Bringing up the rear of the parade comes "The King." Mounted on the great elephant that -does service at the Den, King Ak-Sar-Ben XVHI approaches in all his majesty. Slaves fan him even as the cupids fanned Cleopatra on her barge, and as his majesty passes the great electrical parade of 1912 closes. ' -JE3Sa3SaS -i m i in iTfl HMS KING'S FLOAT, 1911