THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 191C. JARCH, SAYS MAYOR, OR L0SEP0SITI0NS pltinutum lunei at City Hall in Ee- gard 'to Employes In the ..,;-(. , Parade. EtEEBEB DOESN'T. LIKE IT PREDICTS BUMPER CROP INJEBRASKA General Manager Walten of North- weitern Returns from a Trip Through State. BEST OUTLOOK EE'S ETEE SEEN Something of a -stir was caased in e city hall when, at the dote of the egular meeting of the city council ommittee of the whole. Mayor Dahl- man and the commissioners an nounced Individually that the absence of any city employe physically able to walk in, the .patriotic parade to day will mean dismissal from ' the city's service. ." : I The upshot ot this was a report of City Abstracter Hartley to the mayor that Superintendent Schreiber of the .Welfare hoard expressed a disinclina tion to march. Mr. Hartley bad been directed by the mayor to advise, all 'employes of the -public affairs depart ment that' they .would be expected to appear in the parade, exceptions being made for illness, physical disability or .other reasonable excuses. "This is a civic affair, and I want to 'state that anybody in my department (who does not appear in the parade need not expect to draw any more sal arj' from the city, providing he or she (is able -to walk, , announced the mayor. Then the other commission- i era acquiesced in that position. , I . ' v" Doesn't Care for Parades. -. I Mr. Schreiber, asked for an expres- aion, said: "I don't think! shall walk in this parade. I. don't, go much on forced patriotism. I don't think any body should question my, patriotism if I do not' walk mthe parade.- At : college I never did care tor parades. I don't like, the idea ot marching along with everybody looking at me' j Commissioner 'Jardine, ' who Is to be marshal of the city hall section of the nararle. called a - meeting of the I city hall women.' The following at tended: Maude Davies. Bertha Lech' novsky, Blanche Manning, Lulu Me Grier, Susie' Peasinger, Xatherine I Nolan, Nena Starr, Naomi" Schenck, Florence Hoye, Bessie wiison ana Mary Diamond. Mr. Jardine ex plained that it was the wish of the commissioners that all city employes should march. This did not meet with a unanimous 'response. Miss Peasinger suggested that it would be nice for all of the citv hall women to stand in front of the city ball and sing patrotic number wniie tne paraae went by. . V r "Every Woman Should Walk." Miss Darles aid: "I think every woman should walk.- I don't think the city hall women should play off sick just to get out of the parade." Miss Malone, the mayor's secre tary, will carry a flag. . After the meeting of the city coun cil the attitude of the commissioners was quickly passed around the mu nicipal building and every daughter of Eve nodded assent when asked if she would walk in the parade. "Why, of course, I am going to walk. I'm ust crazy to march in this ramie. And. tust think, they are hx ing up cute little canes with ribbons ia Mr. Jardine's office. I think it will be just too lovely for any use," replied one young woman who had not been quite so enthusiastic Deiore tne meet' ino? nf the citv council. " It is not believed that , a-"Help Wanted", sign will be posted on the city hall Thursday morning. It will be the first parade for the majority oi the city hall women. I Fifty girls from the Van Sant school will distribute 75.000 conies of ! the songs which will be sung by the ; marchers and the populace along the route. . General Manager Walters of the Northwestern is back from a trip over the company lines in Nebraska, and is most enthusiastic over the out look for a bumper crop. "During my residence in Nebraska have never seen anything that ap proaches it," Mr. Walters . declared. it doesn t seem as it there is any thing that can orevent a bumper crop of small grain. Wheat is beginning to head and within thirty days harvest will be in full blast all through the South Platte country, with the section to the north about ready for cutting. Small grain is in splendid condition. There are no poor spots, as is fre quently the case. Everywhere the grain seems to be in perfect condi tion. ... i- Corn is comintr on raoidlv. and the farmers are busy in the fields cultivat ing the large acreage. Generally they have gone through their fields once, and in many localities are going through the second time. There is a good acreage and with seasonable weather, the crop should be enormous. i ne hrst cutting of alfalfa, one of the heaviest ever recorded, is mostly in the stack and in good condition. In every section, due to the seasonable rams, the range is as sood as It could possibly be and everything now looks as ti wis is going to be another ban ner year for the whole of Nebraska." Grain Exchange Member sto March . In Flag Parade There will be a short session of the Omaha Grain exchange . this morning and then the members will adjourn to perfect arrangements for marching in the Flag day parade. Two hundred and fifty members and emoloves of the exchange have signed up to march and it is expected that this number will be increased by another 100. Those 'going 'into the parade will- meet at the Exchange building at 2 o'clock. S. P. Mason has been elected marshal. '' ' . The Omaha Brain market was it i-iiWlv atroncer. wheat 'betas ud 1 to 2 cents; corn, J4 to 1 cent, and oats, H cent. Sales were made at 90 to 97 cents for wheat: 70 to 72 cents for earn and 36'A to 37 cents for oats. Receipts for the day were light, there being thirty-five cars of wheat, twenty-four of corn and seven of oats. TTT. k-' Doctor from tne Old u Sod Would Be the; - Health Officer Dr. M. N. O'Sullivan of Bantry, County Cork, Ireland, wants to suc ceed Health Commissioner Connell. ' A postal card application received by Mayor Dahlman was addressed to "His Worship, the Mayor.'; , On the correspondence side .of the card Dr. O'Sullivan states he wishes to apply for the nosition of health physician of Omaha, which job he. understands is vacant ' Inasmuch as Health Commissioner Connell is on the job, has no inten tions of resigning and as there is no thought of discharging him at this time, the Uhk county man a applica tion will be placed on file in the arch' IV O VI L1IC VUJ 111. fT.CGRAM FOR JOINT H. S. CCmmENCEKENT EXERCISES . The following will, he the order of exercises of the joint commencement of 'he three public high school at the Auditorium' rrtday evening:- Entrance 'of, class, march .played by Pearly Minnick; invocation. Rev. litus Lowe; presentation of cadet certificates r Frank - H. ; Woodland, c trman of teachers , committee r m, "Education-and Life," by 1), fWp, superintendent of i .', Cuicago; class march and ncation ot diplomas by C- J t, president of the Board of Edu NOW FOR THE REAL SDMMERVACATION Where to Oo is the Popular Question for Those Seeking an Outing. MANY ABE SEEKING; COLORADO Where are you going on your va cation? That's a very popular question now adays. And a very important one. Plenty of wise people make the problem easy by just reading the ad vertisements in The Bee. For,- the best vacation trips, the best resorts to visit, the best hotels to patronize are advertised, just as the best of sll things that are bought by the public are advertised, in first-class news papers and magazines? Many are planning to go to the Minnesota lakes. . It is a state full of beauty, the "state of ten thousand lakes it has been called. The Chicago breat Western- railroad reaches a great many of these and carries thous ands of people yearly to "The Land of Hiawattia." .... , , Christmas, lakei at Minnetonka, Minn, is most beautiful. .Glen Mor- 6 i 1 Bird Bath Model S Deceives' -Mother"; ff With Dirty Child When the oeonv show wis nn In me rotunda ot tne court hmi. a beautiful false fountain was placed in the center, and surrounded with blooms. The top was made of mir ror so as to resemble water. . A "bird bath" is what the Audubons called it. On Monday afternoon, ... an old woman with five children who had been up to see wether or not the county attorney could make her hus band contribute ' something to her family'a support, approached the bird bath with a handkerchief and her youngest son, whose face was very dirty. When she tried to dip the handkerchief into the "bath" she dis covered that the affair was only a working-model, and ; she became wrathy as onlookers snickered. . It's fine business the Dolice are in to allow practical jokers to make fools of poor people I" she blazed up, Athletic Club is ' Securing Members i ; At a Eapid Clip Membershin committees 'of the Athletic-club of Omaha vTuesday "an nounced that by the end of this week there will be 700 members of the new club. ( The chairman of the commit tee said a man will have to. have more than mere athletic ability to be come a member of the club. '. t "Any applicant must be a man who would pass the. membership board of any high-class club," he said. "The men we are getting in are already members of some of the best clubs of Omaha, but they want a place downtown where they can get exer cise in club surroundings. , U. P. ADVERTISING MEN GO TO DENVER FOR ANNUAL MEET John P. Cummins, general advertis ing agent for the Union Pacific system,' is in the city, en route from Chicago to Denver.. Together with several of the officials from the oaa- senger and advertising departments ne will depart tor the west this even ing. The annual meeting of advertising managers and agents of the Harri- man system of roads will be held 'at Uenver Wednesday. This meeting is for the purpose of exchanging: views and estimating. the sire of the ap propriation mat win ne necessary to tun tne aavertistng aepartment dur ing the fiscal year becinnine Ttrlv. 1 At this meeting those in attendance will agree upon the size of the ap propriation and send the recommen. dations to the executive committee in new-York tor approval, w HOTELS AND BESORTI. Glen Morris Inn CHRISTMAS: LAKE MINNETONKA ' MINN. f -Offers summer 'resort ac-- " ,' commodations of the Ugh . rest - standard. .; Minimum ' ' rate $25.00 per week. Add) bwitlM-aUunt i , : , Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, Minn. -Hotel- Marie Antoinette Broadway, 66 th and 67th Sis. niTTOBXOTTT. ...... . ' - BITOATKD In th most eon- ' . vnlent location In town. Mod- . ! era In vary dstall, absolutely flnvrooC within Un - ralnataa ' ot the leading dSpartmsnt tores, shop ana Useattrm, J Convsnlsnt to Peauylvanla ' and Orand Central Dspota, Rooms. With Bath, $2.50 Per Day Up. Suites, $4. CO Per Day Up. hom jo nm bat vr. H. STANLEY GREEN i , Kanaclng Dlrsctor, Your : Treasure : Islandw , Yon nn own on, with boats, mhom and what not, a varltabl ' "trvasur laJand" with a ff oldaii tora of liaalth, of njormant utv dw lu pin arowaad roof Hth tho wind aoarinc through their tall top. All this la to ba had In tho 0,000 lalaotf talrylaod of Qaorgiaa Boy. Lot us toll yon about Point auBaril the esnter fcr samiMr honus and camps la tMa umm.rl.nd x etllmt hot) and sood board! nf Iwums bT .wlmmlnf, Sihlns, c.noinc, aatUng, motor boating, v orjuitvaaabondlns. Rnehedby tlw Caaadlaa PaolAo Railway. for fuTl tnfermatlon ealt phon or writs -for Tour No, V-ta BIOS. J. WALU O. A. P. D. m B. Clark 81, Clllc(0 r mmmmiimm vim pw lwt opnt, . ris Inn there has summer resort ac commodations of the highest type. Colorado Popular. Colorado, of course, will continue to be an extremely popular summer vscation ground for people in this part of the country. This state ri vals the world in natural scenic won ders, which have the added advan tage of easy accessibility from Colo rado's metropolis, Dencver, which is called "the gateway to nine national parks." To get to the Colorado country there are several good lines of rail road with several trains on each road every1 day the Burlington, Rock Isl and and Union Pacific. These trains are elegant in their equipment and ap pointments and speed over the dis tance in something like fifteen hours. You can go to sleep here and wake up in Denver if you like. The round trip rates for the summer are but little more than the regular one-way rate. Special trips can be taken also from Omaha on which the ticket in cludes automobile ticket to Rocky Mountain National park or Estes park. Lure of the East . Then there is the lure of the east !.:,- fltim anrl millionaire Willi "a us .,.... -- J mansions, its Coney Islands and its Newports, its historic naunts, us m lantic City and many other seaside re sorts where one may mingle with the oa vacation "auarter million on the boardwalk and piers. To the east there are many attrac tive excufsion rates in effect. For ! - U . P n n cvlva .1 io and Other CAaiiifi, m. v.,..j roads are now selling tickets to New York City by the way ot rnuaaeipma, returning by the way of Washington. On this trip it is easy to "take in such summer resorts as are found in the White mountains of New Hamp shire. Maplewood, N. H., is said to be a climate entirely free from hay fever. It has a splendid hotel, Ma plewood Inn, with a capacity of 145 and moderate terms. There is an eighteen-hole golf course of 6,000 yards and other attractions. ' Canada offers many attractions to Eastern Tours Up ess i mftf jjifttf ( fffffffffff fm . . .T-y minifflfiwiim nrmrrmiiriimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimiiiiniii nm imr" mnii mmm SUrtttER, 1916 ill 11 MEVIORK Boston Aiimicuiy PEnrJSYLVATJIA Lines PHIIiDElPBIA ; Also to Resorts of ATLANTIC COAST NEW ENGLAND CANADA A. ri d Direct Route orMa Washington an W. H. ROWLAND, TmM Ptmmtm ioaal Bona BaiUrnf, Faom CoajUa 2003, OMAHA, HOi. Through Service Routes to the Coast Si To California Denver on the Way Essentially the "See America" Route I .. BURLINGTON RIO GRANDE SOUTHERN PACIFIC BURLINGTON RIO GRANDE WESTERN PACIFIC BURLINGTON RIO GRANDE SALT LAKE ROUTE BURLINGTON-RIO GRANDE THROUGH SERVICE: AFTERNOON TRAIN AT 4:30 ia the Burlington ' . through-service to San Francisco and Los Angeles via Denver, Scenic Colorado, the Royal Gorge and Salt Lake City, by daylight . Through standard sleepers; Personally Con- ducted Tourist Sleeper Parties. THROUGH TRAINS t TO PUGET SOUND BURLINGTON-NORTHERN PACIFIC: AFTERNOON TRAIN AT 4:15 is the through-service to Yellowstone Park, Butte, Spokane, Puget Sound, over the direct line Northwest During Yel , lowstone Park season, through standard sleepers to Cody, the Scenic and . ONLY automobile entrance; through sleepers to Gardiner. . - , BURLINGTON-GREAT NORTHERN: NIGHT TRAIN FROM OMAHA AT 12:20 A. M-Standard Sleepers ready at 10 p. m. Through Observation Car, electric-lighted train to Glacier Park, . ' Spokane, Seattle. ... . Coast passengers may enter Yellowstone at Cody, and resume their Journey from Gardiner... . .....-.., They may also go via Denver and Billings, Montana. With Its Five Through-service Scenic Routes! tho Burlington Is a powerful factor In the .t -vV'.i r !. "Perfect Coast Tour.'' r Cm way thraufh Colorado and Salt Last a, tha othor through tho. NorthwoaL InclurU ia your tour on er mot af th Natloaal Park and you will tba comprohond th naourosa and graadaur of 1 '! th Big Wast, compriiing half tha contlnont. Th Burling toa Rao Foldar map will show you at a flaaest hew thssa ihreugh-sarTic routsa may ha vtillaad la a awaoping aircuit tear that Includes the scenic, the highly daveleped nf leas, th weadarful cities of th Wast. , " Ask for literature , J. B. REYNOLDS, City Passenger Agent. 16th and Farnam. Tel. D. 1238 D.3580 r.liiiiiiidiiiii Uliiili; the summer vacationist, not the least of which is cool temperature. One A.n nn nw, th TanaHian Pacific rail way to such interesting places ss To ronto, tne nignianas oi un, Thousand Islands, Ottawa, Montreal m-A n,iK Tfii. o-rr.91- rail- uu 4u.m. c road offers optional routes to eastern lanada, so tnat you can exenange ine railroad cars for a boat down the St Lawrence, through the Thousand Islands and Lachine rapids. Then you can get tnrougn ruuman cars from Montreal to Portland, Me., and Boston and then go on, if you wish, by ocean steamer to New York City. Dr. Kiss's Maw Ufa tills. ' Rafular bowl movement la ouantlal to yonr haalth. T Dr. Kins' Nw Life Fill and hav a dally movomont. Mo, All drusslta-Advrtlement The Bee Want Ads Are the Best Business Boosters. ilk? Hd You arrive Chicago in thMW Pcuitngtr Terminal. NW4IM The Great Lakes and Atlantic Coast Region has innumerable attractions to offer the vacationist . LOW FARES IN EFFECT June I to Sept. 30 via the Chicago & Northwestern Ry. to Chicago and choice of routes therefrom to all important points east Round Trip from Omaha Detroit, Mich. $35.10 Boston, Mass. $54.60 to 69.10 New York, N. Y. 65.80 to 69.10 Niagara Falls, N. Y. 42.45 to 44.45 Toronto, Ont. 40.10 to 44.45 Montreal, Que. 45.20 to 55.55 Atlantic City, N. J. 67.30 Portland, Me. 52.90 to 69.10 Buffalo, N. Y. . 42.45 to 44.45 Return limit 60 days, not to .exceed October SI, 1916. Favorable stop-ovor privileges. Direct connections with fast trains on aD Unaa east. For particular can on Chicago & North Western Ry JOHN MELLEN, O. A. . 1401-1403 Farnam Streat, Omaha, Neb. (Tl, Douglas 1740) , Summer Excursion Fares EAST 1 Via WABASH RAILWAY CO. Boston , Going and returning same route, $54.60 , Going one route, re turning anotner, $57.80 -On Four Lakes Tha Natloaal Pais Line TDITICFC Chicago Buffalo S Going and returning same route, , , : $55.80 Going one route, re Clty turning another, ( $58.50 A Week's Cruise 2200 Miles d A A Meal aad Berth sptU Included VftUsaJsjU Chicaie Duluth and the 30,000 Island of Georgian Bay. Twelve Days' Cruise 3600 Miles On 5 Lakes, $75 The Lake Trips That Have No Equal.'' . ' Many attractive routes to all Eastern Resorts. Full informa tion, descriptive literature, sleeping car reservations, etc. Inquire at , CITY TICKET OFFICE i ' ' or Write . H. C. SHIELDS, 311 South 14th St., OMAHA, NEB. Spend the Summer in MINNESOTA "The Land of Hiawatha" Go and live in real woods, enjoy real out door life, catch real fish, and get a real rest. No other land like if! 10,000 lakes dot the state. Thousands of square miles of great woods. Average temperature in mid-summer about 67 degrees. ,. , . ; The only popular vacation state not "civilized to death." . Best freshwater fishing in the world lakes teem with all varieties of bass, pickerel, pike, muskellunge, sturgeon, etc. the best fighters of the finny tribes. Good hotels, boarding houses, cottages, camps and guides whea needed at reasonable rates... y - , ,: . Easily and quickly reached via the Chicago GREAT western. Call or write for free illustrated folders and full information about round trip fares via the Chicago GREAT Western in effect June 1 to Sept. 30, 1916. P. F. BONORDEN, C. P. & T. A., Peonest Douglas 260. . ; 1522 Farnam St, Omaha. (Emphaiiit the "Great")