The Omaha Sunday Bee oW .Omaha: GoUiiiti 7 7 OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1917. Qrdft ffieW of Omaha At the truth ani untruth tliate fit to kiow hapter VII Discovery of Pike's Peak. By A. R. GROH. Certain persons, instigated by jeal jusy of my great history, are attempt ing to criticise me because, they say, after six chapters, I have not yet be gun to talk about Omaha. They inquire, peevishly, why I wan der over all the earth and the last forty centuries in telling about Omaha. These persons simply betray the shallowness of their minds. They hurt themselves instead of the historian. 1 hey are unwilling to spend time in laying the foundations of a history. , Mushrooms grow up in a night and die in a day. The oak grows slowly and lives for centuries. Such is my history. Other great historians have pursued the same course. Gibbon in his "His tory of" Rome," devotes 160 pages to other conditions in the world before he mentions Rome. Carlyle, in his "Revolution of France," and Bancroft, in the "United States History," do the same thing. So the present author is in good company. I shall continue to tread steadily the path of thoroughness. My detractors are unworthy of notice. Carping critics have ever tried to tear down great works. Little dogs can bark at elephants. (To the artist: Please put a picture in here showing a large, powerful ele- fihant marked "Great Historian" and lave a lot of little dogs barking at it. Have the dogs marked "Critics" and "VVould-Be Critics." Be sure to make the elephant very powerful and not INHT Of LINE Willi OISBOK AW CAWAU paying any attention to the dogs which are barking their heads off.) We will pay no attention to these jealous critics miu prui-ccu rimi uui history. Tike's Peak, Colorado, was discov-. ered in 1806 by Zebuion M. Pike, who named it in honor of himself. It was a landmark for emigrants, who used to paint on ' their wagons, "Pike's Peak or Bust." - - The country was not specially ben efite4 by the discovery of this peak. Thing went on about as they had before. Pike claimed it was higher Round-up Days in Western Nebraska. "Say, have you been reading about the potash fields in western Nebraska? I read an account' oi it the other day and later heard some fellows telling about how they are taking out hundreds of dollars' worth of potash a day from some of those sand-hill lakes. k "That takes me back to March and April of 1878, when I first struck this northern country. Bennett Irwin and I came from the south together and landed on the Niobrara river twelve miles east of where Gordon now stands, at what was called the N ranch, owned by a man named K. S. Newman of St, Louis, Mo. The fore man of that ranch was 'Hun' Ir win, a brother of the Irwin with whom I came to this country. That was about the 20th of March. They had had a terrific snow storm a day or two before and my partner and 1. never having seen a snow storm until we struck that oni, wore light clothes and were in 'some shape for weather of that kind. However, we stayed at the ranch for a while and in the meantime 'Hun' Irwin sent tp Fort Sheridan (which was a trading point at that time) and got us some over coats, overshot s and other things necessary for comfort in that country. Some Cattle Contract, This. v "Newman had a contract with the Pine Ridge and Rosebud agencies to deliver several thousand head of steers to these agencies to supply the Indians with meat. He undertook to winter about 6,000 steers on the Niobrara river, which. was north and west of these sand hills. They had established a camp at the Head of what they called the Snake river, which was about twelve miles south and east of the ranch, in what is known as the sand hills. South and " east of the head of the Snake river was territory of some hundred or hundred and twenty-five milesjquarc that really had never been explored, with the exception of an old govern ment trail that went through on the east end of it. Everyone who had cattle .north and west of there did everything possible to keep the cat tle from getting into those hills, not really knowing what was in them. They kept 'line-riders' stationed at the head ot the snake river, who rode west, to the river and north and east along the Snake river to keep the eat le from drifting into the sand hills. earing they would never see them igam if they did yet in there. -, Sand Hills ft Storm Shelter. ' r "As I remarked, this severe snow than it really is, but even this exag geration did not stir up the country. Pike was killed April 27, 1813, in a battle at York, Canada. Drevious to this he had married Clarissa Brown of Kentucky. John Jacob Astor. a New York mil lionaire, determined to start a city and name it after himself. He had al- pike, discovers Pikes peak ready built the Waldorf-Astoria hotel and named it alter nunseii aim nic town of Waldorf in Germany, where he was born and where his father ran a butcher shop. So he lent out an expedition in 1810 which founded a town at the mouth of the Columbia river in Oregon and named it Astoria. It never amounted to much and has only 9,599 peculation now. This shows that money won't buv everything. Pike, poor and unmarried, was able to have a peak named after him, while Astor, rich beyond the dreams of avarice and owner of a hotel catering to the best trade in New York, and with baths- attached to every room, couldn't even have an important city named in his honor. This chapter will be a fitting ans wer to my critics. I haven't men tioned in it the city concerning which I am writing. Those jealous persons who try to dictate to me how my history should be written will see that I pay no more attention to their yelping than a large, powerful elephant would pay to the barking of a pack of little dogs. Questions on Chapter VII. 1. W hat do critics or would-be crit ics of this history resemble? 2. What is the real reason for their criticism? 3. What peak did Zebuion M. Pike discover? , . Watch this page of The Sun day Bee from week to week for the best and most fascin ating local feature stories to be found anywhere. becomes QWffiKceiii L - storm had wept that country a few days before our arrival, and had drifted the cattle through the lines and into the sand hills. This news had been telegraphed to Newman, and he arrived at the ranch about the same time as we did. I never saw a man so blue as he was. He thought that everything was 'shot to pieces' 'Hun' Irwin, the foreman, proposed to him that if he would let him se lect his men and give him what horses he needed, a wagon and some grub, he would take the outfit in there and undertake to explore those sand hills and try to gather the cattle. Newman gave him this permission and Bennett Irwin and I were two of the men he selected to go on the trip, with some other ten or twelve men We started on the 15th day of April. The horses we had were all horses that had been wintered on grass and they were weak. After we had got about two days out from the ranch another terrible snow storm came up; so we were laid up for three days during this storm. All the grub we had was what we called 'sow-belly' bacon about ' five or six inches through with fat and Wakapamana flour, that made bread as black as vour hat. This was bacon and flour they bad bought at the Pine Ridge agency, supplies furnished by the government to the Indians, and I want to tell you it was tough grub for a Texas fellow who had been used to eating fresh beef whenever he wanted it. After the storm was over we never .moved the wagon without first exploring the country ahead of us, and generally two or three of us would make a trm east of about fifteen miles, to see what we could strike, we would go back to the wagon in the evening and move the next day. We kept that up for about three or four days beforcwe struck any cattle. That Big Black Cow. "But one day 'Hun' Irwin and I were two of the explorers, and after we got about fifteen miles east of the wagon we ran into a wild bunch of about sixty head of cattle. They were as wild as any deer you ever saw. we rounded them ud to see what they were and we found they were none of the cattle we were looking for: but cattle that had evidently been in there for several years; some of them unbranded and ranging from "I to 4-year-olds. Among thein was a big black cow, fat as any cow you ever aw in a feed lot, weighing about 1,300 pounds. Having had about all the bacon I wanted, and being sure the rest pf the boys felt the same way and would stick with me, I told I Comb Honey By EDWARD BLACK. An Old Trunk. Did you ever delve into an old trunk m attic or in basement!1 What tragedy and comedy, what reminis cences and tender memories are as sociated with the nondescript contents of that battered old receptacle! As you open the old trunk your thoughts revert back to days oi cniianoou, or youth, or perhaps some later period of life, as the case may be. A pair of infant's shoes come tp view. Your feet, which now are vexed by corns, ohce wore those tiny shoes. In them one eventful day you wandered away from home to sec the wine, wine worm aionc. iuu looked into the wonderful windows of stores, with their wealth of candy and cakes and toys. In this world of childish imagination you lost all sense of direction. On and on vou traveled until the world of reality grew dark and your feet were tired. Suddenly you tnougnt or mouicr aim vou began to crv. A man asked if you were lost and you shook your head negatively, ne iook you oy mt hand and gave you a nickle. After a while your mother appeared on the scene; she picked you up, kissed you and exclaimed: "Was my little boy Inst?" And your mother saved the little shoes, that some day you might find them in an old trunk and re member the day when you were lost in this wide, wide world. You rummage through the trunk again and your hand touches a time worn autograph album, filled with en dearing sentiments and light-hearted expressions, inscribed by the boys and girls of yesterday. ' "Your album is a pleasant spot in which to write forget me not." That was written by May. Kememuer the time vou took her to a circus and told her the jokes about the giraffe's long neck and the elephant's trunk? And she asked you to show her the blind tiger, and the animal man said they were just out of blind tigers, but they had some dandy lions. "Mr nen is ooor. mv ink is oale, hut my love for you shall never fail." And this one: "Roses are red, violets are blue; sugar isweet, and so are you." And you recall the lines: "How dear to this heart are the scenes of my childhood, when fond recollection presents them to view. Voices of the Night. There is the voice of a mother as she sings her babe to sleep. Just as she gets the intant into slumber land na comes in) from the basement as if he wanted to let the neighbors know he was home. Then -there is the voice of the mother as she chas tises dad for his pachydermatous foot fall on the stairs. Another tumult of the stilly night is the laminar feline crescendo which fills the alley at 11:45 p. m. and as saults the ears of those who would address themselves to sleep, A win dow is ooened and a lot of bric-a- brac is projected at an arch-backed figure silhouetted against the night Irwin I intended to rone that cow and tie her down until we could move the wagon' next day and butcher her for beef. The horse I was riding was a weak one with which to rope a big, heavy cow like that; but we got down our ropes and 1 tied the end of my rope hard and last to the horn ot my saddle and went after Mrs. Cow. After running her for quite a while, I finally got close enough to make a throw. The first throw I made I caught her, and sayl when she went to the end of that rope, she jerked me, horse and all about fifty feet; but Irwin was ready with his rone and roped her by the hind feet. We hog- tted her and left her there at the lake and started back for the wagon, getting there about 8 or 9 o'clock that night. Dressed Beef for a Feast. "When' the boys heard what we discovered and how we had caught and tied down this big cow, they cer tainly did smack their lips in antici pation of some fat beef the next day, Next morning we were up bright and early and three of us went ahead of the wagon. We butchered t e cow and when the wagon came up we had some of the prettiest beef dressed that you ever saw. Talk about a feast I We surely had one. "from then on we kept exploring the lulls and gathering the cattle. We were in there thirty days and when we got back to the ranch we had over 6.000 head of cattle several thousand being those which had drifted through the lines and some 1,500 cattle that had evidently been in there for years. Besides, we gathered on that trip about 300 mavericks (which means unbranded cattle) from 1 year to 4 years old. On this trip we dis covered that this sand hill country was one ot the greatest cattle coun tries in the world. Potash Millions Didn't Worry Him. "When the news got out about our getting in with those cattle, the ranch men came from all directions to see the cattle and hear the story. From that day to this that country has developed, as we all know, into one of the greatest producing sections of our state. Now, to think that they have started 1 this potash industry, which promises to make millions of dollars for those interested in it I It is a wonderful transformation. It was right near one of those lakes where we tied the cow. But we weren't worrying about potash; we wanted some fat beef. That's the history of the starti. of the develop ment of that great sand hill country.." Tie 9 farted as a news- hoy, then going up By A. EDWIN LONG. Even Caesar did not start life with an ambition to be a soldier, much less an emperor. Few boys nurse the ambition to be come what fate finally kicks them into. Why, Caesar carved himself out for oratory, rather than warfare. It was because he sailed for Rhodes to study oratory under Apollonius Molo that he got switched off into fields of war. Pirates snatched him from the high seas and held him for ransom. Caesar always had temper, so he swore) "Believe me, guys, when I get my liberty, I will have you all cruci fied." They laughed. His ransom was finally paid, and as soon as he got ashore he forgot all about his orator ical ambitions, but instead outfitted some ships, overtook the pirates and spiked them hand and foot to the clumsiest wooden crosses he could hastily improvise. Having made good, as a fighting on a garage across the way. "Get my air riHe," is heard from your son's room. The feline incantations final ly cease and you resume sleep. A noise is heard on the back porch; it is the milkman delivering your daily allowance of lacteal fluid. Then you arise and sing. "For this is the end of a perfect night." Mere Man. Mere man faces the cannon's maw unflinchingly. He braves the perils of land, sea and air, for home, his country and his God, He goes to a bargain sale for his wife and other wise jeopardizes life and limb vicari ously during the day's work. There is no deed too bold for this man who is of woman born. But when it comes to holding a baby in the most approved manner, he admits he has a lot to learn.( Lincoln papers please copy.) Neutrality. Careful Observer What is armed neutrality? . Oldest Inhabitant When a girl al lows two admirers to escort her home. Come to Think of It Casting pearls before swine may not be amiss these days. Did You Ever meet a man who always wants to get even with somebody? Where' Is The breeziest corner in Omaha? The Lid. - x Speaking of lids in these days of grace, we notice a lot ot wiminm folks wearing new spring lids. EVeT$o3yTias a HoftyJ A nurse may have a hobby just as well as any regular human being. Miss Bessie Randall, superintendent of the Visiting Nurse Association of Omaha has a hobby and she is proud of it - Her hobby is concentration. She uses her leisure moments study ing concentration. "I have learned that my reading was faulty because I did not concentate and that when in conversation I did not get the most out of it because I did not con centrate as much as If should have done. Concentration strengthens the memory," stated Miss Randall. In memorizing the spelling and meaning of words she finds that concentra tion is helping her considerably. To get the best out of life, she says, one should concentrate all faculties, whether at work or play. Inconsistent with his profession J. Stewart White, president of the Cady Lumber company, has for his pet hob by the making of houses out of can vas for summer use on his vacation camping trips. Most any winter even ing or in his leisure hours friends calling at the White residence may find him industriously plying the needle (with an ease and grace quite foreign to most men), which by sum mer time has taken the shape of a Dortable dwellin&r. Every summer, when he and his family tire of the' hot Nebraska weather and long for a cooler clime, bill clevk ever since. man, he stuck to that field until his scepter swayed most of the known world; but all that has little to do with Ward M. Burgess of Omaha, U. S. A. The only relationship between the Caesar career and that of Ward Bur gess lies in a lack of similarity. Caesar didn't want to be a soldier. Ward Burge3S did want to be a dry goods merchant. Caesar was weak to that extent in allowing himself to be shunted onto a siding from his youthful purpose. :. Ward Burgess let nothing push him on the switch, but clung to the rails of the main line and kept crowding on the steam. For when as a barefoot boy he hauled in the line, yanking catfish out of the Missouri river at St. Joseph, Mo., young Burgess wanted to be a wholesale dry goods merchant. Though he was an expert at cutting the hook out of the mouth of a cat fish, he had no ambition to be a fish monger. Though he was as good a first base man in the kid leagues as ever held down the bag at first, he had no ambi tion to be a big leaguer. Though he was shooting jacksnipe, chickens, ducks and geese on the river long before he was a dozen years old, he had no ambition to be a Daniel Boone or a Nimrod. ,; He didn't even want to be a locomo tive engineer, though the big engines roared into St. Joe dailywith all the clanking magnificence and might of steam and steel. He didn't want to be a cowboy, or a scout, or a guerilla, or even a des perado, despite the fact that Jesse and Frank James and Cole' Younger were alarmingly popular in a neighborhood not a day's ride from, where young Ward was growing up. At 11 years he began to carry a paper route in St. Joseph. This gave him no ambition to be a news vendor, or to monopolize the sale of papers in his city. It was a means to an end. It was a means of making a few dimes, and these he would save, for some day he might need them to en gage in the dry goods business. afeYoursI thev oack their machine full of all the necessities for camp life and go either to some northern Minnesota or Wisconsin lake or to the Rocky moun tains. This year they are planning a trio to Wyoming, and the camping outfit, thanks to Mr. White's nimble fingers, is almost completed, ine White family are, as you may imagine, lovers ot the great out-ot-ooors, and on these trips they pitch their tents and sleep out under the stars every night, being entirely independent of hotel accommodations and tne cook ine characteristic of country town hotels, as well as the hot and dusty trains filled at this season with crowds of tourists. Just another example of the back-to-nature call, and a most delightful suggestion for other out-of-door and fresh-air fiends which may prove especially interesting to the business man who is shut in an office for eleven months out of the twelve. Louis St. Cyr, veteran box office man at the Orpheum theater, has a hobby of collecting relics and curios. Some are grewsome and others are less forbidding. He has a piece of rope used when a man was lynched at the corner of Seventeenth and Har ney streets. In his collection is a set of currency notes issued .by the city of Omaha in the days when Jesse Lowe was mayor. Another ar ticle is a paper centavo issued by the Carranza government in Mexico. He also has an opium "layout" con fiscated by the police. Knives, dag gers and other instruments of destruc and He didn't know when nor where, nor how he would get into the dry goods business, but then Abraham Lincoln didn't know how he would get into law or politics, but Lincoln simply said he would get ready and maybe the time would come. So, too, young Ward Burgess was getting ready in preparation for that mys terious time somewhere, somehow, when he should be a dry goods mer chant. From the age ofll to 15 he carried papers', and didn't even go to high school. Not having a high school training, of course he never got a col lege training, and he just didn't care. He wanted to be a dry goods mer chant, and consequently didn't care a fish gill how to find the cube root of a billion, or how to determine the diameter of the Pole star. Ward Burgess had a brother. That brother proved to be the key to the merchandising 'world for the lad. That brother was employed with the firm of M. E. Smith & Co. of Omaha, as a salesman. Young Ward began to hear tales of wondrou3 Oma ha from his big brother. He began to hear tales about the big wholesale dry goods house in Omaha. The lad longed to see this magnificent place. While other boys longed to steal through the halls of historic palaces and castles, scanning the medieval etchings on the walls, while others dreamed of stalking through the caves of romantic robbers, viewing the price less plunder, young Ward Burgess nursed the ambition to walk through tion from many lands are included :n tv rrJIrrtinn. The collection is one of the most interesting of its kind in Omaha. Rodman M. Brown, structural en in thi ritv hnilHinflr denart- e "il . j . ment, finds surcease from the prob lems ot ouuoing construction uy icau ing a troop of Boy Scouts. After a day with such technical matters as floor loads, wind stress and strains, he finds genuine pleasure in- mingling with his boys. He goes on hikes with the Scouts and knows how to start a fire without matches, now to follow a trail, knows the birds and their notes and can signal with the Morse code. It is a far cry from modern con- K,'1ncr fi-tfiatrtirtinn tn Bov Scout activities) but Mr. Brown avers the latter is a fine sedative. John C. Wharton has two hobbies. One is being a great gymnasium ath lete and the other is drinking weak tea and "cambric tea." ' Alkali Ike and William Jennings Brvan have been popularly supposed to stand, one at either end of the bev erage range of man Alkali Ike lik ing his pisen strong,' long anu freq'ent and W. J. B. finding pleasure and solace in quaffing the sparkling, nure and unfermented juice. Colonel Wharton takes precedence even of the Peerless Leader in the mildness of his potions. He starts each golden day with a cup of tea, a cup of weak tea, pro L &$t7 m m " ;r:TlKTii7ririS ' msM s-snSn IWM the halls of a wholesale dry goods house, and see the stocks of goods stacked high. The opportunity came. The brother got him a job at the M,. E. Smith plant in Omaha. He came here as a bill clerk. And he received the magnificent sum of $10 a month for his services. Ah, but he had arrived; he had alighted in an establishment such as he had dreamed of through the seem ingly endless age of his youth; and lie was happy. . He was 18 years old when he took this job. Promotion, after promotion followed until the lad found himself a stockholder in the firm. Soon he became vice president, and then in conjunction with Louis C Nash oraganized the retail department store of Burgess-Nash, of which con cern he became president. He has realized his boyhood ambi tion of getting into the dry goods game, being now heavily engaged both in the retail and in the whole Sale dry goods merchandising, in his respective connection with the two establishments mentioned. He is a director of the Omaha National bank and also of the Electric lighting company. He has been a live Com mercial club member for years, served on important committees, has been identified with many public movements of importance in Omaha and was last year king of Ak-Sar-Ben, and still his dry goods business is his life. Meit In Serie "Horn Omh Cot 'Bills Schmoller." duced by steeping about three leaves of choice Oolong in boiling water. Fearing that even this migVt limit his athletic prowess, Mr. Wharton pours out one-third of the cup and fills 'er up with rich, nutritious, de licious cream. Noon arrives and the colonel may be seen at the Omaha club or the "Y" cafeteria gormandizing on a bowl of soup and a glass of butter milk. Only this and nothing more (Quoth the waitress, "Have some more?" Quoth the colonel, "No, no more.") At the eveniLj meal the colonel's drink consists of "cambric tea," which can be made, without any in structions from Mrs. Rohrer, by sim ply adding cream and sugar to hot water. "Del you attribute your high posi tion in hand-ball athletic circles to your temperance in beverages?" he was asked by admiring friends. "Very largely," said the colonel, "very largely. I used to have a great liking for coffee. I loved, it. But I decided my athletic constitu tion, my tremendous endurance, my muscles strong as iron bands would be better on a more modest diet." "Well, that's the price you athletes have to pay for your marvelous pow ers. Stecher, Willard, Moran, Whar ton, all have to let stimulants alone." "Oh, my gracious, yes, we have to do it," declared Colonel Wharton. (Yes, colonel, the writer of this article still smokes. A box of any brand will do.)