Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 03, 1919, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BFE: OMAHA. THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1919.
The Omaha Bee
DAILY (MORNING) EVENING SUNDAY
FOUNDED BT EDWARD BOSgWATER
VICTOR ROSEWATER, EDITOR
THI BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY. PROPRIETOR
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS '
Th Aaanclated Prees of wkich The Bee It a member. U ax
eluattelj eniltlfd t" tha um for luDtteatloo ot all sews dlapetche
,crtill to It or not oUierwIae credited In tale paper, and alao tbs
local newa publlahed hertln. All rlfbta of publication of our epe
elal diapatchsa ara alao rptenad.
BEE TELEPHONES t
Prfrate Branch Kxi-hante. Ail for tha TttIoi 1 (CC
Department or Particular Peraon Wanted. jrlCr A JJJ
For Nljht or Sunday Service Call:
Filllarlal Department ..... Tyler 1000L.
Irrulatlon liiartrant ..... Tyler 1L.
adrenialns Department ..... Tyler 1008L.
- v , OFFICES OF THE BEEi
Home Office. Ilea Bulldini. ITlh and ram am.
Branch. Offlcee:
Amea 4110 North 54 I Park MIS UaTenworth.
Beoaoa lilt Military Aie. Mouth Bid U16 N Street.
Council Bluffs 14 N. Mam I Vinton i Wl South lth
Lake- JJ1 North Hth I Walnut (18 North 40th.
Out-of-Town Offices s
New Tark City MS Fifth Ara. Weehtniton
Chicaco Heeser ' Blda. I Lincoln
1311 O Btreet.
1330 H Street.
APRIL CIRCULATION
Daily 65, 830 Sunday 63,444
Averaie circulation for tha month subscribed and aworn to by
B. R. Retail, Circulation Manacer.
Subacrlbera leavlnf tha city ahould hava Th Baa mailed
to tham. Addreaa chanced a often aa requested.
You should know that
Within 50 miles of Omaha there
are 100,000 families owning 64,
000 automobiles.
What about enlarging the "muny" bathing
beach?
Turkey is doing quite a bit of squirming just
now, but it will be mild enough when it gets the
final news from Paris.
. Admiral Peary's famous ice-ship, the Roose
velt, is to be sold at auction. Here is a chance
for "Old Doc" Cook to settle up.
Two and three-quarters beer is not to escape
unscathed. The dry advocates want the popu
lar beverage completely dehorned.
" Governor Lowden of Illinois can distinguish
between a boxing exhibition and a prize fight,
if Governor Cox of Ohio can not.
Another record has gone by the board
somebody having discovered a fool stunt in
which "W. J. B." declined to take part.
Designating Fort Omaha as the chief bal
loon school of the army is but recognizing what
the practical men of the air service long ago
knew.
. . "Wooda da VVils" is now "da bada da man,"
according to the Tribuna of Rome. But sup
pose he had taken the side of Italy on Fiume,
then what?
. President Poincare has dined on American
beef, for which $2.50 a pound was paid in Chi
cago. This is just a little too high for the plain
peepui, however.
Great preparations are being made to re
ceive the president when he gets to New York.
Just wait until he reaches Washington, though,
if vou are interested in the real reception.
Pershing has declared the military censorship
off, and letters and cablegrams can come
through as written, yet so little remains to be
said that the uncensored communication will
hold little interest to any now.
. The report on The Bee's free shoe fund,
promoted last winter, shows that it was a most
timely and welcome service. Now the free milk
and ice fund is doing a similar work. Come on
in; it is 100 per cent service.
Republicans saved the country a billion and
a quarter of dollars by rewriting the appropria
tion bills of which Claude E. Kitchin boasted,
and even this economy might have been ex
ceeded had time enough been given for full con
sideration. The short period is due to the fact
that the president delayed so long in what he
knew was inevitable, and did not call the extra
, session until it could no longer be postponed.
' " Ohio church members who cleaned up the
sanctuary when help could not be hired are
pluming thmselves on having achieved a deed
worthy of note. They should look around a
'. little- and get better acquainted with what is
going on in the world, and maybe they will not
then boast so loudly of having helped them
selves a little. It is being done generally these
days.
Return of the Immigrants
' The Department' of Labor of the United
States continues to emphasize the imminence
of the departure of 1,300,000 aliens to Europe,
carrying with them savings to the amount of
$3,000 each. The peril of this is greatly exag
gerated. Although it is professed that the sta
tistics has been carefully gathered, it can be
merely a little better than guessing. Nor is it
likely that all who return to Europe this sum
mer will remain there. There are many rea
sons why such as have parents or other near
relatives in their native lands should be eager
: to visit them, extend them aid, get a first-hand
story of the war and view the devastation
i :; wrought by the war, but there is little reason
for believing that there will be such an im
mense number or that a large percentage of
, them will Stay in Europe.
Europe is not a bed of roses nor will it be
for many years to come. All travelers tell of
armies of unemployed, paid regularly by the
' governments during the period of unemploy-
- ment. Practically all the countries are on an
inflated paper-money basis, greatly increasing
the prices of things, in addition to the effect of
short supplies. The debts of all the nations will
; be staggering, in proportion to their wealth.
Such aliens as have in the past gone to Europe
' .to visit have been able to cover the cost of their
passage both ways in the saving on living ex
penses. But they will find matters entirely dif-
" ferent this summer. Even those who contem-
plate leaving America for good may soon
change their minds after they discover condi
tions that now prevail. It is probable that sen-
' timent is driving many persons of European
.f birth home. Thousands came to the United
.States to escape intolerable political conditions.
- But they found still greater opportunities in
1 the United States. These opportunities will
not be forgotten when aliens return to their
native lands and face conditions. There will
j 'not be as much European rehabilitation as has
been predicted, for it will not be necessary to
rebuild for the innumerable dead. Further
. more, many thousands fled from zones occupied
i- by the Germans and built elsewhere. The real
"" peril is from a flow toward America. St. Louis
Clobc-DcmocraL
1 :-v.-..' .-, .- " l , .
: - . - t
BUSINESS CONDITIONS.
The Federal Reserve board comes forward
with another optimistic report on business con
ditions in the United States. Coupled with it Is
a carefully worded warning against undue specu
lation. Prospects for a bountiful harvest and
improvement in the labor situation form the
foundation for the encouragement the board
gives the public as to the present and the im
mediate future. New York bankers report a
firmer situation in the money market, which
tends to support the conclusion that, in spite
of the continued activity on Wall street, the
speculative element is not so prevalent as the
Reserve board's warning might suggest.
Recent inquiry, carried on by an eastern
agency, developed the fact that in none of the
staple lines is the volume of sales equal to what
those reporting considered normal for the sea
son. This is a natural result of the transition
from war to peace. Buyers have waited for the
stabilization process to produce its expected ef
fect, and sales have been for immediate require
ments only. Little or no future buying is re
ported anywhere. This condition can not con
tinue long, for consumption is steady, and cer
tainly will increase if threatened advances in
prices are not forced to a point that exceeds
ability to pay.
With bank assets of nearly twenty-one bil
lions, with greater food supplies than in 1918
and the new crop coming on, with the labor
market such as to assimilate all the returning
soldiers, and industry generally getting back
to its steady swing, business conditions seldom
have been more encouraging in the United
States in midsummer. Faith and courage,
joined with enterprise, should secure for Amer
icans the great opportunity now offered by the
world's situation.
Flight of the "R-34."
When the R-34 ties up at Minneola, Long
Island, and this ought to be within a very few
hours now, another phase of voyaging by air
across the Atlantic will have been entered upon.
The American seaplane proved the feasibility
of passage by that means, and the British air
plane showed the nonstop flight to be possible.
Now comes the dirigible lighter-than-air ma
chine to demonstrate that what has long been
considered theoretically possible is practicable.
All that remains now is to arrange the sched
ule, build the ships, and the gadders between
the continents will be ready to provide the
traffic for the modern method of transportation.
These spectacular post-war feats hold a
peculiar interest for another reason. They mark
the downfall of a German dream of air domina
tion. Not many years ago, when the Zep
pellin was making its flights between German
cities, carrying passengers and attracting much
notice, a proposed flight to America was liber
ally exploited. It contemplated crossing by a
southern route, to avoid the anti-cyclone. Then
the Germans were reported to have charted the
air with great care, and were said to be pos
sessed of such knowledge of currents, drift and
the like as to have a tremendous advantage
over any rival. The Zeppellin failed as a war
machine, but its adaptability as a means of
transportation has never been questioned. Eng
land, however, has stepped in and won the
laurels to which the German promoters aspired.
Fancy must find new realms in which to soar,
for man's daring has eliminated the air above
and the waters below the earth as fields for
imaginative speculation. It will require a real
genius to provide a new thrill.
Buying the "Fontenelle Forest."
Several years ago The Bee suggested that
thestate acquire the wooded tract just south of
town, known then as "Child's Point," but now
more generally referred to as "Fontenelle For
est." Many practical as well as sentimental
reasons supported this then, and all are as
strong today. It is the largest tract of original
tree growth standing in the state, containing
fine specimens of indigenous timber, and for
this alone it ought to be preserved. No other
place in the state provides so efficient a bird
sanctuary as this, and the public has long been
educated to the advantages bird-life brings to
an agricultural community.
The movement of the Fontenelle Forest as
sociation to raise the money to purchase this
tract of ground and dedicate it perpetually to
the uses of the birds, and the public under cer
tain restrictions, is along a line that is not alto
gether novel, yet is quite uncommon in Omaha.
In commending the spirit that prompts these
people, and expressing a hope that their ven
ture will succeed, The Bee suggests that they
return to the original name of the tract. Cap
tain Child 'was a pioneer, and his memory is
worthy of commemoration at least to the ex
tent that is involved in retaining it in connec
tion with his former property. On the other
hand, Fontenelle, however great his claim on
posterity, has been signally and frequently hon
ored in other ways. We have a Fontenelle park,
a boulevard similarly designated, and many
private ventures keep the great chief's name
before the public. "Child's Point" was a land
mark for many years, and may well be re
tained as such.
Relief in Sight on Bread Prices.
Nebraska millers are said to be promising
a reduction in the price of flour, following the
present wheat harvest. This, of course, has
been anticipated. It will not be accompanied by
a corresponding drop in the price of wheat to
the farmer, who is guaranteed on the crop of
the current year by the government, but it
means that consumers are to get flour on the
basis of the open market for wheat. In Feb
ruary a Scotch authority placed the Liverpool
price of wheat for August at $1.10 per bushel.
Since that time some argument has been made
that world conditions would save our govern
ment whole against its fixed price to the farmer,
but developments scarcely warrant that belief
at this time. It is within the range of probabili
ties that the entire appropriation of more than
a billion dollars will be used. This is the first
step down the ladder of war prices, and when it
is taken, others must follow. The promise of
the Nebraska millers is 'an assurance that relief
for the public is not to be delayed a great while
longer.
The intoxicating property of a beverage is a
question of fact and not f law, says the De
partment of Justice. Just so; prohibition once
was regarded as a policy and not a principle,
but it was written into the fundamental law of
many states and finally into the constitution of
the United States.
Through German Eyes
From the London Times.
There are still people in Germany who be-'
lieve that a military dictatorship under 'Luden
dorff or Hindenburg is practical. Colonel Bau
er, late of the general staff, has just published a
pamphlet on "The Delusion of a Peace of Un
derstanding." His object, the preface states,
is "to lead all Germans without distinction of
party, along a path by which the ruin designed
for the nation may be avoided." The method is
to praise Ludendorff and Hindenburg, and to
blame Prince Max of Baden and the socialists
for the collapse of Germany.
Prince Max of Baden arid the majority so
cialists have always maintained that the hand
of the government was forced in the end of
last September, because Ludendorff and Hin
denburg declared that the German front would
collapse unless an armistice were obtained
within 24 hours. Their case, in short, is that
it was not until the army had declared itself
beaten that the government surrendered.
Colonel Bauer endeavors to refute this, and
to rehabilitate the generals. He quotes the
hitherto unpublished text of a memorandum by
Ludendorff read at a meeting of the party lead
ers of the Reichstag on October 2, 1918. Ac
cording to this document, Ludendorff urged
that "neither the army nor the civilians must
do anything that would show weakness
On the contrary, both must stand firmer than
ever. Whilst overtures for peace are being
made, there must be a united front, so that the
enemy may realize that, unless they offer an
acceptable peace, there is a resolute determin
ation to continue the war."
According to Bauer, neither Hindenburg nor
Ludendorff regarded the army as beaten. But
they foresaw that civilian weakness and the
civilian "delusion about a good peace" would
before long corrupt the army, and they were
therefore anxious to get an armistice whilst the
army was still unbeaten and powerful.
The moral of the pamphlet is Trust the
army and its leaders, and not the present gov
ernment of Germany.
The Frankfurter Zeitung has a cautious but
on the whole sympathetic article on the com
munistic rule in Hungary. The repeated ru
mors as to the fall of Bela Kun "come from
sensational newspapers in Vienna," and are not
to be trusted. For the present the communis
tic government seems to be the only one with
a chance of continued existence. The dictator
ship secures that counter-revolutionaries are
promptly dealt with, but the recent liberation
of hostages shows that Bela Kuhn feels fairly
secure. The army is well organized, and the
successes against Roumania and Czecho-Slo-vakia
have stimulated Hungarian patriotism so
that many who dislike the government tolerate
it because of its success.
It is more doubtful as to whether or not this
experiment in communism is likely to be suc
cessful. It is much better than bolshevism, as
it includes in the "working classes" intellectual
workers and many of the bourgeoisie. It press
es most hardly on property owners, and the
only serious trouble it has had to face is with
the peasant proprietors who are passionate in
dividualists. Communism has taken over gov
ernment under the worst possible conditions,
and any system might well fail. At present it
is interesting as the "opposite pole of the cap
italism ruling at Versailles"; both are too lop
sided to be secure.
The Cologne Gazette declares that the inde
pendent socialists are bitterly disappointed be
cause the new suffrage has not given a prole
tariat majority. They are proposing, therefore,
to change the basis of the suffrage so as to se
cure the absolute rule of the proletariat. It
quotes a writer in the Freiheit as saying that
"to bring about the necessary proletariat dic
tatorship, based on the system of workers'
councils, there must be a form of suffrage se
curing the unlimited power of the working
classes to establish socialization." The vote
now includes amongst "productive workers"
technical experts, architects, teachers, ' artists
and similar persons who are contaminated by
capitalism. It must, therefore, be reinforced.
In the first place, all those who are out of
work must be included. Next, all adherents of
the socialists must be included, whether these
be producers or not, as "they belong subjective
ly, although not objectively, to the working
classes." On the other hand, those hostile to
socialism must be excluded from the suffrage,
as-, for example, those who belong to antiso
cialist bodies, or who have spoken or written
against socialists or socialism.
If the proposal be genuine, it shows that the
extremists are taking over the old Prussian de
vice of doctoring the electorate.
French Art of Courtesy
No one can understand this French concep
tion of art, as no one could understand the
similar Greek conception, without distinguish
ing clearly between art and artifice. The first
comment of the Anglo-Saxon on all art is like
ly to be that it is artificial! his comment upon
the French life, itself an art, is that it partakes
too much of the quality of artifice. The diffi
culty is that such a comment assumes civiliza
tion as a natural thing, said Professor Erskine
in a recent lecture to his soldier students in
France. The Frenchman knows better. When
our mothers sent us to childhood parties and
CEUtioned us to behave naturally they did not
mean what they said; they meant that we should
wear our acquired arts of courtesy as though
they were natural.
In that sense all civilization is not natural,
and French life, being the most highly civilized,
has most the character of art. But the French
themselves are even more severe than we are
in condemning artifice, which to them is not art
but its most preverse enemy. Art for them
must be frank and sincere, a quite open control
of means to reach an intelligible ideal. There
is nothing secret about it; its glory is the large
part that reason and calculation frankly play in
it as any choice between good and evil should
be calculating and reasonable. Artifice, on the
other hand, is the putting on of disguise, the
assuming of methods which do not harmonize
with the genuine purpose; it is a too great em
phasis upon means and a too slight valuation
of the noble end. Art is, as it were, the con
trast or other pole to nature; it is the condition
which is reached when man has given an inter
pretation and a direction to the chaos of crude
experience. In between these extremes in ar
tifice, partaking of the. quality of both half di
rected, half meaningless. New York Post.
7T
The Day We Celebrate.
Rev. Ewald T. Otto, pastor of the St. Paul's
Ev. Lutheran church, bom 1881.
Habibulla Khan, Ameer of Afghanistan, who
has been making a display of hostility toward
the British, born 47 years ago.
John Alexander Steuart, well-known novelist
and journalist, born in Scotland, 58 years ago.
Helen M. Warrum, celebrated operatic sing
er, born at Greenfield, Ind., 27 years ago.
Dr. Joseph S. Ames, professor of physics in
Johns Hopkins university, born at Manchester,
Vt., 55 years ago.
Thirty Years Ago in Omaha.
Senators Dawes of Massachusetts and Jones
of Alabama, members of subcommittee op In
dian affairs, were in the city. Senator Mander
son, Congressman Connell and wife. Mayor
Broatch and Commissioner Bennett met the
visitors at the station.
About 150 Knights of Pythias left for Colum
I bus to attend the Pythian encampment there.
I Mrs. Thomas Swobe and her two sons left
I for Herkimer, N. Y., where they will spend the
summer.
General Hawkins of the army, who has large
property interests here, is in the city.
Friend of the Soldier
Replies will be given in this
column to questions relating
to the soldier and his prob
lems, in and out of the army.
Names will not be printed.
Ask The Bee to Answer.
Soldier's Birth Certificate.
Mrs. L. E. C. Your request is
not very clear, but if we under
stand it, you want to know how to
proceed to establish the birth of a
soldier who was killed in France.
If, as you say, the boy was born at
Ashland, Neb., in 1895, you should
write to the county clerk of Saun
ders county, Nebraska, addressing
him at Wahoo. Give him the par
ticulars as well as you can, and he
will give you Information as to the
records of the county concerning the
birth of the soldier. Give the name
of the midwife, if you can not tell
the physician's name, and the date
as nearly as you can fix it.
Many Questions Answered.
Babe F. We have no record of
the 22d transportation company hav
ing sailed from Brest. It is cer
tain, however, that all the units of
the American Expeditionary Force
will soon be out of France.
S. A. S. Can not tell from your
letter to what unit you have refer
ence. However, as all the forces in
France are being brought home as
soon as possible, it is pretty certain
that the soldier you are interested in
will soon be back in the home land.
B. J. Salvage unit No. 315 has
been stationed at Toul, where it is
employed at cleaning up and salvag
ing all material. The post will soon
be given up by the American forces.
The unit will probably shortly be re
leased for return to America.
Mrs. G. McK. We have no other
information regarding the soldier
you mention than is contained in
the published list to which you
refer. For information concerning
an individual soldier recourse must
be had to the office of the adjutant
general of the army at Washington,
D. C, you will be furnished with his
present address and reasons, if any,
for his not being reported as having
landed.
A Wife We have no information
with regard to the sailing date for
the 439th supply train.
DAILY CARTOONETTE
IT'cS RAINING, but pfvj
CrOiNCr TO utflR MY NEW
lM
SUIT iTUST TM
same'
loft aaT t JflSZtl
AND HFDID- m
'si n
Or,
J. he proof is irv
its matchless leatxty or
tone, its unrivaled
resonance, its actiorv-
delightfully responsive
to a,ny mood, not only
wkerv new, tut after
trie lapse of years
yxooC that tne
is the worlds firvestr
piano par none.
rlc us o shoxxr S
rotz now and xxrhy,
piar
A
The following is a list of pianos
to be found on our floors; some
of them we have handled for 45
years
Kranich & Bach,
Vose & Sons, Brambach,
Kimball, Bush & Lane,
Cable-Nelson and
Hospe Piano
Cash prices, or terms if you
prefer.
1513 Douglas St.
"Business Is Gooo.Thank You"
-WHY.
NOT
tut i
l.V. Nicholas oil Company
DREAMLAND
ADVENTURE
By DADDY.
"THK QUEST OF JOYOUSNESS."
(PcBSy and Billy, chaalns Joyouanraa.
hevs ii wonderful ride up a mountain ami
a thrilling coast down. Frowning Phil
miares thn fun and lien Into troubla ue
cauae ot his grouchlnaa.)
Phil's Wild Slide.
JUST as Frowning Phil and Wantit
Myway seemed about to slide
into the jaws of the hungry moun
tain lions waiting on the ledge at
the bottom of the cliff, they stopped
abruptly. Their coats had caught
on Jutting rocks, and they nun
suspended over the open mouths of
the snarling beasts.
Joyousness, standing at the door
of her house in the valley far below,
handed Peggy and Billy each a pair
of field glasses. With these they
could see plainly every movement
of Phil and the dwarf. The moun
tain lions, seeing their expected din
ner hanging Just out of their
reach, clawed vainly at the cliff
and leaped as high as they could.
One of the leaps brought a lion
within snapping reach of Phil, but
he, thrashing out with his foot,
kicked the lion right in the nose' and
sent it sprawling backward, tearing
mad.
Peggy and Billy couldn't help
laughing at this, but their laughter
was cut short when the glasses dis
closed wriggling, swaying creatures
in a rocky crevice close to P'hll and
the dwarf.
"Rattlesnakes!" whispered Billy.
Phil saw the snakes at that very
moment. Scared into a panic, he
gave such a jerk that his coat tore
free from the rock and down he
flopped right on top of the moun
tain lions, bringing Wantit Myway
tumbling with him.
The mountain lions were knocked
flat, and before they could rise
Phil and the dwarf had dug their
fingers deep into the creature's soft
DAILY DOT PUZZLE
They Hung Suspended Over the
Open Mouths of the Snarl
ing Beasts.
24
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butted him half way down another
bumpy incline. Bump, bump, bumpl
Phil landed right at the feet of Joy
ousness. And close behind him wu
Wantit Myway.
"You're Just in time for dinner,"
cried Joyousness. "The clock Is be
ginning to strike t. Half a mlnut
more and you'd have been too late,
for my dining room doors always
close on the last stroke!"
"()h, have you lota of frle
chicken and pineapple ice?" aske
Phil, rubbing his bruised head.
"We haven't any chicken or pln
apple ice. We have delicious porl
tenderloin and strawberry short
cake with Ice cream on top."
"Aw, shoot! I want chicken an
pineapple ice!" bawled Phil.
"Zowie! Over we go again," yelle
Wantit Myway disgustedly. Ht
flopped over on his head and Phi
flopped with him.
"Hurry," warned Joyousness. Peg
By and Billy followed Hopeful Smllei
and Cheer-Up into the dining room
to find spread before them a luclous,
mouth-watering, appetizing banquet
that was far beyond their hungriest
dreams.
"Bang!" sounded the clock on the
last stroke of six.
"Hang!" slammed the dining room
door. Frowning Phil and Wantit
Myway, still standing on their heads,
were left outside.
(Tomorrow will be told how the ehaa
for Jo)ouaneaa ends In a surprise.)
Noodle says "Trace fifty-one
And the picture will be done."
Draw from one to two and so on to the end.
fur. The lions, who had thought
they were going to have an easy
dinner, were startled by this unex
pected form of attack, and bounded
away down the mountain with Phil
and Wantit Myway clinging desper
ately to them. The lions were scar
ed, but they were not half so scared
as Phil and the dwarf.
Suddenly a wide chasm yawned
before the fleeing beasts. They
gathered themselves to leap it and
as they flew into the air Phil and
Wantit Myway tumbled off, landing
on a bumpy Incline. Bumpety,
bump, bump! went the two, with
worse bumps to come, for they land
ed right in the midst of a grazing
flock of mountain sheep.
The mountain sheep were scared,
and so they did the first thing that
popped into their heads they but
ted. Wham! a young buck sent Phil
bouncing in front of an old ram,
and wham! the old ram butted him
in front of the leader of the flock,
and wham! the leader of the flock
League of Nations Ensign.
The ensign adopted for the league
of natlunsf has three broad horizon
tal stripes, the top and bottom being
white and the center blue. It is real
ly the flag representing the letter
".1" in the international code
which is the universal language of
the sea with the colors reversed.
The design was selected principally
because it clashes in no way with,
any existing national flag.
Cruise the Great Lakes this Season
On the Palatial Steamers of the
Great Lakes Transit Corporation
Sailings from Dulutb Every Third Day.
Steel Steamers
OCTORARA, JUNIATA, TIONESTA
Leaving Dulutk at 9:30 P. M., Stopping at
Houghton Sault Ste. Marie Mackinac Island
Detroit Cleveland Buffalo
ORCHESTRA DANCING
"Ask anyone who has made the Trip."
Make reservations today for your Summer Vacation.
Through tickets to all ports east on sale at
Consolidated Ticket Office, or H. T. Cutler, Agent,
U. S. Trust Co., Omaha, Neb.
See the Midnight
Sun this Summer
So easy to reach.
First the Canadian Pacific
Rockies.
Then a luxurious
Canadian Pacific
Steamship
torn
-7 ffl
from Vancourer like sailing
on an endless lake, now wide,
now narrow past grotesque
totem poles and great salmon
canneries past gold nines
hustling town, and vast
shimmering glaciers into the
Magnetic North with its mid
night sun and restful silences.
And southbound a new en
chantment around the corner
of each succeeding island.
Settling Dat$$ Gladly Furni$hd
ak for Resort
'our No. S-O.
fHOS. J. W LL,
General
Canadian
Railway,
Clark
iQallTK'
A-ent
Pacific
140 S.
St..
Chicago, 111.
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i
Romance
and Your Summer Vacation
The Lakes and Mountains of Historic New York State
Hit the old romantic trails of the Mohegans and Iroquois; follow
Champlain and other pioneers down beautiful lakes and through
the high woods of the Adirondacks. Visit the Thousand Islands,
Niagara Falls, Saratoga Springs, Lakes George and Champlain,
Ticonderoga forts and battlefields that thrill with the sentiment
of five of our earliest wars now, more than ever, alluring to every
true American. You may camp out or live in luxury, anywhere
in this glorious out-of-doors. Accommodations to fit every purse.
Titles of Booklet.
AdiroiMlackt and Thousand
Island
Saratoga Springs, Lake George,
and Lake Champlain
Niagara Falls
New Bncland Lakes and
Mountains
New England Shores north and
east of Boston
New England Shores south of
Boston
New Jersey Seashore
NEW ENGLAND a little further East, offers an endless
variety of summer attractions; the White and Green Moun
tains ; the woods and lakes of Maine ; or the brilliant summer
life of world-famous seashore resorts.
ON THE NEW JERSEY COAST, from Cape May and
Atlantic City to New York Bay, there are forty wonderful, gay
beaches with thousands of splendid summer hotels, and all
the fascinating life, sports, and attractions of the seaside.
The United States Railroad Administration invite you to travel,
to enjoy this summer out-of-doors. Your local ticket agent, or the
nearest Consolidated Ticket Office, will help plan your trip. Illustrated
booklets of the sections mentioned, giving lists of hotels, and author
itative information have been prepared. Write for them. Mention the
section you desire to visit. Address:
United -States Railrqaj) -Administjraiion
Travel Bureau
143 Liberty Street
New York City
Travel Bureau
646 Transportation Buikjinf
Chicago
Travel Bureau
602 Healey Building
Atlanta
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