Omaha B tINDAY PART FOUR AMUSEMENTS PART FOUR EDITORIAL IBlEE THE VOL. XLIX NO. 50. By EDWARD BLACK. tyor Smith and his colleagues of the city commission are going to vacate, one at a time, during the summer, on their annual vaca tions. It might be properly stat ed that there will be a summer time hegira of municipal chiefs. They will, however, arrange their going so that there will be at all times at least a quorum on the works. i It would be rather bromidic to assert that the mountain won't come to the mayor; therefore, thi mayor will go to the mountain, foe the latter will be the case. The mayor is going to the moun tain, or father to a mountain. He had the Colorado . mountains measured for their -altitudinal su periority and he selected one near Wauneta for his lofty retreat. May6r Smith will" hie away from the din of saxophones, claxons, mosquitoes, chiggers, alarmj clocks, jazz and council manic syncopations. He is going to ensconce himself in the .ma jestic solitude of his mountain top isolation, ten miles from the nearest oil-filling station and far 'He Quit,' Shouts Pixley; L. Jiot Retort nr ' i . Departure of J. E. David son to Coast Regarded With' Suspicion - By C. of C. All bets are called off. Admission charges willT)e refund ed. ' And gloom permeates the Cham ber of Commerce. For the ''big added attraction" of the Chamber of Commerce field .day at Elm wood park on June .5, a bi cycle race between J. A. Davidson; vice president of the Nebraska Power company, and W. A. Pixley, president of the Truck and Tractor corporation, will not takevplace. Chances of its taking place have vanished in the horizon, or more lit erally, in a Pullman compartment of , the. Overland Limited. Davidson Goes to Coast t A week ago Mr. Davidson left, ae- parted, deserted foresook, or, in 'plain American, "beat it" from ' Omaha. . '' "' , ; , ; He went to Pasadena, Cat, for the eight-day convention of the National Electric Light association. ' His departure was regardded with suspicion by Mr. Pixley and ps trainer, King Denmen, but the full meaning of it failed to penetrate until last week when Mr. Davidson's secretary announced that Mr. David son, ex-amateur bicycle race cham . piort of Michigan, would return to Omaha five days too late for the big . This news left both men speech Y.."jfor fullv a minute. Then the storm broke in all its fury. Questions Rival's Motives. "I knew it," were Mr. Pixley's first words. "I knew he was afraid of me. He knew I was just as good as I ever was. He knew I'd, beat him, so he beat it. Can you beat it?" "Just when I was about to score a great triumph over Harry . B. Whitehouse," groaned King Den men, biting his fingernails. "I was developing a secret training process for you that would have made you a superman a new white hope. Just "when I had a chance to prove I was the greatest bicycle trainer in 'the world. This is too much. Now I haven't even got a job as a trainer!" Whitehouse Shouts Grief. 'I don't believe it." declared Mr. Whitehouse when informed of his charge's capitulation. "It can't be true. He'd have won in a wallAway with me training him. I cut sirloin steaks, pies, coffee, tea and other drinks such as er near beer off his menu the first thing not to men tion cigars. "If he'd lived through the training - period, he'd, have broken all records. I was so sure he'd win that I bet S250 on him with Harvey Milliken. There certainly ought to be rejoic ing in the Pixley camp tonight. I call that a fine show of grati- though, after Id arranged the V' U:...1- lst nut i k 4 All Hope Is Gone. . v "The whole thing started , when The Bee published pictures of old time bike riders in its Rotograveure Section, and Pixley and Davidson Ot to bragging around about how 7 "' . ' .) , away from the importunate in dividual who asseverates: "I want to see the mayor." ' May Yodel at Will. Here he may yodel with-insouciance and vehemence if he wishes and none will say him nay. He will see the top of the morning in its roseate splendor. He says he has had a surfeit of crowds. The psychology of the mob, he avers,' may be all right in books and the movies, but he yearns for the psy chology of vast stretches of un broken skyline, . with pine trees piercing the morning haze and in vigorating air cooling the hectic flush of urban strain. On the top of the world he will sit alone; no profane noise mar ring the serenity of the outlook; no troublous thoughts trodpipg in to disturb his musings. Just him self and the mountain. He stated that during the first three or four days of his moun tain life he will sletfp 20 hours each day, a sort of soporific sat urnalia. ' Doubt i-sat Lions. Mountain goats will disport themselves blithely, hither and From - Rival . ; : U4QQY B, MIT HOUSE THE C4USE Of ITALL - good they used to be. But it was up to me to put it over.'.' Mr. Whitehouse waved his hands with a resigned gesture, signifying that he was through with it all. And thus ends all hope that the two prominent business men would cast aside a score of years and bounce across the turf on high wheeled bicycles in a quarter mile race, as they did in the days of yore. British Girls Can't Dress - Well; Make Poot Actresses London,. May 2?. "One of the. main reasons why there have been so few outstanding film 'stars' in this country is that the average British girl does not know how to wear her clothes," a British film producer told the Daily Mail. "It is not because they do not have the latest fashions, or because they cannot afford them. Takeu merely from the fashionable point of view, British girls are always up to date and. spend a great deal on their clothes. But, judging by the girls who come to me for film work and those already in my employ, they do not seem to know how to carry them properly.". Women Planning to Wear Quaint Pilgrim Costume Plymouth, Mass., May 29. South Shore women of 1920 may revive the quaint Pilgrim costume of three centuries ago to wear during the tercentenary celebration of the landing of the Pilgrims. A suggestion made by leaders in celebration plans that the demure, plain gowns, with the white cap and kerchief, be again adopted is being considered. It is pointed out that this simple dress would be a good thither, from crag to crag, if this mountain has any crags. The mayor, said he will not lose any sleep on account of the goats, but somebody told him about moun tain lions and that caused him to wonder whether his equanimity would be tested if. a pair of lions should visit, him during the night. He also realizes that mountain life lacks some of the advantages which the city dweller enjoys. He will not be able to stop the ice cream man, at eventide and buy a cone, . nor will he scan the base ball score board along about four bells of the p. m. "Bill's" Idea of Life. "Bill" Ure enters a plea of guilty to the indictment that he is a fisherman. The usual scene of his piscatorial adventures is in Minnesota, . whither he motors every year, when- the asphalt be gins to yield to the footfall of man and beast and when the hay fever addicts resume their annual plaint. He is a votary of the an cient and honorable sport which was popularized by Isaac Walton, who was born at Stafford, Eng land, August 9, 1S93, according to 'You're Lucky He Did,' Gamp in Bike Eace Row : I tvk Jtfi ': i f& if n .: . 1 1 js .1 ; ft y ":.. W.IAM A. &XLEV mO 4DMIT& ME $ AS GOOD4SEIE& economy move to defeat the high cost of living. .tnotner teature in' preparation is a bronze statue of 1 he Pilgrim Mother," by Henry H. Kitson, the sculptor, to be seven and on-half feet high. This will be the gift of fhe National Society of New Eng land Women,, of which Mrs. Richard H. Greene of New York, is chairman of the tercentenary committee. The statue will be un veiled this fall. Served' Divorce Notice, - . Threw Infant to Floor (By International News Bcrrlec.) Danville, 111., , May 29. It made Mrs. Charles H. Wilbur so mad when she was served with a notice that her husband had filed a suit for divorce she hurled her 3-weeks-old infant to the floor. The child is at the point of death in a hospital. Mrs. Wilbur was immediately ar rested. ' Taken to jail, she continued to rave for three hours, when police vere"abfe to quiet her. bjeto OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 30, 1920. an approved cyclopedia. ' During these periods of ecstatic expectancy Mr. Ure goes into a sphinx-like silence, , much to the chagrin. of other members of his family. When he is out on one of hist excursions, endeavoring to lure some unsophisticated fish to his hook he will neither, speak nor be spoken to. With a pipe in his mouth, and a fishing-rod in his hand, he believes tha't the last word of mental rejuvenation has been attained. Willie Puts One Over. Last summer, while holding his fishing-rod with a calm and col lected conscience, his . son, Willie, brought a note, to him. His sur prise was such that he dropped his pipe on" the bottom of the boat and, frightened away an under water prospect that had been con templating a nibble. The note read: "Frances wants to know if you are catching any fish." He scribbled the reply: "What do you suppose your father is out here for? Trying to drown the w6rms?" Mr. Ure does catch fish while on these outings. Last season he landed one that bore evidence of KNG DENMAN-wiiG)1 LOST J094S PXLEYS TRANEQ, 3 J.EDAVDSOM MO S ACCUSED OF"QUNMN&. OOf'OF TtE &4CZ This Oil City Grocer Man Is Meanest Profiteer Oil City, Pa., . May 29. Here's the way they profiteer in Oil City: One grocer received a barrel of sugar. He put it up in one-pound packages and offered it for sale at 19 cents a pound, no other purchases being necessary. A rival merchant hired a group of small boys to buy the sugar for him and then he placed it on sale for 23 cents, with the re striction that the purchaser must buy other goods. Suggest Mail Course for : Uncultured War Profiteers Vienna, May 29. A school to give instruction by post to war profiteers and their wives has been founded in Vienna. The prospectus lets wealthy clients down lightly by saying: "So cial fife has been altered by post war conditions, and many find them selves in need of instruction in the usages of modern soci ' " having been hooked during the previous season and Mr. Ure knows just as well as he knows his way home that this fish was one that he nearly caught on a previous occasion. This vacationist can go fishing, teach a Sunday school class and at the same time let his con science be his guide without "turning a hair," whatever that means. He insists that bald headed men are the most success ful fishers, and he is willing to prove it. v "Mermaid Daniel." Dan Butler is the aquatic champ of the city hall. He is, willing to allow Bill Ure to carry away the blue ribbon for catch ing a few bullheads, buj when it comes to swimming, Dan tells the work! that he' must be teen be fore the judges make thefr awards. Mr. Butler is going to spend his vacation in the water. When Omahaiis are asking each other, "Is it hot enough for you?" he will be splashing around like a porpoise in a Minnesota lake, Corps of Seamstresses .. Will Fabricate Giant . Balloon for Cup Contest , . ' . i. Fort Omaha Officers Turn to Women for Aid in Con structing Big Gas Bag More Deft Than Men, They Assert. ' They're going to turn the big sheet-iron balloon shed at Fort Omaha into a dressmaking estab lishment with seamstresses, sewing machines, cutting tables, 'n'every thing. Lieut. Col. Jacob Wuest, commanding officer at the fort, de sired it so, and the director of air service at , Washington, Maj. Gen. Charles Menoher, authorized it. But they aren't going to turn out dainty feminine "garments, or even sturdy uniforms, in the gaunt struc ture where so many Omaha boys learned to wrangle a bull balloon patch leaky fabric, or repair fraying rigging. Instead, they're going to cut out and fabricate one of the most remarkable spherical balloons ever constructed, to carry the army colors in competition in the international Walloon race for the Gordon Bennet cup next fall. To Use Improved Fabric. 'Colonel Wuest and A. Leo Stev ens, civilian instructor at the fort, agree the balloon will represent con siderable achievement when it is completed. "In the first place, it will be the first army balloon construct ed entirely at an army batlo6n school, by armyv employes, under military direction. " In the second place, they point out, it will be one of the first balloons constructed of a new fabric of linen and cotton de veloped as an ideal balloon cloth. The balloon will also be in the class of the . largest spherical balloons in existence, plans being to make it of 80,000 cubic feet capacity. In order to complete the balloon outfit, Mr. Stevens, who has been put in charge of the work, intends to recruit his corps of seamstresses and cutters at once. He prefers women fabric workers, he explained, because they are more deft at cut ting the cloth exactly to pattern and at assembling it accurately. Women Best Balloon Makers. "It takes men to fly 'em, but women to build 'em," 'Mr. Stevens explained. Accuracy is the first essential in constructing a balloon, Mr. Stevens maintained, in order that the com pleted job will be a perfect sphero'd. As the balloon will be made of panels, assembled into zones, and the edges of the zones sewed to gether to complete the bag, ex tremely careful workmanship will be necessary. There will be 1,800 panels in the gas bag, Mr. Stevens said, and each one will be cut to its own pattern. Felled seams will be used at all edges, and panels will he staggered to gain strength. Care In Making Net . The same care must be used in ty ing the net to no over the inflated bag, Mr. Stevens pointed out. This net.which must be constructed en tirely by hand, must be so tied that when finished it will just fit the sur face of the inflated bag.- It will be made up of row after row of dia mond meshes, tied with single sheet bend knots at each corner, with each row of diamonds slightly larger than the vrevious row. Enlisted tpecial- 1 D with his birthday suit sufficiently covered to meet the requirements of the board of censors. He does not contemplate entering a Mack Sennett contest. He enjoys sun ning himself on a sandy beach and being nearly covered over .with wet sand. He is particular who gives him the sand bath. A Minnesota miss almost threw sand in his eyes. After that ex perience, he close his eyes. Dashes for Wild Wood. . Roy N. Towl, generalissimo of the public improvements depart ment, makes a dash for the wild wood when the time arrives for his annual recess , of rest and recreation. He loves to pene trate the virgin, forest and attune his ears to the music of the wind as it plays through the boughs of the trees as upon a lyre. That's what he said. The growl of a bear in the distance adds a bit of charm to the scene, and to stum ble upon a snake now and then lends a thrill that only the veteran outer can appreciate. He enjoys to stroll in idle fancy; listening to the rustling of the leaves and the ists will have charge of this work, he said, because of their long prac tice The balloon valve and other accessories will also be made by en listed men at the fort. When all the stitching has been completed the work of varnishing the fabric to make it gas-tight will begin, Mr. Stevens said. The balloon will be stretched out on a large table and the initial coat of balloon var nish applied. A secret preparation, known only to Mr. Stevens, vill be compounded for .this use. Once the entire fabric has been impregnated, the balloon will be carefully laid on clean floor cloths and inflated with air. Additional applications of var nish will be made until the fabric is as imprevious to gas as it can be made. . . Diameter to be 53 Feet The gas bag of the new balloon will be about S3 feet in diameter, Mr. Stevens said. It will weigh about 980 pounds. If made of the two-ply, rubberized fabric formerly used it -would weigh considerably more than a ton. When inflated and rigged for a flight, the entire outfit will stand more than 70 feet in the air, and be taller than many modern six-story buildings. The balloon inflated with hydro gen is expected to lift a useful load of at least 6,000 pounds, exclusive of a poilot and an assistant. Inflated with coal gas, which has somewhat less lifting power, the useful load is expected to be about 3,600 pounds. Balloon pilots at the fort believe that such a lift will make possible a longer flight than ever accomplished in an 8,000 cubic feet balloon in an international race. 'Will Be The "Fort Omaha." The balloon is to be named the "Fort Omaha.".The pilot to navigate the craft in its maiden race has not yet been named, but officers at the fort are confident hat Col. Wuest will be accorded the privilege. It is thought likely that the balloon will have its first test with gas when it is inflated for the race, although it may be completed in time for a test flightvfrom the fort. The balloon will be too large-to be taken through the doors of the balloon shed when inflated? .Mr. Stevens also has charge of the construction of a duplicate of this balloon for E. B. Weston of Dayton, O. It is to be known as the "Elsie Delight," for a member of Mr. Weston's family. Mr. Stevens and Mr. Weston will race in this balloon. ' Eliminations in September. - An elimination race to select the three American representatives in the finals of the Gordon Bennett cup contest will be held September 14, from Indianapolis. In addition to the Weston balloon and the "Fort Omaha," three balloons from "St. Louis, representing the Missouri Aeronautical society, have been en tered. Tentative acceptances have also been made by J. C. McCoy of New York City, holder of American balloon pilot's lice"s No. 1, and Charles Gliddeu of Boston. Both tn. PRICE FIVE buzzing of the bees. He said so. The birds that sing from sun to sun arouse the music of his soul and a pinching bug now and then arouses his interest. The com missioner assures the timid natur alist that there are no wild women in the wildwood. While in the woods Mr. Towl climbs trees and makes grasshoppers spit tobacco. Play is Work to Dean. Dean Ringer, commissioner of police, neither swims, flies nor plays a ukelcle when he goes a cavationing. He owns a 40-acre fruit farm in Traverse Bay, Lake Michigan, ' and to this land of fruited trees he directs his course when he begins his summer so-' journ. On this plot of terrain he works from morn until "night, garbed like a primitive toiler. He grubs and prunes and then prunes and grubs, and after several weeks of this avocation he calls it a vaca tion and returns to the world which he left behind. "By his fruit ye shall know him in the good old summer time," a city hall wag said. Commerce High Pupils To Essay Glen Olander and Miss Geraldine Olson have been chosen by Miss Mary Irene Wallace, ' dramatic coach at the High School of Com merce, to take the leading parts an the play "As You Like It," which will be presented by June graduates of Commerce High on June 9 and 10 in the Central High school audi torium. Olander will take the part of "Orlando," while Miss OIsqii will portray "ROsnlind." Other graduates who wilt take ptrt in the play are Paul Wurn, as the "Duke," Eldon Langevin as "Jacques," Albert Robinovitz as "Jacques de Bois," Dave Swartz as "Amiens," Ben Adler as "Touch stone," Edgar Welch as "Silvius." Walter Sebron as "Coron," Francis Ihm as "Adam," Leon Gross . as "William," "Esther Holsten as "Celia," Hedvika Reznichek as "Audrey," Mildreth Greeling as "Hymen." Ruth Djureen will de liver a prologue. There will be four dances. Those served as majors in the balloon service during the war, and both were stationed at Fort Omaha dur ing their service. The finals of the race will start early in October, according to the present plans of the Aero club of America, in charge of the race. The starting point has not yet been se ftcted. Omaha is strongly consid ered, because of the proximity of the army balloon school. The ques tion of gas supply is one of the serious questions now being consid-; ered. Man Falls In Love With Picture; Weds Original Springfield. III.. May 29 Four years ago, when Raymond R. Good rich of this city, was a doughboy on the Mexican border, he picked up a Chicago newspaper and saw the pic tnre of a pretty girl. Dan Cupid, with an arrow all ready to fire, was hiding behind the picture. He let go the bow as Goodrich looked, and the arrow pierced his heart deep. A few months later Goodrich was transferred to Fort Sheridan. Shortly- afterward he met the girl Mis3 Mary L. Stewart. Now the two are to be married soon. This was ail disclosed in a recent announcement of the wedding. . CENTS -Wtii Tom Falconer has another idea and he appears to be proud of it. The commissioner of parks and boulevards will spend his vaca tion this summer in Portland, San Francisco and Los. Angeles, where he will wander in and out of the parks and motor along the boulevards. He believes there will be more hilarity in this than in, pruning fruit trees. Besides, he has a friend who owns a movie show in San Francisco and he wilt see the movies there "for noth . ing." ' Before duly sworn, upon his oath, Harry Zimman, ' testified that he had not lost anything on a mountain top nor in any Min nesota lake, and that he would gather play pinochle than go swimming or fishing. He has set his vacation time back to the fall, when the game birds begin to wing their flight southward. When the autumnal mornings are crisp, he will saunter away to the Nebraska hunting grounds. This is what he will eat: Green onions, limberger cheese, hard-boiled eggs and bread, and he will drink . "sody pop." He said so. Thespian Art taking part in the first dance who are called the "Morris Dancers" are Helen Stenicka, Ida Knepper, Mildred Cone, - Gladys Conney, Clara Schneider and Ida Fleisher. In the dance of the "Attendants to Hymen" the following will take part: Vera Manning, Emily Stone, Ida Knepper, Gladys Conney, Helen Stenicka, Clara Schneider, Mildred Cone, Ruth Djureen, Fanny Alperin, Hazel Anderson, Zetta' Reeve and Dorothy Wyrick. The third dance will be a coun try dance by "Shepherds and Shep herdesses." Those taking part are: Eva Neilsen, Laura Givot, Florence Thorpe, Mildred Pease, Gertrude Williams, Grace Stanley, Moleigh Pace, Beatrice Cone and Lena Berg. The fourth dance, which will end' the play, will be a square dance by the following: Glen Olander, Ger aldine Olson, Albert Robinovitz, Esther Holsten, Edger Welch. Sarah Abrams, Ben Adler and Hedvika Reznichek. Woman Hurt Fleeing From Mouse Gets $1,500 Verdict Kansas City, Mo., May 29. A mouse brought $1,500 damages to Mrs. Pearl Smith in the court of Judge Lucas here the other morning. Mrs. Smith charged in her suit that she sustained injury to her spine and head when she fell on a loose piece of board while fleeing from a cook who held the mouse by its tail. Her injuries were sustained while she was employed in the lunch room of the. Western Union .Tele graph company. . . i The defense of the company was that the cook was not performing any duty for it when he chased Mrs. Smith with the live mouse. . Injured Man Puts Value Of $500 on Sense of Smell Atlantic City, N. J.t" May 29. In a suit fifed in the district court here, John W. Johnson fixes the value of his sense of smell at $500. He asked this amount in damages from Arthur English, who, he al leges, Destroyed his sense of smell when he struck him on the nose in an alleged unprovoked assault. The nose eaved in undr th im. pat of the Jlow and has since failed to perform us functions,