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. THF NS MADE FOR |School Chiliren |Planning Expert iz o %IKAKERS CONVENTION. To Sing Along the is M:’akflflf BRIVOY |y rentictonn ans anonid have souse | ach. beceses EE: OMAHA, FRIDAY JUNE 2, 1916 } 5 o o 5 e, ' the low scores and are paired to play | Bight Qualify in b el g g b o J. J. Fitzgerald plays Otto Rad- Seymour Lake Golf | ziewier H. C, Foster plays J. H. Parratt sntest | Dick Laverty plays John McCarthy. ( escribe s districts ‘Hr t b Route of Parade | & p. Goodridss of New York, one | {07 prescribed structures,” said the | (nctt it i 3 ihe ity Dlannick estach engayed New York man. “Other cities are s Braut s golf | George Frances plays Dr. William ! PR ¢ i =g \ € vlanning experts engaged |, qopting the plan of restricting cer- Bl Chaiht Ferislont. Grines 2 Berry. \Jour Days’ Sesslon of Dough Mizeesh. s 1ousand [by the City Planning board, is here sectio sidences and Other | rpape ailments weskon vour suat o Country club = All of these matches must be Organization Will Show Growth | dren, siging patri for a brici su i the city, He is|{sections f 185 or factories. I|wait, Use Dr. Boll's Pine.Tar-} has been con Out of the [played off by Sunday. v ninous chorus ) b lcdature o . 1 vs and I ) it ere the e r A rge field of golfers who participated ———————— of the Industry. BREAOUE CheRE, | 4 securing maps a a whic ave 1e city where the resi-|iays tne germ ATg [ f A ¢ the patriotic parade June 14 | work up at his « Starite fents of block may have an ordi- | arussists the fol g eight olayers turned in| Bee Want Ads Produce Results. ¢, EXHIBIT AT”}”HE AUDITORIUM No, the children are not to march e I'hey are not to be a part of the pa P de itself, but rather a part of the k - ss Master Bak- |2 ’ ¥ I:he Trans-Mississippi Maste . | general demonstration. They are to ers’ convention and exhibit, which|fe nacsed ou either side of the line will be held in the Omaha Auditorium, [ of march on the sidc lines. They are June 12 to 15, inclusive, is rounding [to be in groups and masses under into shape in a mar singing leaders and directors, so that , | America, Star Spangled Banner, and factory to the Omaha Master Bakers'| other patriotic songs may be sung in club, which will be the host for this | perfect unisoft important commercial gathering. It I* C. Byrne, member of the general is interesting to note the S“rpnsmg'u*mnnum‘ has received the definite word that all the railroads, freight facts with regard to the marvelous depots and offices will close on that growth of the baking industry in the | afternoon in time for the parade and United States during the last twenty | urge the cmployes to enter the pa- | years, and of the establishment and | rade rapid growth of all the various kinds John ‘I'. Yates, who Las charge of of machinery and equipment manu t the represcutations of the o e ey er verys satis- | | | | facturies that have grown up along 1 ion aterna orders of the city ith and as a necessary counterpar s called a meeting to he held in his s of the baking industry |office on the seventh A of the { Only two decades ago it would have | t thea Wa building | been well nigh impossible to find any- | Mon<du+ evening at & a'cl where in this country a baking estab- | The general commit.ee is to hold | lishment as large, for instance, as the ponm Jay Bur cery o U. P. Ste Bakery of Omaha day you coul hardly find a cit 000 or over i this country that has not to half a dozen large, mc equipped bakeries, with their auto ar horse deliveries distributing product not only to the grocers, | hotels and restaur but to the | homes of the peopie troughout 1he | SPecial Train i3 to " Bread Like Momer Baked. | Take H, 8, Cadets to 1 Notwithstanding the sentiment | about “bread like mother used to Valley En(-,ampmenf,‘ make,” the tendency toward the use | of bakers’ bread during the recent years has been very decide and the | demand for good, whole bakers bread is increasing fast ever in the history of th country, | There is a reason for this, and it lies, [ . o¢\ SPCCAT W baaakEe cars. dnd | 10 & yery Jarge extent, in the fact) Cil"leave the Union station. at! 9| o'clock in the morning, reaching Val- | ley forty-five minutes later Returning, the cadets will come tc Omaha on a Union Pacific specia train, leaving Valley Saturday morn ing at 10:30 o'clock, reaching Omaha at 11:15, June 10, To accc.nmodate visitors who de. | sire to go to the encampment, Thurs- | the home oven, and at a price that | 133 June & the Union Pacific will run | leaved Jittle fo be gained by thel® ~‘uw\’.a| train, leaving the Union de wife who makes her own bread, | POt at 9:30 ’l“,"” morning and on the | his-industry has been g & b3 ‘Tthl’lh trip, leaving Valley at 6 o’clock leaps and bounds and Jast year " th¢ evening of the same day reached the enormous output of $600,. | nion Pacific officials are urging 000,000 worth of bread in this country \\h"(” 4 "” the sRegmpment fo buy . The business of commercial bread | Neir tickets at the city office in order ‘ X' baking now ranks twelfth in volume |[? 3V0id the rush at the depot the among all our commercial enter day of 'I’r,m‘,“”'”” prises. The modern bhakery not only washes every part of the machinery that comes in contact with the floyr but purifies the very air or atmo New Pastor of the oohere.m which e oroy o oo | FPivst Baptist is to mixes the dough, transports it to the | e I oty ok ij Be Here Sunday Rev rencefsrth in prépara I'he gencral committee and the to hold a joint at the Commer subcommittees Friday ed for distribution among 1cusand flags have already | are to march | “Then Walter went to bed and read the Encyclopaedia Britannica,” —s0 runs a story in one of the current magazines. It was not a joke. That was the way he found enjoyment, Yet millions of people would regard the volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica as the last books in the world to be full of fascinating reading. But they are. Here are stories of How Captain Kidd Went Wrong (he was a New York shipowner up to 50); and about Sir Henry Morgan, the Buccaneer; about Hereward the Wake, and Ivanhoe, and Barba- rossa, and Robert the Bruce, and Davy Crockett, and scores of other boyish heroes. You can learn here how long a toad lives, or why a snake can’t cross ice; about Kite-flying, and measuring the wind; about the work of earthworms, or why dew falls, or what makes lightning, or how to tell mushrooms, or why a chameleon changes its color j— —scores and hundreds of interesting things for wide-awake, ambitious boys and girls—and grown-ups, too. (Of course the first and foremost thing that one seeks in an encyclopaedia is that it will answer pretty nearly every question that any human being can put to it—that he can rely upon it as the highest authority and that it shall be up-to-date. The Ency- clopaedia Britannica in its new Eleventh Edition is all this; but it is a huge mine of good reading as well.) There are 41,000 articles in the new Encyclopaedia Britannica. They are not heavy; they are not dull. Every one of them is wriften by an expert, many by the highest living authority. They tell you everything you want to know, about pretty much everything on earth, and they tell it with interest and charm. You can go exploring in the new Britannica for weeks or for months and every day find something new. Take for example The Union Pacific has lined up the | schedule for handling the Omaha High school cadets to the an e campment at Valley, next Monday he special will “consist of ten | vday than | that the up-to-date bakery, with its washed air and strictly sanitary ar rarigements and equipment, its sci entific blending of the best qualities | A & of flour and other necessary ingre- | dients, its thoroughly regulated ovens | and absolutely cleanly methods of handling the bread after it has come from the oven, can produce bread far superior to the average product of oV and afterwards wraps it in air-tight waxed paper without the touch of Hu ¥ 4 man hand | Dr. Delarme is a graduate of the A. A DeLarme, D. D., of Me Keesport, P to begin his pas torate in the First Baptist church of Omaha Sunday, June 4 i Prays for Return seminary G 3 | Chester, Pa., and received his degree 0ing to Norfolk |irom Stetson’ universivy. Fia i | Pl M | previous pastorates have been in New For nearly seventy-two hours John | Haven, Conn.; Norristown, Pa.; Pat A. Chase has remained upon his | cr A on, N. I'; Connellsville and M bended knees and prayed hystericaily [ Keesport, Pa. At McKeesport, the | for the return of “Billy” Sunday. He [place from which he comes, he spent a dozen subjects at random, like these : 15 confined in a cell at the county jail [nine years and nine months, and had and will be taken t isylum for [a ve successful pastorate 7/ 2 - M the insane at Norfolk during the next| At the special request of the Grand g Character and Achievement § Exploration and Adventure few days Army of the Republic post he gave Does your taste run to the lives of * Here are the lives of all the great Chase lived jn Albright with his|the Memorial day address, May 30, reat men—Caesars, Napoleons—ofna- explorers, Marco Polo, da Gama, '\ family, but soon after the tabernacle [ which is the fourth time that he has lon-builders, of founders of religion, Drake; the story of all the Famous evivals his mentality became af-|spoken at these servic which are or great generals or inventors or dis- Voyages and First Discoveries, all fected, his friends say, and lately |attended by between 5,000 and 6,000 coverers, pioneers in trade or in the about the South Sea Islands, or the Billy” Sunday is his sole topic of | peonie settle nwn{ufncw countries? Do you riches of Alaska, or the heart of the conversation | love to read the lives of your favorite * Uganda, or the strange people who Deputy sheriffs have heen unable| STRAWBERRIES AND RED authors or of famous statesmen or of live in Thibet upon the “‘roof of the to budge him from his prayers [ INK M eplendid women? There are 9,000 world”; all about the Pygmies and VANY TOVSEFK DRY FARM | AKE A BAD MIXTURE biographies in the new Britannica. Cannibals, and other strange peoples. ! il Y ."., 9N e boe oL Viba Fadkaiia nbitriot Natural History Preparation for Citizenship HOMESTEADS NEAR DONGLAS | got mixed up with a lot of rude Do you go in for botanizingor plant There is nothing in American his The Burlingt f el ?\m,’..‘”:,"‘y bihas '\T,:‘\ .( raising ? EI’U you love tostudyall the tory or American tradition that is sl ttcuilond ¢ . ! e astonishing varieties of life upon the nof exhaustively treated in the new to the t j""‘v‘fi Al I“-;"‘ W,“' mflv’!- ~Vvlr\\{ft‘r;vr’: earth ‘..fh.;,\»v.- its past history, in Britannica. There you may read of las, Wyo. 1T AT Ted tisi thar s ealiaahs fossil remains of extinct plants what is the Monroe Doctrine or what agO ar be in Omaha the night | the flon X ,“,1' ‘," ‘1,' 1t 1 ‘c :”,r‘ ‘”w:,‘ and animals)? Do you want to know kind of preparedness Washington when extra cars will be . il e i heon: Caris something about the new theories of and Jefferson believed in ; or ng:m( commodate the Omaha | tr 5 PR : ol heredity —about “‘Mendelism,” 80 a8 Wage Laws, and Tariffs, and Trusts, continment Rratiihera L 2 2 | The New “Handy Volume'* Issue of the Encyclopaedia Britannica is a marvel of toraise better chickens, or primroses, ;””#‘ cialism, and Currency, and : L it HE : H( e wa 8 pac kage of ’-M‘ | lightness and compactness—32 inches of shelf room ; weighs 52 pounds. You can or children? 'Here are articles on _thousands of other things. the’ road’s land B s M el A move it around the room or putitin your trunk when you're away for the summer - every phase of all these subjects, h - e road's and added to the bl ct of the 2 arth Marvels gndBimen | iok et b e o hHid Business and Trade Life in the Country Universities and Education Travel and Investigation Would you know of the grander an i wHCHEAE Is e Here are endless articles nhout Is there any side of country life Would you know the histories of Would you know what tracts of nu-l'"m“ of nature —about volcanoes, ities of America earth are still uninhabited, or where * earthquakes and avalanches and rand the rest? Or o6 yagt stretches of unexplored | Whirlwinds and tidal waves and ty tohacco or rubber or leather or or fur or wine—all about the necessar e proc BUILDING ACTIVITIES MOPE gar which t‘\[»"\‘l?l”)’ appeals to you? If famous univers yin you like the outdoors purely f:\rp]n'\', Harvard and Yal a f « de of the world, coal production you will find interesting articles in of Oxford and Cambridge and Edin- 1,1 4¢. would vou know of Labradoror Phoons ? Would you know of glaciers L ions of the Mond t. This g e O raduetion. “All Mot iron the Britannica on Fishing, Hunting, burgh? Orof theSorbonne or Heid the Tar e Frao O Kaneor % and fcebergs and the wonder caves ides that each applicant may file FOR MAY AND FOR YEAR and w,,.? and copper and other met. Shooting, Sailing, and all the other bergand Jena? Orabout the famous it B1CE P © R A5 TEER BF ike those of Kentucky or the great a mestead of aCTe . | \ 1l 'shout B ing and Finance Outdoor games If you are inter- wniversities of the past-—-at Bagdad i ‘M, Cor ']41 3 v0-land. or CADYODS and deserts and jungles? , land i I ng operations in May reached ”"”"i o cks and Bondsand 1abor Lew. €sted in agriculture, thereis no end and Cordova or at Alexandria when e Arctio dournens? Hore are YU an readin the Britannica articles pid : 102 | 510 Y ot N TE 1o the things you need to know—and the Greeks ruled in Egypt? Would 0.8 ATCHO JOBIROYS ' H6N 4 upon scores of subjects such as these, oo e 1 e islation and Arbitration and Profit- o6 data mathods are importantfor you know of all the theories of edu. Articles by Nansen himself and doz. = 2 artment 1 Bleh ware | -\:wwv"“‘:""" every farm, small us well as large. cation, and the lives and preceptaof ©ns of other \wwl"“-"'“’-""l-"’l Religion and the Bible % k 2 ng i 2 el of practical ¢ C The Britannica contains the best in- Pestalozzi and Froebel and all their venturers to give you first-hand Would you imagine offhand that CONVENTION DELEGATES p . ths S lism, Free Trade, and the formation about every wfnw!n(mvm successors? You can read them all knowledge of things you most want " 5 ginore \.»..X‘k dia would con FROM COAST HERE SATURDAY |vears May last year S8R0, I8 ‘I 3‘ h inge » 1 why prices ern farming, '}“"“""}‘ Vicken rais in the Britannica to know tain a total of 532 articles on Biblical s 2 A ' ' 1) al nd nea nll of t ing and no end of similar things. R Criticism, 1840 articles dealing with \ g Or 8 : are written by the most d , Literature and the Arts Beautifying the Home the History of Christianity, 583 arti / g \ R4 ving economist The Householder's Needs Are your tastes for poetry or pi e o fn Suon » cles on Comparative Religion, and J t - If you are—or hope to be—tha tures, o8 Pede o eax 1514 articles on all the different re . ! Sports and Games owner of & home, there is no more archi s Lt CAR MAX® ligious beliefs of the earth? And .8 \ known game, indoor as well fa | l'.-rl th ."Av tlw. all ,’.lvnu *\M ( bedanc t have stood the tHeY are very instructive reading : . ancient and modern A house nd | nardo da Vin sast of Gma—in besutiinl furnt A Mechani et he new Britannica—264 not a o 1o know all about “primitives’’ of the Dutch or Fle of Sime= autie) fura mateur Mechanics pass § Today And A A tilat nitation, heating and schools? Do yo to know about “’ —_ e ‘ ’ % Or are your tastes for motor ears, h . tlos « ne he other essentials, Hut you ean the Parthenon or Wagner's Jlass, China WAT®, or motor hoats, or photography, or : Ny I ' to these subjects-—and many dram son Ayt or Thomas Har. Ceramies, Etel ¢ bject or w s ? Here are hun w . ' I ent nd find all you want to f1 t 1 ! thousands of de es and the work ' e w in one set of b s, the n ] of gh but f ¢ 2 fa ngs of every ¢o Y The Might of time makes i think of : v : ks, the new o T ' i o h o ery concelvable kind of J ' the futwre. The baby of today reflects v [ NY MORE BOYS Our Remarkable Offer ' : MANY MORE BOYS THAN emarka ; Two Books FREE GIRLS BORN IN MAY ' Hand me | laus new brings the Britannion within the res ! ands of AS W | *11l sand you & splendidly lilustrated baak of | w o thousa of pers ho ¢ 1 v [ A enuntle Mlere . o ve - . . . Vher stveteh withoud widue pain, there s 48 g P . . shaanee of diteoms, e Barve Are el - weth A pe by laking away (he burden of leaving sl & : : stiral e - akdiann, - ot B In Motbar s Priend” the dreet and eliate belp What all expaetast moth ' N . ' N . . s tepirn, Lond by el own Mand. guidel CONDITION OF COTTON CROP | issad reitef from ‘moraing skchbass rassit oo watue rete b They eapetion TY.SEVEN PER CENT |04, ] Sty vest I % Indend ot Priend hottle b ¥ drapgisl. Then @ okl B €5 44 La v, Ablasia taining and v "k ookt €or prestated Wil wriling