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14 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE, SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 1800—~TWENTY PAGES. ' | sttco,. On these points is a manager who will | wonld not do, and that was acknowledge that [ any other team iy fhe countryl- | with those of the cast, Ans,—Tiwenty twers It was Kearn's Sensible Views, \ n: venty Awor® It was not. _ 1 have never used a glove on second base,” | ‘The Omaha wheel club run to Bellevue | Please state in your Sunday Ber how and A tnir. A | Was greatly enloyed by a fine attendance, It | what to play with the base ball playing cards, A Revi f The Spring Shooting | Fomarked Kearns the other evening. “A | was the first run of the vernal season, and | ywhich have seventy-two cards in the deck eview o J pring I good many second basemen are using a glove | the members were delighted with the outing. | and they rank from catcher to right fielder; Beason, on the left hand now-a-days, but I have never : ‘:l" ':“l e l;; ;n conducted the yrun |||'r‘\“‘ll and greatly obligei—58, city. s difieult to | 10DY shape. There were seventeen starters | — o ¢ Ay S felt the necessity of it. 1t is more dificult o | g tho trip down was against a strong head- Ans.—If you have @ deck of the cards hnd | hold a thrown ball with a glove. Ball play- | wind, The whole turt v B » | the board that goes with them, you certainly THE GUN OLUB'S INTENTIONS. | ;iare carrying the glove racket too | ol Purtiouy oRing DGR 10419 | ciott €0 D6 abIG e e Now the gama 18 —_— “When there is one man out and a man on The members | played. You shuffie the cards, then turn them third, do vou deem it the proper thing to | suncil last Tuesday evening were | over one at a time, and the instructions on t have the infielders play in close to head off whilst listening to the petition | face tell you of the'play and how to scor made merr remonstr: A Team's Success Kearns' Views the Weekly Wheel """‘"l" i aliaod Bodh anite" . qress | Otiven n.,,‘:"“,,',‘.;,,‘;}';" A Rl Wil sou plense sond mo the addross cf the Among the employes of the great White Machine Factory, at Cleveland, Ohio. The » Horse, the Ring, Ball, _“Well that has always e I we L JATter W goorotary of the leaguoof American Wheels | . - g &5 A2 R R tion with me, although it is the popular play. | dozen sideplitting sections had beon retd | ment—1\ R. Alexander, Beatrice. success of the White Sewing Machine has been so great that all employees get Boat and Oar. 1 have nover been fully satisfied that much is ned by the movement. At such close t @ is no chance of getting a ball many m agos woro to bo read, and when | Ans.—Tne Bee answers no questions by told there were “soveral more” he moved to | mail. Abbott Badsett, sccretary L. A. W v The: | lay the petition on the table, which was | Pearl street, Boston, Mass, Mos the Spring Season. unless jtis hit directly at you, Then itis | 1o¥ Lo Dot t ] v 3 n, Mass, e o O i ot 140 1s rapidly | #encrally hit so hot that it s with the great- | Prmply done. | . Wil you please ahswer through the sport- e spring shooting 0 apldly | St dimcuity that it can bo hand Tho | ' A Cincinnati exchange remarks that “This | ing colimns of T Ber! Is the Omaha ball Arawing to a close, and the honk of the gOOSC | (yy4ole e inhle or hesitation is fatal, T have thrown in a state team going down to the bottom of the sea in cluster good pay, are well satisfied and happy. Old Mr, White, whose white loc around his noble brow, is the token of pure f endship and protection to his thousands of employees. Often this noble old gentleman i sen with a special train with five to and the quack of the duck will soon be heard | coon iy fail many and many a time, and then A rance of a married ladies’ | an endeavor to find McGinty, and do you 0 . i SRy § y T Wi 16 mere in swamp and lagoon untilthe nipping | again T have scon many @ run thus nipped in | club of bievele riders. ' A prominent socioty | think at theiv preseut rate of descending they six hundred of his factory forces going out for an entire day’s picnicing and fishing, f frosts of aatumn come sgain, Of course | the bud, 1m|I\v. \»\‘.h.:)h\'-w at the Gibson, is the leader, | will be able to get even a rag from his famous 1t | 1oV S L 1 b T S eaaty . t ; {RYSE | —ee and avers that the club will make its appe: suit of clothes to fly as a pennant this fallf and thus the employees stay by him, and to make up for lost time they work at night. the teal shooting will continue good for thr Base Hits, Pick-Ups and Fumbles. ance on the street as soon as the weathe ‘These may not be sporting questions, but as et i fl . KTl el b or four weeks yet, but the larger ducks, such | gjck Carpenter, faithful, reliable and al- | mits. have been practicing all winter | you are probably tho smartest man in the The factory runs day and night at this season of the year. So it is with the hands on, T #o0d- and are now in o state of perfe tion, and it ned to play third | expect to create an immense sen world, you will please_an anxious public b a gentleman, will bi uxio s ¥ § s g them.—Robert Kelting, Atlantic, doing business for this one of the best companies in the world, 1, mallard, widgeon | ati todu He has si 1y about taken their | as canvasback, redhe and pintail, have alre 3 has si ird | ¢ ) m, and | e | Dilse for the IKansas City Western association | 8 safe to predict that_ their expectations will j lepurture for their breeding grounds in the | base for the e dsstutes || i s sonlisad, THelr costimes \Will consis Yi " - . . o ) et D% e ony /tho DA oty EIE linu‘t‘x‘:m:-rw‘:::’:vlhsn\l‘« e ff\ml,. ”‘mu' young and r)w.fih |\\'nh|lnt|n|\l [he Omaha office is now running more men than ever before. The reliable rnorth, 2 home. Kuns o > | of navy blue {rousers such as are v viend will journey over to Omaha today and A et : ' o y g mf,’:::,l‘,',‘:*.,'ff,;,",‘,:‘,\ L R i 2L Doxs thor 4% Ho wa T willbo | by equestriennes with overskits to mateh. | g5’ gu4 1 the ball park, he will discover that Shuttle Machine is improved. There is a Rotary Machine. Thereis a Automatic Ma- 4 5 VAt Blics: tho shoot! s not been | leaves here with the good will of eve Miscellaneous Local Sports. the Omaha team has found McGinty—nine of S o e . : . NPT e . ’ b 4 T 2 -nlrlrl Ul il ',‘Z:,,v,'ff:f,:"',ffrl:',',:.",::\. Wit Noman is a greater credit to the profession | Gond pickerel fishing s reported at both | him-—and they will bo recognized in their chine. There is a Tailoring Machine—any style wanted—and sold on the most liberal < surpassed o b M | and no man ever gave his services more fully | Honeyereek and Big lakes, Towa. Sioux City uuifor < i e ' o 4 years, and fn tho sccond all tho water fowl | to his emploes tian Carpentor. His T Tt il a1t O T By RS BB | PR S oI R b Lo terms, or ten per cent off for cash. The quality of the White is not questioned—there yvere, upon_their arrival here, ece: | future o will be watched with_interest | ¢, Yoo for A Fapar and ANG SIOUE Oty | (hcieraatis T T A TS G OF, ¥ o § ¢ \ - t Jonted "m0 condition for spring. Many of | LAROURGe U admivers and friends In thia | Gexi tas somies ot oo SICux CIty | tag auestlons: Tn a game o ba, e o being about 5,000 living witnesses and customers alone in the city of Omaha to testify the mallards were as fat and delightful in | ciyy e is an exccllent fielder and time flavor as they are in the fall after having rev- | jifor and the Kansas City club is to be \ipon acorns, smart-weed und nut-grass for | eartily congratuloted on seciring his serv- birds did not come in in straggling flocks, as on. Carpenter itly | Do not fail to read “Macon's” newsy letter | With the ball. ‘Ts-either out!—M. A. Recd, would naturally be expeeted under the ¢ir- | satisfied with his terms in his new place. m Frisco. Hereafter these letters will be | Dunlap, Tow cumstances, bup come in o rush—geese, | Cincinnati Enquirer. Suspay Bep's sporting de- [ Ans.—The rumners not being forced— <, Hutchins, brant and white fronts, SERAY L RO T § o | Dartment. : B I o Cooney is a theadys littlo player. He s | PGl Preston and W. W. Bingham | 1o declde n wager please state fn the que from the very date of their ival up to th i ) - opstenday, in the elghth, tining, Whet | They made the biggest bag of the season—134 | and Reynolds from the Topeku or Lincoln c | within an ace of making a triplo play. Beara | fine, plump jacks, clubs!--Jusper, city. - departure. e result has been innumerable | Sout'a slashing ved-hot lner right’ at him, | _The Council Bluffs and Omaha rowing as- | -~ Ans.—Yes. v bags, and the gunners have been in | Cooney nailed it, although it nearly took him | sociations are making preparations for exten- 3y Off his feet. Quick asa flash he ran to sec- | Sive improvements at Manawa this spring, TO cgard to the geese, They have not been | ond doubling up Marr, and threw “to first | and a July regatta in not unlikel so plentiful or. well ordered in years, 'he | just too late to get Holliday.—Cincinnati John Dunmire is making rapid advance- | Fight to a Finish Between a Panther legendary Platte has fairly swarmed with | itimes Star. ment at target shooting, and_ it will not be and a Bear, thiese glorious birds, and even yet today they | =G oy Just veleased by Cineinnati, | 10ng ero he will be able to hold his own with . 11d ant £ it boen socn alon; o nuimerous ety 1o D B . Ho Ja. 1 | Pavmelec, Petty, or any of the other local _A\l.-h'.-lrn;.i.l hunts and raps st yaya) thiousand. A couplo of weeks since e geese | iy D Waidworking and fndustrions, | eracks. | mals in the denso forests of Sullivan , 74 took it into their addled p o give us the | o) 15csesses all the qualifications necesss smuett McDowell, the alleged champion | county, twelve miles west of this | . ) N o . L shalo here, and ina body aroso from all ad | % nike wp of an eflcient field. cy roller skater of the world, is in the and | He and his little family live on a patch of Jacent Witer e off wpon thete long pilirim. | &nd @ fleld captain is whut Omaha needs mo to be anxious to make a thréc-hour | cleaved land in the wildnerness at the Ing honks started off- upon theit long D'k than anything else. race with _any professional or amateur bi- | 1556 of Bald mountain, on Whipoorwill age to the north, They were absent fora few O ot Soratin start 3 , Scratch start, 'L oot souson: when TRERELEP N E R G ETE7 (Tordbn thie Xid veho) | a i and UL LT POO et i . HOT Q42 days us thoroughly as if such a bird did not ; i } o exlst, then all of “a sudden, and as unex Glay they 120 10 tho town. of the corn palace | Put Patsy Murray ina_somniférous mood be- zl::«iuhdounl&";«: "lllElJHl(llllld n].:;’4 r”; : s rumes, returning here on the 5th to | fore the Gate City Athletic club several oug! i} L t pectedly as they had vanished, they returned e Ak Follow. | weeks ago, hias been m e anather | through the summer, says a_Skinner's and aré hiere again in almost as large numbers | for thr 1 Rowe's pets coms the Cowboys, novice known as Colorodo Jones, for a purse | Creek (Penn.) special to the New York D I’ T ~ bt i o | B T CHORNIDONG "= = = SNMANACHRS as over. What brought about this singular | meet the Den doems | ing Dave Rowe On the I % home team pl Jim Corbett, who was in the city Wednes- | of chickens, twoor three hogs and several action on the part of thobirds no ono sccms o ! t it ikely that old e e i anon at Des Moines; on the and 20 at Minneapolis; at in the east and anotherin | dogs. But his most valuable property, An effort wil be made here some time this | and B for 8rd; A doesn't get home for he spring Lo organize an_ amateur athletio asso. | finds the ball waiting him, B in the mean- to its merits, The experts of Furope and America at their centennial expositions ation, with the view of joining the national | time touches 3rd: both arve forced sk and ature of Ti ad, mallard, whistler, | pace v WHat totto lid n ’ Bin v v butterball, metganzer, teal | hall - 2 . J spent Thursday sniping at Missouri Valley. | column whether Kansas City got Sw and all, ing the shooting magnificent noon, tomorrow day. On Wedne Anser Hyperorcous for the nonce made a miscue in his meteorological prognostications, ) i \ o and the honkers hurried off lest the Fourth | and 24 and St. Paul on the the west, | stern reporters that | he~ says, are a repeating rifle and two of July would swoop down upon them in | Apostles will return with the Omahas and | he did not believe Sullivan would fight Jack- | qozen steel traps. . BT play three games on June 3, 4 and 5, after | so "'he sportsman can make up his mind, how- | Which sixteen straight games will folloyw on but and that if he did, he would go broke Oneo day this month Hoose’s cow wan- ackson whipped him, Here ho informed [ | On6 duy this monih, HOCK L filE P.‘\RA\DM‘{OF THE PU;S 'i:,i,m ere sent him to this effect, uy wing, yme home forthwith and not endan- 3! man that Sullivan would most cer- the home grounds, when the, Omahas leave ever, that th sse will remain he 1 h X : 5 T AL i 1 ehile longer. | Moderate weather is | on their second southern trip. 4 fight, Jackson and he would wager a | night, and the next morning Hoosc TR b % TSR e 3 o s b th e hElo LT Mok tHe — fow hundred that the Australian would be | shouldered his rifle and went up the L o Our Spring opening hav- west, and at the t symptoms of ethereal The Great Bicycle Race. whipped. He also said that he didn’t think | ereek in search of her, In the course of an S on his westward w and by the time this 2 ng | The great s cle raco between | the pug c-day bic printed he will no doubt bo b ing been delayed by our re- Mildhess penctrating the remoto L ) he ¢ lived that could whip John L. | hour Hooso reached themouthof a darl " bl | grounds i the birds oo up and of.” ey | Ned Reading and Jack Prince s exciting o ;‘ulh\'un, and repeated it emphatieally in (16 | rlon on tho north side of South moun- An Interesting Budgetgf}'{esb Paoifio Doab |38 B i | AW Jf it inst stivel ' pro- o ion amopg n ” > frator- resence of a half-dozel vell known gentle- s . 3 ree SS1P. is one opinion cre as o 5 ski . . aware of it instinetively and never pro- | end of speculation among the sporting frater- | TR tain, and sat down on a fallen tree to Sporting Gossip. i "“:mv."h”;l\'i: }:.'1511‘1.;"\. Amf‘v }::mul‘m | cent repairs and improve- stinate. N " lows and intermittent, | M4 T Turnishing cxcellont vest. While he sat he heard a bear £k 008 cou The sound ind Hoose got | “MACON" AMONG THE FIGHTERS, |\ it will be an exciting contest, and fair, square, up-and-up imirers who will own his belief that | n successfully cope with either Sulli 3 S Thie - D B e naof | || Ments, which ar % « Horseback riding in ny of the eastern e, there is not a | ¢ities is becoming the rage with young ladie: aracter of the | and itis quite certain that the fad.will ¢ Just now all the s 1ghs and strean bellowing up the glen 4 | came neaver and newrer, now com- mand blue wing shooting. As in tho | shadow of a doubt. The cl e h [ A ase of their carlier and hardier 5, | gentlemen who are furnishing the collateral | on here, I body is in the saddle, so to | upon the log and cocked his riffe. In a 2 the best judges of pugilism on this coast say | too, have showed up in wondel i nt guaranty as tot speak, nowadays, and as sequence a | minute a big panther came trofting T think if Choyinski had been handled | pleted, we shall be glad on. g M vun in the | freat deal “’“"‘l““‘“‘i“’ i enly reri] sl roushythopbushcy with a squealing | ®he Famous Authority Gives Some | forently Corbett would mot have defeated pevienced no diflien pings the game L ormed. Good horsemanship is an acquired | : in his mouth. sarried tho : 5 him. dack Dempsey, who did not know his Tednacdne I Pands and commission houses glutted with A icohe. Whowillwint | aecomplishment, 1iko ail othor human. graces, | Cup DeT 4',"]'\l'mf',".'l",,zf,\N\JLA”‘“, it didn’t Pointers on the Relative Mer- D O e itns [ 1IaVVed nesday, S A pril ¥30; S to them. ey That is the question that is being revolved in | and it adds much to the gloom of this world | (000 ST N0 L ¢ iy to get out of its of the Stars of S SRS X ) P g “Ihe English snipe have been here for a | themindsof those interested in eyclingaffairs, | t0 sce young women conforming themsclyes it 8 e Pt S show our y " Shilds weel, ro illed. by the hundreds | bat is apparently @ quostion that cannot | inito temporary pile drivers, trying to pound | the glen. 8 the Squared Circle. TICASREIGIITRR w our fine line of Child at alllthofr #fami ling grounds in this | be satisfactorily answered until two or three | the stufting from their saddles or break the Close at the panther’s heels waddled = he is Choyir Had he been sent right at S N T vicinity. At alley, G Wa- * s been run, Both men | baclks of thewr poor steeds, while their bulg- | the wailing mother bear, She was evi- Jim from the word go, T think Corbett would ren's Suits and IFurishing terloo, Bartlett, Valle Horse- e and will a »diy ride | ing eyes and the quivering of the muscles of | dently afraid to tackle the panther, and Sax Fraxcisco, Cal., April 22.—[Special to | only have the best of it for six or ecight Zh.'fi'ilu find Honcy Creck, 1 ots Jittle | their, best to achi o Prince, as their plump forms tell a tale of self-torture, | {ho panther umwull‘«'\l Yollmowit: “‘.,L “Tun Brr,]—There never was such a sporting | Tounds, and after that T hinle would have Goods to our friends. All il roes © ly sw > | is well known, is an old tricky, profession - presently the panther put the cubon the | city for its siz San Francisco, All kind: allen off d oyins ould have hunter of the most inferior skill has not | rvider, but many think he has scen his day. vers. P i et o better i o g s = > | done him, e SAllBA TR Beouting food What ¢ At any 0y o q(‘\'l‘|“llQA:li:‘;l‘ll(:;“?‘l‘:"("‘l \y‘:\l“:‘::‘“m“m i,:mun«h as if to get a better hold on its | of sport are in high favor but pugilism is This gentleman further said _that are cordm“y invited to call <, when the bear plunged at the pan- | yost affceted, The Bl Dor ze fight between | {hep M caught it round the body. 5 1 made a wage . whip Anders in 'he police stopped the fight be- heart R loan metropolis | “Corbett ~ has got all th J Just | 45 tho Mecca of the slugger (my christening, | necessary for a good figh and all | || P » in front of its hind legs. Like a flashthe | ¢o NI C ) 8 @ M ere ho thrives | the skilly but Tdomt think he hias the stamina | || O US that day. panther flung the cub into the air, Jhore he tAAVES ) o) 46 bottom to enable him to stand punis| ¢ e Tho California | pong, “Whenever I seo hiete who has more enjoyable, more exhilerating, more ben- | a - man worthy of his metal. Read- 4 o g eficial, yway, than o tramp. for suipe | ing, of all brofessiomal . bykors . of | JLo beton tho recent b through meadow’ and marsh: on one of these | the' day, has a record that stands pre-emi- | of &5.00 that Davis would charming April days, with the music of wind, | nently over and above them ail, Heis a man | fwo rounds as he never throve befor und bird und frog flling the of powerful phy and s wonderful | po it anked itself loose, and_pitched at the ; | about you, und the odor of bursti Powors of endivine aro known 10 bo such as | JO1oARAELS was counted outy bub tho reford B e o Jenceired tho panthen o | Athletio club is his best patron aud its presi- | any defect vory apparent,” said he, ¥ wealc blooming flowers intoxicating all the seuses. | to enable i to compete with a good show of | foser-1¢, . Ny Union depot. " o o satond stroke sent the | dent, Mr. Lamartene R. Fuld, enon i, M. Corbet 1 sway-bucled and 1 "R H. N, U . > side, ¢ L stroke s in asway-backed horse or mare Tucky is he, d, who can find the time 1o | s RO T T neverhad standing eithe s in a long distance chase with any Ans. k All bets follow the stakes, un | big cat flying into the bu indulige in the pastine. viderin the world. Heis young. 4 : ) el S LR B s o 1 pace ora hard i et ] X it Wand R cRTa A b G ','L,";”,:{‘i“li...‘,',"f.lf\h Tess d ¢ the referce, this stago of the fight the eub squealed | of a sporting demi-god. Mr. Fuldais a pow e e L R LR The Omaha Gun Club's Work. devoloped spocd equal 10 the most of them. | Will you please inform mo whether Will- | once more, and the mother bear, scem- | erfully built man who stands about five fect | 4;q perhaps undervalues Corbeit's st erything but her young | ten inches tall and who weighs wbout two | powers but there is one thing cevtain ¥ She had not | hundred pounds. Born of German ents | that is if Jim really wants 10" tackle cithe or four steps | in Petersburgh, Va., about forty years ago | Sullivan, Juckson or MeAuliffc ou his nat hieath to a finish he will | on the oppo iz 0t her thront | he was brought to this const when but two | Peatiitaa finish ho will bo kiven the opp The Omaha gun elub may be said to again | Princo is fretting old, has been inactives | fam Beac be upon & solid and substantial foundation, | long time, and ot be otherwi than a | ever beat and it is a healthy sign and one full of | triflo stale. Still should he onee getinto | where? Did he beat Wallad Dromise, that they will from this on devoto | condition he will make ahard nut for any | Oursman, Manawa. rsman of the world | ing to forget e if so when and | one, rushed to its rescue. Rosst—Amateur | talien more than thre when the panther spr themselves fearlessly and vigorously to the ",:l o) “‘.'m“']"’ bo “":)'n l,‘.?"m says | O Ans.—Beach beat Gaudaur for the champ- | neain. Its aim was true, for it settled | years old and all his lifesince has been pa b ity that protection, p stion and propogation of | the stipulated time in the finest | OnShiD Of tho world and £5,000, on the | the claws of its fore feet in the bear’s | onit. ILor rly twenty years he has | Tt 5 4 S il the 1 laurels he lost o 15, he | in teeth in her neck. our fish and game. fettloand to beat him, the Soldier will be | Thames, England, September 18, 1886, Time, | shoulder and i In the past the all important feature of t compelled cage sixteen miles an hour | 22 minutes and 20 seconds. Beat Wallaco | bear struggled hard to shake the pan- mm'u“l‘ x""’f'“d Iln‘m Ih-r H\jr .h'jl\‘!l:mm?" Corbett’s social status here before he organization’s work wis the sport devived | 1€ the entire forty-cight the men are upon | Ross, same place, same conditions, September | ther off, but she couldn’t do it. Soon the {aiithabugof S Shiumb werchant, become a professional wigilist was a very & v the trac owing to its peculiar | o5 Time. 23 mi 5 anther tore the bear’s entrails out with | manufacturer of sashes and blinds ' and | good one and even now he ranks head ot Leip shootlng, andtho Aaunlunb Witk | e D oivinie to its peeliar | 95, 1880, Time, 2 minutes, 5 sconds. panther toro the bear’s entrails out with | Jo"SIit™ s quito extensively” in veal | Sioutders in the socialsealo abovo any” pusdl its supplementary banquet. While as the peop e that oAy wrowd® | Toscttle a dispute will you publish the | its hind claws, and then it leaped away | estate. He is an Ame; e of won- | jst that ever gr Amcrican ring and and went to smelling after the cub. dorful strength. He put up a pair of three- [ s weights for pugilists. What class er after | pound dumb bells 1,500 times without ves Jimmy Lindsay int—Billy L., city. Hoose didn’t wait any lov ¢ American fighters w English or Aus- all know that o ke 500 per cent | | Tho _stukes 50 a side and the entire gate re- not a fake or hippodrome race are shooting, which is a harmiless and be pastime, will be continued as robust he annual hunt will be forever abandoned. [ Mr. — Frank Clarkes ot "tue et | Ans.—The limits of weights in champion- | that, He fired thyee Winehester bullets | und as a boxer he has won two heavyweight | tralian scrappers in intelligence and respect Phis is a wise resolution, and in this new de- | National b; ke holder, and the sport- | ship contests are as follow: Bantam | into the panther, killing it. The cub luy class medals and has held his own in frequent | bility, Jim was a bookkeeper in a bank I bouts with men like Charley Mitchell and | and” his relations and in ing editor of Tur: Bex illuct as ve *s teeth having erushed parture the Omaha gun club will soon d ght , under 112; feather, up to and includ- | dead, the panthes vel seful institutio ced. Their — Y Sl A 9,800 1001 It 4 3 Afs 1 Mike Cleary. Ably assisted by an energetic rood people of the kind who othiorun chubs of tho city and state, and it | Jack Davis, the pugilist, is to take another | 1 up to and including 154; heavy, 165 and | Wy up 140 fren l‘,‘{ unter found tho | contidence of ev mber he is pt perhaps to look at them through cuy is to be hoped that wherever such’ a club | benefit at the Atheneum club rooms tomorrow | BP: Middle-weight. bear’s nest with a live cub in it, whic { THE TLIF ND TIE SOUTL He is the boxing instructor of the exists, there will bo a majority of members | wivhe, This benefit business is being r Can you give me, through the ecolumns of | he carried home. He didn’t find his cow [ ;¢ 40 club hie heads. Its affairs and its ex- amateur athletic club, wh who think more of preserving than d T bt SR b business is being run | o SUAVRNELL” the exact dato. and place of | that day, but two days later he ran across | enditures are his one relaxation for heis a | this ity what the navy, the gz, more of encouraging the increase of into the ground, and it Davis is the gladiator | Clapence Whi death. Was Whistler a | her remains in a gorge four miles from | jodel married man, His wife was a nicce of York athletic and the Gymnasium s to Ph imati His and ke, who built and owned [ delphia nd Cine Tandball, Eleventh and | where he had shot the punther. She | thelate Sam N. I v Now d Cinch e had been killed and partly devoured by | Pike's opera house in Cincinnati and, the ;I_u!nl»_l_\\lu_n‘. LhGEE llll“!dl“':' ! — November 6,18%5,in Melbourne, Aus- | panthers, which he says are thicker in | Grand opera housein New Youlk, e seldom his defiance of Sullivan e pla Whistler was a worker fora number | {hat region than he has known them to | leaves his rtments at night excepting IN THE FRONT RANK I ) 2 Han ) vhen ¢ pall him forth, Naturally ; L of years in the smelting works, this city, but | be in a number of year: O o i Uy sBoeIV 15 and ho will now have to fight R ment of reputation. He = % ; 1arge numbers of letters from all parts of the ot of ! ] T sanllivas L NOXLODORA, i country, but as ho s 1o amancr m Spring wud_the Adiirable Arthur Sullivan, the eminent composer, | {oVey L et i {s At present hard at work upon the score of | Jous or Inquisitive, Hore is a specimen of s St a grand opera which s to be produced in Lon- | {he kind of cpistles would-be sporting wits A prophiet wo than of bringing about its extinction. | he professesto be he should look for a few Indeed this is the only y in | shekels through the sources of a bona-fide which shooting and sporting ovganizations can | fight. The Occidental has been urging be made desirable and subservient to the w him to respond to their invitation to come to Dbeing of the community in which the “risco and battle with Joe Choynski for a cated, If sportsmen simply band themselves | £1,500 purse, and money has been forwarded together to destroy that” which is already | to'defray his railroad “expenses. However, | donot think he was a native of Omaha, vanishing all too quickly it will be impossi- | he'll never o, that is a certainty. He is fully | Please answer the following questions in ble for men of judgment and good solid sense | aware that in'Choynski he is decidey aseball columns and to approve of sich societies, but when such | matched, and it is better to attitudinizo « What was the longest game of professio orgunizations are found clearly recognizing | champion than to jump into the roped ball by innings! Who made the o of profes or su once the Crichton of knows but thi than even his fr Kuow, is not_withont honor adet that the sportsman should b & staunch game | and have your head knocked off for the | throw with a baseball on record! Who has | don next November, says Boston dispateli | somotimes send him: L D e s protector and thathe can only enjoy the | amusement of a lot of ciub men, the best record for running the bases? In | to the New York Tin Sie Arthurshas for | pueparo, N Y., A 3 Y but ho walloped England’s Yecreations he so thoronghly ipprecites by — tho first series for the world’s championship | & long time had under consideration the pro- esident Atliletic ¢ i TR T T protecting tho aninls, © bivds and sl A Left-Hander for Omaha, beween the St. Louis Browns of the Ameri- | ject of composing a grand opers that would | bear sir: | Wolt & 1ol Gown ohn Movrisaoy, who had dofeated him upon which he hopes to exercise hisskill [ The Omaha management is negotiating, assoclati > Chicagos of " | be in every sense an English production, us | and we would like to fizht down Johii Mo 10 had defeated him ) The Omaha managoment. is nogotiating, | can assoviation ind to Chicgos of tho Nu- | e In every sense an Mgl Brielion i | 6N main and 81060 When ho was out of condition, and it may be during tho legal seasons, then the hope may | with a fair promise of success. wi x| tional le at e AT ot fieft Lho Diobs MUY | with a fair promise of success, with Albort | Lo last their timo but serve to afford enjoy- meit, exe to their child ue, who won and w 0 ind § ot oy > ame: ad C| sire for something different from the German | show twenty-one men o i ks, th smomenal loft-handed twirler | S¢0res of tho gamesi 1s Dad Clarke an Irish- | S5 ; R e 0200 pounds and to Gght all 1 Inks, the phenomenal left-handed twirler |y ™or 0" German? — Ball Crank, South | und Italian schools,in which ull present grand O ot tho light and he so and numerous other beuefits | NOW with the Philadelphia national league | Oma operatic produetions are written O a champlona ¢ u's children, club. The prospects aro that Inks willbe | = 4o But for several years ho has been so occu- within four Swormera— signed, and report here within ten 5 4 pied with the scorcs of comic operas that ne 11 battles '“'13'"« n 110 | that Corbett, may prove that history repeats 11, the | jiself in pugilisni s in everything clse. 0t 1 b tobe {7 Who reully knows! f_ | A prominent Market street store keeper s nero ing adorned the front of his house with | E(Jgk‘: for Hatching. nths affe e fou Harvard vs, Manchester, 24 innings, The June Shooting Tournament, e seore 0 to 0, Boston, Mass., May 11, 1873, | opportunity for his much wished-for-scheme Should this L with your | a gigantic can as forty xi\ twenty in size on Singlo Comb Brown and White Gwin & Dunmire have finally fixed upon m the Wheel, Johnny Hatfield, George Gove of the New | I ented itself. But when “Tho Gon- | anbrovid G ot ¢ ,,‘l;' ']‘m;“:;“l'“-“'\)_“( rowitl | which Lie has had painted a picture, |..| ghome, 1 SllverWyans June 8, 4 and 5 for tho dates of their annual | Mittauer to tho safety. York Players’ club is said to have run the s complcted und presentod U the | St that you my name. Your respeet ully TUE FIGIT BETWEEN SULLIVAN AND JACKSON, s i - i . 1 ol (e 1 g i g i theater, London, last December, the | 54 Akl MGt : 4 5 phTAaLy His84161c Caohin, spring trap shooting tournament. Owing to | A special meeting of the Apollo club has [-bases in 14 scconds in a competition | FERAY, L ERREN - 3 08 ® | "1 Qo not give the name or strect address of | As the men will set to for three flrst round R e the difiiculty in procuring live birds tho big | ecn called for Wednesday evening, against time, San Francisco, Cal., November | tite Soemed ripe, and ho ut once setubouthis | 45 Fiing, Ho s ovidently dlshig for | ackson fowors wbovo Sully's heid ind s Iluok Brountocd Red Bantam, T R Billy Combe has taken to the wheel again, | 9, 1 The St. Louis Browns in the fall of eat taske, e cireumstance that gave fm- | freo “ad,” und Tdow't propose Lo givo it to | dark skin looks like maho awed to ) 3 I it they had in_view has been | |5 Dromises to de i owns in the fall of There was one circumstance that ga Alwn‘n i fho ivory whitaness of Sullivans baved body. | A U G usT D/\VlDbEN abandoned, and the threo days shoot above clope into a Rowe, & | 1886, four games out of six, by the following | petus to the work and matc the Australian Crocker or I find that Billie Murphy, S o veferee is the nest most > 3 oned’ will be confined principally t Lunnsden, (ol e e e {to § smmencement of the score com- ook, the referee i 4 2420 South Ninth St., Omah ' ! " s R res ¢ 0 0, 0 to 8, | commencement of the scor catherweight, has made a better impression and around the ring are Jick ltluu‘ .n-;l un:n‘wu up ‘lmp.]» sly for | Iu”.\i--‘llwl: \\3{‘1)1v‘.|'|;nv'|!x.~ mn [:»‘lr\-mgvrm Chicago won two games, 6 to0 and 11 to 4 iy was being formed which was to |""""|““" ‘{,,'I:::u4\'\nhT.]»lxiu'..lll‘m:::fi‘1hmum .'u”u'w\y' other 1 1\‘!3\! Hu:’m( («\.m ains Morso of B rm shooters, In addition to tho t his afternoon. The distance is sixteen miles | Chicago 10,1004 - | YPhe Gondoliers” sther | 0 l pming thanny;otithe oth 1mps sey Hogn, Captain Morso of lfl\fn\l\nu there will be a number of live bird | and the start will be made at 2:30 sharp, ( arke 15 an Amc rican Indian, f Pulliser,who was then studying in Paris, was ‘l"‘t:ll:l.l‘;ll' ‘M :\I\:htll:‘x'\ h“l lu.::\ l:wl' ““I“[ .!'x I“:‘; :|‘> _1\”‘;[ ‘;::\‘1 ::‘\m‘: l,‘\‘\:‘x ,‘ A .“\‘(_ sweepstake races and nothing left undone to Omaha has two more new wheel elubs, the ‘Would you be kind enough to inform the | sent for Mr, D'O; Carte to assume the Sl 8 the litttle oncs of his class [ osean, dack MeAuliftc Mike Donovan, n she rehearsed th ; 1 pleased with her | With at once decided to | ¥ and his decision | © eatod ston. | club to me today, peatedly liston | {6 few men living who would al her fistic celeb. fusuro tho pleasure of the attendants. There | v, M. C. A. boys' ol 5 ] writer where he could vent a bicyele, or pur- | vole of Glane ! ) o A. boys’ club and the Y. M. , vole of Glanetta, ;\'lllilmu mumber of added. purscs, and i R bandtho ¥, M. C. A ‘l»)mw.»“....- by weekly or monthly paymentsi— | part Sir Avthur was so wi ng from the energetic manner in which the zoung Pixlev and: Cabbane wi 4 X oe, City, voice and methods that b Will'ko o vory succossiul towrnamont, whael club in Juy 3 between Thirteenth and Fourtcenth stic wus more firmly fixed aftex t & g to Nof this, ase inform me through Sun. | 1§ toh Nop only case, but that ho can tlso mako it | Younis Mitelcll und many olot ot for most of the 126 pounders. | pities, The portraits are exeel and the \ . il @ director of the California | siym is the talk of the town. It was thein- | /[ he Well Iknown Spoeoiall Murphy is really one of tion of the artist to have included N, M ont of all forms of PR tely w's picture among tho others but that «: i cre guaranteod, v s 160t out.. 1 il am bt lity! cted und it was left out. Thi mbition: Blariltys nwood last week was A Few Points Worth Observing. Tho run to Gl 1| Wil you pl composer determined to arrange the numbers RATHER FIGIT THAN EAT. v left The success of o base ball team is ve attended and & good deal of enjoyment was | da¥'s sporting columns what constitutes the o tho leading avlote suit Miss Palliser's | o is a crank on scrapping, and it makes “Hamlet” with tie part. A p N O R O Yases. Gurod. gt S (Y RS O A TS derived thevefrom, The roads were in a tol- | different kicks and plays ina game of foot- | yoico and immedfately began the work 1o difference to him how big his opponent of “Hamle i ? neluni- | o, Nervous bl | rod gul n q \ ance, diplo erably fair condition, but would be greatly | bull!—Half Back, Omaha, 1 advices to the Post here state that | T think he wouldn't hesitate to tackle either loly Dano omix A ot e ttn & patt e ot Yanly: Copsultation 1 Oftico 8. and good judgment of the manager, Without | improved by a full of ruin Ans.—It would require over a column of o hus boen suficiently advanced to | Juck McAuliffe or Jimmy Carroll. Kay, T will Roady Gullaghor Nt s e Dt | Cor Tith and Jackson stroets, Omulia. Neb. strict discipline, careful instruction and han- | ~In the fomalo bicyclo race at the Coliseum | space to giveeven a synopsis of football rules, | warrant the production of the opera next | go even farther and sug that if his frionds dchl preaen A — R — dling, no baso ball team can_ suceeed, no mat- | st week Miss Buldwin wore the colors of | so voluminous are they, and it would requive | fall, and the initial performance will be given | told him to do it ho would give Sullivan hime | VL, B po™ postponed.” Billy ‘,A\ U", AA\D (n\b““““ ter what tho individual strength of {he play- | the Portland, Ore., wheel club; Miss Nelson | 1o full text to give any adequate idea of all | 86, Mr. D'Oylys Carte's new theater, which | self a round. Once when hewas fiehting Hero [ihave Ut B8 Jeainanod.. Blk 3y ers may be, Good mansgement means har. | Uhe Pittsburg colors and Miss Williams those LIt i 4 g is to be opened this spring in Lagdon. Mr. | voung Mitchell, who was “one of the time ha R ay be. G anag ar- | o the Denver Ramblers. there is n the great game. A drop kick, how- | Guyte intends to devote his playhouse Ly Keepers, made o vemark which someghat dis- | 3, LY wal hon monious team work, and har The mana onious team he Cabbi wer who sits | chay, I me fe foight chince,” If this meets the 1e, Tagger, Flesher, Peabody, San- | CVer is 1 by dropping the ball from | to the production of Euglish grand ope ud | pleased him, whe “retorted, u indorf, Wertz and Pixloy of the | the hands and kicking it the very instant it | severalworks of this sort aro to follow <ir | until I get dond ith this fellow then comoln vo for St. Joe next Saturday, M; vises, A placokick is kicking tho ball after | Avthur's production. Miss Palliser s to | here and L'l belt you Ike Weir gave him §, to participato in the tournament at Athi- as been placed > 10! ¥ leave for ¥ %0 | enough of punishment in ten roun v o Dark, which opens bu the 48, Thoy will | 1t has been placed on the ground. A punt 15 | tho rolo, which wilkpiobably bo ready for her | surfeited two ordinary men bub ho paid 1o work means victor on the beneh duriy should not only wateh for weak points as developed | ard him soy other day ' w'y it takes so h toime for into condition. Ol kin 1 Oi'd_like to ge the . o ek D THE ALASKA ho progress of agame | Apollos | nd s to reh the strong his own pliy aeland _in Septem! 1 but should bo cqually alert to the same ecle- | woar the club colors—red, white and black made by dropping the ball and kicking it be- | by that time, Thove attention to it than & duck would to a | infovin him that he can h £ tha teo ek d afriorer: A ments in the opposing players, In this wa Dot e Bty : Mtort 1o | fore it touches the ground. A kickoft s a | Siv Arthur, for the flrst time in the history | spring showcr. | Ho kept golug vightinyithe | Dy ssnding Bis Tull iasio bk R R ]\Lrl 10¢ rators he will becomo familiar with tho different | )i Tien should make an effort to | o co kick from the center of the field, and | of his operatic compositions, will not have | Spider, and finally he got In u | A o) X R cap! f the | s to be offered at the | Place kick from the center of the fleld, and aRYR , just what you have done or has been > l] ]g Fy Avays of tho severnl playars, and bo enabled | Chicago tournament this ' year. Peabedy | cannot secure a goal, Kickout is a drop kick, [ Mt W Ibert as bis librettist, —Thesc PUNCH ON HIS STOMACH done'to you. Macox and lce boxes AR A S B B e fSet | should take advantage of tho occasion foran | or place kick, by a player i tho sido which two gent b have Aucoosst dlly Jror {a | that nearly bent him double at took all | IS i b . 4 \ g cortain poluts in cortain players in \ e MIVEIARE Of Sho. Renalan. for 6n ) gothor nearly two doca id_ while | A% EEES out of Tsanc,and after that he was y 3 e Water Coolers and Filters, ture contests. He could ju this event say to urd work, ho sbould returs with the | 1as touckied the ball down In their own goal, | Mv. Sullivan hus had no differencewith bis { byy o play toy in Billie's hands. Beforo he s Geave, 4 i a young and green piteher going into the box or Into whose toueh-in goal the ball hus goue, | collaborator, 1t is probuble that they will | Bub & PIY Y 6 G0l 10 b tn the ring | Benjamin Ellis Martin relates how he Wm. [‘)-]c ])ILT]\'(’}' & Co “Now, there's Smith; he man’s scalp, y 4 aver 1o roduce another comic opera, f Lo 1 leash fc Dl there's Srolii Be | “Tho Omaha run today will bo to Parks | and cannot secure a goal, A novepolutly, producy AuoMier, com 2 O | tiathedaliko s hound 1n, leash, for an Wauf b live i & | Mills, about a milo cast of the Council Blufts | Where the opponent is vestrained by rule. Tu | 8 SERGL BNEN (o fivst! porformance of | before e rutors CE 08 A 0" il it os. who | Chautauqua grounds. This is ono of the | touch means outof bounds. A faivis putting | svphe ndoliers,” whilo Mr, Sullivan ¢ -“_"1_'\““h‘,‘;“ PO oy Cal Molarthy, Frank alf the | the ball in play from touch. A foul is any | muined in London, where he is now working | Xyign o o Johuny Murphy should “either of for the first tiw heads the visitors high ball with an out-curve: for them but nevergets there; but Jon Tollows him, is death to high balls; keep ’em | Pleasantest runs out of Omuha, over an hour | yisited Edmonton churchyard in orde po kick is ono ] t Charles Lamb's grave, Service 1403 Douglas Street, Omaha, he waited officiating )ing on in the church and asked tl ixl:l“,“A\';‘.llnl or L -nun‘ll.wl.ll\:shfllm.nluvi ‘Wn en. | route. The start will be mude at 9:50 from ‘I,lfm B OSAGT O Sk ]“l““".“m'"l‘f e \:ull\“n.}l‘w.-m of Chicago i e on. and 01 B T The clergyman didn't knc e b VITH R e 0 MANE00D) © o to fumiietze himselt with tho stylo | the club house, and all members are herein | When tho ball is carvied, kicked or passed f gio'tyg taskc of furnishing ti o Tuith or tuko water in a manner that | heard that Charles Lamb was buried in v W eeitessof Body sud Mind: A of evory pluyer of every team in the associa. | hotified that the captain will tolerate no | across the goal line and then held, either in | oW ‘production, and, s been the ca 10, fase Wip. Pty Him e REBRCALALMUAN G EOM AT URE T A STR[NGTH of Body and Mind, Eeota tion with which ho may be connected, and | delay. | goal or touch-in goal. wWith 3. Gilbert, both words and music ave | Wit BOACY SRELS friends think o |48 GBuEChY B, WUb RS A, 2 Bxossioq|n Oldor Youngy that it has been a policy that has resulted in n“'m“m‘fiv :x"hv"’\fiv ”1 front with bis | o decide a bet will you ploasestato f next | being writton togother. T titly and plot | o el very rash 18 EEAR) RO BERE § TR THANT. Heaes, aany & victory for his wen, Words of praise | Brouco, and he demonstrated its hill- | Sunday's Brr how many games the Omaha Yeligiously guarded, but the story, it s o AP i A atlo S Y iaas B TRATHKNT “Resabis in o dore - :nff 3‘lll'vumm'x| ent, 100, never come x]un:w, | ing powers to the satisfaction of all, ball team played last se AW,.’\\.”.‘.‘.. an ervor, | said, is to wit odern times, and prom- | y IN DA L 1{ 1 e 0 BVt ATy T Y R'Ii'bl" 'T&“i‘éb’”-umt'é“‘fi"? 5 aud the wanager who is'careful and disorim- | was sowethlng, bowever, that Blugham | aud was thelr record in this respect beat by | ises to be full of lutercst, o fight him four uuds, and @ & o No Yo /