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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1902. ASE BALL GOSSIP OF WEEK Omahs in Becond Place with a Goed Ohanos of Getting Pirst. RACE - FOR PENNANT BECOMING FIERCE Record of Shutont Games Shows Ho Desperately the Teams Are Working on the Wi Series This Season. P In the dust. For the second time this season another To the outcome of four of the hardest fought &ames of present season this result is lorado Springs made two runs ln series, That combination is not likely to oconr agein In a lifetime of club than Omaha is leading the league. due. . Ci thirty-sixX innings in its and won two games. st Omal ball playing, but it cost Omaha the lead. Milwaukes has been playing pennant ball ever since the spurt started, but the Angels are on the road now and are certain to drop a few, while Omaha will be recelving at home, and has splendid prospects of hitting Twenty-two days another winning streak. still Intervens before the close of the sea- won, and & lot of things can happen in that time: the price of gas {5 not likely to vary any, but the furnaces will run longer and the gas blaze later into te night if the team does come out ahead, for then the fans will feel Iike sitting up and talking about It. Papa Bill Rourke he feels so g0od over the patronage he has had during the summer that he has about decided to go Into the show business this winter. If he can fig- ure oyt some way. to adapt the old Omaha uniforms to the cestuming of the chorus, it 18 lkely he will make the ventura. How féroclous the winding up games all over the country are may be gauged by the fact that during the six days ending with Friday eighteen shutouts had been regls téred in the four big leagues. ‘were 10 to 0. & remarkable series of shutouts. WESTERN LEAGUE. AMERICAN LEAGUE. 8/ Chio: 0/ Baiti o{Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE. . §|Boston 0| Brooklyn . New York 6 Cincinnati . o AMERICAN ASSOCTATION. Milwaukes 8 8t. Paul L0 If this doesn't .indicate earnesiness on part of the'players, It would be hard to find good evidence in pupport of the proposition. Omaha's part in the performance is quite | consplcuous, as the Rourkes gave two and received two costs of whitewash during ' the week, Colorado Springs being on um| X City and St. Joseph had a duplicate set, splitting other end of the affair. Kans four whitewashes even between them. Omaha's weakness at the bat was made the more apparent during the week. In the firat place it allowed Monk Foreman to get away with a three-hit shutout, a thing he never did In his life, but now in his dotage In the second t three games were lost for lack of a timely hit. But if we didn't hit, we flelded ke a lot of wonders. Bddle hteen hard chances in five games without a skip, and then Frank Genins-_took third and cared for eight he scores it place, at inst Omah: Hickey negotiated chances in two games Iin perfect form. Stone made twelve hits during the week, an average of .80, and caught twenty-one fil with no errors. These figures do not in- clude the two exhibition games played at FIELDING AVERAGES. Last A. E. Tot. Ave. week. ga! P SRR B Z 3 H BEESBIERER EEsssn.Sals " peeRBBEBEESEE SERusEEsIENE.O B8 =gk Eae tRRIBRTEEY suneaaaBgeSeEX ExsERISRCEE | Slowly bui sadly the Denver fans putting ambition behind them. What been apparent to others for weeks has at the adamantine elect who have cheered the | Grizslies when they won and roasted them | they lost, and now the deadly fact has been assimilated, that Deaver will not win the champlonship this year, save by r combination of circum- lonely little ray of consoling light plerces the gloom in which the Colo- | rado tans sit enshrouded, and that Il.l'hl en this has the disadvantage of being the same hope to which they have clung all season. Not & dope sheet has been turned out from the Cherry ereek factcry during last percolated through skulls of t whi an looked. stances. O Omeba may mot win the pennant. ULCERS ::: with washes and salves, because the irritation and discharge, the eatis sloug] Hard cosl will be just as cheap this winter whether Omaha wins or not, and And Five of | these were 1 to 0 games, one was 2 to 0, four were 8 to'0, two were 4 to 0, one was 5 to 0, one 6 to 0, two were 8 to 0, and two Here are the statlstics for cuoSomoron 10 1| Detrott 4/ out about square and Mil sas City are certain losers. " Are in many respects like other ulcers or sores, and this resemblance often blood and the new Cuw.c:dm:n‘:fllmmuydevdoping keep up the al the season on which Omaha has figured, and yet Omaha has gone right along setting the pace for the whole bunch. = Second place is the alm of the Denverites just at pres- ent, and the probabilities are that the Cubs will be mighty lucky If ‘they get second. In the meantime, several other cities have awikened to the fact that of the elght towna in the league only ome can have the pennant. This apparent truth is usually ignored early in the season, and even up to the last few days, and then there is a lively scramble for the cover of “I told you so,” and. the If feature of the contest becomes more prominent than the game ftself. Ex- planations are useless at any time, and the recounting of hard luck stories usually aggravates rather than soothes the disap- pointment. It is always the better team that wins in the end, and no matter which one it is, the true lovers of the game will give the champlons credit for winning first place on its merits, And this suggests the thought that prejudice is too often al- lowed to have sway in discussing base ball matters. During the week a notable ex- ample of this was furnished by the Mil- waukee Sentinel, whose base ball editor has been bitterly opposed to the Western league from the beginning. “ In reference to the great spurt made by Duffy's team, this irresponeible juggler of words made the direct charge that umpires of the West- ern league had been Instructed to give the home team the advantage in all decisions. While the charge is absurd on its face and unworthy of serious consideration, it serves dmirably to filustrate the depth to which some writers will descend in order to be- smirch an opponent. Whatever the po- cullar fate that directed the destiny of the Western league umpires during the season— and it most certainly was erratic to say the least—it s ridiculous to assert that Presi- dent Sexton was In any way responsible for it. It wasn't the Western league alone that suffered from the “home” umplre in- fliction, and it would be just as fair to charge Ban Johuson or Pat Powers or Tom Hickey with issulng such orders as to ac- cuse Sexton of it. The fact that the Mil- waukee American assoclation team has [ transferred its concluding home series to Kansas City and other towns, at @ time when the Western league team is on the road, indicates the public sentiment of Schlitzville toward the Hickey league and its supporters, Rumors of peace negotiations have been as thick as mosquitoes In Kansas City dur- ing the last wi but none of these seems to have any foundation. Warring magnates | are not likely to talk peace until after they have closed the season, negotiated the dls- position of claims to play: and balanced their books. Then they may have time for il:nnlllll.l!lon. Here 1s a bird's-eye view of the present situation: In the Western league Omaha has paid big, Denver has ‘plld well, Colorado Springs and St. Josep! have paid fair, Des Moines will about break | even, while Milwaukee, Kansas City and Peoria will be made whole out of the league sinking fund, although the deficit will not be nearly so large as had been looked for. In the American assoclation Loulsville has pald big, Columbus well, Indfanapolis falir, St. Paul and Minneapolis will probably be a little better than even, Toledo will come jukee and Kan- Thus it will be seen, each league. stands in sbout the ime relative position. Each has an in- herently weak town, Peoria in the one and Toledo in the other; each two towns where loss Is certain as long as the fight is kept up. In Milwaukee the public favors the Western league; in Kansas City the Ameri- |ean league has the preference. In the two leagues there are elght strong towns, which if they can be gotten together, will make a circuft that will be almost ideal.” Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Paul, Minneapolls, Milwauks Indianapolis and Louisville would make a splendid Western I eircuit. This would give Colorado Springs, St. Joseph, Des Moines, Peorla and other towns of that class an opportunity to have ball that they can pay for. It is not likely, though, that any solution of the western base ball circuit problem will be reached for many weeks. President Thomas Jefterson Hickey of the American association has done as fine a little bit of sidestepping as one would wish to see. Down at Loulsville recently Cap tain Grady of the Kansas City team dis-| puted one of Umpire Jack Haskell's de- clslons. Grady called his men off tho fleld | and kell gave the game to Loulsville. On receipt of the umpire's report, Presi- dent Hickey impulsively notified Manager Dale Gear that he had finéd Captain Grady $200 and that the captaln would stand suspended until he had paid the fine out of his salary, as the club would not be allowed to pay It for him. Mahager Gear | asked President Hickey it he didn’t mean | 2, and Hickey answered that §200 was the correct figure. Then up rose Captain Grady and said he would be several things In the vernacular of the game hefore he would pay the fine. One would have thought the president of the league was an umpire from the way Captain Grady talked to him. Manager Dale Gear also told the president that the Kansas City club would be dis banded if he ‘updertook. to carry out the sentence on Grady. Up to date Hickey has made no public reply to this outburst from the Kansas City crowd, but Grady is still playing and Haskell is still umpiring, and the fine has not yet been pald. Maybe it will come up under the head of unfinished | business when the league meets fn Novem- {ber. Or, Grady may mail the check to Hickey the day O'Brien sends the thousand to Bexton to pay for his reinstatement. - It is to laugh when we read that New Magnate Herrman “of the Cincinnat! Reds has told Sam Crawford that he will sign for mext season with Cincinnatl or be re- leased today. But that is the n that comes out from the haunts of the Reds. Manager Joe Kelly is inclined to be a little uppish since he has taken the team and won & game or two, and relylng om Jallbird Mike Donlin, belleves he can bluff Waboo Sam. If Donlin could only land roves fatal. Valuable ost in fruitless efforts to heal the sore of Cancer that are multiplying in the sharp shooting pains the stage, and a hllzou. -kk.;nl::n:neu-' ;::Aool a small , 1809, T . e doctor cau- broke er p. on the ball hard as ho landed on the Baltimore soubrette, he might stand a show of filling the piace of the brawny Ne- braskan on the Oineinnati team. But if New Magnate Herrman wants to see a bargain counter rush, just let him give it out that Sam Crawford has been unocon- ditionally released. Pitcher Virgil Garvin of the Chicago ‘Whitestockings contributed his share to the bilarity of the closing season by winging a barkeep who wouldn't loan him money and then knoeking out the copper who sought to arrest him. Maybe If Charley Comiskey will follow up the lead Garvin has un- covered, he will discover the real reason why Chicago isn’t ltkely to land the pen- pant again this year. CREIGHTON’S FOOT BALL TEAM Be Heavy, Stri Fast on the Grl This Year. After a rest of about three months the Orelghton university athletic fleld is once again livened up by the presence of husky, brown-complexioned athlet: Although the mchool year has mot yet opemed, the aspirants for the foot ball squad, old and new, are arriving in the city and getting down to the preliminary work of the sea- son. For the last woek or more Alfred G. Ellick, the new coach, has had his kick- ers punting the ball over the fleld, and now he is devoting much of his attention to teaching the elementary points of the game to a squad of promising but inex- perienced huskies. Coach Willick predicts that with the ex- cellent old material that will return and the promising new ones that are ex- pected Creighton will have the fast- est foot ball eleven'that ever belonged to Omaha. He is already assured one of the heaviest lines in the west, and with that foundation and men like Welch, Captain Walker and Butler behind the line, a toam of heavy caltber should be devel- oped A few of last season's stars will be miss ing, but the influx of new men, who have had foot ball training in high schools, pre paratory schools and other colleges, as well as old Crelghton men who have developed on the minor teams of the college, 18 ex- pected to completely offset the loss. Mulala, a tackle from St. Mary Kansas, Is expected to fill the place held by “Dusty” Roberts, the old Andover man. Donnelly, an end from Coe college, Kehoe, O'Keefe, the 'varsity base ball captaln, and Lynch will be four mer to try for the end positions. Kippes and the McCaffroy brothers, a pair of active 200-pound glants, will tussle for one of the halves, and ex- Captain Harry Welch wishes the other. Center Lane, who graduated last spring in the collegiate department, will resume his studles at the Medical college and thus will be eligible for playing this year. Captain Joseph Walker is already on the fleld, coach- ing and tralning himsel? down for right tackle, which he played so brilliantly last year. ¢ ‘Then there is Butler, the black-haired plunger, at fullback, and that assortment of materlal leaves the team already pretty well framed up, with the school year still 2 college, soine dislance away and weeks In the future. 8o Creighton men feel rather jubilant over the prospects for their team and hope to cut a little swath of their own In the college world this year. Manager James Fitzgerald, who will handle the team for 1902, has listed the fol- lowing games for the Creighton boys: Omaha High school, Lincoln Medical col- Tabor college, Doane college, Amity college, Bellevue collh, Haskell In- dians, Highland Park college, Des Moines, and University of South Dakota. If the Omaha Medical college has a regularly or- ganized team and schedule & game will probably be played with them, Both manager and coach are determined to enjoin sev: discipline this fall. Ab- solute training will be insisted upon, smok- ing will be punished by immediate dis- missal from the squad, and although a gen- eral training table cannot be established, each player will be given a set menu by the team physician, which he will be ex- pected to follow. Regular, organized, daily practice will commence on Monday, Sep- tember 8, at which time all candidates are expected to have reported for duty. Spalat Foot Ball Guide. On the eve of the day when the foot ball squads begin outdoor work, Spalding's Offi- clal Foot Ball Guide for 1802 appears for perusal. It Is, as usual, edited by Walter A. Camp and contajns more Interesting gridiron information than ever. Eighty half tones of teams show every important club in the country and also many ofthe untmportant ones in the east, such as high school groups. There are many chapters dealing with foot ball in its varfous phases and the rules, revised and in some respect changed, appear in the back. Extremely interesting is the lst of All- America teams, from 1889 down to 1800, These are composed supposedly of the best players in each position in the country that year and are picked by Walter Camp each year. Many of the names now famillar as conches appear in the lists, such Stagg and King. Camp also picks his All-America group for 1901, naming a first, second and third team. . As usual, he negleots the west en- tirely in hi lections, not naming a single weatern man till the third eleven, when he gives Heston of Michigan a position as halt back. Meanwhile, men from such minor schools as Lafayette and Carli: Indlan school are placed on the second and third teams, while the first team is given over exclusively to Harvard, West Point, Col- umbia, Yale, Princeton and Cormell. Mr. Camp does not endear himself to the west by these tactics. With such teams as those of Michigan and Wisconsin In existence last year, he sits in the east and gives the prominence to n on inferior teams with. out ever seeing & game In the west, Other eritios condescend to notice Snow of Michi- gan and Curtls of Wisconsin, but not so Mr. Camp. His first team reads: Ends, Davis of Princeton and Campbell of Harvard; tackles, Cutts of Harvard and Bunker of West Polnt; guards, Warner of Cornell and Lee of Harvard; center, Holt of Yi quarter, Daly of West Point; halt backs, Weekes of Columbia and Kernan of Harvard; full back, Graydon of Harvard, - The pire. Cleveland Plain Dealer: St. Peter—What was your business on earth? The Stranger—I was a base ball ympire. St. Peter—Indeed. And what is your own oplnion of your own fijness for admission Ber The Umpire—Me? Why, I'm as otraight & shoestring as you ever let in. §t. Peter—I'm afraid I'll have to dispute that. The Stranger—What? Dispute it? That's just enough from you.. If you ain’t back on y vegetal or minera! of any deseription. or chronic sore of any kind, Books on Cancer ire them, the bench inside of twenty second I'll fine you $50. An Impression of Hauteur, Washington Star: “I dont's think be meant to be overbearing,” said the monarch pensively. “To whom do you refer?” fnquired the ecourt offelal. To that American capitalisc. Perhaps 1 merely imagined it; but I can’t help sus- pecting that he assumes airs of quiet su- periority because he could enjoy power and- wealth without being obliged to ride bebind ® brass band or make specches.” 9 ] BOWLERS ARE CETTING BUSY| Viaricocele, Stricture, Specific Blood Poison, Nervo-Sexual ' Debility Cured to Stay Cured Foraver, Winter Oampaign Plans Take On Shape and Promise Much Sport. COMMERCIAL LEAGUE NOW TALKED ABOUT League Div Wil Play Twe ship Terms Duw Coming Winte es Its Season and © Two bowling leagues are now the pros- pect for the coming winter in Omaha. The latest schame promulgated by the rollers is to inaugurate a commercial league in addi- tion to the Omaha Bowling league. The new organization would, it is planned, fol- low lines similar to those of the base ball league which has been carried on among the commercial houses for some yea: The leading firms will have representation with @ team of bowlers, the league membership to be limited to nine clubs. It is confidently asserted thai far more ease will be experienced in securing a reg- ular, faithful and reliable bowling team from each house than has been the case with the base ball teams. It will require only -half as many men and far less equip- ment. In addition to that feature the bowl- ing contests in the league will always be at night, while base ball games required after noon attendance, a thing difficult for the employes of the wholesale houses. At night their work will never conflict, Should this addition of a league be consummated the doubtless be greatly to tne advantage of the game in Omaha. It has boen a much considered problem since last winter how the eport was to grow much more here, it having made such phenomenal strides dur- ing the years of 1900 .and 1901. This new league seems to come a happy solution. It would certainly concentrate and extend the bowling Interests of a.large number of commercial house employes. = Many who have in years past been more or less devo- tees of the game, but who have not in- dulged in any special spurt of enthualasm over it, will thus be enrolled on the lists of the ardent ones. The lack of organized competition in the past has been solely re- spousible for their rather desultory attach- ment to the sport, and the new league will furnish this fncentive. The plan is of further interest in that it if cafried out, that there ‘will be developed here shortly a new line of stars. The old guard has had things its own way now for quite & spéll. Each year thers is & bunch of bowlers who take practically all the high honors, and their names remain the same from season to season. They are the best in the present league, and they re- main so. But & new league will mean forty or fifty mew bowlers rolling oftener than ever before In their lives. The three games a week will not in themselves be so much, but, finding themselves In a league, open to public serutiny and criticism, everyone of them wil wish to make a ‘good ‘showing and will practice for it. Practice makes perfect, “and in pursnance of this maxim f hould not he many wesks in ‘existence before & new generation of Emerys and Reads and Denmans and Hart- leys ahould spring up. When that time comes the teams of the new league should rank up well with those of the old, and then there will doubtiess be some interest- ing post season games between the cham- plons, team and Individual, of the two leagues. new bowling result would The two-season proposition seems now definitely settled, though formal action is yet to come. - All the bowlers apparently wish to have two season: of course, means they will The first will begin in October and runi prob- ably forty-two games. The second will commence after an Intermission of two weeks and be equally as lon, It is sald that the captains of most all the teams In the Omaha Bowling league will be changed this year. The personnel of the quin will remain much the same, but the former leaders will take places In the ranks and let some other veteran have a try at captaln, ' ‘Turn about ls fair play, and doubtless in a few years more some of the teams will have preserved their in- tegral parts so identically from season to season that every man on them will have been captaln at some time or other with every other man under him. Some bowlers are saying that it will be a bard mattér to secure material for the nine teams planned. This is scarcely be- lieved, despite the fact that a few of last year's most prominent rollers do not In- tend to re-enter the league race this sea- sop. ' Wood Hartley has announced him- selt as one who will siay out of the league proposition, and it is safd that C. Conrad \will d0 likewlse. The dropping out of a féew men should not be felt to any extent. There weré surely endugh' good ‘ones bowl- ing toward the end of. last season who were not in-any club, and, these will be back: - It should mot prove difficult to re- place the men who drop out, and then some bowlers do not think that any of the enthusiasts will do so wheén it comes down to play. They will not belleve that Wood Hartley or anyone -else will stay away from'the game. ° All these things and many more will be settled at & meeting of the Omaha Bowling league, which is ‘soon to occir. September 20 is the day set, and at that time all these questions of two seasons or ome, of sched- ule, of the nuniber of teims and of this and that, will come up for consideration. It s easy to say now what most of the bowlers Wish in regard to these things, but it camnot be predicted what they will finally decide to do, though their course in most of these matters would seem to be cut and dried at this early date. The opening of the al city has started the game off in earnest already, fof thie weather is so cool that people relish bowling now, as they usually do not until October. One fact noted by the alley keéepers is that there are many new faces this year. This, they say, is a sure indication of & lot of dew bowling material, for the old ones come in slow but sure, while those who have but recently become fascinated with the game wish to get to work as soor as they are allowed on the alleys. The summer resort ‘plays no small part in bullding up the bowling patronage for the following winter, for more people learn to roll for the first time fn: such places than In any city alleys. Wherever you go now for & vacation you find the bowling alleys a prominent factor in the entertaidment and many people will learn the game for fup when they would not think of going into & bowling resort in a city and showing off before & lot of cracks while endeavoring to get on to the tricks of the sport. At a summer resort everyone is in for everything and if anybody pro- poseq bowling all are agreed on doing it. S0 it often happens that some man or women who never picked up & ball before will do so while on his or her vacation and will develop s fondness for the game and an sptoess’ in- it that he persistently stays by aad cultivaies wisen be reluris (o & olty for the winter, -Even the wlieys in the resorts. about Omaha bave se¢n many be- glaners doarn to play sod then -improve this summer, and it s a cinel that some of them will be seen Lowiing iIn the regu- s _around the The original Dr. Cook that others try to imitate. To any person afflicted with VARICOCELE “Time and tide walt for no man.” ages unequaled, but If allowed to pass may never present Opportunities may be bright and advant- themselves again, and what were once golden opportunities develop into blasted hopes whose recols lections mock in your distress. produced lockjaw and death. The occasion may be small and apparently of little importance at the time, but witimately of great harm. sure will come to the man who constantly neglects. Nothing but cen- The scratch of a pin has A little strategy executed at the right time has changed results in immense battles and made new history where a little delay would bave cost thousands of lives and reversed important conditions. Opportunities of vast lmport, fortunes of magnitude and lives by the hundreds are sacrificed in one way or another every day through indifference or neglect, In the treatment of disease it is much easler to prevent than to rectify, though much better to rectify than to neglect. Beautiful farms have grown up in weed bulldings reduced to ruins, and the prop sickness, and that sickness due wholly to a little neglect. the fen ty finally 08 destroyed, wells caved in, sold for taxes on account of Factories have been closed, stores have changed hands, businesses have been discontinued and foee tunes have been spent on account of disease, where “a stitch in time would have saved nine.” If a man is physieally weak it {s the mistake of his life to neglect his condition, and it requires no logical process of reasoning to show that any- thing worth doing at all is worth doing well and promptly. To the study and treatment of Disea: of Men we have devoted special efforts during our entire professional life, and have been re« warded by the discovery of methods which give us complete mastery of these dise ¢ offer a cure perfectly in one week without knife, surgery or detention from business. PILES in one treatment. BLOOD POIBON in twenty-seven to ninety days without potash or mercur; STRICTURE without sounds or knife In six weeks. SEXUAL WEAKNESS and REFLEX DISORDERS or Shrun- ken Parts in four to twelve weeks, and give a contract in writing as good a8 a bond. We will furnish bank and com- mercial references as well as patients we have treated, and we will not make you feel obliged to take treatment after you have talked with us if you are not fully satisfied. Our consultation and advice is always free and cheerfully given at office or by letter. You owe it to yourself and posterity to be vigorous in mind and body. Have your case ex- amined and understood, whether you want treatment now or not. Reflex and Associate Diseases Are those which are present-and act to aggravate and favor the progress of the main malady. We never dismiss a case until cured in every particular. If a case is complicated with Hydrocele (dropsy of the scrotum), Hemorrholds, Fissure or any form of disease, we cure such additional complaints also, so that the cure may be perfect and permanent. Reflex effects of all pelvic complaints are destructive to the tone of the Sympathetic Nerves. The deblilitating ef- fects on the general health and strength are demonstrated by such manhood-sapping agents as Varicocele, Stricture, Blood Poisonous and Discharge-Producing Virus We cure both causes and effects, and restore men so victimized by their own folly or by inheritance of Blood Taint. Personal and Correspondence Consultation FREE. Address, COOK MEDICAL COMPANY, 110-112 So. 14tk St., Omaha, (over Daily News). Office Hours-8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 10 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. lar alleys for the first time the coming sea son. Not many high scores have yet been rolled in Omaha, as the play is but a week or so old, yet that of Miss Loulse Goerne is eo notable as to merit especial mention. She threw 168 at ten pins a few da: this I8 a great record for so e season. Miss Goerne held last yea for women at this game, with 220. The bowlers are casting their eyes over SALLOW WOMEN A disordered digestion makes Itself in a muddy or blotchy complexion, ness and irritable temper. rvous wealk- The right remedy s the high scores left over from last season and they will begin going after them soon. Here are the city scores at the various games which will be the moving spirit in no little flerce bowling this winter: THE SYSTEM REGULATOR. PrickLy AsH BITTERS Clark's Alleys—Ten pin Goerne, 220; Miss Gussie Lehman, 213; Mrs. W. C. King, 2 rs. B. Hunter, 208; Mrs. H. Besell 212; Plumber Rea Nine pins, Charles French, 24. Cocked ha! C. Conrad, 0. Four back, C. Conrad, L. O. Shrader, Charles French, 84. Five back, C. Conrad, 107 Seven up, Charles French, 106. Beven down, C. Conrad, I 8. Hunter, 9. Cocked hat a feather, ¥, G. Butler, C. Conrad, Charles French, 9. Duck pins, C, 1, Mullin, 184, Rubbernedk, Chaties French; 16l Kankakee, C. H. Muliln, 76, ANOTHER TENNIS TOURNEY Fleld Club Men to Have a Little Handicap Affair of Thelr Own, Tennis men of the Omaha Field club are not yet satisfled. They now annmounce & parting tournament for the year, a club handicap affair in singles only. After two early season club toursMments, after o rousing midseason city tournament in singles and doubles, and finally after the triumphant interstate event, stiil these fiends want more tennis, and thus the latest scheme. The new tourney will commence Tuesday, September 9. Entries will close at 8 o'clock the evening previous. It will cost 26 cents to play. The committee in charge of the tournament comprises)J. W. Towl Brown and O.8. Erwin. Towle i man and in charge of entries. They may be made to him at room 352, Bee bullding. More enthusiasm is expected for this affair than any previous club tournament, The interest worked up over the Interstate tournament 1s expected to accomplish this. Fully twenty players in singles are ex- pected. Y The handicapping will be a feature that will attract entries, This will be thorough. The continuous play in the interstate event and before and since has given a good line on the merits of the different at the club and they will be ranked and handicapped more fairly than ever before. The system of sixths will be used. This 1s sald to be the only real fair and prac- tical method of handcapping in tennis. Prizes, too, will prove a strong lure. For first prize there will be a high grade racquet and case. This will be adorned with a silver plal appropriately engraved for the winner. The money received through the entrance fees; probably $5, will be spent for the second prize. final round in the consolation dou- Th bles, left over from the Interstate tourna- ment, was played off during the week, and Young and Caldwell won from Clarke and Haskell in two straight sets, 4. Thus 1t i6 the best beautifier on earth because it goes to the root of the trouble, in the liver and bowels and removes it entirely. Im- parts freshuess and bloom to the complexiol brighteus the aye, promotes good digestion and cheerful spirits. SOLD AT DRUG STORES. $1.00 PER BOTTLE. T 7 . ° goss s Tk Co Boai Sin B, Milweuken Wie REE 10 LADIES it Fie the suit cases go to the tall young m the stick pins to the other: And the players from other cities who were in Omaha for the Interstate camnot get over their good time., One and all they are writing back to repeat their thanks, and the newspapers in their home towns are giving Omaha and the Field club the nicest of notices. H. M. Holland of Galesburg, Ill, the six-footer . who took first prize in the consolation ' eingles, and with Sanderson won second place in the championship dou- bles, wrote bagk to Chairman Blish of the tournament committee as sbon as he reached Galesbu Mr. Holland i chair- man ‘'of the board of control of the Gal burg Tennis club, and 1is an absolute sportsman. An extract from his letter reads: Mr. Sanderson and msnl! will always remember our lm( in Omah: one of the most delightful o tings we've ever en- joyed, and we appreclate far more than I can express the ospltality and the fa: shown us by the club. 3 heartily ag! that Omaha must be full of the most genuinely good people in the world. With this letter Mr. Holland enclosed a olipping from @a Galesburg newspaper which says nice things about the tourna- ment. It read: The treatment received b; tellent. Nothing was too B0ad for them: excellent. Nothing was All_the privileges at the club, with ils swell appointments, were thrown open (o them. “Hesiden there were danoes and smokers and quets ever: ev:a:‘n"(. The the fellows Phi_Delta The e the smoker and a banqu Friday night Omaha Field club had charge of the tour- pament and the Galesburg p! are loud ip their praise of: the clul s. The slx dirt fennis courts west, and the bowlin billlard halls, golf are all fi ass, a are the most h people report it one of the most they ever made. layers ground re alleys, ball ground: nk: n, world.. 4 pleasant trips ey report as| d the finest in me‘ | $10,000 or $15,000 worth at a time. INCORPORATED $100,000,00. $10 makes §100 by our sure fl tment. ntirel SePia, FREE. Write for It quick. THE DOUGLASS DALY €O, rf Commission: u g\“ul Btreet, cnmoo. OUT OF THE ORDINARY. A Connecticut tobacco grower engages iris to wofk in the flelds by telling them i improves their complexions Blair Irwin, one of the few survivors of the “Charge of the Light Brigade, made memorable by Tennyson, now lves on & small farm near Sharon, Mass. Henrl Hourlet, a Swiss watchmake: hgl recently completed a watch made entirely out of the ivory taken from a billiard bai —works and ease complete. It keeps & time. The youngest grandfather in Kansas has not yet reached the votin He 13 & resident of Franklin county d is in- debted to his wife, a widow with grown children, whom he married recently. A remarkable d(nlnllv passed throu b Kan- sas the other day en route o It was composed of Micl with sixteen sons, two. daughters, and grandchildren enough to ake most fill & car. A Chicago man upon the ground ti a Christian Sclentist. charged with desertion, but s was only trying the absent treatment upon her spouse. New Orleans is to have a home for ore han boys, built out of funds ath Ey the late George Xavier Carstal Carstairs was himself orphaned while v young and had a hard struggle with worl accumulated = large fortune, howe’ | of which he has left for the purpose indicated. Both the czar and the sultan possess jeweled swords and sabres of great price, ut the most precious sword in existen is that of the gaekwar of Baroda. Its and belt are incrus! with dlamonds, rubles and emeralds and it is valued at the fabulous sum of $1,110,000. Four millfon doliars {s the sum annually left in Parls by ting Americans, ace cording to a writer in the Petit Pariste: Mrs. Charles T. Yerkes is credited wi ending $20,000 a_year on gowns purchi there and Mrs. Mackay sometimes orders customers the best are said to Q::’elln. Carnegle, Schwab and Vanderbllt has_procured a divorce hat hls wite had_become The wife WaS b BIG HEAD-Go 'way! Git out! I'm sick! I want to diel LEVEL HEAD—AL, in the country, will you? 1 did myself: take a CABCARET Candy Cathartic before you sleep. fix up your stomach and bowels, coel your feve! you old sinner! No rest for the wicked! You will go on & You ought to suffer! But why didn't you do as I told you when Ileft you ing to bed? You'd feel good like I do. liver, and make you feel fine and dandy the [ bat while yous last night, and They work whilq after.