Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 8, 1903, Page 11

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THE OMAHA DAILY WHAT A HORSE SHOW MEANS Beme Explacatory Buggestions iu Oonnec- ‘ tion with the Project GREAT AFFAIRS FOR SWAGGER PEOPLE Dispiay of for the Parade of He in Its Best BIM Tueker. ity Probebly a great majority of the Omaha people who are reading in the newspapers that Omahs is to bave a horse show next September have no very vivid idea of just exactly what such an affair is, what It com- prises, bow it is managed, what happens there and what, in short, there is to & horse show besides the horwes to make it & mat- ter of such extreme interest wherever mAy be given. In all these things every horse sbow is Just alike, no matter what its extent. What- ever proportions it may have, it always bes pretentions apienty. For a horse show 18 & spclety event. It i more—it is the s0- Clety evemt. As & matter of fact the horses are to a large proportion of those who pay wdmission the smaliest part of the show. It k& & horse show, and the animals are there, the best in the land. Also are pres- ent those who apprec he animals, who know their every fault and virtue there is more money exhibited in costly clothes and trappings gemerally of both men and women than in all the gear of the borses and equipages. A horse show is essentially @ big soclety event. It cannot hope for success other- wise. In whatever y the show is given the element there that represents the “400" must be interested in the aftar or it will Dot be a go. There is po intention to try and depart from this precedent in Omahu The ehow next fall will be the biggest so- clety event the city has ever known if the promoters huve their way. And it is in- tended that each succeeding year the so- clety world will bold its breath and ite fun for the annual repetition of this show For years some of the progressive society men of Omaha who are also horse lovers and also business men have been endeavor- ing to get & horse show established here They are about to succeed. The transfor- métion of the Southeru Western Horse show circuit into the American Horse Show association and the accompanying exten- sion ocourred simultaneously with the ad mission pf Omaha into the circult At the meeting in Kansas City st which these things were sccomplished the new organization .was started, with twenty cities involved. They were Ban Antounio Houston, For{ Worth, Dallas, Paris, Little Rock, Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis Sult Lake, Denver, Omaha, Des Moipes, In dianapolis, Louisville, Nashville, Atlan and Kensas City. Since that time five ad Qitional cities have been taken in. The sre Cincinnatl, Detroit, St. Joseph, Eva ville and Terre Haute. Seven months wili be exhausted by this circuit. It opens v San Antonio on April 5 and closes in St Joseph on October 30. _About four days ere given to each city on the average. The Omuha show will be one of the big- gest of them all. Alrendy the stockholders of the asseciation have voted to offer $5,000 in prises. This i an unusually large sum and sufficient to bring the finest horses in the oountry. There ore certain exhibitors jdentified with thie circuit who always fol- low it throughout. Some of the more prom- inent horse owners who will bring their animals here are: Colopgl W. G. Cowling, Bt. Paul; E. A Astibrook snd W. A. Rule, Kansas Oity; Gustav Busch, Max Orthwein, John L. Bratton, St. Louts; C. Pratt, Little Rock, Ark.; John Oudshy, Omaha; Dr. Bark, Den- ver; Dr. Shermsn Willlams, Denver: Thomas Bass, Mexico, Mo.; Herbert Crane St. Charles, 1ll.; Henry W. Kram, Pontiac 1iL; Ball Bros., Versailles, Ky.; 0. D. Un- derwood, Kansas City; Thomas W. Lawson Boston: George W. Memper, Toronto, Osn. Crow & Murray, Theological Seminary, Va.: E. §. Stottsburg, Philadelphia, and C. K. G Biltings, Chicago. In the three years of its existence under the former name, ten car loads of equip- ment have followed this circuit from en to énd. Every imaginable style of eoulp- ment is carried for the better sbowing off of the horses in competition. Every vehicle from & Qog cart up to a ten-ton drag will be here, and these are the latest products of the four leading carriage mapufactories in this country. There will also be carried every possible style of bitches. All the more modern modes of driving horses, never seen In this city, will be shown &t the horse show. Two of these newest ones are the Romsn, three horwes abreast, and 1hé Unicorn, two sbreast and one in the Jead. The show is booked for four days here. September 8, §, 10 and 11, Tuesday, Wednes- day, Thursday and Priday. There will be four evening programs and one matinee, probably on Wednesday afternoon. Bach show will consume fully two hours snd & half, as’ nine classes will be shown each time. There will be every possible class in the Omahs show, from & roadster to a rosd four, from & polo pomy to & four-in- band. Then, besides (his many additional features are planned. There will be many % | pote pomten en wine Aristocraey Calle | el and their riders | skilled men at the game, will be here A | contest, or probably several of them, wil be arrangrd Pouy polo seen ip Omaha Purther features will croms-countr; chase and rbugh riding and fancy rifing I It s expected that the horse show will be & great iiing commercially for Omaba | Merchants wil decorate their stores sud bulldings from top to bottom. Inside and out, with the colors of the show to be adopted. 1t will have all the attractions of & carnival with bome of the bad fes- tures, the unruliness, the bolsterousness | 850 such 1t will also be & good excuse to ask for the lowest of excurwion retes to this city. And then the show will be » liberal efucation in itself in more wavs than one. Already several besides thowe interested in the Omaha Horse Ehow association have been proached regarding this proposition, and all are heartily in favor of ft. Qprners of the department stores have bean seen and they applaud the plan and promis to dec- orate liberally Everything pal to the vast success of the init'al enterprise. businese men of Omaha Y. M. C. A. BASKET BALL| Team Still Strong Good Place in Season Standing. Members of the Young Men's Christian association in Omaha are still ruminating over their defeat last Tuesday night by a team so decidedly their inferior. All the boys realize that they were way off form, and that none of them save perhaps Hansen at’ center, was play- ing his average game. Even at that the sthietes are unable to understand how & | team that they had outclassed so decidedly all season on form and comparative scores €ould snatch a victory from them. In this connection it is interesting to note | the soores made at basket ball in the trans- | missouri country since the season opened on Januery 1. First of all ciation team overwhelmed the soclation boys here on January 2, by a score of 54 to 12. Next the Lincoln asso- ciation team defeated the University of Ne braska 16 to 19. Next the Haskell Indians came north, and stopped off st Lincoln for two games. There they swamped the ‘var- sity tesm, 3 to 18, and also won from the Lincoln association boys, 23 to 21. That was on Friday and Saturday nights, Janu- ary 17 and 15. Leaving that windfall in thelr wake, the Indians came on to Omaha to meet the association team here on Jan- uary 21. The Omahans had no hopes of winning, but they did, and by a big score, 2 to 11 Then and not till then people began consider the Omaha aggregstion as & cham- Lincoln as- to plonship team. They had doubled the score | on the strongest temm in the west, ana they bid fair to run a clean card of vic tories for the season. And then came the Kansans. They opped off in Lin- coln, and they played the same teams as Haskell, being defested by both. The Lin- coln mssociation beat the Jayhawkers 32 to 22, while the University of Nebraska won, Naturally, the Omaha boys 100 28 to 18 felt mighty confident against such a grade of teams as the one indicated by the scores. And it may have been this overconfidence thut got away w them. Anyway, the 26 to 24, just enough to win, but a vie- tory mome the less. No one thinks, however, that the decided slump shown by the Omaha boys last week is any prsage of a permanent falling off in form, or that it was anything more se- rious than an off day. It is confidently ex- pected by the supporters of the team lhat the men will hereafter show their former prowess. Even at that, that defeat was & slap in the face as far as western cham- pionship bonors are concerned, for Kans Can certainly not elaim the supremacy in the transmissouri country, having won only one game. yet neither can the Omahans {lay claim to the lsurels, having been de- feated by Kansas, the team that has made the weakest showing of any. | | | | matter is ! for Omaha to secure a return | game’ with the Jaybawkers on their own [fleld and let that contest determine the whole business. The team goes south late this month to meet the Haskell Indians at Lawrence, Kan., and the team of William Jewell coliege at Liberty, Mo., and might arrange a game with Kansas while in Law- rence on that trip. Should-the Gate City | men win, they will then be free to proceed | With their final games with the Fitch asso- clation tesm of Denver. The result of the | Omaha-Denver games would definitely set- tle the championship of the west, while | a8 things now stand everything is muddied | for a1 the aspirants have been deteated by trom strong weak | tenms. | | The schedule of seven foreign games on its trip, going from Omaba to meet Highland Park teams and have won | college at Des Moines, then the Des Moines ciation team, and finally the Ottumwa association team. The boys from the Sun- flower state cannot | for the gentiemanly game of basket ball Edison and Columbia Phonographs $5 to $100— Cash or Payments 14,000 Records to Select From, — Mobile Runabout $550 Mobile Surrey $1000 Mobile Delivery Wagon $2000 Mobile 12 Passenge Wagonette $2000 Shelby Gasoline $1200 Winton Gasoline " $2500 H. E. FREDRICKSON 15th and Capitel Avenne. *Phone 2161. has pever been | be a | basket bell team of the | the local asso- | visitore did them up last Tuesdsy night, | The only way to satisfactorily settle the | Kapoas, university team played & be praised too highly BEE: SUNDAY FEBRUAI { they play. During the Omaba com they | were clean and fair and square from siart | to fnish, even though the game was one of (hose hairsbreadih margin, eyelash finisd affairs that will bring out unfalr play and roughness If anrthing can it should be 8d0ed also that the two Kansas men who | acted as umpires, Alpha Brummage and | 1. P. Wherry, were sbeclutely impartial and fair to both teams throughout, being apparently uninfivenced by their college af- filiation and allegiance JAYHAWKERS LOOK STRONG Expect to Put & Champlonship Team om the Gridirem Next Fai Alphs Brummage, right tackle on the foot ball team 6f Kansas university for the last two years. and cuptain of the Jayhawker ¢leven for the coming season, was in Omaha iast Tuesday with the basket ball team from Kansas university. Brummage is the man whom Arthur Curtis, coach of Kansas last year, said was the best tackle in the west that season. Curtis made this statement after following the team through all fte gamee, including the one with his own afma mater, the University of Wisconsin the man who has made the most 1 reputation of any middle welt player in & line position, Curtis know whereof be speaks. ball Rrummage was in his own old position, which he held four | years straight on the Badger team, and the Kansas boy played the game after Ourtis’ own style. Brummage is the ideal type of foot ball player for a tackle position. He i heavy, yet not beefy solid, but not so muscle-bound as to be slow on his feet; of & good height, yet with his weight laid low enough to make him firm on his pins. He ference rules limiting a man's time on a team to four seasons ing foot ball at Kaneas. Said he | ““We will have a remarkable team at Kan- sas thie fall. It will ucdoubtedly best since Yost left us, | are tulfilled i present prospects Curtis last season put us on was not opportunity build up a team primel for that now The spirit at the university i all one of confidence now. We cannot figur> how we can lose. Although we will not have Curtis back, we have just secured the famous Weekes of Michigan, quarterback on the Wolverine team for four years past, in- | cluding the last two of the wonderful su- | premacy of the Ann Arbor men. Having been for two vears under the personel in- struction of Coach Yost, Weekes is, of course, thoroughly imbued with his ideas and methods. We couldn't in the one season to of champions, we are choud | still has two years to play under the conm- | The Kansas captain | | bad some interesting things to tell regard- | be our | our foot ball feet again, and though there | you: he wers | runty wen at tme | Hewitt has watched ve men on iflan‘ and ocoached tntil they able to make amy move in the book with | Nghtning rapidity. During practice daye and the bowe have praciosd faithfully every day, with no emthusiastic supporters | like those that greeted the thall squad | Bewstt could be heard st ng | out, “Drop # in, Eiliott or | bim. Ferguson Cover your man, there Hiltner;:” “Get down under him, Hosr and “1 say, Newion, play low!" This gethel with the admirable coaching of Dr Clapp, has made the leather fossers whs they are, the trick plays suggesied by the physical director having proved especially profitable During the last week of Pebruary an- other basket ball trip is contemplated, this | time to the east. 1t is planned to take the Omaha Young Men's Christian associa tion, Des Moines Young Men's Christian | association, Monmouth Military schoc | Chicago Central Young Men's Christian as | soctation and the University of Wisconsin | at Milwaukee or Madison. Already Lincoln hae been given a number of good games, of | especial note being the Haskell Indians | Lincoln Young Men's Christian associa | and Kansas. In these, Nebraska has jost bis o ck team is preparing for a Jist of | events for ome week from tomorrow, Fe ruary 16, which is charter @ay he uni versity. Dr. Clapp and Captain Tobin have been giving their entire ecnergy the working up of this turn, and be good. The pole vaul be pre-eminently interesting, from that et that Dr. Clapp holde the world's champiozship rec ord, galned at Yale B! Johnson, tb { tast little colored boy, is high man at this in the university but Benedict will press him hard. Tob! w put the sh and likely win against al omers. Bene dict will come pretty to “Bobby Gaines’ mark at the high jump proposition and potato races and the llke will be worth while because of the Jarge numbeg, of en- tries. Lehmer of Omahs and Harry Reed of Omaha will probably do this. now close The base ba'l men have at lust old “Jack” Best, the tre and into the cage. Townsend has arranged for this sort of a “working programme and pitchers are now into shape. Bender, Townsend, Thomson and Goar are alrendy on the ground, and there is @ prospect that Hoar, a Fremont man, will come in ROURKE ON WESTERN LEAGUE the PR Loeal Magnate Still Looks om ask anything | | better than that, for Yost is recognized in | the west at least as the most remarkabie coach of the age with Weekes' own record player and we feel sure thy & good thing. He was twice placed at quar- terback on the All-Western eleven. Of | course there are alwa that a plaver doesn't necessarily make e | 8002 coach, but the University of Michigan | evidently thinks that Weekes would be high grade foot ball teacher, for that school refused to let him go till it was sure of Yost for another season. Had Yost left | Michigan we would not have secured | Weekes. | “We get back eleven of the men that Curtis coached last season and nine of the €leven sre first team men. They are my- self at right tackle, Hicke at right end, Allen st right guard, Ackerman &t left | guard, Peters at lett tackle, Pooler at quar- terback, Reed at left half, Mosher and Love, who interchange at fullback; Cook for substitute left half and J. Alfand for substitute right hall. Any one can see what & formidable lineup thet makes, and {1t will be a grest start for Weekes to @ foot bail we are getting begin on & team of trained and experienced | men in thet way. We start training on September 1 at Lawrence: “Curtis goes bagk to Wisconsin next fall to be head coach. I have just heard from him, and be has entered Rush Medical col- lege for the second half of the year. He intends to practice medicine eventually, and will probably pay his way through medical schoel with the proceeds of his coaching. At Kansas he received §1.000 for the ten weeks' work. At Wisconsin he gets $1,800. We pay Weekes §1,200 this season. We re- gard Curtis as & fine conch. 1 think he did everything with that Kansae team last vear that sny man could have done. He is u hard worker, aud anything but frivilous. He is very reserved and confines foot ball strictly to the gridiron itself. He never Qiscusses it outside.” ATHLETICS AT THE UNIVERSITY Are Enthusiastic Over the Out- look and Many Are Try- ing for Teams. With the beginning of the second sem ter at the University of Nebraska all de- partments of epring athletios have taken | new life. The last week has called out mus- cular men with varied tendencies, and dremsed them in “gym" suits for different types of work. Tuesdsy afternoon gt 4 o'clock candidates for the track team were called out for the first time and began ele- mentary training under the direction of Dr. Clapp, the physical director, and Cap- tain Tobin. During the week, alsp, cand dQates for the diamond heve been put into the cage for “working out” and to go through the process of sifting, in order that prospective material may be selected for the ‘varsity sguad, and other men for the orubs.” To complete the week of ac- tivity the basket ball team, under Man- ager Hiltoer and Captain Hewitt, has been taking a lively run out into the altitudinous regions of Celorado end Wyoming, playing #cheduled gumer and making & good show- ing for the Scarlet and Cream The seven men who o0k the basket ball | trip sre the sthletic the public jurt now the action is, ncenes representatives before In other depurtments 80 10 spesk, behind the terest by Nebraska. They have had games st Denver, Bouider, Colorado Bprings, 'flr‘elpy and Cheyemne. They have worked | bard for their alme mater and they have done well. They have gone into every con- | test with & determination to win and they | beve made & creditable showing It is ot generally known, but neverthe- leas true, that basket ball is the most ex- bausting form of athletie sport indulged in by colleges in Americs. And for that rea- #on these N men who bave been throwing goals o the mountains during the last few Qa; @Geserve more credit than they ordi- narily receive. At the end of one of his noted foot ball wemsons Oortelyou, the “star” end for the Oornhuskers for four years, came into the “gym” to take on bas- ket ball. He had been in every hard grid- iron game, and in the most terrific serim- | ages for nearly three months. His cosch bad pronoynced his “wind” good. But In spite of all this, exactly ten minutes of basket ball was enough to put him out of the playing #hd send him, exhausted. to the locker room. That is why only the most robust fellows in school can ever hope to wear baskii ball first team sweaters. And that is why, too, Captain Hewitt, with his Uttle party. should be commended for what e bas done At & @safvantage from & lack of old imen, the sport bas beld ia ows wondesr- ¢ Combine that instruction | those who think | And for this reason the course of | the basket boys has been watched with in- | “It is not any cinch whatever thi ler, one of ¥ basemen, will go to Montgomery, Ala., a8 player-manager of the Souhern league team hat place,” said Manager William Rourke of the Omaha base ball club late last week As & matter of fact, Whistler is such a good man that | am anxious to keep him the “’rs:brr‘ | league. He is certainly 100 good & base ball | player to go in the Southern league. So 1 have offered WHistler to St. Joseph, and until that town refuses bim I'll not let him | go to Montgomery. Of course, down at Bt | Joseph mow they say they have Charles | Farrell, more familisrly known as ‘Duke Farrell, or st least they have a chance to | get him. ‘Duke’ is the catcher who was with the Brooklyn team last season. He is » high grade baliplayer, but at that 1 am not so sure that Whistler would mot be more suitable and saatistactory for St. Jo- seph under all the ocircumstances. Down there they want & player-manager. Now Farrell is the player all right, but he has never been anything else, and is in no way | qualified to manage & team. Whistler, mennwhile, has had considerable experience managing tesms in the minor eastern Jeagues and is mot any scrub of a plaver, efther. “I had been banking s good deal on get- ting pro-season games with Hart's Chicago | National league team for April here, but | my chances for that are not so bright now. 1 see that the western club of the National something at | satisfied | come | ng their arms | Whist- | ’ LEEPING YOLCANOES Those the calm ex fire, molten vapory smoke laz haps the onl tumult with | they soo aroused t quakings which forete downpour of heated blinding, suffocati They v living Thousan who ] near rior of the sleer ive ly ascend i of e to » a sense of their rock der the Merc he deluded victim believ ly been smothered in the s, e in the mouth, the slight rheumatic pains in mhuscles and joints and the red 11y breaks out upon the body, are warn- often go the smoulder vered with sor nd all the old symptoms return— , ulcerated throat, swollen glands, e sufferer believed had been up- d destroyed by the Mercu se disappear z deadly v1 appa S101. 3 oms, which rumblings grow lo { and the body is soon o | splotches and pimples, sore mouth and ton and many others tha rooted an Not only do these minerals fail he greatest rosis or , Salivation, Inflamm. der on | The use of S. 8. S | 1 but is guaranteed a s for Contagious Blood Poison, & | SSS which will be sent free on application. disease, with complete directions for treating the same. mation desired is furnished by our physicians without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. o | McGREW SPECIALIST Treats all forms of BISEASES AND DISORDERS OF MEN ONLY e i e, His remarkable suo- cess has never been aled snd every day brings many flatter- T eporis of the go0d he 18 Goin, or the Tefier he has given. and American leagues are talking of play- ing their spring sevies with each otber, and | if they carry out these plans that will of | | course keep the Chicago Nationals away from this part of the country. If they can get the different teams to dgree to it, they will undoubtedly hold thir series of Nationa! | | clubs versus American, for that will prove | & big @rawing card for the practice games. | But there is still & chance of us getting | Hart's men out here. I have left April 11| and 12 open for them, sud have written | Hart that I shall hold the Bates till Febru- | ary 15. By that time we'll know definitely. | “But affairs are so quiet and settled and orderly in the Western league and in my own club that we are spending most of our | time watching the other fellows. Bvery- | body in our league hus cagerly awaited the | result ‘of the American association meetin Saturday. It is certainly time for those people to be giving out their circuit, and they ought to do it at that meeting. Then we'll see whether or not Hickey will take his club trom Bt. Paul to Chicago. 1 don't thiuk it will be any winner in the Windy | City. In one semse Chicago s three big | eition, and they would undoubtedly get good | Sundey erowas out there on the North Side | But that's all they would get. There | wouldn't be & corporal's guard ou’ on week- | @ays. It's the out-of-town people that | make the weekday crowds in Ohicago,” and | they wouldn't go clear out to that park |1t's the floating populstion that makes those big cities such £ood base ball towns | Bven here in Omahs 30 per cent of our | weekday business is out-of-town people |and clear out there on the North Side | Hickey couldn't get any of that fiosting | populntion patronage | " ote Jhit" b Americen Jessne waa- | nates | refuse to make public the loca. tion of their grounds o New York City | That is begiuning to look rather fishy me. They say they have two options, so if they are shut out of one they will bave the other to fall back upon. But they've got to expose the secrct and start work on the grounds mighty quick nov or they can | | not get it ready for the season. 1f they in- | | tend using that deeation &t Lennox avenue | and One Hundred and Forty-first street they eunnot delay much Jonger, for that is quite centrally situated and it will mean steel comstruction throughou:. They cannot put uny framework in there, Lor &ny other com- bustible material. It must be steel stands and they are slow bullding.” Pucumonia. | Thie is ope of the most dangerous and It alweys results from a cold or from &n attack of the grip Chamberiain's Cough Remedy quickly cures these diseases and counterscts any tendency toward pueumonia. 1t is made especially for these and similar silments and can al- ways be depended upon. A Natursl Questio The youngster in the art gallery looked long and earnestly st the painting. Then be read the imscripticn Do you like it ssked bis mother “Ok, 1 like it well enough ™ he answered “but 1 don't understand L. “What ig it you don't understand? “Why, it says ‘Wild Horses—aAfier Ross Boubeur.' 1 see the borses all right, but where's the girl they're aftert—Brooklyn Bagie. | BLOOD DISEASE Hot Springs Treatment for swm; | And all Blood Polsons NO “BREAKING OUT” on the skin er face and all external signs of the disease disappear at onoce. | lows than 30 Days. Cu s puaranteed in LB AN B DAYS. VARICOCE OVER 30000 S™eils “loast 1 ILaaty, varal _Qischarges, Btricture, | Gt iidney anc Biagder Discases. | . Gieet, Kidney aroce! JICK CURES—LOW CHARGES. rr‘flfmm by mail. P. O. Box 766 Office over 216 B. 14tk street, between Farnam and Dougies streets, OMAHA, NEB. “HICH BALLS" MADE FROM Have & delicious tlavor weculiarly their own. Quaker Maid Rye is R wbsolutely pure. For medicinal purposes it 8 is unequalied. On sale ut the leading cafes, drug stores and bars. S. HIRSCH & CO. Whoiesaie Liguor Deaters, EANSAS CITY, MO. . | Specialists | In sl DISEASES snd DISORDERS of MEN. 12 years of suce cessful practise ia Omaha. CHARGES LOW, DCELE HYDROGELE and | } e BEsoeLr e BT L e e e = o e & e STPRRL T = e | Sompieialy ang ferever No -BAEAKING OUT of A S K] P etk s gy S EAUSTIO WASTING J ! B I e SRrar = 3L 11l - P EROIEY. pev e vy Soie 7 Bo: L oo T e e Cons Free. Tresument by Mail or médress, 119 5. 14t St e ‘ DR SEARLES & SEARLES “%ii* TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Makes Most Useful Present. TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Write for & Sample Copy. S atmo: eril by the rumblings and comir d sect ry to the system. feath of the bones, deep and offensive ach are some of the horrible effects of Mercury and Potash. in Contagious Blood Poison cases is never followed by such results. Thousand Dollars for proof that it contains one particle of Mercury, Potash, or other mineral, rictly vegetable remedy. It cures even where the worst sym developed, and the patient, to all appearances, was hopelessly incurable. | 1d the only radical and permanent cure known. This has been proven by an experience of nearly fifty years, during which thousands have been restored to 5 sound and vigorous health when it seemed nothing could the ravages of the disease and save them from a most S.S. S. destroys and eliminates every atom of poison from the system—purifies, strengthens and builds up the blood, and the smouldering fires of this terrible dis- ease are extinguished, and no signs of a return are ever seen. cial book on Contagious Blood Poison, It describes fully all the symptoms and stages of the Medical advice or any special infor- sulphurous gases, but the thin g from its crater is per- the commotion and ere of danger fear and are only < eruption and - d ashes, scalding mud, g smoke and sulphurous gases. v when the sleeping volcano awoke, and they were lost. ds of Blood Poison sufferers are living upon a sleeping volcano, and are taking ry and Potash treatment, the external evidences of the s the cure complete. stem. unheeded. ~Then the ng poison bursts out s and copper colored ry and Potash treatment. to cure the disease, but Mercurial Rheu- | ! of the Bowels and Stom- We offer One S(Op horrible fate. We have a s: 84’ PR $88s888 biidd zgg: #5459 drawal on demand vesturs. The earuings on our system AR IN MIN Qrawal of your iuvesiment. BEAR IN MIND, purchase of racing stables, steck bookiet nown e money, money, & Boekict of use! e wal turt REFERENCE BANK OF NE I EEEEEE R E I IR EEEEEEEE RN BN years told me that 8. 8. §. had certainly cured him, Weekly Profits Paid as Follows: in Frofits which, together with the principal, is subject to with- MEAR IN MIND, we 80 ot operate series or poots in which & part of in- vested capital may be joat, thus auu-m:.':n capital of & small mumber of in- of 8 & unit and disbursed sccording to contract. = we do Dot place any restrictions whatever o the with- G0 not divert any part of capital invested with us to the Iliaries. Our busiuess is strictly is vestment o races, &8 per pIan wet forth fn our BEAR IN MIND, we are not in SWADDLING CLOTHES, ner are we strug- Iing fur & bare existencs. Our peaition is wo SLrong, 100 re; Truthtully, we are and will cantinue to be the REIGNING TURF SEN SATION, and as o our RELIABILITY ar FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY, we take pleasurs in referring you io the Btate Naugoal Baak of New Orieass 1 ¥y money i card will bring you our Raci and eriginal plan, inderscd by press and public and recommend. ©€ by premincnt banks and bankers. The Co-Operafive Turf Association, Inc., STATE NATIONAL ORLEANS. I EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE NN But the fires of contagion The little sore that now and then Bowping GrEex, Kv., March 24, 1002 Ge~NTLEMEN : For over four years I suffered greatly from a severe case of Contaglous Blood Poison four months prescribed Mercury. Nothing did me any good, in fact the treatment proved more harmful than beneficial 1 went to Hot Springs, staying there 1 then consulted physicians, who Thus I continued to suffer for four 1 mientioned my cese to & friend, who at once commenced use, and in a few months could find no trace of the disease whate ever, and 1 can truthfully say I am entirely well 1recommend S. S. 8. to all in need of & sure and safe cure for Contagious Blood Poison. D. M. SaAXDERS. Residence, Mitchell House. ptoms have S. S. S. is an antidote % PROFIT 84% Week of Jam. 5.. 5.10 Fer Cemt Week of Jun. I3. . .34 Per Comt Week of Jan. 39.. .45 Per Comt Week of Jun. 3€. . 531 Per Oemt are pussed to the credit of all investors . beoking, o other unprofitable turf sux peotable, a0¢ too wei 2 u rmation, with ser entircly mew NEW ORLEANS, LA, $3$$$8388$3$$3$$3$8$$$8853888C85S8833888 Grandpa’s ye—= Unsurpassed in age, strength and purity. No medical chest complete without it. Recommended by leading physicians Ask your dealer for it The Mountain Distiliing Co., CLARK’S Bowling Alleys Biggest - Brightest—Best. 1313-15 Harney Street. SN Bowling Alleys COMPRIEE FHE FIVE BEST ALLEYS WEST OF CHICAGO. 11212 Farnam L. *Phene 2376

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