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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, M BASE BALL BIRDS SINGING Oom‘ng of 8pring 'i\v:Opnnn the Voice of ! the Omaha Orank TI?E FOR HOME ROASTERS TO HOWL U They Don't Get In Thelr Work Now They May the Playing Seaso Never, for win Soon He On Tw. Get ready. Winter's backbone has teen broken and nocked out of sight; the groundhogs rophecy has expired by statute of limita- tflons and the robins and jaybirds and even he strect-cleaning force point to the ar- rival of spring. Papa Bill has sent trans- portation to his hired men and it won't be many more Sundays now until the rest- less fans can ropst on the sunny bleachers and enjoy themselves as only a thirty-third degree crank can. We're to have good ball again this summer, aud that's no josh. All that old gang of sure-enough ball players | wiil be with us once more, and one or two | new ones, 8o the promise for the sort of ball we enjoyed last summer is excellent, Now, you home knockers get busy. Bwing Your hammers on Hickey and Stewart and Genins and Dolan and Carter and Gonding Just as you did last year, and roast the menagement. This is your season; but it will only be a few weeks until the thon- sands of loyal supporters will be too busy cheering the sharp flelding and hair-raising base running of these boys to pay any at- tention to the yawp of the home Old Dave Calboun will be missed off first base, but the bag will be filled by a young- ster who can fleld the position, ean run a base a fow and has been known to make a hit every once in a while. He finighed the season with Omaha and was batting away up near .400 at the close. Even the great Stone was below him. This is Johnny Wright. He'll make Davy's absence very apparent. Stewart on second will be just as young as he was last year, Ace gave up the idea of fielding hot ground- ers with his feet he was a wonder. More than that, he's the best field general on the clreult and éan turn more tricks during the course of a game, and make them go, than any man in the Western league. What Ed- ®iie Hickey doesn’t know about the game @ouldn't fill many dictionartes, and he has 'put In the winter taking care of the in- juries he received last scason, 6o that he expects to report In condition to play the game. Joe Dolan has been in good shape all winter, having only to heal two or three broken fingers and a few minor things like that. We all know the sort of work he does at short. Frank Genins hasn't forgot- ten any of his Infinite knowledge of base ball during the winter, and still says he yfould rather play in Omaha than anywhere @iee in America, so we have reason to look 'or the best this acknowledged prince of outfielders can do. And “Nick' Carter hasn’t done a thing since last fall but make moonshine whisky and dream of steal- ing bases down on his Tarheel farm. Did you ever see “Nick” steal a base? Well, he's one man who can keep everybody on the other side guessing. He was the best base runner in the league last season, and ,it's not likely they have dug up as good one for this year. If they have, Carter will lot out another notch and show the boys what he can do when he's crowded. It's no use talking of Johnny Gonding. He's all the money when it comes to catching. Ever see ‘em steal bases on Johnny? No? Just €0 out ‘some afternoon and watch 'em. It's worth the price of admission just to see the ambitious try the experiment. They are all hoping to catoh. Johony some afternoon when his arm len't working. roaster. ) Much joy. Papa Bill snared a pitcher. He has swapped his extra firs ‘Whistler, tor Bruner, the southpaw who | made such a tear in the Southern league last season. This gives us at least one man to start the season on. Then there Is still the chance that Podge Alloway will be traded for another good pitcher. These, with the big string of youngsters on the list, will be enough to start with, and the *old man" still has his hooks out for some good material. He has had a lot of trou- ble, but belleves the sky is turning blue again. Help that has been promised him by big league managers is sure to result In & good pitcher or two, and then there's al- ways the prospect of Brown or Owen re- turning for the season. Don't you worry; we'll have good base ball all next summer. “With Sexton and Hickey on the coast trying to straighten out the tangle that cxists the little is doing in Omah: Papa Bill. “We are waiting for their re- turn and then the schedule for the coming season will be made out and the members of the team will begin to roll in the last of this month and the first few days in April. T have sent them all transportation 80 that they can be here by April 1, when they are supposed to report, They won't all get here by then, but a few days later will find the men here and hard at work preparing for the struggle of the summer. I have nineteen men signed so far and may slgn another pitcher before many more days go by. He s a good man and I have made him an offer that I think he will aceept. I ‘“The season opens April 23 and Omaba will probably play the first league games away from home. Before tbat there will be & grist of practice league games with teams here in Omaba. I have scheduled games with the Originals for April 4 and 65; Crelghton university, 6; Chicago Natlonal league, 7, 8 and 9; Les Moines, 11 and 12; University of Nebraska, 13 and 14; Creigh- ton umiversity, 15, and Fort Crook, 17. of the zames will be played at home, with the exception of the two with the Uni- versity of Nebraska, which will be played in Lincoln. There are only two open dates in this schedule and T will 1l them if it is SCROFUL Serofula manifests itself in many neck and lh_rofll. Cn.t:srvh, weak eyes, white swelling, offensive sores and -bocesgc-. skin eruptions, loss of strength and weakness in muscles and joints. It is a miserable disease and traceable in almost every instance to some family blood taint, Scrofula is bred i to child, the sceds are planted in infancy and unless the blood is purged and purified and every atom of the taint removed Scrofula is sure to develop atsome period in your life. No remedy equals S. 8. as a cure for Scrof- < \ula, Itcleanses and builds up the deteriorated blood, 150 South makes it rich and pure and under the tonic effects of this great Blood Remedy, the general h strengthened to health, T SSS L S. 8. 8. is guaranteed purely veg purifier and tonic that removes all blood Our physicians will advise without case. Book mailed free, \ THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. | going to move and after | baseman, | All | begins. joints and glands is carried off as soon as the blood is restored to a normal condition, and the sores, erup- s, and other symptoms of Scrofula disappear. possible to do so. ‘‘hese games will put the team In fine shape and give the men the best of practice. Besides, they will all be played at home and the local fans can get a good line on the team by the time the season opens Instead of increasing the langth of the west end of the grand stand fifty feet, as was first Intended, | am golng to a*d weventy feet to it. With this addition 'h"i seating capacity of the grand stand will | be increased by 1,000. Altogether there will be room for 3,700 of the fans and the women to sit under a roof and watch the game. The bleachers that the addition will displace on the west side of the field I am over on the south side of the field and there will still be room for 3,000 there. The American base ball league still main- tains a discreet silence in regard to the location of its new grounds In New York City, despite the promises made from day to day that the apnouncement of the loca tion would be made. It begins to seem as it they had failed to close any contracts | for the grounds. Otherwise there would be no such hesitancy on thelr part in mak- ing public the location. Two places have been mentioned prominently in connection with the matter. One just a.ross the Harlem river In the Bronx and opposite the | polo grounds of the National league and | the otber at Ope Hundred and Forty seventh street in the Bronx. The first lo | tion would make an elegant spot for the games. The ground is ideally flat and well drained for the purpose and there is a goodly amount of it, more than both the polo grounds and Manbattan field combined | It 18 not over ten minutes’ walk from the | end of the elevated lines and near to the | point where the subway will cross the river | | into the Bronx. The other location is dif- | cult of access and not as desirable a fleld | Tt would hardly be a paying venture to | locate there, as New York people would not take the time to go there to see a | game. Brooklyn is much closer for the | majority of people and they would prefer to | go there to a game than so far up in the Bronx if they were not satisfied with the | game that the New York National league puts up ATHLETICS AT THE UNIVERSITY Base Ball Squad Nearly in Shape to Take on Stiff Practice Gamens, Base ball is etill the paramount lssus in university athletic ecircles. Now that the schedule has been arranged and a good trip promised, the players have begun ear- nest work, and the base ball management feels assured that the competition for places will be so keen as to assure a | winning team. Before the scheduled games | are commenced it is intended to play sev- eral practice games to get the team on | its mettle and start the ball rolling. An alumni game is talked of, and probably | will be pulled oft before the Omaha game. In talking over the question of an alumni team soveral of the old boys expressed themaclves as anxious to see one formed and to get out on the dlamond again. Manager Clark Bell also hopes to get a | game with Wesleyan. The date, May 7, which was to have been taken by Beloit, |18 still open, otherwise the schedule is complete. \ Coach Gordon has been hard at work in the cage, gettlng the pitchers into shape. The copdition of the field has not | Allowed much outdoor work, but Manager Boll promises that next week batting nets will be put in position, and then the ma- terfal will develop more rapldly and the leadors can be found out. Nebraska has always felt the need of iacilities for earry- ing on batting work vithin doors, as on the batting the strength of the team must depend to so great wn extent. Outdoor work began last Friday. “The coming week ‘will see forty men workiog for places,” :ald Captain Townsend last Frida e are encouraging every man who has any ability at all to enter the contest. Places will be awarded regardless of any pull or favor.” The fleld upon which the Indomitable foot ball team of the 'varsity so success- fully met thelr opponents last fall is to be put in shape for the coming base ball and track events. It is the hope of every man and woman at the university that equal glory will be gained by Nebraska in these contests. The bleachers are to be removed and the fence on the east sids of the fleld will be taken down. This will give a field of good aize. In the track department of the athletic world thers are no cobwebs accumulaiing. Anyone who pays a visit to the gymnasium on an afternoon when Dr. Clapp s showing how the different stunts are properly done will have no fear for the Nebraska team landing its share of the horors. The men are at work every afternoon. Outdoor work has not been possible so far and so it ‘s impossible to tell what some of the men will be able to do. Captain Tobin stated to a Bee representative the other day that the work will be systematized when the fellows can get outside, as some events cannot be practiced for very satisfactorily in the gym. For the pole vault, “Benny” Johnson and Lehmer are doing good work and profiting | by the experience of Dr, Clapp, who holds | the world's championship in pole vaulting. In the running events Netraska will be | able to put up some speedy material. In | the short distance run, Burg, Cheney, Bender and Harry Reed are doing good work. State and Benediot are showing up well in the half mile run, and in the long distance, States, Carr a7d Kanzler have entered. In the hurdle racing events Morse and Mouck have entered, and perhaps somo others will show up when outside practice | For the weights, hammer throw- | | Ing, shot putting and the discus, Martin, | | Hickle, Borge, Graves and Tobin will enter. | Besides the men mentioned there are a number who are taking gemeral training, A DISEASE WE INHERIT. Swelling of the glands of the ways. n the bone, is transmitted from parent on the he; Scrofula a H‘d little .rlnd’;wm when only 1 Ml‘h‘ old, and spread ra; Adl‘o'e her body, The disease next attacked the eyes and we feared she would lose her sight. Em. inent physiciass were co d, “but could do nothing to relieve the l tle in- HOO t Wi hen that we decided to t That medicine at once made poody and complete oure. is now Sheosy pad emppbeie, (1Y e . of m: 5th Btreet. %fiw.lm ealth improves, the digestive organs are , and there is a gradual but sure return he deposit of tubercular matter in the etable and harmless; an ideal blood taint and builds up weak constitutions, charge, all who write us about their | here first, are not the only | and win even greater thai | the pioneers in having gone to Holdrege for a four days' outing. | will be held a consolidated | the Buffalo Bill elub of North Platte and the Grand Island Gun clubs having com- bined (8 Ita management. but have not as yet signified what events they .intend to enter, Basket ball has about died out, The event of import- ance was the two games of Friday evening, when the first girls’ team of the ‘varsity met the Kansas university girls, and the sccond girls' team met the Haskell girls Basket ball has proved to be a very bene ficial sport for women as well as men, and the work of the girls’ teams has become very good under the supervision of Miss Barr, physical instructor. Class games in basket ball have been held and next Monday evening the class champlonship will be decided. These minor events are important as developing material for the big teams, and they also help to stir up class interest Intertraternity base ball is being talked up and a few games may be played. Coach Gordon expects to have a good second tear to put into the field, as all the good men now out cannot, of course, make the first team, and he hopee for a strong second team. The base ball committee has awarded the contract for furnishiug supplies for the season to E. F. Myers, Mr. My a junfor and has been engaged in bicycle and sporting goods trade for several years. PLANS FOR Y. M. C. A. ATHLETES Series of Nights Which Will Give the Boys a Chance to Test Strength and Skill, Beginning last Thursday night a series of athietic nights was begun in the Young Men's Christian association gymnasium. The series will extend over the four Thurs- day nights in March and each will be dis- tinet from the other in that ‘he events will differ to svme extent from time to time. The showing for the first night was very good, bringink out, as it did, two men who made the honor list. They were Doane Powell of the noon class and O. Weber of the high school. The other elght of the con- testants did not succeed in doing anything startling, but their work was good and gave promise of a successful series for the month, Interest in the gymnasium work of the assoclation is not lagging despite the warmer weather and the temptation to loat out of doors. The classes have all held up well in atfendance and there hus been an increase in membership in the 5 o'clock business men's class. This class 1s taking up new work and has organized four bas- ket ball teams and two Indoor base ball teams. The basket ball teams are cap- talned by four of the players on the first tsam and will play a serfes of games to de- clde the champlonship of the class. The indoor base ball teams are also preparing to indulge in a similar series of contests for the champlonship of the class. Little attention has been given to the coming of spring and its cccompanying sports, the track base ball and tennis, oWwing to the fact that no grounds suitable for the work have been obtained as yet, except for tennis. Three vacant lots at Nineteenth and Farnam streets will be turned into four up-to-date tennis courts and, In this branch, the association will 800 begin to prepare for the summer. 'fhe outlook for a strong showl.g in this sport 1s extremely good and every man will have to work to do anything superior to that of the others, The assoclation numbers among its members a number of men who are excellent players and they are all anxious to get out with their racquets to win glory for the assoclation. In track athletics it is difficult to foretell what the outlook s, as there s little to form any Judgment by. Mosi of the work fnside is of a character that does not allow of any great practice for the ~of- doors work except in the way of hardening the men and giving them endurance. Some work that Is of a ~haracter similar to-the fleld work has been carried on in the gymnasium through the winter months and in these events there is an excellent out- look for the association. In ‘he rumning and standing high jumps and the running and standing broad jumps there are a num- ber of men who are doing excelient In- door work and they will be heard from | when they get on the fleld. In putting the shot, which is another event that is in- cluded in the gymnasium, the outlook is not so promising. There are but two men in this event that are doing any kind of record work. There may be more men who will show up in some kind of form later on when they get out af doore. SHOOTERS AFTER WILD FOWL Open Water and the Spring Flight Brings Out the Gunners in Numerons Force. Local hunters are busy preparing for the spring sport. Guns are being gotten out of their winter haunts, and early mornings find a number of the enthusiasts haunting the shores and marshes of Manawa and Cut Off lakes. Ducks are plentiful on these lakes and bags running as high as seventy- five have been brought in by those who spent the day on these lakes. Most of the hunters, though, slip out for a few hours’ sport in the morning before taking up their day's labors, and they have had great sport and some kills, The pintails, which were ducks that are found on Nebraska strcams and lakes these days. Mallards, redheads and others are as plentitul, If not more so, than the pintalls, and that Is saying a great deal, for the pintails were everywhere in great flocks two weeks ago. A few parties slipped out of town dur- ing the week to duck haunts nearby and stayed a fow days. They report good huni- ing on the Platte and the Elkhorn. Most of them have not returned yet, as they did not leave until the latter part of tha week not come home until after Sun- day George Toozer and a party of friends went to Do Soto Monday, and had sueh good luck that Fred Goodrich and Gus Windheim followed them up or Wednesday. Judge Munger, Henry Homan and M. L. Learned packed up thelr traps and slipped out to Clarks Saturday night for a little sport. Reports from there were too glori- ous for them te resiat the temptation, es- pecially after they saw a bag of seven geese that Fred Downs bought in from there early in the week. He declares that ducks and geese are simply swarming In the Platte at Clarks, and that no one should miss the opportunity of taking a few days off to look for them. Fred Hamilton and Prichard heard re- ports of & plentitude of ducks on the Elk— horn at Highlan?, and hurried out Saturday afternoon to hunt over Sunday. From tne sandhills there comes word of ducks and geese In numbers greater than usual cnd small parties are being made up already to 4o out after them. It is not Itkely that many of the local hunters will €0 up .ato this country for a week or o t, es the promise of good sport then is it 1s now. Ward Burgess and Richard Kimball are the westward movement, Out at Grand Isiand on April 1, 2 and 8 tournament, LIGHT 1 doubt it it ever came home to you that Norway some milllons of regenerated cons: ARCH 1 Al R Free Bottle of Ozomulsion, the Only Ozo- nized and Vitalized 0il, Sent by Mail Emulsion of Cod Liver on Request to All Readers of The Omaha Bee. to the great Cod fisheries of (he Coast ot umptives, scrofulitic, impure blood pa- nts, and weak people generally, owe a prayer of everlasting thanks Equally interesting Is it to know that all the medicinal cod liver ofl of any value ed n the world is made from the annual catch of cod at the Lofoten Is'ands. It is from the drippings of the fresh livers of these codfish that Ozomulsion, the iew flesh-forming medicinal food, is prepar ized with Ozone, Gualacol, Glycerine and th The wonderful good that Ozomulgion is poor, weak, improperly nourished, microbe- e of universal knowledge. There are medicines which will cure the symptoms which we have come to call by But there s one great sickness of the cbangeable and countless that it has neve professors of medical sclence. Its name is simply WEAKNESS, For that disease 1s Ozomulsion. ed and afterwards impregnated and vital- e Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda. now and has for years been doing to all aten, blood poisoned sufferers is a matter sick—that s, put a etop to the outward the names of various diseases. human race whose symptoms are so r been pinned down and classified by our Whether you were born weak or have been brought to it by the attacks of dis- {ease, matters not. . Ozomulsfon cures, It destroys all microbes which infest th, It bullds the body and thereby makes y Thin, pale, bloodless, anaemics, with lis sons after a dlet of Ozomulsion. Consumptive lung sufferers with hectic of appetite, wasting away in spite of al e blood and thus puts a stop to disease. ou strong. tless lack of ambition, become new per- flush and hacking cough, headaches, lack | possible care, regain appetite, strength, fiesh and vitality upon a course of Ozomulsion, Pimply, red-faced, blood polsoned unfortunates, afraid to look thelr friends in the face, with unhealthy skin and God knows what hidden corruption in their blood, regain the fresh complexion of youth and drive out the conditions that are eating away their constitution, by persistently treating their complaints with Ozomulsion, Reader, 1t any of the above eymptoms &re but a few of the many which we could But the maln thing to remember is th SION WILL MAKE YOU STRONG. To get Ozomulsion ask your druggi: FREE TRIAL BOTTLE BY MAI so that all may test its wonderful virtues. and the free bottle wlil at once be malled He hat apply to you, mark them well. quote, at when you are weak and low, 0ZOMUL- They it or will get it for you. We will send free to all readers of this paper a FREE trial bottle of Ozomulsion, Write, giving your name and full addre: you. N\ N N oo The Food That __Does SN s Ozomulsion Co., 32 De Peyster St., New York SPECIAL NOTICE —Physicians use, recommend and prascribs Ozomalsion in the large original sixtesn-ounc vottles, and all druggists sell it. | men directly home classes, collected by Clarence Demin birth rate off as 8 rogressive and rapid come period covered b 1810 to 1878, Lwo years the births were 413 to each 10 It will be a n were 285 birt] strictly amateur affalr, all professionals and manufacturers' agents being barred | from the money. Shooters who average $1 | per cent up will be charged extra money, | the resulting coin to be divided among those | who shoot through the tournament and get | less than 89 per cent. Ten events ol fif- teen and twenty targets will be shot off on the first days, and on the last day the | match of Omaha against the state comes | off. ! | tasurance policies aggregating §99,083,989 are | HAIR SOFT AS SILK, New Scientific Treatment Kills Dan- druff Germs, and Makes Hair Soft. It is an accepted fact, a proven fact, that dandruff is a germ disease, and it is also a demonstrated fact that Newbro's Herpi- cide kills the dandruff germ. Without dan- druff falling bhair will stop, and thin hair will thicken. Herpicide not only kills the dandruff germ, but it also makes hair as soft as silk. It is the most delightful hair dressing made. It cleanses the scalp from dendruff and keeps it clean and healthy, Itching and irritation are instantly relieved and permanently cured. At all drugglsts. There's nothing “just as good.”” Take no substitute, Ask for “Herpieide." EDUCATIONAL NOTES, The Harvard-Yale debate will take place on March 2. A. 8. Hayes 91, has ac- cepted the position as coach to the Yale He was promine himself in de- bates when he was in college. The teachers of New York are beginning to see thelr way clear to the teachers' | ¢lub house which they have been planning to build for many years. They begin saving for it in 1850, and have now the | sum of $23,000, Edward Byles Cowell, professor of San scrit In the University of Cambridge s dead at the age of 7. Prof. Cowell Is re ognized as the greatest orfental teacher | that England has produced. His editions | of Hindoo and Persian classics are famous. | Moreover, it was he who introduced Omar | Kahyam 'to Edward FitzGerald The people of Brooklyn are very wrathy because Buperintendent Maxwell opposes the bullding of new high schools in i parc of the eity which has demanded them. Mr. Maxwell thinks it better to spend a m ion dollars or so for “public comiort rests’” and other fads that are designated by those who oppose him as “public nul- sances. The teachers in the public echols all over the country are making greater ef- forts than ever this year to Interest the pup! in nature study and this Is par- ticularly true of the disirict schools In the clty schools the subject has recelved attention for several vears, but it is only recently that the country school teachers nave taken it Pupils in Michigan rust hereafter go after the close of school The supreme court of the state has de- clared that such a rule fs valid and may be enforced by the principal. Further more, If a principal sces fit he may enter & store and order the cnlidren he finds ther to leave and go home, and the owne: | of the store csnnot get damages on the ground that the principal has driven awas trade and injured the bus'neas of his store. According | to - statistics of sixty-nine ths ong Yale graduates is falling reatly ‘as President Eliot finds arvard men. The figures show decreass as one own toward the later classes. The 13 trom o first period of thirty- mong the inquiry was In o eriod of nineteen to each 100, and eriod of dighteen years there o each Yale ‘men; in the second pi the births were 433 e_third 1 OUT OF THE ORDINARY. The eubmarine cables, reach to the moon. In New York City 100 new cases of con- sumption develop each day. A new hotel in New York City has a capacity for 1,20 guests, and employs 1,500 servants, The_hi it jointed, v hest mountain in the moon is at least 35,000 feet; that s 6,000 feet higher than Mount I Japan's government report shows that carried by Japanese. The trolley lines have effected a reduc- ion of 12,000 annually in the number of passengers carried by steam railroads. In one of the western cities, recently, an Egyptian had a quarrel with some Syrians. He was arrested by Irish policemen; was tried before a German judge, and was de- fended by a Hebrew lawyer, P. 8. Devine of 8t. Louls owns a sundial made by Thomas Jefferson. The authen- ticity of the relic 13 attested by documents duly sworn to. In order to tell the correct time the dial must be set by the north star. The fall of e! ven feet seven Inches in the level of the Great Salt Lake s charge- able, says the director of the Weather bureau for that section, to deficlent rain- fall, and not to water being used for irri- gation. He predicts that the lake will soon begin to rise With the object of discovering a cure for typhold fever a remarkable experiment is belng conducted t Ann AFbor university, Michigan. Six big tanks have been con: structed, with a layer of gelatine, and on these 144 square feet of the fevér germs are grown at a time. These living germs are scraped off, killed and bottied up.” Two ounces of them would kill 70,000 gulnea pigs. The object is, if poseible. to extract th poison from the germ bodies, feed animals with it and try to discover an antidot Pneumonia (lung having become, of late yea ily disease at all in regard to its r e done to avold it is The d nds upon a spe- table organism, which, being at all nt in thickly populated district rapidly in"the alr passages of th {ndividual If his vitality Is suddenly de- pressed. In these particulars the bacilius of pneumonia resembles that of consump- tion, but its multiplication is much more rapid and the polsoning from its excretions much more ac The danger of pn monia may be lessened by keeping the alr passages clear of mucous: by avolding chill and fatigue; by good ventilation and ab- sence from crowded and overheated rooms. perociate your last Novem. nd passed a tape. 3 waking Sasearatn ] £i30 w. . Brown, 1 Prankiia 4., Brooklys, N, ¥, Tiasgal. Pigssle Poteps Tusto 0520, Do BT g':l..":u‘::-": o i Sterling Remedy Co. Chicago or N.Y, ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BO xt”s'[ How to Cure | Blood Polson. | By a secret new way—Trial tr | essay free to all-Send for it ti 1f there be any man or womar who b quired'by contact, they should write Prof. Fowler of New London, Conn., for a free trial treatment ofhig very remarkablé new discovery that has caught like wildfire even going so far us to restore the bones of the nose and ears when they had rotted away by the terrible poison. It is no mer. cary, or fodide of potash, nothing toryb on and no simple liquid, tablet or pill but an herball ind entirely different from anything he known, In magic-like fashion it cures blood poison In the primary, secondary or tertiary stage, copper colored spots, swelling of the glands, soret e parta, plmples, sore throat, swollen groins, aches, 0ld sores, ulcers, mucous’ patches in the mouth, loosening of the teeth, halr or eyebrows falling'out and all the other signs of bl ison, 1t removes every blemisi in & few days and cureg permanently in a few weeks not ouly the blood Poison itself but restores the stomach, liver, kid- neys and heart to their normal condition’thus n opening to you the gates of society, mar e and parenthood. not put it off; do not experiment. Satisfy Jourself that what the professsor says s true by sending name and address today to Prof. F. ¢ Fowler, Box 691, New London, Conn, and he will send you at once (sealed and free from all marks)'s full trial treatment of his discov- ery absolutely frec, together with a valvable tréatise “All About Blood Poison and its Cure.” He asks for no money, simply the privilege of sonvincing you that what he has discovered You, 50 lose 0o time in sending your iay and you will oon be cured. SPECIALIST Treats all forms of DISEASES AND MEN ONLY 21 Years Experience, 17 Years in Omaha, His remarkable euc- cess hi neve; bleen led and every day brings many flatte P orta. of the 650 e 1s doing, OF the rellef he has given. e Hot Springs Trea iment for Syphil's OUT" on the skin or face and all external s of the disease disappear at once. a 30 DAYS, | v‘n|uooil Cures guaranteed {n | OVER 80,000 ot: o, *loe b Gleet, Kidney and Bladder Diseases, drocele RES—-LOW CHARGES. Treatment by mall. over b 8. Mth street, between Farnam and YARICOOELE B2l o Fmaacty il 4 s Smte T And all Blood Poisons. NO “BREAKING ot a ) BLOOD DISEASE LESS THAN 6 DAYS. vitality, unnatural discharges, UICK C o P. 0. Box 166. Ofce Douglas streets, OMAHA, NEB. 30 years' experience. No money scoepted until DR. C. M. COE, 915 Walnut St., Kansas City, Me. . 1 1313-15 Harn>y Straet. poison, whether transmitted by parents or ac- | DISORDERS OF | aTE Bowling Alleys COMPRISE THE FIVE BEST ALLEYS WEST OF CHICAGO. 1312 Farnam $t. 'Phone 2376 CLARK’S Bowling Alleys Biggest—Brightest—Best. Cured While You Sleep In Fifteen Days ferer trom S ORICTURE ¢ ¥ and Sem FREE TREATISE COUPON. ST. JAMES MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, St. James Bldg., CINCINNA' end me & copy of your Illust the Male Sexual System. secu PAID, FREE CHAT and address plainiy Anen, 62 8t Jame Wil ‘send their | parts of the maie | 10 urethral atlimes JAMES Mk |62 . James Blag mail 1t to St James Medical Cinclanatl, O., and they Treatise, sbowing (ho . Mo, FREE L ASSOCIATION. CINCINNATI, O, QUAKER MAID RYE A BEVERAGE FIT FOR THE 6008 Its absolute purity, | its delicious flavor and | For sae at the lcading § bars, cafes and drug stores. { HIRSCH & CO. Wholesale Liquor Dealers, KANSAS CITY, MO,