Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 15, 1903, Page 6

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EORIA TURNS THE TABLES Tike: Oce from Omaba, Thus Evening Up Saturday's Defeat. YicITORS TAKE FIRST BLOOD !N SECOND wo PEORIA, 1IN, June 14.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Today's game was & pitchers’ bat- tlo, in which the home team was the more fortunate, winning although outbatted. | There were but few errors made, but one by Omaha, together with a passed ball by Gending, were sufficlent to lose the game. end and Schafstal were the opposing pitchers and both were In excellent form. Schafstal had the better of the argument in the number of hits alicwed, but he gave three pasees, one of which counted in the score. Omaha was the first to score and made its two runs In the second. Dolan went to first on Hessler's yild throw of the ball in order to head off the runmer, and that player went to third. Genins then came up and landed for a home run, which was nearly as good a hit as that of Welch on the previous day. In the seventh it looked an if the visitors would score after two were out, but Gonding falled to connect. Fworia scored its first In the third on Wall's three-bagger and w single by Wil- «on. In the aixth Thiel was glven first, was sacrificed by Wilson and scored on a fumble of a grounder by Thomas. The win- ning run was made in the elghth on Holly's throe-bagger and a passed ball by Gond- ing. The weather wi fdeal and the at. tendance reachcd the 5,00 mark. Score: Rans Look Like Approaching but Home Team Come ek with Three and End Winners, Vietory, Ll PEORIA. AB. R H. FO. A B, Thiel, 1If.. E] 0 3 [ 0 Ueasier, c.. < o 1 el B Wlison, e " RS O B e W i Lezotte rf. ¢ R B 1 | Stewart, 2. v & N TR RS TIRM 5. .ocrccoecisd & 0 6. 8 8 Birmingham, 1b. 7 S BRE R W S | wall, of...... v T OO OB O LN | Friend, p. 8. 5.9 1T ¢°8 Holly, ‘ss.... ¢ by o P R T | PO wovivessnsuss 8 .88 08} OMAHA AB. R H. PO. A E. togd el e S R | AN OF § oG 4 0 0 8 0 0 e oS N B X gl (B8 e R Y | e B L Hickey, 3b. B9 Ld el Gonding, c. TR TP B A | Schafstal, p. h o TR N e X Total 82 2 5 4 10 1 Peoria 00200101 *3 Omaba . 02000000 0-2 Two-base hit: Shugart. Three-base hits: Wall, Holly. Home run: Genins. Sacrifica hit: ' Wilson. _First base on balls: Off Friend, 1; off Schafstal, 8. Hit by pitcher By Schafstal, 1. Struck out: By Friend, hy Schafstal, 8. Passed ball: Gonding Time: Umpire: Kelley. Denver Falls to Kaw Tribe. KANSAS CITY, June li—Denver was unsble to hit Nichols effectively after the first inning. Gaston was knocked out of the box in the third. Attendance, 4,600. Score: RH.B, Kan. City H 1310010 *6122 Denver 200000001471 Batteries: For Kansas City, Nichols and Ulrich; for Denver, Gaston, Whitridge and Latirer. Milwaukee Plles Up MILWAUKEE, June 14.—Milw: in iled up seven runs in the second inning ih game with Des Moines today and won by to 6. Attendance, 3,000. Score: B, Milwaukee 0 7'0 00010 ‘—l}g Des Moines . 100000!01—0111 Batteries: Milwaukes, Kenna and Lucla; Des Moires, Barry and uo Under, 8T, JOSE! 14.—Colorado Spri could not find Dlohl today and lost locals after poor all around work. R.H. 8t J h ‘0000010'—6!‘ Colo. Bprings .1 0 0 0 000 0 01 6 Hatteries: 8t. Joreph, Diehl and Garvin Colorado Springs, Newmeyer, Villeman &n Doran. Standing of the Teams. o the Played. Won. 11»- b 1) Colorado Bprings.... it Milwaukes . 3] % ® OB R8I | el G | - IHEE T IR | SRR | Des Molnes B S a1 St. Joseph e BEE Omaha 8 1B ®»_ M Games tod: Omaha at Peoria, Denver at Kansas City, Colorado Springs at St. Joseph, Des Moines at Milwaukee. GAMES IN NATIONAL LEAGUE ) cndl matl te Take One from Leaders. CINCINNATI, June M.—Cincinnati t the last game of the series from New Yor) today. Taylor started In to pltch for New York, but was wild; and Cronin was sent in at the beginning of the fifth to relieve him. Attendance, 8,50. Score: CINCINNATL | THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: M() NDAY JUNE 15, 1903 had little trouble In winning from the bome team here today, the final score being 6 to 1 in fayor of the Bostons. Platt, who was in the box for the Bostons, let the St Louisians down with four hits. Greming er's fielding was the feature of the game. Attendance, 6,100. Score BOSTON. RHOAS OAR Dexter, ef.... 1 1 0 0 0Farrell, 10230 0180 00001 0130 IZERE] 1360 011121 1310 00300 1113 0Burke, 3b....0 1 310 01 2% 0Hackett, 15..0 112 1 0 0103 0J ONeill, .0 1 450 0261 0M ONelll, po 00320 1002 0Currie, p.....0 0 0 5 0 Totals ... 5122711 1| Totals .1 42720 3 Boston 00200008 05 Bt. Louls 0010000001 Barned runs: Boston, 3. Two-base hits: Moran, Carney, Kittredge. Three-base hits Brain, Greminger. Bacrifice hits Dono- van, Hackett, Kittred, Abbattichlo. Double plays:' Currle to Hackett to J O'Nelll, J. O'Nelll to Burke to Hackett 8tolen base Cooley. Bases on balls: Off O'Nelil, 2; off Currie, 1; off Pillt, 3. Struck out: By O'Neill, 1; by Currle, 1. Left on s: Boston. 5; 8t. Louls, 7. Time: 1:47. Umplre: Holllday. St % of the Teams, Played. Won. Lost. P.C. New York “ M 14 708 Pittsburg 51 “ 17 607 Chleago . Bl LY 11 807 Brooklyn .4 " = 511 Cincinnat! . “® 20 » 4% Boston .4 19 = 04 Ehiiadeiphia i B 304 Louis .. o3 16 ks 302 today: Chicago at Pittsburg, St. Cineinnatl. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION GAMES Errors Ald Both Sides, but Louisville Finally Wrests Victory fi St. Pa LOUISVILLE, June 14.—The_ locals won a pitchers' battle from BSt. Paul today. Both Walker and Ferguson pitched great ball. The visitors scored in the first Jackson's triple and Walker's error, Loul Jllle scored two in the eighth on Wheele error, Childs' triple and Waller's grounder to short. Attendance, 6,000. Score: LOUISVILLE. BT. PAUL. . R.ELO.A B o 00360 io2300 0 M.11100 Odwel] 00 w.i00120 8. Sulli'n, b0 2 OWheeler, 3b.. 0 0 1 2 1 Clymer, it 11 O Huggins, 2b..0 0 3 5 1 Shriever, 00 0 Kelly, 1b. 021200 Childs, n... 1 1 o Ferguson, 5.0 10 2 0 Walker, B...0 0 33 Sulit'n, .0 0 4 Totals 34 1 Totals .. n Loulsville . 00000002 2 Bt Paul 10000000 0 Three-base hi Childs, Jackson. Sloleu bases. Clymer, Shannon, Huggins, Geler. Sacrifice hits; Schriever, J. van. Bases on balls: Off Walker, 4; off Ferguson, 1. Struck out: By Walker, 3; by Ferguson, & L by pitcher: Bv “Walker, 1. Passed ball: Schriever. Double plays: Brashear to Childs to Hart, Wheeler to Huggins to Kelly. TLeft on' bases: Loulsvilie, 4; St Paul, 7. First on errors: Loulsiille, 1 3 Paul, 1. Time Umpire: Cunning ham. Milwaukee Wins with Ease. TOLEDO, June 14.—Toledo was unable to hit Eiliott today and Milwaukee won with ease. Attendance, 2,80. Score: MILWAUKEE, TOLEDO. R.H.0.AE RHOAE Schafley, 2.0 3 2 3 OSmith, r.. 11310 Donahue, 1b. 1 1 8 1 iiBlauk'p, if..0 0 1 0 0 Wood, €.....9 110 0 OBernhard, of.0 2 0 0 1 Phyle, w01 11 4 0Kieinow, 1b.0 012 1 0 Dunleavy, 1.1 3 1 0 GSchaub, 3b...1 013 9 Unglaub, 31 3 0 1 t1310 Hemphill, ef1 0 2 0 003250 Dungan, ‘#f. 111 1 11310 Eillott, pr...0 111 01020 Totals ... § 12 71 11 3 enu 1 Milwaukes 01 *§ Toledo . 1010002 Two-base hite: Bernard, Marcan, Cris- tall, Dungan, Unglaub, Hoie runs: Smith, Dunleavy. Sacrifice hit: Owens. Struck out; By Cristall, 3; by Eiliott, 7. First base on balle; Ot Cristall, 1; oft Eiljjott, 3. Hit Bltched ball: !chnflok iankenship. Bouble blava:" Smith to Kieinow. ~Time: 1:30. Umpire: Mullane. Kamsas City Shat Out. COLUMBUS, June 14—Columbus shut out Kansas City today in a me. Wag- pitched lendid|; I\eldofl is position Weil"and scored. th Xm and winning run. Attendance, 6,685, on.‘ COLUIBUI KANBAS Clfl $ g 000 0121231 133 oo oo 3132 0 0Knoll, If. 01400 110 OLewee, #s....0 0 2 3 3 0 4 4 0Ganley, of...0 0 1 00 Fox, c.. 0 1 0 OMcAnd's, 3b.0 1 1 3 0 Wagner, 1 0 ¢ oDurham, p... 0 1 10 Totals LR ll’# Totals ... 0 42411 4 Columbus 001001024 Kansas City . L 0000000 00 Stolen bases: Bannon, Raymer, Base on balle: Wagner, 2; off Durham, . ~Thres- Dase nit: “Sagher. “Two-base Thiis; AThGt, ‘Turner, lL‘Anden Double plays: 'l'ur- ner to Raymer to Mellor, Wagner to Tur- ner to Mellor, Hit by pitched ball: Raymer. Struck out: By Wagner, 1; by Durham, 1. Time: 1:%. Umpire: Foreman. Standing of the Teams, Plnyed Wnn Lost. P.C. Milwaukee B o= St. Paul . ‘fi fl 009 Indianapolis ° 2 m 535 Kunsas City . 5 18 19 487 Minneapolis . 4 o B MM Loulsville $ N B a Columbus 6 17 B a8 Toledo % i » 355 No games today. IDEALS DEFEAT CRESCENTS Bat Out & Victory by & Score of 11 to l—Ballenger Pitches Well. LIBERTY'S RALLYING POINT Anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill to Be Oelebrated. LIBERTY BELL AMONG THE = VISITORS Story of a Contest That Made Clock of Time Strike a Worl wonnding Note, Marking Birth of a Mighty Nation. “the ’drl\on into partial insanity as the result of a brutal beating recelved at the hands of a party of English officers at the Brit- ish coffee house in Boston, where Otis had dared to remonstrate against certain acts of insolence and cruelty. He was living, harnilessly demented, at the home of his sister, Mercy Warren, at Watertown, when he witnessed the excitement and listened to the rumor of battle on that eventful morning of the 17th of June. With touching cagerness tq strike a blow for the cause in which he had already suffered €0 much, Otis stole away from home, bor- rowed a musket at some roadside farm- house and hastened to the battlefield, where he fought manfully, and, after all was over, made his way home, weary and In spirit at least the country at large will join Boston in celebrating next | !Nt @ little before midnight. Wednesday the 128th anniversary of the Lesking Backward, battle of Bunker Hill. Liberty bell, which | “It is diffcult to. realize as one stands pealed forth the Declaration of Independ- enve 127 years ago and put a capital F on the Fourth of July, will be brought from Philadelphia to increase the patriotic tone of the occaston. Patrfotic fervor and fire- works will bioom on Bunker Hill, and there will be other doings calculated to stir the ardor of the elders and fire the heart of young America As long as the republic lives, as long as liberty has an abiding place in the hu- man heart, the battle of Bunker Hill, fought June 17, , will remain an in- spiying chapter of Freedom's history. “‘One of the old, old stories of which the world will never weary,” says a writer in Les- lie's Weekly, “is the tale of how a lttle band of American farmers and woodsmen fought the first great battle for American liberty and independence on the crest of Bunker Hill. Like the herolc struggle of Leonidas and his Spartans at Thermopylae, like Arnold Winkelreld before the Aus- trians at Sempach, so did the gallant War- ren and the intrepid Prescott that June day, upon the heights overlooking Boston, win for themselves and for their no less gallant and stalwart followers a crown of imperishable glory. Although the day may come in the not distant future—and it can- not come too soon—when war shall cease throughout the earth and the sword shall flash and the cannon ‘roar no longer in the awtul tragedy of battle, mankind will never cease to look with awe, reverence and ad- miration upon such deeds as were per- formed that day, when a handful of men fresh from their homes and firesides and all unschooled to hostile action, withstood a veteran army and beat it back again and again with awful slaughter. “Who shall add anything new to the story of that eventful conflict, that pivotal point in the evolution of nations and peo- ples toward the higher and truer life of freedom and equality, that epoch-making event upon which the searchlights of his- tory have been playing for a century? Has not every schoolboy learned and told the tale, waved “the sword of Bunker Hill," and rehearsed in tremulous accents the glorious death-song whith the poet has put in the mouth of the patriot Warren: Stand! The ground's your own, my braves, Will ye give it up to slaves? Hope ye merey still? Desperate and Bloody. “Measured by every standard, which have since taken place, the one. oftices one-fourth of the number In action. both of the famous battles preceding 1t und of those conftict on Bunker Hill was a desperate and bloody While not more than an hour was spent In actual fighting the British loss in killed and wounded was 1,04, or more than one third of the whole force engaged, in- cluding an unusually large proportion of The American loss was #9, about On the British side, one company came out of the battle with only five of its number left un- today at the base of the monument marking the spot, that on this very ground. now hemmed around so closely with shops and bulldings of many kinds, the whole area Seemingly so little, insignificant and Incon- sequential in comparison with the propor- tions which it assumes on the pages of history, that here a mighty conflict once raged, mighty in the lssues it involved and in the results which flowed from it; that here the valorous Warren fell and dled, and that on this grassy slope, after the fight that sunny June morning, the dead and wounded lay in heaps. Over there, a few rods away, on a connecting ridge is Breed's Hill, where Colonel Prescott of Pepperell threw up a redoubt and where the most desperate stand was made; and down there, now hidden almost out of sight by jutting wharves and lofty warehouses, flows the Mystic, on whose shores, then open wide to view, the 3,000 redcoats landed to make an easy conquest, as they thought, of the “peasants” who had gathered to defy them on the hill beyond. There, also, lower down, nearer the water, behind the fence of ralls and new-mown grass, lay tho men of Connecticut, against whose stalwart line the British light infantry beat vainly in assault after assault, until thelr dead lay, as one chronicler of the fight tells us, ‘as thick as sheep ip a fold.' “It was here In very truth that the clock of time struck its first world-resound- ing note, marking the birth of a new and mighty nation dedicated for all the com- ng centurles to human freedom and the brotherhood of man Strikes at Their Root. Many dangerous diseases begin in impure blood. Electrio Bitters purifies the blood, and cures, or no pay. Only 60c. For sale by Kuhn & Co. ORIGINALS WIN TWO GAMES First They Down the Atlantie, I Team and Then the B. Jetters. The Lee-Glass-Andreesen Ori inals won & double header from Atlantic, and the B. Jetters of South Omaha yesterday arter: noon at the Vinton Street park. The first game, with Atlantic, in the ninth inning. With the score 3 to 1 in_favor of Atlantic and two men out, O'Keefe, who was gent to bat for Crelghton, singled,’ Buffelder hit safe and Wallace filled the bases with a‘clean base hit, Bradford, next up, hit for three bases, and when the excitement had subsided the Qilsinals were to the good by a score of 0 Immediately following, the B, Jetters and Originals of the Tri-City league played an interesting game. characterized by heavy hitting on both sides. Eddie Creighton, who relieved Wallace on third, played an ex- ceptionally good game and won the ad- miration of the 700 spectators by his clever Work Next Sunday the Lee:Glass-Andreesens Illlfipll)‘ the Crescents, and as both teams hting for the Tri-City pennant a good game Afl assured. The scores: was won hurt. Every officer on General Howe's staff RH.E, was cut down, and only. one survived -his | aiiEaiin" (BURERRAEL o g & wounds. The oldest soldiers in the Rrittsh | Farned runs: Originalé 8; Atlantie, 1. army, veterans of many a hard-fought|Btolen bases: Originals, 3. Atlantic, 2. field in other lands, declared that they had of France, they asserted, were less formid- able than the militla of New England. Vergennes, the French minister of forelgn affairs, exclaimed that with two more such victories England would have no army left In America. To the English people gen- erally the fighting capacity of the colonsts a8 shown on this occasion came as a shock of surprise not unlike that to which they were treated In the early stages of the late Co- lenso and Splon Kop, they saw their veteran in disastrous and bloody defeat before a comparative hand- Tt was the same lesson now as then, on the height above Boston harbor—a mass of trained and disciplined soldiery going to pleces before the calm, desperate, herolc resistance of a few men fighting on ground of their own choosing and in a cause on which they had never peen the like. The regulas Roer war, when, at Maagersfontein, columns turned back ful of vallant burghers of the veldt. staked all that makes life dear. Cor d with Other Battles, “The battle of Quebec, which won half a centinent did not cost the lives of so many British officers as this at Bunker Hill, which gained nothing but a place of en- campment. Had the loss Double play: ,Schosler (o Garrelt. base hitsi Scully, Jarrett. Jarrett, Bradford. Two- Three-base hits: Hit by pitched ball: By Saffelder, 5. First base on_balls: Off By Saffelder. 7; by Schosler, 2. Btruck out: By Bhaffelder.’7; by Schosler, 2. Passed balls: Creighfon (1), Boals (2. Wild itches: Schosler, 2. Betterles: Originals, frelder and Creighton: Atlantic. Schosler and Boals. Time: 1:35. ('mvlre Bhanahan. Btolen bases: Originals, 2; Jetters, 8. Doubie gll)u Fonneman to Lyne; Kennedy radford. Two-base hits: Bradford, 8cully. Three-base hit: ¥. Clark. Hit by pitched ball: By Mecllvaine, 1; by Collier,1, First base on balls: Off Mclivaine, 1: off Collier, 2. Btruck out: By Mcllvaine, 5; by Colller, 3 WIiid pitch: Collier. Batteries: Orig- tnals, Mcllvaine and O'Keefe; Jetters, Mc- Hale, Colller and Finley. Time: 1:40. Um- pire: Shanahan. Sunday Ball at Muncie, INDIANAPOLIS, June 14—Arrangements have been completed by which the Indian- apolis team of the American association will play the remainder of its Sunday ames that are booked for home at uncle, Ind. BSherman Crolley, who has charge of the team in Muncle, has ar- ranged for the park and the deal wa summated with Manager Watkins lndll polls team today. There are still t Sunday home games. The first will e place next Sunday, when the L A et RH.E. ck markets. Last nearly all of the live sto B ottors 00 0 01378 2810 3| week the receipts of sheep at tne South Earned runs: Originals, 2; Jetteps, 2. | Omaha ‘market numbered only 102 Yead. [AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA Rush Orders at Packing Plants Compel Operations on Sunday. OUTPUT FOR MONTH DOUBLE NORMAL Bonrd of Review Appolntments May Be Completed—Scarcity of Sheep— Park Bonds Be May Proposed. On account of the rapldly increasing num- ber of rush orders, all of the packing houses with the exception of Armour's kept their plants running full blast until noon yes- terday. Some work was done in the after- noon, but all the departments were working up to the noon hour. Cars of packing house products were being loaded into r frigerator cars and shipped Into the terri- tory tributary to the Kansas City and St. Louls markets. Packers are inclined to think that the rush of business here will keep up for the balance of the month and poseibly longer. Untill the Stock Yards company at Kansas City {s prepared to handle live stock, the packers cannot com- mence operations. At the plants in Kansas City the damaged stock is being removed from the cellars and tanked. An inspec- tion shows that the loss on meats will not be nearly as large as at first thought. On account of the extra work now going on at the South Omaha plants the rail- roads are kept busy hauling In coal, salt and other supplies. The outgoing ship- ments of refrigerator cars ls largely in ox- cess of the normal. While the exact fig- ures are not accessible, it is understood that the shipments of packing house prod- ucts this month will almost if not quite equal ordinary shipments for any two | months in the year. Very few if any packing house laborers are idle now and it Is aseerted that there is room for more | men At &1l of the plants. A packer sald last night that even shouta | the Kansas City houses start up In a week it would be another week or so before the | trade could be supplied, and therefore tho supply will naturally come from this mar- ket for points west of the river. ‘In the territory adjacent to St. Louis supplies will be sent mostly from Chicago. The yarde here are still filled with re frigerator cars, coal and salt cars, and it koeps the Stock Yards Rafiroad company | busy handling the incoming trains of stock and the outgolng trains of meat, to say nothing of the Afty or more cars of coal | which have to be delivered dally to the packers. Council Meeting Tonight, A regular meeting of the city couneil is | t» be held tonight. Most of the routine business was cleaned up at the meeting held on Friday night, but some matters of minor importance may come up. It is expected that tonight the mayor will submit one or more names for member of the Board of Review. Just what the council will do no one seems to know, as the members are not dolng any talking and the mayor declines to be interviewed on this | subject Tuesday the oard of Review should mect for the purpose of equalizing the 138 assessment. No one seems able to predict what the outcome will be should the council decline to confirm the mayor's appointment. With only two members it is evident that an agreement could not be reached on all of the cases brought before the board, and unless a third member is appointed and confirmed 1t is possible that the entire assessment might be declared invalid. Anything of this kind would prove a disastrous blow to the clty on account of the present condition of the funds and | the overlap, which now amounts to $70,000. Lest night it was reported that a meeting between the mayor and the council would | be held this afternoon to talk over the matter of an appointment. Demand Exceeds Supply. Some days no receipts were noted at all, and on other days only a few cars arrived Commission dealers say that it looks like a continuance of light receipts untll range gheep are ready to be sent to market. Heavy shipments of sheep from the ranges are not looked for until the middle of July. All sheep that come to this market are eagerly sought by the packers and satisfactory prices are being paid. In fact, the demands are far in excess of the sup- ply. Bo far this year 532,438 head of sheep have been received at the South Omaha stock yards. Bonds for Parks. Rumor has it that in the fall the park to consider a proposition to vote bonds in A scarcity of sheep recelpts is noticed at | board of South Omaha will ask the voters | A Delight A Satisfaction The Largest Selling Brand of Cigars in the World. The Band is the Smoker's Prutection. mgtnn Huute ’Burl TSN Chicago & Return $14.75 VIA Rock Island System June 14, 15 and 30 and July 1 round trip tickets to Chicago for $14.75; limit September 15. The Burlington Station is return in the heart of Chicagu, within a few minutes walk of the principal business | uses’and the best hotels. sou can board a street car right at the door for any part of the city. tmgton Blation 100 & e 400 B m and 8:06 p. m., carrying every equip- ment to make traveling comfortable. J. B. REYNOLDS, Oity Passenger Agt., 1502 Farnam St., Omaha R g NEW YORK. on both sides the sum of $100,000 for the purpose of ac- N e " noa REOA beap the sums proportionately, such-tre- %‘n’::":e:'.;,". B aa e GlaX there. | Guiring Syndicate park, and also for the 'ltu Iutlg o!xlsgie ;Iun;e 14,1 }5, 30, and July 1. Final 110 30 mendous les a8 those of later days in| while excursions will be run. hase of ground for parks in all of the return limi ember 15. R e 168 81 o Ve Siands Of the Ideals af Jetiers park |0UF OWn land, at Antietam, Cold Harbor ke 1 as e, with the exception of the Sixth P 143 % 3 ¢|in South Omana yesterday. Troby knotked |4nd Gettysburg, would have counted their s A s g ward. It is understobd that under the | City Ticket Office 111 0 2 ofout a two-bagger, which broaght in their |slain and wounded by the hundred thou- Played. Won. Lost. P.C. )t the churter, bonds fof park it § 1§ omly vosrs A acule b Rich simoet b1 | sunde instnd o ten thousands. The awrul| BONMOT it 8 B 1 58| Peoriot el bervoted a any time. Some i will. ynel inguishes msel adelphia’ ‘ a purposes at a LR 1 ¢ 2| knocking out a home run in the first in- | *ect of the Amercan fire on Bunker | Cleveiand - ‘£ B 19 58|0r the members of the present Board of | 1323 FARNAM ST, R ning, bringing In three scores. Ballenger | Hill slope was a striking testimony to the | St. Louls. IR e B AR R A as ats anxlous 0. Deve | struck out thirteen men. The score by |coolness, the Intrepldity and the skilled | Shicago O el R R ioats DTk They it xBatted for Gilbert -n ninth: Taeals 30000044 ey |markemanship of Prescott’s little band, | New York.... e oa #@ | e S 0l Yonas for this purpose alone | - Omaha, - - Neb. Cincinnati . 0182010 Creacen 00000100 01 |the result of years of unconscious prepara- | Washington ......... 12 32 B NASTRE #th some opposition, so the | New York . 100321010158 Ideals, 9; Crescents, 1. |ton In the rough school of frontfer life, | Games today: Chicago at New York, St | would meet v ks located In all | Two-base hits: Mertes, Bresnahan, Mc- * Mintkus, Doroas, Leuhrs, [with its ever present peril of savage beasts Louls at Fhiladelphis, Detroit at Washing: | plan I8 to h-‘;‘; ’;"1'\“"“ P':r: .t o> ™ Brown. . Bislen hases: ~Bresaiinc: | ta Fetoraon.’ Two-base nite: Minius, Gfor 419 Stil more savage men. It is the deifb. | " i the Sisth ward and Syndicats park is in C. l- Rutherford <— Mertes, Dunn._Double plays: 8. Gilbert to | son, Troby. Home runs: Lynch. Bases [°Tate opinion of one of the most careful Sames ju_ Turse-1 Loagne. o vard, so that If sites are to be o> MecGanu (2). First base on balls' Off Sut-|on balls: Off Ballenger, 2; off Rice, 2. |students of this confiict that, had the| A Cedar Rapidn—Cedar Rapids, (% De- tha. Tuet: Ward. 4 L08 R o Wt @ hoft, it off Taylor, 6. Hit by pitched ball: | Btruck out: By Ballenger, 13; by Rice, & [ Americans been properly supplied with | ciir h purchased for parks the other wards w el ’__ Mertes. Selmour. Struck out: By Buthoff, | Wild pitch: Rice. Time: 1:45. Umpire: R s RS 2 basadt. 'The proposition will ; i CUREE, 7 itk Suthoft, | Wil powder, Hows could no more nave taken | At Dubuque—Dubugu looniington, . | r i Lol on Bakes; l.ln?llncn:t-l. o Bunker FHill than Burnside could have | ;oA Davenport—Davenport, 9; Rock Island, | not, however, be seriously considered until ew York, 9. Time: 2:0. Umpire: Nationals Go Down Enay. taken the helghts of Fredricksbure 0.t Rocktors Rockford, % Springfeld, 0. | the fate of the present bond issue is known. " *““The bes esc lon of t cago Bests Phillies. T o Bt Sope b Gotms a . bl i 5ol Shamrock Arrives Safe. Revising the Liw CHICAGO, June 14.—The visitors went to After the first two' locals up had begn retired Dugglesby last control, gave two ru-u e a wild throw and was nit for two singles and double, which * with (wo wteals gave the locals four runa. The visitors scored twice on w gift, o pase and throe singles. At tendarte,” o0b "5 CHICAGO. PRILADELPHIA. R. AE L. H.0. Harley, rf 0 o 117 Slagel, 1t 1 . 11 111 L ] 110 11 104 131 R 1ii3 . 181 1610 11 v 0.0 1) wu THNE Chicago ... A 00 * Phliadsionia b= Two-base hits: Chance, or, Roth. Sacrifice hit: Hlllnr tolen u-uc Laft on bases: Chicago, ”I‘Ph"‘d“Em Harley, Blagie. out: By Lundgren. 4: u;?r-b‘ . Bases on ls: Off lun Dugglesby, 3. ime, 1:45. Umplre: Moran. Boston Has Hasy Time. ST. LOUIS, June 4.—The Boston team the hands of the Regents Bunday afternoon ark fleld. It was a walk- away for the Regents, who batted around in the first inning, and outclassed their opponents in every Tespect. It was S0 one- od that the Nationals gave up the game in the last half of the sixth inning. lsficllréz on the Krug Regents 2014013161 Nationals 20001-336 Batteries: Regents, Haley and Mokry; fonals, McLean, Westergard and Rice. N Umpire: Croft. Reserves ughter Opponents. The Henry Mlese base ball team had no show to win against the Reserves yester y. It was a case of 3 runs to 6 in seven innings. The sole feature of the game was the pitching of Snyder. Next Sunday the Reserves will play the Nebraska City team 066666 6-36 0020021-5 Champlonship in Doubt. CRESTON, Ia., June 14—(Special Te g1 ‘The ‘question of which is the cham- e ball club of southern lowa fs nn' in doubt, Shenandoah, who claimed that honor, having been beaten today by Creston, § 10 6. About 1,100 people witnessed the game, which was umpired by Golden. Batterfes: Creston, Ward and Corbett; Shenandoah, Case and Townsend. Sloux Fali Scores Again. SIOUX FALLS, 8. D., Juae 14.—(Bpec Telegram.)—In a game of ball here mdl)‘ ‘between the Sloux Falls and Lemars teams of the lowa-Dakota league Sioux Falls won by m'\:"mll‘ nine straight victories for 8. Omabas Beat Arg NEBRASKA CITY, Neb.. June 14—(Spe- cial Telegram.)—The Argos went down to defeat here today for the first time this season. Score: C. N. Dietz of Omaha, §; Argos, 3. Bunker HIll itself is to be found in the letters of provinclal officers and soldiers preserved in the appendix to Richard Frotheringham's “Slege of Boston,” and quoted in Higginson's history, scription of raw soldlers is always most graphie. It is a sufficlent proof of the impression made in England by the affair that the English newspapers of the time, instead of belng exultant, were Indignant or apolegetic, and each had its own theory in regard to ‘the Innumerable errors of the day, the Londdn Chronicle called them, a curfous reminder of the war criticisms of recent days. Tried by this test of con- temporary criticlsm, the Americans do not seem to have exaggerated the real impor- tance of the event. ‘The ministerial troops gained the hill’ John Adams, ‘but were victorious losers, A tew more such victorles and they are undone.’ Prophetic Words, “How it was regarded by Gage himself, the victorious general, Is disclosed by a letter which he wrote immediately after, in which he speaks of & success that ‘cost us dear,’ adding, ‘the trials we have made show that the rebels are not the despicable rabble too many have supposed them to be, and concluding with the words that ‘the conquest of this country is not easy.' More truly was the horoscope cast by the American commander Ward, in @ general order issued after the battle, encouraging his men with the declaration: ‘We shall finally come off victorious, and triumph over the enemles of freedom and America.' Ben Franklin, also, was inspired to write it as the lesson of the day: “The Americans will fight. England has lost her colonies forever.' “In his account of this day's fight John Fiske tells a pathetic lttle story of the part played in it by James Otis, a patriot, who some B8ix years Defore had been The de-| wrote Willam Tudor to prophetic | NEW YORK, June 14.—Shamrock III, challenger for the America’s cup. and the other vessels of Sir Thomas Lipton's fleet, | anchored off Tompkinsville, Staten Island, at 10:30 a. m., having made the voyage from Gourock, Scotland, in sixteen days and | twenty-two hours.” No accident occurred {on the voyage and all on board are well Much Wool at Plerre, PIERRE, 8. D, June l4.—(Special)— Wool growers are beginning to get thelr year's crop to market and are much pleased to find prices have advanced several points since they marketed their last year's sup- ply of wool. The best grades are bringing as high as 18 cents per pound, which fs about 6 cents ahead of last year. Over 1,000,000 pounds of ool were marketed here last summer and the Indications are that fully as much or more will come In this vear. Homesteads Continue to Geo, PIERRE. 8. D.. June 14.—(Special.) spite of the high water in Towa, which de- layed excursionists, last week the flings at the land office for the first fen days in June reached fifty-seven, with ndications that the excursions of next week will make up for the shortage of the beginning of the month In Jatled tor Um ABERD! , 8. D., June 14 In circuit court the jury again found Bortt gullty of an unnatural crime and he will be taken back to the penitentiary to serve his sentence. He was granted a new trial Crime, (Speclal )— on the grounds of his fife testifving against him at the first trial Regt Bed Rock. Health, strength and vigor depend on db gestion. Dr. King's New Life Pills make It perfect, or no pay. Only 2c. For sale by Kubn & Ce. Deputy Sherift James Roach will be busy today looking up the judges and clerks of election. The same judges and clerks ap- pointed“for the election held last November will serve at the special bond election to be held on June 23. It is necessary for the deputy sheriff to personally serve each | judge and clerk with a notice. In cases Where vacancies have occurred since the last election the places will be filled within the ‘next few days. In mearly every in- stance the voting booths will be located at the same places where voterg are T quired to register. Magie City Gossip. Mre. Jay Willame is at Harvard, Neb, visiting friends Frank Thompson has purchased the Dufty restaurant on N street Miss Ella Maxwell of Fremont is the guest of Mrs. Anna Maxwell Miss Clara Tombrink has gone to Fre- mont to attend nbrmal school | South Omaha citizens are aguin receiving | green goods letters from the east Henry Claussen and wife have gone to the Pacific coast to spend the summer. Tax Commissioner Fitzgerald will com- plete the making of his 188 assessment today Nineteen cars of Texas cattle arrived at the st yards yesierday enroute to the ranges in South Dakota During the absence of Inspector Jones, City Physiclan Sapp will logk after the sanitary condition of the eity’ Miss Augusta Kruse, Twenty-third and L streets, leaves today for Rawlins, Wyo., to visit friends for a few weeks. Teachers' examinations will commence to- day at the high schoo ding snd con- tihue until Wednesday noon. Mrs. J. B. Watkins returned to her home at Clinton, Ia., yesterday after a visit with her son, Colonel J. B. Watkins. Maccabee lodges from Omaha, Council Bluffs and South Omaha held memorial services at Odd Felic hall yest fternoor Tonlght the lwlh(\)fllh Cavalry troop mmuummmmmmuuummmmmt | will meet for drill All members are_re- quired to be present unless excused by Cap- tain McCulloch. William Hamm and Miss Catherine Trum- FIRE RECORD. Plattsmo h Man Loses Home. PLATTSMOUTH, Neb., June 14.—(Spe- cial)—Mart Sreldon and family, who have | been living south of town, were lempur.rlly rendered homeless yesterday by a fire goods and other possessions. insurance and the loss will upon Mr. Sheldon, who is with & wife and four children. There was no tall Burglary Rife in Stoux Falls, SIOUX FALLS, 8. D, June 4.—(Special.) —The robbery of the Mullen hardware store in.this city a few nights ago and numerous other crimes of the kind which have re. cently been committed leads the local police to believe that a gang of burglars has selecigd Sloux Falls as its fleld of operations. Several suspiclous characters e belng closely watched. bull were married Saturday evening Rev. Dr. R, L. Wheeler. The groom is connected with Swift and Company. The streets in Bouth Omaha were almost deserted )v)‘l\lda\ Great crowds at- tended the Trad council pienic at Pri lake in the afternoon, while hundreds vi ited other resorts. The local lodges of Odd Fellows held memorial services at the hall yesterday. After the services the members marched to Laurel Hill cemetery and decorated the graves of elght deceased members. A_special mecting of Upchurch lodge No. | 2, Degree of Honor, will be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon for the purpose of making arrangements for the funeral of Mrs. Peter Doran, which will be held Tuesday. which consumed their residence, household | heavily | a laboring man | @ @ - @ > @ o @ o @ o o - - -~ . @ o - - & - o o— o a— - - - o @ - re o> = r= & o r= - crNTnAL P M\SSISSWPI)/VALLEY $14.75 CHICAGO - AND RETURN i June 14, 15, 80, and July 1st. Return limit Sept. 15, Wlinois Central Gity Ticket Office 1402 Farnam St., OMAHA, Neb, | W. B BRILL, Dist. Pass Agt

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