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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JU about a second slower than it would be if it were exactly a half mile In length. B\SE B:“l (OSS“) OF WEEK‘rmncm; It the fine Imposed on his | have had little success so far. The course L L\ manager was insisted upon, Hickey simply |8 unusually hard and the women have {called a league meeting and arrangements | never taken hold of it as they have at the | were made without delay to accept Mr. |Country club. But, if they do, an attempt Havenor's offer. The blufing Milwaukeean | will be made a little later in the year to came off the perch without delay and the |have a match between the feminine side Hickey skies are again,clear. That's one |of the two clubs for a cup which the two In Blujen the assoclation has a speedy pacer and C. C. Kendall, who holds the strin over him, is a thorough horseman {and a competent matines horseman thing to be admired about T. J. Hickey. |clubs will give jointly T. C. Byrnes, who manipulates the reins He doesn't waste any time with bluffers, | —_— |over Lena Burley, has a fast pacing mare AUTOMOBILE GROWS IN USE Om Btill Btuok in Last Place, but Btruggling Gamely, bl Bl L simply calls ‘em | in the 2:12 class. She I8 really a little faster ¥ than the other horses of Class A. F. J The talk of Comiskey's rald on the Campbell has a big brown pacer, which Western league sounds very much like a he uses for surrey purposes and has gone line from the laundry Commy had a at a 2:2 clip In trial heats. Others of the chance at Stone before he was sent back horses are Clinton Briggs' handsome young to Milwaukee, and as Stone is about the pacing stallion, which steps well to the only one who has been returned, a plain, front in Class A, A. C. Russel's hand- Still there. every day observer is a little bit at aloss ey 'x:‘nrllnx rdm_rra l"ov‘:l\-i‘wl“‘lrh is also A straight week of corner-lot ball play- |t0 locate anyone else playing with the m'::e :n': :"| flmm 'nr"r- pacing ing hasn't heiped the Omaha position in | Western this season who would be of much e R e W e fastest the standing table. It seems aimost in- [Service to the American. . credible that the men who played such | magnificent ball ladt season should be gullty of the crimes agalnst good judgment | that have been committed in the name of | Omaha this year; but they have. Now and then from out of the gloom comes a flush of the old-time spirit, but it is only a flash Just enough to show us that the fire hasn't been extinguished, and to start anew the lope that it may biaze forth and burn as | 1 HEBL once it did, withering all opposition. Weak | ghugart hitting, poor flelding, bum base running. ' Carter ... and general headless play seems to be the mlnndn"_&-‘ rule. Manager Rourke has worked like & wyareta) Trojan to get his men Into swing with M.Hlnn each other, and many succeed In bringing }:ltvl;eh them to a condition where they can play ¥ the game as it ought to be played. When | he does this, the heart of the fans will be | wright lifted with much rejolcing, for they still| Carter are buoyed up by an abiding faith in the | ’l'l_l:lrcn}r‘ ablity of the individual members to play | ghugart . ball, and fondly eling to the hope that they | Dolan will | Preston . Genins . | Hickey It Is preposteroys to think that men like Gnndln1 . Genlins, Carter, Dolan, Hickey, Gonding gt\f,;‘f;:n"m- and Preston have forgotten all that they | Mijon knew, and have In one short winter | Henderso descended from the position of premiers to | LITTLE TEAM AND BIG the condition of beginners. Frank Genins Junlo Rourkeites Appear to BDe Floundering in & Morass of ity and le to Bat, Rua or Field Well, Loeal Owners Get Service as Well as Sport Out of Thelr Machines. Uni Every season has its own diseases, but Rheumatism belongs to all, for when it gets well intrenched in the system, and joints and muscles are saturated with the poison, the aches and pains are coming and go- ing all the time, and it becomes an all-the-year-round disease; an attack coming as quickly from sudden chill- ing of the body when overheated, a fit of indigestion or exposure to the damp, Easterly winds of Summer as from the keen, cutting winds and freezing atmosphere of Winter. Rheumatism never comes by accident. It is in the blood and system before a pain is felt. Some inherit a strong predisposition or tendency; it is born in them; but whether heredity is back of it or it comes from im- ; prudent and careless ways of living, it is the same always and at all seasons. The real cause of Rheumatism is a polluted, sour and acid condition of the blood; and as it flows through the body deposits a gritty, irritating substance or sediment in the muscles, joints and nerves, and it is these that produce the terrible pains, inflammation and swelling and the misery and torture of Rheumatism. No other disease causes such pain, such wide-spread suffer- ing. It deforms and cripples its thousands, leaving them helpless, miserable invalids and nervous wrecks. HIS WIFE A GREAT SUFFERER. When neglected or improperly treated, Rheumatism My wife had been troubled with Rheuma- becomes chronic, the pains are wandering or shifting tism for some time vhon; o hn:dofhs 8 8, from one place to another, sometimes sharp and cutting, ¥ v Bt e 1N again dull and aggravating. The muscles of the neck, 2o 8T8 L & good medioine. shoulders and back, the joints of the knees, ankles and Okolona, Miss. J. E. REEDER. wrists, are most often the seat of pain. Countless lini- N 1 ments are rubbed upon the affected parts, and plasters are applied to get relief, but such things do not reach the poisoned blood; their effect is only temporary; they are neither cura- tive nor preventive. The blood must be purified, the acid poison counteracted, and all irritating matter removed from the circulation before (f)crmane.nt relief and a thorough cure is effected, and no remedy does this so certainly and so quickly as S. S. S. It con- tains not only purifying and tonic properties, but solvent qualities as well, all these being necessary in eradicating the poison and making a complete and lasting cure of Rheumatism. Few persons realize how rapidly the auto- mobile has grown more and more into general use this spring and summer. But it has grown, both in numbers and popu- larity, until now there are about seventy- five machines in Omaha and many en- thusiasts whose great delight it is to bowl along smoothly and evenly on the streets and country roads. It is not generally understood by the general public that the edict of the city council against fast auto- | mobile driving on the city streets not only 463 | met the approval of the greater portion of -%1| the automobilists, but was fostered by ‘%3 |some of the most prominent of them. 918 | There has been a custom, which has grown 4 up with some of those owning smaller 910 | machines, to press them to their greatest %5 | speed whenever they were out in them. 8 | These persons have been in the minority and it has proven of a great deal of bother and mortification to their brother drivers, | who were saddied by the public mind with | the faults of the few. The heavy machine, ! which is buflt for touring purposes over | rough country roads, is not a popular ma- chine in Omaha. It has speed and is the ultimate dream of the automobile lover's heart, but the cost and necessary skill to operate places It above the reach and desire of the larger number of the en- thusiasts who have placed their hope in lighter runabouts, both gasoline and electric. The statistics of the performance are of even less comforting nature this week. Here are the figures: FIELDING AVERAGES. In making up the classes this year Class A was arranged for the horses doing the half mile in 1:00 and less, Class B, 1:00 to 1:12 Class C, 1:12 to 1:16 and Class D, 1:16 and over. Most of the horses are pacers, although there are a few trotters and there are extra races with hobbles and match races, so that Interest is never lack- ing because of a lack of variety. Omaha team's Thomas D e The regular races are run on the track at Nineteenth and Ames avenue on the afternoons of the second and fourth Satur- days of the month. For all of these races the assoclation has arranged a list of prizes. TENNIS PLAYERS ARE BUSY First Local Tournament is Over, but Others Bormmpetiaa u Sai2eh Are Coming On Fast, RER The first tournament of the year Is over and another is already at hand to please the tennis enthusiasts of Omaha and every- thing points to a most successful tourna- ment on the St. Croix courts. On Friday there were already thirty entries in the singles and more than half as many in doubles and another day for the entries to come fn. One of the beautles of these en- tries was the fact that they were from so many different tennis organizations about | the city. Scarcely an organization of any size did not have several entries In early and the four men who played In the semi- finals at the Fleld club last week were all entered before the entrles were more than a week old. With the four fastest emcuet s nleR B R B R0 d o RERRED H. E. Fredrickson is the first local auto- mobilist to try his hand this year at a long run through the country. With his large eighteen-horse power Peerless gaso- line machine he started out last Saturday afternoon and took a party of friends to Fremont, where they spent the night. Sun- day morning they started from Fremont bright and early and made 14 miles by | noon. It was a delightful day and the roads were in superb condition, so that the full joy of the drive was felt, and they is estcemed throughout the country as the peer of any ball player who ever walked | ocross the diamond. As a man of brains and resource he Is unsurpassed today, and any team ought to be proud to follow his leadership. Eddie Hickey s a veteran who knows the game backwards, and Johnnie Gonding 1s unequalled as a schemer In & ball game. Yet these men have aliowed | L themselves to be beaten game after game | interest. Manager Ellis has arranged a by beginners, men who have not yet more | Schedule which Includes the important Unfon Stock Yards Forth on a Long Play- ing Trip. The trip through the central part of Towa by the Unlon Stock Yards Juniors Base Ball club promises tq be one of considerable than passed the primary grades in base | ball education. In vain Is the reason for towns along the Chicago & Northwestern, { Rock Island and the Chicago, Burlington came in late Sunday afternoon with 210 men In the Field club handicap and the fastest players from the organizations of S. S. S. cleanses the blood of all irritating matter and the acid Sanicle& are dissolved and filtered removing all danger of future attacks. Under its tonic effect the nervous system regains its normal tone and the appetite and digestion improve, resulting: in the upbuilding of the general health. S. S. S. contains no Potash or minerals of any description, but is guaranteed purely vegetable. Old people will ind it notonly the best blood purifier, but a most invigorating tonic—just such a remedy out of the system, thus relieving the muscles and joints an miles of dust-covered roads behind them. Now Mr. Fredrickson is planning a far more extensive trip. About the middie of July he intends to start from Omaha and make the run to Denver In three days and spend two weeks rambling with his ma- chine through the mountains of Colorado and then make the run back again over the same route as he went by. The whole trip will take about threc weeks and will prove the real delight of a heavy touring the city, there is little doubt but that this, the first.effort of the St. Crolx club, will prove a memorable event in the annals of tennis in Omaha this year., this condition sought. As far as that is |& Quincy, between here and Des Moines, concerned, we don't care a continental |The club will leave next Friday evening, about the reason. If the boys will only | June 26, making its first stop at Malvern, brace up and do what they are capable of | On the Burlington, and will be gone until doing, all will be forgiven, and the fans|July 11. On the Burlington they will play will glve them the most joyous welcome |ball at Malvern, Afton, Red Oak, Creston, ever extended to returning wanderers. | Osceola, and possibly Chariton and In- dlanola. At Des Moines they will start west over the Roek Island, playing at Stuart, Anita, Avoca and Atlantic. At Avoca they The 8t. Crolx courts are, probably, the fastest in the city today and little improve- ment is possible upon them. With no rain to Interfere with the tournament it will Denver sympathizes deeply with Omaha be a great five days of tennis. The handi- in the present state of affairs, and dolor- ously recalls the days of last season, when Denver esteemed it of more value to beat Omaha than to win the pennant. Truly, it has been a great fall for the mighty. Pack- ard has been doing all he can to strengthen the Grizziles and give them a boost into a winning streak. Up to date he has suc- ceeded in landing Frank Schiebeck to pl: short In place of Radcliffe, who has falled to make a go at that position. Schie Is well remembered fn Omaha, as he played short for us in 1892 when the Western league tried the double-pennant deal, and the famous attempt to cqualize the playing strength of the league was made. All the players were bunched and divided Into eight teams by the committee, and then the teams were awarded by lot to the cities making up the cireuit. Schiebeck fell to Omaha’s lot; and Joe Walsh, the darling of the Omaha fans, was drawn by Columbus. Columbus wun the first pennant with much ease, and the discrepancy in the playing strength of the teams was quite as marked as If they had been made up by managers instead of being designed on Ideal lines. And our recollection of Schiebeck is that he didn’t fill Wals! shoes by a good deal. He has never done any great things since, but Denver is in condition to welcome al- most any change in hopes that it will bring a revival of spirit to the team. Colorado Springs hasn't found the trip exactly a triumphal procession thus far. While the Everitt band still leads the race, it is by a much narrower margin than when leaving home and with & falr pros- pect of being jolted out by the Duffy aggre- gatlon at Milwaukee. Duffy's team is play- ing good ball, and playing consistently. All the other teams are playing n and out, and the result of the pennant season s as much in doubt mow as it was at the opening. One of the features of the last week has n the performance of Danny Friend, who is pitching for Peorfa. Bill Wilson seems to have injected some sort of dope into the old boy, for he is doing the sort of work that made him king in his days with the big league. i Hickey is still head of the American Assoclation. When Owner Havenor un- dertook to back up Joe Cantillon in his deflance of the league president, and threatened to give up the Milwaukee Jump across to the Northwestern, stopping at Carroll, Denison, Woodbine and Logan on their way in to Omaha. This trip will require 480 miles of traveling and is more extensive than those taken in previous years. What kind of ball the team will put up against the Southwestern Iowa league and other strong lowa teams re- mains to be seen. This is the third year the club has been together, and the boys should put up a fast game. So far this season they have bumped up against the fastest teams In the city, and have man- aged to break even. Those who will make up the team for this trip are: Charles Miller, Walter Hachten, Dale Talbot, Mar- cus Adams, Finley McLean, Earl Millett, Grant Caughey, Antone Lott, Louls Fer- guson, Kimball Yoder, Frank McMahon, Frank Quinn and Ray Bohner. If figures count for anything the following percent- ages show that the Juniors are not only flelding well but are also good with the stick: BATTING AVERAGES. Games. AB. R H. P.C i PorBoan-tendon. SRaZ PP T ST % Senseny o Q He-iSonnamus- Q g 3 @ uinn erguson Millett GOLF ON CARD FOR THE WEEK B e | eBunBanekBa Suanalbalicc? @osmanrmenol Folks. Tussday of this week the Field club in- tends giving a handicap sweepstakes golf tournament for the women of the club. The golf committee has been trying this spring to interest the women in the game, car If it proves successful. fng out to his farm at Culhoun. eats his dinner on the farm. Before grows dark evening. and Its Repetition Expected. The Omaha Driving association had a most successtul opening of the season a week ago Saturday and feels highly elated With more than 100 members in the assoclation and the year still young there is every In- dication of a growing popularity in fast The horses, too, are a little faster and finer than have been on the local track before and all of I the old members are driving with a little | more certainty and cleverness than before. The new horses this year are certainly an | improvement over many of the old ones and they are bound to add interest and uncertainty to the outcome of many of the the assoctation to make the races pleasurable grandstand has with the prospects for the summer. horses and driving in the eity. races. Everything is being done by for the people and the been put in first class condition and ever: spectators. to while away the minutes between heats. faster than it has ever been before. fortunately the track was made Another little trip that shows the value and pleasure in the heavier machines is the Jaunt that Emil Brandeis takes every even- It is eighteen miles away and he makes the run in from forty-five minutes to an hour and it he can wander around the farm and keep close track of it and then come home in the cool and moonlight of the DRIVING CLUB DOING WELL First Meet of the Association a Suc- thing done possible for the comfort of the The races are all entirely free | and no samission is charged at the gates. An attempt le being made now to bave a band In the grandstand during the races the In getting the track into condition this spring it was entirely resurfaced and made Un- about twenty-nine feet longer than a half mile through a misunderstanding of the con- but | tractors s to the requirements and it Is capping has been done carefully and con- scientiously and by men who are in touch with the style of play of most of the play- ers entered and there can be little eriticism of it. Some of the players, of course, are practically unknown and it has been hard to handicap them properly, but it is doubt- ful if there will be much room for improve- ment in this respect. The fact that most of the pluyers are short of practice will be somewhat of a detriment to the sport of the week, but what is true of one is also true of all and makes little difference in the final results. The tournament at the Field club last week held several surprises to those who have not been watching the tennis players this year. Two new men sprang to the front remarkably. D. Pollard was some- what better known than A. Scribner, but his play at scratch was remarkable. ¥ De- spite a slight nervousness, he played a wonderfully consistent game and showed points of champlonship play continually. Ho is very steady for a new man and plays the most graceful game of any man at, the Fleld club.. Scribner is a newer man than Pollard, but carrled his first two matches away in champlonship style. He is very fast on his feet and places the ball well. Con Young played a very fast game all of the time during the tournament, despite his heavy handicap, and does not show any signs of weakening from his old position as the leader of tennis in Omaha. “When It comes to the Interstate this year Omaha's laurels will probably depend more on him than on any other player that Omaha has put forward so far. The women have shown IMttle Interest in tennis in Omaha this year, with the exception of a few who play on the St. Croix courts on open nights and a number who play at the Country club. At the latter place the game has become almost a mania and every morning finds the two courts continually in use. With Mrs. Stewart as the head of the enthuslastic players there is little doubt but that the club will turn out several very clever players this sum- mer and an attempt will probably be made a bit later In the season to have a ladles' tournament for the benefit of the few that have taken an interest In the game. FISHING DRAWS ATTENTION On the Brink Many a man sticks to his desk until outraged nature gives way and heis on the verge of collapse. It's only a backache—he declares—will be well in a few days—but it doesn’t get well. Sport of the Quiet Man Comes in for an Unusual Degree Just Now. This is the time of the year when the heart of the city dweller turns to the country with its quiet and its loveliness and, what so natural as the cool shades of the banks of the streams and lakes where the trout, the bass, the pike, the croppy and a hundred other kinds of fish are ever present. It is idleness with a purpose. Knee deep in the grasses of the pastures you tramp to the borders of latterly. SSS stage, they are working to catch him. With one of them on the fisherman's hands he has plenty to do and the sport is certainly well worth the trouble and the patience necessary to hook him. Of all the faraway lakes and rivers, there is probably no place this year which is so alluring as the Sturgeon river. It teems with trout and bass, and, for the man with little time to fish, it is as satistactory as any place that has been tried with the rod, the reel and the fly this spring. But wherever the fishermen go this year, they find the fish hungry and willing to bite on anything that is placed on the hook. From flies and spoons to minnows is a far ery, but the fish are equally willing to be snared with the one as with the other and the hunter s taking all kinds of ways to reach them and not trying to fish ac- cording to book or rule this spring. It is the fish they are after and they are getting them. MOTOR AND BICYCLE RACES Louls Flescher Backs a Plan to Re- Wheel Racing on Loeal Tracks. vive A plan s on foot now, with Louls Flescher back of It, to arrange for a serles of automobile, motor cycle and bicycle races within the next month, either on the track of the Council Bluffs Driving asso- clation or of the Omaha Driving assocla- tion. This will be a welcome step on the part of those who are Interested in the racing machines, and the list of entrles promises to be quite large. There has been con- siderable discussion among the local auto- mobilists as to the merits of their re- spective machines, and ihe races will glve all of them ample opportunity to prove the value of thelr assertions. There are & half dozen motor cycles in Omaha and Counell Bluffs, all capable of a speed of thirty or forty miles an hour, and they will give a wonderfully exciting race. This race will probably be five miles in length and there may be a shorter race with the same machines if the owners desire it With the automobiles it is the Intention | to have several mile races with the elec- trics, the gasolines between four and eight- horse power and the larger machines, and, a five-mile handicap for all classes isfied with anything less than an absolutely perfect of S. S. S, the oldest and best purifier and greatest % : ; i Write us fully and freely about your case, and medical advice will be given without charge, and our special book on Rheumatism will be mailed free to all desiring it. Is pumped through the lungs of a person of average as they need to enrich the blood and quicken the circulation. Whether you have Rheumatism in the acute or chronic the treatment must be internal, deep and thorough in order to be lasting. Never be sat- cure. ‘This you can get by the use of all tonics. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA. YOUTHFUL VIGOR RESTORED After Investigating all Known Methode We Belleve There le Nothing to Equal ‘‘Calthos""—Cures at Home, Full 8 Daye’ Trial Treatment will be sent Free to any Needy Man-8end for it Today. say thet If in his twe Yo Prove I . This paper {s authoriged to capable today as when he wa, E20ws he ought 0 giad to send each man trial treatment of 'Calthos,” the: t remedy 80d nervous men, discovered by that celebrated French solentist, Prof. Jules Laborde. This {s the very remedy that bas oured so many thousands of men of all ‘Whothrough errors in youth, excesses In later life sill other causes, had beoome weakiings of the most embarassin tsoever behind this offer to send you a 6 days’ trisl treatmont free. It means that and Dothing more. It is no C, O. D. presoription or deposit resort to such Dame’ they not only prove the value of 0od. but they do mankind some ai Oslthos, You surely need this Man] 1ssions, Varioooe! Eolarge- trate Gland, Lack of Virlle Power, Hydrocele, Impotency: if you sre bashful, timid in the company of ladles, if you lack eonfidence in your Bonc 15 Do §1 7ou afe ekine 10 0 PwoiDad hator ou are getting ‘we m&buvbl.llmyourblondwdnu to the spot, your nerves to tingling with renowed ambi your muscles enlarged witl power ; It stop the drains, oreato bealthy life force, i the flabby, and make you once again see life as you saw it in your rt-?‘nl a8 every vigorous man sees it throughout life. will be @ permanent cure, and accomplished privately in your own home. You may think you have tried your level best to be cured, you may have spent money on this thing and that withous podmulu.m until you send for t) trial treatment of Calthos and see for wili to free ‘What won @ clear con- Do not hesitate to write as they are only o glad w0 do t) for any should mot rest content until you find out by actual trial if Celthos ean oure you. in fuil confidence. Te Von Mohl €0, 636 7, et imwerars ot susges_ Clnclnnat O CLARK’S Bowling Alleys Biggest —Brighest—Best. EIGHT HUNDRED Quarts of Blood Per Hour health. This blood receives its those quiet pools and shady nooks where |of machines, nourishment from the intestines, but if the f T It gets worse and worse. develop. Diabetes follows and then without further warning Bright's Disease fastens its terri- ble fangs in the system. No man can afford to neglect backache, It is a warning cry of overworked kidneys and must be heeded. Doan’s Kidney Pills have brought back many a man and woman from the verge of the grave—have saved many a year of suffering and give a new lease of life to thousands of kidney victims. They have done it right here in Omaha hundreds of times—Omaha citizens say so. Their testimony is positive—you can prove it any day. Here is the statement of one Omaha man: Mr. W. R. Taylor of 1513 Webster street, employed at the Omaha Hard ‘Wood Lumber Co., says: “For a couple of years my back ached, the secretions became highly colored and sharp twinges caught me in the kidneys when stoop- ing. Procuring Doan's Kidney Pills from Kubn & Co's drug store, corner 15th and Douglas streets, I took them and they cured me. I do not hesitate in saying that Doan's Kidney Pills are a reliable remedy and I bave spoken to several of my friends about them.” At all Drug Stores, 50c per box. oster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y Urinary troubles the fish are the easiest lured. What If the fish be lacking or if they will not bite, or, biting, cannot be caught? It is the joy of the country, large and sweet, that draws the angler out from his soft and downy bed to the hardships and exigencles of a welcome camp life. As for fish, they are everywhere this spring if the tales brought back from the lakes and the rivers be not less truthful than usual. And to make it even more certaln there are strings upon strings of bass, ptke and croppy ever present with the returning fishermer. From the far lakes of Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa, where the fish are great in nymbers, the local fishers have come and tell great tales of the old spots more plentiful with fish than ever before. But there even closer to home. Cut Off lake, and the smaller Nebraska lakes are giving forth thelr quota of fish In twofold num- bers. Bass, pike and croppy are all strung together and even the insistent seining of the market fishermen has falled to thin the lakes 80 that the man with the rod and the line cannot reach them and come home with more than tales of those that bit but were not caught. . In the muddy Missouri are, this year,_ a great ‘number of large catfish and they are being made the object of some of the fishers who were wont to fish with the rod and the reel, but have found new sport in dragging to the snare great, bulky fel- lows of thirty, forty and more pounds of fish in one haul. This large denizen of the Nebraska rivers has been despised by the fishers generally, but there has come the feeling to many of the sportsmen that he is also & worthy prey for their efforts and The bicycle races will be one, two and three miles and the list of entries in these events promises to be quite large, number of outsiders from lowa and Ne- braska towns have signified their desire to participate. as a fessional and mes: cess and the people show an Interest them an attempt will be made later in the year to have a second race of the same class and to make it an annual feature afterward These races will be held in he different classes, the amateur and pro- ger boys. If the first series of races proves a suc- in The Wabash Rallroad “In the Good Old Summer Time" offer many special rates to Boston, Indlanapolis, Baltimore, St. Louls, Saratoga, Detroit, Atlanta and other points. Call at city office, 1601 Farnam, or address HARRY E. MOORES, G. A. P. D, Omaha, Neh, rellel. Cures in nt with syringe, for Sherman & Co., bowels are clogged by constipation the In- testines become a hothed of poison and dis- ease breeding germs, which are picked up by the circulation and carried to every part of the human <ystem. Dr. Burkhart's Vege- table Compound cures Constipation and drives the pofson from the blood. Rheuma- tism, Catarrh and all blood diseases yield quickly to its wonderful Thirty days' treatment, %o. All druggists. : . ) Mrs. Regina Watsen's School FOR THE HIGHER ART OF PIANO PLAYIN 197 E. Indiana Street, Chicage. Announces the beginning of ita SUMMER TERM for JUNE 2nd. Watson makes a specialty of the trainng of teachers and comoert planists in repertoirs, etc. Among prominent musiclans trained by her, the following names may men- tioned: Prof. Apel, Detroit, Mich.; Prof. Lutkin, Dean Northwestern Musie Behogl, Evanston; Miss Parsons, Director Rockford Musical College; Miss 8hibley, Director Plano Classes of Girton Behool; Winnetka, Til.; Mr. Walter Spry, Miss )l., Allport, Miss Eleanor Scheih and others of Chicago, tultion may be made at iculars address MRS, REGINA WATSO N, 187 E. inaiaca St., Chicage. For Menstrual Suppression = s vt PEN-T AN-GOT & box; § boxes §5. Sold In Omabs Sherman & Bedmmnis Dras o Mal rdors Rited. owiied H. L.RAMAGCIOTTI, D. V. S, CITY VETERINARIAN, Office and Infirmary, 2th and Mason Sts Deputy State Veterinarian. Food Inspector. 1313-15 Harmey Street. curative power. | Delightful as & Beverage. Healthful as & Tonic.