Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 18, 1903, Page 7

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: i THE OMAHX DATi# BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1008. BARGAINS THAT EXCEL ANYTHING YET OFFERED. In six years we have furnished more than 8,000 homes in Omaha and vicinity with good pianos and more than two-thirds of the number on our able plan of accomodation. Thous- ands have bought fine pianos from us on easy payments, and thousands more will do it. WHY NOT YOU? Your name is Welcome on our books. Take All the Credit You Want—Terms to Suit. We have thirty different makes of piano and players in all the latest styles and rarest woods. Our prices have been sharply reduced to make room for new goods which are ar- riving daily. USED PIANOS Sale Price $375 225 400 298 195 138 Regular Price Beautiful Steck Concert Grand, excellent value............ ..es..$900 Kranich & Bach, Parlor Grand...... 600 Elegant Mason & Hamlin Mahogany upright, good as new..... 550 One Emerson upright, latest design.. 4 Parlor size Kimball, Mahogany Case, little used Arion upright, French Walnut Case. . G. P. Hale Ebony Upright. 225 128 One New York Upright 3o o oo §60 o B0 90 Used Bquare Pianos.......$256—$35—$45 and up. NEW PIANOS Reguiar Price Sale Price One carload mahogany and oak cases.$275 $185 One lot of 12 oak and French walnut finish cases...... Sy ek eivie 8 218 258 250 cesaee e 225 Piano Players Four Different Makes $125 $175 $225 $250 Terms of Purchase Arranged to Suit the Buyer. One lot of 16 San Domingo mahog- any uprights....... ... 375 Bixty others equally good—equally cheap. Estey organs $25 and up—Iless than half regular prices—including some of their Chapel styles for schools and churches. OTHER GOOD ORGANS, $15.00 AND UP. Buyers at a distance should write for CATALOGUE AND SPECIAL BARGAIN LIST. LOW priced pianos bought from us now may be exchanged later toward the purchase of a STEINWAY OR STEGER PIANO. Schmoller & Mueller (INCORPORATED.) Manufacture -Wholesale - Retail - PIANOS Mississippi - and $23.05 Louisiana Points : AND RETURN Tuesday, Oct. 20, 1903—Less Than Half Ra LINCOLN, NEB. 135 S. lith Street. Tel, 763 CO. BLUFFS, IA. 502 Broadway. Tel 368 Main House and Office 1313 Farnam. Factory 1316 Farnam. Telephone 1625 OMAHA. lp\s < CENTRAL 5 .J%.,‘p/u‘l :&Q/ALLEY . Round trip tickets will be sold from Omaha on October 20 to any point (Including New Orleans), on the Illinois Central and Yazoo & Mississippl Valley rallroads in Mississippl and Louisiana, at rate of $23.05; good for return 21 days from date of sale. Liberal stopovers allowed. INVESTIGATE the wonderful resources of the south and the exceptional opportunities for investment in farm and timber land. Special advantages offered to homeseekers. REMEMBER the south will certainly bave a big boom in the next few years, for lands there have not yet reached nearly thelr proper value in comparison with the value of their products. Rate quoted above is very much less than the regular one-way fare. For reservations in special Tourist and Standard sleepers, and any other information, call at Illinols Central Oity Ticket Office, 1402, ¥Farnam Street, Omaha, or write ' Iil. Cent. R. R., Omaha, Neb. Are you one of the many thousands of Weak Men and do you wish to be cured” Multitudes bring on them- selves the horrors of a lifelong disease by unnatura habits. Thousands and thousands of mea are prema W.H. BRILL, D. P. A. turely old and diseased through excesses and unnatura draios, which sap the foundaton of life, destroy their bealth and strength, and finally results in their physical and mental wreck. Not knowing where o apply for a cure, many of these poor sufferers, loaded with disease, remorse and humiliation, silently suffer on, going from bad to worse, or they experiment with too many FREE TREATMENT OR QUICK CURE SCHEMES. ““A Stitch in Time Saves Nine” Don't wait until your whole system is polluted with disease, or untll your nervous system is tottering under the strain and you becors a physical and mental wreck, unfit for work. business, study or marriage, It requires but 4 small leak to sink a large ship. Do not be deluded with the idea that these diseases and meases will correct themselves-they never do. We have observed the terribly blighting influences of abuses and indiscretions in the young and middle-aged, sapping the vital forces, undermining the foundations of manhood, clouding the brightest minds and destroying all noble thoughts and ambitions; family circles disrupted, and the poisonous fangs reaching out and blighting even succeading generations. WE CURE SAFELY AND THOROUGHLY We have been the direct means of restos thousands fiicted sufferers to complete and perfect healt; your confidence in the care of honest, skiilful and success ? We can safely say that no other Medical Institution in America has the advan we have for (reating these special diseapes. Years of practical experience, thousan of #pent in researches and un lmmense practice have enabled us to evolve & system of treatment that bas revolutionized the medical world In the curing o STRICTURE, VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS, NERVO- SEXUAL DEBILITY, (IMPOTENCY, BLOOD POISON (SYPHILIS), RECTAL, KIDNEY AND URINARY DISEASES. The change in thousands of cases is sim of af- = 1 WILL CURE YOU marvelous. . Blighted lives, blarted hopes, weakened systems, weak and shrunken Organs, and pervous wrecks have restored by OUF Method. ' We have evolved & treatment that 18 & ful permanent and determined medicinal corrective where man's charseteristic energies have become weakened by m tlons. indiscretions and abuses. 80 much to do the work that ether rien tricity and medicine R faled. = All that deep knowl expert vast experience and thorough scieptific offi uipments re how belug done for those who come 1o Us for the heip they need. — © BE o wpmp -~ CONSULTATION FREE. Write if youosanos call. Office hours 8 a. m. t0 8 p. m., Sundays 10 to 1 oaly, - STATE ELECTRO-MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 1308 Farmam Streets, Between 13th and 14th Sts., Omaha. Neb. rather ..Jy‘:u- e | able at this point | Kennedy and CREICHTON TARES TBE CAME Looal Oollege E'even Defeats Team from South Dakota University. VISITORS MAKE SPURT AT THE OUTCOME Become Agaressive in Last Half and Play Better Game When Time is Called—Score Ten to Two. In two twenty-five-minute halves the football eleven of South Dakota university went down In defeat yesterday afternoon before the sturdy youths from Creighton university. The score was 10 to2 and the audience witnessed the rare spectacle of a foot ball game in which both sides scored without the ball having been taken across the line by elther of the contesting elev- ens. Creighton's score was made by Captain Callahan's strong right leg. As a matter of fact Callahan did all the scoring for both sides, fcr he was pushed over his own goal line by the eleven from the land of free divorces, thus making a safety which counted two points for the South Dakota eleven. Twice did Callahan try success- fully for a place kick. Bach time the ball was on the twenty-yard line, once at the north goal, and then at the south goal and in each instance the ball sailed true and beautifully between the uprights, while the partisan audience cheered tumultuously. At the beginning of the game South Da- kota, occupying the north goal, kicked oft to Welch, who made a good return. By short gains through the line, coupled with the new quarterback play by Callahan, the ball was carried to South Dakota's twen- ty-yard line. Crelghton having been un- to gain much on two downs, and the ball being squarely in front of the uprights, a signal for a place kick was given. The pass was made, the ball was placed, and finally sent whizzing through the alr and Captain Callaban had made five points for his side before the spectators knew what was golng on or realized that it was time to cheéer. But when the stupendous fact broke over them that a place kick had really been made, Callahan and his team mates were cheered lustily. When South Dakota next kicked off the ball went to Creighton, who fell down, but the ball was recovered by Rooney. Calla- han then gave another exhibition of his powers as a sprinter and circled the visit- ore’ left end for thirty-five yards. Line work was then resorted to and when time for the first half was called Creighton had carried the ball to the opponents’ fifteen- yard line. Creighton had the north goal In the last half and at the beginning kicked off to South Dakota, and the wind being in the north the ball went whizzing beyond the goal line, It was trought out and South Dakota, by a place kick, sent the ball through the air for a distance of forty yards. It was captured by McGovern, who returned it fifteen yards. When the ball, by short line gains, had been brought back to the exact center of the fleld Callahan got in another of his end runs, covering twenty yards. The visitors' llne was hammered for additional short gains, and when the ball had been tuken to the twenty-yard line Cal- {lahan tried for another place kick. The ball went straight as an arrow between the posts and then bedlam broke loose, for the score was then 10 to 0 In favor of the Creighton team, and a victory was assured, for it 4id not seem ble for the visitors to do anything in (R short space of t'me remaining. = At this point, however, the visitors got into the game with more vim and snap than had characterized thelr previous playing, and by constant exchanges of punts, In { which the South Dakota kicker was always a gainer, having” both the ncline of the fleld and the wind In his favor, the ball was finally placed but two yards from Creigh- ton's goal. Reallzing that this was their chance the visitors played like demons, and when Callahan tried for another of his end runs he was tackled and pushed over his own goal line, thus constituting a safety and 2 points for the South Dakota team. Clearly = Safety. At this point there was some question as to whether the pushing of Callahan across his own goal line constituted a touchback or safety, but the officials held that there could be no controversy on this point and that It was clearly a safety. The superfor welght of the visitors was a great help to them In the last few minutes of play, and they were playing the better game of the two when time was finallp called with the ball in Creighton's posses- sion on its own ten-yard line. South Da- kota changed its tactics during the last ten minutes of play and resorted to the punting game frequently. In this it was always a gainer. As the Creighton team could not gain through the line, and since it was losing on the exchange of punts, it seemed that a touchdown for the visitors would have been only a matter of time. Lineup. The game was called at 3:30 with this Uneup: 80. DAKOTA. CREIGHTON, Rimwer o Thompson Hvistendahl wEE Mullaley Lamphier Coed (Capt) g cGovern . f R. Coed n'F e Welch South Dakota substitutes: Blodgett, Case, Johnson, Newcomb Creighton substitutes; BERAOTET UZETmI0: OHm e A Callahan sves M wEER A ford Umpire: timekeeper: A. Ellick. CHICAGO TEAMS ARE TIED Northwestern University Has the Beat of Comtest, but N 3 Scores, Linesman and CHICAGO, Oct. 17.—Thd University of Chicago and Northwestern university today played a tie game on Marshall fleld, the score being 0 to 0. Northwestern outpiayed | Chicago from start to finish, and its goal was at no time in danger. On the other hand, Chicago was saved on its own fo yard line by Northwestern's fumble. Eck: soll, Chicago's speedy quarter, had no chance to show his briliancy on end runs, as the Northwestern ends had no dificulty in sifting through Chicago's line. Fumbles were frequent ‘and both sides were re- peatedly penalized for of-side play. The weather was perfect and about §,000 people witnessed the struggle. The lineup: NORTHWESTERN. . <s Welnberger, Sherlock wEEE W40 04 W -Ivisea L¥. BV, DOANE OVERWHELMS HASTINGS Scere s Seventy Three to Nothing— Goal of Home Team is ¥ in Danger. CRETE. Neb., .)—The Ly Oct. 17.—(Special Tele- Doane eleven overwhelmed the today by the declsive while the play of the loc continual succession of long end r no time in the game was Doane's line in_danger. Lineup: HASTI Powers, DOANE. Tiapan Day . Dowse Spea er Graybiil cHm Spees. Wildhaber Hall B Gaddin B.. Wasdiand (Cap.) Vance Brownell Wents tings. Umpires MeDavitt mw WEWA ©A04M Montgomery (Cap.) F._E Forrester...Q Referee: J. Brown, Mann and’ " Doan: nesman: C. Hall. | | Timekeepers: — Perry ~and Lichtenberg. | | Time of haives: Twenty-five minutes Tew maw- o | TABOR DEFEATS COMMERCIALS Omaha Team Falls to Put Up a Sue- cessful Game Agninst Towa College Eleven. TABOR, Ia., Oct. 17.—(Speclal Telegram.) ~The foot ball game here today between the Tabor college eleven and the Omaha | Commercial college team from Omaha re- sulted in a victory for the home kickers by a score of 11 to 0. The game was [ree fi fouls. The visiting players did not K their signals and were confused in almost every play. No long punts or sen- sational end runs were made and the spec. tators were not much interested. Most of the big gains were made by center plays and line bucking and aside from a beautiful lunge by Hall for a touchdewn in the rst ten minutes’ play, the game was tame. The line-up follows: TABOR—11 | Brown L BIR Minser 'L TR G. Brows ‘Le White e c.lc Housel R'o Davis . . R (L Evenham . R E Ehofer o Bryeon s LHD Todd . L R H B Hall Referee COMMERCIAL--0. " LI, Anthony Burmelster Bike Bond Blackburn B.IF. B gdon Miller. Umpire: Charles Laird. Touchdowns: Hall, Housel. Goal ham. Time of halves: Twenty-five min- utes each. HARVARD WINS FROM CADETS Desperately Fought Points Grounds Decided 5 to O, Game on West WEST POINT, N. Y., Oct. 17.—Under ex- | tremely bad weather 'conditions Harvard | defeated West Point today, scoring 6 to 0. There was much fumbling on both sides. It was probably the most desperately fought | foot ball game ever seen on West Point field. The playe throughout the first half were inostly in West Point's territory There was no time during the game that Harvard's goal was threatened. lineup: HARVARD. { . WEST POINT. Lemoyne . ol R E. Gl Farkensen mmon: Stittwell-Copp Parueworth FROFrropaR mEEnAc: o ... Mackett P, G Beve Torney-Prince Touchdown: Hurley. Time of halves: Fifteen and ten minutes. YALE WINS IN RAINSTORM the Pennsy ia Eleven by a Score of 27 to O, = » Defeats State NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 17.—Yale de- feated the Pennsylvania State eleven today in a rainstorm. Bcore, 27 to 0. Yale scored | two touchdowns in the first half by bucking the line and end running. The play was of the simplest throughout, and the superiority of the Yale halfbacks, rather t tacking power of the forwards, i sible for the big score. Lineup: YALE. JFENNSTLVANIA . Perry respon- | Raffert ogan . Sheviin . Rockwell-Soper Mitchell-Owsley Metealt-Allen . Bowman-Farmer 3 Touchdowns: Metealf, well, Hogan and Owsley. Goals from downs: Bowman, 2 Final score: Yale, #1, Pennsylvania state, 0. Length of halv Twenty minute MINNESOTA'S EASY VICTORY ’ Plles Up Seventy-Five Points Against lowa, Which is Unable to Score. REBFFToRER 17.—Towa _proved an_easy opponent of Minnesota today, the | home team defeating the visitors by a| score of % to 0. Lineup: 10WA. . Fertel Merbert wEmomikR FiE SEROFFFORPR ® Minor Foot Ball Games. GENOA, Neb., Oct. 17.—(Special Tele- sram.)—A’ foot ball game here today be- tween the Indian school and Commercial college of Columbus resulted in a shut- out for the Indians. Scare: Indians, 24; Commercial college, 0. Stahler of the In- dians had two ribs broken, BEATRICE, Neb., Oct. 17.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Company C foot ball tvam of this clty defeated the Wymore eleven here this | afiernoon In one of the best games ever | played in the city. Beore, § to 0. SIOUX_ CITY. Oot.' 17.—(Special Telo- ram.)—Morningside college (Sioux City), i Western Union college (Lemars), 0. Kansas Wi £r Colorado. BOULDER, Colo., Oct. 17.—The foot ball game between the University of Kansas | and Colorado was won by the former, 12 | to 11, but this hardly represents the merits of the two teams. The visitors outplayed the Colorado men, the feature of the game being a sixty-yard bucking through center | to a touchdown by Kansa: VITAL FORCE Is Crushed by Chromic Troubles. One of the most weakening, undermining troubles which mankind is heir to is hem- orrholds or piles. The victim s careless and neglectful of the disease at first, be- | cause the pain is slight and the bleeding may only occur occasionally, or he may be reassured by the occasional disappearance of the symptoms. And yet if at the very start he had found a rational remedy Lo soothe the iInflamation, he would bably never have had a return of this irritating malady, Plles may develop at any season of the year, and at almost any age of the victim; | the abuse of cathartics often causes the trouble, and a period arrives when the dread of man at stool becomes so great that the sufferer begins to neglect the calls of nature, and the bowels are either forced to retain the feces or are only partiall cleared, on account of the suffering tendant upon a thorough movement Before you reach this stage use & remedy which removes the cause, thereby eradi- cating the disease, and that is the Pyr mid Plle Cure, which is sold by all drug- gists at Ofty cents a package; it is In the form of a suppository, is applied directly to the parts affected and brings about a complete cure, quickly and painlessly. A | valuable lttie book on the cause and cure | of plles is published by the Pyramid Drug | Co., Marshall, Mich., and we advise every sufferer to send for a copy of it. People who have suffered from piles for | years are often astonished at the instant | relief experienced from the first applica- | tion. Another important advantage is the | fact that anyone can use the remedy | without detention from business or inter- ference with dally occupation. “I feel it my duty fo recommend the Pyramid Pile Cure, for after sutering ten | years with & most distressing form of | Plles I am entirely cured, thanks to this remedy. Anyone doubting this can write to Margaret Brady, 16 Whitmae 9. Cleveland, Ohie.” New suits and wraps with the dash & charm that appeal to every woman NOT since the advent ofthe tailor-made suit has there been such a rush for ready-to-wear garmoants. New things enough for a full page of styls talk On sale Monday—Ladies’ jack~ ets, latest style, made of oxford melton, sateen lined, made box % back, pouch sleeves, trimmed with folds—sizes 3 to #4—speciul at $2.98 each. To introduce o ér children's cloak style we will put on sale Monday morning, be- tween the hours of 10 and 12, any one of our girl's latest style cloaks marked to sell at $8.7, for two hours only, sizes 4 to 14 years, all colors, at $.00 each. $19.50 for new suits in Scotch Mix- tures, nobby plaited coilarless coat styles, made of the popular tures, plafted front . back an . y with wide strap of ;lain material k, trimned with fancy. brald plain faring kilt plaited skirt to m Our special new fall suits at $15.00 pleases everybody. The demand has been 50 great that it keeps t maker busy on this particu- lar style-we tak . re output. Ma chaviots In all desirable sha blouse style, with hield front style, d_with brald to match—h kirt. You ceuld not get th elscwhere in lty, fit and style than $%.00. sleeves, ndsome s sul rless $7.98 for tallor-made walking skirts — y come In very fine check mixtures in lue, gray ond brow material, worth $i.0 and $4.00 per vard. We bad them m e latest styles—tafloring and fit the very We cannot describe les as this is the greatest assortment of walkin § kirts ever placed on sale, und are worlg $10.00 and $12.50. 39¢c for fall shirt waists — made of heavy rip cloth, (in' solid coler) effects, large plaited o tucked front, with large pearl buttons, sizes 32 Lo 4, $150 values. $2.98 for fine mohalr walsts, In a'l white or black, und polka dot, white, black and blue effects, tucked yoke or shjeld front, piped, fancy stock collar and large sleeves— $.00 values. Great Millinery Bargains %0 trimmed hats, eny color, worth $3.50, for 5 0 trimmed hats, in v plumes, worth $450, %0 trimmed ha morrow only, at 200 more taflor-made, ready-to-wear hats, worth §2 such as are sold all over for $5.00 trmmed with birds, fancy feathers o 3800, we ofter for to . 3.48 ..L.ow Rate.. HOMESEEKERS’EXCURSIONS Tuesdays, VIA THE October 20th November 3d and 17th 1303 «AND.. IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE. To Certain Points in the WEST AND SOUTHWEST AR (i ONE FARE FOR THE ROUND TRIP Final Limit of Tickets, 21 Days. Stopovers will be allowed within transit limit of 15 days going after reaching first homeseekers’ point en-route. route. , FOR FURTHER INFORMATION or land pamphlets, folders, maps, etc.,, address any agent of the company, or T. F. GODFREY, Passenger and Ticket Agent, TOM HUGHES, Travel- ing Passenger Agent, OMIAHA, NEB. H. C. TOWNSEND, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, St. Louis, Mo. OMAHA o CUREDn PAY WHEN CURED 220 So. 14th S, o THE GATLIN CURE, * THE LIQUOR HAB)T DENVER P NO HARMFULAFTER EFFECTS: & Omaha, Neb, A well heated office for $10.00 per month Before the cold weather sets in, it might be well for you to stop to think whether you are apt to freese to death in your office this winter. There's Bo use staying in a cold office all winter. THE BEE BUILDING If you sk one of its teamnts you will find it's alwayw comfert- able, no matter how cold the weather . You would better move before it's cold. There are three pleasant small rooms at $10.00 per month—one or twe larger rooms at reasonable prices R. C. PETERS & CO. RENTAL AGENTS GROUND FLOOR BEE BUILDING

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