THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, Aim 17 ST 17, 1002. 11 r BASE BALL GOSSIP OF WEEK OmiU Still Leading in a liigbtj Clot . v ' Baoe for the finnant. if - FINISH PROMISES TO BE VERY 'WARM Kansas City, Dutfr, Mllvvawkea aad t. Joseph All Didders, bat th gchedal Snows It Br ,J i', tweti Tut Tmi, Roosting high. Not io high that they cap't be reached, bat so high that there are none other be tween them and the top. . Rourke' Red Leg haven't cut ao wide a awath on their farewell tr'p aa they did oa previous en gagement, bat the win have come often enough to keep tho boj at the head of the proceaalon. And maybe you think that the fight haun t become, a merry one. Omaha, Kansas City, Denver,. St. Jcseph and Mil waukee are all possibilities. Just now the first three team are so closs together that a single blanket would cover them. It la to be one of the prettiest finishes ever watrbod, with all the teams on edge to the very last moment. Omaha and Denver have a ds :'cided advantage In a long series of games at home to wind up on, Denver being a little '.the stronger In this regard, the Grizzlies' card calling for twenty-one straight games On the home grounds, beginning on August .IX - Omaha, still has twenty-one games ' 'scheduled for home, but the string la broken by a series at Dea Moines and a final trip . to .the mountains. Kansas City baa but thirteen more games -to play on the home grounds, Including today's, and will be 1 away from home from September 1 to the "finish, winding up at Denver on September 12.' Milwaukee Still baa thirteen games to ' play at home, and winds up at Omaha on i September 23. St. Joseph is In the same ; fix. If the schedule and the record of the aeasoa ao far la any Indication, the fight Is between Omaha and Denver. Omaha has "Shown up stronger on the road than Denver, ' but has not been able to win so large a per ''centag of games at home. However, we , get 4one more crack at each team In the bunch on the home grounda, and If we don't land the pennant It will be because we can't, cot because we don't try for It. , One of the really funny things of the week was the awful yell from the Denver Times young man about games being thrown, be cause the Grizzlies got picked at Kansas City' and St. Joseph. He seemed to be lm tu4d with the Idea that the Grizzlies ought to go right on making a Roman holiday of the other teams, Just aa had been done at '' Denver. Aside from amusing people, his yawp bad no other effect than to show bow 'little be really knows about baio ball as a game. Nothing could be mora ab surd than to charge that gamea are thrown to the. home team merely to attract attend ance. To start with, only one; town In tha circuit patronizes baso ball aolely to see the. home team win.. That la Denver. In '. tirthe other towns the people go but to see . base hall, and are pleased with a coo ' game, bo matter which team wlna. As an illustration of how foolish the assertion Is, Omaha baa gone twice over the eastern balf Cf the circuit, winning a large majority of 'the games each time and drawing tho big (eat crowds that have turned out to aee ,ny of the teams, merely because the pnonld , InoW that when i Omaha comes to town there'll be a ball game, no matter which team wins. Denver hasn't got a 'good road team. This hss been demon strated beyond any room for doubt. Whllo .tha Denver team contains a number of good Individual players. It lacks In the very vs :'. sentlal feature of team harmony. Flayers do not aupport each other aa they should to - gain the beat results, and this fault, overlooked at home, becomes glaring on the road, where tha Inspiration of a friendly crowd Is missing. In the first serios played by Denver In' .Omaha thla season this spirit was shown. As soon aa Omaha got a lead and tha fata of the game aeemed settled, the Grizzlies began to aulk and loaf, and tha snap all died' out of what bad been a good contest, thousands of spectators leaving disgusted. On the sec ond visit a repetition of this performance was had. In none of the games did the Grizzlies fight till the end.' "That they are up to their old tricks Is apparent by the tact that three out of four games lost to Kansas City and St. Joseph weut In the ninth Inning. - To be plain, the Grl3!ll3S are a bunch of quitters. If they could take A. Q. Gray and two or three mora of the megaphone fiends who Infest the Broadway groiiads and make, the ' patients'1 In the County hospital wish they were dead on days when the team Is at home, could taks .'that gravel diamond' and light atmosphere with' them,' and an umpire in whom tht-y .. have confidence (If such an umpire exists) ,i '.they . might make a better showing than : they, are likely to under tha present con ' dltlouat Out tha knockers will still knock. ,;. When George Stone goes to tha Boston American league team Nebraska will have 'added another to a long list of players who have (listened In fast company by reason f their Unerring judgment ' In the field and at the .bat.. "Stone la a youngster with 'a great deal to learn about the game and . ts going In with a bunch that haa the name of being hard company for a beginner. Ha has bad a' decided advantage during tha present season through being associated with a teani of veterans, men of estab lished reputation as ball players, who have taught him all ha could learn la one aeaaon. Wth. this ha will go Into faster company fairly well " equipped, and with anything INDIVIDUALITY . MILWAUKEE Poetess a goodness aS its own. - Unerring rudgmant (xsrciatd la th selection of materials. backed by Blati method of brew anfc ara tha main factor taspoo aiU for Blats character. DLATX MALT VI VINE ... . (Naa-lntoslMat) (UMMIR TONIO U Drussiua er luraol. ' VAL ILATZ BREWING CtLMllnu... OMAHA tlKA.MH, li Doaclaa SI. Tel. 1011. ' l9PaarEATCD atoaov.oa. EftSY .lOIlEY v i aaaoo $jiuv Vr ujr ud 9ytm ot turf tnveelmonl. Kattielr ttuflu, VitKltt. Write (o? l tuiua. . TUBS DOlULAtl HALT CO, Turf Coratnlaatonerii. HI Ckaxk Ktrwt. C'tilCAOO. rrt.ia h 3w-'''j .' ! I """" jhr th w 'r"" I av 1 Ilka aa even break ought to make good. Omaha people, will miss him. for ba has been very popular here, but will wish blm well In his new company. That tha Western league pitchers have been laying for 8tone la shows by the fact that ha only got three blta during the last six gamea. Thla alump brlnge his batting average down nineteen points, but It Is still high enough to look good. Others of the team ara hitting along steadily around the season's mark. Carter is tha bright and shining exception. Ho got through tha week without securing a safety. In tha fielding department of tha game a very noticeable advance la made, everybody Im proving slightly and all giving a splendid exhibition of that ability which haa marked Omaha all season aa the fastest fielding team In tha league. Dolan and Hlckey went through the week without an error, the first time this season. Dolan now haa fielding average above the 90 per cent mark, and Hlckey ts not far away, which recorda ara excellent when one considers that neither of these players ever shirks a ball, no matter Where It la going, but are willing to take a chanca on anything. Here are the atattstlce up to the end of tha Milwaukee series: BATT1NO AVERAGES. Last Tlnyers. AB. R. H. Ftone 2X1 S3 103 Graham 156 ' 19 44 Ptewart a0 44 Dolan Kl ' 47 9 Genlns S& B4 "88 Celhoun liH 2 47 Carter 173 7 87 Hlckey 327 41 71 Oonrtlng 320 83 M Thomas 1K5 18 Owen 8 17 Pears 99 t II Brown 97 IS Alloway j . 6 10 Ave. week. . .KM .HI .3M .2f3 .346 ill .231 .217 .ana . .191 .181 .VA .178 .153 .251 .Ml .1)2 .249 .118 .211 .m .188 .191 .147 .164 .lit ITT ir T TlTVn iWDinra t Tji.t Players. Alloway ... Calhoun .... Oondlng ... Pears Urown Thomas .... Stewart 4... Stone Carter Gnlns Owen Graham .... Dolan Hlckey O. A. E. Tot. Ave. week. 87 1 94 .99 .& SSI 29 11-591 4a 122 11 898 144 IS 6 26 14 V 4 124 , n 26 15 850 241 M I? 601 , VS 8 144 13 10 11 177 167 . 41 18 224 It 75 7 64 26 7 10 112 210 238 47 495 . 109 171 46 824 .Wl .981 .977 .7 .957 .951 .9:18 ;2l .926 .910 1 .906 .861 .m .980 .975 .971 . .951 .934 .934 .924 .93 . .897 .801 Omaha closed IU aeason at Milwaukee with the hardest fought double-header seen there this season. It waa real baaa ball for eighteen Innings, and no mistake. Even the American association supporters admit that the sport waa tha best Milwaukee folka have been called upon to witness In long time. . One unfortunate feature marred tha proceeding. . Mr. Bone, who played aecond base with Duffy's team when It was la Omaha last, umpired both games, and took occasion to . hand the Rourkes one or two little hot bunches. For ex ample, when Genlns and Stone were both on tha second bag and Gatlna touched both with the ball. Bone called both out. One player waa certainly entitled to the base, but Bone wasn't playing any fa vorites, and ha fired Genlna off the grounda for trying to explain the point, ft la not likely that tha result would have been changed had tha decision been fairly made, but Bone showed his willingness to oblige tha home team. Genlns was put out ot both gamea for disputing decisions, which makes one at this distance think they must have been very raw, for Genlna is probably the coolest-headed and best-nature player in the whole Western league; not aven excepting that Chesterfield of tha diamond, Ace Stewart. Here'a hoping that when Mil waukee come to Omaha President Sexton will have an umpire worthy of tha name, for we want to win, but only by playing ball., During tha week both tha National and American leaguea have made public pro. ceedlngs of recent meeting. From tho National camp cornea the announcement that any player not under contract to a club under the national agtaement la ellgl ble to do business with a National league club, which mean that contract jumping is still encouraged by the "big" league mag nates. Ban .Johnson's league announced that it haa no intention of amalgamating with the National. Magnate Shtba of Philadelphia, when spoken, to by a Hoston reporter, said ha was satisfied, that his team was drawing Ita ahara of the home patronage, and he thought he would let uoionei Kogera alone. Bulbe is terr modest. During tha week tha two Phlla delpbla teams, played at boma, and while the attendance at the American sames averaged around 5,000, the crowds at the National park were in the-'vlclnity ot 400. It may be that Colonel Rogirs will learn from these figures, and If he lets another chanca to algn Larry Lajoie, will take blm on at apy figure, but tha probabilities are that the doughty colonel won't do anything of the kind, and will go ahead losing money lor the run of showing his players next season that he can't pay Ban Johnson sal aries. MOKSTKH DREDGER'S WORK. Plam to Dig; the Rlekea-Owt of Oregon One of tha greatest pieces of mechanical engineering ever undertaken in eastern Ore gon, saya the San Francisco Chronicle, la me construction or a monster dredger, weighing 7S0 tons, tor operation on the pla cer bearing bed of tha John Day river in that aectlon. Tha dredger baa been In course of con structlon for a long time and will be ready for work thla week. One hundred and aev eaty-flve thousand feet of lumber were used In tha construction of tha hull alone. Th cost of thla mammoth dredger haa been about 1180,000, but so rich la the sand at tha bottom of tha river that tha company owning tha dredger feela confident that its Investment will bring smpl returns. The aand la to be raited by twenty-seven buckets attached to an endless chain of 719 links. Tha buckets weigh 1,000 pounds each and the links ot tha chain weigh BOO pounds each. Twelve bucketa will paaa a given point each minute,' making a total 'of nlnety-slx cuble yarda of sand lifted In a minute. Tha company has figured that tha cost ot operation will ha nearly 1100 a day, but the membera ara confident that tba aand at the bottom la rich aad they figure that they can make a profit of (100 or mora dally.. C!olrat Marfcaa. This la aa extremely dangerous dlseaaa. In almost every neighborhood some ona baa died from it, and la many Instances before a physician1 could ba summoned ar medicine obtained. Mra. B. H. Delano of Durant, Mich., Is subject to severe attache of chol era morbua. During tha past four years she has kept at band a bottle of Chamber Iain's Oollc, Cholera aad Diarrhoea Rem edy, and aaya it baa always given her quick relief. . During thla time she baa used two bottlee of It. This remedy caa ba de pended upon la the moat severs and dan geroua caaea. The aafe way la to keep It at band ready for Instant use. Reflttctloaa ( Bachelor. New Tork Press: Philosophy la th aalve of dlsappoiatment. . ' Girls awtm overhead almost aa naturally as they rid horseback straddle. A man beta on reason and loses; a woman doesn't bet an instinct, but she win with it. I Mental science never cured a girl ot a ! stitch la bjt p'.is right after the had bees aiiI am A m r h rilaM with flap Kmf Ham II A womaa will try nine different cooks In a month Jid take It as a matter ot course, but whea a man haa to ba ahaved by a new barber ba talaka ha la a aaartyr 00T BALL FOR NEBRASKA University Will Pot Inatbaf Strong Tam on tha Gridiron. COACH BOOTH TO HAVE EXPERT HELP Vm Palaaer of Prlaeetoa vVIII Be Asaletaat Darin; Tralalaaj aaawTaarac Bark , 4 Play at 4kaarter. Tha announcement In Saturday Bee of the good fortune of the Nebraska foot ball team In aecuring for the coming leason Lou Palmer, tha former Prlnoton end, for assistant coach, and Orlls Tborne, Ne braska's greatest quarterback and most fa mous captain, to play hla old position, came aa the first aews concerning tha 'varsity eleven for this year that has been heard alnc tba close of 4aat season's nlay. The information haa started the tr.any foot ball enthusiasts In Omaha and Ne braska a buzzing plenty, and It ia time, too. With the beginning of training .only three weeks distant and the first game scarcely mora than a month away, foot ban gossip kt in good order, and it Is not long before the closing of the baae ball and tennis sea son will leave the sporting field, aa far as gamea ara concerned, practically clear for tba gridiron ramp. Aa It Is, things ar certainly starting off very strong, for the acquisition ot Palmer and Thorpe la doubtless the most Important thing that can happen to Nebraska this year, next to winning games. Thorpe's advent la really tha mora momentous of th two, for ha will fill a place that waa the despair of Captain Westovcr and Coach Booth, the quarterback position vacated by Ralph Drain. Thla lad was, next to Thorpe, the post quarter Nebriska. had ever known, and last year Phil King ranked him aa "no better in th west." He ws the life of the team, being possessed ot good cheer and buoyancy of spirit and indomi table nerve that alone made him Invaluable. Only one other man on tho team possessed all these characteristics. That was Cap tain Westover. Ot the others, aome be came downcast, hopeless; other grew aul- len; other lost their nerve with injuries. To replace such a man aa Drain seemed Im possibles "Of course, I knew I could not do It with any new man' aald Captain westover, "for no matter how strong nnl clever you are. It's the experience that counts. Drain's own case chewed this. His superiority waa the result of long training. Ha played four "years at Ne braska, and not till the last two did he ehlne out. whir In 1901 h waa the star of tha west at bla Job. So you can Imagine how I felt when a week ago I a.cured Thorpe' promise to return to school. There I Just the man, for he has all that experi ence which I so essential, and is, be sides, the best kicker and leader you could find." That Thorpe ia a great quarterback can not ba doubted. When he was captain of Nebraska In '98 he won fame for his quarterback kick, then Just new, for hla nerce oaraiv, hi reimuia usfeuav mui uia clear head In handling the team. Tha Chicago paper touted him big with half tones as one of the best. It waa his first year at quarter, too. In '95 he waa end In '94 sub end aad aub quarter on the team that won the Mlssourl-Iowa-Kansas-Ne- braska championship. In those daya Thorp weighed only about 115 pounda atrlpped. By the time ba be came captain foot .ball bad put more body on blm and. ha weighed about 160. Now be welgha 170. but ha will keep It all under training. Ha 1 alwaya In good ahapa, being athletic, and never dissipating, not even smoking. In appearance be is a very handsome youth, with a perfectly propor tioned body about five feet and nine Inches long. Ha haa broad shoulders and an ex ceptionally deep chest. Orlle alwaya had the reputation vf baring mora strength to th pound than 'any man on tha team. HI weight now should make him irresistible, for ha waa alwaya a great power, being nothing but a bundle of muscles. X, About his playing. It ia necessary to add but little. He ia one of these fellow who standa always perfectly erect, yet, as It turna out, ia always bunched for a spring, start like a flash and run with great peed. He was alwaya the etfvy of hi team mates because he never got hurt or marked up. Ha never took out time In a game. It would aeem that fortunes, like mis fortunes, never come singly. Captain West over saya that he ia now deluged with a downpour of material unheard of at Ne brasca. "A month ago," said he, "1 was worried badly about my quarterback and three line positions. Tha outlook seemed very dlscoursgtng. Suddenly everything haa changed. I have a bunch of men now that weigh figurative tona, and as a consequence the competition for all positions on the team will b hotter than It ever waa." And ther Captain Westover sound th keynote of tha situation. "Competition" is what make a team. The real cause for Joy at the great abundance of materia) la not tha mere fact of Ita availability; it ia the fac that this will result in every man working tor his Job, not only till tha sea son begins, but all tba way through. Here tofore a shortage in material haa alwaya hurt the Nebraska team, not because there were not good njen, for there were, but be cause there were Just about a teamful ot them, and they knew It, ao didn't work hard enough. No mailer what anyone aald to them about losing their place they knew they'd keep them, for ther wasn't anyone else as. a matter of tact who could con sistently ba substituted. But tha following 'showing, tor '01 does awsy onea and entirely with all thla aura thing business. Look down thla line of old mn: Westover tor right tackle at. 185 pounda, Cortelyou for right end at 160 pounds, "Chick" Shadd for left end at 180 pounds. Ringer for left guard at 190 pounds. Maloney and Tobln for guards at 210 and 185 pounds respectively. And those ar all old man and they will all ba back. Then take In thla connection these newH candidates for Una positions: Patton, the Doane college tackle, at 190 pounds; Wilson, a tackle from the State Normal school of Illinois, at 195; Cotton, from Syracuse. Neb., at 110 pounds; Voss, a Nebraska boy,' who weighs 120 pounds and whom the Uni versity ot Pennsylvania ia trying to get aa a guard, having seen his play at a minor col lege In Pennsylvania laat year. And last hut not least, Ed Hubbard, tha Lincoln High school boy, who weighs 210 pounds and who wishes to ba center, a Job a played sev eral year at the preparatory achool. With such a bunch at hand, what matters It that ex-Captain Brew Is gone forever from hi position at guard, that Koehlee will no longer b on hand to play center, the place h baa held for three years. For vary place of tha fiva canter ones In the lin there are twa candidate, three tor aome. And heavy mea. too. a eeatral quintet weighing 1,000 pound, or Just halt a toa, caa ba picked up with eyes closed, and It will b tha Brat time Nebraska aver had the weight, or had It s alcaly dlatrtbuUd. That line will b a compact, aalaaced masa la Its heavy bulwark portion. ' And tha ends will aot be light. Cortelyou at right la a teyor at 140 pounds. It only take agurce t ahuw what ba eaa do. In 1901 tho longest run anade araaaa bin waa six yard, made by Larson at Wisconsin. In 1900 the longest waa nineteen yards, made at Lawrence, Kan., by s Kanaaa man while another held "Cort." But even then he broke away and got the runner from behind. "I do not want any better end than Cortelyou." said Westover. "Cort." by the way. Is sn Omaha boy. He la an other who has grown good by practice and hard work. (At tha other end Shedd will be hard pushed for his Job, despite his weight, by a newcomer, who la yet old to the game. Enthusiasts who remember the champion ship team ot '98, which Will Melford cap tsHned, will recall also the keen, clever, rapid quarterback who played behind "Bill" that year. This was Kay Elliott. Ha waa light then, but has gained weight In the two year he has been out of school. He looks better than ever. Ray also plays a great end, however, and with Thorpe at quarter end 1 where Elliott will go. Ho I a charger and a stubborn Interference fighter, and a awlft runner also. He and Thorpe can change about positions if they wish, for Orlle waa a great end In '95. Ray can still plsy three years on the varsity If he wishes,' Thorpe has one mora. Elliott Will weigh 155 pounds now. Tha backa will be "back" in aa army. Pillabury.- tha 210-pound fullback, will be there; so will Beli and Bender, the two 160-pound light running halvea. Then there Is Benedict, a Lincoln High school lad, who will try for half or quarter at 160 pounds. He Is a brother of the lamoua place-kicking Benedict of '99, and haa played great foot ball for the High school. Fennon, a 160-pound lad from David City, who haa played the game, Is also looking for a Job behind the line. Coacbera will ba aa thick as players this year. Besides Booth and Palmer, George Shedd, captain In '97, will be around to show the backs something, and little Ralph Drain will be there to give pointers to ends and backa. Then Westover himself will coach. He will not line up with the team. It's no use. There's notnlng he can learn, and It's alwaya In practice games that he geta hurt. Last year the scrimmages with the scrubs used to result in injuries to him every night. Anyway, there's no tackle who la going to get by John, and ba will be In tba games hard as ever. Interest In the team thla year will ex reed all bounds. Last season Lincoln waked up, as did the 'varsity Itself. A field Ith a seating capacity of only 1,000 waa given fi,000 seats, and that was not enough. .The business men there waked up and loosened up. They are doing, so again this year. The team will have great financial backing. It will be run aa nearly as possible on eastern college lines. Money will not be spared. Tha team expects a crowd of 10,000 people to greet it in Omaha on November 1, when It plays the Haskell Indians here. The boys hope that Northwestern, Minnesota and Knox will give them another chance to line up with the boys of the Big Nine. "Of course we are looking for the Gophers," said Westover. "It will be a different game against them this year, all close formation. We'll have that heavy line, and we'll beat them at their own Those who know how Lou Palmer, the new coacn.-won hla recognition at Prin. ton aa a foot ball player, understand why ne was an All-American end for the three years that he played there, '88, '00 and '01 Palmer arrived at Princeton from Grin nell college, Ia., where he had been star back. In fact. In '94 he alone won the Orlnnell-Nebraska game at Lincoln by his greaC running, plunin;, ploughing and dodging. The boys down at Lincoln re member him yet. But Palmer only weighed 132 pounds, and be did not look good to the Princeton coaches, who have a penchant for beef. So day after day Lou went through tha preliminary work of passing the ball and falling on it and auch stunts, but when this was over and tho lineups were called Palmer waa Bent to the side lines to sit with his legs kinked under him and wish somebody would get killed. He '. wasn't given the slightest chanca to try out on the acrubs. But finally hla opportunity came, and hla nerve took advantage of it. He aaw that be was sidetracked, and determined to seize any chance, no matter how des perate. Big "Billy" Church waa the left tackle on the first (earn at tha tlme He weighed 195 pounds, and waa known In the Big Four as the meanest player alive. Thla particular afternoon Church , was feeling especially ill-tempered and he was causing all kinds of trouble. The coaches had given the ball to the scrub, so that they might run it down the field against the -first team and give the hoya praotice In defense. But "Billy" would not let the acrubs start a single play. He simply walked through every time the ball waa anapped and amaahed the play before It started. His opponent In the scrub Una was power less against him. "Billy" Just floundered over the opposing tackle. The coaches put In a new one. The same thing happened. Several times they changed that acrub right tackle, but Church wallowed over them all, and meanwhile play by .the scrubs was paralyzed. Finally the head coach turned in desperation to the bunch of scrubs not in action. "Can't I get someone to stop, that manT". he said. "W can't nlav foot hall iih hin ooming through ther all tha time." Tha bigger men ducked and didn't say a word. 'They wished none of "Billy" Church. rut ma in," piped up Palmer. And the coach did ao. Church broke through tha Una time more that day, try hla worst Nobody couia sea now tba little Palmer could hold tha etrongest tackle playing at that time, but ba did, and won recognition. Boon afterward ha waa a atar end, . making, In deed, with Arthur Poe, tha greatest pair of ends that aver played tha game. Nebraaka'a training table will atart on September I, the same day practice com mences. Tha men will be put on It aa they develop. Coach Booth will arriva on Sep tember 12. He writes that ba ia confident that this is to ba Nebraaka'a big foot ball year. Palmer will .follow west about Oc tober L aa he cannot ba bare for tha first threa weeks' work. Captain Weatover and Orlle Thorp atart work tomorrow, spend ing much time on Thorpe's kicking. .West over expects this to ba a great feature of Nebraska's game thla year. It will be the first time tha 'varsity haa bad a safe and strong kicker since Thorpe played In '98. Changes la ths rules ara of Importance this season. Th on which says that all goal kicking, after touchdowns, must be from the twenty-flve-yard Una In a scrimmage i, especially a radical altera tion. Heretofore, after a touchdown, the team waa given a quiet try tor goal, with a man holding the ball tor a kicker. Now the ball will be brought twenty-Ova yarda straight out from the place it went across tha goal Una. tha teams will Una up. the team that haa made tha touchdown will snap tha ball back for either a place or a drop kick, and tha other team will fight to stop It. Just as in opn play. Touchdowns still count 5. goals following them L This means that every team must have a drop kicker or a place kicker, and prf trably both. While theaa lllna ha' a been handy heretofore, they have . never been essential. - Waalover expects Thorp to ail this position for aim. tie waa always a great punter, aad should make a good drop and place kicker. The other new rule of Importance says that the teams sbsll change ends ot the field after each score Is made. Instead of at the end of the first half. Westover thinks this a great Improvement. He saya that with the wlnda changing as they do, whst Is sn sdvantag for one team at one end of the Qrld Las often ceased to ba such by the time the other team gets thst side. "In our game with the Haskell Indians last year," said Westover, "they had a fierta wind behind them during the first half and scored against ua twice by place- kicks at Impossible distances. The fierce wind simply carried the ball over. No man could have kicked It that far with any safety. They r:er got within fair strik ing distance of our goal. But when the first half ended and we got that end, tha wind had died away entirely, so wa gained none of that advantage." y Nebraska's schedule is complete, save for a practice game which will probably be played between the game. with Knox on November 15 and the Northwestern match on Thanksgiving day. The first game ia with the Lincoln High school on Septora ber 21. Others follow thus: September 28, Doane college, at Lincoln. October 4, University of Colorado, at Denver. October 11, Orlnnell college, at Lincoln. October 18, University of Minnesota, at Minneapolis. October 25, University of Missouri, at St Joseph. November 1, Haskell Indians, at Omaha. November 8, Kansaa university, at Lin coln. November 15, Knox rollege, at Uncoln. November 2S, Northweatern university, at Lincoln. WITH THE OMAHA BOWLERS Ball Jusalera Latins; Plana foe th City Lfatae Toarnanteat Kest Winter. . That the Omaha Bowling league will In crease the number of teams on Its member ship list next year seema now a certainty. That the playing schedule of tha league will be broken up into two separate seasons Instead of one as heretofore Is another Inno vation which la almost equally surs to occur. . Though the commencement of the active winter bowling season ia still mors than a month distant tha large number ot ath letically inclined Omahana who devote them selves to thl game ara already turning their attention to plana for Its conduct dur ing 1902-03. These two questions sre the ones that are agitating them chiefly and are now almost the only topics tor discussion among the rollers. It would seem that both plans were welt advised and that each will correct a dis comfort or rather a drawback in the game which has always been felt here. During the last two winters the great growth In popularity in bowling haa made these little troubles especially noticeable, and to that may be assigned the movement now on foot toward eradicating them. ' In the first place, the trouble with the number ot teams In the league has been this: There are three principal alleys here. Elht testis ss' tha ccrzcsnc! s:'!s thst one alley can have only (Vo teams, while the other two have threa each. This la not relished by tha alley having tha smaller representation, for tha teams, although hav Ing no immediate connection ' with tha alleys they hi 11 from, choose these different playing grounda aa their homes and head quarters In a word, they simply hail from those' places and everybody knows it. Two propositions ara now being agitated in regard to this swelling ot the member ship list. One i to make it nine teama, adding but ona more. The other ia to make It twelve. Each Dumber has sup ports. Either will allow an equal division of tba teams between three alleys. Ttfose who want nine teama say that ona extra team would be enough to accommodate the outside bowlers whom it is known would like to play on a league team. The other party maintains that four additional teams will not be a bit too many. They say that last year there were twenty or thirty good bowlers who were looking for chances to get on . league teams and that thla year there will be more than ever extra ones. Under these circumstances It is considered very easy to get a soora of players for the tour new teams who would be men suffi ciently skilled in the gams to make a good showing In the league race. Just now it seems mora likely that only one team will be added, alnca only ona Is definitely talked of aa regarda organiza tion. At tha close ot last aeason Tracy ot tha National team, and a good bowler, too, said that ha had a notion to organize a new team thla year. If he does thla ba will undoubtedly ba given tha ninth place. It other should come forward with ma terial for good teama which they1 wish to organize and put in tha field three mora may be admitted, but at the present writing this seems unlikely. Regarding the matter of the spilt aeason, tha feeling --was very strong at the end of last winter's play. All tha bowlers were keen for a shorter league schedule, and that naturally auggesta two schedules. Twenty-sight weeks wss tha Journey the teams went it season before tha cham pionship was lost snd won. Most ot the bowlers, even those of ths winning team, say they don't want to do - that again. Three or four months they' consider ampl for a bowling sason. That would end It along in January, and, as it la a cinch tha bowlers won't want to stop then, thla lead to th thought of having another aeaaon from then to April, with a couple of week Intermission. Such an arrangement would certainly ren der competition keener and interest mora unfailing. In a season ot seven months ona or two teama ara almost certain to get away ahead of all tha rest and ona or two others away behlud. If this occura at aither the top or bottom th discrepancy in the scores of standing createa a dissatisfaction among the losers. Any team caa stand It to rub along at tho bottom for awhile, but w(hn It comes to being stuck there and held for seven months that ia too anuch to expect Everybody thought last year that tha Na tionals showed a mighty lot ot pluck la hanging on and playing tha aeaaon through aa they did against such a hopeless sure thing. Perhaps some of ths teama that vera higher up ia tha standing column would not have displayed thla atamlna If they bad bn put to th same teat. Of course. It may b aald that baae ball leaguea play five month and that often times the teama ara in that sam fix with regarda standing, but ther 1 no real analogy between tho cases. Base ball ia a matter ot finance. Men ara paid for their work and tha managers and, ownera sup posedly jaake mosey by theirs. Even, the losing teams and tha onea at th bottom of tha column ara apt to hav a handsome sur plus, and the man who la making money doe not want to quit, oven It h 1 losing baa ball. If ba were losing both money and gamea b might then he expected to get the or heart. With bowling It ia entirely dif ferent Th man ara In it for fun aa a recreation sad paetima. Noes of them soak a living at It It la merely for . their Idle hour. They don't need It to live and they don't want it for any other purpose taaa th enjoyment of th gam. 'AH there la In It for them I victory, o it 1 easy to under stand why they should want to quit whea it la a cinch they can't wta. CURE TO STAY C U U E D W make aa snlaleaalaa; tatesaeat o aaaaalaeeallka prooaat-. tloa ta th ataiotea la order to. iksfi taelr aatraaa;. Taa tmmmr yean at sir aaeeeaafvl practice prove that on snetaaa af reataaeat ara af aa certain. What the afflicted men wants la not a temporary relief, but a permanent cure. The beneficial effects. ot my treat ment are aa lasting aa life I cure to stay cured. When one a patient la rescued by Longest established, most success ful and reliable Specialists In Dis eases of Men, aa medical diplomas licenses and newspaper recorda ahow. me from the ravages cf disease or weakness peculiar to his sex, he Is never again bothered with hla former trouble. ' I do not treat all dtheaaes. but I treat men MEN ONLY and cure them to stay cured. ' Varicocele Under my treatment, which Include no cutting or pain, thla Insidious dis ease rapidly disappears. Fain disappears almost Instantly. Th pools of stagnant blood ar driven from the dilated veins and all aoreness and swelling quickly subalde. Every Indication or varicocele soon vanishes and in Its -stead comes tha pride, the power and the pleasure ot perfect health and restored manhood, STRICTURE My cure tor Stricture is safe, pain lets and bloodless, and, therefore, fr from surgery In sny form. It is the only cure that should ever TOUNO, MIDDLH-AOEp AND OLD MEN, call at our-offloea today, or write for our book, FREE, which wilt explain the disease ws curs and bow ws cur thm to stay cured when othera fall. Consultation Free MffiaiVr.ah tient. Kf Best Baak aaa Lvsala Baslaeaa' Mea I This City. . OFFICE HOUR0-' a, m. t I p. to. Sunday IB a. 'm. to 1 p. m. ST ATE ELECTROMEDICAL INSTITUTE 1308 Farnam St., Bat. 13th and 14th Sts., Omaha. Mr Longest Established. Thoroughly Reliable. Authorised by th laws ot tba etat. f CURES SALLOW READY FOR TENNIS TOURNEY r ' .-.' Manager of Intsritat Affair Waiting- for Monday to 8tart -' SIX MORE GOOD PLAYERS ARE COMING Chicago Adds a Notable Pair to the Entry List and St. Loots and Kansas City Each end Cracks. ' Two features ot the week'a development In tha interstate tennla tournament to be held at the Field club thla week are that sis mora outside entries have been secured and that two ot them ara from Chicago. Both facts are productive ot keen pleasure to the many who have the Interest of the tournament and It success keenly at heart This means almost thirty outside entries, assuring ona of th biggest tennl meet ever held In the west. . That tha affair will eclipse anything of the kind ever known in Omaha is a certainty already. Meanwhll the assurance of fifteen local men In th entry list will bring ths total up to a num ber that not even the most enthusiastic pro moter of th affair would have dared predict a month ago. From Chicago B. M. Ashcraft aad R. S. Peter are coming. These two are well known in tennis circles. Both played in tha recent championship affair at the Ken wood Country club. v Ashcraft waa tha man who put Earl Farnsworth of Grand Island, Nebraaka'a prize player, out in tha second round. Both are good players and bava had much experience. T. 8. Blair of SU Louis, E.M. Graves of Lees Summit, Mo., C, C. pockerlll of Pittsburg, Kan., and Dr. F. A.; Sheldon of Kansas City ara the other new entries. Th latter was in 1896 cham pion at Kansaa City and waa given credit for great prowesa'at that time. Ha la aald to be in great form now. Concerning tha other threa not much is known hero.' Everything Is now ready for the getaway,' with the club simply resting on Its oars, as its 'preparations are complete. Today the outside,? arrive and they will straggle In till tha last lata trains tonight- By f:S0 Monday morning all will be primed and th first round, can be started cTf on schedule time. . , . Tha Field club baa several "announce menta to make regarding the touroameat In tha first place, it will, by the very na ture ot the club, be purely , aa Invitation affair. There will . be no admission tea charged,. but that does sot mean that every ona can witness ths tournament. In fact, It will prove to be a rather exclusive af fair. Admission will be by Invitation only. All coinere-' who ara not- members must bear either-visiting cards or else be prop erly Introduced and registered by aome member. Thes courtesies ara already at a premium, .aa tba hundreds of Field . club members ara besieged with importunities to "take me to the tennis tournament," or "give ma a card to tha club." Tha club wishes, to quiet sll fears as to ita being able to care for. th spectator. Th gsllory will b well cared for, aa there will be seal for ail. Thi will be so disposed aa to give a good view of the entire team aaia. Ihe verandas of to club houae will b th principal place for the onlookers, but from ther on out there will b seating arranged, and thoaa who ara keenest after tbv sport will be found eowa D be used, and the only one recom mended by th legion of mn wtae. have been restored by It. It dissolves the Stricture completely and removes every obstruction from the urinary passage, allays all inflam mation, stops every discharge, reduces the prostate gland when enlarged, cleanses and heals the bladder and kldnevs wnen Irritated or congested, invigorates the organs and restores h alth and soundness to every part of i tie body affected by the disease. Contagious Blood Poison My special form of treatment for rpeclflc or contagious blood poison la practically the result of my life work. Knd Is Indorsed by the best physicians of this and foreign countries. It contains no -dangerous drugs of Injurious medicine of any kind. It goes to the vert bottom of tha disease and forcea out every particle of Impurity. Boon every algn and symptom dls- appear completely and forever. Ihe blood, the tissue, the flesh, the bone and the whole system ar cleansed, purified and restored to per fect health and the patient prepared anew for the duties and pleasure ot life. Nervo Sexual Debility My cure for weak men doe nt stimulate temporarily, but restores permanently. It soon drives away all those dis tressing symptoms which sn constaat ly remind one ot hla former folly. It stops every drain of vlgur and builds up th rnascular and nervous system, purifies and enriches th blood, cleanses and heals the bladder and kidneys. Invigorates the liver, revives the spirits, brightens the in tellect, and above and beyond all, restores ths wasted power of man hood. s ) Reflex Diseases Many ailments are reflex, originat ing from other disease. For Instenoa, manly weakness, sometimes comes from Varicocele of stricture, Innumerable blood and ben dlsaaa often result from blood poison taint In th syUm, or physical . nd mental decline frequently follow' lose of manhood. In treating dlseaaa of any hind I , alwaya our th effect aa well aa Ihe cause. V 7V1 COMPLEXION. aa -close to the courts aa they will b'! allowed to get. - . Th ntiptilnmMnt ffnmmlttM ia . nt ready-to announce ita program for the week, all the more Important details, such aa the bigger aoclal affairs, being ar ranged. On Monday night the players will be taken In a body to the Att-Sar-Ben den and there initiated, with all due cere money, pomp and general Jollification. On Tuesday nlgbt a smoker will be given at the club. Wednesday night comes ho . regular club dance, which will ba swelled' to an. Important affair by tha presence of , the visitors. Esther Thursday Or Friday night comes the big banquet, and on Batirr day night Is another dance, together with a formal presentation of tfiei prizes to tho' victors. ' . Extreme Interest Is being taken In tha tournament by the men and also the women of the club. The latter are enthusiastic) aa regarda th entertainment, and It la as sured that the society . life of ths week will hinge round the Field club. All the par trons and misses of the haut ton promise to be there from morning till night, and victors and vanquished will ba certain of a warm welcome after every match, tha ona receiving warm congratulations, tba other sympathetic solace. A club full of women Will certainly be an Inducement' to play tennla. AH the prlzea are now In Omaha, and are undergoing the last touches of engrav- ' Ing. They were 'delayed a little, ao will,, not be finished till early this week. ' Ths ' grand challenge cup fcr singles,' concerning ; which so much has been said, is beyond expectations.' The cup Is an Immense af-, fair, more than a foot high, with elaborate handle ef solid stiver grapevine stock, i clasDed' at either end by leaves- of tha , vine. The cup looka mora than Ita prloe, f 160. AH the other prlzea are on the aama pra portloaat cale ot -magnificence aa this. ' Everything la honest, and each trophy ta . a beauty. , On change has been made, a ' cut glaaa cigar Jar with silver top being I substituted for the traveling aet announced aa flpat prize in the consolation singles. , The price is the same, S1&. J Hw Usm f Ufa for n Iowa .,',. Poitmattor. . , , , 'j 1 Postmaster R. II. Randall, Xlunlap, Ia., ays: 1 suffered from indlgeatloa and re sulting; avlla (or years. Finally I triad Kodol. I soon knew I bad found what I had Ion looked (or. I am belter today than la years. Kodol gay ma a pew lease o( life. Anyone can have my af fidavit to tha truth of thla statement." Kodol digest your food. This auables tha system toaimtlatsuppils,striif then ing every organ aud restoring health. Kodol Rait) You Qtrong. Prepared only by B. O. Da Writ Co., Chtcai u. 1 heSJ. butilecmmlatZH t linos limbo. mi lima cc'!3 arc Cures quick. TbaVa what ItaBiiaaior, READ THE DAILY BEE I V