THE OMAITA DAILY RKE: STJXPAY, MAT :i. 1003. BASE BEL GOSSIP' OF WEEK Omh BriaVi thi DinTar Charm and L;cal Tani Bejoio. TAM IS PLAYING VERY FAST GAME TVrk of the Rourkeltes f h Ram Glltds-ed Order that Marked Their Coarse Darin All Last Seaaoa. are stril to com. It oartarnly looY like the right iFtm for tha magnatea. Tbla aftaraeoa at Ylatoa Park a pair o( tba local eruk amateur tMni will play a benefit Kama for "OH Hois" Bowman, one a weU knowa amateur catcher, bat wbo has been sufferer from rheumatism for a lout time and Is now totally dis abled. It Is a worthy charity that leads these men to assist a former comrade, sod th fans who go out will not only aid a good cause, but will see a corking good game of ball as well. ATHLETICS AT THE UNIVERSITY Weill W won a game In Denver. Thats some thing. Last sraaon we went to Denver time after time and came away licked. It doesn't matter why or how; the simple fact Is that Omaha couldn't cut the mustard on the Dearer diamond, It'a different now, and baring made a start, there Is no telling whore the windup will be. Those two games hare demonstrated another thing, and that Is that the Kourke family Is junt ' aa strong in the Held as It ever was, and that means a lot In the Western league. It saved many a game for Omaha last sea son and will win many a game during the present summer. Hard batting Is a fine feature of the game and a very Important factor In tho outcome, but nice, clean, snappy fielding Is what tho people like to aee, and that's what they get when Omaha Is playing. No Omaha pitcher has occas'on to complain that be doesn't get support, for be has the most reliable team In the circuit back of blm. And the boys are bitting a little, too. They couldn't break Pop Eyler's hoodoo, but they certainly gave the old gen tleman the scare of his lifetime, and maybe on the next meeting the result will be dif ferent. ' Whltrldga was touched up at a lively pace, and the hits all came when they counted. Another nice feature of the two games Is that while Omaha stole three bases In each game Denver didn't steal any. Maybe yon think Johnny Oondlng's good arm Isn't working? When they get to stealing bases on that boy It will be time to put up the shutters. One of the really gratifying experiences f the present season up to date is the treatment accorded Omaha In Denver. All the papers were full of good words for the toam from Papa Bill down, and the whola bunch of fans seemed to lay themselves out to see how pleasant they could make It for the team. This Is the sort of spirit that "should prevail and Omaha will remember It when Captain Tom Delehanty and his bunch of Grizzlies com to Omaha. nnr la considerably crippled already by the loss of Radellffa from short. Had Is sick in bed and may not be able to piay mis season. Hartzell, who takes his place, isn't in firat-class condition, but will likely Im prove when h geta hardened and becomes .mnir with his new duties. But even at that Radcliff will be missed from the In Held. Dundon put up his usual fast game at third and still holda his high position in tho estimation of the people. And, by the way you didn't notice any apota on Eddie Bicker ww. did you? He' In the gamo ... d now and will make Dundon hustla harder than h aver did to hold the plaoe of premier third baseman in in leafu. Th other team opened about aa the BUbllo iiad expected. It waa a guess be tween Kane City and Porla for the first gam, and Big BUI Wilson grabbed Just to how that h could. But h let th othra go for th aama reason. Milwaukee and Colorado Springs show atrength. and St. Joaaph ahowa poeltlve weaknea. De Motn U still a gueaa. but may yet make good on aome of th unaenaaer -...--. 5rw that Vf.n Brunt haa taken hold of the St. Joseph team again, It U likely thattha Blarsra will putmora ma nmnwit v.-, x -.v. . hatter ahowlng In th game, -- r i aneculatora. who apparently had aa Idea that a base ball team la simply a new-tailing fount of ahekels, had tha Brr to try to buy out Van Brunt, putting .. -,in, hut "shoot-mouth." When th Urn cam to make good on their talk, they war luet about 60 cents wore off than a man with no money at all. Van Brunt 1. game. and. even though h will be In New York, h will atlll b ownr of th St. joaeph team until reliable partlea tak it oft hi hands. And tha playere will get their pay.' Not that a ball player needs money In St. Joseph, but then one of them might get over Into Kansas, and that different. Big Ed Delehanty tella th Washington Post that ha had no thought of going to Denvars that tha only negotiation h know of wer a letter b had from hla brother telling him that n miguv v u with Denver, and a telegram from Packard, received after h had gone back to Wash ington, offering him $4,000 per to play with tha Orlzzllea. Big Ed haa the tel gram and letter both to show his good faith, and if hla taia is any su, -glad not only to get back to Washington, but Jto b alive. . , . Th season opened very ausplctoualy Ml V.. -- th. umtiirea are concerned. Not a kick worthy of mention come from any of the Western league towns. Out In Denver they think that McCarthy baa a hot temper, this judgment being based on the fact that ha talked back to the fans, but otherwise his work is praised.. Last season much of the enjoyment of the aport waa spoiled by Incompetent umpiring, and tha general hope Is that Mr. Sexton has found, a corpa of men to give decisions who are capable of doing so without starting all the rows we had to put up with during th war days.-1 In the Hlrkey league the trouble Is far from settled. The Columbus people are atlll warlike; Clugnisn has refused to goto 6t. Paul, and the presumption Is that Bryce 1 paying him his salary while be loafs.' A special meeting of the league has bee a called to decide on this esse. The mayor of Indlanapulls has told 30.000 fan! who signed a petition for Sunday game that the law prohlblta bass ball on Sunday and will be enfereed. The mayor favora the game, but will not overlook the law. Some game have been played without regular umpires, but tha howls that have ' gone up from the managers do not seem to have reached Hlckey's ears as yet. And George Whltewlogs Tebeau Is still busy tell'.ng the world that the Western league cannot last. Well, well. Attendance so far at all the games In dicate a revival for sure. Never In the history of the game have the people turnei out In such number as they have this spring, and th real good days of th game ( Nebraika Data Rail Team Start on It tons Eastern Trip Fall of Confident. Tha curtain Is up, the music has begun and the doings in the big tent are now the order. In other words, the Cornhuskers' base ball team is off on Us tour Into Iowa, UJInols, Indiana, Missouri and Kaneaa. If steady, persistent training under competent coaches can avail a team anything, the Ne braska university fans need have no fear of the outcome, Captain Townsend has had his colts more thsn busy the last week, paving the way to a victorious trip. Every man who left on Saturday morning. May 2, had to work to get bis place. Not a man had a place cinched until be showed up as the player of a real warm article of the American game. There waa a good stock of material to draw from, and every man felt that If he was to be given a place on the squad he would have to get right ont and dig. Even up to a week ago there had to be some fine hair-splitting done to deter mine who the lucky men would be. The following is a complete list of the men wbo make up the Cornhueker aggregation for 1903: Townsend, Held and pitcher; Fetz, shortstop; Hood, third base; Bender, cap tain; Wilson, first base; Steen, second base; Shlmer, center field; Gore, left Held, and Morse, Longanaecker and Beltter will pitch and change off on playing in the field positions. Manager Bell will accompany the team on the trip. , The battery will be seen to be especially atrong. With Bender behind the bat and any of the five pitcher In the box, it is probable that aome of the awlft aggrega tions which the Nebraskans will meet will have to do some going to keep In the game. The real hard games Beltzer will pitch. la n chasg on the Inside and none more on tha outside of th clubhouse. But during th day as the stranger sine last year follow the links over they will find them different. Th greens have all been piped and look fresher and smoother than they were wont to last summer. Here the golf entbuslasta of the club will bat tle during th day, for there will be handi caps played on the links. The tennis court, too, Including the new ones with the brick underfilling, will be filled with the racket wlelders. They will seem no different than they were a yecr ago despite the change In the two, and only a rain will make It evident how much bet ter they have been made. To the north of the courts the ball field has been changed so that the diamond Is at the farthest cor ner from the hou&e and the game can be watched from the porch or from the bleach ers facing the house. Contests will be arranged for the mem bers in all three of these branches, which the Field club has cultivated, and It will Oil the day well, ao that the athletically In clined may forget their winter slothful ness In new-found exerlce, and the others can watch and applaud with becoming zest. Captain .Townsend says that the three gams with Notre Dam university on May 8, Purdue university on the 9th and Illinois state on the 11th are the hardest games. The Cornhuskers' lost to Notre Dame and Illinois State university lost year, but de feated Purdue. In these games the men of Nebraska will put forth their most strenu ous efforts to defeat their opponents, and get It back on them for what they did last year. Bender had this to say about the prospect on Friday: "We are going in to win every game. In foot ball last fall at tho first of the season nobody would have thought but that perhaps the Cornhuskers would lose a game or two. , We didn't lose a game, and the base ball team will try to keep th good record clean." In th 'games .with th Nebraska Indians tha 'varattys team work showed up es pecially flnel- Longanaecker. twirled in one gam and waa pretty badly bit at times, but every time tho sphere cam down Into th gardens there ' was a man there to connect with it, and the Indiana were not allowed to make any sensational plays. On thing encouraging is th way the 'varsity la picking up tha art of sticking. The batting was in the first games de cidedly, weak, but tho last few games of th home schedule showed a big Improve ment, in the Cornhuskers' way of wielding tho olub. The last game before the trip waa played on Friday with Washburn col lege. In track athlettca th teams have as sumed tangible shape and the men who have made the various teams will begin training next week for tha big events with other Institutions. Tha following events wer pulled off Saturday afternoon, and teams selected from a crowd of about forty-flve athletes. Track events 100-yard run, halt mil run, 120-yard hurdle, 440-yard run, mile run, 220-yard dash, 220-yard hurdl. Field Events Pole vault, shot put, run ning high jump, hammer throw, running broad jump, discus. There was also an inter-class relay race of one mile. Tha men who succeeded In making tha teams wer aelected from a large num ber and owing to this fact and the fact that they have had the advantage of train ing under Dr. Clapp would Indicate that In the meet with Knox, which will be held on the horn grounds this month, th Ne braska crowd will show the men from Illi nois some good track and Held work. YACHTING AT. LAKE MANAWA Several New Faat Boat and All the Old One on the Lake Again This Season. The fresh water sailors at Manawa have been getting things Into readiness for the spring breezes and the summer winds dur ing the last ten days, and last Sunday found several of the boats skimming over the ruffled waters of the lake. Other boats are in the water and are being rigged pre paratory to the summer's silling. The rest or the old boats are -having their hulls gone over and are being put in shape to go back Into the water. This Is the summer of yacht racing at Manawa, If the outlook Is any criterion of what things will be. With the three new boats on the lake and the seven old ones. ncludlng the Vitesse, which Charles C. Stewart has purchased from Mr. Van Brunt of 8t. Joseph, the Manawa Vacht club has ten boats of class "A" rating. Whilo these boats are called class "A" hero they are In reality . class "B" In the Inland Lakes Yachting association. Mr. Dixon's boat, which' has been built In Oshkosh, hss arrived and has been Dut on the water. It is to this boat that the club looks for the most of its glory at me usnKostl regatta for tho Wol i, 111 enter at the regatta now that the Council Bluffs Rowing association Is a member of the Inland Lakes association. The Dixon boat Is the first class "B" boat which the Oshkosh builders have made. But as they have built the winner of the class "A" boats at the regatta each year for the last five, there is llttl doubt but that their first attempt in the new class will prove exceedingly fast. OPENING DAY AT FIELD CLUB KTrrthiar la Readiness for Betn alaa- th Outdoor Season of this Organisation. Saturday the Omaha Field club will throw Its door open wide fqr th summer months. The brawn of manhood and the graces ot womankind, the athletlo and the unathletlo, th frivolous and the thoughtful and th paat and tha future of th young men and young women will mingle together and dedicate another year of pleasure and glad ness with the mirth ot laughter, with com panionshlp and friendly trials of strength on the - links, the tennis courts, the dia mond and the bowling alleys. With the odor ot fresh paint still cling ing to the walls and the porches, the first clatter of dishes will be heard, the seltzer corner will commence Its busy life and the younger set will make merry with a dance. To fittingly begin the short year's life for the club every phase of that life will be started In full swing then and no time dur ing the year will find the club so univers ally busy as this. Taken room by room and line by line, the house Is really what It waa when the doors closed last fall tor the cold weather, with slight exceptions, but paint and the car penter have made it seem all different Everywhere the woodwork looks fresh and bright and gleams with the freshness df the paint. The old seltzer corner Is now a rest room and, leading from It, stands a new, little room which la now the corner of experienced men and youths who .Till sow their wild oats slowly. Otherwise ther Then ther Is th boat that Stevens nt McAllister are building. They have built several boats before and their last year's ooai proved a remarkable success as a pleasure boat. In their new boat they have made a boat somewhat similar te th Andover, yet dissimilar in some particu lars. It Is the only boat on the lake which has a double centerboard and hn fast lines that promise to put It In touch with the fastest of the boats on tho Like this year. . . A third boat Is being built by Leffert In the Bluffs, and this boat also gives promise of being very fast and a clean sailer. It is built along the Sams' lines as the Swallow. With the Andover, which Is the fastest boat in the fleet now; there will be' four boat that should make some exceedingly .lively races- during the summer. ' The' Andover, unfortunately, wss built according to the old specifications for class "B" boats and cannot be entered In th Oshkosh races. The races last year were held every Sst- urday, while Informal races we're sailed on Sunday as " well. It seemed to the members of the club that the weekly meet were not aa successful as they should bo and this year It Is probable that regular races will be held every other Saturday thus keeping the sport from being over done, as was the ease then. The racing rules were not adhered to very strictly last summer, but an effort will be mad this summer to sail them as they should be sailed and' It Is believed that this will also lend more' zest to the sport. The cups which the club has are also to be increased In number and with the added sest of the picking of the boat for tho regatta at Oshkosh there is little doubt but that the Increase In Interest nnd enthusiasm will grow greatly. The first of the races will be held on Decoration day. Following that race the regular schedule of races will take place until the fall Is well along. MIDWEST AND TRACK EVENTS BhowlnsT Made oa Franklin Field Gratifying; to th Supporter of Clean Athletics. Illy balanced and th high schools mast held accountable for It In part. The real preparation for college athletics should be done befor entering college. The rough ness and awkwardness should he eliminated In th high schooL Work along these lines has been dona by the high schools that could In base ball and In foot ball, but no thought has been given to the track, to tennis and basket ball by more than three or four. On Saturday the Missouri Valley Athletlo association will hold Its annual track meet at Lincoln. Lincoln and Nebraska City High schools are the only Nebraska high schools thnt will compete. This Is not as It should be. Beatrice, Kesrney, Grand Island, Hastings, Fremont snd Omaha should have had some representation at this meet. Omaha In particular should have taken some steps toward taking part In the meet. A track team la different from most forms of games, In that a few men may represent a srhool In certain portions of the meet and carry off enough of the individual hon ors' to' more than repay the school for tho trouble and expense of preparing for the meet, even though they do not secure a place In the totals for the schools. Track work requires preparation by the man participating more than It does costly grounds or fields. It is Individual work and can be as readily practiced In the country by three men as In the city by 100. No school Rhoulu be prevented from trying to do some work on tho track from lack of money or of men. Out of a high school with a dozen men a team of three men might be taken that would carry off 20 points at a meet. This would not be enough to win the meet fcr them, but it would make an elegant showing for them. Omaha had a track team for years, but In the last three years It has been allowed to die out.. The powers that be have not been favorable to It, but the lack of srlrlt has had more to do with It than anything else. The student body would have the spirit If the boys would get out and work, but they have shown no disposition to do so. Over 100 of the high school boy ore members of the Young Men's Christian association, and If these would go into the track de partment of the association a strong nucleus for a track team for the high school team could'be selected. The ground about the High school could be fixed up so that practice for the weights and Jumps could be carried on as well as anywhere else. The running and hurdling events would bo the only ones 4hot would suffer greatly by cramped quarters on the ground. But track worlt requires conscientious practice and training and this is something that the athletic department of the Omaha High school has always lacked. The boys, aa a whole, have shown a decided disposi tion to Ignore training. The foot ball team has given evidence of this year after year and yet the boys have not taken the matter rerlously. The teamB that have represented the Omaha High school have gone down to defeat time end time again for these reasons and often their opponents have been from smaller towns and have not shown the team work or the grit that the Omaha team did, but they had the staying qualities that can only come with training, and ao won out. If track work Is to be taken up the team must decide to train absolutely. Training rules are not conducive to pleasure, but they are the thing that makes winning possible, and the sooner the High school learns this the sooner it will take Its place at the head of athletlca among Nebraska and Iowa high schools. FISHERMEN HAVE AN INNING Nearby Lake, roll of Bass and th Like and Many Good Strings Are Canarht.' After th cold of th few days In the first of the week the fishermen, most faithful to their habits, sought the banks of tha nearby lakes with their hooks and lines and beguiled the loag hours in the chilly morn ings and the gentle afternoons with tho swish of the reel and the strong-mouthed pull of the black bass. But mostly It has been the bait of the . Look against tho hungrlness of the fish, and the fish have succumbed readily and rapidly. They are hungry and beefsteak and delicate tinted and befeathered spoonhooks have had equal charms fpr them. Skillful fishing has not been a part of the game; It requires only patience to fish for these fish, now. . Black bass, ringtail perch, croppies and catfish are in abundance close to the haunts of the city dweller. Cut Off lake teems with trout, and already a two-pound bass has been brought, shimmering In the morn ing sun,' from Its chilly waters. Hundreds of pounders' and smaller bass have gracod the strings of the tew ihat have braved the early season In their quest of the finny tribe. An occasional perch or cropple has alternated with the bass on these strings and all of the hopeful ones have conin back from their quest with happy hearts THE OLDEST AND BEST lf L L M JM K llfllE THE GREATEST OF ALL TONICS. A1 Spring Medicine that adds vigor and strength to the system, purifies and enriches the Blood and lays the foundation for a strong constitution and good health during the hot sultry summer. Most everybody feels bad in the spring. Some have no particular ailment but are just tired, worn out and totally unfit for work or anything else that requires energy or effort They mope around upon the border-land of invalidism, irritable, peevish, hysterical and unreasonable. A good appetite in the spring is a rarity, and we sicken at the sight of food, or thought of eating, and what little we do eat is a burden to the stomach and a tax upon the digestion. Warm weather is sure to bring out the hidden poisons, germs and seeds of disease that have been collecting in the blood and system during winter, and you may look for some old chronic trouble to make its appearance. It is a time, too, when boils and carbuncles, and pustular or scaly skin eruptions like eczema and tetter, pay their annual visits and make life miserable by their intense pains and intolerable itching and burning. The fight for health should begin before any warning symptoms of physical collapse are felt, or before the germs and seeds of disease have time to germinate if we would avoid the usual spring sickness ; and with S. S. S., the acknowl edged king of blood purifiers and greatest of all tonics, you can put your blood and system in such perfect condition and so strengthen the constitution that one may be as free from sickness and as. vigorous and strong during the trying months of spring and depressing summer season as at any other time. S. S. S. not only builds you tip, but searches out and destroys any poisonous germs or impuri ties that may be lurking in the blood. The benefits derived from the use of S. S. S. are per manent because it acts directly on the blood and purifies and cleanses it of all morbid, impure matter, leaving nothing to cause fermentation and deterioration of this life-giving fluid. In selecting your blood purifier and spring tonic get one that long experience and thorough test have proven the best. In S. S. S. j'ou will find a remedy whose purifying properties are unquestionable, and just such a tonic as your system needs. Ask your druggist for S. S. S. there is nothing else just as good. For the past 40 years we have had a standing offer of $1,000 for proof that S. S. S. contains the least particle of any mineral whatever, and this offer is still open. nature's remedy. Purely vegetable. Qntlmn : Forovr four year X suffered with general debility, causing a thorough breaking down of my system, so that I was unable to attend to my household duties. X had tried other medi cines, which did not relieve me. Seven years ago my oonsln, who had been benefited by S. S. B., told me about it. X tried It and It cured me. I hare been able to attend to my household duties ever sinoe, experiencing no Inconvenience whatever ; In fact, I am able to work In the garden as well as my house. X heartily recommend 8. 8. 8. to all who may feel the need of a thoroughly good blood tonic, feeling sure they will be benefited thereby. Tours truly, MRS. JO8IE A. BRITTAIN, 44 W. Ninth St., Columbia, Tana. and bright hopes of another day. and an other heavy string soon. On Manawa, away from the haunts of the boats and almost cut oft from it by tho land, there Is a, little corner of the lake that teems with bass and perch end here, too, fishers have rpent their spare hours and brought back with them pretty bass and perch and now and then a catfish. The getting of the P.ch Is easy, the men say who carry the string, hack, but It Is getting there that worries. With CutOff so handy and near It hardly pays to wander to Manawa for the fish, as the luck Is as good and the sport as fine at Cut Oft as there. Florence lake has given forth, as tribute to the angler, great strings of bass and cat fleh, although the catfish, have outnumbered the bass considerably. For two weeks they have been drawing these finny fellows from the bosom of the lake and the sport haa not diminished or the number ot the fish seemingly decreased there. Those who are anglers and pride them selves upon their handling ot the hook and the line, the reel, the fly and all of the hundred other tricks that deceive the eyes of the water denizens, are planning long trips Into the mountains and to the north ern lakes this summer to seek their prey.' Day by day they are buying their tackle, flies, spoon hooks and the other accoutre ments of the quest. When the day comes that they can pack their things and slip away to- the waters that hold their prey they will be well and ready for It, and no time will be spent In making ready when It might be spent on the water and the banks where tha fish abound. Then, too, thero are many buying thla year who have never before been really great fishermen, and it seems that the exodus ot fishers thla summer will be greater than ever before In the history of Omaha enthusiasts. HAPPY HOLIDAY. Little' Folk' Festival f Fnn and . Feast of Wonder! Circus day Is children's day. It belongs essentially to them. Tradition has mad It so. There was a time when "taking the children to see the animals" was tha most convenient excuse offered by those who thought It against religious scruples, or their, fancied dignity, to go to the circus. Happily that form of hypocrisy is now about extinct. Years of the most careful effort by the managers of the Adam Fore paugh and Sells Brothers Enormous Shows United to eliminate everything and any thing In the slightest degree Immoral or Impolite In the character of their exhibi tions, or la the demeanor ot their employes of whatever rank, has at last convinced tha public generally of th absolut cleanli ness and morality of th circus a a place of entertainment, and with such compre hensive shows aa are these great consoli dated Institutions, a aource of practical and profitable Instruction. Ther is no longer any excuse or apology for going to the circus. The presence of clergymen at every performance, with seldom an excep tion, attest, the general and sen.lble CLARK'S Bowling Alleys Brgst Brightest Best. 1313-15 Hartley Street. change of consideration for the circus by church people. But all tbls does not re lease anyone from a moral obligation to take their children to see the animals and the accompanying circus performance. It Is really not only a matter of extreme de light to the children to see the "chow," but It Is a duty aa well as a pleasure upon the part of the parents, relatives and friends to enable them to see It. Children are recognized by the manage ment of this consolidation as the source of a considerable part of their patronage, and ample provision Is made In the program of things that will especially appeal to (heir Interest and satisfaction. What all those things are It is unnecessary to recount at this Junoture, but they embrace clever eomlo conceit, by the congress of clowns, pretty performance, by ponle. and all sorts ot petite pets and all kind of funny fan cies that will appeal to happy-hearted llt tl one.. Clrcu. day In Omaha this year Is Satur day, May 16. I'he line of Union suit w supply you with ar the rele- brat4 ML'NBINO make. Keep In mind that ther taxmcnt are in a class or tneir owe Uiy txav no cumiauuou. l r c S2.SO. SI.50 and SI.OO We also have a Un of two-nlera nrmnti In nlaln &t lanry coiurs mai are exceptional nunn window, rrlces value, tie theiu ,n our SI.OO. 75c and SOo Kelley & Heyden 319-J2I North 16! b Street- ft. i d II'.' U t , I J21 The track athletes of the middle west made a gratifying showing In the ninth annual relay meet held on Franklin field. Philadelphia, a week ago last Saturday. In the four-mile relay race, which was the vent of the day, the universities of Michi gan, Wisconsin and Chicago contested with Harvard, Yale, Pennsylvania and Columbia. It was the cream of th east against the cream ot the west and it was a proud mo ment for the west when Keilog ot Michi gan, by a superb finish, broke tha tape five good yards In front ot Franchot ot Yale and gave the race to Michigan. To Wis consin fell fourth place and Chicago fifth. It was the first time that the west had really proved ltaelf an equal of the east In track athletics. The west had sent men to the east before and taken an occasional first or second, but these men have been tew and far between. Tba east laid, and had reason for saying It, "The west Is be hind us In track athleiica. They have had a few men who wer able to meet us, but they were the exception and not tha rule. They could not send track teams that could make us work." It was true years ago, but conditions In college track work have changed In the middle west as they did In base ball and foot ball. The great middle west baa come to Its own and will be as great a factor In amateur athletics as the eastern college. Th meets will be few, as the distance Is too great for them to meet as readily aa among them selves at home, but tbey will establish new records, even as their eastern college brother. But the four-mil relay was not all that fell to the west. In tbt 100-yard dssh Blair of Chicago and Hahn of Michigan came In second and third In a heart-break ing finish and with only two feet between the two ot them, and Schick ot . Harvard, who broke across the line first. In the high school chr.mplonshlp relay race the Hyde Park High school of Chicago bor away lb honors la a close finish. TO MMM 'foE DR. JYlcGREW appeals to MEN of all classes Re gardless of Price or Position. DR. FilcGRGW'S LOW CHARGES for treatment are daily proving what a great good can be done for men, at a' NOMINAL EXPENSE. Those who can pay but $5.00 A MONTH are just as welcome as those who can pay more. The greatest amount of good to the greatest number, is the doctor's motto. For 27 Years Dr. McGrew ha stood between men and physical ruin. THE STUDY OF sv2E&3 and their diseases has been THE LIFE WORK OF DR. Mc GREW. Ills sympathy is ever extended to those who seek his services or advice. His treatment for VARICOCELE is acknowledged by all to be the superior of all other forms of treatment. The quickest, safest and without pain or loss of time. For 27 years Dr. McOrew has made the treatment of Varicocele his special study and If is but justice to him to say that his treatment has NO EQUAL ANY WHERE. One visit and a single treatment Is all that is ne cessary In many cases. Stricture Permanently Gured in Less Than Five Days It Is unfortunate that the position that the middle west haa but com out of In th last fiv year is Just where Nebraska and the other states west of th Missis sippi stand tcday. Th muscle, brawn. speed and wind Is as great aa It Is to th eastward, but th training is lacking. True, foot ball haa taken a step toward th goal of eastern ability and baa ball is even doing th same. But basket ball, tennis and tha track ar wi alhlatie strsugth of ur western college Is . . .. - 1 t ir.nu-,i. for IUood Poison and all Diseases of the Blood. All external signs of trie tliwase disappear ai once uuurr xr. muirw . la ment, and not a spot or pimple will appear to expose the nature of your disease. This fact alone is a priceless comfort and conso 'ation to one afflicted with this, ailment. Dr. McGrew GUARANTEES YOU A PERMANENT CURE FOR Lit E. MANY OF THE WORST FORM) OF BLOOD DISEASES CURED IN LESS THAN THIRTY DAYS. rj rn ir rrr iag.cq IIave bren cuml of 1x5 ot vitallty Los,s of BraJn rwer 1 oor UVEil JvlaVlUU w.OEaJ Memory, Despondency, and all unnatural weaknesses of men. rmmirm Aaiy lumv unilo sank! OAS TO Sl;3rt P. M. SUNDAYS FROM S A. M. TO 4 P. M. L;,. "wten"J n ntur Over 2fS Sn 14th St.. H-twaett Dftuffln and Farnam Sts.. Omaha, Neb- P. O. Box 766 w aj I y W W v w - w BJ - - - - w - " - -