Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 30, 1903, EDITORIAL SHEET, Page 13, Image 13
TITE OMAITA DAILY IlEEs BUND AY, 'AUOUST 30, 1003. 1.1 BASE BALL GOSSIP OF WEEK Wei'.ra Lea6-ui l-'ajrates at Eea Oter Beit eaivn't Circuit. LEAGUE'S MAKE-VP rviL CF UNCf RTAINTY Present (oml llin finch Cnn Be Faced o 1 unirr, bat War Out f Situation Duei Sot Appear. What will It be? Western It-ague maznates are mora deeply Interested In the formutkn nf the circuit for next season than they nra In the out come of the present pennant race. Deapl'.c their aFsttmncca of confidence, It U certain that they have i.ever btrn more ot sea than at the present writing, and that they know as little about what the circuit will bo a ll.i y did two years 1150, when O. Iirnther-Gcorge Tebeau s fixing up his little rcheme to control the two best towns In two lrugufS. Whether they will own ip or not, Kansas City end Milwaukee Will be abandoned. It Is not Impossible, yet not very probable,, that the Hlckeyltes will compromise and abandon Kansas City to the Western. If that cou)d be arranged. It would be a glorious consummation. Hut something must be arranged. Not one of the mncnates Is willing to undertake to put through another aejson under existing Conditions. At present the Western league Circuit holds threo cnrklr.g good boll tons, Omnhn, Ienver and Dei Moines; Peoria lfn't so bad, but St. Joseph and Colorado Springs are dead ones. Btlll the Missouri town will be cnrrled as long ;a the owners down there want to maintain the team. For want of a better, Colnrndn Springs will be allowed to hold a franchise. Fueblo Is no good. It ought to be the peer of any of tho smaller towns In the Western, but It, has such a lanro percentage of foreign eltixenn, who do not rare for the game, that tta capacity for supporting a team la greatly Impaired. Topeka has been given ome consideration as a successor to one of the franchises that will be open for dis posal. The Kansas capital has plenty of life, and If Sunday games can be played there would do much better by the league than either Milwaukee or Kansas City has with the double-header arrangement. After that, the list of available candidates for franchises la remarkably slim. Many heart-to-henrt talks are being had Just now, and the firing of Bill Rourke has gone over to Join the "Me and Van Brunt" talk of Inst season. Joe Qulnn finally proved that his hide Is penctmblo, and hus given over his position as manager of the Des Moines club. He couldn't stand for the continual knocking because hla bunch did not win the pennant, and consequently relinquished tho le ponslblllty for the team. On the face of things. It looks as If Qulnn were wrong. He Is a capable manager, a good a field leader as there la In the Western lists, and has made a very good showing with some very Indifferent material. He ahould have had the support of his team owners. In stead of their constant criticism; but. In any event, be ought to have had the nerve to face the muslo to the finish. ' Omaha suffered all season from demoralisation resulting from Ace Stewart's defection In a lit of pique, and the move made by Qulnn la not at all likely to aid the Des Moines team In the races, victories at Colorado Springs notwithstanding. Omaha didn't disappoint Its watchers at Denver,,' Nobody looked for a victory, and nobody was surprised when . the over whelming defeats were reported. The team Is demoralised, and without apparent spirit, several ot Its members are playing when they ought to be in bed, and the heart is gone from Its ranks. Its position In the pennant race Is hopelessly last, and that Isn't enough to Inspire the boys to any great effort. The team contains some great Individual players, and these will serve as a nucleus for a more creditable organisation another year, when It Is hoped that Omaha will get away from the post In better shape and make a showing that will be a credit to the best ball town In the west. Manager Rourke Isn't making any piomlses beyond the safe ons that he will do his best for the team next season. Sad experience has taught him the futility of trying to win pennants on paper, but he la looking for players as energetically as he has been at any time this year, and will have soma men for a tryout before the season closes. The terms of the national agreement, as prepared by the conferees, are certainly as liberal as the minor leagues could wish. In fact, several very Impel tart concessions have been made by the major leiguev, specially In the matter of reserve control and the farming of players. One of the greatest abuses that flourished under the reserve rule was the farming of players, by which the major league club for year would retain control of the services of a player and keep him at work In a minor league, with no voice In the matter of disposal of servlews. In not a few In stances the major league club securel more for the player's services than It paid hint In salary. The unfairness of this It too patent to need comment. Under the proposed rule. If the player Is not needed by the major league, he reverts to the minor as freely as though he had never been drafted. Under the operations of the draft the major leaguea will cease the practice of gobbling wholesale players from the minors and will select each year only such men aa have given evidence of their being able to hold their own In fast om pany. Ws will no longer witness the spectacle presented lust spring of big league teams with twelve, fifteen and eighteen pitchers signed up. Not ons of these clubs expected to use all of these men, but by signing them for a trial they absolutely prevented minor league teams from dealing lor their services until arter the season opened. From this time on the youngster who wants to get Into fast company will have to make good In the minors and will win his way by merit Instead of by chance. This will be another spur t- good work In the little leagues. Other points In the agreement work to the advantage of the minora and do no Injustice to the majors, SO that the agreement seems based on equity. That It will be ratliled there li no reason to doubt and that haso ball it at the door of an era ot prosperity seems beyond doubt. The collapse nf the Paclflo Northwest league Is not a "blow to organised ball," as some would like to make It appear, but la merely an evidence that an organisation Intended solely to break up an established Institution Is foredoomed to defeat. The In- Tf Constipated . iiA (17)1903 'rbs effervescent "tried by Jims" curs for SxMtivciteas. biliousness. Headache, hie i?UMttjCb. CWuua as irriUuUi sr asrcuAcs. m, . g I . t DrassWU u t aall ties 1844 ifEfT3T72i IHt AfiBAT CO, IHff tlT".' rsslon of the territory of the Pacific Coast league was unwarranted and not In accord with good business prlnc'plea. It proved that the people are more Interested In base ball than In the f.ghts between rival mag nates, and that they will patronize the league that delivers the goods, if they go to tho games at all. A very good evidence of this Is shown In New Tork and Boston. In one town the National league has the rrlnning team end I getting the patronnre; In the other the American tram Is playing the rv.mt and the people ore paying to see I. It would be a good thirg for the West ern lengue If the California people could be brcught Into the national agreement, but It's a clm-h that no further efforts to ea tcbllfh a rival lecue on the Tactile coast mill 1 e m: de, scon. Playing records cf the Omaha players for the reo on up to date afford some reason for the standing of the team In the race. Here are the statlst'.as: BATTING AVERAGES. List AB. R. IB. Av Wk Miller 193 33 M .T9 Carter 4o4 69 ll .52 Welch 242 29 63 .V Fchafstatl H1 7 25 .M7 Illckoy 27 31 19 .212 T hornton f 13 20 .227 Thomas M 18 64 .22 Shurart ir 42 75 .2:1 Uenlns 410 M 90 .Sl FamWs 44 1 .204 Oondlng 2S1 20 M .1! Corrpar.lon P3 7 17 .HI Ke lv 34 .17 Henderson 63 2 4 .003 2)i . ' .s-.-i .147 .J.; .11.1 .I'6 .m .211 .517 .2.10 .!) .I'll .161 .0C7 KIEIJJING AVERAGES. I -nut PO. A. 47 102 12 95 97 21 rs 32 "1 30 61 74 11 156 E. T C. Av. W k P.indni .., Hording .. "f-n-nton . ?enlns Thi 'nis ... C-"-tr 3 1 15 R 18 21 14 40 3 4 7 9 22 39 H 979 9n .3S7 .?"! .273 ,3'i4 .1' 44 2: 2 422 m 41 117 n 72 K2 317 .14 .1)53 .n .916 .914 .914 .911 .920 .913 .91 .9no .876 950 94! Ml 91 9S an S21 io S72 Pnnrirt T97 TTerrtprson it Miller 1(13 Kellv 1H Companion 13 enargtan 9 Welch J"! HIckey 13 GOSSIP FROM THE GRIDIRON College Teams Are Slowly Coming; Together for the Openlnsr of the Foot Ball Season. It Is only a little time and the country from coast to coast will be filled with the heroes of the gridiron, and the lovers of the rport will be spending their Saturdays watching the battle of the teams. There is always much speculation and anticipa tion before the beginning of the season as to the strength and relative merits of the various teams, and the roll of the veterans Is called In every college and high school. Borne are Invariably missing, and the new material Is scanned and weighed by public opinion long before It Is tried on the field. Over and above the question of the make- up of the teams, which Is a universal question among all followers of the game early In the fall, there Is added discussion now because of the new rules. The marked changes are few, but It Is felt that they will hare quite some little effect upon the style of play. As to this, It Is difficult to tell. There are almost as many views as to what the new rules will bring out in the way of changes of play as there are coaches and authorities of the gams. The most particular change Is that which requires seven men to be In the line when the ball Is put Into play between the twenty-five-yard Haves. In this same space the quarterback Is allowed to run with the ball provided he does not carry It forwsrd within S yarda from where It was snapped. For the benefit of the referee In watching this play the center of the field Is marked Into a checkerboard with squares of five yard dimensions. There seems to be a gen srally decided opinion that these new rules In the middle field on the checkerboard will bring the kicking game back Into favor, and also a resumption to ths old Princeton style of play, which depended upon the backs carrying the ball behind Interference. It means more attempts at end runs, double passes, criss-crosses and others of the older forms of play. It also does away entirely with the formation of the guardsback. tackleabaclc and other heavy formations for ground gaining through the line. This means that the spectator will be able to follow the play over the checkerboard more understand ing than waa possible with the more complicated mass formations. Between the twenty-flve-yard lines and the goal line the old rules ss to the carrying or the ball hold, and here It Is doubtful if there will be any great change in the method of play. There may be less mass piays in this portion of the field man usual, per haps, but that will be because the teams havo given more time and preparation to developing plays for the backs to gain ground In and leas time In working up mars plays. Another of the changes, which will be apparent to the spectators, is that in the uniform. The new rules do not allow of any hard or unyielding substanee In either the uniform or the harness and the sole leather headpiece and stiffly-padded uni forms will have to be replaced by softer material. All of this will be replaced and the player aa securely guarded as before, biit the new equipment will neoesearlly be little more bunglesome' than the old, as the padding needs must be thicker without any hard outer covering. The team which Is scored against does not have to kick oft If It does no wish to this year. This is a good point in the new rules, as It gives a poor .defensive tesm a chance to score against a strong offenslvs team, where otherwise It might never have an oppor tunity to touch the ball during the game. Everywhere through the country the teams ars beginning to come together every day now. The University of Pennsylvania have taken twenty-five of the veterana and aspirants to Beach Haven for a preliminary season of training, but none other of the eastern colleges have started to do any ac tual work whatsoever. The only western school, which haa gotten Its team together for practice yet la De l'auw. me oiner teams are spending their spsre moments proselyting and gaining new recruits tor the training table rather than hardening their muscles and increasing their winds in the country air at the expense of the col lege athletic fur.d. Down In Lincoln, where they had the (earn that was not scored on last fall, everything la working along slowly to the beginning of actual practice. Coach Booth Is back and on the ground with Assistant Coach Westover. The team haa . suffered the loss of a few men. but there is a good bunch of veterans to build around. Engel hard t will r.ot be back and both ends are left open by the loas of "Chick" Shedd and Cortelyou. Then li Is undtrstood that sn otties llaeman will be missing In Wilson, but this Is not certain. That means four men gone. With Mlckel to play fullback, Er.jelhardt's loss will not be felt so much, but there Is no one to take Mlckel's place In case he Is hurt. At the ends the loss will be severe, but they will be filled In pretty well with men from ths last year's second team. Thea t lie re la always th new material and that is hard to determine th value of until It haa been given a trial. John West over has been roaming around th state during th last couple of weeks ar.d has gathered In quit a huaky bunch of ma terial. Som of th men have had a llttl play oft their high school teams and some of th men are big and strong, but know Loot g of fot bail. tou Omaa two last year's High school team are going to the university ar.d they should make a fair bid for the team, although both are light men. Sterrlcker Is probably the better man cf the two. as he Is fast and strong, besides baring soma weight. He will try to make end. Griffith, the other man. Is a line man and a good one, but he Is pretty light, only weighing 100 pounds. Crelehton Is looping forward to a giod season this fall, as It Is certain that all but one of last year's team will be back and It may be that Harry Welch will play. If he enters medical college, as he expected to do, he will pity. But his loss will not be felt seriously, as Lampler, the star fuliback cf St. Mary's eolitee, will be In tho gradu ate school at Crelghton this year nr.J he will fill In the gap nicely. With McDonald as coach and the old team back Crelghton expects to win every game on the schedule this year, which la quite a heavy-schedule. Tho situation at th? Orraha High school Is In an Indeterminate ccndltlon this year ri yet and even the students nre unable to . . . . . . . . L , form ar.y Idea as to the strength of the team until the school year has begun and the men have gotten out to work. ACTIVITY AMONG THE GOLFERS Preparatory Work tor the Trnnsmls slaslppl Meeting at Des Moines Ambition of the Field Club. The last week has been one of prepara tion among the golfing contingent at the Omaha Field club and the Increased Inter est and excitement will carry through until after the tournament of the Transmlssls slppl Oolf association at Des Moines next month. For two years golf has been the central figure at the club and Interest and the character of the play have grown apace during this period. But It has been a period of preparation mostly, and the club has attempted little beyond teaching its own members to play a hotter and a stronger game. Now they nre reaching out toward greater things and not the ! least of these la the hope of holding this Transmlsblsslppl tournament on the links of the Field club next year. For this reason the club Is preparing to send a large delegation of players to Des Moines and they are hoping and planning to send not less than fifty, of whom half have al ready signified their intention of going. Only laat year the Transmlaslsslppl was held on the Country club links In Omaha, but the Field club has many reasons for feeling that success Is not Impossible, de spite the desires of other cities to have th3 tournament on their links. The course at the Field club Is considered an ideal na tural course, but is still somewhat new, although each year finds It rounding more and more Into shape. As players from as sociation clubs have played over it from time to time during the summer, they have expressed great satisfaction In Its pos Iblll tles and In Its present ccndltlon. All of these people will speak a kindly word for the club and use their Influence toward Its success. Theo a large representation can not help but have a good effect on the other clubs. Bit above and beyond all Is the promise of what the course' will be next year. It takes time to make a course or to reraako one, and the club has been quietly working on a change In the course. The culmina tion of this work will come next year and the club will then have a course, whtcb will be 6.2S0 yards In length, as agalntt S.700 yards as at present, snd quite different in general character than it now la. The sameness of the west nine holes has been one ot the discouraging features of the course In the past, but this will all be changed. Borne of the holes ' will be re Versed and other changes will be made which will aid In the work. Then there will be six new greens On the course. With these changes made and the nat ural roll of the ground, the haxards aSd the bettered condition of the turf and the greens the course should prove an Ideal 1 one for the holding of the tournament. Besides It is the longest course in the as sociation territory and, as length Is one of the requirements of a good course. It Is another argument for the local clubmen. The holding of the Transmlsslssippl tourn ament at Omaha Is something that will do mush toward helping the game in Its popu larity here and will ' prove of almost aa much good to the Country club as It will to the Field club. The association covers the territories of five states, Iowa, Kan sas, Missouri, Colorado and Nebraska, and Includes practically all of the golf clubs In these states. With the bes players of these states playing In Omaha again nfter one year's absence, the good to the many, who would not go away from home to see It, Is Indefinable. ai'AUT FEATIRKS OF LIFE. George B. Smith has mourned and eulo gised on every Memorial day at Augusta, Me., for about thirty years as one of the gallant soldiers wko fell with Custer st Little Big Horn. Mr. Smith has been alive all the time, however. He writes to l is sister, who is a resident of Augusta, that he Is very much alive and is making money running a stock farm at Oakland, Cal. . Another proof of the statement that one's friends vanish when wealth vanishes Is proved In the case of Francis Marion Wells of San Francisco, a well known sculptor, writer, clubman and social leader. Re cently he lost his money, was taken griev ously ill and sought admission to a char lty hospital. None of the people whom, he lavishly entertained In former days and who had then pretended to be friends has come to his assistance or Inquired for him. Dr. J. F. Iamlnj, an enthusiastic ama teur photographer of Cape May, N. J., had an unusual experience. In developing a J pia(e i,e naj exposed on a clear day of the Methodist church he found two streaks of light plainly visible, apparently coming from the clouds. Another plate of a po tato patch showed the same freak. Bound to ascertain the cause, he developed an unexposed plate, and found the same xlg- sag bolt. He then tried a couple of pieces of bromide paper and found similar marks on these. This satisfied the doctor that a flash of lightning from' a recent storm had penetrated the closed drawer, In which he kept his materials, leaving Its lmpreea on every sheet of paper and plate he had In the drawer. Last Saturday night an unusual thunder storm swept over the northern part of Weber county, I'tah. A tremendous rain fall was accompanied by a great fall of toads. People coming Into Ogden encoun tered an army of hoppers In Taylor pre clnct. There were millions cf them, from an bach to an Inch and a half long. They were so deep on the highway that they clogged th wheels of vehicles, and It was with difficulty that teams could get through. Nothing Ilk It was ever seen or known In that section. The theory is sd vanoed that the storm waa th end of i distant cloud burst, but where the cloud picked up th toads Is a mystery. Madia rwmlow, who, nearly ten years ago, waa kidnaped from her home la tTr bana, I1L, succeeded in effecting her escape and returned to ber parenta. Mr. and Mrs Fred Dem low. laat week. The parents had long believed their daughter dead, and wall a capUv of ths Gypsies) th girl bad. s- , M,'ty ";;imi w.mm. mj ffljii ' iL'.y ig'.'i .'mi POWER SHOWS te w ft WW P . nrr ,-iTiitTv cK-vi-iT. THTnvT.TfTiw.re 1 ONLY ONK TIEMRHY which will nbsolutety cure this serious afflctlon. -Tep.n iam.de froma plant growing in BmUh Africn. 1 'hi. drus win I' tBSlV tirnXSJ, "fl,nraveC.Th.r.hV hassceured tho sole. an,, ontlro treatment in the V. haVE'tIIE MEANb'tO CURE YOU YOU GET MORE FOR Nervou3 Debility cured in 60 to !0 davs. Stricture cured in 15 days'without cutting, pains, drus or detention from business. Prostatic Troubles permanently cured no matter how long standing the disease, in from 6 to ) days. DON'T DELAY. Office Hours 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays 10 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. been told that her parenta had both died. She was 10 years old when abducted and had been compelled to travel over the en tire country, impersonating the part of a blind girl, eel ling trinkets. Several years ago some one had taken pity on the sup posedly sightless girl and had given her a calf. This she attached to the Gypsy train and sold in Alabama. With the proceeds from this sale she bought a ticket to her tome. ' ' The champion money finder Is Isaac Banks of Philadelphia and he holds the championship because he was, until pen sioned off after fifty-eight years of constant service, doorkeeper of the vaults of the Fidelity Trust company. He found and re turned to the owners about t2.0t0.000. His largest And was $100,000 and for Its return he got not a cent, while from the loser of a 160,000 roll which he returned Intact he has never since received anything but studied discourtesy.- And here is all that the old doorkeeper got In titty-Sight years for his faithfulness: In cash. $90; three books, valued at to; Ave neckties, valued at 12; seven silk handkerchiefs, 15; eight pairs of suspenders, 13; six pairs of slippers, Jfll; nine pairs ot gloves, $12; three pairs of pulse warmers, tl; two hats, $8; four boxes Of writing paper, t2; one watch guard, $3; five shirts, $6; total value, $85. Fourteen years ago John Messengale of Macon county, Missouri, and Elijah E. Reese of Charlton county went to law over a $30 calf, and they are stl'.l at law and fighting more fiercely than ever, although the calf -must have grown Into a pretty fair sized steer by this time. He Is going finally ) to prove an expensive one for somebody. The case has been tried four times In Justice and circuit courts, has been heard onc In the Kansas Cltv court of appeals and Is now pending In the Charlton county circuit court again, having been remanded by the court af appeals. The routs now amount to more than one hundred tlms the amount the steer was worth at the time the litigation began. Dr. , W. Brown of Eugene, Ore., relates most peculiar circumstance. He was called to Cottage Drove on the list t assist In an operation to remove an eye from Mra. Hunnlcutt. who had been blind in one eye for thirty-five years, and It had been deemed advisable to remove the use less member. The operation was to be per formed next morning and the woman was placed on the operating table and the at tending surgeons got their Instrument In readiness for the operation, when th woman shouted that the Lord had restore 1 her sight. Those In attendance were greatly surprised at the outburst, but th good eye was rinsed and she was shown several articles and could see thorn pliinlv with the eye thst had been blind for yean and called the articles by name. Tber were half a dozen witnesses of the occur rence sna an were aumrounaea. i no woman had spent several hours In prayer previous to the time for the orerstlon and Just before going on the orentlng table offered a final prayer to Oxl to restore her sight. She naturally feels that her prayer wes answered. I.orr Summer Tonrlst Rates Via Chlr.iero Great Western railway. Round trips to St. Paul. MlnneipolN. Superior, Ashland. Duluth and other Minnesota re sorts. Tickets on sale dally to September 80. Good to return October 31. Also to Colo redo. Utah. Black Hills. New Mexico and Texas points, with stopover privileges. For full Information apply to sny Great Wes tern agent, or J. P. Elmor. O. P. A., Chl ca go. 111. LABOR AMD MDIUVHV. Hi'a.ta takes r a!f h serrlcultiiral nincMnerv that the lnltei States exports. t'rl'el Mine Workers "i-to. oontem - n! the eree'lon of a tlOO.OOO labor temple In Pittsburg. Pa The street , rellway companies ot tha I'tilted States'. ST In numbe-. make returns showing an Investment of STirj.COO.000. There are JJ7 lead pencil factories In Oer many, which etrploy i.flt persons and ex port each year l.iilt tons of pencils, worth $2.0u0.0u0. The erop of apples this year Is estimated at 48.00 010 barrels, which Is more than half a barrel for every man. woman and child In the United States. The question cf the comparative economy of petrolm.in and coal as fuel la one of lo cality. In New Orleans. San Franclaco and Texas the saving In cost with nil is 7$ per rent. In New York coal is 69 per rent cheaper than oil. The Investment in central station elec trical Industry In the United Btates. aa shown by statistics from the census office, Is a little more than L."j0.ou" (A. owned by t,M private companies, mhlch receive an average or per cent on tneir investment The number of workmen now employed In all the automobile factories of foteaux France. Is calculated at al out 30 0. Ac cording to the latrat statistics on the mat ter, the automntiUe Industry haa exported from France rising the last year automo bile to the value of M.uuu.OuO franca. Th puts burg district has more Industrial rbj-slcnl power ami inn nil power nre absolutely mvessnry now-a-dnys In orrlpr to "win out" In U10 atru.TKl" for pxlstcmv. No lian ran hold Ms own without tlicui. Watch your , health n. yoa would n pritdi'ss gem, your very own possession, whleh you priee by fur the most If the slightest signs of Im purity of the blood appear. If the nervous system shows beginning weakness or If the after-effects of some former vicious liab't of wild excesses herald their Approach, do not neglect the summons for n Flngle day. Co to the F.XPKKT M'KCIAI.IST, who mnkes n thorough study and has years of experi ence in tills line. The Chief Consulting Physician of the Cook Medical Co. will ,remaln for another month. It. will be worth rt grout deal to all patients suffering from thtso delicute diseases peemllar to men und women, or chronic skin, blood and nervous troubles to get his thorough personal examina tion and professional ndvie-e. It will cost you iiothlug and may be your only salvation. He cures when all others have failed. HAT S There nre many enses of I.ost Vitality due to excesses or diseases, bnt which are caused by . low ering of the nerve tone, rineipally the result of business cares, dyspepsia, worry, overwork, etc. In these cases the ceaseless pursuit of wealth, the Intense competition for increased business, has In duced nil overdraft on the nerve vitality. These cases are found among men of the energetic, ambitious type, occupying responsible positions, and who accomplish a great deal under a constant tension, and strain, which eventually weakens the nerve force and brings on nerve and brain exhaustion, and event ually LOST VITALITY. Thus you will understand that If you .suffer from this disease you dare not ninrVv. or if you have taken that step, that your position Is a grave one unless you are CURED. Don't let false pride or mock modesty keep you from taking treatment. We treat men of nil professions and trades for this terrible affliction, which hns illled our asylums and graveyards with its victims whllo vi t iu the prime of life. ' You who suffer from Vital Weakness. Ioss of Memory, difficulty in concentrating your thought, loss of energy and ambition, dark circles under the eyes, weak back or any of the many symptoms result ing rrom the above causes call nt our olllee and Investigate how we cure this we-aknesa wheu others fall. COOK MEDICAL CLARK'S Bowling Alleys Biggest Brigbest Best. 1313-15 Harney Street If my PJieu matlsm Cure fails to cure I will refund your money. MUNYON. 4 DR. IVIcGREW SPECIALIST. Treats kll form ef DISEASES OF MEM Si juts cipoi !;. li )&!- Ill OibAb. IMKOttS tuts curd. Ribl, sue teMful. CurM fuarut'l. huri law. TmUMll b mill. fall writ.. Uux T64. Offlc. ever lit 9. l . OMAHA. MB. rw. ,emcflt8ls-a It Si PVtS8ArK. i.".Jrr'Ubl. ldlM. uk Drnrrl rBICUEMTKU'b KNULMfl la KKB n O.I.I .. "' wli bltM ribtMts. Tk. . Rr. P..cvroaa SnUU.0on ijnli tloa. , tj t jaur Druui.l. OI 4c la ( Ut P.rtlraWra, TrW .ls 4 ''Rrllr tmr l a. :,"n UIMr. jr r Iwra Mall. lO.eo TwUm-nlal. "H S Iruck 1 alrhcatr Cheatleei t. LITHBA WATER g USE r.j. it -T:rY-a TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Best Aarlcnltoral Weelily. TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER Beat Agricultural eci. ....lattvaa than Anv other similar area on it hiui i he, icreutes'. iron and steel works, the greatest electrical plants, the largest glass houses. iirenrlcK jaraa, poi-U-rleH, and at the same time Is the center of the world's greatest coal aud cckliig fields. There was a strike of chambermaids last week at Eureka Lake, a Kansas summer F.ur-t Alnt imi mule a-ueHLS were iun in forward to the unwonted tusk of mak lng their own beda, when a lot of society md from Ti,uek.i and elsewhere undcr- tnnii iim work mid had the hotel in apple- r.ie order before noon. That broke the Lack of the strike. Beventy-flv per eent of our foralgn Horn rwimiiutinri in lwO was of Teutonic and Celtic stuck the very same thai inado the English. Of coumo, it still larger per centage of the native lorn are of these races and of their admixture. It is en error, then, to talk of the American people as a miscellaneous conglomeration ui mcw. TVii"4 t an American race, formed ly fuHion of the original races that made tho Ena Hah. A new motive power has been discovered by 8. F. Slearna of Jopltn, Mo., and In ventor, who Is now in New York putting in a plant whim,- it is ciaimea. win rwun the cost uf generating power 40 per cent I,, it. oftritti m them is no need for coal, tx.iltra or water. The power is said to be suoDlid by some sort of combustion. which, properly distributed, will do tlio work. Mr. Btearns has interested with him In the enterprise J. A. Hardy, a mil lionaire mine owner of Webb City and F. M. Cummings of Joplln. One of the. devioes waa recently installed in a big nilnln? plant near Jupl.n and is said to be it success. Consul General Richard Ouenther. at ankfort, Germany, reports the dlsoovury by dward Mollard. a Fracichinan, of a now metal called 'sellum." The discov erer c alms that sellum costs but one-twelfth as mush as aluminum and 1 lighter and stronger. It does not rust, and is there fore suitable for use in ahlptulldlng. for the manufitcture of pipe and for railroad construction. On account of its cheap nessand as It is capable of a fine pollah, resembling nickel it would b deslrahle .for manufacturing cooking utensils. Its density is Z.(. and Its hardness is not quite that of iron, but greater than lead or sine. Its power of resistance is said to be greater than that of Iron, but leas than that of steel. The melting point is l.iiMi decrees C. In melting Its contracts somewhat, but molding in forms is not Impossible. Stop-Over at Niagara Falls without extra charge Is permitted on through tickets to New Tork or Phlladel- pUut via th Lehigh Valley Railroad. 3 NSW Ttg.Rmi -. .MaWiTJ jr t LIST VITALITY 7 15.00 THAN ANY OTHER SPECIAUST Varicocele cured without cutting In from 3 to 10 davs. Blood Poison Every veaiie of poUou removed from, tha system ' without aid of mercury or potash. - Contracted Diseases cured iu 3 to 10 day without the use. cf poison ous drugs COME TODAY. HO-112 SOUTH 14TII OVER DAILY -" u m .iwJW jf ome The Hock Inland will run Home Visitors Excursions to many points in Ohio and Indiana on September 1, 8, 15 and October 6. i The rate will be one and one-third fare for the round trip and tickets will be good thirty days from date of sale. Let the Rock Island agent plan your trip and show you how comfortably it can be made. Write or call on the undcrsigne d for full Inform a 1 1 o n aa to cost of tickets, train ser vice, etc. F. P. RUTHERFORD, D. P. A , is J---J XORTHRRJV Steamer North Weat and all es stem points Buffalo. Steamer Nooth stoamers at buffalo for New Tork days for PufTalo. touching at intermediate portf.. Close connec tions are made by. b leaves Duluth Tuesdays 11 Jo p m for Boston, Phlladelphisrtti Lnd leaves Chicago iM p m bo tup. W. M. L-OWRIK. General Parsenger Atent. Buffalo N Y H. A. CHERRJETl. G. A. P. !.. 320 Bo' ClaVk Street. ChlcV.o. IM All. THE -n.T'. tvrj The Bee ia no older as far ' than the day it wat Hie little things stantly in repair. Wouldn't you prtfer a building that never grows shabby where a broken window cord is 1 rtplaced the day it breaks? at nan raw month too u.iM ntria nrn Urht and little ome llgnt ana tllated Including beat, light, janitor service. The Bee Bui R- C Paters & Co., RantaJ A"nt. Drausi Hoot. Cor. 17th and Par-am Mraeta MAN It was discovered and tested lat January I erecme power, one month, belnn right to use this CAN GIVE FOR 18.00. CO STREET, OMAHA. fj NEWS, ' t yi'iw-w-'iF.a' IUa BS3 cni Are You Going? 1323 Farnam St, Omaha. Neb. STRAMHIlir COMPANY km SBEV s.VirL-i: SrttI;;i'V ttr. Building o as icwar and tsar goes built are Jcept con an office in can rent well Tl wen Tn- water ad - din :s.is-i,: 3? T e Uym 111