Anrift IT, 1905. TITK : OMAITA- ILLUSTRATED HER Lawn Tennis as a V .' ' ". '. ; s '' ' ' .- i - - . .. ' -S ' '-cr-i-' ',1 ."mw,- -r"" srr.-ft...,-l--i.' V--.1--' "-fiki- ."." , '..; ' k- " .Tt -a 7. -- SNOW OF CHICAGO RETURNS ONTD OF BULTTTEKWICIC'8 DRIVES. 1MB waa. not viry far back, whpn a certain eporting writer of prominence would not permit tUm scores of tennis matches to bm published on his sport page, eay Ing that tennis was not a sport, but rattnf a game for candles. This is all changed, and no sport has more playing menilier In Omaha than the ancient and honorable frame of tennis. To play Is to sport, to frolic Is to sport, to practice the diversion! of the field is to sport, and tennis surelf comes under these heads, for it Is a.g.ime endowed with all qualities which bring out the beat there lr In a sportsman. Teople who see women lobbing the ball backward and forward on some grass court think there Is nothing to the game, but let these same critics view an Eberhardt and a Sanderson playing for the championship, they will at once see that It la a game that brings out the best there Is In a man. This was demonstrated In this city very forcibly two years ago, when Frank Eberhardt, one of the finest physical specimens that ever donned an athletic suit, won out on pure form from players who were conceded by all to be more skilled at the game. Play ing a steady game and never weakening when his opponents would make some . phenomenal play which would win the ap plause of the galleries, Frank Eberhardt won the championship simply because he was In the moBt perfect physical condition. All athletic contests are tests of skill and endurance, and no man can think of win ning aji Important event unless he Is In prime condition, or even of holding a title unless he keeps himself In perfect form. Growth In Popularity. Thus from a game which waa not thought much of by so-called "sports," tennis has come,to be recognized aa one of the leading sports of this country and England. In England It has not much opposition In the bid for public favor, according to American Ideas, cricket being the only opposing game except horse racing, In the summer time, but in this country there Is the faster game of base ball to contend with. Tennis has not reached the point where it can expect to attract the numbers that base ball or foot ball does, still In the matches In which the cracks compete large "galleries" are, sure to be present. The Increase of Inter- est is shown by the Increase in the number of entries In the Middle West tournament which Is held at the Omaha Field club each year. In 1902, when the ' tournament was first held under the auspices of the United States National Lawn Tennis association at the Field club, the entries numbered forty-two; In 1903 the number was Increased to forty-five; last year the number was the same as In the proceeding year, and this year the entry list jumped to sixty-six, which Is a fine showing and a tribute to the manner in which these contests are conducted at the Field club. Not only In Omaha Is the interest on the increase but every town and city of any else has had Its tournament and there have been state tournaments, trl-state tourna ments and International tournaments galore. In the ,big tournament held at Newport during the week there were 106 Curious end Romantic Capers of Cupid Dowerlea for Brides. MONO novel marriage portions that with which Herr Duchat schek, a native of Konlggrats, dowered his daughter must find place: Her weight in silver was the promised dowry, so on the wedding morn, before proceeding to church, she was weighed in the drawing room before the assembled guests. The scales regis-, tered sixty-two kilograms, a weight which brought the lucky blide a sack of 13,500 silver colas. Similar Instances of a bride's dowry being In direct ratio to her corporal avoirdupois are on record. Some time back a citizen of Huntington, Conn., who possessed a daughter of the abnormal weight of 400 pounds agreed to bestow upon her a portion of 5 for every pound she weighed. This ofTer brought forward a bold suitor In the person of a Mr. Marang, who gallantly led his weighty and well dowered bride to the altar. In Peru, too, the bride's dowry consists of her own weight, not In gold or in silver, but in sugar. Weight, too. Influenced Mr. Datt, a prosperous English tradesman, when he informed his daughter that, as he admired big men. her dowry should be graduated by the excess of her husband's bodily Weight above her own this excess to be calculated in gold. The day previous to the wedding the parties went to the scale, and that the husband was a man after his father-In-laws heart can be assumed from the fact that he received with her. more than $30,0001. An old Lancashler (England) paper gives an amusing account of a small farmer who agreed to give to his daughter for a marriage portion as many guineas as she could walk miles a day. The feat came off in the neighborhood of Manchester and the sturdy lass tramped more than seventy miles. When, however, the time for set tlement arrived It waa discovered that the father was not worth as many shillings as he should have paid In guineas, whereupon a subscription was opened by the neigh boring gentry, who admired the girl's pluck and an amount was collected that amply compensated her for her exertion. A wealthy London solicitor whose daugh ter had received an expensive education promised on her becoming engaged to give her fifty times the amount she could earn In a year by her own exertlor.a. Though she found that her expensively acquired accomplishments were more or less a drug In the market, she managed, by giving muslo and drawing lessons, to earn suf ficient to entitle her to receive on her mar riage the handsome sum of $26,000. An other father, who had but small faith In als" prospective son-in-law's Industry, agreed to give his daughter on her mar riage an amount corresponding to that which the bridegroom should make In the hum of twelve months. He ' had. how- t0 1 l a : -v B. W. MATTESON OF OMAHA, ONE OF THE COMING LOCAL PLATERS. entries from all sections of the country. Sufficiently Strennona. Tennis Is not the violent sport that base ball or football Is and still to become per fect at the game it .probably requires more practice than either of the other games. It is perhaps the oldest of all existing ball games, and at once, the most difficult to learn because of the Intricacies of Its laws, and the most Interesting when learned because of the great variety of Its combi nations and the difficulty of solving rapidly the combinations which are constantly pre sented to a player by his opponent on the spur of the moment. There Is no telling where a ball Is to be returned, or at what speed and these conditions have to be met lnstanter. Romvthlnsjr of Its History. Tennis has an additional charm from a historical point of view, because of the numberless historical associations. There is no fixed time as to the origin of tennis -r ever, counted without his host, for the young man, chancing to obtain some good Stock exchange information, tabled a sum that the other could only cover on his daughter's sweetheart agreeing to advance the deficit On receiving a very handsome tip from a customer a waiter at a fashionable Lon don restaurant begged to thank the giver in his daughter's name and upon being asked for an explanation said that he had agreed to bestow upon her as a wedding portion an amount equivalent to the tips he should receive in a year. On the gentle man subsequently making inquiries be was told by the waiter that his daughter's dot had worked out at more than $Tu0. Revised Marrlatte Rituals The revised report of the Pennsylvania general assembly's committee on forms and services contains the rituals of the respective churches, and while much llke, they show a striking contrast In the mar riage service. In the Presbyterian church the woman must promise to obey; In the Methodist Episcopal church she need take no such obligation. The Presbyterian service goes as follows! "Then the minister shall say to the woman! Wilt thou have this man to be thy husband and wilt thou pledge thy troth to him. In all love and honor. In all duty and service, In all faith and tenderness, to live with him, cherish and obey him, according to the or dinance of God in the holy bond of mar riage? The woman shall answer, I will." The Methodist Episcopal senvice reads: "Then shall the minister say unto the woman: Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband, to live together after God's ordinance in the holy estate of matri mony? Wilt thou love, honor and keep him, In skknes and In health and forsaking all other ket p thee only unto him so long as ye both shall live? Then the woman shall answer, I will." Playing Caddie tor C lipid. There are six New York aldermen who have offices within a five-minute walk of the city hall. They would probably grow indignant and deny that they located near the city hall for business purposes, but the fact remains that they do a lot of odd Jobs in their capacity as city fathers which, directly or Indirectly, net them quite a Ut ile sum. One alderman married twenty couples In a single day, all of them brought to the office by the city hall hangers-on known as "cuplda." These men hang around the corridors and when they see a young couple wandering around and looking fool ish they know Just what to do. The "cu pld" is always willing to direct them to an alderman's office, and for fear they will lose the way he will accompany them and act as witness. This always means a small fee. Healthy and Enjoyable Outdoor Summer Sport PART i -.-ri ' v . k.t ..1 r 1. : HUGHES AND KOHN OF OMAHA, ARE WINNING FAME. but It Is probably the outcome of some very simple sport played by the ancients. The first authentic dates on tennis are in the Middle Ages when it was played on the courts of the feudal castles In France and Italy. At first the pastime of kings, it soon became popular with the middle classes and from that time on has grown into favor. The French seem to have bor rowed It from the Italians and made cer , tain refining changes. From France it Journeyed to England. Judging from the French name by which It was designated it was played with the hand for a racket. The hand was afterwards protected with "t-- ,; 1 1 m Nebraska Makes Fine Showing at Portland EBRASKA Is making a showing at the Lewis and Clark exposition that has distinguished the state N KvV-'jl imoiii the many which are par- w-iJJ tlclpatlng In the Western World's fair. Nebraska's moving picture shows are known to every one who visits the fair, and the state's resources are ex ploited In a manner striking and artistic. Nebraska occupies a block of space in the Palace of Agriculture, near the center of the building. Anyone can tell you where Nebraska's section Is, because everyone has been there. The originality displayed by the commissioners In designing the theater building and arranging the ex hibits has placed Nebraska In a' class by Itself. Nebraska at the fair wears a dress of yellow. This in itself distinguishes the state from the others. The theater build ing, where the moving picture shows are held every hour during the day, from 10 o'clock on. Is in the design of an Italian villa. Corn samples and products of corn are most attractively displayed on two tables placed In a little court In front of the theater. There are eighty-one varieties of corn shown, and of this number twenty varieties are of sugar corn and fifteen of pop corn. Of special Interest Is a remark able exhibit of evolutlun corn, grown by Theodore Williams of Benson, Neb. The corn products shown number twenty-six i AjOV 1 i . i it NEBRASKA'S EXHIBIT AT T ..... y-fe v .... .a a irr -c: - OP THH OALUCRT WATCHING THE PLAT. 1 I ww:. A PAIR WHO a glove as still prevails In the Basque country. Upon the gloves strings and cross strings were next woven to give the ball a faster impulse and the addition of a short handle was a matter of a short time to make a transition from the glove to the racket. Improvements in the game have been continually made, first by enclosing the courts with walls and latter by roofing them sV that Inclement weather was no terror to the tennis player. The weather Is an interfering factor in these days as was witnessed during the Inst week when old Jupiter Pluvlus put most of the Field and include various kinds of starch, Ameri can gum, gluten feed, corn oil cake, brew ers' sugar, gluten meal, anhydrous sugRr, yellow climax sugar, chopped feed, corn rubber, corn syrup, crude and refined corn oil, glucose, gum paste, British gum and dextrine. y Directly in front of the entrance to the theater, between the tables bearing the corn display, stands the stuffed skin of the 2-year-old steer, Challenger, which weighed 1,782 pounds and was practically perfect In points. Challenger won easily over all competitors at the International Fat Stock show and exposition at Chicago in 190S. At the rear of the theater the comfort and convenience of visitors is provided for by an open reception room, where there are comfortable chairs and a large reading table which is supplied with Nebraska newspapers. Nebraska's showing of small grains is arranged In pyramid form, and excellent samples of threshed grains are to be found in Jars. Sheaves of winter, spring and macaroni wheat and splendid specimens of oats, rye, and barley In the straw make up the pyramid. Some hundreds of samples of vine seeds, In which Nebraska excels all other states, have attracted much at-, tentlon. Two large pyramids of corn in the husk, situated at either side of the writing table in the reception room, compose a striking 'W' . 5 r TUB LEWIS AND CLARK CENTENNIAL r st t, -Ji IT ,M HaJ 71 m ; . .A ff . SCHNEIDER OF OMAHA AND HA9SLER OF PAW. CITY-TWO COMING NEBRASKA PLAYERS. club courts out of commission when, he shed a few tears on the country hereabouts. Engineering skill of the present' century has been brought Into use in the Construc tion of tennis courts, so that they are sup posed to dry shortly after a rain, but this Is a supposition contrary to fact at the Field club for these courts were the wet test spots In the sorroundlng country. IleneAclnl to Any. Tennis Is a game which can be played by many who cannot Indulge In the more violent games. That Is, It would not be real tennis according to definition of some feature of the state's display. About the theater building, and composing most at tractive rural decorations, are wonderful grasses native to Nebraska. These com pose one of the state's most remarkable exhibits. A bale of alfalfa, recently re ceived by the commissioners, has attracted much interest. Probably nothing has done so much to tell the world of the greatness of Nebraska as the moving picture shows which are given In the theater In the Nebraska sec tion. These pictures have as their chief charm their absolute realism. The pictures show such scenes as plow ing and planting, and early harvesting, cutting alfalfa, and raking it and stacking it, fruit culture, raising of vegetables on a large scale; the poultry, sheep and swine Industries; the dairy and beef cattle ln dustrels, ranch life, and the beet sugar In dustry. That the pictures and talks inter est the people Is shown by the fact that the the free entertainments are better at tended as the fair progresses. Visitors at the Nebraska section have been most favorably Impressed by the courteous treatment accorded them by the people In charge. William James la super intendent of the exhibit, and G. C. Shedd is assistant secretary. Both are to be found at Nebraska's headquarters all the time. G. L. Loonils, vice president and treasurer of the commission, and H. G. Shedd. the secretary, are expected in a short time. V t. , 1 1 i SkJU ! - 1 ''-j t EXPOSITION. PORTLAND, OREL MATCH IN SINGLES BEFORE Li . ril W m' ' " ' I '. - m i.1 .iy- IT JiV1; ... w r ; ' ' ! V', i-" iV : si-'l'-V . - ' ' i .r-n. -v "BILLY" WOOD OF OMAHA. SECRE TARY OF THE FIELD CLUB TOUR NAMENT COMMITTEE. of the cracks, but still the same rule could be used and plenty of exercise obtained by simply lobbing the balls back and forth. Any game that brings the player In to the free and open air Is bene ficial unless carried to extremes, and tennis can be played in moderation and yet give forth many of the benefits of the real game. Tennis and golf are about alike in this respect. Golf Is a game which fur nishes a good excuse for the players to tramp the fields and to be In the open air for stretches at a time. It is also a game which can be played by people who would not choose the faster games. Golf In a game more suited to more elderly men and it has not the vigorous action of tennis. Calls for Brain Work. The best sport is that which keeps all of the faculties alert in some agreeable pas time. Contest between man and man Is I J. "J if ; t''?.T (6 I 1 1 Some Quaint Features of Every-Day Life Funerals Ills Pleasure. ERMANTOWN, Pa., has an odd character. He Is known as "Fu neral Joe,", and Is the center of attraction when he appears on the streets of Philadelphia's suburb. No funeral in the last year that has pro ceeded to Ivy Hill cemetery. Mount Airy, found him, missing, and no hearse carrying the remains of man, woman or child passed into the graveyard without Joe placing a mark upon the glass of the vehicle and re tiring to another burying place, where he goes through the same tactics. Previous to the interment be visits the home where thtf-remalns of the deceased are being viewed, and generally causes a stir by his attire of a black suit that has seen better days, white gloves, white shoes and a white opera hat, adorned with green ribbon. Ejected from the houses of mourn ing, as he generally Is, he will seek an other funeral and force himself Into the room In which the corpse reposes. One of his eccentricities while In the place is to pick a flower from the floral tributes, principally from the one sent by one of the survivors of the dead person, and after looking about the room for some time pin It upon the breast of a mourner. At the conclusion of the services at the house he has been known to follow the rortegn for miles to the cemetery, and on growing tired takes rest upon the rear end of a carriage. No mailer what the weather might he, ho may be dnlly seen wherever there is a funeral In the suburb, and al though harmless anil known to the police, diurnully follows his odd notion. The Cat In the fiarden. A German who Iihh a house on the enst side. New York, takes lots of pride In his garden. lie devotes all Ills time to the cul tivation of fliwers nnd hs great success, but Is bothered considerably by the cHts. He recently thought out a scheme to keep the cats away and purchased a lot of fly papers, placing them on the fence around his small plot of ground. Having finished his work, ho took a seat In the middle of the garden, lighted his pipe and watched. It was not long before a cat Jumped on the fence and In a twinkling was entangled with the fly paper. The more the cat tried to shake off the mess the worse it stuck, until. In sheer desperation, the cat Jumped Into the middle of one of the best beds and made havoc of It. The gardener chased the cat until It rushed up the steps Into the house with the, German after It. Up stairs It went and Into his bed room, and then on his bed. where It succeeded In shaking off the fly paper. The papers have all been taken down. Walked Into a of Rattlers. James J. Conrad, formerly with the firm of Miller, Sloss & Scott of San Francisco, had a hair-raising experience at Tucson, Ariz. While out bunting in Pliua canyon. t V, LARGE "OALLERY." always Interesting, no matter In what form and tennis Is a game which requires de velopment of both mind and body. Some sports which are always kept before the public gaze require only physical develop ment, but In tennis the mind Is an Im portant factor, and we are constantly hear ing of a tennis match being won by super ior head work. In the recent tournament for the championship of the city Conrad Toung beat Art Scrlbner by superior head work all the way through. Scrlbner had been playing at the University of Ne braska and was in perfect form, with all sorts of stroke and returns, and It was said and even feared by Young himself that his superior condition would tell In the long three out of five match, and that he would win out If the match went for more than three games. Young brought his superior experience and long head Into the game and by applying unexpected tactics liter ally ran Scrlbner off his feet. Ha would run forward with hls.serve and kept Scrlb ner running back and forth across the back court until the younger player was worn out and his superior training was reduced to naught. This Is merely given as an illustration of what a magnificent game it is to develop all parts of a man. The mind Is also on the alert to antici pate the play of an opponent and to force the play. A plnyer must not only see and anticipate the action of his opponent, but must also be scheming to work the same idea on his antagonist. The crack player is so developed In this matter that In play ing against a weaker player ho is able to continually place the ball absolutely out of his reach. . For these and other reasons tennis can readily be classified as one of the real sports and a sport which can be played by more players than most any other game. It Is a game for the novice to play during the falling shades of evening, as well as for the expert during the heat of the day. It is an ancient game and one that will long live because of its very character. Mad Anthony Button , A handsome button, evidently from the coat of one of the merry officers who served under Mad Anthony Wayne in his campaign against the Indians of the North west territory in 1794, was recently picked up on the site of his camp, eighteen miles from Pittsburg, on the north bank of the 'Ohio river. The button Is solid silver, and when it was found by Attorney J. R. McCrelght of Pittsburg and Rev. R. B. Carrell of Baden was covered with the dirt of more than a century. When General Wayno was sent to punish the Indians for the defeat of General St. Clair he established a camp at what was known as Leglonvllle, where the button was found. Here for almost two years ho drilled his men, and when he met the In dians his victory was complete. ten miles from this city, he walked into a den of rattlesnakes, and It was only after a hard fight that he managed to es cape. Passing Into an Inclosure walled by rocks, where a wounded bird had fallen, he was horrified to see a number of the venomous reptiles, and all rattling their warning. Several of the snakes had changed their positions after his entrance, blocking his exit. The battle commenced, and it was not until after Conrad hud killed nine that he was able to beat a retreat. One vicious fellow struck at him, and either the thickness of a leather legging or the fraction of an Inch saved him from the deadly bite. In relating the experi ence, several hours afterward, Conrad still showed the effect of the nervous tension he had been under. Fasts Twenty-Two Days. Ernest Carter of Columbus, O , aged 4u, ended a fast of twenty days, devoting sev eral hours to his first meal, which con sisted of an ice-cold watermelon. He ate the melon very slowly, chewing each piece thoroughly. Carter attempted the fast which is his third one in an effort to cure himself of dry catarrh, and thinks that the fust has greatly benefited hi in. For the next eighteen days, Carter says, he will cat nothing but fruit. Ilu will diet himself on melons, rf-arhes, bananas, plums, liui kl. berri.-s and other fruits Ha has not decided on his diet following the eighteen days. Lottery lierk on Mreel C nr Fares. The Mexican Electric Tramways com pany, limited, of the City of Mexico has adopted a novel method of keeping a rheck on its passenger fares. This company claims that it suffered heavy losses each month through the dishonesty of some of Its conductors and the many efforts that were made to detect the guilty persons were unsuccessful. W. W. Wheatly, gen eral manager of the company, determined a few months ago to Inaugurate a lottery system In connection with the passenger department of the road. Ills scheme was laid before the proper authorities of the Mexican government and received .their ap proval. Each passenger when lie paid his fare was given a lottery ticket by the con ductor. This ticket stood a chance of draw ing one of the 09 money prizes offered by the company. These prizes range from 11,000 down to a few dollars. The drawing la held monthly. The first drawing took place a few days uso. There were many thousands of tlikets out and the greatest Interest was manifested In the dm wing by the ticket holders. The drawing took place In the presence of Mr. Wheatly, general manager; Sir Charles Kuan-tiuiltli of Lon don, Kng., chuiiman of the b'iard of di rectors, and a representative of the Mexican, government.