V I R f i i 1 5 X r. TitE Omaha SundayBef OMAHA. SVNDAT, JCLT IK U07. () JUDGMENTS I HANK CHANCE would probably give taor than a month pay If -4 ha could llva over a few second of hi life on the Brooklyn ball field. Ills frtenda wilt willingly , forgive him for the one dark mark on hl splendid career as a ball player, but t they will not be able to forget that their Idel's fort are made of clay, after all. No on knows better than Chance that his conduct was Inexcusable even In the stress l.f the game, and under all circumstances, ihe professional athlete must have as per fect control of his temper as he has of his muscles. This Chance did not have. Ills provocation was extreme, but he might have borne In patience a few moments longer the abuse that was being- hurled at him from the bleachers, as well as the pop bottles that were harmlessly falling; around him. Two men were down In the ninth Inning, and within at least two minutes the third would have been out and the gam wts already In Chicago's certain grasp. Tor Just that Instant Chance forgot himself and stained Ms record. Ball play er all over the country have lost control of their tempers at different times, and tha gam ha been marred by many dis graceful wrangles and episodes, but none of thee were ever of championship stult; and this relate to McOraw, who has won for himself th position of premier among rowdloa. He was not a real champion. On Frank Chance rested the hopes of all who favor clean ball, and hi act was a eriou disappointment to hi friends. Tha Incident force attention to a phase of th game that ha been slowly develop ing for several season, until It has reached a point where some serious attention must be paid to It- For several years the au thorities of Die game have devoted all their attention to the rowdy player, until he ha been nearly eliminated from the game, and hsse ball has reached a high place as a contest of skilled and ready wltted ath lete. It I now the unruly spectator, who must be dealt with. All due consideration will be made for partisanship, and for the keen desire to see the home team win, but no stretching of this allowance will cover me of the assault that have been made on visiting clubs by spectators during the last few days. When Cleveland was playing ' In St. Iula recently In one game both Hlnchmsn and Ilradley were made the targets for a continual Are of bottles from the bleachers. Once Hlnchman had to abandon n attempt to catch a foul In or der to protect himself from serious Injury from th volley of bottles hurled at him. flradley suffered similarly, and no effort was made by the 8t. Iouls management to stop the onslaught. The practice of throw ing bottles has become such a menace that It needs Immediate and vigorous treatment. If the rule requiring the home team to po lice the grounds were Interpreted so as to Include forfeiture of a game In event vis iting players are subjected to such violent assaults as are Indicated by the bottle throwing, tfie home manngement would find some way of subduing Its unruly patron. The foul language can hardly be squelched, but the bottle throwing can. and It ought to be. The game of base ball Is one that , appeals more than any other of our sports V 'o fairness ami such episodes as brought tTVank Chance Into trouble ought to be made Impossible. If anybody doubts that the Western league rnoe Is a fierce one lot him look up the record of the last three weeks. There" nothing to equal the way In which De Moines, Omaha, Lincoln and Denver have fought for games during this time. Any body who can pick the sure winner now Is wise enough to win a lot of money. Omaha has a slight advantage just at present In a long string of home games, bat Dcs Moines 1s Just as well fixed, and the Home grounds mean more In Des Moines than anywhere else on the circuit. Having had time to look about since the vent. Tommy Burns finds that the punoh he handed Bosher Bill didn't put him a lot higher up than he was. He got tha "cush," but here comes a welterweight from Boston with an offer to fight him. And Jeff Is opening a combination boose parlor and lodging house at Ik Angeles that will make even the "Poodle Dog" look cheap. Burns' title has a hollow sound. Kit he has the consolation that the money was real. Ex-Omaha pitchers cut some Ice at Phil adelphia during the week. "Tank" Brown Went In and beat the Cubs very prettily; then. Just to show there are others. "Miner" Brown went In nd whitewashed the Quakers. What would have happened If It had been Brown against Brawn even Charley Dryden couldn't describe. Tennis men will soon have the spotlight. The United States opsn begins at Engle wood, N. J., Monday, and from that time on all over the country the courts will be busy. Next week the Omaha City starts, and this, as a precursor for the middle west, promises to be of uncommon Inter est "this season. , The Naps are not giving the White Sox a chance to breathe. Maybe Jones A Co. would appreciate It If Lajole and hi band would let up for a minute. Just long enough to allow the champions to catch their breath. It looks, though, as If the Naps were going to run the Sox to a finish. If almost time to trot out the list of Injuries, etc., from which the foot ball tcnm Is suffertng. An Indication of the progress of the season Is found In Prof. Stairs' announcement of his summer school for foot ball players at Chicago. "Buck"' French' great head ts shown In the fact that he Is the leading run getter and base runner of the league. The cap tain not only theorise for hi men, but he set them the example. He 1 th "Peer less Leader" In the Western, all right. Borne enthusiast baa proposed that Ne braska hav a crew at Poughkeepsie next season. Might be arranged. If the other would agree to a return date on the classlo Salt creek. A new firm: "Sanger tk McNeeley, Wlittewaahers. All Job look alike; satis faction guaranteed; for terms, apply to uck" Francs;." Well, Omaha Is doing quit a much as could reasonably be asked under the cir cumstances. The double-header this afternoon ought to see ths grandstand and bleachers packed. It will be worth the money. t'psets at Euclid atmpjy confirm th be lief that one can't always tell In advance. Otv Tip O'Neill credit for something; he' keeping his mouth shut, wherever be Is. One thing Is soret Washington cant get ny lower because of Bill Bchlpka. By the way: Dvcky Holoea baan t teMchod the pUU yet. QUI BBLERS ON GOLF RULES Fine Playeis Not Among Kickers for Revision. LAWS GOVERN WORLD-WIDE GAME l ulled States Association to Ask for Recognition at St. Andrews When the Code Is Next Amended. At no very distant time the United State Oolf association committee Is to ask for a conference with the rules of golf commit tee of the Royal and Ancient Golf club at St. Andrews, Scotland, or at least for rec ognition when next the rules are to be revised. What will the answer be when the re quest of the American golfers reaches th autocratic Sawneys of St. Andrews? The gray city by the Rclen Is not nearly so grim and cool as the temper of the dom ineering golf committee. To the usual phlegmatic and conservative deliberation with which the committeemen treat the communications sent to them, must this time be added grain of precaution. All they know of American golf Is that one Travis won a championship at Sandwich and that many "hrltera a' " are feathering their nests as professionals In this coun try. The golf of the colonies Is dearer to the Scotch court. The predicament to be faced and dreaded ts whether to recognlxe the Americans will not also compel recognition of Australia. Canada, New Zealand, Bouth America, Japan, India, France, Germany, South Africa; Egypt, and many more places where golf has to be fitted according to the rules as they stand. To temper the rules for the Americans, horrible thought to a canny Scot burgher, may force a recogni tion of many more odd characters who play the game. The shortest way out of the di lemma will be to courteously decline the request of the United States Oolf assocla tlon. To yield to It would lead to annual congresses of golfers from all over the world to patch up the rules. The rules are a complete and satisfactory code except to the quibblers. Just as the "rocking chair fleet'1 of the club carries the greatest kickers on yachting laws and eltquotte, there Is In golf a set of veranda sharps who can pick many discrepancies In the rules. If they played the game more they would clear the cobwebs from their minds. There Is one sort of golfer, who may be classed as the tournament sharp, who can quote the rules offhand, and through the knowledge often steals a hole from a generous or careles opponent. As a protection, therefore, It Is wise to study the rules before going to hunt for cups, and In a general way, an elemental knowl edge of tho rules will add to the enjoyment of golf. The rules were made for Scottish golf, and in that country the players Imbibe the fundomontal principles of them with their mother's milk, and they seldom have to consult the book. Scots carry this suavity regarding the rules wherever they travel. and It Is the best way for a golfer to treat the edicts. This attitude has recently been expressed very happily by David R. For n a Soot of that Ilk very prominent In Chlcngo golf. In reply to a query from the Golfers' Mngaxlne he wrote: I am glad to learn that the United States Qolf association executive committee pro pones to have a conference with the rules of golf committee of the Royal and Ancient Qolf club of St. Andrews before undertak ing to make any serious changes In the ,,T,.. r,f ffnif for this country. So many Americans go abroad every year and ilay goil ai tH. Anarews nun mu wherfi that It would be a great pity to have one set of rules for the old country and another set for this country. It may be possible to express the old rules In clearer language and to arrange them In more con venient form, but I think It would be a misiake to radically change them. For my part I can scarcely understand the uemann tor a cnangu. uetuo i hoti have a dispute with anyone and oonae n....nilv novor have to refer to the rules. For medal play competitions It Is, of course, desirable mar mere bikjuiu w . hinltv of lanauaae or doubt of the meaning and everyone will wolcomo any Improvements in mese respects un ni rr'-,-,,!.. hut I do not wish to Play with anyone who finds It necessary to refer to tho rules more man once in u Every five years! There is the true spirit of golf back of this stipulation. Tet It Is often wise tb seek an exact knowledge of a penalty or privilege when at medal play, for then eacU player must guard the honor of th rire field. The putting greens of Scotland are "brown" of sand or clay In many countries; Its whims are cactus plants or high grass, and there are no rab bit scrapes elsewhere, but Instead land crabs, snake holes and elephant hoof prints. As a consequence there are situa tions forever arising that are not covered by the rules. Questions on such point come In hundred to the rule of golf com mittee from all part of the earth, and they are answered in batches. Other questions that crop up regularly are due to an Ignorance, eras and pro found, of the elementary principle. At medal play a round may not be discon tinued for any reason. In justice to the other competitors, yet the question must often be asked whether It Is fair to dla qualify a player who waits In shelter or under a tree for a rainstorm to pass. It 1 extraordinary, too. that so many do not know the rule for a lost ball at medal play. Hundreds habitually break the rule in ignorance and merit disquali fication. The almost Invariable delusion is that If you lose a ball at stroke play you drop another under penalty of a stroke, as near as possible where you judge the first ball was lost Some drop on the fair green, others tee, and It Is quite exceptional to find a player who know the rule accurately. If there is a revision of the code th words "loss of distance" should be Sil mtnated, as they are a cause of confusion. When a ball 1 lost at stroke play the proper thing Is to return as near as poa slble to the spot from which the lost ball was struck, tee a ball and lose a penalty stroke. One of the Instance of clumsy sxpres slon In th rules appear In No. t. If th parsnthetlcal clause be eliminated, it makes the rule a farcical one. It reads: 'The ball must be fairly struck at. not scooped, scrapsd, nor spooned, under pen alty of the loss of the hole." What was meant Is: "The ball must be fairly struck at; the penalty for a scoop, scrape or spooned ball Is loss of the hole." Within the last few month a western player has brought out an Amsrloan code of golf rules, but It gains little In oonclse- ness and no one plays under It; yet Mr. Jermain's code Is of value aa a suggestion, I and there Is nothing ambiguous in any of ! his rule. Walter Fairbanks ha prepared a set of rules of golf In brief which is useful. and Alex Brltton of the United States Oolf association committee ha suggested a digest of the rules to aid la understanding them. Fairbanks is a veteran amateur golfer and hi view nick well with those expressed by Forgan. He wrltee: A very hlgn authority long ago told the world that "th letter kllleth, but the spirit maketh alive." The rules are amaslogly ffeotlve among real golfer. Who ever heard of a dispute between two first class professional or amateurs Th rules em body the principles of th gam aa we all wish to see It played with sufficient clear ness for all good players who hav taken the trouble to study them. Rare and in genious problems arising from them are of small consequence and can be easily de cided bv Faulty. The mil trouble Is that so few players will mnks thi'insclvss ac quainted with the rules. Tbe agitstlon for a recasting of the rule Is not restricted to this country, for there has been a gvneral dcelre for a new and briefer set in England. The decision of ttie rulMB enmmlttaA nf Rt Andrew ere often sharply criticised, but there Is no appeal from them Recently In deciding a point that arose In a foursome In the Edtn burgh Despatch trophy tournament, the committee had to deal with these facts: At the fifteenth green A and D i ball lies about a foot from the hole and C and D's ball two or three Inches from the hole. A and B are there In three strokes and C and n In four strokes. A has taken up his stand to putt, with his club two or three Inches In front of the ball, when the ball moves, caused by a sudden gust of wind, but It lines not touch either himself or his club. A stops and again addresses his ball, and holes out In four strokes. C and D claimed the ball moved and should be penalised one stroke, making the hole a half In 6, C and D not being asked to hole out. The question whether there Is a penalty attached or not the nlavera agree to leave to the committee of the tournament to decide. C and D say nothing about claiming the hole, and all are under the Impression that the hole at least Is a half In 6. A and B still hold th honor and drive to the sixteenth hole with out any challenge. After the matoh C and D now claim the fifteenth hole, saying that A played two consecutive strokes, and the committee uphold their claim, and award C and D the hole according to rule 34. Is this rtehtT The answer of the committee was: "A appears to have grounded his club and the movement of the ball constituted a stroke and not a penalty stroke. B shoutd then have played. Not having done so, A ana B lose the hole. The matter was left to the committee to docldc, and their de cision 1s correct under rule 4, paragraph 2, and rule X." Yet the committee erred In this Instance, and hundreds rushed Into type to say so. The opinion was that the ruling would have been in excellent one had it Deen asked for nd given at the moment the Incident occurred. The rules committee was not asked what the law Is when a player In a foursome. having moved his ball In addressing It, plays the next stroke Instead of hi part ner, but whether aside, having definitely claimed a certain penalty, Is entitled to amend its claim after the hole has been quitted, or, as a mattor of fact In this instance, after the match Is over. C and D made no claim at the time for the hole, In respect of A having played out of turn. All they claimed was a stroke for trie al iened movlm of the ball. This claim was disputed by A and B, and the match pro ceeded on the understanding that A and B either halved or won the hole, according as the tournament committee decided whether there was or was not a penalty of one stroke for the alleged moving of the ball. When the match was over C and D amended their claim whether they did so of their own Initiative, or were privily od vlsod by some one else, matters little but they discovered that the penalty tney should have claimed was the hole, because, thv alWed. A Dlaved two consecutive shots, and they accordingly substituted this claim Instead of the claim tor a stroKe mutually screed on at the time as the one to be submitted to the tournment com mittee. The committee violated the well recognised prlnciplo In golf that after a player has declared for a certain course, he Is not entitled to go back on his word. As far back as 1897 the United States Oolf naanctnttou anDOlnted Laurence Curtis and C. B. Macdonald a committee to expound and Interpret the St. Andrews rules ror our golfers. The St. Andrews committee re vised the rules again In JBfll and an Amer ican committee C. B. Macdonald, O. H. Windoller and Walter J. Travis made the Interpretations that appear In foot notes In the official set of rules. It Is well to note that in no way do the Interpreta tions violate the spirit or the letter of the St. Andrews rules. At the present time golf the world over Is governed by the one set of rules. "In the Initial meeting of the United States Oolf association there was much discussion as to what form the constitution and rules should take," to quote some re marks by C. B. Macdonald, "and the late Mr. Havemeyer, our first president, ap pointed me chairman of the committee to draw up the constitution, with instructions to communicate with the leading authori ties on golf In Scotland and In England. Many of these gentlemen were personal friend of mine, some of whom I knew at college in Scotland when I first played the game at St. Andrews In 1872 to 'Tb notably Balfour Melville and Mulr Ferguson. I not only wrote these two gentlemen, but also to Horace Hutchinson, Rider Richardson, W. T. Llnsklll, Aleo McFee, H. H. Hilton. H. S. EVerhard and others who have been associated with all the leading commutes on golf legislation In Scotland. "There was a general consensus of opin ion In all replies on two points. One was praying us to play the game of golf In this country as It was played abroad, not hav ing an American game of golf and a Scotch game of golf, so that when one should come to the tee one need not ask, 'Are you playing American golf or Scotch golfr "Should the same feeling still actuate the iti. Andrews golfers. In a year or two they may extend some recognition to the American committee, and seek their aid when the rules are to be revised. But as they rule the game absolutely the St. An drews committeemen will most likely say, 'Here are our rules. Define them as you please.' " AUTO RACES AT BRIGHTON TRACK Program of Much Interest for tho August Meeting. CONBY ISLAND, N. Y.. July 13c-Judglng from th list of event which have been ar ranged for the Brighton beach automobile race of August I and 10, this affair should be the greatest of Its kind In the history of the sport. The feature event Is a twenty-four-hour International endurance derby, with a gold and silver trophy for the owner of the winning car, and $1,000 In gold coin, to be divided between the two drtvera Preceding this contest two five mile, two ten-mile, a fifty-mile, and a 100-mll race will be run off. The entry blank for the Brighton meet have been ent out, and the early receipt of a goodly number of entries Is expected, particularly for tha long distance races. In which tha number of starter will be limited. The fifty, 100, and twenty-four hour con test are open to stock cars, which may be tripped, of sixty-horse power or under. In the last named event each entrant may nominate two car, and the second car may Le substituted In case of accident to the first, under a sliding penalization of lap. Automobile track racing ha come to the front again this year, largely through the excellent test and thrilling sport provided by long distance races. Covering for Torn Tiro Cnatna;. A very good "mancheon" for covering a torn or cut tire casing may be Improvised out of aa old-fashioned leather boot leg. A strip three or four Inches longer than th rupture In the tire casing should be cut from the softest part of tha bootleg and should be worked rapidly between the hands to render it pliable. It should theu be bound firmly In place, anything from a stout cord to a leather thong serving for I th purpose, care being taken to "anchor" the lashing to one of the spoke o that it I cannot creep, HOME MADE OR FOREIGN CAR Difference, in American and European Construction. OPINION OF EXPERT ON TOPIC Yankee Dnllders Are Adopting French Details and Designs Fast Enough to r rod ere Morn Better Results. Mr. Berne Nadall, the Canadian engineer and automobile expert, writes to the Motor Way an Interesting and valuable article on "Differences In American and European Construction," In which he says: The American makers are fast discarding their frenk Ideas for the orthodox French engineering Job. I can almost see In the last few months by perusal of the various motor papers the rapid change the Amer ican manufacturers are making in the proper direction, vis: Two- four and six-cylinder automobiles with vertical engine In front, sliding gear transmlsRlons. magneto Ignition, Cardan and double chain drives. There are still a good many points with regard to detail that need attention on this side of the water. One particular point I notice In the American cars of the four cylinder type, and that Is the great height these engines are above the ground. Amer ican roads are pretty rough, and, while It Is necessary to have good road clear ances. It Is Just as necessary to have en gines set low, and it is Just as easy to have good road clearances (from nine to ten and a half Inches 1s the limit) with a low engine as It Is with a high engine. If the Frenchmen- and the Italians were to transport their plants to America they would still keep their engines low snd In crease tho road clearance to the limit. Another difference I notice between the American and continental practice Is the almost general adoption of the dry cells In America afralnst the sccumulator or mag neto Ignitions used abroad. The magneto is now as much a part of the continental car aa the pump or radiator, and while at present the dual system Is In vogue (mngneto and accumulators), this Is fast changing to a low tension magneto syRtem, which I forecast will eventually be a stand- lard Ignition system on all large enrs. Further, in France. Italy, ungium ana Oermany almost all lorge cars are sold ftl chassis form by the makers and the body proposition being entirely separate and In many Instances purchased from the car rossler. Separate cast cylinders with end plntes are finding great favor, and Americans should hasten the adoption of this class, ns It makes a more compact, better cooled engine, with many advantages over the cylinders cast In pairs. To enumerate these advantages, we have simpler castings, and in cases of breaks ge of one. It does not mean the price of two. Also, with the piste Idea, besides the compactness In the casting, It hos the same advantages of proper cooling with the extra advantage of ease In cleaning If neceBRary. Many makers also have the one piece casting which Includes the top of the crank case, that Is, that the top of the crank case and cylinder rroper should be one piece, and all bushings, bearings, etc., are hung to these top pieces. Forced lubrication by pump which is In tegral with the engine Is accepted as the best In Europe. This system Is made to give besides the ordinary splash a constant level In the crank case reservoir, a posi tive oiling to all parts from above. The oil gauge only Is shown on the dash and the oil Is seen through the glass gauge as always running upwards. Multiple disc clutches have come to stay, and the Americans are rapidly copying them, the Prof. Ileleshaw clutches being perhaps the best. Six-cylinder engines are rapidly displac ing four-cylinder engines of the higher cowers. Generslly speaking, the tendency abroad Is to put better material into the cars nan Is usually used by American firms. As far as I can Judge, you can count on your Angers the number of makers In the United States who are putting up their cars of vanadium or nickel ateel. And many of them use these higher grade ma terials Injudiciously. Another point that Impressed me Is the fact that Americans do not study fuel economy In the same manner that It Is studied abroad. Also, they seem to pay mare particular Interest to what they call fool-proof Ideas In preference to what we may term an ordinary device. - Fool-proof Ideas are sometimes proved to be quite the reverse, and such a thing as an auto mobile carburetor with three or four ad justments Is anything but fool-proof. At the present time the European Is busy studying details On standard lines, such as noiseless valves, nontromblor colls, de tachable rims for the tires, and the like, and there are already many successful ones on the market. For the present I do not know that there Is anything else that strikes me unless I might say In favor of the Americans, that they are coming along very rapidly and 1 predict the early demise of the Imported cars. In fact, my above remarks are from general obsnrvatinns, and should I par ticularly mention the names of a fow hlKrt class American cars, I would have to ad mit that they are as good as any seen abroad. With regard to general design, the Ameri cans are a bit behind In bodies. There seems to be too much of what might be called a "kinetic" feeling of the general designs of the bodies, which I consider Is wrong and which makes It easy for one to pick out a foreign car from among the American makes. The art of the French man seem to predominate In all European cars when It cornea to body making, and the feeling of the French car body la more on lines that we might describe as "statlo," which Is a sort of contrast to the American design. This static design on a low-set car with a low-wheel base certainly de notes power and speed, and. after all, 60 per cent of the purchasers desire such an effect, while half of them do not realise the causa. HIS AUTOMOBILE NAMED DOBBIN Illinois Man Finally Buy n Machine and Tell Why Ho Did It. W. A. Merrlam of Lagrange, HI., has finally bought an automobile, much to the relief of the dealer of Automobile Row, In Chicago, all of whom have tried In vain to sell him a machine for two year past. Demonstrations, endurance testa, economy runs svery known metho.1 of selling a "prospect" have been show ered on Mr. Merrlam by the agent of the best known machine for two year past, but Mr. Merrlam was proof against them all. Why he finally bought a machine Is an Interesting story and should prove In structive to automobile dealer generally. "You see," said Mr. Merrlam, "I wanted an automobile to take the place of nw horse. Now, my horse never tried to gj sixty miles an hour; If he did I would have taken him out and shot him. Nor did he go up steep hills at full speed or through mud like a flying machine; if he did I would have to get rid of him, for what I wanted was comfort and safety for myself and my family. When the dealers used to take me out in their fly ing devils or whatever they call their crack cars I just held on and said noth ing, but I thought to myself, 'I'm glad the fumlly ain't with me,' and I made up my mind to wait; that the right ma- chine wasn't made yet for a family man like me. But last week the Oldsmoblle man came around, right after breakfast, and said: 'I've Just hitched up, so to peak, at my barn took me three min utes to do It; that's quicker than harness ing a horse. Isn't It? Let me take you to town.' So we got In, and. while we didn't speed up any at all. we made the trip in less than half the horse's time. 'Now,' said he, 'we'll suppose It's good weather and you have your horse In front of your office, so we'll leave the machine here until noon. No one can steal It; I lock the wheels,' which h did. Then at noon w took my family horse home to lunch. After lunch he showed how, in a day or two, my wife could run the machine and be safer In It thaa In a horse vehicle Then he got my grandfather Interested, who feels too old to safely manage a horse, and blamed If the old man wasn't running the machine In a few minute. Then tbe nurse and baby were taken out, nd when ws found how It was Impossible for the machine to run away and how much safer It was than any horse vehicle could possibly be I began to look at auto mobile In a dlffereut light. AU told we must have traveled over fifty miles that day. We did everything a family horse could do, and did It better and safer, and when we left the ruacftlne In the barn Anally we knew it was not eat ing Its head off, and, distance considered, was cheaper than a horse. "I think the Oldsmoblle, people are right In advocating their new touring car aa a practical family proposition something that can be relied for the pleasure of any member of the family, from the baby to the grandfather. Racing stunts and all that sort of thing are attractive to some, but there's a mighty lot of people like myself that want none of It. I am will ing to let my .son race my car; I know It can go fifty miles an hour, but you can bet it will never go that fnst while I'm in it. Neither will It climb preci pices, or swim rivers, or ford swamps, or do anything a family horse wouldn't do. What I am glad to know Is that there are four ways of stopping It In stantly; that It can't explode; that It la always ready for use, and that every member of the family Is safer In It than behind any horse. I've called my ma chine 'Dobbin' because It Is going to be the family favorite and the pet of us all. I think If the auto dealers knew how much of the Dobbin feeling there ts in almost every family they would sell more car." TOURING PARTIES THE ORDER Omaha Auto Owner Are Busy on the Road. Touring parties are the order of the day In automobile circles In Omaha. Several of the Omaha owners are at present tour ing through the eastern states, some started yesterday and some have Just returned from extensive trips. This ts the ideal season of the year for touring, for al though occasional rains may be mot, the warm weather soon dries the roads and the tourists are able to resume shortly after a shower, or even a heavy rain. A. T. Austin and son returned Friday from a trip of 2.S00 miles taken through tho middle west states In a Stoddard-Dayton. The remarkable feature of the trip was the fact that, although traveling at the rate of 2n0 miles a day, the occupants of the car did not have to touch the engine once on the trip. Starting at Chicago, a run was made to Rochester. N. T., without mishap. From Rochester they returned to Cleveland, thence to Columbus and Indianapolis and back to Chicago. A start was then made for Omaha and when Clinton, la., was reached a four days' rain set In, which caused the party to give up the trip and ship for Omaha. The entire distance traveled was t,800 miles. Several Omaha owners loft yesterday for Rock Island to attend the Transmisslsslppl Golf association tournament, which will be held, beginning tomorrow, on the govern ment links at the arsenal. Fred Hamilton took his chauffeur. Hunter, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. 8tewart and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Burns. T. V. Mschllnd drove his high-powered Olds runabout, taking a goodly supply of Inner and other tubes. They will travel together. Friday Mr. Hamilton telephoned around Iowa and found several bridge out between Des Moines and Iowa City, so they have decided to follow the more northern route of the Northwestern. Word has been received from G. W. Wattles that he has been to the factory. secured his new machine and is now tour ing New England. In the Automobile World. Wheeled carriages were first .Used In France In li69. Ti. . Iai.....! wnv a rn 1 1 ml often is surer than a main road beset with police trap. W. C. Warwick, representing the trank lln factory, was at tue Power garage last w AeJt'or,mana are nlreafiv under way for Pllisburg s next show, which will be bald as soon after Christmas aa possible. Encouraged by the success of thoir Orphans' Day parade, Pittsburg motorUU are now planning ivr noiot " tbe autumn. The post office department ha authorized Postmaster Aahhurst of Pluladelpiila to experiment with automobiles In the col lection of malls. Prince Borghese entered the Pekln to Paris race from sheer love of sport, being one of the most ardent inoiorluU! on tue European continent. Officials of the Albany Automobile club are fast completing arrangements for the limile road race st for beptember It and upon to amateurs only. The first person to be arrested and fined for violating the speed law at Kitianlng. Pa., was Rev. F. C. Hartehorne, reoior ol an Episcopalian cnurcu. The Automobile Club of America, a New York city organization, now claim to be the largest club of lis kind in the country. It has nearly l.Guo members. "Corn poppers'" Is the term Invented by Philttdelpma motorists for 'the motorcycle policemen who blossom forth each spring and flourish but for a season. R. 8. Buckman of Colorado Spring, en route from the Rocky mountains east, has been at the Powell garage during the last week, overhauling his machine. Nearly 4,&u0 has been raised for the erection of a memorial In Paris to the late M. Serpollet who did so much for motoring both In France and In England. At the Atlantic City Auto Carnival, be ginning August 6. about ,0u0 worth of cups will be distributed to the winner of the sixteen event on the program. A new record from Philadelphia to Pitts burg recently was made by Miss Elsie Jania, the young actress, who drove her car across Pennsylvania in forty-one hours. To accomodate the great demand for Instruction the West Bide Young Men a Christian asaoclatlon. New York, has been compelled to open a night automobile school. A record of fifty and a half hour recently was made from Los Angeles to Khyolite, Nev.. by Fred H. Vahrenkamp. Most of the 400 mile lay trough Death Valley. January and February are the bet month for racing on Ormond Beach, Fla.. because the northeast storms of December leave the strand In excellent condition for speeding. Among members recently elected to the Royal Automobile club of England la the wealthy, powerful Duke of Portland, who owns a fine "stud of motors." aa th Britons style It. , So many tourists are taking their Ameri can cars with them to Europe this year that one eastern builder has found It prof itable to open an agency at Paris to sup ply spare parts. 1 1 , I, a . Anrt.A th CVflVlCt SVB- teui of road buldlng so successfully em ployed ny oiner siuies. i"v In 'gangs of twenty each with an armed guard to each gang. At the recent semi-annual meeting of the Association of Licensed Automobile Manu facturers ji.OuO was appropriated to be used at the discretion of a good roads committee, to be appointed later. In the endeavor to provide a dust proof road the municipal authorities of Garden City. L. I., Willi have a top layer of vltrlfled brick placed on a macadamized street much patronised by motorists. Breaking away from a Pittsburg abattoir a wild bull wandered about the cliy for three days defying capture, until It was chased Into a park and co mured by a squad of police In a touring car. John D. Rockefeller, according to the tax assessor of Cleveland, ride In eight machines In that city all valued at only ll.SuO. In sharp contrast, Mayor "Tom" Johnson uses three machines worth M.700. A New York capitalist, who recently ad vertised In Pittsburg, offering llO.uuO for a man with a practical Idea for a puncture less tire, received M replies. One of the Ideas he believes will prove feasible. British autolsts are having their troubles with the oil trust. In response to repeated public demands, the embargo on petrol has been removed from ships passing through the Sue canal. Yet the price of oil keep up. In spit of all pleadings. Governor Hughe has virtually put an end to all hope for the Vanderbilt cup race on Long Island use of the state troop to protect tbe crowd iroin uangrr. Active steps are being taken by the Royal Automobile cluh of Great Britain to Biecure ths co-operatlon of Its own members, a well as of the members of affiliated clubs, on the suppression of sirens and exhaust cut -out a When James B. Duke, head of tbe To- hncco trust sslls for Europe, wlK-re he will ninrry Mrs. William Itiiusn of Atlantic, he w til take with him on Amcrlcan-bullt car, which cost :,m. In which be end his 1-rUle will tour the continent. The origins! "gas bij;gv" built by tleorgr W, Seldrn In 1vj7, still Is serviceable, hav ing been run on the Out tenberg. N. J., trsck recently to satisfy counsel In s suit over the 8li1en pstrnt tlist It could bo operated under Its own power. Probably the largest single order for elec tric vehicles was pieced recently by a Brooklyn, N. Y., department store. It wus for fifty one-ton delivery wagons, live two ton delivery trucks snd five one-ton wag ons for special delivery purposes. A recent count of vehicles pnslng throuvh Fleet street. London. In twelve hours, re sulted In a total of 10.372, of which 1.121 Were motor driven. In ISSI a count showed only S,3i vehicles passing through the great thoroughfare In twenty-four hours. Governors Stokes of New Jersey, Stuart of Pennsylvania and Hiurhcs of New York and Colgate Hoyt, president of the Auto-' moniio ciud or America, are among those aked to serve aa Judges at the Atlantic City automobile carnival, August 6. 8. F. Edge, who recently smashed world's records by the wholesale on the new ce ment motor trsck at Urooklatid, England, and who covered 1.W0 miles In 14 hours. St minutes and 16 seconds, announces he will attempt soon to lower that record. Th banked corners, or rather bends, of the great llrooklanda track In England, are of 1.(11 fet radius, with huge slopes of saucer-like curvature, so steep In the steep est parts than one cannot walk upon them, the maximum gradient being one In two. Philadelphia autolsts who pass through fashlonnble Hryn Mawr, the pretty Penn sylvania college town, have been eom- fielled within a few weeks to hand over a srge sum In fines levied because they failed to toot their bonis at a certain cross ing. one of the few cars to finish with a per fect score In the recent strenuous relia bility contest of the Copenhagen Auto club was on American two-cylinder machine. The dlstaneo wos 3O0 kilometres over the hllllest roads In the vicinity of the Danish capital. Experiments made bv Iondnn hospitals show conclusively that dally spins In motor cars largely Increase the red corpuscles In the blood, as well as tlielr haemoglobin Content. The experiments further show that automoblllng s an excellent cure for Insomnia. The members of the American Emigra tion commission, who recently toured Italy In an automobile, were objects of srreot wonder to th reiiiilents of manv remot" sections of Sicily and Calabria, who for the first time saw a vehicle moving with out horss. The new army automobile Invented bv Dr. 8. N. McLean of Cleveland will be given a test this month by the United States ofl'.eers at Sandy Hook proving grounds The car will follow floating tar gets Its rapid fire gun peppering away at lii" rounds a mtpute. When the contestants in the Peking and to Paris race reached the monastry occupied by the I,nm of Urga. who Is second only In Importance to the Grand Lama of Thibet, the princely potentate had his attendants drag forth a motor car of his own, which proved to be cheap and worthless. Just The Power of a Man t.v - :wr; I Prof. THS OKXAT PBOPHXTia BUSK, rEXtS4AlTElTTI,T LOCATES AT "1KB XXiMB," BOS K. 18th ST. WONDERFUL! WONDERFUL! Without asking a single question and before you speak one word HE TELLS YOUR FULL NAME Also give nam of your sweetheart! whom you marry; your age, street and number where you live; your past, present and future. Telia of friends and ememles: tall you th truth, good or bad. X also positively tell you whether husband, wif or sweetheart 1 tru or fals; he give you name of friend and enemle or rivals) reads your en tire life from Infancy to old age, giving dates, fact and figures. Advice ou business, law, health, lovs, marriage, divorce and all private and financial difficulties! reunite separated! renews youthful vital force. If you are wor ried with the cares of business, whloh means a loss to your pres ent fortune, Z,s veaus can tell you how to avoid It. Xf you are wor lied rag ardlng your social life health or your af fair of heart Xieveau can set your mind at rest and (how yo mean of dispell lag your trouble- v ?! PROF. EXTRA! PRIVATE. INSTRUCTIONS Is Olalrroyanoy, Xtyehio Fnsnosnsna and Hindoo Fhllosophy. Oomplst oour how to tell your own future, how to be abl to tall any stranger name. Parlor 202 N. 18th St.-"THE ELMS" Everything Confidential MAID AXWATB XH ATTEJTT) AVOB HOVBfl 10 tOO A. M. TO 61OO P. M. BUM OATS, lllOO TO 4lOO i,ijr'"! ismi sii n iiiii mi m Prof. Leveaux Speaks all Languages So Phone Call Answered and ao Heading by Kail Turn to page B, Hew Section, in today's Sunday Bee, and read th account of th Strang re covery of m lost diamond. TOO BUSY TO 213 a. JBL five days. Still taking orders for 1908 Stoddard-DaytonsN Wise people will place their order in time. Only one other American car has been as popular as the Stoddard-Dayton this year and none of them are for 6ale. O ar allotment of fifty for next year will'soon be gone. Still have the old Pope; being overhauled. Price has gone down to $1,600.00. DEIUGIIT AUT0M0BIME CO. 1AI4-16-1S who "stuck" the lama, the Europeans were Unable to discover. Falling a victim to "mntorlt Is" Alfred F l,iiK!ieiil, a 1'biladelphla voutu of 24. soM his hlrthrlnht to an relate of i''".'" for a loan of .l.io, Kitn uliirh to buy sn auto mobile. Tiring of the luai bine be sold It for a mere song and has now begun suit to recover his right to the ustate. Illustrative of the fad for brightly painted cars, the irim.ii;. r of an eastern anionic-, bile manufacturing concern recently re ceived a bright purple had pencil, atxxit three Inches long, from n customer. lt!t the s'. -mention that the csr ordered shoull be linlsjir.l In that particular tint. Ill vetoing a hill providing that no per sons should le permitted to operate an ei-Klne. IrreSfX'i 1 1 e of motor power, ex cedlng ten-horse power, unless the opera tor be a licensed steam engineer. Mayor Mcl'h-llon of New Voik pointed out that It would apply to auto nohlles and hence was absurd. In addition to Its I.ake Mnhopno and Long lleach tiub houses, the City an.l Country club Is making arrangements for another country home nearer New York City, to provide n romletvous for ths cluh members who wish to make short evening trip after business hours. While F. C. Whitney, the American horseman wos In London recently, he hsd sn urgent business call to Florence. Ho made the trip both ways In an automobile, Covering 3.Hm miles through France and Ilalv In less than seven Jays Wherever possible he drove at the rate of fifty mile an hour. Darlington P. Rhodes of Denver, one of the leading road engineers of the country, has lieen Interviewing motorists of Penn sylvania upon tho proposed fia.WO.'WI stato highway between Philadelphia and Pitts burg, and declares that the proposition, though defeated In the last legislature, I not dead by any means. Worse troubles than those experienced In the Gobi desert awaited the contestants In the Peking-Paris race between I'rga nd Klr.hkta. Several cars became mired In deep morasses, the passengers being at th mercy of the setnl-snvuge Mongolian, who, however, were willing to help the motorist out when money wos shown them. A competition for devices whloh will pre vent cars fmm being stolen Is being or ganlxed by the French Association Gen erale Automobile. It is Intended to develop spparntus cnl ulnted at once to prevont tampering with cars, left unattended on the street and also the clandestine use of cars luft In garages by their trusting owners. While the Kngllsh Judges appear to be strongly prejudiced against motorists, Kng lish Juries, seemingly, desire to play fair. An nutolst was sued recently at Hath be cause his machine frightened a cob horse. The Jury held that the fright was caused bv smoke emitted by the auto, which was Just starting, but that It was not due t(t any negligence on the part of the motorist. Touring motorists should beware tho risk Involved In buying luhrlcatlng oil for th motor of agents and dealers In out of th way places as the average gasoline engine Is very sensitive to poor grades of oil. In case an emergency demands the use of some unknown ond heavy compound It I well to mix a little kerosene with It before taking chance on dirty valves or gummed cylinder. - Leveaiix To the young man starting la bnsinsss; to th man with Inter est in stock and bond, to th pro fessional man, and to th man and women In all walk of life, X. veaux's great phy chlo and oocult gift are Invalua ble. If, therefor, you would know th best means of attaining uocasa In Ufa, X.. veaux by all mean. Gl r LEVEAVX EXTRA! WRITE AN AD r '. V 'n.fc stt-snunsTBtMHMBMj Been putting in the Manganese steel vault for the City Savings Hank this week. This vault is really worth seeing. It will be, when com pleted, the finest and most modern bank vault west of Chicago. All sold out of the little Four Cylitder Fords. Carload on the way which will reach us 'in about rarnam Streal