TTTR OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUOUST 1WVS. TniXMAnAStiNnA3aBd WRITER to th Sua Ball Maga A- offer aoma argument to prove that th glow hu not added to. but detracted from tha aclnc of tha game. Ha contends tbat It free falaa excellence to Holding- and put bana on tha batter which fana do not enjoy., HI chief argument la a compart on of fielding average twenty year ago "d today. Tor Inatanee, he show that each tart aa Jerry Denny and Jack Glasscock were far below. In their avwragee, than uch men aa Harry Btelnfeldt and Johnny Bvera, or Bobby Wallace and Hana Wag ner. Ha laya the high percentage which tha ftlayer of today la able to make entirely to the use of the big glove. And there le no doubt hia argument haa truth. In It. He -does not advocate tha total abolition ef tha glove, but want It reduced In rise. The catcher, he says, ahould wear a glove nearer the else and shape of his hand, and neither he nor the first baseman ahould be allowed to use a bed tick. H would not Object If the fielders did hot wear any gloves. This gentleman la on a false trait. The glove a an element of progress In tha development of tha greatest of games which Is greater today than in any previous period of Its history- The glove haa come :o stay, and no matter how good" the game a-as yesterday without tha glove. It la bet ter today with It. He argues that many a batter now la deprived of a fair hit by means of the glove, snd that but for the glovo ws would sea mora good batting and a hlar grade of play. Let's see? A ball is sent on a swift line to Mr. Shortstop, who, by means of his glove. Is enabled to get It and cut off a hit. Logically, without the glove Mr. Shortstop would have tried for the ball, but missed It. The result? Error for Mr. Shortstop. How do errors raise the standard of the game? Or Mr. Shortstop, without the glove, would have made no effort to get tha ball, be couldn't, and yet bow la your standard elevated?. Record ball never Improved the game. The man who covers the widest area of ground la the man who la sought after and the man who makes the game Interesting. It la not necessary and would not be Just to Impeach tha character of work of the old-time player by saying that present-day players are covering more ground than did their fathers of yesterday. This makes the game more spectacular and gives It a hold on the pubile which nothing can break. Tha rule making u strike out of a- ball that hit the bat without any fault or ef fort of tha batsman and bounds off Into foul territory Is becoming unpopular with many managers. It will not be surprising If a determined effort la made nxt winter to efface thla rule from the law book. This rule had Its origin In that general movement to equalise matters between pltdher and batsmaa and remove all possi bility for trlokery on the part of the latter, which would work hardship on the pitcher. The motive was laudable, but th operation of the rule gives rise seriously to the crea tion If the effect does not more than bal ance the scales and leave the odds ma terially against the man at bat. How often do we see this very play put a batsman In the hole at a crucial time without add ing Interest to the game-? There Is no pro cess of reasoning that will remove from consideration the element, of apparent un "fafrnen and Injustice which thla rule Im poses on the batter. "It take but pna to hit It," Is the coach' cry of years, but how often Is that one waated on an Inshoot the batter Is positively unable to eacape before It strikes bis bat and goes fowl? It' a strike, but it's not his fault. It he had bis way it would have been a ball; he had no Intention of batting at It The pitcher should have no such advantage of the bats man. A great deal was done for him In ever creating the foul etrlke rule and put ting the pass down to four balls. That ahould be sufficient, In the minds of many managers, to even up matters between him and the man at bat. The extension of the rule to the Involuntary foul ball savors Just a bit of unsportsmanlike advantage and doea not reflect great credit upon the pitcher. It'a a wild pitch or It wouldn't have hit th bat, and It was not a strike ball for tha very tame reason that It wa a wild pitch, and Incidentally It doea not heighten th interest In base ball. Herman (Dutch) Schaefer haa superceded BUI Coughlln aa captain of Detroit. Schaefer' promotion, which 1 admittedly earned, followed the resignation of Cough lln. Coughlln displayed a fine spirit of team loyalty In hla action. . He realised that hla off-work this Reason no longer In spired the players as did the great playing of Dutch, and rather than stand In the way of what he regarded the best Inter eata of hla team he resigned to let another take the lead. That la a sacrifice hit far too difficult for men of leas character and loyalty than Bill Coughlln to make. Old Bill haa been a great man and la yet a good one. but It la all too apparent that he la (lowing up. Denver laid down certain defiant unUma tuma for White Wing- edification at the beglning of thla sesson. But then no man should be too severely criticised for Den ver's lack of form thla year. The team has had the worst sort of misfortune and this la something that managers and owners cannot very well avoid. If all the Denver player were at their best It would very soon appear that a real effort had been aaad to improve the team. Detroit v.ianagement admits Ty Cobb haa won hMf it game with hi bat this year. That Is admits; that Ty is worth th I&.000, isn't U? Incidentally, if tbey don't look ol?t they'll incur the odium of being called a one-man team. Bader haa crowded McDonough out of first place in the league batting list and old . Chick Is third. Kings advance Is one of the sensational features of the league Just aow. The little fellow has gun up to and 1 still marching on. The Giants have secured another tea year lease on th polo grounds. Thla would be more Interesting if the contract carried with It a guaranty of Justice aod protec tion to vlatlng team. L to date the human officer of Ne vada have done nothing in behalf of Br'er Johnson and th plana for the Bursa match are proceeding. Omaha haa played a game thla last week that aeu th pac for th rest of 'em and eom of them made pitiful out trying to follow. If you war a good gueeser do you think you could guess what would happen to New Tork whea the Cubs reach that towtvf Pa'a rabbit foot was working whea he leaded Rhodes. Jimmy Austin Is 4 erond Arlit Latham c base ( POLO PONIES COST HONEY Great. Increase in Value of Seasoned Fa;. HIGH CLASS FLAYERS HAXPTXED Reeenl Blddtag at raakall Keeae gal -Reuse- Bred atoefc Better a lis Dried Twrf Tkaa Tker stlksretii NKW TORK. Aog. t TIs education train th youthful mind, also th brain and th leg of a polo pony. -That' why at auction In June laat here in New Tork two ranch ponies brought aa much a a herd of steers on the' hoof pr a couple of thoroughbred yearling of a fashionable family. The prices were realised. -a the trade reports say, when Foxhall Keene sold nine ponies for $10,125, an average of tl.18. Express brousxht a&lQO and Flu Peter 12. KM, Paul J. Ralney buying th two, while Keene bid In Crotona for rUttO. No type of hers lasts longer than a polo pony or give more fun to th owner, o to a good player prto I no object. But as a rule It is th duffer who pay long price for ponies good plsyers have developed. ' Raised In a bunch of ponies In Texas, Wyoming or some other western rang country, the 4 of 1-year-old will not know the tickle of a curryoomb until taken up for a preparation for tha eastern market. Thla will be In th fall or very early In tha spring. Tails and manes are trimmed, but not docked or "hogged," while the pony Is made wis aa a saddle horse. If taken up In the early fall the ponies may be roughly broken to polo; that la, to follow the ball and not ahlrk under tha whirling of a polo mallet. They come to the east twenty In a oar, and there I a profit In such a bunch If sold for taw a head. Exceptional Indl vlduals sell as high as $1,000 to 300, but those that don't aunlt tha polo player usually go begging for a buyer. They may bring from $100 to $160 for us In har ness, and they are grand value a light country roadsters. Kla et Poalea Meat Liked. "Cutting out" pontes, trained to work hand In hoof with tha cowboys In rounding up cattle or In taking tha certain steer wanted from out the center of the herd, are worth $7M to $1,000 on the ranch of a cow magnate. They do not com aat ezoept by private sale. It la tha aam with very fast racing ponlea, for If an ' easterner wants ana of thla sort he must go to San Antonio, Cheyenne or soma other center and then begin to scout around. Buyer who drop off In Texas on thatr way to south ern California have paid aa high aa $3,000 at private aale for a racing pony. Really this sort are too hotheaded to learn polo, for they can't be placed In the game, and, a with tha natural high Jumper In the hunt' Ing field, they are a source of danger to th other horse and rider, But to the ama teur Jockeys of. tha country club ne prto I too high for a pony that can win for them, to gain th smile of tha .women and tha cheer of their chum. But In consider ing th price of polo ponlea th race ponlea often dwarf thoroughbred, may be elimi nated. Auction sale of seasoned polo ponlea are vary rare In this country. The record price In England la $6,800, paid ten year age for a thoroughbred mar at a disposal aal of a noted pololst at Tattersall'; but th average of the Keene aal will compare favorably with th beat of th Engliah ale. About flv years ago Thomas Hitch cock, Jr., sold two ha. had played for aev. oral seasons. Rowdy brining $800 and EL W, $G0O. 'At this closing out aal ten year ago or so John A. Logan, Jr., Included six sea soned polo ponlea. They brought . front $400 to $800 piece, Wlnthrop Rutherford paying the latter price for a gray, a color he had a partiality for wberf in the gam as one of the Rockaway "big four," and later on. Sprlatf Sales Are tkalek. There are not over a dosen men who bring on droves of polo ponies. They come to certain "pitches" each spring on iong island, in westcneeter county or near the polo club In Massachusetts. Quick sales mean quick profits, and If ao fortunate the dealer may be back again later in the season with fresh ponies. One westerner three years ago sold three car load In three day and set out for home on th fourth $,O0O to th good. But If galea are alow the dealer hav to follow tha polo tournaments ta drum up trade, which cost money, while the ponies all the whil will be eating their beads off. Even when aal are quick, collection are often very alow, and thla 1 a frequent cause of complaint with the dealers. The ponlea are sold only half broken, and a this sort would not sell at auction th way seasoned ponies do ths dealer prefer the lottery of the private sales to taking the chance of an auction of their carload lota. Polo ponle hav to b eondJtlonad by reg ular work aa carefully a racehorse, but unlesa tha veriest novice the owner must himself break the new pony to polo. Each man' gams la different, and a skillful player will not let a groom break In a pony for him. This meana many hour of preo tic strokes and many preliminary match before a pony la letter perfect. A pony broken In by a good man and used by him for two or three season, as with the vio lin of a virtuoso. Improve In us nd If put on th market brings a price far In excess of th value as msre "hose." There la In England a class of gentleman dealer play- era, if it may be ao defined, who make a living by training and selling polo ponlea There are a few of this clase here, but what they earn from polo cornea from coaching the new team. They are willing enough to deal in ponle, but they can't go very far. aa tha raw product la eon trolled by th western dealers. Pea lea Liked ta Eaglaas. Th ponle best liked In England ar thoroughbreds, up to csrylng a heavy man and with th nduranc to gallop on a alow field. Occasionally they ar played In thla country? but none of th erack American players who hav visited Hurllngham ever hav brought back any Engliah ponlea. Th reason Is that tha mixed bred .ranch pony haa good looks and for light and middle weight riders Is all that la needed there or en thla aid of the herring pond, while on tha sua dried, hard baked polo fields of an American August or September he can rid rings around the Onglish ponies, accustomed to galloping oa turf that stay green and soft. , A number of northern gentlemen farmer hav beea breeding polo ponlea, often using JCngltan stallions t mat with American ranch mare, and In ttm w may hav a typ d st'net from th rng horse. Th western ponies, however, new hav enough hot Wood, ss the ranchmen terra the thor oughbred Infusion, and they are breeding 1 or re rrora selected standard bred trelttr now to gala 000! judgment and stamina. A era ay headed pony Is no good In a polo game. Ther s.lll are herds of wild Denies la th west, and during tr if ring In southern nevtaa th trains that carry o.e from the mine thirty mile ever the deaert to the Tenor ah railroad hav armed gearda. our 10 eaca train ef teams, te orevent ths dauntless wild bands from tamped ng ths work horses. Twenty years ago car loads of ranch ponies sold at a profit ta New Tork at 10 a head, and ther ware frequent auction aaiea. The pon'ea Were mn unoroaen out or corrals, snd !t was worth any sum psld for on of them to get th four footed cyclone to th horn stable. Th present western pony is an improved type, for well bred stallions fir year hav been running with th herds, and at some Teiss farms ther I a pedigree with th best ponies. Hare Cash eeded. It is hard cash that makes th polo pony go. All tha expenses of the sport ar eoetly one, but some may be dodied. Not o th coat of th good ponies, and no player, however, exrert, can join In a match and aid hla team If mounted on slow, stupid nags. There may be good ponies still to be picked up In the west for $100, but few know where to find them. A high class player on an ordinary pony, whatever hap pens, la not worth aa much to his team as an ordinary player on a high class pony. Ptayr handle a pony for several months before branding It as a reliable aid for an Important match. There will be a bunch of ponies from the eerly drones In th spring cut loose by the New Tork, Boston snd Philadelphia player at th tourna ment Impending In Narraganaett Pier, Sar atoga and Newport. There Is a general dis position to strengthen the teams for th senior and Junior champioonshlps at an Cortlandt park from August 29 to Septem ber i. so that the playera will work out In matches tha new ponies they have been putting through the preliminary lessons In private. WELSH LOOKS GOOD IN TEISC0 Eagrltsk Llgatwelskt Waats Match with Nelsoa. A FRANCISCO. Cel., Aug. 1. Freddlu weian. trie clever English lightweight wouia like to catch on wHh Battling Nel on or Packy McFarland In this city either In August or on admission day. Welsh says he Is not tied up with Jeffries and Is free to sign for a match here. He Is anxious to box Nelson, and If the Ely fight falls through, hs would like to fight the Dane on admission day. When asked aa whether he would box Nelson to a finish, ne said while he preferred a limit round contest he would agree to take the Dane on tor forty-five rounds on admission dav weisn is a clean-cut chap, and Is not at all boastful. He never eats meat and dur ing his strenuous sieges of "training sub sists on vegetables, fruits and nuts. He believes that a fighter' condition depends more upon how b trains than upon what n eat. NEW COACH FOR THE MIDDIES Palg ( Yal Will Sacceed Catoa a Aaaapolla. AW tv AFOLI B, Md., Aug. L "Jack" Catos the fast former end of Yale, will not coach the middle In foot ball again thla season. mm am nas ror tne hast two years. The executive committee of the Navy Athletic association has aigned with Ray Paige to teach the young sailors next year. Paige is aiao a rale man, having played tackle on the Ell eleven last year, so that ths Tale styl of gsms will be that In use at Annapolis next fall. Tale coaches have been in charge at ths Navy academy glrdlron ror a number of seasons, one of th grad uate from ther being the field meh while Lieutenant Paul J. Daahdell and graduate coaches from the aoedemy have made up th rest of the squad of teachers. Captain Percy Nrothcroft. with the mid hlpmen of the team, will report back from their vacation about the last week In September for the early fall practice. OWES KORAN IS QUITE EAGER Taiaks Ha Caa Rede at the Olympic Defeats. NEW TORK. Aug. l.-Owen Moran. eager for his coming battle with Ab At- ten for the featherweight championship of the world, Is now on his way to Cali fornia. "Even If wa Britishers did lose a lot of Olympic records," said he. "that doesn't prove that we are not going to hav tn featherweight championship." Moran Is as sure of beating Attell this time as ha Is of fighting. You can't con vince him that Attell has anything he hasn't. He bellevee that he won the last contest of twenty-five rounds, which Jim Jeffries called a draw, and he thinks that Jeff refused to give any other decision because he might have hurt hi own popularity. WISCONSIN HAS ITS BLOOD UP Bsrtger will Oa to PiskkHl West Itaiea, MILWAUKEE. Wis.. Aug. 1. -The Wisconsin erw will go to Poughkeepsle next year to race with Cornell, Syracuse and othr erack eastern teams. This haa been decided, through the formation of a new athletic management iv,im m,ytv will give Wisconsin athletic fund 115.000. of which $8,000 will go to pay th crew's expanses to the Hudson races. The Wis consin crew Is not discouraged at the loss of the last race, but the Wisconsin fight ing spirit i rully aroused and there will be such an outburst of enthusiasm the oomlng year as th old school has never seen before, FIVE EASTERN LEAGUE PITCHERS Qalatet Who Thistle They Are Able to Ga l' This Year. NEW TORK, Aug. 1. Eastern league pitchers who have, by their work this year. shown themselves eligible for big league company are McConnell of Buffalo. Kissin ger of Buffalo, Bumpua Jones of Montreal, Mueller or Newark, Sandy Bannister of Rochester, Lafferty of Jersey City and Rudolph of Tononto. Ths best all around pitching work in ths league this year haa been don by Jones of Montreal If the number of wine Is taken Into considerstlon. Next to him must probably be placed Rube JClsslnger. Ha haa pitched more close games and lost more by tough luck then any other pitcher tn ths league. W0JIAN HEAD' OF RIFLE TEAM Miss Catherta Klaa la lln.li. Hoaored la Baglaad. LONDON. Aug. l.-The Cheshire Rifle association for the first tlms In its history. or probably In the history of any other aa soclatlon, has elected a lady as president. Sir Thomas Marshall, who presided at th annual meeting at Chester, moved the elec tion aa president of Miss Catherine King. daughter of Colonel King, who founded ths association with ths lata duke of West minister. Colonel Motherstll said that Miss King rarely mlased the annual shooting meeting at Altcar, and was a most gener ous donor to their funds. Miss King's election was unanimous. CORNELL LOSES OffE GOOD MAS araey O'ftoark Will Net Reiara to caeel Agala. ITHACA. N. Y., Aug. 1. .. Same O Rourke, tor thre year right tack! and guard en the Cornell foot ball team, will not return to the university. O'Rourks is now employed by ths state engineer's de- peitment ta Syracuse, aad he haa decided not to return to Cornell, although he ha only one more year to finish his course. O Rourke s loss will be felt aeverely at Cornell, particularly a seven of laat vear'a team ar gone. Among th other who will aot play next year are Th.n. May, Carl and McCaU TEAM TO CO FOR DAVIS CUP Tennis Playeri to Represent United Statei in Australia. WILLIAM A. LARKED WILL HOT 00 His Veasaer Brother May, Who Doyl aad Behr Ar Looked ( as Other Likely lavadera Irons Her. NEW TORK. Aug. l.-Wlth the cerUlnty that there will be no elimination tennis matches for the Davis cup In either Eng. land or America this year. Interest In th championship honors of the world h really narrowed down to the proposed trip to Auetralls. Whether or not the commit tee In charge of these matters for th United Slates I Jwn Tennis association can prevail upon two or three good men to go to the Antipodes much will depend. The mstches In Australia are not scheduled to take place until November, and therefor there is plenty of time to make the neces sary prepsrsttons. The trouble this year will be in picking a team with a fair chance of victory and getting the men te go. Thus fsr no one hss really played tennis In this oottntry to warrant any eon fldence of success. The nstlonal cham pion, William A. Larned, has said thst h will positively not make th trip to Au stralla. With th exception of the work shown at Seabrlght. William J. Clothier, the 190 champion, hss not performed well enough to wsrrant hla selection. He has been beaten by Edwin Larned In the mid- die states and C. B. Doyle of Washington also has taken him Into camp. Ther haa undoubtedly been an effort on the part of some moving spirits to get Edwin P. Larned into such shape that hs csn qualify, but th young brother of the champion Is not "classy" enough tor such an undertaking. He has beaten Clothier and Little, and that Is about all. Clothier was away off his game, and Little has been out of the running all year. Larned has been beaten seversl times by Mollenhauer In the Long Island championship, and by George f. Touchsrd In the Felipe cup series. ' , Ksrl Behr will naturally come In' for consideration, but the once fsst Crescent Athletic club man has not done any kind of work this year, and he would have to Improve a great deal to be Justified In de mending consideration. Likewise Little ha been going back steadily. It Is likely that Bests Wright will be one of the team, as he Is always good when It comes to ths International mstches, no matter how care less he may be In the first part of the year. He understands International play ing better than any other star In ths country, and hs would very likely accept an Invitation to go. Frederick B. Alexander ha shown up strong this year. He wss going along splendidly when he sprained hi ankle, and there are many who think he can carry off the Newport honors If he maintains his recent form Whether or not he Could be Induced to go to Australia Is still a ques tion. If he accepts It would mean-that Beals Wright and Fred Alexander Vill.b th team, a pair not to be despised. It is hardly likely that England could beat th pair with both of the Doherty out of the game. Oore, Ritchie, Barrett and one or two other from th British Jales would probably find their hands full with the Ingles If they went In Australia, should America get through the elimination aerie with Great Britain, ther would be Brooke, who I In all likelihood tha best player, of the day. Even Brooke might - atrik a nagt if the two, American were In tep form, and certainly there is no other Kangaroo who would be troublesome. Thus the championship would resolve itself into question of how strong a doubles team could be gathered. Harold Hachett, the partner of Alexander, ha announced that he cannot go, so that Wright would probably have to team with Alexander, and Just how strong a combina tion they would make Is problematical, a they have never been tried. SHEPPAUD THE BEST RACES New York Entkaslasts Bay He Has tha World Beat. NEW YORK. Aug. l.-Melvln fiheppard. ft the Irish-American Athletic club. Is without doubt the greatest runner in' the world today. Whatever doubt there may hav been on this point haa been wiped out by his wonderful victories at the stadium, .races In hlch hs sent the fast est men the athletlo world could pit sgsinst him down tot defeat with com paratlve case, at the same times estab lishing records which are, likely to stand for aome time. Sheppard's time, when he ran 800 meters In 1 minute, 12 seconds, and tha even half In 00:01:64, would have been remark able enough under the best conditions. That hs should maka such records on a track that was tar tixr being fast wss truly wonderful. It Is not often the 00:01-54 halves are run In England. The British record, 00:01:M, waa made more than twenty year ago, and In all that time has seldom been even threatened, never so much as equaled. Before tha yesr Is over Bheppard will probably equal or lower the record mad by Kllpatrlck thirteen years ago. Ills 00:014 was within three fifths of a sec ond of Kllpatrlck's figures, and an Ameri can has never yet dons so well In England that he could not do better at horre. Properly paced and with a fast track under his feet. Bheppard will come mighty close to reeling off 00:01:61 when he returns. Ernie Hertberg trslncr of ths Irish- American Athletlo elub was the happiest man In New York, when the result of the MO meter wa receive). He made no bones of coming out flat-footed end declaring that before the outdoor season Is over Bheppard will do the four furlongs In 00:01:63 fist. "Ail Bheppard needs" seld Ernie, "is a fast enough pace. The Eng lish climate must have had some effct on him. Two weeks is hardly enough In whici to get thoroughly acclimated. Mark my words: When Mel gets home strain e ill run the fastest half mile vt- trsveled." Bheppard work also meana thst England will no longer be able to claim superiority over ths I'nlted Stales as a producer Of middle d'stanc runners. John Bull lias slways claimed th ability to best anything on two legs at snythlng from a half mile up. Bheppard took on the besT Englsnd could show In both the half and mils and ran them off their feet In such convincing -styl that ther will never' be any doubt that he won strictly on his merits. ZETCITELL GETS A PRIZE BELT Proaaater Marlsrta Makes Hlai Preseat f a "Dog Collar." BAN FRANCISCO, Cat Aug. V. Pro. motor Luke Marlsch has presented to Stsnley Ketchel the gold snd silver belt, which he had made expressly for ths middleweight champion. It Is a beautiful specimen of the go'damlth's art and to gether with the precious stones wRlrh. grsce the buckle I vslued at tlW. Th belt 1 given to ths champion without any strings attached to It. He will not b obliged to defend it thrt time, la order to owe it. The fact Model 31 is built with removable tonncau for all kinds of utility or touring service. It is simply constructed with few moving parts; these easily accessible, though enclosed and therefore always clean and prop erly lubricated. You can do all kinds of work with this car as a handy runabout with tonneau removed; then put the tonneau on and take your family or friends for a ride in the roomy five-passenger Car of Steady Service Extra large wheels, long wheel base and full elliptic springs provide comfort and wio.N-uiicr swim ur m mucu Thirty 1909 .exjic 4-Cyllnde-r, Shaft Drlvt, 20 H. P. DISTRIBUTES BY ffPOrPn A I if AmAiln tf WRITE FOR AGENCY. Timely Tips for Automobile Owners and Drivers The Automobile club of Antwerp Is ten yesrs old. Never leave tire covers In a damp place, as the canvas will soon rot. There are more than 1.600 separate pieces In the average full-sised touring car. It has been estimated that 10,000 automo biles will tour New York state during July and August. A new sutomobile factory Is to be located st Mollne, 111., to manufacture elecirlc, gasoline and steam cars. Hesvy snows In Bwltserlsnd have put a sudden stop to automobile touring by American in that country. Permission from the Turkish Imperial government is necesesry betore Palestine may be toured by motorists. Mr. and Mrs. Ororge Jay Gould, who have ben touring Enrope In a motor car, will return to America August 18. It Is expected that the roadbrds of ths grand prise course at Eavannan will be ready for practice Work by October 16. Having been defeated In two aurclsalve years In the Grand Prix, French motorists are talking of discontinuing the content. A net fender, to protect pedestrisns, has been Invented snd Is being used on auto mobile tramrars snd autobuases .In Europe. The Atlantic City Automobile club Is pro moting a convention to diacuas wsys of abolishing New Jersey's draatlc anti-motor law. Philadelphia has appropriated 110,000 for the purchaae of two motor cara for the ue of city officials In Inspecting municipal work. Farm lands have been known to Increase in vslus from 60 to Co) per cent ss a result of road Improvement connecting with mar ket towns. The Long Island Automobile club claims to have been the flret one la th country to atation men along road to warn drivers of speed traps. Two thousand tsxlrsbs sr now In dally operation In Paris streets, and 1.000 more have been ordered. London has 1,600 snd SOO mor ordered. The procetdlngs of the recent Gnod Roada' convention at Buffalo, are being compiled and printed and will be distributed throughout the country. A three-tnn auto truck recently carried a 4.M0 pound load from South Orange, N. J. to Iillp. 1- I., sixty-four miles. In s'x hours snd fifteen minutes. Governor Fort of New Jersey hss pur chased a motor car, and I'nlted States Senator Brigs, of th earn atale, la con templating a similar action. Women who drive motor ears ahould be ware of the veil. It Is to- of en liable to blow across the facs snd obstruct ths view Just at the rrlilral moment. According to late f'ititlr. th number of private owner of automobiles In France ha Increased from 80, inn two years sgo to 40.000 at the present time. The Automobile club of Wsyne county, Indiana, was cne of the flret mutortng or ganisations formed In the Hooslrr state snd now hss fifty members. John D. Rockefeller has purchased a tourlne csr ail hla others hsve hfn limousines and It is believed he Is con templating a cross-country lour. Sometimes th front tire will wesr ahnor. mally, and the blame may b put upon th tire manufacturer, while it Is reallv dus to ths wheels running eut of parallel. Among the mot sttractlvr of widely checked rubberised taffeta motoring coats sr ulsters In two tones of blur, broWn r rTreii, having doublr-brrasted fronts, cls i)S with uied.uru-aUed huttonst patch Proof of Rambler Superiority that eighty-five Per cent of all have told us that they chose the Rambler upon the advice of some other owner should be significant to you. iwu-cyunoer engine raoaei Ji nas no rival Let us prove it. May we call at your home some morning and take you to your place of business in this car T RAMBLER AUTOMOBILE CO. 2044 FARXAM STREET OMAHA, NEB. on Our Floor for Prloa f 800 NINETEENTH pockets similarity decorated and cuffs and collars of the darkest hue. Iwls Mtrang, the only American entrant m the Grand Prix, says Kuroprans are all talking of the Grand Prise race at Savan nah in th fall and predict a large entry list. Dr. Hraton, th Missouri motorist, who Is touring Europe with the determination to keep his expenses below 13 a day, hus suc ceeded In traveling through Swltscrland at U.6 a day. Automoblllsta of Maryland snd Washing ton sre working for the succers of a move ment started by Congressman J. Fred Talbot for the abolishment of all toll roads In Maryland. Count Nlnegawa of Japan, who 'accom panied the Glldden tourists to study Ameri can roads, Is In Americs to study the auto mobile buMneas generally and to vlalt the different factories. Word comes from Germany that a stock company Is being formed to establish and construct an exclusive automobile road for speed and endurance contest in the Tauru mountain district. The members of the Mnsschuaetts Auto mobile club have nvmed a committee to confer with the local municipal authorities of ths cities of the state regarding a proper obaervanc c the speed laws. C. J. Croker, the Tale Junior, who re cntly cronaed the continent from New York to Pan Mateo, Cal., will drive hla car back st the end of the summer vacation, to reiume his studies st the university. A. L. Smith of the New Jersey Auto mobile snd Motor cluh. who recently re turned to his home In Newark from a trip to 1,100 miles through New England, found the roads to be In very go d condition. France hss equipped Its army with more power-driven vehicles than any other na tion. In addition to the quick-firing auto mobile battery which haa dons good work In Morocco, hss motor army wagons galore. Banners reading: "Wamrng Automobll lsts sre requested to obey the speed laws. Help us to do this and we will help vou. New Jersey Automobile snd Motor club." sre being posted on roads about Newark, N. J , by the club. The storage battery finds Itself uaed In various waya in an automobllp. In the of , electric machine it la the entire source the energy used for propulsion. In tb gascllne-drlven machine It makes a con venient and reliable source of Ignition. One of th points sdvancpd In favor of the proponed t wenty-t wo-inlle circuit In Indiana, for ths DeMont Thompson cup stock-car road race. Is trut It runs through only two towns, Ix)well and Crown Point, and Is entirely without grade crosangs. Parisian and American artists are si rvadv designing poalera snd scenic effeel for the show to be given in Grand Centinl palace. New York, under the aurplcea of the American Motor Car Manufacturer a association, December SI to January 7. Now that the sleeves of all daytime gowns sre made so math lunger xnd actually protect the forearms. long 'vr.sted gloves, which formerly kr-pt the draft from whisking up the wide wrist openings of milady a to .rlnf cost, ar no longer necessary. The touring committee of th Rtv Stale Automobile aasoclsilnn I working on plana to conduct a sesltd bonnet, non stop contest, some time during next tb p. teinber. It probehly wlil be s t wenlv-f nur hour endursnce run from Uoston to Bre. ton Woods and return. A New York automobile engineering school hss installed a dvl consulting of heavy roller flush with the floor on which the rear wheels of csrs revolve, en abling atudents to mssisr ths operation Model 31, Price $1,400. Other Model $1,000 to $1,130. Rambler owners I! for power on hilla, in j 1909 fJasjjssSafl BBBMBSjUaaawBS Delivery This beautiful Bui ok Runabout has been im proved and refined. As a hill climber it holds the 1st prize over everything in the $3,00.0 class. Our new models are equipped with 30-inch wheels and 4 unit coils, making it equal to any car on the market selling for $1,750. ' Weight, 1,610 pounds. OiU TOM SXKOsTSTBATOK. OMAHA. KEGS. AND PAR NAM STREETS. of..th.ch,n'e a", clutch and brake, while tha car remains stationary. Ths larger the road wheels are, the less will be the power required to drive a ear on ordinary roads. The muln reasons why larger wheels are not used, nowever, is that they are expensive and fragile, they greatly Increase the cost of tires and ren der access to seats more difficult, v The Quaker City Motor elub will" hold a race meet on Point Hreexe track about the middle of next month. The club 1 repricing because the American Automobile association revoked a sanction to private promoters to hold rsces on the track. The American Automobile association supposed the promoters to be officials of the Nor ristown Automobile club. Taxlrabs will be operated In Baltimore shout Auatis. 1. Ths service will stsrt with fatten cabs and the operator expeot tj suknicnt the serv'ce until fifty cars ar in ": Tl-y rate will be 60 cent for th first nil end 20 cents for each additional mile. or every ten minutes th vehicle Is kept clsrged 1,1 h'r ,0 wlU An elaborate welcome is being planned P' Oerm-.ny for Lieutenant Hans Koeppn, the utimnn cont Hant In th New soric-tV To protect the complexion from freckle. ?,hn nr"-n"nd mnA at th " Urn. to ob a n sn unlmerrupted view of th scen ery a a problem only to be solved by th TJSnn m.k' Th ,)Utlt upon a I,nd,r J'." haped to fit over th nose snd leneatr, tl a chn, and Is composed of wrplnriuce. "Uh. 'n-lr'Ch Ths automoWls buyer of today In moat esse, consider, very carefully th.lmp IcUy 2nr.h .mor' or epPr- thioh il"J" not, rP"n tii trouble which were experienced tn the early day dL'v"?'?0?""1"- whtn Purchaser. Yn. deavored to secur a car Which, la plain languaae. consisted of th greatest numbir of pieces for the money. numosr Kmporer Francis Joseph of Austria, la virtually the only Sovereign In a"l Europ. who mukes no u r nin.kii.. - B',r '"'P""1- Archduke Francis Ferd'lnsrd, hocver. Is a most snthuslastlo motorlsu o,.oorr. u i nope, mey yet tsk to the car. two motor having been pre sented to him by ths Austrlsn Autpmobil club mm Jublie gifts. ' The recent fest of Mrs. KennetH R. Oil of Cleveland, who estsbllshed a record by driving tier car from Cleveland to lluffalo, 204 miles, In six hours mrxi ten minutes running time waa most remarkable, th next best tlms for ths trip being six hour and thlrty-flvs minutes made by Ralph Tucker, th dsy before the Glldden tour last year. section of the Kenis automobile law Is quoted literally ss follows: "Nothing In this srctlon shall be construed as lr any way i.revrntig, obstructing, Impeding, embsrrssalng or in any other manner or form Infrlnairg upon the prerogailve of sny political cuauffeur to run an automo bile band wajon at any rate he aea fit compatlule with the safety of the occu pants thereof." Utile Team Start Hons. IX)NIKN. Aug. 1. tienersl Jsmes A. triln, pieildcnt f the Anur cin Rlf -soi'ti.iti.ti. srd the nie.ul-rs of tne Ameri can teem tl.at won the International tra-n natth with taiv.c rlf: at liisiey. will sail for New York today. General Drain curries tentative acceptance from Brttisk snd French rifle associations La suium ,J" -ieuienani Koeppen I 31 yean old. unn.arrlej, six feet talf. slim snd alh . " t"olnbruah mustache. Among ;.''?o.tt Wel0Olne him home will re En- h'ueep'mlere.V0 MlQ lh