TILE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 17. 1909. V f Tim Omaiia Sundulx Da OMAHA, 8UNMAT, OCTOBER 17.. 19. to Jvinuij. ana the American iMgut nM"M nl world's championship. but they are t,t a seriously in jured r thlr failure to land It at thr would hare bn bad tha con tent imii less atrenuou. Pittsburgh mar- mn a so slender that Ita suporlorltr can inn possmiy tf;om a matter over which to stow arro(ant. Detroit dsmonatrated If t III aor1e la to be regarded an tha cri terionthat there In a very alight differ ence in tha merits of tha National and American league. Tet thia fact cannot hare any disparaging- effect on Pittsburg triumph. It might be argued that the Pirate victory la all the greater because achieved over an opponent ao formidable. At any rate the reault la far more satis factory and beneficial to base ball than had either team won by a walkaway. Nat urally, there muat be disappointment In netrolt arid the American league at large over the outcome. It doe no team or league any special good to auffer defeat three tlmea Ui succession when the distinc tion of success la ao rttal. If tha threat ened Invasion and creation of third major league ihould coma about in 1910 the American league oould ecarcely hope to ea cpa aome III effect of Detroit defeat. Flualnffta la business and 'competition la the bsrometor of It, and fana will hesitate wnue nefore dividing their patronage equally between three league. Farther more they will,' 1 anxlnua for the first season at leaat to aee what the newcomer hare to offer and the must sub tract patronage, ' from' one or thi other Of the old organisation. We aay If thla ahould come about next year then Detroit a defeat will be mora significant Aa to the playing of the two teama It was greet, except In a few Inetancea. Pitts burg' pitchers, moat of them, were dis appointing, and all eave Mullen and Dono van of Detroit fell below expectations'. Tha mighty Cobb did not do all that was expected of him, while his great rival Wagner came valiantly to the rescue more than once. The aerlea muat atand out. mougn, in me nietory or Dane hall, aa distinctive for the splendid sportsmanship and th uK excellent rivalry that marked It, Every vd of ground waa fought aa stren- uoualy and as closely as two great base ball machines were able to fight and from a purely base ball atandpolnt the gamea were pre-eminently successful. Th very fact that It required the entire seven gamea to determine the winner is enough to satisfy every fan In the country, ' The first National league team beats the first A merit an league team, the second National league team bests the fourth American league team, the third National league team is defeated by the third American lgue team. What's the anawer? ' It Is now pretty generally conceded that Johnny Kvers'more than Johnny Kllng Is responsible for the failure of tha Cuba to repeat. Anil this looks plausible. Had Kvera Joined th team at the beginning of the season, in his normal form, without KliUK. ' the Cubs, moat people believe, would have made it, four straight. Or had Manager Chance not got his shoulder broken the same thing might have been accomplished. But with these two draw backs it is' most seriously to be questioned f Kiln;' help Could have changed the n:l ' final result. Archer tnd Moraii both did excellent service behind the bat. Archer bxing a little more valuable because of its better throwing. But it ts rather Idle -" :o talk of four straight National league pennants. The goal has never yet been reached. Four men have had tha chance ': and missed Anson, Hanlon. Rele and Chance, And the Chicago Tribune says; "If Frank Chance with his own enthus iasm and hla magnello personality was un able to keep a team of champion going at X- top speed for four auooesslv years, there I no personality known to the playing ranks today that could do It and Chanoe admit k could not accomplish ' that psychological and physical miracle." In ail th history of baa ball Just on man has achieved that "physical miracle," and that man la th greatest baa ball man ager of thla or any other era Charle A, Comlekey. Commy, tha Old Roman and his Four Tim Winner, th St. Louis Brown, tlll stand out wher no other v'-.. mnA nn nther iMtn have ever J T yet tood. Conilskey. also, was th first V man ever to send an American league team fj to victory over the National in a world' :hampl'nhlp contest. ' At Lm -4X The Cub-Sox series proved Interesting. anyway. And In point of fin baa ball It is doubtful If the game wara ttot auperlOr to the world' championship contest be tween Detroit and nttaburg. They Were all small-soore pitchers' battle, th laat two being f to 1 and 1 to 0. respectively. All of which prove that Comlskey ha team that 1 able to make th beat of them hustle. Th game wer all wen on clean baa tall and th Cuba are by every right entitled to their claim of auperlorlty. Th Box' only victory waa aohlered fcy dint of fin generalship. But for th balk which they forced Reulbaeh to oak, It la questionable if th Box would have won that day. ' But, In forcing th big Cub pitcher to make that balk, I reflected th secret of th Sox' suocos. On faot that will stand out above all other In this aerie 1 that wonderful triumph' of th sturdy old Miner Brown holding the White Sox to on bit In th laat gam. To do such a thing on th 15th day of October require far more than th ordinary skill and nerve. It simply mark th tiian who doe It a httl better than th moat of them. Incidentally, thla make thirty gamea these two Chicago team have played alno the birth of tha Box and th American leaa-ue and th Cub hav aeventeen of them, which ought to settle the question - One of th surprise of th baa ball year ' I ! th overwhelming defeat Boston Anier f iiana admlnlaterod to th New fork Na tionals. It. is too significant to leave room for doubt a to th merit of th two trams. ' Th frosty waather had nothing on th Hilt receipts at tboee Boton-Nw Tork S nines. Anyway, it remained for th Cub to up hold th nam and credit of th National Kagus. 1'p to dat President O'Neill ha not sent his resignation to Ducky Holme. At lliat, IMtUbujg' pitchers, save A, lams, re a disappointment. It 'was good of Brown to let the Sui l 'M t iy hit In that final gam. Vxow. if liey could only put lid on ' rphy for th winter. leap bit ill ibul 1 M il'' I i l. Isn't COLFERS ARE SnOOTINC FAST Seven Hare Scored Below Seventy Within the Lait Fortnight. COURSES ARE NOT AS HARD Old Oraaada Were I, aid Oat tor March name Rather Tha a for Making; Law Medal Seore. NEW YORK, Oct. 1.-Wlthln th last fortnight no fewer than seven golf scores under 70 have been recorded. A. C' Lin coln did 69 at Felixstowe and J. II. Tar lor did a 67 on the same course. It. Hilton had a (17 at Ashford Manor and -W.' K. Reld a 69 at Banstead Downs. W. Blnnle did fl at Dodhoad Bruntlslsnd. J. Rowe a 68 at Ashdown Forest and T. Umb played a marveloua round at 61 at Salthuin-by-the-Bea. Paltburn Is a shortish course, but all th others are long, measuring approx imately 6,000 yards for eighteen holes. Buch low scoring Is remarkable even In these -record-breaking days, and It ia evi dent that the limit has not by any means been reached. Th score of th best players twenty five or thirty years ago were seldom under SO. Indeed, It would not be too much to say scores under 80 at that period. were not commoner than are scores under 72 today. At first sight this looks as If the best players had Improved about ten strokes per round, but It would not be ac curate to set down to lower rate of scoring to a proportionate Improvement In play. The 'question of whether the older genera tion of players were as good as or better than the present is Incapable of settlement because the conditions under which they played were so very different. It does not follow because their scores wev higher that they were less skillful, A score of 80 on one course may require as fine golf or finer than a score of 70 on another. It all depends on the nature of the courses. The old courses were not laid out for the scoring game. The holes were made for match play and the Idea waa to make them aa difficult of access as possible. Th putting green were small and well guarded so that unless the approach was perfect the hall did not stop anywhere on th green. The fairway waa narrow and the lie on It waa generally poor. The ground was full of cups and patches of loose sand and the small hollows were full of long grass, ao that a good lie through the green was not the universal thing It Is now. The length of holes and the placing of hasards called for the ac curate Judgment of ever varying distances. All these things made low scoring diffi cult and th question Is would our flrst claxs players do scores under 70 as often as they do, or would they do them at all under the old conditions any more than the old champions? Modern Coarse Less nlfftealt. Leaving th Improved clubs to balance the greater length of holes. It Is evident that the modern course does not present anything like the same difficulties. The lies through the green on a first-class course today are practically perfect. A bad lie ia the rarest experience. The ball la presented to the player, shot after shot, I precisely the same way. Even tha stance la seldom anything but flat. A large proportion of the hole are two-shot holes and all th player can get hla four all right. Whereaa in the old course he wouM have been In the rough, or In th hasard, and would probably hav required at least three to hole out. The abolition of th cross bunker,' whatever may' be said In favor of it, certainly makes low scor ing easier to a straight player, since a topped approach is not punished. in addition to all these fsctora, th mak ing of holea that are multiples of full shots tends to stereotype a man's game, bo that If he I driving or putting well, there 1 no call xipon him for any variety of stroke, and his play become largely mechanical. At any rat, be Is always playing prac tically the same shot, and It la little won der that he becomes proficient at It. If he partially misses a full stroke th approach he has to play 1 usually quit featureless, a pitch and run on to large, open putting green. -' These remarks on modern courses apply, of course, to play when there is little or no wind, and It la to be presumed that scores under 70 are seldom dona except under favorable conditions. On a windy day our champions take much nearer 80, for then there 1 a call for a much greater variety of stroke. But th old course re quired till more skill and more of It, for their negotiation, even on a sUll day, and It 1 this that has to b remembered In comparing th score of th past with those of th present. In on respect th moderns certainly beat tha anclenta, and that la In driving. Even allowing for the rubber ball and th new club, th driving of our beanplayer I un doubtedly better than It was twenty-five year ago. It 1 more accurate. Our play er get so much more of it that It 1 only natural that they ahould be more proft elent at It than the old player. After th tee-shot It waa usually a cleek ahot or a Jerk with the spoon, and how often hav w to playths ehot today. But are our modern cracks batter approacher or better putter than th ancient? "PINCH HITTERS" ARE CARRIED Klaefc Tomb Has a Maat of Thta R calaed Class. ' NEW TORK, Oct. M.-Ou of th recent developments of baa ball baa been tha "pinch hitter." Almost all of th team In th National and American league carry omt player these day who la suppoaed to be able to tak Jr.U plao at bat In an emergency and rap th ball out of th reaoh of th fielders, thereby restoring hi olub to good atandlng and keeping peac In th community. To soma extent John' J. McOraw of th New Tork National 1 rponlbl for thi Innovation. He was quick to see th ad vantage which were likely to b gained when th rule waa passed that on player could be, aubatltuted for another 'at any time, and after it waa put la effect by th rule committee kept on or two msn on hi team for not muoh of any other rea son than that they oould frequently walk to th plat and smash th ball safely to th field when It we needed. There waa "Sammy" Strang, for In stance. That young man played a much larger part in helping th Nsw Tork team win a championship than he waa given oredtt for playing by some of the un thinking. Many time, when a weak bat ting pitcher waa In sight or when It ap peared that It would be advisable to make a shift in eom player becaua he hap pened nkt to be very successful against a certain nltcher aa a batter. Strang walked to th (W and rapped th ball safely. Th secoiw year that the Giants won the cliampioury P. "under the management of Met) raw. &eng waa th moat dangerous "pinch hittV' In either league. They have "pinch man" in Pittsburg by the nanixiof Hyatt. He hasn't made a good a rVd aa Strang, but It la said of Hyatt tli ' when he meet the ball talrly hera'fap " further than any player In the .V'ional ltuc, and this iu- elude 'Hans" Wagner. II hasn't been put in very often, comparatively speaking, this year and he hasn't made aa many Bf hit. In proportion to th number of chances which have been allotted to him, aa Strang made. He Is a left bander, hlta very freely and with a swing which 1b long enough to bring Into action the muscles of bis big shoulders. SOUTH READY FOR AUTO RACES Coateats Will Be Held la C'oajanetloa with flood Itoada Coaveatloa. NEW TORK, Oct 16. -Followers of . the automobile racing game In the aouth are beginning to show signs of Interest In the two day meet that wUI be staged at the New Orleans track on November JO and It Reporta from that section state that many entries have been promised for the forty-eight-hour speed carnival. Th races will be held In conjunction with the Louisiana good roada convention, at which motorists from all psrt of the state are expected to b In attendance, as well as the small army of th faithful present at every autolng the second day's program appears to be event. Th six-hour race that will feature the chief topic of Interest. The contest ia scheduled to.atart at 10 o'clock in the morning with the finish bIx hours later. It Is forecasted that over 300 miles will be made by the winner. Fol lowing the quarter-day race a number of abort distance events will be held. A fifty mile race Is the prominent feature of the opening day's card. Inasmuch as It Is billed aa a "free-for-all" event, it Is thought than an unusually large number of ra.-a will compete. A contest for th New Orleans trophy Is attracting con siderable Interest In the Crescent City. The cars entered In this event must be local machines and each driver must be an owner or driver who has lived in New Orleans for over thirty days. The six-hour raco will be five contests in one.' A grand prlxo la offered for the car making the greatest milruge. but sep arate and additional prlsex are offered for cars making the most mileage In each of the five classes of which the race will be made up. The event Is to be for stock chassis, and will be run In classes as out lined by the American Automobile as sociation, the piston displacement classifi cation being followed. This glvea the manufacturer and the dealer hla oppor tunity to demonstrate the excellence of his product and will likewise give the amateur a chance to show his skill. The race will be divided Into'the follow ing classes: Class One For stock chassis of piston displacement of tt'l to 600 cubic Inches. Class Two For stock chassis of piston displacement from 801 to 450 cubic inches. Class Three For stock chassis with pis ton dlxplacement of 231 to 300 cubic inches. Class Four For stock chassis with pis ton displacement of 161 to 230 oublo Inches. Amateurs Prlxe to the amateur making the greatest mileage with no reference to piston displacement. A race of this character will bring out the greatest ponslble number of starters and furnish excltment for the spectator. A a many as twenty car may compete in such a contest without endangering the Uvea of any drivers, yet furnish the public unusually keen sport. The race has the support of Howard E. Coffin, chairman of the rules committee of the Manufacturers' Contest association. As a matter of fact. Coffin la said to be the father of the sug gestion that such a race be framed. Governor Sanders and officers of he Progressive union ' are working earnestly on the plans for the good roads conven tion, which will be held the night of No vember 18. Low railroad rate hav al ready been granted and more than 1,000 delegaj.es. and noted autolsta will be at tracted by the combination of sport and good road talk. JONES STARTS WITH NEW PLAYS Drills Tale Boya oa Fresh Staff front the Jamp, NEW HAVEN. Oct, 18.-Almost as soon aa practice started on Yale field thi fall, Head Coach Howard Jones started In with the new style of foot ball. Bince forward pasae and onalde kicks have been In vogue the coaches have usually left those playa until later in the season before developing them. The, opening gamea for the past three yeada have been only straight foot ball by Yale, until the Blue eleven had got fairly under way. - The new play have been frequently used here In gamea thla sea son so far, and Coach Jonea Intends to make them features of the play the rest of the season, for he has spent more time on them than on any others. , Tha absence of Captain Coy from the lineup throwa the brunt of the offense upen Philbtn Daly and Field for the pre nt. Daly and Field hav been selected to do most of the new style of offensive work, while Phllbln has done more of -the old style running with the ball. Haines at nd had been selected to do the punting and to receive onald kick. Owing to the lack of a heavy man for th backfleld he had been temporarily shifted to fullback until Coy come back, but he will go to nd after that He doe the punting and deliver th onalde kick while he playa fullback, and he baa been especially ooached to receive the onald kick when at and, and also to tak the forward pass. Captain Coy' absence ueveaaltatad the appointment of an acting captain, Logan getting th honor. He also Is being coached to tak the new play at end. Be ing faster than any other man on the quad of ends, ho haa been picked to work out several trick plays that Jones la pre paring for Harvard and Princeton. Little Johnson seem to hav th call for th quarterback position Just at present, and he probably will solve the I biggest problem that Coach Jones haa to face, the finding of a general for the team. The lack of one loat the Harvard game last year. - Johnson la a man that can run well with the ball, deliver an onslde kick, or make a neat forward paas, and he has shown up particularly well In the early gamea. If he can learn how to direct playa, which la the only need he has, lie will prove a aecond Tad Jonea. All of the men being used for the for ward pas and onslde kick game are not heavy men, but are lithe and speedy. Johnson does not weigh over HQ pound, Field 1 about ISO, Haines weighs 176, Logun weighs 160, and Daly 155. They are th lightest men on the regular squad, and It Is because of their apeed that they have been able to fall In with the plan of Coach Jonea He, want Just such man as they are to get off his plays In a hurry, and, with the heavy line that Yale haa. the com bination should prove very formidable when the team I fully developed. GOLFERS FLAN FOR NEXT YEAR Baatera Professionals Have Adopted Rale to Uovera. NEW YORK, Oct. 16.-At a recent meet ing of the Eastern Professional Golfers' association It was decided to hold next year' championship in Auguwt, on a course yet to be selected. The championship will be played for aa follow: Eighteen hole medal play, flint eight scores to qualify and play off, iiiatclftlay, fur the chaniliiu!liip. Tlie player getting the lowest score In t lie qualifying round will receive a gold medal. B-coml and third right hoick ,i iiluv. otf mriliil play ft,r QUEER PATRON OF TIIE TURF Fug-ilist Who Won the Derby and Oaki and Became an M. P. GULLY'S REMARKABLE CAREER Held World's Prise nine Title, Re tired and Won Derby with Pyr rhna t and Oaks with Meadleant. Iord Rowebery ws aid to have at tained 4he great ambition of his lifo a few years ago when he won the Derby, b" came prime minister and married one of the richest and handsomest women In Eng land. It whs a remarkable achievement, but the British turf from Its long list of queer patrons and odd characters supplies a case that eaily outphlui's that of the aclon of the house of Primrose. It is that of a man born In ablect poverty, but who at the age of 24 waa prize ring champion of the world and In 1S46 won the Derbv with Pyrrhus and the Oaks with Mendi cant, and un to that time waa the first owner to score in both classics. This was John Gully, who, after he had reaped all the honor of (lis ring and the turf represented Pontefract In the first Reform Parliament. In fact. Gully might be put down as the Nestor of the English turf, and at least his life study furnishes the greatest romance of raclns. It la now unknown whether or not he married a great beauty or whether he married at all, but he lived to a great nge. His varied career is positive proof that cold matter of fact will always outshine the most In genious fiction. What poor boxer today would dare say ho would after winning the world's championship own a Derby winner, and when the turf's glitter failed to attract him he would sit among the great legislators of the land? John Gully was the son of very poor parents and first saw the light at Bristol In the' year 1783, but aa he reached man's estate was a picture of muscular develop ment. Those were the golden days of the prise ring In England, when even th gladiator' art received the patronage ot royalty, and Gully's friends advised him to go in and try for some of the laurels. Around the years of 20 he had three am bitions to win the championship of th price ring, to own a Derby winner and to obtain a seat In Parliament. Gully had no real hankering after the lifo of a prise fighter, but he wanted the championship, and his ambition was ful filled, for at the dawn of the nineteenth century he was champion of England, and the title then carried with it the world championship. Gully held the belt and the cup emblematic of the championship for a few years, but In 1808 he turned both over to Tom Crlbb, saying he was through with the squared circle forever. All this time he waa possessed of a passion for racing and was the most constant visitor at the big race meets, where his keen methods of calculation In betting were well known. On account of his fame as a pugilist he was on friendly terma with most of tha big racing men, who soon found out that he had other abilities than those of slugging. Among Gully's admirer were Lord Foley, the Marquis of Queens berry, Lord Abingdon, Colonel Melllsh, Pitt and Fox. He began to act as betting commissioner for them, and as betting Was heavy in those days and bookmakers few, Gully soon found himself with a fat sum. to his credit. Then he began to strike out for himself, and buying a few horses got . a man named Sykea to -train tmm at Malton. Not content with mov ing along on a small scale he bought tha . Derby , winner Mamelutte from Lord Jersey In 1827. The price paid was a pretty stiff one In those days, the figure being 820,000. ' he bargain was struck the first day of the Ascot meeting, and one of the conditions was that the sale should not be made known for twenty-four hour. Gully wanted to do aome betting, and the wager he did make showed that he wa possessed of an unlimited amount of nerve. He bet 850,000 that Mameluke would beat ten different horse and 860,000 mora that the horse would beat nine different horses. Matilda, the winner of the race, figured In both batchea, ao that Oulley loat both beta. He had anolber bet of tXI.000 to 850,000 that Mameluke would win, ao hla total loss In the on event waa flM.OOO, but It did not shake th pluck of the ex-prlse fighter, for an Instant. The story about Mameluke la interesting, for tha horse subsequently came to America. Because he had won tha Derby Mame luke was first favorite for tha Bt, Leger, and he should have won it, bnt he was Jostled so badly at the atart and pocketed In the race so that Matilda beat him again. Gully lost a lot of money, but still he had absolute faith in tha auperl orlty of his horse, and he offered Maillda'a owner to give her seven pounds for a special race, but the challenge waa re fused. As a four-year-old Mameluke won back all he lost for Gully and a great deal more to boot. One of the best races waa the Oatlanda, then on of the heaviest betting races of the Englieh turf, and It U n fs SjaaasBaBHBBsBBBBSBnBBBBn HnBasnsMsssnssnsassssnnnsi s: ii A Great Investment! TIII5 highest standard of popu lar priced clothes, with individ uality of style that sets it apart from ordinary ready-made. MILTON OOTS CLOTHES for MeuandYountiMea are exclusive models, tailored with exact ness, perfect fitting, and made from high- grade fabrics. Their dash and dignity are lasting. Call on the dealer, see MILTO and judge for yourself. Active Merchants! Wrlta for tha cxclualva ajaacy la your town for thi advertised lino, apaclalla lag on $10 and $13 value. SMt I? M li vN v1 III a nun: related that Oully won something like t-liO.OOO on the race. A little while after ward in a moment of hast Oully sold Mameluke to Theobald, known as , "Old Leather Breeches, " and repenting Im mediately offered an open check to get the horse back. Theodald was Immovable, though Gully pleaded that hla wife was vexed with him and In order to please her he wanted the horses, but the plead ing was of no avail. Mameluke went to the Slockwell stud after he waa through with racing and stayed there till he left for this side of the water. In 1831 Gully went Into partnership with RIdsdale, and that same year the stable ran second In the derby with Little Red Rover. The next year saw Gully mount the ladder of his ambition, for the part ners won the derby with St. Gllea. and the victory brought a large amount In bets, both doing so Well that they dis solved partnership the Monday after the derby. Just then Gully had a gmd hi.rse in Margrave, for which he paid 827.0OU. and he decided to make nnother bid for the St. Legor. For the purpose of putting him In the best possible trim Margrave was sent to John Scott to undergo a special preparation. As he had won the Criterion he reigned fnvorlta In the betting, Jnit he cut his leg badly while at work and his price went tip to 1.000 to IS. and stood at that price a week before the race, fcott, however, got him around, and when he appeared at Doncayter hla price fell to 10 to 1. The horse made all the running and won in a common canter. Gully clearing the nice sum of $50,000 on the event. Soon afterward Gully took John Day a partner, and the pair shared the pos session of The I-gly Buck, with which they won the Two Thousand Guineas In 1144, and the horse ran fourth In the derby. In 1S45 Gully should have won the derby with Weatherbit, but the colt became un manageable on the course and In a mad dash to break away Jumped over Tarn, another horse In the race, and Merry Monarch, an Inferior colt, came home a Winner. Next yenr 1M6-Oully -was des tined to score double firsts at Epsom, a feat never accomplished by any owner up to that time. Pyrrhus the First landed the derby and Mendicant came home In the Oaks. In his 2-year-old year Pyrrhua was such a poor performer that Day sold his Interest In him for $500 to Gully. Early In his 8-year-old season he won the New market Stakes and beat a real good animal In Iago, when it dawned on Gully that there waa something In the colt. A must suffer test which was given him convinced the owner that he had a first rate chance at Epson, and aome beta were placed on the colt In the meantime. Pyr rhua went .to the post a warm favorite and 'beatisir Tatton Syke and a field of twenty, winning 860,000 for Oully. The colt waa prevented from starting In the St. Leger, but as a 4-year-old he continued his winning career by securing among other big races the Orange cup at Good wood. At the stud h did exceedingly well and got a lot of fashionable stock, among them being VIrlgo. Over the filly Mendicant, for the Oaks, Gully wa forestalled by Lord George Bentlnck. He was told that the filly was better than the colt and he backed her warmly. The public took the tip from Lord George, ao the owner had little or no chance to obtain odda wortlt while and h did not make near aa much aa he did In the derby. Mendicant ran for the Cheater cup, when a 4-year-old with 112 pound In the saddle and waa only beaten a short head. In the Ascot week of that same year she wa sold to Blr Joseph Haw ley for $20,000, and he thought he got a bad bargain, for she ran very poorly for the Ascot cup. But she proved to be a verl table gold mine and ten years later she, with her aon Beadsman, brought him the astounding price ot $4,000. " Gully continued hla succe on the turf with varying fortune till 1854, when he had another streak of good luck, and he 'wa then 71 years of age, but his eye for a good animal had loat none of Its sharpness. That year he won th 2,000 gulneaa with the Her mit, and the Derby with Andover. He had only a part ownership In Andover, but It la certain that the colt would hav never figured at all at Epaom. but for Gully. In th spring of 1858 Oully waa staying at Danebury for a while, and one day he caught sight of thre yearlings, one of which Impressed him. Thi on wa An dover, and he Inquired of Padwlok, th owner, if the colt wa for sale. Padwlck said no, and told Oully that ha had Just paid $3,000 for him. Then Oully Inquired If a partnership oould be formed, and to this Padwlck consented. The colt waa then placed in Gully's care and every hour of his work wa closely watched until ha flew past the poat at Epsom. When Gully ran for Parliament h was opposed by Lord Mexborough for th Pontefract seat and the contest wa fought out bitterly. Oully' rival used th fact that he waa once a prisefighter against him and he all the Urn wanted to know if the oonatltuenta cared to b represented by that class of a man. Evidently they did. for they elected Gully and he did very well at Westminster. Raso Ball Players Toar West. CHICAGO, Oct, 14. The Philadelphia American league team and a team of Na tional league atars will tour the west under the management of Norrla O'Nellt Tha players leave here October IS. ihlili M All 1 A A q::u MOW HE AW U I want to recommend S. S. S. to all who are in need of a blood purifier, and especially as a remedy for f ores and obstinate ulcers. In 1877 my blood was very impure and I accidentally cut my leg on the sharp edge of a barrel. This, I suppose, made an opening for the discharge of the impurities in the circulation, and a great sore formed. For years no one knows what I suffered with the place, I tried, it seemed to me nearly everything I had ever heard of, but got no relief. The Doctors said I would have to have the leg amputated or else go through life with an angry, discharging sore that would injure my gen eral health. At last I commenced to take S. S. S., and it was but a short time until I saw the place was improving, trreatiy encouraged I continued the use of S.S. S. until it removed all the poison from my blood and made a complete cure of the sore. This was five years ago and my leg has remained healed and perfectly sound ever si nee. JOHN ELLIS. 108 Wyckoff St., Brooklyn, N. V. What S. S.S. did for Mr. Ellis it can do for everyone who is afflicted with an old sore or ulrer. He is just one of the thousands who have cured themselves of these offensive places through the simple process of purifying the blood, and removing the cause of an old sore with this great blood remedy. No matter on what part of the body a chronic sore may be located, ' it is kept open by bad blood. The flesh tissues at the place have been broken down and the nerves irritated because the blood constantly dis charges germs and impure matters at that spot. Thus a diseased and infected condition is maintained and all efforts of nature to heal the place fail because pure blood is the most necessary thing in the healing of any sore, especially those of a chronic nature. The impurities in the blood which produce chronic sores, come from different causes. A long spell of debilitating sickness which breeds disease germs In the system, the retention of the natural waste matters of the body because of a sluggish condition of theeliminative members, or even inher ited bad blood will produce the infected condition of the circulation that keeps sores and ulcers open. But it does not matter what the cause may be there can be no cure until the blood is purified. One of the strongest evidences of the deep-seated nature of these places is the fact that local treatment, such as salves, washes, piasters,' etc., never have any permanent effect. Such treatment only aids In cleansing the outward Impurities of the ulcer while the blood continues in its Impure state. Nor will removing the place and surrounding flesh by surgical operation produce a cure. ' The blood cannot be cut away, the old cause is still there, and in every instance the sore will return or break out in a new location. S. S. S. cures Old Sores by purifying the blood. It removes every impurity and taint from the circulation, and completely does away with the cause. When S. S. S. has cleansed the blood the sore begins to heal, and it is not a surface cure, but the healing process begins at the bottom; soon the pain and inflammation are gone, the discharge ceases, and the place fills in with firm, healthy flesh. S. S. S. is purely vegetable, made entirely from roots, herbs and barks of specific blood-purifying properties, and it is an absolutely safe remedy for any one to take. Under the purifying and tonic effects of S. S. S. the system is built up, and those whose health has been impaired because of the drain and worry of an old sore will be doubly benefited by its use. S. S. S. cures old sores by PURIFYING THE BLOOD and removing the cause. Book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice you may wish free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA. Stock of KENTUCKY'S wmm whiskey Must be reduced before the Kentucky Legislature meets and passe prohibition law to ruin our bualneaa. To do thla we bare CUT OUR REGULAR PRICE OP HO fanon aimost in cair on Kentucky's Most Famous Whiskey QLDGonrMlDERra" Rnnnnnn rfmcrrirv sm PUUIIUUil w muuia! M (la fall rt bottfa mi 10c par galloa.) DIR10T PROM DISTILLER TO CONSUMER FREE WITH EACH ORDERf Two nil) tlu wmpU bottle f finest Holland Proust Cla tnd Apricot Brandy, together with VKUkey GUtt and Patent Corkscrew. (1 rlla fax, tXTKU PAID. No better WhUkey made In the famoua Blue Graea Region or anywhere on the face of the g-lobe. None purer, richer or mellower, e? en at double the price. The beat and purest Whiskey for the alck, weak and oonTaleacent to girt health, atrengih and good cheer. TRY IT AT OUR RISK If you dont And it the beat Whiskey you erer tasted, cork up the opened bottle, return at our expense, and we will refund your money without question. Order today and addreae KENTUCKY CO-OPERATIVE DISTILLERY CO Dept. 34 Loulevllle, Ky. Order from Colarad and Stata wast, add 20c per at. Orders troaa Pacific Cas tau shlppsd via freight prepaid, U for Z lals, r ajMra. ON TOP ALWAYS mm III I II I II i.."v UL f A 1 11 1 h I 11 " r. : 1 j Clo- flit. JZU sW ABOVE ALL OTHERS - ) n. - -sir: The Bee for All the Sporting jsi'ews CUMEE 3 BEFORE KENTUCKY AH GOES CRY Express PnpalJ Lay In a Supply 55 tra.j l V Jcim UPTO DATE BEEE TELEPHONES BREWERY SQ.fr CtTYDEPT D0UCJ542 if- CO. BLUFFS, DEPT&O 3 COlv -r- , 1 11 1 fertl A u