111 i 7" i , i o w A i f A 7" "i i I i i a Vf N i v I . I i i I ; l . i : i . Omaha High and Lincoln to Try It Again; Cornhuskers in Wait for Jayhawkers JVUlOiiS i)Sil ItVtK BY Three Renowned txptits Jlake Eace to Statui of Liberty. MOISANt HAS . FASTEST TIME t.nal'sHiiian a itl I- rritfbmau 'y In l.trlllna Itmr Ikrrf Thoiiiiiil Keel Atiotr Mater and - llvalW ,.if it) . i NKW YuriK, -o.-t. 31. 'I'hree aviator'; flew from 'Helniont park. long Inland, yea ter'Uy afrerioin." Circled tii Htatue of I.lf !! in ocltte'. aaept back through t lie upper sir wltlinlit a mishap and ulighl"l l llled, hut' rXutturtl. John i,.)Jiiiit,, flying . fur Ainsrlra. invered ta frluiateJ IW-mtle course In m.H.4, Graliaine.'Wliite of ' Kngland wan ecunl In" K.Tt ?l and C.Yrjnt D"l-e!i jt Franc o a third In 41 :a; -J. None. huwtytr, wins the $1 o.teaj prize for the flight offerfd hy Thomas I. Ilyan, ax the ru'en' pieff i 'he that the "conteatants may slntl rfrlv tlm hefween 4." i. m. and 3:W p" ntj tiy day of the Interna tional aviation nwf't. l'nd.r this Interpre tation MoismK, although he protected, must await' 'trie "remilt of any possible flight. turnoi Tny: . I la better lila ifoi fit, today Is at liberty to , as are Uralianie- White and J.I.tvavp. It was Vcp..il.yl late tinilglit that the aviation f-i'inimliten had decided to sustain Muisaiit'a protsst on the ground that th meet of ficlaly-,Ked today and that flights tomorrow therefore could coimlst only of the deferred flights of las! Sunday and whatever rpetai . ovents me committee might be aMe'tvr arrange. Hardly had the bomb announcing the Statute 0I -liVfty flight exploded In midair when up from the field acurrled Delseps In "'.his... 60-horsepower Bleriot. (racefully he arose, with the motor dron ing perfect attunernrnt, circled across the atarting line and, as though to make sure that his machine was shipshape for the flight.' flew ent'- the course and then pointed Its. prow upward and west and went sailing majestically over tha grand stand. ( .' ' Eniilloaiuaa la Off. ?rahameVv'tTjc,',;n s than a minute, whs In tlie' alV: In. a Bleriot of 60-horse-power, , wVth ta preliminary ' skirmishing. Once fiHn ,the. startingr pylon, ,the Kngllsh man Wan .,rf pnjula Journey and. figura tively speaking, at the heels of DeLcs seps. Oraliam4-White's machine appeared to be tlie fuster.of tha two. raising htt frandstand at an elevation of about. lCOfest, both svlators scudded above tha i ailruud-tracks, which took them over Jamaita Plain and across the town of Jamaica, where they were sailing at an elevation of about 3.000 feet, with tha Eng lishman still chasing tha Frenchman, half a mils astern. iOn over Jamaica, attll fol lowing the ' railroad as a gulda for their flight,. De Icsaepa and Orahame-WhUe held their touree -Intq Brooklyn.' The aviators kept tip thels .ei press train speed Respite the biting oold: ' 1 Urahame-Whlta was attll gaining on Da Ietsepa, but .tbe Vranchman waa first out across Kew YerKbay and around tha statue about l.OUO feet -above the big, black ba loon tljat jad siywed him the course. Tha crowda along 1 lie Brooklyn water front, on Governor's ls!iii and along the tlattery shouiecj aa svil.'hndkiehlea. t ' "' 'fV'l V i"MS4 I.llrr. A jfc ti. ' j& Their (bavV'Wt sent he nose -of his .fiievluu around above the head Qf Miss liberty a!v at;IWerl Mack alongf tha same course h had JtraVelod, I Lsrepe still had a sllint" lead.' but with tha wind at Ms bnck, tiiliame-W hlte put on full speed and began, en Ung . .down his . rival's ad vantage. Hiflmay over Brooklyn the avla tora wera oh .evc.it terms, each at an. alti tude of between f.OuO and 3.000 feet, but reaching the. outskirts of the city, Qrahame Whlte forgrd ahead and set aall In earn est, with J3olinont park as Ills objective point. . " ? ! Iesins kept directly In tha English man's wake, and now and then oould be xeen workttu; hi" controls In an endeavor to get greater speed from his machine, w hich waif fast falling behind. Both men: '.continued' to fly above the railroad tiack. It aeemed aa If they feared to lose Itx guiding glimmer of steel rails. J'a-islng liai'k over Jamaica, Orahama Whlta had at lead of about two miles. Daxteads (rosn Itrlaht. Arriving! at the aviation field tba Eng lishman auurted hla descent from a height of about JLtlUO feet. He came down In a graceful iwuop ovar the tops of tha great ' trees wlthlie noae of his machine pointed downward . at an ankle of forty-five de grees. '.-I . Uka Gr'ahHine-Whit-s had dona. Da Lea scps came down from a level of (.000 feet. iUanwhfle Moimint waa tuning up his newly bought Bleriot preparatory to mak ing a atart, At firat Its motora did not alng true, Vut finally they" becams attuned and he wan off over tha grandstand. Fifty mllea an hour waa tha speed the spectators PJIEUtmilSM FLT.IFYEIa THZ CLCC3 the o:;iy periluzht co No caja jf Rheumatism waa erer cured eieejt by a thorough purifica tion of the, blood ; just as long as the blood remains charged with ferment ing uric ccid poison, the painful dis ease, will continue. The pains and aches of Rheumatism are simply su perficial effects of the impurities in the circulation, and sometimes may be temporarily relieved by the appli cation cf plasters, liniments, hot cloths, etc.-' But the person who trifles with this dangerous disease by de pending Qtt. local treatment alone, is certain trf p-y for the mistake with constant siuflering later on. S. S. 3. cures Rheumatism in the only way it is possible to cure the disease. It poes down into the blood, and re moves the tiric acid from the circula tion, so that the nerves, bones, mus cles and joints are lubricated and fed ;tv, -i , k ' 4 uuuiiau'i i n g elements instead of being continually ir ritated and in flamed with the sharp, aratic impurity. When S. S. S. bas cleansed and purified the blood, the pains and aches cease, all inSanimat.oQ disappears, stiffened muscles tne made pliut, and every troublesotn? symptom ot Rheumatism is permanently corrected. Book on Kueuruatitwit tind any medical advice fice to ail v1.t write. X&S IWIfV tficino CO., A tU.aU, fls. reckoned lie was rnnkmg acainst the cold wind. v. iiH h was blowing about ten miles an hour. Me crossed Brooklyn at an altl t ide of 2,0 0 feet. To tho!" who had nen Uralianie-White and the Frenchman It did not apprar that .Molant. machinv was as hteady a theirs. .Now and then it seemed to dip or swing from one side to tha other. Molunit'a Hash. If Al.nant was having trouble he did not liow It. for he kept winding ahead with never a let up In Kcfd. Keachlng the K-ajt river. Mnlpant wept acrosa to the New York slime and paed almost ul'o". e the battery. Then describing a jinny half circle he da.-hed out across t lie ) a and around the ytatue. Xloe the niH'jhe fiK:e he seemed to slop lnuinerita i il;. . then shot ahead for the icturn to the aeiodioiue. Ilke the two rivals who had preceded hint. Moisant also had the wind at Ms back nnd sped i'ii)5j Ki nokl;. n fit it mile a minute clip. Once he deviated from his outward course and followed the elevat'd railroad atrtic tuie. but, finding himself yoniK wrong, he turned attain toward the tracks of the I Ixitig Island railroad and followrd them back to Ht-lniont park. Moisant did not fly at the hli altitudes of irahaiTie-White and I'e l4sseps. Prob ably 2.0Oi fi-et i bis aieraue. but often he was below that. Certainly he as not much above 1.M0 feet when he resched the aerodrome, lie was numb with cold when he alighted, but was happy. H I.TIM OH F. I A I IO MEK.T Slaly ThonsanH Dollars In Crises e lffereI There. BAITIMORR. Oct. ?1.-The ptire list for the aviation ineet which begins here on Wednesday totals VW.OiO and there will be competition for the Michelln cup and for the Commodore Barry trophy for bomb dropping. A special train will leave Belmont park, txng Island, tomorrow n 1 lit and bring the machines of the aviators to Baltimore, arriving here Tuesday morning. Atlanta Readv a For Big Races in November Many . Noted Automobile Speeders Gathered for Contests in Georgia City. ATLANTA, Ua., Oct.. 31. Many noted drivers of racing automobiles are gath ered In Atlanta ami Savannah tonight and othere are en route to these cltlea to pre pare for competition during the next two weeka for several of . the richest automo bile stakes of the year. At Atlanta,' on November's, and 6. nineteen race will be held at the local two-mile speedway for prises aggregating $10.000. about 112.000 of which Is In cash, with the balance In trophies. In Savannah the grand ' price, race will be held Novem ber 12. preceded by a curtain-raiser for small cara on November U. . There are officially twenty events on the Atlanta program, but No. IS Is a blank. On Saturday there will be a free-for-all JfiO-niile race for a $5,000 prise,' of which the winner takes (3,000; second, 11,000; third, ST.00, and tha next three,- $200 $150 and $100, respectively. Thla . Is .the biggest . . event scheduled. ..Friday ..has beefi . made , a city holiday in honor of the race for the city 'of Atlanta trophy,, which Is 'valued at, $7,500. The dlatanoe la 2o0 mllea, and In addition to the trophy $1,860 In prise money will ,b distributed among the leaders. Thursday's feature event 'is 100 hides for a trophy and P2a purse. Caleb Bragg, tha Vew York amateur. who defeated Barney Oldfield at the Los Angeles meet, has announced that he will officially time' professionals at tha races here. . ". , . .' ; Athletics Beat -the Nonpareils Score of Six to Nothing Played by Two Fast Young Omaha , . Teams. In a (am characterized on' both sides by fumbles, the Athletics 1 dirsated tha nonpareils In their rirst game of the season yesterday, on Cretghtoo tleld, th score being 8 to Tha game waa tight until Mulvlhill, for the Cralrfhton Ath letics, received the ball on a fumble and ran twenty-five yards for a touchdown. Blaclt kicked goal. Both teams' were about the same weight and a hard battle waa fought. In the first five minutes of play tha Nonparella advanced the ball to the Ath letics' five-yard Una and then loat It on a fumble. Twice after thla the Nonpareils lost tha ball on fumbles on tha five-yard line. After this the game waa a see-saw contest until the third quarter, when Mul vlhill made the touchdown. The fourth quarter waa marked by punting on both sides, with honors about even. Play ended with tha bait in the Athletics' territory. Morgan, Cox, Boloman and Oulnan were the stars for the Nonpareils, while Black, Mulvlhill and, F. Green starred for tba Athletics. Next Sunday the Nonparella will play tha Gate City team. The Nonparella are looking for games either In or out of tha city. In three weeka they play the fast Walnut Hill aggregation. Kor games call Douglaa jI, between $ and 10 p. in., or addreas Ueorge Gorhani. manager. i4 North Twenty-seventh street. Tha lineup: ATHLETICS. NONPAREIL. I1 Until farmer Thornton Mullock ktusn uillisaa Court r lna-oa tlaivtl . . . F Orron Mulvlhill ! . H T I L.l ... ..H.O Lu..., '. 1' ...LI KU... ...L.T H.T .. ...L.K.I It.g... ...VI B.vt 8... ..It H . H H... . L..H.I L.H... ...K.B. KB.,. I)i Planner? ., ... fr'laalior puad (Jorhajtt Morgan Onob f'os Wuittu Boiouma Touchdowns: Mulvlhill. Goals. Black Time of quarters: Ttn minutes. Vmptre: Young of Cieighton. I .M I I ATION IOWA ('resngay af rreshiaaa SM-lely Takes Place Belweeat HaUea. IOWA CITV. la., Oct. JL-tBiieclal -An affair which will mark a new departure In IntercolleaiutF enia In Iowa schools will be the mock Initiation to be held on Iowa field between the halves of the I'rake-luwa foot ball contest Ssturdav, Novambar It. 'i'liose to bs Initiated are the newly chosen members of til Mu, the honorary freeiimen society of the I'tit versiiy gf Iowa. The initiation this tear will take - tha fui hi of a inonstrr paiade. led by ths uni verntty a band. The newly choeen mem bers are to be attired In fnttlc cos tumes to reprraeiit mciiilwrs of the circus, while the older members of the society will follow In uniform attire, making the fiMitunen undergo various atunta through out the time Hut the parade occupies. Several hundred person from Pes Klolnra will follow the Iirske team to Iowa I lly sint the luitlatory promisee to be wit. Iic-xeaa by some I ua) iwuple. i Tlia Kt- to tha Situation Bee Want KANbAS MrA IIIIS WtEh Coach Kennedy'! Men Will Test Corn husker Strength. MEANS HONORS FOR THE SEASON Cole's Men Were rinyla Oft t)arlaa Hosae llnnir and rosserrlsf Irenatb for Aaprense l labt of Irsr. LINCOLN, Oct. ;'.!.( Special. Only one team stands In the was of a Missouri val ley championship for Nebraska. Kansas, greatest rival of the Cornhuskers. looms "P sis the machine which will have to be toppled over before the proteges of Coach "King" Cole tan aert a claim to the title for l!0. Nebiaka still has Kansat and Ames to Play, hut the Aggies weie defeated by Mornlngslde, the small Sioux City college team, and cannot hope to have any claim on the championship honors this autumn. L'vin though the Aggies should come hark into form and defeat the. Cornhuskers at Lincoln a week from next Saturday, they would have no position of prominence In the foot ball of this section ot the country for this year. As conditions now s'.atid Nebiaka and Kansas are the only undefeated elevens of the "Big Seven" organisation. They are the teams that must fight it out for the leading honors, and the game between them at Lawrence next Saturoay will be the de ciding battle, for It will eliminate one eleven from tha race, leaving the winner to be regarded aa the championship or ganixation of the vallef. Nebraska Li-laar Law. Since this game will practically settle the championship question, more Interest attaches to It than to auy other struggle of the season. Both teams are trained for playing in this game. "King" Cole refused to use nls best men in the game against Doane yesterday because ha did not want to run the risk of having them crippled and laid out before the great Kan sas engagement. He even permitted the Doane colleelans to hold his playera even in the first half and then let his men make only a single touchdown in tha second division. Conserving his men's strength and speed was Just what he was doing. He waa think ing about Kansas, the one eleven in all the west that he really has been seeking to defeat. Kanaas, the team that came to Lincoln two years axo. when Nebraska apparently had the championship in Its pocket, and humiliated the Cornhuskers. i nai is ma eleven that Cole ia "after." Ha tried to lick It last fall, and, but for the redoubtable Johnnie Johnson and his long run., would have come close to turning the trick. To all followers of the game It Is a certainty that Cole played 'possum In meeting Doane, ao tha showing- of that game does not startle anybody. Every body thinks he is ; "laying" for the Jay hawkers, and they -are willing- to trust In his ability to turn out a team that will whip the 'Lawrence aggregation to- a fraxile. In the contest- Saturday the Cornhuskers used nothjug- but atraJght football. Those shlit, plays which ran so well against tha Denver climbers were kept under cover. During the week Cole had added many tiew plays to his repertory and theea were not even given a trial. Whan tha ctbrn huskers go- against . Kansas, -therefore, they should have a large variety of plays which will be entirely new to tba oppos ing team. Test for Keaaedy. Coach Bert Kennedy of Kansas, of course, has been pointing' Ids men fonthls, engagement with the Cornhuskers, just aa Cole haa been preparing for the game, lis haa long realised that his team will he up against one of the beat elevena In the I w est. He also knows that his own team Is hot aa strong as the aggregation which -defeated the Nebraska men by the bare "margin of a single touchdown last fall. He must play the best ball of tha fall, and then, perhaps, will not be able to win.' The Cornhuskers have a powerful line, and Kennedy must beat that line If he. gets a victory. So far this fall, Kansas baa not ahowed any brand of rootball that ahould push fear Into ihe. Cornhuskers. It waa an ex tremely weak exhibition that the team put up. against Drake. In the' games be. fore that It had a hard time getting away with a dean bill.. In the contest with Washtwyn Saturday It rolled up a fair sUed score, but tha opposing aggregation was extremely ' weak,, having previously gone down to defeat before minor normal schools. . Tha : Kansas-Nebraska gam will be stubbornly fought. - No matter what ths teams have done In tha other perform ances of the fall, they can be depended upon to come into this annual clash with, a strong defense. Tha aide that wins will have to play a brilliant game. Close tiara Expected. A margin of a few points will be the beat that either side can get. If Kaunas should win and there Is only a remote possibility "of such being the case It will have to-do ao by the meana of forward paasea and end runa. Kennedy never has shown a skilled hand in the development of tha pass, and ha probably will not have any startling Una of these plays to show on Saturday. Nebraska went against soma well developed passes In tha Min nesota clash and will be prepared, ' by reason of this previous experience, to thwart most of Kennedy's favorite flips. Th Jayhawkers mad good with eome of th paeaas in th Drake game, but tha Dea Molnea school had a weak defense and could not do anything with this kind of plays. Nebraska is strong on th de fensive, and it would not be surprising to see Cole's mea intercept and break up many passes. If the Knas defense Is strong made so for this on game the score may be kept low. But with lta huaky line Nebraska should be able to buret through th oppos ing front and tear along for many gains. If th Cornhuskers strike a weak point in th Lawrence team's offense early in th game th score will be larg. Th result of th ' Ams-Mornlngsld gam brought Into prominence another foot ball coach. Jack Holilater, ot tha winning team. For three years the Mornlngslde man has been troddlng along, unrecog nized, and doln.g a great deal to develop winning teams at hla school. His foot ball machine this fall held Iowa to twelve points and ahould have made way with a tie gam. It defeated Creighton, and then Saturday added to lta Hat Ames, th eleven (hat defeated Missouri. Th Tlgsrs of Co lumbia had pravloualy defeated IdWa, ao th whole result places Mornlngeld In a high position for th full's work. Jack Jskssos Keeps th Rla. CHICAGO. Oct. 31. The long-standing dispute between Jack Johnson and tils former manager, Ueorge Utile, over the ownership of a big diamoud ling which Johnson weara waa concluded today when Utile took a non suit In Hie case In the municipal court. Little aaJd h was un able to produce his chief witness, who had disappeared Per-oletent Advertising Is the Koad Big Relurna 1 Jtllllllll IVUiUl For Auto Tourists AcrOSS Continent A. L. Westward Securing Data to Indicate Best Highways for Motor Travelers. A. L. Wesienril. oft.clnl repivsenlallve Of the public roads department of the I'nlted States government, who is estab lishing a transcontinental highway for the Touring Cluh of America, arrived In Omaha at R:1.1 o'clock lait nlaht. With Hoy McNatnara of ('Hidden lour fame at Ihp wheel and In company with Mrs. .: L. Westgurd and II. C. 'Drum, representative ' of the t'lrcaRo Itecord Horald. Westcanl ,s nut kins, a Hip in his Premier automobile to San Francisco. The fin My stopped for the nluht at th? Home hotel and will leave the city about 9 o'clock this morning for Kansas City, from where they Intend to fin sh their Journey by way of the Santa I'e trml. Besides establishing, a . transcont nental highway for automobile tourists the pur pose of Westgard's trip Is to get data for the government as to altitudes, tempera tures, and the condition of American roads. He is carrying a government camera, with which he ia tak'ng views aloni; the route j uw.i tu ma uiu a. r or tnp neneru or crows-continent tourists Westgard is also compiling a directory nr flrst-cinss hmels rarases and roads contiguous to the high way. With lis Wife and driver the motorist left New York City on October ltt. being officially started by Acting Governor White or iew York. Westgard will be piloted through Ne braska on his way to Kansas City by H. E. Frediickson nr (1m. I. a Th. !,., ! automobilist has been Instrumental in bringing Westgard through Omaha. Foot Ball Rules Working Well List of Injured to Date About Forty Per Cent Less Than Last Year. BOSTON. Oct. 31. The question whether the new foot bail rule has come to stay Is within three weeks of being answered. Next Saturday's contests will be the lust before the final struggles, and the rules committee Is already sizing up the situa tion to see whether the present game 1h a fixture or needs more tinkering, either back toward the original or toward more open play. ' The cry. principally ' from old players, against the latest modification has sub sided to a whisper, and with the Injured list out down by 25 to 40 per cent, leaders In the sport aeemed agreed that the rules committee will make' only minor modifi cations next winter. - In the work of eastern colleges, up to date, Harvard and Princeton stand at the head, with their goal lines Intact and a string of six and lflve victories reepect fullyt , As .'Harvard: haa- scored a toueh down in every., fame, and Princeton failed to get to the goal. line. In the game with Lafayette, winning., by a -field goal, the Cambridge team la placed first on the eastern list. The naval cadets are third. M The Right Brink if At ike Right Time IiF M ' ass ing quite so good to take the "kinks" out of your nerves and give you an appetite to enjoy your evening meal, as TTh-a The Beer of Quality ' You will appreciate its full mellow richness you will enjoy its smooth delicate flavor you will find it different from other beers. A glass of Blue Ribbon just before retiring means a nighfs sound sleep and nerves refreshed for the work of another day. Made and bottled only by Pabst at Milwaukee. Have a case sent home. You will then have it handy at meal time, when you will eryoy it most Phone .The Pabst Company 1307 Leavenworth Tel. -a Vm I.? a-Ta- jl.'JLUUU 11 i I I IVVJI UJU1I1.1 L,., .. VTK. t r, Fnilip Kline, Hurt in Nebraska Class I Rash, 0. II. S. Graduate. .THINK SATURDAY'S GAME EASY Omaha llf irn Kpec( to Toy rtlth South Dinshs Hard r'rartlce la ichrilnlril for the Itelern Lincoln Contest. liill.p Kline, freshman hi the I niverslty of Nebraska, who was hurt Saturday in the class rush, is recoverlnc from his In luties. Kline was a Riaduafe of the Omaha High school In 1' and entered the rush with n number of other local Krnduates (.lfrerl Kennedy, Sam Carrier, Kred Carlson, Calvin Dals and Harold McKlnney, all ttraduates of the Omaha HlKh school, were among these. Saturday afternoon the Omaha High school will play South Omaha High school. An easier came is expected than with Lin rt In and the Omaha rooters hope a bit; scote will be made. No Omaha player was Injured, but all are rather the worse for the lant gam. With the second Lincoln game less than two weeUs off. the Omaha team will work exceptionally hard and will, no doubt, prac tice longer. If for any reason Ieslle Mann does not play his usual position at quar terback, IJneoln will, perhaps, shift Chan nlng Mann, his brother, from end to quar ter. Leslie Mann Is by far the best player on the Lincoln team, but Channlng Mnnn will prove an efficient leader in his ab sence. SUPERIORS BEAT MONMOUTH Fast Game at Florence K.nda with Score of Fifteen to olhlna Sunday Afternoon. The Superiors defeated the Monmouth Parks at Florence Park Sunday afternoon In a one-sded but hard fougiit frame by the score of 15 to 0. The game was full of npectaciilar plays and tackles that brought great applause. For the Superiors, WMIIams. Tracy and Smith were the best ground. gainers. Hen ingsen's and Hachten's tackling were the features of the game. Davis, Anderson and Carlson for the Parks were all good. Following was the lineup: SU'PKRIORS. HeningKen U.K Oolclen L.T Andrews UO ('(imenwky ,...(' MONMWN'l'TH PARKS. P..K. ki lnon Johnson Clotwr Davis Brhrum .Rarler. tlvlnnon Robertson, Prter TniliioTi H.T. HQ. C. w'enlney F.O. i L.O. Khohan R.T. L T. snipe. R K. t, B. Smith anil Htrhtrn .Q B. CJ.H. H cten. Uent'm'n.L.H.B.I R. H. R Anderson Trcy R.H B. L.H.B Hirwn W illiams FBI K B William. Touchdowns: Williams ('), Tracy (1 Referee: Kimball. Umpire: Price. Field judge: Golden. Test Tigers Mart for t'sbs. DETROIT. Oct. 31. -Ten members of the Detroit ba.se ball club start tonight for a barnstorming- tour of Cuna. Tha men who will go are Mullln. manager; CIeary. Willett, Summers. Morlarlty, T. Jones. Casey. Stallage, Crawford, Cobb and Me In tyre. Hermann Bchaefer of Chicago has been Invited to go In place of Bush, who has been found to have a spilt bone In his ankle. O Ieary haa signed a contract with Detroit for 1911. Athletic Club la' Bankrupt." SAN FRANCISCO', Oct. ' 1. With llablL itles placed at $13,000 and s seers at S2.&H), the Reilabce Athletic club of Oakland, through its president, Walter B. Kaweett, preaented a petition In bankruptcy today. The Reliance club waa for many years one of the foremost athletic organizations on the Pacific coast.. Pabst Liie Douglas 79 A 1470 TTft TI H KliODODl Syracuse Doqs Away with Crew For the Present Rowing Costs More Than Any Other Sport and Brings No Return to Pay Way. SYIIACI'FK. N. Y .. Oct. Jl.-Hyiaciise unlvetsliy will not ceiid crews to the Inter collegiate regatta at Poughkeepsle or en gage In tut regattas with colleges next )esr. The Athletic Ooverning hoard of the uni versity has voted to eliminate Intercol legiate rowing from the list of sports for the present college year. The services of Coach James A. Ten Kyck will be re tained. The temporary suspension of crew work is necessitated by a financial problem that has long vexed the athletic authorities. As rowing necessitates the hraviest expenses snd brings no financial returns, it was (Itemed best lo drop that sport for the present to effect economy. The governing tumid exiects that rowing will sgaln be taken up In 1912. suspects Held Upon Schooner Customsj Officials Guard Men Supposed to Be Implicated in Los Angeles Horror. MKXICO CITV, Oct 31 The names of the three men who were arrested at Aca puloo yesterday, suspected of being Impli cated In the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times building, and who were aboard the power schooner Kate, are Harry Ham, O. Carlaon and Dan Archer, according to tele mains received her today. The names given are as they are registered on the boat's papers. In addition, the captain of the vessel. Swan Kngdethe, and the en gineer, Adolph Adolphson, also said to be the owner, are still on board the vessel under guard of custom house officials. As soon as the schooner entered port to take on a supply of gasoline, sh was boarded by the American consul and a port official. The sum of JlO.OOn was found. Tfie captain atated that he had been engaged at a contract price of 1750 by Adolphson to take the schooner from San Francisco to the Galapagos Islands, off the coast of Peru and IJcuador. The register of the schconer states that Ham, Carlson and Archer were each to receive the sum of $30 a month. Carlson, Ham and Archer are now In prison, pending Investigation. On account of a storm the men wr forced to throw overboard th raeollne on hand and run Into port for a new supply.- Bedford Trwm Wins. CRESTON, , Ia., Oct.. . (Special.) Th Business college basket ball . team of this place played their first game of ball at Hedford Friday night with the Bedford High school team and received a drubbing to the tune of fS to 17. The Creston team haa been handicapped In having no hall to piay tn nere tor practice purposes and has been obliged to play games out of ooors, malting it hard for them to play in a nail with a skilled team. - Woodbine Defeats Hanseom Parka. WOODBINE. Ia.. Oct. SI. The Wood bine team defeated the Hanseom Parks of omaha today by the score of 73 to 0. The Woodbine team Is In the field for games trom now until Thanksgiving day After the fatigue of the day's work, there's noth Phillies Sign With Cincinnati McQuillan and Batfs Accept Contracts for Next Year Presented bv Herrmann. CINCINNATI. Oct. Kl-deoie McQuil lan, pitcher, and John Pates, outfielder, both members of the Philadelphia Na tional league team of I'M", to-lay signed contiacts with the Cincinnati cluh for 1!1I. Their act on. In the race of President FrKl'e declaiatlon that the Philadelphia club hail not released them, together with Third Haseinan (Irant and Pitcher Morn. Is expected to precipitate an option test between the Cincinnati and Phllsdelph a eln ha over the trade announced last week. The salaries offered to the men were ' not announced. .vw,. - - - -via . SnroJ Cvmrywhmrm Br. Lyon1 PCnFCCT Toofli Powder cleanses, preserves and beau tifies the teeth and imparts purity and fragrance to the breath. Mothers should teach the little ones its daily use. sa 90 of baldness comes from dandruff. Just see how nicely Na ture will do her work if you remove the cause.' At your barbers. D.I1.SHAMP00 t Uauui U.i beautiful Tooth Thar ar but fw psopl who Tia them. Good Tth vry on might bav If Uisy would K to Dr. Bis J bury. Ths aulckrst. caaiast an laat painful ar til only oilhod sinpluysd by us and hundrad of our patlanta. both lu and ut of th city, will gladly tall you about tha good uanlal worn and our up-to-data ways of dolnic things. Crown and br'lg work from o.vv psr loom, fiat tr.at fit from 14 00 to (it. SO. JHainlsa aitras. lion of tth. Nrrvss of tenth rmovl without nurtiog you. worn warranted DR. BRADBURY, IKE DEBTIST 160 raraam BU rbon X. 171 17 year sam looation. The Truo Follow Up System Wherever you go, let Th Bee follow you. Subscrib ers need only notify, our circulation' department and the addreei will be changed as often aa desired. Getting The Bee is the Bame as get ting A pi!! Letter Frsa tlsni Keeping you posted on what's doing among friends and associates. It's the only up-to-date way. Let The B Follow You OCEAiv STEAMSHIPS . THE ROYAL MAIL MeSrt Crulsss d Xn to CabaWrt lodlrt PaaaaM Keraiaa SEVEKTY YSAH' Kxpurlenre in il Vt Indies lJaisen.'fr Trale. R.M.S.P. "AVlN" lion.7a Jan. Bl (87 days) fl0 and np. Ttb. 19 (32 ilbO and np. - Maroh SS (1 dsys) u3 aad np. 'fh. oitir Hi.aur Yuia4ns in i)i Wt 1 n, dl apst-Ullr ouolrucl4 Jur ssrvlcs la lbs Tropiu. Wsskly Sailing : erniudiCBb..Jmici l'"? on Ahmi Saturdays br Wt Indian Mj stainni and lnt rvwiUis atunly by lit row tamoc trnp , at. M. B. 9. HVEi.14 Ton. Baadaraoa Soa. 91-84 Stat at. at. T. 149 La Halls at. Chloairo. SOUTH ."..S.S.ElueckarVir i mt n. v.. . lull, tluuag U I lsirwtlis t-aw I'l'S is La K Ira ita 4 M.f.ll.a Ala Ur.S U Ik 'rlaal. Wat la araia4 1M M A M It i Ra. A Kta. K il Mg;. !- 1'a.i, T. Agnnts. AMERICA: 'Tft T4 DATS ' J350 dd Or IK-al 0