TIIE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 2. 1911. J. CLEARING SPOT FOR AVIATORS More Than One- Hundred Men Are at Work on Chicago Field. PERFECT AERODROME BUILDING Grada frana llan.ara lor Gi4aallrt Affording Rn A 4 rant a Bra t Tkmi Wha Attra.pt Flight for friar a. 1 CHICAGO. July L Although the opening of the aviation mrt to b hrld in tila city In nearly two month away, 100 men and half aa many team ara now at work In Urant park making a billiard table surface w here bummocki and dltchea predomnlate. When the worker have flnlahed Grant park will have been transformed from an area of no particular uaefulneaa to perhapa tha moat perfect aerodrome In the world. ' Nowhere in the wurld ha there ever been .plotted o Ideal a pot for uch an event The pert atom, for whom there will be v apace to accommodate 60,000, will directly face the lake front with abaolutely nothing to Intercept their view of the event. A Urn proportion of the eeata wilt be free to .the public, and at each end of the court will be parking apace to accommodate all told more than 1,000 automobile and car riages. With an actual length over all of 6.900 feet or more than one mile, the aviation courae which will be travened by the airships will be 4,300 feet In the actual course, assuming that tha alrshlpa hug the theoretical rail. At the northwest corner of the ground will be the hanger, with space for nearly forty flying machines, and in order that each aviator may have plenty of space In which to atart hi machine the actual starting point of the flights will be near the aouthwest corner of the grounds, at which place the judges' stand will be lo cated. Neat each end of the course will be three pylons, with one additional tower at the northeast end, to determine the Inner line of tha course. The ground slopea very gradunllMy from the north to the south of the starting course, so that when the . machine leave the hangers they will travel slightly down hill in gaining their Initial momentum, Specs Would Improve Broken Down Players in Batting Averages New York Doctor Makes Suggestion that Might Bring Old-Timeri Back to the Gaipe NEW YORK, July I. In view of the statements of McOraw, Duffy, Murray and 'others that the main cause of bad batting is bad eyes and that ajl recruits ahould have their eyes examined in the spring, a prominent New York doctor and formerly a Yale player, who asks that his name be withheld, has written the following rather Interesting article on the subject: "Nothing to me la more pathetic than to see how uniformly a baseball player goes into the discard around the age of forty, particularly as regards his batting. A pa- ' tlent of mine last week told me that ha wear spectacle when he Is batting,' One . Saturday he did not wear them and struck out every time he went to the bat. The following Saturday he got to flrat baae. Out of six times at the bat be got one pop fly to the Infield, a base on balls, two singles, a double and a triple. "I have never batted since I have put on spectacles, but I captured my prep. school team before I went fo Yale. I had found out by experience that I could bat ' an In drop every time, so . whenever our team ran up against a pitcher who used Ms curve extensively, my batting average was quite splendid. otherwIserioL My astigmatism, as it turned out, distorts ob jects, so that a pitched ball would look lower to me than It really was; hence the above result. "Would It not be possible aa an experi ment to take aome broken down outfielder whose batting has already fallen off, or : aome pitcher who bate poorly, and try how well he bate by simply wearing spectacles until he gets to first base? My friend Yawkey of the Detroit club says that a Tltcher would throw the ball right at a inan'a eyes If he wore spectacles, but by building heavy rim ones, nothing would happen even If they were hit. and It would be no more difficult to keep from getting ; hit In the apectacles- than to keop from getting hit In the eyes. I think that some man who feels that he la a "has been" might be willing to try It." Pirate Scout Seeks : "Minor League Stock William Murray Ends Four Weeks' Trip Taken to Look Over Young sters at Colleges. . PITTSBURG, Pa., July 1. William Mur ray, the . former manager of the Phlla ' ; delphla National league baae ball club, who j V I". now a scout for the Pirates, arrived .ivy"' ,h thr day "fter tr,P' tdlng ' a ever a period of four weeks, during which he looked over considerable minor league , aud college material In the hope of find . ing something worth while for the local team. "Billy" had a long talk with Presi dent "Barney" Dreyfus, but would not ad mit that he had made any recommendations. "I did not go crasy about any of the 'player I saw," b said. "Most of my , time has been devoted to watching col lege teama perform, and I did not vlait many placea at that. Did I find any fu tuie greats? Well, If they existed In tho placea I visited they managed to escape my eyea, I have never known material to be so acarce aa thla year, and I shall be a much surprised Individual If about f9 per cent of the players that are being bought up by major league club do not turn out to be lemons. "Tbia applies particularly to the college boys who are being signed up. Many of those who have been touted aa wonders do not even know how to put on a unl form. I saw absolutely none that appealed to me and I am beginning to think that college bae ball playera are not as good as they used to be on the university clr cult. 'Of course, you can read nearly every day of wonderful young school aud col Use pitchers who are twirling no-htt games and striking out fifteen to twenty batsmen la nlna innlnga, but you would (use to wonder at these performances If you could see the batsmen against whom these games are pitched. "They know very little about the art ,of batting and It Js easy for a pitcher to fool them. An inferior major league pitcher could go into these gamea and not allow a, bit. ao do not be surprised It a lot of the eollege wonders who have been signed up for the big league eluba explode in a hurry. There may be a few exceptions, of couis. Kor instance, Pittsburg has picked up a promising proposition in Cottrell of Kyraeuse. "As for the minor league talent thla year, I have aeen none of exceptionally high caliber. The big league teama have better men sitting on their benches than are to be found la the bushe.' Chase is Scientific in Style of Throwing, Asserts Learned Man Doctor Explains Why Hal Chase Has it on Other Ball Flayers in the Great Game. NEW YORK, July 1. After carefully watching Hal Chase play a number of gamee the learned doctor bad something to say. Ilia Instructions had been to take a few hour In the genial sunshine and give his opinion as to why Chase has a little on some other flrat basemen as a physical machine. It Is more than probable that the learned doctor never would have entered upon such an errand had It not been that an other doctor Insisted that Chase had a "loosening of the elbow Joint." or some thing of the sort the phrase being well disguised with polychromlo Latin words which gave hl'rn at advantage over his fel low. The learned doctor scoffed when he heard It and pleaded for time to study the sub ject. "It's as easy as rolling eggs down the White . House hill," said the learned doc tor when he sat down to talk about it. "There Isn't any freak exhibit of muscles In Chase's throwing arm. The other chap may have thought so, but he was. travel ing further Into science than the subject warrants. Chase throws with his forearm. That's all there is to It. How many are there who can throw with their forearm r "Some ot the first basemen. In fact, most of them," said the speaker, "use their fore arm a little, but do all of the pushing with the shoulder muscles. It costs them seo onds more to throw than It does Chase. He plcka up the ball from tha ground, tilts It over with his forearm and the first thing that tho runner knows near third baae the ball la on him. If it happens to be a fairly fast runner he may wonder how it came over so rapidly, but It was due to the fact that Chase did not have to hoist the ball over his head before he oould get It started. In other words. It's just like running an elevator up three stories In stead of six to accomplish the same result." If there are any "fane" who have won dered why the ball happens to flit around so expeditiously when Chase la trying to make an Infield play perhaps they will understand it better after reading . the theory of the learned doctor." "Now what I would like to find out," said the Inquisitive Bookworm, "Is whether It would be possible for other first baaemen than Chaae to acquire thla same skill, if we are to call it skill." "Well," said the learned doctor, with deliberation and aome hesitancy, "I reckon that I would better answer that with a mightn't. All elbow joints are not built alike. All ball players do not crook their arms alike to throw. All play ers do not possess the same muscular slower, and there aro those who have to put a heap of awing Into their motion to be sure that the ball will carry aa far aa they would like to have It. Probably it would not do any hurt to all ball players to try to throw like Chaae. but while the general pattern of the aim has been well defined by nature, there are varieties of arms. Just as there are of noses. Chase could hold the upper part of his arm rigid and throw further than the average ball player who attempted the same thing. At least that la my theory of the matter. taking an offhand look. Tbe spectator who sits In the stand and watches the profes sionals play, growls because one man doesn't play the same as another man, or doesn't play the same way as another. I wonder If he ever stops to think that no two men eat the same way and that no two sign their names the same way. Nature favors athletes, and If she didn't, your old game of base ball wouldn't be worth the powder to blow it up, for It would be so mechanically precise that even the um pires wouldn't be pannned by the crowd or h nl.ii.M ... These Three Players Are Star Performers ' as Pitchers' Targets Curtis Welch, Hughie Jennings and rrank Chance Stop More Balls Than Any Others. - NEW YORK. July 1. "There have Wn three men In the history of tha hi leagues," said Bid McPhee. the old second baseman, "who stood out above all others when It came to being hit by pitched balls., Those three men were Curtis Welch Hughey Jennings and Frank Chanea. Thv have never had any rivals, and I don't suppose any players are really anxious to equal the records that thev nda. Th strangest thing of all, iar as two of meae men were concerned, waa the fact that they didn't mean It. The- wr game all right, but not game enough to vuiunianiy run ine risks they seemed to take, and the countless bruises th.v re ceived were not endured to help their teams, but because they couldn't dodge, it's a fact Hugh Jennings could not dodge a ball, and Frank Chance one now. As for Curtis Welsh, he waa i a different proposition. He got hit Inten tionally time after time, and never, per haps, without full meaning. 'The box scores of the old Baltimore games seldom went into print without the words: 'Hit by pitched ball. Jennings.' Time after time Hughey waa cannonaded, and, as a rule, was bumped hard. His nervs and gamenesj were widely praised, while some of the critics said he waa simply looinaray. The latter opinion waa almoat unlvaraal when, after Baltimore had safely won the flag, Hughey continued to get thumped, and to get hit at all. All these years he had been unable to dodge. He seemed unable to convey the sease of danger from his brain to his H enough to spring aside, and on several oc casions he waa knocked cold when he knew me cam waa coming, when he was eager to get out of the way, and simply couldn't make tils muscles movin time. ' Frank Chance has been hit In the hemt thirty-eight times, and stunned on twenty occasions, while he has received innumer able smashes on shoulders, ribs ar u Chance wants to get out of the way, but ;eu i. tie si anas riatrooted, resting heav ily on his pine when batting, almoat Im bedding them hi the ground, and he can not aldestap or" make bla feet move In time to save him. I doubt If he can even dodge a' alow ball, hla feet move so re belllously, and yet. once on bases, he Is a lightning runner. Curtis Welsh stood lightly set upon his feet, and could spring away from tho fastest pitching If he de sired. But he didn't desire, and ao agile, so snakelike was he, that he could seem to be grazed by purest accident every time. He even developed a way of glancing the ball off his forearm, apparently dodg ing, yet leaving the. arm expoaed and let ting the ball tick against It." A S-Mttaa; lens with both parties wounded demands Buck lens Arnica Salve. Meals wounds, aoret, burna or Injuries. 2ic. For aale by Beaton l-ru Co. CYCLISTS SPEED JULY FOURTH Some of Host Daring Men in Country Will Participate. HUffDEED-lULE RACE IS FLANKED Both Amlrtra aad Frofrs.loaala Are F.IIclM. far F.atry l.tx-al Riders Oat Track Preflrln Kvery nay. ' Independence das in Omaha will be the date of the biggest motorcycle meet of the west and one of the big events of the coun try for 1911. A 100-mlle rare on the Omaha F peed way haa been planned by the Omaha Motorcycle club, and some of the speediest snd most dating riders of the United States will participate. . The 100-mlle race will in reality be four races In one. 'prises will be presented to the winner In the 100-mlle single cylinder even and In the twin cylinder class. The complete list of prises will be worth more than $500. The winner of the race, regard lesa of what class machine he tides or whether he la amateur or profeasional, will receive the grand prise in addition to thf regular prises. . Entries for the big race are being re ceived now by the secretary of the Omaha Motorcycle -organisation, T. E. Mlckel. Mr. Mickel expects fifty to sixty riders will start at the firing of the gun. The local motorcycle riders are out every day trying their machines on the Speedway and aome of the Omaha riders will probably come out . well In the finish of the big event.'. The motorcycle club house on Leavenworth street Is a popular place these days, each evening a dozen or more enthusiasts congregating there and then making -a trip out to the track for trials. v Ta Make Fast Time. . Fifty miles an hour will be a slow speed. i The winner will probably make about sixty, even when his time for changing tires and any repairs Is counted In. The light motor cycles do not cut up the track as do auto mobiles, and the race will be speedy from start to flnleh. .. Preceding the big event will be . a ten mile open-to-the-world race. with, prizes for. the 'winners. In all probability the racers will enter this In a body to test their machines and get into running shape for the big event. At S p. m. the gun for the pacemaker will be fired. A man In an automobile or yon a motorcycle will proceed, at a fair rate of speed for the first mile around the track, and as he comes past the line again the starting gun will be flrd and tbe race de clared on. r Inter-City Tourney to Be Held July 4th Tennis Players from Fire Important Centers Will Meet at Omaha Field Club. . An lnter-clty tennla toumev will ba n1avH at the Omaha Field club July Fourth, the partlclpanta to be players from five cities In the Missouri valley. Teams from Sioux City, Kansas City. St. Joseph and Des Moines will join the Omaha enthusiasts In the events. -Arthur Scrlbner Cuthbert Potter. Harrv Koch and probably McKay, a new man In umaha tennis ranks, will make up the Omaha team. McKay haa already shown hla speed In defeating a number . of the Omaha cracks. Including the pity champion. ' Sioux City's tennis squad will consist of W. 8. Oilman, W. S. Carey, W. B. Hicks and George Howell. . Lafe Toung, jr.; Olln Sweet, Peters and Bradley will represent Des Moines. Kansas City, and St. Joseph have not sent In their line-ups, but prominent tennis men from both places have declared their willingness to come and word Is expected dally. ' lnter-clty matches between the tennis clubs of the large cities of the east are very popular and the members of the Omaha Field club believe they can be made fully aa popular ' here. The cost of auch a match In the middle west Is very much higher as the players have to travel greater distances to the common destination, but It Is thought that several of them can be held each year in addition to the regular tournaments of this section. FOOT BALL - PRACTICE IS NEXT Cornell Fmkmta Will Start Two Weeks Earlier. ' ' ITHACA. N. T July l.-Cornell foot bailers will commence practice about the middle of September, while the' freshmen will get to work on September U, about two weeks earlier than usual. It la ex pected that senior week will bring back to Ithaoa a large number of foot ball alumni to attend the annual mneting of the asso ciation. At thla meeting Head Coach Dan Reed will probably talk over plana with the graduates. Coach Reed will be assisted . by Alfred HutchTnson, '09, and John . Newall, 'OS.' and a third field coach is expected. fSSI3S3 ; immediate; pf Hudson "30" ; Motor Cars Hudson dealers all over the country have been clamoring for additional allotments of the "33" model. We have secured three' carloads of this popular car which we olfer for sale this week. In view of the 'fact that the Hudson factory has de clined 1,500 orders this season, this means a great op portunity for prospective buyers in this territory. Should you be looking for a car possessing the distinc tive, merits of the Hudson, we recommed that you see us within the next few days, H. E. Fredericksoh Auto Co. 2044-46-48-Farnam Street Also CHALMERS, PIERCE-ARROW and THOMAS Cars Along Auto Row Tklasxa f latere! A ; I I Motor Car Oralers Owa rra Baslaesa IProaprete Bright. The modem Ir.aak Walton uses a motor csr when going fishing, according to a let ter received the last week by the Pioneer Implement company of Council Bluffs, from Chris Larsen of Primrose, Neh With ills soi.and two friends Mr. Larsen drove In his Model E Jackson some time ago to Willow Lake; which I located In 'Cherry county. The distance was 21S miles and Was negotiated In eleven hours, despite the sandhills and bad roads encountered on the trip. The fishing part of the expedi tion waa also successful, aa 500 black bass were caught on the trip. Some ot the bass caught weighed nearly six pounds each.- During Wednesday arid Thursday of the last week the E-M-F branch house had sufficient cars on hand to supply Its cus tomers. During this period an even allot ment of eighteen cars was distributed to the territory surrounding Omaha. . , Richard Bacon, assistant sales-manager of the Chalmers factory, was In Omaha during the week at the salesrooms of the H. E. Fredrickson Auto company. Carlson Bros., of Beresford, S. P., drove a Jackson "30" car home from' the garage of the Pioneer Implement company o: Council Bluffs. C. L. Qould, manager of the Omaha branch of the Ford Motor company, was married In Lincoln Wednesday to Mrs. Delia McClure. The event was celebrated without , the knowledge of any ot the Omaha office force or any of the groom's friends. On Thursday . evening the couple left for Detroit, where the convention of the Ford branch managers will be. In ses sion this week.' ' The Cadillac company of Omaha received word this week of the victorious perfor mance of the 1911 Cadillac in the Iowa Little Oltdden tour. The run started at Des Moines and lasted for four, days, 'cov eting "800 miles of all kinds of roads. There were thirty-two starters. The Cadlllao was the only car with a perfect road score and a perfect technical score. ! . , H, E. Fredrickson Is spending his an nual summer outing thirty miles away from any railroad up In the mountains near Fillmore, Wyo. With him1- la R. C. Phelps and the two have been having, a genuine outing fishing and loafing near the mountain streams. Mr. Fredrickson and Mr. Phelps will remain two or three weeks longer. Motorists from Omaha and Council Bluffs report that the road between the two cities and Spirit Lake, la., la in especially good condition for touring enthusiasts at the present time. A number have been making the trip within the past two. weeks and are loud In their praises of the Iowa roads encountered. The route as followed by the majority goes straight from Council Bluffs to Denison and then over the "Haw keye Highway" to Spirit Lake. Most of the road Is either macadamised or graded and Is said to be like a boulevard. The Losier Motor company haa an nounced that in the future Lozter cars will take no part in races or contests on dirt tracks or horse tracks of any character, unless they have been rebuilt for. the ex press purpose ot automobile racing and re ceived the approval of the proper American Automobile association committee. - Tha fatal accident to Basle at the Hawthorne track m Chicago recently and the accident to Strang In the Wisconsin races are cited as reasons why lives should not be en dangered by tracks df dirt. This decision will not affect the Losier company enter ing cars on the speedways at Atlanta, Los Angeles or Indianapolis or the road courses at Savannah, Elgin or Falrmount park, v F. E. Fox of the service' department of the Chalmers Motor company was at the garage of the H. . E. Fredrickson Auto company on business this week. The Brush Runabout company ha In augurated a unique economy test that will be national In character and run on a na tional holiday, namely, Fourth ot July. This test will be run In every city of the United States and will be 100 miles in length. Accompanying the driver ot the Brush car will be a disinterested party acting as observer, who will keep complete detail record pt the mileage, amount of gasoline and lubricating oil consumed, the number of stops and the reason for, the stops, the number of t:re punctures and blowouts, if any, and a complete record of any ad justments' that might be necessary. All the data pertaining to the run throughout the country will be published from the Brush headquarters and will make Interesting reading to all who ar , at. all interested In automobiles. This promises to be one of the greatest stunts that haa ever been pulled off In the United States. . . rye Delivery Savannah Will Hold , Big Automobile Race Southern City Has Not Given Up Plan of Pulling Off Notable Auto Event. NEW YORK. July 1. The Savannah Automobile club has not abandoned the Idea of : holding the International light car race, as It was reported some time ago It might. A letter from Arthur W. Solomon, secretary of the Savannah Auto mobile club, says: "We are going to have on Tuesday, November JS, two races, one for the Savannah challenge trophy, the other for the Vanderbllt cup. Both these races will be run In the way the Vander bllt and the sweepstake races were run on Long Island last year, smaller cars being Started first. There will be ne races on Wednesday, but on Thursday, Thanks giving day, will, be the Grand Prise. "The first meeting of the course com mittee was held recently and it was de cided to make all the turns In the course longer and probably to bank them so that we could Increase the speed for a world's record. In fact we are going to make the course this year finer ' than anything abroad." If the course Is so perfected there Is no reason why the winner should not at tain an average speed ' greater than the American toad record of T3.32 miles an hour, held by Tetslaffa Losier, and per haps better than that of 74.8 by Nasarro's Flat. Jesse Froellch, manager for the Bens branch, said that he had received a cable telling him to enter two Bens cars, the one In which Bruce-Brown won last ear and that in which Hemery finished second. BIG AUTO RUN PLANNED FOR WESTERN IOWA SOON Six-Day Trip to Booat for Good Road a to Start anal Bad at Omaha. ' j , fix days of automoblllng through Iowa will ' be undertaken on the annual mid summer run of the autnmoblllats of Omaha and Iowa Interested In the Transcontinen tal Route association, July 6 to 12. The run will start.and end In Omaha, the local automoblllsts picking up other members aa thyey proceed on their way. y Eighteen counties of the western part of Iowa will be covered on the trip by the route laid out, taking In Council Bluffs, Missouri Valley, "Sioux City, Le Mars, Primghar, Spirit JUte, Kmmetsburg. Hum bolt, Fort Dodge. Perry.' Adel. Waukee, Des Moines, Guthrie Center, Extra, At lantic, Avoco, and back through Council Bluffs to Omaha. Pes Moines Is the east ern point of the run, the plan being to spend the night there, July 10. Good roads' meetings will be held every evening when stops are made. Spirit Iake I m nlannlnv mnn.l., mt ttiw tha Rat- I urday night that the automoblllsts wilt be there, with speakers from all over the state present. Another meeting worth at tending will be the Des Moines one on July 10. In Omaha at the close of the six day run, on July 12, a monster meeting, to surpass all the others m size, will he held. The plan of the boosters of the trip is to get every town of the seventy-seven along the route to enter a car. When the party reach the towns on the circuit the car of that town will drop out. Thus each car will complete the circuit, the Omaha men returning home last. From Omaha to Sioux City the run will paas over what is called the "High Gear" route, Sioux City to Spirit Lke over the Sioux Falls-Spirit Lake road. Spirit Lake to Des Moines on the Lake Tourist route, and from . Des Moine to Omaha on the River to River road. , OCEAN TO OCEAN AUTO TOUR Fourteen Cara Start on Lelaarely Rain from the Atlantic) to the Pacific The first - transcontinental, automobile tour ever attempted in this country started Monday morning, . June 26, from Atlantlo City, N. J., where the rear wheels of each car were rolled in the surf and no more salt water -will touch the car until the front wheels are driven Into the Pacific ocean. ' There havebeen more than a few cara that have crossed the American continent from ocean to ocean, but never before has there been a regularly scheduled tour planned, and the fact that fourteen private owners of cars of one make have enthused over the prospect of a run of such magni tude presents a new sltuaUon In private automoblllng. , The idea of the tour originated among some owners of Premier car in Philadel phia only a few weeks ago, and Metro politan Premier owners only heard of the proposition during the previous week, but the scheme struok such a popular chord that four owners in New York immediately sent In their entries. These cars, with their ' owners driving, left R. M. Owen & Co.'s establishment In New York Sunday morning at 10 o'clock, and were accompanied by twenty-five auto mobiles filled with friends of the trans- a- 8 rontlnentsllsts. who wished to give the Intrepid tourists a "send oft." The line was augmented at Newark by twenty more cara, containing friends ot the Newark entrant, and the "send off run" started on '.a way to Perth Amboy, where the real tciists were entertained at dinner and presented with souvenirs and admonition ot one kind and another. The ocean-to-ocean travelers left Terth Amboy for At lantic City at 4 p. m. The cara and occu pants weie: W. Ellsworth Sprsgue's csr. with Mrs. Sprague. Gilbert E. llorton and Mra. Horton. Dr. Hugh F. Cook of Newark was ac companied by Mra. Cook. ' Frank A. Moller had with him K J. F. Moller and W. Herman Rose. John H. Murphy took Mrs. Murphy, Countess de Calatrava, and John Matthews. The first stop of the tour Monday was at Philadelphia, and from there on until the Th blood, and therefore the cure nFanv thorough cleansing of this vital fluid. oumc ui me ucning ana aiscomtort, in keepirtg the cuticle clean, but such and of course can have no real curative of every kind becatise it purifies the A a Inl . I A ..f1- .1 t .a on imciiiai irouDic, ana worKs on tne only reasonable ana certain merttoff of cure. S.S.S. removes all acids and humors from the circulation and icaves inc Diooa stream ncri, Healthy and nourishing in order that it may supply the cuticle with the necessary properties to restore it to its smooth normal condition. Book on Skin Diseases, and medical advice free' 5.5.5. is sold at drug stores. v WE SWIFT SPECIFIC C0H ATLANTA, CA. " - ' . ' ' '- Models a Ready for Delivery J Pioneer Inip!emenf Co. iir . Council Bluffs, Iowa. ' ' Ganaral Wtrn Agents. . mWiiail-IHBWBT lMgrjjr'gffflp JHJin JJ IP ! Ml . MJgij.I.Lr , ' 1 i JMAHA BEE'S-fi r fl'DIREGTORY' ll U A Of Automobiles and Accessories ( f ?j s2J i ' J j tj DI R E G Apperson"JackRabbil:s:M Mm Eleotrie RUSH RUNABOUT Ftmrmun GUY L. H. E. Fredrickson Automobile Go ' t044-4-4 FARNAM STRCET nnnrmHPhPi four models ULt U Uly U iNebrasKa Buick Auto. SEARCHLIGHT GAS " 21 204 Farnam Street MORE. LIGHT, MORE HOURS for Lell Money &wrnr MUTOU CAK ' ' i.b a SJ) John Clr JNJI IVanOrunfAutomoblleGo. raclfie mean Ik reached there will ho n9 attempts made to burn up the road or shove each other off the sides into ditch,, lust to get by. The tour has been laid out In espy atase. and the California coast li scheduled for July Xi. Tuesday's stop waa at Baltimore V the route Includes Washington, Cuiiiher- land, Md.; Cnlontowh. l'enn.s Columhu, Indianapolis, Chicago. From Chicago on the route.taken by I L. Whitman In his Rea run of ten days and a half will b adhered to. New York Times. Fatafcloa Proverbs. V Appcaranfee are a dear school, bn women will go to no other. The shops will never run on the fashions that are past. A straight front Is the shortest distance between two shops. The mills of fashion grind swiftly, but they grind exceeding finery. Judge. BEHOVES ALL HUMORS Fnon HIE DLOOD tne I gh a J lieve I raid 1 ood, I ; ascs J rnftir'wv skin trouhle can come onlv thrnnoh Salves, washes, lotions, etc, relieve neip to reauce inflammation, or aid treatment does not reach thehltwi effect. 5. 5. 5. cures Skin Disease blood. It is an internal remedy for a . . a . I T O Electric Garage DEMISE BARKALOW, Prop. 2218 Farnam Street m mm i m it -Juries ab - PEERLESS SMITH. 2207 Farnam St. OHIO ELECTRICS Marlon Auto Com c. w. Mcdonald. 2101-2103 Far-am St. a Marvel or .workmanship. 1 ' T. 0. KorthwaSI Co., , Jl? , si i V tt i CARS '". FREELAXD AUTO CO., 1122-24 Farnam Street. ins Farnam Street. Company::..: MOTOR CO., 2032-54 Farnam St, Omaha. m-mU. -vi rtriidin uuvct t ' a s a a i - a. a a ' - VELIE AUTOMOBILE CO., 1832 Farnam Street Gears Flow Co., Distributors Overland and Popo Kartford ' ' Coanell Bluff. X. H 4i-aka. Make. VerVr- r. I I a