Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 26, 1913, SPORT SECTION, Page 2-S, Image 56

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    2-S
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JANUARY 20. 1913.
Bringing Up Father
-fjrlslit. 1111. lixernitlixul Nn Sertle.
Drawn for The Bee by George McManua
f I I r
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" VfrsYfll TM
( ;CT R,HT OOT U WCVtow s I N , tStSw
I 7 I OF HERE AND ET 00 00 Oof pT r 1 I JKT WANT L- TVIC PMmt
MHlM . tec: m-H jsaOREsseo-MRi jome v f t charmed: z' .A T5T f l mm St-- '
cnu ne ' I 1 vwhx tb o ANony up: )"!-. 11 dars r VJ v w "V
"SOHE HA.M I ITjMACOlg ? j S V Vfi) J Vou." j j I -, I
CREIGHTON DEFEATS BLUFFS
Basket Ball Quintet Rai Walkaway
by Score ot 62 to 7.
HOFFMAN PROVES TO BE GIANT
Tallrat 3 tun Hren. on ttlsffa Floor
Tbrona Tirelre Ilaaketa, While
Pruchn Throrra Six He
fore Finish.
Italian fltandliiK,
P. W
Otnaha High achool v ?
Nebraska alumni 6
frelfhton university 4
Bttlavue . 4
Omaha "Y" 4
Council Bluffa "V" 7
Council Bluffs High achool
I'nlverslty of Omaha.. 3
I Bet.
0 1.000
.800
.750
.600
.(09
.:sc
.000
.000
The Crelghton Unlveralty basket ball
(am of the Trl-Clty league defeated
the Council Bluffa Hint achool five tat
nlsht at the Bluffs "Y" by the acora
of 12 to 7.
The blue and whit team had the
niuffa High school outclassed from the
start, and threw baskets at -will, Every
man on this team had five or more years'
experience. Hoffman, Crelghton's center,
was the tallest man seen on the Bluffa
'gym" floor In years. He threw
twelve and Prucha threw six baskets.
The Bluffs High school presented a
patched up team, two of their best men,
Giles and Crowl, being laid up. Captain
1'heney had to use two recruits In Deal
and Jones. Both Pheney and Mcintosh
did well In passing, but the men were
unlucky In shootlns baskots. Lineup:
C. B. II. s. cnuiatiTON.
Molntosh UK.
Jones It.F,
I'hsney CC,).......C.
usl ......B,a.
UMt l.lt(ll,lU.UlUU, .
(substitutes; Boyne for Bliss,
L.O Balderson
R.B... Prueha (C.)
C, Hoffman
ocnormiaa
uuss
Field
Der Boss President of the Four-
lime
Winners is Now
Nearing the Home Plate After a Life Given to Sport
soala: Mclnloah. .innti. Phenev. Balder
sou (4), Prucha (6), Hohermlda (11, Hoff
man (11). Free throws! Deal, Kaferee;
Warren Ritchie of Omaha. Timekeeper)
.wontgomtry, Scorer: Uross. Time of
halvts: 15 minutes. Score of first half!
Crelghton, it; council Ulutls High
school, 4.
DWELLERS WORK INDOORS
(Continued from Pace One.)
material which 'formed the "squtd last
caion.
Conference. 'Basket Ball Opens,
Nest Friday night the Tenement Dwel
lers open the Missouri valley conference
basket ball with two games with the
Drake fIVa at tUn local gymnasium, very
little Is known of the strength of tho
Drain team, but the Dwellers have shown
"xcellent pre-seaton form and Stlehm con
fidently expects' to cop the championship
n the Valley this season.
The Cornhuskera have one more buikit
ball trip away from home In which Ames
and Drake wjl be played Ih two scries
of two games each-all of them counting
on the championship standing.
The high school tournament continues
to draw the attention of Nebraska schools
and Stlehm hat sent out his call for en
tries. High school managers In making
thtlr entries should not forget that It Is
xbiolutcly essential to Include the schol
arship standing of the members of the
teams. Alt of the teams taking part In
the tournament must carefully live up ti
the rules of the Nebraska Interscholastle
Athletic- association.
Worth the Trip.
President Comlskey of Chicago, figures
that the California training trip or the
White Box will cost him i&.OJ0. "Dm,"
aays the Old Roman, "a trip to Cali
fornia Is worth every cent It costs." Htt
didn't think so several years ago, when
he engineered a California trip and aban
doned It after one trial.
Cnbin to Cat fli.
Manager Tinker of Cincinnati hopes to
convert Raphael Almeida, the Cuban In
fielder. Into a catcher. Tinker believer;
that Almeida wilt make a name for htnv
uelf behind the bat, and he postessr i
wonderful throwing arm- Before xretTr
to the Red A-''da 'is " atcl
a 111 ng that toeltl n In ibath' w'.r tw
llrln--1 -- H
The New Yrr Amrrl an" nthet
poinieaiy remarks: "It's a trifle belated
MY JA.MK8 B. WOOTAK.
llano ball bus had but one Chris Von
Oer Ahe, and he Is about to be thrown
out at home by the Orlm Reaper.
tute ball has had but one Four-Tlmo
Winners, and the light ot their fame went
out In final extinguishment with the
setting sun of Chris' hnydcy. For Chris
was "Der Poss Bresldctit of Der Four
Time Vlnners," the famous old Ht. Iotils
Browns of tho old American asfocjatlon,
who won the pennant In l&fi, 1W, 1SS7
and IMS, beat Anson's White Hox one year
for the world's championship, split oven
with them the second year, lost the other
two to Detroit and New York, respect
ively. Tho closing days of this unhiuo old
character In all busn ball history serves
to revamp In tho minds of those scores
of veteran fans who knew him or know
of him, memories of him and 'the great
days of his primacy In base ball,
Chris was born hardly sixty-one years
ago In Germany, but he has llvod many
moro years than that, and If he wan the
author or the origin of half tho stories
told about him for he was the most
tnlked-of man In his day he Would he
twlro .sixty-one, Chris' physical makeup,
rotund und rubicund; his funny tem
perament, his Irrcststably comical Ger
man dialect, his lofty pride In "Der
Prowns," nnd his childlike vanity,, mado
him Just the man to fit a good story onto
and he Really did authorise many, of
them.
Chris went to St. Louis In 1870. started
a, little saloon at Bt. Iouls and Orand
avanucs. then lu the suburbs, later the
main corner A Hportiman peik, the home
or the Browns, now tho headquarters of j
the Cardinals. Kids played ball on what
Is now the park and crowds gathered I
to ace them. All llktd Chris" refreshing
goods and he soon saw that It paid to
run such sn emporium near a ball
grounda-ln the tine old city of Bt. 1-ouls.
In ItSO Al Spink and others organised
the St. Louis Base Ball association und
had games played next to Chris' place.
Chris' receipts often exceeded those ut
the gates. Chris maneuvered finally to
buy the majority stock In this base ball '
club for J1.S0O. Out of It he mude SuOQ.OOO
III a few years on his great Browns.
Bnortsmon park finally came, und then
glories and coin for Chris. ' He got hold
of Charley Comlskey In 1SI2. Old Tod
Rulllvan loves ,to relate how he "dis
covered" Commy up In Dubuque, where
tho Old Roman was clerking In a shoe
store and playing ball ut odd times, lie',
went to Ht. Louis us a pitcher, later golus
to first, und really becoming tho plonoor
In the modern style of covering tho bag,
tll-it 1s, he was the first man to play oft
down tho line and u little out In tho
field. In 1S4 Comlskey took tho captaincy
und management of the team. Ills salary,
whlrh began with H a month, grew
gradually. an1 hu probably was drawing
C000 when he left tho Browns.
Here wero soma of those gruud old
slara that made up Dm Four-Time Win
nrra: Catheis, Tom DoIhii. Buahong,
Boyle, pitchers. Fouts. Cruthcrs (who
for two years almost dally alternated In
the box and right field because ot their
terrific batting coupled with marvelous
pitching), McOlnnlrt (u very early pio
neer), and one or two others; first,
Cumlskey; second, Yank Robinson; third.
Arlle Latham; short, Bill aieason; left,
James K. (Tip) O'Nrll. later Tommy Mc
Carthy; center, Curtis Welch; right,
Hugh Nlcol. finally lei go for weak hit
tine;. It was always easy to tell when tho
Browns were winning by the headgvar of
otrt Chris, Winning. Chris wore a silk
tile ut the park; losing, u brewery
Dutchman's tap, drawn well down over
Ida eyes. Naturally amiable and happy,
Chris found It hard to be so when the
YfsBBBBUBBaBBBBBBBBuSaf Baga8BBBS'4''v
gg QSABBSaBBBBBBBgaCv&leAfl
afBBk -sBaABJSBJBBBBHVShBJSBBJB
Vrtli'tila Alw tvnt Uritn Uhfi tfitilnnn Ihioi's
ness at his old place, Grand and St. Louis
avenue.
When Chris bad money he spent It like
watur -and It Is In connection with this
that many of the best stories ot him are
told. But here Is a story, revamped by
thf St Louis Republic, of a somewhat
different nature, though typical:
When his club was winning pennants
Von der Ahe hired special trains and
took half tho city to New York and
other places to rco tho championship
games, lie hired wholo hotels and closed
great bars to overyonc but his friends.
Ho was the Coal Oil Johnnie ot base
liaK. He handled $1,000 bills as If thdV
wero peanuts to feed to monkeys.
In 18S7 he wrta tho hero or victim of a
remurkablo kidnaping episode, whereby
ho was seized nt the Ltndell hotel nt
Sixth and Washington avenue, driven
ncroBa tho ICads brldgo In a carriage, put
upon a train and then to Pittsburgh to
satisfy a Judgment for $ld,0CO secured by
Mark Baldwin, a pitcher, against htm
for false Imprisonment lu St. Louis In
1891.
Baldwin had come to St, Louis to try
to get Jack O'Connor to Jump to the
National league, with which Von der
Aim's American association was at odds.
Von der Aha had Baldwin arrested for
conspiracy. There was no foundation for
the charge and Baldwin was released.
In 1892 Baldwin had phris arrested In
Pittsburgh for alleged false Improson
mcnt In St. Louis. Ho got a Judgment.
It wus up to his bondsman. W. W.
Nlmtck. tb produce Chris or to settle tho
Judgment. The Pennsylvania courts gave
Nlmlck but a few days to produce Von
der Aho or tho J10.000.
Nlmlck could not Induce Chris to leave
Missouri. So he engaged Attorneys
Scandrett and Fording and Detective
Nicholas Bondle, now chief of the Carne
gie Steel company's secret service, to
go to St, Louis and kidnap Von der Ahe.
They arrived (n St. Louis one Monday
morning, decoyed the base ball man to
the Llndcil by a "fake" message, Induced
him to enter a cab and dashed over the
bridge with him There they put him In
a Pullman state room and though Chris
fought valiantly every foot of the ground.
they landed him In IPttfcburgh and he was
obliged to settle the 10,000 olalm. The
caio attracted wide attention at the time,
It waa one of the most famous kidnap
ins cases on record.
This blow started Von der Ahe down
hill as a base ball magnate. He took tip
horse racing and operated a dinkey one-thlrd-mlle
track in his base ball park,
which Is now Roblson field. He ran a
k ut with no deslrp to aound Ironical, we t"n01 8lru'u bl"i treak. Comlskey u4
really wish the New York O ants' Breach to tell a good one.
o: Promise. Alienation of Affection, .nrl
Assault and Battery Defendants' club, as
v yuur as aonsibi. una., tie
clnjurottancts,
"Soma'.imts the team would drop a
game or two while on a trip abroad,"
says Commy. "and It Chris had stayed
In Bt. Louts I was UUely to get a tele
gram nest day something UHe this: 'Fire
rhMi.e ti Keen K-nttiia,
t f I at If i1 tas 4 wi.lr at... W..
Callahanr of the White Soi la ready to i o :s'e11 M -nee.- or Fire Ca-uther,.' or
i . tche jv tn wf. :.ie .'e.- or.i ,u might be any of our bt men Thru
. toi.l!f K11" showed sufficient I X might expect Chris along the nest day "
in All ? cVmpwy.Wamt" trUl Von der Aht httd the We (th l ',!'
1 . baUJ by a good many faas. that It the
Need the, Coin. team happened to lose. It muit be Uis
out piayers are bum ajto:s. mvi rauit or the best nlavers.
screwing up his courage. Finally ho
blurted out to Comlskey;
Charley, I tell your vhat It Iss! Dot
reer drinking now, peer It's all right,
somedlmes I like It myself. But Charley,
I tell you vhat It Iss, porno of dem bluy
ers, dey got It too much peer, already
sometimes. I doun vant to mention some
names, but (and then he vanished past
tho door, Jabbering as he went) Out Dip
O Nell, he better lugk oudl."
O110 hot July Sunday afternoon at
Sportsman park, the Browns wero play
ing Brooklyn. The tamo was closn and
exciting. Tho Browns didn't especially
need tho gamo to help them win tho pen
nant, but every gamo looked alike tu
Chris. He hated defeat worse than" a
dog hates a hickory. The Browns had
three on bases, lttham un third, Oleasou
on second und Comlskey 011 first, hir
Tip ONell ftop!)d to the plate. Chris
was perched un usual 011 tho bench.
"Dip," ho halt whlspured.
with augur, burst Into 11 large Teutonic
smde. A thought had avldently flashed
across his mind.
"Dat'a all right, dut'a all right," ho
kept exclaiming, nud It really was, not
hucuuse ot his, hut the umpire's fiat, und
Chris was not supposed to have even 11
voice In the procedure, for while he
owned tho Browns, Comlskey managed
them.
"Dat's all right, ve got it two runs mlt
Dip's hit and vo inuybc get the odder
und Dip. he don't liot der suit, for the
umpire says It vonn't a home run.' "
Chris was the wholo thing In the Ameri
can association during the days of his
Brown's ascendancy. Ho almost ran th
league, naming the umplreH, fixing the
KCheduleti and, Din worso for Chris, kept
tho other teams needing money supplied,
for he was tho champion spender of Ills
day, as well as tho boss president and
most famous man In base ball. It was
u sud day for him when the disintegration
of his great team came. Camtherm Bush-
O'Nell turned before taking his place
In the box at the plate. , oug and Fouts went to Brooklyn, then
Ilurhle Jennlmra. ftui nv irinV
fuse an offer to go on the stage and pick
R. W 0r xif! "ft Junk ought tq ba
Put Into a padded cell, avera Uughle.
TAFT'S SALARY WILL BE
FIVE THOUSAND A YEAR
NEW HAVEN. Conn.. Jan. Si-Toe
talary at Yale for Prof. WUtam H Ta!
as Kent professor ot law will be ts.OW 1
;a.r, whlcji a the maximum salary now
laid (a th upper grade of full professors.
Tile salary will Include the X305 Income
paid by the Kent endowment Itsslf, the
balance being made good from the gen
rJ fund of the academic department. Jjiouie, each time furtively glancing In.
Of O'Nell. large, handsome, the raoit
phenomenal butter ot his day, but In
tractable at times, Chris had a grim
fear, yet he almost revered him. But
when the big left outfielder got to taking
one or two, as Chris thought, too many,
and Die team should lose.. Chris was
t tiu.t was the reason.
;-.re Is h slory often told In
many Ttrsloni, but we aro sure Chris
would O. K. this aa tho original and
slnca lis cAxinot. we leave It to Comlskey.)
Chris was irate. Tha men were In the
Utile dressing room, off from right field,
gtttlng ready for the game. Chris passed
bad; and forth in front of the club
"Dip, for a home run I glf It to you
a new suit ot clodes."
Now, Tip probably did not need thu
clothes any more than the Browns needed
the game, for. he was us fancy u dresser,
almost, as Latham. There was no crisis
or emergency ot any kind on hand,
though, ot course, a home run with the
buses full is always ucceptablo to the
side setting the runs.
O'Nell swung ut the first two balls
pitched. Chris was almost frantic. The
things he said, the antics hp cut, yould,
not now, a quarter ut a isntury later, bo
recited with any nlre regard for facts.
But the next ball Tip did not miss. He
swung and the ball sptd on its way to
ward left field. The thro runners moved,
the fleet-footed Luthum crossing the
plate before tho ball landed. It Ut In
the left field bleachers and was a fair
home run, but some over-xealous fun
picked up tho balljtnd tossed It back onto
the field. That precipitated u debate,
which ended III the umpire's sending the
last two men back. O'Nell to second,
Comlskey to third, allowing but a two
bagger for the hit.
Comlskey and the other players, of
course, kicked vigorously. But old Chris,
well. It looked for a while us ff he
would die of apoplexy. He was lu favor
ot taking the umpire to the Four Courts
and having him hanged without further
ceremony Then. audd ul . .' his round
face that had been loutu.tvd . a tiusU d
wwii Welch, succeeded In center by Lyon,
QleiiEon nt short by Fuller and O'Nell
In left by Tommy McCarthy, famous
among the most famous, went and when
the brotherhood made. Its cruel advent.
even tho pillar of his hopes, tho cornor-
stolio of his achievements. Comlskey,
left him.
Base bull war with the Brotherhood; or
Playors' leugue, In lfW, und a war with
the National league III 1S?1. depleted Von
der Aho's resources and changed his
fabled "Dutchman's luck." His last
winning Club wus Dint of tl, which fin
ished sevond In the American 'assocla
Don, In which ho had been chief, In fact,
sole, factor for ten years.
In 1892 he entered th twelve-club Na
tional league, and his teams Invariably
finished last or next to last until 1890.
when tho Sportsman's Park und Club
were sold to satisfy the demands of Von
der Ahe's innumerable creditors. The
sale was made by the sheriff nt the cast
steps of the court house, and bought by
E. C. Becker, a retired grocer at St.
Louis, for Frank Dellcss and Mathew
Stanley Roblson, who transferred the
Cleveland club to this city and named It
the Cardinals.
Mrs. F. Schuyler Britton. the present
owner of the Cardinal team, la a daughter
ot Frank Delless Roblson and directly
Inherited the property from her uncle,
the late Mathew Stanley Roblson. On
Ills . rtlifinuit ftom base bull lu 11A) M.
"shoot the chutes" and said he was going
to make his park the "Coney Island of
der Vest." Ho subordinated his base
ball Interests to these things and lost
much money. Then In 1S99 came the
sheriff and that wss the last of Chris
Von der Ahe, "der Po.?a Bresldent off Dor
Four Dime Vlnners," In base ball.
Even his enemies now soy that Chris
was "tho best fellow," meaning the best
buyer and moat generous man, that ever
has been In base ball. They also admit
thnt he was the "gamest Dutchman"
that ever lived. When he was kidnaped
he almost wrecked the carriage and then
the Pullman In which he was confined,
ate a $3t wine dinner ajid refused to pay
for it, on the way, broke the windows,
licked Bendle, and when they finally
landed him In Jail he turned good humor
edly and said:
"Veil, fellers, I gafe you a off a
goodt vlte, anyhow."
"You bet you did, you you," said
Bendle, as he fell In a heap on the floor
exhausted by his battle with "Der Poss
Bresldent off Der Four Dime Vlnners."
With the Bowlers
Set Senaon Ilecnrd.
The O'Brien Monte Chrlatos won three
games from .the Rogers Ponnlts and set
a season record of 2.817. Brown was high
with 610. Score:
O'BRIEN MONTE CHRIBTOS.
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
Dettman 190 207 174 871
Calvert 171 221 160 542
Brown 215 203 192 610
Wiley 14S U8 173 604
Hamlet 191 201 19S 500
Totals 910 1.020 $87 2,817
ROGERS' PERMITS.
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
Doherty 163 HT 15 55
Hi Hawley 182 104 136 482
J. Hawley HT HT
Straw i 1W 32
Hansen 15t 160 149 490
Melum 153 196 149 493
Handicap , '23 23 23 69
Totals 19 880 763 2.451
Fairmont CreatVierr tessiie.
DIADEMS.
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
Cavett 138 123 118 9
Parker 160 16 440
Hetler 117 110 111 368
Snyder 130 143 110 40.1
Heldt 13 165 167 475
Totals 728 707 632 2.067
BETTER BUTTER.
1st. 2d. 3d. Tots).
Gibson 140 177 133 460
Drake 120 156 115 391
Bertwell 138 135 129 403
Smith 147 88 140 375
Bland 160 12s 130 418
Totals 70C CS4 617 2,036
DELICIA.
1st. 2d. 3d. Totnl.
Lang 1C6 108 144 418
Berger 124 128 123 371
Bohnlzer 161 170 12S 459
Mohlgard 125 114 107 316
Hansen 120 114 1U 33
Totals 606 034 661 1.991
FAIRMONT RANCH.
1st. 2d. 3d. Totnl.
Williams 12S 100 152 3W
Wilson 14G 142 148 K
Qasser 116 125 110 HI
Welgel 124 114 136 874
Holeomb U Hi 149 4J1
Totals 648 6W KB LPT2
Onmha Leagne.
BURKLEYS.
1st. , 2d. 3d. Total.
Stunz 163 203 158 530
Johnson 243 171 201 615
Baiter 202 223 173 59ft
Sprague 198 172 l&l 64:t
Martin 179 203 156 544
Totals m 978 871 2,830
'LUXUS.
' 1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
Firestone 147 224 208 579
Chrlstensen IK) 192 192 573
Cain 186 181 202 569
J. Week 153 171 ISO 504
Angelsberg 181 218 189 SS
Totals 83S 9S6 971 2.81J
ADVOS.
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
Frltscher .-...16S ISO 174 522
Tracy.. 183 198 158 3S)
Botple 236 211 ISS 6.S
Zimmerman 148 204 204 .
doff 177 173 166 0I6
Totals .912 966 S90 2,108
JETTER'S OLD AGE. .
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
Solomon 144 172 151 7
Ohnesorg 170 160 199 .529
Qodenswager 1 1S1 161 M
Pruyn 175 200 170 615
Zarp 167 213 205 t&i
Total .835 928 886 2,647
METZ BROS.
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
veale 183 186 140 5jW
Powell 168 160 194 5n
Chambers"... 125 146 146 tu
FranclSCO 184 234 134 "53
Huntington .147 17? U
Totals ...807 911 802 2,aJa
HOSPE'S.
1st. 2d. 3d. Total.
C. Weeks IT? jl pi"
Fanton 184 175 193 U2
Toman ...1M 156 197 ill
HaH ... ...191 8
b. Huii..:.;:. m 220 m w
Totals 901 922 993 2.S1S
Mordecal to Earn Ilia Pay.
Joe Tinker figures that Mordecal Brown
will earn h: salary If he does not pitch
a full game next season. Ho figures that
the veteral will come In handy In tho
pinches. He will be ablo to stop many a
batting rally because If his cunning and
knowledge of the pitching art. Brown be
lleves that he will be ablo to take his
regular turn on tho rubber for the Reds.
Slnrphy Holiln Dereham mer.
Martin Berghammer, the Pittsburgh
boy, who was tried out by the Whit Sox
last spring, la one of Charles Webb
Murphy's 'nd hopes for a regular Infield
Job with the Cubs. Berghammer will go
south with the Cubs lato In February'.
St. Louts wanted to get him, but Murphy
shook his head.
flolaar to Bermuda.
Hal Chase Is figuring on going to Ber
muda with the Highlanders' battery men
about the middle of February, so aa to
get into flrat-class shape for the "best
year of his career."
Take advantage of
Kelley's Closing Out Sale
fLvo days of notivo selling Imve proven unmistakably to us that the Omaha
public appreciates tho fact that high class, clean merchandise is selling here at
exceptionally attractive prices. The most famous makers of men's furnishings are here rep
resented Faultless Pajamas, Holeproof and Interwoven Hosiery, Munslns; and Lewis Under
wear. E. & W. Shirts, Fownes and H. & P. Gloves, Stetson and Sehoble Hats and scores of
other household names. We must vacate by March 15th and the shrewd, economical buyer
can well afford to buy for futuro needs.
Pajamas , Hats White Shirts
$1.C0 Pajamas ..81.15 3.0 hats $2.15 $1,00 BhlrtB 7RA
J2.00 Pajamas . .1.5 .00 hata ... , .i5.oO It' TZ JJJ'J ' V ?S
$2.60 Pajamas ..81.85 5.00 Stetson ...S3.5U a 'Sri;?
J3.00 Pajamas ..R2.2o ?6,00 Stetson . ..S4.0U 2'00 shlrU S1.35
$3.50. Pajamas ..a5a.no $7.00 Stetson . . -S4.50 xi tw,
$B.00 Pajamas ..R,50 $12.00 Stetson ..$8.60 jnUi UTeas
$7.50 Pajamas . ..f.Of wr,iW TTnrlBr-OTonr a-00 Bh,rtB $1.36
$8.oo Pajamas . .K.Rf Munaing Underwear ....$i.G5
$8.50 PaJvaas ..n,Of $1.50 quality. .. .$1.00 S3 00 shirts 1o
$9.00 Pajamas . .UtT.OO $2.00 quality. . . .l 50 fJ'JJ !j ' ' '
$10.00 Pajamas .$7.50 2.60 quality $2.00 5
Sweaters S JSgg; ; ; ;l;g Colored Shirts
$2.50 to $7.50, $4,00 quality. .. .$2.75 11.50 quality 75d
Prlce- M-50 quality $3.00 $2.00 quality $1.00
Mufflers Lewis Underwear 2 B0 Quality 81.25
50c mufflers 35 2.00 suits $1.25 Hl ' ' 'll'IS
75c mufflers 50 $2.50 suits 1 65 ' quality $1.75
$1,00 mufflers 754 53.50 suits $2.G5 iTInvon
$1.50 mufflers... V.OI T. UlOVeS
$2.00 mufflers... $1.45 . Interwoven and $1.50 gloves ....$1.15
$2.50 mufflers.. .jui.fto Holenroof Hosiery $2.00 gloves $1.35
$3.00 mufflers... pilRR iioieprqoi ixosiery $2.50 gloves ... .81 .GO
$3.50 mufflers. . .JQ9J0 - 25c quality 20 $3.00 gloves .$1.85
$5.00 mufflers, . ,JSJ1.50 3B5 quality 25 3-50 Blare ....82.25
$7.50 mufflers, . .85.00 50c quality 35c $5.00 gloves ... .$3.50
Tom Kelley Co.
Ikis Sale Strictly Ctsh 315 South 16th Street