TIIF, OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 31, 191.. 3 P. BRINGING UP FATHER Copyright. l;t, International News "enrico. Drawn for The Bee by George McManus I - t.-S-f I'M FOR." VOTES bTHs AlmO v. .... C0 fOOe HEAR Jl;; "vote for HE CEKTAMLT HVt MADE. UP HIS MiD THAT WOMEN SHOULDN'T 1 nru i M fAI t W ft. 1 THERE HE b NOW- usrs hen VHAT HE HAft TO SAf HE IS A OUD TOP 1 WELL -ARE OU STILL STATiDNi PAT ON F0UTCAU rOTHN' WOULD MAKE Judgments T TPERINO OKHILL hM called a meeting of his personal and prtvat Western league to assemble In Chicago today, acting, he says, "under In structions from the board ot directors." Presumably this board con sist of Messrs. Isbell and Holland, who irere ousted at the Omaha meeting, when Tip, himself, was tossed over the tran som. That meeting was not called by the board ot directors, but by a majority of the team owners, six of the eight taking part In the session. It was called because O'Neill declined to pay any at tention to a request from the owners of the teams, and his subsequent ousting was the reason that he had declined to pay attention to the request of the men Who employed him. Isbell and Holland declined to participate In the meeting, and they, too, were set aside. That Is the way the matter now stands, and the affair will come squarely before the National Association of inor League Base Ball Clubs, when that august body gathers at San Francisco next week. O'Neill insists he Is president of the Western league, and Messrs. Hanlon of Sioux City, Jones of Lincoln, McOlll of lenver, Savage ot Topeka and Rourke of Omaha say he is not Isbell and Holland say he Is. and the Wichita folks have' been on both sides of the question. It Is hot likely that many of the owners of the clubs will be at the meeting called In Chicago today, nor that any action taken there will have much affect on the course to be followed at San Fran cisco,. Jt.wtll there be determined If the owners of the teams, or somebody they employ, is to have the full direction of the destinies of the league. And another of the so-called wrestling champions from the east has tested out Joe Steelier" prowess, and gone home satisfied, If not contented. Still others FOOT BALL INJURIES HEAVY This Tear it Jmt the Reverie of Last Season on the Local Gridirons. SEVERAL GAMES FOB TODAY By FRANK QVIGLBT. It seems miraculous In glancing back ward and comparing the fatalities of last year with the accidents already reported this season to learn that nothing of Im portance happened to any of the local leather egg manipulators last season: but this season tells a different story. Sev eral are at present laid up with broken bones, others have had to have their countenances decorated with stitches, while others are limping around on ac count of swollen knees, Charley horses, sprained ankles, eto. All the fellows in jured to data are recuperating as fast as could be expected, and, although some of them will be unable to participate In any games this year, none will be crippled for life. Today out at Rourke park the local foot ball devotees will be afforded an oppor tunity to witness the Columbians battle with Missouri Valley, la., the squad that claims the championship of western Iowa. This team has not lost a game on their home grounds for several years. The last time they played In Omaha, which was three years ago, they lost by a small margin to the Superiors. According to their manager, they have an unusually strong team this year and In all proba bility will whip the pride of Omaha. To date the Columbians have not lost a game and have scored twenty-six points against opponents, and they don't intend to let the Iowans trim them up today. The Athletics, the team that is after the class B championship, will mix with the Clifton Hill Merchants. Oodles of rivalry exists between these two squads Joe Only One to Throw Earl and Earl Only One to Throw Joe are to be brought on here for the purpose ' corking good game la looked for. ot trying conclusions with him, or looking for a little easy money, in the way of the loser's end, whloh Is the same thing. All of these mountains of flesh are "cham pions," some of the world, others of the universe, but they all look alike to Joe, who Isn't conceded to be champion of ny thing by the wise guys, some of whom will hardly admit that Stecher Is a wrestler. For the matter of that, be isn't; he's a specialist. Tale authorities decline to recede from their position on summer base ball, to the extent of reinstating the athletlo stars recently resigned from all forms of athletics at the university. Minne sota authorities not only refused to back, but actually expelled the offending stu dent from the university. This ought to be ample warning to the boys who are Inclined to take chances on the rule. Only one way Is known to be clean, and that la to keep clean. Rumors of settlement between the Federals and the older leagues are again heard, but it Is a little early In the sea son to get right down to brass tacks on the matter. The rumors will be handed around all winter long, unless something turns up to make better dope stories. It la admitted, however, as one of the facts of the late season, that the First game at IM p. m. Lineup for sec ond game: MO. VALLET. I ...R.Q. ...L.Q. ...R.T. ...UT. ...RE ...L.E. Blackman Plefer Johnson .... Cook Morgan .... ! Brundsare ., McDonald .. Doty Fensler .... Jones ....... Peterson ... May Referee: Fensler. ex-Nebraska. Un plre: Hasten, ex-Crelghton. Head lines man: Morganthaler, ex-Crelghton. .a ...R. ...L.H F. ...Bub. ...Bub, COLUMBIANS. C... R.O. L.O. RT. L.T. Three years ago last April a fall was called upon Joe Stecher. So far as la known this Is the only time a referee ever patted an opponent of Joe's on the back. The lad who turned the trick is Elarl Caddock. who Is to Casa county. Iowa, what Stecher Is to Dodgs county, Ne braska, and who Is the one other wrestler whom mat fans regard as Irreproachably honest. Caddock Is a product of Anita, a little Inland town in Cass county. One day he was driving down a road with a team when he passed the farm ot Frank Petit, for whom Stecher was working at that time. Petit stopped to talk to Earl and told him of a "strong fellow" he had working for him. Caddock was regarded as a pretty husky youth around those parts, so Petit suggests that he and the "strong fellow" work out. Caddock was agreeable. So the workout was arranged for In a keronene-lamp-llghted hall In Berea. When Caddock arrived he found Stecher on the Job. Joe suggested that an admis sion be charged. "What Is this?" queried Caddock, "a workout or a wrestling match T" "Let's make It a match," said Joe. "All right," agreed Caddock. Thirty-one persons were charged a dime a throw to see the fray, thus making a total gate of $3.10. Stecher copped 00 per cent for his bit and the house man ager got the other 40, The first fall of the event went to Stecher. It came quick. Caddock de clares that It really wasn't a fall, but that the referee being a novice at um piring called it ahead of time. The second fall came Just as quick, but the referee awarded this fall to Caddock. Proving that he has a pretty good claim to the reputation for honesty, Caddock admits this was no fall either and that the referee again started out ahead of the train. The third fall went to Joe about the same as the first one. V ' " 1 f R.B L.E R.H.:::: k?::::: Hub Bub Murphy .... ttandau Kosso . . Newman . 1 . . i tawtelli' th-w "c Maixe Trials ef Mssirtn. The trials and tribulations associated with a foot ball league are numerous, ac cording to the president nf the Pioneer league. Nevertheless, this league has bumped about every rock available and Is now sailing along on a quiet sea. They started the ball a-rolllng with elg"ht teams, but two of them, namely, the Co lumbian Reserves, now known as the Nonpareil Reserves, and the Thorpelans Inoculated the dropsy and dopped out. The other six teams have decided to stick until the asbestos drops and demon strate the fact that a foot ball league can be a success. At a meeting of the league directors last week the schedule was revised and thoegame played against I the two squads that have since been Kansas City Federal club lost 135,820, a dropped from the league were thrown o Jt Was Throws. Bo officially Joe Stecher has been Caddock declares no one Furbushj of the three falls awarded were real ' Yi I faI1. nd it doesn't matter as the event .. Gibson; Is shrouded In the veil of the past, but Lightfootl never lct 11 b ald w " UP tb v.u uwj', vii ii, tj iiug, flic u win. A year after the tilt with Stecher, Cad dock went to Chicago and ran across a chap named Oakes, who was acting as trainer at Hull house there. Caddock went to work assisting Oakes. Earl proved a better man than Oakes so he was entered In the Hull house wrestling tournament. It dfdn't take the lowan long to trim up the Greeks of the house. Shortly after Caddock entered the Ama teur Athletic union national tournament at Chicago and won that. This spring he went to San Francisco and won first honors In the world's tournament This made him the amateur champion of the world. After the tourney at the exposition Caddock entered the professional ranks and In the short six months he has been In the game, has thrown a string of more or less good wrestlers, and has not lost a fall yet. Clarence Kklund, Paul Martenson, Bob Managoff, Harvey McPeak, Jud Thomp son, Bill Hokuf, War Eagle, George Wise and a flock of others have been vanquished by Caddock, Now plans are on foot to match the Cass county lad with Adolph Ernst, ths man who gave Joe Stecher a run for over an hour at Fremont last winter. It Is planned to stage the match either In Omaha or Council Bluffs. Caddock la 2 years old and weighs 1W pounds. His only disadvantage Is his weight He Is forced to give too many pounds In battling heavy men. Omaha mat fans are predicting that It won't be long before Joe Stecher, some seventy-five miles to the west, and Earl Caddock, some seventy-five miles to the east, will be the two undefeated wrestlers of the country and that they wlU lock horns on a mat In Omaha to settle the supremacy onoe and for all, raroll Reserves will buck up against the Thirtieth Street Merchants. The Non pareils will have the advantage of speed and the Merchants beef. -Last Sunday the Monmouth Parks can celled their game booked with Missouri Valley, la. They were looking for a IK fiuarantee besides expenses and the Val ey hoys wouldn't dig up. Across the waves at Athletlo park. Council Bluffs, the Omaha Ramblers and the Council Hluffs Mldsets will bump. The Midgets sre tied for first plaoe In the IMoneer league, but the Ramblers . say they will lose their grip today. Fred (Pwei'e) Carlson Is afraid If he play again somebody will put his knee on the bilnk. He Injured same a few seaoonn ago and last season he was cracked on the same knee, so he don't care about taking a chanoe on being crippled for life. Demand for Seats for Harvard-Yale Combat is Heavy BOSTON. Mass., Oct SO.-Prtcss for tickets bought from speculators to the Harvard-Yale foot ball game this year will make the quotations on the recent world's series tickets sound like tips In a cafeteria. Ths demand for tickets will exceed the supply six or seven times over, it Is estimated, and only those v. he, tote million-dollar bankrolls or who are Harvard or Yale students or alumni will be able to edge their way Into the stadium on November 10. , The Harvard Athletlo association In Cambridge is this early In the season be ginning to feel the pressure ot the enor mous demand for the tickets. The pub licity attendant on the recent granting of the permit for the temporary wooden stands first attracted the attention of the general public to the fact that accommo dations this year will be at the highest premium yet known. The result has been a ceaseless Influx of applications Iroin Harvard men for their Yale game tickets, although the time for filing ap plications will not expire until Novem ber 4. Fred W. Moore, gradoaU treasurer or Harvard athletios, knows that the sta dium cannot even seat all tba Harvard and Yaie men and their frtenda on the day of the game. If the ehannels through which speculators and tloket agencies get their ticket were clossd It would be theoretically Impossible for any body but Harvard and Yale men, their closest friends and the newspaper r- oorters to see the game. But as long as the lure of lucre persists there will always be ticket to be had at soma price. Ownership of Two Western Loop Clubs May Be Changed This Year real battle royal for supremacy Is ex pected. Lineup: C. B. TIGERS. sum that puts sense, at least it Into majors In one Almost anynody will do a an op ponent for Jess Wliiard, If only the New York promoters can get their fingers into the pie; then the great American publio will be handed another bunch, such as it got In the McFariand Olbbons farce, and will go home kick ing. These promoters have to Uv some way, though, and they know the crop of sucker 1 always ripe and there's no closed season on them. It's too bad a lot of us poor boobs didn't know what we were getting out at Rourke park last Sunday. Some of us were simple enough to think we were wstchlng a pretty nice exhibition game, but we found out better when we read the paper next evening, and learned It was a sorry farce. Wonder what a real exhibition game would look llkeT out Here Is the official standing to date: P. W. I Pet. Masdas 1 10 1.000 Council Bluff Midgets.... 11 1.00) Ramblers til .687 Monmouth Park Reserves 111 .600 Montclalre 1 1 .Ouu Florence Athletics t 0 t .000 On the turf at the Douglas County Fair ground this afternoon two foot ball de bates will be Jerked off. the first ot whloh will be Monmouth Park Reserves against Montclalre and the second Fontenelles against Monmouth Parka The first game I between members of the Pioneer league and will undoubtedly be stubbornly contested. In the Initial wrangle between the Parks and Fonte nelles, which was a practlos event, the former copped the gravy, but the latter aay they are going to throw themselves In reverse and back out with the grapes this trip. The lineup: Who's going to pay for that "special' on whlrk Ik. mIm, turn, (M.M.nt will travel between Chicago and San Johnson Francisco? It ought to make the team William owner feel good to think that In spite of the poor season, the men who are drawing pay from the league can afford such luxurious travel. FONTENELLES. Lindmier C. George Stone has consulted with Ducky Holmes about the purchase of the Lin xla franchise and team from HugnLe (ones, but hasn't as yet said what he Is fotng to do. Meantime. Holme 1 still pursuing subscribers for stock In the omfsny he Is going to form. Well. If Oene Melady doe buy out Bill Rourke. we'll know that the Omaha ball team ha passed Into the hands of a good sport But he'll find It different getting people out to sea ball games. If ths weather man had been as good to the base ball men as he Is to the foot ball playera the deficit would have been a surplus. Kelly Nordstrom Howes McCreary . Tallman ... De Franco, Moran RG L.O R.T ia.' R.E L.E. 3B. B. ..L.H.B. F.B. HON, PARKS. C fichmittroth R.G Parker LG Flanagan a.T Schruro 1T Mahnet RE Beaton UE Carlson Q B Glasgow R.H.B Flnegan H B Oney F.B Scanlan Next Sunday the foot ball team from Havelock will Jovrney to Omaha and fight the Columbian out at Rourke park. This team la made up of men employed at the Burlington shop there. Guy King, ex-Nebraska, Is their coach. They aver age betweea 17 and lit pounds. They have the advantage of daylight practice because they work out at noon hour. Consequently they are the best coached and will probably whip the Columbians. They have played three game so far this season and won them alt At three bell the .ounetl Bluffs Tiger and the Nonpareils will mix at Lujtus park. Both teams have complied an excellent record to date and as they are approximately evenly matched, a Rasmussen Norgaard .. forenson .. k;. Larsen.., II. Larsen.. Thomas .... A. Larsen.., Langan Johnson .... Moline Steffer .C. ....R.O. ....L.O. ....R.T. L.T. ....R.E. ....L.E. .'r.iTb; .L.H.B. F.B. NONPAREILS, C R.G , L.O R.T L.T R.E L.E R.H.B'.'.' I..H.B... F.B. .... Belden Lynch Kumorfsky Bchuelsky ... Pearson Foran Kleny Moore , Smith Fitch Sullivan Substitutes: Carvel for Lynch. Tracey for Kmith. Golden for Fitch. tirta Ooealp. On account of a aDralned ankle Ted Millett tackle for the Maadas. will be un able to promenade on the gridiron today. The Masdas and Florence Athletic, will hook up about three atrlUes on the mu nicipal lot at Thirty-second and Dewey avenue. Gunderson. Mattarn and MoTVimM alt former university stars, are playing with ino vv nue rroms. me strong ut. Paul, Minn., aggregation.. Today the huikv team frnm Hviru.v Neb., will lournev over In n, vM r'liJ and do their utmost to trounce the war riors siauonea inert. For the Information of numerous fane that want to know when the Columbiana and Monmouth parks will mix, it will be Sunday, November 14. On Sunday, November n. the Council Bluffs Ked Socks, champion of Council Bluffs, will play the fast Columbian squad at Rourke park. Th (urn mt Mawtlnob X7K I. m. thing hko the Wiener squad, tflsner and Havelock ought to meet on some neutral ground and tight It out For the Nonpareils. Pearson, their Ms right tackle, seems to be their best ground gainer. When In a pinch he is generally able to deliver. Wallr Walworth, former! a. ttm.r at Crelghton university, has answered the rou can ai miner, reo. He is one or their chief ground gainers. To date the fast combination mustered together st Wiener, Neb., have not lost a game. They are aln going after the championship of Nebraska. Melvin Davis of the Monmouth Park Reaervee received a crack on the smeller last Sunday which broke a bone. He will probably quit for this season. A broken bone now and then Is not even relished by foot ball men. Of coarse they all like to pla the game, but they hate to get crippled Just trie same. A new team has been recently organised to be known as the Imperials. They average VJO poands. For games call Douglas 4M3 and squawk for Albert. The team at Wiener. Neb.. Is especially anxious to play the Nonpareils. For the Information of tbe Nonpareils F. H. tk'hlrmer is the manager at Winner. Bcribner. Neb., was unaMe to withstand the teirUlc onslaughts of the Oaklaud, Ownership of two Western league base ball club may be changed this winter. Lincoln and Wichita are the club. In the Nebraska capital Ducky Holmes, formerly manager at Lincoln, la trying to organise a stock company to take ever Hugh Jones' holdings. Jones dropped quite a wad this summer and la willing to sell at a most reasonable prtoe. Holmes' proposition Is to manage the team and conduct the club for a salary of H,aw a year and one-third of all money received for the purchase or draft of player. He doe not ask a cut In ths profits, should there be any. He already has thirty signer to tak stock In amount from flOO lip. The total attendance at Linooln this year was 40. m. Of this, but It per cent wss grandstand attendance. It can easily be seen that Hugh Jones would be quite willing to rettre from bass ball In the Nebraska capital. But Lincoln was not the only city where attendance was very shy. In fact not a club In the league did over S,(M0 persons on the season, and It ordinarily takes 10,000 to pay expenses. Des Moines was the only club which came out on the right aid of the ledger, and that was be cause Isbell pulled down some coin ca sale of players. Wichita la the other club which may change hand. Several director of the Wolvea are anxious to sell, and on di rector seems willing to buy. Arthur Paulllne, who I at present on ef th . heaviest stockholders, declares that ha believe Wichita I a good ball town, and It Is believed In Wichita that Paullln may buy out the other stockholder and run the club himself, , - In addition, there la em talk of Frank Isbell returning to Wichita. This chat ter comes from Los Angeles, where Isbell la spending th winter. Western league magnate are taking an evident Interest In th success ot Ducky Holme at Lincoln. If Ducky get con trol of th Links, ONeUl will have th loop deadlocked on th presidency ques tion. Holmes Is an O'Neill man and would rote to retain Prexle Tip. This would switch a vote as Jones Is an antl-, O'Neill man. V Wichita slid off th fence the other day and announced It would stand up for O'Neill. Holland and Isbell, of course, will O. K. Thus, with Holme In Lin coln, It would be four tor and four against, and the fur would be bound to fly. Neb., back field; as a consequence' they had to be satisfied with the short end. You have to step some to get around ths end where Mlshler of Dunlap. la.. stationed. He is last on his pedals and it la nearly impossible to box him in. According to the spectators that to tie game between the Columbians and Uunlap, la., waa a corker. Many thrill ing plays were pulled off by both elevens, The Council Bluffs Rad Socks hsvs abandoned the field, but a new team has been organised whloh will be known as the council muffs Ked Bocks or Tigers, Dunlap, la., was sadly disappointed on account of the Council Blurts Ked books throwing up the sponge because they had a row booked with them for today. Arthur Newman, star tackle of the Columbians is now working at Pender. Neb., nevertheless he comes to Omaha every (Sunday and helps out ths Columbians. The White Fronts of St Paul would like to play some fsst Omaha contingent In Omaha. The writer don't know how any Omaha team could pay their ex penses. The quarterback for the Council Bluffs Midgets tagged John Chapman, had his left knee badly wrenched and In all probability will be unable to play again this year. That new team recently mustered to gether In Council Bluffs will be known through these columns as the Council Bluffs Tiger until they decide on a monicker. If that Chicago foot ball squad la anx ious for a game In Omaha and wante to play on a SO and 44 per cent basis it can play th Columbiana at Rourke park most any Sunday. Down at Havelock, Neb., they have an eleven that tips the beams around Vt pounds. Teams wishing games writs to L. P. Smith, manager of foot ball team, naveiocg, nto. Matters look mlirhtv swset for the Ath letics, managed by Frank Oreene, to win tne Class M championship. They can skill fully negotiate the forward bass, which is a valuable asset. After making a long run last Sunisv Lloyd Retter of the Council Bluffs Mid get stumbled and fell within three yards of goal, and as a consequence sustained a nroaen collar none. Three playera that used to perform with the Joe Smiths of Council Bluffs are now booked on the Council Bluffs Tigers. The Tigers are hot after the champion ship of the two cltlea. Doc Retchelt the husky fullback of the Dunlap, la., aggregation, is a tough gent to stop. He Is shifty on his pedals and as he runs with his knots high is a hard man to tackle. Hal Blarkman, well known In local foot ball circles, formerly a star with the Alhletica and picked by many as the All Mtar Omaha center, is now playing with Missouri vaucy, la. At 1.30 p. m.. at Lux us park, th N6n "Beat Nebraskal" . Is Again the Cry of 4 Jayhawker Crew LAWRENCE. Kan.. Oct . (Bpeclal.) After this afternoon' trenuou battle with the Oklahoma Sooner the uni versity ot Kansas foot ball team ha lit tle to fear from 1U next opponent Washburn college. When the Jayhawk er lln up against th Ioabod on mo Cook field next Baturday they will rush the Washburnltes off their feet with a mhirtaiinri attack. After the game ha been safely nailed for Kansas the second squad will be ssnt In to finish the Job and to give the Jayhawker stars a rest But the Washburn, and even the Mis souri game, pales Into Insignificance be fore the battle with the Comhuskers on November II. "It w can only win from Nebraska." said coaches, players and rooters at ths beginning of the season, "we would gladly lose every other game on the achedule." This spirit still sur vlvee, although the Crimson and the Blue baa a string of five victories behind It It Is the Nebraska contest and th Ne braska contest alone which Kansas unl- vsrslty wants to win. Jap Grapplers Will Stage Show in Omaha Omaha "raaslln" fans will soon be privileged to gase upon the plckod mat artists of Japan. Forty Japanese grap plers, who are appearing at the Ban Francisco fair will be taken on a tour of th country by Mayard O. William, an American, who baa for tour year been aa Instructor of athletics in ths orient Included In the party Is Urns gatanl, champion of Japan. Umegatanl only weighs MO pounds. Ths Jap grap pler will stop at Bait Lake City. Den ver, Omaha. Kansas City and Chicago on the tour. YALE BLAMES PRINCETON 11 Follower! Bitter Ag-ainit New Jeney School for Proteit Against Lefore. BALL TEAM SHOT TO PIECES NEW HAVEN. Conn., Oct. KX Th Yale campus I a gloomy place as the result of th announcement that five member of th 111 varsity has ball tsara are Ineligible to represent Yal In athletics because of playing summer baa ball. Keen resentment I felt against Princeton, where It I said th protest against th five Yal athlete originated. The base ball squad held a meeting the other afternoon to elect a eueoeesor to Arthur M. Mil burn, one of th men disqualified, as captain. Usually only th men who won the "T" tbe previous year are allowed to vote for captain, but on this occasion th entire squad was Invited, slnoe there were toe tew letter men to elect a new loader, Harry Legore, th baa ball and foot ball star, who waa on of thoee declared Ineligible, and Captain MUburn, both spoke. Captain MUburn expressed hi regret at the Incident and Legore voiced similar sentiments. Legore then sug gested that Captain MUburn retain hi position as long aa he saw fit and that no sucoessor be elected until MUburn asked It. The meeting Immediately voted to act a Legore suggested. William Lauder, the new Tale baas ball coach, who auoceeded Frank Qulnby, was present at th meeting and stirred enthusiasm among th men, despite tne gloom whlnh hung over the gathering, It was decided to continue th fall prac tice and to make an added effort to get out new men for the team Pumpelly, Legore, Certain MUburn, Rhett and Easton, who were disqualified, all agreed to come to baa ball practice during the winter and spring. Ail of them will help coach and all of them wilt have place on th eecond team, which th eligible team will meet In dally prao- tlce. Play Foot Ball, Too, It waa announced by the foot ball coaches that Harry Legore and William Easton, th two base ball players who have been barred from further competl tlon on a Yale foot ball team by profes sionallatn, will play on ths team ot ln allglbles which Frank Hlckey, ths hsad foot ball coach, has organised. This Is the team which ha been pitted against th ,Yal varsity in scrlmmags for ths th enemleT trick plays against th reg ulars and ths on that doe much to' set. th standard of th varsity Itself. Legore aasurano that he will report for foot ball! dally was greatly encour Ing to the coaches. Legore will give the regular a lasts of what Click of Prince- and Rahan ot Harvard may be expected to do In the big game. Talk of Storz Team In the Omaha Loop There Is some talk of the 8 tors and Joe Smiths, ths crack semi-pro teams of Omaha and Council Bluffs, applying for admission to th Orsater Omaha league In th amateur base ball association. It is said that both of these teams would like to get Into th league a the trip which come at th end of the year for th champ of th city I attractive fruit for th aeml-pros. Whether they will be accepted If tbey do ask application la a problem. MoLarry Even Crabs " His Own Business Charley Dryden telle a ' good on on McLarry, th Cub Inflelder. McLarry I Texas undertaker by profession and recently he waa married. . Instead of buy ing him th customary chest of sliver the Cuba presented Mao with a nickel- plated aet of undertaking tool. On day ' MoLarry took Zimmerman' place after Heine had been banished from the gam. The peppery McLarry began Jabbering: - 'Come on boys, show a little life; show llttl llf." 'Ha, ha," yelled Zlm derisively. 'Ther you go again crabbing your own game, ' . The 1916 Harley-Davidson with 92 brand new Improve ments is now on display and ready for delivery. Don't pass up the joys ol autumn motorcycling to be had if you possess a 1916 Harley Davidson. VICTOR H. ROOS "The Motorcycle Man" last month. It Is one that tries out 2703 Leavenworth St., Omaha, Neb. i d2 I nr ALl CAN BE CURED Froe Proof To You All I waat is veer aaae aad address m I eaa sead yea a " b.bL I waat vea lost to try this trelaB-thfs all-Just try It, That's say eoly argument. I've bee la the dreg badness I Fort Wsyse for years. Iteerly everyone know M and kJr7ibt successful treatment. Oee thro teeusae ouisule of F..r wTTm bir.: loeerdlagU their statesseaU. beea cured by thlTusaUoeot sace I att sea this offer public If yea have lexeme. Itefc. Sett , TeHoe-oever atnd hw b4mv treatment ha area L werst cases I ever ew-ge eso a ahano to pro say elslea. ipoa as year Beats and address ee the eoopon below snd get the trhil treatment I want teeend roe rfcgg. The wemlers eccaupthed la your owa case will be erf. aasasessssiBiBSlBBBiail UT AND MAIW TODAY as, see es ssi J. C. HUTZKU, DraccUt, tS Wt Mnln U rrt Wayn. IbhI. rieae send wttasa seat or bugatk t M ra rre rroof Treauaanv. seweetst . Age- res Oms . Bute.. I Ma