2 S THE OMAHA SUNDAY 1 BEE : JUNE 18, 1916. DODGERS TIGHTEN . GRIP 0NTHE LEAD Brooklyn Defeats Chicago, Four to Three, in Game lasting Eleven Innings. FOUR SUPEBBA PITCHEES SHIFTED CREW SHOWS WELL Practically a new crew u placed in the Cornell vanity boat at the Poughkeepeie regetta yesterday by the veteran coach, Courtney, but it put up a game fight and gave the victorious Syracuse boat a stiff tussle for honors, i Brooklyn, June 17, The Brooklyns took a firmer grip on the lead today by defeating Chicago, 4jo 3, In eleven innings, while Cincinnati was trim ming the Phillies. Brooklyn used four pitchers, the three relief men - holding the Cubs without a hit or run. after Cheney had given the visitors a three-run lead. Vaughn had the Superbas blanked up to the eighth, when they bunched four hits on top of a hit batter and tied the score. With two out in the eleventh and Olson on first, Seaton passed Myers purposely to get Coombs. The latter sinsled over second, the ball roiling limn t ., t " , iu vviiiiams, wno tnppea on tne wet ' grass, and Olson came home with the winning run. Cutshaw was ac cidental kicked ltv,the face during a , close play at first base and had to retire. A double header will be played by Brooklyn and Philadelphia Monday. Tuesday will be Orphans day, when 2,500 children will be admitted free. Score: a.MeC.lb I0SI 6fT. Mr'i.cf 'i i VLUDt,lD I 1 Rleck.rf S onn.rf I wllme.ef chulu.lf I rim'on.tb I Beler.lb t Archer.e 4 Hul i'n.n Vauahn.e I Sll t s f s 1 s 4 tstengel.rf I I t i I SPfeffer.lf lists OKh.at.lfrt I J 4 S S "MOW y,ao OCute'W.tb OOlaon.lb JO'M.r,,, 4 114 1 rni7.n,g 1 , t tl fills till k a i S S 1 OChenor.p I i 1 I 1 If.,.,,'.,! a a I . total,. .11 fit II tApplet'ri'.p ilti! t Coombi.p I H I L.McC'r tists Johnetos isles . Miliar 11IIS , Tttto..li"siJ'ii"i Batted for gtontel In eighth. . Betted for Cheney In sixth Batted tor Merojuard In elthth. CMcmia ,. tlllSlSSSt 61 Brooklyn ......... tStSISSISt 14 Two-boo hltt Vasghn. SurltlM hit,! Vtntw, O'Mera. Doable ploys; A. MoCar thy te Mulllnn to Baler. MoCarthy to ialer, Merer to Cutahaw. Ft ret baa on error,! Chicago, S: Brooklyn, 1. Baooa on ballr Oft Cheney, I; off Appteton, 1; off Coomb,, 1 off Vaughn, 1; off Beaton, I. Hlu end earned rnui Off Cbonoy, 4 kits nnd ono run la nix Innings; off Marqusrd. no hlti nnd no runs In two Inninaa; off Apploton, no kit nnd no run In ono Inning: off Coomb, no kit and no ran In two lnnlnao: off v&ughn, s hits and I runs In olakt nnd one third Innlnsat off goaton, 1 hit nnd 1 run ' in two nnd ono-thlrd Innings. Hit by pltohod tall: H. Meyer, by Vaughn. Struok out: By Ckonoy, I; by Coomb. 1; by Vnugkn. Il by Sonton, ft, Umpires: O'Dey nnd Baooa. Alumni and Profs Of Indiana Uni Jo Play Base Ball Fray , Bloomington, , Ind., June 17. A ' number of former athletes of Indiana university are arranging to come here for the annual baseball game be tween the alumni and faculty of the institution, which is one of the fea . hires of "Alumni day" of commence ment week. 'Each year a number' of the old bunch of ball tossers return to the scenes of their former' tri umphs snd try to even scores with the faculty snd alto demonstrate that they have not lost their cunning on the diamond. Last year, when the alumni forces were led by Frank C. Dailey, former United States district attorney for Indiana, the faculty was inglorioasly defeated.' ' E. E. -McFerren, an Indianapolis lawyer, has been selected to captain the old stars this year and plans to lead a large force against the pro fessors, including Harry McDowell, Winamac; George W. Moore, Spen cer; Brandt C. Downey, Indianapolis; John O. Sutphin, Bloomington; Claude Malott, Bloomington; Charles Dailey, Bluff ton; Dudley , 0. Mc Govney, Columbia, Mo.; E. F. Branch, Martinsville; Thomas M. Honan, Seymour; Dr. C E. Harris, Bloomington; "Rab" Gare, Nobles ville: H. M. Scholler, Crawfordsville; Dr. L. H. Maxwell, Indianapolis; Al bert Rabb, Indianapolis; B. V. Sud bury, Bloomington; W. M. Alaop, Vincennet; Phelps Darby, Evans ville; Howard Paddock, Indianapolis; Winston Menzies, Mt Vernon: Frank Dailey, Indianapolis, and Mickey Erehart, Bloomington. Mermen said the large number of players was necessary as the men would tire out stealing bates on the professors. William Lowe Bryan, president of the university and a dia mond star at Indiana in his under graduate days, will be in the lineup for the faculty. . Plattsmouth to See Luxus , Crew Today Johnny Dennison wilt take his championship Luxus team to Platts . mouth for ag ame with the town ag ' gre'ation there today. This is the off day for the Luxus in the Greater Omaha league schedule. The Bour geois and the Te-Be-Ces will play at Luxus park today during the absence of the home team. . JIMMY DREXEL TO LOCK HORNS WITH LINCOLN LAD Jimmy Drexel, the fast Omaha lightweight, will box a ten-rbtfnd ex hibition at Lincoln Friday night with Jest Hall, the pride of the Salt Creek village. Drexel and Hall are rated the best lightweight pugs in Nebraska and should put up a corking go. They will appear as part of the program on the final day of the Eagles' convention.' i Tint. At MniaeapoUs (flnt same) B.H.B. tolvUl. I M M I I I M allnnonpoun ,....t t t t t t t t t 1 4 1 Batterlooi Mlddlotoa and Wnitsmei Bnrko and Land. , ,,. Soeond faom ' ' ' R,R.rj Lonlovlllo ..,!.:. MlliltM t t Minneapolis S S I I t I 11 J Bettertee! Northrop and La Long lint and Owona. At llilwnukoo (flnt genu! 1UH.1. Tolodo ........... t t t t I S t S 4 I Milwaukee ....... tlttlltt tf Batteries: yieroe nod gweoneri slapnlka and Mayor. Sonmd gam ' " R.K.B. Tolodo t t t 1 I I 1 14 It 1 llilwnukoo ......S I I I t I I t t t S S Betterteoi Main, Xateerllng nnd gweeaeyj HovUk. Conutook and Spollmnn. At St Paul K.H.B. tndlanapollt .... t t S S 1 I t S I S I . St. Paul ...... ...I StSISttt I II Bnttorloo: . Carter oad Sonant! MftoM nnd Clomono. . , . At Kaoaaa City R.H.B. Oolnmbwi ........ IIIIIIIMll I Kanaaa Ctty ..,. S S t I I t t t BaturiooiCttrtlo and Oolonani Sandonn Boaau and Sorry. - ? . .,, . Jt.j.. I' j. v t v ' Aif Z 'i hlu m lJv ''kit: y !'.?'.!ESnagjBaBaasnno LIST IK FOR EARLY CLOSING G, W, RAGES (Continued From Pace One.) Omaha meeting it one ol the most im portant of the eleven turf classics. The number of entries for the early closing races, the names and amounts of the purtet, at announced by Otis M. Smith, secretary and treasurer of the Omaha Driving club, the organiza tion unaer inc nuapicea 01 wnicn tne Great Western circuit meeting will be given, are as follows: S:14 Trot Omaha Orala aaebantn pnroa, 11,000, thirty-two ontrloo. 1:17 Trot ABar-Bn puno, I,SSS. thlrty-flTo ontrloo. j:it Trot noutn omnnn Mora nnd Halo mpnny puroo, 11,010, twonty-olgkt ontrleo. Throo - Yoar - Old Trot Byrno Ranunor oompany purao, 1600, flftaon ontrlo. Two-Yoar-uia Trot Btngon auk gtako, 1100 addad, thlrtoan ontrlo. 1:11 Paoo Hal MoKlnnoy puna, 11,000. twanty-flvo ontrloo. 1:11 Paoo Luxuo nuna. I1.S0S. twontv.atc ontrloo. Tkroo-Tonr-Old Paoo Burtooa-Naok puroo, 1100, nlno ontrloo. Tho Into oloolnt puroa. oloolng Auguot I. aro: 1:11 Trot Elkr oloo puno, 1100. I:1S Trot Rotary olub puno, 1600. 1:10 Trot Commercial club puroo, tSOO. 1:01 Paoo Omaha Printing oompany puno, 1000. a:ia rnoa ncwi ynrao puroo. fBOO. S:XI Paoo Brandolo Btora puroo, IS00. Proo-for.AU Paoat Alamo Bnalna bum. 1,000. Few Have Larger Purses. Only five cities on the Great West ern circuit are hanging up a larger aggregate of purtet than Omaha. And two of these Cleveland and Detroit are also Grand circuit sessions. The Omaha meetmar will mark two significant "firsts" in Nebraska horse racing circles. It will be the first time that a city in the state has been on the Great Western circuit, and the first time that $2,000 . purses have been raced for in these parts. Taken all in all. it narrows down to a plain fact: Omaha may not be the best harness racing city in the middle west, but if it isn't, which city is? Quite a delegation of Omaha horse men and their charges journeyed over to iMeoraska city last week to help keep the metropolis on the map at the second meeting on the Nebraska Midway Racing circuit. Practically all of the starters st the meeting had been here the previous week at the Benson races, the curtain raiser on the circuit. A great many of the con sistent winners at Nebraska City had also been consistent winnert here, al though a few surprises were sprung and considerable dope uptet. A Chicago horae scribe has this to say of a local pacing celebrity one Hal Connors: "The pacer Hal Connors, that last season was a member of the Geers string snd supposed to be so good he was named all the way down the Grand circuit, but never won s heat, being unsteady any time he was asked to show something like a race-horte rate of tpeed, now It owned at Omaha by Tom Dennison and is doing well, a pair of hopples having been fitted to him with such good results he looks like a ture 2:10 or better pacer on the half-mile rings. Mr, Geert will not drive a hoppled pacer, which is why Hal Connort did not parade in 'the ttrapt' last year." Ronin Injured in SpilL Jim Ronin, the popular horseman in charge of the East Omaha ttablea of the driving club, wat painfully bruised and lacerated in a spill at the Thursday races of the Nebraska City meeting. Mr, Ronin was driving the well-known Jim O'Shea in the 2:25 pace. Jim O'Shea la well known, among other things, for his ability to step some occasionally, and also to figure in some of the nicest little spills ever staged for the edification of a line of morbid rail birds. If Jim doesn't look out he'll get his owner, Fred Myera, mad and find himself on the bow end of a milk wagon some fine morning. Another addition has been made to the Tom Dennison stables, Mr. Den nison purchasing a likely looking trotter, Nutway, eligible to the 2:20 class, while over at the Nebraska City meeting. Nutway will be held over until next year before being started. Whispers of Amateur Breezes ThlriMB busju wr teitm darinc that Frank Dwr-Rmb.f)r row by th fUm- Dira. Tmttui wtihltitT troubla With thai n Wftlta oU Bnaen 10-J tnd th match can m arrant to. At eornar ana Oulnana. la titavtiinr that avara off tho (am for too BurfM-..i. It took- am lnnlnafsi fnt that flunk HolmM duaM to duck tho BourtMio into rtvor of defeat ThoM dayt Joooph 0111 ham of tho Beuri eoppad a. pair last Sunday. Madam Humor has It that Oaor Clark will umpire aomo of tho Important game used on th municipal lota. That follow Jamea 8ut1 muit havm hrtmat ran on tho brain. Re atnfed ono for tour laai Sunday acalnat the Luxua. Albert- Storm, manmr at that rnunnti Bluffs Joo Bmttha, aald he jerked off a Sood deal when ho landed Deal to hold own the left patch for his tana. Red Hnhbard la now atatlnnaufj - ma on. thro for the Stars and Strlnna. ft win trtuftheo thie fan considerably. Tho Chtcaro Street Merchant, hriaaad hv Ernie McKae, are maktn. tho teams In their olass sup tome to oop tho frapes. Today tho Stars and Btrlnaa will akin wa. to Avoca, la.. In caa certs and on nasi Sun day they will play at Treynor, la. CUStOmerT. Arthur Vf nran . fa tAlavtosT his usual brilliant same with tho Murphy pld Its. His ability never fluctuates. Hereafter tho Intorclt Itums win m. vene at the city hail overy Wednesday night. Members aro kindly requested, to attend. Dennison. Melody and Atkins iuuh kiaaswi tWO On the Smallar OUt nf thrsntt allamntn during tho LuausBurgess-Nash argument. JatnSS SuteJ tS aftar hla Valaattasi fftvtna 1 BurgessNaah congregation. He would like to bitch up with tho Uucky Holmes band. Cntcll Lohr tS now hftlrllnar tha manas-1.l reins for tho Burgeas-Nash, He ought to m aoio to inject some gtnger Is this troupe. A WIDIO Die was nil Dad ntt attirtna that Towhssnd-Merohanu' Hotel wrangle by Pe te reon and Fflaster of tho Merchanto Hotel. Hereafter Joaanh nuiham win nntaia is Bourgeois bunoh, joo knows tho game from A to a and should make an Ideal oantaln. Tho Stars and BtrlMo wanld lika a aaxm. a gams for July 4 out of town. Address Roy Btacoy, 4410 South Twelfth, or call South The latest aoaulsttloa to tha Con iisaMaa Is OUlo Blamer. Ollte Is a speed demon on tho paths and ho sUnge tho horsehlde rather UTda . , Those luggort stationed at Pia.ttam.mth only touohed up tho offerings dished up by Wommar of tho Centurions for ono oafs Mlrasky plunked two for tho otm.lt the Ducky Holmee-Bourgols fracas m singio out os live Sham Badura. catcher for tha Pniiah Merchants. Is atlll hitting the ball like a big leaguo iur. Ho smacks 'am high and far. - J. during and ho also oraokod umes up. Those Holly: are stilt stinging tho pltl to remote oorncrs of tho lot Against tho La Siestas they noted ioht aixtaan m that Ui.si of safety. Down at Orotna. Jown Andrews is twirl ing grand balL Ho strvok out twelve of tho Memphis Dill tanners and an I sviUwavH flvo hits. Unless the rentuHansi itt thai vtii Vague dig up their forfeit kale on or .before wo7 ttsay win not o auowoa to play this afternoon. BariY of McCarthys Sunnv Mmki togged out In hie whiffing machinery lsst Sunday. Ho struck out thirteen of the Kourso Oil- It must havo bean a dlfrtoul tho Ducky Holmee tribe to oose runs over tho platter last Sunday. It had fifteen men lutt e basca Cecil Lcht, chief of the Burym.Mh. u looking for a oouplo of speedy gents. can Harney 4875 For further Information Douglas Madden of the Bourgeois, Dyck of tho Luiuz and Tom Sullivan of ths Armours have weakened their teams by Joining out-of-town squads. Charlie Ltttoh Is now picking up the round ones that flirt In ths shortstop1! tsrrltery for the Emll Hansons. He Is a humdinger la this position. Thirteen may be a hoodoo, hut the Ram blers are not s. bit superstitious because they trimmed ths Vrank Dswsys In the thirteenth round. Peterson, chief of the Emll Hansens, Is hot on tho trail of Joe Hollander. He would like to havo him grab the slants behind the counting station. Joe Wavrln, manager of the Ducky Holmes team, selected Horace Oil leap. to suaceed Dutch Plata as captain. He ought to be a capable general. Manager Peterson woold like to book a few out-of-town games for the Emll Han sens. Address STS7 Seward, or call Webster 7071 after sU bells. Marty Collins, an Omaha product, now playing with Gretna, showed up strong sgalnat Memphis, garnering three hits and stealing three bases. Ollte Munch, first saoker for the 0. B. Improvsment club, has been Indefinitely sus pended because he had a mix-up with Um pire Fog last Sunday, At short Jackson Is playing grand ball for McCarthy's Sunny Brooks, Last Sun day he cracked ons for tore and a couple for the half-war trip. Wooeley twirled excellent ball for the Luxus last Sunday. With a little more coaching he will make all the Class A fel lows sit up and blink. . . , Pete Lyck, playing with the Omaha Stars, last Sunday grabbed three safe ones out of four attempts off Myers, the crack hearer of the Lincoln Cleaners. Lacy, formerly with the bueky Holmes, Is new a member of ths H. Besella 4V Son tribe. He will undoubtedly prove a strong man for this contingent. Mammy of the Ramblers stols a couple of bags last Sunday and took care of ten chances at short. His offsnslr work was of the phenomenal order. . Although the Prank Doweys touched up Kaufman of the Ramblers for ten hits, they were only able to put two counters over the putter. He whiffed eleven. With the score I to 0 against them In the ninth round, the Centurions braced, slipped in four runs and grabbed the bacon from the bail tossers at Plattsmouth. King, formerly preeldent'of the Commer cial league, handled the Indicator during the Holly-La Siestas quarrel and got off without being a target for pop bottles. Max Tergy of the Polish Merchants Is a wonder getting off his pedals to grab ths high ones, Tou have to hoist them high for them to sail out of hla reach. It seems as though ths elongated Peterson shoves up pusslsrs that are pard to solve. Last Sunday he struck out fourteen of the La Siestas snd Allowed only two mark. The president of the Omaha Amateur Base Ball association has been garbed with ths authority to extend the time limit signing players to July 1 In event he deems U neces sary. . That diminutive rascal, Heinle Peltfa. gab for McCarthy's Sunny Brooks, got a chance last Sunday and he surprised the bunch the way he pounded the ball, and he also pilfered sin bases. On July 1, I and 4 ths Hotel Castle team will play an aggregation from St Louis rep resenting the Wabash railroad. Just where the games will be Jerked off has not been definitely decided. . . . A1 good game is expected this afternoon when the Stags, leaders of the Metropoli tan league, will olaeh with the Walnut Orove Athletics. The latter are la second place. This game Is booked for Fort Omaha. FREE-FOR-ALL PACE RULED A TIE RAGE Secretary of A. T. A. Wires Judges ' Bad Ro Bight to Order a ' Fourth Heat - OMAHA 1 HOBSEMEH PLEASED Reports to the contrary notwith standing, the battle between the two great pacers, Hal McKinney and Co lumbia Fire, at Nebraska City Thurs day, was a tie. No leu an authority than the secretary of the American Trotting association ssyt it was a tie; and while the free-for-all pace at the Nebraska City meeting of the Ne braska Midway Racing circuit will go down In racing annals as one of the greatest contests ever staged on a half-mile track In this country, and pottibly some of Columbia Fire's fol lowers will still contend that this horse wat the winner, it is unani mously agreed among well-infoimed horsemen that the event was a tie, pure and simple. . . The race brings up tome fine points in harness racing judgments, and pre sents problems that judget on Ne braska trackt may have to wrestle with in the future. When the newt filtered into local horsemen's rendezvous that Hal Mc Kinney had been defeated, at Ne braska City, they could hardly believe it, especially after the local pacer's decisive victory at the Benson track the week before. " Day Chilly; Track Bad. The facts of the Nebraska City free-for-all pace are as follows: The day wat chilly and a ttiff wind was blowing. The track was in poor condition, having been sprinkled the night before the race, and as the morning was cloudy, the oval had no chance to dry. ' Despite these conditions, world's records for a half-mile track in June were hung up. Hal McKinney won the first heat in 2:07. The second heat wat a dead heat, the time being 2:07. Columbia Fire copped the third heat in 2:08. Now, under the rules of the Ne braska Midway Racing circuit, the race should have been declared a tie right there. , Tom Dennison Protests. After the finish of the third heat the owner of Hal McKinney protest ed against continuing the race. The judges, having the authority to do so, ordered a fourth heat. To keep peace, Mr. Denison instructed Bob Sebastian, driver of Hal McKinney, to take the pacer out on the track for the fourth time. Columbia Fire won the fourth heat in 2:10. Upon arriving in Omaha, Mr. Den nison wired W. M. Knight, secretary of the American Trotting association, asking him, in view of the conditions prevailing on the Nebraska Midway Racing circuit, whether the judges had the right to call a fourth heat Mr. Knight wired "no." The real facts of the case, therefore, were that the race was s tie. Hal McKinney and Columbia Fire meet again at Auburn next week. - The stage is all set for the big championship tug-of-war match to be held at the Auditorium tonight at 8:15 between the Danes and the Swedes. The Danes are now the champions of Omaha. They captured the title in tne tournament held at the Auditor ium last winter. The Swedes, who were second in the tourney, are chal lenging the Danes for the title and for a $500 side-bet. Both teams have been praticing dil igently for the last month and Cap tain Talbod of the Danes and Caotain Samuelson of the Swedes both report their men are ready for the, pull of tneir lives, uotn predict victory with easy confidence. ihe pull will be a finish affair five feet to the flag. The pull of five feet must be made even if it takes all night xne sale ot seats tor the event has been brisk and it is expected several thousand persons will find places in the Auditorium tonight. two preliminary pulls of twenty minutes will be staged previous to the Dig event the bpalding club will tussle with the Columbian club and the Florence Fraternity club will tan. gle with the German Turner club. Xa Curo Chlldron'o Cold. , Koap ohtld dry, olotaos eomfortnbloi avoln oipoiuro: flvo Dr. BoU'o Flne-Tar-Honoy: ralaoo phloem; reduceo Inflammation. Only SBo.' All druggloto. Advortlaemont. ' Bank Clearing. Omaha, Juno 17. Bank elearlnn for omana today woro SS.Z8S.610.46 and for tho corresponding aay last year 12,6,5,961.68. xno total clearlnvs for tho weak ending waar wwo ,.d,u,uli,i.vi ana tor tne cor Standing of Teams WEST. LEAOCB. W.UPot Omaha ..SB is. SI 71 Lincoln . .17 IS .UflPhlla, 17 10 .171 NAT. LEAQUB. W.I-Pot Brooklyn IS .641 Now Tork.Il 11 .lit Boatoh .... IS .! Cnlcaa-0 ...26 27 .481 Cincinnati .11 J7 .486 FtttaDurlh 11 17 .417 at. LOUU...H 11 ,404 AMUR. ASS'N. W.IPet. Tndlanap.. St IS .626 LouUvllla .11 I . Kan. City. .11 11 .696 Mlnnoapol 16 II .142 Cotumbu .11 II .481 Tolodo ....It II .466 St. Paul.. ..II St .406 Utlwaukoo IS SS .164 D. Motnen.16 II .111 Wichita ..II II .4761 Denver ...IS IS .476 Sioux C1ty.ll II .466 St. Joooph.ll It .467 Topokn ..11 17 .4171 AMER. LEAGUE. I W.UPot. Cleveland .11 10 .6161 Waah'ton .11 IS .64SI Detroit ...IS 14 .1471 New Tork.Il St .111 Boiton ...ll it .100 Chlcao ..16 IS .100 HI LOUie. .12 21 .411 Phlln, ....II IS .nil Yeoterdayl Beeelta. WESTERN HAOVJB. -Xitnooln. t; Topokn, 1. veo Mowee, e; ienTor, 1. r; St. Joooph. a. ty. 11: Wichita. 4. - NATIONAL LBAOTJB). Plttoburfeh.Booton, rain.. Chloaro, S; Brooklyn. 4. St Loulo-Now York, wet around. Cincinnati, Is Philadelphia, t. ' AMERICAN LEAOCB. Now York. 1: Cleveland. S rniiaaeipnia, ; uetrott Weahtntton, ii St Loul no ton, v: ioicaco, o. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Lonlavlllo, t-S; Mlnnoanollo, 1.1, Toledo, 4-1: Milwaukee, 0-4. Indlanapollo, 6: 8L Paul, 4, Colttmbue, S; Kanaka City, 4. ' Liverpool Orala Market, Liverpool, Juno IT. WHEAT Spot: No. 1 Manltohe, 10 Id; No. I, 6, llltd; No. t, So 6dj No. I rod wootorn winter, lollOd. CORN Spot, American, mined, new, So Id. Omaha, 7; I Sloun City. It, 7. aula, 1 BIG TUG-O'-WAR TONIGHT Danes and Swedes Tangle at the Auditorium Tonight for Pall ing Championship. TWO Pm.TttS ABE ON THE BILL ONI CLUB HOLDS FIELD DAY First Annual Event Will Be Staged at Happy Hollow Club by Col lege Hen Wednesday. MAST EVENTS ON PROGRAM The University club will hold a big field day at the Happy Hollow club Wednesday, atarttng at l o clock in the afternoon and concluding with a big dinner at 7 o'clock in the evening. Uolt, tennis, soft ball and other events are carded. A real gala day is planned. An eighteen-hole golf match will be staged with play starting at 1 o'clock. Players will be rated on the basis of ineir ciuo nanaicaps. ine player making the best gross score will re ceive a prize and will have hit name inscribed on the championship cud. Other prizes will be offered at fol low! : Lowest net score, least num ber of putts for eighteen holes, lowest gross score on the choice of any nine holes, the greatest number of Strokes on any one hole, the greatest number of balls driven out of bounds on one hole, and the poorest score turned in. Tennis singles will be played. All matches, except the finals, will be de cided by the winning of seven games. The finals will be the best eleven games out of twenty-two. The tennis will be in charge of Ralph Rainey. Soft ball will be played between teams representing the Universities of Nebraska and Michigan, and the Fats and the Leans. Charles McLaughlin is captain of Nebraska and Dr. Claude Uren of Michigan. The captain of the Fats is Dr. Rodney Bliss and the cap tain of the Leans is S. S. Caldwell. Raymond Croesman will be In charge of these events. , With Frank Latenser and Vincent C Hascall in charge, an Olympic will bring the athletic Droaram to a clone. It is said the memory of other Olym pics will pate into inaiffnincance when this one is seen. A tpeechlees dinner at 7 o'clock will wind up the day. SOUTHWESTERN TENNIS TO BE HELD AT ORLEANS The annual Southwestern Tennia tournament of Nebraska will be held at Orleans on July 11 and 12, this (rear, on tne clay courts of the Or eans Tennis club. Dr. G. M. Boeh- ler of Alma it pretident of the South western association. LEWIS MUST WEAR SHOES Strangler Cannot Leave Tootsiet . Bare when He Climbs Into the King with Joe Stecher J RESULT OF A LONG ASGUMEN) One clause in the articles of agree. ment signed between Joe btecher an Ed Lewis for the big wrestling mate! in Omaha July 4 came near endinj the negotiations for the match ant ending it for all time. It was l clause providing that both wrestler! wear gymnasium or leather shoes il the contest. When the, Lewis people came t& sign up this clause attracted their ey at once and there wat a big squawk Lewis always has wrestled in his bar feet, believing that he gets a bet. ter "purchase on the mat than h would with shoes on, even if thl toles are rubber and gripping to the ,.1.11 , aa Luc ling. ilic OiCUlCl Lv pie insisted upon the shoe clause bei in L7 ifTT in ann atrot nm arirn. u ment it was left in and Lewis signed The same trouble arose over th and also in the Stecher-Hussan mntrhXtn T.ini''ln taf fall Tn kk. former match it caused endless worrjf to the promoters and the referee, wh4 finally had to decide it. It appear) that Antoine Pierre, who had Mah mout at the time, signed up undei Police Gazette rules. Later it devel oped that he never had read thes rules, one clause of which distinctl) says that both contestants shall weal gymnasium shoes. Gotch Gets Bit. Gotch said nothing about this un. til the day before the match, whet, the advance sale had reached close to $30,000. Then he sent word to tht, referee calling attention to the clauaj in the rules. Pierre was notified and the Turk burst into tears. It appear! he never had worn shoes in his en tire career and wouldn't know how te wrestle with them. At the last mo ment Gotch demanded $500 to con. cede the point, which the management paid him out, of the Turk'a end of the money. , , In the Lincoln match a compromise, was reached when Hussane wat al lowed to wrestle in socks. It it not supposed that Lewis' chances will bi weakened by the shoes, but he sim ply hated to give into the Stechei people on that point. Where the Amateurs 'Play GREATER OMAR A. LEAGUE. Bourfooli against T-B-Cm, Luxua parte, S:S0 p. m. Duekr HetmM agalnat Omaha Ou Co., Ducky Rolmet Park. 1:30 p. m.j doublo hadr. - Armoara agalnat BnrgsMsNah. Armour park, S:ao p. m. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Poliih Merchant against Tenth Street jierchante. Armour park, 1:80 p. m. Rambiere agalnit Centurion, Thlrtr-eec-ond and Dewey avenue, 8:30 p. m. citt league: Mlcket Vlctrolae against Holly. Luxus park, 1:80 p. m. Murphy Did Its against H. Beselln 4 Bon, Fontenelle park, east diamond 8:80 p. m. Walter G. Clarke against La Siestas, Elm wood park, east diamond, 1:80 p. m. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chris Lycks against Omaha Printing Co., county fair grounds, scheduled for 3:80 p. m.. but this game will be forfeited by the Omaha Printing Co. Omaha Bicycle Indians against Dundee Woolen Mills, Thirty-first and Boyd, 8:80 p. m. J. D. Crews against Mereliantg Hotel, Miller park, 8:80 p. ra. . Townsends against South Omaha Mer chants, RlvervUw park, 1:30 p. m. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Corr Electrics against Omaha Beverage Co.. Fontenelle park, east diamond, 1:30 p. m. wourse on against Albright Merchants, Elmwood nark. wat diamond, -xtt n double-header. uouiuu Bluffs Athletics against Mc Carthy's Sunnybrooks; gams will be forfeit? to McCarthys. METROPOLITAN LEAGUE. Modern Woodmen agalnet Western Uttlog Electrical Club, Fort Omaha, 1:80 p. m, SUgs against Walnut Grove Athletics, Fort Omaha, 8:80 p. m. Ancient Order of United Workmen against Qulveras, west diamond, Fontenelle park. BOOSTER LEAGUE. Trimble Bros, against National Cash) Registers, county fair grounds, south dia mond. 1:30 p. m. Boston Wet Wash against Beddeos, Lake-i side park, 1:30 p, m. ; double-header. South Omaha Midgets against Southeast! Improvement Club, Thirty-seventh and Ar bor, 1:30 p. m.; may be forfeited. Tradesman against Mazdas, Rlvervlew park, 1:80 p. m. INTERCITY LEAGUE. Homesteads against Thirteenth Street Merchants, Thirty-seventh and Arbor, 1:S4 p. m. ; may be forfeited. Tomaneks against Missouri Avenue Cubs, east diamond, Elmwood park 1:80 p.-mJ may be forfeited. Brown Park Juniors acalnst Gate City Merchants, Thlrty-aeoond and Dewey, 1:81 p. m. Dahlman Knights against Kraj leeks, Mtllef park, 1:30 p. m. INDEPENDENT GAMES. Brandeis against Blair, Neb., Rourke park, 8:16 p. m. Council Bluffs Joe Smlvn against Porta moum, ml, Atnietio para-, council Bluffs. ours ana stripes at Avoca, la. Luxus at P'attsmouth. Nah. Sunnybrooks against Emll Hansens, countj $50,000 Ty Cobb "Comes Back" Nuxated Iron Makes Him Winner-Greatest Baseball Batter of all time says Nuxated Iron filled him with renewed life after he was weakened and all run down. Supplies that "stay there" strength and vim that makes men of mark and women of power r. onrj Well known physician who has studied widely in this country and Europe, explains why taking iron enabled Ty Cobb to "come back" so quickly and show such tremendous strength and endurance. Says ordinary nuxated iron will often increase the strength and endurance of delicate, nervous folks 200 per cent in two weeks' time. New. York. N. T. Whoa Inter viewed In hla apartment at Bretton Ball, Ty Cobb aald: "Hundred, of people write to me to know how I train and what I do to keep up that force and vitality which enables me to play practically every day of the entire baseball season. They wonder why I oan play a belter game today than wnen 1 was younger. The secret la keeping tip the supply of Iron In my blood exaotly what everyone alea oan do if they will. At the beginning of the present season I waa- nervous and run down from a bad attack of tonsolltls, but soon the papers began to state "Ty Cobb has 'come back.' He Is hitting up the old stride." The secret waa iron Nuxated Iron tilled me with renewed life. Now they say I'm worth $50,009 a year to any baseball team, yet with, out plenty of iron In my blood I wouldn't be worth Ave cents. Nux ated Iron supplies that "stay there" nieniin na vim max msKes men or .t Murk an WAman m, n.m T ' everyone would be better off, unless they have some seri ous organio trouble, to quit doctoring and take Nuxated Iron for strength and power." Continuing, T)r Rone oaM: "lfr. Cobb's case la only f on of hundreds tf a. whiaii I eouia eito D Y m Nuxated Iron has filled me with re newed life and vigor. I play abet ter game to-day than when I was younger. from tny own personal experience, which proves conclusively the as tonishing power of nuisted Iron to restore strength and vitality tven In moot complicated ohronlo condi tions. . . - Not long ago a man came to mo who was nearly half a century old and asked me to give him a pre liminary examination for life Insur "J t was astonished to find him wltH tho blood Bresaure of a boy ot St) and as fall of vigor, vim and vi tality as a young mans In faot a young man he really waa notwith standing hla age. Tha secret he said waa taking Iron nuxated iron had filled him with renewed life. At 10 he was in bad health; at 41 ho was careworn and nearly all In. Now at M a miracle of vitality and his facs beaming with tha buoyancy of youth. Am I havo aald a hundred times over Iron Is the greatest of all strength builders, , If people would only throw away patent medicines and nauseona concocuuus and take simple nuxated Iron, 1 am convinced lhat the lives of thousands of persons might be saved, who now die every year from pneumonia, grippe, consumption, kiuney, liver and heart trouble, etc. The real and true caubte whioh started their diseases waa nothing more nor less than a weakened condition brought on by lack ot Iron in the blood. Iron la absolutely necessary to enable your blood to change food Into living tissue. Without It, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through you without doing you any good. Tou don't get the, strength out or It, and as a con sequence you become weak, pale and Bioaiy looking just like a plant trying to grow in a soil dead ent In iron. If you are not strong or well you owe It to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you oan walk without becoming tired. Next take two Ave grain tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three times per day after meal, for two weeks. Then teet your rt.n.th train and see for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous run-down Seople who were ailing all the while, ouble their strength and endurance and entirely get rid of all symptoms of dypepsla, liver and other troubles In from ten to fourteen ays time simply by taking Iron In the proper form. And thie after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any bene fit But don't take the old forms ot reduced iron, Iron acetate or tincture of Iron simply to savs a few centa. Tou must take Iron In form that can he easily absorbed and assimilated like nuxated iron If yon want It to do you any good, otherwise it may provs worse than useless. 1 Many an athlete or prlxe fighter has won the day simply becauee he knew the aeoret of great strength and endurance and filled his blood with Iron before he went Into the affray, while many another has gone to In glorious defeat simply for tht) lack of Iron, E. Bauer, M. D, KOTT. Kmoted Into, ronnmeatod sbo v, Dr. Saoor. I not o pataot netleloe tor Herat teoMdr, bat one vote, 1 ll known te era, 1at aat oboe I no eoettltneot, re vtdel, pre rrltiod br eminent parelclen wuolwio. bri nk, tbe oloer tBonwlo ho, prodoeto. It 1 oulo anlmllfcttd. deoa not Injur, the taota. Bake the bleak, sor opiet the einmeab: os uw contrary, hi, noat potent raeed ts naarir n form of tnrDiwUoo o weTl a for smuua m-eowa eondluon. Tne mannfaenmr, bm rook tree, eonfldence hi Ifnxeted Irna that flae, offer te f.n fell S100.0O to ear ekariteble butlroUes If Uw eunet take oar mm or vneioa wider SO wbo iaeka tne and teemae their etrencth tot per oenL or over hi fear oeeka' tin imrrldad tba, hare no otrtena errurte trouble Tner elao offer to Rfoat mar stone, U It doe, not ot tout double row etreniui ana ebOwauo, In tea da1 time. It 1 duuNauod at Una cur br ahemin a , HeCoueU Pros Co, Mono est aU toed druf