The Cedarville Herald, Volume 23, Numbers 1-26

l ike a Chapter From the Ara­ bian Nights, WEALTH OF CAPE NOME New Facte About the Golden band* —Dawson Will t o About Deserted— The Country All Staked for Miles— Cost of Food and Fuel. Who solves the riddle of the Capo Nome lipaeh sands, gold laden beyond \lu» dreams of the most avaricious, saya Ucorrespondent of the St. Louts Globe- Dotmu'rat, will earn enduring fame and the gratitude of the hundreds of pros-' per-tors who wrlll search during the coining year the low mountains border- l'id the Arctic Ocean aiid Behring Sea for the “mother lode,” The offspring of this '‘mother lode" are the placers of Fnake Illver, Nome River, Anvil Creek anil a score of other streams bordering Reining Sea and the Arctic Ocean, 135 , miles north of St, Michael, 200 miles northwest of the Yukon's mouth. It Is easy to toll the truth about Capo Noon*, but a very hard thing to make people believe you are not Indulging in the wildest nights of .fancy, of the .Arabian . Nights order. However, It happened that such very well-known army officers as Major Philip Ray and Captain Walker, who were stationed In Alaska last summer, made a thorough Investigation of the diggings, and their reports at Washington' substantiate everything that 1 b said In this article. But probably the best proof of all of the,wonderful Cape Nome sands, where gold was as free as the air.to over 3000 .‘■trended miners- last summer, lies in- the sacks of the yellow stuff which Have beep brought down during the past, three months and sold.to Uncle Sam through the government .assay of­ fice at Seattle. Assayer Wing estimates that at least t-tfO.OOOIn Cape Nome gold ‘has. been de­ posited with him. this fall, wi lls he recoiHlir of the transportation com­ panies show th a t as much more has been disposed of through other sources, or sent to San-/Francisco.. The discoverers of the Cape N me district wore .Peter Linderbejgy Jol.n Lliiiihtoom and Johan Brandson. The . first two were sailors on the whaler Alaska, Becoming dlssatlslle 1 with their lot, in August, 1858, they c1A binding oil the beach near Cape Nome, on'Norton Round. They bid for a re.v days find then were taken into c, in p. hungry and worn, by the tribe of Es­ kimos. A few days later they canoed up the Snake River on a little pum- pecting trip. The result was that t.lnderberg and Idndbloom. found gold- bearing gravel on" a shallow bedrock on the bed of a creek entering Snake ' River- They rocked, out over $ii.Q|)0 on the second day, when they had UiUrdiit their claims. They kept the ir se e t ' for a few days, brought in sf?m of their countrymen from Port Clarence, and then organized the district. Since that day they have located claims all over the district, which is thirty miles -square. I t Is estimated that lyu-h of the three discoverers of Cape Nome has taken out upwards of ?100,050 since their lucky find was made. The Romance about Cape N me, however, lies in the discovery of gul I In the beach sands. In June, this year, the camp numbered not over SOI peo­ ple, Late in the month steamers from Dawson brought hundreds of miners down the Yukon bound '•outside.” hav­ ing found mining in the Interior un­ profitable. They camped (n tents on the beach at Nome, waiting for the steamers to fake them to Seattle. Half of them had barely enough money u> pay their passage. The rest were pre­ paring to work their way to Scatt'e. One day, one of the miners In- n tent accidentally found gold colors in sand beneath hts tent. He seized a pan, and with the sea water panned a dozen, parts full of the dirt. The deeper he went into the moist beach the higher grew the number of colors. In on hour’s Work he found a pay streak, with pans averaging 10c to 15c. That nettled if. The next day sluice bows men with pans and shovels wete thick an the beach as (lies around n molas­ ses barrel In a country atore. Tor weeks the beach fairly *warmed with men. All made wages of 83 up to 889 per day. AH who were working at wages in the little City of Anvil, now called Nome, threw up their positions and went tfi parting geld on the beach. The deposits lay in a 60-foot strip be­ tween low and high tide, reserved by the government. It was free to all who runic. There was no staking of claims,' as no title could pass from the govern­ ment. At one time there Were over 3,COO men a t work, on the beach. The steam­ ers that came from Seattle with miners bound for Dawson, for the Koyukuk, Tartan* and Forty-Mite districts, land­ ed their passengers a t Nome, goon the country wag staked for miles. The steamers two months later began bringing the beach miners to Seattle. Instead of coming down from the north with empty pockets, all had money. The individual amounts ran from a few hundred to 410,009. Great excitement reigned among north-bound miners, and returning steamers went away with every foot of space occupied by passengers and men, Out of a space of ground CO feet square on Anvil Creek two miners took 410,000 in a day. Hack to the hills went the prospectors, over the tundra, in which they found colors. In the spring an effort will he mads to find the moth­ er lode, from which, It Is supposed by the mlncro, glaciers ground down tho gold-bearing rocks into the sea ages ago, depositing their precious contents on the qarids for American rolncrp to ' Arid a t the dawn of tho twentieth cen­ tury. Nome Is a typical mining camp In Alaska, Half of the people will live this winter in tents, .Every article of food is dtar. Wages are 410 per day and up. Hundreds have* already gone to Daw­ son to winter, expecting to take the first boats for the new mining fields In the spring, beating the *11-water route several weeks, Victim of Her Emotions, "Cousin Arabella has had to give up playing Wagner altogether." "W fty r ‘ Every time she began her Angora r At had- n fit,** tOCOIR A OOfctt M 0 K 8 BAT. Take faxstfee Bromo Quinine Tsblete, AH d ru g g is t rtfiifid tho money i f it fail# to j * y • Grove*'-- signature is oh entdi mix. - -Smoke the l ‘tp© o f J>«ee «t »M price*, <J» M. Uidgwsy* • - New <j*wp Cslifornf* Apricot*. f t t e N , O hhwiwh I * * * & , At «!»»>, m A WAOON. Haw g Circus Man Xlspt During a •Mean's Traveling. “I *>ept in a wagon a\l summer/’ aaht Dolph t.csslcy, the well-known ticket seller of the Robinson Circus, which has made its seventy-fifth an­ nual season of travel. "Yes, sir, in a wagon. The rest of the show people slept In regular sleeping ears. Now, yon would think they had the best of it, wouldn't you? But they didn’t. My bed was made up Jn tho wagon lu which I gold tickets. Along tho sides of It are benches. I had a cot bed from which tho lege were re­ moved. Tho benches had lids, and inside were boxes where tho tickets and other stuff necessary were kept. In one compartment l had tho bed­ ding, in another towels and other toilet esentials. After the count up at night I pulled down the cot top, got out my sheets and blankets and made up my bed. Then l turned in, after folding up my clothes. The ticket wagon is a finely constructed affair, with platform springs, and rides likes a fashionable carriage. The "razor- backs,’’ or common laborers with the show, would, when the time came to entrain, run the wagon onto a flat car and chock the wheels securely. The car has super-springs, and rides llko n-passenger coach, The cot top was laid netosB the aisle, of which tho benches formed the sides, sq there were three placcB to take up the mo­ tion—the car springs, the wagon springs and the elastic cot. webbing. I was as snuga as a bug in a rug. By leaving the windows in the rear open I got a fine breeze, and in the hottest nights was cool and comfortable. Many a morning I woke up to find the wagon pn the circus lots miles from the depot. I slept so soundly that I never felt the wagon being detrained or driven uptown. Then my wagon men would bring up water and my toilet was a matter of only a moment or two. Bathing? Why a man with a circus can bath every day in the dressing te n t The folks in the sleep­ ing car had many discomforts. Any­ body that haq traveled in a crowded Pullman-car appreciates this fact. All want to go to bed at the same 'time and get up together. The aisles are crowded with clothing and impedi­ ments, and then there, is the snoring and talking that is inevitable. Oh, ' tell you, I was comfortable. Some o( the razor-backs had a novel way of bunking for the night. They slept in hammocks, which were slung Under the wagons from axle to axle. I never tried it, but those who did tell me that .it Is exceedingly comfortable. Lots of fresh air. you know. Curious­ ly enough, they didn’t get- wet, and the cinders don’t (ly under the wag­ ons. On dusty nights they get a little of loose Mother Eearth, but not so much as you would think. Nothing could induce me to change my Gess- iey palace sleeping ear. as I called my wagon bed, for one of Pullman’s make. I have privacy, room and comfort, and no sleeping car e.in boast of this triple advantage.”—Exchange. BATTLE AT THE AQUARIUM. Mr. Crab Was Gar-ie, But, Like Fitz­ simmons, .Went Out,of His Class. There were placed recently in the lobster and crab tank at the Aquar­ ium eleven lohslc", a lively lot of medium and small sizes, that have proved a s t m ’--a1 traction. Tho lob­ ster is an' intv " Ing creature any­ way, and -llkelv lo be especially so to anybody not faml iar with them as they appear in mture: and besides iobaters, and cribs, too. for that mat­ ter. are Inclined t» ho scrappy as well ns lively, and -IV* .visitors like that. Sometimes two lobsters,, meeting, put up their big claws to each other like boxing gloves: and sometimes crab and lobster meet and have a little set-to. Here, for lllustiv.tlon, Is a good, siz­ able, vigorous blue crab walking along on the bottom of tho tank, close by the glnss In front. 'A lobster comes along the same pr th from the other direction, and they meet at the centre, with as many persons as can see the tank looking on. Neither gives way. The crab IS the smaller, but not .a bit afraid. Crab swines with right, but fails to land, the blow falling short. Lobster flops one big claw overhand and lands on top o? crab shell, right in tho centre, m'rtway between the eyes, and pins him down to the sand. Crab waves his claw wildly with an effort to get in on lobster, but eaft’t touch him. “Hold him off. <Id man, hold him off,” says qn enthusiastic spectator. “Don't let him go' Inside your guard. If you do you’re a goner.’’ And the lobster does hold him off, for maybe a minute, and then lifts his heavy claw. Oral' Is game by nature, but in this particular Instance he turns and goes u\e other way, realiz­ ing that he is flguting out of'Ills class. Often, liOY/ever, the lobster will turn out for the crab. The crab always ap­ pears to be resolute and self-reliant. It goes right along as if It owned tho bottom, whereas sometimes when a lobster meets a crab it seems to be thrown off its Guard, and it jumps bad;, though the crab may be only half as big as itself. Then It is pos­ sible to see tho manner in which the lobster habitually jumps, whfeh is diagonally upward and backward, tali first. He makes a quick, nervous leap of two or three times his own length, the crab meanwhile keeping on along the bottom quite unruffled. Here may be seen, In soino measure, a t least, the manner in v/hich the lob­ ster secludes Itself for safety If It hides In a crevice in the rocks it al­ ways backs in, so that its big claws. Its weapons, are in front.—N. Y. Sun. Aa Editor’s Life Saved by Cham'.erlaia’e Coagh Bemtdy* During the early part of October, 18%, I contracted a bad cold which settled on iny lungs and was neglected until I feared that consumption bad appeared in fin incipient stale. I was constantly coughing and trying to expel something which 1 could not. 1 became alarmed and after giving tho local doctor a trial bought a bot­ tle of Chamberlain's Cough Itcmedy and the result was immediate im­ provement, and sifter 1 bad uses! three bottles) my lungs were restored to their healthy state- -li. B. Ed­ wards, Publisher of The licvicw, Wyant, 111. For rale by C. Al. Hidgwtiy, druggist, , ^ , $ - W. H. Philpot, Albany, Oa„ jm p , "DcWittVi Little liiriy RI mm ? did me more gtwd tiffin any piHs J ever took,” The ftiinmr* little, pill* for et.fiHip.athm, bilimt* #* and IfcM and W «4 trouble*. Kid*way A t*u.« Dw ijtifatr A Prominent and Fortunate Army Officer, FIANCE OF MISS MILE& Choice of the Daughter of the Com­ mending General of the Army—A Weet Point Graduate and an Elec­ trical Expert—Gen. Milee et Home, Tho announcement a short time ago of tho engagement of tho daughter of the major general commanding the Army, Miss Cecilia Sherman Miles, to Captain Samuel Rcber caused, a con­ siderable stir in Army circles, where Miss Miles has long been a leading figure. The announcement was unex­ pected, and therefore game In tho na­ ture of a surprise, although there wu« really nothing surprising about it. Captain Rebor, whose mother was a Sherman, is Miss Miles’s second cousin, and the two have almost grown up to.- gethcr. He Is several years her-senior, and they have been fast friends, so much that no one thought of) them us lovers, More than that, Miss Miles has been such a general favorite that her paine has frequently been coupled with those of other Army officers who have paid her' marked attention, and her marriage has been prophesied repeat­ edly, but until now she has remained fancy free. She Is an unusually intelligent, bright (Capt. Samuel Reber.) young woman. As a little girl, and while she was in her .teens also, she lived much of the time with her par­ ents at the frontier Army posts, and that experience gave- her a breadth of character which is not unusually found, among girls of society. Later on she caini East and attended a fashionable boarding school for two or three years but most of her education was obtain­ ed from tutors under her father’s Im­ mediate Supervision. Only those who have the' good for­ tune to know Genera' Miles intimately are aware of the gen iality of his dis­ position. In his home he is seen at his best:, he is the Ideal husband and fa ­ ther. and with hts wife, daughter anc son—-a youth of,about eighteen, who i*. now at West Point—he is a most de­ lightful companion. He is never toe busj to be interested in what interest* them, and he always prefers an even­ ing at Ills own fireside to any other place. Miss Miles’s quick; receptive mind lias always been . a source of pleasure to him. As a little child he delighted to guide her reading, and- a.> she grew older she formed the habit of reading to him from the books he enjoyed. In this way she has obtain­ ed a wide scope of general informa­ tion, and has in consequence been of muck help to him in his literary Work. Ooptuin Reber is one of the most promising and certainly one of the most fortunate, of the younger Army officers. He .was born in Missouri thirty-five years ago, and was appoint­ ed fiom thnt State to West Point. He was graduated with the class of '83, and was appointed a second lieutenant of the 4th Cavalry in the following July, and in 1892 was made a first lieu­ tenant of thcOlh Cavalry. In January, 1894, he entered the Signal Corps, be­ came chief signal officer of volunteers in May, 1898, and in July of the same year was appointed lieutenant colonel. He remained chief signal officer with the Army Corps and of the Department of Mntanzao and Ranfa Clara, and also acting superintendent of military tele­ graph lines of the island of Cuba, un­ til January, 1899*, When he was made chief signal officer of the Department of the East, 'with headquarters at Governor's Island, where he is now stationed. Captain Reber is an elec­ trical expert. He took a special course of Instructions nt JohnB Hopkins In connection with his Work on the In­ tercontinental Railway Commission of 1S92, of which he was a member. He was also on dutv with the Board of Engineer Officers on the Water Power of the Great Falls from April to July, In 1894, and was one of the Government appointees for examining and reporting Upon the etectrical exhibits of the At­ lanta Exposition, During the fipanish- Amerlenn war he was on duty v, 1th the United States Army in Porto Rico, and accompanied General Miles in his cam­ paign across the island. Miss Miles has been with her parents on the Pa­ cific Coast. The wedding is to take place in Washington in’January. Feminine Financiering. That women are the best financiers of the world yvg have often had opportu­ nity to acknowledge, says the Honolulu Independent. Wo have seen them at the auction sales When they made a "bargain” by buying an article they had no use for whatever, and we have seen them haggling fiver the price of cheap calico for a reduction in prieo of one t ent a yard, and then triumph­ antly' carrying their purchase to a fashionable dressmaker and paying Iter $10 for making a "morning" dress. This morning we could not help smiling while watching* a •lady credited with possessing good business sense buying "( hinese birds” on board a mail steam­ er, haggling over the price of the birds and beating down tho seller of coven fine specimens by fifty cents of tho ori­ ginal price. In the meantime, her hack was v/aitifig, and the driver "charg­ ing." She made her bargain, how'over, saved fifty rente on the birds and paid tho hackman one dollar for waiting. That is female flnaiseeerlng.--Exchang« The colonies of Australia are rapidly becoming more than mere growers and shippers of wool. In one week during September there was shipped to Eng­ land from Melbourne 43C3.0M worth of refrigerated articles, constituted aa fol­ lows: S33 tons of butter, 109 caacn of milk and cream, 245,899 pahs of rab­ bits, 3,609 carcasses of mutton tutd 02 MtiNsssM of veal. All the railway etnHfins In Sweden fit which tnrnl* tiro BMtred urn Known by a td*n bearing th* «uffg#fitiv« em­ blem of a erotmefI knlf« **4 fork, DOG A DETECTIVE. Animal Belonging to th* Police at Shanghai Gave Valuable Aid. There has just (lied in ‘.‘ho central dlco station in Shanghai perhaps one i the roost faithful and intelligent nimals of the (lumb rogation, and one. which was truly regarded by the Shanghai police as the "policcincn’fi dog,” n route but sagacious compan­ ion, whoso death has been regretted by the whole forco. Nigger a t his death was 25 years old, eleven oi® which he had served in tho Shanghai police force. His record in the sen vice chows that he lias actually been in both the public and the secret de­ partments of the police, and hud been the means of effecting the arrest ol many notorious criminals. Nigger, re­ marks the-China Gazette, was a per­ sonality in the force, petted as much by the superintendent as he was by constables, both European and native. He was moreover, part and parcel ol them, for he visited them on their usual heats, was patted, and with a . gentle tail wag traveled onward to meet the next officer. The dog, too, became a general favorite, because he. used to remain out on “night duty,”' and never considered that his patrol was up till the morning round was finished. When he was on night duty he used to enter the station at 3 o’clock to get ids coffee. After t h a t ' Nigger would trot out again and con­ tinue his round till morning. An in­ spector of the police forco, speaking of-tlie death of the dog, states that he was as good as. a detective, and that on' many occasions Nigger had been the means of arresting lawbreakers in cases where the police had failed. Several notable Instances are re­ corded. .It is-well known that Nigger secured the arrest of a criminal who escaped from the llong-KeW police station. The convict was In for a term of years, and his escape from the sttit Ion was apparently unperceived until Nigger took iqi the chase. The dog pursued the man for two miles, the while biting him on the heels. '1.ie runaway dropped and the police came upon him.' .One of the most remark­ able instances of canine fidelity per- ,haps in modern times was this: About three months ago two- European po­ lice officers were going up the Nan­ king road at about midnight. Nigger, who had been with them, was missed.. A few minutes afterward the animal made its reappearance, wfien it began pawing at the legs of its master, Ser­ geant Madsen,who knew then there was something wrong. Both officers proceeded to ascertain post, piloted by Nigger, who at once put his front paws against the door of a house and returned to scratch his master. The • dog again went to the door and actual­ ly Uy his front paws burst it open, and then it was that the officers discover­ ed n criminal who was on private pro­ perty for the. supposed purpose .of committing a felony and who was sub­ sequently conylcted and sentenced to 1 three months' hard labor. These are among the many acts which made Nigger's name famous in Shanghai, •not only among, the mem­ bers of the. police force, but among many private residents who knew him by his reputatton. The shanghai po­ lice force is Inconsolable. The funeral was att -nded by six constables and a sprgeant.—Pall Mall Gazette. —“Iluwl. bronchitis ever}- winter for years and no medicine gave me permanent relief till I began to take One Minute Cough Cure, I know it is the best cough medicine made,” says J. Koontz; Carry, Pa. It quickly cures coughs, colds, croup, asthma, grippe and throat and lung taouhlcs, Itjs the children’s favorite remedy. Cures quickly. Ridgwuy & Vo., Druggists. LIST OF LETTERS List of letters remaining uncalled for in the Cedarville postoificc for the month ending Feb. 10, 1900. • List No. 7. Jones, Louie Wileoxcn, Samuel , T. N. T aubox , V M. WorkingNight andDay. The busiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Dr. King’s New Life Pills. These pills change weakness into slreugth, list- lessness into energy, brain Jag into menial power. They’re wonderful in building up the health. Only 25c per box. Wold by Ividgwnv it Co , druggists. According to a recent publication, alleged to bo a confession of --n ex* Spanish officer, the Maim* \s..s blown up under orders of i!.( government of Spain, This u„»y or may not be true, but it .s certain that -Spain paid dearly for the destruction of the Maine, which was the real cause of the war. $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will he pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science fins been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh.' Ilall’a Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure kuov.u to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con­ stitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surface of the system, thereby destroy­ ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by build­ ing up the constitutions and assisting nature in doing its work. The pro­ prietors have so much faith in its cur- alive powers, (hat they ofler One Hundred Dollar-* for any ease that it tails to cure. Mend for list of testi­ monials, Address, l'\ J . Cheney & Co., Toledo, (). Hold by nil Druggists, 75e Haifa Family Pills are the beat. ...DoWittVi Witch Hazel Halve is (Uicqtkdlrd tor pile?, injuries and skin d.VeascH, ft is tho original Witch Harol Halve. Beware of nil fount* r- friK Kidgway A Co., Druggtrt*, A N N U A L S A L E M U S L I N U N D E R W E A R Our i960 Spring Underwear sale will begin Monday, February 5th. We have been several months preparing for this sale, and we are confident it will be the best sale we have ever held. All goods offered in the sale are well made, good material, and are thoroughly honest goods. -Not a shoddy piece in the lot. * L A D I E S A N D H I S S E S ’ G O W N S 39 CEN.TS TO $ 3 . 5 0 , W I T H G R E A T V A L U E S S T 50 , 75 C E N T S A N D ' $ i . o p A good ,‘19c 11own is an actual .wonder this year.' We can sell a liberal tpiantity only at this price—-there are about 25 dozen in this sale; after that there can be no more’ ^Wtdl-trimmed (rowns in large assortments, at oOe; better qualities at Too and § 1 , and some very tine new styles, at . $ 1 . 2 5 > $ 1 . 5 0 , $ 2 . 0 0 and up. f l u s l i n D r a w e r s 2 5 C E N T S . . A t this popular price wtygive you plain muslin drawers, 7 rows tucking of the best- muslin made, at 2:1 e. This is less than the muslin is worth today. A large assortment <>1 trimmed drawers at- 2 ;»c. Better grades at 40, 40, 74 and $ 1 . 00 . C o r s e t C o v e r s Cambric Corset Covers, plain, well.made... ..... ..................... ......... ........ ........................................ . ...... ,10c Trimmed ” ” in more than a dozen styles, all ^hape necks, splendid quality...... .25c Fhier ” ” .including all the new styles, at..... .......... 39 , 50, 75 , $1.00 up to $ 1.50 Ny . h i t e S k i r t s 5 0 c t o $ 5 . 0 0 A L L P R I C E S B E T W E E N You cannot afford to make your White-Skirts after see­ ing what- you can 'buy. in this sale, at 75c, $ 1, 1.25 and 1.50. We give you skirts that the material would figure much higher U N D E R S K I R T S AT 2 5 , - 5 0 A N D 75 C E N T S t C h e m i s e , T r i m m e d , W e l l M a d e ' AT 2 5, 39 A N D 5.0 C E N T S We also show during this sale our complete line of New Embroideries for Spring 1900, in’Cambric, Nainsook and Swiss, and all the new wash material for this season lobe Bros. $ Company,Xenia, 0. ANight ofTorror. j . Docs Your Stomach Distress You? Awitil anxiety was felt for the | you have pains in the side, widow of the brave General Burnlinm nausea, sometimes vomiting, distress of Machine, Me., when the doctors said she would die from Pneumonia before morning” writes Mrs. H. II. Lincoln, who attended her that fear­ ful night, but she begged for Dr. King's New Discovery, which had more than once saved her life, and cured her of Consumption. After after eating, belching, constipation, loss of appetite, dizziness, flatulence, moth patches^ sluggish looks, pimples j and a repulsive complexion? If you Irove any of these symtoms, you have d>-pepsin or stomach disorder. These diMr- firing troubles are promptly re­ lieved and then cured by Dailey's Dyspepsia Tablets. Pleasant to take. T 1 ; „ T 7 . ThcV Will bring quick relief to the taking, she slept nil night. Further ^yorstcnees. Written signature of W, use entirely cured her.” fins mar* J, ]}ailey on each package. Price vellous medicine is guaranteed to cure all Throat, Chest and Lung Diseases. Only f)0e and $1.00. Trial bottles free at Kidwav &Uo.*s drug store. —That charming idyl of New Eng­ land coast life, “Shore Acres, is un­ derlined for one night, Monday, Feb. 20, at the Xenia Opera House. Mr Charles G. Craig, the well-known character actor, who played Nathaniel Berry so successfully in New York City, will appear on this occasion. Messrs Atkins Lawrence, W. H. Gerald, William Burton and Misses Marion Cullen and Belle Theodore niid many other well-known players are members of this orgonization. There will be a big ntsh for seats and those expecting to go bad better drop Manager McClellan n card. “ 1 think I would go crazy with pain wore it not for Chamberlain's Pain Balm,” writes Mr. W. II. ,Stapleton, Hcrtuinie, Pa, “I have been afilleted with rheumatism for several years and have tried remedies without number, but Pain Balm is tho \ best medicine t have got hold of.” O«o application relieves the pain For sale by V, M. Itidway, druggist. Bailey on each pad- 25 cents. Sample free. Druggists who 'don’t have them will get them for you. Two kinds of tablets in each package. The latest discovery. Sold by Ilidgway &Co PATENTS Caveat-;, Anl TraJc-Matka Attained and all Pnt- .er.tbusincn.7 conducted far MOOCKATC F it* . O ub ornce is oppositeu .B.P atent Or tick |and we cat) secure patent in Jtaa lima titan Uioae remote from Washington. . Send mode!, drawing or fifcoto., (villi dctcrip-, ition. We advice, it patcr.talda or not, tree cl charge. Ourfeenctuuotilt patent is secured. > P amph iS t . “ Um? la Obtain I’atento,’*with coot oi eama (ntho if.lit and foreign countries sent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. O pp . P atent OrricE,W ashington , O. C. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure D igests w h a t you e a t . Itartlficialfy cligc-statuofoiidand aids Nature in strengthening and recon­ structing the exhausted digestive or­ gans. I t is the. latest discovereddigest- ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency, I t in­ stantly relieves and permanentlyctire 3 Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nau(;ea, Sick Headache, Hast ralgla,Cramp3,and all other results of imperfectdigestion. Prepared by E. C. DcWltt &Co.» Chicane For role by Itiilgway & Co. 50 YEARS* EXPERIENCE P atents 1BADE MAHnl D esigns C opyright * Ac. Anvrmn sr-mllUR a tf;ej r h and I’.cszilf.Um k » t qsitftily asrortriin nnr<i.:i .ra frco.wt.rihrr »n PATENTS GUARANTEED Our fee returned if we fail. Any one £eudmq , she tell and description of fl»y im entiua will ; prouiplly receive our opinion free com eunua ; the patentability of sanse. *' How to Obtain n ■ I’atosii" sent upon tequest. Patent*; sc.uicu . throaj. ll ufl ndvertifed for rate at our expense. . 1 v eenilius ftfttscf ftj e o n;.f ....... ..... .... invention it probablyratc-.toWe. CiOnr-ia:!.!-** tinnsciricli.Vfi.i-.adc-i.tfc:, iJandh.wki.ntWt-fits seutfrea. ciMf'l naenc; Itntont* taken thrmiRh T.lm'.a S> < terclTb tptrtiilRctlce, wiihootc&ofK'. tatta ScientificAmerican. AhnudiofaclfHlrtstraicJw Uly. Izwcei&fjf- r,notionof AnvrficnliOeJni mal. ‘ifrr'.n.fij* yewsImirmonths,$h (Serabyal) r.cnvc consulted by afacafacturcMfind Investors, Send for sample ropy ffiEEi Address, VICTOR a. EVANS A CO, (latentAttorney*,) 13618 »td»ay, "BfAtschoffice. O V KnWestsaiitif. I> Crown ■--•A choice line of mil kinds of Urororiwi, st Hwr’fl, Ivans SnlMUit, WASHINGTON, D. C,;* i b a k i n g .B PW iiJ tR ‘TTRcT'hrw . M «w.icjsydlt-lUA'I TIH. EAllHj jWli% A-I 4SR8SI i S k I SOtO Ny.fcUt, FiRSY- CLASS aROOtryv-v-M

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