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ML for nts up to pair osing out the left from suits many broken lots. The ma« terials the choicest and the best All good patterns—many are #5.00 values ~chofce of lot at $1.50. PANTS 150 Men's worth 5.60 a W Wrapper Clearance $1.00 Wrappers for 25¢c. On sale tomorrow, 500 calico wrappers— are odd pairs and the | and ure did styles sty light and me- line dium dark for 25 Boston euit THE OMAMNA YOUTI'S SUITS 8250 for Boys' Long Pants Suits, worth P to $7.50 his is a marvelous offer quite characteristic of ALl splen- ard nohby patterns—every well made and well rd—up to $7.50 values— $2.50 m Store. materials les and colors, actual $1.00 values, all gizes, clearing sale price— | of the magnitude of the values tc we are going to have them. seen ry economist should a Dress Goods Clearance Values like these have made Boston Store famous. yard for $1 Dress Goods—Including C ilk and wool novelties, storm serges, flan- nels, Jn-n ch flannels, worth up to £1.00 a yard—all on sale at 25¢ yard. yard for 50c and 75¢ Dress Goods—FPure ‘ wool coverts, cheviots, caslimeres, brocades, 50c and The values, clearing sale price 15¢ a yard. $1.25 Black Dress Goods— Clearing price 50c¢ yd All of our high class crepons, storm and French scrges, fancy 50 :V‘vntf;:“m black goods, m.l u.|v'1.rvrsvsl »(nuflu”d.l'ltfrtv»nl"r.fl g C Dress Goods Clearing in the Basement Thousands of yards of 19¢ English Cashmeres, bright checis & plaids” ~9] / double width 36-inches wide, ar H05|ery Clearmg Men's strictly all hose, in black, gray and tan, worth 35c a pair on sale at Clearing Sale of Dress Trimmings, etc. 500 gross of pure white and smoked wool cashmere halt 15¢ TOMORROW IS THE had a chance to thoroughly inspect their purchases and (as is only natural let » be found here, ttend this great sale and derive t DAILY v hav tl BEFE: T JUBRANDEIS & flh’s[]RE "A"" DOUCLAS STS OMAHA ) SUNDAY, ON:ST AN » 16 fends estimate the worth of the good benefits of our clearing prices, told their friends and neighbors about the UARY 1 SECOND DAY OF OUR Great Challenge Clearing Sale t seems almost incredible to say that we will have larger crowds here tomorrow than we had the first day of the sale, but The thousands who attended thig sale yesterday gr The price 3, 1901, 2100 - fo M S1 fully $1 our $1.25 w Many are lot a whit colored I The colored ones hav to mateh. lot Al sizes your choice for 2 1t bargaing at the Boste patd for them We are clearing out winter goods now and the sweeping reductions we have made has created values the like of which Omaha has never Radical Cloak Clearance: Big Bargains Special We will offor tomorrow 100 new tailor lenge clearing sale at the lined throughout, in homesp ity you would expect to pay £7.50 ladies suits, shirts and jackets. ... Jack- 3_5—0 & o8 9 .50 ladies’ ots, at ....0 §17.50 ladies’ extra quality Jjackets—at 6 50 only .. §2.50 child’s reef- 980 P8 AL viviviianen £6.00 v!lild's 298 reeiers, 2% unly........ £6.50 golf skirts. atest ry une, cheviota, venetians, ¢ 5 for and they are worth it, made suits, silk lined throughout iction ever heard of in the suit dept. in blouse, eton and tight-fitting effec tyle, fit and shape, superior in £30.00 Automobile coats, at %15.00 tailor-made they go at ndsomely finished All of them silk th suits at ..., 7.50 fine boucle capes at. $12.50 handsome plush £5.00 fur coliar- ottemat (v avenes 50 fur collar- ette £275.00 genuine Alas- $125 ka seal cape 1t in this chale $10 Q0 73 98 98 1o quals pes at 50 1 29 MEN'S SUITS e NECKW Sc¢: Aoz for Men's S0.¢cent Neekw'r t T * en's hirts orth Glove Clearance $1.50 Gloves 25¢ a pair. We our chofce 1 « all earing mperiale Fonrsin-hands t hat priced S0¢ for The styles and patterns aro th the market you car geot better ones anywhero for 50¢ f Our first nouncement well o from and | ynd recelved dored, | w it totor clearing out kid left over day trade mussed solled, thes e cuffs offer best or in the ] and But the th are §L2 values are and white 25c¢ Clearmg Sale of Silks Where can you get such values, but here! We urge you to come and secure your share of them, You'll attended the sale, and be sorry if you miss it. 50c¢ Silks at 9¢ yard—An immense lot of yard wide china silks, plain colors, silks, all worth up to 50¢ yard, in this clearing sale at in All colors, Black m Store. Purthermore they have is a revelation to thousands more, be glad you lining silks, brocaded 9C 75¢ Silks at 39¢ yard—In order to close outan immense lot of 27.inch taffeta in navy blue and other 390 desirable shades, foulard silks and brocaded es of black peaude silks they go on sale at, yard. extra 59C 10 odd pie 27-inches wide, silk department, Ladies', men's and children's fast black full seamless hosiery, good 5C weight, all sizes. Clearing Sale price, per pair. Underwear Clearing Sale of misses’, boys' underwear. Very earl buttons, all sizes, 1 clearing price, per dozen ZC Fancy buckles in a great variety of styles, plain, jet and fancy enameled, worth up to 25e C each, clearing price.. 3 Fancy dress trimmings at one-thirg prices, including all colors and black, gimps, braid, aod irridescent novelties worth up to 20c a yard, at yard, 1c and 3ic Clearing children's values at 5c. 10c and 15¢ and special We are cl(nlrhu( out all small lots of footwes ar of Shoe CIEAranCe qyers dssoriptin, and havs saade grost ommosir in prices. Our busoment and main floor depariments have umerous. bace gain squares filled with wonderful shoo values. We have $1 98 quite s number of pairs of the men’s shoes left that we placed on sale Saturday., They are worth up to # a pair—choice. 60-tnch Kreen worth Colored Damask absolutely fast color, Soe yard, at tan red, and 15¢ Table Dam- 19¢ »om dice pat- 20¢ inch all linen extra. fine German Damask bleached, and ich very heavy Cream Scoteh Tabla Damask, would be \ mask, woul 50¢ cheap at 7 1 extra heavy German inch all Tinen BT 69c 25¢ inch hes the y all 1 n Cream kind, go extra heavy all linen Able Damask, worth 1, go at . inch all pur Silver Bleached, and Bleached Satin 'y regular $1.00 kind,| 1, Al silk and linen Fringed Doylies, at selves of this first opportunity to land since leaving the states. Some hunted which they found sea shore; others fished; LIFE AT BLEAK CAPE NOME gamblers set up 0. B. Coon Draws & Vivid Word Picture of the Eldorado. A theatrical company two performances ™ ve pla; a sid of from our boat gave to standing room eams selected from the sels Oregon 1 Charles A. Nelson a match game of base ball for $100 . which was witnessed by thousand people. The rest wandered over MANY DIFFICULTIES ARE ENCOUNTERED terra firma in the manner of chilézoy “The harbor fs a beautiful sheet @ water, landlocked and secure. In the distance and active volcanoes. Dutch Harbor is the village of Unalaska which was formerly a Russian mission, where the church is said old and containing grand old masters. “Most boats coal elither at or Unalaska, Two miles €. B. Coon is among the geveral well known Omaha men who have explored the Alaskan gold fiel .8 Last summer he started out to find his fortune at Nome, and, after A long and st ational voyage to that port, was obliged to further and encounter many unexpected difficulties before locating | & claim that panned out satistactorily. Mr. | Coon was formerly in the United States revenue office in this city and it is under- stood that his adventure in the Alaskan | torritory was undertaken in the Interests o(w 4 company composed largely of government | offclals. His trip was an interesting and exeiting of which he speaks as fol lows “We left Seattle May ship Santa Ana, @ 1,200-ton 447 passengers and a crew of sixty. traversing the sound we came Pacific ocean at Cape Flattery just miles on our way “Nothing unusual happened on the voyage to our first Duteh Harbor, excepting an occasional sight of large hair seals and | whales, until the first of June, six days out | and 900 miles from port. On that morning fire was discovered in the hold of the vessel | und after investigating, being unable to locate the blaze, the captain ordered the chief engineer to turn steam into the per forated pipes which lined the hold. At the end of twenty-four hours the fir: was locatel and that part of the ship was flooded. The Jarger part of the freight and baggage was | damaged and all leather goods were totally destroyed. ) ch Marbor Has Attrac N “We arrived at Dutch Harbor, 1,742 miles from Seattle, on June 7, and found a fleet of fifteen large steamers which preceded us and we lying there to coal. This was a beautiful sight, the vessels averaging more than 500 pa ngers, who avalled them- 14 pictures by eek ships take on from 400 to 600 tons. We salled out of Dutch Harbor June 12 and were soon in the Bering sea on our way north 800 miles to Nome. Arriving there on June 17 | revealed a case of smallpox on board. one, lowed to land was ordered passengers or freight, to proceed without delay Egg fsland, in Norton sound, 100 southeast of Nome. One passenger down a rope into a small boat and away; he was a gambler and took chance “Of the 447 pas: tow that did not a8 most ¢ to Nome. on the steam- vessel, with After Into the | 121 r that long. stop, and wounded; another had a bunkhouse i wind, where the miner might rest weary body at $1 per rest machinery and a dozen helpers to lick ug the gold from among the sands of the beach and in his mind was losing $1,000 per were losing more money than would pay off the national debt. Wo reached destination the next morning and anchored our smallpox patient, days’ imprisonment Land of Midnight “Near us lay the magnificent Ohlo, which had been quarantined days previous, with the late Captain C Rustin and 700 others on board. The was calm and the weather delightful sunrises and sunsets were most beautiful Unlike iz Nebraska, the sun rises in th north, describes almost a circle sets apparently a short distan rising, less than an hour having elap from sunrise to sunset. The glow of th sun on the sky made perpetual day. time In the twenty-four hours was it dark that you could not see to read withou settled down to a ten Sun, e 124 Danger of Pocumonia. Our old winter enemy, Grip, is at band, and in his wake will follow his twin brother. What is termned an “ordinary cold™ is usually the first warning, and in a few days Poeumonia follows. The main trouble Is centered in the neg- lect of the first symptoms. The latter are more ominous of evil in proportion to the age of the patient. Past fifty yoars of age Pneumonia s a very fatal malady The man whe gets thoroughly chilled after exposure to inclement weather must needs concern himself as to the ultimate outcome, especially i high temperature, cough and difficult respiration supervene. The only foty lies in the prompt use of SEVE SEVEN,” Dr. Humphroys' fa- mous Specific for the cure of Grip and the Prevention of Pneumonia. At all Drug Stores, or by Mall, 2¢. & Pocket Manual mailed free, the high peaks the sun was never out o sight at that time of year. Truly this | ‘the land of the midalght sun.’' At the ex board had been vaccinated, we pulled ancho and were on our way to Nome, the land o gold, where each and every one expected t load himself up with the yellow metal an return home a bloated holder of golde wealth, How many were disappointed his tory will never tell; only the few who sue ceed are recorded. “We arrived at Nome on June schedule time, and commenced to passengers on a lighter. and amustmg sight. There was a three inch plank about one foot wide shoved ouf from the ship to the lighter at an angl of alout thirty degrees, and those Wh could rot walc down it had to slide. of them slid, both men and women, &n ol unloa Homeopathle Medicine ®ts., New York. Humphreys Cor. Willlam and Joh Co., clams, in_abundance along the their devices and did a thriving business. only. ngers of the the | hills, picking wild flowers and enjoying the can be seen snow-capped mountain peaks from to be 250 years the Dutch Harbor and as the coal costs $12 per ton, it 1s no small item, because the larger an inspection by the quarantine officers The | sbip was at once quarantined and not al- but to miles slid | Kot ngers there wero very sad look, veryone had an fmportant mission One woman was going there to start a hospital and take care of the sick his ; one man had day. The Standard Theater company of Seattle, with its thirty artists, to hear them tell it, our on the south side of the {sland and, landing steamer two B. | The and then e from the At no 50 artifictal light, and I was informed that on piration of our quarantine and after all on This was a novel Most All sk solilan 2 | the plank was none too smooth, either, but after befng cooped up thirty days on a ship they were ready for any chance K ashore, especfally on a golden where nuggets were reported | potng to for the want I to pick them up. The lighter carried about | 130 passengers, with most of thelr baggage. When loaded it was towed near the by a tugbeat and then pulled in by a long | cable. When unloaded it would be returned | to the ship for another load until all were | landed to | &ho! to be of €ome one e waste n shore | Thousan .| “Upon landing we saw thousands of dis appointed beings who had neither place to eat nor sleep, wandering whither they knew not, and only from the most favorable weather did they escape the most serious hardships. There never was such a sight | on this great continent, No tongue or pen can adequately express or picture this mo wonderful babel of human beings. Scarcely ono in 1,000 knew where to go or what to do. The streets were overcrowded. Water ost 25 ceats for three palls. The beach was lined with tents and all kinds of v chinery, lumber, coal and stores of every description to the west for ten miles and to the east to Nome river—four mile There was no place to pitch a tent for mile: unless on the wet tundra back of the cit where you would sink to the knees in moss, | mud and wate “We remained in and around the 12th of July | me untll more about what to do than we did. Dur- ing our stay four of us, including w. B | ller, A. B. Coon, Frank Searle and myselt, | tried rocking the beach, and for five hours of hard work we took out about $10 and saved $3. We gave it up as a poor in- vestment and our rocker, which cost $30 in Seattle, was laid aside forever. “All mineral lands around Nome had been | located and there was no cha for a newcomer to acquire any of Uncle Sam's domain in that vicinity. The ouly thing left was to lease a mine, work by da labor or find new fleld. We chose the latter and with a party of about seventy-five | | others shipped to Port Clarence, Grantly | Harbor and through Tooksook river, which is about six miles long and connects Grantly | Harbor with Salt or Storm lake. At point we took small boats for the Great Kroog Rock country, where it was said that | gold existed in fabulous quantities and there was plenty of room for all to get in | on the ground floor. his country s 100 miles north of Nome by land and about 0 miles by water. Our party remained there | fourteen days, and, not bel able to find gold enough to satlsfy us, we started on o‘n'; return to Nome and for home as we then | supposed. | Struck a Good Lead, | This was about the last of July and on | the Gth of August we arrived at what Is | now called Teller City, where the United States land office is located for the Port mining district. We found quite | excltement there about the Blue- | ¢ | stone country, which lies about fitteen miles | to the southeast. The report was that o | the pan (which is about two shovelstull of | gravel), was taken out on Gold Run, a tributary to the Bluestone, but having heard so many stories of this kind we were | a lttle skeptical and concluded to in vestigate before making another long march, On Investigation we found that a party who were with us to the Krogg Rock country | were the ones who panned out the $2, and upon this we made a forced march for Gold | Run and found that not half the truth had been told. We saw with our own eye as much as $56 to §15 taken out to the pan and $10.60 in one shovelfull claim known as No above Gold Run. On No, two claims ahove, §27 | was taken out In pan. On one claim below, $12 to the pan and a nugget of $128 found. On Alder gulch, ,which emp- on ) nee p h 0 s t r ] o a n n d t 0 This was on & [ Discovery on one | 000 to 5, All bl B sig at, of \ched ched for vard An ass These are slightly Bleached worth up Double worth $i dozen, och new patte Marseilles W ties into ¢ below N; $96 and th coarse and or slu $1,700 in on into a ninc The Toombs, Lamb. Th the claim, they prosp that 1t wil “From P Nos. 6, produce fro are numer. been prosy equally as gold has 1 glacier action and it is the opinion of man that when prove as ri claims. It of Gold R On account and little e {find 15 thought to be the richest discovery ever made {of gold was not m done to spe was no wa many Omaha men who did not know any |close to §100,0 worked. ! “Belng we succee claims on the prospec imity to ot well satisfl “Tho sea makes o rainy seasc first of Aug shino there the mounta dlsagreeabl “On our return to 3 ent looking quiet for the k and infall the producis T and 1 do not think that 1 ing it fn with such on the, Bl above $10,0¢ As dance of ¢ sound, on also at Co my to gineer whe vear for maps show vieinity He inform: nty fe the sha voint a to be bill the coal this could he had tested 68 p At Port way best soda springs in the tasted more | springs are the beach | mile from streq al my at a profit on “In all t abundance. ted e box parties owning thi Idaho, Mr what cting Nos. eated Some Va but fairly good this | in and around Nome want to other re tramwi jon the xtra_ fine Damask and German Silver nask, with embossed de 1 m of Napkins. s saimplos and some are 1. They come in ot Cream and Full Bleached to §1.50 dozen 75¢ soiled, all $1.25 $1.98 he $1.00 d Dimity Bed Spreads, wutiful destgns, @ 20 $1.25 One ng 3 st ctly Crash, vard Blenched Twilled Kkind, & The ul dru balance Napkins, s wholesal at lightly it e e and 6 sk Tingec n white and blue White dozen, e Clith Satin Damask Bo at heted Hed rns, very ale at 101d Rua atout one-hiait s wils||few.d 9, was found two nugget the b other $98.50. The gold i casily saved with cither On No. % they day, with three inch box about thirty one | very | rocker luiced out hoveling ach the kind dip up smelts, and and They » by the little ne men feet long. | sho at Black John F. V these in the codfish come took net claim live n 1l b, and their nar Mr. Me offered §100,000 cash for refused it. They say that ected the claim enough to know 1 produce $400,000 to $500,000 Is known by actual 1, 2 and 3 on Alde 10, 11 and 12 on Gold Run will bm $1,000 to $5,000 each and there ous other claims that have not sected that are to b rich. From all indications this en carried down the hills by zer and ey were The les long We left had been but t'me, the above zero well a ne 5. gulch and wa believed trip in cight Nome to Oma opened up the beach claims will | (0UBtry about it not richer, than the crecl 18 estimated that from $2,000 0,000 In gold will be taken ot n and tribut next of its easy access for supplies expense to extract the gold, this S to the major owne be n cuhance who go. a wonderful it cost 1son the in Alaska. The find le until July No work was k of until September and there | to get in supplies except by | e IOl and in this time we met |man packers and yet the gold output was ) Vital Sta cren Dis. and ly four claims in ah «r on the ground in lo some valuable 14 Run tributaries. With ts obtained and the close prox her valuable properties we are ed with our season's work son is short and a man that stake must be a hustler The n started in last year about the ust and there was but little sun Cold rain, with snow prevailed and it was for outdoor work ms. At me mong tho fir Ating number as in that | now try Today we days we may that on | dise: very | Kidne into acute aware of its of many business and and others the leak in tin While to find out by a litt fatal tyy pattor, e ains, me we sew a differ well bullt up, with business The minin was much handicapped of water, esp Anvil tributaries. With a reasonab mines about Nome are capat it 85 xt clty 50 intere lally on th g least next year timat peninsula Gold Run 1 over ¢ ward and produce saying camps as Anvil iestone, will 00,000 in gold that trouble | more can yet It 18 the ources, there oal nor th and east the of the ok's I met Al had an English ing nearly well ed us that et allowness is abun- of Kotzbue Arctic ocean inlet in Seattle on ka an English mining en been at Cook's inlet last company. He had all coal veins in that samples of the coal one of the veins was but said account of the water at that or rallroad would have t a distance of six miles before | could be loaded on ves but | easily be done. The samples re mostly from the surface and er cent carbon Clarence there of the world. Mun never mineral water. The bout half a mile from ence bay, and City, on a ney or bladde Kilmer & Co sample bottle brated specif great ¢ th thick, on ot Swamp-Re tion QUAINT Ernest Cloveland, perity he | latter. A few bim with tr of bor is one At th palatable situated Port Port Clar 1 Trou could be on [] one mall water, William bottl and shipped e the For n H biting ' of ¥ hese northern waters fish are Where we were located for e Fish | . lives t alko with red horders Fringed Napkins, rted lot of worth less than . all go at linen ind Unbleached Cotton Toweling, yard of our and Lunch Cloths, Tl Nap fringed appear season in in like mann over tom cod nd one ha, remained in 1,000 pe Probably about Bering of lik chances —Ar in the there been such an alarming increase of cases of any ki bo grieved to learn of thelr serious fllness or sudden death, Th it might Binghamton of Swamp-Root which pand and remarkable mo bladder trouble oot about two miles west of Nome, on at from 8 to 10 p. to do was to take a bucket, in a throw Nome little cold we thermometer not going below ten Snake all other small stream: ice along the sea shore rived in Seattle on October 1,0 them Considering all country A Intien 8 sce a relative acquaintance apparently of trouble stages presence udden professi ey scientists e precaution contracting dreaded eradicate ission of at every opportunity we advise all who have any symptoms of kid tr will pamphlet and treatise all all kind ind € of Towel 158 Cloth. 7ic Unbleached 3ic 2ic Dresser Scarfs 15¢ Pattern Cioths, $1.25 Wt 1 or red ic tuck the & [ 8O at kins, with blue around m or som minutes we could shore hundreds of to be carried to the The water is black with This was in July. Later ay In October, the tom One man with a dip six to ten Al we had hing of fow on at haul » about on There ther up to this river was frozen over, , but there We 29, making the half days. Time n and one-half day ome und surrounding ple for the winter. 00 to 5,000 people will go this year, the being returning mine s of min There will last season, which will per capita of those things Alaska Is and well worth what ar coust N EPIDEMIC? n Alarm Alrendy Prey Any Exe history of s =" pe e disease has u the particular malady | and bladder troubl preying upon the people of this ¢ a friend or an | well and in a few caused by kidney trouble—Bright’s often becomes advanced before the afficted is that is why we read | aths of promix al men, physiclan have neglected to stop d ent | are ause puzzling their brains each individual can, avold the chances of and dangerous kidney | it completely from dy aficted. Many have been and many aved by paylog attention The Bee to benefit its nd therefore | ouble to write today to Dr N. Y., for a free the cele having such a in the and bottle free a nforma is succes distressing kidney With the sample be sent of valuable also FEATU och log: off iplets living and Mark and have a number of customers Allen, a Standard Oil employe in | voted for “McK{nley t electiod o and nd now pro thinks has received his first installment of the days t0 hi oy He w wite pre and o gl has nd the ented all the Han of Reading, | He tail other I de 1 the cha not | K selling for | head of a pigeon | people | men | among the farmers aroung Richfield | ened the fee, $1.25 Silks at 59¢ yard- clearing soie and satin duchesse, Sheetmg heavy quality, in sale ]>rim', yard 17»c 23zc lOc Sale of Muslm Thie best grade of Bleached Muslin manu factured—none better at any 6 C rice, yard recommended cotton ever .6¢C gener -4 Bleached Lockwood Sheeting 10-4 Ble Sheeting, 45-Inch Pillow i-4 Bleached Lockwood Spectal offering In all Kinds of Prult of the Loom Ready-made S50c Sheets, at in all slzes of Fruit ot Defender Brand Pillow worth up Liberty brand, for family sold for less we offer it at especlally no better than §tge yard worth 2ic 1, at use hed Lockwood th Bleached w 30 at Lockwo The finest cambric WhELIL R8¢ ally sells at 121 Monday at, yard manufactured yard yard, o & yard, at “Fairflax” Long Cloth worth 16¢ yard, 8t ...eeeeeens 10,000 yards remnants Un bleached Muslin at, yard Special offering the Loom and Cases {13 10,000 yards remnants good Bleached Muslin, yard Clolhln Cleara" e You will find tomorrow a number of the bigs g CE€ “bargains that were advertised for yestorda, sale. Besides other lots that the price has been reduced on. Our special price tavles are contantly Leing refilled with higher priced goods. No matter what you want in the clothing line vou'll find it here at a cut pric —Come and sec tne fine men's suits (som ones) we ar unpleasant, for there is little ctween it and biting off the which is quite common trick about twenty years ago, trimmed the tails of consider difference it the rest and showed his nerve by skating across the channel of Richfield pond. Each time the ice bent beneath the lad's welght \d his elster, who was also skating, her brother 10 accompany her home. “On more he told her ho took flylug start. Downing had reached the cen- ter of the channel when the fce gave way and he funged into ten feet of water The hoy fast becoming exhausted when Carlo appeared. Teddy Symonds called to him, clapped his hands and pointed to Downing. The dog seemed to understand in moment, for he ran the and shoved his nose in Downing'’s face. The latter grasped Carlo's and the dog backed away from the pulling in bo out of the water. I learned the and then have bundreds of dog asked ince About the ceolest thieves on record did a fob of work in Philadelphia a few day Early in the while were waor arrayed mechanic front of a ‘Turkish bath Walnut street, and with chisels, hammers wrenches took down the handsome bronze ornaments and railing which orna- mented the place. Then they calmly walk with the plunder ago. wa hundreds of half a dozen wppeared in establishment on morning goln [ and J collar hold away Already some startling achievements have narked the century. A street car passenger in New York, compelled to stand without even the aid of a strap, found his equilibrium o well preserved by the motor- man in bandling his car, t he a letter about it to the compeny course, the feat cannot be ordinary thing James Eads How refused to take the his father. “I want ‘beyond what 1 earn brow. am out of the istence, for wealth these things interest me nearly my frail nature will permit unselfish life There is nothing of inine that 1 would not give to help needy per son, My time talents, 1f have any and my small earning « ity are held by me In trust for th of mankind. | do ot regret the course 1 have pursued in vefusing to take what | have inherited from my father 1 regard that as unearned in ment That represented what my father did not 1 and what his laborers earned for him. They should have It 1 have a factory and cmploy 100 men and fhey earn $200 a day, it is not a fair distribu tion of profits if I take $100 and give the other $100 to the men ot ) for $1 for the n My iegitimate is what an equal diviston would bring me. T other rned increment, the rainy day fund of the laboring man, which T unjustly take That was the way I regarded my inherl tance, Hence, I refuse of St. Louis has again left to him by he says sweat of my truggle for ex of new « fortune o money by the wild at wrote for But, of expected as an power. Non 1 am livi record that will be hard to beat has been established by an Itallan barber at Unionport, N. Y., who has had four children within a year. Three of them together Thursday night. At a re Italian festival the father got the in a “handsomest man contest top watch. He had it with him triplets The first girl was born at 1054 o'clock, the second at 10:56 nd the boy at 11:02 His first child boy, was born last February A new century my for benefit 1 can cent most vot and won when the a a a is a hero 7 because he saved the life of Charles Down Carlo, a big Newfoundland dog hare tin. was it bw No Dru Boits t per the weik strength an 0ld mon with s to ruin the stoma ter aud burn, local trentment ag L disord Uit g e T will se0 and doy Tor it Js applied dir @ rdor. 1t makes nod quickly, 1o C.0.D. or says the Philadelphia Bulle- Without Drugs or Electricity by Our NOT ONE RETURNED Our Vacuum Organ Developer cures whore ‘ The blood is the life, the fertilizer of the hu. trength and development to woak and lifeless d dir s | few yeurs ngo by the French specialist, De nhood, or the | the exclusive control t5rulo on the Western y restored h) heulth and strength, Our | the entire dieal pro fo It has restored mending yplis | without detention fre Write for freo particulars sent sealed in plain But Downing more daring than caso or how long standing, it is as suro to yield everything elso fails and hopo i« dead, Tt re man body. Our instrament forces the hlood nd Varicocele pormanently eured in 1 o | Wo Electric | parts. The Vacuum Organ Developer was first i i s, It gives | Bouswet, aud fts remariablo suceess in these Yeapini the re: | Continent: wnd sinco its into this co hins wstonished the entire | thousands of cuses | d incurable by where ther | Remember there is 1o exposure. onvalope; LOCAL APPLIANCE COMPANY, ing, 8 year old. The warm weather weak- 75 000 |N US NOT ONE FAILURE 9 to.our troatment as the suii i+ to rise stores small, weak organs, lost power, failing Mo circulation where most necded, giving ‘Our Vacuum De- | introduced in tho standi ¢ armics of Europe o erever appliod, | countries lod the Locu Applinnce Co. to securs its introductic or over work are | country its remarkable cures have astounded O Tendnig physicians in the | physicians. It eurs harmlossly, and any other sehe ling with the publie. _ 474 Charles Bullding, Denver, Colora banefit from the first tly at the seat of the ronce Low severo the