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4 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL SUNDAY, ' APRIL 23, 1899 SACRAMENTO’S PLANS MANY BEQUESTS 0 FOR THE DEWEY FETE BAINS st [ SROSY SRS SRDAE D DN * *o-+ -6 - Setietietie Setietieti et etiet S AHEIT rEs A VU R D O O O S SO S I e S e e e ) Queen will be crowned with dance. For this event, also, elaborate great pomp. She 1 be attended by preparations are being made. The par- a full court compo: £ knights, squires, ticipants will be handsomely dressed in ges, rs, maf of honor, etc atriotic colors, carefully designed by 1 ATC the course of proud mother: B 850 There will be a Cairo street, lined with whole city Sacramento Quese en e cont and seral patrons and whom This is that ‘ever t will be more than or ALINAS READY FOR THE COMING OF THE NATIVES To-Day the Delegates to the Grand Parior Will Be Given a Welcome. tain rrive t attire is business te symb loved « s lite es with tt ming draj pinnac Lines s and flag pre flying at intervals on ibilan i Castr of rnia bear nlanned the deleg: < us’ round of from the time of their arr end of the week Native Hall wi BOORD'S LONDON, ENGCLAND) OLD TOM, DRY or SLOE GINS ARE THE BEST. CHARLES ME Sole Agents, San Fr & co., ento Street, i o o O o O R S R = CANDIDATES FOR THE MAY DAY CROWN AT SACRAMENTO. | Fi = e the local parlors of both N tive Sons z ive Daughters. Santa Luc or, N. S. G. W., has arranged cony 1t and comfortable smoking, readin nd lounging rooms, and a committee will always be in attendance to attend to the wants or answer the inquiries of The Native e possession of the rooms of the ame building, beautifying them in the dainty and artistic way which only | women understand, and making them the most att e of all the rendez- vous in the city. The reception commit- | of al- pres members will headquarters, G. Hare, Mrs. whose fiiat tee, way some be J. Abbott, Mrs. N. Blanchard, A. Harris, e Porter. places at which a hearty wel- will Be extended to the visiting the armory of Troop C, Guard of California, and th The eption roon it both places are beautifully decorated. At the City Hall some of the city office will dispense the city’s hospitality, while a detachment of Troop C will | preside daily in their especial domain. The armory proper will have the fin- 1ing touches of its decorations given ter, it is there the grand ball and a 1 is nual banquet are to be held. to decorate it with especial boration, much expensive material E: well elegant cut flowers and potted plants to be employed. Mr. Pratt, the official decorator, has de- gnel and is supervising the work at particular place. All the business sessions of the Grand Parlor will be held in the opera- house. \Lere special preparations have been made for the comfort and con- venience of officers and delegate; | committee composed of P. | . Harr L. U. Grant, E. A. Porter and others from Parlor of Salinas nt to incisco to-day to participate in high jinks which Stanford Parlor s to-night in honor of the visiting in San Francisco en route All the delegat now in BSan Fran » will leave there at 9 a. m. to- ow for Salinas. At San Jose | the f*1 Regiment Band will meet |/them and accompany them here. | _Gabilan Parlor of Castroville and the n at Castroville and invite the dele- gates to a reception and luncheon, | after which all will proceed to Salinas. The Salinas Band, Troop C, National Guard of Cali A, dismounted in full uniform; Santa Lucia = Parlor, Native Sons of the Golden West, eighty-one strong, and ‘Aleli Parlor, Native Dau~hters of the Golden West, | with ninety-seven members, will mee | the train which brings the delegates, and, forming a procession, body will march to Armory Hall, where an informal reception ‘and " general ! handshaking will be the order. The Troop C Orchestra will pley sweet mu- sic during the reception. The visiting | delegates will then be escorted to the | headquarters in Native Sons’ Hall, and | each will be assigned to the quarters | | | he is to occupy during the coming week. Excellent arrangements have been mac for the housing of delegates. | Grand President William Conley will tioville Brass Band will meet the | The d | money involved h: the entire | is AMERICAN SCIENTISTS ! i | The of the experience he desires and to ‘Zab- | Professor C. H. Gilbert | [ | O B B O R R SO = g S R f all ki sound th the teur_spielers. sided over by the fia I 1l kinds, and the air will re- orian voices of an booths will be pr young women of Call chters. a football game, a_base- between memt of Sacra ~ T ive Sons, feature is 0 affair, reputation her ball particuiarly mento is proud of h as the gh- a proc er of attractive youngsters. | nent cit- There will be an imménse band con- ns, who t com- cert, accompanied by a large chorus, with o ry of artillery effects. There will be many | : popu- other features sufficient to entertain all. | in the Golden Eagle Ho- This is an opportunity that Sacramento | of tk Iry_are s been waiting for, and now that it is| efforts in he Miss here it is intended not only to rival® but | keeper in a large mer- similar celebrations in Southern | in a portion of The flowers here are both | many Sacramento bounteo: i1 beautiful. There are v are doing many uj ate carriages here, a | w. Miss A Dewey day in Sacramento will go do votes to-ni in history as one never to be f Heitman of by those who will be so fortunat he asion. The follow is the way ood for the leading candidates nvass to-day: the ballots at the Goepel 159 Hal 158 Peterson 119 | anville 105 is being - 102 May-pole et etietiotie o2 +9 , be domiciled at Hotel Abbott. Grand | Secretary ant Secreta their headquarters House. t 3 o’clock on Sunday afternoon the th Regiment Band of San Jose will| give a sacred concert on Main street, and informal visits to various head- quarters and reception rooms will close | the day. Henry Lunstedt and A - J. J. Jamison will hav at the Bardin | g i REUNION OF FORESTERS. Four Hundred Mcmbers of the Order to Gather at Salinas. | Ap Foresters of | a reunion here on | , Ap in which over 400 mem- | f the order are expected to partici- | Court Lucia of this cit g great preparations to entert ting brethren and their wives dur- | ing the day and evening. The pavilion and | cific Hall have been engaged for a ban- | nd ball. The Foresters from abroad | | arrive in time to take part in the Native Sons' parade on Tuesday morning. | bers o; In the afternoon special entertainment will be provided the visitors. At night the banquet for For s will occur at | pavilion, “after which there will be | ing In Pacific Hall. Both halls have | horately decorated. | he courts fo be present are Pajaro Valley, Rose of Watsonville, Court Del | Monte ‘of Monterey and courts from Santa Cruz, San Lucas, Soledad a Castro- ville. Several of the grand officers will be in attendance TO EXPLORE ALASKA | NEW YORK, April 22.—Edward H. Har- riman of this city has chartered a steam- ship on which he will leave Seattle about May 20 with .a party of noted American scientis what voy who will be his guests during promises to be the most notable | ge of scient!fic discovery in Alaska, | trip will be of national importance several representative f the United s Government will be among those to ar rofit by it. The ship will be equipped so that much | scientific work can he done on board. Sha will carry many guides, packers and beare ers, so that all sorts of journeys of explor- | ation inland may be made. tent each member of the independently, having an vants placed at his dis; To a great ex- | party may work | outfit and Ser-‘ posal and having only to notify Mr. Harriman of the nature | name | the place at which he will rejoin the ship. As_for the route, all _that has been de- cided as vet is that the steamship will | make the Inside passage to Sitka, thence | to Cooks Tnlet arid around Kadiak Island, | Zven these plans may be modified to meet | the wishes of members of the party o tg | follow up some line of investigation which may suggest itself later. Almost every branch of sclentific research will be rep. resented, and Alaska will be scanned and | sounded from every point of view. Leland Stanford University of Califor- nia will have one representative at least— As another Cali- fornia representative it is expected Pro- | fessor John Muir will go. | COPPER QUEEN GROUP } OF CLAIMS IS SOLD REDDING, April 22—The Copper Queen | group of claims in Trinity County has | been sold to a Napa company, composed of Henry Brown of the Bank of Napa and | chuppert and Buckman, owners ofthe old | Spanish mine in this county, dlso of Napa, | The deeds of the property ‘will be trans: | on Saturday. The amount of not yet heen made | public. The Copper Queen ituated | about five miles north of Trinity Center and a mile east of Carrville, on the Trin. | ity River. The men who relinquish own. | ership to the property are Willlam Voll. | mers, Tom Baker, Frank Dimmick and Elias Eliery. The'property is immensely rich in copper, carrying carbonate ore | which can be easily treated. The Copper Queen is well developed, having over 300 | feet of tunnel. Tt was successtully worked | in the seventies by Willlam Andrews, | when the ore had to be freighted to Red | Bluff and then shipped down the river, One lot of 2800 pounds sent down by Mr. | Andrews yiclded 1800 pounds of pure cop- | per. It is estimated that there are over 200,000 tons of ore in sight. The purchas. | ers will go to work immediately on an ex. } | tensive scale. Messrs. Brown & Schup- pert went to Napa on Wednesday night to be prepared to turn over the purchase money, while Mr. Buckman went on to San Francisco to place an order with the ‘nion Iron Works for a furnace for a | forty-ton smelter, which will be erected immediately, I | binder war. The Will Not to Be Opened Until May I. VAST SUMS GIVEN CHARITIES TWO ADOPTED SONS LIBERAL- LY PROVIDED FOR. In the Event of the Elder Dying Childless Ten Millions More Will Be Added to the Amounts Donated., Special Dispatch to The Call April 22—A World cable The will of the late wurice de Hirsch, which mor says gives $100,000,000 to charities NEW YORK not to be formally opened until May Although mention is made of bequests to the extent of $100,000,000, the actual be- quests to charities so fa gate only about $12,000,000. The late Baron left $124,000,000, of w $100,000,000 went to charities under his will, which equivalent to the sum now leged to have been devoted to charitles So’ probably there has heen some confu sion between the Baron's and Baroness' losed aggre- elder of the Bg de wo adopted choffsheim, and in the event sons, Maurice gets interest on of his dying childless the principal goes to chariti The second adopted son, a | permanent {nvalid, géts $100.000 per annum or life. For Baron Hirsch's New York fund for the extension of schools and other insti- tutions there is $1,200000; for the Oriental Israelite Normal School irr Pa nd for the ‘maintenance of colleges in the Sast, $500000; for pensions to teach- s in _the 'same institutior for feeding and clothing the poorer pup in the schools founded or to be founded by the Universal Israelite Alliance, $600,- 000; for a loan fund of the Jewish board of guardians in London, $600,000; for Baron Hirsch Institute in Montreal, $120,000; for a home for Jewish working gi founded by the Baroness, 0 for the com- mittee of Jewish benevolence in Paris $100,000; for the Jewish Colonization As ciation in London, $5,000,000; for the jubilee fund in Australia started by the Barones: for the support of boys and girls, $400, for the Baron's primary schools in licia, $600,000, to which the Baron had al- 4 devoted $6,000,000, th of Paris Bienfa communities pesth in Bru and Paris, Main ),000. The text of this document, if published in full, will be found, it is said, to con- tain a passage of great general interest referring to Princes and others in_high stations who were family in large sum The delay in pu documen indout from the highest qu: other Européan countri indebted to the Hirsch ng the text of the due to influence s here and in CHINESE SUSPECTS ARRESTED. FRESNO, April have be charg —Two more Chinese n lodged in the County Jail on of murder A result of the high- They are Choy Lie and Hop Woo, and they were arrested at Tracy this morning. Last night they were driven out of town to Collis, where they boarded the train. The officers got word of it and had them stopped at Tracy. This even- ing they were brought back by J. E. Rags- dale, the Chinatown night watchman. One of them claimed to be a merchant, while the other is said to be a highbinder ch | $600,000; | ENGLAND IN NEED |GHTING MEN Recruiting Becomes a Difficult Task. I goiionte | ARMY’S WANING STRENGTH .:GETS ONLY THE DREGS OF THE | POPULATION. | | Scotland Is Especially Backward, and | | Even in Ireland It Is Harder | to Get Soldiers Than | Formerly. ‘ | | | | | | | Special Dispatch to The Call. | NEW YORK, April 22.—A speclal ca- | ble to the World from London says England must prepare to make a big | | financial sacrificg if she wishes to a\'-’\idi a conscription in some form. The mil- | itary authorities here are at their wits' | | ends to stimulate recruiting, which has | shown a great falling off. It was de- cided recently to add another battalion | | to the Scots Guard, but so few recruits 1 have come forward that special per- | | mission has been obtained to enlist men in Ireland for this nominally Scot- tish regiment. But that is an old story, as there are almost as many Irishmen | | as Scotchmen in some of the most fa- | mous fighting Highland regiments. | Despite all the fresh inducements of | pay and pension recently offered, in- | volving a large additional charge on | the nation, the army is getting only the dregs of the population. Scotland | especial is backward. Even in Ire- | land it is harder to get soldiers than | formerly. This state of affairs is attributed in | some measure to the improvement in trade and the consequent satisfactory | condition of the labor market, for it is a known fact that except in a few districts in North England Englishmen | rarely become soldiers except through | want of employment. | It different in Ireland, but there | political feeling is a great drag on re- cruiting. | Army reformers insist that the dim—-; culty can be surmounted only by pay- | ing at the rate of the labor market and | giving the soldier 24 cents a day clear instead of deducting his rations from that pay, as at present. TOMB OF THE POPE HAS BEEN PREPARED The Missing Detail Which Consisted on an Inscription Is Completed by His Holiness. -Several years ago the sculptor, Luchetti, t a tomb for his Holiness, to be placed in the basilica of St. John. The tomb is now complete in | every detail save one. It can be erected in its place in a day or two. The missing detail is now supplied. It is the inscrip- | tion, which the Pope once jokingly said he would write as soon as there seemed to be a likelihood of needing it. Last week he composed the inscription and sent {f to Luchettl. It i8 in Latin and is very sim- ple, only the Pope's Christian and family | names, date of birth, blank for date of deatn 'and a_few wojds recording Leo's | | veneration for St. Thomas and St. | thony. An- | WASTING MEN »WOMEN ? IN SIDE HUDYAN CURES IN STOMACH, SLEEPLE: HUDYAN NESS, COATE CURES PA! HUDYAN CURES IRREGULARITIES HEALTH AND STRENGTH, IT MAKES YOU HAVE THE PRIVILEGE OF ? ; : ; 5 THE I LABLE AMOUNT OF GOOD THAT HUDYAN IS DOING IN 4+ MAKING WEAK AND DESPAIRING PEOPLE WELL SHOULD COMMAND ¢ /;) OF EVERY PERSON WHO IS OUT OF HEALTH. @ . MEDICAL MEN IN ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY ARE COMPELLED TO 4 | & INDORSE HUDYAN, BECAUSE HUDYAN IS A REMEDY THAT POSSESSES | ‘ SUPERIOR CURATIV PROPERTIES. NO REMEDY O ARTH HAS HAD .:l 1 NDERFUL. A RECORD AS HUDYAN FOR BUILDING UP AND REJUV] é‘ » CONSTITUTIONS THAT HAVE BEEN BROK DOWN BY DISEASE ¢ THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE WHO OWE TO HUDYAN THEIR GOOD HEALTH, % RESTORED VITALITY, RENEW ERGY AND FREEDOM FROM DISEASE ¢ ARE READY AND WILLING AT ALL TIMES TO TESTIFY RELATIVE TO THE ¢ f MERITS OF THIS GREAT REMEDY. ot + + . @ ® | ® . & 3 ? % NERVOUS DISORDER, FEMALE WEAKNESS, 1 5 BAKER CITY, Or. SACRAMENTO, Cal. T Dear Doctors: 1 am pleased to state| Dear Doctors: I am very thankful to you ¢ ® that your medicine has cured me of ner- | for placing within my reach your veluable & vous trouble. My appetite is now good | Hudyan. I used to be pale, weak and very | ¢ and I can sleen “well. I have gained in|nervous. Would be confined to bed for % & Welght and strength.” 1 feel more ener-|three days every month. I suffered a great \ getic and my work don’t tire me.. I am|deal. Your Hudyan made a wonderful 1 ¢ thankful to you and to Hudyan. Yours|change, and I am now well and strong. ¢ T truly, A. B. HOOPER. |I suffer no more pain. k3 MRS. W. T. JONES. ¢ + + il s BRIGHT'S DISEASE, DYSPEPSIA, ¢ . STAUNTON, TiL FRISCO, N. M. 4 Dear Doctors: T.owe my life to Hudyan, | Dear Doctors: T am recommending Hud- for T would never have gotten well of Kid-|yan to all my friends, because I have rea. © 4 mey disease had it not been for Hudyan. |son to know that it will do what you claim ¢ ? 1am working every day now. Have gained |for it. I suffered from a serlous Stomach | pounds in welght, eat well and sleep | trouble for many years, and your Hudyan well. 1 feel that I can mever repay you|cured me. T am so glad that T found your sufficiently for the benefit T have receivged. | valuable medicine and will always praise it. WILHELM LICH. R. W. LEWIS. & . HUDYAN CURES NERVOUSNESS, + 5 + © © ¢ e asasas e e o e B S e e SLEEPLESSNESS, DESPONDENCY, TREMBLIN BACK AND SHOULDERS, HE ERVOUS DYSPEPSIA, LPITATION OF THE HEART, DIZZY SPELLS, TEND- ENCY TO FAINT, DIFFICULT BREATHING, RUSHES OF BLOOD TO HEAD, IN BACK, DRAGGING PAINS, WEAKNESS AND PALLOR. HUDYAN GIVES Hudyan fs for sale by drugglsts, i0c a package, or six packages for $2 5. your druggist does not keep Hudyan send direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY co., corner Stockton, Ellis and Market streets, ¢ ABOUT YOUR CASE, FREE OF CHARGE. CALL OR WRITE. DISEASES N.... WEAKNESS, NERVOUS EXHAUSTION, GS, NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, DACHES, PAINS IN CHEST. INDIG! D TONGUE. STIO0 » BLOATIN NG, PAINS IN WOMEN, PAINFUL PERIODS, PAIN RICH, RED BLOOD. It San Francisco, Cal. CONSULTING THE HUDYAN' DOCTORS | A MME ADVERTISEMENTS. To-morrow. begins our Great Sale satin finjsh, Twilled Foulards, e: colorings in purple, light and d a_grand assortment. On special choice designs.) BLACK DUCHESSE. Pure Silk, 19 inches wide, worth Sic; special at 55c varp. ® ALL-WOOL 25c SERGE. A GREAT BARGAIN Serge, In black wide; worth WOOL COVERT SUITINGS. 44-inch Wool Covert Suitings in new spring colorings, correct material for spring; worth 75¢; special at 50c YARD. [ A _SALE OF WASH FABRICS. | pecial purchase of 200 To-morrow we- place on sale a gandies in light and medium grou yard worth 20c and 15¢, which we offer at feces Cotton Cov- ert Sultings in correct spring colorings; the right_material for out- ing skirts; price....yard 12j¢c 100 pieces Linen Crash Suitings with bl colored silk _ stripes; price...... (& v pretty ard A new involce of gen- uine Scotch Zephyr . Ginghams in stripes and checks; 30 inches wide; fast colors; in all the ' new colorings; price... yard READY-MADE GARMENTS ON SPECIAL SALE. Skirts made i Crash Dres in latest le; also Covert Dress Skirts in all the new colorings; price each ‘White Pique Dress Skirts made in latest style; good quality Pique; price.. : Black z wool Serge. SO plain and figured icilian 2SS Skirts, percaline worth $8 and E al for to-morrow at affeta Silk Wais corded fronts -d throug! out; extra d quality; latest styles; sizes 34 .to .25 special 2 i each = Most extensive line Ladies’ Cotton Shirt W ever exhibited, in white and colors; prices’ $3, $2.50, and 2 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. COUNTRY ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. . DALMA JAILED BY MOORS Arrested While Entering a Mosque. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, April According to an account given to-day by Sie Hassan Ben Ali, manager of a troupe of Ara- bian acrobats, a startling chapter has been added to the already sensational career of a young woman formerly the wite of Rudolf Aronson, who, since her divorce a few ears ago, known as Mme. Alma d'Alma. Ben Ali said that Mme. d’Alma is at pres- ent a prisoner in the hands of the Moors, and showed me a cablegram to himself in which she announced that she had been arrested. The dispatch was dated yesterday at Tangier, and read: Have been arrested while attempting to enter mosque. It was signed “Dalma.” Ben Ali was much pertirbed over the tidings, and aid he had grave fears that the pri oner would be harshly deait with. Madame d’Alma sailed from this city on March 29 for Tangier with the in- tention of endeavoring to obtain ad- mission to the harem of the Sultan of Morocco for the purpose of studying the life of the inlnfll(‘s.’ Ben Ali said that he made the acquaintance Madame d'Alma on board steamship on the voyage from Mediterranean ports to this city. It was his account of life in the Orient, he said, that suggested to her the idea of traveling in com- paratively unknown portions of Moroc- co. He warned her that she Sultan, but she determined to perse- vere in the adventure. 2 Ben Ali said that he learned of her safe arrival at Tangier and of her de- parture from that place to go into the interior with a caravan. The next news he received was contained in the cablegram. Allowing for the time elapsed, Ben Ali said that he was pretty well sat- isfled that the arrest had taken place at the town of Sidi Kassam Bo / a place which is celebrated for mosque of great antiquity and pecu liar sanctity. This place five da Jjourney from Tangier and sixteen da Jjourney by caravan from the city of Moroeco. “I greatly fear, he said to-day, “that Madame d’Alma is in serious trouble. She was to travel in the garb of a woman of the country in which no objection would ordinarily be made to her entering the mosque. She was ig: norant of the customs of the country, and it is very likely that she com- mitted some breach of decorum which would constitute a dreadful offense in the eves of a fanatic. BEvidently she managed to get a messenger through to Tangier to send the cablegram. This makes me think she has been sent a prisoner to the Sultan at the city of Morocco. In that case it will take con- siderable time before she can be com- municated with.” i Ben Ali said he would write to the Secretary of State asking him to in- tervene in the prisoner’s behalf. Transfer of a Sugar Plant. CHINO, April 2.—On Friday the Chino Valley Beet Sugar Company will cease to exist, at least so far as holding any prop- erty or interests here is concerned. Op elient 100 pieces all-wool genu and navy, morrow only, price 2 has been | of | would | probably have much difficulty in gain- | ing an entrance to the harem of the | all-silk, . comprising 15 ch, all-silk, quality, in be f‘an ; (l;_\ t nayy, brown, heliot at 75c a yard. and s BLACK DUCHESSE. 24 inches Pure Silk Satin Duchesse, 24 inches wide, b nd lustrous; W th $1; spe- clal T Se yano: t French 8 inches for tc - FOR TO-MOR-~ yard; ROW ONLY. [ BLAC 44-inch ra good special ¢ in brilliant 1 regular val $2 y $1.50 YARD. ster d Or- every in pretty WHITE GOODS BARGAINS. 50 pleces ¥ Or- gandy iC 100 ded s q vard es fine Whit Dimities, nic EXTRA VALUES IN LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SPRING UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY. White Cotton Ribbed ey lace trimmed; low ck and no sleeves. Lad Spun Silk_ Ribbed sts, fancy lace effe in nk, ' blue, lavender, black 1d crean Fast high xtra Imported H val |LACE SPECIAL. that date the factory here | ferred to the American Be | pany, which is but a reorgar A combination of the Oxnarc | Cutting compa | name only. The | now as the An t Sugar Con | pany. Tt inclua ther companies— | one”at Oxnara, County; one Grand Island and one at Norfolk, N ADVERTISEMENTS. GLOVE HOUSE. SPECIAL FOR WEEK COMMENCING HONDAY, APRIL 24, | =0 | [ WE WILL SELL | $1.50 GLOVES. Including Real Kid Mousquetaire and Foster Hook Gloves, in all colors, 800 MARKET ST. | Cor. Grant Avenue. SAVE YOUR MONEY! ‘ from $10 to $17.50 You can get the best All-Wool Suit Made to Order at } % % JOE POHEIM If you want a first-class, well-fitting suit of c'othes from $20 to $40 go to l{ Wl JOE POHEIM i Fine Clothes at 25 per | cent less than elsewhere. | ) 201-203 Montgomery St., Cor. Bush, |SKIN, SCALP, ¢ COMPLEXION., | Itching, burning, irritated skin, | scaly, crusted scalps, falling hair | and dandrufr blemished com- s | plexions instantly relieved and restored to | healthy ral ‘condition by the daily us: | woon: Facial Soap and Facfal Crea: They are strictly antiseptic, healing and puri- fying. Sold everywhere. Exposure to a sudden cli- matic change produces Cold in the Head. neglect it and catarrh fol- lows. Provided with Ely's Cream Balm you'are armed against NASAL CATARRH It quickly cures cold in the head. Cream balm 1s placed into n. over the membrane and is absorbed. Relief is immediate and a cure follows. It is not dr: —does not produce eneezing. large size, at druggists mwail: triai size, 10c, b El , 56 Warren st., New Spreads ,»$1.00 per Year | Weekly“Call A