The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 27, 1899, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, " JU 27, 1899 MAIINE SCORES HER FIRST W \T THE ST Leads Out a Field at Sheepshead. CHARENTUS RUNS SECOND ADMIRATION DISPOSES OF A/ TRACK RECORD. - d Dennis Takes a Selling Race at Louis and Einstein Beats Some Good Ones at Harlem. o | to The Call | 26.~In the Spring S Bay to-day Mis- w favorite of a poor lot € pendthrift han- ¥ bitive favor- After A Glengar to » away and won Mack beating niration was at and K rec rd, PENNSYLVANIA DARSMEN WIN ROM CORVELL Victors in the Four- Oared Race. —— ROW WITH FASTER STROKE BEAT THE ITHICANS ALMOST | FROM THE START. In the Freshmen Eight-Oared Event I | [ Cornell’'s Crew Finishes in Front With Plenty to Spare. e Spectal Dispatch o The Call POUGHKEEPSIE. N. Y., June 2.—The four-oared race over the two-mile course to-day was won by Pennsylvania. Time 11 minutes and 12 seconds. Cornell was second me, 11 minutes 14 seconds The freshman eight-oared race between Pennsylvania, Columbia and Cornell over the two-mile course was won by Cornell Time, 3 minutes 55 seconds. Columbia was second, one and one-quarter boat lengths k d Cornell. Time, 10 minutes. Penn- sylvania was third. thres hoat lengths be- hind Columbia. Time, 10:10. of the pistol the two four oared crews from Cornell and Per he water together, but the stroke started at 36. while th roke was only 34. The Pennsyl- vania stroke, while not as prettily rowed as Cornell's much more go in it, and | before the hoats had gone lengths the | Quakers had showed their s nose ahead of the Ithacans nell had dropped down to the Courtney stroke of | 33 to the minute, and zh_inch by | nch the Quakers' t s to the | front, they never increased g the | mile. At the bridge a colllslon seemed almost imminent. Both crews had steered rather the start. angling in tow h Just as they got under the i of the great bridge and when = vania had succeeded in obtaining almost a_shell length. th = A crossed e river t t4 4 swell. Either becau 3 isylvania oar who did the steering fe effect of and turned toward nter, or arings, the turned al- seemingly pre a Cornell boat s turned 4 i six Quick as a flash Pennsylvania straight- « ened out again, and when they cleared | n the gr s it was seen that e S d Pennsylvania h lead over Cornell of 1 gth and a quarter, there being s water 3 . From - point of th le to the finish there little material change, unless it may 3 been at the ifle and three quarters N where Corneil hit the s up to started to cl p the zap. The s—An who had been rowing from one th to two strokes per minute | all through the - 1d crossed 7 i :r by one length and a| rd which started | © Antiquary ed finish, exclting Y DAY AT DENVER. Donated to the “Slaves of Serpent. T! was the Co- crew a | \ce and ing the | sound | v “in a down of the | it was | pointed | of the | slowness of f the pistol “but 2 the crew at Cornell H le e struggle s arose | ervation w. Cor- rowing at . rowing a I jong str the wonder . 1 )t all the experts on | Iay won. C at went along almo st as the !f d @ Cornell boat | c Close together the three boats hung, but there was someth out the way the | Cornell hoat seen ) over the | ater that made Columbia and Pennsyl- | | vania hearts go down. As the crews | reached the mile mark the Cornell boat 2 as about a half length out from the B h. Columbla began to lose after the . was passed, and soon Cornell had S = a d of a clear le h Pennzyvivania 1t 3 was in the meantime steering erratically F at the mile mark, going out of the course passing the point the Penn- 1t seemed to lose power and rapidly astern as the Columbia hit it up to 34 in an or to up the gap hetween Cornell’s boat and_theirs. Cornell responded with a stroke of 36. away vester- | “Uhen the boats crossed the finish line, treet. A horse| Cornell led with a boat and a quarter < ing driven down | length to spare and Pennsylvania was m ¢ street. when one | three boat lengths behind Columbia, The . Sa Ahe = time of Cornell was 9:55, not so good as s d the antmal | 108 Yade by Yale in 1897—9:19—on the g after spilling | same course. shles. The way htened Lake View Improvement Club. g th. The ‘owner: property and restdants 8 runa to swerve, | of the far western quarter overl he threw the cart into a | Lake Merced and the ocean have orza ! who presides | jzed an improvement club, representin on one of his| the nterests of that section as well as claret-colored | that of O« View. One of the objects been used to| of the new club was made m, st at ber. Vet 1 not have time | jtg first meeting—its objection to ths vak en the shock came. He | extension of the pound limits. i i on the sidewalk, and In the opposition to giving the pound- 4 was a assortment of wreck-( man increased jurisdiction. the Ocean View Improvement Club concurs. As 1ght the baotblack | hoth are grazing localities, the poundman a_ruddy stream of | would work a hardship on the owners from ber the | of stock. The meeting was called (o or proved to be Veto's der by M. F. Taylor. president of the loss of which he Ocean View Improvement Club, who ch as the destruc- | stated the objects of the assembl owner of the horse | after which tha following officers wert the damage. but | elected: President. G. Amzenhofer: vi and he hired | president. J. H. Hammon: sec - ase before the | James Farrell; treasurer. J.'N. Sneider, o e sidewalk. | and sergeant-at-arms, W. Rover. e R AT e B Red Hot Smoker. i A Trolley Ride. ng Golden Era’Circle, Com-| This evening there will be a great time 0 st of America, having ! in the hall of Golden West Tent, Knights 12 ion cars, will enjoy | of the Maccabees, B. B. building. when . the several eleciric | there will be inaugurated a *red hot ¥ treet system. The smoker.” The committee announces a £ Second and ‘“crackeriack entertainment” of music, 5 an Francisco, songs. j “some new and some not so House, Ingleside and other new,” and a fight to a_finish between ¢ ! “Jim Jeff Jr.” and “Bob Fitz Jr.” T 25.2 Hartford and Vedette Bicycles COMBINE THE BEST RESULTS OF 22 YEARS EXPERIENCE Our factories comprise the largest bicycle manufacturing plant in the world. We have unequaled resources for obtaining material, the best devised automatic machinery, the most skilled artisans, the greatest output—a combination of advantages which pro- possible pric ENTIRELY NEW MODELS FOR 1899. | | | duces the Standard Bicycles of the world and enables us to offer them at the lowest ‘ | | | Ask any Columbia dealer for Catalogue, or write us direct, enclosing one 2-cent stamp. B3 Pope Manufacturing Co. 344 RSST STRCEL ol | | Up-Town City 7 gency, I, P, ALLEN, Proprictor, 1970 Page Street, ncar Stanyan. JIN JEFFRIES TRAVELS WITH TWO TREASURERS Thall Has Returned From the East. — THE CHAMPION WILL BE HERE ON THE SIXTH OF NEXT MONTH. e GOSSIP OF Brady Is Having a Play Written for Him and Swears He Will Make an Actor of the Fighter. —_— Sam Thall came In on the overland last night., bringing news of the early ap- proach of “Jim” Jeffries. The champion will be here July 6. He will remain a week and then proceed to Los Angeles, where he will spend another week, and then he will return to New York in time to start for London on the 27th pre Jeffries is traveling with his own e v. Thall ahead, and with the plon are “Jim" Daly, ‘“Rilly” De- Jack' Jeffries and two treasur- | s evening Jeffries 13 booked for evening for Kansas 3, Omaha; to-morrow evening_ for Denver; Jul t Lake: July 4, Ogden: and then he wili me here dir At Ogden he is booked to umpire two games of ball and he will L o R e SO o - & WHIMSICAL WIT - AND GAY FANTASY ~ OFLADY URSULA Audacious Essay in Romantic Comedy. e {COULD e | FIGHTING ROSALIND: S | A Uniquely Clever Play Handsomely Produced in Spite of Nervous- | ness in the Miller Company. egiad BY ASHTON STEVENS. | Anthony Hope's trust in our trust- ! fulness is audacious to say the ieast. Here in “The Adventure of Lady Ur- sula,” which Henry Miller and his com- pany played in the Columbia Theater | last night, he takes it for granted that | we will believe that the heroine of the | play. who dre up in her younger brother's clothes, makes the hero be- lieve that she believes t he takes ‘her for a man through the better part of two full-sized acts. Audaclty is | hardly the name for it. It is simply rieb e e e e e® D e e edeidebed 3 o box on the field after each game. In the morning he will box with “Jim” Dail in the afternoon with his brother *“Jack. Jeffries will meet Sharkey 4n October. aid Thall st 1 . “The fight will be on the d hefore the Coney Island or the Len: ub in New York. Brady \ting the Cone d Club, offered a purse of $0.000. Jef- s he doe care If Sharke himself champio! He regard a bluff. The g fellow will exhibitions here and one in give sever: Tos Angeles, but_he must be In London before / st. He will put in a week there at the Alhambra or the Folles Be geres, in Paris The vitagraph was a failure. There was not light enough in_the pavilion. so we lost t jctures. There is a report this morning that says Jeffries has pur- sed a place on Broadway, New York It is not so. He has not made of that kind in New York. Bill a play written for the champion Charley Vineent is doing the writing, and he and Brady are now working on it. They | are going to call it “The Rough Riders, and Brady swears he will make an actor out of Jeffries before he is done with him. The play will not be put on until after Jeffries is finished with Sharkey.” Thall saw McCoy in Denver. He savs he is feeling bad and looking worse. Jef- fries, “he savs, mayv give him a chance after he is done with Sharkey. There is ) ‘talk there of any MeCoy-Choynski fight. In New York they are nulling for a fight between Corbett and Fitzsimmons to be held next winter, and Thall thinks it will come off. DEATH OF AN EX-SENATOR. Timothy McCarthy Passes Away Full of Years and Honors. Ex-Se or Timothy McCarth who died Sunday night at the residence of his sister. Mrs. \. Driscoll. 622 Willow ave- nue, has been so long and so favorably known in this community that his demise will be looked upon by the large number of those who knew him well as a personal calamity. enator McCarthy came to this State in *58 from New York, his native clty, where father was a large builder and con- r and an influential member of the al Democratic party. Senator McCar . who had been educated in the busi ness of his parent, at first interested himself in the building trade here. But taking naturally to politics, it was not long before he had become a powe- in municipal matters and was elected to the position of Supervisor, which place he filled twice, only relinquishing the ofice to serve two terms in the State Senate. Though Senator McCarthy's life had been passed almost entirely in a political atmosphere, yet such was the rectitude of his character that even his most bitter political opponents never attempted to attribute any but the purest motives to any of his acts. He was the friend of such men as Stan- ford and Hearst, who listened to and ac- | knowledged the wisdom of his councils, though they were often forced to follow a different p#h. With. all the organizations of his day Senator McCarthy was hand in glove, and | there are still left a few of the old timers who can recall the nights when * ‘Mac’ | ran with the old machin'.” Though Senator MeCarthy had oppor- tunities that would have made a less sernpulous man many times a millionaire he leaves but a comparatively small tor- tune, which will be divided among his sur- viving children, a married daughter and two sons. ass will be celebrated and the funeral will take place from St. Mary’s Cathedral on Thursday morning at 10 o’clock. e e Yesterday’s Insolvent. John A. Crough. pork packer. San Fran- liabilities $823 14, no assets. cisco; e Ch P e Ocean Water Tub Baths. 101 Seventh strect,. corner Mission. Salt water direct from the ocean. TWHAT | LADY URSULA HERE 3 P A e e o the summit of daredevilment. And yet, in a way, it wins. | You find vourself getting mightily interested in the affairs of th ung Lady Ursul She hecomes a creation as the star heroi of your fairy tale days. You hear about her feigning a swoon at the door of Sir | George Sylvester’s house, just because he has vowed that no woman shall cross the threshold: you h from her own lips, th George was equal to the ruse and politely offered her the shelter of his porter’s lodge, and that her brother, on finding this out, sends allenge to George, whieh And then her brother, Lord Hassenden, enters the scene him- self and heaps no end of acid re- proaches on the head of his sister when she explains that the whole thing came about through a wager of hers with his betrothed that a woman would suc- ceed in entering Sir George’'s house. Now the fun commences in real earn- est, for gentle Ursula dons the breeches | of the free-legged sex and beards the lion in his den. Sir George has heen a deadly duelist, and she fears for hel brother's life. Artfully she plies a Fwoman’s wit, explains the reckless wager, and in the guise of a loving yvounger brother paints a glowing pic- ture of the sister Ursula, and finally in- duces Sir George to call the fight off. Here the complications commence, for Sir George is at opce for being con- ducted by his guest to her peppery brother and to her sister. If not the guest has the alternative of putting in the night at Sir George Horrors! The be-trousered Lady Ursula takes the first choice, and while Sir George is making ready for the journey slips out into the night and off for London town to her brother’'s quarters. she encounters a band of noisy blades, full of punch and fight, and soon the masquerading maiden is about to par- icipate in a bloody duel because, by Gad, sir! Lady Ursula has the squints. Enter Sir George, who parts the hostilities in the middle by claiming a previous en- gagement with the young stranger. She choses pistols, one loaded, the other empty; distance, across the table. They take ® their positions. “One! two!” drones the master of ceremonies. And then Sir George calls a halt and refuses to fight. When the company,retires he makes many pretty speeches to her and bids her carry tender messages to Ursula. And perhaps this handker- chief that bears Ursula's name and was somehow or other discovered in his house—perhaps, says Sir George, she will once again invade his monastery and bring it with her. Sure enough, the next act finds her at Sir George's, handkerchief in hand, and her fighting brother in hot pursuit. But explanations are given and taken and all ends with nothing more serious than the promise of a wedding. | “'Now set up in the quick type that follows a performance that gives out at something like half-past eleven o’ciock, this may read like the argument of a comic cpera. But “The Adventure of Lady Ursula” is not a comic opera. It may be—way down deep—a satire on the romantic drama of the day, but on my soul it is'not a comic opera, nor even a farce. It is a transparent, light- waisted adventure 1nto playwriting, and a cleverly fantastical play. While it is going on you want to believe in it, l | HOPE'S MALE IMPERSONATOR A | Here | IT BE A SATIRE?, ou try with all the good nature that s in you, and lots of the time you suc- ceed. It is only after the last curtain is dowr that you realize just how much ou have fooled yourself. Ycu might as well try to take Rosalind seriously | as Ursula, who is a matter of picture | and poetry. Indeed, 1 may say with all | modesty that Mr. Hope, for all that he affects the sturdy prose of to-day, | comes very mear to being Shakespear- | ean at times. The spirit of his work is | certainly Shakespearean. This is not a novel spirit, but it is one that is sel- dom dealt with successfully. The con- | versation {s witty in that whimsir‘al’ | | way of Hope's; the action, after the first act of explanation, is vigorous; the situations clinch in a very workmanlike fashion for a fellow's first play; eighteenth century -atmosphe: - ed up with elegance and beauty. There were waits and hitches in last | and the serv- | night’s performance, but not enough to | however, and th | the; she will not admit that the | | favor by conceal the excellence of Mr. Miller's production—only enough to show that the quick assimilation practiced by our | local weekly change of bill companies | does not come readily to actors who are accustomed to long runs and plenty of | rehearsals. The faults were not vital, | e is no reason why should exist after to-night or the | night. T cannot recall a_single part that is really miscast, and there are several notable instances of indi- vidual excellence. Mr. Miller has a princely part in Sir George, and even with the occasional touches | of mervousness and Insecurity that marked his performance last night, | he was In my opinion, much more for- tunate than in “The Liars.” Those | strenuous qualities of his that show | him at his best are brought into fre- quent play and he is always a picture | in deportment and an adept in what I | may call elocutionary tact. In a part that is quite as difficult as | that of Rosalind—more difficult in fact | when you realize that it has not the ADVERTISEMENTS. NO FAITH CURE About Stuart’'s Dyspepsia Tables. They Cure Stomach Troubles and Indiges- tion, Anyway, Whether You Have Faith in Them or Not. All physicians agreé that the element of | faith has a great deal to do In the cure | of disease. | Firm bellef and confidence in a family physician or the same confidence and faith in a patent medicine have produced remarkable cures fn all ages. | This is especlally trué in nervous trou- |, bles, and no field offers so prolific a har- | Flesh and NoZ Fat Is What Is Needed vest for the quack and charlatan as the diseases arising from a weak or run-down | nervous system. % |, What thin people want is flesh. and not Nevertheless. fat. To be symmeotrical and properly pro- diseases. indigestion portioned every person should have a cer- bles, which in turn cause nervous dis- | taln amount of flesh. To be plump does eases. heart troubles, consumption, and | Nt necessarily mean to be fat. Fat is un- loss of flesh, require something besides ) desirable; it clogs and retards the action ARE YCU THIN? Do You Want to Become Fleshy? A FEW SIMPLE RULES. the most common of all and stomach trou- faith to cure. | of every muscle, interferes with the Mere faith will not digest your food for | healthy action of the heart and lungs, and vou, will not give you an appetite, will| When excessive predisposes to fatty de- not Increase your flesh and strengthen | Beneratlon of vital organs, to say nothing vour nerves and heart, but Stuart’s Dys- | Of the discomfort. more or less, resulting from excessive adipose tissue pepsia_ Tablets will do these things. be-| = % PRIEEE Ve 8Ciboss t that it ‘c 1 E St ould suggest that if one cause they are composed of the elements | tremendous assistance of musical verse | o digestion: they contain the juices, acids | Wishes to become fleshy and plump, the Anglin w the superlative of | and peptones necessary to the digestion | thing most needed would be flesh-forming If. Her work was distinguished | fnd aemiiation of 4l wholesome food. | £9008: In other words, albumingus foods by delicacy, fragrance and an exquis- |~ gtuart's Dyspepsin Tablets will digest | oo'g SKBS: beef. oatmeal etc. ‘The kinds ite sense of humor. Mr: Morgan pre- | so0q if placed in r or hottle in water | form the greater part s .rfln\t”;nrlh?’v; sented a boldly outlined Lord Hessen- | heated to 98 desrees. and they will do it f : B den, splendid in its omission of trick | pifr€ 0 Ce T T pen taken into| Now. the only so many people heroics. Tt is a warmly human bit of | {h ctomach after meals, whether vou | Temain thin is tomachs do work. Mrs. Whiffen, Miss Burton, Mr. | ;2%a aith that they will or not not properly anc A1y digest and Willcot - and My Adleman gave ad- |5t S0t CUT R O0T o oure] dSSimillate the flesh forming boctiteal sud na ey Invizorate the stomach, make pure | eges we eat every ¢ mirable performances. The stage set- | poad and trong nerves In the only way Fhere are thousands of suct and ings are in themselves a subject for | 067 S50 SVORE GNP 4 that is from | they are really dvspeptic, they applause, I lenty of wholesome food well digested. | May not suffer any particular pain Al | plenty holes o hat we digest | OF Inconvenience from their stomachs. It Alcazar. | Tt is not what “"'1"4“ out what 1 such persons would take. with their “Fr!;dorlvk the Great.” the historicat| ”’;.’.'”':'r’:l‘ it are soit by Teals e Tabet o ol Slike s Rtuaus comedy by George Foster Platt, w The | menals s i A BRE Fapepsia ts. 0 : ts the | 1 izeists at 3 cents for full-sized pack- | auickly digested. and the proper degree of attraction at the Alcazar last night, and aalala Oy plumpness very “soon sccured.' becauss it drew a crowded house. It met with 25% 5 ese tablets are prepared exactly —for A i g Little book on cause and cure of stom- 4 o v zes rv v ready favor when presented by Mr. Lewls R o R e e B U e he O L Morrison and his talented wife last sum- | 4 Mg RN MAEC GO0 BN ole reason why they so quickly build up mnrl.xl Ilnl\'(hr ter, and they were warmly and strengthen thin, dyspeptic men and appla ec t night, rec g several women. curtain cails. At the end of the second = S ]('= rr\uprp» ia -7(-”1,1,‘.< cure dyspep- act the stage looked like a florist’s store sia_and every form of indigestion on this g : | common " sen t they digest the Mr. Morrison gives a fine representation DANGER IN SODA. food promy strength to every of the old warrior in his changeable nerve and orga e body, while at the moods, and his wife is charming as La same time the stomach has a chance to Barbarina, the character being admirabl suited to her winning personality. Whit Whittles as Bar renck with his handsome stage presence made a capable lover. and Howard Scott Voitaire had | a chance to display his versatility. George Foster Platt as Lieutenant Hulsén, George Wel er as General Hulsen and Clarence Monta as. Maupertuis were good. Miss irginia Drew was the Queen Consort, Miss Ida Banning the Princess Amelia ——0—— > — b — & —@ L3 ol & L4 rest and recover its natural vicor. Noth- ing further is required to cure any stom- ach trouble, or to make thin. dvspeptic people strong. plump and well Serious Results Sometimes Follow Its Excessive Use. This excellent preparation is manufac- Common soda is all right in its place, | tured by A, Stuart C Marshall, and indispensable in the kitchen and for | Mich., and sold bv druggists everywhere at 50 cents per nackage. FREE TO MILLIONS. A Valuable Little Book Sent Free for cooking and washing purposes, but it was | never intended for a medicine, and people who use it as such will some day regret it. | We refer to the common use of soda to relieve heartburn or sour stomach, a habit | which thousands of people practice almo dally and one which is fraught with dan- ! ger; moreover, the soda only gives tem- | the Asking. porary relief and in_the end the stomach | trouble is worse and wors y The soda acts as a mechanieal irritant | Medical books are not always interest- | to the walls of the stomach and bowels, | Ing reading. especially to people enjoying AnfdRcase T D e here It accumu-| good health, but, a matter of fact. lated in the ng death bY { scarcely one person in ten is perfectly inflammation or peritonitis Dr. Harlanson recommends as the saf est and surest cure for sour stom healthy, and even with such sooner or lat- er sickness must come. 4 | (acta dyspepsia) an excellent preparation | It Is also a well-established truth that ! | sold by druggists under the name of Stu- & Os ek A b @ | 7ts Dyspepsia Tablets. These tablets (111 '9‘1""“ Siallidisadaealionid pRicwith 4 | are large, twenty-grain lozenges, very |2 breaking down of the digestion: a weak | pleasant to taste. and contain the natural | Stomach weakens and impoverishes the @ | Belds. peptones and digestive elements es- | system, making It easy for disease to gain + | sential to good digestion. and when taken | a foothold. 3 omptly before it has had | 3 | disease, liver trouble or - weak heart and ¢ | ferment, sour and polson the blood and |}, C0is system as long as the digestion i o E¥sem at He invariably | 00d and the stomach able to assimilate ? L e fix'-::m'v:’y;\t Tablets in. all e e L T T cases of stomach derangements, and finds | _ Stomagh w\ikn»’;“ Snaws, "»‘I“ f in & & | them a certain cure. not only for sour| =€ >r| o )w\ and _this ll‘mv book de- stomach. but. by promntly digesting Gy "i,; he symptongs and causes and | food, they create a healthy appetite. in- | POINts the way to cure so >lr’r1!v.e that any ® | crease flesh and strengthen the action of | O0g €an uader and anp the heart and liver. They are not a ca- housands h, ome form of stomach ? | thartio. but intended only for stomach | trouble and do not know it. They ascribe © | aisenses and weakness. and will be found | the headache, the languor. nervousness, + | reliable in any stomach trouble except 'j};‘]lflz‘ “~”I‘;'l‘“{‘”lvl<fl‘;’v-‘- :'“';:'v:h’x‘\'rlv‘(pr; ‘.mz © | cancer of the stomach., it than the true one. Get vour digestion on All druggists sell Stuart's Dyspepsia ¢ Tab B3 cents per package. the right track and_ the heart trouble, Tt At e P etbine all forms of | lung trouble, liver disease. or nervous de: @il ittie ho S in ot mailed | DIty will rapidly disappear. stomach we anditheir 1| This little book treats entirely on_the # | free by addressing F. A. Stuart Co., Mar-| | e anthe & | shall, Mich. £ oA : . = or s mptoms of Actd Dys- a. Nervous Dyspepsia. Slow Dyspep- & G S0y 2| . Amylaceous Dyspepsia. Catarrh of ! ONLY ONE WAY | the Stomach, and all affiictions of the di- ) 2 | gestive organs in plain language. easily ) | understood. and the cause removed. ! i rease Flesh | It gives valuable suzgestions as to diet, 4 | To Burify the Blood, Inc | table glving length of time ke and Strength and to Cure rticles of food, P'S Indigestion. | ¢l O | No price is asked, but simpl- send your name and plainly written on ‘{ SECRET PATENT MEDICINES | postal card A ‘vluvuln 11' 8 _\L,».ramnh_ | Mich.. requesting a little book on Stomac! e WILL NOT DO IT. | Diseases, :|lnd it 5.1l be promptly sent by L | return mail. 34| — | pit e & | There Is a Simpler and Better Way. | ” 4| { There is only one way to purify the| . 4 [ blood. only one way to increase fles andi Do S D S e s]a @ | that is through the stomdgh and digestive s ns. Why? Because (& stomach and Dsce000 06000000 e@ ive organs make blchd and flesh, They do not have Dyspepsia bone, rerves, and sinew. Did you ever see and Miss Marie Howe Countess Swarta-|a person blessed with a healthy, vigorous becanse, the stomach of a deg feld. The play is well mounted. i 0 ach Tanddl disestiont whoihad frmpuxa secretes six times as much pepsin Orpheum. blood, muddy.. sallow complexion, or who and twice as much hydrochloric The three new turns at the Orpheum | had weak nerves, sleepless nights and the acidas the stomach of a man. come in a bunch at the tail end of the rogramme and are all received with good the crowd. The Pasqualis (Mr. and M aided by local Mr. Abramoff, | are the best of the lot in the prison scene | from “Faust.”” The town has had an over- | dose of opera these last few months, so | the valué of this act may fairly be me: ) ured by the applause that follows it. | gafest ‘apd best way to secure and pre- Twice was the bli"trio redemanded. Billie | Sorve a healthy condition of the digestive and Willie Farrell are a team of colored | grgans. Tt is not done by the use of any cakewalkers. Willle is a female. Their | wonderful secret patent medicine, but by singing doesn’t amount to much, but their | the use of certain harmless digestive prin- dancing is brisk and unusual. The Four | ciples, which, taken at meals, will digest O'Learys, minus two, do some wild and | the food anyway, regardless of the weak spectacular feats in tumbling. They are | condition of the stomach. a winning card. Fran a new sketch that shows her off to much better advantage than the one of last week, and the Misses Melville and Stetson, | too, Seem to have found happier materiai for the second week. Altogather the show | is more Orpheumlike than it has been in | some little time. | Grand Opera-House. - | Persse as “Myles Na Coppaleen” was the leading figure in “The Lily of Killain at the Grand Opera-house last night fell to his lot to sing the best musi. sca Redding has | It | the opera and that was the songs that | O did not belong to it. namely: such old favorites as “The Cruiskheen Lawn, | “The Low-Backed Car” and “Belicve Mo If All Those Endearing Young Charm: The hit of the opera was “The Mins Boy” by Hattie Belle Ladd as Ann Chute. Bertha Ricci as Mrs. Cregan, | Persse as Myles and W. Goff as Corrigan. | All those gems, redolent of the old sod, | were encored again and _again. Edit§ | el | ach, digest it perfectly. | chemist knows thousand and-one pains and ac! arising from poor digestion? No, because perfect digestion converts the food eaten into pure blood, strong nerves and muscles, and all_the fl sh a person needs to have for health, symmetry anu beauty. | Every person knows whether or not his or her digestion is what it should be, but every person does not know what is the Dr. Brooks recommends a combination of vegetable essences, fruit salts, pure asceptic pepsin and Golden Seal, prepared in convenient tablet form. and sold by druggists everywhere under the name of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. These pleasant tasting tablets are to be dissolved in the mouth after each meal, and, mingling with the food In the stom: There othing wonderful about this. Any physician or that Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets will do this because repeatedl tested and proved, and thousands of cured vspeptics have found it to be true also. Dr. Harlandson states that these tablets increase flesh because they digest flesh- forming food like eggs, meat, and ordi- nary evervday food: for the same reason they purify the biood and strengthen weak nerves. In no other way can it be done, because flesh. blood and nerves are obtained from the food we eat. Dr. Jennison once stated that he be- Heved a 50-cent package of Stuart’s D pepsia Tablets would give more real bene- STUART'S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS have cured thousands of men and women of Dyspepsia and Indigestion Decause they supply what every weak stomach lacks: Hydrochloric and lactic acids, pure aseptic pepsin, gin- ger and Golden Seal to increase the secretion of gastric juices. They cure Nervous - Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach, Gas and Fermentation. Billousness, Constipation or any form of weak digestion. FULL SIZED PACKAGES 56c. AT DRUGGISTS. ADDRESS: F. A. STUART CO., Marshall, Mich. e yeat . dze O Canmor, arsw for free book on stomach troubles. and Willlam Wollt | as” Dapny “Mann | At tha ‘atty " dollars' worth of ordinary played the devoted villain to the life. RBut | % : Yo oguer ORIt Was® bowfiie Aut| [These tabléts can be found at any drug there was lack of local coloring when half a dozen Sicilian bandits came uprn the stage with bits of dexible hose for | blackthorns. Tivoli. “Orpheus and Eurydice” was revived for three performances In the Tivoll last night, with the same cast that figured in the piece several weeks ago. It is, as be- fore, a creditable production. On Thurs- | day night the great Irish opera, “Shamus | O'Brien” takes the stage, with O'Sullivan In his original creation of Shamus. The Chutes. At the Chutes Theater Ada Cosgrove, a London Music Hall singer. made a hit with her child impersonations and re- spondede to four recalls. Armstrong and O'Neill, an athletic trio, gave an amus- ing sketch, “Fun in a Club”; Mae Tuni- son sang some pleasing soprano solos and the La Rose brothers, comedy acrobats. —_— gave a break-neck exhibition. The new moving pictures were interesting and the rest of the bill good. Democratic League Meeting. The Thirty-eighth Assembly District Municipal League held a well-attended meeting last night at Powers Hall, Pierce street, near Turk. Chairman Bert Schles- inger appointed a tommittee of five on membership, consisting of Eugene Mec- Fadden, Willlam Green, Maurice Living- stone, James Powers and John O'Keefe Charles 8. Cas a and Fred Peterson were added to committee on resolu- tions. Thirty new members signed the roll, which now numbers 120. Addresses on the political issues were made by Judge H. S. Foote and others, Olympia. The Kelsings made their first appear- ance at the Olympia last night and were the recipients of bouquets and applause without end. From an artistic standpoint, however, Querita Vincent was the hit of the bill. Her coon songs nand swagger costumes caught the crowd. Farewell to the Lambardis. The Lambardi Italian Opera Company will give two farewell performances at the California Theater to-night, when Il Trovatore” will be sung, and to-morrow evening, when “Manon Lescaut” will be produced. The advance sale is large. in which party organization was strongly urged. The meeting adjourned to Thurs- day, July 6, at the same place, —_———————— Ladies’ taflor-made suits, fur capes, cloaks Credit. M. Rothschild, 324 Post st.

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