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4 THE SA FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, ATGUST 21, 1900 'ASKED TO THE WEDDING OF PRESIDENT’S NIECE OLYMPIA STAKES ASILY TAKEN BY THE UNKKOWN Headwater, the Favorite, Comes in Third at the Hawthorne Meet. PEEE VAN Colonel Gay Wins From Pinochle in & Tremendous Drive on the St. Louis Track and Sur- prises the Talent. 00000zo@o@ooo“roovrooooooovxbo AGO, Aug 20.—The Unknown eas- the feat- he Hawthorne mer meeting. Re- own ory in the lem last Saturday, 1 against him vily backed. t of the twelve ed the conditions in e e 2 & sree o0 §7 NVITATIONS have been received here to the wedding of Miss Mabel Anna | McKinley and Dr. Hermann Ludwig Baer, which takes place Wednesday evening, BSeptember 12, at McKinley, Somerset, Pa. Miss McKinley is the lece of the President and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Abner McKinley. The an of her cholce is a young physician, a recent graduate of the Jefferson Medi- cal College of Philadelphia. The invitations to the wedding are quite e handsomest of any that have ever n seen here, and were got up by Tif- ny, in New York. The style is also quite erent from that in use in this city titutes for our usual ‘‘re- ques of your presence,” ‘“re- que: r of—" with the name of written out. Another followed is the early he Invitations—one fufl ng goo of heavy be PRESIDENT McKINLEY'S NIECE AND HER FIANCE. L 4 * th the invited ern fashic sending out of L e e e e e e . ] month before the day set for the cere- mony. —Sackatuck and =~ SPEEDY VACHTS [FAST DOCS FOR S WILL BACE FOR | RESERVE STAKE - HANOSOME CUPS| AT UNIDN PARK, gl €2 Macdonough Presents | Midweek Entries Inclrde a c me, 1:20%. | 2 sar 3. ¥ An ®—me: Box.| B Fiith Trophy. for Number of Stake ® second part of the Grand | : 3 ? s Motul piaba TN afincis y sl Thirty-Footers. Winners. s o8 A e ; : he time made in the Semi-Centennial Celebration Commit- | Draw Brings Fleet Hounds of Known - e tee Awards a Large Sum to Be Ability Together—Sixty-Four ‘Advance G Expended in Prizes at Dogs Entered to Com- . op At Inter-Club Regatta. pete. atter's head At a meeting of the Pacific Inter-Club arrow | yacht Association, held yesterday at the King | Merchants’ Exchange, the following were « present: President G. E. Billings in the )r | chair, ex-Commodore T. F. Tracy, Colonel the | Eastwood, J. M. Maitoon, Dr. C. L. Tis- 2 Michaels, Commodore J. 8. The Union Park Coursing Assoclation reserve stake on Wednesday. The tries show an u: mber of fine dogs and the coursir 1d be of excellent qual- | ity from the first round to the last. The prizes will be the same as in former mid- ter was disqual ng the run down water front on September 9. The deputa- | lenger vs. J Olympus; J. sarade of yachts | GIoRInE 9, be substituted | Knowles' An The following are | vs. George S Sterl & " Betsy Baron Sun on for the annual cruise, CINCINNATI WINS. the members of the regatta committee | gell, Allen & Wilson's Julius Caesar ve. T. J having the regatta and parade in charge: | Crorin’s Vixen: R. E. de B. Lopez & Son's Hard-Fought Game With the St. R. R. I'Hommedieu of the California | Crawford Rex ve. D. Dillon’s Europa; Russell, Louis Ni Yacht Club, chairman; C. L. Tisdale of | Allen & Wilson's Miss Allen vs. H. Lynch's uis Nine. the Encinal Yacht Club, H. Gibbs of the | Linton: J. H. Perigo's Pennigrante vs. Curtis | CORRECT ETANDING OF THE CLUBS. | San Francisco Yacht Club, T. F. Tracy of | & Fon's Old Glory: E. M. Kellogg's Lady Gil- | = he Corinthian Yacht Club and F, E.|pore ve D | W..L Pt | Clubs— W..L Pet. | & 5 o 5 & Wilson's Sea Breeze va. Pasha Kenneis' May ¥ 3 620 Boston G 4eh Sovkendall of the Soutl: Bay Yacht Club. | Hempstead; Pasha Kennels' Roundabout vs. | 5 44 651 Cincinnati .45 51 .49 | Lhe committee on the celection and pur-|F A McComb's Storm King; Curtls & Son's | a 47 48 305 St Logto & 51 .4r2 Chase of trophies consists of A. M. Clay, | Vanity Fair vs. A L. Austin’s Los Angeles; 48 48 500 New York... .87 ‘42 R. F. Peckham, C. F. Michaels, Orlo East- | R. E. de B. Lopez & Son's Sarah vs. Russell, i ~ | wood and J. R. Sa ., T. F. Tracy WA;‘ Allen & Wilson's Lady Emma; H. Murray's LOUIS, Aug —Cinctnnat! had much | appointed @ committee on tugboats and | ‘E"ygm;" = I }(&mans Lungln ilnu; e better of & terrific sl o R. R. I'Hommedleu a committee on Smith's Victor Queen vs. W. Kramer's e e mah. Yok | STt | Jesre Moors; Pasha Kennels' Ragia Addition e Snvien - nd Hughey, 3 vs. H. A. Deckelman's Le Roy; R. E. de B. Sioceeded him. was hit just as hard. Aitend. |, TWo flags in addition to the trophies are | 7% H - 5 S o n. to be awarded to the yachts taking first | 5obez & Bon's Warrigal ve George Sherman's and second places in each class. R. R. E B |I'Hommedieu and Dr. C, L. Tisdale wilj & MeNel's Black Hawk act as judges, and H. Gibbs and F. E. i - £ - 1 Coykendall_as timers at ‘the annual re- WINS ON A FOUL. %, Hughey and Criger: Brel- | gatta. O. Eastwood, thé secretary of the g " Swartwoc ,},i\x Lla‘x)lnn.“virllll pkreprar!‘ n;le c1rcufars and | Peter Maher Gets the Decision Over s,y e & Gibbs wi ook after the racing num- | Aug. .- Tannehlll was easy, | pore'to be capried by the yachts. | George Haines. ase running. At- | pEE-Commodore A M. Clay stated that| TRENTON. N. J., Aug. 2.—Peter Maher e had ommunicated with J. M. Macdon- | to-night defeated George Halnes, a col- R H E | ough with regard to the fifth of the series . n : series ugilist of Chicago, b ? %l of Macdonough cups to be awarded to the et Che ich o ot ks Schriver: Mercer | Yecelved A reply by cable autherisimg the | 133, Lo have been a twenty-round bout, before the Trenton Athietic Club. assoclation to order the trophy. The com- | peiofe thS Trenton ATHete Tl mittee on trophies will meet to-day to | select a design for the cup. It is under- | " e: stood that J. M. Macdonough will present | ponent five times. a second serles of prizes, to be awarded ST. LOUIS, Aug. 2 John J. MeGraw will be manager of the St. Louis team this m, Gespite stories to the contrary eckzodbrdomuda | o1 - | the legs and threw him. He then crawled | each year fov another period of five years. ; Minor Games. 1t ‘is ‘probable, however, that the §350 ag Seter's pioEpI Tna procrennIe KANSAS CITY, Aug. %—Kansas City 6, | 2@wardedannually willbe split u Into two P A Gty Milwaukee 4. or even three prizes, instead o ng ex- EUFFALO, Aug. 2 —Buffalo 3, Detrott 2 Pended as heretofore upon a SIngle tro- TENNIS TOURNAMENT. CHICAGO, Aug. 20—Chicago §, Minneapoiis 4. | phy. In this way a large number of en- e CLEVELAND, Aug. 20.—Cleveland 7, In- | tries can be secured in two or three Larned Defeats Wrenn.and Will dianapolts 3. RAINBOW WINS A RACE. Cornelius Vanderbilt's Yacht Crosses the Finish Line First. SWPORT, R. I, Aug. 20.—Cornelius Vanderbilt's Rainbow crossed the finish classes, as the clubs are stronger in the 36-foot class than in 30-footers. The start | will be by the fire of a single gun. It is | likely that several of the South Bay fleet | will be seen in the coming regatta, as the | the all-comers' tennis tournament, which South Bay Yacht Club has become a | has been in progress at the Casino court member of the assoclation. | for a week. —_—————— | _ Larned will now challenge Malcolm D. line & winner in to-day’'s race, the eighth SCHEDULE FOR THE | Whitman for the championship. Whit- of the series for the X }x;\‘ankp'l&yed agbl\lns} K. D. W‘remfl and 000 cup. Sh had 1 ac! 's morning in preparation for th il E T ] S R YEAR'S FOOTBALL GAMES 3 seconds, and the Mineola by 1 minute § challenge match to-morrow. He showed excellent form against the two very dif- seconds. It was a fluky day, and the Vir. | ferent styles of game. The final match ginia got the worst of the light airs. She |in the consolations was won by J. A. was 22 minutes 44 seconds behind the leader. This race gives the Rainbow six | Allen of Yale, who defeated J. P. Paret of points and the Yankee nine. The Mineola New York, 46, 6—0, 6—4. has eight and the Virginia one. Challenge Whitman. NEWPORT, R. I, Aug. 20.—W. A. Larned defeated G. L. Wrenn to-day In BERKELEY, Aug. 20.—The provisional schedule for this season's football games is as follows Feptembas 29—Rellance vs. Stanford. October 6—Tpllance vs. California. ey Kramer’s Record Broken. The wind was so light and unsatisfac- | October 13—iellance Stanford. HARTFORD, Conn., Aug. 20.—At the e lflne‘ scommitiee. ds!x?llfid flthe e e B e e Velodrome track to-night Fenn of Water- i:\;n? r-a“‘linn lthe“ra‘r: cgm 'l.el;de ';'(s':‘ November 3—Rellance vs. Stanford. % bury won the two-thirds mile amateur e 1i 71 - o Pl w November 6—Reliance vs. California. handicap in 1:20 2-5 beathing the world’s the fifteen miles at the end of the first| November 10—Calitornia vs. Oreson. { amateur record of Kramer, which was round of the triangular course. | November Z—Intercollegiate game. 11:23 LTI DI IIOIDIIIOIOIOIOPOIOIOIIIDIPIOITIIEIITIIERITIIIPIPOIITITIITTeOE O+ 0@ held the draw last night for the midweek | Sweeney's tio 0 ar ed that an appropriation | Lady Hugo v Austin's Thorndale; J of $350 had bee mac fo prizes, to be | P. Thrift's Ty = vs. J. Hurley's O K awarded in such a manner as the associa- | Capitol; H vs. J. L. Ross tion may #eem fit JPSu\I‘VB. L. ve. P. It decided that the annual regatta | Reilly 3 ciation be held ou | ADEe] Maher In the fifth round Maher floored his op- The last time he was nocked down Haines grasped Maher by ANNIE BURNS DOES GOOD WORE AT READVILLE Pressed Hard, the Favorite Takes the Blue Hill Stakes. RN Fast Track and a Big Field in Each Event Make the Heats Inter- esting on the Opening two favorites lost, the winning of the big | stake—the Blue Hill—by Annte Burns and the fast pace by Gyp Walnut evened up matters to everybody's satisfaction Neither Burns nor Walnut had an easy thing, for it took flve heats to decide the Blue Hill and four for t! . pace went to Gentry's Tre: | straights, though Fred, Wed looked upon as a certainty three-year-old trot C. w. Dreamer, the hottest favorite, tanced at the outset. The ‘nterest centered in the big stake | race, the Blue Hill, in its fifth renewal, i | and ‘eleven horses faced the starter. All | eves, however, were on Annie Burns, who | fulfilled ~ expectations immediately by | winning the first two heats, although ressed hard in the first by Middlemay. ust after the start in the third heat the mare went into the air and danced there until the fleld was an eighth of a mile away, and It became a race between the favorite and distance flag. In the mean- time Dillonite, who had gone through the field and taken the lead, captured the heat. The horses were held back a bit in the last half, so Annie Burns got in- side the flag. The fast sprint, : told 80 severely on her that Dillonite won the third heat jogging under the wire. The fifth heat settled matters, for while Dillonite took the lead at the start and held it to the three-quarters, Annie Burns went right at his w. ) him ouf Gracle Onward passed Dillonite at the wire. % 2:80 class, trotting, the Blue Hill stake, value $5000, best three in five—Annie Burns won first, | second and fifth heats In 2:14%g, 2:14%, 24 | Dillonite won third and fourth heats in 2:13%, 2:15. Gracie Onward, Mr. Middleway, Electric | Wiikes, Kplevala, Ebba, Belle Curr Peppina, Leonard Bell and Bert Herr also started. 2:12 class, pacing, purse $1000—Gyp W won first, third and fourth heats in 2:10%, 1. Little rly Bird Jr., also started i :17 class, pacing, purse $1000- “rithcn lnp(!. fl!‘ l‘lra\zhl heats. Time, 2:11, 2:10, 2:11. Wedgewood, Ituta, Jennle | Mac. Garnet, Victor, , Satan, Rosalet, | Bethel. The Private, San Telmo, Braden, Junoco, Alberta and Mistura also started. Frank won second heat in 2 Tonita F and Joe Bauleham jentry's Treas- Fred S. Rex, Foals of 1897, purse $2000—Major Delmar won | second. and third heats in 2:15. 2:16%. Emma | | Winter won first heat jn 2:15. Ivg Dee, Sonata, | Juniutara, Tramp, Nami Krakatoa, The Dreamer and Gu 'ATHLETES TO START | FOR ASTORIA CARNIVAL | Twenty-Five Rowers, Swimmers and Trackmen Will Leave for the North. The rowers, swimmers and track ath- letes of this city who will strive for prizes . ) aléo s | on the athletic field and in the aquatic | contests at Astoria, Or., will start to-day | for the scene of action in the north. | TAltogether there will be twenty-five in | the party, most of whom are oarsmen | representing the various local clubs. The | Astoria carnjval of water and field sports will begin on August 23. The Olympic Club will represent Call- fornia on the track and fAeld. A team of | four men, all active Olympians, will wear | the winged O in the carnival contests. W. ‘J Cutter will enter the pole vault event, | George Burgees in the sprints, Fred Bur- gose in the middle distances and R. | Thomas in the hurdles. Alex Pape and | Lester Hammond will do, the swimming for the Olympic Club. | "One of the principal events on the card | is the mile relay race, four men to each | team. The four Olympic track men will be seen in this event. | ——— e———— | Fitzpatrick Beaten. Day. S 5 TR0 BOSTON, Aug. 20.—There was every in- centive for good racing at the opening of the grand clreuit meeting at the Read- | ville track this afterncon, for the track | was fast und a big field fn each event | made the heats interesting. Although however, | cel and simply bflul TWO PLAYHOUSES DAZZLE PATRONS WITH THE POLICE-VISED “SAPHO” [ aaaa e e e e R e A S A A e A G A e a e a s s s a2 S0 o0 o o b o o e ng e . - | R R B e S o S S o ST S o g HENRY MILLER AND J. H. STODDARD Il “THE ONLY WAY.” ‘ot to have his'home surrounded by pig pens | rather than by rose garder L. DUPONT SYLE. [ O i o S RPN PSP MDA SN probably have died an early and natu- | F “SAPHO” had not been so exten H sively advertised by the police, it woul ral death. In the four-act version pre- | sented by the Frawley company at the | Columbta. Grand Opera-house last night there was kinted tn biond spisahes of blood snd gne act of healthy, human feeling and crescendo is Fresman Wills three acts of unwholesome, gutter senti- - B R e mentalism. To have to sit through the ot i o = three acts for the sake of the one, Is a | ¢ PIay may stand besi penalty heavy enough to crush out a ten wnf R e preciate the former. dency to vice in even the most promising | and lov "he Tale” w criminal. the play to condemn. Lik: Miss Wakeman struggled through the | lege 3 corded the poet is t part of the mendaclous heroine (?) with l}'“\‘l Kl"]nl‘t rded to the dram an energy worthy of a better fate. Her | b0 gramatist's license, and wit volce was better attempered to her task than usual and hence was more pleasing. Her register is pitched so low, however, neither marred nor omitted some charac- cate hand, that desecrated, ters, give me Defarge strength and that when she employs less force than the | hatred to ur Defarge, and idealiz ordinary her tones are lost in the huge & nameless ittle milliner, making h jokes and stand forth in faithful, tender little Mimi. hi Like a tactful host Miller kept recesses of the Grand Opera-house stage 0 f much of the first act was quite inaudible. Mr. Reynolds played Jean Gausson in ex- cellent taste, never ranting and never be- coming feeble. Miss Van Buren made a charming Irene and carried the audience with her in the only wholesome act of the play—the third. Nobody else had any- thing particular to do, and ali did it well. | ar 4 One feels really sorry for intelligent !¢ arton Mr. Mi e t his be: men and women obliged to earn a living “f;é'g”;, :Jl!\:; uATs‘_i_ “;‘l‘("’g;i by playing in such stuff asthis S?!{““ 83 ¢ audience last evening did not fail to a book shows how an unsavory subject | ognize this fact and palm music and boot may be partly redeemed by subtlety in |thunder testified their appreciation. character study and by great skill in liter- | Another old favorite that got round af- ary presentation. “Sapho” as a play | l€T round eof applause even hefore he had s a chance to utter his first line was dear takes only the bare outlines of a horrible A2 ter hi % ey and exhibits them under the fierce | 9ld Stoddard. Stoddard came all the way his bes and last, and after offering generou 4 the monkeys right and light, he t with stre is a lesson i hi; nan x actor-: songs and dances and and an offered tra was movi Chutes. 61ymp1u. Margaret | fro New York to take up his original h t. has n t ctive lare of the footlights in all their naked | from L, < ! The Chute: has an attrac and BUFFALO, Aug. 20.—Jim Jeffords nfig.-udp“,“_ True, “Sapho" s indeed a raw | PAIT of ‘[‘ 1"“_”; in Ernest “lf,"‘. esting bill. Lord and Rowe, acrobat | California secured the decision over Jim | and bleeding “slice of life,”” to use the a::rgan ;ms. Alunlg“ nial role, one that e o their Iaughable Fitzpatrick of Olean, N. Y., to-night after | favorite phrase of the Decadents, but all | fits his clenched teeth and sullen looks. | COMeCIAm Ivia Puerari | twent e rounds of fighting. Fitzpatrick | slices of life are not fit for public carving. | \"OTChing was happlly cast both in pro- o I o e lections in a Was all but out at the end of the last | Plg pens, equally with rose gardens, are | OB anf DIy, Grst as the roue Marduls | ST TSR Sinbers o the bil round. parts of life; but no healthy man prefers | suffering for his father's sins. Dan Baby Ruth Rowland, La 1 SRR s Harkins was a_convincing Dr. Man dancer, Kalacratus the juggler. Z = == = — The best of “The Only Way" falls to | the mimic, the lion act and new mov the men. The women of the cast have pictures DEA’I‘] [ OF LIEU I ENAN I comparatively little to do. Mi D*-HH+ D +H> e 9P = CABLEGRAM as received in this city from the United States Consul at Valparaiso, Chile, yesterday con- firming the news of the death in that city of Selim E. Woodworth, The death of Mr. Woodworth marks another epoch in the annals of a family already famous. His father was the late Commodore Woodworth of the United States navy, and his grandfather. Samuel Woodworth, will long be remembered as the author 'of “The Old Oaken Bucket.” A brother, Willlam, occupies a chair at Harvard University. Selim E. Woodworth entered the Naval Academy at Ann;finlls in 1872, graduating with honors in 1877. He folldwed the sea until 1891, when he resigned with the rank gt Meutenant. At the outbreak of ‘the | Spanish-American war he volunteered his Robinson looked after the joys an week events. The resuit of the draw is | rows of Lucie Manette in a nc The Olympia bill for this week R. R. I'Hommedieu and R. F.|as follows: WORTH CONFIRME D unplosstnge wall oMt up to the usual average. The y » Tac vs. J. Dean" rather a vigorous Mim s living statua A deputation of three members of the | B Lopez & Son's Minn WOO D | "No review of “The Only Way"” would be regatta committee of the semi-centennial | LA joomuiste wRhoat s mnie . (an - D VERTISEM s s & 8 % | M. Kellogs's Humme: : e Be-0000- > ete0 s> sdeoeoe@ | notice of the wonderfully realistic mob ADVER' ENT! celebration of the Native Sons of thely. .. is & Son's War > e S * | that helped to create the stirring picture AR s oo s SRS Golden West was introduced and request- | p Gol w& P of the tribunal scene. ed that the annual regatta of the assocla- ot L o SR tion be made an important feature of the ley’s Shy- Alcazar. celebration, and that as many yachts ns il “Sapho was reproduced last night ar 0N T“[ RoA” ssible take part in a pa along th ¥ y Smma ) A > se W possible take part in a parade along the| (& T¥OLs FONET ST T e on's. Ch the Alcazar Theater and the house was packed. The cast was the same as on | previous presentation, with two exce | tions. Clarence Arper playing the part of | Dechelette and Ernest Howell, Caoudal Florence Roberts in the title role was as its All the time, eating irregularly, slecping irregnlarly, exposed to every disease latent in bad cooking or poor food; that’s successful if not more so than before - she was admirably supported by White a summary of the traveling Whittlesey as Jean Gaussin, her lover. man’s life. The result is They were repeatedly call curtain at the close of the second and third acts. Miss Roberts is seen in her best as Sapho, the part being suited Lo her emotional temperament. There should be crowded houses during the week. Tivoli. The Wagnerites were out in full force last evening at the Tivoll Opera-house to hear the first production of the favorite “Tannhauser” that has been given at the gopular little theater, and much praise is lue the enterprising management for the manner in which this ditficult opera is put on. The orchestra has been enlarged to forty pleces, which, considering the size of the house, fully' approximates to the orchestra used during the grand opera season by Grau at the Metropolitan Opera- house, in New York. It is also admirably evident that rehearsals have not been spared. From. the standpoint of smooth- ress, attack, good ensemble work gener- ally, it is rarely indeed that a first-night performance of so difficult an opera as “Tannhauser” equals that given last night at the Tivoli. In other directions the opera was a surprise, Miss Effic Stewart, who made her first 1 before tie § %gtomach troubl eral term which covers various forms and of dis- ease of the organs of di- gestion and nutrition. The traveling man can’t avoid the troubles which ing from his business ;fl:g:don:. But he can avoid “stomach trouble.” If Dr. Pierce’s ('}olden Medical Discovery is used when the early symptoms of de- rangement of the stomach manifest themselves, the cure will be quick and radical. But even if the disease has become chronic the *Discovery” will cure ninety -eight times out of every hun- dred if tried fairly and appearance this season in the role o ¢ Eilsabeth, shows a considerable advance | | faithfully. on her good work of three years ago. Her Mr. Ned Nelson, the cel- voice is magnificent. Absolutely true in intonation, without the shadow of a vi- brato, sweet and powerful and of splendid range, her Wagner interpretation is whol- 1y admirable, that is as far as the vocal effort goes; Miss Stewart's acting is bet- ter left undone. Anna Lichter's Venus was the best bit of work she has done | this season. She looked, acted and sung in thoroughly satisfactory fashion. | Avedano fs not happy in the part of Tannhauser. His temperament, llke that of Salassa, 1s too essentially Latin to be | ja ease h;xl n‘|‘e phlegmatic, lelsurely pro- ... | Bress of the Wagnerian music drama. and Services and was assigned to the collier | though the volces are there the unfitness | o c] as convoyes 15~ | of the Teutonic musical atmosphere makes pines by the United States monitor Mo- |{icalf falt. Willlam Schuster aiq el- | nadnock. He performed his duties in and | o1 service with his valoable Locs scice around Manila during the troublous times v R e o e ] following, and at the end of the war re- nxs th‘e Lflndgrave‘ and [h’.- Whole produc- | turned 10 this country and tendered his e Rk as e TR Wlcat faterest 40 resignation. 7 - t | ¥ ignon, Nie- His health having suffersd n the Phillp- | oyl Feidint case wily srternen o e pines, he secured gassage on the German A sew St - ship Luxor, bound for New York. le sie never rounded the Horn, however. FHis California. heart began to_trouble him and he was| Sylvain A. Lee and his company of hyp- Erefiu ashore at Valparaiso for treatment. | notists gave their second performance in e_attack proved fatal, and he sue- | this city at the California last evening to cumbed to the inevitable on August S. a full house. The cakewalk and the vacit He is survived by a widow, two bright | excursion were the humorous features »f little boys and a girl, who live at Berke- | the entertainment. }ey'C His mother, Mrs. Dennison, resides | Mr, Lee announced that Chief of Police n Cambridge, Mass., with his brother | Sullivan had objected to his placing his Willtam. Two other brothers, Frederick | sleeping subject in a Market street show A. and Benjamin R.; reside in’this city. |window and he was therefore obiiged to ebrated Irish comedian and \mmlic. of 577 R A e Sutl et of touve pretie ST T stant traveling gave me a bad touch of that dreaded disease called 1 had tried everything possible to cure it till last week, while plaving at B. F. Keith's Bijou theater. Philadelphia, in the Neison trio, a professional friead of mine advised me to try Dr, Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery Iiried it, and, thank God, with good results » Free! Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adyiser, 1008 pages, 700 il- lustrations, is sent free on receipt of stamps. to cover expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the same book cloth-bound. dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, M Kearny 'strest, 8. B ror Fishing Tackie and Sporting da. The largest stock Send % puge postage Mlustrated catalogue, No, 4 )