Newspaper Page Text
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TO EVERY PERSON WHO READS
THIS PAPER:
For years McCollum has been making your pictures, and for two years
The New McCollum Studio has been making photos for the Dawson picture
buying public; and judging from the great business success we will make
more pictures this fall than ever before. We were figuring on this when
we bought a large stock of the latest and most catchy designs possible.
These we would be glad to show and interest you in, if you will only call.
We are not sitting up nights worrying about the orders we have not got,
but we are rather worrying about how in the world we are going to fill the
orders we have, and one of the greatest troubles is this: Most people want
their pictures “day after tomorrow.” If you want your pictures ona cer
tain date you will have to come to see us more than two days before that
time, and leave some space for a possible disadvantage of the weather.
Now is the time to et busy and have them photos made of the little ones
before something happens so you can’t have them made. Now is the time
to have Your pictures made, for you will never look younger.
We have on exhibition now the latest made in pfctures, and we want to
show YOU every one of them and will gladly do this if you will give us
the desired opportunity.
Thanking you for the suppbrt oiven us, and thanking you again for your
business this fall, we remain, Yours very truly,
McCOLLUM’S STUDIO.
NEW YORK SOCIETY ENJOYS
ANOTHER FREAK PARTY.
Rich Clubman's Horses Munch Oats
from Silver Bucket in Banquet
Haill. Beats a Monkey Dinner.
A New York dispatch says Harvey
S. Ladew, many times a millionaire,
who attracted attention in the fash
ionable world a few years ago by
originating a buck and wing dance,
has eclipsed all previous attempts
at novel entertainment with a *‘pony
dinner.”’” Forty guests were sull
moned to his mansion at Glen Cove
to celebrate the' victories won by
the Ladew entries in the Piping
Rock horse show, and two of the
four-footed winners had places at
the board, while three more were led
through the banquet hall by grooms
in livery and fed with sugar plums.
The Ladew country seat is one of
the finest on Long Island. The din
ing-room, built in the colonial stvie,
accommodated 100 diners comfort
ably.
It was Mr. Ladew’s exclusive idea
to have the two ponies as guests, and
box stalls built for them in the din
ing-room, where they could munch
oats from silver buckets and quaff
water from gold-hooped pails. It
was his very own idea also to be
stow this honor on two of the daint
jest and most intelligent ponies ever
entered for a prize, and two with
more winnings to their credit than
any other ponies in the world. One
of the hoefed guests was Welsh
Princess, the winner of 100 prizes
in Great Britain; the other was All
There, a beautiful little mare, 13
hands high, the holder of 19 blue
ribbons and by long odds the great
est favorite in the Piping Rock
how. :
When the 40 human guests were
ushered into the dining room there
vas a murmur of surprise. Even
Berry Wall, who is an originator of
novelties himself, gasped in admira
tion.
The ‘“‘hospitable mahogany” was
in the form of a horseshoe. Directly
over it were incandescent electric
lights in norseshoe form and with
electric pails between the inner and
outer edzes of the shoe. Near the
curve of the table on either side were
the box stalls of hardwood, garland
ed with roses and bedecked with the
blue ribbons won by the occupants.
The stalls were close enough to the
stable for Princess and All There
to poke out their velvety noses for
caresses. The table equipment, all
made to order, was symbolical of the
occasion. The silver salt cellars
were miniature feed boxes. The
golden cellery helders were replicas
of hay racks, and all the glassware
was engraved with delicate little
scenes of the field, the road and the
course. .
Just after soup was served double
ioors at the side of the dining room
7ere opened and three of the tiniest
sonies were led in by grooms. With
necks arched and champing at the
bit the beautiful little creatures were
led around the outer edge of the
horseshoe. When they had been led
away there was a moment of com
plete darkness, and then as the
lights flashed out again periwigged
servitors stood behind the chairs
with the favors—gold-mounted rid
ing crops and silver stirrups.
All There and Welsh Princess
were served with oéts in ccurses as
each course was brought to the ta
ble. Mr. Ladew was delighted with
the success of his entertainment, and
John Drake and Richard Carman
agreed with Berry Wall that it beat
a monkey dinner out of sight.
BUILD PEN AROUND SNAKES.
idaho Farmers Are Forced to Fence
In a Den of Rattlers.
The voung sons of Jeff Donant and
Frank Richardson had an exciting
experience with a den of rattlesankes
sn the latter's ranch near Council,
Idaho. They killed twenty-one rep
tiles in a few minutes, and appar
ently did not make much of an im
pression on the number that inhabit
the den.
For a number of years there has
been known to exist a number of
dens of these snakes along the rocky
bluffs that border Hornet Creek val
ley, and a few years ago an effort
was made to exterminate the largest
colony, at which time more than 300
were killed in one day without ex
hausting the supply. Failing in the
effort to kill them, the ranchers liv
ing adjacent to the den fenced the
snakes in with a tight board fence.
While the reptiles are numerous
within a few miles of Council, there
are none whatever in the valley and
a strange peculiarity of the snakes
seems to be that they never leave
the rocky'ledges along the rim of
Hornet Creek valley.
NEEDLE WENT THROUGH HER.
Swallowed 50 Years Ago, Surgeons
Took It from Matron’s Knee.
An old-fashioned silver needle
with a gold "eye wandered around
in Mrs. H. A. Smith’s body for socme
thing over a half century, Mrs.
Smith lives in Jersey City, N. J., and
no one was more surprised than she
when the needle ended its wander
ings by emerging from her left knee.
It is a particularly fine needle,
with its gold eye, and Mrs. Smith’s
mother must have been very much
vexed when her baby daughter swal
lowed it. Mrs. Smith as a baby
must have swallowed it, say the
doctors, though Mrs. Smith has no
recollection of having performed
such a feat. She had been having
“rheumatism,” so she thought, for
more than a yvear, and the pain had
been settling about her left knee
cap. Finally the pain became so in
tense that she called in Dr. Lambert.
He applied the lancet and found the
long lost needle.
Large line of Banister’s $5.00 and
$6.00 mens’® shoes. McLain Bros.
& Co.
The Dawson News. Wednesday, October 31, 1906.
AMERICANS ARE TO BE SHOT
DR. HARLE AND ASSOCIATES TO
BE SHOT TO DEATH.
‘\Vill Be Executed in Mexico for Al
leged Imsurance Fraud. Mur-
E dered for Money.
Dr. C. S. Harle, formerly of El
Paso, who has been resting under “a
sentence of being shot for some time
by the Mexican government for al
leged insurance frauds, and who has
written a Chicago physician charg
ing a New York insurance company
with being responsible for his pres
ent condition, is well known in Tex
as. For several years he was a
practicing physician in El Paso,
where he married and seemed to be
leading a happy and prosperous life
up to the time of his connection with
this insurance trouble.
It is alleged that Harle and two
accomplices poisoned a man for the
sake of the insurance on his life, the ‘
offense taking place on the Mexican
side of the river at E 1 Paso. The ar
rest and the trial of the men charged
with murder were followed by their
sentence to be shot, and they have
been held in jail at Chihauhau since
that time, exhausting every possible
effort to obtain their freedom. The
cases were affirmed by the highest
Mexican court, and a final appeal to
President Diaz for pardon was de
nied Dr. Harle and his unhappy as
sociates, who are to be shot in a few
days.
Mrs. Harle, who is said to have
been one of the most beautiful wo
men in Texas, obtalned a divorce
from her husband a few months ago
and is said to have since married
another. Harle comes from a good
family and was highly thougnt of
in Texas up to the time of his con
nection with this unfortunate affair. |
A Nervy Bridegroom.
A Fulton, Missouri woman was
married the other day for the sev
enth time. Seeing that the other six
are all living, it would seem the hus
band is a man endowed with nerve
and optimism.
Do You Suffer from Kidn.ey Troubles
We guarantee one bottle of
Smith’'s Sure Kidney Cure to bene
fit or cure, or your druggist will re
fund your money. Price 50 cents at
Kendrick’s Drug Store.
An ebsolute specific and anti-septic prep~
aration for all kinds of
SORE THROAT.
BIMPLY A GARGLE, PERFECTLY HARMLESS,
A sure cure for Hoarseness, Tonsilitis, Quinsy,
Inllamed, Ulcerated and Catarrhal Sore Throat.
A preventive of Croup, Whooping Cough and
Diphtheria.
PURIFYING HEALING SOOTHING
Endorsed by the Most Eminent Throat Special
ists in the country.
Ehonld de kept in every home. FPrice 25 Cents.
Berg Medlcine C 0.,, Des Molnes, lowa.
Kendrick’s Drug Store.
—— \
IS ATTRACTING THE ATTENTION
OF THE BIG BUGS.
Secretary - Shaw's Hurried Visit to
Washington Causes Rumors
to Go Around.
A Washington dispatch says: The
money stringency is attracting con
siderable attention in administration
circles and the hurried visit of Secre
tary Shaw, cutting short his cam
‘paign tour, has awakened many ru
‘mors. Some fears are expressed that
‘the country is on'the eve of a finan
cial panic. These fears are not well
founded, and the present stringency
can be accounted for in many ways.
The criticism that has been so wide
spread among American bankers of
our existing currency system, the ty
ing up of so many millions in real
estate, the heavy investments in min
ing stocks, the inadequacy -of the
transportation facilities for handling
the immense crops of the south and
west and the political campaigns now
being waged are all factors.
The Ohio Verdict.
It is even claimed that the ver
dict of the Ohio jury, in finding the
Standard Oil company guilty of a
conspiracy in restraint of trade, has
had a depressing influence on the
money market and adds to the causes
producing the present strengenc*v.
Whether this is true or not, it is
very likely the verdict will have
much to do in causing a re-adjust
ment of many very large financial in
terests operating great industries.
The shifting that will thus be
brought about will, no doubt, add to
the financial complications and de
'lay the time of an easier money mar
ket.
Obligations Overlap.
A prominent financier of New
York, discussing the present condi
ltions, says: 3
“The key to the present conditions
’at home and abroad seems to be that
‘economic developments are being
Ipushed faster than the monetary re
sources of the different countries
would permit naturally. The danger
lies in the tendency to assume larger
obligations which might become
greater than can readily be borne.”
On the whole it is believed by
those best qualified to judge that the
business of this country is on a solid
basis, and that the enormous pros
perity we have been enjoying is like
ly to continue for some time to come.
In fact, Mr. Frick only a few days
ago predicted it would extend
through next year and based his pre- }
diction on the great demand for ircn
and steel, a demand that will carry
those industries’ well through the
coming year.
lE\'IDENCE OF OCEAN TRAGEDY.
Hundreds of Life Preservers Are
’ Ashore Near Hateras.
A dispatch from Norfolk, Va., says
%a maritime puzzle that may be the
result of an ocean tragedy have
come ashore near Cape Hatteras in
the shape of more than 400 life pre
servers.
Between Hatteras and Big Kinna
keet the beach is strewn with the
cork jackets. Some are marked,
‘“‘Caswits, Rettunysyurcer, G. R. P.,
No. 108,341.”” Others are stamped,
‘““‘Sealanan.”” Two bear the name
‘“Smeskf.”” Three miles north of Big
Kinnakeet a part of a white yawl
boat and a fragment of a boat’s gun
wale washed ashore. There are no
marks on this wreckage.
Because all the life preservers and
the pieces of wreckage came on the
beach in such a limited area, and be
cause of the large number of* jack
ets, shipping men are of the opinion
that whatever the cause may be it
occurred not far from the coast, and
that the wreck, if any, is that of a
passenger ship. |
Search among marine records has
failed to reveal any names that cor
respond with those on the life pre
servers, and life preservers are gen
erally marked with the name of the
boat they are on.
Worth 25 Cts. in Cash to Dyspeptics.
If you suffer from Dyspepsia in
any form, gas belching, bitter taste,
offensive, bad breath, dizzy spells,
sour stomach, heart pains, nausea,
gastritis, loathing of food, pains in
the stomach, then they will disap
pear in a short time after taking
Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy, made es
pecially to cure dyspepsia, indiges
tion and all stomach troubles, even
of the worst cases where doctors
and other remedies had failed or
where the patient could hardly swal
low food without great distress.
Tyner’'s Dyspepsia Remedy helps
digest your food. It expels the gases
and sweetens the breath. It cures
sick headache and colic at once.
Sold by all druggists at 50 cents a
bottle. Coupon good for 25 cents
(in cash) toward purchase of Ty
ner’s I)yspepsiaéßeme_dy sent by writ
ing Tyner's Remedy Co., Augusta,
Ga.
One car best cypress. Best
price. T. O. WHITCHARD & CO.
COMING SURE!
_l;;_wson, Thursd:y,\
November Ist.
botoet G T RA T [ »
|h SUCCESSFUL OVER 3,000
1% Sexson. \‘ ‘Qs HISTORIO ”7[ (£ORSES & PEOPLE,
“&£ T W[
i /% /:7‘?:, ?g7 “l“:‘x‘ BS T
The | [gy % S | The :
AR SINETRE R
Actuslities 7sT P 2 R Habits and
of Life Beyond the g%fi X il Customs of tha Red
Prontier Vividly Re- d i ,’m B ,’W ! Men illustrated by
produced by Actumt! [/ '5 'u_.,.,;\-!" T t,-/,'./{, Themselves.
Wil A Witomaa RREOR || | 3
Participants and His-i ‘A’I@M ~r R, Entire Indian Vil
tory Makers of the ./fi(@:f‘fi § e ¢‘,r‘;,{“,i&;%?£\" lages of Many Tribes,
Far West. o ,//\ / g\&&&;fi; ) with their Wigwams,
indian Warriors in 27| 5 ::yzx Equaws, Papooses and
Brilliant Native Cos= Ve[ Al Native Ponies, in Pice
tumes. flajor Gorden W. Lillio, i turesque Profusion,
ATR TR IS L TRO MATS OO VAL LI : e : . " 2
Engaged for this Season only: Yroupe of ‘ i SOUTH AMERICAN GAUCHOS, the Most
i -
Greatest of all Arab Equestrians direct § | Expert Boius Throwers in the Worlg,
from Zazan, Central Africa. g in Yhelr Picturesque Costumes,
it e ———
: PERFORMANCES, Rain or Shine, ? Finest Specimen of Buffalo in Exi
AT 2 AND 8 P. M. | Tin e Siirs ey
) i > awnee, ahoma,
eats For 10,000 Peopie. 'i,. WE"RD AN!') STARTL;
bl &
nder Water-Proof Canopies.
U p“?i‘“f'm P X 0 e FREE STREET PARAD|
L) 295 Nl VU Ne%? » .
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IMERICA'S NATIONAL ENTERTAINMENT :
Cantains Featurcs trom the Wild West of America and the World at Large.
n Army of Cowbeys and Frontier Heroes. Thrilling Military Reviews by D etachment
the Arinies of the World., Boomerang Throwers irom Australia, iindoos and Japancse
-——-FIHST APPEARANCE IN AMERICA OF-——
. v
NATIVE FILIPINO WARRIORS, -50 IN NUMBE
Ex-Members of Aguinalde’s Army. Direct Frow the Fhrilippines.
Yirst Tour of United States of PRINCE LUCKS, a Russian Nok:! man, Wi
@ Contingent of Unequalled Imperia. Cossach Troopers.
WAY WHITE BUSTFALO ZVELR EXHISITED. T!e ol of fndiap Traditi
Herd of Royal India Elephants. Drove of
Egyptian Camels. Philippine Island Catl
ONLY WILD WEST
Exhibition Touring America. Consequentl
- The ONLY ONE to visit this Section.
Strange People from Every Clime.
The Orient Transnlanted to Your Ver
Homes. Stupendous Spectacle:
THE MOUNTAIN
MEADOW MASSACRE.
Hanging of a Horse Thief ,
Burning of Trapper Tom’s Cabi
Custer’s Last Fight
Deadwood Stage Robbef
Fresh From One Month’s New York Succés
Over a mile of new, novel and spectacular featur® i
The Great Street Parade
which leaves exhibition grounds at ten o’clock &
' D
Reserved seats on sale day of show; al '
ple’s Drug Store without extra charge-
Thurs Don’t FO!'gCt thC No‘/
¢ Day and Date .