A Little Poet. Out in the garden wee Elsie Was gathering flowers for me; “0, mamma,’ Ne erfed, “hurry, hurry, Here's something I want you to see. { went to the window. Before her A velvet winged butterfly flew, . And the pansies themselves were not brighter Than the beautiful creature in hue. “0, fsn't it pretty?” With ed ge an As she watched Agalust the so cried Elsie, wondering eyes, it soar lazily upward t blue of the skies. “1 know what it is, don't you, mamma?" 0, the wisdom of these ftele things When the soul of a poet is in them, “It's a pansy—a pansy with wings. —VYiek's Magazine - a - - TALES FROM THE SEA. Never Heard Frome. a hundred ships come is lost, but when one to which they I suppose that and go where one reflects on the dangers are exposed he must marvel that so many escape. 1 saw a list of thirty- six missing ships the other day, missing from American, English and French ports, and the fate of each was un- known or guessed at, Say that half of them foundered in mid-ocean, five were run down in collision, five more were wrecked on capes or shoals where all hands perished, and what became of the rest? Say that three of the remain- der were destroyed by fire, and what fate shall we attach to the other live? From the moment a vessel leaves port to begin her voyage she is exposed danger, and though a sailor may ever 80 brave aud hardy, he cannot | shake off the knowledge that he lives on the verge of the grave. There are | gales, and fogs, and collisions, and | fire, and hidden rocks, and powerful | currents; and so I repeat that it isa marvel more sailing craft are not ad- ded to the lonesome list of missing which is recorded year by year. [u the vear 1855, as the British bark Lord Oldham, of which I was second mate, was approaching the Canary Islands, and when about 180 miles dis- | tant, we were caught in the tail end of | a cyclone and badly knocked about. We got out with some slight loss and a great deal of discomfort, and were bearing up again to our course when a | great calamity happened. Half an | hour before midnight, while the bark | was doing her best under a fresh | breeze, a sudden and great shock was felt. Her masts went by the board, and, as 1 reached the deck, a minute after the shock, the hull seemed to split open from stam to stern. I had gone below to get a glass of bitters, leaving the | deck only thirty seconds before th shock came, 1 was knocked down and | confused, but it could not have been | over sixty seconds before 1 regained the | deck. 1 was just in time lO be carried | overboard. 1 went with a lot of raffle from the decks, and amid the fr ightened | cries of the men, and a quarter of an | hour later, when I had ashed myself | to the crosstrees of the mainmast, I could not get an answer to any of wy calls to tte rest of the crew. How It | was that all were lost I never could | make out, There was raflie enough to have floated 500 men, and my watch | were all certainly wide awake at the mo- | ment of the collision. The only expia- i nation that I can give is that they were | somehow caught and crushed. I drifted during the rest ot the night, and was plcked up in the morning by a vessel | bound in. By that time the wreckage | had drifted apart until nothing could be found. Nothing whatever was picked up or cast upon any shore, and | had 1 not been saved the fate of the bark could only have Desn guessed at, What did collide with? The looksuts were on the DOW, and alert, | and the night so clear that a ship could | have been seen a mile away. The chart showed clear waler lor a hundred miles | must have run full tilt upon some vessel which had been dis- masted and bilged in the hurricane, If loaded with timber her decks would have been awash, and she would have been as bad as a rock to collide with. There was only one shock, and the whole bows of the bars were crushed in by it. Three years later, while off the janks of Brazil in a small English | ship called the White Cloud, another | strange thing happened. 1 was first | mate of this ship, and about 10 o'clock ! in the fcrenoon, the weather being very fine and the wind light, I bad all | the men on deck setting up the rigging, | some of which had slackened away. A man aloft suddenly hailed the deck with the information that a large whale was bearing dowu on the ship heal on, We were a merchant vessel, aud the sight of a whale had no inter- | est for us, We went on with our work for three or four minutes, when the wan again hailed me with: ss1f that fellow holds hig course he will be dead on to us, sir. He's a biz fellow, and coming like an i100 steamer.”’ I ran forward to get a look, and the gea was 80 smooth that I had no dit | culty in making out the whale, He | was still a mile away, coming down at | about steamer speed, and holding a course as straight as if somebody aboard of him was steering by coin pass. I was not a bit alarmed, expecting to see him show flukes every Imo- ment, but the captain came on deck and ordered the man at the wheel to break off two or three points, This brought the whale on our port bow, As 1 told you, 1 expected to see him sound every moment. 1t was astonish- ing that he bad not discovered us long pefore. 1 could scarcely believe my eyis os he Leld on, and by and by we had bim alongside. 1 am telling you the truth when I say he actually rubbed us as we 1 euch other, and the odor of him was #e rank that some of the men cried out in disgust, That whale was ninety feet long if he was an inch, and he had a head on him like a brick wall, So far as we could see he was carrying no harpoons and had bad po fresh wound, but he Was moss-grown and barnacled as if he had knocked to be she about, and we i about for a couple of hundred years, The fact of bis holding his own in such a bull-headed way was alarming, and when we were clear of him we fell to congratulating ourselves over the close shave, We were perhaps a mile apart when the whale slewed around, The moment we discovered what he was dong we breeze had now died away until we could not hope to dodge him, and he had not yet fully turned when we drop- ped the yawl from the her alongside to the bow. Two men were ordered to get water and provis- tons into her, and as the whale headed up for us we went off before the light breeze to give him all the room Wwe could. Three or four minutes settled the question of whether he was after the ship or sailing his own course, He headed up for her, sailing faster and faster, and when he was two cables’ length away there was a great white wall of water rolling before him, and his speed was from eighteen to twenty miles an hour. He struck us full on the starboard quarter, and the shock was as if two ships had collided. Planks and ribs gave way before him, and as he recoiled from the blow our ship settled down stern first and was under water within two minutes. Everybody was knocked dow body got up to rush for the yawl | which I came out best by a close shave, I was shot to the surface amid deck raflle. men around me at first, heaved up I eanght sight of the y with at least tw~o men in her whale was stil at hand, lying very quiet, but I aroused and attack us in turn, awl and 1 While doing this { ir v Of g on a *quall came down and hu twenty minutes, and when it I could see nothing of the whale. That afternoon, an boat or hour before sun- She already found can whaler Richard Knox. had our yawl, which sue had 1, and but for my testimony the fate of the ship woul . have forever remained a mys tery. As Lo why the whale atta us was made more clear after my cked Fes ue, im the evening before, and he bul been vgallied’” or annoyed so often during become came for us w the inten- ing the ship to the bottom, 1h Abid ugly. He tion of send A third mystery was the case of the Jane Wilcox, an American brig bound for Ilo Janeiro. 1 was second mate of her when the occurrence took place. We bad bad weather lor of the voyage, bul Lhe b and stanch, and was al minent peril, while enjoying a bit of good weather, we one morning raised a longboal full Indeed, the sail and was There were of her, and they had The rig ev Ind no tine in boat had taken down her nine wen aboard which had been burned two days be- fore, They claimed that all had got become separated in the heavy weather, They were a hard-looking lot, composed of all nationalities, and when we had taken them aboard our captain was by po means satisfied with their story. One of them claimed to be second mate. and as the crew had all got off in two i mate Was not in command of oue, Other strange things came up, and the story of the men did not hang together, and so all hands were ordered Lo Keep an eye on the fellows. We got a good slant of wind and had run down to within fifty or sixty of the coast when the fellows showed their hands. They had been allowed to mingle freely with our crew, but had carefully abstained from any remark to indicate that they bad an evil pur- pose In view, Their boat was large and unwieldy, and we had towed it after us rather than to cast it loose or attempt to hoist it aboard. I was on watch from 8 to 12, and nothing suspicous occurred during the first th.ece hours About 11 o'clock, as I stood near the man at the wheel, I was hailed from the foremast with: “Mr. Merlin, will you please step for- ward and take a look at something we can’t make out?’ 1 afterward recalled that the voice of one of my watch, it was not but 1 I started forward, and had reached the waist of the vessel when Iwo nen seized me, lifted me clear off the deck, and before I could recover from my as- tonishment I was flung overboard head first. It was more by instinct than of my own that I swam for Had the brig not been sailing close hauled, and theretore sailing at a moderate pace, i should not have reached it. It was a close shave, and as I hung to the gun- fusion on the brig. It was mutiny, of course, and I was the first victim, skin up the pa nter. two I pulled myself in, and just then shots from the brig, followed had gone overboard. painter, when it was loosened from above, and I drited astern, The fight continued as long as I was within hear- ing. I was out of it entirely, and could only hope that our crew, who were all good men, would overcowe the mutin- neers in the struggle. After the brig was out of sight I got sail on the boat, and followed her to the best of my judgment, It was just in the gray of morning when I was picked up by a British ship bound into Rio. It wasn't so very mysteirous that we picked up the boat and that Ler crew attempted our capture, but it certainly was queer that from the hour she left me to this day that brig has never been heard of. But for my es- cupe she would have been rated as lost and the insurance paid. As it was, the Insurance company contested pay- ment, und won their case id court, The insurance of that day, at least, did not Jrovide for any such emer gency. paval and merchant ser. Ypew that he meant lo attack, The vice of every power was notified of the CR A YR. ' —————————— | ¢ircumstance, and for two or three venrs every sein was under observation, | but the brig was never overhauled nor suy of her old crew heard of. My idea is that she foundered within a few days with all hands, but others differ, She certainly did not turn pirate, and she was never heard of as a wreck, There was no such British ship as the men sald, nor was any craft burned as they stated, ‘l'iey must have been should be su far out to sea in such a boat. Tuken all in all, it was a strange case, and no one has ever got the right end of the thread to solve it. The World's Houses. Under the shadow of the great if] Tower in Paris there now stands a ser- ies of most interesting structures, in tended, like the tower, to signalize the Revolution, and attract by the people of Paris the ‘Street of and illustrates with great number of houses the history of the habitations of men. In order to imitate the oldest form of habitation which man is known to have built for himself, a little lake has been several dwellings,” like those oecupied races, and such as have else The pre yosed to have will be “lake where. have been erected. historic men who are supj built these earliest dwellings exhibition. Near by, in a rocky ledge, ¢ like those of the troglodytes ont tive ome ng or Everything about these very pri nggests the flint and polish i {t is a curious fact, how it all the races of have ed out of ti . x1 awelld men wo cave-dwelling Se yor i to dwell in caves or in Apulia, a pro civilized pe > stil carved out of the bot of valleys, wh cupied in this oral More attractive is * Ar iIONE 3440. way are the of those | Indo-European Asia before the great parent Aryan race ilt by the ances 1 LAE the raoes - . uses, plain and s 43 t hi to the needs of th An American, and hearing in houses linger long at the earl tion, with its its garden upon the roof The simple and often imposin {f the Egyptians will be as well as Hindoo archit and the Phoenician hou and other ] the first houses « the copied, and the gs mansion of the Mi the dwelling of the the classic ideas of architecturs : pe i 'a y reading abont the of the chil thread UONCes « il FE iil ed, the tations. Then { ks, Romans, LE and timbered Ages, Renais SAnce, w hen 1 Oriental i f the Gre Ses will and even as well as began srevail once more in Eur ihe Russian h yrmonnted by a cupola in the form of an inverted pear, will be a conspic object up to "i 10us n the abian house, with its battlemented tower Another group of structures in to the inhabitants of the civilized por tions of the world, who are tomed to dwellings savages, will American Indians, and the huts ¢ ti square, teresting fnaccus- of wigwams of the f the TR seeing be the ages of Africa Following these will be the he the Aztecs of Mexico, and the Incas of Pern It is not probable, however, that the directors of the Exhibition will attempt to duplicate the great h of the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico and Arizogs. These immense struct ares were built to ace yodnts en- tire population of a « and some times contained six hundred apart ments. in which three thousand or four thousand people lived By no means all of the varieties of dwellings erecte d on this Street of Hab- itations have been mentioned hers The list wonld be too long. In order to preserve as much as pos- sible the similitude of the varions f stises Of OLSCH 3 nm thie YW, which they are built, cupied, as far as the races to whom they belong. Thus, the Egyptian house will be occupied by modern Egyptians, in copied from lately discovered antiqui- ties in Egypt. Japanese and Chinese will the houses of their ceuntries, they will be oc- occupy and will duets which they make at home. the Indian wigwam will be an Indian family from Canadas. ——— True and False Missions About a quarter of a century ago Methodist clergyman, who, being dis- All of his leisure time he gave to the of a book on geometry. He was so kind and devout a man, that his uneonscions influence on his yupils was as wholesome as the sun ld pure air upon young plants. Every one of them has been a nobler man or woman for his teaching. Yet this teaching he looked upon as slay; it was the nneconstrained effort of is nature. His real work in the world, he thought, was the discovery of unknown laws and methods in mathe- matios, But when he was dead, the huge rolls of manuseript which he left behind him were pronounced by mathematicinus to be faulty, and of no value. There is nothing in which men are so readily mistaken as in their own true work A life. That which costs them labor and effort, they are apt to value most highly; but that whioh is most likely to last in the world is the work which exp their secret nature and feeling; which came from their minds as naturally as the breath from their bodies, Haydon, the artist, paint with in- 1 | finite care and pain many gigantic his- torical pieces which are now almost for gotten, while he is known best to pos tority by a hasty sketch thrown off for his own amusement. Von Kroeble was the author of many yoaderous tomes on metaphysics, but ie is remembered only as the writer of | a little song full of love and pathos, yv/hieh is sung in every nursery in Ger |1aany. The same discouraging truth meets ns in every-day life. The conscienti onus young man who measures every hout of the day, and fills it with a duty, and who regulates every word and ac- { tion by rigid laws, is apt to find that | while the outward life is perfect, some | unexpected taint suddenly shows itself in his heart. i He 1s priggish, irritable, vain, or ma licious, and he finds, to his astonish ment, that it is these hidden faults that | impress his companions, rather his faithful observance of duty. is forced action; the first true expression of his nature. hel has been busy in seeing That the ramparts are secure, and the sentinels on guard on the outer wills of the neglected owner of the fortress has proved traitor, pulled down the flag, yielded to the enemy. “What am I to do, or girl will probably ask to strive to do good work, perfect life in the world?” The wise Asiatic king answered the stion i i i i i The | last is the and then?" some boy “Am I not to live or i 1 ages ith all diligence; sues of life.” That vvork will be most effective and enduring into which vitality. That a AZo. <h { f it are the W for out of 1t are the yon own word and action only n of yi ir own yundation be . heal and no world with its waters would YOu -——- Home Wage-Earners. There under this he ading in a of Harper's Bazar by O. MM. E For want of x all room but among other » gays: 1 cat lack in won ives is want of training. T le of Were some very apt re marks recent numl cannot Space Wi ari Le gr tie of a great many ding especially true of towns « superiati ight up 3 When » earn they kno #0 ull time con nota BOW t . embroide y paint a few stiff flowers or impossible landscapes What « ] ; the emergency of the 86 avails for earning 8 living Jenishing their small wardrol i have been trained to nothin Ih married women in New Bagiar least out-number the married ones Massachusetts alone there are seventy than men, majority ort them- selves big cities their them and many of them are hampe red by some home tie and the questio . what can a woman do at her « hstone? thousand more and 11 1s safe to 3 ot five is ¥ “1 CAREY JURiaN mans If these go 1ntO " unfitness 3 against n is I yon heart It may be women in « this problem A poor clergyn w found her self with four boys under thirteen years of age to support In desperation « day she told the boys to gather train arbutus which grew little rs in ne profusion o1 i these Mavy- . fow farm 1:0} hight he Tr flowe bur leaves and sent two of i he express train stopped for water to see if they co The first they return od with a dollar, and day after day with the changes made in the flowers as t BORSON progressed they carried ther bloss One day a want you bri 1 sell them. day ne ms and realized quite a 1 't swoel sum gentleman said why don After this no ay passed without the presence at the station of the boys with iny birch bark cups filled with raspberries, blackber ries or blueberries i tAnother woman who had been her | brothers house-keeper found herself at | his death without means of support | She had a large conservatory in connec. | tion with her home and she determined |to sell flowers to the students in neighboring college. She did a good | business and increased it by advertis- ing to send cut flowers by express. The flower woman is very happy with her work and is laying by something for a rainy day. vour flowers: ¥ =1:1 } & ng wild berries } 4 i interested in the cultivation of fruit, | and among them are some of the most | successful orchardist in California. 1t is often asserted that women succeed better at their work than men. A New Jersey mother sent two boys to college and a New York state woman made a clear profit of 1600 dollars one season by raspberry culture. Some daughters of a clergyman in New Hampshire bought a small photographic outfit and took views o the beautiful White Mountain scenery and sold them to the summer visitors and so made enough money to finish their educations. A Pennsylvania woman thought she might be able to realize something from the birch bark which was abundant near her home. She made lovely little baskets filled with ferns and wild mosses and they were pronounced lovely for table decoration, and sold rapidly. She took orders for filling vases and Wardean cases for certain rich people who liked unique decorations. An old lady in reduced circumstances sold raspberry shrub and elderberry wine of her own making, and obtained a sum sufficient to enable her to en- large her methods and now she is kept very busy. These instances only illustrate the sanibilities within grasp when a woman an intelligent eye to see, tact to avail herself of the resources fate be- stows and energy to persevere. But success in every case was due to scru- pulous care to do the thing attempted in the very best manner. Ho non Don't tempt one to question your ve- racity. FASHION NOTES, Out-side garments and hats offer us the most charming novelties “What shall we wear for wraps?’ We reply that the preity models pach we publish in this number will give an exact idea. First is the pelerine, under whatever form it presents itself, times it is the form so well sleeves and fitted to the back. times it is the pelerine gathered Bome- at the with folds—again it is the sleeve which we have spoken detached from the back which takes the form redingote and falls back again as dervish sleeve with long tobs in front. In our opinion all these dimensions, and all colors which have become the commonest things world, For.an elderly person the garment is traveling glazed tafli are very pretty. Our first illustration is 8 combin ation of blue cloth and olive green cashmere, this green is a little dusty, little dim, like the le of the oli The skirt is of silk with black cheni tulle, a kind of blouse, 1s the back, the fronts are gathered and held in place by an “‘ancient * buckle. The is opened the entire length, in order to show a large panne i of the skirt, sleeves of gath- ered on the and from top to bottom on the upper side, to w an under sleeve of milk h tulle. This is quite new ri, also for se blo been i“ WYes COver- ed The blouse cashmere, lers } vil BIOL open and suit n¢ HORSE NOTES. ~The BMutual | sports will be held at the University | Grounds. Pat. Killen 1s getting tired of his | journalistic work, and now contems | plates a tnip to Califorma. —W. B. McDonald has two Jewet! Farm horses in his stable that promise | to enter the 2.680 list this year, They | are Dimice, by Rochester, and Harry D., by Coronet, — Count Valensin recently lost thx filly Lottie Simmons, by Shmmons, oul of Lottie Thorne, by Mambring Patchen, that be purchased at Abdal- lah Park in March. —E. C. Montague, Hansen, Neb, | has purchased from Dr. Prentice, Fair. | field, Neb,, the chestnut horse Payne | Killer, foaled 1883, by John ¥. Payne, | dam Dixie, by Major Grant, ! ~The bay gelding Weaver Boy, 2.29%, by Fortune out of Fanny Greely, dam of Leon, 2.29}, has been sold by | A. Merrill, Danvers, Mass, to H. C. | Sherburn, Paris, France, —D. Muckle, Cleveland, O., has sold | to Dr 8, E. McCully, Toronto, Can,, | a brown flly, foaled 1886, by Pilot | Wilkes, dam Idlewild, 1} Nugget, | 2.264; 2d dam Zoe F., by Blue Bull. —The 53-year-old bay mare Emaline, | by Electioneer, out of Emma Robson, | daughter of Woodburn and {lady Bell, by Williamson's Belmont, made a re ord of 2.27}, at Sacramento, Cal., a few days ago. iw ( Joe Brown won the 2.20 class race | at White Plains on Thursday 20th, Best time, 2.31%. class was won by Kentuck and the best heat was 2.33]. —Jim Guest, the Kentucky | has been in tough luck t he seriously contemplates gi turf and joining the church—al £0 the story goes, “Dod” Irwin, Myers, Wash Woodruff, Johnny Smith and S. A. Tanner each has a stable of trotters and are kept quite busy at Jelimont Charles dress, sleeves are of se of Bengal i the waist and | nel 1 We have spoken of out-side garments n the commencement of this letter, but we have not enumerated them. Thera is the long mantle like the pelisse, gote that may be le very rich simple according to its 1 th ih the redin made i Or very sak The ol well kne This which is u m 1 dingote of light brocade, the red ith small bis redingote 1s Classic and wr wn Or grey, Ww +1 es Jes bay sinuias £3, WH i 1 back are panne are of brocade, full to the « Ibows, in order by a lace sleeve, closed at the wrist, As for mantles Our ih diversity of shape, better than any desc It may be said tha velvet, lace, besutifu and Al abundance entire expense sec. the elegance ns present their iptic black embroideries will make with well faci broad brims, shading the The erowns are very low, Tox ps ribbon or flowers arranged almost flat, humming birds and butterflies mix their brilliant colors with ribbons and flowers. of as well as rice straws, The Tonkinoise shape is one of the original creations of the season. Many ed ganze, green or delicate pink with a The trimming is often composed of butterflies, orchid, and Pekines, rib- light surah, covered with black tulle. Capotes are of lace straw or “Tosca” tulle with large gold meshes. A grit novelty is a hat, the top of is covered with violet leaves, in the green foliage. -_— a The meeting at Terra Haute will begin on Tuesday next, June 11th. —Mulatto, 2.22, has been added to John Splan’s string. Spokane is undergoing a careful preparation for the American Derby. RB. 8, Strader, of Versailles, Ky., has sent out a nicely arranged cata- logue. ~It 18 said tbat the b. g. Royal Bounce has been sold to go to a foreign country. — Proctor Knott seems to have lost his speed. — William Trimble was in good luck when be got the first horse foal by Star Duroc. ~The Dayton (O. has been declared o continuous rains, ~The 5-yearold Aberdeen stallion Malate, 2.22, das been added to Splan’s spring meeting because of the —1Lady Langtry, a chestnut mare LY Post's Hambletonian, dam by Abdal- lah, Jr., dropped y foal to Star Duroc, record 2.25%, a Elk Farm, Maryland, on the 29th uit. The announces that the ra 1880, of twenty days, wil July 4, and cont | each Tuesday, thereafter until Woodlan horse Earl ( Hankey, foaled dam Curiosity, Clifden 11 is a hand HADGE, a in ane ul * r freed t iL DLOCK “ Associall g SEAsol Monmouth Park in COMIDEnce o July 6 nue atid alia 1111 oe : x Thursday anc Satu 3 August 14. ds imported iarge, w it} iva good bone and —Mr. George Dearborn presented 118 Belmont Driving Club with a handsoms piano on Wednesday May 29 Dan- | jel Strouse went over the keys lightly. and after playlng several solos wound up with the popular air Junetheith, | with both bands strong. The trainers at Point breeze are quite busy. The track is in good shape, and the horses are doing well. The association is composed of young. ac- tive and liberal genliemen. John McCorkell will do the Lonors of the ciub-house for the ensuing year. OG Fa Contracts have been made for the new race track pear the exposition grounds at Kansas City, Mo., and 1t will be but fifteen minules ride by cable cars from the centre of the city. it 1s the intention of Budd Doble not to start his horses in public until the Detroit meetling. He has two sist him in giving the horses thelr re peats. Furor. brother, to Fuge, 2.184, died at W. B. Hayne’s s.ables, Jacke | son, Mich., on May 15. He was bred by H. C. McDowell, and was ow ned Ly | Dewey & Stewart, of Owosso, Mich, —The nominations for the Clay stakes to be trotted at Albany on Wed- | nesday June 19 inclusive Violin, King Bird, Gillig, Aline, Electric, Alice, | Gretna, Farmer Boy, Kentucky | Blanche and Suisun. — The 5-year-old bay horse MacCal- lummore, by Robert Met regor out of | Elsie, daughter of Mcleod, and Emma | Wells, by Magnolia, was accidentally | poisoned at the Peoria Dell Farm, To- | peka, Kan. ~The popular and generous Presi- | dept of the Detroit Driving Club, D. | J. Campau, has decided to open the | gates of the Hamptrack Course and let | the public in free on the first day of the | summer blue-ribbon meeting. This | should be highly appreciated by the | good peoplp of Detroit, and is a good | example for other associations to tol- | low, 1 ~The Coney Island Jockey Clubs have adopted the following rule, which the clubs running under the general rules will no doubt also enforce: “Ifa horse be disqualified on account of in- correct weight, the decision shall not apply to bets, provided the weight pub- lished in the programine or corrected on the notice board was " —Atl Sacramento, Cal, on May 18, the 5-year-old mare Emaline, by Elec- tioneer, out of thoro hbred Emma Robson, by Woodburn (by Lexington, dam Heads I Say, by imp. Glencoe), won her maiden race in straight heats, taking a record of 2 274. Messrs. Henschell and Hobbs, of Baltimore, who purchased Phil Thomp- at the Fasig sale, have the! stable by 2.26. Mary Anderson by Lightwood, dam by Tom got her record last year.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers