What Mether Says. Now, here's a hand-glass : let me try 11 1 can this thine see Just one of all those funny thing4 My mother sees in me, She says my eyes are violets And what sho says is true Liat I think they are just two eyes; Don’t they look so to you? She says my lips are cherry red, And makes b'ieve take a bite; They never look like that 10 me-— Bit mother's always right. She says each cheek is like a rose: And this I surely Know, I never would believe it ~but What mother says is so, She says my teeth are shining pearls; Now, that's $0 Very queer : 1f some folks said it why, 1'd think— But then, ‘twas mother dear. i only see alittle girl, With hair that's rather wild, Who has two eyes, a nose, and mouth, Like any other child. Care ARGUL. BROTHER FRAN CIS. No sane man, I suppose, ever carried an epis- tolary flirtation on to an actual proposal ol mar riage without seeing the object, or, except what her pen has told him, without knowing some- thing about her. ~Sententious Magnzine Writer. So much for the conclusions of self | Man has done that thing. I Don't I? 1 think conceit. kuow a ease in point. 1 do, forasmueh as I myself was its dominating idiot. I, age 31; name, Francis Howland; usually known as Brother Francis—not of ecclesiastic brotherhood—heaven forbid! I gotthe | sobriquet from = trick my sisters there are eight of them, four older and fonr vounger than I—a trick the girls had of always designating me with that misleading prefix. 1 was known far and wide. Would be Pe nitents to me thus witty people use d tosend to confess, and strang- ers, on being introduced, took to ad- dressing me as ‘Your and | that before I was out of gy teens, J, | nd wasn't it galling? I love d the girls, i bough, the whole eight, Martha | the oldest, who had married and gone | the next town to live before 1 entered | those teens, and Catherine, had taken off with her--she was next to | her in nge—then Harriett, the sensible | one, who, after our m ther's death, had i taken her place as head of the house. Eliza. number three, is afrisky maiden, two vears older than I. She talks ever- lastingly, and never saysanything worth hearing, only I like the rattle of her | tongue. Then the little ones Florence, | Mand. Blanche and Edith Ifanything could have reconciled me to my hated . prefix it was hearing them use it. (How | they used to tousle me around, and run | races over me, and make the business of ! existence a perpetual scramble for me. Edith was only five years old when my | twenty-first birthday came and I started | for the west to 8 ek my fortune. i And now I pass over nine years. It | uld be idle to tell of t struggles and hardships, the disappoi of nent it that after various I took np govern Colorado, a corner of whieh, was fixed upon | magnates for a great and resto! eo! I was ¢ 1 declare I've been living in night ever since. I wrote directly home, telling good fortune, and I built a house furnished it, and laid out my grom and stocked them with a magnific which accorded with my means, here was my grand stumbling am a quiet, reserved man never, whatever 3 been mixed up in, could identify my with the spirit of my surroundings was alone, always alone. 1 I Adam's predicament if an did, but however deep a sl 4 me, withdrawal rib diminished my either side. Up to the day when I was 30 old. and rich, my whole time hands, I had been too busy to matter much thought. Bat n skeleton in my closet made up all my domestic socie ty. it wasn't sociable, Is it any wonder that I, like 3 another victim of uncongenial fireside companionship, was mueh from home? Not that 1 went abroad insearch of per- sons with whom to exchange ideas. I -athe~ think sas a tolerably wet blan- 3 Wel a dropped in sInong those in- clined to that recreation. Une day, sanntering into the railway station, i pick d up a scrap of newspaper some- soddy had tossed by, and in my lazy, aimless supersbundance of leisure began to run through it. Eureka! Here was the message I had waited for! Therecon I read that some body—oh, the deliciousness of that sug- gestion !—some man, another as yet full ribbed Adam like myself, no doubt solicited the correspondence of the wo- man ‘“whose hand the fates had knotted | into his.” Upon that hint I spake, or rather I wrote. I don’t think a forcing pump could have got the words off my tongue though the very woman whom of all the | world I would have chosen nad stood | there with her ear open to receive them. | But conld not 1, trusting the “divinity which shapes our ends,” so put forth my hand with faith, with that uncon- querable force of will which should summon out of the unknown that com- pletion of my being which wy soul eraved? I went home, dashed my ap- wal on paper snd hurried it off to that neficent little jour=a! by the eacliost mail. : Could I wait for the time when & answer was possible? It was no easy task, but I managed to do it—and what? Had my earnestness multiplied its de- mands? Had the editor secretly set me off as an inhabitant of Utah-—one in ex- cellent standing, too? Fifty-seven letters the po st handed out to me in answer to my first call. I carried them home with aquaking heart, Could they all beaddressed tome? Yes, every one, and in every one the writer ex- pressed a belief that she had found her other self in me, were varionsly written—pah! I ean't bear to think of them. Before I'd read the instalment half through the ce clerk came rushing to ing doos with another, nn My Reverence, a ven . ' 1 whom sie | ; we SUCCESSES those mor Sag Suflice downs, ruling center, alter, raiir chang "1 « ri ani Arabian nx block. Indeed, society I may have | “i wv bse ght fall of a eep mi n never the i il Years on my the this give Iw There had a second box was bursting with them. More than a hundred made up this last batch —all tothe same tune! Heavens! I lifted up my voice and wept. But the end was not yet. They came pouring in day snd night. Inless than forty: eight hours I enough to stuff four ms t could I do other tiresses, toss what I did? I went out and made a bonfire of the whole. 1 had a glimpse of scores of photographs and various little tokens like pointed heartsand dif. forent cabalistic signs as they went off in smoke, but the fragrance was hateful to my nostrils. It was plain I was on the wrong track. And still they came. For three weeks I stood the target for those missiles. I neve ranswered or really read one. They all went in the Chinese mail to their ancestors, and I was at peace. Then Liere was a lull No letters for a week. At the end of that time there eame one, dainty, per- fumed, most artistic looking little mes- genger, which my inner consciousness at once announced us the foot for the glass slipper; the dreamy, mawkish simpleton that I was! I swallowed the bait, hook, line, fisherman, all. And forthwith there began a correspondence that might have melted a pathway to the North Pole. I told the lady all about myself, except the matter of my worldly condition. That, I felt, wastan- worthy the attention of this professedly unnworldly being. We exchanged photographs. Did not that face which I used to carry in my vest pocket every odd minute realize my very ideal It WHE very blonde, very thin, LOO markably thin lips. The head tip slightly back. In all these tion] it indicated a character exactly my op- posite. a sharper tongue. Thu ~ “mark (in me) the perfect man. prove our entire faith in each decided not to ir until the bridal Aay, hich was to be in about ti i ment. and I meeting Burli It wa pledge news of my rit wed ~ it see our future spouses ngage. diana emed tom + whole six in mm) provide for them irregular correspondence her! How could We up an Harriett she care for the little v of us had been ove i of our but his death had taken away of the house. I sent Harriet Kept with bless ones? f iON never proj 11d it if she needed more, todraw on : and, wehow, notin this act perhaps, but near to the sympathies and felt ten fold it before ned fter sv to shat SO in getting so affections of old times, more al since I became ri actually more s this episode it was 3 myself ont from all materia surround- y and sit down to the 1 of into which he wav . * 108 BO € 1 * ngs NSILNORS dreaming this woman was to ¢ me The next lette pondering the privilege of ‘Pear Frank.” had the donkey in one had ever yet since 1 had , presumed to address arity Asi i estates, I hs nality {ere me with ew 1 i Vv ial pers } ih aN was inevitatl le 3 learn to : we seventeenth What could agreed on Burlington station, and the ca ff under nth ‘on ti Whe w! it meam? We'd § . way Sh sw the th. s ignore it ten 1 na ft was n¢ Straggle to ignoble eting ge ry 1 BOYEnD stood agha I might, a cowardly, dread at the to face, this pen and dread I had all along been LOUS Was lying dormant in my soul, pressed it self to the forefront and overshadows d “Dear Rrank i‘ prospect OF Int 2 Axd f ink idol of in % CONnSC ther sentiment. Only one little week. Oh, for old hones «Brother Francis!” Hark; was I in my ears. Girl's voices, m iitit in familiar wel } a mirage’ Un "Twas they! t “Brother Fran cial” The stone walls of my bh voenl speech and ech ed, words into six different Keys y one straight off from Bn Ie al fle ah and blood larynx and tongue and pressed on by a great, loving heart that thr sbbed behind it. It was they! . My very pen loiters for ome ecstatic moment to live over again that joyful surprise. The little gurls grown into every « & heartsome the dreaming? 1t was singing udin is, Was this An optical girls! Fran- i pOMAnE : my Fray x ’ ie Ves i r anse took to the fearing evel bright ribbons, or rustle crisp, fresh to those? Such bachelor em- ping fect! Was ever old from hand to hand to be exalted over and admired as I was? were roomy enough to hold them all, Not a doubt had ever entered any one of their innocent heads astomy wanting them and needing them. The question was, how ever had I managed to live without them. up a dinner such as I never hoped eould grace my table before the arrival of its mistress—(oh!) Croquet seis, lawn ten. nis fixings, side saddles and saddle horses—six—six very beautifully far nished chambers, parlor attractions without stint or eount-—everything young ladyism could erave were attheir disposal before sunset. Por the next six days we held un broken festival in honor of our reunion. Oh, but there was a lump of léad at my heart. Conld I tell them? What would sensible Harriet say. How Eliza would chatter over the romance of Brother Francis! And the little ones! Had I a right to show myself, I whom they so honored and looked upto, as the ridienlous fossil [ was—spooning over a bundle of old letters, the writer of which I had never set eyes on? Would I re joioe to see one of therm laying the role she'd played? Noa ion times no! Those simple, fresh hearted girls, Only to imagine that it could be in the heart of woman to do it, would have brought the blush to every one of their young faces. Only one day more. I locked myself in my chamber to re-read my Lizzie's last letter. “Signed,” it said, “for Ahan the last time, Lizzie Kent,” Just now, I own the toneh of the thing was repug- nant to me. But the event it i. was too near for me to pause. Why, here was something 1 had overlooked, After that signature, on the next page. scrawled hastily, it seemed, evidently an after thought, this: “Look for me, dear Frank am stop that nonsense if I live), on the train which resnches there at 4 o'clock p.m. IfI am belated, I will telegraph from Kansas City.” No dispatch hid come. Of course the trains were on time, hours. Well, the emergéncy mus of but to take Harriet into my confi- dence. Harriet is not a person given to exclamation points, hated to lower myself, as I knew I must, in her eyes by the relation. If it was & fach that the advent of the girls had swept my | mind clear of the befogged sentimental ism which had reigned there in my | loneliness, it was equally a fact that this sister had not in her the capacity to be- | lieve that any man in his senses would | be guilty of the follies with which I had been entertaining myself for the last | twelve months. And how good he was! She listened | patiently, studying my face, meantime, | with something of the look with which | & pagan might have gazed down on the remains of his shattered idol There | | were sorrow, pity and deep solicitude in it. But she uttered no ungracicus coms | ment. Of course she had set me down as but mindful of the trite maxim for “humor the pati nt.’ Fats me on she was 1 CH Insane, #1 “H, 1 1 3 > 1 rily ready she was tO aavVise Vv (ine WAY LIONS, have the that this Currency A h i i. She and I play such a made of Arious, Te Bef ing the he reception « [ groaned 1 f a princess v Elza plans i think she hs Harriet And the hours Hall past We in tls pl m d sisters moving as either side, , raliway gate was at th farthes } oad it winding, 2igz neasuring a fall ] The moving sped by! 14 the it mints re } fn HUOARIGE Of half hour's respit The gate nn Misw i wil 10 B58 LRG wi rtir rsi stopped the showiest bean in addy, 8 stranger Howland! Mr. Howland! effusively, taking off his w, ] ¥ 1 s started oll if AD i bowing iow el to light a ince you to lady by the Over again, My wife, was shiny enon b “Let me Inird Howard,” taking the yr the Has Mrs hand alr d doing “My wife, Mr vonng ladies! Half an sro Miss Lizzie Kent. Now! now!" —he swelled “Mrs. Frank Howard!” “Hurrah!” I fairly shouted. 1 be praised!” I heard ejaculated from the lips of our good Harriet, My whole being echoed the thanks- giving. It scems she had been holding yanacles ready for me or both of us a paper that Howard had thrown away that I had picked up. He had then got through the mountainous ex- serienee that marked my initiatory work. My Lizzie had been corresponding with him for three weeks, and she took me up and kept me along, because, you know, if anything should happen to des- | poil her of the first, it would be well to | how Howland ur no 1p again fof Jom ig have a second in the house to fill the | | gap. That “Dear Frank” letter was in- | tended for him. In the hurry of get-! ting it off she mixed up our names. Harriet found that out somehow, I'm a free man and there aren't in all the forty-swo states six prettier, nicer | girls than are my sisters, and there isn’t | | prouder, happier old bachelor than is | their brother Francis. —A. T. Perry, in | | Home Journal, : —-——— One Thousand Ye What will the man of the Twenty- ninth century—that ia to say, just 1,000 years bence—be like? In what he will differ from ourselves? Will be be stronger or weaker, taller or shorter, more intellectual or less clever? Will his life be long or less? Will he de- velop new powers and facilities, or will lie, on the other hand, lose the use of and consequently by slow degrees cease to certain organs and senses? o sum the whole matter up in a very few words, the future man (and woman) will be very much indeed like the present man (or woman), FProb- ably shightly taller and more robust, certainly more healthy and consequently longer lived, having all the same or- gans and senses, only slightly if at all all modified—muoh more learned and versed in arts and sciences, but to all intents and purposes so much like our- solves that if one of the I’ an Englishman of the Nineteenth century our man of the future could ars Hence. neither would excite surprise in most) for remark from the other. TT Alabama reports an ‘‘immense"’ corn crop in might. A vcs es. ITA THE HOME PHYSICIAN. Standing Straight. If man was jonde in the image of God it should be bis proud resolve to retain as much ak possible his likeness to that original. The wide departures from that standard which we see everywhere about us, sare either our own tault or else our ancestral inheritence. Every one who does not inherit hip digease, eurvature of the spine, rickets or some other disease or deformity, has either a or snother to blame or other Seven. the result of laziness, temperament, or ignorance, or perhaps sll three combin- The other eighth, we exclude in- herited erookedness, is that kind seen among students or literary wople, who are so absorbed in their work, sitting so into lounging, easy attitudes which become habitual, producing the stooping fignre and rounded shoulders 80 often seen in the sedentary. Now the ignorant people; who no give were made in the image of their Maker, and who, if they did, would not know enough to value it. As to the lazy, it crooked or straight of the Creation—they are not produo 8, but generally feeders I have great respect for the croc back of the hard-working old farmer or laborer in any sphere of manuel er ployment, man but er for the be he i €l 1 1 Ke Or Woman; erooked 1 mitiionaire or whatev nn, He JratH r 54 kinds of in formity, f man Or ned, {or proj : ndly proportioned that declaration, of } Maker, becom defaced by carciess his arts ness 10 ly endows of form ait. argue natural hebetude, ignor preoccupation, pro- For inheritance and orance there is ample excuse, for the HEL Crooked ness $TLES -—-—— Historical Anecdotes of the Table. nd of the yf the mu Bth century bel wi brilliant ' led the sue of re fe disci rates, retreat thousand he historian he border of { the Blac inch valuable info untry He in er oO y oon Lovin IETS f the Dan noo keep them which ren 1H ag ecable, It be that of % jers which ennses head 1% the banks of the diers ate, for the firs of 1d were as but this fi The palm tree, from i ¥ % ARE, Ww 1IgTis, 4 4 + dime the palm tree ar 3 itn ds Hetonsne “5 wil cans ense headache, which the pith is The wealth of Ass and sueh its productiveness that when it held by y for four months Asia fur- 1 months 4 ROOTS ithers syria Was very great wae was the provisions d the arm of the year while meshed provisions for Thus Assyria al ; rodueted one third of the entire production of Asia- Babylon gave in wheat two per cent for one and sometimes three; it was Al so with honey, an article of exportation This country also sesame. The citron is a native of Assy ris and mellons there have always been excellent, Melons coming from Mossul where Nineveh was formerly situated, relates Pietre della Valle, were sent down the Tigris not in ordinary boats but upon rafts of scantling, the bottom being not of wood. It consisted of goat skin air bottles which were artistically united in the form of a square in a very ingen- jous manner. the rest 114 produces the oil of lifted over the shallows. Ducks Killed by Lightning. A strange sight was witnessed here a few days ago during a severe thander storm. When the storm was al its n enormously large flock of ducks was seen coming from the North, It was undoubtedly the largest flock ever seen in this section of the State. The sky was “lack with the birds and the number 4 variously estimated at from 500,000 to 1,000,000. They were terror stricken and flew along wildly, making a great noise. Instead of flying high they skurried along close to the ground and the Happing of their wings provoked a tumult that could be plainly heard above the roar of the thunder. Suddenly there came a vivid flash of lightning, followed by a terrific of thunder.—At the first flash hundreds of the birds fell crying to the ground, The storm began ta grow in intensity and the ducks becams more terrified each moment, There came another flash more vivid than its pre- d thousands of the fowls Two more EN Lr FASHION NOTES. Our city st deserted. true, business was never more prosper- ous, and not one business man the less isseen on our erowded streets, train or cart is missang from the ands that daily carry from os in 3 ninne not tho i Hs # de ti the other of our island the products of our industries But our ladies have gone to the t‘shore,” the “Bprings,” the “mont sing,” to rest, to win from “mother na- ture’ health strength, It is very necessary that they take with them ele gant and becoming toilettes. The tailor costumes with which our dressmakers are so successful are worn exclusively. For travel promenades and for carriage wear they are dark in color, for other purposes they are white, light grey or in tennis flannel. All or almost all have the skirt round and straight. Sometimes it is made of two fabrics one light and the other dark, one of the skirts being open upon the other. ‘ and or & cuirase closed on the buttoned in the rout or shoulder and under the left arm. Bome do not likethe severity of the tailor costume and make init some little modification, Instead of the vest or drape the corsage wi flannel and “faille” Or th cuirasse, th h serge r ul the waist ribbon, ¢ n being If w of the tr we shall be RlOOVEes the bias, ol | de pis nan All etrical figures BEIT Was ywa of black ve woven trimmed { vet ribbon | corsage was plaited, a yoke at the neck {and the laita held at the | black velvet closed | The full black velvet ¥ith the YT A833 : . will certainly und r ¢ waist b with ¢ with a 13 r I i“ it al 3608 foulard dre BROS, their costume which trunks tri in rotdy are meshes and shar of guapure tru re. ths top and bo 1 the wrisls wens of or Bos BT an Datiste trim. rather = Diack ac ti} + i £ vO TROs 118 ¥¢ dresses One dress was of black tulle, another white veiling trimmed with {the prettiest of the pretty. What mo H Flraw re * ¢ with a « iff in white wool 4 i st to Women. The MTD Wn only wno could really hie Tr the charming writes n Sylva 3 fiw $11 ¥ ner sad Pu on uroes y ss nf Ratinani dueen ol Roumania, res wou under the nas In perso: tive, having nose, deeply a disfiguring is a wonderful linguist, mg her ideas preferably in the purest Parisian Freneh. She is at present engage d in translating into Fneligh and German a versified collec tion of natural Roumanian songs. She appears to possess a genius for lan- guages, and an instinctive perception of the shades of meaning in different | tongues. She works as systematically as & woman who is obliged to earn her bread, and her writings savor but little of dilettanteism. The “Queen of Hearts,” as the fair | Margherita of Italy is called by her | | adorning subjects, has developed quite | | a talent for designing. A lamp of high | and great artistic value was recentiy male Jor her from her own designs. 1t is of rich ruby-tinted erystal of a pure Greek shape, and the globe is covered with an intricate network of fretted gold, representing a trellis of olive jeaves. The base of bronze gilt con- sists of two doves, the symbols of peace. The Italian Queen has also revived the long forgotten art of making Burano lace. It was diffieunlt to find any one who could teach the stitches, but finally an old woman was discovered who had made it in her younger days, and she was engaged to instruct a of younger artisans. The financial re- sults have been very gratifying, as the beautiful fabric is much sought after by tourists, The empress of Germany has an army of seamstresses, but it is her delight to reside over and assist in the mapn- acture of her children's garments. She is a person of great taste, and generally jocks her own and her children’s bats to pieces and makes them over, after re- ceiving them from a renowned French modiste. She is also an adept in fine embroidery in both white and colors, and is as industrious os many & Woman is also an Sol eves SOA ol he i A I I 3551 AEA, It ia a sign that & woman jis getting old when sne stops crying fin setting and b gins to think. ibm. S— HORSE NOTES. 9 “ | -Jucy, pacing record 14, has had three foals since going to California. | we A great internationg! | meeting will be held at Paris-Videe | nes. France, on September 9. at wh | , at w hich 56,0001, will be hung up in purses, tin trotiin 1 L — Isaac Murphy is riding the Dwyer | Bros, horses in such winning form at aratoga that he will probably be en | gaged by the Brooklyn stable next sea- i 801. i: ~A, A, Bonner was asked if he thought the 2.08% of Maud 5, would be i beaten, **1 have pot,” was the reply | "80 long asthe life of my father | spared. After that I do not care how Inany horses trot below 2.08,” ~The Belle Hamlin-Harry Wilkes £10,000 match race has a still more tshy odor now that it is a thing of the past. Harry Wilkes appeared to have no | speed, and It is said that he has done 10 fast work in his training. — I'he free-for-all pacing race | Cleveland recently will go on record as |one of the greatest races ever paced 1 bere were five starters and it tood six { heats to decide it. Time-—2.1 124, 2.154, 2.19, 2.204. i% at 7 12 9, 41 a | food 1h E. Campbell, owner of the colt Protection, winser of the Junior Cham pion stakes, 1s a colored Lrainer employ of J. E. Baldwin. purchased the colt at sale as a yearling in $5 sant, oC Lu Lhe Campbel’ the Elmendorf Mav JRE™ May, 18X57, for —The fo Falr October B to rirt rth annual I will be Leld at Shs ~lal tivier iit SEF * Liat there was ame, Marshall H., $ i 1 : Mare, 3 194, wi pro- and the dam f Moro oo, 2.90, died recentiy att 2iy’s farm, near Clyde, XN, Y. was foaled in 1865, and was got aniel Webs er, Macduff —Daisy F.. juff, suslained vie brilliant reputation which she made the West this spring, by winning the Spinaway stakes at Moom : from a good leld, * uced William } “ ¥ ¥ ov a 5 — The Saratoga Association has ered even greater loss revenue weount of the storms, u Monmouth Park. mablic will not weather, while tend, rad ox sh ~Dr. F. E. Corrigan, of the Quin- Stud, Louisville, Ky., pur- R.A Clelland. of West ort. Ky., the bay stallion V foaled 87 by Virgil—Reagan, lexing- Dr, Corrigan will place Lim in daro Stud with Alarm. in iate rain ATO has hased of Vv if bs by Von. ¥ {3 © LL sit A Pointer, record 2153, was Tom Hal, dam by dweep- takes. Rumor has it that he can go in 12. He is owned by Captain Pointer, { Tennessee, and was bred b Major ampbell Brown, the well-gEpown stock farm king. Hal Pointer is a brother to Brown Hal. -— Hal sired by y —When Guy stopped he watch In 03 he wore only 6i-ounce shoe for- ward. Millard Sanders says at in the Mr. W. J. Gordon told iim the S-ovnee toe weights 3 OINnea t morning to laxe off 11 he was acl i that this was the reason of Lis play- the song and dance act while scor- 4 y fn WERATITE 15% iO Wearing, New York Jockey Club's stakes for the fall meeling OVer the magnificent new course at Westchester are the Fall Test handicap at a mile, ud the Farewell stakes at six furiongs, wih for 2-vear-olds; the Good Luck Handicap for 3-year-olds, the Record and Echo stakes for all ages, and the Country Club handicap fos year-olds and upward. Senator Hearst is quoted as saying that the only good jockeys are negroes and Irishmen. The negro, he says, 18 aturally a borseman. Put him stride a horse, and in riding a race he loesn’t know what fear is The Irish. man is ail heart and soul, and if he oss know what fear is his enthusiasin carries him to the front before Le has had time to calculate the chances, John D. Rockefeller has leased of the Cleveland Driving Park Company the piece of land east of the grand stand, formerly covered by the stables which were burned a few months ago, sixty box-stalls and a carriage-house for Recently Mr. Rockfeller drove Flash, 2,19, and Mid- —At Fleetwood Park, New York, Yearance, won a $50 sweepstakes race in straight beats. Best time—2. 334. A match for $1000 between Yearance’s bay gelding Hugh J. Grant, to wagon, and Howard's black mare in four hasts, Best time-—2.41j. St. Louis beat Gabe Case in a match race for $200. Time—2.38, 2.39, — Of the thirty-one trotters with rec- ovds of 2.16 or better at the close of the last season, the blood of Hambiletonian in all but eight of them—Giuy, Harus, H al, Lala, Smuggler, Clemmie G., Phyllis and White Stock- ings. Mambrino Chief is represented in 13. American Star 10, Abdallah In 4 outside of Hambletontan, Pilot, Jr., in 8, and George M. Pawchen in 3. The Morgan family, generally through Vermont . Hawk, crops out in 11; the Clay family in 9; pacing strains in 10, and the thoroughbred in 10. A horse with all the symptoms of muck in Chicago the 7 Lali
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers