Consider the Ravens. « Lord, according to Thy words, 1 hive considered Thy birds: And I find their life good. And better the bettel understood: Sowing neither corn or wheat, They have all they cin eat: Reaping no more thau they sow, They have all they can stow : Having neither barn nor store, Hungry again, they eat more, Considering, 1 see, too, that they Have a busy life, and plenty of play: In the earth they dig their bills deep, And work well though they do not heap: Then to play in the air they are not loath, And thelr nests between are better than both. But this is when there blow ho storms; When berries are plenty in winter, and worms; When fouthers ave thick, and oll is enough To Keep s cold out and the ran off 1f there should come a long hard frost, ‘Then it looks as if Thy birds were lost, ier further, and find { has a free mind; gry to«lay, not to-morrow omiort, not grief doth bBOrrow 5, Thy will hath said it, ve till Thou hast made it. A hung He is Steals This moment is The next The b y put has no fear, Wi ‘ the rst of ANY OAT: Whe er and harm betide him, uff inside him; he has got, ¢ me any alarm vird to harm, hast bed ; sed} place grace is, Lord; the 3 A HOW said, to tl hy word, be Thy bird By Lieorge MacDonald. -—-—-— - LOSING HER HOLD. The school morning wav dow: hill homes the dot remark at Ong hind bh Sau i necting ard. The path was , walked first. He made intervals to his wife be- looking back: t Beckon via 3 A wasn't out. lumbag« ree? hair in a wisp, and wore the scuttle bon- nets proper to old age. The work of life, she held, was finished for her and Daniel. They had paid for the farm, go that when one died the other wassure of maintenance; the farm and house were in perfect order, the cemetery lot was bought. The money for the monu- ment was a kind of frilling embroidery on this perfected life, the handsome flourish to the signature which closed the deed. As she sat pouring out the tens, think- ing these things over, her husband vreckoned” again that the ‘Squire's Jumbazo was bad, and that the doctor's daughter was at home. Then he yawn- ed drearily, and fell asleep in his chair in the san. How much of his time he slept in yawning and sleeping! Yet, thirty years ago, Daniel Holmes was an eager teacher, keeping wi 11 abreast with the knowledge and ideas of his time, living in the world of boeks, newspapers, nmu- sic and pictures. But they had come out of town into this village, ant themselves to scrape tog buy this farm. What that had on them? Had they really been spinning their grave clothes out of selfishness? Ann went to afternoon gorvice, she did not hear a word of Fatl ley's discourse. come but yer Lang- town: long-forgotton history in her ears. There was Dan's brother, Jack, poor fellow! She saw him plainly in the crowd. A gay, affectionate lad, who might have turned ont well if he had been guided! But he had married a feather-headed gir had tarned them both adrift. As they walked home that evening said to the schoolmaster: patience, she wo | i i ner. has.” a silence after through the hot grass. y stopped to see how much the lower pigs in their But pen. i i : i i She walked with er breast, almost forget up the wut of the grass. There nge preacher that day i i different from nged, drowsy hu m. rung 1 cntences in Ann live! Yon hness and fat content, thes before youare dead. full of vour brothers, ienorant. (Go to them! rvice to the last breatl live, ud asked the doctor’ he thought He sie wok her head conte i What has pire WC Lers, $ Amity well. Let the to their own aupers?” womforted for the moment, ed That hint ave clothes seemed 0 per- herself. yar aimshouse Gk Tall UNeasy. long is it since heard from John, Dannell?” He did not reply annoyed voles “Twenty-six years «1 wish I and Abbie could have hit I am feared that it was it r n staff.’ eply, but Ann \ re bitte ing ul s'anll canvas bay “There ) yme money 1 have n’ expenses, Pannell,” she ike to take it instead for nd a week in Phila lelphia.” Lat tom foollery’'s that?” «There's no poor folks 1m Amity, wi } ne there t look up the libres “Nonsense!” “And anavbe v ‘Here, bank it,” he growle fint four days iat ht meet John.” BWAY nig Ont Amity was shaken that the school- master and his wife had gone for an out- ing to Philadelphia. “There's a queer enstomer,” whi pered one of the attendants in the old ibrary afterwards. comes every day and goes from shelf breat . " Franklin L week “He shelf to not f buried in the country, “And why shoul { any wl dig n as if he had sched i vears. Been appose ’" body who ean want to smell bled the other who was lean and sto ped, w f doors ith an Daniel came fairly panting with researches. He ha tens, industrial school where art and science we out charge to the «As for libraries, whole continent knowledge have been discovered I was dozing and snoring in Amity,” he exclaimed. Ann made her rounds am: poorest : # mg the asvl- hed their own gate, go- of beds of geraninms and roses on side, to , side door. She could not resist a complacent glance atthose beds, Not a weed; the brown earth sifted fine and There was no garden ®O eX smooth. mn th Fer nisiie 0 speckless and prim. ence told her she was a good Chris- tian woman fulfilling her duty, and had BO the eyes were dim and wot, «Half the world seems to be eold hungry, and tae other half are working to warm and feed them,” she said. “And I could find nothing to do but to Classes, crechons Her cold gray nd an Abbie, Dannell?” “No: I doubt its no use Ann.” But as Ann woke day by day and her hold upon the world again, search becatne more energetic. ¢ s HOw her {Inn which she felt just now. She went upstairs to her own cham- ber. laid off her . bonnet carefully, and then nnlocked a drawer in the press. She did not need to lift the white tow- els. She knew perfectly well what was pinned np in them. Theunderclothing of snowy linen, the worked flannels, the fine woolen shroud. She stitch in them. Could the man have known? Every matron in Amity had her “funeral suits” provided. It was a mate ter of pride to them, just as Mrs. B., in Boston, would delight in her old satsu- ma or her Corot. The Amity peo ple glorified in their new cemetery. Lhe folmes had their lot like the rest; a narrow one; for there were only two to be buried in it. Ann had her choicest roses set ont there. She had directed in her will every detail of the trimming on her coffin. She thrust her hand under the shroud now and pulled out a little bag of gold coin. They were the savings of years; pennies serimped out of clothes, meat, milk. They were to pay for the hand- some granije monument “Erected torhe memory of Daniel Holmes and Ann, his wifes” While you live, live!” She dropped the bag ss if some one spoke at her back, locked the drawer, and went downstairs, The “piece” was spread as usual on Sunday noon; flaky bread; clover- scenied honey, delicious ples. Ann, as she cut the pie, was comforted by a sense of spintual well-being. No wo- man made such crust in Amity. No woman was more ‘aithful at meeting, at Sunday schoo', at missionary society. In what had #oe come short? her starved soul demanded of its Maker. Ever duty. grest and small, had been well finished. urs, Holmes was fifty-five years of age, but she used to speak of hersell as nesr ber grave. She twisted up her i “I've found them, Dannell. That is are dead; Dut The eldest boy supports them, and he is that con- you took a fancy to. Come right along. Don't stop for dinner, Three children! And the Lord never before gave us one!’ Mrs. Ann Holmes' house is no longer the neatest in Amity. The chubby lit- tle girl of fourteen who helps her inthe kitchen leaves her work and school books here and there and the baby who tags after her from morning until night drops her greasy bread and butter even in the sacred parlor, unrebuked., «What's a clean floor e flesh Come! coming onto their bones?” she asks, triumphantly. ‘Look at Albert! He's another boy. He is a born farmer. That library was killing him.” «111 have no sbuse of libraries” Daniel says. ‘‘I'm going up for study twice a year. It doesn’t do to lose your hold on the world. You've got to keep stop while you live.” “Y.ea,” Ann replies absently. She is looking up a hymn simple enough for Abbie to understand, and after that she is going to make some flannel petticoats for baby before the cold weather comes. They are cut and neatly folded in her basket, and the drawer up-stairs which held her fine shroud is empty. Con- gregationalist, St The Smart Indian Boy. At a meeting held at Hampton last “Indian Emancipation day,’ one of the [ndian boys in his speech said: “Whenever we doanything, white man don’t like he calls us ‘Lujun,’ whenever we do anything Injun don’t like he calls us ‘white man.’ He also ex- pressed his conviction that “Injun boy great deal smarter than white boy ‘cause folks expect that Injun will jearn as much in three years as white boy does in nine Or ten yearr,"' LICHTNINC'S FREAKS. Some Very Peculiar Instances of its Effects on the Body. —H———————— sergen 1. Newell, a grocer of Plain. field, N. J., while pulling up his awne ing during a severe thunder #t ro in June, received a stroke of lightning that very nearly killed nm, Lie was completely paralyzed for several hours, and was not able to speak or make any sort of motion, His shoes were torn from his feet, though his feel gave no evidence of the visit of the mysterious fluid, There were a few slizht burns ou nis body. Though he was paral- yzed he retained entire possession of his faculties, und can describe the sen- sa in he experienced as life came back to his benumbed limbs, Ie thinks he might have Leen UNCONSCIOUS for a second, because he has no recollection | of falling. On tise other band, be saw the clerk in hls store running to his as- stance. Inasmuch as the clerk saw Lim fall and ran immediately to his as- sistance, it would seem that the period | of unconsciousness must have been | very short indeed, | *“Myeyes were wi fe open,’ said he, ¢und 1 was not able to close them. I could see hear and understand every- thing, but could not move or talk. At first my body seemed absolutely devoid | of any feeling whalever, then, as the | treatment to which the doctors sub- | jected me began to have | couscious first of a feeling of ess, which gradually began to be pain- ful, until finally the numbness | worn away and my enti | to be one of intense ache, very much like that which accoinpanias inflama- tory rheumatism. When the pain was | tuost intense my muscles began to have involuntary motion, a sort of twitch ing much like that of Sr. Vitus’ dance, Very shortly after that I began to get control of my muscles myseif, and mo- tion became gradually easier Lo Ime All this occupied probably ten hours from the time 1 was struck.” victim of insomupia before this experi- i ence, which has now entirely disap- peared. Five years ago Mrs, William Baxter { of Milford, Conn... was struck by Hight ning during a sudden afternoon storm, | while she was in the acl of closing a window to prevent Lhe rain from driv- ing in. The fluid Orst struck a corner | of the frame dwelling and tore off the clapboards in a straight line toward window. It then prosirated Mrs, Baxter (nd ran along two sides | of the budroom the chimney { ing the brickwork 10 the kitchen below, where iron pots and kettles were tered over the floor and the stove up- sot. Mrs, Daxter was a short, woman, about 45 years of age ject to rheumatism in her lower Him The stroke of lightning senseless, and she remained uncon scious for more than three hours Her skin was not broken, but the electiic fluid ieft dark blue marks across shoulders and down ithe right in which there was for a year alierw ard a partial paralysis, She has pow almost entirely recovered from the effects of the stroke, and has since been wholly free from her rheumatic ubl Mrs. Baxter has ro what transpired from the raised her hand to unfasien the w sash until regained consci Her came as suddenly as ib departed, and she at once stretched out her arm and endeavored to lower the sash. While members of her family were rubbing ber hubs 10 resusc her there was no Sigh of life excepling an occasional long breath, When a thunderstorio is now approaciuing Mra, Baxter feels an attack of nausea, but otherwise she is well as ever. Henry M. Burt, the edilor and pub- tisher of Among the Clowiz, a souvenir daily newspaper published on the sum- mit of Mt, Washington, N H., during the summer season, will long have rea- son to remember his experience with lightning, which occurred mine or ten years ago. The paper wis then issued from the old Tip Top House, which contained the printing press, types, cases, ete. Thunder storms are quent at this elevation, 6,200 feet, many times the shower passing below the summit, on which ihe sun will be shining, while the lightning plays be- jow. On this occasion a bolt came tl to OLIOW~- BUA knocked he side, ’ Fe le A, no oLeCilion of moment she indow MISLIOSS, Hy ane “onses ey tale about among the other persons present, Mr. placed or gs mountain side, jurt was picked fresh earth. The left him and he recovered his senses, je was disabled for months or more, but entirely recovered, except that he has been since, perhaps in somew hat more before. 1is sensation when recovering | his senses was an intense prickling or | tingling all over his body, as if innum- erable fne-pointed needles were stick- ing into the flesh. The same course of treatment, bury- ing the patient in fresh earth as soon as possible was tried on a fireman on the Mount Washington railioad, who was struck by lightuing, with equally good results, In that caw the fireman, who was taken froin the summit of the mountain to the base insensible, is said 10 have ridden babk in the cab of his own engiue a few hours after. Lavinda Adams, a farmer residing at Pound Rudge, N. Y., a small own of a few miles below Danbury, Conn, just over the State line, was sitting at the supper table with his family and a neighbor, Noah Brown, on Saturday evening, April 20, talking, laughing and Joking, when about 6 o'clock un eal of thunder came, a flash, and nothing more was seen or heard by any of the party until Edward, the 19-year-old boy came to his senses, Everything was in disorder. Every pane of glass in the window frames was shattered, His father, mother, two sisters, infant r. Brown were lying on the floor motion- Jess and apparently dead, The crackling and ping of tim. bers over head is attention, and as he saw ibe flames rapidly con. suming the dry and splintered rafters he realized that it was time for action. He lost no time in dragging the forms of the unfortunates out of the doomed house. flis oldest sister was the next to re. cover from the shock, and she wus atl once sent for help, Neighb rs hurried to the scene, and set about to exting- uish the flames, This done, they all turned their attention to the unfortu- nate and still unconscious victims, Mrs Adams had recovered in the meantling, but she showed every sign of fnsamty, and it was by main force she was kept from rushing into the burning building. The youngest sister was killed out- right, Mr. Brown was so badly Injured that he died the following morning. His flesh was torn into shreds, and in many places the bone was exposed, Mr, Adams was badly burped, but recov- ered, For weeks Mr, Adams was & raving maniac, ous moment laughing, the next groaning and writhing in the most intense pain. ing she was brought back to herself, Lightning receutly struck a tree at Danbury, Conn., near which stood a little girl 11 years of age. | caused the girl to spin around tike a top. A man who was passing ran and caught hei ground. She was carr and soon recovered, She claims sue telt as if 1,000 needles were pricking | ered. Her parents say she has never | been as bright or inteMigent since the | shock, Several years ago, ina small Massa- chusetts town, Thomas Taylor standing on the porch of the house of James Acton. | against the side of They were walching t thunder storm. Acton was str lightning and instantly killed, | Taylor was dered unconscious, unconscious condition for sever | but recovered after many months | suffering. He said: “1 had no idea what struck me, bad no feeling whatever for 101 I was not conscious of anything, 1 was told that when were torn and cousiderably burned. hair before the shock was light Now, a8 you see, JL 18 as W of an old man of the door, open of » tas iT Gay 5 2 iv nite as that years.’ --_—-— THE PROVOKING OFFICE BOY: The Bad Qualities the Tribe Exposed. ¥ ofl In one of the biggest law 8 in this city there is employed a litle, faced LOY whose bright eves are 1 on the alert to detect something. dow care ouch what it is so 1 rules ECTS arever sn't hat it violates some of the his employers of to him to be wrong and needful of correction, His contempt for wealth and power 1s un- surpassed, and he will d { some slight fracture of the rules by a famous man and chide him as qu kis though le were the poorest client on the list of his employers. His desk is near the enlrance, and here gits throughout the day with bh i in his bands an 10S i 4 his eves fixed upot some bloody § escapes. Dut i ol Are i the fal OUl Cat is ] ghite si foot. t en prick up his hen ele CRY As little he is poin- Le Lh tail bairbreadth 3 always on apd U step W ith ears and body. ABRs “Who did you wish to see?” “Mr -' “3% hat about?" of will tell him.” “Very well” Then the boy resumes his reading | the visitor, aiter a puzzled glance al the row of little offices, says: “Pleass tell Mr, —that Mr. Smith is out here and would like to sce him,’ “What about ?"’ “Bless your impudence, what's thai to you?" The boy returns wearily and pays no further atiention thing outside of it until Mr. weakens and says: “Tell lum I want to see the Blank matter.” edge pt fibre of his enters he with every the person 1 Ww vind did wish 0 you to any- an air of renewed interest in life: “Oh, but I can’i] ‘cause Mr, —isn’t He has just stepped out.”’ “W hea will he bein?” “Don’t know.” “Will he be in again to-day?” “(Guess not.”’ “Dio you know where he is?” “Yes sir.” “Where?! Europe.’ Sammer Outings. Many who have become enfeebled by loug conhinement and close attention the calls of sedentary occupations rush away for a short ho iday, and endeavor | by systematic over- exertion to make up for the jnactivity of the previous months. Every year brings its sad warnings of this folly in a record of fa- talities, while the experience of most pracationers shows yet more clearly that this overstrain is followed by prolonged illness. The circulatory and respiratory system work hand-in-hand, and rebel against any sudden disturbance of their ordinary routine. The dadger is always greatest when there 18 any heart weak- pess, In moments of intense nervous excitement the breathing is frequently unconsciously stopped, and the strain upon an enfeebled heart then becomes very severe, Emotional excitement necessarily produces palpitation, and the fixation of the thorat (chest) then adds to the diffi ulty at tne moment when the heart is at its weakest. The prime requisite for a happy summer outing, for a beneficial vacation, is the harmonious setting, Keep coo ; don’t fret your nerves, strive to keep your temper, and be deliberate. Don't hurry. A Yustion in the or re is a oe thing—a very ng ~ prov ou go about it like & sensible being, ot us drop out “beastly” American way of doing it. Tb is the pace that is snapping so many strings. Go slow a ———I SAIS : "I'is best not to dispute where there is no probability of convincing. without work and a note w. out a signature are alike in value, FABHION NOTES, The season” id Wining. Very soon all costumes of batiste, foulard india silk, all hats of light straw and tulle must be laid aside. A few new grace: ful and fanciful shaped hats are seen, the most conspicuous is a broad, square flat in Italian straw, faneifully torned up, draped and erumpled, black veivet around the crown and a garland of white velvet édelweiss with hearts of gold, a dainty wreath, spreading its pretty flowers of remembrance and fidelity, is placed upon the dope of the brim in front. More graceful, more elegant and fresher there is however, in this head-dress a resemblances to that of the belles of the #FPrasteverie.” A dress which accompanies this hat, is 8 nothing, trifle, in banana eolored batiste figured with elematis and thistles. Very light and simple, it is gathered over a rose and banana colored changeable Ou the bottom a gathered flonase, lnrge reveres on the corsage, covered with fine silk embroidery to | mateh the color he skirt. A long rose colored ribbon surrounds the waist and falls npon th side of the skirt, The sleeve is shghtly puffed snd held in the center by fine plaits, In the hand is » reed basket ealled flours,” With all these light robes, all these | f silk. other silk skirts of tin a hundred different two of shoppe i lie chang i take One 1s dalhia taffetas of fine shade with which are mingled other tints admirably blinded. On the bot. tom of this skirt 18 a ruche made of seven or eight rufl gradulated in width and shades, from the lightest to the darkest ! his elegant garment may be in n ¢ 4 LZreat 1 wen nt rom {he rose mauve Then there pretty ‘“Nonnain accordeon plait d, fine and close, opening and elvet. al closing with the apg ance of ¥ Three r« i insertion separale We see others, with strange 1103 draped ORY hiade res, 4 “rnignot MRI, interwoven wi ribbon of “moire” or BITAY HORSE NOTES. ~Doylestown races will Le beld on October 1, 2, 8 and 4. The classes range from 2,24 to 4.00, Guy trotted in 2.12 over the new Queen City Driviag Club track at Cin. cinnati on Thursday September 12th, — Among the latest bets on the Nat. onal Stallion race, to be decided at Bos- ton, September 18, is §1000 to $500 against Alcryon, Trenton has added a 2.23 troiting race for a $600 purse to the programing for decision on September 3th and fol- lowing days. — Sunol trotted in 2.164 for the Oe. cident Stokes at Sacramento on Thurs. day September 12th, She was allowed a walkover by the default of the other nominations, —~ Mr. George H. Engeman visited yrighton Beach Race Course on Thurs- day September 12th, and rep yried that $50) would repair the damage done by the stor. —1It was almost finally decided at a recent meeting of the Executive Com-= mittee of the . North Hudson Driving Park to have troti in the month of October. — Premiums amounting to Sryer ing races g 20,000 nual fair at Mount Holly, N. J., ou Ocwber 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12. ~The pacer Charley Friel, purchased g sale for $285), reduced his record from 2.16} to 2.15§ over a half- mile track at Defiance, O., recently. Onflamme aud Hanover are the most successful horses on the turf that have uxdergone the trying operation of perving, The former was nevel faster than at present. ~The following Danville (Ky. ) horses 2.30 this season for the {rst Don Pizarro, 20%; and 8S. G. Boyle's E ¢ Lime: 9 591 — Miller & Sibley, of Franklin, Pa., record 1}, by Spring VY Electioneer, Stock Farm, for cy 3 wei bg 4 Wi jE [iL —Henry W. Genet died recently at He was an admirer of the and owned black was fam- eld bLorse the Ona isn a , what we can direct thunk « { § us of when we He i gotlier many ; all are 5 IeANSs of 1 lengthwise 114 rials are | hair and 1s underneath, draped at out there belt, and vel- | { ise in the maddie | 8 4 large ornamens | ( ight or « gc somets mented holds up the to show = Few pleatings are a . mes only a band velvet or of ribbon, ora f of the dress at the foot of the foundation For trimming the outside of a dress. no matter of what hig else three straight | rows of open-patterne d black pessemen- | terie, or the row of wvandyke | points of passementerie. Sings —-— The Question Finally Solved. One often wonders why such a large | ways surround every | building in the cen- | yesterday sheds some | A man who sat | given by one of : ses, who said: “1 have seen you around here most | onths.”’ “Yen. “Are you drawing wages?’ Oh, no.” vfs it a relative building?" “No. “(Going to rent it w “NLD “Getting points sn architecture?’ HNoY “Well, then, what brings you here?” “Well, I'll tell you, It struck me that you were not making the front door wide enough by an inch and a half, and I've been sitting around to see whether 1 was wroug or you meant to change it,” “That door 1s all won't be changed. ®’ “{s it? Then there's no longer any need of my presence, and I'll move up. street and see if they carry the walls of that new store up plumb,” —————————— AIA seAbrabam Griffin, a jockey at the Merchantville race track, was crushed under his horse recently, and will prob- ably die. In some manner the horss became unmanageable at one of the turps and ran with great force to the other fence. The jockey was thrown off and the horse rol'ed on him. Grif- fin was taken to the Cooper Hospital, Camden, where it was found that he was suffering from concussion of the brain, with probable internal injuries, and his chances of recovery are very slim. Beware of those who an homeless from choice, . of yours who Is hen finished?" right, sr, and —For the first time in many “failed to connect’ The track years with the he ( reli ia ~The chestnut mare Donna, foaled 1885. by Mambrino Patchen, dam Sun. nyside, by Richelieu, brol her | 3 4 in the pasiure recel y be destroyed. —Mambrino Maid, tbe Mambrino Startle, brother ~f © 98 of 2.29 P 4-VEar- old the Phoenix Hotel Stakes at the Lexington Fair, recently. ter of Dolly, entered This makes the others Thorndale, 2,213, —Czarina, daugh the 2.30 list at Chicago. the fourth represeniative being Director, 2.17; and Onward 2.25§ —W. i. Wilson, of Abdaliah Park, Cynthiana, Ky., has purchased from Edwin ID. Bither, Racine, Wis., the bay H-year-old stallion Raymond, sired by Simmons, 2.28, dam Lady Raymond, by Carlisle, __Bentoneer, bay stallion, by Gen- Benton, dam Guess by Election~ owned by William Disston, of ‘hiladelphia, took first premium at the Wilmington Fair for the slow class for stallions between 4 and 5 years old. —A. R. Mock has a 9.vear-old Olly Almont, dam dam Wilkes, 2.143, which he gave $4500 for last year. Crit Davis has her in charge, and she promises 10 go as fast as the renowned Prince. —The Southern Hotel stakes of $10, 000 for horses with records not better than 2.25 on April 15 will be trotted at st. Louis on Thursday, October 3. The horses named to start are Laurabel, Harry Noble, Dixie V., Robert By:- dyk, Reference, Acolyte, Hendrix, Norval, Greenlander and Geneva. — Jos Hocker, a promising 3-year old breeding owned by Cinecin- nati parties, dropped dead in a race at the Lexington (Ky.) fair grounds, He was in the 2.20 class race, which was won by Nancy Hanks Best time 2 Hecker went a mile in bis work in 2.25 a few days since. — Moonstone, the yearling filly that Mr. Wilson, of Cynthiana, Ky,, sold to Mr. Ashbrook, of the same place, soma time ago for $2500, was left to be trained at Abdaliah Park, and on Aug- ust 31, at Lexington, she won her race in a jog, and obtained a record of 2.474. the of —Amy Lee and Marie Jaesen, the two mares that Budd Doble has retired for the season, are related, Marie Jansen is by Betterton, son of George Wilkes, out of Dame Tansey. Amy Lee is by Bay Star, tbe brother of Dame Tansey, out of a mare by Hia- toga. The dam of Marie Jansen and the sire of Amy Lee are brother and sister —— daughter of the man who bred and raised Spokane now comes to the front and claims Montana as the home of the famous horse, She laughs at the wozone of the Rockies” and the “‘morn- ing tapees,’’ spokeroot, ete., ideas, and says the horse never the mouns Salm but once, and then when a 2-year ox. «At the close of the at Westchester, Mr. Belmont sull re- mained at the head of the list of wine being credited thus far hh $97.000, followed by the Dwyer Bros, with $80,000, J. B, Haggin with $898, J A& AH. Morris with $564,000, Theodore Winters with $51,000, and A.J. Cassatt with $48,000. receyt meeting Friondsip gives evileps to make
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers