Hn ene LL BR - a. a — 2 ——————. Sop FO i 10 * IN HONOR OF AN AMERICAN. She 1s to Becelve the Salutations of Many Distinguished People. Preparations are being made for the bration in November next of the tieth birthday of the veteran cham- Pow of woman suffrage, Mrs. Elizabeth * Cady Stanton. The place chosen for it is Carnegie | Music Hall, and thedate of it is the 12th | of the month. Notable men and women | from all parts of the country will come | - here to take part in ‘it, and the central | - figure on the platform will be the hero- | ine of the decasion. There will be eloquence and music, flowers and flags and trophies of her life. It will be the crowning incident in the honored woman's career. She herself is aware of the preparations for the day, which she looks forward too with pleasure, wholly free from vanity. | * Itis over half a century since Mrs. | Stanton fi st gave her mind to the cause then known as “Woman's Rights,” which afterward developed into ‘the | movement that has given full suffrage | to her sexiin two States, and partial suf- | frage in a largdnumber of States. It was in 1848 that the first formal | claim for suffrage was made at a meet- ing held in her house at Seneca Falls, N. Y.; and since that time, until recent- | ly, she hag been perpetunlly active inthe | promotion of the cause, as a speaker, canvasser, writer and organizer. Mrs. Stanton is now a permanent res- ident of New York City. She retains the appearance which became familiar | to the public long ago. Her spirits are always remarkably lively. and her mind is in the best working order, though she is a sufferer from rhenmatism- and nn- fe to meve about without assistance, e has a! charming little home in an apartment house where she enjoys the companionship of her sons and daugh- ters. She is especially gratified with the re- | ception that has been given to those | parts of her ‘Woman's. Bible” which have been published though it has not | met with the approval of the theologi- | ans, Biblical eritics or Hebrew schol ars. As the pioneer of the new idea of woru- ans rights, Mrs. Stanton was ahead of | her life long friend, Miss Susan B. An- ‘ thony, though she cannot, in these days, Join Miss Anthony in her campaigns. : Consequences of » Frog's Error. Jess, the big elephant belonging to _ Sells & Rentfrow’s circus, was slumber- ing quietly on the ground in the menag- | "erie tent at Salt Lake, when a frog | mistaking the nozzle of her trunk for a | hole in the ground, jumped into ‘it. ~ Nothing #0 terrorizes an elephant as the | of a live insect or animal in its | ~ trunk, and the big brute broke looseand ‘went on a rampage. - The keepers were eating their lunch at. the time and the menagerie tent was en- tirely deserted. A great crash was ‘heard and the raen rushed back just in time to see Jess go through the side of : the tent and amble off toward the busi- | ness center of the city. A scene of | was presented within the | Ee The big brute had broken her . chain, apparently, and amused herself by tossing the cages about before leav- | Four cages were thrown over on their sides as though they were so many | toys, and then the elephant walked right | - through the side of the tent. The cages ‘were those containing the badgers, hedge- hogs, monkeys and kangaroos, but for- tunately none of the animals were in- ~ jured and very little damage was done to the wagons. Fifteen mounted men were sent in . pursuit of the elephant. Jess came | © straight down town and astonished the ~ few pedestrians on the street by prome- _ nading up and down Main street, occa- * sionally striking the curb with her trunk and ottering cries of distress. Mr. Sells was with the men who over- took her, and soon. discovered the cause . of ‘her discomfort. By compressing the trunk the frog was forced ‘down, and finally blown out by the elephant. She then became docile and was taken back tothe tent. —Denver Republican. Satin Bows for Cuffs. Leaders of men's fashions in London decided over six months ago that the cuff ‘button, the time Ionored, ornamental | yet mseful cuff button, must go. Prince | George, of the royil household, came out on Rotten Row ome day with the _ liberal cuffs whieh he always wears tied together with an irch wide black satin yibbon made into a bow, and the ends Ying four inci»s from his wrists in a most ladylike manner. Within twenty- hours the Prince's set had discard- the creations of gold, silver and pre- “cious stones; with which their ¢ cuffs had been. held together, and appeared on ~ “The Row” with (angling satin ribbons at their wrists. The departure was, of ~eourse, prempily adopted by the ultra- fashionab!s dudes of London Town, then ‘by: the would-be fashionables, sod in . Jess than six months the ridiculous and effeminate style has become $0 common as to attract but the most passing atten- ; The Trials of Life, : Lawyer Quibble— What was the greatest trial yen ever presided over, judge? : - Judge Kid Bringing up ten daugh- ters, $i, Harper 5 Bazar. “Willing to Be the Trustee. “Aften all,” saysthe ¥ rankford Sage, there isn’t much difference between a thief and a philosopher. They both take things as they find them.’ '— Philadelphia Record. One Point of Similarity. «Ain't it said, madam, that given’ to the poor. is lendin’ to de Lord?” “Yes.” “Well, would ycu mind lendin’ de sp me tS SE 3 CY a quarter?’ —Life. ~ Mr. Gladstone's spring costume is de- scribed as *'jaunty gray clothes, white hat and waistcoat und the most spring like of boutonnieres.” A FUNNY MAN'S FAME. | ms bee of a Carlesturist. { writes to the New York W orld of his achievements as an artist: name of caricature, by the young aspir- | broad walks of a happy life to the nar row path of fame. | sion I will adopt this way of answer- ing: The day 1 began to inflict on the public 4% a car | Monday, in the year 1820. I think also that it was “Blue Monday,” at least it myself up- With your permis-- | THE SHIRT WAIST. ‘QUEEN ONLY IN NAME “Zim,” the very funny man of Judge Ihave often been appealed to in the | ant for fame, switching one from the The First Steps in the Successful Career | BOOLEST AND MOST ‘CONVENIENT | OF WOMEN'S GARMENTS. ! Silk, the Other of Gray Alpaea, ‘Hashes and Bows Should Now be All Loops and i No Streamers, . One of the distingnishing features of this season's styles in dress is that most gashes an bows are all loops ard no ends. The ribbon bel or Sati invaria- ‘bly ends with hig, bristidag bunches of jcaturist was on i appeared. ‘ geemed so to me, as I remember my ride | | upon the rear platform of a Third ‘avenue surface car, with only a fried {cake and a cup of weak coffee as the | foundation stone to success. Iwas received cordially at the Puck office, but without pomp or brass bands, {and after making ail the necessary ar- rangements to become famous, I saun- becoming garrant. tered down Greenwich street to select a | | cafe which might be in harmony with | | my $7.50 a week salary. Then began the | ' real work of my life. | Before this all codered; however, I’ had tried my hand at a series of trades, | { the first of which was baking, or second. 'asdistant’s work in the establishment. i : loops. The long, floating streamers of former vears seem to have almost dis- When well fitting 'in every respect, properly lannderad and carefully ad- | justed, the shirt waist is a stylish and. When ill-fitting, | badly laundered and, instead of repos ing peacefully at the waist line it bulges at the shoulders and lets the dress shirt band show below the belt, | the shirt waist is most anbecomirg and | non-stylish. This year's shirt waist is noticeable for a decided improvement in make. The improvement, too, extends to its wearers, The majority of shirt’ waists that are seen nowadays are worn with style andl grace, amd as one sees several hundred daily, this may bs ta- ‘This gave me a good idea of its interior | and utensils nsed, so that at my present | -age I need not go to a bakery to make a sketch of such interior. Then 1 was given a chaho e with an honest farmer. This move on my dad's part satisfied me that his opinion of my ability to knead the dough had lessens d. ! ' 80 1 began to study the farm and the | | implements used, while the farmer milk ; | ed the cows and. did the chores; after three years of hard labor (which the {farmer did himself), he advised me to | | seek tay fortune elsewhere, as his soil | | was too poor to support us both in luxu- | ry, 80 I agnin was allowed a few years of public schooling, Then, as 1 thought sign painting would give me the chance I desired to ' flash the brush and mix in paints and ! oils. I sought an opening and received | ia three years’ engagement with board and clothes. It is needless to say thatin | this branch I learned much to aid me in | my present profession. I have always been a great student of | {human nature, faces and ‘characters | There are, at least, two branches of cari- | cature—the society and the comi¢—the | | former meaning the ludicrous side of | | drawing room life and the latter the = | funny side of the middle and lower 'classes. I do not think an artist can successfully depict both sides and keep up with the demand for such work, al- | though many undertake it. 1am speak- ‘ing from observation and not from a | selfish standpoint. If a joke can be expressed in a single + line, #0 much the better. Remember | that *'Brevity is the soulof wit.” I have i noticed that the most catchy comics are those which show no effort. The quick, certain aud racy lines of A. B. Frost and Gibson are always appreciated by the public. These two gentlemen are thu best representatives of their respec- | tive art—comic and social-in my esti- mation. Well, I have not caid much in regard to the habits of the caricaturist, but as { Ene Cook and Brigss Barlow and Baby ! Roe are waiting for me to go spring sucker fishing, and not a worm dug yet, I leave you to imagiue the kind of life 1 prefer. WHO OWNS THE RAILROADS. ‘Forty Companies Opiate One-half and 700 Companits the Balance. : The railway system of the United ‘States is held under 1,797 corporations, but operated alinost entirely by 747, the tendency being toward leasing or con. solidation. Indeed, 40 companies oper- ‘ated about 47 1-2 per cent. of the Whole mileage, and 75 companies about 65 1-2 per cent., so that ore-tenth of the op mo longer attempts to keep in touch with I year, indeed, did rouse ! tle social activity, and Twi hi it there ciime something like a renaissance of the old THE GOOD VICTORIA LIVES MOSTLY | | IN SECLUSION. Bagiand js Condseive to Eheumatie Pains. That the Prince of Wales Vay { om Henry Irving i= one that his friends | Two figits of Stylish Cut, One of Ceinkly goo 49 Seventy-six od the Climatn of rive Ry expected for Lin Become Regent is a Future Possibility. : For many years Victoria has ceasel to be more than a name and a memory to. ‘the great mass of her people. Since the. death of her béloveil frie rl and servant, Beaconsfield, she has taken little or no interest in public affairs. The julilee ior to some lit- AN ACTOR KNIGHTED, | A FLYIN iG MAC , Henry Irving Receives Evidence of Queen Yietorin’s Favor, The honor that was recently conferred | A RIDE CN ONE OF CARL. AIR BICYCLES. Various The Machine a Modification of the Bal. “explanations why he has not received it; loon and Dirigible to Some Extent, ; have been made. He was born with the | Uses to Which It May Be Put. A Meo. patronymic of Brodribb and assumed | the more picturesque name of Irving for silage purposes As an ¢ sphination why Irving was not knighted when Aungustus Harris and Arthar Sullivan hal been so honored, it was said that it was contr ary to prece- dent to duba muna k knight by any other name than that which his father tor Needed | A reporter of the New York Sun took a ride throngh the air recently on the flying machine or air Hieycls invented by Carl M vers. Mr. Myers lives at Frenkfort, Herkimer county, N. Y., in the benutifal Mohawk Valley. He has Adore much good work for + the Weather had carried before him. Ifa popular Burean of the United States. by means royalist spirit in Great Britain. But that was soon followed by =ven closes | seclusion and a still further weaker ing | of the thread that binds the personality of the sovereign to the A of the le. To-day the Queen talon an invalid, | Her rheumatism has grown upon her to | such a degres as to render a residencs in | the wet, fogiy and changeable climate | of England extremely undesirable. She | longs comstantly for Italy. it is said, where she has passed so many morths | of peace and comfort of late years. She | cannot walk at all except with the sup- | port of a cane and an attendant, and im | Eagland she cannot venture out during | the late autumn, the winter and the spring montix, This cimfinement is extremely wear: some and depressing to the Queen. She | the affairs of state. She does not even | © dictate the responses to personal letters, ! | which antil recent'y she ‘has always done. Her secrets: es write all her Jet | ' diate circle, gentle and considerato alk | ters for her, excepi those to Lor imme- | diate family, . which are written by Prin- | oess Beat rice eu a revere in her own ime | | ways to those about her. Victoria has | ' diifted apart from the ideas, the aspira- | i tivns and endeavors of her people and | | practically belongs to a past generation. . Toe political and social movements “hat | are dominant forces in the England of ' 80-day neither disturb nor interest her. ' Her days are given up to her family and ! | ken as conclusive. The only way to in- sure a shirt waist keeping in place is to! have & waistband at the walst line. At the back it should also have large metal ' eyes, upon which the dress skirt should | oy & bo hooked. The outside belt should 'arch’s point of view it was a case of e3- | that subject, though there is no doubt hine is about fifteen pounds. The | then be pinned down in the back, after ile and flight from armed rebellion rath- | that Irving has admirers en >ugh of his hydrogen is made from water by a pa which there can be no danger of the un- er than of abdication. The mad amd Hamlet to fill his theater when 'he tent process of Myers, and its purpose is | ating companies control nearly ins ‘thirds of the whole system; these do about 83 1-2 per cent. of the passenger and 8d 1-2 perc ent. of the freight traflic, 1 | receiving #0 1-2 per cent. of the gross | revenue of the system. Much has been said against this sys- | tem of consolidation, but under it the | passengers and to .601 per ton of freight, actual cost of transporting freight has | been reduced to 1.917 cents per mile for | and the revenues were 2.167 and 9411 eents respectively, To move a ton of | freight, says Mr. Gannett, from Chicago to New York, costs about $6. and to move a barrel of flour about 60 cents, s that ‘on this basis the entire vearly | food supply for a fiamnily of five persons | can be transported 1.000 miles for the | sum of $0.7 The capital stock and funded debt are about equal, on the assumed cost of nearly $10,000,000,000, so that dividends on -railways in the aggregate averuge only about two per cent Some Pay three or four tines as much and others pay nothing on tl tock. As to the Latter, the funit may » not only from mismanasement or wre king.” buat from premature imilding, miscalenlation » as. to possible profits, the desire to keep out rivals dt a given tervitory, or the opening of a territory to seltlement, in 1 which fortunes are waade by buying and selling land, althoagn the railroad niay HOt Piky : : : For the year ending June 30, 18%) there were in servi co 29.028 lovorgolitey 25,511 passenger cars, and a total of 1,164,188 cars... Of 749.800 . iD loves, 92.451 were killed and 22,898 injured dur > ing that year, but of 492 430 565 passen- gers only 286 were Lille d and 2,425 in- jured. : FAME, Fame is a fakir in the public street; Blocking the pavement with a. gaping crowd; Playing clown’'s tricks to stay passers’ feet; Catching their ears vw ith clamor harsh and loud, While through the throng, with sad and downeast mien, Elbow their way the poet and the sage, Passing unmarked, unnoticed and unseen; Only the fakir interests the age’ ~Harry Romaine in 1 Afa | The skirt, which flares well all ound, welcome gap. Here is a gown with several novel characteristics to recommend it. First, | its skirt is slightly trimmed. Second, its sleeves vary just a trifle from the season's ordinary arm covering. Third, | its bodice is of a cut becoming to almost any style of figure. The color ¢f the | gown is a medinm shade of light blue, with trimmings of jet and butter-col- ored lace. Its material is erinkly silk. | has in the front two long V-shaped in- sertions of minor velvet of a darker shade of bine and ending with jet ornaments | near the waist line. The only other touches of velvet abeut the gown are the plain ronad beltand the high choker collar, over w hic h are two little tabs of | life—religion, match making and the society of her grandchildren. Her ap | pearatices at the royal social functions ars pow increasingly rare and are n ade ' | great state occasions. Yet withal, the abdication of the en is extremely improbable. It ' would be without precedent, amd, as far 88 possible, the English do mething of | this character without precedent. James | IL did, indeed, abandon the crowa to William of Orange, but from the riem- | mischievous old kimg, (George IIL, yeld ' chooses to play it. ed the reins of power to the regency of | | } i fession. { its of Mr. Irving's Hamlet. i i | . thias, but there has never been any rea- | #0 the three delights of an old woman's | yin to donbt jts effect on an on Bo . When he appeared at the Lyceum in | 1473 as Richelien he gave a performance | that added to his fame, though he was | I choice for the honor had been made of scientificaily conducted balloon ascen- among English actors for the past ten “ON both with passengers and with- | years there is little doubt that it would vat, and hig made it’ possible So obtain Save fallen to Irving. (important data as to atmospheric densi- wee ties and dryness, wind corrents and sther elements . over valleys and plans. > ; 1 "The air bicycle is a curious and ine | genious affair, and looks like a large bal loon or bag skiaped likes boat turned | bottom uppermost. It is rounded ontop ‘and flat ut the bottom, slightly hollow- ad towarl the center, as an inverted ‘boat would. ‘The bag is filled with hiy- frozen. Atttached - to the netting which covers the bag are two stays that support a very light but strong skeleton of steal. On this is placed a bicycle sad- Ale, with a bicycle handle in front and cranks and pedals below, Instead of whaels the pedals operate a piston rod, {which extends about fourteen feet 1 ahead, and on which is fitted a hollow tube ra¢he te] to or cogged into ‘the me- chanism operated by the pedal. At the extreme ord of this tube is a rigid steel arpi, which. when .at rest, lies at right - angles to the head, and abont six feet | nearer the riderisac orresponding arm rigidly fi ized on the tubes. Sip HENRY IRVING. Om these two arms of steel is stretch- Mr. Irving went on the stage in 1858, | ‘ed a piece of light canvas hanging . per- bat it was not until his appearance as | perdic ularly down in the same plane as | Matthias in the ~The Bells.” in 18711 from chin to feet of the rider, and look "ing like the topsails of a ship beating to ‘windward. When the pedals are oper- ated the steel arm at the extreme end of the shaft is turned back and forth, and this action twists and untwists the sail into a right and then into a left hand he- lix such as would be produced by taking a square sheet of paper with one hand at zach end, and twisting the hands in opposite directions. that he achieved a success that placed | him easily in the front ranks of his pro- | Critical opinion has differed widely as to the artistic merit of Irving's Mat- gaverely criticized. In 1574 Irving took the boldest step in his career, and played Hamlet at the Ly- | coum with an original conception of the part. The critics resolved themseives | into two parties and waged . a furious | battle in the public prints over the mer- of the balloon and causes it to soar up in | the air. The machine is like the toy balloons one buys at the dry goods stores for children, which do not rise by “themselves; but blow under them and Public opinion may still be divided on IP they go. The entire weight of this simply t5 counteract the weight of the His Battatisdous stage management rider. | his infamous and worthless son, but that ' added not a little to his success. In hig | There is no rudder. To rise it is only | was a case of absolute necessity, anc the tours through this country he has been nevessary to lean backward and work | received with favor, and by his scholar- | the pedals; to descend one lean slightly | was still king i in name. re yet remains in England a pec liar and intense vemerntion for the mon. | 'archy, which an abdication would tend | to greatly shoek and disturb. Although | in the British theory of government the | hearts of the people. Every foot of land surrounding the home of Queen Victoria is historic, A$ the foot of the hill lies the village whiers Shakespeare first met Mistress Davenant and where the characters of Mistress . Page and Mist Ford, $ - | 2 ant stress Ford, of Justice Shal | peofitable that they believe a general forty feet. Then he circled round the | Jow and Master Slender, of Fenton and | Sweet Anne Page, took shape in the poet's brain. Back of the castle, with | | monarchy is purely the creature of Par- Bament, it is not so in the minds and ly mind and pleasant personality he has forward; to tara to the right or left rah | won many friends who will rejoice with Jong in the direction desired. In him in his new honor. it is like riding a bicycle, except AR thers is no front wheel to turn, CUBA'S WAR EXPENDITURES. | He had two of the machines on the rn ns lawn, and after fully explaining them, $0 Enormous that a General Uprising May Mr, Myers jumped on one--or raths Result from the Hard Times. ' er. he stopped across the frame as it lay In a semi-official statement received balanced on two trestles-——and drew the in Washington from the leaders of one saddle tight up to his body by means of of the most influential elements in Cuba, | | the handles. Then he gave a spring in : it is shown that the war expenditures the air and as the bicycle rose sixor are becoming so enormous and the | eight feet he leaned back slightly, work- pgar and tobacco industries so un- ed the pedals and steadily rose to abou | uprising will resalt from the hard times house, returning to where the reporter its miles of open glade and dense wod- | land stretches the historic park waere | | Falstaff was burned by the fairies—-the i English kings. and still the source of the | verison that farnisues the royal table, | hunting zrou.d of many generatioes of ' A few eiles below 4 0 park the Thames “divides at Mamma Charta Island, and | | there, you may stand upon the very spot | where King John sip aed the first declaras | and under the very | French muslin edged ored lace. The bodice black chiffon over bine down tightly in the hae! the front. hands of tae FOTOR ik (ERS sho auld ATS ik. ii ut t} ie 00) nl hicher th Lo ornamentis ning of jet zown §s broal by in the back. two blue ples lace to give it colo Another gown is of gray al skirt is fall and 4 ie 3 bode Qe is drawn do Wn tual y under | ff} be 0 p yo 3s 1 13 2 ¥ 3 helt and extends below ina bri very full skirt. This bodice als) has a voke effect, Produce «1. this time by deep, rounling pieces of yellow lace, A black ribbon stock with spreading loops is at the neck, The belt, also of black ribbon, is fastened in front: with a rosette and falling ends of the lace. 3Y The sleeves hang in large putfs. to the elbow ani fit smoothly below. The puffs are canght midway with rosettes of the vellow lace. Down the bodice front ix a donble row of gaviy i i wilt-frame 1 buttons. iatryd i wk bAd t tion of independan tpoe which tradition says is a scion of thie oak abinat which the barons were g.thered. A fos the river from the ¢ et atle i= Eton. the mother of many gen- cergnions of dairies Enciishruen her walls scarred with immortal nahnes, forishin c condition that the Minister .(yniatly now carved by boyish hands for centures— | E .om, upon whose playground Welling- te testilial. that he got the training whieh enabled him to beat Napoleon at u% Nor is Windsor itself less striking and | significant than its surroundings. The towers which have seen many 4 Fire ruard. Go ireasnn ae of ’ sLlence and beauty. rom . ears iy usd Ie rah Patel i IL, WiIlil Res JT tattle ivy trophies, to the old XY warir} the rm » - ¥a 1 ts the Feyyy . the Jiaxing |, yoy yur 1ET%, Lely | 1 of g iin nis, 1 y WY other raster Abbey, em- ! spirit of the English iy a VN HC , 44d sy oi 3) Xs y 4 Milicadl rill DL. tha tle herself. Her private ts are im a wing, the ap whieh are guarded by sob wien ver Majesty is pot m SEARO r + { Queen seldom centers the state ‘Pe wtments now. When the receives | i 3 be Prime Minister or any member of | the voyal f farnily it is in her own room. | | unload evervihing they had at an enor- | advances that have been wide in wages One of the very few oceasiors whem the grand staivcise has been used of recent years was when Gen. Grant and Mrs, | was going to break up the government. | akout 200 firms, employing about 128,- Grant visited the Queen at Windsor, and her Majesty received them at the | man. He managed to secure nearly all as to the causes of the business. revival, | head of the staircase. All presenta ties now are during the on led sear ‘ cansed. The portion of the statement stood and descended at his side. concerning the terrible conditions pre- | vailing is as follows: ‘asked. “Then get astride and try it “The. war expenses of - 1863-88 were yourself. Don't jerk when you spring paid by Cul. Spain furnished 212.367 gpward: go very slowly, and don’t be in men. but not a single dollar. _ a burry about your feet. There is plen- Cha was loaded with nearly $2.00, ty of time, and if not quick enough yom 000 debts, besidea yearly budget of $38,- ' wil] simply land on your feet and be. 000.000 in those ten vears. Gen. loveil- realy to try again. ar declared in the Spanish Cortes that | soon as von are up.” the war cipenses have been SRO0, 000,000 It Jookad easy enough, and the report- OT An average of $70,000,000 a year. Lerlid as he was told. He gave the re ‘Sugar produced then. with slave la- © quired spring and up he went i asa bor w as Ni dd L at 6 7-8 cents 4 pound. Feit her The tohacro industry was ‘in such a | Take your time.” PR folk We. you as came from below. lean back a Httle! Here! f the C vl in-ancther minute Myers the building was alongside, about 20 feet away. Rise Leaf tobacco was sold 100 per cent. ine to a height of about 50 feet ‘the two shove to day's prices. - Per contra, su- circled aronnd for some time. until the gar sells t day at 1.86 cents a pound, OF ' paporter was 5% much at home as if ona 39 pur gent Telus une: Diotintin, wel {iyctoin She ro. Soe oul cura \ sensation be uit of a very powerfal besat si h : : : . wind blowin rast Ais face without “Th tobacco In lastry is mn mes be-. toaching it. . This was caused by the POT empti Dy a tariil war. Leal. poli inverted boat of the C londes, Romdsro Rea lado, called I come.” : of their factories ‘palaces.’ blowine into the above, : 1 «ail Myers, “and poy, R12 id LOO; fru ts amd sandr ‘30, “hey machines worse under perfect con 000.000; total. $9.000.000: defieat, H.- ppol, amd even the shizht head wind had on, 0 a no effec dro Myers said that a head 4 1 ti » Impox ah tn fans an alva AEE as Ar as labor speed } LOWES CeliCe Te : : 2 Owing to the Jackward tilt of the spindle the hed winl toshed under neath, forcing + npwardl instead of backward only. Th winsy understood {RH} THAD wl Suraw leet of 3. (Hr) (def mystifying &0 ahv one but an aerial expert. : to Finding thir the reporter was content Made an Fortune After Fifty. with his achievements, and would go no Creneral MeAl commander of the | hijzher, Mr. Myers eried "Good by” and New York militia, i= a rich man, Many [ascended to aliont 1,000 feet, it seemed, | of the Governor's staff are millionaires, | in a few minutes, circling round and but none of them wear swords that cost | round the valley, eventually descending | $7,000. General Ye Alpin's father. at and rejoining the reporter at the lower { the age of 50 vears, was emploved in a “elevation, : : tobaceo factory. The war male him. ri m——— ————— The stockholders became frightened. at | The Business Revival the rain which was staring themand the | Facts count. The’ New York Times country iu the face, and were crazy to | has attempied to keep some track of the mons sacrifice. They fell among the | in various parts of the country. Its list alarmists, who believed that the South is getting to be a long one, covering McAlpin, however, was an ardent Union | 000 persons. While men may disagree ! of the stock, and when the price of to- , there can wo longer be dispute as to the son When te Queen is af Duckingham bacco went kiting his fortune was fait, FE biladel pis Record. Palace. : ; ; : 3 This action of the cloth produces & | errrent nf wind, which strikes backward ani upward against the under surface “Do yon understand the working? he | ist | when in th bat perhaps is rather - - * SN Ai SMB
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers