ng ae wits ol s+ Co H— oe, Sane gL his career, and played Hamlet at the Ly. - # year will be: have been made, When he 1873 a= E fob lien he gave a performance | sugar ad tobacco mous siicrifice, va AN ACTOR KNIGHTED. : Honry Irving Receives Evidence of Queen Vietoria's Favor, The honor that was recently conferred on Henry Irving is one that his friends have long; expected for him. Various explanations why he has not received - it He was born with the patronyniic of Brodribb and assumed the more picturesque name of Irving for stage purposes, ; As an explanation why Irving was not knighted when Angustne Harris anil “Arthur Sullivan had heen so honored, it was said that it was contrary to prece- dent. to dub a mana L i ght by any other naine than that which his father had carried hefore him. among English actors for the past ten * years thre is little doubt that it would have fallen to Irvin. SIR HENRY IRVING. Mr. Irvidg went on the stage in 18356, but it wis not until his appearance as Matthias in the “The Bells.” in 1871 that he achioved a success that placed him easily in the front ranks of his pro- fession. Critical opinion has differe 1 widely as to the artistic merit of Irving's Mat- son to Sab its effect on an andience. eppeared ut the Lyceum in that addi to his f fame, thouch Lie was severally criticized. In 1574 Irving took the boldest step in ceum with an original conception of the part. The ¢ritics resolved themselves into two parties and waged o furious battle in the pablic prints over the mer- its of Mz. Irving's Hamlet. Public opinion may ¢ that sul; oct, that Irving has admirers enough of his Hamlet to “fill his theater when he chooses to play it. His harmonious stage management added not a little to his success. Inhis | tours through this country he has been received with favor, and by his scholar- ly mind nnd pleasant personality he bas won many friends who will rejoice with him in his new honor. . CUBA'S WAR EXPENDITURES. $0 Enoruious that a General Uprising May £ Rasult from the Hard Times, In a somi-official statement received in Wash noton from the viers of one “of the most inflnential elements in Cuba, it is shown that the war expenditures are beciming so enormous and the industries so nun- profitable that they believe a general uprising will result from the hard times caused. - The portion of the statement » concerning the terrible conditions pre- vailing 1 as follows: “The war expenses of 1365-88 were paid by Cuba. Spain furnished 212,367 men, bus not a single dollar, “Cabs. was loaded with nearly $2,000,- 000 debts, besidea yearly vdgetof $58,- 000,000 in those ten vears. (Gen. Ioveil- - ar'declared in the Spanish Cortes that the war expenses’have been $800,000,000 or an averagaof $70,000,000 a year. “Sug:r proddeed then with slave la- bor was sold at 6 7-8 cents a pound. The tobacco industry was in such a ~ flourishing ORI that the Minister of the € olonies, Romero Robiedo. call ‘the buil ling 5 of their factories ‘pala es,” tobacco was sgld 100 per Cent, abdVe to-day's prices. Per’ contra, sup gar sellt to-day at 1.88 cents a pound, or 30 per cent. below cost prodic tion, and is pressid to its last ditch by German beet smyzar. : “The tobacco yond reiemption by a industry is ruined bes tariff war. Leap #0 “does not: pay the cost of labor attp-day’s prices. The production of Cuba this Sngar, $32,000.000; tobac- co, $12,000,000; fruits and sundries, §3,- 000,000; total, 000,000, s‘Expenses: Budget, $25, 500400; ex- tra octroi tax, %3,500,000; imports, £35,- 000,000. municipal budgets, $10,000,000; gxtra war expenses at least £19, 000,000; total, $4,000,000, “A $16:000,000 deficit is the last straw on the camel's back. The budget of 1898-94 was closed with a $6,000,000 def- jcit, and sugar sold then at 2.825 cents a pound, while this year it sells at 1.86 ‘cents a pound.” Made a Fertune After i'ifty, ' Gerieral McAlpin, commander of the New York militia, is a rich man. Many of the (iovernor’s staff are millionajres, but none of them wear swords that cost $7,000. General McAlpin's father, at the age of 50 years, was employed in a tobacco factory. The war made him, The stockholders became frightened at the rnin which was staring them and the country in the face, and were crazy to unload everything they had at an enor- They fell among the alarmists, who believed that the South was going to break up the government. Ad MecAlpin, however, was an ardent Union man. He managed to secure nearly all of the stock, and when the price of to- bacco went kiting his fortune was made, if a popul ir choice for.the honor had been made tion for pardon inigh: Ce made | person belonging to tf {emy at West Paint in June, signed from the United States Army, diff April, 1861; and was a General in the GEN. LEE'S. AMNESTY. fis Appliontion fo President Johnson the Result of Patriotic Motives. Thirty years ago this month, (General Robert Edward the Confederacy, never greater than in the hour of the failure of his cause, ‘ § wrote to Predident Johnson a letter ap- | plying for the benefits of amnesty and | restoration to his civil rights as a sitizen of the United States, Johnson's proclamation of general am- nesty had been issued on May 29. Size teen classes of persons were Rp ifically American manufacturers a ! that on | excluded. Lee was excluded not.only because he was a West Pointer and military officer of the Confederate Gov. spent ranking higher than Colonel, but also becanse he belangedl to the to fa thirteenth class excepted. namely, those persons who had volt tat arily patti fpaied in the rebellion, and the valine of whose taxable property was over §10.00, The emnesty proclamation -of May 19. 1865, provided, however, tls! special applica- bv any (RES G reepted: and Gen, Lee therstor a the sub. joined letter: “Richmond, ¥n.. Tune 13. 1865. “His Exc'y. Andrew .! + 150m, “Pre<ident of the United States, “Sir: Deing excluded from the pro- facturars or operators to visions of amnesty contained in the pro- | clamation of the 20 ult, 1 hereby apply all rights and privileges extended to | those included in its térms. “I graduated from the Military Acad- | Confederate Army, and incinded in the surrender of the Army of N. Va., April. 9, 1865. “I have te honor to be, V fully, Your obedient servant, : (Signed ; “R. E. Ler." "The copy we have of this document is | had been 8 this count ry. 1429; 9 re abhor it is gene attested by Gen. George Washington | Custis Leo, Confederate Commander; and Gen. G, £111 be divided on though there is no doubt $494. £49000, 00h; deficit, $44, Yaspaip. W. C. Lee adds this highly interesting | tie al note concerning his father's | , {motives in making so promptly thias, but there has never been any rea- | g: . Prompt LL I WE SELL JOHN BULL. AMERICAN MANUFAGCT JRES NOW FIND A PEADY SALE IN EUROPE. ——— aot . the great soldier of Shoes, Woolens and Typ:writers. An Unexpected Result of thy Herd Times. Our Tools and Machinery ie Foreign Lands. Englishmen Use Our Bikes. A remarkable phase of the recent bus ness depression has Leen the singular impstis which it has give ta the ex- portation of American paannafactures, account of the hard times ned nearly go many goods were being cocumed ing All branches of tr duced and t ith the pr i the mon hig Ioannis £10 Went prompt- raets, thie wirika is an COMIpet Bopts 5 wiih of Amel : tons of Arierican riioes have been delivered in a sin- gle day to Leicester dealers at prices cheaper than they could bs hiought from the manufacturers there. Cominenting on this dispatoh, the london Daily | Nows said that ar this rate there willl soon be little left for the English mani wontend for. And this is entirely tre. est boot and shee making ma- chinery in the world, . Furthermore, we have the raw material comparatively | close at hand, and while we pay more for erence in wages is entirely made up| parative amount of work turned ont by | the American and the English operator. | {To such: perfection has boot making in ery respects this country beer pushed that to-day we manufac turers ‘have machines which dec lare turn out finer shoes than those | ' which are made by hand. But perhaps the most Jemarkable de- the eldest son of the great | velopment of export tride from this . country has been that of the editor of the Metal Worker: “Probably the finest mechanics in the an ap- | world are now to be found in Ne w Eng- i plication to President Johnson for am- | land, and in the making cf 1001s, éspaci- {nesty: “When Gen, Lee requests make 4 copy of this Jet Johnson, he remarked: right for him to set nn exampls of mak- ing formal submission to the Civil An. thorities; and that he thonght, } trig, he mizht possibly be in a better po- sition to be of use tothe Confederates who were not protected by ‘roles; especially Me. Davis, “a, W. C. Lig.” Ww ¥ £ ter to Prosiderit me 10 guired. we It was but Maxim ILIArY Pa | gonlios gi ‘ally high priced instruments in which great precision and accuriu fend all other countries, is the testimony of investor Ii that he could not fmd a siuare that wus really square in Hi Europe, ex- cept those which were made in America, } by 80 do- | And so in other lines, 06h nhackines as sis ¥ A tarning lathes, i . Y 1% 2 5 - chines drill presses, microme i rules, coming cthnost invari othe Ltd Dla "Tg ETE? tei riih : ai ? ihe Fhe sevwinge tnacoineg vad one of the In laying to-day before our roeade ry first of American manda Lnred prod- and the Ze aieral public Gen. Ri yoert E. i ucts to be intro ine | ab; ‘Ohad, I. and it 80 Lee's application for a par fon | own declaration of the motives J prompt | v, and his Learly acquired preceden:e There are com- | that it has held the lead ever sinc e. ; | rod a he “7 fin 1 wall eladi f iT We Amherican ingennity has. invented and perfected | for the benefits and full restoration of 4.0 ; he difference of skill and the com-! fine tools, Said’ ylaniers abd S000 nas! THE OLD Hove ar a Graceful Tribute by the Rew Dw © Collyer. : Ta a scries of articles vpon “The Woman Who Inflaenced M2 Most.” pub lished in the Ladies’ Home Journal, Rev, Rebert Collyer, the blacksw ith preacher, in paying trilvate to his me ther, saya; “So rhe stands in the snnlight of the for doing well what she :nrnst take in ‘hand that I think still if it bad fallen to ber lot and her training to govern a tkingdom she wonld have 13316 a nihla queen and governs it wel | while what : she did govern well was the hor { eager nnd outbreeding ch llron with 8 #1 of the «ll Berge ker blood in thai, as I hare recsom to suspect—ieep- 2 ing us all well in hand and © coring the [way for ns into the worli's creat life when our time eames to ro forth: seeing t that we were well ho day and Sonday, : while the zchool wave was paid for nua, 80 long as we conlid be svar { fo gothere, cont of th cehillings un weet my father earned in those days at his aavil, together with the pittance sore of us i oould earn by and br in the factory,” { Of his visit to the scenes: of his child. hood fa Encland, Dr. Colivir w “3 “80.1 went font the villey, ag they say, with ay heart in py month, and i sosmed to bosaving to the boy I saw i theongh thi: misiz of the rrany vases: “Doar little fallow, yor hala hard 2 grr nt eg wasn't it now? H.ve any lowers in the world beside ever seemed so sweet to) srimrose and | yon knew so v'ell where te rally considered that this | ' find and bring home to nao hy vr, or have '* thd your | ¥ : throstle, | { or were there vver such Ci riz — des | y ¥ | saggested, may be the essential principle | you as the snowdrop, thie , the cowslip any singing binds ever nate memory of the skylark lt 4] ‘a8 those ah» made for ta when her ctdidren and the world were all young ry ‘ stond wher? south, and ‘with a cin of roses set abont with wallflower, pinks and sweet williams. | There was a plum tree als) branching about the winklows.. Then went with- fn doors of the home which was, and is | no wore, to nd the bright ypem fire that | baming | 2 TOO i : went ont in 1839, bu was. «3:11 for me, and the walls of t were white as the driven 1 ov. There was the famous bureau. .1 0», shining Like a dim mirpes, and and too slow 4b real tim vit here in gar dining room nov. gtill the ®ne tore rack avant the w Christmas and the sum all things were 230 rife Turner could not have dore soul nF wil? TT ri tha + wis for ing him to one of the mie roic acts of paratively few sewing machines made | ‘8 life full of heroism, The San feels that it is adding lustre to a noble faire which | from American factories and by Amer- Something of the same is constantly growing as the years pass, | mm Earope except those male by branches ‘fcan machinary. and which is justly appreciated and gen. 50Tt is true of 1 inting pr esuds i Another (urious examyp e is the type- | erously prized in the North es well as in the South. —Ne IW ed OTK Sun. WAGES TRE WORLD OVER. Enprmous Variations froin Slate to State and Country to Country, TItis popalarly suppose that the immna- | table law of supply and demand operat- ing throughout a country makes the wages for the same labor uniform in | dicate an immense every part of -it, us a dearth of labor in any one place cannot be of lung duras tion while men are nl wisd elsewhere, A recent supplementary bulletin of the | manufactures of the United States, howe éver, shows this general view to be! false. In Colorado the average yearly earns | ings of an employe of a manufacturing makes. Now. corapany was $720; in Montana, $722; in Nevada, $71 the States where colored labor is abun- is $376: in Mississippi, $310: in North Carolina, $216; in Georgia $307, and in | South Carolina, $267. In New York the | ‘average is $530; in Pennsylvania, $492; | in Ohio, $479, and in Massechnsetio | ‘Wheitit i is s00p onslized to what extent | the femald And “ghald* labiyiEndyrs inte | { Yotk the 3 The total | Wages paid ie New afk vfs; whflivturing @ rprisesar gis in oxime VRS to | $500, 400,000, ’ lar, >: a gre Bid ns | ators of egal vane and pat it upon the best ho qtland | the wholesale mariet mm lige quanti-| twy offered | 'a consigned f. 104k jaachines to | their European agent, be was utterly ; dumbfou ; ; } | took their sale Ffande area lif{lebelpr 3 . Then there-is a heavy drop ail Asi nia, the Nefherldads, arg ne am reached; the sealq goesqital lt Jowey ig (Yermany where the rate is the sath 58. Ireland. Risdia, Seedan oY aly follow | Bere in thegr dif 1g ¥ding to the tabk:’ te Bald. ‘a an bia writy, . glasshlowers are the best paid mechanics in Italy, and paper makers the poorest, The rate of wages in Italy, low as it is now, was still [dwer twenty-five years | ago. In England the increase in the rate of wages has beenabout twenty per cent. in twenty-five years. A French bricklayer gets fifty per cent. more wages now than were paid for his work in France forty years ago. The Mean Thing. “David,” exclaimed Mrs. Fogg, as her lord and master entered the house on a muddy day, ‘I'd be willing to bet al- most anythirig that you didn’t wipe your | fact on the mat before you came in here.” “Well, I guess you're about right, Hannah,” replied Fogg; ‘but 1. did wipe my shoes on it.’ : And then the aggravating thing langh- od like a hyena, just as though he had said somethidg awfully smart.--Boston Transcript. Edmund G. “Row, ex- United States Senator from Kansas, whose vote saved Andrew Johnson from impeachment, is | now a job printer in Albuquerque, N. | | watch casts | been Casy ios INOS evs load — equivalent writer. Thera is to- day prac ti; ally. 10 yer ls vos 0s bid t ¥ . English machin « on the Eugl to comets th the America an pre For sone reas that i 14 difiio explain, the kaglhish have not yes been cessful ma ‘hit 18, 3 0 such an wwritérs in Europe as in this county, bat careful estimates in- incre sa an "mand in the nex? few years. Another Ams found reptar dye is tlh able to tarn our a sue Of course thers has Foo ppnow al tery accepualice ol Ly] the d (Lo entirely years, | lish 114 * ak J £8 well wera | Pt hans *superior to tle American however. the American manufacturers are tani ogt a ma- | S, and | in Wyoming, $768. In { chine that is not oniy hunter and | stronger but cheaper thay any made in dant the total average earnings are con- ! Europe, and, in conse puedes, -of this, 3 "within the last vear a lire number of | aC hie I We Deen se tom t try ard . 4 all the le:ding makers i have established Bm sncies, American watcd ! years ago, found that the demand for had sudden they went to work muicin, « relometers, ' These little machines woe selling ig! Eu rope al seven 5 Bde dollars 2 piece. Experi the mann- { fagturers that th sould mike eyelo- ties for about §1.25, under- msign- ment reiche » lor had Oflate years Amerionn mad have taken ed al- Most exclusives 11 A. 1s also the case With Ameria: agricultural machinery. Almost wll the larger Ainormicaar houses have of lute year ts : agencies, und Tis aunually reach a large Within the vear them nt reaper SENT A ship- of Taa- chines to the B r large consigr nents to the Bal ic and to Al: glers: The Amenc to the E hig { tO 100 carixuis s Yaoi id ah AUR Sed, alba Olle n shipped irket to be thence reshiy ped to staat parts of the world. Invalid Doctor, ‘1 should not fear death. but | am so afmad of being burned alive! : : Physician—You need have no fear of that with me attending von.-- New York Weekly. Batcher-— Will yeu steak, Miss? Young Honsekee pex—Cih, 1 don't care! what shape iL 1s »0 1Us teader. —Detroit " Free Press. liiz coun- 3 1facturers, | f when the depression set in about two Cullen off. Bod gouni sernbbing, wh » fem FArearms’ cae of ale aropean! lave a round REV, ROBERT COLL YER, “There were six of ug in thé enrlier years, also, to make gool the oll rue pt ! . r its now amd then: Four is good company. five iu Six is a family, seven 's Leo lars: bat I think she would have refitted the rhyme to the reason if there ha ! beer more, : “And now how did she raise us w that her sop mast fain wr ie down this WMEINGTY 7 3 ie, “The; re Was fai ir white linen and calice first to wear and sleap ir. And until we could ses to it ourselves, once a week therd was the tub where w' Ind a bid engugh ‘for the sad solewunit ¥, with yellow soap and things that fot into youreyes, gd a stout “harden tosy T i -harge, i > 0 dy off withal, { 5. so that ow, Ti 1 ¥ think of of Col 's Salurday tL the worms of the ‘Wha hath red eyes. who tion, who hath strife? and I can answer. I know whp hal wll thesw, uy Sats ye years ago, when | was tured dnio that tub, while there was Lut =1ani‘cambiag for me in the words she would say as a sort of benedi “tion, ‘There nw, children, gleanliness i next wo Go v “How did’ we fare, the six hearty children? There was oatinail, and what we call mush who kpow me Letter, and skiza milk in plenty, with oateake, ae mother would say, to fill in. also wheat- en bread fur more careful ure, and some- ties a {race} batier. Not much meat, for meat was dear, but sony with dump- lings, and what the ok York<hire folk ‘used to call *sikelike” st wonl with a wide meaning. And the tradition still remains of an early time of mnoesncy when mother would say those who eat the most dumpling sh ull have the most meat, So we would pag away uutil we did net want any nieat, aml then mother would save it for the next day's diumer. There was fruit, also, when this was cheap, ia the Jovely guise of a pie, anl then more oatmeal and skim nilk for sapper.’” A writer In Bla a says that “priests cannot change itleir priestly sountenance if they wished. For some mysterious reason tire suboutaneons tis- sue over th. cheekbones am under the Jaws of the clerics face gets an undue supply of mourishnient, wich leaves distinctive marks while the conscious ness of a share in the Apostolic legaey | gives a muscular set to the lips.” long ago, and sha had also rpch a genins | ofallof | {se well tod: -made with helium. time then. but if wis a gor] time also, “And thers was the old home nest. It! the villa stands now, but I | | wonld not have exchanged the memory 18 ‘for the. ATi It was a cottage of | ‘two rooms and am attic fronting due | there was a groen doorysed | tet 8 clock | ‘which was alwara too L2 at bellime | stands | FP PX) men and dig a hole There was | feast: while | bv pictures | to save his | | : ¢ .; be leveled and the Isthinos of Panama wise mat are apt to Comms hick to we, ah conten | wake him comfortabla in i joy life and at the same tine “where near it,” responded the whose team had balked across the car | ANOTHER ? NEW GA HELIUM, TAKEN ~ Fiom STONES, SHOWS REMARKABLE QUALITIES. Hecme the Complement ot Argon. Terrifin "Explosive Force of This New Gas, Which May Revolutionize Naval Warfare and Accomplish Unheard of Things, Fallowing close in the track of argon another new gas, hitherto nnknown aml unsuspected, has been found, 4nd seien- tists are onxicusly waiting for reports from the laberatories where it is now i rimented with, There is no what {hae new gas is cap- orn the earlies rien had thing into their lungs withont knowing it has een shown $0 be the cane of ihe anrura borealis, Helium. the newes id thie gazes, it 18 ROW su cansa of have It is en- , although | both were discove eonsly. Argon is found in theatmos when comvlensed nnder enorna gre it looks like cheese. H Hen in found in certain minersle, snd when ex- tracted it bears a resemblance fo batter, The experiments that have thus far been show that it bears & euro! ms and strange relationshin to argon, od the ¢ may produce sults of a startling character. : “v unlike argon, helinm, so far as is known, i3 not an illnoginsnt. It does ob Kive forthi the weird li from argen by Prof. Herthelot, and which he has dential with the aurora | boreali=. But helizm is less easily con- trollable than arg n. The latter, it is simost stmmaitan- whats avuY pneTe, anc 3 i: % IWO WHEN Tne of light, while helium gives suggestions | i of being the essential pri Bile of force. Lodged in certain minerals, it is sup | posed to be present io the earth ai tupendons quantities, as is argon in the | air, and the one is the coraplement of the other, Helinm, it is pointed out, may reve intionize warfare, introdncing a new ex- piogive which will demand new guns and render ironclads worthless, It may make war so terrible that pations will fear to engage in hv stilities aad a reign s thas insared. Hit i am prog jectile, 11 » WE Ung ironels 1, with all ker crew, 1 air and the very depths of ocean be st tirred by the comeussion, Dropred army from a helio ile. a heliura iz 3 at Kiil ii} - » carta So biz that the ocean would flow in. Not aly nations bat eounires: could thus be wiped from the tis terrible £8 is to develop its suspectad explosive mountain ranges could 2 x of perpe nal peace he wo rith Py v vanish obs i nf SS in the midst of an advan Vi 1 borah, it is pointed © ap sd qualities, while 1 at by a few bombs placed at short in- tervals. : st. lakes might thins! be made to ap near in a desert, and shar a either be des fruitful or blown out of existence iace to a ses where edible fish Id be found. The terrible force thus in th a band. A of revolutionists | Who + hope of Ire wr trite Tit Yiaes FN TYE TEIN il APTenl - fray iay 4 sad SanE 1 AT the 1AETY no walls wonit VING. dow the French Show Thelr Thrift, Chil. dren Taught te dave Money, FORT Dairies Bree aple on the the basis STSOTE SAVES The hat is ved the Yeast ara siEe to be i in this grear Mmviiromss. Tae l | in! bave mre sham S060 and their depos wm Hint to abound FRM tn AR, and this birge =e is made ny of sngll sums, The Fring sshoulks teaih children save seney, and the 1m {reaguent ize given toa bight pupil ca savings ox with a’smmall nn ithe credis wher, Tis 1s piven where in mntry we wonki Het a comm nn sings “he d 10 joan to home ite interest, In the Lar factory towns of the Fist savings banks are the yu sf the poor wage k ing for Ek: » doz al ! he cor 8 1 | eonldd dd withi the bear. , | the trail and Toby located the bear in a | small patch of lanrelz, from which ke TITERS + press ly | Toby. [ eonid hava e i otitained | i t wild with rage. teeth asen ni fattened Jorty pounds of “right out on the roncaie, “tor seers gdalf om South, wi + A 3 ne Julie NOT CUT OUT FOR AN ACROBAT. 80 the Bear Dog Toby, Smart as He wan Fell a Yietim to His Zeal. “I had a dog named Toby. when I was living up in the Pennsyivania lumber woods,” said George Reywpolds. of the Natiomal Lumber Company. “He was a bear dog. Bears, as every one knows who ever lived among them, hate dogs beyond everything else, two legged or four legzed, and will frequently give ap a gend cha wpe from a pursuits hanter just for the satisfaction of wilt is yelping bebind him and taking A fall emt of him when it is adog not t benr. S¥ing over a logging rtracted for, and discoversd signs of kK. Nextdiy Toby and IL I went ontto ses what we Ve mon sirok “iy 1 4 0 rang oT soom route brain, He brought the boar to oy i i & little open space th a piece of chestnut (haber. Thers was no notes sity of the bear tariing at bay but he evidently wanted to oot a whack at asily seat a bullet through the bear, hit having the ntmost confidence in Toby's smartaess, and dee ing that the hear wd anzions to put his smartness against ts dog's, I eonclnded to let them have the chance and to enjcy the sport of & few minutes’ maneuvering ! tween the two. “It waz fun. Toby worried the ak | ready ugly old chap with tricks and { quick movements antil the bear was Do what be might he ' couldn't get a blow ora Vite in on Toby, i while Toby gota nip at the bear at al . most every tum. This amusing dances lasted for ten mingles, and felt so proud of my dog that I declared tha and there that it would like a good deal ! more than a one hundred dollar bill to { bay him. ‘+ After sparring and rushing fruitless- ly at the dog for ten minutés the bear | put his back against a tree and breathod i bard for at least a minute, - suddenly dropped to Then Le all fours and har- ried to another tree a rod or so away. Toby followed, and, as the bear start d to climb the tree. seized him br one of its hams, fos » Although the dog mnst have set his the flesh the bear did not ‘stop on his way, but climes! on a if nothing was worrying lim. he fog beld on and was lifted from the groom! as the bear climbed, The nizier the ber went the tighter Toly apna ved to bang on ils rear, and presents he was swiag- ing in the air aboat fifteen foot from Le groimd. “The sight waa so frnny tha tumbled on the ground aod roarel, he bear stoppet when about itecd leet wp the trunk of the tree, clung here a 180 ment, and then lst co. He cane down like a pile driver. When he struckat the hotto nn of Be trea Toby was betwen hip and the gro dl. There was a fin yelp and that was all “Three hundred pounds of le { doz out of of shape. - The catasts phe Wis » ir lind all kind so stdden and unespectsd ‘hat befone | from <1 couli recave it gave me the lanrels, honr doe tl . out for an | Rodiail Diversion at the Capital A few {orthmate “Dactaleors Were wit & very aEn ». in the fishing. An italian posses the niher ey nal bat 3 able Wa organ grader turning out a settes of tempring waltzes and polkas in fring | of theresidencs of one of ciety leaders. Quite a party of some of the gayestind best known sowiely i 1s” we are seated on the stems of the balmy air of Not 3% i £ {i was amenyg them. (nt moment one of the darsels suggested that they beautiful Bt dance fo hand organ Therewron pe city's EN . May evening. hive a tune of the they pairsd © hony thee miawiene #0 Joragges and coy tu thi? fas atde Sewwipe eels of the west end. dancod pag ty ground $e street in front ofthe xe dsc to theming. nog s<tonishment od a Orewa geiRcier, Then they ull “Sipfied in and thew the organ yrinder change. The Pe anual ds Nok Es . In reply ™ a question UF Oye edit of The Richy wl Dis oh, th mt of Age Ti als § has cacided AG ie eos: nut ww Dot a 3 and thie “he whip of anther a Sag oll we Cadiing 1 awd Bee § peanut of {i orth id known in the re it is connmonly grown, is r ped. ~Loweil News. : Declined | With Thashs, y “Can I write my name under Sp alte like in | ceived payieent on this bill” a "| eollector who likes to put thing "| catély as possible. zhi the im. ng avart Hid should be ce of saving wi ithant i fous and niggandly. We nsed more irift. The averaze American waged ifetune to id old age, | Arner wastes enough in We should take a lesson from in this respect.’ ate They know how to en- work hard and gave money. : Takes Years of f Schosling wouldn't swear that v Lindibooking old lady, milily, “Bless your soul, ma'am, y n couldn't. It takes vearsof truck drivin'to rack. Cincinnati © r bune. the French | " said the omeany- Jeritleman | “No, thank you,” replied Me. ly. *'I'm ao autograph fiend. — "ton Star. He, Too. 4 Miss Lillie C ‘usack {ooplat ' hg Alkali Ike's proposal)=B | home next Sunday night. Alkali tke (outly yell iy cussed if 1 don’ t stay thar. Boudelr : May-—Are your skirts “Madge Yes; after] g then theyare Mvided amoug : sisters. Vernal Odors. No sooner do the dainty Their per{umes soi Then cigarettes on proms Come into blossom, too. = Wasal po, a fall that nenally ends the I just nase line fx spar of the > is z, A SS . RM FS RR Ie A SAO TL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers