Evening Star Newspaper, January 16, 1897, Page 11

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THE EVENING STAR, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1897-24 PAGES. 11 = Pradbury Manufacturers’ January | BICYCLE CONTESTS en ati in Meats |SOME CYCLE CHAT! treater tors aevice tor mnatcatme the | THEATRICAL GOSSIP Clearance Sale Now in Progress. : speed of bicycles, which is said to be the grit, and plenty o' “There is a time in pioneer of its kind in the country. It is a the riding,” said he, “when you feel sick ae combination speed-indicating and contin Jaw is tance race of the sort, I felt that way, and | aul of the residents who owned bicycles | ‘%® maximum rate allowed by etucntion: itr? ne-e 5 taka ot bs reached, a rider will be informed by the ° a e is a warm tend of Were my cindition, the other riders must | aid not take favorably to the scheme, The| sounding of the bell thet he wy trnveline ne | generous impulses, and one of the moet det 8 $s IMPORTANCE OF GRIT} be in the same way, and I stuck it through. | objections were more strenuous thdn ‘the| fast as the law allows. It can be set also lightful companions imaginable. Here in = 1 was Stiff and sore and feeling bad ail | city fathers imegined, and the enforcement | to sound a light, unobjectionabie continu- | Washington Mr, Mansfield has a large cir- over, but I managed to hold on. of the regulation did not bring as much | 204 in the case Uf riders training for eaecs | cle of friends who always try to make his ‘There comes a time when even your re-| money into the municipal treasury as was fucast ba aasediaevaar mutonisitie: eet ‘For | visits pleasant by social attentions exten4- HE FACT THAT A/Serve strength becomes exhausted, and | caicuiated. The matter was taken into the| !t C2” a ; bs then the rider is left in a predicament. | court by some of the bicyclists and the instance, should a rider desire to keep up @} ed to himself and his charming wife. Had six days’ race has re | Stimulants have to be resorted to, and as | Court sestaines the plainelife wnt cana he speed of fourteen miles an hour. it will be | not Mr. Mansfield become an actor, there cently been compict-| tho effects of the mall doses at the be- | seerwhy wheelg as a vehicle wore givcrie! the proper point, and thea pedal away till | #8 little doubt that he would long ago have ed in this city, and| ginning wear off, the quantity has to be | inated against. The result was that a de- Ss eecuell ringing all the time. If | achieved a name for himself as one of the that there is a posst- | increased in order to feel any effects. At | cisjon was rendered declaring the ordinance | 1°, aP'telis te sound he will know that he | foremost conversationalists of the time. Dillty Of Snofher ne ne re en eee Tene. Th Snore nay | t2 be unconstitutional. is falling below the pace he has set for | ‘the art of conversation, we hear tre: here the latter pert] tif quantity of stimulant was something | In the attempt to lower records every-| himself. In appearance the bell excepting | cag ee SUeR, 18 lost art, That tt ts of March or some|it at the time. Almost ail of the riders | lightest thing that would prove in the least Lager z hogany with him can testify et time in April, is suf- | took it, and poor Rice is now in t! 0S- | advantageous to the rider is taken into ac- ny = ficient to pet up the | Pital, crazy from the effects of taking the } count. The successful trainer leaves notn- Stalking a Deer on the Ice. Sele = = eo de humor sep up drug. He will come around again, but the | ing undone which will help his charge. De-| From the Minneapolis Journal. HEM, tase tes te s Sr bine urea . interest of the public | effect is more lasting on him than on me. | tails which the general. public mould: come re had in the great bay near the | in self-defense) MS Rumor save in this style of bicy-| I never use the deadly drug outside of a | sider insignificant are regarded as impor-| _ We had gone up boys and dogs,] When Mr. Mansfield was playing that cle racing. It is com-| race. Twenty drops taken by itself would | tant by the racing men and their backers, | head of the jake, when some boys a: Se ta ee ores paving thal { paratively new on|be enough to kill a person, but, taken in | all of which tends to show to what a fine| rummaging around the woods along the ys ee this side of the Atlantic, Ameri a can of milk. the latter neutralizes the | point the record-breaking mania has been | shore, started a deer and chased it onto the | ¢UF pe tue Ren ork engtaned *, numericans, for | effects of the poison. The rider is Ike a | reduced. In this style of racing the Amer. : : : ~ Y Rha the most part, being more noted for thetr - — ———$—_— and weak-hearted. You give up all hope | the policy of taxing: Wicycles has ‘been | OUS alarm bell, and is designed to be at-| afere has probably been written about : and want to quit. There is where your . %. F ; tached to the bicycle precisely as cy- i Crack Racers Tell How They Get} srit comes in. Stick to the ride, even it | Put into operation much hearer home than| ciometers are, at the axle of the front Richard 4, a aoe oie oertaniie’ 66 you know it will be the last one you will | 1s perhaps generally supposed. There 1s a] wheel. Like the cyclometer it has the fa- | UPS age. pel y in Conditi eyer enter, and then you can be certain of | Iittle village in Marylayd, not many miles| miliar star wheel and button. is so distinctive that it is always making 9 Themselves in Condition. doing something. This is the most trying | from this city, which has a government of| The revolving of the star wheel operates | itself felt, elther pleasantly or otherwise i ‘ the whole of the race, and once upon a gearing, which turns the clapper. ereve y be. — Reagents passed, everything 1s com. | #8 OWN, and a town council and mayor. As placed horizontally in the bell. As the |)" piney eee ee ue vas mr beckon paratively easy sailing. . Your second | Ususl, the town counél{ enacts the ordi-| Speed is increased, centrifugal force nakes | Han v attainments, a: need STOMACH MUST BE IN G00) ORDER strength, as it were, comes to your ald, { nances for the government of the town| the clapper describe a circle of widening | be true, he possesses a temper as varia J and you are able to do more hard ridin; and devises means for ‘faising revenue. At} radius, and the striking surfac2 of the bell | as the wind. ‘Those who know him only by though it is at the expense of your reserve | a recent meeting the city fathers decided to| 18 cleverly arranged so that it can be al- having seen him upon the stage ard by strength piace a tax of $1 upon’ ill bicycles owned | Justed to this radius. The bell can be set} wnat they have read of him have a rather - : In a race, especially the first you ever s seat ed | so as to ring continuously or to sound at e Use of Stimulants, Especially Co-| enter, this feeling is terrible. With expe- | bY residents of the village. The regulation} any predetermined rate of speed. It is in- | CUfious idea of what he is in private life. i rience you are able to overcome it, and | Was passed in due order, received the signa-| tended to warn a rider when te is exceed-| Those. who enjoy the pleasure of his 99 ine, Whil the Track with bulldog tenacity you stick to’ your | ture of the chief officist and with due cere-| Ing a lawful rate of speed, for 1° the indi-| friendship, or acquaintance even, know caine, He on the Track. work. I remember, in the first long-dis- | mony: was put into execution. Caton, 33 set 20, that the) beil will ing WhO iat be is a eentieasn tnlisenier end ly, oO ice, and we had the most exciting chase] the author, George Bernard Shaw h new man. All stiffness and pains leave his | ican riders are far ahead, though for lon a i as Pics = : tances the wing in short and middle dis-| body, and he can ride miles upon miles at | distance racing the European racers lead, | immediately after I ever took part in. We Cie ae EAE ee ‘This sharp decisive cutting we are doing | *#NCes than for their endurance in long-dis- | the magt rapid galt without feeling the ef-| Take the case of a rider beins paced by | cid not harm the animal, and had we wish- | the mos ! ‘There's Shaw, now, tls sharp dectalve werdre: 60 7 . he is not only a successful playwright, a w is thinning out the ranks of the slightly tance racing, though the record established | fects of the strain. The other riders can’t | a quad. There is another rider on the track | ed to do so we couldn't, for there wasn’t a pi eI musical critic, a socialist, a member of the Troe rele EE | La z keep up with you at your terrible speed, | fellowing him, as he hangs close ‘to the yore ays of such ‘selling and our January ’y Frank Waller last September, in mak- in the crowd; but we made him “make | Fapian Society, and possessed of red hair. : and ycu can leave anything on the track. | rear of the pacers. No one for a moment | &U : 3 - ; 5 whcesstecapnt 3 Seering sale, must cod Here'are's tex | 10g 100 miles In a little over seven minates eae eases Would think’ that the firet-anan behind the | the effort of his life” before he broke the) but he In‘aiso as =—= <== more “‘snaps’” that ought to be sold by noon Jess than four hours, equals that made by Say eae ea etre eee quad would have a big advantage, from a| trocha we built around him and got away.| | Th Sa teen tO Bee Mer ee was asked 301 o mnigh 1 that would put blush to the Mouday You shave a happy-go-lucky feeling | racing point of view, over the man who| When he sighted him he was making | he had been to sce Mr. Brady's melodrama, “Under the Poiar Star.” He mused awhile, | 82" Whoop of an Apache Indian. Lt woul: Trhile under the influence, and don't care | rides Immediately behind him and is second | straight across the bay, which is five miles | 7 nder the E Under the polat star, ahem] | have awakened the Seven Sleepers, and it = the cracks of England,France and other cy- Tac $375 Upright,$228. cle countries of the continent. The record of | yn any danger. The other riders you pass | from the pacing machine. Yet this is tres, this same rider In covering fifty miles in y wide, and the ice was so slippery that he! Let me see, Isn't that the play where they | Drought everybody in the house to the room Just one very slightly used magnificent less than two hours is equally as good a| /€¢ ® Streak of lightning. Nothing can Beeler amano eee ana to, expand could not make ee were vane do impessible things on ice? He ids unsiher kee cere: seni bas ten: ap gra 0 octave s . ¥ e realized 2 te ee eee ere shania stand ta your way. When the effect of} directly behind the pacers. The explana-| time of his kind when they t e- . * vigil had gone for naught, and that, despite Z sculs into their heels, and scatter miles be . Mansfield’s varied career, first as | ¥ pedals, Including’ the In England the favorite long-distance ria- | tH® 408e is worn off you are left in a pitia- | tion is simple enough. The big pacing ma- : 2 his unselfish desire, he had waked her from pho yee 3 ble condition, and would collapse if an- | Chine, in cutting through the air, creates aj ind them with an easy indifference most} painter and then as actor, has given him a Sey ey % " Suleeedl aaew: ant talks ing Is done more in the summer time than in| other and stronger dose was mot given, | Sort of a vacuum in its trade’ ne man | Peautiful to witness. “Doc” Spalding, | {424 of experience prolific in good stories. gyregatecd, TO close the winter. The American makes his long-| and immediately you are transformed pees! follows directly behind gets the full SS en eS Paes 780, you onoe Nivea ty painting?” sald z Monday, only... 3 diatencs 2 z s on the dose has an | benefit of the vacuum, and the air rushing | Who wa 3 ian A sen yeep ee Sea ciate ; Ear in the winter time upon an seat ane eee use causes tho | in acts apa sort of-a suction and helps to} ahead, and very soon passed him, and] spite of painting,” was Mr. Mansfield’s cor- | Burt G. Clark, who plays the part of the Handsome hardwoxt stool and Japanese Bae ae a rama IB | ihe 1o-loaet histhicadl andubecomel crac: | Loccoshim (slang: ENotisa serait ocean ea || fanoed alens ty tien, (end when na (Ga tira (ensign: Syvaty ng satirical comments on} breezy old Kentucky colonel in “In Old silk searf ineinded. he otherwise waste time for cycling, while | was crazy for three days at Madison | tan behind the pacing machine. Conse-| there wae rine of —- eilyerouns ee ee ES asa ee it is still | Kentucky Col. Clark is a southerner, * * for the most x ently, to ovel 2 him, and for an hour he played w a fact that nearly all of the important Other Piano Bargains. ¢ most part the English rider does his | Square. I could not see the other riders. | % yy, rcome the advantage gained ly P MONTHLY PAYMEN’ “There is no more delicious drink in sum- mer time than the “mint julep,’” said Col auene yecoomientt bs Pe aeearean anon Sey ee arene — and has a great fondness for the mint julep hard work in the summer tim the | The only thing that I could see were le | bY the man in front he has to pedal that | Very ™uch as a four-le; - scene! uses today in his productions 18 | ‘The colonel, by the way, earned his title on roads of British isle. ‘Twenty-four. | trees In'my way on the track, and 1 would | "uch faster, meaning more work and more| We got him running in a circle, but we| after designs from bis own pencil. ti for hii ble to catch him, for every time Here is asi ‘Mr. M. field told k 1 the field of battle. He served in the con hour contests on outdoor J or | €%ertion for him. were unable + z ere tory Mr. Mansfield told lately, | federate army, and he served unde a $100 Harris, $25 mon events there, and anthectitesteone is A eweriaaTannints Stent Sanaipeaoce — any one tried it, that venturesome individu. When the conversation had turned to hard- | famous guerrilla Quantrell. Col. Clar TIS, $25.6 is from Land's End to John O’Groat, the |them down. I never knew where the other | 1" 1898 John 8. Johnson, while at Inde-| ai elther failed to get a hold on him, or, | luck experiences: mild-mannered, hearty, whole-souled fel $150 Haines, $65.. alpha and omega, as It were, of the Brit-| riders were, but still, in the condition that | Pendence, Iowa, rode a quarter mile, | Succeeding, was hurled as from a catapult It was years ago,” he said, “when I | low, and there is nothing in his kindly ey — Decker, $195 ish a record that is contested for al-|1 was in. I was very successful in avoid- | Standing start, paced, in the remarkably | 2/0ng the ice, to the great delight of all the} was starving, more or less, in London. I|to indicate any of. that blood-thirstins bets Ba Ge Os are crc ct Most every year, but which of late hag not | Ing any collisions, and in keeping clear of | fast time of 28 seconds. This record has | 28t. It was the merriest skating party I| had reached ihe pleasant condition of hav. | which Quantrell’s guerrillas were supposed rey Ss ifi ed been broken so readily as of yore. In| them when they passed me or I passed | ever been equaled, and is one of the| ever witnessed, although the deer might ing had nothing to eat that day, and hav-| to possess. The colonel does not care to rgans acrificed. France and. Belgium long-distance ride me oldest world's records in existence. While | "Ot have scen much matter for merriment, ing my last shilling in my pocket. I was | talk about his war experiences, but on from towns to towns are also popular and Poor Rice was in the same condition, |"¥Merous attempts have been made to| in it. 3 mi less his wind | P2/Ki8S along looking somewhat covetous- | mint juleps, for instance, he is volubility form a large proportion of the interest of | only his hallucination assumed a different | lower It, not one has been successful, and | But he was perfectly safe, un! f which the | pinto the windows of the various coffee | itself. $75 Smith American, $15 the cycle-loving public. form. He imagined that I wag after him | from present Indications the record played out before ours did, of which the places and pastry shops I passed, when | “The author has put a good deal into my v2 ae Vig Teo To the foreigners the test of endurance | with a knife, and was yelling to the others | Stand a few years longer. Otto Ziegler, | €Vent proved there was small danger. One-}euddenty"came upon a friend, a vagabond | part about mint juleps,” said he, “and $150 Weaver, $75....- . i cxcling comies more natural fhan to the | to take the knife away from me, as I was | With a flying start, unpaced, made the dis- | Wing of the circular trocha we had formed) like myself, but apparently ‘Just’ then in | one scene I'am sompelled to drink thre ¥ bakapHs f breath and slowed up, | much tter luck. Hi - | of them. I am a lover of a well-made juley _ 5--$2] American, the habits of living’in the va-| going to kill him. Even after the race he | tance in two-fifths of a second above the | 1 the line got out o bet ck. He was gorgeously ar: $200 Estty & Co., 18 stops, $125..$2| American. the probably accounting for this | entertained this same idea’ f'‘wae ati | time, while the Euglsh ccc for the | & Sap was formed in the line, and the deer | rayed in all the black and white splendor | but, unfortunately for me, the properts No exchanges. fact. Yet It seems the riders on this side |erazy at the end of the race, and was|same distance and the same riding as| WeMt through it like a flash, and the last] of evening clothes. He had @ diame ne our e.2 fash, and the ls ‘ i- | mah makes these, and T regret to say that Strated ty vbe Yell, Chough, as is demon- | taken to the hospital, but after nearly a | Ziegler ts 282-5 seconds. Johnson made | ¥¢ S@W of him was “hull down,” and going | tation, he, explained, at Lord Cavendistrs, | they are made of plain water. put into strated by the fact that most of the six-|'week's treatment 1 came around alt right, | the fast time soon after: thes introduction | ®S merrily as {f freshly started. or some place of that sort. We'd go in| 8Teen colored tumblers, with a oe ra ur day records are held by Americans, and | in spite of the fact that some of the papers | of the quad, and while he has nevee ton ——__++— Fee ree re eee alle pometiing on | Bia OA ERS Sp At 9 Poetics Semaie- that the recent six-day-go-as-you-please | ‘Sald I was in such bad condition that my | able to equal the record,’he has come the It Came Oue Just That Way. the strength of it. We went into one of | ton, sah, to be rpg eg ag carey toring record, which was smashed by Teddy Hale, | recovery was not looked fo closest to it of any. riders. Ruring his Cer aeee Diates thal (ate eckttered inl | Pomenems oonbocsen atte sepet aleriees Factory Warerooms. a menber of Plummer’s English string,| In view of this, it seems as though long | recent trip to England he rode the cis. | From the Chicago Record. ae eS Mp edb pete oe gt teed neteme nec eo be was for eight years held by Albert Shock, | distance racing is not as rosy as some | tance in one-fifth of @. second above the Merton ts a book collector, and what is | Centglass of champagne on draught for “ 4 bows : Pngyenblicy all Hoe tecnebeoueanta.” 1225 Pa. Ave. the American. would think. Even though the purse for-} time. 1 Saite: Ws reads Books: six pence. They. always have a huge | ¢ Dal. KSkik baeven Shee tes Suey te < 2 Conditi. : the winner may be large, the damage pate » x 5 cheese about, you know, from which you Col. Clar! : —- “3 v > 4 FREEBORN G. SMITH, Manafacturer. ondition of the Stomach. done to the constitution “is irreparable | |The time has come whey experiments are| MTS. Merton makes her own dresses. —_| can nelp yourself, which is the nearest ‘sy, EE ey er 25 W. P. VAN WICKLE, Manager. at_| TO one unacquainted with this style of | should he win. There are many who do | numerous in the ling sf suhstitating ioc | A few evenings ago Merton was deep in| proach to the Fae nen Stal they Dave | Fon lone Sebi Dabney, an abl Golered een’ ~ Fiding it ts supposed that the contestants | not even get a smell of the prize money. | the chain some other driving power for] the travels of Anacharsis in ancient | over there. Well, we tucked Ino ihe piasach, “stibee Seen tion ae emmens teen = have to train hard for their long ride. Some p=aee<S the bicycle. The public 49 well acquairted | Greece, and Mrs. Merton was industriously i or at least I know that I did, and one end of the south to the other. Great Reduction do: babs moat Gb! hemidenict: Ot caeen The Uabaowe Neca: Pith the introduction of the chainless cycle | poking a needle through the hem of a dress | N° Tne ee cumaens {ach | ““John Dabney is an institution, sab,” he In Hai none of the riders enter the race if they do | From the Minneapolis Jourual. and the bevel gear. ‘Whtle the latier has | skirt. hot, but. there is probably not = mictace of | continued. “Yes, sah, he ts as much a n Hair. given favorable resul‘s, it has not as yet |” wpnye probably not a mixture in | Credit to the south as the Washington and pen ee not feel in comparatively good trim, though |’ J. B. Tyrell of the dominion geological | been able to reach the plane occupied we | 2! coe nat_is/sarer tovcreate\Wnger|vc5 Wetversity. Eichinowa Steniiver Sak: n Switches, 250. formerty (3.90. instances have bee known where the men | survey department lately returned from | the chain, one of the rudiments of phys.| It was a firm, interrogative monosyllable | than cheese and. champagne. T hadnt Switches, 6», formerly 10.50. a ee Le ee ee went in when feeling quite sick and at the Gray Switches, 150, forreerly 6.50. end of the ride were In excellent condition. First-class attendants in Hairdressing, Shan.poo | The main training of the men seems to be in making spins of several miles each day Oo Virginia is proud of him. The south honors the unknown north, where he has been | ics being that in transmitting power it is} which brought Merton's feet down from a cone a a Jas I had a huge one al-| nim No, sah, there never will be another making explorations. He left Selkirk on | Necessary to employ an appliance that| hassock, leaving him staring blankly 3 atter that cheese and cham- | 7 : : ‘ ney, and when he passes away we will gives the least frictton.’ One prominent Sas aan dont positive gnawing. I was men- 10 more mint juleps—and that will be June 24. Taking canoes at Grand Rapids, | manufacturer mainialudy that fhe 'tncus | through twenty-three centuries. tally gloating over the shilling’s worth of | B@ye,ne more mint Julep te. ‘Try our “Curlette’* for retaining ark = 5 a calamity, sah; yes, sah, a calamity.” : he, with Indian guldes, proceeded to Nor-| gear is in no way. equal to chain, upon s brushing his eyes } food E would xo {orth and feast on, when | and the colone's votes quivered a tit. Pres- S. HELLER S, If the rider has a good appetite, that 1s | 100 miles to the Pine river, Which they as- | the See methofs which g1V,| velveteen and cut the plece inte five strips | ssifty tence hariantiirere yas ey Eisabaa: She pater webeee Se pak a e least exertion are requisites, an us, 3 : * : yt man, | ‘field day’ at Bluefield, the place where 720 7th Street N.W. everything. | Should his. stomach ‘0, back Gended to the Wolf river. All this territory | tar the hain esrves ab ihe and a for skirt binding, wouldn't it be enough to | but I seem to have left my pocketbook ai . Nina, Fannie Washington, Eolus F s on ag the ride he x bas practically never before been eatered 2 ae ind a skirt which is four yards around? home. If you happen to have a shilling of the best horses of Virginia Pe sequently more attention is patd ts thts oe | ean te men. Reaching the Nelson, they | che chairman of the racing board witi| _ Krom Alcibiades to mental arithmetic was} abopt yous anys ad the satisfaction of | were foaled and trained. Dabney, sah, fur- : a long call, but Merton tackled the prob- |'payiig ouf my lést’. she i gan than to the general condition of the | miles, and followed the Burntwood to a re- | "®t @ccept records which are merely an- “ Tra ae and chatsparaee St™ | tlshed the edibles and, mixed his faioy a le ger-raising chees ” * me wi 5 ‘5 2 nounced in the newspapers. Compet. 5 bs ig cheese and champagne. juleps. At these ‘field days’ when the trial as F za. | Mots Hudson Bay Company post. officials, and at least one L.A. We ES We, maya dext i} Reiventured, etter amp Panenierere yar au iilener Satan, 9 Sons Take Charley Ashinger ag a representa- “This large section of the country,” says sentative, must be present to act in the | Ment: “you would come out just nine “Madam Janauschek was a remarkable | ihe major’s custom and pleasure to as- tive long-distance rider, whose record for| Mr. Tyrell, “is not a wilderness of recke capacity of timer. Many rdere Revermene| itches short. z Foe an ind @ wonderful actress when I] semble his guests in his parlor, and there on be properly filled as} Six days (eight hours) was broken. at the | svch as lies to the east of here, and has | mistakes in the past. W. W. Hamilton docs Yes,’ observed Mrs. Merton, musingly, te Otis Skinner is quoted as | the day was appropriately wound up in More so, Dechaps. A} contest recently held at the Ice Palace} Leen dcscribed by many of the men who | Mistakes tn | paced mile record because of a | With her chin in her hana; “I have. ys. first, met her during the old| singing the old-time southern a tjonal | after standing for over five years..He does | have pretended to have a knowledge of { Dot hold the pac Ofithonmiieey an Z ‘Have what?” asked Merton, looking up. re's no | very little training, and in fact none at all.| the region. I found a well-wooded coum. eS S srules.: Shes case iG . days of the Walnut Street | Thomas Nelson Page, Virginia’ “Come out nine inches short Theater, Philadel, Y ; : oh nem | “Of course,” said he to a Star reporter, “I| try, interspersed with stretches of prairie; | “i, F. Dirnberger is brought to mind. -In Merton straightened up. iladelphia. ‘There were not | writer, was always there, sah. Upon each many women stars then, upon to recite “Little EE “Ao chey'dnurt make | always aim to keep in good health, and hia | a soll of rich clay loam, with clay subsol. | {we 22t108 of IMit. Denberger was sent to ugg lt& Merton.” ‘he began, with dignity, | was in her prime. How she frightened me | Socks pacm wreatien ba nim and dedleae in i is one of the great sec ti ‘a eat stretches that were a few years ago "train. | “if you knew by actual trial how the thing | one night, for ist : fiding., Af Keeping good hours and regulat- | heavily timbered with spruce have felt the | Sith the assistance of a big corps of train-| would coe out Why did Younee ane ried | roe sf, & as only ee a ee Arlington Drug Store, | iss me character of the food taken can be| deadly effects of fire, and are now's me 7 | sequently more attention is paid to this or-| again descended it for about seventy-fi IPS JUST up in a problem in mental arithmetic I had been given Seyton to play. We h. thos, sah, depicting the leading inci- called strict training, then I train, but I] blackened stubble of dead tree form ahd rosdy for the tig unterteee | “just because | been carefully rehearsed, and at rehearsed | a manos San, eee \t Ave. & H St. 4¥ez,8, Daggett. | hardly think that you can call tt such.| “There are large areas of rich, cultivable ed ramen Pt I was letter-perfect. In th Dabney is a work of ar’ Cor. Vt. Ave. t jal5- zai ‘The only real hard work I do preparatory | lands west of the Nelson, and, though | DMberger succeeded in lowering several ph! hek dices! Aner poeastorees | Mecca toes pees Sateen me Tae 7 eo Se to a race ts to ride every day for an hour| wheat ‘Is not. grown, simply because ‘it | TeCoras, but a few weeks later was In-| “Marie? eowa nave sald more only that [Scenes one could faigit sae tee neonate | bestowed upon personages whom he holds ROM BABY or two, covering fifty miles, and sometimes | would be of no value, all varieties of vege, He det net kny {abor was for his pains. | ne wasn't at all surprised He had been.| sen hones, =2 eS Be aperad eng tet S 4 J ‘ = 3 le did not know that such events required i = 2 ne yes. vas my duty to announce | a sterling silver 3 “ ) GRANDFATHER __| icresindse Parte dots an Pecmee-| es promcn, ia toe envdone of he | Byala gor oe ten pong “uta | anced beten gat” Tela te Ie | Ueryeteahy fearae mee, womens |e ringer, ee, fur ch }I received my cue. Wh 4 ap, of rt capacity, W: ea PHOT ot every | ‘le sult and make the ride on a home train-| hardy. Large stretches of prairie also oc. | Comseduence never had his records accepted. | yer, Ne added Dorwet nd oem ent ‘ac y When the proper time | silver. The cap, of a qua » : 4 ought to sai & : game madam gave it to me again, but, real- | made for Dabney, and bears upon its bow . , won't he a baby Jeng. | €r, with enough pressure to make the ped-| cur, and I have stood on the banks of the One of the causes that is believed to have ‘It was just like a woman: izing the mistake I had made, the lines fled | the legend: ‘John Dabney, presented by the . + emu wn grow to be men and | aling something like work. I do this sim-| Purntwood river and gazed on just such advanced the bicycle in popularity is varie- —+ e+ —_____ and I was speechless. I could feel the | gentlemen of Richmond, champion julep.’ << ~ of them as they are NOW | ply to keep my muscles in condition,;-and | rich stretches as might have been seen on ty in the color of the frame. There was a] Wheelbarrow Instead of Knapsnek. | !iWtning flashing from her eyes, and wait. ‘An adequate idea of this julep cannot be ei Pee Rrra Cee ded, aero them from getting stiff when I See nae ony Aesinibotie land that | time when it was only possible to secure a Picked up by the Philadelphia Record. = tor a2 explosion with a very sinking | had without a — Seed ig x fat Sine bighest satistaction._ } enter a race. = ~ | wi good for sgricultural purposes and | 4, vhic: is p el . eart. Fortunately, it did not come. a ly delicious and exhilarating, bu a eee: ae it O7ES . Heed forahe Racca cxeellent for, stock raising yfome,_ time, Bolld black ‘colon, wear’ Re ee Major Padrin of the Itallan army has in- | King came on and ‘the play mentann! very |e eerk plat aE walens os ie beastie, i. § S > ough now it s practically inaccessible. mae : s : elf indeed without my very vi 5 a thing of beauty and a joy for va mean ; When the contest is on the question of} “All this country is Eut a continuation of } Cycles ara tunned wate nne renee time ‘bi- | vented a very Ingenlous contrivance which think that during | all who ai : at sistance. But I do not think that during | all who sit around, connected with its hid- food is everything. The rider cannot be too the Red River valley. It is all the deposit | cf which are almosr all of the ln od ins | 18 designed to supersede the knapsack. He } fic “enesgentat ios ever forgave me. | den charms by the silver straws. ‘The urn careful in eating. He cannot make a heavy (ee reat lake, of eee Lake Winnipeg ts | rambowt ‘The percentage of black has invented a vehicle to which he has The, first eed 4 ever really stuck in is almost entirely —. by lg rg sam e sunken represer.tative, which stretches given the name of the cyclosac, or the | line’ was later in the same season, playing | ice figures frozen to the bow e top is meal while riding, as the after effects would | (75 sunken represer-tative, which stretches | ameled wheels is very small compared with y 6 playing sis ahi other Colors SHOU ghLEhe RackiontwneeinulGnitnke on with John McCullough. He was’ playing | a pyramid of crystal snow ice. Sticking to Hard pedaling: when again the violent on: | ine Pembina mountatcs on the west, and| edie sno sane tee tee eee there is Tageareratttwolaniicrt aaatctancn ine | ‘Coriolanus,” and I had a very sniuor part | the lee, In artistic designs, are fruits and hard pedaling. Then, again, the violent ex-| from Grand Forks on the south to a point uly th TI 4 , e Uprights} of @ Roman general. We had played the | flowers, grapes, sliced peaches, bananas, ercise after a good meal fs none of the best | further north than was reached this trip. | 2°7¢@illy than any other color. There is] of the tent will be used to convert it into piece several nights, and everything had | strawberries, raspberries, blackberries and work produced by any other for the body. Liquid food 1s the best of | “Except for the climate, tert rece cone COTE ESIS ea ae ea fan drag Leneparrow, Which the soldier } gone well until the night in question. It | raisins, roses, carnations and violets,, Noth- when ascendin hed thie execttor yutitoctuiqusine: teiticatstwrallice eaten Valley" <~ 38 the far- | that all riders of gaily colored machines are | two soldiers will take It tien abuutio push | head; I could think of nothing: I never had | the Julep is not weakened. Bach sear, sah, or three days of the ride is comparatively pnealewen advertising agents for ihe par-| or draw the cyclosac, and it 1s contended Such a feeling: the stage seemed te whirl | Dabney, at special times, constructs one of nothing. The strain begins to tell the lat- ticular machine. The businesa of manufac-| that this arrangement will not merely en- | sectnd me. McCullough picked up my lines | his marvels, and visitors from all the ter part of the week, just when the rider ee ee oe ee Wonderful prapoetion 1% has grown to} able the troops to march much longer dis: | and’ finished. the wecee eked UP my | oft | polnis see them and wonder. = FTE —— needs his strength, for the hardest work of | From the Kansas City Journal. “There aré some tanufacturers who have | {2ce%, but to fight much better on the| the stage l felt as if’ | had cemites some| “The Prince of Wales is unquestionably WIA tels to suit the whole race 1s yet before him. The for-| ‘That tale related in the telegrams of an] nel out against the demands of some of | U¢!4 of battle, being relieved of all impedl-| awful crime. This feeling gave way to a] a connoisseur of fine beverages. Upon a 7 at : lorn hope comes up, and every. rider, im-| alabama girl who shot a young man a ments, which can be left in these light sar copie pplies for all. Our wonder of the ase. va 617-619 7th st. sense of the keenest shame, which was in | visit to Richmond years ago, Dabney pre- of taste agining that the strain is telling on the! ccuple of times and then married htm re- aly ASE enameled frame, het one | Wheelbarrows in the rear. {urn succeeded by anger. I was fearfally | pared for him a Julep the like of which the A n h aS si! = EI ever dreame: : Sf increasing Mis lead Or eccming c temee} calls the method employed by George| coming season will witness a change ic SS = angry and could feel the hot tears stream- | heir to England's throne had neve! rt 1 How the Major Led Up te It. ing down my face as I moved alo! toward | of in his moments of happiness and his . we pele Abe cleverest | pcsiticn. Then it 1s that the other riders| Bardsley, one of the early day sheriffs of eneveley S bere See nee Le ee inicn ane ” my dressing room. Suddenly I felt a hand | encomiums thereupon were of the highest. 2 tevrind sbowing—im i commence to hump, and the riding is just} Ellis county, in appointing his deputtes.| multi-colored frames, pur re keep in the} one” eae on my shoulder, and heard the great actor | His enthusiasm, expressed, was so gre cartivetaes tor cokantee tening Aut | a8 swift as on the opening day. when the | O75 aight he was called to Chris Riley’s| trade they are obliged to deviate from their] We are‘on the eve of a new century,” in the kindliest tone: ‘Feeling bad, my he wanted to import to Sandringham isin ettest mmanged by the un | men were fresh and feeling ‘good. Of] Oiton “wnere “roxas Feank, former methods. Why cyclists prefer a| ald the major. boy? Don't mind it a bit. Accidents’ will | the recipe for the making of Dabney’s royal eniliton cuainioes Copperas bes id naire pt ara d ye gaily colored wheel is something that is] “Yes,” sald the colonel. A panei ree ee og ein [arp eh Se Sg - -Corning, 520 13tn st. atten sae titan he eee ing out” the place—a performance which| hard to understand. There was 4 time in-the bright ‘morning of the times. ago that I forgot my lines in “Othello mn Dabney . and they had to ring the curtai preserved. He is one of the last of his f ealeonte teat kind. His generation has passed, yet he ~ Me: Skinner has a brother, a newspaper | lingers, the last connecting link with a class man, and he in turn has a small son. The | of colored men and women to whom the ‘ould you indorse my note for thir-| boy ‘was @ rabid politician during the late | south (as a southerner I say it) owes an asked the major. campaign. He organized a boys' McKinlcy | eternal debt of gratitude, sah. It was his consisted in the promiscuous firing of his} when this could be explained by the fact| “Yes,” replied the colonel. s zt ES iranian eae agree nh the Face. | “gun” at the barkeeper, bystanders, lamps, | that many riders prefer something out of Oka fits max cee aaces for us.” YOUR RECEPTIO In an eight-hour race the worst part of| bottles and pictures. Sheriff Bardsley grab-| the ordinary, but now that the multi-colors} «qt has,” said the colonel. = * the whole day's riding Is j ‘before ‘the | ed the first weapon handy in his own| have sprung into. general use, there exists} “And and on “your days at close, when everybody increases the, speed.| Saloon, which happened to be a double-bar-| no good reason. There 1s really no ad-| ty days Se (ea: of course. “Bay to gain distance. This exertion, coming | Teled shotgun, and proceeded to Riley's on| vantage in having a bright-colored frame, FOR “ZT would not,” replied the colonel, “and| cluty and spent much of his time upon it, | kind who, during the war, stayed at home 5 F after the steady pedaling for near eight| the run. Dashing in he ordered Frank to | beyond possibly it does not show the dust |1 wish you a very good morning!” Degiecting tin fcausmm for he aeieen ard | and faithfully cared for and protected the pent mire hours, does more harm to the condition of | throw up his hands, and the response was a| as much as a plain black frame. On the ———— “")fimarthed all the time he was out of school, | women and children when the men were ies because it's he the rider than anything else. It practically | bullet from Frank's .44. Letting go both| other hand, a coloted wheel will show the and dreamed of it all the hours he was sup- | fighting at the front. os : knocks him out. and when at last the gun| Parrels of tis shotgun, Bardsley brought | reeults of wear .and will chip more readily Suenetee- posed to be at his lessons. Young Otis was |° “Eh? Thank you, sah: I shall be pleased CHELLS, 1325 F STREET. is fired marking the close of. the -raceehe| the desperado to the floor, so full of shot|tban one in black.» From the Indianapolis Journal. , all a-tingle with excitement on election | to. Give me a little toddy. kets off the wheel feeling so tired that he| Holes that he couldn’t hold either air or — , “I tell you, the man I respect is the|day, and he was sure he A not wait ESSE _——— ‘seems | Water. The bicycle in ‘the patent office is classed is esda: EACH EYr fp think that, "this feueiateat the raat Frank was not killed, however, and in| in division No. 7, which éncludes bicycles | ™an who can change his opinions.’ His mother Senecee amen tes Meaning of Hereditary. ee Re atmined and fitted | condition caused by riding the entire time | COUrse of time recovered, under the kind| and harvesters, yet the improvements in| ‘And the man I respect is the mag who | ‘tly. e finest quality lenses “- z , attention which he received in the county | this connection are so greafias to monopolize | can change @ $1,000 bill.” of warranted gold-fiiea | ‘" @!most one position. Jail. “Presently it was observed that the| most of the attentionvof the examines ana Found Beer Usefa Texas man was walking around town with-| his corps of asaistanty, The work of the Those Coal Ton | “A good rub-down generally revives the | 0Ut @ guard, and a Mttle later the people | division is far behindhafi, and the com: Cc a ii irt) | Were astenished to find him serving legal} missioner makes the ‘Eecommendation that | From the Detroit Tribune. ure of Grip. | drooping spirtte and makes the muscles papers and making arrests. Bardsley was|@ new examining division be created, | Perdition as eechatt wine dazg am | Met lke Mew again. Each succeeding rub- approacted by @ newspaper man at this| which will include bicycles’ only, 2 see M you can give me an example of oll; ove-balf wine glass raw ti ee 5 down, however, decrea: in f 4 ime, when the following coll ery something that is hereditary. Ea sresrg het mater orale See re schecasstiati ce Ipips. for, the, coming as forced to drop all the heavy és te ' fect: a if the rid place: M. i "em from dele tats. Wor aula 02 | Soult be teached whee It Gadid aoe el? “te Texas Frank your deputy?’ qusctea}a@esok tte tans many changes, | articles he had stolen, retaining only the} ,,She did not get home until after 12, and oe quaintance were to go down town on Tues-| prom rooklyn 7 day night fo hear the returns, and young = = +e0-- ‘Otis besopght her to tell him the news the minute she got home. ‘But. you. will be asleep.” A “Then you can wake me up, for I must "" hissed the burglar, “I am} know tonight.” Bobby—“Pop, what does hereditary mean?” Fond Parent—“It means, Bobby, some- thing that goes from parent to child. Now A. KAHN, 935 F st. nw. FP nw.; Henry Evans, 933 | would be reached when it would have no ‘then, ‘asthe youngster was fast asleep and eno! bar thracite coal. ‘ toth’ and F uw.; Judd, | effect at all. In the latter part of the race} ‘8g, reporter. Te ee re nendle Dawdinelts ipive,| ton of an «| safe until morning, she hadn't the heurt to a eae Z + FP. Waller, Sth and I'Ge., of | the skill of the successful trainer on re ‘Ye oes was the sententious response of pee of the seat ed ere eeakinn awaken “tim. So she went =m er room Changed. - SS Er Mew Arak cold, weak sage ten. | Randily, when he gives, hie man food ehat |-"“How does that come?” was thé next in-| sivlen The new the te Anat ere | "Young ‘Otis’ ‘slumbers "were tiitul: ana | Fem the Brobiyn Lite. leave him In something like a strengthened | “Wen, you see.” sald Bardsley, “most |e aiser eet or eres being enameled ; tip ana wha anika. Eoin eeelcc ous tle cen bream AS orto! < sy Se ne sberiffs appoint their deputies, but I Hke to] With these it is claimed to be-impossible to .}ito,see if she had returned, and learned to utterly bl: bays pte chit x ne. include beer, w! is one of the te z I a “4 : sildres z best things, acgording’ to. mp esneriaren: A Wenderfal Mind. matic Brip has appeared, ayhich Js.nid to i he was too kind-hearted to awaken-her, so | | “I should say so; now it’s a picosere z eur that I used. During the latter part of the | From Leslie's Weekly. the hands hi coh hel ? eur woe « week I Grank a good deal while riding, and = és F. tightly on the ore evening I drank three bottles during grips fora number ofmiles.” ‘Theh a grip has come out with a braided cane: surface, } 7, se Sah te Diplomacy. = = the ride. There were other riders in. the. u : 3 \ good cup of coffee, Tece. who, instead of debating fer! ire 7d | while « fiber buckskin grip will be-another | - 4 rss bceant italy To his | From the Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. rel sh ~, Ju Sh foe sour day'a | Several ponies of whisky, which had more ; My, SE eee Sie pop neat ot Siete on : +. | Brent surprise and alarm His Father—“If you marry old Stubbs? is made with Hi 1 a. grip, pai , % d : . : od im ith Hu of, 2 stint ating eftent, pen which I cot ExS pl on the market, ‘for which @ number} i @aughter you shan’t have a cent of my track I would drink another botjle of beer, ; of advantages are claimed. — : ] ‘ana lectern: —. and after the rub-down would like a is, There was another wedding recently in 4 the local cycli ld. The ‘grooi ¥ feito : ; The Son—“But, father, if I don’t marry top until morning, getting a splendid rest. 7 e local cycling. wor! eo m was | - x : Corns and Bunions not been on a wheel for over=two: months }~" | Club, and now a dealer in this city, while the S©MOVED WITHOUT PAIN, prior to entering the race. Teddy Hale, bride was Miss Olive B. Gray, a pretty tyfann * Ki when he won the recent race at Madison rider, who énjoys a’ targe’ 1 Of ac- ¥ — eat Square Garden, establishing the wonderful / quJaintances.~ The ceremony took: place on ae Poot Spectalists, 1115 Pa. ave. record of 1,910 miles, had not ‘beenon’ » .. \" f wheel for four months before the race. PCMES OF DO-DATH IN STYLE, PINISH. Plenty of Grit. + M. KETS REMETHY. pitt, 'gestta | Fred: Forster, the jovial and -eivatig E : oitie poet eae u German, who secured sixth place at thet "Am epeaking of Prien ae Sart T. SV ALICE is, loTH ST. N. race, did not train for the event. He did“ ip ning. Fel sagt and I oe isaieg. Celta Eee Hele and’ Gay, tram, however, for the Madison “Square We, owe, Gat satan cans ote oes lal. Face, and would have won had he been | is strorger than the chickens.’

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