New York Clipper (Jun 1858)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

NEW YORK CLIPPER. J*Q*TB. 0POHT91 ;li#fvlie! EieroiBell Bxerpltell! ?^if JTOBK CLIP FEB, 'III IP0ITIR8 JODBHAI SF WRICl, -,\ ^ixa tpfoom or rayisuu. AMD ; imnii. wnBiitmwi «.«V i.l mh tHB Pima. pawthr iMrtM^aluHmL M a (a* Mkpnol hkMH lattatOMdratUlea,jri*ndtn|*vwrlb» t»t«- ' ib*Qim(inirBnu4Htt<auor«veragr«T«r [ mat, Mob aa-^QIdkfj Ca«»irjr»njht*; Taatt- ■I Boxtnf; HM lMti trottmn Fa- lAW tOmdac; 9tia*fowl; WreaKaij Oarbnf, In., to., to. ' • * UK flTti Iwo or JDGT« irOIIIHI IlLOHTBATIOWB ■ B) ate! Saw snaalilariMS f • AMSWBBS TO 0OBBBBPOWDBKT8: [ ■-*—^ M iwril t opta, bat ajortthg mattars m par- '■■fltwwiwd frw* of expose*. I tpertnf Mthorttr hi Anjark*," - - • ByninO-siOOtbritxrnonlhi; r nioa; dak *f dfhl, r W nnm hi til ewes la ——i- . i per Use tbrenchandoTerylMwr- sJSB,- Dtr*paantttaM.1>iiia«r«C «Kbww t. FUNK flOXDI, ttmn, Vo. It Aim ftratt, Mtw York.. (''!■■ ■ii|lioooS»,4«ril**vib Bymal OKN Mr una: dab of iwalrs, HS.M per aavaac*. Adretlkkaunti.eotnw per line ft MM YORK CLIPPER. SATVBDAY, JUNE 26, 1808. 4)UHK t DltOB AMD FBOPUnOI. 1 WHOLItALI AOINTI. M«*tiMMT,initaM«. l H.7. Mm n ud a its mtml ,-. j»M»WBM»j Plna i uyc . ' oK^ra^UMaTiil&MiMt. EiMSM • Jmm No. 13 Am itneC L ■ a/WDm,US<^olitwet,l , M»delphii. knUL taaitilg,,) end UOoartcb**, . JIM T, JflM. II nullum nil. Hewn \:; A.<tHi«iT,TliJ0ta»UI. ■ , - Wiiiia, lea * Bm, (klaco, IB. . A.fel.na^TKutaaapP)miUiar9]rdmM. l R*w0ilMii. . IinOtm^UIllitlriatWMtlgntlaOuUaWMi ■MftHnaxm&ftitttmlllhtn.ir.Y.. A TALK WITH 01TB PAT^OtS. Sokb the publication In oar last of the suggestion of a correspondent relative to the enlargement of the Oumi, we hare received a number of other documents, all ap- ' proving of the^suggestionand arguments advanced by . " Amerloeu." We, too, have given the subjeot par carel . fol attention,"" bat hare oome to the oooolndon that Jl i. vooU be Impolltlo to make any ohange it preeent We hare not arrived at this conclusion without due delibera- tion and. regard for the iotereets of oar friends, u well as ourselves. When we adopted the present form, we were '- 'Under the Impression thaV'the'paper would be large enongh to contain reports of all (porting matteiiof'ln- ( ...tarest|het mjghtreach os; bat .enph,has. been, the steady , ■ progress waloh the various field and other, sports , have '• Blade; within a year or two, that we have been oompell- ' ! ad, of . late, to oondense many articles that'might have .. appeared In (nil, had the paper been larger, Bat tpk .'. only occurs In the summer season, when orlcket, base V ball and aqnatlb rparts'are In (all blast As It Is, the ! Oijffb now bdntalne Juat ioubU the quantity of,.mat- 1'ter, owiained In the i*^„ an4 other' papers of that :, olass, and oar bills for oompoalllon are, In a like ratld, higher than those contracted by 6ther papers,. Oar mat- V ter, as a genaral thing, la set In smaU type, and In a j. oompaot. mumer) we devote very little space to adver- <■:'■ tlsemsnta, wbloh' we naer ulieit, and only Insert those 1irbajh|''<0j and, In most oases, paid for In advahoe at r oar.dJBoe. Wo have even refaeed long adverUsement*, Of .'. late, In order that nothing of a news oharaoter should be • ' crowded oat- Now, when It Is known that with very V few exceptions, all dally and weekly papers depend upon ... their advertlilng patronage for their profits, U w^l be ■\- aeon at once that we moat have:a large blroolatlen to af ford aproUt, for we receive wllbln a fraction bt two and ? ' jBhalf oents a obp/ only for the paper, oat of whJoh aU ... exjpeoajg most be paid, vie: paper, press work, oomposl' j^iUoai.arawlng, engraving, rent, reportorlal,services for .' . different depirtmento, show bills, Ac. Wo merely refer to > these matters to convlnoo bar readers that we ere In no , ° wise tntnrly In the condaot of oar jonrnal; and that we J; woold gladly add four more pagea to the paper, and ooa ' ' tlnue the price eS It Is, were It net that by so doing we r thoold be a loser on every aheet printed; and to raise the j price of the OLTtriB we do not think would be doing Jus- ;.'' ,tioe to our nnmerona patrons. There are many who'can af- :ford, and would gladly pay the difference, but there' aril others, again—and by far the larger namber of oar read' r . ere—who could but 111 afford to. continue, however, maou ... ; ' v Inclined they might be, to patronise as. Under.a^iese ritr- /■ camstanoei, therefore, we must deollne to make any aV ; lera,tIons In our little Jonrnal for the present, at least -! . We have had our attention called, In tbli oonneotlon, to'tbe fact that when JMJ'i Lift in Lmim> was first pub- lished, (1822,) It was a sheet mach smaHer then theOur^ J: . not, but sold for fcmUm tend, (ot oar money,) per copy, 1, We have ; been plioed In posaemlpn of the first .five, vol , nines of ihiipaper, and have them before ai at present, ■t Our readers would be surprised at the loudly of sport-, 'lng news at that'day, ror at the olose of the fifth volume, ' (the present age of the OuprsB,) BMiUtft, of that day, i„,. ,averaise4 but two peges of spotUng news In each nnmber, f d flu other alx pagea being token up with ooar t reports, olty news, and mlioellaneoua Items. From this It woold appear that sporting matters are making more rapid advanoe- meat In this country, anler the guidance of. the Cuma, '' -''{hai thsy did la T jaddn In former days, when BM't Lift p.. lw^'l|i|i.|w lJifuoy. JicU'was the Same price then' that It le ■ at present, and although addltlosal eipenses are Incurred l' Inltspttbllcatlcn and management at the jpeent day, ^'i# ! ui^M|s^ «z- .peoia^;Vifi^|^ji»in>M.profit fromtlBueiof the , paptrt, at.l4.oents per oopy. The Outhb, on the other bara.boalleipenieatopayoatoflUwleiatfouroents . , per copy. Oar otrcalatlon, however, fa muh Ian* (Am MFiLif*, at the present day, and about jIm tima tarf* Cat paptr mkm tt W m&ti IM fruad o^y (^Ourml We raerely refer to these fsota to ahow pur readers that vie afajprogreatug In true Young America stylo—when weflrst atarted the Currui, In 1868, aportlng Items tamed ap slowly In this country, and tho corf afforded the princi- pal of these; there were two or three cricket olubs in ei- tstesoe, true, but there was little or no Interest taken In field or aeqaatlo sporta In those days. Look at ns now. Orlcket and Base Ball Olobs have been organized all brer the country; sportive recreations have been Introduced In many of our sohools, and even the clergy have taken a hand In the physical exerolses and games of the people. Look over the Cuprm—aee and read Itsorowded oolamnf, Its reports of those gemee which tend to develop the pbyst> osl man, that the mental faculties may have free aoope to " spread." Where was Ofuu before the Curoa took optheaobjeott Soaroely known here. How, that we have shown them " the huw," nomerooi Journals In this otty, Boston, Philadelphia, Lynn, Olnolnattl, New Orleans, fta, to toy 'nothing of a one-hone monthly oonoern, have followed la oar wake at m reapectfal distance unUl the g«ne is no longer confined toe few foreigners, but has become " AmerloanlaeA" Notice the private trot- ting parte that have been laid oat within the put three years. Who assisted to bring abut this bat the Ouffbb. We exposed the rascalities of some of the professional torfltes, and many of the tracks frequented by that olaea in armor day a have been completely broken ap, or are fast going to seed." Behold ihe yacht olabs springing up around ns; therowing olabs; eparrlng olabs; qaoit groondij old English games of different kinds; all ateadlly on the Increase under the fostering oere Of the Olippib. Why even oar old friends, Horace Greeley and James Gordon Bennett, are with us in enoonraglng oar sports; Horace nan make as safe a wager on a horse race or election as ths great bettor in England, the " Leviathan." Friend Bennett goes In for yachting, and thinks he osu lead the fleet In a cruise at see, with his well-behaved little lasale, the Bebeooa, There's neighbor Bonner, too, of the Ltdgtr, wide awake on the so>jeot of hones, and won't allow bis team to be passed by any on the road. All these things have been brought about alnce the advent of the Ouppib, whloh Is now the noognlsed organ of sports In America, as Bett'i J>/i Is of those In England. No, friends) we are getUng along well enough, and though a little crowded at times for room, It Is muoh bet- ter to sail In a small craft, with a fall cargo, than In a larger vessel, without anfflolent freight to pay expenses. We may, In time, make some changes In car paper, or, poatlbly, wk may try the experiment of a "monthly" of ihe magazine abhool, In whloh oar Oheas and Draught oontrlbdtora may have more room, and In whloh sporting literature andengravings of a higher order may figure. Should this latter design meet with favor, wo may give It oar attention at an early day. There la no good reason why the sporting world should not have a monthly maga- zine as wellas other olasses of the community. •"• In the meantime," here ahe goes, and there she goes," the sporUng organ of America, the Nbw Tobx Olippxb, only four oents per oopy. . THB GOODWOOD OV?. OHABxteroH axo pbiobbss xmtbbbd roa thi bios. Wb have received the list or entries for the Goodwood Oop Race of 1868, and papilah;them! below.iogether with the weights oalonlated np to Hay 28th. It will be pe^ belved'that "Mr. Ven Broeok. has/ aia we anticipated, en- tered both Oharjeston and frloreffl as bis representatives la the oemtert for thUmagnlfloentturfttopby. Although thia is a weight for age race, etrlotly speaking, yet the allowances whloh beaten horses reoelve; and the penalties Imposed on. winning horses, give It, la lome degree, the appearance of a handicap race, from the variation In the scale of weights carried.. It Is almost unnecessary to repeat that Prioress and Oharleaton, along with the French horses entered, are entltled to an allowance of 14 lbs., in oonseqaeooe of theb being foreign bred horses. This ailowanae Is made to 'oounterbalasoe.any dlsad vantage whloh ohange of climate, air, food and water may entail upon horses aaacoaatomed to the English ollmate, aid hot from any feelings of bonaolous superiority^ on the part of English owners of faoehoraes. As . the saoceaa of our Amerioan representatlrea will be viewed ibis season, as It was last year, with the deepeat Interest, we Bh,al) pi'eaent bar readers with aoursory glanoe at' the performances of .-the, horses entered, for this great race, and a comparative estimate of their ohanoea of eaooeas. ial' lMHlEa fQB TBB OOODWOOO COP. Tse veifbti etlaiUted'tb iUj IS. Itobmnu., (>UDlD|toa, BroUier to Btrd-caUe- Wloi.... Qettmft 41 Verir,'. Aramtl , Oaesott SwMam BtDDte'rer Btrd-iB Ihe-Hud Dinbrtse •naheir OSitinrosJintrlwo). 'Brother to Hortllf ; Puouti (AmailcaB).... HglntUoo IllyorttMViIe „i IBS Ul lit us us iia us lie 1U lit in 119 in lie in lis Htppr Ual.... TbcHaitjl.... Eullpio GMbgif Pbjiloltn Ooalnl PtiDltUr , HtpiUu ToniUlllkld..... The Peer. Bos. 4«ll0MO0«. Baibaam , He OrudBeerM ., Bomborg Vuue 6i. Oris (Vrtneb) Btolle da Nord U H»l»d«ll»{FreoCib).. iai .. S lvl 101 101 lOt 1U 101 106 101 101 101 .101 101 JC1 101 01 8T • 17 As we before remarked, those weights are susceptible of' considerable alteration before the day of running, as horses whloh may ran and win oertain races wlllhave to carry eitri' welghVln addition to the above, by way of penalty, and beaten hones will reoelve oertain allowances for each defeat Fisherman standi' flrst on the list, and at present will have to oarry the highest weight, as since the above weights were Issued, he has won the Ascot Gold Cap, whloh wllletiteJl additional weight upon him for the Goodwood event Thia .home moat be familiar to oar readers, at a week seldom possess without our having to reoord one or more vlolory for him. Up to the Chester Meeting, la the beginning of Hay, he hid won 62 raoea out of 84 starts, and at those races he oarried off the Grosvenor Stakes, the Steward's Oap, and Her Majesty' Plate. Blnoe then he has atarted for and won the Epsom Cup, the Queen's Plate at Manchester,'and the Gold Oop at Ascot; being defeated by and running aeoond to fledbury, rot the Gold Vase at the latter meeting. The anennt of work which the evergreen Flaherman acoom- pllsbea (s astonishing, as one day he may be running and winning at one extremity of the Kingdom, and next day, owing to the oonvenlenoe of transit by rail, be may be seen taking his preparatory canter at a race meeting at Ihe other end of the island. He Is a most cnrprlslng horse, and will be one of the moat dangerous animals in the race for the Goodwood Oop, where the distance will Juitioltblm. Leamington, the winner of the Cheater Oap efld Good- wood Stakes last year, was a flrst-olass animal, bat having been amiss this'spring, we are Inclined to think hts chance quite oat for this race, even If he start, which Is doubtful. Brother to Bird on the Wing, the property or Lord Glasgow, has hot an earthly ohanoe of winning, as far aa we can Judge of bla previous performances, wbloh have been very mediocre. : Gemma de Vergy seems to have entirely lost his nun tog this year, and we do not think him at all dangerous for this race. Arsenal, Bed bury, and Eclipse, all belong to the ssme party, Mr. Pad' wlok, and are a formidable lot Arsenal last year won the Gold Vase at Ascot (*> Bed bury his done thia,) and ran a good second to . Fisherman for the Ascot Cup re- cently. His performances have always been of a high order. Sedbory, although he disappointed his party by his ruontag in the Derby, has proved himself a racer by beating Fisherman at weight forage, In the race for the Ascot Gold.Vase, bat we are inollned to think that Eollpse will be the chosen of the FIndon stable for the Goodwood Oop Bate. Eclipse, It will be remembered, ran a dead heat with Beadsman, the Derby Winner, for the New- market Stakes, and at Ascot oat down FlIzBoland, the 2000 guineas vlotor, for the Biennial Stakes. Saoh run- ning as this stamps him as a racehorse of the first order, add if well and fit on the day, most be " there or there- about*" for the Goodwood Oap. Schiedam we have no faith in, for though he has ran very respeotably, yet here he will Had the company too good for him, as will also Sannterer. This latter Is so uncertain horse and so faint-hearted that no dependanoe can be placed open his running. Bird la the Hand) Danboyne, Boea Bonheor, and Brother to Homily, we dismiss sum- marily aa hopeless, and oar Amerioan horses next olalm oar attention. Prioress, 116 lbs., must by this time have beoome thoroughly abollmated to the ohange of air, soil, Ao., and be in far better oendltlbn than she was last year. She baa also had the advantage of the English system of training, and she will be ridden by a jockey who will not throw away the race through Ignoranoe and Incompe- tence, as was the case last year; In fact, the experience of the past must have convinced Mr. Ten Braeok of the polloy of engaging the highest professional talent among the " artlats in the plgekln." We are not In a position to say at present upon whloh cf the two, Prioress or Charleston, Mr. Ten Broeck will place his dependence to win the Goodwood Cup; ae we are Ignorant of the effeots which the sea voyage and ohange of climate may have bad upon Oharleaton since his arrival In England. We have seen the fatally injurious influence whloh saoh ohange had upon Prior and Leoomte last year, and we most watt until we hear farther as to Its effeots upon Charleston before we oan pronounoe definitely upon his proepto'ta of success. It Is well known that he was not perfectly sound previous to leaving this ooantry, and oar readera will remember Ms having paid forfeit In oonae- qdenoe of having Injured one of bis forelegs In his train- ing exerolse, In the race at the last Fall Meeting on Fashion Coarse, where he would have had to eoobunter Nicholas I. and Bpgtneer.; His weight in this race, it will be seen, Is 119 Jba, Proceeding with oar examination of the other horses In ths list we oome to Gunboat, 4 years old, with 120 lbs. This horse showed some exoellent running last year, and it will be remembered that It was the falling of Gunboat In the race for the Cap last year, that was the oaose of so many of the favorites being placed her» it embat In the race, by tumbling over him. His running this year has been of a very high order; oommenolng the season at Northampton, he there won the Netae Stakes, oarrylng the top weight of 124 lbs, and the day alter won the St. Liz Handlbap, beating Odd Trlok, the Oambrldgeahlre winner, Queen Bess, who ran Prioress a dead heat lor the CEeiarwltob, and four ethers, At the Carragh April Meeting he followed op his aucceu by wlnilng .two of Her Majesty's Plates, from good fields. It Is saldithat he has been speolally reserved for thlsfaoe, and If well/and meant, will proves dangeroaB oustomer. Ruination and. Lily of the Vale we pass by without oomment. Happy Land, 3 years old, 106 lba, who ran seoond to FItz Roland for the 2,000 guineas, Is a good horse for a short distance, tat' possessed of a bed temper, and'dlffloolt to ride. Lord Rlbblesdale, his owner, apparently has no great hope of bis winning this prize, as he baa recently arrived in this olty oh -a tour through the Slates. Hadji, another 3 year old, with the same weight, ran third for the Derby, a.performance wbloh in Itself slampe him as a good horse. He has sinoe won the Union Cop at Manoheeter, beating a large Held of hones. IfheruWforthlsraoehe will beat more than will beat him; Phyalolan, 8 years old, 103 lbs., ran a good horse for the Chester Oap, for wbloh he was a capital third, after'having been disappointed In getting through bla bones, and being only beaten a bead for second place. He made the running In the rape for the Derby, but was) "pamptd oat" at'Tattenham Corner. His ohanoe fox this race does not look remarkably flat- tering at present Coatrel, Palmlater, Rose do Florenoe, Homburg, and The Grand Beoret, we dismiss as hope- less. Hepatloa and The Peer, the representatives of the stables of the " Wizard of the North," Mr. John Soott, are two moet dangerous antagonists to stand against The former Is a line slashing mare, who was only beaten by a head for the One Thousand Gaineas by Governess, the Oaks'winner, and would moat oerlalnly have beaten Flaherman fbr'the Steward's Odp at Cheater, bat for the breaking of the Jockey's itlrrop leather. She la a better animal than her stable oompanton, The Peer, who was so long flrst favorite for the 1000 guineas stake, and was no where lh the race. Tunitall Maid Is one of the most dangerous ,ot the three year dlvlBlon. She won the Great Northern Hendloep at the York Spring Meeting, and ran a good third for the Oaks. She la a good stayer, and the distance In the Goodwood Cop race, two and a I half mile*, will suit her adatfrebly. Sunbeam, though a I floe powerful mare, oannot itay over the Cap Coarse. [ The three French 8 jear-olds, Ventre-St. GrU, IUoQd,| Nord, and La Maladetta, have, like our American horses, the allowance of 14 lbs. each, though the former, In con- sequence of having won the French Derby, is penalized I 4 lbs. extra, La Maladetta ran third for that event, hot wefanoy that none of the three will be able to repeat the victory wbloh Beggaraao, Jouvence, Baronolno, and | Monarque, so suooessfolly achieved. Having thus glanced over the performanoes of the I horses entered for the Goodwood Oup of 1868, and their respective chances of suooess, we will briefly repeat, that, In our opinion, at the present time, the horses most worthy of consideration and most likely to Include the winner, are Flaherman, Ganboat, The Hadji, Hepetlce, TonstallHald, the beat of Hr.Padwick'e lot (probably Eclipse) and either Prioress or Charleston, whichever may represent Mr. Ten Broeck. Oar readers may rely upon being furnished with the earliest and most reliable 1 Information regarding this Interesting and Important | event of the Tort Gun Burruia—At a poultry show held In Birming- ham, Eng., In May, for the flret time there was a class for single Game Bantam oooks, and the result of the experi- ment was satisfactory, twenty-three of these pugnacious little creatures entering the lists, and acquitting them- selves with deolded tdaL ' There were black- breasted Reds, Piles, Duobwings, Birchen Greys, Blacks, and Whites. The whole formed an Interesting as well as novel feature of the exhibition. The one (a black-breasted red) belonging to Mr. Moss, which reoelved the flrst prize, was not so large as the Bants in the pigeon seotlon. The other Ban- tam olaaus, with the exception of the Sllver-laced, which showed deolded proofs of inferiority, were above the average, the Blacks being pre-eminent. Ia reference tc these " Utile bullies," a Wiltshire poultry keeper saya they are good layers, good setters, tight featherd, hardy, and pluoky to a degree. What a pity It Is that so few good and well-bred small ones are in being. But these birds are rlstng In publlo estimation, and ere long will be as muoh looked after as any other. At the above exhibition there was a oapltal array ol Game, the Black-breasted and other Beds being of on- asaal excellence. The first prize Whltte and Plies was an extraordinary fine pen. In this olass a can qf painted kgi oecmtd; hot the deception was speedily detected by the Judges, and was, of course, visited with the penalty of dis- qualification. The Duokwlogs and other Greys and Blues were very praiseworthy. Thealngle Game cooks were admlrablSj and In high condition for this period of the year. . Hdktino Matoh a Vbehont.— There was a great hunt between matohed parties of huntsmen, atWardsboro, Vt., recently, and the vlotorloaa party brought ia two loxes, two hedgehogs, one skunk, fourteen woodobaoks, one owl, twenty-six hawks, eighty-one woodpeokers, forty six red squirrels, six hundred ohlppen eqatrrels and sixty-five crows; the other side declined to have their game oount- ed, bat they were not far behind. Tow Ssx op Eaoa.—M. Genin has addressed the Acade- mic dee Sciences on this subjeot He says he Is able, after threei years' study, to state with assurance that aU eggs containing the germs of males have wrinkles on their smaller end, while female eggs are equally smooth at both extremities. AHabdOibb.— The"fanoy"ofNew York were de- prived by the police of Ihe inexpressible privilege of wit- nessing a fight between the celebrated dogs " New York" and ■< New Orleans", on Monday—Boston Ledger. Not so, Mister Ledger man. The fight took place, a re- port of whloh was published in oar last, so ihe " fiuioy" were not disappointed. OR, THE CAGED BIBD: A LOAPCR'8 REQUEST.* BT "BPSCKB." {AtojUA to Jfufc.) "Com sp netm. Bill/—nearir, For Ibo 'ilarr ire ImOoi round j • » (Bill. Adr pb>w|i leemtib deutr Whca Ibej'ie tlx -<et QiSar-troiuid 1 .) "Iim'ooopod 1 op, Billy—'cooped'op; (Don't yoa aln m» on Ihe' Up' f) I am 'In' for Juet a Donlb, BUI, IIuiUbm, > Tj lei 'or rip. "Birkea to me Billy, btrite; I arnra umelblDg I wonld nr Br* your noble form bo Tinlabed, . And yon |o from henooaney. "lam 1 boxed' op—torely • boxed'ap, Bal my bopot of bill we etrogf, For the very ' corot' ibu 1 caffeo't me Know ibu I did nolblng wroof. " Tell Ihe' boyn* when next yoa greet them, Tbnt wblle bere I'll Iblnlc of Iben i Think. Ibtt la t aonlb I'll meet tbnra, IT 1 nlW* and kloxui' then. 'i "Llilenlo mt—keep yoor eye • peeled'— 'Pu yonneifl epeik ofnow: ' 0, BlUyl sow I Dialed yoa When I none wis In lba row. 11 Now. BUI, huken-oloeely biteo, Don't lorfel a iln|l< word| Ask Dan Muiaua wbaa yoa meet ban, What be aid wllb my • fame bird 'i. >' If you're lba • tin,'*, as yoa pea the«Ball dD|" Drop in and iqoare my Mils Ml), ... (loogldn'l.irintdlhalloe.BUI,. , . "Cbityl'-IhtT'nlimili) " O, the 1 boyi 1!—0, the' boys I' leob puuoular ono'i'a 1 6rlek;'| 0, lb*' blgb tloet'T wllb thoto • ooja' Does la my memory allok. •' 'Iiru for Ibem 1 'abook'ee'lbtt bank utt: , Wbu I inw there I'll not tell, 3ot Whtl beppenod' rlls ilnl|bt ulsrwuds'' W* all know very well. - 11 Tell lba < crowd' I'm bow la trio* 'Nttlh the tlaUon-boua, down-town; Bat I'll TMlfn In Ja, I on* month, BUI— The Urn* will noon roll 'rosnd, i "Atklbe'boy'tlolrytndDtUme, . » 'On Tm lonflsf hero nlone i •> When I ie*l|n, w*'U ill be—" At tbli Janetor* Billy" roddenly " mnlthed'' on ueoaatet the app*uuoa.or londry peraonife* aevaraUy onancnled wllb njari, and dltpla;laf modersM alied olabs. <* • •' • * • • Tb» utt w* bard of tt* Iwo frlende u*y were mitlotUgs on BUok.weU'1 blaul ♦DeuTeredno"'B»ri" fan oppemUon perlbrmtd by placui a pair of " aUtebed braotleU" on lba wrUU. ftdomMtkattdmaltfowL iTt*r«qolredip»el*. K bird nbttuos. t^TWed pt ocetdlip, •Aol of InTteUitlbf, or lorpteUsf an arttele, ProTldenoe, A I., Jose 10, lets.