18 Sole Agency I A RDnTHnDC Sole Agency t r Hanan & Son # J ALU D I D t\\J IUC IvP # Johnson & Murphy New York «. ■ The Big — Newark, N. J. Men's Fine Shoes Exclusive Styles Popular Prices Men's Fine Shoes ■ 0 show of Fall Clothing is ready. Wonder if you ever stop to think how much preparation we have to make before that simple state- % c * ment can be uttered. As far back as last spring, when you were thinking of vacations, Crash and Linen Suits, etc., busy heads and Jj a busy hands were making the preparations that were necessary for your Fall and Winter wants. Our Mr. N. Jacoby was in the Eastern c markets at'least two months before any other clothier in town. Superior judgment, long experience, ready cash, coupled with a thorough _ c knowledge of your tastes, enables us to offer you Exclusive Styles and Patterns that the smaller stores cannot obtain. All our Fall stocks J V were ordered before the new tariff went into effect, and we propose to give our friends the advantage of our early purchases. You would J never know from the price-tickets on our goods that substantial advances have been made in the cost of most every line. If you want to ror * have clothes a little above the ordinary and quite exclusive in style, you can find them at our stores. Come and see what you can save on a. 1 your Fall purchases. r * r * f * r * f * f * f *r* t *r*r* r *r* f * f *i* s 2 School Hats Every Fond Hother School Shoes Boys' Knee Pants Suits Men's Hats n A c Boys' Navy Blue ?5c Is desirous to have her child appear at school Misses'Dongola button School Shoes, extension Boys' Nobby Plaid Knee d»| 7C (MQC Men's Pflll Hate In the latest and n A Scotch Turbans at neatly, comfortably and properly dressed, and soles, patent leather tips, famous ££? Broadway* Hats." * ''None Better & •J ?!... h ! d 45C where in the city ca.i you do it as well and as at $1.45 Mad." Is their motto. _ R Boys' Assorted Mixed Goods, made up In JZr cheaply as at the BIG STORE. Our buyers jyij sses > Dongola button School Shoes, <_1 Boys' All-wool Knee Pants Suits, new nobby $2.40 HatS ffi ° T yacht shape cap, at £Ot have made it a spec.al feature to purchase such neat and dvr S ablei si2es , 2 to 2 .$l,llO styles, double seats and knees, Mif Trade Soft Dress Hats V g Boys' Golf and Bicycle Caps, with klove fastener, goods as are especially suited for school wear— at f eather tipS) sizes 8J t0 10 .J QVC stylish colors, all wool, at $O.UU JSlk ■ O 1 Crack-a-Jack Knee Pants, double seams, double school patterns OUC Youths' Long Pants Suits, fancy brown plaid?, <)r- on if ant i Riu* r fcn . in «. J * NE BoyS' SchOOl WaiStS Children's grain leather button School QQ- $7.00 g «C ■ t 75c K^^^T 5 ..'" 45c a^»'*u '^ ,to '* wu - 6VC _ ■s**-*'— > « Boys' Percale Waists, a good serviceable Boys' calf School Shoes, solid leather (j» f A SpSCial Sole Agency waist, worth 4 oc, at £/t through,sizes to n Mothers, Don't m«s. Thi. Sole Agency Boys' Outing Flannel Waists and Blouses, with Dtr\srh different colored collars and cuffs, latest cut, 600 Boys' Plain, Double-BreasteJ, Knee Pants Y/A*##««e p Hnc *jlCin = DlUL>il Vl/t a good scerviceable waist for school, gA Boys' calf School Shoes, guaranteed fJ» ||A Suits for ages 4t08,t0 |J t£ [) • I UUiljC DlUOe at OUC to wear, sizes 12 to 2 «PI.I" be closed out at Hall rIiCC Rochester, N. Y. Broadway, New York Men's Fine Clothes sole Agency Eugene P. Men's Fine Hats THROUGH SPACE ON THE DEVIL'S TROLLY LONDON. Sept. 10.—(Special Corre-' Spondence to The Herald.) I have ridden up the side of the Devil's Dyke. It is th most appropriately named! place I ever saw, for it gives one the most fiendish sensation of horror, in fact, absolute terror, that you can imagine, It oniy Ingratitude Unless Mr. Cleveland concealed some tsi nig from the Princeton assessors, trusts, as well as republics, are un grateful.—Detroit New*. takes three minutes to make the ascent, but in those three minutes one seems to live hours. This remarkable creation of nature is six miles to the northwest of Brighton, the famous summer place for every body and where everybody goes. You 'Twas Even Thus Miss Walnut—And how do you like life in Philadelphia? Miss Gotham—l haven't seen any yet. —New York Journal. LOS ANGELES HERALD: SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, (897 may see that it is rather a harrowing task to take the trip I took by the fact that not over 10 per cent nf Brighton'? biummer population never made the trip, and what ls more, they express no anx iety to do so. The dyke is' a remarkable chasm, having on one Side a table land over seven hundred feet above sea level, from which a splendid panoramic view is obtainable. On its. southern, side this table land Is easy of access, but the.ap proach from the north is barred by a forbidding escarpment, and up to a short time ago—that is a year—could only be achieved in a roundabout though fairly safe fashion. Some genius, whose name I have for gotten conceived the idea that If this roundabout way could be shortened and the time necessary to make the ascent KNOCKED FITZSIMMONS DOWN The Champion's Coachman Has a Mo ment's Triumph Over His Master NEW YORK, Sept. 23.—According to his own admission, "Bob" Fitzsimmons, champion pugilist of the world, re ceived a knock-down blow last Satur day. "A harder blow than ever Cor bett struck," to use his own words. But the proud dignity of the red-haired pugilist has been in no way impaired, as he immediately "put out" his plucky assailant, and for fully half an hour the man who struck Fitzsimmons was dead to the world. There was no $15,000 purse at stake when the champion gave the latest ex hibition of his punching powers. The trouble arose over a paltry sum, repre senting precisely one-thousandth part of the amount. Neither was the cham pion's opponent a professional pugilist. He was merely Patterson, the little English coachman, of Mr. Robert Fitz simmons of Rye, Westchester county, New York. Robert Beck of this city had been a guest of Fitzsimmons, and wished to catch the 12:25 train home. Patterson was called upon to drive him. Mr. Beck, however, missed his train, by reduced to a very few mirvutese all the Brighton visitors would take advantage of the new route. So he gathered the re mainder of his wits together, this genius, and thought out a plan for a railway of the most novel character. It was over this railway that I took the trip spoken of in the beginning of my story. And let me confess right here—l nev*r want to take such a trip again, nor anything which approaches it The new railroad extends directly from the top of the table land to the plain below, at a point about a quarter of a mile from the -fillage of Poynings. It Is only 840 feet long, but every one who rides on It Is delighted that It Is no longer. Double the distance traversed under the same circumstances would have made an Incurable lunatic of me. Two cars are used for the service of as cending this height, one going down while the other goes up. The cars are open, and are fitted with four sets of steel jaw breaks, possessing, it is said, sufficient grip to stop and hold the car steady at any point on the line. Of course, this assurance is delightful, but if it should not happen that way there would be absolutely no escape from a death so dreadful that you do not care to think about It on the trip—that is, if you can help It. I couldn't. Tou enter the car as I did at the foot about a minute. He expressed a desire to punch the coachman's head. Pat terson Jumped from his seat and offered the pugilist's guest an opportunity to gratify his desires, and the two mixed it up a bit, with honors about even, un til "Bob" himself made them break away. Then all three drove back to the cottage. Arrived there, Fitzsimmons expressed his disapproval of the coachman's meth ods, and tendered him his dismissal. This was accepted with a stipulation that half a month's wages due should be paid. The champion declined, and a war of words followed. Fitzsimmons landed a heavy blow on the back of the coachman's head. Patterson replied with a whack on "Bob's" chest, which sent the champion to his knees, and which the Cornishman has since made historical as a harder blow than any he ever got from James J. Corbett. But the coachman's triumph was hort lived The next moment "Bob" landed on the solar plexus, and Patterson lay uncon scious for half an hour. The result of these little episodes ln the life ot « country gentleman of leisure ls that Mr. Fitsslmmons was arrested for assault and was given a hearing last night. Patterson has brought an action against cf the escarpment, and wcndtr what your state of mind and body will be when next yi v ar* away from it. The conductor s.-es to it that you are se curely f=nc