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IN THE TIMES TOMORROW Thomas A. Edison has come to sixty years. No need here to tell of the marvellous fruits to the world of the actual slavery in which this great American has rigidly held himself for two generations.. Mr. Edison has perfected his last invention. He has shaped for himself a new course. And in The Times tomorrow he glimpses the future in an article of rare interest and importance. “He is the most adroit, suave and noiseless man that American finance has ever known.” Thus did the late William C. Whitney classify Thomas Fortune Ryan. There are rumors that Mr. Ryan would like to add a United States Senatorship to his achievements. And there are rumors that he will return to his native Virginia. Mr. Ryan remains “noiseless” as to both. In the TIMES tomorrow will be told, in detail, what the man has done at Fifty Six—and the manner of man he is. To the criticism of Ambassador Bryce, recently expressed through The Times, that America lacks poets’ it may be recalled that Henry M. Alden responded with: “ What better sustained poem have we had for thirty years past than AMELIE LIVES’ ‘SELENE’ ?” In The Times Tomorrow the Author of “SELENE” makes a most effective addition to the discussion of this subject and her criticisms and analyses of American Poetry are made with the vigor and certainty that characterize her. The Little Brown Men of Japan have been in the Metrop olis of the nation whose guests they are for only a few days, but the eye of the Oriental sees much. Their im pressions of New York City will have entertaining expressions in The Times tomorrow through Richard Barry, who witnessed the siege of Port Arthur. And there will be a companion article to this in a comparison of the lives aboard the Japanese warships and those of America. And there will be: Mr. Dooley’s Thoughts on War and and Its Prevention—Senator Foraker and His Fight on the President—The Really Interesting Lay of One of the Last Minstrels—The Making of County Fairs in New York—An Exposition of the Causes Leading to the Unrest In India—A New Nation in the Making in Central America—Mr. Binin ger’s Observations on the Rush of Americans to Europe—And the Always Attractive Pictorial Section, with Its Pages Filled with Splendidly Printed Pictures of Timely Subjects. IN THE TIMES TOMORROW
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Chris S.

USA 20 Feb 2026

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