Ocean City Sentinel, 18 May 1899 IIIF issue link — Page 1

OCEAN CITY SENTINEL,

OCEAN CUT, N. J.,

H. C. MBDISOK EdStlii Pninelor,

CITY DIRECTORY. CITY on ICIAl.s

SHCKtT SOCIETIES

D k J- S. WAGGONER,

Physician and Druggist,

711 Ast'urj Arc., Ocean City, N. J.

y. c. HUTCHINSON, M.D.

■ lomreopathtfft.

No. h%> i Ocean Avenue.

1. AHBOTI, M.

I’liy siciaii and Nurtcron, OFFICE-Urur Uolnl ud ElAblk SlreeL

in btelLar deeps.

]VI"KC \N HAND. ATIDUXKY' AND <OI \Ni:i.I.OK AT 1.4H.

■ ■ N* j.

jJ^AW OF1ICES

jSGHaYUER C WOODRabU.

JONATHAN HAND,

, < ’ountcollof*- nt - I.n w« jl'AHK MAY’ COl'lCTHOl SK, N. J. i

• -Not

"ia>i *"

my dnly— my plani dnty.' | ’An I TiDd.-r»UiDd it. it ! T dnty to d.-f.-nd hi. client |

PICTURES IN SPAIN.

' huriiii JnHUi ii-dthat hi* Imd fun

j perw.ii.' rcmarkr.1 Judite BUuk.

nk I •• ‘I nuintain it t-c' n-plinltbe lawicclypT. Altiu.neli a (irrv ncr may oundh*! mi.-l.i I- iii«oe*^Vn he cunfrwrti. 11'

» d..i

nthy p.T

lavtnn. »«. whrtbi-r I or not. "who tDt. in think, tca-auf*' he iu t-urr. Dl..ill'll. i{.*im-

Pari*

||.* 11 .v Iho-h, r

M I*..’ replied the

TKKATWK^T

BY

INHALATION 1112 Giraril St., Phila., Pa. -Fever. Headarfar. nebllll>. MhcumatUm, Kearatcla. . 1 nd all Chronic and Nervous Disorders.

El GENEC. COLE,

! tber

l»l-r t

t of e

G. A. BOURGEOIS, Counsellor-at-LaYY,

11'uludaun Jf,”*”

' l ‘ 1 ' ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. ALBERT A. HOWELL, At t «»rne> -jkt-Ijn>v,

our... HulldlYiic.

CHCKCM SbRVICIS

iSErS-

CHURCH SOCIETIES.

GODFREY & GODFREY,

R ALPH. L. GOFF, CIVIL-ENGINEERS SaRVEYeR CONVEYANCER. NINTH AND CENTRAL AVENUE, OCEAN CITY. N. J. H. H. Rice, AiM'HITECT, ItourNr Ktailtlinic. OCR AN CITY. N. -T.

i. kntata: and ia.i aaNt^r. ISRAEL 8. ADAMS & CO.

i-csaL^i-iv^slReal Estate ■ Insurance

1 j M.lirWy r-.N..rrrO ha^fcMJfh. nujrrlrd a I ’ lf ’ * ,lb b 'r Riabop WILLIAM TAYLOR.

t o nfm Arrcur. N#rt Ynrt. N. 1 ) of »» lacnr iiul.lUbnl by Dr* Hlartr

^.O-EITTS,

Rooms 2. 416. Bui EsUlf t L» Bulldind,

ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.

imruiwloneni rrf Deedr. fur Pemi-

|»r». STA KK KY A I'AI.R-Y. 1112 GMiid St.. PkHtdalpkii. Pi. 120 Sittn SI. Sh Fiiadwe CiL

C. THOMAS, No. 108 Market St., PHILADELPHIA,

al eoolb Jeraey lor

HoTr.iA and «imai.i.v. HOTEL ATGLEN ocean env, n. j. THE EMMETT

- File Faily GMies.

HEADQUARTERS FOR Deal Estate aDmnstirattGe. CONVEYANCING, ETC.. AT CHARLES P. LAKE'S W.BRIDGEWSTERiCO.. Real Estate and Insurance Agents, a’,I ASBl'KY AVENUE. or bale Money to

In AlSnUe «OaptSay «mnly. LOW FRIGES.

GARWOOD HOUSE, R. R. SOOY &. SON

Restaurant and Lunch Rooms

OPEN FOR THE SEASON OF ’oe- ., u ,„ rlT BELLEVUE HOT BATHS,

SAMUEL SCHURC^u"''

| pmeta maaoNaaLC

B0A80WU, BETVEEI 7lH AID Slk STREETS ] rtoo. Na%* Suita lor Surf Bathlnat. j J. T. BRYAN,

E. CLINTON & CO.,

■•wltdiim u£

‘bRUSHES,

100t MlBin. ud 8 S. TERTH ST.,

Fuii.ADM.rMia, r

Nn. 1007 Ridge A»e.

I-hlladrlptlla.

“““

■ylva

y lo loan on Kind Mortgage, fur kale al Hrruth AUautic City Lmi on Houtet fat

JOSEPH SUTTON

OCEAN CITY. N. J

Conveyancing, Real Estate Insurance, Mortgages -and Collections Dd MHthrf. Lr«ml*J£l>rr« krt.| ID- of rt./iryr lirnu eulleeied. Fur and iltle InF. P. CANFIELD Real Estate ^

Insurance

No. SM Astun Avenue

OCEAN CITY, N. J.

JOSEPH M. CORSON Real Estate Agent PALERMO, ^ k

ul ltarliy 11 ****

Agent

A .11 IMJK'S STORY. "SlMinld a Uwt.t defenil a man charged with nmrd.-r wh.-ti be krii.n-. the wan to Ire gnilty ?" Thin rju—ti.m led to an animalr-d diaramiun. whieh, an end by the judge enddenly exclaim iWf, "Du yon nee tlint num?” TIT.' Irenebem turned their fae.- in the directi.m indical.vl ly the kpeakit jiiMt in fitue to a.^. a tall, lank man m rhahhy attire leave the building Before a wiml war rpnlcvn by any,. ! the rarioni. bn>cbffs the jndge mrid. atbungh ninoing to iiimwlf. though in a time loud enough fur the nthenr to hear "Hirange that I rh uld nv that man

and when w.

that lie

•oold

hare ati.wer.vl. Hi. lif. Wn a failnr.': hot. thank God. my re greta. though many, can nev.T la- a. hitter aa hi. are. lie rained hi. career a. a lawyer by defending a man who had cuufewd that be waa guilty of "Tell n« the idory. ” exclaimed the one known a. the prurtor. ••He war rained." began the jndge. “Amlritiun." angg.-rt.a1 the Nilic-iUit. with a genial Mnih- *m hi. kindly, dean .haven face. "i« re»i«»n.iiile fi'ir much good and lunch evil. It in ambition that ha. made nrrckn. legal driftwi.td. uf many of n*. YVe have dream..! .if great dee.1. in onr prof.vwirm; we liave build..l fairy earth, in tlie air. while ut her. have by hard Work raccceded. I

fur one”—

"TIh- rtory, the alary!" rxi-Uimed N-Veral of the liencbem. The jndge. thus urged, told hi. .lory : tered the email conrtboafe in a emali ti.wn in the anwtern nTtiun of New Y'urk. Cunrt waa in amnion, and the hu-b that had fallen upon the crowd in the r.«.ui fa. oppn-iMve. Nothing waa h.-ard at that time hot the ticking uf tile dock and the tireathing uf the npcetatura. The iireaiding judge waa looking up aume legal qnmtiun in the law laaik. la-fore him. The rapt altenthiu of the jnrora and the eagi'rneaa of the connael canra-d me to realire that a trial of more than ordinary intem-t and importance waa in imigrem. I naked a hyatander what the raae on trial waa. He gazed at me in anrpriae ijr a moment and then exclaimed. 'Y'ou muat bo a atrangiT in theae |iartaV • • •! am.' I replii-d. ‘I have ju.t come here from New Y’urk city to file a complaint in an action of ejectment. ‘ ” ’Thin.’ replied my informant, 'is a ’murder trial, and there.' he |aiinted in the direction I waa to look. - ia the nun who will certainly hang.' "Hooked at the pri.in.* at the liar He waa a giud looking young fellow about SS Vi ar> of age. Thi-re waa aoisething in the expreiwinn of hia pale face that convinced me of hia guilt. "While the trial jndge turned over page after page of the law honk* 1 learned the detail* of the crime." Here the atury teller t«.>k a nip from the flaak the proctor handed to him and then maimed: "I learned that in hia bonae on the ontalrirta of the town, one morning two month, before the day of the trial. John Petrrkin. a wealthy old man. who had been, it waa aaid. in the habit of keeping large anma of money in hia honac, waa found murdered, ahot in the back. The murdered man had I men seated when he waa ah. t. for hia chair waa overturned jnat aa be had fallen from it. Peterldn. who was about 67 year* old. lived alone with hia niece, a pretty girl al.rut I" yean old. She it wa. who discovered the murder When she had aufllcienUy recovered from her alarm, the niece. Mary Peterkin'. arunsrd the tteighlajn. “At firet It waa thought that the motive of the crime had been robbery. I rut when the police discovered that the safe, the door uf which war unlocked and half way open, contained #1.750. and that the old man's watch had not Wn taken, that theory had to be abanmyatery. Tlien it came to the knowledge of the chief of police that Haacall Kcnidder. the only run of a widow, whom father bad been poatinaater of the little town, had been seen an-nod the bonae and bad ijr-ken unkindly of old I’eterkin.' Kenidder waa pnt under •'When 1 had learned this much." aaid the jndge. "the Dial jndge. whom we will call Blank, looked up from the legal hook* and aaid. "I will admit the wiiliruit objected So.' "While Jndge BUnk waa rertewing the law ouretluda 1 looked al Mar*

connael for the prisoner, aaid to the wit"Tbc n-'it witness called waa a woman win had formerly Wn employed ly exr-eedingly tiorvoua, and her voice trembled when rhe swore to tell the truth There wa> a malignant rxprea

aii.n on the fare • f the mnnwl for the j '• "~I- "

- -Do you know Man- Peterkin V

•• •! do.’ wii. the refly.

•• ‘She is the niece of the mnrdered

'• -1 am guilty!' abonteil the pnr ..net -I did it 1 did it. I —’ -He fell lau-kward on the cunnael'a table, gar]led. ami after a few euuvnlritv iii.A.'iimitr nttimpted to row. fell laick, twisted bnlf around, and hia nml ,ia—-al to a higher tribnnal- ,Jndge Ulank. after aia-ertaining that the pair oner at the lair waa dead. aaid. '1 acre|it hia plea of gnilty. ’ « The teller of tiiia rtory then added "The man' W^o no rtrangely parr-al be t‘m> me today wan the pri~.ner r law

IS HE A WIZARD7

war eh Dr. H. w’ Felkin. roinimiii.il Emin Paaha through Uganda and adjacu

r bla par

Dial n

r had a

■' replied nee lived'

the

• 'Must

r ever quarrel!' at 7* ark'ii lie*

Y’ou moat.' sternly replied the 'Y’ea. They qnarrelial.' faltered What alamt?' Baked the connael

mile* routh of

Khartutn. and that he had bnen without . letter* from Europe for a year. Natnrally he waa impatient for tiding*.In that part of Ainca be imd often come acr-wr wixarda. who pretended to

trun-fonii theuwl'

vel immenm-

Tiiae. They also aaaert

T the p

"AU eye. Peterkin. w

herehair E

Mary

i crouched up in n that runrtnaim

Ma med to miliar that the teetimony al ri-ady addnerd against the prisoner at the lair war ar nothing compared with that jnat brunght out against the girl. The prisoner at the liar waa ]mb' and trembling and. 1 thought, an object at abject misery. Then the tbonght flashed ai rora my mind that be might hr' in-

locetlt. It i

t that I

Dash waa atruggliug with himself when

be asked the next qnertion.

*• ‘Did yon ever hear Miaa Peterkin

"With a moan of anguish Mary Pe-U-rkin fainted. Tlie prisoner started forward and. despite the efforts of tin bailiffs to restrain him. exr{aimed: •• 'This is a shame. I am guilty, and that man'—pointing hia finlp-r at Lawyer Horace Dash—'knows that I am.' " -YY'hat doe* this mean V asked Jndge Blank, addressii counsel, who war leaning on the table and seemed abont to faint. " •! don't know, your honor.' replied the lawyer, who waa seen ' hand to hia heart. " •led the trial proceed.' aaid Jndge BUnk. 'and don't let that woman.' dicating Mary Peterkin. 'leave •• •Slop!" rxcUimed the prisoner, withdraw my plea of not gnilty. I

guilty!’

"For a moment silence, cppmmve silence, reigned supreme. Finally the jndge raid. 'Do you apjireriate your piadtiun—that I can death on yonV " ’I do.’ replied the prisoner, defiant look at hia connael. ‘bnt I wtrald like to ray a few word*. ’ “ •Prixeed. rir,' raid Jndge Blank. ‘‘ "I committed the crime, yonr honor, bnt not from desire for gain. It waa done in a uunuent of anger, jnrt anger, and few the sake of my dear old mother. Y’rara ago my inotbfr. so that she might pay some debt* I < outrun.-.! while ' college, mortgaged her farm —the hoi

Elach year since then she pah nsnriona interest Finally tbei day when be would nut renew' gage. That was the day I kiHed him. I pleaded with him. bnt in vain. He insisted Ire would foreclose the mortgage. He called my mother a vile name. I saw the revolver on hi* dmk. picked it np and aimed ' ' around in hi* chair toward his desk, and the Imilet enlerrd bir "While be wa* telling this story the prisoner sereral time* pressed hia band to hia left aide and moaned aa if in pail •• 'Have yon anything else to aay asked Jndge Blank. *• 'Yea; 1 want to aay.' explained tinprisoner in gasping tones, 'that after ' had retained that Dwyer’—pointing t Horace Daso - ‘ 1 told him 1 wa* guilty ; that I wanted to pltad gnilty. He ftwbade my doing an Kaid it waa a splendid fane. He would acquit mr.andorrrr himarlf with glory. He «*‘d be wonld ask do fee. I urged that 1 waa gnilty. bnt he aaid be could clear me I consent, si to the plea of not gnilty. ’ "Again the prisoner placed .his hand to bis heart and with an effort aaid. *1 con id not save my life at the exprnae of an innocent person, and that person a woman. I am gnilty.' "He sank hade into a chair, and Jndge BUnk tnrm-d to H.wace Dash, the prisoner'* conmal. and asked: " 'What bare yon to aay fur yoor-

aalfr

it sncli

time- fib-int stolen cattle and other hat property. Dr. Felkin nays that, al though be ha* no explanation to uffet in regard to the-e alleard frata. be had a chance to verify one of their stories. One morning after, hia arrival at La do a man came to bis lent, evidently in great r xciteme: t. and raid that the local wixatd. or •’m’logo." had been roaming abont the country the night before in the form of a jackal. During hia ramble* the "m’logo" had visited i-el-Bek.-fully

Lad..

The

wizard declared that two jnat arm-ed at thia point and had brought mail* He also described minutely the appearance of an English officer accompanying the beat* Dr. Felkin ridiculed the story. Bo! Emin Fa-ba took the thing more eeri ou-ly. He directed that the wiaard Ishronght la-fore him and qneationed the

fellow.

"Where did yon go lart night T" "1 waa at Me-chera-el Hck. " "YY’hat were fbn doing there T" ••1 went to see some fri-nd*.’’

I waa there," the wizard replied

‘and with the at

wn* an Englianman. a snort man witn

a big heard."

"Well, what was hi* miaaioot" “He aay* that the great paaha at Kbartnm had sent him. and he had acme paper* for yon. He is atarting overland tomorrow, (ringing the papers with him, and be will he here abunl BO day# from now.” Dr. Felkin says that 82 days later the Englishman did arrive at La do. and that bs lirongbt litter* for the party. The newcomer waa Lnptou Bey. Of the vrYiard Dr. Fefkin any* that ha is satisfied that the man waa never outside hia native village in hia life. -New

York Tribune.

WAS HIS FRIEND.

According to Inspector Gci Breckinridge, who recently reto from Cate and Porto Hico. the ecu moral reapouaihility of the averagr ban ia extremely limited Thia was atronvly imjiranasd upon him one day a military station near Santiago, gang of bandit* had been rounded by the trisqai and with them a doxno bune-ri stolen from a plantation in the vicinity. The general looks bark a' the {riiamera and noticed among tbei a man who appeared to belong to a be' ter ( hoar than hi* companion*. Hr wi called forward and thmngb an intei prCter the general qnertioued him. "How did yon get mixed npint^ia? asked the ine|iector general. "1 bad nothing to do with the affair," waa the reply, yl am aclssdtgachrr in the district when these men live, and Igive them advice. I give every one advice who comes for

it"

"But.” suggested the officer who arrampanied General Breckinridge, "tlu.: fellow told the mb I era tc e«i off the hand of the owner of the borer*." "Ask him why be made ancha'KaUgnant anggestion." raid the general to the interpreter. The question waa pnt. and thaacbool teacher ah rugged his abonlders. "The •caciqne' dura Dot under aland." 'or asid "It waa I who aared the proprietor'* life. These men came to me with him and aaid: 'He will not pay aa what wa demand. Shall we kill himf Then, aa they asked me for advice. I aaid •No. do not kill him. Cut off one band; be will pay yon then.’ vTbey did'aa I advised, the money wa* paid, and I bad aared the man'a life. There la surely nothing malignant about that .1 am friend. '—Washington Htar.

aim mere i> a gallery in Madrid win. I ia well worth going all the aray then ti -ee. nut at present l- riiaje f--r an Aiuer "l wa* in Madrid two yrara ago. am after a week's study Ihrough the mya tncgnre gallery, or Real Muaoo d- I'ln turns. aa the r-|iaiiiarda call it. if 1 wen that it 1* tho huest gallery in tls World. 1 wae ready lo any that it wa without a *u|e-rtur. The l-nilding wa ens-tMl in I7N5 by Uterlra IU a* a mn

in tin- collection, and while It . chronological wnea of the .1 Uncle Sam might ainns-t l« ■ I in invading Spam to that are al jm-aent doing what to compete with Enropeon exbihitiuos of. pictnnai, and not makmg of a aWtw induing. Togo iutodetalia, lei me nay that on ita walla are 6S Rulanaea. iST.-uierae*, 10 Raphael*. 46 Munlhe. 64 Vrdaaqiiraea, 22 Yitndykra. 43 Tusana. SI Tintoret*. 26 VerraMwin. 54 Brough-!-. 28 Snyder* IV Poussins. •46 Woorennan* 55 Gionlauo* 58 Ki brraa 10 Clandn* and ■ lot more, in-

red yean, and thaF

i- currently r.-]«-rtai

• tier

r hia

galleries they • SI hibiiioii

Watteaus, Guido* and plAty of others which if not in such superior onnpany would be held to he very superior them aelvea Now if any at yon kijow of any other gallery that can show such a list of winner* as this one in Spain that dorsai'i liave half a* many visitor* and art rtudeula in a year aa Drealen or Florence has in a month I'd like to

know ita addrera.

"Thia ia a ooller-tioe of guuuinr*. too, as meet of them are from the palaces of Madrid, the Ksrnrial. El Pardo an Granja and were painted to order

It i

■erai free on Sunday, the one day iu America when picture* in all tho galleries I know of bnt one cannot la> seen

at all."—Detroit Free Preen.

The management of the regular army in the field ia almost sordidly bnaines* like, bnt in the end it makes for the pictunwqnr. The tmggage train, for ex ample, as it totla down the highway, it superb. Tlie wagons are of a faded bio.color and a bit butDrud. hut they like those veterans

The old army overcoat they have re* ntVM-ted for the orcasioo has faded tc the palest of blues, and the wearer ia a bit battered. He ia sound at the core, though, and ao are theae lumUriny«ararana that bare come all tlie way from Fort Reno and farther. They J un-fa through the rand and over the racks of the Florida highway, and mulling give*. They are idled high with tents and greasy camp equipage and bnxta of munition. Six males draw them, end the mule* are admunlabed tmcnaaingly in a profane m-mot one by a powerful person, who has teamed to drive with The nsstt poetic end erductirq namee appear with what might at first blush aeera atartltug Irrelt-vancy. eraisidering the general context at the driver's remark* One is anrpriand to hear him couple the names of Lena. Paulina and Sadie with his frantic exhortations as to the rights at the nod and the proper conduct of an army mol* t-till I ace mi reaeuu why even an army’ mole should not he graced with a romantic name. Life at best can bold ao little for an army mule—Tampa (FI*) Letter in Chicago Journal.

No atnna-pbere is eo injurious to tbr bearer and none a> trying to the preacher aa petty criticisms and malicious interpretation People ought to hear in a large and generous spirit, remembering

that the preacher ia a man of like f ties with Jbemaelvea and rememlIbat no wan ongbt to he judged el ->n the length and Ireatltb of bis ttsaailile that one day he may

he dal

-it ir

is possible another day that be may not sweet trnmered—it ia a matter of digestion : the hearers ought to make great allowances for one who has to work with the double instrument of a fickle mind aibk an imperfect body Hearers should real ember that no man ever tan be iqual except be travel on the plane of dreary commonplace.— Ian Maclarrn in Ladies' Home Jnnmal "Oh, mamma.” exclaimed little Alio* "it rays baa in the paper that Mr* Bockletbwmite addressed tlie S ais meeting in moving terms! I »ln think she'd hi- asliaraed of luvsolf never thought she wonld do and thing os that Now We con neve friends with her any mure, can

"Why, my child, I d yon." her mamma replied. "Why should we cease lo le friindaV ' ‘ llecausi she used moving terms, of conn*" the littlecoeesplained. "Jnst think of a lady doing that when there were a lot uf othere around to tear her. •apecially if they were such moving ternuas pap* n*ed the last time we Then her mother understood-—Cleve-land Leader. - In p’s edro sod Norway a legal It:

:ii>n N<> inaii in England is Is-tLv titt<d to deal with tbr- propoe.*! partition <-f tlie shah'* domain than be, fur hia king resilience at Teheran and hia ante serpent stndira of the qnestton have made him abeilnte master of Its araallest detail* The prop-eal is to divide the mnntry by a rough line running east and west through the r-rnter. giving tlie northern section to Rnasia and adding the aontbern half to India. Aa matters stand now. Persia is going ,fn-ui had to worse. She has no law*'save thorn imposed by the powerful ; no justice, rare that which is pur-•dia-al-le is, state treasury, save the sbah'a private pnrae. and no enterprise, save that which is Rnssian re English. Divided into two section* by a desert that run* through the center and with oat railriads save tbuer organised and ran by European! for their oafn pur|aaee. which are chiefly military, the nation baa no united feeling, and its national pride has been bopeleaaly crashed ont by a corrupt aristocracy. Rnoda ia binding tlie northern section to herself by means of a network of railroads which are connected with the Uiberian system, while England has constructed railroads in the southern section which tie it to India. With the death of Mosafrr-ed-din the country ia expected to fall in halves natnrally. bat if It dor" not then the two nationa most promptly.—HI Louis Republic. UNCLE SAM’S BANDS.

".“trangely enough, nntil the army reorganization goes fully into operation, military lands hare had no legal existenow, explained a member of an army hand, “tbungh quite a number of them have existed in spite of the law. With the exception of the post hand at Went Point, no army band has ever been provided far by statute. There are. as D well known, a numhsr of military hands, those uf the Sixth cavalry and Second janiih-fy bring well and favorably known in Washington, from the lung arrirce they hare given in thia section. but they were never ptorided for or maintained >>y any form of law. Other regiments have had their bands also, bnt the fnnda which provided them with their instramenta and mnaic always came in an indirect manner and witbont any ctpresasd statute of law. Under the statute [dividing fur the ranrganiaatiioi of the army, there will ha a laud connected with each regiment of the army, and j* the three branch** of the service—infantry, cavalry and artillery. “Banda are now appropriated fur. the same aa the officer* and aoldirra themselves. In direct and erprrrns.1 term* and it will not be many yean before they will he very considerably improved all around, fur they will bs independent of company fond* which varied from time to time, and which at some time* were very low. The bandsmen had to be company tailor* barbers and do other outside service, so aa to make both enda inert"—Exchange.

“I wish, doctor." aaid a pretty patient one blustering day in March lart to Dr. Alfred E. Regenahergar. "that yon wonld give me something to prevent my catching cold an often.” He ia a very snare physician, ao he looked wise and raid authoritatively: "My dear madam, yon must keep yonr Innga fall of good, fresh air. A deep breath of cold atmuepbera counteracts the danger of a sudden chill It is like rqiening the draft of a furnace; it makes the fire burn.'' , "BoL” objected the fair patitot who pc-eatwd that attribute of her aex. an inconvenient memory, "it wa* only last Christina* thaf yon told me to beware of cidd air." No one ever knew Dr. Regensberger to be nonplused. "My dear lady." be replied, with

makee rapid strides theae day* That was in December. 18*8; this is March, la** "—San Francisco Newa Letter.

leave it iu poeeraica of the B( bnt Colloid K-socvelt pulled hia pistol and raid. 'Y'on can fail back if yon want to. but my men will nold It till the lart wan die*' We held it and did not die cither. I tell yon Wood wad Ronacvrit are proud of their ngimmiL Colonel Rooaevdt says if we knaok the bottom iri* of th-a thing in rime be is going to Utkc all the rough rids* that arc alive and able to go to the Paria exposition ip 1*00 at hia own expan aa Our hoy* arepruod of onr oolonal. W# fought wo boors witbont sleep or raa* "