GIBSON PEACOGKr«or. VOLUME XXL—NO. 277. •THE lEVENING BULLETIN FC]>MfiUEl> EVERT EVENING (-Sundays excepted). AT THE NEW BULtETIN BtrilsDlNG, «OTCbeq.,allof Pollaaelphha, [Burlington and Mount Holly P ±M£smk-Oo the Mth fost.. by the. Rev. Wm. B. Wood, Mr. Ben done* and Mice Rachel Leeber, both of this city. \ DIED. ABBOTT.-On Thursday, the 27th instaat, Samuel W. Abbott, In the 61>t year or bie age. Due notice will be given of tbe funeral * DF.BINGFiK.-On the 26th of February, im, at bki resi dence, No. «18 North Front street. Henry Deringer, aged 82year». - The friend* of the family are Invited to attend bis morrow (BaturdayX at 10 A. M. To proceed FULTQfS-dn Friday, 27th lint, Mr*. Sarah Fulton, widtVr of Mark Fulton, aged 86. It MECONKKY.—On Thursday evening, 27 th InaU David Meconkcy. la the sixty-ninth (©til) year of bla age. . The friend* ef the family are Invited to attend the funeral from his late residence, in Went Cheater, on Mon day afternoon, March aeeond (2d), at two (2) o’clock.. • , MOBlifB.-On the morning or the 36th Instant, Levi Blorris, in tlie 61st roar of hla age. . . The funeral wlu meet at his late residence. In Lower Merion-on Seventh-day, the 29th Instant, at 2P. M. * _ WHWFIBI.D.—At Orange, New Jitter, February 26. dsn-nee Bird, son of Edwin A. and Susie B. Whltheld, a, sd two yearn, two month* and twenty-ax dart. » Ta'VRE * LANDELL OPEN TO DAY THE LIGHI’ Xu shades ofSprinc Poplins for the Fashionable Walking DfCMtfL Steel Colored PopHna, Mode Colored Poplinm BUtbitrck Exact Sb&de. sFeoial mmcEs. war To the Select and Common Councils CITY OF PHILADELPHIA. ’J'l Company 1* prepared to purchase It* Loan due 4nvm,atpar. gOIIOMON^ BHEPHERD, Treasurer. JaflO-tfrp - No. Ha Soutirßoeond Street THE ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT OF THE •"' Penwylvanla Collegeof Dental StiWery Will, be held at the Musical Fund Hilton Saturday evenlntFcb. 39tb. 1968, at 7 34 o’clock. Valedictonr far Prof. 0. T. Barker/The public are pam] g(g f* HOWARD HOSPITAL. NOB. IjM AND^UTp cd treatment and xnedichieytuTniehedsriituitouriY to the «oor. . . , .• 1 ■ ■ ■- v MOP* SECOND LECTOR® ON VENTILATION.—BY Mr. t W. Leeda at the Franklin Institute, THIS - made of goaiskin,- Striking those whom they met, much as nowadays, without any idea: except impudence, the common mas queraders--in the carnival hit right and left with inflatedibiaddetfs; But the'skin W the ga®t gaVe“ February its name, and-it‘ls singular to observe another of the many Instances where tho early Church absorbed cmaeanetifiod by a widely dif ferent spirit those pophiar feasts and even sym bols which would have heem .difficult.to have up rooted-altogether in those first days of the new religion. The cemmencemen tof the Purification of the Virgin, forty days aftetf thfe birth of the Saviour, oUtbxactly at the; pbrbd of, the proces sion.'that Tutted from the dwa .before Eneas reach# the Italian shores, and tira& a procession 1 w#T3t#ifih#hy the Church, was fol loßMjSiSwrthffthe. Christomjjwj^cphit^njof ttePaitaa ntee. ?Mtey.bore in twjrhandsllghKd OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. divinity of Christ, the wax being typical Of the purity and mortality of the first, the liglif of ibe latter. The Popes had been in the habit of ulebratirg the fits of the Purification and the procession in the chapel of their palace. In 183!? Gregory XVI. decided thenceforward on trans icrriiig the ceremonial to the Basilica itself, giving thereby great satisfaction to the laith lul, who could never find places sufficient in the Sixtine sbapel. The cardinals assist at the mass with all the signs and tokens of tbeir several dignities. The patriarchs, archbishops, and bishops coming-in their violet copes and white mitres. Ths Bovereign Pontiff ascends bis throne in the tribune, surrounded by his whole court, and immediately after receiving the homage of the • Bacred College of Cardinals, com mences the blessing, of the vandtea. Three of these are dedicated to the Pope himself, two enormous tapers of twenty pounds each, and one of two pounds only,, most richly orna mented, to be carried in his hand by his Holiness during the snbsequent procession and! the Mass. The Cardinals receive each their candle of three pouads weight, and kiBS first this and then tbe bem of the Papal cope. The bishops kiss- their ta pers of two poundseach and kiss the Pope's knee. Tbe other recipients of a little amount of wax, to wit,ambassadors,prelates,and lay persons of dis tinction, kiss the loot only. After the distribution, tbe Pope washes his hands in a basin presented to him by the prince in attendance near tbe throne, and the procession takes- places The cortege leaves the choir on the right side of tbe altar, makes the tour of the nave, and returns by the left or gospel side. His Holiness- thorn de scends from the elevated chair in which, he has been borfie through tlie church, and takes his former seat. The violet robes ef the cardinals are laid aside, and the ecailet assumed, and’ mass is sung by one of their number, to whom, special powera have been accorded by a Papal bulL as otherwise mass at the high altar of anv basilica is reserved for the Pontiff. On this occasion the German Cardinal, Keisach.sung mass, at the con clusion of which his Holiness intoned the Ambro sian hymn, with which it has been customary to conclude this day’s ceremonial since‘the preservation of the city of Home in 1703 from threatened destruction by . earth quake. After bestowing general bene diction, the Pope returned to his'own'apartment in the Vatican, there to receive as usual the of ferings of wax from the patriarchal and minor basilicas, from the different parish churches, the religious orders, the Knights of Malta, and the holy house of Lorctto. These he in turn bestows on poor convents and charitable institutions for pilgrims and incurables. He sends them like wise to persons whom he wishes to distin guish, to members of his own family, personal attendants, and the various artists employed about the apostolical palaces. When the Feast of the Purification does not, as this year, fall on a Stlnday, it is still kept as a day of obligation, and . is one of the fifteen holidays' left to be observed strictly by Pius VI. when, in 1798,' he suppressed tbe obligation on tbe remainder of the thirty-four which up to that date had been maintained by the Church. MEXICO. Tbe American Jfaegion In Mexico—Scan- Galons Treatment. [Garreapondence of the N. Y. Hereld.l According to the decree of Benito Juarez, made in Monterey ton the 11th of August, 1864, such Americans as would enter the liberal service were to have in addition to their full pay of one' rank higher than that which-ibey held in the United Slates army, fifteen bupnred acres of land, on ah average nessmitoe'. to their rank. It is reported to hsve been discovered! that there jp-e scrioua difficulties : in the way of carrying onfcjbia decree in the cases of the Legion of Hfmor, the body of Americans who BtUl .await their pay; and it is even declared that the general government possesses no lands, they being the property of the separate State 3. Under all of the circumstances it has been proposed to the Legion to accept a sum of mone; in hen of the land—not $1,500, but $3OO. %imo, perhaps the majority, have agreed to accept it; having, at the same time,but little confidence that the repre sentation concerning the land, so gloriously and picturesquely promised in the decree, would be honorably carried out by the subordinate officials’ who might have the particulars under their charge. As a natural consequence the feeling is not cordial towards the Government J>y the Le gion, which has also been subjected to asrattempt at disgrace within a ffcw weeks by the civil or military commander (it is impossible to say which, as both are inclined to shirk the respon sibility), who declared in a written document to the Secretary of War in substance that-thc-Ame rican Legion was a nuisance and recommended that they be ordered. out of the country—of course saying nothing about paying them. Every American in Mexico who knows.anything about the Legion and the behavior of its members on many a battle-field in the late civil war at home, aud also of their deeds and sufferings at Zacatecas and at Querotaro are strnck dumb at the-treat ment which they are receiving. , It is now about two weeks since the arrange ment was made and accepted by., a portion of them to receive $3OO in full, and ae yet less than a dozen have been paid, although the implied if not definite nndcrslfinding was that the payment should be made immediately, and before they would be compelled to hypothecate ihat amount tor necessary living expenses. Many of the most respectable families of the States, dnd especially of New York, are represented in the Legion —the Proudfoots, the Catlins, Blaisdeils, die. Their friends and relatives .in : the states, however, need hardly expect to welcome "nuisances” on their arrival home,as the entire Legion, with possibly a few exceptions (which occnr in military bodies in all countries), have won the esteem oi foreigners here, inclu ding Americans, and elsewhere the everlasting gratitude of liberal Mexico, This may be unpala table to be re-read in Mexico, but it is hardly pos sible to suffer the Legion. to leave Mexico aDd expect that a correspondent, who.has an Ameri can heart burning within him, could allow at least as much as the above to remain, unsaid, es pecially when among them are very many- of his late companions in arms in Virginia ana the southwest. . * Address of JUexlctui £xiles Co tbe Pope. The Diario.de la Marina of Havana contains the’ following address sent to his Holiness the Pope, and signed by General Santa Anna and most of the leading ex-imperialists now in Ha vana: Daly Father: The,undersigned Mexicans, eml- f rants and residents in Havana, have the high onor to address your Holiness and mosthumbly to present yon with our most sincere congratu lations on the success with which the Holy See has passed through the dangers , created bv the revolution of ■ the Italian populace. This terrible tempest having bien overcome, and France having again goat ] anteed the temporal power ot your Holiness, the members of the - Catholic Church, hope for tran quil days to its visible head,-, and ; also tor the prosperity of the Christian religion. Undersuch pleasing circumstances the undersigned, as Catholics and friends of good principles, raise to your Holiness the vows which they coatipually direct to Heaven for the peace and prosperity of the Church. Being desirous that your Holindes be persuaded’ of the sentiments which animate' ''■ns, and‘ t ! The undersigned beseech yonr. Holiness to deign to send them your apostoUe i Messing, as unto yonr most falththl sons. - , s ■ > Antonio Lopez de Bantk Anna, former Presl dent bf Mexico, .The GweraU of Brigade—Felix Zulosga, AntomOTaj»#a,.BemtoZenea,Mandel R. de* Arrelaaoi'>F«lentsff'7Tart(j!^^.:‘‘^Rt»Ml6. tallon—MapueiH, CameSHitwiMw-; D. Galindo, Juan J. Jaurc,»fii, Lorenzo Garcia do Bebvilo. LieutenaDt Generaf-of Artillerv, Lorenzo Rojl; Captain of Infantry, Juan. N. Garav; Di rector of tbe Military Tcleg-jpwot Vera 'Cruz, Francisco de P- Travesi. ’ CRIME. INCENDIARISM IN Ht/mi.ff. Throe Attempts in Twenty-four Hours, [Prom tße Buffalo CqmmCTcinl. February 26 ] Notwithstanding the precautions taken by the authorities, tie incendiaries are still at their devilish work. Since the detailed account! of fires . given by ns on Monday three more incendiary attempis harp been made, one of.which wiv» luliy successes],' end resulted in the destruction of ths old Melodcon. About' 4 o'clock this morning a fire was' discovered' in the building formerly known atrCarr’a Melodeon,No. 280 Washington street, in rear of St. James’s Hall. There are different stories in relation to' tbe exact locality where the fire commenced, bnt from all tine facts we can gather, after diligent inquiry, itto altogether likely that the incendiary torch was applied to the scenery on the stage. The bundl ing was completely burned' out; with the excep tion of the basement floor, and- nothing but the walls are left. The scenery, properties, &c. r which were formerly used at the ACefcdeon, were owned" ity ‘ Thomas Carr, and' were Valued at $l,OOO. These were destroyed, and there was no insurance. The basement was- occupied on one side by T. Keenan, as a gas fitting’and plumbing shop, and on the other'byForrester dk Eritline, ornamental plasters. The first-named!gentleman estimates bis loss at about $250; ana the two latter at about $3OO. There was no- insurance on any of the property in the basement The budding, a four-story brick, had'buen altered in the interio(,and the second and third 1 floors taken ont previous to Mr. Carr’s occupation of it as a place of amusement. It was the property of George and Albert Brisbane, and> was valoed at from $7,000 to $9,000. There was no insurance on the building, which was unoccupied. The adjoining bnildiDg, No. 278' Washington street, was damaged considerably by fire arid! water. The third and fourth floors were pretty thor oughly drenched. Frederick Graham oeeaplcd the basement and first and second fibers-. The basement waß used as a kitchen, and there was nearly two feet of water in it this morning. The first and second floors fonr or five tenants occuplcMroomsoVthe third and fourth floors, and hatreiheir efffects more or less damaged by water. Philip- Thomas, one of the tenants, states'that some one stole several articles of valuable jewelry from his rooms during the progress of the fi re. Mr. Gra ham’s loss will amount to sloo,whicW is- covered by insurance for $l,OOO in the Albany Xhaurancc Company. No. 278 i 6 owned by Riley Saunders, Esq., and is valued at $7,000. Mr. Saun ders has insurance on the building to the extent of $3,000, which will fully cover the dam age done. St. James’s Hall' escaped without any damage, as did also the baUd-. ing in the rear! of the burned one. The'West ern Transportation Company keep a day* and night watch over their property in and about tbe Erie Basin. They have a night force of four men, and besides there are the N. F. Police and the. Special Police recently appointed .to keep-watch and gua'd over the citof.. Notwithstanding these precautions, however,we learn that two attempts were made on Monday night to fire the Western Transportation Company’s Warehouse.. There were combustible materials -pi iced in- tbe privy, and. fired. The discovery was made bf the, night- watchfrom thesmell of smoke in time to prevent much damage. Had the incen diaries succeeded In their plans, there would un doubtedly have been a large destruction of pro perty, including the warehouse of the W. T. Co., as well as thtir fleet of propellers moored- along side of tbe building. Not only these, but the wa ter-line warehouse of Cnmmings & Clark would have been endangered, as well as a lumber-yard near it. The discovery of the diabolical attempt was most opportune and fortunate. Between 2 and 3 o’clock this morning, Frank , a night-watchman in the employ of Marsh & Sternberg, discovered a fire in the engine-room of tbe Empire Elevator, on the south side of tbe creek, opposite tbe Sternberg and Wadsworth Elevators. He immediately c died to bis aid! one of the N. F. Police, and they took buckets of water over the creek, polled off tbe cl ip-boards on the lower pari of the engine-room, and threw water on the roof of the room and put out the lire.' Kerosene bad been thrown on the clap boards of the engine-room, which is only one story high, and on the outside of tbe elevator, and that being done, the fire was kindled. The timely discovery of the fire, and the prompt ac tion of the two men before mentioned, saved both the Empire and the Marine Elevator, on the op posite side of the slip. A man was arrested by order of Superintendent Reynolds this morning, on suspicion of attempt ing tho dcstrnction of the warehonse of the Western Transportation Company yesterday morning. The circumstances strongly point to the man in custody, and he js detained for inves tigation. There was a rumor this morning that a man had been arrested on suspicion- of firing tbe oldMelodeon building, bnt this is a mis take. A person was arrested for disorderly con duct, but nothing more serious was urged-against him. V ''' : Tire Idaho Tragedy—The Kate oi Scr» gcant Dennollle and WHO, flew Iforbt We h'ave received the following letter, dated Fort Boise, Idaho Territory, February lhth: 1 To the Editor of the JVew YorkEtoeninfr Post With a view to relieve from further,suspense the inquiring friends of the ill-fated Sergeant Den noille and wife, I respectfully ask room in your ; columns'for the following: About the 24th of October, 1867, as Sergeant Peter Dtnnoille, of Company C, Twenty-third Infantry, accompanied by bis wife and First Sergeant Samuel Nichols, of. thcsame company, wias traveUng in an ambu lance on his way- to Fort Boise from Camp Lyon, Southwestemldaho,they were attacked by a party of Indians about ten miles from the latter camp. On the first round fired by the Indians, Forgeant Dennollle exclaimed, “I am shot,” and fell dead from the ambulance. His wlfe became almost frantic. Sergeant Nichols drove rapidly a short distance, when one of the hones stumbled, and both then alighted. Sergeant Nichols was armed with a sixteen shooter, and endeavoied-toper suade Mrs. Dennoille to take refuge with him in the rocks, hut she returned to the lifeless form of her husband, and was immediately captured by thb savages; Sergeant Niehota escaped. Unhurt, and, arriving athta post, made In substance the foregoing statement. , Brevet Colonel J. B. Sinclair, Captain Twenty third Infantry, commanding Fort Boise; Brevet Major J. C. Hunt. First Cavalry, commanding Camp •Lyon, and Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel J. Coppinger, Captaln 'TwSnty-thlrd Infantry, commanding the camp of “Three Forks of the Owyhee,” sent detachments from their respective commands to ascertain the fate of or rescue the unfortunate woman, bat without success. ' The body of Sergeant Dennoille was found per fectly nnde,' scarred and slabbed all over. It was convoyed to Camp Lyon and interred. —According to a correspondent of the New .ForkXri&ime,.thf>-ladles of .Chile, ats, .very. ,ac-. complished in ,music and nothing,else. It is said that performers who would, pass Tor accomplished pianists,ln this countiy would therebe Wgarded as hardly 1 above mediocrity. The character of tbe muslo Selected and enjoyed is of the-highest classical order,"but It ls no unuaual thlpgffor ttios.who are tooroughlyfatnUlar witojaschf Beethoven and Mendelssohn to be wholly IgUo raht lh theefrnplerdepartmentaof edapation. i —An Arkansas negro,.expounding the Scrip tures, had occasion to tpnch ujfew antediluvian longevity, and In the courtbof* hi* remarks said that inthoeodays men: didn’t many before they were SOO, and, in fact, weretwcaty-dve years ala before they were bom. F. I. PRICE THREE CENTS. facts astd —The Toitahawh glve&the following table of ■WAITS AHD MEASURES W ABYStHtftA. : Mifss Measure. 50 moles make 1 mnfeteerto look after"them. - mnleteere to look sifter them make 1 good 'thing of it. 100 good things of it malto 1 penny'en ttf tho income tax. 1 penny on to the income-tax makealD.OOO-,' , - 000 Englishmen swear. British' Wcri(3. . ' ‘ 2 visits' to the HorsB Guards make T? six months’delay. . 2 six months' delays make 1 hit of Botibar management 12 bits oFßombSy management make 1 Aa nesley Bay. 100 Annesfey Bays make 1' Abysobaian- Expedf* - tion. - The bare Idea of two AbySßiniaa Expedition# - • makesoneMad. —The- tobacco dealers of Ba&viße, Va.. an about to form a board Of tfaefe'. ' . —A Mr. Wright, of claims to have discovered perpetaaliporien.: —Senrfys’s latest lecturings enr tire Alabama were at Atlanta last week. i ■ -*■ —The- Pope's Canadian troopo wear’wdwte o*l - to match. ' : < —Barton'Hill is to Bupport Mr.JOrrcs t in a two weeks' engagement at Louisville. —Jefferson Davie and family are soon-expected on a visit to-Louisville. —A direct descendant of Martin lather, ia the eighth generation, lives at Hagerstown, MBb —A Michigani youth tried to cub iff hin bead with a hatchet. *» W . —An in obviated Sewthem cri O'c epealft- off Mr. Winkle’s Blp'Van'JeSferson. * —A Frenchman has invented a. kcttloln which water is boiled: in six minutes by friction-/, without any fire. . —A bidder at a horse auction isi Nashville last week mounted a mare to try her .speed, and wax so. Well satisfied! that he has not yet returns®; —Boss ncsoiaation as JHiniater to China 1b strongly indorsed by ■ the CaUfomus press. —Opera House Crosby has had * silver' tea set given him in testimonlalefksa being OpererHthisx Crosby. 'I —Mr. William Young’s new evening paper in> New York, from which great things are ezdebted;, will ba called Krorg.A'ftermm. —MS. Arthur Helps,the Queen’s literary ‘‘help*”' owes hen favor to a former friendship: between' himself and the Prince Consort. , —Governor Dnrkee of Utah did not alludo to- Mormoniem In his annual message, and- thereby displeased both parties. —Hon. John Merrissey is, it is said, soam-to give a sparring exhibition in New York in aid of the po6r. —Alexander Smith left some unpublished preae papers, aeon to be published under the tUirf of ‘•Last Leaves,” with a memoir of the author. —Many wells and 1 springs In New York State and Canada, which have never failed before are now completely, dry. This is attributed to'vol canic action. —Mr; Bandmann was announced' to appearha< London in hlf> favorite play of Narcissi. It hae been adapted for the English stage by Mr. Tom. Taylor.'. ' . .-I# —An enterprising Chinaman in California- is making money s taivina all the rale- ctnudtt , alive, undiAttchiug ihcflfflSr' Kg eat. -•!> ■ ■ ; ■ :j ... —The whole of the Egyptian cavalry have been. supplied with Colt’s revolvers. Thus we. pro gress. Think of Pharaoh chasing, Moses throagh the Bed Sea with a revolver and a bowlc knitetf —Accounts come to ns In the technological journals of the application of electricity to -the purification offcast iron by passing a current; through the metal while melted. ' —Genera) Burnside has contracted for the con struction of the Cairo and Vincennes Bailroad-ia Illinois, to finish the whole line within twd yeans from November 25, 1887. —Longfellow’s translation of Dante Is quoted) by tho Italian editor of the new edition pub lished at Milan, for the explanation of obscure - passages. r ' —Colombia College ie to publish autohlogi»t ; phk/aof the graduating class in its next catalogue, und which the students are requested to fargishi them; they are also cautioned to “use a becom ing modesty.” T —A Russian princess has beensued byadairy man of Porta to recover 500 franca for milfc for nishcd by him for the princess’s bath. The qyea lion turns on the purity of the milk. Tho prior ctss evidently believes in in-cream-ation. —“My dear, what makes yon always yawtk?” The wife exclaimed, her tempergone, ■! • “Is home so dnll and dreary ?’.’ “Not so,” he said, “my love, not so; Bnt man and wife are one.yon know; . And when alone , I’m weary." —Mrs. Warren Clark, of Athol,- New Hamp sbire, died almost instantly last - week an ner-, way to a class meeting. The Editor ofthoAthoi Chronicle say s : “The autopsy revealed' exten sive cardiac disease, hypertrophy complicated: with aneurism ofthe aorta just befow its bifurca tion.” What the poor man means to say is,' that tho woman died of heart disease: ’ —A writer In the Edinburgh Review has thls to. say about oysters “on the half shell:“ ‘Oysters," says old Fuller, ‘are the only moat which mem eat alive and yet acconnt it no cruelty.’ ‘ The idea of .eating any creature whilst etilialwe does, it must be confessed, savor a little eft fetodUy, and, as King James Was wont to say, ‘he wAa ft very valiant man who first CifwUS of oysters;’ or, as the poet Gay 6ung-of the’final raw-oyater cater in the wpll-knuwn lines:; ■ ‘The man,h«d sureapalatecavfered?e’er , First broke the oozy oyster's pearly coal, , And risked the living morsel down his The popular idea with regard ;'tb> eating* raw oysters Isthatthe animal is killed.as soonas ‘The damsel’s knife the gaping sbelbcoMtiaande, And the Salt liquor streams between be abends. But this is a mistake; if the oyster is not dead before It la opened, it Is undoubtedly swallowed. 'allve.” :1 "':. —General Grant’s father la writing a biography of hiß eon in the New York ludger. 1 Hue 1 is aa episode in the General's life:. “ When Dlysaea was a boy, if a draw or any show came along, in which there. was. % call for eomehody to come forward and! ride a pony, ha was always the one to present hlmaelfi and what ever he undertook to me he rode. This practice be keDt up until he got to be so large that he was ashamed to ride a pony. • WDce, when he was a boy, a show came (dong in which there was a mischievous pony; trained to go round the ring like ligbtaJng I “and he was expected to throw any bay that a ttempted to ride him. . ' ' ‘“Will any boy come forward and ride,this, pony ?" shouted the ring-master. \ , “piysses stepped forward, and mounted the pony. The performance began., Routld ;oud round and round the ring went the, and faster, maklng tbe Kreateat e®nmo ( d«japttnt the rider. Bat Ulysses sat as steadyas tf.JfiS had grown to the pony’s hack, rreecuflyodidame a ... large monkey ana sprang up beluufpTlly sses.' The people set up a grtat Shout of.ftugjjtey.-and \ oh the pony ran; built all produced no effect on the rider. Then the riug-mastor :• made"the monkey-jump up on ing with bis feet on his shoulders, and with his hands holding on. to his teal?* *t this'there was another and a etulloudoretioal, but not a muscle of Ulysses’ face moved. Therewiuinot a tremor of his nerves. A,few more rounds and thdrioK* master gave l tup; he hadteome aeiosa a wh: that the ponjrand thb moator tnttt cwdd not dls , mount.