THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 29, 1898 e , 500iXX)XX)KX MILLINERY OPENING. MILLINERY OPENING. MILLINERY OPENING. MILLINERY OPENING. THE LAMBTON DIAMOND. M0 MILLINERY OPENING. I 8 rt rtlrh 11 V) (GREAT ) hv it C i ' T M F .t K Tlie famous Lambton diamond threw bark the light from Us many facets, 'md strange, tirllltant colors tihot from Its depths. It was the Ilnest stone I liad ever act In my life. I was particularly pleased with my design for the setting. No other hand had touched It, rind 1 felt that the frame, fo to speak, was worthy of the picture. The line, now that It way finished, was fit even to adorn the hand of Lady Gwendolen Foirest, the beauty and heiress of the season. Uut 1 did not envy young Lord Lambton his fiance: In my own Nell I had a girl as good nnd as pretty as any in the land. I was about to take the ring to Mr. Nugent when Nell herself ran In. She was my employer's daughter, and his private house watt upstair? over the large showroom In Clifford street. It was against all custom for Nell to come down to my workshop, for her father disapproved our engagement. Uut today she had not been able to resist the temptation of having a peep at the Lambton diamond. Just as she had slipped It on her linger and was dancing about twisting her hand, that the marvelous stone might catch the light, the door opened and Mr. Nugent entered. I prepared to defend Nell from a harsh reprimand, hut none came. Her father appeared oddly preoccupied, merely tok the ring from her, examined it earnestly, and, snapping the lid of the case down upon it, placed it In his pocket and walked away. Next day I was sitting at work, when 1 saw a hansom drive up, and Lord Lambton jump out. lie came hastily Into the room, which adjoined the one where 1 was sitting and where Mr. Nugent was. "Scoundrel!" I heard him say, and could scarcely believe my cars. "You thought to fool mo easily by a false stone; but I am as good a Judge of jewels as you are. You arc a thief sir! What have you done with the diamond I Intrusted to you?" Mr. Nugent answered In a lower voice. What ho said could not have made any great Impression upon Lord Lambton, however, for he Impatiently interrupted, and at last an ominous threat concerning the "police" reached my cars. I sat still. I understood very well that Lord Lambton had deliberately accused my employer of trying to palm off upon him an Imitation diamond, yet I know that I had set the true stono and delivered It to Mr. Nugent only yesterday. My employer himself was a skilled workman, though not a good designer, and In the time that had elapsed be tween, my handing him the ring and his transferring It to the owner he could have removed the stono and re placed It by another. Uut for such a bold trick to succeed the Imitation must be magnltlcently made, and the orig inal diamond must have been caicfully measured. I had never known that Mr. Nugent kept any false gems about the place. Tesldes.was It likely that a man In his position would care to run so terrible a risk? Still, I could not help remem bering how haggard and Irritable he had been of late, and the keen Interest that he took In the racing Intelligence, is I thus speculated on the astound ing accusation, Mr. Nugent himself opened the door of the workroom. Ho looked keenly at me as If wondering if it would be safe to trust me. "Did you hear anything of what passed In the next room?" he ques tioned. I admitted that I had. "Of course, I shall be triumphantly acquitted," ho announced, clearing his throat huskily as ho spoke. "Still, Lord Lambton can make things dis agreeable. And look here, Wade, I haven't always been as friendly to you as I might, hut I can trust you. You'll bo an Important witness. Do what you can for me, for the girl's sake." The words sounded strange, but I wa3 given no time to answer, for at that moment Lord Lambton returned with two Scotland Yard men. My em ployer was given into custody and taken to the police station to be charged, the detectives remaining to search the premises. Mr. Nugent being a widownr, with only one child, the management of the business practically devolved on me, and as the detectives ransacked the place, they put many questions to me at to where the stones were kept. The safes were all pointed out to them, but they seemed disappointed with their operations. Late In the evening they came to me In the workroom, and, holding out the ring that I had made for Lord Lamb ton, one of them said: "This Is your woik, we understand. Is that the atone you set?" I glanced at it, but I only replied: "I don't call myself an expert In precious stones, nnd all I can say Is that this one precisely resembles In size, shape and appearance the one given mo to set." While this statement was practically true, that one glance had been enough to show mo that I was not looking at thj Lambton diamond. The detectives left, saying that I would have to tell all I know in the witness box, and then, Just no I was t about to lock up the place for the ldght, Nell carrie In. It was the first lime she had let me see her since her father had been taken away. The face whlcn I thought the sweet est on earth was marble- while, and TO SKEPTICAL ASTHMATICS Th truly marvelous cures of Asth ma which have alteady been effected by Dr. Rudolph Bchiffmann, certainly call for notice. His preparation, (Schumann's Authmn Cure) not only elves Instant relief In the most stub born and obstinate cases, but positive ly cures, In proof of which hear what the Town Clerk at Cavalier, N. 1J Mr. W. SereruB, nays: "I was troubled with asthma for 20 years, about S years ago I started to use your Asthma Cure, and havo not had an attack fur ix year." Package of Kchlffmann's Asthma Cure may be obtained of all Druggists for 80u. and $1.00 per package, or by writing direct to Dr. It. Schlffmann. Jlox $"4, St. Taul, Mln:i. there were daik shadows under tho lashes. "There's something t must say to you," she panted, "something I've been wild to say all day, lest It should be too late, but I dared not let anyone i;us port. V month ago father confided to me that he had lost a great deal of money -and he showed me how to open a secret drawer In his Chippendale bureau. 'If over anything happens to me.' ho sr.ld. 'don't lose a moment, but look Into this drawer; throw away everything that yon will ilnd In tho left-hand partition, anil keep what may be In tho right.' " It. Together we mnraokid the old bureau, ami at length. Nell touched tin spring which opened the secret drawer. I drew In my breath sharply lor the light of the candle which I hold struck out a gleam from a pile ol exquisitely mad" false stones, which lay In a par tition on the lefi hand, while on thu right was the Lambton diamond. lnvoluiitnrll 1 l-rtrayed the dreadful nature of the discovery by an exclama tion, for, left to herself, Nell would not have understood. Hut she was quick to comprehend, and realising tho worst she swayed, slaggcHng backward. "My poor father," she moaned, as I held her. "He is ruined forever and I, too. The daughter of a convicted thief Is no lit wife for ati honest man.'' "My darling, you aro a wife for a king, nnd as for your father, I swear to you that 1 will save him yet," "You you cannot." "I tell you that I can and will." For even as 1 spoke an Idea Hashed into my head which startled me by Its au dacity. In a moment 1 had thought out every detail. I made up the stones, Lambton dia mond and all. Into a packet, carefully closing the secret drawer, and con triving to get away without being seen, and went straight to my brother's house In Kent, managing to avoid the service of a subpoena. Thus 1 was not present at the police proceedings, which would havo meant ruin for my plan. Mr. Nugent was committed for trial, and meanwhile I stayed In the coun try working each night In locked room, with the tools 1 had brought with me, until the gray dawn Altered under my closed shutters. When I saw my old employer In the dock at the trial I was shocked at the ghastly change which had come over him. The evidence at first vent stoadllv against him. Lord Lambton swore that the stone In tho ring was not his diamond. One expert testified that not only was the stone he now saw not the Lamberton diamond, but was not a genuine Jewel nt all, hut a marvelous Imitation. Another was not so posi tive He looked at the gem through his glass, turning It this way and that, declaring that In all his oxeiience lie had never seen a false stone so clever ly executed as this. Indeed, ho was not prepared to swear that it was false. This was the Hist ray of doubt which had been thrown by the evidence upon Mr. Nugent's guilt; and then I went Into the box. I was very cool now, for the game I had determined on had cost me many a qualm of conscience. Uut I had no Intention of cheating Lord Lambton swearing falsely, or tarnishing my personal honor. Tho preliminary question of the pros ecuting counsel brought out the fact that I had designed the ring's tot ting, and done all the work upon it. "What sort of stone was it your em ployer gave you to set?" was the next (iuestion. "An extremely valuable white dia mond," 1 replied. "Do you swear that you set the gen uine stone, and delivered the ring when finished to the prisoner?" "I do." "Do you consider It possible that stone might have been taken out and an Imitation (mo substituted?" "Certainly. Uut I could tell whether the ring hod been tampered with since it left my hands." "Take this, then, examine it, and In form the court If that Is the stone you set." i The ring was handed to me. and n hush fell upon the court. The kind of lull which denotes that a vital point In a case has been reached. I put my hand In my wnlstcoat pock et for my jeweler's glass, and the sharpest eye could not havo seen that I also drew forth a now ring, made In the secret hours of the night an exact counterpart of the other, save that It contains! the real Lambton diamond. I pretended to examine the Imitation with creat care while all eyes weie flxd upon me. At length 1 returned the glass to my pocket, and with It the ring with the false stone. I could hear my own heart beating, but. handing the court usher the new ring, I ald firmly, In reply to tho snappish "Well?" of tho prosecuting counsel: "I swear unhesitatingly that the set ting of this ring has not been tamper ed with, and that this is the genuine diamond which was given to me to set." A rustle went round the court; the doubting expert pricked up his ears, the prosecuting counsel, with Lord Lambtor and the treasury solicitor, were whispering over the ring. ".Mind." said the counsel, "I ask permission to recall the expert." 1 stepped out of the box and the ex pert stepped In. The new ring was put Into his hand, a friendly ray of sun shine lighting up the Jewel. "This Is very remarkable," he said at last. "It's tho first time I havo over made a mistake. This stono Is gen uine. I cannot doubt it." And so tho prisoner was free; but when the verdict of "Not guilty" was pronounced a faint groan echoed It, and a dead man was taken from the dock. A spasm of the heart had proved fatal. Six months later Nell and I were married. On our honeymoon we were wnlklng In a lane near Jlfracombe, when we came face to face with Lord Lambton, who was stopping with his bride In a neighboring country house. "Ah, Mr. Wade!" he exclaimed, "I haven't seen you since tho very mys terious case of mine. Do you know I have always since thought of you as a very clever mun?" "Thank you," I said quietly. "Will you allow me, my lord, to present you to my wife the only daughter of tho late Air, Nugent." Lord Lambton raised his hat, looked keenly at pretty Nell, shook handB with us both, and murmured: "Ah, I ivdursland! y 1 ?T0Rj? i "-m -"-"-" " " - ' S (r C CVJ 1 1 '- . jR: xr$ mmm 1 : "r ? &v I ( MJkm ) If I S ' v- u mw i ,.- -- . ... i n rn v vTWW ) i i uw i y SOME ODD PHASES OF COURAGE THINGS THAT iiAVE MADE OF riCEKS FAINT-HEAKTED. Capt. Gridley and the Jack-o'- the Dust Awakening of a Loutish Landsman Brave Act of a Powder Hoy Ilcu Who Have Acted Promptly at the Bight Moment. Mony Varieties of Bravery. 1'rom the New York Sun. Courage possesses a man completely at one time and at another does not even Ilnd him. It may be too much to say that the quality called nerve Is a mood, but there are many lB-tances that go to show how strong a man may be on one occasion and how wo n.anish on another. A regular army cavalry otllcer. one of tl-.o men to go down with a bad wound In the first light bfori San tiago, had proved his valor in Indian campaigns when lie was wearing his Prst shoulder straps. He had been a witness of many scenes of violence on tho frontier, and he fousht well anil haul leforo .Santiago. He has always been know n among olllccrs nnd men who have soldiered alongside of him as Intrepid. A low years ago, when ho was commanding Ills troops down In one of the Arizona cavalry garrisons, one ol the soldiers of his outfit shot himself In a (It of remorse after a protracted spree. The soldier walte.l until lr.ess call for dinner. Then he got his carbine out of the rack, put a ball In It. pulled oft his light boot, and, working the trigger with his toe. sent the bullet crashing Into his head, dy ing almost Instantly. Tho commander of the troop, the officer of proved cour age, was on hand in a f-w moments. Ho passed through the crowd of troop ers, and took one look at the dead man. Then he put his hand to his head, reeled dizzily, and. In a dead fulnt, fell lino the arms of a couple of soldiers. lit! was unconscious for fully ten minutes, and It was the sight of the blood that did it. There had been no comradeship between the ofllcer niui the dead soldier, such as often spilngs up between enlisted men and nlllrerx who fpend maiiv years togeth er ill the same out lit or post, for the suklde had been recently transferred It. the troop, it was a pure case of wilting at the sight of blood on the pail of the oflicer. although he had been used to violent scenes since his eaihest manhood and he could afford to.' and did acknowledge It freely. WJIKN GIUDLUY WEAKENED. (.'apt. (Irldley. who dlfd at Hon,? Kon. whlthc i he was carried very 111 nfter he had done his share of the llKhtiin: with Dewey in Manila Cay. had a similar experience when he was a commander. He was In some of the bad lighting Jobs of the civil war, and wns a conspicuously brave and cool headed man. When he was promoted to Hi'.- rank of commander his first rhlp had as a member of her crew a .lack-ii'-tiv-dust who was a heavy orinker, but so valuable a man that the ofllcera overlooked a vod many bad breaks. A Jack-o'-the-dust Is the striker" for tho paymaster and tho paymaster's yeoman. He holds the rate of fea man, and Is assigned as .lack-o'-the-dust to dish out the provisions to the ne?8 cooks and to act ad general fac totum for thu pay olllce uboard Milp. tiildley had been In command of tho ship for a month before the .lack-o'-ihe,duRt went on a spree nnd had to bo put in the brig over night. Orldley had been shipmate with tne man on and off for twenty years and liked him and hated to seo him in trouble. So, when tho .Tuck-o'-the-du&t got sober enough Orldley had him brought aft to tho cabin Instead of Jawing him at ' tho stick." and gave him as clover a man-to-man sort of talk as a blue jacket ever listened to. Then, Instead of punishing him for his spree, ha turned lilin loose. Thle was on a monthly muster morning. The re morseful .luck, on whom (Jrldley's kindly talk had pressed heavily, got his nuisterlntf clothes and appeared on deck all right for muster. When tho men wero dismissed he went below to stand In one of tho paymaster's store rooms until tho skipper had ilnLshcd Inspecting tho ship, nridley made a vety thorough inspection of the ship In company with tho executive ofllcer, and tho Inspection wus to wind up' with the offices and storerooms In tho , after part of thu vessel on the berth .sOSMbo" - rjx& on the Grandest Exposition of Millinery that this valley has ever seen. This is a positive statement beyond any question of doubt. This season's styles present some radical changes from those of last and we are first in the field with all of them. There is nothing in Trimmed or Untrimmcd Hats with which we are not in touch. A Brilliant Collection of the Choicest Designs Of the World's Best Is Mere for Your Choosing. 'aris is onlv iust beginning of Paris. Not a milliner of any renown in all France but what is represented here with their choicest creations. Our own designs, mingling with them, will demand equal attention, for we are promoters not imitators. Tocfag and Tomorrow Are Grand Exhibition Dags. This is a personal invitation to you to attend. Whether to look or to buy, you will be given courteous attention and treatment by our able corps of milliners. Personal supervision is given the department by Mr. Edward Long, who has made a study of fashion for years. hat you will enjoy these reception days goes without question. That you cannot afford to miss them we can assure you. MILUNCRr DEPARTMENT-SECOND FLOOR, TAKE ELEVATORS. JONASLONS SONS. deck. He walked a few feet ahead of the executive officer, and when he i cached the last paymaster's store room and peered Inside he fell back Into the nrms of the executive ofllcer, utterly unconscious. The executive ofllc"!' called out for the surjoon, and then looked Into the storeroom to sc what had had such an effect upon the cool-headed rirldley. The repentant Jack-o'-the-dust was sitting on a box of salt-water soap, dead, with his throat cut from ear to car. The thing made so painful an Impression upon Orldley that he was under the weather for some time, and yet he was one of the nerviest men In I'ncle Sam's line if lighting packets A CADET'S EXPEKIENVE. ;n engineer cadet, who Is now an assistant engineer on one of the cruis ers In Cuban waters, wcU ashore in Honolulu to weigh coal for his ship one morning about live years ago. When he leturned aboard for luncheon all hands were at mess, except a lout ish, moon-faced landsman, a former farm hand from Interior California, who had been the butt of his mates as an innocent of the rawest kind. This landsman had bolted his dinner and was leaning of the starboard rail, look ing no more stupid or Inert that he generally did. A big coal lighter was moored alongside the ship, and the cadet In order to get aboard ship had to climb from the .steam launch that brought him olf onto the lighter, and then pull himself up on the fixed Iron gangway ladder to the gangway. There was a space of about two feet between the coal lighter and the ship. Into this space the cadet, missing his hold when he attempted to clutch tho lad der, fell, feet foremost, with a splash. The crew of the steam launch heard the splash, but did not know what had caused It, It was about 100 to 1 against the cadet's saving his life by his own efforts, for when he came up his head was due to bump against tho bottom of the lighter, and It Is a hard proposition even for a good swimmer to keep his nerve under such clmcunistances. The cadet didn't keep his nerve, mid he would surely have been a goner had it not been for the loutish landsman lean ing over the starboard rail. The lout ish landsman proved to be the tight man. He did not even kick off his gov ernment straight brogans before he let himself fall Into the space between the lighter and the ship at the exact point where the cadet had gone down. The crew of the steam launch saw this move and wondered what It meant. They did not know the cadet wus un derneath the lighter. In about half a minute the moon-faced landsman camo from beneath the lighter and he had the cadet along with him. The cadet, his nerve gone, was very wild, and clutched the landsman fiercely. The landsman freed his right arm from tho grasp of the strugglng cadet and gave him a jolt on the point of the Jaw with his big light fist that the cadet de clares he feels yet. The blow put the cadei out of the gume altogether, but it saved his life. He would have pulled his rescuer down with him had he not been knocked silly, and this was one of the times when an enlisted man struck an otllcer without being punished for It. The landsman and the cadet were hauled Into the steam launch by the crew, ami the ship's company proceed ed to hunt up another butt for their humor. The moon-faced landsman wasn't made to serve In that capacity any longer. NERVE OP A HOY. Not long ufter the Atlnnta went Into commission an apprentice boy who had been dubbed by his companions the man-o'-war equivalent of a na tural put the whole pack of them Into the shade by a sudden exhibition of nerve. A gun's crew, Including sever al of the boys, and this slow-witted boy Ir. particular, wero engaged In breaking out one of the after maga zines. Two of the men were down In the magazine and fastened cans of powder to thu hoist hook, and the rest of tho gang were ut tho head of the magazine hatch handling the ammunl lion as It camo up. The Atlanta wasn't fitted with electric lights at that time, nnd tho gunner's mato In charge of the Job swung a closed lantern In his hand at the head of tho hutch. He was swinging It somewhat ourelessly when the lantern struck against one of tho sides of the hatch, and the lamp, al ready loosened, fell from tho lantern down the hatchway. It fell squarely on the top of u can of powder a tweu-ty-flve pound can. The men down In the magazine had gone way forward to get unother can of powder, and they weren't on hand to pick tho lamp off thu powder can and extinguish It. Tho heavy-headed apprentice hoy was at thu top of the hatch, though, and ho -. ". vir,ivi. . -. .7lCW.lVi-iicy iM LWcTSicOO ,y,(-tr;c.c VGC.C, - " - ' "" , , rtv - iS OPEN-THE KEV to show its autumn and winter styles and we are abreast was the only one of the gang who wasn't paralyzed with fear. While all of the others stood waiting for the ship to go Into the air, lie slid down the hoist chain like a cat descending from a tree. He grabbed the lamp, the wick of which, still ablaze, was heating thu Iron can, and blew It out. Then he clutched the handle of the powder can with one hand, took a firm hold on the hoist chain with the other, and yelled: "Shoot me up out o' this, you fellows above there, iiulck!" The lad with the can of powder In his hand was at the top of tho hatch in no time. He ran for the poop as soon as he made the spar deck and chucked the can, the lid of which was hot from the wick of the lantern lamp, over the side Into the water. The lad certainly saved his ship from being blown up. The skipper didn't punish the boy for wasting government ammunition, as may be taken for granted. Instead, he commended the lad so highly in a let ter to the department that the boy re received a special letter of praise from the secretary of the navy. CNEXl ECTED HUAVEHY. An American sealing vessel, bound for Japan and thence to the Aleutian sealing waters, got onto the French Frigate Shoals, a couple of hundred mllcfi oft the Hawaiian Islands, a few years ago, and began to go to pieces. An Ameiican man-o'-wnr, making soundings down In that neighborhood, sighted the wiccUed sealer, and, though the Fca was terrific, a boat's crev , under the l?ndcrship of the chief's bo'sun's mate, was put off from the wjrshlp to succor tho fieal ei's crew. The chief bo'sun's mate was not a man not'ible for nutve. Hu had. in fact, shown the white feather in two or three mix-ups he had had with other chief petty olliccrs of his ship, and he hod lost prestige among the men forward for this reason. When the man-o'-war boat got within a hun dred feet or so of the sealer, which was rapidly going to pieces, the crew of tho succoring boat saw, with considerable disgust, that all hands aboard the seal er. Including the bklpper, weie boiling drunH, and were standing maundering to one another, waiting for the last lurch of their ship, Instead of making an effort to clear the life-boats of the d.ivlls. It was Impossible for the war ship's boat to get alongside the wrecked sealer on account of the giant seas. The chief bo'sun's mate, who had hitherto lacked the nerve to take his own part In fo'c'sle uct'Jabbles, didn't Intend to let it go at that, how ever. Ho leaped cuddenly Info the sea, nnd he had a navy pistol etuck Into the lioEom of his mustering shirt when h" leaped. When ho drew near to the distressed sealer the sas slammed him against the s-hlp's tides time and again before ho was able to clutch at a rail chain to pull himself aboaid. He suc ceeded In climbing aboard finally, how ever, and then ho made a race forward to where tho crew, including the skip per and mates, were huddled around a rum cask, soaking themselves The chief bo'sun's mate hopped Into the middle of the gang of drunkards, whipped out his big navy pistol, and made the bluff of his life. The bluff went. "Cut away tho boats, ye sots, and take a chance or I'll put an ounce of lead into every drunken dog of ye!" he yelled. He covered the crew with his gun as he spoke, and his attitude sobered the men. They lumbered out of tho fo' c'sle, and, despite their half-helpless condition, they got two longboats clear of tho davits, and all hands, nineteen men In nil of the sealer's crew, got at the oars In the nick of time. The bft'sun's mate went along In ono of tho longboats, and, followed by the man-o'-war's boat, the all madn for tho Amrrlcan warship, which wns hove to a (luarter of a mile away. The sealer went to pieces ten minutes after tho crew had left her. Tho crew was taken to Honolulu by the warship. The chief bo'sun's mate was afterward regarded Vy his shipmates as a man who could only be can led nlong a certain num ber of knots. SAVED HIS LIFE. Commander Thomas, formerly of the gunboat Hennlngtcn, had his life saved aluard that ship by a Cingalese mc3s attendnnt In an odd f.ort of way. He was doing n bit of Inspecting on the berth deck, uft, one afternoon when the executive olllcer of the ship. came to the head of tho after berth deck ladder and thouted down below to any body within hearing: "Is tho captain below theto?" Commander Thomas heard the call, and, without making any reply to tho nucMlon, started from tho pay ofllce for the ludder Intending to go abovo to the main dec); to tee wuaj. Uuj first iasic 5! Wm lieutenant wanted. The hetch right at the foot of the ladder had been care lessly left open by a seaman who had gone forward for a bit of gear, and It was dark on the berth deck. Tho commander had his eyes raised to the head of the ladder, anyhow, as he ap proached the ladder, and had he made another step hu would have plunged to the bottom of the deep hatch nnd been mangled to bits. He was arrest ed by healing a plciclng voice behind him exclaim: "Damn the skipper's eyes! Damn tho skipper's eyes!" With his foot still raised to take the step that would have plunged him Into the hatch, Commodore Thomas turned his heaj suddenly. "Who's that?" he asked. Then the Cingoleho mess attendant, leaping out of the darkness, had the skipper clutched .by the sleeve, and Jerked him back from tho open hatch by main force. Thomas couldn't quite sea into It for a second, until the Cin galese, who had fortunately picked up English on a UrUlsh wind-jammer, pointed to the open hatch. The Cin galese explained in his broken dialect that the exclamation he had u.ed was the first bunch of English words that camo into his head when lie saw the captain's dapger. He couldn't remem ber the English equivalent of the word "stop" soon enough, he snld, and so he had damned the skipper's eyes ns the best way of attracting the ofllcer's at tention. "And so the first thing that crops Into your head. Is to damm your skip per's eyes, ir It?" asked Thomas of the Cingalese. The man got all of the best of it on the Uennlngton after that. An Ordnance sergeant stationed at one of the Pacific coast artlllcrj posts went suddenly Insane a few years ago. His mind had been disturbed for some time by the hard-heartf dness of n young woman who .jniincd to marry him. On the day that his wits went completely awry he made for the mag azines with the intention, as he quiet ly nnnounced to a young Swedish re cruit whom he met on the way, of blowing them up. The Swede's eyes stuck out nt this, but ho was one of the tribe of quick thinkers. "Ay tank Ay'll go alang nn" halp," said he to the crazy Ordnanep ser geant, whoso eyes gleamed with In sanity. The cargeant made no response, and the Swedish recruit walked after him. The sergeant opened the door of one of the main magazines, that held mnny thousands of pounds of black smooth boie powder, and started to break out a big box of It. The Swede saw that the crazy man actually Intended to blow up tho magazine. When ho was convinced of this lie picked up a shell bar, waited for the Insane man to turn his back and banged him over tho head with It. Then he carried the crazy Ordancc bergeant u his back to tho guardhouse. The Swedish recruit was corporal the next day. KEST IN MANILA. Every Year Has 120 Holidays-Two Hours for Lunchoen Music and Alluring Beauty. From tho Louisville Courier-Journal. Outside of the Spanish colony In Man ila there Is little care for the fash Ions as they change from season to season In Europe and America. The same matcrlul and cut does In summer nnd winter or, moro accurately, in the wet season and the dry. There Is never any frost and never occasion for furnaces or open fires. Except for cooking, there Is plenty of heat In the atmosphere the year around. Men wear white duck suits, with thin flannel or silk underwear, no linen shirt or collar, white pith helmets, and white canvas shoes the year round. The Spanards and tho Spanish half-castes go in for stylo a little moro. The Spaniards ure haughty and fond of displaying their uniforms of blue or white und their gold trimmings. The half-castes, or Mestizo, are equally fond of display, but their nttlc Is something of u compromise between European and Chinese modes. Besides the ono year out of seven that all foreign employes of tho great mercantile houses represented In Man ila have given to them as "homo leave," there Is a month's vacation each year, a regular holiday each month, and all thu saints' days and Spanish, French, English, German, and Ameiican holidays. Not to observe a salnt'a day in Manila Is sinful, and every one holds such sinfulness In es pecial detestation. Figuring In all the saints' days, Sundays, and general hol idays, thero aro 129 days In each year when these people do not work. Clerks earn from $2,600 to $5,000 a year, besides having lodgings found, ftJ GREAT x STncfii .1- ksbS WILSON-FALL, '98 BROWN or BLACK rilRRU DIMENSIONS. Tho kind that U fully ctiaranteei. Dy that we menu you can hnvo another hat wltlioii coat Kit iloo not glo entire H:itlnfuctloa. CONRAD, 30ft Lacka, Avenus SELLS THEM AT $3.00. Grab Apples, Peaches, Pears, Grapes, Quinces, Blue Point and Rockaway Oysters Fresh Daily. Pierce's Market a mess allowance, medical attendance, and traveling expenses. In many cases their rooms are over tho ofllces. They work from daylight to noon, rest fop two or three hours, and then worls till C o'clock, but they have much free dom In choosing their hours and aro hurried only on mall days. There are many excellent bands Irt Manila, and open-air concerts aro given every evening In fair weather. Theatrical companies, both native and foreign, play through tho season. Tho Mestlza chorus girl Is alluring. In tho cathedral nnd the churches tho muslo Is always good, though it Is startling to the newcomer to hear, as ho will, In soma services, n. Gloria from Trova tore," the Credo with music from" Bar blere," and tho Elevation from "Tra- vlata." - rHE KATXROAD ARMY. The Largest Peace Establishment That the World Possesses. From tho Sun Tho standing army of Ttussla 3 usually put .it 800,000 men, of Germany at 000,000, of Austria at U'COOO, and of Great Urltaln at 2:r,c00, all on a peacj footing. Yet there are, it appears by the last published report of the Inter state Commerce Commission, 830,009 railroad employees In tho United States, whose gross wages and salaries are nearly $.'i00,000,000 a year, or 02 per cent, of the operating expenses of tho American railways. There nro four employees, on tho average, for each mile of railroad track. There ure 30, 019 station acents, S",CG7 engineers, 23, 32J onductor.s, 13.76S switchmen, flag men, and watchmen, and IM.IM tele graph operators and despatchers. At the present ratio of Increase there nra now GO.OOn mart railway emplojces In the I'ntted States than there were In lsM tho total number will not be very far below 1.000,000 at the time of the next census. Here Is an army In which there Is no mustering out and no war footing, for thu railroad army of the United States, larger than the number of railroad em ployees of ary other country. Is essen tially an army of peace, and it Is stead ily growing at n rate larger than tho ivfiiroaos uiciniiM'.i, taxing uic mue-t age as a measme of their Importance. Silence. So silent Is the world tonight The lamp give? silence out like light, The latticed windows, open wide. Show Hllunce. like the night, ouulde; Thu nightingale's faint botes draw nea. LIku niiitiic.il hlltnce to inluu ear. Tho empty houfe calls rot to me: "Here, but for Fate, were thou end shV," i r?) A7 1 -,- JUg .....I....,..,. .......... .y aans. is unfile 5 &. m mmM X rssvrii . v.nrSJVHrti& IP p mm "V v (.'"SHi k mm 111 illll villi' $ I - Wv'4aw;iwiwi', r vi 'ivll '" f; C w I . 'VR.WSMBt'WJ' &FJpr llps That gibe for or.cu Is checked; tontglit Silence Is queen In grief's despite; And even the lot glng of my soul Is silent in this hour's control. -Full Mall Oazcttc. y-,-