I HI1'' 'V v'lIHHI Solitary Confinement. BY HELEX KOI1HP.ST GRAVE. The brief, decisive battle was over. The seveu-ye;ir-old enemy routed, though uot subdued, was carried off, kicking, in his nurse's arms, scream ing at tho very pitch of hi infantile lungs, "I won't I I won't! I wo-o-o-n't bo a Rood boy I" whiletho hint glimpse his mothor caught was a scarlet coun tenance where the heels should be, and the two be-slippcred feet oscil lating like humnu pendulums. Mrs. Jessamy looked after little Tommy iu matornnl tribulation. "Dj lot mo go to him, Holomon!" he pleaded, "I am sure I conid quiet him." But Mr. Jessamy a bald-hended sage of five-aud-tlfty, with round gog gles that gave a preternaturally wise expression to bis oountennnce, and a spotless white waistcoat, festooned with seals suit chains laid a detain ing hnud on her arm. "Surah," quoth he, oracularly, "I am astonished at this very culpablo weakness on yonr part. The boy has committed a great fault iu thus giving way to an uncontrolled temper, and he must bo punished accordingly, " "But, Solomon, he is such n mite of a thing!" pleaded the mother, piteous- iy. "That makes no difference, my dear. Solitary confinement. Sarah solitary confinement, on bread and water, is whut will break his spirit." "But he may come out to nipper, Solomon?" Mr. Jessamy settled tho goggles on the bridge of his nose, with au auto cratic diguity of movement. "He will remain iu the buck store room until tomorrow mornmg,Sarab." "Alone ? " gusped tho nervous mother. "Alone!" prououncod the domestic grand mogul. "Believe me thore is 'nothing like solitary aonUneuiuut. It has been proved, my dear, more than a soore of times. That boy of yours" Mr. JaHsamy spoke as if he himself had nothiug whatever to do with the proprietorship of Muster Tommy "has u temper, and thut temper has got to be broken. Pray, Mrs. Jes samy, do not aunoy me with any fur ther misjudged intercessions." And thus pronouncing his ultima tum, Mr. Jessamy stulkoil out into the garden, to view the ripening globes of uotted melons and the budding tube roses, for Mr. Jessamy was a inau of hobbies, and the latest hobby was hor ticulture, the more satisfactorily to ride which he had rented this little villa on tho bauks of the Schuylkill, with an abundance of gables, honey uokle leafage and water fronts. "Simmons!" said Mr. Jessamy, sharply, as he stood with both hands in his pockets surveying his domains. "Sir I" grunted Simmons a lank specimen of the genus general gir doner, who appeared to exist witu a spade over his shoulder and a measuring-line half-way out of his pocket "How are tha ogg-plants?" "Getting along nicely, sir." "And tho cherry tomatoes?" "Well, sir, the dry weather helps 'em along amuziu'," "And, Simmons " Mr. Jessamy beat down, settled Lis goggles and then resettled them. "Sir." "Where is tha big melon that I had here a watermelon, Simmons, on a alute, just close to this stake?" "Well, air, I up and throwed it way," owned Simmons; "for what a watermillion, air, was doiu' among them oantelopes " "Ton aeoundrel I You rascal I" roared Mr. Jessamy. "How dared yon do such thing ? Do you know, air, that you have frustrated one of tha Quest scientific experiments of the age a watermelon grafted ou the ateui of the cantolope vine grafted by my own hands ? And you to go and throw it away as if it were a blighted pumpkiu or a half-ripe squash ! How dared you, I say ? Villain I wretob I get out of my aigbt I" i tr t , 'Tiw rc i sbt i And Mr. Jessamy, stopping short in his infuriated war-danco,made such a dive at poor Simmons that that worthy, fearing for his bodily preser vation, whisked around among the young cauliflowers and ran for his life, crushing through hot-bed sashes and entangling his long ankle! in mats of sweet potato vines. "I never knowed a gentleman with such a temper before !" panted Sim mons, as he bolted head foremost into his tool-shed, among a grove of dahlia poles and flower pots. "It's as much as a poor workiu' man's life is worth to live with him !" Mr. Solomon Jessamy, loft alone with his blightod "scientific experi ment," danced around about it, in a frenzy of wrath, uttering mingled lamentations and malediction. Suddenly a hand was clapped on his shoulder, and a hoarse, chuckling voice rumbled into his ear: "I've got yon now!" "Who are you?" barked out Mr. Jessamy, turning so abruptly thut the goggles fell off his nose and tumbled into the grass. "Are you aware, sir, that yon are trespassing on private property?" to a socond individual, tall and sparo, and apprehensive-looking, who kept at a safe distance. "Come, now, none of that!" cried ho, as Mr. Jessamy tried to wriggle out of tho grasp of the stouter and shorter of the two, who was holding him, as it wore, iu a viso. "No vio lence it will do no good. Solitary confinement that is the thing ! Hold on to him tight, Fink! That's right. Into the boat with him!" And, before Mr. Jessamy oonld raise his voice to halloa for help, they were darting down the river as fast as strong arms and a pair of broad-bladed oars could propol them. "What is the moaning of this this outrage?" he panted. "Solitary confinement that's the thing!" said the tall man solitary confinement!" Mr. Jessamy stared ; a curious sen sation came over him, as if he were his own seveu-year-old boy, going to be shut up for getting into a passion. "Eh !" he faltered, "Am I mad?" The short, stout man grinned; the tall one nodded oracularly. "A lucid interval, most probably," said ho. "All the better, Simpsou ; it wou't be necessary to handoulT him." Mr. Jessamy jumped up in tho boat. Tho tall man and the short man fell on him with one accord, and forced him back into his seat; and al most at the same moment, the boat drew up at a little pier or landing, half bidden in water willows. "Whither are you taking me?" breathlessly demanded our hero. "Solitary coufiuement solitary confinement that's tha only thiug," murmured the tall man, takiug snuff. "Sir, are you mad?" cried Mr. Jes samy. "No; but you be!" said the short stout man. "Easy now, Mr. Par rott!" "Thot's not my name," said Mr. Jessamy. "There's soma mistake here. "Oh, no, there ain't!" aaid the man. "You're Malaohi Parrott, and you've esoapod from the Sanitary Home; but I guess you wou't ag'in !" My name is Solomon Jessamy, and I won't be made a madman iu spite of myself!" "Gammon 1" said tha assistant koeper of the insane asylum. I've heerd such stories afore." And, in spite of his remonstrances, Mr. Jeitsnmy was hurried off to a dreary stone buil.i n, up an inimeu sity of stairs into a Binall room, with a barred window, au iron bedstead and a throe-legged stool, with tha agree able prospect of passing the night therein as a reoaptured lunatic. As the irou door banged upon him with the "click! click" of a spring lock, and an indescribable sensation of lonlinoss crept over him, ha thought of poor little Tommy, iu the durk bed-room, aupperless, and sorely iu fear of ghouls and goblins. "If I ever get out of this alive,'' thought he, I'll adopt a new system of discipline toward the boy hanged if I don't!" But just as the dismal shadows of dusk were beginning to gather in the augles of the cell, tha spring look clicked again, aud the moon-like eounteuanoe of tha keeper beamed in. "It's all a mistake," said he ; "and it never would Lava happened if ma aud Mr, Ellys badu't been new bauds, We'va found Parrott down fishing in the woods. And Mr. Ellys, ha hopes yon ain't been seriously discommoded, sir, while he's ready to make all apol ogies. sir?" Anything we can do for you, Mr. Jessamy grew scarlet. "I shall lay this matter before the proper authorities, you may rest as sured 1" said ho. "This this atrocious assault shall not go unpunished I" And he stalked dignifledly out of the "Sanitary Home," followed by the profuse apologies and protestations of tho whole staff and faculty thereof. "But wo never should have sus pected you," said the tall man, court eously, "if we had not soen you danc ing and jumping around in such a peculiar fashion, sir." When Mr. Jessamy reached home, his first act was to release littlo Tom my from the durance vile of tho back store-room. "I'll be a good boy now, pa," whined Tommy, with swollen eyelids and tear-besprinklod countenance. "So will I, my son," aaid the phil osopher. "It's very wicked to get angry, ain't it, pa?" "Very wicked, indeed, my son," said Mr. Jessamy. And they had their supper together a lobster, with pleuty of cream toast, and peaches sliced in sugar as ami cably as possible. How One Hook Was Written. Dr. Hoffmon of Frankfort, Ger many, whose "Shock -headed Peter" is one of the most famous child's books in the world, tells as a good joke how he happened to make it, for he ia a quaint old German scientist, though good humored. One Christmas he had boon searching high and low for a suitable picture book for his two-year-old son, but in vain. At last he purchased a blank copy book and told his wife ho was going to make a pic ture book for the boy "one he can understand, ami in whioh the tedious morals 'be obedient,' 'be clean,' 'be indiiHtrious,' are brought home in a inauuer which impresses a young child." Dr. Hoffman was the head physi cian of tho Frankfort lunatic asylum, and knew nothing of drawing, but he set to work and produced tho gruesome picture of all the naughty boys and girls which everybody knows. His child was delighted, and when some of his circle of literary friends saw it, they urged him to have it published before the boy spoiled it, and Dr. Loning the publisher, said ho would bring it out. "Well," said Dr. Hoffman, "give mo eighty gulden (about tweuty-flve dollara), and try your fortune. Don't moke it expensive, and don't make it too strong. Children like to tear books as well as to read them, and nursery books ought not to be heir looms. They ought to last only a time." An edition of 1,500 was quick ly sold, and now 173 editions have ap. peared in Germany and forty in Eng land, and it has been translated into Russian, Swedish, Danish, Dutch, French, Italian, Portuguese, and it has penetrated Iudia, Africa and Aus traliaPaper World. Why The Colonel Was There. Seuator Walthall tells a story on himself, which is none the less good by roason of the faot that tha scene is laid during the late Civil War. At that time the senator was a colonel ia command of a Confederate regiment and had brought Lis men into posi tion, ooonpying a sunken road. A Federal battery was pouring shot and hell all around theadjaoeut territory. This fire, however, passed over the regiment hidden in the roadway, and they were to all intents and purposes out of danger. On the high bank ia front of the place where Colonel Walthall stood was a giant pine tree about a dozen feet in ciroumferenoe. Acting on the spur of the moment, the colonel thought a fine opportunity was pre - seuted to give Lis men an object lesson in personal bravery without any risk to himself. Accordingly La climbed up tho bank and stood behind the pine tree. Tha next minute a shell struck tha tree and sent a shower of bark and splinters flying in all direc tions, when Walthall overheard tha 1 t following dialogue between two of Lis men lying in the roadway beneath: "Itellvou. Jim. it was a mhrhtv good thing for the colonel that that uina tree was there." "Yes. Tom." reulied tha other . "hnt if it hadn't been for tha big tree the colonel would never Lava been there ;n tha first plaoe." Memphis Com mercial Appeal. A watch whioh is in good ranniug kiud UM wel1 M ltt tb Wlnu order in one year's time ticks 157,680,. tar" dolu- - Philadelphia Ro 000 ticks I eoli qi'AlXT AND CURIOUS. The watermelon grows wild all over Africa. It was cultivated in Egypt B. 1 pj 2500, Dr. Fayetto Hall of New Haven, Ct., buried bis pet parrot last week in a silk lined-coffin. Thomas Flanagan, of Elmwood, Ind., is the happy owner of a four logged Plymouth Rock rooster. Among the curiosities that a Cobalt (Ct) dentist left after hi death wore all tha teeth that he had ever pulled. Many of the inhabitants of India believe that elephant have a religion, and engage in acts of divine worship. Little oak trees, an inch and a half in height, are grown by Chiuesa gar deners. They take root iu thimbles. Count Tolstoi always replies to let ters in tho language in which they are written, and he gets letters in several languages. A land-locked salmon was recently captured in Lake Quinsigamond, Worcester the first of its kind ever seen iu those waters. Johanu Kirchebner of Steinach, in the)Austriau Tyrol, is a tanner. What' more, so have been the male Kircheb ner before him for 300 years. Chicago's board of education an nounces that it proposes to forbtd tha teachers in its employ to smoke pipes or cigarettes, or to chew gum. The republio of Audora, ia the Py renees, has a population of 6,000 and the republio of San Marino, in the Appenines, a population of 8,200. A laborer grubbing root recently in Bowmauville,Ill., found, three feet below the surface, and under the roots of a tree 300 years old, a fine three pound stone axe. They say that Grey never got a cent out of his immortal elegy, though his publisher made $5,000 by it. Grey held that a poet should not degrade his art by taking money for it Dawsou Oldham, a seventy-eight-year-old resident of White Hall, Ky., never has missed a sermou at tho Methodist Church in that place in tha forty years he has been a member. In tho private chapel at Windsor Castle, which is octagonal in shape, with a lantern roof, the Queen's pew is in the gallery, iu the division uext to the organ loft. The household sit below, the women on one side aud the men on the other. A gray Afrioau parrot owned by a family iu Providence, B, I., has a vo cabulary of 140 words, and can imi tate the sound of a clanging boll with I astonishing clearness. It is believed to bo at least sixty year old, and bus been iu the possession of one owner for twenty-Beven years. The Absent-Mlnded Man Again. Tho absent-minded man took his seat at th restaurant table, aud, as usual, buried his face at once iu a newspaper. A waiter placed a bill of fare, a napkin and a knife and fork in front of him, and stood two or throe minutes unnoticed before asking: "What shall I bring you sir?" "What's that?" said the absent minded man, starting up suddenly, not remembering what it was all about. "What do you want for lunob,sir?" the waiter asked again. "O, yos," Baid the absent-minded man, trying to collect his wits. "Briug me a cup of coffee and a ham sand wich." The waiter supplied the order, and put a large pasteboard oheck for it down on the table, the absent-minded mau continued to read hi paper. The waiter went away to attend to tha wants of other people, and about 13 minutes later came back. "Do you wish any more?" he naked politely. "Yes," snapped tha absent-minded man somewhat viciously, "Go aud got me a fresh ham sandwich. The brought was as dry as a one you 1 bone." 1 "Why, here is the sandwich I j brought sir," said tha waiter, pushing the plute toward him. "You've eaten the check." Chicago Tribune. Uses of Sawdust. A growing industry ia this city is the sawdust business, Forty years tue Iumber wllu wera 'a t0 mwuusi oariaa away ; twenty. ! fl J"" a8 U 00l,lJ ha "ought for oenU lod! now U brin8 3-60 a loau. i( is useu ia noteis, saloons groove. sud other business bouses for tha absorption of dirt wheu sweeping. Plumbers use it a great deal about pipes and wall to deaden sound. Soda water men and paokers of gluss and small articles of every THE PLATFORM. P Hnolplss of th Republican Party Plainly and Ably Sat Forth. The following Is the platform adopted by th Republican National Contention: "The Republican of the United fltntes, as sembled by their representatives In national convention, appealing for the popular and historical Justification of their clnltns to the matchless achievements ot thirty years ot Republican ruin, earnestly ami confidently address themselves to the awakened Intel ligence, experience, nnd eoneene of their countrymen in the following declaration of facts and principle- "For the tint tl me sines the civil war the American people have now witnessed the calamitous consequence of full and unre stricted Democratic control of the govern ment. It has been a record of unparalleled Incapacity, dishonor end disaster. In the administrative management It has ruthless ly sacrificed Indispensable revenue, eked out ordinary current running expense with borrowed money, piled up the publlo debt U,000,000 In time of peace, forced an ad verse balance of trade, kept a perpetual menace hanging over the redemption fund for pawned American credit to alien syn dicate and reversed all the measures lind results of successful Hepuhllcan rule. In the broad effect of this poller It has precipitated panic, reduced work and wages, halted en terprise ami crippled Amerlcnu production while stimulating foreign production for the American market. Every consideration of public safety and Individual Interest demands that the government shall be rescued from the hands of those who have shown them fives Incapable of conducting It without disaster at liome and dishonor abroad, anil shall be restored to the party which for SO years administered It with unequaleds'-uces nil prosperity. "we renew and emphasize our allegiance to the policy of protection as the bulwark ot American industrial Independence and the foundation of American development and firospertty. This true American policy taies nrelgn products and encourages home In dustry! ft puta the burden of revenue on foreign goods; It secure the Amnricnn mark et for American producers; It upholds the American standard of wanes for the Ameri can worklngmani It puts the factory by the Ida of the farm and makes the American farmer leas dependent on foreign demand Mid prlcet It dltTuse general thrift and founds the strength of all on the strength ot -ai'h. In Its responsible application it U ust, f ill r, and impartial, equally opposed to foreign control and domestic monopoly to sectional discrimination an Individual favor itism. Anil In this connection we heartily In dorse the wisdom, patriotism and the suo jrti nt the administration of President Har rison. We denounce the present Democratic '.arllT as sectional, partisan and one-sided tnd disastrous to the treasury and destruc tive of business enterprise and we demand luch an equitable tarilT on foreign Imports which enme Into competition with American products as will not only furnish adeouate revenue for the necessary expenses of the government, but will protect American la- Mr from degradation and tne wage level or other lands. We are not ideilged to any particular schedules. The question of rate s a practical question to ue govnrneu by tne somlitlon of times and ot production. The ruling and uncompromising principle Is the protection and development of American la oor and Industry. The country wants a right settlement and then it wants rest we believe the repeal of the reciprocity arrangements negotiated by the lost Repub lican administration was a national calamity ind we demand the renewal and extension n such terms as will equalize our trade with other nations, remove the restrictions which now obstruct the sale of American products In the port of other countries, and lecure enlarged markets for the products of ?ar farms, forests and factories. 'Protection and reciprocity are twin meas ures of Republican policy, and no hand In hand. Democratic rule has recklessly struck iown both and both must be re-estaollshed. Protection for what we produce; free ad mission for the necessaries of life which we io not produce; reciprocity agreements of xutual interest which gain open market for us In return for our open market to others. Protection builds up domestlo In- lustry and trade and secures our own mar ket for ourselves; reciprocity bulbil up foreign trade and find aa outlet for our lurplus. 'Ihe Republican party Is unreservedly for sound money. It caused the enactment of the law providing for the resumption of ipecle payment In 1H79; since then every Jollar has been as good as gold. Wears un alterably opposed to every measure calculat ed to debase our currency or Impair the credit of our country. We are, therefore opposed to the free nnd unlimited coinage of silver, except by International agreement, with the leading commercial nation of the world, which we pledge ourselves to pro mote, and until such agreement can be ob tained the existing gold standard must he preserved. All our sliver and paper cur rency now In circulation must be maintained st parity with gold, and we favor all measures designed to maintain Inviolably tne obligations of the United Mates and all our noney, whether ooin or paper, at th pres ent standard, the standard ot the most en lightened nations of the earth." 'we condemn the present administration for not keenina faltb with the beet sugar producers of this country; the llenublican party favors such protection a will lead to '.he production on American soil of all the itigar which th Americans use, and for which they pay to other countries more than 100,000.000 annually. To au our product to those ot the mine and the Held ss well aa to those of the shop ma tne factory to nemp, to wool, tne pro duct ot the great Industry of sheep hus bandry, as well a to the finished woolens of the mill we promise the most ample pro tection. "Wo favor restoring the early American ollcy of discriminating duties for the up ulldlng of our merchant marine and the protection of our shipping In the foreign carrying trude, so that American shipping, the product of tha American labor employed In American shlp-yarda sailing under the itar and stripe and manned, officered and owued by Ameiicaus, muy regain the carry ing of our foreign commerce. I ha veterans of the union army deserve tad should receive fair treatment and gen- erous recognition. Whenever practicable they should be given the preference in the matter of employment, ana tney are entitled to the enaotment of such law as are best -aloulated to secure the fulfillment of the pledges mad to them In the dark days of the country's peril. We denounce the prac tice In th pension bureau, so recklessly aud unjustly carried on by the present adminis tration, of reducing pensions and arbitrarily dropping the name from th roll, deserv ing the severest condemnation ot the Ameri can people. The Hawaiian Islands should be controlled by tha Called Htgte, and no foreign power ihould b permitted to Interfere wlta them; ih Ninriuriian canal should be built, owned n.l nmimtxil hv the United Mates t and by th purchase of the Danish Islands w should secure a proper and much needed naval sta tion In the West Indie. Th mauuuirea in Armenia have aroused th deep sympathy and Just Indignation ol tha American people, and we believe that the llnlte.1 Mates should exercise all the Iu. tluence it call properly exert to brlug these atrocities to nil eud. Id Turkey Americau residents have been exposed to the graveht j..ian mut American nronertv destroyed. f bare and everywhere American oltiieus and American property must d aosoiuteiy pro lu,..! .11 haants and at 1DV eoaL W reassert th Monro doctrine in Its full extnt, and we rearTIm tne right of the Unit ed Htntes to give the doctrine effect by re- 1 ponding to the appeals of any American Htste for friendly Intervention In case of European encroachment. We have not in terfered and shall not Interfere with the ex isting possessions ot any European power In this hemisphere, but these possessions must not, on nnv pretext, be extended. We watch with deep and abiding Interest the heroin battle of the Cuban patriots against cruelty and oppression, and our best hopes go out for the full success to their de termined contest for liberty. The govern ment of Spain, having lost control of Cuba, and being unable to protect the property or lives of resident American citizens, or to comply with Its treaty obligations, we be lieve that the government of the United Htntes should actively use Its Influence and good office to restore peace and give Inde pendence to the Island. Wo favor the continued enlargement of our navy and a complete system ot harbor and secoast defense. For the protection of the quality of our American citizenship and of the wage of the worklngmen against the fatal competlton of low-priced labor we demand that the immi gration laws be thoroughly enforced and so extended as to exclude from the entrance to the United Htntes those who can neither read nor write. The civil service law was plsoed on the statute book by the Hepuhllcan party which has alwavs sustained It and we renew our rs- fieatcl declarations that It shall be thorough y and honestly enforced and extended wher ever practicable. We demand that every citizen of the Uni ted fltntes shall be allowed to cast one tree and unrestricted ballot and that such ballot shall be oounted and returned as cast. We proclaim our unqualified condemna tion to the uncivilized and barbarous prac tices well known as lynching or killing of human beings, suspected or charged with crime, without process of law. We favor the creation of a national board of arbitration to settle and adjust difference which may arise between employers and employees engaged In Interstate commerce. We believe In an Immediate return to the free homestead policy of the Republican arty, nnd urge the passage by ('(ingress of the satisfactory free homestead measure which no already passed the House and is now pending in the Hen ate. vie rnvor the admission of the remaining territories at the earliest practicable date, having due regard to the Interests of the people of the territories and of the United Htntes. All the federal officer appointed for the territories should be elected frorj bona tide resident thereof, nnd the right of self government ahould be accorded a lar aa practicable. We Imlleve the citizens of Alaska should have representation In the Congress of tha United Mates, to the end that needful legis lation may lie Intelligently enacted. vte sympathize with all wise and lesltl. mate efforts to lessen and prevent the evil of Intemperance and promote morality. ine nepuoiican party is miuiiiui 01 tne rights and Interest of women. Protection, of American Industries Include equal op portunities, equal pay for equal work, ant protection to the home. We favor the ad mission of women to wider spheres of use fulness, and welcomo their co-operation In rescuing the country from mismanagement and misrule. A MARCHING REGIMENT. Th 18th Wis. Covrd 3,380 Mils ia Twclv States Snrlng th War. In a modest little book of 300 page, writ ten by II. W. Rood. Superintendent ot Hchools In Wisconsin, I find the history of the mnrcbes and campaigns of the lith Wis., which contains a detailed account of tnetr i..u.,ilia. !..., ...V. ,1. -o. nff till.... I,. Mla souri, Kansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, jllsals sippl, Louinlaua, Alabama, Georgia, Hotith Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia, cov ering the unprecedented distance of 8,810 mile on foot during three years of the civil war. Having access to nearly all the great libra ries of New York City and Ilrooklyn, and to the Inexhaustible ofllclal records of that war now on II le at Cooper Union Library, I can Mud no parallel ot this remarkable feat by any foot regiment In the United Htntes army. 1 men wrote to tne commanding (teneraia of the English, French aud Herman armies, all of whom furnished me, through their Ad jutant-General's department, with polite re- pllej, but failed to llnd the record of any of their foot regiments who, In the short space uf three years, hsd covered sucn a great number ot miles ou foot, even In times ot peace. The records also show that the regiment took part In the campaign at the extreme ngnt nana 01 tne enure grand army 01 tne North in the early part of the war, and after participating In many of the principal cam paigns of the central part of that arinv found themselves at the extreme left Hank when the war wo declared ended; no, that after nearly one year of studlou research and letter-writing I have no hesi tation in placing the litli Wis. an the cham pion murchlng regiment of the world. The records also show that the Vith Wis.. together with the lrHb Wis., formed the first line of the brigade, of which the wth. 80th aud 81st III., formed the second line of the assaulting columu of ilea. Hhermun's army that charged and captured Leggctt's Hill, the kev to the position of the right dank of the Confederate army at Atlanta on the illst of July 18t!4W. K Mitchbll, 76 broad way, Anw York. 4 On Wist Virginian's Expsrieno. I have read with pleasure the recent ac count of the second Dull Run. I was with Hlegel' Corp, Milroy' brigade. We cut McDowell out of a serious place on the even ing of August US. The Eleventh Corp fought In the center the next day. McDowell on the left and Fits John Porter lay back on tne ngnt. At about 3 o dock p. m.. while charging on the railroad embankment, I received a gunshot wound in the left knee, entirely dis abling the limb. I was carried back by the Johnnie to the pike, 100 yard distant. The next morning when the battle opened I wa In range of our guua. I crawled to a small oak tree for protection, aud by so doing no doubt my life wa saved. I was again re moved, September, ii, a short dlstuuce In the direction of the gup, aud In speaking dis tance of 40 or 60 wounded comrades, prin cipally McDowell' men. We lay there with wun tne earin lor a uea and tne heaven lor a shelter until the eveuiug of the 5th, when the ambulance train wa onnounceda If there are Joy greater than ours when that nibulanoe train oaine I have never experi enced them. We were moved about one mile toward Alexandria and camped over night; started out again on th mornlngof the 6th, arriving at Georgetown college, at 4 o'clock a. m. on on the 7th. I had to hav my leg amputated after that. F. M. H uftman, Corporal Co. D. 8i W. Vu., Marquess, W. Va, WEYLER ON THE DEFENSIVE. Opanly Admitting What Cuban Loag Hav Asserted. The Spanish Generals recently called to Havana, Cuba, for a council, met at the Pal ace and the difficulties ot oampuigulng dur lug the rainy season were dlscuised. Surgeon-Qeneral Loaads urged that mill, tary operations be limited to defensive move ment for the present, and thi wi llually agreed upon. Report com from Remedlos, Santa Clara Provinoe, that many native, driven front farm to village and towns, hav yellow fver.