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Show ndrmrwi-ri- It BRITISH ATHLETES. more met about their hidden campfires Jackman was better liked than A he laid been, but be never mixed with ' THE MEN WHO WILL MEET THE trich melancholy of lament, :I,I on the the crowd. An? sorrow that is the ex I AMERICANS. Voice d. Jackman a bad half lik- h sort of aint se? that ancient mourning music M. of fellow, said Oklahoma Bill, as he oice or t l 8611 counted the notches on his revolver TUe London Times Says That They Are Rama childless; the world handle, the Greatest Set of Banners, Jumpers supposed to represent the men FWailn thee! f W be had killed. 'They do say as how and Hurdlers Ever Gotten Together he did crack that Indians head in j0S Their Records. ness of all beauty at the heart, tlT' f Tlf of a11 srals unt0 the good style when he went to kiss Nellie hx ix the other day. appeS 1 That is so, said Jack Jones. A mans each in locked HE .wonder f ul ,h0 lousing 'Oeiir Cheyenne went up to the dug sneaking apart, standard of excelhrfast out door and asked for something to 5n lence reached by in the melody of thine old eat. When she gave it to him he be; the Amateur Athcries. gan to call her pet names and caught letic Associations sweet mother of sad her in his arms. Just then Jackman tears, of annual championrotber l happened along, and now the Indian ship meeting at All of the world weep is over at Mexican Joes with a crackmourners Stamford B r idge All ed skull. And, come to think of it, I to ttL has few parallels Irish,1 Weep bi i dont like that Mexican much. He is burdened time while In the history of thee; too darned polite. uVe wjth s p o r ts. till flies, athletic, What did Nellie say to Jackman i'cnty f Sorrows reach God through thee, was Everything when he clipped the Indian? asked 'r veil; , for the favorable and ask for sleep. Dad Eckels, curiously. Tins of the comwhile ranks meeting, the, 'Are you still liable to arrest for petitors were richly Recruited from the tbbcr; own unsleeping sor- nd though thine and shooting the deputy sher- best runners that had taken part in the nd Cit forgery yet iff? she asked. nsbirrv' i row Oxford and Cambridge sports, says the end of burdened time, In - No. The jjve to the been got well and I London Times. deputy The result was that the pain, served nine months of a years sendiicb men of and for sorrow, the Cambridge song played a very big part tence for the forgery. Now, will you in Aiil sing Inlet, c the meeting. The secret' of Fitzher-bert- s get me? marry ias , t success in the solace of the the quarter might be Why did you commit a forgery and traced to the inway! jke sorrow, Jnt!.A p, which his fellow strain did you hate women so? why 7 re- -( r Horan took Gredin "Blue, along in the poems' by Lionel Johnson. I forged a check to get money to half-mile arable at of the the 'afterbeginning give a woman. She was a friend of noon, while clinker Cambride the Lutyehs? the deputy sheriff, and as soon as I in the out Bacon run made miler, right gave her the money she had her lover mile, and the sent a r of this fight, no severity arrest me. That was why I shot hirp. A BOOMERS STORY. the mij,, latters doubt, prejudiced Johnson was a good fellow, and I am in the four miles, which was wrmchances oo well the 1A sorry he is dead. I am not a robber !; or a specially bad man. I have a farm e Pceu; some money. What do you say? and e din I will marry you as soon as you to ave rCS of t! In 1S88, the boys who used prove that all your statements are the wlng thick woods, along .truth, she said. Did you know that jjjglr liars in the Canadian river v'Mexiean Jose died? North of the tie banks Oklahoma City now HeNo, he tosaid. I didnt care much. pan. ipi near where have been shot or hung ought r: stands, were ,in the habit of coming are !,, long before. What did the boys think the Santa Fe trains from th6 about it? ap to the Woo.1, Nothing. They never knew what by on- north every night after dark to get was the matter with him, I guess. tween, and faded Then they away a paper. chir : James Wilton and Nellie Blair were the went back to hidden dugouts and married at Oklahoma City last week, nese v,r 1 hi.3 They and Dad Eckles and Oklahoma Bill Jjuts to hide for another day. L were who e boomers defying the - gave the bride away. Wichita, Kan., they are invasion, Correspondent Philadelphia Times. aw against the Oklahoma BICYCLES THAT FOLD TJF." '.nd some of, the boys who used to orawl away in holes in the ground I men in the territ- New Kind of Wheel That Hon Just . if-re now influential Appeared- on the Market, goveory, many of them holding high The popular fad now Is the conS . j, rnment positions. struction of some novel and useful that tl a thepapersf The attachments for bicycles. The redue- ' !sooners eyed him suspiciously, and tion of wreight in all grades of wheels FITZHERBERT. the attachment of pneumatic saddles 'sapar;::., iood, r i and i the innovation of chainle'ss by H. A. Munro, whose great, spurt in appet?-'wheels have all interested the cycling the last mile brought Bacon to a stand-stil- l. ive n a But firm of this public. These successes of Fitzherbert 3 he AC and city has what is termed the folding and Munro were, perhaps, the most popmob of hungry This wheel differs little From ular of the day. The grandest struggle correspondents, but all the bicycle. irilla nowsoaper A the ordinary style except that the up- - of the afternoon was In the quarter. time he kept his back to the shanty 'mines;1 per and lower bars of the frame are And lt will be a (long time before its depot and held his gun in his hand. for 5. crossed by a light bar that works on spectators forget how Fitzherbert, with Dad asked Be you a boomer? a isiy viY pivot, and when a person has finish-- j his raking stride, beat Bredin, the Eckles. .riha. a a a ride and desires to convert his ed I expect to be, said the stranger. post. Bredins half a machine into suitable for easy shape mile, preliminary, of asked Dad, Whar he yon from? 0I a unscrews he besides which he merely m, transportation who had been a boomer even before folds and the was in bolt, up, at bicycle shut turning I starting by the South .David Payne led the first raid, and Butler. Africans and who buried a wife and large family Fitzherbert, who on had his difon the improved University time of that had died of exposure 1 his made way from the a Wednesday, tied two and Winchester f sive leader from Dave Payne to Paw-- 1 path amid great applause, and Sir Richard Webster, the President, was the nee Bill. y n to congratuljate him. first I might be from 4 Texas, but I Another great piece of running was '.aint. was the reply. Hell would be done ' nearer the mark. Anything else you by Bradley in the sprint, the final of He he won in even time. which want to know ? his for and started beautifully, victory No one answered and pretty soon ihe Scottish champion. England against The boys began to drift away in the ' Downer, by a good yard and a half was darkness and sought , their hiding excellently merited. There was much i and places. The stranger was left stand- exciting racing in the preliminary of lug on the platform. 1 the hurdles, in which the university d Durned unlikely, men gave a very! good show, and Oakcuss, Dad Eckles had muttered as he k. was second 'to Shaw In the final. ley left the depot. Bacon ran a wonderful mile, and beat r. n Georges British jrecord of 4 minutes 18 The next night the gray-eye- d strang5 seconds, whicih had stood for eleven liUi u er was at the 'WBBE-- J depot with all his weapoBacons time was 4 minutes 17 years. ns handy.. He bought a paper, and iary, seconds. Although the pace was made s the train ryorTer out he for Purcell, pulled uanent ? very strong by utyens, the champion said; I found a half mined rested at dugout finished with one of his wonderful over cast here I lake. a juaraalittle slept by Will COS sprints. Georgefs professional record there last night. one own it? biHs.ard Any who has been too busy with cricket to en marGuess it must be Henry Hills in much for athletics, did' not enter go ches said Bill Stone, but I dont the long jump, of which he holds the for riiroat, reckon hell ever care to take it. Hes Leers on of 23 feet 6 record Inches; but the fallir? after off by the was a See of o 3 higher carried Ol-game. championship little gal in a cave near anything it obsn- thar? Oxford President, Oakley. The great d for a Xo, said of W. Jj. M. Barry of Queens a stature the with stranger, s alwj soowl. I am not looking for girls tphyhi- College, Cork, ahd Southport drew "at uneoriilhammer-throwinand am in to one hear is there sorry ialed rn around. Y CO Irishmen proficient. j More About Broad, Tires. LLL, Til not bother you, stranger, said f high jump and the Thfe ent. American Farmer is another one weight-puttin- g a ?trl as she through Ryan and Hor-gaslipped out of the shadow of the building. My name is Nel- - of the agricultural journals that favors while Dickenson of Windermere he Blair, and sub-her- e EESt while the I have as good a right wid,e tires. It says that repeated his success in the pole jump. as you have. Do you dispute the walking race the judges had the In' of good roads is being agitated in jec task of disqualifying the Liiui lt; of the country those most disagreeable part every in the holder lap when he was enlat uaybe yon have a better right. interested ,in the subject are doing deavoring to overtake ,ul the leader, who said the man with the gray eyes, un- thesir best to make bad roads still .walked remarkably well. 19 th3 iousij-- , i dont lke women worse by using narrow tires on their minutes 49 5 seconds for theMunros miles four drawn over is the best time ver done in the cham;LD I wjgons. Heavy loads arenarrow-tired on these 'our. mud roads in pionship. There were about 7,000 specthem cut into ruts wfagons and deep their enthusiasm reached a and tators and vet weather make them almost,I have Miss Webster, who was aecom- pitch. impassable. sometimes entirely, s from Oklahoma City. Indians a sort of pity for a man who urges his h T found the old man beat him with team along a muddy road, all the time or it, A.Aoed muskets and his grumbling about the badness of destroyed his labor Some of the boys found him when he might reduce the one-hakftcr the raid and d to by nursed him. He team from addi-ot- e a bad cold from little a at tires very wide exposure and fusing to Nellie. She came great at once tional cost to himself' and to the to watched her father die. Then h saving of team and temper. It is look-Ka- n first the legislation r9 Quietly took possession of the old! be hoped that y'S s ruined home of threads of j ing to the Improvement and down settled en- a life of hide the in be will the country and seek. use of wide tiies, tor cournging thc LLo wacon will do more "loa had best keep a tout'd one narrow-tire- d a dozen quiet la rnr de ires with head. said John Jones, threat! damage than SIC. No one soft. An;rir. if you don,t like thenJ if the roads are at all roUDi you can leave- Over at Nor) disputes the seema Phl.phy sary t to have Wj good there are no women that I Know an(1 no one iei U tS reagon to 0fjCE why they should not antics. Oli. for your information, saici be jTanks 14 J eyed ' man with a sneer. precedent .. f. b Lumbermen fathers did before me. Besides this and freighters use tvuth my and save plans. r LlV ;S'tires almost SOfuniversally Im seems bs!f. that it .but ltorn Jackman; b doing am n dead bnt H. A. MUNRO. in economize to care not do our of condition The this- direction. by Sir Richard Webster, pre'rnadXi costs us more than any other panled the cups and medals. Summary; sented of waste in this country, n tko ' fellow walked awaija Some land tVe common Run Final heat tires use of wide to A. C. to follow won of waste wanted, Bradley, London, A. C.; Veduce this energy by him, Vi" L. A. C., second. Won by f'aid: No; he aint worth it, would R. A. Downer, a large 'xtent. bo V a yard and a half. Time, 10 seconds. foy anything Business. Run to nEye marCiat no orjn paid much atten- L. C, E. A. who S. heiress Bredin, Won F. C.; by the that Pieter ciunt 'ickinan. He came and went second. ()J Won week? Cambridge, Horan, last by ried the four yards. Time, 1:55 ; alance of the crowd. Wle n Hurmad from Fort Brno and ait till I band her my cari won heat Final re law divorce by dles rounded up like Godfrey Shaw, tvhe most successful ' L. A. C.; W. J. Oakley, Oxford, second; driven into a Mg vino Im P. II. Lowe, L. A. C.. third. Time, 15 5 yerin the city. y He the hr-- alirm. A seconds, which tle3 the British record I do? drove tin The out at boyv What shall ir F 1 -1 held by D. D. Bulger, Dublin vo ret a, and thma rf tie the moon. AfbV for One-irderring Run Yon by F. E. Bacon, tore Eovn th Ir hourc a over to tha rftiv-I- Tl run right Y7. E. Cambridge, TOWf- I then nil d th.ro and borrow a property Ashton; Y7 orf byLutyers, arwt'tbr.ure twenty-fiv- e I r T. thyards. cr.aa ..'h, a loyr f si 0 ttfO WEEP IKISIIA 1 - 1 -- r 4 - - 1 , - vi ( - 1 . Jlt , b-,t- ( j 5 j j , , 7i , , , i-- ; ,: -- re-r- y ( ra-av- f. 11 t-- e . j . -- LCC-- J - . Pf-;- Jre n"Sh 3 ; , well-know- paper-purchase- rs J i j ; Time, record. 4:17, J a new British and worlds -- Run 3- -5 inches. Pole Vault Won by R. D. Dickenson, Windermere, with a vault of 10 feet; P. Hunter, South African A. A. A., second, with 9 feet. Dickenson subsequently cleared 10 feet lOa inches. Running High Jump Won by J. M. Ryan, Ireland, with a jump of 5 feet 11 inches; R. Williams, L. A. C., second, with 5 tried 6 feet 10y2 feet 4 2-- 16-pou- nd s . 'ittle duckie. a soogar plum? Whos C. B. NEEL. Oo is. Whos two soogar plums three sooOne of the Foremost Tennis Players on gar plums ten million scogar plums? the Continent. Me Is. Do e 'ittle soogar plum love its own Carr B. Neel, Western champion in O . tennis singles and joint champion with his brother in doubles, has proved himself worthy of a foremost place among the great wielders of the racket in this country.. He has twice this spring defeated , Sam T. Chase, who is ranked the twelfth best player in the cotlntry, and his general work this summer shows that his victories have been well merited. Besides' being a good player he is a student, not only in the sense of standing high in his class at .the University of Chicago, but he has also delved deep Into the science of the game and is a competent critic on all its technical points. Mr. Neel is the tennis reporter for the Inter. Ocean. He has written unequaled accounts of the two great tournaments in the city, the invitation on the grounds of the Chicago Tennis club and the western championship at the Kenwood Country clflb. For the past week he has sent complete telegraphic news of, the tournament at Lake Minnetonka far? the northwestern championship. , During the coming week Mr. Neel will chronicle daily the games at the invitation tournament to -- 2-- ! d ' n, C. B. NEEL. at West Superior, Wis., In which several Chicago1 players take part, and he will be the Inter Ocean's correspondent at Newport in August and send a full account of the tournament for the national championship. be held ! j j j 2-- j I i one-thir- lf I ,r-- ; , j : , - 1 ) . - evf-rf- - -- ""StW v0 Snamow - , i One-hundred-y- ard i r I ht 5 : -- , jj The First Marguerite. Mme. Miolan Carvalho, who sang the part of Marguerite when Gounod's Faust was first produced, gives some interesting particulars about the proThe rehearsals took place unM. der Carvalhos direction at the Theatre Lyrlque, of the Boulevard du Temple, and; were very fatiguing. Gounod had interspersed many splendid bits of music through his work which had to be cut out, notably a duet between Marguerite and Valentin during the Kermesse. Another duet in the prison was also sacrificed. The rehearsal lasted from 7 oclock in the evening until 2 oclock in the morning. The prefect of police, however, inter-- ; fered and obliged the singers to leave off at midnight at the instance of the firemen, who, complained of the long hours. The censorship had also to be reckoned with, for it was thought that the cathedral scene would be objected to in Rome. Mgr. de Segur, however, attended the rehearsals and said that he found the cathedral scene superb. He also gave Mme. Miolan Carvalho a beautifully bound mass book, which she was to use in the church, and she has the gift still. The first representation, as Mme. Miolan Carvalho reminds people, was not brilliant. Gounod was regarded as an Innovator, and the house was divided into two camps, one for and the other against the composer. Meyerbeer and Rossini were among the admirers of the new work, but the Maestro of Pesaro afterward said that he preferred Gounods Provencal composition, Faust, however, made its way later, and does not need defenders now. The London Daily Telegraph. duction. Mi-reill- e." 4-- 5. , , j ' - j-- .r; I -- . 4-- t nc-"w- - ',rr 1 1 le - , so-swee- It seems to me that rican A. A. A., secoid, with 43 feet 1 a mystic spell Inch; W. J. M. Barry, L. A. C., third, Possesses my heart and brain with 42 feet 8 inches. When I cross the boundry and enter Two-mil- e awhile Steeplechase Won by E. J. L. L. C. S. walk In Natures domain. ; C. A. To, Wilkins, Sydenham, 24 11 A. C., second. minutes Time, I feel, a I catch the first sweet breath seconds. Of clover-scente- d air. Four-mil- e Run Won by H. A. Munro, That a my whole soul power, higher Lt. A. C. ; C. Pearce, second; Sid. Thomclaims. as, L. A. C., third. Won by 80 yards in And I pause for a moment there, 19 minutes 49 5 seconds. And wonder if waiting at Heavens Four-mil- e Walk Won by W. J. Stur-ges- s, gate. Poly. Harriers; M. K. Forester, With all lifes battles complete, e Poly. Harriers, second; W. Cryer, High-gat- I shall not feel as I do when I stand H., third. Time, -- 31 minutes.. 15 Where the town and the ; country seconds. Curtis, the holder, finished-first-, meet. but was disqualified. Hammer Won by The Summer Honeymoon. Throwing W. J. M. Barry, L. AiC., with a throw A Novel in One Hundred Thousand of 132 feet 11 Inches; T. F. Kiely, IreChapters. land, second, with 130 feet 2 Inches; J. Cnap. I. MacDonald, third, with 100 feet 3 Inches. Whos 'ittle duckie is oo? cross-graine- g, lie. And begin the meadows 16-pou- nd - - citys confines Shot Won by D. Horgan, Ireland, ,with a put of 44 feet 3 Inches; H. D. Glad well. South Af- Putting WHERE stretches the hazy line, Where the town and country meet. That line where the inches; R. G. Perry, L. 5 feet 9 inches. Ryan inches, but failed. s a'-- WAY, A. C.., third, with 1 i zva CORNER OF ODDITIES. !"! U Final heat won by W. Fitzherbert, Cambridge; E, C. Bredin, L. A. C., second; CURRENT HAPPENINGS OF UNPhilip J. Blignant, South African A. A. USUAL OCCURRENCE. A., third. Won by a foot. Time, 43 Running Broad Jump Von by W. T. Oakley, Oxford, with a jump of 21 feet Where Town and Country Meet The 6Y2 inches; W. Mendelsohn, Cambridge, Jane Honeymoon Feeneys Galwaji second, with 21 feet 3 inches; C. E. H. Gone A Sea Serpent Sighted Parrot Leggatt, L. A. C., third, with 20 feet 8 Punched Him. rs vr, , -- tnoi 'YjwjWiirmirrav 'CT rmitHi rut a Flint frem Stage of Cleveland, O., amateur champion sprinter of 1833, is the most recent addition of the New York Athletic club and should he succeed in getting into championship form will be a member of the team to represent that organization in the forthcoming international competition with the representatives of the London Athletic club C. W. . Willie tweedy Es ittle soogar plum do. How much do e ittle duckie love its own darlingest? ! ChLp. II. The same as chap. I. e -oo Chap. III. , Precisely as previously. Chaps. IV. to CM. Ditto. t. i ''baknAiip, lilt J j thot to got in our light f : j six-shoote- t r.LcVi 1 , y ! ri'i r r ? 1 -- J I r rt t our fb M 1 gia- out of right, too often at where in Florida to be mistaken in rey judgment that this snake which f raw-iLong Island sound was an c I rattler. 'Mr. Smith differed from Mr. Window, his opinion being that the serpent was a water snake, but agreed with tla5 "captain in every other particular regarding it, as did also Sailing Master Hors. Stewmrd Snow was equally positive on the matter and remarked incidentally that lie had served no cocktails or liquor of any kind on the Agns that morning. Old yachtsmen and fishermen Iwro are inclined to credit the story and say that Capt. Winslow and his companions undoubtedly saw a rattlesnake swimming from Fishers island to the Long Island shore, and, although th-say the occurrence wad extraordinary, they declare it was not impossible. Rattlesnakes have been known to swim across the Indian river in Florida and have been found on Fisher's island. 3 Made Her Deputy Sheriff. Bay City (Mich.) special: Just before the last election the wdfe of Dennis Ddodeyne, who keeps a grocery store d and has an voice and influence, asked Sutherland, the republican candidate for sheriff, if he wmuld appoint her a deputy sheriff in case she won Dennis, her husband, over to him. Sutherland promised and was elected. Mrs,, Dennis didnt see Sutherland for a long time, but when she did meet him she reminded him of his promise and he kept it by appointing her. No woman had ever held the office of deputy sheriff, and at first Mrs. Dennis did not seem Inclined to accept, but yesterday she took the oath of office and a fresh young attorney gave her some papers to serve as a joke. It was no joke for Mrs. Dennis, and she served those papers with a calm dignity that no deputy of Bay county has had in yeaflk. She proposes to fulable-bodie- fill the responsibilities ,of, her office and meantime to keep her grocery store. Deputy Sheriff Mrs. Dennis Doodeyne can be found at the grocery at any reasonable hour and she wears prominently displayed the big star of a Bay; county deputy sheriff. ' ; ( 5 Rattlers Among Indian Kellog. W. II. Stewrart of Brooklyn was in Finis. Port Jervis a few days ago, and, being something of an antiquarian, he visited Feeneys Galways Are Gone. in company with Ben Quick the old InPatrick dian Pittsburg (Pa.) special: burying ground along the Never-sin- k Feeney, a laborer employed on the new on the Van Etten farm., trolley road to Carnegie, was so drunk near river, In digging among Jervis. Port last Saturday night that he slept out the rocks Stewart found an Indians on the hillside aboVe Limerick. There in was It his hand, He skull. holding are about as many goats as ragged chilheard a he when the relic, examining dren in the neighborhood. One of the strange buzzing sound coming from residents of Limerick Is Mary Burke, its hollow interior. The next instant a who keeps a candy store and a goat rattlesnake poked its head out of one about the size of a young horse. Mrs. of the eyeholes in the skull. The anBurkes goat, while browsing on the dropped the skull, The snake hillside, came across Feeney sleeping in tiquarian of its strange home slid all the the bushes where he had fallen. Feeney and was way outkilled. Stewart and promptly had long red whiskers, which he had for their renewed prospecting Quick persisted in wearing, despite the en- relics. They found several valuable treaties of friends. The goat saw the but were compelled to kill six whiskers, and, evidently thinking they ones, big rattlers before the collection were a new kind of grass, made a grab more was completed. Ex. for them. It bit off several handfuls of hair before Feeney awoke. He was Assaalt with Wooden Leg A Kirk. so enraged that he threw a stone at the goat, breaking one of Its legs. Mrs. Messrs. Dickinson and Carpenter, of Burke went to the Thirteenth street po- Wheatland paid a visit this morning to lice station and wanted to swear out a Clerk Slocum of the Supreme Court. warrant for Feeneys arrest. Inspector Mr. Dickinson assaulted Mr. Carpenter Kelly told her the Humane society of- with his wooden leg and the question fice was the proper place to enter her for decision was whether such assault complaint. After she had departed came under the head of an assaultofwith the Feeney appeared at the station and a deadly weapon or with the kick sum the asked if he had been sued. He wanted foot. The disputants wagered to enter a cross suit against Mrs. Burke of $5 on the result. said Mr. Slocum,, my Gentlemen, for the larceny of part of his whiskers After consulting nuis made mind up. had by the goat. The remaining part to be shaved off and the sudden disap- merous authorities I have come to the decision: It appears, there bepearance of Feeneys long whiskers Is following no direct evidence to the contrary, causing considerable talk between the ing assault was committed with a the that West End and Carnegie. that it wa3 a wooden one fact the leg; enter into the discussion at riot need His Check. Punched The Parrot that Mr. Dickinall. I therefore, find, near and Ninth At a light lunch cafe, Market streets, each waiter Is supplied son is entitled to the stakes and take with a package of printed t tickets upon pleasure in handing them to him now.' Messrs. Dickinson and Carpenter dewhich he cuts out with a punch the figamount of the ures representing the parted for home In a democrat wagon Philadelthe says gayly decorated with flags, the best of patrons purchase, a also cafe has The Record. parfriends. phia rot. One day last week a young man , entered the cafe and took his noonday A FcstofBce Romance. meal. He was a very light eater and Green Y.) special: Binghamton (N. his check amounted to 15 cents. On his ville Louis J. Templeton, a member of way to the cashiers desk to settle up the British parliament, who was makthe young man passed the parrot, ing a tour of America, visited; Bingwhich sat gnawing a cracker on its hamton several weeks agoAi While at perch. The young man began to tease the post office to have a money order the bird,- poking the meal check at It cashed he met Miss Bstella Wessel, the at first tantalizingly. The bird made a sud- clerk, and It was a case of love "secured a bill friend and den dive and jabbed its pointed sight. He sought visits to the govthrough the thin paper. The young man an introduction. His were check ernment the snatched frequent. Ills away, however, and, building went were and they rewarded the fist bird," his jauntiat, attentions shaking week. the desk. last to on' the married cashiers were Saturday ly He laid his 15 cents down with the couple sailed for Europe and after a check and started to walk out. The short tour of the continent they will recashier called him back and demanded side on Mr. Templetons estate at 15 cents more. The young man was as- Broadlands, England. The wedding refused to pay. The was a quiet one and caused much surand tonished cashier pointed to the check with both prise. 15 and 60 punched out. The waiter was called, but he fdidnt remember Overcome by the Death Sentence. what the young man had eaten. It was Jasper (Fla.) special: One of the most only after a deal of wrangling that the sensational scenes ever witnessed In a young man convinced the cashier that courtroom occurred here when Judge the parrots bill had punched out the White sentenced a man named Jones 60. to death for murder. Jones was put on trial last Friday morning and a verdict Sea Serpent in the Sound , was returned Saturday mornof The schooner yacht Agnes of the New ing.guilty The man seemed dazed by the York Yacht club, Capt. J. Norton Wins- verdict and when called to stand up for low commanding, brought a strange sentence arose mechanically- - Jones aptale of the sea when it arrived here any Interest in parently did not take from Shelter island, says a Newport the near till the close. Then proceedings special. Capt. Winslow told it, and his he leaned Intentlistened and forward story was backed up by his guest on ly. As the words hang by the neck the Agnes, Oscar Smith of the. New until dead were uttered by Judge York stock exchange. Sailing Master White Jones fell to the floor, apparently Ross, and Steward Snow as if a bullet had entered his as dead We left Grenport, L. I., about 8 heart. For a long time be was thought a. m. on Wednesday, says Capt. Wins- dead, but he was finally partly revived low, and were about a mile south of Fishers island, near Race Rock light, with Honor headed east for Newport, with all balexaminaA loon sails set and a light norwest bright youth, undergoing of the govone breeze blowing, about noon of that day. tion for admission to found himself Oscar Smith, who was at the wheel, ernment departments, called my attention to a peculiar object confronted with the question: What is the distance from the earth In the water about forty feet away, 1.0 the sun? saying: Not knowing the exact number c eat head if that isnt Ill my wrote in reply: snakeV mils, heunable to state accurately; but I tra "Hurriedly leaving my comfortable sun is near enough the believe chair In the cockpit and turning around, I Cttt the with proper performI discovered, swimming leisurely along, is interfere '" 1 get thi3 clerk-ehi- p. if duties of ance should I headed to the suthard, what rattlesnake say was a diamond-bac- k II parsed his examination. in seven feet length, trlth a from five to as a claret body about as large aroundwas A London restaurant serves its faof, to haul bottle. My first impulse ca closer. electrically heated plates. get on the wind, tie schooner , - i ( - r-- |