12 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE.r TIIUKSDAY , MARCH 17 , 1808. "BOBBY MEALSACKS and the SHAMROCKS" A SAINT PATRICK'S DAY STORY. IY GERALD HRENAN. I. Bis Pat Mulcahcy had been wrestling for llfo In the dread clutches of African fever. He lay In the little wooden hut which the Mashonaland Hallway company had dignified with the title of "New Tlpperary station. " Already the twin steel rails which marked the progress of the track to Salisbury had Ifasied far Into the Interior , bringing with them the army of engineers , laborers and native helpers. Big Pat Mulcahcy , who , just a short week before , had been a ) strong a teller as any of these pioneers , was now left behind , sick to the verge of death , and with no one to care for him , save only "Bobby Mealsacks. " Now , "Bobby Mealsacks" was a Kaffir boy brought from the coast under Mul- cahey's especial protection. He earned hli peculiar name from the fact that , having no clothing to speak of , ho had managed with considerable Ingenuity to make unto himself a cert of bloomer costume out of two small Indian meal sacks found on the platform at Belra. The officious representative of Mr. Cecil Rhodes In this section of Africa had recognized the sacks and demanded Im mediate restitution. Bobby , utterly guiltless of Intentional larceny from the British South African company , pr.iycd with tears to be allowed to keep his garments. But the o'llclal ( an assistant deputy substorekeeper or something of that .sort ) wca adamant. For the- first tltnc In Ills life ho had a chance of bullying somebody , so he bullied poor Bobby with all his might. Indeed , he was in the net of trouncing the child , when big I > at Mulcahcy came swaggering along the nearly- laid rails. "What's the matter here , I don't know ? " re-marked Big Pat , as he wedged his giant form between the angry official and the cowering boy , "Wot's the matter ? " cried the assistant deputy substorekceper. "Wot's the matter ? Wy this 'cro little blabbering nigger 'as jolly well prlKKoJ two of the comp'ny's meal Backs , and sewed 'cm up Into jacket and trousers. That's wot's the matter , Hlrlsh. " Big Pat 'Mulcahcy surveyed first the meal lacks and then th.o cockney official. "An * Is that all > e're makln' such a fuas about ? " quoth he. "Well , you know that those same bits of canvas arc no value to the comp'ny. Why all the boys are usln1 them to patch > their clothes. It seems to me , my Whltechapel friend , that you're exccedln' your ordhers. This llttlo darky goes an * elevates himself above the level of his race. He puts on daclnt clothing , an' give clvlllza tlon a hoist. Conslderlu' the crayture's opportunities * he has done mighty well ; an' 'Us myself that thinks he ounlit to be en couraged. So be off with you , an' leave the child alone. Come alcng , Bobby Mealsacks. Come along , ma bouchaleen dhu. On behalf of the right honorable Cecil Rhodes , I give you leave to keep your new suit. " The cockney official , overawed by Big Pat's size , alunk an ay , and from that time forth Bobby Mcahacks regarded Mulcahcy as the greatest of men. Indeed , v.hsn the rait trucks moved westward , Bobby managed to move with them ; and the pioneers looked upon his as Pat Mulcabcy's protege and serv ant. - - This was why , when Big Pat lay grcilng : on the cocoanut matting ! ri "New Tlpperar ) etatlcn , " Bobby Mealsacks alone remained to nurse him. Pat Mulcahcy , the fever havlcg In nome degree departed , cat up anj took a look at the almanac on the station wall. "Thanaman dhlat" he exclaimed , "I mu-jt have teen powerful sick , Bobby. Tomorrow' ! ! bo Saint Patrick' * day , an * me wlth'n an ace o' nilssln. ' It. Faith , , but 'twas lucky 1 woke up. Go over there In the corner , ye little haythen , an' hand me down the box o' clay with the shamrock In It. " But when the obedient Bobby Mealsacks wen to the corner shelf ho found no box o ! clay. Atafi and clock ! The treasured rsham- rocks which Big Pat had brought out wl h Infinite trouble from his native parlih , ti.d which he had mcciaged to keep green ar.iV fresh even In blistering Mashcaaland , were there no longer. Somebody had taken them away during Mulcaliey'a delirium. "Box not dere , Baas , " said the little Kaf fir ; "box gone , ai' Bobby Meahacks beiry eorry. " With a yell of anger Big Pat nprang to hlu feet , cnly to fall weakly back upon the mat- tin. ? . "My shamrocks gone ! " ho cried. "The shamrocks I reared troself ! An * to morrow St. Patrick's day ! O , wlrrasthrue ! Wlrrtathrue ! What thief was mean caougli to steal my box o * nhamrocka ? " Bobby Mealrucks * beady eyes grew dim with team He hurried from side to side of the llttlo station hut , examining every nook and cranny for some truce of the missing box. But never a shamrock could he flnd. The Irishman's humble , little sou venir of his far-distant home had Indeed l > oen taken. Pat Mulcahey 'tossed and tumbled on the matting like ono demented. The lo. * ; of the shamrocks on the very eve of St. Patrick's day was a terrible blow to tbe simple- hearted glint , particularly In his then conJI- ' BOBBY MEALSACKJ ? . " OUIBD THE DOGTOIl. tlon of wcakneia. When the railroad doctoi cam ? along In bis special engine durhig the afternoon he shook his head over Put's Incoherent - coherent ravings atout Patrick's day ant ! the stolen box. "Ho'll worry himself Into a worse fevei than ever It he dc-csn't find tho.se sham' rocks or something like th"m , " said thi fihjslclan. Hut tbere wore- other cares alonj the Hoc beside Mulcahey'c. and there wai no tlmo to look through tbe Mashonalam marshes for something res onbllng a nham reck. Still shaking hla head gloomily thi doctor stepped Into the cub of Ms engine and Rave the rlgual to stall , "I'm orry for Mulcahey , " he muttered "ho la a mighty fine fellow. Hullo Othcro did > ou come from ! " The last exclamation was caure.1 by thi apparition from the engine coal box of i little Kaffir boy , with a sad , serious face tnd two grimy nicks In lieu of clothing. "Mo Hobby Mtolsackn. " said the imal Kaffir. "Me go Salisbury , flnd Baa * 'Cahey'i e'mrocks. " "To Salisbury ! " exclaimed the doctor , wh ( ty this time had recognized Mulcahcy'i faithful little servant ; "how d'you know thi thamrocki are In Salisbury ! " "You know Eaao 'Arris ? " "O. you mean Harris , the little Engllit deputy storekeeper ? That fellow tba wanted to thrash you for taking those mea acka ? " Hobby nodded. "Yah ! " he Mid. "Pat Baai 'Arris. ' ( Bobby pronounced the .Cockney's name ai thai ladlvidiuJj JUmieU proaouocrt it , Bobby saw Eoa5 'Arris In Baas 'Cahey's iraal. Me saw him " and the boy held up wo fingers. "Two dayu ago ? " queried the doctor. Again Bobby Mealeacks nodded. "Two a > , " he said. "Mo go fetch water , an * laas 'Arris he come out. As he- come out 10 try kick''me. Ddn he go puff-puff train o Salisbury. Bobby see him laugh mighty ard. " "And you think he took poor Mulcahey's hamrocks , by way of revenge , eh ? " "Haas 'Arris he want get even , so he took aas 'Cahey's s'mrok , " answered the little Kaffir. "Me go find Haas 'Arris. " "But , arent you afralJ. Bobby ? " exclaimed ho doctor. "Harris may hurt you. " " 'Mo ' no want Baas 'Cahey to die. Me no frnld , " laid Bobby Mealsacks. I 1 II. Now It came to pass that during the night receding St. Patrick's day Assistant Dupty iub-storckeeper Harris sat In the newly- milt storerooms at Salisbury. With him vero two or three oi bis pet cronies eeedy gentlemen , who had left England and America for reasons which they might not are to mention , half-casts from India , tnu- otio-volced Londoners , and the like. Harris nd evidentlybeen telling an amusing story , or hU hearers were grinning at his words. "And so bo > s , " he continued , "I got quits vlth the Hlrlsh bully. Tomorrow will bo Is bloomln' old St. Patrick's day ; but 'e'lt FROM THE SMOKB HOLE IN THE ROOF CAME SQUIRMING A STRANGE FIGURE 'ave no ehamtiocks to celebrate wlh. Crikey my , 'ow Jolly mad 'e'll be , when 'e finds out that I've taken the box. " Hero Harris drew from a locker by his side poor Pat Mulcahey'u lost box of sham- rocko already beginning to droop and fade for want of water. Ere they are , " he said. "All ablowlng and agrowlng ! And now I'm about to make a shamrock salad and esnd It to the big Hl'&ihman. Maybe 'twill 'teach ' 1m not to hlntcrfere with the comp'ny's agents. " But the shamrocks were destined for a better fate ! Hardly had Harris seized the first tiny plant to pull It irom the clay when an unearthly scream rang out through the storehouse. Then from the smokehole In thereof roof came squirming a strange figure , clad In eerie garments of gray a figure , black- vlsagcd and appalling which dropped Hko an arrow Into the very mldet of the as- tounJed group. Next moment the box had been snatched out of Harris * hands and a little Knffln boy , arrayed In meaUacV.a , was dashing across the storehouse bales and boxes , through the open door , and Into the sultry night. "H's the Kaffir brat , " cried Harris , leapIng - Ing wildly from his scat. "Aftert Mm , lads ! Halt my month's salary for whoever brings back the box. " Away went the motley crew helterekeltor down the track of 'the Mashonaland rail way. Far ahead they saw Bobby Mealsacks speeding like a gemabok , with the box bugged to his breast. And after him they went , like bounc'o after a quart'/ ' . One sturdy runner led the pursuit. He wn.3 on outcast of the outcasts ; and the prom ise of half Harris * pay urged him on. Hobby was swift of fcot , but be could uol cope with this man who had been a famous athlete before disgrace drove , him from civilization. Llttlo by little the others dropped away , leaving the leader to finish out the race Hobby McalEacks , glancing over his shoulder , saw ttiat the Icae pursuer gained at every step. He left the hard tracks and took to the short grass of the plain. Hut tic-re , too , the man behind him gained. . Escape seetued hopeless. Yet the Kaffir "boy ran on , al though his breath was labored , and the level \elat seemed to waver before hla eyes. At lost he toppled aud fell senseless In the short grars by the railroad. Quick as a fiacfa the rran behind bad pounced upon the box of shamrocks. III. The company's doctor was paying hit mjrnlng v.'slt ' to big Pat Mulcahcy. He found the Iclahman hjeterlcal , and on the brink of a rclapne. ' "Octi , doctor , dear , tbls Is the sorrowful Patrick's day ! " cried Pat , writhing In Im potent grief and anger upon the matting. "My shamrocks my fine Irish rhamcockn stolen , and now Hobby Mealsaks goes and deserts me. D'ye think 'twas Hobby stole Kie shamrocks , doctor ? " Just at that moment the door flew uncere- mnoiwly ! open and a tall , bearded man strode'.Into tbe hut. Perched on his aboul- dcr bo.carried a small Kaffir urchin ; aad In the Kaffir urchin's arm * there was a square box. box."Hobby MealsacVs ! " cried the doctor. "The shamrocks ! " roared big Pat Mulca hey , his eyea fixed , upon the box. "Aye. gentlemen both Bobby and the box , " tfie . "Unkempt stranger ; ' "I've brought them both back where they belong. " And then , Mn'-a few words , he told what had occurred. Despite his none too savory past he had 'somegood feeling left , and the courage and. .devotion , of 'Bobby Mfalsackfl bad outweighed In his mind the hope of gaining' Harris' proffered bribe. "Besides , " he added , rather shamefacedly , "I eaw'the shamrocks. I was'Irish once my self befpre I went to the bad. " Very gently he sat down iDobby Mealsacks from hla bread shouder and turned toward the dcor. "Hould hard ! " sang out big Pat. "Where are you nolnc ? " "Back to Salisbury. " replied the nameless outcast ; "I've been promised work under Harris. " "Then 'tlsn't one foot you'll stir to work for that blackguard , " cried the sick roan , rising to hh feet with a mighty effort , and clutching the ether's arm. "You're Mastber Jack Dillon my ould landlord's son. Arrab , didn't I know you the minute you sild you were an Irishman ? Besides , you brought me back the slumrocka , and you brought mo back Hobby Mealsacks. I don't care bow wild you've been. Ofaitber Jack ; I'm going to keep you straight. So sit down like a daclnt Irishman , and spend Patrick' ! day at New Tlpperarjr. " - | "Ab , raai , " exclaim * Bobby ; "whit * baaa stay wld Baai 'Cahtjr an * Hobby Meal- When tbe doctor returned to Salisbury It w i to report that the notorious frontier desperado , Jack Dillon , bad been spending a happy and hopeful tit. Patrick' * day In the little station hut. "So , you see , " ha remarked , "even Dllon found a good angel , " "Yea , " said the world-famous chief of the railway : "a little black Kaffir angel. It was Hobby Mealsacks that did It. " FIVE OEMJHATIOXS. Mr . Snrnh I > . Mn.lly nH < 1 Ilrfr 120 DC- NCcnitniUii. Mrs. Sarah P. Llndly , grandmother of Hon. Cicero J. Llndly of the Illinois Board of Railroad and Warehouse commissioners and grand master of the Odd FelldWA of Illinois , celebrated her 99th birthday annlycmiry last week at her home In Upper Alton , III. In her family , relates the Globe-Democrat , Is found an lnstan.ce of remarkable longev ity , she being a "representative * of the first of five living generations In a direct Hoc. She Is the maternal ancestor of 120 'living descendants. She Is one of tbe few remain ing widows of veterans of the war of 1812 , and as such ( bo draws A pension. Her hua- band. John Llndly , did three years' valiant sei"vlce as "ranger , " by wl.lch term the sol diers of that period were called who were organized for protection against Indians In cited to hostilities by British agents as a means of harassing the country along the borders of western civilization. These ran gers gathered their families Into blockhouses ( or protection while they , ccntlnually armed , sought by hunting , trapping and crude farming to provide a subsistence. Such blockhouses were located In St. Clalr county at Alma , at Lebanon ( where traces of the old building may yet bo seen ) , at New Athens and Mascoutah , and were part of the frontier line of forts extending from a paint opposite the mouth of the Missouri river for sixty miles to the Kaekabkla , east of New Design In all twenty-two forts. Such was the service of her husband , John Llndiy , a sturdy pioneer , who figured prominently In the settlement and development of Madison county. Mr. Llndly boasted a lineage that traced back to a Elymouth colonist who eime over In the historic Mayflower , one of two brothers who came- over together and who were the progenitors of the Ltndly family In America. John Llndly died In Madison county In 1863. Mrs. Sarah P. , Llndly was the daughte Jacob Gonterman , who was a native of New Jersey , and related to Caleb Ball , the coco great financier of New York. Her mother was a member of the Stark family , six rep resmitatlvea of which served in the war of Independence In capacities ranging from ensign to colonel , and , as the name of Mol ly Stark Is connected with the story of rev olutionary Incidents , even so Is tbe family name Indlesolubly linked with those of New Hampshire revolutionary heroes. She ws born near Hopklnsvllle , Ky. , February 24 1799 , not seven years after "the dark cm blcody ground" was admitted to the union cad when Daniel Boone , Its pioneer path finder and hero , had scarcely parsed the prime of life. She came to Illinois in 181b old settled near Edwardavllle , la Madison county. She was married to John Llndly in 1818 , the year the otate gained admission into the union. As an evidence of the pioneer charade of these settlers tbere la now In the pos ( session of their son , John J. Llndly , at Leb anon , a valuable historic instrument in tb form of a government patent to one-fourth Ecctlon of land made to .Mr. Lladly am signed personally fay President James Mon roe , before the establlthment of the genera land ofilce , and while the Illinois land offlc was stllf located at Kaskaskla , although 'a Edwardsvtllo was established one of tbe car Host lind offices in the state. Various othc land patents granted Mr. Llndly , algned b President Mat tin Van Buren , are In posses slon of this son. Mrc. Llndly was th mother of eight children , six of whom fitll live Anna M. , wife of Jefferson Virgin ol St. Jacob ; Hannah P. , wife of Aaron Van Hooser ; Elizabeth J.wife of A. W. Brasher , and Ellen P. Llndly , all of Upper Alton ] John J. Llndly ( father of. Judge Cicero J , Llndly ) , of Lebanon. Ill , , and Mary K. Mc Coy of Belleville , Jll. , who' , together with thlrty-oi.0 grandchildren , seventy-five great grandchildren and eight great-great-grand' children , comprise tbe 120 living descend ants. ants.Her Her youth knew all the hardships of fron tier llfo and the danger from savages and wild beasts. Her foot has piled the spindle and her hands the loan In the making of homespun. She was a less of 13 at the be ginning of the war of 1812 , a matron of ma ture years at the outbreak of the Black Hawk and Mexican " /ars unfl 62 years of ogc when Fort Sumpter was "flrej upon. In her lifetime all the presidents but 7/ashlngton have been Inaugurated and almost the entire drama of the h'story of the" republic since the adoption of tbe constftutlorj'hcs been en acted. Born In another century , her life em braces the almost completed nineteenth , like a great parenthesis , and her memory , still active , comprehends the bestiperiod of Amer ica's marvelouii development' . In which time she has seen thtj Immediate * section trans formed Iron the primeval forest and virgin prairie to one of the moatfertile garden spats of the world on the outskirts of St. Lous ! ( the coming metroplls of the nation. And If her life bo spared but one more year she will have passed the century mark and II three years longer she will have seen the light of three different ccnturfes. Ariilvn Snlvc. THE BEST SALVE In the-Vorld for Cuta Driilr-os , Soren , Ulcers , Sal Uhcum. Fevei Sores , Tettev , Chapped Hands. Chilblains Ceres and all Skin Eruptions , and positive ! ] cures Piles , or no pay required. It Is guaranteed anteod lo give perfect satl.i'artlon or inone ] refunded. Prtco 25 cents per box. For sail by Kuhn & Co. ' n Monument tn Colfnx. SOUTH HEND. Ind. . March 16.-Qenera Lew Wallace spoke here Inrt. night undc the auspices of the CoVnmerclal Athlctl club. Inaugurating a movement to erect i statue In South Hend to Schuylcr C'lfjx vice president with Grant. CoUax was ai ardent Odd Fellow and the' founder of thi Daughters of Hebekuh. It I * expected than orders will lend assistance , each lodge li the country contributing such sums as thi members nee fit. The entertainment las night , at iRhlch General Wallace paid i lilsh tribute to the worth of Colfux. brough In considerable money with which to torn the nucleuH cf a fund of 110,000 , which It 1 ; hoped to raise. Arnold' ! Brome Celery cure * headache * , 250 and 6Qc , All drugfUU. NEW MK.JEABS ; NO FOE ) efentea of tbe Jfctrtpolto Impregnable to AttwMly Sea. FACTS ABOUT "TIE FORTIFICATIONS .More GIIIIB > ! < > < ml nt the Sen Kn- trnncv lo Ihe Harbor Thnn ( liei En tire .HpnnlRM. \ vy Wlmt Hnn Been llonc. The oft-repeated assertion that New York City would be at thi mercy of any modern navy which might attack It is emphatically coutcd by Now York , papers , and they claim o know what's what In war armaments and other things. Regarding the condition of the efcnscs of the harbor the Sun furnishes the ollowlng details : -New York has got a chip one her shoulder and In case of war she Invites any foreign leet that's looking * for trouble to trot along with its biggest guns and biggest boats and ry to knock It off ; and there Isn't any iluster or brag about this , cither. Since he 'Maine was blown up In Havana harbor New York has been pictured as a defenseless city. 'Her ' big buildings have been pointed out as shining targets and a species of Idiocy las been developed that has encouraged the drawing and painting of Imaginative pictures showing how New York would look after ten , Ifteen or twenty minutes of firing by a tostlle fleet. The officers of the United States army and navy , have not thought It necessary to make any statement In reply to hese fool stories and fcol pictures. The facts are that New York U practically mprcgnable. So long as her defenses hold out no ve-esel , no fleet of vessels afloat , could get within range of the city. No gun on any man-of-war that floats could throw a hell any nearer to the city than New Utrecht , and If a shell got as close as that he boat that fired the shot would be at he bottom of the bay before she could throw a second shell. Asto the length of time the defenses of New York could hold out against a foreign fleet , no matter what Its size , there need be no apprehension on that score. New York's defensea could not be successfully as- aultei from the sea. They could not be got at ; and there Is not one chance fii ten nllllons that they would ever have to be lefcnded from land attack except In case of a civil war. war.SUPERIOR SUPERIOR GUNS. The officers of the United States army who have In charge the defenses of New York are not talking at all about their plans of lefenso and are not telling anything In detail about the means of defense that they have at hand. The Sun , however , can speak with knowledge of the facts when It tells some- hlng of the defenses. To begin with. New fork City Is admlra'bly ' located for defensive mrposcs. From the entrance of the harbor o the iHattery the distance Is more than .wenty-one mllea. No gun that has ever > cen made can shoot that distance , no matter what the elevation may be. Next , at this entrance to the harbor there are more ten and twelve-Inch rifled guns ready for busl- less than there are big guns In the entire Spanish navy. .If the whole Spanish navy should attack ( New York at the same Instant .he defense guns would outnumber the Spanish guns , and la point of effectiveness each defense gun would be better than any three guns that the Spanhh navy possessors. There are four entrances to New York harbor. They are tba Gcdney channel , the main ship channel , the south channel , which runa Into the Swash channel , and the East channel. Any ehip wanting to get Into New Ycrk harbor must come through one of these channels. The nearest point to New York City that any vessel entering one of these channels Is off Coney Island and Manhattan beach. Ships could flnd deep water off Rockawmy beach but .that would be too far away. Now as to the means of attack. The big gest guns ( .carried by any'Spanish nun-of- war are ten-Inch rifles. A tenlnch gun In a barbette has an effective range of five or six miles. The range Is so short because the gun cannot be elevated to a sufficient height to make it longer. An Inprotectcd ten-Inch gun , that Is , a gun not In a barbstte or turret , h > is a range perhaps two miles greater on shlpl/card. Tbls longer range would require the extreme elevation that can bo given to a gun afloat. Now , from the entrance to the harbor , within a radius of eight miles , there la hardly anything that can be damaged. From the point mentioned nearest New York , off Coney Island and Manhattan beach , eight miles would Include Flatbush , Flatlands , New Utrecht and Can- arsle. It might Include gome parts of Brooklyn south of Greenwood cemetery. This Is the longest range possible for any gun In tbe Spanish Navy on a vessel lying outside the harbor. THE DEFENSES. Now for the defenses. They arc located at Sandy Hook , Fort. . Wadsworth , Fort Ham ilton and Plum Island , which U In Sheeps- head bay between Coney Island and Graven- end. At Sandy Hoc- * and Fort Wadsworth and Fort Hamilton there are fortifications with modern guns. At Sandy Hook alone there are between forty and fifty modern ten end twelve-Inch rifled cannon. These guns are capable of an elevation that gives them a range of twelve miles. Shooting In a straight line , of course , they could not throw a projectile anything like that dis tance ; bit elevated they can drop tremendous projectiles loaded with explosives on a given object twelve miles away. The aim wouU not be no accurate as It would be at shorter ranges , but It would bo accurate enough to hit a ship anywhere within the distance , Twelve miles from Sapdy Hook would in clude Flatbush , Flatlands , Canarsle , Coney Island , Gravescnd , Rockaway beach and New Utrecht. Tbe point nearest New York out side the harbor where hostile ships could lie Is within eight miles of these big guns at Sandy Hook. So It will be seen thit ships would not lie there longer than a few mlnutm If they succeeded In reaching the spot at all. All four entrances to the harbor ure un der the guns of Sandy Hook. These guns alone , so long a ? they are active , would sink any ship that attempted to enter the harbor , no matter how heavily armored she might be. But these big gunu are not all. There are mortar batteries at Sandy Hook. These batteries are arranged four mortars to a battery , and they are effective at a distance of between four and five miles. The teats with 'these ' batteries show that they cun bo aimed with great accuracy and that each battery can hit an object as big as a ship within a square of 200 yards. There are four batteries. Each mortan throws a steel projectile twelve inches In diameter loaded with seventy or eighty pounds of explosives and weighing about S0 pounds. These pro jectiles arei hurled up in the air and fall en < ho deck of a ship. The heaviest deck armor Is four and one-half Inches thick. It would not withstand a projectile of this size falling from a distance , and just one of them strik ing the deck of a ship would blow things to kingdom come. INVISIBLE FORTS. It ban been said 'tlat these gun ? and mci'tar taiterlca could not be succciufully afoiultcd from , the sea. Tbe reason Ir this : The ten and twelve Inch guns are mounted on forty feet of nolld concrete protected by tremendous bank ! bf sand. The guns are on dlcappearlng carriages. They are aimed before they are seca by the enemy. For Instance , a fleet or a.ship of a hostile nation Is approaching. The range finder ? locate the veosel exactly and tfco > cfflcer who fires the gun alma for a spot that will bo reached by the boat and the shot at the came moment. The speed of the boat , the length ) of tlmo It 4akca to raise the gun , and the length of time It takes the abet 'to ' travel the distance arc , of courte , calculated. The gun being aimed. It bobs up. In an instant It Is fired , and the recoil sends It back and down out of tight again. A bomb-proof cover clcsca over the hole out of which It rose , it la TTic Henri MnM Not lie- Trifled With , Where there are symptoms of heart weak , nes * . there should be Dr. Agnew's Cure foi the Heart , It's a musical remedy , gives re. lief In thirty minutes , and there ure thous. nrds who testify that It cures permanently Mrs. W. T. Uundle , , yf Dundalk , Ont. , says "I mas 'for years uuable to attend to m ) household duties. I used Dr. Agnew's Cun for the Heart , the result waa wonderful the coin left me Immediately after the flrsl dose , and a few botthB cured. " Kuhn & Co. 15th and Douglas ; Sherman & McConnel Co. , 151S Codec * , - 11 over In a few seconds , and before * a gun board ihlp could bo sighted the big gun li gone. The chances of a > gunner on any boat even hitting one of thcoo guns are not two In a thousand , even If tbe ehlp'e guns are within ran e. U must cot be for * gotten that a hlpAo'ild bo within range of the forty or fitly guns at Sandy Hook for four mllca at least before eho could flro a ehot that would even reach tbe forti fications , let alone hit a gun. The movtar batteries are In. pits Inland from the fortifications In which the big guns are. They cahoot tic seen from the eur- rounding country even , let alone from the tea. The pita are deep , and for a hol to get Into ono and reach the bottom where the guns are placed It would have to be flrcd almost straight up Into the air. Fired at a very slight angle , It would enter the side of the..pit end would not reach the bottom. To hit one of these mortar batteries , except by chance , U utterly out of the question. Just these two means of dcfeuto woulil seem trf bo sufficient to protect the entrance to the .harbor of New York , but they are only a email part of the whole system of defense. The torpedo eystcm Is fully as Important. Every one of the four channels Is laid with torpedoes. The torpedo lines extend clear acro-'s the channel. Nothing could pass thc'm. They can bo exploded ooe at a tlmo or twenty or forty at a time. Each torpedo Is capable of being operated separately If desirable. Each of the four channels that afford entrances to the harbor Is small. One or two canal boats sunk across any one of them would block It absolutely , . They are so narrow that three boats cannot pass abreast. Their ways are so tortuous that shifting the buoys and the range lights In the harbor would result Inevitably In a vessel's going ashore. There Is not a pilot who could bring a big boat Into the harbor safely If the buojs were out of place or the range lights changed even a few feet. WHAT NEXT ? Now , assume that all these Impregnable fortifications and channels full of torpedoes .and with buoys aad range lights displaced , should be passed In safety by hostile vessels bound to bombard New .York. The moment those boats got Iralde the Hook aud long before they got to Homer Shoals they would be the targets for batteries scarcely lerH formidable than those at Sandy Hook. Fort Wadsnorth and Fort Hamilton would open on them. Take Fort Wadeworth first. Fort Wadsworth Is a natural defense. It Is on land 120 feet higher than the surrounding country. The earthworks alcoe could not be penetrated by any projectile fired from any gun that Is made. Fort Wadeworth has a full equipment of modem 10-Inch guns. The range of these guns 1.3 the same as the range of the guns at Sandy Hook. The terraces enable batteries to be placed one on top of the other. Supplement lag the guns of Fort Wadsworth there are the big guns of Fcvt Hamilton directly across the Narrows. The guns at Fort Hamilton have just been put In place. They Include five 10-Inch rifles of the latest type mounted on disappearing car riages. The range of these guns l > i beyond Coney Island and away out to the point of Kockaway Beach. The battery at Fort Wadsworth consists of six 8-Inch guus and eight 10-Inch guns. Suppcse , now , that Instead of trying to get Into the harbor the hostile fleet goes oft Coney Island to the point already described as the nearest to New York that Is approach able. It has been shown that the fleet would be In clcae range of the forty or flft > guns of For * Wadswovth and Fort Hamilton. The boat or boats that tried to shell the city from that place would be pegged away at by from sixty to seventy of the greatest guns there are In the world. But If the gunners In these three forts were the worst gunners that ever lived Instead of the bwt , If they couldn't hit the side of a barn halt a mile away , there Is still cnothcr detcrae Plum Island. Plum Island Is lens than a mile and a half from this particular point. There Is noth ing on Plum IsUnd for a hostile fleet to shoot at. There are no fortifications , but there Is no end of torpedoes there. Toi- pedoea from Plum Island would do whatever there was to do after the big guns got through , or before , or while the big guna were at work. SUBMARINE IMPLEMENTS. In addition to all these things that have been told about , there IB not an anchorage In the lower bay that Is not underlaid with torpedoes , and any boat that attempted to ctmo to anchor , once It got In , would be blown sky high by them. Torpedoes , while they are loaded with dynamite , are harmless until 'they are actually flrcd from the shore. This Is an Interesting point In connection with the disaster to the Maine. If a boat bumped against twenty of them at the name time they would not explode. U requires an electric current to make them .active and dangerous , and the current Is managed en tirely from the shore. The operator sla ! with a glass watching an apprtachlng boat. When she Is over a torpedo he presses a but ton , and the torpedo does tbe rest. In tlmo of peace. If the torperdoes are laid ready for business , the kcjs that explode them are guarded with more care than the vaults of a bank. There Is no such thing as their being touched off accidentally or without the full knowledge of the officials In charge. All the sea approaches to the city being disposed of , there remains the possibility of bombardment from the sound. That possi bility Is a great deal more remote even- than the other. The approach to the city from Lone Island sound Is narrow , and the de fenses are such that the entrance to the East river Is absolutely locked. Assuming that a foreign fleet should get past tbe vari ous fortifications further up the sound and approach the city , the first defense it would strike would be Davids Island. Davids Island , men who know , say. Is well named , for , though small , It would be able to smash any Goliath that came along. It has the same wicked modern guns as Sandy Hook and Fort Wadsworth and Fort Hamilton. If Long Island sound was deep enough all the way acrces for the biggest man-of-war to pass In any part , she would not escape. The guns of DaVlds Island reach clear across and beyond. Like the other guns , they are mounted on disappearing carriage * * , and they offer no target at all. There are not so many of them at Davldn Island as there are at Sandy Hook. That Is because they are not needed. Suppose , however , that Davids Island was passed and the fleet sailed on , IMPASSABLE BAItltlEllS. Wllleta Point and Fort Schuylcr , which Heat at the lower end of the sound opposite each other , and as close as Fort Wadsworth and Fort Hamilton are Impassable * barriers. They have modern guns In plenty , with four miles greater range than any floating gun , Wlllcts Point , too , Is known as the home of the tor pedo. There Is nothing In the way of a tor pedo or submarine mine ever thought of that cannot bo found at Wlllcts Point. The big modern guns , mighty as they are , might al most bo said to bo secondary , compared to the torpedo system. There Is nothing too small and nothing tco big to be blown up by the totpcdoes operated from Wlllcts Point. Besides Wlllets Point. Hcwletts Point and Sands Point would ho taken by the. govern ment the moment hostilities began , and be fore a boat could como the length of the sound devilish contrivances that arc already prepared would be In opurntlon from each of them. So no matter what anybody tells you about ! .the defcnselessncfs ot Now York , don't give It a moment's thought. There Is no more' ' possibility of Now York being made the vic tim of a hostile fleet than there Is of an earthquake turning Manhattan upside down , and any nation looking for 'trouble may flnd It In large quantities by trying to cut up shin-digs In this neighborhood. For , beside * all these things that have been told about. there would be the navy to b handled , and one of the best fighting boats In the world la hero now to help the land defenses out. That boat Is the Terror. She carries ten- Inch guns and can sail In fourteen feet of water , which Is less than the depth required by any foreign fighting ship. She could lie In shallow water anywhere safe from harm herself and capable with her ten-Inch guns of doing awful work. Children and adults tortured by burns , : alds , injuries , eczema or skin diseases may lecuro Instant relief by using DnWItt's Witch Hazel Salve. U Is the great pllo remedy. CromI > M ! Itnln , SAN FHANCISCO , March 10. Hi-ports from nil section.of Ca'lfornla show that the crop conditions throughout the country nre erltlc.il. A hiMvy rain within the nt-xt few days would save the grain on thousands of acres of ulie.it nnd barley and Insure KOOI ! crop0 In many places , Avhero , otherwise , there would lx > scant harvests. The Sacramento valley seems to be the mo * ! favored portion tion of the northern part of the mate and the outlook for large yields of fruit nnd sraln It. sood. Recent showers In the Ban Joaquln valley nnd southern counties have Improved conditions greatly , The damage to fruit by the frost of lust Sunday IB lees than VNUS feared. Don't annoy others by your coughing and risk your life by nejlectlng a cold. Ono Mln. ute Cough Cure cures coughs , colds , croup , grlppo and all throat and lunc troubles. Mnrxlinl Shut liy it IliiruJur. ST. JOSEPH , Mo. . March 1G.-A special to the Dally News says : George H. Leonard , cltv marshal of Cameron , Mo. , was mur dered by a negro burglar whom he had arrested lit 3:30 : o'o'.ock this morning1. Leonard wis irnrchlrnc the prisoner whrn the negro wrested hla revolver from him nnd shot him twice. Posses are In pursuit of the murderer. See That Stamp ! It is the Government Internal Revenue Stamp over the Cork and Cap * sulc of every bottle of IT WHISKIE Certifying to the Age and Purity of the Whisky. NOTE. It Is thn Government's Guar antee tlmt KOCH with tills bottllncr. See that the nmne W. A. GAIMS & CO. l printed on the stamp. ALL DEALERS SELL IT Never has anything been so Justly praised m Itur-ltcu for the nerves , body niul brain. It replaces Iho essentials of llfo thnt have been exhausted by high living , overwork , woiry , brain fatigue , Indigestion , excesses nml abuse. It rrcutm solid limit , muncln nnil strength , clears the brain , makes the blood pure and rich and causes n general feeling of health , strength and renewed vitality , whllo the icncr- ntlvo organs arc helped to regain their formal powers nnil the mflerer Is quickly made con scious of direct bcncllt. llnr-lien Is the result of over M years' experience In the treatment of the nervous disorders of mnn and woman and Is endorsed by physicians all over th * world as u most excellent NERVE FOOD. It Is purely an animal nnd vegetable extract , contains no poisonous substances , nnd Is pre pared In sugar-coated tablet' , envy to take. llur-llpii Is for stile nt till drug stores , a OO-'doso boxforfOccnts , cnouirh for ono to two months * treatment. In case of nremnturo lost vitality , llnr-llrn Is n prompt , absolute nnd permanent specific , producing results without n parallel In the history of medicine. As n special offir If you will wrlto to us , remitting tl.Otf , wo will forward n 00-dpse box of our remedy and will Rlvo your case any special attention needed. Wo answer nil letters In plain cnvclopo ar.il hold all correspondence fUrlctlv confidential DKS. HAUTON AN1J HENSON , Suite Ill.i'S 1'ubllo So. . , Clcvolanil , O Inilit on ( tcttlnr the f tnulrc BAR-BEN A CO-dcso box for 60 cents Tor itle by Kuhn & Co. , I'th nnd Uoimlun ; J. A. Kiilli > i A ( "n. , H"2 nouclns St. . nnil ( Irnlinm DrilK CD. . r.'li ntul Knrniim : Klns'H I'hnrmnoy , ! 7lh anil Ij-nvonwortli ; rcvtim' * Pharmacy , S.th nnil I.cnvrn\toith ; i : . J. Sr > kora , H. Omulin , nsul nil nlhor ilrut'Rliitx In Oninlui , H. Umnlia , Council IllulTB niul vicinity. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "OASTORIA , " AND " PITCHER'S CASTORIA , " AS OUR TRADE MARK. / , DR. SAMUEL PITCHER , of Hyannis , Massachuoetta , was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA , " the eamo that has borne and does now x r _ / / & ? T' on eyery bear the fac-eim//e signature of C&t&V < MCfa iv f/rsr. , Thin is the original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA" which haa been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY fit the wrapper and see that it ia the fcfnd you have a/ways bought , / f , , # j on the and has the signature of ( t&7 G6dc&M wrap per. No one has authority from me to use my name 0.f oept The Centaur Company of which Chas , H , Fletoher i * President. March 8 , 1897. IMC OtNTAUn COHFANV , TT MUKRAV TKCCT , NVCHH O.TT. IT WAS BEFORE THE DAY OF SAPOLIO THEY USED TO SAY : "WOMAN'S WORK 13 NEVER DONE. " WINE Or CARDUI Relieves Them APPLETON , Ark. , Nov. 18th , 1897. I have used Theciford's Black-Draught and \ McElree's Wine of Cardui for a long time. There are no better medicines made. 1 am never with out them. MRS. M1TT1E BRUTON. STANLEY , Ind. , Jan'y 10th. I have used your McElree's Wine of Cardui \ and Thedford's Black-Draught , and found them to be a great relief to suffering women. MRS. W1LLARD BARTON. SLATER , Mo. , March 13th. My husband and 1 have botH taken your Wine of Cardui and and Black-Draught , ex perienced good effects from it. MRS , W. W. CUMMINGS. ia good for every woman. Every woman needs Wine of Cardui. From the time she approaches womanhood until she has entirely recovered from the effects of the change of life no other medicine will do so much for her. It is a medicine that fits a woman for every duty of wifehood and motherhood. By acting directly upon the delicate menstrual organs it stops all those pains and drains and weaknesses that make so many lives miserable. For whites , falling of the womb , suppression , flooding , monthly pains in the head , back and abdomen , this is the medicine to take. Following child-birth and mis carriage Wine of Cardui is very useful. It has brought healthy babies to many barren homes. For nervousness , a bnguid LADIES' ADVISORY DEPARTMENT. feeling and general ( un-down conditions it is TOT Ulrica In . CUM eltl direction ! , attdrou requiring , firing imp- p equally efficient. Wine of Cardui is as harm * ton * . loMif 44v < < orv ZfepartmMK , The t1baiu , n Ttnn. * < w li 4let { < . less as water to any woman in any condition. II to HolU la Every Drag B or . tlQO WIRJ& OF CARDUI