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f ETfWHi CAPITAL. jjv INDEPENDENT FAMILY TO THE BEST INTEREST OF THE STATE, CITY AND COUNTY. VOL I. NO. 4. \ ANNAPOLIS, MD., THURSDAY EVENING. MAY 15, 1884. PRICE ONE CENT. Jr ; . ■——— ■ —■ ——— THE POET'S FAITH. t- God is good, an l will not leave in?, W hen I die; [ love, 1 know, w.ll not deceive me, cruel doubt* He will not grievnine. W r tea cn death* bel I lie. -•God haa don<- too much for me For death to end l|jo< tny n ght upon th * shore, ■vhope heg ves forevermore To foe and friend. p Ik at < ray soul on lake* of ligh^ In *p rit land, |g;>nd th* -h uif.w and th? blight, i*r L-d the len'-h of human sight. By angels famid. |jjp inakee my spirit all devout ? Who 1 ends my knee? Rk dwells w.t.i n an 1 guards without, % save* m y s jul from wayward doubt By ail I h e i ypnount'iin'H nol, the val/s embrace. The vault at ove ! ®kouJ which lids the b Mind less spac *. myields me thought and 1 gjucs, 111 Ochl's sweet J|j in spirit, if mm pray, ‘|*| And 1< o*i to < art of conneic nflp will Ik* gay, its sway || Pi %$£ _ IMM ~ lipliSlS yrsJf unmolested, until I began to dis regard the danger altogether. During th;jl time I became accustomed to eveiy phase of my situation, and al- uiy lonely life gave me a very silejpt and taciturn habit, I enjoyed my days at LO3 Angeles, or at Santa M<SwP a * sea-bathing, as much as my more fortu§b' ite friends, who ran north over the Tch'Jkhapi pass, and were at home every nigh§’ enjoyed their rests. 'TrJiin robberies had lately been fre quent* and while I did not expect to be Httatjpked, I learned to be on the lookout. I hJfd a set of signals with the l>cll rope to the trainmen know when I was in dpj'ger. Robberies were often made w jJile the trains were in motion, and the vx ji>ress messengers were either bound ba#*d and foot, or killed, the robbers bc/ n L desperate men who hesitated at u Jothing. / Occasionally, however. I did relax my Jigibrace, and slept as soundly as at the jJiotcl where I boarded. Finally my turn lame. " The train arrived at Tucson one night l early an hour late. There was a great deal of express matter to exchange, and far fifteen minutes 1 was kept “busy load ing and unloading bundles and boxes. The passengers walked up and down the platform to stretch their legs; the en gine's safety-valve hummed with escap ing steam, and the long train of cars, reaching the full length of the platform, presented a picture of bustle and activity. the last bundle was piled away, banee to talk a few minutes w ith then the train started, |m( kim 1 .and 1 i;t n< that were 1 ■ ~ 111 ; fc f i Before they had gone five miles farther I had some nails in my poc Viet, and a care less glance showed me a hole in the side of the box through which the robber was undoubtedly watching every movement I made. I did not go near the revolvers or rifles. It would have taken but a second for him to have raised the lid and shot me, and I knew he would do so if I ap j proached them. Instead of that I care | lessly assorted a pile of express matter ! near the box, with a view to what I was ! about to do. I was terribly excited, though I tried j to appear cool. When I was all ready, I threw several heavy packages on the lid, sat down on the box. and hastily nailed down the lid* I heard a noise within, and felt a pressure us my prisoner endeavored to raise the lid. The weight was too great, and I soon had all the nails driven in to hold him fast. He was secured, but to make sury of him I sur rounded the box with heavy bundles, and piled upon it the heaviest boxes the car contained. I sat down for a minut|to recover my self; then taking down ii rifle, I cocked j it loud enough for him to hear. “How many more are there aboard the train?” I asked, placing 4iy mouth to a crack between the bricks. In reply I heard a muffled sound re sembling a curse, and as all the holes through which he might shoot were cov ered with gold and si'ver, I put my mouth nearer and asked the question 1 again. * I received no reply, and going to the j end of the car, I quietly qpened the door leading to the platform. The night air rushed in, and the noise u. f *ihe train came with it, making a din in’my ears. We were running at a high' rate of speed the hills that apound in that the platftjftm of the next The traiu at \flrk. Two men, HgfcMin tiv, f<‘P! of l>;i' -• n- A REMARKABLE AFFECTION rax BTiAiax mozis that dis- TZVaUZSK VSTTmOPKOBXA. Person* with m Dislike for Certain Streets, Places or Objects—Others who Dread Letter* or Colors, In the afternoon of one of the sunniest ! days last week two got on a Madi- j son avenue car going down town at the i corner of Fifty-fourth street. One was a j j thin, pallid, rather emaciated gentleman, i possibly forty years of age, with rather a j peculiar transparency of the temples, j restless eyes, and a singular nervousness ; of manner; the other large, well nour- j ished, massive and rather corpulent, with the placid, self-satisfied countenance of the man who has succeeded in the world, and feels on good terms with it. The pair might readily have been mistaken for a madman and lus keeper, only the ! feebler of the two was evidently not past the verge of sanity, while the placid com panion was a trifle less vigilant than the : custodian of a maniac ought to be, and i moreover was recognized by at least one j j passenger as a famous physician. The thin gentleman shifted his posi- ! tion uneasily, gazed out of the car win- ‘ dow a moment, then studied the faces of his three or four fellow passengers with the rapid intensity of a physiognomist, and glanced furtively at the open door, i in which the figure of the c6nductor was J framed like a full-length photograph. “Fares, gents.” grumbled that func- ; 1 tionary, stalking into the ear. The thin gentleman paid for two, and again glanced in the direction of the open door. His hand shook a* he replaced his pocketbook, and a shiver passed over him. His portly companion turned and spoke to him in a low tone. The words were inaudible, and the intonations were soft, soothing, and evidently expostula tory. Suddenly the pale passenger sprang j to his feet, pulled the bell violently, and rushed out of the car, which was uow midway between Forty-eighth and Forty- I ninth streets. The portly physician rose | seat in a leisurely, comfortable and alighted ut the corner j '•in'Ct, when* the T Li* oynteis To his wonder, as he was about tp step from the curbstone at the corner of the postoffice he was seized with a, lit of trembling and terror, and since then he has never been able to command himself to cross at that p~>int, though he has often tested his selt control by try*‘ ! ing it. Another patient had the same terror of 1 >he Jersey City ferry at the foot of Cort land t street. The Brooklyn ferries have no terrors for him. the Desbrosses street ferry is not objectionable, but if his life depended upon crossing to Jersey v ii.y at Cortlandt street hr could not com mand his ne.'vcs to accomplish it. As in the other two, there is no as. Ignable cause for the morbid impression in th’S case. It came suddenly, and has beer in existence for lour years. • ; “Sometimes.” continued the doctor, i “the victim has a terror of a certain street, avenue, or public square* aod one i man I know cannot pass the s.atue of j Lincoln at Union squ re \%ith-A expe^ ! riencing a nervous tremoi. But, with regard to some of our outdoo* statuary, nervous dreau is natural enougt.” “One of my patients.” he ••?nt on, “a literary man ot some reputation, baa a nervous terror of words ending in or containing the diphthong *ch.’ This man will take any trouble to avoid the rela tive pronoun ‘which.’ lie has not for years written any one of the words termi nating in tch—such as catch, fetch, scratch, batch, latch or patch. For match lie always writes lucifer or Vesu- ' vian; for fetch either bring or obtain; for catcl\, he uses capture or some other proximate. He has often tried to over come the prejudice; but some how his haud begins to tremble, his breath cornea short, and lie cannot form the letters. For character he always writes disposi- I tion, reputation, kind, description—any thing that will pass muster as a substi ( tute.” i Cases of neurophobia as concerns j colors are not uncommon. One of the / doctor's patients—a woman this time-W i is driven into hysteria by a certain pal/ | cold shade of blue. And a nervoy j fidgety little man, who called upon j to be treated for musicians' cramp, buf /] his e :, rs in his own office for wearing j , scarf, and begged his pardonL..^/^