United States or Brazil ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


"Him over there," he cried, pointing to the groom, "he donta looka like his own face if I get him." "Come, old friend," said Owen in a low voice. "Don't you remember me? Don't you remember the Zoological Garden in Brussels and the lion that bent a cage so easily one day that it killed Herr Bruner, of Berlin." The last words spoken almost in a whisper, had an electrical effect upon the lion tamer.

"And I'll tell you," Senator Bruner was saying, "it isn't only because I knew it would be funny that I wanted you to see it; but well, you see America isn't the real America when she has on her best clothes and is trying to show off. You haven't seen anybody who hasn't prepared for your coming, and that means you haven't seen them as they are at all. Now here we are. This is us!

One of the vice-presidents of the road lived there, and he was taken into confidence, and proved an able and eager ally. They located the special train bearing the Prince and ordered it stopped at the next station. The stop was made that Senator Patton might receive a long telegram from Senator Bruner. "I figure it like this," the Senator told the vice-president.

If he made no friends, he could not have shown his watch to many people." "That is so," replied Bucholz, eagerly catching at the suggestion, and his face brightened at once. "There is only one person who can identify it the old man's former servant, Frank Bruner, and he must be got out of the way." Sommers gazed at his companion in astonishment.

Woman's rights are coming to be respected more and more every year, and we hope you will aid us in demonstrating that a woman can deliver as profitable an address at an agricultural fair as can a lord of creation.... Yours respectfully, WILLIAM HOUSE, Secretary, per D. S. BRUNER. To refuse such an opportunity was not to be thought of, so she accepted, and then wrote Mrs.

He journeyed to Hamburg, and from thence in a few days, accompanied by his servant, he took passage in a steamer, arriving in New York City, "a stranger in a strange land," in the month of August in the same year. The Arrival in New York. Frank Bruner determines to leave the Service of his Master. The meeting of Frank Bruner and William Bucholz.

After attending to the requirements of the old gentleman, Frank Bruner returned to the bar-room and joined the group sitting around the table. His mind was fixed upon leaving a service that was distasteful to him, and in which he was made to feel the hand of the master too frequently and too heavily to be borne longer with submission or silence.

In the morning he again met Frank Bruner, and the conversation of the night before was continued. Bucholz, without seeming to be anxious upon the subject, adroitly led the unsuspecting servant on in his dislike for his occupation, and he succeeded so well that before the day was passed, Frank had firmly resolved to inform Henry Schulte of his plans and of his intention to leave his service.

He immediately wrote to his family for the money he required, and it was while awaiting their reply that he met Frank Bruner, the servant of Henry Schulte, whose acquaintance was destined to produce such a marked and dramatic effect upon his future life. Frank leaves the Service of his Master. A Bowery Concert Saloon. The departure of Henry Schulte.

"You have just come over from Germany, I understand," said Bucholz, addressing his companion in German. "Just arrived to-day," replied Bruner. "Did you come alone?" "Oh, no; I came with the old gentleman who has just gone to bed." "Have you been long with him?" "Long enough to want to get away from him," was the reply.