iitoh:,'- Cinty llciald pohn fl PabttBfbev Kals ft Mg family and uphold 1 President' hands. There are two tides to every ques tion. Your side nnd the wrong side. jxumerous unsocial rubbernecks lire making anxious Inquiries as to this pro posed elastic currency. It Is extremely doubtful whether Oount Bonl would prove a fiiccess as n head waiter If tlie Job call for any nead work. The London writers have started n movement to put a slop to the practice of tipping. The fear of dying rich must be spreading rapidly. Spain Is building a new unvy. Spain has jio more colonics on tinnds the chances are tint the Bayy will prove a durable one. As her new Mr. Eckels has hit the nnll fairly on Hie head. What we all need Is a "re sponslve currency," one that will come When we whistle or call It by name. A Connecticut Judge has decided that turtle Is not an animal. The Treas ury Department would probably rule, for purposes of duty, that It is canned anluion. The acrainbio among Oklahoma towns to become county seats promised to equal the toad rush for claims when the territory was thrown open to set tlement A woman s magazine asks: "What Implement ran equal a hairpin In the eft bands of woman?" Well, In some cases a hatpin In the deft hands of another woman. "There are some things," notes the Richmond Times-Democrat, "that you can t say even to a Plttsburger." For Instance, you can't ask him to be proud Of bis Idle millionaires. An English astronomer, after years of careful work, ventures the opinion that there are 04,184,757 stars. Some people are sure they saw more than that the first time they put on roller ' skates. Andrew Carnegie wishes to have It understood that Sklbo, the name of his place In Scotland, In pronounced Ekeoboo. If Andrew doesn't wateb out Bow Irreverent ieople may get to call ing It Skldoo. At Dresden, Germany, a public bath ing boUHe for dogs has been opened. If Dresden Is one of the places where dogs are utilized In the sausage busi ness, It Is no more than right that they should be kept as clean as possi ble. The number of women who kill men unfortunate enough to have Incurred their displeasure and then Invoke tho unwritten law Is getting uncomfort ably large. Perhaps there may yet be necessity for going to tho extreme of seeing If the other kind of law doesn't fit In view of tho trouble In Eurojm the peoplo of this country may vell con gratulate themselves that the fathers settled the relations of church and state lit the very beginning of our existence as a nation, and settled it for all time, for no one wishes to Interfere with the conclusion reached. Happily the horse has a faculty for upsetting the gloomy predictions that Jie' Is fated to be put out of business y the automobile. Tho horse business has kept right on developing In spite of tho fact that the automobile Indus try has been engaged In a similar un dertaking. Tho demand for horses Is till great Tho supply of some classes f them Is inadequate. Tho prices are high. The automobile may scare tho horse Into tho ditch, but It isn't likely to crowd hiin to tho wall. There- will always be a field for the horse, as there will always bo a field for the au tomobile. Reports from places which used vot ing machines In tho recent State elec tions show the superiority of tho ma chine over the lead-pencll-and-ballot method. In no place where the ma chines were used were returns later than one-half hour after tho closing of the polls. In most places where the old-fashioned way of voting prevailed there waa seldom a complete and accu rate return wlthlu twenty-four hours. Machines are uow In use In more than 600 cities, towns and villages In the United States. Iluffalo, Syracuse, Sau Francisco, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Cleveland and Omaha aro among the larger cities where they have been adopted. It Is not sufficiently recognized that agriculture Is a scientific pursuit aud that In order to get tho very best re turns out of It a niau could to ad vantage utilize a sieclal scientific edu cation as truly as does the doctor or lawyer or tho engineer. It Is not mere ly because of the Increased material return that such education for the farmer Is of valua. The Intellectual aud moral dividends would by means of such training be equally Increased. It Is a great loss In human power aud happiness that thousands of men en gaged In one of the most scientific of pursuits should go about It without get ting the same moral and Intellectual eatisfactiou that comes to men lu other callings In wuicli the professional ele ment has been more consciously rc?og. sized. Herculaneum, tho rich aud splendid tltj that was burled, along with Pom pel! and Stublu', by the eruption of Vesuvius lu A. D. 7!), is to be dug from the mass of tufa which covered It aud Its buildings aro to be disclosed to view, Professor. Waldsteln of Cam-j bridge University has induced the Ital ian government to consent to the work, ea condition that tt bs officially direct- ed by Italians, find that the assistance of foreigners, financially and otherwise, shall bo unofficial. Should the enter prise be carried out, we shall soon bavej much light throwu on the manner of) lire or the Ilonians of the first cen tury. Ilerculnneutn, far more than Pompeii, was the residence of wealthy! and cultivated cltlr.cti. Their house! were filled with artistic objects and their libraries contained the best liter ature of the period. In a partial exen ration nearly two thousand manuscrli rolls were found lu one house. Pour pell was covered with small stones an soft ashes from the volcano. Ilercu laneum was burled beneath a torrent o mud to the depth of from thirty to a hundred and twenty feet On top of It two large modern villages have been built. General excavation has not been undertaken, lest the stability of the vll Ingcs should be threatened. Plans now making provide for tearing down these villages, so far as necessary, to get at the city beneath. In the comparatively near future we may expect to hear re ports of the uncovering of fine bronze and marble statuary, of beautiful man slons, of libraries filled with ancient books, some of them for centuries known by tradition only. In short. It will be as If we were taken back mors than eighteen hundred years, and were able to look upon the city as Its In hab itants suddenly left It when Vesuvius poured forth the flood of mud, molten rock nnd scalding water upon the towns of Hs seaward slope. The present criod Is distinguished for two things prosperity and dlscon tent. Despite many glaring Incquall tics or Inequities In the distribution of Its results, great prosperity has pre vailed In the United States for eight or nine years, and there are no visible signs of Its Interruption. Yet It Is a matter of common remark that only In a few trying times of great Industrial depression, when millions of working peoplo were deprived of optsirtunlties to earn a living, has there been so much discontent as Is seen and heard and felt In these time cf amazing prosjier Ity. Never liefore wore attacks on the great trusts made with such determina tion and effect. Never before were the people so united and so zealous lu war-f.-re upon political graft In all sections. ie discontent of the period Is not i ..-re grumbling. It Is enlightened de sire for better conditions. Such dis content Is the parent of all progress. If the American people were more con tent with a full stomach they would be less energetic and progressiva To an Individual, a tribe, or a people who are contented, who have all they de sire, progress Is Impossible. Hut for those whose Ideals are higher than any resent attainment, the longing for bet ter things, vtho have shown up here and there In all the ages aud who have ecome more numerous and more In sistent as one after another their aims and longings have lnn gratified, tho rogrcss of tho human family would never have advanced lcyond naked bar barism. Wo are a discontented jaxqile there's no denying It, and no reason for trying to deny It. Because we are discontented we hustlo and "get there." The discontent Is not at all due to tho prosperity, but the prosperity Is very largely due to the discontent. We have not reached perfection yet and the fact that we know It and kick about It Is the best possible assurance tlmt affairs will steadily grow better. Is Switzerland to loso Its glaciers. The subject bears a close resemblance to that as to the exhaustion of tho British coal beds. It will scarcely be- como acute ln our time; but nonethe less scientific observations of tho move ment of the glaciers during 11)03 shows. as similar observations In previous years have shown, a shrinkage ln tho surface. Somo of tho glaciers have Bhrunk as much as 21X) yards since 1000. lu no lnstanco has growth been reported. According to the results of recent ex periments the flame of acetylene Is per haps the hottest known except that of tho electric arc. The following figures have been given by Mr. Matll: ISunsen burner, 1,871 degrees; acetylene flame,' 2,548 degrees; alcohol flame, 1,705 de grees; Denayrouze burner half alco- hoi, half petroleum 2,053 degrees; hy-j drogen flame, ln air, 1,000 degrees; gas jet flame, with oxygen, 2,200 degrees;' oxygen flame, 2,420 degrees. These are! all Centigrade degrees. One degree Centigrade equals ono degree and eight tenths Fahrenheit The lowest temperature yet recorded, says a medical Journal, Is that reached recently by K. Olszewski ln an attempt to liquify helium. By tho aid of solid, hydrogen he cooled the gas to minus 259 degrees 8. Under 180 atmospheres' presaure; then, suddenly releasing the' pressure to that of tho atmosphere, a; degree of cold was created which, byi calculation from Laplace and UolBsonV formula, amounted to minus 271.3 do-; grees C. Helium, however, did not; liquify, and he accordingly assumes that Its boiling point must bo below minus 271, and that there Is but little prospect of reducing it to a liquid. A French scientific writer ltolnts out that a mere gain In weight should not lu Itself be taken as an Indication of Improved Udlly condition. It Is, ac cording to hiin, rather a question of tho density than the quantity of tissue which covers the bones. When in creased weight results from Increased density, then the health Is really Im provid. In order that this prlnelplo may bo practically applied, lie suggests the u so of baths containing a known quantity of water and supplied with appliances . for measurement whereby the density of the Immersed body may be calculated. In the manner lu which Archimedes nsccrtulucd t lie density of King Illero's crown of adulterated gold. A alural Ksplaaatloa. "There Is always so much gossip about the flirtations which go on In Mrs. Nurltch's conservatory." "Possibly because It contains so many rubber plants." Valtiiuort American. f jP-tf!?? T'f jA "s&a - m ."N Charity. Charity Is the true coin to day; hatred and contention, tho dis gusting counterfeit. I!ev. It. Mc.VvI line, Catholic, Freiichvllle, Pa. Thought. The Christian needs to learn bow to think of others, how to think of himself, and what to think of his work. Kev. 10. A. Ott, Independent, Chicago. Loyal Americans. America, the land of the free, should be ruled only by loyal Americans, whether native born or adopted by naturalization. Kev. C. II. Lemklii. Methodist. New York City. Creed. It Is better to have a gisxl human creed than to have no creed, but, U'tter still, to have a divine creed which Is a personal faith in a personal Christ. Kev. M. E. Harlan, Disciple, Brooklyn. Creation. No evolution could pro duce man. He Is a creation, but through the use of evolved material. God is the creator: he breathed Into us the breath of life. Kev. Kobt. Mac Donald, Baptist, llrooklyn. Government. We want a govern ment for the benefit of the people; a government which, to use Mr. Glad stone's words, "will make vice difficult and virtue easy." Kev. Lyman Abbott, Congregatioiialist, llrooklyn. Honesty and Purity. (Quietly nnd steadfastly stand for honesty and pur ity in public and In private, and you shall serve your generation more than by steamships or railways or all ma terial wealth. Kev. W. H. Faunce, Presbyterian, Providence, 1J. I. P.lg itry. There are Congregutlonal- Ists ami Presbyterians and Methodists with equal loyalty. Hut the Christian should be lui bigot, anil no species of bigotry Is more offensive than that of th" denominational bigot. C. A. Har bour. Baptist, Kotiicstcr, X. Y. Kingly Christians. The love of God has gone Into the palaces of kings and queens and made them act kindly to ward their subjects, Queen Victoria was a hlg'i example of the love of God tiling in the heart of a monarch. Kev. C. II. Gariirh, Baptist, Albany, X. Y. Environment. Man finds himself in the midst of a double environment of : od and evil, and subjected to Hmlta lons. Yet who can say how far he can go beyond apparent limits? The ideal we have to-day Is not The Ideal of yes terday. Kov. .S. Kirk, Independent. Des Moines, Iowa. Modern Marriages. What part has iod In the great majority of modem .larrlngos? It Is a libel on God to say that He Joined In holy matrimony those that know Him not. Countless thous ands of miserable marriages are the re sult of not being Joined together by God. Itev. John Thresher. Baptist. Pittsburg. Higher Consecration. If society la ever led to the purer and loftier heights It will be when the Christians of our land live up to the standard and march forward with It. It may require a little higher consecration, but It will not be any higher thau the Bible re quires. Kev. L. r, Ludden, Disciple, Lincoln, Xeb. ' Ideals. It Is true that we may not be able to carry out our plans fully nor to reach our ideals. It Is said that Kaphnol turned away from his Sistlne Madonna, dlsupioiiitcd, that P.eethoven heard grander symphonies In his soul than he was alio to write on paper. Kev. J. It. Miukward, Lutheran. Wilk Insburg. Pa. Final Words. If a man ever ulters his true convictions at any time It Is when he speak his last words. Final words are the ones that usually live and wield the posthumous inlluence. The dent Illicit message has furnished a text for many a sermon and many a song. Kev. W. A. ' Frye, Methodist, Lansing, Mich. Social Life. Blessed are they who do hunger and thirst for righteousness In social life. What the social life needs Is a strong Infusion of righteous ness, so that there shall be considerate uess, chnrltableness, modesty, temper ance, healthy amusement, und intelli gence. Kev. S. II, Harris, Methodist, Amherst, Mass. A Higher Life. Wo must build a higher Intellectual nnd spiritual life. A sound mind nnd body aro necessary be fore we can proceed, and we must have a spirit of love und forget nnger by em bodying the spirit Inculcated by God by persistent faith In God and rejecting all wrongs. Ker. P. G. Senrs, Episco palian, Mcrldcn, Mass. Work lu the Church. There Is a way to relate yourself to your faith by your works. Some people seem to have a terrible fear of working too much, esiHH-lally for their church. Every inemls'r of a church should select a specific thing to do. Each one set him self, for Instance, to securing one new member each year. Kev. W. H. Mc Glautllln, Unlversaltst, Atlanta. Hungers of Maturity. Maturity l's headstrong and dominant. It is quick tempered and brooks no restraint. It has the willfulness of conscious strength. It presents opportunities that no other age presents and so tempta tions from within are abetted by cir cumstances from without, and there la but one result that can come to t lit un guarded. Kev. C. L. Goodell, Metho dist, Pro. l.lvn. One Too Mtuiy; "Keiilly," said Dr. Yoiiiigui.tn, "I have more patients than 1 know what to do wli'i." "You don't tell me," replied Dr. ES 'dor. 'How many have you?" 'One. The trouble Is I cant tell what's the mutter with him." Phlla. delphla Press, TcacliliiK tbm Younw Idea. Pop took him to the roller riuk - Alas ! for poor old pop I Hc'h lying, fuming some, in bed J Pop lias a huttd prop. Houston Post. I i UN IN THE Cofl,, MkH' thnl fu" ,n "vln' ln th When the frost Is In the furrow an' im,.. , .... . . i m il iiiu u.i, nit cooi no rrifqiy, an ine nignui nave nrinuior niara, An' you hear the tinkle of the bells acrost the pastur' bars. ' Thsr's lots of fun In llvln' when the woods are full of haze An' you hear fhe fiddle surgln' whsr the" cabin fires blase I r ' When the gals are candy pullin', an' they've robbed the honey beesf An you're dancln' when you want to, an you're spark In' when you please! O, the whlrrln' of the partridge an' the The treeln 'of the 'jmssum, and the rabbit's foot for luck I I The barkin' of tho squirrels on the oak an' blck'ry trees An' you find 'em when you want to, an' you shoot 'em wen you please! I i That's tho time that gits mo! for the world Is good to see i When the fiddle Is a-slngln' an' my sweetheart smiles on ine? An' If It Is a quadrille I'm not tnkln any chance, But I'll bet you that the prettiest gal Is goln' to have a dance': Atlanta Constitution. ... I 2 A Guardian Wraith L T FT F r?ACK EVERETT, the "third trick" jtJJ dispatcher, with steady nerve nnd - sound digestion, woke that even ing with his mother's voice ringing In his ears. ' . "Be careful, Jack," It said softly, but warning!-. This was the second time he had heard It. Once liefore forty-eight hours before and the same words. Ills mother was miles eastward, away over tho mountain, but the voice spoke to him so plainly that he caught himself forming a surprised reply. To be sure, she was coming to him as fast as the fast schedule of the Pacific Ex press would permit, but that she would be ln his arms to-morrow was n ex planation' of her voice to-day. Had he been dreaming? Xo, the echo of the voice was ln the room, and be sides he' slept the dreamless sleep of a healthy boy whose troubles have not begun. Hallway suKrstltIon that makes much of "warnings" began to oppress him. Blindly anxious to do something, cnything to shake off the uncanny feeling, he hurried down to the tele graph office. The Pacific Express was i i 1 1 i -"1 ,JL tIW?'.i'.SSBS' IS THIS THE WAY YOU WATCH OVEB LIVES f marked up on the blackboard as four Lours late. He could catch it at Tos tou, on tho Montana division, with a word to his mother. He scribbled and toro up, Bcrlhlcd and tore up again, until, consulting his watch, he handed this message to the oiorutor : "Missoula, Mont, June 3. "To Mrs. Fanny Everett On Xo. 1, Toston: I am on duty at midnight and will watch over your safety, mother dear, from the time you leave Helena. Don't worry, sleep sound, and dream of JACK." ) "You've got twenty minutes to get . 'em ln, Jimmy, and now I'll see If I can eat some dinner!" was his com ment, as he strolled off to Draco's restaurant and ordered a meal, still groping for a solution of the mystery. I For years he had wandered, but the ' weekly letters between his mother and himself knew no break. Xow as he thought of them, there sounded an eerie note through the letters to ' him In key with the warnings. He had ! never noticed It before. How many times she hud Insisted that she was watching over bun; insisted that she could and would be near him In time of need. Why. In her last letter he had received l only that morning, the . last one to come before she would be with him she had said: "Jack, dear, I love you so, my boy, that If danger should threaten you, at that moment you will find your old mother at your side to tsand between you aud Its shadow." He had looked on the letters as epis tolary lullabys that crooned of the days when they would be together; when his boyhood would be lived again. She seemed to be singing happily of her child coming to her with bis troubles, looking to her for ready consolation. That, with boyish condescension, was the way ho had Interpreted them. The warning words struck another key. The theme was full of minors that set bis nerves quivering. "Bo careful!" What was ho but careful? How could he answer for the safety of those In his care, for the lives, except by being careful. Where a single oversight would pile up en gines and cars In horrid chaos re sounding with the flying prayers and curses of those his mistake had inur dered. He bad seen a man once who had forgotten, pacing the floor In white' lipped eusiK'Hse, waiting for news of the crash of two traius he had sent racing Into each other. Wasn't the muiiory of that mail's oversight anil tlie agony which followed enough without these words sfioUeu out of the mystery of the night? Mechanically he paid his check, leav ing bis meal untastcd, and walked out Into the quiet street to reason MtU himself. For miles he tramied. He must quiet bis nerves, must get himself lu control before be went on duty. The buttle waa wou at lost and be ii fey II 1 .1 -r po'"r'' 8,1 "round. the" green Is turnln' brown, ... ... .... , i boundln of the buck! reached the office Just before- midnight hot dusty, root weary, but with brain cool and alert. And w hile he walked the little moth er lay In her berth In the sleeper "Oneta" on Xo. 1, the telegram folded In one hand, unable to sleep, and thiuklng bo busily of him. Of Baby Jack, with his cunning ways; of nooiboy Jack, with his bovlsh pranks; of Jack, the youth who left home to seek his fortune, and lert her heart almost breaking. Up Placer Hill, down past the barren sides of Clasoll, and through Prickly rear Canyon, Bill Dalrymple drove the 417. The sleerers swuved and rocked. and the berth curtains swung with the curves they rounded, but It was not until the train slowed down In Helena jurd that her weary eyes closed. Every man on the Koeky Mountain division knew thnt Jack Everett's mother was coming out on Xo. 1, and as Jack was the apple of the eye of every man on the division, from super intendent to section boss, there was a general feeling that No. 1 must take her over the division In style. Though "Black" Swayzey, of the 423, and Dan McLane, of the 470, had an lntlmnte acquaintance with every bolt and bearing of their big machines, that acquaintance was personally renewed. ami prolonged visits paid with torch, wrench, soft hammer and oil can be fore they would allow the engines to be taken out of Helena roundhouse. They sjioke words of wisdom to their firmen, too. Words of railway wisdom that told volumes of what the furnace stuffers might expect if they failed to furnish steam In plenty fr the run. which the engineers suggested would In all probability keep them busy. So It was that everything was ready for a record-breaker, when, as Jack's mother fell asleep lu the "Oneta," the engines backed down on the traiu; SawhlU's silver-plated lamp swung out; and with echoing toots they picked up their load with Jack's orders to run three hours late from Helena to Mis soula for the Montana division had made up nothing of the four hours. "Let's see," said Jack to himself as he received tlx) report of their depart ure at his office where the Kattlesnake and Hell Gate Join their waters, and, tipping back at the open window, blinked at the familiar face of the clock. "Four hours that will give Swayzey a chance to pick up ten min utes on the hill and fifty minutes from Blossburg to Missoula, and still keep on the safe side of that order. He surely cau't do better than that even If I do want to get 'Marmsie' here as quick as I can." Tho situation looked good to him, and he began to give way No. l's time to freight trains with a lavish hand. He believed ln the maxim that freight trains pay passenger crews' wages. But "Black" Swayzey hadn't taken orders from Jack for two years for nothing and,' knowing the young dis patcher's habit of helping those who helped themselves, chuckled as be hook ed the 423 up and opened her out to tear off the miles. "If you keep the old beast hot," he yelled across tho cab to "Shorty" Mc- Cone, his fireman, "we'll have Everett canceling a lot of those orders be Is paslng out to freight trains, and then he'll give us a show," and "Shorty" grinned, for the escaping steam was singing over the roar of the exhaust even then as he steadied himself to round the curve at Blrdseye, and squluted at the cloud of black smoke pourtug out of the big McQueen's stack. Digging along behind In desperate effort to keep the pace, the "hog" coughed frantically, with Dan McLane leaning half way out of the cab win dow keeping watch on a pin that was a bit tender. It made Jack's eyes sparkle with delight when the operator at Butler reported the double-header by without having stopped for water. That meant ten minutes saved. Other duties called his attention. Two freights Just In from tho west end were ready for orders, waiting to pull out of Heron; a stock train was calling for orders at Horse Plains; Trout Creek wanted help for a delayed way Irelglit up White Pine Hill against No. 3; and a heliwr at Arlee must come over the mountain to have Its boiler washed out. By the time he had si lenced the clamor of the night hawks west of Missoula the ojMrator at Bloss burg rcsrtcd No. 1 rolling out -f the tunnel. They bad made up twenty-five min utes coining :ip the hill. A record run sure '.'nougn. It meant that they would crowd the order to run three hours late before Swayzey whistled for tho Garrison yardpost. They must he glv m a chance, aud, telling Blossburg to copy for No. 1, Jack quickly picked up the freights to which he had given away the time, aud sent an order can celing the favors against No. 1. nnd giving that train an order to run three hours late to Elllston and two hours lato from there to Mlssoulr anra station repeated the order back, the train crews signed it and wete re hased, and Swayzey, now freed from McLane's lumbering giant, dropped out of Blossburg so precipitately that Saw hill had to forget bis dignity and catch the first coach he might or get left be hind. Jack tipped back In bis chair again, loosened his vest, and filled his irngs with the cool night breeze of June that blew from the foothills. Then with de liberation stuffed tobacco Into his pipe and aided Its purpose with a match. The moonlight tlpicd the distant snow caps with silver. It shone over the little town which was all isleep but for the chugging activity of chubby, Important switch engines that kicked and pushed and pulled cars here nd there In obedience to waving lamps, spitefully banging those they cast off against their fellows slumbering on the side tracks. The clang of Iron on Iron echoed through the still air ami brought a long-drawn "yap yap yar-r-r" of defiance from a lone coyote on his haunches In the Indian burying ground on the nearest terrace of foothills. The roar of the Hell Gate over its rock strewn channel readied the olliee In a murmur that was music to the young dispatcher's ears, until the sharp chat ter of the sounder broke In to tell him that his charges In the west were again after him to straighten out their tan gle. He bad Just told Xoxon for tho third time that If Cameron's special would not help Itself he could not reach out and pull It along, and begged Its crew to remember that a little time honestly stolen Is a lot of help lu getting over the road, when the pages of his order book shivered with a sudden draught There seemed something strange around him. He could not understand the sensa tion. He was all alone, but there was the compelling feeling of eyes that de mand response. From sheer perverse nes he resisted the lnflunce as long as he could, perhaps for a minute, call lug himself a fool for his nervousness. It was of no use. He looked up from the train sheet Stauding between the door and his desk was a little woman gray garbed, no covering on her gray hair that was drawn smoothly bnck from her face. Per eyes like Jack's own. His mother, his darling mother but how did she get there? By any process of reasoning she could be nowhere ex cept in her berth on Xo. 1, still miles out on the division ; yet here she was. He could not mistake form or feature, or the Indulgent .smile, which had so cfteu tempered her reproof of his boy ish misdeeds. His lips moved In a meaningless at tempt, but be could not utter a sound. She came slowly toward his desk as though groping her way, her eyes fixed on the train sheet She pointed to its margin, nnd said ln mild reproach: "You told me to sleep soundly for you wqaild guard me safely. Is this the way you watch over the lives lu your charge, Jack?" Dumb with fear, his eyes went back to the record of the trains once more, realizing some awful sight awaited him ; something which had brought bis mother to hiin to keep her promise; some explanation of the warnings he had so little understood. Under the extended finger and at the extreme edge of the sheet were the figures showing Maglll's special east had passed Garrison Just after mid night when Jack had given them the three hours' time on Xo. 1. 'ihey had gone on to Lester's siding for the crew to load five cars of ties. They had been bottled up there with no telegraph office when he changed tho order to Xo. 1. The figures on the sheet were so small ho had overlooked them, and knowing nothing of the change of pro gram the traiu was even then hurrying on to make AInslee for the express, which Swayzey, In the belief that he had a clear track, would surely get there first. The horror of it roused the boy. Tho thought of the crash of engines, tho top pling over the coaches down the till, went -through him like an electric shock. "Oa-os-os Xo. 1 by, three hours late." Elllston was reporting Swayzey paring his time order close, tt'be 423 bad struck her gait and would make up fifteen minutes more to AInslee. Railway training asserted itself. How bis warning came, how his mother was at bis elbow was not a question to be dealt with then. Ono of those trains must be stopped. If be might get Avon! That station had no night operator, but the agent slept ln a little room off the telegraph office, aud if he had not cut out bis instrument the office call might wake him. "Av Av Av" rang out sharply as' Jack grasped his only chance. "Av Av Av " the brass sounder seemed to change Its metallic clatter to a human cry for help. "Av " once more; then "I I Av " ticked back, sleepily, and Jack was on his feet with excite ment "Drop your signal and stop Maglll, special east," ho snapped. "O. K. Maglll here; what do you want with him?" rattled back the op erator In a way which spelled Indig nation at broken similiter. "Get hlm on the siding quick nnd take this order," answered Jack, his breath coming thick as he bent a copy .of the order given to No. 1 at Bloss burg, and which meant so many lives. A heartbreaking pause, then It was related, the signatures of Maglll and his engineer were added, and before the Ink was dry ou the order book, Avon reported No. 1 passing line the tall of a comet The sisxlal started east The thread snapped. Mike Schenck, the yardmaster, threw Ice water over Jack half an hour after, doused hlm unsparingly, and revived hlm pale and bedraggled. No one knew hy he collapsed and let trains run themselves for thirty minutes! no one In authority, . at least kuew of the narrow escape of No. 1 ; and Jack's mother could not understand why the dispatcher's office seemed so familiar to ber wheu sue met hlui there aa No. 1 arrived In Missoula, although she never before had seen It And while no one In authority re ceived any rtsrt of the mysterious visitation which had prevented a fear ful catastrophe, there will not be found many railroaders who will deny the re ality of such occurrences; few will as cribe them to the imagination f the person who receives the strange warn ing. But the puzzling question which remnlns, and defies solution, Is this: How did Jack's mother "get away from herself" and traverse the space that separated her from her son? Pennsyl vania Grit DIAMONDS THAT ARE LOST. Manx Valuable fttnnea AVhlcli nininp pear Sievrr lo lie Itecovered. At what figure can we estimate the diamonds that get lost? One can only reply approximately.' Although It seems enormous. It appears that ono can place at 15 per cent the diamonds that no longer belong to anybody. First of all, what do we mean by lost diamonds? When n stone goes astray It generally occurs that, If the owner does not find It again, It has fallen Into other hands. It Is not lost to commerce. It Is not thus, however, when a diamond, badly set, for exam ple, falls to the ground. At least un less It be of size sufficiently Important to attract attention one must see there Is little chance of It being saved. In the city It goes directly Into the gutter nnd thence to the sewer. In the country, on the main rond. It be comes covered up ' by the pebbles nnd earth that are stirred up by vehicles and pedestrians. One can feel sure ln this case the gems are lost to the world and will never return to useful ness. But, one will say, we are still far from the 15 per cent given as the actual loss of diamonds. There are, after all, not such a great number that get lost and are never found again. That Is true, but It is necessary to take Into account numerous other sources of loss, such as-those occurring In fires, shipwreck, etc. , Again, there are per sons who express In their wills the formal desire to be decorated with their Jewels when dead. This Is customary in some countries. All these causes explain easily how nearly a sixth of the diamonds can completely disappear. The Bank of France every year has a big balance coming from bills that are never presented for payment. It Is therefore not at all surprising that the same should happen with precious stones. In this reconlng are not computed the losses arising from recutting. The splintered frasiments and pieces are serviceable still In some way or other. We do not admit bort, black diamonds and 'diamonds used in the Industries, but refer only to gem qualities. One might mention the 25 per cent indicated by the loss on rose cut stones. Of all stones these roses show the greatest loss. Le Dlnmnnt. WOMEN TO THEIR RESCUE. Aaatrallan Politic Itefarmed by the Worlc of the Fair Sex. A Queensland man told me that he doubted If In his part of the country they could have achieved much If It had not been for the women. Every avenue of employment was absolutely In the hands of the intrenched govern ing classes and every man that agitated for election reform was not only dis charged hut blacklisted and boycotted. Ho found It impossible then to obtain 1 employment anywhere; no man dared to hire hlm. George Kyland was blacklisted for five years. They would not let hlm plow nor chop wood nor drive horses. It looked like a hois'less fight against a iwer so great and so arbitrary. Often the men were discouraged, but the women, never; they had more pluck than the men. The savage Injustice had stirred their utmost resentment; one and all they urged their husbands to keep on nnd never to yield. In many cases wives assumed the burden of siqi porting the family. Some turned dress makers and some -ooks. One family that I know lived four years on a weekly income of between $3 and $4 earned with her needle by the wife aud mother. The husbnnd tramped Queenstown looking in vulu for work. With such a spirit among the women the situation could not long continue. A body of voters grew up not of the labor element but painfully convinced that existing conditions were wrong. These united with the few la bor men that had the franchise, tho "U'tter" element was outvoted nnd overturned, the suffrage was reformed, the labor party swept Into possession of the Queensland state government and holds the gavernment today. Every, body's Magazine. Left In the Cloak Hoom. There was a sophomore who was hard up lu the early fall, and pawned all bis good cle.thes. A little before Thanksgiving he got a check from home, and according'?, like a wise sophomore, redeemeu his wardrobe. Wheu he got home for the holidays his mother said she would unpack lils trunk for him. The first thine his ' mother took out of the trunk was an overcoat, and on It was pinned, be saw to his horror, the pawnbroker's ticket that he had forgotten to remove. Hastily grabbing the ticket, he sa d: "Hello ! They must have forgotten to take this off at the Smith dame, when I left It In the cloak roe.ni." A moment later his mother took on": his evening trousers. They also had n ticket on them. "Why, Frank." she said, "surely you didn't leave these In the cloak roo-n, too, did you?" Philadelphia Bulletin, A ire:it 4 uaxitlc-rullfin. "You consider him tho foremost of our arctic explorers?" "I do," answered the publisher. "I know of no one else whoso literary stylo approaches his." Washington Star, If a man follows the family clock ln taklug a train, he will find when be goes to the depot that he la going to-morrow, when he really lutended ta go yesterday.