" i- I.-'aI :''.! LI L ! 1 "Oil, SAY! CAN YOU SEEP . GIFTS TOHABVARD'SHERBAHnJM I i. s 'i. 1 mm v ; The Great American Battleship Squadron Sails for the Pacific. THE HOMESTEAD. Girt nil about with fence of white Tho low-roofed collage stands; There, si retelling' fur, are banks of green, Ahd yon are fallow lands. Skyward nt eve the swift bird wins Along its eieted way ; Tin; re. stars of love look down by night, A S!l!l of 1,'U e by M I V. l'iiclinii:-i-d the wild a.;l scighig wood.-) : The (.'lad brook dances still; And echoes as of yore ring out The music of the hill, nd where we played the violet grows; In; trout leaps in the stream; , AntVyiust ns fair ns long ngo rAi you in my dream. All think in earth, and sky, and breeze, To oldi'i days are true; O playtime maiden, iniiight has changed. Or pastl'il nway, but you ! Yoiith'lComianion. Persuasive Statistics "John," she wild, 'I will bi; a sis ter to you, but " "So it's :i throwdown, oil?" asked the young man wit li the rosebud in his but tonhole. "Yes," she admitted, frowning. "If you want to talk about it that way, I euiiose it is." "All right," he said, "doirt get warm. Walt a hit." Hi; arose to his foot nml consulted a 6llp of paper which he took from his 'HAVE YOU I1EI:. ADVISKl) OK THIS?" pocket. Immediately thereafter In threw his shoulders back, shot his cuffs and made a comprehensive gent tire. "Madam, said lie. are you aware that according to the last government census there was, In the state of New York, an excess of ;.".( k K females? Do vou know that if every single male was married tomorrow there would hi C,nh females lett over.' Were you aware of this?" Sin; tapped her little foot upon tin carpet, but answered I1I111 not. "And you, madam!" ho cried, wig gling ids Index finger at her, "what guarantee have ycu J hat you would not be one of the (;.".,(HiOy" She sniffed the air, but that was all "Madam, no . com union, -are you nware that when a woman has reached the age of 'Jo her chances of matrhuoiiy grow less and less each year until they disappear altogether? Did you know tins?" He inlod his linger at her again. "And you, madam! he cried. "What xrround have you for supioslng that your chaw-es are better than those of the girl neat door or the girl across the street?" "Twenty-five, eh?" she asked. "Yes, 'Jo," lie said, eyeing her Bternly. "Twenty-five, eh?" the sniffed. With an Impatient movement ho re turned to his oratorical manner. "Do you know," said be, "that on no count of the iiupriccdciitcl risij in rents, food and clothing the number of , marriages la fulling off dallyV That V CI Sn! Id s th Am s ifefe every day a woman's chance of matri mony grows distinctly less, to say noth ing of the decrease In her chances on account of the increase In her age? Have you been advised of this?" He pointed his inexorable finger nt her and cried : "And you, madam! What right have you to suppose that you are nix excep tion to the- rule?" She tried to pass it off with n laugh, but nevertheless she batter her eyes In a thoughtful manner. ."Do you regard nn honorable pro posal of marriage as an everyday oc currence?" he declaimed. "Do you know that there are thousands of old maids in this broad lam' today, lonely and in despair, each of whom would give ten years of her life to recall her light refusal of the first and only pro posal she ever received?" He folded his hands behind liini and leaned forward impressively. "And you!" ho solemnly exclaimed. Could you make oath that you will ever receive another proposal of mar riage?" lie straightened himself with an abrupt motion and shot his cuffs again. "Do you know," lie demanded, "that there are more than l,(KK),fKK) old maids in those United States and that the numlier is Increasing every day? Ah, think of them! Think of them with pity !" lie leaned forward again Impressive ly, almost tenderly. "What "girl knows," ho whispered, but that she will be one of these mil lions? Do you?" Was it u tear that glistened in her eye? "Do you know," he continued with n geutle mournful ness, "that the number of old women's homes is increasing In geometrical progression? That every day, every hour, lonely spinsters are obliged to seek tho refuge offered by these fast growing institutions?'' He sat down beside her. "Mary," he whispered, "are you aware that the average adult male's Income Is less than $!) a week that 1 flm getting $10. Don't cry, little girl ! It's all right. I I'll have you." And when mother, wondering at the silence, looked in n few minutes later, he' was measuring her for the ring in a lordly sort of way. Evening Sun. A GAME IN EARNEST. Coiiruucou ArlliiK Which Averteil a l'an to nt Sra. Captain John Tbeaker of tho Earl of Eldou was homeward Ixomd from Pom bay with a load of cotton. A large number of passengers were 011 tmard. About three days out the captain bad good reason to believe that the cotton was smoldering. Any knowledge of such a catastrophe would cause a gen eral panic. It was impossible to put back In the teeth, of a northeast mo.i- soon. so the commander quietly pre pared for the inevitable. The passengers, holed from lack of occupation, were amused and interested when Captain Theaker proposed to play at having a fire on Isinrd. lie said that they would go through all maneuvers Just as if a conflagration were taking place. Tho passengers fell In with tho sug gestion eagerly. The Ixmts were got ready ; provisions were put In, with water, sails and compasses. The scats in the various boats were allotted, nnd the passengers made up bundles of tin; valuables they considered the most prooioux. Thus, quietly, but quickly, the "Joke" was carried out to the full. When nil was reudy the captain calmly told the players that the game was in earnest and that the ship was really on fire, with the flames making toward the powder magazine. The boats were siecdily got off, and In less than an hour the explosion occurred. The loaU were 1,000 miles from land, but tho weather renminbi fair, and In fourteen days every soul was landed In safety. "The SHU Life of the Middle Temple." Some men go olxiut temptation to yield to. looking for SNAKE3 AT $20 A FOOT. IlitC Ones Council ucn I y Come Illicit t Some S unite Sold by flic round. "Snakes," said a dealer in wild ani mals and reptiles, "increase In value j out of nil proportion to their size. So ' while you could buy n seven-foot py thon for ?12, you couldn't begin to buy one of twice that length for twice that price. A fourteen-foot python would, be - ,'i S1.".(i? And a python twenty ii. icet in length would cost .r0. Some sor'.s of smaller snakes are regularly sold by the pound, and wo sometimes buy big snakes in that .vay of sailors that bring them in on ships coming from wiako countries. We weigh tho blg snaku in a bag and pay so much a pound for it. "Iiut big snakes tiro not sold in that way by dealers, nor are they sold by tho foot, though, of course, the length governs the snake's value. Put of two snakes of the same length one might bo worth more money than the other. For snakes vary In their physical char acteristics just as human beings do, and their prices vary accordingly. j "Of two big snakes of the same length and the same thickness one might weigh fifty jiounds more than the other. And then of two big snakes of the same length one might lioj thin and spare of body, while the other was thicker and bulkier, Imd as between these two, other things being etfual, tho bulkier snake would Isj worth tho more, because It would make the more strik ing and Imposing show. "Thus, while the length does gov ern, it is not the only thing to be taken Into account, nnd so big snakes are sold neither by the pound nor by the foot, but nt prices fixed on each indl-. vldual snoke. "Pig snakes nnd little ones nre sold to zoological parks nnd to show people nil over tho country. For the very largest snnkes the demand Is greater thun the supply." Cmiiels Dwplt tu Oretfon That the whole of interior Oregon was once the bed of the Pacific Ocean has been proved beyond question, says Sunset, by the Investigations of Prof. Thomas Condon, Dr. Dillcr and .other noted geologists. That the region was later a tropical country lias been equal ly well established. Numerous discoveries of the bones of those fiiiimals, nnd rocks containing the perfiH't imprint of tin; plants of tho tropics, have been made, and it Is no longer an occasion for surprise when well diggers or irrigation excavators unearth the fossil remains of a eaimn or a broad-faced ox. Within recent years many fossil beds of beautiful palm leaves have been found In eastern Oregon. The Cascade bills, P.I no mountains and Owylices, once Islands surrounded by tropical lakes, were covered with luxurla'it growth, forests ami flowering shrubs, for Knowltoii tells us the mag nolia ai:d cinii Miion and fig trees wcro there. To-day the foil presents a finely ground mixture of basalt and volcanic ash. containing the elements of most fertile soil, and when properly watered producing enormous crops of vegetables, fruits and grains common to tempera to zones. The climate bus been changed, says Prof. Condon, by lis; iipfolding of tho Cascade range, shutting off from the Interior the softening Influence of the Japan current and the drift of ocean fogs nml clouds. lp fu llutr. "That man Jawklns Is the most ener getic playwright 1 ever know." "What Is he up to now?" "lie Is Just finishing tho third act of a lurid melodrama In which a live vol cano will be the star." Cleveland Plain Dealer. A in on if the Human. "What do you think of that scientist who went to Africa to study monkey chatter?" "Foolish waste uf time. You can hoar plenty of that here ut home." Detroit Free res Pi. BequeM of 10,000 lrovllea Ample Snm for If eeilw. Mls Mary Dandrldge Peck of Ster ling has presented to the mlner:i!oglv museum n collection of minerals made by her grandfather. Th" gift contains nbout (Mm sjioclmcna, some of which are of considerable vnluei and all of which will Ik useful In adding to the rcsonrt'S of tho inltifraloglcal museum, snys the Boston Trnnscrlit. Ml Peck's grand father, who MartcM this ollcctlon, was Prof. Willlan Dandrblge Peck of t. class of 17N-, who held from ISO. to 1822 the position of "Mist Massachu setts professor of tint lira! history" In Harvard. Her father. Dr. William D. Peck, was also n graduate of Harvard, reviving the degree of A. It. In is:;:, slid M. D. In is;iii. For this reason Miss Pool; thought It nppniprlate"t.bat the collection should come to Harvard. From Miss Maria Whitney of Cam bridge the university has recently re--elved a gift of !?5,KXi, the. Income of which is (o ls used for the maintenance of tho Whitney, lirtrnry In the museum of soology. ' 'Announcement has aUo Just been mode of the gift In .Tune, 1!)7. of ?.(, (XX) ly the will of Mrs. Sarah E. Pot ter of ltoston, for some years n nienilx'r of the committee to visit the (iray her barium. Th lMvpicst Is to be used in connection with the tiray herbarium, and Is to bo called the Sarah E. Potter endowment fund. As one of the num ber of residuary legatees, the university bus since nvelved from tho executors, Jniuos It. Dunbar and (Jeorgo 15. White, who Is also 11 member of the visiting commit toe of the herbarium, an addi tional gift of aNmt $l:!(i,(X, consisting of cash and securities. Tho total nmount of the gift, there fore. Is nbout $lSO,(.itX), n sum ample to provide for the needs of the herbarhrii In Its present condition. For many years tho herbarium has been In large meflsure dependent on the gifts of friends for the payment of Its current expenses. While this support, ranging from ?.'t,KiO to S'.OtX) annually, has al ways been generously contributed, there hns boon great nwd of a jo.rniniiont fund, yielding a more definite nml as sured Income, which would enable It to develop in a manner appropriate to Its scientific usefulness. PASSING OF A SLANG WORD. .One flie SIkh "Hntilior" I'rovokotl n I.nuiiu, lit ot Now. "Curious how ready wo Americans nre to adopt shing words." said the !mnn who had finished leading a paper ;to a New York Sun writer. "And wo drop them quite ns suddenly after they have penetrated Into remote sections of the country and seemingly become a part of our dally speech. "I was reminded of this while com ing through the train from ISoston this morning. For a number of years I have traveled back und forth nt regular In tervals between New York and Boston and have beeofcie more or less familiar with the eouutry along the route. I "At ono point the train passes close by a large rubber manufacturing plant. Abutting on tho railroad is n long stretch of neatly kept grounds nnd In tho center, in full view of passing trains, Is erected n sign benrlng the single word, 'Hubhor.' , "A few years ago every 1 1 1110 we Iwould pass that sign there would he a mild commotion In tho car. Some would turn on their fellow passengers ex ipanslve grins, ns though they had just accomplished a huge joke. Others would be convulsed with suppressed laughter, and once ns we passed the place a man liohlnd me poked a long hony finger Into tho small of my back and then chuckled gleefully. I "I was thlDking of this ns Ve np preached thnt town this morning, and took pains to note what effect the sign would have. Most of tho passengers "were looking out of tho windows nnd saw the sign. 1 '.'There was no Indication, however, that It received more than a passing glance, and I doubt If any of the pas sengers thought of the vogue this word, In Its slang sense, had several years ago. I "Strange, isn't It? They nil have their day nnd then oblivion. I am waiting patiently ns possible for the same fate to overtake tho 'lemon' Joke." WARMED WITHOUT FERE. Klectrlo Ifeutlnic HuI Are the I.n pt Innovation. Electric heating rugs are the newest Innovation calculated to make the house owner and home maker smile with gladness nnd relief. In tlio Tech nical World Magazine an nrtlclo by F. 0. Perkins describes this new addi tion to domestic comfort and economy. Imagine rugs, carpets and comforters so heated by electricity as to warm the rooms In which they are usitl, and then imagine the effect of such an Inno vation In your own home 011 your own housekeeping. Think of a dust less, odorless, noiseless heating system In your own home, which preserves an even temperature, makes no trouble, requires practically no care and which not only banishes stoves, radiators, reg isters and all such cumbrous, unsight ly things, but hides the very presence of Its own mediums of radiation In the heart of some beautifully di-oorativo fabric. It seems like the perfection of devices for satisfactory heating. "Tin; advantages of this in-w sys tem," says the author, "are many. It can be used wherever lniindcs"cnt lights nre In use. There is no smoke, no combustion, no gaseous by products are thrown off; It creates neither dust nor odor; requires neither fuel, reser voir or special apparatus. It docs not consume oxygen from the nlr and, spread out Hut on the floor, one of the thermopile rugs, for Instance, I'urni'i es a mild, steady nnd Mrmaiicnt source of heat, evenly distributed over a very large surface. The feet of persons oc cupying a room boated in this way will always be warm and their heads cool." Ideal combination! Uefmlned. Mamuui Ami what did you sny .when Mr. Tllewodd gave you a ix'iiny? Tommy I was as polite as I could b and didn't say not bin'. Cleveland Leader. OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS AMAZING riGUIlES ON DIVORCE. """ilTKOXIM.YTF.LY olio million divorces wore AA grunted In tin Fnltod Stolon between 1SS and liioti. and half a million more couples have got ns far as the divorce courts with their marital unhnpplnos. This information Is supplied by tho Census Bureau. These figures should onuso good citizens to think. The marriage Institution Is rapidly losing Us nacredness. The stigma that used to attach to persons breaking their' marriage ImiihIs no longer exists. Many people marry now with feeling that the relation Is only provisional. If It docs not .prove satisfactory, they will break it. Wed lock, which used to be regarded as a solemn thing, is now entered lightly and treated with indifference. If the husband Is a "good provider" and the wife meets no man she likes better, if tho wife continues agreeable and pretty, marriage is persisted In. If not, then the chain Is broken and husband and wife seek new affinities. The rapid growth of this manner of looking Mn mar riage Is a serious matter for the country. Whatever the cause, whether It be decay of religious brllef, God being 110 longer considered a party to tho contract, or some thing else, marriage by many people Is no longer regarded as possessing a sanctity. But If this view should become general, what will become of our civilization, based, as It Is, UK)ii the family? Here Is matter of sufficient Impor tance to engage the best thought of every mnn who wants to see his country preserved from danger. Our whole structure of life rests upon the home, and If the home Is destroyed tho structure falls. What can be done to dis courage divorce and make marriage once more a serious fact of existence? Indianapolis Sun. PANICS. iAXICS In the financial world differ one from yPj another In Incident and In their Immediate cause j but the fundamental, underlying cause Is always the snnie overinvestment. The fact can best bo made clear by sketch ing the circumstances which lnvnrisbly pre cede a paulc. After a period of hard times there Is a graduul reiovery. Business Improves, lalior Is. well employed, and commerce become more active. Deposits accumulate In the banks, and money for mercan tile purposes can be borrowed nt low rates of Interest. For a time business Ir conducted cautiously nnd con servatively. Not many large now enterprises are launched. As prosperity Is established, and as the wealth of tlio community Increases, there is an extension of business, and the success which attends tho movement justifies it. But gradually confidence In tho future lends to rashness. Those who have been conservative risk more than they have been accustomed to venture. This is tho time when largo fortunes sometimes only fortunes "on paper" are made quickly. Now men appear In the markets with emnll capital, but with great boldness. They speculate on a large scale, promote lnagnlfli'cnt schemes, nnd carry them through by means of extensive loans, nnd by the attraction of apparent success draw a multitude of small Investors Into their enterprises. It Is only when this process of extension has gone to the point of exhausting the borrowing power that tho 11 (i a t it Tho bill clerk came out of the Inner cfllce with ft very red face, and, climb ing upon his stool, proceeded to figure on a scratch block, consulting from time to time some papers which ho had brought with him. The cashier waited until he had fin ished nnd placed tho papers In n flic, and then ho asked: "Was ho right In a sort of way, Johnny?" Tho bill clerk scowled nt his Inter rogator with an Intensity which should have forbidden further speech, but the cashier was unabashed. "I wouldn't take It so to heart, John ny," he said. "Anybody might happen to be right once In a while. You are, yourself, though I grant that you would not be so brutal about It. I don't be lieve you would call a man Into your room and give him such an everlasting roasting over a trilling error that In volved only a few paltry hundreds of lollnrs at the most. I agree with you ?int It would have been sufficient to oltit out the error without making coarse remarks about the mental ca pacity of the man who made It." "Who told won that I got a roast ig?" "Nobody," replied the cashier. "It was simply a case of deduction. I was called In this morning myself in refer ence to the matter, and the boss wanted to know what kind of an Idiot asylum ho had endowed, anyway, and who was tlio particular Inmate rcsons!ble for this piece of criminal carelessness. I told him that yon had perpetrated It, hut that you were not really responsible. I might have argued that the term 'criminal carelessness' was misapplied, hut his milliner did not extend a cor dial Invitation to indulge in argument. fcio I Inferred that his language to you lulght have been Intemperate." "If you think I'll take that kind of talk from him, or anybody else, you're mistaken." said tlio bill clerk, grullly. "Ah, then you reproved him?" said the cashier, approvingly. "I'm glad of It. If anyone called mo a blundering chump and an unmitigated Jackass and told mo that I would be kicked from the top of tfn; stairway clear down to tho main floor upon any repetition of my offense, 1 think I should reprove him. But I hope you weren't too se vere with hhn, Johnny. He is really a sensitive man when you get underneath a certain hruKqucncss of manner, and It would bo easy to hurt Ills feelings without actually Intending to do so, Did you tell him to go to the dick' ens?" "No, I dldu't," replliHl tho bill clerk, ullenly. "I'm glad you didn't," said the cashier. "If you had, I think lie would liavo been seriously wounded. You didn't call him a 'fnt slob' and threaten to 'knock his block off If he gave you any of his Hp?' I trust not You know when a man Is Inclined to corpu lence he doesn't take any allustlons to hi aUllctluu lu good part lie may not crisis comes; nnd the borrowing power Is exhausted ns a matter of course when the available capital In the banks has all lceu lent. Then some enterprises one. or more which must have nmre money In order to contlnuo In ojieratlon find themselves unable to borrow ; or It is discovered that the market for some Important com modity l demoralized; or in some oilier way a weak ness Is developed, tho weakness extends from ono point to another, and shortly there Is a panic. Those who study the course of events which led to tin! serious financial troifble In New York last month will dis ngrce as to the Immediate cause. Some will hold thnt It came from oli Heal agitation, some will attribute It to overcapitalization of certain large enterprises, others to 11 lack of loanable funds In the banks, nnd still others to other causes. But In the last analysis It all comes to the same thing overconfldetice In the future nnd invest ment beyond the actual means of tho Investors. Youth's Companies. FATHER fragmentary work of his predecessors, stamps it with his own Inventive originality and gives It to the world In practical working form. It Is upon these principles of selection that Bessemer Is known as the father of the modern steel Industry; Edison, of the electric light; West Ingliouse, of the nlr brake; Marconi, of wireless teleg raphy ; Spraguo, of the trolley ear, and Parsons, of th steam turbine. With equal Impartiality, prosperity has agreed to name Fulton as tho father of modern steamboat navigation. In doing so, there has been no Intentional slighting of the work of enrller Inventors; of William Henry, who In 17hl was at work on the problem, and actually built it steam boat propelled wlfh paddle wheels; of Fitch and liuni soy. who did excellent work in the last years of the eighteenth century, tuid last, and by no means least, of Stevens. Indeed, If thero Is any one inventor In Ameri ca who, on tho strength of his practical achievements, presses Fulton rather closely for the claim to be con sidered the father of steam navigation, It Is Stevens, who In 1S04 ran a steam yawl from the Battery to Ho boken, and three years later ran tho Phoenix to New Brunswick, and In less than a year after the trip of the Clermont to Albany and back, sent the same Phoenix to Philadelphia by sea, thus securing the credit for Inaugu rating deep-sea navlgr.tlnn. However, the consensus of opinion on the part of those who have made careful in vcstlgatioil of tho historical facts accords to Robert Ful ton tho distinction of placing on a regular route, run ning on schedule, the first practical passenger steamship. The Clermont was no more Inventor's model. It was a staunchly-built craft, designed for a special purpose, and at Its first venture it achieved what, considering all tho conditions, must be forever" regarded ns a brilliant suc cess. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. tell you lu so many' words that you hnve grieved him. lie may even smile and try to turn It nslde as a Joke, but he won't take It, Just tho same. I'm glad you restrained yourself, for I am sure yon would have regretted It If you had not He is really a most estimable man." "I'm glad you think so," said the bill clerk. "A little lijnsty, I don't deny," said the cashier, "but estimable, neverthe less. That Is why I shall ho sorry to hear that you told him you Intended to quit working for him. lie may have said a few things In tho heat of the moment, 'but nothing that would Justify you in making a threat like that, I think. You know I'm sure you know he would worry himself sick over the awful possibility of a separa tion. On that account I feel sure you didn't do more than hint obscurely at such a punishment. I know when the office boy was getting his tho other day you expressed your determination to call down the boss la the terms I have mentioned, btit jott are not one of these ohstlnato, set, mulish persons who never change their minds. Do you know, Johnny, that I have a hunch that you took your medicine like u little man and said that you would be moro care ful In future. Am I right?" "You go to thunder!" said the bill clerk. Chicago Dally News. 'MiiJeXIc W'liifrr. Theodore Parker gave the following graphic description of Daniel YY'ebstcr la the famous throe hour sermon preached soon alter woiisters death: lie was a mnn of large mold, a great dy and a great brain. He seemed made to last a hundred years. Since Socrates there has seldom been a head so massively large save the stormy fea tures of Michael Angelo. Since Charle magne 1 think tliere has not been such a grand figure In all Christendom. A large man, decorous In dress, dignified In deHirtment, he walked as If he felt himself king. The coal heavers and jMirtcrs of Loudon looked on him as out of the great fori-s of the glolie. They recognized a native kiiik. 111 llie sen ate of tho I'nited Slates he looked au emperor lu that council. Even the ma jestic Calhoun seemed common com pared with hltn. Clay looked vulgar ami inn liuren nut a iox. 11:1c a mouth ho bad! It was a lion's mouth, yet there was a sweet grandeur In the smile and a woman's softness when he would. YY'hat a brow It was! What eyes like charcoal tires In the lioftom of a deep, dark well! Bis face was rugged with volcanic tires --grout pus slons and great thoughts, "The front of Jove himself; uti ije l!ko Mars, to threaten and command." A man Imagines he Is misunder stood; that he is too deep to fathom. though every one sees clear through hluk OF STEAMBOATING. HE Scientific American has always holdYknt, if some Individual must be chosen from B I among the many who nre associated In the I .1 -....) ........... . ...... ........ I.,.,. ,ltni. ...1... 110 Clil imc ui ,11 Milv ll'(ll mi Clllioii, H in'rr name it Is to liear In tho years to -onio, tho choice should fall upon the man who gath ers together the unrelated and more or loss PASSED LIFE AI A HERMIT. leak to the Woodn "When lie Vn' ltnpplnlpil In Love. One of the strangest characters evu . known In South Dakota bos just died In the squalid llttlo hut near Rattle snake Butte, west of the Missouri riv er, In which ho lived alone and friend less for nearly forty years, says tho New Y'ork Herald. In the early 7s James Jlmson saino to the wild Da kota territory as a trader among tho Sioux tribes of Indians. He was al ways friendly to tr "! red men and inado friends as well as money. It Is said . tliftt he fell in love with ono of t!m beautiful young Sioux girls, but as tho laws of the tribe forbid any Intermar riage with the whites, his love was In vain. So, choosing a locality away from his old scones of activity, Jimsoii' lived alone, depending on n small flock of sheep and several cows for a liv ing. This was forty years ago. Tho old man's hair was as white as snow when ho was found dead In the little hut by a cowboy, and his clothes were In tat ters. . It Is said that he possessed a considerable amount of money, which. It Is believed, bo has burled or se creted somewhere on the rough butto, Among some popers found In a llttk cabinet In the rock were letters daed 1870, which led tho discoverer the man's bixly to believe ho Juut friends -. somewhero In Franklin tjiiinty. Ohio. The land he has livedon for so long Is valuable, as It Is near tho present survey of tho Milwaukee. Railroad's coast extension. lie was probably the oldest continu ous Inhabitant of tho western part of fsoum imivota. S wltcerltiiKl'a rultllo School, The public schools of Switzerland are among the best In the world, and those of Basel are the finest In the re public. Every schoolhouso built In that city In the past ton years has been equipped with baths, and school bath ing Is general, as It now Is In Germany. Tho shower-baths of the Basel schools are so arranged ns to give absolute is-lvacy for every girl. Other features of Swiss schools are free dental, eye and car treatment for all pupils. Re productions of art masterpieces nre used not only as decorations, but to furnish themes for compositions ami for nature study. The only school punishment in Basel is exclusion from tho picture room for a given is-riod. She PonlpoiirU Her Vlatt. When the lady from next door called to complain of Tommy for the persecu tion of her pet cat she found the youth ful offender sitting on tlio front steps. "I want to see your father!" she ex claimed. "You can't see pa now," the hoy ro plied. "1 shall see him Instantly," tho lady Insisted, advancing. "All right," the little fellow agree!, opening the front door and slipping out of arm's length. "Walk right upstairs. You'll find ini lu the bathriKim taklu' tl bath." Horrible. "Have you a smoke nuisance lu your town?" "lu our town? It is usually ou our front gallery! The young mau who Is calling on my daughter la a clga-. rwttt uuoker." Houston Pout ) 5 i