a THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. October 31, 1901. Charles A. Town e. Spleen dlirered by Mr. Bryan at banquet tendered ex-Senator Charles A- To wee on the eve oi bis r moral from Duluth to New York: Buckler try that civilization la measured by' the r&atry of the bosun mind over the forces of tatnre. Ie elaborating this proposition be de clares that tbe mora! element in civilization la , Insignificant aa compared with tbe intellectual element. Tbe reason which be give is tbat tbe tame moral principles bave betn generally ac cepted throughout tbe ages, and hj argues from tbia tbat tbe difference between races, nations and civilization mut be accounted for by differences la mental development. His error, for I believe tbat be rra. Is due to tbe fact tbat be confuses tbe ac ceptance of a mral principle with living up to a moral principle, wbereas nations are to be meas ured, not according to tbe moral principles ad mitted to be true, but according to tbe moral prin ciple wbkb govern tbe lives of tbe people. If you will take tbe worst tbief tbat can be found ia tbe penitentiary and place bim beside the best maa you know, and then question the two, you will lad :bat both admit tbe binding force of tbe Ten Commandments. What Is tbe difference, then, between them? It is this, tbat one puts his moral principle Into every-day practice and is known a an tonett and upright man, while tbe other suspend bis moral principles in moments of temptation and become a criminal. A careful study cf tbe causes tbat bave led to tb decline cf nations and to tbe decay of races will. I think, convince an Impartial student that the rsoral element is net only Important, but para mount in a nation a life. Take, for Instance, tbe fall cf tbe Roman empire It was not due to lack cf Intellect or to lack of tbe physical qualities. It was tbe Roman heart, not tbe Roman head, that went a it ray: and it is as true today as it ever baa U in tbe part tbat there e? 1 be no real or per manent national growth unless that national growth is accompanied by tbe development of na zscnal conscience and national character. Tbe nation is but a collection of individuals and rtSeet the character of tbe people. As the moral element is essential to a nation so it Is to an IndividiaL There is no danger of our becoming Indifferent to physical excellence, nor is It likely tbat we hall place a low estimate upon the de velopment cf tbe mind, but in our rush for wealth an-! material advantage there is danger that we shall Ignore tbe most important part cf man the heart. Plutarch has said tbat men entertain three mtimenut concerning tbe gods: that they fear thera because of their strength, admire them for their wisdom, and love them for their Justice. Men entertain towards their fellows the same sen timents which, according to Plutarch, the ancients entertained towards their deities. Force may ex cite fear and genius may arouse admiration; but we only love the heart tbat loves. Justice the fruit of love, is the, element which gives strength and permanence to organized government. So.Im portant Is the moral element in the individual that no man has ever won a lasting place in the affec- tlons of the people who has not in his life given evidence of a broad and deep affection for his fel lows. It may be truthfully written upon every monument reared by grateful hand3 to the mem ory of a great man: "We loved him because he first loved us." Of the qualities of the heart, moral courage is one of the most essential; it is the shield that protects the other virtues; it is the fortress that guards integrity. The image of the Creator is never seen more clearly stamped upon the brow of man than when God's creature stands erect, pro claiming the conviction of an honest heart, and ready either to live for them or to die for them. There is strength and inspiration in the presence of such alone. It is sometimes difficult to select a subject for an after-dinner speech, but when I received an in vitation to participate in the farewell banquet tendered by the people of Duluth to their distin guished townsman and my friend, the sentiment, "Moral Courage," at once occurred to me, for he has given signal evidence of the possession of that manly quality which makes him welcome defeat rather than surrender that which to him seems right. We admire the physical vigor and the at tractive graces of our guest; we admire th clar ness of his Intellect, the force of his logic and that fund of information which enables him to fortify his arguments by illustrations drawn from history and from nature's book; we listen with lin gering delight to the magic of his voice and are led captive by his persuasive oratory; but far above our admiration for his other qualities we place our admiration for the moral courage which has made him conspicuous among the members of his gen eration. We need this moral courage for the protection and preservation of our government today. We reed it among public officials, that they may prize above pecuniary rewards and above the flattering whisperings of ambition, the honor that comes from faithful service and a clean record. Whether a man i3 serving his fellows as an official in the city, in the county, in the state, or in the nation, he needs moral courage to enable him to with stand the pressure that is brought upon him by the great corporations that are 'Clamoring for favors and are able to richly compensate those who will consent to turn public office to private advantage. Moral courage is needed among our private citizens, tbat they may be as bold to punish un faithful officials as they are ready to commend the faithful. In times of war the individual is ready to give his life, if need be, in the service of his country; the demands of peace are equally impera tive. The nation is entitled to the brain and heart as well as to the body; It claims the best thought and the best conscience of Its citizens. Great issues are at stake; great interests are involved aye even our civilization itself, and through us the civilization of the world. This nation is a world power; it has not acquired Its Influence by recent wars, but for a century its ideas have been permeating the world. Every citizen is a factor in our civilization, and by his conduct raises or lowers the level of that civiliza tion. He cannot expect his neighbor to be more conscientious than himself; he cannot rely upon some one performing the cuty that he ought him self to discharge. He owes it to his country, as well as to his generation and to posterity, to throw the weight of his influence upon the right side of every public question. For the proper dis charge of his duties he will require the highest form of moral courage. , t Some may be disposed to stamp the word "failure" upon the political career of our distin guished guest. I hope that the future may have in store for him a reward that will be worthy of his high merit, but, even if he were to die tonight, he would not have lived in vain. He has set an ex ample that must weigh heavily on the side of civic virtue. He has faced without flinching a fire as hot and hellish as ever came from cannon's mouth and he has won a victory greater and more glor ious than ever crowned the life of one who fawned at the feet of power or bartered away his man hood to secure an office. Because he forgot himself in his devotion to duty he will be remembered by the people when time-servers and self-seekers have disappeared. JJJ New Jersey remunerates her state officers liber ally. The governor is paid $10,000 a year. The sec retary of state receives X 6,000 a year and liberal fees. The attorney general is paid $7,000. Favored visitors of the Russian Naval Commis sion, now superintending the construction of the Russian warships at Cramp's shipyard, Philadel phia, are treated to tea of their own brewing. Cardinal Mezzofanti is said to have been the greatest linguist tbat ever lived. He spoke 114 languages and dialects, fifty of them so perfectly that he was often mistaken for a native" of the lands where they were used. The Grand Trunk railway of Canada is devot ing a good deal of attention to re-stocking the Canadian lakes with fish. Most of the lakes have been ruined as fishing resorts by injudicious sein ing and the company finds its passenger receipts decreased by reason of .sportsmen seeking other resorts. WHEN OTHERS FAIL CONSULT CAT AT CHURCH. Ltotees to Tmm One WOMEN IN MEDICINE. London, la tbe family of Dr. Augustus C Hamlin of Banger i a handsome black rat. cf unusual size. His big eyes Clears as yellow as tb tcpax in hi setter's mineral cabinet. Tb cat 1 2S3tu!!y intelligent. He 1 able to ikim a pas cf "".k as cleanly a th beat milk eparator ever invented. Like bis mUtres, tbe cat is a regular rtendant of tb Episcopal church that is, be goe regularly when th esaid forget to lock him up of a Sun day taornlcg. Tbe cent regation at tb Episcopal church la now perfectly bar. Sesed to tbe sight cf a sleek, topas cyed pinny padding up tbe ail and tato tbe spar witb'n tbe chancel rail. There tbe cat sits aobegy and listen to tbe morning leaeon. On one occas ion be did not exactly catch tbe drift of th leseoa and leaped softly to tb pulpit top. Tti ww Just tbe least bit too seen fsr tbe rector, and with on far-reaching wipe cf hi veted arm be sent tb rat to tb far aid of tb taneraary. were b alighted on four rmibloned feet and tiptoed angrily from tb church. But, aocn forgiving this insult, puss once more went to church. He went Into the gallery and began a c-s'.Mle promenade along tb balus trade. Clear to tb point d:rUy be hind tb minister be went. He remem bered now the unfeeling man bad hu miliated hi catship before an entire audience cf bis admirer. He planned a maattfal revenge. Bat eight feet cf epa.ee belcw tb balustrade were th broad shoulders of tbe pastor. The distance was Jut about right for th leap, and tbe unexpected pomace of 25 pound cf cat upon a man shoulder would naturally surprise and mortify tb victim to an extent Which would square matters. Tb cat crouched, an 3 n interested audinc of worhipTS watched tb animal a b sharpened ttl claw on tbe railing In happy an ticipation of hi Iml urpri party. H got hi balance and secured the nery perch for an ljrbt-foot catapult on tb mini iter's spotless I -sea reatmenta. Then b relented. He bad preriotialy tt "-given tbe man. He would now forget It alL And h earerany Balanced hi way back to tb rear loft, with bis tail straight la tbe air la a spirit cf elf-ledatirn. Dr. KamJln heard of tbe story and said to tbe Janitor, who bad been an Int-r eating witnea: "I'd have given S5 if tb eat bad made tbat Jump." "And Td bare aivea another five, was tb uirt and un,rpct?d answer of tbe tIt deaccn. Lewlaton (Me.) Journal. WORLD-FAMOUS BON M ARCH E. of Them. Practicing In Earns S20.000 a Year. Striking as has been the advance of women in the medical profession in England, it has been even mere so in tbe United States, says the Young Woman. Twenty-five years ago there were 500 lady doctors in practice in the states; today there are 4,500 one in 15,000 of the population. Among these are a tew distinguished homeopathists, hospital physicians and surgeon, pro fessors in medical schools, oculists and electro-therapeutists, the great majority being ordinary doctors. The first lady doctor in the world was an American woman Miss Elizabeth Blackwell, who was enrolled as a phy sician in the medical register of Jan. 1. 1849. One of America's most noted lady doctors. Marie E. Zakrewska, was a native of Berlin, but she had to leave the German capital in consequence of the strong prejudice aroused against her. That was many years ago, and the lady doctor is now tolerated even on the continent. Even the far east has its lady doctors, the best known among them being a Chinese lady, Dr. Hu "lng Eng. first physician to the hous Id of Li Hung Chang. Dr. Eng is a t tian, and comes of a wealthy family. She took her degree in the United States and is now in charge of a Hospital t,Foo enow, as to me earnings o ie woman doctor, they vary, of cou very largely. There are women w count their income in thousands, an one woman' practicing in the west end of London earns $20,000 a year. Miss Annie Romberger Great Emporium the Life-Work of Mme. Bonclcao.lt. As many people are aware, tbe Bon Marche, one of the greatest emporiums of Paris, was the life work of a wom an, the Justly famous Mme, Boucicault, and it was literally the first emporium of the kind ever seen. Mme. Bouci cault was a woman possessed of a great heart as well as of a great brain, and her business owed not a little of its monetary success to the fact. that it was conducted by her on really co operative principles. It is said that each of her shopmen and shopwomen, as well, of course, as all those con cerned with the purely clerical side of the business, was admitted by her to a snare in tne pronts. ssoi content with doing this, she further estab lished in connection with her employes homes of rest, holiday homes, a hos pital and an annuity fuid; and at her death it was found that she had di vided her vast fortune ' among her workers, the sum left in each case be ing carefully graduated according to the time the legatee had been In the service of the Bon Marche. All these advanced methods and ideas were new to Paris, and more than at variance with the lines of thought then popu lar concerning the relations of the em ployer and employed. But Mme. Bou cicault pursued the plan she had map ped out for herself, and found her re ward, not only in the financial success whereby her critics were compelled to own that her peculiar ideas had not brought her failure, but also in the knowledge that she had partly Solved TYPHOID GERMS. of Philadelphia has a practice worth tte pm of heT responsibility to- 16.000 a year, ana sne is one or man warf her dex)enlents who earn as much. n(bit CMtew la ac4. A weird epecticle was wltnesel in Warwickshire recently. Before sun rise a group cf persons from all quar ters gathered around the aae'eat oocad at'Kdghtlow Hill, near Dun ciarch, and deposited wroth silver in tbe boilow of a craa. Tbe money, la parable to tbe Duke of Buccleucb for tbe prtvCec of uttng certain roads. Tbe runs contributed by liable par Hie vary frorr a penny to over 2s. Tb p!ty cf on-payraect I 20s. or forfeiture of a whit bull with red x$ ad ar i i , ' ' t . Old Ian to lie Demolished. One of tbe very few now remaining cf tbe old galleried coaching inns that fine example, the Bull, at Dartford is about to be demolished. It stands In the High street of that Kentish town, on the course of the old Dover road. The once open courtyard Is now roofed In with glass, aad the little bedrooms, which op-sn upon the curiously balustrated gallery, mostly given up to spider and lumber. The Bull at Dartford Is thus an object les son in old social cenditions. The ex terior of the house is in the staid and stolid early eighteenth century style, but tbe sign the great black effigy of a bull is placed In a whimsical situa tion, high up among the chimney pots, The aite of the house itself is historic. for It was immediately opposite, on the long-vanished Dartford Green, that Wat Tyler slew the tax-gatherer; while a more modern Incident Is the Insult offered here to George the Fourth by a Journeyman currier. It was soon after the death of the ill-used Queen Caroline. The king was trav eling along the ros.d and his caTiage was naitea tor a cnange or norses. when the currier thrust his bead in at the window, with the exclamation. "You are a murderer!" The Most Familiar Surnames. - In a recent appendix to the last census report of the British registrar-general, a comparison with the commonest names in Great Britain and Ireland shows the following result: England and Wales: Smith, 253,606; Jones, 242,100; the next In order being Williams, Taylor, Davies and Brown. In Scotland, Smith again leads, Mc Donald, Brown, Thomson, Robertson, Stewart, Campbell following. In Ire land, Smiths take the fifth place. The Murpheys head the poll with 62,600, the next most frequent being. Kelly, 55,000; Sullivan, 43,600; Walsh, 41,700; Smith, 37.000; O'Brien, 33,400; and then, In order, Byrne, Ryan, Connor, O'Neil and Rellly, the last numbering 29.000. They, Are JEUUed by Interbreeding-, Says i- -' a Physician. Now, when there is so much talk of typhoid fever, all thories in regard to the dreaded disease are of interest. Dr. J. O. Malsbury of Indiana has advanced a theory in regard to the reason of the self-limitation of the fever, which theory receives publicity in the Indiana Medical Journal. He believes that the law which governs higher animal life namely, that constant Interbreeding results in Jess vigorous progeny until finally there ceases to be fertility- holds good In the case of lower animal organisms. In typhoid fever it is fair to assume, he thinks, that there is a new production every twenty-four hours, since there is a reasonably reg ular variation of temperature of about one degree during that time. This specific element or spore reproduces within and of itself, and with each successive reproduction the spores be come less vigorous, until finally fertil ity ends, reproduction ceases, and the active phenomenon disease In this particular case is at an end. If a pa tient be infected with vigorous spores the attack will be malignant, severe and abrupt,, while the spores of Infec tion be such as would be found after several successive reproductions tb attack would be mild. Oases that In crease in malignancy may have been infected with mixed spores, the cross resulting in increased vigor. Repeated Interbreeding would of course end in failure to reproduce, but owing to the severity and prolongation of the attack the patientfs vitality may end first. SEARLES & SEARLES Main Office Lincoln, Neb. SPECIALISTS IN Jfervoua, Chronlo and , PriTate Diseases. WEAK MEN SB: All priyate diseases and dis orders of men. Treatment by mail ; consultation free, hvpbilis cared for life. All forms o' female weak ness and Diseases ot Women. Wltb. Medicine. JSaables ns to guarantee to cure all cases cnrabl of the nose, throat, chest, stomach, liver, blood, skin and kidney diseases. Lost Manhood, Night Emissions. HTdrocele. Varicocele, Gonorrhea. Gieet, Piles. Fistula and Rectai Clcers, Diabetes and Bneht s Disease, SlOO.OO for a case of CATAHRH, RHEUMATISM, DYSPEPSIA or SVPH1JL.I8 we cannot care, if curable. Electricity wll lulul U IX Uluul meinoa wuuout inm or Catting. Consultation FREE. Treatment by mail Call, or address with stamp 1 Mala Office Drs. Searles & Searles I rv LINCOLN NEBRASKA STRANGE DISEASES. Humanity Has a Variety of Things with Eerie Names. - "I have been looking over one of the blanks for the regular monthly mortal ity report of the board of health," said a citizen who admits that he likes to pry and prowl, says the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "and I was amazed at the weird diseases which I found enumerated. I had no idea that hu manity had such a variety of things with eerie names to select from in the matter of shuffling off. Science has certainly made a great advance in that particular. , A few years ago appendi citis was about the only fancy disease on the market, and that was beyond the reach of people of limited means. It was confined entirely to the aris tocracy. Here are a few samples of maladies from the last board of health catalogue: Haematemesis, apthous, phlegmasia, doleno, cachexia, lympha denoma, colica-pictonum, spina-bifida and mollities-ossium. I'd like to see the man who would dare to assert, after reading that little list, that medi cine has been at a standstill during tbe past decade. Altogether there are 302 different ways of getting out of the world set down on the blank, and the chap who couldn't find something to suit him in the lot would certainly be ultra-fastidious. The document looks at first glance like the classified adver tisement of a big bargain sale. It is a magnificent monument of pathologic perseverance." UMBRELLAS FOR SAVAGES. Chiefs Japanese Brides. The Japanese bride, dressed in a long white silk kimono and white veil, sits upon the floor facing her future hus band. Two tables stand near, and upon one are two cups, a bottle of saki and a kettle with two spouts. Upon the other side a miniature plum tree. typifying the beauty of the bride; a miniature fir tree, which signifies th strength of the bridegroom, and a stork standing upon a tortoise, representing long life and happiness. The two- spouted kettle is put to the mouth of Slea with Green Hair. Eight mn with green hair have been J the bride and bridegroom alternately. discovered by a Eetlln professor among signifying that they are to Share eacn S0O laborers who constantly handla I other's Joys and sorrows. The brid sopper. The phenomenon is one thai I keeps her veil and It is used as 6 yl ft t? ?:ytrv -cropace., j , shroua wnen.snjies, ... y DanperoYis avnd Harmless Mosqnltoee. Prof. C. W. Stiles, of the agricultural department, says that only the mos quito of the genus Anopheles carries the malaria germs. This species, the professor continues, can readily be dis tinguished from the common mosquito by its voioe. The dangerous mosquito gives forth a deep, strong buzz, quite different from the gentler hum of the harmless mosquito. Grammar of English Dialects. Professor Joseph Wright is collect ing phonographic specimens of Eng lish dialects, partly to enable him to check the material or a comprenen siva- comparative grammar of all the English dialects in the United King dom and partly to band down to pos terity a faithful record of tbe dialects as spoken at tbe end of the nineteenth century. . Destitute Because Miserly. Patrick McCabe, an old man, was taken to a New York hospital in what appeared to be a destitute condition. His wretched rags were exchanged for comfortable clothing and then the as tonished attendants found that he had a chest protector made of $50 bills, the total amount sewed inside of his old flannel shirt being $950. Xxmdon Is Supplying Ashantee with Sonshades. Nearly twenty Englishmen are now at work on seven umbrellas for an Ashantee chief and his faithful staff. There is nothing under the sun a chief can wear, not even excepting a cast off silk hat or a red -!ned cavalry coat, so calculated to strike awe into the minds of -refractory, natives and so imbue them with a spirit of obedience as a "gingham." Traders, when they want to obtain free access to the coun try of one of the hostile tribes, make presents of worn-out clothing to the natives, or even a "gamp- to a par ticularly obstinate and pugnacious chief. A London syndicate of Gold Coast traders has given the order and is pay ing for the umbrellas in question, which will be given to bribe the vain dusky warriors, says the London Ex press. James Smith & Sons oi uxiora street are making them at 35 for the large one and 20 each for the others. When finished the umbrellas will -be gorgeous beyond the dream of the most imaginative negro. For the chief present will be nearly fifteen feet across, quite a decent sized tent. In fact, on state occasions, it will be so used. The handle will then be stuck in the ground and six slaves will act as the tent pegs. The ma terial from which it is being made is silk, and the colors are to be "red, white and blue!" What will some of our political stump orators say to this? Round the edge will be a deep rich fringe and on the, top an elaborately chased cap surmounted by a British lion, rampant. For the staff the umbrellas will be somewhat smaller and less majestic' What rejocings there will be in the land when the carriers arrive with those parasol-tent-like umbrellas; and how pleased will the city men be with the return for their good-natured and thoughtful action! President of HIstorteaA Soetety. Professor Samuel Hart of the Berk eley - Divinity School, Middletown, Conn., has been elected president of tbe Connecticut Historical society, suc ceeding tie late Dj;, jPbajlee J. HoedJj. Saloonkeeper Chaees Files, Big John Grose, who is one of the characters of Gibbsboro, N. J., is cursed with extreme obesity, says the Philadelphia Record. He ac& as his own barkeeper, and as a result of this confinement increased in weight to an alarming extent. John's wife also viewed this additional adipose with alarm, and finally suggested a scheme for keeping down the flesh that works to perfection. Whenever there is a lull in business Jonn seizes a paddle about a foot long and watches for an active looking fly to come his way. The game is to start the fly on the wing and then chase it around the room un til such time as he has an opportunity to kill it. The pursuit involving the leaping of tables, chairs, stoves and other obstructions, and if the fly is un usually wary and active John gener ally succeeds in losing a pound or two of flesh before the finish. At first he could only kill one fly a day. but now he considers it a poor day that does not add a half a dozen notches to his paddle. y A Professional Visit. BY FRANK H. SWEET. (Copyright, 1901, by Daily Story. Pub. Co.) It was bitterly cold, and the tvn figures threading their way down the mountain side bent to avoid the slant ing particles of ice that stung their faces. Yet only the day before the sun had shone and May flowers had opened their petals to a soft breeze. "Hurry! hurry! Doctor! for mercy's sake, hurry!" Implored one of the fig ures, shouting in order to be heard above the wind, and the other figure, strong and athletic though it was, threw Itself forward still more fiercely In vain endeavor to overtake the old man, who was plunging on ahead. "Hurry! hur ry! hurry!" came back to him as part of the wind. "It's ten miles yet, an she may be dyin'. For . mercy's sake, hurry!" Only a few hours before, just as the storm was bursting, the old man had appeared at the door of a small iso lated hotel in the mountains and de manded a doctor, and when assured there was not one within twenty miles he had thrown up his hands with a despairing, "An" she may be dyin'! She may be dyin'!" " Then suddenly straightening himself, he had asked harshly to be shown the road to the nearest doctor. At that moment the young man had appeared. . "I am not a doctor," he had said, "but I studied medicine two years before deciding upon the ministry. I have only just arrived, so I know nothing about the location of doctors here. As you are in a hurry, I may be better than none, and am at your service." Hardly a word had been spoken since then, except the , Intermittent "Hurry! hurry!" Down slopes they had plunged, dodging trees and bowlders, slipping and stumbling, and up slopes they, had climbed and scrambled, clinging by sheer force of fingers where they would often have fallen back, their one thought to cover distance as rapidly as possible. 'Mile after mile fell away behind them and still they bent their faces to the slanting particles of Ice, the young man unable to see where he was going, but. following his compan ion, who was apparently oblivious of fatigue or pain. But suddenly as they hurried on the old man's foot caught In some projec tion. and he .was thrown violently for ward. Almost instantly, however, he was upon his feet again and plunging on. But only for a few steps; then he tottered and fell. "Hurrv! hurry!" he called. "I've broke my ankle, and can't keep up. Foller the ridge till ye come to a gul ley with pine trees on one side. Keep through it, and then turn to the right. My cabin's in the oak scrub beyond." "But you," protested the young man anxiously. "I cannot, leave you like this. Let me attend to your ankle first," "No, no, no!" screamed the old man harshly. . "Go on, I tell ye. There's no time for me. I'm all right an' know every foot o' these mountains. If my ankle is broke, I can hobble along, an' will get there 'most as soon as you. Go on. I tell ye! Hurry! hurry! For mer cy's sake, hurry! She may be dyin'!" The young man sprang-, away obe diently. Along the ridge and down the gulley he hurried dodging the trees and rocks when he could see them, and bruising himself against themwhen he could not, the storm still beating in his face, but the bitter cold unnoticed In his haste. At the end of the gully he beard the rush and roar of turbulent waters, and presently came to the bank of a stream, thirty or forty feet wide, whose current was broken into white ridges by its force against the rough ness of the river bed. The old man had not spoken of this. Doubtless he knew of a fording place, and had ex pected himself to lead the way across. There was no time to look for a ford now, and without hesitation the young man flung" himself into the Icy water. He was a strong swimmer, but when even more slowly and painfully. It required several hours to hobble to tbe scrub, and several more to reach the cabin. When he pushed open the door with an improvised crutch, he saw a girl lying on a couch, 'her face pale and frightened, but her eyes clear and bright. For the first time tears began to fall from the old man's eyes, for the brightness of the girl's face told him that-she was saved. Upon the floor lay the young man breathing heavily. "He fell there after he saved me," the girl said, hurriedly, "but first he took some of his own medicine. He said he would try to get to the fire. could only lie here and wait and watch. It's been awful, for maybe Henry is dying. You must hurry for a doctor, uncle." "Yes, yes; I'll hUrry for one right off," said the old man thankfully; "he'sf earned that. But first I'll git him on the bed an give him something hot to drink. I reckon mebbe he's got chilled and used up." But as he bent over him, the young "Hurry! Hurry!" he called, he drew himself laboriously up the opposite bank he was breathing heav ily. Another ten feet of the whirling Icy current he felt would have been more than he could have overcome. For a moment he lay panting and trembling; then rose stiffly to his feet. In his wet garments he" would soon freeze unless he kept moving. Far up the slope he could see the scrub oaks, and among them was doubtless the cabin. It was still miles away, and wouldfrequire hard climbing to reach it. But the very exertion of such a climb would be the best means of keeping him from freezing. Up, up he climbed and crawled, all the time more slowly and painfully, his gar ments soon freezing stiff as boards and his fingers becoming red and blood stained. But at hut he reached the scrub, and soon after saw the cabin In which was the life he was to save. , It was late the next day when th old jaa JsWQftJft . uptko elop "He fell there after he saw me." man opened his eyes; at first blankly, then with growing Intelligence in them. "It's more exhaustion than anything else," he whispered, "that and the cold. I'll be all right in a day or two. Don't go for a doctor; you're not able. You might hand me my box of medicine. It fell on the floor. And and " The old man bent lower. "Is is El-sie , doing well? You might give her another spoonful from the glass." . t The old man nodded, a surprised look coming to his face. But the young man had fallen back uncon scious. ' v Three days later the two were out side the cabin together. The old man was sitting on a bench, his ankle bandaged. "Your niece is all right now," th3 young ma was saying. "If she has another attack, give her the medicine as I have directed. And you must be very careful of your ankle for a week or two though for that matter I shall be back agaln-HBoon. I you see I used to know your niece. We attended schools in the same town. Then she disappeared, and I could not obtain her address." "Yes," said the oid man, "an' you've found her here?" "I've foun4 her here," simply, "and arid she says I may call again. But good-by." The old man reached into his pocket. "L wish I could give you something like what you've done for me's worth, Doctor," he said, wistfully, "but I can't, Elsie's paw was rich, but he died, an Elsie came to live with me. I git my llvin huntin. This is all the money I've got, but. you must take it," and he held out a silver dollar. The young man glanced at it smil ingly, with refusal on his lip3. But something in the old man's eyes made him change his mind. He took the dollar and slipped it into hi3 pocket "Thank you," he said. "Now I must be going." When he came to the crossing to which the old man had directed him, a tree fallen across the river, he paused and took some letters from his pocket. One of them he opened and read thoughtfully. "Dear Jack: Allow me to congratu late you In advance upon your success in the suit All that was needed was the evidence which you write you have secured. The money is unques tionably rours, and even the other side tscitly admits this, while counting lor success upon quibble of the law. But you must be careful to have your evi dence In court on the 20th, or the case will go by default. Five thousand dollars is not much, but it may be of great use to a young fellow like you, who is Just starting out in life. Youra as 'ever, . . The young man tore the letter Into strips and dropped them Into the swirling current of river. "It Is now the twenty-second," he said contentedly, "and the case has al ready gone by default But what of it? I have found Elsie." ir 1 Briquettes from VfaMe. One problem which municipal au thorities of all countries have been seeking to solve is how to best dispose of the city's garbage. A process has been discovered In France, says Con sul Warner, by which garbage is con verted into briquettes. It consists of mincing the refuse straw, paper and the like and adding tar and naphtha lene. The whole mass is then mixed la a kneading apparatus, dried and pressed into briquettes. The director, of the Paris municipal laboratory saysf that these briquettes have" a slight odor of gas, burn brightly and engen der heat slowly. With a more highly perfected method of manufacture they will engender less ash, and the beat producing Qualities will be about the ai&e as those ot common co&L