r 1 THE SIOQ COl'.NTT JOURNAL, i L 4. SIMMUlta, Pva. HABEISOX, SEBBASKA. Tbe Boston Traveler announce that "castor oil is suing down." Well, of all sutuiiier t-tra tr bats the band! Under the big display advertisement of a rival an economical inert bant once iwdN the publication of these words: "Me, too. Jame Jones." Judicious liberality Is the bent who amy in trnde..and honest wares, honest ly advertised and honestly Hold, br.ng: the dealer popular confidence, linancia.1 competence and personal content. Four girte at the Wisconsin Cnivers lty succeeded in getting in debt ko deeply that their chattels were at tached by creditors. And yet some people contend that coeducation is a failure, and does not tend to fit wo men for business. One of the railroads in Pennsylvania has not waited for the passage of a bicycle baggage law in that State, but announces that it will carry bicycles and baby carriages free. This goes ahead of the legal requirements and provides an outing for the whole fam ily. ' Fanners complain that it is bard to bire labor in the cities as It was before the electric railways began to reach out into rural places. Inventive electricians will have to help out the tillers ot the oil, for it Is evident that the "unem ployed" will not count for much when there is a rush of work in the Held. A boy in Xew York found $4,346 in bank notes on the street He gave the money to a policeman, who turned it over to his Captain, and thus It reach ed the owner within a few hours. This la a wholesome incident that speaks volumes for the boy and the policeman. If the gratitude of the finder is of the customary affluent character the boy by this time doubtless has received 10 cents or perhaps a dollar and tbe policeman is rejoicing in an assurance of appreciation of his rectitude. What a crank with a determined pur pose can do ia well illustrated in the case of Mr. Hlnes, a North Dakota farmer. lie studied the wheat trans portation question. He found that a railway capitalized at a price of fi&.OOO a mile could carry wheat at a profit when charging 11 cents a bushel for it. He resolved then that he would per suade his brother farmers to build their own railroad for transporting wheat from Grafton to Dulutb. The work on the road Is done on the co-operative plan, the fanners themselves turning out with their teams and performing the hauling, grading and timber cutting At first Mr. Hlnes was laughed at as a crank, but already forty miles of I be road are done, as an answer to tbe gibes of unbelievers. The farmers take stock in the new road as part pay for their work, showing that they have faith in their own enterprise. The road when finished will be 281 miles long. It will enjoy the distinction of being the only farmers' road in this country. Joseph Jefferson was recently quoted as saying that Frank Mayo, who died suddenly, was America's representative actor. Middle aged men of to-day re member his "Davy Crocket" the most thrilling dramatic event of their boyhood. The dramatic critics never liked the character, but the people did, and it ran for many years. "Davy Crockett" wore a buckskin suit, lived In the backwoods, and was regarded by people as having a heap of plain com mon sense. His golden rule: "Be sure yon' re right, then go ahead," ran through the play Just as "damn it" runs through many more modern plays. Davy was a very strong man, and once, while protecting the heroine, was chased by wolves. They sought refuge in an old cabin, but upon entering found that tbe bar used to bold tbe door abut was gone. Rolling up his sleeve, Davy put his big right arm In place of the bar, and set the gallery wild. But Mayo was capable of heavier acting, and bad played in Bhakapearean roles, "Don Caesar" and "D'Artagnan" and plays which are still on the boards. The bit of Mayo's life was made In "Puddln' bead Wilson." To moat white people wbo remember tfee thrill of borror with which the newa of tbe Custer umstticrj was re ceived, there is the provocation of a erreas shock in the fact that six thou sand flioux were recently on tbe Little B'g Horn, holding war dances In cele bration of tbe part which they bore ia that bloody affair. It Is easy for wblto people to think of Indians as "Bod devils," and of member of tbe Sloox tribe as among the worst of tbe lot. Tot whoa that powerful tribe was first rial tod by whit men, nJ ladeed as lato as a century and a quar ter ago, tbe Sloox were frleadly and hospitable. Jonathan Carver speat tao winter among them. Dear tbe head waters of the Minnesota, la 1767, study ha( tkair langoage and their manner. Bo foond them generous and kladly disposed. Daring 'bis canoe voyage of awn than Ave t boa sand miles through tbo coaatrj of the Northwestern In dia tadta. ha waa aover Bred at from Mr subjected to any nnfrload ty attack. A geMimtlaa later, Amer kata erptortrf procoodlag up tbo Mia Hasf;yl were la esastaat danger of (Mr Bros, by raaooa of attacks from feoacSe ladtaaa. What had pradaood Cut change? Nat laaato rlalaasaoas la r taart of tao Iadfca, bat tbo bad C at tbe wWlsa, waa the eaaoe ftD txT warfare wtjed ky U tHxl TiyteB eft Ce fSftiM aaal :n the mountains ot the .orta . hich culminated in ifciHi of slauffh- I . 1:1.. .1 t.. Mil li'j ! m-n jer.shed ia the Uri beds. ni Custer and bin gallant band were done to death no the banks of the Little 15i Horn "Women seem to have a rooted dis like to Insuring their livws," recently declared one of a new firm of women i "insurance brokers" to a Philadelphia j Times reporter. "If it is a warned ; woman, she will say: 'Why should I pay money for another woman to en j Joy after I am gone? It is strange that j married women always take it for ; granted that their husbands will marry ' again If they ever become widowers. : The single woman has plenty of rea sons for refusing to insure, and most ; of them valid. She says that she ean I not afford to, for one thing; then she will ask why she should insure her life and pay out money annually, when she has no children to enjoy the money she may leave. She w ill say that there is absolutely no Inducement for her to go into such a speculation. Even when we point out the advantage of an endow ment policy, which will give her the money at the end of twenty or twenty five years, she cannot see it. She fty-ls that she would rather have f 10 in her pjcket to-day tlmn wait twenty-five years for $Kl,iMl. I suppose there must lie about two million of dollars invested by the rich women in this city in Insur ance policies. Your rich woman knows the value of insurance, anil she does not hesitate to take any means to add to her wealth, even if she must die to do if Martin Albert, a band-leader and cornet player of Xew Brunswick, N. J.. caused the arrest of John Barry, wuose room adjoins bis in an apartment bouse, for snoring. The reason given by the complainant for tbe apprehen sion of the accused was that Barry'.' style of snoring was a shock to bis mus ical instincts. "The snore is away up in G," the eornetist explained o the Judge. "He dimlnuendoes, strikes a canttbilo movement, takes a cresivmlo neatly and then catches his breath on, tbe retard as if he had a small circular saw In his larynx. When he gets his second wind he begins well down on the bass clef, and then bursts with a fine Wagnerian finale that cracks 'lie wall paper In my room." In rebuttal Barry disavowed any knowledge of having snored, and furthermore de clared that he did not propose to stay up nights to see whether he did or not. When the Judge asked him what he had to say In answer to the complain ant's statement that he had beard hirn snore, Barry answered that one could n't always believe what he hears. Tbe Judge discharged Barry. Evidently the court wag couvinced that the com plainant had misstated his reasons for arresting Barry. It was quite appar ent that the other occupants of the apartment bouse had mistaken the snoring for Albert's comet practice, and had annoyed the musician either with compliments or notices to quit. Anyway, the court reasoned that even If Barry's performance was as bad as the bandleader reported it the offense was Justified by the law of retaliation, and to be Impartial both the suorer and the cornet player would have to go to Jail. As to requiring snorers to take Instruction in order that their nocturnal exercises shall not offend the trained ear of a musician who may happen to sleep In the same block, that would be a flagrant subversion of the constitutional privilege of every citizen to enjoy life, liberty and audible res piration. Disease Detected by X-Kays. , In the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Prof. Norton ha been able, with the aid of X-rays, to make a diag nosis in case of tubereuioais of the lungs, pneumonia, enlarged heart and enlarged spleen. Tbe lungs, when sound, are very transparent to the rays, but become more or less opaque when diseased. The heart Is slightly more opaque than tbe lungs, aud Its outline can be easily seen. The game Is true of tbe spleen, which is more transpar ent than Its surroundings, and of the liver, which Is more opaque. The skull transmits tbe rays and reveals, by va riations In opacity, the location of Its thicker and thinner parts, but of the texture of the brain uothing can lie made out. An Indication of the ease with which opaque foreign substances lodged In tbe body can be detected Is given by the statement that buckles on tbe clothes are easily seen through any part of the body ecepttbe lower por tion of tbe abdomen. Young persons are more transparent to the rays than their elders, but tbe different parts of their bodies show less contrast, even the bones being transparent In s Ik.v i years old. wedfab Proverbs. Mrs. Baker, In Ploturea of Kwedisli Life, saya that tbe Kwedlsb language Is rich In proverbs. Many of these are exactly tbo same as are found In En glish. "Tbe burnt child dreads the Are" and "Better late that never" are In stances. Others, while corresponding to proverbs In English, have a turn pe culiar to themselves. Tbe following are a few examples: "When tbe cat Is awsy tbe rata dance on tbe table;" "a new broom sweeps well, bat an old one Is best for tbe corners "one bird In the band la better than tea on the roof;" Mwboa the stomach Is satisfied the food It bttter;" "to read and not to know 1 to plough and not to sow;" "that which la aatoa from tbo pot never conies to tbe pUtter." - ' flaaawaye. . A device for freeing a rnnawsy horse from the vehicle has been Invented by a New England man. By moving a lever the shafts are released from tic toUcm, a ad tbe vehicle can be guided fey tse aasM lever aatll It stops. 1 17 1! i i Ftw a Meteoric Stone Fall- Mr. J. F. Black, a farmer, living about nine miles from Ottawa. Kan., jiw a mall meteorite fall on his land late la the afternoon of April i last, and going to the spot where It fell, picked It up, It weighs thirty -one ounces and con tains a little Iron, but consists in the main of atony material. New Zealand's Gem. Agate-hunters from Germany are now exploring New Zealand w ith very prom ising results. Blue and while lopax and splendid specimens of amethyst have tteen discovered by them, as well as large pieces of quartz so tilled with slender, rutile crystals as to resemble masses of matted hair. Java' Man-Apt-. Prof. Marsh, of i'ale, has recently an nouucd hU opinion that the remarka ble remain of a ukull. teeth and other losxil Imiucs found by Dr. I tube's in Java belonged to uu aiiini.il tii-tt " not hiiMan but lepreweu e-j ,i form intermedia telH't ween man and the high er apes." This opinion confirms the be lief of the discovert r of the 1kik , w.'io called the aimial pllhej:iiitliro)os, or "ape-man." The boues were f'und In ancient volcanic !eposiin. and belong. Prof. Marh thluk-i, to the aj known as the Pliocene. New Kind of Kltea. Meteorologists are now trying to study the atmosphere high above the ground with the aid of self-recording barometers and thermometers, etc., sent up iu kites. This has resulted In a great Improvement In tbe forms of kites, which are now constructed on scientific principles. At tbe headquar ters of the Weather Bureau Iu Wash ington box-shaped kites, with oien ends aud sides partly covered with silk, are used. Instead of twine or cord, flue piano wire is employed to hold the kite. At the Blue Hill Observatory, near Bos ton, box-Hhaied kites have leen sent up to an elevation of almost a mile above sea -lev el. A I'hoaphoreacent 1'artr. Monsieur Henry, of the Paris Acad emy of Sciences, has Invented a phos phorescent starch with which surpris ing effects can lie produced. I'sed as a face-powder, it makes the countenance glow In a dark room with mysterious radiance. Kecently a "5-o'dock tea" wag given in Paris after dark, no light being employed except that supplied by phosphorescent starch sprinkled over everything In the room. The carpet, the ceiling, the pictures on tbe walls, tbe furniture, the teacups, the Sowers, the faces, shoulders and dresses of the la diet all glowed and gleamed, making a spectacle that waa at once startling and beautiful. Oldest Man in the World. According to statistics collected in Germany the oldest man known to be living anywhere ou the earth is Bruno Cotrlm, a negro born In Africa, but now living in Hio Janeiro. Upon the same authority is based the seemingly Incred ible statement that there are per sons living in Bulgaria, each of whom has reached, or passed, the age 4 NX) years, maklug one cenlenarlau to every 1,000 inhabitants of that country: Ger many, with a population of r2.0O0,(((Kl, claims only 78 centenarians, ami France, with a poulatlon of 40,00o,ui)0, 213 centenarians, while Ireland, whose population numbers only 4,0OH,SSi, has 578 centenarians. Destroying Friction. After calling atteutlou to the fact that man waa content with tbe use of oil to keep machinery In running order until he began to ride the bicycle, when he demanded some better labor-saver ami Invented ball-bearing, the Scientific American proceeds to Illustrate aud de scribe some recent applications of such bearings. They are employed for wag on and carriage wheels, for tbe carrier wheels of cable roads, and for the shafts of swift-running machinery. They practically dispense with the use of tbe oil can and greatly reduce the amount of friction to be overcome, thus adding to tbe effective power of all ma chines .In which they are used. The singular fact Is noted that Prof. Boys, of London, showed experimentally that ball-bearings, when properly construct ed, are practh-ally proof aginst wear. He demonstrated this fact by weighing the balls of a bicyrie-beating when they were new, and again after they had been subjected to long service. They showed no loss of weight. American Boapatone. In the Ragged Mountains, In A I be marie County, Virginia, tbe scene of one of Poe's weird tales, exists a great deposit of soaps toue which Is said to be tbe finest In tbe world. It was dis covered only about twelve years ago, but now s small colony exists at the spot and three quarries have been open ed. Tbe stone, which Is very hard and fine-grained. Is cut out In blocks aver aging nine tons In weight, and after ward Is sawed Into slabs. It Is em ployed, among other things, for tanks In (iieiuUal Ishoratories, tubs snd sinks In laundries, linings for fireplaces, grid dles, which need bo greasing when made of soaps tone, tables and fittings In hospitals and dissecting-rooms. Acid ia said to have no effect upon tbe stone. Dose Woanae) Bar Her Keep? T bouse ads of womea work la tbe mlnoa of fMelnm. Caaiaad and Cora- walk la the flrst-aamed eevatry tbey formerly worked from twelve to iceii Lours a day, with no Sunday rest. The linen thread splnuers o." New Jer sey, according to the re.rt of the l.bor Commissioner, are So one branch of the Industry compelled to and on a stone AW In water the year rtMiud. uiont of the time barefoot, with a spray of water from a revolving cyl inder flying constantly against the breast; and the coldest night In in ter, as well as the warmest In sum mer, these poor creatures must go to their homes with iter dripping from their underclothing along their path, lecause there could uot be space or a few moments allowed them wherein to change their clothing." ft women are "exempted" from labor attended by hardship! Despite these washerwomen, mlneis and linen thread spinners, we are told "it Is woman's privilege generally to !e exempted from the care of earning her livelihood snd that of her off spring." It would seem to be time that this Iitel Usn woman should be scorned by fair minded men. Krom all antiqui ty the majority of women have been faithful workers, rendering a full equivalent In labor for their scanty sliare of the world's goods. The origin of every Industry bears testimony to this. Iu our own era. while wotnen were still homekeepers. did they not earn their livelihood '! What was the weaving, the sewing, the cooking, the doctoring, the nursing, the child care, "the work that was never done." if It was not earning a subsistence? Kven In these days, w hen woman goes forth and receives the reward of her labor as publicly as man, she Is no more worthy of her hire. Her aucesiress sweet and saintly soul! did not tlream of recompense. But was it uot her due, and shall we refuse to credit It because man was then a self-sutflcienf ignoramus who deemed himself the only one fit to acquire property ' -Popular Science Monthly. Will Not Hulnnlt to Dictation. The subject of renewing the privi leges of the Bank of Prance will short ly come up for discussion In the cham ber, after having been iu abeyance since 18! rj, when the senate approved a bill for the purpose. The bill has not since been modified and the provisions included In It will. It Is thought, be adopted without ma terial alteration. One of them, which was to empower the bank to Increaxe its note issue from :t,.VSi,ism.(Ssi francs to 4.1 KU io.oi 0, was passed an far back as 18(3. The charter expires on Dec. 31, 18!7, and tbe proposal Is to extend It for a period of twenty years from that date. In consideration of the bank making certain concessions to the stale. Among these concessions Is one by which the bank Is to forego nil future Interest on the government debt, 140, 000,000 francs, and not to demand re payment of the capital so long as the charier Is in force. The bank Is to undertake the service of the national debt and transact other business for the treasury, both at the head office and branches, free of charge, and make an annual payment to the latter for 2.s, 0O0 francs during the first year of the currency of the new charter and 1!.5ii0. 000 francs per annum subsequently. It Is to open several new branches and make advances to agrlciiltur.il co operative societies. It Is not Improbable that an effort will be made to convert the bank Into a state institution, but such a project does not command support either In financial or ministerial circles, and is not In the least degree likely to meet with success. Kdlnburgh Scotsman. Interviewing Casey. A reporter of a New York daily oncp went to tbe office of the late Genera! Casey to get some Information concern ing the I.ydecker tunnel story. General Casey looked at the young mini rather sternly at first, aud ihe reporter ex pected but scant detail lo follow. "Come In, sir.'" he exclaimed. Iu a tone of almost unpleasant com ma ml. The two dooss of his office were open. The reporter was standing. The gen eral, without a word, went to one door and closed It with the utmost pre cision; then he went to (lie other door and closed It with the same precision. The reporter was In doubt. The two were in the room slone. t'ninlnir m to Ihe newspaper man. he pointed his , Index finger straight at his eye, ami j said: "Sit dow n there, young man. and I'll tell you the st story you ever heard." And he did. t'.ftlann'a Sru..l. I ., . ; Mr. Edison has only once tried to (iiAo-t ,,,,. 1(MI) v.sierday. which make a seech. It was before a girls' w Uie Sabl.lh day." "No. sir." re seminary, where he had agreed to lec-1 pne(j , cb,M .., p11(Ml ,,., ture on electricity. He had engaged mon,iDf(. uu, ,1Py WH gr()in' n ,es. a friend named Adams to operate the 1(.r(,,y-..yullt Havlmi f ,.,,. apparatus while he talked; but when drea by , K.. nvll, ,M,.ru,.. the "Wizard" arose liefore his audi- ence, be felt so dazed that be simply ' The Hlcycle Brush. said: "Ladies. Mr. Adams will now Tbe verv latest thin? In l.lcri.lu mm. address you on electricity, and I will demonstrate what be has to say with tbe apparatus." Heard While Waiting. A passenger, while waiting at a rail- way stHtlon for his train, amused him-' self by w a tcinng the queer looks and antics of a la III ess cat as It played about on tbe platform. The statlomunster happening to pop out of bis office, the Intending traveler pointed to tbe cat1 and said, "What kind of a cat Is that-' Manx'" "No," replied the statlonmas- of riders wbo wish to visit the ceme ter, with a sly smile, "Brighton Ux- tery, but are not ermitted to enter with pr""." their wheels. A Vacaam. I . Mhoee. ! A perfect vacuum is a jM-rfect insula-' When shoes have become stiff and tor. It Is possible lo exhaust a tut so uncomfortable from constant wesr In perfectly tnst no electric machine can ' the rain, or from lying by unworn, ap send a spark through the vacuous ply. s cost of vaseline, nibbing It in well space, even when flic stace Is only one' wltb a cloth, snd In a short time tbe centimetre. leather will become soft snd pliable, j A woman should at least be grateful tor one ining: sne is never aaaeg u. ae rtona, and should 1-s.e no time In ac apsBbearer. kaowWdglng it. ACROSS THE ROCKIES. j Mich Easlneerlns klll Heqairrd to r-et the Holes Properly. j Telephone cutisi ruction in the Hot ky j Mountain Is anything but child's play, j ) aud Is atteu-led w ith a great dl of hardship. J he line built from irauvmr to A sj.c u several years ago is a caw in point. It took two mouths to cover the entire length, forty-eight miles. In or dinary construction the pole would lie - set forty-two to the mile, but at certain j points, w here sharp turns w ere tits-es-1 jsary, the numlx-r would sometimes t j j Increased to seveuty-nre to tne nine, Tbe members of the construction gang ' had to be as expert as axmen as they j were as linemen, for when timlsr was encountered a th of -ii feet on each side of the line bad to I cleared In or- j der that wires might not lie broken when trees were blown over by the ter rific blasts which at times prevail In that region. A great deal of Ihe coin para five slow news of the Installation was owing to the inability of the workmen to labor iu such a raritieil atmosphere. At one point the wires were strung at an ele vation of 12.l feet above Ihe sea level. Iu such an altitude the lineman soon becomes completely tired: after he has climbed two or three poles he has to take a rest to reciqierate his en ergies. The prearatiou of Ihe holes for poles, which would have ticeu tedi ous in similar ground even in an ordi nary atmosphere, was an especially slow and fatiguing operation. It was often necessary to blast a bole for the pole by the use of giant powder, and an ex-niiner, who had Imd an extensive experience with explosives, was assign ed to the Job. The digging of one pole bole would sometimes occupy him for a w hole day, working honestly. Over 300 pounds of powder were ued on the line for this purjv. When the continental divide was reached the poles had to be aian doned and tbe wires were placed in a submarine cable, which was burled In a two-foot trench for a distance of 7,000 feet. The advisability of abandoning aerial construction at this point was demonstrated by the experience of the company tluit maintains the Denver and Leadvllle line. At one point on that line. Mosquito Pass, the poles were orig inally set seventy feet apart. As soon as the wires were covered with sleet they promptly snapped aud the line was useless. Double the number of poles were then used, with the samp result. The Sace Isiween the poles was then i educed to twenty-five feet, but as soon ns 1 lie sleet came Ihe line was swept down flat. Eventually an underground cable was laid for two and a half miles, and there has been no trouble since. Denver Field and Kami. 'Itastaa' Birthday. The oddest birthday celebration of which we have ever heard Is thus de scritied by a gentleman who has lately travelled through the South: In the northern part of Georgia I came upon a negro cabin, and as 1 ap proached, it became evident that some extraordinary commotion was going on within. In fact, shouts and yells of ter- j ror succeeded one another so rapidly t hat I hastened to see what could ! the trouble. As I drew rein liefore the door, half-a-dozen ragged pickaninnies ran out. All but one of them were screaming and crying at the tops of their voices, while the odd oue, as merry as flic others were sad, liegan tumbling cart wheels' and standing on his head. At this moment a man. evidently thp head of the household, apiicared In the door way, and In answer to my Inquiries j gave uie the following explanation of j the mystery: ! "Yer see, sab, ills is 'Hast us' blrfday," j Indicating the one whose Joyful antics j I have Just mentioned. "Now. 1'se pow- j erful hard up Jes' at presen". an' didn't j hab no money ter celebrate In de usual way. An' If Jes' bruk me nil up fer see ' de res' habln' jes' ns much fun on j Kasttis' birthday as 'Itastus wus habiu' hlsself. So, times leln' so hard, de only way I could see was ter gib der res' all a-lickln', and' dat kinder raises 'Itastus up ober de odders!" j A quarter flung to 'Itastus proved a J cnartn mar raised mm sun nigner, and dried the tears of the others In an in stant. Happier children than these same pickanuinlei as I rode away, a moment later, It would be hard to find. Grew on Sunday. A liltle girl In Aberdeen brought a basket of stra wherries to the minister very early on Monday morning. "Thank j von. mv little airl." he said. 'Ther ' . .... .. .. ' are verv iteautirui. H it l none vm. dries at this writing Is a bicycle brush, ! which is Isitig placed on the market by a manufacturer ou South DmrlMji-'u street. It looks a good deal like a very mrg toolh brush and Is used for reach- ig points In the bicycle snaton. that sr. difficult to get st with a cloth Lads of Enterprise. Two enterprising boys have erected a small shed near the entrance to Oak' woods Cemetery snd do a good bus! neae on Sundays checking the blcvcles Kvery man Is weak In certsln direc THE OLD CLFRK. Hi Life After AH n No Sain r Pai-nrr. It was noou. but tbe dek nearest the window In the great library was still vacant. Tbe4erk whispered together, and the U.ys who carried tsjoks to tbe alcoves glanced at H uneasily. "Old Peyton," tbey said, "has been here for twetity years and never missed a day before." ( ne of tbe Isiy watered bis fbrwers, for the deaf old clerk had his window full of growing plants. The chief lil.rariau me out of his offl.-e. "Mr. Peyton is dead." be said abruptly. "Kouud dead iu his lied last night. It Is Iu the morning's paper." The library, was always quiet, but a great slb-uce filled It during that day. The Isiys sloped skylarking, and the clerks made uo comments to each other, even alsiut the dead mail. Mr. Peyton bad tieeii very deaf, and rarely siik lo them. But it they looke-1 nt th vaciint stool, and remembered the bttn. bent figure In its shabby cloi!n-, and tbe kindly face, it seemed a if a strong help had suddmily drop-d out of their lives. Ill Ihe ottice the thief discussed the dead man with a director. "Never was a life sm h a failure," he said. "Piytoii was a tine Greek schol ar. He gave his youth an 1 mid lie age to his book on Greece. His whole htttrt was In his work. He put into !t k-rent research and bfirnln. But Schlic tua mi's discoveries iddciily prov -1 all his theories false. Tiiere is his !-i ik ou the shelves, worthless; ccvered with dust. Nolsfdy reads il. Then he lost his b'liring. He could init even teach Greek. He was only tit for clerical work, which lmrcly kept him alive, lie bud no wife uor child. A wasted life, sir! A wasted life:" "You will go to the funeral?" iid ills friend, rising to go out. "Most certainly!" said the chief, hot ly. "Why, there is no man livlwj for whom I feel as 1 did fo" Peyton! I could tell you things of the lofty bono of tluit old fellow, his eUilcriiewH. his charity. Oh, you know t m i.i w ben you live with him twenty tear! No lie--gyman ever mnde Christianity rfil to me ns he did." .Meanwhile the old clerk lay still and cohl on his cot In his liltle chamts.-r. It wus a bare room, for he had lieeii vert poor. On a shelf was his great work, which eveu be had not opened for year. Whs it a failure Had his life failed with it? A miniature picture of his mother, a young, beautiful woman, hung over It. "Perhaps "be knows why Gil bt my work go for nothing," Peyton used 'o think, as he looked hi h-r. "I don? understand." His Irish landlady was in the room all day. She told every one w ho came how the old clerk had cared for her and her children for years. How he had kept Mike at work, and s'opped lieu from drinking. The neighbor came, hard woriiirr. intelligent folk, anil each hail a story to tell of advice or help which h" had giv en them In some strait of their lives. Krom the policeman on his round tc the crippled newslmy at the onier. 1 bad been a friend anil wise father to them all. I-atcr in the day the clerks .-ame, and the Isiys from the library. They brought buiii'hes of flowers and with tenrs laid them on bis breast, thinking of kind words and deeds which were ns natural to the poor clerk as his breath. They did not notice the great work of his life on the shelf overhead, the work lliat hail failed. Tbey only knew that one of God's helpers hud gone out of the world, and mourned for hirn. Ills mother's face smiled down, as It bad always done, well content ujHin her son. Anil upoii the dead man's far there was now a strange, listening look, as of one who was culled home an l beard his welcome. Youth's Compan ion. What's In a Name? The story of their trouble Is easily told. There wus William J. Brown, who Iwul ail office on the seventh floor, and W. Joseph Brown, w ho had an office on the six Hi floor. Each tried to stick to bis own met iiixl of jtilng his name, but many lalsr-savlng correspondent Insisted upon using only the Initials, and that made a good deal of trouble. It was annoying to one W. J. Brown to see a check sticking out of a letter as he opened It, only to fl'id that It lie longed to the other W. J, Brown, and It was annoying to the other W. J. Brow n to pay t xrrss charges on packages be longing to W. J. Brown on the floor nltove. William ,1. ioss.sl n letter Into W, Joseph's office one day with the sugges lion that It w ould be a good scheme for 01 m to pay h'Mt bills, as he (William J.) was tired of receiving tbem. It was not until W. Joseph's wife made the mistake of addressing a let ter to hi m as "W. J." Hint the real trou ble begun. William J. handed the let ter lo W. Joseph and asked with right eous Indignation: "Why don't you sup ply your wife with enough money when she goes visiting?" He got away before there was a chance for an explosion, but It came the next day when W. Joseph drifted Into bis office and handed biro a letter with the remark: "I wish you'd marry that girl. You've been engaged long enough, and, besides, her letleri are getting sickening." The police finally succeeded In restor ing order. Chicago Post. llange of the Voice. The range of the human voice : quit astounding there being slmut nine per fect tones, but I7.r(i2,1M,(H4,M3 differ ent sounds; thus fourteen direct mus cles, alone or together, produce 1A.8R.1; thirty Indirect muscles, ditto, 173,741.. ; snd sll In co-operation produce the number we have named, and these In dependently of different dog reel of h tensity. D V K