A TRIUMPHAL MARCH LABOR'S GREAT ADVANCE DESPITE ATTACK AND OPPRESSION. How the RlKht to Ora-anlse Has Been Won Through Centuries of Oppoai- Ion Men Jailed For Dorian to Meet to Consider Wanes. From the statute nf laborers, pass ed In 13,"1. and tbo statute of appren tices, passed in 1503 and repealed as late as 1813. no fewer than thirty ex press statutes were passed In England down to 1825 which, among other things, made the association of work lilt; men criminal. , The very circumstance that so much legislation Intended to be suppressive was deemed necessary may well indi cate that the processes began early by which England was to become the mother of labor unions.. Wlie e the thirty statutes of suppression were written In vain In those year long past, there were at the close o.' I'.KKi 11101 than 1,000.000 organized wording men in 1,183 uuions. It Is claimed that the union member ship In the United States largely ex ceeds that of the United Kingdom now. In proportion to population, however, industry In Britaiu is - much more thoroughly organized. Following the English speaking na tions in the number, membership and 1 . A 1. ..I 1 1- tions come Germany, 800,000 members; France, nenrly 500,000; Austria, more than 157,000; Denmark, nearly 100,000; Hungary, over 04,000; Sweden, about 00,000; Norway, 24,000; Switzerland, about 50.000; Belgium, between 60.000 and 70.000; Spain, more than 41,000. The figures given are gathered from the book "Methods of Industrial Peace," by Dr. Nicholas Paine Oilman, .just issued by Houghton, Mifflin & Co. r. Oilman has aimed to treat the subject of industrial peace more com prehensively than other writers have done and to make up in part for what lie considers "a surprising lack of books" on this vital matter. He traces in brief detail the history of combina tion among laboring men and gives an interesting reference to the times pre ceding the unions, when masters were usually their own helpers. In such times in the duchy of Magdeburg, for instance, there were (year 1784) 27,030 masters to 4,285 assistants and appren tices. ; At present in this country labor is better organized than capital. It la Dr. Oilman's philosophical view that an adjustment of the balance in or ganization must be one of the methods of providing for the permanent set tling of difficulties for securiug the reasonable and fruitful conduct of "collective bargaining." Borrowing a figure of speech, the author says. "As long as one side is as well disciplined as a regular army and tne other more line a nome guaru there will probably be no permanent adjustment of the difficulties between them." The antiorganization laws were sup posed to affect employers as well as employed, but "the law had a very poor vision for employers acting to gether, and employers were never fined, much less imprisoned." As late as 1817 ten delegates of the calico printers of Bolton were jailed for meeting to consider the question of wages. In 1812 the central committee of the Scottish weavers went to prison for directing a strike to secure wages fixed b? 0 Justice of the peace and re fused by employers. It is well. Indeed, that we are far away from such misuses of power and the law. For our own country Dr. Gilman con fronts us with the story of a meeting in Boston in 1832 at which merchants and shipowners subscribed a $20,000 fund to fight the movement for a ten hour day. Horace Mann, Itobert Ran toul, .Tames G. Carter and Wendell Phillips sided with the workpeople. Mr. IUntoul defended the journeymen bootmakers in an important case which was decided for them in 1812 and final ly established the right of worklngmen to combine. "Trade unionism may have a great future before it," says Dr. Gilman aft er devoting chapters to the various as pects of industrial peace and war, strikes, lockouts, arbitration, concilia tion, etc. "I would fain see that fu ture marked by a deep sense of respon sibility for large power and by a tem perate employment of it for the good of all classes." New York World. Farm Labor In Demand. It Is estimated that in seven states out west 45,000 men will be needed tills summer to harvest the wheat crop. Crops are increasing faster than labor to secure them can be bad. and this, too. In the face of the fact that nearly 1,000,000 immigrants a year are com ing to America. Last year college stu dent were attracted to the west by the offer of $2.30 a day and board and lodging, but so many fell by the way side In the hot sun that scarcely enough remained to. marry all the daughters of the rich farmers. Harvesters can find employment from May to nearly October, moving up from Texas to Can ada. Wages arc high, and there is plenty to eat. With a foreign war now In progress and the regular demand for foodstuffs In the countries in Europe which always buy from Americans on the Increase, the. outlook for a great business in exporting agricultural prod ucts Is excellent. Baltimore Herald. Labor's Advnnce. Ill 1812 the central committee of the Scottish weavers went to prison for di recting a strike to secure wages fixed 'by a justice of the peace nnd refused by employer!!.' It is well ludecd that vu are fur away from such misuses of grower and the la Wr New York World. FROFIT SHARING SYSTEM. Statistiea Prove That It Is Steadllr LoalnaT Ground. It Is an admitted fact that the profit sharing system has uot proved so suc cessful In practice as its early advo cates predicted. Whatever advantages this plan appears to offer in the way of inciting the workers to greater in dustry, establishing identity of inter est between employer and employed and improving the general status of the working class, its practical work ing has been often disappointing. According to the "Annual Abstract of Labor Statistics," the number of per sons em-'oved In profit sharing con cerns in Great Britain is decreasing. On June 30, 11)01. it was 53.204, and on June 30, 1902, it had fallen to 47.271. During four years 1880 to 1892 the profit sharing movement was at its height. Previously to 1880 the largest number of profit sharing . schemes started in any single year was seven; in 188!) twenty were put into opera tion; in 1890, thirty-two; in 1801, fif teen; in 1892, seventeen. It is a signifi cant fact that of the eighty-four profit sharing enterprises started during this four year period forty-nine have come to grief. The table giving the causes of the abandonment of profit sharing is in structive. Twenty-six were abandoned owing to dissatisfaction of the em ployees with the results and eighteen owing to losses or want of success. Among the other causes are: Apathy of employees, disputes with employers and decrease of profits. Certainly this record of profit sharing experience in Great Britain does not warrant any expectation that the plan will ever be come a general substitute for the wage system. Boston Transcript. POWER OF ORGANIZATION. Transforms the Slave Into n Man and Makes the Weak Strong;. Organization transforms the slave in to a man. It gives a voice to the dumb and a vote to the disenfranchised. It makes the helpless irresistible. It gives authority to those who have been despised. It straightens the bent back of the hireling and the drudge and en ables him to' look his employer in the face without revenge or fear. It en ables a common coal miner like John Mitchell, who was kindergartened in the breakers and educated in the pit, to do more for his fellow workers than could be done by all the presidents of all the universities in America. The military general was the first to find out the magic of organization. Thousands of years ago he discovered that a hundred well drilled men could defeat a mob of thousands of undis ciplined warriors. A century ago the great French thinkers, Fourier and Saint Simon, proclaimed the fact that organization should be applied to in dustry as well as to war. Our Ameri can capitalists were the first to realize this, and the result has been the piling up of enormous fortunes and the form ing of corporations and trusts. The working people realized the ben efits of organization at atout the same time as the capitalists; but, being so much more numerous, they could not organize so quickly as their employ ers bad done. When they are organ ized completely their numbers will give tiiem such a political and indus trial power that the future of the re public will be in their bands. Herbert N. Cnsson. The San Francisco System. Frank Buchanan, international presi dent of the bridge and structural iron workers, in a recent speech called at tention to the much criticised control the labor unions have In San Fran cisco, lie says it has the best system in the country. No union is allowed to demand improved conditions with out giving three months' notice, and it is positively laid down that no new demands can be made from the time work has commenced on one building until it is concluded. Further, the president says, when reports reached there of depression in the east the cen tral body of all unions at the Golden Gate ordered that no unions ask for improved conditions until all evidences of this depression had disappeared. Labor Pence For Pittsburg. Pittsburg stands iu a fair way to present an example to other cities by not having a single labor dispute of consequence for the rest of the year. In the recent settlement of the sheet and tin plate scale the last doubt was removed. It is almost positively as sured that there will be no trouble in the building trades this year. The mis cellaneous trades, including the ma chinists, structural Ironworkers, boiler makers, etc., have agreements that do not expire until next spring or, at the earliest, the latter part of this year. The miners are agreed, and the glass workers, while having small disputes, are likely not to see any serious trouble. LABOR NOTES. Engravers of the country are organ izing an international union. Children engaged in labor In the United States reach the enormous fig ures or 1.850.000. Congress sidetracked until next ses sion both the eight hour and the auti injutiction bills. Co-operation is flourishing in Scot land. At the quarterly meeting of the Scottish Co-operative Wholesale so rlety recently it was stated that the total business done for 1903 amounted to 0,395,487. an increase of ilt,3(iH. equal to 5.5 per cent., while the pro ductive efforts were valued at 1,540, 445. In New Zealand last year 12.4S1 per sons drew old age pensions amount ing to $1,057,970. The total cost of ad ministering the act was only $19,025. Gregory of Hampton By ANNA S. RICHARDSON Copyright, 1003. by T. C. MeClure "Madge, didn't you spend half an hour in Mrs. Gifford's conservatory last eveuiug?" "Yes her orchids are marvels," re plied the girl quietly. She returned her father's keen scrutiny without flinching. Miss Marsden was a worthy daughter of the great political leader. "Mr. Gregory was with you and I happen to know that he is not inter ested in orchids." "Gregory of Hampton!" The words had become the scorn of the political headquarters over which Mr. Marsden presided. In truth, Greg gory of Hampton was a thorn in the wire puller's flesh. He was unap proachable, unbribable and, from Mr. Marsden's point of view, hopelessly un reasonable. The apportionment bill was strictly framed by Marsden to give his party better control of the state legislative branches. It was not a vicious measure, but knowing that his heart was set upon it the younger element, who had begun to murmur against the iron rule of ''the boss," had vigorously opposed the bill. Its defeat meant the dethronement of Marsden and the assumption of par ty leadership by one of the younger men. Gregory had entered the fight under instructions from his district leaders staid, back country farmers to whom newfangled politics did not ap peal. Self reliant and gifted with the faculty of dominating others, he had unconsciously assumed the leadership of the opposition and was already spoken of as Marsden's probable suc cessor. , All this was passing through Mars den's mind as be watched bis daugh ter run through her morning's mail and wished she would speak. But clearly she was not in a communicative mood. "I suppose you help receive at the governor's reception this afternoon. Well, go where yon like, though I don't care for that daughter of his. Only remember one thing, there is to be no nonsense between you and this young Gregory. The apportionment bill gives us almost complete control, and it's got to go through. Gregory by his ob stinacy encourages the opposition. I've started to put it through, and I'll do it if it takes my last dollar." "I hardly think it is worth while for you to waste money on Mr. Gregory. He's not that sort." Margaret had risen and now stood, pale and tense, before her father, whose face had turned livid. "Don't tell me it has gone as far as that! Would you stand by this man in preference to your father? Think, child, think. You're all I have in the world since since your mother's gone." The lips of the political leader twitch ed. The girl, who was the living, breathing image of her mother, occu pied the one soft spot in his callous, scheming heart. ; At mention of her mother's name Margaret turned swiftly and twined her arms around her father's neck. ' "Father, dear, you make it so bard. You don't know how I love him. Can't you two agree and make me happy?" Her father did not reply, and with a soft rustling of silken skirts she slip ped from the room, closing the door gently behind her. From ber bedroom window she watched her father climb into tbe wait ing brougham. She noted the increas ing stoop of his shoulders, the languor of his step. When the carriage turn ed the corner, she sat down at her desk and wrote: My Dear Mr. Gregory I have thought and thought all night long-, and still 1 cannot give you the answeri you want. It is useless for me to make false pre tenses, useless for me to deny my love for you. And yet I am my father's, all, and, no matter how happy we might be, I should always feel that I had robbed him of the reward for his faithful care of me. Can't you understand? He has been so good to me always and 1 owe him everything. You must make - my answer for me. This afternoon. I under stand, they take another vote on the bill which stands between me and happiness. Your vote will be my answer. If It is "No," do not see me again. It will be easier for us both, and surely you owe my love that much consideration. Faith fully yours, MARGARET MARSDEN. ; The ladies' gallery of the assembly chamber was thronged with brilliantly gowned women. The fourth day of the deadlock, and rumor had gone forth that there were prospects of a break. Members on the floor bowed to acquaintances in the gay array of butterflies. Gregory of Hampton sent but one long, searching glance in their direction, but in that look he caught a vision in the background, a slender, ifray growned figure. A chiffon veil hid ber features, but under tbe droop ing brim of her bat he caught the glint of bronze gold hair. For an in stant the hard, set look died from his eyes, and a tender smile rested on his lips. Then he glanced toward Mars den's desk. A group of men fawned upon the leader, who seemed not to no tice them. His face was gray white, his eyes a steely blue. But Gregory of Hampton read behind the look of grim determination to the years of inter minable struggle, to the home life sacrificed, the wife love neglected,, all for political power. And this same power lay within his own grasp if the apportionment bill failed.' Leadership of men or life companionship and the love of a pure woman? The plaudits of the public or the caresses of a love for which he hungered as he had nev er hungered and longed ami yearned for anything in all his busy, success- ft life? The house was called to or der. Cold perspiration bathed his mo tionless figure. His arms were crossed on his breast. His eyes were fixed on the speaker. Sudden silence fell upon the floor and the crowded galleries. The clerk cleared his voice and nerv ously adjusted his glasses! Marsden sat with the tabulated vote of two days before in his hand. To Margaret it seemed as if the alphabet held a thousand letters. Would the "G's" never come. "Finch!" "No!" Faint applause. , t , "Garrity!" "Aye!" Mingled hisses and cheers. "Gorman!" Gregory's eyelids quiv ered just a trifle, and his glance shift ed for an instant to the bent head with its glint of bronze gold. "No!" Increased applause. "Gregory!" For one brief second Margaret's heart stopped beating. "Aye!" 1 Every reporter at the tables above the speaker's head took a fresh grip on his pencil. There was a sensation. Consternation spread over the faces of the men who had been following Greg ory's lepd. The machine element cheered, and the speaker rapped for order. Marsden folded his arms and glanced at the gallery, where Margaret had suddenly risen and was now making for the entrance. Just what part had she played In this little drama, he won dered. With Gregory on their side vic tory was assured. When he finally made his way through the crush after the vote was concluded neither his daughter nor Gregory was in sight. The former had entered her coupe, said the doorman, and another man told him that some one had seen Greg ory swing into a hack,, and tbe driver had started the horse up at a terrific pace. But Gregory had not followed Mar garet. It was dark before his ride end ed, and he came back to town a trifle white in the face, but with eyes serene ly happy. Marsden came upon them In the li brary and extended his band with awkward attempt at cordiality. "I am glad you could finally see things our way," he commenced. The words died on his lips. Margaret and Gregory turned toward him, and there was that in the latter's face which stilled the voice of the po litical leader. He gazed dumbly at this young man, born to lead, whom no amount of wire pulling, no offers of political preferment, no bribe, however alluring, could move and yet who for love of this slip of a girl had deliber ately turned his back on a brilliant po litical career. Would be have done as much at the same age for love of this girl's moth er? He looked up suddenly, and his glance met the eyes of bis wife gazing at him wistfully from a large oil paint ing. How often her eyes had met his in real life just that same way! For the first time in years something like a prayer of thanksgiving welled up from the heart of the "boss." The apportionment bill turned miserably Insignificant. Without a word he turned upon his heel, but at the door be looked back, and a smile of . real liappiness, not triumph, rested on his thin, blood less lips. His daughter's head rested confidingly on the shoulder of Gregory of Hampton. Rat Canning:. The rat has often demonstrated his Intelligence. Perhaps the best known instance is that of the rats which, rob bing a poultry yard, could conceive of no better way of carrying oft the eggs than by getting one of their number to lie on his back and clasp the eggs on his stomach. Then several rats pulled their recumbent brother's tail, while others pushed his shoulders. Thus egg after egg was safely hidden in their burrow. A rat has been known to cross a swollen torrent in Scotland seated on a swan's back. Other rats have made friends with dogs and feci from the same platter. When the dogs were absent they would never feed, know ing that the presence of their canine friends meant safety. Although when driven desperate with hunger they will devour one an other, in times of plenty their affec tion is almost human. A Sussex clergyman has told how he saw a number of rats migrating from one district to another, and in the mid dle of tbe company was an old blind rat with a twig in his mouth, by which he was being safely led by a younger rodent. Instances of rats leading blind com rades by the ears to feeding places and placing food close to -their muzzles have, been observed more than once. This is more than many human beings will do for their weaker brethren. London Express. Gluttonous ISna-lisnmen. Bluffkins wandered in at the club the other night and drew hts chair close to the fire. "I wouldn't be an Englishman for anything!" he ejaculated. "Tbey have tbe most gluttonous appetites on rec ord." "You cawn't prove that, bah Jove!" said Mr. Algernon Hawkins, who lived on chops and swore by his majesty. "I can," replied Bluffkins, with un ruffled composure, "and here is the proof. I was riding home in an elec tric last night. Two Englishmen sat iext to me. T 'ave just bought a stove,' said one. 'So 'ave I.' said the other. 'But mine is the best on earth. It cooks my breakfast in 'alf an hour,' said the first. 'Jove,' said the second, 'that isn't anything. I can 'eat my stove In five minutes.'". And even Mr. Algernon Hawkins ac knowledged that the Englishman did have a pretty solid appetite. How Stumpy Learned to Subtract- SSU Copyright, 1903, by T. C. MeClure In Munkersville everybody 1 agreed that Stumpy Dent was silly; not very much off, but off. Pa Dent " himself did not deny it. Of course ma was an exception to the rule and vigorously denied everything and anything that touched on tbe softness of Stumpy. And toward - pa,' because of his sittin' on the fence attitude, she assumed a frigid front. "Silence is jes' the same as consent, Dave Dent," she complained bitterly, eying her spouse with a shrewish look. "Shame on ye, an' him your own flesh an' blood!" But Dave paid no heed to these out bursts. As a matter of fact, pa was past speaking . to Stumpy. He had fought the good fight and failed. In time perhaps, be allowed, intelligence might penetrate to Stumpy's brain. Good humored, fat and flabby. Stumpy had seen nine healthy sum mers. His eyes were blue and watery, his cheeks dimpled and red. Rain or shine he wore a hayseed hat two sizes too small for his abnormal crown, kept In place by an elastic so tight that it puckered and reddened his skin. His pants were drawn up three Inches above his knees, and, though ma tried hard to prevent it. Stumpy's kneecaps were always exposed, for Stumpy bad a weakness for curbstones and mar bles, and rather than stand on his feet he hustled along on all fours. In school work Stumpy was disap pointing, two grades behind the times. Yet he could read, spell, add to the thousands and would attack millions if he dared. But, oh, subtraction, sub traction not even a standing black board example could enlighten Stumpy's mind! His long suffering teacher, like pa, was nearing tbe exasperation point, when suddenly a happy thought occur red to her. She had observed Stumpy on the curbstone playing marbles. Sure! He must have marbles in his pocket. He did have them, a bulging pocketful, jealously guarded, and after a struggle she successfully extracted three. But it was all she could do to get them, and for days ber soft, white hand retained evidence of the getting. "Stumpy Dent," she cried, with blaz ing eyes, "now tell what I have done!" "Cobbed ma marbles," wailed the outraged pupil, with streaming eyes and waggling toes. "Hush, bush, sonny. I'm going to give them all back to you. I'm only trying to show you what subtraction is. Now, how many marbles had you when you came to school?" "Twelve," shouted Stumpy. "How many have you now?" One by one Stumpy counted them and considered. ' "How many?" repeated the teacher. "Twelve when ye give 'em back fine," calmly announced the' hopeless one. From pent up forms a roar of, boyish laughter made sensitive Stumpy tear ful and tight as a clam, and away went hope like tbe filmy wake of a dream. . Of course Pa Dent soon heard the story and looked sadly at his son. He himself had tried the practical illustra tion scheme, but the lad was unrespon sive. "Stumpy," he demanded, shaking the boy's fat hand a little roughly, "do you like school?" "Yis," was the glib reply. "Then you must do better or I'll take you away." Now, Stumpy spoke the truth. He really loved his teacher. School was his heaven, and in his clumsy way he had tried hard to catch subtraction. But it wasn't pa's threat that awaken ed Stumpy. To Darby Peck, the town's leading grocer, must be given the cred it Darby had a way with him, such a way that for every customer his rival, Bollinger, boasted, Darby could set up four, and Darby had just open ed a branch near Stump's school. "Naw, the laddies' trade ain't much," he admitted, "but A'm a-caterin' t'em jest the same." , Here hitherto Bollinger had held full sway. But Bollinger was mean, hard as nails; he didn't give marbles away with every five cent purchase. But Darby did, so Darby corralled the school. Bollinger tried hard to get it back. At half price, as a lure, be ad vertised squeakln' balloons and sticks of candy, the chowchow kind. Who wanted squeakln' balloons and chow chow candy? And again Darby went him one better: FREE! FREE! FREE! Five dollar bill to the boy or girl who guesses nearest the num ber of peas in this bottle. His store was besieged. The school playgrounds were deserted. Troops of madly excited boys and girls flung frantic guesses at the delighted grocer. Tlug-a-Iing! Ting-a-Hng! Vainly, across the way, the janitor swung his bell high above his head, then down to his weak old knees, and the brass gave out its utmost. "No, no, no; every guess must be written, and I will take none till 3 o'clock this afternoon," cried Darby, dismissing1 the disappointed mob. But one boy, regardless of the Jani tor's peremptory mandate, remained glued to Darby's window, mumbling to himself, his chubby fists clutched tightly at the crimson sill, as he dump ed his toughened knees against the freshly painted panel. It was Stumpy Det, and he was thinking .yea, he was reasoning- Where bad he seen a ... bottle just like that one with tbe peas? Ma had one just, the same down in tbe -.. cellar. Sure! Suddenly, when the white aproned . assistant peeped out of the'' door. Stumpy melted. . Hookey? Fine he knew what hookey meant, and ma .. mustn't see him get the bottle naw, nor tbe peas! And she didn't. At 2 o'clock that same afternoon Pa Dent came unexpectedly upon his off- , spring. Pa seldom disturbed the stable loft till the evening, when he brought the .horses in, and thereore had. Stum py chosen it as a fitting place folus operations. A newspaper spread length wise, the French prune bottle, a pyra mid of peas. Stumpy carefully count ing every pea he dropped into the hot- 1 n atwl .A.. l... ..-I. It.. ... . . i.f V. ' etui, iug nuitc vl ihc newspaper a record of red chalk strokes that was what pa saw when his head topped the open trap. "Stumpy!" he cried sharply. "What are you doing? -Why are you not at school?" , , Taken in the act and breathless from the shock, , Stumpy did not reply at ; once. Under such strong incriminat ing circumstances the grand' Impulse of the ordinary boy ' would hnve been instant confession and "take the con sequences." Not so with Stumpy. A splendid evasion loomed up before'' him. ' "Subtractin", pa," he gurgled, dabbing . his finger on the last chalk mark so as not to forget his total. "Ah, I see!" said pa. . , Certainly the excuse was a feasible one. He had told tbe teacher to send Stumpy home if he became too dense. Left, to himself, pa said, subtraction might come in a flash, but the jeering of his companions would make bim worse. - Sensible Miss Marlow had act ed on bis advice. . , Yes, that was it, , and pa. quite satisfied, descended the ladder from the loft ; When he disap peared Stumpy smiled and went on '' adding. ' ' ' Came 3 o'clock, and Darby ..was again besieged. Every; boy and girl in Munkersville had a guess to give ' in,, and every slip bad to be carefully examined. At last, amid breathless - ' silence, Darby, beaming like a harvest moon, 'mounted a chair and. in loud -tones cried: "Nine two two is the winning num-. ?. ber, boys, and Stumpy Dent guesses " nine two one! Stumpy gets the bill!" Wild was the scene in Darby's. Up and out went Stumpy on the shoulders of the fifth grade gang. And pa, driv-. ing home in his buggy, felt a lump in his throat when he heard the loud ' . cheers for Stumpy. . J "How did you do it, sonny?" he ask- , ed when the demonstration was over . and the boy safe at home. " ' ' "Jes' this way," whispered Stumpy. "I fetched ma's prune bottle from the cellar. Darby's was jes' the same in size an' wi' the same wee rid label on the neck. .' So I - filled ma's bottle-. . neat wi' peas, emptied 'era out on' the newspaper an' counted 'em as I filled It up ag'ln. That gave nine two . "Ha,' ha, ha!" laughed Jubilant pa. "Come, Stumpy, lad," he cried, count ing but five shining silver dollars- for the bill; "come an' we'll put your mon ey in a bank!" . . ' . It was a miniature Iron bank, a pen ny in the slot affair, and the silver rat tled and rang as it dropped to the lit tle vault below. "Now, Stumpy," said pa : proudly, f'that's your first deposit, an' it draws interest at 5 per cent in one month." But when the month was up and pa pried open the lid only three shining dollars demanded 5 per cent. Stumpy had learned to subtract. Applicant In the Wktok Room. During the excitement of a physical ; examination of candidates for places -on the police force in city hall a mild mannered man wandered into the room and somehow got mixed, up with the aspirants for places on the force. He was instructed to remove his clothes partly, and in a few -minutes was hard at work with the other men In the room, raising dumbbells, inflating his . chest and undergoing a general physic al examination. ' "Run around the room," he was com manded, and, on a trot, be made the circuit of the room a dozen times. Almost out of breath, be stopped then and inquired: ' - "Look a-here, what else have I got to do to get my license?" 4 "What license?" queried the' surgeon, in surprise. "Why, my marriage license. That's what I came in for," was tbe reply. "Say," said the surgeon, "you're in the wrong room. I thought you want- . ed to be a policeman. The license bureau is downstairs." Philadelphia Record. A Frlsbtfnl Accident. A laborer was on his way to his work, one morning as a through train was about to pass a little station where a crowd had assembled for the way train, due in a few . moments. A child who had strayed to the edge of the platform seemed about to lose her balance in her effort to get a good ? view of the oncoming engine ' Quick as a flash the workman jump- " ed forward, tossed the child back to a place of safety and was himself grazed by the cylinder, which rolled him over on the platform pretty roughly, jf Several people hastened to his as-'7 slstance, but he rose uninjured, ahv 1 though with a face expressive of grave concern. ; '-; "fonfonnd It! Just mv luck!" he ex claimed, drawing a colored handker chief, evidently containing luncheon, from his pocket and examining it rue fully. ", ,7v.:V; ' - -"What is it?" inquired the onlookers. , "Why. the salt and pepper's all over the rhubarb pie, and the eggs well, I kept telling her something Vould hap-' pen if she didn't boil 'em harder?' -. j v