THE UNBROKEN HEART Ho was sitting at the window avd his little nose was Hat As ho pressed his face to kiss me with his lips against the pane Then I hour but without kissing in vex ation seized my hat It had jostled and I knew that I would barely catch the train Camo just faintly Papa kiss me as I hurried out the gate But my lime was all to scanty and I really couldnt wait For I heard the distant whistle and I know that I was late And my work accumulating in the town TJe was silting at the window and as town ward rolled the train I looked back to see the house and into distance watched it pass And I knew that he was crying with his little might and main Tor the kiss I hadnt time to press against the window glass I could see him with his choo choos quite disowned upon the iloor And his wooden blocks forgotten and my parent heart grew sore And I thought Dear God what what if I should never see him more At the window when I started for the town He was sitting at the window and his cry a little moan As my mental vision saw him all that long and wretched day And my foolish fearful fancy knew him dying there alone With his kiss that still was waiting for his papa far away He was dying of the grieving of the awful awful ache Of his little baby heart that love had only filled to break -And I pushed the papers from me and de clared that I would take The returning train and hurry from the town He was sitting at the window as I clat tered at the gate And his tiny nose was flattened as he pressed it to the pane And I heard his joyful clamor as with baby heart elate lie screamed out a royal welcome with his little might and main With a brown and sugared doughnut held in either chubby fist And his cherry lips a pucker in the quaint est sort of twist To my arms he came a leaping and he clamored as I kissed Now ven papa what you bling me fom ve town Chicago Record ttARBISON IE A ROUND HOUSE Smoky Hill was the end of the track at that time said the old engineer shifting his lame foot to an easy posi tion We had built a round house a square one with two stalls and room at the back for three or four bunks and a work bench To protect ourselves against the Sioux we had lined or wainscoated the house up to about five feet from the ground and filled in be hind the lining with sand Indians were thicker in Kansas in the days of the build ing of the Kansas Pacific and scarcely a day never a week went by without -a fight At first they appeared to be awed by the locomotives but in a little while their superstitious fear had van ished and they were constantly setting lures to capture the big boss as they called the engine One day we were -out at the front with a train of steel some eight or ten miles west of the Hill It had been snowing all day in little fits and spits and near nightfall the clouds became thicker and darker and before the sun had gone down the snow was falling fast By the rime the last rail had been unloaded it was pitch dark and as the engine was head ed west we wore obliged to back up all the way to Smoky Hill The conductor and the captain of the guard composed of goveniment scouts took a stand on the rearmost flat ear and when I got a signal I opened the throttle and be gan to poke the blunt end of the con struction train into the darkness Or dinarily I hate running backward at night but in a case of this kind it is a real relief to know that there are a dozen or more well armed soldiers be tween you and whatever the darkness holds Three or four men with white lights were stationed at intervals along the tops of the ten or twelve cars that made up the train The house car or eabdbse was next the engine and upon the top of tliis car stood the foreman of the gang and from him I was supposed to take my tokens We had been in motion less than ten minutes when I saw the conductors Jight we were going with the storm stand out and following this move ment all the lights along the trains top pointed over the plain and I began to slow down Instantly a dozen shots were fired from the darkness Muffled by the storm the sound came as if a -pack of firecrackers were going off un der a dinner pail and we all knew what -we had run into Injuns shouted the fireman leaping across the gangway -and theyre on my side Keep your seat said I theyre on my side too Now all the white lights following another signal from the conductor be- gan to whirl furiously in a short circle That was my notion precisely If they liad prepared to ditch us we might as -well go into the ditch as to remain on the tops of the cars to be picked off by the Sioux so I opened the throttle and be gan to back away again as fast as pos sible The Indians had prepared to ditch our train They had placed a great pile of cross ties upon the track expecting that when we struck them our train would come to a dead stop This small party which had fired upon us was the outer watch the main band being huddled about the head of ties where they expected us to halt and -where most of the amusement would -occur The track was newly laid and as billowy as a rough sea but this was no time for careful running The old work engine soon had the train going at a thirty mile gait and then we hit the tie pile The men on the rear car which was now the front had anticipated a wreck and re tired in bad order to the center of the train The Indians who had only a faint notion of the power and resistance of a locomotive stood close together about the pile of ties The falling snow had made the rails and timbers so wet and that when we hit the stack of wood the ties flew in all directions Some of them were thrown to the tops of the cars and others flew into the mob of redskins knocking them into con fusion A line buck who must have been standing on the track was picked up in the collision and landed upon the top of the second car right at the con ductors feet The fellow was consid erably stunned by the fall and taking advantage oi his condition the scouts seized and bound him with a piece of bell cord taking care to remove an ugly knife from his rawhide belt The band were so surprised to see the train plough through the wreckage that they forgot to fire until we had almost passed them and a great flood of fire from the en gine stack was falling among them They then threw up their guns those who were still on their feet and let go at us but none of the bullets affected our party When we had reached the station the Pawnees who were among the scouts recognized our captive at once as Bear Foot a noted and very wicked chief When the Sioux came to him self and realized that he was a captive he became furious He surged and strained at the bell rope but it was all in vain and finally he gave it up When we had eaten our supper we all went into the round house soldiers and all for we knew the Sioux would make a desperate effort to secure their chief before the night was out It was long after midnight when one of the men on duty heard a low scraping sound like that made by a hog crawling under a gate A moment later the noise was repeated and when the same sound had been heard three or four times the lieutenant in com mand flashed a bulls eye lamp in the direction of the door and the light of it revealed three big braves standing close together while a fourth was just creep ing in under the door With a we-are-discovered expression the tall Indian who appeared to be the leader glanced at his companions Then as though the idea had struck all of them at once they threw their guns up and let go along down the ray of light and the lieutenant fell to the ground severely wounded Appreciating the importance of our capture the captain in command had set four powerful Pawnee scouts to guard Bear Foot the Sioux chief It was no sure thing that we would be able to stand the Indians off till morn ing and as the storm had knocked the wires down we had been unable to tele graph to Lawrence for reinforcements The fact that their brave chief was himself a captive would increase the wrath of the red men without and tak ing even a moderate view of the situa tion we were in a hard hole I for one would have gladly bartered our captive and the glory of the capture away for an assurance of seeing the sun rise on the following morning but I dared not hint such a thing to the captain much less to the Pawnees The four Pawnees with their pris oner were placed in the coal tank of the locomotive while the fireman and I oc cupied our places in the cab and kept the steam up to 140 pounds If at any time it seemed to me the fight was go ing against us and the Sioux stood a chance to effect an entrance I was to pull out for Lawrence with the captain and fetch assistance provided I did not meet a west bound train and lose my locomotive I rather liked this arrange ment risky as it was for it was pre ferable to remaining in the round house to be roasted alive Then again I dis liked fighting thats what we fed and hauled these soldiers around for They were so Infernally lazy in time of peace that I used almost to pray for trouble that they might be given an opportunity at least once a week to earn their board and keep Now that the opportunity seemed to be at hand I had no wish to deprive them of the excitement and glory of being killed in real battle and so sat nodding in the cab of the old 49 until the flash of the bulls eye caused me to look ahead The report of the rifles in the hands of the Indians had been answered by a dozen guns from the interior of the building and immediately a shower of lead rained and rattled upon the wood en doors from without One of the scouts picked the bulls eye lamp up and placed it upon the work bench training the light upon the double doors immedi ately in front of my engine Our men know how useless it would be to fire into the sand stuffed sides of the building and not caring to put themselves into a position where they could fire effective ly above the wainstcoting they very wisely kept close to the ground and al lowed the- Sioux to empty their guns into the sand Presently hearing no sound from within the attacking party ceased firing and began to prowl about the building in search of a weak spot through which they might effect an en trance The fate of the three early call ers who had hogged it under the door kept them from fooling about that trap for the remainder of the evening In a little while the whole place was as still as the tomb save for the soft flut ter of steam from the safety valve of the 49 Bear Foot knew what was go ing on Even though he could see noth ing he knew that his faithful followers were working for his release and now when all was silent he shouted from the coal tank to his braves to break the door and come in Before the Pawnee scouts could pound him Into a state of quietude he had imparted to his people the particulars of his whereabouts and immediately the whole band threw themselves against the front of the building The house fiirly trembled fne In dians surged from without and the great doors swayed to and fro threat ening at any moment to give iray and let the flood of bloodthirsty redflkins in upon us Stand together called the eaptain to his men Put on the blower and get her hot I called to the fireman for I kpew the frail structure could not withstand the strain much longer As often as the fireman opened the furnace door to rake his fire the glare of the fire box lit up the whole interior and showed three dead Sioux near the door One of them lay across the rail and I found myself speculating as to whether the pilot of the 49 would throw him off or whether I must run over him Now it seemed that the whole band had thrown themselves against the building and the yelling was deafening Above it all I heard our captain shout Get ready Frank I am ready said I All right said he shoot it to and I opened the sand valves and the throttle I have often thought what a temptation it was for those soldiers to leap upon the engine and make their escape but although they all under stood perfectly what was going on not one of them took advantage of this last train out Just as the Big Hoss moved with an her ponderous and almost irresistible weight toward the front of the building the double doors sagged toward me liko the head gate of a great reservoir that is overcharged and- then I hit em The big doors being forced from their hinges fell out upon the redskins and they were caught like rats in a trap The pilot ploughed through them maiming and killing a score of them and on went the 49 over the safe switches which had already been set for her before the fight began Tho confusion caused by the awful work of Big Hoss which they regarded as little less than the devil was increased when the Indians who remained unhurt re alized that the engine was making away with their chief for he had told them how he was held a captive in the belly of the big horse All effort for the capture of tho round house was instantly abandoned and the Sioux as one man turned and ran after the locomotive The captain in command of the scouts taking ad vantage of the confusion of his foe and of the fact that his force was in the dark building while the Sioux were out upon the whitened earth quickly mass ed his men at the open door and began to pour a murderously wicked fire into the baffled Sioux who like foolish farm dogs were chasing the 49 out over the switches All the Indians who were crippled by the engine were promptly and I thought very properly killed by the Pawnee scouts and the rest were driven away with fearful loss It was a desperately risky run from Smoky Hill to Lawrence with no run ning orders and due to collide with a westbound special or an extra that might be going out to the rescue with a train load of material but the officials fearing that something might arise which would cause us to want to come in had very wisely abandoned all trains the moment the wires went down and so we reached Lawrence just before day without a mishap My first thought was of our captive Bear Foot who had made track laying dangerous business for our people for the past three or four weeks but upon looking about I saw only four Pawnees and concluded that the fierce fellows had killed the chief and rolled him off Wheres Boar Foot I demanded Here said a Pawnee who was quietly seated upon the manhole of the engine tank and he pointed down During the excitement in the round house at Smoky Hill the Sioux had made a desperate effort to escape and had been quietly dropped into the tank where he had remained throughout th entire run Now its one thing to stay in a tank that is half filled with water when the engine is in her stall and quite another thing to inhabit a place of that kind when a locomotive is making a flying run over a new track After much time and labor had been lost fishing for tho chief with a clinker hook one of the scou43 got into the tank which was now quite empty and handed Bear Foot out When we had bailed him out and placed him along side the depot where the sun would catch him earls the cor oner came and sat on him and pro nounced him a good Indian Cy War man in the Evening Star Washington Be Agreeable The otherwise good man who lacks politeness or assumes a gruff repellant manner really sacrifices a part of his gifts for very few people will discover his good qualities under his repulsive manners Those who do may have pa tience to bear with him knowing that his heart Is right but others will judge him by his manners and finding him disagreeable will avoid Intimacy with him It Is not enough therefore to be just or mnaneartea one snouia aiso be agreeable in manner and it requires very little effort to be so The founda tion of agreeable manners is thoughtful consideration of others or true polite ness This does not imply any neces sary sacrifice of frankness and honesty It does not mean that one shall not con tradict or dispute but it does meap that when a contradiction is madri necessary it shall be expressed courte ously and Inoffensively Every one should cultivate this kind of politeness for in so far as it helps to make one agreeable It extends his opportunities for usefulness and helps to give full play to his other good qualities Balti more Sun A good cook is one who can make stewed prunes taste as if she had wash ed them before cooking them Wnl1 rnnrti mn flnlr it iti u h uju uua His -works and name snail ever live Till chaos rules tne earth Let every- patriot hail the day That celebrates his birth PleaBe Danpa will oo tell me asked a small but thoughtful youth Why Is a little hatchet called a symbol of the truth Why dont you know said grandpa Lit tle Bobby shook his head I tooly dont he answered Then you ought to grandpa said All ready he continued taking Bobby on his knee Its going to be a story and youre wide awake I see Once on a time a little boy of just about your lift Received a little hatchet from his father for a gift Oh what a funny present thoughtful Bobby cried Suppose That boy had chopped his fingers off and bloodied all his clothes I dess his foolish papa then would cry a lot I say I Why didnt that boys mamma take the hatchet right away Perhaps she didnt know It grandpa laughed at any rate Next morning bright and early rose that little boy elate To try his little hatchet In his fathers gar den he Displayed his skill by cutting down a favor ite cherry tree A cherry tree cried Bobby Werent any woods around Why cherrlea are the goodest things to eat I ever found I dess that little fellow wasnt smart a bit like me Say Danpa Do you link Id kill a lovely cherry tree Of course you wouldnt Bobby youre too fond of things to eat But just for fun suppose you did and then had chanced to meet Your father in the garden and he sternly asked you who Gut down his favorite cherry tree Now tell me what youd do nss cnerry tree And papa came and caught me If I cut down with the hatchet wouldnt he Know certain sure I did It If I told a story why Hed whip me twice as hard you know for telling him a lie But If I looked real sorry and I didnt skip and said Dear pop forgive poor Bobby who cut down your tree Instead Of getting any whipping wouldnt papa say My son Because you didnt tell a lie no whipping will be done Ahem said Grandpa startled by the wis dom of the tot Thats Just the thing that happened In the story Now you trot Away to bed and say your prayers before you close your eyes And dream about the whippings bad boys get for telling lies Detroit Free Press Washingtons Greatest Glory The transcendent glory of Washington as a soldier is that when the war was end ed he surrendered his victorious and stain less sword to the civil authority For eight long years he had carried that great trust without salary or pecuniary compensation of any kind never but once seeing his beloved Mount Vernon A pli ant army smarting under grievances would have made him king or dictator He crushed the very suggestion with indig nant rebuke Cromwell and Napoleon after successful revolutions had held on to power There is hardly another case In history where under like circum stances power has been voluntarily sur rendered Washington set for all suc cessful generals in all ages after him a noble and immortal example when he sought out that weak and migratory con- gress at Annapolis and in such dignified and manly words as these closed his im pressive speech of resignation Having now finished the work assign ed me I retire from the great theater of action and bidding an affectionate fare well to this august body under whose orders I have so long acted I here offer my commission and take my leave of all the employments of public life WASHINGTONS COACH It Is Now a Boost for Chickens in an Old Barn in New York Washingtons coach in which the fath er of his country rode to his inauguration and which should be treasured as apre cious relic is now rusting away in an old stable in New York serving as a roost for chickens and a catch all for discarded things usually thrown into garrets A few years ago this coach was purchased for 6500 but to day it is virtually neg Iected With what delight says the New York Press in commenting on this would the French take this graceful relic and array washikgtons misused coach it in the Musee de Cluny beside the Na poleon carriages guarded so reverently None would esteem it better as a public possession than the Swiss or Tyroleans who have his portrait and that of Abra ham Lincoln in honored places on the walls of their homes His appeal is as strong as that of the other who made way for liberty brave Arnold Winkel ried And wouldnt the Italians like to wheel it into the great armory at Turin It would look interesting beside the stuff ed skin of the horse that carried the hero of Marengo and the picturesque accoutre ments of Garibaldi Here in New York it is falling away with neglect February When the streets are full of slushy mushy snow When our cellars and our gutters overflow When we lose our gum galoshes As the snowdrift slowly sloshes And upon the sidewalk sploshes Doncherknow When the careless little birdlet pokes his head From his warm and comfortable winter bed And receives an Icy tiplet From Johannes Frostus nlplet And then dieth of the piplet Very dead When the earth Is In a sort of frozen web When the cigarette gives way to the eubeb Then oh then tis very clear And I say It without fear We have reached the time of year Written Feb Harpers Bazar No Tariff on the Prince Prince Ranjitsinjhl the cricketer ap pears as one of the articles on the free list in the New South Wales tariff He is going to visit the country with an English team next year and has been excepted by name from the penalties of a bill imposing a tax of 100 on all colored aliens that land In the colony The bill is intended to exclude Hin doos Chinese and Japanese from Aus tralia If all men knew what they say of one another there would not be four friends in the world This appears by the quar rels which are sometimes caused by h discreet reports FASTEST RUN ON RECORD An Old Encrinccr Tells of the Great Time Kc Made on a Railroad J Western roads have recently set up so many claims as to their ability to make fast runs and break the record it is possible the following story told by an old engineer of how he once broke all records and pulled a freight at the rate of G73 miles an hour may end the con troversy for the time being Realty my son said the engineer as he oiled vhe drivers of the huge lo comotive he had just backed Into the depot the fastest time I ever made was the fastest run ever made in this or any other country I was hauling freight then and running an old Bald win mogul We had started east with a train of twenty one cars and four of them were loaded with powder I was a little afraid of powder and was pleased to note that the cars containing the explosive was near the rear of the train We stopped on a siding to let the west bound express pass and then pulled out and let her go for all she was worth so that we could get over the tunnel summit The top of the hill was just at the entrance to the tunnel and as the track was not in very good shape In the tunnel I shut off steam and eased her up a little after getting start ed down the hill That was where I made a mistake for ten of the cars had broken loose after the engine and first eleven cars had passed over the sum mit and the momentum carried them over the knuckle and they came dovu after us fifty miles an hour Just about the middle of the tunnol they struck us with terrible force and then it was that I made the fast run for you see thet powder exploded and my engine and all the cars that were left shot out of the tunnel just like wads out of a big gun My breath was fairlv taken awav by the speed and I had to hold tight to the cab to keep from being left behind Old 71 kept the rails and shot out of the other end of that hole going at the rate of G75 miles an hour in fact we went so fast that the watchman did not see us pass although he heard th terrible report and thought that the tunnel had caved in When we reached the little town of S we were going about 350 miles an hour having lost some of our velocity Of course only a few of the cars kept the track and they all had hot boxes and flat wheels when we finally came to a stand It was 403 when we entered the tunnel and allowing a minute from that time till the explosion took place we ran the eight miles in just forty six seconds according to my watch Old 71 lost her side rods and connecting rods and two of her tires and had her smokestack carried off by the wind pressure but she was able to pull in on the side track and just at that moment the operator received a telegram from O six miles on the other side of the tunnel which read Caboose No 64 and two smoking cars just flew by leaving boards in the air which are still falling Rails are red hot from the friction That young man was the fasvtlfiS run I ever made and I dont want ro break the record again And then without even a smile the old man crawled up on the cab of the big ex press engine and got ready to pull out with the limited -Boston Herald Small Courtesies Habit counts for so much in little things that one cannot look too care fully after the small courtesies in ones own conduct A writer in the Interior describes a visit to a home where the young people possessed the true polite ness which habit had made natural One evening last week I entered a room where several young men with books and work were sitting around the lamp The young man with the lex icon and the grammar on the table be fore him was the busiest of the group but he instantly rose and remained standing until I had taken my seat The little action was automatic the habit of his family is to practice small courtesies and the boys have been trained from childhood to pay defer ence to women They always rise whenever a lady their mother sister friend or guest of the house comes into the room where they are at wnrt Neither mother nor sister goes out after dark without an escort One of the boys can always go out of his way or find it in his way to see her safeiy to a friends door or to the meeting which she wishes to attend Most win ningand sweet is the air of good breed ing which these young men have ac quired which they wear with an un conscious grace You should not care so much about the merely superficial conduct says a friend Veneering is only a polish Laid on I approve of the man or woman who is honest sincere I can pardon him a little brusqueness which may be his only misfortune It Is not veneering to be polite We are apt to grow confused on this sub ject and to fancy that there is a nat ural conflict between goodness of heart and elegance of deportment The fact is life would be a far more agreeable thing if politeness were more assidu ously cultivated Which Wickwire Have you noticed that Mudge has quit cigars and taken np a pipe Yabsley Yes I wonder what is the cause Has he been playing the races or getting engaged Indianapolis Jour nal Shy Xonn Thinjr She Have you ever been kissed by a girl before HeWhat a question Of course I havent Judy Tobacco received its name of nlev tiana in honor of Jean NIcot envov J N from the court of France tq Portugal JK who sent some seed to Catherine df Medicis a T b