don bert ' liar tiiul eta. IIJ' her ivn. con illy ted the 0111 veil who Jrtio Mil- hit- all n\v- lit Kj - /A THE OMAHA DAir/Y BEE : SUNDAY. DEOEMBEtt 14. ISOO-TITTRTY'-TWO PAaES. 9.1 The 99 Cent Store , 1319 Farnam Street , 3rd Door from 14th St. H HARDY & CO. Wholesale and Retail , St.ILR IT Our assortments are completeWe can deliver promDtlv. Can sive Vdii better attention now than we can the closing' days before Xmas. TH IS 1'IN'K BILK I'MJSIl Toilet Case , QQc Worth . Pin- ( | ii allty plu hlof- It t CBirs (1.49 ( , Shaving Cases , 99c. fVortli IJ.OO. Others proportionately cheap at ? ! , ( $ to J7.M. PLUSH Collar Cuff EOXES , 50c and up. LEATHER Collars Cuff SETS , 28e up. Plush Work Boxes , Furnished , 2Bc to $6.96. Smoking Sets in fine silk plush cases 49 cents to $4,95 A w .wjy. aarea sg gi G AM KS-\Velmvo every desirable game nude nt prices 'roiu 10 cents to W cents. SPELLING HOiVnn-Tho most Instinctive toy over inndo 830 It is impossible to give you an idea from an advertise ment of the enormous stock we carry. We are better pre pared to please you than any other store in .the city , as our stock is all newnothing trashy , and prices are within the reach 'of the leanest purses. Goods selected now can be laid away and delivered day before Christmas if yov de sire it. DOLLS ! DOLLS ! We have a special sale to morrow. 1,000 , kid body dolls at 190 , worth 500 ; large kid body dolls , with moving eyes , at 750 , worth $1.50 ; dressed dolls way below what they are worth today in Europe. Select your dolls from our mammoth stock. Shoofly hordes 7.70. finer ones from 990 to $2.95. Hobby horses 750 , better ones from 990 to $9.80. Fine skin covered horses from $6.95 to $14.85. Fine Painted Sleds 49c ; coasters 69 cents to $ J.9S , imsasmamxmaa Boys' Wag ons 49c ; lar ger ones SSc up. All iron wagons from $1.98 to $3.95. .5 m-o o 03 55 ceo c i C3 O Complete assortment Xmas Cards. Prices from ic to $2.95 each. Finest line manufactured. Wo carry n line assortment silver in nil standard makes at prices 1 less lixn ! : others nsk. Sou our now line Children's Cups Knife and Fork Sots , Napkin Kings , Etc. Etc. Doll buggies 490 ; good on.es at 75c , lined , with parasol top ; better quality up to $9.80. I H. HARDY & CO.TH JflK-i I T TTI t-e IH M. HAKDY . . i-n 1 Urtc. . . . & CO. TIIESENATORS FROM WYOISC Who the Two BaWoa Are and How They Look. GREAT STOCK INTERESTS , A. Stor : ' of Ills Boyhood nnd a Clint With Him About Ills htiUo Tlio Farmers' Alllnnoo and Inirnlls. tfOO , liy Frank O. GirpemVr.l Dec. 10.-lSpecial to TUB DBB. ] The United States senate opens this year with two full grown babies. These nro tno twin senators from the now state of Wy oming. They nro both bright fellows and they promise ) woll. Senators Cure/ and Wurren are of the snnio ago , both were horn in the east , both have made money in - western ern stock raising and both come from tbo capital of the 11077 state , Choyenno. Senator Carey has n good standing hero as a terri torial delegate. IIo has served flvojears in congress and ho is ns straight as a string and as bright as a button , IIo has studied tno machinery of congressional legislation and ho goes Into the senate well equipped for his duties. The most interesting of the new senators , however , is G ovcrnor Wnrrcn. IIo Is entirely now to Washington anil his only political ser vice has been as governor of "Wyoming terrl tory , mayor of Cheyenne and ns ono of the loading politicianof his section , lie is a man with a history and his llfo has been typ ically American , Ills father VM n Massa chusetts farmer who believed ttiat nil the learning : a boy needed was comprised in the MASTIIIIV 01' Till ! THItlC HS , "readln' , iltin1 and rilhmetlc. " When young Wnrrcn was thirteen years old ho had , to r certain extent , mastered these nnd ho wantci more schooling. Ills father told him that il be got it ho would have to earn it and ho lol him have his tlmo to li'amelf. ' From thutngo until now Wnrrcu has made his own living , IIo got n good education by working In the summers and going to school In the winters , and the most of his los&ons was studied by the light of a tallow dip away up under the roof In bis nttio room li his grandfather's house where ho boarded. IIo had progressed well in his academical studies when the war broke out , nnd ho was nt this tlmo about sixteen years old. ilo wanted to enlist at once , lu his father sent him word forbidding it , nnd according to the laws of Massachusetts ho had to bo considerably elder before ho could BO without his fnthor'n consent. Ho \ \ asunder under contract to work for his master until ho was eighteen. But on his eighteenth birthday. Juno 23 , 1SG2 , ho cnmo Into town with a load of chceso , determined to go to the war. There was a meeting in tlio town Imll that night for recruits , nndSenator Wnr- ren tells mo that when ho went in ho saw his father there , nnd ho was afraid ho might prevent - vent his enlistment. IIo was also backward because a bounty of f 150 had been offered for volunteers , and ho feared It would bethought thought ho went Into tUo army for Iho bounty. When the request for recruits was uiudo , however , ho found himself on hla feet before ho know It and ns ho Etartod up for the front his father stood by his side and took bis arm and walked with him , saying that ho had not wanted him to go before , but that ho was a man now , and ho hod confidently expected to find him liero , nnd that bo went with his consent and his blessing , Veil , so young Warren started out to bat- Ue. IIo was only lu service about a year and had bcoa offered a commission when sickness drove him homo to Massachusetts. He had icro for a tlmo charge of the largent dairy farm la that part of tbo country nnd was making a high salary for Now England wucu JO DECIDED TO GO WEST. lie stopped in Iowa , worked there for a j tlmo nnd then went on to Cheyenne. Ho had no money to sncnk of , 1 but ho got into merchandising nnd cattle raising , and gradually increased Us I capital by successful turns and by his knowledge ' of stock until hois now ono of the richest cattlemen in the country. Ho ia the president I nnd the chief stockholder in the Warren live stock company , and this com pany I has 100,000 , sheep , a.OOO cows , and about two t thousand horses. It has a flock of C.OOO Angora goats , and It has some of the finest Imported 1 rams in the United Stntos. It owns 1i 100,000 1 acres of land , and it is increasing the number i 1i of Its nnlmnls right along. Wyoming is i a state of thousands of hills , and Warren may i well bo called the Job or the senate , for his 1 cattle ronmover the best of them. IIo is like 1I 1 Job , too , in his other possessions , for ho is I a man of many interests. His merchandis ing interests extend over the whole state , ana the Cheyenne house has ngencies In Salt Lnko nnd Ogdcn. IIo has Interests In the electric light plant of Clieyenno , and there nro few business mteicsts In the city with which bo Is not connected. Lot mo tell you how this Wyoming senator looks. I called uoon him last night in his room at the Arlington hotel nnd found him a good looking fellow of about forty-six years of ago , dictating like mad to a tlpowritor who took down bis words on a mactilno that rat tled like a corn shellcr. The senator left off his dictation upon my entrance , but the in fernal clicking wont on during our conversa tion. Senator Warrca is about six feet tall and bis form is as ST1UIQ1IT AS TIIK STUAIOIITF.ST PINK which hugs the Wyoming slopes of the Kocky mountains. Ills shoulders are as broad , as are western ideas , and his chest hns boon inndo deep and full by the raritledair of Cheyenne , which contains , I am told , llfty times as much ozone as any air cast of the Mississippi. Senator Warren is a blonde. His hair Is of a light brown. His eyes nro blue nnd ho has n luxuriant straw colored moustache , which comes well down over a strong and clean cut mouth. Ills forehead Is high nnd broad , his nose u straight , nnd Ids face is , on tbo whole , rather handsome. Ho dresses well , talks well and will , I judge , bo a man of more than ordinary weight on the senate floor. I asked him as to the present condition of the now state. Said ho ! "Tho stnto of Wyoming Is increasing In popula tion right along. It is true the census gives us only 00,000 , , but wo had only 15,000 in 1870 , and I think our population todnv is really about one Hundred thousand. Wo have n great many out of the way towns nnd districts in which it was hard to pot an accurate census , Our state contains about ninety thousand square miles , and you could lose the six Now England states inside of It. Some of our county seats are a hundred anil sovcnty-llvo miles from a railroad , and I bc- llovo that we have about forty thousand more population than the census has given us. NuvuQii is decreasing In population , hu < nur population will steadily grow nnd wo wll' have , I think , ouo of the great states of tuo west" What has the stnto to make it great ! " j asked. "I thought it was all sago brush nnt mountains. " "We have ono of the richest mineral ro- glens In the United Suites , " replied the sen ator , "Our coal nnd Iron will eventually make us a great manufacturing state ando Lave THIHTT Tnomvn SQCAIIE MILES of good coal. Some of our Iron cannot bo surpassed in quality nnd quantity and wo hnvo copper nnd lead nnd gold nnd silver Wo have consldoriiDlo agricultural countr. % and if the government would give Wyoming Its arid lands , stock companies would b < formed for its irrigation and great trucks of desert could bo made to blossom like the rose Wo have some of the richest oil Holds in the United States. I have eooa oil wells which vould throw n stream sixty foot In the air , nnd there are in parts of the state ponds of ill eight feet deep , where the oil has run out 'roin natural wells and bas been caught n basins. It is not willy known how valuable Wvoming is , and the state is In ts babyhood , materially as well as politically. Jhoycnno , its capital , is an enterprising a town ns you \\ilt find anvwhero. It was a few years ago the richest town in proportion to its population in the United btatcs , and mw with a population of 15,000 ; it ha ? ns much enterprise and stir as many a town of a 100,000 in the east. It has electric lights , n $100,0011 university , ono of tlio finest railro.id depots of the country , and It is full of snap nnd enterprise. Youa.sk mo whnt 1 think the government ought to do for Wyoming , I reply she ought to give us some public build- ngs , lot the state have the dlsnosal of the irld lauds and strengthen the military posts , Wo nro on the edge of tbo Indian country mid some alarm h felt among the people as to the possibilities of an Indian war. " Senator 1'lumb tells mo that fmralls will probably bo returned to the senate , and that no 1ms a number of friends among the alli ance legislators which , in addition to his re publican fiionds , will secure his election. Senator Ingulls liimself will snv nothing about his election for publication , but I un derstand that ho COXMDKH3 ins ! UCCE S ciimi : > r. There is a general desire hero that Ingalls lie returned to the senate , and exnressions of this kind nro common , even uraong the sen ators who have been tlio most bitterly at tacked by him. The newspaper correspond ents , without an exception , are anxious that ho should remain , as bo furnishes Better de scriptive material than any other man in the body , and alwavs 1ms a new idea to offer upon every subject that comes up. I Hud a general impression that the alli ance party will bo ophormnl , nnd that it will not have murh influence on the next presi dential election. Senator 1'lumb said last night : "You can't tell whr.t will bo tbo state of thingj two yfars from now. Times may bo bettor , and the ef fect of the McKinley law may show that It will bo n good rather than n bad thing for the country. The Farmers' alliance party will hnvo a number of oftlccs to dis tribute. Us leaders will probably quarrel among themselves , nnd it may all go to plocos before tbo presidential election. " Judge Tyner , ox-postmaster general , and now at torney general of the postofllco department , thinks with General Plumb , and ho says It reminds him of the granger movement which struck Indiana about the tlmo ho ran tor congress. Ho was ad vised not to accept the republican nomination on account of the strong farmers element of the district , which would certainly DO ncalnst him. IIo was a weaker candidate than Tynor , but ho was elected because the grangers fought among themselves and could not nt tlm end agree upon n candidate. KoaHcll P. Flower thinks tlio alii auto bos TOO MAST CIUZV IDEAS as to fl at money , etc. , to hold Itself together , nnd Gcorgo O. Jones , who was the greenback candidate for the presidency some years ago , believes that the old greenback element will unite and that they will rally around bonator Stanford as the next candidate for the presi dency. I called on Senator Sanders of Montana last night. Ho says there are no alliance people in Montana , and ventures the state ment that the alliance party will within two years bo n thing of the past. "Tho people of tUo United Stntos , " saidhe , "will uotsupport any party which holds its meetings in the dark , Such actions are against the spirit of American institutions , nnd they are n part only of the craze of the times. Wo are growing - ing insane over secret societies. If you will go into any crowd you will find more buttons and badges thnu you can count , nnd it would tnko more lonmmg to read their moaning thnn it would to write a history of MOSOB and the prophet * . Parties have been lu a trans ition state for the last ten yenrs and Just now there is going on all over the United States n disintegration of pnrtlos nnd a change of so cial conditions which inake It almost Impos sible to prophecy for the future. This Is nn ngo of trusts , of false values , and of grxul fortunes. It is an ago of fortunes made dis honestly , and It would , seem to mo that a mr or KKCKONIXO Mrsr COSIE sooner or later. Our great corporation vnl ucs are based on false estimates. Our rail roads are operated so that tholr directors nnd managers and great proprietors arellttla bettor than thieves lu regard to tbo public And the balance sheet must bo made sooner or Inter. As to tbo nllianco party , I don't think that it is tbo party that Is destined to brii K this about. It is only an evidence of the discontent which prevails among the poo- > lens to existing conditions. It is so consti tuted that I don't bollovo it can hold to- other mid I do not expect to see It alive In b ! > - ' . " Now railroads are being built out from Washington in every direction. Three now electric lines are being constructed and tbo rails nro already down between the treasury ind the patent bnico of the now G street line .ind cars will bo running , it is suld , by the lirst of January. The business part of Washington is changing. A few jcars ago all of the business houses were on Pennsylvania nvcnuo with n few second class ' stores'on Seventh stroot. Ab'out eight yenrs ngo little shops begnn to spring up on F street , which runs parallel with the avenue on the north , and only about four years ago was It settled that P street was to bo a great business street. Now the F street property is the most valuablu business property in the city , and as nn evidence of its rise Hon. John W. Thompson , Washington's millionaire banker , bought last soring the corner of F and Thirteenth sheets , Just below tlio Ebultt liouso nnd paid $ JJ5OUO for it. This was considered an Immense price , and the conservative Investors of the city raised their hands in wonder. Mr. Thompson went off to Europe during the summer nnd after a nice trip through Norway nnd Switz erland , returned a few days ngo , and sold bis property for f5tl,00 , ! ( ) , making $123,000 , off of it in six months. This G street railroad has made n great boom in G street property , and It will1 sooa bo as busy as F 'street is now. Tha owners of residences along It have grown rich , and houses which tlireo yenrs ago were worth $3,000 nro now worth $25.000. General Denver , the man after whom Denver was niimod , tells mo that his landlndly was the other day ollorod $51,000 for a house which she had bouuht for $1,000 , , nnu tliero is a negro woman who owned 11 llttlo $ . " ) ,000 , prop- crtv on P street some years nuo , who hits inndo ? 7 , " > ,000 on it. Ex-Senator Buckalow of Pennsylvania und General Denver wore chatting together last nlrht of tbo wonderful growth of AVashington and of Its elements of prosperity. "Tbo people outside of Washing ton , " said General Denver , "urn11 understand it. They say the town has no manufacturers , no water front nnd no commerce , and they can't see anything to inaVo it grow. It has , in fact , the biggestfactorics In the United States nnd its hands are the best paid. There is the treasury factory , with its il.OOO cminlovcs re ceiving nn average of ? 1,000 , n year. There is the interior department which has three or four thousand more high priced hands. And there Is the pension olllco , the war depart ment and the dozen of other governmental in stitutions which must Incn-aso in size and which distribute millions of dollars hero every month. " ' "Yes , " said Senator Duckalow , "and there Is congress , with iu 400'men ' getting 15,000 salaries nnd spending more that 5,000 , a yenr hero on the average. There are the thousand odd people who hang n round congress want ing to get something out ofi \ , and there are the nabobs wbo nro.conlug here from nil parts of the country for tlielr winter resi dence and spending hero the income of their millions , There are millions of dollars spoilt every year inn social way and Washington has , I bollovo , UiubosUelements of growth of any city of its slzo lu the country. " "Yes , " suld Gouoral. Denver , "and the transient element olr Washington brings a great deal into the city. Every inauguration brings ! OXH HCNIWim TIIOrsVKi ) BTIIANOKI19 , and he Is a mighty close i calculator who can pass through Washington without spending nt least WO on the way. Washington gets f V 000,000 out of every Inauguration , or an aver age of $500,000 a year from tills source nlone , and It has conventions of all sorts from week to week , yenr in and year out. Todav it Is tbo dentists of the United State , tomorrow It Is some branch of scientists , and tbo next day It Is something else. The city grows right along in bonuty nnd In population. Its people pay only one-half the taxes and the capitalists are not afraid of the voters voting more taxes upon thorn. It Is a city cf low taxation and of fair valuation , nnd It will bo the Mecca of the capitalists for years to come. Speaking of the money spent in entertain ing \Vnshliigton \ , Res well P. Flower of New York gives some of the best dinners of tbo Capital city , IIo dlnod nearly every member of congress last session , and ho Is lion- one of the most ] > ouulnr nion in public life. I learned last night the secret of those dinners. They were given on the ground of good fellowship In the fir-it place , but in tbo second pl.ico they were nlso given to cducato Mr. Flower to the peculiar tastes and natures of the men who dined with him. Under the spurkliiiR bubbles of Flower's champagne ibo senators and representatives burst forth in their real feelings as to public matters , nnd Flower now understands how to work each of them ai to his own plans in regard to national interests und ns to the nxcs of his constituents. Flower is one of the best Ui- plomats in congress. IIo has a big head and a brainy one. When he smiles , bo smiles all over , and bo never smiles in vain. FIIANK G. CAIIPCVTCH. A Grunt Inventor. IIo made a new Invention nearly every other But something always ailed It nnd it always scorned toshirn ; Its functional activity was somehow very weak ; Its whole vitality w.is low ; the blomcd thing wouldn't work , IIo made perpetual motion things , but they would never move : And then bo made a big machine for flying through the sky , But there was n slialit obstruction in the piston rod or groove , And the only" trouble with it was , ho couldn't make it lly. And bo made marine toboggans for sliding on the sen A very pretty compromise of bicycle and boat And on tno second trial trip ho said 'twas ' his ide.i The thing would sllao tremendously If ho could make it llo.it. And ho made a panacea that would euro overv ill The long-sought life elixir , to the world so lone denied ; Hotooktho medicine himself a largo , jjrcon- lookingplll Aud twenty minutes later ho laid him down middled. Intorcbtini ; In forum lion. Smith , Gray & Co.'s Monthly : "That's ' an awful price this now company has to pay the government for every seal they kill in Alaska , " said Mr.Viggler. \ . "Ten dollars ; just think of HI" "Ton dollars for every onol" asked Mrs. WiKglor. "livery single ono. The old company never paid but& . " "Is that alii" "Yes ; Its a shame , too , the way the ani mals have been thinned out up there by the tinders and the poachers , und I don't know what nil , " "I suppose so. " "Man up there from the Smithsonian Insti tution a llttlo while ngo says there ain't ono now whcro there were twenty a dozen years ago. " "Tho Idea. , ' "Seals are seals now. " "Well ! " "Well , I thought I'd kind of toll you about it , so vou'd ' understand how I came to buy this beautiful sllver-buttoner for Christmas , in stead of the sealskin sucijuo you spoke about. " _ Presbyterian Maiden ( who admires the Episcopal ritual ) You don't know how much J. envy you that beautiful service of yours , Mr. Kowrot. Young Assistant ( who prides himself upon his skill nt tennis-O ) , well , you know , it's only a good bit of speed , with a llltla effective cutting now and then. Tan Htund I- Munsoy's Weekly : iJrown 1 see by the pipers that the Intcst is a cat doctor. Now hi ) patients have some show. Jtlrs. Drown How Is that , my dear. llrowp Because they have nine lives. A Slight .Mlstnfce. Boston Traveler : Mrs. Cnwlcr Who man ages the affairs of yourlato husband ( Ilercuved Widow His brother U bis oxo- culloner , Dr. Dlrnoy euros oUarrh , Boo bld Ktiicl How do you manage to distinguish the men who wish to milrry for injnoy from these who really love you } Maud These Who really love mo make such awful fools of themselves The 99 Cent Store. 1319 Farnam Street 3rd Door from 14th St. HERE'S ' LAUGHING GAS OS TAP Some of the Bright Things the World's ' Wits Are Saying. A POEM BY THE PROOF-READER. How JHosHom "Was Spirited Away A htiiiKin-r Ilt'lMilco In Texas Can Stand Experiment Ing Got tlio Chllilrcn Mixed. St. Joseph News : St. Agedoro Do you sco that man over there taking moxiol Ono of tlio greatest antiquarians in this town. Do Masons-Hobby of his ? "No. Ho makes his living that way. Ho publishes a patent inside comic weekly. " Wat PITight. . Harper's Ba/nr : "Does the collar leak I" "No. It's hail two feet of water In it over since I've been in the house. Not n drop can get OUt. " Tlio IVooI-Itontliir'H Pot-in. Somerville Journal : After nn uiuisunllj busy tiny those pathetic lines were found poncilleil on tlio blotter of the proof-reader's desk : Proofs to the rSpht of him , Proofs to tlio left of him. Proofs nil around him rattled and thundered ; But ho sat In blsclmlr , Withaconlldontnlr , And marked where the miserable compo. had blundered. Kpirltctl Avvny. St , Joseph News : "Whero Is your friend Blossom , now ) " "Ho has been spirited nwny. " "Whotl Kldnnpncai" "No , no. Bled of drink. " AStingliii ; Hobukc. Somerville Journal : Old Konb I fell ofl the bridge Into the river last night. Indifferent Companion Oh , well I guess it didn't hurt you much. You seem to have conio out nil rmht. Old Soak Yes , Im I swallowed nt least linlf a pint of water when I went down. Oncn In a Lifetime , St. Joseph Hows' ! "What Is your punish ment for norM ) stealing out hero ) " asked a strantjer from the cast. "Oh. " replied young Docan of Texas , "wo administer n stinging robuka for that sort of tiling. Wo generally hold a lynching beo. " ThroHtcnini : toTnrn Slntn'n Hvlilnnco. Jewelers1 Weekly : Thief Madam , hero's I tlio stuit mo an1 my pal toolc when wo busted 1 your trunk. Actress Pollcol Thief Tut , tut ! Hfon't ' make miy fuss , or I'll call In experts to testify to the vnluo of tlio rubbish. A DlHgiiHtod Native. Chicago Tribune : First Stockbroker ( pourIng - Ing out his regular quantity ) Well , iJillon has beou made president of the Union Pa- cillc. cillc.Second Second Stockbroker ( stirring a little sugar In his ) I said all the time Gould was going to give him tliut position , Intense but pooily Informed Atncilcnn ( overbearing the tnlk ) Anil lie's only been in this country two weoksl What clmnco tloes a strait-lit United States limn stand In this country , anvhow ? I wonder whnt fat Job they'll ' glvo 6'Hricnl ' IIo Wunliiil No Kvponslvo Prlic. Jewelers' Weekly ; Jeweler Would you prefer a cap of solid silver orono of nlbntiu Yank Hawks A solid silver cap ! See bore , mister , if yer want to tbrow In any do's Jc.v make It a straw hat. Tlitilr I'll ft , I UK , Chicago Tribune ; She clung to him and sobbed In heart-breaking sorrow. "Promise me , Harry , " slio pleaded , ' 'that your last thought thall bo of ma ! " "I promise , darling : , " replied the strong man brokenly , ashostrained bcrto bis bosom and mingled hi ? tours with hers. "I will ilia as becomes a bravo man , hut my lost thought shall bo of my own llltlo Hesslol" Ono convulsive embrace , ono last kiss nml ho toro himself iiwur from tlio fainting girl and rushed from tlio liouso. IIo was on his wnv to play In the rush line at n g.uni ! of football. Sorry Sim AHkoil. Epoch : She Do you love mo for myself nlono ? , He Yrs , nnil when wo'ro ' married I don't ' want any of the family thrown In. Dirt Clicnp. Chicago Trlbuno : "Biislness seems to ha lively here , " remnrkod the dignified stranger who was taking a .stioll through the booming young western uity. "LivelyI You boll" replied the man whit tling the dry yoods box. "Why , this yero corner sold last week for ? 3..riOO , , an' Its jest about big enough to nit down on. Kvor see thoboivtof it ! " "I think I have , " mused the stranger. "I paid8100,000 once fora placotoslt down in , " And the dlKiiilled United States senator walked thoughtfully away. Got 'Km Mixed. Detroit Free Press : ' 'Say , have you n losl boy down there ! " asked a voice by telephony of police headquarters the other day. "No , slr. ' "All right , neon gene a clay or two , but will probably turn up nil right somowhcro. Good bye. " About nn hoiii-later thesnmo voice U&KOU : "fot ! a lost girl down there ! " "No , sir. " "Excuse me , but I didn't know but you had. " "Aren't ' you the man who asked for a loat boy about an hour ugoi" "Yes , " "And wit's " no a gltl ? "Ye ? , hut there was a mistake. I've ' Just married a widow with live children nml haven't got to know the latter yet. I thought ono of the boys was lost , but it turut out to bo ono of the girls. Olvo mo n week and I'll ' bo nil right. Good bye. " Tlio Ijnn ( Factory. Capo Cod Item : A clergyman riding on tin down train from lioston to Ynrmoiithport the other day had Ills attention ntlractod by the succession of factories us tlio train was passing through Hrockton , ilia city of shoos , "How many fnetorioa nro there hum11 hu asked a neighboring passenger ; "lias the row noi'ndl" "That'a ' the last factory , " replied the pas- . - * BCiigor.- "You'ro mistaken , " said the clergyman ; "thoro is another. " "I loll you that was the lust factory , " said tlio other , hnperturbably. As there was Hki'ly to boa not argument , n third person pucillrally Interposed and ox- plnlneil that It was the last factory , or , in other words , the factory whcto lasts aru niuilo. Ton Chicago Tribune : "Mndnm , " snld the trump sunvi'lj'i to tlio woman of the house , "you will have no objections , I hope , to my remaining on your buck porch afuw moments to rest myself nnd Inhalu the odor of that do * liclous young praiiloehicken you nru coolt- ing ! " "How do you know it's u young prnlrlu chli'kenl" she demanded , "Why , I 11 "How do you know that It isn't n quail , or venison , or Hocky Mountain sticopl" "Madam , I assure you " "How do vou know that it Isn't cnnvaw- back duck , or California rlcubirds , or blue- winged teal , or Jlainonu-biiehrd torranml" "It smells good enough to bo any of them , I nm suio , nnd " "If you've ' got any use of that rodnosoof yours , " retorted thu woman , "you know well onouuli Its a luuthory old barnyard hen. She's been cookl'itr for six mortal hours , nn uln't donu yet , mid I've ' got no time to waste on a sneaking , hypocritical , flattering , cold victuals loafer , You fjlt. " The tramp lost no tlmo In obeying tlio roin- innnd. "Tho next liouso I tackle , " ho snld snvngcly to himself iis ho trudged on , ' 'I'll nsk ' 0111 fo bonio of their fried liver scrota , by gosh | " Dr. Uirnuy cuics cntarrli , Ueo