Famous "Smile" Verse Written by Omaha Man Delectable Bit of Poetry Has Made Rounds of Newspapers 20 Years Under Various Au thors' Names. Betsey Ross built the first flag but it took Georgie Cohan to make it popular. Tlve flag waved o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave many moon before people really got to know what it was. Then Georgie began writing popular songs and he had the happy faculty of putting in a strain of Francis Scott Key's immortal song, here and there, and Georgie even. waved the flag on the stage at times. Finally people just had to recognize the Star-Spangled Banner. Georgie also made people realize what the Fourth of July was for, not because it was Georgie's birth day, but because it was what it is. The smile has been known to countless generations. It, was Cleo patra's smiles that made a bum out of Antony. It was Juliet's smiles in the moonlight that brought Romeo to an early grave. Smiles have done much in the world's his tory, but it remained for an Omaha man to make smiling an international pastime. You've Read It You have read the following little verse many times and smiled because of. the pure philosophy of the thing: 8mllo awllr: While jroa Mills Another smile i And soon there'! miles And mile Of smile) And life's worth while If you but smile. The author of this bit of fugitive verse, which has been printed in al most every language and on thou sands of art cards, postal cards, cal endars and wall niottos, is Zane Thompson, 131 North Thirty-first avenue, formerly with the old Chi cago Record-Herald, but now mem bership secretary for the Omaha Automobile club. Verse Goes Rounds. Mr. Thompson is somewhat in the position of a father who has a famous son., The little verse,' written 20 years ago, has gone the rounds. It liu been accredited to many famous authors, the latest being James Whit Cjmb Riley, as a late Edison record ticclares. Mr. Thompson has watched hrji brain child go into the world, be coming famous, hobnobbing with celebrities, being quoted by states iBen and prohibitionists as well as uffragists and saloonkeepers. It has befi used at banquets, political ral li? t)d prayer meetings. a wise father that knows his ti child," Mr. Thompson says. Thn verse has been printed hundreds of times and like most verse that yeil into print appears before the public limping and mutilated. Gives Original Version . But as Mr. Thompson knew the verse before it became famous he has given the original version. - Mr. Thompson contributed the verse to the Chicago Record-Herald when S. E. Kiser was conducting a column entitled "Alternating Cur rents." Each Monday he had a col umn especially for contributors which he called "Dipped From the Streets." It was in the latter col umn the verse first appeared. Soon after its appearance it was printed and reprinted. Authors claimed it. Papers fought for the honor of having been its father and above all it started an epidemic of "smile" verses that ' was national. Feminists Claim It When the verse first appeared Mr. Thompson suffered the usual indig nity of Ihose who burst into song and print, of having his name spelled "Jane" instead of Zane, so the feminists have always claimed the little verse. Mr. Thompson himself suc cumbed to the disease he had start ed and wrote other smile verses, but none that could compare with his THE The Anarchist Hunter. ' English Sleuth Poses as Red to Break Up Ter rorist Societies. Coprlht, 1111, by th World-Wias Nsws Service, Inc.) Sodibsim' Melville retired to lOS from Seotlsnil Yard one f th most thrlllli "y. ; tectlre of modern times. At the lard he specialised to political crime, and hs It was who. almost slnle-h"nded. broke np tha danerous ruwrchli. eret societies which were rS",'"f; bomb ootracea " " th,,1,, ' Mpeakln French and t.erman fluentl. ho attended many an anarchist meet Inr. and he had more narrow escapes from assassination than any deteeUre .'Ho joined the force In 1S7S. and nine years later he was the man upon whom Scotland Yard chiefly relied to , deal with the dynamltards and an annrchist then fllllns; the country with terror. After that otcb the bilfheot officials at Scotland Yard were not al" ways eertala where MrUllle was to be found, and any day they expected to here that he had been aasaminnted in mm obscure quarter of London or ' Malrtlfe was equally well known In franco as In London, and. In fact, ho once spent the best part of three years oa one ease in Paris before he ob tained the necowary evidence he wanted. As a result of his serrices to the French government ho was made an orftccr of the I-aton of Honor, a dis tinction which baa rarely fallen to any detective.) By NAZARIENE DAAN KANNI- When M. Very, the proprietor of the Cafe Very, in Paris, gave the French police information which, led to the arrest of the most infamous f ,11 anarchists. Ravachol. he little knew that he was sealing his own death warrant and providing an Eng lish detective with one of the most itamnnuit rse in hi whole career. A few days after Ravachol had beea sent to the gallows two cus- .... . . e r tomers walked into tne aie very anrl nrrlererl a rinttle of wine between them. The restaurant was brilliantly lighted and crowded with customers, first child. Following are some of the ethers: "Leave selfish (len Or floomy den. And smile again; Ilft-Hune you then Like A boa Ben Will love all men; And only when You smlla again. "lo not forget Your part is jet To smile. - Then, while The world grows brighter, Your heart is lighter, And always while You smile. "He who smiles And laughs away The little triala Of Life today Shall live to smile And laugh away A greater trial Another day." Never Copyrighted. He has never had his original "smile" copyrighted, and it has been printed probably as often as any other motto. It is still going the rounds. "I never cared to make any money from the verse. I just want ed to do something to bring more smiles in the world. I think my lit tle verse is doing it," Mr. Thompson says. . For years, after leaving the .Record-Herald, Mr. Thompson was identified with various trade jour nals. He was former editor of the Middle West School Review. Pretty Jurors Won By He-Vamp Lawyer Can a handsome young lawyer of the species of the male vamp a jury of women? Ask Miss Elizabeth Blume, one of the leadine members of the Newark (N.J.) bar shi knows. It was dull uninterest ing case she tried in the district court of Mont clair, N. J., in vnlvincr the oal- try sum ot ?4UU ( over' an alleged - breach of con-i v tract. But there - were eight wo- 1 ; men on the jury, , ama-incr them . :1 " ' " " o ------- -w-- some of the Elizabetn Blume sweetest and . loveliest girls in the county. And op posed to Miss Blume was one of the handsomest attorneys in the state of New Jersey Samuel Boardman, a Beau Brummel and a Chesterfield if ever there was One. The result? Why, Miss tilume lost. WORLD'S GREATEST DETECTIVE CASES which was soon to overwhelm them. Tti twn men conversed in low tones for a few minutes, and then one casually dropped his hat on the floor. He bent down to pick it up, and as he did so he slipped a small package under the taftie wnere nc was sitting. Immediately afterwards the two paid for their wine ana weni out. Ten miniitp later the oassers-bv were suddenly startled by the crash ing of glass, followed by the terrible roar of an explosion m , the uate Wrv anrl thp. screams of terrified women mingled with the groans of wounded and dying customers. The interior of the Cafe Very had been blown to pieces by a dynamite bomb, and nearly every one inside had been killed or wounded. Among the killed was M. Very himself, the proprietor, who had been standing near flip table on which the bomb was hidden when it went off. Crime of Revenge. Q,.rli ,'n Srief is the outline of the terrible crime, which had been car ried out by two anarchists named M,.r,;r anrl Francois in revenue for the betrayal of their still more mur derous comrade, tne notorious nava chol. From information received by the French police they learned that fran m; i,ori fl.rl tn F.ncland. though nothing was known at the time about Munier. The latter was then the darling of the French criminal classes and was ripincr Went safelv hidden, though, as the sequel will show, he was, atter two years l-er sistent inquiries by Inspector Mel vi11e trarlrerl rlnurn anr! rantlfrprl. As soon as Scotland Yard received t1, infrMrmatinn that Franrnic was wanted and had fled to England the a . u 1 . 1 . tl m a 1 lamous anarcnist nunier, as aiei villa . was t-tinwn. rtptrari tlinsa in quiries which did not cease till 1894, two years atter the caie very naa been wrecked. Melville, when hunting anarchists, was naturally not the spruce and debonair police chief he appeared in Crown Jewels Once Carried Through Paris Streets In Valise, Now Safe in "Trick" Showcase at Louvre Gems Valued at Millions, and Unbuyable at Any Price, Descend Into Masonry of Build ing at Night. By STERLING HEILIG. Paris, Aug. 13. A man carried the crown jewels of France in a shabby valise, through the streets of Paris. There was not a vehicle to be had. All the taxis and auto busses were rushing soldiers to the battle of the Marne. , The enemy was thundering down upon the capital. The crown jewels must be taken out of Paris. The shabby valise stopped at a vmtact flit Tlio director of national museums handed it to the sub-sec retary of state for beaux arts, and took a receipt. "Three days the shabby valise stayed in the modest flat until the beaux arts man could get a train for X (The railroads were packed with arriving troops and fleeing Parisians.) At X the beaux arts man took a receipt from an obscure country ki.L- Its rtrnhlematir.allv burelar- proof vault sheltered the crown jewels perfectly, througliout tne en tire war herause nobodv had all idea that they were there I Stayed in Bank. Tl,...nl,ni 1 war ttiev remained AlllUUgUUUi 1 ..' -J - there, in the shabby valise the most precious jewels in the world by their associations! The Reeents diamond greatest of jewels I The value of the worm s great stones does not depend on their size and purity alone, but on their history and adventures, ana tne personagca them InveH them, lost ttliU TYUH. uiwii'i . w . , , them, or committed crimes to win them- , Th TJetrpiit's diamond, neverthe less, ranks also finest and most per fect in Europe, as a stone. It weighs 117 carats and its onlv suoerior in mere size the Orloff, 194 carats belonged to the Russian crown; and who knows where it now isr xniru, I? tin Florentine. 133 U31.U IV . . carats, in the Austrian crown jewels and who knows wnere it isf iuc v-u : tne Rritish crown. weighs only 106 carats. But thmk of its name and story, ana tne name and story of each of them! Rests in Trick Box. r.., a trick hnv of the Louvre. iiun, 1,1 " ... . it lies on pale mauve satin, the Regent s diamona, onen caneu T: k.iinc. it came tn Kurooc in the . pocket of Pitt, the English statesman. vvmic governor . Madras (and having a pocket), he obtained it at uoiconaa, nc, iidiuicu, f . Tanielcliiind. . Hindoo 1IU1U VllV J " ' " . merchant, for $100,000. -These de tails, Pitt gave out in a pamphlet, to . . . i j ' t Att.. ctnnes mitigate tne oaium ui of the acquisition, summed up in Pope's lines of the "Man of Ross. Asletp nd nakfd as h Indlsn lay. An honest ftr stole the emwy ! t:i. 1,1 it Air rtian tn - the JTlll sum ii - monev-burning French Regent tor $650,000. : v. Who owns a Kingaoms iewels? . . c... The king, you say, oi couisc, uuv they're not his to burn. King Louis XV let Madame de Pompadour play that Regent's gem was really hers; and Marie Antoinette, being queen, knew that the glorious piece of ice was hers to wear; out f" back' honestly, each time, in the crown jewels fireproof safe as safest there. One day, however, Louis XVI took a paltry $175,000 worth of small diamonds ana tudics nui.. crown junk, to pay a certain debt of Marie Antoinette and it started the trench revolution! Called It Stealing. The national assembly called it stealing and ordered all crown jewels to be taken from the palace fire proof vault and deposited in the na- 1: I rnnm ilist a oretext tO llUIIdl .vw." j r , insult the king, and to try their power. i ' tu In the national strong room, the .1.. cc Knv He was. on the MIC Tt lunaa , contrary, a disreputable member of several anarchists ciuo in uiei-i End and other parts of London. No ir.v,;reri viilrl.pved anarchist lUUg-iia'.vu, -j present at the meetings ot these clubs was nercer in i uuiuuv.at.v,. class and everv tvDe of gov ernment than Melville I Contrary to the case with most crimes, mc au .u,. n( on-irchist crimes were Usual- ly known, but it required not only the greatest detective skiu to irac them down, but also the' greatest .-.sir-,-IV.1.B. -iirn CTe If Melville had ;iiS3iuiv i-uv. -- ever been recognized in any ot the anarchist clubs, in wnicn ne enicreu ;.. riiccriiice hp would have been hacked to pieces before he had the slightest chance ot ODiaimng any help. " it the time Munier and Francois had fled one of the most notorious of the anarchist clubs was a chid known as the Automanie club in Soho, and, there disguised, Melville went to gather what news he could. An excited band of long-haired an archists were holding a meet, but the shabbily-dressed, foreign looking comrade who entered seemed even more excited when talking over things with his other comrades in the club, all of whom knew hiin well as one of the most zealous members. At the Club. "Vive Francois; Vive Munier!" cried an excited Italian, and the cry was taken up all over the room. A speaker sprang upon the platform. Stretched across one end of the room was a big canvas sign reading, "Anarchy is order!" the motto of the anarchists. "We want some English Ra vacholsl" cried the speaker. "We want some English Muniers! Bread or lead was the question put by Rutzerveld to his master. Rutzer veld did not go to the law courts. but a gunsmith, toon a revolver, ana cKni liie amnlrtver dear! Rutzerveld was an anarchist, who murdered his master, because the lat ter refused him an increase in salary. "Vive Rutzerveld!" cried the hab-! THE BEE: OMAHA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, 1921. 1IIBJ M i tt'U'-V v jewels were safe, what? Tut, tut! Quite promptly and as famously, they were stolen by the Mietto band. How the king laughed poor boob I In the greatest police in quiry of the epoch, most of the stolen jewels were finally recovered. Only the Regent stone eluded search and at last it was found in the hands of a wine shop-keeper, - who had bought it from a stranger for $10! In all probability, both this stone and the Koh-i-Noor are portions of the fabulous diamond belonging to the Grand Mogul in 1326 the great est ever known, in size and beauty. Its story went back, with the pagent of the Indies, for 5,000 years to the mines of Golconda and, it had been worn by Kama, hero celebrated in the Mahabharata! Prefer Mazarin Diamond. 'Yet. there are men who, just to have and wear, . would prefer the Mazarin diamond, called the Peach blow, although valued, merely as a stone, in 1886, at a price not above $500,000. How could the French state sell such a fragment of France for any money? Cardinal Mazarin, the poor boy who became master of France, one of the dictators of Eiirope, and secretly-married husband of the wid owed queen, was a grand collector. In his old age, he wept over this Peachblow diamond: "Must I leave you?" . " : : . The wonderful stone had been found on the dead body of the duke of Burgundy, in the Swiss swamp after the battle of Granson, by a Swiss soldier. After changing hands several times, it was bought for the king of Portugal. One - hundred years later, a . French baron . ob tained it for his king, the romantic Henri IV. Sent by the hand of a faithful servant, the latter was at tacked on the road. He swallowed the stone; and "after his : death, it was found in his body, according to plan!" The baron who invented this novel burglar-proof vault was De Sancy by whose name the diamond has been often called; but it ceased to be the De Sancy diamond, after some new adventures. Give Stone Value. These adventures give the stone its fancy value in the eyes of senti mental English people. It came into the possessio of Charles I. of Eng land. He passed-it to his son, be fore he was beheaded; and it was exactly "the sole jewel remaining" which the wandering Prince Charlie sold to Mazarin for $25,000 at the Palace of Blois in fact as well as in Dumas' romance of "Twenty Years After." bily dressed comrade, waving his hat excitedly. "Comrades," continued the man on the platform. "I have great news, glorious news. Our brave comrades who were so gloriously revenged on the vile spy. Very, have escaped from the cursed spies in Paris, and will shortly be among us!" There followed a tremendous out burst of cheering, and the shabbily dressed comrade cheered louder than any. "Tonight," announced the speaker, vaingloriously, "tonight I meet the hero Francois! Tonight I hear from his own lips the story of Ins glorious exploit. Tonight, comrades, we shall plan a yet more glorious and tar teaching blow for the cause." The shabbily dressed man sprang excitedly on the platform beside the speaker. "Comrades!" he boomed. "There is danger to our comrade Francois. The vile spy Melville" . He got 110 further. A wild cry of rage came from a dozen hoarse throats and from all quarters of the room could be heard cries of "Death to the spyl Death to Melville!". While here and there a knife flashed, which boded ill if the great detective had been within reach. . "Francois will never, be taken alive!" shouted the first speaker. "He has a bomb for the great Melville! Bah! He fears no English police spy! Comrade," he whispered to the man beside him. "I will tell you how he is protected later. Have no fear. The English spies will never get him." He turned to the wild f rowd in front of him. "Comrades," he shrieked above the din, "Our next glorious blow in the cause of liberty will shortly be struck. The vile spy Melville is to be removed. Awaiting Francois. He put a resolution to the motley ciowd in front of him, the raving mass of German, Italian, French, Spanish and alien criminals, in which was a slight sprinkling of British fanatics, calling for lb death ft Ipsy-.". in, ii i .mi. ' ..j ... g it Ji&TJ . j . -- . . Crewct cSetvel? Qf Prance- Mazarin bequeathed it to the French state; and here it is.. A Famed Ruby. r.i. The great ruby has ' as grandiose associations for the French. ., How could they auction off the marvelous stone which . King .Francis I. made the very foundation, of , the French crown jewels? Jv , " It glows red, hot, like a dull fire. It is the greatest ruby in the world. Although . uncut, and merely as a raw stone, it would probably fetch $1,500,000 today; but it was worn by Solomon, they say, who received it from the queen of Sheba. It came to Europe .with the Moors of Granada. Peter, the cruel, murdered one of their princes, to. snatch it from his breast. Around this part of its story Alexandre Ditmas wove an entire historical romance the ' "Batard de Nauleon." Began New Adventures. Then the Great Ruby began its new adventures. Through the reign ing House of Foix with whom - it had all kinds of adventures it came to Anne of Brittany. And so, later, having it by inheritance, Francis , I. made it the foundation stone of the French crown jewels. The four 1 precious and ' peculiar jewels, are now again in the Louvre palace, exposed to public view in the gallery of Apollo. They repose in a sensational trick case of steel and plate glass, supposed to be absolutely burglar proof, because'' the whole business descends through the floor, at night, into a cement chamber hid den in the old masonry-of the pal ace and, so, not in any room at all! Yet there is a queer rumor. 'Have the .French authorities com plete" confidence in their strong and ingenious' burglar-proof device a steel box that is ; not in any room at all! Are They There? Are the crown jewels there? . According to Parisian rumor, they are not there. So, I went to photograph them. Armed with a special permit, the other morning, my photographer and I were in the gallery of Apollo be fore opening hours. The sun was striking in the east windows of that glorious long hall where sleepless Charles IX walked melancholy at daybreak ., with his little dogs, wait ing for the cour,t to wake and amuse him. Now, a guardian of the re public was doing it without dog. "To photograph the crown jewels!" read the permit. "Then you belieisc they're . here?" he said. "Those Parisians are crazy. They were so impressed' by that country bank idea that they cannot of the great detective. The first man to raise his arms in wild as sent was the shabbily dressed man on the platform. At a small, dirty table afterwards, with a bottle of cheap wine in front of them, the two men on the plat form conversed in low tones.- "Francois arrives tonight," said the first speaker. "He will come here, and we shall take him to the rooms we have for him near." "When will he come?" asked the shabby man. "Not till the early morning," answered the other. "Even I" and he tapped his dirty shiny coat as though he spoke with authority. "Even I do not know the precise hour of his arrival." The shabbily-dressed , man slowly finished off the cheap wine in front pf him and wandered away to an other little group of comrades. In 10 minutes he had shuffled out of the club and was slowly wandering along the dark side streets in the di rection ci the embankment. As he left the club he was followed at a distance by what appeared to be a half intoxicated laborer. Neai the embankment, however, the shabby looking anarchist slipped into a dark doorway, to be joined a min ute later by a drunken-locking la borer. "I think we've got Francois!" whispered the "anarchist." "He's coming into the club some time to night. We've got to be there for him. Anybody in sight?" "No one, sir," replied the laborer, who seemed to .have sobered very suddenly. "Sure j'ou weren't followed?" . "Quite, sir!" "Then e'U get along to the Yard at once," replied the other. The shabby anarchist was Inspec tor Melville, and the' intoxicated la borer was Detective Sergeant Walsh! The Rail. On the way to Scotland Yard the two discussed their plans. It was agreed to surround the Automie club get it out of their heads. I'll show you the crown jewels 1" The great glass case was empty. Also, it had no top. The bell of St. Bartholomew's tolled 8. "The time lock is open, down there," he said, pointing to the floor." He began unlocking locks, with beautiful big keys. In a hole which opened, he inserted a heavy crank; and he began to turn. It was heavy winch work. Inch by inch up rose the glass top of the empty case from a trick trap in the flooring. The entire case, in fact, was coming up from a black hole from the cement cham ber hidden in the masonry below the floor! And, suddenly, the sunlight pour ing in the windows lit up glints of topaz, amethyst, emerald, chrysto beryl, jargoon and alexandrite, from an extraordinary golden edifice that rose between two queer old crowns. Crown of Napoleon. "On the left, the crown of Na poleon,, copied exactly from the crown of Charlemagne at Aix," he said. , "On the right, the crown of Louis XV. but robbed of its great est jewels. In the middle, the last glory of the old French kings. It is the commemorative symbol of the peace of Teschen in 1779, a chef d'oeuvre of the German goldsmith's art." . "Why does France have it?" I asked. "The war of the Bavarian succession was a scrap between all the Germans!" The French museum guard straightened himself worthily. "France was mediator," he said simply. "France received this token from their gratitude. Blesscd are the peacemakers." ' Jewels Appear. As he spoke, the case, no longer empty, blazed inside with a mass of prismatic lightning flashes, blinding to the eye, like heaped electric sparks, white, pink, yellow, red, green, orange, opalescent, shimmer ing and dancing, and beside them, center of effulgence, a pure fountain of glittering light the Regent, the most perfect of the world's great diamonds. The museum guard laughed happily. "There they are!" he said. "You -see them. The great ruby, the Mazarin diamond, the swort hilt of Napoleon. Who can estimate the value of that swort hilt? It is a mass of perfect diamonds, collected one by one to do Napoleon honor, valued 50 years ago at ,$3,000,000, and today beyond price for who dare to break up Napoleon's swort hilt ? See it glitter I Do you doubt those stones? All right. Now, listen to the foolish Paris public!" and arrest every member in it. If Francois were not present then it was agreed to keep all the njembers under arrest, and capture him as he came in. It was known that he was an exceedingly dangerous man, and would not hesitate to kill if he had the opportunity. Within an hour a large force of po lice, headed by Inspector Melville, who had completely lost his foreign appearance, raided the builr'ing and arrested all who were found in it. But Francois had apparently not ar rived, and Detective Walsh acted the part of doorkeeper, while Melville waited inside the club for his man. Every body who came into the club was admitted by Walsh am! arrested by Melville and other detectives in waiting, and in a few hours the po lice had in their charge a large num ber of the most dangerous and des perate anarchists in London, but somehow or other either Francois had got wind of what had happened, or, what was far more likely, he had altered his plans at the last minute, fearing they would leak out. One of the greatest troubles the bomb throwing assassins of those day had was preventing news getting into the hands of the police. That was why they continually altered their plans at the very last moment. Little did they know how often Melville him self attended their own meetings and voted his own death! . When the detective realized that his bird was not walking into the net prepared for him he quietly re leased all the anarchists he had ar rested, and left them to shout ex cuses and swear vengeance to their hearts' content against the police to one another. But at another meeting Melville learned that Francois had been de layed. It was sheer accident he had not arrived at the Autonomic club that night. What was more impor tant, however, to the detective was that he found out Francois was lying hidden in a small house in Poplar, where he had taken the whole upocr 59 Cents Kept Titus Lowe a Week, Back in School Days Pastor of First Methodist Church Recalls Priva tions Endured While Working His Way In to an Education. By LAURA M'LAUGHLIN ENNIS Dr. Titus Lowe, pastor of First Methodist church, says that any voung man with pluck, initiative and stick-to itivencss can work his way through school if he wills to do so; and DY. Lowe ought to know, for he "has been through the mill." He "When I went to college it did not take me long to get rid of all the money I had, for 1 didn't have much. I started to school, undertaking a nine years' course, and I had less than $100 to begin with." One of the hard parts, which the doctor does not generally mention, was the fact that his father was not in sympathy with the son's desire to acquire a higher education, and it took unusual courage to proceed against the wishes of his father. But the young man telt the compelling power of "the still small voice" call ing him to preach the jrcspel, and in spite of the fact that everything needful to the acquirement of a uni versity degree seemed conspicuous by its lack, he determined upon his life course and started to school. Tells of Experiences. Dr. Lowe laughingly tells today of his hard experiences; but to the young Titus Lowe of twenty-odd years ago these same experiences lacked enduring humor. Of late yrars, he never visits Pittsburgh without hunting up his old room mate who went through the first years of school with him. This friend, now a successful business man, takes particular pleasure in sntertaining Dr. Lowe at his club. Invariably, as they feast upon the fat of the land the old days are recalled and the friend qustions: , "You recall the days, Titus, when we used to live on 59c per week? Grub and gasoline at 50!" And they join in laughter at the recollection. And this low sum was not the re sult of any experimental test for a single week but was the average cost for each of the boys extending over a period of several months. But even S9c is not so bad if you always have it, or so these boys thought when the time came that thev faced the end of their united resources. For three weeks, the young Lowe was the only monied man of the partner ship, but still they shared alike; con tinued in class and hoped. Then followed the fatal day of the empty purse! After "Panic Year." These were the days closely fol lowing the "panic year" and what work college boys were able to se cure received but slight reward com pared to wages paid today for odd jobs. There was. however, the other advantage to offset this handicap. Dr. Lowe recites that: "Apples were particularly bounti ful that year and we could get all we wanted for 25c a bushel, and I can tell you we boys could eat a lot of them. We stewed the apples, too; and we could buy tomatoes for 7c a can four cans for a quarter; and oatmeal was only 3c a pound." "I expect you used considerable oatmeal?" The memory seemed to be pleas ant; a hearty laugh preceded the re play: "Did we? There was not much variation in our breakfasts; no catering to lagging appetites with us! That was one thing we never lacked appetites! Every morning we had oatmeal for breakfast. Oat meal, and that was all!" Cream? No. "With cream, of course?" was in terrogated.' "Cream! We forgot the very ap pearance of cream in those days. But we could get milk at 5 cents a quart and sugar was cheap, too, 5 cents a pound.- Yes, I don't wonder that you laugh at my quoting prices after a lapse of so many years, but those figures are indelibly stamped floor and converted it into a niinia ture arsenal. Arrest of Francois. There Melville discovered the an archist had not only got a supply of ammunition and revolvers, but he had prepared the rooms so that it was almost impossible to take him by surprise, and whoever tried to arrest him ran the risk of almost certain death. The murderer of the people in the Cafe Very had screwed up the only door leading out of his rooms on the landing in such a way that it could only be opened a few inches, sufficient for a man at a time to squeeze through. Facing this nar row opening was a table on which Francois kept a loaded revolver and a supply of cartridges. He very rarely went out of his rooms, for he feared the English police, and Melville in particular, would ran across him, and he had got in a large store of tinned provisions ready, if necessary, to withstand a siege. Nevertheless, though Melville knew only too well what he had to face, he determined that the arrest must be carried out at all costs, and with Detective Walsh and two other detectives he preptied to capture the desperado. The four made their final plans in a saloon close to the arsenal of the anarchist, and to this brief delay, one, at least, owed his life. : The four had a silent drink, wished one another luck, and slipped quietly across the road. As they did so, Francois made one of his extremely rare excursions from the house. He had run short of oil for his lamp, and had come out to get a fresh supply at the very moment the de tectives were coming to arrest him. In a moment Melville and Walsh had him by the collar, and though a small man, the anarchist fought like a demon. It took the united strength of four detectives to get the handcuffs on him, and the crowds which quickly gathered, made matters worse by wanting to side with him, not knowing, of course, who the S II 1 t W on my memory; I shall never forget them as long as I live; they meant too much to us then to ever be for gotten." But to return to the fateful day when the two boys faced the cup board which was as bare as ever Dame Hubbard's dared to be. The last cent had been expended; they faced defeat! There was one bless ing left; nof far from the college campus there was a great siupnur spring. Judging from the spontan eous flow of water frcm under the big bluff, there was no limit to the supply. Breakfast on Water. Dr. Lowe says: "We went down to the old sulphur spring that morn ing and we filled up on water, then went on to our algebra and other classes; at neon we had nothing more to eat than we had at break fast; but the spring was still run ning and we went down and filled up again. But a fellow's courage does not hold out long without bread; after our lunch of spring water we held a consultation, and my Buddy said: "It's no use, Titus; we can't go on this wav! We've reached the fend of our string. Somehow we've got to sell our trunks and get home the best way we can." When the doctor gets this far in the recounting of those other dayst his voice grows tender, and a dif ferent light shines in his eyes as he proceeds: "That afternoon while we were sitting, wondering why the junk dealer did not come as he had promised, the mail man came down the street and handed me a letter. When I tore open that envelope a money order for $10 dropped out on the table; with it was an encourag ing letter from a friend that I had not heard, from for at least five years. Maybe you think we didn't to the restaurant and enjoyed a fed- ;t -oct tie 7$ rpnta anipre. but it was worth it! Ah, those were days!" "Well Worth While." "Dr. Lowe, if you had a son, would you be willing to allow him to un dertake the securing of an education without the necessary funds, if the money was not available?" After a moment's hesitation he de clared: "I would, yes. I think there is no better fitting for the work of living than just such experiences as a fellow gets while he is working his way through school. To have a little money all of the time, and yet not so much but what it is necessary for him to keep in touch with life and work why, there is nothing bet ter for a man! He must of neces sity give up all social activities of school, if he has no money, and, of course, that is bad. But any young fellow must be in earnest and stick mightily to his purpose if he under takes the job and expects to succeed in working his way through to a college degree. But, it's worth it alll" prisoner was. Suddenly Melville had an inspiration, and he yelled out, "Keep away. He's Jack the Ripper!" The effect was unexpected, for the four detectives had all their work cut out to prevent the crowd from lynching their prisoner 1 Munier The Terrible But though Francois was safely under lock and key there still re mained at large Munier, whom Mel ville thought to be on the continent. As luck would have it, however, the very first man he came across when he next entered the Autonomic club was Munier himself, holding forth to an admiring crowd. He had just drawn an ugly-lookiug pistol when the detective entered, and was crying, "You little beauty! I will presently teach you how to sew up Melville in his shroud 1" For Melville to have attempted to arrest the murderer then and there would have been the height of folly. For one thing it would have meant certain death, with not even a sport ing chance, for there were too many desperate characters there to allow him to get out alive once they knew he was in their midst. Moreover, even if he could have relied on help, it would have meant disclosing his disguise, and that would have pre vented him from obtaining further in formation and attending anarchist' meetings in the future. Instead, he made careful inquiries as to where Munier lived, and found that he, like Francois, had made the room he, was living in, in Soho, a perfect death trap for anyone who tried to arrest him. The detective learned that this room contained no fewer than five automatic pistols, as well as a num ber of large-sized, keet-edged surgi cal knives, similar to those used by doctors for amputations! Munier al ways carried one of these knives upon him, as well as two pistols. Inspector Melville, however, was not to be daunted by such terrible odds. At the first possible oppori (Tura te Face Sight, Colnniha SeTMh)