Of the Masterpiece Records Show an Average of Fifty Years for , J Performance of the Masterwork. f? j. Newman Borland. HE "summura bonum" of a man's life who shall say when or what it Is in any given case? It becomes almost a work of supererogation to attempt to designate any single act or performance as the one most valuable in any man's career. Reduced to the ultimate, it becomes, after all, only the ex pression of an individual opinion, save in those striking in stances in which by general consent a certain achieve ment is recognized as the man's grea-est work. No one '- fin would deny that in "Paradise Lost" Milton attained iu highest expression of his mentality, that Wellington achieved his greatest fame when he won the field of Waterloo, that Bacon's "Novum Organum Is his greatest accomplishment, and that "Don Quixote" exceeded anything else that Cervantes ever did. In other life-records one act may appear equal to another at different stages in the man's development; or to one observer the influence of one deed may far outweigh that of another, and contrariwise. This difficulty has been exceedingly hard to overcome, and without any at tempt at dogmatism, but with the earnest desire to ascertain the truth as far as may be possible, has the decision been made in the disputable records. Having be-en arranged in this manner, the records give an average age of fifty for the performance of the masterwork. For the workers the average age is forty-seven, and for the thinkers fifty-two. Chemists and physicists averago the youngest at forty-one; dramatists and playwrights, poets and Inventors, follow at forty-four; novelists give an average of forty-six; ex plorers and warriors, forty-seven; musical composers and actors, forty-eight; artists and divines occupy the position of equilibrium at fifty; essayists and reformers stand at fifty-one; physicians and surgeons line up with the states men at fifty-two; philosophers give an average of fifty-four; astronomers and mathematicians, satirists and humorists, reach fifty-six; historians, fifty -seven, and naturalists and jurists, fifty-eight. As may be noted, there is a re-arrangement of the order at this time, but the thinkers, as before, and as would naturally be expected, attain their full maturity at a later period than the workers. The corollary Is evident. Provided health and optimism remain, the man of fifty can command success as readily as the man of thirty. Health plus optimism read the secret of success; the one God-given, the other inborn, also but capable of cultivation to the point of enthusiasm The Century. ? The Man and His Job Ey Herbert J. man cannot serve two . . j r two joos at me same your whole time, it is f comes to you should be entertained and developed so as to benefit your present employers. I once knew a man who attempted to carry on a small mail order business while filling a responsible position with SI a large corporation. He spent his evenings devising new schemes and perfecting his follow-up system. The side line required more attention, perhaps, than he had originally proposed giving to it, and at last he found himself sitting up late into the night mastering the details of his new business. A man cannot work all the time, and it only naturally followed that his regular office duty showed the effects of his overworked brain, resulting from insufficient rest and recreation. What Js more, before many weeks he found that his ma'd order business was encroaching on his regular office hours, and he gave much time to it that practically belonged to the company which was paying him a salary. Aside from the idea of justice in the matter, it is unwise for the best in terests of both parties concerned for an employe to try to keep two fires go ing at one time. Most men get pretty busy getting wood for one fire, but when they try to furnish the fuel for two fires, their energy and originalitj is taxed beyond the bounds of human capabilities. New York Commercial. IT'S Significance of Mind By Benjamin ICidd -;:4m;:- T has been my experience to be able to study animal in- stincts and animal intelligence, both in the lower and high er animals, in many conditions, ror a periou nuw exicuuius over more than twenty years. Deep and lasting, on the whole, has been the impression left as to the results of animal instinct. Nevertheless, it yields place to a deeper feeling as to the character of the enormous interval which separates the highest example of animal instinct from even a simple act of intelligence. The most permanent result of ;:.- my own studies in animal capacities has been a gradually increasing convic tion as to the as yet unirnagined significance cf mind in the further evolution of the universe. But I think that a first step toward a truer appreciation of the almost Inconceivable potentialities of mind in the future is a clearer per ception of the difference which marks off its higher manifestations from eves the most remarkable examples of animal instinct. The Century. The Definition Ey George ELL, what is a railway? A railway, as we understand it in the states, is a railroad, which for the purpose of the issue of a lot of new securities 'must find a way, so we call it road. Wre build railways because the people who !lve in territory where they are rot, pray for them, clamor for them, and say that the railway would be the greatest bless ing that could come their way, but when the railways are built, and they have derived all the blessings that come with I w them, they are the principal uses of the railway is to furnish office seekers with something to howl about; agitators with a topic for unlimited conversation, and everybody with something to try to beat. The motto of politicians in dealing with rail ways is. "Soak it to him " Hapgpod. masters, neither can he hold down j..' ?v u fym ? T-kavinf fov tiuit. ucu uic ui o not fair to divide your attention be- ri line. Every idea which Of a Railway H. Post. worst things that ever happened. The GOOD-NIGHT TO DAY. The Ions gray beach with Its spur of rock a Sprinkled with pearly spray. With a tare upturned to jjreet the sky Is wooing the last of day. And the stormy waves toss up their hands And eoi'io their moaning cry. And scream ot the gulla is harshly heard As home to their nests they rty. "Leave us not," cries the sand, the waves, the birds, "Leave us not. O Golden day. But "Hush my children," replies the sun. "For now 1 must speed away." The lonely traveller bows his head. And Is bathed in the day's last liffht. And the sun bends down to kiss the earth, 'Good-night," she murmurs. good night." And her streaming locks of red and gold linse the sky with a Rlory bright, And she pulls night's veil across ner face. "Good-night," she says, "good-night. And the lighthouse keeper folds his hands. "Iear God," he murmurs low, , "Save thy children throughout the night Whom the wavus toss to and fro. ' And lo! as the earnest keeper prays, There gleams a radiant light, And God's lamp to guide his children saie Is shining througli the night. One by one the stars peep out. And the ocean reileets their light. And the sands and the sea and the birds and men Cry, "Good-night, O world, good-night. All night long from the lighthouse tower Flashes a steady light, And God's own lamp, t-he moon, and stars Are watching on earth to-night. So fear not ocean, nor birds, nor man, For God will make all things right; And with perfect trust in him and all. Murmur, "Good-night, good-night. OEXOl Eoaoi r. A unique EXPERIENCE. ; Part of the Story of the toy Who Rods on tks First Train O D Mary K. Maule in St. Nicholas. D on20inDi tnr-t. i There is a boy in New York, who but wait a minute, he isn't a boy any more, come to think of it, he is ninety four years old, and that is hardly a boy, is it? But he was a boy once, and a lively, healthy, hustling boy he was, too, away back in the early '30's, and he did something that no boy had ever done beioie. and that no hoy will ever do aga.:i for he was the first boy that rude oa the first tiain in America. II. s name was Stephen Smith Dubois, and ha was just as fond of fun and ex citement, and of going to places and seeing things, as boys are today. In the autumn of 1S31, after the crops were harvested, and he had in his jacket the money he had earned as a farm hand, he thought he would give himself a great treat. So he put his little bundle on a stick over his snoui der, and started to walk all the way from Providence, Saratoga County, up to Albany, to visit his uncle. He was fifteen years old then, and a forty mile walk was nothing to his active young limbs. He had been living on a farm, and the sishts of Albany kept him at a fev er heat of interest for a week, at which time hs felt that he would have to start on his return jou.-ey. He did not in the least mind the prospect of the long iyalk. but when he mentioned the mat ter to his uncle, he was told. that if he would remain a little longer his uncle would take him on the trial trip of the new railroad then oelng built, and which was the greatest experiment that had ever been undertaken in that pa:t cf the country. What boy could possibly resist the opportunity to ride in a brand-new in vention that was the talk of the whole country, and which, moreover, it was predicted, would run away or blow up, or go over into a ditch at the first trial! "The name of the engine was the 'De Witt Clinton,' but somebody called it the 'Brother Jonathan,' and it was afterward known as the 'Yankee,' I suppose on account of the English en gine being called the 'John Bull.' "It was a pretty funny looking little contraption compared to what locomo tives are now. It stood high and spind ling, had a straight, small smokestack and the boiler was about as big as a kerosene barrel. Behind the engine there was a tender, just a sort of a platform on a truck, and on this were two barrels of water, a couple of bas kets of fagots, and an armful of wood. Behind the tender were the coaches, hooked together by three links. Did you ever see an old fashioned stage coach? Well, these coaches were made just like them. Regular stage coach bodies, placed on trucks and supported by thorough braces with a "boot" at each end for baggage and four seats inside, each holding three people, two seats in the middle, and one on each end. There were five coaches that day, and all of them were packed full when the train finally got started, so there must have been something like seven- tv-five people aboard "All the "big bugs, and dignitaries of the whole state were there. I reck on no boy ever rode in more distin guished company. Most of them were directors of the road, senators, govern ors, mayors, high-constables, editors, and all sorts of celebrities. Many of them were old men, even than, and most of them were middle aged or ovei while I was the only boy on the ex cursion and I was only fifteen. That's why I say that I know that I am the only person now living that vas on the Mchawk and Hudson on its first trip with passengers over the road "Well, as I said, we had a terrible time getting started, but at last we got off, and then it did seem to me as if we fairly flew. I had never felt any thing like it. Theio were big white stono mile-pests all along the road, and it seemed to me that I no sooner would get through dodging one than another would come by. Oh,, it was grand riding, I tell you! wn by the nam of Jervis Jeha is. J. is, I think it was wa3 chief en gineer, John Hampson was the fire man, and John Clark, the fellow they called 'resident engineer,' acted as con ductor. They didn't have a regular conductor. I remember that they filled up the boiler when we started, but at what they called the 'half-way house' we had to stop at a tank and take on water to carry us through. 'By the time we'd left the half way house she was getting right down to her work, and it did look to me as if we were going at a terrible speed al though I guess about eighteen miles an hour was the best time we made. "I saw some of the passengers turn pale and clutch their seats like grim death when we rounded the curves; and others of them, solemn old fel lows, looked at each other and shook their heads, as if they knew that going at such a rate as that was almost wick etd, and that they surely were tempt ing' fate. But I wasn't a bit scared. The faster we went the better I liked it. The engine couldn't go too fast to suit me. "People all along the way ran out to look after the train as dumbfounded as if it had been an airship or a comet, and the horses and cows and pigs and chickens took to the hills, bawling and quawking as if they thought the very fiends were after them." ENGLAND'S BAYONET. It Is New and Superior to its Prede cessor as a Weapon. The ordr for the manufacture of 53,000 new bayonets recently placed by the war office is one of the most important given for some time. As is well known there has long been dis satisfaction with the type of army bayonet now in use, which, it is said, is lacking in thrusting power and is generally inefficient as a weapon of war. A glance at the new and the present pattern will show at once the great gain in thrusting power which is obtained by the new style. Apart from an additional five inches in lenerth it is a more formidable and useful instrument from almost every point of view than the present knife bayonet. One consideration which no military expert can leave out of his calcula tions is what may be called the fa tigue of a bayonet. In addition to the grim purpose for which it is mainly devised a bayonet should combine, with a minimum of weight and cum- bersomeness, a maximum of useful ness for cutting away brushwood and other rough hacking work. Here again it will be seen that the swordlike shape of the new weapon is infinitely more practical than the daggerlike form of its predecessor. To some ex tent the latest bayonet is a reversal of the old triangular bayonet pattern and resembles the bayonet used by the Japanese and French infantry. "Undoubtedly it is the best bayonet of any European pattern," said a manager of the firm before referred to, when seen by a representative of the Globe yesterday. "It is a longer pattern blade and the design i3 an ex ceedingly good one. Its manufacture, moreover, involves the most highly skilled workmanship, as the harden ing, tempering and grinding of the steel is a very careful performance. No,. I have not the slightest doubt that it is a far superior article to that which is about to be discarded. "We shall get to work on the order in the next two months, and I should say it will keep us employed until the new year. It will mean the regular employment of 200 or 300 men at our razor and bayonet department at our works at Acton. "Yes, the bayonets are of English manufacture throughout. It is not true that orders for weapons for the British army go abroad. The steel for these bayonets comes up from Shef field in lengths of about 24 feet, and it leaves our factory in a finished condition. Before the final stage is reached each blade goes through no fewer than 200 operations." London Globe. A Mistaken Applicant. An Episcopal clergyman had adver tised for a butler, and the next morn ing a well-dressed clean shaven young man in black was ushered into the study. "Name, please?" asked the clergyman. "Hilary Arbuthnot, sir." "Age?" "Twenty-eight." "What work have you been accustomed to"; "I am a lawyer, sir." The clergyman started. This was odd. However, as he knew, many were called in the law, few chosen. "But," he said, "do you understand the conduct of a household?" "In a general way, yes," murmured the applicant. "Can you carve?" "Yes." "Wash glass and sil ver?" "I er think so." The young man seemed embarrassed. He frowned and blushed. Just then the clergyman's wife entered. "Are you married?" was her first question. "That," said the young man, "was what I called to see your husband about, raadarae. I desire to know if he can make it convenient to officiate at my wedding at noon next Thursday week." Bellman. A Wail from the West. Every woman greedily reads the hints for economical housekeeping in current publications, but I have yet to see any such articles addressed to men. We women are told how to feed hungry families with mock-duck, use milk when we are accustomed tc cream and dye last year's fineries. Why not a cheaper brand of cigars less clubs, or perhaps more whiskrr and a smaller barber's bill? Asi, ton. why not raint tbe ""to nnothf" color and 3kim the gasoline? Har rier's Bazar Modem Farm Methods As Applied in the South. Notes of Iittereat to Planter, Fruit Grower anil Stockman Improving a Mountain Farm. J J. J. D., Etrtckhouse, N. u., writes: "I have purchased a small farm in the mountains of Western North Car olina, which has been neglected and needs improvement. The soil is sandy. I will appreciate any sugges tions." Answer: One of the chief needs of a sandy soil that has been abused is undoubtedly vegetable matter. The soil is also likely to be deficient in available supplies of phosphoric acid Bnd potash. You can add the needed vegetable matter to the soil cheaply and to advantage through the use of leguminous crops. Among the crops that are grown to advantage in your locality will be any of the clovers, the cowpea, the vetch, soy bean and vel vet bean. The velvet bearr will hard ly mature seed, but it grows well on thin land and makes an immense mass of green material which can first be pastured off, thus making the land produce something of value and tl e refuse plowed under to add veget able matter to the soil. Animals pas ture on the velvet bean to advantage when they become accustomed to it, though, of course, one should look Dut for bloat, which is liable to hap pen when animals are pasturing on any green crop that is wet with dew or soaked by heavy rains. Under your conditions it Is Impor tant that you adopt a rotation as nearly as possible. One of the best you could use would be to sow the land in cowpeas this spring, using 200 pounds of sixteen per cent, acid phosphate and seventy-five pounds of muriate of potash per acre. If the land has not grown peas for several years get two or three wagon loads Df earth from an old pea field and icatter thinly over the surface and work in with a harrow before seed ing. Use either the Whipporwill, New Era or Black pea. Cut the first irop for hay and let the second crop Srow as long as possible before turn ing it under. Turn under and seed io wheat, using a complete fertilizer it the rate of 100 pounds of cotton teed meal, 100 pounds of sixteen per jent. acid phosphate and twenty-five pounds of muriate of potash. Apply Ihe fertilizer well away from the leed, as cottonseed meal sometimes has an Injurious effect on germina tion. In the spring seed the wheat lown to clover and timothy, or if you prefer, a pasture seeded to clover and orchard grass. Allow to stand two years in grass, cutting for hay one year and grazing the second year. Then turn in the spring and put in :orn, seeding to crimson clover in the fall to plow under, and then back to cowpeas and wheat and grass. You will need to use plentiful sup plies of phosphates and potash and If your land is acid, give a good coat ing of lime, using one ton per acre. This may be purchased in the un Blacked form and distributed in heaps find scattered over the soil when properly slacked, or it may be slacked In quantity, and distributed with a machine especially made for the ap plication of lime. Keap all the stock you can on the farm, feed as much of the roughness produced as possi ble, and utilize carefully all avail able supplies of farm yard manure, and you should certainly be able to Improve your land considerably in a very short time. Knosville Tribune. Destroying Field Mice and Moles. J. P. T., Jonesboro, Tenn., writes: I would like to know how to poison or otherwise kill field mice and moles. They are very destructive in my corn fields and potato patches. Answer: Moles and mice may sometimes be killed to advantage by iha iiso nf carbon bisulph'de. Take small wads of lint cotton and thor oughly saturate with the carbon bi sulphide and put in the holes and runways if underground. The fresh runways of the mole are easily dis covered and if the bisulphide i3 put in the ground and the place where it is inserted covered with earth and pressed down slightly the fumes will penetrate the channels and often cause the destruction of moles and mice. There is a difficulty in this remedy, however, for the runways are often so near the surface of the ground that part of the carbon bi sulphide escapes and becomes mixed with the air and is not effective. Another good way to rid yourself of these pests is to prepare a mash of bran in which you might mix a lit tle cheese, corn meal or any other food that is likely to prove attractive to mice, and saturate the mixture thoroughly with paris green or some other deadly poison. Put small spoon fuls here and there about the places the mice frequent. In this way you might be able to kill a great many of them. The principal objection to us ing pari3 green in the mash as indi cated is tha dnnser that something Words of Wisdom. Fortune favors the man with a strong arm and a hard fist if he has a disposition to use them. It is not a crime to be an egotist, but it is exceed!. j;ly bad taste to let others discover it. Some people are so proud of their humility that they are constantly eomrnittins indiscretions in order that they may gracefully apologize for them. else may eat It. If the field Is some what remote from the house and the poultry not allowed to run on itr there is not mucto -danger except In the case of dogs. No other means of ridding field of mice and moles are known to the writer, though they may exist, but I trust you will find these remediesr ' satisfactory. Prof. Soule. Raising Calves AVithont Milk. E. T., Quicksburg, Va., writes: I would like to know if I can raise a calf only two weeks old without milk. If so, what is the best food, also for older calves? Answer: Calves have been raised with fair success with the use of very; little skim milk. It would be a diffi cult undertaking to attempt to raise a calf only two weeks old without the use of milk. At the end of thirty days, a fair substitute may be made for milk from hay tea. This is best pre pared by taking hay that has been cut quite young, covering it well with water, and covering it so as to ex tract the soluble food elements. The tea should be boiled until it is iff quite a concentrated form,, and then some flaxseed and wheat middlings should be added to the tea to Increase the fattening and muscle forming ele ments in which hay tea is deficient. Flaxseed jelly may be used to advan tage for this purpose. It is made, byj adding boiling water to oil mealj For a calf thirty days old not more than one-quarter pound should be fed per day with an equal amount of wheat middlings thoroughly stirred into the tea. This hay tea is often used by dairymen who sell milk.' It is quite a eimple matter to raise a calf on skim milk when taken away from the dam two or three days aftec it is dropped by adding a smalt amount of flaxseed jelly to the skim1 milk. Not more than one tablespoon ful should be used at, first, and the amount increased daily as the needs? of the calf seem to require. A calf! when first taken away from the dam! should not receive more than tens pounds of skim milk to be' increased! gradually up to fifteen pounds, buc under no circumstances should it go over eighteen pounds before, the calf, is five or six weeks old. After thai; time as much as twenty-four pounds may be fed. Should you attempt to raise a calf on skim milk or hay tea.11 remember that a small amount fed! three times a day 1b likely to give you muni Viattov roKiilte than a larffw ' ' ' ,'WUww LI amount fed twice a day. Where skim milk is used it is Important that it be fed at blood temperature and in & sweet condition.: A. M. Soule. Set Oat Asparagtwfn October. Asparagus may 4e -gown from seed, or set from roots) whlH imtyba' V, r. nf fmni K in n-v 1 llflfl .j net will require about 6000 plants to the acre. The soil should be moist, rich, sandy loam." The lighter the soil the better the result. Sets should be put out In October, in deep furrows, eigh teen inches apart and covered with, an inch or two of soil. Well-rotted stable manure in the furrow is the best fertilizer. The ground must be kept soft and free from weeds and grass. In the early spring mulch with a coat of fine straw or pine needles. It will produce from 200 to 300 pounds of shoots to the acre per season and will sell from five to twenty-five cents per pound, although the first shoots may bring as high as fifty cents per pound. But aside from the sale of the vegetable, every farm er should have a bed of it for his own use. What is more delicious than the first dainty dish of asparagus in the early springtime? Sincere, in Pro gressive Farmer. Shrnb the Pastures. Briars, bushes and trees are the greatest drawbacks to pastures irj this section. These are very anxious to grow and they hold back the srjff from growing. No farmer can grow them and do much growing grass at the same time. There is enough bottom land for pastures on almost every farm if the briars, trees and bushes were out of the way of the grass. It helps very much to remove the briars and bushes if the trees are allowed to re main. Pastures should be shrubbed at least every two years, and once a year is better. Now is the best time to do this work. Bush axes, gras3 knives and" briar knives are the tools mainly used. Remember that it takes a little work in the pasture as well as in the field. Without pastures.you can not do much with livestock, and without livestock it is impossible to get th biggest crops from the flelrs. J. M, featy. in Smithfield Herald. Odds and Enda. People who are always trying to look the part sometimes get so busy about' it that they forget it. If you have not seen a girl for a year or more, you don't know whether to describe her to an ;nter ested friend as blond or bdunftte. Beauty gushes out of poetry, in great gobs when you the author, lacking a shave, Ftowiiu away corned beef and eabcufge, -A,