The Qhauifeur and the Jewels Cerrrluht, I'Vfi. by J. B. Lipmnoott Company. AU rights reserved. CHAPTER VI. (Continued.) Giving liis shoulders n resolute, fatal istic shrug. Sarto tt fjioil out of his stateroom nnil, luck in? the door behind him, went jauntily down to dinner. In the saloons through which he passed pco pie were htill scattered about, notwith standing the claims of table d'hote, and more than one loiterer turned nrouiul or glanced up over his newspaper at the sight of the distinguished looking for igner sauntering by. "Pining saloon on the left. Your High ness," an obsequious steward informed our friend as ho turned into the main ut ranee. Alceste was an ally worth having! With a sense of satisfaction that amounted to positive elation, Sarto open ed the door on his left. lie fore him glim mered a river of lights, looked a river of faces men and women of varying types, plying their knives and forks as siduously. l'erfectly conscious of the eyes that followed him. the mock prince walked slowly up the length of the room between rows of waiters, his eyes well to the front, where a chair had been already drawn out for him, far up at the captain's right. It was as he sat down, with a bow to his uniformed host, and let his glance wander idly about him that Sarto expe rienced his second shock that d.iy, and a startling one indeed. For an instant the sheer surprise of it staggered him com pletely. Then, recovering himself with supreme effort, he lifted his monocle and looked steadily across the table. Yes, there they were there was no mistake the very last people he had wished or expected to see Mrs. Richard Waring, Annette Bancroft and Gerald Buist, Englishman! After all. why had he not thought of this possibility? It was just like Gussie. after laying her plans for a protracted stay in London, suddenly to take passage for home. Raising his head, the chauffeur glanced rapidly over the tables, his quick eye picking out a keen-edged profile an an gular back. Surrounded! Hemmed in ou all sides! His lips twitched. The situation was positively comic in its dire fulness. Detective, robber, and robbed, breaking bread together! What a justa position ! "Game's up," Sarto told himself stoic ally, and, fixing his eyes on his menu card, he awaited the inevitable check mate. But it was long in coining ! Over and over the chauffeur conned that intermin able list of dishes, his brain on the alert for developments across the table ; yet nothing happened, the tinkle of glasses and the clatter of cutlery continuing un broken. What did it mean? At last the sound of a voice opposite made him prick up his ears. "I told you Blantoik was on board," came a familiar British drawl. "See him over there, Gus ie?" "Where?" Sarto experienced a faint thrill at the clear-cut, well-known tones. "Down there. That second table to your left. Look ! Four seats from the end." But Gussie did not look ! Under his lowered eye-lids the man opposite was unpleasantly conscious that her gaze was upon him curiously, interrogatively. She had recognized him ! Taking a little gold pencil out of his pocket, Sarto began, with perfect self possession, to cross off an elaborate meal, while he waited for her next move. What would she do? Gradually the eyes upon him shifted, then they came back again. Gussie put up hpr hand and litrhtly touched her hair, the furtive, beringed fingers patting a lock here, a coil there a characteristic gesture, this of hers. Why, the bird was actually pluming itself! For whose ben efit? There was a moment's silence. "If Mr. Blantock is really on board," Mrs. Waring remarked, in obviously cau tious tones, "what do you suppose it means?" Gerald hesitated a moment. "Perhaps," he suggested significantly, "it means that a friend of yours is on board too." It was a tremendous moment. Handing the card to the waiter, with a low-toned direction. Sarto now raised his head and looked deliberately across the table, his eyes encountering those of the woman opposite in a steely, impenetrable stare. To his surprise, Mrs. Waring looked away, blushing faintly, and set down her wine g!ns with a little cliek. "Well. I've quite finish. -d.'' she an nounced. ghi!H-i"2 at h-r party; "how about you? Shall w- go u; on der'k and have co:Te-?" The girl beside her acjuiesed. speak ing for the t:rt tiir.e. mid. s'ill under Lis lowered ;) id.. Sarto watched the familiar procession pass out of the room, G'tssii; takir.e the lead, as usual, the Eng lishman bringing up the r-ar. If they had recognized him. of which the cli.TjiT'-ur made no doubt, then, he told himself, there must have been a 11 tual silent derision avoid n scene in the sa'oon. Probably ;ne arrest would e made as son as he went out. "After dlrnier. the dehj.-e !" juoth Sar to. the philosopher, paraphrasing a fam ous maxim, and. true to the tcachlnes of Mine, de Pompadour, he set forth on his consomme. It was some lime later t hat. his eventful meal end -d, the ino'k prince fctf-pix'd out of the saloon and. standing in the lee of the outer door, placidly lit a cigar. What a night of enchantment It was! Ixiw in the Leavens, over the luminous, palpitating h-i-mi damzh-d the fu!l moon a pref. cold, n -,,h, and from it, de k -ciidiT the waves, a ladder of light hung us;x-; iel, each rung girt with silver. Not a breath of air i:ioed. the throbbing of the screw alone Lreaking the mystic stillness. dancing about him cautiously, Sarto took in one group after another uunter- By UJith Morgan Willett 'ng up and down the deck, and then drew back with sudden swiftness into the door shadow, his cigar bitten tight between his eeth, his breath coming unevenly, as he watched two familinr figures go by un der the electric lights. Scarcely were they past, a breath of violets following the swish of Gussie's skirts, when the man in the doorway sprang forward and picked up something that whirled over the deck in her wake. What should he do with it? Grasping the white lace thing, he star ed after the couple, twisting his thin lips uncertainly. Fate had thrown him Gus sie's handkerchief, with some obvious end in view. Why not run the chance now? "It's always best to know the worst," Sarto told himself, with unconscious Irish wit, and he set out along the decks, quick ening his steps to catch up with the loit ering pair. "Pardon, madame !" He saw them stop, and felt Gussie turn her head inquiringly. Then advancing, hat in hand, "I think you dropped this." he said, speaking in English and holding the handkerchief out to her with a glance that was half ques tion, half grim, daring defiance, for Gus sie's eyes were full of recognition. "Thank you very much," she said, tak ing her possession without looking at it. and, with a little hesitation, "Isn't this the Prince del Pino? The captain told me that he sat opposite to us at dinner." Holding himself well in hand, Sarto achieved a bow. Mrs. Waring smiled. "I feel as if I knew Your Highness already," she said, "through my old friend Count Souravieff. of the Russian Legation. I wonder if you ever heard him speak of Mrs. Richard Waring?" With his self-possession miraculously restored, Mrs. Waring's chauffeur bowed over the hand so graciously outstretched to him. "I have heard your name, madame, a hundred times," he said gallantly, "and from many others beside Count Soura vieff. Boris Souravieff!" He laughed, with a keen recollection of his late pat ron's boon companion. "Why, we were motoring together only last autumn." At this point another voice broke in. "My name's Buist," said that individ ual, introducing himself with his usual nonchalance. "Glad . to meet you, I'm sure." "Charmed," declared the Prince del Pino. Clicking his heels together, he bowed a,gain, searching the other's face warily ; but Gerald's straightforward lineaments were as open as the proverbial political door. Not a shade of suspicion, not a sign of doubt, lurked in that broad, clean shaven expanse ! Behind his tilted monocle the eyes of Ludovic Sarto, chauffeur, glistened with satisfaction at his own amazing good for tune. So these two people had accepted him without reserve! Theirs be the risk, then. He would play the part for all it was worth. "We were just about to join my cousin. Miss Bancroft." Gussie explained, leading the way around the deck. "Ah, here she is!" "Annette, this is the Prince del Pino." She sat down next to the girl and smil ingly motioned to a chair beside her. "Won't Your Highness join us? You see, Mr. Buist is evidently going to desert us for a smoke. Perhaps you will take his place?" With a murmured word of thanks. Sarto slipped into the low, easy chair, his mind going back rapidly to a certain tea party when he had first taken Mr. Buist's place when the humble chauffeur had been first allowed the honor of sitting by Mrs. Waring. What a turning of tables to-night ! With what subtle difference of texture the Fates had woven in the old design! And yet this exquisite situation had its undoubted perils. It whs with a swift realization of his own immediate danger that, turning his head, the mock Prince del Pino now met Gussie Waring's half puzzled, interrogative gaze. "Really," she apologized, "your face is so absurdly familiar, you know, I've been wondering, ever since I first saw you across the dinner table, where I could possibly have met you before or is it that you remind me of some one I know? Let me think" (she frowned absently). "Who can it be?" "Yes. who can it be?" echoed the man beside her. He smiled a faint twinkle in his inscrutable eye. "Not Souravieff, I ope .' Gussie took the bait. "Souravieff. I should think not!" She laughed, remem bering the diplomat's razor-like outlines. Then, her thoughts swerving unconscious ly into a new chrnnel, "Oh, by the way, prince, we have another mutual friend I haven't mentioned yet" this with a mis chievous side-glance at Annette. "Perhaps you haven't heard of my experience with your i-hauffeur?" "Ah. that miserable scclcrat!" ejacu lated Ludovic Sarto. He bent towards the womm he had robbed, his face posi tively sphinx-like in its impenetrability, his manner serious, deferential: and, re lapsing unconsciously into French, "My dear Mrs. Waring, I cannot tell you how distressed absolutely apologetic I feel about jour loss. To think of that fellow of mine turning out such a rascal! It is inconceivable." He paused, hesitated, then, the humor of the situation carrying him on irresist ibly. "Why, I trusted Ludovic Sarto ns I did myself, be declared, with infinite pathos; "I was sincerely attached to him!" For the first time lie looked across de liberately at the girl on his other side. Annette Bancroft was leaning forward also, taking in every word that he said, her lips parted, her small face, in the all-revt-aling electric lights, oddly tense and eager. "Ah! you too!" she exclaimed Impuls ively, a ahe caught bis eye. "Wasn't it a terrible disappointment that he should turn out so? That poor ehaiiuVur !" There was a little pause, then: "How about my poor diamonds?" aske.. Gussie. "What do you think, prince?" She turned to him, "Shall we ever get hold of that man?" "How can I tell?" asked Ludovic Sarto. lie cleared his throat and spoke in business-like English. "What steps are you aking, if 1 may ask, madame? I sup pose it is in the hands of the police Yes?" Mrs. Waring nodded her head. "I have a very capable detective," she said confi dentially, "who tracked the chauffeur all the way from Southampton to Liverpool, where, unfortunately, he gave him the slip. Mr. Blantock's idea is that he was trying to get over to America." "That is very probable," agreed Sarto. Turning slightly, he glanced again at Annette, to find her eyes fixed on him with an intensity that was almost painful. "My experience of the man indeed," he went on, choosing his words deliberately and watching her face, "is that he sel dom fails of his ends. Sarto, I think, will elude you by every means in his power. He is a shrewd fellow, I can tell you, and if you are too many for him" lie shrug ged his shoulders "ma foi ! I doubt me if you will ever catch him alive." With keen satisfaction he saw Annettt wince. "Ah !" she said, in a low tone, "what a grisly suggestion !" Then, rising abruptly, "There's Mr. Buist." This with evident relief. "I think I am going to join him and walk up and down a bit, if you and the prince will excuse mo, Gussie." Holding on to the rail, she made her way off unsteadily. Watching the small figure, Sarto was so absorbed in his own speculations that it was with a start he became conscious of a voice beside him. "Don't you think," it asked, in languid, rather bored accents, "that your chauffeur and my diamonds have absorbed quite enough of the conversation? It seems to me that you and I. prince, have a thou sand other things in common." (To be continued.) TEA FROM THE FLOWERS. Nntnrally Sweet Ten of Western ( liiim Yuliie of Tea Dmt. Tea, not from the leaves, but from the flowers alone of the plant, Is rare ly encountered in commerce. The petals, stamens, etc., are sun-dried, and the resulting tea is of a rich, deep brown hue of peculiarly delicate odor, and gives a pale amber colored infu sion rather more astringent in taste than that from the average fair grade leaf. The taste for it is an acquired one, and even if this tea could be made commercially possible, It is doubtful if it would ever become popular. The American tea trade could advan tageously take a suggestion from the brick tea of the far east. In our coun try, the tea dust, some of which is of good quality, is not properly utilized. In Europe it Is a regular article of trade, and it is advertised and sold as tea dust. In America it is sold to thou sands of cheap restaurants, who make from it the mixture of tannic acid, sugar and boiled milk which they sell as "tea." If, as in the Orient, this dust were compressed into bricks, good tea could be made from it, and the product would find a ready market through the multitude of uses for which it is adapt ed. A beginning in this direction has been made by the Pinehurst tea estate In South Carolina, and In Europe sim ilar advances have been inaugurated. The virgin tea (biepjeki-chi), so called from its use at Chinese wed dings, is the sun-dried leaf intact, tied up with three strands of colored silk. After infusion, these fagotlike little bundles are pickled in vinegar and used as salad. This tea is sold in especially handsome silk-covered and glass-topped boxes. The rarest of till teas, and one that has never been known to reach this country, is a naturally sweet tea, produced in western China on a very limited scale. Its culture is centuries old. and the secret has been jealously guarded from aer.oration to generation. The saccharinity is probably due to grafting and years of patient study and care, such as only the small Chinese tea farmer is capable of bestowing.- Scientific American. Xew lied Clover I Found. The Bureau of Plant Industry has been experimenting with a new form of rod clover which came from the black soil region of Russia. The plant is practically hairless and therefore does not hold dust like the common red clover. .For this reason it is believed tha.. it will make a better forage plant for horses, since it will bo much less like ly to cause lieavis and will be cleaner and more convenient to handle. P.loat- . ...i . t ..I....... .1.,,. t ti.irf- ! Il'g HI CHI lie 1 H'I liaors Miic in to the presence ,,f imirs on common clover. If Hits be true the trouble would bo obviated by fowling them the new hairless Orel clover. Another objection to Cue common reo. clover is that it matuns much earlier than timothy, with which it is usually j sown. It is thus impossible to harvest ! the mixture at a ti when the full value of both the clover ami timothy ran be obtained. The new Orel clover matures two weeks later than the common red kind, or at the same time with the timothy, and at a season when the farmer's at tention is not co Imperatively demanded for his corn, and also at a time when In most of the clover In It the weather Is more favorable for harvesting the crop without injury by rain. I-:nrt of Heavy Cull Klrc. The firing of a big gun causes hem orrhages in the ears of eight out of ninety-six soldiers. Freckles may be hereditary. Cases of freckles all over the body are men tioned. Food Is not supiKsed to cause them. Sun and wind make some face freckle. Cultivation of Corn. Corn makes a rank growth both above and below ground, and for that reason requires treatment somewhat different from what is given to wheat or oats. Planting in rows Is necessary not only to permit full development of the stalks, but also to give plenty of feeding room to the roots. Corn roots, If they have a chance, will occupy every inch to the depth of from three to live feet, and the yield of the corn will depend on the completeness of this occupation. The feeding ground, or, In other words, the corn root pasture, depends mainly on the preparation and cultivation of the soil. It may be limited In many ways, so that the farmer, Instead of us ing from three to live feet of his field as soil, will use only a small portion of it. If the land is not properly drained, either naturally or artificially, the corn roots cannot penetrate into the regions saturated with water, for the water shuts out the air. If hard pan comes near the surface the corn roots cannot reach Into that, and he may be culti vating but six, eight or ten inches of the field as soil. If the land be heavy and ploughed wet, full of lumps on the sur face or resting on the plough pan or bottom of the furrow, the corn roots cannot utilize these, and hence his soil Is limited. If he has ploughed under, In a dry time, coarse manure, so as to shut off the supply of water from be low, the corn roots are again limited. It is, therefore, about as necessary for the farmer to understand corn roots and their habits and ways as It is for the surgeon to understand the anatomy of the system, where the bones lie, and where the arteries, veins, nerves and muscles are hidden under the skin. The corn plant, It will be seen, has no top-root. The first roots start out from the seed grain and go down. After this the roots are sent out in whorls of from two to ten. As the plant advances toward maturity, these whorls rise closer to the surface. The first roots thrown out Immediately above the primary roots run sideways and occupy ten or fifteen inches below tjie surface. These lateral roofs throw out fibrous or feeding roots, which run in every di rection through the soil and occupy every Inch within a radius of from two to five feet. It is evident, therefore, that if we plough corn immediately after planting, or after it Is first up, we can plough us deep as we like, and generally the deeper the better. When, however, the roots begin to rise and occupy every square Inch of soil within reach, it will not do to plough deep. Our cultivation must, therefore, be lim ited to the surface, and with the end in view of killing the weeds and forming the mulch of dry dirt which will shut off surface evaporation, and spread out the water which is continually rising from below within reach of the roots. The older ami larger the plant the shallower should the cultivation be. In fact, If the ground is well prepared, ploughed deep when there is no dan ger of cutting off the roots, the only thing the farmer needs to do during (lie latter period Is to maintain the mulch of dry dirt on the surface. I-'nrni Help I,- Kiprnalve, Farm labor is cheaper than it was at this time last year and is pretty sure to continue so for the season. There has been some curtailment in manufac turing throughout the country, the re sult being that a great many men are out of work. With this condition farm ers find that they can get he!) more readily now than they have been able to for scveni 1 years. It Is asivrtained that where contracts have been made in the Middle West and Southwest for farm hands the rate of wages averages about $.1 per month low er than that prevailing a year ago. A common rate of pay for farm hands at this time Is $2."i per month, as against $.'50 last season. Competent men with experience In special departments of farming will command more, hut not as much as In l!Xx; and 1!KJ. Good live stock hands receive $3." to $4.", hut above this there are few men hired even for fancy farming or the specialties who are receiving more. Youths and Inexperienced Immigrants are offering their service for from $15 to (20 per month. DISTIUBUTIOX OF CORN BOOTS IX SOIL. Concrete Outdoor Cellm. A simple method of constructing a cool, outdoor cellar in localities whero the common house cellars are too warm for use during the summertime, Is shown in the accompanying sketch. It Is a cellar made under the pump, so that the water pumped by the windmill has a very cooling effect. In places where it is difficult to obtain Ice, it will prove indispensable to the dairyman who keeps a few cows. An other important item Is the fact that a man docs not find It necessary to pull up all of the pipes every time that he finds It necessary to repair the pipes and pump. It Is constructed of concrete. The top Is re-enforced with otit-half-Inch steel rods placed one foot apart each way and the concrete is about six Inches thick. The sides are made by using a form and t.ie stairs are also made of concrete and ara re enforced by small steel rods. The cost, OUTDOOR (HOLLAR. Including the labor, amounted to about !?r0 In the west and southwest it will also answer the purpose of a storm cave, which Is considered a fixture on all farms. Farm and House. A Sew Swindle on Fanner. An entirely new but highly successful scheme to separate farmers from their money has been worked In South Da kota during the past few months. An oily grafter calls on a farmer and makes a bid for his laud. The figures are absurdly low at first, but by de grees are raised as high as $00 an acre, and the farmer consents. Then the visitor explains that he is only an agent, but that he can sell the land at the price named if the owner will agree to pay for advertising at the rate of 50 cents an acre. The "agent'' promises orally that the advertising money will not be payable until the land is sold, but this stipula tion Is not contained In the contract that the farmer signs. In a few days he receives a copy of an ad and not overcourteous demand for money. It is said that twenty-two agricul turists were caught with this bait in Brown County and that one of them gave up $320. Thornier and Milk. To many persons the curdling of milk in a thunderstorm Is a mysterious and unintelligible phenomenon. Yet, ac cording to scientists, the whole process is simple and natural. Their claim is that milk, like most other substances, contains millions of bacteria. The milk bacteria that In a day or two, under natural conditions, would cause the fluid to sour are peculiarly sus ceptible to electricity. Electricity In spires and invigorates them, as alco hol, cocaine or strong tea affects men'. Under the current's influence they fall to work with amazing energy, and in stead of taking a couple of days to sour the milk they accomplish the task completely in a half hour. With an electric buttery it is easy on the same principle to sour the freshest milk. Improved Khuvrl Handle. In a scoop-handle for shovels, spades and similar articles recently patented, an Illinois inventor claims that he lias designed a device for tools of this kind by which the weight of the load can be more ef fectually balanced and the forward hand of the opera tor shifted In a more convenient manner to facili tate the operation of the tool in scoop BALANCES LOAD. ing and lifting. The operator Is also relieved of the necessity of stooping so low as he does in shovels of the or dinary construction. Ho introduces a supplemental handle, which is secured to the handle of the shovel, the oppo site end extending forward of the rear end of the blade, being supported from the latter by braces. The supplemen tal handle is engaged by the forward hand of the operator, the latter being thus greatly relieved of weight. It avoids the twisting strain of the body caused by lifting a heavy load when the forward hand is placed low down upon the usual handle. The hand of the operator can be readily slid back and forth in the various manipulations of the scoop, rendering it more con venient and efficient in use, adapting it to be used with decreased power and strain. The Codrilinic Moth. About one-fifth of the first laying of eggs by the coddling moth Is on the fruit, the rest being on the leaves and branches. The young larva that hatches from the egg Is able to feed on the foliage to some extent and may come into maturity without entering the fruit, although It rarely does so. About SO per cent of the first brood finds Its way Into the apples at the calyx, while the rest eat In at other points, principally at the stem. Only about 28 jkt cent of the second brood enters at the calyx, the others eating in where the apples touch each other, or a leaf at the stem end. The aver age life of the adult Insect, or moth, is about four days. THEWEEKLY 110S- Death of Peter the Hermit, the preanher of the first crusade. 13SG Swiss defeated the Austrians at battle of Sempach. 1008 Chaniplain founded the city of Quebec. 1709 Peter the Great of Russia decis ively defeated Charles XII. of Swe den at battle of Pultowa. 177o Washington took command of the Continental army at Cambridge. 17S1 Engagement between British and American troops at Kings Bridge, X. Y. 1779 Fairfield, Conn., burned by the British. 1792 City of Washington selected as the capital of the United States. ' 183!) First normal school in America opened at Lexington, Mass. 184(5 Commodore Slout of the United States navy bombarded and took pos session of the city of Monterey. ISIS Peace proclaimed between the United States and Mexico. lSoO Integrity of Denmark guaranteed by England, France, Prussia and Sweden. 1S51 Corner stone of the extension of the capitol laid by President Filmore. 18."4 Turks defeated the Russians at Giurgevo. lS5o Lord Canning appointed Gov ernor General of India. T8C3 Surrender of Port Hudson, a Con federate fortress on the Mississippi river. .. .Last day of the battle of Gettysburg. ISOu Execution of Payne, Atzerott, Har old and Mrs. Surratt, for complicity in the assassination of President Lin coln. 1800 Prussians defeated the Austrians at Sadowa. 1SS7 The Ameer of Afghanistan, follow ing a rising against taxation, pro claimed peace, amnesty and a remis sion of taxes for two years. IS90 Idaho Territory became a State. 1893 Marriage of the Duke of York and Princess May of Teck. 18!)."i A third daughter was Iwirn to the President and Mrs. Cleveland at Cray Gables Twenty persons killed in a railroad wreck on the Grand Trunk near Quebec. 1807 -Lisbon celebrated the 4Ht h anni versary of the departure of Vasco da Gama to discover the sea route to the Indies. 1898 The island of Guam seized by the Americans of the warship Charles ton. 1900 Li Hung Chang made viceroy of China. 190r 'i,rjst's College, Cambridge, cele brated the 4UOih year of its founda tion. 1907 Mayor Schmitz of San Francisco sentenced to five years' imprisonment for extortion ... .Opening of the new lift lock in the canal at Kirklield, Out. The bnccalaureate address of President Woodrow Wilson of Princeton to the senior class said that the fundamental moral problem in the complex civilization of to-day was "how to separate the in dividual from the mass, to lift the indi vidual soul out of the confusion and dis traction of modern societies, unions, brotherhoods, leagues, alliances, corpora tions and trusts, into some clear place of vision, where he may think and see ajwrt, looking beyond the things of to day to the things that abide." Standards, he thought, had been confused by the at tempt to confound morals with material ambitions. Individual conscience and not law would make reforms. But the ten dency toward vast organizations of all kinds had resulted in men's trying to st arate their individual life from the life of their organization, being meal in the jne and immoral in the other, lie declared I hat the tendency to be practical would not conquer the tendency to be moral. Gov. Warner has announced the ap point ment of Chase S. Osborn. of Sault Sle. Marie, Mich., as regent of the Uni versity of Michigan, to succeed the late Peter White, of Marquette. Mr. OsWn was chairman of the Michigan delegation at the Republican national convention. Gov. Johnson of Minnesota delivered, the commencement address to the stu dents of Kansas State university. His subject was "landmarks of American Ubcrty." Ih Wu Ting-Fang, Chinese minister to the United States, delivered the com mencement address at Iowa University. At the conclusion of his address Minis ter Wu was given the honorary degree of LL. D. In the afternoon Minister Wu delivered an open-air address. Theodore Koosevelt. Jr., son of the President, ha taken his degree as bach elor of arts, thus finisainj a four yars' course in three years. The Joung man has mod-! known his purose to begin hi tireer ia the ranks of thj manual lalior ers. and is said to have atpted a p ac a a miner.