PART III. THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. 5cccccccccccccccccccoccoc PAGES 17 TO 20. < ESTA15LISI1ED JUNE 19 , 1871. OMAHA , SUNDAY MORNING- , JULY 7 , 1805 TWENTY PAGES. SINGLE COPY FIVE ( TENTS. THE SECRETS OF LONG LIFE ft * lamons Veterans en Life's Stage Eelato r V Their Experiences. SAGE CONCLUSIONS SEASONED WITH AGE butnn II. Anthony , I.ouUn Drew , Clark , Siunticl Hmllri , Illicit Mct'ulloch mid Other Notable * Contribute Wisdom for the Young , * ( Copyrighted , ISO : . , by Frank d. Carpenter. ) WASHINGTON , July 3. ( Special Corre cpondenco of The Bee. ) "How to keep young" For the past ten years I have been getting advlco from the famous old people of the world upon this subject. I Interviewed George Bancroft upon It when ho was in his L nineties , and ho then told mo ho could ride thirty miles a day without tiring. I chatted with W. W. Corcoran as to this when he K was 85 , and President Harrison's father-In law , Dr. Scott , gave mo hla receipt for a working old age when ho was 92. I know a dozen men who have passed their three score and ten , and who are famous In public life , who are still doing good work , and Governor Gear , the newly elected senator from Iowa , in halo and hearty at 75. I Interviewed Casslus M. Clay when he was over 80 , about three years ago , upon this subject , and since that tlmo ho has married a young wife and lias begun another existence. LI Hung Chang told mo last summer how ho divided his work and sleep , In order to maintain the wonderful vitality which ho showed at 74 , nnd I have today a number of letters and In terviews with noted septo and octogenarians upon this subject. Thcso loiters have been accumulating for some time. They are writ ten by mon a-nd women who have long since passed , their three score and ten , and still their handwriting shows that they have not Inst thclV vigor , and their words sparkle with the 'vitality' ' of youth. ADVICE FROM SUSAN B. ANTHONY. The first ono -I give Is from Susan B. Anthony. She Is now 75 , but her blue eyes are full cf life and her voice Is as strong as it was when she made her first public speech , away back In 1847 , nearly half a century ago. I sent her a list of questions upon the sub ject of perpetual youth about a year ago. And hero are her answers , dated April 28 , 1S94 : "The course of llfo for a young woman to lead , In order that she may reach a working old ago and make the most of herself , Is precisely the course of life that a young man nhould pursue for the same purpose , and this has been so well Indicated by Phillips Brooks , that I can do no better than to quote his own words , as follows : " 'To be at work , to do things for the world , to turn the currents of the things about us at our will , to make our existence a positive element , oven though It bo no bigger than a grain of sand In the great system where wo live this alone Is to live. Long-lived people whp keep up their work to the last are the people who have found out this secret , namely , that congenial work ts the Joy of life. ' " Ono of my questions was as to how Miss Anthony kept her wonderful health and workIng - Ing power. Her reply to this Is as follows : "A human being Is born to think , to will , , to' enjoy a liberty bounded , only by respect for the equal liberty of others. To think one's self into ( he realm of perfect freedom cf thought ; to possess and enjoy such liberty of social action as Is bounded only by the same liberty In others , and to will with all one's power that each unit's political liberty shall be conceded and officially recognized by each Is to tread the natural path of human development. Hence , I can but attribute my own extraordinary health and working powers to' the fact that I have chosen such a course. As machinery In action lasts longer than ma chinery lying Idle , ro a body and soul In ac tive exercise escapes the corroding rust of physical and mental laziness , which prema turely cuts off so many women's lives. It I am able to do the work of dally traveling and lecturing at over three scare years ami ten , I bJllove It to bo simply because I have always worked and loved work. As to my habits of life , It will be plain from what I liave just said that It has been Impossible for me to have fixed rules for eating , resting , Bleeping , etc. The only advice I could give a young person on this point would be : 'Llvo as simply as you can. Eat what you find agrees with your constitution when you can get It. Sleep whenever you are sleepy , and think-as little of thesis details as possible. ' ' 6'A WORD ABOUT MARRIAGE. "You ask whether marriage Is conducive to longevity and should women marry young , " Miss Anthony's letter continues. "Now , the answers" to this are plainly : That depends upon the specific case of marriage and upon what you mean by young. In the orient a woman Is considered old enough to marry at 12. In the Occident the average ago for mar riage ranges from 20 to 28. I should con sider 25 a good age for a woman to marry , as by that time she has arrived at a reason ing stage , and Is therefore In condition to make an Intelligent choice among men. A marriage at this , age , largely because It Is likely to be made with some Intelligence , Is nioro conducive to longevity than a child mar riage. Then , if It be a marriage with a hus band whp highly respects his wlfe'.i Individu ality , who treats her In all particulars as ho himself would wish to be treated were he a woman ot fine spirit , of Independoit thyg'it and ot self-respecting will , ! should say such a marriage Is conducive to longevity , and \a \ an Ideal human relation. " In closing. Miss Anthony writes the WowIng - Ingas to the preservation ot mental activ ity : "Intellectual health Is best preserved by exorcise of the Intellect. Intellectual decay U due io an Inactivity ot the mind. The worrying people of the world are rarely round among the workers , for one of the les sons a worker learns is to do the best possi ble at every moment , and to trust time to finish what cannot then be consummated. Worry belongs to those who have no faith and who assume too great responsibility. It belongs to the people who feel that all the work of the world can only be well done by themselves , and that they have neither time nor strength to do It alt. The true thinker understand ! that nature creates thousands of workers for every work , and her faith In this standing host preserves her from the worry that la born of narrowness and egol m. " THE GREAT MRS. MALAPROP. Ot the same age as Susan B. Anthony and Cf equal vitality Is Mrs. Louis.-x Drew , who now. at 75 , has all the vigor ot youth. For the the past sixty-seven years she has been delighting audiences In this country and Europe with her genius , and her comedy acting has laughed more fat upon the boneset ot the people of the United States than the humors ot "BUI Nye" or "Josh Billings. " Mrs. Drew may almost be said to be In her prime today. For thirty years she was the manager ot a theater , and her letter shows that her life has boon comparatively free from the Ills which ordinary flesh is heir to. I give It verbatim : "BIRMINGHAM , Ala. . April 23 , 1894. My Pear Sir : You ha > e put several ques tions to mu which are difficult for me to answer. How can I tell that what agrees with my constitution will do so with others. I can only answer for myself , and shall , I f * ( ear , appear egotistical. I have always ' lived generously and have enjoyed my life. Many sorrows have overtaken my late years , but have not crushed my spirits. I mar ried very early In life , at the age of 16 , but should not advise to early a marriage Bonerally. Still I did not have any family until I waa SO years old. and I waa consequently quently not harassed by the care of children when I waa very young. I know of no way ot preserving health. Intellectual or physi cal , except through the exercise ot the facul- i , ties. I have never been aflllcted with In somnia , and therefore cannot prescribe a ' remedy ( or that. In fact , I have been to Insularly blessed with One health that I m scarcely a good subject for your purpose. Yours truly , LOUISA DREW. " BISHOP CLARK OF RHODE ISLAND. One of the great men of the Episcopal church Is Bishop Thomas M. .Clark , who has ' jeon preaching the gospel for the last sixty i years. He graduated at 'Yale college when j Andrew Jackson was ( till In his first pres- dentlal term , and he was llcenrsd to preach ' as a Presbyterian clergyman before Van I llurcn got the presidency , . Soon after this lie dropped Presbytcrlanlsm and became an Episcopalian , and ho was mdde the bishop of Rhode Island more than -forty years ago. He has published a number of , books , and now , at the age of 83 , he can outwork most of the young men about htm. Here t ? what he writes : 'PROVIDENCE , R. I. . April 1 , 1891. Dear Sir : In reply to yours of the 3d Inst. al low me to say that I wasi born In Newbury- port , Mass. , on the 4th of July , 1812 , and so far as I know , with the exception of a stiff ness In the joints , which-prevents me from walking long distances , I am as > strong and well as I ever have been. I am able to keep all my appointments home and abroad , and to work with entire freedom In fact , I have done more visiting-within the last six months than In any other half year of my life. life."Now "Now , In reply to your questions , let mo say that In order to reach a working old ago and making the most of himself , and 'keep- Ing up his work to the last , a young man should take abundant physical exercise , nu tritious , wholesome food , < and rational amusements. He should 'cultivate all his mental powers to the best possible advantage , while at the came time he should be care ful not to overtask his mind wl.th the study of books , or anything , likely to Impair his health. Of course he must avoid every habit and Indulgence which tends to weaken his nervous force , and lead a natural , wholesome , pure and temperate life. . The working power of the mind ought not , to diminish with the approach of age , and it U possible for us to do our best work toward the close of our mortal existence. "I attribute my own ( health , which has never been seriously Impaired , and my lon gevity , very much to the Inheritance which has been transmitted to me by my ancestors. I am descended on my mother's side from the Rev. John Wheelwright , one of the earliest of the Boston ministers , who was banished from the Massachusetts colony for heresy about the year 1640. He lived to an extreme old age , as most of his posterl.ty have done , my own grandfather being 93 years old the first time he ever sent for a physician. SMOKED TOBACCO FIFTY YEARS. "As to my own personal habits , I smoked tobacco faithfully for fifty years , and then , seven or eight years ago , I abandoned It altogether , on the ground that I did not care to be a slave of such a htfblt any longer. I have not been a total abstainer , except for certain limited periods , when I thought that the wefare of others required It. I have been accustomed to sleep as other people do and without giving much thought to It. In fact , a scrupulous regard for sanitary rules and special attention to bodily health have never interested me very much. "In regard to marriage as conducive to longevity and everything else that Is good and desirable , I think that every able-bodied man who has the means of supporting a fam ily Is under a moral obligation to marry as soon as , possible after he has reached the age of 21. If he expects to live upon other people ple , like a parasite , he has no right to marry at all. "In order , to preserve Intellectual health a young man , I would say an old man also , should act and work like a reasonable being , ' and always have so'methlng on hand to oc cupy and benefit and Interest him. Inertia Is the cause of old age. A machine that lies Idle for a series of yeara ts destroyed by rust , and It works In the same way with human beings , whether they are young or old. I do not mean that a business man should keep on going to his office or his shop every day and toll on as ho has been accus tomed to do until the end comes. But there must bo something to occupy the mini If wo would keep from dying before our time. "As to Insomnia , I go to bsd every night at 12 o'clock and get up before 8 the next morning taking a short nap during the day If I have the opportunity to do so. I often keep on writing until after midnight , as I am now doing , but this does not Interfere with my sleeping. I have no troubls oh that scare , "I have , in fact , no consciousness of old age , and but for the Impediment in walking I should consider myself as young a man as I ever was. I know , of course , that the end must be near , but It does not seem to me any nearer than It did fifty years ago. I have great reason .to thank God for giving mo such a serene and famous old age. Very respectfully yours , "THOMAS M. CLARK. " THE AUTHOR OF SELF HELP. My next letter Is from Mr. Samuel Smiles , the author of Self Help and of a dozen other valuable works. He also says that work is the only thing that keeps man young. His letter Is full of personal details about his hablU and his work. It Is written lu a firm hand U leads as follows : "KENSINGTON , London , June 4 , 1894. Dear Sir : I have Io ask your pardon for not sooner rcplylnir to your letter of 10th April. It came to mo through Edinburgh , Scotland , which I left fifty-six years ago. Since then I have lived at Leeds , but principally In Lon don , whore I long acted as secretary of the Southeastern Railway .o-mpany. . "I am well on In my 821 yeir. About twenty-three years ago I had a stroke of par alysis and should scarcely be living at pres ent , bul having a sound constitution and giving up all work for about five vears. I happily recovered , and only the other day I sent the MS. of a new book to the printers. "The reason I had my stroke of paralysis Is as follows : After doing my secretarial work during the day I went home at night and wrote the Lives of the Engineers. After that came Self Help and Character. The first successful book I wrote was on the life ot George Stephenson. I had at tained the age of ' 45 years when I wrote that book. The' ' vothcrs"'rollowed. Whllo I was writing Character I was also editing the work of my son , "A Boy's Voyage Round the World. " This was more than any human brain could undergo. Then I was stricken down lost the use of my right side , lost my speech had what Is called aphasia ; and then took mj- long rest. When I recovered I proceeded to write other books , most of which are known In America. Many of my books have been translated Into European languages and also Into Asiatic , as far as Japan. "You ask me about my habits. I am never Idle Work Is the salvation of every human being. My wife la alive and as happy as I am. I should not have been as I am without her. We had two sons and three daughters one of the sweetest of the latter died. But we have , nevertheless , twenty grandchildren , and one of them Is happily married. Wo had our , golden wedding in December last , "I smoke moderately and take three-quar ters of a glass of whisky at night , by the advice of my doctor , to Induce sleep. Every thing In moderation. I take two walks a day , one in the afternoon , another In the afternoon. On the whole , I anv very well. Ever yours , faithfully , s. MILES. " SECRETARY M'CULLOCH. ? ! V\OIi ih most ' " ' " " "tine of these un published letters was .from Hon. Hugh Mc- Culloch. He was 76 ye.trs old when secretary of the treasury , and he preserved his Intel lectual vigor to the last. About a year go ho dictated a letter for , me on youth and how x ? i.'X' ' , , He , wa * nof we" at the tlme. a"l .Mm. McCulloch wrote- the letter and signed t. In It she said : " .Mr. McCullosh believes In the golden rule. The young man who woull grow old and fitlll keep young should do to Qlhera as he would b done by. He should bo pure In soul "arid body , and be temperate In eatins and drinking. He be- lltves that tobacco and ardent splrlta are In jurious , and he would advlae the young to let them alone. Ho should devote himself to business , but he Should not neglect his family. He should marry aa aoon as he la able to keep house , and when he flnda the woman whom ha can * sincerely love. ' You ask ua to Insomnia. Mr. McCulloch htu found that horseback riding has done a great deal for him. He has always been a light sleeper , nnd he could not sleep well when business cares annoyed him. He waa delicate when he we.it to Indiana at the age ! cf 25. hut he had to take four trips a yeir from Fort Wayne to Indianapolis on horse back. This exerclflo made him strong and vigorous , and he kept It up In atter life. It was his chlet exercise when. In the Treasury department. Secretary McCulloch has always been domestic In hi * tastes. His pleasures have been In hla family , an. ) It Is there that ho has gotten his rest and enjoyment. Hla boys have always been fonder of homo than of any other place , and their father was thflr favorite'companion. . He therefore had no black sheep In his family. Sons and grand sons are respectablemen. . so far. God blew them ! MRS. M'CULLeCH. " AX OCTOGENARIAN ASTRONOMER. One of the most famous astronomers and scientists of England Is Hon. William Hug- .glns . , F. R. S. , D. C. L. , LL. D. . who now , at 81 , writes a hand like copper-plate. I have a long letter from him upon these subjects , and he glvc me many good points as to how to keep young. Says he : "Ono of the chief things that I would say to young men Is , don't burn your candle at both ends. Do not attempt to take upon yourself the double burden of hard Intel lectual work , and at the same time try to undergo the exhausting activities of modern social life. Work alone seldom , If ever , kills or even enfeebles , but Intellectual work , fol lowed by the exhausting excitement of B3cc'y ! , makes a double strain which is one of the most frequent causes of premature feebleness - nes-s and of old age. I believe In regular and sufficient periods of sleep , and as for myself , I have never smoked , and , though not a total abstainer , I take very little ot any alcoholic stimulants. I sometimes drink a glass of claret , but often for a long period no wines at all. . - . . "You ask as to marriage. I reply that , other conditions being equal , a young man will do wls-ely to marry reasonably early. I think , however , that It would be far better to defer marriage If Its Increased expenses and social claims are likely to cripple the means of the young man and his preparation for his life work. If a wise choice Is made , and both are willing by a prudent mode of living to avoid bringing upon themselves prema turely large expenses and social distinctions , I believe a young man In such caws will be Immensely the- gainer by the stimulus , sym pathy and safeguards of an early marriage. "WILLIAM HUGGINS. " THOMAS WENTWORTH 1IIGGINSON. Few men in the United States have done more literary work than Tlumai Wentworth Hlgglnson. He has written a dozen dlfure.it works , and ho has been one of the leaders of advanced thought In the United States for vears. Ho Is now 82 years of age , but he la In good physical condition and Is still at work. His reply comes to mo on the pages of a notebook , with the questions on one side and the answers opposite them. It is short and to the point. He says he doe.3 not use tobacco nor liquor , an ! yet many who us them reach a healthy old age. He sleeps eight hours every night , and takes a cell sponge bath daily. He can't say whethe- marriage Is conducive to lo-gevlty or not and he adds that "many unmarried psopla live long. " He thinks 25 Is a good age for a young man to marry , and advises young men who wish to reach 80 "to have regular habits nnd to work moderately , but persls- cntly. In some good cause. " To such us can t sleep he says : "Diminish the strain upon your mind and avoid care from annoyance ana evil. " This correspondence of mine Is Interesting through the Insight which it glvei into the lives and habits of some public men. Many of these old men write firm , characteristic hands. Some refuse to give matter for pub lication. Canon Farrar writes me that he has a rooted objection to giving promiscuous opinions and details of biography to the press and that he must beg me to kindly excuse him. HOW HERBERT SPENCER WORKS. Mr. Herbert Spencer , the great scientist. Is now 85. He was a sickly boy , and he never had good health. Still his life has been spent In hard work , and he Is now one of the most skillful men of the world In the art of taking care of himself. He does most of his work by dictation , and he saves himself In every possible way. He has for years been troubled with Insomnia , and though he Is a good talker he will not enter Into discussions In the evening. Ho drinks tea and snakes' cig arettes. , , ' He firmly declines to do everything „ butslde ot his own work and he has a lithographic reply which he sends out to all correspond ents who write as to matters whtah do not relate to this. His life shows that work and care arc the secrets of his wonderful workIng - Ing old age. Huxley ts another eld scientist , who writes me that he cannot supply the In formation which I want. His letter is an autograph ono and the hand is firm and clear. NEWMAN HALL ON PERPETUAL YOUTH. Rev. Newman Hall , who , now at 79 , Is halo and hearty , and writes a good business hand , says : "To remain In health to three score and ten , and possibly by reason of strength to four score , I would say : 'Live according to the laws of God temperately and virtu ously , soberly , righteously and godly abstain from fleshly lusts , ' which war against the soul , was PaUl's advice to young Timothy. As regards my personal habits. I have never smoked , and during sixty years have wholly abstained from all Intoxicating drinks. I gen erally sleep from 11:30 : or 12 to 7 or 7:30. : I sleep seven hours without waking. I use a cold bath every morning throughout the year. On an average I walk about four miles a day. I can still walk ten miles without fatigue. I generally have three services every Sunday , and am never Mondayish. On an average I preach five times weekly and neither suffer from pain nor fatigue. As to overwork of brain. I would say : Give up working as soon as It Is a weariness and do the chief brain work early In the day. Do not work the brain late at night If you wish to sleep , and as to worry , do your duty and cast you care upon the Lord , content with His approval and a good conscience. " ' , . M } \ ixnvhTiii.tr. Minnesota employs 79.629 factory hands with an annual output of $192,033,478 worth of goods. Jewish butchers ot New York establlshe < a co-operative slaughter house In opposition to the meat combine. There are 3.000 operators employed In the general postofHce building , London , and o these 1,000 are women , , The Fort Worth Iron works , Fort Worth Tex. , has Increased Its force ot men more than 100 during the past few weeks. The Cumberland Nail and Iron company Bridgetown , N. J. , will soon resume opera tlons , giving employment to several hundrei men. men.The The Port Chester ( N. Y. ) Bolt and Nut works have notified employes that begin nlng with the 1st ot July their wages wll be increased. New England cotton spinning Is quite active. A new mill Is announced at North Adams. Mass. , to cost $1,000,000 and employ 1,000 hands. Preparations are being made for a genera resumption at the Herrertown furnace o the Thompson Iron company , which has been Idle for some time. The Youngstown ( O. ) Bridge -company has taken at $27,000 the contract for the stee construction of the grandstand at the state fair grounds at Springfield , IIL The' directors of the Newcastle ( Pa. ) Tube company have let the contract for an engine and pumps. Ground has been broken for the new plant , and It Is expected by September 1,300 men will be at work. Some time ago the men employed by tbe Illinois Steel company cent a committee whose expenses were paid by tbe company on a tour ot Investigation to all tbe largt steel plants In the country , to compare the wages paid at each of them with those pak by the Illnola Steel company. This com mittee returned two weeks ago and made Ita report to the effect that tbe men In tbe em ploy of the Illinois Steel company are at pres ent receiving as high wages aa any In the country. Notwlthatandlnjr thla report , the IllnoU Steel company announced that an ad vance ot 10 per cent would be made at all their worka , and the order went Into effect SCOTLAND'S ' CHILD OF SONG A Tojtio Star Eisiiij in tin Horizon of Eng lish Litters. ' PROMISING WORK OF JjHN DAVD30N A Soul Attuned to the Dnrlt iinil Mrlnu chilly Hided of Unman Nntnro ntul , KxUtrncc Selections * from III * WrltlngM CHICAGO , July 2. ( Special Corre spondence of The Bee. ) "A poet of the poor and wretched , " "a poet of the lost and Sillily" that Is a characterization of John Davidson , the young author who Is Just now cieating such a stir In the English world of letters. Davidson , like Robert Burns , Is an offspring of Scotland , but , unlike him , no sun child of the highlands ; on the contrary , a stepson of the fogs of llio moorheath and the damp coast marshes ; already In child hood a martyr of puritan narrowness ; later , as youth , the prey of unceasing external and Internal struggles. At last , as a man , a poet , and at the same time the victim of a poetical Intuition , left chiefly to the dark sides of human nature and existence , to the tragedies of personal doom , to the general Injustice of society , and , above all , to that dire dis proportion between the number of fortune's children and the overwhelming majority of the deserted and the outcast. In this he does not stand alone. Pessimism Is us old as man's writing and poetry Itself. Even our race's first and oldest document of history and literature , the bible , fairly teems with It. And In our days It permeates nearly everything In art , philosophy and fic tion. But here also.lt Is that the poet , who lends to his creative and formulatlvc powers provided he be ths true and called poet liiust at the same time step In as comforter , reconciler and glorifies. And If the degree In which he Is equal to this mission Is also the measure of his poetical standing In general , then In John Davidson we ara deal Ing with a poet of the first order. Ilut not for that alone , for , notwithstanding the fact that his latest book , or to speak more exactly , that book of his which brought him the first real success. Is no more than a booklet of 130 pages , containing , all In all , thirty poems , but every one of these 130 pages and all of these thirty , poems unveil the full fledged master of his own. "Ballads and Songs" Is the title of the boolo.ind Its con tents vary In volume from the epigram of two , six and eight lines to the full epic of twelve , sixteen and even twenty-eight pages. The best way to be the spokesman and proclalmer of a true peat Is to allow him to to htj own spokesman , So , therefore , let our new champion tnd high defender of th ; great human crowd on tne cold , dark an 1 criminal tide of life's great highway be Intro duced with two or three df his best charac teristic poems. Of those which show most clearly that great' , peullarlty of his to re deem and glorify all eartMy misery and sin In accordance with the Nazarene's great word of "the heavenly kingdom belonging to the troubled and heavily laden. " or of the still greater one of "pardoning those who slnnet for love. " "Thirty Bob a Week * ' Is the titleof a Ulna of monologue put ' In the mouth of a poor clerk , dragging hl'mtolf and family at the weekly pittance of so royal a salary through the exigencies of. liondotn llfe.-i The description Is "not altogether'.devoid of hRs of truly tragic pathos nor of aHruly grim humor. . It tells of one 'of thosa Inri'umer- able underpaid existences In the metropoll- : an whirlpool , where , the. pay Just enable. ? him to starve through the life , or , rather to live through the starvation secured by ( t. The two last stanzas ihow the hsart cutting , realism pervading ; the ; whole poemr "THY AVILL BE DONK ! " They say It dally up and clotvn the land , As easy as you take u , drink. It's true , But the dllllcultest go td understand And the dltllcultest Job a man "can do Is to come It brave and meek With thirty bob a. week And feel that that's the proper thing for It's a naked child against a hungry wolf ; It's playing bowls upon a splitting wreck It s walking on a string across a gulf With millstones fore and aft about your neck ; But the thing Is dally done By many ana many a one , . And we fall , face forwarJ. fighting- the deck. . Reaching back to the "milleti" of the me diaeval and the legendary U the "Ballad of a Nun. " Among all the poems of Mr. David son perhaps Is the one which apart from Il lustrating most loftily and boldly the whole Chrlstllke drift of his poetry at the same tlmo allows the charm of his terse ant original diction to stand out with greatest fascination. As this .ballad Is one of the more voluminous pieces of the book It can find hero but the following abridged repro duction : THE BALLAD OP ANUN. . From Eastertide to Eastertide , For ten long years her patient knees Engraved the stone * the fittest bride Of Christ In all the diocese. - She conquered every earthly lust ; The abbess loved her more and more ; And as a mark of perfect trust , Made her the keeper of the door. High on the hill the convent , ruing- , Across a duchy looking clown. Where everlasting mountains flung1 Their shadows over tower und town. The Jewels of their lofty snows In constellations flashed at night ; Above their crests the moan arose ; The deep earth shuddqred with delight. Long ere she left her cloudy bed , Still dreaming la the Orient land , Oi > many a mountain's happy head Dawn lightly laid her rosy hand , The adventurous sun took Heaven by storm Clouds gathered largesses of rain ; The sounding cities , rich and warm , Smouldered and glittered In the plain. And on all that has the young nun , ap pointed as a guard at the very door of ever lasting resignation and absolute renunciation to lookl down. On all that and many a thing more ! Sometimes It was a wandering wind , Sometimes the fragrance of the pine , Sometlmea the thought how others sinned , That turned her sweet blood Into wine. Sometimes she heard a serenade Complaining sweetly far away ; She said : "A young man wooa a maid , " And dreamt of love till break of day. Then would she ply her knotted scourge Until she swooned ; but evermore She had the same red sin to purge Poor , passionate keeper of Ihe doorl For still night's starry scroll unfurled. And still the day came like a flood ; It was the greatness of the world That made her long to use her blood. One sees the catastrophe approach. World's beauty and world's lust combine to allure the young nun , helplessly and defeneelesuly ex posed on her guardian' * post , .to allure her down from her quiet , worM-removed convent hill to the bustling city. In the vortex of roaring humanity Into rack and ruin. In winter time , when Lent drew nigh. And hill and plain were wrapped In enow She watched beneath thf frosty sky The nearest city nightly glow. Like peals of airy bells outworn. Faint laughter died above her head In custs of broken music borne ; "They keep the Carnival ! " she said. Her hungry heart devoured the town : "Heaven gave me by a .miracle ! unleHs God vends an angei down. Thither I go , though It vere HolH" She dug- her nails deep Irtlier breast. Bobbed , shrieked , andirftight withdrew the bar ; * A fledellmr flying- from trw n * t , A pale moth , rushing to a star. And fate overtake ! the pale nun-sphinx , who rushes out exclaiming : "I leave the righteous God behind , I go to worship sinful , man ! " Ana perdition Jay * uol $ ot the perjured sister , revoking her convent vows with the words : 'I care not for my broken vow. Though Hod should come In thunder soon , [ am sister to the mountains now. And slater to the sun und moon I' * Through all the towns of Behnarle She made a progress like a queen. "She Is , " they said , "wlmte'er she bo , The Htrangest woman ever seen. " 'From fairyland she must have come , Or else' Hie Is n mermalden. " Some said she was a ghoul , and some A heathen goddess born again. And the end ? Here It Is : But soon her fire to ashes burned ; Her beauty changed to hnggardncss , Her golden hnlr to silver turned ; The hour cume of her last caress. At midnight from her lonely bed She rose and said : "I have hud my wllll" The old , ragged robe she donned and fled Buck to the convent on the hill. Hnlf naked ns she went before , She hurried to the city wall ; Unnoticed In the rush and roar And splendor of the Carnival. No question did the warder ask ; Her ragged robe , her shrunken limb , Her dreadful eyes ! It Is no nm. k It Is a she-wolf , gaunt and grim ! < S She rnn across the Icy plain ; Her worn blood curdled In the blast ; Each footstep left a crimson stain ; The white-faced moon looked on aghast. She said between her chattering Jaws : "IXep pearl Is mine. I cense to strive ; Oh , comfortable convent laws. That bury foolish nuns nllve ! A trowel for. my passing bell , A little bed\wlthln the wall. A coverlet of. ttones ; how well I there shall'keep the Carnival ! " Like tlrod bells chiming In their sleep. The wind faint pvals of laughter bore ; She stopped her ears and climbed the steep , And thundered at the convent door. It opened straight : she entered In , And at the warder's feet foil prone : "I cometo purge away my sin ; Bury me , close mo tip in ptone. " The wardress raised her tenderly. She touched her wet and fust shut eyes : "Look , sister ; sister , look at me ; Look , can you see through my disguise ? " She looked and saw her owrr pad face. And trembled , wondering "Who art thou ? " "God sent me down to till yoilr place ; "I am the Virgin Mary , now ! " And with the word God's Mother shone ; The wanderer whispered , "Mary , hall ! " The virgin helped her to put on Bracelet and fillet , ring and veil. "You arc sister to the mountains , now , And sister to the day and night , Sister to God" and on the brow She kissed her thrice and loft her sight. While dreaming In her downy bed , Far In the crimson Orient land , On many n mountain's happy head Dawn lightly laid her rosy hand. There Is an old Scotch lay at the bottom of this unique poem , but that Is no detraction from the poet's merit. On the contrary , there are plots which In their elementary great ness are so thoroughly human , yet so per fectly divineat once , that only the work of generations ot men's mind and men's fancy might Invent and shape them. Even Goethe had to take hold of such a folk-lore to give to the German world In "Faust" their most sublime poem. And now , ln > lconcluslon , once again let the poet himself speak directly to the reader , but this tlmo In a complete poem. One who has the courage to open his book as he does with the following dedicatory distich addressed "To My Enenemy : " Help me with scorn and strengthen me with hate ! should be entitled to be heard , at least once , unabridged and uncurtalled. "A Ballad ol Heaven , " Is the tltlo ot the 'ninth piece of the book a story from heaven , that heaven which this poet Imagines andi hopes for all human cross bearers , alike those by their own guilt as well as those by fate's Implacability , as the end of all earthly suffering , erring and falling. A BALLAD FROM HEAVEN. He wrought at one great work for years ; The world passed by with lofty look. Sometimes his lips with laughter shook , Sometimes his eyes were dashed with tears. His wife and child went clothed In rags , And In n windy'garret starved ; HP trod his measures on the flags. And high on heaven his music carved. Wistful he grew , but never feareil , For always on the midnight skies , His rich orchestral score appeared In stars and zones and galaxies. Ho thought to copy down his score , The moonlight was his lamp ; he said : "Listen , my love ! " but on the floor , His wife and child were lying dead. Her hollow eyes were open wide ; He deemed die heard with special zest ; Her death's-head Infant coldly eyed , The desert of her shrunken breast. "Listen , my love ! My work Is done , I tremble as I touch the page To sign the sentence of the sun And crown the great eternal age. The plow adagio begins , The winding sheets are raveled out That swathe the minds of men , the sins That wrap their rotting souls about. "The dead are heralded along , With silver trumps and golden drums , And flutes and oboes , keen and strong , My brave andante singing comes. "Then like a python's sumptuous dress , The frame of things is cast away , And out of time's obscure distress The thundering scherzo crashes day. For three great orchestras I hope My mighty music shall be scored , On three high hills they shall have scope , With heaven's vault for a sounding board. Sleep well , love ! Let your eyelids fall , Cover the child ; good night , and If What ? Speak the traitorous end of all ! Hoth cold and. hungry , cold and stiff. But , no ! Godane'ans us well , I trust ! Dear ones behappy ) , hope Is nigh ! We are too young to fall to dust , And too unsatisfied to die ! " He lifted up against his breast The woman's body , stark and wan , And to her withered bosom pressed The little thin-clad skeleton. "You see , you ore alive ! " he cried. He rocked them gently to and fro , "No , no , my love , you have not died , Nor you , my little fellow , nol" Long In his arms he strained his dead , And crooned an antique lullaby ; Then laid them on the lowly bed , And broke down with a doleful cry ; "The lovp , the hope , the blood , the brain Of her and me , the budding life , And my great music all In vain ! My unscored work , my child , my wife ! "We drop Into oblivion. And nourish some surburban sod ; My work , this woman , this , my son , Are now no more ; there Is no God ! "The world's a dustbin ; we are duo And death's cart waits ; be life accurst ! " He stumbled down beside the two , And clasping them , his great heart burst Straightway he stood at heaven's gate Abashed and trembling for his sin. I trow he had not long to wait , For God came out and let him In. And then there run a radiant pair , Huddy with hase and eager-eyed To meet htm first upon the stair- Ills wife and child beatllled. They- clad him In a robe of light , And gave him heavenly food to eat ; Great seraphs praised him to the height Archangels gat aoout his feet. God , smiling- , took him by the hand , And led him to the brink of heaven : He saw where systems whirling stand , Where galaxies like snow are driven. Dead silence reigned ; a shudder ran Through space ; Time furled his wearied wlnga ; A slow adagio then began Sweetly resolving troubled things. The dead were heralded along. As If with drums and trumps of flame. And flutes and oboes keen and strong , A brave andante singing came. Then like a python's sumptuous dress , The frame of things wag cast away , And out of Time's obscure distress The conquering scherzo thundered day. lie doubted ; but God said ; "Even BO ; Nothing IB lost that's wrought In tears ; The music that you made below Is now the music of the spheres ) " Verses treating of mu lc , and betas mutlo henmtvei , such thorough music that they night easily conjure up before the reader's mind that symphony of the symphonies Bee- hovcn's fifth , with Its first movement marked > y the composer's own hand as "Knocking of Fate , " as the eternal awakening call , with ts singing Andatito coming next , and with that greatest song of triumph ever written breaking upon the listener like thundering and conquering day as the closing move ment. Only that , fortunately for the world , he great master's fearful life tragedy being ileethoven and being deaf never prevented the most sumptuous and most unceasing flow of musical creation , and that he had not to go first up to the heavens to give to the spheres the music of their own. UDO URACHVOGEL. I..t3lXT 01' A LITTLE ( tlVU Toronto Mull. My brother Will , ho used to bo The nicest kind of girl ; He wore a little dress , like me , And hud his hair In curl. We played with dolls and ton set then , And every kind of toy But all thopp good old times arc gonn Will turned Into n boy. Mamma has made him little suits , With pockets In the pants , And cut oft nil his yellow curls And sent them to my aunts ; And Will , he was so pleased , I believe He almost jumped for Joy ; But I must own I didn't Ilko Will turned Into a boy. And now ho plays with horrid tops I don't know how ' { 6spin. . And marbles that I try to shoot , But never hit nor win ; And leap frog I can't give a "back , " Like Charley , Frank or Hey Oh , no one knows how bad 1 feel , Since Will has turned a boy. I have to wear frocks just the same And now they're mostly white ; I have to Bit and just be good , While Will can climb and light. Hut I must keep my dresses nice , And wear my hair In curl , And worst oh , worstpst thing of all I have to stay a girl ! AMI RICAN8 IN PAH IS. 1'oor ItcprcAcntatlvoM of the New World In tli ( ninny. The American colony In Paris , says a writer In Harper's , Is not wicked , but It would like to be thought so , which Is much worse. Among some of the men It Is a pose to be considered the friend of this or tliat particular married woman , and each of them , Instead of paying the woman the slight tribute of treating her In public as though they were the merest acquaintances , which is the least the man can do , rather forces himself upon her horizon , and Is always In evidence , not obnoxiously , but unobtrusively , like a pet cat or a butler , but still with sulfi- clent pertinacity to let you know that he Is there. As a matter of fact the women have not the courage to carry out to the end thow affairs of which they hint , as have the French men and women around them whose example they are trying to emulate. And , moreover , the twenty-five years of virtue which they have spent In America , as Balzac has pointed out , Is not to be over come In a day or In many days , and so they only pretend to have overcome It , and tell rlsques stories and talk scandalously of each other and even of young girls. But It all begins and ends In talk , and the deques stories , | f they knew It , sound rather silly from their lips , especially to men who put them away when they were boys at boardIng - Ing school , and when they were so young that they thought It was grand to be vulgar and manly to be nasty. It Is a question whether or not one should be pleased that the woiijd-bo wicked Ameri can woman -In Paris can not adopt the point of view of the Parisian women as easily at she adopts tlrelr bonnets. She tries to do so , It Is true ; she tries to look on life from the same side , but BIO ! does not succeed very well , and you may be sure she Is afraid and a fraud at heert , and In private a most excellent wife and rqollier. If It be reprehensible to be a hypocrite and to pretend to bo better than one Is , It should also be wrong to pretend to be worse than one dares to be , and so lend countenance to others. It Is like a man who shouts with the mob , but whose sympathies are against It. The mob only hears him shout and takes courage at his doing so , and continues In consequence to destroy things. And tl.ose foolish pretty women lend their counte nance by their talk and by their stories to many things of which they know nothing from experience , and so do themselves In- Jut-tlce and others much harm. Sometimes It happens that an outsider brings them up with a sharp turn , and shows them how far they have strayed from the standard which they recognized at home. I remember , as an Instance ot this , how an American art student told me with much sat isfaction last summer of how he had made himself Intensely disagreeable at a dinner given by one of these expatriated Americans. "I don't mind their -taking away the char acter of every married woman they knew , " he said ; "they were their own friends , not mine ; but I did object when they began on the young girls , for that Is mnethlng we haven't learned at home yet. And finally they got to Miss , and one of the women said : 'Oh , she has so compromised herself now that no one will marry her. ' " At which , It seems , my young man banged the table with his list , and eald : "I'll marry her , If she'll have mo , and I know twenty more men at home who would be glad of the chance. We'vo all asked her once , and we're willing to ask her again. " There was an uncomfortable pause , and the young woman who had spoken protested she had not meant It so seriously. She had only meant the girl was a trifle passe and travel- worn. But when the women had left the. table one ot the. men laughed and said ; "You are qulto like a breeze from the piny woods at home. I suppose we do talk rather thoughtlessly over here , but then non * ot us take what we may say of each other as absolute truth. " The other men all agreafl/jito thlsf/and pro tested that no one took them or what they said seriously. They were quite right , and , as a matter of fact , It would bo unjust to them to do so except to pity them. The man with out a country was no more unfortunate than they. It Is true , they have Henry's bar where they can get real American cocktails and the Travelers' where they can play rea American poker ; but that U as near as they ever get to anything that savors of country and they do not get as near as that towarc anything that savors of the Frenchman's country. They have their own social suc cesses and their own salons and dinner par ties , but the Faubourg St. Qermaln Is as strange a territory to many of them as though It were situated In the heart of the Congo Basin. ELIHD'S PREDICAMENT. An American Mloliter In III * Stocking Fort ntul renrli Court Knll. When Kllhu Washburne wan United States minister to France , says the Cincinnati Times Star , there was a court dinner given at the Palace of the Tulllerles one night by the em peror , Napoleon III. It was ( ho custom a these dinners when the empress arose to re tire with the ladles for the gentlemen to rise from their seats and step back. , so that the ladles should pass down the line between them and the table. By this all could avoid turning their backi on the empress. Mr Washburne had very tender feet. During the dinner they had given him a great deal o annoyance , and to ease himself he had slipped off his patent leather pumps. Ho was ab sorbed In conversation at the close of the dinner and was caught unawares when the empress made the signal for departure. Mr Waahburno waa obliged to step back wlthcu his pumps. There he stood lu tils stocking feet , grave , dignified and self-poasetsed In the row of grinning diplomats to hla right and left. Ho betrayed none of the embarrass ment he muit have felt , and was never heard to allude to the Incident. A notice has been Issued by the Federation of Labor officials that the boycott U removed form the Weatem Wheel Dicycla company , a settlement of differences baying been made with the metal polishers , buffetera and platers national union. Secretaries- are re quested to announce thli at union meetings. \RE \ STEAM ROADS DOOMED ? Details of the Remarkable Electric Power Test on a Massachusetts Road , TRIKING AN EIGHTY MILE GAIT V Hot lint Chock ! the Spnrd nnd Shorten * the Trlnl Wlint the Now llnven Head la Doing with iioclrlclty ni . n Mollva 1'owcr. Press dispatches ot Saturday gave m'agei * account of the test of an electric ocomotlvo on the Nantaskct branch ot the -Jew - York , New Haven & Hartford railroad. The details , supplied by the New York Sun , are of general Interest , and confirm the ; rowlng belief that the supremacy of steam ocomotlvcs Is Imperiled. A revolution In railroading , says the Sun , s promised by the result of the trials of the electric power on the Nantasket branch ot he Now York , New Haven & Hartford rail- vay yesterday. The success of the venture s assured. The first trial was made on Thursday night. News of the test was with- icld from the public. Two electric locomo tives were run over the road and a speed of moro than fifty miles an hour was at- : alned between the old Colony house anil I'emberton. Last night another trial with an electric locomotive geared to accomplish eighty or more miles an hour was made , and a hot jox on a motor car defeated a now record for speed. The heating of the box was duo to he fact that the new bearings would not withstand the friction caused by the terrlflo spon ! at which the car uas run 'or a distance of proh-ibly lera than three miles. Jn the opinion of nen qualified by years of experience to ludgo of speed , eighty miles an hour was reached. The possibilities , they say , were ilncty miles an hour , but the hot box spoiled It. None but officials and attaches of'the road were allowed on this test , the entire party comprising lens than twenty. It was exactly 8:45 : o'clock when Colonel Heft turned on the current , and In less than four lenghts the : ar was going nt n speed of twenty miles an liour. Atcr having gone less than a quarter of a mile the car was speeding along at a thlrty-five-mllo gait. A stop was made at Nantasket for a few minutes , and then came the run to Pcmberton. The troublesome curves In the first few rods were gone over slowly , but upon reaching the long stretch Just below Nantaskct full power was turned on. There was none of the gradual Increase of speed characteristic of the steam locomo tive , but with a plunge the car began to fly. .Just as the more apprehensive began lo wonder how long the car would remain on the track It was announced that there waa a hot box , and Colonel Heft shut off the cur rent. Eighty miles an hour with five notches of the "controller" still to spare was his estimate of the speed at the tlmo ot shutting off the current. Under the momentum gathered the car ran on for two miles further , most of the distance at an estimated speed of sixty miles an hour. The engine room contains two tandem , compound engines wltln two direct coupled generators. The engines are of the Greon- Corllse build , and specially designed for the work they are to do.The shaft ls eighteen Inches and the fly wheel , which weighs 64,000 pounds. Is eighteen feet In diameter. Thp condensers are so p'lpe.d that the 'engines can work with or without them. They are ar ranged to regulate from no load to a max imum of 1,420-horse power. The regulators are so arranged that In case of an accident to any part of the machinery the engines will stop automatically. They can also be stopped by simply pressing ono of several buttons. The two generators specially built for the line run at a tpeed of 110 revolutions a min ute , and are guaranteed to develop 1,600- liort-a pcwer each. The armatures , Instead of being built up ot wlrd In the usual way , are made up of copper disks , each Insulated from the other. By this arrangement It Is said to- be Impossible for them to get out of repair. The generators are ten feet high and 'the armatures eight feet In diameter. The switchboard Is of the latest design. It I arranged with two main generator panels. The tatlon voltage Is 700 volts. The wires are so arranged that none can be seen Issuing from the roof of the building , and there Is little to Indicate that the building Is an elec tric power houeo. Four motor cars , built after the style of baggage cars , are the electric locomotives. To secure traction they have been made extra heavy , weighing , when fully equipped , about 60,000 pounds each. Two will have four motors each and the others two motors each hung on trucks. The wark of changing the motive power ot the road from steam to electricity was done under the direction of Colonel N. H. Teft , formerly president of the Bridgeport Traction company , but who was recently engaged by the Consolidated road to superintend their electric work. Starting at Old Colony Houso. thcro Is little to suggest the trolley railway. In place of the girder , groove , stllt-llko "T , " or the other' styles of rail In electric rail ways , there Is used the conventional T rail employed by steam roads. The rails weigh seventy-eight pounds to the yard , and are ot the typo known as. the "Old Colony section , " four and one-half inches high , and are laid precisely as the rails of steam roads. Two flexible coper bonds seven Inches long are under the base of the rails at each joint and riveted tothem. . The bonds are so placed that when the angle bars used In splic ing the rails are In position the bonds can not be seen. The length of the bond Is re duced to a minimum to Insure the maximum carrying capacity with the minimum ot re sistance. The tracks are fifteen feet apart from cen ter to center , and between the tracks Is the single lute of poles upon which ts supported the cables and trolley wire cross arms. The poles are 12x14 Inches at the butt and 10x12 Inches at the top. They are painted black tea a point six feet from the ground , and whits to within ono foot ot the cross arm , then finished black. Power house No. 1 Is situated midway be tween Nantasket and Old Colony House sta tion. The stack Is 115 feet high , with a base of thirteen feet. The power house Is 83x110 feet and fifty-three feet to the top of the roof. A twenty-four-lnch wall separates the engine from the boiler room , In which there are two batteries of four boilers each. The boilers are of the horizontal flue type , sev enty-two Inches In diameter and nineteen feet long , with 140 three-Inch tubes. The cars are equipped with the Wetting- house air brake , and have all standard ap pliances ot the steam care In use by the Consolidated. In addition to a fifteen-Inch gong at the front ends of the motor can , each of these cars will have a chime whistle , worked with compressed air In place of steam. Save for a single feature , there Is not the slightest resemblance to tbo steam loco motive. That feature Is the cowcatcher at both ends of the motor cars. It Is situated underneath the platforms Instead of pro jecting beyond the body of the locomotive , as with the steam locomotive. The wheels are about the size ot the largest wheels used on steam cars , but the axles are consider ably heavier to withstand the strain ot ths electric gearing. Until the capacities of the motors ara fully ascertained It Is not known.how many cars will be run on a train. It la expected , however , that tralna will have from tour to nine can , as occasion may require. The Nantasket Beach branch waa choeeh for the experiment for the reason that within Ita llmltu are condensed most ot tha difficult problems which will have to to determined to make electricity a successful substitute for steam. The curves are maqy and sharp and the grades stoep. Traltis will be run with great frequency In the seven miles between Old Colony House elation out ! Pemberton. Rov. I'hllos G. Cook , better known | "Chaplain Cook , " who haa Just died ( U Buffalo , aerved In the war aa a regimental chaplain and since Ihe war devoted hit to Buuday school work : In