Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 26, 1899, Page 6, Image 6

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HILLIOXS IN GIFTS BYV01IES \
Lavish Lfb riHty of the Fair Sex Toward
Pnilanthropio Institutions ,
ONE Mil LION DOLLARS A MONTH DONATED
lllulirr Itiliii'Mtloii > lnl < i < HIP SfrmiK-
OAIIIIMI ( | ( o I'cniliilnc S > niin-
\ HN | Sums i\pcmlnl
for lli-tnorliilN.
Whllo Iho following la not a complete
record of women's gifts for the cause of
thnrlly during IS'i'i , it .approximate * ) the
inngnlflcent sum of $10,000,000 , or over II-
000,000 every month Of this amount the
largest elnglo sum Is Mrs Stanford's 110.-
000,000 , and Mrs Urndloy's $500,000 Is the
next largest gift
With the ending of the year and century
ono may perhaps bo pardoned f r dropping
Into slntlstles , statistics proving1 the
splendid muulll"enro of American women to
srhools , churches , art Institutes and phll-
nnthroplo enterprises.
To hark back n little , the total of gifts
nnd bequests for the llvo } oais 1S'I3 through
IS'i" In this countr } were more1 than MfiV
eon 000 Hint Is gifts from private fortunes
frr public ilfcr Of this $45,000,000 was
given during 18'i7 In 181S In Now York
Clt } nlone $2.1,000,000 wn given away in
harlty During the snmo } cnr the gifts
nf thirty-four women In the L'nlted Stntcs
for higher education amounted to $3 , 1 10,400 ,
of this sum Corn J Flood gave the largest
amount , or $2,000,000 , nnd Helen Gould , besides -
sides her magnificent donntlf n to the govern
ment , gnvo$37000 for educational purposes.
I'or IMiicnlliiniil I'lirpOHCN.
The record of gifts to charily nnd for
cduuitloii.il purpose * bj women In this
country for the } cnr now ending Is a noble
one.
one.Half
Half n million d-dlars , given b } Mrs. hjdln
Ilrndley of I'eiirl.a , 111. , le-adr the list H was
presented last summer lo the Hradley
Polytechnic Institute , and constituted
her second donation , the first been
ing a gift of the land on whlca
the Institute wns built nnd the monc.v
to bullil it That involved a sum ap
proximating $2-.0,000 In addition Mrs
Hradley has given to Pcorla 137 acres of
laud for n park , she bus built a church , a
homo for aged women and mnn } other
smaller Iintltutlonn
Miss Flood's prescntntlon of her father's
ceuntrj place , at Menlo park , to the Unl-
vcrslty of California made la l vear , bus
been supplemented icccntl } by n gift of
nioiipy The house1 nnd Its contents me
valued at $1,000,000 , mid a ( net of ncaily
3'iOn acrns Is Included in the tinnsfer
Another California , ladj has been munifi
cent In her gifts , It is Mrs E B Crocker ,
who lias couvejpd to the Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks her homo In Snc-
ramonto It Ib presented no n memorial of
her husband , and Is valued nt $10000 Mrs
rboebc Hearst and Mr > Lcland Stanford are
constant ! } adding to their gifts to the uul-
versltlcs the } have built up In California ,
tnd their benefactions go up into the mil
lions Mr ° Stnufoid's latent contribution
mudo dutlng the fciimmer v\as one of $10-
000,000.
Mrs Enimons Blalnp of Chicago in May
Bnnrimced that she would found a college
of pedagogy , the Institution to be started
with n fund of several hundred thousand
dollars She has had this idea in mind soni
joare , H being her desire to accomplish a
juactluil grod for poor girls and h } giving
them an opportunity to become teachers she
bestows a permanent bonofU upou them. The
jiow college of pedagogy , built and pndowei
1) } Mrs Hlalnc , will represent an outlay o
$500,000
At the commencement at Vassnr college In
June It was announced that Miss Katharine
Tuttle had given n $10,000 bcholaishlp In
memory of her sister and Mrs Cnrollm
Swift Atw.ater of Poughkeepslo to build anew
now Inflrmar } h id donated $8,000
Krom Mrs William Beldon Noble of Wash
ington Harvard iiuivorslt } has icceivcd a
gift of JJO.OOO , to endow a lectureship li
memory of her husband , n graduate of the
class of 1881.nothPr gift of $20,000 was
received b } the university from the famll }
of John Slmpklim , for the Laurence Scientific
echool , nnd still another $5,000 from Mrs
Frederick T Philips of Lawrence , R I The
money is to establish a fund , the income o
which Is to bc expended annually In the pur
chase of books for the college library in the
department of English literature. The gift
IB in memoiy of thc < donor's brother.
A new dormitory to bo erected at Welles'.e }
college , nl a cost of $ fiO 000 , is the gift of
JIrs Martha S Pomcroy of Washington
Jlrs Irene B Lewis of Hamilton , N. Y , has
rpcenll } made the gpncrous gift of $ " ,000 to
Colgate unlverslt } , to found three scholar
ships for the purpose of aiding } ouug men
dtudvlng for the Baptist mlnUtiy In that In-
Gtttutlon
Miss Marie Hopper of Philadelphia has
Klven $10,000 to Bryn Mavvr college for a
scholarship foundation fund ,
I'or ( cut-nil ClinrKlfH.
Mrs. Joseph Moffatt of Iosngelcs , Cnl. ,
has given pioperty to the value of $ r > 0,000 to
the endowment fund of the National Florence
Crlttenton mission a charity which wai
founded sixteen jears ago by Charles N
Crlttenton of Now York In memory ot his
dnughtei
For the maintenance of n home for con-
Yalesccnts mid invalids at Snntn Hnrbira
$80,000 has 'been left by Miss Anna S C
Blake , her will being probited In April
Ebo also left _ to the Cottage hospital $10 000 ,
to the Orthopedic hospital , Philadelphia. } iu ,
000 , nnd to n Boston hospital n llko sum
A noblu charity Is that founded during thp
past few months b } Mrs Alfred Corning
Clark , In memor } of her husband A mcrp
vnlunblo and Plllclent form of chnrlt } does
not exist In New York Clt } than the Alfred
Corning Clark Neighborhood house , which
titmnls in the very heart of the crowded
lower east side Men's , women's , boe' and
clrls' clubb , kindergartens , libraries , cnn-
t-ervatorlcs and rcof gardens are Included In
the work of the Institution a work which
JH thoroughly npprc-clutod by the people In
\\hcho behnlf it Is bplng done It has been
rstablUhcd nnd endowed at u cost of about
JIUO.OOO. a
During last summer a new Uoatlng hos-
rdtnl for St John's Guild was Iiulll 'hj Mrs
Augustus O Julllard of Nuw York at n I
ccbt of $ S3,000 It was named in honor of
the donor the Helen C Julllard The Emma
Abbott , another barge , built from the inu-
iiltlieuco of the singer nnd n lined In her
lionor , was also placed lu commission dur
ing the hot weather
Minn ( .ouM'ii OrnrroiiH } , '
Th : gcnproiiK and lavish gifts of Miss
Helen Miller Gould are coupled with an
unobtrusive and uoblr manner and such
nn nbse-nco of display as IB rarply nift with
This uncdtcntutlon makes It extremely dlfil-
cull Indred Impossible lo do more than
mention n gift 1'ero nnd thorn Sbo la sup-
jioK'd to bo thu donor of $250,000 subscribed
to build tbo new library for the University
of the City of Now York Her gifts to
Clmutauqiu have also bp n munificent
lo the endowment fund of tbo University
M Chicago sliii has rpctmtl ) contributed $25-
(00 ( A * i co ml scholarship of JS.OOO to Vas-
lar collegu was unnounccj at the commence- |
mpnl In June thivse scholarships are given
In nu'iuor ) of her mother Two scholar-
eblps of $ b,000 each she has given to Mr
MopO > 's Eiho-U one for the glrlc soml-
nai ) an 1 one for the bo > To endow u
frfo bed In perpetuit ) lu the Manhattan IJjo In
nnd Ear hospital New York , $5,000 At
cost of about $250 she provided for a
floating hospital trip Inst summer. Tor
cyclone nuffercrs In Wisconsin Julj
C last she sent her check for $ ! ' 0 ,
In March the Countess do Castellan"
( Anna Oould ) gave $20.000 to a chlldr n >
poclcty In Paris She IR to present n * plcn- ,
did hall to bo used for charity biznrs to.
take the place of the building destrojed bj
flrc , In which co many Ihes wore lost The
site alone has cost $200,000 When the
countess took posicsslon of her new home
on the Avcnuo do Uols dc Hologno Inst i
Christmas she Invited the children rf nil the
workmen employed In Us building to n ,
Christmas tree and sent them home lad n
with presents.
( ilfln from I'nN'iloniilile Women.
Slnco her Iniab.ind's death perlnpi f-o
largest check written by Mrs Ccrncl.m Vnn-
dcrbllt for a gift Is that of $5,000 for the I'o- ' i
lice pension fund , as n recognition of the
services rendered b > the pollco force nt to 1
tlmo of Mr Vandcrbllfs funeral. I i
To the King's DiURhters of Newport her I
person-,1 check for $1,000 was lately sent ,
the amount to be used In mlnliterlng to the
wants cf the slrk poor.
Mrs Frederick Vanderblltlslted NCA"C I
port eirlj In No\ ember to personally supervise - i
vise the TI'anksgMng dinner which she hai' '
Bhcn for ninny jears to the nrwsbojs , o t- i
blaeks nnd other poor bojs of that fashionable - i
able watering place To defrn > the ex-
penscs of the occasion she wrltcH her check i
for $1.500
Mrs 0 II P Helmont's gift of $5fO to
Trlnlt } Church Sunday school was usul In
providing n Thanksgiving entertainment To
the Nassau hospital , at Hcmpstead , h I. ,
Mrs. Uclmont. hna sent $3,000 Mrs. P A.
Hnrper has given the same amount to the
hospital.
Tor "St Anthony's Bread" Mrs Frances
Brockholst Cutting contributes $3000 a jear
The charity was founded a } ear ago In
memory of Mrs. Cutting's son , Brockholst
Cutting The fund is for the sick poor
within the limits of St Mnry's parish. New
port , which Is more than half of the town ,
but the fluid Is distributed without regnrd to
erred , color or nationality. St. Marj's Is a
Roman Catholic church , and a requiem nnss
Is celebrated for the dead mnn upon each
anniversary of his death Ho died three
} oars ngo
O'lrlng ' thv jear nt nn outlay of about
$1,000 Mrs Anson Phelps Stokes has con
tinued her gifts to the home she presented
to the parish of ttho Heavenly Rest , New
York , a llhrnrv ami recre.atlcii house for
the use of the crowded Italltn colony cen
tered around Mulborr ) street The king nnd
queen of Italy have recognised the chnrltnble
work nf Mrs Stokes by sending their per
traits.
May last the now church of the Holj
Trinity was com-ocratrd this Is the Hhlne-
lander memorial , the church , morning
chapel , parish house and clergy house being
memorial gifts and costing well up Into the
millions The famll } have reserved the right
during ten je.ars of adding memorials in the
form of windows The buildings stand upon
the last of the Rhlnelatider farm , which has
been owned by the famll } over 100 years
Miss Elizabeth Plnnkiuton of Milwaukee
gives $100,000 for a Young Woman's Chris
tian association In that city Through the
genoroim gift of $50,000 fn > m a woman re
siding lei New England , Bishop Grnfton ofFend
Fond du I ic , Wis , recently announced that
the Indebtedness on the cathedral had been
wiped out nnd the school fund augmented
The $21,000 raised In England for the hos
pital ship Milne , to be dispatched to South
Africa , received so many noble contributions
from American women that the sum may
Justly claim a place in this list
InOIIK > II'K Will * .
Olfta bv bc < quests have abounded during
1809 A quarter of a million dollars was left
by Mrs. Eugene Kelly to build n lady chapel
for St Patilck's cathedral. Now York , and
to provldo n fund for the sick poor. Of the
Barone"e de Hlrsch's $100,000,000 left to char
ity , $1,200,000 comes to America to the De
Hlrsch's foundation In New York. The
Clara do Hlrsch homo In Sixtjsecond street ,
founded about two jears ago by the
baroness , receive * an additional legacy of
$250,000.
The will of Mrs Caroline L Macj , who
founded the Macy Memorial Art school In
Now York , bequeaths $200,000 to the Teach
ers' college and $ r > ,000 to the Presbyterian
hospital. Mrs. E. A Stevens of Castle Point ,
Hoboken , left generous bequesth to Holy In
nocent church , which she was malnlj instru
mental In establishing. A fund of $3,000 Is
to piovido coal for the poor of Hoboketi , fiee
or at cost price $12,000 Is left for other
church charities. To the Church of the Holy
Communion , New York , Mrs Caroline A.
Cisco leaves $10,000 To the Mlsslonarj MJ-
cletj domestic and foreign Mrs Enillle A
Mntthlcn , $5,000. About $80,000 Is dis
tributed among New York charities by the
will of Mrs Caroline E Holllster
Generous legacies making u total of $20,000
were also left by Mrs Mary K Hart of Troy ,
N Y Mrs Foils R. Brunnot of Alleghany
City , Pa , bequeathed by will , probated In
November , $123,000 to m | = slons The Into
Mrs Harriet Frotlilngham Wolcott , step
mother of Governor Roger Wolcott , dis
tributed by her will , probated In April last ,
$3.r ! > 00 to various charities , among the num
ber the Massachusetts General chapel , the
Hampton school , Virginia , the Hcnnetl In
dustrial school , Boston , and the Tuskegco
Normal and Agricultural Institute
St. Hnrnnbau hospital , Newark , benefits to
the value cf $1,000 and a f.haro In the
residuary estate of Mrs Eliza Wells , who
also left $1,000 to the Society for the Pre
vention of Cruelty to Children. By the will
of Mis. T W Hobblns , widowof the late
Congressman John Hobblr.fi , her estate Is
charged with the payment of many charitable
legacies
By the death of Mrs Elizabeth Thompson
In July the pe > or seamstresses of nhlnobeck-
on-Hudson find themselves heirs to an pslalo
of $300,000 , which is to be equally divided
among them It
JUhT MICE 01,11 TIM IIS. lo
slioodnur Heal ! ! IICH on nn Arl/oiiu eMi (
Mi
I
rf\
There was a tragic ending of the perform- j | . .
nnro of "Don Caesar" by "The Three
Musketeers" company , In which laul Oil-
ln
nioro In leading man , at the opera house In
u
Phoenix , Ariz , lust Saturday night nn
In thefourth act ono mem-
by
ln > r of the company , In accordance with the
lines of the pin } , opened llro on a group of enW
other actors The flro wns returned by bnlf W
dozen other pistols and tbo ensuing scene co
of confusion
wna ono
lei
Paul Gllmoro and David Halbcrt fell to nn
he. floor In u manner which could not be on
mistaken for n pleco of acting The ) were be
seriously but not fatally wounded. bewl
Meanwhile tbo leaden missiles rattled po
about the stage nnd In various pails of "T
the opera house The audlenco of about ov
4,000 persons stampeded , yelling "Fire1"
Murder' ' " and everything else calculated to are
create a panic In tbo midst of the excite
ment the lights went out and women cl
screamed The crowd In Its hurrj to escape
from the building packed at the doors and
o\erythlng bad quieted before a majority of
tbo people could force themselves out
The pistols used were 3S-callbe r and they
had bwn carried by the troupe for some are
tlnii' When the performance was about
re-ady to In-gln It wns discoerfd that the
company's supply of blank cartridges had and
been exhausted. What a clerk declared to cess
bo blank cartridges were purchased and
used In the weapons The ) bad the appear- Saw
nrvrp of bvlng blanks , but hidden at a j Hi
depth behind each wad wns a ball of lead ' In
Ton or tueho "f tint * ' balls hu\o sinre been fir
dug out of the walls of the opera bouse
. - Onu
Nightly coughing and that torturing ticl.le ( tit
the throat are Invariably topped by I and
llpau's mentholated cough drops , only live ' log
cents at druggltts , self
NOTED NOVELS OF THE YEAR
Works of Fiction tint Hnvo Tickled the
1 ! Fancy of the Efaling Public ,
COMMERCIAL SIDE OF THE BUSINESS
Kvli ! iiorillimrx I'linuliirlt ) > nt n True
Tc t f Merit or l.iiNtlnu Suot'csn
Heiil sis. Not el * of
( lie
1 Imvo always had T theory tlmt no one
should buy n book , or nt any rate a novel ,
until _ Ik. l-ns been published for at Icaal a
jcar . , writes Harry Thurston 1'eck , editor of
lllc Daokmnii , In the Independent. There
are so many mtirncs which one Is urged to
read . , or nhlch nt the moment of readltiR
Impress ; . . one as belni ; very KOOI | , an to make
It Impossible to decide at that rarllculnr mo-
mom ! just , the ( iiiesilon of their Intrinsic
merit ; Looking bark , howe\er. o\er one's
reading for n tx.chemonth mid oxerclslns
a ccrtnln faciiltj ofTompnilson which conici
from . having read a good deal In the lomntn
past ) ( | | , the real books of ei.e-h ycnr will be
found to have shrunk In number to a very
few . , for after n > car man } cltvei trllles will
ua\e , been forgotten ntid ninny more serious
productknH will ha\e assumed a relntlvo
position before one's critical Judgment far
different from that In which the mood
of the moment , or some cap-
tUatltif ? trick of stjlo. or some fellcltoiiK
choice of subject liucsted them Vlth a tem
porary Importance.
It IB only oiico or twice In many > cars that
a rc-illy great work of fiction IB born Into
the world i\ery month brings to the read
ing public ehonls of books , mid those
whose business It Is lo write of books must
write of these and discuss thrm i
seiloufl > , and weigh and criticise Some of M
them are \ eryldcl > read , still others nre
both widely read and nrc widely talked I
about , but aftei a cortnln tlmo has pas"d I
the great majority of them arc neither reid I
nor talked about They h-uo served their
purpose , they ha\o pleased or amused or
shocked a hundred thousand icidcrs , but no
one goes back to them again It l as ImposM
slblo to reread them as It is to laugh again
at the Jokes In '
last j cat's couilc pipers
Tlic > are dead , for thoj do not belong to the
annals of tine lllenttire I wonder how
many copies of 'Tailed Hack , " or "The-
Hcavcnlv Twins , " or "Trllb > , " are now sold
In a year Earh one of these Immensely pop-
ill , r novolfl iiad , nt the time of Its \ogtte , an
apparent importance grcatoi than the Im
portance of "U.nld Ooppcrfleld , " or "Van
ity Pali , " but II was an Importance of the
moment only They were clever novels , but
they weto not literature.
( Jrt-jit Sellers.
The jear now ending has wltne'sed the
publication of several novels each one of
which attained to an c\traotdlnaiy populai-
lt > , as attested bj thclt silcs Of "David
Ilarum" there were sold perhaps 400,000
copies , of "Richard Caivei" no dnubt as
man > more. Of "Janice Meredith" there
wcro sold I'.OOO copies In two \\eeks , and
the book has since its first appearance found
purchasers at the rate of between 2,000 and
3,000 copies evorj day of the week. So far
as the commerchl Bide of the question Is
concetncd , It Is safe tp say thit the records
of no vear have ever included such remarKalit (
ble statistics , for not meiclj one or two , but
half a dozen , novels by different authors
have met with an almost en.ua ! popular suc
cess
When wo come , however , to take a retro
spective glance .it these extiaordinary "sell
ers" ( to use the publishers' favorite word ) ,
and to consider how far their success hab
been based upon unusual merit , It has to be
confessed that nf all the novels of the 30.11
there is only one , or nt the most , not more
than two , which are llkel > to be read by any
one In particular a vear from uow And to
give a sweeping Judgment such as this is
not to bo dogmatical and critically supercil
ious , though perhaps for the moment It ma >
appear so A moment's reflection will make
the truth of It quite evident When anyone
begins to olasslfj the novels of the world
they will bo lound to fall undot a compara-
lively feu divisions as to subject as to nan-
ner and as to the ebpcchl school of fiction
to which each of them belong. In each
class the world possesses a few great mas
terpieces which have stood the test of tlmo
and which all men equally regard as repre
senting what Is best of their own kind New-
many books are written every joar , and thej
are often ab y written , full of interest and
deserving nf the sort of favor which they
win But after the novelty of them has de
parted wo till unconsciously compare them
with those books of their classes which are
not merely good , but which nro ad
mittedly the very best , and then the final
judgment Is not by any means the same as
the Judgment which Is nebulously formed
while the render Is still Ifoldlng the volume
in his hand It Is soon recognbed that alrl
though the popular book Is good it Is not the
best of lib kind that has been written And
so the masterpiece icsumes Its old proim
eminence , the clever Imitation Is not read
again , and ns soon as a sMIl newer replica I I
appears the Immediate predecessor is forca
gotten
Merit In tlie , .
Appljlng such a standard of comparison
and Judgment to the best novels of the pros0
ont jear ono mny serenely disregard the test
that Is commercial nnd misleading nnd con
fine one's self to a consideration of Just how-
far each of them approximates In merit to
those works of genius which. In the differ
ent departments of pure fiction , afford us an
accepted and enduring standard of Compar
ison
If we extend the term "novel" so ns to let
Include collections of short stories I should
eaj that thorp Is Just one work of firtlon be
longing : to the present joar which Is equ il
o the \crj best In Its own ciass , and this Is
Mrs. IMlth Wlinrlon's "Oreiter Inclination "
The lahs which It represents has to do with
the psychological study of social conditions
and of the problems that nriso In the more
Intlmatp relations of nie i nnd wonlen of the
world The criterion by which Mrs Wharton
must bo Judged Is the criterion established
Mr Henry James In his earlier works ,
such as "Tho Point of View , " "An Inter j
national nplsoae" nnd "Tho Pupil , " and Mrs.
Wharten has no need to shrink from this
comparison She Is no Imitator , jet her del
icacy of touch , hpr penetration , her subtlety
nnd her o\quislto fell Itj of phrasing remind
ono Irresistibly of Mr Junes nt his eiy
best It Is situation rather than Incident for
which Mr James nnd Mis Wharton iilIKo
possets a cur'ously ' unerring instinct , and In
"Tho Greater Inclination" this Instinct Is Of
everywhere nppaient Such perfect lltorary ' j I cl
workmanship Is seldom seen In books that t I 0
written In the Kngllsh language , nnd 1 c\
Mrs Wliarton's pages ue\er lose their fns-
dilution ! , even though they mny bo rend a
bcoro of times Tlu book has met with much to
appreciation from the critical portion of the
public , a widely popular success It could not
have , for Its beauties and fellcltlre , which
give so much pure joy to ( he discriminating , | (
far too dellcato und subtle for tbo per- ] ,
ceptlon of the uiunllshtened D
A DUUiK-llj ( iiiiiil Hook II
one that well deserves Its great sue- j U1
Is "David Ilarum , " which belongs to the I B'
class of utorlcd In which Mark Twain' * "Tom 1 I'1 '
> or" and 'Huckleberry Finn , " and Mr j '
Howell's "Silas Lapham , " represent approx'o | '
Ini.ite perfection David Harum , In the w
place in true In the second place , It IB
go-iilul in the third plact It IB wholesome. II
cun banll ) all it literature In the highrl
seiiBU Apart from the central character m
his quaint monologue * It Is mere notliw
Even In the utterance" of David him- 1 si
, the author Mr Weetcott , ilau occasion. It
'
S borrowed prettj frerly from other
I jonrroi , and on MID whole the novel ln the
. snine relation to literature ns "The Old
I Homestead bears to the drami Novorllie
le I * , with these limitations , tne 'nook ! > rloin
and , vigorous and amusing , nnd It has the ad-
dltlonnl merit of being thorotiKhl } nnd un-
errlnglj American
In the pherc of the hlflorlcnl ronunre
three novels have run neck nnd neck In the
race for popular favor. The o nrc Caskobci
den's | "When Knighthood Was In Plower , '
Mr Winston ' " '
Cnurs-hlll's "Richard Cauel'
I and ' Mr Pord'g ' Janice Mrrfdltli " It Is
I rather dinicult to deoldo upon the relative
merit of each "When Knighthood Was In
Tlower" moves swlftlv nnd sureb along to
Its finish , never dragging nnd never dlapcai
pointing "Hlchnrd Panel" is admirable
and oven distinguished In Its tvlp tlnugli
some modern locutions occasional ! } niter
through Into the author's assumed clqht-
ccnth-century stjle , nnd the first Inlf of the
( novel Is undeniably ton slow In Us develop
ment Mr I'ord's " "
i "Janice Meredith" Is well-
, I11 nnd flrmlj compacted nnd Its narrntho
i : os ono along easllj and eitreh , thrush
, the stjlu Is sometimes sllp-shol and unfin
ished The populnrlU of all three o' Ih'sc
books has been \crj great and shows a
I he-\lthy tone In the public mind Of cojrs'
jflll , of them pale Into Insignificance bolide
Tharkern\'s "Helm IJsmomV but the last
two may claim equal rnnU with "Ko-nn
i Doone. " and the first with some of Iliilwerl
I Ilion's rather
> rococo bits of hlst-rlcnl rom
manre. ;
I
j I The ' cln of morbid psvchologv has been
worked with remarkable power and Mlccess '
by Mrs Henry Dudcnej In "The Maternity
of Harriott Wlckcn , ' nun \cry feeblj and
Ineffcctuall } b > Miss Ucntilce Harmdcn In
"Tho 1'owler. " The former book Is almost
woithy to bo ranked with Hard > 's "Judo , "
the latter , with an Immensely Interesting
thomr > , Is In Us execution beneath contempt
lloth looks are studies In degeneracy , but
'Mis ' Dudeney writes with a strong mnsMi-
] line grip on her subject and with n glcim
'hero < nnd there of rcul humor , while Miss I
j Harrnden Is mlsslsh nnd theoretical to n de-
giro \ "Tho 1'ottler" dcalh with the th me
I of f pscblc.il seduction , and In the hinds of
L
profound psjchnloglst like Dilzac It would
'iha\o been n startling nnd epoch-making
book To the biinie class of books bc'onsrs
Mr Hcnrj James' no\cl. "The Awkwaid
Ago , " which dlsereetlj skirts the edges of
forbidden subjects and which Is i miracle of
subtle .suggestion nnd fertile allusion entiled
to the vanishing point , so that It icpresonts
the apotheosis of his peculiar style , > ct , as a
whole , the book Is unrcidible
The only important representation of the
realistic novel that the jear has seen Is Mr
Xorris' "McToaguc " Thin book contains In
many places some verj vigorous and Indi
vidual writing , while the fcoidldncua nnd
brutalitj of the life which It depicts show
that Its author has fully mastered the le-
allstio formula Nevertheless this sort of
thing IIOH been so much better done b > Zola
and George Moore and Olsslng that 'Mc-
Teague ' will find few leaders after several
months shall have passed
The socialistic novel Is best represented by
Mr Uichard Whltclng's "No 5 John Stteet , "
which Is very readable if one studiouslj
omitH all the author's Intercalated comments
on tbo Inequality oC out existing conditions
The stoiy , ns n storv , dealing with the ex-
peilmentnl residence of an English gentle
man In ont of the foulest of London's slums.
is strong and stirring , and cantninn mnnv
little touches which show Mr. Whltelng to be
not onlj a skillful writer , but a man of wldo
leading In very many literatures , ancient
and modern As a socialistic novel , how
ever , it Is of no importance when compared
with so brilliant n piece of writing as Bella-
mj's "Looking Bickward"
Mi. Harold Frederic's posthumous novrl ,
"The Market Place , " givesivld study of
the modern financial world , and for a time
Its. narrative of a great operation In stocks
carried out with Napoleonic energy and au-
dacltj of the self-made , overbearing , unscru
pulous , virile hero Is thrilling , but the tale
runs on beyond Its natural climax and dis
solves Into weakness nt the end Neverthe
less the best of It ! f equal to the best that
Mr Frederic wrote in "Theron Ware" anil
Its perusal Intensifies the general regret over
Its , author's death nt the very moment of his
llterarv maturity
Of "Stalkj & . Co , " which has lately ap
peared In book form , It would bo unnecessary
to say anything at all were Its author n less
distinguished literary personage than Mr.
Kinl-ml Kipling , for the book Is an exem
plification of everthing that Is least admir
able In Mr Kipling's manner , unrelieved by
any of his finer touches It is oven hard to
read a criticism that has never before bean
evoked by any of Mi. Kipling's work The
truth ' Is that there Is beginning to bo vlslbln
a very ominous deterioration In the character
and quality of all that ho has lately done
His ! poem , "Cruisers , " was ns fiat ns anything
that Mr. Alfied Austin ever wrote His
latent "war poem , " with Its staccato ending , "
"Pay , pay , pa } , " does not , with all Its "go , "
rise : above the level of one of Mr. Gilbert's
"patter songs" Mr Kipling , In fact , has
cither already written too much or else ho
hna resumed his lltcrnr } labors too soon after
his recent Illness. Ho ought to recognize
the fact that ho has reached a point In his
career nt which a little more inferior produc
tion will very seriously compromlso a
uniquely brilliant reputation.
If I wore asked to group the best six novels
of ( the jear In the order of their true Im
portance fioni a lltorarj- point of vlt-w I
should tot down the list as follows
1. "Tho Greater Inclination , " bj Hdlth
Wharton
2 "Dav Id Harnm , " by C N Wcfltcott. "
3 "That Maternity of Harriott WIcken , "
by Mrs Dudeiipy.
4 "nichard Panel. " by Winston Churchill '
5 "Tho Market Place , " by Harold Trederlc
C. "When Knighthood Wns in Dow or , " by
IMwln CiiHkodcn
invcic n\\viv's srrrnsson. SI
Vliout ( lie Nu Clilof of ( lit- co
WIlllU'llHCO llllllllllN ,
Green Cloud , pretender to the chlcftnln- gr
eMp of the Wlnncbago Indians , bus gl\en i Hi
to Thomas R Roddy of Chicago a belt of : j fo
white waninum , slgnlf\lng pence , and urth |
iciidercd lo him all claims to the position of pc
head of the tribe The Irishman will be In- en
stalled as chief with big ceremonies when i Ai
the council of thu trlbn calls lilm at the i A
lirbt of the jcjlr , IJH n Clileago letter w
It was Ulaek Hawk's will that Ills friend In
and ndvlser , Roddy , known to the WlnnoIJi
bngoH , Sioux and Chlppeunfc as Whlto I3ufw
folo , autcewl him and when the old chief m
went to the happy bunting ground enrly In i , n
September Hodd ) became the actual head I ' nl
thn tribe , but ho v\as not InstnlliHl Green i I th
Cloud , leader of the part of the tilbo which i m
| posed Hlack HawK , wanted to be chief , | i I"
e\on though he Is the friend of Hoddj The i \
chierrt of the tribe made no decision , but last
week Green Cloud presented white wampum
Itoddy and the council will call Its now
thief or
Ilcddy , who is a Email , daik Irishman ,
will still live In Chicago during thu win- , to
lets , but In the summers hit \\lll take up11'1 '
his | abode in the lands oAtho tribe around I"
Hlack Hlver I'.ilU. in Wlwonsln , and rule I "
Ho is a quiet man and has acquired the ' J"
ludlnn trait of solemnity and ono looks for
gruuttt ' of approval or disapproval rather a
than for words from him He has beei ) the i co
actual leading spirit among the Wlnnebagoia i ' "
jears , even whllu UlacK Hawk , the " "
wisest of recent Indian ruleri. , lived
1Uo Installation ceremony will bo beld In , of
the council lepeu of tbo tribe and the warIn
riora who llvo In Nebraska an well as the in
men of the Hlack Hlver Tails Bi-tilemeiu. bj
will attend The ceromoti } has been the cs
same Mure the trlbo bus known Its history Ki
ta a religious dance , not as the word dance be
Is \ used rommonli hut Is n ppremom which
Mr Uoddj sinjs Is like the IniMnilnn nf
theMnsins ( Mr Iloddv sa > Mn onry exists
nmong the Indian tribes and existed before
Columbus discovered America He sijs he
adhr ficen the Mn onlc degrees up to the
unIte Arch degree given In the Indian
I' dRes None but niMtibers will bo admitted
to thi > council tMit when Ho1d > tak < a his
oath I of office The ccremonv of Installation
begins nt stiu rt of one dnj nnd ends at the
next : going do\\n \ of the sun The waulors
clad In their finest clothes each cnrrjlng A
medicine bug made of furs nud covered with
beads ; , march ! solemn procession striking
the ' ' ( cnndldatp with their medicine bags nnd
chnntltiK Occasionally they scpntnti *
e-ach datucs in n separate spot. During the
dancp ' the men bow to earth nnd roll ns If
In ' abject tetror
( Chief ( noddy's tepee In Chicago Is n bentn
I tttul little lltit at 6026 Iiiglesidfl n\Ptiue , Just
off the Mldwnj. The Hat is furtilslii'd ptct-
tlly ; and filled with costlbrlcnbrae nud
priceless ' relics of thc > Indians He has the
greatest collection of wnmpitni belts In ex
istence The llrst bolt William Penn g.ixo
the- Indians the belt given to the first lllack
Hawk | , uncle of the chlrf whom Uoddj will
succeed , nt the end of the wnl In 1SS2 nnd
.
dozens . of other bells nro owucd bv him
Ilesldes wampum. Chief Hoddy holds n won
derful ( ) collection ef copper work nnd the
,
relics of dead chiefs , the propertj of the
Wlnnelngos ,
Hoddv j was bom fortj jears ago at Pcotln
His fnthor wns Patrick Hoddv , a native of
Ireland , who wns ft trapper , trader and l
tcrpreter nnd n great friend of thp - | 1
bngos When White Iluffalo was five vears
old ] his father removed to Hlack Hlvcr Tnlls
nnd Iho lad wns raised among the Indians.
Ho lenrned the Inngunges of the Wlnne-
baKix nnd Cblppevvas almost befolo be
lent nod English , and when 14 jears of ago
was nn Intelprotcr
Young Hoddj beeame pecull.irlj popular
among the Indians of Wisconsin and Minnesota
seta Fourteen joars ago ho succeeded In
establishing frlotidlj relations between the
WIntiebagos Sioux and Chlppowas Heguvo
a great dance and the three tribes were
represented
im i. or TIM : s
IIM % tlie'C.lft Problem Is So\ril | on
( Insiiorex of Ilike IJrle.
The con pallor In her honip , observes
the Clovolnnil Plain Dealer In reporting the
proccoMlngsverbatim
Ho "I want to tell jou that I nm ut-
tcrly discouraged '
Slip "Deir me' You talk like mlsflt
parson In nn unsympathetic pulpit. Whit
Is { ! tbo tiouble' '
HP "It's the Chrlhtmns season. I nm
ovpnvhclmod bj It. "
She "Now jou talk nftor the fashion o [
a n clerk lu the only toj stoic In town ,
do on "
He "Well , 1'vo rummaged the stoles np
nnd down to ing to find n gift for a person
I am verj anxious to please"
She "How romantic. Old person 01
jonng' " '
Hobout jour ago , I think"
She"That would Imply tint I am of
doubtful aip "
He 'Would It' Well. I cin't doubt
vour word lint this person for whom I
have ransacked the shops "
She "This exacting she "
Ho "Did I saj die' "
She "Would jou ransack for a he' "
HP "I fancy I wouldn't Wpll. she I
admit It already ha-i everj thing that heirt
could wish I 1me seaiched the stores
through nnd can't find a novelty that would
clmrm her "
She. "Ho\v dreadfully blase she must
be"Ho
Ho"Hut cm jou blame her' At last I
ga\o up In despflr I nnld of course to
myself It's no ute There Is 'but ' one thing
I posse-ss that would prove a novelty to
her and so I have come "
She ( qulckls ) "To consult me ? "
He "To offer jon mj heart"
A brief silence
She"Let ns be frank vvltb each o'hci
You have teiidcicd mo what jou nre pleased
to term a novel gift. Hut aic jou quite
sure it was yours to give ? "
He"Hli' ' Whj not' "
She"H was a generous thought that
prompted It , Hut In this practical world
it Is always well to ask for abstracts of
title. "
Ho : "What do jou mean' "
She "Well , I fancied that in the multi
plicity of my treasures I alieady pos
sessed "
He "My heart' "
She "Your heart "
Ho"Edith" '
She- " "
She"George !
They clinch.
< > r MAIVPviM'Nf ; minim.
lias I'niil Deiirlt for Her
Territorial | 'I > MN < < N | < > IIN.
Empire Imp los the domination by ferro
of one race or nation over other races and
nations , with more or less unwillingness on
the part of subjects so dominated , bajs the
Chicago Chronicle Imperialism menus
therefore , the maintenance of expensive and
dcmornll/lng armies for the double puipoto
of maintaining and extending one's eon-
quobts. Napoleon's "expansionist" Imperial
ism kept Franco nnd all EuropeIn com
motion for fifteen years nnd caused the waste
of oceans of blood and treasure Similarly
the extension of the HuBslan empire till it
covers 8,000,000 square miles nnd of the
British empire till It covers 11 000,000 square
mlicH has resulted In numerous wars , great
nnd small , cltbci In bubdulng the nations to
bo incorporated or In conflict with rlvnl cm
plres that threatened Imperial Interests
England's war record during the so-called
"peaceful" reign of'Queen Victoria Illus
trates the Inccnipntlbllltj of wide empire an !
perpetual ponce In 1838 thorc was rebellion
" Canada , In 1SIO thcie wns n brush with
China nnd another with Egjpt , In list- oc
curred the first Afghan wai 1S43 was the
joar of the Scindo und Mahralta wars. In
1845 nnd 1848 thoio were wnrs with the !
Sikhs , In 1850 the Kuflli war began in 18 > J i
there was wnr In Burma In 1SD3-5 the more
|
considerable wai with HuiHn occurred In
1857 there was wnr with Persia and the ,
greut Indian mutiny wns to bo bUppreBBcd ,
the second Chinese wai didiil tn 1SGO , to Im j
followed bj the Maori vvnr In 181.2 , 1SC3 saw
the Ashniitee expedition , In 1&G7-S the PX-
penslvo wnr of rescue with Abj .lnla was
carried on , lu 1873 there was n second
Ashantoo war , in 1878-SO occurred tbo second
Afghan wat nnd the Huluvar , In 1880 there
was war with the liners of the Transvaal
1SS2 Arnbi Pnsha was to be put down nnd
Kgjpt recovered , from 1881 to 18S9 there
worn < numerous bloody battles with the
inulidlstfl , In 1SS5 llurma was annexed nftei
brief war , In 18-8 occurred the furmld
'able vvara that resulted in the downfall of
the khalifa nt Omdurmnii and of the mad
mullah nnd other tribal loaders in northwest
India This record omits Innumerable minoi
v\aib In west Africa , In I'gunda. In Deludes i
tan , lu Matabelrlnnd npd olhei parts Of
the slxtj-two jiars of Vlctoila's reign
thlrty-Mx wore marked with wait ) of gioatir Cl
less magnitude , at times t o or three ,
wars being in progress at the game tlmo Ai
many points throughout the glebe doc * .
the nriilsh empire como In contact with con |
dieting Interests that It Is ulmo.M literally
tiue that the doors of the Hrltleh Temple of
Janus are never shut
This docs not imply that the IJngllsh aie
particularly aggressive people On Iho
contrar ) , their commercial and Industrial
interests predispose theiu to pc-aco Hut i
frequent wars nro Inevitable In Idints o'
empire ; r pi < lall ) when one t HUbJi in an
alien races or whin exputiBion luiim < n .
J
Into < ontfl < t with baiburoun | ii | il 4 i n
self Lontiul Hi bn'u 'li' ' I in i J > au-j
IlinitlllK Ith lf 10 hi ! ) 01 K 1 llJrt
escaped the lOnstan n K ' jr o n n
England Is oxponwl but no ttia' ' ni lu e (
begun to nceX adviuiurca our rca aau tuva i
'conip ' In contact with numerous alien
ho' ' ttle races our risks nrc IndpfinitcU tnul-
Hpllpd Omitting our domestic wnr/ , our
on' ' > wnrs hive been with England In 1M2 ,
with Mexico In IS 1C with Spnln in 1W aivl
with thrrillplnos In ISOi-M , Die Inst two
being ! duo to the new lniporl ll m It nnv
be nlllrmed. In fnct , that bill for oui IIP *
'policy ' of expansion the L'nlted States wo I'd '
bp prnctliili > exempt from thr rl l s of for
elgn wnr to which othei great untliiis nrp
exposed | The evil of the new jollcj lln not
nloiu1 | In the fact tlmt II Involve * us now in
nn Intomilnnblp nnd cotlv ; conflict with the
rillplnos , on thp othrr side of the globe , hut
'
that , , it contains the germs of otheiind
igtenter | | , conlllcts in thp [ utiire
,
| Doc * tour linn ! uclu-f
Ask vour dingiest for Wrights Pmngon
Headache- , and Neuralgia. Cure Ti > It 23c
OMXIIV ( illMMtU , \IIICirr. .
Conilltlnii nf Trnite unit ( iniKiilliin < < on
Maple mill I'nne.t I'lniluee ,
I'GGSllei olpts HOit fro li stork , Kc
sr.n i'ofi/i in-choice to f mv
'lo due Ks 7 ( , UPPMO ve. spring
chlikriH fiV , lu im OP , looste'ls , | ' , iv
LIVE rol'I/rUY lion" , 5o ; ipilng i UlcK-
PIIS . ii.T/tc. old nnd staggv roo"tii , U
ili.iks , 1,1 gio p , ( , ! * , ( liirkovs \ ,
"j
HI Tl I'll Common to full , IC'jr iliodo
nJ'il' ' "PP'intor , "be , KiitliciPd eienniirv i
"preJlIONS-l.H , . , I1Pr dor , 7r.c I
VIIAKS-ChoUe , ! < c-
(5A Jin " Prnlrle cli'pkens. ' pet do V' TO i
RIUIISI { . ' ] $ > quail , ppr iloz . fl v , mnllarils '
iJIOflftlSS , liluovliit J l , Jl 75. irriH-n vvlnu
tonl. * I Xijil 50 , mlMd dunks JlVKjK | ) ,
l\STiitri ) .Mpdluni. poi1111 , IV titid
ard " , per i in. > , bulk stindiid per gal
$12" ) oxltii - ole'i t" , pi r i-nn , 'We , ixtn
spli-ctM per gnl , $ lfO , New Yolk rount
per _ ean , 37c , New York counts , per li > >
1 HAY rpluiid pholPC , J650 , mldl-ind' '
oil > li e , M. lowland , oholie $5. IVP sti ivv
Pholic W "ill. No 1 porn 27e , No ! vvlilo ,
oaf , 2Jlt < ciarked eoiti , pel ton , J12. cum'
nnd iiiits rluippod , pei ton. JI.'uU brnn , per
ton , } tT , Bhoits ppi ton J14
swiir : : i-pTAToils-ivr bbi Illinois
? 1. lorsijs $0 , lingo libN , Xobraskii , J2 7o
' ' '
I'Ol'A'IOES-Per Im , Pholev , 30n too
CA Hit Ui- ! Tot Ib , iV.e. llulland seed
' erntp , } 2 50
t'KANHKHHIIHol ! & . Hugle , per bbl
$ G "iO , , Ioi * < ovs. Jt 23
ONIONS 'Ilpl.itl vvnj , jollow , C3p , rod , 75
Cl Sic
CKMJIlY-I'pi do25ff30c. . California ,
" ' i r bum h , 13
i
TfltNU'S-Itntnlngns. poi Ib . Ii4c , Cana
dian , I'tftll o
N vVAinilt'HUSS IVr IG-Ht P.I PS , Jl to
MfSllHOOMS-Por Ib box , f > 0o
' 1 OMA'IOUS riorldn , DPI U-basket crate
I
rut * IT"
IS Choli'p wostPin shipping stock
$ ) 1X (3 ( VIper Ni w York slot k. $3 "ity I 00
IS-'allfoi nbi Emperor. $ J , i ntavv
poi small bi Kol ISc , Mnlagii grapes
per bbl , $7iM79no
I KOPH'Al , riHTITS
OHAXGES Me > xlrnn , PPI box $3. C'il-
Ifoinln nivols jior box , $1 " > 0'i.1 ( "S
M3MUNP CTllfornln fancv , $ I2. > 5IV ( ) ,
ebokc C'allfotnn , WWiQIOT. Messlm , ft Wij.
IION13Y I'or Jl-'vitlou case , $1 S' l 50
NU Ib llli Korv mil" , large , per bu , $1 ,
shell Iwrks $1 J5Jil 15
FIGS Cillfoi nla lipis , per 10-lb bo\ ,
$1. Calirouil.i carton per 10-lb box , $1 10
MAPI.,1 : SI C.AIl Per Ib , 9c.
HIDES , TALLOW , ETC
HIDES No 1 t'li-Pll hides S c , No J
green hide. , 7'-c , No 1 suited hides , lOc ,
No : Milted hides , IP , No 1 veal onlf , S to
1. lls Si No J venl uilf 12 to H Ibs , S ( .
i \ 1,1.0 \ \ OIUASE , mv Taiiovv. NO
1 , 4c No 2 3'iC , rough , 2c , vUille grease ,
214f | | > 14 < jellovv ind brown grease' , 2Vs
Genuine
r e i i TI Tr TTin
Little Liver Pills ,
Must Bear Signature of
See Poc-Slmllc Wrapper Iklow.
Tory nmall and as ea
to take ns ungor.
FOR HEADACHE ,
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS ,
FOR TORPID LIVER ,
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIH.
THE COMPLEXION
_ .
29 eJntJ
CURE SICK HEARACHE.
Thev nrc ns ni'icb HLc COATHI )
HI.I.'ClKICITV as sclenee can make
them Kith one produces tisimicli
nerve buililliij ; fiiihstanf-IH Is i on-
tallied III the amount of food a tnin
coiisiiinf.s In n wecL , This Is why
they baie ciirrd thoueaniNof cases
of nrrvout dls'nscs , fciich as Dclill-
Ity , Dizziness , liisumniu V rlcocele ,
etc They enable you to think clear-
1 > bydevelopliiKbraliunntteri force
benlthy clrpulntlon , cure IndlRe *
lion , am ) Impart bounding xl or to
the wbolr a\stem All weiVeiling
and tiiiiic destroying drains ail 1
losses permanently iun-1 Delay
nii\ ; mean Infinity , Consumption
anil Dtutb HA.
I'n Jiprrbor six boxes fwllh C\l
iron , lail ( ruiruntee tj curt ur reSSI
luml i iuiif\ i { s ISook tjiitninlni ? gf
pignut pnx-r tree , Addre& >
For i oalc by Kuhn & oo. , or Wnlilron ft
CfimpbUU
rzt.c tie *
RRPEMMEYftCa
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. , . , -l iilllim J
2 f ] ( 'r' > U' ' 'i1'1 ' siiftra eti , cunvua ur ofer.
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REMUDV CO. ,
Tor rain in Omalm , Neb , l > y , 'ua Foi.
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