' "98'""SfPfr,llH'W ' "VJ!1'r wry ,im t-hj- 5 T. L.' V '.: The Aged PoritiJrf.' Tho Pittsburg Post of recent date contained the following interesting account of the daily life of Pope Leo XIII.: The aged pontiff who dwells In tho great Vati can at Rome, and who rules the neatest sect in tho world, is nearing the goal where the reaper awaits him an end Leo XIII. awaits with Christian for titude and wonderful calm. And yet he is not the decrepit individual his great age 91 years would indicate. Neither his public life nor his home life would suggest that he Stood so near tho brink of the grave, for even at the best he cannot expect to live long. The public life all the world knows his profound knowledge, his blameless life, his Christian democracy. Not so with the life he leads hidden away from all but the college of car dinals, from his physicians and his body atten dants. It is as a private individual that the pope is perhaps more interesting than-as a great prelate. As .the latter, he stands in the light of a prin ciple -the religious and moral' guide of millions. As the former, he is an humbToi. man, whose per fect life has won for him thoi respect of all the world, irrespective of belief or creed. As the merp individual he is watched oyer, nursed and cared for with a vigilance far greater than that ex tended to the head of a royal house. As every one knows, the pope makes his home in the famous Vatican, a magnificent palace in Rome, surrounded by superb gardens. Since his accession to tho papacy, Leo XIII. has not left the confines of the Vatican gardens because of the con flict between the church of Rome and the Italian government over the question of temporal power So great is the Vatican, however, so magniucent its appointments and art treasures, that so patient and philosophic a man as Leo XIII. does not feel the restraint that would seem irksome to most other .beings. u And yet, despite the hundreds of rooms and salons and immensef 'halls, the pope uses only three small apartments for himself, and one of these is the private chapel in which he celebrates mass every morning, as the church laws demand. The most interesting of these rop'rt 'is the one in which he sleeps and worfcs, a email narrow room, comparatively plainly furnished. In one corner stands a low bed of magniuu .t mahogany, em bellished with solid gold and bearing on the foot piece the inscription in gold, "Leo XIII." Above the head of the bed hangs a small o.i painting of the Virgin, and Child, by one of the old masters. To the side of the bed within reach stands a low chiffonier;- having no ornamentation whatever. This serves the double purpose of writ ing desk and medicine chest. To one side of the bed is a settee of red velvet, and at the root stands ar. easy chair. That completes the entire fur nishing of the room. The other rooms are a dining-room, also sim ply furnished, with a Semi-alcove adjoining, which is used as a reception room for the cardinals and favored visitors. Beyond is the private chapel, the mural decorations of which are famed for their exquisite beauty. The floor is of onyx and gold abounds. The altar of solid gold is magnifi cent in the extreme. In these few rooms the pope lives, save when in the gardens of the Vatican or when saying pontifical high mass in St Peter's. He rises be tween 6 and 8 o'clock in the morning, is dressed and goes to breakfast, consisting of coffee and wheat bread. The simple meal over, L goes to his desk and attends to such business as may be presented to him by the cardinal camerlengo the real secretary of the church, and the prelate near est to the pope. At about 11 o'clock he takes a cup of bullion in which a raw egg has been beaten. T- n more work Is done until 2 o'clock, when din ger is served. , This meal consists of soup, meat, vegetables and fruit, neither sweets nor pastries of any kind being permitted on the papal table. The dinner The Commoner. lasts until 3 o'clock, when the pope rises and passes through tho various corridors and rooms of the Vatican, where ho greets the prelates and blesses those who seek his- benediction. At tho door he enters a sedan chair, in which he Is car ried by liveried servanda to tho park itself, where w is transferred Into a carriage, which takes him some distance away to the spot where the ramble begins. The pope Is usually dressed In a red cloak and a red pontificial hat, and is accompanied by some prelates or by his nephew, Count Pecci, and a body guard of his Swiss soldiers. In. summer Leo takes his walks In tho early mornings to avoid the great heat and works in the evenings. Returned from his walk tho pope takes a glass of Bordeaux wine and a cracker, attends to more work, or indulges in his favorite pastime of versi fying, and then prepares for bed. Once in his couch the pope is watched over until he awakens in the morning. In tho wall opposite the bed Is a hole, through which every movement of the aped pontiff can bo seen. His" every breath is noted his every move anticipateH." " As often happens, Leo awakens during the night and rises to work, for hi3 brain is unceas ingly active. At those times the watchers, his body servant and physician, keep their respective eyes at the peephole to see that his holiness does not tire himself. In that manner he is somewhat constrained, but even he acknowledges that he is careless at times and needs a restraining hand. In fact, there Is a sort of jolly warfare be tween him and -ib physician. Dr. Laponl, to whom he has to report himself every day, whether he wills it or no. Tbe doctor asserts his authority, however, and like a good patient Leo submits and laughingly vows that he will outlive all his doc tors, despite their pills and drugs. ' ' ' Besides these faithful watchers there is an other, of whom the world knows even less. ' He stands until relieved, at the piazza rusticucci, near St. Peter's, and watches a window in the Vati can. Winter and summer it has been open (since 1878) in the daytime and lit by a lamp by night. That denotes, he knows, that I co XIII. lives. But let that window be closed or dark and the caribi nier will know at onfre that the soul of the pontiff ha3 gone to that' bourne from which no traveller e'erreturns. Aside from these phases of the pope's private life and the fact that he was 91 years of age on the 2d of March, some incidents of his early life, be fore he became even a priest, are cf much Interest. To begin, he was born in 1810 at Carpiento, Italy, and christened Vincentio. This name he bore, un til he was graduated as a doctor of laws, when he took the n?.me of Joachim (Pecci. Long before this time, however, he haa become famous throughout Italy for his brilliant proficiency in Latin and mathematics. The pope, attracted by the young man's abilities, used 3 Is influence to ob tain the finest teachers for him. At 28 the future pope became civil governs of the province of Benevant, which was at that time Infested wltn murderous robber bands. From the first he ruled with energy and firmness and in a few months had cleared- the province of the malefactors. Five years later he was ordained a priest, and three j ears after was made apostolic delegate to the pro vince of Perugia. Shortly after ho was made archbishop, and in 1853, at the age of 43, ho be camo a cardinal. The most important event in Cardinal Pecci's life took place February 7, 1878. At that time Pius IX. ruled the church, and Pecci acted as car dinal camerlengo. At 3 o'clock ixvtho xnomixg cf that day Pius, who had been ill for some time, called cardinals about him and asked, for a con fessor. A humble Augustine monk, dressed in somber black, was called in and shrived the dying pontiff. Two hours later Pius was dead. At 7 o'clock in the morning the cardinal camerlengo entered the papal bedchamber and re- moved tho white veil hiding t 3 face of the dead pope. "Giovanni Mantai! Giovanni Mantal, speak!" called Cardinal Pecci to tho dead hguro. No an swer camo from tho cold lips, and tho cardinal tapped thrice upon tho forehead of tho former popo with a silver mallet and pronounced him dead. Then ho drew from his flngor tho fisher ring, sym bolic of tho Apostle Peter. Six days lator Cardinal Camorlongo Pecci was elected popo, and on March 3, when G8 yearn of ago, he was crowned with great po; p and splendor at St. Peter's. A Valuable Tree. There Is an orange tree" at tho agricultural de partment which, tradition says, has produced rev enue sufficient to meet all tho expenses of that de partment for tho last thirty years. Its history is in' cresting. About 1870 an American woman told Mr. Saunders, tho expert on pomology for tho de partment, that she had enjoyed tho most delicious oranges while In the vicinity of the City of Bahla, Brazil, and believed he would do well to procurd some of the budded fruit as an experiment In this country. The secretary of agriculture requested our con sul at that point to send him twelve budded trees. They came In duo time, and were In turn budded on small seedlings for distribution. This is orio great tree that survived, and, while they did not thrive in Florida, they did on tho Pacific coast, and today the navel or Bahia orange, the father of that industry in California, owes its existence to the single tree now standing In the glass house In the agricultural grounds. Of the crop of about 20,000 carloads for 1901 at lqast 15,000 of them were of the navel variety, while the revenue varies from $3,000,o0 to $5,000, 000 a year. The statement of this fact, a single tree having produced sufficient revenue to sustain the department for a period of thirty years, never falls to awe the tourist, and causes him to beg for a single leaf from the wonderful money tree; Chicago Tribune. "' A Dissenting Opinion. The Ram's Horn haBvhevcr shared the optim istic estimate of this Filipino chief which is held by those who liken him to our Washington, but to his own people he is a Washington, or a BolLvar. In all fairness and good sense we ought to try and look at his capture if possible as his countrymen may look at it and as wo would have looked at It one hundred and thirty years ago. .Suppose some English officer, Andre for example, had gath ered a company of Mohawks who knew the coun try trails and together with Benedict Arnold, be fore his treason was known, had started out for Valley Forge where Washington was in retreat with his shattered army. Suppose under the guise of friendship and loyalty and with the announce ment that the English officer was being fetched as a prisoner access were gained to Washington' quarters and that brave general were made a prisoner and dragged to a British frigate, would we as Americans think any more of Arnold and Andre than we do now? Or would there be any self-respecting Englishman now-a-days who would bo overproud of his countryman's daring exploit one hundred and thirty years ago? Or does any one fancy that one hundred and thirty years hence, as the dusky youth of the Philippines spell out their lessons in reading and. geograp!':'" and history they will think any more highly of the Christian civili zation which reigned in the North American con tinent In 1901? Let us not at all be misunderstood Our aim Is not at Funston; we like him, he is the kind of man whom we would love to follow in a high cause. But we pity him, and we regret that circumstances have involved him In a policy of which ho may be the unconscious abettor or tho unwilling victim. The Ram's Horn. 4 n m lh-i t.Uai-A-jfiti jVmu ,AJ4.-li-