The Commoner. VOLUME 4, NUMBER 4, the presidential candidate Is, but it docs matter what liq alands for. It dooB not mutter much from what sec tion ho comes, but it does matter in wUt direction ho is going to lead the TKirtv This is not a sham battle in which wo are about to ongago. It is in . tensely real, and terribly earnest. Wo need candidates whoso recoids aro such as to insplro courage in democrats such as appeal to the con fidence) of republicans. Lovo, a great philosopher has declared, is not stu pla, and those who lovo democratic principles will certainly not Ijo &o Btupld as to select a candidate whose past is indcfonsiblo, whoso present position is inscrutable, or whose fu ture conduct can be a matter of con jecture. And how shall our committee con duct the campaign? Not by the pur chase of votes, or by the corruption of citizenship, but by an open and honorable appeal to the hearts and minds of the American people. Let the republican party bo challenged to meet tho moral issue presented this is democratic, this is patriotic. Let this be done, and "unless reason and love of country have tied wo shall light without being ashamed. If we lose it will be but a temporary defeat and will bring no disgrace with it. If wo win, tho victory will mean much for our country and for the world. Rome The Catholic C.pitJ (Copyright, 1904, by New York Journal.) Tho dominant feature of Itomo is the religious feature, and it is fitting that it should bo so, for horo tho soil was stained with the blood of those who first barkened to the voice of the Nazarono hero a cruol Nero lighted his gardens with human torches, little thinking that tho religion of those whom ho burned would In timo il lumine tho earth. Tho fact that tho city is tho capi tal of tho Catholic world is apparent overywhero. All interest is centered In tho Vatican and St. Peter's. The civil government of Italy extondr to tho nation's borders, but tho papal authority of Homo reaches to the ie motest corners of the earth. I was anxious to see the man upon whom such vast responsibility rests and whoso words so profoundly influonco millions of tho human race. Lord Denbigh, of England, had given me a lottor of introduction to Cardinal Merry del Val, tho papal secretary of stato, and armed with this I visited tho Vatican. Oardinel del Val is an exceedingly interesting man. Ho was born of Spanish parents, but ono of liis grand-parents was English and ho is connected by ties of blood with several families of the English nobil ity. Ho was educated in England, and speaks that language fluently and without an accent, ns ho does French, German, Italian and Spanish. His linguistic accomplishments are al most as groat as those of the famous Cardinal Mozzofantl. Cardinal del Val Is an unusually young man to oc cur y such an important post ho Is not yet forty. Ho impresses one as a man of rare ability and ho possesses extraordinary volatility and a diplo ' matic training that will mako him eminently useful to His Holiness. The papal socrotary of state Is a tall slender, distinguished-looking man' His Intellectual faco is thin and oval-' his oyos are large, dark and "brilliant showing hia Spanish birth. He re ceived us in his private apartments in tho Vatican. They are among the most interesting of tho 1,200 rooms in that great building and were onco oc cupied by that famous pope who was a Borgia. Tho ceilings and walls down to the floor aro painted magnif icently, tho decoration having been done by the hand of a master artist of Borgia's roign. For centuries tho ?i 1 TY 0CC"Pied by Cardinal del 7 hadn,S00n nnrt of the Vatican 11 maSL 1 h bea"tlful wa re once Si? tiby,Voat of rud0 whitewash, but the paintings were discovered not long ago and tho pictures restored onco more to view. ea Before visiting the Vatican I called of LMA0nSlg,nor Keedy, the rector of tho American College. Mgr Ken nedy is a learned and an oxceWng?y Indigastlon Gund In ono trcok with Drake's Fnim mi. postal card request for frSo i?nmI7lnoVSend Formula Company, Chicago? 0ttl t0 Drako agreeable American and tinder his ef ficient management the number of students in the college has been dou bled within a few years. He enabled mc to meet Pope Pius' Maestro di Camera. By tho good offices of Car dinal del Val, and tho Maestro di Ca mera it was arranged that I should have a private audience with the Holy Father tho following day, Mgr. Kennedy acting as interpreter. JTope Pius received us in his pri vate audience room adjoining the pub lic audience chamber, where distin guished Catholics from all over the world were collected and ready to be presented and receive the papal blessingj The private audience room is a rather small apartment, simply, but beautifully furnished and deco rated. A throne bearing the papal crown occupied one side of tho room. His Holiness greeted us very cour teously and cordially. He wore a long white cassock, with a girdle at the waist; the fisherman's ring was on his finger and ho wore a small, closely fitting skull-cap of white. ? I had an opportunity to study his face. It is a round, strong face, full of kindliness and benevolence, but there are not acking indications that its possessor has a purpose and will of his own'.l .The face is ruddy and the nose rather long it is straight and not arched. His eyes are large, blue and friendly. The scant hair visible below the slaill-cap is white, in stature the Holy Father is about five feet nine or ten inches and his figure is sturdy, but not too heavy. His step is light and S r2!fn&Olln08ft has aIrcady saed a reputation as a democratic pontiff and enjoys a large and growing non ulirity with the people. He is an oTVt'hl0"611 n sSnda SesSinato on, of tho many court yards of the Vatican and preaches to tho crowds that gather quite informally hIs gestures aro said to be graceful and pressed in clear and emphaUc hT fhaatgPiusTxr?s1S ,a tfKoZ foimer of doctr no hnr - as a re will populaZ bo church T0 with a view to increaX the Sm' ness and zeal of the masse? in 1 application of religious tX ? n tho day life. -ufeIO"s truth to every- I assured His Holiness tw t Predated tho opporfiy his to g vo Imnetncj n . as forces of the world 1 he moral "t un J,orld and he ronlied will iZ SS "0rtts la ?t direcUon Son" w. merlt oommenda- 3saS3S so renowned a scholar and diplomat as was his predecessor, nor is he so skilled in statecraft, but he is a virile, energetic, practical religious teacher, charitable, abounding in good works and full of brotherly love. I am en couraged to believe that he will play an important part in the world-wide conflict between man and mammon,. The world has made and is malcing great progress in education and in industry. The percentage of illiteracy is everywhere steadily decreasing. The standards of art and taste aro rifcing and the forces of naturo are being harnessed to do the work of man. Steam, madly escaping from its prison walls, turns myrid wheels and dn?gs our commerce over land and sea, while electricity, more fleet of foot than Mercury, has become the message-bearer of millions. Even tho waves of the air are now obedient to the command of man and intelligence is flashed across the ocean without the aid of wires. With this dominion over nature man has been able to ad vance his physical well-being as well as to enlarge his mental horizon, but mts luu murai ueveiopment 01 tne people kept pace with material pros perity? The growing antagonism be tween capital and labor,the lack of sympathy often manifest between those of the same race and oven of the same religion when enjoying in comes quite unequal these things would seem to indicate that tho heart has lagged behind the head and the prrse. The restoration of tho equili brium and the infusing of a feeling of brotherhood that will establish justice and good will must be the aim of those who are sincerely interested in the progress of the race. This is pre-eminently the work of our relig ious teachers, although it is a work in which tho laity as well as the clercy must take part. After meeting Pius X.,'late the be loved patriarch of Venice, I feei as suied that he is peculiarly fitted to lead his portion of the Christian church in this great endeavor. The Vatican which serves as the home and executive offices of the su preme pontiff of the Catholic church is an enormous building, or rather collection of buildings for it bears evidence of additions and annexes. One might be easily lost in its maze of corridors. The ceilings of the chief apartments are high and like he walls of the spacious rooms and halls are covered with frescoes of priceless value. The Vatican adjoins St. Peter s cathedral or basilica as it s called a description of whose beetles would fill a volume. The basilica is so harmoniously propor tioned that one does not apprec ate its vastness from a distance, but once within its walls it is easy to credit the statement that fifty thousand per sons can be crowded into it. in a crypt just beneath the great dnm It mvr,n7? f bout whieh myriad lamps are kept constant u-nine- Near tho tomb isTcrudte suspended under a canopy supnorted by four spiral columns that Xe re plicas ; of a column elsewhere in Part W ta. Said ha'vben part of Solomon's temple. Not far from the crucifix is the famous bron7A statue of St. Peter, made from a na gaii statue of Jupiter. It is mounted upon a pedestal about five feet high and the large toe of the right loot which projects over the pedestal, has been worn smooth by the lips of de vout visitors to the basilica. To me the most remarkable of tho splendors of the cathedral were tho Mosaic pictures of which there aro many of heroic size.v- These Mosaics depict Bible scenes and chaiacter3 and are done with such marvellous skill that 'a little way off one can hardly doubt that they are the prod uct of the brush of,some great master. The colors, tints and shades are so perfect that it is difficult to believe that the. pictures are formed by the piecing together" of tiny bits of col ored marbles and other stones. The Vatican maintains, a staff of artists in Mosaic some of whose work may be purchased by ' the public. 1 was shown the masterpiece of Michael Angelo in the. cathedral of St. Peter in Vinculo a statue .of Moses, seated. In the right knee there is a slight crack visible and it is the tradition that when the great sculptor had fin ished his work he struck the knee with his mallet in a burst of en thusiasm and exclaimed, "Now, speak." St. Paul's cathedral, which stands outside the ancient wall of the city, is of modern construction and is therefore less interesting to the visi tor than the great basilica of St. Peter's. Next to the Vatican and the cathe drals in interest are the ruins of an cient Rome. In England and France I had seen buildings" many centuries old; in Rome one walks at the foot of walls that for two thousand years have defied the ravages nf time Tim best preserved and most stupendous pf the relics of "The Eternal City" is the Colloseum. 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BvelccTe IncHfcfiter Co.' Box, &9, 0rlHKeld, . Th6 CS2S?,,ltan Magazine. The TS.l?,,Cf"tury Home. :-J -WE OEFER-- . EITHER of the abova liVr lA. with The Commo.;: l- $.25 OrffiIlo0' J Eo bove ) 1 T, , immt ., i,. h, ,, .Commonw, UwiJ.SStai "" Id"' to Th 23"Jw i,'x JMBasaaeaagft