' - Cw"-- : " ; ' . . . . ' - . ; ' " . f ' . naooooaoooaooaaaooooaaaca $ aoaaaooaaaooaoooaaaoo o , uoozcccco PAnT acccQaoaaaoaaaau III. T HE 0 MAHA. , U N DAY B E E. g PAGES a occcccccocceC.cO 17 TO 20 , , . - - - - - " - - - " ' - - - _ _ . _ _ . - . - - - - - - - - ES'l'AJn.JISIll : D JUNJ : 1H , 1871. OMAHA . SUNDAY MORNING OOl'OBEn la , lS)3-1'\VE \ N l'P 1 \ . t 4) J SINGLE OUL'V lJ' VE OBN'l':3. : . ' - - . , r N. W. Corner . . , 16th and Douglas , OMAHA. ' . - - , . - - - - - - - , MOST EXTRAORDINARY GralldestPuscl' ' < of Under wear Ever lVI ad r . . 2000PairsHigI1Gl'a(1e GRAND CLOAK SALE , ) > . - BARGAINS iN 12,000 Dozen lleu ' ' , La(1ies' and Children's gall ; t.p.t. : ( Winter IMPORTED ' ' . + . 'l'ho llll' dst and finest stock nod rho $ " lowest ' prices ' ' in ' Ouutlnt . , . . DRESS That GOODS were ever and offered SILIS . U N D E R W E R fa KID ( Worth to i2/00 up ' ) 40 PIeCeS . 75c'Silk for 18c This pmclmsc : Is the entire stock of 1\ Rhlllll island t tndcrwenr mill , up to nosy 111 the humt of a l'ccCI\'CI' III GLOVES ' \ Double width A tremendous bin' jo sold It 1111-thl entire shick-to us at 5. : on the dollar of Its actual \'ulnc. Its the Itu'gcst slnglc p11 r- r Cashmere of Satin , China , " 'Su- amuse of Unlerlvcut ' ever recorded and by all odds thc gl'cat'st : sacl'llicl over Il1elll'I'c.I by 1man. . Plain Colored I 0 rams . , Dcng-allnc , ufnchll'CI' . Hm the ercditors WII'I ChUllOI'OU ! : for their honey ami hall to hl\\'c it. C C C C Moires and Futile C 5 9 15 9 8 , , - SCCgCS Silts g-o at 18e yard , And tansy half wool ' enl 12 yards tu each . r E N ' 6. n At U"n C if' ' If } IlB m rrJHi11E f1R ' , , , , r i \ novoltlps ClIstOIllOl' ' L E S . . C , u..ai4HW I I.\B \ Fff' U 1 & 81 t inch N U & 0 it } ) liB ff' ' 'rhe entire 1.Ianlm11lt stock or a 111'001. , . y iau + x ; 1 , loan KJ 40 $ L00 ORES SILKS Ir S9C D m KtUr1'1 ' , in VOOI . novelties . . U n'ij tJj ! IJ ; b ' \if \ ! ' 1 1 ! ! . n > > u"H [ ElR\VEAR . U [ j ER ' , m EC.l R . 1S11 I . eXl'lllsl\'e 1\111 1 glove ' store , Indlll1in + , . . PI laid Cheviots . - - - - - - - - .1.hntloll rtubraldUrcd'bnci : glncH gloves . s , + 4 lCVlOts 100 ' and pieces 1000 DOZEN W91 ! TI10UP Ladlcs' Hlbbcl1 Ladles' natural wool Slmttoll mon ( tlnl'tnh'es , In gray , brava , < C. " I . , All Pure MIENS WHITE GRAY UNDEItWEAR ) hlla'l. 1 111111 l white , i IImt j Foster hook . . Fancy Cheat I . . rRWt\R ! \ ; I L : , C pe1lt'nftR.'rn ! ' ' uc ! : Io\"es ; ron will lied lu filet all the high- Mixtures SLS ( r . 'nn IQUnnJl 6n'nE \ nVHnAFJ ; 12'1c r + , it.lt fr , . .l f1 est , ! : llIlesorl\lllglo\'I'HlnthHcalots d , . , , 29c . , . H\ Mun's ' lttnsoxttaheavy eottou- " . ' " r n. whidl , ' tomol'I'O\l' , "ac ' . 2 Cases . . " - ' 1 u h hT ! ! t ; 'o 1uarrow at iiUe ' l c , USe g , I'ibbcdnndOl'II.C1U. ) . . . . . . " - -2 f . . all ' ' Double breasted , , heavy a ° + t J4I , , , L' ' , Strictly III GI'OS Grain 'l'afTotlls , Satins , bleak 5 ' ' ' , ' , y ' wbh'rlt WOIt'I'1l ; o 'rlI jjc Wool I St' d and all shades ! ; wm'th u dollar 110 yard , ; 'rayunderwcur. . . . . . . . 2 5 ® - , ! . 00 Striped ' . . ' , Fine cancels hair under C I.adles' heavy ribbed . . BAOQAIN8 . . at 'lUc .1.U . . 5 . h rt > \1' ear . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . , ' . Ladled ( nbolutly I nil , /.1.\ / DresS C UIDE/lV'JEIIII / wool bcal'lot I t7 , ' ' ess h'w . . , + ' \DIJ"S' \'KFTS 7picccs [ worth } $ I to $ C2- : ] Faa.y""loo'od unda'tvenr . " ' ' ' ' 'H1 l n ° ! elf IN' THE Bode ' ? Aeltoil cloth , very $1,39 i 7- : 1 : > - - , Ui1iJ.Hiia..R1& } stylish ; worth $5.O4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gds Elegant - 19 - - - _ . . C BASEMENT r . Fancy T 49c . , . . IADms' I"INJ' ' ! . ' 1II'lm Y JA'KI I 1'S i 200 ) ices : SILKS Children natural cam- , , 3,98 , $ pieces gray IInlC ratio IIl1el ! mule III the , Irnportl.d Tnffeta "OHTII : tic . . UhlS 1VA'I'IRL'ItU01' I > > ' , . . . . . . . . Irul\Orll'll high Iratlo ' ' Uhl\ ! latest style : worth $7.60. 4 ) nil wool novclty . . , „ - - - - , ' . . ms , , , . Cl I' S lair and white 1 merino COLLAHS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . ' ' - waist I uch 1 fine all . , ' \1 'OI"r'll .19- C , POI' dresses and lI'a sts , suc I as IIIC a Lathe ( EYJllInu : or l,2. i . n- , , . _ l Dress 2 Silk , " 4 Inch Plaid SurahsdT inch block combed ? yurt Underwear 1Vurth C. LADIES' ALL \VOOi. Ktat 9 Satin DUl'h- derby ' ribbed Lades' I ! cotton heavy rib . , ' ; . , HalC lin0d SUY lIIallllolln JACKET sleeves , $4. 98. - , . . C UNDERWEAR ' " Light I colored I ! Sblrthc I I I 1 back worth , , . . , . . , . Tippled Qiso. aloe all \ ; \ > , OCl. ' : tIOOO Goods WOOL \ U"DI'R\\TEAI \ \ . , . _ _ _ U r,3 - \ llintsg'o.\t. . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 JII 20 9lI1ll1L'90f Satin I Rim- r . a : " 5 , 9 15 \Vm.th li ( lie " "III' 'd . 2 C \DII"S' J J \I-I . 'I' " " dllfcl'cnt styles ' " 25 . C C C Made oC boucle cloth , Ierse ' , ( dl\ICS well \ 5 _ FOI' meu" all . wool c . y' \ ' ! u C 0 Best Standard Dress I ' tints covert cloth . rind astrachan ' . , 998' 42 and 44 In. 1 ns5Udlllercut comhination" [ " . a . scarlet , undordvear ' . _ C I . I' . . . . 3 C quality cloth . extra worth t one , 0.00 . stYle . . . . . . , . UIIII . . . . $9 . , Mon's [ all ' en s a wool , doubVOI.tll tJOo 'OI.th 71c - - I nl t 1 all of r I bl ported a changeable . 1'1I frotaa for -1i. , 10 breasted gray . tin Children's . all I 1 wool scarlet , all e Ht I. Dttt'v's : : . . , RI.EFEIt wool , and . . . . . Plain fancy trimming and wIIIst3 Also 01'0 derterar , mcn ' rill , . Det heavy Garnet Prints , 1 JACKETS , l Made oC chluchllIa beaver nml . . . e wool and camels hair . . . . . . . . , , , a c fancy colored .lII.11wltloan Chonoylkos. , \ - LnDIES gray go at. ' " ' ' " ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' 32C covert . extra hea98c , C Liningsouo Chaney wool , fleece lined un . t't'I"S'I' : : 2 ? , cloth heavy : Dress Black China Sills \ , nit at 50c a J ' . derw'car , mon' Underwear \ , , olth Se. worth $2.50. ( ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . r Ol'WCtU' : ! gon- t ' ] ] ' r COlIBI1f1TI0 Goods $ . black and Colored p 4r' , \llno camel hair 11 l Besthtli go hluo and white I , ITH m CAPES f. 4 50 < \ < . Colored1 " ' and I''tl Pl'illt 41 Plush en pelsll'U'hall cape , ' Dress Goods and - sims @C underwear . , men's SUITS. , goat ( . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . 2C French Cooke ) ' capes . , ao Inches ttt e ( ' ! ' " , 100-Inch $7.50' long worth t DLA11'U trons hnpol.tcd l"I'onoh . . 9 ICe : i 25c ir & . ,1 : ! I , I , . . sweep . : : ; . . . ; ? , r.t.l , I V V' U M U nI U U UJ . . In this purchnso . . . . striped under- pm fancy un ot. , au inch wide l"J'cnch Percales - - cat bar rtdn I Clot T. Ct 1. 111 fine J ijJ1J - , Iggc..tt'gII GO pieces .Jj'ln ( l\IohIl l' and wool nn' , . _ quality Dross satins and Silks nt'e " to bo WCIII' , worth up to " wore limo , flllest lot I of , go at . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 C 1"In'NCII CAPES CONI1'UIt $4,98. ties in all the new designs , had tomol'I'OW. $1.2.3. Ladio 3 : ! Combination Worth L ] c. 28 Inches long ! , worth $10.00. . . . , go on Sale Monday at . 0 Suits 0\01' put 011 the , - - ; . - - , . - - ' 1'he90 . " . . ' ' 9 GUINET 1'1110 ' Ucnl'iotta El . ECTIttC SEAL CAPES , "oodsL'O 1 osu row \ acv ' ' sold l 'I' eo C _ . For , marmot \ , In all wool , . Of' . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ASTltAClIAN CAPES Sat - 62C . rot- _ lose thmttt Osa " , rd Black Gl'oa , Grain SIlk r and part I wool , hi.Boys and I GIrls , strictly aU 11'orlh' tmn : ' ; 3c ; . Z "l0 : : InehtJl " ! long ood1DUa Inchn I-Iwecll.$12 $ 50 , - - - - - Underwear " 1 ll1 wIth g oed ! Fatln : worh 51 . rook hea" ' " storm serge 22 Inch all purc $ ( llr . Satin Duchs8c , 15 n r \v C1C eluding all colors wool gray Underwear ; Jancy. t " 5 , OO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ! . . I . . . . . , in Kavy P.te and Black 21 Inch all silk . , C \ \ T orth and black . . Extra line quality double 1 _ _ Btl' u all rook Autcy black , ' _ ' " . mixed brown Underwear , nap Shakpr 1"111111101 " goo nt 51 C -500 , Nl1W- ' $2 0 . ' n lulu' AI . mdny . at 50ez \ 50 Ii .fancggl.ilua $ , ( . . - . . . . . 50 , and..fanc y . , stri p. Under- \\OI.thlnc. . , , ' , f. 2 , ArhLE i t { 71)iU t KITS & . CAPES ' " ' fl.tel\ \ . 89eyard tll' brocade ht - y Such na Dr. , \\.1'1I:11t.8 hygienic UUllol'- Ladles' CornlJlnl\tlon Unlo . . . . . . , ' . . . ' regular ) . , o ! : . . \ . ! Gpit4 50c - - - ' . 500 new Barnnis JiicICc.l.'t 'hlft1 .CnIH I' . .eacb , - . . . . . , It . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . Satin and Grod wear , colorJaeger imported underwear , north lIollnl' .n" : : ; ; wcar , ' Double nap gray and brown ' n IIIIerl'nt 11 ' 1e-10 ! two u11kt . ' -made'lu nIL Hun t'eds or ImpOl'tmllJlnek novelties In ( ; rata. 21illel1 -c real English Vicuna ! nnl , French cash- Lndle Conlhlni1tlon { Unionlults ! . Sanitary Flannel goes at 81 C' the t ! BI , \elfal \ cloths-fancy ; - . . and plain hl houclea 1 : Silk and \Vool UI1I1l\JOhllil' Chntnollon mere underwear , in fact the highest worth 1L5. ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , J. , . . . . . . . 75c 1Vurth' 00. 2 clay erslan worsteds Iamb anti cloth doeskin worumho Ierse's-wlth . chinchuln. fat and Noel very IItyllllh Dress and grades ( or all \ killll men's I underwear , Llldlecoill"llIatlou Unlon'Hlllts ripple back mandolin Coot ball ned ( draped ' patterns ) " , also ' 5d-in Mohair j \YUiRt Taffetas such liS handled In the finest exclusive : worth tl\O dollars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; " , . . . . 9Sc pansy Swansdown FIUlllol sleeves . , together . . . . with un IlIIlI1en lot oC . : slcillan8. 98 C In dark and evening shades. 3U inch mun'lI furnishing good stores and sold Idlllle + ' OOlllhlnnllon Union full : , Q p 2 9 C 3 9 C 49 Clancy ' Wl'Uppel'lI , CtC „ nt. . 1 0 C train plush.'elou t30.oo 10 ! ' : $7GOO elolh , go and nt fur copes : wortll. Regular price , $1.60 go at wide whlto and cream BI\tlus \ all go at75e , for up to $ 'W5o ' , go at 1tJc. worth five dOUtn'Ii. . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . SI 98 Regular price ' 2..c. . $12,50 $ $15,00 $ $17.50 $ $20.00 $ $22.50 $ $25.011 $ gi Ol > POSITlON ] TO REAUS [ School of Fiction Without Substantial .A Public Favor REALITIES TOO GRIM AND SORDID r ltomnlltlrlH1I1 1'1'1'(1'1'1',1 11) the :1lnHI- : rode , nl111 the H..nNonM 'rh..ror -IIt'nIM thnt Stir the IuujUnts . At the session at the Federation at Women's , Clubs recently held In Lincoln lhl following % paper : dealing with the romantic and realistic - schools ot llteraturo was prepared and read by loss Irene Byrne ot Omaha : The evolution at each century Is Incarnated In n particular form of literature and the form of our ago Is the 1\Oycl. There Is al- I ways n harmony between the social moyo- i meat , which Is the cause , and , the literary ! expresslot which Is the effect Thus Greece In the heroic age wrote epic poem telling low bravo men lived and loved and voyaged and dIed , tolling ot a gallant lire and honest purpose ; the mystical mldtlle ages left us n poem ot heaven : and hell of darkness and s death and doom ; Shakespeare the flower at I tllo'1tenalssnnce ' : , gave liS dramas ! varied as hUlllalllt . and the nineteenth century man sClllls the nervous shiver of his ago thro' the t rtdveh But ICYDU think of the novel ns simply n narrative , the main object ot which Is to please , you have little Idea of the scope of the modern art . Utile Idea at the potent ) force I which fiction has come to be In the life of I htmanlty The novelist of tOday has complete freedom In the choice ot his subJect and the manner of Its treatment ; he IIIny adopt the novel as Q plnltorlll or n pulpit , usa It ns a. means or an end think of It us lIIerely vehicle for conveying his theories of life and philosophy , or regard It Itself as nil In all. The novel which ho gives us may be historical - torical and critical , heavy as n German treatise precise ns n column of statistics or . It IIku Stevenson fancy has filled his eyes with rainbows ho nay send warm blood Into the dead chill and show us the shimmering + IJUrlllo hued 110nlbllltles of a life more ardent a I sod vigorous : lu conception than our own tame dull colored one. And this Is what a large number of the young men , the new writers / . have been doing. : Make a list of the books most widely read and discussed and you will and a large pcr- ceqt3ge written lJy men of whom the literary world knew but little ten years ago : thaw look at the books themselves and you will find that In thl'm life has been viewed front { 1 Its picturesque rOlllalltio and adventurous aides Their stories tell oC brave men and i 1 fair women , who thrill and InspIre us by showing what heroic things the human heart can do ; they transport us to n new and \ Juarvelous world ot magic landscapes , where llerJlslII seems natural , alll\ where we learn that In sJllle of the desolatlllg monotony oC things there lie within the ( Ihnllll of human : achievement nobler deeds \ than we have : done , deeper emotions than 11'0 have felt higher ideals at fallh-frlendshltl-than we have reached . . anti as our life currents ebb or flow In sympathy with the hopes and tears , the desires and 11Isappolnlmenls of these people , moat real tho' they have never existed we life glad to know that back of the t 'eneee of cIVilization the human heart can still thrlll and throb , and that tho' we may not have 110uo so more richly ! endowed natures have In their passionate love ot lICe warmed both > hands before its lire and drunk deeply ut III cup , whether for weal or woe. Dot books lighted by huaginatlon and warmed by enthusiasm , books ; < full of turmoil and ebullition from which emerge men and , women who , lJy reason of theIr genuine vital force , show us that the race with all its com- merclallsm and materialism , Is yet capable of a large aTIII liberal sweep of emotion , such books come from the realm oC romanticism And l'oml1ntlclsm , we have been told by the eminent " uuthoritl ° s " . Howells Doyeson Zola , la'dying ! of bloodlessness , of starvation for tlio'storles upon which she feeds have been so often tolll that they no longer nourish her. What then Is the meaning of this sudden Influx ot romantic novels ? Why Is It that Stevenson Crockett Darrlo Anthony hope , Conan Doyle , Gilbert Parker , Stanley Wey- man have suddenly attained such prominent l lIoslllons In the world of letters and why do they wrllll or Scotch raiders and French Iingeonots ot Indians trom the new world and gypsIes front the old ? It Is because : there Is always a vital relation between time deep , instinctive natural prefl'r coca of limo reading public and the activity of its writers , so when from no single personal - sonal impulse but from 11 general movement which could no more be helped than could n change In the social or political world , men . weary at the books In which there Is no ro- Ulance , no poetry feel that In their own lives the realllles arc too grim and sordid and ever present to fill their novels to the exclusion of all else , then these young writers spring up In response to the demand of the hour as champions of the new romanticism For It Is not true that romanticism Is deader or dying : neither has realism had , Its day Each Is liS old as the world and each Is ever young und appears In new strength ! and under , a new guise al each new literary period for as art Is progressive It never Quite repeats Itself and tbo' the strong , strenuous delight In doing and daring which pervades the house ot the wolf the refugees or Iddnal1e Is the same as that which vitalizes old mortallly , " 93. " or Ihe ( robbers , yet the time spirit [ which haunls the books of CrockettVey - man or Stevenson show that they have been surrounded and governed lJy circumstances different front those which hnprlsonec1 Scott , Hugo Schiller and the romanticists at an earlier day and n different clime. 1"01' romanllclsm , which Is the form that idealism In Ilteraure often takes . means different ( - terent things In different countries different things at different tines In accordance with the school or tendency with which II comes into collision. It cOllies usually at periods when men , tired of plain , praclicm . l things . de- mood ot art that It show them not only the actual and present but the potential and l'as- sllJle : when hungry for eloquence and thirsty for poetry they turn to art for the Intellectual - leclual excitement which cannot be found In the dull anti conventional Today It Is placed , In opposition to the realism whIch has assumed , such varYing phases . In the work at Zola , de Dalzae I'lau- berl . Tolstol Turgeuet , Ilowells James and \ Garland , according , 10 the race and Individual temperaments oC these aulhors. Each man Is 11 product ot his own time and If these men have preached the doctrine of the Importance of the real facts of life If they have formulated their creed In books In which Imagination playa no part and < In i which niceness of observation and minuteness at analysis ! are the mbst prominent characteristics - 1slles. It I. because they have lived III an age of Iclenllllo development and have been so influenced by It as to think that science must , In its raped , growth supplant art the pho togrllher : lake the place of the artist , the re- tarter that If the ' novelist And It Is true that u time \ which heels only the call of call ! . blooded reason and which rl'fl\H' to take oven its religion on trust , needs its novels to bo built of sterner stuff than fairyland can give : requires Its stories to be marked by Melli ) ' to experlel'c and probability oC mo- tive hut It Is not true that In learning 10 place a proper value on the things that we can see . hear and taste on the mere pai- pable that we lose all sense of the subtle values ! of life end art : we do not believe that the truthful U'elllment of material necenl- tales tile omnlaslon > > ot the slllrlt element and wo refuse 10 he thrilled and inspired by the dull and commonplace as we are by the dra- made amt unusual : ! . 'fltla the reonllits have falll'tto \ comprehend ) \ ; In their efforts to faithfully copy ' and reproduce the me around thelll they have lost their arose ot proportion and perspective : forgotten to subordinate the weak and ' accidental 10 the strong antI essential - sential and tram n vast mass of facts make no selection of what Is vital and interesting , hut serve all Indlscrlminately As In the IJllllat of Pasha Daley Ben : ' They bring us onions strung on ropes , ' And cold boiled beef and telescope . And , balls ot string ant shrimps und guns , bals And chops and ! tacks nor , hats and buns. They bring uM white kid gloves and pals Ant candlesticks amid potted qualms . Ant capstan bars and scales and , weights And ornaments for empty srates. and expect us to bo as grateful as I they appealed to the almost universal love tor the marvelous and strange . which Mr. Howell declares Is characteristic of only primitive natures-the young and the savag But surely the pitiful awe and care , of l Q \manlty. . the desire for justice , the hope that' there Is 1 purpose In life beyond what wo can see the belief that the men of today , like the men of all time are capable of strong self-sncrll1ce and unselfish living , oC heroic deeds and noble thoughts : surely these are not charac- lerlstlc at undevelol1ment. of youthfulness or I so 'outn hi a glorious fault and one we would all have. And yet these yearnings for what Is hIghest ant best , the longing to cherish time dreams of our youth even after the ardor and fire have died out of than to hold 10 our kinship with the infinite and keep the light that never was on land or sea . these , with the desire for the expressions of the deep primitive passions which never fail to touch humanity deeply are . say their opponents - ponenls Isfy. , what the realists have failed to sat- Devoting themselves to their realities known tluo' the senses they have neglected the no less real tho' elusive verities ot the spirit [ : describing the surface and superl1clal elemenls ot life . its appearances . they have failed 10 speak to the highest In man-to arouse those Indefinable emotions which emolons Novals calls the anonymous feelings oC the soul. soul.Their Their theory Is that the novelist's duty Is to portray und reproduce the life at his time ; not to let his personality color the facts which be wishes to recordbmt to 11alnt them as they arldnll. drab dreary CO\CII.g himself - self not with the plot for there Is none : not whim the selection at his subject or characters - ters for the ' more eonlnon and general the story Is the better It Is then typIcal , but with the manner of its treatment for to write badly Is the greatest crime ot which they can conceive. Ant In part they have done a good work : they have given us pieces of faithful portraiture . they have striven to do away with the reproach Implied In Emerson's words : "Jlfe les about us dumlJ : the day as wo know I has not yet found a \'olce. " But In their efforts 10 be precise al I exact In their eagerness to avoid the delicate exag- gel'aton by which pictures of life gain color , sound perfume , they have too often selected the mean and sordid the dull ali dense , and shown us only the terrible InelerlhtP s of life . the dreary days leading nowhere . the dead motives . the unfulfilled longings without - out showing the other side of the picture where "I.lfe behind Its accidents stands strong and , self-sustaining , the human fact transcending all the losing amid the galln . " Ot course 10 man can put the whole of life Into a play or a book but the realism which leads its advocates to select the sad and shallow - low and petty , unlighted by the idealization , of life and sentiment found everywhere , Is grossly nnlrue. The battle between the soul at man and , its environment the strife be tween time Inward desire and the outward ne- ceslly , often results In the conquht of the hgh c. ' , finer elements by the baser but not always , and life may be broadening and deepening In its elect , as well liS corroslVA and corroding. In applying the scientific melhods to the literary analysis of man amid nature , making their work as far as possible impersonal , they have Ignored the tact that In all the great masterpieces the personality ot the creator dominates , no mater what torn I has taken , as I means of expression that the pets have set their own hearts 10 amusic and that the great paInter have put into their pictures a somelhln whIch the realty had not and that this something Is what distinguishes the great achievements from the mediocre. "Oh the little more and how much It b. and the little less and what , ' miles away " They have made the fatal mistake . take at assuming that theirs Is the only point of view ; If they and the rpat of humanity lifter It must be because humanity Is In the wrong . and have insisted so strongly on the sacredness oC plain unvarnished facts that they have forced the reacfonlst Into the other extreme where they rebelliously cry out that fiction should pt not facts brit tanlasles , thaI It should not sadden and ! leaden and depress , but enthuse , Intoxicate and enraplure . ' Facts , say these , tho' t Inestimable value to the historian , are but the tools , th@ equipment mEt ot the novelist , who should give 10 us what the history ot a fragment of life denies poetic justice : who should reveal not only the worM without . but the vision within . paint- Ing not the bare realties of life as It Is , but the glories of life lS It Might be For as Dramles says : "The warm heat of the masses wishes to believe like a child . to feel the Imlght's enthusiasm , the n nk's ecstasy . to rave poetically . to dream melodIously , to bath In moonshine to hear the grass grow and understand what the birds say. " And 10 the light goes on 'ni It Is not likely that eiher side will convilci the other for between Howells , with his. somewhat arrogant declaration that there Is no art so exquisite as the art of pailtlll facts exactly as they are , no fiction except that ot facts nIcely observed - served , there lghly digested ahd fallhfuly recorded - corded , and the man whQ bgllevcq that the real truthulness oC all worKs of art Is so purely In time imagination ! that time artist arlst lever represents the trut ! but an idealized Image ot a truth there can , o but little sym- palhy. Between Hal C lno's Impassoned ( cry of "Fiction Is not nature , It Is not char- actor . It Is nol Imagined history , It Is fallacy lacy poetic fallacy . pathetic fallacy , n beautl- ful'lle , a lie that Is lt once false and true , false to fact true to faith , " ) and noye 'n's calm acceptance oC the realistic In literature as a higher order than the romantic or traditional - diional , there Is a gulf which neither cal hridge and Stevenson , who believed so strongly that aclous speak louder than words , could never bring tllmsel to the point ot view tram which action and emotion appear - aJ- pear unseemly 41.,1 where In Salntbur"s words originality is regarded a a mark of bd taste and Insufclent culture. Bat there are 01nong us those who feel that the lan who realizes In a work of art an Idea personal to himself Is an artist , no mater to which school he belongs and so'e \ can enjoy both the daintily fine touches of the writer . who , by careful analysis and dissection of motives has shown us a Slls Sapham , and the virile strength of those who from the swing and swirl at action have conceived a David Bel- tour or a Patrick Heron , for we feel that life Is too broad and deep . human thought too progressive , to be bound b ) any alI form of expression and we cannot agree with the disciples of realsm that It Is the anal and most complete contribution to literature any moro than we can believe that romanticism alone could satisfy all sorts and conditions ot men Each I needed for a complete ex- pession ot the life of today and time touch oC truth should be found In the books of each school-Ihe realist can map out the existence of the average man the , romanlclst pIcture the concentrated electric lte whIch comes . to the exceptional man , and both should ac- knowledge the supremacy ot the purer Ideal- Ism whose apostles finding truth hal ) way between rte two antagonlt't fatu and ! fancy , and unable to beatl In the narrow bounds set by realsm. paint life artistically and sig- nificantly , presenting all whit the Ideal sympathy - psthy ot a poet who COII" ' not to copy but to Interpret nature , and feel It his business- "to paint no more of body than shows 50ul"- "To bring the invisible full Into play Let the visible go to the dogs , 'hat inatter7" For the object ot art I. not Invitation , but creation . and time master bit literature shoullt . sound all Instrument In the sympathy of I ) humanity , strike all chord " ot the harp of life . revealing to us things that we do not see In things we look al every day. ' le should have both Ihe clear sight of the ' leer and the divine ulenu pa or the prophet who through the web oC q and elmamo ' ann sorrow which 1 world or f'anec : inc chang weaves . nd& the balance oC justice struck sOlewlure , see not only ! tit lte achievement . ment but the noble cent ' peons . which never finding adequate cpreSI.n hero strengthen : , - our b'le that there must bo a heaven for their conmpletlon For all creation Is a mystery - 101) ' . and Iho' we have made great strIdes In knowledego . no man has yet answered the questions at the sph'nx to the satisfaction of all other men . and outside the smal tern . tory oC clear daylight fact which wo have wrested from 'time unknown , there arc yet vast realms ot darkness of which we know noth- Ing , but think much . And the man wlmo when he has described the falls , the wounds , the \'all hopes the cruel events whIch at times darken the joy of humankind , feels that he has shown all , cannot touch us so deeply as the one who , although ho 11X not quite recapture time first line earel s ' rapture of the times when all the world was young , can still bring our hearts Into our throats with the very Joy ot life and thrill us with , a delight so exquisite that I verges on pn \ by teaching us 10 feel limo sense and significance of things , the soul of the universe ns Ieal Celt It when he wrote the poem which may well serVe as the watchword . word and rallying cry of those who are lead- Ing the opposition to realsm. RELIGIOUS. The Jesuits have purchased the fatuous palace 10ndragone. near Frascati Italy , tram Prince Dorgheic , for $80,000 , I will bo used as -n institute. Rev. Charles Otis Gull and his wife will shortly leave New York for the Chlneso mission l1eld. Mr. Gill was captain ot the Yale foot ball team In IB89 , allli rowed In the victorious Yale crews ot that and the Iwo previous yea\ : He has been engaged In home mission work for several years Rev . Dr Dmnn , rector of St A ne9' parish . New York Is one oC the wittiest divines In the Catholic church When asked what he thought of the movement to rename the . EpIscopal church he saId ! : "It's rather Jail. I should Ihlnl" , 10 baptize the child of Henry VI H. " Rev . Dl' Talmage of Brooklyn has accepted the cal to be eo-putor ot the First Pretbr- lerlan church of Washington He I 10 lJe co-pastor of limo church of equal authority with Dr. Sutherland and probably will preach one-halC of the sermons , beginning Sunday evening . October 21. Dshop Vincent , In an address 10 the memo hers of the Geneee ( N. Y. ) Methodist con- ference advised young minister to ride the bicycle saying : "I thInk nothing has done so much for our young people ns the bicycle. I has saved them from falling into many bad practices and built up their constitutions . nt the same Iliac. I hope you all have .them. I not get one. " The Rev . Dr . D. McConnell of Philadelphia - phla spent his vacation In Europe on I wheel riding 3,000 miles In England , France . Belgium - glum and Germany lIe gives this advice to those who may contemplale a similar lour : "You can see Eur9pe very cheaply : but , remember - member , keep I'IY from time big hotels and from places where the usual crowd of Amer- lean travelers go. They skin Americans of every dollar they can possibly get. " A the llnnespols convention of the Epla . copal church official notice was given oC the embezzlement of $41,000 ot the funds of the American Church Missionary socIety by Henry A. Oakler , the former treasurer , and Rev. Wiiam , \ . Newbold formerly secretary - tar ) It had , been hoped [ to avoid all public reference to the affair , but this was found ImpolsllJle. The amount taken by Oaldey has been computed to be $21,823.43 and by Newbold $19,034G. from September I , 1881. English clergymen's salaries are not ss high a Is commonly believed . In Crockfortl's clerical directory for this year statements or the actlli , value ot BG3G benefices out of 13- 243 In England are given or these 638 are worth $500 a year or less , 2.18 more $1,000 or less 4,219 less than $2,000. 192 less than $3,000. 13 less than $4,00. 43 only $5,000 or lees , antI 23 more than $5,000 , G being above $ ,500. and , put one of these $10,000. The nominal value In the case ot the other 4.801 benel1ees Is , for nearly 3,000 less than $1.50 and for 1.000 more leas titan $2,500. In ad- diton to his laconic however , the Incumbent ha the use ot I house , and In the country , at least , ot a garden. POSSIBILITIES ! > OF IRRIGATION Transforming 1 Desert Waste Into 1 Fruitful - fnl , Populous Roeion THE MAGIC OF ARTIFICIAL MOISTURE . tiVondcrs ' \'ron/ht I ) f'rlj'ntol II Cu iiforulu-Solt 'I'letcied with :1lonltnll : Sh'l'nmN Smiles ni Abundance . - I Some years before the building at the ! Southern Pacific railroad . writes Kirk Mun- ' roe In Harper's Weekly I was one oC sn exploring party that struggled across the burning deserts ot southern California , from ' the Colorado river to the Slerrns. Never can I forget the sufferings ot that journey , the agony of three days and nights without water , the intolerable glare of shining sands that slipped from beneath our feet or were driven hither amid thither In stifling clouds hy blats of furace.tl.'mllereJ winds , the quivering heat ( waves time lying mirages that tormented us with time visions of Tantalus time awful silence and \ the ever present evidences - dences ot death abounding on all sides Horses and lules perished , wagon after wagon was abandoned , and men well-night lost their reason as limey plodded mechan- Icnl ) on through that Gohenna oC sand , sunk tar below sea level ralnless , treeless alI verdurelces save for sparse bunches of sickly sage or thorny cactus In 'the distance gleamed peaks ot time San Jaclnlo and San Bernardino mountains Belween them lay the San Gorgonlo pass , the goal of our fierce desires and tainting hopes-a place of which we had been told lS one of rustling palms and lving , springs. From that day the experiences of those weeks on the Colorado desert have been as a nightmare , amid when recently compelled to traverse the same desert for a second time . though I might now 1J0 whirled over its sands In 11 parlor car . I still looked forward - ward to the trip with dread. As the train crossed . the summit ot the pass : and ! I' led swl ! ) down its eastern slope a heated blast of kiln-dried sir , sweep Ing up from the desert gave warning that the Inter still existed In all its untamed savagery and that beyond the narrow thread ot steel that spanned It sulTerlng and death still lurked In Its pitiless sands. The air of the car became stilling and the heat almost intolerable. In spite of closed doors windows and , 'enllators dust filtered in . until one end ot the interior was barely vllllble from time other A'men ) after weary mies of this ex- perlenre , the limit of endurance was nearly nearl' reached the train suddenly dashed Into a place of dense shadows and came to n halt. We had reached Indlo , aa veritable an oasis as exists In allY desert ot the world , the home of waving palms and double rows oC tall foliage trees , beneath which the tracks ran I ns through I green tunnel a place ot vines and flowering shrubs of singing birds and whispering wlnds-alJove all . n place 01 plashing waters and delicious \ coolness . A broatl-verandsed Inn offered hospitable doors , and a dimly lighted Interior that seemed al- most .dal , after the recent glare of Ihe desert \ On the dining table were fruits and vegetables front an adjacent garden After dinner the refreshed travelers still had time to examine time great artesian well that , from n depth ot CIO feel , pours forth 3COO gallons of water per hour lifts It twelve feet above the surface and \ has by Its magic created this spot of charming verdure amid those savage wales of sand. Not tar from the well stands a group of sup rb fan palms , one ot which only eleven years old . lIIeasures , twelve and I hal tee about its trunk at I j - - . . - - - . - - . _ , _ . _ , - - - - - - - - . . . . . . . . - point two feet above the ground. Half a mlle away Is a line vineyard , Irrlgalel by means . or a wlmlml that lifts Into tanks the sur- face water found throughout this region at an , average depth of twenty feet Alfalfa . the great forage crop ot the coast rows. hero wIth n rank luxuriance wherever water can reach it . while all fl'nll and \'egelalJlel can bo ripened ut least one mouth earlier than on the western slol1e of Ih' mountains. \Vhlio 1nlio thus present a striking ex- allllc of what lay lJe aecoml1lshel throuI ! artesian irrigation oC limo prolific desert. sands , another phase of water magic and on a far grander scale , may w slullld on tho. same Californian Journey at time southern end at the great San Joaquin valley . In and alJout. the fiomrlshfng city of Bakersl1oll. The explorers - , plorers of thirty years ago found this section , of commtry time "Ker ] Dell , " as I Is called . almost as desertke as that bordering Iho , Colorado . Its midsummer aspect was that of a vast plain parched and lllerlng wllh heat its scant vegetation burned to n crip , and Its wastes of sand and sage all the moro dreary I ) comparison with time recently recenly traversed oak groves of Tehlchlpa. Through It , to Le sure flowed the Kcrn river clear cool and inexhaustible , with its source la the everlasting snows oC Mount Whitney , but „ beyond a narrow fringe of verdure Its In- . l1uenco was unfelt. Hy an Inlelgent system of consorvation. and , distribution this same river today 1s male to irrigate alll give redundant me to over 400.000 acres oC adjacent lands . and so to transform limo seming desert into one or time most fertile and prosperous sections at the stale Tlis greatest Irrigating proposl- , lon of the country has ? been accomplished by the digging oC Iwenty-sevl'n laln canals , . ] having an aggregate length at :10 : miles , and 1,100 manes of large laterals , the whole system having been conslructed lt a cost of ,000.000. _ The largest and most important of all these canals Is the Calloway . which Is hy Itself 1 , river 120 feet wide and six feet deep. Through sixty-live large IlslrlbutarLes ana , network at slllaller ditches Iho water of this one mnal' Is spread over 200,000 acres ot thirsty Illnel. I Is not only the largest , but Is also the' oldest canal of time ayatem . amid whim lIs. shining reaches , sweeping curves , time turn- Ilng fails at Its many dh'erlon weirs , Its cool stretches oC densely wooded bunks , its bordering miles of rich pasture lands tenanted lJy thousnnds oC sleek cattle . and its count- less orchards and vlneynrds , all In vigorous fruitage It presenle a marvelous and tas- clnatlng abject lesson In the leson possibilities and and results of irrigation. . The Kern river drains over 3,000 square miles oC mountain waleralmed . from which It Is bountifully supplied the year round. Throughout the section oC , secton country 10 whlcl Its overflowing waters are diverted Iroutl Is eliminated from limo ' elmlnated farmer'l calculations. le lay count with certainty upon water enough h 10 raise his crops and cloudless ski. beneath \hlch 10 harvest them . On skle\ rJaled , : and once desert lands ho lay cut fvl' CrOP ot alfalfa In I single season . with a. total yield ! oC from eight 10 twelve Ions per acre alI selling readily for $ G per Ion In the stucl These stacks arc In themselves won- derful sights to an eastern farler , containing as they do tram 400 to COO tons of hay each and ( built up by means oC great derrick plch- forks oppr ted by hone power. Although sOle GOOOO acres of Irrigated lands are gIven over 10 alfalfa , and other lum- mense areas are sown In wheat which ls harvested by huge reaper and thresher combl- lalln machines drawn hy thirty or more horses , the leading Industry of time entire see- ton : I horticulture. Peaches pears prunes , apricots raisin grapes sod figs flourish Incredibly - credibly In its warm , light . and wel.wnlered soil 'he I1rst.nale,1 , produce an average avera/o ) 'lld of 1,000 boxes per acre. 'fhese sell readily In eastern markets fur $ leI box , on which the freight charge l f5 cents. Prunes average 100 pounds 10 the 5-year-oh ! tree , and these are worth from 12 tu 20 cents I per pound In the orchard. Already the raisins - Ins ut this locallly are favorably known and I consumed throughout the length and breadth ( of Slim United Rtates . and with the Increaed transportation facilities recently promised 10 I auured. this favored section , its future prosperity - - Ia , - - - - - - - - '