TJIE SCBANTON TRIBUNE -SATURDAY. MORNING,' MARCH 9. 1895. Of and About the Makers of Books. Two weeka ago mention was made of a serial publication by the J. 11. Millet Co., Boston, entitled "Famous Consum ers and Their Works." Of the thirty parts 'of that pretentious undertaking, ten lie before us ami call for notice ot their; seope ami' quality of uuthorshlp. The subjects comprehended v It Mill this one-third 'portion' of the book number Bixteeu; tle composers... fourteen and the contributing? authors, eleven. Haeh and .Haudel receive elaborate and Demi-philosophical narratives from the pen of the Uerman critic, Phllipp Spltta; Cluck Is presented la careful manner by Wllhelm Langhuns: .Benjamin K. Wootf contributes a sympathetic bio graphical sketch of llaydn, which Is among the best executed of all the biographies in the ten parts; Mozart ami Beethoven both depend for their correct representation upon the pol- Hshed pen of Philip Hale, who, although ccoi'ded k most dltlU'ult task, performs tv satisfactorily; John Fiske writes en tertainingly about Schubert; W. J. Hen derson presents in succinct manner the Ufe-story of the little known Luthvig Spohr; Weber anil Marschner receive scholarly treatment at the hands of H. K. Krehbiel; Mendelssohn at the hands of John S. Dwight: Hubert Schu mann and also Hubert flans, at the hands of Louis Kelterborn, and the aketeli-of -Meyerbeer, which tills out the tenth part, being uncompleted, does not disclose its author's- signature. There are. in addition t. these more or less concise biographies two essays concerning; Beethoven, one by Clarence J. Blake, treating of his deafness, and the other a masterly review of his work as a composer, contributed by the editor of the serial," 1'rofessor John Knowles Paine. So much fur the liter ary features of the work, the eminent quality of which Is sufficiently guaran teed by the names of the distinguished contributors. Thece remain to be ex amined the illustrations which are an exceedingly valuable and instructive feature, presented with a mechanical elegance truly delightful to the lover ot artistic printing and the selected compositions which serve as specimens of the various composers' best efforts. 'From the serial parts one cannot get so clear an Idea of the discernment dis played by Karl Klauser in his editing of the illustrations as will doubtless be ascertained after the sequence shall have been properly adjusted in the bound volumes. The first portrait pre sented to us. in part one, that of Johunn Sebastian liuoh, being th reproduc tion of a steel engraving by Sicltllng, after an oil portrait by Haussmann, Would, for Instance, in the completed volumes, occupy a place not far from the middle if th- tirst volume, a fact that will perchance help to explain the djtlleulty of properly appreciating, in the disconnected parts, Mr. Klauser's fine Judgment and good taste. Hut these are sufficiently In evidence, In every number, to excite genuine admiration for the care and thoroughness with V-blcu-his jjor.ti.ua of UjsL-Work has been - achieved. Without wishing to "fall to.) deeply Into details, we proceed to note some of the more striking pictures that attract attention in the ten parts at hand. The birthplace of Sebastian Bach at Kisenach, engraved from a photograph, calls up visions of in numerable ancient Teutonic houses, wide of gable and heavily coated, on the sides, with plaster and whitewash, that may be seen, In all their hoary and solemn magnificence, throughout mid-Oermany. An Ideal scene. "Morn- :' lng Prayers In the Bach Family," gives one perhaps a clearer insight Into the modest piety ami quiet dignity of this father of Gorman music than could be . derived from any number of printed pages of letter-text. Equally notewor thy. In Its way, is the scene, also Ideal, of "Bach Before Frederick the Great," commemorating a circumstance of semi-romantic Interest. It will be re membered that Bach, descended from eight generations or more of obedient and peaceful burghers, was. In his po litical opinions, the very Incarnation of loyalty to king and state. Great was his pride when his son. Carl Phlllpp, became established, In 1740, as chamber musician to that queer but determined old monarch, Frederick II of Prussia. To Potsdam, one day In May. seven years thereafter, repaired the famous composer. Intent upon visiting that son. Tt was the old king's custom, of even ings, to gather round him his family tfnS Intimates, and to entertain them h'y his own somewhat uncertain per formances on the flute. One evening, Bach was Invited to be present , and to p'lay, 'Wrth' what fervor he must have ' responded-can be conjectured when It Is perceived in the picture how the old monarch, after pacing, sword In hand, to and fro on the platform behind the royal clavichord,-suddenly stops, as If transfixed, and gazes, a mute 'captive to the overmastering genius of the blind composer before him. The frontispiece to part second con sists of the reproduction of a steel en slaving of Handel by Slchling. nfter nn oil portrait by V. Hudson. This por trait Is said by admirers of Handel to be the best 'me known. The face Is large and florid, and It somehow re minds one of 'the'portrnlt of J.imcs Kd ward 'Oglethorpe- which stared nt one from the school histories In boyhood days. There are, In 'this pnrt, five other portraits of Handel, reproduced front noted statues or busts; one por trait of Handel's father, who was a valet and surgeon to the prince of Haxe. Magdeburg; and "two or three views of modernJe. Interest showing the Hun del monument In Halle, Handel's house In Loudon, and the commemoration of Ifandel In Westminster abbey. More In teresting than either of these In lh London theater. In spiteful retaliation TOP Hiima iwnr mnml rer,lCfto rr,tv lh composer. It Is entitled the "Harmo nious Boar" and depicts Handel, as a repulsive beast, seated before the organ, playing, while In the' background his music causes' jackass to bray furious ly. It Is singular that a man who, for the great genius that he was, was In character so noble, -dignified and truly ' benevolent, should be thus aSBnllcd. Of all the great composers, Handel viands forth pre-eminent for both nobility of ',. character and bullast of temperament. He would have been a great man had he net'er" produced a tone nor written a note; great for-his high sense of honor, his fortitude under adverse for tune and -his lofty standards 'of, per- sonal conduct; . Perhaps the very mn Jesty of his -career has left little; room for pictorial 'reminiscences. Certain it Is that one Is -Inspired by the few Il lustrations In this part to wish that the collection hud been, If possible, more extended. 5ome of the Latest Volumes To Issue from the Press. Several portraits of Gluck and Haydn adorn the third pnrt, which Is notable also for a tnll piece of most artistic design, representing the fresco In the Vienna Opera house which depicts Uluck's "Arinlde." Parts four, five and six are notubly rich In Illustrations, beginning with a tall piece from the Viennese fresco Illustrating Haydn's oratorio of "The Creation," und run ning through the pre-eminently -interesting biographies of Moart and Beethoven. The first portrait of Mozurt, reproduced from uu original silver crayon taken two years before the composer's death by the daughter-in-law of Mozart's friend Korner, Is be lieved to be the most characteristic life portrait remaining to us. Its strongly accentuated features bespeak the ec centricity, bordering on nuulness, of the man. It will be remembered that at the age of 5 years Mozart dictated minuets to his futher, the Salzburg violinist, one of which Is preserved in this work. The earliest portrait of Mozart shows him at the age of 6 years, a commanding youngster In court dress. At ! he hud, boy-fashion, grown lanky: nt 10 he looked al most frail and at fourteen there was evidence of the outcropping of the man. Altogether these live portraits form a most Interesting series of "human documents." The 'house in which the composer was born; also the room, with its low ceiling, Its harp sichord. Its corner bust, und family portraits, are shown upon opposite pages. Another view represents his favorite concert piano (which sold after his death for fc!"o und the splnnet or small clavichord upon which he. com posed the "Magic Flute," "Titus" and "The Kequlem." A page reproduction of a sculpture by Delafosse, showing the senior Mozurt. standing violin In hand, behind Wolfgang Amadeus, who is seated at his harpsichord, while the hitter's sister, Murla Anna, accom panies with her voice is largely Ideal ized, us is also the de la Croee oil study of the Mozurt family pictured on the fol lowing page. The picture of an unpre tentious house in Vienna, In which Mozart lived, with that Interesting fact duly announced In great letters on its dingy exterior; also one of the extreme ly plain Viennese dwelling in which the poor fellow died, conclude the more no table of the Mozart Illustrations, un less we except a curious comparison of the composer's ear with the average ear. showing as It does a most unex pected difference in contour. This brings us to the parts devoted to that greatest of all masters of sound, l.udwlK van Beethoven. The von Klober portrait, made In 1S17, at the time when its subject, then 47 years of age, had just begun the composition of the Ninth symphony, which he finished six yeuts later, rightly occupies the post of honor. It reveals the furious hair, the violent face and the eccentric dress of its subject with minute fidelity; but una MtuUles it thse autwurd char acteristics fade away and there ap pears In their place the spirit of a kind ly, magnanimous and withal affection ate being, despite the fitful savagery to which his caprices drove him. This portrait Is. for us, the most Interesting thing in the entire series. We prefer It to the half-score of Idealized repre sentations to which It has given origin, and many of which are shown In this work. Just as the life of Beethoven K from Its kaleidoscopic variety of Inci dent, by all odds the most Interesting of all the lives of the great composers, so this true portrait true, but not harsh Is, in our Judgment, the superior of all the likenesses of him that exist. But we must, hasten on. Beethoven's modest birth-place at Bonn; his enter tainment of Mozart by playing for the latter on the piano"; an Idealized view of Beethoven leading the performance of one of his quartettes; a view of the composer's latest and much disordered studio In the Hchwarz-Spanler Jiouse In Vienna. In which Beethoven -died, also a view of that house's exterior; his tomb in Vienna cemetery; life and death masks, the former taken by Franz Klein in 1S12 and the latter by Dannhauser Irt 1S27, two days after the composer's demise; and finally, th-? Zumbusch figure of Beethoven on the Vienna monument complete for us a cycle of illustrations of Interest even in excess of the readable, but necessari ly abridged letter-text. Brevity of spnee reminds us that we must now pass lightly over the admirable illus trations with which Professor Klauser has Illumined the lives of Uchuberf, Carl Weber, Mendelssohn and Hobert .Schumann, and conclude this scant notice with a word concerning the mu sical selections made at the suggestion of Theodore Thomas. To Sebastian Bach. In hnnor of his plonecrshlp among the great Herman composers, Mr. Thomas has accorded representation with no less thnn six selections, namely: The prelude, In F.-IInt minor, to the "Well-Tempered Clavichord" No. 8; the fugue In K-llat nwjor, No. 7; the nlto aria "Ah! Ool gotha" from the Passion Music; tho flnnl chorus from the Passion Music; the organ fugue in (i ma'Jor and the snrnbondo and gavotte from the Eng lish Suite in O minor. Handel Is rep resented by tho I lend .March; the "Sampson" chorus "Fixed Is His lOverlastlng Heat;" the aria from "Xerxes'; My Plane Tree, and by the recitative and siclliana from "Ialle gro." To Cluck Is accorded space for the chorus of Furies from "Orpheus;" for the ea.itlna from "Semlramls" Hear Is the Hour Advancing; for the chorus from "Paris and Helene"' Take My Offering; and for the aria, from the same? work, Thou My Adored. Haydn Is represented by the minuet from his twelfth symphony; 4y the rondo from his third sonata; by the soprano soli. With Verdure Clad, from the "Crea tion;" and, lastly, by the rantablle p mcsto from the string quartette' In K-shurp major, Tho andante move ment from the string quartette In C major, a scene from Act II of "Don Juan," the soprano aria from "Don Juan" Come, Shall I Tell Thee, and the minuet from his symphony In K-llat complete Mozart's all-too limited show ing, whl as for Beethoven one geta Just a taste, as t were, hi the cherxti from the Seventh symphony, the Fare well sortatu and the Introduction and aria to Act II of "Fldollo." In the Quse ftt Schubert, Weber, Mendelssohn In ess degree, and Hubert Schumann, ;the editor is equally confronted .with the dilemma of how best to) put a bushel Into a pint measure; That ha, has suc ceeded so well Is proof of his thorough mastery of the. tusk's dilllcultles and likewise of his superior discernment. The proper .. judgment to pronounce upon Mr. Thomas' editing of the music numbers Is that froai an embarrassing superabundance he Jias emerged with creditable selections. ' 1 ' y i The Napoleonic revival continues to supply a- lurge proportion of tho con tents of our leading magazines. The Century,- St. Nicholas and MeClure's for March are Instances In evidence. In the former, Sloane's excellent life of. Napoleon Is continued; In the second, there Is an Instalment of Elhrldgc S. Brooks' lively serial, "A Boy of tho First Empire;" and in the latter, Ida M. Tarbell describes "Napoleon at the Height of Ills Power." On the other hund, the Cosmopolitan has had com paratively little to say 'about' the great Corslcun, In which particular It re sembles Harper's. As an olTset to the Napoleon craze, MeClure's Intends to print u series of autobiographical, pa pers by men who 'were eminent during our civil war; und Seribner's hus ar ranged for the publication of a 'serial "History of Our Own Day," to be writ ten by President Andrews, of Brown university. The Century for March contains, In addition to Us Napoleonic literature ami niiscelluny, three notable studies of givut men H. E. Krehblel's paper on the Belgian violinist, Eugene Vsaye; Thomus Commerford Martin's study of Professor von Hclmholtz und an instal ment of Nouli Brooks' reudable series of recollections concerning ante-bellum and war-time publics. We perhaps should mention a fourth urticle, in recognition of the interest newly awak ened umong Scruulonlans by reason of W. Hudson Hhuw's lectures on Venice Mrs. Harriet Wuters Preston's Illus trated letters of travel entitled "Be yond the Adriatic," which take one to lstrlu, the one-time home of the ven turesome Dalmatian pirates; to Karn, the lagoon republic's first territorial acquisition, and to other places invested with unique historic, and artistic Inter est. With respect to. Us illustrations, the Ma,rch Century seems even better than usual, which for this journal. Is saying a great deal. St. Nicholas, which may be looked upon as the Cen tury, Jr., hus for Its March menu an acceptable variety of good serial stories and Juvenile poetry, by competent au thors;, a. diverting Journey of Buhner Cox's Inimitable Brownies through Texas, and an exceedingly Instructive There Is no reflection more discouraging to the conscientious writer for newspapers than that his best as. well us his worst efforts are, to ull upieurances, doomed to less than five hours' life. 1 hope this time to be pardoned for "tulklng shop" to those not employed In my kind of shop; for I fancy that what I shall have to say may not be wholly devoid of Interest, even to laymen. It will not be my argu ment that the making of u newspuper re uuires u better quality of brains nor that It exacts u larger nieusnre of preparation than go to make the successful sermon, the successful store or the successful con duct of u law ciue or a disease. Too often, the equipment of the newspaper worker Is notably Inferior to the equipment of tho preacher, the merchant, the lawyer or the physician. The one point which 1 am de sirous of emphasizing -is that, whether well or Ill-fitted for his task, the man who helps to make a newspaper puts- his labor into a thing that lives less than one fourth of a single day. Can we wonder thai sometimes, in a mood of discourage ment which even the Incessant velocity of the chase for news urtd novelties cannot'' forever ward off, the writer for the press for the moment loses faith In his vocation, and lets slip' a chance to cast the best thoughts within him before the stamped ing throng? The artist who paints a picture, be It good or bad, does something which car ries a message down to remote genera tions. The author who puts Into a boon the honest energies of a disciplined mind is limited, ns to his power of influencing., men, only by the longevity of bis- lan guage und nice. The oomposPr who-ex-presses by notation' a new thought or u reul emotion cunnot feel thut his work has been thrown awuy. The preacher who siieuks the truth talks to all eternity. And even the lawyer who conducts a case f?tffffyf tff1'tfyfffW tfTffff?TftTf?TT?fTTf There is ut ONE and only One Trae EJloodl FyirSfieir Prominently Dim th InlOOdl 9 s These letters Tim 'world litis never soon such mar .VrlloiiH cures accomplished by any medicine, but Hood's SurB!iiiirlu. Tho secret of its success is that It lu tlio best blond ptti ilier ever produced. It Is king over all I onus of Hcrufttlii, salt rliciim and ull other blood discuses. It Is tho only medicine, of which can ho fluid: It CUKKS. by making- jjure, rich red blood, ' Kcud these- letters: Saved Her Sight Another Wonder Performed by .Hootf'a 8araparllla. ' Mv little udrl Hnrel I. nn. ; Old. Twovcarsair ishe had th. . ln ifc.mu;n to our d recoverv her nvm irivw tniiD.i turated. For over 7 months she had to have ber eyes bandaged and itay In a dark room. The family doctor and an oculist did everything posalbls. She did not Im provo and even grew worse. ' At last after lx months he gave us the discouraging opinion that the cornea of one eyo waa de stroyed And 8lght Entirely Gone., That K was doubtful If the would ever be able to see any with therother, ka thealght waa rapidly being destroyed in that alao. Hood's Sarsaparilla Do not be induced to sketch of Nathaniel Hawthorne, by Brander Matthews. The March Cosmopolitan leans some what heavily toward European themes. The post of honor is given to a profusu ly " Illustrated article descriptive of Mont-Salnt-Mlohel. Then Fr. Th. Sis son occupies a number of pages with a running narrative of biography and gossip, about ' the famous models of Paris. Next to that, Ernest Daudet, under the title "A President of France," nddH to the now rapid apotheosis of the assassinated executive, M. Sadl Carnot. An elaborate article on tho Observutory of the Vatican, with another concern ing "A Portrait In Bruges" carries the European tendency to an unusual ex treme. These various transatlantic subjects are good enough, in their way; and the literary and pictorial charm connected with their exploitation goes far to reconcile one to the expatriation. But are (here no longer any topics of Interest In America? Conun Doyle appears twice In Me Clure's for March, the first time In a brief story,- of course well-sketched, of the Franco-Prussian war, und aguin with a sprightly essay on Alpine travels on ski. It Is pleasant to observe that while the gifted Conun Is making hay without waste of sunlight, he does not deteriorate In consequence thereof. But the urticle In MeClure's which will com mund the greatest avidity Is Mr. Glad stone's paper on ''The Lord's Duy," und the Illustrations which will trunscend u II others in point of Interest ure those Instructive "huinun documents" which photograph the great Englishmnn, ut ull the way from 0 years of uge to 83. The March Chautauquan contains much thut Is entertaining, as well us a great ileal thut Is Instructive. A pen picture of Chauncey M. Pepcw, for In stance, contributed by a well known journalist, Franklin Morris, puts one into a better understanding of this versatile American und pleases at the same moment. A study of the royal family of England, with portraits, -offers diversion for the curious; while In the line of more serious reudlng, Dr. John H. Billings accounting of "The World's Debt to Medicine" and A. E. Daulell's description of the under ground railway In London are Valuable oontrlhutlons. The Chautnuquun, from month to month, is-ulways Instructive und well edited. Satturday Reflectioirn or the doctor who treats a disease hus a week or a month In which to prepare his phia- or concoct his curatives. But the newspuper man, mayhap born of the same kin us the artist, the author, the composer or the preacher, hus before him a uiurgln of leas, than sixteen hours, if he eat anil sleep, ill which to do work that Is :io sooner dono than It Is dead; und must, over Its corpse, proceed to a second edi tion I make no allusion, In this article, to. the question of puy. The newspuper worker who Is worth more than he Is get ting for his work will eventually get more. But whether he receive the pay of a puuper or u prince, it Is nevertheless true thut the, labor for which he Is paid disappears with- the dew-drop and yet It has to be repeated without respite for at tendance ut its funeral. There are Journals which believe In leis ure und encourage wholesome thinking us a pre-requlslte to writing. These Jour nals, when printed daily, perhaps live longer than five hours per- duy. At a stretch, we may siiy that they live seven. But the extra two hours is a poor offset to tho fact that live persons read the live hour paper where only one reads the seven-hour paper. It would be Just as sat isfactory to the publisher, who Is usunlly a business mechanism, to print a seven hour piier ns to print one of the five hour type, if the profits -were us lurge. Hut, In this country, they are not. The profitable American newspaper, from the standpoint of the Investor, Is not that Which uses the best brums under the best of conditions so as to get the best Intel lectual results. It isithe paper which most consummately tickles the mob, plays to tho gullerles, antl "catches on.". There are Incidental, or ruther nccldental, excep. tiohs; but they only prove the rule. The Imperial American public edits editors the FybOic JCtoddy and that One Sairssipair,iIIa tell of Wonderful Cures by We thought her doomed to permanent blind nuea. Hhe Buffered Intense pain and kept her head burled In the pillows most of the time. If light was admitted to the room a be would cry as If burned with hot Iron. As she waa badly run down we thought before continuing th tnwt input we would try to build up ber aystrm and renew ner strength. Wo began giving her Hood'a Harsaparllla. She began to Improve Rapidly , and bv the time aha had flnluluul tnlrlni? the first bottle we were able to remove the bandages and found tbat she could bear tne ngnt and tbat the sight waa returning much to our delight. Bho took several I bottles and then wis as well as evor, It Is now a year since, and ber eyes Are Permanently Cured. Aha nn a ttnrfwt.lv. Iiaa had nn ulima nf any further trouble and Is in every respect pcriec.tiy ncauny. we nave great iaun in Hood'a Haraaparllla.;' V. II. Buttrr F1BLO, 1496 Hastings Ht., Detroit, Mich. -H . 8alt Rheum Curod., N "Three Wlutera ago salt rheum broke out on my hands and became very trou bio Borne, malting large aorcs, I saw'aeveral doctora and tried various remedies, but all Purifie The Blood buy, any other. Insist upon having Hood's Sarsaparilla, AUTHORS AND PUBLISHERS: ' Georges Ohnet's new novel bears tho title of "The Woman In Gray." H, L. Stevenson's posthumous novel, "St. Ives," Is to be published, by Stone & Kimball.! Count Tolslot hus finished another work which Is culled "Priceless Wealth and All tho Trouble Attuehed to It." Hermann Sudermunn's novel, "The Wish," bus been translated for tho Apple tons. HtiilcrniHiin Is the German Ibsen. Mr. and Mrs. Chnrles Dudley Warner will spend the winter ut Florence, Italy, where they will be tho guests of Profes sor Fluke. The late Sir John Heeley left at his death sufficient material for a volume to bo entitled "The History of English For eign Policy." HoWfllH suy that if it were not for An thony Trollupe's ubseneu of humor, ho would "otherwise make bold to declare, him tho greatest of English novelists." Paul Bourgut will bu received Into the French Academic. In April. The "Immor tals" will ulao elect successors to Jjurny a ml Lesseps, Jules Lemullre Is a candi date. A citizen of Constantinople has been banished for life to an usl in the desert of Suhura, for translating Into Turkish u portion of Scripture referring to the com ing of the kingdom of Christ. Mrs. Humphrey Ward's new novel, "Tho Story of .Bessie I'uHtrell," detils with an episode of village life In one of the EngllHli nilillund commies. The serial puhliculluu will be begun in the May number of tho I'onihlll Magazine. The Nation uuys thut the statement that Bryce's "Commonwealth" Is under the ban of the censor In Russia is untrue. "The fact Is thut the work was translated and published there, in IVi'J und IMW, In three volumes, the edition consisting of LIMO copies," "llllltry, a Parody on Trilby," by Mary Kyle Dallas, la perpetrated by tho Mer rlam I'ompuny. The "three inusketis'i'-i" of Hu Muurler's story ure here metamor phosed Into the Giraffe, the Ludy if Shallot und Little Heckle, urtlst malls who fall In love with the wonderful tues of the mule llllltry. lnsteud of England having vanquished Scotland, I'uledonla seems to have con quered Albion. Since the days of Scott, Dr. Johnson's land of oatmeal has sent London many of her great heroes. The late Hubert Louis Stevenson was followed by llurrle, of Thrums, next by Mlnlstei Crockett, of Galoway, und then llev. Ian Mucluren Watson. The latest is John Davidson, who has been styled "the l'oet Laureate of London." same as II bosses congresses and presi dents. It knows what it wants, and it takes measures to get It. Sometimes, when considering the kind of newspapers that it most energetically demands, I am led to believe that the quickness of the newspaper's death is not un unmixed evil. But It is ever a poor consolutlon for tho men whose labor goes down In tho dally chaos. There Is a brighter side to this gloomy picture. To the conscientious newspaper worker it fully balances the account. While tho conditions of the 'business keep that business from overshooting the heads of the masses, under penalty of financial loss, the very existence of the business foretells public Improvement. Men who read poor newspapers today will wunt to read better ones tomorrow. There Is no such thing us standing still in America. Besides, In uu individual sense, tho writer who daily addresses ten of thousands, even if he Is compelled ,y the circum stances of tho case to iu so Imperfectly, wields, if he be an honest man, un ag gregate temporary inlluenee In excess of the most popular pulpit. He controls one of tho Irresistible forces of the day. It Is a, force which would to some extent disap pear If the paper would cease to be print ed every time the sun rises. Hut for all that, it is an imperial force, Incomparably the greatest In the land, and the very consciousness that one has something to do with Its wielding constitutes, to the trim newspaper man, golden rcpuyment for the Innumerable "slings and arrows" of his otherwise "outrageous fortune." For at least live hours each day he is the king Incognito of republican America often ill-paid, not Infrequently ill-dressed. but still a king, whose anonymous scepter sways the destiny of nations. The Intoxl id lion of authority Is his ever uccesslbl balm for bruised self-esteem. WWW V WWW ffttWTf fffftl f ff tffl Is Purified Blood. failed to afford much relief. A few moot hi ago I commenced taking Hood's Barsnpar rilla and the trouble has entirely disap peared." Mrs. II, W. Hubunell, Lyon Brook, Oxford, Now York. Blood Poison. "I became poisoned with ivy. It would break out on mo, spring and (all. I'hnd doctora but waa not relloved. It would breakout into Bores and pimples on mo and form scabs. It it bad not been for a neighbor recommending Hood'a Harsapa rllla to tne I do not think I would bo alive day. I used two bottles last full and three to his spring and it has cure me." Francis A. Payette, Mtshawaka, Ind. A Baby Boy Cured. "I hnvo used several bottles of Hood'a Sarsaparilla (or my little boy, three years of uge, who has been troubled with ecr-ema very badly. It has entirely cured him, therefore I recommend 'it to all mothers who have children suffering Iroinecr.cmn." Mrs. Peter A. Johnson, Cranbury Sta tion, New Jeraey. Hood'a Barsaparilla is sold by all drug gists, flj six (or f5. Preivared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. It pos sesses curative powers ' Peculiar To Itself lye Woman's Claim for ' ; . . i : -. t The Right to " Arguments in Favor of the Extension Of the Suffrage to Women. At the last semi-annual convention of the Lnxernn and Lackawanna county Woman's Christian Temperance-union, held ut West I'lttston, Feb. 1,4, Mrs. Franc T. Vail, of this city, read a paper on "Woman Kul1rai?e" which has elicited much praiseworthy comment. The text of thut paper is subjoined: When the lonely murlner -has been tossed weary hours on the foaming bil lows of the deep, the lirst appearance of deur sky Is Improved by un effort to ascertain his whercabouta und bear ings. Let us In like mun ner endeavor, by u few minutes' study of our govern ment, to ascertain our position us women on the .troubled waters, of the present political sea. Looking back over the history of the world we find that whenever evil has reigned until cor ruption has reached un extreme point some new force hus been raised up to combut It. Kvery where in the political realm we lind corruption, spoils and bribery, extortion und fraud, Impurity ami false standards. Injustice and the subtler forms of tyranny. Politics, Instead of being a science, bus become a game of chance a gam bling pool In the hands of the unscru pulous am designing. Intemperance und other evils prevail to nn alarming extent, nd patriotism seems about lo expire. The present condition of our country demands a new force or ele ment in politics. It needs purification und if this cannot be. bud by the in troduction of the refining and elevat ing influence jf women, then our repub lic will shun the fate of the Uonmn empire, which fainted to death through its own corruption. Cod says: "The na tions that will not serve Me shall perish." We have reached our extreme point us a nation, and woman Is the new force that shall combat the corruption of our social ns well as political life. "When the enemy shall come in like a Hood the spirit of the Lord shall lift up it standard against them." May not the Christian motherhood of this land have come to the kingdom for such a time us this'.' The Lord's Heservcs. flod's reserves ure the home-guards. Woman with her Irresistible vitalizing and regenerating power sounds the trumpet for the nation s redemption through lier ballot, but the world puts up its hands to shut out the sound. She pleads with the "powers that be" to place, in her liunds the weapons with which to combat existing evils. Fur years woman has been slowly develop lug her mental powers and assum ing her enlarged responsibilities conse quent upon the progressive steps of our national civilization toward the stan dard of Cod-given equality and indi vidual rights, Irrespective of race, color or sex. The wider opportunities given to women have undoubtedly changed woman's position. There is no use ig noring this fact. Her eyes are opened to the great questions that agitate the nations of the world. A wealthy Knglish lady married n poor man. At his death she fell heir to her own property through his will, with a proviso that she never marry again. The absurdity of this situation and others quite similar regarding tn ownership of children have amused much indignation upon the part of women. Home Is, Indeed, the proper sphere for woman, and we are told by men in high places that our highest aim in life should bo a bountllul re production of the race: and to the Lulla by song of the cradle and the never ending stitch of the needle must an holy ambitions be sacrificed. But no true man, who is abreast of the times and allows the nobility of his nature to assert itself, will ever speak thus of us who arc tho crowning excellence of creation, and whose lives are so often jeoparded and even sacrificed for the perpetuity of tho race. i he Influence of Home. Home is the first thought of wife and mother. All things are secondary to that, only ns they bear direct influence upon the home. Out of the home the state Itself is created, and since the smaller makes the larger, the larger reacts upon the smaller. And when through the misrule of professed Chris tlan men public evils become rampant, then women see and' feel Us effect upon the home life, and then docs she realize that there Is a limit to her influence, but none to a licensed evil. The ques tlons of the duy are nil moral ques tlons nnd every one of thorn Is in poli tics. Hence, every woman who enters uuon reform work of nny kind becomes ns a rule, a suffragist. For she soon sees that laws hamper ami handicap a woman in her righteous efforts to keep home sacred and pure. They prevent her from performing her greatest duty to Ood. to her family and mankind. Now, every human being has a right to Work out his. or her own destiny, sun 1cct onlv to those restraints of society which are applied to all alike. No one class has a right to restrict the lives of onc-hnlf the race to any particular work. The .women of ls!)r are not nn like those of 17?r. They could make anything from a bonnet up to their own destiny. So can we! (Jive us one half "the tools now used by men nnd we will not only make our own -destiny but that of the household nnd nation. They sent forth from their flrc-sldes niinutc-incn who carried, muskets and bayonets. We send .forth pure mnn- hood nnd Intelligent womanhood, armed with noble thoughts nnd principles that shall vet become nn established sys tem. The ballot seems to be the golden key to opportunity, and Just ns It Is nn advantage to men It will be to women, nnd It Is not so much a woman's ques tion us It a human question. . "Then call them out, the home g'uhrds. who keep the llrcslde altar. Their hands are clean their hearts are pure, with sin they dure not palter." AVe often nnncnl to ministers of the Christian faith to help on the cause of righteousness, but many of them In sist upon preaching on the fate of Lot's wife, while we who huve put our hnnds to the floor much prefer tn hear a ser moll on a wife's lot. ' Some persons think women so Inferior to men. Hut Dr. llnshford says: "It takes an Im mouse niuouut of Ingenuity to make out woman's Inferiority J'rom the, simple scale of creation presented In (lode word. Since womnn was not made In Hum's Ininge, neither was the dominion of the world committed to him mono, The record snys: "In the Image of tiod denied He him; mule and female created He them.' And Ood said, 'Let them have dominion over all the earth.' We, therefore, believe that ull women ns all men. nre created free nnd equal." Illshop Vincent snys: "Woman's In fluence Is enormous, and If she uses It wisely she needs no additional power." He . has evidently lost sight of one fact.' that woman's Influence (under present conditions) is like the sign over the door Ot certain business firms: i , . ItflOWV A- CY. l.lmllpill' I. v. a. - Ari 'mm co of 'experiment Is' worth it ton -of theory to a woman. And such women generally know whereof they speak. Mothers have always had . the privilege of giving precept upon pre cept. Fathers have always had the privilege of carrying out the precept by example, whfch la alwaya Very effec Vote. tual. The mother tries to teach her boy that he must be pure and temperate and honorable. That boy goes out from his mother, und the first thlntf no meets wim neutralizes and gives the lie to all his mother's teachlnKS. Ha says to himself, "Why, mother says so and so," but he finds men In high places violating all those teachings, and he begins to conclude that his mother does not know much about It. From that minute that boy discounts his mother's Judgment, and though she must still nave u hold on his affections, she does not liave a hold upon him in any other way. I here is where you wrong us. gentlemen, and cripple us in training men who will make the statemen of hla nation. Other llistinguislmd Testimony. Solomon says: "Train up a child in the way he should go und when he is old he will not depart from It." Solo mon knew that a mother's training was limited and a child, no matter how well trained and how well disciplined by its mother, would In nine cases out ten, if of the mule sex, do Just as father does. Hut when he is old und the harvesting time comes he naturally, turns to Cod and mother. Hlshop Vincent also says: "Woman cun. through the votes of men, have -.-ry right to which she it entitled." In order to be able to Judge Just what right we are entitled to, we must suppose him to be a strong believer In the transmigration of the soul, and that in some unknown past (perhaps the dark ages) he was once a woman with all her attributes. Kxperlenced men and women who have labored for years to secure present improved laws for women are not found declaring that women get everything they ought to have?. We have tried persuasion. There is nothing about it we do not know. The responses to the many petitions we have presented to state and munici pal authorities has omri been: "You can't vote, ladies, you can't vote." Kvery interest of society und of the individual will in the end be better shielded if mothers especially have the franchise, one plank will be more prominent in our platform than ny other an equal standard of murals for both sexes. The common sense of the civilized world is working round to woman's suff rage. lir. Huckley seems to have more fear of the excitement connect' d with poli tical work upon woman 'nun the possi bility of her becoming jnsexej r mus culine. He forge's thut the women of the Methodist church are the most active and take a livelier interest in the affairs of the nation than any other class, and us for excitement, they en dure any amount of it and come out clear-headed. Gladstone says: "Woman will lose her delicacy if in polities." Hut Mrs. Gladstone, with his approval, preside over a woman's club whose chief otij.-ct Is the promotion of the Liberal party. Women Greatly .Misunderstood. We arc greatly misunderstood be cause we desir'- the ballot. We are re garded by conservatives among our own sex. and most of the male contin gent, as aggressive creatures, devoid of all those divine qualities which consti tute female loveableness. What a ter rible mistake. Many suffragists are thedointiest bltsof femininity your eyes ever beheld. Such Lucy Stone was, and Kachol Foster Avery Is. A posi tive will allied to earnest efforts does not make a woman coarse, vulgar or masculine. Here are some "clear-cut, rifle-shot" FenUnecs setting forth our reasons for belief in equal riphts: We need the ballot so as to be able to do our part in municipal house clean ing. Wo need it to close the saloon, the gambling den, the house of infamy. Nothing will so protect our boys as the ballot in our hands. We need it to build walls of protection around our girls; to change the infamous age of consent from 7 to 18 years. We ought to have it because bre wers antagonize it and Frohibltlonlsts stand by it. How significant! Uecatise men establish saloons and dens of vice, and perpetuate them with their ballots, and it is time we had something to counteract it. Because it is only simple justice that we should have a voice in the laws by which we are governed and by which we nre punished. When a man asksmelf hedoes not represent his wife at the ballot box. I simply ask him if she has so lost her identity that he could be hung In her stead if she com mitted murder nnd if she must attempt to enter heaven on his passport. If woman's chance of getting there de pended upon man It would be very slim. All you nevd to prove it Is to attend prayer meeting. Because we would take the sceptre of power from the hands of politicians and place it In that of patriots. Because men know everything except that which women know better. Because laws of marriage and divorce arc made by men. Because no law bearing outrageously upon the moral well-being of women nnd girls was ever changed by men except under great pressure. Because It would protect us mentally, morally und materially. "Womnn now is rising Beliaiit. ready, strong. Villi earnest heart and hopeful, To riKht nil seeming wrong; Help solve life's darkest problem. Make smooth the mush, hard way In which so ninny stumble, So many so astray. "Our faith, so broad and cheering. Makes darkest paths seem brlnht: , Its hois- nnd love unfailing The whole bread world should llsnt. We would Imparl Its spirit To all along life's way Its blessings scatter lively Thus honor this, our duy. . Watches Instead of Medals. Swiss firms huve n. contract with t'no Japanese war office to supply a sulll.'lent number of watches for one to w given to every soldier who bus served In the cam paign when the mikado reviews his vic torious troops at theclose of the war. Tln watches, which will take the phioo or war nieduls, are to cost $1.W apiece. Till: WORLD OF LABOR. New Vork has saloons. Purls supports 32.0H) bar-rooms. African ruilrouds cover 21.687 mllcn. llockefeller's dully Income Is $41 ,'&, London has 10.000 piofessloiuil musi cians. 'Rubber wns llttlo used, except for eras ing, until PCU 300 years ufter Its discovery. Tho ciinnl connecting tho Hultic with the North seu, llfly-nlne miles In length, is now finished, except a few minor detulls. Bread as a dully article of food IS used by only iiIhuU one-third of the l.WO.OOO.ooO that constitute the present population of the earth. ' From' 69.000 to 70.000 tons or Ice liava been harvested at Neenuh, Wis., th larg est quantity ever harvetsed In tho history, of 'that city. jTwenty-four years ago electricity as a mechanclul power was unknown. Now J!mi,oio,ooo are Invested In vurloiis kinds of electrical machinery. Indiana's natural gus supply will be ex hausted In less than four years, accord ing to the annual report Just mudo by tho stale gus Inspetcor. Ho estimates that at leust $:o,000,0uu worth ot ttui has been wasted In Indiana alone.