8 THE SCBANTON TEIBUNE-SATURDAY MQIWINCr, APRIL' 13, 1895. Random Notes of Life to London, - Chatty Letter About Teas and a Visit to Indon, March 30. London Is bright- enlng up wonderfully Just now. and everything and everybody la "perking up a bit" and getting ready for the sea son, which opens here at Easter. The opera at Covent Garden commences on Hay 13, as Sir Augustus Harris begs to Inform the "royalty, the nobility, the aristocracy, the gentry and the public" on his announcements this spring. We are to have all the artists whom you huve hud over there In New York this winter, besides a few more Important eponent of the divine art of song Albaul. Calve, and even Puttl. Think or It! I do hope 1 can go a great many times, for I have been living In the lu-.pes of the opera season all winter long, and If I urn so fortunate as to realize my dreams. I shall certainly treat myself to a perfect repast of It, ond as often as I cun, too. There Is only one drawback. Opera Is expensive, the cheapest seats costing half u crown, instead of a shilling, us the concert tickets sometimes do. Apropos of concerts, we are going to huve a perfect surfeit of them this sea eon, and In fuel, are seeing the begin ning of them even now. The Philhar monics, us 1 told you before, are al ready begun, the one last week having been particularly Interesting, on ac count of its being the occasion of tho linn Introduction of Vlllleis Stanford's new symphony, "IVAllegro U Pente cost." H 'HS conducted by the com poser, of course, and was a lovely per formance of a beautiful piece of work, the audience receiving It with the heartiest approval, and even the critics, who always find fault with a thing If they can. praising it way up to the skies In the puper next day. Something About New Music. Ir. Stanford Is an Irishman and is the foremost teacher of harmony and composition In London to-day, besides himself being one of the finest present time composers of lovely things for the pio 'and for orchestra. Dawson, an English pianist, and one trained en tirely in England, was the soloist of honor, and Mine. Ve Vere Saplo sang ugaln. In place of Ella Russell, who was ill. She did no better than at her first appearance two weeks ago. and was not. by any means, an overwhelming success, nor does anyone else who sings like that deserve to be, either, and the disappointment of the English audi ences in her is intense. T am dreadfully sorry. At the next Philharmonic the voice soloist Is to be no less a person than Adellna Patti herself, whose agents In I'.lnnlngham have kindly con sented to allow her to appear, as a great favor to the Philharmonic directors. Every seat In the great Queen's hall is already sold, and everybody that can Is going to hear her. Fortunately for us, we had our tickets for the whole series and so rest easy on the subject of get ting our seats all right. I dare say the audience, as well as the soloist, Willi be well worth seeing on that night. I do hope she won't get one of her charac teristic little tits of temper on the long looked for day and send word at the last minute that she is "Indisposed." And may Providence protect her from catching a cold, also, so that, when the auspicious night arrives, I may have the pleasure of hearing her warble the threadbare favorite of hers "Una Voce IMco Fa" with which she promises to delight our ears. The Divino Master's Son. We are soon to have no less a person than Herr Segfried Wagner, over to conduct some concerts of his father's music, and then there are to be some more orchestral concerts of the highest class, directed by the famous foreign conductor, De flans Rlchter, at one of which the adorable PaderewskI Is to be the soloist, which artist Is to give one or two only one or two recitals also, liefore he files back to, Paris again. Daniel Mayer, the agent who first "ran" PaderewskI as a risk a few years ago when he first came out, and to whom PaderewskI owes a big debt of grati tude for believing In his genius when no one else did, ha3 prevailed upon him to emerge from his temporary compar ative retirement for the sake of his worshippers In London. Herr Felix Mottl is also expected, and a visit from Herr Herman Servl is on the cards. Great Interest will necessarily at tach to the debut here of Mr. Arthur Xlklsch, conductor and director of the opera at Iluda Pesth, who gained such a distinguished reputation as conduc tor of the Boston Symphony orchestra nt home. Mr. Xlklsch will. It Is now arrranged, direct four orchestral con certs to take place In June and July. It Is understood that Slavonic music, will be a prominent feature on the pro gramme of these concerts. Last Thursday I attended the last one of the Thursday subscription concerts, at which my friend, the Scotch girl, made hpr debut on the concert plat form.' We all went to support her and she deserved It, too, for she did splen didly We are very proud, indeed, of her, as she is quite clever, besides being gifted with a lovely voice. She sings foreign songs simply charmingly. An English Afternoon 'leu. Yesterday afternoon I went with a friend to an out and out English tea. It was all very smart and grand, and I suppose I was the dingiest looking one of the constantly going and coming stream of people, but that did not trouble me much, as no one seemed to object to my old winter clothes. In fact the wearers of the nicest gowns kept persistently coming up to me and my chaperone, until I rather suspected them of wanting to use me as a foil to all their spring bravery. The handshake at these occasions Is heart-breaking, or rather arm-breaking, correctly speak ing. You are expected to hold up your hand on a level with the top of your head, and all the llmper you can make it all 'the better. Then you waggle it to andl fro sideways while shaking hands. It Is hard enough on me, who am so small. to keep my hand up as high as my own head, but after several at tempts of the sort, shaking hands wMh people much taller than myself and trying to reach their standard of height, why I was rather tired out. I shall not go there again. There were perfect hosts of women and only one man, and he, I suppose, was being what they call at home "lionised," for he was an In dian from Calcutta, very little and very brown, and (whispered with bated breath) "Im-mensely rich, you know." Very entertaining he was, and, some how finding out that I was non-English, too, by my American accent, I suppose, he asked me all about America In very funny questions. The interesting young man is a student nt Oxford university. In the Tower of London. This morning I treated myself to a . look at the tower of London, which J New Concerts, Afternoon London Tower. have long intended to visit, but for which I never seemed to have time un til to-day. The underground railway took mo there, and then I had a whole half day of the most delightful poking about the grim old place that I could ever ask for. 1 do love to go sight-seeing by myself In these old places. J can find my own way about and don't have to talk to anybody all the time, and can go about places thinking all my own .thoughts, which may not be very fine ones, I own, but which uro as much company as I want In these quiet old places that call for so much reflec tion. You know, of course, that this is one of the oldest lumlmurks In Englund. having been begun by King Alfred, continued by Wllllum the Conqueror, and finished sometime In the eleventh century. I think. Its purpose was, they say, both to protect the port of Loudon und to overawe the citizens, and was surrounded on all sides by a big moal. which Is now dry, and down at the bot tom of which are little flower beds and grassses, instead of the ugly stagnant water which used to stand there. Ow ing to the strength of Its walls it was used very much as a prison, and Is sur rounded by linmensei fortifications, through the first of which, called the Middle Tower. I went, passing by the old Hell Tower and the "Queen's House" to the Traitor's Gate, above which Is u part called St. Thomas' Tower. Interesting lieininiscences Suggested. The Traitor's Gate, by which state prisoners used to enter the tower, Is at the opening of the mont and guarded by two stiong water gates. I could almost fancy I could see Anne Boleyn or Lady Jane Grey or any of those poor unfortunate royalties beheaded hero, entering at the gate and ascending the water steps to their pluce of Imprison ment. I went next to the White Tower, In one part of which Sir Walter Raleigh wus once Imprisoned and where he wrote his "History of the World." Immedi ately over this cell, which Is formed in the thickness of a single wull, some fif teen 'feet thlckfc Is St. John's chape!, "one of the finest and most perfect specimens of Norman architecture" to be found in the kingdom. It was very cold and bare, but wonderfully beauti ful, and was no doubt used by Wil liam the Conqueror and his family for the purpose of worship long ago. The Bloody Tower, through which one enters this chapel, Is so-cnlled from the spiral staircase, under which the two princes, the sons of Edward IV, were burled after their murder. The crown jewels and regalia are kept In the strongest of the tower rooms, and in elude various classnijjf objects, crowns, scepter and father things worn or car ried at the coronation ceremony: sacred vessels used at Westminster Abbey on the same occasion, and at certain other religious ceremonies; the gold and sil ver table plate used at the coronation banquet, and a set of the Insignia of British Orders of Knighthood. C-uccn Victoria's Crown. The crown of Queen Victoria occupies the highest place In the case. It was used for the coronation of her majesty In 1838 and Is perfectly gorgeous with diamonds, large and small, and con tains the "Inestimable sapphire," which we hear so much about, beside the fam ous ruby which belonged to the black prince and which was worn in the hel met of Henry V at the battle of Agin- court in 1415. The Prince of Wales' coronet Is here.beslde the model of the Kohlnoor, in Its original setting as it came from India before cutting, and several other things of Interest, such as the gold spurs for the king, the great maces of gold for the sergeant-at-arms at the coronations, great gold salt cel lars and so on. From here I went to the White Tower, where I ran through the banquetting hall, the state floor, and the council chamber, now occupied by a vast col lection known for two centuries or more as the Tower Armory, where there are suits of armor from all the periods during which armor was worn. Some of the figures wearing armor are mounted on great horses, which are themselves Incased as much as possible in heavy armor. On one figure there was a suit of armor weighing over 114 pounds, the helmet alone weighing as much as fifteen pounds. The poor horse that carried all this load was himself helmeted and protected with a most cumbersome armor besides. Heavyweight Suits of Mall. Some of these figures are armed to the very teeth, or rather to the very finger nails and toe nails, not a speck of them being visible. These are called "enp-a pie," so I suppose "armed cap-a-ple" means completely armed. The old spears, the halberds, boar spears, glaives and so forth, are Interesting in the extreme. There Is in this room also a case containing various Instruments of punishment and torture and a model of the rack. Among the Instruments of torture are two executioner's swords, a sort of stocks called "Skefflngton's daughter," thumb screws and so on. There are several mounted and ar mur covered figures of Henry VI U here In this room also, almost wonder fully comparlsoned, both horse ''ml man, some of the armor consisting of over 118 separate pieces and very heavy Indeed. He must have been a dread fully conceited piece of humanity. Guns, swords, famous pieces of old can non, battle axes and such pieces, be sides great old shields, abound In this armory. But I could not linger here forever, and so tore myself away to the next ining, wnicn was tne parade, across which one must go to reach the Beau champ Tower, which Is one of the most Interesting of all. It Is here that so . muny prisoners have worn away their lives, and It Is In this tower that these prisoners have carved Inscriptions on the walls, some of which must have taken years of trouble and patience, having been done with the aid of forks, needles, sharp stones, etc. They were most wildly Interesting and I puzzled over some of them for a long time. There was a book of etchings of them there, over which . my heart fairly yearned but they were rather expensive and forebore. There was such a ourloui lit tlo old winding staircase In this tower, I was admiring it as I descended until I neaYly fell, which rather Jostled my admiration out of me. I went out on the terrace afterward and watched the Bhlps going up and down and saw them lading for departure. The l'ort of London. The port of London is right below the tower bridge, which is one of the most beautiful speclmenta of bridge architec ture in the whole world. It la fe, most quaint and old-fashioned place, . the whole thing, and looks very mediaeval with the thick stone walls, with, the little silts of windows, and the heavy' portcullis and drawbridge, and the windlass which raises it. The yeoman of the guard and the warders who take care of the place walk about in very. ery queer old liveries, with Bklrted coats and big hats. They are very kind and direct you everywhere you wish to go. They still keep up the an cient custom with regard to the tower and do all the things which the old keepers used to do, as nearly as they can In these modern times. . . When the gates are locked at night the yeoman porter Is accompanied by a military escort, and on his return the old ceremonial Is stllll scrupulously ob served. The sentry cries, "Who comes there?" The yeoman porter answers. The Keys!" The sentry then asks, 'Whose Keys?" and the yeoman por ter replies sturdily, "Queen Victoria's Keys," the guard and escort saluting the keys, and the yeoman porter com pleting the ceremony, before taking the keys to the queen's house, Inside the gates, by saying out loud, "God pre serve Quten Victoria!" e Sadie E. Kaiser. AKE WE DEdiEXEHATIXH? Arguments Which Seem to Prove That People Nowadays Think Entirely Too .Much for the Good or Their lloalth. The verdict of guilty In the case of Oscar Wilde lias made doubly luterest- ng a book recently published by Max Nordau, entitled "Degeneration." What the author undertakes to prove In it Is this (to use the brllliuut words of Mayo W. Huzletlne, In the New York Sun of April 7): "That degenerates are not always criminals, prostitutes, unurch- Ists, and pronounced lunatics; they ure often authors und artists. The latter, however, manifest the same mental characteristics, and, for the most part, the sume somatic features as those members of the anthropologi cal fumlly who satisfy their unhealthy Impulses with the knife of the assassin or the bomb of the dymunlter, Instead of with pen and pencil. Some among these degenerates In literature, music, and painting have, in recent years, come Into extraordinary prominence, and are acclaimed by numerous ad mirers as creators of a new art and heralds of the coming century. The aim of this book is to demonstrate that the tendencies of the latest fashions in art and literature are aberrant and morbid tendencies: that they have their source In the degeneracy of their au thors, and that the enthusiasm bf their admirers is for manifestations of more or less pronounced moral insanity, Im becility, and dementia? "What Is meant." .nntiniies Mr. Tin zletlne, "by the tesfh fin de slecle? The author says truly that this rather silly but conven let if term Is used to connote what Is characteristic of many modern phenomena, and also the underlying mood which In them finds expression Yet, Jfowever silly the term fin de slecle may be, the mental constitution which It Indicates Is actually present In in fluential circles. The disposition of the times Is curiously confused, a com pound of feverish restlessness and blunted discouragement, of fearful presage and hangdog renunciation. The prevalent feeling Is that of Imminent perdition and extinction. Fin de slecle Is at once a confession and a complaint, The mood to which it testifies Is the Im potent despair of a sick man who feels himself dying by Inches In the midst of an eternally living nature, flower ing Insolently forever. It Is the envy of a rich, hoary voluptuary who sees a pair of young lovers making for a se questered forest nook: It Is the morti fication of the exhausted refugee from a Florentine plague seeking in an en chanted garden the experiences of a Decamerone," but striving in vain to snatch one more pleasure of sense from the uncertain hour. An Age of Hysteria. "To what is this tired and despair ing attitude attributed? To degener acy and hyBteria. But why, again, should these maladies be exceptionally prevalent at the present time? Morel ascribes their prevalence largely to poi soning through alcoholic drinks, tobac co, opium, arsenic and tainted foods. To these noxious Influences the author of this book would odd residence In large towns, where even the richest in habitant is continually exposed to un favorable Influences which unduly diminish his vital powers. . He breathes an atmosphere charged with organic detritus; he eats food which In more or less contaminated and adulterated; he feels himself In a state of constant nervous excitement, and he may be compared, without exaggeration, to the Inhlbitant of a marshy district. Now It Is well known that at the present time an Incomparably larger portion of the whole population of Europe and the United States Is subjected to the destructive influences of large towns than was the case fifty years ago; hence the number of victims of urban degeneration is proportionately more striking. "Still another cause is suggested for the enormous increase of hysteria in our day. A phenomenon which, If not adequate to the production of degen eration, hi at least able to produce hys teria, may be recognized in the excep tional fatigue of the present ' genera tion. To the fatigue which, according to pathologists, may change healthy men Into hysterical, the whole of civil ized humanity has been ' exposed for half a century. All its conditions of life have In this period of time 'experi enced a revolution unexampled In the history of the world, Mankind can point to no century In which the Inven tions which penetrate so deeply, so tyrant lly Into the life of every Indi vidual, are crowded so thick ax in ours. The discovery of America, the Refor mation, the French revolution stirred men's minds powerfully ho doubt, and certainly, also, destroyed the equilibri um of thousands of brains which lacked staying powers. But they did not change the material life of man. He got tip and lay down, ate and drank, dressed, amused himself, passed his days and years as he had been always wont to do. The I'aeo That kills. "In our times, on the contrary, steam and electricity have turned the customs of life of every member of the civil ized nations upside down, even of the most obtuse and narrow-minded citi zen who Is completely ' Inaccessible to the Impelling thoughts of the times. Besides, an Incomparably greater pro portion of the population is accessible to such thoughts than was formerly the case. The humblest village inhabi tant has today. If he do but read his newspaper, a wider geographical hori zon,, more numerous and complex In tellectual Interests, than the prime minister of a petty or even a second rate state a century ago.- A cook re ceives and sends more letters than did a university professor, and , a small tradesman travels more and sees more countries and peoples than did the reigning prince of other times. It la manifest, however, that all these ac tivities, even the simplest Involve an effqrt of the nervous system ' and a wearing of tissue. Every line we read or write, every human face we see, . every conversation we carry on; every ; Bcene we perceive through the window of the flying express, sets in activity our sensory nerves and our brain cen ters. Even the little shocks of rail way traveling not perceived by con sciousness, the perpetual noises and the various Bights in the streets of a large town, our suspense pending the pro gress of events, the constant ex pecting of the newspaper, of the postman, of visitors, cost our brains wear and tear. In the last fifty years the population of Europe has not doubled, whereas the sum of its mental labors has increased tenfold, In -some directions even flftyfold. Every civilized man furnishes at the present tlmo from five to twentyrfive times us much mental work as was de manded of him half a century ago. "It is next pointed out that this enor mous Increase in organic expenditures has not, and cannot have, a corre sponding increase of supply. Euro peans now eat a little more and a little better food than they did fifty years ugo, but by no means In proportion to the Increase of mental effort which to day is required of them. Even If they had the choicest food In the greatest abundance, It could do nothing toward helping them, for they would be In capable of digesting It. Our stomachs cannot keep pace with the brain and nervous system. The latter demand very much more than the former are able to furnish. So there follows 'what, always huppens when great expenses are met by small Incomes: first, the savings are consumed, then comes bankruptcy. In a word, their own new dlcoverles and progress have taken civilized mankind by surprise. They have had no time to adupt themselves to their changed conditions of life. Un questionably our organs acquire by ex ercise an ever greater functional ca pacity, developed by their own activity, and cun eventually respond to nearly every demand made upon them; but only under one condition, that the de mand Increases graduully and that time be allowed to them. If they are summoned to fulfil without transition a multiple of their usual task, they soon give out entirely. "No time was left to our fathers, that is to say, to the generation born in the fourth decade of this century. Be tween one day and the next, as it were, 'without preparation, with murderous suddenness, they were obliged to change the comfortable, creeping gait of former existence for the stormy strides of modern life. Their heart and lungs cuuld not bear It. The strongest could keep up, no doubt, but the less vigorous soon fell out right and left, and fill today the ditches on the road of progress. Statistics indicate In what measure the sum of work of civilized mankind has lncreused during the last half century. It had not grown up to this increased effort. It became fa- tlgued and exhausted, and this fatigue and exhaustion showed themselves in the first generation under the form of acquired hysteria. The new aesthetic schools constitute, according to Nor dau, a form of this general hysteria; but they are far from being the only one. Analogous phenomena are recog nizable In the increase of alcoholism, crime, madness, and suicide; of nervous disorders, Including such new affec tions as the 'railway spine' and 'rail way brain;' the Increase of heart dis ease; the prevalence of precocious den tal decay and baldness, of nearsighted ness and deafness, and premature old age. Why Franco Is Art Crazy. "All the pathological symptoms enu merated are the consequence of states of fatigue and exhaustion, and these, again, are the effects of contemporary civilization, of the vertigo and whirl of our frenzied life, the vastly Increased number of sense impressions and or ganic reactions, and, therefore, of per ceptions, Judgments, and motor im pulses, which at present are forced into a given unit of time. To these general causes of contemporary pathological phenomena Is coupled one special to France. By the frightful loss of blood which the body of the French people suffered during the twenty years of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, and by the violent moral upheavals to which they were subjected during the same period, they found themselves ill prepared for the Impact of the great discoveries of the century and . sus tained from these a more violent shock than did other nations more ro bust and more capable of resistance. "Upon this nation, nervously strained and predestined to morbid derange ment, broke the awful catastrophe of 1870. It had, with a self-satisfaction which almost attained to megalomania, believed Itself the first nation In the world; It now saw itself suddenly hu mlllated and crushed. All its convic tions abruptly crumbled to pieces, ev ery single Frenchman suffered reverses qf fortune, lost some members of his family, and felt himself personally robbed of his dearest conceptions, nay, even of his honor. The whole people fell Into the condition of a man sudden ly visited by a shattering blow of des tiny in his fortune, his position, his family, his reputation, even in his self- respect. Thousands lost their reason and even those who did not at once succumb to mental derangement suf fered lasting Injury to their nervpus system. Thus would Mr. Nordau ex plain why hysteria and neurasthenia are much more frequent In France, and appear under a greater variety of forms than they do anywhere else. The opera tion of the same special cause, added to the general causes of fatigue, would explain, too, why it is precisely In France that the craziest fashions in art and literature arise, and why it Is there that the morbid exhaustion else where less acutely experienced became, for the first time, sufficiently distinct to allow a special name to be coined for it, the designation, namely, of fin de slecle." She Was Too Good. From Texas Olftlngs. "Madame, there is a poor man at the (loot1 who says he In out of work and hat a large family who depend on him for sup port and have nothing to eat. "Do tell him to go away, Mary. I am keeping Lent and my prayers end medita tions must not lie disturbed." , LAUGH A LITTLE BIT, Here's a motto Just your At Laugh a little bit. When you think you're trouble hit. Laugh a little bit. Look misfortune In the face, Brave the beldam's rude grimace) , Ten to one 'twill yield Its place, If you huve the wit and grit Just to lough a little bit.) Cherish this as sacred writ Laugh a little bit. . Keep It with you, sample It, Laugh a little bit. ' Little 111 will sure betide you, - , Fortune may not sit beside you, ) Men muy mock and fame deride you, ' But you'll mind them not a whit ' If you,lauKh a little bit. News the Room All London is now talking about Ptn- ero's latest play, "The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmlth." The play is described as strange one, full of pathos, full of human nature, full of power. The chief characters are Lucas Cleeve. a weak man, filled with shallow enthusiasm for doctrines that he but half appreciates, and Agnes Ebbsmlth, a woman of strong passions, which she takes for strong character, and who finds her womanhood too strong for her, to the utter destruction of her ideals and the ultimate unveiling of their falsity. These two It Is, acting one upon the other, who achieve the tragedy not a tragedy of poison and dagger and death, but the trugedy of two wasted lives. Agnes is the daughter of a rav ing Socialist demagogue, and has by her vehemence made herself known down in the East End as "Mad Agnes." Then she has married, and her violent enthusiasm and raging for Impossibili ties has wrecked her married life, and then she seeks peace as a hospital nurse. In this capacity she Is sent U Venice to nurse Cleeve, who is 111, her fierce passions rouse the enthusiasm of his nature, and for the time hide its weakness, and she, triumphing In find ing her Ideal, a man who thinks as she thinks and who feels as she feels, is found when the scene opens, dwelling with him under his name, proud of her position, and filled with the conviction that they two will lead a movement that ahull shatter all preconceived no tions and bring happiness to all. Plainly they have started off down the cflmnion road to "free love;" the power of Mr. Plnero's art in which he la magnificently aided by the perfection of the acting Is that with this commonplace motive he has so perfectly drawn his picture that we see the motive only, as the truth, while we appreciate the anguish of the char acters who are working their own mis ery, through their Inability to come down to the common level and Bee it too. The truth of human nature Is clear before us, and the equal truth of human nature deceiving itself, and the result Is a work of astounding power. Re lief from the gloom Is given with per fect truth so different from the com mon "comic relief" of melodrama by the. entertaining cynicism of Cleeve's uncle, the duke of St. Olpherts, who seeks to detach Cleeve from Agnes. In the end Agnes finds peace in the quiet home of a stalwart, muscular Christian parson and his sister. The scene where they try to move her reso lution, when, recognizing the weakness of Cleeve, she casts off her own over wrought ideas of nobleness and seeks with dress and all that woman can do to hold his love In any form, and, fall ing then, hurls Into the fire a Testament which the two true friends have given her then aa they go out, suddenly recognizes the truth of all, and thrust ing her bare arm Into the stove, drags out the book and clasps It to her that scene riveted in silence the attention of every ear and every eye, and when the curtain fell upon it brought forth round upon round of applause in recognition of a scene as finely conceived by the author, and aa finely acted as any that London has known for many a day. e e Col. Sam Boyd, the Irrepressible, he of the loud trousers and the winning way, came up from Wllkes-Barre last week to see a really good show. Atter an evening of unrestrained merriment evoked by the "Brownies." he returned to the city of sighs ond wrote as tol ,i . .,. "A;1""-"'"! YZ:L pi lac nun pumi vi v. ....... .v.. ........ ...... has given them. It Is by all odds tne finest amusement house In the state, except possibly the Alva Joslin theatre at Pittsburg, and it Is but a trifle Infer ior to that and only In unimportant de tails. The acoustic properties are ex cellent and there Is not a bad seat In the entire 1,664 that the house will hold." Tho appearance to-night In this city of the Kendals, in their decadent play. The Second Mrs. Tanqueray. will af ford local theater-goers a chance to as certain about how far polite nastlnesa can project Itself Into the modern drama without getting thrown out bodily. ve will not say anything in advance con cerning the acting powers of the Ken dals. That Is a point which must be settled by each spectator, through per sonal observation. Our own opinion is far from eulogistic. But concerning their play It may be said that It is a shadeclevererand a shade better sugar coated than were some of Oscar Wllde'B productions, but still of the same gen eral decadent class. We quite agree with the Chicago Herald In Its remarks, apropos of Wilde's collapse, that "those who defend problem plays and assume that they are certain to regenerate stage literature and reform the world will find It . difficult to discover any moral or Intellectual benefit in the writ ings of Ibsen, Plnero, Sudermann or Wilde. When not honeBtly cynical, if vyQiclsrn can be honest, they are brual- ly indelicate and dangerously unwhole some. They are the living pictures of stage literature, and If not in-tended to excite vicious thoughts and atlr evil Imaginings it Is difficult to understand wnat the real purpose Is. Possibly the downfall of Wilde will open many eyes heretofore closed to the truth."- FOOTHQHT FLASHES: Mine. Modjeska Is In Rome. Mrs. Langtry Is worth (700,000. Lewis Morrison Is worth $100,000. Henry Irving has engaged Julia Arthur. Isabella Coe has Joined Mansfield's com pany. Lillian Ruasell can shoot, fish, swim and play poker. Miss Hull Calne, sister of the novelist. Is an aotress. William Gillette Is the son of a United States Senator. Beer boh m Tree will be seen here In new plays next season. Barnum's circus boasts "the only lady clown lu he world." New Yorkers pay 1, 000,000 a year for theatrical amusement. Mansfield pays $18,000 a year for the lease of Harrlgan's Theater. Mansfield will give a new play by Q. Barnard Shaw, called "Canldu." Palermo, "the city of churches and thea ters," Is building a $10,000,000 theater. Ada Rehan added the rote of Juliana, In the "Honeymoon," to her repertoire on Friday night. A new play by William Gillette will be produced In Philadelphia for the first time on any stage May IS. . Agnes Booth will appear In the leading role of "A Modern Duchess," to . be brought out In the autumn. Charles and Rose Coghlan will short! 'appear in a new play by the former. Green V: Foyer. : Some of the More Important Doings of These, Our Actors. will be called the "Head of the Firm, or "Madam." Sol Smith Russell sails for Europe on the steamship New York, May 21. He Is to make a tour of England, .France, Ire land and Scotland. Madeline Shirley sued a New York man ager for saying that she was discharged because she was always Intoxicated. The manuger was discharged. Dun Rice entered the circus ring a half century ago. He has been married three times. The retired clown in living at Long Branch and speculates In real es tate, hive Is 71 years old. Joseph Jefferson, William H. Crane, Mrs. John Drew, N. C. Uoodwln, and Sol Smith Bunnell are to appear In "The Ri vals" at the Couldock benefit. This Is the way Town Toplca describes Mrs. Potter: "Nature has Illuminated her with a sort of starry sweetness and she steals upon the vision In a delicate glory that Is Inexpressively silvery and sort. Charles Frohman led the way for a re form In orchestral music when he gave William Furst, the New York Emplre'a director, carte blanche. Mr. Furt dropped the heavy bass out of his orchestra ami recently had a small church organ put under the stage. Anna O'Keefe says: "I have seen De Wolf Hopper ao worked up by a bad notice that he would go info a rage, only finding relief in tears. If any one could see that big fellow seated In the corner of his dressing room, sobbing as though his heart would break, he would soon come to the conclusion that newspaper criti cism was noticed by actors and taken se verely to heart." The New York Sun says the best three American actresses now before the public In the legitimate drama are Fanny Daven- part, who played comedy roles In Daly's company In Mil; Rose Coghlan, who came to New York In Lydla Thompson's bur lesque company at about the same time, and Ada Kehan, who was the leading lady of an Albany stock company, a year or two earlier. Each had gained a consider able advance In her profession twenty-live years ago. and has reached her present eminence by hard work and long experi ence. NAGGING AS A DISEASE. Do Women Really Goad Men to the Ex tent Indicated Below' North American Review. The habit of nagging, although not common, is more often found among women than among men It Is natural this Bhould be true. In- the first place, from the time they are small boys, all men are taught words may be followed by blows, whereas very many women go through life absolutely certain they are safe, no matter what they may say. from physical violence. It Is not a question of courage. It is simply com mon sense, that makes men understand unless they consider a thing worth fighting aiout, they must control their speech. Secondly, men, when they be come angry, have nothing like the fluency of women; as a rule, they can only swear. To nag successfully re quires a feminine cast of mind, and nag gens iamang men are Invariably effemlate In character. Thirdly, angry men generally show their anger by becoming sullen; they "bottle It up." The fact of the matter Is, men are forced "to learn self-control; If for nothing else, that they may suc ceed In business, and when angry, this knowledge stands them In good stead. More than this, the majority of men look with considerable contempt on many words. Taciturnity Is a charac teristic of the Anglo-Saxon race. These, and other Influences, all tend to limit the number of naggers among men. It is a curious fact, toot that while women detest the habit of nagging In other '.women, men despise It In other men A nagging man is invariably a coward. I ... while a nagging woman may be, and more often Is, physically brave. A nagging man Is the more contempt ible creature, for he Invariably nags those weaker than himself or those who he believes will not hurt him, while a nagging woman generally nags those who are stronger. True, she Is general ly confident she will not be hurt, and In the "war of tongues" she has the heavier battalions. His Won't Power. From the Amusing Journal. The crown prince of Germany, though only about VI years old, has a very ready wit and a queer way of saying things. He sees the funny side of a situation at once. One day, while visiting Potsdam, the Utile prince was amusing himself by trying to make a donkey draw a cart, tsui tne donkey was stubborn and would not "go." Your donkey has a great of will power,' called out the emperor, who had been watching the struggle between his lit tlo son and the stubborn beast, "un, no. papa," replied the little prince quickly, "It Isn't his will power that troubles me. It Is his won't power. He won't go." - .- - . l'ar Worse. From Life. "Jack was very disagreeable last night." "Was he full of whisky?" "It was worse than that. He was full of himself." THE PLD FRIENDS. i .,,., The old friends, the old friends We loved when We were young. With sunshine on their faces. And music on their tongues! The bees are In the almond flower, The birds renew their strain; But the old friends, once lost to us, Can never come again. The old friends, the old friends! Their brow Is lined with care; They've furrows In the faded cheek, And silver in their hair; But to me they are the old friends still In youth and bloom the same, As when we drove the flying ball, Or shouted In the game. The old men, the old men, How slow they oreep along! How naughtily we scoffed at them In days when we were young! Their prosing and their doting. Their prate of times gone by. Their shiver like an aspen leaf - It but a breath went by. ' But we, we are tho old men now, i Our blood Is faint and chill; We can not leap the mighty brook. Or climb the break-neck hill. We maunder down' the shortest cuts, We rest on stick or atlla, And the young men half ashamed to Uuih Yet pass us with a smile. But the young men, tSie young men. Their strength Is fair to set; The straight back, the springy stride, The eye as falcon free: -The shout above the frollo wind As up the hill they go; But though so high above us n6w, They soon shall be aa low, aweary, weary drat the years - f ! Jka life draws near the end; Atid sadly, sadly fall the tears fPor loss of love and friend. HUt we'll not doubt there's good about jn all of humankind; here's a health before we go To those we leave behind I The Spectator, ' IJb t V DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his asso I , ...4 t ii ft il I-n .r 1 V. .ml r. i .i n physicians, are now permanently located at Old Postofflce Building, Corner Panit Avanua and Sprue Street. TtiA Arift ir la a MrmAitnm nt Ihu IfnlvnM- Ity of Pennsylvania, formerly demon strator of Dhystoioa-y and auraerr at the vous. uitin. Heart, womn ana aiaoa a uses. U1SKASKX OK TrlK HKKYilUa SYST i nee. ss vmnYfimui nr wninn straw nivvinoiiei i oi commence, lexuai wvftvnwi in unaui to concentrate tne mind on UVMDU W, HU UU1I UIBII niBOU UI11IU. Wl Zo.c!DOUInKS. coward o. Tatar. f1raim mo IIIUI III II K MB Wlifjfl rHl idi: k ui nicii, uprvnuinPBB ramri ard be restored to perfect health, i t ,r a tLJiJ 1IKU1111UUU BT"a. K ar: Weakness of Young Men Cured. it vau mn nfn riv.n tin ,.u i.mi iviku van uyuu ma ngvior ana De exam Mid. He cures the wont riui ,.f v.-- ous L'eblllty, Scrofula, Old Bores, Ca tarrh, Riles, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Asthma, Deafness, Tumors, Cancers and Cripples of every description. Consultations free and strictly racr4 and confident. OtlK-e hours daily frem t a.m. to (p.m. Sunday, to t. Enclose five 2-cent stamps for symtpom blanks and my book called "New Ufa." I will pay one thousand dollars In sold to anyone whom I cannot cure of EPI LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS. ... . DR. E. GREWER, Old Post Office Building, corner Peua avenue and Spruce street. 8CRANTON. PA. STILL IN EXISTENCE. The World Ranownad and Old Reliable, Dr. Campbell's Grtat Magic Worm Sugar and Tea. Every box gnrranteid to five aatiafactloa or monty refunded. Full printed directions from child to a grown person. It is pumI y table and cannot positively barm th idukI Under infant. Insist o.i haTing Dr. Camp bell's; accept ao other. At all Orogf lita, 2& WONDERFUL BotTTB 8-hakto. Pa, Vov. 10, 1W4. Mr. C. W. CaracbcU-DMr Sir? I hav given my boy, Freddie. 1 years old, some of Dr. Campbell's Magic Worm Sugar and Tea, and to my surprise tois afternoon about I o'clock fa pMd a tapeworm measuring about ti feet in length, head and alL 1 Lav, it In a bottle and any person wishing to aeo it can d ao by calling at my etora. I hud tried numerous other remedita recommended fur taking tapeworms, but all tailed. In my estimation Dr. CumpbeU'a la the greatest worm remedy in existence. Yours wjtv reanertfuliy. FRED HEFFNEB, 782 Beech St Note The above la what every body aava after anee ming. Mann fact ured by C. W. Campbell. Lancaster, Pa. Successor to Ds John Campbell A Sob. BREWERY. Manufacture of the Celebrated PILSENER LAGER SEER CAPACITY : loo.ooo Barrels per Annum DU FONT'S INING, BUSTING AND SPORTING POWDER Manufactured at the Wapwallnpen Mttla, L seme ooanty, Pa., aad at Wil mington, Delaware, HENRY BELIN.Jr. General Agent for the Wyoming District. IIS WYOMING AVE Seranton. fa, Talrd national Bank BaUdiag. Aoajroias: THOB. FORDT PHtaton, Pa. JOHN B SMITH BON. Plymouth, Pa, K. W. MULUOAM, Wllkes-Barre, Pa. Aganta tor the Repaano Chemical Uoaa. aaay's Bigh Ksplosivea THE SCR ANTON VITRIFIED BRICK TILE : MANUFACTURING CO., MABBBt or SHALE PAVING BRICK .. AND BUILDING BRICK Ofiloe: 3119 Washington Avenua. Works: flay Aug, Pa.. E. W. V. R. R. iM. H. DALE, General Sales Agent, Scrantun, r f OkMeeter'a Kaatlel Masm Bnai, Pennyroyal pills DranM a aummr. Jm sf A h.. Mnl xik mm iIMm. Take' If JUmm a auttalu.. ManaMUa nit aUO. llt.l.,-l tHWMWI'l i " 1 im's in LAGER BEER 1 BeMkr eaten i ' V, ...PUfcti 9 a X L