8 THE SCBANTON" TMBUXE SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1895. In the Wonderland Of North America. Ninth Letter of Northwestern Travel Incidents of the Journey from Livingston to Helena. Livingston la located on a broad and loaning plateau, at the head of the Yellowstone valley, at the very gateway of the Belt Range of the Rocky Moun tains, on the left bank and at the last crossing' of the Yellowstone river, which here makes an abrupt turn southward Into Yellowstone park. The town con tains about 4.000 population and pre sents a bright and thriving appearance. It is naturally and charmingly situated in an amphitheater of noble mountains, whose snowy peaks rise over 10,000 feet above the sea level, and so temper the atmosphere of summer that tourists never feel the enervating effect of a lower altitude. The valley here a wide expanse gradually rises to tho fcase of theee mountuins which encircle It; the Ions ridges and cones, at whose feet Mo 'sleeping snow banks." seem io look down proudly upon the valley below with Its bustling town. Livingston is an important railroad terminus and junction point of the park branch with the main line. Trains eastward and westward, from Atlantic end Pacific, center here, as all travel to the Yellowstone park must slop here for Wonderland. The roundhouse and ma chine shops of the Northern Pacific the next largest on their entire line are located here. Veins of tine bituminous coal are found In the mountains close by. Here Is also a large limestone ledge; said to be the first deposit of this important mineral found west of Lake Superior on this line. The Clark's Fork mines, rich In sliver, lie directly south, and the surrounding hills are covered with cattle ranches. This Is a famous hunt ing ground. Although the buffalo has disappeared from his accustomed haunts, the antelope, deer anvl bear are still found 'here, besides all manner of small game. This Is a favorite breed ing ground for elk. As the hunting and killing of all game Is prohibited by law within the boundaries of the Yellow stone park, hunters find here a con venient place to lenre the train for the so-called Crazy (Mountains. In close proximity to the park, where game is abundant. This locality, too. Is notej for Its fine trout fishing. Near Still water eighty-seven fine trout are re ported by a noted "rodster" of the pre ceding trafn to have been caught In four hours with a single rod. Some that we saw weighed two, three and even four pounds each. Uesumlng the Onward Jonrncv. Reserving our description of Yellow stone park, the "Wonderland of Ameri ca," for a future series, as Indicated in my last letter, we resume our Journey westward from Livingston oer the Bolt Range of the Rockies. Early was the hour. 4.50 a. m.. when our long train of sixteen cars pulled out to climb the range. The eastern sky was already crimsoning with beams of the rising sun and all nature seemed to be awak ening from a r.lght of slumber. Birds were singing, fowls were crowing and flowers were fragrant from the morning dew. Columns of thin bluish smoke as cended from farm house chimneys on every hand and the morning air was de lightfully and refreshingly cool as we speed up the range In plain sleht of the white peaks of Crazy Mountains on the right and the snow ranee on the left. We soon found ourselves ascending the first of the two great mountain bar riets that ihad to be surmounted by the entrlnee rs of the Northern Pacific rail road. Three times does the train climb up and d jwn the vast mountains before it clears the last of the range From the valley of the Yellowstone, at Liv ingston, to the approach of the Boze man tunnel, some twelve mllej. the grade is US feet to th mile through a Tolling country, with park-like spots. The tunnel pierces the mountains at an elevation of 5.572 feet for a distance of 3.G10 feet In length, from which It emerges into a wild defile on the west ern slope, called Rock Canyon. It Is well named, for In places the rocks are pro digious In size and the scenery is re markably grand and Impressive. Enor mous precipices of gray rock, with cas tellated seams, rise high above the dark forests which clothe the sides of the narrow ravine. So regular In form ore they that they seem to have been built by human hands. At Continental Iivide Summit the waters run mainly westward, and we find for the first a coal mine, produc ing a good quality of bituminous coal, tad at Timber Line we find a busy coal mining town of 500 inhabitants. These mines furnish coal for the Northern Pacific railroad and most of the Mon tana towns reached by rail. A Cltv Gemmed by Whito-Caps. As we pass out Into the broad, fertile valley of Gallatin Is seen the old mili tary post of Fort .Rills, abandoned In I8S7. A few minutes m-ire end the train runs Into Bozeman, a flourishing little city of twenty years' rrowth. with a population of 4,000. Few places can boast of more magnificent scenery majestic snow-capped ranges standing out against the sky on every side. The city presents an attractive appearance, with its .handsome brick structures, made from brick manufactured here. IVjzeman owe much of her solidity to her agricultural resources, being locat ed at the head of the Gallatin valley, which is twenty by thirty miles In ex lent, with a soil composed of a rich, dark vegetable mould. Aside from ex pensive coal mines near here, there are forge gold, silver, Iron and copper de posits. 'Both placer and quart mines are being rapidly developed. The coal mined here Is of superior quality; not a lignite, hut about 05 per cent, of fixed carbon. These coal fields extend some thirty miles. The borings show three seams of five, ten and sixteen feet each. iA good coke Is trade from this ooal and 1s used .largely fur locomotive purposes . and smelting ores, as well as for domes tic fuel. Thermal Springs, said to contain the same medicinal properties as those of the famous Carlsbad springs of Ger many, are within six miles. After leav ing Bozeman the railroad traverses th6 famous Gallatin valley, which Is hemmed in by .lofty mountains. Its level plains are so rich and well tilled that It in not uncommon to get inrty bushels of hard spring wheat and sixty bushels of fall wheat to the acre; and Its barley is of such superior excellence us wj De n great uemana lor mailing, etc., at Milwaukee and other eastern - cities. Much of the farming In this valley Is carried on by Irrigation, the gentle elope of the valley being favor ' able for the construction and manage ment of Irrigating ditches which were eccn on both sides of the train. The largest Irrigating canal In, .Montana 1s found here. The Gallatin river also furnishes Immense water power, and abundant supply for irrigation aside from the mountain streams. I will say night here that the average yield of wheat, oats and barley, etc., on irri gated lands Is about double that raised on eastern farms.- The soil, which is a black vegetable mould, would prove a good fertilizer for New England soil,, A Point of Geogrsphionl Interest, Twenty-nine miles westward ' from Bozeman is Gallatin City and the bright little town of Three Forks com manding the valleys of the Madison and Jefferson. This Is a point of con siderable geographical Interest to the traveler, for ihere the three great mountain streams form a confluence, pouring their waters into common channel, : to form the 'Missouri river, perhaps. the greatest river on the con tinent, Which ihere enters upon its long J . I llf. . 1 1 . 1 river for nearly fifty mile In its various . winding, until, finally, the river run away northwamft through the profound chasm known aa the Grand Canyon of .I'ae Missouri, or tlhe Gates of the Rocky Mountains. After leaving Gallatin, ttie railroad first enters a savsge gorge of weather worn rock or pallisades, remindful of those on the Hudson river. They show stains of Iron and copper, und rise hun dreds of feet above the track on both sides, the swil't clear current vf the Missouri flowing between. The scen ery here is among the wildest on the road. (Passing three stations amid a scries of bald, barren bluffs on the one side and large natural mustard fields on the lelt. we reacih, Townsend. 1.122 miles from St. Paul, an Important trading post and depot for visitors to the White Sulphur Springs, renowned In Montana for t.hc!r dilative proprlit!S. Also, a center of gold and silver mines which yield a high grade of ore. This is the celebrated Neihart silver camp and .St. Louis district. Here, too. Is another Curse ln'its.:lng carnal, costing $150,000, which will bring under cultivation 40, OuO acres of line lands. Hcgiuiiing of tho Canyons. ' From Townsend cimes a series of deep guises or canyons. On the sum mit of the first Is a gigantic le.'.;;e of lime rock, the aimer, vertical sides, partly smooth and partly seamed, from top to. bottom, form narrow gorges of fantastic chape. First Is Avalanche Canyon, noted for its snow-slides and avalanches, I. w here are rich and ex tensive placer nJincs. Net Is Hell C.a'.e Canyon. two miles ftittlmr on. whloli wnile .having a peculiarly suggestive name, amply merits the appellation. It is said there is no spot In Montana where there Is as much rugged wlUI-ix-fs and natural beauty In so small a place. The gates of this canyon rise to a surprising height, and within its walls a silvery st rcum Hows, forming a tortuous passage through a series of gates cut In very hlth walls. There gates are so narrow that a man can span their width nearly with extended anus. On each side of the pot-go are smooth fissures, called "Devil's Glides." and every noul: .is tilled with bright moFSes and lichens. This scene can be belter Imagined .than oVscr!u-d. Six miles distant are Castle .Mountain and Crystal Cave, the latter a cavern of great extent, having twenty-three separate chambers, full of curious and beautiful stalactltlc and stalagmitic formations. From her? to Ik-iena. liilr ty miles, we traverse mainly the broad and rich Missouri Valley, w hich Is from ten to twenty miles wide. The country Is covered with sage, brush and huiuih grass, a dry, barren waste apparently, but under Irrigation the richest of land. From the car windows we see several nilver mines, some In operation nn.t some abandoned. An occasional smelter was alo seen, flat what Interested us the most was the cattle ranches and the "cattle on a thousand hills" ex tending up the mountain sides, down the gulches and on the river bank, as fat and sleek as tne corn-fed of the east. Western Stock Nitlslng. While Montana possesses an Immense area of very rich agricultural land and stands fifth In the I'nlted Spates in the production of gold ami silver, tills "great barren stale" has as great a reputation f r Its stock raising as Pa kota has for its wheat. The Red River Valley of the North has Justly been called the -"Ureal Basket of our Country." and as Justly can the Yellowstone and Mls tourl Valleys of Montana be called the great resort for the grazier and cow boy and metropolis, even, of the stock raiding Interest of the Great West. The traveler can find much food for rell-c-tlon. much to interest and Instruct him aside from viewing the ever-changung panaroma of grand tcen.vy. In the ar rangements at the 3tatkr.s for holding ami caring for and shipping the Im mense droves of cattle, sheep, etc.. fuusd t the stations along the line, and that roam the country miles back In the hills and the mountains out of sieht. From the train 1t Is no uncommon right to see herds of sleek looking cattle grazing on the?e russet hills. Some time droves of a thousand or two are noUced coming In a broad column from the distant mountains on their wiy to the railroad station for shipment; many have marched, may be, hundreds of miles from their ranches. These droves arecontrolled by rh? famous "cowbovs." picturesquely dressed In gray shirts, leather breeches, called "chapps," broad brimmed hats, each man mount ed on a fast steed, armed with a revol ver, bowle-knlfe and rawhide whip, ac companied by a large band of pon!s, wMch curry the camp eiiuippage and supplies, and serve as "remounts" for the cowboys. To keep the wildest and straying members of the drove In line, often requires the greatest skill and keeps the powers of bofi driver and beast strained thrtr utm t tension. These boys are large, brawny and clear-eyed fel lows, and polite to anrwir all civil questions, but quick to repent insinua tions. How Stock Mnlslng Is Conducted. A biCef description of how stock ral. Ing Is carried on in Montana may be of interest. The customary way Is to brand the cattle and turn tactn nut Ixrje on tie prairie. The more careful system Is to employ he-rders (cowboys), who can manage a thousnnd head or more while on the range, except at the "round-up'' In the spring, when a f"W extra men are required. They always go mounted, and ride at a speed which sends terror t the straying ereaturen, No human being dure go among the cattle on foot for he would be gord or trampled to death at once, as the sight of a person on foot instantly c.auses a rush toward") the strange vis. Itor. Veil Informed cattlemen est), mate the aveiage profit of stock rais ing In Montana for the last few years at 30 per cent, per anumn on the money Investment. It is said that the grazing interests or tne west are moving stead ily toward eastern Mantana, for so rapidly do cattle thrive on the nnirl llous grasses of these northern valleys that a yearling steer Is worth from $S to no more In Mantana than In Texas. Why, a single acre of bunch grass Is fully equal to three acres of average buffalo grass. In actual sustenance, for car tie, and It is unexcelled by the best of cultivated timothy or clover. The Hording of Sheep. . Sheep must be herded summer and winter In separate flocks of one or more thousand each, and must be corralled every night and guarded against the depredations of dogs and wild animals, Hay must be provided for them while the ground Is covered wilth enow, and sheds must be erected to protect them from severe storms. They must be raised by themselves, for cattle and sheep cannot live together on the same range. The sheep not only eat down the grass so closely that .nothing Is left for the cattle, but they also leave an odor which Is very offensive to cattle for at Jfcast two seasons after. One ranchman says: "Cattle men locate. sheep men come and go, roam from ranch to ranch and kill It." Notwlth standieg the ocs,t of managing sheep Is greater than that of handling cattle. the returns from sheep raJsIng ere quicker and larger, and profits some- times double on the Investment. Of the few large bands of horse we saw. they' were carefully herded and fenced ilnln valley ranches ten or twelve miles Jong, often extending hack to the foot hills and even mountain sides. With, the river front and fenc lng the two sides, sufficient protection is afforded for the best, horse farms. Horses being more hardy than sheep or cattle, arc belter awe to endure cold weather and to ' "rustle" or paw through the snow that covers their pasturage. 'Wiio has not heard of tbe (Montana horse? 'Noble creatures! They are among tne beat in the world; ten rules an hour Js the usual' speed which tney are capable or trotting with ease. 'But enough of this digression. The subject 4s one that needs to be studied at length. Dismissing H, we enter weiena tnrougn the Prickly Pear val ley, covering an area of fifteen by twenty-five miles, which Ilea eastward and north of the Silver .City a treeless country, but rich with bunch grass and enormous crops of cereals wiith irriga tion, j. e. Richmond. LORD LIONEL'S PERIL An lintertaining Incident of the Es-.MIn-Ister's Stay In Washing ton-Tits Thrill ing Tola of a Mysterious Bos. From the Washington Post. There Is no longer any doubt that Hon. Lionel Sackville-West was, during his term here as British minister, ter ribly alarmed as to his personal safety. Undoubtedly he imagined that the whole torce and Ingenuity f the Irish agitation party was concentrated upon himsilf. and. that the leaders expected un.l Intended to make' a brilliant ex ample of 'their importance by Immolat ing him up in the altar of freedom. We already know that, as a matter of fact. Mr. Wevt wus spirited out of town, and taken away upon a yacht In order to rave him from the ravening Fenlann, a::d It now appears that a really thrlll li.g tragedy occurred at the British l.-gatlon about the fame time a trag ci'y which Involved the state and navy d. j artments, and, for some hours at leat i, occupied the attention and preyed upon the iienes of tome of our ablest oi .Itiance olllceirs. It seems that, one morning, an ex press cmpany delivery wagon drew up before ..he HritU'.i establl.-ibnietit on I'ennt client avenue, and deposited a particularly solemn ami mysterious b'x. The box In question was -not much to boiift of In the matter of slse, but It was a low-browed and forbid ding pnekage,, suggestive of stratagem and plot. It was oblong In shape, very heavy us to its upeeilir gravity, und absolutely non-committal In appear-ar.-ce. Tin re wan nothing to show where it came from, the various tags and pasters having been multiplied an I superlmpe'sed s that no one could ac cucttely determine Its origin. The one conspicuous feature, however, was an elaborate ami eyplU-it Inscription, giv ing minute details as to the manner In wilicli the box was to be opened. The legend entered Into the most Insignifi cant particulars, explaining every evo lution wttli painstaking care, and leav ing It to tlie ft verisli imagination of the reader to prefigure tiie ghaily conse quences of the very smallest careless ness. ent totlie St.ito Depnrtmiint. Naturally, the mysterious package first fell under the observation of the llunkey, who promptly dismissed it as not being in his lino. Then it came to the r.otlee of one of the official under strappers who thought it a good thimr to let alone. At last Mr. Horace Hel yar. the secretary, surveyed It and found that It was as Inscrutable as the American wallz. And, finally, Hon. Lionel Saekville-West looked at It and grew white and broke on: Into goose flesh. The upshot was Uat they Sent the oblong box to the stale department with a message to the effect that her majesty's envoy extraordinary, and uVI the rest of It, had no sort of curiosity as to the contents, and a hint that perhaps the I'nlted States authorities might like to examine the same at their leisure. It took Just two minutes to convey the HEWS ARB GOSSIP OF Brief Resume of Facts Concerning: Wales Cardiff Musical Festival Notes. Although this Is the only Institution of Its kind In Wales, the Cardiff Musi cal festival Is only referred to by two .f the Welsh papers the Tarlnn and the I.Ian. The Tarian refers particularly to Mr. Jenkins' work, "The l'salm of Life." which was performed for the first time. "The musician from Aheryst wlth Is seen here at his best. It Is a classical work, without any effort to . I. lease the ear hv 'breaking Ihromh I rules or art. The choir and himself were as of one soul, and he drenv more music out of ihem than any one of the others Sir Arthur Sullivan and Hlr Jo seph ll.irnby was able to do. If the opinion of those who were listening In the Park hall are of any value, Mr. Jenkins has gone up one step of the lad der." The Llan thinks that the com mittee if the festival deserve praise for Inviting a Welsh musician to com pose a work, especially for the festival. It thinks the festival will raise the standard of music In Wales. It believes that Wall 3 ought to produce better pieces than "The Light of the World." by Hulllvan Pieces which can be sung in the sam festivals as the "Kiljah" and the Menlah." Wlint Hr. J nines . levied Thinks. "I believe much of tho quiet, dignified, conservative character of Philadelphia Is due to the good old Welsh blood of her first Welsh settlers." declares Dr. James J. .Levlck, who has been making an exhaustive historical research into the settlement of Welwh emigrants In Pennsylvania. "Tho emigrants were cadets of ancient houses. Mora than one had been ut Oxford. It Is an Inter esting fact that for twenty-five years the only phyplcinn In Philadelphia and vklnlly were 'Welshmen. Curiously enough, .Dr. John Jones, the physician of flcorgo Washington, wits the great pisrdfon of Or. Thomas Wynne, thi physician of Wlllam P-nn, who rime over In the giod ship Welcom?. Thus the founder of the state and 'the father of his country,' owed Ihflr lives hu manly sje-nkln-T. to the care and skill of Wcbh physicians." Noics. Oonidec. thi transistor of the Plblo to th l'.rctaftne Innguage, .was burled p.t Konkln, Brittany. Oct. 12. 145. T!ip Cymrlgyddion y Fenni In -offered a prize for a Welsh englyn to place on Ms tomb, and the bishop of Bt. David's. Lady Llanover, OarnhituiiEWe. and Mr. Keee Llandovery, Were amongst the rubsoribers towards the memorial. Can any of our readersgive the englyn which wan the prize? "We believe Mr. Anourln Jor.cs, of Brooklyn', can forplsh It. If he cannot, protably M trloh, of Wales, can. Both gentlemen live III the beau tics of ancient history.- ' . " Mr. Thomas Oee. the Veteran editor, has given great offence once more to tho church of England 'people. of Wales. Mr. Oee was preaching at the work house of St.. Asaph on a Sunday evening recently, when 'ht noticed that the cush ion under the Blbl Met bwas worked thereon. TWs he C.ircful'y mdvsd away, and some of the churchmen of . tho dis trict propose bringing theJmiKter be fore the board of guardians.-t Apropos of "Kllsby,." s-corrcrpondent writes wht It war 'on. the occasion of his receiving a call to Birmingham, England. that he replied, thereto In his own style. Instead pf replying In writ ing to the call he wpnt to Birmingham and attended a ohurch meeting of the members and addressed thein. In these terms: "You have Invited' James Rees Jones to become your pastor, and I have come here to tell you- that James Rees Jones has decided to accept It. I have come here not to kwd over you, but as the Lord llveth, you . shall' not lord over me." " . ', While the literature of Wales ' can boast of a good number of faithful and comprehensive biographies, thr.t monu mental work of the late Dr. Owen Thomas tHe biography o,' the late Jones Talysarn the Chrysostum o package, in the hands of affrighted janitors, to the navy dejsAPtment, and as much longer for one of our diplo matic experts to pen a highly hysterical, letter asking the naval big-bugs to see what the thing amounted to. In less than half an hour the box was lying on the grass of the navy yard plalsance sur rounded at a respectful distance by the scientific wiseacres of the corps and still turning upward to the fearless sun Its weird and terrifying inscription. "What shall we do with Itr This was the dilemma confronting the rep resentatives of our great and glorious government. It was a very trumpery little package so fur as concerned its size, but It was Immeasurable in its mystery and suggestlveness. Those di rections about the opening thereof read very much like the programme of a holocaust or the prophecy of an erup tion. The adjacent officials felt that they were gasing upon the unknown and the Immeasurable, 'llut of course something had to be done, and present ly a gigantic ldea occurred to one of the ordnance ollicers. WMh furrowed brow and solemn mien he ordered out a sec tlon of double riveted boIUr Iron. With this he Inclosed the olilonn box. Then a hole was cut In the side of the Iron, and soon a long metallic handle was spliced to a saw. Next an elderly and not psrtlculaly valuable minion was summoned fom the shops and told to take thl&'saw and, ntandlnir outside the casemate and Inserting the instrument through the porthole, to saw off the end of the box and in expose the deadly contents to sclent Iflc observation. The person sawed away, under some diffi culties, of course, while his superiors, with fingers In their ears, watched him eagerly. Suddenly he struck what seemed a wire, and then, accompanied by a whole party, he tied n mile or so and waited, palpitating, for the cata clysm. Welled Anln forthc rxrlo!nn. Nothing fallowed. Then they ven tured back and gazed. There was th wire, but the box was voiceless and Inert. After s-.ine feverish consulta tion, they fastened another wire, a I long one, to the wire In the box, and, ivtrea'.in'r to the distance of a hundred yards, thry gave that wire a great, big Macedonian Jerk. There was no eiuiition. The heavens were not rent ivltit clamor nor the earth torn up with violence. The boiler Iron stood upright ard the oblong lx within lay still like a cobra coiled fur the fatal f prlng. They put fhctr heads together In a sym'vislum of terror and confusion, wondt r!r..-r what they should do next wlih the British minister's express pa.'kare, and. about that time, a smil ing llunkey appeared up.m the seen" i bearing a very polite ami somewhat urgent note In which the minister, the lion. I.lon I .Slckvllle-W est begged that the box mlg'it be relurneil to him Im mediately. This dreadful thing, as It afterward appeared, was nothing more nor It .s than the woiklnir model of a machine, designed by some Ingenious Cockney resident In the West Indies, for the cheaper and more expeditious extraction of t lie tnlees ef pineapples nnd so forth. Mr. West had nn Interest In the Industry, and the machine had been sent to him for his Inspection und approval. The box waa afterward rudely opened with a hatchet and the apparatus used In the West menage for the effectual sqneesing of le-mons and the like. But the Incldemt was tre mendous while It lasted, and for at least six hours the British minister and the state department and the hugh-u-muck-a-mucks of our great American navy Mt as If they stood upon the brink of the bottomless abyis They fell as though the secret council of the Fe nian br.rtherhood, grand, epic, homi cidal, stood with uplifted dagger at their very throats. THE LARD OF SOKC -The the Welfh pulpit, must on nil hands be uccredlted first In place In the language. Nenrer than this to Boswell no Welsh bh itrapher has ever approached. A recent convert from the Congrega tional denomination to the . I'nltarlan body is the Itev. L. Jenkyn Jones, of Bradford, Kngland. vile is a native edu rati I at I'M In burg university, Scotland. He Is an excellent preacher, and has much ef the Welsh lire In his delivery. 'Mr. Joins 1s now visiting Wales, and prior to commencing .his ministry at Woolwich, F.nglund, he will prach at the Harvest Festival of the Highland Place I'nitHrinn church at Aberdaro, the home of Unitarians In Waits. Now. we have him sure. According to old Wlh manuscripts there bad been an Institution for learning at Caerwrgon, established by the em ei jT. 1 h ob..lin, the second of that name, in the beginning of the fifth cen tuiy. and called IJangor Tewdwr. that Is, the college of Theodoslus). Of this col lege, the same manuscript ay, was St. Patrick, the apostle and titulary saint of Ireland. Again, in the gen ealcgy of the Brltljh saints we find the following notice of At. Patrick: "It wa.i the rloiy of the Kmperor Theodoslus In conjunction with Cyatewvn Lydiw. first founded the college or llltyd. which was regulated by Balerus. a man from Home, and St. Patrick was the princi pal of it before lie was csrrled away a captive by the wicked Irishmen." Will Mr. Lynett, of the Times, please remem ber this; that St. Patrick was a Welshman ami that the Robert Morris '' ' 'dtlfod will be held on ilarch 17. ISM. The lltton stone has been worked In fli.uth Wales from the time of the ll'vnar. und the .Normans for srchl tpctiir.il purposes for ornamenting pub lh buildings, anil It preserves its whlteners fpr centuries, a fact tn which Ihe ruins of Neath Abbey, i wnnsea cas tle, ar.d other ruins In South Wules bear convincing testimony. On the seashore, near ilHinraven castle, this vein, which Is a ?)cchj of limestone, Is most promi nent, and the promontory at Twyn yr Hufen is chiefly composed of It. Last week's London Graphic, whlch sneaks In appreciative terms of Ids Int ct production. Informs us that Mr. David Jenkins' "Legend of gtf. David's" will shortly be performed in Liondon. The first volume of "The Methodist Fathers," edited by the Rev. John Mor gan Jones. Cardiff, and W. Morgan t Pant, has Juet been published. The praise's accorded the work are univer sal.. 1 .1 The Rev. Tcewyn Parry has published a very able little volume on the life of that great Welshman, the late Dr. Lewis Edwards, Bala. The complete biography of this divine Is, by the way. In active preparation by his. son, tho Rev. Principal Edwards. M. A.,' D. D. There Is ancient tradition In Cardl ganehlre that a powerful giant once kept a post on Cmig Mawr. or l'entry chryd Maur, in' the vale of tAeron Olr aldus mentions an open grave which was to be seen in that neighborhood, which fitted tho length of any man, be he email or great. This wm supposed to be, and was pointed out as the grave of tho giant, for he was the genius of the Aeron Vale. His palace 1s said to have been on the hill, and according to the traditions of the .place he was In the habit of Inviting neighboring giants to a trial of strength, and wonderful were the fetes accomplished by these mighty men. At one of the meetings quoits were proposed, and, after a se vere contest the hero of Crug Mawr won the day, throwing his quoit clean over the sea, and. planting; It on the Irish shore, and, henceforth gave the Cardigan giant (superiority over all other giants In Ceredlg's land. Wonder If there are many of these remarkable giants living tn Csraiganhire today! Men of Renown in European Affairs. Discussion of the Claims of Two Prominent Candidates for the English Laureateshlp. From the Times-Herald. London, Oct. 12. Considerable specu lation has been set on foot in literary circles by the statement of the Dally News that it has been "assured that the prime minister has resolved to ap point a poet laureate in succession to the late Lord Tennyson, and that his choice has fallen upon a London jour- , aalisi." There are only two London Journal ists who have attained sufficient emin ence tn poetry to make the bestowal of the distinction upon either of them any thing less thun an empty and turcica! compliment. These are Sir Kdwln Arn old and William Krnest Henley. The liberal Dally News would scarce ly be the medium of the "advance in formation" of even a literary appoint ment by a tory premier, If he could have his will. But this journal has a way oi getting at the inner purports 01 .the literary leaders of the period, ond is right In nine cases out of ten v, lien It makes a forecast In this field, iOtl quotte requires that the name of a laure-ate-elee t, when there Is one, rhould Hrsl be given to the country through the columns of the ofileiel gazt'tte; so that. If tiie- Dally News people have precise Information as to Tennyson's successor Ihev arc In honor bound to keep It to themselves, that It may be dl vulrred in the wiy prescribed by estab lished usage. ..Meanwhile the tongues of the goslps wag. .Mr. Ilcnlo's Uccord. Mr. Henley's name or poetry 1s not widely known, I npprehe.id. In the Unit ed States. thounh both are lamiliar to the American literary cult. A word about u man whom his friends dei-m worthy to wear Ihe laurel crown will not be out ol place. He was born in USouceKter about forty-live years ago. Whui a mi re boy the loss of his father t!irev him upon his own resources, and the hardships of early poverty were In creased by a constitutional weakness, resulting In permanent lamenesB. He was a man grown when this disorder attacked him most fiercely, and he went to, the care of famous surgeons at the oi l Infirmary, Kill. 1 burgh. In hope of an operation tnat mi,-ht afford relief. Lit tle physical good came of this experi ence; for t.muy a duy he lingered there, bedrldd in, w ithout money or friends. At that time the Comhlll Magazine stood for mtiv than It represents now. It was edited by 'Leslie Stephen, a man with an unerring instinct for literary genius wherever it cropped to the sur face. Henley sent him verses verses describing abysmal depths of mental and physical suffering In that hn!f workhouse and half-Jail." things too horrible for prose. As a result of his contributions Robert -Louis Stevenson came to him one duy into that "trans formed back kitchen" which he tells of In his "Itook of Versi-s" bearing vjI umes of Balzac. Met UN Wife in the Hospital. It was while at this Scottish Infirm ary that he met the lady who In years after became his wife. She had gone there upon an errand of mercy to a sick relative. On leaving the hospital he plunged Into literary work for a live lihood, first in Edinburgh and then In London. There he edited In the order named. "Ior.don," the Magazine of Art and (Jointly with another) the Art Jour nal, writing all the while profusely and forcefully for the Saturday Review and Ihe Athenaeum. His compositions were about equally divided between poetry and prose. But It was not until the np pcarance of his "Book of Veises" III 1S8 that he became known outside of a comparatively small circle. This volume iattracte.1 wide attention. It bore the stamp of originality. An drew Lang, 'in a careful critique of It, observed: 'lMr. Henley says what no body else says and as nobody else says It." In 1SS9, with an expanding fame, he Went to Edinburgh to edit the Scots Observer. The publication leaped at once Into a national status. It was read everywhere for Its singular ability and deflnlteness of doctrine. The trans fer of Ixindon and the change of title to the National Observer have made it and Its editor yet more eonspleuous. Very much as Charles A. Dana has Impressed his peculiar personality upon every department of the New York Sun. so Mr. iHenley Impressed himself upon the National Observer. His more recent Journalistic ventures are too familiar to call for specification. Hen ley's best prope today Is that of art criticism. In this field of effort he is the terror of charlatans. Ills f'reed in Ills Verse. His last Important volume of verse has for title "The Song of the Sword." The poem Itself was written at St. An drews' university, whose senate lias conferred upon him the degree of doctor of laws. "The 'Book of Verses" has tho greater vogue. In Its second part he unfolds his theory of life. If I read him aright there Is a strain of new paganism In his song. He thanks rhe "gods;" be appeals to the "gods" like any panthleH. You may search his verse In vain for such n line as Tenny ron's "?trong ron of Ood, Immortal Love." etlll. if there be not divinity In his poesy, there Is a touch of mag nificent humanity. He sings "I thank whatever gods may be. f.ir my uncon querable soul." He Is as ftrong. and perhaps Intractable, as Ibsen. His Im agination Is brilliant, despfte the dull ing Influence of newspaper drudgery. Uudyard Kipling has based one of his bent stories on Henley's "Or ever .tlhe knightly years were gone." which Is ns gorgeous os n Cob rldg -an dream. "On tho Way to Kcw" Is Spenserian In Us soft, old-fashioned effects. As pretty a love song as one could wlrh to hear Is "I Loved You Once In Old Japan." It Is Impossible to resist the feeling, how ever, that Henley's orly hardships dropped gall Into his cup, which ell his subsequent good fortunes have not en tirely washed away. To him life Is full of splendid purposes, but mean results. He has 'the Ideals of Tennyson und Longfellow, but does not see the ac tualities they saw -with the eye of Chris tian faith. , Sir l.dlh Suits the Politicians. . Sir Edwin 'Arnold would suit the poli ticians better, and the poet laureateshlp Is, In but resort, a political gift. He Is more tractable than dlcnley. He Is, moreover, the editor of the great liberal unionist organ, tho Dally Tcjegraph, and In that capacity has rendered In calculable services to the unionist cause during the last nine years. A man of many accomplishments, a cour Itler, ft scholarly litterateur, familiar by personal study and long residence with the peoples and customs of the Orient, Sir Edwin Arnold Is a name ns well known In Tokio and Benares as In London and Chicago. Of his master piece, "The Lights of Asia," morn than fifty editions have been published in 'England, twice that number in the United States and 110 less than ten In India. It 'has been read with the glow of enthusiasm by scholars in ad parts of the world. Carlyle referred to the time he had spent In perusing it as passed "well and nobly, as in a -temple of wisdom." Arnold has not found poetry and Jour narllsm antagonistic. Heine said: "Send a philosopher to Fleet street, but for God's sake do not send a poet there.": Perhaps he .would not have felt so if he had not been an Invalid. Arnold says: "Send a poet to Fleet Street. Let him work there every day and learn his business." He declares that he is a poet because he is, in heart; of the people that Is to say, because he is a Journalist to whom the hopes, fears, Joys and sorrows of the people are absorbing facts. . "Ths Light of. the 'World." which flrat read to an English-speaking audi ence in America, Is his latest poem of particularly ambitious flight. It is the natural crown of earlier works. By It ihe aims to show that "each great re ligious faith contributes a special color to the philosophical speotrum which makes the light of truth." Arnold's Idea is that the chief religions of the world are not mutual enemies but sis ters. The resolution to write this poem was itaken on a sudden as he sat one day in a Japanese teahouse amid the Emoklngs of the silver pipes and the sounds of the guitars. It was the logi cal sequence of a long line of effusions, of "Hllopades'a." "Mahabharata," "The Lotus and the Jewel." and "The Beautiful Names of Allah." Air of Verity Stumps His Words. Descriptive grandeur and an air of "erlty utamp all his oriental works. The approval of the orientals them icIvch In In proof of this. But Arnold Is as well veired- in Creek as In Hindu uta nte or Japanese. Few Englishmen, with the excel tlon of Mr. Gladstone, are so well versed In classic Greek. His translation of "Hero and Leander" in heroic verse from the elreek of Mu eaeus, is a specimen of his critical scholarship and sensitive classical sym pathies. His distinctively English poems do not bear ithe stamp of an equal genius, but there Is no reason to believe that he would not be equal to the official task of glorifying the Vic torian age In verse If It devolved upon him to earn a laureate's stipend In that way. The truest poet In England Is Charles Algerr-m Swinburne. William .Morris pushes him closely In foe race for glory. The one Is a red republicans; the other Is a socialist. Both are politically barrel out from the favors of the crown, and both wear fairer wreaths than any king could give thorn. But if the post of laureate Is to filled at all, those two poets being excluded from the sphere of choice, a selection that would not move the stones to rise In nmllr.y might fairly be made from Sir Fdwln Arnold and William Ernest Henley. As between the two the odds are in favor of Arnold. He Is an optimist, a courtier and religionist. Henley Is only a poet. Quite likely neither Arnold, Henley nor any other will get the dis tinction for a time yet. RECORD OF THE PLAYERS. President Yonng's Official 1. 1st of League Avcrngcs-nmkclt's Phenomenal Stick Work -The Phillies Led as a Club. President Young has completed the batting averages of the league players of '!; who played In fifteen games or more. The feature of this table of sta tlstles is Jesse Burkett's hitting. This hard-hitting Cleveland outfielder leads the league with the phenomenal aver age of .t:3. His nearest competitor is Delehanty. of the Phillies, with an average of .359. In fact, the Philadel phia team shows up higher than any team In the league at the bat, Hamilton with .a5. standing fourth; Clements fifth, with .3VJ. while Turner with tit 3 Lange. the stalwart and handsome Chicago outfielder. Jennings, the obstreperous Baltimore shortstop. Is in seventh place. .M6, and Stenzel, of Pittsburg, eighth, at .24. The champion Orioles show by their averages that their nick work was an Important factor In their scrappy bid for the pennant, as "Mugsy" MeUraw, "Steve" Brodle, andKelley all haveover .350 to their credit. One. and perhaps the principal, feature of the season's work at the stick Is that seventy play ers have an average of .300 and over. Popular Jim MoOuire, the Senators' crack backstop, leads the Washington team, with an average of .330, thus placing him among the select seventy. Senator Cartwrlght is a good second with .32710 his credit, and Selbach. with ,3J4, ranks third among the Senators, ttelng Hawley and Beckley, of Pitts burg, and Sheehan, of St. Louts. Scrappy Joyce has an average of .308. Anderson. .301: Crooks. .2&1; Boyd, .2M; Abbey. .275: Mercer, .254; Maul, .253; Schiebeck. ,1S2. Hamilton leads the league in stolen bases, with $5 pllferlngs during the sea son. Lange. of Chicago, is next, with "9. and iMugsy MeUraw comes third, with 69; Jennings, with 60; Kelley, 59, and Heeler, 67. all Orioles, occupying fourth, fifth and sixth places in the stolen base record, and showing how the Orioles hustled on the bases. Cartwrlght, of Washington, consid ering his extreme adiposity for a base runner, is perhaps the most remarkable player In the league on the bases. He and Stenzel tie for seventh place In the stolen base record with 63 pllferlngs to their credit. Tom Brown has 61 steals, ami Is In eighth piace, tlelng Everett, of Chicago. Jack Crooks ties MUler. Dowd and Smith for nineteenth place on the bases, each getting 35, and Joyce and Buck Kwlng 34 each, are In the twenti eth position. Abbey and Selbach. of Washington, are tied for twnty-thlrd honors, with 30 steals each. Farmer Thompson, of Philadelphia, the tallest man In Ihe league, and Tom McCarthy, of Boston, probably the shortest, are tied In twenty-ninth place, with 21 stolen bases. la the 133 games In which Jim Mc Otilre participated he stole 20 bases and secured thirty-third place. Jennings, of Baltimore, leads the league In sacrifice hitting, with 28 of this class of hits to his credit. Jack Crooks has 18 eacrllloes to his credit, leading Washington. No matter how violent or excruciating Ihe puln, the Rheumatic, Bedrldi'rn In firm. Crippled, Nervous, Neurr.lglc, or prostrated with diseases may auffo- RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Will Afford Instant Ease. 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