THE SCKAWTON Tlhi U-PTE VTSPJfKSPAY' MOKNTNCr, MARCH 18, 1890. AC01EVEF.1ENTS OF YOUTH . Great Met fco Acquired Fame at aa Early Age. THB TINS OF EARNEST WORK ft bat Malory Teaches In Kneosra.snunt t the Yoaag Maa Jaat Eateriag I'poa a Caraar Extracta from aa Eloqueat Address. 'At a dinner given In Philadelphia on March 3 to Judge Thayer, the following words were used by Jamea M. Beck In hla response to the toast, "The Junior Bar": Secular history eloquently tell u of the capability of youth. It is one long, splendid, flaming record of youthful ex. Clolts. Shall we Imitunce Alexander, who at 20 asi-ended the throne, ut a won the feat tie or issus, anil at 25 that of Arbela, who at 30 year of age had curried Oreek civilization from the 'Mediterranean to the Uanges. and who was hut 33 when he died, nnconquered save by that waste of ocean whose tumbling- billow mocked hla fur ther jirogrees? The greatest of the Cae amis -was but a young soldier when tie compelled Pompey and Crassus to divide with him the dominion of the world. Or hall we Instance that marvelous boy of oorowncentury.whoatft;. like young Hum tun, rent the lion of French anarchy "as though It had been a kid." at St he re ceived as his wife's dowry the command cf some Su.uuo half -clothed and half-starved battalions, and Hun hla iiroud challenge to hi adversaries, that he would muKe them burn their books on tactics.' At So this modern t'uesur behold the mlnarols of Cairo gleaming- In the rising sun, and could challenge the forty centuries that looked down upon him from the Pyramids to parallel the wonder of his career, ln-de-d, from 175 until VtUu all Km ope be came the mere chessboard of two young men, and Us kings, knight, bishops, rus Jes and pawns, were moved almost ut the will of their master minds. . 'Itie one. Napoleon, who ut Xi pressed the other, young- Hill, who on entering the bar was elected to the house of commons, and who approved blmself "nun Inipur 'ongressus AchlUL" His tlrst speech, de livered at the uk of Si. was so remark able that not only Burke proclaimed hlui "a chip of the old block" and therefore a worthy sou of 'the Karl of 4'hnthum, but Fox, when told thut Hit would become one of the- greatest orators of 'the house, replied: "Nav, h Is," A -year luter the ministry hod dissolved and a powerful coalition, consisting of Lord North, Hurke. Fox" and other parliamentary giants, was formed to oppose the government. Who could ooi with an opposition that whs fonnldatilo beyond any precedent? The king turned to Pitt, and at 23 years of ge he became chuheellor of the exche. quer, and from that time until his death, a few duys after the battle of Auster lltx, he held supreme sway In KtiRlund, a longer continuous reign of power thp.n has even been enjoyed by any Knglish parliamentary-leader before or since. It was young- Pitt who organized with un tiring energy the coalition after coali tion that ultimately broke the power of the young Napoleon, and thus they played for the empire of the world their chess game of nations. The latter's genius shone forth resplendent at Austerlitz, and 1'ltt died of chagrin ut hearing the thun ilerous "checkmate" from Napoleon's canon, but when the smoke curled heaven ward from the cornfields of Waterloo the real victor of the Titanic struggle of twenty years was not the Iron Duke, but that voting lawyer, whose remulns then rested In that Valhalla of the English speaking race, Westminster Abbey. OTHER GREAT YOUNG WEN. If we turn from the cabinet and the tented field to the more peaceful voca tions of men. the truth Is not less star tling. Newton was but 23 when he tils covered that law as Infinite and compre hensive as the universe, and which holds the Innumerable starry worlds In Its ma jestic operation aravltatlon. Beethoven wrote the more famous of his sympho nies before he was 32, and "Fldello" at M. The merry, sparkling strains of "Don fJlovnnnl," which the gray-beards here sssembled have not failed to admire, were written bv Mozart at 32. Mendelssohn amazed the musicians of Berlin by writing Ht 17 the overture to the "Midsummer Night's Dream," of which It Is the high est compliment to say thnt It Is worthy of the text. 8chubert, who filled the world with his mellifluous melody, tiled at HI. Wagner, the Napoleon of the or chestra, revolutionized the opera by writing "Lohengrin" at 35. Sheridan, at 22, convulsed the world with merriment und It has been laughing ever since by that most perfect comedy, "The Rivals." Byron, as we know, awoke one morning and found himself famous at 23 by writ ing "Chllde Harold." Campbell, nt 2, composed his "Pleasures of Hope," and Bryant, nt 18, wrote that undying poem, "Thanatopsls." Shelley, at 18, made the world his lasting debtor by "Queen Mab," while Burns, with his boyish hand upon the plough sang under the blue skies of Ayr his divine lyrics of democracy. Shall we further Instance that sovereign poet, who, fleeing across Warwickshire meadows, entered London a .penniless and unknown young man? A jaek-of-all-rades, as Oreene called him, he held horses and dreamed. He doubtless slept In the squalor of some London garret, but at the bidding of his genius the rude walls dissolved and to his prodigal Imag ination there arched above him the blue heavens of Verona, Its "malestlcal roof fretted with golden fire," while across the balmy air there floated the youthful vows of ardent lovers. Thus nt 27 years of age Shakespeare composed the most per rect love 'tragedy or literature, -Jtomeo and Juliet." IN AMERICAN HISTORY. Go back In Imagination to the house of burgesses. In Virginia, In the year 1'i'w. The members are largely lawyers, ami none more quick to resent the slightest exuraaslun of disloyalty to Knaland's king. The session Is drawing to its close end no member has had sufficient cour age to condemn bv word or resolution the recently enacted stamp act. The oungest member of the house Is a young lawyer, gaunt, lll-attlred, with the clouk ot u parson and a wig thut knew np pow der. who had lust reached his twenty ninth year. He had not Imbibed what jenerson finely called "the noneyeu Mans tieldlsm of Blackstone." which, as Jeffer on added, "had turned the old lawyers xrom w ntgs Into Tories," but had druiiK deep draughts of liberty from old Coke's comments on Mugna Charts. "Alone, un advised and unassisted," the young law yer arose and submitted five resolutions o radical, revolutionary and comprehen sive as to cause a thrill of Indignation to pervade that Tory body, as though bias- pnemy against ine torn Anointed had been uttered. Standing erect, with larire weeping gesticulations and a voice of marvelous melody, he supported his reso lutions by "torrents of a sublime elo quence." as one of his auditors said sixty years later, neacning to a cumax, lie, ut tered the memorable and dating wonM, tne nrst cnauenga oi uenance to the urn- Charles I bis Cromwell and Georan HI' "Treason! treason!" echoed from every part of the house. The orator faltered not far an Instant, but rising with the lofty courage and prescience of youth to a loftier attitude, exclaimed: "And George 111 may profit by their example. If this us treason, mage tne most oi it." It was the "forest-born Demosthenes." young Patrick Henry, of Immortal mem ory. My a majority of one vote the reso lutions were carried. It was a triumph vi rivuuriii'v great almost ueyonu prece dent. Preylon Kandolnh. tha klnir's at' torney general, angrily swept out of the cnamwr crying, tsy uoU, 1 would have given 600 guineas for a single vote!" Wythe (destined to be the law preceptor vi inw mining ugnia or me junior Dar, Thomas Jefferson. James lUmiiuin in, . John 'Marshall) Pendletpn and other older lawyers, opposed the resolutions. It was carrHMi. us nnnrroit says, because "Hen rv carried all the younir mmhr viih him. and thus Virginia gave the signal for llie ruiiuiiriii. Standing on ttotoe nml listnnin- it. bated breath to his friend's sublime elo quence, another law student, aged 22 years, who had drawn his Inspiration of freedom from the everlasting hills r Northern Virginia, stood on that great any in ine loouy ni ine nouse. At 25 he procured by his "Summary View of the Rights of America" the honor ot an at tainder by the British parliament, and at St was selected, because his was the mas terful Dsn of hla time, to a-lve to man. kind In the Declaration of independence its una aeea to iioeny. YOUNO WARRIORS.' The men who supported In the field the Declaration with their swords were In great part young men, and conspicuous among them young lawyers., Alexander Hamilton ana ionn marsnaii were Hardly out of their teens when they dragged the artillery over the frosen plains of Valley Varmm. Nathaniel Green, at 34. was m-i. a major general. Ethan Allen was but 31 wnen fie rousen irom ins slumbers the commander of the British forces at Tlcon dsrega and hade him surrender "la the name of Great Jehovah and the Conti nental Congress." John Sullivan was a brigadier geiiaral at 35. and our own "Mad kmhanv" H'aviM nt 34 mads hla brilliant attack -on Stony Point. Struck by a bul let while leading the charge ana oeiieving that he was fatally wounded, he cried: "Carry me into the fort and let tne die at the head of my column." Henry Knox was but when he Joined the Infant army before Boston, and he was but 36 when he became Washington's secretary of war. Our invincible naval hero, wno sougiu nis adversaries In Knglish waters and won his great victory off Flam borough Point and within alght of the English coast, John Paul Jones, was but 31 when In command of his little fleet he engaged a larger one of English ships. "Has your ship struck? called out the British captain, end Jones instantly replied: "I have not yet begun to fight," Few struggles on the sea were ever so desperate, and no victory more brilliant. Youth Is a tradition with our navy, for Lawrence was but 27 yhen ho poured out the blood of his gallant heart on the decks ot the Constitution, with his last utterance of indomitable courage: "Don't give up the ship." Decatur was but 25 when he entered the harbor of Tri poli and destroyed the captive vessel Phil adelphia, and but 2S when he was intde a commodore: Perry but 28 when he won his memorable victory on Lake Erie and sent that hlstorlo dispatch, which ran only be titly compared to Caesar's "Smil vidl. vlcl." "We Imtfe met the enemy and they are our.", YOUNG LAWYERS. Again. If we take the Constitutional con venilon. which framed the wisest Instru ment ever struck off by the brain and purpose of man at a given time, we cannot but be reminded that the three master spirits of that convention were Janes Madison, who at 2i was a member of the general assembly of Virginia and at -3 became a member ef the continental con gross, and at 3K entered the constitutional convention; Alexander Hamilton, who was but SU when he sat In the constitutional convention, and Oouverneur Morns, who was the saihe age as Madison. These three young lawyers were lumt Instrumental In shaping the constitution, and they, with young John Jay. of New York, most ably supported It by the Federalist. The latt.:r wus only 29 when elected to the eonstl lieiital congress, and at 32 he became chief Justice of New York. What a gal axy of genius! Alexander Hamilton, Pat rick Heury. John Jay. Thomas Jefferson, Richard Henry Lee. Charles O. Plnck ney , Robert R. 'Livingston, John Marshall, Oliver Ellsworth. Elbrldge tlerry, ull young lawyers, whose fame will ever shine resplendent as stars of first mag nitude. To this list .should M added. If need were, Joseph Story, who ut 32 wns an associate justice of the supreme court; William Wirt, who nt 35 was employed to prosecute Aurou Burr; John C. Culhoun. who at 30 was chuimiuii of the committee on foreign relations of the huusn; Henry Clay, who entered the senate while under the constitutional age being only 2 and at 34 was speaker of the house. Paiild Webster, who entered congress at 30, and at 3ti argued thn famous Dartmouth col lege case. Stephen A. Douglas, who at SO was made attorney general of Illinois, and William If. Steward, whb at 37 became, governor of New York. Nay, If we look In our own state, we cannot but remem ber that the wisest of our Judges, such as Gibson. Black, Sharwood and .the la mented Allison, have been recruited from the ranks ot the junior bar. GRANT AS A TEAMSTER, Ills Widow Indignantly Denies the Im- peaohment, but Is Effectively An swered-To Have Been a Teamster In volves No Disirace-Othsr Great Men Who Were Teamsters. Some months ago Captain Watrous, of Milwaukee, In the course of some army stories in the Chicago Times-Herald, told an anecdote or two ot General Grant, which had to do with the period of his life when he was a teamster at Galena. To these anecdotes Mrs. Grant Indignantly demurred, alleging first that Grant had never been a teamster, and secondly, that If he had been. It would be unkind to rake the fact up against his memory. To this objection Captain Watrous rather aptly replies: "Supposing it were to develop that Gen eral Grant had, at a certain period In his life, been a professional teamster or driver? Could that hurt Grant? I have not seen anything that went to prove that that ever was his regular business, but I have heard many things, backed by the most positive proof, that In the transaction of his regular busi ness he had performed the duty ot driver, and on various occasions taken the position of driver in an excursion, both of pleasure and business, as In the tase of his trip from Galena to Janes vllle in 1860. Not a soul who has read the history of Grant will think any the less of him because of that. No one would think any the less of him were it established beyond a doubt that for a year, or for years, he had been a pro fessional teamster. A man who Is great enough to command a million of men and be president Is not hurt by a team ster record, nor can his family be hurt by it. The fact that in the short space of four years he could rise from the rank of a retired captain to that of lieu tenant general and be crowned with greater military achievements than any other man of modern times, and then serve eight years as president. Is the best of proof that If he were a teamster he had metal In him for something else. .OTHER TEAMSTERS. "By the way, other pretty good men have been teamsters. One of the grandest governors Wisconsin ever had was a stage driver for years. It did not hurt grand old Jerry Rusk later on to have it- known he had been a stage driver. He was pleased to hear the fact mentioned. Who thinks any the less ot the great war president because Mr. Lincoln, to keep the pot boiling, split rails; or of George Washington because he once carried a chain for a surveyor? Who thinks less of Garfield because he rode a mule that hauled a canal boat? Gat-ricld was a professional teamster. In a way, but It didn't hurt his reputation when lie wuh great enough for presl dent. Who thinks less of one of Wis consin's grandest characters because, when lie flrwt cutne to the state he had to chop cord wood at 25 cents a cord or go hungry? Who thinks less of ex-Gov-nor W. D. Hoard liecause he was a wood chopper? Men speak of It as a compliment. Who thinks less of John M. Thurston, Nebraska's senator, be cause he was a drayman in Chicago ut one time? Or of ex-Governor and Gen eral Alger, of Michigan, who drove a team in the pineries? Who thinks less of Minnesota's senator, Cushman K. Davis, because he drove his father's team and held his father's plow? Who thought less of Henry Ward Beecher because, when he tlrst began his minis terial career, he was obliged to milk the cow and do the stable housework? Does anyone ever hold It up against Da niel Webster because he earned needed shillings as a chore boy? Who thinks less of Benjamin Harrison because, when he tlrst began housekeeping, lie was his own chore boy and his wife the kitchen girl? Look back Into the life of almost any successful merchant, manufacturer, railroad official, lawyer, doctor, educator, publisher, and yon will And that some time he was glud to do work for a llvlng'tliat was not better than being a teamster. The teamster has an honorable calling. If It Is in him to graduate from that calling to the head of a college, a nation, a railroad, a great paper, why, of course, it Is not against him." UIS PATENT IN PERIL. Attorney Garrett McEnery recently appeared as counsel In a rase before a justice of the peace at sulsun. accord ing to the San Francisco Post. Mc Enery found it necessary to make fre quent objection to the evidence that opposing counsel was attempting to In troduce. The Justice, whose first rule of evidence Is "everything goes," looked first annoyed and then Indignant. ' Fin ally, he could contain himself no longer, and, as a ruling on one of Mr Mc Enery's objections, roared: "Mr. McEnery, what kind of a lawyer are you, anyway?" "I am a patent lawyer," replied the attorney, facetiously. "Well, all I've got to say la that when the patent expires you will have a hard time getting It renewed. Go. on with tne case." OLDEST OF ITALIAN CITIES Four Sights One Always Goes to See in Pisa. FIRST IS THE LEANING TOWER Then Comes the Cathedral, the Campo Santo and the Baptistery-W hat an American Trareler Saw to Interest Uim In Pisa. Special Correspondence of The Tribune. Pisa, March 2. There were three Italian cities that became, in the early middle ages, great naval powers. These three cities, Genoa, Venice and IMsa. grew rich and luxurious. To their ef forts the preservation of Europe from the Mohammedan is largely due. If It PRESIDENTS RAFAEL I0LESIAS, oi Costa Rica. QEN. GUTIERREZ, of Salvador. had not been for the almost ceaseless war they waged with the Saracens, there is little doubt that that race of warriors would have overrun Europe, but harassed as they continually were by the fleets of these three cities their efforts were diverted. It is the habit to say that these cities maintained their Meets only to protect their own com merce, but we must remember that, in protecting that commerce they protect ed Europe. The first of these cities to rise to power, and also the first to fall was Pisa, and its decay has been the most complete. Its old-time rivals still re tain some of their old-time importance in the world, but Pisa has gone to sleep, as it were, and the world has run away from her. Since that memorable Au gust day, 612 years ago, when the Geno ese destroyed their naval power, the Pisans have, generation after genera tion, seen their city slip further and further behind Its neighbors. As a consequence of that great sea fight Pisa lost Corsica, and soon after Sar dinia was taken from her. Thus re duced in power she fell an easy prey to the rising city of Florence, and the town that had single handed, driven back the Saracens, and had held at one time a large portion of the Italian peninsula, became a dependency. OF INTEREST TO STUDENTS. As a natural consequence of this early decay as an Independent growing city, the group of buildings by which Pisa is mainly known to us belong to the earlier Italian period, having been either built or designed between the years 1000 and 1100. They were the first of the renaissance buildings of Italy, and are thus of great interest to the student aside from their great beauty. The structures are four In number, and are situated close together In one corner of the town, and not In Its center, as Is usual. They are the cathedral, considered by some critics the most beautiful in Italy, the Baptistery, the Campo Santo and the far-famed Cam panile, or Leaning Tower. They an? In excellent preservation, in fact are now kept up by th city as a sort of public Institution. Their being a public Insti tution, however, does not prevent the ever present guide from intruding his services upon you. To ascend the lean ing tower It Is necessary to have a companion, and this gives lilin his opportunity. The ascent of Hie tower Is well worth the effort required. At one's feet lies sleepy old Pisa, shrunk Inside Us old walls, which still stand, now some distance from the town In nearly every direction. The level plain on which Pisa is built stretcheH uwny to the Apennines, and if, as happened when I made the ascent, the sun is set ting, the effect of its rays on the snow covered mountain tops is superb. Away to the west the sea Is visible, with a steamer making its way along the coast. Just under the sun rises a rocky Island, and the whole scene Is one which once seen. Is not soon for gotten. The Inclination of the tower nt the top Is very noticeable, and when on its lower side one automatically clings to the inner wall. This Inclination, how ever is not so much on the top as it Is about two-thirds of the way up. as It was at this point it wits discovered thut one side of the tower was sinking, and from there on It begins to bend buck, the bow being quite noticeable If one looks carefully at it. THE LEANING TOW En. Aside from Its great peculiarity of structure, the tower Is very beautiful and would have always been celebrated for that alone. The marble of which it is built is still white, Pisa having no modern manufactories to nil the air with smoke and dust. In the cathedral hangs the lamp whose swaying Is said to have suggest ed to Galileo the Idea of the pendulum. It hangs there still, from the flat roof of the nave, (for the church Is In the basilica style) which roof Is borne by sixty-eight antique Roman and Greek columns which the Pisans captured In war. It may be said that the whole church Is the result of war, for It was begun after the great victory of the Pisans over the Saracens by which they acquired possession of Sardinia. One of the most interesting things In Italy Is the way one comes across old Greek and Roman columns In the churches. Perhaps some of them origi nally stood In Greece supporting some temple of the gods, and were brought thence by the conquering Romans, from whom they have descended to the Italians. A good column has a long life, and perhaps some ot these old travelers will make yet another Jour ney before they return to their original, primeval dust. IN THE CATHEDRAL. The effect of the interior of the cathe dral, with Its copper gilded' roof, its many colored marbles,, its old stained glass windows and Its fine paintings, is very rich, made all the hiore so by the subduedllght which, howevfrf prevents one from fully, seeing the fine Audlca, del Santos of which the, church; Is own er. Just opposite the facade of the cathedral stands the flnetlrcular domed Baptistery, built a hundvd,y,eax8 after the cathedral and occupying the same relative position to It as does the one In Florence to the cathedra;! .there. The Interior is bare and desolate now, ex cept for the celebrated luoiblu pulpit by Nicola Pisano, regardedis one ot the finest works of its time, pke the tower this building also leans out. of the per pendicular, but of course not to the same extent. Some parts" of the cathedral are also "out, of plumb" OF CENTRAL OEN. BARRIOS, ol auatemalaJ ,Z ' ,1'iiw I Fronj the Chloago for the whole ground was flat and mar shy, and at the time the buildings were erected the science of foundation' was probably not well understood. ' . THE CAMPO SANTO. A." j The Campo Sunt'o, or burial ground,' Is the fourth building of this group. Fifty-three ship-loads of earth from Mt. Calvary were brought hither when the Crusaders were compelled to evacu ate Palestine, and as a consequence of the possession of this holy ground, the cemetery was known all over Italy. It such a thing can be said of a cemetery, positions there were much sought for. The walls of the enclosing Gothic ar cades are covered with frescoes, almost obliterated, but of great' Interest to the student as many celebrated pictures are traced back to suggestions received from these paintings. These are the sights of Pisa. ' The city itself is a strangely quiet sleepy old town, -with quaint, deserted streets.1 There seems to be no especial industry there, and the shops are hid In under dim old arcades. My chief recollection of the people of Pisa is that there I first encountered what may be termed the Tuscan toga. This Is an ulster of a peculiarly vivid shade of red, some thing between orange and brick color. It is trimmed with heavy cuffs and collar of fox-skin, and usually ' lined with green. To a limited extent they ore worn at Florence and Sienna, hut Pisa seems to be the main seat of the, fashion. One Is very likely to think on first catching sight of a man in one of them thnt a comet is coming around the corner. But every people to Its own fashion, and these ore perhaps popular there because they are both warm In color and texture. Or perhaps the Pisans wear them to counteract the quietness of the town. Winford J. Northup, . I ABOUT FAMOUS MEN. j DEPEW'8 LATEST. Chfuineey Pepew. as 'the President of another very. Important railroad, cuuio down to his dinner with one of his m Imllulile speeches, suys the Washington correspondence of the New York Hun. He Is looking thin. James llusted, now dead,, once told tne that he was a college ma:.! of llepew ut Yale, and thnt IVnew even'nt that time was Htrlvinir for the laurel mr oratory, and llnally did Kft the valedlc. lory. Kepew's gentlemanly nature liu had much to do with his IhkIi promotions, lie Is hoth a good fellow und a coiirliec. He delivers speeches Just us Oliver Wen dell' I Ionics wrote poems, liecause they are In him, and bubble out like the KprliiKS of wuter under pressure, lie has n fine capacity to Invent anecdotes or -to adapt old ones, us when it Ibis. dinner lie con vulsed the house by ilescrililtus a ' new member of t'ongress seutrd In an old blink barber's chair, and sayliiK, "You have shaved ninny other stiiicsinvn In tha pasC'tuH-h" ns-f'lay unci Webster' "Yes, sir," replied Ihe barber, somewhat frigl'llv; "you look somewhat llku Mr. Webster." .'In my brow?" Inquired the statesman, who has III the nieantiuie been rendered helpless In the barber's chair. "No." replies the- nci;io. In .' "your breath." This anecdote, shaped by Mr. Pepew himself, is of the character of Ihe news paper comments on public men which sev eral speakers thut niaht uppenred to reprobate. I lemoerury mukes sport of Itself.- While Mr. pep, w was thus referrin;; In Mr. YWhster's hnccliunultan breath, some of those very Invited suests were huving their will of Mr. pepew's consti tution. He ftbt credit for belli every tliillK but a railroad man, yet I lieurd him sity some time uro thai he itave more hours to his railroad duties than-any corpora tion President In the country, WEIJSTRR'S PERSONAL FORCE. Onre,' when Daniel" Webster wns ad dressing ,a poll I leal meeting In r'nncoiil Hull, say's ihe San Francisco Argonaut,' the standing multitude within the hall, pressed b'y those who were emltavoring to enter from without, liecun to sway to and fro, a solid mass of human bodies, os helpless to counteract the movement an If Faneull Hull were being rocked by an earthquake. The orator, was In the midst of a stirring uppcal, tirg'.ng the necessity of individual exertion und until nchl id? patrlotium tb avert the dangurs - that threatened the political pnrty,whose prin ciples he espdused, when he perceived the terrible swaying of the. packed. assembly and thn Imminent danKer.that might en sue. -Webster stopped sljort In the middle of a sentence, advanced to the eliiwor the platform, extended his arm In an author!.. taiive a limine, ana in a stentornn voice of command crlecl out: "Let each man stand firm!" The effect was-Instantane ous. Each man stood firm; .the great' neHvuig- muse vi numanuy guinea us equilibrium, and, save the long breath of relief that filled the air, perfect stillness ensued, "That,'' exclaimed' the great ora tor, "U what we call self-government." -AffiWCAN REPUBLICS... SUNDAY OBSERVED WELL In the Sinful Capital City of Darkest England. ALL BUSINESS IS SUSPENDED The Inhabitants of London Are Not Specially Religions, but They Firmly Believe in Resting One ' Whole Day In Seven. , Barron, In the Times-Herald. A London Sunday Is a very solemn If not a pre-eminently religious day. Perhaps there Is no city in the world that, to the stranger, shows as austere and repellant on the "Hawbath" as this modern Babylon. To Issue from your hotel or domicile at ID o'clock In the PRESIDENT ZELAVA. oi Nicaragua. POLVCARPO BONILLA, of Honduras. Tlmei-Herald, By the Courtesy ot H. H. Kobliaat. morning Is to enter the streets of a deserted city. A few cabs with sleepy horses and Invisible cabmen may be in the ranks ot a street here and there; now and then a bus may rumble past; occasionally, too, a private equipage of one or two horse power will hurry by; and, of course, men and women and children will straggle along: but what movement there Is only heightens and Intensifies the emptiness and lone liness ot the monster city's desolation, and one asks one's self wonderingly, "Where are the crowds and the crfftfu sion of yesterday, the surging thous ands, the Incessant stream of traffic, the dull, reverberating rumble of wheels, the muffled clip-clap of my riads of Iron-shod hoofs beating the pavement, and that Inarticulate, inde finable hum of a great city's babble? Whither has It all vanished? They only can tell who are the par ticles of the daily commotion. Every thing Is closed, as If men. were done with buying and selling, even the "pubs" being strictly forbidden to sell to anyone not a "traveler," though I believe any person who lives a three miles remove from the "pub" may qual ify as a "traveler." A resident of any of the principal American cities who has not bpen in London on a Sunday has but an Imperfect Idea of what Sun day observance really . means. Corn pored with London, New York, which makes a flourish of Sunday closing, has 'a fete, and Chicago a carnival on the seventh day. London Is more puritan ical than Boston and more sweetly sol emn than Philadelphia, and It Is Pur itanism rather than an evidence of higher culture and broader refinement, because the benevolence and philan thropy nnd evangelism of Sunday-open art galleries cannot be made evident to the minds In authority. NO SUNDAY DIN. "Hitf you are glud of the quiet anil rp poseas you wulk abroad, and appreci ate' the benellcence of a day of rest so universally resected. There Is no temptution to loiter In the streets, for the shop windows have heavy Bhuttera before them or are curtained within. The tradesman docs not seem to think it worth while to cheat his God or 'juggle with his conscience by using Ids windows as a Sunday advertising medi um. He closes up shop In earliest. So, ith nothing to see in the thorough fares, you stroll into the parks, and there you see the lower inlddle-cliiss world, till uges, decked out, a la Me lilnty, in Its best suit of clothes, quite ut ease utid huppy, idle, chatty, laugh ing, but to the full degree orderly and In no way noisy. You may hear present ly the Jar-resounding boom of "ISIg Hen" procliilinliiK from his lofty tower the aging of the day, und you will know that cathedral, nbbey and church are receiving their congregations and thnt soon from thousuiuls of choirs and pul pits will ascend Hint spiritual essence of physical submission which has made the nineteenth century a little belter than uny other cycle that ever was. Now, If you t liuctie to stand In one of the busier thoroughfares near a church you will note another London lieoiiliarily. On the lamp-posts of the "refuges" In the middle of the streets are placards, hung there only Sundays, which bear the command "Drive slow ly." The driver of 'bus or cab or curt ot "growler" or carriage pulls shnrply up at that notice and keeps his team at n walk until the church Is well passed; then he inhy whip into a trot aguln and go his lively way to the next warning. Services In n Imdon church are not disturbed by the ronr of the careless street; hard I y as much mny be snid fof some American cities. In which the prayer of the pastor Is often punctured by the shrill voice of the newsboy cry ing his wares, or Ihe organ takes Its .grewsome minor from the smothered Hang and rattle of the passing wagons, that seem to concentrate their ilynnmle energies before a church door. This street placard, wliicli aims to subordin ate worldly necessities to spiritual de sires, and which. In a manner, tybWes a London Sunday, would not. 1 fear, have much lnlluence upon Ihe independ ent ardor of Yankee Jehus. Rut here a constable stands before the door of the church, and, though he never lifts a finger nor opens his Hps In admonition, his presence is an all-sufficient remindet of taws that are uncompromisingly and surely enforced. What marvelous crea tures these London policemen are. to be sure! Quiet,, undemonstrative, polite, ready their voices always modulated to conversational tones; no bluster, no rrab,- no knocking down and dragging off. Yet they give the biggest city In the world the best police service, and prove better than argument may what a real ly civilized community London is. Even Paris arms her police with a huge dag ger, by courtesy called a sword, an In strument of defense and assault that the dapper gendarmes are only too ready to draw and put to use. Sunday does not end with daylight, aa it does In some communities that temporise with religion, but rounds out the twenty-four hours. Therefore, .there are no Sunday evening amusements. Thea ters, music halls, vaudevilles, concert rooms, everything of the sort is scrupu lously closed. So very strict are the au thorities in these respects that it is only with the greatest difficulty and by the smallest majority of votes that per mission Is given tor the Sunday opening of such rare and temporary public bene fits as the loan collection of old paint ings at Guildhall. Recently a concession has been made to muslo, and it Is possible now to at tend a classical and seml-sacred concert Sunday afternoon and evening, but these are Infrequent, there being only two advertised In last Sunday's papers. Whether this Sabbath day rest be dic tated by sentimental or by sensible considerations, there Isn't the slightest doubt that its value to London is so great, that If all religious scruples were removed, the present metropolitan reg ulations would continue In force, for the public Is well aware of the benefit to the Individual and to the community of this ordered suspension of "wrang ling worldliness." It need nut be In ferred from this that London Is a com munity of churchgoers. Indeed, my ob servation leads me to the conclusion thut an extraordinarily small propor tion of this vast population Is to bor row the phrase of an Impious wretch addicted to church. But they make up for the deficiency by a love of nature, for the outdoor life of the English Is Itself a religion. You would think so. Indeed, to see their swimming races In the Serpentine In Hyde Park on Clirlst mas Day. What other people takes an open-air plunge Into water every day In the year, often breaking through Ice to do It. If Is not Puritanism ulone that bids such a people keep one duy In the week for better things thun work. ANECDOTES OF Till? BAR. YOUNO LAWYER'S CLAIM-. A young man with a delicate, straw rolnred moustache and football hair parted In the center and glued down to his temples, sauntered carelessly Into one of the Superior Court a the other day, says the San, Francisco Post. He eyed the judge through his glasses, and sized up all the attorneys. Then he walked out of the court. The Judge a class of Ice water. The judge who is nervous and testy had observed the young man and frowned down on the glued hair and glasses. When the young man boldly walked up to the bar and .took a glass of ice water the Judge fairly boiled with indignation at such temerity amounting almost to contempt. The young man was just raising the glass to his lips when tho judge roared: "That water, sir. Is for attorneys and other officers, of the court." The glass almost drooped from his hand, he started violently, turned red. then placed the glass on the table and waled out of the court. The Judge chuckled. V Half an hour later the young man entered the court mom again with a roll of parchment in his hand. The Judge glared at him savagely, but he never flinched. Finally there was a lull In the proceedings, and he address ed the court: ' "Your Honor!" "What is It, sir?" "I wish to submit to the court my certificate of admission to practice In the Supreme Court and all other courts of this State,", and he passed the parch ment to the clerk. "Well, what of that?" growled the Judge. "Now, Your Honor, having presented the proofs of my admission to the bar, I would now move the court that I be permitted to drink from the official pitcher," and he calmly drained the glass of water he had left on the table. SENSITIVE ABOUT HIS AGE. 'An attorney of Springfield, 111., was at the Capitol the other day, says the Washington Star and the subject of sensitiveness about the age came up "The most remarkable Instance of that," he said, "was a man not a woman and a very able man mentally too, Judge Snyder Breese. for many years one of the justices of Supreme Court of Illinois, died at a very advanced age, but no one ever knew how old he was. Upon one occasion tho Judges of the Supreme Court of Iowa visited the Ill inois Supreme Court. Judge Wright, of Iowa, was at that time very old. and he had gone West from Ohio, the State of Judge Breese's nativity. At the ban quet table Judge Wright said to the venerable Illinois Jurist: " 'Judge, we must be about the same age. We left Ohio in the same year. We have served on the bench an equal length of time. I wonder how much further the coincidence extends. I would not be surprised If we were born during the snme year. If not an Im pertinence I would usk how old you are? I am 78.' "Judge Breese arose from the table, his face livid with anger, and snylng. fiercely. "I would consider It the height of Impertinence, sir.' and left the room, and would not appear again when Judge-W'rlght was present." ms ExcrsE. Mr. Justice Hawkins, of London, has been ut It again. "You are charged with trying to com mit suicide," be said, sternly, to the prisoner ut the bur. "I was driven to It. Your Lordship." stnininered the unfortunate; "I was driven to It by a woman. " "Hum!" mused His lordship. Then, suddenly. "Hid she refuse you, or did she marry you?" SKILLED INDIAN COOKS. Aborigines of California Make Some Fa mous and Savory IHshes. From the Overland Monthly. I have watched the women, ns many hours more, gathered in groups along the bank on the lovely slope a little eastward, preparing their cuisine for a great feast or "Hlg Times." Here and there lazily curled the smoke from fagot flies on which smooth stones were heating wherewith to cook acorn soup and bread and other luxuries. Shallow circular depressions, some two feet In lla meter, were made in the sand for wushing the acorn meal, to remove the bitter. astringent properties. The acorns nfter being dried were pulver ized In stone mortals of rude construc tion with stone pestles nnd put to these shallow cavities. Water wus then repeatedly poured on till the bitterness was gone. Then with the finger the dough wns marked Into srfiiures, lifted by one hand und the adhering sand re moved by a dexterous application of water with the other. It wns then ttansferred to the heated stones, on which fresh grass or leaves wer? hast ily laid to receive It. Then another handful of grass oh top of the dough anil hot stones upon that until it was baked. My husband says they also made thn dough Into bans and put it Into holes in the ground, previously heated, and added heated stones on top. The meal not made Into bread was di luted with water and boiled Into soup In latge waterproof baskets of beau tiful shape and ornamentation, made of grass roots, wild rmilax and certain shrubs. The stones were lifted from the fire with two long, pointed sticks, dipped Into a basket of water to re move the ashes, then dropiied Into the soup und on cooling returned to the fire. This wns repeated until the soup was thoroughly boiled, bubbling like a mud geyser. The very aged still ad here to some of the old customs. FINE TRIBUTE TO QUAY Colonel A. L. Conger, of Akron, 0 Warmly EulofjUes Him. THINKS H1H LIKELY TO MIS Tha Aotlv Polltielaas. tu Says, Are for Ulna from Main to California. Qnalltles That Make His Candi dacy So Popular. Colonel A. L, Conger, of Akron. O haa been saying many nice things la behalf of the Quay boom. "I have talked," said he, "with many prominent buslnesss people from many different states, some of them from states with 'favorite sons as candidates, and all speak well of Senator Quay. Peraon- ally, I regard the name of Senator Quay as one ot the strongest that will come before the convention. "First Because of his great strength with the business interests of the coun try. In the senate, he has always been the champion of those Interests. Com ing from the great state ot Pennsylva nia, which has always been the cham pion ot. the American protective tariff system, he has gained the confidence of the friends of protection from all over the country. Probably on that score 1 1 1 1 11 r , I MiVlnlflvaru.vnnlv muteHtwl Hecond Because he Is the firm friend of American ugrlculture, and today this great Interest is- down, and has been neglected. I think among all the candi dates, perhaps Senator Allison bears tha closest relations to our agricultural In terests, und yet one of the best short speeches 1 ever listened to on American agriculture was made by Quay. "Third Senator Quay Is stronger With the politicians of the country than any other cundldute or any other man In our party. The wonderful magnan imity he hits always shown to and for those who have opposed him, the splen did success he has achieved In party management, and the ability shown In restoring und maintaining harmony In the party, mark him as one of the great est lenders In the Republican party. PERSONAL KXPERIENCE. , "It was my good fortune tu be asso ciated with Senator Quay for a number of years on the Republican National Ex ecutive comlttee. I have sat with him In important counclls.and seen him with many surrounding embarrassments, but he Is never rattled and always fair to all. First for his country, then for his party. He has the confidence of the politicians of his party to as great w degree as any other man In It. Let me give you a little incident which I now recall to illustrate how he has secured at d maintained this confidence. After the Harrison campaign and Instalment of the administration. Quay had a meet ing of the Republican National Execu tive committee at his house In Washing ton to consider some of Its unfinished business. We commenced our business early in the evening. About 8 o'clock a delegation of five or six gentlemen from a leading city in Pennsylvania called at his house and wished to see the Benator before their departure on the night train. Quay requested the committee to take a recess while he gave them a hearing, and we did so, and the gentle men withdrew to the corner of hla li brary, while the members of our com mlttee remained In the room. HARBORED NO REVENGE. "It was evident that the gentlemen had called to discussi certain political appointments for their state, and thera seemed to be unanimity until the sena tor mentioned a name for a particular office, when the principal spokesman entered his strong protest, said the man was one of the bitterest political ene mia. tha spnntnr had In the state of Pennsylvania, the chief lieutenant of a rival, etc. Each one of the gentlemen Joined In the protest. "Naturally, the members of our com mittee were attracted by the talk, and were anxious to hear the senator's re ply, which was as follows: " 'Well, boys, we have won this fight, and all the Republicans of the United States helped to win it, and all are de serving of credit and the best recogni tion we can give them.' "Speaking of the rival whose name had been mentioned, he said: 'He has a large following. They have done a good service for the party, and In the next contest we shall need their services again. The candidate is unobjection able and I have decided to recommend him for the place. You must remember It Is my duty to represent all factions of the party in our state, regardless of how it affects me personally.' "Mr. Fessenden, of Connecticut, turn ed to me and said: 'Conger, do you ever get that kind of politics dished up to you In Ohio?' I had to say no but If we had, we would have had two Repub lican senators during: the past thirty; years Instead of one. ESTEEMED BY BLAINE. His policy In such matters shows why Senator Quay hus the confidence of the men who innke Presidents. I doubt If there will be many, or any, politicians at the St. Louis convention, who. If they ennnot get their own favorite candi date, would not prefer a landing under the banner of Pennsylvania's candidate. "Let me tell you of the high estima tion In which Quay was held by Jamea (I. Blaine. It wus during Governor Mc Kinley's first cumpalKii for governor In our state. I was requested to make a Visit to Mr. ltlalne ami to get from him a letter favoring Governor McKinley's canvass. Its beuring upon protection, etc. Mr. Blaine was too ill to come to Ohio to enter the canvass, but wrote tho letter. 'I was nt Bar Harbor three days, and spent much of the tlmo with Mr. Klulne and Emmons, tild cumpalKiis und pub lic mei! came up III our dials, and I shall never forget his splendid talk about Senator Quay. H wus very eulogistic In his remarks ubout the senator and suld: "'Quay Is one of the strongest and one of the safest men in the senate; not' an orator, but a deep thinker, and prob ably the shrewdest and best politician In the I'nlled Slates. Pennsylvania has reason to feel proud of him, and much of her great strength In natlonul politics and legislation Is due to his guidance.' " JOLLYING A SOLTHEHNEa. The Keparce of a Hotel :ierk Silenced aa Atlanta Visitor. From the Philadelphia llecord. Quite funny lire some of the experl ecnes narrutcd by persons returning from the Atlanta exposition. A local uewspuper man who got buck from the south on Monday tells this one on him self. I'pon arriving- ot Atlanta he chartered a hack, nnd with that fine scorn of pecuniary considerations char acteristic of his profession, ordered the driver to convey him to the "best hotel in town." Entering the really gorgeous caravansary, he dropped his grip before the desk, held a jien Tiolsed above the register ami Inquired:. "What kind of a room can you give me. ami how much?" The clerk, a typical southerner, with sallow complexion, drooping mustache und long goatee, replied In an indiffer ent sort of tone: "Weil. suh. Ah ken give yo' a fo'th flo room foh fo' dollahs a day. suh." "Fo'th flo. fo' dollahs." repeated the visitor facetiously mimicking the soft southern accent: "then I presume you can give- mo a first-floor room tor $L eh?" "N-o-o, suh." drawled the haughty Georgian. "Ah kaln't give yo' a fust flo' room foh one dollah. suh; but Ah ken give yo' a room without any flo at all foh nothin', suh. Jest go down thar to the bahn and inqul' foh the mewel apahtments." The Philadelphlan made no further attempt to have fun with the natives during his stay in Atlanta.