THE SCBANTON TMBtJNE -WEDNESDAY MOBNING, JULY 22, 1896. 11 '.. ONE YANKEE TELLS ABOUT THE DERBY Quite (he Most Important Event in the British Calendar. IS THE CELEBRATED DERBY DAY Elwyta A. Barron, Iho Versatile Lou do Correspondent of Ibe Chicago TimewIIerald, CJive a Polished Description of Hi f'irxt View of Thin Momentous Afl'uir. Next to th rrown the most Important thin In English esteem Is the Derby; and when for the first time In consider ably more than a centuiy the prize Is borne off by a Prince of Wales, and that prince extremely popular with all class en, you may imagine that the degree of Jubilation Is nothing less than In ex-i-elals. For my part. I had never wlt vuBSrtd anything equal, in point of en thusiastic demonstration, to that scene tf Joyous commotion and excitement when it became known to the vast mul titude the Persimmon had passed the post u winner. Derby day on Epsom Downs (they were known as Banstead Downs in th days of the inimitable Pepys) is always the thing of the year; but the conditions and experiences of yesterday made it one of the red-letter events of a tif tlint. 1 count It a blessed bit of fortune to have ben present, und I owe It to our good friend, the admirable Wlllard, that the most favorable circumstances attended me. Mr. Wlllard had tele graphed up from Banstead, one of th loveliest spots in England, "Come down and we'll drive to tin races. Dinner and a bed to follow." an Invitation that only madness would gambol from. Ban stead being happily and sweetly re moved from that curse of rural ro mance, the railway, he met mo with his trap at Sutton, the way by which the great tide of pleasure-seekers rolls down from London In every sort of "conveyance," from the swelf four-in-hand to the humble donkey-cart of the coster, to witness the Darby. AN EXTRAORDINARY SIGHT. We pulled out from the road on a hilltop and became spectators of the heterogeneous pageant. An extraor dinary sight, indeed, is the tide of ve hlcularate humanity that ovcrtloods the road to the Derby. The like of it Is to be seen nowhere else In the world. Everything on wheels Is conscripted for service on this imperial anniversary and everything that passes Is heaped und crowded with an unuccustomed load of eager holiday makers for once the uncouth occupants of the strangely decked butcher's curt, or the groaning prehistoric chaise, or the covered van, jogging along under the dust and shu dow of the royal coach In common pro cession. A wagonette Is filled with the artisans of some establishments, who have spread newspapers over their knees and are beguiling the tedlousness of the long ride with cards; a brake speeds along with two horns blowing; Immediately fololwlng Is a wagon that has on the box with the driver a lusty pair of lungs discoursing prodigious music through a cornet; almost invisi ble among the throng of four-wheeled affairs is a shabby two-wheeled, bar-, row-like cart, on which four persons are seated, drugged reluctantly by a dimin utive donkey that might well have been put In the driver's pocket; other wagon loads cheered by cornet or bugle; here a cart-load of stout Voiced fellows shouting a coster chorus; omnibuses with four horses chartered for the day,' their tops crowded with merry parties; fashionable equipages, with crests on the panels, and postillions; a group of equestrians, ladles and gentlemen; the Inevitable bicycle contingent; her grace the duchess and her lovely companions in white and making way a little for the prancing steeds the cart In which 'Arry and 'An let are swelling It like East End haristocrats. And so, higgledy-piggledy, high and low, rich aud poor, prince and beggar, coach and carriage, and bus and trap and cart, and pedestrian In a grand fantastic procession of unassorted dem ocracy wind their picturesque way through town and village and hamlet, along paved highways and through stretches of tree-bowered, hedge-guarded, llower-decked country lanes, over sweeps of downs, with the green way side commons tempting one to leap down for a roll among the billowing daisies and so on to those splendid, wide-reaching downs where the Derby Is run, on the turf, over a course shaped like a horseshoe, a mile and a half about. THE IMMENSE THRONG. A there is no charge of admission to the course (excepting, indeed, to the litclosures about the grand stand, with Its stalls, private boxes, clubhouse, etc to enter which you must pay 11) there is no restraint upon popular patronage and there is no possible way to ascer tain the number of people In attend ance. But surveying the grounds from a commanding point at the top of the grand stand, seeing the hill In the center of the horseshoe black with people and the dense mass along both sides of the track from Tattenliam corner to tho finish, a distance of five furlongs, be ides those In the grand stand and on th rear slope. It seemed to me the throng was even more numerous than that upon which I looked down that memorable "Chicago Day" In '93. Per son who are familiar only with Amer ican race tracks and the scenes which there distinguish the chief events of meetings can have no adequate Idea of the spectacle at Epsom Downs on Derby day. It is like getting to a huge fair. As you drive up you seem to be com ing upon the encampment of an army. Thousands of tents, of various sizes and in every shade of gradation, from approximate white to the grime of age and use, give the impression that an advancing host has pitched its camp for a brief sojourn. This idea is heightened by the number of horses, their harness till on their bucks, munching their feed in open Inclosure of rope or can vas, or under awnings, while here, there and everywhere are gypsy vans veritable houses (gayly painted)) on wheels. In which families live year in and year cut, journeying over country; Vehicles of all kinds drawn up on order ly way about these stabling booths; tands for every kind of refreshments- periwinkles or whelks served tempting ly In large oyster shells for a penny, being the favorite supply of the multi tude; and above all that subdued roar vi inarticulate sounds that comes up from the busy, happy multit ide, like the wash of the sea heard at night on a rocky coast. THE BOOKIES. That which you hear most distinctly the cry of the host of "bookies" of ferlng tremendous odds on the horses no on cares to buy, or on shorter terms. permit ting you to "name one, bar one,1 which means they will give odds against any horse you will name, the favorite excepted. These "bookies In the open have huge placards erected in front of them bearing their names, where from he who reads may deter mine their descent as well as their re sponsibility. One of the most conspicu ous of these bore the nominal biography. Issy Isaacs," and from one you muy know all, the bookmakers of kss racial distinctness having their betting-stands within the inclosure at the grand stand. Showmen's booths are ranged along the hill slope within the horseshoe, the monster fat woman" being advertised In gaudily painted pictures on bellying canvas In rivalry to Punch and Judy,- pantomime and other forms of the art of mimicry and deception dear to the holiday heart. Then there are swings and merry-go- rounds, besides such pastimes as throw ing at cocoanuts. striking with mallets on automatic machines to test your force, watching girls dance on the turf to the quavering lamentations of a hand organ, or forming a ring about a rather buxom young woman In lilac- colored tights and close-fitting sleeve less red bodice, who engages in a few bouts at boxing with a chap who seems to have come from Whitechapel for the purpose. When she has done boxing she slips a dress skirt on over her head and. subsiding Into her aboriginal state. becomes a typical female cockney, not bad looking There are lings, too, about men here and there who make rather a good thing out of the euger crowd by giving tips at a shilling er on the im pending races, and stimulate desire by crying: "I gyve It to yo rolght enough lawst tyme, didn t I? Come on. now; I'm only a charging ye a bob to uyme the winner in the next ryce. Who wants a card' Lively now; the 'osscs won't wyte for ye to myke up ycr minds, ye know." MANY GYPSIES. The gypsies tell fortunes at their van?. or make themselves importunately un- useful ubout tho grounds, or give .thi-lr Indolent attention to refreshment stqgids, to paronlze which requires the uncritical appetite of a "navvy. All these dwellers in vans are not uypsies. however, for a goodly percentage of the lower British public lives and breeds families in the cooplike houses In order to have a home of their own, and yet escape the payment of rates as house holders. There Is always a hopeful group of these folk In the vicinity of the brakes und coaches of the blessed rich, who have brought humpers of wine and other things precious to the stomach, and who Improve the times between races In gastronomic merriment. When these nomads have a suspicion that their social superiors are quite light of heart they feel emboldened to discharge verbal challenges to vanity and benevolence. "Won't the prltty lydy throw me down a copper? I'm sure my lord can spare a body a trifle!" The mendicancy of England will be as troublesome tie long us that of Italy If travelers do not tuke the time to reulize that the promiscuous "chucking about of brass" Is the nurse and propagator of pauperism. Why, In addition to the countless ragumulllns and tatterdemal ions of every age that hover aloifg the roads leading from town to the downs, I saw shoals of school children, at In frequent Intervals, under the care of women teachers, drawn up In line be hind fences, begging In chorus for the pennies showered among them by the passers, who thought only of the fun of seeing the youngsters scramble for the coppers, and did not know or care to remember that the pauper and de pendent classes are Increasing In Eng land in direct proportion to the growth of charities of all sorts, pocket and sys tematized. The Derby not only attracts every beggar who can get within range, but it draws from Londoin every thief and pick-pocket who is able to stand the fatigue of elbowing his or her way through the crowd. 'Nowhere Is a more motley assembly to be found In all the world than at the Derby. From prince to coster Is the confine of all social de grees, and It seemed to me I saw repre sentatives of every race under the sun; and the experienced patron of the turf knows that betting brings odd ex tremes into contact Just as politics makes strange bedfellows. There was such a mingling when the Derby was won. WALES WON. As I have said, the fact that Persim mon, against whom odds of live to one had been laid not an hour before, shot so smartly to the fore after an uncom monly well-run race, set the people wild, and they came rushing onto the track behind the horses like a black deluge roaring their Joy und bearing down to ward the Judges' stand, where the po licemen were already forming their circle to keep clear a space Into which the horses should be ridden before un saddling. In the meantime the excite ment in the royal box was even more intense than that elsewhere. The prince flushed and then turned pale like a schoolboy receiving his first prize, and then mude a rush to the ring to lead in his victorious colt. The Princess of Wales quite discarded dignity to ap plaud w it'll genuine heartiness and to shake hands with her daughters, who were as fluttered as ever young prin cesses were. The sight of the Joy In the royal box was a new inspiration of rap ture to the crowd, so that when the prince, followed to the gate by felici tating friends, took Persimmon by the bridle, not attempting to conceal his pride of triumph, a cheer that might have reached London swelled out from half a million throats. And It was genuine. I Imagine that even the heaviest losers on the result were gladly sympathetic with the prince in his good fortune in the achievement of the highest of England's sporting honors; aud as for the public at lurge well. If the radicals have any doubt that the people of Great Britain are wedded In love and fidelity to royalty let them say why there was such a convulsion of happiness because the Derby stakes were1' gathered In by the Prince of Wales. No one was more radiant than our li lend Wlllard, who had stubbornly re fused to yield assent to the prevailing opinion that St. Frusquln was preor dained the victor. He backed his con fldence in Persimmon liberally with the bookmakers, nor did he hesitate to double his bets after the horses had come onto the course for the parade and It was learned that the royal colt was too nervous - and fractious to be led down In that way without endangering his chance of success. BEFORE THE START. You know that the starters In the Derby on being brought from the stab les are led at a walk past the grand stand, etc.and are then ridden by at a gallop before they are taken to the starting point at the further end of the horsephoe, about half a mile across the downs from the. Judge's stand. The course is an uphill run at first and down hill afterward toward the home stretch. Many a race Is practically lost at the famous "corner" where the slop ing turn Is made, and It Is always aclean race down that great, broad avenue of close worn turf In the full view of the spectators. It Is the finest running course In the world, and when there Is a full field, thirty or forty starters, the tight of the horses, aeetninf to move with the smoothness of a machine, and their vividly garbed riders. Is some thing to thrill the most phlegmatic tem perament. There was no pretense at stolidity on the part of the Americans present, and their name was legion. They uttered their delight with more than English fervor when Persimmon made that sud den lunge ahead, thrusting his nose aud then his neck in thAlead of the splendid ly laboring St. Frusquln, as they shot toward and passed the post. The roy alty has Its penalties, and more than once in the afternoon I heard the du bious phrase: "Do you suppose it was arranged to let the prince win?" So the great? achievement of the gullunt and spirited colt has this smudge of skepticism to dim its luster, although there Is Just about as much chance to "tlx" the Derby as thore Is to dig gold out of a limekiln. The Prince of Wales could not afford, were he disposed, to take a race other than by sheer merit. All England re joiced over his victory; all England would have blushed for and execrated any "contrivance;" and It Is very well known to princes and potentates, r.s well as to meaner oreutui'O, that "Jobs," like murder, will out. soon or lute. CANDIDATES IN DEFEAT. Ilisturic Imliiiict's Shcwiiiic Ho A' t't-nl Their Chagrin ut mi 111 Tutu oi Fortune. From the Times-Herald. Thute are few men who can bear de feat with equanimity, pniticulaily when the- lost piize is the greatest to which mull may aspire. Consequently, when Mr. Keed expressed himself mole for cibly than politely at 1.1s recent defeat, with sjine lenmiks us to tho manage ment of tho canvass by his friends, the temporary ebullition of iage was ex cusuble. He Is not the lirst defeated a-"-piiant lor a nomination who has shown temper over his loss, ur.d there me num erous traditions and anecdotes still ple at! ved fhowlnif how r .me of them ucttd. Henry Clay was u candidate for tl..- presidency in ai d ug-iin i.i lSJ, ne ither tif which times hud he the least cliuuce uf election. Cut in KiO the cur. rent hud ctanstd and it was evident that the v.'hls weie bound to Lis suc cessful. Clay os the leader of his party was entitled to the nomination, and there Is no doubt that the rank und file of the party eagerly wished him for their candidate. But the politicians, Thiirlcvv Weed part'cu.Uily, weie op l.jsod to him. and looking around for an "available" candidate they pitched upon General William Henry Harrison. The whlir convention met at Hairls burg in December. 1WJ, to nominate candidates, and the names of Clay, Harrison, and General Scott were pre sented. It Is the universal testimony that a liiujority of the conventions were rt-ully In favor of Clay, but owing to tho extiaordinaiy method of making the- Humiliation-un Invention of Thur low Weed Clay was defeated and Har rison nominated. Mr. Clay was in Washington when he received the news, and Henry A. Wise has related his outburst of passion and the sturm of curses and imprecations that he called down upon everybody connected with the whole affair. Ris ing from his chair and walking the room rapidly, lifting his feet like a horse string halted In both legs, he stamped ut'on the lioor, exclaiming: "My Mend are not worth the powder and shot it would take to kill them." He men tioned the names of several of them, in voking upon them the most dreadful imprecations, and then cried out: "If there were two Henry Clays one of them would make the other president of the United States." "When remonstrated with for his un seemly passion he said: "It Is a dia bolical intrigue, I now know, which has betrayed me. I am the most unfortu nate man In the history of parties; al ways run by my friends when sure to be defeated, and now betrayed for a nomination when I, or anyone, would be sure of an election. Clay sulked for a time, but soon re lented and gave unwavering support to General Harrison. His superb oratory carried everything before It In the long and hilarious campaign of 1810. THE CASE OF WEBSTER. . Daniel Webster was a standing candi date for a presidential nomination from IS 30 until IS52. In 183 he was nominated by his own state, Massachusetts, and received its electoral Vote, but no other. In 1S4 Harrison carried off the honors and in 1844 Henry Clay, but in 1S48 there was a chance for Webster, but again Thurlow Weed used his "fine Italian hand," and under the old plea of uvaii ability secured the nomination of Gen eral Taylor. ' This angered Webster, and he did not hesitate in expressing himself. "A JOSEPH i rem t'j Chicago 7im Herald. nomination not fit to be made," he said In a public speech. But he was Anally brought Into tine and made a number of speeches In behalf of the whig ticket, But it was in 1S52 that he exhibited his keenest disappointment, and gave expression to his feelings. It will be remembered that his famous 7th of March Bpeech in advocacy of the compromise measures of 1S50 had es tranged the northern whlgs, and It was charged that his speech was a bid for southel n support. When the whig convention met at Philadelphia in 1852 the candidates were Fillmore. Scott and Webster, and not a single vote from the south was cast tor Webster. He received the lowest vote of ail the candidates and Scott was finally nominated. It was the severest blow Webster ever received In his long public career. Wheti the Mississippi dcvejatU u called upon him In Washington, on their way home, he told them he was surprised at not receiving a single southern vote "not one" In the numerous ballotings, and repretted they had deemed It nec essary to treat him in sush a manner. Of course, he must submit, but It was impossible lor him to hide his disap pointment'. In fact, the blow hastened his death und he died the following October, sev eral weeks before the el.'ctlon Prior to hu death he said to Mr. Hatvey that GeniTui Scot, would not cairy six states. That the people knew he wcilld be a mere puppet In the hunds of the New York whig regency controlled by Weed und Sewaid, and he added. 'The people of the It.d Statss will never Intrust their destinies und the admin istration of the government to the hands cf William H. Seward and his associates. Mr. Seward Is an able man. but Subtle ai.d unscrupulous, and will make everything bend to the one Idea i f making himself president of the Vnlled States." The words were prophet!?. Scott only rallied four states, and eight years later, when Seward thoucht he had the nomination within hl3 grasp, it was snatched fiom him at the moment of his anticli'uted victory . .2 WARD'S CHAP.GIN. How Seward took his defeat at Chi cago In lstio does not appear except as It may be Inferred from "Wetd's Mem oirs." Seward had too much control ever his feelings to give general ex pression to them, but doubtless his in tlmute f: lends at Auburn witnessed his dejection. .But Weed makes no con cealment. That hardened politician who had placed the bitter cup at the lips of both Clay and . Webster was now obliged to swallow the draught himself, and he plainly relates that he did hot like It. For the consummate orator and statesman to be passed over by the ungainly and unknown Lincoln was too much to endure. Both Seward and Weed found out by and by who Lincoln was. discovering at the same time that he was no puppet for them to manage. Impulsive and outspoken as Blaine was by nature, he gave no outward sign of disappointment over his defeats In the convention of 1876 and 1890. He could console himself In those instances with the fact that his rivals were also defeated, and that "dark horses" car ried off the prize. In his recent memoirs John Sherman makes no concealment of his chargln at his defeats In 1S80 and 1888. particularly In the former year, where he places the responsibility upon General Garfield. THE ABILITY' TO BUY. If free wool will secure cheaper cloth ing to the people by the same process of reusonlng, cloth duty free and untaxed ready made clothing, will diminish the price still further, and give to the co.i sumer the very consummation of low puictis and cheap wearing apparel. If every consideration but the mere cheap ness of the fabric be discarded then no reason can be found why with free wool, there should not come free cloth and free clothing. Things, however, are some times the dearest, when nominally they are the cheapest. The selling price of an article Is not the only measure: the ability to buy, the coin with which to purchase, Is an important and essentlul element, and must. not be dismissed from our consideration. If a man Is without means and without employment, and there Is none of the latter to be had, ev erything Is dear to him. The price Is ot the smallest consequence, however cheap, if it Is beyond his reach. Hon. William McKlnley. Sic Trans t Gloria Muudi. Lay away the bright brass buttons That our Paddy used to wear; In a tight down on Canal street Paddy climbed the golden stair. Lay away the great big billy; Lay away the awful pop; Paddy has a pair of wtnglets; Paddy now is a fly cop. D. M., in Chicago To Date. HEDILL. By tb Courtesy cf H. II. Kuhlsatl BOTH CHIPS FROM THE SAME BLOCK Insanity and Genius Are Really Very Closely Allltd DR. M'DONALD'S PSYCHIC STUDIES The Genius Has Urgiunlily and Crit ical Power.-Tuc Insane Temper ament Hat Orginnlity, bat Lack Critical Pover-Some of tho Ureal .Men of the Past Who Have Had Periods of Inunuity. From tha S-n. Dr. Arthur MacDonald, ot Washing ton, the Bureau of Education expeit in criminology and sociology, hui de voted hl3 life to the study cf fsychlc men. In his eyes a gie.it per.lus and a great ci lmlr.al are both ubnoimal in the sense of diverging n ush frjni the aver age man. Genius is taken in in? ram? category with titnai.it ix -.i crime. All aesthetical Ideas are entirely removed, and in an investigation of insarl.y and geniu.1 which Dr. MiuDoi.a d lid) mau. he has taken uway all those ethical Ideas that wo have besu accustomed tJ iassociate With lhej t.Mms. Th? ituuy was prepared for a work of the Euieau of Education ly Dr. MacDonald on the abnormal mar. Some icu. a:keb!y In'.frestlng facts In reyard to the sreat geniuses of the world are brought to light in this woik. In some cases the Insanity wa so very near the renins that there ,-vas or.ly a slight line of Oemarkatlon. The mani festations of san tv in some ressecti cannot be distinguished frcm thoss of Insanity. The fluctuating line between ranlty and Insanity, as freciifent'y seen In public and private life, may o;cll:ate, It seems, between the extremes of gen ius and mental disease. Such men are cure to show peculiarities In thought, feeling and action. The great mass of people dub them strange or foolish, because the great majority of men feel or act otherwise. They may become so eccentric as to b? said to have a strain of m-diris In them. They have a defective cir.d tlon of morality a tendency to sudden cap rices, to act Indepently of society, and a personal gratification that seems to others a sign of great vanity. Many of them, however, aie endowed with toa sensitive a nervous system, and while this may be a part of a person's genius, it is not of the highest order, for It lacks the power of the critical sense and the vast Intelligence of the genius which permits him to correct his void imaginations. The Insane temperament shows originality, but lacks the critical spirit. The ordinary normal mind has some critical spirit, but lacks oiiglnal tty; the genius possesses both origin ality and critical power. NOTABLE EXAMPLES. Dr. MacDonald speaks of a number ot examples of insane temperaments ranging from inspired idiots to Inspired geniuses. He says that DeQuincy. Cow per. Turner, Shelley, Tasso, Lamb and Goldsmith may be reckoned as having had In some degree the insane temper ament. The discrimination between the very highest flights of genius from In sanity Is a difficult and at times an Impossible undertaking, for they may exist in one and the same person. Tasso, Burns, Swift. Mozart, Haydn. Walter Scott, Blake and Poe all exhibited strong signs of Insanity toward the close of their lives, If not during their lives. On the basis of biographical facts It Is discovered that among dis tinguished men one finds the largest number of insane, and that the children of geniuses are inferior even to those of average men, owing to convulsions and cerebral diseases In Infancy. As Dr. MacDonald puts It, "Genius is al ways Isolated; it is a summum of na ture's energy, after which her procrea tlve forces are exhausted." Some of the geniuses the iworld has known have had some Interesting ideas on this same question. Aristotle said that under the Influence of congestion of the head persons became poets, prophets and sybils; Democritus made Insanity an essential condition of poetry. Cato said before committing suicide: "Since when have I shown signs of insanity?" Cicero calls It the furor posticus; Horace calls It the am abllls Insanla; Lamartlne called genius a mental disease; Schopenhuuer con fessed that when he composed his great work he carried himself strangely and was considered by the people about him to be Insane. Dr. McDonald says that It has been a most difficult mat ter to obtain tacts of an abnormal or pathological nature, or other unfavor able data, for the reason that authors In recording the lives of geniuses have not only concealed such data, but have not considered thern of sufficient im portance to record. These Interesting facts, however, he has gleaned from every possible source. HAD HALLUCINATIONS. Socrates had hallucinations from his familiar genius or demon. Pausanlas, the Lacedaemonian, after killing a young slave, was tormented until his death by a spirit, which pursued him In all places and which resemlled his v c tlm. Lucretius A as attacked with In termittent mania. Bayle says this mania left him lucid intervals, during which he cmposed six books, "De rrum tiutuia." He was 44 years of ag3 when he put an end to his life. Charles V. had epileptic attxeks during his ycuth; he stammered. He r.tr.atcd to a mon astery, wh' r he h d theslnguljr phan tasy cf celebrating his c wn fun-1: al r t33 ' In his own presence. His n.o'.her (Jane of Castle) was Insune and deforced. HU giand.'atner (Ferd'nar.d ot Arag-.n) died ct ti e age cf 62 In a state cf pro found melar.cholti. Peter th; Great, durinpr his Ir.fancy. wa? subject to ner vous nttaci-3, which deflrentiatod to j epilepsy. Cn or his ar-r.s had ra lucin- atlens; onotfcjr cor.vuk'.ons. Caesar i was tpiler.t c. of feeble constitution, vith pallid skin, and subjec: to h:aU- i aches. Llnr?, a piecocl us genius, hsd. a cranium hydrocephalic in tirm, He suffered from a strike of f ara'ysls. At the fnd cf one attack he had f .rgcf.en Ms rame, He died In a ttate tf senile dementia. Harhael eupe- line;, temp tations to sulci J. He hlmre'f says, in deBctlbinii h: u!t mi t?d ruM.lt: "I tld the fisherman's cords which t found In the host eight times uround her body and mine tightly as In a wind ing sheet. ra?d her In my arms. Which I h1 kept fres In order to prec p liate her with me Into the waves. At the iron ent I was to le?p, ti be wallowed forever with her. I felt hnr head turn upon my shoulder lika a d?ad weight and the body gink d-.vn upon my knees." Pascal, from birth tl'l death, ruffered from nervous troubles, At ons year of age he fell Into a languor, during which he oould not see water without mani festing rt outbursts of passion; and, till more peculiar, he cwulij pot bear to see his father and mother near one another. Walter Beott. during his In fancy, had precarious health, and be fore the age of two was paralyzed In his right leg. He had a stroke or apo plexy. He had this vision on hearing ot the death ot Byron: Coming Into the dining room he. aaw before him the Image of his dead friend; on advanc ing toward It he recognized that the vision was due to drapery extended over the screen. Voltaire, like Cicero,- De mosthenes, Newton and Walter Scott, .vuh born under the saddest and most alarming conditions of hen'.th. His feebleness was such that he could not be taken to church to be christened. During his first years he manifested an extraordinary mind. In his old age he was like a bent shadow. He had un attack of apoplexy at the age of S3. His cutopsy showed a slight thickness of the bony walls of the cranium. Michael Angelo. while painting "The Last Judgment," fell from his eaffoId and received a painful Injury In the leg. He shut himself up and would not see any one. The elder brother of Richelieu, the Cardinal, was a singular man; he committed suicide because of a rsbuke from his parents. The sister of Richelieu was insane. Richelieu him self had attacks of Insanity: he would fisuw himself as a horse, but afte:r.vard would have no recollection of It. DREAMS AND VISION3. De3caites, after a lorg retirement, was followed by an luvls.bie peison who urged him to pursue his investigations after the truth. Goethe was sure of having perceived the Image of himself coming to meet him. Goethe's mother died of an apoplectic attack. Cromwell when at school had an hallucination In his room; suddenly the curtains opened and a woman of gigantic stature ap peared to him, announcing his future greatness. In the days of his power he liked to recount this vision. Cromwell had violent attacks of melancholic hu mor; he spoke of his hypochondria. Hli entire moral life .was moulded bv a sickly and neuiopathical constitution, which he had at birth. Rousseau was a type of the melancholic temperament, assuming sometimes the symptoms ot a veritable pathetic Insanity. Joan of Arc was a genuis by her In trepid will; she had faith In her visions; her faith rested upon the immovable foundation of r.unr.eious hallucinations having the force of moial and Intellect ual Impulsion, making her superior to those around her. Dr. MacDonald thinks that science can pronounce to her Inspirations, but Its judgment does not diminish In the least the merit ot her heroism. Mohammed was epileptic. He persistently claimed to bs a messen ger from God, receiving his first revela tion at the age of 42. Henry Heine died of a chronic disease of the spinal col umn. Lotze was often melancholic, Mollere suffered from convulsions; de lay or derangement would throw him Into convulsion. Mozait's musical tal ent was revealed at 3 years of age; be tween 4 and 6 he composed pieces with expertness. Mozart died at 38 ot cere bral hydropsy. He had a preaimtlmtnt of his approaching end. He was subject to fainting tits before and during the composition of his famous "Requiem." Chopin ordered by will that he be burled In a gala costume, white cravat, small Bhoes and short trousers. He abandoned his wife, whom he loved, be cause she offered another person a seat before she offered It to him. Mme. d? Stael died in a state of delirium, which had lasted several days; according to some authors, seveial months. The au topsy showed a large quantity of cere bral matter and a very thin cranium. Moreau of Toui s says she had a ner vous habit of rolling continually be tween her fingers small strips of pap&r. an ample provision of which was kept on her mantleplece. She used oplu'n immoderately. She had a singula" Idea during her whole life; she was afraid of being cold in the tomb; she desired that she be enveloped In fur before burial. HALF CRAZY WRITERS. The English men cf leiers who have become insane, or have haUMclnations and peculiarities sympotornatlc of In sanity, are Swift, Johnson, Cowper Southey, Shelley, Bryon. Goldsmith! Lamb and Pone. Swift was also cruel In conduct, but he was hardly respon sible, as his Insanity was congentlal. His parentlal uncle lost speech and memoy and died Insane. Swift was somewhat erratic and wild as a un iversity student. Shelley when young was strange and fond of musing alone, and was called "Mad Shelley." He suffered from somnambulism and dreams, and was excitable and Impe tuous. These symptoms tnceased with age; at twenty he constantly took laudanum for his nervous condition; he had hallucinations: he saw a child rise from the sea and clap its hands, a vis Ion which was difficult to reason away. Charles Lamb was confined In an In sane asylum. Johnson was hypochon diacal and apprehended Insanity, fan cying himself seized with It; he had convulsions, cramps, and a paralytic seizure depriving him of speech; he had hallucinations of hearing, Carlyle con sidered Southey the most excitable man cf his acquaintance. Southy's mind failed and he became an Imbecile and died; a year before his death he was In a dreamy state, little conscious of his surroundings. Southey wrote verses before he was 8 years of age. His maternal unsle was an Idiot and died of apoplexy. The mother oi South ey had paialysis. Cowper was attacked with a melancholia at 20. which oej. tinued a year; at another tlm.4 It re turned with greater force. Keats was an extremely emotional child, passing from laug"', to tearg. he was extremely n.S9;)nate. using laudanum to caU-, hmsef: sometimes he fell Into J8r,0ndency. He prophe sied tru' oiat he would never have any res until he reached the grave. Coler luge was a nreccclous child, self-absorbed, weakly, and mcrbld In Imag ination; this morbidity was the cause of his running away from home when a child and from college when a student: he enlisted as a scldler and again went to Malta for no reason, permitting his family to d'rvr.d upen charity. Alex ander the C:eat had a neurosl3 of the muscles of tho neck, attacking him from birth and causlnr? his heed to Incline constantly urorf his shoulders. He died at the age cf 32. having all the cymptcms cf r.cut delirium tremens. His brcthor Arrchids was an idiot. Do Balzac fHrncre) died of hypertro phy cf th: hezrt. a disease that can predispose one to cerebral congestion. The eccentricity cf his Ideas are well known. Lamartlne says he had pecu liar nottons about everything: was in contradiction with the common sense of "this lower world." His father was 33 peculiar. Lord Chatham did not do things as others. He was mysterious and violent, indolent and active. Im perious and charming. Pope was rick ety. Lord Byron was scrofulous and rachitic and club-foot?d. Sometimes he imagined that he was visited by a ghost. Thl he attributed to the river excitability of his brain. H? was born It) convulsions. Lord Dudley had the conviction that Byron was Insane. The Duke of Wellington died of an apop lectic attack. Napoleon I. had a bent back, an Involuntary movement of the right shoulder, and at the tame time another movement of the mouth from left to right. When In anger, according to his own expression, he looked like a hurricane. WHITHER DO WE DKIFTt The Bicycle Mmy I'pset All Oar Old . Kocial Castoas. At a recent widely-advertised anil fashionable affair, for "sweet charity's ake," for which society waa pleased to stand sponsor, and attended, sold flowers, poured tea and mad itself use ful for once, there appeared over th door the sign: "Bicycles checked." Dear me! This sets one to thinking, says a writer in the New York Even ing Telegram. Where are we drifting? What will be the function ot the future T Will we be forced. In time, to witness Gussle Knickerbocker leading a cotillon at Sherry's on opening an assembly ball with Miss Murray-Hill in bicycle cos tumes? Instead of leaning gracefully at tha door of her trap, "saying goodnight again soft and low," while she nestle back in her sortie de bal, will be assist her to her wheel? Instead of her chaperon ending hi pretty adieus by the magic word "home" to the footman, will hi speech es be cut short by a sharp clang of th bell, leaving him standing with uncov ered head as he watches her falry-lik form disappear between th row of lamposts? Will there be morning, afternoon ant evening cycling costumes? Will it be bad form to be seen on th drive tn the afternoon with tan shoes, or In the morning with a Sail bicycle hat? Dear me! These are question t puzzle over, and only the twentieth century girl can answer them. JtT TO ALL. If the policy of Protection Is not to be just In its application, and national In it scope, baaed upon broad principle, then the sooner it is relinquished the better. It cannot be sustained, and ought not to be, for one class or Interest or section, and denied to others equally within th contemplation of Its purpose. Th raw materials class have right which cannot be ignored. Those who think otherwise, forget that the advanced product is only the manipulation ot the less advanced, and the less advanced of th still is finished product, 'with 'human, labor a the chief factor In ell: and PnWntloa, upon the one cannot be successfully aad peirnaneotly maintained without Pro tection of the other. Hon. William Mc- Klnley. Ravages of Time. Clara Sadie has been 111 for ft month. Maude Does she show It? Clara I should say so. You ought t see the color of her hair. Los Angeito tCal.) World. Fair Play. A thrje-cent fare. If one ha to stand, Is good, no matter whose pockets if hurts; But we now declare for a ten-cent far For the woman who sits and spreads her skirts'. Chicago Record. IS WCioDesoma When shortened with in Mil Th rottntan trade narks ue "OHoKm" sod ttnr't htad In cotton-ptanl maU am avary Ua. . THE N. K. PAIRBANK OOMPANV, Cblcage, tors. PklllBU. PlUsksi. WILLIAM S- MILLAR, Alderman 8tb Ward, Scranton ROOMS 4 AND 8 OA! AND WATER CO. BtfLDIMO, CORNER WYOMING ATE. AND CENTER SI OFFICE HOURS from 7.39 a. m. to I a, m. (1 hour Intermission for dinner and upper.) Particular Attention divan t CollectlMe. Vreapt settlement Ouaranteto. Year Bast. a U Respectfully tallclted. Tstepfe j. DN THE LINE OF THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RK ar located the finest Ashing and hunting grounds In th world. Descriptive book on application., Tickets to all points In Maine. Canada and Maritime Province. Minneapolis St. Paul, Canadian and United States Northwest, Vanvouver, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Ore., Ban Francisco. First-Class Sleeping and Dining Cars attached to all throught trains. Tourist ears fully fitted with bedding, curtain and specially adapted to wants of families may be had with second-class tlekats. Rates always less than via other lines. For further Information, time tables, to on application to E. V. SKINNER, Q. E. A.. 333 Broadway, New York. REVIVG RESTORES VITALITY. Made a 1st Oar Well Man loth Day. TKE OPEAT produce! the nbore results ln'30 days. It sell power! till? and quicklr. Curt when all others tail. Vouch mm will rtfOa their lost manhood, aad old meu will recover thtir youthful visor or nslat RET1VO. It quicklr and surely Mtorea Harrou D9M, Lout Vitality. Impoteticy. NLfbtly Emlanear, Loat Power, Failint Memory, WMtlna DtaeesM. sad II effecte of eell-abUM or exceaaaod indiscretion, tttiirb unfit one tor Mod, binlnen or marrisce. It sot only cure by Martina at the nil of d.ese. but la a great Berre tonle and tiloo builder, bring. in back the pink glow to pale cheeks and le ttering tlie ore of yemtb. It ward off fneaiuty nd Conttimptioa. Ineltt os baying RKT1VO,bo other. It cau be carried to veil pocket. Br mall, 1 .0 per package, or tU for S.OO, with pool '.Wu wrlttea garanee to ear or reread he moewy. Circular tree. Addreea :.lrafiue;n CHICMO. 1r Fee tale by (r)A1THEWS BROS., Orafgitt sraatea. Fa. Li 7 13 ill tesW SmI. fi JJp4 rff?-wvft liW. of Me. aoth bay.