THE SCKAXTON TBIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 19, 189G., 11 SIR LEWIS MORRIS A'l FARDDONIAETH They Suggest the Perfect Art of tbe the Great Teotuson. EXQUISITELY.W'ROUQHT HARMONIES They Come Over tho Spirit with tho Freshness of a Spring Morning When the Daises Star tho Sod aud all tho Birds are Awukc--Xotes of of Great Interest. We lire pent. Who sing today, by all the garnered wealth Of ages of pnst song. We have no more The world to choose from, who, where'er we turn, TrAJ through old thoughts and fair. Tot mtiFt we sins We have no choice; and If more hard to toll In noon, when all Is clear, than In the fresh Wh.te mists of eurly morn, yet do we And Achievements its own guerdon. Lewis Morris. The -difficulties of a modern poet are well expressed In these linea from his pen whom In this sketch we seek to honor. In a sense the poet of our day mny be forgiven the Impression that It Is a vain thing to attempt anything new in the world of song. There ore times when the mind Is oppressed with a painful consciousness of the limits within which thought is bound. 'When It seems as If thinking and even Im agination were doomed eternally to move In a circle. Wheh with some thing of the bitterness of Solomon, the heart, wearied of the dull, erey aspect of everything around, 1ms cried out: "There Is nothing new under the sun." In such a mood the poet feels as though the harvest had been reHped by other sickles and he were only doomed to be a gleaner picking up a few scanty ears. Hut this is a mood which tho poc-t should resist with all his power, for the world Is as young today ns ever, and Is rich In suggestlveness if we have but souls to respond. Tho dews sparkle as freshly on the budding quicks as they did in Kden. The lark's soprano, the thrush's warble, and "blackbird's boxwood flute" Bound as sweet today as they did when Shakes peare heard them. Age has not sullied tho stars or dimmed the pensive mooil. The tales and sighs of happy lovers have not ceased, and the myrteries cf life and death still front u for solu tion. Homer and Shakespeare and Wordsworth had said everything. Hut this Is not so. Far truer is the mood of Mr. Morris In another place, He sings: For whllo a youth Is lost la soaring thought, And whllo a maid grows sweet and beau tiful, And whllo a springtide coming- lights the earth, AnJ while a child, and whllo a flower Is born. And while one wrong cries for redress and Hilda A soul to answer, still the world Is young. Yes. tho world Is silll young1 and It unveils Its Inner loveliness to tho mind illumined with that "light -which wns never on tho sea or shore, tho consecra tion and the poet's dream." It is with out question that such a light has been shed upon It by Sir Lewis Morris, and for thU reason we are glad to call the attention of our readers to one of the purest and most gifted of living poets. PARENTAGE AND CAREER, Wales Is a land of beauty, nnd we are not, therefore, surprised that it is a land of song. He who wanders on the banks of the "Wizard De-e," stands amid the spray of the Swallow Fall3, or looks up to the glittering precipices of Cader Idrls, cannot wonder that stall visions have stirred men Into song; and Sir Lewis Morris Is a Welshman. He was born at Carmarthen In Jan vary, 1833, and la the grandson of the well-known Welsh antiquary and poet, Lewis Morris, of Penbryn, Cardigan shire. He thus owes Fortieth Ing to the important law of heredity bo powerfully . ntoeutuatcd by modern science. His father was the inte L. E. Williams Morris, of Carmarthen, ami his mother was the daughter of the late John Hughes of that ancient borough. The subject of our sketch received ills early education at Oowbridge and Sherborne school, after which he went to Jesus College, Oxford. He-re he frail tinted ns first class in classics and Chancellor's Prizeman, and took In 1S55 his M. A. degree. In 18GI he was called to the I!ar at Lincoln Inn, where lie prac ticed chlelly as a conveyancing- counsel until 1S80. Meanwhile he had been elected an Honorary Fellow of Jesus College and a Knight of the Order of the Savior (Greece.) In 1880 he wns appointed on the Department Commit tee, charged by the government to In quire Into the subject of Higher Edu cation In Wale, and In the same year was made a Justice of tho peace of Car marthenshire In which county he now resides at Penbryn House.In 1S86 ho was Gladstonlan candidate for Tembroke and Haverfordwest, He speedily, how ever, retired from the strife of politics to fulfil his higher destiny as a poet. "SONGS OF TWO WOKLDS." It whs In the year 1872 tliut our au thor first ventured to publish, when ho issued a modest volume w ith the above title. The authorship of the volume was veiled under the nom de plume of "A New Writer." Of this volume the Spectator wrote: "If this Is the mere prelude of a mind growing In power, we have in him the promise of a fine poet." Other critical judgments were equally favorable, and two years after a second series appeared, which was received with still more hearty ap proval Blackwood's Magazine declar ing that "the v"es are full of melo dious charm oi , sing themselves al most without mx '.c." In 1875 appeared a third series, w..lch elicited from the Times the declaration that the author had nojla definite position among con temporary poets. These volumes have since been collected Into one, which has passed through nearly twenty editions, and Is published by Osgood, Mcllvaine & Co. ' We are not surprised at the world's favorable Judgment of these verses, since In their felicitous phrasing, their exquisitely-wrought harmonies, and their purity and delicacy of feeling, they suggest the perfect art of Tennyson, and come over the spirit with the freshness of a spring morning when daisies star the sod and all the birds are awake. In proof of this assertion take the following lines from the poem entitled v ODE ON A FAIR SPRING MORNING. Come, friend, let us forget The turmoil of the world a little while, For now the soft skies smile. The fields with flowers are set. Let us away awhile With fierce unrest and carkinf thoughts of care. And breathe a little while the jocund air, Aa4 stag the Jeyous neaeurea suns; By those free singers, when the world was young. t For still the world is youug, for still the spring Rcuews Itself, and still the lengthening hours Bring back the month of flowers. SONGS OF THE CITY. But the songs of this volume are the songs of two worlds. Hence not only of the world of Nature ddes our poet sing, but also of the world of Man, who Is greater than Nat'tre, as the tenant Is greater than the bouse In which he dwells. It is Impossible to study his verse without discerning his deep sym pathy with humanity, alike In Us more piteous aspects as they confront us In our great cities, or In the anxious ques tioning which burdens the mind of the thinker in his outlook on the myster ies of life. The spectacle of human misery and human fall la ever trtth him. "The still sad music ofs humanity" haunts him with Its pathetic and sorrowful refrain. Soiled human doves as they flit by him bring pain upon their wings. Weedo of the city on which God's tender dews scarce seem to fall sudden his steps. Lives which from their poisoned fountains flow polluted to the sea oppress him with their hope lessness. Indeed, we are Inclined to think 'that it is in this deep moral sym pathy, this feeling of brotherhood, this tender outlook on the Buffering world, that his truest claim to greatness rests. In his poem entitled "St. Christo pher' he tells us. behind the veil of his hero, how he "moved amid the miry ways of this sad world" for ever bur dened with The great pnln Which everywhere cries heavenward ev cry day With unregarded sufferage; the foul wrongs Which are done on earth for ever; the dink sins Sinned nnd yet unrequited: the great sum And mystery of Evil, worked on him Not to allure, not to repel, but only With that strange spell of power whist) knows to tuke Tho strong soul captlvo. In anothr r poem of great beauty called "The Food for Song" he asks to what subject he shall strike his lyre. Shall he Ring of Nature with her blue dome flocked wi'ih pearly cloudlets? Shnll he sing of knightly tournaments and the awful Joys of battle? Shall he attune his voice to the low thunder of Thought's unfathomed sea? Nay ltather amid the throng of tolling men Ho finds the food and sustenance of sons, Spread by hidden hands, again, and yet nfcain. Where'er he goes, by crowded city street. He fares thro' springing fancies sad and sweet Some Innocent baby smile; A close-wound waist; Fathers and children; things of shame and guile; Dim eyes, and lips at parting kissed In haste; The halt, the blind, the prosperous thing of HI The thief, the wanton, touch and vex him still. "EPIC OF HADES." It was In the year 1S76 that Sir Lewis Morris published the first Instalment f the poem which constitutes his truest title to enduring fame. In the classic legends of Greece he found a sphere specially suited for the exercise of that exquisitet delicacy of touch, and that pictorial grace which had already re vealed Itself in his best work. In the "Epic of Hades" he has made those "fair nnd gracious fantasies" of Greek mythology tho theme of his verso. Marsyaa and Andromeda. Helen and Eurydlc, Adonis nnd Medusa, Psyche and Eudymlon, with others In their train, come forth to enchant us with the strange witchery which for two thousnnd years has led captive the hearts of men. The poet represents himself as Hades In a dream; and passing from place to place in that realm of shudes, ho sees the forms of those whose names are enshrined In the mythology of ancient Greece, and from their lips he hears their story. That is a fine touch in which he pic tures the souls in Hades as "dim and pale as the young faith which made them." Ills dream is all the way through half mixed with waking thoughts, and, as a consequence of this, lessons are drawn from these fantasies of the ancient time full of suggestive ness for the modern day, and of thoughtful application to the common experience of life. The poet scorns the thought that these stories of the dim past have no present significance. On the contrary, ho holds that Greek mythology abounds with truths which am unfading and eternal, and which will ever find an echo In the deep heart of man. How should any hold Those precious scriptures only old-world tales Of strange Impossible torments and false gods; Of men and monsters In some brainless dream, Cohorent, yet unmeaning, linked together By some false skein of song? Nay! evermore. All things and thoughts, both new and old, are writ Upon the unchanging human heart and soul. The wenry woman Punk deep In easo and sated with her life. Much loved nnd yet unloving, pines today As Helen; still the poet strives nnd sings, And hears Apollo's music and grows dumb. And suffers, yet Is happy; still the young Fond dreamer seeks bis high ideal love, And finds her name is Death; still doth the fair And Innocent life, bound naked to the rock. Redeem the race; still the gay tempter goes And leaves his victim, stone; still doth pain bind Men's souls In closer links of lovlngness. Than Death Itself can sever; still the sight Of too great beauty blinds us, and we lose lhe sense of earthly splendours, gaining Heaven. It Is after this fnshlon that these an cient fables are spiritualized, while from the first line to the last a high and delicate purity dominates each conception. Our author's treatment of these fascinating themes Is a remark able Illustration of the law that we see what we are framed to see, and what we take with us the wish to see; and, while some writers have sensuallaed these legends, he has spiritualized them. The Beatrice of Dante did not move through the regions of departed spir its more purely than he docs or survey the loves and sorrows of those dim shades with a more tender sympathy. This Is another note of excellency In Sir Lewis Morris. He does not tamper with the moral law, or trifle with moral distinctions. These things are not with him mere matters of opinion, to be shaped by him In caprice, but eternal and unalterable realities receiving their solemn functions from the eternal mind. As Sophocles expressed It at an earlier time, "there Is a God within them who groweth not old." It was a fortunate circumstance for Sir Lewis Morris that the "Epic of Hades" fell Into the hands of John Bright, the people's tribune, and that he referred to It In one of his speeches as "another gem added to the wealth of poetry in our language," It would be a happy thing for us as a nation If our public men would more frequently al lude to such examples of pure and .en nobling literature as Impress them In the course of their reading. Many a beautiful and helpful poem which might have stood In lriteilectual heavens as a moon, full-orbed, to silver the sterner aspects of human feeling, has rolltfd up slowly Into vision, or even waned and died without adequate recognition, because attention has never been called to its merits by those who commanded the public enr. Amid to much of ex ceeding loveliness, clear In outline, chaste in color, and suffused by the glow of, a rich and vivid Imagination wisely curbed by the fine restraint of an ulmost perfect art, It is difficult to furnish extracts which will convey a just Idea of the writer's power. NOTES. The Pont-y-Prldd Temperance choir are likely to compete at the Cardiff exhibition eisteddfod. . The magnificent banner presented to tho Gorsedd by Sir Arthur Stepney, formerly member for the Carmarthen buroughs. Is now on view at tbe Athenaeum, Llanelly. Few towns in Wales, barring Cardiff, have made such rapid strides onward as l'ont-y-Prlrld during the last twenty years. As a proof of this It need only be men tioned that while the population In 1875 was only 7.M0, it Is today 3ti,0U0. Mr. Christopher Bishop, who had charge of tho train which conveyed Li Hung Chang from Euston northward on Wednesday Is the son of Mr. Joseph Bish op, of Abergavenny, tho well-known dis trict passenger intent of the London and Northwestern railroad. Hbbw Vale boasts possession of the laritest east steel wheel ever made. It is twelve feet six and three-eighths Inches In diameter, nine Inches pitch, thirty-two Inches wide, and weights eighteen and one-half tons, and hns just been made for the Kbbw Vnlo Iron nnd Steel company by Messrs. Thomas Frith nnd sons (Llin. lted) of Norfolk works, Sheffield. Dr. IX B. Thomas, of Toronto, Canada, whoso recent visit to Wales was made ro much of by his numerous Baptist friends, hns one of the Inrgest and wealthiest churches In the Dominion of Canada. His chief characteristics ns a preacher are a free nnd lluent style and a strong Welsh accent. The Llanelly Guardian rcforrlng to tho fact that Sister Gwendoline, who nursed Sir .Iphn MHInls In his fatal Illness, Is the daughter of Mr. Joshua Griffiths, a native of Llanelly, states that Sister Victoria, who, It will be remembered, acted as nurse to the lute Duke of Clarence Is also closely associated with Llanelly. It is a happy coincidence that the Rev. T. K. Edwards, Cwniafon, wns elected moderator for tho year of the South Wales and Monmouthshire Cnlvlnlstlc Methodist association. At the quarterly meeting at Pemiet church, Ebbw Yale tha place at which be hold his first pas toratehe received double the number of votes recorded for the two gentlemen who were also In the running. A Llanelly contemporary declares that the Rev, Thomus Johns, the popular pas tor of Capel Als which by reason of its pnst associations Is one of the best known churches In Wales believes In variety. He spent tho first part of his holidays In Scotland, then at Llandrlndod, and Is now In Paris, whore it Is said he startled some of the natives with a number of his englymon. The "Tyst" points out that in his article on tho Rev. Griffith John, the veteran Walter Daniel, of Harry Dock. p mistaken in referring to the Rev. Elijah Jacob, tho minister of Ebenezer, Swansea, who pre pared the youthful student for college, at having passed to the majority. Mr. Jacob, w ho was ordained in 1813, is at present re siding in Strund, but is without tho charge of a church, having resigned the pastorate of Ebley church, Glouchtster shire, eoine ten years ago. A Rhonddn navvy under the Influence of drink entered the ring formed by the Sal vation Army on Saturday evening In tho upper part of the valley and Inquired of the "Captain" If he was too much o" a sinner to be saved. "Xo, my dear fellow," replied tho officer, "fur In Christ there's salvation for all." "Yes, but I'm an Irishman," rejoined the mnn in moleskin. "It doesn't matter whether you nre an Irishman, or Welshman, or Englishman; In Christ there's salvation for all." "Three cheers for the 'captain!' " exclaimed 1'nt; and one of tho soldiers shouted fortfl, "Let's pray for the navvy.' ' The poularity of the eisteddfod, which hns for generations been so marked In Glamorgan and Carmarthenshire, In tho South, Is rapidly extending to the western counties. The New Castle Emlyn and St. David's eisteddfodau must be written ns two of the most successful gatherings cf the year, nnd already eyes nro directed to those parts for promising talent. Tho triumph of isullh at Llandudno should bring about a similar revival In the county which Is mournfully associated with tho death of Prince Llewelyn. Welsh ministers somehow do not stay long In Loudon. Osslun ft after a rive years' pastorate, Kynon stayed about sev en years between two pastorates, Justin Evuns remained about nine years, Cynon Lewis left after three years. Dr. Hevan hardly stnyed a fifth year In any church; Thomas Evans was pastor of Victoria Park for eleven years; Elwyn Thomas has a ten years' experience of Tolmers-square; Pedr Williams, J. M. Gibbon. Hey Mor gan, Evan Thomas, David Thonin3 and olhers are all men of comparatively short experiences us pastors of one church. The Vicar of rnnt-y-TYidd preached at the opening of a new church at Llanwrtyd recently. When coming down the pulpit stairs his foot caught In tho carpet. He fell and dislocated his shoulder. A locnl surgeon was not within call. Dr. Enoch Davles, being at Llanwrtyd. was sent for. The well-known anti-tlthi-r soon put the Joint right and gave Immediate relief to the pastor. The visitors were highly pleased, and one of the sights of Llan wrtyd for the next few days was that of the Llberstlnnlst leader and the clergy mnn walking, arm linked in arm, about the park. Some would have It thnt it was the case of the Hon nnd the lamb, nnd thnt they could not distinguish which fcis which. A South Wales man who has ventured Into the Transvaal recently thus writes home: "A nice ride it was from Cape Town to Johannesburg. No cushions on the peats; six In a compartment; very hot In tho day and bitter cold at night. It took us sixty hours. I om working fifteen miles from Johannesburg, for nothing, as I nm learning the rock drill, and have al most mastered It. By the time you git this, I hope to be earning cl a day, which is the pny of a rock driller. Everything Is very dear: f.G a month for food alone. The company finds us rooms, but you must find your own bed and everything you need, f!o your own washing, etc. There is no fireplace In tho room, nnd it Is very cold at-nlght almost bites your nose off when you get up in the morning. I find it very different from home. 'Every mnn for himself Is the motto. At meal times, if you are not there In time, you get none. We have three meals a day; breakfast at 7. dinner at 12. tea nt fl; and then the men all clear off to bed, as there Is nowhere else to go. only thp public, where they charge Is for every drink you get." WHAT ROBERT . MORRIS SAID. Tt (Unsound currency) has caused In finite private mischief, numberless frauds and the greatest distress. There Is great Impropriety, not to say Injustice, In com pelling a man to receive a part of his rtnbt In discharge of the whole. Arguments are unnecessary to show that the scula by which everything is to bo measured ought to be llxert at the nature of things per-sffwfft- Exacts from a Chicago Alderman's Sermon on " Practical Politics," Whnt wonder that our land is full of discontent? Where are the poor and the unfortunate of this city before the law? Their highest court is the Justice-shop, tho creature of dirty politics; i ho othciuis they meet are of the wort I. They luar Homing but tha blackest side of govern ment und are usuully its saddest victims. They know that they suffer; they know thai they are wronged. They listen to the vuleo of tho demagogue, who has learned the story of their sorrjw, and ac cept the (piuck remedy which he holds out to them. And the farmer, t lie man we sometimes call a repuliutlonlst In whnt school has he been educated? A railroad has recently been built without itoveiinneni aid uion honest capitalisa tion from San Francisco to Fresno, up '.he San Joaquin Valley. Desplle tho eco nomic waste of parallel railways. It can make 6 per cent, by charging just half what the Southern Pacltlo railway has churned and the farmers have paid all then years, liuving contributed by tax ation his share of government expense and having paid in addition extortionate rates to a merciless monopoly, can one wonder that he now asks who is In pos session of the fruits of his toll or that favors a sort of retultutlon, unable to see that tile form taken by retaliation Would bo worse for lilia iu the end than the In jury he seeks to remedy? Too many V.in-tlei-bllts have dimmed the public, too muuy rich men have been kept out of jail by ex pensive lawyers. There have been too many Northern Paclllc railways and loo many Union loops. Were there nothing but unreasoning anarchy behind the dem onstration of class hostility. It would be founded upon the whirlwind nnd blow away, for the game of politics Is nothing but a bluff uud a bubble, I'pon the very real danger of an alien, Irreconcilable populutton Dennis Kearney founded the ssnd lot pnrly; upon the abuses of rail ways the l'opullsts have their footing. Our governor, the inconsistent and contra dictory, tlnds in tho real evils thnt beset the poor throughout the oppression of tho well to do, whether directly or through the oll'eeis of tho law a fertilo Held in which to sow the seeds of anarchy. The worst politician In the midst of his self-seeking does more for the commun ity than tho citizen who Is too line to take up the dirty business of praetleul polities. 1 have seen In my short public llfo the must shameless corruption that can be conceived. I have heard It made a jest by men who should wear prison stripes for selling their constituents. I have heard It lightly discussed by men of capi tal who should adorn the stocks ami whipping post If the prison Is Rood enough for tho commodity they have purchased. H Is nrgued that the vote that controls our local politics conies from the suloon, that It Is drunken, sodden and ignorant. What an admission! Do tha drunken, the sodden, the Ignorant manage tho private business of this community? 1'ubllo control must come from some source. It might come from the count. Iim-roum ami the pulpit. The neglect of the Intelligent and honest is tho oppor tunity of the demagogue. Pulpit and reform platforms ring with vituperation of the saloon and the saloon power In politics. Is selfishness the pecu liar property of the saloon? The saloon may be the poor man's club It may be the poor man's gambling-house; it may be a leading cause of his poverty und the suf fering of his family. Were I an omnipo tent being, I would wipe out alcohol from the list of human commodities until men were fit to use it without encompassing their ruin, but If you want to find tho place where politics Is not neglected be. tween (lections, go to tho saloon. You will ilnd, perhaps to your surprise, that the talk is largely of measures for the general good, and you would feel thut to day the saloon is more nearly the forum of our local government than the church or the club. Even the average saloon discussion is better than no interest at all. When we hear the clamor of the unfor tunate we are. apt to fall back with com placency upon the i'iicim of the survival of the lit test, ignoring the fact that we In n certain measure' create the standard of the Illness. Yes, we have been vic tims nf the doctrine of the survival of the (litest when we have elected to choose as A MAMMOTH STEAMER. The Pennsylvania Will lie the Lurg est Craft Allont. Porno time next month tho Hamburg American Packet Line will launch their new ocenn steamship Pennsylvania, which will be the largest freight carry ing vessel In the world, and with one exception the largest ever built, says the New Tor!: Journal. The largest boats now In transportation service be tween Amerlcnn and European ports are those of tho White Star and Hamburg American Lines. They can carry from seven to eight thousand tons deud weight, or. In other words, that much freight ran bo stored In the holds, ex clusive of the weight of the crew and passengers. The Pennsylvania will nearly double their capacity. The measurements of the new boat, which Is being built at Dclfast, are as follows: Length, CC8 feet; beam, G2; depth, 42. The displacement will be twenty thou snnd tons, and the dead weight carry ing capacity Is estimated at between thirteen and fourteen thousand tuna, nearly double that of the present largest liners In service. The Pennsylvania will be equipped with quadruple expansion engines, und the combined horse-power will bo seven thousand. The length, BCS feet. Is fully one hundred and fifty feet greater than the present steamers, and the depth and beam are increased ac cordingly. The new craft will be expected to de velop a speed of from fourteen to fif teen knots an hour, which Is a very fair rate, though by no means a record breaker. The enormous freight-carrying capacity of the boat may be the bet ter realized through comparluon with the freight cars of the railroad trans pot tntion companies. The largest of American freight cars can carry but thirty tons of dead weight, so that In the huge holds of the Pennsylvania the contents of forty-six cars could be stored. in addition to Us largo freight-carrying capacity, the craft will carry 223 cabin passengers and 1,500 persons in the steerage. It will be equipped with five decks, with plenty of room for promenades nnd observation seats. The ofllclals of the company expect to launch the Pennsylvania from tho yards in Itclfost .next October, nnd It will ply between New York and Hum burg. The Pennsylvania will be the largest freight-carrying craft In commission, and with one exception the largest ever built. The one exception was the famous Great Eastern, which was built In 1S.'8 at JIillvall-on-the-Thames. She was the largest ocean-going craft ever built, but from a financial standpoint was a wretched failure. The dimen sions of the Great Eastern were as follows: Length, 691 feet; width, S3 feet; depth, 48 feet. The craft was registered as being of 32,100 tons displacement, with a dead weight capacity of 18,915 tons. She had one direct-acting horizontal en gine for driving the screw, with four cylinders, each of 84 lnche3 diameter, and with a four-foot stroke. Tho horse power wns six thousand, and was de rived from six boilers and sixty fur naces. In addition to steam power, tho Great Eastern carried 6,500 square yards of sail. She made several trips across the ocean, but was so unwieldy and unsafe that she was finally dis mantled and the hulk sold for old met al and wreckage. iMILUINKR. Mrs. M. fiaxe, 146 If. Main avenue. UPHOLSTERER AND CARPET LAYER. C. H. Haslett, 28 Spruce street the nttest thoso with tho most dollars. We havo set up a stundard of excellencn thnt muy be b- KgeJ, borrowed or sioien. Yes, one ihat may l.e eontrucied, expand.! or wiped out of existence, und 111 passing It might b remarked that tho free coin age idea con hardly be culled u reform hi the staiidurd, for we have no reason to be lieve that IhoFj with the mo.-t half dollars will bo any titter. The outlook Is dark enough, but It Is the durkness before tho dawn. Beneath nil the sins of wealth and the besetting crime of lunorance there Is still character, thank God, yes, und sense In the American peo ple. They Hro awakening to their posi tion und they will rise, to the emergency. We must not wait for un impersonal some thing to do the woik. We have been ne glectful; we. the greedy; we, the Ignorant. Hero and now is our oojjoruinlty; our duty is before us; not here, but wherever we mny be; not now, but every day. We niuu work. We must barn, und our na tion will live. Let us shatter the stupid dictum of those who. In the weakness of inanition, despair of popular government. flepresentatlve government means con stant watchfulness on the part of tho gov erned. There Is nollilug vicarious abi it. If there were ever as cowurdly a ipic- -tlon asked us the lilsmrle, "la lifuj worth living?" it Is Its correlative, "Is repre sentative government a failure?" Repre sentative government cunnot be a failure. It is the ultimate truth of men's mutual relations. It may be overthrown and the human race stt back for centuries, but as the cloud tends to the sea, so must men return agin to self-government. There Is no other solution. In ench case the competent, who havo allowed our country to reach Its present duiii-cr point, have evaded their responsi bilities ami considered "practical politics" s synonymous with r'dlrty business." There is a large, Impractical forum buil-1-ed for them somuwhere in the clouds, where men may kick against reflection of mundane pricks with no hurt to their feet, no effoct upon the thorns. The man who sneers at practical politics Is creat ing the condition which his dainty exist ence shuns. I have tried tn put beforo yen a picture of the present situation. It could be noth ing bin a rough sketch, a bare outline. Tho Inexcusable greed of wealth, tho In discriminating envy of yovevty. Corrup tion in oilice, corruption In elections, cor ruption in nominations. Hmpd nculect on the part of the competent, bitter Ignorance of tho Incompetent. The lying appeals of the demagogue to low Impulse and lower intelligence. The Insatiable appetite of the politician. Whether we look nt the broad field cf finance, where stock-watering nnd merci less trickery prevail or tho narrower life, where the farmer and the country buyr play hide and seek wllh the scales, we have no cause to congratulate ourselves upon our honesty as a people; but our private morals ore still pure und holy In comparison with our civic life that is an ulcer steadily eating into tho nation's stamina. It must he burned out by tho tire of unselfish effort. Most of us have scarcely given our gov ernment a thought between elections. It Is supposedly Instltutetd for nil of us, ns directed by tho best of us but hun become largely the rule of the purchasable unions us for the benefit of tho purchasers, or un tnillscrlmluatln? hodce-portgo of sonu. times well-meaning ignruno. All that wu have accomplished in a material way Is threatened by neglect of this one thing needful. We have had one slnndnrd of morals for our churches and charities, another for our business dealings, whllo our mu tual relations, through the sacred forms of lnw, have been forced to do without any system of morals ut all. Our government Is not representative of the average mor ality, though it doubtless Is what we de serve. . We cannot reconstruct the human race, but we can drag political life up to our average level; if we do not It will level things by dragging us down. ANDItEW JACKSON'S VIEWS. From Ills Eighth Annual Message. "A depreciation of the currency Is al ways attended by a loss to the laboring classes. This portion of tho community have neither time nor opportunity to watcii the ebbs nnd flow of the money market. Engaged from day to ony In their U3eful toils, they do not perceive that, although their wages nre nominally tho same, or even somewhat higher, they are greatly reduced, in fact, by the rapid Increase of cur. ency, which, as It appears to makr; money noound, tney aro ut llrst Inclined to consider a blessing." I Directory of Wholesale and Retail CITY AND SUBURBAN NTATIVE ART STUDIO. .. V. Santee C3S Spruce. ATHLETIC AND DAILY PAPKK4. llelsman ft Solomon, 103 W yoming ave. a tiii.ltk: goods ami hicvcles. C. M. I-'lorey, !K2 Wyoming ave. AWMNtiS AND HI HULK GOODS. J. J. Crosby, 15 Lackuwunna, ave. HANKS. Lackawanna Trust and Safe Deposit Co. Men-hunts' und Mechanics', 4'J'J I.acka. Traders' National, cor. Wyoming and Spruce. West Side Bark, W N. Main. Scran ton Savings, 1-2 Wyoming. IlHiD'NG. CAHI'ICT CI.KAN'IN'fl, ETC, The Scranton Bedding Co., Lackawanna. II U LWF.RS. Robinson, Y.. Sons. 4:Ci X. Seventh, llobiiison, ilina, Cedur, cor. Alder, ilirVri.ES GI NS. I.TC. Parker, E. It., 321 Spruce. liir.VCI.f-: LIVLRV. City Dicyclo Livery, 120 Franklin. mr.VCLK UI I'AIHS, ETC. Bittenbendcr & Co., 31314 Spruce street. poors AND SHOES. Goldsmith Bros. ,W Lackawanna, liooilmun's Shoe Store, i'il Lackawanna. UKOKLK AND JEWELER. Radln Bros., 123 Penn. CANDY MAM EACTIRER Scranton Candy Co., 22 Luenuwanna. CAUPE1S AND WJI.I. P AIM l. Ingalls, J. Scfjtt, 419 Lackawanna. CAKklAKKS AND HARNESS. Slmwell. V. A., 515 Linden. CARRI AG E R E I'OSITOH V. Illume, Wm. & Son, G22 Spruce. CATERER. Huntington, J. C, 308 N. Washington. CHINA AND GLASSWARE, Itupprecht, Louis, 221 Penn ave. CldAH MANEFACTIREH. J. P. Fioro, 223 Spruco Btreet.' CONFECTIONERY AND TOYS. Williams, J. D. & Bros., 314 Lacko, CONTRACTOR AND fit ILDLR. Stlook, S. M Olyphant. CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE. Harding, J. L., 215 Lackawanna, DINING ROOM. Caryl's Dining Boom, COS Linden. DRY GOODS. The Fashion. SOS Lackawanna avenue. Kelly A Henley, 20 Lackawanna, FInley, P. 11., 510 Lackawanna. DRY GOODS, SHOES, HARDWARE, ETC. Mulley, Ambrose, triple itorei. Providence A tlnisfor's F03 FIFTEEN YEARS REV. JOSEPH SECHLER WAS i" T8BKEOT. Tried ell Setts of Rediclne, but Kens fifforiiod Relict Scnsev.'hat Dlsssuraged fcul with Faint Kepo !!e was hi to try a Ke Remedy. Read what Ha now Says. JVomV Vatetlt, There if probably no malady to which the huinuu body in liable so painful or aggravat ing as rheumatism. Tiie person so unfortu nate as to be afflicted with this Insidious dis ease has no outward indication of iuwarj tor ment. TJuliko other diiordert it does not often affect the appetite nor dues it in most instances reduce the lleslt. Often a rerlaln flush in the face scenm. panics tho ailment und lends the friends of the patient to congraluluto hi in on hit healthy appearance with the familiar ex pression, "how well you look," while he is sult'cring the most acute torment, Not often briiis the direct cause of fulalitv. the nntient tines not generally receive the sympathy of i.itiiua un ia mo vnsu ui uuit-r coillHUims. Often during the day there is n marked sub siibuee of tho p-iln und the sick msn is able to pet around w ith eotisidernbiu comfort only to feel tho most excruciating nsony on retir ing nnd the night is spent in the most pain ful sleeplessness. Sometimes the disease as sumes u Inl'rutorv character moving from limb to limb. This is the moxt alarming symptom us it is opt to lncnte iu the vital flirts iu which case It Is liable to prove fatal. Under tho most fuvnrnble circumstances sn otherwise healthy body may wear out the disease, but the cases when once seated and recovery follows are few. Frequently it does not succumb without leaving the ex tremities in. a deformed eondition and the Jin ii da often remaining permanently out of snnpe. Alter "eintng convalescence tt. is liable 1o return on the slightest provocation. The application of embrocations ami other outward remedies may, in a eliuht degree, alleviate the sult'cring 'but are powerless to five perruuuciit relief. ' ' . P.rCV. JOSEPH 8ECIII.ER. A pentlcman connected with the pres was recently roiiversinif with Kev. Joseph Secli ler who furnished liim with some information concerning I ho above mentioned disease. lr. Sechler is a clergyman of the Reformed Church and has been a prominent minister cf that body for over thirty yeare, and lias nearly all Hint time resided in Lena, Stephenson Comity. Ill, lie was active in founding tho Northern Illinois College nt Dakota in thnt county, nnd wm for eight years tecrelnry of thut institution and for two years its financial iit'cnt, which position ho liutl to abandon from causes hcrcnltcr mentioned, sinco which time he has taken charge of a congregation nf his brethren in the town of Harlem a few miles from his res;dence. Through his efforts the Salem Keformcd Church, one of the ncutest nnd most appropriate country churches in Illi nois, wns built three years ago. The interior is finished in modern stvle and the frescointr. tlthnugh not so elaborate, is in taste not be laud the wealthy city edifices, Mr. Sechler BUSK DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS. MILK, CREAM. BUTTER, ETC. Kresky, E. H. & Co., 114 8. Main. Srranton Dairy Co., Penn and Linden. Stone Dros.. .10S Spruce. DRUGGISTS. ' McOarrah & Thomas. 209 Lackawanna. MILLINER Y AND DRESSMAKING. Lorcntz. C. 41S Lacka.; Linden & Wash. Mrs. P.radley, 20S Adams, opp. Court Davis, (. W Main nnd Market. Ifouse. liloes, W. 8., Peekville. 1 Davles, John J.. lOti S. Main. MILLINERY AND FURNISHING GOODS. " Brown's Bee Hive, 224 Lackawanna, ENGINES AND 1'OII.EKS. Dickson Manufacturing Co. MINK AND MILL SUPPLIES. Scranton Supply and Mach. Co., Bl Wyo. FINE MERCHANT TAILORING. JLL J. W. Roberts, 12C N Main ave. MODISTE AND DRESSMAKER. W. J. Davis, 215 Lackawanna. Mrg. K. Walsh, 311 Spruce street. Eric Audren, 119 8. Main ave. Z. 1 LORAL DEMONS. Owens Bros., 2!S Adams ave. Clark, G. R. & Co., 201 Washington. pv-rs , ,-"t ,i; ,-"5. ?;G0:T, w t Great Atlantic 3 Pant. Co.. 319 Lacka- The T. H. Watts Co., Ltd., 723 W. Lacka. Ve liubeock O. J. & Co.. lit) Franklin. ,,,.,, MFDlwrmtV PAINTS ANO SUPPLIES. , ; X t a i t v Jleneke & McKee. 309 Spruce street. Matthews C. P. Sons & Co., 31 Lacka. The Weston Mill Co., 47-49 Lackawanna, pi-f-g r WAI I. PAPER. FRUITS AND PRODUCE. Wliike. J. C. 31S Penn. Dale & Stevens, 2J Lackawanna. PAWNBROKER. Cleveland, A. S 17 Lackawanna. 0rggn. Joseph, ffi Lackawanna. FURNISHED ROOMS. MAXOS AND ORGANS. Union House, 215 Lackawanna. gte)I, j Lawrence. 308 Spruce. FURNITURE. PHOTOGRAPHER. 1IIII ft Conrtell. wpsttnEton. H. 8. Cramer, 311 Lnckawanna ave. Barbour s Home Credit House, 425 Lack. ... PI UMBINO AND HI-A I1NM. GENERAL Ml RCIIANDISB. Howley, P. F. & M. F.. 231 Wyoming ave. Osterhoui, N. P., 110 W. Market. Jordan. James, Olyphant. REAL ESTtTF HcchtolJ. !:. J- Olyphant, Horatio X. Patrick, Washington. GROCERS. R BFK STAMPS, SIENCILS, ETC. "yT'i i. ?,'i?4;!,.r.ki,a!n!!Il Scranton Rubber Stamp Co.. 538 Sprucf le-iargcl fir ( oniiell, I-nitkI!n avenue. " Porter. John T.. 20 and 21 Lnckawanna. Blr'"-t' Mice, Levy & Co., 30 I.ieks wanna, ,..... l'lrle. J. J., 427 Lackawanna. HOOHNU. - National Roofing Co., 331 Washington. HARDWARE. , ... Connell, W. P. ft Sons, 11S Penn. P "T . . Foote ft Shear Co., 119 Nf. Washington, W. A. Wledebusch. 234 Washington ave. Hunt ft Connell Co.. 434 Lackawanna. STEAMSHIP TICKETS. HARDWARE AND PLUMBING. J. A. Ilarron, 215 Lackawanna and Ounster Forsyth. 327 Penn. Prlceburg. Cowles, W. C, 1B07 N. Main ave. ' ! STEREO-RELIEF DECORATIONS AND HARNESS AND SADDLERY HARDWARE. Vivv't!!,. , , ttn - , S. II. Morris, 217 yomlng ave. Frits, O. W 410 Lackawanna, : Keller ft Harris. 117 Penn. tea, COf't'EE AND SPICE. HARNESS, TR I NKS, BUGGIES. Grand Union Tea Co., 103 S. Main. E. B. Houscr. 133 N. Mnln avenue. TRUSS IS. BATTERIES, RIDKER GOODS Benjamin & Benjamin, Franklin and HOTELS. (spruce. Arlington, Orlmes tt Flannery, Spruce 1 and Franklin. UVDEK TAKFR AND LIVERY. Scranton House, near depot. Raub, A. It., 425 Spruce, HOUSE, SIGN AND FRESCO PAINTER. WALL PAPER, ETC. Wm. Hay, 113 Linden. - Ford, W. M.. 120 Penn. HUMAN HAIR AND II AIR DRESSING. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER. N. T. Llsk, 223 Lackawanna. Rogers. A. L... 215 Lackawanna. L.T,?EH Au "mi sh,AEdVLr0?j",,L.ekaw.nna. William. Samuel, El Spruce. t . ... D. ....... WIRE AND WIRE ROPE. , LIME, CEMENT SEW FR PIPE. Waehburn Uota Mfg C. IU FraakUa KtUer, Luther, U3 IJackawaaaa, ave i(u. iufforings Galena, H!inoi$. includes in his contTrpntion large nuraher ut well-to-do farmers, chiefly from the Hliito of Pennsylvania, many of them readouts of the vicinity since pioneer times. This worthy minister informed the reporter thnt for lilureu years lie was the victim of that dread disease, rheuinutikui, Bud suffered nearly ell tha torment above described. The prescriptions furnished by skillful phy. iciutis gavo only temporary reiief, Tho vurious advertised remedies which were recommended to him were alike powcrlcis to mitigate his sum-rings. The pain wus to intense that he contemplated abandoning his culling because the disease interfered so much with tho necessary preparation for the duties of his office. Hoinewliut discouraged, but witli a faint hoie of recovery, ho was led to try Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills for Pale People. It took but a short time to feel the ell'cet of the med icine in u marked alleviation of bis terrilda agony. After three months lie was fonixir tively free from pain. He continued the use of the remedy st longer intervals and at the end of six months he felt that the disease was entirely eradicated. Another great benefit cume to him ut this time. During this fifteen veers nf suffering there wns added to the malady tho lesser one of piles which iuelf would have been a terrible miction but for tho over-shadowing cue of rheumatism. In the effort to cure the greater the lesser one gave way. lie ran now fulfill tho duties of his calling without being diverted by the agony thnt he suffered for so many years. He ran with eonlidenrn conscientiously recommend the pills to all afflicted with the diseases mentioned above. This worthy minister would, if necessary, muke affidavit to the foregoing statements, but feels somewhat dlfiident about doing fo in a community where his word is taken without question. Mr. Sechlcr's ense was to remarkable thnt it a subsequent interview the press repre sentative inquired if he wus sw.-ire of any other remsrknhlo cure effected bv Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills. He replied that he was somewhat cautious about recommending ad vertised remedies, but if he wanted to know more he might inquire of Joseph Ilutmao- ner, r,sq., an oinciai menineroi iter. .-ecn. ler's congregation, who resides a short dis. tance north of the church referred to shove. Mr. Hutnineher if prominent farmer of the town of Harlrm whose ambition never ex tended beyond his own town, but lie has filled nearly all the town olliccs up to super visor and is well-known in the county. lie wns enthusiastic in his praise of the pills. He stated that for three yeurs he was an in tense Mill'erer with kidney troubles nnd n tendency to dropsy but always accompanied with rheumatism. The most skillful inedi cnl treatment measurably succeeded with tho two former but the latter defied their ' efforts. No wonder tiiat lie was credulous when his pastor related his experience nnd recommended the remedy thnt lind relieved his ulVerinrr. However, stler using two boxes of pills according to .irections, lie be gan to feel relieved ami ' continued use of ilicm effected n perfect ei re. He hns rreom mended them to Ids neighbors and they linve iiivurlribly benefited the afflicted when taken sceordine to directions. He always keens the pills in tho house in case there should be indications of n return of the disense. "Should nny afflicted ono wish for reference regarding the above named gentlemen a let ter addressed to tlio bankers of Lena or Preeport, III., or any of tho public men of Stephenson County, will procure tho neces sary information. Of course a stamp or curd should be inclosed. Dr. Williams' rink Pil's for Pale People nro now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing ull forms of weakness nrisini; front a watery eon. ditinn of the blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by nil dealers, or will he sent post paid on receipt nf price, 50 cents a Imx, or six boxes for $2.50 (they are never sold la bulk or by the 1U), by aririrriwine Dr. ',. liuuis' Medicine Company, Schenectady, K. Y. BOUSES. r4 i