THE SUNDAY OREOOXIAX, POBTLANI, JULY 9, 1903. 43 John Vance NEW VOLUME OF VERSE FROM THE PEN OF THE MAN WHO ANSWERED EDWIN MARQUAM MONG distinguished Exposition vis itors o the past "week has been John Vance Cheney, poet and lit terateur of distinction, formerly a resi dent of the Pacific Coast. Mr. Cheney came on with the librarians who have been holding their annual conventions here. Although he is now Identified with Chicago, being head of the famous New berry Library, he was for so long a. resi dent of the Pacific Coast, and his at tachments lie here so deeply that hia many friends in this section like still to think of him as a Westerner. Moreover, Mr. Chancy himself plans again to take up his residence in the Wont in the not far distant future. It is as a poet that Mr. Cheney has achieved Ills widest fame. He began writ ing 3-ears ago. when a lad living among the Greon Mountains of Vermont.' He found time to scribble verse when ho taught school In Now England. He kept it up when he began the study of law in Massachusetts and later its practice In New York. He was still writing when he came out to the Coast and settled in San Francisco. Here lie formed friendships with Joaquin Miller, with Edwin Mark ham, with the great geologist, John Mulr; with Keith, the artist, and with other men whose names nre famous. These gave to him of the inspiration of their own genius, and In California, Mr. Cheney produced some of his best verse. During his residence of 27 years thoro ho pub lished six book's, all of which are now out of print. Poet of Optimism. Mr. Cheney's verse has dealt with a wide range of thought and of feeling. It Is thoroughly optimistic in tone and mod ern in all its sympathies. Nothing bet ter shows this than his "reply" to Mark ham's "The Man With the Hoe." As may be remembered by many readers of The Oregonian. "The Man With the Hoe" : was first published in a San Francisco i daily paper. It was copied all over the j country, and its author, from being a j humble schoolmaster, soon sprang into fame as a poet. Mr. Cheney, with the j liberty of long and close friendship, wrote to Markham criticising the sentiment of his poem. At the samo time. In contro version of that sentiment, he inclosed some hastily-written lines of his own which he felt more truly expressed the sentiment with which human toil should be regarded. Writes a Prize Poem. It was not long after this that the la to Colls P. Huntington, through the columns of the New York Sun, offered a prize of $00 for a poem that should controvert "The Man With the Hoe." Mr. Cheney then wrote to Markham requesting the return o,f the rough lines, saying he would polish them up and submit them in the competition. Jatcr, he went to New York, and. in company with Mr. Mark am, visited the office of the Sun and gavo his poom Into the hands of the editor. Edmund Clarence Stcdman. Thomas Bai ley Aldrich and Mr. Dana, of the Sun, were the committee to decide on tha merits of the )Kems. and they voted the prize to Mr. Cheney. This fact is of present interest to Portlanders because Millet's painting which inspired both Markham's masterpiece and Mr. Cheney's reply to it is now hanging in one of the Exposition art galleries. New Collection. The 'Reply" will be the leading poom in a volume of verse by Mr. Cheney which is to bo brought out in the early Fall by a Boston publishing house. This volume is divided, into three parts, the first a triology, the second a collection grouped under the title, "The Heart of Man." and the third a collection headed "The Heart of Nature." The captious of the triology are; "Freedom." "The Gold of Havllah" (addreseod to the rich man), and "The Hyssop in the Wall" (to the poor man). In these collections are to be found the choicest of the many poems of the author that have appeared in the Atlantic Monthly. Harper's, the Century and oth er leading magazines. Aside from the stray verses that may be found every month in some magazine, none of Mr. Personal Recollections of John Li Sullivan Likewise Running: Comment on Current Hosing Events and Boxers, Together With Mean Talk. THERE was a great blowing of Her bert Slade's lazoo when the Maori half-breed was imported to give me the lullaby. A gent in Now York who was scraping the earth with a fine-tooth comb to get a man to lick me, was the cause of taking Slade from his happy homo in Australia and wo met in Madi son Square Garden, New York, in August, 1S83. "This is tho time the wind comes out of your sails, and you'll go back to Bos ton in an icebox," wa.s one of the mes sages handed to me by the gent referred to. That was before tsking Slade on. There was a crowd there to make your head swim. Slade looked fit for his part, with 6 feet 1 Inches, carrying 216 pounds of beef. He could handle himself well, knew how to box, and entered the ring cock-sure of doing me up. Ho looked as good as any man I ever faced, and the crowd was ready to see assault-and-bat-tery. rough-house, explosions, and so forth. In the first round, after sparring a fow seconds, I felt for him with a smash full in the face, following it up with another in the neck. Then I floored him with an other. When he got up, we met like a couple of bulls, and I handed him a punch that smashed him through the ropes ami off the platform, head first Into tho crowd. In tho second round, I walloped him all over tho ring. The third round was short and Slade was down and out. Captain Williams, with his famous sldc whlskcrs. led his police into the ring to stop the fight, but there wasn't any fight to stop, the Importation being busy dreaming of home. 1 afterwards took Slade In my party on a tour of the coun try. He stayed with us till we struck Utah, where he joined the Mormons, and he's there yet, I guess. Why lie Broke Jack Hogan's Xosc. Jack Hognn, of Providence, was one of the fow-and-far-between men to knock me down in a bout. I have already told how I ran into his fist, but I didn't explain Just why Jack got the chance to get me oft my guard. It was very early In my ca reer, when 1 had few friends to open the way for mo to exhibit my punch, and it wasn't easy to butt into the game. Hear ing that there wore boxing matches pulled off every week in the Theater Comlque in Providence. I got Billy Mahoney to give me a letter of Introduction to Derils O'Reilly, a man of prominence in that city. Mr, O'Reilly was as good a sport and as fine a gentleman as his namesake, Boyle O'Reilly, of Boston.. I found Mr. O'Reilly In a big dry goods store in Providence, where he was man ager. Pushing my letter at him, I asked him to heJ-me set an engagement. That Cheney, Poet '.jstssfsssssssssssssHiassB 'Hl ' lssssssssssssssflsW.''' -bsssssssssssssssssssssssssssssisbk , Hkv, , HBJbHH bssssssssssssssssssBR ssssssssslEiSHBBSisBSK Bss'saBisBssssBlssBsssa flSBBisssssssssEBslisflB9Bsssss' ' - MssssslBBsssssssssllasssssBl ij"BSBSBflBssssssvsaKIBSBssMflBssr tB"BMsHH HRRBsmEBPlf ' ssssssssssaisBBsaBslsssssssI jRjHjHHHRnH LsssssssBXssssmbsssssssI BssssassfiraSssSltsLasH! HHBERflH IHHKaHH IssssssBSBSssBssBflssssssssssssssB JOHN VANCE Cheney's poems are to be bought. All are out of print and the fortlicoming vol ume will be the more heartily welcomed therefor. Mr. Cheney contemplates pub lishing a second volume next year. As showing Mr. Cheney's happy combination of philosophy, ethics and charm of lit erary expression, three short selections of verse from the forthcoming volume are subjoined: It EST. When of thin flurry iWom shalt have thy All. The thing theu seeiiet. It will seek thee then: The hnavons repeat themselves la waters still And in the faces f oentonied men. The flowors are loved, the weeds are spurned. But ?wf tfiem hath the suns are burned; And when, at hist, the)- fall the day. The long ntsht folds them alt away. ' THE LOST SOVU A lone until ramt to IIenvn' hard gate, Iw at the warder's feet she fell; SulMng. she mM hf had not kwcked so late But for the many roads to Hell. Straktag hor .hwd. unmothered head, Xp spoke the coori M warder Krey: '"ThlR chltd. to- fair. hlKh hp let her be led. Past thera that never lost the way." Mr. Cheney can be facetious as well as serious. Witness the following lines ad dressed to the 'bashful rattlesnake" of which John Mulr had told him a story: FRIEND OPHIDIAN. Cylindrical thing Without leg. without wins. Glazed membrane stuffed with met Ion, Give car to a heretic's notion. The fact that you crawl Is ne reason at all Kor sHfnt accusing And heed-pan braising; A walk or a glide. A stride or a slide, A trip or a slip. A skate or a skip-- Any one of the eight, ell the same to me. Sly. Jndla-rubber iniquity! Mr. Cheney Is a living refutation of the 1 evening he took me to the manager of the I theater and 1 was put -on through Mr. O'Reilly's influence. That was a real I start for me, and I owe a great deal to J ! O'Reilly, for he was a friend when 1 j ' needed one. He had a better Idea of what ' i 1 could do than any of th others, and al- ' though Hogan was the champion of Prov idence ami the best man they had down ! there. O'Reilly asked me to go easy with I him. Everybody else thought I was a j cinch for Hogan. J When I ran Into Hogan's fist and was 1 knocked down, I forgot my promise to O'Reilly ami smashed Jack on the nose, sending him Into the wings of the stage. O'Reilly came over to me and reminded me that I lad promised to bo easy, and after that we finished the bout in a light way. We looked at Hogan's nose after the bout and found it was broken. I felt sorry that I had been so strenuous, as Jack was a good fclkw. and me and O'Reilly took him In a hack to Dr. Gardi ner's office, where the bum beak was set and put In a piaster cast. "You've got a terrible punch, young fel low," said Mr. O'Reilly, after we had got Jack safely at home, "and all you need to be the best fighter living is to loarn 1hw to deliver It before the other fellow connects. You look to me like a coming chamjrton." I never forgot Denis O'Reil ly's kindness and encouragement, and I won't." Stinging of the Frisco Sports. The San Francisco sports have been stung oftencr than any bunch in tho land, but they seem to like it. They got It pushed into them by Britt, who Is playing hop-scotch with Nelson, and they seem to get the worst stings from boxers that are native to their soil. In tho East, a battle In San Francisco is expected to be a get-rich-quick Job. The sports who pay to see fights on the Coast arc the best ever, free spenders, willing to pay for the I best there is. yet getting the hlnky-dlnk over and over again. Between playing politics to get licenses, tylng'clastlos on forfeits drawing articles that can be read any old way, and gen eral joshing of the public, the game In San Francisco Is going to the bad. and unless the sport is made right. I'll bet the rings will shut up for good when the present two-year limit is up. Unless things better. I may turn promoter my self and show them. I'm out on the Coast .and I have the chance to set things as they ought to be. John L. Sulllfan's name over a fight-shop ought to be a guarantee that only real goods would be delivered. A chap who has made more money than he knows how to spend has offered me a chanco to open up such a place it I will settle out here, and after my meeting with Mitchell. I may give the gamble a whirl. If I do. there'll be chalk-line work or the fighter.? will have to meet me outside of the ring, without gloves and with no bell to save them. I ow.e a good deal to the square men on the and Literateur CltEXEV. old theory that a man who could write good poetry could do little else of value, and must needs be a fiat failure In prac tical business affairs. Like Stcadman, tho banker-poet, like John Hay, the statesman and literateur. Mr. Cheney is both poet and man of affairs. For tho last seven years he has. shaped the growth of one of tho great libraries of this coun try and. directed all its internal organi zation. For several years he was libra rian of tho free public library in San Francisco, and it was from that position that he was called to Chicago upon the death of Mr. Poole, first librarian of the Newberry. Tho founders of this institu tion planned to make it one of the great est libraries not only of America but of the world. The present building, beauti ful and Imposing as It is, though it can well hold a million volumes, is only one quarter of the structure as It will stand when completed. Its collection of books embraces those on. pll subjects other than pure science, books of this class being found in the John Crcrar Library in Chi cago. The Newberry Library is a ref erence collection, no books from It being allowed to circulate. Mr. Cheney goes from Portland to San Francisco, where he will visit Joaquin Miller and other old friends. He will go to Oakland to sco his daughter, whose home Is there, and he will take some long horseback rides to revisit his favor ite old-time haunts. Mr. Cheney is a musician and in early life taught music In the midst of his busy life, his working days devoted to his library, his holidays and spare moments to writing verse, ho still finds time to "keep in practice" on tho piano, and his day usually ends with the gentle rhythm of a barcarolle, the full harmonic of some Wagnerian strain or the quietly brilliant notes of a sonata played for the appreciative audiences gathered at his fireside. Coast, and I don't know any better way to even up with them than to give them something for the money they pay, even If the grafters would object to my but ting into their mint. New l-'ramc-Up for Battling Nelson. The latest frame-up for the 'Frisco sports Is the Brltt-Kld Sullivan match. It's a plain duck on the part of Britt to pass up Nelson. Al Herford has plucked the Kid from his Baltimore-Washington Incubator, and what do you think will happen when this go comes oft on the ISth? As a side-play. Al. when Nelson Is on the way West, challenges him on behalf of Gans. They're playing Nelson, going and coming. Gans made the trip from Baltimore with Herford and the Kid. Al is certainly a groat general, but this time he may have made a slip that will put Britt on the bum. Hereford doesn't care about that, as they arc all fish for him. He kept Gans in "the dark (no pun) when Nelson was handy to Bal timore, but when he's on the train West he lets loose the defl. As Nelson Is willing to take on tho chocolate Gans at 133 pounds, and as Gans Is called the champion at this weight, and as Nelson ought to win out, where will Britt be at when the win Is recorded for the Battler? Britt will bo living In the last house In Bad alley, and instead of Nelson chasing him for a ccrap. the Callfornian will have to get a reputation before the Dane needs to look at him. What a bird Herford Is to be able to play norse with tho 'Frisco sports the way ne does! Tho thing that would help put an end to all these frosts on the public would-be a return to finish lights, and all men Interested In honest boxing should help this along. In finish tights, my opinion Is that tho Dano could go right down tho line and store away about everything of his weight. Some dope I gavo out in these articlos about Fltz has come true. The slump of his matcn with Mike Schreck didn't surprise yours truly, for Fltz may have come to. my way or tninklng. that Schjrock would be too much for hlra. I said tnat if this go was pulled off, it might show that Fltz was an old pitch er that had gone to the well onco too many. His Freckles thought so. for al though you can hear him yelling, "At tempted robbery." and that it was an other Job to Wyntt Earp him, he hasn't convinced mo that the fight promoters at Salt Lake City are a band of pick pockets. There was plenty of room for Fltz to fight out there If he had the right kind of wallop along, but the honest blacksmith has grown conserva tive since George Gardner gave him those 20 weary rounds. Aaaifaw SUMS I made on Fltz waenjjrhe schoolroom of Nature I lo 'Jts isi. he refused, a couple of months ago, to fight me, was that he would yet be daring- Corbett to get back into the ring- with him. I was only teasing- when I shofthat at him, but, by Jingo, he has done that very same. Of course, he knows, there Isn't money enough out of the ground to get the Pompadour Has Been Into a real fight, and the gentle man promptly told him so. If Fltz would agree to do a turn like that Kid McCoy frazzle, the gentleman would be willing, but for real busienss. not for him. Fits knows all this, and I'm sorry to see a square fighter like him peter ing out as a long-distance conversa tionalist. If Fltz keeps hopping back, it wouldn't surprise me to see hlra under the management of Billy Brady, giving physical culture lectures to young ladles' seminaries, with Jeff posing as a terrible example of what too much chcstlness will do when It goes to the place where Fltz wears his toupee. Yours truly. JOHN L. SULLIVAN. Bad Whisky Brings on Heart Disease Strrnuomi I,lvlng, Strata of Mind, and Rheumatism Are Also Contributing Cause. AD whlcky, rheumatism, mental strain and high living are among the leading causes of heart dis ease." says Dr. Henry P. Loomls, of New York. "It Is easier, however, to admit a tremendous increase in tho number of deaths- from heart dlscaso than to point out any one reason for tho Increase. "Here, for Instance, Is a chart sent out by the Health Board, which illustrates the steady Increase In mortality from heart disease in this city since 1SSS, and it includes a table of figures of deaths resulting from Brighfo disease and heart disease combined." This table rfiowed that 'In 1S6S 13 per sons out of every 10,000 died from the causes named. In 1S01 the proportion had Jumped up to 30 in every 10,000, or more than double. "There aro cases of heart disease which aro not complicated with Bright's dis ease." continued Dr. Loomls, "but it Is not often that a sufferer from Bright's disease is free from heart trouble. "Many capes of heart disease are di rectly traceable to mental strain and. high living, the heart being Indirectly affected through other organa "In nine cases out of ten well, no. that's putting It too strongly, perhaps I would say rather that tho majority of the cases of heart disease which come under my notice are due to rheumatism in many forms. "Heart disease Is not an aIlmcntvcori- fined to any one class. It Is fatal alike to rich and poor. Persons with a ten dency to rheumatism, who are subject to frequent attacks of rheumatism, do much harm often by fighting the attacks, in stead of giving up to them.' Says Patient Should Rest. "How give up to them?" the doctor was asked. "By going to bed at once and staying there till the disease yields, by avoiding cxposuro and remaining In an even tem peraturc. Naturally; the shorter the at tack the less strain thcro is on the heart. "Certain forms of throat trouble com mon to children are indicative of rheu matism, and they should be treated ac cordinglythat is, the patient should ob serve afterward the proper precautions. It is safer for person inclined to rheu matism to wear flannels the year around and use every preventive to stave off at tacks of th) dlieaiv If ho wants Jo keep h! heart to'good- -forking oicer. . t is true, o course, that one, may have heart dlscare and yet not bo af flicted with rheumatism, and vice versa. speaKing generally. I would say that In case of the rich, I believe that rich food and lack of proper exercise, execsaive drinking and a persistent mental strain are the main causes for heart dlseam. "The strenuous life plus- mental anxi ety is In thoso dayo almost irrevocably associated with the upper classes. I don't think, though, that there is any increase in drinking, among tho rich; In fact. I be lieve Just the reverse, and the rich mnn has this- In his favor he. at least, can drink good liquor when ho drinks at all. "With the poorer elapses it is different. Tho great nrmy of mechanics', drivers and laborers who work out of doors are moro or less a prey to heart dlsca not only because of prolonged exposure, which fosters ills which In turn weaken tho heart, but because of tho drinking habit, which Is often acquired in consequence of this exposure. Exposure and Drinking-. "I have known men who thought they must take from ten to 15 drinks of whis ky a day to minimize the bad effects of exposure, and who could hardly be per suaded to the contrary- Now, even If the whisky they drank was of good qual ity, the results would bo bad, very bad. but when a man continues day after day. as many a one does, to pour down his throat the most adulterated stuff In the market, his finish Is not far off. His heart is bound to give out. "I am heartily In favor of BLhop Pot ter's saloon plan to this extent: Give the poor as well as the rich man pure liquor. If he murt and will drink, let him havo a brand of whisky which will do him the least harm. "Worry, (ret, hurry and rheumatism." Is the way Dr.- Darlington, of the New York Ileilth Board, checked off tho causes for heart disease. "So far." said he. "the simple life has not become the fashion, and, as a conse quence, the hearts- of most people have to work overtime. Hurry Is bad, but not nearly so fatal as worry and fret to a weak heart. "'Don't run and 'avoid rheumatism are among the health recipes which ousht to bo first considered by the man or woman who wants his or her heart to keep on ticking normally for three score and ten years or longer. It Is safe to my that a person of temperate habits In eat ing and drinking who takes six or olsht hours sleep out of the 24 and tome exer cise afoot in the open air every day. and who absolutely refuses to worry and fret over his business or anything else, will never die of heart dlseas?." Washington Post. Vncation Sons. Omaha Bee. 1 have clo?d my bookp and hidden my lat. And thrown my catehel across the sate. My chool la out for a season of rest. And now for the school room I love the best. My fehool room lies on the meadow wld. "Where under the clover the sunbeam hide. Where the lonp v!ns cling to the moFiy bars. And the dalrlex twinkle- like fallen .stars. Where cluster of buttercups gild the scene. Like showers of sold dust thrown over tho RTeon. And the wind's flying footsteps are traced as they pars. Br the dance of the sorrel and the dip of the crass. My lessons are written In clouds and trees. And no one whispers except the breeze. Who sometimes blows, from a secret place. A stray, sweet blossom against my face. My school bell rlass In the rippling stream Which hides Itself, like a schoolboy's dream. Under the shadow and out of sight. But laughing still for Its own delight. My schoolmates there are the birds and bees. And the yaucr squirrel, more dull than these. For he on!r learns In all the weeks. How many chestnuts will nil his cheeks. O come! O come, or we shall be la.". And Autumn will fasten the golden jrate. Shades of the Fathers at the, .National Capitol THE AUTHOR FAILS TO RECOGNIZE WASHINGTON, JEFFERSON AND ADAMS IN MODERN GARB BY FREDERIDK UPHAM ADAMS (Coprright. IPGS, br McClur. Phillips & Co.) (IXTnODCCTIOX The Shades of Washing ton. JetTerron and Samuel Adams are pictured by this gifted Imaginative writer as- having returned for a period to the country they helped to establish. Late at night Xhty visit the library of Smith, an author, and and him la conversation with his friend Brown. Smith lit a conservative, while Brown Is a pro nounced radical. A series of conferences fol low. In which the leading topic Is the crowtli of corporations and the Inequality of the distribution of wealth. They then decide to make a tour of Investigation of the country, the Three Shaden agreeing to meet Smith and Brown In Washington at & designated place and time. No articles written In recent years on eco nomic topics have-attracted more attention or aroused more comment and criticism than these from the pen, of Mr. Adams.) BROWN and. I Journeyed to Wash ington a day in advance1 of tho day set for our meeting with the shades of the three distinguished pat riots. It seemed a strange quest, but we had no doubt that they would keep their appointment. I confess that I was possessed of a feeling of nervous ness. If not of dread. While we bad met these shades, ghosts or reincarna tions I do not yet know how to desig nate them properly and while we had become moro or less accustomed to as sociating with them In the night quiet of my library, it was another and a far different thing to go with, them on the proposed tour of Investigation, and to present them to the busy, practical, un imaginative and careless world. Brown and I discussed this matter as we sped on our way through Philadelphia and Baltimore and neared the National Capitol. Wc always referred to them as "They." "If they appear In the same garb In Washington and elsewhere as they did to us In my library," I remarked, "they will create the greatest sensation ever experienced In this country." "I doubt if .they will appear to others as they did to us." said Brown. "I certainly hope not." "Why?" "To tell you the truth." I replied. after a "moment's hesitation, "my reason is so selfish that it does me small credit. but I may as well confess It. If they make themselves known publicly I shall no longer be the exclusive historian of Jhelr sayings and movements. Since we had little difficulty In recognizing them I fall to see why others should not do the same." "There's no use of worrying about It." laughed Brown. "I Imagine that they will have no difficulty In preserving tho secret of their Identity if they choose to do so. and I will wager that- no one In Washington will recognize them. I think we have an entirely erroneous idea about shades "or ghosts." '-How so?" "We assume that - they wander about only at night and imagine that they are always shadowy and illusive in their ap pearancc. returned lirown. "Now we know that those shades look as substan tial as we do. When they get to talking and, walking up and down the room I forget that there Is anything unreal about them. It is only when they mys teriously appear and disappear that I think of.thcm as not of this world. How about you Smith?" . BrS-fnnnXT expresse-)" "my sensations wlth'Jnusual accuracy, and I told him so. "If. shades visit this earth at times and we know now that' they do," ob served Brown, "why. sliould they prowl about at night? The things which most Interest them occur in the daytime. If" "They probably do not care to be aeen." I interrupted. "How do you know that they do not car to be seen?" Brown demanded. "Wo know that we have seen the shades of three men. and we saw them in a light almost as bright as that of noon. How do you know that you have not seen hundreds and perhaps thousands of shades? "Every day of your life when you are In the city you meet armies of persons you do not know. How can you tell that all of them arc real? How do you know that the stranger who passes you on Broadway Is a man of flesh and blood? Because he does not appear and vanish before your eyes, how do you know that He cannot do so If he chooses?" "I cannot disprove It, but I do not be lieve It," I said, smiling at Brown's earnestness. "Well. I do." responded Brown. "Even In small villages where every Inhabitant knows cverj other Inhabitant strangers will be seen walking up and down the streets and across the. pastures. No one sees them come, and no one sees them depart- Who are they?" I was not In the mood to dispute or even to discuss this strange and rather Interesting theory of Brown's, and re mained silent while he elaborated on it to his heart's content. He Inststed that there wero bad shades as well as good ones, and declared that he had no doubt that many of the street-car brutes ami other offenders against com mon decency were no more nor less than "shades who had been given a vacation by his satanlc majesty." This seemed so much In harmony with the facts that I was forced to admit Its possibility. Our appointment with The Three was at noon of the following clay, and we en tered the Capitol Building and proceeded to Statuary Hall several minutes before the hour. There was more than the us ual throng of visitors, most of whom were evidently from the country districts or the smaller towns. The coolness of this famous hall was refreshing after our' long climb from Pennsylvania ave nue, nnd we stood for several minutes content to watch those who gazed for the first time, perhaps, at the marble representations of the great historic characters of our republic. The scene was a familiar one to me. and Brown had been there many times before, but the spot now had new interest to us be cause of the fact that the statues of Washington. Jefferson and Samuel Adams occupied conspicuous places. A guide proffered his services, but we declined them and walked slowly around the room, pausing to study the faces of the three great patriots as carved by the sculptors. We were so engrossed In gazing at the majestic figure of Thomas Jefferson that we did not note the speeding of the min utes. Brown suddenly looked at his watch. "It Is five minutes past twelve!" .he exclaimed. "Where are they? Let's look for them." There were probably 50 persons In the hall, ami we looked closely at each of them as we walked around the broad circle. It needed only a glance to con- (. vlnce us that those we sought were not present. I wns keenly disappointed, and Brown shared In my feelings. We stood near the center of the hall where we could watch all who entered nnd left, and again we looked searchlngly at the various persons and -roups scattered around the room, there were famlly partles. simpering school girls, farmers with bowed shoulders and calloused hands, army veterans with empty sleeves and other types such as one may expect to see In one of Washington's show places. A few feet from us were three men. but It was so evident that they were modern and real that we paid only passing attention to them. Five minutes passed, during which time neith er Brown nor I said a word. Then my friend broke the silence. iU3 is tno cna or. una wild goosey chase." he said, pulling at my sleeve and starting for the west exit. "Come on. Smith, let's go to the hotel, pay our bill and take the next 'train back home." "We may as well," I said, after hes itating a minute. "I cannot understand this. Is It possible that we can have made a mistake In the date?" "It was forenoon of today." replied Brown as we walked slowly past the three men I have before mentioned. "Jeffer son made the appointment, and I heard him as plain aa you can hear me now." "You are right, Mr. Brown," said the taller of the three men as he left his companions and stood In front of us. It. was tho reincarnated, modern ized figure of Thomas Jefferson, but ove!n then I did not recognize him! Brown Insists that he did, but I shall never forget tho expression- of aston ishment on his face. "Wo wero here promptly on the stroke of 12," continued Jefferson, his faco lighted with a smile wlIch indi cated his enjoyment of the situation. As ho spoke the others joined us, and while I was vagculy conscious that they were the shades of Washington and Samuel Adam3. I found myself struggling with another conviction to the effect that we were the victims of some strange coincidence. As I havo already narrated, when these three first presented themselves In my li brary toora late that eventful night I was Impressed by the fact that they appeared In the guise of men In tho prlmo of life, not as we are wont to picture the Washington, Jefferson and Adams In their declining years. They were garbed that night In tho pictu resque and long since discarded ap parel of the age In which they lived, and we were so familiar with their faces and figures In that setting that we nad no difficulty In recognizing them. I claim to be fairly competent to draw a word painting of a man or a woman. It is a part of my trado, but I despair of describing the three figures which stood before us within the shadow of the dome of the Capitol building. Let me say at the outset that they lost none of their dignity in my eyes, and If anything I shall write concerning their appearance leads to any other conclusion such inference is not warranted. I should have taken Jefferson to be a prosperous, cultured and brisk man of affairs, a banker, manufacturer or merchant from somo such city as Chicago. Pittsburg or New Tork. His clothes were thoso worn by men of good taste and ample means, and were adapted to the warm and enervat ing climate of Washington during the Summer season. I noted the blue sergo suit of light material, the negligee shirt, tho low standing collar, the plain scarf, the straw hat and mentally con trasted the effect with that of the con ventional Jefferson or Washington's Cabinet, who on his return from France was accounted the best-dressed man In thi republic. In later years ho went to the other extreme, but tho re incarnated Jefferson who confronted us did not look to bo more than 35 year3 of ago. The face was that of Jeffer son, but there" are thousands now liv ing who havo his type of features, and you meet such men frequently without once thinking of the author of the Dec laration of Independence. Washington looked tho well-to-do farmer or. plantation owner who has retired to broad acres after a military training, ne was dressed in a suit of dark material and wore the soft slouch hat familiar to thoso who have met the gentleman farmer of the South and Southwest. I should have judged him a man of 40. a man of splendid physique, broad-shouldered, erect' and Impressive of bearing. ' Our portraits of him lead us to believe that his hair was always gray or white, but the Washington who greeted ua had red- doctor, advising him to set his mind stead fastly on one thing or the other. "You can probably do fairly well both as a doctor and as a writer, but you can become noted in either line If your whole attention" Is given to It," he said. "If I were you I would take medicine for my career. By the time you are of middle age, or a little past, you can be well enough off to retire. If you wish to. and then you can begin on literature. Mean while you will have accumulated such a stock of experience and knowledge of hu man nature In the profession that you will be exceptionally equipped to write of human life." Young Mitchell didn't follow this advice completely, for he wrote a few stories and verses when In the 30s. but nobody knows about them now, and he forsook llteraturo entirely- for several years. His later works. ill undertaken after he was past S. have made him known to more people than his achievements In medicine. It was after the Civil War. during which he made profound studies of gunshot wounds and nervous shock, that he took up the study of snake poison as a relaxa tion. In order to do this, of course, he either had to keep venomous snakes at his office or spend some time In a region where they aro common. The first of these courses not being quite, feasible, ho gave up two or three of his Summer vaca tions to life in the rattlesnake districts of Pennsylvania, gathering venom nnd health at the same time, and returning to his practice in the Fall almost as much refreshed by his experiments with the venom as by his general outdoor life. Dr. Mitchell's vacation diversion Is ang ling In Canadian waters. Few men have the power of getting practically all of their relaxation out of change of occupation, but Frank H. Smith the builder of seawalls and lighthouses, succeeds admirably In doing so. In hl3 lino Frank H. Smith Is exceedingly well known, though-you may not recognize him by that name, but as F. Hopkinson Smith, essayist, fiction writer, lecturer, painter nnd elocutionist, the whole reading world knows him. This man glories in the fact that he can spend a certain time dally In his business office in the morning generally buying supplies, making contracts and so on! much of the afternoon at his studio paint ings pictures, and. an hour just before dinner, writing In his library at his house, while in the evening he may fill an en gagement to lecture or to read, and, as he often tells IjIh friends, he gets the relaxation which other men have to fight for, out of every change of work. Mr. Smith takes his vacations like other men, and In their course has visited most parts of the world worth visiting, but he does some of his hardest work while on his vacation traveling, as his published books indicate. W. D. Howella clears most of the cob webs that get Into his brain when writing by going out among the people and pick ing up materlnl for more writing. When he lived In New York he used to tramp miles and miles of metropolitan streets every day, preferring to walk ea3t ana west across town mostly, because, as he said, he could get more variety In a shorter time that way than by following the avenues which run north and south. Social conditions In New York are ranged in layers running north and couth, and a Clearing Cobwebs From Brains Continued From Page Forty. disr.-brown hnlr, which was slightly Inclined to curl. Instead of a sword he carried a stout cane, and In place of boots- or silk stockings he wore a well-flitlng pair of modern shoes. I could have guessed that Samuel Adams was a college professor, or per haps a clergyman of some such denom ination as- Methodist or Baptist. He had a couple of books under his arm, and a package of papers or documents protruded from an Inner pocket of nis gray cpat. He looked Iiko a man who had visited the Capitol for the pur pose of collecting material fbr a lecture or a sermon. I did not gather all of these Impressions at the iriomeht of our meeting. I was too astounded and dazed to have a clenr idea of any thing, and It was only after several minutes had passed that I took occa sion to study tho three at my leisure. As Jefferson spoke he extended his hand to' me. During all of our preced ing Intercourse neither Brown nor I had .attempted to touch oven tho gar ments of our strange -visitors, though now that I recall it. Brown in a mo ment of forgctfulness was on tne point of offering to shake hands with Jeffer spn one midnight aa the clock sounded the signal for their departure, but ho checked himself In time, and was care ful thereafter not to risk making so glaring a contretemps. As Jefferson held out his hand I hesitated and In stinctively stepped back a pace, but tho next Instant I regained my courago and grasped what I presumed to bo merely the Illusion of a hand. Posslbiy it was an Illusion, but it had the feel and tho muscle of a human being who is enjoying unusual good health. I do not pretend to explain it. and can only suggest that since we know that our eyes often deceive uj why is it not, reasonable to assume that our sense of feeling is equally unreliable? In our dream.3 w-e see illusions, hear them arid feel them. I take it that it Is no more remarkable to sejj a shade or a spirit than to touch one. Whether the sensation is real or a figment or the fancy, I do not, presume to say, but I know that Brown and I shook hand-s with all three of these figures, and that if I was the victim of a delu sion, so was Brown. "STou will excuse us If we have amused ourselves for a few minutes at your expense." said Jefferson, his deep blue eye3 twinkling with good nature. "Wo wero here ahead of you. and gavo you every chance to recognize us, but you refused to do so. We stopped you once and asked you several questions, all of which you answered polltely wlthout giving a sign that you had met us before. This convinces us that your modern garments are an effectual disguise." "You need not have the slightest! uneasiness on that score," declared Brown, who had entirely regained his normal complacent poise. "Mr. Adams could deliver an address in Faneull Hall, General Washington could roam over tho grounds of Mount Vernon, and you. Mr. Jefferson, could return to Mon" tlcello, and none of you would be recog nized." "Let us go to the Senate chamber and hold a brlof conferenco and map out" a plan of campaign," suggested Samuel Adams. "Your Congress Is not in session at present, and It is possible that the traditions of that famous room may give us inspiration." .r With Brown and Samuel Adams lead ing the way we strolled down the long corridors and entered unchallenged into the sacred gloom and quiet of the de serted Senate chamber. "This," said tho unabashed Brown. "Is said to bo tlx hon.lnnurters of tho most wealthy and exclusive club In tha world. Membership here costs all tha way from $10,000 to $100,000, and tha wnltlng list Is enormous." brisk half-hour's walk across town wilt bisect practically all of them, while it would take much longer to get a similar variety walking In the other direction. Earlier in his career, when Boston In stead of New York was his headquarters, he cultivated a garden for recreation. It contained many splendid beds of flowers, and he used to work In them personally several hours every day. FAMOUS M7WQR, MILLION AIRE SENATOR JOHN WEAVER, of Philadelphia, whose life as Mayor in that City of Graft nnd Brotherly Love has been strenuous enough the past few years to fill his brain with all sorts of cobwebs, has half a dozen ways of sweeping them out. Ono of them Is teaching a class In Sun- day school every week. Before he becamo Mayor and began to draw $12,000 a year he used to take long walks. Somo tlma after his election he bought a saddla horse, and. down to tho big row about tho gas, ho rode regularly with David J. Smyth, the Director of Public Safety, who was bounced out of office In the midst 02 the row. Smyth dotailed one of his mount ed policemen to teach the Mayor to ride, and once the latter gave the local news papers an interesting Itcni and nearly loss his life by getting his foot caught In tho stirrup jumping from his horse, and be ing rescued from his perilous position by the mounted policeman. Of late the Mayor has found grea,t ana regular relaxation In his new automobile, with which he drove as many miles as h could find time to, daily, in the parks ana suburbs, while the gas war was In prog ress. His vacation relaxation Is yacht ing. He is an ardent menAcr of tho Sea side Park Yacht Club, whose boats aro sailed on Bnrnegat Bay. and his yacht Fanroy Is one of the fastest in the fleet. The Mayor sails Fanroy himself, and Is counted an exceptionally skillful skipper. Senator Clark, of Montana, is as fond of automobillng as Is Mayor Weaver. Aim ing to take at least one spin every day. he also finds forgetfulness from the cares of legislation and the worries of th.- big business affairs to which he devotes seri ous attention in looking carefully after his household expenses and the study of costly paintings. No one acquainted with the Senator would term him close or niggardly, but ho know? to a cent each month how much hl3 household costs him and why; ha Inspects his stables almost dally, nnd notes carefully any deterioration In tha harness and lack of attention to hl3 horses, as shown by mane or fetlock, and keeps close watch of the price of oats and hay. When In Washington, during the session, he often does his own mar keting. He Is as good a Judge of a steak or turkey as the next one. and. his friends say. Is able completely to forget the big affairs of life In attending to tho little details mentioned here. DEXTER MARSHALL. The Heaviest Battalion, Etc. Pittsburg Despatch. The Kaiser chose for the text of . his latest sermon "The Lord of Hosts Is With Us." But that is just what the Russians thought about 17 months ago.