THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 11, 1904. F SEVEN THINGS NECESSARY TO KEEP IT FREE. AND THE CHIEF IS AN INTELLIGENT AND VIGILANT CITIZENSHIP ree Government ryce on a James B INSTITUTIONS are Intended to work for ft particular people at a par ticular tlma. You must have re gard for the particular time In Judging of the quality of the in tltutlona. For Inatance. people have been In the habit 01 supposing that maaaea of men have alwaya certala propertlea of popular government. That la ft mlataken Idea. After all, a popular government In Sicily M not the same thing aa a popular government In New York. Therefore you must examine what may be called all the condlttona af fecting the working of human nature In government. In other words, you muat consider what ia called the environ ment. Let me try not to go Into the sub ject In detail, but to convey aome Idea of what la meant by the Influence of environment by giving you ft number of Instance In which It doea affect the working Institutions. A very Important element which haa to be considered before determining a good institution la the character of the country in which -it la at work, and by country I mean the area occupied by the people you muat .onalder the char acter of lta surface. Another element la found In the ca pacity of the country for producing wealth: lta minerals. Its soil, lta pas ture, lta foreata and any other element that can produce wealth, and In the oc cupations which lta natural reaourcea and condition prescribe for the people who Inhabit It. These occupations of the people will have a great Influence upon the kind of government which they will produce, and which la fit for them. And then you must consider the pon dltlon of education, the met. .0,1 of com munication, whether by land or sea, by By REV. 1 (Copyright, 1004, by W. R Hesrat.) "X. NH of the essential points In the 1 problem of how to keep young sa m is tor young moiner 10 with their children aa much as possible. Let thm try If, ad later they will agree with me that the only possi ble way for ft mother to keep young and fresh rs to spend as much time aa possible with her children and with young people. Young people can always be made to associate with their eiders. 1 owe n greatest enjoyment of my llf to the fact that r jcould associate with my father and mother and an elder brother and Bis ter. I have never forgotten what the companionship of older friends ha been to me. When my mother. tbik..0ver .70. was asked what her chief occupation waa, ahe said that It waa talking to young people. And it waa always so. When we were children growing up we talked to her and with hr about everything we naa aeen or done. Sh alwaya mad ua feel that ah was enjoying It all, and I be lieve ah waa. Sarah Bernhardt, who I believe 1 (0 year of age. ha ft number of young peo ple wno taae care 01 ner. one unuoi -stands the art of keeping young, and therefor she always keeps with -young people as much as possible. - A great mistake that old people ore aft to make I to draw away from th younger generation and live ft reserved, lonely llf among themselves. Nothing is better for even young man or woman of 21 or 22 than ft company of young people younger than himself or herself. It la good for boy of 15 to have 00m panlona among men of 20 or older, and for a man of 10 nothing la better than companion among younger people id w aid Lambert, on of the great Iron men of th country, now about 90 yeara old, told me that when he first went to Kngland aa the agent of a large com pany he was 21 or 22. He waa corre spondent and agent of a large eastern firm before he waa 26. He attended business councils, dinner parties, visited country plsces with cor respondents and agenta of other con cerns, and he said that be did not dare to tell how old he waa, because the older people with whom he waa associating wouldn't have had the slightest respect for his opinion or for himself had they known his age. He was a mere boy. That la why I send young men to th west as much a I do. I always say to a young man: . "You would better go weat. Go to the Pacific coast, the Islands in ths Pacific, and. In fact, get out anywhere in the weat and see how they do things. It Is always well to see how they do things in other parte of the country. In the west they are learning to depend on the young men in great enterprises." It Is said that the battle of Gettysburg wss won by sn army of boys averaging 23 years of age. If they could trust them to do that much, why not let them do more? When Mr. Bancroft, the hls torlsn, describes the setting aside of Ar temus Ward b'y General Washington In the revolutionary war, the reason he gives I that Ward, being 48, was too old. , . Lafayette was wounded at Bran dywlne when only It. Knox and Pick ens and others were not over 25 when the revolution began. One of the causes, I Vital Importance of Cheerfulness By MRS. JOHN A. LOGAN (Copyright, 1004, by the AnerlciD-Joaraal-Eiamlaer.) BULWER LYTTON declared that "If there Is a virtue In the world at which we ahould aim, It la cheerfulness." No wiser axiom could be uttered. Without cheerfulness life would be one eternal" 'grind, with naught to lighten lta burdens and bright en Its devious pathways. Cheerfulness Is the product of temp pernment. physical condltlona and culti vation. Scientists have undertaken to locate it in the human tody; they insist It Is a quality of mind and heart. Peo ple are spoken of as being "cheerful and light-hearted," "cheerful-minded." a having "a cheerful dlaposltlon." or as being "cheerless and heavy-hearted." Those possessing th heaven-born qual ity of cheerfulne ar not easily affect ed by bodily HI o adversities; to them there Is ever a silver lining to every cloud. They, sbove sll othere, r the dispensers of happiness. A cheerful face Ilka the aunshlne, banlahes th storm clouds. A rhsery smile Is s bene diction that unconaiously drive away th frowns of th angry or depressed. It 1 not because the possessor of a cheerful disposition alwaya saya the wisest and tendereat things; it is, the tone and manner In which one speaks, the expression of the eyei. which pene t rates to the soul and drives away cares feare. foot or beast of burden, and in our own days by railroad or telegraph. And you muat conalder the direction In which the tastes of the people may go. Then you muat conalder their disposi tion with regard to outer countrlea. We will see how much depemla upon their relatione to others, upon their liability to be taken by enemies, upon their powers of defense, in the natjiral char acter of the country all those things that make a difference whether a com munity develops a military or civic tact. Then you must consider the relatione of clasaes. Theae are determined by economic conditions. Where conducive to wealth. It la more proper that a dif ference of conditions will grow up, that soma will be rich and some will be poor, and the difference of the claaaea will be repeated In the structure of the government. V Win must alsn consider rnetnl phr. acter and habits of a people. You can not Impose a form of government upon a people without some regard to haKst and the capacity which those habits have for Industry, for working and for education. Then you have a group of differences indicated by the word religion. It la ft factor In many waya. Religion Is at once a cause and an effect. It Is an Index of the degree of 1 l Ulxatlon which a people have reached, and It Is also a factor In fitting a people for ft higher or lower form of Institu tions. All these different conditions have comer to be recognised to such an ex tent that sensible men have come to abandon what was a favorite study and inquiry with the political phlloaopher one or two rentilrle ago. In thoae days of the French revolu tion, and a good many days after the How to Keep Young DR. EDWARD EVERETT think, and deserved causes, of Roose velt's popularity is that he breathea the health and spirit and youth of the coun try. He stands for youth and health aisl energy. - Now, It must be taken for granted that no one approaches the ethlca of thla question with any expectation of profit unleas he baa previously applied the ear lier directions. It is supposed, for in stance, that he haa accustomed himself to aleep and eat regularly, and that he takes regular exercise In the open air every day of his life. A story which one of the most beauti ful women I ever knew made to me when ahe muat have been about 48 years old Is apropos here. . It was In the early days of my ministry and 1 had been making a pariah call. As I came away I laughed and sstdf "Would you be good enough to give me th secret of beauty?" "Why, what do you mean?" ahe said. i"WeII," I Said, "If you will permit m to say so, you look younger than any of the young ladle I meat, and yet you have a boy of II." "I can tell you one thing, Mr. Hal," ahe replied; "when we were married and cam out bar to Longwood to live,' my husband aald to me: 'Sarah, the trou ble with you will be that you won't take exercise enough, and I will make thla promise to you I will give you 76 cents a day for every walk you take which carries you further than such and such a post.' Of course. It waa nothing but fun. I didn't need the money, and didn't do it for that, but many a time I have put on my India-rubber boots and cloak and taken a mile walk and back because I wanted to score him with the 7R cents. I got Into the habit of that two-mile walk every day, rain or shine." Now very few women1 of today have got Into that habit, but It would be bet ter for them If they had. And so I say, live In the open air Just as much as you can. If you are to maintain intercourse with the young, you must. In certain thinga, live In their life. You need not Ignore the fact that you are not physi cally young and make the mistake of playing ball at (0 with boys of 18 un less you want to. Don't pretend that you are a boy. A certain doctor told me that at 8S yeara of age a man In good health waa In his prime, but he also said that at the ag of 46 physical strength Is on the decline. I remember that he took a piece of paper and drew the aeml-clrcle of a man's life, using It to Illustrate the Increase of physlcsl powers to their full development, which he said waa th middle-of the curve, and that the curve decltfged after 46. But he ssld thst a man's spiritual life was always enlarg ing. That Is the reason why, when you talk with an older gentleman he knows so much more than you do and Is able to help you there, though perhaps he Is In such physical decline that you could throw him out of the window If you wanted to. That person muat rely more and more upon the experience of ad vancing life, for Instance, than on his dancing or walking or active exercise. To make the best of the power thus gained by experience we must use It un consciously. One mustn't constantly be saying: "I Hoapltal and prison attendants have told some touching stories of the effect of cheerful visitors upon patients and prisoners. Often Inmates of these Insti tutions are so gloomy and depreaaed that It seems Impossible to arouse thetn. Perhapn unannounced some good angel comes In, passes up and down the aisles. Inquiring after the health and welfare of each unfortunate, graciously extending a hand of greeting or uttering at few words of encouragement and good wlahes which act like a balm to their suffering souls snd bodies, encouraging them to make new resdlves and efforts to recover Trom disease or reform J they have commit ted crime. No matter what position people occu py In life, much of their success depends upon the cheerfulness with which they take hold of their duties. The churlish servant Is unsatlafactory. no matter wlfh what preclalon and dispatch the work may be done. If. nn the contrary, nn employe la always bright snd cheery. In numerable deficiencies will be excused and overlooked. A moroae, disobliging tradesman has few customers that cannot be supplied with their wanta elsewhere. The) busi ness man who starts with gloomy fore boding and a cheerless countenance will rarely succeed, because he advertise his want of confidence In himself by hie melancholy face and depressed spirits Of ftlt people, however, th wife and French revolution, people were urging views and holding discussions on the best form of government. Nobody Is discussing th'at question now, because It la acknowledged that the beat form Of government la that best suited to a particular community. The facts are not measurable In the way that the facts of natural science are. You cannot be sure that the con dlttona will be the aame Ave or ten yeara hence aa they are at the moment when your observations are taken I feel this la so in regard to your own government. The conditions In your government seem to be different today from what they were years ago. I don't see how any person can state that the conditions of 1(70 could be true at thla moment. Therefore, one may ar rive at thla general conclusion, that, although a qualitative science. It Is not an exact science. In political science you can determine the existence of a given phenomenon. It Is possible, I believe, with regard to nearly every form of government, to de termine whether or not political cor ruption la present, either among officials or electors; but to determine the quan tity to which It la there Is obviously a more difficult task, and one which I think no one without the longest and most protracted Inquiry could satisfy himself that he had accomplished. That la an Instance of the extra difficulty of applying to our science the methods which the scientist may use. Now, speaking generally, a monarchy. Is more dangerous In a small commu nity tfuun In a larger one; It Is more likely to degenerate' Into tyranny. It makes all the difference to a mon archy whether It be national or not! that It, whether the monarch rules over a nation which Is homogenous and pene HALE. am older than you and I know a great deal more." They say that young peo ple think old people are fools and old people thai young people are. One should keep that thought out of sight. We must not be thinking of ourselves all the time. Don't be bothered about yourself. The good God will take care of that If you take care of the other thinga But nobody ever forgot himself who had to remember to forget himself. The way to forget yourself Is to think of somebody larger and better than yourself. Now, as a matter of persons! experi ence, aa well aa what the best guldea would tell us. I think the study of na ture la a great part of this forgetting of one's self In the right way. Well I re member thdse charming cards that that man up In Vermont makes by which he shows ths glories and beauty of the snowf lakes. Jhe boy or girl seeing the wonderful pmsclenoe and wisdom of th good God In making 60 snowflake dif ferent from each other may also learn to feel constantly the presence of God In the glorlea and beauties qf nature. So with anybody who will launoh out Into the love of nature. Take- my lady of 48, already mentioned, in her daily walk. If. while she wss walking, she was not thinking about the 16 cents, but was keeping the run of the crlcketa and beetles and spiders, and the lichens and the mosses, ahe got Into the larger life and felt herseir a fellow workman with God. The gardener who raises a lovely rose Is a workman working with God. The woman who gets her hyacinths to bloom aa she want them to Is a workman working with GodJ And so I say. the .sooner you. get the child or the young person interested In nature the better It Is for him and you. It may be a common ground between you and the young person. If you are fond of a garden, do not satisfy yourself with carrying that on aa you did SO years ago. Read and study and observe. Determine that in some one point that ga den ahall excel, that It ahall be a better garden than it was possible for you to have SO years ago. That meana that, though you are under some dtsadvantagea in being 30 years older, you still have the greater advantages that belong to your age. It is a pity for a man of advancing age to "quit business," aa the familiar phraae is. He should have some busi ness, although, as the doctor whom I have quoted says, a man of (6 should not force himself to his duty. The title of this article, "How to Re main Young," Is the same as that of one which I wrote about 20 years ago. it was really suggested to me by a suc cessful publisher, a great friend of mine. He wrote to me, aaklng for something on this subject. I said I would. do it and prepared the paper. I hope I ahall not be misunderstood when I say that I think that was the only thing thst was ever returned to me by a publisher. I aatd In that article, with perfect simplicity, that a child of God who was at work with his Father, and was in his Father's life ell the time, would natur ally rely on Omnipotence; that If you allied youraelf with God you were almighty yourself and might rely on His power as a workman working with the mothy should be cheerful; the hap piness or the husband and the children dependa upon her. If eh Is low-splrlted and melancholy, how enn th husbsnd come to her for sympathy and encour agement In his business worries? He looks to her for Inspiration In all hla undertakings They may sometimes be very harassing, and he may be tried al most to desperation, and If he must go home to a wife whose face ia without smiles, and who Is gloomy and spirit less, he Is all the more depressed: where as If she la merry and bright and in sists that the worries he has are trivi alities and that they are sure to adjust themselves to his liking or to vanish al together, nine times out of ten before he Is really aw.are of the fact he haa for gotten them or they have dwindled Into Insignificance. The mountains thst de spair builds up by brooding over mole hills can best be removed by cheerful ness. Many a case of melsnchola has developed In both men and women through indulgence In gloomy thoughts and a yielding to low spirits snd Inslg nlflcant physical Indisposition. Some persons give way to grief over th death of a loved one to the extent of altogether neglecting the living. They sometimes profess great faith in God. They know all must die. and yet thsy act aa If they had no hope beyond th grave. They distress all with whom they come In contact, and afflict their families by trated by a national scale, or whether It la a monarchy operating by the power of one nation over one or several na tions with which he la not In aympathy. Clearly in the latter caae his rule Is likely to be exposed to evil which would not be likely In the former Instance. There Is a difference also If it Is held In check by religion. There is a difference If It Is military. If It rests upon an army, absolutism la more likely to obtain. If a citizen of the United State de sires to study other governments; be cause, after all. we have got to con sider political conditions in other coun tries, he will desire to know what are the essentials of a free government. In Oie first place, ft free government requires an Intelligent and vigilant peo ple. No people whch la not both In teiitgeni ana watennu, Hnxious 10 pre aerve lta own liberty, can maintain a free government. There Is an old maxim of your revolutionary daya that covers this: Perpetual vigilance 1 the price of freedom." The citizen muat be a good citizen and continually alive to hi duty. j Second, It Is another essential of free government that It should provide a sys tem for bringing the will of the people to bear upon the government; for mak ing the government a representation of the popular will. That may. be done, speaking broadly, by two methods the one, the method of representation In which the people choose certain persona to legislate, or by a second method of popular vote, either by a primary as sembly or in the form of a vote taken not in an aasembly, but by the people over a wide area, as, for example, In the ease of the referendum In Swltserland or the popular vote on a constitutional amendment in thla country. God; that In the morning when you got up you could aay, "Well, I am not much myself, but the good God will carry me through." Well, this psper was returned. Th publisher said that he thought he ought to print It, and his wife thought he ought to, but his waa not a religious Journal and he did not want It to be stamped as such, ' snd. therefore, he could not print the article. Now. If that Is the real test of the literary world, If ws are going to try to get on with the attraction of gravity without knowing who makes It and ac cept the universe without knowing what Its life springs from. why. thsn I think America Is In a pretty bad way. The man or woman who doesn't under stand what It la to live in a spiritual world, who doesn't know anything about being a workman with God. is a person you can t give any rules to, because that man or woman wont use the rules. - Very seriously, the way to remain young Is to remember that we are Im mortal beings; that this business of so many yeara Is only a sort of a calendar bunlneaa and'a very Insignificant part of qur whole career; that we are really children of God, If we partake of God's nature. Aa God is eternal, we are Immortal. If we can always bear that In mind we ahall remain young. . - The Story .CHAPTER I. Before her proud old father stands The heroine so fair (A half a page about her handa, A page about her hair). "You ahall not wed thla man!" gro.wls he 1 We think we quote th text). "Dare to defy my rule, you'll be" (Continued In our next) CHAPTER It The villain with hi cigarette Now wool the heroin; She wall the day sh ever met A man so filled With sin. "Refuse meh, gyurl!" he coldly sneers. While he stands there, perplexed, "Then you shall be, through all your year " (Continued In our next.) CHAPTER III. The hero meets the villain now; The hero aaya, "Aha!" , And wildly mopa hla furrowed brow; The villain mutters, "Bah!" The villain telle the hero he Home money haa annexed. The hero swears he soon shall be (Continued In our next. ) CHAPTER IV. Proud father, villain, hero, too. Detective by th score: Proud father: "Ne'er again must you Be darkening my door!" The villain laughs his scornful sneer Whose tones are clrcumflexed. The hero: "Walt for me. my dear " (Continued in our next.) CHAPTER V. The hern languishes In Jail; The villain, with a grin. Saya that he'll go the hero's ball And wed the heroine. But, ho! the1 hero's Innocence Is proven by a friend; They wed; the villain slouches thence; l'roud father melts. (The end.) Chicago Tribune. their tearful eyes, cheerless and woe begone aces. Mothers should remember that their children are destined to become ac quainted with grief soon enough In life, and they should never allow them to see signs of sorrow and trouble in their faces. They should teach them the'vltai Importance of cheerfulness by never varying happineaa and amiable dlaposl tlon. How many little ones have first learned there wereclouda as well as sun-. shine by looking up Into the tearful eyea of their mothers, and, though unable to divine the meaning of her trouble, bave climbed up to kiss away her tears, and doubtless wander whnt they meant. No duty la more obligatory than that of cheerfulness. "What the sun Is to nature, what God Is to the stricken heart which knows how to lesn upon Him. are the cheerful persons In the house and by the wayside." CHOOL FOB Hi Even blacksmiths and locksmiths must hare technical school educations In ths fatherlsnd. Jiermany haa seven schools devoted to the training of as pirants to these trades, Only graduates of public schools sre admitted, and to one of them, that at Rosaweln. are ad mitted only the graduates of one of the other six blscksmlth and locksmith schools. This Rossweln school hss a highly advanced curriculum which covers physics, chemistry and electricity, with psrtlculsr reference to practical construction of machinery. The schools are supported by the blacksmith and locksmith guilds, aided by subventions from the government of Saxony snd pri vate beneficence. The course lasts from two to three years, according to the school. Third, it Is essential to a free gov ernment that the election ahould be hon orable: that la to aay, that there ahould be a fair count in order that the true will of the people will be listed. Fourth. It Is essential that there should be adequate Inducements to ca pable men 1 offer themaelvea for the work of government. And these Induce ments may be of two kinds. It may be a positive Inducement In the form of attraction to a man to work for a gov ernment. In the wuy of remunerating him; or, pn the other hand. It may be the absence of abuse or suspicions to which he may he exposed at the hands of the people. It Is further easentlal that the con stitution should contain a method by which responsibility may be fixed upon the person who Is answerable for any act. The repreeentatlve may be made responsible for his votes, and with this purpose hla votes must be recorded and known. The official must be responsi ble for his acts, and It must be possible to bring responsibility or liability home to htm, o that he cannot shirk out of It by alleging that he acted for someone else. Sixth. It Is essential that the Judiciary be Independent and be honest. They must not be displaced at the will, of the legislature or executive. It is upon the honesty of the Judiciary thst reliance Is had for the proper enforcement of the laws. Seventh, you must have In every free government nn adequate system of checks and balsnre, to secure the people from the dsnger of acting with too much haste. On the other hand you muat give adequate protection against undue delay. To theae seven requisites I might add two others that are not peculiar to free IT would seem that women are more largely swayed by deattny than ouraelvea. They submit to its de crees with far- more almpllclty, nor la there sincerity In the resistance they offer. They are stni nearer to God and yield themselves with less re serve to the pure workings of the mys tery. And therefore it la doubtless thst all the incidents In our life In which they take part seem to Bring us nearer to the very fountain head ' of destiny. It Is above all when by their aide that moments come, unexpectedly, when a "clear preaentlment" flashea across us. ft preaentlment of a life that does not always seem parallel to the life we know of. They lead us close to the gates of our being. May It not be during one of those pro found moments when his head la pillowed on a woman's breast that the hero lea ma to know the strength and steadfastness of his star? And, lntTeed, will any true sentiment, of the future ever come to the man who has not had his resting place In a woman's heart. Yet again do we enter the troubled circles of higher conscience. Ah! how Ltrue It Is that, here too, "the so-called psychology la a hobgoblin, that haa usurped In the sanctuary Itself the place reserved for the veritable Images of the gods." For It Is not the surface that always" concerns us nay, nor rs tt even the deepest of hidden thoughts. Do you imagine that love knows only of thoughts and acta and worda and that the soul never emerges from Its dungeon? Do I need to be told whether she whom I take In my arms todsy Is Jealous or faithful, gay" or sad, sincere or treacherous? Do you think that these wretched words can attain the heights whereon our souls repose and where our deatlny fulfills Itself In silence? What care" I whether she speak of rain or Jewela, of pins or feathers; what oare I though ahe appear not to under stsnd? Do you think It t for a sublime word I thirst when I feel that a soul Is gating Into my soul? Do I not know that the moat beautiful of thoughts dare not raise their heada when the mysteri ous confront them? I am ever stsndlng st the seashore and were I Plato. Pascal or Mchsel Angelo and the woman I loved merely telling me of her earrings, the words I would say and the worda she would ssy would 'appear but the aame as they floated on the waves of the fathomless Inner sea that each of ua would be con templating In the other. Let but my very loftleat thoughts be weighed In t lie scale of life or love It will not turn the balance against the three little words that maid who loves me shall have whispered of her sliver bangles, her pearl necklsce or her trinkets of glass. It Is we who do not understand, be cause we never rise sbove the earth level of our Intellect. Let us but ascend to the first snows of the mountstn and all Inequalities sre leveled by the purify ing hand of the horlton that opens be fore us. What difference, then, be tween a pronouncement of Marcus Aurellua and the worda of the child com plaining of the cold? Let us be humble Fables of tke Day-Labors Journey By BOLTON HALL. A STRONG horse set out on a never-ending Journey, and, be cause the way was steep and the flints 'sharp and hla driver stern he fell Isms the very first day, but in the process of time his feet hardened and by Natural Selection he learned to pick out the amooth places, and to avoid the rocks; so when hn came to where the road was smoothly pavod with In vention the Prophets said: "Surely, he will one day come to the end of hla Journey." But he paased across the common lands and a great thorn ran up Into his hoof, so that he fell lame worse than be fore. But the driver. Necessity. 'laahed him sll the harder. Then the Doctor considered his case; they saw that he was shod with the Iron Law of Wagea, and that Competition pressed him down. to they bound his feet with I'nlons. lest he should take too long steps, snd decreed thst he should work but eight hours a day. They brought him ihln broth called Charity, and put a heckrein on him for "Protection." But he grew only the worse, and began to bite nd kirk at those sgalnat whom he stumbled Then the Prophets said: "He Is de praved and ignorant, and he muat be taught." So they made a law for compulsory Education, but he became more dlsoosv governments, but apply to all govern ments, without which a government can not remain efficient. One of theae Is an upright pacific church; that Is. a ministry who are fit fur their work. The other Is ample pro vision for the stability of the govern ment; that Is. the maintenance of public order and due execution of the lawa. If you find that any particular form ot government secures all theae advan tages you sny set that government down as safe. Now let us see how the republics of ancient Greece aecured them. You will be thus enabled to discover what are the faults of government. Let me make two preliminary remark. You will note that If you don't Improve a gov ernment It will become worse. There are always changes going on and the government must keep up with those changea. We are especially bound to this with regard to democratic govern ment. There is every prospect that thla form of government will continue to remain In the world for some consider able time. Nothing comes to stay. There is no human Institution of any kind that you can venture to assert is per manent. Nevertheless democracy will last aa long as anything which we can foresee. It haa- lta faults. Although some forms of government are worse than others, all forms of government are bad. They all fall short of the Ideals which we set before ourselves. There Is no human Institution which will nojt go to pieces If you don't take care to repair it. Therefore never let us forget to learn all that Sua cm from th experience of the ancient world. Now then, the Greek republics were In constant fear of overthrow. They Women and Destiny By MAURICE MAETERLINCK. snd learn to distinguish between aeol dent and easence. Let not "sticks that float" cauae ua to forget the prodigies of the gulf. The .most gloroua thoughts and the moot degraded ldeaa .can no more ruffle th eternal surface of our soul than, amid the stars of heaven, Himalaya or precipice can alter the surface of the earth. - A look, a kiss and all la said, and J know that she who la by my aide la my equal. But truly thla equal la admirable and strange, and when love comee to her even the lowest of wantons possesses that which we never have. Inasmuch as. In her thoughts,' love Is alwaya eternal. Therefore It Is, perhaps, that besides their primitive Instincts, all women have communications with the unknown that are denied to us. Great is the dis tance that separates the best of men from the treasures of the second bound ary, and when ft aolemn moment of life demands a Jewel from thla treasure they no longer" remember the paths that thither" lead and vainly offer to the Im pervious, undecelvabie circumstance the false trinkets that their Intellect has fashioned. But the woman never forgets the path that leads to the center of her being, and no matter whether 1 find her in opulence or In poverty, In ignorance or In- fulness of knowledge, In shame" or in glory, do I but whisper one word that has truly come forth from the virgin depths of my soul, she will retrace her footsteps along the mysterious paths that she has never forgotten and without a moment's hesi tation she will bring back to me from out her Inexhaustible stores of love a word, aa look or a gesture that ahall be no lesa pure than my own. It la as though aoul were always within call, for by day and night Is she prepared to give answer to the loftleat appeals from snother soul snd the ransom of the poorest is undlstlngulshable from the ransom of a queen. With reverence muat we draw near to them, be they lowly or arrogant. Inat tentive or lost In dreams, be they smil ing still or plunged In tears, for they know the thing that we do not know and have a lamp that we have loot. Their abiding place la at the foot it self of the Inevitable, whose well-worn paths are visible to them more clearly than to us. And thence It Is that their strange Intultiona have come to them; then- gravity, at which we wonder, and we feel that even In their moat trifling actions they are conscious Of being up held by the strong, unerring hands of the gods. I said before that they drew us nearer to the gates of our being; verily might we believe, when we are with them, amid the bewildering whispers that doubtleaa waited on the birth of things, then when speech was yet hushed, for fear lest command or forbidding ahould Issue forth, unheard. She will never cross the threshold of that gate, and she awaits us within, where are the fountain heads. And when we come and knock from without and she opens to our bidding, her hand will still keep hold of latch and key. She will look for one Instant at the! man wno ha been sent to her snd In that brief moment she has learned all that had to be learned, and the yeara to come have trembled to the end ot time. tented still, and great blotches broke out on his body. "Jhese," said they, "are Social Evils." 80 they plastered them with Expediency, and he checked his fever with Drink. Necessity lashed him only the harder. Then they organised a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty and made labor laws: yet he went all the more pain fully. 'This." aald they. "Is the result of overcrowding In th stables, and we must take measures," they aald. "for the suppression of sweating " But these gave no relief. A certain Radical looked at him and said: ' Xt us first take out the thorn. Monopoly." Hut the Sages answered: "If you take out the thorn there will be no stimulus to work, snd Progress will stop." The Radical said: The natural con dition Is the best." But they answered: "Old you not eee that he wss lame before he picked up the thorn 1" He said: "Let us take out the thorn ' A Moral Teacher replied: "The Churches have sanctioned that thorn remember that there Is no panacea I will bandage his root with Rcelgnatlon; then I will get upon his back, with th clergyman, and he will go much better." And for a time the horse did seem to go Ur, until be could stand the MM weei unsiame i uere was great jeal ousy and a disposition to leva! down the citizens to prevent any man reach ing prominence. A regular Institution waa the casting of lots to determine who should bscooM officials. The Greeks were unable te resist pecuniary temptation. The thing. It la true, was true at the time of other communities than th democracies. In Greece the terms of office were ton short, end the citizens, of th wealthy class neglected then' duties by falling to attend the assembly. OTionv inn nen rnniu im. mimw takes the form of unwillingness to serve In public office. The desire for equality sometimes contributes to make th v. inn 1 omuiy icm penwi inuu nt . . i . ......... a -1 1 ought to be, because, the idea that anybody la good enough. Corruption among the Greek took various forms bribes in th army, or the hiring of orators to persuade th people. In modern times It has It root in th aame tendency, namely, "tt may use public office for private gain. This Is a danger that w should si- ways watch for and which from th birth of free government In Greece, where It began to show Itself. Is an evil against which men must contend. The RomnnsO'hsd a far longer and stronger constitutional life than the Greeks. The Rnmana war ft compara tively dull people. You do not want too much cleverneas In everybody It perished not so much by Internal cause, but from cause brought about by It own conquests. The Romans hsd too much pride to adjuat themselves to th conquest of Italy and the conquest of the world. The Greeks perished because they con quered, and the Romans because of thlr conquests. j ... -JJj Who shall tell us. of what consists the first look of love, "that magic wand made of a ray of broken light," the ray that haa lasued forth from the eternal home of our being, that haa transformed two souls and given them twenty cen turies of youth? The door may 'open again or close, pay no heed nor make further effort, for all la decided. She knows. She will no longer concern bar self with the thinga you do or amy or even think, and If ah notice them. It will be but with a smile, and uncon sciously ahe will fling from her all that doe not help to confirm the certitude of that first glance. And If you think you have deceived her, and that her Impression Is wrong-," be sure thst tt Is she who Is right and you yourself who are mistaken. I would that all those who hare suf fered from women's hand would loudly proclaim It and give ua their reasons, and If those reasons be well founded w shall Indeed be surprised and ahall have advanced far forward In the mystery. For women are Indeed the veiled slaters of all the great things we do not see. They are Indeed nearest of kin to the infinite that la about us And they alone can still smile at It with the Intimate grace of the child to whom its father inspires no fear. It 1 they who preserve her below the pure fragrance of our soul, Ilk soma Jewel from heaven, which none know how to use, and were they to depart th spirit would reign in solitude In a des ert. Theirs are still the divine emotions of the first days, and the sources of their being lie deeper far than ours. In all that was Illimitable. Thoae who complain of them know not the heights where true klaaea ar. to be found, and verily do 1 pity them. And yet how Insignificant do women seem when we look at them as we pass by! We see them moving about In their little homes this one is bending forward, down there, another la sob bing a third sings, and the last sews, and there Is not one of us who under stands. ... We vialt them aa one visits pleasant thinga We approach them with caution and suspicion, and It la scarcely possible for the soul to en ter. We question them mlstrustlngty they who know already answer naught; and we go away shrugging our shoul ders, convinced that they do not under stand. "But what need for them to under stand." answers the poet who Is always right, "what need for them to under stand, those thrice happy one who have choaen the better part and who even aa a pure flame of love In thla earth of ours, taken of the celestial Are that irradiates all thinga. ahlne forth only from the pinnacles of templee snd the mastheads of ships that wander?" Home of nature a strangest Ideas sr often revealed, at sacred momenta, to these maidens who love, and Ingeniously and unconsciously will they declare them. The aage follows In their foot steps to gather up the Jewela that la their Innocence and Joy they scatter along their path. The poet who feel what they feel offers homage to their love and trie In hi songs to trans plant that love, that la th germ of th age of gold, to other time and other countrlea. no longer. Then he bucked off even the Clergyman. The Clergyman said that waa Original Sin. And the Radical repeated: "Let me take out the thorn." Hut the Politicians cried: "Anarch ist! Visionary! Fool! If you take out the thorn you will break up hla Syatsm and besides he will not let any of u get up again upon hi back.'' But again the Radical said. Take out the thorn." And the Professors said: "Yew ar a parrot, and do not understand Politi cal Economy; we must provM work for him: and the State muat own hi har ness, so that there will be no lark of traps and no fault In them " Still the Horse grew wilder sad wore, ami the pig-headed Radical said only, again and again: "Take out the thorn." A Prohibitionist said: 1 think he his other diseases, due to In tern per aoa." "No! Due to wickedness" cried Minister. It mar be so," rtd that fTSw mlnH ittel "tvnl t mHi Ufc. ul tm thorn, N dun the 1 asaai nation. am tiy I ftftsw to