. 2f ...vi JO , , . . ". ' t f , ' fi;i I -i 5 x a -w i. . a. - . t-u Julia tY -'. y - mi v xwravaas.r r m av. m r .v - - a - -rrz. ....... . ':: ii ,1 itv4 irZ7T-y wr7 vrr v.--.-. iRm-3iwv . II l 1 r--0 : " :S5K : 7ft Trfflf T tb -Arat-Maaioii 6f the fiftj.. MVnth ronsresii tha followliiK- concurrent Taolutltltti"f af ; 'That thera toa prlntf and bound bjr photographlo proeefts within lntroduo " t Ion of not to exjoeed'28 pnrea. to ba pra pared by Xr-!yru"Aller;"in)rarli of " tha Smtthaonlan Inatltutlon; for the uo of congTM 8,000 copiea w of ' Thomaa . JaSeraon'a 'Morals of jeaua of Nasarcth' i- aa Uia aama appeam In tha national mu . euro; S.OOO roplea for the u of the lawnata and 1,009 copies for tha uaeof the 'Souse." .. .' : ' . Tha bonk thus ordered by a special act jf jonarress has rcfPttfl?JUPIdjndJs attracting much attention. .- President Jefferson, though bitterly Assailed ' for - -hts-reJtg-ious viawa, :- aa.irdent stu dent of the BlbU and a sincere admirer "of Jesus of Nasareth. ;When enUrinc upoa - his duttea : aa a," statesman. ' he ld: shall need the favor -of that Being In whose hand a wa ' are".' who led ir fathers aa Israel of old from their native land and planted them In a coun try nowing wun an me neCTrssariwa aim . comforts of life." When, his daughter. i Maria, died lu J 80C -he sought comfort In his grief by turning to tha Bible. - "i found him," wrote his eldest daughter, Martha, "with his Bible in his hands. He who baa been so often and so Itajahly accuaed of .unbelief, he in his hour of In, : tense affliction sought and found, conso , Jatlon In tha sabred, ivolu roe." On a car tain occasion a gentleman expreased his disbelief in Jhe teachrnga of tha- Bible . Then,, sir." said JeftVnwn. "you have studied It to little "purpose." .Daniel Webster once wrote a letter in "which ha " gave an account -of an Interview with Jefferson. "I am considered by many. Mr. Webster." ha said, "to hava little re llglon. but now la not the time to cor v'""ract aryora of "thla sort. . I hava al- - ways said and always will say, that the atudioua perusal of tha aacred -volume will make better cltlnena, better hus- ..'JDnaa ana netitr letncra. , . v . - . Bo Impreased did he become with the surpassing beauty of tha - teachings of Jesus that he determined to Compile a ", book that should contain tha story of the life and philosophy of Jesus In the exsct words or the New Testament, con1 aequently he secured four copies of tha gospel In Greek. Latin. French and Eng lish. Texts were put out of -these books .y.ana, pwad ;.tn Ttt-boofc-jf- This waa handsomely bound in' red mo rocco, on tha back of which in gtit let .; ters were stamped te. words, "The Mor : als of Jesus.' In regard to the first col- -- lection of texts out of -which- grew the one., entitled 'The ' Morale of Jesus. Jefferson afterwards wroto these slgnltl . cant words, "J too have made a wee Jit-f V ;i seventh congress the f ollowtnK- 1 1 F' I 11 C - 1 - ,.-,. ' ,.;..'-.'; -concurrent xesolutlon.-riwai-: I 1 1 I - J ,,- . ; 'V .".V '.'. .." ' . ' iTla book from the same materials, which I call tha "Philosophy of Jesus.' It is a paradlgtna of his doctrines, -made by cutting the texts out of 'the book and ... arranging them on the .pages of a blank " book in a certain ordef of time or suu ' ' ject. A more beautiful or precious mor sel of ethics I hava never seen; it is u document in proof that I am a rear Chrlstlan.that Is to sar dWc1pTeor , . ' the doctrines of Jesus.' . - It is Interesting to note that Jefferson , ' did not select for his compilation all the . words of Jesus. , In fact he etudlously avoided certain passages the acceptance of which would have Compelled. Mr, .. . Jefferson -to Jtake a view of Jesus which .' he refused to consider..- lie explained -this strange proceeding thus: "We must reduce our volume to the simple vaogeils ts. select .veu Jcom t hem -the, 'Very words only of Jesus, paring off Abe amphlbollglems." - The ; last In a-long ymort wtilch llkschai lly. fuvt-retlra-nnrt-t tltude of sins. .Let ua see. Jefferson ; Includes In hie book the sermon on the , mount. That Is good, but why omit hie Interview with Ktcodemua In which the great truth ' of-the new birth Is ' taught, and In which is found that mag nlflcent " passage which Luther called . r'A- Uttle BlbleT' "For Uod ao loved :' tha world that He gave ills only begot- ten Boa that whosoever belle veth In Him .should -not perish but have ever ' lasting life." This must be an ampbi . boligiam. ; w .. -.. Jefferson-. Included In . his book -the ...tender story of tha woman taken in, adultery, which ' la now generally re garded as an Interpolation. - But he omitted all reference to the lofty teach ing of Jesus at the well-aide of Sychar, and to that ' sublime utterance before ) tha tomb of Lazarus, ' "I am tha resur rection and tha life, he that . belleveth "' , in ma though be were dead, yet a ball he live'."- ThtRrUtooj must bo one of ; those strange creaturVa Jefferson would label "amphlbollglsm." The exposure of . . the rharlsees,- the story of Zaccheoue, the parable of tha ten virgins are all - ralthfully reported In the exact language " of the Bible. But why omit the match ' - less fourteenth chapter of ISL, Jolm and -tha fifteenth and the- Sixteenth and J severJethT Why carry the story no "farther along than the wofuyfThe.ra laid they Jesus, and"rolled -a great stone to the door.ofthe sepulchre and de parted" ' And why omit such words as ' these: 'In my Fiuher'a house are many mannlona; I go to prepare a place for you" Is this also an "amphlloglum"? And ara all the words of Jcmis spoken at Emmaus knd by theLake oC Galilee, ' "amphlbologlhisL;iiimpty - because i to give them plare would be-to ackno l - edra that something happened after that " stone was rolled before the Sepulchre . In Joseph's garden? How significant It Is to find that this admirer of Jenua was so witling to accept all the teachings -of Jesus In i' regard to ethics, as the very , werd of God. and yet insisted In calling verrthlna an amphlbologlsm that re- -f erred to-hla AUjr his aacrtflrlal daathl . or his resurrection t .i.llere It jeemi.wa hava another -. ample of the statement made by that eplendld Darwinian scholar. Profesror nomanes. who-, after floundering for. m while In the bog of evolutionary agnos tlrlmn. regained a foothold pn 4he rock ef C'hrlat Jesus and vald' eonrernlng such a system of religion' aa Jefferson l.;i; 'It la only wbca it takea tha : v f - r THE ilffi7n7l 4- t -n; -r k. ..... New Testament, tears out a few of Rs leaves relating to tfie divinity of Christ and.gpproprlates all the rest that its system becomes In any degree possible aa a basis for personal religion,"- ; .. EDGAR Pi HILL. ' w - ..l ' On June 14, 1890, Senator , Evarts arose from his seat In the United States senate and offered a report of the com mittee on library,' InajKhlch It was rec ommended -that the government pur chase jhe manuscript papers and .corre spondence" if .Thomas Jefferson. The senate did ' not sea fit at that Ifme to purchase these writings. - But the reso lution ' offered by ' Senator Evarts b6re fruit. j The action of the"senRtn fflot acting; optm-tha-advice of th committee on library alled forth a storm of protest from every section of the nation,' Jeffer- son. one -of the greatest figures in the history of thn new World, wrote many things tha,h la 4ou nt ryman-of t-wcentury. after his Jay wish - to know. - At last the 'will Of tha nubile warn carried nut anatha Jefferson library purchasedBut in this collection-of tomes was one vol ume that was missing, and this one book waa valued more highly than all the others the so-called "Jefferson Bible." Readers of , American history had long known' of this work of tha great Demo crat, but only .very few had aver seen It- -Some, even regarded tha atory as a myth. lit only to be connected with tha fabd tale of how. Jefferson rode alone Into Washington on the morning of his Inauguration, hitched his horse at a cor ner post., and strode unattended into tha capltol and took the oath of the presi dent, of the United- fHatea dressed In riding suit and -boots.. -. " r :'. But this was not the case, as careful students of American history kept.-Still, there waa keen disappointment when the much wanted Bible, was not foiind In tha collection of books purohaeed from tha Montlccllo library. ' The hub-bub stirred up over this - disappointment soon brought the1 owner of Ora Bible to light It waa owned by XDfts Randolph, a mem ber of the famous Virginia family. Tfia book waa purchased from her. the price .paid is said to have been 1400. After the book waa purchased, people began to wonder what sort of a work it was. ' They knew that It was some thing out of the ordinary run of Bibles, printed by the million, and sold at any prlcef rom. a penny to a pound, but Just what thxt difference waa they did not know.-True, -the newspapers had told them that It.'. was a collection of clip pings from the holy book, said collection containing verses tn four languages. Greek. Latin. French and English. Bible students the.d wished to know ust what parts of tha holy writ tha great states men hud seen HCiolfp; students of history wished .to. aea the clippings1 tn order that they ml-rht learn just, what sections of the Bible Jefferson thought worthy oC-a statesman's, notice. ' j'or the beneflt'of these folk, Ainaworth ,It Spofford. then librarian of congreas, wrote the following brief description: . - '.The Morals, and - Life of Jesus of Naaar-th.'j.e-ftractcd 'textpally from the rtospeia In .tirce ijittn, rrencn and English. Title, nn his own hand. Texts were cats by him out of printed copies of Oreek, . Latin. French "" and Erigltsh testament and pasted In this book of blank pages, which waa handsomely bound In red morocco, ornamented In gtit. and titled on the berk In gilt letters. The Morels of Jeans.' lit original Idea wss tojfjye the lira and teachings of th Bavror, Mi - OREGON SUNDAY jbuRNAIr PORTLAND, SUNDAfr Tattr t .. . v , I In similar. . excerpts prepared . for the Indians, thinks this simple form would suit them beat- But,, abandoning this, the formal execution of hla plan; took the shape above described, which waa for his individual use. , He used the four languages that lie might have, the texts In" them'' aide by side, convenient, for comparison. In tha book he raated a map of the ancient 'world and iha' Holy Land, with which ha atudied .the ,!w Teatamont." -V1- ' "''' ' But -this description of Mr. Ppofford's did npt mitt-lhe JHerary tastes of tha senators who wished to have tha Jeffer son Bible printed. They wanted a, mora complete story of the work. They slso wanted a fuller description of the book Itself. . So. one of the first clsuaea of the .resolution was that an Introduction, "not to exceed ti pages"." be written by Dr. Cyrus Adler, librarian of the Smith sonian- Institution,1 for-the-new- publtca tlon. ' Dr. Adler' wrote tha introduction, and used exactly one half of hla allotted number of pages. . His description of the book la complete. It la: - " "Tha so-called Jefferson' Bible, more accurately The Life arid Morals of Jesus of Naxareth,'. Is now the property of the United States National museum at Washington, having been obtained by purchase in 1896.... Tha following la a description of the. volume: - 'Measurements: Height, S4 inches; width, ' 4 16-11 Inches; thickness at back. 1U inches; Inmlddje, IS inches; at edge points, Inch. ' Binding: . 'Foil red leather' with gilt tooling. The back divided in five panels; In second psnel from top title in gold: 'Morals of Jesus.' - . "The margin of the covers of all four aides onr.the outside, " and on the. three outer ones on the Inside,- aa well aa on the edges, are tooled In gold.' Inside of the upper cover is on the -left side -top -a label containing the words:, 'Bound by Fred A, Mayo, Richmond,, Va.'" - ' 'Tha cover Inilde as well as tha fly leaves are covered with gray paper in marble dealgna.' t . "Order: Upper cover; two manu script leaves In the handwriting of Jef ferson, containing on tha first two and a half -pages thy table -texts;.! the rest Is blank)- fly-leaf three blank leaves; title pages in manuscript- In - Jefferson's handwriting, reading: i- ' .-. - i . THff.-W- - LIFB kND MORALS t r'- - ' , .. '--.op - . JESt'8 OK NAZARETH - EXTRACTKD TEXTITALLY FROM 1 THE OOHPEt.S IN . OstEEK LATIN, FRENCH AND ;i - f -ENOLrSH;-' folded printed . mapa. of . Pnlestlna and .Asia Minor, taken out from a book; that of Palestine has on top In print, "page 1.' and that of Asia Minor, .'page .414'; blank page excepting Tor a black line tn Its middle, running from top to bot tom. Then come, on numbered leaves, beginning, on the left aide of -the first (the reverse of the page lust described). m- veryull .Index "TfltaTid tlushig un the light side of the last, extracts arranged In two columns, sep arated by a black line, on each page. In the-fotltiwlng order: . - "On tha left-hand page Greek and Latin, on the right.. French and Engltstvf Tha so-trccs are Indicated in .the margin In .Jefferson's handwriting.-,' The . num bers of tha leaves, which rtii from 1 te tt, ara on tha left side top of. tha lett 7 A Sjmmm mmm-, iN-M Jill - ;ip I hand 1 pageg, Leaf. JS-Juta extracts on tha right-hand page, the left-hand, page hag only tha black line; It Is. followed by three other blank ' leaves, tha'flrst of which , has the black Una On both sides; then -coma' tha Oy-leaf and the cover." Between aaehT of tha leava,-w!tti tha exception of - tha blank one, there are alternately one and two narrow strips of pper,bound In."' -f . That Jefferson had In mind tha prep aration -of auch a book, and -that- ha ac tually prepared it. - has been known $0 students of his letters and writings, and especial attention Was drawn to tha fact In The Life and Times of Thomaa Jef ferson,' by Henry 8. Randall, published In three volumes. New York, 1861." John- - Adams and Thomas JeffetSgTC who were at one time bitter enemies, afterward became warm friends, and the TompilaOoivJSfJeff erson'abtbla "became the oubject .Of considerable correspon dence between them. On January St. 1804, In a letter writ ten at Washington to Dr. . Priestley, Jef ferson aald: j " . '' ' - -"I rejoice- that 'ybtrliava 'tihdertaken thataak of enmpartpg -tha; moral ..doer trlnes of Jesus with those of the an cient philosophers. . I thlpk'you cannot avoid giving,- as a preliminary to toe comparison, a digest of hla moral doc trine, extracted in his oaui-words from tha evangelists and- leaving out every thing relative - to hla - personal history and character. It would be ahort and From, the Chicago -Tribune. - F EW people since Rousseau have be- vealed more about the secrets of their soul than Count Lyof Tol- '' atol. and yet few figures have -re mained .. snore - essentially enigmatic. Like: Rousseau again, Sktlstol speaks hot to mis eouatry or tnai, dui in inn wurm, and I tkrok that he is listened; to. for oreclsery tha. same reason. H It wss -a difficult f thing for -.the ex-valef. to . win -tha.-frenchtao-of Europe -et -a- time- when ita -Intelligence .was embodied in . voi-taire.-. It .la a dif fleult .thing f or Count Lyof Tolstoi. the - aristocrat in -.the mujlk. blouse, to repeat t to., a-generation Inoculated - with tha theories of . Darwin tha old. lesson of the-sermon on th mount. ,Mere sincerity in neither .case would . have , availed - anything. Mere fanaticism In either - case , would " have been found ' only tedious. , Tolstoi, ho less than Rousseau, conquered because he had power to Interest the human heart. - r , ' ..- '.... .'.i One - would ' naturally Ima glna , that under a -despotism such aa the Russian, a despotism which holda out unique ad-vantagea-for Individual .. energy., pro vided, tha neceasary,. formulas ara ac cented, such a form of self-development would be- almost - Inevitable. , Count Lyof Tolstoi s life . Is an utter contra diction to thia thesis. He waa born with thht rare gift, -the power, to -see men and thinks In -perspective and-'nt first hand for one's self.' As a child he seems. - to, hava been . singularly clear eyed with that hard, "jjagaa vision that his enemr Mereshkovsky.-attrlbutea-- to him ag. yioj essence of his character. He could see his tafher lust as ha-was, and oould record the changes of-Inflection In his-voice-as he argued with tha old, steward, over . the acubus. He, noticed every little mimlclng affectation about his sister's French governesavs -.Years afterwarTTie: was aBleo, roproduce by. a few ' touches the- picture of -the old servant, . In whom hla- tutor . used ao snxlously-to confide I do tidt think that there Is In any other writer of narrative quite the same grip of the actual that Tolstoi gives ua. ..You will find It In the recollections of the nursery; It will crop up again 1n the defense of Sevastopol. You. will meet with it In the-fetid at mosphere of a mujlk's hornf and you will find It smid the hostoric traditions of palaces. . : ' ' - '-.,'.'.. Let ma take one little example of this merciless gift, this pagan hardness, which allows no film to arise between the eye and the object. You remember that - Incomparable little sketch of Aipbonse Daudet, "The Last Lesson," In -.which -the'" French school meat er Ijtha right-hand page, the loft-tpi pat r:T iiri-W-;:V- r. lA-LL?PJIJ.- A.'.i.i.-..V'!-VA! '.'":.-i,fr77T7'::. : : - '. . - r1? : a writes upon the hlarkhnard fnr-tha-laatiprferttaton.Jie waa JgaDlyto the time In the loved language of hla coun try "Vive la France."' It seemato ma that lit thia little story there. Is pre served, like some forgotten fragrance, all 'the tenderneas and -charm of early associations that have been completely severed. Now. -rn tha recollections of his childhood, with no attempt at pathos, without tha magnetism of ap MOSNING, - -FEBRUARY '.: 12. precloua With a view to do thia for my own satis f sot Ion I had sent to Pnll adelphia to get two testaments Greek of the aama edition and two- English, with a design to cut tha doctrines of morality and paata them on the leaves of a book In the manner you describe in framing- your harmony. - But I ehall now get tha thing dona by better hands." In-a. letter to Mr. Adams. August 11, 1818. Jefferson aava that ha had ore- paired 4v eyllabTis of the ChriattaA Teach- lnis Or Dr. Priestly and Dr. Rush, and that Dr. Rush's family hr.d returned It after the death Of that gentlemun,- .0 Mr. Jefferson's great delight, for he found ahat' It" would Involve him In a religious controversy. . In Jefferson's compilation ofthe gos- peia.he omitted everything of a miracu lous nature and confined bis clippings to the.iteachlnga...of J etuaiHaaeUsped 1 from , all the gonpela, using -tha verses which make tha cleareat statement where : tha texta ara . practically tha -same. .- , t -v ' In the concluding verse of tha work he Ukea John xix:41 and Matthew xxvll:60 and combines them, clipping out all but tha plain atatamant of tha burial. Tha peal which lies In a national disaster, Tolstoi produces an Illusion similar to that of the great French novelist. , Jt la tha Illusion of life. ..The children ara to be taken to Moacow, and their tutor; 91ft ,KarI -Ivanovtch, has to go away. That la absolutely all. Can any situation be more trite and . commonplace t There had-been no extraordinary .devotion to their Instructor on tha part of the. chil dren.- He Is jdo at. all. Tom Finch, cast off after years. of devoted aarvica. There la no appeal . whatever - tor senti mentality.- and yet -forever-yoti'-will-'re member him aa he alta there, . tha poor faded old man. saying. --with a futile sweep, of his arm, that the lady of the house. is devoted to .him. .but that aha haa no-power. -no power. .Ha must go out-, into -the cold. Once more Ufa had caught him up and torn him away from a quiet .anchorage. Da Maupaasant might have given, us much, tha aama picture,, but he would hava ended -with a sneer,, just ilka Dickens, -after .achiev ing a, much, more - amplified portrait, would have ended with a -sob,. .Tolstoi, the pagan artist, makes no comment." -- All through .his after life he pra served Uhls directness of vision. -His life Itself waa a romance because he could gee clearly. .-- The university days, his entry Into society, tha Inevitable re lapses Into 'dissipation these thlnga fie puts 'before. us as though no. one had written oi!vueh' topics before. - Per haps, Indeed" no one had,; for "these things. ara written ... with something other than Ink. But there was -another slde-of Tolstoi, The man who eould aee clearly soon ceased to take' everything for (granted.- He-began to- question; above all, he began. to question- hla own heart. ' - . .-. . - . . - With these two things, tha power to face 'reality with .unflinching eyea and the habit of self-questioning. Tolstoi Is fully equipped for the work of a novel ist; is, tn fnct. a novelist before ha has written' a single book.- They coma out st once in the "Recollections of Sevas topol," ; and. with them an Incomparable honesty. Tolstoi Is mot merely honest to . the outside world,- he la honest to himself. In the. retreat ftom Bevaato pol how did tha common .soldier really feel First of all, a aenie of loss at tha abandonment .of familiar places; secondly, the fear of pursuit. . That ,1s In the rough. , . .. -. I-ater on. lnWr and .Peace." he was to get at tha thought that vibrates through great messes of men, and. at ths. same time, to disclose the secret tortures vof the Individual. ' Above all, he waa to avoid the formula, the banal adjective, the prearranged method, of Held of battle tha asms Inqulsltlv scrutiny thst- ha hsd applied to tha nursery In-his old home.. But, as I have aid before, almost from tha beginning, he o,uestloned. Just ss yon will find the germ of "Wer and Pesce' in the little sketch of "Sevsstopol," so you will And the -germ of ''Anna Hsrenlna." tn that wonderful open air atory, "Tha , Coa- 1CC3. ... :. . result Is as follows: : . John '.xlx:"S "There laid they-Jesus. .- '. .J. ;' ; - r: - ., MattheW gxvllSu- e . e ,nd ?a a. .rolled a great atone tdi$he door of the sepulchre" and departed.''T'.--i-:. Thus he followed out to thfMhfs general plan and omitted all that 'could not.be explained to tha satisfaction of a practical lawyer, leaving Christ burled forever and giving no evidence of belief hnTCaTerorrlctlon. Jefferson himself wrote many prov erbs quite as -many as Solomon and. saya one of hla biographers, 'was quite as 'careless In observing them." . - How aver that may be. hla own code of morale which ha thought ahould be observed Is found In what ha called - "A Catalogue of Canons for Observation In Practical Life, which waa written In hla youth. ThisTliaslJerapreaeTvd Topostsr ity, and in view of the Interest recently re vived in Jwffereon. andhla doings and writings by -the action of congress, 1s lnteretlng. This Is Jefferson's code:- X1feverp.it off until tomorrow what you can do today. ' "' 2. Never- trouble another -for what you can do yourself. "'.? L- " t Mriu.' .WHIrrthtwr-pagiii. TlalODL. oMrtsri that drank in ao greedily 'the endless varieties, of the real- world,-it-was, Im possible that - introspection' should - ever completely master him. 1 He is too near to tha elemental forces of nature, too much in sympathy with, the good- black earth, and tlte men who till It, ever to become, morbid, and detached -from the common life. . -'. . -. . , 1 : Far from, coileentratlng hla strength opon goal-of parsonahamMUoiw-Tolstal searched in every. direction for what was beat in life t A soldier and a sportsman, he .turned hungrily to art, to literature, to philosophy, to science. He dissipated hla 'Immense energies,' but' his question remained eternally . HQaoswered.r In Pierre and Levin,' tha two central figures of .the. great works, "War and- Peace'? and '."Anna Karenlna." .we find Tolstoi searching . with steadfast eyes for the answer to the enigma of life. One must recollect always that. It, waa jno' hermit , who - waa '.brooding .over this ancient question,, but a' man who had the entree Into the. most .exclusive' so ciety, a man who had been, atceped to satiety In the - best ." or . the; worst . of what life had to 'offer.. Both, these em bodiments of Count Tolstoi, or at least of Count Tolstoi's gospel, of. life, Pierre and Levin, practically give up the search for new wisdom and fall back Upon the old simplicity. , Each of them la con-4 tent to learn from tUo.humWe pfas'ant who, because , he haa never been be wildered by a futllo search, can see the eternal, varieties with undimmed eyes. It is said JJiat there are. two. Tolstois Tolstoi the-artlst and Tolstoi the relig ious fanatlo. - I do. not think that any candid reader - of '"Resurrection," ' for example, would draw any such academic line of demarcation... No. no 1 there . hna Pbeon only one Tolstoi, and It Is after all the Tolstoi: whowaiched old Karl Ivan- ovltch so closely, years and years aao.-. J in nia particularly -interesting .dook, "The Downfall of Russia." Hugo Oans, the well ' known Vienna correspondent, tells ua of a recent Visit to Tolstois He approached .' thts enlgmatlo figure who has renounced so many Ideals, and 'has narrowed hla life down to such Spartan simplicity., with a. fear of approaching dlalllusloti.' ' WoMld the mah ring true beneath the 'phraseology of the prone.-' gnpdlst? Wss Tolstoi a vast make-be-Uc. -who evaded ' analysis merely by adroitness? Thin Is the picture that'he draws of the old man of '71 aa he 4s today: '.' r . ; ."Thick, "bushy gray ayebrowa' shsde (fie.' deepest eyes' and shsrply define An annular, self-willed forehead. The nose Is strong, ' slender 'above, broad ' and finely modeled In the nostrils. The long gray musiacrra completely covers the mobile mouth. A waving white beard, partelln;the. middle. rlowe : from, the hoary cheeka'to the ahoulders. The head la ' not .. bfoad It' misTit - be called narrow wholly unidavorTWsnd is well poised. . The broad, strongly built' shoul dera have a military erectness, A har row foot la hidden In tha high Russian r a. up - a k v I . Never spend" your money before) you--have It.. . a ; 4. Never buy what you don't want be cause it is chesp; It will be dear to you., t. - Prldo costs us mora- tbaR.hungar, . thirst or cold. '. ....-.- aVi We never; repent of having eaten toojjttler- "yy'-" -"'"- - ' 1.. Nothing ia troublesome that wa do willingly. ' -' ....-'.-. - I. How' much pain have cost ua thai evils which. have never happened! ' . - ' T7t. Take -thing always by -the smooth J handle.. -- '. , ; - j 10. , When angry, count 10 before you apeak: It very angry, then a hundred. Thomaa Jfferaon the United Stataa . first - secretary of state, second vice- ' president -and third president waa born in Virginia In 1741; he died in his native . commonwealth, July 4, 12. Just a few , hours before John Adams naaaed awaw. 'Jef fevaowFwaa.. bold-horseman.-ahHl ful hunter, an elegant, penman, a fine violinist, a brilliant conversationalist, a master in tha art of letter-writing, an archltect of no mean ability, and a su- : perlor" classical-acholar.-" Ha -waa tha -most popular American to represent tha new nation In tha court of France, with the possible exception of Ben Franklin.' L boor." arid move elastlcally. .Tha step and carriage are youthful. An Irony of fate will liavo it that the blttereet foe of militarism Wtrays In' his whole ap ; V pea ranee the former' officer.- The ma i In the pesaant's drcslls ln every mova- ment the grand seigneur." - There was no disillusion. The master -of Yasnaya Poiysns was lpdeed th re ality, whose, genius had arrested tha -attention of a Europe languidly akeptt- : cal as to nearly.aH other-voioear-Tha': man wJiose. hnnd I had Just grasped,'" writes Mr.- Oai;x, "embodies the moral consciousness' of , our. century." Nobody need, ask what Tolstoi sUnds for when .one. .glances . at tha varloua forces that Interpret modern 'thought. -He -hss, discardod-'as ;vnrn.snd lllusiva shadowa everything except the whisper ' of the Inner consciousness' which saya,: This Is right and that, la wrong." Ha who -all hla life has been able to appre clata. so- well the pagan: gladness of Ufa wiJ.iibrtntJonedforevur.the pagan gospel -of Teauty. ' lie who absorbed, as per haps no other novelist has absorbed, tha ; .-,' passion .and romance of war -haa sur- -vrved to maintain the duty - of - non reslatancaHe who for years haa been a -diligent student-of philosophy and . sclenoe hss accepted humbly the mujlk's . blouse ss the symbol of hla faith.. Alona he survive. unequivocal, unsentimental. . ... dofng the thing that -be beltevea to be -HgnX-rand contemptuously Indifferent . to the terrors of the machine that has done ao much- to bring his country to final ruin. "They, know where to find me," The' said' tinna- tn superb defiance"' of the authorities who hava been power less to suppress this one voice. Tyranny dares much In. that land of immense si- lnce, but tyranny Is Itself abashed be- . fore the Isolated nobility of Count Lyof , Tolstai.-:. . ' e. .,,..? . , COiTLDtrV MTM WaTT BOSS XAVaOS ' From the Chics go Tribune. Yes. the foreman admitted they were rather shortr haodorti-They could do with another men, but he wasn't aura tha ap plicant would suit.- --.it ' "You're rather old," he salcr." X ' ' ?"F1fty, sir:" was the reply. -PH'm! I funcy yp wouldn't be able to' stand the. strain. You sea. It'a hard and monotonous work." ' "What la it, alrf A n .... ''The man I engage will have to carry water all day long from the tank to the workmen there.' You don't think yon could manage - a couple nf bucketa of w4tr for hours at a stretch, do yon 1" What?" elaruleted the applicant.' de lightedly. "Why. It's the thing! A cou- ytigcketr o water lustrtry tm ! Why, I've dona It for yeara!" Then you've been In thia line before?"- afked the foreman. "When was that!" When I wua a milkman!" cam tha 14 nocent teply. , t The applicant got tha post, though be cfiuldn't ace for the life of him srhtt tha remad waa laughing at. - f - f' -' r-