V ' 6f'.lw . W A aWf 1- ; t f (Copyright l. hy W. B. Hearst) . ? STOOD. In on ot th pMt rail- i I w,r tha.vothsr day at, a -!L ..'" hnilthe..rt.workr pour ' - Into, London for th day'e tolL ' ; It was summer day. Ths streets were , already giving promise, or tropical heat ,'.', under a mid-day sun. The""siatlon was dusty and ill-smelling, and tha orowds ,' of paopl disgorged from each train as It thundered under the archway was bewildering. ; . ... ; r Among tha crowd I noticed the Urge 'percentage of girls, and remembered that : some years back that would hare been .remarkable. I spoke of this naw phase : to my companion, and a woman who had given' many years of study to our social '.conditions. " , . ..v. ; . .', ..."Every girt in a certain class wants o ba a typewriter," she said, "and go v . into a city, office. Formerly aha wished . t to teach, now a business Ufa is the sols attraction." .,"',,.,. V r " ; '1 i"To what t do you ;ttrlbut ;j tha . chanf eft 1 asked.,' -v. .'.. 5 -"Greater freedom," eh said, , "mora defined work and the certainty, of knock- ingveff on Saturday afternoon till Mon- , "-day."" f .-, , ..,,.... . "1 . I looked at, the girls hurrying city ward more carefully." and ths remem brance ef Charles Kin gal ay's description .-' of Naustcaa cams very vividly before 'me. For ths most part they were thin ' --'j.nd pale, with a look-of exhausted vl Vtallty, girls who appeared to be lnade ' 'quately nourished and who worked In a "bad 'air, neurotic ,nd 'generally ill -de-i veloped. ! -f ,.;! ' turned away to take my train. Into ? , ihs country, feeling that tha overstocked market of girl clerks was oertalnly not , building up a healthy womanhood. . - ..Never bad tha country appeared more ticlvantlng than - tbia- June day, - Tha .hedgerows ware crowned, -with wild '. ,roses, tha cheatnut tree covered with a pi ra) blossoms,-, ths meadows golden .' with buttercups, and the blue streak , of river reflected tha .delicate tracery , tpt tha pollard willows. . . My thoughts turned with pity to tha A.j-JrU..ahut up within tha narrow walla v of city offices, and aa tha train bore ma .vpn I.looked out on tha passing panorama of summer beauty and wondered. ; . -X, Then ,1 remembered " that kind - and , helpful banda ware andeavorlng.to push V open new doors . for women, doors that '. led not to the crowded cities but into r, fair ways of ordered gardens and sweet smiling meadows, and I determined to j. Changs my plans and Visit Studley cas tie aa aeon as possible; in order to gain - some clearer Idea ot what prospect ths iTte Inf?crutatle Mystei LL tha mysteries and marvels ot light ar . by ' no means ex- plained, even now, after three . Mnturlea of critical reaearch ' by some ot the ableat men tha world haa ,, produced. For Kepler and Newton ' ...k Wai aftav ur in hon of solv- ,4 lng th problsm t tb agea, '-What ."inc Kepler began the study -of the ' nature ot light: ana in ""w1 " " ar triangular plscs of glsss in bsam of sunlight In ft darkened room and saw - f white light : broken up and dispersed, separated Into a aerisa ot gorgeoue ) colors. ! i ' H -f "2. ;'. Every objset on -arth Is lWack. - 1 Color do not exist In any kind ot mat- ter r material thing, but In th light ? It light Just ss received from th sun, be passd through ft prism of glass end ; let fall n ft whits wall or screen, a long , ban of color, will be ssen. This is v called th aolaf apectrum,- The colors ,.- . arc ranged In regular order of. red, I j.. orange, yellow, green, blue,, indigo and Vi .'violet- - f ' ' " - . Now red rose destroys, quenchea or v ' absorbs ovary color of th spectrum and c; reflects red. light only, and ft gren leaf able to reflect green and no other V tint There ar many thouaand shsdes " of red, blue, green and ao on. th colors V . merrin on into - snothar gradually. -' ' ' There may ba almost an infinite number ;"-'"f tints. ..; ; , . v. '-"'') Ths standing wonder of all time Is tha '' hormous speed of light To th pbys ' Icists now living It is aa overwhelming to an powers of mind as it was xo thos' of tha discoverers, t In fact, no brain IS abl tov comprehend anything bout It - - ' JLIght is known to move with tha al most Infinite speed ot llt.ooa milea per scond. .- Thla terrlflo motion has been measured ovsr and over again oy care ful . Investigators and by means ot a -variety of methods. ' , ? Before tha " lima " of - th ' Iri!sh 'astronomer - Romer , aclentlflo -- men thought that light was transmitted "in stantansously in time." But he notioed that when. the earth waa between the aun and Jupiter that th eclipses of the moon occurred about If minutes earlier than when tha aun was between the ' .'v srth and tha distant world. Aa ths - ' 'revolutions of th moon are 'regular, ' - th only explanation was that light ra T T quired that 1tma to fly. across, the in- ' creaaed distance, tha diameter of the : earth' orbit, or 1M.009.000 miles. Mod rrn maasurea of exceeding accuracy .'. -show- the true tlm to be t aeconds, or 4tl to coma from tha aun to ths earth, pr t minute It seconds to trav erse ei.ooo.ooo miles. y v - Th highest mathematicians On earth -' admit that their minds cannof, think of . ' thla velocity. It la sufficient to carry '. light around th earth's equator nearly .- seven' and oha half tlmea while th pen . dulum ot a clock beating seconds swings )'. one. . An hour, day, week, month, 'year. ' scad and century of traveling t thla ' aeemlngly impossible speed would, any , the power of trained ' minds to eomprs- - - hand; yet stars are known to be at such vsst distances that periods of . from J, three to five and ten thouaand, not days. . but years, ar required to reach the '' earth. Astonishing ss all this may ap- ' -pear, and it Is aa surprising to ths math ematlclan as to a beginner, It is ft true - and well-settled , fact ot modern as- ,-tronomy,-" I - A mystery about light la how It Igets '"."" through a -layer of glass - and net . through Iron. What happen Inald of ', glsss when light is passlagf ' . If a ray atrikes glass at any angls " , less thhit ft right sngle. part of th light ' enters, passe and escapes, and ft part f refuse -to enter and la reflected. And ' Jh portion that passes through Is bent out of Its original straight line and .'. thrown. Into another. Thla ta called re fraction.. And If there wer no refrsc- ' tlon we would not b able to make ' spectacles, microscopes., telescope , or - ny other optical instruments. .... - T A great amount of hard study hss . been expended on light Th great theories have divided th attention of . physicists the emlsslvs snd undulstory. en t' e emission hypothesis, light wss . ... t . - y rf corpuscle o -1 ti t ,. KNG FOR JWD: .- W LADY- HENRY 8OUER8ET. career ot agriculturist might fealty hold for tha wage-earning girl. , .-'' ; '. More than 19 years had elapaed since tha idea had already matured in Ger many, when Frau Hedwlg Heyl of Char lottenberg put her extensive nuraary arid garden at ths dlapoaal of tha Ger man Society for tha Welfare of Women, commonly known as "Frauenwohi." . As a reeult of this experiment Herr Hea dorffer took oyer tha enterprise and undertook to train girls for the manage ment of private gardens and to enter tha profession Of florists, i :. In Hl the horticultural cotlegb at Bwanley, Kent, which hitherto had ec lated only for man, opened lta dopra to women.. .Two brave' women determined to make tha experiment, and found that tha work was good for their health and improving to their mlnda. , Jn that year a separata house waa taken and a dis tinct branch atarted for women., Thirty women passed through the course. - The demand for lady - gardeners began to grow and the college has become an in. stitutlon of real importance. ... , .. In .1818 Lady Warwick opened "her farm hotel for women at Beading. , Sh had ' the double .object, first, to trsln women for tha career of horticulturists, and, second, to raise up an army of en thusiasts who could revive ths farming Industry of England and do battle In its service. Tha students were taught gar dening,, bee-keeping and dairy work. . ' ; Her dream tor ths f uturs Is, to make women's agricultural settlements a pos sibility. - Several women , could take ft farm -or cottage together, and work at market gardening, a bee farm or fruit growing. She , also desired to traln woman for colonial Ufa, and to thla and she started branches for domestlo econ omy, Wftlch include lessons In cookery; dreeemaklng, poultry farming, etc. . 4 Sha endeavored - to - give women ' the resourcefulness- necessary for euch con ditioner and the system -worked upon waa largely the. rule of "do without." For Instance, no yeast was aupplled for btead-maklng, but pupils were taught to find it for themselves in the potato. ' T " v But the number of application to this Eden for the daughtera of Eva soon far exceeded ; the accommodation, and Lady Warwick- determined to aeek a larger field f or her "activities, hence, the college jiow established at Btudley cas tle. i ;, -'.. ,. , . , Ths gray stona bouse stands In beauti ful surroundings. It haa, tha splepdid woods,- the broad - walks, tha . stately walled gardens peculiar to the old coun ceedlngly smalt and b shot frth from alt luminoua bodlea with tha ve locity of 184.000 mllea per second. . , The undulatory doctrine t la that all space 1a filled with a ' very rare me dium called tbsr and that light Is aim ply a wave motion therein,. like wavea transvsrs to tha direction of propaga tion, or up or down. In water. -- - corpuscular theory, and it reigned al most supreme, few questioning It until Freanel cam and .attacked the entire theory from 181 to 182. since when thvosclllatory theorem haa held away. So light la now called A mode of energy extending between a shining body and ths retina of th ye, The physiological theory of vision Is that the wave inthe ether boat against th excedlngly delicate nerve filaments, that marvslou network in th rear -of tha eye called tha retina. How tha sen satlona ar reproduced, aa actual forma In the brain may never be found out ' Light ha been found of late to ex ert , pressure upon th surface of any thing upon which It falls. This is ao fsebla that only the moat sensitive in struments ever mad could- detect it: but wonderful force waa rendered ap parent by ths well-known - physicists Hull and Nichols. ... When . this action I MRS. ELLA WHEELER WILCOX'S OWN STORY : v': ' '-f ;',:j" ! ' . : ' ' ; i By UL1 AN .-hawthorn Et; ; ;, .' , ; :. .;':y'r-r '''V:';;' MRS. WILCOX is sn extraordP nary woman. . That la a atato ment , which no. on who has followed her courss In litera ture and In Journalism will attsmpt to deny.-- She became generally known first by ths publication of ber "Poems of Pssslon," tba success . of which - wss mainly . due . to th faithfulness with which ths contents of th vol urns ful filled Ur promts Of th title to their passionate and graphlo-f rankness. And yet,- though few would have believed it at tha tlm,.. tba poema war poem ot Imagination, - and - not of experience save In so far ss Imagination, in thia In stancs at least, might Je regarded as the record of spiritual ; experience. i. - But. for that matter, anybody who eta out to- solve tha problem of Ella Wheeler Wilcox without making the spiritual part of It the chief subject of study will hav hla labor for hla palna. Hsr physical aspect Is, to be surs, strik ing snd winning enough; where aha sits is tho center of th room or th head of th Ubl-;! ; ., '- , Her drees "Is individual and harmo niously designed: her fscs and look hav power and distinction; hsr movements and gestures ar spontaneous, sxpressiv and graceful. She Is never a person who takes color from her surroundings,' but shs Imprsss herself .upon them, snd makea them her sccessortes; ao that the eye of the observer Inevitably re gards her as ths plcturs, and all else as It, .frame. Tet It la not her dress, nor sny beauty of face or figur or eloquence of movement that constitutes hsr real charms, but. Impressively and predominantly, th tntens and abound ing life which shines lh and. through thee. '- --. ' It 1a "what aha is saying. thinking, feol Ing what shs spiritually . la. in short thst faaolnatss tha observer. Th mind sad soul should, no doubt alwaya reign ovsr th body, using It ss their mere instrument and vehicle, and Informing It at- all points with their Immortal significance: but la our ordinary social existence - this Is very seldom tb case. Ths annals of society funetlons In th newspapers Is found to he an expert description of women's cos tumes, . i.,..: '.. But Mrs.-Wilcox's costumes and ber countenance and body with them ar Imply a part ot her utteranoe -subordinate aide In her expression. They af ford to tha eye ths outline or foreshad owing Of what In hsr reaches th soul, -'.her person might wear bar clothee , .- '.- : ' ' ; ; ,; try houses of England, but now It la tra"aformed Into a hive of Industry, for "sweat girl graduatea" in nature's school are every where buay aeeking Informa tion or carrying out practical lessons. Many of the ' girls appeared to be quite , young, but hero and there' were women who had reached maturer years. They were dressed in very short skirts, usually of serge or soma woolen mate rial, broad-brimmed straw hata shaded their faces, but some" who belonged to the, "hatleas brigade" discarded all headgear...'-, ' " . ' . '. -The warden. Miss Bradley, is held in affectionate esteem. She , is an; expe rienced horticulturist, L but she never fails to -emphasise the importance she attaches to '-orderly surroundings - and Lreflned domestlo habits; mors especially does shs believe in i - Inculcating - this among girls, who wish to have an out door career. The girls are put to all branchea of work, not because a woman can hope to earn her living by-digging dirt or eawlng wood, for it la aklll.that she will require, not strength; but it is well that students should really master how averythlng should be dons, in order to be able efficiently to superintend tha work of others. - . . .'"The requirements.", said the warden, USER - thinga - ar J happening dally. ; Of course they are, you say. Yet these queer things are ' not merely platitudes which wa must expect, They make the gray matter work lit us all. : - ' ' . A widower down south wrote ma a Isttsr ft short tlms ago, - In - which, he made the urgent -request- that-1 should find .him a wire in Boston. . He , has read' something charming - about - ths women ot tbia city.- ' ' i . - "1 want," he saya, "a nice, plump, pretty, honest, truthful, poor girl, height about Jive feet and weight 'from 10 to 110 pounds." 'r--k He is a woodsman and make a -pretty good living. I answered his letter, snd nsnt to work In search of t such a prise. I have not been suooeesfuL -- Every one approached ' Says: : - - - Liglit was shown, then the great - Swedish mathematical : physicist, Arrhsnlua, mads computations to. find the mass snd dimensions of minute particles of matter that wouM "awim - in apace" around th aun; that la, the attraction upon them exerted byPth aun would be balanced by repulsion due to . th pressure of light -, Now, If light Is made -up of wav-se.-'ths' probtsin Is tmaur their lengths. This haa been don with an accuracy - paat all understanding. Dim violet light . beats on ths retinal nerve with wavea so short that 11,000 ar required to make an Inch; and dull red so long that- 11.000 flit an Inch. This la lass tbsn on "octave," for twice ti equala ; ao th sys Is Issa sensitive to notes then the ear, for we can hear nearly 11 octaves. . Th moat rsmarkabl fact about light, perhaps, Jf one can ba mor.than an other, la that It can pass through space during 10,000 years. The impulse sand ing out Hght must b powerful Indeed, for In either case corpuscles, or wavea, the energy required . to send oat - with euch speed, and to auch enormous dls. tancea. Is beyond all comparison. -And another mystery, bow can nWlltona of raya pass through ons point from every posslbl direct lost Thus put a glass In space, than rays will paaa through It and her aspect, and yet,. being deatttuta ot her spirit, would be merged unno ticeably In the , general well-dressed, welt-mannered throng. , ; . . t ' While, then,'. tha body, with moat of us. Is tba veil of th spirit and some times a very dens and misleading one, with Mrs. Wilcox tha case might almoat be said to be reversed her spirit shines her body Into ft subordinate place. , , My own notion la.. moreover, that this stat of . thinga waa- not alwaya ao notice able as It Is now, and of 1st years has been becoming; It is a progressiva evolution, th result of spiritual initia tions and developments of bsr ' nature, the character and aeope of which we can only, surmise. '. In th beginning she waa, -t wo may suppose, ' sn enigma to herself, and ah waa Sjnrplexed and Buf fered as only thoss can who ar to be th channels of something mightier than themselves.- .' '.- - , -'. ." Voices sba hsard, summoning her to do something, -which ,sh waa axtous enough to do, but knew not ss yst what manner ot deed it waa to be.- Voices, indeed, we may conceive her to have heard which seemed to her to proceed from ths paat, sddresslng hsr aa a for mer actor In scenes and events remote from th present, oaltlng upon her to fulfill promise mad- sges ago, sre aha was born to hsr contemporary as tats; urging hsr to compteta projects, to cor rect errors, to stone wrongs, planned or perpetrated - at periods . withdrawn -Immeasurably fsr In th recesses of unre corded tlm. , . '' -" , ' " To these mystic and myaterlous sug gestions she lent attentive ear. and by degreea (so we may venture to fancy) th conylctlon grew upon her that hf present -sojourn In this world wss but tha culmination of unknown ' previous experiences links in ft chain which, ex tending back Into th shadows of what hss been, waa destined aleo to be pro jected forward Into th marvela of th unknown to be. , , , ' And thla growing faith In th con tinuity of Uvea awoke In her a sens of responsibility, a desire for beneficence, and a craving for perfection, not for her own sake, but for other.. Which" lifted her thought above . the conventional roMlne of world interests and led her to regsrd persons! sxlstsncs as ft minis-, Irv vrhlcti she wss bound by a higher than earthly honor to perform. , But th precis character ana manner or mat ministry sha had yst to discover.' Her, good will wss towsrd ait hsr fellow sreatures.- but how should ah reach "far a go4 gardener are these: The strength to be on one's feet all day long, to be constantly moving from one place to another,, generally. ' carrying something either in one'a hands or arms or on a barrow. ; "Tha strain of the new , work, aha saya, "comae hard , opon a girl for a time, but tha advantage,- tha Improved health, th .absence ot nerves, are ' an inestimable gain in the end." t i ' Boms girls were pruning," th fruit trees, standing on, tall laddera aet against th old brick walls. Others were preparing a new flower bed to be planted against th gray atone of the castle. Others were bending ever desks, writing their- papers for examina tion. Out (n tha potting sheds, groups again1 were busy with th young; trult trees, and in tha orchards with poultry. Helpful' and happy seemed to be the mental ' attitude of tha inmatea, sun kissed cheeks snd bright eyes and well knit ' limbs their physical manifesta tions. Jt Is a career which opens a joyous, healthy life, full of never-falling interest such- as nature alone pro vides, for to those who aeek ber mys teries and minister to her needs she is ft good mother and an unfailing friend. Surely In these days of sever, compe tition and sordid struggle,' any prof es slon which brings ft young woman inti , purer 'and ; more natural . surrounding is to b warmly welcomed, and all train ing which makea her businesslike an! Industrious and develops common, sense Is ft gain not only , to the . success of bar. future, career but to the . world at large.. ''.,' . . - ' . . .', . Ckbose Your Own By ALBERT: E. GEORGE ,l"Why does hs not And soma one down where he liveat - Oh, he's an old fool and Is queer." ' .'';". '.'-',,',.. ' . ' Whan I look at his photograph and study .bis features, he appears to bq.sm honest, open-hearted , fellow, and I am persuaded hs would make soma woman happy In a h(imbl.home. " . . But It ft man want a wife he should be able to obtain one without much out side help.' .;..:;"'-' ''' There Is a knack about getting a wife; even a "widower' of 48 should And this out. To tell me that 1 he has brown, curly gray hair,, blue-gray eyes and a brown mustache- Is ft" good margin ' ts work with. ! i-' ' : ':., ' But woman generally, who ar matri monially. Inclined, do not like descrip tionsof ft proepeatlve. husband.. They want to see tha subject themselves. from at least oh hundred million suns, in every conceivable direction that ta, no matter where an eye might be placed, it would see a sun through tba lens. . Waves either shorter than violet or longer than--red cannot be seen. But tbey now have apparatua for more sen sitive than tive eye. And millions of hitn srtq unknown Waves ar being .discov ered. v Thus the X-rays are in the region beyond the "violet end of the spectrum, and others, and many beyond ths - red end also. - .r-Vi'-T ' ' . -, m h' 1 ? Tb wood Old Tbaas. ';. i Hsnry 'Wstterson in the ; Louisville .-.5-. Courier-Journal. I take no stock In the lamentation of the aentlmentallats about what they eall- ths- Md "I tlmes. i There is a deal of stuff and nonsenss trolled off on this text Every man over 10 who Is not precisely- a boor is described aa "a gentleman of th old school." We need but turn to' th English satirists from Fielding tOvThsckersy -to learn that all tha essential Ingredients of Vsntty Fair had their existence-100 or 100. years ago: la tha proportion that there wer more nature and coarser . fibre there . were livelier doings. . In proportion thst there wer fewer dramatis psrsons upon-ths stag there was better play for th In dividual. 1 confsss. that I Ilka ft little blood In mln Sincerity even Inwtcksd ness hss a flavor quite Its own.But he who fsils to ses ths world ss It is and refuses to take It aa he finds It falls Inevitably betwixt the three-legged stool of a very false philosophy and th hlgh bscksd chair of very ill-judged per versity, with consequences sometimes serious and alwaya humllltattng. . them t ' And In what form should hsr message be delivered T ', , Th publle platform' and th dramatis stage are, in our day, open to women as thsy hav never be for been, and one might think that either or both of these would suggest themselves to Mrs. Wil cox as a medium for her deliverance; few actreeae or lecturers possess quail flcationa ao favorable aa her to theae careers. . But it not seldom hsppens that ths courage and energy of tb spirit ar not eupplamented by a corresponding In trepidity of th physical nerves; ga un conquerable aversion from personal con splcuousnsss besets some whose minds ss trenchantly, and adventure without fear.-;' "' -.').,. ''- j-; A shrinking timidity of this kind must wo may Infer, have stood In the path of whst might have been th ora torical or histrionic triumphs of Mr. Wilcox and she, poignantly-conscious of that Interior warning, wisely,' doubt tees, forebore "to defy the Injunction. Whst ' shs hsd to convey to her genera tion must 'not b presented by personal publlo utterance; shs was to rssch her audlenc In ft mor-Interior way. Use liable to 'the dlatractlona and promiscuity of great assemblages; sba must address the Inner, not tb outer, eye and ear. We might have been prone to miss ths philosophy nod insight of what ah said. In the vistbls faaclnatlon of her saying It. We were to take her words horns with us, and meditate upon them In our heart, and let them fructify In alienee and seclusion. ' And to each on ot ua was It to ba open to approach her with our Individual problems and doubta, and receive from her our special solutions and encouragements. , - - . . By ' what atsps It came to pass' that Mrs Wtloox entered Journal Ism I am en tirely uninformed; Indeed, surmls has of necessity bsen my chief Instrument tn this discourse. Though I hav th honor of th lady's acquaintance, my opportunities for -Improving it hav ben rery few, and 1 hav been restricted. Ilk so many others, to th evidence of her published writings for my conception of whst shs may he. It I enough to know; however.' that. Journalism proved to be ths mesns of communication, with tha world; and yst her position in Jour nal I ant Is ao unique that It might -be more correct to aay that Journalism daptsd Itself to her. - ; -B that aa II may, th community haa for yearg paat been aware that a pythons la prophesying to It la ft jjlSSlANREVOLUTIONUML-. '7-::r:: v- :-Vv . Br CHARLES E. HANDS. . , ,- trTTHE Russian revolution. - I tlemen: and may w alt live . ' 1 , to se it!" . - a . 1 ' , I suggest that as ft suit able toast for any assembly of genuine sexagenarians. For thos who llv to ses ths Russlsn revolution will Jlvs a long, long time. ' ': "-, Ruesla is a difficult country to prophesy sbout for Just th Same reason that it I difficult to forecast a day ahead the ac tion pf a man who does not know whst hs wants to do. Moreover, it is immoral to prophesy except about horses. ' About the doings of tslking animals it la more virtuous snd prudent to bet, I bet against tns Russlsn revolution, snd if that tremendoua and fascinating personality, ' th. "principal- operator." whose recorded exploits amid th shouts and. traropllnga of Tattersall's are fol lowed with admiring interest in remote corners of the earth: If he ta thinking according to his habit of "throwing ths wslght of his influence into th market" upon this event, f. would earnestly rec ommend Jilra to follow in. For this horss, though a. publle fancy. Is 1 have it atralght from the stable a bad stsrter, an ungenerous beast, on the light slds aa regarda bone, backward in bit preparation and ft non-tryer. , . ; It is necessary, of ur, to know ex actly what is meant by "revolution.'' Vagu general terms are well enough for Wife to you blame them T. We do not btfy horses; without - seeing them. , Why should ' a second party bargain , tots a wife? ' This Is queen business. . . .. Now, my advice is thlsr When ft msn. especially a widower, wanta a wife, he should have gumption enough to look sround and Investigate for hlmeelf. If he tacks this, be la not deserving of ft partner. ' . , '.- i-J:. ' , It Is ticklish business t find ft wit for another man, even when you have vivid description of whst Is wanted. ' A woman may ba thankful when aha is put upon tha track of a man who la deserving of a good wife, Thla Is ss far as one earee to go. But arranging for f uturs msrrlagea and trying to- work Cupid to uberve your schsmsa la a dangerous Interference. . . By E are totd that Lovs goes where It Is sent - lata lha ai, ,iKK-a mrA tar 111 flit V - mind of ths mortal man or woman is ofttlmes th sender. . It seems to" be! the nature of a certain order of men and women to desire what la difficult, and' dangerous to possess. A woman,' brought up-W the Protestant Tftglon has been thrown In close ss- soclatlon with a Roman Catholic Driest. and ah has become Infatuated. She Imagines It to be the passion bf a lifetime and believes her whols earthly existence is to be mads unhappy by. his hopeless hv. v' ,. t. ',',.''.; ' v . She 'has tried separation and absence, but ths. lovs still dominates her. - Is it right is it natural, is It necessary," shs asks, . "for this man t give up ail ties ot borne, and wife, and children, to earn Ood's approval T.. - ..i. ... "Do you believe he I following God's wlllt . - - ' . ' "Doe God make human beings with natural emotions and desires and affec tions, and thsn demand that thsy crucify them .; . -, . -v . ' .:..'! "Ar they any better when they do Yuotfy-themT " ",7 "This priest Is th most sunny natursd and cheerful man I have ever seen, but strain tha like whereof haa not been heard before. She sits. Osllsd. at th receipt of th custom, and extends heal ing hand and apeak a Inspiring word to ths sick, halt and blind who throng to bsr for counsel, and auccor.- Faith, hope, charity, courage, ar ths burden ef her meaaage; aa they have been the inner purport of an great 'messagas from on being to others; but Mrs. Wit oox haa analyssd these slements Into special applications, fitting thsm to each soeker. and haa enriched them with In timations of esotrlo mysteries and bean ties such sa aeera have been wont to behold which bring to her counsels ths stamp of an - authenticity higher than can be claimed by . the individual. Whence haa ah herself derived them? , That Is question which, in no csss of this kind, hss, perhsps. . even been categorically anawered. Th secret of th Eleualnisn mystsrie. wa never be trayed.' becaus It was not-a thing that could b translated ' Into words. - The Inltlatea ' understood, but except for th language of s look or of gesture, thsy themselves might not even to one another communicate what they knew. What haa really happened in each ln stance I a change lri th nature, kdmlt ting tha subject of ft to a world hitherto unknown. It is a world, or a sphere, in j g. plans above ours, composed of now substances and forma, which stand to thos below In a relation to be likened to that of cauas and effect. A language It haa; but of ft richness snd meaning so profound and vaat that the llmltatlona of mortal tongue and brain are wholly incommensurat with thsm. Ths hour of vision comes, and It goes; but there Is left, during th Intervals. . for mortal purposes, only a finer Intuition and com prehension of svery-day problems snd doubts thst wisdom merely mortal can possess; ths full communion ef fhe spirit la Incommunlcabls. '', " Tha Eleuainlan myaterlee have alwaya existed, snd will exist. In terms suitsd to successive 'sges .of - human history.' None but t he Intttstes hss believed In them: but they bsv been ths source of whatever spiritual light baa found It' way Into this world. Its' aprtatles have often been persecuted snd slain; but we hav now arrived at an ags less dark and -intolerant, and - th messengers of ths Immortals are suffered to do their work unharmed. - i Mrs. Wilcox Is probably th object ef th grstltuds snd sf feet Ion of s terser number ef person e tnsn is sny ot er woman In America.- She has faith In I r mission, and ah diligently pvrsuet . , AAA the loose practices of prophecy, but for a question that has climbed to the highest plane of a -wager exact ' definition of terms snd conditions are necessary For a theorist expounding ths probabilities of ths next big race It is proper to be a little mysterious and "pin his faith" to "th upstanding son of Frylngpan" or to talk ot seeing ths popular lemon .snd vanilla Jacket once mors triumphant. ' 1 But when, ths principal operator comes Into the argument with his methods of expression the horss he fancies Is spoken of very definitely ae "Pancake." And no doubt he will be careful to have It clearly understood .what. Is meant by "revolution", before ba begin t make his Investment, for revolution Is far too looss ft tarm for serious wsgerlng. It wouideuss wrangling -na-to" -Its tntsr pretatlon, repudiation of responsibility and lll-feeilngs Incidental to a reference to the commute of Tattersall's. ,. . For example, a bad loser who hsd bet on ft revolution taking place In Russia might easily argue that a revolution Is already occurring. If, indeed, it hss not slresdy occurred. The Russian system 1 haa broken down; general discontent haa expressed Itself in a sort of passive re slstsnce to administrative authority. The people having ceased to give willing obedience, the government had- prac tically ceased to govern. ,- -; It would be difficult to contend that a nation In auch a condition ia In a stats of revolution. I should not psy ovsr con-' structlv revolution. Also I bar palacs revolution. - Thst Is s dark kind . oi borae that has affected many startling surprises In Russlsn history, and may ssslly bring off snot hi r coup soma fins day. .(-V' - .'" . A mar chsng of ruler or even a change ef dynasty without sny alter ation In th principle or system of gov ernment does not constltuts ths sort of revolution that I ass betting against - It would be so easy. . Tba revolution I mesn la th full blooded French article national move ment, not a family affair. When the people of Russia rise in overwhelming might tb sweep away the systsm and to trample on th fragtnente of th broken machine.' that will be a real revolution. But they will llv long who llv to se It. . Th trouble is thst ths Russlsn om elet, indolent and incompetent as for te moat part ha may be, la a modal of sn ergy and high-minded devotion to duty compared with the Russlsn revolutionist. The number ot people lit Russia who desire sn Improvement in the systsm of government Is rather larger svsn thsn Is generally suspected. It comprise th entire population,. and Includes ths csar, moat of tha grand dukes, ths greater Love and Duty ELLA WHEELER -WILCOX. I cannot believe h Is rsalty satisfied with his life. It aeems ao unnatural to mat v . , ' - : ' - " ''' "Do vou think tha vowa ot celibacy and. poverty necessary to tba living ot ft religious lifer , . - -. -'- - In snswer tq thss questions "1 can only ear what my personal beliefs upon this subject r. I am .neither a Roman j Catholic nor Protestant I believs In a Rullnc Spirit of Intelligence and Love, and in a succession of lives. I believe In ths Immortality' of all life, and In th existence of Innumerable realm about, above and below us. where dis embodied, spirits dwell. And I believe that each man ahould worship th Crea tor of this universe In. his own way and according to his own Ideals and- eon vistlons.' vT . - Tb Protestant clergymen . who works among the poor and help to sustain ths weak, snd to uolift th fallen, wnu ne enjoy hi home lire snd performs ths dutisa of a good husband and father, t serving God In accordance with hie Ideal. The Roman Catholic, or th Hindoo, or th Buddhist priest who takea tba volun tary vowa of celibacy and poverty and keeps them, devoting all hla vital powers to religious work ana inougms and aspirations, Is serving his Creator In and aha has faith in herself. And when An autobiographical narrative ' of her career was snnounesd. It waa doubtless hoped thst It would comprls a revela tion of many thinga pertinent to her spiritual sxpsrlsncs. But It wss Impos slbls that such an expectation could be gratified. All that sh could writ di rectly concerning herself must needs b only such outward facta as belong to tb Ufa of worldly jsxpertenc,-. Th secret of hsr life is not to be sought there, but thoee who read bar writings which srs not contained in this volums, sod which wer written with no conscious autobiographical Intent, may divine much concerning her which could not otherwise be conveyed. In the sams way, what is of dee pest. Import In the face of nature cannot be aeen at a direct glance, but sometimes it stesls upon us swiftly, unawares, ss ws look away. . For tho rest, th little book is delight ful reading, picturing forth ths dawning of genius in ft girt removed from con genial surroundings. Ignorant of ths way, and with none to guide her In It Tet genlua la never really alone; it even seems, often, to b Immured In solitudes In ordsf thst it may there find It true companions.- Thera were an Immense energy and vitality In th girl' heart, enabling her to overcome her obstacles; snd Emerson's vers wss true of her: 'Th eye aeea omens ss It go, and speaks all languagee -the roe." - Bhe lightly trace her courss. till sh meets ths fellow spirit who .wss destined to complete for her th conditions of her mortal destiny. There, ' where life be gins, ah leavea her reader; and tha little supplementary eeeay by a friend, grace fully and aympathettcally written. Itfta no essential veil, and leada to no untrod den paths, '- '., What, mora, after all. do wa need to know ot Ella Wheeler WUoox than that sh live snd doe good work for ber fellow creatures? Ws need not know, or snare, ner pnuosopntcaL convictions: and if we, hav mat with a benefactor, we do 111 to be curious a to th sources wheno wssVdcrivsd hsr power of benefi cence, to ner personal friends sh 4 a woman, simple, nstural and lovable; to th rest of her generation ah la a vole speaking good tidings and exhorting to faith tn what la good and high. If I have auggested further aspects of her character. It has been, but In lh Irre sponsible pursuit ot my prtvst speeu lstlona, for wMrh, perhaps, my apolo fee sre t , l at a e noseeeses a g' r " ' wtuet ff - - ( part of the officiate, tba po' army of all ranks, ia ad.i. peasantry and the profession, ' clal and Industrial classes. Lttt ber of people who srs proper . part In any actlv sreaaurea i t ing a better system I no gr ths number of thos who oons. t salve qualified and entitled I I bead ot tha .movement- There l-nb TWfder with whose 1 ship any ons else ia content Ths ' 1st ion Is dlssstlsf led with tha ex stat of things, but hss not th fa notion of how to set about Improv The so-called tnteileetuala wn t as ths leaders of ths vsrious reform , tie do not possess ths affectionate t fldenc or even the admiring reaper "the -peopI-t1rgs. Professors,' t ver learned and able, do not leas popular movements, and aa yet their ; no 'one els to lead. f : t . . i There ar manyx eminent and his-,?, quatlf lsd : Egyptologists, --, eoleoptsrlst, philosophers, phllologers, aatronomsrs. Jurists, physiologists aad geologists in Russia and aa immense number of atu dents of thas and ether abatrus sci ences; vry on ef ' whom haa ft theory of his own sa to the kind of constitution, which would be most agroeabl d con venient for Russia whan ths tlm com for a constitution to be estsbllshed. Imllsrty In-other parts of fh wortt there are large numbers of amiable en.1 reepectsble people who find a pleasln solace for their poverty 'in rocking-chair speculation aa to what they would da with ten thousand pounds ft ysar If eve they should have such a fortune lei I them. Th most practical of ths Rus sian reformers, ss far as I hav be stole to observe, are thess -who look t th benevolence and good will f th s toe rat for son amelioration of the ev of autocracy. That th csar it h llv and continue to reign wilt grant prudeni concessions of eivtl liberty to his peo ple la generally conceded, and whan they com to vote, however littles authority at first their - votes may carry, their vague discontent will begin to crystal lis Into clear Ideaa ot what they want snd how they propose to get It When thst hss happened a leader may mrge, and thinga may begin to march. Bat i. present ths only man I know of In Rus sia who knowa Just what hs. wants. to S and knowa Just how b propose to do it, snd with a clear purpose before him, throw himself with energy and eapaci ' Into Its achievement m General Trenot.. Reform Is in the talking stag In Rus sia at prevent - II General Trepoff hal happened to ba born ft revolutionist th reform, movement might hav taken more practical shape. . , - - hi way, and wbovvr tries to ledd hl from hla resolutions Is doiag wrong. Thla applle only to the priests who have voluntarily chosen hls. life; It doe not apply to the wbo'-tiav been driven into It by pareata, err by trad! tiona, and compelled ta take-up a course which ta distasteful to thsm vr for which theyjrsmlnntly unfltted., -. ... . , No man ahould beooeae . priest-unless from overwhelming convictions and dominating desire to devot ' his whole life to spiritual things. No parent, ne teacher, haa the right ts aay to child. Ten must become a priest." j unlee they as ! confident the boy la born Into Ufa wUo tba awakened spirituality , which will find Its truest happiness and lta widest usefulness , la such career. , , ' v have 'known priests who Wer abso lutely happy tn their self sacrlfloe. sn : who lived so la the spiritual plan thst ths desires snd ambitions of ths ordinary man did not reach them or appeal ta them... , i ,'. I recall a beautiful young priest ef tt Roman Catholie persuasion wb r. taken hla vows from choice, and w gloried In his llfs of poverty aad cbastl and I recall that - greatest soul it w evsr my privilege to encounter, t from India, who bad vercome th o Jectiona of hla high casta family by 1 persistent clamor for. a religious. II. and who regarded hla vowa aa th gre est privilege ft mortal could an) Human lov - and worldly rtchee a honors held nothing for him; be v always enjoying a wealth which t gsrsd tba billionaires of earth. - I heard foolish, sentimental aad " " women sigh over his saciific of r tlea and family. Incapable of under , Ing the high altitude of tb men. heard women say hi life waa unnatu Tet to the man It waa the only att Ufa possible for him to live. . 1 outlived the domestlo sxlstsncs hi re incarnations. Ha waa born Into ar for a religious post-graduate course, . ha left hla work and hla example behln -him when ha passed on. , . But whst folly- for aay parent to at tempt to thrust such ft career upon ft on I Priests, and Yogis, and great re ligious masters ar born, not mad to order. Th averag human being needs ths developing experiences of mortal lovs, marriage and parenthood, aad they serve God's purposes through being good buabanaa apu wiyea and cttissna. But becaus you and I And this Ufa th natural one we have no right to In sist upon It for ths priest or tb Sister of Charity, who takea voluntary vows of -celibacy and' poverty, and finds Joy in keeping them. Nor hav w th right t try and tempt them to break tbelr resolutions. I do not believe It a sin for tba man or woman who has taken the vowa without due understanding of ait thsy Implied to abandon them. I knew ft young man who bad been sent Into priesthood aa deliberately as hla brother waa sent Into th army; h had nothing la his eaters t mak th calling of a priest natural, or agree able, or holy, and he bad everything to make him devoted head ef a family and ft goad, shrewd buaiaess msn. ti fsil In lov and married, and la doln tb world a good service as a hlmi husband i and father and ft ehariuhi cittaen today. -" . k This la ft thousands times better ths It he were a misers We, unhappy, d contented priest carrying, a turbui human heart ailed with earthly de., under hla priestly robe. God hss i punishment in stors tor suck a r but He baa penalties for thoe who I fOod wnTnot be "snary" with te r who finds he hss made a mists'- calling, but Hs will not approi, woman who goes sbout trylnv f vine the happy snd falfful y rejoices In his lifs of devo. n I thins thst be to on the This le not h'rh !" " tent we ta. jv'er a to s'v t she w'i.l t 1 f ' I - ef '