THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMkER 3, 1905. Ainiiiisvei mm Lloyd Tie (SMM's Safe mm ft X . t ft "V TEXT Sunday ia the centennial : IV I anniversary of the birth of Wil X Ham Lloyd Garrison, temperance advocate and emancipator In the alavery atruggle; ad churchee and so cieties In all part of the land will do .. .honor to on of the greatest ' name claims, Garrison Is known everywhere a the treat anti-slavery agitator, the editor of the Liberator, the man .who wa quartered in- a Boston prison' to protect him from the violence i of a "respectable mob"; but not so com monly is be known as a exeat temwr. " ncs worker as well, who chose for the mono - or his early paper. "Moderate """'n is ine Dowu-HIII Road to- drunkenness." That. too. when the total ; abstinence cause was far more unpopular nan u now is and, when hatred and contumely were Hkrlyto accompany Us espousal. At the earty aire of ZS Garri son hadV taken up this fight Oarrlaon In this work, which led to bis greater crusade, ia the Garrison that the TV. C. T. V. will honor on, the tenth of this t month. h .; William Lloyd Garrison was born In Kewburyport, Massachusetu. December JO. 1806. The surroundings of his' youth ' and his Inheritances from his parents . were such as to nurture his hatred of Injustice and bis championship of the oppressed. Hla father waa a sea captain ' of treat bravery and skill and hla mother ' was of the sect of persecuted Baptists. Hearing by chance, while yet a young girl, a traveling preacher of that sect. - which wasthen considered vulgar and , was much despised, his mother was con-;-.verted and became one of them, thereby -losing a home with her Episcopalian parents, who felt she had disgraced them. 11 was at one of the revival meetings '. " that Abljah Garrison,' a handsome young V sea captain, saw her and was Impressed 1 with her beauty. She waa dressed neatly . In a blue habit and Garrison, wlthHie ". uudaclty of a sailor, followed her to Ine door and asked to accompany her borne, addressing her as "Miss Blue Jacket." -" lie met with a rebuff, but when be fol, - lowed up thla Incident with a letter the lint day hla earnestness received some reward. The romance resulted In their marriage. The young man waa known , as a fluent and pleasing letter-writer, ' and probably his son Inherited from thla . aource much of hla ready flow of words and easy expression, which bad received ; no training In school. .Worked UpJThrough Ranks. . X. Like many another leader, William Lloyd Garrison had to work up through the ranks. When he waa but -t years old hia father suddenly deserted 'the family, going' to another country and never returning or communicating with them. ' Hla affection for bis family had "been indisputably strong and the. cause of hla disappearance remained a mys tery. It was supposed that he felt -deeply they disgrace, of the liquor habit, which was-gToaJng upon him and which waa ao detestable to hla wife that he to1 leave before nil sense or Honor '.was lost.' Lloyd's mother first appren- tired Mm to a shoemaker, but the work ,'wn eo distasteful to him that he spent - moat of his time thinking; big thoughts -and explaining Justice and injustices to himself. He soon left ahoemaking and the 'art 'of fpHntlng arTdnltu Tst""M t had found what pleased him. In the printing office he supplied the eduoa- Hon which his mother had been unable to give him. He learned to " spell. learned the use of words, and finally felt the power and- conviction of wrlt- ; ten words and ao choae his-own path of life. The paper on which he worked contained many anonymous articles - from his pen. and even at that time he jiad firm and fixed ideaa on the politi cal and ethical questions of the day. - His flrat contribution, however, waa not on a-.politlcal subject. In' May. 1832. he wrote over the signature "An Old ' Bachelor" an article entitled "Breach of the Marriage Yromlse," which profeaaed to be the . reflections of a bachelor on reading the recent verdict in a breach or promise case in Boston ny wnicn a --- young - man- who had ."kept company with" a girl for two years and then " refused to marry her was fined 1750. Garrison held that while a promise should not-be .broken the -mere fact that a man had "kept company with" or paid attentions to one- of the oppo " alte sexfor a year or two was not con . elusive evidence of promise or en- ; gsgement, but rather indicated that he ' wlsned to be assured of the wladom of hla choice before taking the momentous .step. The "old bachelor" -of IS con ' eluded the article with aome cynical re- marks on the vanity of women. Signed Articles A. O. B . '. Other articles followed and were ac cepted by the editor, who did not sus pect the authorship, and they were . signed with the abbreviation of hla newly-assumed title, "A. O. -B." For a year hla. eontrlbutlona continued thua secretly and tha editor waa aq pleased with them that he wrote through , the ' postoffice, requesting a meeting. - ' The apprenticeship waa ended when Lloyd waa 10 years old and shortly - afterward be-' started the publication of hla bwn paper, The Free Preas." In his native town of Newburyport. But the ' field wss too small or the tone too high - and the publication did not meet with ,,the aurceae the young enthuslaat had - : hoped for. ao he tranaferred hla activi ties to Boston, where he published "The National Philanthropist". the first pa ., per aver established to. teach the evils of Intemperance and the new gospel of GERMANY'S SOUTH AFBICAN"WAR j m U K I ONSIDERINO" that a long" and bloody war or.no smaii magni tude has been raging for nearly w-m in Herman South Af- - rlea. It Is remarkable how little public attention It has received. Perhaps the term 'Hottentots" ss used for the rebels tends to mislead the public, and t sug gest mere naked savages like the Mata Ceie and the Masai, who oppose numbers, blind courage and -primitive warfare - against disciplined troop and modern weapone. The rebellion In German Na- maqualand haa. In fact, frequently been ' "lumped In" with rlslnga in fff't Africa .and elsewhere, giving a: wholly false Impression. ' , . Tha so-called "Hottentots.w,ho hav so long and so bravely resisted the might of Oermany are akin t the Cape Boys that Js to say, a mixture of all racea, but with- Hottentot predominate Ing. Many, have a large proportion of white blood and some-would pass, at a glance for Italians and Spaniards. Their " langung la Dutch, they sre Christians . by religion, and their dress and cus toms are on the Boer model. Many of them ran read and write, and their standard of morality Is comparatively total abstinence. He waa only tl yeara old. At that time it waa the custom to serve wine, at all the beat houses, so there was an uphill and unpopular road before him. It waa In thla paper that he published hla radical motto "Mod erate Drinking Ia the Downhill Road to Drunkenness." All his editorials In both these papera were set up by Oarrlaon himself, without being first written la manusorlpt. and the ability to think with clearness and precision which he thua acquired stood him in good stead in later years. , - . The political situation at thla time (1S28) seemed to young Mr. Garrison to demand the election of John Qulncy Adams as president, and with the ardor characteristic of him, ha bent all hla energlea to that purpose. Going to Ben nlngton. ' Vermont, he started a cam paign paper supporting Adams, but did not neglect hla total abstinence evan gelising. : . -And now a new idea entered his large heart and brain -no less a on than the emancipation of .slaves. He straight way championed It with all the strength of conviction, and this was tha begin ning of the anti-slavery sentiment in the preas. 1 In the Journal of tha Times he brought out hla vlewa of tha ques tion and from the first advocated dis union -as tha only remedy. Partnership With Lundyi ; ' " ; ' The only -other organ publishing aim liar aentlmenta waa Genius of Univer se Emancipation, published In Baltimore by Benjamin Lundy. : It. . however, ad vocated a more conservative , policy, condemning the practice of holding slaves, but - looking -'to their gradual emancipation. Of course, the two men came together In the course of time and a partnership was formed.' Garri son assumed the editorship and gave the paper a radical and aggressive pol icy. He demanded immediate emanci pation and would accept no compromise. For aome time Garrison and Lundy eon tlnued the paper." presenting articles from both signed with their own names. The new policy, with the forceful -ar guments of Garrison, Vita unqualified demands and plain statements, alarmed tha southern neighborhood and .Oarrl aon began to be feared as a dangeroua enemy. The mild converts to Lundy's teachings became scared at Garrison's decisive measures . and deserted the paper. They - feared hla methods had been too extreme, but that he waa right was amply proven, for within a year abolition waa being discussed all over the country aa a live Issue. The audacloua man had to be stopped. and he waa approached through a libel auit Instituted by a slave trader whom he denounced. As a result ha waa put Into prlaon for Inability to pay hla fine, and hla half-hearted adherents aban doned htm. During his Imprisonment Garrison wrote a good deal of poetry, arid it waa at thla period that he- made the . ac quaintance of and started ' the subse quent warm friendship with John G. Whlttler. H waa finally released by a payment of the fine by -Arthur Tappan, who had. followed with Irrterewt -the work of Garrison. After the releaaa he traveled through the northern "cities lecturing, but was coldly received, except by tha Quakers, who were alwaya flrat to champion tha slave. He finally returned to -the pub lishing field and started hla famous aim. In Buntuiu IDf' forts were made constantly to suppress It. for this organ waa detrimental to the commercial Interests of the south. Vigorous, Fight Begins.' From, this time the' story of Garrison's life Is the story of the anti-slavery struggle. He is Identified closely with every step In the fight. .He was the founder of the New England ' Anti- Slavery aoclety, which waa unsuccessful and very abort-lived, and attempted to establish a college fdr negroes In New Haven. In I83S, Just before sailing for' Eng land to secure the cooperation of Eng lish abolitionists, he met Helen Benson In Providence. Rhode Island,--The name of ...William Lloyd - Garrison long bad been a household word In the home of her father, who waa president of the New England Anti-Slavery aoclety, and waa an advocate of abolition, but held hla vlewa unasaumlngly and quietly, though ready to speak and fight for tha great cauae whenever there eras need. Hla daughter had formed a grand con ception of the man who was leading the fight of tha nation, and evidently tha reality waa not disappointing to her. They met 'again the next day at her brother's store and he was deeply Im pressed by her "sweet countenance and pleasant conversation," and she. -who had "found him to surpass even her imagination of him," stood "riveted to the spot." bidding him .farewell with sadnesa, feeling that aha might never see him again. Both remained in each other's thoughts, and -when be returned from England his first visit was to her father's home, and before long 'ha had won her for Ma bride. - . ' Mrs. Garrison .la apoken of with love end admiration by all who met her. She was. ' as"- a girl, a plump, rosy creature, with blue eyes and fair brown hair, and she was called by her friends "Peace and , Plenty." not more In allusion to her tmlformly placid disposition than to her easily aroused and. Irrepreealble mlrthfulnesa. Bhe waa simple in her tastes, a famous patron of cold water, and the wedding. September 4. 1834. was marked by Ita simplicity. All the ap pointments were plain and Unostenta tious. Wine of course was abaent from the feast and even cake was not pro vided, for both felt tha Importance of high. In fact, life, property and the honor of women are safer among these people, practically free' from controS tie they are, than In too many well policed areas in Europe. ' ' . " ( Though the Hereros and the Bushmen have been guilty of soma, excesses, the "Hottentots" have conducted their war In a manner deserving of all praise. A typical Instance la that of old Christian, who found his men looting a farm. Al though short of provisions himself,- lie ordored the bulk of the property to b restored, naively saying, "How shall theae poor people live if we take their food awayf a consideration that haa given but little concern to many re nowned, white military ' leadera. Only on occasions of extreme provocation have the warriors got out of hand, when, like the British, troops In. the Indian mutiny and the Japanese In the China war,1hey were stimulated to-vengeance by the apectacls of murdered fellow pptintrrmen.. v ' In strong contrast to the Hottentots' methods of warfare have been those of Germany. From the first the Germans appear to have sought te rrtre by terror alone.. When they Ylrst annexed the country a tribe that has adopted the ttUe William Lloyd Garrison, Whose Centenary Will B Celebrated Next Sunday. their axsmple to the. colored population whose Interest n ate rally was keen. Attacked In Boston. ; n Til- ratnwi from Enrland he oraran- lsed the NatioTT XITtT-STa (eTfTI3c1T and this time the organisation grew snd became strong. In 183& the pro-slavery mobs began to commit depredations and in the same year the southern press be came aggressive In lta opposition and threatening. The Uvea of abolitionists were In danger and Garrison waa-attacked In Boston and wan confined In prlaon over night to ave him from the violence of a respectable mob." This event and many similar ones had the effect of making frtenda for the abo litionists, t - . "Garrison, besides being celebrated to day as a hero by temperance organisa tions, might well be glorified by the equal suffrage associations. He was one of ita earliest, champions. About thla time a division was caosed in tha American Anti-Slavery aoclety by the appointment of a woman on , the busi ness committee. The - press took ad vantage of the disturbance to heap more contumely on the head of Garrison, but the worst effect on htm personally was tha alienation from men with whom he had worked in harmony for yeara. Arthur Tappan, who had been hla meana of release frorir the Baltimore .prlaon. waa ona who now deserted, but Oarrl aon stood firm for the , privilege of Women. One of his fellows In the light was Wendell Phillips, who has delivered strong orations on the subject. In 1840 Garrison was appointed one of America's delegates to the -World's Antl-8uffrage convention In London, but finding on bis arrival that America s women dele gates had been excluded, be refused to enter It and sat' in the gallery1 as a spectator. '. .. ; ' Lost Caste With Clergy. ',..; Garrison next found himself In dis favor with the clergy with whom he never was particularly popular because of his fearless denunciations of the In consistency between their preaching and their countenancing of slavery. .Now, however, he waa accused of athelam be cause he refused to Identify himself with any one sect to the exclusion of all Others. He expressed liberal V views about the holiness of the Sabbath and proclaimed the abaurdlty of breaking all the other commandments of love and kindness to make one keep the fourth, and of professing to be' a good Chris tian when all one'a life one had been of . "Africanders" roe ... agatnat them. Germany had practically no other right to tha greater pari of tha oountry than that of conquest, and 'the Inhabitants najturally wlahed to sea th claim .mad good. Tha Africander warriors were in due time defeated and driven across the border of Cape Colony, where they sur rendered to a handful of Cape police Captors and captives believed that the latter would be treated aa. prisoners of war, so the unfortunate Africanders were handed back to the Germans only to bo lined up." helpless, disarmed, and submissive, and ruthlessly slaughtered in cold blood : ... In the present i campaign there has been no lack of almllar barbarities. In deed, If th Hottentots themselves are to be believed (and their stories are fre quently backed by white testimony)', the German methods of warfare fall but lit tle. If any, abort of those of th Span lards In Cuba and th Phlllpptnear tha chief difference being that there la no Unci Sam at hand .to- whose Interest It la to ventilate the grievances of the Hottentots, and no wealth In the coun try to Invite the assistance of filibus ters or to make Intervention on tha part of other powers seem profitable and de sirable. . The emperor la credited wftn having ordered General yen Trotha to "hang all. breaking up the marriage vows of the black race. . , , ;-',. .;. In 1144 Garrison began to attack the constitution of the United matee and caused consternation by-burning it pub- i, -'ni traffic. When seoenslon came he real- laed that the disunion which he had been advocating was not sufficient to cure the evil and that this would effect a change only In on part of.the country because the dissevered atatea , would continue as before. Then he realised that by war only could the matter be aetUed and he atralghtway began to prepare the publlo mind for 'this step. Soon the north was ready for the emergency. He urged ' the people on constantly though he could not fight himself. His son, however, . carried out hla father's principles and volunteered as an officer, for .one of the colored companies. It ia a significant fact that when the waa was over Garrison insisted that there was no more to fight about. He withdrew hia paper Liberator from pub lication and refused to remain a member of any anti-slavery socletlea. Ha wlahed then to enjoy the - domestic life for which he waa ' primarily Intended but which circumstances had kept him front enjoying. He lived In Boston till 1844, then removed to a more retired Ufa. at Roxbury, Massachusetts. .'.,:. Had Seven Children. ; 1 . He had seven children, 'five of whom grew to maturity.. The eldeat waa named George Thompson- In honor of. the great English emancipator who came over to lend hla aid and. waa mobbed with Mr. Garrison while' trying to lecture, in aa unpopular cause. ' .. . - ' . In 18(7 Mr. Garrison went to Paris for his health and to visit his two children there. He received marked at tentions from noted assemblies - and everywhere, people paid him honor, aa one of the groat men of the day. At St, Jamea hall in London ho was given a banquet at which all the most distin guished men pf London were present. -me description . or nta personal ap pearance in youth aa given by Thomas B. Laws on,, an artist companion' of tha emancipator in Boaton, will be of inter- Ills hair a rich dark brown, his for-. head high and very, white, hfr cheeks decidedly roseate, hla lips full.snsltlve and ruddy, hla eyes Intent, wide open, of a yellowUh baser, with fine teeth, rather th rebels upon trees." ' Though th scarcity of tres prevents th gallant general from obeying the-aetter of his monarch's human command, he endeav ors to act up to th spirit fit, and floggings and executions attend the German lln of march. Nor art these verities limited to native rebels. Last year two Englishmen - named Fisher were shot by the Germans on suspicion of having furnished th rebels with sup plies, snd other cases of maltreatment of whltea have .been reported . Of course, all tha authoritative Infor mation concerning this "little war" ha to paaa through German handa before It reaches ths butslde world.. Official ac counts are proverbially unreliable, since even with th check of impartial war correspondents and foreign attaches, the staffs of contending armies ars apt" to turn repulses Into defeats, 'claim vic tories for drawn battles, -and draw largely on their Imagination . for the damage inflicted on th other, side.. From ' th constantly renewed vigor and confidence ahown by tha Hottentots It would appear that the German suc cesses have by no meana been so com plete as they appear in print,- while th extent of their disasters has been un derestimated. Even thin explanation, however, does not fully account for tha larger than the average, and. a complex Ion mora fair, more silvery white than I ever saw upon a man. . He became bald early and was alwaya smooth shaven. He waa singularly pre -nrt Jw"l- and even after It became rtho rasTO&hTTOTOTiailrif It always With men of no reputation just as the conventional stage villain is bearded. He encouraged Independence in his children, but almost rated tt a moral delinquency that hla sons all es chewed tha racor. Fond of Children, : - Mr.' Garrison, outside of hla publlo life, was a gentle character, fond of children and having" a great Influence over them. Tie waa, too, fond of pets, except dogs, which he hated, and he thought almost as much of the cat a of tha houaa aa of his own family.. When abaent from home, his customary way of dosing a letter was: "Remembrances to Mary Attn (the ona maid servant). My good will to the cat. Love to all the friends." He was fond of art and mu sic and reading. In art. to be aura, he was led- in hla likes and dislikes more by sentiment than by artlatlo discrimi nation. " But he heard good muslo when ever it waa possible, Reading he had to give up largely after he reached man hood for lack of time. i Mr. Oarrlaon died May 14. 187. at tha age of74 yeara, at Roxbury, Massachu setts, surviving his wife three yeara and with four children yet living. Ha waa burled beside his wife in the cem etery at Forest Hills.- Mrs. Lucy Stone followed the body to the grave In recog nition of hla services to women. A poem written by John Greenleaf Whlt tler. for. the occasion waa read at the funeral . eervlces. and. Wendell Phillips delivered one of his masterly addresses. Tha flags of , the city and state were at half mast on the day of tha funeral and the governor In his otder respecting Decoration day a few days later Invoked special honor to "the great cltlsen whose name will forever be . associated with the cause and the triumph of the con test." in various northern arid south ern cities the colored population met in memory of , the Illustrious champion. Tho leading papers of the TJnlted State and Great Britain contained Ions; editor ials and biographical articles on the founder of the anti-slavery movement. Even the very publications which for merly had caricatured and reviled him joined in the general eulogy.'-'-- v. stubborn resistance of th rebels. Th native of South Africa soon tires of a long war -when the terms of peace are not too severe. But when surrender means death or other heavy punishment he will fight to the last like a rat at bay.' Marengo tried to enter into nego tiations with th Germans, as a result of 'which he has determined to send his women and children to British ter ritory and with bis band of warriors maintain the war to th last man. Th terms of peace must have been harsh in deed, to force, the Hottentot chief -to such a decision. . ;, Meanwhile the ayes of black South Africa are turned in eager -anxiety to ward' th. chnfl let. Man i i natives are aware that the British, If not the Boers, admit the military superiority of th Germane, And, having short memories, they forget In the, present discomfiture of the- white men th almost oonatant sueoesa of British- and Boer arms against them in. the. paat.'. Even wher England haa failed, as in the Baautoland fiasco of 1880. tha Boers have prevailed, and vice versa; so the prestige of the whit man did not suffer. But now the spectacl of a few bands of Hottentots defying a vastly superior army Is bound to ' have an unsettling affect npon. th native mind,. - - From the New York Sun. HERB waan't anything child ish or foolish about the great giant," said the old circus man. "He was a man, like you and me. but he did have a boy streak In him that stayed In him all his life, same ss it does In all good men, and kpt him young and fresh. Now, I don t mind saying, about myself, that I haven't forgotten the fun I used to have flying kites. I don't mean to say that I'd go to making kites and flying 'em now In my o(d age, but If I come across a lot of boys flying kites I like to get hold of the string of on for a mtnute and feel the tug of It it brings back a touch of youth to me; snd ths giant was Just like that. - "One spring when we were waiting in winter ouartara for tha weather to settle a Uttlemore, before taking the road for the summer, the giant saw some boys out flying kites; he had a mild attack of kite fever and he thought he'd build a kite and fly It himself. ' Naturally the giant built a aits mat was proportioned to his own else, just ss you or I would do, or any boy. If we were going to build a kite, and that made the giant's kite about 11 feet high, which. If youll : stop to tnin about it a minute, is a good deal of a kite, and one that any ordinary man couldn't begin to hold at all. But it waa all right for the giant.. He had for a kite atrlng a number of goad atout new clothes lines tied to gether and to end and for a tall no naa a lot of oid horse blankets torn into thick strips and knotted together, with a long roll of old canvas that the old man had lent blm sandwiched In to lengthen It out and he had great fun flying the big kite for on day and then something happened "There was standing at that time out side of a two-story brick butldlng that we had on the grounds there at our winter quarters a building that we used for storage, a weather-beaten stairway that reached from the ground to the aecond story. This location aaved tha apace that the stairway would have taken up inside tha building, and it was just aa good, better, in fact, for the use we put It to, outside; we couia naui wagons right alongside of it outside and tots ths stuff right up It, to the second story. . - "WelL on the . second morning mai the slant had th big kit out, the wind being aa it was, he was flying It from around by 'that storehouse building and on the stairway aide. And wanting to amoke, and "finding that he waa out of matches, he lust tied the kite atrlng around the outer atdepiece of that stair way going up the aide of tb Dunning while h went and got some.. - And what with tha tremendous pulling power f th kite and the fact. I suppose, tost soms of he spikes had rotted off or worked looae in the mortar, the kite pulled the old stairway away from the building and started off with it. "It brought up first, draggtng more or less on ths ground, sgalnst the board fence running around our property, ana for a minute we thought that was arolng n. hold It: but a guat or wina atruca theblg kite juat at that minute, and amaah ment three panels of the fence Into kindling wood and apllnters and the kite was off, dragging th , atairway after it aeroaa the country, with the whole clrcu now humping aner it, with, the glant.ln the lad He had tied the line abouFhalfway Busy Lives of t ft HE sons of rich men ars rarely idle whatever tha extent or If-there is nothing hers thst Interests them, they make a businesa of aport. Foxhall keens Is an example of cMasriil devotion to snort. In ons farm or another it has Kept Dial nappur employed all his Ufa. He nas maoe himsaif shsmnlon in every field of sport from billiards to cross country riding. Hs made it a ruie 10 piace Him self in-the first rank of players In svery n.w snort that became popular. He had been expert In racquets and later took up golf. Hs conquered that with ease.' All ths time ha conducted a rac ing stable on ths side. . Mr. Keen never waa In business, but nobody vsr heard that he found little In life. Riinni Hiarsina. who Is a large owner In great carpet- induatrlea. haa not for years taken any active share ia the management of thla business, but hs would never t consiaerea s. mu found it difficult to occupy his time. He spends most of his time on his yacht with congenial frtenda f m i never without the Interest tnai an snthualaatlo yachtaman nnds In his favorite sport. Mr. Hlgglns is supposed to possess an Incoms of- mors than 8200,000 and has during recent years spent most of. it abroad, as ha rarely comes to this country. Mr. Hlgglns is, like Mr.'Keene, enough of an all-round sportsman to have other resources than his trips on ths Varuna or bis four-ln-bands. He Is a crack pigeon shot and on. of the best fencers that th old club, with its quarters in West Twenty eighth street, ever knew. In the same way Frederic Gebhard, who has never been In business, haa found in a rac ing stabla sufficient occupation w awp alive his interest In existence. At least -two of ths younger Zander bilts find In horses" sufficient to occupy much of their time. Alfred drives four-ln-hand frequently In tha fall and winter seasons in isew xora anu . Newport in the summer. Reginsjo, wno has not, liks Alfred, an offlc in the Grand Central station, has. grown, so much interested in his stables that M roes even as far west as Kansas yy exhibit in ths horss shows. He baa no other occupation. ' . " - .it,., aim travels abroad on ac count of his health, would Ilka nothing better than to remain here and derot himself to his business ana mecnan leal interesta. But he spends little time i ,v.i. .nnntrf. His arfaWi. however, are kept constantly under his eontroT nr hla occupation in ine us ni u- hess. Georg Vanderbllt has for years devoted most of his tim to controlling his vast estat at BUtmors. - With his tenants .and overseers. . that has been work enough for' any man, especially as tha estate baa been tha scene of many Important agricultural and sociological experiments. . w Other wealthy men wno na not nave to work and sought other interests have chosen different channels for ths' eon sumption of their time and money. Two of the Stokeses decided that their chlof Interests lay in church and charitabl work. Everit Macr. ons of the richest men in New York, has for the last II yeara made a business of putting his money Into the good works that seemed to him moat worthy of it. .Mr. Macy not 'only glvea his money to tha support of worthy causes, but he devotes his time to Investigating thetr needs and aim. He determined to make philanthropy hi business when a very young man. and as soon as be cams Into his great for tuns he carried out this ambition. . - Evert J. Wendell haa never done any business sines ha left college, Jint divides his large . income between bjs rescue work tor boys from th slum Snd hla rro: UT up on the stairway, where It was handy for htm to reach It, and so tha etulr way waa now about evenly balanced on th atrlng. Our next door neishbor on that aide was. a farmer who had four stack of hay In a field Just the other side 6f that fence, and the atairway Juat caught each of those' haystacks right at the bass and picked up and shook out and scattered the whole lot of 'em, one after another- all over creation. And at the next jump It made it broke the -bayowner's- arm and tor the roof off his woodshed. ' "It bounced along the field after tear ing up the haystacka and happened to be on an upward bounce when it struck the woodshed and caught under tha eaves. The farmer had coma out along with everybody else when the kite started, and he rushed up and grabbed the stairs and tried to hold them, but a puff of wind on' ths kite pinned his arm between the stairs and the shed, and the next Instant away went the roof. leaving nothing Of it but sticks and shingles, and away went tha stairs. tearing up fields beyond and tearing down fences on the way nntil it came to a road, where - something really extraordinary happened. This road ran east and west and there was coming along It at th time a horse' and wagon, headed east. The stairway bounded clean over the last fence by thla road without touching that, but, as It sailed over on end of It It hit this wagon a smaahlng blow, and turned the whole outfit horae. wagon and all clean around la tha road, so that the horse headed west, and tt started, with the wreck of the wagon, running away, in that direction. Just contrary to ths way it had been headed a minute before, while ths kite dragged the stairs slong across the road and through the fence on tha other aids and on Into the next field. "Not very far from th fence In this . field there was a - .big ' moss-grown boulder, too big to move, and which the farmer had . never ; thought it worth while to blast out, and not far beyond this was the farmer's bouse and barns. Moving fast and tearing things up gen erally on the way, and with an extra blast hitting the kite at Just that minute, when the stairs hit this boulder they slid up ths slds of it and high Into the air and turned around' and came down end first Ilk a great battering ram and smashed half .. their . length through the aide of this farmer's big gest barn. - Tou never saw such destruc tion anywhere. "But that waa ths and of ft. . Coming on the run we'd come up with the fly ing atairway now, and th giant got hla handa on the kits 11ns and hauled In the kite and we got ths stairway out of the hole in the barn and started home, with"- ths giant ahead - carrying " th " kits and soms of ths circus men carry ing what there waa left of the stairs, marching back across country along the line that the stairs had plowed up. "And ths old man paid all the bills cheerfully. He was always willing and more than willing to do anything he could 1 to amuse th great giant, the greatest circus attraction that over took the road, to make him happy and keep him comfortable.' But ths giant never flew any kites after - that; ha didn't want to. .: r-- . -.. "He'd juat had a little mild attack of kits fever, that'a alt, and now it waa all over.. He waa a freak in slae only. In other ways he was Just like tharest of us." Rich Men's Sons theatre collection, which la one of th flneat In existence. But it la the reacue work that oocuplea him chiefly. He ttn a uuLiuiaij tu lisjlp Mm. ' ETSty flay ' from until 10 in ths morning he re ceives at his office the. boys who come there in search of help, - This office is in the front basement of his residence and hla . neighbors have grown accustomed to the ragged band that gathers there svery day. Mr. Wendell thrlc a year makes a trip to tha far western states, where many of the youths that he has rescued fln.l homes and develop Into useful- cltisens. Mr. Wendell does this all at his own expense and has never solicited aid from anybody, whether financial or otherwise, Thomas Pearsall Thorns lives in Paris and devotes himself to musical composi tion, although he has not produced any of his works sine his "Leonardo" failed -here several years ago and cost the com poser more then such experiments usually do because. Mr. Thorns had engaged an expensive company and pro duced hla opera In very elaborate fashion. He still makes muslo ths work of hi life, although he plays his compositions chiefly. In his den drawing-room, tct which . he Invites hla friends to heat them. . , .. ,- ' Thomas Hughv Kelly, who Inherited a large shore of ths Eugene Kelly fdrtune. haa never been in bualneas but ha de voted much of las tlms In recent years to Irish national purposes. It was hs who several years ago backed a series of performances of Teats plays. Lloyd Warren, a younger brother of Whitney1 Warren, la an architect, but has devoted much time lately to furthering . in this country the interests of the Beaux . Arts society. H. 8. Brooks, the oid Tale sprinter, is, like Hn Tendell, very much Interested In settlement work, and. hav ing, no regular business, devote all -his tim to It. . - , . Mow So Brush she XCalx. - Dr. George W. Spencer, writing In tha American Physician on the care of th hair and acalp, says: "Boys and men think they have to have their scalps and hair scrubbed with soap and water and then dried by violent' rubbing with a rough towel, or submitted to a moat wonderfully bene ficial preparation, - called a ehampoo, which leaves the scalp In a tender and congested condition favorable for In fection . and sensitive atmoepheri changes. . "The eteanlng of the scalp should be very carefully and tenderly performed, using warm ..water with a mild soap, rubbing in gently and with the ends of ths fingers, then rinsing with tepid water and drying by gently pressing the hair and acalp with a very dry towel, continuing until thoroughly dry; or, atlll better, dry It by fanning. If any application is necessary to bring tli hair thus dried Into shape, dnmpen with a bichloride of mercury solution 1-J.fi. "Ordinarily thla thorough cleaning need not be done oftener than once a week and in th Interim the hair needs only to he brushed with a aoft brush without allowing-to brush to acralcli the scalp. r "The stlfT brush, and especially thst most Injurious of all brushes, the mili tary brush, which Is frequently .need f.jf months severs! tunes dally until It l comes filled with dirt, cun onlv be i,f great Injury to ths acnlp. because of the vigorous scratching, a well as brisk ing the hair." '"' v Aa! Opinion. From the Philadelphia Pri - "Starr's manuw has promise! to K a nresentntion of that comedy of ni"n- ' said da Klter, "but, I don't know t.a IV te to eme aff." "Probably the night after It ft on, suggested tb oul sriuu. i