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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY -MORNING; JUNE' 7, 1803. Independence Day CLosen ly tte Ens(lisn -Bisnops in Honor of tne American Bisnops Who Greatly Outnumber Tnem, and of Whom Alout Eighty Arc Expected to Go to London Heads of. the Anglican Church Going From All Over the World, Some Making a Long Journey -J. REATEST GATHERING OF BISHOPS By James 8. Steele, church sod are governed by their ownr ivruiiu Mav 58 Prer rations nods and metropolitans or archblsh rm ONWN. . M!" zs. preparations oos, whll In some of tha smaller or I are now- ' being completed at newer colonies the bishops are directly I " Lambeth palace, the - headquar- under the control of the archdiocese of te of th. archbishop of Canter- ofThe most interestlnr fibres at bury, an at Desna Yard, close tne conference will be Assistant Bishop ,lv old Westminster Abbey, where moet Oluwolle of West and Equatorial Af of "th. .xecuuvromce. of th, Church ".53, ot England are situated, for twu of tn ,j,ere. ,He tias many native clergymen treatest religious gatheftrifrs which hav under hla Jurisdiction In the African ver been-Aeld li tb English-speaking n'. "ft ct hon hv trained ; world. it. ivngiana. One of these Is the Pan-American con- ' . rppss. whtoh meiU in na f the large Interesting. Figure. AndlTo'rVlhe pVVffilcVcon Another Interesting figure from Amerl faience of bishops, which meets at Lam- lea will be the veteran Bishop Doane of ' rvMh palace 1m July. The latter meet-. Albany, the only American bishop who ' trn Is the first of the kind ever held. Ing gaiters and apron, and who adopt The Lamtmh conference a th meet- tne English form of bishop's aignatara Ing of bishop U called, ,ls held "very 'hi. christian name, followed by the years ., TI- tint conterrne wfrS in name of his aee In Latin. ThuS th ir ,11,67. theSMond I In , I8T. the Ltnlrrn archblshop of Canterbury, whose nama ' and the fourth lnJ8. V ,Tr. fl' la Randall Davidson, signs himself -conference a.attended by less than .Randall Cantuar." and Bishop Doane usea the form "William Albanians!" "100 bishops The conference this year will be attended by Jf if fit tor hla signature. Bishop Doane; who parts of the world. . . ' . . Nothing can show' the great extent of "the Anglican communion better than a "few figures concerning this meeting of bishops. The church, of course, had Its orlgiii in the great secession from Horn; at th reformation. After that It spread 'to Waits, Scotland and Ireland, and then to the colonies, which have since be "come the United States. As tha Anglo 'Ssxon race spread and colonised the arth the Anglican church went with th Unionists, preserving Us distinctive rit ual and its episcopal form of . church, "government. . - '"--'l : ' " ' '-a Today there are S7 bishop In Eng " land and Wales who will be present at th' conference aa representatives of the n:rthcr church. The rest of the 250 ' bNhont ', Will represent ' the daughter churches. Ireland and Scotland have 20 bishops, most of whom will be at th conference. United States. , The United State comes !fhrst In point of numbers with 24 bishops, of whom It Is expected that about 80 will coma to Lambeth. jCanada has 24 blsh- : ttp. Australia 20, indta. il. Sou tb Africa 3 0, while 11 will come from China and Japan-x In fact, In almost every corner of the earth where English-speaking settlers are to he found -there Is a dio cese of the Anglican church presided over by a bishop, and it Is expectedstbat ' st leust 90 per cent of these bishops ; will be at the conference. Some of them whose dioceses are three months' journey from London hv started al ready. ' ': -.-'' The archbishop of Canterbury, the I rirnate of all England and the spirit ual head of the ILingiish church, will preside at this great gathering. Th rrotestnnt Episcopal church of America '. Is, of course, entirely Independent and is democratically Roverned, the bishops being elected, by their people, while in England they are appointed by th king, who is the nominal head of the church. . The American bishops trace their ordi h nation, however, to the Anglican church, and the sentimental tie Is very close. The churches of Canada. Australia fnd many of the other colonies ar also entirely Independent ; of the . mother cue of the ripest.' scholars th v. I 0 THP ! American cllurch, will read a paper on tions; religious education In schools. cratlc assembly, because every cnurcn VOrganlzation - Within. Ihe Anglican July 9 Foreign missions; prayer-vm an and woman, lay or clrical,"ln is,ng. Communion." In which -he will deal with baolc adaptation and enrichment. " land ! entitled to - membership, and th 4ies which bind the- foreign and July 10 Marriuge problems; minis--every diocese abroad Is entitled to ap colonial churches to the see of Canter- tries of healing. t point Bix delegates. In this way It IS bury, even In cases In which they havs July. 11 The conditions revisit to more democratic and more representa formally severed , their allearience, s In the duo administration of the holy com- live than the conference of bishops, but th case of the-Amerlcan church. - Other, munion; report of the committee on .lt will not be so widely representative American ecclesiastic who figure on communities anl deaconesses. t-f th church, because, a great many th agenda paper of th conference ara . .distant and poor dioceses will be rep- the bishops of Tennessee.. . Massachu- Succeeding Weeks ' t J : kteaented bv their bishop at the blsh sctta. New York. Chicago. ' Louisiana. . " ' ' " " ' ' ods' meetin'a- hut will not be represented : Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Th succeeding two week of th eon- at the congress. The decisions of th Df Willi ind will churches. decisions of the conference will carry various 'Questions durln th flrat whilr , - ' SvSJf thwluUhve "bind ing' e " conference and the discussion of Hold Great Meetings. . : - -v - on anybody. , Thev-will be eimply ex- these Reports by th tfonferenc. A ; ' , , During th week of th -Pan-Angllcsn r,KTchWch theX meetings 'wW'b., held nt f h A n wirar nmmnnlnn mav ai ma v bishops and. their women - folk for -vrv evantn at th Albert hall, which not adopt, as they please. Vrhtn tha "Ty married bishop Is bringing his wln be addressed by leaders of .th conference, was lnapgurated. ,40. years, wife, and many of fhem ..are. bringing r.!S . dV r. osuxnitri ana nieces as weu it f-, - - the resources even of the , ligious problems will b handled. erv- , men of London. - .A hosoitalitv ices will he held everv dav for the dele- mother 'church even on Important coromittes ha been appointed, and It la gatss at Westminster Abbey ajid tit. points Of doctrine, ana it was decided ara wore- aearcmn: out weaitny --aurs. t v then that the .decisions of the confer- churchman who ara, willing and able to-' Special attention will b devoted to enc should be purely Of a recommend- entertain a, bishon or two. The arch- the work of the church's missions, snd atony nature,'' ,. ; , t bishop will fare for a couple of dosen during the week of the congress spe- . 'i , . of his brethren. at Lambeth palace, and eial collections for mission work will Recention In CathedraL th, blhop of London has announced his be made la all the churches in England. v willtngmse to tak In about a-doen at lt Is estimated that th various sec- ' Th conference, out of compliment to 'uln,n Pft'ace. There ar half a dosen (ions of the congress will be attended the American rhiirch which la now th ' other wealthy English bishops who hava .dally bv at least 6.000 delegates and th American churcn. whicn is now jn n0U(feB ,u London whlch they occupy members, all of them representative of most powerful v branch of the whole while the house of lords, of which thev the oDinion of the Ahalican church In eommunlon, will begin on Independence ?re members, by virtu of their offic. Is some part of the English-speaking Vermont, jrinooe lsiano, uonneciicut ana -mm succeeding two weeks of th eon- at the congress. The decisions ot southern Ohio, and CoaJJuator Bisltop ference will be devoted to tha mnetinra congress will also, of course, b Weller of Fond du LacVlsconsln. devo mee"n," expJessions of pious opinion and ' It must bo understood that while th ot commlttets . appointed, to -consider; nave no binding fore on Tthe churchi conference .was inaugurated, ,.40 years v." J ago, the fear was expressed that In time ' Jnejr to come th foreign and colonial taxing churches might be .able .to outvote the churchr diT' Tniv 4 !ith ti(iiMoii t fh ,n session, and they will all take In as .world. There will be delegates at th . jTil V . f .J? ? "j " al "R many of the visiting bishop as they .conference from men of almost everv cleprcatholral of Canterbury. , th Bt can accommodate, but. when all these .race under the sun. Negroes from Af- I P.tr'a ni- tin.-F.nH-llnh rhnrch. I-Tolv are accounted for there will still b rlca will sit aid bv side with Chines ' ..omniuinon1 will be celebrated bv the 5,ettrly 1 blshopstnd their female rela-n and Japanese converts, and'women from toiiin-uiiion , will- oe eeieDraiea DyM fives left over. Trhe committee ha th zenanas of India will take part in rarchblshop of Canterbury at thevcath-; great hopes.- however, that It will" not tho debates with their sisters from th drat,' and then the bishops will be "in- have to send any of them to' hotels. English shires and. from th United vlted to lurcheon -atithe ancient college - 'The Pan-Anglican congress, which will' States. Bed Indians from th church's of St. Augustine. After that-the for- meet In London from June 18 to Jun 22, missions In Canada will sit In tho same mal gathering in the cathedral will take will be in some respects a more repre- ' hall with Eskimos from the-ley north, place. . - - s ' " : - .-, . ; sents.tive church body than the Lambeth and with South-Sea Islanders who have Th seen of action Will then b trans- conference, -and in some respects less been converted by the clergy of the dio ferred to London, and on July 6, which It will certainly be a more demo- ceae of Polynesia. : ... ... . .-, . is bunday, there will te a great com-, ' ,. 1 ' " 11 . '.' "- ' 1 ' -'. " - munion celebration- In"'1 Westminster -f '. J " "v mm Abbey. The real work of the confer ence will begin 'onth Monday in - the; great liorary, or tn arcnpisiiops pal ace at Lamoetn. axn it win continue : 1 dally session until Thursday, August when there wlU be a concludlnr service FOR SUMMER PLAYGROUNDS n. Recreatibn Spaces SKoulcL Be Estatliahecl In St. Paul's cathedral, at' which' th tilshop of - London will officiate. The -Br Josenh Tn . . ' ' (As vice-president of th Maesschu- wlll never be available for all th chil dren of this age. lirst wtK win oe given p to aaareajie ..tt civie uini Mr Xm hmm ,..r. -, . 71 -V " : . , " and debates on church problems, the PVartlotfar interest in advalcTni f " KtnaiV 04Ur "Mt eonohislon Is that atrnda being as foil ws: . - -uti7i . interest in advancing we should in each Jurisdiction try to July gReunioS "ind 'intercommunion. ok.c05 Tichtot t r,)f ",oon nbil ?lPion can, b? v July 7 Organisation within the Aft- rm,! P,a imnortaS? as tthrie R'a tft It. ememfnlmum school fr1Cca..rmmUn,0n; -Uly-nd and"rhamoV7VtcSrr.o clergy. Julv B Th' moral witness .of the church ir.. relation to (a) the democratic: Ideal, (b) social and economlo ques- ix.)a6flX-: TOE "FAMOUS -LWJ&SY WHAT MAN DOES NOTKNOW "By Camille Flammarion . ' 11 li ps 41 St. Ilk L law WE TAKE our ideas to ' be reall- speaking ar-manifestations bf th unl ie .TVile in a mistake.' For versal dynamism with which our -five ties. Thla is a mistait. or BenBM put ua vry imperfectly 1n re instance, to our senses th latlon. Tw live in the midst of an air is not a solid body. 1lVo unexplored world, in which the psychlo ma throiie-h it without . f, forces play a part still very Insuffl pass througn it w!"ul cientlv Investigated. It Is not mattee fort, while we cannot pass through an that rules the world; , it Is a dynamic iron door. The opposite Is true of else- and psychic element triclty-lt pa finds the air to be solid, impassable .wigin of the soul and upon the condl ' body. To the electrician a .wire is a tions of Its survivals? That Is eome- runal leading 'electricity acfoss th thing the future has to teach us.. , canal leaning electricity i Th truth that the soul is a spiritual i solid rock of the air. Glass is opaque entUv dl8tlnct from the body is proved to electrlcfty and transparent to mag- by other arguments. These arguments, netism. The flesh 1 transparent to r not mad for the purpos of Injur-r-rv while clas la cnaauo. lng this doctrine, but while confirming ' ' We fee? the n'ied of expfalning every- It end putting in clear'nght the eppll : thing and w ar driven to admit only cation of psychic forces, they still do , the phenomena of which we have had not solve the great problenv by th an explanation, but that does not prov material proofs that we should Ilk to that our explanations hold good. : ba ve. , ' , ,,' . .. b: If for Instance eom one had af- ' There Is In nature, especially in th firmed the possibility of instantaneous domain of life, in the manifestation of communication between Paris and Lon- Instinct In vegetables and animals, in don before the invention of the tele- jno generw eoui m nn. in numan- graph. people would hav regarded th lty in the cosmic universe, a psychlo assertion as absurd. Later it .would element which appears more and more not have been admitted except on con- In modern studies., especially in re- aition ot in existence 01 a, wire jj.. ra.v,, ,,. r ' 'tween the two stations, and any com- servatlon of the unexplained phenomena, muntcation without , the medium oran wmot ira. iYtrjn ug "electric wire would Save been declared This element is still unknown ' imnn.fliKu vaw htt httv wireieiiM temporary science. - .L.ni. on ihim diu-nviirv Human nature is endowed with to tlie explanaUon of the phenomena of nltles yet little explored, that . , . i. - t .. . i . i HnI .. . .A AhMrvfttlnnf marie with medium. Tt-iT-imiiijr. - mi ii iT'r" " . ii.fci .ltT t : . on consistently undermine od- rrj."?1" biu.Bi. . - Vi uiy-icritn, posaioie to nii- n iv ' mat mis expianaiion is toe iru win. t.t. , , , , , , , , , . j, ,,,,. . JLiirougn mental seinsnness ana u- wuiy iimnea lew. . , r"i . " v. ,71'i ; .v. fnrtlia. mvliliM iiia. ' Why do w wlh to, explain these human, magnetism, hypnotism, tele- Atacles. surmount difficulties and M..;ution Is on greaUy deprived of the;. There is a eortato ' typ. of.-'eolleW ' !2luw-f .lIJlVi 'irtile mim7pfnael T to Sermit IZJn phenomena as eagerly as &e do . Be- gthy. clairvoyance and premonition, complish aima , - : ; ' i powers of suggestion, arguments and bred man that appears most in need w ' iht "2 ' faiiM we ehlldllke tmasina that wear These: unknown psychic forces are , 5 ' ' manv forms .V nnwrMsms not to he of education, whn im2.. til "e day is too long for steady outdcr wreets especially designed for the puf Sable to do so In the present state of worthy of being embraced within th ' . . "' " found In print, whereas through a during their four years of study they -d U c"tf ""dow valu our knowledge.' The physiologists who ope of scientific analysis. snccesseg in Uf seem partially dls- generous exohang of thought la the hav accomplished all th work of their "ummer playground. More- nr UK riwiciny, pcriiBuiiR n w counting for th movements of the astral bodies by holding to tha Idea of Ha immoKnitv Af ih. Asirth nr naiiurt Bcionce ana xo DniiOHonnv. , or luriace iacu. wnere -to inrj niurv untnttk. - . r.tK. eji ehoAttirri v.M.oiAM. - inouRnuui wan, w " uo51l; ttistalces are we frequently taught facta, erally discouragina; tho humbler class TK T I-1 - ,.A annantlr Mm.rlrnMn iikkm, V. ".""--. M "- "1 eucn jc.vii. ciiijjf xui.vtii. ,t , ' "nicrs appears conspicuously - ia;a- xitwr. It was fair ' and his sweetheart ntmv surelv. and thev hav nothing of round arm In whfeh to wmtnlAin. Rut who Aewm not Presently thev feel that this natural propensity to pi hop. which they promptly entered, erally imagined in business circles, but edge: to the youth it marks and de great Mriiinn..nt tn rh"..?" J?J P0"" '" yards will hav to be some- overlooked. After thev had been swung explain everything is not justified, that Sandy ordered on pi, sat . down and equally so In each and every day s so-, cldes his profession and: career; to th most unfortunate - what separated from the grammar through th revolving door she said: science progresses from age to age. commenced to eat it Meanwhile the clal and domestlo experiences; for do girl it emphasizes her character and rK.... schools because of the squealing. "Did you give that man at the door tnai wnat is not Known toaay win d gin looKeo shyly on. rat little acts- or consiaeration ana womanliness, and 10 . every success In ' . V ' ' V naygrounos ror little enwaren snouia anytningT" n -iiie iana e tip after life it may be attributed the ch THE ARCHP15J10P OF 1S.MBEtH PALACE - IDEAS and THOUGHT By Langdon Carter aw Hint an it t la an - fiectton i. Herearter no scnooinous WK" " ' ' ,Mtr0-. ahall twt Mn.lnii.M In th. fitr nt Kew ment for giving effect to the hu- York without an. open-air playground ma a will. . Peopl Who do not attached to or used in connection with vmoathlse with nrorreaslve lae. tne Sam. Islatton are forever aylnfc-j that f TZli'1 , '", without publle opinion behind it is ,J!t!1 iZ Vl " - uselesa and they often add. that when necessary, as any public body with th public opinion exists th enactment power to build a school must by Impll- - of the. lew becomes unnecessary And ,ltl0" n"v" Pwjr .to provide , a thing i. 4W.. fo ncessnry ea the school playground, it Is prfctly. tro that tha mere im- just as they hav power without a sp- pression of printer's ink, in whatever ol-tl statute to provide desks and black- , pattern or arrangement upon sheets boards or etairs and roofs and entrlea I.K.4 - I? . t A school without- a -playground Is an prepared wood pulp, and th blndlnsyof absurdity. As our Heading citisen in these sheets4 together '.in calfskin and Boston enld to the schoolhous com mis labeling them' 1TPublic Statutes," does Um. which was thinking of providing not of Itself produce Important results, such a school: "Gentlemen, if you ran H Is also true that an ax placed, upon' hot afford both, let' us have the yard a shelf or leaned up In th corner of th now and build th school when you can " woodshed will accomplish little beyond get around to it" , r ; . the accumulation of rust And yt th We should like to have our law spect- fact remains that a man can cat down f this minimum else of SO square feet more tree in an afternoon with an ax per child. The trouble Is that in a than he can chew down with his teeth very crowded place, as In New York, and it 1 equally -tha case that a public land may be so expensive as to make - purpose, armed, with a law that fits It, the price appear prohibitive. I am told Is ntor effective than it can ever bo that they actually get their 80 Jeet 1n without. t . . London often more but the English Th enactment of a law. moreover, is cities grow horlsontally, not up as som a potent factor not only In carrying out of ours do. We seem therefore to need of the public will, but in th creation of some clause providing for exceptions. It. With the public-as with the indl- Th surface and the fitting up. and vldval, It is utterance that defines. Peo- the ways, days and season-of carrying pj Intend the oblect-of aaw much on th playground, we must I think, more concretely after thev hav fou-'n . leave to the discretion .; of th school i for it and got it through than thr did committee, praying for a quick-drying when the agitation began. ; eurfac; for sand, tilt and -teeter lad- . If these principles are applied to play ders; . for sloyd-mad checkers and -ground legislation, we will mak our wooden spoons; for afternoons. Satur agitation for permissive laws as a days, Sundays and vacation, but in our means of arousing th purpos which law covering the matter by th vagn will take advantag of th permission and useful word "suitable." "Open air" , and ; will work for mandatory leglsla-, Is a -gor-d adjective to apply. It per tlon only when w feel that w can rr.lts rcof playgrounds, but is not satlsw thereby focus an effective publlo opln- fil by a basement - Ion upon the demand that playground I think there should ba provision for provision shall be made. s - the use of streets for play. The street In general, what we want is a fit and re now- and will for many years b available playground for vry child. tne principal playground, at least for This neans that for children under 10 fhe younger children, and I think they w must have a playground- within a will always be such to a very great ex quarter of a mil of very horn, that tent. We allow thera to be used by au beins; about tho orbit of the bov with ; tomoblles ' and bicycles, and In Massa- short legs or of th mother carrying a cnusetts a oiu nas Deen introauoea tnis babv in her arms. , v- . - - , yar for the setting aside of streets for Where shall th playgrounds for the, hlll-cltmbing contests by the former. X smaller children be placed? In most co not se why. if the streets can b esses the best location will be next the used for th pla- of grown-ups, of a primary or 'grammar school. - Schools kind that is' notoriously -dangerous to ; - . ......... ...... ..... .. ............ ... . . ara nfHuri irw.aa vha-a ka,4i. lira and limn, tnsv annum not ne used ' w m i xiiii-iiv is not aaiiying witn. nus or sucn inougnt. wnat rignt nave w to systematio cultivation or everv-day iir . i. 'rrr z.rr'7-"7. .i.ir-. ... . to con-. the concentration; of thought n' hr.niBgTlhSnhlay fac-, I ' which involves desire, reason and trn-th th.4i.wn i.ni m.h.n . mnint ., th. iTZiZXZl i2.T It has witer supply and sanitary ar- Mas-acnusetw we nave a law unoer . th determination, and by It only can and I of . air power, known to man Jh vldenm rKr4!' .VWe.?SV whan It ralna on la ton streets. I think there ourht to be in explaining the attraction of amber by tne rare Taction or in surrounding : air, or Lavoisier seeking the origin of aeroliths in thunderstorms, or Galvant, who saw In : frogs a special organic electricity. -S? --,: , I put my physiologists in good com- The Cannjr Wooer. It e.at. a mhnAnwr vain- DOF. Ana tne streets or tne city snsu n cause, as almost very teacher will now rom tha St Louis Republic, teatlfv nntdnnr ranaaa 1a Imllanananhl. : ' Tinning Is admitted to h a bad hshft.t ve and In primary schools because the dls- but It Is firmly established. A young tim in Selkirk, and Sandy "TimZriiiiX'. - " .owrr, to y Through systematio thought and de- Jhl iJ." hAT.i.- .v : .vi-Kh fellow who took his best girl to supper were wanderinr ) Ca&ful tho" and attention "W oV .AZVrr' " illTJSS , 5."?- 2Z?? ii ioul diiirovlng'for hi dren under felt -that h must conform to custom. arm en loving the sights, tail is the secret of success in every tb - -hilrta anH.a flnnenntratlon of nn..ihi'. .u' : r..iTf.iJ ..Ir'-i" . so that afternoon sessions of these and handed out his coin with liberality. rnnliil a amort.lnnklna-; arthar. nf life, not Onlv as Is SO gen-'hnnht I. th. fnn..tiA,. . t,i.bnnri. 1.1,1. ' . enl will be held outdoors for ' which nur- an that nn nna In tha reotanrant waa known later, and that we ought some times know how to wait The phenomena of which Is't fine, Sandy V she tlraldly asked, ithoughtfiilness sweeten n an- love, sentiment "Ay, 'tis awful fine, Jennie! are swered. "Ye should buy one!" and friendship ever ; motive nower. - keen, and if we never give evidences Th word "sclenc1 "Thought chief ?! iym Wt. even In blackest woe, b in the parks, too, the oftenep- the bet- "No. Why?" MRS. GEORGE GOULD ON NEEDS FOR STAGE CAREER Extols the Dramatic Profession Immediately sug gests the mysterious, complicated and difficult, whereas' in reality thera should b nothing "mysterious" about It it la simply common sense and thought capitalised- Science . simply means the vi'JleMnls "om" fl" t,hre?(I of verity.' ter for the summer,montbs, and on th - "He ought to hate had the most Ho Knows momentary Godhead." larger playgrounds;' but this resource let ua out" T : Family Horse on the Monnment. From the St Paul Pioneer Press: There has just been put in place by From the New York Times. part In which her mother had tdsved 'wtth the first hesitating; suggestion Of iC VrCIXT n JT r- . - , with hnth artlatln aryA . Mmnln .,.,. . aiiooaaa : flltenaaa. to m V mind. IS TlOt ephemeral ko& successful return to JttHrJuno wynn uoma is nir iwu iw "'Xn.i, iiuron man a monument in tne ceme- tu. ZVH m, H , . "ow lovely young woman, the phy-. trivial ends. Success Is accomplish-. Britton the count ... th stage on Tuesday at Frederick slcal counterpart of her mother, and ment, victory, with a preface of toy and - Britton, , the county seat Of Town send Martin's tea ahe hsaneit season she will make her formal effort There can be no gratifying suo Marshall; county, and It is attracting consenUd to exDress a few n - de?u.t In society. - , . cess without, this forerunner of nf f,";; ,' much attention. It was made by an X " f in iiarTi airy. in n -awnwa -i m firnminir GENEE-DIANA OF THE DANCERS ;Charming V Little Dane Is Scornful ofr Men 1 : N O!" declared Adeline , Genee, th 1 waa only three years old he told my Times building and overlooking the city some aay o a or New Jforis at night remarked most famous danseus from the, Lon don empire, . with a vigor aston ishing for a little person gener- parents that I would dancer but then - we all would never com true. 'How did my unci know? thought it simply: "It Is very wonderful." But ; in simple remark conveyed more ap Wliy preclatlon than many ejaculations. Off ally so quiet and : sedata "No! he thought I had the dancer's instep, hB stage,- as on the stage, Genee'a ant absolutely not married!" in. n iti. -pv. 0...4 v"M,u i.imo" tv- j. ;-, V'TTL i.z KmmettsDurg Ilrm Tor Mrs. Ttona Hav." Th man who waa ukinr th. fl.iaatin. inougn 11 is imposs 1 3" Bunu i"ne" PJ!er ,y?? manuscript of her opln-. .uei ipno uieme yel uiu ,i.?r It ls -f Vermont marble about-,. i-7 -ZZ -TJV" CI "I Oenee and believe that she Is vr out and her wise words may act as an en- on- ne related the first intimation history of th IndlvlduaL 1 naii.v. a nr who cuuteiiiuiatoa w 1 j . 1 . . . i . nrvMi vnar in, mnji hnmnvi -( 1 . .mniinn.i j . 1 A uiiira iin.Tnaor.niv . . ...m wmm.. , ing. on the stage .should begln very .andstone base, on which rest, a hiut not denarterl trmn th. f. r twPle. - had Just passed by. '1 wonder how You know I have the dancer's foot" f,n" rt of expression, poise., and ges- 161a to look at .tpareuuy. ail unconscious, i. r The oiialntlv hnmnrAna - anrl OD" of sorts, she must b a subject to .quality of her - mind cropped out one couragemeat to countless straggling ao- "h? had ' an "mb'tlon to become an hrTThni,t h7w ;' MnowM M"Wn,I J" years old.- said youhgt in her middle teen., - healrybl-cton 'wl' .'uYport; Z rj.ni.r.om.n th. ni.na ihl A good d.nc is th best cur. for they 'comb; thefr hair!'' she exclalmei throughout th world as a woman who Mrs. Gould, "my father took me to see Then her awakening brain can drink In the monument proper, - " - Unr Danl"n woman the Diana of the h temper," ah averred. "Ther is I' o frightfully curly!" -na cisruiiea two distinct walks in Ufa V . S " r"al "r"u" uncie iom s -ao-; truuia oi on the race side of the monument ullIu:i wnose lavonte interpretation nomins; equal to it at least, ror me. in one of the store windows was a equally difficult and equally mttHUAj tiSSi '"- Wa"h!izldUm.yIi1; 2k17t?J?1P& if -nTave1 ! -Ii? likeness of Mr.s Is her. "Hunting Dance.". Then lie -must". Vi.!. ! oo for. poster advertising, ;The Soul Kiss." th She has been both a good artist, and ?er th. pla"r X" Va. 'emed by . stln"cVTAnd th.T-to mer.pill.- thi v.rr SeVV,. tood mother. . :-; .,. ; outer mleery. I sobbed myself to sleeo. essence of effective acting. This, in- . ' been Mn Mould's life . haa K r. . unoiuou Dm ODKUta HU, I StlnCtlVS . acting me wu.n. Triire" - - , with the laurels, of a benevoi.nt V.7- r,u.,.,J-2L..1 .8 -an .actress. But. t to my, makes an actress great., -jjiere ?, . , Scarcely had the'publlo taken her to Its- . 'Ur.JV ntt, co,ul1 only bitter dls- a groundwork of technical intelligence, i rt e. an ingeriue of unusual cha ;'rt,m'nt .1 'oned it out that, But the dreary rules of "Stand thl nd promise than she wai IwhUked froS lll a,i"dy with flaxen hair and bright, way" and "Emphasiie - this syllable" si aVe to become thi Twlf e of Geore. 5 ?.i cl:k coali b ctress, and. are what defeat the basic principles of ;"?.Taw' i.7. .-i ,wiJT" 'l.t I was a dark-haJreJ. UnrVrfv h. .t... An artresa whoknows these lent sry she was the aame charming wo- from mv hTamnr. tmi i. and her manifold successes Thave lTQm 107 memory. i-en emphasized by the slight gllmps , u e general public has had into th Uf or. a rwuiy extraorainary womaji. A 8TAGH CAREER. BV TCrtlth VlnDn. n-.-IJ ' (Written for The Bunday Tlmea will never fade canons as intimate , as - a natlv Irnmra V. I u Ion cru a ertk becomes instlnct- ' Ive on th stage, and the repetition of the llns sounds as natural as life lt- self. But before this consummate art ls attained experience and Knpwieage " the stage, as tdlth .Klngdon.. Mra 'r My oninioni n;".a. ...kL-I '""TiT. ".Vlainoa, ' acn eveo actual greatnesa to- the stag must hi .neVn".?- application. The wmium of :"taesilj ; servants. dould never f fweverr -the date Augi nmnager. told Henry this actress retired Va.. i wiuai oe in the form or - Th. umiiU tinn -or tms menial Dai- 2aloucnert'UeBn - P?ssed. ance entails, years of . sacrlflc and ln- from the atage. wlthhrar .""'"J""?? """."na mlled. too. and ther must "have" i2" ."rS JXTLYZL. Pee in wnioit oenee win make her ' - ics.1 ciui oiiu nut ii rat: l liu mur.n.- r" r PwimTar rtrir lannr o r the aiant Vmw.1 ai. something still doubting , and in- haps it doesn't look that wav hnt vnu i in h. i - quisitive in his glance. "I am not en- know dancing Is really yery hard work." dancer in a short ballet sklrvexecuU gaged, either," she continued, with a I remained in Denmark for three ing a pirouette. . , " oeFi?iv fhak of her. hea .. years after I went to- my uncle and The newspaper man glanced " first it' ."Then there ls all the more pleasure 'aunty.' who have really been my par- the poster and then at the demur still awaiting you,'' was the response ents for most of my Ufa I made my little, woman by- his side, the only response that seemed posslbl first appearance as prima ballerina "I don't think that picture looks a under the circumstances. , when I was 12 years old at my undo' bit like you" he said "I don't know," answered the little own theatre in Stettin, Germany. At "Why not?" she answered . " dancer In a vole -so low and matter of this theatre he arranged elaborate m w- - v :;: fact that It .might hav discouraged steal productions and had a ballet of Cupid himself, she was not even mod- hla own 12 people From ther I went erately Interested in the. subject, of to the Royal Opera in Berlin for thrc 'A certain scientist In tha env.rnm.nt mere man. months, and next to th Munich Op-- --.i-l .1 1. - w! . ernmnt Thoughroene Is Danish in appear- era-House for on year. - When I first OLD KIT. . The family horsa, -and my first Investment In 1876.-' Died March, 1896. . Wanted a Day Off. From the Syracuse Journal. - .H..-ov w.rrx. . lm -naita &Dd Infinite. .nf - V, . " " " iT- Z - Athana eaUn swwm, I . K -l -a i or I . I A A a, ""jT.- l-.rle Gwvnn in "lv ' onrutslS ThSSf iI2'SPSW'fla. 'trtfllng. lessly long. - And the woman who elects bent a trifle in communicating the news tnark," she began. . "That is in th that I'm 27 years , of age i', f:;,i,i itin. in t hut th. 7.v ? r?.?? doubt that to a wo- a stage career must be prepared to to his personal attendant. country and so you see I lived with Oenee is quaint i.wn wa rlnrina: with the charm of stna-e la d!St;. creer, On th ','play the gama" She must tell, herself : " Vautif, yourgr woman at D?ly-a fg. Ther aLW,Un?U"er- 1 W,1J T0rk- 1 "0t U was while the actress was taking easyT br small about ?th. !if nnrj- hlJT ecou.raKen!.ent: to 5a, at my her .urtaln calls with Ada Kehan that Ws, ind,' of coSrse. I m tr,Z trtSg .nd' KJv,,h" t.mpera b.T.fws met thos of the young man, only woram U. A.L tJ?J.LudJ"f nt a".'? the inherent ability, this wo- Bldliigr Her Time From the Boston Herald "i J v A Boston child not yet in her teens servlc Is said to b a hard taskmas. anc a well as birth and ancestry, she went to London I was 17 years old n unusually precocious, with excep ter to both his. official 'and .his do- has. acquired the English manner of 1 be-, and that was 10 years ago." tlonal penetrgtlon, asked 'her mother rniiu ' voiiiB, . . v .. 1 ing iiii-erviewet a a i;uiiiyioi.aijr .a urn. a ii uaiutji auaou enu srniiea. 1 nai th. other av ' Being detailed once to accompany a English language, which, she , . speaks gives the secret away!" she declared, long motinr' aiii it k. maa.ms; a most lascinaiing. mou : "I. T . ",,h ,', ir? said light out am nervous and not naughty when J do . v. ' ' so and so 7" . orenaratlon . has t or som scientmc - expedition on an extended with absolute nurltv. I was horn in juuano Aarnus, Len- mignt just as weu nave n rniiowe,i i, m .i,; "ur ser- man wiM succeed. he first dg-hter ws .wltabli pslaci Of ambufonT1?' " twJat.gherr0U,, c"nP'"aat,nK ' r-ard . urted that she be In all h vnfJZ.tl "nA.l ',' 'aw"K" he.r'. ..ed -Mom. awyna." after the acter ko sweeter momt will con than pie who ornament itT peo- "Henry," said., he, ."how would you -my parents until I was eight years ld, v uenee knows what she .has accom like to go with me around th world?" and then I went to the city -to live Pllshed in her-chosen field, and. before "Do we, go from east. to west, sir?" with my uncle, Alexander Gene, a her opening in America, did not pre asked the man. . , 'famous dancer,' and teacher rof danc- tend to be worried about her reception Kes." - ing. ... , or success in this country that Is to The Campaign On.: From the Louisville Courier-Journal. "Got any babies around your place? '(. tiurtiilp it i !... and when t t . I II, ' Air. Crotlld And we lose a day going that way. "When I left my people at eight years say, she does hot play the hypocrite Inquired the candidate. Of age and went to my uncle in Go- for th sake ; of "appearances."' At "Nope," answered the farmer, "Ra i - - ' . nenhagen ne lmmeaiateiy set anout tne tne same urn, an is modest and rea- pies is an Browed ud an marrieii ntt "Then' sir. I should like verv much -work of making me a real dancer. i That sonable. j How'd vou like to Put in. th ifnrann to go. . It would giv me a day off." had always been my uncle's Idea.. When Oenee, standing; on the tower of The ploughlA'7" m i do we not slrT' We do."