THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 12, 1908. 11 5 The auttorkisse- her lervenily; Tray, let us wed!" be cried ia baste, For be discovered Instantly . She badi literary taste I. Lippincolfs, i .11 x 1 lit 3b V.- "II "THE GARDEN OF ALLAH1 a Trial Marriage, by F. Frankfort Moore. Auttyrs and Newspapers Association, New " York City. Astonishment was,. expressed when George Meredith unfolded before a wondering world his doctrine of limited wedlock; But Mr. Moore Is more daring in his novel, which has caused a good deal of discussion tn England, picturing a mythical state known as Azalea, where there are no policemen, churches, or law, where children are taken when one year old from their parents and brought up by the government, and where marriages are only for the term of three years. It is not possible to yawn when read ing "A Trial Marriage." Tea, to Bkip even one page Is out of the question. The reader Is on the hunt for surprises tnd certainly gets them. The epigrams are strong and so is the character work, while the general subject Is handled with boldness andvivacity. When Millionaire Steve Stunt, presum ably an Englishman, found that he had more money than he knew what to- do with, he was prevailed upon to start a new state which blossomed into Azalea, located 'in a land whlrh had been so long reckoned among the dead places of the earth, that nature and the require ments of man had space to re-create it. The country which was the site of Azalea had been forgotten nearly 1000 years, and Its chief harbor had ceased to' be prac tical about the time of Charles I. Money without stint was poured Into the new Utopia, whose affairs were ordered to be governed on purely scien tific principles. Brains and the ability to work were the principal qualifications fr admission into the country, but as the new state progressed with Its radical legislation. It began to be noticed that both the birth and marriage rates showed a decrease. Attempting to save society, the Azaleans decreed that In three years' time all present marriages should be annulled, and should thereafter last just as long, If the two parties were willing to con tinue living together. Just as the new law goes into effect, the hero and heroine, Basil Rtdgemount and Violet Castledene, marry, and In their case the experiment la unfortunate, as the husband foolishly Imagines that he has discovered his "af finity" in another woman. The new law turns out to be unpopular, as nearly pvery married person wishes to change his or her mate. One married woman, not blessed with good looks, instinctively knows that her husband will disown her and she fears that she will not be .able to captivate a second victim: A tlrl who has beauty can look around tnd make her choice. I had to use all my arts to entrap I don't mean that, of course -I mean to to captivate to capti vate the one who was inclined to look on fne with some favor. Tow do not know what I suffered when he was making up his mind Oh, my God! la there any tongue that can tell the tragedy of the plain Roman who knows that she Is plain? God la merciful to most of them. He has with held from them the knowledge that they re plain, so that they go along mer rily for a time; but I knew it from the first, I had brothers and sisters and they rubbed It in without compunction. After all I wasn't so very plain. At any rate, I got a husband and the two sisters who used to m"-ke a mock of me are still unmarried. But what good Is a husband to me now? He will fling ma away from him like an overripe orange the day the three years sf the new system come to an end, and there is the nnieh of my fool paradise. But the plain people of Asalea rise up in their wrath, sweep away the laws of sntocracy, and make a popular hero of Basil Rtdgemount, who promises to re store an untll-death-marriage and chil dren to their parents. Basil Is pretty much of a fool in social behavior and he Is in luck that his wife wisely shuts her eyes to his roaming fancies after another woman. The novel Is written after an KngllFh pattern, and to not so much of a shocker after all. The- Daughter ef Jorlo, by Gabriels B'An nunsio. 1 1 lustra ted. Uttle, Brown ss i'o., Boston, An angel with oneghand uplifted in pro tost and with the other covering her eyes is pictured on this book cover and the scene Is an advance hint of the pastoral tragedy told on tho printed pages within. d'Annunzto delights in the Impressionat and tragic, and now he gives full rein to hisi exotic imagination. "The Daughter of Jorio' is a three-act play of Latin color. It tells of primal pastflons and lust of savage blood. The etting la Italian. Indeed, no other coun try under the sun except Italy has the d' Annunxlo atmosphere. For Instance, you would not calmly think of Sweden, Germany or Scotland in this connection. The scene of the play is the land of the Abruzsi, an Italian region where grows the vine ftnd oll've in sunny slopes run ning seaward to the Adriatic and shut from the touch of Western Europe by the towering ridgo of the Apennines. Mediae val and pagan worlds still mingle to gether, and romantic shepherds make poemg about their sweethearts and often about their flovks. The time of the play is placed by Michetti about the 16th cen tury. Mila Dl Corda. the daughter of Jorio, the sorcerer dalle Fame, ia the heroine, and Aligl, shepherd-artist, 1 the hero. He has just espoused Vtenda X1 Giave, selected for him by his mother, and Vienda and hfs relatives are gathered around him In the rustic home of his parents, when Mila, running, panting from fright and exertion, and covered with dust and briars, like a hart pursued by a paca of hunting dogs, enters the family circle asking refuge from lascivious rustics. The latter rush to the door of the house, asking that the fugitive girl be given to 1 f "V i 1 ? 1 N- i 9 ..ft- them, somewhat after the fashion of a certain occurrence narrated In Genesis. AlLgt'4 women folk are doubtful of Mila's reputation, and cry. "Out with her." Like a prophetess of old, Mila shrinks within the fireplace and says to Allgl: , Touch, me not. Oh,' yon, you are sinning Against the old laws of the hearthstone You are sinning the great sin that's mortal. Against your own blood ' and the sanction Of your race, of your own ancient kinsfolk. Lo, 'over the stone o the nreslace, I pour out the wine that was given To. me by your sister, in blood hound; Bo now if you touch me, molest me, All the dead In your land. In your country, AH those of the long years forgotten, Generation to past generation. That He underground eighty fathoms , Will abhor you. with horror eternal!. Allgi ultimately succeeds in inducing the attacking; party to go away, and a pastoral scene ensues where Aligl, bereft of Vienda, his bride, suddenly discovers that he alone loves Mila, daughter of the sorcerer, and along a mountain slope where sheep are feeding, Aligl and Mila swear their constancy, although at 'the beginning of their interview Mila ha4 said to her lover: AUgt, brother of mine." Lazardo IH Roio, father of Aligi, con celves a guilty passion for Mila," and when- he grasps her and she calls for aid, Aligi, with a blow from an ax. Kills his father. He Is arrested for the crime, and to shield him Mila pretends that she alone struck the fatal blow. The 'crowd of fanatics is only too ready to believe anything evil against the sorcerer's daughter. While Aligi curses her for the alleged murder of his1 father, and then conveniently faints away. Mila is burned at the stake. - ; Old Adam's story over again. "And the man said: 'The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree and I did eat." Badle. by Karl Edwin Harriman. D. Ao- pleton & Co.. New York City. " Mr. Harriman'a new novel sparkles with its knowledge of feminity and shrewd comment wrapped up in slang. " Who Is Sadie? She was an expert judge of human nature so far as her vision went for she was a waitress In a rail road restaurant In Kansas City. Mo. An unhappy love experience caused her to emigrate to Bagdad, on the edge of the Arizona desert, from - whence she writes & breezy letter to "a lady friend named Fan": "Say, Fan. remember what. X wrote you about Mr. Thompson last Fall? Well, he's got it bad. It's as clear as a sunset heie in the desert. Anybody could see It with their eyes shut, but I couldn't for a lonff time I do now, tho'ugh. I guess I'm half fool anyway. And haten it's over me. H ain't told me about it, but he's got it just the same. And I'm up against It good and hard. I can't frame a way to let him down for the life of m. I like him. Oh. I like him, lots and lots, but that ain't enough. 1 can't ever marxy Mm. I feel awful sorry for him. but I don't see what I can do. Maybe, though, I'll be able to fix It Up cne of these days. Tou see I want him to like me but that's all. I'll let you know bow It comes out. "On the square. Fan. I'd rather have a hundred and ten here anytime than eighty five in K. C. It's so. dry. Boer costs a dol lar a bottle. What do you think of that? The eating-house is the only place In town that has any ice. They throw some off No. 5 every day. But It's a snap for me after all. The only time there's ever a rush is when the men uo at the borax mine come down once a month after oaydav. It gets a little lively then, sometimes. Poor fellows, it's the only fun they have, and I don't blame them much if they do cet teaed Billy calls it 'soused' when they hit town. I would too. I guees. If I had to work like they do. It goes to 140 some times where they are. ilow'd you like that? "Well, I've written a lot but f ain't said much, have I ? Some afternoon, when things are quiet. I wish you'd go into the People's Cut-Rate Drucatore next to Frie berg'a and get ft pineapple sundae on me. Gee. I wish I had one this minute! I've forgotten how they taste; but I could eat a mil! ion. And say, Fan, it you do hear anything about J. L. let ma know, won't you? But don't tell him where I am. I guess maybe, he's never asked, or you'd have said something about it. It won't do any good for him to know-; he'd only write me a letter, and If I ever got a letter from him, now, I guess rd pass away. Give my love to Grace and tell her I hope she'll be awful happy. Gee. I'd like to see her get oft of No. 8 some day. I'd hug her to death. But If I don't ston writing I will get homesick. Lots of love.' At first sight the reader Is apt to think Sadde's philosophy df the cheap order of things, but not so. She speaks with the air of a working girl who has lived, al though her dialect is not that of Boston. Here Is how she discusses matrimony, with Billy: "Iook here' she turned and faced him "who's the fellow that a xlrl like me could marry Just naturally, you know? I'll, tell you a shipping; clerk down in some railroad office. A suy that never earned over eighteen a week In his life. And she's working, too, you know, tucking away her little old ten, or maybe twelve, every Sal udray night. And she's her own boss. Don't lose sight of that, for that's the most. It's worth more'n the money, even. Just bein her own boss. Well, she marries the guy. Of course when she does she quits her job and pssses up the ten or twelve per. And they go to housekeeping she and Charley boy in a flat over a butefcer shoo that costs i5 a month. The' place is full of old gold, spindle-legged furniture bought on the installment plan. You know the ad vertisements In the streetcars back Eat : Let Foster Feather Tour Nest. Four rooms Furnished Complete for Seventy-nve Dol lars. Complete for Seventy-five Dollar. Your Credit Is Good!' Chairs that-saueak when you sit on 'em: a sofa with roses as b!g as cabbages green roses and that's always coming unglued an easel In the two-by-twice parlor with the siicture of an old mtH In a snow storm in a silver frame: and a slush album on the almost mahogany table, with pictures of Charley boy's sisters in It in their confirmation dresses. "Anrt. the girl does the cooking on an $8 'dollar down and dollar a week' gas stove 4hat the company connected for noth ing. Then, after the first younrun comes and she's wearing a calico wrapper and cut) papers till 4 o'clock In the afternoon, she sits down some morning by the window looking out on the streetcar tracks, while little Charley that looks like the It she r Li J married's asleep, and lines it ail but. She's been in a trance. Before she xa&sed away It was -her for the nark with the oth-r girls on her afternoon off. vaudeville every Saturday all Winter, and a .show every night if. she wanted to go. Now it's a case of kid. wash, socks, shirt and a mop. She eouldn't go to a show if she wated to on account of little Charley, and -on Sunday biff Charley'd rather sit in the narlor in his stocking; feet or out on the back porch' In his suspenders than do anything, what's she done? She's quit bein' her own boss at t-n or twelve a week to be Charley -boy's hired rirl at nothing a year. That's the dope. Billy. Fine busluess, ain't It?" Billy's smile had widened and now, as she ceased sneaking, he- threw back hjs head snd laughed. . "But you've left out the best part of It. Fadie," he declared, when he had caught his breath. "What?" she blankly inauired, "The part that made her marry .him In the first place." A look of puzzlement came into her eyes. "The lve. I mean," he explained. "Love!" she cried. "Lovel O Billy, quit yosr kiddin'." J. M. QUBNTIN. IS LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP. Tha Illustration on today's book page is taken from Robert Hichen's "The oarden of Allah," a book which waa reviewed in last Sundav's Oregonlan. "The Garden of Allah' deserves all the good things said about It. Not for years has. there appeared such a strong story of human experience and des ert life. . ' - ' t It is lucky for David Grayson that he has kept his identity, and especially his resi dence, the scene of "Adventures in Content ment," a secret; for his publishers are be ing overwhelmed with requests to know where the farm is. The author would have a settlement on his hands In no time. News comes that Alfred de' Musset's housekeeper, Adele Colin, possessed at iifr. death soras? 8000 lines of his works In man uscript, and from these a selection of con siderable length will sown be oublished. It seems that when De Musset was 111 which was often enough, during the later years of his life he employed the -housekeeper as amanuensis, and the result remained in her hands. - There is hardly a series of social polit ical facts more significant to one who be lieves' in democracy, or to one who wiehes to resist democracy understanding, than those which have accompanied the develop ment of the Swiss Commonwealth. These facts Mr. Lloyd has sought into studiously, appreciatively,, fairly, and presented .-with clearness and Insight tn hia. new book "A Sovereign People." .-. A "players edition" of Anne Warner's popular story, 'The Rejuvenation of Aunt Mary," has just been issued, containing ad ditional illustrations from scenes from the play In which- May Rob son Is star ring. Originally published in I0O5, "The Rejuvenation of Aunt . Mary proved to be as popular as the author's original Susan Clegg stories, for the new players' edition makes the seventh time "Aunt Mary" has been sent to press. Mrs. Harriet T. Comstack's new novel, "Janet of the puneq," will be issued tomor row. Mrs. Comstoek. known as the author of twp admirable historical romances of the davs-of Elisabeth, "Tower or Throne." and "The Queen's Hostage," has now produced, a story, that in construction and human in terest surpasses anything she. has hitherto written. The scenes in "Janet of the Dunes" are laid on th dunes of Long Island. In and around the Summer homes of a colony of artists. . Life, America's unique satirical snd hu morous Journal, is. just now celebrating Its 25th birthday. The event takes the form of an anniversary number whoso . cover is ornamented with reductions of many of Life's most famous cartoons and sketches. The text Is largely made up of reminiscent articles by John A. Mitchell, E. S. Martm, James S, Metcalfe and Thomas L. Masson. Among its other attractive features Is an Impressive full-page drawing by Charles Dana Gibson, whose newer work has not been seen in- America since his departure for Europe to study In foreign studios. a Rudyavd Kipling's publishers, Doublfcday, Page & Co., jredict an early revival of In terest in Mr. Kipling's work. The response to books which they Issued last. Fall his Collected Verse," the holiday edition of "The Brushwood Boy," the new editions of "From Sea to Sea" and "Many Inventions" has shown that there Is a widespread lat ent interest In Mr. Kipling's writings which . may be counted upon to spring into great .activity on any likely occasion. They feel confident that his next book, announce ment of which will be mada shortly will be greeted with enthusiasm. "Miss Elizabeth B. Browning, care of D. Appleton se Company, New York," was the recent address on a letter Inclosing a coun try review of a new edition of the famous poem. "Lady Geraldine's Courtship." by Elizabeth. Barrett Browning. A letter, .ac companied the clipping and solicited "Miss Browning's" patronage for the clipping bu reau. .She would doubtless be glad to' see this charmingly illustrated edition of her poetry and to hear what people, of this day are saying of her: There Is certainly no other poetess In history of such beauti ful memory. If the busy, clipping-clipper had read this clipping through he or she would have come across these words: "There is a tradition that it was this poem that first attracted Robert Browning to Elizabeth Barrett." 'It is thought that Boston readers of CHmbing Up to Nature," which will be brought out early In the Spring, will have little difficulty In placing the "pink gran He, chime-crowned church" and the elo quent divine who spent his life preaching In London and America, both of which sub-: jects supplied Florepee J. Lewis, the gifted young author of this charming story, with the basic thoughts for her hook. The clergyman was a prominent figure, up to the time of his death. In the Massachusetts town famous for Its beautiful boulevards and splendid homes, and had made his church known at home and abroad for Its spirit of tolerance and broad humanitarlanlsm. His teachings ripple through the story, and give a touch of gentle seriousness to the book, through which, despite its am o sing sat' Ires on striking New England characteris tics, a lofty purpose runs. e , The collected New York edition of "The Novels and Tales of Henry James." issued by the Scribners will be completed In 2S volumes, each with Its own preface prepared by Mr. James. "The prefaces are of three fold nature," say the publishers in thir preliminary announcement. "Each, In the first place, narrates the circumstances in which the book It ' introduces was orlrin ally conceived and executed, what the idea was, how. when and where It occurred .to the author, and the various incidents of Its working out. In the next place It is a critical examination of the book Itself, per fectly candid and, as may readily be seen, uniquely piquant and Interesting an au thor's detailed criticism of his own works being a complete novelty. Finally, taken to-, gether, the prefaces constitute indirectly a unique body of criticism of the art of the novelist at once philosophic, technical and authoritative. Mr. James is hardly Ies a critic than a practitioner of his own art. and his general views of It herein set forth are rendered particularly effective and en tertaining by their grouping around the examples and Illustrations of his own pro duction. The prefacea unite the Interest of personal 'Confessions' with that of a pro fession of faith." To the Book Monthly, of London, White law Reld contributes an appreciation of Thackeray In which Is mingled personal reminiscences and reflections, "I never had the good fortune to meet Mr. Thackeray In America," says Mr. Reid, "though I did met soon afterward your other great nov elist of that period. But for years X was constantly hearing gross ip about Thackeray from thlse who had met him during his visits to us, like the genial publisher who was his guide, philosopher and friend among the Brahmins of Boston, or like the Old Centurions of New York. Their account ran all one way. They admired his talk, and the yloved hira. They pictured him as big, hearty and very human. They didn't find him laying the lion, the least little bit, and we may hope he didn't find us playing the spread eagle too much. They pointed out the corner in the Century Club where he usd to sit exchanging literary chat. or. In Yankee parlance, 'swapping sto ries,' with a group of clubmen about him. They could tell you years afterward what had beep Thackeray's favorite chair, and some had even been so observant or the least trifles about the great man as to know what particular concoction In a club tum bler had been hia favorite nlght-cap." One day while lounging In the New Tork studio of Reginald Eathurst Birch it was down on that fascinating. old Washing ton Square a young artist with the aroma of the Latin Quarter stilt hovering about him, entered and we' were made acquaint ed," writes diaries Warren Stoddard, In the current number of the Pacific Monthly. "Birch, was called away, and my new friend and I were left alone in the studio. Presently he said to me in an offhand way, Do you know of any publisher who would be likely to issue a book of mine?' I asked, 'Have yon written a book?" 'Yes! three or four of them.' This astonished me, because I did not think It was the custom of artists to write book after book unless their name chanced. to be F. Hopklnson Smith. It seems that while an art student In Paris the young man- had. as a pleasant avocation, been writing stories and even a novel or two. It was soon after we had first met when we met again at Birch's studio. My album chanced to be -there, and I asked If he would place his name amvog the autographs of which t was so proud. Birch and I had an -engagement and he said he would write while we were absent. Very shortly we re turned, and I found a charming poem, a good! large page In length, written in my honor. I -no longer wondered at his facility, though facility is the gift of - few. This young artiM-author was Robert W. Cham bers. Whose prolific pen Is the delight of the reading world. He has published -hie volume of poems, also, and I sometimes wonder if he ever returns to his easel,' In memory of the pastv or seizes again his palette and lays on his colors with the 'enthusiasm thnt drew him to Julleo's Acadepiy in Paris mora than 20-3-ear ago." Mr. Chambers' new est novel is "The Younger Set." The latter has led one composer, Paul Kaiser, to write a waits and name It after the book. "The Youns;r &et Waltz', is published In Phila delphia. Fiction often outruns fact, but n hardly go farther. The extremely ingenious idea of Arthur Train's 'Mortmain" is based on the transplanting of the human hand. The hero. Sir Richard Mortmain, has an acci dent requiring the- amputation of his hand, and oti the stump i auocessfully grafted another one. bought at great price of a man, who, after selling it, d4es from the loss of it. This places Mortmain in a bad situation, for it is in law a mnrder to commit such fatal mayhem.- Also, the man .who sold the hand was a criminal, a much-wan ted one, and the police have a record of his thumb-print. One does not se how Mortmain can possibly escape the con sequences of his dilemma, . H must be proved guilty of murder in either oase, it seems; but the author, who. is-a lawyer, re lieves our feelings at the last moment Doctors are debating . the possibility of hand-grafting, but all the trend seems to be that way. It Is possible Toow to knit arteries and nerves together, but the trans planting of a hand Is yet for the future. Dr. Alexis Carrel, however, recently grafted the thigh of one 4og on another dog and the circulation was perfect. Blood poisonmg set In. however, (n four days and the dog died. But the partial success of, the opera tion Is encouraging as a beginning, and gives a new reality to the situation of which Mr. Train has made such clever use. A correspondent of the New York Dven Ing Post says he has discovered a similarity between the central situations of Mrs. Wharton's novel, The Fruit of the Tree' and Ibsen's play, "Rosmeraholm.' After out lining the principal ' elements of both, he proceeds to demonstrate his' point that the three leading characters of "The Fruit of the Tree" stand In the same relation to one another as Rosmer, Beata and Rebecca. "Amherst, like Rosmer," he says, "Is a man of- 'advanced thought, an Idealist and would-be reformer. Bessie, like Beata. is Incapable of sympathy 'with her husband's theories. Justine Brent like 'Jtebecca, is a friend of the wife who comes Into the fam 11. becomes Intimate with the husband, and sympathizes with his aspirations. Like Re becca, sne is a girl of singular personal charm-and persuasiveness. "There's noth ing you can't make people believe, you little Jesuit!" Amherst says to her. To save Besr sie from needless anguish,. Justine gives her an overdose of morphine. Afterward she marries Amherst Her motive, 'unlike Re becca's. Is selfish, but the outcqme is the same that .Rebecca planned. Like Rebecca, Justine- conceals her share . in the wife's death as long as she can' Another re viewer notes a similarity between Mrs. Wharton's novel anc. Edouan$ Rod's "La acrinee," Issued in France some ten years ago, but as yet unpublished in an English translation. WOMEN WORKERS FOR PAY Injuring Marriage Chances by Going :. Into Business. . Juliet Wilbor Tompkins in Success. ; "No one will marry you, my dears!" says tho alarmist to the young women of business. If they are young enough they answer; In their hearts, "Nonsense!" whatever their lips may say; as they grow older, the Inner repudiation may be come tempered with a faint doubt. It is certainly true that the modern man of the educated world marries less early and often than did his grandfather, and ' any grandmother can give you the reason. . But, in spite of the Increased cost of living. In .spite of the tupn given by sport to energies, that once knew no outlet but lovemaking, and In spite ' of the comforts' of clubs and bachelor apart ments, still many men do marry. I wish I could say that the modern preference is clearly for the alert, self-helpful women of affairs, the girl Who has mas tered a profession or the one whose trained mind can put through a real .es tate transfer or a deal In May wheat; in time, I believe that this may be true; but, as yet, a limited personal experience says otherwise. We have traveled a long way since the odious Dr. Maglnn made his sneering comment, "We like to Hfear a few words of sense, from a woman as we do from a parrot, because they are so unexpected"; but the level head is still outrivaled by the curly head, whether we like the ad mission or not. Statistics may prove the contrary? but it has seemed to me that the women, who work and who are thrown witti men in dally practical con tact are less apt to marry than those who meet men only by lamp and candle light. Vanity suggests that this is the woman's choice, but I do not believe it. I, believe that nearly, all single women past SO, no matter- how brilliantly successful their lives may be, . are secretly crying in the wilderness; they want love and children, and the want cannot be stilled or 0tls fled with anything else. To the frank this would seem like an argument against going to work, but there is an -argument for it so vastly greater that it overwhelms thiswhich is, after all, only a general tendency and need not apply to the particular case. On the other side lies the splendid fact that the woman with a trade of her own does not need ' to. marry. She may wait until love comes, with ho anxious thought of "chances," no compromise with her heart or head; she may keep the door open for the best thing of all. Instead of shutting It' on a possible half best. If she misses altogether, she Is not an eco nomlo hanger-on, a maiden aunt to be passed about among relatives, but ah in dependent factor in the world's processes. When hope goes, she still has dignity and a purpose; she still, has her lniie pendent personal importance. Whatever the risk, the sum pf the argument Is all on the side of work. ' Phonograph to Scare Burglars. Mansfield (Ohio) Dispatch. Once more the phonograph has been called upon for greater service In a house hold, and this time it take's the place of a night policeman. Kichard Rcllly, who lives near here, has all doors and win dows of bis house especially wired and connecting with the talking machine. When the family retires at night .ie throws the switoh'and from that hour the opening of any window or door will start the following from the phonograph in a gruff voice: "Get out of heru, or I'll fill you full of lead." Reilly has in vited burglars to visit him to give his in vention a practical tjst. The Monitor. . TfThington Star.' Ol' clock stanA on de mantel siiclf ; NufBn' much tolo exep' a-talkln' to hisoelf; Tallin" 'bout tje days between de moTturmi n' de flowers; -Jes a fine sons story, for de mos he has to eay . , Is Testerriay was jee' about de same thing as today; An de day dat's still a-eomin' you Is rwlnter And- at last. Zs purty much da same aa you was used to In re past." So, what'a de food o' waitln' if you sees a chance to amile. . . A-thlnHln' dat de laughter may be better after while? - Aa' what', de good o' adfhhi' ton de hopes of long ago, Then da present baa Its prospects, earn as what the caat could show? Say, chlliun, ia yoa atrivln' on an' smilla' in de Now, Or la you Jes complainin bout de whyfor an' de How. An' nxin' up a future dat'll nnd yon on de shelf. Wit nuffln much to do except a-talkin' to youraelf? FATE OF A. CARFARE NICKEL HOW THE GREAT NEW YORK STREET RAILWAY COMPANIES DISPOSE OF THESE COINS , OT one person in 100 who pays for a ride in a streetcar or an elevated or subway train ever gives a thought to what becomes of his nickel and the hundreds of thousands of other nickels handed to conductors and ticket agents Ih one day. As a matter of fact, the pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and half-dollars fatten in by conductors and ticket agent in Manhattan and. Brooklyn go to two big financial concerns, and from there are put in circulation again. The Manhattan lines send their coin to a bank here and the Brooklyn roads ship theirs to the Subtreasury in Wall street every day. There is a constant de mand by banks and storekeepers, big and little, for coin, and they get most of it from these -two concerns. The bank, that takes the pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and half-dollars of the Manhattan roads makes a special business of collecting coins. This bank . has coin counting-jnachines of its own, and these, besides counting the coins, turn them out in paper-covered rolls in various amounts. It Is in these rolls that the change Is sold to storekeepers and ether banks. A small commission is charged to cus tomers. At the Subtreasury, the coin is not given out in rolls, but in bags or loose. Anyone who has ever called there for change and heard the racket from the section where the money is kept would imagine It is dealt out by ehovelers, just as coal is gathered up at a coal yard. The coin comes to the Subtreas ury in bags. Each bag bears a tag that tells how much it contains. But this record is not accepted on the say so of those who send the bags there. The coin -is counted all over again there, put up in other bags and tagged anew. The system of collecting the money Is about the' same In all the companies. In. Brooklyn, at the close of his day's werk, every conductor puts what he has taken In on his car into a canvas bag. He' incloses also a slip whereon he records the receipts of his. various trips. The slip bears his name and the numbers, of his run: The money and this data are sealed in the bag by means of a patent device. Then' the bag is dropped through a silt in a safe' at the depot, where his day's work is finished. There are many of these depots all through Erooklyn. ' Early every morning two covered wagons start out from the Brrklyn rapid transit stable In Herkimer street BLOOD-SEEKING SOLDIERS THEJ reverses met with by our AriTsy at the first battle of Bull Run, fol lowed' by that . disaster ' at Ball's Bluff, was paralyzing to our Government at Washington. Consternation every where reigned;' even the iron-willed Stan ton was filled with dismay. I have said all; no, not all. The placid. Lincoln alouo remained imperturbable. He of all men knew wherein lay our re Sources; that the sinews of .war would comefrom the great Northwest, In bor der more extensive than all our guarded coast line our frontier, with its million of "young men, all riflemen to the manner born; sharpshooters ready at his call. From the farms, shops and schools came 300,000, riflemen by Inheritance. They had surveyed the coming storm, had weighed Its magnitude, and, as minute-men, stoed In readiness. Impetuosity here had its personifica tion. At Lexington the Briton found it, a death-dealing blaze from behind trees a,nd every stump; and later when that army' of- invasion, marching across Ken tucky, found in front of them 60,000 squir rel hunters (in less than 24 hours this vast army had gathered' In defense-of their homes), it was well the invaders turned back. ' ' Such as these were the men In whom our chieftain relied. That daring Mor gan with his 5000 ohosen riders raided within this territory. By constant flight, night and day, he lasted only long enough to be destroyed by piecemeal. It Is useless to speculate, as does a notable writer, on our inability for a successful defense; not years, but days, would suf fice to Bee our Pacific Slope gathered as one man to resist all invasion of and by an armed foe. Impetuous and invincible when familiar with the use oftsuoh weap ons of warfare as may be provided. We find It thua with Jackson at New Or leans, as well ets with the -Bough-Riders at San Juan Hill. . With the tocsin ef war sounding, there was but one sentiment throughout the entire North; nothing could now avert the coming storm. Our Union must and shall be preserved. There ' was haste, haste everywhere: regiments formed in September were in the field, doing battle in. October. Leaving the plow In the unturned furrow, they were soldiers fully fledged in less than 30 days. Naturally enough, he that was most skillful In tha use" of firearms felt him self especially oalled; neither, did kin dred ties count. With one pang of re gret for' bright prospects so suddenly cut short, with a lingering good-by- to his young family, the writer was off to war. At the place of rendezvous 26,000 men had gathered, all Imbued with the same spirit to do If we could, or die If we must. A hew life was opening to us, and, as first Impressions sink deepest,.-we were shown the sunny' side of the soldier's life. Military exactness was - slow In coming. Company drill was made a pastime; enlivened by the fife and drum, we were stepping to the music. Then the dress parade, in which each man was taught to look his best; at guard mount ing we were taught to feel our import ance. Then came .the manual of arms. Here was our first genuine disappoint ment; our first source of real grievance was when the old Belgian muskets were put In our hands as weapons. - All fa vorable impressions were, for a time, lost; but under the promise of better, a,t the earliest date possible, we managed to swallow down this bitter pill. - Love of country is but the counterpart of the ties of home and kindred. With spirits made buoyant by continuous good health, we were " Joyous in expectancy; illness changed all this to ardent longings for home; and It is my belief that had these precepts of our . nature been carefully observed and the invalid sent at once to his home thousands of lives would have been saved. We dallied only long enough In this camp to obtain a change of .raiment, put on the blue uniform and, with the ap pearance of soldiers,, were hurried sway to the front. At the line of demarcation between the North and South, -between friend and foe, a most pleasing -thing happened to us; those old antiquated muskets were exchanged, for new Spring field rifles. - Though connoisseurs In the art of gunnery; we found nothing In these to criticise. The fact was, they seemed made to order, and. In the mind of the writer. It is doubtful If that rifle,, for the purpose designed, has ever been Improved upon. Once at the front we could see and realize the vastness of our country's re to collect these bags and take them to the main office of the company in Montague street. The wagons start from the stable at half-past 2 in the morning, and by half-past 8 they pull up with their valuable loads in front of the Montague-street office. . ; Then begins the work of getting the money ready to be sent to the Sub treasury. Only the coin goes there. From the wagons the bags are taken to the' treasurer's office, where they are .turned over to 14 receivers.. These re ceivers are expert coin-counters. One bag at a time is opened by a counter and themoney dumped out on a table. The slip put In the bag by tha conduc tor Is compared with the record shown by his car's register, which is also sent to the ofnee. The money is sorted according to de nomination. All the bills are laid out first. As they are not sent to the Sub-treasury.they-go to' the cashier's -office. Next the coin if counted. If the count of the receivers corresponds with the conductor's record, all Is well.. But if there is a shortage note is made of it and the conductor must make good. This long experience in handling coin makes the counters experts in detect ing counterfeit money. Any of this they discover is laid aside and the con ductor who turned It in Is notified to replace It with (rood money in his next bag. All the counting being finished, the coin is put up in bags to be Sent to the Subtreasury. Pennies and nick els are made up in $100 bags, and dimes, quarters and half-dollars In $500 lots. A wagon takes the money over to Wall street. When It has been re ceived there the driver gets a Sub-i treasury draft for the amount- he turned In. This he carries back to the Montague-street office to the cashier of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit. The draft and the bills in the conductors' bags are then sent by the cashier to the banks, where the B. R, T. has its ac counts. . At the subtreasury the B. R.. T. Is credited with whatever amounts the tags on the money bags foot up, tor, of cdurse, the coin Isn't counted at once there.- But If the subtreasury's coun ters should discover a shortage the driver of the money wagon makes It up on his next trip out of a fund be carries for that purpose. On the elevated lines in Brooklyn the collections from the ticket agents are made by a man on a train after mid night. As there are time during the day and' evening when there isn't much doing the agents have ample opportun ity to put up in rolls the money they take in. They aren't compelled to do this, but they do It for their own con sources. The reply of .a comrade to an elegantly dressed Southern lady ex pressed the impressions that met us here. "Where did you all come from?" He answered: "From the North Pole, mad ami and they were beating the drum for more when I left." ' On reaching Nashville we became a unit In that great fighting machine which was destined to cut the Confederacy in. twain, from the Ohio River to the coas at Savannah, leaving a trail well marked by the mounds of our dead. At the front we were brigaded, and detailed on out post duty, to take our station at a lit tle town some 20 miles further down. We felt our honors and proudly marched away with colors flying. With heavy knapsacks, box and gun 'twas harder work than farming. First impressions were sinking deeply; but more deeply, after a few miles of travel, sank thoe straps and slings of the load we car ried, while our thoughts were engaged in an Inventory of the things we would dispense with on all future marches. The column was halted and our regiment marched to the front with our company leading. "Colonel, you are' chosen to charge the town, to take possession and hold it.' With eager ears we listened, and in our Interest our burdens were forgotten. Adding to our excitement, a delegation of colored men met us, and with eyes fully extended, reported: "Forrest's, cav alry in Bar, heaps on "em." Our company was quickly deployed, skirmishers' to lead in this rapid move ment. With nearly 80 muskets we formed a line over 200 yards long, and with our bright rifles glistening In the sunlight the sight must have been a pleasing one to our friends who followed. "Forward, double quick!" rang oht the commands of our colonel. When we thought the city within our grasp an un foreseen obstacle met us; y9 brought up on the banks of a river, whose murky waters looked threatening unfathom able. "Forward; forward!" again came those stern commands. Surely, he did not know, could not mean; but he did, though. An insignificant river was no barrier to hia impetuosity. I was on the extreme flank, left guide. I dould see my comrades on the right making a crossing on the timbers and logs of a bridge now burning in the river. With a pang of doubt and uncertainty I slid down that bank of mud, up 'to my arm pits into water icy cold. Happily I found.lt no deeper, but then came the bank on the other side, six feet of al most perpendicular clay. How X mana aged to reach terra flrma will always re main a mystery to myself; water soaked as I was I felt I weighed a ton. I lay long enough, to get my -breath and drain out a little, then took my way up a lane that came out on the main street. I was aware that I was In advance of the line, and up to this time had seen no mem. In another moment the clattering of horses', feet on the stony road made me aware that something was coming fast; and then from around the corner came a cavalcade of horsemen, vying ' with each other as to which should Je foremost. With their steeds under full run they passed me without deigning a word or look. I must have been spellbound, for there I stood within a few feet of their, flight, viewing the sight without fear. When the rearmost men had passed me, about 900 yards, they came to a halt and sent me their greetings. A comrade had Joined me. The whist ling of bullets, cutting the leaves off the mulberries over our heads, brought me to a sense of duty. In an instant my whole being changed; from a peaceful citizen I became at once a blood-seeking soldier. The metamorphosis was com plete. As If to redeem myself I stepped at once Into the middle of the street, and with, deliberate aim fired; loaded and fired again. I. knew my bullets were finding the mark; their carbines and. shotguns were no match for our new rifles. I had made choice of the In fantry because of its Advantage In form ing a fighting machine, and ever after thought of their cavalry as a harmless branch of the service. Arms and the Man. Fancy. From "The Merchant' of Venice." Tell me where is Fancy bred. Or in the heart, or In the head? How. begot, how nourished? i Reply, reply. It Is engendered in the eyes, With, gazing fed; and Fancy dies '' In the cradle where it lies. Let us all ring- Fancy's 'knell; I'll begin It Ding, dong, bell. Ding, dong, bell. SHAKESPEARE. venience In handling the . toln.- The agents' count in these. rolls isn't accept ed at the Montague-street office.. and so when the elevated railroad receipts are taken in there the rolls are broken and the money gono all over again. Then tt In nil f nn In haM fnr lh nhtr.Bunrv A check is kept on the ticket agents by means of the turnstiles at the stations and the tickets sold. About one-third of the daily receipts of a street railway are in coin. The counters handle hundreds of thousands of pieces of money every day. and as thoy ' must do their work rapidly. It would be only natural If they frequent ly passed counterfeits, but they don't. For instance, there is a counterfeit quarter in circulation that an ordinary mortal couldn't, to save his life, discover- anything WTorg about. It bears the date of 1893. .Its milling Is perfect, and it rings Ma true as any genuine 25-cent piece. But the line around the shield on the eagle is a trifle shu-per than In tho quarter mado at Uncle Sam's mint. Numbers of these spurious coins have been put out of circulation by the Brooklyn rapid transit's coun ters. Whenever a counterfeit is discovered it is charged up against the conductor or agent who Bent it In. He is allowea to make good for it in subsequent re turns. But the coin Is not returned to him- The company has been In tho habit of destroying It by chopping it tn two and then turning It over to the secret service men. Lately, however, the .secret service men have asked that counterfeits be given to them dust as they are received. When they are chopped In two it Is often difficult to discover Just in what respect they differ from the genuine, article. The secret service officers are informed what con ductor turned in any counterfeit given to him, and they are also told what car he had; Then they go over his run and try to trace the counterfeit. Mutilated coins that come in tha daily receipts are hot cast' out like counterfeits, for the subtreasury takes such pieces and gives credit for them. ' New Tork isn't the only place ' whee coins collected on the car lines are put into circulation again. The bank here' that makes a specialty of supplying merchants with small change, ships coins out of town, too. It .has a man out on the rotad drumming up tr;ide. He was a small change supplier him self until lately. He used to take a great deal of the Brooklyn rapid transit's money and dispose of It. to Brooklyn storekeepers. He sold his , now he Is employed by it to :nrum up 1 customers. New -York Sun. INSANITY OF THE SANE .N England the increase of insanity has I been appalling. In 30 years the number of cases has nearly doubled. In PM about one of every 630 ef the population -was insane; in'lS90 the ratio reached one In every 220. And. the majority of the Insane, doctors tell us, are ' not recognized as such.' Thousands of persons are walking the streets perssns likely at any moment to fall victims to a homicidal desire; thou sands of persons are living In families; persons entirely unsuspected of murder ous intents. Listen to what one of England's great est living experts on Insanity says: "Tomorrow's criminal may be the man we brushed against on the street today. Statistics of recent date show luat, of the thousands of persons in England who are admitted to lunatic asylums every year, 41 per cent are afflicted with serious mania of one kind or another, aud quite half of the percentage incline to homicide. It Is only by the merest chance that they are kept from crime. -"Ask yourself where next - year's re cruits to your Insane army are, and the question becomes alarmingly serious. It Is no use closing our eyes to the fact; they are here, mingling in the crowds we mingle In." There are In England, according to this expert, 120,000 persons in asylums. One fourth of these are subject to attacks of homicidal mania. "In 12 months more, at the rate lunacy is growing, our in sane will be Increased by 6000 or 7000. To day we meet them on the street, or on. the 'bus' top. One cannot help thInKl:.g of possibilities." And right here In America, so doctors declare, things are going from bad to worse. . According to Dr. John D. Quak enbos, of New York, thousands of appar ently sane people are likely at any time to break loose on a rampage of 'crime. "Delusions of the sane are a matter of nerves and twentieth-century strenuos- lty," said Dr. Quakenbos,.- "If you play bridge or poker too much, play the races, speed an automobile, dabble In Wall street, work or play too much by electric light, live In a flat, eat adulterated food, or breathe bad air, you are liable to im agine that microbes are playing tag on your coat sleeve; or. If you happen to keep bees In your cellar, you may be afraid of going into the cellar for fear of eating a bee. "Among my patients have been persons who dared not cross the threshold of their homes, and had not been out of their houses for months; who would not force themselves on a streetcar, or wash and dress themselves, or shake hands, or sleep under a bedquilt. "Some- have diseases that no one ever had before. Wheels go round In their ears; they see birds, and the fluttering of wings; footsteps follow them; strange things crawl through their keyholes; faces stand out on the walls; flies whisper se crets to them. Lots of people come to me saying they are bewitched an ex ceedingly common delusion today." In a speech before the Entertainment Club, of New York, at the Waldorf-Astoria recently. Dr. ua.kenbos told stories of a woman who cduld' not sit in a theater because she was always overcome by a desire to fire a pistol at the woman In front of her; of a society ' woman who once saw a coarse word written on a fence, end could not help saying it aloud in the presence of company: "of a man who declared a spirit haunted him. and wished' to teach him the. Oddfellow' grip, and of a well-known authoress who was obsessed by the idea that a doctor came to her room disguL-.a as a cloud, and persisted in flapping his astral wingj over her. The causes generally ascribed arc men tal strain, business worry, living condi tions in cities, consanguinity, and heral ity. "Without doubt," declared a prominent physician recently,, "the terrible frenzied pace of modern finance Is driving hun dreds of men insane. The terrible strain of working the stock market Is weakening the minds of men. Worries over money losses are sapping the mental and physi cal strength of hundreds of thousands. And as a result we are producing men sally inept children-children who are fit aly for the hospital, grave, or mad house." Philadelphia North American. Japan's mining production last year,- ac cording to returns published by the Jap anese Department of Agriculture and Com merce, amounted to $52. 130.884. In 1S8G the corresponding value was $5,000,000. Tha value of Japan's mining output la trebling every decade.