THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, NOVE3IBEIS," 4, 1906. "HE NEEDS. NO OTHER ROSARY WHOSE THREAD IS STRUNG! WITH THE BEADS OF LOVE AND THOUGHT". Sue John Lubbock. (if Bir Nigel, by Sir A. Conan Doyle." Illus trated. McClure, Phillips & Co., New York City. Among all who read English and their number is many whose veins iiave not thrilled to the martial music called into being by Conan Doyle's "The White Com pany" ? Readers were disconsolate when the last page came, and knew at that time there was no more for them of Sir Nisei Lor iiiR he of the red roses on a silver shield. Sir Nisei wa then an elderly, battered warrior. But Conan Doyle was resourceful and knew his public. ' Why not write a war novel picturing this young knight's earlier days? "3r Nigel" is the answer, and it is positively, for Blowing- military pictures and enthusiastic appreciation of a fighting age. when England first humbled haughty France, the best war novel Conan Doyle has yet written. It charm draws like a magnet, and when once the first chapter is read there is no peace until one finds contentment in the last. Love and war have rarely had so strong a portrayal. Patriotism runs riot. No purer, healthier book for the young has been published this season. "Sir Nigel" is the great mil itary novel of the day. Here is one of the war verses breathing feudalism in every line: A sword! A sword! Ah, give me a sword! For the world is all to win. Though the way be hard and the door, be barred. Tiio strong man enters in. If Chance and FaTte still hold the gate. Give me the iron key. And turret high my plume shall fly. Or, you may weep for mc! Organized Democracy, by Albert Stickney. t. Houghton. Mifflin & Co.. Boston, and the J. K. (Jill Co., Portland. This argumentative study is not an appeal to resurrect that political party vaguely known as the Democracy which one man supposes to be under the domination of Bryan, another of Cleveland, and a third of Hearst or take your choice. Democracy in the general sense is meant, and Mr. Stickney accordingly proceeds to find fault with nearly every principle In our political system. He says that Abraham Lincoln's nomi nation to the Presidency of the United States was procured by a political bar ter: that our Civil War might have been brought to a successful conclusion in two years instead of four and at half the cost in men and money: that our recent war with Spain was man aged by party politicians for party purposes; that the Panama canal is a waste of money and that we should Instead build a ship railway and that money expended upon our battleships is thrown away. Why? Mr. Stickney thinks that "A modern whaleback ship, with an overdeck of steel, with low revolving: turrets on Kricsson's meth ods, carrying two or three rifled guns of the longest range and the highest power, would sink our entire fleet of battleships." All of which goes to show that Mr. Stickney is out of har mony with the great majority of thoughtful people in this enlightened country. In matters of governing the people Mr. Stickney favors the selection of lawmakers through the medium of the old-fashioned New England town meet ing with certain specifications, the most important of these being the cre ation "f an electoral college. His main conclusion is: "Democracy must he governed by the people's brain. But .that is an impossibility under the; su premacy of the election machine. We murit now make a thorougli reorgani zation of our political system." Teachers' Guide to the International Sunday (x-hool IKMinn for 1907, by Martha Tar bell. Ph. D. $1.23. The Bobbs Merrill Co., Indianapolis. Ind. Wherever the English tongue is spoken there will be the Bible in Eng lish, and there ought also to be side by side with that Bible the Tarbell teachers' guide, which is designed both for teachers and pupils, and is helpful not only to advanced students, but to the. lower grades of classes. The Tar bell guide for 1906 was hailed with marked favor and immense numbers of copies were sold, but the hew vol ume will receive equally as cordial a reception. It naturally contains more material than its predecessor, and is lighter and more easily handled. Its 500 pages contain nearly everything and that practically is everything that the Bible student and teacher want to know. And the price is rea sonable. The special features of this year's Tarbell are 16 full-page illus trations, many of them made from the famous pointings of J. J. Tissot, for the use of wnich exclusive permission has been obtained. There are also a InrRe number of reproductions of cele brated pictures of the life of the peo ple of Bible lands and times, ancient inscriptions, coins, Egyptian and Assy rian wall paintings and other original sources. Walt Whitman, by Bliss Perry. Illustrated. $1.."0. Houghton. Mifflin & Co.. Boston, and the J. K. GUI Co.. Portland. Among American authors no one has been praised in the one breath and condemned In the other as has Walt Whitman, poet. And in speaking of recent books on the general subject one Is irresistibly reminded of the worth of Horace Traubel's "With Walt Whitman in Camden." Now here is 0 another view from the pen of Bliss Perry, editor of the Atlantic Monthly. Not only does he present new bio graphical material, but his principal aim is to portray the man and poet with sympathy but yet without parti sanship. Mr. Perry even goes further he Is, not afraid to speak out and .the picture he presents is a very hu man, loving one. John Burroughs has aided Mr. Per ry in the preparation of the book.- Mr. Perry's language is always beautifully polished and his 'work elegant and scholarly, these attributes being spe cially noticeable in. the present volume. "Whitman will survive by the ampli tude of his Imagination, his magical thougn intermittent power of praise, and the majesty with which he con fronts -the eternal realities," says Mr. Perry. "No American poet now seems more sure to be read, by the fit per sons, after 100 or 300 years." Tuck, of Pook's Hill, by Rudyard Kipling. Illustrated In color by Arthur Rackham. l..)0. Doubleday. Page Jfc Co.. New York city, and the J. K. Gill Co.. Portland. The day Is past when anything that can be said in print will persuade people to read what Kipling has written. Peo ple read Kipling because he is Kipling one of the truly great writers of the English language. His new book . now under review is a collection of short stories and poems most of which have already appeared lately in magazines, where they aroused tremendous Interest.' In these ten short stories in which two children named Dan and Una and the fair Puck play principal parts. Mr. Kip ling fills modern England with old-time fairies. At his command a .vivid pano rama of knights, robbers and pirates flit across the canvas and take part In some of the most exciting events in old English history. Needless to say. Mr. Kipling shines as a writer of fairy stories and again demonstrates his marvelous versa tility. Fourteen poems adorn the volume. They have the genuine Kipling ring and can be easily recognized by the liberal use of Italics. The. greatest of them Is that gem entitled "The Children's Song," reminding one of the martial tread in stinctively felt in the "Recessional." The first and closing verses are: Land of our birth, we pledge -to thee Our love and toll In the years to be. When we are grown and take our place. As men and women with, our race. Land of our birth, our faith, our pride. For whose dear sake our fathers died; O motherland, we pledge to thee. Head, heart and hand through the years to be! . This poem is written on lines so broad that it will live when the others in the collection are forgotten. Among the stories,' the best one is "A Centurion of the Thirtieth." The Charlatans, by Bert Leston Taylor. Il lustrations by George Brehm. The Bobbs Merrlll Co.. Indianapolis. Ind. Imagine a musical conservatory where young Bachs and Beethovcns are turned out as if by machinery at so many dollars per quarter! Add to this lots of human in terest and the loves of several maidens and you have this new musical novel. "The Charlatans." The heroine is Miss Hope Winston, a farmer's daughter, who, because she could play on the piano fairly well "Autumn Leaves." "Forest Reveries" and other brave tunes of an- elder day, had visions of a greater musical career. So. Hope hied to a neighboring town to the Colossus Conservatory of Music, which from its advertisements was supposed tobe the largest conservatory of its kind in this or any other land. "Graduated wnile you wait" might have been its motto. Hope found tnat one of the piano students' drills was to rise on their toes with hands high and fingers arched and at a signal to pitch forward on a bench. This was said to develop volume of tone. To produce a perfect crescendo, singers warbled under a Japanese parasol. The girl extracted much amusement from the method of this "fake" conservatory, and the whole tale has a delicious humor that will surely enthrall all music-lovers. Geronimo's Story of Mb IJfe, edited by S M. Barrett. Illustrated. $1.50. Fox Duftleld & Co.. New York City. This remarkable autoblographv taken from the life of the great Apache war chief by S. M. Barrett, Superintendent of Education, Lawton. Oklahoma, is worth reading because of Its plain, unvarnished style and because it discusses historical events in a free manner not met with in the usual history books. Geronimo begins his story with the origin of the world, one of the first heroes being a boy named Apache, meaning "enemy." Then he un folds a blood-curdling tale of war and rapine principally against Mexico, and latterly against this country. In the 17th chapter, Geronimo criticizes many of the acts of General Crook and says that the General's death was sent y the Almighty for the many evi deeds he committed. According to his own account, Geronimo was a very badly used person! A Lady of Rome, by F. Marlon Crawford. $1.50. The Macmlllan Co., New York City. Kipling found his India and Crawford his Italy, and they have both given us men and women whose fame is of the lasting order. Mr. Crawford is one of the most voluminous novelists of our gen eration. We recall more than 30 good novels he has WTitten. and they have such uniformly good qualities that It is a diffi cult matter to say which one excels. "A Lady of Rome" is of two parts, the first being devoted to Maria and the next to the Countess of Montalto. The Rome to which we are introduced Is the mod ern city, and, although there are several plots and counter-plots and pictures of military life in the ranks of the Piedmont Lancers, there .is no lurid war. Rome strikes the central note. As Maria's son says: "If Rome has no other enemies, there are always the French and the priests. No priests are soldiers. They wouldn't defend Italy. 9o they are Italy's enemies." Roman life Is handled with consummate skill, strong and yet sensitive pictures being given of militarism and clericism. The study of emotion awakens sus tained, sympathetic interest, and it is another pleasurable experience to know Mr. Crawford's Italy. "A Lady of Rome" is the best Crawford has yet built in a literary monument of the Eternal City. Jewel Weed, by Alice Ames Winter. Illus trated. The Bobbs-Merrlll Co., Indlan . spoils. . s In the midst of fiction, we are in life,' and characters met with in modern nov els will here and there appear in the maelstrom of American every-day exis tence. This prompts the query: Does the Almighty send forth helpless souls into space totally unaccountable for their impulses and trusting in a vague way for divine guidance to work out their des tiny? Or do'souls find themselves in this world masters of their fate to work out their existence according to the human Impulses within them for weal or woe? These two suppositions are suggested. by two characters in this remarkable novel Miss Lena Quincy and her mother, shrew ish, creating discord with as much delight as the witches in "Macbeth," and prone to malice and envy. So able is the character drawing of Miss Quincy and her mother-that these two are as dominant in the novel as other people in it of more healthy influ ence, such as Ellery Norrls and ' his sweetheart, Madeline Elton.. At first ac quaintance the novel seems about, to de pict civic, reformers attacking political corruption of the day in the town of- St. Etlenne. Minn. But th'is is only a minor phase of the picture which really : princi pally concerns the growth of Lena Quincy and her baleful influence over Richard Perclval. The . Perclvals and their kind are ladies and gentlemen, not because of their dollars and fine worldly position, but because of their high character and influence for good In all that counts the best in life. Lena is described by one woman who knew her as "a vulgar little image overlaid with tinsel." Here is an other view of' the fair Lena, for. from a physical standpoint, she was beautiful to look upon: Lena has been a bald revelation to me of things I only half understood in better-bred women. She's like a weed- transplanted from her lean ground to a garden and grown more luxuriant In her weediness. Do you know what I think? I believe that when the last judgment - shall strip her of her sw-eet pink flesh there will be nothing found inside but a little dry kernel, too hard to bite, and labeled, "Self." : Richard Perclval starts out with .his fel low Yale graduate, EHery Norrls. and both young men make a good friend and comrade in Miss Elton. Of . the latter, there was "a certain serenity even in the broad curve with which her hair clung to her temples, and in the over-crowded room her smile was as refreshing as a draught from . a cool spring. She was Lmarkcd by a repose of manner which dis tinguished her from the eager crowd." Had Percival known the direful fate In store for him, he would have married Madeline, but instead he married Lena. How- he wasn't driven .to drink or worse is a mystery. . , Another baleful influence scattered through the book is a Hindu named Swam! Ram Juna. an "apostle of theoso phy. In secret, however, he is a danger ous criminal and a .maker of 'counterfeit coin. Both Norris and Percival strive to exert a better civic- influence in the com munity in, which they live, but while Norris forges ahead as a newspaper edi tor, Perclval disappoints by his inability to finish any one given task except when aided by other people. It is delightful to read about the courtship of Miss Elton and Norrls. because it is out of the beaten path and do-you-love-me order. Miss El ton Is not only a talented musician, but a composer, and here is one of her verses breathing the spirit of the West! Oh, young blood of the Nation; , Oh, hope in a world of need; ; The traditions of 'the fathers Shall be our vital seed. Thy newer daughters of the West, Columbia, mother mine. Still hold' to th' simple virtues Of field and stream and pine! Most novels are of the lovey-dovey or der and only picture lovers who marry and live happily ever afterward. "Jewel Weed" is different. It tells of lovers after they are married and who live a human existence, in which both sunshine and rain happen. The novel has caught the true spirit of the Northwest, and has wit, fine sentiment and common-sense philosophy to commend it. No Friend Uke a Sister, by Rosa Xourhette Carey. J. B. Llpplncott Co.,1 Philadelphia, and the J. K. Gill Co.. Portland. Worthy in every respect of the dis tinguished authoress of "The Household of Peter." In writing "No. Friend Like a Sister," Miss Carey has given us a typi cal English novel portraying the every day emotions of middle-class, educated people in short a tale that speaks with insistent emphasis to young women who desire calm, restful reading without any fireworks. The story is built around St. Monica's Nursing Home, two sisters named Frances and Augusta, extreme "High Church" believers, and the uplift of the submerged in the parish of St. Mathias, London. The book will also be remembered by its pure simplicity and healthful influence. The Happy-Oo-f.ucky, translated from the German by Mrs. A. L. Wister. Illus trated. The J. B. Llpplncott Co., Phila delphia. Leaves from the life of a natural bohemian young man who left the pleasant country stream - where his father kept a prosperous mill and drove with two aristocratic young wo men to Vienna to seek his fortune. He found it, in romantic fashion and married a porter's niece with whom he lived happily ever after. Just the kind of new fairy tale to enthrall young folks. Its tone is good, the transla tion being from the works of Joseph Frieherr von Eichendorff. The little book is, finely bound and richly decor ated. The Hock, by Mary Austin. Illustrated by , E. Boyd Smith. $2. Houghton. Mifflin & Co., -Boston, and the J. K. Gill Co., . Portland. Beautiful in Illustration and design, this book Is Instinct with open air life on the sheep ranges of California. Its long note is: "Be-a-a!" Mrs. Austin begins with the early Spaniards who drove their flocks from Vellcia. in the year when Daniel Boone moved into the then unknown West, and she successively introduces herders and 'shearers Frenchman. Span iard. Basque and American. calm and restful influence accompanies the telling, and the romantic story ought to particu lary commend itself to Oregon, where there are also large sheep interests. A Modern Madonna, by Caroline Abbot Stan ley. $1.50. The Century Co.. New Tork City, and the J. K. Gill Co., Portland. The germ thought in this novel with scenes laid in the District of Columbia is the law which was in force until ten years ago permitting a man to will the custody of his own child, even of an unborn-child, to any one he might choose. The father's violent death and the forci ble separation of a young mother from her baby are told with fine dramatic power. It is a relief to find at the end of the story a period of tragedy succeeded by clouds breaking into calm. The Impersonator, by Mary Imlay Taylor. Illustrated by Cti. Grunwald. $1.30. Lit tle. Brown & Co., Boston, and the J K. Gill Co., Portland. To those of us out West who have never seen Washington, D. O, that city if we are to believe society novels pub lished in its honor is a mixture of "strata" society, diplomacy,-and autos. "The Impersonator" Is another Wash ington. D. C, novel, but it is far above the ordinary because every scene in it is a delight, its composition shows great talent, and its people are witty and amusing. May Hading, shrew and art student in Parte, is Invited to visit a rich aurit whom she has never seen and who Is a leader in Washington society, and induces her chum, Mary Lang, a beautiful girl, to impersonate her. The icomplications that follow when Mary Is ultimately unmasked and finds that she is the long-lost daughter of Count Portucarreo. a foreign ambassador, is true literary art. The Dragon Painter, by Mary McNeil Fen- ollosa. Illustrated by Gertrude McDanlel. $1.50. Little. Brown & Co.. Boston, and the J. K. Gill Co., Portland. Instinct with the spirit of old Japan and Its art, and just such a novel of the Far East as one might expect the creator of "The Breath of the Gods" to write. "The Dragon Painter" is Mrs. Fenollosa's ripest work,- and in it she has caught the true spirit of painting for art's sake. The principal characters are Kano Indara'. last of a mighty race of artists, his daughter. Ume-ko and a dragon-painter-named Tat su. a wild mountain artist. The love story unfolded Is an absorbing. one. J. M. Q. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. Breezy, by J. George Frederick. Illustrat ed, 50 cents: A Good Samaritan, by Mary R. S. Andrews, illustrated. &0 cents; The Pets, by Henry Wallace Phillips. Illustrated. 50 : cents; The Shadow, of the House, by Ivan Strannik. a translation from , the French; Cayblgan. by James Hopper: Tin ker Two, by Edgar Jepson; The Pettison Twins, by Marion Hill. (McClure-Phillljjs.) Further Fortunes ot Plnkey, Illustrated, by Captain Harold Hammond. U. S. A., il lustrated, $1.50, and Don-A-Dreams, by. Har vey J. Htgglns. 11.50. (Century Co.) The Slave of Silence, by Fred M. White, Illustrated, $1.50. (Little-Brown.) Set In Authority,, by Mrs. Everard Cotes, $1.50. (Doubleday-Page. Books. Culture and Character, by J. N. Larned, $1; Nelson, the Adventurer, by Nora Archibald Smith,. $1. (Houghton-Mlfflln.) Lady Hollyhock and Her Friends, by Mar garet Coulson Walker, illustrated. (Baker Taylor.) Tiie Avenging Hour, by H. F. Prcvost Bat tersby, $1.00., (Appleton.) The Country Road, by' Alice Brown, $1.50. (H. Houghton & Co.) i The Wild Flower Book for Young People, by Alice Lounsberry. with 77 illustrations. $1.50; Favorite Nursery Rhymes, by Ethel Franklin Be Us, illustrated, $1.50. (Stokes.) i The above books were received through the J. K. Gill Co., Portland. The Minute Boys of the Wyoming Val ley, by James Otis, illustrated. (Dana Estes.) Are Tou a Bromide? by Gelett Burgess. (Huebsch.) - Trusia, A Princess of Krovltch, by Davis Brinton, Illustrated, $1.50. and Queen of the Rushes, a Romance of the Welsh country, by Allen Raines. $1.50. (Jacobs.) IX LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP. That humorous Vlassic of childhood, Mrs. Rankin's "Dandelion Cottage" has already gone into a fourth printing. The third good-sized edition of ' "Power Lot." Mrs. Greene's new book, will be pub lished simultaneously with the opening-of her play, "Cape Cod Folks," In New York City. Paradoxical as it may appear, the main portion of "A Romance of Old Wars." by Valentlna Hawtrey. is the peaceful idyl of a honeymoon in camp In France in the Mid dle Ages. . m n Henry Holt & Co. were obliged to send the second printing of Mrs. Fraser's "In the Shadow of the Lord," a romance of the Washlngtons. to press on the day that they issued the first. Booker T. Washington's new book, "Put ting the Most Into Life," has gone into a second edition the first month of publica tion. Tt is devoted to addresses delivered before Tuskcgee Institute. , Anne Warner's latest book. "Seeing France wun uncie jonn, a Duricsque on the Ameri can tourist abroad, will be published In book form this week. The book will have a num ber of Illustrations, in sympathy with the humorous character of the narrative, by May Wilson Preston. Recent aVchacologlcal discoveries have interrupted in one or two instances the progress of the text of the earlier part of Mr. Eturgis" "History of Architecture." so that Volume I has again been postponed and will protaMy now not be Issued until the middle of November. The opponents of that exotic novel, "Folly," will not down. One reviewer ex hausted her vocabulary in the Spring in one magazine, and In two columns heaped abuse- upon Miss Rickert. At the same time It is only fair to add that the book itself will not down, and that the sixth edition Is now imminent. The author of "In the Daya of the Comet." "The War of the World." "The Time Ma chine" and a long list of other works, lives and writes In Kent. England, his native place. Mr. Wells was educated mainly at private schools, and carried ofT first-class hon ors at the Royal Academy of Science a fact of Interest since the jtuper-natural enters so largely into all his books. Roy . Rolfe Uilson. whose "Katrlna" has Just been lKsued, has leased a house In Con cord, Mass., which he will occupy shortly. Mr. Gllson has always loved the traditions of Boston and of the Transcendental period, and It is the fulfillment of an. oft-dreamed dream to settle in Concord. . Says "A Cheerful Tear Book": "And the automobile may be Identified as the sub stance of things owed and the odor of things unseen. Dreams are the spiritual savors from our supper tables. Homo men are never so solitary as when alone with their thoughts." Henry M. Hyde's "The Upstarts." which The Century Company will issue sfn. Is the author's first book, although magazine readers are familiar with his short stories. The narra tlv9 deal with the life and common people of the Middle West, a life which has always had strong interest for the author. Mr. Hyde is now editor of the Technical Magazine, after several years' editorial service on the Chicago Tribune. A complete illustrated account of J. Pler pont Morgan's collection of pictures ap pears In the October Issue of the Cortnolsseur Magazine. As the collection of works of art owned by Mr. Morgan is the most repre sentative of any American collection, this article, will prove of the greatest Interest to all connoisseur readers In the United States. A child's book of more than ordinary in terest is "Indian Boys and Girls." This book Is Illustrated by Alice Mar and Ed win Willard Demlng. while the accompany ing verses and stories were written by Aliue Calhoun Haines. Children are proverbially more Interested In our American Indians than in any other race. This book Is cal culated not only to . arouse this interest, but to give them accurate knowledge of the manners and customs of Indian chlldren.- Love seems to be the strain of the song of the modern poet no less than that of the ancient bard, and no form of verse Is, per haps, a more perfect embodiment for rhymed expression of this sentiment than the sonnet. This fact has led the publishing house of Small. Maynard & Company to prepare, under the editorship of Laurens Maynard. an anth ology entitled, "Latter-Day Love Sonnets," made up of a notable group of poems of near ly 100 writers of the present day, both Brit ish and American. A etlrring new novel to be issued early this Fall by Small, Maynard oV Company is "Father Pink." by A. Wilson Barrett, the author of "The Silver Pin." It is a lively narrative of the wily machinations of m seemingly good natured and harmless priest, who has schemes of his own for the benefit of a favorite niece. Large property rights are involved, together with a hoarded pile of diamonds, which have been singularly concealed for safe-keeping. The hand of the woman whose property la thus at stake is sought by two eager rivals, whose fortunes are Involved in the plot. The custody of the diamonds, when at last found, gives rise to exciting complications, with the priest. Father Pink, as the cleverest actor In the drama. It Is by no mean an ordinary man who can elude obviously certain capture by backing into a cage of trained lions with whom he-had previously made friends for that purpose, and then retreating, without possible pursuit, through a secret passage. The study of history and biography of great men is an effective way by which to get a , proper perspective of present men and events. ' Such a perspective can be gotten from "Four American Leaders" by President Charles W. Eliot, announced for early publication by the American Unitar ian Association. The contents of the book consists of essays on "Franklin," "Wash ington," "Channing" and "Emerson." w'hlch, condensed in expression and broad sugges tivenees. summarize the influence of four great Americans in shaping the political, moral and intellectual trend of the republic and by their lives and writings in framing our American ideals. . Miss Mary Mears. whose novel, "The Breath of the Runners," Is shortly to ap pear, Is a young writer of unusual promise. She discloses to readers of fiction a phase of- American life little known outside its own limits. The art world of America has never before been made the environment of a thoughtful and significant novel. Miss Mears is , herself an American artist, and has secured great facility as well as repu tation as a writer by frequent contributions to some of our leading magazines. One need read a few pages only of this strong book to realize that Miss Mears' apprentice ship both as artist and writer has peculiarly fitted her to depict graphically her "world." "Daughters of the Puritans" sold so well last year and' seemed to give such general satisfaction to its wide circle of readers that a portrait edition for the holidays is an nounced for early issue by its publishers, the American Unitarian Association. 'The-or'.? Inals -from which the portraits are reproduced are the very best obtainable of the seven women whose sketches make up the contents of the volume Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Mary Love 11 Ware". Lydle-Maria Child. Doro thea Lynde Dlx.. Sarah Margaret Fuller Os soll, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Louisa May Alcott. The brief lives of these descendants of the Puritans are treated by the author, Seth Curtis Beach. In a delightful style that makes their - perusal a source of pleasure no less than of information. - "Cap'n Chadwfck: Marblehead Skipper and Shoemaker" is the third volume ef the series of "True AmertcatWTypes" (of which the first was "John Gilley," by President Eliot, and the second. "Augustus Conant." ' by Robert Collyer) and maintains the high standard set for this little group of homely biographies. It presents the humble but ennobling life story of a Marblehead skipper and shoemaker, revealing the method and spirit of one who, by turning his hand to more than one vocation in the course of Summer and Winter, secured, with serene coura'ge. a comfortable mainten ance' for himself .and family. The book Is written by his son, the well-known author and preacher, John White Chadwlck, and Is to be published immediately. A recent number of The World's Work contains a remarkable story of a negro who, like Booker T. Washington, rose from the humblest beginnings to the headship . of a helpful and Important Institution. He was put to work when 4 years old. and at 9 w-as a regular plowhand. Yet he managed to learn to read and write, at odd moments, and later worked his way through Tuskegee Institute. After a series of hardships, he says: "I felt that I was born to bad luck and gave up all hope of future work. Just at that time some one sent me a copy of Orison Swett Marden's book. "Pushing to the Front." I read every chapter. . Every line In It seemed to say to me:-'You are a coward to give up.' " The book, which proved the turning point in his career, is now translated into nearly every civilized tongue, including the Japanese.' ,lt sounds like exaggeration to say that a volume of 340 pages is the finest collection of ethical scriptures that has ever been printed. Such a book, however, is an nounced as one of the early Fall publica tions of the American Unitarian Association. "The Message of Man," which has been gathered from many sources and edited by Stanton Colt, Is. in scope, quality and ar rangement, as near a perfect expression of the concentrated thought of the world's greatest thinkers as it is eastly possible to imagine can be compressed into a little pocket companion. Arranged' in chapters by topics, with an Index of authors and 'edi tions, and with footnotes giving the exact source, even to the folio number, of each quotation, the book becomes not merely an Inspiration In itself, but a key or -guide to the finest things in all literature, ancient or modern. ' ' - N . A book that- is being much discussed in Paris Just now is "La Voile du Temple" ("The Veil of the Temple") hy Jean.Dornis, which troats of a very "live" topic, in French society. This is the growing irre liglon of the time, or rather the disappear ance of religious intolerance. To present the question In concrete form, the author has chosen for his hero the scion of an old Catholic family who loves a- Jewess. She is his sister's most intimate friend and is In all other respects a most eligible wife for him. But his aristocratic 4ld mother, who had found the Jewess perfectly suitable as a companion of her daughter, will, not hear of her as her son's wife, even though she abjures her religion and becomes a Catholic. And not less Inflexible In her opposition to the match Is the girl's- aunt, Deborah, who Is an admirably drawn ex ample of the old-fashioned daughters of Is rael. . A curious mingling of fact and fiction, somewhat in the manner of Mrs. Gertrude Atherton'a romantic treatment of Alexander Hamilton's life In "The Conqueror." Is "La Chute de l'Algle" ("The Eagle's Fall"), In which Camille Vcrgniol presents In the form of dialogues 'the Important scenes in the last days of Nanoleon's life. They range In point of time from the ascent of Louis XVIII to the throne of France to a final scene In November, 1817, at Longwood, on the Island of - St. Helena, where "the eagle's" captivity ended four years later In his death. M. Vergniol takes an undoubted liberty In thus putting words .and senti ments in the' mouths of historic person ages, but the thorough knowledge of facts and characters with which he has equipped himself and the cloverness ' with which he has performed his task, have not only been his excuse, but have won for him high praise. The work Is curious, but interest ing and of distinct value. A Portrait. Caroline Duer. A man more kindly. In his careless way, Than many who profess a higher creed; Whose fickle love might change from day to day And yet be faithful to a friend in need: Whose manners covered, through life's outs and Ins, Like charity, a multitude of sins. A man of honor, too. as such things go; Discfeet and secret qualities of use. Saltish, but not self-conBclous, generous, slow To anger, but most ready in excuse. His wit and clevernt-ss consisted not So much in what he said, as what he got. His principles one might not quite com mend. And they were much too simple to mis take; Never to turn his back upon a friend. Never to He, but, for a woman's sake; To take the sweets that came within his way. And pay the price If there was price to pay. Idle, good looking, negatively wise, Lazy In action, plausible in speech; Favor he found in many women's eyes. And valued most that which was . hard to reach. Few are both true and tender, and he grew In time, a little tenderer than true. Knowing much evil, half regretting good. As we regret a childish impulse lost. Wearied with knowledge best not under stood. Bored with the disenchantment that It cost ; But, in conclusion, with no fallings hid; A gentleman, no matter what he did. "God's With the Country Still.' Frank Stanton In the Atlanta Constitution. It's the same old sun as It heaves in sight The same blue sky o'er the hill. And the song by day, and the song by night "God's with the country still!" It's the same sweet moon with the same soft light. And the stars their splendor spill, And the song that thrifts through the starry night God's with the country still!" It's the same old world with its rosy round. And the same sweet song birds trill; And the storm winds blow but the roses know "Gods with, the country still r" Back to the Little Red Schoolhouse ! Not a Single Change Was Apparent After i an Absence of Two Score Years.. I. K. Friedman in the Chicago News. ff AST week," said the high school La principal, "it occurred to me that I should like to renew my acquaintance with the little red schoolhouse to which I used to go when ' I" was a boy.'. So I started out bright and early along the' friendly old country road that saunters unhill and across the fields like a lazy man with his hands in his pockets. Here and there where the hills are steep and it comes down at breakneck speed, head over heels, it is not so indolent nor so shiftless in Its manner. At the river the road pauses for a swim. . It dips, as It were, into the sparkling waters and comes out bright and refreshed on the other side. . .. "Every foot of the way was as familiar to me as the face of a friend. Seeing the orchards I had robbed, the farmhouses I had visited and the fields I used to scurry across when I was a boy, it wasn't long before my boyhood came back to me.- Soon a little youngster, book and slate in hand, trudged along at, my side. . We two had much to say to each other of times gone by. and so, before I knew it, I found myself a good two miles from the village and face to face with the little red schoolhouse out and in at the doors of which I had passed times with out number always, if memory serves me right, a little bit gladder to get out than to go In. j "There It stood, the one story, square, red brick, building, with the white window sashes and doors and the fantastic little bell tower on top. just about the size of the bell inside of it that called me to school on more than one early Spring and early Fall morning when I would have preferred to go elsewhere. It would astonish you to know how much noise that bell can make and from what a ter rible distance you can hear it, especially if your conscience happens to be out of gear'and you happen to have made up your mind in advance to play truant. "I stopped to refresh myself with a cup ot water from the pump that had quenched my thirst times Innumerable of yore. Then I climbed the few steps and passed thhrough the door. Children's voices in recitation greeted trie and the school teacher bowed me welcome, lift ing her spectacled eyes from her book in a quaint flutter of surprise at the Intru sion. - '-'I tiptoed my way to the back of the small room over the' rough pine flooring and took my seat in the last double bench of the row. A glance or two convinced me that nothing had changed in all the years I had been away, unless you would call the mellowing that things and people undergo with time a change. ' "There was the same old-fashioned wood stove with the fat round pipe that ran parallel with and -just below the New and Old Dramatic Favorites BY A. H. BALLARD. NEW YORK, Oct. 24. Henry B. Irv ing and Dorothea Balrd are contrlb- utlng the dramatic treat of the day at the New Amsterdam Theater. There is no one whom I can recall who has done as good work as this son of the great ' Irving since Edwin Booth. The play In which this fine pair of English actors first appeared, andtiave continued for two weeks, is Stephen Phillips' vPaola and Franceses," an uplifting and Inspired classic that breathes the most beautiful poetry In every line, and which is inter preted by the Irving players with infinite good taste and rare discrimination. , . I went there expecting to be bored. I had the most delicious sursrlse. They will come out to the Coast, and don't any one miss. them. Mr; Irving has not the one last spark that .we call genius, but he is better looking than his father was. effectively sincere and impressive. Intelli gent to the highest degree, and the per formances can be relied upon to be cor rect and satisfying in every way. Miss Balrd is charmingly naive, and the quint essence of English culture. She adds the same air of lovely womanliness to the picture that was contributed to the elder Irvlng's theatrical presentations by Ellen Terry, in the days of old. I cannot think how anything could be more welcome or more productive of good results for theat. rlcal art than the tour of these excellent English players. Mr. Irving will remind you all of his illustrious father, but ' he has none of that eminent man's man nerisms. I have never been so unquali fiedly pleased with a young actor in my life. ' Their repertoire includes: "Paola and Francesca," "The Lyons Mall," "King Rene's Daughters," "Charles I," "Maura cette," "Hamlet" and "Othello." Following the Irving Company at the New Amsterdam will come Forbes Robert, son and Gertrude Klliott (sister of Max Ine), - who will open In George Bernard Shaw's "Caesar and Cleopatra," in which production and performance there is a big amount of. interest. -- Forbes Robertson is the man whom the critics dub great. His painstaking labor in the field of the legitimate are lauded to the skies, and he wields a large influ ence here. As a matter of fact, young Mr. Irving is his professional superior In every technical point. Xillliau Russell's Great Exploitation. Lillian Russell has at last come to town with Paul Potter's play. "Barbara's Millions." and dt has met the Inevitable fateIt .has fallen flat. It Is the result of having Paul Potter try and take out theTobasco sauce from a French farce and still keep It interesting. He has tried to replace the Tobasco with humor, but he has failed to accomplish a wildly ex citing finish. The finish will come soon, for the play is not drawing, notwithstand ing the magnificent cast, the high-priced players, the beautiful scenery. Miss Rus sell's abundant personal popularity, and the general good will of everybody alive concerning the enterprise. There is something back of this Lillian Russell exploitation that is of -special in. terest. There are all kinds of money be hind it. The players have been selected solely with an eye to getting the best and fittest that can be gotten together. Miss Russell's name and fame are some thing to conjure with all over the coun try, and her backers will at last succeed In obtaining a suitable vehicle for her and her companv that will at length sweep the land with signal success. I believe that the present play will be with, drawn soon, and something else substi tuted. Ferdinand Gottschalk, the clever little fellow who translated "The Love Letter" now played at the Lyric Theater toy Virginia Harned, Is one of the cast in Lillian Russell's company, which may suggest the caliber of the dramatic per sonae. Catherine Counttss. Another Item of Interest to Portlanders will be the fact that Miss Catherine Coun flss has the leading part in the play next to the star. Miss Countiss grows younger every day, and never looked so well as she does now when she appears nightly at the Savoy Theater In this play. Her gowns are dreams, and (she'll kill me if she ever sees this) she has let her beau tiful hair go back to its pristine, lovely, light brown hue.- This makes her look ten years younger. I understand that the Intention hs to keep the organization of this company In tact and supply a play, from somewhere or other, that will fill tha cejurremenU. ceiling. The movable blackboard, paint ed anew. I suppose, occupied its corner. The wash basin, a clean crash towel, and the pitcher of water were in another corner as of old, and near the door stood the teacher's unvarnished wooden desk. An .American flag, hung gracefully on the front wall over the recitation bench, was the only attempt at decoration. "Even the children ' seemed the same the same flaxen haired, freckled and rosy cheeked crowd that used to attend school when I did. Nearly all the children in the room, whose aites varied from 7 ta 17, had bare feet. The girls were dressed in faded calicoes and the boys were ar rayed in blue Jeans and hickory shirts. However, lest you should thing that they paid no attention at all to dress. I wish to call your attention 4o the transcen dent art with which their suspender I use the singular . purposely was twist ed behind their backs and across their shoulders. - It ' takes a count-ry boy to catch the trick of that! "One class after another of the severi grades that the room comprised, the size of the' classes varying from two to five, left their seats at the word of command from the teacher and took their places in the front of the room In the recitation bench and proved their knowledge of the text they had been studying while tha others had been reciting before them. "A teacher handling in that fashion a whole roomful of children Is kept pretty busy, as yon can well Imagine. Yet 'tha discipline was marred only by the nat ural restlessness of the pupils, due to the warmth- of the drowsy September (lay. ' An Intruding bee droned away in one corner of the room, some Insect or other chirped lustily ,in another corner and through the open windows the flies- "It was an atmosphere that inspired drowsiness, if not dreaminess, and I fain would have laid my head down on the desk as . did some of those sleepy boys and given myself over to dreams of tho days gone by. ' ' "The initials I found carved on tha desk were conducive to dreams my own initials intertwined with those of a girl who had passed out of my life as com pletely as he had left that room. They tempt me to grow sentimental, putting me In that 'old apple tree' sort of mood but I forbear. "Yet. looking across the road to thn grape vines, burdened with their purple clusters, to the golden tassels of the corn; shimmering in the sun, my thoughts passed beyond the confines of the room into the greater world, reflecting that there, after all, in the illiteracy it com bated, in the characters It helped to up build, in the lives of the men and women it influenced, were to be found and weighed the true worth and influence of the little red schoolhouse. 'May its doors," thought I as I passed out of them, 'never be shut and its last lesson never be taught.' " I. K. Friedman, in Tne Chicugo News. Miss Countiss hosts of friends in Port land will' be glad to learn that this" en gagement has brought her to the atten tion of the big managers, and that her dash and charm and technical finish has caused so much comment that even now her career is assured from a Broad way standpoint. I was astonished to no tice how beautiful she has grow'n. She was featured In Chicago as the beauty of the cast and Lillian Russell, the world famous beauty right there at the same time as the star. E. D. Price, who was a long Mme con nected with the San Francisco theatrical firm of Belasco & Mayer, and who is now suing them for his share in the division of their profits, is now in the employ promi nently of the Klaw & Erlanger people, and acted as manager for tho Lillian Rus sell Company on their Chicago trip. He is also general manager of the Man agers' Association that was recently or ganized. There is no brainier man in tha business than this same Mr. Price, and vou will hear from him in the next few years around the purlieus of the borough) of Manhattan. VALUE OF LOST FINGERS Appraisement Jr'lxcd by the Various Countries of Europe, Philadelphia Record. Thfl H'ffprfint finfrni-M nrp far fr-rh rr hair. ins the same value in the eyes of the law with reference to their functional utiliza tion. Much the most important is tha thumb, for without it prehension would ba very imperfect. The hand Is no longer pincers, but merely a claw, when de prived of the thumb. It may be esti mated that the thumb represents fully a) third of the total value of the hand. Tha French courts allow 15 to 35 per cent value for the. right hand and 10 to 15 for the left: the Austrian schedule gives from 15 per cent for the left to 23 per cent for, the right; in Germany 20 and 28 per cent, and even as high as 33.3 per cent has been, awarded. The percentage is based or 100 as the total Industrial value, of the hand previously to the accident, a loss oC 50 per cent representing half of tha value, etc. The total loss of the index linger causes) an incapacity estimated at 10 to 15 pen cent in Austria, 16 to 20 per cent In Ger many, 15 per cent for the left and 20 per cent for the right hy Italian courts; the French allow 15 ter cent. The middle finger is of much more lm portance than the Index, states Dr. Mel guan, whom we are citing, and who is no small authority, for a great loss of force la observed In the hand when the finger is) amputated. Yet almost all the authoritiesf ascribe less importance to it than the in- dex. The Italian law allows 5 per cent, the Austrian 5 to 10 per cent. Thi rlnc finppr iia the lp.iiat imnnriant. Its total loss often does not cause inca pacity. The Austrian tariff assimilates this finger to the middle one. The Italian law is liberal, with 8 per cent. The French and German tribunals often re fuse Indemnity, considering the Incapacity resulting from the loss as very slight. The little finger may be compared to tha ring finger, except in the professions In which It serves as a point of support for the hand. Jt may be reniarkedhere that the artist has not been taken Into con sideration in these cases. A Sleepy Song. As soon as the fire burns red and low. And the house upstairs is still. She sings me a queer little sleepy song Of sheep that go over the hill. The good little sheep run quick and soft Their colors are gray and whlto; For they must be home by night. And on slips over, and one comes next. And one runs after behind. The gray one's nose at the white one's tall. The top of the hill they find. And when they get to the top of the hilt They quietly slip away. But one runs over and one comes next . Their colors are white, and gray. And over they go and over they go. And over the top of the hill The good little sheep rtln quick and soft And the house uptftalrs is still. And one slips over and on comes next. The good little, gray little sneep I wateh how the fire hums red and, lowi And aha sstys that I fall Mk,