- . THE SUNDAY OREGOyiAX, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 10, 1907. " ' - " 51 On the Making of a Successful Wife f - BY C. S. YOST NO. V MEXlirXC FAMILY JABS. I TpdaywhenJItseerawouthTSDendiner5his II ' . . , - . . ,".- - i " J i" -.ae " wwt- O - " w.w1w,4w.n..wjj.- juunm aiiciiiicuvtl . I 'I I - I - f fr - u pi if IWlfWll - IL- ' t- . ,H I pi My MM! B B ygfbiy Ilahlng and Shooting Hketchea, by Grover i"lfveland. lllvstrited. I1.2.V Th Outing Publlrhlnn Company, yew Tork City. Grovcr Cleveland as a politician and Jihfrman are two widely different per sons. As a politician his record is too well known for any discussion at this time, and as a fisherman and sportsman he exhibits naturalness and calm philoso phy that makes anything he has to say on these subjects of refreshing worth. The present volume is another reissue of an already famous book, and several of the sketches are well known, but the hook in its new and improved form is the one you oucht to get for your library. The name of Cleveland Is a good asset, but the literary matter is so good that It doesn't require the impress of a famous name to sell it. The illustrations are by Henry a. Watson. Truthful .lane, by Florence Morf Klngs'.ey. 1.30. D. Applcton & Co.. New Tork City. Occasionally, one gets hold of a pretty. little love story with an English setting which comes as the breath of old rose from a delicately scented jar, and as one reads it one seoms to pass through gar den Kngland and Its leafy lanes. 'Truth ful Jane" Is one of these delicious Eng lish stories, and it amuses as well as in- terests. It is just the sort of a story that Is interest-compelling enough to fas cinate the reader to the last page. Is'o fcody is made to experience a violent death in it, and there is no woman with several husbands and a chloride past. Jane Aubrey Blythe is a foolishly roman tic young woman with high-strung ideas which nearly wreck her life had she not visited America, where she gained com-mon-sonse and an excellent husband. Hon. Wippllnger Towle is a splendid ly drawn character, although it is a pity be makes so poor a lover. But he stands heroic in his unselfishness and unloved middle age, Once he softly told Jane he loved her, and that damsel replied: "I'd like you awfully well for an uncle, or a grandfather. There, I oughtn't to Ijave said that. You are really not old enough to be a grandfather. But mine are both dead, and I've always thought it would be lovely to have one.' ... It wasn't a bit nice of me to say It. But then. I'm always saying dreadful things. That Is why" dejectedly "nobody likes me." In spite of all this. Mr. Towle was noble enough to leave Jane a legacy of 560.000. "Trurtiful Jane" is also an epitome of the servant-girl question from the serv ant girl point of view. The New Internationalism, by Harold Bole. $1.50. D. Appleton & Co., New York City. A calm, philosophical, economic study nf world problems, particularly those af fecting America, written in a spirit Of cheerful optimism. The reasoning Is close and thoughtful, but it Is never dull each point being illustrated by apt anec dotes principally selected by Mr. Bolce during his recent foreign tour. The new Internationalism unfolded In these pages Is nothing else than a finan cial and commercial amalgamation of the nations. Mr. Boise says that the men who are Inaugurating it are not poets, that they carry their favorite oook in an Inside pocket, and that the quotations with which they are most familiar are found through the ticker. Such men, he thinks, are hastening a peace more' se cure and a prosperity far more abundant than anything sung by poets or forecast toy political optimists. Here Is another sugjresttve senKnee: "The only way for socialism to combine the nations Into anything like the unity which money has already wrought, would Be py an international parliament, an in ternational fleet for police patrol of the A seven seas, and an international constab ulary. Tills Is the dream of a remote A ready." Of course holding such opln ions as he does, Mr. Bolce argues against the criminal wastefulness of war, and one chapter fairly bristles with facts combating the standpatters. An admir able book to put Into the hands of a youth or young. man Just becoming aware of life's more serious side. The IJfe f Ir. Pvnuel A. Mudd, ditd by Nilu NetllB Mudd. Illustrated. Tbt Neals Publishing Co., New York City. Among those, even of middle age, how rpany remember that It was Dr. Samuel A. Mudd who dressed Uie injured limb of John Wilkes Booth, Just after the latter had fatally shot President Lin coln? This well-written book of 3D pages, from the pen of Miss Nettie Mudd. daughter of Dr. Samuel A. Mudd. tells the momentous story of her father's life from his own point of view with an endeavor to show that he was innocent with reference to the charge that he was one of John Wilkes Booth's accomplices. Miss Mudd clearly shows that on April 15, 1SS5. two unknown men called at her father's country- house In Maryland, iC miles distant from Washington, D. C, nd that one of the strangers asked Dr. Mudd to set a broken bone In one of his comrade's legs. The injured man vecelved surgical care nd ten hours af terward was taken away by his friend? "How was my father to know that the injured stranger was Booth? At that time Dr. Mudd did not know that "Pres ident Uncoln had been shot." says our author, in concrete. Dr. Mudd was sub sequently arrested, charged with com plicity In the crime referred to. and was found guilty, with the result that he passed nearly four years in prison. The volume contains many letters written in .prison , by Dr. Mudd to his wife, and the language employed is cer tainly not that of an enemy of his coun try. Miss Mudd's book is welcome as shedding new light on a dispute his torical Incident. Alexander Wilson, roet and Naturalist, by James Southall Wilson, rh. D. f2. The Nealc Publishing Company, New York City. Although born in Scotland, Alexander Wilson conies down through the years as our first ornithologist and one of our earliest poets. He was alike th friend of "Bobbie" Burns and Thomas Jeffer son, and his fame also lives in the names of the many birds which he first made known. Professor Wilson, of the department of English and history of the College of William and Mary, has" written a unique biography because It Is so sane, frank and courageous. He gives a, close study of Wilson the man. nature poet and naturalist. In starting the biography, however. Professor Wilson begins in a crude manner by needlessly picturing the licentious, drunken Scotland of Alex ander . Wilson's boyhood. This criticism can honestly be made. It would have given the reader a more pleasant impres sion in the very beginning of things had the biographer launched his literary craft differently. He ought to have first interested the reader in his hero, and then about the middle of the book to have told what he considered the nauseating truths regarding the Scotland of the early portion of the 18th century. Here are a few thoughts selected from the first chapter: The towns of Scotland were dirty and sewerlesa. Even from the streets of such ernes as jt,ainDursn ana uiasuow went up the ater.ch of decayed refuse which had been thrown from the windows above. The churches were very frequently dlsorcanlzed and factious, the schools poor and the morals of the people loose, and corrupt. . It was not uncommon for the beat-bred la dles to accompany young men to the dirty little oyster cellar bolow the street, where they ate and drank together. . . . " Especially appalling are the figures which Illustrate the number of chlld-murderl which occurred all . through the 17th and I8t centuries. On one day. In Edinburgh alone. In th,year J881, seven women were executed for destroying their offspring; four were hanged In Aberdeen In 1703 In a sin gle day. and in 1714 there were executions June JS and 24 and' July 9. It Is a signifi cant fact that the severity of the punish ment tor immorality was les for the lower orders than for .the more enlightened classes. A story Is related of a certain John-H Pardie. who took appeal Jn a case In which he wnjlnfd as a gentleman for 300 pounds sterling 8cots, for" being guilty of Immor ality. The lords Iti session tried the appeal and sustained his objection, reducing the fine to 16 pounds sterling Pcota. They! gave as their very good reason that "he had not the air or face of a gentleman."- . .- , Profanity kept progress with h spread of drunkenness, in the midst of these con ditions, -Alexander Wilson .grew up, and In contending against them In part and in sometimes yielding to them, his character was formed. Shades of Sir Walter Scott. David Liv ingstone. Ian Maclaren, J. M. Barrle et al.! Professor Wilson, you have drawn a sewer Indictment of poor old Scotland. If you should happen In the near future to partake of hot Scotch, first analvser that fiery liquid. It will be safer and prohahly disappoint the coroner. . Moeby'a Men, b.r John H. Alexander. - Illus trated. 12. The Neale' Publishing Com .' pany. New York City. In no sense of the' word is this a hlar tory of that famous Confederate body of irregular cavalry known as Mosby's Rangers. It Is rather a narrative of what Mr. Alexander saw of Mosby's men and their doings, and he writes most inter estingly, for waa he not one of that cele. brated command? He relates Incidents In which he took part as his memory re calls them, and" he certainly wields a graphic pen, or is it typewriter? The book Is valuable for reference, as it deals with phases of the war la a manner different from that to which we North erners are accustomed, and It will by reason of Its attractive, natural literary style soon find for Itself & place in the literature of the Civil Wax. Guanajuato, Mexico's Treaanre-Houae, by Percy F. Martin, F. R. O. S. 3. Illus trated. The Cheltenham Press, New York . City. Enriched by 44 page illustrations, six panoramic views and two maps and dia grams, this book of 259 pages Is one to enrich not only the knowledge and lmagi. nation of the mining man, but the politi clan and investor. Mr. Martin gives- In detail an Illus trated and descriptive account of Guana juato's mines and their operations, up to date. He gives lirst an historical sketch of the busy Mexican mining town from Its earliest days, and notes that the first shaft in thu Mellado mine was opened by the Spanlards-'ln April, 1568. Previous to that, however, it is reported that a min ing discovery had been made at San Ber nabe. at L.a Luz. but it took a period of nine years for the early pioneers to discover that there existed such a thing as a mother lode. Even Cortes sang its praises. Experts say that the mines in the district have from first to last con tributed about three-fifths of the total amount of the world's supply of silver. Mint and government records state that the principal or mother vein at (Guana juato has yielded the sum of $1.000.000. 000. As to what it costs to mine and treat the ores, the expenses of management, etc.. all these and more are answered in this book. The personnel of the parlous min ing corporations is also given. ' This striking quotation by the late Cecil Rhodes is noted: "I am not blind to the unison of opinion as expressed by scien tists and experts that Mexico will one day furnish the sold, silver and copper of the world; that from her hidden vaults, her subterranean treasure houses, will come the gold, silver, copper and precious stones that will build the empires of to morrow and make future cities of this world veritable New Jcrusalems." J. M. Q. IX LIHIiARY AND "WORKSHOP If. O. Wells, the novelist, has "been seriously Injured by oeing run dow n by a motor car in Ixtndon. The nonager (Juecn of Roumania "Car men Sylvia." inakes an income from her books that many authors cannot equal. ' ' The Indiana Trachers" Reading Circle, wtilch Is one of the largest rea-tinp, circles In thn rountry, has officially adopted "American History and Its fjeoicraptiii-al Conditions," by Miss Kllen C. Svmple. Another of Mrs. Frances Hodgson Bur nett's quaint "Queen Silver-bell" fairy sto ries begin In the St. Nicnolsf. It has the piquant title of "The Cozy l,lon"; and there are a number of illustrations by the same artist who lias made the pictures for the earlier atorles of the series, Harrison Cady. Professor Hugo Munsterberg. of Harvard University, author of "Psychology and IJfe." "American Traits." "The Ktorna IJfe," and editor of tjio .'.Miarvard Psychological Studies." him -been "honnr.-d by the (ifrman Emperor with a Crown Orderi-of th second class. During the midyear p.ealod- Professor Munsterberg has been in tlermany, tfhere he .waa Invited to deliver a courne of lectures. s . k ( 1 Its 13lh year does not seem to bring any lll-lurk ta "The Honorable Teter Stirling." which, in a sen's may be said to have passed its first half century, as its pub lishers are, just having to print it for the 61st time. The politicians who succeed . know pretty, well that personal maenetlsm is probably as Important hi their work as anything that ran be found m the text books. It might not be stretching things much to' say that the late Mr. Ford's re markable novel Is perhaps being tijed by many an embryo politician as a textbook on prr.onal . jnagBettum and klnAred sub jects. - , . , - Professor Ernest Rutherford, Macdonald professor. of iphysics In McOIll Cnlversitv, and author ef an exhaustive volume upon "Radioactive Transformations," just pub lished, has been appointed to succeed Tro fessor Schuster 9a Langworthy professor and director of the physical laboratories at the vnlverslty of Manchester. England. In the course- of their reviews of the volume above mentioned the lndon Athenaeum says he "has done more than anvnnd u date the beharlor of radium and its conge ners." and the Tendon Spectator terms him one "of the chief leaders In this department ox research." -'. . r The portrait presented on the "bonk page today of Mrs. Amalla Kuasner Coudert la from a sketch of the American miniature painter made by the Marchioness of Oran by. Mrs. Coudert Is a native of Indiana where she received her early education through private Instruction. After studving In New York sh went- abroad, painting miniatures of the King of England, the Prince of Wales. Cecil Rhodes, the Km peror and Empress of Russia, and other peraonages of note. She has written for a recent number of the Century an account'of her experiences and impressions in the Win ter Palace of Russia. - A new edition Is announced of Mr. Samuel T. Pickard'a profusely Illustrated work, '"vvhit-tler-Land." of which this is the fourth print ing. It contains a portrait of Whlttler never before produced, It being from an ambrotype taken when the poet was about 50 years old, and it Is thought by those who knew him in that period of his Intense activity to be a most striking llkenees. There Is also an addition to the letter press. Including an account of V hlttler's personal appearance and . manner, written by the English poet and critic. Rd mund Ooese, librarian of the House of Lords who visited thie country In 1884. Houghton. Mifflin V Co. have ready the following new printings: 7th edition of "Tha Opened Shutters." by Clara. Ioulse Bumham; 5th edition of "The County Road," by Alice Brown; 4th edition of "Harding of St. Timo thy's." by Arthur S. Pier; 3d edition of "Watt Whitman," by musa Perry, and Cowper'a I nation of the mining man, but the politi- I I I I "John Gilpin." Illustrated by Robert Seaver: ana e-utions or "TiirougB Man to tlod." by Dr. torge A. Gordon; The Memoir and Letters of Frederic Dan Huntington." bv Arria. Sv Huntington: "K'ety's Ralnv ftav Picnic." by Olive Thorn Miller: "Books. Culture and Character." by V . I. N. I.arned; and "Christ and the Huiaa Race," by Dr. Charles Cuthbert Hall. ' ' T A persistent error it! the press connects' Maxim Gorky's novel '."Slosher," with a hook of Imprewiotis of AmflHrjy recrntly published In Italy. tJorky's "Mother" Is a novel written In America, but concerned entirely with events in Itustda. the story .taking Its name from a peasant mother, whose son becomes involved with the revolutionists, the mother herself gradually being dranti into the dramatic Htruit gle for life and liberty, j The novel "Mother" Is being published es a' serial in Applcton's Macazine, and will be brought out as a book In the late Spring. It is perhaps the first Instance of a great foreign novelist writing his masterpiece in America and giving it first to the world In Bnglish, ,'' In a late address before the Municipal Art Society of Baltimore. Hopkinson Smith, f- i'uok oi wnoc :oiie. uniii-r me now Of" "The Veiled i.ady and Ot her ' r n and Women." Ib about tor be published, said: "The tendencies of our times the time of the telegram of ten vrds and no more tend to condensation ; In literature, and wlier well done, ilo suggestion. Exquisite as are the results, notaVl.v ... in the school of modern p'renoli writers and our own master, Bret Warte, and In the ear lier siories of that literary comet, Ruriyard Kipling, the danger ls that the writer of the future, advancing along these lilies, may give us only a paragraph out of wh.-li to construct a chapter:, as Some naturalists do a bone or a tooth ' from which to re construct a mastodon." . .. , 'v' ' ,' Sidney lee. the well-ktlown :nKllsh au thority upon Shakespeare., In. his recent vol um.i upon "Shakespeare jand.-the Modern stage;" enters a vigorous protest against the present tendency towardr overeiabora tlon of scenic display in thev presdntation of the master-dramatist's works. aaV, as the following extract from a recent crlTi vlsm in the London Daily Mall describes: "At His Majesty's Theater, last nifrt-,Mr. Tree exhibited, under the tiNe of Anthony and Cleopatra, manv exquisitely painted scenes by Joseph Harkor andS T. E .Ryan, supplemented with ' costumes- by Percy Mucquoid. R. I., some charming incidental music specially composed b? Raymond Ijose, and explanatory teptt by Shakespeare. The acting In almost every civc was over Whelmed by the grandeur ot the scenic effects." ' tir ' ' ' : i In speaking of the manner in which Bar uie obtained local color for "Pft-f-r Pan." a erf Uc say.: "It needs but a walk in Ken sington Park. I,ondon to kn flrst knowing: his friends. Here has he rpfnz many an hour at plav and a t Rtorv-telUnR wilh the littlest of British ladles and Kcn tjemen. And in this way does it happen tjiat better than any other modern writer Mr. Barrie knows the manner of speech; tlie Walk, and the ways of the little dwellers in Hie land of make believe. It hau been by frequent association with all rtfl of, little "kiddies." bv studying their wavjt r end catching tliep point, of vjew that" Barrle has succeeded in evolving a weave oT Imag inings thai, frr all thefr faneUulness and unoarthlness of mood, nevertheless pom a humannes and fineness of fueling to be found in scarcely any other modern fiction. J Those best qualified to judjre say that Sir 'sn? fttepnen s nump of ravereur was not mountainous. Nevertheless,- It will per haps grlve most of u a jolt when one is torousrht suddenly in contact with these com ments upon Alfred Ird Tennyson in a let ter of Stephen's to hlR pood friend Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. We quote front Matt land's "ltfe nf Sir Tepli- Htephen,'- tut published "The IrM remarkable person with whom 1 msde an acquaintance was the quer old poet Tennyson. We spent a month at Freshwater, and saw a deal of him nd his pleasant wife and children. it the queerest old bloke, to speak Irreverently. tht I ever saw." There are th.ose who wUl deprecate these remarks. Hero; however, it is well to remember that Tennysnn. with his portentlous incivilities of. speerh and other peculiarities, had an impossible side. Undue depreciation of tall estimates of great men is not a thin to encourage,' hut surely Sir Ies!te'B tone is pleaaauter to the ear than that of the unctuous chorus of the obsequious and deferential to which nc-nni have listened now these many, years. . m m ; Following upon their discovery or the fact that the Cedarton of He well Ford's toi-iea in his new hook, "Truogate of Moj? ador. just published. Is really Toms River, N. J., in disguise, the citizens of that vil lage are reported to be busily engaged In reading and discussing the merits of t ho book. It Is also evident from the following extract from a late news paragraph that they are proud of his real success in mak ing a book out of their sayings and doings. The clipping says that when they found him out : i ney iooKea upon t ora as an ac quisition, and used to point him out to tho Summer visitors, with a look of conscious pride, as 'That's Ford, Sewell Ford, the author yeu know the chap, what writes horse sto ries.' When the Presbyterian f'hurrh gave a mimical and literary entertainment in Cow pert h waft Hall. Ford was Impressed into the service, and altogether the towns folk looked at Ford as a possession to be proud of and pointed out something like the aiew town clock that the village wom en's club put in the church . tower right across from his home." NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. The Diamond Ship. by. Max Pemberton, and the Secret of Toni. by Mollv Elliott Sea well, fcoth Illustrated and $ l'so each Appletons. Wags, the Philosophy of a Peaceful Pup, by John Taylor, illustrated, (Morgan Shep herd Co.). Frailties and the Jury, by Henry P. Wil cox, $1. (Legal Literature Co., Chicago;. T DEAR LITLE GIRL A Utile while ago, just a little while, it seems to me, though it may seem ages to you. when you were a little "iilfrif 'a-'crrtlrt. I used to take vou on my. k nee. in the e.veuinjrs by the fire light and tell you stories. Sometimes they were just, to entertain you, but some other timeB they had lessons hid den In their sugar coats. Now, I want you to imagine yourself a baby girl again and t'liat you" are cuddled up 1n -my lap, with your curly golden head nestling against my shoulder, and .that I am telling you the story about, the two kings find the buttermilk pall. Perhaps you don't remember the story of the two kins Rod the buttermilk pail? 'Well, dearie, .keep your head right there on my shoulder and, I'M tell it tp - you now. Ofir.e upon a time there were two kings, pretty good sort of fellows as kings go, but they were both tremen dously fond of buttermilk. One of them liked it so well that he had a palf made for his spe ial use that was theiwonder of therwoild. It was ham mesed out of pure sold, so bright and shiny that when it was hung out to air ;the sun hurried' up and got behind a cloud, and it was set with diamonds and rubles as big as walnuts. At last ltslfam'e reached tlierHhcr king, who had; been contentedly drinking his but termilk out of a 10-eent fin pall and wiping his mouth on his shirt sleeves, and he straightway fell, sick with envy. So lie-ient speiai messengers to the first king's court to try and buy the: wonderful buttermilk pail. j AYIiat Startetf theltow. - ' But the first king' laughed them ..to scorn. "11a. ha," he-tried, for he was full of buttermilk and ' vainglorious. "Go' tell 'your craven king, to stick to tin." So theyf departed: And when thfy had made their official report and filed their expense account the second king. jiimped out of his royal bd and kl-kd his royal pajamas out of the window. "Gadzooks!" he cried. Let me. at him." So they went to war. And when they had fought for years, and thousands of good men who couldn't afford buttermilk and didn't like it, anyhow, had been' killed, the first king caljed a truce and they had a parley. 'BJ' the way," said the first king, "wjiat did we start this row about?" "Blessed if 1 can remember," said the, sedond king, "but whatever it was. voi re another." "And you're another." sail the lirst king. So they went at it agftin, and after they were both dead from appendicitis or rheumatism or something like that. It was discovered that the second assistant lord of the poultry yard had been using the golden buttermilk pail to feed the chickens for the past -U years. It's hardly necessary to say, my dear, that I am not telling this story exclu sively for your entertainment. I don 't know whether you see the point or-not. but it's there, and I am moved to un cover It by a little conversation, scraps of which I could not help but hear as they floated -ocr the back of the car seat in front of me this morning. It was Just the ragged end of a family Oitarcl, an insignificant little spat be tween a young man and his'young wife, but it carried my thoughts to you and William, of course. I know you- never quarrel, and even if you did yuu are too well bred to do it in public. 1 can hear you say this with a tos of your pretty head and a retrousse curl of your dainty nose thr.t might to be either tempting or exasperating to Bill, according to the way he feels. All the same, little girl, unless you and he have got your diplo mas and been measured for your heaven ly uniforms 1 am eatisHed th:u you have your little disagreements. And I don't blame you at all for that. We -are all more or less human, and no doubt, in oiocr io Keep things from getting too monotonous down here, the good Lord has so arranged matters that no two of us can always have the same opinions. on can see at once, can t you. what dreary place this would be if we all thought alike. Why. we'd all wear ex actly the same kind of clothes, live in houses the same size and color, eat. the same rocsa. and there -wotildn t be any thins; at all to talk about. These dif ferences of opinion are just as natural auo , prooaniy just s frequent in your house as in your next door neighbor's, and quarrels are merely disagreements gone io seca, . , . 3 Quarrels Have Tlielr Virtues. - A little quarrel now and" then" isn't t bad thin in any family. On the con trary. my dar. it has its virtues: . Do mestic life is too likely to become hum drum if It is all cooing and billing. It needs spice. But just a pinch, little girl, just a pinch. Vou know what delightful spice cake your mother) makes. Well, now. suppose ahe should make a mistake and put in as much spice as she does flour. Wouldn't he tit to eat. would it? 111HL3 juhl ine uiiicreiice. AS lue tiOOd book says, a little leaven leavens th whole lump, but you want to be mighty careful about getting too much leaven in. It's so easy to go too far, partlcu- riy in the matter of family quarrels. The best way to hold them down to the right proportions Is by trying hard not to have any at all, Balng human, you probably can't do. it, but the mere effort will serve' to keep them front jumping out or me spice box - into the nourbln; so that when I say. solemnly and with pareniai srernness, (ion 1 quarrel, I mean don't quarrel any oftcner than you can possibly help. But when you do quarrel and this Is the meat In, the coeoanut when you do quarrel, make It up quickly. Don't let it drag. Don't put it back In the refrigerator and warm it up for to morrow. Have it out at once and then forget it. That's the quality that makes the little tilts between husband and wife harmless that's the gentle art of forgetting. One, of the happiest couples I ever knew was old .lerry Pal mer and his wife, who used to live just around, the corner from us. " I really believe there never was a day that tTiey dUl not have a quarrel, and I am just as confident trfey never had it on their minds when they went to sleep. I mention them Just to show the possibilities of forgetting, not -as an example for you to follow. Nrit by a lang ehot. Palmer and his wife were exceptional cases. "' They were a good deal like some Mexicans who won't eat strawberries unless they are seasoned with red pep per. Their dally life had to be sea soned red-hot. Such a diet, mental or physical, Is unhealthy for 99 out of 100 married couples, and you and Bill, I'm pretty sure, belong to the 99.- So I say, try not to have any family jars at all, but when there is any broken crockery around the house mend it the same day. before the lights go out. Then your quarrels will be like little Summer clouds that obscure the sun for a while, but make It seem all the brighter when they pass. There ' is nothing much sweeter in life, my-dear, than the sunburst of love and trust which follows a domestic shower; that Is, if the love and trust are there and undlmmed. Don't Xurse the Quarrels. The 'trouble is. little girl, that too many quarrels are not allowed to pass. Like prize chickens, they are fed and nursed and petted and grow stronger and harder to kill every day. They ere drawn out it's quarrels I'm talk ing about now, not chickens they are M drawn out day after day. until lovo grows tired and slips out the front door, nver. perhaps, to return. And all for wha.t? Just a little too much pride, Just a little too much, stiffness of the neck, just a little too much derned fool stubbornness. That's .it. "He's wrong and I won't give In." That's what you say. No doubt that's what he says. And so you go on with the corners of your mouths turned down and the ends of your noses turned up. sacrificing all that is good anrt true' and . beautiful in life for a buttermilk pail. Do you gut the point of that' stcry now? Practically all quarrel3. . particularly domestic ones, are about comparative trifles, but they are too often carried on until the real cause Is forgotten and in its place Is a mutua-1 antagonism, unforgiving and unrelenting, the dTcstrOyer of happiness and, chief commissioner of supplies for the divorce courts.. Oh. my little girl, quarrel, if you must, but don't let 'em drag, don't let 'em drag.v But you may protest, he says tlilnsrs that hurt, things one cant forget so easily. . L'h Huh! I guess so. But. my dear. I'll bet my old gray horse against a small boy's pocket-knife that what he says 'to you, is Ilka soothing syrup com pared to what you say to him. The srood Lord provided every animal with soma kind of a "weapon of offense ori defense. A man's .Is his list, a woman's Is her tongue. Civilization lias so far pror gressed that a man that is. a gentleman cannot use his natural weapon In. deal ing with a woman. That's all right. Civilization has made .'some mistakes, but that Isn't one of them. But it has placed no such limitations on woman's weapon, and ages of .constant use have given her skill that Puts a., "man at a pretty co'frstderable disadvantage. Whether she uses it as a poniard or a meat-ax depends upon her temperament, but the result is usually the same; the man picks up his hat and Jumps for the front door. Now, It's a peculiarity of A Condiment of Words RV MA HOI'S IJfe is but a waiting for the morning's paper. next About all some of us amount to is the ability to second a motion to adjourn. It is curious why so many people's idea of a good time always ends up with a wet towel around the head and a dark browti taste In the mouth. - There are probably people who enjoy the smell of boiled cabbage. It was an Intelligent rector who re1 marked on the kindness of the Maker of the Universe in putting a good .barber beside every large city. He should have kept on noting how a startling accident or two was furnished every day from the same source for the benefit ot the newspapers. . Very few of us pay 10 per cent on the investment. Two classes of people wear shabby clothes men who have not a cent in tlielr pocket, and men who have a super abundance. The fellow in the middle dresses well. When a woman picks up a novel, she always turns to the last page to see how it ended and what happened to Gwendo line. ' Why caii't we do that to life? We have courses of . treatment for fatty rtegencratlon of the heart why can t we have something similar for fatty degen eration of the pockctbook? 1 . There is no poetry In the patter of the rain on a leaky roof. , . A large ninpth does not necessarily mean that the possessor thereof is an orator; li may be that he merely loves pie. . . The North American Indian named his children af'er incidents in his every-day llfe. "" Of "a'consequence. we do not have any chiefs named "Man Makes Money Hand-Over-Fist.'' or "Ten Per Cent White Horse." . " . The smMI of gasoline on a man's clothes does not necessarily make him an automobile owner. ... It is a' grtod thing that no trolley lines run by 'the gates of 'beaven. for the Dwellings Associated With Lincoln Continued l-'rom lage Forty-Kighl achievements ot the 18th President. He was born in Kentucky, he found his wife there, -"nd had lie lived, be would un doubtedly have made the effort he always contemplated, to makenioney reparation to those plantation owners who were ruined b' the loss of their slaves. The Springfield . home of . Lincoln Is a modest dwelling, ' such as any business man of moderate means would thmk none too good. It is Infinitely inferior to-, the dwellings of thousands of Lincoln's con- temporaries of far less fame. But to Lincoln it was home, the best-loved place in the world. Most of the happiness that came Into his sad life, he found there, and what he thought of it is shown in the pathos of his farewell to his fellow citizens of Springfield when -lie left for vrashlngton to take up one of the most fearful tasks that ever fell to the lot of mortal man. The State of Illinois now appropriately enough owns the Lincoln homestead. Af ter the death of his mother. Robert T. Lincoln, son of the martyr, himself Min ister to Kngland and Cabinet member, and at one time prominently mentioned as a possible candidate for the presi dency, presented it to the. state. Since that time it has been most reverently cared for, and lias become the repository of many, relics of Lincoln and ills family.- Another building prominently Identified with Lincoln is Musical Fund Hall. Phil adelphia, where was held last Summer the celebration of the Soth anniversary of tiio birth of the Republican -party. This venerable hall, still standing in much the same condition it was then. is nearly a century old. and has echoed to the voices of the most famous singers of the world. , In that first Republican convention held there in 3S56. 'that saw' the beginning of the party that has been dominant with an interval of only eight years since I860, Lincoln was a commanding figure. In fact. It may be said that this convention really launched him as a Presidential .factor and paved the way for his nomina tion In Chicago four years later. Lincoln's 6 feet 4 Inches of height made him a marked figure physieally. and his fame as a lawyer had attracted general attention to him from members of the bar, many noted lights of this profes sion being conspicuous at thg conven tion. Moreover, the country was still ringing with his masterful reply to Douglas . delivered In 1555, during the campaign to elect Mr. Trumbull to the Senate over General Shields. Lincoln was mentioned for both Presi dency and Vice-Presidency at the Phila delphia convention, which finally selected rremont to bead the ticket, and many prominent leaders felt dissatisfied when Lincoln was pRS.sed. But though he failed of nomination. most women under such circumstances that, while she remembers with highly ma?nllled clearness all that lie says, and much that he didn't, she entirely forgets the occasional remarks she made her-f-elf. I want you to reverse that process. Think over what you ?aid. an'r long be fore, time for Bill to come back from work you' will be in the proper frame of mind to meet him with a kiss, to he your own sweet setf. serene and smiling. Just a If a quarrel had never happened since the world began. -Then. f..r Heaven s sake, don't refer to the disagreement again. You can bet your life Bill won't. Vse Mrs. Adam's Method. Of course, you aro entitled to your own opinions, all yon want of them. 5o is he. But let me tell you one tiling, my little girl, and if I was a printer I'd put it in the biggest type to be had. there never was nn opinion that was worth the prli-c of your happiness. Have your opin ions, but don't try to impress them on Bill with a potato masher. That way isn't effective, and. besides, it lacks re tinement. When you want him to think your way just put your arm around hi neck, and but pshaw! Tou know how. All women do. The trouble is they some times allow their tempers to blind them to the old reliable, never failing metlmri that they have hail copyrighted since the days of Mrs. Adam. It s an old paying that it takes two to make a quarrel, "and there's another almost f.s old. that iL takes but one to end It. Both are equally true, but when it comes to closing up a domestic controversy a woman will suc ceed where a man will only get his foot in deeper, and she can do it without con cessions, without humiliation, by th sujiplc trick of forgetting. That's t!i sfnff that will mend family jars quicker and more effectively than anything else. Paste the recipe lu your cook book, my dear, and take a. look at .it every titn'n you get on the, warpath. So Ions:, little sweetheart. Your affectionate dad. ' JOHN SXEKD. (Copyright. 1P07. by Casper S. Yost.) XV. BOBBIN'S. American relic fiend would have them shipped down to the hinges In a very short 'imc. 1 ' I . . . In the first days of the Legislature, it is always going to be economical, but it ends .the session by the members swiping even the spittoons. One thing suspicious atjout the ordinary theory of hell and the fallen angels is that it is laid up to ambition, and does not seem to have any woman in the case. We have platcglass, burglary and acci dent insurance, why can't we have an insurance against divorce and the pay ment of alimony ? From one point of view, earthquakes and fires are indicted on us for the pur pose of enabling the sawmill inttu to make a decent living. The Iind of Nod must have been paradise for bachelors. If most of jis were smelted down, the nugget of good that would result would be very small indeed. Grants Pass. Or.. February 1. Girl.-. Karncd More Than Youth. New York Herald. Columbia University's committee frr employment of students made public recently its report on what students have been earning during the vncntlon. Of the 581 students who applied for positions, the total earnings of 31. T who turn in reports amounted to $104,210. s Last year 388 students earned $92,436. Most of the 90 colh-ge men who ap plied received positions as tutors. Sev eral were appointed to secretaryships, and others acted as clerks and sales men for shipping houses. The average earnings of these men was $113.1:1. The law students, 4u in number, re ceived the largest salaries, averaging $281.5!. Nearest to them were the stu dents of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, -1 of whom averaged $202.19. Girls at Barnard beat tlielr brothers in the college at Columbia. Twenty seven, acting as clerks, stenographers, private secretaries, traveling compan ions and governesses, averaged $117.10 to, the Columbia men's $11.1.43. After tli e close of college .1M em ployers applied for students to fill posi tions. - Musical Fund Hall will ever be Identi fied with Lincoln, because it was there he took commanding place as a Na tional figure, and make, folks begin to think of him as the right man for the crisis of 1S0. From Musical Fund Hall it is an easy step to the White House, next in the line of buildings associated with Lin coln. What he did there will survive as long as history lives or as men ad mire devotion to principle. What he suf fered can never even be remotely guessed, for those who knew him intimately say that the burden he bore would hav broken a man of le3.er physical strength, mental caliber and lofty devotion. It was not the White House of now that Lincoln knew. The new executive wingx part of the improvements of W2. had not been ad-deil. and the changes in the dwelling part to accommodate the larga family of President Roosevelt, were then not even contemplated. Not far from the White Houe stands the New York Avrnui Tresbyterlan Church, where Lincoln worshiped 'while, he was Chief Kxecutive -f the Nation. This historic old place of worship is probably the only church of note Inti mately associated with Lincoln. Tho edi fice Is in appearance today practically the same as In Lincoln's time, anil his pew. when the interior of the structure was renovated some time since, was left un disturbed and is constantly an object of great Interest to visitors to the Na tional Captitol. The New York Avenue Presbyterian Church is one of the oldest, churches in Washington. Several years ago it celebrated its centennial. t which time Lincoln's intimate connection wtth the church was given much promi nence. A few blocks from the Kxecutive Mansion are the two buildings directly a-crpss the street from each other that saw the sad story of Lincoln's lifo com pleted. One is Ford's Theater, the other the house in which he died. That deed of hlood performed -there, in that Tenth-avenue structure, only a stone's throw from Pennsylvania avenue, on April 14, 1S65. gave the United Slates oerhaps the most terribler shock It ever knew. The dying man was carried to a. dwelling directly across the street, and there at a few minutes before 7 o'clock he passed Into the Great Beyond. Appropriately enough the buildings that knew him after death still survive, for 111 that pathetic prosress across the country to Springfield the body lay In state in many .statehouses. including' the most famous of all. Independence Hall. Philadelphia, the cradle of American lib erty. The increasing veneration for Lincoln shown at each recurring birthday is as surance that Americans will never per mit the- piussing of one of these struc tures associated with his life and death. ft