THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, , PORTLAND, OCTOBER 13, 1907. 11 JSssj "A : LFRED, I am becoming uneasy bout you. lor I am sure you are getting too stout. -Don't A-ou think, dear, that you should do tomething to reduce your superfluous flesh?" and his wife bestowed such a look of affectionate concern upon him that Mr. Mudd murmured, "breakers ahead," and waited for the symptoms to Sevelop Into trouble, as he knew they would. "Yes," she continued, tenderly, "you require more outdoor exercise. The of fice Is close and stuffy, and you sit cramped up all day why, actually," and hr voice trembled with emotion, "you seldom see the sun, poor man." Mr. Mudd's thoughts strayed back to the numerous afternoons ' during which he had boiled and broiled upon the bleach ers at Twenty-fourth and Vaughn under the torrid rays of the luminary men tioned, but wisely maintained a discreet alienee and waited, nervously. "My love," he was feeling his way, cau tiously "I might walk home each even ing or help you pick the roses, or " "I have It." The uninitiated would have thought this a brilliant Inspiration of the moment, but Mr. Mudd was well aware that It had been In preparation all day. "I have It," she repeated, tensely. "Iet's have It," he replied, also tensely. "The slabwood." Her voice sank to a thrilling whisper. So did his as he ex Blaitned, "darn the slabwood." "Alfred." Mrs. Mudd sat up very straight In her chair and her eyes pierced his inmost soul; "your language is hard ly as high " "As the price of slabwood," he feebly ventured. " as highly refined as might be ex pected of one in your station in life." "My angel." he asked, soothingly, "what are the relative positions of our wood pile and my obesity?" "I want you to put the wood In the basement, yourself, this year." "Hobo work," he protested. Mrs. Mudd Ignored the remark and continued: "Get a pair of rough gloves and begin tomorrow evening." "I know I ain't henpecked," mut tered Mr. Mudd the following day Ut 7 P. M.. ai he trundled the wheelbarrow to the 10 loads of waste that were strewn for a hundred feet along the curb, "but somehow she always has her way." Ha rilled and lit his corncob a corn cob pipe and a woodpile Invariably go together and surveyed the task before him. "Wonder why Mart ordered oak. this year. Guess I'll put It In first, anyway," and, ere he quit for the night, the one lone load of oak at the far end of his lot had found Its way into his base ment. Mr. Mudd sighed contentedly as he drew off his gloves and entered the house, being rather pleased at the un expected exhilaration the heavy work had produced, removed his sweater, washed his face and hands and ap peared before his wife wearing a tri umphant smile. "What was that awful crash I heard, Alfred?" she asked. "My love, in my enthusiasm I broke a pane In the sash." Mr. Mudd failed to add that part of the sash had fol lowed the glass. He also neglected to mention tho wreck of the hanging shelf when a wild throw of a heavy John I.. Glvtn'i "Ma kin a New paper," an Accurate account of newspaper organl catii n and niMhodn, has ben adopted aa a text-book f"r tha course In Journalism at Bueknell University and the University of Illinois. furinua readers who ilka to penetrate pen names will be Interested to learn that the ral name of Kllsa .alvert Hall, the author of "Aunt Jane of Kentucky" la Llda, Calvert Obenchaln. and that sh la the wife of J'rofessor A M. Obcnchaln. the president of URden College. Bowling Green. Ky. The Harpers will soon publish a novel by Mrs. James H. Canfleid. wife of the librarian of Columbia University and mother of Doro thy Canfleid, whose name Is familiar to the readers of magazines aa the author of striking short stories. This is Mrs. Can Acid's first venture In the literary Held. New novels from the Century Company: Pv Anne Pouglas Sedgwick and Helen R Martin; '"The Quest of the Colonial' by Robert and Elisabeth Bhackleton; "A Tus can Childhood-: by Llsl Clprlana; and Ths lied Helen." KelTofg Durland'a record of a vear'a wanderings, adventure and observa tions In Russia. Autumn book of travel will Include one by A. Henry Savage Landor, "Across Wild est Africa." If he writes aa picturesquely as he did In bis book on Tibet he ought to be amusing. His latest expedition extended from PJlbutl on the Ea:t Coast to Cape Verde, a distance of S300 miles. Another new travel book will be Douglas S laden'. "Queer Things About Persia," written with the assistance of Eustgi'he de Lorey. Among the many amusing anecdotes told by John Burroughs in his new book "Camp tug and Tramping with Roosevelt." la the following: "The rough riders, wherever thev are. always look to President Roosevelt w hen in trouble. One had come to grief In Art son a. He was In jail. So he wrote the President, and his letter ran something like this: 'Dear Colonel. 1 am In trouble. I shot a Isdy In the eye. bin I did not intend to hit the lady. I was shooting at my w ife.' ' Thla week will see the publication of 'Storlea ami Sketches" b Dr. Mary Putnam JacobU The book naturally appears under the Putnam imprint. At the time of their first publication, these papers received fav oraMe attention from the critics aa well for literary quality a for originality of con ception and imaginative powt-r. So ex perienced an editor as Richard Watson Glid er described the paper printed tn iScrlbner'a In 1S71 as '"on of the best American mega alne articles of which he had knowledge." In rewriting and revlalng hie Reetllec t'ona of Possum." Hall Calne ia reverting to the book wherewith he made his liter ary debut a quarter of a century ago. The new edition will be Issued In London yerv soon, and will Include "new letters, new Maraphical material, and a great deal of matter whlrn U was thought undesirable to fublish Immediately after the poet s death." t will be of more than ordinary Interest to read Hall Calne's twentieth century verdict upon his nineteenth century friend. e e An Interesting note qm the reading pub lic in Sweden appears In the London Book man. Writing from Stockholm, a corre spondent of that Journal says: "English authors are read here less than Qertnan and French, and lo the Tauchnlts editions chief ly, but there ara Swedish translations, at moderate prices, of most of our popular novaiists. A year or two ago there was a great run on Mr. Kipling's books, and they are still widely read. 8j are the works of Lafcadlo Hearn. I find titevenaon little known and Thackeray little read. Dickons la. without doubt, the popular English clas sic. The Swedes are at the moment neglect lug foreign literature comparatively, and IN LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP Hoy a. Portland man. 'wrestled with & slabwood proposition, end the result slab, containing ten pounds of river water, destroyed eight jars of fruit thereon, but wisely removed all evi dences of the crime ere aha returned from her visit to a neighbor tho next evening. "Well, Alfred." she remarked at din ner, a week later, "you have gotten In over half the wood and, my, how your appetite has improved. It Is really do ing you a world of good, besides sav ing at least $7. That's what a man wanted for the Job." "I do feel better from the exercise," he answered, heartily, "except that I'm just breaking out all over with the hives," and he clawed frantically at himself In a dozen places at once. "That's from overheated blood. I'll get you a bottle of something to cool It, tomorrow." ' 'That'll be another dollar," he thought. "Wonder what It'll cost to patch up that hole In the furnace where I hit It tonight?" Mr. Mudd toiled manfully to the last and. while large quantities of his en thusiasm had oozed out and vanished, still, as he wheeled the last load of fuel up to the window he felt that he had accomplished something worth while. He sat down upon the wheel barrow, tired but happy. "Hullo, Mudd! Puttln' In your wood?" "Hullo. Jumble! Yes; that's what I'm doing. Mipht have been giving the tree toads a music lesson or hoeing our. nut meg patch, but I'm only putting in the wood." "Uh-uh! Funny thing where my load of oak went to. Was left below your slub, but it's gone,' every stick of it." "Wh-what!" gasped Mr. Mudd. "Was was that your oak?" "Sure, and I need It bad." "Why. I thought It was ours, so I threw it in flsst." "Well, you'll have to throw it out again. Can't get any more for two weeks." "Can't I buy it?" "Nope. Got to have it myself." "All right." sighed Mr. Mudd. "I'll get it out from under the pile tomorrow." giving more encouragement to their own authors. All the publishers now Issue cheap reprints of Swedish classics, and some re cant and living writers have attained high circulations Selma Lagerlof has just been given the honorary degree of LL. D. by the j University of Upsala the first Swedish wo- man so honored. see Another of the Colerldgea haa passeoV away In the person of Mary Elisabeth Coleridge, a grandnlece of the poet. In her modest and unpretentious literary career, she gained an enviable reputation among the best literarv Judges by her novels, "The King With Two Faces," "The Fiery Dawn," "The Shadow on the Wall," and "The Lady on the Drawing-room Floor." She was a writer of verses In sympathy with the Pre Raphaelite school, and she was active aa a reviewer. e The woman who publishes her books over the name of Christopher Hare haa shown In her Italian studies that she has a flair for a good subject, and she shows this again In her forthcoming volume. Under the title of "Louis XI, of France" she treats of personalities and affairs in fifteenth century Europe. Around the career of the grim French King she weaves a story In volving such events as the appearance of Joan of Arc, the capture of Constantinople by the Turks and the death of Edward IV of England. Leroy Pcott has had many requests from actors and playwrights for the dramatisa tion rights of his new book "To Him That Hath'" and negotiations are now In progress with one of our best known American act ore. "To Him That Hath" will probably be produced within a year. The chaplain of one of the prisons recently wrote Mr. Scott, author of the book mentioned: "Do not let any one tell you that David is not a real character. I could tell you of dozens of Innocent people who are taking upon themselves the sins of the guilty and suf fering imprisonment. The prisons are tuil of real Davids." General Morris Schaff, whose interesting reminiscences of "The Spirit of Old West Point" will be published this month In book form, with illustrations, additions, and re visions, has received many letters of com mendation from army men all over the country. One of them reads as follows: "Your work will have a beneficial effect on a large number of readers who know lit tle of the true spirit of West Point, which la best known by, those who have been as sociated with Its graduates in active serv ice and have come to know of Us efficiency in teaching patriotism, loyalty, devotion to duty, courage, and manly fortitude. West point is the Nation's most beneficent in stitution. Thackeray's grave has been the subject of several letters In the London Daily Telegraph, owing to the fact that one -correspondent, through error, complained that the resting place of the novelist at East Barnet was In a neglected condition. That statement is false In two particulars. Thack eray la not buried at East Barnet. but at Kensal Green, and his grave la not la a neglected condition. The confusion has arisen from the faot that the novelist' grandfather, whose name was the same, was thought to be burled at East Barnet. whereas, he Is Interred at Headley. Even thst tomb is in aa excellent state of pres ervation. One of the most interesting of the Fall announcements is that of Mrs. Cornwallis West's tLadv Randolph Churchill autobi ography. There was a lively contest among publishers and editors for the book, which waa Anally secured by the Century Company and will run serially through the Century Magaaine. Mrs. Cornwallis West has al ready proved herself a writer of talent. As the wile of the lata Lord Randolph "Wish you would, because I must have It at once." "Darn such luck!" and Mr-. Mudd heaved a. huge slab savagely into the basement and the boy howled: "Pa, you've smashed my velocipede all to pieces!" "Did I? Well, don't cry, and don't tell ma. I'll buy you another. Hush up, now here she comes." "Have you noticed a hatchet anywhere, Alfred?" asked Mrs. Mudd from the foot of the stairs. "No, my dear." "Well, It's down here, for I borrowed It from Mrs. Jumble a couple of weeks ago to open a box of peaches with and forgot ail about It. She has just sent Johnny after it. I. placed it In the box so it would not get lost." "Why, I did see a fruit box when I commenced, but " "But what?" "It's buried under seven feet of wood now." "How careless of you. Tou must get It: they need it. Johnny," she called, "I'll send It over in the morning." By 12 o'clock that night Mr. Mudd had succeeded in burrowing to and hauling out the hatchet. He was tired and cross, and as he picked the slivers out of his fingers the gloves now had holes at the end of every finger he muttered: "Window sash, two-fifty; gloves, one fifty; repairing furnace, two dollars; ve locipede, five-fifty; eight jars of fruit, one-sixty: bottle of hive cure, one dollar; total, fourteen dollars and ten cents just seven-ten more than a man would have charged to do the Job. Anyhow, I'll bet a roll of butter I've reduced my weight a whole lot." v Mr. Mudd was perched upon the grocer's scales. Mrs. Mudd stood beside him. The grocer adjusted the weights, and all eyes examined the recording bar. "Oh!" exclaimed Mrs. Mudd, disgust edly. "Ah!" exclaimed Mr. Mudd, dubiously. "Ha, ha!" exclaimed the grocer, joy ously. Mr. Mudd had gained just eight pounds! Churchill she lived a busy and Interesting life. She entered fully into the spirit of her husband's political ambitions and waa of great assistance to him In the making of his career. Somt time ago she attempted editorship on an over-ambit lous scale, but the effort wae not a pecuniary success. though the contributions to the magaxlne and Its gorgeous cover attracted wide at tention. It in more than likely that her son, Winston Churchill. Inherited his writ ing talent from his mother, while from his father he inherited a taste tor punnc me And yet, the popular impression prevails that In this world we are all equal and that it Is mere money that has raised false barriers between classes. "Nursery Rhymes From Mother Goose" which Grace G WiederBelm haa lust illus trated In a fascinating manner, has always been popular with children. The tltler ap pears to have come from France, where Queen Goosefoot or Bertha au pled the mother or Chartemagne was regaraea as the sneclal natron of chtlaren ana her fes tival January second Is still celebrated. The most- aeiinite source is cnane rerrauit s "Contes de ma mee rOya (16W7) contain ing ten stories, seven of which are from the Pentamerone. "Mother Goose Melodies' was printed in London by John Newbery In 17 '.50. Though the title Is probably of French origin the songs are English, some belonging to the time of Shakespeare and earner. A teacher of English in the Boston Nor mal School writes: "I find It oue of my most Interesting and at the same time most mincuit amies to introduce my etuaems to books which they In their turn may read or recommend to children. There are plenty of good collections of fairy tales and myths ana cmgiisti verse, out stories about clili dren suitable for children are few and far between. Miss Sarah Orne Jewctt's 'Play Days' and Johanna Spyrl's 'Heidi' have been my etand-bya. With these I am delighted to place Miss Ellxa Orne Whites children's stories 'An Only Child' and all the others. So are my pupils, and what is much more 10 me point, so are the children whom they iacn. i ne stories are so genuine. at wholesome In their Influence, and so inter esting always. How does she remember so wen how a little girl feels?" Booth Tarklngton's new book. "His Own People," just published, contains a surprise that has nothing to do with the plot. With tma volume the publishers Inaugrur&te new Idea In American book-making. Upon opening "His Own People" the first sight which greets our eyes is the Grand Canal of Venice In all the glow of an Italian sunset. The double lining papers of the book have been transformed from the usual white, blank to this charming and famous water scene. It la an auspicious beginning i"r me inp upon wmcn air. Tarkingth takes us. through Paris. Rome anrt the Queen of the Adriatic. When we have come to the end of our Journey, we bid "His Own feopie- aaieu in a most ideal spot for farewell to take place, the Plncian Hill in Rome, beyond which Is seen the dome of ei. romr a numg jn ine misty distance. Lovers of artistic book-maklrg win wel come mis most eirecnve decoration. Th work is by the well-known artist St. John Harper, who has caught the trua tints of a Venetian sunset and the dellcat foliage "I uiu main lUl-LOp. Professor Pelham Edgar contribute an u lumlnatlng article on George Meredith to the i i iKua i rj (boimoni. we traces the novelist's individual style to Frnh and Ger man influence, especially to Richter. and re calls that Mr. Meredith was educated In Ger many. No doubt Carlyle had a considerable Influence on him, but the Teutonic element is modified by the French. Concerning the dif ficulties in reading the Meredith novel Pro feesor Edgar says: . "Rather more than enough has been wld, even in the spirit of friend liest criticism, of Mr. Meredith's obscurity. He does nr,t. Indeed, take rank -with the boudoir and hammock novelists. He cannot be read profitably In half dose and he has lon since reconciled himself to remaining a closed book for ail who seek ia the poppied leave of fiction lullaby sentiment as an opiate for tired brains. But the difficulties of Mr. Mer edith's style have been much exafgerated.Ks punpent force and rich expressiveness not sufficiently eppreclated. If we accept as read a few baffling chapter and eliminate soma Impossible imart converaatlons at Diana's din ner table and elsewhere, all the rest, save for , a lew mannerisms, is clear gain, in lour oi his novels. In "Evan Harrington." "Rboda Fleming." "Harry Richmond" and "Vlttorla" there is scarcely a verbal difficulty. In the remaining 4CGO pages, granted that we have grasped the writer' point of view, we need dismiss no more than 20 pages as unintelli gible. 1 may even boast of having made conquests of meaning within this 20. but whether the meaning Is my own or the author's I shall never know." -. Arthur C. Benson, the author of a book of essays entitled "From a College Wid ow." is an English novelist who Is an apostle of the meditative life. Ha admits having so far written- tt books. The son of an archbishop, like Charlotte Bronte. ne is one or a literary trto. His brother, E. F. Benson, is the author of "Dodo." and another brother. Father Robert Hugh Ben- son. writes novels of a different type. Mr. Benson was for somo years a master at Eton and at the present time he la a fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge. One re viewer thinks that Benson suggests Charles Lamb. Miss Hildegrade Hawthorne, tho granddaughter of ' Nathaniel Hawthorns, confesses that she reads Benean's books "with ever-incraaslng admiration. They do not. it may be. tell you anything you do not already know, but they remind you of many 'things which you are glad of knowing and which you need to remember. Mr. Benson's philosophy is carried along on a quiet flow of humor much as the silver current of a river bears a boat Insensibly but surely. He paints his characters with keen insight Into human nature, with a wise, tolerance for fault and an amused smile foibles." Harper-1 Weekly, in an edi torial on "Books of Quiet." treats the works uf Mr. Benson, which It links with those of Maeterlinck. Charle Wagner. "C. K-," and Michael Fairless, as the indication of an important literary tendency in our day. All of which is worth remembering, as Mr. Benson books are enjoying a wide popularity in England and are beginning to Invade this country. The rumor that the Nobel prise for litera ture is to be awarded to Rudyard Kipling, causes doubt as to tho Justice of the de cision, says the Manchester Guardian. One cannot help thinking that the money so munificently spent by Alfred Nobel on the encouragement of literary work "of an Idealising tendency" might be turned to bet ter account But for Its proper use a trustee of superhuman insight and critical faculty would be necessary. Writers who attain so great a popularity a Mr. Kipling are in little need of big financial rewbrds; their literary agents sea to that, and the lot of the popular author today 1 cast fh very easy places. But what a number of in stances one . can derive from a casual acquaintance with literary history where such a lump sum aa the Nobel trustee allot each year would have proved the turning point in a career. One think of Mr. Mero dlth. toiling In poverty and neglect to en dow our literature with one of its finest portrait galleries: it is an open secret that at one time he was reduced to cultivating Ms muse on literal oatmeal In consequence of bis atern determination to educate the public up to his level rather than descend to theirs for mere boiling purposes. One thinks of Carlyle recording In his Journal as a document lor the future his torian of literature that for -a months he had not succeeded in earning a single penny by his pen, and that, at the time when he had already published faartor Resartus and was meditating the great epic of the French Revolution. Also, what oi Brows lng. Thackeray and Chapelian ? NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. Lord Cammarlela-h Secret, br Rov Horn! man; and Theext Door jftfareiands ; by Emily West wood Lewis, each $1. 50; and Dorcaster Days, by A. G. Ply mp ton, $1.25, (Little, Brown Co.) High .Living, compiled by L. t. McLaren, 70 cents (Paul Elder Co.. a. r The American Book of Golden Deeds, by James Baldwin, 50 cents (Am. Book Co.) Quips avnd Qulddlts, by John B. Tabh tbmall-Mayuard. ) About Ho. Detroit Free Press. Wu Ting-fang, Is coming back, - With hla questions By the stack. Are you married ? What's your age? What's your trade? And what's your wage? . Wu Ting-fang,, Will noon return; Many things He'll want to learn. Do you love Your wife? and do Tou believe that She loves you? W'u Ting-fang Will soon be here. Spreading questions Far and near. Trusts and railroad Magnates flee; Standard Oil , " Acts nervously. Have you skeletons None sees? Lock the doors, And lose the keys. Run and hide From his attack; Curious Wu Is coming back. Men of the Trail. Denver Republican. Eyes that are narrowed and keen. Gleaming 'neath hat brims wide; Cheeks that are browned by the sun. Vigor in pose and in stride: Scant of their laughter and speech. Swept by no impotent gale. Yet quick unto honor's defense These be the men of the trail. Paths that they follow lead far To the heart of the hills or the plain- To the snows that gleam white on the crest, To the horizon lost In the rain; No flowery byways they seek; And duty alone Is their grail ; "Our work, in the storm or the sun, Murmur the men of the trail. J . n hit sin Pk i rct AuhjmrTpo.5sed with eovj4lvTr&in? Hi -plume was red Ard ColJ, Ar oU trowrv ekedrvu! crcKed I ky rrtuTha.vei ikovght KlrrToold. Tke fading lpon mi e-ovesfken lookad I 1 .11 e- bounteous aiKt ' Arvd signed ihey 'mid me. lofty Dots Jack Froil pais lonikl? Kin Jack will come, Ike keiidlessfellow Tkrouki counlry lane, and lown IU orne kaske.rxor- Idled kingdom, l.wedrsiajeweled crown. June McMiuTen Ordway. True Books Ate Kotf Easier to Find Than TiruelMcn: Familiar Letter of J am as Howell. In two volumas. $5. Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston, and tho .J. K. Gill Co., Portland. Amons; dusty treasures of an an tiquarian's' store, or reposing: on the shelves ot a well-selected private library are certain literary treasures that have- lived for centuries a life of calm seclu sion, far from the whirl and din of what we moderns call the six beat sellers. The monthly magazine knows them ns.t and their binding is generally of the best. In this collection of old friends, the mind unconsciously harks back to one Pepys and his diary, and possibly next, comes one James Howell, the bril liant and witty Welshman, who. In a series of letters, wrote of life under Charles I, Cromwell, Charles II and other historical worthies of that era. The present volumes consist of a series of letters written by Howell to his patrons and other friends, and such is the esteem in which these amusing mes sages are held that they have been looked upon for fxilly 300 years as fa miliar friends. It is educative to read history In books usually devoted to that study and If the truth must be told, history-telling In that fashion now and then becomes monotonous and dry. But In these letters ot the olden time history takes on a new meaning and kings, queens, lords and bishops seem to be come . more human and understandable. It is related that Howell was poor In estate, as befitted one of a country cler gyman's 15 children, and that at Oxford University he acquired what he called "the patrimony of a liberal education." For a number of years he traveled over Europe, acting for three years as the agent of a London glass factory, seeking to obtain workmen, materials and in spiration from foreign art centers. Italy seems to have impressed Howell the most for he writes: "Venice the rich, Padua the learned, Bologna the fat, Rome the holy, Naples the gentle, Genoa the proud, Florence the fair and Milan the great." The first beautiful woman, Howell quaintly tells us, was made of Venice glass, lovely and brittle withal; and "Eve spoke Italian when Adam was seduced, for In what other tongue could she have been so irresistible?" Howell betrayed a Justifiable pride In the ability of an English nobleman to cope with the mighty drinkers of the North, and he draws this picture: The King feasted my Lord once, and it lasted from eleven of the clock till towards the evening, during which time the King began SS healths, the nrt to the Emperor, the second to his nephew of England and o went over all the King and Queen of. Christendom: but he never remembered the Prince of Palsgrave' health, nor hi niece's all the while. The King waa taken away at last In his chair, but my Ird of Lei cester bore up stoutly all the while; so that when there came two of the King's guard to take him by the arms, a he was going down the stairs my Lord shook them off and went alone. The next morning the King was gone a-huntlng at break of day; but going to aome other ot hie officers, their servant told me without, any appearance of shame that their master were drunk over night, and o it would be late before they would rise. Howell was a voluminous writer and his career must have been a checkered one. He was sent for debt to the Fleet Street prison, but even there he wrote hla beloved letters. Seemingly kindly disposed to most national ties, 'Howell had an unfavorablevoptnion of the Scotch. He must have been a judge of good liv ing, for one of his longest letters is that dated October 17, 1634, addressed to Lord Cliff. In which Howell gives an eloquent description of the liquors of the world. The rampftre of Mad Anthony, by Dr. Ever ett T. Tomllnson. Illustrated. 1.50. Hough ton, Mifflin & Co., Boston. Anaemic folks are warned away, like wise those who are wholly engrossed with their own troubles. This stirring novel appeals to all who have bounding, red blood to boast of, and has special. patriotic meaning for healthy young Americans. It covers the period between wilk Lvjgkltf wilk worvder; krA.rvchfts,"' Kill wS6k V V. Wm 111 Arthur C. Benson The English Novelist who is an Apostle of the Meditative Life 1774 and 17TS, and details many adventures of the great American General, "Mad Anthony" Wayne, tho burning of a cargo of Tory tea at Greenwich, N. J., the tarring of a Tory and describes one of Wayne's big fights with the British. An excellent book for younpr (people begin ning to appreciate serious history. Has snap and go. The War of a Man. by' Emerson H'ounb. lllmtrated. f!.5. The Outing Publishing Co., New York city. Pulsing with the spirit of out-of-doors. first In Virginia, and afterward In the Middle West, stretching to the American desert of the late '50s, Mr. Hough'a novel has elements to make it readable. Strong character drawing, owning two sweethearts at the same time, an ex emplification of a peculiar "Scotch" mar riage, buffalo hunting, Indian fighting and concluding about the end of the book with Incidents relating to the open ing of the Civil War these are a few of Mr. Hough's word pictures. His strongest situation is where he portrays a young man and a young woman for a time at least stripped of the convention alities of civilized life, and almost ex periencing the Joys of the Garden of Eden. Sentiment largely marks the tale for the first words on page one read: "I admit I kissed her," and the same five words mark the conclusion of the 345th and last page. The story is told by John Cowles. who first woos Miss Grace Sheraton and latterly Miss Ellen Merl wether. In the course ot his travels Cowles goes West as far as St. Louis, where be meets Ellen. With a large trav eling party they cross the great plains and one day straying from the trail they are lost In the desert, where they are forced to live by their wits as the, first primitive folk did, placing their cunning against tnat oi animals upon which they prey. The two lost ones fall In love with each other, and Cowles with the aid of charred stick writes upon the surface of a hide this covenant: "I, John Cowles, take thee, Ellen Meriwether, to be my lawful, wedded wife. In sickness and In health, for better or for worse, till death do us part." This covenant Cowles signed, the girl Affixing only her Christian name. At this Juncture they are providentially rescued by United States soldiers and In. dians. The villain in the drama Is one Gordon Orme, Marquis of Bute and Rayne, black sheep, renegade, spy, desperado and an expert In uncanny tricks of the Orient. He boasted that he was a Raja Yogi, had taken the eight mystic steps; tor years had kept up the sacred exercises of breath, posture and thought; had learned super-conscious reasoning how to cast his own mind to a distance and bring other minds close to him. In sketching Orme's character Mr. Hough has done remarkably clever work. The war scenes are good but few. Satan black horse. Is made to have a dis tinct personality. "The Way of a Man" is also distinctive by its inherent American spirit. Morning, by Jame Whitcomb Riley. The Sobbs-Merrlll Co., Indianapolis, Ind. It's a genuine treat again to look over a number of new poems by James Whit- comb Riley, and the pub.shing of them In this neatly printed, red-covered little book Is one of the pr.ncipal happenings this year in American letters. - A fine picture of the Hoosier poet adorns the volume, taken from the well- known portrait by John S. Sargent, in the John Herron Art Institute, Indian apolis. The dedication is to Meredith Nicholson. Dialect. love of home, theol ogy, war, children' verses and other fine BBiiiiiuent xut. acroN, uie xtuey canvas, and after reading them It Is a pleasure to record that his muse gains new strength and Is just as pleasing as ever. Drink In the tenderness warped around every line of "A Golden Wedding." Your Qolden Wedding! 50 year Of comradeship, through smiles and tears! Through bummer sun, ana winter sleet. You walked the ways with willing feet; or. journeying togetner thus, Sach path held something glorious. No Winter wind could blow so chill. But found you even warmer still In fervor of affection bleat In knowing all was for the best; And so, content, you faced the storm And fared on, smiling, arm-in-arm. There is real humor In "The Country Editor," that person of the "thoughtful brow and face of sallow hue." A man he 1 deserving well, of tha,- 8o be compassionate yea, pay thy dues. Nor pamper him with thy Spring-poetry But haul him wood, or aomethlng be can use; And promptly act, nor tarry long whsn he unawetn. ms pen ana glaretb rabidly. The most enjoyable of the new dialect poems are "Ef Uncle Remus Please Ter Scusen Me," and 'My Little Sadie Sue." One that is sure to make a popular hit is "Tne Raggedy Man on Children." The Best Man, by Harold Macgrath. Illus trated. -otiD. Merrill Co., indi&napolle, Ind. Mr. Macgrath earned fame and ducats by his great novel, "The Man on the Box," and now he issues three stories The Best Man," "Two Candidates" and -xne Advent or Mr. Shifty Sullivan.' which will probably be largely read because they bear the Macgrath stamp. Candor compels the reviewer to says However, that these three tales ara ordinary and not above similar offer ings in current magazines. "The Best Man is not about the chief functionary at a marriage, although the finale sug gests the ring of wedding bells. Yet the tale has a mischievous tendency, because it relates to a three-cornered fight to a finish which is participated in by a corporation lawyer, a plutocrat father who had swindled his business associates, and a wicked grandfather. who was a retired burglar, and hadn't been caught. The plutocrat ought to have been sent to Jail, but he pur chases immunity or secrecy by paying his father 150,000 hush money. That is where the story does not ring true. Aa may be guessed, "The Two Candi dates" is a political story, and relates to a Mayoralty contest, while the other tale pictures a prizefight. The Illus trations ara by Will Grefe and the dec orations by Franklin Booth. Mr. Macgrath you can do better than this. liife of Japan, by Masujl Miyakawa. The waiter r xajrior io., iew lors Vliy. A reauy wen-written, readable ac count of life in Japan, written by Japanese, who discusses social, politi cal, commercial and military questions. Attention is directed to both ancient" and modern history in Japan, and it is a pleasure to read such attractively decorated pages. Mr. Mlyakawa says that it is or. !y after Japan, in her war with Russia, proved that she could kill more men In one land battle than in all the land battles of the Crimean War of the Eng lish and French, and that Japan could send to the bottom more ships and sea men in one naval battle than in all the battles In Nelson's Trafalgar and Dewey's Manila Bay that the civilized world received Japan as a first-class civilized power and her people a4 a civilized people. The statement is also nade that although Japan la by no means a warlike nation, II she ngnts It will be because she has to carry out the mandate of the civilized world. Yet Mr. Miyikawa presents many reasons why Japan and America should not go to war. and suggests that the two countrle form a congress to deal with "the questions of commerce, ot j war and of peace between us and the rest of the world." Religion and HUtorie Faith, by Otto PfleH- erer. r. D.. tl.SO. B. w. Huebsch. .New Tork City. Dr. Fflelderer, Protestant theologian, has an international reputation as the leading representative of the liberal theological movement, principally be cause he writes with authorlay. and has none of the dogmatic bitterness which at one time n.arked the German school of research. The Important book pow under review was trans lated from the German by Daniel A. Huebsch. Ph. D.. and principally con sists of lectures recently delivered at the University of Berlin before an audi- dence compose of students ot all tne faculties and older noncolleglates. other portions of the lectures being given as a public course in a nigii school period. Tho messages so deliv ered made a profound Impression among educated people Interested m tn'.ngs religious. It is a rare pleasure to read In Eng lish such a comprehensive book. Most of the religious faiths of the world are critically considered, and with such tact and ripe Judgment that no one a convictions or beliefs can possibly be. wounded, unless these dwell In glass houses. There are 15 chapters, the. most Important of these being papers on Christianity, the Chinese. Egyptian,, and Babylonian religions, the faith of . Zarathustra and the Mithra cult, Brahmanlsm and Gautama Buddha, the religion of Israel, etc. IJght-Flngered Gentry, by David Graham. Phillips. 11.50. 0. Appleton & Co., iew York City. Not so very long ago, this novel ex posing Insurance graft and the money madness that is plain theft, would, have created an explosion wherever read. But, so many plutocrats, nnan-. rial man-nates, and worried lawbreak ers generally, have lately been placed on the rack, that the public makes Blgns that it wants a rest. Withal Mr. Phillips- new novel dealing with the O. A. D. insurance corporation end the grafters harteing to its vine lke leeches, must be con sidered. For, It Is a powerfully drawn' storv where high finance holds you In Its grip and fighting, money kings turn out to be warriors worth watch ing. Horace Armstrong, a suitable for such a strong character. Is -n.-Hna- onnnerh to be compelling, and you flnd yourself becoming Interested in him and his money talks. The book' is piquant and full of the spice of life.. Grandmother, by Laura E. Richards, 13 cents. Dana, Este & Co.. Boston. Has freshness, delicacy and charm recalling some of the best work ot Louisa A. Alcott and Mrs. Wllklns- Freeman. The tale reveals the gentle personality of a girl named Miss Pity, who was married to uranaiaiimr hoi was married by urandiatner Merion, because her folks were aeaa, and she hadn't anyone left to look af ter her. She was, in derision, called grandmother. She suffered much per secution from the relatives sne ade through her hasty marriage, es- DecTallv the brimstone vocal abuse of Miss Rachel, who was Known woman who would not learn" to gov ern herself and more particularly her tongue. This little book r.as a mission, may it sail on. Boys of the Border, by Mary P. Wall $1.25. Little. Brown Smith. Illustrated, & Co.. Boston. The third volume of the well-known Old -Deerfield Series." this, the "Boys of the Border." narrates thrilling lights hiwun white settlers and Indians in I the Deerfield Valley durlnr; French and Indian wars, from 1746 to 1765, espe cially those conneoted with the line of forts along, the northwest border of Massachusetts, and north up to th Connecticut River. Just the kind of a healthy story for American boys nn-rinun to read about doughty pioneers. who helped to mould this country's destinies at a time when Oregon was yet a primitive wilderness. When King Go Forth to Battle, by William Wallace WhiteiecK. luusirtiieu. . B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia. Another brave echo of a Zenda story. This time the scene is laid ia the King dom of Westrum. a mythical EuTopean country where at the opening of the story revolutionists were trying to un seat the reigning monarch. King Lud- wle. In favor ot his cousin, prince Ru dolf, a popular favorite. Wyffeffoth. a young man from New York, supports Lu dolf and then there's something doing. The American girl in the case is Eunice Earle In this dashing romance lnwrent Is never permitted to flag, and the clash of sworos ana Dang oi piio .mm at regular Intervals. A Child's Book of Abriogea wwac, w Child Harold. T5 cents, raui x-oi- Co.. New York City. ' A beautifully and quaintly Illustrated little book for children, recalling inaj style of Kate Greenaway. the pictures being In colors and accompanied by amusing verse. One bit of advice given to small boys and girls is: Speak kindly to the wild flower. And call them a they're named: For everything that' wild, my child. - Ia anxlou to be tamea. And If you do as I suggest. l naves i m-nr uouut But that they will become o tame, They'll follow you about: Bean Brocade, by Barones orczy. illus trated. J. 1. l-ippmcotl -o.. rntnaei phla. With th scene laid in England about the year 1745, thls-romance Is of the rat tling, exciting sort, telling aDout tne ao- mea ui . ... , . ..... White Dragoons, who. because or tne treachery of a superior officer, waa dis missed from the army of the DuKe et Cumberland, and afterward earned re nown as Beau Brocade, nignwayman.. There is action a-plenty, and the illus trations in color by Clarence F. under wood are unusually good. A Man of Sark. by John Oienbsm. Illustrat ed, si.oo. .patter t isyior -u., new ioi City. There's the tang of the salt breeze as the advancing tide Iburies Itself in spray against the Jagged rock ot Sark, one Of the Channel Islands. The time of the, tale la about 107 years ago, wnen cng- land was busily engaged in ngnting France and Spain, and most of tne peo ple portrayed are hearty fishermen. Mr. Oxenham has written a strong story marked by vigor and softened by poetlo feeling. -.. Fishermen' Iuck. The Judge For two years you men have fished together, peaceable, and yet von fourht- over this fish. The Sportsman you see. your nonor,. this is the first one we aver caught!