THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 15, 1907. 11 "Oil, a word is a gem, or a stone, or a song, Or a flame, or a two-edged sword; Or a rose in bloom, or a sweet perfume, b Or a drop of gall, is a word. THE shuttlx 4 FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT. Jay Cooke: Financier of the Civil War, by Gills Pucton OberholWAr, Ph. D. U voli $7. SO. Illuatrated. Caorce V. Jacobs A Co., Philadelphia. By its wealth of historical material con cerning the Civil war period and the ex tension of the Northern Pacific Railroad to the Paclflo Coaat; Its pen portraits of the (treat men of National reputation dur iiij? the stormy days of '61 to "65, aye, and even after that; Its calm review of finan cial conditions; and its word-monument of Jay Cooke, the doughty Philadelphia banker who was probably the first of America's great money kings those two volumes stand pre-eminent among the books of the year. The price charged for the books Is not exorbitant, when one con siders the great amount of material pre- rented and reflecting National issues so much so that one reading of the pases by an alert young man represents quite an era In his business education. Ameri can librarians should see to It that this 'Important contribution to current .itera ture Is represented on their sheives it shouldn't bo passed by. Jay Cooke was born August 10, 1821, In what was Portland and later Sandus..y City, In the wilds of Ohio, and he died in February, 1906. But what an endless chain of events was crowded Into that spaco of time! Imagination falls to grasp Its achievements. We younger Americans have been accustomed to acclaim Lincoln and Grant as the two chief saviors of this country's integrity during the Civil ar, but after reading these volumes, a third name must be added that of Jay Cooke, making a veritable trinity of heroes. The Cooke light is made to shine with sur prising brilliance, throughout the whole 1"4S pages, while the many pictures of Jay Cooke and his several homes add mure inun a local interest. It is refreshing to note that Cooke was I such an accomplished letter writer, man of business, and lover of hard work. His day was before the typewriting machine had revolutionised the art of business correspondence,- and it Is Instructive to close ly examine the facsimiles of his bold, eas ily read handwriting. His patriotism glows with astonishing fervor, and while his biographer admits that as a business man Cooke didn't work for nothing in soiling Government securities to carry on the Civil War. yet Cooke took tremendous risks and he docs not appear at this dis tance of time to be the basilisk and evil genius of finance pictured by his fierce critics, the most active of whom was the late George W. Childs. the editor of the Philadelphia Ledger newspaper. Cooke's uniform cheerfulness and self rontalnedness were proverbial. Here is one word picture of him as a money-handler in his early days: To the writer as a boy. Ja- 4'ooke was a revelation. Nver before had he seen one so deft In the business of handling money, not yet since and he has seen ihroutrh life almoat countless handlers of money. Jay Cooke surpassed them all. With lightning; rapidity, the notes passed l)iroi(th his delicate Angers. There was nothing mechanical about It. There was no hesitancy, no pause apparently, no thuuiM. or mental eft)ort. it was as a smoothly tlowlns stream of noiseless water, so equally and uninterruptedly did tha operation of counting go on. There was no counting over; one count was sufficient; and It was so easily and gracefully done. As he counted, he could talk also. He both a'ked and answered questloas, brledly of course, but the like I had never seen and It astonished me. Although he afterward had occasion ti change his opinion, Cooke once had an unfavorable estimate of newspaper men the time he was connected with 13. W. t lark & Co.'s bank. In these callow days he wrote: "I see daily In Philadelphia tha whole editorial corps, a. needy, half starved. Improvident set, always short, no credit, out at elbows, broken down in almost every particular. All except Swain and McMlchael are beggars." January 1, 1861. the celebrated banking firm of Jay Cooke & Co. was organized, the members being Mr. Cooke and his brother-in-law William G. Moorehead. Then came the Civil War. and it seemed as if Cooks had been specially propared for the emergency, and into the breach he stepped like a patriot to largely supply the needed millions, from first to last. His faith in the ultimate success of ti.e North never faltered, and he raised loans not only In this country but In Europe. For instance, he induced Thomas Nelson, the Scotch publisher, to Invest J50u,ooo in war bonds. Opposite page 623, Vol. I., is a facsimile of the last check of J. Wilkes Booth on Jay Cooke & Co., at Washington, D. c for ,25. ' In May, 1S69, Cooke sent out his special corps of experts to report upon the teas Ibillty of his great Northern Pacific .vall road project, and Thomas H. Canfleid conducted the expedition from San Fran cisco to this city: Thoy went much of" the way In states wairons, through wheat and fruit lands, admiring the soli, the climate and the vari ous products of a favored country. The party came to Portland in the midst of the Fourth of July ceremonies. They were warmly received by the best citizens of Oregon and assembled In the city. George Francis Train was "the orator of the day." C'anfleld and Kfcberts were assigned to seats on the grand stand. Upon concluding his speech. Train referred to them and they were both called out by the crowd. "Had any one told mo a month ago when I was tn Portland. Me.," wrote Hoherts to Mr. 'Tooke, "that I would be making a speech o several thousands of people on the fourth of July In Portland, Or., I would Hove thought him demented." ... On he return trip to Portland, a portion of he way was covered In a canoe propelled Hy Indians, the party of six being increased y Senator Corbett . and George Francis Train and his secretary. On page 16S. Vol. II, particulars are given concerning the payment of money to boom the Northern Pacific Railroad proj ect, to the Philadelphia Press, and the Washington (D. C.) Chronicle, John W. Forney receiving "J4666.68 for the support of both newspapers." General Horace Porter, President Grant's private sec You may hammer away on the anvil of thought, And fashion your word with care, But unless you are stirred to the depths, that word Shall die on the empty air." -Selected. ft."' 4 fi? fcj retary, is stated to hs.ve accepted a simi lar offer "with alacrity." On pages 548-0 particulars are furnished of the sale of a three-quarters interest in the Oregon steam Navigation Company to the Northern Pacific Railroad, for ti, 300,000 of which 76O,O0O was paid in Northern Pacific bonds, $250,000 in earn ings on the three-fourths share, while the remaining toOO.OOO Involved cash transfers. Jay Cooke closed the deal in New York. In rapid succession are pictured the panic of '73. the Jay Cooke failure, his subsequent rehabilitation as a great finan cier, his visit to this city and the closing acts of a busy life. He ultimately be came a f Isherman, and wore a broad brimmed, light gray, soft felt hat over his gentle face which was adorned by a long white beard. "None of your derbies for me," once said Cooke, on a fishing trip, "you can't stick fish-hooks In the brim." Arizona. Nights, by Stewart Edward White. Illustrated. The McClur, Company, New Tork City and the J: K. Gill Company, Portland "Called him and shot htm in the stomach!" So says the Captain explaining the lurid frontispiece, where one be-spurred and red-handkerchlef-on-neck Westerner is pictured shooting another. It's a fair sample of the bang! of the book. But the stories are so well told that they make the quietest pulse heat faster and stir up the pagan that exists In all of us. No 'mtlk-and-water tales are they. American to the bone. . Many of the yarns told are complete in themselves, and stand out clearly. Cowboys. Indians and other children of the Arizona desert are vividly pictured, and notable among the pages are those devoted to descriptions of corral-branding. A rude but healthy humor Is apparent. Foolish and unnecessary glamor - often exists about what Is called the "charm" of desert life. . Read this candid descrip tion In "Arizona Nights": Before him lay the desert, but a desert suddenly and mlracuously changed, a des ert he had never seen before. Mile after mile it sn-ept away before him. hot. dry. suffo cating, lifeless. The sparse vegetation was gray with the alkali dust. The heat hunk choking in the air like a curtain. A rattle snake dragged Its loathsome length from under a mesqulte. The dried carcass of a steer whose parchment skin drew tight across its bones, rattled in the breexe. Hera and there rock rldgea showed with the ob scurity of so many skeletons, expostng to the hard, cruel sky the earth's nakedness. Thirst, delirium, death, hovered paipable In the wind; dreadful, unconquerable, ghastly. The desert showed her teeth and lay in wait like a fierce beast. Tbe Boy Electrician Illustrated. By Edwin J. Houston, J. B. Ltppincott Co., Phila delphia. Edwin J. Houston, Ph. D.. of Princeton University, has hod an experience of more than a quarter of a century in school rooms In actual teaching of the natural sciences. So he knows what he is talking about, and writes so sensibly yet so Interestingly that he is sure of a wide audience, especially among , active, healthy boys. In the present novel Dr. Houston gives the delightful experience of two Phila delphia grammar school boys, who in addition to their fondness for baseball, swimming, and other athletic exercises so common and natural to every day, growing boys possessed A marked lik ing for the natural sciences. These boys did not -pcriiiit their marked scientific powers to Ho dormant, but they fitted up a laboratory, experimented with magnet ism and electricity, took photographs of lightning flashes, repeated Franklin's ex periment 'of drawing electricity from the clouds, constructed a private telegraph line, etc. And what fun these two boys had! What they did to improve their leisure time and make themselves useful members of society not "dude" society, but the real thing can easily be depli cated by other boys who try hard enough. What a pity this good book for youth could not be placed into the grimy hands of every street-corner gang of boys, and a law passed to make them read it I Cigarette-users and poolroom-loungers who are rapidly being made Into hard ened, young criminals through "tough" associations, might be saved through ad vice given in these printed pages. Dny OA. By Henry Van Dyke. Illustrated. 1.50. Charles Scrlbner's Sons, New York City. Twelve pleasant discursive essays just as a man would speak them with his eyes closed, at peace with all mankind, and under the influence of a good cigar at the close of a busy day. A holiday spirit is, apparent, includ ing country excursions in this country. Canada, and England; Ashing, shooting and philosophizing. Several of the more enjoyable essays are thoughtful talks between the author and an elderly per son known as his Uncle Peter. The bof k Is dedicated to the author's "friend and neighbor Grover Cleveland, whose years of great work as a statesman have been cherished by days of. good play as a fisherman." The most enjoyable story in the collec tion is "Silverhorns," about the pursuit of a giant moose in New Brunswick. He had successfully evaded hunters armed with up-to-date guns, but his doom came when he calmly stood on a railway track and defied an advancing train: Losh!" cried McLeod: "he's gaun' to fecht us!" and he dropped the cord, grabbed the levers, and threw the steam off and the brakes on hard. The heavy train sltd groan ing and jarring along tha track. The moose never stirred. The Are smouldered in his small, narrow eyes. His black crest was bristling. As the engine bore down upon him. not a rod away, he reared high in the air. his antlers flashing In the blaze, and struck full at the headlight with his Im Ill k 4 . X. ' itV i i -jpif If vl Pl1 J hi Kit "4 - wtaiAi -f'Tsi . II! I zlv' ranoBV orwv tTwrv mense fore feet. There was a shattering of glass, a crash, a heavy shock, and the train slid on. through the darkness, lit only by the moon. The moose was lying In the ditch boslda the track, stone dead and frightfully shattered. But the great head and tbe vast,' spreading antlers were iatact. Northwestern Fights and Fighters, by Cyrus Townsend Beady. Illustrated $1-00. The McClure Company, New York City. For Western- people, and especially those of Oregon, this well-written and handBomely-illustrated volume of 373 pages has peculiar attraction. It tells so much of, the winning; and keeping of the Far West, in comparatively modern times, 1876 to 1900, that the reading of such a book is at once an education and a duty. The periods treated of are the Nez Perce and Modoc Wars, the latter be ing waged in the Winter of 1872-1873 in the lava beds of Oregon, when BO Indians under the leadership of Kient poos held their ground against- regular soldiers witn such success that the In dians were not captured until treach ery played a part. Mistakes in the management and working detail of the military opera tions are freely pointed out, while the descriptions of the fights are thrilling, making the reader glad that he now lives in a more peaceful Oregon. The battles are described by the offi cers who engaged in them, and among: the papers are noticed those' by Major General O. O. Howard, Colonel James Jackson and Colonel J. W. Redlngton, the second of these writers being a resident of this city. The Natural History of the Ten Command ments. -By Ernest Thompson fcieton. &0 cents. Charles Scrlbner's Sons, New Tork City. At, the outset, Mr. Seton displays the Ten Commandments which by the way Wall street recently discovered and shows that they materially apply to tha animal world. Instances are given where animals respect rights of property In ma terials and places, where certain rules of marriage invariably govern them, etc. The opinion is expressed that while man is concerned with all the commandments, that animals need only concern them selves with the last six. Stories said to be true are told of weaker animals, while being pursued by stronger rivals, ruining to human beings for protection; and from this Mr. Scton deduces: When animals are in terrible trouble, when they are face to face with despair and death, thence Is then revealed in them an instinct, deep-laid, and deeper laid as the animal is higher which prompts them In their extremity to throw themselves on the mercy of some other power, not know ing Indeed whether It be friendly or not, but very sure that It is supelor. ., , A splendid treatise on humane philos ophy one which ought to be read as part of a necessary education. The Suburban Whirl, by Mary Stew-Rrt Cut ting. Illustrated. The McClure Company, New York City. B:tter than any other American writer, Mrs. Cutting has caught the real home atmosphere of happy, married life in the stories she sends out, and the housewife who is so fortunate as to come in her leisure moments under so potent a spell, is blessed. - Mrs. Cutting's husbands and wives of fancy really exist in the big world, and are human enough to have lovable faults. They arc all people who work for their own living, and not one is a tiresome Pittsburg millionaire. The hus bands have a salaried position in the city, the wives are old-fashioned enough to do the moat of their own housekeep ing; there are babies, and pretty unpre tentious suburban homes wltsi plenty of love and comfort In them and Mrs. Cut ting's picture is complete. This book contains these four stories: "The Sub urban Whirl," "The Measure," "On the Ridge." and "Mrs. Tremley." Bachelors and old maids who love boarding-houses and hate children are warned away. Married folks, please take notice. Tbe Romance of an Old-Tirae Shipmaster. by Ralph D. Paine. $1.25. The Outing Pub lishing Company, New York City. Turbine engines and steel hulls were only dreamt of by poets and enthusiasts from 17P6 to 1S13, the days when Captain John Willard Russell, mariner, of Bris tol, R. I., sailed the seas, one of his voy ages being as a slaver. Mr. Paine says that he has dug from the depths of an old sea chest, the letters and sea-journals of this Captain Russell and has fashioned thara into a book. Be this as it may for sometimes Mr. i'ayne is an able romancer the letters have the twang of the salt water about them and the real swell of the tide. Best of all they read well, and breathe a tenderness and piety that one rarely meets with in yarns of the sea. Captain Russell's love letters to Nancy Smith are exquisite and show that he' was a pious, good man. His life was a short but busy one, for he died in his 44th year. The Angel of Forgiveness, by Rosa Nou chette Carey. J. B. Llpplnoott A Co., Phlladalphla. A placid English, domestic story written in Miss Carey's wholesome style, and specially suited for young girls. The early experiences are given of Githe Dar nell, school girl, fiancee, and wife. Episco pal church and home atmospheres are skillfully mirrored. A Rose of the Old Regime. By Folger Mc Klnsey. Doxey Book Shop Company, Bal timore, Md. How often has it been remarked that we Americans are too busily engaged in busi ness pursuits and especially in makings money, to dabble In verse making for the glory of American poetry. But there are some of us who make the venture, and one of the foremost knights in the tour nament is Mr. McKlnsey, who is better known in Eastern cities as "The Bents town Bard." . . The McKlnsey poetry is essentially hu man and sings of the horns. It is not up roariously funny nor an. undertaker's de light. It reaches a happy medium and dompels an audience because of native worth. The poems really form e.n Impor tant contribution to American verse, in their honest homespun. They are selected from poems written for an editorial page department of the Baltimore Sun news papet. . Dainty - humor is sometimes apparent. For Instance, in "Stick Candy Days": I want to go back to the stlck-oandy days. Before they made bonbons of choc' late and glaze; I want to go back to the dear little shop Where the little old lady sold ginger.-beer pop, . And made little cookies with raisins that went Like lightning because they were two for . a cent ! Some Neglected Aspects of War. By Cap tain A. T. Mahan. Price, 11.50. Little, Brown & Co.. Boston. Captain Mahan's chief fame as a I1t eratus lies 4n the fact that he once wrote that tremendous success, "The Influence of Sea Power Upon History," and ever since the name of Mahan. has been a shining star when placed on a book or In a magazine. In this hook Captain Mahan presents four arguments for necessary war, dem onstrating the righteous part it has often played in modern civilization, and show ing that at least under present conditions' the futility of replacing It by any other agency. - His arguments are intellectual and are of the usual able Mahan order of things, but it is as well to bear in mind that they have already appeared as mag azine articles. To these Mahan articles have been, added, strange to say, two outside contributions. "The Pow er That Makes for Peace." py Henry S. Prichett. formerly president of the Mas sachusetts' Institute of Technology, and a discursion on "The Capture of Private Property at Sea," by Julian Corbett, a well-known English authority . on naval subjects. The price of $1.50 seems excessive, for value received. Maglo Casements. Edited by Kate Douglas Wiggln and Nora Archibald Smith. The McClure company. New York City. The first fairy book for children Issued by these authors met with such a hearty response that this, the second of the se ries has Just left the printers. A wealth of new stories has been discovered since, those In "The Fairy Ring," were selected, and the new gems add lustre to the older Jewel. The volume can't be recommended be cause of its wealth of illustration It is rather severely plain, Its clief . attrac tion rather being simplicity, and stories, stories' from Scandinavian. French, Ger man, " English, Russian. Hungarian, South African, Japanese, North American Indian, Roumanian, Neapolitan and Hin du sources. The book has been called "Magic -Casements," because of the fam ous line of John Keats: "Magic case ments opening on the foam of perilous seas In faery lands forlorn." Happy are the child owners of such story treasures. Men Who Sell Things. By Walter D. Moody. A. C. McClurg & Co., Chicago, Did you ever try to sell goods on the road? The writer has. and knows how difficult it is. A true salesman is born, or he eo everlastingly trains himself to sell goods that he approaches high-water mark with his number one rival. It Is also admitted that no book alone will ever make a salesman, but good advice will greatly help him and that is what Is contained in this book. ' Mr. Moody has had more than 20 years' experience as traveling salesman. Eu ropean buyer, sales manager and em ployer, i His many adventures are un usually Interesting from a business point of view. May they' give inspiration to all young, temporarily discouraged salesmen! Words of Liberty, by Myra Kelly. Illus trated. The McClure Company. New York City and the J. K. Gill Company, Port land. Myra Kelly has achieved interna tional recognition for the fidelity with which she has pictured types of every day life among Hebrew school children in the East Side of New York City, and the present book contains eight crisp, enjoyable stories of the kind Indicated. They possess marked human interest. Just the sort to attract the attention of helpful, educated people and hold it. The style is refreshingly natural, so much so that it would seem .that Miss Kelly were actually present giving a friendly talk. Early American Humorists. Small, May nard & Co., Boston. Two dainty little volumes which can be conveniently knpt in one's coat pocket without ' their presence being discovered. Crisp selections, told In clear type, are given from the. best writings of Wash ington Irving. William Austin, W. T. Thompson. Fredorio 9. Cozzins, Artemus Ward, Petroleum V. Nasby, The Dan bury Newsman, Josh Billings, Widow Bedott, N. P. Willis and others. In short such readings are presented, In compact form that might otherwise repose in the dust of some forgotten garret, valuable American readings of which the present generation is strangely ignorant. Character Portraits From Dickens. Selected by Charles Welsh. Small. Maynard A Co.. . Boston. Young people, those who are Just enter ing into a knowledge-of the larger world of books, complain that the one obstacle to their becoming better acquainted with Dickens is because ' he has written so voluminously. This little volume will help them to really know their Dickens. Over 150 word portraits from Dickens are given, selected from 1500 characters por trayed by hlm.v Prefaced to each por trait Is a brief note indicating the place the individual occupies in the story from which the portrait ,1s taken. Life's Ideals. By Rev. William Dickie. D. L) Jennings & Graham, Cincinnati. Dr. Dickie is minister of - Dowanhill United Free Church, Glasgow, Scotland, and is the author of many admirable books of advice concerning the ethics of Christian and social living. The ten chap ters in this book of 247 pages are equally addressed to young men and to those farther along the Journey of life who have not yet lost their high Ideals. The best chapters for lessons concerning the formation of character are those on "The Ethics of Work" " and "The Love of Books." Practical Farming, by W. F. Maasey. $1.S0. The Outing Publishing Company, New York City. . ." t Books on agriculture are many, hut there Is always room for one more, espe cially when such a practical farmer as Mr. Massey writes on scientific farming. He has not only written for scientists, but tillers of the soil and has stated his mes sage in so simple and natural a manner that he will have no danger in being mis understood. Mr. Massey, who comes from Philadelphia, has a book of S23 pages. ' J. M. QUENTIN. IN LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP. It is of Miss Gale's new book that the story Is told that a little girl to whom one of Its chapters had been read, described ft as "a lovely book" the name of It Is "Billy S. and the Terror." Miss Gale's readers usually know It as "The Loves of Pelleaa and Etarre." The title of Owen Wister's book. "The Seven Ages . of Washington." promises marked originality In the treatment of this subject. Mr. Wlster- has aimed to sum up comprehensively ' the qualities that made Washington what ha was, and to trace his influence on the institutions of this country. ' i Miss Margaret Lynn, assistant professor of English in the University of Kansas, has edited a volume of representative English poems of the 18th century which is to be published under tha title "Specimens of Eighteenth Century Verse." The volume U well furnished with notes and other helps for classroom work. C Lawrence Gomme's "Governance of London," Is a study of the various Influences which account for the unique position oc cupied by London. It deals with many phases of the history of London as a Roman. Anglo-Saxon and charter city, and will sug gest a "line of Inquiry which has hitherto been neglected ,by historians. Mary Caroline Crawford's new book, "Old New England Inns." just Issued by L. C Page A Co.. baa a wealth of Illustrations, and shows that in the past quite' a number of Important historical occurrences In this country had their being in inns or hotels along tha Atlantic sea. coast Inns possess ing convenient rooms somewhat akin to modern high-class saloons, Professor John Bates Clark's "Essentials of Economic Theory." which is to be pub lished shortly, deals with what he has called "Economic Dynamlca." The changes through which Industrial society is passing, and tho evolution in the wants of the indi vidual consumer whom industry has to serve, are here treated rather than those so-called "natural" laws which were tha themes of the older economists. These books were received through the courtesy of the J. K. Gill Co.: "Tha Boy Electrician," "The Royal Foes," The Free Lances." "Kilo," . "John O' Jamestown," "Great Writers," "The Suburban Whirl," "Northwestern Fights and Fighters," "The Angel of Forgiveness," "Jack, the Young Trapper," "The Natural History of the Ten Commandments," "Words of Liberty,"' "Father and Son" and "Days Off." The third annual edition for 1908 of the "Planetary Daily Guide." issued by the Portland School of Astrology, 608 Fourth street, has been received. It la worth study as an open sesame to a peculiarly fascinat ing subject a method by -which believers may learn to what particular planetary In fluence they are in sympathy. The little book is worth while, whether or not one be lieves In astrology. , ' ' The laureate of green fields and running brooks, James Whitcomb Riley, has written a long poem entitled "Boys of the Old Glee Club." which will soon be Issued. It Is written in the famous Riley dialect, and presents such village characters as the title suggests shoemakers, storekeepers, farm ers, whose gift for song used to thrill the "gathering" at "sociables, G. A. R.'s, cam paign meetln's," and tha ilka. 'A note has been issued by the publishers of Hallle Ermlnie Rivers' novel. "Satan Sanderson." In which it is stated that the City- of Anlston, mentioned in Its pages. Is presumably Portland. Or., whose citizens will no doubt recognize the lonely white house in the. aspens, the wide square with the courthouse facing it, and on- another side the chapel on whose communion table the Rev. Henry Sanderson played hla game of poken for Hugh Stlres' soul." Some one's Imagination will work overtime to see all this. Do you? When "Dodo" appeared some 14 years ago It was greeted with consternation and de light. It was so unlike anything to be ex pected from the son of an archbishop. But a good deal of water has flowed under the bridges since then, and E. F. Benson has taken his place among the serious novelists of England. His new book, "Sheaves," Just published. Is a full-grown novel which paints real people in real and serious situations, and takes firm hold, of the sympathies of its readers. It will mark an important stage in the evolution of a novelist. The little volume, enttlled "Pupil Self Government," by Bernard Cronson, gives an account of one of the most interesting pedagogical experiments of recent years. Within a brief compass, the author has given a lucid exposition of his theory, a description of the conditions which must precede and foster It, and a history of the movement, as put In practice in public schools fi9 and 125 in tbe City of New York. The Illustrations are from photo graphs of tbe various' disciplinary and other organizations of the pupils of School US. Professor M. V. O'Shea, of the University of Wisconsin, has dealt wjth the resulu of a series of experiments relating to the teaching of language In his "Linguistic Development end Education." On the ex perimental side, this book relates a series of careful observations of ''a child from the beginning of expressive activity, the 'observations having afterward ( been extended to other children. The ' book also Includes the organization of the mate rial gained by observation and Its Inter pretation from the standpoint of contem porary educational and developmental psy chology. A new work on the writers of the Jowlsh faith has Just appeared, written by Profes sor Israel Abrahams, of the University of Cambridge, which is called "Short History of Jewish Literature, From the Fall of tha Temple 70 A. D.. to the .Era of Emancipa tion, 1780 A. D-"' It Is a concise manual on a much neglected section of Jewish litera ture, serving both as a work for general reading and as a text-book for elementary study. The author, a high authority in this branch of learning, has covered succinctly the 17 centuries reviewed, and has imparted color and vividness to hls'pages by selecting prominent personalities round which to group a whole cycle of facts. . In "Tbe Awakening of a Race," George E. Boxall traces briefly the tendencies of thought In civilized countries at the present time with a view to estimating the probable trend of events In the near future. He notes the decay of Ideals in this and in other civilized lands, and prophesies a new de velopment of the religious Idea Man. ha says, always has had and always must have a religion as a guide to conduct, and the lesson we learn from the past Is that a new religion grows 'gradually out of an older one as man's knowledge Increases. Accord ing to him Christianity has about reached Ha ultimata capacity for division, and, as "a house divided against itself cannot stand," a new development In religion, based on a scientific view of the world. Is abso hiiely necessary. . One thousand dollars for a new story by a new writer Is the prize offered by tha Out ing Publishing Company. to encourage story tellers, who believe they could write a novel worth, while If they onry had the chance. No such offer as this has ever probably been made In this country. It was inspired by the convlclon on the part of the Outing Pub lishing Company that many men and women have It "In them" to tell a big story If a . special opportunity Is given to them alone. Manuscripts to be considered should be sent to the Outing Publishing Company, Book Department, Deposit, N. Y., before May 8. 1008. Should a story not win the prize, the "publishers still reserve the right to purchase It at terms to be agreed upon. The only condition of competition is that the writer shall never before have had published a novel of standard length. - One of tha most characteristically eo centrlc things ever done by Gelett Burgess was to spend three or four days in con structing of cardboard, mica and green velvet a little model of an old New Eng land house, complete to windows, cur tains, lawn, garden, trees, and even in cluding a hammock with a tiny hat and Summer novel, and washing stretched out on a clothes-line on the back stoop. This was for a dinner given to several literary friends in New York, and, when the coffee was served, he deliberately set fire to tha whole farm. His explanation was that, had it been spared, his guests might have forgotten the affair, but they would alwaya remember the destruction of the house. There was considerable practical if subtle psychology In this reasoning. No one who ever saw that little house go up In smoke cn its little hill of damp moss will aver forget it. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. "The Royal Foes," by Eva Madden, $1.25; The Free Lances," by Captain Jack Brand; "Kilo.' by Ellis Parker Butler; "John O' Jamestown," by Vaugnan K ester (McClure Company). "Jack, the Young Trappers," by Bird Grinnell, Z1.25 (Stokes Company). BATTLESHIPS Continued From Page 3. only, captain of a fleet who ever served as apprentice. At one time he com manded the Dolphin, one of the so-called Presidential yachts, and he was on duty in the office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy when he was assigned to the Kansas. - Captain William P. Potter, of the Ver mont, was advanced Ave numbers for his services in the war with Spain. He was a member of the Maine court of inquiry in l&s, and during the war was executive officer of the armored cruiser New York. Before going to the Vermont he was as- People's Welfare Highest Law Modern Socialism Is Purely an Economic Question With No Political or Religious Features. BT L. L NOEL. IN his letter to The Oregonlan Father Gregory, believing his arguments to have proven the absurdity of Social Ism, decides not to respond any more to the replies that will probably be made. Nevertheless, I shall try to show In this letter that his arguments are not so strong as he believes, being the same obsolete ones that have for years been produced against It. The first great misleading mistake lies In the assertion thfct socialism "wishes," and so forth. Father Gregory, although affirming that . he bases his argumentation on scientific socialists, yet by the way he interprets phrases chosen at random from the works of the same, proves that he still confounds modern scientific socialism with the same petty schemes a la Four ier, More, Campanells, But, modern so cialism does not, so to say, wish any thing. It is from the study of modern society that socialism draws its con clusions. Socialism, as defined by a well-known' European socialist, Is the science that teaches us why, how and by what means modern society evolves to a social organ ization based on collective ownership of the means of production. Not until one refutes the premises on which socialism bases its conclusions is one able to attack these conclusions. What are these premises? The mode of production and distribu tion of riches Is the basis of every so ciety, which determines the character of the social, political or Intellectual super structure. That, whenever a contradiction be tween the mode of production and dis tribution and the social superstructure takes place, the social superstructure becoming too tight for the method of production, the former is, so to say, torn to pieces and another one corresponding-to the new state of the mode of pro duction substitutes it. And further on, that the system of private property engenders a social or ganization characterized by the existence of two economic groups with different in terests. That, the history of mankind has been the history of a struggle be tween these two classes. That all the changes that have taken place in the past, the passage from slavery to feudalism and from feudalism to capitalism, were due to that necessity of the social organism to adjust itself after the changes of the mode of produce tlon. That today the crisis and other facts prove the existence of a contradiction between the present social system and the mode of production, consisting in the fact that whereas production is collect ive, appropriation or possession is pri vate. That only in the harmonizing of this contradiction by the substitution of col lective ownership to the private one, lies the remedy. And that it is upon the expropriated proletariat that history Imposes the duty of doing it; the duty of the socialist party being thus to organize and prepare the proletariat for the revolution by which this change will be effected. Has Father Gregory disproved the truth of these premises? Does he deny the fact that modern so ciety is based on a diversity of interest between the laboring class and capital ist class? If so. let us recall some of our algebra. Suppose the number 10 represents the amount of production to be shared by the extant social groups, L e., landowners (rent): capitalist (profits) and workingmen (wages). Suppose again the amount of wages is represented by 2. The' equation will be 10 minus 2 equals i plus 4. If the wages increase, instead of 2 being 4, the equation will now be 111 minus 4 equals 3 plus 3. Rent and profits must decrease, otherwise there is no equation. Is Father Gregory able to prqve the contrary to be true? If the above named premises are true, and I believe they are, until the contrary Is proven, the conclusion is that a revo lution must operate the change. But Father Gregory does not like revolution. Revolution for the reverend gentleman signifies bombs, killing of men, etc, and this hurts his Christian feelings. . And yet it has been time and again said that the word revolution applies to the end of socialism and not to the means used. Father Gregory knows that in the clerical troubles in France in IPOS, the good and faithful French Catholics sistant chief of the BureHU of Naviga tion. He is 57. Captain W. H. H. South erland of the New Jersey was senior naval officer in Dominican waters when the United States a couple of years ago established a fiscal protectorate . over Panto Domingo. He commanded the steamer Eagle in the war with Spain and was with her off the Coast of Cuba.. Captain Ten Eyck D. W. Veeder, of the Alabama, is another of the fleet's big men who are so little known that they Bre not even mentioned In "Who's Who in America," The most exciting incident In his life occurred when the Ashouelot, on which he was serving, was wrecked in the Formosa channel In the 'Ms. Like several of his fellow captains., he played a minor part -in punishing Spain, being aboard the Bancroft. This Rear-Admiral la a Blue Blood. The Rear Admiral commanding.' the third division, Charles M. Thomas, flag ship Minnesota, is a Rittenhouse Square Phlladelphlan, and to any one who knows the Quaker city and its ways that means that he is of the very elect of the coun try's bluebloods. For all that he is a democratic sort of fellow when oH duty. His most Interesting detail to date oc curred when he was sent to Paris in the famous old training ship Constitution -to carry the American exhibit to one of the exhibitions held there. Rear Admiral Charles 8. Sperry, In command of the fourth division, with the Alabama as his flagship, was this coun try's naval representative at the recent peace word-war at The Hague. He was president of the Naval College at New port for sevoral years, and, taken by and large, Is held to be one of the most effl- Men Who Saved the Union LINCOLN" JAY You are familiar with the parts played by Lincoln and Grant, What do you know about the' man who raised the money that saved the Union? Read .the life of The Financier of the Civil War It's history that's new to you. The life-story of the nation and the gentns of finance who raised dollars while Lincoln raised armies. The personal, patriotic and philanthropic sides of the daring financier of a generation ago furnish an interesting comparison to men and methods of to-day. By ELLIS PAXSON OBERHOLTZER Author of "Robert Morris, Patriot and Financier." Just published; tivt volumes; cloth, $7.50 tut. At all boolstlltrs. GEORGE W. JACOBS A CO., Publishers, Philadelphia. Pa, used socialistic violence in order to pre vent the application of the law of sepa ration. Would not Father Gregory In cline to call them socialists? The revolutlonarlsm of socialism lies in the ends to which it tends, 1. e., so cialization of means of production, and not in the means it uses. "The contrast between social reform and social revolution does not consist in I the application of force In the latter," says K. Kautsky. the greatest living Interpreter of Mary. That violence is sometimes necessary for the promotion of liberty is a fact admitted even by non-socialists, but nobody could say that the social revolution will be accompanied by violence. Circumstances decide, and it Is foolish to say that force is abso lutely necessary. And in order to un derstand the modern interpretation of the words quoted from Marx and Engela, let Father Gregory read the introduc tion of the same Engels to Marx's "Class Struggle in France." The same Is the attitude of socialism toward family. Here, too, socialism studies facts and concludes: Facts show that the family has changed with the change of social organization. Modern family Is based upon a contract. Rela tions between sexes are, as Clara Fet kin says, ein sachverheltnlss (relatiqn of objects). The persons unite not in view of what they are, but in view of what they have. Max Nordau, who is not a socialist, calls, therefore, modern mar riage a legalized prostitution. The consequences of these marriages are seen in the numberless divorces and the general discontent of married peo ple. , On the other hand, modern industry disorganizes the worker's family; 5,000. 000 women and nearly 2,000,000 children work in the fields and- factories of the United States Do not all these facts prove the base ness and disorganization of modern family? A change must take ' place. Spencer also admits it. Socialism shows that it is free choice and love and not material Interests that will be at the basis of the future family. Can Father Gregory show me pro miscuity practised by the advocates of free love? Who practised it? Eltsee Reclus, the greatest geographer of the world: Kropotklne. the great buril, dis coverer of radium? Father Gregory does not like socialism, also because it con siders work the basis of exchange value. This theory, first exposed by Smith. Rlcardo and Mill, has resisted every at tack directed against it. It is still an undeniable truth that in taking out of the table I write on the work of the'ear penter or Joiner who made it, and in taking likewise out of the boards of which it was made the work of the man who cut the tree from the woods, making boards of it, what is left? A tree grown without the Intervention of man; a tree, which as long as It Is in the woods has no exchange value. The water of the river, how useful it might be, has no exchange value, so long as no human work Is added to it; but as soon as by human work it is directed through pipes to some place lt acquires an exchange value equal to the human work put in it. lt it be remembered that by work I mean work socially necessary. To discuss the question whether so cialism opposes religion is. as the French say, enforce desportes onvertes. Socialism considers religion as a pri vate affair. But the atheistic assertions of socialists given by Father Gregory proves the contrary. Here is the clue: Socialism opposes th church (church i Is something different from religion) because the church has been the Instrument by which rulers have kept the people In subjection. It opposes religion because it is thoroughly scientific, and It has been said. "A chaque pas que la science fait en avant la religian fait un en arviere." (With every step science makes forwards, re ligion makes one backwards.) As long as science denies or doubts the alleged truths of religion, socialism, or rather the socialists, will do the same, as noth ing can compel them to hide the truth. These are the remarks I had to make about Father Gregory's criticism of so cialism, of that scientific doctrine, that furnishes the best Interpretation of mod ern society: of that theory which teaches not a fictitious but the real brotherhood of men, based on community of interests; of that movement which strives to make the old Latin slogan: "Solus populi su prema lex esto" a' realty. cient officers In the Navy. He attained the grade of captain In 1900. These, then, .are the "young mn" to whom President Roosevelt, ns Commander-in-Chief of the Army and the Navy of the United States of America, Is in trusting the care of the real Navy of the Nation. Though they are young men. most of them have been in training pretty much the world over since th middle "60s, and a big majority of them have seen fighting here and there, hut principally in the Spanish-American War. Those who have been given opportunity to display grit and fighting blood never have failed to do so; and each and every one has stood true In emergencies. They now are about to be tried in a manner absolutely unique In the history of our : Navy. And It may be that when they have brought the fleet safe to its ' Pa cific destination they will then be told to go back to the Atlantic by way of Europe. That Is a reasonable probability, and that would be a far greater test for officers and men than the one they are to begin tomorrow that the Navy may . become conversant with our home sea on the west as well as the home sea ' that leaves our Eastern shores. (Copyright, 1907. by Dexter Marshall.) . How We Live Now. Birmingham (Ala.) Age-Herald. Pierced by tbe Pin Trust, Chilled by the Ice Trust. Roasted by the Coal Trust, Soaked by the Soap Trust. Doped by tha Drug Trusty (W)rapped by the Paper 'A'ruat, Bullied by the Beef Trust, Lighted by the Oil Trust, Squeezed by the Corset Trust, Soured by the Pickle Trust. GRANT COOKS