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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, MAY 31, 1903. 11. star II VCt-' I . v C Jbe Golden Rose, by Amelia Rives. Price. 1.:. Harper db Brother New York City. Near the edge of a leafy lane and bor dering on an orchard where birds sang joyously in the Summer sunshine, lived a colony of roses whose nodding heads gave a perfume which was described as "the breath of the Lord." And the woman who ruled over these roses was what the world cruelly call an old maid. Day after day she lived for her roses ai.d seemed content to lead the flower life. She and her little maid servant said in their innocence: "Surely this Is heaven. There's no man to bother us." But in the fullness of time the woman of the garden began to long for more human society and one morning she hor rified her maid-of-all-work by placing a man's hat on the tiny rack in the hall way of her house and a man's walking stick in the umbrella stand. "The hat and walking cane will give a certain re spectability and completeness to the house," the flower woman told her lit tle maid. The serpent had entered Its Ilden. This Is exactly the awkward situation In which the heroine of "'The Golden Hose finds herself. She believes In a new psychology of love that can have no physical fulfillment, forgetting that we are creatures of passion, flesh and blood. It Is written In Genesis: 'Therefore shall a man leave bis father and his mother, end shall cleave unto his wife; and they shall be one flesh." But In the telling of her story Amelia Rives who is also known as the Princess Troubetzkoy, the author of "The Quick and the Dead" has written a delicate, poetic fancy that holds the patient breathless with intensity. One moment the book Is chaste ice, and the next flaming Are. Its beauty of language In depicting ecstatic passion lifts It from common ground to ether. Dull words glow with the divine fire of poetry. Really the best and sanest story bearing the name of Amelia Rives as author. - The central figure in thjs psychology of love Is Mrs. Meraud Cabell, a young widow who has endured the misery of an unhappy marriage. Tp her compan ion. Miss Anlce Mayo, the widow con fesses: How strange, after all I've been through! Vet It's there the girl feeling, 1 mean. I'm like a rose cut back to the roots. I'm all fresh little twigs and leaves and buds oh. but It's different. This pear that I should ever know peace. That I should have given up all thought of love a great love be tween man and woman I mean and yet bn happy golden happy. My kind of lovs doesn't exlut In this world. In some other. 'es I know that, I remember it. But here? No . . . I tell you It doesn't exist on this earth. Men don't want It: some women, maybe. What does love on this earth lead to? Always the same end and it is an end. It ends all the beauty, all the dream, all the mystery. Why, what men call love' on this eaVth It's Just a hungrlness. My lilnd of love Is a thirst. . . . What peo ple call the fulfillment of love means love's death. "I'nder every flower Is coiled a ser pent" that Is it. Under every flower of that human love Is colled a serpent. I was In love with "him" and In that love were all the dreams that you ever dreamed. Now 1 am awake. This was the mental condition of Mrs. Cabell before she makes the acquain tance in the second chapter of Steven Gordon Trafford. a young man of 30. a sort of cousin of hers who called sud denly at her house, saying that he Is an historian and wishes to write a history I of that part of Virginia where Mrs. Ca bell's estate is located- The property Is known as the Klngsweather estate. It had been a royal grant to the Cabclls and had never been bought or sold. Its llrst owner had named it in honor of I Charles II, who had been "le beau temps" j inr tne uaoeii family, very little Is men tioned in the novel about Mrs. Cabell's departed husband out of sight, out of mind. On page 65 is a reference to Mr. Cabell having been appointed Minister to England. Mrs. Cabell Is silly In her simplicity. Phe has a glowing, daszllng pallor, and when she blushes Instead of blushing red. as any other woman would this creature of pure Ice blushes "a dazsling flame white." Her physician. Dr. Rob ert Dundas. had warned her that she w'hs subject to heart disease. She loves animals so much that sho can't imagine eating them. "Why should I," she asks, "munch lit tle pieces of my sister the hen, or my brother the lamb, as St. Francis would liave said?" She believes In reincarna tion and thinks we have all lived before often and shall live again on this earth "until we conquer once for all; until we reach the end of that 'ancient, narrow path, stretching far away, as hard to tread as the edge of a raior.' " She likes Trafford because he is what she calls "pure" and "clean of mind and body. Pure as the 'Knights of the Qrall' under stand purity." It ultimately dawned on her that Traf ford lived 12 miles away, and as she suddenly discovered that she was lonely, she Invited him to be the guest of her self and Miss Mayo. Trafford and Me raud have many talks in a charming garden that is an exotlo dream. Dr. Dundas, however, makes fun of Widow Mciaud's theory of platonlc affection, and says: Po you think that because she looks and feels and acts like an angel that Maraud is an angel? She's a human being. I can tell vnu. in the most beautiful sense of tha word. That heart of hers, weak or strong, pumps red. human blood and It's ss big as the world and has the needs of the world. to you think that nature will let such a being aa that continue to live proud lywithout any throes or Interruptions, tha ascetic, bookbound. solitary, unnatural yes. unnatural life that she has been leading here for five years? Of course when Mrs. Cabell and Traf ford discovered that they loved each other, their lovemaklng wasn't of the common sort. It suggested angels' wings and icebergs. "When you look at me like that." she said to him, "as you are looking now. I seem to be about to re member something to remember you. I think long ago somewhere. It was the same no. not quite the same there. It has gone now, but I've felt it once or twice before. I wonder what that place was? I wonder what we were doing to gether that long, long while ago?" Like a flash, the two know that they love each other and they walk forward "into the warm dark, hand locked in hand, like two bewildered children fleeing from some vague shape in a fearful house." Trafford kisses her and she speaks of h.iving "hurt him" and of the love that has been "desecrated." But she la sure 3 in s - r f ! she can never marry him, and that she will never marry again. Trafford as sures her that there is no passion in his love for her and swears It is more of the spirit than of the flesh. She answers: Listen and I will tell you what It is.you have done for me. I had a dear and won derful friend ooce and when she lay dying she said many beautiful things. . . and among them: "Always the painted ap ple, never the golden rose." I said: "Gen evieve, who aald that? Rosettl?" And she smiled and said, "No. Genevieve." And a little while after aha died. And then, later, when when I had lived more, 1 felt that I knew what she meant- But, oh! tonight you have given me the golden rose. Such bliss could not last. Trafford finds that, according to a promise he had made to a friend, he must pass the Win ter In India, and the lovers part for the time being, vowing to live on each other's letters, and swearing eternal de votion. , Then human frailty crept In. Away from Meraud's physical presence, Traf ford found that he was human enough to let bis love Blacken for so ethereal a being. Months later, he suddenly returns to Now York and the lovers accidentally meet on electric-biasing Broadway. The fair widow Instinctively knows that the love-light has died In Trafofrds" eyes: And a sort of wild pity came over her for him only for him. the pity we feal for soma one who has loved fair colors and all the lovely pageantry of form, and who haa been stricken suddenly with bltndnessu TpT she knew In that moment that the wonder, the splendor of a great passion had dimmed Into tha commonplace for him, had flick ered and died down and left him .In the graynesa of every day. The mystery of her nature had lost jta allurement as of the land beyond the lightning and only a chill void inclosed- blm. It Is a relief to know that this oddly assorted couple part. There is nothing so vulgar as the hint of even a tragedy. They just pass. They typify an Ameri can Beauty rose which has been trans planted from its native earth and sud denly burled In a "bed of concrete. A History of the I'nited States and Its People. By Professor ISIroy McKendree Avery. Volume IV. Illustrated. The Bur rows Brothers Company, Cleveland, O. This, the fourth volume of an historical series promising to conclude with the . 15th, groups the causes and complaints which eventually led to the American Revolution. In the third volume, the author traced the continued amd intensi fying conflict between prerogative and popular rights in the English colonies In this country; and In the present volume, enough Is shown to demonstrate that the American Revolution was in the people's blood, and that the Iniquitous stamp act and George III were only Irritants that hastened the birth of the Republic. I Appropriately enough, on opening this ; handsome volume one meets with a por trait of Benjamin Franklin, a reproduc tion from the original painting by Joseph j Slfrede Duplessis, in the Corocoran Art Gallery, Washington, D. C, and the ; Franklin signature is from an autograph j letter in the library of Congress. A perfect wealth of valuable maps, re- I productions of historical documents, por- traits, etc., delights the student, and he instinctively feels that such information and especially the liberal, scnoiariy in terpretation of history, are met with no where else. "Avery" is the open door. For Instance, the illustrations include: Letter to Sir William Pepperrell, from the Massachusetts General Court, dated December 24, 174S. congratulating him on the capture . of Louuburg; Massachusetts three-penny bill. : 17DO: manuscript declaration of war against tha Penobscot and other Indians by Governor j Bennlng Wentworth. of New Hampshire, i 174.; the royal armet. probably painted about 1724; seal of King's College. 1754 to 177S; crown on flagstaff of King's College (Colum bia University): seal of Princeton University; title page of "Poor Richard's Almanac." 1733; manuscript of Indian treaty, 1748; relics of Maryland Palatine; view of Baltimore, Md., 1752; North Carolina nine-shilling proclama tion money: facsimile of One of the lead platea burled by Celeron de Bienville; silver bowl used at christening of George Wash ington; plan of Fort Duquesne; 6ignaturea of the members of the Albany, N. T. conven tion, 1754; page from Braddock's order book. In Washington's handwriting; view of Fort Niagara; plan of the battle of- Lake George: seal of Nova Scotia at tha time of George II; uniform of a French soldier. 1765, in colors; view of Loulsburg during the selge of 1758; Forbes' order appointing Washing ton president of a general court martial, the taking of Q' Bbec; portrait of James Wolfe; house In which Montcalm died: "Montreal taken" medal. 1700: George UI; facsimile map of Detroit River. 1T4; redoubt at Pittsburg; medal presented to Indian chiefs at .the treaty of 1764, after the Pontlao conspiracy, etc. The special historical period treated be longs to the colonial times of 1745-1764. The volume, of J97 pages, bears the marks of scholarship, accuracy, and wise discrim ination, and at the top of each page Is the year about which the historian writes. This plan saves confusion. Nothing Is so exasperating to the reader as to meet with histories which mention a jumble of different months and force one to go back several pages to hunt for the year in which the events referred to happened. Professor Avery's history Is free from this. It leads, and Is a remarkable wit ness to the life work of Us author. Physical Geography, by Dr. M. F. Maury and Dr. Frederic William Simonds. Illus trated. $1.20. The American Book Com pany, New York City. A generation of teachers has stamped approval on the MauryePhyslcal Geog raphy, and mainly because of the ad vances in recent years of physiographic science. Professor Slmonds, head of the department of geology In the Univer sity of Texas, haa thoroughly modern ized the text of the book, revising and to a large extent rewriting the entire; work. It is, so to speak, brought up to date. For Instance, the picture oppo site the "title pape represents the erup tion of Vesuvius in April. 1906. The illustrations are unusually good. Poems, by Robert Underwood Johnson. The Century Company, Naw York City. Many of the poems gathered together In this volume have been favorites since they originally appeared In maga slnes, and it is a pleasure to have them In a permanent collection. The verses are marked by brightness, quaint senti ment and ringing optimism, although Mr. Johnson sometimes criticises life and leaves you wondering. His style, is of the scholarly, American type, that leaves an Impression for good Mr. Johnson's book of poems Is is sued by the Century Company, on the completion of his 35th year of service with the magazine now known and universally admired as the Century, -aOe." 4 v v. JS "O and he has been Its associate editor since 1881. It is also notable that his first poem. TTo Ralph Waldo Emerson, on the 'Death of Garfield," was the last accepted by Dr. J. G. Holland for the magazine. The poems I like best in this coflec tion are:. "An English Mother," "The Welcome of Our Tears," "Dewey at Manila." "Hands Across the Sea," "Apostrophe to Greece." "An Irish Love Song" and "On" a Candidate Accused of Youth." These latter verses are writ ten with piophetic fire, and describe the Theodore Roosevelt of the year 188C. I give two of the three verses, to present an idea of Mr. Johnson's earlier literary style: "Too young." dr they call him? Wljo say It? Not they Who have felt his hard stroke In the civic affray. When eiders, wnom veteran fighters had taught Till they knew all the rules bj:" which battles are fought. Fumbled weakly with weapons bis foresight naa sougnt. see. Yea, tha strength of the arm la tbs strength of its use. Not its years; and when fighting la on, better chooea Not the rust-eaten sword from the library wall. But tha new blade that leaps in its sheath at the call. Ask tha foe by which weapon he fears most to lain The Cltr of neHiaht. bv Elizabeth Miller. The Bobs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis. Ind. It is A. D. 70. Titus and his legions storming the . holy City of Jerusalem. Mailed Jews and Romans In blazing brass, as they rush Into the fight that was to decide the fate of the historic empire whose history is entwined with the names of ' Moses, David, Solomon and the Nazarene these are the principal word pictures of this kaleidoscopic novel notable among , literary wares of the spring. Its canvas is huge and Intensity of situ ation striking, while the novelist only errs in want of concentration. The tplen dor of Orientalism favorably IrnDresses the reader, who Is led on and on, by the sweep of a powerful imagination. The story ought to specially appeal to Sunday school folks. In addition to the hardened novel expert. The heroine was "tall and slender, sup ple and alive. About her hips was knot ted a silken scarf of red and white and green, with long, undulant fringes that aaaea to the lithe grace in her move ments. Under it was a glistening arar ment of silver tissue that reached to the small ankles laced about by the ribbons or white sandals. In those full, tender Hps. in the slope of those black, silken brows, in the sparkling behind the dusky, slumbrous eyes, there was all the fire and generosity and limitless charm that should make her lover's world a place of ueugnt. ana periume and music." Quite a different picture from our mod ern, chewing-gum girl. Two ward pictures of the Emperor Ti tus arrest attention, the first being as a shepherd boy eees the haughty Roman, on a Syrian plain: "It was a young face, tanned by the sun of Alexandria but bright with an emana tion of light that somehow-was made tang ible bv the flash nf hi, aB w . ... T-. 8IYl,,he 'Darkle of his lively eyes. For a "Posed to the open air and the .!5ttn.. "fe of ,he cmp. and burdened with the grave task of subduing a desper ate nation, he was free from disfigurements. His brows were knitted aa If to give his full soft eyes protection, and the frown, with the laughing cut of his youthful Hps, gave his face a quizzical expression that was entirely winning. In countenance and figure he was handsome, refined and thor oughly Roman. The little shepherd' was won to him instantly. Without knowing that the world from one border to the other had already named this charming young Roman the Darling of Mankind, the little shepherd, had Ills Hps been shaped to poetry, would have called him that." The other picture of Titus, as he ap peared to Jews, gazing at him from Jeru salem's walls: "There a solitary borseman rode. Not a scale of armor was upon his horse; not a weapon, not even a shleM depended from his harness. His head was uncovered and a sheeny purple fillet showed In the tum bled, dusty black hair. There was no guard on the hand that held the bridle: the cloak that floated from his shoulders was white wool; the tunic was the simple light garment that soldiers usually wear under armor; the shoes alone were mailed It seemed that the young Roman had stripped off his helmet, breastplate and greaves to ride less encumbered or to ap pear less warlike. But the Jews who looked at him understood. Here was Titus come In peace!" Better -.descriptive-writing Is met with in three paragraphs which deal with the siege of Jerusalem and the ultimate vic tory of Titus: "She saw the ascending streets of Zlon and the tail fortifications mounting- the heights within tha city's limits. There she eaw the flash of swords, swung afar off. speara brandished and tha running hither and thither of ..defenders on the wall. Below she saw the remote constrict ed passages between rows of desolate houses, movlnr with people, sounding with clamor. There she aaw combats, terrible scenes of frenzy, deatha and unnamable horrors: starvelings gnawing their nails; shadows of Infants pressed to hollow bos oms; old men too weak to walk that went on hands and knees; young men and young women In rags that failed to cover them and wandering skeletons screaming 'Woe!' "Meanwhile huge stones mounted over the walla and fell within the city; three great towers planted beyond the walls out of range of the Jewish engines and equipped with superior machines, were ateadlly devastating the 'entire quarter near which they were erected. Here two thirds of the forces of Jerusalem were concentrated In a vain effort to resist the dire inroads of these effective englnea. Here, the Maccabee and his Gibborlm stood shoulder to shoulder with the Idu means and fanatics of Simon and John, and here the ha!f-mad defenders awak ened at last to the fact that only divine interference could save the city against Roma. - "In the aouth and the east, conflagra tions roared and crackled, where burning oil had been scattered over some remain ing structures near the walla When a great ram began its thunder somewhere near the sheep Gate, there came a hollow booming noise of deafening volume from the charnel pits outside the walls, and a black cloud of Incredible depth soared us Into the skies." Just Friends, by Mary Ives Todd. Calkins A Conuiany, New York City. Time now looks more kindly on the memory of the English-American, Thom as Paine, once called atheist, and by many thinkers ha is revered aa having possessed the giant Intellect that started the popular agitation culminating In the American Revolution. He fought under Washington, and was the friend of liberty as he saw it. and of women and animals. A legend remains that Paine wrote a part of the Declaration of Independence -a statement which has been as often de nied as affirmed. It Is noteworthy also that Paine's will closed with these words: "I die in perfect composure and resigna tion to the will of my creator God." This book of 150 pages purports to be largely- an exposition af Painea rather loose ideas concerning the laxity of the marriage relation, and the telling Is often weakly sentimental, approaching to ab surdity. At other times poetic ideas appear clothed In beauty of sentiment, and Interest deepens to read to the last what the author is to evolve to end her plea. The book is largely conversational carried on by a hoary old sinner, Mr. Smith, who once unhappily married a woman and then because of "liberty" without the formality of divorcing his wife, lived with another woman until she died; and a Mrs. Wells, one of the nu merous runaway wives of a Mormon elder. . The talks between these two apostles of freak love take place In Italy, and every time Mr. Smith makes an heroic speech he usually stands beside a statue. Mr. Smith and Mrs. Wells tell each other of their "past." over which chloride of lime ought mercifully to be spread, and, although they love each other, they agree that they will be "Just friends." For which the reader is thankful. High-flown ideas abound in the book, which is finely printed and adorned with superior portraits of Thomas Paine, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln and Ralph Waldo Em erson. Paine Is spoken of as the "apostle of common sense." What a pity there isn't more of that scares article In this Btory! . The Adventures of Charles Edward, by Harrison Rhodes. Illustrated. SI. 50. Lit tle, Brown A Company, Boston, Mass. Charles Edward Austin, the idle-rich American young man who lived on papa's money, and who jnarrfed Lady Angela Farnston, because he had nerve. Have you heard of them? This new edition of a popular society story will prove a fit ting medium. It's Just the Summer book to take with you on a holiday trip to kill time. The black and white Illustrations are by Penrhyn Staniaws. u 1. M. QUENTIN. IN LIBRARY AND WORK SHOP. Th half-torve of Blatr Hall. Princeton University, New Jereey, shown on this book pa fro la taken from a picture shown In John Corbln's new book, ,WhIcn College for the Boy?" recently reviewed In The Oregonlan, . Professor Stevens, of Annapol!, "haa writ ten "The Story of theSubmarine' for an early number of St. Nicholas, to be fol lowed in the next Issue by A.' W. Jlolker's account of "The Under-Seas bailor and His Boat," both, articles to hive a number of picture. Am president of the British Board of Trade, Winston Churchill, who has only a modest private income, earns a salary of $23i.04)0 per annum. He make a good deal by M writings and received $40,000 for the biography of his father, Xxrd Randolph Churchill. It is suggested by the Topeka (Kan.) Journal that as a companion book to "A Gentleman From Indiana.," it Is up to Booth Tarkington or someone else to write one called "A Perfect Iay From Indiana." The reason ia considered to be that Mrs. Belle Gunness has furnished the material for a stirring novel of this ort. Miss Alire Fletcher, whose little book on "Indian Story and Song." published a short time ago, .was the first to popularize the music of the Omahas and other Western tribe, is now a part of her work at the Bureau of Ethnology In Washington, D. C. making a test of the phonograph as a means of securing the most complete record pos sible of the vanishing melodies of the abo rigines. Chatto & Winflus. London, are now pub lishers of "The Book of Elisahethan Verse," chosen and edited by- William Stanley Bralthwalte, the Boston poet, and published In this country by Small. Maynard fe Co. The literary critic of The Queen says of it: "This book i as essential to keep In one's reference bookcase as the Golden Treasury Itself; it is a regular encyclopedia of the Elirabetnans," Mrs. Humphry Ward at a women's lunch eon in New York eatd of the literary style of a popular novelist: "It Is an insane style. it makes me think of the school pirl novelist who wrote: 'He sprang ar dently forward, but a look of soft entreaty from one of Pearls eyes and a glance of warning darted from the other in the di rection of her aunt forced him regretfully back into his chair." While Mrs. Humphry Ward was In Amer ica there took place in London the produc tion of the re-dramatlzed "Marriage of Wil liam Ashe." The version was as different from the one produced in America as two versions of the same book could very well be. a notable difference being the much desired happy ending. The new play was accounted a great success. Mrs. Ward her self collaborated with Miss Margarej. Mayo in Its dramatization. s Marion Beve ridge Lee has written In "Barselma's Kiss" a strong story of love and hate around the novel Idea of a pre mature burial. It is a question thnt is agi tating medical and legal minds just now to a marked degree. Massachusetts has a bill before the Legislature to enforce a law of practical tests on a body before assign ing it to the grave. But, despite her vital, central question, Miss Lee handles the story with a stir and vim that are refreshing, and the tale brims over with humor. "The Enchanted- Castle. a new Juvenile story, comes already recommended as being by the author of "The Wouldbegoods." E. Nesblt Bland. It 1 a pure fairy tale, as full of quaint impossibilities as "Peter Pan." The plot turns upon the discovery of a magic wlshlnjc-rlng," and forthwith breath less .adventures follow, until all ends hap pily. "The Enchanted Castle" possesses, In a very high degree, the true child quality. and the true a ream quality, ana tne oldsters will enjoy It quite as heartily as will the children. American literature has been almost bar ren' of reminiscences of artists, particularly artists of the prevailing scnool. No msn has had a wider circle of friends than Will H. Low, who will soon begin articles on "A Chronicle of Friendships," In which al ths charm of student life in Paris will be pic tured, not as fiction but as fact. In which the peal characters are men like Wyatt Eaton, Augustus Salnt-Gaudens, Robert Louts Stevenson, Theodore Robinson, and great Frenchmen such, as Millet and Caro-lus-Duran, with many comments on. life and art to adorn the pages. - Ths new volume -by Charles A. Conant Just published under the title "The Princi ples of Banking" Is directly In line with the call for books on financial subjects created by ths recent disturbance in banks and trust companies. Th origin of crises ana tne management oc crises are c no. piers likewise bearing on banking problems, and based on the author's "The Principles of Money and Banking," from which this new book has been adapted. Mr. Conant has a reputation which is international, and has served on the monetary commissions both of ths Philippines and Mexico. s There will be brought out in few days a new Western novel. "The Jaymakers." John A. Martin, of Pueblo, Colo., ia the author. The story deals with the "boom days" on the plains, when men staked out and fought for towns on ths prairies just as they stake out and fight for mines in the mountains. The author knows his types thoroughly and so graphically has he caught the atmosphere surrounding them that one can almost hear the clink of the boot-spur and the singing hiss of the lassoo, as well as the drawling, musical suavity of voice, associated with these grim, picturesque men. see Fred M. White, the author of "The Crim son Blind," etc.. Is stated to be the most popular writer of serial stories In England toaay. mis American auaience is steadily growing larger, and there will be many eager readers to greet his new mystery story. "The Five Knots." The latter de scribes the attempts of two Malays to pro cure a vast, hiddn treasure from a wealthy London shipowner, and their strange prac tices upon him oy means or the "blue ter ror" and a string with five knots. This story has great originality in plot, and is unusually fertile in interesting and unique situations. Jesse W- Weik, one of the co-authors of Herndon it WIk"s "Life of Lincoln," has written for the June Century the story of Lincoln's vote for Vice-President In the Philadelphia convention of 1856s quoting a hitherto unpublished letter of W. B. Ar cher, the man who, It appears. Is entitled to the credit of first suggesting Mr. Lincoln for the office. Mr. Lincoln was not in Philadelphia at the time, but was In Illi nois following Judge Davis around tha clr Entered m 2ad CU MW Matter OUR PRESIDENTIAL PLATFORM W are th origlnar Prohibition. Istt Our wife Is prohibited from Going: anything except housework! We sold our country place because the air was so Intoxicating 1 We refuse to wear cotton because' of the cotton gin! Fair banks take notice! We challenge all rival candidates to be more In favor of an elastic currency than we are! When we are elected we shall pass a law pro viding for the immediate minting of suspenders! Gown with govern ment by injunction! The day we are Inaugurated we will take the crown of thorns from labor's & nrnw o n n nnt it m m v . ital's chair. Bryan take notice! Copyright Infringers take notice! Our trade marks aio: Equal Justice for All! A 8quare Deal! This Broad Land of Ours! Malefactors of Great Wealth! Take notice! Consumers, accept no substitutes! Down with do mination by the courts! Whn we are President they will have to hand down decisions that will . please both sides! Tours for Peace. Progress and Prosperity! No campaign promise is genuine without our signature in fac simile! cuit. and Mr. Welk quotes him as say lnr, rather ungrammatically, when told that he had received 110 votes for Vice-President: "Surely it aint me; there's another (treat man named Lincoln down In Massachusetts. I reckon it's him." s Mary Austin Is a writer who Is becoming known for a gilt for clever phrasing which Is not of the "smart" order, but rather simple, and of a sort , ordinarily heard among people one meets. "Santa. Lucia" owes much of the discussion which rather suddenly followed its recent publication by the Harpers to the quality of saying; wise things briskly. "An unsuitable marriage Is like a mended teacup. It can be put to gether so it looks well from the outside, but It never holds tea," says one woman, sagely. "A wonderful woman to talk to," remarks another character, plainly a man. "I don't suppose she understands half I say when I get going about my work, but I understand It better myself afterward." Referring to the recent noteworthy article In Harper's, In which Miss Carolina Tlck nor showed that George Washington was a direct descendant of King Edward I., of Kngland, & correspondent of the same mag azine, in an interesting letter printed In the current issue, asserts that Washington was a direct descendant of still another King Henry I., of France. The line of descent is through John de Sutton, Baron of Dudley and son of John de Sutton and Margery de Someri. heiress of Barony of Dudley. This Margery de Someri was a direct descendant of Lady Isabel, wife of the Earl of MUlsnt and Leicester and daughter of Hugh ths Great, Count de Valrnandois, who was son of Henry I., King of France, and his wife Anne of Russia. The Bible as a standard for the correct use of words has been urged upon readers by Professor Lounsbury, of Yale, writing in the June Harper's. "Make up your mind," says Professor Lounsbury, "that the Bible is a guide to be followed grammatically as much as it is morally. The languags of our version belongs to the loth century. It, therefore, naturally contains expressions which, though proper at that time, are not in accord with the common usage of our day. When it was originally translated, "which" was generally the relative pro noun referring to persons. Hence, we say, "Our Father 'which art In hsaven." More than this: the subtle distinction found in the employment of "shall'- and "will" had not then become established in ths lan guage. Bur these do not affect ths correct ness of its procedure In regard to expres sions still met with everywhere. In such cases accept its authority without question, and conform your practice to It." see The Popular Magaslne for June opens with a complet novel, "My Lord of ths Pillagers," by Francis Lynde, author of "The Taming of Red Butte Western," etc. It is filled with rapidly shifting scenes and Intensely dramatic situations. The main In terest lies in the efforts of the hero to pre vent the despoliation of forest reserves by an organized band of lumber thleves.i "How He Beoame a Ballplayer by W. B. M. Ferguson, is the unvarnished account of ths supposed formation of the greatest baseball nine the world has ever known. In "$1000 Worth of Violets," Charles Prescott Fuller tells of a man whs came to New York with plenty of money and nothing to do. He wanted adventure. He found It. Ralph D. Paine's great- serial. "The WlM Man of Jer sey," gets even runnier as it proceeds. sir. Paine is well known from his stories ia EcTlbnars and other leading periodicals. "No Margin," by Harold C. Burr. Is the Inside story of a little Wall street game, see Few more dramatically thought out situa tions could be imagined thas that which Frederick A. Ray so graphically pictures In one chapter of his latest book. "The Devil Worshipper.' It is a love scene, played under the protecting base of a huge bronze idol, by a Christian maid and man, while the shouts of ths devil worshippers ring. In their ears as they pay homage to this their god. Around them are the smok ing ruins and awful devastation of the city; the conflagration gradually creeping upon them, announced by the volumes of sulphur and f lame-tongded smoke, belched forth from the cone of the burning Mount Pelee. Mr. Ray Is probably the first author to lay a -heart drama In such an unique setting, and, needless to say, has done the task well. "The Devil Worshipper" handles be sides, as its title would Imply, one of ths most novel and interesting sects of occult ism. A description of the rites of "Satan Ism" during the burning of Martinique is marvelousiy written. e No one is likely to stand up for the abso lute linguistic inspiration of our transla tion of the Bible. There are unquestionably grammatical faults in It, though the num ber of these Is far fewer than Is often as serted, remarks Professor Lounsbury In Har per's. The place In our version where par ticular error is found Is In those passages of the gospels where Christ Is represented as asking the opinion of his disciples as to the view entertained of him, by people In general and by themselves in particular. "Whom do men say that I am?" is the question as It appears in Matthew. This may be taken as the representative of all the six Instances of the occurrence of the construction. Its employment was due to ao Inadvertence. It Is essentially the same In the account as found in each of the first three gospels. ... It would never be made If one simple fact were kept In mind: The very "to be" takes the same case after It as before It. If one of the finite tenses be used, both the subject and the subject predicate are necessarily In the nominative. If it be the Infinitive which is employed. It Is the accusative that must appear In both fy Under fS Royal pCEQ3 Patronage 5 MAY 31. 1908- THE FATAL EGG; or, A WOEFUL WOOING ' CHAPTER VI. Meantime there was Joy and evil congratulation among the low browed financiers and burly capitalists who made the United States unsafe Through all their dens and lairs had gone the news of the President's unsuccessful hunt for the railroad rebate. Many toasts were drunk in the secret boosing kens of preda tory wealth to the Dukees of Arfenarf. ia me wnite House there was deep dejection Day after day the President galloped a few hundred miles to search for the - worn to the shadow of a sky scraper wm wusiuviiufi iu uoBvwati vxpeaieui jl uecoming speechless! Count of Loeb. "Tell the caller it was Then his eye alit on the name! wita tremoang legs he ran to the Throne Room and uttered thai .inri. word "Saved!" The President dropped a con-tressmln "'"A1? sprang up. ' uwr At this terrible moment the door opened and disclosed the forms of fufvert Model- 6' 7 Chauffeur Md Willi. Colander the beauU- 'Eggs "ln4 Ulem !m tt" Seoretrr Hflatfl-r fliiaan TT"ti H Iv. KmVa - , "j . and beautiful as ever, the Dukess of SneerlnK coDloualr. nho ' InnVoH her. Too clearly' she saw that she her bosom she drew forth the rn dent's feet. "Take It!" aha irlsil In inn. a Arfenarf knows how to escape your .SS," , i ,!r . 5 a Derore "u wj. witn me I She iumDed Into the air And rsma nixed aa the wslUnnwn Hull h,, I . - - ' - -" ins uuKess oi Arcenan naa exploded! The rent rtt nnr simnl. t.u im 4i t.u i . ... 7 ring-leaders to Philadelphia for Hf Terror-atrlr.knii a t thto . IlLvnttAn rain. nA HAtfam. V. . --- , - h TaSA(1UH C Y7 J W.a. , ' - , 7w ft,. "na YV1"1 the world In thr- WHaVk,""" rrX.r"L.?-l..""aeymoon "P ; . . """"""" took up their residence in New York. one or tne prettiest sights in see Mr. and Mrs. Cnlanriar iinnrf 7 , .w.ii ic7 J- uu VCIBU with diamonds, speed down Fifth Avenue In their Smello- "uj wuiie Denina mem automobiles each containing a Colander. THS ENDJ Instances, or, to adopt English grammatical terminology, the objective No one would think of asking such a question as "Whom am I?" Yet It Is a thing of this very sort which Is done In the passage quoted from Matthew; and it Js done because the two subjects had been separated by an interven ing verb. On the other hand. It would have been grammatically correct, even If rather unusual, to put the question in this form: "Whom do men say me to be?' "I know with .certainty that in dying I shall be- happy and that I shall enter a world more real," said Tolstoi recently In summing up bis anticipation of death to a friend who congratulated him upon his approaching 90th birthday. Elsewhere, aa quoted in Helen Phllbrook Patten's "Inti mations of Immortality," an anthology of the comments of thinkers of ancient and modern times on the subject of life after death, the Russian phllosopner has said: "Men who have renounced their individual happiness never doubt their immortality. Christ knew that he would continue to live after death because he had already entered into the true life which cannot cease. He j lived even then In the rays of that other center of life toward -which he was advanc ' Ing, and he saw them reflected on those ' who stood around him. And this every ; man who renounces his own good beholds, i he passes In this life Into a new relation Colonel Baker Continued In considering- and portraying; the de lights and charms of peace, he was not surpassed, but Senator Baker showed that those who then were clamoring; for this boon had precipitated war by firing- upon the flag- of their country, and were now trampling- that flag- un der foot. He depicted the evils that must come from a divided country. In one-half of which the flag under whose folds we had gained so much glory would be excluded, and declared that an Inglorious peace would be far more disastrous than the horrors of war, however much In blood and treas ure It might coat. The passage which most struck me, and which Impressed me to such a de gree that it can never be effaced from my memory, was what follows. It now seems prophetic. After exclaiming, "Do not make peace until the glory of the American flag shall be Its own defense," he con tinued: "I have heard It said that there was a time In Ireland I believe It to be a myth, but It Is said that there was a time in Ireland when a virgin, alone, unguarded, could go through all Its length and breadth with a crown upon her head and gold ir vsae In hr hand, nnd no man dis- Books Added to Library Ths following books St the Publlo Library will go Into circulation June i. Blocraphi'. All Insrhsra. Diary: ad. by H. Alllnrhsm ana D. Radford. 190S. McLoufhltn. Dr. John McLouchlin, the Father of Oraron; by B. V. O'Hara. 1008. Tuttla. Rmlnlcnca of a missionary bishop. 1900. Description and Travel. Jsrrold. Hlfhwaya and byways In Kent. 1807. Fain. JTbs greater America. 1007, ' FlettOB. Bearh. The barrier. Dawson. A prophet In Babylon. Hall. Tha Inward usht. pyle. Rajactad of man. 'Ward. Usht of tha world. - Fine Arts. Bach. Piano compositions; ed. by Ebtn err Prout. 190T Back. Art principles in portrait photog raphy; composition. treatment of back grounds and tha nroeaases involved la manipulates the plate. 1907. Bnsba. Successful entertalnmenta 1007. Gibson. Tha romance of modern photog raphy; its discovery and Its achievement. 1U?lolme. ed. The gardens of England. l9Long. Medals of the Baltlsh navy and how they ware won. 1806. Paderewskl. Ignaa Jaa Paderewski; by B. A Bausban. 1008. Science. Coulter. A text-book of 'botany for sec ondary schools. 10O7. Johnson. Tha theory and practice of sur veying. Ed. 16. rev. 1907. Macdougal. Elementary plant physiology. 1006. Marshall A Greenly. Flying machines, n. d. History. Ady. History of Milan under the Sforza. 1907. Markham. History of Peru. 1S!)2. widney. Race life of the Aryan peoples. 1807. literature. Booth. A practical guide for authors io PA SUNSHINE SOCIETY em trail. Evening after eve-Cf . . . w utt. .loij ui wmr was I and the United States Senate 2I my mistake," he said TmhanTcUr mecnanicauy. o State rolling a barrel .marked .v. m . uu ui out stepped, hauehtr Arfenarf! . . r ,. n.i. . coul l Jif!f r.w .. .v." r"r?,n. ml.Q . " l .au v...i .m . vengeance!" Dukess of theT cou:l tP her, she had suck"" uie niiro-giycerlne bens shall Del Hawr wift, v -. . , 1 t " uiuuieat lu sound of wiu. Armeo wun tne railroAAX "ua 8X116(1 thV ..-i.v viuiLumciii ui o in era gave up toelr - jtt . . . uimn wnicn soon proved fatal . . colander were married with in! u uiiar squaaron, the Metropolis is to are fourteen little Mrs. Colander with the world for which there is no death, and this experience gives him an immovable faith In tho stability. Immortality and eter nal growth of life." ess John Macy. author of the latest biography J or ttugar Allan poe, says rranmy tnat as a , result of several years' study of the life of J tne poet ana story-tejier, tie has come ioi nave a certain aversion ror roo s cnaracicr, not because he was a good fellow, but be cause he wasn't. Poe. In his opinion, was neither a dipsomaniac nor a victim of alco holism Upon his nervous temperament stimulants had a marked errect. tmt tne amount of painstaking literary work lie aia proves nnu ia nave oef n pir sober. His real faults of charact those of the selfish, unlovable man. liar Indication of his disposition one of the letters of Sarah Helen v one of Poe's biographers, wnich recently in New York, In which she of their friendship during "the moy est cdocTi of his life." and says: ' seen him in many moods and pha these lonesome latter years which wer Idlv mereinir into the monumental t; of his death. I have seen him sullen and moody under a sense of Insult and imag inary wrong. I have never seen in him the faintest indication of savagery and rowdy ism and brutality." The sullenneas and moodiness. In Mr. Macy's Judgment, would have disqualified Poe for membership In any self-respecting club of literary men. w-ifh 1 a Matchless Orator K From Page 5. turbed her chastity or robbed her of her treasure. After drawing this picture of respect and devotion and reverence, tho ora tor appeared to rise to a great height, his whole frame quivering with emo tion and fn tones that seemed to me would ring through that Senate cham ber for all- time, he continued: "I shall not consent to make peace until ihe time when a little drummer boy shall be able to carry the flag of the United ttle drummer boy shall I Y the flag of the United -J city and In every wW f' sr It once floated, amir i, the submission pi everence of every mi lid who gazes upon l. States In every derness wherever the enthusiasm, the profound re' woman and child who gazes upo stars." I never saw Senator Baker-'after wards. At the head of his command In the thick of the fight he fell only a short time after at Ball's Bluff. I shall always remember him as I saw and beard blm there In the Senate, self-poised, majestic, sublime, and I shall never cease to be grateful that I have been permitted to live to see the return of the peace he predicted, the "peace which passeth understand ing," not evanescent nor ephemeral . but permanent, under whose heniarJ. Influence the whole united nfl never before. their relations with publishers and printers. ITaalam. Tonewood corner; a country man'a horisons. 1007. Jonea. Rebellious Susan; a comedy in three acts. 1905. Lucas, ed. The gentlest art; a choice of letters by entertaining hands. 1907. Murray. Rise of the Greek epic; being a . course of lectures delivered at Harvard Uni versity. 1907. Philosophy. - Baldwin. Thought and things, v. 2. inv. Harrison. The philosophy of common sense. 1307. Sociology. Madison. Writings, v. T. IOCS. Mulrhead Historical introduction to tha private law of Roma. JEd. 2. rev. 1800. Murdoch. History of constitutional re- lorm m ureat Britain and Ireland. 1S85. ..-4 Useful Arts. Bassell. Earth dams. 1907. Benjamin. Modern American machine tools. 1U07. Kewbtgglng. Handbook Tor gas engineers and managers. Ed. .7. 1904. Slnolalr The oare and management' of locomotive boilers. 1001. Voogt. Our domestic animala; tr. by K. P. Wormeley. 1907. Whinery. Specifications for street road way pavements. 1907. Wllliama How it works; deallr-g In sim ple language with at?ara. electricity, .light, heat, aound. hydraulics, optics, etc., and their applications to apparatus in common use. 1907. Maxim Gorky's Many Trades. Philadelphia Record. Maxim Gorky, the Russian novelist. In reply to a question as to his early life, says that hs began to earn his living in 1SS7 as a shoemaker's apprentice. Then be became a patternmaker's apprentice; a year later hs was a helper In a steamship kitchen and after four years on the water he became a porter, baker, a chorus sing er, a street peddler and a clerk. He pub lished his first novel in 1S92 and this he regards as ths beginning of his career.