THE SUXDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND, JUNE 21, 1903. 11 ' the: co&zxsxt' rj&cr , . v ; , ' t yxV ft I : I I r? k v J ' V iv' Jit 1-7 Tb Money id, by Julio C. Van Dyke. Charles Scrlbner's Sons, Ntw Ycrk City. A stirrln? appeal for a return to moral standards in these days of Mammon wor ship, when, In speaking of a ipan, the question mostly pushed to the front Is: "How much lias he? What is he rated at?" A weariness is here expressed with these days of greed of gain, but Mr. Van Dyke insists that his book is not one sim ply of constructive criticism. It is no ticed that he does not specify a cure for the ills on which he sheds his lamp rays and that his undercurrent of thought is decidedly pessimistic. Yet what he says Is couched in scholarly garb and must awaken both lntarest and thought. What a pity he writes with such a wail, espe cially when he nnds fault with the immi grant of today and longs for the "good" Immigrant of far-back colonial days. Here Is the Van Dyke view of Ameri can money-madness: When a nation becomes monomaniacal, making unto Itself a tolden image which it fails down before and worships, when It acts and legislates for money only, when it turns ,the arts and sciences into ma chines for gain, and scorns the higher edu cation and morality of life, when it plun der and tramples under ' foot the most beautiful country in the world; when, drunk with its own power. It revels in gluttony and becomes boastful of its own selfishness; when it forgets the goodiy heritage of its history, forgets its ideals and faiths and beliefs and stants upon a career of greed and grasp, harm who it will or may, again, what hope Is there for happiness? The pace is one leading to destruction. The text of this paragraph is the pro portions of capital and labor: If the situation were put down in figures It would read something like this: Organ ized labor with us can muster something over 2.000,000 members: incorporated capi tal possibly 200,000 members. For the sake of argument, let . us concede 2.000.000 to capital and 5.000.00 to both. There are some 80,000.000 or 90,000.000 of people in the United States, but let us discard all but the 30.000.000 of actual workers casting out the women and children with the lame, the halt and the blind. Our figures now indi cate that the 5.000.000 of capital and labor, w-ith their various quarrels and bickerings, are keeping 25.000.000 in continuous hot water. It is the differences of these peo ple that are not only turning the business worM tnpsey-turvy every few weeks, but wff. professional and social world as well, i hey practically control the cost of living throughout the country, and every time tltey come to blows the cost is materially enhanced. In Itself that Is sufficlnet to disconcert the average Individual in the community. He does not know where he stands. Add to this the unhappiness that Is bred of these Quarrels, the staie of un rest, the mental strain of living in a never ending jangle; end it Is not to be wondert d at that the suffering community in between should Anally exclaim in its wrath: "A plague o' both your houses!" In wondering whether the tenant can take .the landlord's place: But we may paliae for the moment with the conclusion that the rich man is a trus tee of. wealth, whether he so desires or not, adding only his further suggestion, that Fine wealth must be administered for the T?nent of the many it is perhaps us well that it should remain in the hands of one man of experience and executive ability, as In the keeping of a thousand of less experience and less ability. The Duke of Bu.-clueh knows how to handle his trust of land, as Mr. Carnegie his trust of a great Industry. Therefore, why not let them handle? Could the thousands of tenants and wage-earners control ai.d administer for themselves as well? It Is doubtful. The argument for restricting individual control, by limiting fortunes to a hundred thousand or a million dollaTs Is not strong. Besides, there are serious disadvantages to be con sidered. How will you carry through great enterprises lrite trans- A merican railways when no man has more than $1,000,000 with which totake the Initiative? Would it e possible to construct tunnels under the Hud son River at New York by rasslng around th hat for thousand-dallar sutscrlptions? One may not admire plutocracy. Gen erally speaking, the materialism of It Is depressing, its arrogance Is galling, and the low ideals of many of its members are con temptible. But It nevertheless has Us uses, is perhaps necessary to modern life, and very often is to be credited with wise action and true philanthropy. I seem to have heard before these one sided Ideas about our 1908 immigrants: Nor is there any trust to be placed in, the idea of lifting them (Immigrants) up to our standard by association, by marriage and by education. They do not rise perceptibly, but the American goes down to meet them. We are na nobler than our most ignoble constituency. To talk of assimilating such a mass as cornea In each year, to think of making them like ourselves by a process of public achooling for the children. Is to shoot arrows at the sun. Education may improve any given endowment, but II will not cre ate a new endowment. People are what they are born as regards natural gifts; and education will not beat it out of them. Be sides, the newcomers object to having their birth-gifts beaten out of them, to being born again. They do not want to he assimi lated, do pot want to become American. They want our gold: that is all. We shall not change their nature nor their character to any marked degree. The camel that was allowed to put his head, under the Arab tent did not turn into an Arab; but he con tinued to occupy the tent to the owner's undoing. "Our author is at variant with the ad vertising spirit of the age: The newspapers and magazines are mere thin butterlns of reading matter between two huge slices of business announcements. . . . Again, look at Its signs or escape them If you csni' Every available spot where human eyes could wander ems occu pied by a sign setting forth In exaggerated language the merits of a face powilr, a patent razor, or an alleged Scotch whisky. Signs in wood and glass and metal, signs In gold, sliver and brass, signs animate and Inanimate Jump at the passer-by like a mad dog or fix him with a manlatal glitter from their niche. At night the bewilderment is increased by the ingenious application of electricity. IJghts In rows make up huge let ters ten feet or more in height, designs of articles for sale are outlined with lights, and colored classes are brought In to heighten the effect. Then there is the ad ditional ingenuity of moving, dancing lights to make one dlszy. A table water in a huge tumbler continues to effervesce in bubbles of light all night long, flashes of lightning point the way to some one's vaudeville performance, or against the sky a waving banner l ftruck by an eiectrio searchlight to call your attention to a new brand of soap. On reading such a wail, it is pernils lhle to state that the American tiubllo has become, for the past two years at "ast, surfeited with the severely critical wo&ciisr have s&totzze'jz hleas now advanced by Mr. Van Dyke. He should change his vision; at present he sees everything in a "yellow" light, and lacks patriotism. If his Eastern en vironment stijl continues to dwarf his im agination, let him leave the effete East and take long, good breaths of Western air. Then he might learn to know his country his real country! If I were a Judge, I'd condemn Mr. Van Dyke to live one whole year In a certain Western city famous for its rosea, snow clad mountains, easily seen on a swelter ing July day, and its c-r-a-w-ftsh. One year after taking this medicine, there would be a different Van Dyke. He'd be a better American. Mind in the Making. By E. J. Swift. Price. 1 1.50. Charles acribner's Sons, New York City. The"writer of this excellent study In mental development Is professor of psychology and pedagogy in Washing ton University, St. Louie, Mo., and In his book he makes a strong plea for the personal element in education and for the extension of the experimental method. Some of the subjects discussed are: Standards of human power; criminal tendencies of boys, their cause and function; school and the Individual; re flex neuroses and their relation to de velopment; some nervous disturbances of development; psychology of learn ing: racial brain and education; ex perimental pedagogy; school-mastering education; and man's educational re construction of nature. Throughout the entire book there isn't one chapter that Is not plenti fully illustrated by human Incidents that have really happened. For In stance, Linnaeus' gymnasium director would have made a cobbler of him, tell ing his father that he was unfit for a learned profession. During his whole Jife Charles Darwin, as he admitted, was singularly incapable of mastering any language. Harriet Martlneau's parents considered her mind dull, unobservant and unwieldy, and she was the first In her family who failed in the matter of handwriting. Napoleon Bonaparte did' not distinguish himself in his studies at the military school In Paris, and he stood in the final examination for graduation forty-second in his class. Samuel Johnson was Indolent: "My master whipped me very hard. With out that, sir, I should have done noth ing." he said. John Hunter, the cele brated surgeon, at 17 years old was unable to read or write. Oliver Gold smith's teacher in his early childhood thought him one of the dullest boys that she had ever tried to teach. Henry Ward Beecher at 10 years of age ac cording to his sister, Mrs. Stowe "was a poor writer, a miserable speller, with a thick utterance and a bashful reti cence which seemed like stolid stupid ity. He had great deficiency in verbal memoryV-a deficiency marked In him through life." And so the list goes on. Possibly the chapter headed "Crim inal Tendencies of Boys" will cause the most discussion, because of Its sensa tional disclosures relating to defective youth. Confessions relating to young people who lied and stole are given, and one professor in an Eastern col lege said that he and his playmate generally had no regard for the truth when an untruth was likely to save them from punishment. Ferrlanl Is quoted as saying that In his opinion "from 8 to 14 years, the child is almost always a thief." This quotation will be found lllumina-' tive: The so-called criminal Instincts of chil dren are the racial survivals of acts that In past ages fitted their possessors to sxir vlve. They were not merely righl. but necessary at that time, and they wens right because they were necessary and because they stood for the best of which primitive man could conceive. This period of sav agery, or semi-crlminallty. Is normal for all healthy boys. Those whose surroundings are favorable to a life of crime continue in it, finally to end in the reform school, and still later, probably. In the peniten tiary, while those of better surroundings pass through It without permanent moral Injury, and. perhaps. Indeed, with a strong character and a keener Insight Into human nature. But Professor Swift insists that the eo-called dullness and idleness of chil dren are in most cases due to a failure to understand them and to give them proper subjects of study. He concludes that, barring the degenerates, and they are comparatively few, children should not be classed as good and bad. "They have tendencies and Instincts, tome of racial and others of family inheritance, but their permanent dispositions are yet unformed arid will be mainly deter mined by their environment, which, of course. Includes all that enters Into their experience and education." The Tjost Goddess. By Edward.. Barron. Price. $1.50. Henry Helt A Co., New York City. Patterned after the Rider-Haggard style, this story of adventure has plenty of excitement and fight. Lieutenant Winthrop, late of the American Navy, starts in a steamer to reach the head waters of the Amazon River to find a lost goddess in the person of an American girl who Is supposed to be detained by Indians, against her will. One Katharine Randolph, an Indian Princess In disguise, and a descendant of the Mayas the fore runners, of the Aztecs is one of the party, and the latter has a stirring jour ney up the historic river, only to find that the story of the waiting ' goddess existed in a bad man's Imagination. It's a case of the best In life exiBtlng nearest home. People and Problem. By Fabian Franklin. Price, H.60. Henry Holt Co., New York City. Mr. Frankjln Is known In the world' of letters and journalism as the .accom plished editor of the Baltimore News from lsOo-1908, and sometime professor of mathematics In the Johns Hopkins Uni versity. This book of 144 page consists o( a ut- zcesz zzssr zzep zzt-sezf. ries of addresses and editorials, and shows their writer to be a man of vaned , intellectual gifts. No one can accuse him of being- afraid to spfak out,' his utter ances belns distinguished, for their vigor of thought. One of his most scholarly estimates is that on the life of William Ewart Gladstone, while it is generally agreed that his pro-Boer utterances as read in his editorial of December 15. 1899, represented a noisy . minority. Mr. Franklin's views on American politics are Illuminative. Judfre Waxen'a pocket -Book of Politic. By William J. Lampion. G. W. Dillingham & Co., New York City. A political campaign funbook. Judge Wabash Q. "Waxen is supposed to be the member of Congress for Wayback, and by means of curious spelling which ho has adopted as his own he, .with sage wisdom, comments in crisp sentences on politics and office-seeking, as he finds them. In exterior appearance", his book resembles a pocketbook. Samples of Wax em humor: In God We Trust la about the only Trust I know of that don't have a lobbyist er so 'round Washington some time er other tea chin statesmen bizness prlnclpels. I know a woman's rights woman that says she d ruther vote than eat, and I ain't supprised at her taste. I et supper at her house once. Poverty ain't no disgrace In politics. It's wueL It's defeat. Women In politics Is a contradiction. A rolling vote gethers no boss. A man never rely gits Into politic till politics gits Into him-. Th Chaperon. By C. N. and A. M. Wil liamson. The McClure Company, New York City. Breathing; a vacation spirit, this novel tells how Mis Phyllis Rivers and Miss Van Buren inherited a motor boat and 91000 and went about Holland as tourists. The story Is divided jnto four parts, two being told by the young women named, and by Rudolph Brederode and Ronald Lester Starr. The central notes are re partee and love making. Karl Anderson furnishes suitable illustrations. ' The Red Skull. By Fergus Hume. Price. $1.50. Dodge Publishing Company, New York City. Sensationalism boiled to an essence. The scene is laid in Cornwall, England, and the story Is built around the murder of John Bowring, a South African mil lionaire. His son, Morgan, is insane. The skull mentioned in the tale was col ored scarlet, and around the forehead to the back was a broad band of silver, like a crpwn. Not high-gTade fiction. Dinkelspiel's Jjeiterg to Iooey. By George V. Hobart. Illustrated. G. W. Dillingham Company, New York City. Mr.- Dinkelspiel's opinions, expressed In amusing German-American dialecL- have been floating around for years through the medium of selected newspapers, until the query has been voiced, "Who Is Din kelspiel, anyway?" This volume of 190 pages is the answer. It's chock full of quaint fun. J. M. QUENTIN. IN LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP. The portrait shown on this book page is that of Charlrs Rann Kennedy, who wrote the play. "The Servant in the House." whirh was reviewed at length in last week's Oregonlan. BosMes her literary activities, whirh are strenuous and constant, Gertrude Atherton will divort herself in Munich this Summer with musical interests, of which that city In a pronounced center. Mrs. Atherton Is a devoted student of opera. ' "The Shoulders of Atlas," Mary E. Wll klns Freeman's forthcoming- novel, which will be issued next week, is to have a spe cial printing, for an edition to Australia, where this famous New England story writer has specially large and enthu sia&tio audience. New fiction for the Autumn book season Is in active preparation by Houghton, Mif flin Company, and among the authors on their llt will be Mary Johnston, Clara Ixuis Burnham, Alice Brown, Charles Kk brt Craddock, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, C. Hanford Henderson and Harry James Smith. Mar Pemherton, whose "Sir Richard Ks combe" will appear within one week. Is at hU hom, Troston Hall, at Troston. Suf folk. Mr. Pemberton was formerly a resi dent of Hampstead, and withdrew a few months ago to his present cottage, where he expects to be established for an Indefi nite time. "The Woman Pays, a novel upon a theme that its title sufficiently indicates. Is about to be published in New York. Its author is Frederic P. Iadd, who has also written "As a Man otri," a one-act dram atization, of which has had some success on the stage. The seen of The Woman Pays" Is laid In New York. The demand for Anne Warner French's humorous tale, "The Rejuvenation of Aunt Mary," appears to be persistent. Another and tenth reprint has just appeared and it ts called the players' edition. In honor of the dramatic version of the story in whlh May Robson la appearing. It is illus trated with photographic scenes from the play. It is worth while noting that the author of "Handbook of, the Trees," Rome.yn Beck Hough, dedicates his book "To the mem ory of my father. Dr. Franklin B. Hough, who as the pioneer commissioner of- for estry nrst strove to arouse the public to check the course of destruction of the American forests and establish the princi ples of forestry; and to my mother, whose Interest in the plan of this handbook and enjoyment In Its progress have been, among the pleasures of the preparation.' The home of Warwick Deeping, at Battle. Sussex, England. Is in the old Hastines district, which In Itself explains the quaint name of Battle. Gate cottage, Mr. Deep ina's houpe, is much more man a century old; Indeed, no one knows the exact num ber of years It has stood, so familiar a landmark ha It become. It Is very small, very low, with little old-fashioned windows, and almost, submerged with ivy. Here Mr. Deeping wrote a great part of the romantlo "Bertrand of Brittany," his latest novel, e - In Maurice Hewlett's new novel, "Half may Houw," he .has written a iievel of modern Hie of today In England. Against a background of social life In the country In London, sketched In a brilliant way with witty dialogue and vivid, humorously sa tirical suggestion of many minor parson age, he tells the story of a country girl, a governess, who marries a man of higher position and much older than herself. She has two other men in love with her, one masterful, dominating, conventional in life and feeling, able and selfish ; the other a delightful, unconventional gentleman-vag abond, a painter of landscapes and an en thusiastic botanist who wanders over the country planting strange plants In odd cor ners of England, living by the roadside in a wagon, the "Halfway House" Is full of pleasant talk and whimsical Ideas. The struggle of the girl, her gradual develop ment, her dealings with the three men and her final decision make up an unusual novel. New books received: Over Against Green Peak, by Zephine Humphrey. $1,25 fHolU; The Essential Life, by Stephen Berrien Stanton, 1 (Scribner's). ' These books were received through the kindness of the J. K. Gill Company, of this city; Dinkelspiel's Letters to Looey; Judge Wax em's Pocket Book of politics; The Red Skull; The Lost Goddess; Tne Money God; The Chaperon; Mind in the Making; Over Against Green Peak, and The Essential Life. T. H. B. Eecott's "Kins; Edward VII and His Court" and "The Story of - British Diplomacy" are to be published in this country la a few days. Both are written In the gossipy and entertaining Btyle of Mr. Escott'e other works. Mr. Escott has long- been the leading- editorial writer for the London Stan-dard, and has recently suoceede-d John Morley as editor of the Fortnightly Review. All fresh and salt-water fishermen will welcome Louis Rhead's latest addition to outdoor literature. "The Book of Msh and Pishing." It cover in a most .systematic and comprehensive way not only the meth ods of capturing all kinds of sea and fresh water fish, hut tells how. and when, and where to get them, the right way to keep them fresh and to shtp them, and finally Tiow to cook them. This is one of the flrBt ooks dealing in a thorough way with the question of salt-water game fishes on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, and It oupht to become a standard of reference on that subject. H. O. AmoM-Forster., in his "English Socialism- of Today" while conceding the irood intentions of the leaders of that move ment, declares that Socialism "must inev itably aggravate the III from which we suffer, must Increase the poverty it Is de-? signed to remove, must intensify the class distinctions which it professes to obliterate, and Instead of bringing- peace must bring hatred, strife and, possibly, open war." Mr. Arnold-Forster also realizes the need for change, and In his constructive suggestions pleads that land transfer should be made simple and cheap, and that rates and taxes on land should be diminished. Chales Hawkes, the blind naturalist and author, whose book on the beaver has proved such a success, is shortly to bring out a new animal story under the cantion "Black Bruin, the Biography of a Bear." Mr. Hawkes is a most unusual blind man, one who is thoroughly interested in ail that goes on about him. He is an enthusiastic attendant of baseball and football games, an experienced fisherman and boatman, and a trained naturalist atield. where no bird or squirrel escapes his keen intuitive per ception, which "sees" without eyes. Indeed, as his clever stories Indicate, he probably obaerveB the process- of nature about him far more keenly than do most persons with perfect eyesight. Professor Thomas R. Lounsbury, of Yale University, who said in a recent interview that the much disputed Idiom "none are" Is perfectly right, is a hearty defender of what is sometimes called "newspaper Eng lish." In his book, "The Standard of Usage In English," he maintains that the style of reputable journals is Quite as good as the proper conditions allow, if not a little better. Indeed, Professor Lounsbury, whose practical standard Is the usage of great writers and cultivated speakers, seems inclined to permit more latitude of idiom than some editors. One characteristic pro nouncement of this critic which many peo ple are quoting is: "Language not only does change, but should change." That William Dean Howells should have vital sympathy with the art or doctrine of Tolstoi may seem surprising, yet the genial American novelist professes to have received the utmost benefit from the vig orous Russian philosopher. "I agree with him," once said Mr. Howells. "bu can't live as he does and advises." In Mr. How ell's "Altrurlan" novels such, as "A Trav eler From Altmrla" and "Through the Eye of the Needle" there Is a hint, perhaps, of Tolstoism modified by shrewd common sense, and much Americanized in spirit. It will be remembered, also, that "Sebasto pol" in one of Its American printings con tains an appreciation of Tolstoi by Mr. Howells which illumines both writers in an uncommon light. The' author of "The Technique of the Novel," Charles F. Home, Ph.D., has the dis tinction of having received his entire edu cation In New York City, from the firs of the primary grades, through the College of the City of New York, where he is now In structor in English, up to the New York University, which bestowed his doctor's de gree. This is especially noteworthy because the connections of Professor Home's ancestry might well have drawn him toward Eng land his forefathers having been among the Puritan settlers of Massachusetts Bay. and his grandfather one of the first Abolitionists in New England, stoned out of Dover, N. H., for that cause. Professor Home has been a traveler, miner, and even served his experi ence with the stage before devoting himself to literary criticism. The Japanese Ambassador, representing his Emperor, has conferred upon Dr. Will iam Elliott Griffin, of Cornell University, the Order of the Rising Sun. Dr. Griff Is Is the author of "The Mikado's Empire" and other authoritative works on the Japanese people and on Japan, where he lived for several years. He is also an authority on the Dutch nation, and only recently completed an account of the Inauguration and reiKn of Wllhelmlna. which has been Included in the revision, under his editorship, of the Harpers' "Motley's Dutch Nation." The emblem of the Sun is a large ruby set in gold and enamel, and it is accompanied by an official diplomat. Dr. GrlfTis notification of the intended honor was made through one of the former peace representatives at the Portsmouth conference. Baron Komura. If you have never been behind the scenes of a theater or in the "make-up" tent of a circus you will learn much that is in teresting by reading "The Stage Door," Charles Belmont Davis latest book. in these stories the comedies and tragedies of theatrical life are admirably portrayed. They are purely fiction, yet the characters stand out so vividly that one gains a more Intimate acquaintance with the life of the green room than could be acquired by months of actual experience. The position of impressarto of the New York Metropoli tan Opera Company has proved too much for the constitution of three men, and the work of managing theatrical and managing stars has never been regarded as easy. But Mr. Davis survived several seasons as the manager of Weber & Fields' All-Star Burlesque Company and has lived to tell the tale. Or at least he tells much that he knows of theatrical life In "The Stage Door," and mighty good reading he makes of it. Vera the Medium," by Richard Harding Davis, his first novel in six years Is an unusual story, and Vera is the most charm ing and fascinatinr of heroines, and one Books Added to Library THE following books at the Publio Library will gro Into circulation on June 23: . BIOGRAPHY. Hawthorne The life and genius of Na thaniel Hawthorne; by F. P. Stearns. 1906. Huxley Thomaa H. Huxley; by J. R. A. Davis. 1007. BOOKS IN' FOREIGN UA.VGUAGBS. Bkl Da amerikanlKh volk. DESCRIPTION AND TRAVBI Grimhar FIJI and It, poimibilltiea. lflOT. Street The ghosts of Piccadilly. 1807. FICTION. Cody Jacquette, a sorority girl. Stephens & Westley Clementine's highway, man. Tnljtol Tales: tr. by R. N. Bain. White lock When kings go forth to battlt. FINE ARTS. Henshall Favorite fish and fishing. 1808. Pratt The history of music; a handbook and Kulde for students. 1907. Raven The bell of England. 1B06. Vago Instructions in the art of modeling In clay. 1880. Wright The romance of the world' fisheries. lut'8. HI6TORY. Brady. comp. Northwestern fights and fighters. 1907. Crawford Among old New England Inns. 190T. Paris Ancient Italy; historical and geo graphical Investigations. 19ua. LITERATURE. Brewster, comp. Specimen of modern English literary criticism. 1907. De Vere Selections from poems; ed. by G. E. Woodberry. 189. Putnam, ed. Representative essays; r entirely new to fiction. To get material for his story Mr. Davis visited all the seances and spiritualists he could find or hear of in New York and Brooklyn, N. Y. Durinp one of these seances the medium decided to make it uncomfortable for Mr. Davis, suspecting: that he was there "to show the place up" in the newspapers, and much to the delight of the "true believers" present proceeded to deliver messages from the other world little likely to arouse him to enthusiasm either for the future or his own personal appearance. Just as the spirit was about to journey back. Mr. Davis was permitted to ask one question. "Well." said Mr. Davis, "I want to ask your ad vice. Had I better take that position in Mr. Jerome's office, or had I better go in with General Bingham after all?" There was a ga?p from both spirit and audience, and a hurried exit on the part of the latter. Choosfng titles for their books. Is hardly a pastime for authors; It is a task, and a difficult and disappointing one, although it does sometime, afford amusement in pass ing. When Miss Alice MacGowan chose a title for her new novel she found It was one that Miss Florence Wilkinson had al ready used "The Strength of the Hills." Therefore Miss MacGowan rechristened her story, called it "Judith of the Cumber lands," and felt safely original again. Evi dently she forgot "Judith of the Plains." a novel which Mips Marie Manning brought out a year or two ago. Attached to a name so comlnon as Judith, this difference of only one word might well be expected to pull confusion, down upon the' heads of bookmen. Hamlin Garland, author of "The Tyranny of the Dark" and "The Shadow World." has agreed to lecture this coming aason on the so-called occult phenomena of the spirit world, with which these books have to do. Although a man of the mountains and the plains, as storiea like "Money Magic" prove, Mr. Garland has always felt an interest in the mysteries of "spirit communication." and some i5 years ago served on the execu tive court of the American Psychical So ciety, of which he was also at one time president. "The Shadow World." appearing as a current magazine serial, is a discus sion in dialogue and narrative of some very thri! ling occult happening, white "The Tyranny of the Dark," a novel published a few years ago. makes us cf similar mo tives. Mr. Garland's friends are now specu lating as to probable results of these inves tigations. ' J. Ernest PhytMan, In his "Trees In Na ture, Myth and Art," just published, makes this comparison between tree life and hu man life: "In what ways are trees like us? They are born, grow to maturity, fail and then die. They draw nourishment from earth and air; and. by Ita aid are formed the myriad cells of which they are built up; the nutriment being- changed by a process we can trace, but cannot under stand, Into root, stem, bark, leaf or -other part of their economy. They have no heart to pump the fluid nourishment throughout their frame from root to highest branch and twig; but other forces effect the needed cir culation of food.. They have a rough, thick skin to protect their sensitive,, vital parts. Earth and air, rain and sunshine are need ful for their life; and they vary in charac ter with varying habitat. They come near to ui in that they differ In sex; and it Is only by great restraint that we do not speak of their love-making." "The Debate of the Body and the Soul." taken from an early 34th century manu script, and modernized by the late Professor Child, of Harvard. Is announced for publi cation. Although the theme, the b'dy blam ing the soul and the soul the body for Its shortcomings. Is common to nearly every language, still the poem itself is almost en tirely unknown at the present time. Pro fessor Child brought out a very small edi tion as a gift for his friends several years ago, and it is next to Impossible to set a copy now. In the present reprint, for the publication of which special permission was granted by the Child heirs. Professor Georgo Lyman Kittredge has written a most schol arly essay and incidentally pays a glowing tribute to his life-long friend and rfolleague. Professor Child. The volume will be printed on English hand-made paper. Miss Marion L. Peabody, sister of Josephine Preston Pea body, the poet, contributing the simple il lustrations in keeping with the subject. The edition will be limited to 780 copies, of which 750 only will be offered for sale, all plates being destroyed after printing. Robert Hlchens new story, "A Spirit in Prison,' continues its serial publication in Harper's Weekly. That Mr. Hichens" vivid imagination and arresting style are as po tent as ever is evidenced by an absorbing passage in which a strange Egyptian talks to Hermione, the tragic central figure of the story, of Destiny end the Desert two themes which, in Mr. Hichens hands, are familiarly compelling. Here Is a bit of the dialogue: "The sea teaches, but the desert teaches more." "What does it teach?" "Madame must know If madame has ever been to the desert." "I don't think I should ever learn the lesson of the desert," said Hermione. "Per haps only those who belong to it can learn from it." "If it is so, it is sad for the others," said the Egyptian. "They seek. I suppose." he continued. 'They rebel, th"y fight, they try to a void things, they try to bring things about. They lift up their hands to disperse the grains of the sand atorm. They lift up their voices to he heard by the wind from the south. They stretch forth their hands to gather the mirage into their bosom. They follow the drum that is benten among the dunes. They are afraid of life because they know it has two kinds of rrlfts; and one they snatch at, and one they would refuse. And they are afreld still more of the door tli at all must enter. Sultan and nomad he who has washed himseir and made the threefold pilgrimage, and he who U a leper and Is eaten by flies. Fo it is." The Flower Factory. McClure's. Lfsahetta, Marlsnlna. Ftametta. Teresina, They are winding stems of roses, one by one, one by one Little children who have never learned to play; Teresina softly crying that her fingers ache today. Tiny Flcmetta nodding when the twilight slips In, gray. High above the clattering street, ambu lance and fire gong beat. They sit, curling crimson petals, one by one, one by one. jUsabetta, Marianlna, Flametta, Teresina, They have never seen a rose bush nor a ' dew drop in the sun. They will dream of the vendetta, Teresina, Flametta, Of a Black Hand and a Face behind a grating; They will dream of cotton petals, endless, crimson, suffocating. Never of a wild rose thicket nor the sing ing of a cricket. Btrt the ambulance will bellow through the wanness of their dreams. And their tired lids will flutter with the street's hysteric screams. Lfsahetta, Marianlna, Flametta, Teresina, They are winding stems of roses, one by one, one by one. Let them have a long, long playtime. Lord of Toll, when toil is done! j Kill their baby hands with roses, Joyous roses of the sun lected from the eeries of "ProsA masterpieces from the modern essaylBta." 1903. PHILOSOPHT. Brooks, comp. Helps to Happiness. 100T. SCIENCE. Wright Field, laboratory and library manual in physical geography. ,1906. SOCIOLOGY. Currency problem and the present financial situation; a series of sddresses delivered at Columbia University. 1008. L.loyd A sovereign people; a study of Swiss Democracy; ed. by J.. A. Hobson. 3907. USEFUL ARTS. Butterfleld Chapters In rural progress. 19"8. Partsch Message to mothers. 1908. BOOKS ADDED TO REFERENCE DEPART MENT. American society of mechanical engineers. Transcriptions, v. 2b. 1107. Dowson & Jjrter Producer gas. 190. Parke The effeot of brake-beam banging Upon brake efficiency. 1907. Twopenny English metal work; S3 draw ings. 1906. United State Continental Congress. Jour nals, v. 11-12. United States Fthnology. Bureau of. An tiquitifs of the upper Gila and Salt River valleys In Arizona and New Mexico; by Walter Hough. 190T. BOOKS ADDED TO JUVENILE DEPART MENT. Brooke Story of a football season. Rutterworth Treasure ship. r Dean's rag books Dollle's A, B. C. Dean's rag books Goosey Oander. Dean's rag hooks Red Riding Hood. Dean's rag books What Is.ltV Dickens Children's stories; reto.d hy Edrle Vredenburg. i i Ferrault and othersTales of passed -times. Joyce's Various June Letters By LOUISE JUNE 1, 190S. Dearest Aunt Mar garet Mamma Bays I'm to write you a letter every few days until you are strong again. She says when one Is convalescing time Is apt to pass slowly, and any sort of a letter Is very welcome. Mamma says she will have more tim to write letters herself soon, as she Intends to drop a certain part of her newspaper work and give all of her attention to another line called "featuring." I think she said. Then we shall have her at home a great deal of the time, and she may wear that flowered silk kimono you sent as much as she caooses. As it is now, she often eats breakfast in her street hat. The annual Hose Festival opens to day and I am going to send you a souvenir programme and a handful' of rose petals from a bush that grows near our dining-room window. Close your eyes, auntie, and smell of them, and dream that you are in Portland, the Rose City, the most beautiful city in the world, and one that has become most dear to us m11. I am sorry that you keep asking how soon we shall come back thore to live, because Portland Is home to all of us now. even to Ruth- Ann, and she holds out longer than anybody else. And we have made so many friends here. Oh. I am quite sure, auntie, that If we ever go East again, it will only be for a visit to you all after our ship comes in. Lovingly, Joyce. June 4, 19 i8. Dear Aunt: I am hav ing the very nicest gown made. I'm to graduate 'from the grammar school In two weeks and next term will enter High School, then I shall feel grown up, Indeed. Already I am planning how I shall act toward all of the new girls and what I shall do at first to make them like me. I believe I'll try to think up soine really original way to wear my hair bows or something that will rouse their Interest in me right from the start. I sometimes envy Julie, who is only 13, and Billy, who's but 6. Billy will start to school next term. ai when you saw him last he was only a baby. He .still has some of his dear little baby ways, but he will lose them all too soon, I fear, when he starts to school, if he is at all like the little bey who lives across the hall from us. His mamma says she sent him the first 'morning with his hair cut Buster Brown, and with a Buster Brown suit and the dearest little socks on. But after the , first day he refused to go any more unless he might have his blouses belted in at the waist and have his hair shortened and his stockings lengthened. Now he wears a dirty old ball catcher's mit attached to his belt, and his mamma says she stands at the window and watches him go to school every morning and Just sighs and sighs for. her baby that will never come back to her. It's Just perfectly heart-breaking to hear her talk, but Ruth Ann says, "Pshaw, I should think she'd be mighty glad to see him gettin' some sense. All the larnin' don't come out o' books, neither!" Lovingly, JOYCE. June 7, 190S Dear Aunt Margaret: The Rose Festival was dandy! We went to four parades, to the rose ex hibit, a concert, a matinee and a picnic. Ruth Ann said she never saw such a "maddening crowd." Mamma insisted that she go about with us, and it was funny to hear her scold and sputter, though JiTlie and I really think Bhe enjoyed it almost as much as we did except the confetti. That seemed to make her perfectly furious. She even grabbed one poor boy by the arm and crammed yards and yards of the pretty paper ribbon he -had dangled all about her into his mouth! Now, I have some beautiful news. We are to move Into a pretty bungalow upon Portland Heights an ideal Sum mer home. The owner, a friend of ours the "gentle gray lady" of whom I often write Is to be married this month, and afterward will be traveling all Summer. Her aunt, who lives with her now, jtv-ill return to Denver, and for three or four long months we will be ,tip there, above the bisr, hustling city, among the cool, green fir trees, breath ing the most delightful elr. and feast ing our eyes upon the beauty of snow capped mountains and forest-clad hills. And last, but not least, we shall sleep out-of-doors on the verandas. For sleeping out-of-doors the year around Is a great fad in Portland, especially among the people who live up on the Heights. Lovingly, JOYCE. "Heart's Content." June 20, 190S. Dear Aunt Margaret: Things do hap pen, even when one Is only half-past 14 and lives In such a tiny corner of the world. I dearly adore weddings, and the one at "Heart's Content" was per fectly splendid. I almost cried my eyes out. I wore my graduating dress, and had some beauttful new hair-ribbons. Julie said I looked lovely.' And the "gentle gray lady" looked lovely, too, only I believe I should have said that before I talked about myself. She is now Mrs. Walsh, and we have been liv ing In her home since the day of the wedding. Mamma came up early that day, for she wanted to help her, and we children followed later, for she Insisted on having us all, even Billy. Ruth Ann made the salad and coffee and both the Immense big cakes. Julie and I packed some dear little white boxes with the cake for the guests to carry home. The rooms at "Heart's Content" were literally banked with roses, all of them from the rose garden of the "gentle gray lady." When Julie and I first en tered we thought we had been sudden ly transported to Fairyland, and Julie's pretty voice had the sweetest thrill when she said softly: "Oh, Joyce, .loyse; and it's to be ours all the happy Summer!" And Billy shouted excited ly: "Oh, It smells just like bureau drawers! I do hope the 'gentle gray lady' will be gone ever an' ever so long on her wedding march!" Of course, that made us laugh, but I pre tended It was at the way Julie's hair bows stuck out at the sides, for Billy perfectly hates being teased. When mamma. In her new gown, stood up by aunt to help receive the guests. Julie whispered and asked me If I thought the "gentle gray lady" would look half so beautiful as "Aunt Klizabeth." That Is a pet name our own. Julie has given mamma, and I said I was pretty sure she wouldn't, and sure enough she didn't; although she looked like a dream. Mamma looked like a picture from a stained glass window. Lovingly, JOVCE. "Heart's Content," June 15. 190S. Oh, Dear Aunt Margaret: This let ter will probably make you 111 again it is so blue. I have tried for a week to keep ray feelings all to myself, hut now it seems I shall burst unless I tell some one. I can't help It. I feel terribly selfish, but I Just know I shall die when we have to move into our lit tle flat again. To have enough room! Not to have to let down beds at night, or be obliged to keep one's tea things In a clothes closet oh, it's perfectly delightful! But of course it can't last, and I can't seem to enjoy myself while It does last, for thinking about the end of it all. I sat out on the veranda with. Julie and mamma last evening and listened to one of mamma's little loving talks about being grateful for our blessings, and I felt so selfish and mean I Just had to go away and have LEXINGTON a good cry. All the rest are enjoying themselves so much. School is out and there is nothing much to do but enjoy oneself. Of course, there are music-lessons, but whenever I think of the beautiful ride to town, with the city lying below na, and the sweet scented air blowing in at the open win dows, I do not mind them a bit. And after the lesson why, there is the ride all over again! Billy wears his little blue overalls all day long; Julie flits about the gar den with one of Ruth Ann's big sun bonnets on, and Ruth Ann is very im portant and dignified. She i bleaching all the household linen, and storing away the, Wiiuer things for the "gen tle gray lady." And between times she is making strawberry shortcake. Mamma says the air up here Is like wine, and her appetite is wonderful. But poor little selfish me dt would have been much better if I had never come. Sorrowfully, JOYCE. "Heart's Content," June 20, 1908. Dearest Aunt Margaret: We are mo happy! The most wonderful letter came today, and you must share our Joy. The "gentle gray lady" married a wealthy man, and he wants to build her a beautiful new home when they return to Portland. She says she can not bear to give up the little home) that was once her mother's, or to allow strangers to occupy it, and so she wants us to Just live here as long as ever we please. She says we may pay her the same rent we paid for our lit tle flat, and she hopes we will use all of her things as if they were our very own that will be a great "ac commodation," mamma says. That is one of the "gentle gray lady's" ways of being gentle. The only condition she makes Is that she shall be allowed to visit us often and carry away aj many roses as she can hold in her. arms. She declares she cannot find any half so fragrant or beautiful as those that blossom at Heart's Content. Mamma says you must visit us as soon as ever you are able. Tonight I went to my room and promised God I would be a better girl, and Jnlle and I have planned the love liest party before Lois Clifton starts for the Coast. Joyfully. JOYCE. How the Steel Kings Made Fortunes INDUSTRY has furnished us with many wonderful romances, but the origin, and development of the steel trade of America, as told by Herbert N. Casson In his book, "The Romance of Steel," form, perhaps, the most remarkable in dustrial narrative ever written. A thou sand millionaires have been made by the Iron and steel trade of America in the last 40 years. There was enough money made in steel last year to give 250 men $1,000,000 apiece, while , enough iron and steel have been produced In the states !n 13 months to secure no less than 37 to every man, woman and child living in the land of Uncle Sam. And yet 60 years ago cheap steel was unknown. It was then sold at a shil ling a pound; the railroads were u.siug Iron rails which wore out in less than two years, and the total output of iron and steel in a year was less than is now made In four days. Then came to William Kelly, a Titts burg Irish-American, that flash of genius which provided the world with a new metal something as strong as steel and as cheap as lon. "Kelly was an Ironmaker and needed charcoal. In time all the wood near his furnaces was burned, and the nearest available source of supply was seven miles distant. To cart hia charcoal seven miles meant bankruptcy, unless he could Invent a way to save fuel. One day he was sitting In front of the 'finery fire" when he suddenly sprang to his feet with a shout, and rushed to the furnace. At one edge he saw a white-hot spot in the yellow mass of molten metal. The iron at this spot was incandescent. It was almost gaseous. Yet there was no charcoal nothing but the steady blast of air. Like a flash the Idea leaped into his excited brain there was no need o,f charcoal. Air alone for fuel." Then, seven years later, came Besse mer, who made the new process a com mercial success by the invention of his celebrated "converter." and received :,000.0i. world-wide fame and a knight hood as "liis reward. Kelly received 100,000 and comparative oblivion, al though his Idea was the nucleus of the Bessemer process, by which Iron Is puri fied from carbon by the direct intro duction of oxygen; for when Bessemer applied for and obtained a United States patent for his "pneumatic process." Kelly claimed priority for his Invention, and his claim was alios, ed by the patent office. Another pioneer of the jtecl trade, Robert F. Mushct, a Scotchman, wh'i hit upon a device for removing a diffi culty that baffled Kelly and Bessemer, fared even worse than Kelly. For he lost his patent by falling to pay the nec essary fee, and In his later years was dependent upon a pension of 300. which he received annually from Bessemer. The difficulty which Mushct removed was this: "The air blast clears the molten metal of carbon and of all impurities, includ ing sulphur and phosphorus. But a cer tain quantity of carbon is necessary to harden the metal Into the required qual ity of steel. Instead of endeavoring to stop the process at exactly the'right mo ment, Mushet asked, 'Why not firet bum out all the carbon and then pour back the exact quantity that you need?" This was a simple device, but no one had thought of it before." The man who took the invention of Kelly and Bessemer into his hands de veloped it into one of the wonders of the world, and made Carnog-ie millions, was Captain William R. Jone? "Bill" Jones, as he was known who seemed to live with the sole desire of toppling over the idea that England owned the steel trade. He could have been a millionaire many times over, but he cared little for money. When he was offered a partner ship, he replied: "No, Mr. Carnegie, I don't know any thing about business, and I don't want to be bothered with it. I've got trouble enough here In these works. I'll tell you what you can do" these were his exact words "you can give me a thun dering big salary. "After this. Captain." replied Carne gie, "you shall have the salary of. the President of the United States $25.0iyv The most brilliant of all the Carnezle partners was Charles M. Schwab. HIM was the most meteoric career ever known in the steel business. He had risen step by step but such stepp! Step No. 1. driving stakes for Jl a day at the Ertprir Thompson works. Step No. 2. six months later, superintendent of the Ed gar Thomson works, the foremost steel making plant In the world. Step No. 3. at 35 years of age, superintendent of both tne Edgar Thomson and Home stead plants, managing 8000 workmen. This was the only Instanco In which Mr. Carnegie permitted one man to operate two plants Step No. 4, president of the Carnegie Steel Company, with a White House salary and t pr cent stock.