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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 26, 100S. 11 IV kl FB .1 4 C4M C J in i i.u n i ijjn.niiiiii.iii i. ii .nun mi .u in.'.."j nmmmwm nullum iHH.J u juiui WU'll. gsmmmmmKummmmmmmmmm . i . ' - .-r -Vivas ft -JLL-nL , 1 X-r :-xV WHOSE HOME IS IN f-fc ilfl iHli y4i Vh'. I Lf -'ssw"" ' iZZ ZsZr&J??, -a. j I? it? I I jw1 Si Ft;i-,- - ff: ' " I I I - S " (wow , 3 jl V s it- illl 1 f s T t" . T- &4T. . - tSVv In 1 -"" HMEQr'THErWE ' V E3f- PRESIDENT CLEVELAND H7 r - ,v . - , 1 " , "irTf AT PR1NCETOR WHEES TJ3E hlJP - -i i fcSil JEAMUY RESIDED BOR MORE W v Ir.-iUTHAN A DETCADE -ATTERj ILJIh - ' v ' 1KSA THEY JjETT,. THE WHITE HOUSE. f 4 ME5. I30V:R CLEVEIUAND, THE L-A.TSXj WIDOW OT -A. TORMERj r LTHOUQH there ts now no ur J vlving ex-President of the United State, three women still live who have afaared the lot of former rulera of the Xatlon. The three widows of ex-Fresldents are Mrs. James A. Garfield, Mrs. Ben jamin Harrison and Mrs. Grover Cleve land. It has nearly always been the case that the widows of Presidents have outnumbered former holders of tha office. The strain of caring for the Nation's affairs seems to bear heavily on Incumbents of the Chief Magis tracy, and it is rare Indeed to have had more than two ex-Fresidents liv ing at the same time, despite the fart that the term of office being only four yeans it would naturally be expected" more would survive after concluding terms of office to receive the respect of their fellow citizens. Mrs. GarfleKi has Inner survived her husband, who has now been dead al most 2 7 years. Since his death she has lived to see her son. James Rudolph Garfield, stead ily advance to a place of prominence in the Nation's councils until now he has become a member of the Presi dent's Cabinet, and in view of his youth has at least a ripht to hope that history of the Adams family might be duplicated, and the son of a President go to the White House. Particularly has Mr. Garrleld a rlKht to nurse this dream In view of the fact that he comee from Ohio, which has usurped the one time place of Virginia as a producer of Chief Executives. Mrs. Garfield divides her time be tween three places. She deeply loves her old home town of Mentor. Ohio. which is rich in memories of her young life. There her children were brought up; there are a thousand memories of the statesman stricken down by tha bullet of Guiteau. . Mrs. Garfield is also partial to Wash ington. Deepite the fact that the Cap ital City saw the off -taking of her hus band, she has made it a practice to o thera oftaa to apend the Winter, BE(DE MR. MH JAMS A NStT BENJAMIN HARRISON OUTLIVED THEIR HUDANDT WASHINGTON THE FIRST WIDOW CT within sight of his triumphs during the brief time that he occupied the tt'hlte House. Garfield was a comparatively young man when he received his death wound in the station of the iPennsylvsnia Railroad, and Mrs. Garfield often has expressed the opinion that he might etill be living had not the hand of the assassin snapped the life thread. In Pasadena. CaL, Mrs. Garfield has a Summer home. There she spends a larger part of her time in the midst of idyllic surroundings. She spends most of her time sewing and reading. She is a sweet and gracious woman, gentle and kindly and always ready to speak of the triumphs of her husband. Mrs. Benjamin Harrison was not ac tually a lady of the White House, for her distinguished husband had retire from public life before he wed tnt beautiful Mrs. Mary Pimmlck, the fa vorite niece of the. first wife of the President. She became a member of the Harri son household prior to his election to the Presidency, and after his inaugura tion she took a prominent part in all the activities of social Washington. The first wife, Mary Scott Harrison, was an invalid during a large part of Mr. Harrison's stay at the White House, and much of the social duty devolved upon Mrs. Dlmmlck. She cared for it with complete success. When four yeara after his passing from the White House, Mr. Harrison announced his purpose to remarry, there was general pleasure and hearti est good will was expressed i all over the country. On February 21'. 1897, a child was born to the pair. Elizabeth Harrison. A woman of rare beauty and charm. Mrs. Harrison Is naturally very popu lar, both in Indianapolis, where she had her home, and in Tuxedo, N. T., where she spends much of her time. Mrs. Cleveland has only lately been made the widow of a President. The whole life of this lovable woman, since her girlhoodj days, radiated around the utt of the only man the Democrat hfi-ve iirw EAMES .A. AEFIELD succeeded in putting in the White House In half a century of effort. They were wedded in the White House during the first term of the then New Yorker. For the remaining three years of his term Mrs. Cleveland presided with a charm and a dignity that were irresis tible, and that gave her perhaps more IN THE LIBRARY AND WORKSHOP The appearance tt Professor Walter rMl! Soott'a 'The Psychology of Advertising." an nounced for June, has been unavoidably de lay id until next montb. m m m Mrs. Delano's "The Awakening of Helena Rlcliio," which was recently dramatized, had a performance Juno 2T In Sydney, Australia, where the novel has been particularly popu lar. Charles H. Caffln, the dramatic critic and author of "How to Study Pictures," has re cently completed "A Child's Guide to Pic tures. " He ts, now in Ensrland, where he will egend the Summer enyag-ed In writing ine Appreciation or tne urama. Of the recent recommendations for the New York State library for tentative selection of the bent books of 1&07, it is interesting to note that out of IS books published by the Kaker & Taylor Company, 13 have found thetr way on this list an average of 72 per cent of all books published. Juliet Wllbor Tompkins, the successful short story writer, whose novel of Western life, "Dr. KM en." is now in Its fourth edition, has sailed for Europe, where he Intends to upend the Summer traveling In Italy and working on her new novel which will be published thus Fall. e The August Century ts the Midsummer holiday number, with lO short stories, be sides new chapters, of increasingly Intense Interest, of rr. S. Weir Mitchell's "The Red City." Among the contributors to this short-story issue are: David Gray, the "Gallops" man. Irving Pacheller, Charles D. Stewart and Jack London. - Max Pemberton Is a thorough sportsman and a lover of all outdoor pastimes, is an enthusltlc golfer, a famous walker, and more than anything else, he is devoted to motor ing. On all matters concerning the motor Mr. Pemberton Is authority, and his "Motor ist's Notebook,", whirh appears In the Lon don Sphere, is the meet popular of his maga slne contributions. e e Frederic 8. Isham reports from Rusfda some Interesting items suggesting the ever growing activity la American exports. At a small place near St. Petersburg he heard an American phonograph; at another out-of-tha way town an official played the complicat ed Russian alphabet on an American type writer. In Moscow shopkeepers ring up ko pecs on Yankee -made cash registers. Japan has ordered 3V ropies of "Life of Japan," by Masuji' Mlyakawa. author of "Powers of the American People." When it Is remembered that this work Is written en tirely in English and Is comparatively ex pensive t$3 net per copy), it is significant of the cuiture of the Japanese and his interest In a comparison between American and na tive Institutions that he should require so many copies of this Important work. "Thou Foot" is the striking title of J. J. Bell's new novel. It is quite different from the author's former successes Inasmuch as Wee McGregor was dialect, and "Thou Fool" Is a novel of Scotland-English society people. The fool Is one Robert Barker, a merchant prince, who conquers everything except the thing he most desires. The story is a strong one and will be published Au gust 10. . e 1 One of the most successful books of poetry of the present year is "The Tides of Spring." by Arthur I'pson. which was brought out lat Fall in England by Oliver Jk Boyd, of Edinburgh and London, and in this country by a Boston house. The strange love story of Malcolm, son of Shakespeare's Duncan, and Margaret, sis ter of Edgar Atheling. of Saxon England. Is told in delicate, haunting verse. Ella Higginson'e new book, "Alaska, the Great Country." la announced. One who has read the book writes about !t: "Mrs. Hlgginson has seen Alaska with an eye open, to all tha Impressions of xomaacs and thorough popularity than any woman of the many who have held the title of "First Lady of the Land." For four years more In private life, Mrs. Cleveland continued to hold a place in the affections of the people, andi when in 1892 the vote of the people carried Grover Cleveland back into the chair of Washington, many a Republican found the pangs of having a Democratic Presi dent lessened by the fact that his selec tion returned Mrs. Cleveland to her old place. Her triumphs of the first term were abundantly repeated, and when once more the pair retired to private life to take up their home in beautiful "Westlanda," their Princeton abode, Mrs. Cleveland re mained a beautiful fnemory to the Nation that had genuinely loved her. Now as a widiow charged with the re sponsibility of training her family the old affection, is still there. Mrs. Cleveland completes a notable line of White House widows, first and most Illustrious of which was Martha Washington, wife of the founder, whose body lies beside that of the Immortal George in the simple tomb at Mount Vernon. Martha Washington died in 1902, having survived her illustrious husband by three years. Thomas Jefferson outlived his wife U years, a most remarkable extent of time. She died in 17S2, while life did not go from the body of the greatest of Demo crats until 1S26. Mrs. Madison lived IS yeara after thef death of her husband. John Adams outlived his wife, so did Andrew Jackson. John Qulncy Adams died four years before his wife. Martin Van Buren almost equalled the record of Jefferson, and lived 43 years after the passing of his wife. The first time a pension was ever sug gested for the widow of an ex-President was when William H. Harrison died one month after his inauguration. Prior to that time there had been only one in stance of a widow getting any favora whatever. This was when Dolly Madison was granted the right to publish in other countries for her own benefit the manu script debates on the Constitution. The death of Harrison peculiarly ap pealed to the Bentiment of the Nation, and Mrs. Harrison was voted outright 15,000. Even this sum was not extrava gant, for she had, to live on it for the 33 yeara she survived her husband. The second Mrs. Tyler, who married the President during his stay in office oc cupied the White House for eight months. When the former President died in 1862 it wa9 found that he had left his widow so poorly provided for that Government help became imperative. Therefore a pension of $5000 yearly was granted, which Mrs. Tyler continued to draw till her death 27 years later. Franklin Pierce outlived hl3 wife six years. Buchanan was a bachelor. Fill more's second wife outlived him seven years, but never received Government aid. In the burst of pity and affection that followed the off-taking of Lincoln, the Nation sought a means of doing some thing for those who had been dear to him. An outright J25.00O was granted to the widow, and she was further given a pension of 50U0 yearly. Johnson's wife outlived him but one year. There was no pension in that time. The distinguished services that Grant had rendered his country received some acknowledgement In the shaoe of a J5000 pension for his widow, which was un doubtedly welcome, since the misfortunes of the former President in the banking business had gone far to reduce his never extensive fortune. ' Mrs. Hayes died before her husband. Mrs. Garfield received a pension of J5000 a year, which she still continues to draw, and it is a question if any of the money that goes from Uncle Sam's Treasury is paid more cheerfully by the American people. Arthur was a widower when he suc ceeded Garfield. After the death of Har rison a movement was set afoot to get a pension for his daughter, but as soon as his widow learned of the opposition she insisted that the plan be abandoned Mrs. McKinley accepted at5000 pension after the death of her husband, and there would be no opposition on the part of Congress to making a settlement on Mrs. Cleveland, but that being comfortable she is not likely to need it. strange beauty that are ,to be found there. This book is neither a guide-boolc nor a history, though It might serve either pur pose better than some more pretentious works, but rather an unconventional and picturesque description of the country and the life of its people." Upton Sinclair new novel, "The Money changers," is announced for Fall publica tion Few readers of "The Metropolis" sus pected that that book was merely an in troduction to a. series, a trilogy in fact, which la intended to be an adequate presentation of the contemporary business and social life of Xew, York City. "The Moneychangers" carries on the characters of "The Metropolis" in the development of the main story of the trilogy, a story reach ing its climax in the history of the "financial stringency" of 1907.- A new Tchalkowsky book, called "The Life and Works" of the composer, has been brought out by Rosa Newnmrch and. Edwin Evans. For people who persist In believing that there was some terrible secret tragedy in the life of Tschalkowsky to account for the melancholy of some or his music, it will be Interesting to learn from Mrs. Newmarch that one night the composer's eye "fsll on the volumes of his diary, thereat he was as s ailed by a sudden terror lest he might die with no friends at hand and that some one should pry into these life secrets. Under the influence of this feeling he Immediately or dered his Are to be lit and burned every volume before he went to bed." e A high authority on our language in Eng land, according to the London Book Month ly, has been pointing out that we are get tWtg to be very slovenly talkers, that we do not take the trouble to pronounce our words correctly, and that one reason for this Is the dying out of home reading aloud. This writer says that if people want their chil dren to speak well and elegantly, there is no training like reading aloud two or three evenings a week, and that it Introduces the children Tery pleasantly to good books. He ascribes the decadence of reading aloud to the cheapness of books. When books were dearer one volume had to Eervs for a com pany, but now each person may have a vol ume for himself. e In its Issue for this month the Forum magazine goes back to its original form of a monthly publication. For the past six years It has appeared as a quarterly, but the management has decided that, all things considered, the Forum will be able to cover a wider field if it comes out more frequently. In it new form it admits fic tion to its pages for the first -time In- the shape of the first installment, of a serial story by Joseph Conrad. It will be re membered that Frederic Taber Cooper has been for some time the editor of the mag azine and those who know of Mr. Cooper's critical activities will not be surprised to know that the criticism of current litera ture will be an important feature of each Issue of the magazine, although politics and other practical affairs will occupy the space heretofore given them in the quarterly. "Medieval Architecture," by Arthur Kings bury Porter the elaborate work on Gothic I a rare example of American application to an idea. For six years Mr. Porter, who is a young man, has constantly applied him self to the production of this monumental his tory of the origin, growth and development of Gothic architecture, making several Asi atic and European trips required by the book since his graduation from Yale and working on his subject dally for years. He has now completed this important work, which, with its bibliography and list of monuments, cov ers over 600,000 words. There will be upward of 300 illustrations, many of them taken specially for this work. There will be a sim ultaneous publication of the work in Eng land which will bear the imprint of B. T. Batsford. of London, the well-known pub lisher of architectural books. Dr. Henry van Dyke visited Damascus while he was revising his poetlo drama, "The House of Rimmon." so that the color and setting of this striking literary feature o tha notion uumbec of Scrlbner's are true it :We are, each one of us, but an omnibus carrying down the traits of our ancestors ' GEORGE ELIOT. TS.ICHAJ2D HAJ2V1KG DAYIS AUTHOR, OF "VERA THE MEDIUM."' Vera, the Medium. By Richard Harding' Davis. Illustrated. Price. 1.50. Charles Scrlbner's Som, New York City, and the J. K. Gill Company, Portland. It seems singularly appropriate since Portland has passed strict laws for bidding fortune-tellers for a fee to reveal the future, or In any way ply their calling, that there should be is sued Just now this novel by Mr. Davis, in which he exposes a "fake" medium, with a dash of romance added. The novel is eminently one to read on vaca tion; for, as a book, the print and illustrations are excellent, and ther story itself is told with the true. Davis sweep. And anyone who has ever read "Soldiers of Fortune" or "The Bar Sin ister" knows what this means. "Vera" is human, amusing, tearful and appeal ing. Interest starts out with the announce ment that Stephen Hallowell, million aire. Is supposed to be dying. His mil lions had largely been made by dollars coined from the manufacture and sale of a coupling-pin, the invention of, his brother-in-law, Coates, since dead. The understanding Detween Hallowell and his brother-in-law was, that for Hal lowell's trouble in placing the coup-ltng-pln on the market for five years the partners would share the profits equally. Thereafter all rights in the patent reverted to Hallowell. In the meantime the inventor and his wife died, and Hallowell was enough of a finance-shark to see to it that profits from the invention began shortly after the fifth year. Miss Helen Coates, Hal lawell's niece, insisted that all profits to the realities. The drama Is In four acts, two of which will ar.pear next month and two in September. L. Allen Harker, the author of the "Paul and Flammetta" stories, will tell in the fiction number the amusing adventure of Paul when he be came acquainted with John Hay's "Pike County Ballads" and started out to dis cover the identity of a "whisky skin." F. Hopkinson Smith has just started on his twenty-first annual sketching trip to Eu rope, to be gone until December, and he will contribute to this eventful number a story. "Forty Minutes Late." which nar rates the disturbing adventures of a lec turer In a desolate New England village in Winter time. "The Century of the Child." by Ellen Key, the Swedish writer, has gone through more than 20 German editions, has been published in several European countries, and Is to be brought out soon In an English translation. Since Ellen Key severed her connection with the champions of woman's emancipation, 12 years ago, by asserting that the salvation of woman depended upon a nobler conception of her natural mission as wife and mother rather than upon at enlargement of her sphere, she has devoted herself largely to educational questions, and her seriousness and sincerity of ethical pur pose have won for her a large and enthu siastic following. Some of her ideas are revolutionary, but in educational questions she shows originality, and her writings make a strong appeal to many people. In the matter of the education of children she is the foe of mechanical methods, and recommends a large liberty in the bringing up of young people. Percy F. Megargel, the co-author with Grace Sartwell Mason of the new novel. "The Car and the Lady," Is known as one of the most experienced Iong-distanoe motor-drivers in America in 1904. He drove a two-cylinder Elmore Pathfinder from New York to St. Louis and return twice In 1906. He drove a six-horsepower Oldsmobile from New York to this city. In 1005-06, he drove the two cylinder 16-horsepower Reo Mountaineer from New York to this city, down the coast to Los Angeles across the Great Desert of CaM f orn la. Arizona and New Mexico, and back to New York City, crossing the Rocky Moun tains in midwinter. Grace S. Mason is a well-known contributor to htgh-olass journals, and this collaboration promises to be most successful. The story is one of active love and business rivalry between an Italian de signer and driver of high-grade foreign cars and a young American manufacturer. The conflict Is to be decided in favor Of the winner of this race from New York to this city, and the competitors put up $50,000 be tween them. The novel Is one of pro gressive interest s n d will be issued about the end of this month. Mrs. M. D. Frazar. whose "Practical Eu ropean Guide" Is finding so much favor with travelers, tells a story In regard to the esti mate of our people by a low-class London crowd: "It was In 1801 when the German Emperor and his suite, together with other titled per sons, were on a visit to Queen Victoria. They were being driven about the city to see Its notable points and to enjoy the elab orate decorations. The carriages were, of course, very handsome, the drivers being In livery. "On this same occasian a large party of wealthy Americans were In London, driving about in the same way, with the same style of carriage and drivers. On a sunny after noon they were driving down the Strand and turned up toward the Coven t Garden Fruit and Flower Market. This is a rendezvous Tor the hucksters, and all the poor wretched crowds, attracted by a chance to pick up a bit of decayed fruit. a cry was raised that the titled visitors were coming, and in half a minute the carriages were sur rounded by the people not the enthusiastic, courteous crowds of Latin countries, but one in which coarse jokes and criticisms circu lated freely, and unpleasant faces were thrust close to those in the carriages. "One old woman, her eyes blood-shot, and her hair hanging In wisps around her face, pressed nearer and nearer, and took s sTood careful look. . accruing from the sale of the Coates Hallowell coupling--pln should belong solely to her, and threatens to pro ceed leg-ally against her uncle. Judge Gaylor heade a band of con spirators who persuade Mr. Hallowell to leave his millions in trust for a mythical Hallowell Institute, the said institute 'largely being the conspira tors' pockets. The conspirators, at the time the story opena, have partly In duced old Mr. Hallowell ' to believe in spiritualism, and by means of a medium that the spirit of hii dead sister, Mrs. Catharine Coates. may be Induced to Indicate what disposition should be made of the Hallowell money. Vera Is cognizant of Oaylor's plan to rob Hallowell, and seconds his endeav ors with professional composure. Her two co-workers in the mind-reading business are Professor Paul Vance, and his wife, Mabel. The Vances are thus Introduced: For the last six weeks as head liners at one of the vaudeville theaters, and as en tertalners at private houses, under the firm name of "The vances," they had been giv ing an exhibition of code and cipher sig naling. They called It mind-reading.. During the day, at the bouse of Vanes and his wife, the girl, as vera, the Ms dlum," furnished to all comers memories of the past or news of the future. In their profession, In all Its branches, tha man and the girl were past masters. They knew it from the A B C of the dream-book to the post-graduate work of projecting from a cabinet the spirits of the dead. As the occasion offered and paid best, they were mind-readers, clairvoyants, ma terializing mediums, test mediums. From them a pack of cards, a crystal globe, the lines of the human hand, held no secret a They found lost articles, cast horoscopes, gave advice in affairs of the heart, of busi ness and speculation, uttered warnings of journeys over seas, and against a smooth shaven stranger. They even stooped to foretell earthquakes, or caused to drop fluttering from the celling a letter straight from the. Himalayas. Vera had entered the New York home of the Vances from the country town of Geneva, N. T., and from the first had brought business and money to the precious pair. At 21 years old Vera was "tall, wonderfully graceful,, and of the most enchanting loveliness." Many of the men who called on her profes sionally returned the day following, and each begged the beautiful priestess of the occult to fly with him, to live with him. to marry him. "When this happened Vera would touch a button, and 'Mannie O'Day, who admitted visitors, and, later, in the hall searched their .hats and umbrellas for initials, came on the run and threw the infatuated one out upon a cold and unfeeling sidewalk." Before Vera had quite influenced Mr. Hallowell, the plot had attracted the attention of Mr. Wlnthrop, the Dis trict Attorney of New York. Part of the portrait of tlis young lawyer Is supposed to be that of District At torney Jerome. When Mr. Wlnthrop discovers Vera in the act of persuading Mr. Hallowell that she Is "calling" the spirit of his sister Catharine, the young District At torney thinks he has met the girl be fore; and on page 72 a dramatic scene Is enacted where the girl admits that years previously she had been arrested for stealing a cloak, and that Wln throp had been the lawyer who had secured her acquittal. This had been Wlnthrop' "first case," and he had ar gued that the girl ought to be set free, because she stole the cloak to get money to take her where she had been promised work. "And, please, there's the money I owe you, and and I thank you and gfood bye," said Vera, running from him towards the door. "Stop," cried Winthrop, "when can I see you again r "You'll be sorrr," aald the girl. From this moment, a really pretty and unusual romance follows. ' Wln throp awakens in Veras heart the de sire to be honest and abandon her life of mummery. CJnce in calling on Vera he was puzzled at the something which "had filled this unknown, tawdry room with beauty, and given It the happiness of a home." Pity the book that doesn't have its supreme moment, and that moment comes when Miss Coates publicly de nounces Vera as a thief. Away down in Vera's heart deepens the conviction that she really Is a priestess and a seer, and, defying Winthrop, she en acts the part of a medium before old Mr; Hallowell. The scene Is thrilling. Vera had been tUd in the cabinet, in the orthodox way, and was success fully Impersonating the spirit of Mrs. Coates, when she breaks down and con fesses that she is an Impostor: The ap peal coming from Wlnthrop to lead a new life, had borne fruit. And "Vera and ' Wlnthrop. The end is surprising and of the breathless variety. My Life and My Leotnrss, By Lamar Fon taine. Price, $3. The Neale Publishing Company, New York City. They tell a story of an Irish soldier who gave so much proof of being a fighter, that on his being suspended by a rope connected with a ring in the ceiling, bullets dropped from hia body to the floor! Such a soldier of fortune must have been Lamar Fontaine, ex -Con federate. whose life story reads like pages from the enchanted "Arabian Nights," He was nearly shot to pieces In his various fights, but gives evidence that he is alive to tell the tale. Witty and anecdotal, the story of his wanderings have a charm that in stinctively draws you. Just as a cheerful fireplace in Winter attracts the tired traveler. What a pity that Fontaine is such a man of blood. His book con tains 361 pages, and at the top of each page sxcept that containing the heading of each chapter appears the legend: "My Ltfe and My Lectures. There Is no chancs of getting away from tflat "my." It pursues you like the glare of a head light and adds to the general picture of Fontaine's egotism. His experiences uni- : formly hark back to the personal pronoun 1. He tells little of real patriotism, and ; writes as one who gloried in being his country's rebel. But think of the man's career: Born in Texas, in a tent, October 10, 1S29, when ( he was 10 years old he was captured by Oomanche Indians, living as one of them : for nearly five years. At 15 years of age, he went to sea and got acquainted with China, Egypt. India. Palestine, South America: sailed as far north as the 79th parallel and as far south as the 76th. He crossed the desert of Sahara on camel back, from Fes to the valley of the Nile. then down the Nile to the Delta; traversed 350 miles of the Great Chinese Wall and explored the Amazon with Lieutenant Herndon and the Holy Land with Lieu tenant Lynch; surveyed the Great Andean Plateau from Cuzco to the foot of Lake Titicaca; and was a member of Prince Gortschokoff'a Kloski Cossack body-guard in the Siege of Sevastopol, during th Crimean War. In 1861, at the age of 31, he returned to America and enlisted in ' Company A of the Tenth Mississippi In- 1 fantry, and later he belonged to Company K, Eighteenth Mississippi Infantry, and Company I of the Second Virginia. CaValry. He." was wounded 67 times and lay in an iron frame, suspended from the celling, for 21 days, that his broken bones might knit and heal. And he went on lighting. Fontaine must have been, according to his book, one of the great sharpshooters of the world. He takes a savage delight in telling of. the Federal soldiers at whom he took aim and killed, especially if they wece foreign born. On pages 127 and 128. he relates how at Waterloo Bridge, in August 1862, before Generals "Stonewall" Jackson and Robert . Lee, he shot, and presumably killed, with his rifle 60 Fed eral soldiers, in less than 60 minutes of time. On page 111 he writes: "Our cavalry shot the hirelings as they would mad dogs, as 90 per cent of them could not speak or understand English." Else where he exhibits . this animal desire to kill: When I came in contact with thosevast hordes of foreign hirelings who entered the Federal army during the Confederate war, for gold alone, and not from patriotism or love of country, I felt It a solemn, a God given duty, a privilege to kill them; and I thanked my Creator that he had given me steady hands and good eyes to hold and direct my missiles of death, for they were only fit to feed the buzzards of our South land. They had sold their very souls for gold, and I took delight in piling their car casses In mounds to .feed the fowls of the air. ' It Is not my intention to review Major Fontaine's further adventures throughout the remainder of the Civil War, because that would be telling a well-told tale. Major Fontaine Is more interesting as a philosopher, scientist and studont. He believes that it was upon this North American shore, at the North Pole, that the first germs of life sprang into exist ence, and that as the earth cooled, plant and animal life grew and prospered, and followed tha cooling earth down toward the equator. It is suggested that after the creation of fishes, birds and beasts, that man came in the sixth era man of a low order of intellect, but a shade above the monkey tribe, with the long dolichokeoholic heads, prognathus jaws and small brain capacity, dark-skinned and woolly-haired, capable of standing a very hot climate. After them, Fontaine goes on to say. in that far Northern region in the eighth era of the Mosaic account, came the later In telligent man, fair-skinned, with mesoke phalic head, orthognathus or upright jaws, straight slender bones with duties to per form. And it was into this man created on the eighth day, after the finishing of hl work on the seventh, that uort breathed Into his nostrils the breath of life and that man became a living bouI. People lived before Adam and Eve. "When the blood of Abel cried out for vengeance, God heard the cry and sent Cain a vagabond and wanderer far out Into the land of Nod to the eastward -of Eden, among these prognathus-jawed and do 1 ich ok ephalic-headed men and women of the sixth-day creation." Fallen from his high estate, Cain married one or more of these women who gave birth to a miscegenated son, Enoch. Many of this miscegenated race Intermarried and be got a new race entirely, this race of half breeds spreading rapidly over the earth. ' Our author, therefore, believes that God created the black and white race, but not the yellow, red, brown and tan: and he advanc?s the idea that the act of miscegenation of the races brought about the destruction of the world, as shown In the Bible, and will surely do so again. He thinks that the mound-builders of America were negroes, and worked under the supervision of white men or white masters, who directed and governed them. The Book of Fish and Fishing. By Louts Rhead. Illustrated. Price, S1.50. Charles Scrlbner's Sons. New York City, and the J. K. GUI Company, Portland. Mr. Rhead, I am told by one competent authority, is one of the best known fish ermen In this country,, and for over 25 years he has made painstaking studies of the most approved methods to lure fishes, ajid also of the habits of fishes. The book under review consists of 306 pages, and is an encyclopedia of facts showing the easiest and best ways, how to catch, where to go to catch fish, and how to get the best sport. Mr. Rhead admits that among game fishes the sal mon is supreme, and he pays our Colum bia River Salmon a deserved compliment. "It is over 50 yean eince the 'Jock Scott and 'silver doctor salmon flies were in vented. Nothing In flies has been made aince to equal them," says our author, who. by the way. has drawn liberally on standard authorities for some of his con clusions. For a frontispiece, the volume is beau tified by this quotation from Henry Van Dyke: Only an idle little stream. Whose amber waters softly gleam. Where I may wade, through woodland shade. And cast the fly. and loaf, and dream. Chinese Fables and Folk Stories. By Mary Hayes Davis and Rev. Chow-Leung. Illus trated. Price. 40 cents. American Book Company. New York City. These 37 Stories of Chinese life and char acter introduce us to an unsuspected field of fiction, and the translators have clev erry preserved the different phases of Oriental character and habits of thought. Several of the most admired stories are thousands of years old, and reading them in this admrable collection one recog nises here and there old favorites which some people fondly Imagine originated in our English tongue. The best story told in the book is "How the Moon Became Beautiful." The interesting illustrations are from drawings by native artists, and the whole is Intended for supplementary use in the third and fourth years . of school. ' The Power Supreme, By Francis C. Nicho las. R. E. Les Company, Boston. Tells of primal conditions in the re moter portions of South America, in which political and ecclesiastical condi tons are mirrored to the sound of con stant turmoil, ending in battle and revo lution. A half-breed Indian named Joa quin, who fought in revolutions bordering On the Caribbean Sea from Central Amer ica down to Columbia, and Venezuela, tells the principal stories. All who like plenty of frenzied acton will find it in this novel, J. M. QUENTIN.