iTTTti smrTUTT ftrinvTv pnPTT.i VT). ATTflTTST SO. 1908. S"si . - i 'f-r-.r tir. a, mMfiif the, mind : it requires the same effort of the' brain that it takes to balance ..one's self on a bicycle.rJIelen Keller. S . JMARY .ROBERTS Halfway Hoaaa. bv Maurice Hewlete. f I 30. Charles ficrihner's tout, New York City. and the J. K. GUI (. Portland It is well to remember tliat tha iub title of this novel ts "A Comedy of Degrees." before' deeply wading Into w hat is an analysis of English "high" life and the temperamental study of a foolish but fortunate young woman, Mi Mary Middleham. afterward In succession Mrs. John Oorman and Mrs. Jack Senhouse. Halfway House." In title, almost suggests a sort of Last-Chanr Saloon, a last gap for liquid refreshment and a two-fer cigar before we again "hit" the dusty road; but the author clearly shows that it is a place of moral shelter. The book is a striking; bit of fiction and comes up to the front In a season noteworthy for meritorious story-telling. ' England" Is written all over It from the Insistent use of the verbs "shall" and "will," down to many cups of tea. On page 244 we read that one Tristram Duplessis "leisurely sipped bis tea before answering;, got up and waited for another cup while ho col lected his reply. It's a long time I know that. Thanks, no sugar." Next page, we come across Miss Nina Ewetebrede. of Copestake, who "came In. craving tex" And further along, the young person says, as ahe dis tributes her nods and smiles on either hand: "Dear Mary, I'm so tired. Do feed me and make a fuss of me and 1 shall love you." - But after all Mary Middleham Is the star performer, the top-liner tn this comedy of temperament. She first comes on the stage as a country gov erness, a penniless dependent, who is fortunate enough to attract tha notice of John Germain, widower, a man old enough to bo her father, but the pos sessor of a long pedigree, a country house, an atate and iota of money. "She glowed like a peach' in the sun. She looked wholesome and healthy. Her figure was charming softly, ten derly curved." Germain was impressed with the maloVn, for he wistfully said In his heart: "To woo the confidence back to. such eyes, to still the doubts In such a breast, were work for a true map." Now, Miss Mary was clearly not meant for marriage, since she was cap able of loving only one person In the world herself. But she hankered after matrimony and the delight of having money and a . handle to her name. The average young man of her acquaintance tn those days al ways wanted to fall down on his knees and worship her just as soon as she put In. an appearance. Three of her chief lovers were John Germain, 30 years old, lord of the manor; Tristram Duplessis. a six-footer who looked on every pretty girl as his lawful prey, and Jack Senhouse, poet, 'dreamer and tinker. Senhouse is the most Interest ing of the three, and this description of him Is furnished by an envious friend: Jack Eenhnuse? 'Well, he's mad. Hieh chsp at least hla father waa rich. Well. Jack chocked all that took to painting, scribbling-. God knows what. His governor s;te crow; sends hlra 'round tha world on tha chance ha settle down by and by. Ha collects plants In the Atlas. Ha turns up In Warsaw. talking to the Poles about revolu tion. Ha goes to Siberia after plants and polities. Mora rows. Well, he came back and said ha was a tinker. Had learned tinkering somewhere, sowderln' and all that, and I'm d d If he didn't set up a cart and corse and go about with a teat. Ha paint, he ecrJbblee. ha sowders and ha turns England Into a garden and planta hts plant. He's got plants out all over tha cou n try. Mary marries Mr. Germain, although she doesn't love him, and he treats her as h would a grown-up daughter. Even after marriage Mr. Germain al lows Duplessis to pay her remarkable attention, a fact of which her hus band Is painfully aware, although he prefers to suffer In silence. Senhouse, he who allows his hair to grow long, walks about without shoes or stock ings, and tramps over Bngland with his caravan, horse and dog, thus senses the situation: Old Germain what's he doing but playing the "King on tha Cross?" But has ha any thing to give? Its an Infernal shams. He's bought the child. She'll never forgive him. Fhe'll harden, she'll be pltlleea have no mercy when tha hour strikes. ... If there'e a woman in her, after travail she'll b- bom. If I bedeck he bosom of England and star It with the flowers, do I do batter than Germain whh bis money, or Duplessis with his rights? And If X were to court her bosom Oh, ray brown-eyed venturer in deeo- waters. I could serve you well! Go to school, missy and when you are tired, there'e Halfway House. When one. reads of the armed-peace between Mrs. Germain and her hus band, and learns that the queerly assorted pair have hardly one thought In common, one dimly suspects that the husband will conveniently dia be fore vary long. No tender-hearted novelist would dare In fiction to hint that such a marriage ought to be of the untll-dcath-doth-us-part order So. old Mr. Germain dies, of a broken heart, and leaves a fine house and $15,000 a year to his widow, so long as she remains unmarried. But, if she marries. $2500. Now, put on your thinking cap. What do you think this very-much-loved young woman does? Go through the remainder of her life a widow? Mr. Hewlett finds a ready answer. Some Afrtaaa Highways, by Caroline Klrk land. Illustrated. St. SO. Dana Estes & Co., Boston, Mass. Frank G. Carpenter, through his letters to The Oregonian, has mads African 5 71 J i .V- - Nl I i JDErrEOTlVE 6TOK.V -:inE CIRCUlR STAIRCASE travel a familiar subject in this region. and so complete have been his word pic tures that it would seem that the entire subject had been exhausted for tne Dresent. But the writer of this Interesting book of observation holds up a new mirror and tells about what may be called "a wo man's Africa." She describes the Jour ney of herself and mother to Uganda ana tha Transvaal, the accompanying photo graphs toeing excellent. She tells of utter savagery In closs contsct wun monem aortal Ufa bu lit ud by Britons, r rencn. Germans, Italians and Portuguese. A llvelv Introduction Is given ny ueutenani General Baden-Powell, the hero of Mafe- klne during the British-Boer war. The authoress says that her book Is published with tha hope of Interesting other Americans In one of the most fas cinating and unique tours In the world a tour which can be made with entlra safety and great comfort. "Where else?" asks she. "can you look from railway carriage windows and see sebraa, gnus, giraffes, hyenas, and even lions, as you steam through a land? We two women only touched the surface of it. but we were ever conscious of much that we could not see, nor hear, nor formulate, but which exists In a land teeming with fierce and savage life." In speaking of Victoria Nyanza. the latter word meaning "lake," our author ess writes: Lake Superior has none of the hippopo tami, tha giant crocodiles, or tha still mora repulsive water-pythons that Infest this body of water and glva a sinister glint to the sparkles. By way of reassurance, tha captain of our steamer showed us photographs of huge crocodiles he had ahot from tha and of that very pier; also of a mammoth water-python which had crawled up a few months ago on tha very deck where we were pitting, where It stretched tta horrid, slimy, 17 feet of colls, and Interrupted a "capital game of bridge." In nearly every chapter the authoress voices her appreciation of what she. calls English colonial rule In Africa- For In stance, on page 113 she speaks of the King of England's birthday, which was observed by English officials with pomp and ceremony. English? Surely she means British. In mentioning a dinner party given at Entebbe, Uganda, it is related that a portion of tha eatables consisted of salmon from the Columbia River. The most Impressive word pictures given are those describing disease-producing tropical Africa, the land of ants and sleeping sickness. It Is thought that this latter disease first appeared in West Africa about 15 years ago, having pos sibly been brought there from South America- The natives of Uganda paid Its most shocking toll, for out of a popu lation of about 300.000 In the year 1900, 200.000 died of sleeping sickness between that date and 1906, In the Protectorate. Tha opinion is .expressed that a long residence In tropical Africa has a disin tegrating effect, both physically and men tally, on the white races? It saps the vigor, rendering bodies anemic and minds torpid, one of Its most peculiar effects being the destruction ef the memory. The tenure of the Anglo-Saxon in Central Africa, It Is stated. Is rather like that of the animal trainer in a cage full of trained linns and tigers, because "the black races do not like tha white people." The Wayfarers, by Mary Stewart Cutting. $1 55. Illustrated. Tha McClure com pany, New York City. Just as Conan Doyle is known to tha world for his wonderfully good detective stories, O. Henry, ' for his New York tales of the four million: Robert W. Chambers, for his brilliant pictures of our new plutocracy Mrs. Mary Stewart Cutting has become known as tha nov elist of the American suburbanite. Pic ture a business man in the city manag ing a machine shop or a foundry, a train tooting toward the fragrant meadows, a trolley car or a ferryboat, and a wait ing wife accompanied by lota of babies at tha other end of suburban-town, and the Cutting atmosphere arrives. Mrs. Cutting, up to now, has rather been known as a writer of short stories, but lately ahe liu wooed fame as the author of regular novels. A typical Cushlng study is "The Wayfarers," be ing the story of a married pair who narrowly escaped being tha principal actors in the domestic tragedy of an unhappy marriage, the moving spirit in It being Justin Alexander, a husband who becomes so much absorbed in hla business that his wife suffers from lack ef his society. She was made to be coddled and loved like a big baby and she has one long wall of regret. Just like the rat whose milk-bowl is left unfilled for a succession of mornings. Probably Mrs. Alexander would have been happier had her husband been able to store her in one ef his vest pockets, the one nearest his heart. But, anyway, Mrs. Alexander is human and lovable, and possesses an interesting personality, so much so that she makes one curious to watch her to the and. One morning she "sat up" to welcome her husband on his return, from a club dinner party, and "her facfe was white, and her large eyes stared straight be fore her rigidly, yet with a wild gleam in them. As he looked at her she rose and moved as. If to pass him." "Where are you going?" he asked, aa ha atepped forward with his dripping overcoat it waa raining half off. Her lips stiffly framed, the word: "Out." He spoke roughly, in a terrible anxiety and anger mixed together: "What are you working yourself up to all this foolishness lor?" "Tou don't cars any mora." Oh, if ha would snatch her to him now. that she might feel his protecting arms around her. If he would kiss her now with the kisses she remembered, and love her, and comfort her, and send this horrible spirit out of her! "Tou don't care." she whispered again. "No. I don't care for you when you act like this." His voice was sterner" now: It was time, that this travesty came to an end. She atared at him aa before. "Then I'll go." she said wildly, and slipped past him out of the door and Into the rain, running with swift uncertain footsteps down the black, wet street, listening, listening al! the time for him to follow listening aa she ran. She had gone nearly a block toward the river. Oh. watild ha let her go? Of course not. Mr. Alexander came up with his foolish wife and caught her and the little tragedy dissolved amid kisses and tears. So a woman'e words , are shown. A young girl. Miss Dosla Linden. Is in troduced with admirable yet amusing effect. She is a girl of foolish senti mentalism who has a vasiety of lovers and can't for a long time make up her mind which one Is "the" one. Ultimate ly she i suited. The portrait of -Justin Alexander is perhaps the best drawn, because he en dures the most-r-a young business man starting on borrowed, capital and whose financial savior turns out, indirectly, to be his wife. "The Wayfarers" has a domestic thrill, a homey feeling that goes to the right spot. Its- married lovers are natural folks of every-day type. Anne of Creen Gables, by L. M. Mont gomery. Illustrated. 1.S0. I. C. Page A Co.. Boston. Mass.. and Llpman, Wolfs A Co., Portland. Tod much praise cannot be awarded this splendidly drawn and daintily apprecia tive sketch of sensitive and Imaginative girlhood. The heroine is Miss Anna or Cordelia Shirley, who has red hair and creeps into the book and Into your liking when she Is Just 11 years old. and is a graduate from an orphan asylum on Prince Island, Canada. There Is a quaint humor about her that is contagious, but pleasant the kind you chnckle over. She has all sorts of odd adventures, and tha delineation of character seen in tha per cons of a rugged old farmer and his drled-up spinster sister is above tba aver age. Anna is a child of trouble, but there la enough ootimism In her to say at tha end when she is really a success In life: "Dear old world, you are very lovely and I am glad to be alive in you." Tha teach ing of the novel is wholesome, ana tne book Is a suitable present for a young girl at school. There ought to ba mora eenai bla books like "Anne of Green Gables." The Vegetable Oardea, by Ira n. Bennett lllustrsted. $150. The McClura Com "" pany. New Tork City. Away with peddled fruit and tht dusty vegetables that grace the gro cars' doorway! In tha words of thli client honk. "There are no vege imMki ilka those which coma wet with the morning dew from one's own gai . L. - V. (Ohio wit UCil, in (tract? iiiw u n o " . . . . , .. the toothsome erlspness of the scarlet radish or the fresh coolness of lettu e. To possess the land and till it, is the primal heritage of men." All of which goes to show that you (i U K 1 1 1 iw lit v " . ' ' . den all your own. and that you ought . . , . 1 V. nalAnt Aarth to plant seeas i Fnllr,,fc ... which before long will come out as food. This nneiy uiustrsicu b.hu Itoly written book will tell you Just what you ought to do. Its wise ad vice Is worth real money. How to Dreae a noil, by Mary M. Morgan, .o cents. Henry Aitemus company. Phll- A valuable little book admirably adanted for use in schools, churcn sewing classes and the home. Both mother and child will welcome It as a friend. Tha authoress is an experi enced teacher of sewing and seems to know ev-erv difficulty that besets lit tie needlewomen. Simple words are used, so simple that most of the little folks will understand the lessons iriven. Pictures, diagrams ana pat terna help to simplify the text, and the mysteries of iucks, nems anu stitches are made clear. The Mystery of the Four Fingers, by Fred M. White. W. J. Watt & Co.. New York city. A sensational story of English life, de pleting the aftermath of one Mark Fen wick, who committed murder to gain tha secret of how to obtain gold from tha Four Fingers mine, in Mexico. The "four finger" thread in the story is a grewsome one, and the subsequent Nemesis which overtakes Fenwick thrills like melo drama. But the story Itself is undeniably cheap, and I can t recommend it aa one to read Just before dinner. The Social Puty of Oar Daughters, by Mrs. Adolph Hoffman. 85 cents. Vlr Publlsh Comp&ny, Philadelphia. Pa Mrs. Hoffman, of Geneva, Bwltxer land, is prominent In European reform work, and In this sympathetically writ ten book gives a helpful message to mothers and grown daughters on the responsibility of motherhood. J. M. QUBNTIX. IN IJBRARY AND WORKSHOP. New books received: "Peggy at Bplnater Farm," by Helen M. Winslow (Psga A Co.); "The Study of Nature," by Dr. Samuel Christian Schmercker (Ulppincott). New books received: Through LJpman. Wolfe A Co., "Anne of Green Gables and . . -. Lj.in.i.. Vav m-" through the J. K. Gill Company, "Tha Study of Nature,1; Tne wayiarers, in vsksu, c - ubi .Mil Wordum to define the difference between genius and insanity. ,.nr. ii .nihnr of "Doacneratlon. speaking in a tone of conviction, "the luna- . . a. I lutavil m rA tic its. av iMm u'" . ' "" lothes." . . . Robert Hsrriek's new novel "Together." l nrose ante of marriage, continues to ba sought after. It's ona charm is that It begins at tha place wnere neroea ana nr- nes are generally sujuwtw w " ever after. v.. - ... .hlldren that J t . . - ' - m . . UnjIvaAM T3 , ... mil b. a M written for some years will ba -ubHshed lmmediate- ... . . I .1.1. Tl'nlf Al ly U 111) CI UIV I ' U w. - . --- ready, through Its serial publication, tna and the book will no doubt meet with a large 'Bala. Warner's "American Charities." which for several years has tesn tha standard work of reference upon tta subject, ta to be presented In entirely revised ana enlarged lorra oy its publishers this fall. A naw poetic version of Tha Pearl," a medieval poem, oy rrw. Sophie Jeweu of Wallealey. is also an nounced. ess When Sir Robert Walpole. tha English statesman, retired Into private life, time hung heavy oa his hands, and Horace ex erted himself to amuse his father. One day ha offered to read ta him. "What will you read, child?" askad tUr Robert, wearily. Horace suggested history. "No. no," replied the veteran statesman; "not history, Hor ace; that can't ba true." e e s The Blue Dragon." by Kirk Munroe, and "Cast Up by the Sea." by Hamuel White Baker, old-time favorites with young peo ple, have gone Into reprint. Other Juvenile reprints noticed are "Toby Tyler," by James Otis; "Pony Tracks and Crooked Trails." by Frederick Remington; "Nan." by Lacy O. 1,1111s. and three books by Ellen Douglas island "Oakleigh," "Josephine" and "Alan Ralnsford." ess la a few days will ba Issued a new novel by Frederick Palmar entitled "Tha Big Fellow." This Is a big itory with a big American -for Its heroa new character, simple and magnetic, full of boyish unaffect edness. a rr.&l hero without even wanting to be one. Tha story recalls measurably, the author's other fine American novel. "The Vagabond" but it is xnaturer, more finished, better In every way It is being told of Renan in Paris that his contemporary Bolsaler came to him beamingly to boast that one of his auto graphs had been sold at an auction for a dollar, while Renan's had. brought only 80 cents. "Well." said Renan. "now let me tell you the reason." And he produced the Identical dollar autograph from his desk. There were three mistakes In Fpelllng and It had besn bought in at a fancy prioe to keep the public from learning that an acade mician couia tint p-mi. e "Tha Duke's Motto" Is the title of tha new novel by Justin Huntly McCarthy which will sea the light In a few days. Ivers of facile swords and devil-may-care heroes will rejoice to know that Mr. McCarthy hero will be like that. The plot has its setting In France under I.tuis XIII.. shifts also to Spain, and is described as sheer adventure completely under the spell of a hero so audacious and resourceful that all of his exploits seem true. A novel of international flavor, powerful In plot and action, will be published under the title of "The Ptstue." It Is the Joint work of Eden Phlllpotts and Arnold Ben nett, and partakes of the great story telling qualities of each of these rreatly unlike novelists. The scene Is England and the Issues Involved, soclsl and political, are of tha larger kind. The novel Is finely written. It leaves the reader at the close of the exciting clln ax with the feeling of satisfaction that follows the reading of only a few booka each year. - An exciting detective etory Is announced under the title of "The Man Without a Head." The -autho- is Tyler de Salx. The scene Is England, for the most part London, and the hero a young German recently an nexed to the staff of Scotland Yard, who has his reputation to make and makes It. The story Is ona which depends for its powerful grip on the attention upon the keen clash of wits between the pursuer and the pursued, rather than upon the sheer force of horror plied on horror, which Is the method of so many rtcent writers of mystery stori-s. Among women who write there Is aoms diversity of opinion about women's clubs. Many of the best-known writers are identi fied with club life. Gertrude Atherton. of course, being the great exception, and the newer ones are also divided among them selves. "I am very fond of clubs," con fesses Maude Radford Warren, who is being noticed as the author of tne new novel "The Land of the Living." "I belong to half a dosen or so of all sorts merely so oial. surely fashionable, really Intellectual and aolely philanthropic. In short, I belong to all tha nice clubs I can nna. see Mary Roberts Rlnehart is a young au thoress who Is going to be lucky with her first novel "The Circular Staircase" a first-class detective atory, which proves to be mysterious and very readable. Up to now. Miss Rlnehart haa attracted faver abla notice as a writer of short stories. "The Circular Staircase" tells what hap pened to a middle aged spinster, who. with her sisters two grown children, occupies a country house for- the Summer. Then a murder happens, and' the clue to the mur derer Is so deftly hidden that the explana tion relative to the Identity of the wretch, comes Ilka a sudden blow In the face. . e Of course, the ona Important feature of the September number of the Pacific Monthly is the new story, by Jack I,ondon. entitled "Martin Eden." The opening chapter open exceedingly well, and all the good things said In advance of the etyry so far turn out to be true. London appears this time In a new and better light, and It's about time. His story l sure to meet with a great re ception. Very useful is William T. Proe ser's article, "ts Alaska Becoming a Rich Man's Preserver' Ared White, seemingly a new writer, e-ritea gilt-edge ' Action in a stirring tsle of a man hunt. "The Anniversary of Los Plnoe." Mr. White's word pictures are eo vivid that one almost seems to eee his characters move on a stage. One of those people who concern them selves with such things wrote the other dsy tn Charles Rann Kennedy, author of "The Servant in the House." asking for aome story of his childhood. Evidently much success the hook has exhaustsd many editions, and the play Is touring the coun try has not quenched the Englishman's ambition, for he replied promptly: "Only etory of childhood recorded by my mother. One whole day I cried literally for the moon. Like the atory." offers Mr. Ken nedy. "Symbolical. Been crying for It aver since. And I'll get It yet." According to literary reports, tha two books ffictlon and plays) moat in demand in New York libra ries at this time are Rex Beach's "Tha Bar rier" and Charles Rann Kennedy's "The Servant in the House." e e e William Helnemann. the well-known Lon don publisher. Is a man of varied talents. It is known that be has successfully ap peared In I,ondon In a number of copy right performances of modern standard playa, and now ha has been displaying bla skill as a photographer in a number of striking snapshots that he has taken of William DeMorgan. author of "Somehow Good." and "Joseph Vance," In Florence. Although It Is known that Mr. DeMorgan la considerably over 40 years of age, he does not look , a day over It In theae pictures, all of which show him In the beat of humor: Most of them were taken In tha beautiful Cachlne Park, one of them at the spot where Shelley wrote "The Ode to the West Wind." Still another shows Mr. DeMorgan on the Lung Arno near where Dante met Beatrice. eee Commenting upjj Lord Dunedln's leroark at the recent unveiling of the memorial to Mrs. Ollphant in Fdlnburrh Cathedral, to the effect that the author of "The Chrr.n leles of Carllngford" was the greatest novel ist Scotland had produced since Miss Fer rier. the Springfield Republican Bays that this Is "an estimate to which some ardent Btevensonlans would take exception." And It adds: "As a matter of fact. Stevenson waa hardly a novelist at all. though a brilliant writer and romancer. It may well be believed that If he had lived another ten years and learned to portray women and develop character he would have become a great novelist as well. JHs unfinished Weir of Hermlston shows a remarkable growth In this direction Mrs. Oilshant was by comparison a second-rate writer, but a mora accomplished novelist, and her books hsva lasting charm." eee "Tha Whole Family." the remarkable ae rial novel now appearing in Harper's Basar. Is conesded by the critics to be a most strik ing magazine feature. "The Whole Family" la written by twelve of America's most famous authors, whose names are: William Dean Howells, Mary E. Wllklna Freeman, John Kendrlek Bangs, Mary R. S. Andrews. Mary Stewart Cutting,-Alice Brown, Henry van Dyke. Elisabeth Stuart Phelps, Elisa beth Jordon, Edith Wyatt, Mary Heatoa Vorse, Henry James. The navel is unique and wholly different from former composite novels ln the fact that each author writes his chapter In the first person and aa the mouthpiece of ona member of the family. Moreover, the Bazar is publishing the chapters without ths names of the authors, and allowing the public to guess which has written each In stallment. eee The September Century contains tha first of William H. Crook's reminiscences of Andrew Johnson In tha White House, an nounced some monthB ago. Mr. Crook was for many years one of the White House staff: and his reminiscences of tha daya of Andrew Johnson's presidency, written In col laboration with Mrs. Margarita Spalding Gerry, are marked by a sympathetic appre ciation of the mora engaging qualities of a man who ts the ona of our Preetdenta least known and, perhaps, least understood. Edward C Parker, of the University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station. who has written for the same magazine of "The Future Wheat Supply of the United Stages." started in June for Manchuria on an agricultural mis sion for the VThlneee authorities, who re quested the State Department of the United Statea to furnish them with two American experts In agricultureal experiment work. The work contemplated la that of organiz ing an experiment station and agricultural school in the province of Manchuria, eee It is well know that Mrs. Humphry Ward, whosa Influence on the American publie has deepened since "The Testing of Diana Mal lnry" has been written, is an ardent settle ment worker, and prominently identified with the promotion of recreation schools. Only recently Mrs. Ward was hoetess at a settlement garden-party in London, where the children of the play achools entertained her guests, the Society of Women Journal ists, of which she Is president, with exer cises, dances and songs. "I have seen Mrs. Ward." said one woman who was present at the fete, "on a platform with the late M. Auguste Sabatier, Joining In a discussion on religious and philosophical problems. I have heard her lecture on Pierre Loti, and ad dress an audience of learned people on Modernism' in Italy. But never has she appeared more charming or more womanly than In the company of the tiny members of her 'Guilds of Play.' ' Sir Gilbert Parker's boyish taste in books, if it does not indicate the future author ship of novels like "The Weavers" and "The Right of Way," is at least uncommon. "The hooks of my boyhood which lured me most." writes Sir Gilbert, "were Shapespeare (eight of whose plays I knew by heart). 'David Copperneld." 'The Heart of Midlothian.' Ma caulay'a 'History of England,' Kinglake's 'Eothen,' Carlyle's 'French Revolution,' and Webster's Dictionary. You will see that it la an oddly Incongruous lot, but I browsed In my own way, and if I did not understand all of Carlyle. the drama,the vivid plctur esqueness of his style, captivated me. Web ster's Dictionary and Shakespeare were to me the most alluring of all books, but I must add to the list the Apocrypha, which had all the glamor and none of the perils of forbidden fruit. Solving the Secrets of Aerial Flight CONTINUED FROM PAGE THREE can. Certainly within the next score of years, but, then, it may come In a night. But this I do know when the scientists come to irrefutable facts and figures In aerial navigation and can lay down a set of rules and laws and a formula for the guidance of us prac tical men, then will come perfection In a Jump. "There are very few who have taken up the subject methodically and scien tifically; in fact, practically none but experimenters like myself plain, prac tical experimenters, willing to take a chance and find out the best we may how the thing is to ba done. But It takes years and lives to learn and get tha experience. We can only hope that science will join hands with practical bllity and gain perfection In aviation. "The airship of the future will be of tha Von Zeppeiln type. I have studied out that phase of tha question to my own satisfaction, and I have oome to the conclusion that such will ba the type. But It will hava more planes more than on my dirigible In fact, ba a combination of the dirigible and the aeroplane, but larger. The airship of the future, as I sea It, will he of Im mense size, hava great speed and will be as easily controlled aa this hundred-footer of mine. It will be of such slse that it will overcome the ele-. ments as does the modern liner, and will be as capable, from Its great lift ing power, of being of service not only In war but in commerce." By 0. Chanut8 Builder of Airships and author of several books on aeronautics. I .BELIEVE the ultimate type of flying machine will preserve the feature of bridge trussing, because In that way we ejeem to be able to attain to the maxi mum of stiffness and strength with the minimum of weight. My interest is in ths two-surface or double-decker machine. It ta with that type Farman. Bell, tha Wright brothers and De la Grange are getting their best results. While I am satisfied that the two-surface Idea will be adhered to, I am also of the opinion there may be a variation from the present manner of arranging tha sur faces to get the best possible results. It is most Important now that there should be such arrangement of surface as will assure automatic equilibrium in the air. By automatic equilibrium I mean that the apparatus itself shall he able to neu tralize irregularities of the wind and that less reliance need be placed on the. human equation. Wright brothers, for instance, have, done some great things with their flying machines, but It is questionable if any one else could hava dona eo much with them. The ultimata heavier-than-alr machine must he one which will meet suscess fully Its own emergencies in fiiglit nnd overcome obstacles without too much In tervention on the part of the opritar. That is recognised both In this country and In Europe as the one great desider atum. The monoplane gives greater supporting power to ti-e square foot, but it 13 much heavier than the double-surface ma;aine and one lo: more in the latter direction than Is gained in the former. .The great effort of the future, it seems to me, should be to bring about automatic equi librium. That accomplished the hardest part of the road will have been passed over. I have made up my mind that no heavier-than-alr machine ever will be devised that will serve for practical com nercial purposes for carrying passengers and freight In any numbers or quantity. The difficulty is that the weight of tha rraachlne will increase more rapidly than its carrying capacity. I do not now see any . possibility of building an airship that will bear more than five persons. The use of the flying machine will be confined to three things. First, it will be used for sport; second, for reconnolaance In times of war, and, third, for the exploration of lands and places that are otherwise plainly inac cessible. , I do not subscribe to the prophecy that the flying machine will Temodel civilisa tion, that it will do away with tariffs and frontiers, and that it will result In modifi cations of existing styles of architecture. There Is too much optimism In that fore cast for me, and I have studied the' sub ject pretty thoroughly. I do not expect to sea the day, as some would have us believe, when the roofs of men's houses will ba constructed to serve as lighting stations for their flying machines. Dirigi fcle balloons may be built to carry a score of men but they must be always cumber some and dangerous, according to our present knowledge. ByAlexanderGraham Bell AS to the ultimate type of airship, that to my mind is a question that canot be answered. There are two dis tinct classes of aerial vehicles balloons. which are lighter than air, and airships, which are heavier than, air. I believe that aerial navigation will be solved by tha heavier-than-alr machines, and conse quently am giving all my attention to that class. There are) threo varieties of heavier- than-alr machines aerodromes, helicop- 'lera and the ornlthopter. All three of these ere being worked, but only the first named has given any practical re sults and carried a man any distance. Aerodromes are divided into many types, and the type that will eventually be suc cessful will ba decided by experiments now being made, but I have the greatest confidence in the tetradons. As to the probable influence on social and political conditions, I might reply that I am not Interested In that phase of tha airship question and have not given It serious thought. I am anxious only to succeed without reference to the uses to which tha machine may be put, but I will say that the success of the airship will rev olutionize warfare. It may become, in fact, a war exterminating agency, and thus end all armed conflicts between na tions. For Instance, as an Illustration of the tremendous use to which the airship will tie put, a $7,000,000 ship might be easily destroyed by a cheap machine, and by tha earns agencies whole cities wiped out. Then when you regard tho more peace ful side of the question, it is safe to pre dict that aerial sailing will become a great sport, for it will entail less ex pense than automoblling or motorboats and prove infinitely more exciting. By Captain W. H. Hedge Founder of tho Aero Club of Amer ica. Founder of the Aero Club of America. THEJ flying machine will make our seacoasts absolutely impre enable. It has been estimated that a single airship station costing $23,000 would render useless a war fleet worth tens of millions of dol lars. A small fleet of such craft would be more than a match for the combined navies of the world. Hera is but one utility of tho airship. When it Is consid ered what a tremendous advantage It will afford reconnoitering and in all field operations it seems no exaggeration to say it will revolutionize warfare. Ultimately ths airship in some form Is certain to play an Important part in gen eral transportation. First, we will see airships used as a sport and within a fear years aeroplanes or dirigibles will be as common as automobiles. Later they will be utilized for transporting lighter freight, such as the mails, and ultimately we will have the sky filled with great passenRer ships crossing the Atlantic as well as the entire continent. By Brig.-Gen. G. J. Allen Chief of Signal Office, U. S. A. THE practical utility of the airship . seems to be limited at present to warfare, but in this field its value can scarcely be estimated. I am very hopeful of its future. The Government tests at Fort Meyer will be the roost rigid yet tried and will doubtless go far to establish the airship in this field. The use of such engines for reconnoitring promises to work a revolution In our methods of warfare. It Is Impossible to say whether tha dirigible or the aeroplane will ulti mately be adopted. At present the dir igible balloon answers our purposes better. It will go higher and stay aloft longer. The aeroplane Is more dependent upon the atmosphere. In the next few years, however, the de velopment of the aeroplane may be such that It will surpass the balloon. We are wWtlng meanwhile and watch ing with the liveliest Interest and hopefulness. The advance In aerial navigation' of lata has been remarkable.- Compare the recent German war balloon with the balloons we sent up during the Civil War. When we see what has been ac complished, the most extravagant hopes of the future do not Seem Impos sible. Publie confidence In the airship meanwhile seems complete: After the loss of the French war balloon, for In stance, many people in Franc seemed to Imagine that Germany would be able to Invade them within a few hours. By Dr. A. F. Zahm . Cathollo University of America. SINCE automobiles hava been per fected In ten years It seems safe to assume that tha flying machine will be crystallted in five, said Dr. Zahm. With tha hiachines which are now available a revolution is at hand In methods of transportation. We hava dirigible balloons which will travel 35 miles an hour and carry two people. Within two years we may expect a speed of forty miles or more an hour with a carrying: capacity of twelve people for voyages of 40 hours. Today the aeroplane will carry two peo ple at a speed of 40 miles an hour and within a year this speed will probably be increased to 60 or SO miles. As for distance, the Wright brothers already of fer to build an airship which will travel 500 miles without coming to earth. In other words, within a year or two we will find ourselves In a new age. Our methods of warfare will probably be- the first to be affected. I believe . that a single aeroplane capable of traveling 500 miles will be as effective as an army of 60.000 men. A fleet of such machines will revolutionize warfare. With snch an engine of war the enemy would have no secrets. Its exact force and distribution could be observed and reported hourly. The airship again will soon become a very active and terrible engine of war, apart from Its value as a scout. It will be Impossible to scatter explosives, aa has been suggested, because bombs are heavy and could not well ba raised in The Frisking CONTIXUKD FROM PAGE SIX. glad you're here! I'd follow an old Injun fighter like you anywhere. Come let's rush "em!" I'd got him by the elbow and was pushin' him out the front door by that tlsne; so It was a case of must. It was a mighty nice moonlight night, but there was so many bushes and trees around the grounds that the shadows were plenty and black. "Git behind one of them trees, quick! says Joe, all excited. So we makes a run for It; but we hadn't got half way before there come a bang! bang! and half a dozen bushes was lit up by flashes. "Oh, lordy, lordy!" groans Joe, and then he streaks It for the tree like he was a hundred-yard champ. "Git out!" e&ys he, when I comes up. "Go find a tree of your own.'' "Not much!" says I. "I'm goln' to stick by you and watch the slaughter. Why don't you get busy7" "I'm waitln' to shoot at some of them flashes." says he. He didn't have to wait long. They opened up again, and Joe lets drive back. And say, I'll be hanged If he wa'n't goln' about It cool and business like. He might have been some scared at first; but the minute he gets to work his nerve comes back, and he acts like a man who meana to do a good Job. Course, he didn't know that nothln' but Fourth of July ammunition was bein' burned, and I be gun to see that behind all that bluff there was some real grit. "There!" says Joe. crackln" another shot. "I'll bet a doughnut one of them pesky redskins bit the dust then!" I guess It was lucky for them Cat taraugus braves that Joe was shootln' nothin' but powder. "Look out!" says I. "They're crawl in' up on us." Blamed If It wa'n't better'n anything Buffalo Bill ever put on, to see them tur key tail bonnets wrlgglln' along, and the moonlight shlnin, on the pistol barrets. Dodge has spread out his crowd so that they had us cut off from the house, and was closln' in gradual. Joe, he lets fly a couple of times: but when he don't see ony of 'em tumble over he don't know what to make of It. He stands it a couple of minutes, and the next thing I know he heaves up a yell you could have heard 40 blocks, and starts over the sod on the Jump. I keeps on after him the best I can. and the whole bunch trails after, shootin' and yellln to beat the cars. It was a hot pace he was settin', and we left 'em behind like they was all standin still. Joe was headed toward the station, and by the time I'd got there he has turned over the baggage truck and has his knife out, preparin' for the last stand. I knew Dodge had called oft his crowd at the gates and had gone hack to let Mrs, Pell into the game. "It's all over, Joe," says I. He wouldn't believe it for a spell; but after he'd listened and couldn't hear any thing, he simmers down. "How many do you reckon It was that I killed?" says he. "I lost count," says I; "but you put up as gamy a fight aa I ever saw. As an Injun slayer, Joe, you're all right. Want any great quantity. But. the aeroplane might scatter fire pellets with deadly ef fect over wlda areas. A piece of phos phorus, for Instance, dropped from a great height would instantly ignite any-' thing it struck. Great forests or fields of grain or even cities could be tired In this way. The possibilities of such war fare are Incalculable. Within a few years we may s actual battles in the air between war aeroplanes. The possibilities of resistance In these machines is greater than would be Im agined. It would be Impossible for them to raise cannon or heavy guns to the up per air to fight with, so lhat In -fighting among themselves their batteries will consist Onty of rifles or pistols. Since these planes would b sweeping, abr.it at a mile-a-minute gait they would be , hard to hit In any vital spot. They might ' be riddled with shot and still keep afloat. ; The only way to sink these ships would he to disable the operator, and this would prova a very difficult thing to do. A battle In midair will last longer than most people would imagine. We are likely to develop the .balloon, the dirigible and the aeroplane . along more or les parallel lines. Eai-h form of airship nas its own merits. In Amer ica especially I think this advance will be very rapid. The Government restric tions are the most rigid of their kind In the world. The requirements for th UttB at Fort Meyer are fsr more exact ing than In any other country. By Peter Cooper Hewitt Inventor, member Aero Club of America. I AM not only hopeful but confident of the Immediate future of aerial naviga tion. It is but a question of a very few years before we will see airships In more or less common Use such as automobiles are today. The use of such craft as a means of transportation will eventually follow. It is already possible to calculate with some degree of accuracy the cost of this form Of transportation. The airship will prov somewhat cheaper than an au tomobile. The airship consists merely of canvas and a few bars nnd bolts and pieces of wire. The cost of road3 which must be provided at public expense will be done away with. The cost of propul sion will be less than In the case of boats or automobiles. The cost of propelling an airship has been found to be about one-eighth that of a boat, taking weight for weight. The question of the cost of the machine is quite apart. Allowing for variations there is still obviously a very great advantage in favor of the air craft In comparison with the boat, which in turn is cheaper than a locomotive. Some such proportion as this will eventually be found to exist between land and air transportation. It Is impossible to predict with any certainty when the era of air transportation win arrive, but the future would seem to be assured. The aeroplane will eventually be used for the lighter work of transportation. Since it is very swift Its usefulness is obvious. As we learn to drive it more swiftly through tho air It will hecomS safer and more efficient. There is little variation, for instance, in the path of a bullet. An aeroplane traveling 60 miles an hour need fear little from the wind currents. For lifting and carrying greater weights, the dirigible balloon will doubt less bo found more efficient. The airship has already reached a point where it has become a question ' of the motor rather than the form. , The prob lem lies in the motor. A great advance has been made In motor building in the last few years, and we may look for still greater improvements in the near future. This applies both to the aeroplane and the dirigible balloon. Within a year or two I expect to have sevpral of my own airships in actual operation, while many other inventors are working toward, the same end. of Caribou Joe to go out and see if you can gather a few scalps for souvenirs?" "No." says he. "I can't wait. I've got to go back to the lakes." So I telephones for 'em to send down his traps, and starts him north on the next train that comes In. Pnrdy Pell gets off one car Just as Joe climbs m an other. "Hello, there. professor," says he. "What's up now?" "Nothln" much." says I. "only we're , been glvln' the folks a little outdoor I melodrammer." ' "Where is Caribou Joe?" says he. . "Him?" says I. "The Terror or the Rangeleys? Oh. I've Just loaded him into : the smoker there. He's goln' back to the woods to tell 'em about the Battle of I Roekywold." Then we goes up to the house, where Mrs. Pell Is glvin' the basketmakers a 1 swell midnight spread, and everybody has a lot of fun tellin" how scared Joe was. : But say, I ain't so sure he didn't come pretty near makln' good his bluff, after : all. Prepared Sandwiches. Boston Post. Take a long oblong-ehaped loaf of bread and out the crust from the sides, top and 1 bottom; then cut Into thin slices, length- 1 wise; chop a quantity of cold boiled bam: 1 also a quantity of cold boiled chicken; 1 take a slice of the bread and place upon : It a layer of chopped bam, then a layer ' of mayonnaise dressing, a layer of ' chopped chicken, a layer of chopped Eng lish walnuts) and another slice of bread: attain a layer of chopped ham, mayon naise dressing, chopped chicken, chopped English walnuts) and lastly a slice of bread. Wrap all in a damp cloth and place a heavy weight on top (flat iron are serviceable) to press well the ingredi ents. Allow the loaf to stand from six to eight hours, then slice aa you would bread. Thl makes a very dainty course ' for luncheons, parties, etc. A layer of finely cut lettuce or celery may be used with effect. The Town Summer Girl. New York Times. The Rummer Girl, down by the sea. fitrolls lonely on the silver strand; Or. In the wild waves, billowy, Ts guided by her own fair hand. Day in. day out, 'tis hers to scan The sea and shore, to find a man. The Rummer Girl, up In the-hills, gits lonesome in her hammock awing; She reads a novel for her thrills. And hears no little love-bird sins. She wanders far, she braves the tan In searching vainly for a man. The Summer Girl, who stays In town. Is' en the everlasting Jump, Until her system's aulte run down And her emotions on the slump. The men are standing In a line Around the block, or more; They beg of her to sup or dine. Or go down to the shore; They take her out In motorcars. To ail the roofs In town she noes: They walk with her beneath the stars. nr tnkA her to the Summer shous. What's sea or mountains? Town is where , The Summer Girl has men to spare. Another writer to spend his vacation In Maine Is Norman Duncan, author ef "The Cruise of the Shlnlns Light" and other stories of the seacoast. Mr. Duncan ts in camp at a place whose very name Is sus- Kestive or tninrs com ena remote inaiaa Fond, at Moosehead Lake.