IB
DIME
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"vl'ot d'ye think about this here sacs
peril?" axked the House Detective of
the St. Reckless, ever seeking after In
formation. "Meaning our own Governor Hughes,
1 take It." said the Hotel Clerk. "Well,
It la Indeed a frightful Wow that has
. befallen a great Industry and sport, but
more of an Industry than a sport. If
anybody should happen to be solicitous.
When I think, Larry, of all the vast
array of men that have been deprived
of suitable employment and now, at ths
beginning of cold weather, stand fare
to face with the dreadful alternative
of maybe having to earn their own-living
all this Winter, it makes my heart
bleed. Just picture the frightful con
dition of all those alert young touts
that've grown too stout to go back to
second-story Jobs, and those furnishers
of correct advance information, with
their. bright, open countenances, like a
burglar's Jimmy, and the bookmakers
and the sheet-writers and the high
minded private detectives with faces
that seem almost human If viewed in a
half-light, from a distance, and all the
others connected with the tracks who
may either have to pawn their diamond
studs or also go to work. It is indeed
a most deplorable stste of affairs when
an ignorant and debased Legislative,
aided snd abetted by a brutal and un
reasonable Executive, can take the
Sally sweetbread out of the mouths of
10 many worthy citizens, not to men
;ion dally mushrooms under glass and
Ihe daily planked guinea hen, and jj
"That ain't the race peril I mean,"
aid the House .Detective, breaking in.
"Well, that's the orly race peril I
tnow anything about." said the Hotel
Clerk. "You can't be meaning the
lack race?"
"Sure." said the House Detective.
"Oh, that's been averted." said the
"otel Clerk, reassuringly. "All danger
f the supremacy of the black or. In
many cases, chocolate-colored race,
passed away nearly three weeks ago
ut in California, when Mr. Battling
Kelson, of Chicago, added Mr. Joe Gans,
f Baltimore, to his already large and
aiteresting collection of souvenir ei
shampions. It was a splendid exhibl
tton of the superiority of the Caucasian,
o I hear. They say the colored party's
(ace looked like one of those old-fashioned,
deep-dish, blueberry pies when
he got through, and the loose ends of
quite a number of ribs were tickling
him In the side."
"Chop the kiddin'," said the House
Detective. You know good and well
wot I'm aimin' at. Ain't the magazine
full of stuff by the most expensive
writers about the race question in this
country? Ain't everybody gittin' stirred
up over it?"
"Not me," said the Hotel Clerk. "I'm
not worrying deeply about anything at
this writing except how to get that
clinging . moth-ball aroma out of my
overcoat. As a perfumery I do not re
gard camphor as highly as some."
"Ain't you reflected on the danger of
the races mixinT' persisted the House
Detective.
"Well, since you mention it. I believe
1 have-." admitted the Hotel Clerk; "but
as long as the colored brother persists
MissTaft'sDebut at the White House
She Is Fond of Dancing and Xext to It Horseback Riding.
4,' II OW does It feel to be the daughter
"I of the President of the United
States?" was asked of Miss Helen Taft.
Helen Taft.
"Well. I can't answer that question.
Walt until November.
"But It's a good dRl less nerve
racking to be the daughter of Mr. Wil
liam Taft than it was this time last
week. Oh, I'll admit that I was wor
ried. You see, after so much fuss had
been made about it, it would have
been rather " Miss Taft shrugged.
"Well, a trifle uncomfortable if be bad
not really been nominated."
"You see, I didn't Intend to go down
to the War Office at ail that day, al
though mama went over early in the
morning. But I was so restless that
I couldn't settle down to anything.
'I tried to read, but I couldn't be
cause Chicago' was written all over
the page between the lines.
"1 did my hair half a dosen different
nays, but It didn't do a bit of good.
"Then I went eut and hunted up
some of the girls, but nobody would
talk abont anything but the Republi
can convention.
'Finally, about ! o'clock, I gave it up
as a bad Job and hurried down to the
War Office as fast as I could get there.
"Lots of papa's friends were there,
and we passed the time In laughing
and talking and trying to pretend that
we were not at all anxious or excited.
And all the time telephones were buz
zing and the telegraphic Instruments
clicking all about us, until we couldn't
hear ourselves think.
"Finally, the news came, and then
well. I don't remember Just what hap
pened then.
Hates Formality.
'1 do think the White House will
be a charming place for a debut that
Is. of course, not that I care for so
ciety, as society. It's ghastly to think,
of standing up primly and politely in
a row with a lot of other prim and po
lite people and shaking hands with
hundreds of other prim and -polite peo
ple. I hate formality, but I love fun.
And. at any rate, I shall be allowed to
dance, as much as I please." and Miss
Taft's blue eyes sparkled.
"We are going to be with father at
Hot Springs. Vs., all during the Sum
mer, but after that I'm afraid he will
be even busier than ever If he is elec
ted. "He has always been such a chum
with all of ua that it will seem queer
not to sea a great deal nf him.
"I had such fun traveling with hfm
when we were in the Philippines. He
alwaya makes so many interesting
friends. The natives used to run all
over each other to please him.
learned to Ride In Philippines.
"It was while I was in the Philip
pines that 1 learned to ride horseback.
I rode with papa a great deal. There's
nothing I enjoy more than horseback
riding, unless It's dancing.
"Of course, there I learned to ride
with a cross saddle, but I suppose it
will have to be a side saddle If we go
to Washington. I think the other way
Is much more sensible- though, don't
you? One feels so much more Inde
pendent. "I'm fond of all kinds of athletics,
particularly out-of-door games. Of
course, I never do anything well, but I
love to try.
"Bveryone asks me just why I hap
pened to choose Bryn Mawr. I didn't
choose it. It has been cut and dried in
the family ever since I can remember
that I was to go there eventually.
Expects to Like Byrn Mawr.
"Tou see. Bryn Mawr has come to be
more or less of a tradition in our fam
ily. A college is handed down from I
In clinging to the old-fashioned half
brick and the equally unreliable ninety-eight-cent
razor, it seems to me that
without modern weapons and the po
llre force on our side, we're compara
tively safe. Under those circumstances,
we seem to be able to mix with him and
still run little danger unless it's from
the premature explosion of the auto
matic pocket cannons that our fellows
are toting. Look at Atlanta, and. if it
strains your eyesight to look so far
away from home, you can look at
Springfield. Illinois."
"That's the town where Lincoln cama
from, ain't it?" Inquired the House De
tective. "Ves." said the Hotel Clerk, "It is.
And looking back on its recent history
I begin to understand why he came. You
see, Larry; there're possibly some ex
tenuating circumstances below that ma
jestic river that marks the dividing line
between dipped toast "and hot biscuit.
'Tls few home amusements that the
Southern gentleman has had since Pro
hibition In Us deadliest form swept over
his fair land and left him drier than any
dryad that ever lived. Time was, when
in Summer, he mingled the fragrant mint
with the mellow bourbon In such deft
yet dangerous proportions as to cause the
resultant mixture to lean from tha
tumbler and strike the Innocent by
stander a staggering blow In the lower
part of the face, while in the stormy
Winter he took the nutmeg and the new
laid egg and certain other ingredients In
hsnd and assembled a Christmas eggnog
that only needed a crust on it to be a
custard pie. But alas, hose halycon days
have Ted. Taking it as a whole the sun
may still shine on the Old Kentucky
Home, as the poet Foster says, but over
a large and excessively arid section of
that once well-irrigated commonwealth.
It no longer jopgles In the heavens, be
fore the half-closed eyes of tbe Kentucky
Colonel as he returns homeward after a
long, hard court day.
"Likewise m Tennessee and Georgia,
not to mention grand old thirsty Texas,
It's practically a stationary and perma
nent sun, compared to what it was in
the days when the true Southern gentle
man who desired to emulate that noble
insect, the glow worm, could c.o so with
out having to detach a dollar for a pre
scription from a family physician making
a specialty of treating those forms of
snake bite and cramp colic that seem to
be so prevalent, I might even say so
popular. In local option communities.
"The best our Southern kinsman can
do now. when he feels the need of a
slight nourishment Is to sequester himself
in the back room of the local drug store
and take something out of a bottle la
beled 'Cholera Mixture,' that makes him
think he's swallowed a procession of
lightning bugs. So, naturally, in this la
mentable situation, when he offers the
inner man an Insult every time he offers
himself a hurried slug and can't get lit
up anywhere except behind the barn or
under the back steps where a creditable
Illumination is really wasted, be Is prone
to seek relaxation in a little race mis
understanding now and then. Even at
that he exercises more discrimination
than we here in the North where the art
of lynching is newer and not so well
understood in all its branches. And he
throws a lot of class into his work, too.
Here only the other day. you remember.
they had a lynching down in Mississippi
generation to generation ia a family
Just like a religion.
"No. indeed, I'm not going to college
because of an abnormal love of study.
Oh. the scholarship, that was Just an
accident." with a deprecatory bluBh
and smile.
Miss Taft is an extremely unworthy
person. In her own estimation. It was
"Just an accident" that she won the
(300 scholarship offered for highest
honors in the Bryn Mawr entrance ex
aminations. "Just an accident" that she
played on one of the two hockey teams
ah Miss Baldwin's preparatory school,
ind "Just an accident" that she had an
.mportant role in the senior play.
Enthusiastic About Dramatics.
She is very enthusiastic over dra
matics. "I like character parts best and the
more I can exaggerate them the better.
I'm no kind of a success at playing the
heroine, where I have to be sweet and
natural and girlish." said MIsa Taft,
looking very much all three.
"I had great fun in our senior play.
It was 'My Lord In Livery,' and I waa
Laura, a nervous, hysterical girl, with
a shriek. I got great satisfaction out
of that shriek," she added reminis
cent y. "I never had half a chance be
fore. "Did you ever hear about our class
prophecy? I thought It was extremely
original. One of my friends wrote It
and It was in the form of a play, each
girl acting out her own .future.
"I was an American ambassador's
wife, entertaining at a reception. I
wore a stunning gown of my mother's,
black, with a long train, and powdered
my hair. I was most impressive.
Lively Times at School.
"I was very sorry to leave school.
We certainly had gorgeous times there.
"I think the best things I ever had
to eat In my whole life were the ones
we used to get from the tea house
across the road on forbidden days.
"Tou see there wera two days in the
week when we were at liberty to go
over there; but aomehow things never
seemed to taste half as good on those
days aa when one of the maids smug
gled them to us through a knothole In
the floor.
"We seniors. 21 of us, used to sit at
one table, without any of the teachers,
and had simply hilarious times. One
evening at dinner someone suggested
that we should see if we couldn't pile
all the tumblers on the table on top
of one another. So we started to pass
them around the table, each girl adding
hers aa they came along. We had got
almost halfway around and had a pile
of eight or nine, when, all of a sudden,
one of the girls sneezed and over they
went onto the floor, with Miss Brownell'a
eye fairly glued to them.
Something of a Poetess.
"We were all invited into the principal s
room that evening. It wasn't a social af
fair either. There was a poem written
about it. One verse ran something like
this:
And then Miss Brownell. our principal.
In righteous wrmth she swore
That the special senior table .
Should not exist no more.
' (With apologies to sfacaulay.)
"Who wrote it?" I aaked. She turned
suspiciously ph:k. "You'd better put it
down aa anonymous." she replied.
"Well, I suppose I shall have Just as
good a tune in college," she went on. "I
shall have to crowd four years' worth of
fun Into two, for in all probability I shall
leave after sophomore year, and then
but then, that all depends."
She Is about five feet five inches In
height, slender and lithe, every movement
showing the effect of an out-of-door life.
Her hair, which Is heavy and of a rich
sunshiny tint, she wears piled simply
upon her head, and held by three heavy
amber combs. There are no baavv
TOKMC
GOuu5H
that was correct to the minutest par
liamentary detail, being presided over by
a Statesman who'd learned Cushing'a
Manual while a member of the United
States Senate.
"It'a different up North," put in tha
House Detective.
You're right, it is," said the Hotel
Clerk. "The North stands at the
threshold inviting the colored man to
come on up. But when he accepts the
Invitation and comes up, accompanied
by a large and smoky family and settles
down in the house next door to ours and
tries to Join the same labor union we be
long to and intimates that his oldest
switches, wire rolls or artificial puffs in
the coiffure of Mr. Taft's daughter.
There Is nothing of a tomboy suggested
by Miss Taft's personality, for she is es
sentially feminine, one of her greatest
charms being an exquisitely modulated
voice. In quality It Is a voice of the
South, very soft and soothing, and It has
the inflections of a much older woman.
Another of Miss Taft's charms is the
ripple of bright color that comes and goea
aa she, talks. Baltimore Sun.
learning to Rest.
It Is strange that a woman must make
a great effort to learn how and when to
rest. It comes naturally to most animals,
but the human animal defies this law
from the cradle to the grave.
fleep is better than medicine, all agree;
and yet a woman will take a tonic or
pills or stimulants Instead of deliberately
going to her room after supper xr dinner
and going to sleep.
She mill prop her eyes open until 10
o'clock and strain her aching nerves and
muscles rather than sacrifice the evening
hours. Of course she -Is always tired.
She la never equal to the vital occasions.
She always brings half her powers to
perfect any piece of work. She Is the
woman of 100 ventures and one achieve
ment. 8he needs sleep and ahe needs rest, but
she takes company, the theater, supper
party or a trolley ride Instead. Then she
wonders why other women do so much in
,;. -"'V? ,' ;, x .,: 'v,.'' i Jf. v 'a " :,; '.:...;.'';::. O '1- .vi;'-, ! ' -; . V ' ' "
:' ! ' ;':':''"-'''" ov. TV V ?' "" '''V- 'x'--V H'"c: :"-": -'Jv .2 ?-k' 'Z'-.yx.'j :kVy4 '. - " ' ' '' - ' v.
. - ;. : . , ,;."o't?" :-.-. '';-y ; .''' - ' , ; f '.. ' i'. .JS '. .C.--;'! ' - : ;-' , '" ; ; S-
son could fill the job that we ve been
saving up for our own boy Willie as soon
as he gets out of high school, a change
seems to steal over us. We intimate
that he'd better move about four miles
from town and do light housekeeping In
a hollow tree, and If he manifests a tardi
ness in regard to taking the hint we or
ganize an Infuriated mob of 10,000 deter
mined citizens or. Illinois or viiuu, tu wic
the world and why she never baa time
for anythlnge.
She should learn to keep books and
balance her rest eJid work accounts every
Saturday night. She would be the richer
by it and she would make all her family
the happier.
Yielded to'Temptatlon.
A grumpy old broker, who employed
a very pretty, quiet girl as his typist,
frequently exasperated her almost be
yond endurance by his bearish ways.
For a long time she bore with his Ill
temper. One morning, however, he turned
up in a quite insupportable humor.
"Look at my desk," he roared. "All
In disorder! All In confusion! All "
"But, sir." the young girl Interrupted,
mildly, "you have often told me never
to touch your desk."
"Well, I don't want you to disturb
my papera," he admitted. And then his
eye caught a sheet of postage stamps.
I don't want them here!" he shouted.
She took up the stamp.
"Where shall I put 'em, sir?" she
said.
"Ah," lie snarled, "put 'em anywhere
-anywhere out of sight."
She flushed.
"Very well, sir," she said, icily, and,
giving the stamps a quick lick with
her tongue, she stuck the big sheet on
his bald head and departed to look
for another Job.
The Articulate Chick.
Owner of the Coop Who's In there!
Quick - Wltted Rastus (softly)
'Tain t nobody in heah 'cepping us
chickenB. Life.
V:
. 4
FRAU KARL DRUSCHKL
BACK ROOM
OF THE- DRUGSTORE
case may be, ana hang his azed grand-
motner to wie iiejuco. ituupyu-i.
Some of the Favorite
Among the Hybrid
BT WILLIAM S. SIBSON.
IV THE year 106 W. E. Nlckerson, of
Combridge, Mass., who is an enthus
iastic amateur rosarlon, presented to
the National Rose Society of England
three silver cups. He requested that
a representative committee be appoint
ed' and that according to Its decision
the cups be awarded to the respective
Introducers of the best Hybrid Perpet
ual, the best Hybrid Tea, and the best
Tea for general cultivation that had
been put upon the market since and
Including the year 1800. A committee
of 60 was selected, comprising both
professional and amateur rose growers,
and In due course the prizes were
awarded. In the Hybrid Perpetual class
58 votes out of 60 were cast In favor
of that queen of white roses, Frau
Karl Druschkl. This splendid variety
is a seedling from Merveille de Lyon,
which was crossed with Mme. Caroline
Testout. It was shown for the first
time at the Rose Exhibition at Trier,
Germany, In 1900. Strange to say, it
was not then awarded a prize of any
kind. Since then, however, it has made
rapid strides In popularity, has secured
prizes wherever exhibited, and very
few rose lovers are now without at
least one plant in their garden. It re
ceived its name In honor of the wife
of the president of the German Ros
arlan Society. The Illustration depicts
'I
sms the hotel clerk
"Anyway he kin vote up here," per
sisted the house detective.
"Tea, he can," assented the hotel
clerk, "but It's a rare thing when ha
geta over two dollars for it. I'll admit
he gains somewhat In personal popu
larity along toward election time, es
pecially if it's a close election. Judge
Thorax, of Cincinnati, who's running
In a white ward, but with a mourning
border on the edge of it, pats him on
the back in public and hands him a ci
gar that throws off clinkers when he
tries to smoke it, like an anthracite
range. Out in the Indianapolis f 'airict.
Major Tonsils, the Republican nominee
for Congress stops him on the street
to Inquire after the health of his fam
ily. On the night before election he is
given the proud privilege of walking
nine miles right behind the carriage in
which his candidate Is seated, and
what's more-they let him carry the
heaviest transparency there is in the
whole procession. On election day he
rides to the polls in a hired hack with
the top thrown back, and three white
gentlemen contend for the honor of
clasping his brawny hand as he steps
out. .
"The morning after election he rings
Judge Thorax's door bell and is thrown
down the front seeps by an indignant
white butler. He applies at Major
Tonsils' and a Qerman hired girl tells
him that the Major cannot be disturbed
because he's busy figuring up how
many votes be had to spare and any
way, she says, the kitchen wood has
already been chopped and they won't
need any whitewashing done until
Spring and be sure to fasten the alley
gate as he goes out.
"Nearly everybody calls him "mister,
but hardly anybody gives him a ham
bone. As soon as he strikes Philadel
phia coming North he becomes an Afro
American, which don'.t sound at all
like what they called him In Yazoo
City, and there's a large teeming popu
lace ready to sympathize with his lot,
but after about three weeks he's got
about two hundred bushels of sympa
thy stored up that he'd be pleased to
trade for a side of meat. And then to
top off with our brightest little maga
zlners. Invade the privacy of his home
and expose his most intimate secrets
in print and figure out how many of
him there'll be a hundred years from
now and aek what are we going to do
with him?
"I know the answer to that, Larry.
We're not going to do anything with
him. except after awhile we're going
to learn to leave him alone. Nobody
asked his consent when he was brought
here and now there's too many of him
to move away, without leaving a large
perceptible gap in the population. We
can't isolate him. because if we did
we'd have to learn to pick our own
cotton and this, when done under the
noonday beams of the ardent Southern
sun is represented to be an underta
king bordering on the irksome. e
can t return him to his native Africa
because we need that continent as a
hunting ground for our ex-Presidonts,
and it wouldn't do to crowd it. Any
way he fills a niche here. Ic's been
demonstrated that he really cares not
Perpetuals, the Frau nan ruum,
a full blown bloom of this famous rOBe.
The original was grown in a Portland
garden, and when photographed meas
ured 7H Inches in diameter.
Dean Hole a lovely rose), intro
duced In 1904, was selected as the best
Hybrid Tea, and Mme. . Jules Graver
eaux (19)0 deservedly secured the
prize as the best Tea. So successful
was this competition that In the Au
tumn of 1807 Mr. Nickerson offered 12
silver cups to the National Rose So
ciety of England, with the same object
as before only in this case there were
to be It divisions arranged, as fol
lows: Shades of crimson, shades of pink,
white or pale blush, and shades of yel
low in each of the following sections:
Climbing roses blooming in clusters.
Climbing roses blooming more or less
Insrly- . . .
Bedding (or as they are designated
in Europe) Dwarf roses.
To the introducer of the rose receiv
ing the highest number of votes in its
respective division one of the sliver
cups was to be awarded.
Eighty-three voting papers were re
ceived by the committee from leading
rosarians of Great Britain and else
where. The result was quite Interest
ing, and espe'cially gratifying to Amer
ican growers, because an American
rose, "Dorothy Perkins," stood highest
in the list of ramblers and climbers of
all colors. In fact, only two, varieties
in the whole competition received a
greater number of votes than "Dorothy
Perkins " and they were Mme. Alfred
Carriere and Frau Karl Druschkl. I
will not occupy space by designating the
entire result of the voting, but will
briefly state that as Is almost always the
case, good quality came to the top.
Portland's favorite rose, Mme. Caroline
Testout. received the highest number
of votes in the shades of pink bedding
roses. Frau Karl Druschkl In white,
and Mme. Ravary In yellow.
In the climbing section of roses bloom-
Books Added to Library
The following books at'the Public li
brary will go into circulation September -8:
BIOGRAPHY.
Brooks. Shirley Brooks of Punch, his
Hf. letters and diaries: br O. 8. lyard.
1907
Louis IX. Saint Louis. Klni of FTar.ce;
by the Sire de Jolnvllle; tr. by James Mut
ton. 1869.
BOOKS IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES.
Becqner. Lssenris, tales and r.oems.
Bunysn. Pllegrlms vandrlng fro denne
vsrden til den tllkommende.
Erostorfl. Eln glucksjunse.
Pron. Das krauterwetbln von Wtmpfen.
Haling. Die bosen des Herrn von Bro
4ow. Lsueur. La force du passe.
Terry, ed. French sonc and verse for
children. . S
DESCRIPTION AND TRAVEL.
Jernicgham. From West to East: notes
by the way. 1907.
Mardcn. Greece and the Aegean Islands.
190T.
Smith. Story of Brussels. 1!KM1.
Vivian. Ssrvla, the poor mans para
dise. 1687.
FICTION.
Bsnson. A queen's tragedy.
Btndloss. For Jacinta.
Brown. Rose MacLeod.
Bullen. The call of the deep.
Churchill. Mr. Crewe's career.
Copping. Gotty and the guv-'nor.
FINE ARTS.
California bungalow; the ideal home for
any climate, n. d.
Davey. The tree doctor; the care of
trees and plants. 1907.
Fletcher. Innuenee of material on archi
tecture. 1897.
Peker. How to road plana 190S.
Rlcketts. The art of J-rado. 1907.
Selous. Recent hunting trips In British
North America. 1907.
Wilson. Bungalow book. Ed. z. 1907.
HISTORY.
Weir. introduction to the history of
modern Europe. 1907.
BY"
WI S COBB
THEY
LET HIM
IE
HEAVIEST
who makes his country's laws so long
as he is permitted to write its ragtime.
At handling a bay mule, he stands
without a peer, and his wife can beat
anybody in the known world frying a
chicken. And sometimes, Larry, I am
even moved to believe that he'd feel a
lot easier In his mind if his Northern
friends would quit treating him as a
problem and begin treating him as a
pusson."
"Didn't you never see a dlnge that
you regarded as dangerous to the white
race?" asked the house detective.
"Yes, one," said the hotel clerk.
"Wot one wuz that?" said the house
detective.
"Joe Walcott," said the hotel flerk.
New "Roses
x.,,.,
lng more or-less singly (1. e., not In clus
ters), another of Portland's favorites,
Mme. Alfred Carriere was the top. Such
competitions are. most useful to the gen
eral rose-loving public, for it must ' be
borne in mind, that the prizes are
awarded to those varieties best suited
for general cultivation in the garden,
and not to those whose chief and special
characteristics and qualification are suit
ability for the show table and exhibi
tion hall.
Another event that has created a
world-wide Interest among rose lovers
has recently taken place. I refer to the
competition held this Summer In the
Bols de Boulogne, Paris, to which rose
growers and introducers of new varieties
generally were Invited by Mons. Jules
Gravereaux and others to send for com
petition their latest creations, five plants ,
of each variety. Eighty-seven new roses
were exhibited from the leading rose
growers of the world. A Jury of seven
experts was selected to decide upon the
merits of these roses. American hybrid
izers were represented in the person of
E. G. Hill, of Richmond, Ind. (the in
troducer of that favorite hybrid tea rose.
"Richmond," and several other good va
rieties), who acted as one of the judges.
The roses were Judged by points, 10 be
ing the acme of perfection. That new
and wonderful "Lyon Rose" (1907) was
awarded by the jury the maximum num
ber of points. A new and very promis
ing seedling, originated by Mr. Hill and
named "Rhea Reid," received 8 points,
which speaks well for Its good qualities,
especially as the plants sent over from
America had not really had sufficient
time to become properly established in
French soil at the time fixed for the
competition. The remainder of the va
rieties exhibited received rrom s points
down to 5. And so the march of prog
ress in the world of roses steps along. I
will In a later article endeavor to tell
something further about other matters
pertaining to this interesting subject.
Wlnckler. History of Babylonia and As
syria; tr. and ed. by J. A. Craig. 1907
LANGUAGE.
Harrihgton and Cunningham. Language
lessons to acompany the first book for non-English-speaking
people. 1907.
Wlllte. First Greek hook. 189.
LITERATURE.
Kletser. How to speak In public. Ed. S.
107-
Mackaye. Jeanne d'Arr; a drema. 1907.
Matthews. Inquiries and opinions, lftl'7.
Stebblns. A progressive course In Eng
lish for secondary schools; second year
book. 190B.
Woolley. Handbook of composition: a
compendium of rules regarding good Eng
lish. 1908.
PHILOSOPHY.
Row, The philosophy of loyalty. 1908.
Tltchener. A primer of psychology. Rev.
ed. 1907.
RELIGION.
Hapgood, tr. Service book of the holy
orthodox Catholic apostolic (Greco-Roman)
chroch. 190.
Holy Bible; tr. out of the origins!
tongues and e4. by the American revision
committee. 1901.
Ward. Problems and persona 1903.
SCIENCE.
Jones. Principles of inorganic chemis
try. Ed. 3. 190.
Moore A- Miner. Practical business arith
metic. 190-
servlss. The moon; a ' popular treatise.
1907.
Tracy. Plane surveying; a text-book and
pocket manual. 1903.
SOCIOLOGY.
Calthrop. English costume. 1906.
Hershey. The international law snd
diplomacy of the Russo-Japanese war. tHO.
Stimson. The law of federal and stats
constitutions, n. d. ,
USEFUL ARTS
Ashley. Prartlcal planer kinks tor pla
ner bands. 1905.
Case for the goat, with the practical ex
perience of 24 experts; by "Home counties"
(pseud.). 1908