THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 29, 190S. 7 '! ! & f i M if l g ' - ' V 2?"" 1 .... . t i ? -4 JjL ? vll'.- ? TTPmH E all V X XX Tb MoncoU In RomIa, by Jeremiah Cur tn Uttle. Hnwn A Co.. Boston. That period of history dealing with Russia In Its? yrmi-avaf state, -hen Its native Pinces had (trained the best riRhltn blood of tt pepl y continual i tl war: the far-buck age hon tha heathen ModkoIk led br the brutal Batu. a skillful M.inieul. trained In the tradi tion and polic ies of his grandfather or mirk, p. I. Una 1"). the great Jinghls Khan, conquered province after prov im In what i now Russia and Imposed a Mongol yoke on the Russians for inre th.in -0t years has ever been the nu9t of the painstaking student, of hla 1orv. But the subject Is one on which little light has been thrown In the past at lat In English and Information was difficult to get. unless one consulted a multitude of book. Into the breach steps Mr. Curtln'a learned, disrriniinatltig volume, "The McriKoi In Russia." which Is a continu ation of " The Mongols." published last vear. and pronounced by a high literary authority as being the best single work on the Mibject yet published in English. Uriefiv, it describes the invasion of Rus sia bv the Mongols, after the latter's expulsion from thina by the Ming dy naty. tells of the domination of Russia and surrounding territories by Batu. ac companied by a Mongol army estimated at 5it.it.j warriors: the rule of the new Moneol empire, and how it held the Russians In an Iron grip until the melt ing away of what Is known as the great Mongol horde at Sarai. In 1505. The Invk Is exceedingly valuable from ai historical standpoint, represents the ex penditure of vast energy and untiring industry, and sen to be Just what the reading world Is waiting for. Extracts from nearly inacccsible authorities are presented In graphic form, so that the races are always readanie. 1 ne nisior- leal period Meeeribed Is 1093-1506, and In gathering material for his book It may be well to explain at this point that the author used the early chronicles of China, Persia and Russia, and that to obtain these he visited Russia several times, and abo the Orient. 0 eager was Mr. ("urtln to lay road. historical foundation for the Mongol picture to follow that for the first 224 pages be gives a painstaking study of Russia under lta native Princes, In which he states that Russia's polit ical history hectns lu $2, when Rurlk, Fineus and Truvor came from an un known country, probably Scandinavia, to rule over the Novgorod lands. In this portion of the book Mr. Curtln wanders sometimes until the reader begins to wonder when the Mongols are to step into the scene of action. It was tn the year 1--4 that the whole course of Nature seemed changed hi Russia. "There was an unheard-of dry season, and a hazr beat with it; pttchy forests were burning and turf swamps were smoking alt over the country; birds bad not strength to fly, and fell down Inanimate. In tho Autumn appearea great 00 mot : after sunset tt lifted up the whle heavens, extending nae lone awful lance from the west toward the east. There were tales of floods overwhelming distant places. There were earthquakes. In Vladimir, during mass. the holy Images In churches hepan to oniver; the walls of the citv trembled. More than once was the sun darkened. People fell on their l nees and pra y ed to t he tord to ha ve merry; they took farewell of one an other, feeling sure that the end of all life was tbn near them. There was pestilence. In Novgorod there were not graveyards to hold aM the corpses, and fence were made n round new ones." And so on. amid a m.iss of some un printab'e details. It must have seemed to the Russians trmt their cup of bitter ness could have no more depth of sor row, when from the Kast. from the land of the Fuigars of the Vo!c:i. came re ports of ill omen: "Mongol! It Is they wh cave t he Knian Princes that awful disastrous defeat on the Kalka. . . . They mill come before time ends and capture all places." The Mongols advanced toward the capital, between December., 1 and January the year fo'Iowinc. and In their military suc cesses they reduced city after city bv the sheer force of numbers. They did not only surround a doomed city with an snnv. but with a wall as well, and thev strengthened this wall In places with firm palisades. They railed this preceding 'driving the pig tn." and generally planned their operations so that no one could escape when the city was stormed. To ns and villages were made charred ruin. It became a common circumstance to see a devoted band of Russian pa triots surround on of their Princes and fight until tho all died, one after the otn. r. When M wow was stormed and sacked, it is re'ated. the Mongols iiiick ly k illed ordinry prisoners, but "others of dlstinctl a were crucified, fiityed alie or burn 4 " At Vladimir, only young women, a ins and strong laborer were led away captive. The sick, l-rfirm and the weak and aged n erc slaughtered without mercy. 'The Mongols cut down people as a mower cuts grass. When they entered a prov ince they sent out detachments on every, side: like locusts, they utterly destroyed everything. From stores of grain they took what they needed, and burned the remainder, boasting that grass would not grow In their path." After making Mongol territory out of Russia. Batu threatened Hungary. This extract is taken from page 241: Am soon as the Dnieper was frozen, the army passed over. The 11 on cot warriors were so numerous, the squeak in b or their asona eo piercing, the nemhlng of their homes and the roaring of camels so deaf ening that men in the citv could not hear, as was derlm-ed. what they said to one another. First the attackers surrounded Klrf; next they built a. wooden wall: then they erected their engines and hurled im mense stones at the city walls day and nlrht without ceasing. The mother city was defended bravely by It citizens, but available warriors were fe-; for no short sighted bad the Princes been that even hen the enemy was on the march the; had continued to struggle for succession. When the Mongols had made sufficient breaches in the walls they rushed through and began a hand-to-hand struggle. It Is stated that Batu, who had brought terror on all Kurope by the riHtrurtion wrougnt in nungar, iro atla. Servia. Bulgaria. Moldavia and other portions of Poland, was not pleased with those lands. He thought that the West was too narrow for a nomad people like the Mongols, and so Russia became a real province for thm. Batu pitched his tents and built Sarai on the bank of the lower Folga, from whence It was convenient and easy to send troops in every airec tion and keep conquered Russia In obedience. Little did Batu dream that he was building a city of destiny, the Oolden Horde as It began to be called, the Khan's residence in Russia. It would be tiresome to go on with the story of such ruthless conquest, and the thoughtful reader, busy with Russian history for the first time. Im patiently waits to hear that the Lord raised up a great patriot leader to save his people from slavery. The hero dawns In the person of Ivan III. In the year 1 505, two hostile armies. Russian and Mongol, faced each other on opposite banks of the River L gra, Iran pursued a wise Fabian policy. and the Khan also waited, hoping for reinforcements that did not come. Was there to be another Marathon, or Tours? To the surprise of the Rus sians, the Mongols marched off, never again to appear as conquerors. They began to fight among themselves, they themselves destroyed the Horde, and Russia was free, after more than 240 years of foreign domination. The feeble continuation of the Horde was the small Astrakhan kingdom, once a vassal state in Batu's empire. The Mongols began and ended in blood. They sank fittingly with the name less dust. My IJfe. Py Jostah Flynt. Price, $2. Illus trated. The Outing Publishing Company, New York City. A more than ordinarily careful reading of this frank biography of a natural t ram p. and an A me r ica n tramp at t h at , emphasizes the conviction that the late Mr. Flynt was that natural curiosity, a lover of his kind for the sensation of lov ing and without the expectation of get ting anything in return. From Flynt there never came the seltlsh query: "What Is there In it for me?" From the world's point of view, Flynl's life was a failure, because he never knew the value of money and didn't leave much. If any. Yet, as a nat ural philosopher and wanderer, J?lynt was happy in his' ignorance. In his youthful days. Flynt was known as "that awful Flynt boy." Yet there was a tender chord In his being, waiting for some one to give it soul. He loved. devotedly, his mother, and of his early home life he wrote: Aa I sot well .on into my teena and was at work with my school Noks. It naturally required a different kind of anneal to start me off on a trip from the simple call of the railroad train which had sufficed In the earlier years. For periods of time, long or short, as my temperament dictated. T became definitely interested in my books and in trying to behave for my mother's sake, if for no other reason. I knew only too well that my falling caused her much anxiety and worrlment. and for weeks I would honeii'r struggle aralnst all appeals to vamose. Then, without any warning, tha mere reading of some biography of a self- marie man. who had struggled independent- lv in the world from about my age on to the Presidency, perhaps, would fire me with a desire to do likewise In- some far-off com munity, where there was the conventional arademy and attendant helps to fame and fortune. There was an academy - in our own vlltare and I attended it, but the ap peal to go elsewhere carried with it a pic ture of Independence, mmnignc on ana seii- supporting- work, which fascinated me. and at an age when most boys have gotten over their guoto for wwndering I would start off in secret, to return faraoua, I hoped. Of his early tramp-life, Flynt spoke with agreeable frankness: Durtna the flrst month of my wandering! X was bed less and frequently roofless, In- deed, when I finally did rest or try to, In a bed. the experience wu so strange that I slept very little. A box car, a hay etacK. a railway tie drawn cloe to a ftra these were my principal lodging places during the entire eight months. It may have been a hard outtng. but it toughened me and inured me to unpleasantness which would certainly seem very undesirable now. In a way they were undesirable then. I al wavs laugh when a tramp tells me that he la happier in a box car than in a bed. He merely fancies that he Is. and I certainly should not like to risk offering him my bed In exchange for bla box car. . . . All told, I traveled in the great majority of the full-fledged etates of that period and visited many of the large cities. In Europe, especially in Germany. Flynt tried desperately to lead a conventional life, and he nearly took a degree at Ber lin T'niverslty. Of Ibsen, Flynt said: "Occasionally he (Ibsen) would smile, and then we saw the man at his best. Crabbed and curthe might be at times, but behind that genial smile, there was. without doubt, a very kind nature, and I was sure of it then and have been ever since." Twelve years ago Flynt visited the celebrated Tolstoy In the latter's Russian home, and the impressions given are characteristic: A good illustration of Totstoy'a trrewponel bilitv on the estate, or what he meant to be such, Is the way he invited me to stop one niht at his houae. I had gona swim ming with the boys to a pool perhaps a quarter of a mile from the houae. and tt waa getting to be time for me to know whether I was to sleep at the Tolstoys or In the neighbor's barn, w nue we w. ins and dressing ourselves I heard a voire In the brush wood near by saying: ""r Fleent, my wife invites you to spend the t.h iia Tt m-u the Count himself who had come all that dlstanca to tell ma that bis wife had told him that ne was i seek me out, and deliver hr invitation, not his. I shall always reroemtwr his face as It appeared through the twigs, and tha r- rand-boy accent in nis voice n t k. nr twtfnre seen sreatnesa in such bumble posture. It was openly said to me in nf the Count's friends that this v.'. i -u.a .fivsn th nlri eentleman con- Iderable trouble. In lta acquirement aa well as in its exercise. . . . I learnea much on the spot: Tolstoy feels very keen ly the seeming Inconsistency of hts life, the fact that he cannot make his altruistic notions harmonize with his dally life. His chagrin haa on one or two occasions nearly mai- . roward of him. At nignt. wnen wn t.o trairin-v he has slunk away to ward Moscow, like a tramp, to be himself somewhere. But always, before he has got tmr m. vo!r nas said to him I "Lyoff MCO- layevitch. you are afraid. You dread the remarks of the crowd. Tou are afraid of hearing that you preach what you don't practice. You are trying to run away from It all. to be comfortable yourself whether others are or not. Thlnic of vour wife and children, of the home that you have made. Is it your right to sneak away from all this Juat to make yourself look and sound consistent? Have you not duties towara your wire ami cnn- dren to observe ? Do you think that you can throw over all that you were to them and they to you merely to satisfy your v un 1 1 y van 1 1 y. Ly off . and nothing more. You are vain tn your very sneaking. You Insist upon appearing all that you think von are Back, hack, harm riememoer your who nd children. Hemember that you have no rlirht to make them think and move the way you would. Hemember that to sneaa away la cowardly. Barn J, yon icoiaye- vltrh!" And bark the old man has trudged. to take up his burden as a citlxen. Ttie American College: A Criticism, by $1. The Century Abraham Flexner. Prlci Co., New York City. A finely educated man for whose pin Ion I have Infinite respect on most sub jects, assures me if he had his youth to live over, he would not attend college, It's a waste of time." he argues. ' I prefer to get my education in the world. nowfver, mis in uic i-w ui mc norltv, and I for one am not going to deorv the value to a young man of a college education, notwithstanding Hor ace Greeley's opinion to the contrary. Mr. Flexner picks flaws In our college system and marshals facta "lo support his arguments. He asserts that the average boy is tsimply not educable and that in point of scholarship and trained apaolty the American college graauate of 13 is sadly inferior to the Uerman book is such an earnest appeal that It j is sure of sensible consideration and will awaken discussison. ' Here is oart of "the way out The American college Is wisely committed to a broad and rtexible scheme of higher education through which each individual may hope to procure the training best cal p..iiitMH tt realize his maximum effective' ness. The scheme falls for Jack of suffi cient Insight: in the first place, because the preparatory school routine devised by the iuvu onnnroxpii iit what the co He gp: as nm. th.it it will develoo: in the second niace. because of the chaotic condition of the college curriculum; finally, because re search has largely appropriated the re sources of the college, substituting the methods and Interest of highly specialized investigation for the larger objects of col lege toaching. The way out lies, aa I see it. through the vigorous reassert ion of the priority of the college as such. The point of empnaais musi do inuin u-. Other extracts follow: I do not mean to imply that a college experience ought properly to contain noin inir hut what Is explicitly or technicaly ed uratlon; I do mean, however, to Intimate strongly that nowadays the college puts the emphasis In the wrong place: inai inci dental and sometimes Irrelevant elements In eoltoco pxoerlence dominate the essential ami fundamental educational purpose. Does the outcome bear the impress of a clear, consistent and valid purpose T Does the thing prove an education to nave oeen sue. The important'thlng is to realise that the American college is pedagoglcally deficient and unnecessarily deficient, alike in earnest ness and in intelligence: that In consequence our college aiuoents are. anu iur part emerge, flighty, superficial and Imma ture, lacking, as a class, concentration, seriousness and thoroughness. College standards of success are actually below those mat prevail ouiaiur a uui may win his degree on a showing that would In an office cost him his desk. The prominent features of college life an Immense sociability on a commonplace basis, widespread absorption in athletics. cliLbs Journalism, etc. are for my purpose symptoms which enable us to gage the ex tent to which the college enlists the youth s total energy In appropriate intellectual ef fort Not only 'the weight which it at taches to Its alms, but the sincerity and Intelligence with which It embarks on their attainments, mav thus be gathered from the occupations and diversions which the col lege finds not incompatible with its stand ards end expectations. An education which seeks to And for cverv Individual his appropriate place can not construe its undertaking narrowly with out disintegrating the society it sets out to serve. It cannot survey its pedagogical prnhlem and conceive Its pedagogical pro cedure simply from the standpoint of the individual student, and from a single as perX of his real concern at that. The elective scheme has no necessary, inner logic. If a liberal education is anything more than a personal indulgence or a personal opportunity, the college has a very distinct task In reference to the impersonal aspects of social and civic life. The elective system Ignores the educa tional aspects of the inclusive social and buman relationship. Further, It leaves the student entirely free to follow his speolal interest narrowly. . . . The elective sys tem Impoverishes and Isolates by excessive and premature specialism where it does not waste by aimless dispersion. It Is the college where a boy may be trained In seriousness of interest and mas tery of power, that the nation preeminently needs. The graduate school is a late de velopment, a proper beneficiary of the col- leg surplus, it sucn tnere e; not the leKitlmate apprnpriator of the lion's share of Its revenues. Kmphaats of the teaching motive will put i end to commercialism. Efficient tearhing is utterly Irreconcilable with nu merical and commercial standards of suc cess. The secondary school Is the key to the college position: On the vigor and Intelli gence of the secondary school, the perma nent solution of college problems now de pends. Taken as a whole, the book shakes up .over-complacency, and shatters a few college ideals. Mr. Flexner waa born at Louisville. Ky.. in and was educated at public schools; is a R A., Johns Hop kins University: A. M.. Harvard Uni versity. He studied at the University of Berlin and Columbia University, a year each: was instructor in Greek. Louis ville high school. 1SSK-1W1: principal prep aratory school. 1S91-1905. For the last three years Mr. Flexner has been engaged in studying educational systems, methods and results In the United States, England, and Germany. His conclusions are based on long contact and experience with sec ondary school and college methods, and results and first-hand investigation of col- I lege students and college teachers. Christ Tjegrnd. By Selma Lagerlof. Illustrated- Henry Holt A Co., New York City, and the J. K. Gill Company. Port land. Eleven admirably-told sacred etories for children, written by Selma Lagerlof and translated from' the Swedish by Velma Swanston Howard, with decora tions by Mies Bertha Stuart, of Port land, Ore. The stories are real literary gems, the sacred atmosphere being well preserved, and they can be safely in troduced without fear of harm Into the home. They belong to that character of good stories with a moral over which lit tle children grow enthusiastic, saying. "Tell us some more. And don't skip." The three stories which stand out for their gentle reverence and touching ten derness are "Bethlehem's Children." "Our Lord and Saint Peter' and "Robin Bed breast." The latter story tells of the mlracu lous manner in which our Lord created "a little gray bird," and told It to remember that its name was Robin Redbreast. The bird was puxzled at its odd name, for the little creature was "all gray, from its bill to the very end of its tail. Why was It called Robin Redbreast, when It did not possess one single red feather? But the Almighty knew. The story goes on to say that when Jesus Christ was dying on the Cross, that Robin Redbreast looked on with compas sion, wondering how one could mitigate the Redeemer's agony. Robin flew close to the Christ and with his bill drew out a thorn that had become imbedded In the brow of the Crucified, and Just at that Instant a drop of blood fell from Jesus' face and made red all the little breast feathers of the bird. The dying man whispered: "Because of thy compassion, thou hast won all that thy kind have been striving after, ever since the world waa created." And every Robin . Red breast's throat and breast are red to this day. Mies Stuart has done artistic work on the beautifully designed book cover, a representation of three wise men on camels, probably on the road to Bethle hem. The title page is skilfully treated In black and gold, and before each story is a finely drawn picture in black and white. The f arolyn Wells Year Book for 1909. 11 lusirated. Price. 11.23. Henry Holt & Co.. New York City, and the J. K. Gill Company. Portland. Jests, advice, limericks, and fun gen erally out of that seemingly inexhaustible humor-mine of Miss Carolyn Wells, best known among America's younger poets whose field is popular on topical verse. Her work appears only in first-class magazines and newspapers, and her ad miring readers run into the hundreds of thousands. Her verse has that rare sun shiny, laughing sparkle that ought to make a mummy smile, and in another mood she Is all tenderness and delicate sympathy. And Just for a change, she is sarcasm Iteelf. This artistic book Is a diary for every day of 1909, with Miss Wells' amusing verse or prose close by. Her funniest momenta are when she writes parodies on the most celebrated, but more serious verse of our generation. The pictures for each month are by Mrs. M. E. Leonard; the cover and 12 sketches by Miss" Bertha Stuart, and fur ther pictures by C. De Tornado, Oliver Henford and Strothmann. Portland hag an unusual interest in the book, for Miss Bertha Stuart Is a Portland arttet. The cover she has de signed is a whirl of fun, and her dozen pictures are highly creditable to her artistic sense. This gay, little book will make a long-wished-for Christmas pres ent. The Hermit and- the WHd Woman. By Edith Wharton. Charles Scribnere Sons, Sew York City. Seven we 11 -told short stories, each pos sessing that human inferest and natural process of development that has marked all Edith WTharton's books, so far. The titles are: "The Hermit and the Wild Woman," "The Last Asset." "In Trust " 'The Pretext," "The Verdict." "The Pot- Boiler" and "The Best Man." The best story seems to be '.'The Hermit and the Wild- Woman," with a most un usual plot, detailing a time of rapine and war or tne middle ages. The hermit as a little boy ran from his father's house wnen "a steel-colored line of men-at- arms murdered nearly ail the family, and sacked the town. So the boy ran for his life to the hills, where he lived for years in a cave. As he grew up, the simple folks of the valley called him a noiy man. One day he returned from a., short Journey and found a strange woman sleeping on his bed of rushes. On in quiry it appeared that she was a runa way nun and that she had got into trouble at her convent because she had insisted on talcing baths. The rule of the order was that to wash was unholy. A most unusual ending has this beautifully poetic tale. It has tender sentiment Bound the Fire Stories. By Sir Arthur Co nan Doyle. The McClure Company, New York City, and the J. K. QUI Company. Portland. You who have read The White Com pany" and about the cold-blooded de tective doings of one Sherlock Holmes, may be pardoned If you do not at once trace the author of the books named as being also responsible for "Round the Fire Stories. The latter di ff er from the ordinary Conan Doyle style of Action, because they portray the ter rible, the grotesque somewhat after the fashion of Poe. These short stories of English life are nearly perfect In their way and teach us that the art of Guy de Mau passant lives again in the fiction of 1908. The most thrilling of the series are: "The Leather Funnel." "The Jew's Breastplate," "The Brazilian Cat" and 'The Brown Hand." To' insure a fitting environment when you read- these stories, open the book in a dimly lighted room, insist on ab solute quiet, and have near you a black cat with gleaming eyes. Then a weird spell will be woven. Her' Caveman's Letters and Hex's in Reply. dt iance cwiri ana aroi Steele. Gil lam's Sons Company. Philadelphia. Most lovers prefer to meet each other personally and to exchange their love vows by word of mouth. But not so Bruce MacMahon and Eleanor Vaunton Phelps. The latter is an artist, and Mr. MacMahon first writes a business letter to her about her pictures. An art atmos phere Is created, and the letters grow more intimate until love enters and then! The surrender of the woman to the man typifies the old unwritten right of the cave-man who in pre-historlc times ran out from his cave, flung a passing woman that pleased his fancy over his shoulder, and walked off with her. And a strange experience came with the con viction that it was the primal, natural t to do. and after a little while of protest and pouting, the woman willingly Joined her lot with the man's until death. This cave idea is most artistically and poetically conveyed In these letters, which are really a literary curiosity. Judith of the Cumberland. By Alice Mac Gowan. Illustrated. Price, I.M. G P Putnam's Sons. New York City Miss Alice MacGowan knows intimately her Cumberlands about as Intimately as we know and love our Oregon. So It isn't surprising that she has written an in tensely interesting American novel about the region indicated, a novel that reaches the high-water mark of excellence, be cause it s a pure love idyl, has a setting of much brightness and has the true we first meet her In the village milliner's shop, as she tries on a new hat. "Far over to one side, honey jest the way they're a-wearln' them in New York this minute." says the little milliner, con sidering privately that Judith was a big, coarse country girl, and that "a pair of stout corsets, well pulled in, would im prove her crude figure.' Judith U a born flirt, and looked upon every man as a being to be snared. Most of her suitors were rough mountaineers. There was Blateh, whose idea was freely expressed, so confident was he that she was his: "The way to do with a woman like Jude is to give her a civil beatin to start out with, and show her who s boss: wouldn't be no trouble after that. Jude Barrier ha got a good farm. She's the best worker of any gal I know, and I am for to have her an' this farm." Elihu Drane, of some education and comfortable means, and an elder In the church, asked Judith to wed him. He had already buried two wives. Since 14 years old. Judith had been love's votary, and her aim was "to lure, to please, to exploit, to defend, evade, deny, in each postulant seeking, testing, trying for the right man to whom should be made love's final surrender." But Judith's master came in one Creed Bonbrlght and that's the main part of the story. Of course, there are dishes of gun-play, lllloit stills, mountain dew all well served. A story of the Cumberlands would be Incomplete without these. The Speaking Voice. By Katherine Jewell Everts. Price 1. Harper & Brothers, New York City. Interest in voice-improvement has been quickened by the "success of the recent "Speech Crusade" of Harper's Ba zaar and the sharp, rather aggravating criticisms of such literary men as Wit Mam Dean Howells and Henry James, Those -who have even given the subject superficial consideration, unite in stat ing that the American speaking: voice is hard, shrill and often unpleasant to the sensitive ear. There is a wise little book that delves Into the heart of the matter, and written by one who knows what she is talking about, for she has had experience as reader, teacher and actress. Within the scope of 218 pages. the author gives a sensible method of voice training, accompanied -by easily understood exercises, first for freeing' the voice and then for Its development. The venture ought to secceed, both for patriotic and educational reasons. Mv irfv f thi Kosr. By Ralph. Henry Bar bour. Price, S2. Illustrated. J. B. Lip- plncQtt Company, Philadelphia. An edltlon-de-luxe of one -of the very best and most moving love storiea and American at that I ever read in all my life, and I've read well, several thou sand. Pure as a rose, bright as a star. Old maids and old bachelors may sneer at love, because they don't know what it Is! But "love's marriage ring's 'round all the earth, an' I love thee," as one singer says. "My lady of the Fog" tells of the accidental meeting of Miss Ju dith Sypher and Tom Randall, in a fog near Sweetwater Island. She was a dory and he in a motor boat. She had about $20,000,000 of inherited wealth in her own right, and he was a poor, civil engineer. But the things that happen to these two! Mr. Barbour tells the story with a sweep that makes one forget ' mealS; sleep, telephone calls. Keminlaoencee of a Ranchman. By Edgar Beeciier Bronson. The McClure Company, New York City. "All, yes. Indeed, my boy. You are quite right. My years in the Sierras and plains of California, Oregon and Nevada were the happiest I have ever known or ever expect to know. So opens the first paragraph erf a rous ing, realistic collection of ranch yarns, all breathing the open air and freedom of action. There's plenty of motion in the way of 'things doing" to suit the most critical. Many of the incidents are found ed on real life, and they may have all happened for all that I know, but even passing that by, the book is as entertain ing as a novel and as good as any liter ature of its kind. A Canyon Voyage. By Frederick S. Dellen baugh. Illustrated. Price, 3.50. . G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. The narrative of the second Powell ex pedition down the Green-Colorado Rivers from Wyoming, and the explorations oh land, in the years 1871 and 1872, and writ ten by Mr. Dellenbaugh, artist and as sistant topographer of the expedition. With 50 Illustrations. Here is an important book that is a noteworthy addition to the scientific,' geo graphical knowledge of a most interest ing part of the West. The subject has been little understood until Mr. Dillen baugh's book appeared, and he gives an intimate, always interesting record. Its wealth of maps will be specially appre ciated. Such patriotic writing makes new patriots of readers. The Wisdom of Walt Whitman, and The Wisdom of Abraham Lincoln. Edited by Laurens Maynard and Temple Scott, re- epectlvely. Price, Si each. Brentanos, New York City. Two prettily bound little books, with limp-leather covers of red and gold, containing extracts from the written and spoken thoughts of Walt Whitman, the Quaker poet, and Abraham Lincoln, the greatest American, surely, since the white race landed on these shores. The pages have neat margins, and the in dices complete. Should be acceptable in the Christmas present line. The Art of the Nether land Galleries. By Daniel C. Preyer. Illustrated. Price, $2. L C. Page & Co., Boston. An educational treat. This beautifully illustrated book gives a history of the Dutch school of painting, illuminated and demonstrated by artistically executed de scriptions of great paintings in many his toric galleries. To read the book Is as good as going to Holland's picture land. Mary Ware. By Anne Fellows Johnston. Illustrated. L C. Page & Co., Boston, Mass. Rosnah. By Myra Kelly. Illustrated. D. Appleton & Co., New York City. A dear, little, sweet, little Irish Ioe tale told with -that piquant humor which iMyra Kelly makes her very own. The novel moves amid aristocratic Irish in Ireland the Duchess of Clontarf, Lord Kevin Cretghton and Lady Rosnah. And there's Sheila, a beautiful wild flower. "Rosnah" is the very author's best, far. The IHwtributor. By Anthony Partridge. The McClure Company, New York City. An aristocratic English story. In which an organization called the Society of Ghosts provokes one's curiosity. Then there's money in it, and people with queer ways of spending their destiny. The best part of this readable novel is its clever conversation. The Boyhood of Lincoln. By Eleanor At kinson. Price. 30 cents. The McClure Company, New York City. Told in dialect form, a little story is presented about Abraham Lincoln as a boy, by one who knew him well. Gen uinely interesting and sure of a cordial welcome, even If several more ambitious Lincoln books are being published just now. Cupid the Surgeon. By Herman Lee Meader. Illustrated. Price. $1. Henry Altemus Company, Philadelphia, Medical schools warned away. Mr. Pleader is up to his old tricks as a laugh maker, and he gives ludicrous advice on the asjeient art of love making. His wit is dry but pungent. An Immortal Soul. By W. H. Ma! lock. Price, $1.50. Harper & Brothers, New York City. An entertaining story of a girl with a double personality, with a frame of Eng lish life. The people In it are mostly patricians. and the novel shines In bril liant conversation. The eJimple Jography. By Oliver Herford. Illustrated. John W- Luce Sc Co., Bos ton. An amusing little book on the world's geography, sparkling with good-natured fun. The Illustrations and comment are u n us ual 1 y c le ve r . Vnder the Gremt Ber. By Kirk Munroe. Illustrated. Price, $1.25. Harper A Broth ers. New York City. Pictures exciting days axound the shores of bleak New Foundland and Lab rador, with smuggling, sailor fights, etc. A healthy adventurous yarn for boys. JOSEPH M. QUENTIN. IX LIBRARY A XT) WORKSHOP. Dr. Horace Edgar Flack's "The Adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment." will be issued early next month from the Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore. Md. . An attractive edition of musical collec tions for piano and vocal student is Oliver Dltson's "The Musician's Library,' In which piano compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach are dominant. Mary ehlpman Andrews' story, "The Bet ter Treasure." is about the length of the author's memorable Lincoln story, "The Perfect Tribute." and has an equal beauty and appeal. It la adapted for Christmas. ' Marie Corellt's relations with the village people Of Stratford -on-A von, England, are said to be "extensive and cordial." This will be interesting to the mayor of that town, who confessed recently that, although not a rich man, he had come to the con clusion that he would be willing to give S50OO to get Miss Corelll out of the place. Readers of "The Life of Alice Freeman Palmer." now In ira ninth pointing. wiH be interested to know that the only papers by her which are to be oublished have just appeared in the volume entitled "The Teacher," of Which she is the joint author, together with her husband and biographer. Professor George H. Palmer. The four essays by Mrs. Palmer are entitled: "Why Go to College?" "Three Types of Women's Collegea," "Progress In Women's Eudca tlon," and "Permanent Results of the World's Fair." Meredith Nicholson, who prides himself on his careful accuracy, ventures, in "The Little Brown Jug at Klldare," to 8feak of robins nesting above Tim rod's grave In the Cathedral Churchyard at Columbia. S. C. Now comes the secretary of the historical commission of South Carolina to deny very vigorously that the robins prevail In the Palmetto States tn nesting time. He brands the author as a nature faker. Mr. Nicholson avers in reply that he knowa a robin from a reed bird, and that he saw them with hla own eyes. "The World I Live In," by Helen Keller, is an unique and valuable autloblnsrraphtcal record of a deaf and blind girl whose career haa been watched by the public for many years the first deaf and Diind person to receive a higher education. Among other topics, the book discusses The Seeing Hand, The Hands of Others. The Hand of the Race. The power of Touch, The Finer Vi bra tion s. Smell, the fallen Angel. Relative Values of the Senses, Imagination and the Senses, Inward Vision, Analogies in Sense. Perception. Before the Spiritual Awakening, The Larger Sanctions, Dreams, A Chant of Darkness. J. C. Snaith's new novel, "Araminta," will be published early in January. In "Araminta" he returns to the field of the legitimate novel of "character and manners, and with a power of characterization, and an art of expression developed so far above the level of "Broke of Coveden" as to ful fill the liveliest expectations aroused by that novel. "Araminta" Is Inspired by a tine humor and a high artistic purpose. The scene is laid In the London of today, which Mr. Snalth treats with wonderful success. I'nless the present reviewer guesses wrongly, if Mr. Snalth lives say ten years more and works as assiduously as he does at present, he may be the new Charles Dickens of Eng land.: It Is common to read In a report con cerning the failure or suspension of a business-house or corporation that not until experts have been at work upon the books for several days or weeks rfan anyone learn the exact state of assets, liabilities, or loss. The frequency with which this state ment is made naturally suggests a causal connection between accounting and suc cess. The long-felt want of a reliable, up-to-date book upon the construction and interpretation of accounts for the use of business men. Investors and students of affairs is said to be met by the publication of a volume entitled. "Accounts." by u il- liam M. Cole, professor of accounting in Harvard University. In China the mother-in-law's position in the family admits of no doubt; she rules her son's wife. "A shcrt time ago. when in Canton, an illustration of tnis was forcibly brought home to me." writes Frederick S. Isham. author of "The Lady of the Mount." from the Far East. "A wife was found murdered. The husband was accused, and would have been con victed and had his head taken off. when most obviously his motner. the mother- in-law In the case, came forward.' 'I did It myself she said, calmly; 'the woman had a bad temper and answered back. So I punished her.' The judge acquitted the son. and. in accordance to Lninese law. inflicted a mere nominal fine on the mother-in-law. She and the son left the court with a look on their faces which seemed to say: 'There has been much ado about little.' " There is much of curious interest to the bibliophile In W- H. Chesson's study of George Cruikshank. just published. It is also the record of an astonishing pro ductive career that touched the English public from the year 17M9 until 3S75. Cruikshank wtfs born September 27, 1792, and he died February 1, J 878. the years of his activity covering a greater period of his life than is common with most famous men. "It Is not not much as an artist that we here admire him." says Mr. Chesson. "It is as an Argus of the street., an Argus not only with many eyes, but with feet enpugh to plant him at once in a hundred coiners. From this voluble Argus his mistress. Clio, recoils but cannot dismiss him. . . . The packed and ugly caricatures which are the visible laughter of Cruikshank the Argus of journalism. Their violent colors and vigorous lines fail not in invocation. . . . He is the illustrator whose fame makes more than 600 books and pamphlets de sirable; he Is truly an artist, a maker of beauty." ' The first part of Ernest Thompson Eeton's new story of animal life, "Domino Reynard of Goldur Town." will appear la the Christ mas Century, with many of the author artist's characteristic illustrations. Mr. Seton believes that for ages the animals have been groping for an ideal form of ; marriage; and his avowed purpose In the ; new storv is "to show the Man-world how the Fox-world lives and above all to ad vertise and emphasise the beautiful monoiramy of the better-class Fox. "The Books Added to Library The following new books may be examined at the Public Library durinsr tnls wee, and will be ready for circulation Monoay, November 30. BIOGRAPHY. Buckingham The romance or George Vil liera, first Duke of Buckingham, and k''8 m.n and WOmen OB inc oiumul tuu. H. Gibbe. 1908. Terry Ellen Terry, by Christopher St. John (pseud.) 1W)7. BOOKS IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES. Asbjoritsen & Moe Eventyrbog for born. Baleac L.a Cousine Bette. Bazin Le ble qui leve. - Dahl Johan Bverdrup at Storthingsbll lede. 2 volumes. Decken Die Elken von Eiken'.ieide. flor Haandbog I den Danske llteratur. jacobson 1m dienst. Maeterlinck La vie des abeillea. . Rlehl Ein ranzer. mann. PESCRIPTION AND TRAVEL. Henderson ft Watt Scotland of today 19McKenzle The Unveiled East. 1907. Sayce The archaeology of the cuneiform Inscriptions. 1907. FICTION. Bazin The Nun. Booth The Post Girl. Church Lords of the Worm. Litchfield The Moving Finger Writes. FINE ARTS. Maris The Brothers of Maris; ed. by Charles Holme, text by D. C. Thomson. 190l. Elliott Pottery and Porcelain. l?7ti. Murlllo Murtllo, a Biography and Appre ciation: by A. F. Calvert. 1907. Patterson Chats With Music Lovers, n. d. HISTORY Acton History of Freedom and Other Esays. 1907. . Margoliouth Cairo, Jerusalem and Da mascus. 1907. LANGUAGE. Bonilla Spanish Daily Life, a reader. 1907. . ftuehler A modern English grammar, with composition. 1906. SCIENCE. Campbell Modern Electrical Theory. 1907. TT.Ml.r A Smith Teacher's handbook to accompany the essentials of chemistry. 1902. McCook Nature's Craftsmen: popular i studies of ants and other Insects. 1907. story of Domino Reynard," Mr. Seton told a questioner, "gives the life history of a fog In the form of fiction. It Is fiction founded on fact, on my own observations, extending over a period of many years. Domino Reynard, the hero of the story. Is a com posite of some 20 or SO foxes that I have watched as they appeared either in a wild state or tamed in indifferent households. Among other moral qualities which I have thus discovered in the fox Is a strong monogamous tendency in his family rela tions, and that ts something which I hava emphasized in my story." mm Feter B. McCord, an artist and rartoonit well known in the newspaper world, recent ly died at his home in Newark. N. J., of lung trouble. Successively connected with the Philadelphia North American, tha 8t Louis Olobe-Democrat and the Newark Evening News, his name and the clover laf sign which invariably accompanied It. were familiar to many thousands. Hesldes h talent for pen and pencil drawing he was a clever water-colorist and a connoisseur of Japanese art. A new book from his pen. "Wolfe, the Memoirs of a Cave-pweller." a tale of primitive man in America, is an nounced. It was illustrated with a number of very original drawings by the author, and has attracted much comment. The Champlain Society of Toronto, Can- ada, is preparing, with H. p. Piggar as edi tor, a translation of the complete works of Champlain. accompanied by a reprint of tho original French tt-xt, the whole work extending to four large volumes. Mr. Blggar Is well known as the author of "The Early Trading Companies .of New France." and other important historical works. The publications of the Champlain Society ace In limited editions of 5(K copies 2."0 for members and '2b0 for subscribing libraries. It has already undertaken Lea carbofs "History of New Fiance." part of which has appeared, as has also the hitherto little known work by Nicholas Deny s, "On the Coast of North America in the 17th Century." Margarita Spalding Gerry. who haa written "The Toy Shop." a story-siudy of Lincoln, which .appeared hrst in Harper's Magazine, and is published now as a book, has been a privileged student of the Lin coln period. Mrs. Gerry, who Is a resident of Washington, D. C, waa engaged in writ ing an article on the historic associations of a little Washington shop when the per sonality of Lincoln as one of its visitors overshadowed all others, and led to "The Toy Shop" in fictional form Instead of the intended article. It was during the course of her search for Lincoln memorabilia That Mrs. Gerry met Colonel William Crook, the author of reminiBcenses of Presidents Lin coln. Andrew Johnson. Grant and Hayes, which have appeared in Harper's or in The Century, and an Inmate of the White House since the days of Lincoln. After ward Mrs. Gerry assisted in preparing Colonel Crook's memoirs for publication Ralph D Paine, author of "The Stroke. Oar." which Is to be Issued soon. row4 on the Yale crews of 'in. '92 and '03. Ha made the crew in his froshman year, and had the added distinction of being the only crew man who had ever been chairman of the Yale Literary Magazine, a fact which shows that athletics do not interfere with the cultivation f a man's litoraiy powers. Mr. Paine rowed No. 4 on the '92 crew, which was one of the fastest eights that ever churned the waters of the Thames at New London. Ct. After his graduation he was sent to Henley. England, with the Yale crew as correspondent, and with three other "gracls," improvised a four-oarrd crew and rowed a scratch rac wiih he Henley Boat Club four, beating by two feet. This race, which, however, being something of a Joke, cannot be considered seriously, was the only instance of an American college crew ever finishing fitst at Henley. . Mrs. Annie Iee Wister, who died the other day at Wallingrord, Pa., in her 7!th year, is remembered as one of the most talented and learned of contemporary American translators. Beginning her lit erary work in isti4. she spent more than 40 years of her life in translating the works of German authors principally novelists. The last of her productions. "Tho Lonely House." was published last year. Another recent production w as "The Happy Go Lucky." One of Mrs. Wister' s best-known translations, from a selling standpoint, was "The Old Mam'selie's Secret." by Marlitt. A few of the other books translated by her were "The Second Wife." "At the Coun cillor's." "Vain Forebodings." "The Lady With the Kuby." A peniless Girl." "A Noble Name." and "The Green Gate " Mrs. Wister had no children. In addition to her literary work she was devoted to music. Her brothers are Dr. Horace How and Furness.- Captain Frank Furness and William Henry Furness. -Jr. Owen Wister, the novelist, 1b her nephew. To the dehate on the question whether rum is an inspiration to industry or a blight upon the muscle and intellect, comes Professor Muensterberg. the Harvard psychologist, who has been contending that moderate use of alcohol stimulates a man to more and better production, says the New York Press. This experimenter now tells of the case of a brilliant New York author "whose secret trouble is that he bs never written a pace of his brilliant books but after intemperate use of whisky. Un fortunately for the value of the instance, the author is a patient of Dr. Muenster berg, so that his name is kept secret. Thus we do not know whether the psychol ogist's judgment on the brilliancy of the work done by the said writer is correct. If it Is, why does he want to be cured of the habit? If hypnotic suggestion stops our gifted author from putting in a quart of whisky before settling down to the de lirious delights of composition, professor Muensterberg may be doing the world an Injustice and the patient, too. Our In vestigator in psychology would do much better to find out the brand of whisky and let the literary world try what virtue lies therein. NEW BOOKS RECKIVED. "A Happy Night." by W. J. Patmore (Cochrane Publishing Company, New York. "Miss Betty of New York." by Ellen Douglas Deland. $1.23 (Harper's. "The Supreme Test," by Mrs. Balllle Revnolds i Brentano'si. "That Pup." by Ellis Parker Butler, (McClure's. "Little Stings." by T. W. H. Crosland, (John W. Luce & Co. . "A Physician to the Soul." by Dr. Ho ratio W. Dresser. $1: and "A Woman at Bay." by Sibilla Aleramo, Sl.fiO, (Put nam's). "The Blue Peter." by Morley Roberts, $1.50. (L. C. Pago & Co.). Rich Feathered Game of the Northwest. 19Serviss Astronomy With the Naked Eye. Straahurgor and others Textbook of Bot any Ed 3. 3908. LITERATURE. Aflaio. comp The Call of the Sea; a pro.e anthology. 1907. Jeseopp Frivols, Simon Ryan and other papers. Ed 2. 190". Trent & Hcnnemann, compa. The Best American Talcs. 1907. SOCIOLOGY. Cronson Pupil Self-Government; its the orv and practice, uios. Hall Youth; its education, regimen and hygiene. 1907. Lowell The Government of England. 2 v. Perry The Management of a City School. 190S. RELIGIOUS. Balzani The Popes and the Hohenstaufcn. 1901. Gwatkin The Arian Controversy. 1903. Programme of Modernism; a leply to the encyclical of Plus X. 10S. USEFUL ARTS. Audel's Gas Engine Manual. 100S. Barton Terriers, their points and man agement. 1908. Carr Open hearth steel castings. 1907. Crelghton The steam engine and other heat-motors. 1907. Hasluck Practical metal plate work. 1907. Lodge Electrons. 1907. Oswald German cookery for the Ameri can home. 1907. Practical Upholsterer. ISM. Schofleld Tho Force of Mind. 1908. BOOKS ADDED TO REFERENCE DE PARTMET. Brynildsen Dictionary of the English and Dai.o-Norwegian Languages. 2 v. 1902. Heck The steam engine and other steam motors. 2 v. 1UO5-1907. Hiscox Modern steam engineering in tHe- ory and practice. 1907. Verity and others Flats, urban houses and cottage homes. 1908. BOOKS ADDED TO JUVENILE DEPART MENT. Adams ft Baker Harper's electricity book for boys. Baldwin second tairy reaaer. Brown Star Jewels and other wonders. Knapp Raphia and reed weaving. Madden Two Royal Foes. J