11 THE". SUNDAY ORT2GOXIAX. PORTXA1VP. FEBRUARY 9, 1913. V A Wayfarer to China, by Elizabeth Kendall. Iiluetrauxl. 2.50. HouKton, Milllin Co, Boston. The whole world just now Is watch ing: China, and wondering If the new Republic will really produce the men and women who will bring a new. educated, civilized China to take her proper place among the first nation of the world, as good as any. Will there be a return to Manchu mlsgov ernment and graft, or a revival? One of the books that will enable . fnrm his own opinion ol the ne China of our day, a book that is informing, lively, authoritative and easily read, is Miss Kendall's "A Wayfarer In China." She is head of the history department of Wellesley College, and adds to the trained mind of the scientist and scholar the en thusiasm of the wanderer and the sympathy and keeness of vision of a trained observer. She did not confine her visits to a short residence at Pekln or one of the treaty ports, take as sertions for facts, and then depart for home to write her book. She traveled over the roads and byways of China, accompanied by her Chinese guard, and often In company with her best friend on the trip. Jack, a little, chummy Irish terrier. Miss Kendall, through interpreters, talked with Chinese and knew them intimately, far from railroad tracks and often amid desert wastes. The most remarkable portion of her trip was across Mongolia, that vast plat eau, "almost as large as all of China proper, 'from whence had come in days past horde upon horde of savage war riors, the scourge of God. the terror of the West, carrying North and South, from Peking to Budapest, from the Volga to the Hugh, their victorious banners. Before me stretched the treat Mongolian plateau. The wind .l.. m fgrA had blown over i iiuai iHivi&u j L'thousands of miles of prairie and des ert. The long lines ui d'J. bllng camels, the great droves of sheep, herded by wild-looking men on sturdy litUe ponies, told of an open country. Each mile led deeper and deeper into the rolling grassland and the barren -.- nnhi ami between me and waaio na " " , it the next town lay nearly 700 miles of treeless plain ana Darren -mm. four days we were crossing the grass land, wide stretches of gently undulat ing country covered with thick, rich grass: wave upon wave, it rolled like a great ocean up to the ramparts of China. As far as the eye could reach, there was nothing but living green, . .... ...1 Kir nlnnch or BDade? Un- UlilUULUCU "J ....... r. - - . . , i wham little lines of set- Druacu " . " - - . .......,. v, ...i c a -lutchiner fin- lierueiii. i5 1 t-ii'"'- gers Into the sea of grass, the menacing advance of the Chinese, me tuier the soil. Most of the time I walked. a.. unnirntB hurrvintr to 1 11 W RIUUB " . h town irreeted me in friendly fashion; the look of the desert was In their faces, bold, haray. Durnt, auu lined by sun and wind and biting cold. The book extends to 338 pages and the Illustrations number 39. The trip was taken in 1911, in the last quiet months before the Chinese revolution, 'It is true, I had some special ad vantages." says our frank autnor. flMlWAOl J " , was an American and a woman, and no longer young. Chinese respect for grey hair Is a very real thing: a woman Is not feared as a man may be, and hostility Is often nothing more than fear; and even in remote Szechuan I met men who knew that the American Government had returned the Boxer Indemnity, and who looked kindly upon me for that reason." The contents are: Across Tonklng: Days in Tunnan-Fu: Across Yunnan; . i -v.i pii'iinc- Tachlpnlu: The Less er Trail; Across Chengtu Plain; Omer Shan, the Sacred; Down the rangise, From the Great River to the Great Wall: The Mongolian Grassland; Across the rcrt of Gobi; Unga, the Sacred City: North to the Siberian Railway; A Few First Impressions of China. To show the lively character of Miss Kendall's literary style, let this quo tation suffice: Just before reaching Hua-lin-plns. or Pboentx" Klat. where we were to spend the night. 1 espied across the narrow val ley to our right a picturesque temple perched at the ton of a high, wooded cliff. A it 1 ,u .ftrnnnn I turned was sxiii cimij ' - , . off from the trail and, accompanied by the Interpreter, scramniea aown tne biuv j : -t.a - m r harm Inn wooden a.. .nnnnlng tlie torrent. After a sharp pull through a fine forest, we came out m front of the temple, which was dedicated to Kuan Tin: bv the way. It is rather sig nificant that China's favorite delly is the . j . Kn-v The place seemed ae- mnti we wandered about at will. Ap parently extensive repairs were going on. and roofs and gods alike were being refur bished. After a time an old priest turned ... .-.it e through the timber-built ...... wj,hini1 the temple. Here, he tola us, cii-i-"u i" " hood often spent a few weeks In Summer to escape the damp heat of the valley. The practical Chinese do not hesitate to put their sacred places to use, and they serve In turn for schools, political gatherings. Rummer resorts. , ,t I was half a mind to cry a halt, the place looked so attractive, and all the more when on stepping out of a door there opened before mo a wonderful vision of heaven-Vlsslng mountains. While we were Inside the clouds had lifted, revealing the whole line of the gnat peaks that stand as sentinels at the eastern end of the vast Tibetan plateau. Westward from that snow toi.ped line there Is no lowland until yon reach the plains of India. For a few minutes we stood spellbound, and then the clouds shut dawn again, leaving only a glorious memory to cheer the descent throush a grey, dripping world. What of China of the future? It jviiss iemian Kvn " 1 v " sion: "China has ages of ex perience both in organizing and In rebelling, back of today. Establish ing a republic, however, is something new; the Chinese have never before tried their hand at that, but If they will only bring into play now all their un doubted power of organization, of re source, of moderation, they will cer tainly make a success of their new experiment in government. Given time, and they will do it. Perhaps my view of China's future is rose-colored. But k v.ir noon and felt Is of tremen dous force, and the Impression of power that the Chinese made upon me was rather overwhelming. And. any- . a f,inHiv nninion ma v be par doned In one who, during months of solitary travel in China, never met any thing but courtesy and consideration from all. whether coolie on the road. villager or innkeeper or priesu n. nrfrin tid Antlaultr of Man, by G. '..... n.i.t.. n t.I-D.. F. O. S w reun luav " ... in,..,ii Ribllotheca Sacra Co.. Oberlln. O. Very often books on this subject are of the learned, ary-as-ausi nu u . k , .ttmot the hiehlv educated, but fh. nrHinnrv reader. This hook of S47 pages, with a wealth of Illustrations. Is written attractively on a popular basis, but rich in Its mine , i vnnwi.Hff-e nrMpTited so In terestingly that even the non-sclentlflc reader Is fascinated. The suojeci is one .honld all know about. The book win v., tiaanr(l m one of the most im portant and scholarly friends on one's bookshelf. iL Dr. Wright says he haa studied the subject for 40 years, and he takes the position that in tne ngni oi mouern i i aii fur nnlv a moment's re flection to see that the human race has had a limited period of existence in the world, and that It Is destined to extinction in the near future. Accord- , . . w. cohln? of astronomv." says 1110 IV o - . - our author, "the solar system consists of centers of matter and force whlcn f"TT i.r T,r,'SA l View 7b.fr Ovzz Jtfrazrteye, u hi-h " hn WW A x f iri-v. T 1 1 life Corner, eza"J Wayfarer m -i . i . . i. . . , .iiralv no rf in ir with their am t,uh bu.u- I a - . - - heat and tending to dead uniformity in their various modes or motion. j.iic earth upon which we live is but one of v, .. i-. ,wl i n ,r nlnnetarv masses and has become fit for the habitation of man only during recent geological ages, a few million years ago the heat upon the surface of the earth was so great that it would have been impossible for man. with his present physical consti tution to have endured it. A few mil lion years hence and the rigors of an arctic climate will have settled down over all. for the sun Is losing its pris tine vigor, and finally, instead of being. as now, a source of lifegiving power, will itself need to be warmed at the fireside of some longer-lived and more fortunate luminary. Sir George H. Dar win maintains, with the genius of his father, that It is not more than 50, 000,00 or 100,000,000 years ago that the birth of the moon took place, coming verily out of the ribs of the earth, as, in Hebrew story. Eve Is said to have come out from man, naving oeen thrown off from the rotating mass o earth, as water Is thrown from a grind stone, by accelerated ceniriiugoa force. ... "Everything was in an incandescent state. There was no solid eartn, ana there was no water on the earth or above it, but everything was In a mol ten or gaseous condition. Gradually the heat was dissipated and the volume of matter contracted, and the rotary motion of both the earth and the moon commenced to be reduced, until the present happy medium condition of af fairs was reached wnicn renaerea or ganic life possible. How life began upon the earth It is not our province to ask. Whether, as some Buppose, it was spontaneously generated in the effer vescent turmoil of the cooling elements, or whether, as some others have sug gested, it was brought to the earth by the fortunate collision with some more fortunate planet, or whether It was brought Into being by the creative fiat of the Almighty, are questions which we will leave for other times and op portunities of discussion. Here we will simply say that those who take the last alternative certainly cannot be charged with choosing the most difficult hy pothesis. Every supposable hypothesis makes extravagant demands upon the reasoning powers of the human mind. The solar system is running down and the earth is moving to a condition of universal glaciation." In other words, man will, some time, he disturbed, because the sun will no longer give him warmth, and he will be frozen. The world will be a frogen world of deadly cold. In which life, as we know it, cannot possibly exist. Alfred Russel Wallace Is quoted as saying that the age of the oldest sedi mentary rocks Is 28.000,000 years, and it is the belief of our author that post glacial time is to be reckoned by thou sands of years, rather than by hun dreds of thousands, or even tens of thousands. On page 494. after ex haustive reasonins, the statement Is made that the antiquity of man. so far as the question depends upon his con nection wltn tne giaciai epocn, m proved to be. even when a generous margin Is allowed, greater than 12,000 ie AAA ..abm T. Is tVirmo-ht that one or j-,vvv . " -'- " of the very earliest traceable homes of man was In the valley of the Euphrates and in Turkestan. Of snecial interest is the chapter on man and the lava beds of the Pacific Coast. Old Age. Its Cease and Prevention, by San- loru lienneti. iuiuLia.cu. . . Ciilturo Publishing Co.. New York City. C fmnnrtant In the miblift health does this book and Its message seem that before passing an opinion as to t tenrhines I nave careiuny lean ever one of Its s4 pages, ana nave looked at Its 67 illustrations. 1 nave no hesitation In saying that the views i,.,. sound, and that the book ought to be brought to the attention of all people wno wis a to eipeucu . i i.imn-A fnr wn cn xnev were 1:1c- ba that Is to eniov me to lib fullest and live to the age of at least 100 years. To experience goou neum and live to this good old age, wnai must we do? Here is the lesson: ah .. .i - a n A oil nrarnns increase in : -.i, ah a1 ii r r 1 v when nrop SIaC. BllWft"" " t ill erly exercised. Tms is inn prmuiiiai secret ol neann, sirenBui au c.i-v.- ity of body, and a long uie. T av.a. wnrHv- As a man thinketh so is he. Think good thoJghts, and lead clean lives, but above all, exercise. XT. Duinntf IS Known US Lil LIIO.LI who was old and sickly at 50 years of r. ..I o vmmt man at , an through sane exercise and right living and thinking. He oia not joiu mi'i ball team or work heavy dumb-bells, Kt invented slmDle exercises of his nn , nhnmine. exercises In bed. He ran at the Stadium raceuacs; in ou c--A..Ai--r. ihnrtln after hla 71st blrth- j miiA in 7 minutes and 55 sec onds, pulling up at the finish without any distress. By ue time i naa iiu f of mv exercising clothes and running shoes, say In about 10 minutes, my puise was ua6 . i.i.. it vu when I started. Mr. sietiuiij ' ' i . i Bennett gives pictures oi me prai""" of his body in taking the exercises he advises. Mr Bennett's lamer was a cunauuiw tlve who, when he died at the age of 42, was known to be a nervous, dyspeptic i . Atllno- nnrl alwavs taking .omethine for it." Our author was a , .. .. v. ka was not Axneeted to live through childhood, so you see he stat ed to live wnn many miiis" 1.1 ti.. 1, a vnn nut. bv exercise. "Health cannot be found in drug store prescriptions, nor can life.be materially prolonged by any memouiii''""'" r,? - nt - C&na-. i. 'T Vi n anliltinn of the D I' O D - lem lies only iu nature's principal methods of Inducing heaitn sunugni. pure air, pure water, nourishing food, cleanliness and exercise. Given these tmnnrtani fnctnra and an observ ance of what we know as the general laws of hygiene, health and a long life ; v. i .. n .1 uaiiniiv vnrv nrobable. tiro (iveaiiiii;, " ' " " " - ' But without these conditions they are not obtainable, ana me ions mi Hll,,al remedies With Which the world has been afflicted, will not re . 1 ...... 1 nnnillHni1" umn c i, v, i. r i ... . ohvum npalnftt the use of intoxicating liquor and tobacco, but . -. kA emnlTAa 0 little" and aamna i uc " that he usually drinks beer or claret at his meals, but only men. mm i re freshing frankness! On page 213, he -i . 1 r Mllnnal llL'sln TT nf tlV- savs iiiu-L ii. . i iiL - gienlc law and an equally rational system or exercise ior me u" " made a part or tjnrisuan dcibuuc ii,. , . i ,i .nrolv h nrDloneed.u III till ilia wu'"' J ' ' and our stay upon this earth would be easier and more pieasanv. w vs. 71 119 and 215, Mr. Bennett praises ' . , ii A Hh.l.tlan S.lAnr SLR ana speaas wen a miKhty force for good. He makes the point clear that ne is not a reu6ii"i" in any sense. This book Is brought to the attention ui all ' ' or 30 years old. .. ii ... v. a,.,, "hrnlcen aown ttl 3V, v, Tk. t. shore, bv Rose Macaulay. J1.25. r.inria H. Coran Co.. New York. Quite a story of commanding merit- seeing that it won In the Hodder & Stoughton prize novel competition an j tmnn .nii -iftur n naraful ex amination of its contents, it is a pleas ure to say that the awara i juu iaa DAAnAA nre mostly laid in Eng land, and afterwards In Italy. The hero- is Peter Margerison, a natural born aristocrat and a rebel against the restraints of conventionalism. He, at first, is the butt of all jokes, but makes plenty of rrlenas wno ime mm. cause they can t help It. He marries, but marries the wrong woman, and a son is born to them. They call him Thomas, because Peter saia, ne nu skeptical look aooui me tj mm nn " Peter's Wile, wnen ner uou, .c brought to her, says: "Take him away. please. He tires me. rcmi along socialistic-vagabond lines, to the ,.i A.noie nf his swell rela tions, meets the right woman and loves ADEQUATE EXTENSION WORK MEANS MUCH (CONTINUED tures given in the Interest oi more and better poultry and eggs from Ore- -I . .. Tn nrlrlitlnn to this. Bun jji uuulm j. ; service demonstrations were given at three Grange lairs, at tne oi- and in four high schools. Six orchards at different points in the state were also the scenes of practical instruction given to 4oU orcnaruis m Vi !..... In the manufacture of lime - sulphur spray. Fair Exfclblta Extensive in.iw nhiu nf extension work which reached unprecedented propor tions last year is that of officiating at fairs and similar competitive exniDi tinn throughout the state. In this i jn.n9 .i.i. nnRt vear. the col- 6B1I1"!, uu'mB 1 - lege sent its experts to 37 exhibitions. ranging from rose snows is uii.j.. fairs, and requests ior Bimum ""w wo.-,. reatlv In excess of the number the college could satisfy. As expressed bv the secretary ot one oi tne organi sations served last year, and whlcn has already requested a like service m 1913, "the popularity of the college faculty members here In this line of work is due to the fact that their decl--i . i . irlth full reasons, and B1U119 All 1 "-- explanations, thus enhancing the value of the xair irom an cuuiiivnn. ' Plnt- . . .. , Next, in looking up tne omce ui Al lege extension work in tne puonc BChools, a material service is Known m have been rendered by the college In conjunction with the State Superin tendent of Public Instruction in the promotion of the school fair movement. In the field the extension division was represented by Messrs. n. - mans " C C. Thomason, who were employee through the Portland union toca yards Company and the State Bankers' Association. Devoting full time to ths work, these men visited the publlo schools of every county in the state and gave Instruction to 41,105 school chil dren relative to the preparation of ex hibits for tneir respective sumui io,. . The work of the field agents was . i A h,, llio nislstflncs nf three faculty members, who devoted 15 days to the Industrial lair campaign auu reached 7035 school children, in addi tion to mwoi' 1 cr .v. In connection with the school fair movement were also published three Extension Bulletins In editions of en non R-riea 1 No. 1. "Industrial Aaa Hrounn TtOVS and Girls" Series 2, No. 1, "uregon aoya anu uun and the Eeg Problem"; Series 2, No. 2, .t.i.A--innine- Piirs for Oregon Boys." These bulletins were written at the college and financed Dy tne uregon Bankers' Association, Portland Com- i-i riii.ii Portland Union Stock Yards Company, and the office of the State Superlntenaent oi ruuno imuut An Antirelv new demand, for exten- Ainn wnrir in the oublic schools has sprung up this Fall, in the form of re . - aa i ha aaIIaota pTntrti to a n IUDBia ii . i ' .'"..n i - pear at regular Intervals as lecturers .before high school literary societies her best, but fails to win her. Then he takes to the life of tne roaa s eling hawker or tramp, and, with great humor, emerges as a cneentu philosopher whose creeu is is, is best. , Good luck to this healthy novel, free from shams! The Ghost Girl, by Henry Kitchell Webster. Illustrated, S1.23. D. Apple"" & Co.. New York. Another Sherlock Holmes mystery story, to which is added a little of the horror of Poe. The body of a beautl . , to f ,-m n rl frozen In IUI JUUUg " i,iiia.. - the river Ice. She had been shot i . v. i. ...... ii-a t r 1 1 1 in l weal 1116 evening dress, but there was no bullet hole In the bodice of her gown and no blood-stain on tne wmte satm -.w u been dressed in the gown after she was killed. Her name was supposed to have been Miss Claire Meredith. Arthur Jef frev, artist, and Mr. Drew, lawyer (who tells the story), seek to ferret out the mystery, and there are several we.i- constructea surprises. Pictures of the Panama Canal, byJoseph Pennell. J. B. Lippincott Co., Philadel phia. ' . Handsomely illustrated, this book Is of the edition-de-luxe class and is so distinctive in its artistic worth that it occupies the foremost place among the many illustrated books on this subject. The title page says: "Reproductions of a series of lithographs made by Mr. Pennell on the Isthmus of Panama in January-March, 1912, together with im pressions and notes by the artist. The . . j ,,..- to eicrht pages 111 111 ini makici -- . and for lucidity of description and beauty of brevity it can ne rammtim. The illustrious number 29 and are so admirable that they are worth fram ing, each and every one. Bunch Grass, by Horace Annesley VacheU. Our author went 30 years ago to Cal ifornia ana ior n , , . - uu.mn.hAr TTfl lived in v,. hAraa.thiAf. outlaw and stage-coach. In this story he is qu ue successful In depicting ciiim-i"."-- in soutnern inn"" n y ,. Izatlon of Miss Aletnea uene " ; V- an, school teacner iram is an unusually able one, Decause n so interestingly human T.t,xin,TI SEW BOOKS RECEIVED. . . i i ........ i. rimra a dashing story of adventure, and the sea. the story being ioiu "'rr" J i. The Private Life ot Henry Morley Roberts, a nove jui e out of the ,narya Eng.T.,hmin. and ivents are nar rated w.tu rare iranKueaa " Y'vltn real hero is siaieu iw ic "r " Who really lived but ha I since Passed on and the promise Is made that shall very probably before long be treated to some more or ills aiHCiuui c - n - -- -. -- ury and literary conditions declared to exist in England today, each novel l.-5 (Geo. H. ""cvn'thia: "jiLeonard Merrick, a smart nove? of English life with a merary hero and likeable femininity: and The Man Who Was God. by" Leonard Merrick, an English novel, very well done, with stage I fe motif, each book 1.2I (Desmond Fitzgerald. N-The' First Lady in the Land, by Acton Davies and Charles Nlrdllnger. one of the fine novels of an entire year, search "hers you will, the heroine being a gay widow. Mrs. Dolly Todd; other characters being Aaron Burr. Thomas Jefferson, James Madi son and others, who all fall In love with her. Officer 6B. by Barton V. Currle and Au gustln McHugh. a rattling story with a Doliceman much In evidence, with a mustard king's son as hero, and a heroine that is worth while, the plot being taken from the play of that name, each novel (The H K. Fly Co N y ). Handbook for China, by Carl Crow. J2.30 (Mex.). more than a guidebook. It is a personal attendant explaining to intending Sect to see when tn get There.;' ? 'pages r. . t, i. innnAFA EhnnirhnL China!. The Green Overcoat, by Hllaire Be'loc, Illustrated by Gilbert K. Chesterton, Sl-jO. a delicious plot fashioned into an entertain ing novel, affecting a green overcoat and an English professor ol psychology (Mc- Bride. Nast & CO.. Y.). told novel of the Civil War. with a Vicksburg Interest. 1.20; and The Caverns of Crail by Thomas Sawyer Splvey. $1.2o. a novel ol high dramatic, nisionoai imuo "i h h a one oi toe pnuwiioi ... - description of the first war between the Medes and Persians (Cosmopolitan Press. N"Love. Marriage and Divorce, by Brian C. Bullen, 96 pages, a series of sensible essajs on these subjects, the argument being con ducted on a liberal basts (J. S. Ogilvie Pub. CRelIglon "and Medicine, by Elwood Wor cester D. Ph. D., Samuel McComb. M. A D. D.. and Isador H. Corlat, M. 1.. 42. pages, a valuable, instructive book dealing with the moral control of nervous disor ders not Christian sclence as practiced lr the healing movement undertaken by the Emmanuel Church. Boston, said to be the only official book on the Emmanuel move ment and the only authentic presentation of tbe principles and the methods that un derlie the work originated and carried on by the authors. $1.50 (Moffat, Yard & Co.. N. Y.. FROM PAGE 8.) and before joint meetings of pupils and ......... T.nnlr nf nnerinl nrovision for such extra requirements has made it impossible for the college to comply fully with a single one of these re quests, although In some cases one or two lectures have been or will be fur nished in place of the series desired. Itinerant Schools Asked. Still another line of work which hits the extension division in a weak spot is' represented by three requests now in the office for itinerant schools to be held in different parts of the state for the benefit of the men and women whose home duties prohibit attendance at the college for the regular exer piapn nf Farmers' Week or the Win ter Short Courses. Such requests as these find the college practically help less as the handicap, which has thus a I. 1a Ka haIi.aa nf limltcwl nlVl. LtXL UHUll 111 V11L liniui. ...... . . f j cal endurance on the part of instruc tors, is now extenoea to eijuipiiiuiii- ah ItfnA-An ui.hnnl In nn t Ii In kn hie without apparatus and full instructional equip ment; so this important branch of ex tension worK must, at present, oe de nied, except in a few special cases, where local high school equipment Is made available for the use of the col lege In connection wltn sucn instruc tional work. rillnninc T, i it ( . f rnview of the development of the O. A. C. extension service, whlcn has snown tne scope oi tbe work, explained the subject-matter 1 a1.. a I,, a- nnln tliA mnat H1"Q r' t i I'O A.B 11H.1UU1UB . " 1- - courses taught at the institution, given in detail the agencies through which the work has oeen none, ana maicaiea tne m-Aeon. .nnttutitl v incre.sRlner demand for such service, the question arises. W nat wouia an aoequaie ex.i.eiiiwii aaIaa mAAn tn tha nannln nf Cir eernn ?" Tnls question can do auawere-j m mu ways In terms oi collars ana cents, with the consequent improvement In a.aaaaAa nf llirlriD. nnri hv cnllinCT &t- LU11UU1 UL3 v. J . " ' n .- J v.--.-c7 tention to tne possioiuties ot tne wum. Reasoning Irom tne results oi anaio- aaahIaaa whlnh arA rteinir ron- uercu ill tiiiii.i i .i. ... . . - - - .3 .1 1a a. AAA A.A-AA It Vlllllll Trt A n the saving or nunareas or aoiiars to the people of Oregon lor every ooiiar luvesim in oui.il bcitiia. r.. in toncrlhlA u t tn Indlviduals. communltles, and the state at large. an adequate extension service in urer gon would mean institutes so sched xiail -hat itpn rommunitv In the state could have the college experts with them at least once each year; It would mean more demonstration work i . . i. AAmA . n thncA. ii-V, n are snxlens U 1 IV 11 f, -1 L fcw ......... - to adopt new methods which have stood the test ol practical trial; it wouiu mean that every new settler in Qre- AA..lrl tinVA a MHnnll - vifllt f TOTTI BU11 .itt.a " f -' . aVaa ivIsap ii-Vi n wnilld exDlaln to the newcomer just what activities have accounted tor tne success or mn- a a.aaa In hla vlAlnitv it would mean the establishment of correspon dence courses at such time as justi fied. In all subjects which can be satis- - i , 1. kv ttifA tnethndr it lacwin; vaufeiii. j - - would mean an Instructional exhibit POET ROSTAND NOW HAS LITERARY RIVALS IN HIS OWN WIFE AND SON Play Composed by Youth and Mother Prodnced-Vinir Daly Leaves Stage to Reduce Weight-Ine. JdhoUaad . to Lead Suffragists Mrs. Brush Owns BasehaU Team Lucie Cherbonmer to Wed. -SSSSaSa. It . vv i r rv" -s. I fZ f I f v- ''If ... I" --. 1 "lP ' - I If .Sip-. -I , W "W "'A . I' i' i I I -j - J I - - Mil J SI BW YORK, Feb. 8 (Special.) N Th nrndurtion of the fairy play, "The Good Little Devil," which David Belasco has put on In New York, introduced to the American public Madame Rostand, the wife of the fa mous poet, and his son Maurice. Mad ame Rostand is a poet, having pub lished her writing while she was still Rosemond Gerard. Maurice is begin ning to write poetry, though he has not yet reached his majority. The play on which they coliaDoratea was prouuueu in Paris sorpe months ago and achieved a success. It is whispered in Paris that Ros tand Is jealous of his talented wife and son, but it is hardly likely that the author of "Cyrano de Bergerac" and "Li'Aiglon" is afraid of comparison. The Rostands live In a quaint house . at Cambo, in the south of France. It is on the road to Bayonne. Here "Chan tecler" was written. "The Good Little- Devil" is the story of a boy who goes away from his home at the gawky age and returns from and demonstration from the agricul tural college becoming an Integral part of every fair in the state; it would mean a closer co-operation of the col lege with the secondary schools in mat ters of industrial education; it would mean the publication of Instructional bulletins giving the results of Impor tant discoveries ana ior tne oisscuu-. nation of much valuable information 1 now compiled, yet unpublished for lack of funds; It would mean movable schools and short courses Ior counties . . . . -AA Anm tha Onlle-P. tO W II n u are iw i - - permit all Interested to attend the work here, in otner woms, a ayoux n quate extension teaching would result In the betterment ot ru uuim. and standards of living, in more pro ductive farms, more and better live stock, more permanent rarm improve ments, better roads, more social advan tages, and, consequently, happier homes and more prosperous communi ties. . , i i . .-nhDhlir will not be in conuiuniuii, ii. - out of place to reiterate the statement that this work nas an oeeu ii "J 43 members of the college faculty and i . ..inti.m t ii f f with the as- 11 i pi: 1 1 in ti ii t .i ... . sistance of the field agents who de voted their entire wme a an.cu"" to the school fair campaign. At pres ent there is not a single instructor on the staff of Oregon Agricultural Col lege whose duty it is to umi. specified time to extension teaching. i -aa.- a ii that the demand for extension work in Oregon has kept pace with the rapia oeveiopmeui m state is an apt and accurate expres sion of the situation. And furthermore, that the success of the work done in Oregon and the demand for more extensive service along the same line, is merely the local expression of a Nation-wide movement demanding the dissemination of useful knowledge, is witnesses -uy iue .. .....niotivi islnw-mov- tnat tne ever twiwut ing Federal Government has expressed its unquaimea commence, in ouv." by favorably considering the Lever Smith Extension Bill, now pending be fore Congress. If It could liKewise oe -uumi v..-. provision has been made by our own state to render a service adequate to meet her present-day requirements, the conclusion inevitably wouia iouow that Oregon has just as efficient and .1.-1 - A..A,Am nf a aIaiiI tural and practical yoi'" - ------ - industrial education as any state In the Union. " IRISH WIT AND HUMOR Seumas McManns I.ectnres In Port land February 17-18. in aa uuyiVanna. tha. Irish writer and lecturer, who is to lecture in this city February n-is unaer tne ui-pn.-of the Portland Library Association, gives his opinion that the wit of an TAA-iiAViman will nut be liable to blind you when it scintillates. He says that i i.. a aaa Aar i-i ili n i- nn an in- wnen no wm vnw j - aide tourist car. in County Kerry, he got into a dispute on irisn wn wnn rather thick-headed Englishman who . i .iaa him An absorbed were they in their argument that when they reached a rather steep hill on the road. i . i. . i aa-. .grHrivnr who. hv the way is the greatest wit In Ireland had jumped off to lighten the horses' , xj . - ." Paris at 20 a thorough snob. But he is rails v a" ...... o - - - met by his own younger self, and at Eight oi tne Doy oi it m " was. all the snobbishness oozes out. Belasco has put the play on with a fine cast and all the scenic accessories which make a Belasco production al ways notable. Vlnle Daly, well known for many years as a dancer and more recently a singer in opera, has sailed for Europe to take the cure at Kissingen. Miss Daly wants to get thin. Her ambition to be thin Is so great that It may take her from the opera stage. While sing ing in Hammerstein's opera-house in London she found that she was taking on flesh at a rapid rate. Inquiry showed that this was the usual fate of singers, and was due to the deep breathing and diaphragm exercise. Miss Daly says she would rather be thin than be an opera singer, and sh .i it.., Aint-AAt 4iTnt before she left ueuuucu ..un. j : America. MIbs Daly is only 26 years old. She has been on the stage more than 12 years, having made her debut load up the hill, he (MacManus) fot got his duty to the dumb animals, kept his seat and went on with his argu ment. The jarvey, walking behind the car, opened the door of it several times and slammed It again with a loud slam, which at length so annoyed the Eng lishman that he irritably asked why he Was UUUlg mill. , , - the sly jarvey, "every time the horses j i . . v. aaaa ctAm tvioi. think that1 aniA . n a . "Haimniiii. Kir. nuiu ileal Mini, uuv" o.u.,.. -.. - another man has got out, and it gives the creatures encouragement vu mo hill." The Englishman, at hearing this, slapped his knee and let out of him a great guffaw. To Seumas MacManus, who had taken the hint and jumped out, the Englishman, settling himself back ror a more comionaoie wai, umphantly: "And this is some of your boasted Irish brightness, eh? Ha, ha. hai Did vou ever know anything more stupid?" "Well, I must confess," re plied Seumas MacManus, "that Ireland carries its share of stupidity in the tourist season." At this remark again the Englishman slappea nis Knee auu roared right neanuy. . . . i , ii........ .alia bnw When he Ana iii ui. 'i i ii u -1 - was in America eight months later, he read in an American paper a paragraph copied from a London journal, in which the writer told how when he was tour- t i a v. a AAAtHAUA Summer, his ins ii r-i.iiiii mi, i - ' jarvey, a fair specimen of the Irishman who is cried up ior nis Drigui-iie-his wit. thought that he encouraged . - , . i. . hill hv fi-annant fllam- nis noraea vu -' - - . mlng of the door of his waggonette to give them tne laea mat panoeuBum were alighting. "And." went on the naraaraDh. "the most remarkable part of it is that a young Irishman who traveled with me and wno seemea to have had the advantages of a middling . . .. . .i .. . i Ajt nf hnvlnsr visited iair 1.-11111.111-111.1, j America once or twice, tried to explain to me that lor some awiruw iioji-i.i,-i i i AAAenn it wns nnlv in the Sum mer time that the Irish were stupid! And these people," the article con cluded, "are asking us to let them gov ern themselves! If they were allowed to govern themselves," MacManus says, 'they could in the stupid season have the guidance of brilliant English tourists." PARISIAN VISITORS ARE GAY Gowns and Dancing Do Sluch to Add to Animation. PARIS, Feb. 8. (Special.) Many vis itors came to Paris during the holidays and so gay was the city that scores of -i 1.A..A AAmainAt 1nrioflnite.lv. The strangers have no doubt contributed largely to the animation at tne princi pal restaurants. It is they who dress in the loveliest of their latest acquisi tions and pass through the long halls with the knowledge of their power to make every woman look up from her ..ui... nr -ravfish her oysters or Cluctieii. Supper parties after the theater nave .aa tiiiaitaat nf entertainments. ueeu i ii " i, . . ..... - and in some of the celebrated places the most charming oi khi u-.o enacted. A pretty girl In red satin, for Instance, with her skirt open on one side to the knees, dances the fashion able waits with an "elegant" young man. The guests applaud. Then an . aa.i-.1a An thmne-h all the AintriLAU wujih fa" ' ' contortions -of face and limb that the as a child dancer at Mechanics' HalL in Boston. A -r Itlllinllotnl KW YOrk Btlf- miss in iiiiii,.." fragist, will lead the suffrage parada in Washington, D. C March 3. Mrs. J T. Brush Is the' second woman to me into control of a major league baseball club by Inheritance. Mrs. Britton, of St. Louis, airs. u.. has decided to leave to men the mat ter of managing her" property and to remain in the background. Brush him self never interfered with McGraw In the actual control of the players, and McGraw will have full latitude under the new regime. Lucie Cherhonnler, one of the pret tiest girls in Baltimore, and known In the horse show world as one- of the most daring women riders In the coun try, is to be married. She has Just an nounced her engagement to Ensign Howard Adams Flanagan, of the Navy. Miss Cherbonnier Is the daughter of Caleb Dorsey Cherbonnier. latest innovations require, and the pub lic applaud again more rapturously than before. The majority of the spectator are American and English, with a. sprinkling of Parislennes from tha half world. PRISONER'S RUSE FAILS Man Steals Warder's Clotnes vn Exit Is Blocked. PARIS, Feb. 8. (Special.) A dartaff attempt to escape from the Bant Prison was made last vveanesaay ui-.ni. . i ... nan,A j-'i-ii nripn who oc cupied a cell adjoining that of a war der. During tne latter s ooei man crept Into the warder's room ana .... . 1 I . AAl.AllTAA A All Sill stole nis uuuui in. i n . .1 .... . The warder, on discovering his loss. at first thought that a comraao iim. played a practical joke on him, but ii.il . 1. . r.,..lAn'a ah 1 1 will PilltltV luiuing ui-.!. - - i - he realized what had happened, ana gave the aiarm. m Meanwhile the head waraer noticea strange warder making his way towards the prison exit and chal lenged him. In reply Eckerlen, for It was he, pointed the revolver at the Af'iAiAi Tha i u i tpr with orreat pres ence of mind pulled out a long skele ton key and pointea it at me uiiiii.i. as though it were a revolver, exclaim- in sr. "Throw down your weapon, or a will fire!" Eckerlen was deceived by the ruse and, realizing that he could not escape, attempted to end his own life. As he was in the act of firing another war der who had rushed up struca mm on the arm and the bullet Just missed the head warder. Eckerlen was over powered iiw-i-) Any Book Advertised or reviewed o this page may be obtained at Gill'! ft On It Wtore. Srd And ln T H B J. K. U1UL CO. For full informatioa regardins Any Book Old or New Write, Call or PIidh Meier & Frank's Basement BooK Store Pri. Ex. Marshall 4600 A 6101 k