r l)tMllDAofAolly J 'Maria bvnopsis of -The MeHlDg ' Molly." Leaf firt In which plump little Molly Car ter a young aldow, tel: lomelhln) of her n-uhbor. lir. John: his eon Billy: Alfred l:,r,ntt. her returning lover; tbe lata Mr. wt-r. ' Aunt Adeline, and her little red l.r,k lhar contains ur. jonn iaw ui .lieicl's. by following suit-It the hopea to ,-et thin as a string bean. Leaf second Which ia all about Molly1! -ktmpv diet, her hot ualha, her ball game vnh isii'y. her tumble. Judse Wade's n rmiely intrusion. Aunt Adeline's aculdiD. :er t bfdii- from denp moumlne. her letter :r -m Al Bennett aud Dr. Jobu. , i iMi third Some more aliout the Judge v.telw euia.Ml'-. Vs. .luhuaon'e oflt. Aunt K fly- Pollard.- Mis fimicr 'Irom Vtashing- t -r. M"llv Itvo eold tub, her'uuest UI i"mblun. Iter return with a trousseau. F.. liy's preseut and Ir. John. i.af fourth About the conduct of widows i" general, Billy's fish worm, another Inttei from Beunetl. more about Ur. John's laws, .follya trousseau. Tom Follard. another of Aunt Adelines scoldings, dinner party prep arations, Mollys disobedience, aud John. i- fifth On lemons, ptoslcal examlna- "tlona. lonesnraeneaa. Impromptu nurse work, Molly's suitors, a dance, and lit. John. Ueaf sixth Vfhreiu figures the resur rection rnzoo, another letter from Al Ben nett, Billy's pmsyness, batchelor buttons, mlntjulepa. a- telegram, aod- Xr. John. LEAK StTV KTH, IMuahrell DO believe God ave that wise angel charge concerning me leat I get I dashed, but I just got dashed anyway, and tts my own fault, not the angel's. I have suffered this day until I want t lay my face down against the hem or His garment and wait in the dust for Him to pick me up. I shall never be able to do it myself-, and how He's going to du it I can't see, but He will. That dinner-party last night was ba.l enough, but today's been worse. 1 didn't sleep until long after daylight and then Judy came in before 8 o'clock with a letter for me that looked like a state document- I felt In my trembly bones that It was some sort ot sum mons affair from Judge Wade; and It was. I looked into the first paragraph and then decided that I had better get up ancfdress and have a cup of coffee and a single egg before I tried to read it. Incidental to my hath and dressing'. I weighed and found that I had loa all tour of tliobe last surplus pounds and two more in three days. Those two extra pounds might be construed to prove love, hut exactly on whum l was utterly unprepared to say. I didn't even '.enjoy the thinness, but took a kind of already-married look in my Slats and tried to slip the egg past iny bored lips and get myself to chew il down, ii was work; and then I toon up the judge's litter, which also was t, "ik and, mote of it. lie started in at the beginning ot everything, that ia at the beginning of the tuberculosis girl and I cried over the pages uf her as if she had been my own sister. Al the tenth page we buried her and took up Alfred and 1 must say I saw a new Alfred In' the judge's bouquet-strewn appreciation ot him. but I didn't want him us hud as 1 had the day before when I read his own new and old letters, and cried over Ins old phutogiapha. I suppose mat was the result of sumo of what the judifa-manasta. the juries with-. He'd be apt to use it on a woman and she wouldn't find out ubotit it until it was , loo late to be anything- but mad. Still when he brgan on me at page 16 I fell a little better, though i didn't knot myackf any better than I did Alfred when I got to page 20. What 1 am. is just a poor foolish woman, who has a lot more heart than she can manage with the amount ot brains shu got with it at birth. I'm not any star in a rose-colored sky, and I don't want to inspire anybody; it's too much of a job. 1 wunt to tie a healthy happy woman and a wife to a man who can inspire himself and manage me. 1 want to marry a thin man and have from five to 111 thin . hildreii. and when I get to be 30 I want my husband to want me to be hi fat a.s Aunt Bettie. but not let me. An inspiration couldn't be fat anil I'm always in danger from hot muffins and Oh ken gravy. However, if I should undertake to be all the tilings Judge Wade said in that letter he wanted me 'o be to him, I should soon be skin anu hones front mental aud physical extr- i sc. .Still. he dues live in Hillaboro and I won't let myself know how my heart aches at the thought of leaving my home and other things. It's up in my throat and I seem ajways to be s wallow ins the last few days Ail the men who write me letters seem to get themselves wound up into a skyrocket and then let themselves explode in the last paragraph and It always upsets my nerves. 1 was just about to begin to cry again over the last words of the Judge when the only bright spot in the day so far suddenly happened. Pet Buford blew in with the pinkest cheeks and the brightest eyes I had seen since I looked in the mirror the night of the dance. She was in an awful hurry. "Molly, dear,'" she said, with her 'words literally tailing over them selves, "Tom says you'll give ua some '( your dinner left-overs to take for lunch' in the Hup, for we are going way out to Wayne County to see some awfully fine tobacco he has heard is there. I don't want to ask mother, for she won't let me go; and his mother. r he asked her, will begin to talk about us. Tom said, come to you and you would uiideia'taud and fix it luick. He said kiss you for him and ell you he said "Come on in, the water's fine." Isn't he a Joke?'' Aud we kissod and laughed and packed a basket, and kissed and laughed again for good-by. I felt amused and happy for a few minutes and also deserted. It's a very food thins for a woman's -conceit to find out how many of her lovers are i ist make-believes. I may have needed Tom's defection. Anyway, 1 don't know when I evei was so glad to see anybody as 1 was when Mrs. Johnson came in the front door. A woman who has proved to net own satisfaction that marriage is a failure is at times a great tonic to other women. 1 needed a tonic badly this morning aud I got it. "Well, from all my long experience. Molly," she said as she seated herself and began to hem a dish-towel with long steady stabs, "husbauds are Just stick candy in different jars. They may look a little different, but they all taste alike and you soon get tired f them. In two months you won't know- tho difference in being married to Al Bennett and Mr. Carter and you'll have to go on living with him maybe "' years. Luck doesn't strike twice in the sumo place and ou can't count on losing two husbands. AI's father was Mr. Johnson's first cousin aud had more crochets and worse. He had silent spells that lasted a week and family prayers three times a day, though he got drunk twice a year for a month at a time. Al looks very much like him." "Mrs. Johnson." I said after a min iie'a Eiiente, while I iiad decidMu w hether or not I had better teil her ail about it. If a woman's in love with her husband yon can't trust iier to V.eep' a secret, but I decided lo tiy .Mrs. Johnson. "I really am not en gaged to Alfred Bennett, though 1 sup pr.se he thinks ?o by now if lie has sot the answer to that telegram. But but something has made me made ; : : 1 " .,,n-, i m ' 7 l i TjoDSOff Daw'ess 'l I- ': III ij IpWlJ WHAT AKI3 YOUR me think about Judge" Wade that Is he what do you think of him, Mrs. Johnson?" I concluded in the most piti fully perplexed tone of voice. "All alike, Molly; all as much alike as peas in a pod; all except John Moore, who's the only exception in all the male tribe I ever met! His marry ing once was just accidental and must be forgiven him. She fell in love with him while he was treating her for ty phoid, when his back was turned as it were, and It was God's own kindness in him that made htm marry her when he found out how it was with the poor thing. There's not a woman in this town who could marry, that wouldn't marry him at the drop of his hat but, thank goodness, that hat will never drop and I'll have one sensible man to comfort and doctor me down into my old age- Now. just look at that! Mr. Johnson's como homo here in the mid dle of the morning and I'll have to get that old paper I hunted out of his desk for him lust night. 1 wonder how he came to forget it!"' It's funny how Mrs. Johnson always knows what Mr. Johnson wants before he knows him self and gets it before he asks for it: Aa she went out the gate the post man came in and at the sight of anoth er letter my heart again slunk off into my slippers, and my brain seemed about to back up in a corner and refuse to work. In a flash it came to mo that men oughn't to write letters to women very much they really don't plow deep enough, they just irritate tho top soil. I took this missive from Alfred, counted all tho 15 pages, put it out of sii-'ht under a book, looked out the window and saw the ginger barber coming dejectedly around to the side gate from the kitchen I knew the scene he had had with Judy, about the bottle encounters of the night before saw Mr. Juhnson shooed off down the street by Mrs. Johnson; saw the doc tor's iar go chucking hurriedly In the garage and then my spirit turned It self to tho wall and refused to be comforted. I tried my best, but failed to respond to iny own remonstrances with myself, and tears were plowly gathertng in a cloud of gloom when a blue gingham rompers-clad sunbeam burst into the room. "Git your nightgown and your tooth brcsh quick. Molly, if you want to puck 'em in my trunk!" he exclaimed with his eyes dancing and a curl standing straight un on the top of his head, as it has a habit of doing when he is most excited. "You can't take nothing but them 'cause I'm going to put in a rope to tie the whale with when I ketch him, and it'll take up all the rest of the room. Git 'em quick !' "Yes. lover, I'll got them for you. but tell Molly where It Is you are going to sail off with her in that trunk of yours?" I - asked, dropping into the game as 1 have always done with him, no matter what game of my own pressed when he called. "On the oceau where the boats go "cross and run right over'a whale. ron't you remember you showed me them pictures of spout whales in a book, Molly? Doc fcays they comes right up by the ship and you can hear "em shoot water and maybe a iceberg, too. Which do you want to ketch most, Molly, a Iceberg or a whale?" His eager eyes demanded Instant decision on my part of tha nature of capture I preferred. My mind quickly reverted to those two ponderous und Intense epistles I had got within the hour and I lay buck In my chair and laughed until I felt al most merry. "The iceberg'. Billy, every time." I said at last. "I just can't manage whales, especially if they are ardent, which word means hot. I like icebergs, or I think I should if I could catch one." "I don't believe you could, Molly, but maybe Hoc will let you put a rope and a long hook In his trunk to try with if your clothes go into mine. His is a heap the biggest anyway and Nurse Tilly said he oughter put my things lp his, but I cried and then he went up stairs and got out that little one for me. Come see "em!" "What do you mean, Billy 7" I asked, while a sudden fear shot all over me like lightning. "You're just playing go-away, aren't you?" "No, I ain't playing. Molly!" he ex claimed excitedly. "Me and you and Doc is a-going across the ocean for a long, long time away from here. Doc ast me about it this morning Bna 1 told him all right and you could come with us, if you was good. He said couldn't I go without you if you was busy and couldn't come and I told him you would put things down and come if I said so. Won't you, Molly? It won't be no fun without you and you'd cry all by yourself with me gone." His little face was all drawn up with anxi ety and sympathy at my lonely estate with him out of it and a cry rose up from my heart with a kind of primitive savagery at what I felt was coming dow n upon me. Without waiting to take lilm with me. or think, or do anything but feel deadly savage anger, I harried across the garden and into Doctor Moore's of T SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND. SEPTE31BER mm ROSE UPS FORI fice, where he was just laying off his gloves and dust coat. "What do you mean, John Moore, by darins-, daring to think you can go and take Billy away from me?" I demanded looking at him with what must have been such fear and madness in my lace that he was . startled as he came close to the table against whlch i leaned. His face had grown white and quiet at my attack and Ire waited to answer for a long horrible minute that pulled me apart like one of those inquisition machines they used to torture women with when they oiun t know any better modern way to do it. "I dldn'.t know Bill would tell you so soon. Mrs. Molly, he said, at last gent ly, looking put me out of the window into the garden. "I was coming over lust as booh as I got back from this call to talk with you about it, even if it did seem to intrude Bill s and my af fairs into a day that that ought to be all yours to be be happy in, But Bill, you see, is no-respecter of-r-of other people's happy days if he wants them in his." "Billy's happy days are mine and mine are his aud he has the heart net to leave me out even if you would have him!" I exclaimed, a sob gathering in my heart at the thought that my little lover hadn't even taken in a situation that would separate him from me across an ocean. "Bill is too young to understand when he is is being bereaved, Molly," he said and still he didn't look at me. "I have been appointed a delegate to represent the State Medical Association at the Centennial Xingress in London the mid dle of next month and somehow I feel a bit pulled lately and I thought 1 would take the little chap and have have a wanderjahr. You won't need him now, Mrs. Peaches, and I couldn't go without him, could I?" The sadness In bis voice would have killed me if 1 hadn't let it madden me Instead. "Won't need Billy any more!" I ex claimed with a rage that made my voice literally scorch past my lips. "Was there ever a minute In his life that I haven't needed Billy? How dare you say such a thing to me? You are cruel, cruel and I have always known it, cold and cruel like all other men who don't car how they wring the life blood out of women's hearts and are willing to use their children to do it with. Even the law doesn't help us poor helpicsF creatures and you can take our children and go with them to the ends of the earth and leave us suffering. I have gone on and believed that you were not like what the women say all men are and that you cared whether you hurt people or not. but now I see that you are just the same and you'll take my baby away if you want to and I can do nothing to prevent it nothing in the wide world I am completely and absolutely helpless r-you coward, you!" When that awful word, the worst word that a woman can use to a man, left my Hps. a flame shot up into his eyes that I thought would burn me up, but In a half second it was extin guished by the strangest thing in the world for the nituation a perfect flood of mirth. He sat down In his chair aud shook all over with his head in his hands until I saw tears creep through his fingers. I had calmed down so suddenly that I was about to begin to cry In good earnest, when he wiped his eyes and said with a low laugh in his throat: "The case is yours, Molly, settled out of court, and the posseasion-nine-polnts-of-the-law clause" works In some cases for a woman against a man. Gen erally speaking, anyway, the pup be longs to the man who can whistle him down and you can whistle Bill from me any day. I'm Just his father and what I think or want doesn't matter. You had better take him and keep him!" "I Intend to." I answered haughtily, uncertain as to whether I had better give in and be agreeable or stay pre pared to cry in case there was further argument. But suddenly a strange dif ference came Into his eyes and he looked away from me as he said la queer hesitating words: "You see, Mrs Molly, I thought from now on your Ufa wouldn't have exactly a place for Bill. Have you considered that you have trained him to demand you all the time and all of you? How would you manage BUlrand and other claims?"' And if there la a contagious thing in this world it is embarrassment I never felt anything worse in all my life than the shame that swept over me in a great hot wave when that look came into his eyes and made me realize Just exactly what I had been saying to him, about what, and how I had said It. I stood perfectly still, shook all over like a leaf, and wondered if I would ever be able to raise my eyes from tho ground. A dizsy nauseated feeling for myself rose up in me against myself atid I was just about to turn on my heels and leavo him, f hoped for ever, when he came over and laid his hand on my shoulder. "Molly," he said In a voice that might have come down from heaven on dove wings, "you can for a moment leei or think that I don't realize and appreciate what you have beeu to the motherless little chap, and for life I am yours at command, as he is. I really thought it would be a relief to you to have him taken away from you for just a little while right now, and I still think it is best; but not unless you consent. You shall have him bats: whenever you are ready or him. and at all times both he and I are at your service to the whole of our kingdoms. Just think the mat ter over, won't you. and decide what you want me to do?" Something in me .died for ever, I think, when he spoke to me like that. He's not like other men aud there aren't any other men on earth but him." " AH the rest are just bugs or bats or something worse. And I'm not anvtbing myself. There's nu excuse for my living and I wish I wasu t so healthy and likely to go on doing U. It was all over and there was nothing left for me to live for, and before I couh! stop myself I buried my face in mv hands. "Billy asked ine to go with hiin on this awful whale hunt!" I sobbed oul to comfort myself with the Un'ugNt that somebody did care lor me. re;aru less of just how I was further embar rassing and complicating myself in the affairs of the two men I had ..,,u-h.t I nwnA.i and was now finding out that I had to give up. I wish I had beeu looking at. mm, ior i ic;i him start, but he said in his bis' friend ly voice that Is so-much aud never enough for me: x..h.r nnl vnn anil Al come along and make it a family party, if that is what suits uni, me uuss . if men would just buy good, sharp, kitchen knives and cut out women's hearts in a busipessllke way it would be so much kinder of them. Why do n,d, tn iika dull we.anons that mash the life out slowly? Everything is at an -end for me tonignt ana mat blow d'u It. It was a horrible cruel thing for him to say to me: t kuuw now that 1 have been in love with J"hn Moore for longer than my honor lets me admit and that I'll never love any body else, and that also 1 have offered myself to him served up in every known enticement and have had to he refused at least twice a day for a year. A widow can't say Blie didn't under stand what she was doing, even to her self, but my humiliation is complete and the only thing that oun make iu,i ever hold up my head is to puzzle him bv bv happily marrying Alfred Ben nett and quick! Of course, ho must suspect now i feel about him, for two people couldn't both be so ignorant as not to see such a,, oi.crrw.i w thina as mv love fur him is, and I was the blind one. But he must never, never know that 1 ever reauu it. for he Is so good that it would distress- him. I must Just go on in my foolish way with him until I can get away. I'll tell him I'm sorry I was so indignant tonight and say that I think it will be fine for him to take my Billy away from me with him. I must smile at the idea of having my very soul amputated, insist that it is the only thing to do, and pack up the little soul in a steamer trunk with the smile. Just smile, that is all! Life demands smiles from a woman even if she must crush their perfume from her own heart; and she generally has them ready. Oh, Molly, Molly, is it for this you came into the world, twice to give your, self without love? What difference does it make that your arms are strong and white if they can't clasp him to the softness and fragrance of yoUr breast? Why are your eyes blue pools of love if 'they are not for his questioning and what are your rose lips for if they quench not his thirst? Yes. I know God is very tender with a woman and I think he understands, so If she crept very close to him and caught at his sleeve to steady herself he would be kind to her until she could go on along her own steep way. Please. God. never let him find out. for it would hurt him to have hurt me! (Continued Next Sundav.l End of Vacation Days Finds Women in Quandary Hair Coarse and niaeolored. Kect Out of Shape and Krecklea and Tan Cover Fair Kncea. VACATION days are over; all the glorious good times on tennis court, golf links and deep blue sea are past, and indoor Joys are, soon the only ones in store for many a long day. Now does the average woman disconsolately take stock of her looks and mark the diro results of these aforementioned good times on court and links and sea. and wonder what she is ever going to do to make herself presentable for Kail shape. Her hair seems coarser, and four shades at once, from its expusuie to salt water and hot suns; her arms are freckled to the elbow and a line. of demarkation reveals, in her evening gown, just where her Summer boating frocks stopped at the neck. Rowing has set callous spots inside her hands that make her rings uncomfortable, and tennis shoes have allowed her f et to spread so that the buttoned boot of Fall must be selected a whole size wider. Freckles are the most obstinate com plexion blemishes to pass away. Light freckles will yield to cucumber juice or lemon juice faithfully applied. Deep er ones must bo "skinned" off by a process more tedious and a little pain ful. Tan -can bo bleached from face and neck in a short time, by dabbing the face once an hour with freshly boiled water in which a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda lias been dissoivi-i. Before going to bed rub cold cream well Into the face and neck and in lue morning you will be surprised at tno result. After a Summer's exposure to wind and sun the hair must be brushed and brushed, and vaseline rubbed in at the. roots to restore its luster. Try a. week of this treatment, then shampoo the hair, using white of egg. Rinse well, dry. quickly, brush and brush again and be astonished at the sheen and softness of your tresses but be care ful to wash well also tho brush which has been brushing the hair during the vaseline process. Soaking the hands iti warm olive oil will soften the callous places and also make the akiu whi'.e and firmly soft. WOMEN JURORS AID GIRL Aurora, 111., Fair Sex Decide Against Cafe Mart ia 10 Minutes. CHICAGO, Sept. 14. A woman jury, the first In Kane County, and the sec ond in Illinois to hear a civil case, sit ting in Aurora, found for Gertrude Alderman, a waitress who was suing her former employer, Harry Curzon, proprietor of a restaurant, for fa wages. "l would like to have my case heard by a woman jury," said Miss Alderman When her case was called before Jus tice Dutton yesterday. A ballif vaa sent into the street to assemble twelve jurors. Kvery woman asked agreed to serve and the jury was impaneled without delay, Curzon assorted Miss Alderman had agreed to work without wages, saj ing she would be contented with the tips she might receive. It required Just 10 niinutes for the women to decide in favor of Miss Al derman, asserting that in '"their opin ion a person who worked for tips alone was not worklfis but grafting." 31, 1913- The fcceuted Chamber aud Other Poem, bp Charles Camiuell. Arthur lu Huuiphtej s Lunduu, Euslai'd. Roaliy high-class poetry. This little volume of is pages will be treasured becauso it contains the inner thoughts, nearly the heart-beats of an intellectual puet who is a purist and the exponent of the divine passion of 'love, and the glory and tumult of war. The hook is newlv nublishcd in London. Kugland, -where it attained the. dignity of a fa vorable review l-y mat oisimguioneo literary authority, the Athenaeum, and it will meet with special recognition in Oregon. Mr. Ca:n:uell, who. is. an Kng liphicitu living most of the time it: France, is a brother of Mrs. Krank Wil der, of this city. Mr. Ciiii.meH is of tho. Byron-Shelley order of KngUsh poets. His muse has the cultured. otcU-luri ring- H ' state ly and . dignified, and when it harks back, to the. beauty of Swinburne, it lacks, happily, the satire and censori ousness which marred the exquisite charm of the iatter poet's best verse. The. Cammvlii verse., also, is happy and fervent. Mr. Cammell is a poet of the reincarnation, as. much as Tennyson was when lie wrote "In Memorial!!." Henceforth, wherever thou may'nt roam, My bhix-dnK. like a lino of light. Is on the-waters day and uiglit And like a heaeou suaids thee home. My own dim life should teach me this. That litn should live for evermore. Kise earth is dai'sneas at the core. And dust and ashes all that is. Mr. Cammell lives powerfully in the past. M.ivbe in the feudal days that were, he was a belted and armored knight. Who knows? This thought lives in "The Kattle of Khaluli," in which the poet describes the triumph of Sennacherib, w ho succeeded his father, t-aragon. the usurper, on the Assyrian throne in 7U5. Ii. C. "The Battle of Khaluii" is a true battle song, and in it lives again the figure of the magnificent and boastful Eastern despot: I am Sonna-herib. the Kins of Kinss. The. Kins ot the tssyriaivs, tha l.ord Of all the East: 1 new with casle's wings l met tho rebels, put them to the sword. Scattered tha powers of Babylon abroad And truadliiK Klam's pnnces in the dust My riehlv broldered standards were un fusied . Through aU the land. I drowned in olood mv lust " For vengeance. Once again I ruled the world. The poet, with' tine skill and shrewd knowledge ot human nature shows how Sennacherib, true pagan that he was, called on tits heathen gods for aid, put on his armor, chose the tinest of all the war steeds for his chariot, and after winning a bloody victory, was solaced by "the passion of love": I am Sennacherib- the King of Kings. The King; of the Assyrians, the Lord Of all the East! I left tho victor's feast, And hither Hew with sweetly perfumed Following to her chamber my adored; And as I laid my head upon that breast So warm aud soft, my weary war-worn soul Passed out Into the land of dreams and rest. Where the wind sighs and the blue waters roll. In some respects "The Battle of Khaluli" is the most satisfactory. Vir ile, and masculine of all the 16 poems in tlie book. In it, our poet is the most enduring, and is at his best. It may he a personal opinion, but it might have been bi tter had "The Battle of Khaluli" been placed to lead the book, instbad of being relegated lo second place. "The sjcented Chamber" is a perfect mirror of pure love, between a bride and bride groom. It is as daring and as beauti fully appealing as far as Byrou dared to Bo. It retiects the spirituality of happy marriage as noted in the second chapter of lieuesis. verse IM: "Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife; and they shall be one. flesh." "The Scented Chamber" is tho bridal bedroom, and it begins: 'Tis night time: Ah! my soul, how shall I tell The maiiic power of Aphrodite's spell, Tho subtle thoughts that set my heart on tire And nil my soul with raptures of desire. The Seented t:T'ainber on this golden night Id radiant with tho silvery, shimmering Or waxen candles, burning clear and bright. The siient witnesses of love'a delight. The broidered sheets lie open to invito The lovers and their love so cool and white. And fraprant with tho inott seductive scent That e'er was fashioned In the' Orient, The tempting Hi lie pillows, eaeh in place Tiaintily fringed with frills of snowy lace, Their little mistress patiently await, Aud seem to wonder why she is so late. The poem has three other stanzas of amorous reflection, poetically and rev erently treated. The other poems are: "To Klizabeth"; "White Hose": "Lugano"; . "hove"; "Where Are You Wandering?"; "The Firstborn": "Day Dreams"; "Love's Awakening"; "Reverie'"; "A Song of Old Provence": "Ode to His Grace, Ucorge YillierB, First Duke of Buck ingham"; '"Ode to His Grace. George Villlers, Second Duke of Buckingham"; " The Glory of Guise," and "The Lilies of France." It would b'i preferable, if space were sufficient to allow of liberal extracts from each of the poems named, but alas! other books of the week are call ing for their share of attention, i-tif-Hce to say- that all of Mr. Cammell's poems are excellent, and reflect great credit. It h) pleasant, poetically sppaking', to stretch out our hands beyond the seas that divide us, to Mr. Cammell, and say to one of that old. old race: "Well done, new poet of love! You have en riched the Knglish tongue, with new beauty." . Diamond Cut rUamond, by Jane Bunker. - Sl.u'a. Illustrated. The Kolihs-Moriill Co., I udiunaeolis. It is easy to understand that a woman novelist wrote this novel, be cause the latter is so elusive, interest ing' and feminine in its scope. The title is well chosen and the plot so gallop ing that the reader's attention is riv eted. The heroine, an expert in pre cious stones, is a middle-aged woman, an American author. She tells the story in the first person singular, al though the reader has difficulty in discovering if her name is mentioned. The pronoun "I" is omnipresent. The story opens in Paris, where the heroine and Anne Beswick are gath ering literary material and about to sail for Xew York. M. do Ravenol. a stranger to both women, asks the heroine, who we may as well call Miss A., if she will escort his daughter to New York, where Madame tie Ravenol is waiting. Miss A meets Mrs. Delario, an American clairvoyant, in a Paris shop, where both women want to pur chase fancy dancing slippers as sou venirs. Miss A refuses to act as chaperone to Miss de Ravenol, and the latter crosses the ocean with Mi's. De lario. Home in her cosy flat in New York, Miss A visited Mrs. Dtlario to give her slippers she owned, when Miss Delario insisted on Miss A keeping for her, seven red-blood diamonds valued at $1,000,000 Mrs. Delario says that rob bers are after the diamonds, and are about to sack her house to get them. M. de Ravenol appears and claims the diamonds from Miss A. intimating that they were stolen from him in Paris. He says that he is the secret agent of Em peror William, of Germany, and that the diamonds are gifts from the Em peror to the wife of the President of tho Mexican Republic, as a basis for a secret treaty about to be entered upon between Germany and Mexico. Mrs. Delario says thai M. de Raven ol's story Is not true. What is Miss A to do? Hand over tho diamonds to "Coursqz consisls jit not being j dfrd id of one's own mind dndcf j other peoples. mindy." r "' V V'' & Vtphit&$ ' ' '' ' " " S" he police, or Solomon-like, divide them between the two claimants? Billy Riv ers, a newspaper reporter, helps to un ravel the mystery. Midshipman May. By Roger West. $1. Il lustrated. Houghton. Jliftlln Co.. Boston. A healthy, common-sense novel of 242 pages, full of information and live liness, .concerning the adventures of budding officers of the United States Navy, afloat and ashore. Blake Mcin tosh is chief hero and one of his per sonal friends is a midshipman who con. fesses. frankly, that he is a coward. A story tor boys. Believest Thou This? by Miss Aduh Isaacs Menken, il. M. A. Donohue i. Co,, Chi cago. , The author of these religious mus ings, prose and poetry, died in the year 1868, and this little book of 117 pages, is mystical, reverent and digni fied in its messages. The pages make profitable reading. "Itin and Her," by, H. H. Kick. 50 cents. Illustrated. American Book Co., New York City. Mr. Fick is supervisor of German In the Cincinnati, O.. public schools, and his two previous books In German for beginners, have proved successful. This bpok. of 90 pages, is a simple German reader prepared, for a class of young pupils, and contains 100 selections of short stories, anecdotes and verses. One of the best of its kind, and well printed. The Morv of Richard roiibledlck. Captain ISoldheart and William Tinkling. by t'harles Dickens, and The Three tloldeu Apples and The Farad) e f Children, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Illustrated. Houghton-Mifflin Co.. Boston. Five reprints of famous books writ ten by well-known authors, for children GEORGE ADE EXPLAINS SLANG TO BRITISHERS Hoosier Wit Answers London Reporter as a "Chicago Board of Trad Man" Would and Paraphrases Sections of Macaulay's Essays. L'ONDON. Sept. 20. (Special.) George Ado lias been taking the British people into his confidence about slang, and has told them recently through the Dondon Daily Chronicle some excellent truths about the use, abuse and manufacture of slang. "I am regarded as a writer of slang quite by accident," he said, "and if you think Americans have carried it to excess don't blame me. I have only put into print what I have heard other people say." Thereon the London newspaper man put Ado a few questions which lie answered as the "Chicago Board of Trade man" would. "Was he Intoxicated?" he was asked. "I guess so. He lit up like a ca thedral," he replied. The reporter then passed him a vol ume of Macauley's essays and alight ing on a passage on Warren Hastings, Ade read first in English and then in the Chicago man's style these words: "With all his faults and they were neither few nor small only one ceme tery was worthy to contain his re mains." This was the polished style of the essay, but the Chicago street version was: , . "With all his rough work and, be lieve me, he could pull some very coarse stuff there was only one bone orchard up to his class when it came to put him away." Again, in the essay on Johnson, Macaulay wrote: "Johnson's friends have allowed that he carried to a ridiculous extreme this unjust contempt for foreigners. He pronounced the French to be a very silly people, much behind us, stupid and ignorant creatures. And this judg ment he formed after having been at i'arin about a month, during which he would not talk French fur tear of giv ing the natives an advantage over him in conversation." Here is a Chicago man's paraphrase: "Johnson's side-partners have given it out cold that he overplayed his hand when it came to harpooning the for eigners. Ho sized tip the French as about 8 or 9 years old. These .hooks, each 50 cents, are clearly printed and finely illustrated, anil are In every way suited as gift books for children, around the approaching holiday time. The Pathos of IHstauce, By James lliincke.r. $'J. Charles Scriunel's Sons, Nov Vurk. City. ' . . Mr. lluneker's early training in, France shows in many of the delightfuh essays comprising this novel, essays' pleasantly discourslve and of cosmo- , politan charm. Tho chief subjects dis cussed are art and literature. The sub title is "A Book of a Thousand and One Moments"; and the title is taken from this quotation, selected from the writ ings of Friedrich Nietzsche: "Convic tions are prisons. The experience of seven Bolitudes. New ears for new mu sic. New eyes for the most remots things. The pathos of distance." Source Problems of the French RevolntloB, by Fred Morrow Fling, Ph. 11., and Heleun Dresser Kllng. M. A. 1.10. Harper Bros., Now York City. Dr. Fred Morrow Fling is professor of F.uropean history in the University of Nebraska, and in this book of Sol pages an admirable and painstaking account is given of new views of causes which precipitated the French Revolution of 1789. A valuable text book. The Way Home, by Basil Kins. SI 35. V lustrated. Harper & Bros., New lor City. Charles, or rather Charlie, Grace, i the son of a church rector in Newr York City, and he is the author of thin remarkably thoughttful, intellectual novel. Church services, femininity, love-making and the growth of a sin ner's personality make up a llkabl story. JOSEPH M. QUENTIN. a bunch of light-weights and mutts," not in the same division with us low foreheads, bone-heads, and very littl doing in the cocoa. Ho thought he wan wise to tlie French proposition after he had been up against the pai'ley-vot, for one brief moon. Ho kept tho sow pedal on most of the time, because bu knew his talk was phoney, and if ho tried to go along with tlie native soti, lie would be shown up and made to look like 30 cents." "Slang is very often good Knglish." Ade concluded. "I have found words). Ihat we call slang today in old diction aries as good old Anglo-Saxon." And a prominent member of the British Authors' riociety rush-tX promptly into print and said Ade wa. quite right. "Few people." he Hdcled. "speak u they write; many cannot write as they would like to speak. What would Kil ling be without his 'slang,' or Barrie. without his broad Scottish dialect, or VYells without his men who speak wltn a lisp or stutter a few words that ev ery baker's boy uses daily'.' The. key note of successful literature is tha translation of the actual words of tho characters a.s they are In real life into print. Then when that is done ar tistically readers realize that they are near to understanding the man or woman who utters them, and the auth or has created literature. "Good downright slang never harmed a literary production," he con-, tinned, "and the great difticulty about all our literature today is a ricid ad herence to classic language when quite, ordinary words would suit as well. 1 believe half the failures in young auth ors are due to the fact that they try to write an epic when they are desurib, ing a quite ordinary incident-" Moiiinoiilli Tiiiililin Hi-Ill- Mi .MtH"l'H. (Jr., Sept. 20. (Spe cial.) W. J. Mulkey. a rilireri' iner chant of this city, is erecting a new brick .;ti'ucturc on .Main street. Tliv rooms in tho building are to be lilted for stores and offices aud will join the icoffice. block on (he east. Tl'iv construction is bung rushed and t'ov building Is to bo completed wirhin ths next month