THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAy, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER SO, . 1914. Myths of the Mod oca, by Jeremiah Curtin. 3- Little, Brown t Co., Boston. Oresonian readers do not require to be told that the Modoc Indians origin ally inhabited the valley of Lost River. Oregon, and the country adjacent to the shores of Little Klamath Lake and Tule Lake. Such facts are well known in this region, but in the United States at large the information is informing and oO new itnerest. Mr. Curtin, in this volume of SS9 pages, has made a valuable contribu tion to the folk lore of America, espe cially to the department of its legends and fairy tales. These legends which make up our text have been handed down by word of mouth for generations in the -Modoc tribe or nation and were told to Mr. Curtin by members of the Modoc tribe on their reservation. The Modocs believed that the Modoc coun try in old Oregon was created specially lor them and that each rock, tree, flower and animal had not only a dis tinct personality, but is thought to be a transformation from a different ob ject. The elements of fancy and romance dwell in these 0 legends. Each one is a story m itself and is graphically told. ' "Kumush and His Daughter," How Sickness Came Unto the World," "How Old Age Came Into the World," "The Rainmaker," "War Between Beasts and Birds," "The Stone Peo ple," "Ilyuyn and Kulta's Sisters." "The Spirit of the Tule Grass" and others are notable among the excellent ly presented legends. Ta'le the story or legend of "Ku mush and His Daughter." as an ex ample. Kumush is the Creator, ac cording to Indian myths, and the word "Skoks" is translated as "Spirit." Ku mush left Tule Lake and wandered over the earth and brought back with him his daughter "from the edge of the world." Where he got her no one knows. She came out of the "sweat house" with her face, hands and body painted with a red root and told her father that when she slept she dreamed that she would die soon. "That means your own death. You dreamed of yourself," said Kumush. He was frightened and felt lonesome. "Father, you must not cry," she said. 'What has happened to me is your will. You made it to be tlrls way. My spirit will leave the body and go west." As she put on her burial dress her spirit left her body. Kumush took ' her hand and they started, leaving their bodies behind. Kumush was not dead, but his spirit left the body. They came to a large plain, on which was a great house, the whole underground world, known only to Bpirits. Kumush's daughter hid him and. made a mist be fore his eyes. When it was dark, Wus-Kumush, keeper of the house, said: "I want a fire!" A big fire sprang up in the center, and there was light everywhere In the house. Then spirits came from all sides, and there were so many that no one could have counted them. They made a great circle around Kumush's daughter, who stood by the lire, and then they lanced a dance not of this world, and sung a song not of this world. Kumush watched th;m from the corner of the house. They danced each night, for five nights. All the spirits sang, but only those in the circle danced. As daylight came they disappeared. They went away to their own places, lay down and became dry, disjointed bones. . Wus-Kumush gave Kumush's daughter goose eggs and crawfish. 6 ho ate them and became bones. All newcomers became bones, but those who had been tried for five years, and hadn't eaten anything the Skoks gave them, lived in shining settlements outside. IB circles around the big house. Kumush's daughter became bones, but her spirit went to her father in the corner. On the sixth night she moved him to the eaatern side of the house. That night he arrow tired of staying -with the spirits; he wanted to leave the underground world, but he wanted to take some of the spirits with j him to people the upper world. "Afterward," aid he, "I am going to the place where the un rises. I shall travel on the sun's road till I come to where he stops at midday. There I will build a house." "Somo of the spirits are angry with you," aid Wus-Kumush. "Because you are not oead they want to kill you; you must be oareful." "They may try as hard as they like," said Kumush; "they can't kill me. They haven't the power. They are my children; they are all from me. If they should kill me it would only be for a little while. I should come to life again.' The spirits, though they were bones then heard this, and said: "We will crush the old man's heart out, with our elbows." Kumush left Wus-Kumush and went back to the eastern side of tne house. In his corner was a pile of bones. Every bone in the pile rose up and tried to kill him, but they couldn't hit him, for he dodged them. Each day his daughter moved him. but ths bones knew where he waa, because they could sea him. Kumush longed to be home and he elected bones to apportion each to dif ferent tribes, but on his Journey the bones fought him. At last he reached his own haven. The balance of the story relates to his creation of different tribes of Indians. The parable of the bones and the part the latter play in creation has grewsome tut dramatic fashioning. The Auction Block, by Rex Beach. $1.3.. Illustrated. Harper & Brothers, New York City. No, this is not a story of slavery be fore our Civil War. It rather pictures the social conspiracy by which penniless young women are made to "catch" rich young men and marry them mainly for the sake of wealth. This time. Rex Beach breaks away from his usual racy stories of the icy North, where devil-may-care-, heroes clad In furs do deeds of daring, before they are frost-bitten; where masterful young women make real men of the aforesaid heroes, and where Alaska dogs do nearly everything but talk. In "The Auction Block" Mr. Beach invades territory supposed to be sacred to Rob ert W. Chambers rich, blase New York City where tho normal condition of very rich young men of the imported-Pittsburg type Is chronic drunkenness, and where good-looking young women are the men's protectors and saviors. Taken on this bases, "The Auction Block" as a novel, is entertaining, cyn ical, human and amusing. It is also, at times, naughty and blase. It introduces us to the McKnight family, every mem ber of which is a grafter of the black mail type, except one blessed part of it MisB Lorelei McKnight, a young wo man of marvelous beauty. In fact, she is so beautiful that you wonder where she gets her good looks from consid ering that she comes from the evil, al most criminal McKnights. The story opens in the town of Vale, New York State, where old, wheezy Peter McKnight, professional politician and office hunter, is told by the politi cal "organization" that he is a back number and that there are no more fat pickings for Mm. He.( his wife, and their son Jimmy are firmly persuaded mat tne world owes them an easv liv ing, and that they do not need to Work to earn that living. Mr. and Mrs. McKnight train their pretty daughter, Lorelei, for no other purpose In life than to marry a rich young man, some time and eomewhere. A political friend secures Mr. McKnight a clerkship in New York City, at 11500 a year, and the McKnights move ac cordingly. Mrs. McKnight has the busi ness ability of the gang of harpiea. and by her influence, etc.. she secures her daughter, Lorelei, a position as a chorus girl in a dizzy variety show. Lorelei, the beautiful, captivates New York, and at one bound she becomes a professional beauty, a stage success, but at the same time keeps hersekf as" pure as ice. and he takes care of her good name. Her brother, Jimmy, becomes a crook. He associates with confidence men and rnieves, generally. One of Lorelei's rich young mert ad mirors Is Bob Wharton, son of the I'lttsburg multi-millionaire of that name, and Bob is mostly drunk. He Is 'COD MADE TiiEI AND -11 AN MADE i-cvy 7 f . 4M s, i . Tn. i "r a sort of walking saloon. Lorelei frets reckless, and aided by Jimmy, when Bon Is drunker than usual, he and Lorelei are married. Bob's father dis owns him, and Lorelei's family tries to blackmail the elder Mr. Wharton. How Lorelei, variety actress, becomes a good angel is inspiring. beveral scenes of New York City's dis sipation among idle-rich are salaciously described. The Secrets of the German War Office, by Dr. Armgaard Karl Graves. fl.SO. Illus trated. McBride. Nast & Co.. New York City. Written by Dr. Armgaard Karl Graves, in collaboration with. Edward Lyell Fox, this book is a positive start ler, a . bomb suddenly emerging from the dark. Dr. Graves (probably an assumed name) says that for one dozen years he was a successful secret agent or spy in the service of Emperor Wil- , nam of Germany, and that, as the Germans recently "double-crossed" I him because be knew too much about their diplomatic secrets, he now writes this book, in which he exposes their spy system. The secrets he exposes, in revenge, surely place his life in peril. It would not startle the world if he disappeared one of these morn ings and was never heard of again. Dr. Graves' nationality is a puzzle. He says he is not a German, although his name would so indicate. He shows a surprising familiarity about England and Scotland, especially the latter. The chances are that from a hint he drops on page 174 his family is of German origin and he was born in Scotland or Ireland. We was "brought up in the traditions of a house actively engaged in the affairs of its country for hun dreds of years. As an only son, I was promptly and efficiently spoiled for anything else but the station in life which should have been mine, but never has been, and now never can be." Trained as a military cadet,,, our author took his degrees afterward in philosophy and medicine, and dis played - talent for languages. Ac quiring political opinions, he gave vent to utterances that were disliked "by the powers that be," and he found himself banished from family and na tive land. Here an Irish trend is ap parent Dr. Graves began to be a globe wan derer and when the British-Boer War broke out he served with a Natal field force in a medical capacity. One of the wounded foreign officers serving on the Boer side was Major Frelherr von Reitzenstein, one of the few people in the world who knew the facts con nected with Dr. Graves' exile. The two men became close friends and it was through Von Reitzenstein' good offices that our author secured nis appointment as a German spy of in ternational fame. In his work as a spy, in discovering imiMirttnt rliDlomatlc secrets. Dr. Graves used money, women, more than ordinary skill in reading peoples minds and reckless bravery. unra the Servians lined him up against a ...ail tn ha shot and hew was only saved at the last minute. The incident of the warship Panther, when Emperor William prevented a European war. and where Dr. Graves says he re ceived his instructions personally from Emperor William, is toia witn rem thrills. Dr. Graves tells the British govern ment an important bit of advice when he points out that the Forth bridge in Scotland is in the wrong place, and that it nullifies the value of the Rossyth naval base behind the bridge. Suppose an enemy blew up the bridge and thereby established an obstruction by which warships could not pass from the naval base? The enemy could shell the adjacent coast at its leisure. Dr. Graves was ultimately arrested in Scotland through his government sending him a letter addressed with a wrong initial, and after being tried as a spy and sentenced to 18 months' im-J prlsonment he was secretly released by the British government. He was taken to New York, where he was arrested last week by the police on a ludicrous charge and then set at liberty. He blames his political enemies for his ar rest. "You may Wonder why they want to put me into Jail." Dr. Graves said. "1 will tell you. I had an interview the other day with a certain European diplomat, and I was incautious enough to remark that on the 23d of this month a very important meeting between agents of certain of European powers will be held in this country as a part of a plan to carry out a new align ment of the powers now engaged in war. "That was enough. That diplomat's government at once wanted to lay me by the heels. They knew I knew too much. I laid myself open. My enemies COUNTRy THE TOWf COWPER f low.? ""?! ? t 8 s ' 1 iiiti Iff IBnl n Mill r WltU w T knew of the ring transaction, so they seized upon it as a means of putting me away for a time. "On May 1 I prophesied in an ad dress that there would be a general European conflict within" five months, probably by August 1. My words came true and this proved to the secret, serv ice departments of Europe that J still had sources of information about in ternational intrigue. "And I now say that this war hasn't started yet; that the next move on Ger many's part will be to cause a rupture among the allies. She will throw her self into the hands of one of them, and the allies are afraid it will be Russia. There will be no peace in Europe this year or next. There is a feeling of dis trust growing among the allies now. "Why do they not kill, me? I will tell you. I have a life insurance and that is the knowledge I have of cer tain personalities in Europe and the things they have done. This is all locked up where they can't get at it. 7,, ""ow li i aie a, natural death it will never be divulged. But they also know that I have made arrangements in case I am killed to have this knowl edge given to the world." " 13 Presumed that what our author says is true. But if any part of the book is "faked" u - if X . ln.e is mighty interesting reading. Modern City Planning and Malntenanco- Fran.k Koester. Illustrated m -nue. wast & co. New' York City. "City planning determines the des tiny of a city. It taste, civic pride and patriotism; it arfLe5bttirwC,ti2enB and -tians; It ft til health. comfort and happiness; it helps to increase the population and fMtPSfUC? the Industrlal Prosperity. City planning attracts industries, com merce and visitors; it produces better transportation facilities. Improved hy gienic conditions and more adequate and less expensive living quarters and food supplies. City planning is a busi ness proposition of the first Impor tance. While city planning is a subject of the greatest antiquity and one the principle of which wem wn stood by the ancients, as is shown by the examples of Greek and Roman towns, and one which in medieval times was equally well understood, as is proven by such German towns as Ro tenburg. Nuremberg, Cologne. Maintz. etc, yet modern city planning-, in the sense In which it is now understood, dates from the period immediately sub sequent to the Franco-Prussian War and is of purely German origin In 1S74 the United Society of German Architects and Engineers laid down certain principles of city planning and gave the first organized impetus to tne practice or the art. Since that time the principles and nrsLntirA rt modern city planning have spread to other countries, and tho art has been so rapidly developed that it has now reached a definite form, and its engi neering features have been reduced to a science." -. , This admirable explanation tt hJ suDject or this book Is given. in .our author's own words. Mr. Koester, who gives hie address as Hudson Terminal building. New York Cit;-, has written a pioneer book of the first importance, founded on his wide experience in this country and in Germany, where he has long being identified with the city planning movement. The book has much interest both for the expert and general public, and no more complete and learned exposition of the subject has been published in this country, so tar as tne present reviewer is aware. The pictures, nearly 2S0 in number. are first-class and are' on a par with actual photographs. Many of these pic tures are iuu-page Ones, end the Indi vidual page measures ten inches by seven inches. These pictures represent scenes in the United States and Europe, many or inem in oermany. Two pic tures of Pacific Northwest interest are those of the (proposed) civio center of Seattle and also ground plan. Such is an example of the power of adver tising in Seattle. Portland, Or., has also a beautiful (proposed) new civic center, but it is not Included in the views referred to. The pages in the book are 329. Such Information from Mr. Koester includes the business ex periences of a lifetime. The table of contents: What city planning Is; how to proceed in replanning a city; the civic center; the great ground plan; arterial highways; streets up-to-date; waterways and harbor improvements; bridge and bridge approaches; traffic and transportation; open squares and traffic regulations; park systems; civic embellishment; building regulations and block plans; garden cities and workingmen's colonies; civic culture; administrative functions; communal in dustries; city con st i ictlon and mainte nance; street construction; sewage dis posal; care of streets; stree: cleaning; - if.is.ittirnwniii KV,lll.:WWUJ.' I refuse disposal; water supply; gas sup ply; electric current supply; electric street railways; valuation of public utilities; financing civic improvements; the planning of growing towns; co operation of engineer and architect In city planning; the executive manage ment of a city. Mr. Koester approves of the utility of commission government. The Rise of the Working Class, by Algernon Sidney Crapsey. SI. SO. Tho Century. Co.', New York City. In many respects this book is un settling and revolutionary in its views, but its message is always clear and in cisive. Its sympathetic tone, procla mation of .brotherhood and catholicity of spirit for wage-earners are marked in all its 382 ' pages. Social changes, from savagery until the. present time, are carefully noted and compared. Our author has been rector of St. An drew's Church, Rochester, N. Y.. for over twenty-five years; is now pastor of The . Brotherhood, Rochester, and a lecturer on historical, religious, and sociological topics. Several of the headings of the book are: Social evolution and revolution; the downfall of the father;' the re sponsibility of the mother; the emanci pation of the children; the "out-family" woman; the slaves of the market; working-class religion; morality, poli tics, philosophy; the coming age; the war against poverty, etc These thoughtful paragraphs in the book are noted: Evolution means changes in structure; rev olution means change in environment. The invention of labor-saving machinery. fwith its employment of the superhuman powers of steam and electricity, which has transferred from tho home to the factory tho brewinir and the baking, the 10100108 and the weaving, tho cutting and the sew ing - of garments, baa destroyed tho family as an oconomio unit. Tho out-family woman today is a sexual menace, a vast social waste, etna m. danger to the present political order. Quite tho most Interesting and startling phonomenon of present-day history is tho militant suffragette movement in Kngland. The revolt of woman against tho cramp ing, corrupting conditions of her life has Increased In magnitude and violence until today it is the most important, significant and tho most dangerous of all the revolu tionary forces that are threatening the present: order. It is only by the resistance of tho work ing class that society can be saved. Over-production is tho chronic disease of modern Industry. ... Production for sale Instead of for consumption is tho germ of this disease. Our great masters of industry are doing for the commercial world what tho great statesmen of Prance did for that country In tho 15th and 16th centuries. They are bringing order out of ehaos. The religion of the working class is. and cannot help being, the vital religion of the present and the growing religion of tho future. The working man dwells In evrrv land and wherever the working man is, there the wonting class party is to assert and protect his rights. For this reason the working a) ass party is the party most bitterly opposed to war between tne nations. The significant, fact of nresent-dav his tory is the rise of the working class from the condition of degradation under which It has throughout the civilized world been compelled to live, to the social, the political and religious life of tho world. Personality Plus, by Edna Ferber. SI. Illus- ' irateo. r reuencK a. otokes Co., xtew York City. Jock McChesney is a laughable, lik able hero, and his adventures in this novel, where the advertising agency business is ventilated, are decidedly worth Knowing. Looking After Sandy, by Margaret Turnbull. 41.35. Illustrated. Harper & Brothers, New York City. Sandy is a waif, a foundling, a whole some, interesting girl. She is the hero ine of this entertaining novel, and has a refreshing mission. For all girls. JOSEPH M. QUENTIN. Cooks Added to Library GENERAL. WORKS. Hardy Public library; Its place In our educational system. 112. BOOKS IN FOREIGN LANGUAGES. Manley Eln Bummer in Xeutschland. ' DESCP.IPTION AND TRAVEL. Belloc Old Road. New ed. 1911. llck Pageant of the Forth. IVIO. Foord Springs, streams and anas of Lon don. 1010. Smith In Thackeray's London. 1914. Winter Poland of toilay and yesterday. 1913. HISTORY. Eyr Saint John's Wood. 1913. Grundy Thucydides and tho history of his age. 1911. Petre Napoleon's last campaign in Ger many, 1813. 11112. Reade Martyrdom of man. Ed. IS n. d. LITERATURE. Clarke Miracle play in England. 1897. Egyptian literature. 2v. H12. Gates Studies and appreciations. 3900. Lawrence Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd; a dram In three acts. 1914. . Lytton The student. New ed. 1840. Ransom Portraits and speculations. 1913. West Poems of human progress. 1914. PHUjOSOPHJ. Darroch Place of psychology In tho train, ing of the teacher, lull. Eucken Knowledge and life; tr. by W. T. Jones. 1914. Mark Unfolding of personality as the chief aim in education. Ed. 2. n. d. RELIGION. Ayre Suggestions for a syllabus m re ligious teaching. 1011. - Bible. O. T. Job Book of Job Interpreted; by James Strahan. 1913. MacCulloch Religion of the ancient Celts. 1911. SCIENCE. Creevey Harper's guide to wild flowers. 1612. Gould Cliff castles and cave dwellings of Europe. 1S11. 1 Gregory. Keller Vk Bishop Physical and commercial geography. 1914. Pike & Tuck Wild nature wooed and won. SOCIOLOGY. ' Cowan Education of the women of India. 1912. Thwlng ' Letters from a father to his daughter entering college. 1913. USEFUL ARTS. Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia rWlinir forces; prepared by R. J. Walsh. 191 S. Follett Table decorations and delicacies; a complete hand-book for tho hostess, by Hester price. 1914. Nathan How to make money in Ihe print. Ing business. Ed. 2. 1909. Roo New standard American business guide. New ed. enl. . 191 1. DEMOCRATS FEAR DEFEAT Voters In Mftrt Oklahoma District , Turn to Republicans. TULSA. Okla., Sept. 13. That the first Congressional District, compris ing the chief oil producing counties of Oklahoma, and embracing the lead and sine mining belt, will return a sub stantial majority for John Fields. Re publican candidate for Governor, and Judge J. A. Gill, Republican candidate for Congress, is admitted even by Democratic politicians. , The oil country holds: a grudge against the present and past state ad ministrations for efforts made to im pose what are termed ruinous taxes upon the oil industry. At one time an attempt was made to increase the gross production tax on oil to 3 per cent in the face of four other kinds of taxes the industry was laboring under. Normally Tulsa County is 700 Demo cratic, but it is believed Fields will have a plurality of at least 300. Wash ington County is expected to Ifne up for Fields by at least 500 plurality. Pawnee and Miami lean strongly to Fields, and the Democratic majority in Craig, Rogers. Mayes and Delaware counties will be materially reduced, and in one county of this group at least may be wiped out. Signs for temporary use can be made by coating glass with black iron var nish and. lettering them with a mix ture of 'oxide of sine and mucilage, which easily washes off. 1 Dawn O lhra$ Chapter II (Continued.) AND-Von Gerhard came. The spal peens watched for-him. their noses . flattened against the window pane, for it was raining. As he came up the patch they burst out of the door to meet him. From my bedroom window I saw him come prancing up the walk like a boy, with the two children clinging to his coat-tails, all three quite unmindful of the rain, and yelling like Comanches. Ten minutes later he had donned his professional dignity, entered my room, and beheld me in all my limp and pea-green beauty. I noted approvingly that he had to stoop a bit as .he en tered the low doorway and that the Vandyke of my phophecy was missing. He took my hand in his own steady, reassuring clasp. Then he began to talk. Half an hour sped away while we discussed New York books music theaters everything and anything but Dawn O'Hara. I learned later that as we chatted he was getting his story, bit by bit. from every twitch of the eyelids, from every gesture . of the hands that had grown too thin to wear the hateful ring; from every motion of tho lips; from the color of my nails; from each convulsive muscle: from every shadow, and wrinkle and curve and line of my face. Suddenly he asked: "Are you making the proper effort to get well? You try to conquer those jumping nerfs, yes?" I glared at him. "Try! I do every thing. I'd eat woolly worms if I thought they might benefit me. If ever a girl has minded her big sister and her doctor, that girl is I. I've eaten everything from pate do folse gras to raw beef, and I've drunk every thing from blood to champagne." "Eggs?" queried Von Gerhard, as though making a happy suggestion. "Eggs!" I snorted. "Eggs! Thousands of 'em! Eggs hard and soft boiled, poached and fried, scrambled and shirred, eggs in beer and egg-noggs, egg lemonades and egg orangeades, eggs in wine and eggs in milk, and eggs au nature!. I've lapped up iron-and-wine, and whole rivers of milk, and I've devoured rare porterhouse and roast beef day after day for weeks. So! Eggs!" "Meln Himmel!" ejaculated he, fer vently, "and you still live!" A sus picion of a smile dawned in his eyes. I wondered if he ever laughed. I would experiment. "Don't breathe it to & soul," I whis pered, tragically, "but eggs, and eggs alone, are turning my love for my sis ter into bitterest hate. She stalks me the whole day long, forcing egg mix tures down my unwilling throat. She bullies me. I daren't put out my hand suddenly without knocking over liquid refreshment In some form, but certain ly with an egg lurking in its depths, I am so expert that I can tell an egg orangeade from an egg lemonade at a distance of20 yards, with my left hand tied behind me and one -eye shut and my feet in a sack." "You can laugh, eh? Well, that iss good," commented the grave and un smiling one. "Sure," answered I. made more riip pant by his solemnity. "Surely I can laugh. For what else was my father Irish? Dad used to say that a sense of humor was like a shillaly an iligent thing to have around handy, especially when the joke's on you." The ghost of a twinkle appeared again in the corners of the German blue eyes. Some fiend of rudeness seized me. "Laugh!" I commanded. Dr. Ernst von Gerhard stiffened. "Pardon?" inquired he. as one who is sure that he has misunderstood. '"Laugh!" I snapped again. "I'll dare yon .to do It. I'll double dare you! You dassen't!" But he did. After a moment's be wildered surprise he threw back his handsome blond head and gave vent to a great, deep, infectious roar of mirth that brought the spalpeens tum bling up the stairs in defiance of their mother's strict instructions. After that we got along beautifully. He turned out to be quite human, be neath tho outer crust of reserve. He continued his examination only after bribing the spalpeens shamefully, so that even their rapacious demands were satisfied, and they trotted eft contente Jly. There followed a process which re duced me to a giggling heap but which Von Gerhard carried out ceremonious ly. It consisted of certain raps at my knees, and shins, and elbows, and fin gers, and certain commands to "look at my finger! Look at the wall! Look at my finger! Look at the wall!" "So!" said Von Gerhard at last. In a tone of finality. I Bank my battered frame into the nearest chair. "This this newspaper work it must cease. He dismissed it with a wave of the hand. "Certainly." I said, with elaborate sarcasm. "How should you advise me to earn my living in the future? In the stories they paint dinner cards, don't they? or bake angel cake?" "Are you then never serious?" asked Von Gerhard, in disapproval. "Never," said I. "An old, worn-out worked-out newspaper reporter, with a husband in the madhouse, can't af ford to be serious for a minute, be cause if sfie were she'd go mad, too, with the hopelessness of it all." And I buried my face in my hands. The room was vary still for a mo ment. Then the great Von Gerhard came over and took my hands gently from my face. "I I do beg your par don," he said. He looked strangely boyish and uncomfortable as he said It. "I was thinking only of your good. We do that, sometimes, forgetting that circumstances may make our wishes impossible of execution. So. You will forgive me?" "Forgive you?" Yes. Indeed." I as sured him. And we shook hands grave ly. "But that doesn't help mutters much, after all, does it?" "Yes, it helps. For now we under stand one another, is it not so? You say you can only write for a living. Then why not write here at home? Surely these years of newspaper work have given you a great knowledge of human nature. Then, too, there is your gift of humor. Surely that is a com bination which should make your work acceptable to the magazines. Never in my life have I seen so many maga zines as here in the United States. But hundreds! Thousands!" "Me!" I exploded ;"A real writer lady! No more interviews with ac tresses! No more slushy Sugiday spe cials! No more teary tales! O. my! When may I begin? Tomorrow? You know I brought my typewriter with me. I've almost forgotten where the letters are in the keyboard." "Wait, wait; not so fast! In a month or two, perhaps. But first must come other . things outdoors things. Also housework." "Housework!" I echoed feebly. "Naturllch. A little dusting, a little scrubbing, a little sweeping, a little cdoklng. The finest kind of indoor ex ercise. Later you may write a little but very little. Run and play out of doors with the children. When I see you again you will have roses in your cheeks like the German girls, yes?" "Yes," I echoed, meekly. "I wonder how Frieda will like my elephantine efforts at assisting with .the house work. If she gives notice, Norah will be lost to you." But Frieda did not give notice. After I had helped her clean the kitchen and the pantry I noticed an expression of deepest pity overspreading her lumpy features. The expression became al most one of agony as she watched me roll out some noodles for soup, and , ill - - - , vv' delve into the sticky mysteries of a new kind of cake. Max says that for a poor working girl who hasn't time to cultivate the domestic graces, my cakes are a dis tinct' triumph. Sis sniffs at that, and mutters something about cups or rais ins and nuts and citron hiding a multi tude of batter sins. She never allows the spalpeens to eat my cakes, and on my baking days they are usually sent from the table howling. Norah declares, severely, that she is going to hide the Green Cook Book. The Green Cook Book is a German one. Norah bought it In deference to Max's love of Ger man cookery. It is called Aunt Jul chen's cook book, and the author,' be tween hints as to flour and butter, gets delightfully chummy with her pu pil. Her cakes are proud, rich cakes. She orders grandly: "Now throw in the yolks of 12 eggs, one-fourth of a pound of almonds, ywo pounds of raisins, a pound of citron, a pound of orange-peel." As if that were not enough, there follow minor instructions as to trifles like ounces of walnut meats, pounds of confectioner's sugar, and pints of very rich cream. When cold, to be frosted with an icing made up of more eggs, more nuts, more cream, more everything. The children have appointed them selves official lickers and scrapers of the spoons and icing pans, also official guides on their auntie's walks. They regard their Aunt Dawn as a quite ri diculous but altogether delightful old thing. And Norah bless her! looks up when I come in from a romp with the spal peens and says: "Your cheeks are pink! Actually! And you're losing a puff there at tho back of yrur ear, and your hat's on crooked. Oh, you are be ginning to look your old self. Dawn dear!" At which doubtful compliment I re tort, recklessly: "Pooh! What's a puff more or less, in a worthy cause? And if you think my cheeks are pink now. Just wait until your mighty Von Ger hard comes again. By that time they shall be so red and bursting that Frieda's, on wash day, will look anemic by comparison. Say, Norah, how red are German red cheeks, anyway?" CHAPTER IIL Good as New. So Spring danced away, and Summer Bauntered in. My pillows looked less and less temoting. The wine of the northern air imparted a cocky assur ance. One blue-ana-gold day followed the other, and 1 spent hours together outof doors in the sunshine, lying full length on the warm, sweet ground, to the horror of the entire neighborhood. To be sure, I was sufficiently discreet to choose the lawn at the rear of the house. There I drank in the atmos phere, as per doctor's instructions, while the genial sun warmed the watery blood In my veins and burned the skin off the end of my nose. All my life I had envied the loungers in the parks those silent. Inert figures that He under the trees all the long Summer day. their shabby hats over their faces,- their handB clasped above their heads, legs sprawled in uncouth comfort, while the sun dapples down between the -leaves and. like a good fairy godmother, touches their frayed and wrinkled garments with flickering figures of golden splendor, while they sleep. They always seemed so bliss fully care-free and at ease those sprawling men figures and I. to whom such simple joys were forbidden, being a woman, had envied them. Now I was reveling in that very joy. stretched prone upon the ground, blink ing sleepily up at the sun and the co balt sky. feeling my very hair grow, and health returning in warm, electric waves. I even dared to cross One leg over the other and to swing the pen dant member with nonchalant air, first taking a cautious survey of the neigh boring back windows to see if anyone peeked. Doubtless they did. behind those ruffled curtains, but I grew splen didly indifferent. Even the crawling things and there were myriads of them added to the en joyment of my ease. With my ear so close to the ground the grass seemed fairly to buzz with them. Everywhere there were crazily busy ants, and 1, patently a sluggard and therefore one of those for whom the ancient warning was intended, considered them lazily. How they plunged about, weaving in and out, rushing here and there, helter skelter, like bargain-hunting women darting wildly from counter to counter! "Oh. foolish, foolish anties!" I chlded them, "stop wearing- yourselves out this way. Don't you know that the game isn't worth the candle, and that you'll give yourselves nervous jim-jams and then you'll have to go home to be patched up? Look at me! I'm a hor rible example." But they only bustled on, heedless of my advice, and showed their contempt by crawling over me as I lay there like a lady Gulliver. Oh. I played what they call a heavy thinking part. It was not only the ants that came In for lectures. I preached sternly to myselfL "Well, Dawn, old girl, you've made a beautiful mess of it. A sniashed-up wreck at 28! And what have you to show for it? Nothing! You're a useless pulp, like a lemon that has been squeezed dry. Von Gerhard was right. There must be no more newspaper work ror you, me girl. Not if you can keep away from the fascination of it, which I don't think you can." Then I would fall to thinking of those years of newspaper ins of the thrills of them, and the ills of ttfem. It had been exhilarating, and educating, but scarcely remunerative. Mother had never approved. Dad bad chuckled and said that it was a curse descended up on me from the terrible old Kitty O'Hara, the only old maid in the history of the O' Haras, and famed in her day for a caustic tongue and a venomed pen. Dad and mother what a pair of children they had been! The very dis similarity of their natures had been a bond between them. Dad, light-hearted, whimsical. care-free, improvident; mother, gravely sweet, anxious-browed, trying to teach economy to the hand some Irish husband who, descendant of n iuiik kiiu i - ui line ul t)icnuiflrut an cestors, would have none of it. it was Dad who had insisted that they name me Dawn. Dawn O'Hara! His sense of humor must have been sleeping. "You were such a rwsy. pinky, soft baby thins." mother had once told me, "that you looked just like the first flush of light at sunrise. That is why your father insisted on calling you Dawn." Poor Dad! How could he know that at 28 I would be a yellow wreck of a newspaper reporter with a wrinkle be tween my eyes. If he could see me now he would say: "Sure, you look like the dawn yet. me girl but a Pittsburg dawn." At that, mother, if she were here, would pat my cheek where the hollow place is, and' murmur: "Never mind, Dawnie dearie, mother thinks you are beautiful just the same." Of such hlocCAri otilff k ra wta-afrhaavu mniia At this stage of the memory game l would bury my face in the warm grass mm inana my uoa ior naving taaen mother before Peter Orme came into my life. And then I would fall asleep there on the soft, sweet grass, with my head snuggled in my arms, and the anta wriggling, unchided. into my ears. On the last of these sylvan occasions I awoke, not with a graceful start, liko the storybook ladies, but with a grunt. her toe. I looked up to see her stand--lng over me, a foaming tumbler of something in her hand. I felt that it was eggy and eyed it disgustedly. "Get up." said she. "you lazy scrib bler, and drink this." I sat up, eyeing her severely and picking grass and ants out of my hair u you mean to ten me ui you woke me out of that babe-HRe slumber to make me drink that goo! What Is it. ah. may lit wcw . o ctihh.h i p.-uv. "Egg-nogg It is; and swallow it' right awav. because there aro guests iu see yuu. I emerged from the first dip into the yellow mixture and fixed on her as stern and terrible a look as anyone enrt whose mouth is encircled by a mustache of yellow foam. "Guests!" I roared, "not for vne! Don't you dare to say that they came to see me!" "Did too," insists Norab, with firm-' ness, "they came especially to Bee you. Asked for you, right from tho Jump." v- I finished the egs-nossr in four gulps, returned the empty tumbler with an air of decision, and sank upon the grass. "Tell 'em 1 rave. Tell 'em that I'm unconscious, ami that for weeks I have sister. Say that in my present nerve: shattered condition I " That woman i eatisiy mem, rorair calmly interrupts, "they know you're crazy because they saw you out here from their second-etory back windows." That s why they came. &o you may as well get tip and fate them. I promised them I'd br'.nir you In. You can't go pn forever refusing to see people, and you' know the Whalens are " "Whalens!" I gasped. "How many; of them? Not not the entire fiendish" three?" "All three. I left them champing with impatience." (To be Continued.) "I suppose the straw vote will go out of fashion now',", said the Kansas man. "Why?" "Women who vote won't be satisfied to use straws. They'll want to use ribbons. Any Book reviewed on this page can found at your Book store. The J. K. GILL CO. Third and Alder.