TITR STJXDAY OHEGONTATf, POIITLAND, NOVEMBER 1. 1914. Colonial Mansions of Maryland and Iela-1 ware, by Jobn Martin Hammond. 65 illus-I tratlons. (5, in l box. J. B. Llppincott ! Co.. Philadelphia, Those who are at this time In quest ef a ChriBtmas present to give to an American friend of cultured tastes on a fond of historical remembrances of our country cannot do better than to obtain this book as a gift, if the donor's purse can easily stand the strain. ' This is really an instructive and beau tiful volume, one which the American reader can view with patriotic pride. The pases are 304 and the illustrations are -superb. "One great distinction between the colonial homes of Maryland and Dela ware relates to the comparatively un important matter of size." writes our author. "The homes of Maryland are of much bolder conception than those of Delaware. There are many reasons for this, but on the surface It is apparent that Delaware, with its unsettled early day founded by the Dutch, wrangrled over by the Swedes and finally wrest ed from both of these nationalities by the strong hand of the English would not attract as wealthy a class of settlers as Maryland, nor would its people spring from a stock with as Imperative a tradition of luxurious liv ing as those of the cavalier life in the Southern State. In point of charm and historic Interest, however, one finds as much to please the- Imagination and the eye In (.he homes of Delaware as in those of any other state of the Union. The period of fine Homebuilding in Maryland and Delaware extended from about 17S5 to the end or tne istn cen tury. It. was not until the beginning of this stretch of time that a really wealthy class had been developed in either of the two colonies. Now the planter came Into his own. His acres were 'a going concern,' a concern that probably paid larger dlviaenas in pro portion than the great bulk of these commercial ventures which have been born in the present day. His own work was little more than casual supervi sion; two or three months in the year he would devote to the planting and cutting, and the reBt of the time was his own, overseers taking the mass of mall details from his shoulders. It was at this time that he began to build himself a beautiful home, that Anna polis in Maryland, and Dover and New Castle in Delaware became social cap itals, and that the lawyer class made up chiefly of leisured men attained that brilliance of forensic and intellec tual achievement which was character . lstlc of the bar of these two states, be fore the Revolution." Such historic houses are more than historic They were not all places fof cards, wine, dancing and love-making, but places "where the occupants knew how to live fully and frankly, and one may be sure that they had sufficient leisure, as well, for reflection and rest." Mr. Hammond has already written similar books on historic colonial homes of New Jersey, Virginia, and1 of the vicinity of Philadelphia. His home Is in Baltimore. Md and he nays that for years he has been "a collector of old houses." Most of the material which appears in this book has been gathered by him from personal visits at first hand of the houses described. The photographs of mansions, etc., he made himself. WIS DIFFICULT- TO APPRECIATE, A FRIEND WHOSE CHIEF OCCUPATION IS POINTING OUT ONE'S MISTAKES " u.ecTeo I , i k -. 1 t ! Pit K- s Vs ' ; ' 1 '?; 'X- i Marv Roberts Rfnehart. S 1.25. a romance be- twVen two students in the heart of Vienna, the city of music, a thrilling touch Deing crivem in the oart clayed by a spy of the Balkan powers. The Joyful Heart, by Rob ert Haven Schauffler. (1.25, a guidebook to toy. bavlna- for Its motto tbeae words of Jean Finot: "People who are nobly happy constitute the power, the beauty and the lounaation or the state." taikd io rresn man Girls, by Helen Dawes Brown, 75 cents, four short talks en "Real Readers," 'Studies Serve for Delight, for Ornament and for Ability." "The lie of the Pen" and "Everyday Living." Open-Alr Politics, by Junius Jay. Sl.2.1. clever discussions of syndicalism and kindred subjects by an em. Inent American whose Identity is unknown. The Nightingale, by alienor Stoothoff, $1.25. the adventures of an American woman who lays asldo all conventionality and travels in a rather fantastic manner through Italy, France and rural England. War's Aftermath, by David Starr Jordan and Harv-y Ernest Jordan. 75 cents, a deep study of economic conditions before and after the Civil War, preaentlnr vital results as to the deteriora tion of race occasioned by that war. The Abolition of Poverty. 75 cents, by Jacob H. Hollander, Ph. D an essay discussing the causes of Dovertv. and outlining: a pro gramme of economic betterment. Songs of SixDenca. hv Ahbls Harwell Brown. 1.2. illustrated, a collection of poems suitable for young reaaers irom iz to in years, juo College Course and the' Preparation for Life, bv Albert Parker Kitch. l.i5, talks on nntblm and themes familiar to under graduates. Intended not so much to Instruct as to - interpret ana reveal itiougnion- Mlfflin. Boston). A Tale of Red Roses, bv George Ran dolph Chester. 60 cents, and The River, by Ednah 'Aiken. $1.35 Bobbs-Men-111 Co.. in dlanaDolis). The KTirlmrtlma of Love, hy Albert- Ed mund Trombly. 41.25, a collection of son nets solving unhappiness by making love tne polar star, lo a bummer ciouo, oj rmllv Tnlman SI a. vnlrnnl of verse 111 - SDlred 4v a love of nature and a profound belief In eternal goodness. The God Who Found Himself, by Alfred Ward bmitn 1.25. a. book of religious ana ethical en lightenment., shovlna mankind where to find what he has ever been striving tor. aprwa Moods arid Fancies, by Helen K. Wleand. bo cents, a volume of lyric poemv whose Key note Is loy. love and youth. A Captain of the King, bv Chester L. Baxby. 1, a taie of Oriental Life in Palestine, with an In domitable little hero who realizes his dream (Sherman. Frenob. c Co.. Boston) Achievement. bv K. Temple T nurston. $U&3. a serious type of fiction showing how an artist overcame all the temptations of is life and how hla character aeveiopea The Development of the Dictionary of the Knglih language, by Frank 11. Vizetelly, l.ltt. D.. LL. i. Illustrated. Funk St Wagnalls Company, New York City. v It is rare that such a valuable, edu cative book on the growth and use of the English language finds its way In book form for review into a news paper office. The subject rather ap pears to be one for magazines. This learned book of 41 pages is in the form of a memorial to the late Dr. Isaac K. Funk, founder and editor-in-chief of the Standard Dictionary, and our author says: "It is somewhat curious that Amer ica should owe its first dictionary to a man who bore tho name of Samuel Johnson. He was not related in any way to the sage of Fleet Street, who gave his famous work to the English people in 175a, but was born in the town of Guildford, Conn., March 10, 1757. The work he edited favored sim plified spelling, and gave as its pref ence such form as 'arbor,' 'fervor, 'pro gram,' etc It was the first Amer ican pronouncing dictionary in which the macron was used to idlcate the 'first or natural sound,' as of the vowel a In 'ale'; the breve to indicate the 'second or short' sound, as of the vowel "a' In 'am'; the circumflex to indicate a sound different from either, as that of 'a in 'alL "As this, the first American " diction ary, was printed and published by Ed ward O Brien, -a.t New Haven, Conn, in 1798 eight years before 'Noah Web ster, Esq.,' issued his 'Compendious Die tionary' Samuel Johnson was 'father of American lexicography,' and not Noah Webster. The second' American dictionary was produced by Samuel Johnson Jaintly with Rev. John Elliott in January, 1800. The latter, who was bor August 28. 1768. was a d.trect de scendant of John Eliot, 'the apostle to tne Indians.' The family name was variously spelled "Eliot" or "Elliott.' "Among the curious examples of def lnitions which Dr. Vizetelly cites may be given Bailey's idea of the definition of 'Man a creature endued with rea - son'; 'cat a creature well known'; ' norse a beast well known. These were first published in 1721. Although these definitions were drafted nearly 200 j-ears ago, they do not differ ma terially from those recently purbllshed in one of the latest dictionaries which defines 'horse' as 'well-known hoofed quadruped ; and pansy' as .'a well known garden plant and flower.' and describes 'kite' as a well-known con trivance for flying In the air at the end of the strnig.' "A dictionary that, 24 years ago, con tained 125.000 words now claims 400, 000 an inflation of 275.000 words, from which it may be inferred that the Eng lish language has been enriched more than 200 per cent in the Interval." How an English dictionary is made. Is told by words and pictures. Take the case of the "Standard Dictionary," illustrated proofs are shown in 11 dif ferent stages of the work, with all -corrections made, etc. taken prisoners by the enemy, who or-' der Anatule to blow the "retreat." so that the Arabs could charge and win the battle. Instead Anatole blows the "charge" and he and his chum are cut down. They eventually recover. On their return, after their term of mili tary service, to France, they find their own home in ruins, fired by the Prus sians, and Oabrieile, Anatole's sister, missing. Gabrielle had promised to mairjr Pierre if he brought back . her brother safely. Abbe Agneau brings news to Anatole that the Society of Perpetuation of French Renown will receive Anatole as guest of honor at its banquet in three weeks' time, to receive for his bravery at the attack on Sidl-Baroun, the cross of the X-eglon of Honor, from the hands of the President of the French Repub lic. Anatole and Pierre and several of the citizens of Chatillon begin the Journey to Paris. "We'll go like soldiers,"- roars Ana tole. "We'll- march it on foot." On the walk to Paris the two old soldiers falter and Anatole succumbs from weakness and dies. What is to be done? The banquet is about to be held and great men will be waiting. Pierre Impersonates Anatole, makes the speech of his life at. the banquet and receives the famous cross, tie is told of a surprise in store for him. M. Dis sard tells him that France restores to him his lost sister, Gabrielle. An elder ly little woman walks up to the bril liant company, looks at the guest of honor and is overcome with emotion. "Brother and sister," is the cry of the audience. "I knew thy voice," whispers -the old lady to Pierre. She knew by intuition that the guest of honor before her was not her lotst brother, but her lover. Pierre. As an honorable man, what should the Impersonator do? who furnished what was widely ac cepted as "official justification for the war. Now comes Mr. Low, who not only answers the Germans' statements, but furnishes arguments showing that in the present war England (Britain) and allies are fighting in the defense of Europe. A trenchant, authoritative book, from the British point of- view. West Winds, edited by Herman Whitaker. Illustrated. Paul Elder & Co., San Fran cisco. This is California's book of fiction. written by California authors and illustrated by California artists. It is quite a notable literary and artistic undertaking, and the result is a hand some looking book, deafly printed, a fine specimen of the book-making art. The first sentence in the foreword is significant: "Though, at this hour of Our day, it Is become trite " to draw the familiar parallel between Cali fornia and ancient Greece, it yet re mains the source from which any ut terance concerning Western art must proceed." Fifteen short stories are presented in all, and they are admirably select ed. They are representative of the besf in the field of first-class Ameri can story-telling. The authors se lected for exploitation In these pages are Herman Whitaker, Elizabeth Ab bey Everett, Sherley A. Mansfield, Sarah Thurston Nott, Agnes Morley Cleaveland, Rebecca N. Porter, Julia B. Foster, Charles F. Lumniis, Jack London, Hester A. Dickinson, Elizabeth Griswold Rowe, Frances Orr Allen, Mrs. Carl Bank, Harriet Holmes Has lett and Torrey Connor. There are eight Illustrations. "We Are French." by Perley Poore Sheehan and Robert H. "Davis. r0 cents. George 11. Doran Conmanv. New York City. The outside paper cover of this novel lias a representation of a wild battle scene, in which a French soldier, a Zouave, is blowing a trumpet. He wears a blue jacket, baggy red trousers and there is a bloodstaalned bandage on l is head. . Behind him soldiers are fighting. Such a scene might suggest one of the battles in the present war between the German and French allies, in Bel glum or France. "Not so. The novel scenes are much older and the story is a delicate,' pure, delightful French ro mance, filled with pretty sentiment and sudden surprises. There are two old men who are the heroes Anatole Pickard and his chum, Pierre Dupont, who live together In a small cottage in the village of Chatil lon. .a hiiDdred-odd kilometers to the west of Paris. Anatole and Pierre are In the village tavern and Pierrre tells the gossslps of a wild incident when he and Anatole were French soldiers ,in Algiers. In a battle with the Moors at Sidi-Baroun the two old Boldiers are Character Reading Through Analysis of the atures, by ueraia Klton toauroKe, sj.uu; Illustrated. U. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. With Illustrations from original drawings by Carl Bohnen, the purpose of this remarkable book is to incite inquiry, criticism, research. Mr. Fos broke believes that a person's head and face possess a certain significance in revealing personality, and that such revelation may be recognized and tab ulated so as to be of definite statistical value. Strict rules are laid down and are here elucidated in this book, by which it is asserted, a trustworthy an alysis of character is determined. In other words, this book forms a char acter balance-scale which is moved up and down by weights, and the residue is the character estimate. The study is a fascinating one, and Mr. Fosbroke is a .master of it. 19 pages. Political HlBtorv of Secession to the Brwin nine- of the Civil War. by Daniel Walt Howe. $3.o0. G. P. Putcam'8 Sons, New iorK city. Our author is president of the In diana Historical Society, and in this scholarly book of 649 pages, with a complete index, he Bhows that slavery was only one of the many causes that led up to1 our Civil War. He has ar rayed his facts in such a way as to give them a new interest, and to en able the reader to understand the is sues and the attempted compromises that antedated the final outbreak. Though a descendant of old Massa chusetts stock - and a veteran of the Union side of the Civil War, Mr. Howe has presented his subject with the im partiality and calmness of the true his The Real "Troth About Germany." by Doug las Sladen. 1. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. Recently, a pamphlet was prepared In Germany called "The Truth About Germany," under tho supervision of a committee of representative Germans The Jolly Book of Bnxrraft. by Patten Beard. tl.3."i. Illustrated. Frederick A. Stokes Company. New York City. Any child able to handle scissors can i.make numbers of fascinating toys and games from discarded boxes with the aid of taste, patience, paste and cray ons. This book of 188 pages shows how, and there are many illustrations. The very article a growing, healthy. child needs. A most ingenious idea. JOSEPH M. Ql'ENTlii NEW BOOKS KECKIVED. The story of Dartmouth, by Wilder D. Quint, Illustrated. 285 pages, an Interesting, sketchy account of Dartmouth College, New Uampslilre 1 Little-Brown St Co., Boston). Doing Us Good and Plenty, by Charles Ed ward Kussetl, 50 centa, a call tor a social revolution, a "hot" Socialist book tKerr & Co., Chicago). . . The Romance of Piracy, by E. Kcble Chat terton. Illustrated, a rousing, romantic book for youths; Buffalo Bill And The Overland urall, Dy Edwin L.- Sabln, (1.25, illustrated, a novol of Western adventure, for bovs: Rosaly's New Schoolby Elsie Oxenham, with jour coiorea illustration, a healthy, inspir ing story for girls, depicting boarding-school life on Devonshire Moor, England; Sons of the Sea, by Christopher Beck, 1, a rousing English story of boys who were Boy Scout Coast-Guarda; The Mystery of the Oriental Rug. by Dr. G. Griffin Lewis. 30 illustrations, $1.50, an elegant, poetic presentation on the mysteries of rugs of the Orient, the prayer rug, and -aluable advice to purchasers of tne same; tne True Ulyasea s. Grant, by Gen eral Charles King, S2, 28 illustrations, one o tho fairest, moat comprehensive estimates ever published of Grant as eoldler. states man and politician, a portrait of tho hero mat win surely live- ana Heroes and Hero ines of Fiction, by William S. Walsh. S3, i valuable and educational, alphabetically ar- z-angeu dook oe xamous cnaracters ana fa mous names in modern novels, romances, poems and dramas, classified, analyzed and criticised, with supplementary citations from the best authorities, 391 pages Lippicott v.o., rnna j. Open Water, by Arthur Strlnirer. 11. SI sptenaia poems by one of the greatest poet who writes In English, poema that will liver The Man With the Double Heart, by Muriel Hine. SI. 20. a throbhlnar novAl rt lonaon and Italy, about a Scotch hero wh was told by a ohvsician that he rrha hern had two hearte, therefore the .hero loved two women; Valley of a Thousand Mills, by r. e.. jvinis jcung, st.30, a romantic, first class novel of Boerland In Southern Africa. with two heroes, one Englih and the other noer; l- ootnotes to Life, by Dr. Frank Crane, 1. 257 Daires. a book of nithv. dura.t!va ooservations of many moods, a great search ngnt to arouxe the weary and cynical; The 1 beater of Today, by Hiram Kelly Moder well. 11.51). with 82 illustrations and num erous cuts In the texts, a summing up of the new forces' that have entered into the theatrical production in the last ten years im tnis country ana Europe; But She Mean Well, by William Caine. S1.30, a likeable. sunny English novel snout a little girl. Han nah, S years old, a child of remarkable or glnallty (John Lane Co., N. Y.). ' Blind Byes, by Margaret Peterson. 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Just the story for children, written In human, graphic style, about animals, plants and people in South America; Hearts and Coronets, by Alice Wil son Fox, 50 cents, a healthy, good-natured English story for children; and The Young1 est Girl in the School, by Evelyn Sharp, 50 cents, a reprint of a dellciouslv told story of a little English schoolgirl (The Macmll lan Co.. N. Y. ). Dynamic Evolution; A Story of the Causes of Evolution and Degeneracy, by Casper L. Redfleld. SI. 50. In which the author formu lates a theory of animal energy, the process by which It Is increased or diminished from generation to generation, and the-' manner in which It Is transmitted, a theory he substantiates ly statistics drawn from the pedigrees of horses, cattle, dogs, and men: Nullo Auction, by Florence Irvin, S1.2S-. and Honest Business, by Amos Klder Fiske. i lucid explanation of the , nature of bust ness. the use of money and rrd!t. the mean, ing of wages, profits, and prices, the proper basis for the division of the fruits of labor, etc. (Putnam & Sons, N. Y.l. The Life of a Little College and Other paper. ty Arnninaid aiac.vecnan, i.3o several essavs on such subjects as "Tenny son as Artist. Browning s Women. "Virsrll" and "Evangeline and the Heal Arcadians. The Street ot Seven Stars, by Dawn O narafeas nder the Influence of the -opposite sex. Today's Daughter, by Josephine Daskum Bacon. S1.S5. Illustrated, the story ol a young woman's career from her 30th to her 88th year, and her. great opportunities as compared with her arandmother's, dealing with problems of economics ana social serv- ce. as well as love and marriage tu. p- pleton &. Co.. New York). Annlled- Cltv Government, by Herman G. James. J. D.. Ph. D.. T3 cents, a book giving njlt-ftl nrner t hn matters with wnicn a Irv charter must deal nresentlna? a model charter which can be used by students of civic welfare. Mark Tldd In the Backwoods, by Clarence B. Kelland, $1. a series of hu morous adventures of a resourceful fat boy. The Last Invasion, by Donnl H. Haines. SI. 25. a stlrrins- tale of two boys who played thrilling parts in a supposed invasion oi tne united mates, witn oatnes on tauu and battles In the air. Captain of the Cat's Paw, by W. O. Stoddard, Jr., illustrated, SI. bov's hook that will interest every ooy who likes tales of tbe sea. The Art of Being Alive, by EUa Wheeler Wilcox, ft, selec tions from the celebrated author'fc writings, containing messages for everybody, 'the book belnr a mental tonlo and most neipiui inn stimulating. The Anti-Trust Act and the Supreme Court, bv William H. Taft. 11.23: tlmelv anH authoritative is this book. Which discusses the Sherman anti-trust law. the nronosed amendments to It. and the effect oi lis oecisionB upun uubiubm n mra - and its Drobable Influence in tne tuiure. The Unseen Kmnlre. bv Atherton Brownell, St. 25. a. dramatic story of peace in the form of a da v. The New Clarion, by Will N. Harben. SI. 35. a humorous tale of love and mystery in the Georgia mountains, now to cook and Whv. by Ellzaoetn tonau nu .! a a lnr fl. a book; written to meet the needs of the high school girl and the average housekeeper not a book of recipes. r,i or nr nr n M and crlvinr venerai uirtc Hons In uslna cookbooks. A Guide to Good r.nriuii. hv Robert Palfrey Utter, rn. u. Sl.liO. a useful arrangement or principles and rules for everyday writers, based on the ex perience of years snent in handling various kinds of manuscriDts. Party Government in the United States of America, oy wimam Milliirar, Klnane. ?. a hlstorv of American politics and an exposition of party political tnnrienalea In nractlce. treatlna TUlly suca Questions as the Monroe doctrine, rotation In office, civil eel-vice reform, ballot rerorm, the silver Question. Interstate commerce. state paternalism and the beginnings of So. lallsm Hans Andersen's Fairy Tales. Ill us trated bv lxuls Rhead and an lntroouction by W. D. Howells. SI. B0, a holiday edition with more than 10O illustrations in black and white (Harper ac Bros. New YorK J. The American Japanese Problem, by Sid nev Gullck. SI. 7.'.. a study of tne race problems of the far Knst and the West, the sublecls discussed belna-; -Japanese rroo tern In California." "Are Japanese Asslm- llable? ' The Real yeuow rem ana uui- lines of n New American Oriental policy. i,n hnnV belns- riedlrated to "Andrew Car negie and the host of loyal workers for uni versal peace and tne inenusnips ox tne East and- the West" (Charlea Scribnor'a Sons. New York). A Tramn Through the Bret Harte Coun try. by Thomas' Dykes . Beasley, 11.25, the story of a Summer's tramp through a coun try of rare beauty ana unique associaiiuim, 24 beautiful illustrations completing the lit tle volume (Paul Elder & co san rau- ClSROl. Human Harmonies and the Art of Making Them, by S. F. Shorey, CO cents, a strong nlt.4 for education In its broadest sense. based on the fact that the first cause of all life problems is ianorance. and when the truth Is understood, harmony will prevail (Desmond Kltzaerald. Inc. New YorKi, How to Live Ouietlv. by Annie Payson Call. SI. an introspective study for making all the rough places smooth a book full of practical truths which. If followed in our everyday life, will give us the freedom we are ail striving for the peace that Is not boueht at any price (Little, Brown So t,o. Boston). i A Mother in Exile, by an anonymous su-i thor. 11.85, a sensational and absorbing au tobiography embodied In letters written for her daughter by a mother "exiled" from her husband and children. Major Prophets of Today, by Edwin E. Slosson, S1.50. for cible and Informing estimates of such fa mous men as Maurice Maeterlinck. Henri Bergson. Henri Polncare. Elie Metchnikoff, Wilhelm Oatwald and Ernst Haeckel. (Lit tle. Brown & Co., Boston.) Great Pianists on Piano Playing, by James Francis Cook, a series of Interview-study talks with famous virtuosi presenting most modern ideas upon the subjects of tech nique, interpretation, style and expression, 288 pages (Theo. Preaser Co.. Phila., Pa.). The Fleet Goes By. by Mary Synon. BO cents, a little novel that Is a masterpiece, the leading figure being an American prima donna who lives abroad. Plays, by John Galsworthy. St. S3, three plays by this cele brated English dramatist : The Fugitive, The pigeon and The Mob. The Mob, by John Galsworthy. 60 cents. 77 pages (Charles Scrlbner's Sons. N. Y.) The Promise or Life, by Howard Suther land. BO cents. a comforting, well written essay on the Insistence of the survival of the Individual after death (Rand-McNally. Chicago). The Immigration Problem, by Jeremiah W. Jenks. Ph. D.. LL. D.. and W. Jett Lauck. 11.75. r..",l pages, third edition, revised and enlarged, beinr an expert and illumining lnauirv and study of American immigration and needs lust the book for the attention of social and woman's clubs. The price of a Soul. Man. The Value of an Ideal and The Prince of Peace, by William Jennings Bryan four little books, each oO cents, be ing either lectures or addresses delivered at various times bv this distinguished American orator (Funic A Wasnalls Co.. N. Y.). ' Growlna- Bulbs, bv Maurice Field, SI. 3 paces, an expert exposition on the growing of Winter and Spring flowering bulbs (Tbe Home of Heather, lMadlson ave.. . 1.). Our Many-toinea. isavy, py nooert w . Neser. S2.50. 220 pages, splendidly illus tmtMl. a pranhlc. and understandable exposi tion of the ways of our Navy, afloat and hore one of the best books .noticed on this sublect (Yale University Press, N. Y.). The Nlaht Before Christmas, by Lillian Bennett Thompson. 73 cents. 47 pages, s pathetio little story that is a masterpiece. the hero- being a aobo who plays that ne la Santa Claus (Browne Howell Co., Chi cago). The Rout of the Frost King, by Eugene Neustadu illustrated. 3D pages, fanciful, well written talrv poems (Paul Klder st t;o.. S. F.). Economics and Syndicalism, by A. W, Klrkaldv. Coal Mining, by T. C. Cantrlll. The Making of Leather, by H. R. Procter, The Sun. bv K. A. Sampson. Four little academic books, each 40 cents and each written by an expert. These books are verltaole storehouses of knowledge. (Q. F. Putnam's Sons. New York). Commercialized Prostitution In New York Citv. bv George J. Kneeland. with a supple mentary chaoter by Katharine Bement Davis, superintendent of the New York State Reformatory for women, ana an lntroduc tlon by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. chairman of the Bureau of Social Hygiene. 134 nages. Probably the most expert book of its kind published In English. (Century Company, Clay and Rainbows, by T. C. Calthrop, SI. 2,i. a novel tnat furnishes exquisite, mas terful studies of two young, gay Loadoners Sir Timothy and Miss Pliiliupina and the love thev bore to each other. (Fred A. Stokes Company. New York.) Sicily Ann. by Fanxie Heasllp Lea. $1, a dainty romance or a young American girl who is so bewitching that she makes you think of a lovely flower. Social Forces in Bnaland and America, by H. G. Wells. S2. 413 oases. S essays or studies on a variety of subjects, representing practically all the author s miscellaneous writings tor the last four or flvo years, edited and drawn to gether into an effective whole.. (Harpers, now ro.j CHAPTER VII. Continued. Blackie regarded me pityingly. "You ain't never been to Baumbach's? Why girl, if you don't know Baumbach's, you ain't never been properly introduced to Milwaukee. No wonder you aln t hep to the ways of this little community. There ain't what the s'clety editor would call the proper ontong cordyal between you and the natives if you haven't had coffee at Baumbach's. It ain't hardly legal t' live in Milwaukee all this time without ever having been Inside of B "Stop! If you do not tell me at onceJ ust where this wonderful place may be found, and what one does when one finds It, and how I happened to miss It. and why it Is so necessary to the. proper understanding of the city" "I'll tell you whar 111 do." said Blackie. grinning. "I'll romp you over there tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. Ach Himmel! What will that for a grand time be. no?" "Blackie, you're a dear to be so po lite to an old married cratur like me. Did you notice that Is, does Ernst von Gerhard drop lnr often at Baumbach's?" CHAPTER VIII. Kaf fee and Kaffeekncfcea. I have visited Baumbach's. I have heard Milwaukee drinking its after noon Kaffee. O Baumbach's, with your deliciously crumbling butter cookies and your kaf fee kuchen,vand your thick cream, and your thicker waitresses and your cock roaches, and your dinginess and your dowdy German ladles and your black black Kaffee, where In this country Is there another like you! Blackie, true to his promise, had hailed me from the doorway on the afternoon of the following day. In the rush of the day's work I had. quite for gotten about Blackie and Buumbach s. 'Come, Kindchen!" he called. "Get your bonnet on. vV e will by Baum- bach a go, no? Ruefully I gazed at the grimy cuffs of my blouse, and felt my disheveled hair. "Oh, I'm afraid I can t go. I look o muBsy. Haven't had time to brush up." - 'Brush up!" scoffed Blackie. "the only thing about you that will need brushln' up Is your German. I waa goin' f warn you to rumple up your hair a little so you wouldn t feel overdressed w en you got there. Come on. girl, And so I came. And oh. I'm bo glad I camel I must have passed it a dozen times without once noticing it just a dingy little black shop nestling between two taller buildings, almost within the shadow of the City Hall. Over the sidewalk swung a shabby black sign with gilt letters that spelled, "Franz Baumbach." Blackie waved an Introductory hand In the direction of the sign. "There he is. That s all you'll ever see of him Dead?" asked I, regretfully, as we entered the narrow doorway. No: down In the basement baking Itaff eekuchera. Two tiny show windows faced the street such Queer, old-fashioned win dows in these days of plate glass. At the back they were quite open to, the shop, and in one of them reposed huge, white. Immovable structu majestic, heavy, nutty, surely indigest ible birthday cake. Around lts edge were flutlngs and scrolls of white icing, and on its broad breast reposed cherries, and stout butterflies of Jelly and cunning traceries of colored sugar. It was quite the dressiest cake I had ever beheld. Surely no human hand could be wanton enough to guide knife through all that magnificence. But in the center of all this splendor was an inscription in heavy white let ters or Icing: " Charlottens Geburtstag. Reluctantly I tore my gaze from thl Imposing example of the German con fectioner's art, for Blackie was tugging impatiently at my sleeve. "But Blackie," I marveled, "do youlBlackie- . . . . . . . . . 'WtA the narrow room. Three or four stout, blond girls plodded back and forth, from tables to front shop, bearing trays of cakes and steaming cups of coffee'. There was a rumble and clat ter of German. Kvery one seemed to know every one else. A game of chess was in progress at one table, and be tween moves each contestant would refresh himself with a long-drawn, sibilant mouthful of coffee. There was nothing about the place or its occu pants to remind one of America. This dim, smoky, cake-scented cafe was Germany. "Time!" said Blackie. "Here cornea Rosie to take our order. You can take your choice of coffee or chocolate. That's as fancy as they get here." An expansive blond girl paused at our table smiling a broad welcome at honestly suppose that that structure is intended for some Charlotte's birth day?" "In Milwaukee." explained Blackie. "w'en you got a birthday you got t' have a geburtstag cake, with your name on It. and all the cousins and aunts and members of the North Side Frauen Turner Verein Gesellchaft In for the day. It ain't considered decent If you don't- Are you ready to fight your way into the main tent?" It was holiday time, and the single narrow aisle of the front shop was crowded. It was not easy to elbow one's way through the packed little space. Men and women were ordering reck lessly of the cakes of every description that were heaped In cases and on sh elves. Cakes! What a pale, dry name to apply to those crumbling, melting. In digestible German confections! Blackie grinned with enjoyment while I gazed. There were cakes the like of which I had never seen and of which I did not even know the names. There were little round cup cakes made of almond paste that melts In the mouth; there were Schnecken glazed with a delicious candied brown sugar; there were Bis- marcks composed of layer upon layer of flaky crust inlaid with an oozy cus tard that evades the eager consumer at the flrdt bite, and that slides down one's collar when chased with a pursu ing tongue. There were Pfeffernusse; there were Lebkuchen: there were cheese-kuchen, plum-kuchen. peach kuchen. Apfelkuchen, the juicy fruit stuck thickly Into the crust, the whole dusted over with powdered sugar. There were Torten and Hornchen and butter cookies. Blackie touched my arm, and I tore my gaze from a cherry-studded Scharmtorte that waa being reverently packed for delivery, My. what a greedy girl! Now get your mind all made up. This is your chance. You know you re supposed t take" a slant at th' things an' make up your mlndw'at you want before you go back w ere th tables are. Don t fumble this thing. When Olga or Minna comes waddlin' up V you an1 says: Nu, Fraulein?" you gotto tell her whether your heart says plumkuchen Oder Nusstorte. or both, see?' Just like that. Now make up your mind. I'd hate f have you blunder. Have you decided?" ' "Decided! How can- I?" I moaned. watching a black-haired, black-eyed Alsatian girl behind the counter as she rolled a piece of white paper into a cone and dipped a spoonful of whipped cream from a great brown bowl heaped high with the snowy stuff. She filled the paper cone, inserted the point of It into one end of a hollow pastry horn and gently squeezed. Presto! A cream filled Hornchen! "Oh, Blackie!" I gasped. "Come on. I want to go In and eat.' As we elbowed our -way to the rear room separated from the front shop only by a flimsy wooden partition, expected I know not what. But surely this was not Blackle's much-Taunted Baumbach s: This long, narrow, dingy room, with Its bare floor and its iron-legged tables, whose bare ma4-ble tops were yellow with age and use! I said nothing as we seated our selves. Blackie was watching me out of the tail of his eye. My glance wan dered about the shabby,- smoke-filled room, and slowly and surely the charm of that musty, dingy little cafe came upon me. A huge stove glowed red In one cor ner. On tne wail oenina tne stove was suspended a wooden rack, black with age, its compartments holding German, Austrian and Hungarian newspapers. Against the opposite wall stood an an cient walnut mirror, and above it hung a colored print of Bismarck, helmeted, uniformed, and fiercely mustached. The clumsy iron-legged tables stood in two solemn rows down the length of tier. "Wie geht's, Roschen?" he greeted Roschen's smile became 6till more pervasive, so that her blue eyes dis appeared in creases cf good humor. She wiped the marble table top with a large and cireless gesture that pre cipitated stray crumbs into our laps. Gut! . murmured she, coyly. ana leaned one hand on as portly hip in an attitude of waiting. 'Coffee?" asked Blackie, turning to me. I nodded. Zwelmal Kaffee?" beamed Roschen grasping the idea. NoWs your time to speak up, tirgea Blackie. "Go ahead an' order all the cream geflllte things that looked good to you out in front. But I leaned forward, lowering my voice discreetly. "Blackie. before I plunge in too recklessly, tell me, are their prices very "Sa-a-ay, child, you just can't spend half a dollar here if you try. The flossiest kind of thing they got is only 10 cents a order. They'll smother you in . whipped cream r r a quarter. You c'n come in here an' eat an' eat an' put away piles of cakes till you feel like a combination ,ot Little Jack Horner ani old Doc Johnson. An' w'en you're all through, they hand yuh your check, an , say it says 4S cents, iou can't beat it, so wade right in an' spoil your complexion." With enthusiasm 1 turned upon the patient Rosie. "O, bring me some of those cunning little round things with the cream on 'em, you know two of those, eh Blackie? And a couple of those with the flaky crust and the custard between, and a slice of that fluffy-looking cake and some of those funny cocked-hat shaped cookies But a pall of bewilderment waB slowlv settling over Rosie's erstwhile smiling face. Her plump shoulders went up in a helpless shrug, and she turned her round blue eyes appealingly to Blackie. "Was meint sie alles?" eho asked. So I began at over again, with the assistance of Blackie. We went into minute detail. We made elaborate ges tures. We drew pictures of our desired goodies on the marble-topped table, using a soft-lead pencil. Rosie's countenance wore a distracted look. In desperation I was about to accompany her to the crowded shop, there to point out my chosen dainties when suddenly, as they would put.lt here, a light went her over. "Ach. yes-s-s-s! Sle wollten vlelleicht abgeruhrter Gugellhopf haben. und auch Schaumtorte. und Bis- marcks. und Hornchen mit cream gefullt. nicht?" "Certainly," I murmured, quite crushed. Roschen waddled merrily off to the shop. Blackie was rolling a cigarette. He ran his funny little red tongue along the edge of the paper and glanced up at me in glee. "Don't bother about me." he generously observed. "Just set still and let the atmosphere soak in." But already I was lost in contempla tion of a red-faced, pompadoured Ger man who was drinking coffee and reading the Fliegende Blatter at table just across the way. There were counterparts of my aborigines at Knapf's thick spectacled engineers with high foreheads actors and act resses from the German stock company reporters from the English and Ger man newspapers business men with comfortable German consciences long-haired musicians dapper young lawyers a giggling group of college girls and boys a couple of smartly dressed women nibbling appreciatively at slices of Nusstorte low-voiced lovers whose coffee cups stood un touched at their elbows' while no tra grant cloud of steam rose to Indicate that there was warmth within. Their glances grow warmer as the neglected Kaffee grows colder. The color-comes and goes In the girl's face and I watch It, a bit enviously, marveling that the old story still should be so new. At a largo square table near the door way a group of eight men were ab sorbed In an animated political dis cussion, accompanied by much waving of arms and thundering of gutturals. It appeared to be a table of importance. " for the high-backed bench that ran. ' along one side was upholstered in worn red velvet and every newcomer paused a moment to pod or to say a wurd in greeting. It was not American poli- : tics that they talked, but of the poli tics of Austria and Hungary. Finally the argument resolved itself into a duel of words between a handsome, red-faced German, whose rosy skin' seemed to take on a deeper tone in contrast to tho whiteness of his hair and mustache, and a swarthy young" fellow whose thick -spectacles ana. heavy mane of black hair gave him the look of a caricature out of an il lustrated German weekly. The red faced man argued loudly, with much, rapping of bare knuckles on the table) top. But the dark man spoke seldom . and softly, with a little twisted half- ; smile on his lips: and whenever he ; spoke tho red-faced man grew redder r and there came a litifre iaugn iroin tne others who sat listening. Say, wouldn't it curdle your Eng lish'.'" Blackie laughed. Solemnly I turned to him. "Blackie Griffith, theso people do hot even realize that there is anything unusual about this." 'Sure not: that's' the beauty of 4t. They don't need to make an artificial atmosphere for this place: it Just grows wild, like dandelions. Everybody comes here for their coffeo becaufie their aunts an' uncles und Grossmuttcrs -and Grosspapas used t' come, and coma yet. if they re livin'! An", arter all. what is it but a little German bakery ?" "But O. wise Herr Baumbach down in the kitchen! O, subtle Fraud Baum bach back of the desk!" said I. "Others may fit their shops with mirrors and. cut-glass chandeliers and Oriental rugs and mahogany, but you sit se renely, by and you smile and you, change nothing. You let the brown walls grow dimmer with ago: you see the marble-topped tables turning yel low; you leave- bare your wooden floor and you smile, and smile .and smile." "Fine!" applauded Blackie. "lours on. And hero comes Rosie." Rosie. the radiant, placed on the table cups and saucers of unbelievable thick ness. She set them down on the mar ble surface with a crash as one who knows well that no mere marble or granite could shatter the solidity of thoFo stout earthenware receptacles. Napkins there were none. I was to learn that fingers wore rid of any clinging rernnants of cream or crum by the simple expedient of licking them. - Blackie emptied his pitcher of cream into his cup of black, black coffee. sugared It. stirred, tasted and then. with a wicked gleam in his black eyes, he lifted thj heavy cup to his lips and took a long, gurgling mouthful. "Blackie, I hissed, if you do that again I shall refuse to speak to you!" "Do what? demanded he, all in jured Innocence. "shuffle up your coffee like that. "Why, girl, that's th" proper way t' drink coffee here. Listen f every body else." And while 1 glared he wrapped his hand lovingly about his cup, holding the spoon imprisoned be tween first and - second fingers, and took another sibilant mouthful. "Any more of your back talk and I'll drink it out of m' saucer an" blow on it like the hefty party over there In the ear rings is doin'. Calm yourself an" try a Bismarck." I picked up one of the flaky confec tions and eyed it in despair. There were no plates except that on which the cakes reposed. (To be Continued.) Any Book r vie wed on this page cr.n be found at your Bookstore. The J. K. GILL CO. Third and Alder.