TITE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 24, 1918. OREGON GOAT INDUSTRY HAS BIG OPPORTUNITY FOR EXPANSION ON RANGES OF CUT-OVER LANDS Angoras Reclaim Valuable Lands From Growth of Underbrush, and With Proper Care, Produce Substantial Profits; Quality of Oregon Mohair Unsurpassed in World, but Need Is Seen for Organization of Growers. ...... , w . . :y v J will be "The Falling Leaf." Tonight his subject will be "Pitching Tents." At Hope Presbyterian Church, East Everett and Seventy-eighth streets the pastor, Floyd E. Dorris, will speak at 7:30 on "The New Dawn as a Rea son for Thanksgiving.'" In. the morn ing at 11 o'clock communion will be observed with the reception of members. Utmim of Drpartmeata of Red Cream. Whose Work Most Go On Mr. C. B. Woodruff, Supervisor of Workroom tor These Jtaaoraa Woa First aad Fonrth Awards at Salem la September, IBIS. S L.oog--Halred Mohair Class of Am. g-oraa. This Yearling Woa Second Prise at Oroa State Fair. Illustrates Reach of Goata in Browsing. WILL, goats pay on Oregon farms and ranges? This question has been answered in the affirmative by numerous Oregon farmers. Under the old and mistaken idea that they would care for themselves, they did not ' pay; but with care and shelter equal to that given to sheep, they do pro duce a definite profit. Many who have lands otherwise un productive are employing Angora goats to reclaim them from the growth of underbrush. For cleaning up along roads and fence lines goats have proved their utility. Pastured on stubble In the Fall they make a good living. They are most valuable, however, on brush ranges. Attention of the United States De partment of Agriculture has been given to goats as browsers and several bul letins have been issued on the subject. One now In preparation deals with the grazing problem on forest areas. It proved by the men who have worn it. Mutton value of the goat is not con sidered in Oregon, but In the Middle West It is a very important addition to the meat supply. Kansas City slaugh ters many thousand goats each year. These pass into distributive channels and are consumed as Spring lamb or the usual mutton bought over the counter. The goat has been the friend of man kind from Biblical times. In return it bas been made synonymous for con tempt and ridicule. Yet it has come into the livestock field as an importan producer, finding recognition from Its absolute merit. Oregon Production 600.000 Pound. Estimates for the past three years indicate annual production of about 500.000 pounds of mohair in Oregon, in dicating, perhaps, 125.000 Angora goats in this state. Lane County has on Its assessment rolls 22,000, Lincoln County Is exDected to be ready about Janu-1 about the same number. PolK, t,tnn nrr 1. t ' Marlon. Douglas. Jackson an other Oregon Grower Not Orgaalsed. Oregon as an Angora goat state does not appear as prominently as some oth ers. for the reason that there is no state organization of growers. Tet Ore gon leads all the states In production of fine breeding stock. An entire exhibit barn was occupied by the Angora goats at the 191 S Ore gon State Fair. Only five breeders were represented, but the showing made by these exhibitors could not be surpassed . In any part of the world for fineness of fleece and character of the animals themselves. Several hundred dollars in prizes were awarded to exhibitors. Ranging from Spring kids, the list Included aged does and bucks of aristo cratic lineage up to 7 and 8 years ol age. Usefulness of Angoras often goes be yond the age of 10 years, both as sires and as producing does. The older the animal the more wiry is the fleece. It lacks spinning qualities desired, which are found in highest degree in the year lings. The mohair from a 5 or 6-year- old goat will show finest milling quail ties, but as a rule, the fleece coarsens with age. Oregon, with thousands of acres of brush ranges on cut-over lands, affords unlimited expanse for increase of An gora goat growing. One very important point is that rare must be given goats in severe weather, and shelter must be provided equal to that given to sheep. In years when Angora goats were more numer ous in Oregon than now, it was re peatedly heard that "Angoras would take care of themselves." Shelter Shonld Be Provided. Whether they use it regularly or not, shelter should- be available for goats on the range. They will huddle under trees or on the "lee side of logs In the open, but the goat farmers who spread the report referred to probably had losses, and later condemned the An cora business as a losing game. One case in particular may be noted: A Washington State farmer paid $4 a head for 1000 Angora goats, when they were less valuable than now in the market. He turned them loose under the impression that they would need no care or shelter, and after two years he found he had scarcely any remaining. They were scattered over the Olympic range of mountains and many hunters brought In reports of having killed wild goats, which were found to be excel lent venison. Had this man supplied herder, sheds and salt licks, he would not have lost his Investment. To secure best results. Angoras should be kept on ranges where they can be counted at frequent Intervals. In many clearings will be found piles or limbs and brush which have laid for years and have been covered with a growth of vines and berry bushes. Climbing is one of the natural traits of the goat. He will mount these tacks of brush to get at the leaves at the top. ' The decayed wood will not hold bis weight and he becomes en tangled so fast that, unless human aid Is given, he perishes. He will stand on hind legs and reach all browse to a height of six or seven feet. Two seasons are required to kill off vine maple and willow growths. For this reason the best plan is to fence off such areas as are desired to be entirely cleared by intensive grazing. For preservation of open range, herders are best employed. Mohair Fabric Superior. Various uses are being devised for mohair, the fleece of the Angora goat. Recently the United States Government ordered in excess of ISO.OOO yards of melton" cloth for use In Army uni forms. This fabric contains from 20 to SO per cent of mohair, combined with wool. The resulting cloth has been tested In actual Army service and has been found superior to the former all wool textiles in use. It is durable.' fakes dye readily and has been ap. 1 counties in Western Oregon have con siderable numbers, but no census has been made. The principal goat-raising section of the United states comprises the Southwestern states, Texas. New Mexico and Arizona, with large herds in litah, Colorado. Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Oregon growers should be organized for their own interests. This need has been expressed by many of the leading growers in this state and at the Oregon State Fair some talk was indulged on the subject- Milling demand has been increased by Government utilization of mohair. American buyers have been active in South Africa, the only other portion of the globe in which Angora goat cul ture is carried on commercially. Origin of the Angora was in Asia Minor, near the .town of that name. This district is near Mount Ararat and the goat spe cies is as old as history. Turkish mo hair has been rendered merely a nomi nal article in the market, by reason of the devastation of Armenia and the entire destruction of marfy herds. Sfohalr Prleea Increased. Following the destruction of Asiatic herds the price of mohair has risen both in South Africa and in America. Prices before the war ranged from 28 cents to 30 cents a pound. The staple Is now selling In the Southwest at 85 cents to 90 cents a pound, while in Oregon the market has not gone above S3 cents for all grades of mohair. Average fleece from range goats runs from three and one-half to five pounds a head. The pure-breds often shear eight to 12 pounds. Best Willamette Valley wool scours away 45 per cent in cleaning; other grades lose as much as 75 per cent In scouring. They are by-products from wool, such as lanoline. Mohair has no by-products and scours away less than 15 per cent in the clean ing process. Therefore a bale of mo hair of 400 pounds returns a net weight n mining raw iioer of 340 pounds. while the same weight of average wool returns less than 200 pounds net weight. The industry in Oregon is capable of much more extensive development than is indicated at present. Great areas now lying untouched and unproductive nd on which taxes are being paid. might become at least taxpayers under intelligent stocking with Angora goats. One Clackamas County goat farme states that he carried his entire herd over the Winter of 1916-17 on rough age, feeding only . a little straw in the snow period. Separate Censna Arranged. The census of 1910 enumerated goats and sheep together. . For this reason it has been impossible to determine the number of goats in this country. Like wise it rendered uncertain any state ment as to the exact extent of the sheep industry. Through activity of men in both these kindred industries the director of the census has provided for a sep arate count of goats, apart from sheep, and currently has arranged for record ing the mohair production as segre gated from wool. It will be possible after next year to determine the rela tive proportions of the two industries. Approximately. 225,000,000. pounds of wool are produced in this country and perhaps 8,000,000 pounds of mohair. It must be remembered, however, that the sheep industry dates from the days ot the pilgrims landing at Plymouth Rock. while the commercial importance of mohair in this country dates only from the early '90s. Interesting stories are told of the first importations; how the goats were smuggled out of the Turkish domain by energetic Americans who braved the death penalty to get the Sultan's goats. First importations to this country were made about 1850, but the industry had no commercial Importance until 1890. Upon these importations, with a mod erate import from South Africa, the American line of breeding stock has been built. The goat Is a pioneer, going ahead of other livestock and giving the grass a chance to grow. Stump land becomes productive without removal of the stumps. Landowners are recognizing the fact that goats are pasture makers. Goats are doing a work which Secre tary W. D. B. Dodson, of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, estimates will cost $16 an acre removing brush from cut-over areas, while growing a valua ble' fleece and making annual increase of flock estimated conservatively at 65 to 75 per cent, to say nothing of their hides. Goata Clear Land Cheaply. It has been proved by actual expe rience that 200 bead of goats under fence will destroy all brush on 45 acres of land so completely that it can be seeded to grass after the first year. While thus employed they have been distributing one of the most valuable fertilizers known to agriculture and have been producing a marketable fleece and each doe has added one kid to the flock. Logged-off lands are all suitable fof growing goats and mohair. Many a homesteader has "shot stumps" until his money was all gone and he had to give up. while goats would have done the work of clearing the land around the stumps, which could have been used for pasture and the stumps taken out gradually at a later time when the re sources of the homesteader were great er. Sheep and cattle may follow the goats in the second year, with good management. IN PORTLAND'S CHURCHES Contlnned from Page 2.) More than two hundred have been add ed to the membership under the lead ership of the present pastor. Rev. R. H. Sawyer, who has been In the oity but two years. , . "Our Glorious Heritage" will be the theme of the sermon this morning of the Rev. Edward Constant at the High land Congregational Church. In the evening at 7:30 the speaker will be Fred Lockley. who has been engaged in M. . A. work in France and who will talk on his experiences In the war zone. At this service Mrs. Esther Luce-Fisher, violinist, who has just taken up her residence in Portland, will play, with Mrs. H. D. G. Baxter as ac companist. At Wilbur Methodist Church, which meets at Multnomah Hotel, a patriotic service will be held this morning at 0:30. Stuart McQuire will repeat, by request. "La Marseillaise." and Miss Harriet Leach will sing "The Star Spangled Banner." . The pastor. Rev Francis Burgette Short, will speak on America for Americans and Americans for World Democracy." . Rev. Wilhelm Peterson, pastor of the Bethlehem Lutheran Church, will preach in Norwegian this morning at 11 o'clock on "The final. lest," .This evening the service will be in English and his subject will be "Life and Resurrection." A meeting of the con gregation will be held Monday eve ning and 25 new members will be ad mitted. Thanksgiving services will be held at 11 o'clock Thursday morning. At this service a special Victory hymn dedicated to the National League for Women's Service will be sung. The Second Spiritualist Church will hold services Sunday at 3 o'clock and at 8 o'clock In the Alisky Hall, on Third and Morrison streets. The lec ture and the demonstrations will "be given by the pastor. Max Hoffman. Rev. Alexander Beers, pastor of the Tee Methodist Church on East Ninth and Mill streets, will preach Sunday morning on "Philosophy Crumbles, the Bible Stands." He will deal with the underlying principles of false philoso phy, showing the utter collapse during the war. and will show how the Bible has gained a stronger hold on the peo ple. At 8 o'clock Rev. Mr. Beers will preaoh on "The New Name." Mrs. Clara Herald will conduct the young people's meeting at 7 o'clock. The community Thanksgiving service for the Montavilla district will be held on Thursday morning at 10 o'clock at the Hope Presbyterian Church. Rev. Hiram Gould, the newly appointed min ister of the Montavilla Methodist Church will deliver the Thanksgiving address. All churches of the district will unite in this service. The Sellwood Spiritualist Church of the Soul, Inc.. will hold services Sun day in the Strahlman Hall. Spokane and Thirteenth streets, at 3 P. M. Lec ture and messages by Dr. R. Angus, assisted by others. At 8 P. M. Rev. Mrs. B. Z. Smith will lecture on the subject of "Spiritualism," following with a seance. The subject of the sermon by Rev. Hiram Gould at' Montavilla Methodist Church this morning will be "What God Is Like." This evening at 7:30 his theme will be "The Kingdom of Heav en. Sunday school will be held at :& A. M. and Epworth League will meet at 6:30 P. M. The Realization League will hold morning and evening services at 11 and 8 o'clock. Rev. H. Edward Mills, leader of the league, will preach. The morning subject is "Generosity." The evening subject, "The Temptations of Jesus and the Lessons They Teach." Services are held in the Realization rooms over the Woman's Exchange, 186 Fifth street. On Thursday at the same place there will be held a union Thanksgiving service. Several of the advanced thought centers will unite. The hour is 11 o'clock. The Spiritualist Church of the Soul, Inc., will hold services Sunday at 208 Third street as follows: 11 A. M., .Dr. R. McL. Angus will lecture on the sub ject. "Is Mediumship Reliable?" fol lowed with answers to questions: 3 P. M., symposium, addresses by Mrs. S. B. Seip, Judge Piggott and L. D. Norris, followed with messages by Mrs. M. Barber, Mrs. Elkenton, Mrs. F. Lyon and M. Partlow. At 5 P. M. circles will be- held in the church, conducted by the local mediums. At 8 P. M. the pastor will lecture on the subject, "The New Age," followed with a seance. Rev. Joseph D. Boyd, pastor of the Woodlawn Christian Church, will pfreach this mdrning on "The Living God." This evening at 7:30 his subject will be "The Living Word." Rev. Mr Boyd will give a series of sermons on "Living Things," of which these are the first two. By cJosephHaccueen. A special memorial service will be held at Mount Tabor Presbj'terian Church this morning honoring William Deucher, Herbert Downham, Lucius McKelvy and Ralph Beebe, who died for their country. Rev. 'Ward Mae Henry, pastor of the church, will preach on "The Challenge of the Hop Immortal." At 7:30 this evening he will give a Thanksgiving sermon With Grateful Hearts." At the Hope Presbyterian Church East Everett and Seventy-eighth streets, the pastor, Floyd E. Dorris, will speak at 7:30 on "The New Dawn as a Reason for Thanksgiving. In th morning at 11 o'clock communion will be observed, with the reception of members. lit Pilgrim Congregational Church special Thanksgiving programme will be carried out in the Sunday school. At the services of worship Rev. Robert Murray Pratt, pastor, will take for his topics A Living Dog and a Dead Lion," at 11, and "Faces in the Fire,' at 7:30. Rev. J. C. Rollins, pastor of the Cen tenary Methodist Church, will preach this morning at 11 o'clock on "Chris tion Unity, Is It Possible or Desirable?' This evening his subject will be "One Man s Great Adventure. Revival meetings are continuing for shipyard workers at Hope Hall, on Al der between Third and Fourth streets. Rev. F. C. Carlson preaches nightly, assisted by Rev. Mr. Northrup, singer. On Thanksgiving day Rev. A. L. Hutch son. Rev. Robert G. Milligan and Rev. Mr. Geil will address the meetings at 10 A. M., 2 P. M. and at 7:30 P. M. , Rev. William G. Eliot pastor of the Church of Our Father (Unitarian), will preach this morning at 11 o'clock on xnougnts on Theology and Religion Suggested by the Influenza Epidemic.1 The evening forum is omitted until December 1. Rev. J. J. Staub, pastor of Sunnyside Congregational Church, will preach this morning at 11 o'clock on "The Need of a 'World-Wide Vision for the Church" and this evening at 7:45 on Honors and Duties of Ambassadors of Peace." Sunday school is at 9:45 and Junior Endeavor at 6:15. The Christian Science churches and society of Portland hold services at heir respective places of worship at 1 o'clock on Sunday morning, and ail except Fifth Church and the society repeat the service Sunday evening at 8 o'clock. The same service is held in all the churches and the society, the ubject for the lesson-sermon this week being "Soul and Body." At the Wednes day evening meeting, which is held at 8 clock, testimonials of Christian Sci ence healing are given. Rev. F. C. Laslette will have charge at the services of the Glencoe Baptist Church, East . Forty-fifth and Main streets, today, This morning his. topic I book (Tlios. J. Crowell Co., N. l.X, NEW BOOKS RECErVED. The Modernists, by Robert W. KnrvmnA $1.25. 19 puemo. sterling, impassioned, moving, the beat two being "The Cave Man" and "Joan of Arc": and Keports on British Prison Camps In India and Burma. 10 cents, snowing that Britain has humanely rcatea 'rurKian ana otner prisoners trusted her care (Doran Co., N. Y.. How to Prevent Sickness, by Q. L. Howe. M. P., medical director, ttie Eastman Kodak Company, $1.23, an instructive book showing me value ox prevention to avota accidents, and with wisn suggestions showing th reader how to care for himself (Harper's, A Runaway Woman, by Louis Dodge. $1.50, a strong, suggestive novel of realism and femininity and Present-Day Warfare, uy jacquea xiouvier. fi.,ii, a scientixic. ex pert. Instructive book, showing how a mod ern Army trains and fights, a book written by one of the French military mission to the United States (Scribner's, N. Y.). Home Life Around the World, by George A. Morick, $1.25, a travel book for boys and girls: The French Twins, by Lucy Fitch Perkins, $1.25, a splendid patriotic French story of two children in Rheims and its cathedral in war time: The Book of Elves and Fairies, by Frances Jenkins Olcott, $2, illustrated In colors, a dainty Christmas present for a child; and The First Book of Stories for the Story Teller, by Fanny E. Coe, $1.50, . illustrated in colors, fairy-tales from many lands, a suitable gift book (Houghton-Mifflin Co., Boston). Helen of Troy and Rose, by Phyllis Bot tome, $1.35, two illustrations, two delight ful stories of the novelette size (Century Co., N. Y.). Liberty Recipes, by Amelia Doddridge, $1.25, a new book of more than 100 tried war-time recipes, to help cut down the high cost of living, the author being the city home demonstration agent, Wilmington. Del. (Stewart & Kldd Co., Cincinnati, O.). Famous Pictures of Real Animals, by Lorinda Munson Bryant. 98 illustrations. $1.50, a rare, educative book telling stories or animals round pictured on prehistoric tombs, and also animals pictured from paintings of our day (John Lane Co., X. Y.. Tales From Shakespeare, by Charles and Mary Lamb, $2, 16 illustrations in color, a new and improved edition of an old favorite; Dutch Fairy Tales, by William Elliot Grifflts, $1.23. eight illustrations in color, Dutch fairy tales for boys and girls, a suitable gift book for Christmas; and Lit tle Miss Grasshopper, by Johanna Spyri, SO cents, four pictures in color, a pretty story of & little Swiss girl in the Alps, a fine gift Tbe Story of the Sun. by Frank M. O'Brien. Illustrated. $3. George H. Doran Co., New York City. This is the wonderful etory 6f the New York Sun newspaper now 85 years old. .Newspaper people know the Sun practically there's only one newspaper of that name. But, alas! changes come so thick and fast in this life that the newcomers in it many of them have not heard of the glories of the Sun. It is undoubtedly to interest and in form the ''wider audience that. Mr. O'Brien's book nowyses the light. Ap parently, he is, or was, a Sun worker, but the fact is successfully concealed in his book, which is modest, volumin ous, well written and authoritative. It brings out the human touch and the living personality of the Sun from the date of the late Charles Anderson Dana, its great editof. until now. An interesting introduction is given by Edwin P. Mitchell, editor of the Sun. In the days of Benjamin H. Day, founder of the Sun, in one issue in tbe year 1S33, we meet with the frank paragraph: ' With the exception of the interesting news from Portugal, there appears to be very little worthy of note. Nullification has blown over. Black Hawk has gone home. The new race for President is not yet com menced and everybody seems settled down into a calm. Dull times, these, for us newspaper makers. We wish the President or Major Downing or some other distin guished individual would happen along again and afford us material for a daily article. Or even if the sea-serpent would be so kind as to pay us a visit, we should be extremely obliged to him, and would honor his snake ship with a most tremendous puff. In Editor Day's time the other news papers of New York City were six-cent ones, and it was considered extremely daring of Mr. Day to issue the Sun as a penny paper. Advertisements could not at first be obtained for the Sun, so Mr. Day clipped what advertisements he fancied from other papers and printed them, without charge. In the Sun. Space is not available at this time to make copious extracts from the entire newspaper history of the Sim, and espe cially of the stirring days of the mas terful personality of Dana. The most striking portrait of all Sun workers is that of Arthur Brisbane, reporter and managing editor of the Evening Sun when he was 23 years old. Next in in terest are the word portraits of Amos Cummings and Julian Ralph. ' Dana died at Desoris, October 17, 1897, in the30th year of his reign over the Sun newspaper. A few years be fore, when absorbing an ordinary paragraph which Mr. Dana had written about some noted man, John Swinton asked his chief how much space he (Swinton) would get when his turn came. "For you, John, two sticks," said Mr. Dana. Turning to Mr. Mitchell, then his chief editorial writer, he added: "For me, two lines." Strangely enough, when Mr. Dana did die, the Sun the next morning printed only ten words, and these were carried at the head of the first editorial col umn, without a heading: Charles Anderson Dana, editor of the Sun, died yesterday afternoon. Mr. Dana had meant that he "had made the Sun so great that the with drawal from it of one man's hand was negligible." Throughout the days of the Sun that succeeded the ownerships of Paul Dana, Laffan, Reick and Munsey Mr. O'Brien's story is of more than ordi nary interest, and is always live and graphic. It is so far the newspaper storybook of 1918. v r""-f y I v k,.A Wnnsw . .wi;. ' -'-r- ; talked, and also told of their strange adventures. These are all entertain ingly recorded here. A new and orig inal story-book for a child. Simplified Navigation, by Clmrles Lnne rnor. Illustrated. $l..".o. The t:enlury Co., New York City. Our author. Is professor of celestial mechanics in Columbia University. Ilia book tolls how one can find one's po sition at sea or In the air. and all his writing is treated from the viewpoint of the practical navigator, one speciul chapter being devoted to aerial naviga tion. The method used is that of its originator. Admiral St. Hilaire, now used for vessels in the United States Navy. George W. Cronyn, of Hood River, Or, Editor of "The Path on the Rainbow." Food Administration, with the co operation of the Department of Agri culture and the Bureau of Education. The book is a sensible, authoritative one, and is primarily a text-book for college classes. It will save time, food, and money, says one competent pro fessional cook and housewife. The Vital Issue of the War, by Rev. Rich ard Wilson Boynton. $1. Beacon Press, Boston, Mass. Writing as the minister of the First Unitarian Church, Buffalo, N. Y., our author presents six sermons relating to questions concerning the war (let us hope) that has just been concluded. These sermons are not "dry" as some sermons are, but live, thoughtful, criti caleven going as far as sensible fault-finding. For instance. Mr. Boyn ton, in his sermon on "Making the World Safe for Democracy," writes: "Our country, the United States, is not and has never been a democracy, but a federal republic We do not always elect our best men to public office. Autocracy in Germany is wrong and brutal, but in the government of cities in Germany there is much we can learn." In other words, we can learn much from the best that our enemy has. The Winds of Clmnre. by Rex Beach. $1.50. Harper 4i Brothers, New York City. Written in Mr. Ileach's moijt alluring romantic style, '.'The Winds of Chance" visions the hardy souls who, up North, swept through Chilkoot Pass at the be ginning of the gold rush. We again meet 'Poleon Doret, French Canadian, who is our hero. -Rouletta, pretty girl and gambler's daughter, is the heroine. The opening scene is the depiction of a shell gambling game and the love story that follows is sufficiently lively. Kelneth, by Jane D. Abbott. $1 .23. Illustrated. J. B. Llppincott Co, Philadelphia. A 12-year-old girl, Keineth Raudoph, is the principal figure in this healthful, breezy novel for growing girls, a novel in which life around the shores of Lake Erie, also boating, swimming, etc., are mirrored. War activities and a letter from President Wilson add interest. If We Return, by C. B. Manwaring. $1.23. John Lane Co., New York City. Written in modest, cultured style, these war-letters of a young British army officer, still in active service, have a literary quality stamping them as something rare and worth preserving.. :s. Ti- New The Path on the Rainbow; The Book of In ..dlan Poems, edited by George W. Cronyn. Boni Liveright, New York City. Mr. Cronyn, the editor of this re markable collection of selected Ameri can Indian poems, is a Hood River man who is by profession a high school teacher. It was while Mr. Cronyn was work ing on a thesis for his master's degree at Columbia University, New York, that he became interested anew in the poems of our American Indians, and he resumed the study with added serious ness and zeal. This admirable volume, which is a valuable addition to native literature, is the result. Cultured read ers are not only in debt to the inspira tion of Mr. Cronyn, but to the influence of Columbia University's teachings. The ornithological work is excellent. Mary Austin whites the introduction and T. B. Piatt supplies the frontispiece and designs. The character of the na tive songs and chants selected shows fine, cultured judgment and good taste. The volume Is in a class all by itself as being the first authoritative volume of aboriginal American verse, as other wise one would have to consult the wordy and learned wastes of records of the bureau of ethnology, Smith sonian Institution, to read the kind of Indian verse of which "The Path of the Rainbow" isthe subject. The collections of poems are divided into these heads: Songs from the East ern Woodlands, Southeast, Great Plains, Southwest, California, North west Coast, Far North and Interpreta tions. Poems by such authors as Nata lie Curti3 Burlin. Mary Austin, Harriet Maxwell Converse, H. H. Schoolcraft, W. J. Hoffman, Frances Densmore, John R. Swanton, Professor Franz Boas, Constance Lindsay Skinner, Frank Gor don, Pauline Johnson and others stand out with special beauty of literary rhythm. The Valley of Democracy, by Meredith Nich olson. $2. Illustrated. Charles Scribner's Sons, New -York City. Mr. Nicholson was born, brought up and Educated in the Middle West, and has become known as the head and particular shining star of the Indiana literary center. In this remarkably interesting book of descriptions of people and activities of the Middle West, Meredith Nicholson writes in his most enthusiastic vein. He is, this "time, a polished essayist, and his elegant English is a treat. Here is Mr. Nicholson's definition of "Folks." "A superior people, derived largely ' from the Anglo-Saxon and Celtic races, and domiciled in those Northern states of the American Navy whose waters fall Into the Mississippi. The 16 full-page illustrations are done in exauisite taste, the most strtl: ing one being "Michigan Avenue. Chi cago, from? the Steps ot tne Art man tute." Arlo. by Bertha and Ernest Cobb. $1.! lustrated. G. P. Putnam's Sons, rork city. Romantic and prettily sentimental, this novel is practically meant for boys of 10 years old. The Inferno, by Hewle Barbusse. $1.50. Boni .& Liveright, New York City. Translated from the 100th French edition, with an introduction by Edward J. O'Brien, we have a novel whose teaching as to love and passion is so daring that the scenes ueptctea are rarely expressed in English rather, the idle French before the war. The plot is laid in a French boarding-house, in which the sentimental hero finds by accident an aperture in his bedroom through which he can view people in the room adjoining. Sensational events are described, after the realism of Zola. There Is no need to say more. What Is Love? by Isaac Newton Stevens. $1.35. Duffield & Co., New Y'ork City. An extraordinary love story, filled with beautiful sentiment. The hero, like a modern Sir Galahad, sets out to find the pure love of a good woman, and to offer her his clean life and clean all. He finds his beloved in Texas, in Miss Ina Vive Constant, a 23-vear-old American girl, who has been educated in the poetic religion of the Parsees of India. .The setting is charmingly romantic. when true love is at last defined. NEW YORK CAFES SCORED Police Accuse Number of Hotels of Being Disorderly. PHILADELPHIA. Hearing of charges of disorderly conduct in a dozen or more hotels, cafes and saloons have be gun in the License Court. Government operatives were present to testify with a view to obtaining re vocation of the licenses of the places, several of which have been raided in the last few months. The places against which remon strances have been filed by the Gov ernment are: Dad's Hotel. 153 North Seventh street; Heck's Cafe. 1007 Ox ford street; Eagle Hotel, Tenth street below Chestnut; the White Elephant, Eugene Mack, 44 North Eleventh street, and the saloons of James Cullen, Fifth and Diamond streets; Bernard Gordon, Thirteenth and Kater streets; John Colder, 657 North Broad street; Dom inick . Framamskum. Bill North Twelfth street, and Thomas Rodgers, 333 North Fifteenth street. Dads Hotel, the White Elephant. Hermann's Cafe, Eagle Hotel and Beck's Cafe have been raided. Operatives and persons taken In the raid testified against Eugene Mack. Police offered testimony against Gor don. The Government gave none. Gor don having eliminated certain objec tionable features of his place. The hearing wns before Judges Shoemaker and Wessel. St. Louis has abolished German names of five streets. Tells How to Stop a 8 Bad Cough Surprlrunff remit from tlil famous old home-made syrup. Easily prepared aim coat little. 6 prepared aim coat uiue. ( If you have a severe cough or chest cold accompanied with, soreness, (liroat tickle, hoarseness, or diflicult breathing, or if your child wakes up during the night with, croup and you want quick help, try this reliable old home-made cough remedy. Any druggist can sup ply you with 2', -j ounces of Pinex. Pour thi3 into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar Verve, being the journal of RoWt DeCamp , syrup. Or you can use clanliea Leiand. $1. The Poetry-Drama Co., Bos-, molasses, honey, or corn syrup, in ton. j stead of sugar syrup, if desired. This A little, daring book of 38 pages, i recipe makes a pint of really remarkable written to startle people, written in the cough remedy. It tastes good, and in reckless, satirical style of a certain late , Bpite of its low cost, it can be depended. English essayist, whose name is not 1 upon to give quick and lasting relief. You can feel this take hold of a cough in a way that means business. It loos ens and raises the phlegm, stops throat; tickle and soothes and heals the irritated membranes that lino the throat and bron chial tubes with such promptness, ease Fightinr for Fairview, by William Heyllgor. $1.35. Illustrated. 1J. Appieton & Co., New York City. In an address he once delivered be fore the American Booksellers' Asso ciation, Mr. Heyliger said: "Germany cannot play fair, because German boys never had a national sport, with its orresponding code of honor, or uvenile literature to drive home the meaning of that code." Now, American boys are different. They have national games in baseball, football, etc., with their sturdy codes of honor and, cleanness. It is this praiseworthy spirit that Mr. Heyliger has visioned in this sterling novel for crowing boys not sissies but boys. Fairview School tne scnooi or iair nlav is pictured sincerely The hero s Buddy Jones, wno nas oeen eiectea captain of the baseball nine, but soon fter the Inter-scnool games were begun. Buddy found he wasn't a nat ural leader, and as a captain ne was misfit. He hated to resign. But the spirit of Fairview demanded it. So he did resign, and saw to it tnat tne hovs elected In his place Terry iuc earthy. Buddy's bitter rivah What happened aiterwara manes uj the story. Tales From a Dngout, by Arthur Guy Em- ney. $1.50. Tne century wo., iew iom City. Mr. Emnev is remembered as the au thor of that brilliant war-novel canea Over the Top, wnicD is a moaesi re- Ital of Mr. Empey s experiences in war-stricken France and Belgium, as a soldier in a Western Canadian regi ment. Here we have 11 short stories of that same "war zone stories tola to eacn other by soldiers who were members of the same machine-gun company. These tales were personal experiences of the soldiers, as they rested in their dugout, with the hostile Germans not so far away. These stories have true Empey "pep." ' Food and the' War. SO cents. Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston. Prepared under the direction of the collegiate section of the United States mentioned now. Men, women, and man ners are discussed, and living, the lat ter being described as a Socialist might write. Some of the printed messages in this book suggest a bizarre effect, and in the printing of them well, the paper could be utilized to other more anci ccrtainty that it is really aston- useiul purposes, mo yrice oi uic uuun jsning. is too dear. Steel Shipbuilders' Cook. $1.50. Handbook, by C. W. Longmans, Green & Co., New Tork City. Our author is associate professor of navakerchitecture. University of South ern California, Los Angeles, Cal. In alphabetical, condensed form, this scientific book is an informing ency clopedia of the names of parts, tools, operations, trades, abbreviations, etc., used in the building of . steel ships. Valuable to new employes In a yard where steel ships are the principal Industry. . Father Thrift and His Animal Friends, by Joseph C. Sindelar. illustrated. 50 cents. Beckley-Cardy Co., Chicago. With 49 pictures in black and color and decorated sheets by Helen G. Hldge, this little book for small chil dren able to read tells the story of thrift and economy in such a skillful manner that child readers will drink in useful lessons unconsciously that will do them good. Nerve and the War, by Annie Payson Call, $1.25. Little. Brown & Co., notion. Miss Call's wise book of 220 pages deals with the economy of nerve force, and applies with equal force to soldiers and citizens, helping them all to reacn greater mental efficiency. Of the best chapters Is psychological help In shell- shock, and its cure; including nerve- diseases, after the war. Pinex is a special and highly concen trated compound of genuine Norway pino extract, and is probably the best known means of overcoming severe coughs, throat and chest colds. There are many worthless imitations of this mixture. To avoid disappointment ask for "2'4 ounces of Pinex" with full directions and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Tbe Child's First Book, $1.25. Illustrated. Houghton-Mifflin Co., Boston. An attractively designed, pictured story-book that will take the young reader by easy stages from the simplest word-combinations to real stories and poems. Quite a pleasant gift for a fortunate child. The Trail Book, by Mary Austin. $2. Il lustrated. Houghton-Mirrnn Co., Boston. Little Oliver and his sister, Dorcas Jane, lived in a museum where their father was night engineer. At night. the animals on exhibition that were stuffed during tbe day, came out and S Restores Gray Hair J i To Its Original Color Gray, streaked, lifeless hair takes on real beauty when this scientific re storer Is used. The original color is restored, the gray streaks disappear like magic, your hair is clean, fluffy and natural. And the best part of It Is the caso with which Mary T. Gold man's Hair Color Restorer is used. Simply apply It with a comb. It Is not a creasy dye, but a scientific restorer. Does not interfere with the washing of the hair; does not stain or discolor the scalp. A few applications are all that is necessary to restore the bait to its original color and beauty. Be sure you get the genuine Mary T. Goldman's Hair Color Restorer. Make sure of the name 6a the botua. Your druggist has it. Trial Bottle Free Send for trial bottlo todny and n; rhotheryocrhair in naturally black, duxfc brown, med i am brow a or linht hrowtu If table, eend a loot ia our loitor. T. Goldman II I lf 5 Goldman Bid.