THE SUNDAY OKEGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 28. 1919. WOULD YOU LIVE LONG ? MARION HARLAND TELLS HOW On Her Eighty-Ninth Birthday This Famous and Old-Fashioned Expert on Household Economies Tells Us How to Prolong Our Days and Wm Success and Happiness This fine, -white-haired old lady In lavender and lace still finds pleasure and profit in the pursuits and pastimes of our grandfathers and grandmothers. MARION HARLAND, the writer, out of an experience of nearly fourscore years and ten, knows of no substitute for the fundamental Issue of life over and above the things that maintained three-quarters of a century ago.' As against the Utopias of the parlor socialists and the "little heavens" of other moderns this fine little white-haired old lady in laven der and lace, sitting quietly with knit ting needle in hand in her New York home recounting the glories of the daya back there when Longfellow, Whlttier, Lowell and Holmes were in their prime, still finds pleasure and profit in the pursuits and pastimes of our grandfathers and grandmothers. She is of the opinion that work alone will keep the universe alive. She points out that no super scientist has as yet found it possible to nourish and sustain the human body except by recourse to the standard food products of the market places. Sleep is the only means to rejuvenate the tired body; fresh air and sunshine surer tonics than any prescription materia medica has ever written. In an age when men and women are chasing many wild will-'o-the-wisp phantoms to a jazz-band accompani ment evolved out of a mist of "isms" and "istics," the fact still remains to this famous litterateur that men and women must eat, sleep and work to day as they always have done in order to keep body and soul together and to find real happiness in life. Mrs. Edward Pay son Terhune, known and beloved for more than 70 years as Marion Harland, writing in a language that can be understood and interpreted according to the life of the humblest reader, was S9 years old on December 21. She wrote her first poem at 10 years of age and her first short story at 14 years and her first book at 18 years. For three-quarters of a century work has been her fetish, and in and through it she has found a realization of her fondest dreams. And now on her 89 birthday one finds life's great est joy in her work. "If I had a message to give to all the people at this time, she said the other evening in the course of an interview, "it would be to extract the real joy out of your work. It is there there for the finding if men and women would only seek it. Get into your work, lose your heart and soul in it and don't give up until you have accomplished what you have started and reaped the results of good, earnest labor." Marion Harland is yet a worker de spite her age. When she is not writ ing she is knitting. When she Is neither writing nor knitting she is spreading her philosophy of life a rich life of service not alone for what one may obtain for himself, but for what one may do for others. Ten years ago she fell and broke her right arm just above the wrist. It incapacitated for all time the good right hand with which she had guided a pen or pencil through the many score of. manuscripts that she had given to the world. Many a person under such circumstances and at such an age would have considered such an accident the inevitable ending of a life work. But not Marion Harland. Although past 75 years, she took up the typewriter. With her left hand she began picking at the keys until she had mastered the keyboard. It was tedious work for one of her years, but with the persistence that has marked her every endeavor she tri umphed over age and accident. To day she is still writing at 89 picking out the words letter by letter with her left hand! Her lest book Is as much of a success as any of its pre decessors. "The Carringtons of High Hill," reflecting plantation life in the heart of the Old Dominion, a quarter of a century before the great civil war, is a delightful refutation of the ragged old theory that the producer ceases to produce after a certain age. Marion Harland ticked it off the type writer after she was 88 years old, and it Is as pretty a picture of the fine old south as any word artist has ever painted at any age. And, good friends, it is by no means her swan song. This lovely old lady is going right ahead with her writing as long as the good Lord gives her sight and strength for her writing. What a spectacle for those lazy bodies who today seek some way out of work altogether! "No, I am not through yet." she said quietly. "I may write more books; indeed, I think I'll sit down in the twilight and address myself to the American girl," she said rather wist fully. But we will take up the Ameri can girl as Marion Harland sees her a little later. Work seemed a natural beginning for an interview with this remark able little lady. Upon being admitted to her apartments just off Riverside drive in New York city, the inter viewer found her seated by a reading lamp in her "den," busy with her knitting needle. Her desk was still open, and upon it were books and writing materials ready for the trim little typewriter in the opposite cor ner. The interview had been set for 8 o'clock in the evening an hour most folks think is "bedtime" for folks nearly 90 years old. But here Is a lady remarkably virile for one of her years, who sits by the lamplight and chats , . 1 .11 ,A - - ' - a trace of fatigue. In her white lace cap and black silk dress she was a fitting picture for a master. "I have to be busy all the time," she was saying apropos of the knit ting. "During the war we all got so in the habit of JPhlttlng that I don't seem able to get away from It. And. besides. It Is a relief from other work. One cannot write all the time." What was the secret of her happi ness and her success? How had she been able to keep so mentally alert and vigorous despite the years? She a writer of recipes known all over the world for her recipes what rec ipes would she write now for success and happiness and good health? "I have found the greatest happi ness always In being busy," she said, laying aside her knitting. "And I have always managed to keep an In terest In my work. So many people are miserable because they fall to find the real pleasure that Is to be found in work of every kind. Think of the very power of producing something! People are too prone to pass over that thought. Man stands alongside his God and I say it In reverence In the power to produce. If folks would only dwell on that phase of life they would find more happiness Instead of chas ing aimlessly from one thing to an other. "You must put your whole heart In your work if you would succeed. Life becomes monotony to many people be cause they are going along without any heart In the particular thing they are doing. In my own life I found it easier to accomplish a thing when I gave it my undivided attention and got Into the very spirit of it with all the energy and concentration that I could command." "What would he your advice to young writers?" was asked. Mrs. Terhune turned the question over for a mo ment before replying. "My advice, first of all, would be not to take up writing as a life work unless one felt the all-consuming urge to write," was her rejoinder after a moment of meditation. "One should feel It as a calling. Writing Is a gift the gift of expression and unless there is the urge to produce and to keep on producing one should not take it up. "Once In it, you should write natur ally of life1 all around you. Characters in books are characters right out of life. Writing should mirror life. When one paints a picture he goes directly to nature and reproduces It. Yes. In my own experience, the characters of my books have been for the most part those people among whom I mingled; incidents and personalities one sees every day Incorporated In the story to SOME RECIPES FROM MARION UAELAXD'S COOK BOOK OP LIFE. For Happineaa Live simply. Have something to do. Keep your conscience clean. Have faith In yourself and man kind In general. Look forward and not backward. For Health. Study yourself and do the things that are proved good for you. Exercise your body and mind systematically, but not too rigor ously. Get plenty of fresh air and good food. Don't -worry. For Success. Put your whole heart In what ever you do. Live right In your work. Have a particular aim In life and stick to it. Exalt the Inherent power to pro duce and dignify your work as part of the great plan of creation. bring out the thought that the writer has in mind. "To write successfully one must live directly within the manuscript you are producing. You must feel the living presence of the characters and move along step by step with the life that you are picturing. First of all. the call to writing; second, mirror life Itself, and. lastly, get. right Into your manuscript and live there until it is accomplished." What did Mrs. Terhune think of current literature? Did she agree with some critics that it was exotic and sensational? She was loath to critl else, but did. Indeed, believe that much of the literature of the day that has been taken up by the public was trashy and of the undesirable type But she was inclined to think the public bought this kind of fiction not because they particularly desired it but because It was foisted upon them by a market that had persisted In en couraging the salacious or the sensa tional product. What she particularly noted was that the present school of writers in America were producing no Longfel low, Whittier. Bryant, Holmes, Thack eray or Emerson. Mow dia she ac count for this? Was it because we were living In a too materialistic age? Perhaps so, since this seems to be commercial era. It may be due to the fact that the people no longer appre ciate real art In prose and poetry or because their tastes have been per verted by the sentimentally exotic word painters. She was careful not to cross swords with any particular writer, but felt Inclined to note the distressing fact that America had now no great author of the kind that ob tained a half or three-quarter cen tury ago. "Oh, for another Charles Dickens'." was her lament as she pointed out the quaint and vivid reality of life pic tured in such characters at Little Nell and Barnaby Rudge, and In such vol umes as the "Christmas Carol" and the "Old Curiosity Shop." She grew reminiscent of the old masters and told with a trace of emotion of a letter Bhe had received from Henry W. Longfellow at one time In which he noted that one of her first books had reached the sixth edition and pre dicting "that she was on her way to great career." She. has the lettet today and, needless to say, it is one of her treasured possessions. And what was the secret of Mrs. Terhume's long life? Had she, like Ponce de Leon, discovered some foun tain of youth in which she had kept her spirit and body submerged through nearly 90 years? "1 have to keep up to my family record, you know," she smilingly an- fwered. Some of my people lived to etter than 100 years. But it Is all so simple " she grew grave. "Looking on the bright side always helps. Looking forward and not back ward. It is rtght, of course, to look hack at the mistakes and profit by them; but it is better to keep your mind -on the future and on what you can do while life lasts. In the matter of health people should observe the general rules. Exercise and good food. Enough sleep to 'res; the body and mind. It Is a sin to transgress these laws. But above all else keep In good mental and spiritual health." Mrs. Terhune stresses the Idea of "feeling more useful" as the years come and she regards the "twilight of life" as the most beautiful period of life. "Life never held more beauty and worth to me than It does now," she Bays. "It should be that way with every woman, and it would be if she Is possessed of the blessed heritage of health and an understanding of what real beauty old age can hold If It is genuine old age. Many years ago I resolved that old age should be the best part of my life. I decided that instead of reaching the top of a hill and then slipping down there was a tableland that would be mine for a long time. I am still on that table- land. If women would only realize that these later years hold more and more for them they would get mora out of life. There la nothing- more sweet than to live over life In the children of our children." The profession of home-making Is the finest profession that any woman can have, according to Marlon Har land. Home is the foundation of our life and she avers never was there a time when women have a greater trust to fulfill than in this day when so many extreme thoughts are strik ing at the very roots of modern civil ization the home and the family. And thereby hingea Mrs. Terhune's appraisement of the modern woman hinted above. She tries hard to be loyal to her sex, but It is evident that this sweet little old lady disapproves of the modern woman. "She Is making herself too promi nent," said Mrs. Terhune. when asked her opinion of the modern woman. 'She is seeking something that she calls a career, and it is the best way to characterize it. Our girls are they not a wee bit too flippant? They seem to patronize old age and to flout the advice of old age. Oh, bless their hearts. If they would only stop and realize that wifehood and moth erhood are the high calling of women." On the point of suffrage Mrs. Ter hune takes the ground that women are not yet ready to do man's work In the world. For the future, she is ' not prophesying; but it is plain to see that this little lady who was reared In the fine old school of south ern chivalry and chastity cannot ap preciate the aims and ambitions of the modern woman. "I think I will sit down in the twi light and talk to this young girl of today," she said, apropos of a possible new book. Not that Marlon Harland will scold the American girl, for she believes the woman of today has ad vanced mentally and physically but she thinks woman's high destiny Is the home and motherhood and she Is apprehensive lest the trend of mod ern thought takes woman away from her high calling Into strange fields of new endeavor. "I do not know how long I will live." she says, "but I am filled with gratitude for the life that has been mine. I am ready whenever the good Lord calls roe and confident of the fu ture life. This twilight of life is the happiest of all to me, and my one wish Is -that others may find happi ness as I have found it. They can if they will. Live right. Do something for others and find the joy of serv ice. That is my birthday thought." MAYOR OF DALLAS, TEX., IS YOUNGEST CITY EXECUTIVE IN WHOLE UNITED STATES Frank W. Wozencraft Elected to Office by Two Political Parties Almost Immediately From Military Service Overseas. After Return WANT to know a real live wire, a genuine southwesterner whose first, last and middle name is hurry? If so, then meet by all means Frank W. Wozencraft of Dallas, Tex., the youngest mayor in the United States. Speed is the keynote in the life of this youthful executive. The events of his life haven't unfolded like a budding rose as most men's do, they have sky-rocketed out like the star shells did on the French front only a short time ago. Ten months ago he had no more idea that he would be mayor of Dallas today than he had when he sailed overseas to fight in the great world's war that he would return home alive. There is nothing about him that betrays for an instant that he is a politician. While not polished, he is good mannered in an energetic, ob viously in a hurry sort of way. But there is none of the glad-h; :id, open hearted, hail-fellow-well-met, what- can-I-do-for-you-if-you - vote - for - me manner in his makeup. Rather lje suggests an excessively energetic young business man deter mined to make the most of his time and not overly patient with those who stand in his way. Briefly stated Wozencraft gives the impression of an unusual, out-of-the-ordinary poli tician. By those who are optimistic it could well be claimed that he is the type of the American politician of the future; in other words, a man 10 or 20 years ahead of his time, yet making good under the disadvantages and natural misunacrstanaings or such a handicap. A man not content to sit still and watch the normal progress of a thriving American city, but con stantly on the lookout for points re garding new things and methods to Improve current conditions. Mayor la Only 26 Years Old. When everything else is considered it must be remembered that he is only 26 years old. only just arrived at time of life when most young men are just about beginning the serious stage of their business career, with fame and fortune still some years ahead a pleasing but dim and distant pros pect. Because a good many folks consider that, he is much too young for his job does not bother Mayor Wozencraft in the least. Ever since he has been in office he has been much too busy learning how to officially run a city to give a thought to what people are thinkiug about him. This does not, however, get away from the fact that he Is the youngest mayor ever elected in the United ' States, as was proved by a careful investigation along these lines made by one of the Dallas newspapers at the time of bis election. Other high spots of interest regard ing him are that he was elected by two parties, something of a novelty, and that ever since he has been in office he has been working to squash the political spoils system and start ing exceedingly up-to-date municipal reforms. Born in Dallas, the sen of General in his father's law office war was de clared. He was appointed lieutenant, then promoted to the captaincy of what was later the 144th infantry, company B, the locally-famous "Dallas Grays, 42 of whose members were later com missioned. To reach France earlier, he took a position in one of the staff departments. He unluckily broke his ankle the day he arrived In France, but finally, after a siege in the hospl cal, succeeded in transferring back to the Infantry. Ho was sent to the army school of the line, and from there to general staff college at Lan gres, where the armistice caught him. Back to Dallas in January last, he Immediately resumed the practice of law. There was a brief space for breath, then in February the trouble began. Without any previous political am bitions, young Wozencraft found him self nominated for mayor by two fac tions, the democratic party and the citizens' association, a non-partisan organization. The campaign was as strenuous as the rest of Wozencraft's carser. For over a month he made several speeches a day. A survey of Dallas papers of the time will show that in the opinion of the editors his election was seemingly impossible. Yet he won out with a majority of 930 votes over his nearest opponent. Study Made In East. Not long since Major Wozencraft, feeling that studies of the city gov ernment of New York and some of the other big municipalities of the United States might be productive of worth-while ideas he could adopt to the betterment of Dallas he de cided to take a "vacation" and went east to get such pointers. While he was in New York he took time from his many other activ ities to chat In reference to hlmsell and the projects he is now develop ing to help the people of Dallas, for the sole idea of this young man seems to be service to the people who elect ed hira. "It seems to me," he said, "that every city dweller at present Is more interested in the housing problem than most anything else. In Dallas as -elsewhere, there has been a great shortage of homes, but we are now getting tne Dest oi tne proDiem. one of my first acts, after assuming of fice, was to assist In the organiza tloo of what is known as a housing corporation. It is not a zovernmental Wozencraft, national guardsman and body 5ut was formed bv Dublic snirit. prominent lawyer. the youngest i ed and far-sighted business men who mayor in the United States leaped ' subscribed for the mutual stock in through school, was graduated from preparatory school valedictorian of his class, went through the University of Texas and finished with a law de gree at the age of 21. In odd mo ments he had made several trips to Europe, one 01 them as a member of the American commission for the study of agricultural co-operation. Just as be was settling down to work order to make possible the building of homes In these days of high prices for the poor at prices which they could afford. All holders of mutual stock receive 6 per cent on their money, and no other profit is made by the corporation. "To co-operate with this organiza tion I appointed a board known as the housing commission, it is the duty of this board to investigate housing and sanitary conditions in the city, and recommend a model ordinance which will prevent Im proper construction and remedy any present defects In those already enacted. Under the direction of the two commissions houses are now fast being supplied for all who need them. "One of the big steps, I believe, my administration has taken Is the separation of the departments of pre ventive and curative medicine. A captain of the United States public health service has been loaned by the government to the city, we pay ing the larger part of his salary. He is working to make, Dallas as nearly safe from the standpoint of health as any city of Its size can be. We use the full system of public health service reports ard are so organized as to be able to detect and prevent the spread of any new disease the moment it may appear. 'The curative medicine department of the city government is handled by the hospital board and by the superintendent of hospitals and the director of emergency and the house service. Our superintendent of hos pitals is a woman of national repu tation. She was an Inspector of hos pitals for the Red Cross in France. She is reorganizing the city hospital along broad humanitarian lines and Is giving charity patients who came there as good treatment as any paid patients can receive anywhere. The director of emergency In home serv ice has charge of the emergency hos pital and the visitation of the poor sick. In connection with the emer gency hospital there is a dental clinic, and a physician is always on duty and ready to give adequate treatment at any hour of the day or night free of charge. The visiting physician also goes wherever he is needed. Campaign Slogan Unique. "The campaign slogan of my ad ministration was 'No friends to re ward and no enemies to punish.' so when I was elected all boards and other officials were appointed purely on the basis of suitability for the position and without reefrence to pol itics, that Is to what party they claimed to, vote for. The result has been that we are giving the city 100 cents value for every dollar spent avid all factions are joined together for the upbuilding of the municipality. "Since I have been in office I have created an arbitration board for the settlement of labor disputes, retained a city purchasing agent, given the flreeran a double platoon and secured the services of a Wellesley graduate for general welfare work who held an important federal position doing similar work during the war. I ara also extending our park and play ground system and making arrange ments to have a splendidly equipped play place within a half mile of every child In the city. I am making a special eftoi t to assist the board 9t education In maintaining a splendid efficiency in our schools and last spring made funds available to In crease the salaries of the teachers be tween 25 and 33 1-3 per cent. I have organised a city plan commission and have retained a city plan expert. So far we have worked In perfect har mony for the good of Dallas. "My administration is co-operating with the Chamber of Commerce and other city bodies in order that there may be no duplication of effort and 1 And that this co-operation leads to materially Increased efficiency. "I believe that the time has come when the American public will de mand of Its city officials an efficient administration forward looking and non-political and when the service of any official will be rewarded by the good he has done for the whole com munity and. not by the favor he has been able to bestow upon those who supported him during the election." When asked how he liked belns mayor, he said: "Although I did not realise It until after l was eelcted. it Is a fact that my father had been training me for a public- life ever since I can remember. My mother died when I was a baby and my father aud I were always pals. We traveled together In summer and in the winter we read together and ho directed my attention toward things the value of which I was far from realizing at the time. We went to Mexico together, to Canada together, to Europe together, out on the coast together, and everywhere that ha went he was calling my attention to government, civic and economic mat ters. He got me interested in debat ing when I was very young and was always ready to help me with his counsel and advice. I owe my liking and all the qualifications I may have for public life entirely to the tore sight and companionship of my father. "Out of service ln January, 1919, I went back to practicing law with ab solutely no thousht of politics and had no political ideas. The first time I knew I was being considered was In February last, when a newspaper rang up and I was told that I was nominated for mayor by the demo cratic party and that I was going to run. In the next half hour two other newspapers called roe, but I declined to consent at the time. Later on In the week both the democratic party and the Citizens' association asked me to be their candidate for mayor and the following Monday I decided to run." MACHINE FOR WEAVING BASKETS IS INVENTED Method Employed by Adam Used Until Few Months Ago When Quicker Way Was Offered by Ex-Mayor of Michigan Town. THE first punishment inflicted upon man was work, and the first work was wicker weaving. From the days when Eve wove her first skirt out of leaves and twigs, man has labored over wicker weaving with his hands. Time and time again, down through the centuries, attempts have been made by Inventors o construct a machine that would weave wicker, but they have always failed. The feat has been finally accom plished by an American inventor. Mar shall Lloyd, ex-mayor of Menominee, Mich. It now seems that the difficulty In the way and the reason for so .many failures was that all former Inventors attempted to use the Biblical method of attaching the weft to the frame of the desired article and then inter lacing the warp. Inventor Lloyd started at the other end and found a method whereby he weaves the wicker Independent of the frame and attaches It to It when com pleted. His machine, the first of Its kind in the world, does the work better and thirty tiroes faster than skilled hands can do it. For some time his weavers operated under the old method, but labor short age drove the Inventor in search of a loom. More months of study followed, with the result that the loom came into existence. It is the only weav ing device ever made, textile or wicker, which weaves fabrics of Ir regular contour. It weaves the body of a baby carriage 30 times faster and more perfect than the hand weavers. The wicker, wrapped in spools at the side of the loom, is threaded into it over a tension wheel. Before start ing the loom in its rotary movement the stakes, or weft, are placed in permanent positions. As the machine revolves the warp is drawn from the spools on two sides of the machine over the tension wheel into stationary shuttles. Just before the revolving weft reach the shuttle star-shaped wheels pass them alternately to either side of the shuttles and as they do so the warp is interlaced between them. After the warp leaves the shuttles a mechanical finger Is released, grasp ing the warp and pulling it down ward to its proper position. Each finger is attached to an arm with a weight at the bottom, which in turn travels on a stationary cam. When the arm rises the finger recedes, per mitting It to pass behind the shut tles, after which it comes forward where the warp leaves the shuttle, grasps it and presses It into position. Each arm has the same weight, and hence the wicker is woven with abso lute evenness, ....... -