TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND, JULY 4, 1920 3. CUDGELS ARE TAKEN UP IN DEFENSE OF SKUNKS AS ANIMALS OF SENSE AND VALOR Adventures and Catastrophes Detailed With Innocent-Appearing Animals Which Are Held to Be Help In ' .1' stead of Hindrance and Honest With Farmer's Poultry. 4 K fetes-. J w -7? ?yjD&. V 4 . skunks taken during every month In th year was marie. Nearly half of the skunks had eaten largely of grasshoppers and crickets. Fifteen animals had eaten injurious rodents, such as mice, rats, ground squirrels and pocket gophers. But it was found that the most important Item of food was beetles and their larvae, most of them being injurious species. One stomach contained the feathers of a bird, and another from an animal taken in a henhouse parts of a domestic fowl. The ease with which the skunk is kept in captivity makes fkunk farm ing a rather pleasant and profitable occupation. And ' there are . many skunk farms in the United States and Canada that may be considered suc cessful enterprises. A very simple operation requiring only a few minutes' time, performed before the little one is old. enough to scent, makes it entirely harmlees, when it grows up' an Interesting and engaging pet. It is to be hoped that men will learn more of the habits of the skuns and finally realize and appreciate its great value to the agriculturist, in order that it may be better protected. Unless the skunk is protected, the skunk farm alone will be obliged to furnish all furs of the United States' second greatest fur-producing animal, the skunk. Loveless, Scientific Mating Held to Be Big Job. Recently Advocated Idea la Ilr aonneed by Popular Novelists and Others. BT GEORGE F. SYKE. ;another Processor of ZooIokv, Oregon Agricultural - College. FACE to face I was going to say face to face witn a skunk, tut that would har-Uy explain the situation. It was really a little worse than that. A youth of 12 or 15 years was on hip hands an4 knees beneath a thicket tf blackberry bushes, searcht'.iK for a b!?d's nest. Suddenly he found that l.e was facing and ony a few feet auiay from a well-pla.;el and accu rately aimed battery and that this battery was about to discharge its full load of liquid fire and mustard gas. It was certainly a delicate situ ation. Had it arisen J 5 years later that same individual would undoubt edly have intuitively given the ul:irm, Eael As it was. he withdrew quiet. y and aa . swiftly as the blackberry tangle would permit, but even before na had KQt well out he had determined with the promptness and spirit of boys of his age to capture that skunk alive. -it- was a pretty little black and white fellow, about half grown. And it. too, had decided to retreat to a more distant region, possibly to a thicket concealing a burrow or a hollow log. But the young chap headed it off into a clear stretch of land, and there they stood, actually fce to face. Wetting a finger and holding it up to the breezes, he determined the best direction for an approach, which he Immediately made. - That little bunch of fur harboring her 100 per cent efficient load began to clamp her little front paws in a threatening manner and sniff her warning. By a series of advances and re treats, accompanied by much tipping up -behind and twisting to the side, she made, a slow withdrawal toward a thicket. Something must be done, . and - quickly, too. A wild grab for that upturned plume, and the bos held his prize dangling in the air. She had misfired, the breeze was tslrong and in the right direction, and a hasty getaway completed a perfect ly successful capture of a wild, live skunk. Can anyone conceive of anything of which a youngster could be more proud? - - Slater's Talcum I'sed. Of course that skunk must be taken horie, .and home it went a distance of- nearly a mile through the woods. The boy was fortunate in having some knowledge of taxidermy, and he decided to show his capture to the boys and then "put her up." He got to- the icehouse without any mishap. Holding the skunk by the tail while all his pals looked at it and at him with admiring eyes, and with plenty of willing help, he proceeded to "ret up" his first skunk. With much twisting of the neck and tipping of the "head a little to one side and then to the other, elevating the back a lit tle and turning the tail to give it a lifelike appearance, the job was done. Heads were cut from a pair of shawl ptjis and Inserted for eyes, .That skunk was. in the opinion of every youngster present, about the most remarkable demonstration of a young taxidermist's ability that ever existed. One little tow-headed chap "kind of thought" she might "stink" a;"tittle, but the rest all decided after much sniffing that "she didn't have any more smell than a yeller dog." But to play the safe game, the sis ter's talcum powder was smuggled out from the house and used freely, v At a favorable time the skunk was slipped tnto the house and placed in the living-room, with the idea of surprising mother. But sometimes, a we all know, the unexpected hap pens. Feminine voices were heard, the doorbell rang and in walked a half dozen of the women of the town dangling sewing bags front their arms. A consultation was Immediately held and the boys decided to put off their fishing trip. He low and watch the fun. After a time one woman who had seen a box delivered at the house that morning began to look things over a little. Suddenly, as if she had been a bombshell, she ex ploded, pointing to the top of the piano, where, peeking from behind a vase and with striking artistic pose, stood that terrible beast, the skunk,! And there the women stood, holding on '.to a variegated assortment of noses, declaring by their actions, if not by words, that It had a terrible smell. Women 'Imagine Odor. i The youth had been watching his mother, and finally aw the expected smile replacing the expression of as temlshment. He took this as his cue a4d entered. Taking his artistic at tmpi down with the air of a re nowned painter he dusted a little jwwder from its fur and explained with a confidence that made his ar gument convincing that it was not the- -naturalndor of the skunk that the artie smelled, but rather the odor fm his sister's talcum powder which he had used on its fur. One aftet the women saw he joke until there remained but one indi vidual who saw nothing funny. Since then she, too, has become quite fond of that "sachet kitten." Within the last year I have seen young women on several occasions admire with feminine enthusiasm a pen of black skunks and talk a good deal about their beauty. They would say some awfully nice things, then suddenly exclaim, holding their noses: "But. olv that smell!" Now, of course, I dlQn't have the heart to disillusion the women, but as a matter of fact those Innocent little black balls of fur had way back in their infancy had their ecent glands removed before they had hardly discovered their latent possi bilities. On one occasion I happened to hear a big happy-go-lucky chap say .to another who also took things rather easy: "Say. I wonder what she really smells?" The other chap replied: "Well. I don't know but I reason it might be she got a. whiff of this stuff they call perfume. Indians Have Table. It may be interesting to know that the skunk received his peculiar ability right here in the northwest. At least so says an old Indian legend of the upper Columbia valley,, recorded by Thomas W. Symons as follows: "In the long ago a skunk, a coyote and a rattlesnake each had a farm on top of the white stone. Those were the days before the skunk was as odorous as he is now, but was esteemed as a good fellow and pleas ant companion by other animals. As in some other small communities, jealousies, dissensions and intrigues arose in this one. The result was that the coyote and the- rattlesnake took a mean advantage of the skunk one night when he was asleep and threw him off the rock away down into the river. He was not drowned, but floated on and on, far away to the south and west, until he came to the mouth of the river, where lived a great mediefhe man and magician. To him the skunk applied and-was fitted out with an apparatus warranted to give immunity from and conquest over all his enemies. Back he journeyed along the river to his old home, where he arrived much to the surprise of the coyote and rattlesnake, and com menced to make it so pleasant for them with his pungent perfuming apparatus, the gift of the magician, that they soon left him in undisputed possession of his rocky home, which he has maintained ever since." When men discuss the "skunk," and I have heard it talked In nearly every place possible, they generaTly hinge their conversation on two main points that terrible odor and chicken thievery. Sometimes very good stories are told. The last one and the best one I have heard was about a man who lived back in Missouri. Farmer Haa Disaster. This man had just married an gone out on a little place and built his wife and himself a cabin. Later he put up a little chicken house, bought a nail dozen hens and started fan ing. One night along In the email hours. he heard a disturbance in the chicken house and went out, wearing his night rooei. e took with him a pitchfork wnicn Happened to have only two tynes. There was Mr. Skunk, sure enougn. v Now he had heard that If one cin pin a skunk's back c'ose to the ground and hold i there It can't throw scent, so he decided to straddle the skunk with the fork and leave him pinned to the ground until morning. He stole up on his victim and made a lunge. Unfortunately, the skunk was standing on a two-Inch plank partly imDeaaea in the soil. Not hav Ing lunged with quite sufficient force to pierce the plank, the farmer was left directly above the skunk, which. having free use of his spinal cord, proceeded to play his hose with con siderable ekill and accuracy until out or juice. It is hardly necessary to explain that he was not permitted entrance to the cabin again that night, but was advised to bury himself in the garden until morning. Skunk Smell Fade Away. No one will ever attempt to prove that the skunk does not make use o a very repulsive smelling spray as a means of protection, though it is true that he seldom makes use of this means until he is considerably dis turbed. It is also true that he does not and cannot throw the spray with his tail. As a matter of fact, he is very careful not to get any of It- on his tail or elsewhere on his fur. The substance Is held in two gland each about the size of a filbert. These thin-walled sacks are inclosed in lemon-shaped muscular sheaths situ ated wen Deneain tne skin, one on each side of tbe vent. A very shor tube or duct leads to tne vent, oner. ing in small teat-like protuberances. The yellowish liquid is squeezed from these small openings by the contrac tion of the muscular sheath about the gland. It apparently diffuses very fast and is carried by the wind for a considerable distance. If the liquid misses its mark and is discharged into the air, it requires only a short time for it to pass off. If it falls upon any object. Us lingering ability is quite marked, but not s6 great as Is usually beileved, and it ib folly to dispose of clothing scented by it. A few days in, the air is usually suffi cient to rid the clothing of the odor. Men who have had considerable .ex perience with ekunks really helieve that the attitude generally held toward skunks is little short of erro neous, but it i certainly true that SKunKS still nave tne aouiiy to pro tect themselves by liberating a fluid which is to most people disagreeable, to eay the least. Sknnks TVot Real Thieves. Now what are the facts in regard to the skunk as a chicken thief? Skunks have certainly been known to take chickens. Only this winter a family of Rkunks made their head quarters beneath a henhouse in this vicinity. Not -one, but a great many, valuable hens were taken. The owner was puzzled, and didn't know what to do. Finally a trapper who knew the customs of Mr. Skunk and his family set a few traps, and within a week had been successful in getting skins which will probably net him $30 to J75. This would have been done with out any odor if a dog had not at tempted to remove one of the skunks from its trap. we cannot determine the status of that skunk family. It may be that hey were all chicken thieves, but it is more likely that only one of them was a thief, the others willing accomplices. We hardly condemn every man he- cause a few have been caught now and then on a dark night with a chicken. And yet that in Just what we do with the skunk. Having spent over 20 years on a farm where hens were kept and where skunks were plentiful, and never having known of a hen or a chicken on that place being molested by a skunk. I suspected that oossi- bly all skunks were being con demned because of the bad habits of a few, and were obliged many timee to shoulder the responsibility for thefts made by the fox. weasel or doh. sibly a neighbor'a cat if not the neighbor himself. To make sure that I was r.ot mis taken and that I was not protecting a guilty party, I recently procured a native skunk, put it in a pen and placed a hen in it. To date they are getting along at least comfortably. The old hen has a desire to get one of the skuni: s eyes. The skunk has an eye out rr the old hen's eggs, but is usually entirely unsuccessful in her attempt to break them, having no definite method and succeeding only when by accident she happens to hit a nail with them or roll them against some other hard object. CHICAGO. The Woman's Christian Temperance union was instru mental in giving old John Barleycorn the knockout wallop, but, according to two popular novelists, a Judge of the divorce court, a minister, an ac tress and the clerk of the marriage license bureau, it has its hands full when It undertakes to "elevate mat ing to a science instead of an emo tion." The opinion of all Is that romance shall not perish from the earth. ' Why. it would put us novelists out of business." Indignantly asserted Emerson Hough. "No, no," he continued. "I think this is just one more Instance of the current hysteria of America. Things cannot be changed by resolutions. The process of natural selection of men and women contemplating matri mony will continue to exist." Henry Kitchell Webster was more optimistic. "We novelists need have no fear," he said, "it will take the W. o. T. U. much longer to extract emotion and romance from mating than It did for it to put John Barley corn out of business." "Just another manifestation of the fad habit'," said Judge John F. Mc Goorty of the circuit court, who has heard hundreds of divorce cases dur ing the last year. "I can only think that a scientifically mated couple would end up before me in the divorce court." Dr. O. F. Jordan, pastor of the Evanston Christian church, asserted that there can be no mating without emotion. "Love Is what counts, after all." he said, "although, of course, the study of sex hygiene is a good thing." Amelia Bingham, the actress, who has been married oh, so many times, threw up her hands In dismay. "Science! Science!" she cried. "There is entirely too much science and not enough emotion! Why can't people be natural? They are acting, acting all the time, repressing their emotions. What America needs Is to let emotion rule for a while." raV4y 'wast.thecmother o,pM8iohwo "L,et 'em rave." said kouis C. Leg- nor. chief clerk of the marriage license bureau. "We're having the biggest month in our history 3!!00 licenses issued in the first fifteen days. They can tslk science all they want to we'll still be doing business at the same old stand." Black Variety of Pepper Is Tropical Plant. lint of Supply Comes From Went Indies Rambling Shrub. HE black variety of pepper usu ally found in the table pepper Knemles Are Few. 1 Skunks have few enemies with the exception of man. It is probably true mat coyotes, wolves and foxes are frequently successful in combat with them, and some dogs succeed In kill Ing them. Usually, however, the dog proves the victim. I once saw a dog make a wild dash after a skunk that was just disappearing beneath a boul der. I arrived Just in time to S"(e him make a grab for the skunk, which discharged his full load Into the dog's open mouth. I have never seen the fight taken out of any animal so qhickly and en tirely as it was taken out of that dog. He demonstrated the old saying, "As sick as a dog." I later owned a fine collie and St. Bernard dog which was a remarka ble hunter. We frequently found dead skunks on the farm, but as the dog was always free from the odor of skunk, we hardly thought it possible that he was responsible. It re mained a mystery until early one morning the dog suddenly left the cattle he was. taking to the capture and ran down a side road for a little distance. Here he stopped, peeked over the tall grass, turned partly sidewise to the object he was pursu ing, backed close to It, made a spring. gave a growl and a ferocious shake and landed back in he road. I Investigated and found a ekunk lying in the grass dead. The dog had grasped it by the back and probably had been able with those massive jaws and powerful neck and shoulders to kill it almost instantly. Our native narrow-striped skunk In prime condition was quoted during the last year at $12.50 to $2.50, ac cording to the size and quality, while the best black skins were quoted as high as $18. With their skins selling at such prices it will take only a few years for this animal to become en tirely extinct, unless protected for certain months in the year by state laws. Food Habits Studied. The federal bureau of biological survey has revealed some very inter esting jiaets regarding the food hab its of these animals. A study of the contents of the stomachs of 62 shaker is a tropical plant and most of it comes from the West Indies. It grows there as a rambling and climb ing shrub whose smooth and spongy stems are often more than 20 feet in length, to which are attached very broad, leathery leaves. This black pepper, or common pep per as it is usually called, is a fruit about the size of a pea, changing to a bright red when fully ripe and gathered just as it begins to turn from green to red, for when allowed to get more ripe it loses a great deal of its pungency. When in cultivation the pepper plants are supported by poles, or sometimes dwarf trees are planted to give the. vine a support, the second method usually proving the more satisfactory. It Is propagated by means of cuttings and comes into bearing within three or four years after being planted. After beginning to bear the black pepper yields tfo crops annually for about 12 years, after which the vine loses It vitality for production and another must be planted to take Its place. Pepper was known to the ancients and used by them as a medicine, while in the middle ages it was one of the most costly spices and a pound of it was considered a fitting present for the king. In these enlightened times nothing is thoug of Its old-time preciousness, as it now eo com mon and comparatively cheap. The black pepper you use today for seasoning your food Is nothing more than the dried pepper berries which have been ground fine. White pepper, the kind usually served in restaurants on account of its color, is made from the eeed of the pepper berry after the skin and fleshy parts have been removed by soaking the dried berry In water. Red pepper is obtained from a spe cies of plant, such as is grown in local market gardens, and it is the hottest variety, too. It does not re quire a. tropical sun to give it Its "kicks," but right here in the United States the farmers and gardeners know how to put the "pep" in it. Stephen Collins Foster, by Harold Vincent Milligan. u. SchJrmer. New York city. Harold Vincent Milligan, now or ganist and music director of the Fifth Avenue Baptist church,. New York1 Jlty, and who has won distinction as a valued,' creative force in the larger field of American music, is well re membered in this city, where he has many warm personal friends. Mr. - Milligan's mother, Mrs. James V. Milligan. lives at 975 East Taylor street, this city. Her son formerly was organist and choirmaster of Cal vary Presbyterian church, this city, and left Oregon several years ago to become Identified with the larger musical field in New York where he has won much success. In addition to his labors as organ ist of the Fifth Avenue Baptist church. New York City, Mr. Milligan also occupies the same position in the West End Synagogue. one of the largest and oldest Jewish congrega tions in -that city, which has always been noted for its music. He was for a few years head of the theory and organ departments in the Von Ende School of Music, but practically has given' up instruction as his writ ing occupies most of his time, and is now sufficiently remunerative. He has a nu-an-ber of original composi tions published, with more coming out all the time, published principally by Q. Schirmer and The Arthur P. Schmidt Co. He has been especially successful with songs, which have been sung by such artists as Bond, t , ji 4 Seagle, and others. For years Mr. Milligan has made a specialty of American music, and particularly in research historical work in that line. For instance. Mr. Milligan deter mined to write a new study of a much-abused American song com poser, Stephen Collins Fraser. and for two years he worked at that duty, collecting material, only stopping in his search when he was sure he had exhausted every source of available information. The present book, now under review, is the result of these labors. The hook. of 116 clearly printed pages, is a handsome looking volume, and is embellished with vari ous pictures of the subject. in this presentation of Foster. Mr. Milligan is fair, kind yet critical, and always informing and . educative. There are many facts in dispute con nected with Foster's , life and espe cially hie bohemian habits, facts that have been twvsted and distorted by various other biographers until the observing reader Is bewildered. Mr. Milligan's estimate of'Fo6ter also presents facts that are new, or not so well known. Mr. Milligan is to be credited with having done good work in this direction in clearing away myth and fable connected with Fos ter, the composer of such American song favorites as: "Old Folks at Home." "My Old Kentucky Home," "Old Black Joe." "Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming," and others. Stephen Collins Foster was of Scotch-Irish ancestrjron both sides of the family, and was born in what Is now Pittsburg, Pa., Juty 4. 186. 94 years today. Hp was the ninth child of his parents there were ten Foster children in all and Stenhen was spoken of as the baby of the family. William Foster. Stephen's father, was a merchant in Pittsburg, and during the war of 1812, he was a real patriot. He loaned' the govern ment $.",0,000, which, it appears, is yet unpaid. William B. Foster, Jr., a brother of Stephen, became a noted civil engi neer, and one of the builders of the Pennsylvania railroad. Stephen was an erratic boy, and his mother said "there was something perfectly orig inal about him." When Stephen was five years old, he was taken to an Infant school conducted by a Mrs. Harvey. But when called up for his first alphabet lesson. Stephen's pa tience gave out. and "with a yell like that of a Comanche Indian, he bounded into the road, and never stopped running and yelling until he reached home, a mile away." Stephen's other schooldays were er ratic and often stormy, and he deter mined early to take as his vocation in life that of being a song composer. His musical education was crude, yet lie managed to play the flute and piano. His career as a student at Jefferson college was brief. Foster, as he had better now be called, developed as a composer of American negro songs that really won renown, but curiously enough, al though he. In his songs, created charming Southern atmosphere, he only visited the South once, and that in 1852 when he visited New Orleans (p. 72). Foster married Mies MacDowell da'ughter of a physician, in the year 1850, and one daughter was born to them. Marian, two years afterward As may be surmised from a man of Foster's erratic and impecunious habits, his marriage was not a happy one, and Mrs. Foster and he separat ed. His enemies said Foster drank liquor to excess, but Mr. Milligan passes this as gossip. There is no space available in this review department to speak of Fos ter's songs in detail. The critical part of Mr. Milligan's biography is not reached until page 109. He says. In part,-that Foster was not a com poser of constructive ability and that he showed many evidences of uncon scions repetition In his songs. "Both melody and harmony (of Fosters) are of the utmost simplicity. He could neither develop a melody, nor vary his harmony. His melodies re- neat themselves monotonously, and he was content with a few simple cords and modulations. Because his songs are the- honest expression of real emotion, they .found their way directly and at once to the world s heart." In January, 1864. Foster was living, practically with only a friend or two who believed in him, in a flowery New York, lodging house. He" fell ...........,... .. t i - X t f ;v,-';. V-' a " -.. r. ' ; - . " " V T x T 1 - J J t : J It trical Engineers, the Illuminating En gineering society, etc. "Artificial Light" is helpfully Illus trated from photograph.. It is the second volume in the series, the Cen tury books of useful science of which the first volume was Dr. E. K. Slos son's remarkable "Creative Chemis try." ... if: v i .v: 1 thor of 'Stephen Collins Foi. i ter," m new bloa-raphy. out of his miserable bed, and his head collided with a broken water pitcher, which cut his throat. He was moved to a charity ward In the Bellevue hospital, where he died three days af terward, January 13, 1864. He was only J6 years old. Mr. Milligan has placed this dedica tion to his book: "To the memory of my tamer. - Artificial I.isbt: Its Influence on CItIII zatton, by M. Luckiesch. illustrated. The Century Co., New York City. jur. jucxiescn is a director of a research laboratory of the national lamp works of the General Electric company, is an international authority on the subject of light, and chairman during the late war of the camouflage committee of the national research council. . This la the story of man's conquest of darkness. It Is as fascinating as a thrilling piece of fiction and it is one of those extraordinary books with al most universal interest. Most people do not realize how much of health, happiness and wisdom all of us owe to out ability to merely dispel darkness at will; and the book Is a stimulating opener and quickener of the mind. The vista of new developments of ljght to come in tne future are entrancing:. L,ignt paints picture. says our author. decorates walls, moulds architecture and models ornament. Its great range of brightness, its won derful purity of color and its mobility combine to make it the expressive medium par excellence. With all these powers, lighting may become a fine art. and If it does. It will contribute ore to spiritual civilization than any other art. Mr. Luckiesh iti m native of low was graduated from Purdue univer sity. Iowa State college and the State University of Iowa: has devoted him self to the one subject of light for years: Is the author of "Color and Its Application," "Light and Shade and Their Application," etc.; and is a mem ber of the American, Institute of Elec- The Second Place of Honor. New York Evening Post. To a friend who congratulated him on the nomination for vice-president. Governor Coolidge said: "The gover norship of Massachusetts has always been considered the second most im portant office in the United States Well, we don't know , about that. Hereabouts the governorship of New York has always been considered the second most Important office in ths United States. We have heard rumors from Champ Clark's state that in that region the governorship of Missouri was considered the second most lm portant, etc. There used to be a pretty healthy tradition that the snv ond mort important office in the country was the speakership. Other candidates for the honor of holding tnis position are: Premier pitcher- in tb National league. Ditto in the American league Drum major of the circus band. Bearer of the longest string of fish . Boy with the most marbles. . Old-fashioned Fourth of July orator. Ocean Shipping, by Robert Kdwards Anntn Illustrated. The Century Co.. New York City. This is the first volume in a series of related books soon to be published by this company, under the general title, "The Century Foreign Trade Series." The general editor is Dr. Wil- 1am E. Aughlnbaugh. foreign trade editor of the New York Commercial and lecturer on foreign trade in New York university, a man of wide ex perience and knowledge in the ex porting field. Each book of the series is to be written by an authority on the subject. Mr. Annin, author of "Ocean Ship ping, is a Princeton graduate, is now lecturer on economics at New York university and has been for many years and still is a member of one of the great shipping firms of New York. tor decades, ocean freighting has been an important single activity of Great Britain. For many reasons our own country has been unable to com pete with this trade, our own share of which (except coastwise) has been negligible. Therefore, the recent sud den expansion of our merchant fleet has found seaports without the per sonnel which is even now urgently needed for manning. managing and operating of our freighters. Because this vocation is both technical and difficult, there has arisen a demand for literature on the subject especial ly adapted to suit the needs of the present emergency. Ocean Shipping" Is a record of practices rather than a treatise on principles. Its author has been en gaged for more than, 30 years in ship ping and export and is therefore able to present the fruits of personal ex perience. The book contains not only wealth of stimulating sugges tions, but also detailed instruction in practice and methods. Briefly, the aim has Included encouragement of self help along practical lines, as well as information and instruction in routine methods. Types and values of ship: wharf work, stowage, insurance, traf fic marAgement and office organiza tion (including accounts and records) are all touched upon briefly, clearly and suggestively. There 13 searching analysis, clause by clause, of typical forms of charters and bills of lading. The language- is simple and direct free from obscure technical or trade terms. The legal side has been stu diously kept down to make room for more practical subjects. I ' ' The Mynterr In tne Rltomore, by "Willi Johnston. Little. Brown A- Co.. Boston. A puzzling murder mystery. Inter national plots and a love story, all in one. Mrs. Betty Le Baron, bride. opens a clothes closet In her room In the Ritsmore hotel, when the body of a well-dressed girl falls out. with dagger In her heart. Betty's husband is charged with the murder, although he protests innocence. It turns out that the murdered girl is Miss Olga Ordlnoff and that with her disap peared z,uuu,uuu. To find the murderer is quite per plexing. and what follows is quite of the who-would-have-thought-lt kind THE- LITBMRY PERISCOPE F" BY ETHEL R. SAWYER. Director of Training Class, Portland Library. RANCOIS DE CUREL. member of the French academy and writer of plays In the extremely realis tic vein for the Theater Libre, writes thus of his method of composing: When I write, the entrance of a person who speaks to me does not dis turb me. I am, on the contrary, de lighted at having my attention divert ed: I seek to retain the intruder, no matter how insignificant he may be. Upon his departure I find that my characters have progressed: my facul ties of production are doubled. If I am alone for a long time I saunter to the window to amuse myself by gazing at the peasant working in the distance, at the hares pursuing one another, at the clouds, the herds, etc.. this without giving a thought in the world to my plays. At the end of several minutes my characters arise within me. force themselves upon my notice and lead me back invincibly to my manuscrfpt." ' , The thought arises, couldn't expres sion, apparently so largely a product of the subconsciousness, be used psy-cho-analytically with horrible effect by Dr. Freud? Later M. Curel says: "I have almost no sensation of being the author of my plays. After a short while I completely forget my works. If, at the end of ten years, I re-read them, I have very real surprises. I feel myself absolutely free to censure or to admire. I am hindered neither by amour-propre nor by modesty. I am not the author." Mary Roberts Rhinehart and Avery Hopwood, the combination that wrote the farce entitled "Seven Days." have a new play ready for production. It is a mystery play called "The Bat." - It Isn't merely novels or dramatic epics like Homer's "Odyssey" that are food for the films, but travel books also contribute their quota. No doubt many people saw with enjoyment the pictures of Shackleton's trip to the Antarctic. Soon we are to be offered a film version of O'Brien's "White Shadows in the South Seas." This book has been one of the best-selling volumes of non-fiction of the last several months. It has already been dramatized by the author In collab oration with Laurence Langner of the Theater Guild, and will be given next autumn at the Garrkk theater under the title "White Shadows." . Mr. Wells' "Outlines of History." which has been for some time appear ing serially in England, is announced for publication by a New York firm in the autumn. It will be a two-volume work. Certainly its advent will be welcomed with interest by the many admirers of the versatile and indomitable Mr. Wells. It is a not unheard-of thing for a historian to seek relaxation from his serious la bors in the composition of a trifle in to toss off a historical Interlude to I his regular performance Is an event. ! the way of a novel, but for a novelist M EMM Don't Risk Your Material in a Poor Dye Each package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color into worn, shabby dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, ginghams, sweaters, draperies, cover ings, hangings, everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods. Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect results are) guaranteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist bas "Diamond Dyes Color Card." 16 Rich, Fadeless Colors. Mr. Wells' utterances on the subject of education and the teaching of his tory have prepared us to expect som original ideas In the way of treating! historical matter. Henry James had a great dm!nw tion for the work of H. G. Wells which seems a trifle strange, as they would appear to be at the opposite) poles temperamentally and artistic ally. But in letter after letter to Mr. Wells we find such appreciative ut terances as "the most interesting and masterful prose painter of your Eng lish generation. ... Your blir feeling for life, your capacity for rhewing up the thickness of tho world in such enormous mouthfuls. Your temper and) your hand form one of the choicest treasures ot our time." And then Mr. Wells, with no better excuse than t ofind "escape from ths ohsession of the war," wrote "Boon." which Wells himself characterizes a "just a waste-paper basket" in which, under the character of Mutineer, the once perfect butler, he parodies Mr. James' own style. Moreover, he sent a copy to Mr. James! Indeed, it does seem almost as though the charge were not unfounded that Mr. Wells is a little lacking in good taste, "a bit of a bounder," I believe it was some one once called him. The original manuscript of Charles Lamb's "Dissertation Upon Roast Pig" was recently old in Philadelphia for $12,600. From Lamb's letters we de duce the writer of the manuscript re ceived five guineas therefor. Again the middleman! The treasure now re poses in the J. P. Morgan library along with many other much-sought- after manuscripts. Mark Twain's home In Hartford. Conn., for possession of which tho society of Connecticut artists has for some time been waging a war with, speculators, seems to have been as) unconventional as was the owner him self. The kit-hen was on the top floor front so "that servants might see the parados and funerals without running through the house." Clemena lived he-re for 17 years after his mar riage, from 1674. when he built it, till 1S91. During- these years this cele brated house was the stopping-otf place for all sorts of artists and act ors, writers and other famous men traveling between New Tork and Bos ton. The public-spirited men of tha city and indeed throughout the entire state have been roused to action to preserve this house as a monument for the American people. The specu lators in question bought the property for $55,000 and are now demanding, it is said, $300,000. If cosmopolitan experience 1a a con- siderable factor in authorship there should bo a. great future for Myriam Harry, whoss eighth novel. "The Lit tle Daughter of Jerusalem," has re cently appe.irad in France. The pref ace is written by Jules Lemaitre, In ternationally honored critic. Daugh ter of a Russian Jw. converted to the English church, and a German Lu theran deaconess, she had for a nurse a Bethlehemite woman and for com panion a Soudtncse slave. Her early youth was spent in Jerusalem, poly glot as New York. Berlin was th home of her later education and here she developed her literary talent b.r writing stories for the Tageblatt. She receive. I instruction in nearly every European language except French And then we have a bit of personal 1 istory which remind one of Conrs-l and bis attainment of literary fnmc In a tongue unfamiliar to him throuclt all his early years. At 17 Myriatn Harry went to Paris, added French to her remarkable lirguistic acquire ments, and not merely the French lan guage, bat sh also developed ths Latin rpirit. Her work is said to be in the style of Flaubert and Chateau briand with an emotional kinship with the oriental. It is well to have a sens-e of humor even when th joko is on you. Booth, Tarkincton tells the following story on himself with apparently real en joyment: "I was strolllr.e around an artists? Red Croji fair v hen two pretty "flap pers' of 16 or so cam up rnd asked me for my autograph. 'I haven't got a fountain pen.' I said, much flattered. 'Will a pencil do?" 'Yes,' said tha other flapper, md so I took cut mir pencil an! signed my name in tho morocco-bound book that she ha'i given me. "The flapper studied the signature with a frown. Then she looked uo rnd said: 'A-on't you Rohert W. Ch.-m-brs?' 'No, said I. "I'm Booth Tar klngton.' "The flanp-r tarred to her friend with a shrug if dl.gust. "Lend m your -rubber. Mir.' h said. Take Tablets without Fear if you see the '' Bayer Cross" ; For Headache Pain, Colds. Neuralgia Toothache Earache Lumbago . Rheumatism Insist upon a Bayer package," which contains safe, proper Directions. Proved safe by millions. O pfll "Bayer" introduced Aspirin to physicians 20 years ago. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents Larger packages. Aspirin Is the trad mark of Bajtr Manufacture of MonoaeeUcaddaater of Eallcylieacid FIFTH AVENUE' -BELT- TRUSSES . 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