.THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 12,' 1920 MANY CREEKS fLOW. FROM UPLANDS WITHIN FEW MILES OF EACH OTHER INTO YAKIMA Large Number of Streams Along Eastern Line of Lincoln Wind Into County and Out, for Eastern Line Is Not on Crest of Coast Range. I Vs?tX . Aft I ' f -f s ' 4 . x . w. "5 his employment continuously until ' oA I J .... 1 1 i w&bki Tha two men knew each other intimately and from this friendship and daily conversations this record':, has been prepared, and it is a moat worthy I paper one. . Sometimes arguments are heard as to the manner in which. Mr. Ingersoil ! : , .i rr v. i v. 1 - ........ . v. . T . . I UlCUi 1 illio uuun. OflJO tuL U U'J 21, 189, Colonel IniErersoll euffered from indigestion and was resting:, with his wife in his room. It was in their beautiful Hudson river. New York City home. Mrs. Ingersoil and he were talking gently about his state of health, and suddenly he looked at her with a loving gaze, slowly 'closed his eyes, dropped his head upon his breast and without the slightetst sign of suffering, like one falling peacefully to sleep, passed away. The book contains also several of Colonel Ingersoll's famous addresses, particularly the touching oration he spcke at his brother's grave. BT ADDISON BENNETT. This is the 23d of a series of article by Mr. Bennett on Oregon waterway. The 24th will follow at an early date, presumably the Sunday following this tirtitle. Readers of The OreRonlan would do well to save these articles, for when concluded they will present the first auth etuie tabulation of our rivera, lakes and creeks. THE last stream taken In article 22 was Beaver creek, which flows into Depot slough near Toledo. I will Skntlnue up the Yaquina in the left or north river. The next nanJed stream is Balal creek, which flows In about two miles above Toledo. It comes in from the north and has one TiHjned tributary, Simpson's creek, six mUes lone. There are a good many creeks flowing into the river between tiaial creek and the county line, 17 miles in a straight line, but none of them named. Going up on the right or south Bide of the Taquina, the first named stream is Elk' creek, which flows in at telk City. It is a long stream which rises near Mary's peak, two miles east of the Lincoln county line, Jn Benton county. It is a winding stream and difficult to measure, but 1 think it is fully 25 miles long, that is. in Lincoln county. .Elk has several named branches, as follows: Bear creek, which flows 1n: about five miles from Its mouth. It Is three . miles long. A few rods above that. Bolter creek flows in. The name of this creek has a letter knocked out between the o and t. which I think must have been an 1.) This creek is also about three miles long. Savage creek Is next. It flows in from the south about five. miles due east of Salado, a town seven miles east and four miles south of Toledo. It is about six miles long. Three quarters of a mile above Savage, but on the opposite side of the Taquina, Upthe-Spout creek flows In from the northeast. It is about four miles long, and has one named branch, Johnson creek, which flows in from the east. It is three miles long and rises very close to the county line. There are a great many streams along the eastern line of Lincoln, some of them flowing into the county and some flowing out, for the eastern line is not on the crest of the coast range it seems, only in spots. For instance, Mary's peak, west of Philo math in Benton county, is surely the summit, for it "Is said to be the highest peak in the coast range. Yet the Lincoln-Benton county line is two miles west of that peak. I will now begin at the southwest corner of the county on the ocean, and follow along the south line to the southeast corner of the county, and then north along the east line to the Tillamook line, and give the named streams flowing in and out of the county and their named tribu taries. The first is Buck creek, flowing in from Lane county, about 12 miles from the ocean. This creek's length in Lincoln is about two and one-half miles, and it has one named tribtr tary. Wilson creek, which flows into It from the west. Wilson "Is two miles long. Then Crab creek flows up from Lane county and flows into a river 1 never heard of before Five river. I ljnow about Sixes river, but nothing about Five. Crab creek has a course of only three quarters of a mile in Lincoln. Five river, which flows' into the Alsea near the town of Denser, nas length of ten miles in Lincoln. give three streams flowing into it. Buck, Crab and Wilsonreeks, the latter a feeder Of Buck, and there is one other. Lobster creek, and three feeders of Lobster, Camp, William son and Little Lobster. Lobster creek flows in from' the extreme southeastern corner of the county, reaching the Five near the town of Denser. Camp has a length the county of three miles, William son two. miles and Little Lobster one-half mile. Lobster creek is about nine, miles long. Six miles north of the south line of Lincoln and one mile west of the east line. Fall creek flows into the Alsea from the north; it Is ten miles long. There are also some other tributaries of the Alsea which I did not mention in their proper order. Sudson creek flows in from thesouth three miles west of Tidewater. It is five miles long. Scott creek, five miles long, flows in from the north east, about four miles southeast of Tidewater. It is six miles long. Grass creek flows in two miles south of the mouth of Scott creek, coming up from the south on the opposite side from Scott. It is four miles long. Mrs;t's Prorma, by Douglas Gold ring-. nomas seltzer, flew Tors Ctty. Margot in plain English MissMag- Sie Carter, daughter of a Canadian grocer who left her J3000 is our heroine. ' Margot determines to see the world and be a "fine lady." She sails on the steamer Majestic for Cherbourg, France, and, to wrap herself with an air of social distinction, says she is Miss Margot Cartier, Canadian aristo crat. Margot succeeds in capturing her social world and she becomes a bold, heartless young woman, a profession al heart breaker, a Becky Sharp. She breaks the heart of the man she mar ries. A depraved aristocrat who is no relative of hers dies and leaves her l,250,O0O. The world is Margot's sugar plum and she certainly sees to It that every thing she wants somehow comes her way. " Then, bing! comes the blir war with the kaiser, and trouble comes for Margot. A clever novel and sure to arouse the most blase. Artemua Ward, by Don C. Salts. Illus trated. Harper Brothers. New York city. Echoes of -delightful,, quietly ex pressed American wit of the long ago steal from these storied pages of the biography of Artemua Ward (Charles Farrar Browne), wit, lecturer and general showman. Ward was born in Waterford. Me., April 26. 1834, and died in Southamp ton, England where he had been on a lecture tour March 6, 1867, from consumption. Mr. Seitz has written a biography. of permanent value. He obtained his facts from conversations with the Browne family and also from an ex tensive search for information on the subject, a search that went far away from the quiet Maine town where the subject of this book first saw the light of day. - " Examples of Artemus Ward jokes are furnished, also several of the fa mous lectures. The pages are 338. The Hand In the Dark, try Arthur J. Rees. jonn lane Co., New Yrk city. An English novel of the present day, with a murder mystery in it. One of the girl characters is shot. an old-fashioned manor house; and the hunt for the guilty person is de scribed with force and Ingenuity. Interim, by Dorothy M. Richardson. Al fred A. Knopf, New York city. Miss Richardson is a talented and Industrious young novelist. This is the fifth instalment of her interesting and original series of novels "Pil grimage." "Interim" is an English novel of promise and polished art. It has dull beginning, and at first would be all the better of shorter paragraphs and more conversation, but this is remedied as the reader progresses. lli'art Trouble. Their Prevention and Be lief, by Louis Fangeres Bishop, M. D. I'unk & WaKnalla Co., New Xork city. Our author is professor of diseases of the heart and blood circulation, Fondham university, president of the Oood Samaritan dispensary and phy sician in Lincoln hospital. New York city. This book of 435 pages, SO full-page halftone plate and text illustrations, contains an authoritative discussion of the subject at issue, and is writ ten in an easy popular style with the ahsence of the use of obscure tech nical terminology. It is designed for the guidance and help of the layman who suffers from heart trouble oi for the family or immediate relatives of euch sufferers, and especially for the nurses in charge of these cases. It describes the various types of heart n.-ease in a most lucid and informing way and tells exactly what should be clone in each case, the mode of life Vest suited to the trouble, the most Veneficial diet, etc. It goes carefully into the question of palliative treat ment by drugs, by the Nauheim bath method, and also by exercise. The book's cheery optimism and pane counsel should prove of real service not only to all heart patients, but also to physicians', who can ob tain much valuable information from the instructions given. Notable chapters are on theje topics: The heart of an engine; what is meant by hardening of the arter ies: cause and symptoms of heart dis ease, and the contributing cause of nervousness; heart troubles and the , cure resort; nitroglycerin and how to use it; the care of the heart; the anl mil proteins; health how remedies should be given to keep it; tea, coffee and tobacco: the danger of the heart from anti-fat treatment; and nurs inr in heart troubles. Dr. Bishop does not pose as a cure all, lie is cautious. For Instance, in discussing Graves' disease, or exoph thalmic goiter a disease of the thy roid gland. It is a puzzling disease, and experts are not agreed as to its cause. It is stated to be difficult to cure. Dr. Bishop's advice under this head is conciee: "People who have this disease, should have their hearts carefully looked after." The Seventeenth Centnry, by Jacques Boulenger.N ti. P. Putnam Sons, Aaw York Crty. In this case the title "The Seven teenth Century" refers especially to the national history of France. The book is translated from the French and has. for its stage the sway of Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XXV, known as "Le Grand Monarque." Scholars are agreed that the age depicted by our author is known as the Great Age. "France was enriched through the successive efforts of Louis XIII and Richelieu, Mazarin and Louis XIV by the acquisition of Roussilon Franche Comte, Alsace, Flanders and .nnois, provided witn a vast colonial : csm aomain ana protected tty a solid ana stately girdle of fortresses. Intel lectually, Franca shed her radiance throughout the world. The age in which French national patrimony was enriched by so many provinces, by so much glory and beauty, is just ly known as the Great Age." The pages are 393. The presenta tion of historical events is interest ingly arranged. Z, t Ethics and Natural Law, by George Lansing- Raymond. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. This Is a learned, reconstructive review of moral philosophy, applied to the rational art of living. Such abstruse subjects are dis cussed as: "Human experience start- r ...... . -r -i ' ,, y; 5. : Lnlli--- v . J m ' I . v ' r f-1 d ' ; I , a . i . , - on Copyright, Cornh ill Co. I Mrs, A, Lou lac Andrea, snthor ? of "Dehydratinai; Foods." t ..... .4 ed and developed from desires"; "de sires of body and of mind often an tagonistic and not necessarily devel oped from one another;" "man can live in a world of ideas"; "lnstitution ism, empiricism and rational emotive and perceptible lntuitionism"; "analy sis between harmony in aesthetics and in ethics"; "keeping the mind's desires uppermost in the general re lations of society, in social customs and habits, in pleasures, in commer cial relations between buyers and sellers"; etc The book is one of 345 pages. The acconvplished author was professor of oratory in Williams college, 1874 1881; of oratory and aesthetic criti in Princeton university, 1880- 1893; of aesthetics In the same uni versity, 1893-1905, and of aesthetics. George Washington university, 1905- 1912. The message of this excellent book is helpful and educative in the up building of family and industrial life of the nation. Dehydrattag Foods, by A. Louise Andrea The CornhiU Co., Boston. Emphatically a book for the hour, and a step in the direction of better domestic economy. It is a blow in the reduction of the high cost of living, and specializes in fruits, vege tables, fish and meats. . Dehydration is defined as "the su perior method of food preservation. No cans, jars or tedious canning proc ess required. Merely the water is removed from food materials, leaving all flavorings and nourishment values intact. Mrs. Andrea is a food lecturer and expert of wide reputation. George H- utUiers of tgfjtoaps By ANTHONY EUWER This Poem, Written fcij Mr. Euiver, Was Read by Him Last Monday at Hood River. It W as an Interesting Feature of the Meeting Celebrating the Completion of the Columbia River Highway to Hood River. Masterful builders! Tou who've planned Tour limitless highways through our land Splendid in vision well have you wrought, Leaving your trails where trails were not; Weavers weaving gigantically Into a boundless tapestry Systems of travel, skillfully traced Hither and thither interlaced. Gathering, linking, chain on chain. Corn land and pasture, fields of grain. Acres of orchard rolling down. Forest and homestead, nestling town. Binding our counties, joining our states. Breaking the walls of our cities' gates. Letting humanity's stream rush through Into the open, into the blue. Into the sun or into the shade. Into the playgrounds you have made, Treading where never before they've trod Touching the earth and seeing God! Long have you wrestled, uncontounded With problems the grim, old earth pro pounded; Meeting each taunting challenge while She watched with a cold, sardonic smile. Flinching at nothing your labor met. Writing your answer in dirt and sweat. First with your, transit, pounding stakes Rotten logs,, briars, sticks and snakes . . Trees of the thicket, hatchet-scarred, . Biasing tomorrow's boulevard. .Now comes the new world's big romance. Unloosing your swarms of human ants. Slashing the willows, 'crowding In Under the maples, and chlncopin; Totterng timbers see them crash Deafening thud arid crunch and gash. Tearing their rifts where the bows arch high. Baring blue hole In the gaping sky; Follows the blasting dynamite. Deep in the damp earth tamped in tight. Sputtering spark. Into the dark Travels the fuse to the burled runs. Vomiting stumps in hurtling tons. Falling back, mangled, shattered, torn, Into the clay where they were born. Through pine-pillared aisles the thunder- lngs ring, Echoing canyons answering; Enter the horses lashing reins. Yelling and. curses. Jangling chains, ' -Snorting and straining, steaming brutes, Grappling hooks shackled to stubborn roots, Snug in their sockets holding fast Steadily pulling, they yield at last; Shovel of steam omniverous scoop. Gouging the way for one more loop'. Rearing a wall that will prevail Against the push of eliding shale. Peeling a slope to fill a draw, Stuffipg the crusher's hungry maw That crumbles to bits the rock you've fed To blanket a roadway's winding bed; These are the digits running through The problems that Nature's handed you. And you of the Norseland yon who found This Oregon wilderness goodly ground, Tou came with a love In your heart for men Tou got but you gave it back again. You looked toward the years that were to be And you gave to those years unstintingly ; Tou knew that a road was a useful thing, -But couldn't go far without fostering. And fostar you did and spared no pains. Backing your backing with all your brains, - Filling your place in the age-old plan. And they're calling you Simon the Highway Man! " And we of the people we for whom These miracles are, behold we come! . Driving our chariots biasoned bright Crimson and yellow and pink and white. Silver and black and gray and green Rattle-trap Liszle and limousine. Bulgy with bedding, grip and can. Lashed to the back and tucked to the van, -Letting our home-town banners flame, .- Advising the world from whence we came From everywhere under the dusty sun From Mosler, White Salmon, Pendleton, .From Boise. Seattle. Saginaw, From Buffalo, Little Rock, Waukeshaw Still we are coming see 4he train From "all points east" to Bangor, Maine, Up from the Dixies, coming still, k . From Charleston. Havana. Jacksonville, Down from the Old Dominion, see; From Montreal, Winnipeg. Calgary We of the people are on our way. Turning the world to a holiday! ' And vast.are the hollows from crest to' crest Where stretches the hand of the big north west. And out of the .winds from her frozen peaks A welcome speaks Come all you people: come and keep .Tryst in our mountains; play and sleep. Wrapped in the silence here that lies Under our star-jeweled western skies; Wake if you will and see the sun Unveiling our canyons one by one. Slanting his golden fingers till The shadows have crept from each drowsy hUl. Rousing the giants in their beds; See how they, lift their hoary heads ' " Up through the purple robe of night, RubWing their eyes in the morning light; -Tahoma the mountain that was God, Jefferson, Adams, St. Helens, Hood; Hold fast your visions and your dreams. Memories born of our laughing-streams. Our cataracts, castles, towering domes. Oh, carry them back to your million homes! Drink, oh, you people! Be satisfied! Our wells of beauty are never dried. Search out'each Eden that awaits Blazed are the trails and wide the gates! Come, oh, you people! Look upon The bountiful sweep of the Oregon, Forcing a pass through the blue Cascades, Lapping the walls of her palisades, Cradled in sand dunes, gleaming white. Girdling her islands of malachite! And high on the hills where a thrush's song Tells out its gladness, there winds along. Like a sinuous serpent twist and bend, 1 - Following on to the river's trend. The lordliest highway that ever ran Through the hills of the world since the dawn of man Pride of the west! Sublime event! Columbia the Magnificent! Conceived by a poet who believed Dreams should be dreamed and then achieve And he dreamed! at his dream and put it . through; .And, old Sam Lancaster, this means you! 'And he bored him a tunnel rock and boulder, -Out of a mountain's granite shoulder. Chiseled his windows, arching wide, Glimpsing the sky and the rolling tide; Throwing his gracetul spans across Dripping ravines of fern and moss; Charming the serpent up and down Till it lazily coiled cn the lofty crown Goal of eac"i traveler who would be Thrilled with unspeakable ecstasy. Oh. climb in your chariots, pink and green. Rattle-trap Lizzie and limousine. Throbbing triumphantly toward the sky (There's never a grade but you can take on high). Honking and honking, round on round. Honking again till the cliffs resound. Looping at last the Crown Point top And there you sop! Where winds from the north, east, west and south Tumble their clouds in tjie chasm's mouth. Curtains of mist and far-off thunder And, somehow, you look and look anl wonder If he who was wise to the sparrow's fall Didn't have something to do with it all. Over tjie broad Willamette go Into the coast range, learn to know Who are the Vikings see them rise Out of the gulches Into the skies There are plummet lines dropped through the hearts of these. . And they're girthed like the pillars of Her 1 cules! Nursed by the centuries still they stand. The Viking spruce of the bottom land. And ever the pageant swings along. Blossoms and fruit and birds and song; Sword ferns, high-heaped beneath the firs. Glistening like emerald scimitars; Foxglove and flreweed. sunlight flashes. Blotching the banks in purple splashes; Salmcnberries in hordes untold. Luscious clusters of dangling gold; Elders above them, bending branches. Falling in ruby-red avalanches. Hedging the roadways, climbing back Up through the alders and tamarac; And over the bridges rumbling, coasting Oh, God of the humble, keep us from boast ing! - Ranges ruff-backed with th.eir jagged trees. Crawling and sprawling down into the seas. Reaching their ragged, granite hands Out through the shifting, drifting sands! Out where the wild, white horses prance. Tossing their manes and the cormorants Strut with the lions and blustering seals. And the smn-god reels With a splash of blood Into the great Pacific flood! And this is the welcome waiting you. Drivers of chariots gold and blue You who fare Under the heavens from everywhere This is the crowning of your quest When you've looked in the heart of the great northwest! Parkdale. Or. Queen I.acia, E. F. Benson. Doran Co., New York City, Mrs. ijucaa naa a nusoand, money and comforts. Yet she was not satis fied. She yearned to be a reformer, and she undertook to play the part of a modern Lorenzo de Medici lr the "cultural awakening" of an English village.. She had been an enthusiast in Italy and Italians; and the havoc she caused and the fun that ensued behold! are they not all displayed in the 331 pages of this laughable story of England? An Intimate View of Robert G. InsrersoU. by 1. Newton Baker. C. P. F&rrell, New York City. Those lucky enougn to have heard Robert G. Ingersoil in life, deliver one Of his speeches or addresses, will haidly expect to find in cold type a book with as eloquent a greeting as he spoke in speech of silver. This tribute to the memory of the late Mr. Ingersoil, is told in 207 pages. and is a sincerely expressed,' affec tionate one. The author, Mr. Baker, entered Mr. Ingersoll's office in 1879 as private secretary, and remained in The Letters of Thackeray. Although William Makepeace Thack eray was one of the great letter writers of the Victorian period, the world has waited for more than half a century or a reasonably complete collection of his letters. Those which he wrote to Mrs. Brookfield, the Bar ters, and various kinsmen and kins- women have been published in the magazines and later in book form But no one has undertaken to bring together from widely scattered sources the hundreds of letters which arranged in chronological order and adequately annotated, would furnish a continuing and -lluminating record of his life as an author. The task remained for Hufus Rock well Wilson of Boston, author of 'New England in Letters" nd other widely-read books, to accomplish after a number of years of loving and unremitting labor. The work now has reached the stage which promises within the next few month the publication of "The Letters of Thackeray." carefully annotated, in two octavo volumes of about 30(1 pages each. The first edition, pri vately printed, will be limited to 250 copies, numbered and signed, of which. it is stated, only 200 will be offered for sale in America and in England. Navy Boys OH Special Service, by Halsey Davidson and George Sully & Co.; Naw York City. Boys who want entertainment in a red-blooded, exciting story of sea life will find it in these 216 pages. The scenes are laid, in the recent world war. and they depict the doings of brave sailor boys serving in our navy against German opponents and espe cially against German submarines. NEW BOOKS RECEIVED. The Man of Tomorrow, by Claude Rich ards. 29ti pages, a discussion of vocational success with the boy of today wise ad vice as to what professions boys ought to engage In, and how to find professions for which they are beat fitted (Crowell Co., New York). - God's Smile, by Julius Magnusaen, a series of brilliant essays on deep psycho logical subjects, and powerful messages of hope offered as a boon to the sorrow burdened written by one of Denmark's greatest dramatists (D. Appleton A Co., N. Y.). Ell of the Downs, by C M. A. Peake, a brilliant novel of realism, presenting a racy account of the doings of a natural wanderer; and Almonds of Life, by F. E. Mills yYountc. a powerfully written novel of South African life, love and retribu tion and a picture of passion wrestling against tha civilizing barrier of xnarriaga (Doran Co., N. Y.). . Impulses, by Harriet Holmes Haslett. a novel of pretty sentiment;- and Brass Tacks, by Homer Sherman, an excellent New England novel featuring pleasant family life and doings at a boys school (The CornhiU Co.. Boston). Tales of Mystery and Horror, by Man rice Level, translated from tha French by Alys Eyre Macklin. 26 short stories of halr-rakting significance stories so start ling that they approach In every particu lar literary subjects (Thomas Seltzer, N. Y.). . Modern Greek Stories, translated from the original Greek by Demetra Vaka and Aristides Phantrides, with a foreword by Demetra Vaka eight stories by. modern Greek authors, stories remarkable for lit erary quality and fine simplicity of ex oresslon (Duffieid. & Co., N. Y.. Hidden Creek, by Katharine Newiln Burt, a novel of the west that is so well done and a work of art that it is like a marble statue carved by a Greek sculptor a story that is worth a place in the ranks of the "best sellers" (Houghton, Mifflin Co.. Boston). The Crimson Patch, by Augusta Huiell Seaman, a thrilling - mystery story for girls a sort of a new Sherlock Holmes story that makes fascinating reading (Century Co.. N. Y.). Resurrection Rock, by Edwin Balmer, -an excellent story of outdoors and adven ture: and Midnight of the Ranges, by George Gilbert, a healthy and exciting story of life on the Texas plains, featur ing a chivalrous range rider, fine in in stinct and whose love finds its own re ward (Little, Brown ac Co., Boston). Indian Vengeance, by L. F. Jones. realistic, thrilling novel depicting Indian life and vengeance in Alaska (The strat ford Co., Boston). Literary Snapshots, by Richard Butler Glaenxer, 116 pages of lyrical, lively verse, mm written about contemporary authors, American English and others (Brentano's. N. Y.). Frank Hlggins, Trail Blazer, by Thomas D. Whittles, a modestly written, graphic account of the adventures of Mr. Higgins as a big brother or home missionary In the Minnesota lumber camps (Interchurch Press, N. 1".). The Gifts We Bring, by Nina B. Lam kin, a Christmas pageant for boys and girls and growsiups, 37 pages a pageant that has already been given with success in many school, colleges and Y. W. C. A.s (T. 8. Denlson & Co., Chicago. Miss yinerva's Baby, by Emma Speed Sampson, the third story In the delightful "Miss Minerva" series, describing this time fluffy-haired Josephine, a baby with the appearance of an angel and the per sonality of an adorable sprite a home story of healthy Interest (Tha Retlly & Lee Co., Chicago). The . Cheery way, or John KenaricK Bangs, a charming book, worth being called a "gift" book containing a poem by Mr. Bangs for every day In the year verse that la cheerful And bright; Leerlfc. by Ruth Sawyer, eloquent, heart-throbbing tales of a war nurse and her patients quite a notable bit of fiction (Harper's, N. Y ). Letters to a Young Man on Love and Health, by Walter M. Gallichan. wise ad vice and instruction to young men on sex problems consisting of letters from- an uncle to his young nephew, the first writ ten when he boy Is 18 years old and the last when he Is about to be married (Stokes A Co.. N. Y.). The Man Who Convicted Himself, by David Fox, a story of excitement, mystery and humor, being the first of a series of detective novels dealing with the activi ties of an organization of retired crimi nals who form a crime prevention burfau; and A Tour Through Indiana in 1840. edited by Kate Milner Rabb, an unusually Interesting, educative book, being the diary of John Parsons, a young Virginian who left home to see tna west or aeciaea historic interest (Robert M. McBride tc Co.. N. Y.). - Tha Seventh Real, by Jeanette Agnes, a book of religious Importance, 'discussing salvation, revelation, the Levltlcal law, the lost word," etc. (John C. Winston Co., Phila.). Old and New, sundry papers dv c. h. Grandgent, professor of romance languages In , Harvard university, eight essays or papers on educational subjects, a message of marked culture (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass.). Jane and the Owl, by Gene stone, illus trated, a charming story book for chil dren, and telling about new friends worth while (Crowell Co.. N. x. ). A Mating in the Wilds, by OttweU; Binns, a romantic- novel of engrosaing In terest, depicting the regeneration of a hero in Hudson Bay company territory in the far north (Alfeda Knapf. N. Y.). The Great Steel Strike and Its Lessons. by William Z. Foster, secretary and or ganizer of tha steel workers in the trade dispute referred to. atis pages, paper cov ers (B. W. Huebsch. N. Y. ). Atlantida. bv Pierre Benolt. translated from the French by Mary C. Tongue and Mary Ross. This exciting and dramatic story was recently awarded the "Grand Prix du Roman" of -5000 francs by the French Academy as the best novel of the year, and already l( has sold in France more than 100,000 copies. It la a novel of mysterious, wild Africa, df North African mountains, fierce tribes and Antlnea, wonderful heroine who reminds the reader somewhat of the principal figure In Ryder Haggard s masterpiece sue (Uuttieid ac Co., N. Y.). War Poems and Other Verses, by R. E. Vernede, 82. sterling poems of more than ordinary merit, being visions of War scenes depicted by an English soldier-poet who was killed in the recent world war in Adventures and Enthusiasms,-by E. V. Lucas. 62 charmingly written, restrul es savs depicting literature, satire, English acenes, etc.: and Wild Cat. by Hugh Wiley., a happy-hearted, joyous novel, about a care-free negro who hates work a story that shows creditable mastery of the negro dialect (Doran Co., N. Y.) The Beautiful Mrs. Davenant. by Violet Tweedale. an entertaining English novel. the central figure of which Is a married woman who for a strange reason does not live with her husband (Stokes Co., IS. .) Blueberry Bear, by J. L. Sherard. and Uncle Squeaky's Country 8tore, by Nellie M. Leonard, two delightful. Illustrated story books for litUs children (Crowell Co., N, Cats of Many Kind Found in Various Parts of World. Felines Minna Tails Inhabit Isle of Man and ' Hairleaa Animals Are Seen in Mexico Mo in baa Cat of Africa Most Peculiar Animal. H "I love little Pussy, her coat la so warm. If 1 don't pull her tail she will do ma no harm." OW familiar, to at least three a a generations, tnis old nursery jingle has been, inciting love lor puss and "putting over" propaganda for the A. S. P. A. on unsuspecting youth at the same time. Among our English - cousins who live on the Isle of Man the old rhyme is pointless, for the good and auf ficient reason that their cats have no talis to pull. Just why nature discrim inated, against puss in this way, plac ing a topknot oi hair at the end of the backbone instead of the usual snaky, waving appendage, eeems to be shrouded in myetery. Of course, there are a few cats with tails on the island, generally imported from Eng land or Scotland, but the tailless Man: cats are most In evidence. In north ern Russia and in Japan there are a few of the ailless cats which, like the Manx variety, have bind quarters higher than the fore quarters. The royal cat of Siam has a long, thtn tall, and in some instances it has a kink in it like the tail of a prize bulldog; these famous and beautiful cats are white when born and change gradually as they grow to a silky chocolate color, the coat shading to a cream tan under the belly, black face, legs and tail and big blue eyes. Being semi-albinos they are rather delicate nd hard to raise. They are first cousins to the Malay kink-tailed cats which eeem of a hardier race. There is a hairless cat of Mexico, descendant of a famous Aztec breed. which is almost extinct, hut they are strange enough in appearance to be interesting if a trifle repulsive. The common domestic cat of Paraguay has a shiny coat,- indefinite in color, of short hair lying flat to the body. luce that of a dog. The cats weigh but three pounds and have a strange ly elongated body. India boasts a spotted cat of un usual appearance. Domestic cats of Abyssinia have long, pointed, very hairy ears, one special variety being called the "bunny" cat because it is marked ( exactly like a hare. Cats have been known in India for over 2000 years, though the domestication of cats from wild ancestors originated in Egypt, where they were wor sniped as emblems of the sun be cause "their eyes change with the sun's course, and also each month change with the moon." When a fa vorite cat died in an Egyptian home its owners always shaved their own eyebrows by way of appropriate mourning. From Egypt the cat evidently en tered Greece.' a fact proved beyond doubt by a wonderful cat fresco found in the ruins of Pompeii. Cat killers in Wales. Switzerland and Saxony were punished in old times, the penalty in Wales being the pay ment of enough wheat to cover the body of the cat when It was held up by the tail, its nose touching- the round. Amomr less civilized people cats are highly respected for being self supporting and always bringing home their prey. In some localities they are trained to catch birds, the sale of wh'cU Is a source of Income to the owner of the cat. ' White cats with blue eyes are very apt to be deaf and in eome cases the eyes are not both the same color. It In taid that n Chin there is a cat with pendant ars and in Soutn Amer ica a breed that is voiceless, unable ta wail; but tt is difficult to :ind authentic proof as to the existence of either variety. Most peculiar in appearance is the Mornbas cat of Africa. This animal has short, stiff, brush-like hair and orange-colored eyes and is highly prized by the natives. The seven-toed Maltese cats with blue eyes are con sidered the finest of that breed. There are three shades of the tortoise shell cats; the species having black and nut-brown coloring, with green eyes. is held to be the most rare. The orange Persian cat is considered the most beautiful, though the black. white and blue phases of the breed are oftenest exhibited. The Angora has the finest har of long-haired cats and is a beautiful beast, though the Persian seems more popular. The coon cat of Maine has fine hair, almost as long as that of an Angora; it is only one generation removed from its wild ancestors, and though cTomesticated, it is in no sense a lap tabby. It is very Intelligent and can be taught tricks and to follow its master like a dog. The ordinary lifs of a cat ranges from IS to 16 years, during eight of which years the female is a breeder, averaging four litters a year. It is an untruth to believe that to be a good mouser a cat must be hungry. A well fed cat will do twice the service -In this line, as mousing is the animal's sport and not the satisfaction of hunger. and is still living to spend his own money. Moral Hunches are far from being infallible. i Hunches Far From Infallible. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Cox has a hunch that he will occu py the White House. There was once a man who had a huncir that his old, wealthy, bachelor uncle would soon die. Instead the old fellow married The answer of most fat' people is that exercise and dieting is too hard, too troublesome and too dangerous a method to force the weight down. How ever, in Marmots Prescription Tablets, all these difficulties are overcome. They are absolutely harmless, entail no dieting or violent exercise, and have the added advantage of cheapness. 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