THE SUNDAY OREGOXTATT. PORTLAND. DECEMBER 11, 1021 Rooofvrnt in the I tad I and, by Hermann Haceilorn. Illustrated. Houghton, Mif flin Co., Boston. Surely no other book published previously contained such a dramatic, lively portrayal of the "wild" days of Theodore Koosevelt when he lived in the cattle country bad-lands of Da kota from lHHi to 1887 the dayS when the cowboys and others of that lurid region called Roosevelt, because! of the spectacles he wore, "Foir Eyes." In the biography of 491 pages. Mr. Hagedorn has done splendid work, and has created a vigorous portrait j of the open air Roosevelt, one that will have pi-rmanent value. It seems that it was Roosevelt himself who gave our author the Impulse to write this book, "and it was the letters of Introduction which he (Roosevelt) wrote in 1118 which made It possible for me to secure the friendly interest of the men who knew most about his life on the ranch and the range." "If you want to know what 1 was like when I had bark on," Roosevelt had remarked, "you ought to talk to Bill Sewell and Merrifield and Syivane Ferris and his brother Joe." Our author said he told Roosevelt: "I am writing a book about you for boys." Again and again Roosevelt said: "I want you to go out to Da kota.' On one occasion I referred to his life in the bad-lands as 'a kind of Idyl,' and Roosevelt replied: That's It. That's exactly what It was.' The wish he had expressed, living, be came In a sense, a command after he was dead. The letters he had given me unsealed the lips of the men who for 35 years had steadily refused to reveal to 'newspaper fellows' the in timate story of the romantic life they had shared with the man who became president of the United States. "I question whether any biographer has ever had a better time gathering his material than I have. Amid the old scenes, the epic life of the fron tier has been recreated for me by the men who were the leading actors In it. In the course of this most grateful of labors I have myself come to know something of the life that Roosevelt knew 35 years ago the hot desolation of noon In the scarred butte country: the magic of dawn and dusk when the long shadows crept across the coulee and woke them to unexpected beauty; the soli tude of the prairies that have the vastness without the malignancy of the sea. I have come to know the thrill and the dust and the cattle odors of the round-up; the warm companionship of the ranchman's dinner tables; such profanity as I never expect to hear again; singing and yarns and hints of the tragedy of prairie women; and, at the height of a barbecue, the appalling lntru- j sion oi aeatn. i nave leu in an ua potency the spell which the short grass county cast over Theodore Roosevelt and I cannot hear the word Dakota without feeling a stirring in my blood." In other words, Mr. Hagedorn went to Dakota in the little Missouri river country, and lived among the people who were friends and even old cronies of Roosevelt, and. sensed the wild atmosphere of those lawless days when Roosevelt was working out his destiny In the rugged west. It Is remarkable that Roosevelt, then in search of health and adven ture, and with the cultured accents of Harvard apparent In his speech, held his own with the wild men he met in 1883 in Dakota. It was the terminal of the "under ground railway" of the horse and cattle thieves that ran from that country to the Canadian border. There wasn't a sheriff within 100 miles of the place and the "six shooter" and the "noose" were the principal means of settlement be tween man and man. The landscape round about was of the most for bidding aspects Impenetrable wild erness of tangled ravines and weird grotesque rocks and craggy fast nesses that made a natural hiding place for the lawless freebooters of the range. It was a place, too, wnere nature assumed a lawless mood the home of the deadly, blighting bliz zards that came and went, without warning, to test to the limits of enr durance the hardihood of man ana beast. Roosevelt came to hunt game and to seek health, but he remained to engage professionally In the cattle business and to develop into real, vigorous, clean-living manhood. The westerners whom Roosevelt met Included such worthies as "Hell Roaring Bill Jones." "Red-Headed Finnegan," Bill Williams and Jess Hogue. who sold "Forty-Mile Rock Eye" Jake Maunders, "the sneakiest man In town"; Granville Stuart, the silent but grim leader of the vigil antes; Joe Ferris and Bill Merrifield, the Canadian free-and-easy but sterl ing men who became Roosevelt's partners In the cattle business. Once. It Is related, Roosevelt was near a tough Dakota saloon, on a stormy night, when he heard two shots fired. True to his instinct, Roosevelt entered and sat down quietly at a rear table. A big bully of a man, with a revolver In each hand, was parading up and down the saloon, looking for trouble, when he saw Roosevelt. The bully shouted: "Four-eyes Is going to treat," and ordered Roosevelt to set up "drinks for the crowd." Now, it occurred to Roosevelt that he was face to face with a crisis vastly significant in that new coun try. If he backed down, he said to himself, he would have more trouble explaining the reasons for It than he would care to undertake. Besides It wasn't his way. The bully stood close to him. with his heels together a fact that Immediately struck Roosevelt, the athlete, as a foolish attitude for a threatening man. Fin ally yonng Roosevelt rose, saying: "Well, If I've got to I've got to." and as he came to his feet he suddenly struck quick and hard with his right to the point of the bully's Jaw and then again with his left. The bully hit the corner of the bar with his head, discharging both guns as he went down and out. He was hustled Into a shed and the crowd viewed "Four-eyes" with a new respect. The bully quickly left town. But. view the Incident from another angles Suppose the bully had been a trained prizefighter, and that the blows he received had not knocked him out? What would he then have done with his two loaded revolvers? The episode about a French adven turer, the gallant and brave but foolish Marquis de Mores, one he boasted of the royal Bourbon family France. Is delicious reading. When the marquis and Roosevelt met. It was a case of two strong men, etc. They became business rivals. The marquis took offense at a remark of Roosevelt's, and he wrote that "there was a way of settling such differ ences between gentlemen." Roosevelt showed the letter to Bill Bewell and said: "That's a threat He Is trying to bully me. He can't bully me. I'm going to write him a letter myself. Bill. I don't believe in fighting duels. My friends don't believe in It. But I r.-on't be bullied by this Frenchman. Now. as I am evidently the challenged party, I have the privilege of naming the weapons. I am no swordsman and Miss Ana E. tsasrstad of Pacific nnivemlty. Or., who has trana lated from the French two of fOdmond Itostand's play. pistols are too uncertain for me. So what do "you say I make It rifles?" Roosevelt sat down on a log and drafted his reply, stating that while he had no unfriendly feeling for the marquis, "he was ready at all times and all places to answer for his ac tions and that if the marquis insisted upon having satisfaction, he would meet him with rifles at 12 paces, the adversaries to shoot and advance until one or the other dropped." A day or so later the answer came by special messenger: The marquis assured Mr. Roosevelt that he had completely misunderstood the mean ing of his letter that the idea he meant to convey was that there was always a way of settling affairs of that sort between gentlemen with out trouble. And would not Mr. Roosevelt do him the honor of dining with him? In a sentence, the mar quis' bluff was called. It Is a matter of subsequent record that the marquis, while he lived, never gave up his dream of being crowned the king of France. He began various business enterprises in America, but lost money in all of them. He died eventually, fighting In north Africa against natives who had rebelled against French au thority. j, CnneM, Marriage, by M. T. F. Duffill & Co., Xew York City. The author of this novel modestly hides her identity and leaves no ap parent clew. The incidents are writ ten in the styie of a story that ac tually took place in real life. It Is I great love tale, one of permanent value, and a classic of its kind. Its literary style is simple and natural. "My Chinese Marriage" is the re cital of the love existing between two students at a college In this coun try the students being an American girl named Margaret, the heroine, and a Ch'nose young man named Chan King, a member of the aristo cratic Lang clan of China, the hero. Against the wishes and advice of most of their friends, Margaret and Chan King are married. She is an Episcopalian and he !s a member of the Dutch Recormed church of Amer ica. fter graduation from college Chan King returns to China to enter i so that his own father and sweetheart the diplomatic service, when his baby! find it difficult to be in his company, son, Wilfred, was five months old. I How Perclnet Is "tamed" and a happy Four months later his wife received I ending created make an artistic word from her husband to Join him finale. in Shanghai. China. ' The Princess Far-Away" Is one of In China the young wife deter- j Rostand's romantic tragedies in four mined to become a Chinese wife and acts, and the translation into English to live and act as one, because she is dne as completely as in the pre and her husband love each other ceding comedy. "The Princess Far dearly. Her husband s parents had Away" much longer play and lasts opposed the marriage, but after a while her husband's grandmother to see her and the two women J fell in love, in a calm way. The young wife then with her hus band and child went to live with Chan King's mother, and the latter and the American begin to love each other. It was a calm, happy, philoso phical household. A baby daughter is born to the couple. Chan King, wife and babies return to American for a term of years, as he Is ordered to a diplomatic post. A week after reaching these shores, Qhan King is stricken by lnfluensa and dies. His broken-hearted widow and her babies return to live In China, because she prefers China. Breuklng Into the Movies, by John Emer son and Anita Loos. The James A. Mc Cann Co., New York City. It Is stated by one authority that Anita Loos Is the dean of the school of photoplay writing, and that her collaborator In proiUicing the Emerson-Loos photodramas is John Emer son, veteran dramatist of the spoken stage. Such two authorities therefore are entitled to respect, when they present such a book of well-arranged information as this. It tg written along commonsense. friendly lines, with a desire to be fair to producer, star, reader and learner. The pages are 115. It is stated that "one or two mov ing picture stars get as high as $10, 000 a week, while the majority of the leading stars of the screen get from $1000 'to $10,000 per week. Smaller parts bring salaries ranging from $50 to $200 per week." Some chapter heads are: Introduc tion acting for the screen; what the Jobs are; would you film well?; make-up; how to dress for a picture; moving picture manners; reading your part; inside the brains of a moving picture star; salaries; scen ario writing; how others have done 1L Sw-lrcti-d Poems, by Yone Maquhie The Four Seas Co., Boston. Inquiry shows that Yone Nogughl is a Japanese poet whose verse has sterling merit, and whose art has won esteem that is international. During 1893-1904. with the exception of one year in 1903 In London, he was in the United States, and lived with Joaquin Miller, the American poet, for three years. There are 53 of this poet's poems In this little book of 125 pages poems selected by the poet himself to pre sent to the American public. These poems, in blank verse, possess the soul of fine, lofty sentiment, set In Imagery of the orient. To occidental readers, this verse is strange and ever curious. The Founding of New England, by James Truslow Adams. Tne Atlantic Monthly Press. Boston. There is much historical matter ably presented In this book which causes the American reader to thrill with pride, for it Is the record of the beginning of this nation founded by Englishmen In North America. Our author tells the story fairly and prints agreeable and disagreeable facts with Impartiality. He even re lates the hanging of innocent people I In Massachusetts in the long ago be cause of a false charge of witchcraft. Our author deals mainly with ori gins, discussing the discovery and first settlement of New England; the genesis of the religious and political ideas which there took root and flour ished; the geographic and other fac tors which shaped Its economic de velopment; the beginning of that English overseas empire, of which it formed a part; and the "early formu lation of thought on both sides of the Atlantic regarding Imperial problems." The author writes from Brldge hampton, N. Y. One significant chap ter deals with the adoption In Xew England colonies of not only Indian but negro slavery, and the assertion is made (page 205) that "the import ing of slaves for use In the other oolonles long constituted an Impor tant part of Puritan trade." It Is shrewdly remarked that It was "wholly due to economic and not ethical causes that the institution did not take root." Pages are 482. Triinslnllnna Into English of Two Plars In French by Edmond Kostand. Tho translator Is Miss Anna E. Bagstad. of Pacific university. Oregon. . The genius .of Edmond Rostand, the celebrated' French dramatist and poet of the romantic school, is acknowl edged internationally. Experts ac cet Rostand's "Cyrano de Bergerac"' as "the finest dramatic poem of half a century," although other judges dis agree. Rostand's plays "The Ro mancers," and "The Princess Far Away," are notable examples of Ros tand at his best. In depicting the ro mantic. Miss Anna E. Bagstad has lust fin ished translations from the French of the latter two plays Just named, and has done creditable work. She has been professor of romance languages at Pacific university. Or., for the last five years, formerly was a student at Simmons college and the Emerson College of Oratory, Boston, and took a master's degree at Yankton. S. D.. In 1905. "The Romancers." translated from the French of Rostand, is a delicious romance. The plot as created by Ros tand has not suffered In the least when given an English dress by Miss Bagstad, and even presented in our language of 1921. with one or two street phrases added. The charming sentiment and infectious fun In the story are not lost, but artistically woven together. The translation Is dedicated to Grace Haines, pupil and friend, the Sylvette of the play. There are five principal characters: Sylvette, a pretty girl, who loves Per cinet, the son of a neighbor. Perclnet, a romantic youth. loves Sylvette. Bergamin is the youth's father, and Pasqulnet, the girl's father. Both fathers became aware of the love match, and to help it along, and to make it more romantic, the fathers announce that a deadly feud exists between them. The lovers are sure that they are reincarnations of Romeo and Juliet, and they plan to escape Perclnet pretends to be a swordsman. which he Is not. He and his sweet heart, near the garden wall separat ing the homes, of the two families, prepare a pretended attack on Syl vette. with Perclnet looming up as her brave rescuer and the hero of both the fathers. This inaocent scheme Is discussed loudly by the lovers, and is overheard by Bergamin. who with the other parent, hires a professional bravo and actor, Straf orel, to stage a fake street abduction of the girl. This scene takes place, and Perclnet acts as a great hero. But he becomes so conceited over his "bravery" that he gives himself to boasting, so much to 97 pages, while "The Romancers' 1b a shorter work. The Princess Far- Away" is romantic, beautifully poetic. with latterly an element of tragedy It i the story of the deathless love existing between Melissinde, princess of the orient and countess of Tripoli, and young and dashing Jeffrey Rudel, prince of Blaye, troubadour of French Aquitaive. In the cast of 24 principal characters, on land and sea, are sailors, knights, a chaplain, phys ician, merchants, pilots, pilgrims, etc., also intending warriors who wish to take part In the crusades against the Saracens. The time depicted Is the 12th century. While I Remember: A Book of Keminin- cenrrs, by Stephen McKenna. George H. Doran Co., New York city. Mr. McKenna is pleasantly remem bered as a clever and young English writer who is the author of "Sonia," "The Education of Eric Lane," "The Sixth Sense," "Midas and Son" and few others. These memoirs of an Englishman of 30 'are significant and informing He th'nks that the peace of Versailles In 1919 ushered in a new order of thought and customs and that It la better to talk in a friendly way about events of world moment prior to 1919, before they pass from remem brance, as to "old" England. Westminster, London, polities, poli ticians, war-time. 1914-1918, demobili zation and other subjects are ably discussed. Analysis of the Electric Railway rroblrm, by Delost V. Wilcox. Apperton Press, New York city. This is a voluminous book of 789 pages, a small library of valuable In formation, with a carefully arranged index. The publication is a complete one of Its kind and Is "a report to the federal electric railways commission, with summary and recommendations, supplemented by special studies of local transportation issues In the state of New Jersey and the city of Denver, with notes on recent de velopments In the electric railway field." Dr. Wilcox Is a consulting fran chise and public utility expert and recognized as an eminent specallst In his profession. Dulry, by George S. Kaufman and Mara Connelly. G. P. Putnam's Sons, Xew York City. A sparkling, clever comedy In three acts, that had Its premiere In In dianapolis In 1921. and was produced at the Frazee theater. New York. August 13, 1921, where It won big success. There are clever charac ters, and the principal one is Dul cinea. a foolish, feather - brained young hostess whose social doings In New York and suburbs create wonder and much gossip. Japan and the 1'nlted States, 1853-1931, by Payson J. Treat. Houghton, Mifflin St Pn Hn.tnn Professor Treat of Stanford univer- I siLy is me nuiiiui "i liiis iniurmir.g, 1 quietly written book of 283 pages It, Is stated that with the exception of the first chapter, the volume consists of one dozen lectures prepared for delivery at Xour of the leading Jap- lanese universities In the tall of this year The author gives a sensible survey of the relations between chls country and Japan, from the beginning of friendly relations to the present time. During the past 15 years. It Is stated. Professor Treat has made two visits to eastern Asia to check up his studies by observation and research. A "way out" for better, more friendly relations between America and Japan is thought to be "by federal action, through the maintenance .if treaty and constitutional guarantees, and through the right of naturalization." Patience and reason are advised for future International relations Dreamers, by Knot Hamsun. Alfred A. Knapf, New York city. "Dreamers" Is the most pleasant-to-read of all the Hamsun novels, and is without the grimness and dark real Ism that stand out so sharply in Ham sun's principal novel, the one called "Hunger." "Dreamers" Is a picture of Nor wegian peasant life, and has flashes of merry humor. It reflects princi pally the love affairs of Ave Ronald sen, telegraph operator, inventor of a kind of fish-glue, and lover of many girls. At the opening of the book, he is engaged to marry Marie Van Loos, housekeeper at the vicarage. Then a pastor and his wife arrive, and Ron aldsen thinks he loves her. She Is sure she Is tired of her hus4and. as he can't keep her In finery. Ronald sen next falls in love with Ellse Mack. Ten Little Books for Children, Illustrated to colors. Henry Altemus, Philadelphia. Pocket-book editions of little stories of childhood, for small children about 6 years and upward. Each book meas ures 5H Inches by 44- Titles are: "Grunty Grunts and "Smiley Smile Outdoors," "Peter Rab bit's Birthday." "A Child's Garden of Verses," by Robert Louts Stevenson; "Little Squirrelle Squlrrellekln," "The Old Time Story of the Three Bears," "Little Lambie Lambkin," "Peter Rab bit's Easter," "The Wonderful Storv of Cinderella," "The Story of Chicken! T t, ....... . - ana inline frayers ror inline Lips." Some of these stories are told In verse and some In prose. Days of the Discoverers, by L. Lamprey, Illustrated. Frederick A. Stokes Co.. New York city. Nineteen short stories, describing In graphic form great days In our Amer ican history describing Columbus when he first saw America; Balboa, as he reached the Pacific: Hendrick Hudson sailing up the river that aft erward bore his name; Captain John Smith, admiral of New England, and others. The pages are 300. and the book Is recommended to the atten tion of parents and teachers. In the knowledge that the volume may be found valuable as supplementary reading for regulation study in his tory. Two Christmas Books.. Illustrated. Volland Co., Chicago. P. F. "The Christmas Story" is the title of a hansomely Illustrated book, with pictures in charming colors, consist ing of sacred texts from the gospels of St. Luke and St. Matthew, telling the story of the birth of Jesus of Naz areth. The Illustrations In skilfully chosen colors are by John Rae. "Mother Goose," Is the title of a pleasant-to-look-at gift-book forchll- THE UTEllYWCOPlr ll BY JENNETTE KENNEDY. THE great Russian bacteriologist, Metchnikoff whose theories as set forth In "The Prolongation of Life" have influenced both scientists and general readers and In many re spects revolutionized medical science is now presented to the world in a biography by his second wife. Olga Metchnikoff. It deals with his birth in Russia, his German student days, his life at Petrograd. his researches and finally his position as the head of the Pas teur Institute. That In his own decline which re sulted in his death, he carefully watched and recorded his condition, is an interesting commentary on his devotion to science. Timber Wolves," by Bernard Cron- takes a scene little known in the world of fiction Tasmania. It is a i r,l-hloodcd" book concerned with logging and the difficult work In "a man's country." m a It is said that before "The Quest" sailed for the Antarctic with Sir Robert Shackjeton in command, on its Journey of exploration, three stanzas from Kipling's poem, "If." were en graved on a brass plate, and placed Just below the bridge of the vessel. A few excerpts from W. L. George's "A London Mosaic" show the epi grammatic style of the book, viz.: "There Is no such thing as 'good old.' There is nothing but 'bad old ." "Men do not fall, they dive." "The cinema was put forward by the vulgar for the vulgar. Few peo ple like cinemas: they either love them or loathe them." "If a woman has the wit to shut the becoming she can always be in fashion. If she dares." "The poor are not as unhappy as they look. . The rich have less pleasures than the poor: they are free from more pains, but that is not the same thing." An interesting little old book came to light the other day called "Horn's Overland Guide to California." It Is of the vintage of 1852 and deals with the route from the United States In dian sub-agency. Council Bluffs, on the Missouri rlyer. to Sacramento, California. Hosea B. Horn is the au thor and he gives a table of distances, and briefly describes th' rivers, creeks, lakes, mountains, roads, tim ber, grasses, curiosities, and all fea tures for the benefit of the overland traveler. It Is noteworthy that the page of tables giving distances frDm point to point from Council Bluffs to Oregon City is decidedly well thumbed. a In "Glenwood of Shipbay." John H. Walsh's new novel, the hero returns from ten years of adventure in Alaska to rouse his Maine home town to new activities in shipbuilding. He telle his companions. "Work kills philosophy: put a man to work, and you have perhaps saved society from a philosopher. And philosophy is a poor science. It teaches you how to get along without thtge; not how to get things." An adventure tale of the type which usually appeals to boys of all ages la "The Castaways of Banda Sea," by Warren H Miller. His pub lishers assure us It 'has not one dull moment for Its readers." It contains, among other incidents, the race with death across the Banda sea of the little trading schooner Kawanl, with the fire eating its heart out; "the rescue of a native child from human sacrifice to a heathen god; a wreck on a Pearl Atoll; a fight with sharks; the capture of a band of 't-'eT-in'vI'h What more could eart desire? a a The author of the popular books on the South seas "White Shadows in the South Seas." and "Mystic Isles of the South Seas" will publish in the spring another work on that ren a book re-arranged and edited by Eulalle Osgood Grover, and Illus trated bv Frederick Richardson. The story is told in attractively arranged verse and the book measures 11 by JV4 inches, 24 pages. Helen's Babies, by John Habberton. Il lustrated. 9tewart-Kldd. Cincinnati. O. A splendid, memorial edition of a favorite American classic of child hood, much treasured In the years that are gone, and Just the innocent tale that the younger generation of 1921 should know about. The book of 241 pages measures 9 Inches by 6Vt. and is boxed. A suit able Christmas present. NEVY BOOKS RECEIVED. Modern English Statesmen, by J. R. Stirling Taylor. 261 pages, splendldly-done etudles of leading figures in English state craft Oliver Cromwell. Robert Walpol. the Pitts, Edmund Burke and Benjamin Disraeli; Long Swsetening. by Grant Car penter, a satisfying romance of the Cali fornia redwoods, with a wonderful hero; and. The Threshold, by Evelyn Campbell, a papered-cover novel of romantic inter est, depleting American life and changing Ideals (Robert M. McBrlde It Co.. N. Y.. The Olrl of Ghost Mountain, by J. Allan Dunn, a dashing romance of ths west, with cowboy and other heroea: and Jack O'Judgment, by Edgar Wallace, an English mystery story of decided Interest (Small, Maynard A Co.. Boston). Wild Brotner, by William Lyman Un derwood, 140 pages. Illustrated by photo graphs by the author, a beautifully ap pearing book short stories of wild pets found in the Maine woods a story of hu man kindness and animal life under unique conditions a suitable present for a young man (The Atlantic Monthly Press. Bos ton). ' Adventures in Cuba, by Seckatary Haw kins, Illustrated, a wall-told story of ad ventures by boys In Cuba and a hunt for a treasure. These stories appeared origi nally In the Cincinnati. Ohio. Enquirer, newspaper. A boya' book. Stewart Kldd Co.. Cincinnati ). Phyllis Anne, by Florence Ward, an In teresting story of stage people, depicting an ambitious American girl neorino uamea A. Mr.Cann Co.. N. Y.l. The Wandering Jew, by E. Temple Thurston. Illustrated, a powerful play In four phases, being a delineation of the old legend of the .lew who was doomed to wander the earth until Judgment day. The play has had a long run In London and has Just been presented In this coun try (Putnam's Sons. N. Y.). The Gentle floneers, Dy k. naDersnam arnwell. a sensible American novel of Barnwell ,..,..,! In ril good influence. CThe Four Seas Co.. Boa- ton). Philllppa's Fortune, by Margarita Spald ing Oerrv. one of the big. splendid novels of the fall for girls, depicting Phllippa's school days a story mat recalls jean Webster's "Patty;" and Inea and Thllby May, by Sewell Ford, a sparkling, amus ing story of two girls who come to New York In search of romance and a rich uncle a story told by the clever author. "Shorty McCabe" (Harpers. N. Y.). The Forest Beyond the Woodlands, by Mildred Kennedy, with silhouettes by Vlanna Knowlton, a reprint of a favorite, admired story for children: The Other Magic, by K L. Grant Watson, a roman tic, pulsing novel of life In the south seas: Lady Luck, by Hugh Wiley, an amusing novel of today In the far west, with touches of rapid 8an Francisco life and rich In darkey dialect: and Jane, by Hugh Wiley, rapid-fire, racy short stories of San Fran cisco life, depicting Chinatown and other districts (Alfred A. Knapp. N. T.. The Hidden Force, by Louis Couperus. a novel far above average merit, dealing with scenes, people and mysteries of Java (Dodd-Mead 4 Co.. N. Y.). America, and the Young Intellectual, by Harold Stevens. 22 essay-articles on cur rent topics of America and foreign life messages told In well-chosen, crisp Eng lish; Angelica, by Elizabeth Santay Hold ing, a sincerely written, splendid American novel, of romantic Interest, with comedy features: Splinters, bv Keith Preston. 94 poems, smart, emotional and finely polished verse (Doran Co.. w. Y.l. Apritly, by Jane Abbott, an unusual, well-told novel for girla. depicting a clr- uh heroine ( Llpplncott s. Phlla.) Columbine Time, by Will Irvln, a story that Is told In splendid .striking style, of days when the west was young (Stratford Co.. Boston). quarter of the globe. It is to be called "AtolLs of the Sun." Mr. O'Brien Is now in New York work ing on a dramatization of "White Shadows in the South Seas." Moving pictures will be shown next spring In Tahiti, the Marquesas. Samoa, Flfl, the Solomons and New Guinea, where his yacht Wisdom II has stopped to make the pictures. Three manuscripts of Robert Burns were found recently among the pos session of a Dumferllne baker who has .been dead for 30 years. They have been declared genuine. Bertha Runkle's stories have had a European setting, almost without exception, but her newest novel Is a love story of today In New York, and it Is called "The Islsmd." Bagdad ww" TCTKTJ B f , . ' . ' , " 'u u IL , u"V k' i. lne 5 :V"T" -"- amusing: j . lo American nie, is tne theme of Simeon Strunsky's humorous "Slnbtid and His Friends." - ; WE HAD Just relumed from Aunt Mary's funeral when Marjory asked Grandpa Kline why Aunt Mary had never married when she was so nice and her aister. who. was so dif ferent, had married such a splendid man as Mr. Hunt. Grandpa Kline set tled back In his chair, and began this strange love story: "Now that Mary and Alf Hunt are both gone, it will do no harm to tell their story, though I shouldn't want you to repeat it. In the first place, Mary is not Anna's sister nor any re lation. Her mother married a wid ower who. like herself, had one child These two girls grew up together but were as different as night and day The father died when they were in high school, the mother soon became iiiijicss invaiia, and upon the young shoulders of these two de scended the responsibility of support ing the home. Anna never did much but run with boys, and Mary took In sewing and took care of the Invalid Then along came Alf Hunt. "I remember fiim well. He was a tall, serious chap whom everybody liked. The whole neic-hborhnnrf v.,., i , , , -"-".i. uui mey never could be sure which girl, for he took turns taking them to the church so cial about the only amusement In those days. None of us thought that Anna stood much of a chance, so we were all surprlse4 when she appeared at missionary society with a moon stone on her finger and announced that she was going to marry Alf Hunt. The town buzzed for a while and then settled down, prepared to sympathize with Alf. Mary didn't say much Just began to get a little thinner, a little grayer. But we thought this was due to her mother's death, which occurred shortly before the wedding. "About this time a distant relative A. f no, ........ . l . . ot Alary s died. leaving an income for Mary. She cheerfully withdrew into I the west wing of the house, giving the best part at the house to Anna and Alf. Everybody In the town came to call her Aunt Mary, for she never failed to help whenever there was sickness, trouble, or need. She always seemed to flndtime to slip in and straighten up Anna's untidy house and get a de cent meal for Alf to eat. Anna was the worst housekeeper In town, but Alf never suspected how bad she was till Mary took a trip west. I guess the shock of it, along with the star vation diet he had for six months. brought on a rever which nearly proved fatal. Mary came home and ' nursed him back to lite. "Then came the children four boys. ' all of whom Mary nursed and reared I because Anna disliked children. I Those boys were always in wrong, al- I ways setting into scrapes, and Aunt I Send for Complete Illustrated Ralph Connor In die spirit and style of "The Sky Pilot," Ralph Connor deals with the new issues and struggles of the West where social unrest and economic dis turbance call for equity and the square deal. You rill enjoy every page of this romantic story of a roan and woman who courageously face the truth and come victorious through the pain and turmoil. A book that prescribes a remedy for the aching heart of the world. $1.75 To Him that Hath Robert W. Chambers By common consent of critics and readers every where, Mr. Chambers has repeated in this story his great success of "Cardigan." Once more a glamor ous and thrilling page of American history is retold to stir tbe pulse of every American. Courage, hardi hood and daring stamped our forefathers who loved greatly and fought splendidly to hold tbe Mohawk country against the Indians and Red Coats. A romance of County Tryon. $1.90 The Little Red Foot GEORGE H. DORAN Mary paid the bills so Alt wouldn't worry. It was only because the town respected Aunt Mary so much that they tolerated those boys at all. When the war came, though, they showed their training, for, as you know, dears, there are four gold stars In the Hunt service flag. It killed what little was left of Alfs heart, for when the flu hit him he didn't try to fight. It was my turn to sit up with him the night he asked for Mary. Anna was asleep In the next room. "He asked me to lift him up a little, and then he took Mary's hands in his and raid: " 'Mary, you were so far above me and my poor prospects. 1 never dared tell you how much you meant to me. We all make mistakes, and I made mine when I was afraid to tell you 40 years ago that I loved you.' "I bowed my head before the look In her eyes, the same look your grandmother had when she round me wounded in a hospital after having been told 1 was among the missing In the terrible railroad wreck. When I looked up Alf had gone to the fairer land, and now, after two years, Mary has Joined him." P- L- M. IN PORTLAND'S CHURCHES tCuntlnusd From Pagf 2.) sospel sermon will be given. Several members were taken Into the church last Sunday and more are to follow. The Sunday school has in hand the Drotect of Dlacing two large art glass windows in the church auditorium and the contract will soon be let. a a MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Dr. Lucius H. Hughes, Methodist Episcopal min ister of this city, declares "The church is suffering ror lack of lead ership; it Is not attracting to the ranks of its ministry young men oi outstanding genius and character; to secure the best, it must be willing to count the cost and pay the price. II Is irreatly to the credit of t. nris- tian ministers as a class that tney place their financial compensation ; last in the order or tneir inieresLs. Nevertheless, a minister cannot be J the constructive leader that he ought j to be unless he is freed from the anx ieties and demands of temporary af fairs. At present only about 17 per I cent of the Protestant clergymen of the United States receive 11,500 or ( over, the sum recommended by gov ernment economics as the minimum I needed to maintain a family. ae great majority of them receive less than the lowest wage paid In the steel industry. Of the 170,000 Prot estant clergymen, not one per cent come within the income tax allotment of 32000., The church will fail to se cure the best young men for our min istry unless she rewards them ade quately and assures them of a re spectable support in old age. "Men of brains and power are not attracted by monotonous and color less activities of the ordinary routine of church life. They want to see the church coming to grips with practi cal problems, actually applying the spirit and principles of Jesus to every phase of life. "There must be adequate freedom. Young men must know that If they are entering into any form of Chris tian Bervice they will not be ham pered and hindered by ecclesiastical restrictions and regulations. Men are impatient JUBt now of denominational shiboleths and incidental differences. There must be time to think and pray and experience for oneself that the Christian message may bear the stamp of that authority which comes See our ads in the Society Section The J. K. Gill Co. Are You MalUnfe Your Children Happy ? The VOLLAND IDEAL Jr thai booty jhould make children happy and build character unconrclouylY and jttould contain nothing to cauce trteht .juyi fear, y only mljchlef .excuje mance or condone cruelty. As Vour Dealer TOSncStu 'YW. Talec of Little Dogr Nay P.F Volland Company-Poofricrr SBSBHssSSBBBnMBssBBaSsai ftookfTprocu feVlVWKQ et Z? GILL'S r aO - - I - at a . A Catalogue Free Are Yon a sm COMPANY from individual thinking and experi ence. We must stop handing down ready-made programmes from church officials and encourage the Individ uality leader to express his own ini tiative in his own programme. In the large churches, especially, there must be an adequate staff. A Christian leader must have time to think and grow or he cannot keep ahead of his congreation. "Individual and social salvation certainly go hand in hand and one cannot be divorced from the other But let the church remember that the task the church is engaged In is not the saving of a few chosen souls from the wreck of things but the re demption of the world and the crea tion of a new order of society based upon the principles of Jesus." Dr. Edward H. Pence, pastor of the Westminster Presbyterian church, will be a speaker at 3:30 this after noon in the Y. M. C. A., .when an open forum will be held on the sub ject of limitation of armament. The limitation of armament confer ence progress will be discussed from the viewpoint of the church. Marshal N. Dana will speak before the Wednesday night meeting of the Y. M. C. A. dormitory club. The social and religious work de partment of the Y. M. C. A. has ob tained films showing scenes In the near east, as related to welfare work being conducted there. TOWN SEEKS TREASURE Council Bluffs Citizens Die for Gold Burled by Bandits. Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald. Hunters for burled gold have begun to flock to the Schneider farm north east of Council Bluffs, rendezvous of gunmen routed a week or so ago. The Sort of Novels that Vigorous Folk Like to Read ik Flaming Fobzst By James Oliver Curwood Author of 'Ta. Rer-i 6W." "Ths VoBcj oSilmt Msn" T7VER feel mentally fagged? Then L adventure with Cnrwood into the wild North Woods "the Last outpost of romance" where men and women still live rugRed lives and die with the grandeur of pioneer days. His Issue cmA greatest novel tat The Flaming Forest VThrrxver Books art Sold $2.00 IP WaomvmWUsenis mmmrn My message to-day was a message of death for ottr misuruai jtrmrt young men. Ham strange it seems to applaud that.' " WOODROW WILSON, now revealed by the man who stood beside him day after day during America's most momentous, decade, has not been known heretofore in all the fullness of his humanity. Mr. Tumulty has shed many new lights on the war President, tearing away all veils of siience with his straightforward announcement of fact. From the New Jersey campaign of 1910 to the end of Wilson's second term, Tumulty's account of men and statesmen tells of every great personage who crossed Wilson's path. JOSEPH P. TUMULTY searches every phase of the controversies which have dung to Woodrow Wilson's public life, wrth challenging answers to the criticisms that were directed at Wilson's policies and activities. Friend and foe of Wilson agree that such a hook has not appeared since Nicolay and Hay's Lite of I J-rn Woodrow Wilson As I Know Him $5.00 at every book store Doubleday , Page & Co., Garden City. New York Regular Subscriber to Tbe Bookman? Mary Roberts Rinehart The further adventures of Tish, Aggie and l.inir, the three spinsters whose enterprise has carried them into many a ridiculous situation and into the hearts of Americans everywhere. In this new book they dare anything, accomplishing with the support of lettuce sandwiches and blackberry cordial the most blood-curdling feats. As elderly ladies they ore ecstatically amusing and as a side-light on the humor of American life they arc a great success. $1.75 More Tish Irvin S. Cobb Getting thin with Cobb. A book of fun, filosoiV and sound common tense for all who can no longer catch the five-fifteen without panting more than the engine. It U Cobb at his beat, more hilariously funny over losing one-third of himself than he was about losing his appendix in ''Speaking of Opera tions ." With illustrations by Tony Sarg. "He qualifies as a thing of beauty in tha.t he is a joy for ever." New York Post. $1.00 One Third Off 244 MADISON AVE.. NEW YORK They go with pick and shovel to dig and pry for money and bonds, loot of Iowa and Nebraska bank vaults, believed to have been buried by the bank officials, bent on the same er rand a hunt for their stolen se curities has only spurred on the treasure seekers. The first treasure hunters were officers and bank officials who hunted on the farm from one end to the other. Every bit of ground was examined for traces of fresh earth mounds. Every corner and nook in the house, barn and outhouses was scrutinized with the thoroughness of Sherlock Holmes, but nothing was found. The walls of the house were pried Into to disclose possible secret panels or hiding pluces In the partitions or floors, but all without success. Presence of strangers on the place only served to stimulate curiosity of Hie folk In the surrounding country, and when the word went out that the visitors were bank officials looking for stolen plunder. It was passed around the community like fire la prairie grass. Buried treasure! This was enough! Excitement of the gun battle with a gang of outlaws In their peaceful community was Intensified by tales of burled treasure. Singly and in groups of two and three treasure seekers appeared St the farm and began to turn up the sod in likely looking places. Not only was the farm searched thoroughly, but the surrounding pastures were also. There were those desirous of mak ing a "find" without It being known who stole forth at night to work by moonlight. However, no report has yet niaru of anytning In the wnj treasure being found. Tlw author ties believe that It loot ever is found It will be "finders are keepers," and the lucky one will not reveal it. Those brain tuoWcers go farthest ho can put other thing aside for brief daily vacations with great present day ikaon suck as this: 'pRIDEyALOMAR By Ptter B. Kyne AwtJWojf "KtTWsml of the Puit A MIGHTY drama of the New West, so "alive" that you'll feci tempted to cheer aloud for its characters when the surpris ing climax catches you off your guard. Ttlusmiums rndtsde rwo fuU-color ftngu, Wherever Boats are SoldtJ.OO iopolitan Book oratioQ Publishers w aiktaviiwm Ns. The War President and the War At the time of delivering his Jar-ex hoed war message, in April, 1917, the President was cheered ty dense muutludes thronging the streets as he passed from the White House to the Capitol anA hack again. This is from Tumulty's own description of the retnrn: "Fer a while he sat silent and pate in the Cabinet room. At last he said, ' Think what it was they were applauding.