THE SUNDAY OREGOXTAX, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 3, 1922 3 '7 rf 3sa ByfiiciardYHaller tlon he could; a venture that re-1 their respective opera boxes, across Russian school, especially in his suited in valuable additions to the , tables in fashionable restaurants and The Adventure of Uvinjj. by J6hn St. Loe Strachey. G. P. Putnam's Son New Tork city. - This is a book which will have a more far-reaching effect than its covers or its contents would indi-( cate to the average lay mind. For more than 30 years John St Loe Etrachey has held the unique posi tion of leading conservative jour nalist of England, and now that he has aired his views in the form of a subjective autobiography, it re quires little imagination to realize that his words will be pondered over by his emulators, and but little more imagination to believe that what .John Strachey has said wilstba, if not visible, at least discernible in conservative journalism tor years to come. - i- Strachey represents a bedrock English family, a family that has furnished a long line of prominent men, with scarcely one dazzling show of genius in the lot. Every uncle and every nephew has had eome opportunity to mold public thought or shape government, every one has done his job exceeding well, but few have achieved world-wide renown. They have been peda gogues, statesmen, engineers and journalists; all have been scholars, since the Strachey family tree .be gan to bear fruit. Consequently this particular Strachey is precisely the kind of Englishman that Eng land has been proud of. At the time of the completion of his book Strachey was 62 years of age. He was educated by private tutors and at Oxford, where he was not considered much of a student. His only zeal while at school was for English literature and he accu mulated a vast hoard of knowledge concerning poetry. He wrote some verse for qne or two English pub lications and for a while swayed between literature and journalism. Finally the latter caught him and he became associated with the Spec tator A year as book reviewer and he succeeded Mr. Asquith as editorial writer, and in this capacity was of such portend that the two editors, Hutton and Townsend, agreed that Strachey should succeed to the half ownership of the paper left by the one who died first. This was Hut ton, but shortly after that an ar rangement was effected1 whereby Strachey became sole editor. - Since assuming such a role his in fluence has been so vast that he has molded much English political opinion, and he has held a com manding position at the helm of English literature. Americans will be interested more In what Strachey has to say of Roosevelt and Hays than in any other part of the book. With both of these men he enjoyed deep friendships, and his British opinions of both are well worth reading by Americans, because of his different . Viewpoint. y Strachey, does not WTite much about himself except as events con cern him, or vice versa. He John St. Loe Strachey. editor of the Spectator and the British leader of conservative journal ism, whose autobiography has - just been, published by filessrs- Putnam. . ' pendent upon a married brother of Constance's. The support of the divorced hus band parUy filled the gap in the family's finances, but it brought to Constance only discontent and un happiness. She felt it up to herself to work out her own destiny, whether it be a second marriage or self-earned economic independence, Margaret-Ashraun has turned this situation into a. splendid sort of novel, sufficiently Tenetrating to be worth while, but not so deep as to lose its interest. It stands right on the dividing line between light fiction and real, discussion and sup plies something of both. Constance Moffatt's family is pre cisely typical and it is made so with ingenious simplicity. The picture of tne little town and what it affords in the way of opportunity, enter tainment -ana mental diversion is fairly graphic, and it is completely the proper setting Jor just such an exposition of feeling. Just how the author gets her people out of the trouble she plunges them Into it is Dest for the reader to find out. There is a brave defiance of con vention in Constance Moffatt's de- cisions and opinions, and yet Miss Asnmun Keeps her . settlements ivithin the boundaries - of nro- priety The well-read person will not nave to read this book t r, main well-read, but It is worth the reaamg. - fastness in Massachusetts, a little cabin fvmerly occupied by the rec luse, oSiCrow, and now looked after by Ihe manager of Raven's farm and his wife. On his way to the cabin Raven meets Tyra Ten ney, who is running away from Jier husband's madness. The Tenney household represents one. of theseydepressing tempests in a. teapot which may be interpreted ae- a minor typical phase of life anywhere. - Israel Tenney married his wife with full knowledge of a former love episode of hers. Their child, by some strange circum stance, bears a certain likeness to the other man, and this likeness causes Tenney to have strange fits of jealousy, intermittent and fe rocious. At such times Tenney will arm himself with an ax and go searching for the child. Then Tyra flees from her home and stays away with the child until her husband's frenzy has worn itself out. It is during one of these involun tary excursions that Raven comes upon Tyra. Her rare beauty, the pathos of her circumstances and the unreasonableness - of her husband's convictions that the child is not his touch Raven profoundly and h" throws himself into the task of showing Tenney the light. These are all excellent tvDes of New England people. JTenney is the religious man almost to the point of fanaticism; his wife is the rea Puritan woman. The turmoil is the kind which such earnestness of character brings forth when two different personalities clash. Miss Brown hasmade of the situation and of the people concerned a pene-. trating study. The story is slightly similar- to Sophie Kerr's "One Thing Is Certain," and is every bit as gripping and as meritorious. knowledge already available of I over the gaming tables of the casino. Lincoln's boyhood. . I and they do such things behind each 1 Most of Mr. Weik's new hook is I other's backs as to make the poor ! devoted to "Lincoln's Springfield ' reader's blood run cold, and hopes for i days, his work as a successful law- j the poor president and his beautiful ! yer, a record of his cases and a girl sink clear down below zero. But good 'bit of his social relations. He ' there is a very touching epilogue has provided in readable form of the ! wnen tne curiam imauj rings aowu host a. enmmandahiA nw record of ; on a ruined plot--and a double royal Lincoln the man which throws more ! catastrophe. The undertakers make money ana several weaaing rings change hands. What could be sweeter Eminent EnroTann. hv TCiii,nn r tj ser. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York Queen Marie, King Ferdinand, Venizelos, Constantine, Masaryk, Benes, Paderewski, Bratiano, Horthy and Karolyi: these are the ten- em- more occupied with the eras andinent Europeans Eugene S. Bagger stages he has passed through and their significances. Mostly he is concerned with the influence of Journalism and its place In the mod ern complex, and in this connection a great deal of his greatness can be comprehended. Considering the Importance of the press, regardless of what Mr. Chesterton so recently had to say, the light he throws on the structure of journalism in itself makes the book well worth reading. The Heart's Justice, by Amanda Halt The George H. Doran company, New York city. There should be, if there is not, such a 1 term as "literary license" corresponding to "poetic license," if only for the convenience of review ers in deciding how much leeway an author may havsf from the straight and narrow path of tech nique and form so long as the con tent and the message of the book justifies any departure. "The Heart's Justice" .is one such book where such a license would be con sidered. Amanda Hall is a novelist of un deniable ability; yet there is in her writing a trace of studied care and meticulous discrimination in choice of points that comes to the top oc casionally and somewhat halts whatf otherwise would be very easy read ing. This same care, however, is not used in the choice of characters Out of three Miss Hall has provided one that verges on the unique; the other two might be called types. On top of this the problem presented cannot be called exactly general in application, and in fact it verges on the individual. Muffett Harlow, the unique char acter. Is the daughter of David Har low, an ineffective sort of person of Inventive mind, whose inventions have never achieved euooess. Muf fett and her father like the old dilapidated house in which they live and their quiet, happy and under standing mode of living. Rolf Ster ling is the personification of the ef ficient business man and he is man ager of the company which has practically pensioned David Harlow. His ideas of efficiency in all things Jibe not a bit with the Harlows' Ideas of living, nor does Sterling approve of Mr. Harlow's puttering around over inventions. The only part he does approve of is Muffett; he loves her and marries her. David Harlow needs his daugh ter's love and she realizes that she cannot withdraw it from him and give it to her husband. That con stitutes the whole problem present ed In the novel. There is some ques tion whether Miss Hall -really solves it or whether she does not allow it to be solved by happenstance Rather than to have let the unusual happen to extricate father, daughter and husband from their emotional conflict it might possibly have been better to guide the three different emotions to some sort of conclu sions. The book is not a volume of de fects, however'. The problem is pre sented in an interesting manner and remains interesting throughout "The Heart's Justice" l)ears reading, and is, on the whole, well written and entertaining. light than ever on Lincoln's back ground. Of course the book is over shadowed by the immense quantity oft biographical data already avail able, and the first thought is apt to be that enough has already been written about Lincoln. This, how ever, is quickly dispelled. Mr. Weift has labored prodigiously, in bis ex aminations and searches into record, and with meticulous care has brought out all new material that he was able to find that was reveal ing of the personal side of Lincoln. chose when Ire realized after living a while in Chicago that he had spent the rest of his life 'n central Europe, one of the tempest spots of tne world. As a result of this real! zation, he has written these ten sketches of prominent persons which maKe worthy additions to that list of papers on personalities included in such volumes as "The Mirrors of Downing street," "The Mirrors of Washington" and "Behind the Mir rors," that have come to grace our bookshelves within the last two years. The book is highly appropriate and timely. The most important wheels grinding out history are re volving in central Europe right now, and Mr. Bagger's book serves to focus the att ention of readers on the personalities which oil the wheels. He has described and char acterized his ten eminent Europe ans in such excellent manner that they can be known quite as well as Lloyd George, Clemenceau, Wilson or any other limelight figure. Queen Marie of Rumania, the' woman who talked of' her starving subjects while she fingered a S250, 000 string of pearls, is aptly de scribed as a person who happens to have rare royal gifts of beauty and a talent for publicity; a woman who is unhappy if she has not spent two hours of every day in the saddle, riding her horses too hard, and two hours' painting. King Ferdinand, it might be said, comes out the little end of the horn, for, as in most other writings about the royal pair, his fascinating wife outshines him. Bagger does not write sympa thetically of all ten of his subjects. He is an Hungarian and has a right to be bitter toward some of them. For Karolyi and Horthy, his coun trymen, he has almost unstinted praise. His understanding and praise of Paderewski are generously ex pressed, but even so, the composer- prime minister does not come off whole-sKlnnea. Tne other five are rather liberally censored, but it can easily be seen that Bagger has at tempted to preserve a balance of justice, and to write with as little partiality as possible. Whether his selections are the ten really eminent Europeans is a. matter open to de bate. Like such contests as finding the ten most beautiful - women in America, the ten best authors, or the ten best anything, the ten most eminent Europeans should be picked by the composite system of group ing. Nevertheless, Bagger has chosen ten interesting characters, nine men and one woman who have had their fingers in the central European pie, and he has written interestingly and illuminatingly about them. Raphael, by Felix Laverty. The Frederick a. btoKes company. New York city. Books on such subjects as the Florentine and other early masters must- necessarily ne chosen carefully In such localities as Portland, where opportunities to oecome. informed and acquainted with the works and lives of the great painters are for the most part limited to the printed record. This book on Raphael is not for the reader who would know something of his mode of living, his hards-hi-pa and struggles and the per sonal side of his achievements. It Is rather for the student of his works who would care to learn the history of each painting and the par ticulars connected with its execution. ei'ix Lavery has drawn largely for his material from the biography of Raphael written, 30 years after the great painter's death. Added to what he could gilean from that work are his own findings during ten brears of diligent research, and judg ing irom tne results the ten years cannot exactly be called wasted time. ( Lavery has divided the 18 ve-ars of Raphael's life as a painter into three periods, Ts first period be gins in 1504 and the dussion traces the influence of Rachel's teacher, Perugino, which can be seV in sudh paintings as "The Cruci fixion," "The Madonma. Ansidei" and "Agnolo Don-i." In this period also appears the first vestiges of the Florentine manner, due to the fame which Leonardo da Vsncl was gain ing at that time. . The middle period covers the years from 1510 to 1514. The work of Ra phael in each period, descriptions o'f.the pictures arranged in chrono logical order as they were painted, is discussed. The middle period be gan with the1 adoption of the Ro man manner. The more important pictures bearing this influence are reproduced. The third period takes Raphael from the year 1514 to his death in 1520. One point of the book deserving more gratitude than any othe !s the new d'aba collected on the paint ing, "The Nativity." Lavery devotes much space to this subject and has been successful in tracing the com plete 'history of the masterpiece. Anooner excellent feature is the ex position of the work of various col lectors, including Cardinal Mazarin, whose devotion to collecting re sulted In the present method of pub- no museum display. For anyone interested at all in painting-, and especially in Raphael tiavery s dook ls extremely valuable. It should make for a far keener and more comprehensible appreciation. Nothing as complete has ever been written on Raphael before, and the text, combined with the renroduc tions of paintings and preliminary oirawings, leaves little to be desired. A Homesteader's Portfolio, by Alice Day Pratt. The MacMill&n company. New York city. . One can readily Imagine a pros pective homesteader setting out for the promised land with a few tools, a few dashes, a few clothes,, many hopes and a large blank book to be used for a diary. It seems to be chronic for prospective homestead ers to keep' diaries, usually with a view to publication. Many of them have proved exceptionally worth while; most of them achieve wide circulations, but, even so, the un sympathetic reviewer m'ght have passed this new book by, had he not noticed on the "blurb" that Miss Pratt's homestead was in Oregon. And then perusal proved that even with the local interest one of the main features of the book, there was a great deal more besides which makes Miss Pratt's account decid edly wotth reading. For .one thing she has' put an agreeable limit on the effusiveness and enthusiasm of her writing common faults with many homesteaders' diaries and she has endeavored, with real success, to make her story informative as we'll as entertaining. Miss Pratt Is delightfully frank. She says that in the year 1910 a small child was reprimanded for speaking of old maids in her pres ence, making her realize that she was one or almost one, and she should take steps to provide her self with some big adventure. Con sequently she picked on Oregon and arrived at Pendleton during a Roundup, which, makes material for an Interesting chapter. First came a job as a teacher in Athena, while she studied the state and decided where to cast her lot Then, late one afternoon in June, after various excursions with locat ors, a wagon rumbled away until the sound' of its rumblings was lost in the distance and left her on the "high, central Oregon plateau, and the adventure was begun. First it was in t a tent, later in a tiny house; gradually the first brood, of tiny chickens (the incubation hav ing been a tremendous adventure in Itself) grew into an enviable hock of White Leghorns, and other assets were added until homesteading was completed. Miss Pratt writes her story in sprightly fashion, picking with en joyable eagerness the interesting topics from her experience. Many fascinating "characters, human and animal, came within her vision. One of these is the "old Oregonian," who provides a genuine taste of Oregon .ioneer life and who gives valuable added touch. Sam BUek'g Diary, by Stephen C. Noland, Harper Sl Brothers, New York city. Sam Blick had a wife and daugh ter who hoodwinked him by making him believe he was boss of his own house, a furnace, a ten-dollar raise, a pup, and a lot of funny neigh bors. The only thing he didn't have was a sense of 'humor. .If he could have traded his new year's resolu tion to keep a diary for a sense of humor, we might all have been happy. - The most amazing thing is the consistency of the author's own par ticular brand of humor. Maybe the book is autobiographical and was actually written from day to day as Sam ls supposed to have written in his diary. Maybe Sam is the usual sort of man, a quartermaster .for a wife and daughter, thoroughly gul lible and thoroughly blind to. things around him, fortunately an optimist and always a firm believer in him self. Wit is like liquor; eome of it is sparkling, some of it is dry and some of it is slow. This resembles home-brew in both taste and appli cation it should te applied apolo getically on account of its taste. But, then, is it fair to criticise a foolish book seriously Sam Blick is a naive old man. If such a thing is possible. He tells his wife and daughter that they should resolve to. limit their expenses to the family "income and they answer that he should resolve to say nothing unpleasant at break fast. Sam gets a ten-dollar raise and decides to keep it a secret and come out 500 to the good at the end of the year. He spends that extra J500 about six times during the year. He plays rhum with his daughter's beau and causes a lovers' quarrel. Daugh ter wants a fur coat and Sam. picks one out for her while he resolves that she shan't have a fur coat. The neighbors talk about everything and Sam. and his wife talk back. All of the fallacies of day-to-day family strife and happiness are carefully chronicled in a fashion about as hu morous as a moderately lively din ner party, although with not quite as much originality.' "Sam Blick's Diary" might ' be taken as a parody on "Main Street," and as such it ought to go over big. The book would make a fine Christ mas present for friend husband; he would think it was funny because he is one husband that wasn't at all like Sam, and ire would agree that most other husbands were. The Kingmaker, by Burton E. Steven son. iodd. Mead & Co., New YorK city. There are a few of us who must admit a sneaking liking for a really good melodrama; not necessarily the zounds, villain or ' save my child sort, but something where diamonds, pearls and beautiful women and the ribbons denoting royalty figure in descriptions, where kings and queens are tossed in and out of thrones with an improbable and fascinating liveliness, and a red-blooded, quick witted American hero wins his game while blue-blooded, shrewd Euro pean courtiers lose theirs. Once in The Story of Don Quixote, by Arvid Paulson and Clayton Edwards. The Frederick A. Stokes company. New York city. . Cervantes, if v he could read it, would be mueh less horrified at this children's version of his fine old classic than at most of the other versions which have been published. He would be rather interested and maybe gratified, at the unique vein of humorous satire which has been lifted wholesome from his epiq 'and imbedded in the prose for juveniles. His satire is one of about three qualities in the origiinal and of them it is the one which should by a,U means be perpetuated. It would be interesting to trace the history of humor and satire in literature. It seems always to have existed in gome form or other; Boc- carao made extravagant use of it, and it crops out now and again in varied form in works of many mas tens since his day. The present rage for it can scarcely be called a chip oit the old block because . modern satire, in its highly developed form, is a thing entirely apart from the quaint originals. Cervantes had a wonderful sense or humor, and ror that reason abridged versions of Don Quixote make valuable reading for children. climaxes. Those who know only the American short story of magazine variety will, occasionally, upon read ing their first Russian story, read it a second time to grasp the point they missed. Then convinced that there is no point, they suddenly see that it lies in a mental turnover Instead of the customary emotional close-up. Take, for instance, the story from which the book derives its name. 'England, My England" Egbert had no place in .the world beyond his home. There he was self-sufficient, but sufficient to no one el'se. He refused to make himself so. The natural ending would seem to be that the war at least would change mm. Dirt it seems far more natural that one of his mental meanderlngs would delay him just enough to be killed by a chance shell.. Such an ending serves a better, tf not a more satisfying purpose, but it is not the ending that matters so much in Mr. Lawrence's stories. He ls so effective in his portrayals, whether they be concrete exposures or subtle inuendoea, that almost any pass is a revelation. Nothing could be more characteristio of thecasuaj Egibert than that he left a sickle where his best-beloved daughter would fall upon it and lame herself for life. - Another good example of Law rence's force is found in the -story, "Wintry Peacock," wherein the wife of a soldier asks a stranger to read a French letter addressed to her husband. The whole- reason It is gathered that the little Belgian irl should write to the father of her new-born child, is the love of the wife for a temperamental and af fection-craving peacock, and the" point . is put with such extreme nicety. The husbandX before he knows of the letter, tries to kill the peacock almost the first day he re turns. The other eight stories are equally good and equally significant, al though some are more likeable than others. Their titles are: "Tickets, Please," "The Blind Man," "Monkey Nuts," "You Touched Me," "Samson and DeMlah," "The Primrose Path,1 "The Horse Dealer's Daugihiter" and 'anmy and Annie." Grace Hall's Rights Sold. Another bit "of good fortune has come to Grace E.. Hall, Oregon au thor, whose first book of verse, Homespun," arrived in. Portland just four weeks ago. Here is a let ter received yesterday from her pub Ushers, podd. Mead & Co. of New York, in which the information Is given that second serial rights for her book have been sold to a large syndicate company of Chicago, pend-. ing approval of the sale by the au thor. This should be exceedingly gratifying, following so quickly, the appearance of Mrs. Halls first book, and bespeaks the widespread appeal of her verse. Grace E. Hall's work has -been a regular feature - of the editorial page of The Oregoniajn for the last five years and she hasmany friends in Oregon who will be glad to learn of this last success, j THE LITERARY PERISCOPE- " f " a " u""fB ."'"V-I-Muoh of the value, however, depends niscence of the nights when "Nick..ln.n t!h. mbast, th, !A; and the authors of this volume can be praised in this respect, for it is so written ss to provide keen train ing for youthful perception. Florence Choate and Elizabeth Curtis have carried out the authors points of view - most admirably In their splendid colored illustrations. The whole book is so gotten up as to prove delightful to any child into whose 'hands it falls. Support, by Margaret Ashmun. The McMillan company, New York city. A setting very similar to "Main Street" with a good bit of the same vividness applied in a more per sona! way, this making a back ground for the turmoil in which Constance Moffatt settles the ques tion of her right to a divorced hus band's support, is in brief Margaret Ashmun's new novel. Constance Moffatt divorced her husband in New York, and, living on his support, she returned to her , home in a small middle western ' town, a borne that was as unnat ural and different from her cus tomary environment as it possibly could have been. Her family was in Btr&itened circumstances, her mother had degenerated into a wbiner and her father imagined himself an in valid. Rose, her sister, was discon tented with her lot. and in love with a suitor not altogether desirable. I The whole family was partially de-1 nephew and flees to a mountain Old Crow, bv Alice Brown. The Mac Millan company, New York city. Praise is merited by those au thors who choose for themes certain unlikable human traits and the fruits which such traits bear. Sen sitive folk know that there exist these peculiar complexes in the broil of life and know their de pressing influences; yet they can do little toward bettering such con ditions, and the novelistic isermon stands as one of the few weapons of any degree of effectiveness. "Old Crow" is a story of the suf ferings of a few persons because of one man's insane jealousy. Strength of telling makes of it a powerful novel. Miss Brown has a knack of relating in simple fashion, and with a precision in diction and usage, the facts which go to make her story so that they stand out with particular vividness. Her characters are unusually clean cut; so much so that even the least Im portant of them stands outv as markedly as even the leading char acter does. John Raven is something just a little bit new and yet conforming to a certain type of fiction hero. He is the open-minded New Englander somewhat of a student and philoso pher. The war spoiled for him both war and peace, and on top of his disillusionment he is asked to ad minister a fortune left to the per petuation of the French spirit. Raven turns over this task to his The Real Uneoln, by Jesse W. Weik. Tne JHougnton-Mifflln company, Bos ton, juass. Natural obscurity during his earlier years, a peculiarity of social status attributed to personality, and tne various spheres in which Lin coin moved during the different stages of his career, make personal biography for the most part a mat ter of chronicling his years as i statesman and president. William Henry Herndon's life of Lincoln is perhaps the accepted biography of the great liberator, but upon its publicat'on many who knew Lincoln expressed the regret that it dealt primarily with public life and not sufficiently with private life. At a matter of fact, Lincoln's pri vate life s not such an obscure record as many persons would think. He undoubtedly leads the list of American notables in anecdotal lore, and acquaintance of more or less personal nature, even at this latt day, with Abraham Lincoln rests largely upon the desire to search into files and archives and living memories. By searching a good bit of the personal side can be uncov ered, and fortunately not all of it is the romance of poverty-stricken childhood and exalted youthful integrity. These s'delights on the life of the emancipating president are. how ever, now set forth in book form for I the first time by a really capable author. Mr. Weik was the collabo rator with Herndon in the latter's book on Lincoln and was the first man to receive the criticism that the personal side had been- neglected in that book. Herndon was Lin coln's law partner and knew more about him than did any other of his associates. It -"was Herndon who. immediately after Lincoln's death, realized the scantiness of his early history and made a pilgrimage to Kentucky to gather what informa- Carter" or "Buffalo Bill" came out from under the pillow as the crazy quilt was pulled up around the ears and a rag carpet had been pushed against the crack at the bottom of the door to prevent parental detec tion. It ls like putting a jazz record on the phonograph at the end of a long, hard day. First of all this story is played at Monte Carlo; a fitting background for princely gambling and royal in trigue. An American newspaper correspondent has been startling diplomats and aspirants with his sharp, accurate stories. Suddenly a woman of exceeding beauty singles him out and tells him she owes him a great debt because he was instru mental in securing the death war rant of a highly undesirable hus band. Just at present the "countess" is working for plotters interested in re-establishing a dethroned king to an imaginary central European throne. The president of the newly-made republic is a very likeable young man, and he is in love with one of the two most beautiful women in the story, while the newspaper cor respondent falls in love with the other. The president's girl has two thingsenough money to put the down-and-out king back on his throne and a socially ambitious mother who sides with the king against the president and her daugh ter. There is also a scapegoat prince, son of the same king, who gambles and has discreet love af fairs. All these and a lot of other personalities watch each other from England, My England, by D. H. Law rence. Thomas Seltzer, New York city. It is something to write' one ex ceptional short story, exemplifying at least a single flash of gemius en during enough to permit its express ion, but to group ten stories that fairly leave you gasping- with their force within the covers of one small book is something entirely different- Such a group means a per petual flame of genius that will en. dure for ages. An entirely new set of adjectives is needed to pay Lawrence his de served praise. He is so miraculously energetic; conveys his thoughts with such sharp and distinct rapidity; moves so swiftly along his stories to their subtle conclusions,' that words somehow fail to fit descriptive Justice. . v It could easily be surmised that Lawrence is an outcropping of the MY DEAREST: The other night I sat watching your wonderful profile. I was drinking in all the sweetness of that last half hour with you and thinking of what an in delible impression that profile, yes, all of you, every inch of your livable personality, has made oh my mind, I said I longed to possess the art of Anacreon that I might paint that impression In words of glory..1" But I would possess it for much dearer reason. . For it is a fact, dearest, that-I love you more than life itself. Old Anacreon could perhaps express his emotions in words, but he could not love one whit more the lady of his heart than I love you. It is an old story, chere, but this is the first time I have ever loved you, the first time I have ever -loved tanyone, and the only time l shall ever love anyone, as the senorita said in our little love story, a Carlos loves but once. I am giving you all the love of which I am capable, and I am no Eskimo. The proof of the pudding is in the eating, they say. And while Petrarch could extol his Laura with flaming words, Horace his Lalage, and Cicero his Tulla, when you find yourself in my arms, sweetheart, you will want no proof other than that which my not altogether weak arms tell. And then when I feel your warm lips on mine, I shall wonder why it is that one is permitted such joy outside of paradise. Yours, dearest. SAMSON. BY JENNETTE KENNEDY, , Assistant in Circulation Department, Public Library. CENTRAL AMERICA is a vague locality of small republics to most people, except when some arresting incident brings . it into publicity and the flash in tiio pan Illuminates the scene for a moment. A book recently published called "Typing Through Central America" gives just those familiar touches which lend reality to a distant scene. A Journey by foot, horeback and train throughout the whole five re publics was accomplished by Eu gene Cunningham and Norman Hart- man and the volume is made up of I their experiences, narrated by -Jar. Cunningham and photographed by Mr. Hartman. To the people who know the del icate distinctions between different kinds and colors of. troutflias and what lure to use at T o'clock in the morning and what catches the high ly specialized fancy of a trout at eventide. Major John W. Hills' "A History of Fly Fishing for Trout" will appeal. Major Hills goes back to the 15th century for data ana brings the story of flies, rods and lines down to date. r. - Edig-ar Saltus" last novel, written just prior to his death, "The Ghost Girl," is a story based on psychio phenomena. Some of the chapter headings in Francis Hackett's sincere inquiry into modern American life, "The Golden Calf," are: "The Highbrows," The Half-Gods and the Hair- Baked," "ThePsycho-Antics," "Batik, Hootch and Henna," "The Fallacies of Freedom." Despite its wide use, the story of wallpaper had not been told until Dr. Phyllis Ackerman produced her work on "Wallpaper: its History, Design and Use." This work should prove valuable both to decorators and home makers interested in dec oratlve problems. s Franz Molnar"s "Liliom" attracted a great dealf attention both in -its presentation ow the stage and in book foam .as a drama to be read. Mr. Motoar has two satires which are to be presented on the New York stage this year: "The Swan" and Fashions for Men." Both of these dramas were widely discussed when produced . on' the European stage. ' A noteworthy translation from the Italian has been made by Professor Wilkins of the University of Chi cago in "Four and Twenty Minds,' a collection of essays by one of Italy's foremost critics, Giovanni Paplnl. These essays deal with Spencer, Hegel, Dante, Nietzsche, Swift, Maeterlinck, Walt Whitman, Croce and others. v - The naima of Clarence Darrow is so well known as that of a great criminal lawyer that a book by him on unme: us i;ause ana treatment, will command attention His conten tion that crime should be treated by wise and humane specialists, as much as any other disease, is sig nificant. eel o on he ears of most -American-' schooled individuals. , ? s The literary editor of the Boston Evening Transcript, Edwin Frances Big'-ett, has ooonpiled some of his humorous "shots" at things and peo ple which have appeared bi-weekly in a volume called "Slings and. Ar rows." - Harvard's celebrated footbalrtoaon -has written a timely book for spec tators of the game instead of for the players themselves. It is en titled, "Football and How to Watch' It," by Percy D. Haughton, with JO pages of illustrations showing form?-, ations and representative plays. - t '"' ..... .A book of humorous versa which portrays the characters, -incidents and setting of a typical American r university town is "Lyra Lewis," by Edward Bliss Reed. - The "Tiger of France," who is just now so much in the day's news during his visit to leading American cities has been faithfully presented In biography by a leader amontg British socialists, H. At Hyndiman, in his volume called, ''Clemenoeau: The Man and His Time." - . . . B. L. Putnam Weale, who has writ ten "indiscreet" letters before from the orient, now has unloosed, further "state secrets" in Ms new volume, "An Indiscreet Chronicle from the Pacific" Mr. Weale is one of the chief authorities on the far eastern situation, and as a special agent for China to this country and Europe in 1921, and as one of the advisors, of the Chinese delegation at the disarmament conference, he has had unusual opportunities for observa tion as well as the advantages of. having lived in China since child hood. : . . . i - In "The Call of the Mountains." by Leroy Jeffers, the mountains of the Oregon coast are among the northwestern mountains described. Glacier park. Mount Rainier, the Canadian rookies and the Yellow stone also are pictured. Robert W. Service, so definitely associated with virile poems of Al askan adventure, has just written a novel of Monte Carlo called "The Poisoned Paradise." 'Tilsrh't Interviews With Shades" are some opinions on timely topics which various experts have given through mediums translating from spirit-land, for instance, "King Solo mon on Family Vacation Trips," "Captain Kidd on Tag Days," "Adam on Feminine Fashions, ' Shake speare on the Movie" and other airy topics which occur to the mind of Robert Webster Jones, the news paper man who has secured these interviews. Henry Kitohell Webster has added to his series of novels dealing with Chicagio life, viz: "The Real Adven ture," An American Family and Mary Wpllaston (a new one), Jo seph Greer and His Daughter." ... Mary Johnston, who has so suc cessfully handled various periods of our history in her historical ro mances, has taken the period of dis covery itself for her new one, "1492," date wiMeh will strike a familiar Intelligence Test Success. Washington Star. The teacher was ' giving a few general questions to test the intel lisence of his pupils. "How many races are there?" he asked. "Two," replied a, small boy, who had been feeling the cane some time previously. "Two! Well, what -are they?" "Please, sir, teachers and pupils.' "What do you mean, my lad, by saying teachers and pupils queried the teacher. "Please, sir," was- the reply, "the teachers are the 'canine' race, and the pupils are -the 'feline' race." "OUT WHERE THE WEST BEGINS" "North Dakota of Today" By Z. L Trinka The most complete and entertaining history of the west ever written; authen tic and romantic Highly praised by Literary Digest and others. Copies pur chased by British museum. Fully illus trated by BARRY The Noted Indian Photographer. Limited DE LUXE EDITION of two volutes. Price per set $15.00, pre paid. Send orders to NORTH DAKOTA BOOK CO, -Udg-erwood, North Dakota Funnier Than TheCruise of the -Kawa" Fir from home and censor sailed "the Intrepid party of Dr. Traprock, t o conquer the cold wastes of but, no! Let the daring Doctor tell his own startling story of a m a r velous Polar expedition. FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE DON'T MISS MY NORTHERN EXPOSURE The Kawa at the Pole By .Dr. Walter E. Traprock, FRESSE0, NLD., With 21 Revealing Photos $2.50 At All Booksellers. , G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Wm The Wfielps of the North By George Slarsh A story of the Hudsons Bay Country. The greatest dog story since "The Call of the Wild." At All Books tot 8. Price $1.7$. The Pean Publishing Co., Phila, Other Good Bradley Books RICK AND RUDDY By Howard R. Garit Illustrated by John A. Goat Price $1.75 RICK'AND RUDDY IN CAMP By Howard R. Garta m. bylMilo K. Winter t Price 1.75 THE SKIPPER OF THE CYNTHIA B. By Charle Pcndexter Durell ' Illustrated bv Harold Brett Cloth. Price $1.50 It seemed like certain disas ter, yet neither Rick nor Ruddy faltered- DOWN whirling, dangerous rap idsthrough placid streams, go these two boy and dog-best of friends on a mission of grave im-' portance., How they reach their destination, foiling those who would thwart them, how they lose their bearings and thru Ruddy's unusual in telligencefind their way again, makes a story that will thrill all children especially those to whom Rick and Ruddy are old friends. RICK AND RUDDY AFLOAT By Howard R. Garb III. by W.B.King (Red Book) Price $1.75 Childrenlovedogs theyknowwhattrue friends they make. And was there ever a dog like Ruddy, the companion of the boy hero of Howard Carit' series of Rick and Ruddy stories? AT ALL GOOD BOOKSELLERS Milton IBradley Company, Springfield, Mass. 3ra&ey Quatife? Books STUDENTS PLAN DEBATES Merits of Home Towns Subject of College Discussion. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, Dec. 2. (Special.)' Gettingr towns and cities of Ore gon acquainted with eah other Is the project for the Oregon Agricul tural college chamber of commerce this year. This will be accomplished throughdebates concerning relative merits of the home cities' of the stu dents in commrce. Students to rep resent the towns and cities will be selected by the chambers of com merce of the various places them selves. Statistics prove that 98 per cent of the college students In the United States, born and reared in a given community, fail to return after their college- courses are completed. To sell the home city to home students la the basic idea of the debates. Guess Who Owned the Flowers. Kansas City Star. A man may steal bread to keep from starting, but even, so Indus trious a partisan of the social of fender as Victor Hugo never thought of making a hero of the depraved wretch who wantonly steals flowers from porch boxes. Outdoors and Us By Mary Carolyn Davies Beautiful Child Poems with wonder ful illustrations in color and. black and white. . At AU Booktftorea. Price $2.50. The Perm Publishing Co., Phila. JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD! AQiivnaxrSbabcr' Cantos' hf iantt MosrawsCTy Flags 3hG.rxm the North woods as does no other living author and over two million readers have bought his books! Whatever else you read this year whatever else you j give for Christmas don't let yourself LttC miss Curwood's latest and greatest noveh Country Beyond THE story of Nada,'and Roger McKay, and the one man dog named Peter a wonderful novel of wilderness love. Begin it after supper aod you won't hear the clock strike until you've reached the last page! Now On Sale at Bookstores Everywhere Price $2.00 publishers (osmopolitaa Book rporation newyork looks- procured BJS GILVS ltay ThirdihkT BALDY OF NOME By Esther Bird sail Darling A true Btory of Alaskan Togr Raocs and the most widely known d-og in the world. At AU Bookstores. Frfeo $2.00. The Penn Publishing Co.. Phila.