THE' OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. MARCH 3. 1SQ7. NATION'S GREAT COLONY ' Of EX-BANKERS What Was Seen in a Day in juried City of Pompeii Jr. B. Horner. m: iflVTB flamma wa waking .front dap sleep or many ceniuneav ta auccumb to U elements. . that th more ambitious Va. avius might be bora: Asnes " which bad risen with the smoke con "., tlnuod t lower, transforming the beaut f - ful Mediterranean day' Into the black ' mm of an Egyptian night - The smoke ', became so dens In the eoorae of the following IS hours that even la Brlndlsi, . a- tha nniwulta ahora of ltalv. MS sun v was obscured, and at Athens and even -tn Alexandria the sir was Impregnated with gases emanating from the volcano, v With the Mhos, descended a dense hall - efVpumlce. cowing the ground to the - - -. m , w . aa - v- . jr. i u.. - a ma bimi" An uw Nnim, ,3a, . awed ' world looked on a collapsed Mont Bom ma mucn or wnicn naa peon V blown Into the sir. A new cone appear ed Instead. Thus while the earth was ' writhing in convulsive-energy and clt ls were burled tn pumice atone and ashes and people were suffocated with ' smoke and gas. Vesuvius was born. - . Llk Monte Somms, Vesuvius slept for ' many centuries. - , But In 1000 A. D., x rhils William .of Normandy- was stir vinm th. 11 f a f tYim InflAuM the dyspetle condition et lit. Vesuvtua , cams evident as the great oons began to ' belah hot mud mils and a half InMS the lr where It fall la torrent pa the , doomed eartn. .- - - In tni the new summit of Mt. Veau- . vlus waa forced up to theheight of 411 ' feet within two days, arid In lilt Her culaneum and soma ofthe other villages were Imbedded In Java: at which time - wmnu vy iwiuai .f -w 1 seat forth fro or the mountain.. ' am 9 . . a,pm-w.,. In 1794 the fury of the vomitory out break destroyed Torre del Greco. In lgSt began a series of eruptions which; culminated in 'April, 190. when . the' volcano emitted so much ashes that nany hundred feet of the cone suddenly 'fell back Into tha thorax of the great monster..' ,,,,. --;' Where Man Is Awed. . ' ',. . . ": : . ' Bs who visits Vesuvius should also visit aft Etna and 8troraboli, both of which eaa bo seen In one day. In the day tlms Vesuvtua Is the most Imposing volcano on earth, but as a display of pyrotechnics In ths night time, Strom boll with Its ever changing firs works would outrival Mt. Vesuvius surrounded by all ths Fourth of July celebrations la ths world. --,.- At s'olock ta ths morning ths train . leave Naples for Pompeii. . We . pass ovsr "ths ruins of Hsrculaasum where people dwelt for oenturlea, building ens city abov anothor without knowing It Down Into a stone stairway carved out of lava some SO feet deep, and we are led Into an old theatre where evidences of ths life and hablti of ths anclsnt peo ple have been preserved In stone. Tou sit upon ths lot g stone seats where attentive audlenoea listened to ths songs snd viewed ths performances of actors who strutted their brief time on .the 'stag long 'before ths Christian era. Tou step upon ths rostrum where the mummers died inj tragedies whoa auth. ors are forgot Tou walk Into their dressing spartmsnts and It seems as if i vou are living over the life they ones lived. Above you, below you and about yen Is stone, . stone, stone; snd" you breathe an atmosphere stmlnlar to that New Books 'And Thtlr Publishers '- "A MODERN MADONNA" By Carolina Abbot Stanley. "To my beloved brother, Richard D Jarnette. who has been to . m a father. I give and be queath tb custody and tuition of my child until it shall be of full age. and I direct . that such disposition shall be good and effectual against all and every person or persons claiming tha custody and tuition of said child." - This waa ths co dicil appended to the will of Victor De Jarnstts th day. In a rage, he left his young wife, because she demanded him to ebooe between her and hie mistress. Choosing th Utter, he took her to Eu rope, and 'th day after his departure, which h had taken unsnnounoed, the child he had willed away' was born to the -deserted mother. A year later the recreant husband returned, hoping to effsct a reconciliation with his wife, but net with a tragi death befor ne gotiations were well begun. He lived Just long enough to make en ante-mortem statement avowing that his dssth wss ths result of sn accident otherwise rlrcumstar.tlal evidence might bav con victed th wife. , Th brother had caught a dying wrd that convinced hrm that, la aplte of th dying confession the wife wss - the. murderer, but hs was powerless t make her suffer for it, until ths win ws read and hs learned hs could rasks her suffer wors than death la th loss of the child. Vpoa Investigation Msrgaret D Jsr netles lawyers found thst there was on ttis ttut books of ths District of Columbia a taw granting this privilege to the husband. It was aa English law. dating to ths time of Charles IL which Jiad originally been framed to prevent the Catholics from obtaining possession rt the children of Proteetant father Urs. Btsnley seems, to her explsnatlon. ii ft up a mlns of wealth to ths Ov- .u i f aa Inquiring disposition, as well .r;- - ... - - - ' s "' - ; em tv t ;7:k it'l l ; i? ..t . . --i . ;.,; U if - ':L:V,.. ... ' - . , ' i - ( ' .':'... '... ...' . . .. ' ". ... "V r " ' - " - r -aM.-;.' ; : . T--I -sj - II HI' Ml II II f -.e--S.- 1 MllllISM a. M a. fc. fci-T f ir n " 1 1 ir. e s aiw-j'Aaw r -AfcfcA.-aBt. ijj j Som is iS Sj, h.iaaaataaa.S.SilSSisasi.lV Ilia, asa I III I II I IMIIIIlSlI - of ths cataoomba. The spirit of death has not departed from Herculsaeum. Elsewhere you are shown Into a smaller snd less pretentious compart ment which has been excavated enough to prove to ths visitor that ths ancients were religious 'and that they had good homss. , ;. Valut of the Old., ' -"' V'L Bo much already haa been- unoovered of ths city that ths government of Italy has about determined that . ths burled city of Herculaneum Is more valuable to science and history than ths present city built above It. is to commerce. It is saaerted la that locality that a grave yard la Ood'e acre, which no people bav a right to appropriate for commercial purposes. ..Within 10 years a thousand J ' as to ths hlstoriaa of American Juris prudence. ' 8h ha mads more thaa ths one point, which ah wlshss to smpha sls la her story, by starting th Inquiry as to how many of thea old, obsolete laws transplanted to American soil may yet be menacing derelicts In th way of progress and liberty. Neither of th D Jarnette men was wholly bad, and had It not bees that ths older brother suspected th wife of hi brother's death, he would, per haps, never have pressed his claim. .But ths "wolf-blood" waa la him, aad many of tha years that followed ths rsadlng of th will, were years of torture, but not unprofitable experience ' to ths mother. Ths story Is worked with artlstt skill, and ths object for which it waa written brought it out la strong and vivid light with no excess of coloring, but with never a loss In 11ns or shade. ' As ths plot unfolds ths author develops her chsracters, until neither villain nor sstnt occupies Its pagss, but Just natural peo ple contending with human passions aad doing ths right aa God haa given them to eee it ' And after ll theee are the kind ef people that In real life do ths great heroic deeds; suffering, and ths world growing better for their' sorrow. . "Mammy Cely," who had been separ ated from her child la slavery days, was the philosopher of ths book, and a. typ ical ''Mammy." , Ia consoling Msrgaret she ones said: "A body eaa bear a heap, of things, honey, thsy think they can't at yoar age. X bore It because there wa'n't anything else to da That's why people bear most of their troubles." Up to the time of her desertion by her husband, Msrgaret had been one, of th sheltered clsss; conservative herself and Impregnated with her father's IdeasHhat "Queen you must always be; queens to your lovers, quoens to your busbsrfds and your sons, queens of higher mys tery to ths world beyond, which bows Itself and will forever bow, before ths myrtle crown snd ths stainless scepter of womanhood." , X ; . . - - Poor Margaret found for how much her qneenehlp counted when she was caught between the grinding stones of mas-mads laws. Like many of her class, sue bed to bs touched herself before shs lost faith ih men's rhlvalry whers law and ioltt!ta wors concerned. But Ilk men ' will be constantly employed by the Italian government In - excavating Hrrculansum. This will provs ths most arduous tssk of ths sort In - history; hitherto all excavations of cities and bousss havs been made from free soil, while Herculsneum Is Incased In lava as hard as ths lava and baaaltlo col umns along, the Columbia. ' Continuing down along ths rim of tbJlue-watsr-sf ths Bay of Naples, ws are showa ' where the lava and mud from Mt , Vesuvius hsvs pushed the landar Into ths Mediterranean. At Pompeii we are introduced to Joseph, better known as guide No. 1. who loat all hi property during the convulsions of Vesuvius In April, ISO. The story Is pitiful, for a poor man's estate la ss precious to him as a palace is to Rock efeller. Morgan . or Rothchild.' Bo an extra lira. Is handed to him and his tongus becomes suppls at ones. .. "Oh, wad some power the glftle gle us" To "tip" another as hs would tip us. ( The Center of Fashion. . Ths walls of Pompeii provs that ths shape of the ancient city la that of a half shoe sols of ths near f oot ' This so)4 extsnded over about two' hundred acres of territory with narrow streets and closely built houses, accommodat ing about tt.000 people. ' At , ths de struction of Pompeii these people were descendants from ths leading families --.-Trw Y many another woman who haa to as th "wiles sad gfles" of influence In stead of votes, shs devsloped th diplo macy which, with that of other workers, svsntually abolished ths obnoxious law. - A far-sfghted politician might detect a note of warning tn th manner In which the women managed their bill for property rights la ths District of Colum bia, for thsy have "pulled string" so long In ths eminently womanly art of "Influence" that If they aver do get the franchise added to thla accomplishment they will be the1 moat expert politicians extant Mrs. Stanley showed great dis cernment la casting ber characters from tb upper walk of life, for she could not so forcibly bar showa th power of law over every clrcumstsno of life if It b enforced. If she had taken a wo man to lllustrat hef point who could not have been abls to buy her way out for tha world has such aa exalted 'opin ion of money, that It Imagine nothing can withstand It Mrs. Stanley proves differently, and with It tha Injustice of law to woman, with it unequal provisions.- Ths story Is not wholly la mi nor chords, but haa many bright pas sages snd an ending both wholesome snd happy, Century company, pries 11.00. ; , ... . -;-.-.!-": "The Trsaaur of Peyrs OalUard" By - John Bennett This story comes like a breath from the past for slnos the advsnt of ths problem novel snd de tective story, the good old talss of hidden treasure, romance and decipher ing hieroglyphics to find them havs al most become obsolete.- tt this has tar tied long in tha coming, ths story has gathered freshness and -thrilling inter est and ths author haa presented It In a most engaging manner. In ths days of the revolution, tha Frenchman, Peyrs Oalllard, was a marked man, and - at length, surrounded . by a . ho wllng mob In th mansion of Blus Hill with the members of his- household, , bs was forced to' hsvs them make their ascap through underground passages.' while he and his trusty negro servant gath ered up the treasures and family Jewels, tied them In strong bundles, and forced their way through ths wood la dan ger of pursuit ' they burled t the, treas ure in a swamp and made a diagram of to jjUce, They, were overtaken by of Greece and Italy. For Pompeii at this tlms was ths fashionable city of all Italy, and it waa noted far end-wide both as a commercial center and as a military fort After walking along the walls some distance wa approach a - double, gats, through on wing of which ths people psased down elegant marble stairs to ths level of the-city, Through'the Other wing vehicles are drawn down the inclined -way of polygonal stones. Into the olty. and ws ' face long narrow streets not sxoeedlng 10 bp 10 feet in width; many srs 'narrower. They are covered with stons and curbed with great slabs .of msrbls and of tufa ex- tsndlng a. foot and a half above. Be- twesn ' ths - buildings - and these - slabs were ths walks which st that- time were covered with stucco or . mosaics. To serve as crosswalks large stones were pieced .In ths street, st convenient distances. Ths horses were loosely harnessed. ' so that they -could pass be tween - the huge stones of the Pom pelan crosswalks without throwing the, two wheeled vehicles out of ths ruts, which are usually two to four .Inches dsep.- t,:,,, . A . x And fceaury Still Survives. : V , V " Ths houses look as If they were built by mechanics trained tn Greece and Rom. Whlle-ths buildings are not so larg as ths ancient palaces and ba silicas to be found in Rome, they pre sent a neat and attractive appearance, refining and elevating. ''Many of the houses, are built after the Spanish or der of architecture, only one story in height" yet they ars, not of ths bun galow type. -, Moat . of the . roofs ,are almost level. Within these homes 'ars various decoratlona, suob - ss - frescoes snd work in relief that could hardly be excelled at. this age. Strange to say, ths paint on ths walls, as well as ths polish of ths stons remain perfect Msny of the" greatest artists visit Pom pell merely to copy the work which has been left by he ancient artist of the city. ; .y s'" . Disgonally two. street reach aero as Pompeii; at right angles to these are two other streets. Brosller alleys and streets ramify these.f - la ona quarter of the city are to be found, the prin cipal temples and shrines erected to ths Roman gods. : In another may be seen the forums where all sorts' of leaitimats - exchange was " transacted. When th wrath of Vesuvius cams, It found the bsker at ths oven, the wihe seller at ths Jars, the Jeweler at his bench, ,.tbe blacksmith at his forye snd thee evidence remain perfect till this day. - Fruit preserved In Jars ha re mained, swsst and palatable till 'It was unearthed In this century. Grata which was burled. 1.80s years and more In Pompeii, haa been v taken out of . ths ruins and) ths seed 'hs brought forth of its kind.. Ths lnhabltanta, true enough, srs gone, but now snd then a hollow place Is found in ths earth; plaster of Paris Is poured Into ths their pursuers. Oalllard waa killed and ths negro became insane from ill-treatment and exposure, and but a part of . k - ll.Man a M,tlAl Ih. fftnttlvZ Each , succeeding generation of. Oall lard took a turn la hunting for ths hidden- treasure, but to no avail. Then cam th Civil war, which swept away their every possession, leaving them poverty stricken and without a ray of hops ror ths ruturev At mia onucaj tlms appeared a-young surveyor, cousin Jack Glgnlllatt who took upon himself ths task of unraveling tn orypiogram. How ha went sbout it what hs did (with th assistance of his pretty cousin Jeanne), and the way they suc ceeded IS aa Ingenious story of. mors thaa ordinary strength' and ' intensity. If Is well told and ha ths plcturesqus ness of i ths old plantation days- Ths book Is wall Illustrated and has a sug gestive cover design. The Century company.' Prtc 11.00. '"'','"' "Betterment ' Individual,' Sooial, In dustrial" By ID. Waks Cook. Th ob ject of th book I to givs la, convenient form th latest discoveries' which pro mote individual. Industrial and colleo tlv efficiency. For physical troubles, Mr., Cook recommends th "heroic" or "nature cure," saying for It: "It not only cost nothing, but on th principle that money saved Is money gained. It puts money Into the pocket constantly, and th mean and th physfclaa ar al ways at hand." . , ' Th author begins certainly at th foundation for world betterment and devotes a chapter under tha head of "efficiency. to tha snhappy conditions surrounding ths birth of children, de ploring th car which is given to ani mals, while human beings propagate most rapidly Iri ths haunts of crime and disease. The author sees rather hope- than, disaster in ths . apparently undesirable - alisns ' pouring into our country, for hs says? "Ths mixing Of races tends to evolve a higher type.. Na ture's selective action tends to main tain the better qualities and eliminate th lower. It Is ths mixed rsces that have don ths greatest things ta the world." . 1 , - The author takes up snd treats In an Interesting manner all those things that go to make up a perfect physical 1 hollow; when dried, the plaster of Paris is removed from the mold which Is peeled off. ' and the form of soms un fortunate who-perished In th destruc tion o Pompeii In It A. D.. is exposed to view. J- Many of these models ars .on exhibition in th museum which Is within ths walls and near the, main entrance of th city, . . ; Home Life of Pompeii. . . : - . Whll strolling about fearing that ths guide may miss his course and tbt you will be lost among the ruins, you cannot help observing many features of ths horns II fs of these people, who flour ished 1S00 years ago. Tou will see over ths 'door- of ene house ths announcement ox the pries that soma maiden set upon her 'charms. At another sumptuous edi fice you will observe a notice in which th proprietor, tells tha"t he w!l) not rent for a brothel. In a tavern was found a representation of ssrpsnts which war suppossd to keep the place Immune from intruders. . Under these serpents was ths Latin Inscription -". Otlosls lucus hio non sst dlsceds moratur or, "Lin gerer, depart; ' this Is no ' place -for idler" At another place you observe Imbedded in the threshold leading to ths main apartment . of tb horn the word. "Salve" welcome, or good health to you. . Among the theatre and business places, there .were many temples scat tered over the city, which Indicate ths rellgloua culture of thoss who were sep ulchred by Vesuvius.. All people should be rslig.ovs; and avsry man ahould se lect a religion as carefully as bs select a w.e on which he will not desert la the days of his prosperity. . .. , Our Penates and Lares? '"' '' ' A you ' depart from Pompeii, you taks a last rlancs at ths corner of the stone wall - which- lay burled about' tt centuries. Near ths top la a large tablet on which la engraved a . squar . sur rounded by s. compass, plumb, level, spade, trowel, gavel and certain ' other unmistakable evidence of Free Masonry which prospered ta that locality before the Christian srs, ompell is as yst only half exhumed. Dally new treasures of archaeloglcal and aome life ars dlsoovsred. disclosing - to us bow ths people lived, what was ttte nature of the pursuits and th trend or "Captain Jack Lo rimer" By - Winn mlnd-f -th-nolnt,-Then,--a-Th-8tandiBh.- Tha closing paragraph' Of ths thinks of his horn en another continent book might fittingly be termed a syn h reasons thus: Suppose soms ' vol- opals of th story. , It says: "But If cano should suddenly bury our own home with us in them, and then after these homes havs lain buried IS cen turies, thsy should bs uncovered, what feature of home life Would they dis close? v It la a serious matter. Indeed, to determine what we shall permit to pass over th threehhold into our homes. For what ws hsvs in our horns 11 f la America today,-though preserved aa sa credly, will bs disclosed aa. surely as havs been ths treasures of Pompeii bur led slacs th daya of eld. body, believing tt to be th unit from which to attain th highest efficiency. Exercise, diet clothing, fresh - air, the oar of every function of the body, with th individual environment ar considered practically. Education nat urally comes to for a generous share of attention, aad one needs but read a page or twe of the book befor on learn that Mr. Cook sees th salvation of the nation in ths proper rearing of it children. He quotes Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper, who eald that la 14 years la San Francisco, out of about 16,000 kin dergarten children, they had tha his tory of 0,000, and of these not one. had ever ' been arrested. 'Patrick Crowley, chief of polio of Ban Francisco, de clared that out of 4,000 children ar rested for crime In thst city, but oa had bad kindergarten training. ,,. . ' Dr. Bernardo and Dr. Kellogg ars quoted freely along thes lines. . Indus trial betterment ia then taken up and into it merge tha welfare work, th Daytoa cash register - furnishing ' th author -with all the data necessary t establish th fact that "It pay" The .book Is full of good, plain advice, - if On wishes- earnestly -to be bettered, but will -serve rather as a reminder, than as an Instructor, for there la little in It that Is new or original, . though following closely ths trend of ths most advanced thought i - la "Appendix B," th author advises, or sees, th need of sn American Legion of Honor, saying: "When institutions outrun human naturs and deep-lying Instincts find no outlet for their legiti mate expression, they will' make chan nel for ' themselves In - undesirable ways.. As socialism Is ths swing of tbe pendulum from ths crudities of un checked Individualism, " so, I believe, democracy Is ths swing-to the other ex treme from th evils of aristocracy. True wisdom -would extract the- good from both, and no progressiva nation should allow Itself to be. ruled by tha dead hand of th outgrown Ideal." The au thor deplores the vain sndeavor to"; establish- mock titles , such ss ' ths Knights of Labor, ths Mayflower so ciety, snd ths descendants of tbe revo lution, but he rather -oversteps In classing with this "American aristoc racy" the "King's Daughters, which has com to be reoognJsed as among ths j T f OWHERH tn America and prob ably nowhere In the world ta there a penal Institution " that baa as large a bankers colony as haa the United Btates peniten tiary at Leavenworth. Kansas. There ars )S clerical position in ths main offlc of the Institution, and avsry ens Is filled by an ex-banker! the last two being taken up only a few months ago ny a pair of arrivals from Illinois, ssys ths Nsw Tork Hsrald. - When an ex-banker goes to th in stitution It 1 under sentence of so many years at hard labor, but Wardan MoClaughry figures that a man trained to' office duties sould not do a good day's work with a pick or wheel-barrow, and that he would not last a month at suoh a task. , The ' banker would be a poor laborer' at best, and a clerks are seeded, he is assigned to a desk in the office. , . ,4 - Ths . ex-banker is received la prison with no more courtesies than the horse, thief. He must givs up his fin under wear, socks, custom' mads shoes, and other apparel, and don the same sort of clothing given his fellow convicts. A blue-gray suit Is given each untried prlsonsr. If he does not behave, ha Is put In stripes; If h proves a "good citlsen" and doea his work with precis ion, he is given a navy bins suit the kind worn by trustlss or paroles. . v i Dean of the. Colony. ' . " v ' ' ' Th bankers' colony was founded by John P. Cooper, sx-presldent of ths First ' National bank of McGregor, Texas. In 10I there waa a big crop of cotton in the-Lone 8tar stats-and Cooper tried s speculating by loaning money to cotton growers In excess of th limits set by ths national banking hl ti was caugnt ana seuienoea iu serve five years from March I, 1004. Hs will be th first of the ex-bankers to leave ths Institution. His good tlms aUowanc . will snd bis sentencs Nov ember I, HOT. He Is 4T yesrs old. . April SI, ' 1304. two ex-bankers of Elkhart, Indiana, were sentenced, . and on April. 13, 1004. a third cam from th same place. These men are James Ia Brodertck. ex-p resident First Na tional bank, Elkhart IT yesrs old. 10 years' sentence; good tlms term ex pires December II. 1010. Wilson L, Collins, ex-caehler First National bank, Elkhart 46 years .old; six years sen tence good time terra expire Septem ber Id, 1000. Welter Brown; ex-director First National bank. Elkhart, .41 years old; eight years from . April tl. 1904; good tlms terra expires Msrch t, 1110. , Brodertck. Collin and Brown ar brothr-tn-law, . . , - Members From Indians. . V -t Hardly ' had Brown, Brodertck aad Collins been assigned to desk than Indiana seat two mors "clerks." Alfred C Parker,- ex-cashler of the First Na tional bank at New Bedford. SO years old; flvs years from May tt, 1904; good time term expires January SS, J000; and Cyrus E. MoCrsdy, sx-caahler First Na tional hank. Seymour. Indiana, 44 years old; six years from Msy SS, 1004; good tlms term expires October IS, 1001. Th United BUtes penitentiary had been buying much , of the stone for which' Bedford. Indiana, la famous, and ths drafts from .ths prison passed through Parker's hands. . Boon aftar hs arrived at th prison h waa given work tn th office and again handled drafts for Bedford etone, but and. er different drcurastanose, "..i -: "-.; . Cyrus MeCrady Is th ' most Valued asslstaat. f M W. . MoClaughry, th prison record clerk. Ha understands ths taking or Bertlllon measurements and finger prints, and la an' exoellent photographer In fact what on Would term aa all-round roan for a prison Offlc.. .' ' - J, Missouri had no representative la th ex-benker colony until th govern ment transferred Its prisoner from ths Jefferson City prison. November S4, 1000.-- Robert B. Taylor,"banker-f orger, waa one ef the anivata. He Is 10 years old, and has flv years to serve from August IS, 1004. snd with good time will be freed April IS. JI0S. , noblest religious organisation, without any reference whatever to earthly roy alty. O tha whole, th book takes an optlmlstlo -view of -life -and a-hopeful outlook upon the future. Frederick Btokes company. . Pries Il.tO. . . , ... '.;' ' you'd ask me who deserved to' has luck, I'd say, the fellow who's patient and brave and cheerful; lives a clean life and aaver misses a chancs to help somebody else; woa't 11 or cheat or taks advantage; doesn't whin when hs gets beat but keep right en doin' his level best that's Jack Lo rimer." The Inoldenta of th book furnish a. good, clean story for either boy or' girls, though.lt ha to do more with high school athletic and the sxperlenoes of Jack Lorlmar, aa eaptsia of ths foot ball team, thaa with ths recreation of th girl Th story I fuU of llfs and animation, aad is on to delight - the heart of any youth. - ' A school Is but a youthful commun ity, and dispositions, training and char-, acter ar to be found there la svery va riety. Just as thsy ars In mors mature fields, and th author of "Captain Jack Lo rimer" has bsea particularly happy la bringing together a school full of boys and girls and not creating them all : after the sams pattern. He haa also -avoided the "sissy" boy, while refraining from picturing thoa things which debase, but ar unfortunately of ten present In school children. He ha shown , his boy and girl readers bow to be ehume, comrades, scholars aad rivals aad even football players all at once, and enjoy school llfs to th utmost. This la not Captain Jack's Initial bow to ths public, aa hs first appeared In tbe Boston Bundsy Herald. The book la dedicated to "Jack Hyde, Captain Jack's first friend.',' It Is well Illustrated and handsomely bound. L. C Page 4k Co. prfc SLio., . ; r Ths Rival Campers Afloat" By Ruel Perley 8mlth. If there la any on thing that delights ths heart of a boy or girl reader more than another it la to meet again . old i acquaintance in another story. It I this feeling In youth thst created ths once famous "Rollo Books," gavs Miss Alcott her hold oa girls, and that haa caused scores of series of books for children, and It Is la recogni tion of this fact no doubt ths author ha continued his story of that famous coterie of boys, known aa "Ths Rival Campers." This tlms he has placed them on th trim little yacht "Viking," th gift of old Mrs. Newcoms, whose everlasting gratitude. It wlU bs remem bered, they had earned by saving hsr est from ths roof of a burning building, whan they were only camper. The scenes of their exploits on the "good ship Viking", ars on ths Somerset river. which floats the commerce from -the large town of Benton to Boston and other seaports. It is Just ths river for all sorts of escapades, and ths boys never miss an opportunity to distin guish themselves one way or another. They had first to master the srt of hsmUIng their craft, and then rams ths experiences, adventures and other N James H. Wood arrived January 1005, to swell Indiana's quota. Ha la 44 years old, baa six years to serve, and with' good time will be freed June S. 1009. ' . " .'.'.., Frank O.. Blgelow, of th First Na tional bank, of Milwaukee, arrived Jun 10, 1905. He had been president of th Institution snd used IS. 000,000 not hi own. He is employed in the record clerk's offlc and la a. good workman. His work is to check In a big oook th misdeeds of his fellow convicts. Blge low Is a great reader when not at his ; desk. , Ills sentence Is for 10 years; good time expiring February 10, 181 J. Henry O. Goll, ex-cashler of the Sam bank in Milwaukee, SS years old, fol lowed Blgelow to the prison, arriving -May I, 10. to serve 10 yeare. Wit good time he will be released January s. mt. . - - - . Indiana, not yet satisfied with' Its national bankers. Investigated th meth ods of Gustav A. Conxman, president ' of ths Vigo County National bank, and the - Jury decided he had .violated th national banking laws. Hs wa given, eight years, from January S9, 10, ana wim gooa tlms wiu be free Decern -i per 11, 1011, . ... . . f sS Chicago Slow, but Gets There. . Banker No. IS. Hermann ' Haass, reached ths prison with th ' federal ' prisoners transferred from Jollet, I111-? aola, a few months ago. . Ha la a Chi- oagoan, and was caught tn South Amsr Ics after a long search. , No. JS 1 Francis B. Wright ex natlonal banker from Katie county, Illi nois, .who arrived with Haass. . L Ths sx-bankers of ths elerloal fore llya in a building separata from tha main 'cell rootna They have three bed rooms on ths second floor of th soil-' tsry cell building. Th room ar t by SO feet and they Jiavs sheets on their beds and slips on the pllows, th same aa other worthy convict v : . ,? They asssmbl hers after ' working hours and ars permitted to convsrsa nd read until 0 p. m., when ltghta ar put out If they should rebel aa prison rules they would be treated th asms ss other, prisoner taken below their "bom" and placed In an "Isolation" cell -with Its varied punishments for ths more or less serious offenses, - Th ex-banker arises st 0 a, th. when th bugle blows. . Hs ' haa underwear of -cotton cloth, - strong - and durable, cut to th Simplest lines. ' On each gar ment' ths wearer number ta stenciled. -He draws on heavy prison socks and -shoes. After dressing hs makes hie bed In a neat manner, preeerlbed by. ths prison rules. Computing hi per- ; sons! toilet under ths escort of a guard he ' fall into line and ; marches to breakfast' , -.'.-.-'. s, "j . , - t V - , . , .... . ,' ' ; . J' I . ' . . ! Stand Till Opnft; 8otrads. I h - '' ' : la th dlntng hsll th ex-bankers sit six in a row with the other" parol men,' mostly sx-apny. officer. . politicians. : lawyers snd. physicians. . In the great room are five rows of oross tables of scoured - oak. - Each man haa a granite . plat and cup, knife, fork and spoon. -Hs stands until th gong sounds, when ne sits down to his meal. - , - v -at "Rankara row" hara tmaidafa I tables la ths rear of th room with vm- ' esnt space between thea man and the other convicts. Several . reason sr given for this arrangement Th con-' -vict who work la th shops wear cloth- ', fog- necessarily - more - or less soiled. Th clerks' clothing must be kept clesa or the books would b soiled. - There fore, these two classes are not "brought -together., -Again, the 'men who do man ual labor require more substantial food than do thoss occupied ta sedentary work. - But th - convalescent - convict whether hs be Indten or negro, is seat- -sd In "bankers' row" and given th sams food as his ex-wealthy comrade. The ex-banker msy writ a limited number of letters each week to hi rel stives. Hs may have bla allowance ef chewing tobacco, and while in the of- flee can? talk to his fellows on matters pertaining to the business' of th in stitution, but It Is seldom, that they' converse. Thsy usuilly. .work steadily slhently and accurately, ' r. things Incident to this sort of vacation. ' There la a weU-dsflnsd plot running through tha story whioh adds Interest and excitement tot the sdventures of " th boys, whioh are not alwaya eon- fined to th tlmea they are afloat Ther sr time and occasions, too. which try th courage and strength, of: ths lads, v but they ar a fine, manly set of fellows and rlss to ths emergency every time la a manner that win delight th heart . of every boy reader, who, like them, has . good American blood la bla veins. One . , of the best characters la th first book was old Squire Bracket! and It I m de light to meet him again In thla story Just as hs was whsn h first appeared ,' to the boy , ... '..-,. Both books ars la uniform blading and both handsomely Illustrated by . Louis D. Go wing. ' L. C, Pag Co. Fric SOO. " 4. - ; - Th speech delivered by .-"00111 It ' . Thompson, th noted Seattle trial law- ' yer, la defense 'of hi son, Chester Thompson, charged with killing Judge Emery Mead at Seattle last summer, is soon to bs published la book form. . Arrangements havs been made with a . western publishing house to so tb work.'. :' . ; . " , '.' ' i ) -The speech Is en of ths moat oele- r bra ted of It kind that haa over been mads In this country. ' It required two and a half daya In delivery, and will . make about S60 S-vo pages, which , will contain nearly 1SS.000 words., ,( !,--,'' ' "A Woman and God's Outdoor" On opening "Tn uutsrs hook- ror reoru- ary It wss a happy surprise to tjr greeted on tb frontispags with a strik ingly good photograph Of Portland's farmer-society girl, Miss Clara Webb, truj hsr pet horse Don. Quickly turn ing to th text It Is an addsd pleasure to find the name of Miss Anns Shan non Monroe under aa artlol entitled. . "A Woman - and God's Outdoors," In which shs relates a bit of ths farm Ufa of Mis .Webb. Th sccompllshments of this young woman, who ta a native f Portland, sr toe wall known to need comment farther thaa to say that svery . Oregonlan Is proud of ber, and of tha -many other Oregon girls ."who ars glor ifying ths work they touch, sa Miss Monroe says. And, by the way, that la Just what peopls ars beginning to say of th young author herself. , Unlike Miss Webb, Miss Monroe esnnot claim Oregon nativity,, but shs holds a prior claim to ths good will ,and admiration of ths people of ths home of her adop tion, through her illustrious ancestor, ' ths hsndsome,' brilliant Oeorge Shan non of th Lewis and -Clark; sxpsdltlon, . Miss Anne Shannon Monro Is th great-'., aranaanusnier oi in explorer, wno later a 1 in life became one of the moat anhnlari X and distinguished Jurists of th country. Whether or not Miss Monro Inherited -her literary talents th fact Is undls putsd that she possesses marked ability and excellent literary style, Thla la ev ident even tn as short an article as ths . one "The Outer's Book" has bben foftu-, note enouah to secure. It is concisely . and picturesquely told, snd while tha ' elaborate illustrations, which show Mies ' wcdd in many phases of her farm work sr Interesting, fhey moke the subject matter do more lifelike than do ths au thor's pea tlcturea, . ,