-TIflv OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAt, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING,' MAY 10, ICCS; - T A TIT TT" 1 1 T ! Tfc T TV AM Tt T1 ."'' rfflT TT1 : i T V IT TTI'CTT A "XT FT T"I Cf Cf Ajf ATfTtT VAFlTr T T . , TT r, t - xt v i txt , t t , . c n r 10 i Elliott to Build' a Model Tkeatre-rVaiters Enter. ClutJo Little Known Hut Interesting JNatural Wonders ot UrctfonLovcly boots m Urcat Xlwtrict or the Douth : - - , - - . - J -. Mat ITIKIt ITT.T.TriTT i tha twinular nockat to settle. TTa ha A than nnl tn flnh mamhara ; Th. ,. - ft tseaanel ja ala hi , V' m.. ' . " :iaailiissiisi 0 kL--ZA -cVf y JLaa4i 4 AXINET JCJULilOTTi ' to popular pocicai xo aaiue. lie nag men oniy x ciud aiemBera. They hava xnenJed .. . , V " !L " T" bank, who could satisfy .the hotel man- J - i most , every - tneatra . ltt - tna agement that hla check waa roo4. Bo A score of Tammany henchmen enter Unlted BUtes. from one-nlfht popular haa the bank been, and mo treat talned about' to members of the Phlla- 1 - sunds to a season on Broad-'. voiuma of jinanoiai transaction in .aeipma political rln- the other-.ulght at ' , wnui w . wMva . the wee small hours of the night that the modest price of , $126 ner Dlate. -way, Is going to manage a new theatre u im now proposed to nave night and which was served on the S5MO0 gokl which is to be - built on Thirty-ninth Jay banks In all of the leading hotels, service of the Knickerbocker hotel, street,' just east f . the Great mite he New Plata Is the first to put the Every mouthful of the lvlh dinner; .w.v a,. la' t h. td nt JEctL The .imM pU(..(Jo14 knives' .... - r uj mou ui woaiin mu yruini- uu junta, goia gooiota. gold sait cellars known as the Elliott theatre, and Is to nence and It la expected that It will not and pepper boxes, gold spoons, gold be under the actress" ' personal - super- P"0, v,1: , colnv.enl?,n,?. P1"" nd Bold cups aod saucers were i i ? "'"v"t ' patrons of the big hotels but will be a spread bfor the big political bosses lslon except when she la) en the road, good financial venture. It la regarded and when the list of gold plate ws when the Shuberts will be In charge., by the publio as only -one more step checked up after the banquet not even The new enterprise Is being constructed toward a state of affairs which will a spoon was missing. This is con according to Miss Elliott's own ideas, . make It Unnecessary for a visitor to sldered by the members of the Republt and ahe Is going to provide for the fat New York to leave his inn for any of can club to be unparalleled In the his neoDle of Gotham: for the . new .'seats ther accommodations of life. tory of Tammanv Mu whan th.r. aa -are 10 oe inree incnes wioer man iu . , , . , o mucn toTe wider and the corridors larger, and A.v"m?," v.L"..,1 .erday In : one WM made to take t7 above all,, she-intends to have real ven- rirth.vT.i . . rlia.i fli detective on hand for - every 7 guest, tllation throughout But In addition to f l5 .i-.;2mfi ven at that the Republicans de- looking ut for the comfort or tne put. -A- ".-'t'-"-ym ciare that the Tammanyltes must have Diana to nroviaa well lor tne --; - -r--- " - - naen nvnnotlxed bfnr tl,. h,nn. told within sight of th Demo not ; True, ao cratic chieftains and not in itiemnt there was no. ane players, Thel-e Is to be a big window n- if h. trTmatrVaH -hV, ent through the dinner under the im- fn every dressing-room and a commodl- ?u4i ' $2? pa?lm V1 Presslon that they were dining from ous green room "n which the actors may "i?h,r,m,e? ?J5eiiiie ij?0f2 china, . " " , lounge when they are not on the stage, ril?" Ih lf n.Lf -3? - - fc. , , ! . . . . rr-TT'- -r.L.vrn-.- had a ruul wIM Waat- l?m. n it r,t???r v,a.r.y In New important aecision was xianaeu .,.vT ,i," rf-v,- Vi.Vi v.t " tnat is unique. At tne Navarre it is in one of the courts the other day. "'"?.e ' .naa uncommon to aea the fin an a. ire i of in cases of children born In. f'.V X hotel during the fashionable dinner eiigious raitn. ana tnrougn tne r"r.i -".".v ". -,"t.rr"r "';". waiic into tha b dinina-rnom with, nn An down whereby certain I death of parents left In charge of a person of different belief. . it la iustl flable to take them out of the care of her flat, without the neighbors realising mat sne naa sucn a run xennei. the ore waa extinguished lady decided to take York not the hour e 111 or two little oriental sparrows perched Alter ,,, n hi. kui ki. r,"".1, vi. Ilia UQWl u V 4JB PUUUHiOl,. that person and place them In charge of J"?. m... iT ?J .i.n .h rao. tham in ttt, fashionable Plata hotel. .iTw i k i , Ti, that the management waa opposed .l"" .V;ri "Z'",.m".- ,"u" taking her with all her nets.' She waa uathoiic faith na ty the deatn. or tneir ."1 ".,",1; -i- cages scat! mother were .left in charge . of --"Weir- T"" v""" wr . and. dining-rooms, and every one is atepfather. Although the latter, had .ow. nrAvlilal wall fnlp- tha hlldran' and hail - been a good guardian, the fact that he . Fashionable Club row In "West Forty- not unusual to see some of the regular guests feeding them at the different laoies. . There are fully too birds In scattered . throughout perfect singer. A college graduate who took his d- the lobb a Cornell university some years was a Protestant caused the court -to rourtn street naa been Invaded by the e-ree In order tha children claced in chares of .Walters' club, m The . sllnaers of hash, aa-o ai1vrtlrt fnr a nnaitlnn ranJiv In a Catholic until they should reach tha the dispensers of highballs and reclpl- all of the leading New York papers. He age of maturity and be able to decide enta of tips have opened a clubhouse ot advertised in the usual way, but got no for themselves the question of re- their own right in the midst of such ex- responses. Finally he decided to be ligloua gelecttoii..-. : v,y--s : -ejugtre epota - . tbe New York Taeht original, and inserted an advertisement club, the Harvard. Yale,. City, Lambs which he headed "An Utter Fool." Ha New Tork already haa a "Night and and St. Nicholas clubs. , It is now pos- then proceeded to describe himself as a Day" bank whose doors are open for slble for the not over prosperous mem- college graduate, who had failed at business every hour of the 14. It has per of a fashionable club who haa gone everything he had - Undertaken. He oroM ui nm aioca ranrin o run into a siatea tnai ne waa totally una l ted to waiter, Off duty, who an hour before fill anv business position, that ha had its that i great convenience to many a late theatre supper, who when he came to get his bill. Droved host at a Jate theatre did. not have zouna mm ne enough money in his attended slavishly to hla wants and re- no accomplishmen woul sAt w . 5UBTBB- V wO OP TJ1B KOGUB V - rmm I EDFOKD., OR May f. Among the little known, but interesting natural wonders of Oregon, is the natural bridge across the upper Bogus river, about 10 miles above Prospect, lying In an Iso lated region, a mile from the road from Medford to Crater lake, the bridge , is of solid rock and Is about JO feet T.lde and SO feet In length. Under neath In a tortuous chajiBel winds the foaming mountain current shooting out with tremendous forte from a- subter ranean channel to one side of the brldgs a little below. ' All the 'upper Rogue country Is of voicanlo formation. Great stretches of Volcanic ash and pumice alternate with lava hard as flint, which In some pre historic age flowed in molten torrents from Mount Manama as they now ca'l the ancient ruins of the volcano whose worn out crater Is filled with the beau tiful waters of Crater lake, pronounced by K. H. Harrlman the greatest of the world's natural wonders. - - ( Shortly before the old volcano, which must have towered far above any oUif r peaks of the Cascades, blew off Its peak leaving Its giant crater six miles In diameter to slowly fill With the melting vnows of ages, there was evidently a tremendous flood of molten rock which i an down across the adjoining country nd partially. filled what is now the val ly of the Rogue. ; Down this channel 3a y r 5.V0W---' 9 t :4- 4 llliiilils y i w 'A A-.Kf-i-es-.1 T d lndnca ceived a quarter tip from the un- any man In New York to nay him 5 prosperous but fashionable clubman, cent a week as an employe. Among who now passes him as though be had other things he requested that anyone never seen him in his life. Of course who desired to communioate with him the Waiters' club isn't called - the must first state the color of his eyes Walters' club. That would be too pie- and nose, or he woudl not give thorn the beian. It Is called the Geneva asaocia- benefit of an Interview. He got many tion. The waiters bought the house, answers to. this unique "ad," with the chiefly from the money they received result that he was offered a position at as tip from their fashionable neighbor 12,600 a year. Ike MENACE OF ANARCHISM By Mrs. John A. Logan (Ovyrigbt,-1808, by W. B. Qum.) recently appeared In Its columns, dla- HERB have been some sad evl- bcal plots of murder, arson and an- . ..,, ,v, .vt.. la were ooiaiy aavocatea assaasi- dences recenUy that anarchism la nation, seising of arms, killing of offl- not dead In the United tatea cere and soldiers, and the use of dyna- From Russia, lUly and otW for- "ll'.tb1" especially recommended. . elgn lands have come would-be there la My law under wlJch he could assassins, who, escaping- from the hands proceed to suppress the organ or proa- of the law In their own countries, flee jcute ite editors- and proprietors, or to this country to escape merited pu- brk P rchlstlo organisations. ,.Vl., , Anarchists met in Chicago March 15 isnrnent. and "voted to raise $20,000 to purchase Organisations are permitted which a site and build an anarchistic hall" carry the red flag of anarchy, speakers " that city, Emma Goldman declaring n ,ji, that there were 1S.000 anarchists lu are allowed to harangue audience, de- Chicago and that they could raise double fylng- the officers of the law' and utter- that amount quickly, lng treasonable and incendiary sentl- Another report Is to the effect that mente against Individuals, legitimate there Is an organised campaign being corporations, municipal, state and the made "to clear the name of Lazarus national government. ' Averbuch from the taint of assassin;" - Literature of the most revolutionary that a secret fund of $100,000 is being character is disseminated all over the rained to prosecute Chief of Police country , without hindrance, and noth- Bhlpp. should they be able to obtain ing is done to restrain them In their . sufficient evidence upon which they promulgation of vicious theories full of could base prosecution, criticism and disloyalty to the govern- These are startling announcements tnent. - -' . , to those who read the account of the ;. Confessed criminals are allowed to attempted assassination of Chief escape from-Justice and are feted -and Shippy and his son. and one wonders lauded by their followers though 'the what has become of the threatened ' crimson stains of their victim's blood extermination ot anarchists and their may still be upon their hands and their sympathisers from Chicago ao boldly garments. Neither creed nor condition announced while the excitement over is any protection to those who once the attack unon the chief of police and come under the ban of anarchism. hla son wss at its height. Are the ehurohes of all creeds do- TUe question arlsea whether c not ing their duty In their apathetic acqul- association with people who live in the escenee tn the oft-repeated tragedies slums of any City does not do more that are perpetrated by the viciously harm to the misguided philanthropist insane. The teachings of anarchism are than it does good to the denlsens of at variance with every form of religion, such localities, because often tie re is Agents of the law and religion are no need of industrious, sober, law entitled to little credit if they cannot abiding people living in such places, suppress and atamp out anarchism , be- There will be no relief from the - ' - ; . i v. a vrnwrn HTfflin mian, nr I hi. ia,a ,,it eeauent 'eenturi?sL thV mountain Salua-a i A -.w Vl Wr KJS rCKJ iSWUC JS, l. V LXTV, d W V i-'&lw'W J'lTl IU-U iJ 0 lytftf IWWU'W WVfl , control. Political amDiiion is nwpon- laws are passea, ir tne present stat- f a.vS ? 5it?Ti- -Ti.f i Jl ul - : "TxriiT t i-nKT . slble for rapid growth in the United titen are not sufflciont, and the enemies lias dashed, wearing a channel for it- tVXrirtL LOrl - , o.l. . nf law and order and tha nvimmnii pelf in this hardest of rocks. Wherevw : - . The natural bridge 1a of solid lava, the upper tributaries, with eastern trout, of the red Breckled beautiM a flaw ooourre ta tb'ttlnty-foiwoa"iPhg.how'praTnl"Uie' itreim' teartn and hai T stopped the tut of fish from Thesenave since multiplied until there below the bridge, as none of the rain- 'riu, a "wspapVr through SMlnffiMt puniahed for he water has taken advantage of it Sown over the bare rock on which not the head waters. Some yeara ago the is fairly good fishing of this variety bow cut throat, or western brook trout tlnarehlsti circulate their The day hai passed. If we wish to nnd burrowed an outlet. The photo- even a fern can find a footing. government stocked Union creek, one of In the Rogue above the bridge, but none atre found above. obnoxious tenets all over the world, preserve the republic for sentimental- From a translation ox an article .wmcn ism wnen aeanng witn criminals. NEW BOOKS and THEIR PUBLISHERS ..- HBJ "Sorceress of Roma,' by In lu religious and military organlxa- I Nathan OalUxierA short"0";. ... .. I intrninntr .1...... Otto, the German king, and conqueror I Introductory chapter gives of Rome a visltor"n the Eternal the readers a very good in- City and the senator, taking advantage sight Into . the history, of ot the king's Infatuation for a beautl- Rome nrior ttt ' tha nnanW r thia ,uI woman stirs the people of Rome to Kome prior t ins i opening of this revoit Tn hePO of the ,tory j, the story, and fixes in their mind the re- commander of the German army, who, latlons of the various historical char- through - his extraordinary ability, acter. and the condition of the county IVng'frUTum.ayona.f3. at the period of .time in which the a strange weird story Is told of the fyJ'y i ,c,u"t. . The introducUon says: German general s wife who is the sor The oarkneas of the 10th century la ceress of Rome. The story Is a tan dissipated by no contemporary hla- gied plot of many counter plots and torlan. Monkish chronicles alone shed the number and variety of the people . faint light over the discordant chaos that are brought Into it would be con f the Htaliani world. Rome waa no fusing in a1 lighter or less profoundly longer the capital of the earth. The i fascinating story; but the whole book, eat of empire had shifted from the which soara way above the common banks of the Tiber to the shores of pjace, and lato the classic demands a ine Bosphorus, and the seven hUled concentration of the mind and atten- Hy of Cons tan Una has assumed the tion that is required by very little of imperial purple of the ancient caplul our present-day fiction. The strength f Uie Caesara. . Centuries tof strug- and power of the story is centered let with the hosts of foreign invad- in Its principal characters, while its r"Pd la time lowered the state of interest lies in its historic; significance, civilization to such a degree, that in The monks naturally play a prom loint of literature and art the Rome Inent part, while dark caves, secret t.f the 10th century could not boast passages and religious orgies add their f a single name . worthy of being thrills and shivers to the tale, transmitted to posterity. Even the it is not a story, perhaps, that will memory of the men whose achieve- blase into popularity at once, as It rnents in the days of its glory con- contains no element of sensationalism, ututed the pride and boast of the but its fine literary atyle, Ita rich ro J.oman world, bad become almost ex- mance out of a time of meager his V, n(ih. A ,sr,eat lethargy benumbed the torical data and its painstaking and JtaliaTi mind, engendered by the reac- careful preparation will Insure it a per son from the Incessant feuds and evils manent place among enduring fiction, amongi tie petty -Ojaats-and eppres--The book isvell bound andTreix hand ftirs of the .country. Together with somely illustrated in colors by the V,9ire',t.of.th 'l"tegrated states of Kinnys with decorations by P. Verberg. lialyunited by a common bond. Rome L. c. Page 6 Co. Price $1.60. lad become the prey of the greatest ., ' '' rIi ' r, . ' "The Meaning of the Times." by Al- l 3LhH.,Ji'B lnto manner of bert J. Beverldge The senate of the rrupuon. its former halo and pres- United States is not so rich In orators ",e. t?.. dPl't d. The chair of 8c. that a man like Benator Beverldge ,mtriH?2 'K?uiht by bribery i and would be overlooked. But even in the c ontrolling influence, often by violence days when brilliant oratory was a f ea rn! assassination, and the city was ture of congress he would have taken , tKiiiiiB .ana wu iiiiv mi Dinra tn tn rrnnt1 rant m av. now con- - - . liuiu wi,,vu mi- many oi tne coneervajtive-oouna nacxv. aw no other means of extricating her- who are left-overs from ancient davs. hif, harassed by the Hungarians in h has never been forgiven for break jx.rabardy and the Saracens in Cala- lng the time honored custom of re 'llilAtal?na,4 h the year SV called mainlng a dummy, to be eeeu and not m Otto the Great, king ol Germany, heard during hla first year in the sen ior assistance. ates but while they deride hia efforts Every ancient prejudice, every recol- it is a matter of comment that when he lortion whether of Augustus or Char- begins to talk they sit up and begin to j.Tnaitne, had led the Romans to an- take notice. ' -j ex the notion of sovereignty to ithe This book Is a collection of .18 of l ame of Roman emperor, nor were Otto Senator Beverldge's speeches many of j-nd histwo lnimediate descendants In- them among his most notable ones, linnd to waive these supposed pre- while others, such as his address at the KiUives, which they were able to in- Indiana state teachers' convention in , a The flames of re- honor of James Whltcomb Riley, and i i ilKm again swept over the seven his remarks in the United States aen : n.'d city, during the rule of Otto II, ateon the occasion of the unveiling of uiif.seald the Romans had invokd the Frances Willard statue are: less - the invading hordes of Islam, known but .show the man rather than , -I the same republican spirit broke the stateaman. There Is no man In the it during the brli;f, but fsjitaatio reign, senate whose public utterances might f his eon. the third Otto, directing it- more properly be construed as the f in the latter instance chiefly againnt meaning of the times. , He K vi tallied person of the youthful pontiff, with th portends of the future; he has nmo of Carinthia, the. friend or the taken a long look ahead and he has r, whose purity stands out in msrkd grasped Usues with the strength and -'tr against the depravity ; of iho courage" of determined conviction ..mm era. who. to the number of 3 0. coupled with the ability and desire to i linring the past five decades, de wrestle with them. His speeches ther. ' ,.,1 tt,e throne of the apostle.'- fore -reflect the character of the man. Mr.. aiiiser"a - story Is a Roman His visit to the far east to China nvljr eiiiirted in 98, A. I)., and deals Japan and Russia just after his elec . 4 t.l. wunOtnon of the country, both lion to the senate was an example of bis manner of taking holdf publio questions. He was elected Just after our treaty of peace with Spain and he realized that the questions' growing out of It would be the most momentous Is sues congress would have to deal with. So he determined upon the trip thst he might study the conditions of the countries and their people, and from personal observation and knowledge be able to take a firm and Intelligent stand upon every question that might arise pertaining to them. That he has done this msny of these speeches give abundant testimony to. His speech on "Our Prlllpplne Policy" has become a historic document and his Interpreta tion of " our constitution. In various speeches,' Indicates the breadth of hla horison and the depth of his analytical m!nd. Senator Beverldge, It must be ad mitted, has come under some seething criticism from his colleagues, but hie honest- of purpose has never, been questioned and his patriotism. , which shines forth In every speech he makes, no matter upon what occasion, would be inspirational to any one who would read them, This is certainly a notable collec tion of speeches, not alone for the mine of valuable information they open up, but for their pure diction and chaste oratorical style. Senator Beverldge's latest photograph, which we 'copv, furnishes a frontispiece for the book. Bobbs, Merrill A Co. Price $1.60. Mii.mlsslon by foreign adventurers tn acted the name attention which he . .mmand of panda collected from tho receives, though sometimes from a i . itcaats ' of all nations. gress wth Very unwilling ears. TmtVmTT It BariTVin Tin Ban Francisco disaster Is beginning to fur nish K background for many fiction writers, ss Is evidenced by several re cent novels, and "Travars" Is one of them. The story begins with a supper at the Palace hotel the evening before the earthquake, and the desolation and terror that founws the disaster devel opes the strength of the characters throughout the book. , The chief Interest'- centers about a man who was In the midst of a burglary when the earth be pan to fchake and his Intended victim; Together they make their way to the hills and his former ex perience teaches him whatmay be ex- fected. so he secures comfortable quar nrs and food enough to tide them ovac, the stress that followed. The girl, a pampered society woman, soon adapted herself to circumstances and developed, like so manv at that time did, a strong and splendid character. The quondam burglar proves to be skilled in med icine aod is of untold service to the suf ferers that have sought refuge on the same hillside. ..".... i. The climax of the story comes when the here and heroine have a thrilling experience in a burning building where they had gone to secure some valuable Pagers belonging to the girl. The story Is well and graphically written end the loyalty and devotion of the girl to her desolated home Is so typical of the spirit of San Francises one would admire the story even if It were not as Interesting ss it really Is. Nor Is the story one of the sensational, unreal sort that have appeared so fre quently of late with the romance founded upon the San Francisco earth quake. The book has a number of good 'colored ' ' lllu-tratlms. l Frederick A. Stokes Co. Price $.1.B0, , - ' y; , " "if . '" ' " '' I'" If ' ''TttfMTi l,M HiMrt the Spanish by Elisabeth Howard West the scholar or htstorjan, and more ln "The Ice Dragon and the Sun God," by teresting to the layman than any fiction Isabel Moore la an April legend with could possibly be. It also contains a a very rooaern zinaie. it is npivpwat nuuiwri ui crj ni,uuTa aim in- very imaginative and quite poetic structive illustrations, among them iVtt.nr r.nitnn has written a very being several page reproductions of ood article on "The Saturnalia,' which cartoons In connection with the article, -full of Information and very enter- "The Cartoon in American Life." There Cl (fiill nt Information and verv talning. The entire book Is. a feast of are also a number of pnge pictures of good things, but almost like the "best statuary illustrating "Historic Art In at the laaV appreciative article America." by Badoslar A. Tsanoff on Ivan Vasoff. There Is no magazine published in the Balkan poet and noveliat Scholars America today that in as elegantly got have found this great man and a few ten up or upon which such an amount are appreciating him. but to the great of money ia expended as "The Journal army of even literary people It is a of American History." This Is saying name almost unknown and the measure a great deal, but It can be said without of hia greatness, as portrayed by Mr. fear of contradiction. It is further Tsanoff, will be a surprise and grati- more a magasine that must stand on its Deration to many. own merits and by the support it. re It ia in bringing to', notice Just such celves through Its subscribers, for it people, the going out of the usual path does not carry a pafo of advertisements to find the unusual ablUty and making and from cover to cover Is a gem of the unfamiliar names sought after, literary merit Subscription $3. Four when they are worth seeking. thefT Issues a year. Single copies 76 centa "Poet Lore", is doing a great service to New Haven, Connecticut the world and is verily becoming an ex- ? - plorer In the field of literature. Be- Professor Hugo Munsterberg, whose book, "On the Witness Stand." beautiful poems vaiue. her doaV th. 8om of the birds are so accustomed to ; fLt She found Koto to the big dining-room that It is onnosed ti not unusual to see some of the regular WSS opposed tO a-lieaia tamAlnm h.n . MfZ.-t ofwafmarked literary has Just been issued by the.McClure , - ' . . , .u n it.. vaiu. ( , ' , km company, noa uacttrtu, uuwi vi a VuVbe&hed by tIb. vard laboratory of experimental pay Badgei '& Co Boston. - , , chology since its organisation. Born v, : v ... y . - . . ' and educated in Germany, he lectured J'S'PC- relbuwncfhe'was SlWlfar? Thia book .marks the t&"f'.'-Zlr4lnin. He has shown since his ond year ?' h ta-tUuUon of a yesWence In this country an intense and f1 SLLiT-''JarSan omnI critical interest in American life, social, ing the principles of. American citisen- Uca, and educational; and In his ship and narrating the deeds of honor Yl known book, "The Americans," and achievement that are so true to whlchwaa published some- years go, - American character. . ..,. he embodied the results of his observe- i . ?.h!(rt.'.,,lSffllj f- 2 tlonsT "On the Witness Stand" is a col- v imitation i heep and old go!d i and 1 Is a Jn". deaUn wUh th- reproduction from an nc,ent-vo'"n psychology of the 'witness and the J",..06 h"0 l'h', ot. New .York, uestlon8"of evidence The essays have l'J.l' , ' iiul . ti,. ..nU.', i .' attracted unusual attention as they The t rontlsplec of the. ' J1 have appeared from time to time In Mi- gorgeous heraldic Illumination In gold. SfK.Mmlnm and m Tother period!- aiiAn a n n ziAinrti nr inn slt iii h. ci r iiru- . - - dore Roosevelt's family. It was in herited through ls Holland progenitors and waa aatablishad in American in 1(49. cala The Good Old Hymns. maT..VfTmerr - n. ofihe Author of Am.rtcL"' T'huX An'when.o.0- gray-ba.red brother dredth thirthof Sam- '' hand-inthlnk "1, w"-" I- Qmi.k iu ruiiP nn nntober X orter-wmnt to taK & nana! tmnK II, 108. The original manuscript of - . - o fy.f"awb"rv T 'America" is still in existence Dd ! "On Jordan', tormy banlti I ALBERT J. BEVERIDGB. ? many by four live, healthy and up-to- aate girls. but with some verv nrettv rnmanca who have been cut In charge - making it on the whole a very attract- of good old Colonel - Wentworth, the ive book. ' It Is strikingly bound and -American consul, and his "lady of well presented. Richard G. Badger Co, rank." The girls are types but of the .Price $1.25. . best American brand, and all are of the - . . r . ' . ages when life is rose-cblored and the 'Toet Lore," edited by Charlotte P6r world a sea of splendor .for them- to ter and Helen A Clarke The quarterly plunge an revel In. Under-such fa- number Just received competes in x vorable espionage as .the consul and his ' cellence with all past numbers and well wife and the' doors that would swing sustains the reputation the magazine open to them through this Influence. the has acquired In the. world of letters, girls of course saw Germany under the Why it is, can, perhaps,' not be satis most favorable circumstances, but ifor 'factorlly explained, but It is a fact all of that the dear home country was nevertheless that it Is a difficult thing never out of mind. The book is an ex- :to procure, at the ordinary book stores, eellent glimpse of - German life, both the modern dramas, and If you do tho home and socjal, and' the customs and price is excessive, therefore theV scheme stand, and vl ;l.,i In rar-almlle. cast a wisnui eye. "Amerlcanisatlon of the Great South- ' , , y ' West" "Americanism of the Rich Mid- There's lots . of musto In m those die West" "American Spirit of the near, sweet hymns of old. Great Lakes" and "The Greatness of the -"Titi, visions bright of lands of light Smallest State in the Unlon' are head- and shining streets of gold; lngs nnder which a vast amount of And T hear 'em ringing singing, where valuable sectional history is given. memory dreaming stands, . - May 11 will mara tne mumu um- "From oreeniana s icy mountains tor India's coral strands." we hardly needed singln' books them oia oays; we Knew In versary of Minnesota's admission to the union and In honor, of this the magasine gives a beautiful trl-fold, halftone, copied from the mural painting of Ed win Howland Bwsnne.o in cny... words, the tunes, of every one the at Bt. Paul, ymbolwlnw tte birth r dear old hymn-book through! the northwest after Us imo nofu ftlgti w had no blaring triumphs then, no val alumber, and a CJPn Jn utra organs built Yor show; tion. "presenting ,fh . J!';, Wl only sang to praise the Lord "from wes?dtakenafrom Tmml oorttlon . whom aU blessing, flow," . S?aa7 andmwhlch has been painted in An' so I love the dear Old hymns, and ?A.rnnratlon of the .fiftieth annl- ' --- when my time shall come , 'rrn Charge bf the, Consul." ' by Ella F. Padon-A bright breesv little book, the chronicle ot a year spent in Ger- tna'nners of the people are deftly woven in ana out.witn tne goings ana com ings of ' tnese bright girls and jthe In--formation Imparted by Colonef Wentt worth and others who are brought into' the atorr. Jt is a atorv without a Plot. of "Poet. Lore" in publishing each quarter . a drama by some modern rating qramatim is a most acceptable and beneficial one. This Issue - contains "The Madman Divine"' (Kl Ioco Diosi by Jose Kchassrav and ' from k ll.kt haa U m anNmv T inannttalv tniimt- slnarlna llns are dumb .V "JL. .callent articles In If I can only hear 'em then I'll-pass. thia ma Kaztne and then give a very in- . without a elgh, squats idea of its real wortW. for It "To Canaan'a fair ana happy land. where X, T7u11 to overf lowing, with good read- my possessions Her . - aUTLUkLU IsaUU ii lWW" felafw ( ww , . .weaa.ea vvnenVi hvaa ; abl - .