Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 22,v 1808. Wit and their "S I TUDIES la ths American Baca Problem," by Alfred Holt Stone. -If one were uked to designate the two atronrest characteristic of this book they would at once ay, The familiar ity of the author with his subject and his clear and unbiased way of present ' ing It to his readers." That both of these are essentials to a work of this kind goes without sarins;. Then the work Is extremely analytical; there is nothing said; or attempted to be provtd - from surface Indications, but, bit by bit. the 'author takes the various phases of the subject, dissecting; them end test Ing them by every known method, and bringing about his logical conclusions as neatly and as absolutely correct as the chemist would separata .and combine the chemicals in his retorts. The vol- ' ume contains three statistical papers, contributed by Walter F, Wtllcox. than : whom there Is perhaps no better authqr . Hy upon the subject, and as the pub lishers trumruiiy . say: neither con tributor to this" Volume Is : a propa gandist: neither has any panacea, the, aim of both is a scientific study of the " subject." t . That locality plays a strong part in determining the race problem, the au thor brings out clearly and proves it In a way that is both convincing and original to any one who has never given the subject mature deliberation. In the opening chapter on "Contrasts and Parallels," the author shows the re lation of the negro to his environments end the outgrowth, ol this relation to i i (a -n n t .pal An ' TT a A mm nnl v. cuse or blame, and much leas senti mentalise over conditons; he simply ac- - cepts them and in clear cut language rives plain facts, and proves them. Much of his proof, through the intire book, he brings from such well known and experienced authorities as Booker T. Washington and Dr. Du Bols. One f the most-Interesting chapters in the work treats of the ".Economic Future of the Negro." It is Interesting because It brings such a practical side of, the problem to us, and yet is .discouraging : from the fact that it Is a conceded fact 1 that Industrial education Is the hope of the race and yet that today, in the in dustrial world the negro Is worse off . than at the close of the warthere are !sa skilled workmen and their prop erty holdings are far smaller (n propor tion to their numbers. The author says: "It is inconceivable that any people who could increase In numbers from four and a half millions in 1860 to nine . mill ons in 1800 could fall also to In. crease, their property during that pe . rlod." Mr. Stone does not simply make this assertion and ask you to accept it on . credit, but ha accompanies it with convincing figures, v quoting among ' others Mr. wanamaKer. who in an ad , dress at the New York convention of the National Negro Business League, made this significant remark, which also gives the real cause of negro de terioration in the business world after recalling the fact that Philadelphia onca had a number of nearo business men In whom the local business world took pridehe said: "Many of them lost v their business before they paasec away. , As an old business man I am speaking the Tact; they )ost their business oe cause the Swiss, the German and others who were American white men aid that rame business better tnan they did it. Their color had not the least thing to . do with it." .In sneaKlnx on the "Eco- nomlo Future of the Negro," the writer aayai "It is Idle here to confuse the practical Question of actual conditions with the ethical question of cause. For our purpose w need not stop to multi ply words In an effort to determine where rests the burden or responsibility, Between the white man and the black It is likely always to remain a disputed question. But a man wbo has ceased to breathe - Is equally dead, whether he came to his death by . assaa slnation Or. suicide. In the end Is to be the- same, the negro masses will not be particularly Interested In the academic question of causes ond means. If the white man Is responsible for the negro's condition; if me latter cannot remove the obstacles . from his own path, then his economic future no longer remains' within the field of speculation, and the 'efforts to .ward his Industrial training become a mockery to him and a fraud upon those who support them. But I take the view that at least holds something of hope i for the negro, in that It does not en tirely remove his present or future from the range or his own individual efforts. In the chapter devoted to "Race Frio tlon." the author treats. In a most con vincing manner, that phase of the race problem that is so tritely quoted and eo little understood, from a theoretical piaiiunuuih nam' i . i ntj i i: juniaieii i in. it ion pf the-southern white man. who objects less to personal contact and as sociation with the negro than the north ern man does. - He. through a course of reasoning proves that to be an artificial relation growing out of the Institution of slavery, while he believes that feeling or tne norrnern man against personal contact the feeling of Instinctive racial antlnathv in us olementarv form. One might go on quoting Indefinitely from Mr. Stone's book and than be able only to give a very meager idea or the fullness and completeness of it. But It may be truthfully said to be one of the illuminating woras on mis question, which is fulfilling De Tocqueville's II . L ... S!!" A. if. Stone, Author of "Studieg in the American Race Problem." IN WOMAN'S BREAST ANY LUMP IS CANCER Any tumor, lump or sore on the Up, face or anywnrr, six months, is cancer. Thejr never pUa until al most past cure, Three Physicians Offer $1000 ; If They Fan to Cnro Any Cancer without muti or wmxm AT MAXJt FB.ICS for 10 days. Not a dollar need be paid until cured. Only infallible cure ,-ver - discovered .ABIOLDfl 'OVl.ilTIl. vSBeat boo on can- ev-r printed, sent raura with . , It e s 1 1 monials of ' ' thousands cured I without a failure. A - Pacific Island . T I n . .nalrAM ,1.. Ieurs. ' Most won oerrui discovery on earth. Small cancers cured at - ir home. No X-Ray or ether swindle. il;e to.ixyfor 12t-page book, sent free. ;Xi:',:PtS.DR.CriAMLfY&C0. ("4 i : V.'httr St., left F, fat frmciits. '- J'-"" J Ta ."ue f.';!!i Car.ccr. prophecy when he said that emancipa tion would be but the beginning of American's racial problems. - And to study this problem la the duty and re sponsibility of every American cltiien, and a better text book could not be fur nished than Mr. Btone has given. ; Poubleday, Page & Co. Price 12. , "I and my ' true' love," by H: A' Mitchell Keays Again Mrs. Keays has given us a novel founded tapoh her fav orite theme divorce. She Is however a clean writer and tells no disgusting tale of marital infelicity, with the shine ?nd polution of Infidelity clinging about t This is not her style: she simply points to : the fitfalls. Illustrates her point by entertaining fiction, : and concludes without leavina- a bad taste in the mouth. In this story .Illel Sargent, the successful playwright, at the open ing -of -the-story, sends his 19-year-old dauchter to his divorced wife.' Mrs. Dicky Warder, to learn something of tne world, iuei Bargains romance naa been brief, sweet while it lasted and exceedingly commonplace. He wooed nrettv Klttv and won her In Overshot Wood among the primroses, but it was love in a cottage, and arter iittie Christina came, and the wild passion of romance began to settle down to the everyday routine of domestio life, Kitty, the handsome young matron lonced for the flesh Dots and the ad miration the plodding husband forgot to give her. Of course the man to supply the want was not long in coming and It nappenea to d weatiny, un nrinclnled Dicky Warder, the husband college chum. Stress Is laid upon the fact that Kitty's, conduct IS entirely Dronertv onlv after due process of law, and a reasonable time after the divorce had been granted. Sargent kept the child, whom the mother never wanted, and as he became rich and famous raised the trlrl to be a bright beautiful creature, in person and features like him, but with many of the mother's traits. When the story opens Christina is en eared to marry a handsome, clean boy, but fearing she may make her mother's mistake In marrying for love and then regretting it, no aeciqes to send her to "Madam Kitty." now brll liant society leader, who arrived at continent only upon the death of the brutal Dickv. aome five years previous. Christina is at runs In a high key. and makes things lively all around, but the Influence of mother and daughter upon each other and the gradual de velopment of the two Is a subtle and clever niece of work. Sargent Is a fine character, natural and well balanced, but the wise-acres would not have commended his action In sending the girl to sucn a mother, however he nroved his wisdom. He took her himself to "Madam Kitty's" door and as he waigea away arter unnstina had been "swallowed ud." he turned and looked back and the saw the brilliant polnsetttas biasing In every window of the warder home; . haunted oy tne oe wilderlng thought he realized that "be tween primroses and poinsettlas the dlvidlnr years were set like swords.' This thought is very prettily carried out In the cover design of the book. This story is not perhaps, ss intricate as "He that Eateth Bread with Me.' but it is more vivacious and is full of brlshtness and fairly overflows with the mirth of the Irrepressible Christina. It has its patnos too, ana carries a m- tremendous lesson to young and experienced wives and husbands. Mrs. Keavs has a line literary stvle ano never iaiis 10 impress tne point, though the reader is hardly aware of it. Small Maynard Co., Price 1.50. "The RIverman." toy Stewart Edward White. Mr. White has carved another notch in his cllmh to tame as a fiction writer. In this his latest story, and he was already very near the toe Some one has compared his work with Cooner'e ana perhaps mere are points 01 con tact, but Mr. White, while dropping the fire knd storm of the "Red Stocking Tales" has brought into his work a poiss and silent strength that Cooper never could have attained. In fact tnls silent, quiet strength, Which is the atrencth and .Immensity of nature it self, is the stamp of Individuality which sets Mr. wnue s oooas in a class oy themselves, and there .creates one of the points of resemblanee to Cooper a permanent place in American literature, In Cooper's books one reads voraciously for the story; In Mr. White's works one' is so engaged with the "setting the storv ellns . throurh so almost totally unobserved' that the end comes, and we realise the romance onlv as we recognise the subtle flavor of some thing we nave Deen enjoym. In the present storv Jack Orde is me nver-ooss wno nv - nirricuit and successful work, attracts the attention of Newark, a shrewd lawyer, who sees the commercial advantatrfes of the river and enters into a partnership with Orde to put In Piers, and In various ways con trol the rive When it. tm aoenmnllahiuf. Newark then turns Ills trained talents for f doing 1 people" onto Orde himself, who like all great hearted creatures of raturt, is slow to see tho drUt of bis partners maneuvers, but when he finally does he rises up In his righteous in dignation and smites ,hls legal friend hip and thigh, and relieves his con science in regular riverman style. The courtship of Jack Orde and Carroll Bishop la strong and pure and In keep ing with the masterful situations and incidents of the book. The publishers have used the handsome, picturesque portrait of the riverman for cover de sign whtch is both striking; and ap propriate. Tne book is well and elab orately illustrated. The McClure Co. Price $1.50. "Though Life Us Do Part," by Elis abeth Stuart Phelps (Mrs. H. D. Ward). This is a simple tale of domestic In felicity, but one In : which sorrow and suffering bring out the best that is in tho man's character: and not quits too late to retrieve what he has thrown away. Like most of Mrs. Ward's fiction this Is a "down "east" story. She introduces her principal characters as they gather upon the broad veranda of a summer which the author remarks: "Golf, like death or hunger, Is a leveler; and peo ple who do not meet In the same drawing-room might tea off into the same bunker." Carolyn Sterling is the char acter about which tho story revolves a flrl of rare bravery, wealth and beauty, he marries a man not "to the manner born," and then the author -carries them through the gradual decline of affection until the final break comes, and he enlists and goes . off to the Spanish war. Through all the troublous times, past, and to come, two strong beautlfu' char acters stand out more prominently than any others save the hero and heroine these are first, the strong, but tender-hearted rector and the noble, almost suman Scotch collie, who Is the pro tector and mentor of his mistress. The story is full of life and action with a somewhat unusual plot It Is written in the clean-cut, decisive Honest Quality PIANOS In buying a piano vou want honest quality. Pianos of good quality cost but a trifle more than those of-cheap construction. Sherman, Clay &Co. have an es tablished reputation ler selline nianos of honest quality, upon convenient, satisfactory .terms of payment where the customer is not prepared to pay cash. Strictly one price to all is the rale of this house. Among the pianos thus offered are Steinwa. A B Chase, Everett, Conover, Packard, Esty, Ludwig, Kingsbury, Emerson,' Kurtrman and Wellington. Player pianos: A. B. Chase, Carola, Kings bury, Euphona. We have some fine yalues in used pianos, which may be purchased on very small payments. These pianos have been traded. In toward the purchase of our A. B. Chase player pianos. One nrir ti all, and always "An Honest Piano at an Honest Price. -. Sherman, Clay & Co. STEI.NWAY DEALERS , Sfxlfj and Morrison .: Opp. Postofficc ktyle, which is one of the characteris tics of Mrs. Ward's- works. Elisabeth Stuart Phelns f Mrs. H.' D. Ward) has been a prollfia writer, but no less a popular One. for her stories nave never arrewn mass or repeated themselves, and the present one, save and except for uniformity of excellent and polished literary style, is as new and fresh as though It were her first attempt in the rieut or notion. The book is bound in a fine dignified manner, and has a pretty colored fron tispiece. Houghton, Mifflin , . Co. Price, $1.(0. : "The One and I," by Elisabeth Free, mantle. An English girl, whose father end -mother have moved to Canada, finds herself engaged to "One," but for whom she Is not willing to give up her personal ambitions and aspirations; nor Is she willing to settle down to the life of labor and deprivation that Can adian farm life demands. Her mother having died and her fath er marrying - again, a decision was necessarv. and ths book Is simply her diary, begun at about this period of her Interesting existence. it is almost wnouy a description or the Canadian northwest with its teo- ple -half English, half native and all interesting, as written bv a bright, lib erty-loving girl, whoso greatest Joy is "God's out-of-doors." Of course It takes Well nigh a tragedy to convince. -i" tnat "une- is tne only one tning In all the world. and "I" decides: "This dlarv shall be kect always: it is a monument of folly whereon is writ ten a taie or vanity." But tne writing is assuredly most interesting and In structive to the reader, and It is a tale that is well worth the telling. Tne book is beautifully bound in dark, blue with the maple leaf of Can ada In gold, for cover design. It is charmingly illustrated in colors, and s rnaDle leaf outlined in black At the chapter announcements. George W. -Jacobs company. Price, $1.50.. 'Wvomtnar." bv William MacLd Ratne.- The title biases to the world the nature of the story, for only a tale of the west could come forth under this significant name and a veritable tale of tho west It proves, for It Is bright, energetic, full of snap and vim and fairly bubbling over with life In Its best and healthiest conditions, and then it la the storv Of a woman that did things, V neien . jaessiter, up to two months before the story opens, had been a seo- ond grade teacher in the schools of Kalamatoo, Mich., when an uncle died and left her a valuable ranch in Wyom ing, for which she promptly refused a hundred thousand dollars, and getting a substitute to finish her school, she, against the advice of her lawyers and the protests of several young men, Went OUtfi and assumed the management of it herself.. She not only took with her the knowledge and accomplishments of her eastern civilisation but provided herself with the habiliments of comfort and luxury In ths shape of a great panting, careering automobile, which was tne wonder and surprise of the many cowboys which It falls to Miss Messiter's lot to be thrown In contact I witii. ut course a plot, and a very ciever one, aeveiops, in wnich tne gin from the east meets every emergency with steady nerve, warm sympathy and keen intelligence. rne book is full of Snirrkllna- conver sation and bright repartee, as well as Of good, wholesome and exciting adven ture. On the whole It Is a book very far above the average western or cow boy story, now so. much In vogue. The book is well illustrated hv r H. Rowe, Oeorgs W. Dillinghora. Price, 11,60. , polored Child Fatally Burned. (Halted Press Leasee W!r. Los Angeles, Nov. Jl. Her face and body a mass of burns. Mamie B rough- ton, a 8-year-old colorT girl. Is dying t the receivlnr hoanital this aftf rnnon. Her dress caught flro from a stove near which she and her two little brothers were playing. She was fatally burned before the flames were extinguished by Robert Brown, a 14-year-old colored boy, who rushed to ner assistance. , Advance Showing of Ghristraas.Leathers mRBA : We now have on display and ready for your inspection the best line-ol fine leather goods ever shown in Portland. There are new handbags, , vanity bags, purses, card cases, gold and silver. mesh purses-, 'work baskets, music rolls, travel ing cases,- jewel cases, collar . and cuff boxes, tie pin boxes, tie cases, cigar cases, wallets and many, many other useful and pleasing articles. TRY THIS PLAN Select your gift now pay a deposit get it at Christmas. Everything Engraved la Geld FBEC - Sole Agents For Mark Cross English Leathers SEE WASHINGTON STREET WINDOW Columbia nntvsrattv ' 'New' iTnrlc 1im. after will give degrees for students who complete a course In aeronautics. Use a Home ''wMrTl Bath BflM-Cabirtet- .rmKmu wui, give U.tra i r VEZiH. healthy a body (jr and a beautiful ; complexion. Every home MIUU1U UdVC t Vapor Bath Cabinet,' as the saving it will make, by keeping you well, will more than pay its original cost. It will relieve rheumatism, kidney trouble, cure the worst colds, catarrh, tc, and will beautify the complexion. Prices $4.00, $5.00, $7.50, $12.50 IF INTERESTED SEND FOR FREE BOOKLET Invalid Chairs ' ' j ' '. " ' mi " ..I i ., ii . ii , A large assortment to select from. Priced from $25.00 4Jp f We rent them for $5,00 a month. VictorTalkingMachincs and Edison Phonographs Masts' Sold on easy terms ?1.00 down ( and $1.00 a week. ' Tax ta lorato tho fomrtb Tlov. U '' lw""' "IJI i.1ir Hi isml I sSili isl lilil I si i IT HI sit wi as l v. I , I il TUBS ntoxss rOVBTB 290 Morrison Street 0 9tMCL S Special Occas CLOAK AND SUIT HOUSE ioeT 290 Morrison Street liaiil csgivieg Tne Littlekost, with' its unequaled values, will for the NEXT THREE DAYS make the biggest sacrifice that has ever been offered in the following articles. DON'T FAIL TO ORASP THIS OPPORTUNITY $23.50 50 TAILOR- MADE SUITS; newest cut, actu al value $45.00.......... Every suit strictly tailored, made of Herringbone, Broadcloth and fancy serges. Skirt flares, with buttons, in all the newest seasonable shades. SILK PETTICOATS,! A Values up to $10.00, for Petticoats strictly tailored, 17-inch flounce, strapped effectr Black and all colors. $17.85 ALTMAN VOILE SKIRTS, silk accordion drop; actual val. $32.50. . Voile dress skirts, side sheath effects, silk lined. Eight different styles, as. per cut and similar. ; $17w8jB w. RAINCOATS Silk and cravenette; actual value $25.00 Made with semi-fitting or loose back. Neatly trimmed with buttons and bands. 11.90 WAISTS In net, messa- f fl HP line silk and lace. Values Jill Jl up to $12.00 vv..;...;.. Yiel. Waists in lace, net, and messalme silk; handsomely trimmed with valencienne and oriental laces. Black and colors; long or short sleeves ' . FURS, scarfs and muffs. Actual value $12.00, special only ...............v.,.,, $5.85 Beautiful furs in squirrel, wolf and Jap mink. WOULP RECOMMEND FORENOON SHOPPING BEFORE STORE GETS CROWDEDy The Littlekost Cloak and Suit Hoiise CORRECT STYLES 290 Morrison Street , - DEPENDABLE GOODS " 1 LITTLE COST