THE ? OREGON DAILY JOURNAL; PORTLANDS SATURDAY, i JANUARY. 20 1917. ID And stil! upon the thorn iest stock, the sweetest roses love to blow. Holmes. He that complies lgiinst his will, is of his own opin ion still Scott. NEWS J300JKS. WRITERS PI ' I I . i : i -m - ' JL Ji:.iLl-J - kh4 . - : ' . ; rnni iai hum iiitiiipa - tnliLloFiWuiYIAIi AfttS ;. GERMAN EFFICIENCY COUNTS IN LIVES OF NON-COMBATANTS Herbert Bayard Swope Re lates His Experiences as a Visitor "Inside the Empire" Two Women, and the Episode of a Bare Knee na , ticns 0,M tries, I religi Iuaid th German Empire, by Herbert Bay ard Swnp. The Ceutury company. New I ork. $2.00 net. Mr. Swope spent several months In Germany lat summer end fall, meet ing many of the big men of that na tion, and being granted certain privi leges of a nature not enjoyed by the casual raveler. There Is reason to be lieve Mr. Rwope's conclusions to be well drawn. r It Is rather Interesting; then to quote: Germany Is not starving, and she does not intend to starve. She is fur ther away from that danger point to day than she has been at any time since the British blockade tightened abont her. Her food supplies are not varied and they are not abundant, but she has enough to provide for actual needs and still leave a margin of re serve. . . , Every great staple of life Is to be ob tained only by a card. One must have cards for bread, butter, meat, fruits, i potatoes, fats, sugar and recently the j system has been extended to Include milk, cream and eggs. Errs Ax Watched. On may, have meat only five times week, butter or fats only twice a week, and In the beginning of October the empire had gone on a one-egg-a-person-per-week basis. This was for the purpose of building up a reserve stock of eggs, which up to that time had been purchasable without restric tion. Bread, vegtables and fish were to be had every day. The methods of obtaining food for those living in hotels and those keep ing house differ. In the official re port recently issued by the British gov ernment It was said that foreigners in Germany, particularly newspaper cor respondents, were treated exceptionally in that no restrictions were placed upon Ahelr food. I can bear personal test! mony to the falsity of this information. Upon my arrival at the Hotel Adlon in Berlin I was provided with meat and bread cards. The bread cards had little tabs on them, each calling for 25 grams of Kriegsbrot (war bread made of a mixture of wheat flour, corn flour and potato meal, looking and tasting like our ordinary rye bread). Each tab was good for a slico of bread. A roll re quired two tabs, or 50 grams. The meat cards entitled one to a slice and a half, or 75 grams daily. The meatless days are Tuesdays and Fridays. In com pensation the days upon which one can obtain butter are also Tuesdays and Fridays. Fats f6r frying" can be had Mondays and Thursdays. So Sugar, Cream. In the hotels and restaurants sugar and cream are not served.' In place of sugar, little particles of saccharin are given, and in place of cream a thin bklmmed milk. The cream and sugar are kept for hospital use. While it is possible to regulate the service of meatr and butters in a restaurant, it is not so easy to do so in households, and so tho system for the householders is changed. Every family is given, a card calling for the quantity to which its size en titles it, and then these cards are use-i on stated days at the various markets. Kvery family has a regular day on which it buys its meats supplies for the week. This is to prevent the butcher being loaded down with an un necessarily great supply. He stocks just the amounts he knows his various customers will require and for which they present their cards, which he In turn presents to the central govern mental supply station on renewing his stock. Sow Bread Is Sold. The bakers, too, sell by weekly ar rangetnents. Each customer Is entitled to 1900 grams of baked bread or 17J0 grams of bread and 250 grams of meal or flour. At the beginning of the regu iatlons the loaves used to be baked in 2000 gram loaves (about four pounds) but It was found the wastage In this was heavy, so now they are made In 1000 gram loaves. Every consumer is entitled to 60 grams of butter and SO grams of oleo margarine, or vegetable fat. Every per son has the right to draw nine pounds of DOtatoes a week. There is no restric tion as t how these supplies ahall be used In "private families. If a house hold wanted to, it could use all its card rations in one day. Then for the rest of the week It would "have to live on the things the purchase of which Is still unrestricted Ho Souvenirs Allowed. Nothing is permitted to be carried off the battlefields as souvenirs, Mr. Swope aays. The debris is carefully sorted over, and every article that German ingen uity can bring into usefulness again is sent back to the quartermaster's de pot. Throughout the empire there are collecting stations for all sorts of old things old bottles, shoes, pieces of .rubber, news and wrapping papers, brass, steel, copper, tin, string, rags nothing is thrown away. Once a month these articles are gathered up from every city and village and worked over. Women as Great Inspirers of Men emat Intpiren, by ReT. J. A. Zahm, autbo f '"Woman In Science." etc. Krontlapece. ' D. Appleton Co.. New York. $1.00 net. Interesting pen pictures of St. Jerome and Dante, showing how greatly each was influenced by the "eternal woman ly' and how their achievements are really due to the inspiration of noble women friends. a : I mm-.. i I pwwM V ' Mi 1 .' F . f l I i IB , ; , , U r H Sees the Interesting Spqts in Scotland Bornia Bootlmjld. by William Elliot Grifria. niuatrated. Houston, Mifflin company Bolton. $1.25 Det. Dr. Grlffls has visited Scotland eight times under conditions that gav.j him favorable opportunities for rang ing widely through both familiar and little visited regions. He was a most i sympathetic observer. The first tour was made immediately after his col-' loge days, and the last one Just before I the breaking out of the present war. This record of what he saw and felt, as well as the facts he learned, .covers not only the leading cities Glasgow, Edinburgh. Dundee, Aberdeen but also lesser places on the border and In the Highlands, Iona and Staff a, the Orkneys and the Shetlands. His interest was always keen, and the book is full of abrewd observa tions en Scottish homes and Indus- music and aongs, literature and eligion. Mag Pye.Is Child of Mysterious Artist Pye. by tfc Baronesn Von Batten, mnthor .t ' 'Shurmw Im at r inu.n & Co., New York. $1..0 net. Mag Pye Is the little daughter of a rather mysterious artist who seems to have little idea of his responsibility as a parent. Through a chance meet ing with an old bachelor. Mag. with her keen love of life and her artistic appreciation, gets started right. This is the story of her experiences and of the people who elect themselves her guardians. jN'-.t- 1'.. s p, ? ? fi : Si Here's Tip for Club Women in Any of The Smaller Cities Klamath Falls. Or.. Jan. ;o. A Saturday afternoon story 4t hour for the children of the city is the latest Innovation of the Women'! Library club her. Arrangements have been made to have members of the club at the public library every Saturday prepared to entertain the children in an instructive manner, so that their busy mothers may have soma free 4$. time for shopping. knowing that their little ones are hav- ing the best of care. President Mm. R. K. Wat- teivberg. assisted by Mrs. G. A. Krause, has charge. Stories Told as the War Clouds Lowered TbIiI in a Pranek Gardaa. hr Mlldref Aid rich. With a portrait rrontlapiece in pno t uraTare from a aketrh of the author hw Pierre Emlle Cornillier. Small. Marnard 4k Co.. Boston. $1.25 art. Mayhap you have read these stories, told in a French Garden, In August, 1914. in one of the leading magazines. If ko. It will do no harm, but enter tain you. to read them again. Mil red Aldrlch. author of "The Hilltop on the Marne," has the story telling faculty highly developed. So. August. 1914 ominous date! finds a group of delightful people en joying a house party in a quaint coun try place not many mile outside of Paria. There are the lawyer, the critic the youngster. the divorcee. the violinist, the trained nuree. the doctor, the sculptor, the Journalist all devoted friends and all. of course. unaware of the Impending crisis. War! and discussion, too heated to be borne in friendly fashions So war becomes the one topic that Is taboo and. at the suggestion of one of the party, they fall to telling stories. Each one tells a tale as the company gathers in the garden after dinner in the bright August twilight and the war is kept its distance. The stories are capital and all the time, as the days go by, the war comes nearer and nearer, until HogQ Stage Favorite Now . at - at at .- at . at at This Is the Life, Says Mary Can ueen St . . Mary Out, avtressfol actress whose ambition Qneen of Oregon" rather than queen of nigh ten. ' tt is to become "Hog the New York first EXCEPTIONS TO OUR nn rr m UU-ll-iUJI! IIT mmmmmmm m rimmrrmTt' nm i ""vr 1 mwrf vtiwuuBsS Marshfield Man Is Author of a "Life" "Doubling Back." by Ed Meade of Marshfield. Or., is the human Interest autobiography of an actor, a "bird of passage," bo to apeak. Mr. Meade wu compelled by a stroke of paralysis lo give up his stage career, but even this affliction did not warp his happy view of life and the world. Mr. Meade tells in his own way of the many interesting, amusing, and, sometlmea tragic, bits of life that ar lived by those who tread the boards, Ar whn riiif an rithr In - ntif.n golden days. "Doubling Back" may be had from the author at Marshfield. ' "m'm''' if ' S--li l vV'Vi . J'zXl Mrs, de Jan Declares in Fa vor of the More Simple"; English Life. 7 VJSTJSEXZ In Pearson's for February. "Will Lloyd George Play Lincoln is discussed with penetration by "One Who Knows Him" in the current issue of Pearson's magazine. This gives evl dence throughout of first hand observa tion of its subject, as well as compre- nensive knowledge of English affairs Frank Harris, the new editor of Pear son s, is its author. He is inclined to look upon Lloyd George as a "lost leader" whose desire for a great ca reer has carried him over to the side of the aristocracy, but still has enougn Dener in tne rormer radical to hope that he may yet put into effect the demo cratic equalizing social policies which he looks upon as the only thing that can save Kn gland from humiliation and decline. As the result of her first efforts to ride the erratic ski, Miss Mar garet Calhan, New York, society miss, is seen at the top in rather unconventional pose. Or, maybe, she is an expert ski rider and is just posing for effect. Anyway, it's unconventional. Below her is Mrs. Helen Kenny Holmes, declared to be Wall street's only ' woman trader, and her flock of trained telephones. Must sound like midnight in a clock store when all the telephones go off at once. Below is another unconventional though graphic picture, and it's a hundred . to one shot that it isn't specially posed, either. It shows a British fighting man receiving field surgical attention for a minor wound received in action.' Chehalis Library Had A Prosperous Year Chehalis, Wash.. Jan. 20. The li brarian of the Chehalis free public li brary haa submitted her report for 1916. The total circulation for the year was 26,S9. There was a lose of the circulation of fiction amounting to S408 but a slight gain in the cir culation of non-fiction. There were 1017 registrations during the year, in cluding reregistratlons which are re quired every two years. There were C912 books In the library at the begin ning of the year. Three hundred and thirty have been added by purchase, 24 Dy binding. $3 by gift and 211 have been withdrawn, leaving a total of 6126 in the library. Verhaeren, a Poet of Joy. From the New Republic. The work of Emile Verhaeren was a long progress toward Joy. The world has known geniuses who did not have to make the ascent. Born at the sum mit, their art has been a mighty, a con tinual, affirmation of existence. They are, however, the exceptions. There has been but one Rubens, one Handel, one ftabeiais. 1 lie rest have had to toil towards gladness. Many have died cn the cruel journey. The Belgian poet who perished a few weeks ago in a railroad accident persevered and at tained.. The mature, the definite por tion of his work, is a passionate hymn to life. He is of the company of th conquerors. Press Agent Offers This for Golf Fans Contesting in the newspaper mtn's golf tournament, Irvin 8. Cobb, author of Local Color and Fibble. D. D. (George H. Doran company), was re cently defeated in his match with Hey wood Broun, dramatic critic of the New York Tribune, by a score of 134 to 136. Cobb was considered by the Judges to be the better player and at the 12th hole , was leading by a wide margin, when, to quote from the account of a spectator. "Broun, under the tutelage of Will McGeehan, donned his tortoise shell glasses, which improved his game wonderfully and pulled him through two strokes in the lead. The cunning shown by both contest ants in playing exactly opposite thelf coaches' instructions, was the feature of the match," Joan Is Story of Capital and Labor Joaa, ty Amelia B. Barr. aothor of "Profit and boat." etc. D. Aptleton ft Co., New York. $1.50 net. This is a story of life in a Yorkshire mining village in which the author has placed a heroine whose sympathetic un derstanding of life makea her a suc cessful leader in helping to adjust a number of difficult problems between capital and labor. PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES Broadway Favorite Quits White Lights and Gets Up at 4 A, M, on Her 2500-Acre Oregon" Ranch to Feed the Pigs and Turkeys. "A Capital Volume." Theodore Roosevelt, in a recent ar ticle in the Metropolitan, describes G. G. Coulton's "The Main Illusions of Pacificism," as "a capital volume," and on which is a satisfactory answer to certain "peace books," particularly Norman Angel's "The Great Illusion." The bills of the Oregon legislature, both house and senate, are regularly received at the library and can be found in the reference department. An Interesting "collection of reproduc tions of historic keys haa been lent to the library by Professor De Lory and la on exhibit in toe case in the lobby cn the second floor. Among th more Interesting keys are those of the dun geon at Carcassonne, and of the chateau of Chenonceaux and of a secret pas page at Blois. A key belonging to Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy, was made to hold poison In a secret compartment. That which will attract most attention, however, is the key to the. Bastile, most interesting for its pile a foot and a half in length and for its associations with that famous prison. Tnrougn Ttie window ETC a -TLJEL. : They Pester Author. Philip Curtlss, author of the recently published novel. "Between Two Worlds," remarked the other day that though he, like all writers, needs con tact with people of all kinds, there is just one class to escape which he would run a mile. "The greatest pest in a writer's life," says Mr. Curtissrls the man who always aays. 'If you couid only write p a; thing that once hap pened, to my uncle it would make the greatest story you eer read."' - Growing Interest in John Muir. The interest in the writings of John Muir is -perennial. Not only is there a phenomenal demand for his post humous works, "A Thousand Mile Waik to the Gulf and "Travels in Alaska." but there is a steadily growing audi ence for his earlier books, and partic ularly for those written about our na tional parks. Colleges and schools use his books to a great extent, and the University of Wisconsin, where Muir was a student for four years, has been presented, recently, with a bust of the great naturalist by T. E. Brlttinham. T m New Century Book. . The Century company will shortly publish a new novel by Eleanor Hallo well Abbott, author of "Molly Make Believe," entitled "The Stingy Re ceiver. The chief characters are an invalid old lady with money, her doc tor, and a whimsical young - woman from Norway. Why is it that pasty-faced men and women . . . Will stand on the street corner . . Waiting for a car . . . Looking as pitiful and cheerless .. . . As a Christmas tree . - . On a gar bage wagon . . . And shiver and shake ... As with the palsy . . . When a brisk walk . . . Until the car comes . . . Stirs the sluggish blood . . . Makes the body warm . . . Paints the cheeks red ... Pumps osone into the lungs . . . Floods the heart with Joy . . . Brushes the cob webs from the brain . . . Puts fire in the eye . . . And pep in the step . . . And fortifies one generally . . . With God's own tonic . . . For the day's tasks. An "Oregon boot" may become the prevailing etyle for an Oregon boot legger. Representative Sweeney , has intro duced a hill to protect fish from being frightened at irrigation gates. Might make the gates wear masks. Hold 'en, Oregon! When a man marries for money, wed ding bells must sound like the tinkle of a cash register. Since they've raised the round trip fare to Vancouver, some of Ore gon's newly-weds probably feel like 30 cents. ' oacuraay January .. .,, M t know you now. and I met "k whenULf..r ;b';; I you l". thin half an hour ago. Tear :k wh.L" HI" Collwell Iftee vear she grows a little more re- Scout Story for Boys. .Robert M. McBride & Co. is publish ing this month George Frederick Parks' adventure story for boys "Dick Jud son. Bey Scout Ranger,' which deals In part with the United States forestry service.- - The Creator put but one thing upon the earth for man to drink. And it wasn't alcohoL It doesn't seem very long ago that they were building arches of welcome for the Hero of Manila Bay. s ; -j . Now - his homeward-bound 1 pennant Is furled Tor the last time., May be a Flying Dutchman that's sailing the southern seas. Some sentiment favors giving the gate to the women who are picket fencing the White House. For you a nose in Portland blows. After being up in the air ao long as to the fate of the American army avi ators over the border, liewa of their rescue comes as a happy relief. Those motion pictures of ice-harvesting at North Powder will cut aume Ice on the screen next summer. Elixa and a couple of hounds would have rounded out the plot. But the photographer probably be longs to the union. t And Uncle Tom 'sCabln. - This way out. - ".H" i' ' n ' , A new library, to be called the Rose juy t-aric Drancn. win be opened to the public Wednesday evening. Janu ary 24, at 8 o clock. In the Vincent block on the corner of East Forty-se ona street ana sandy boulevard. A snort .program win be given and all residents of the district, which in eludes Beaumont and Laurelh'urst ai weii as Kose jjty raric, are urged to be present. On Saturday, January mere win be a dren at 3 o'clock. will tell the story of ."The Nightingale. Miss Edith Will will be in charge of this new branch, which will be open from 2 to C and 7 to 9 p. m. "Customs and Morals Under Various Environments' will be the subject of Professor Ogburn's Illustrated lecture to be given in Library hall on Monday evening, January 22. Thursday evening, January 2S, Pro fessor Morgan will lecture in Library hall on "Early American History the Colonial Period." Thia lecture will also be illustrated by lantern slides Mrs. Mable Holmes Parson of the University of Oregon will meet her class in modern drama In room H of the Central library on Saturday, Janu ary 27. at 7:46 p. m. ' University of Oregon classes in ar chitectural design, descriptive geom etry, graphic statics, free hand draw Ing, musical understanding, child psy chology and philosophy are meeting in the library weekly. 1 "Bungalows Is Popular. Henry A. Baylor's popular "Bunga lows" McBride V has Just gone Into a third edition. Mr. Savior is the editor By Vella Winner. From the lofty station of a toasted and sought after Broadway actress to the 2500 acre throne of the "hog queen of Oregon" is a far leap, but .Mary Cart of Fossil, Or., has taken it and landed and how well she has landed this lit tle story will undertake to, tell. "I haven't any thrilling 'story to tell such as you newspaper people want. 1 am Just living my life, yes living for the first time a free, whole some life, for in the old days my first thought on wakening was 'how can I get through another day.' " "You want me to begin at the first, you say. Well, I was born in Seattle SS veers an. now you can't say I am not frank. I was educated In a con vent and at 15 ran away and got mar ried. At H I was the mother of a lit tle son and at 18 the mistake of my marriage was discovered and there came a parting of the ways. Works Way Throug-h College. "I wnt home to my mother and by that time I realized my need or more education, so my mother took care of mv baby and 1 entered the University of Washington, working my way, dur ing the entire four years' course. While in school through amateur theatricals developed the desire for rne stage. took a few lessons in dramatic inter pretation and aet out for New York. Going there without a name, without relatives and without -puir you may be sure I had a strugjle. but I was determined and finally succeeded, yes. I aucceeded Just as far as any woman can on the New York stage and stay straight. . . , "Sounds startling, doesn't it. but it Is true, I know because I hsve been through it all. I Played wtth Maude Adams In 'Peter Pan;' with Frances Starr In The Rose of the Rancho;' with John Mason in The Witching Hour.' The saddest of Women. "And Just here I want to aay some thing about Maude Adams that will Biirarls vou and I am sure -m interest the many admirers of that gifted actress. She is the saddest woman I have ever non. i Vim.jw with her several seasons, yet at the end of that time I didn't know her he said without the quiver of an eye lash: Don't you think you could finance the matterT I told him I did not think I could and left his studio. Takes TJp Oregon Baark. "That night I wrote my sister. Who had almost from birth been an In valid, whom I had sent all over the country In search of health. She had been in New York with me a good deal, but a few months before, feeling that she was not going to live long, ahe came back to Seattle to aee mother. The change did her good and now that my mind was made up to give up the stage and come west, I wrote her suggesting that she take up some land. She traveled over Washing ton and Oregon and rinaiiy took up a section of land IS miles from Fossil. As soon ss I could I Joined her and took up another section and after the passing of my father, who was an In valid for many years, my mother came i f e ts wore off. a. little more detached, a lit tie more sad. No one kdowb aiauae Adams. "After I had played with these big people the next step for me was to pUy a lead in a uroaowsy preaucuon. I -Jtad a friend who was a placing agent for one of the country's biggest producers and rinaiiy wnen a piay was found that had a part for me I was sent for and ushered Into the presence of this mighty man. for he is a mighty man. Offered Wn S3 a wees. I read the lines for him ard he said, I like the way you read tne lines. I like your personality; 1 would like to encase you for this part and now what salary will you expect told him I would rather net aiscuss alarv lust at that time, as I was so overwhelmed with the opportunity of doing this great part. I didn't even want to think of money Just then. But ignoring my remark ue said: The sal arr will be ttS per week.' "I was almost speechless but finally cot mr tongue long enough to say That would be impossible. I have my mother, sister 'and little son to support, then there would be my cos tumes, living, etc. "don't. see how I could do it.'. His eyes narrowed and to us and took up aonther section and we have alnce acquired a little more, giving us a total of 2500 acres. Grows Xors aad Tarkeys. "1 sm Just returning from the Home Makers' week at Corvallis and there I happened to say in the course of a toast at a dinner that my ambition was to be the hog queen of Oregon. I am growing a great many hoga and a great many turkeys, these are to be my source of immediate Income, but eventually I shall stock the ranch with cows and aheep. Last year I raleed 100 hogs and this year I want to have 250. Last, year I had 350 turkeys snd this year I hope to have 1500. The raising of turkeys ts no Joke, you know they are part wild and part tame and I had a hard time, until one day I determined to Interview a man In that country who raised turkeys success- fully. I had to ride 57 miles on horse. back, and I asked him so many ques tions that I have since been known In that part of the country as the human question mark. Bachelor Makes Biscuits. This turkey expert Is a bashful bachelor, but a fine cook. He asked me if I would like to prepare myself sometning to eat and 1 assured hire that I would not but that I would b pleased to have him prepare me some thing snd he did. He made delicious biscuits. He Just hollowed out a nlace In the top of the aack of flour and poured In the milk and salt and bak ing powder and mixed them tia Maybe aome of your readers never saw biscuits made that way, so you might put that in your story. "Now I am not Just the manager of the ranch. I am a rancher. I wear high topped boots, overalls and a dark woolen shirt. I get up a 4 o'clock In the morning and climb around In the pig pens until my mother gets in panic declaring the hogs will sorely kill me. Last summer I harvested 100 tons of hay and 70 tons I hauled in myself. Carries Tarkey IS Bmeeu I have helped numerous little pigs and little calves into the world end last w winter one of my most exciting experiences was ta carrying or a 24 pound turkey gobbler under my arm on horseback xroin rossu to the ranch, a distance of IS miles. I knew If th turkey would scratch the horse, th horse would run away and while that in Itself would have been a calamity. It would have been even worse to have lost the gobbler. "Why don't you ask me about ray son 7 Z am Just dying to talk about him." . ; . . . r. "Any woman . can, talk abont ' her children,' but it Isn't often I find one - " . . '. v - " ' The American habit of hanging up mottoes In an office "Do It Now." tJt It Over." "This Is My Busy Day," etc, . Is amusingly treated by Wlnlfrf 4 James (Mrs. Henry de Jan) in ''her book. "A Woman In the Wllderneea (published by George IL Doran com pany). "The American." says Mrs,' da Jan, "arrives at bis office at S:S0 snl. leaves at . as against the English man's 10 to 4:30 or 5. As far as I can see. both here and anywhere else, the difference between, them Is that the American wastes his -time In his office and the Englishman out of It, "And If I belonged to a nation that manages somehow to be a nation, and could still dig in its garden or walk, home through the park before dinner. I would distinctly feel I had got, the bulge on another nation that could only keep up by sitting. In Its orflce Xroia 8:30 till C. at the mercy of all the het alrera who make those mottoes neces sary." - :- who can discuss hogs and turkeys. however, if you must you may. .-" 'This Is his lest year In high school In Seattle; he will spend the summer with me as he always does. He Is so anxious to get to the ranch . that, he takes the midnight train on the last, day of school and stays out with ua until the very last day. Boa Zs to Oo to Tale. - "Last year we went east together and visited the various universities and he decided that he liked Yale beat. so next year he will enter Yale and when he finishes there I want him to go to Stanford university. I want him to have both the eastern and-tne western viewpoint and to be just as -broad In his outlook and Judgment as It In possible to be. An education is' all I can give him and X went, mm to have the best. He thinks now that he wanta to be a lawyer. X come of a family of lawyers, so I expect that Is what he will be. At any rate be will be Just what he wants to be; I shall not try to Influence him." Mrs. Carr has written a number of successful vaudeville sketches, one of which she used for two years on the Orpheum circuit. Her "Flat 44 and -Back to Buffalo" are still being- pro duced with success on the vaudeville stege. To Write Country Sketches. "Surely you must find more mater ial In your present life for writing than ever before," I suggested. "Yes. I want to write some sketches contrasting the feverish, unnatural at mosphere of New York with -the wholesome. Invigorating clean life of the open country, but I don't know when I will find time to do It, Speak ing of New York again, I am reminded that I forgot to tell you that I became so Interested In the efforts of certain New York physicians and publlo spir ited women to eradicate the use of drugs among young boys and girls, thst I took a Job of selling tickets la a five cent movie In the east side Just to gain the confidence of the people and learn the secret of the source of the drugs. I went down there and lived and it certainly was a liberal education. 1 yimds tsonros of Sr&a;. "I found that the particular drag need so much by boys and girls could be procured for from five to IS cents at practically every cheap candy . and soda shop. The dope Is rubbed on tbe shoulder of the dress or coat and an occasional anlff la taken. Tbe fav orite a. tint waa to buy a shot and then come to the movie, and promptly go to sleep and etsy there until the er- I turned the result of my inveatlgstions over to Dr. Blake and he and Mrs. Clarence Mackey. who by the way, la one of tbe finest women have ever known, and With his knowledge and her money a vast mount of good was accomplished la eradicating the habit and in curing those addicted to it." Toleraaeo Bteaas STii ucis "After theee varied experiences' of yours, what la your keynote for the uccessful llfe? If I must put It 4n one word, that word would be tolerance, which means n understanding sympathy and a great big love, then cheerfulness is one of the biggest powers In the world, and must not leave out service." Mrs. Carr spent several days In Port land on her way back to her- ranch, but before the end of a week she got restless and th happiest moment of her visit wss when she stepped aboard tbe trsin thst was to carry her back to Condon, whence she would take a stage for 20 miles to Fos:l and there th remaining IS miles would bo cov ered on horseback. - .... VES2 Drink It Gargle with it. A test wilt proro Its remarkable Taiue. etirwetioaw need Internally as directed In book let pacaed in. all original red cartons. ?1ves permanent and positive relief rom indigestion, gas on the stom ach, lower bowel troubles, gastritis, catarrh of the stomachy ulcerated stomach, sore throat., bilious a eea, ttomalns poisoning and similar all. Bleats, For sale tt all tlrueetsts r'-'-.' Insist on Genuine la Bod Carte a. TO KILL RAT8, MICE AND COCKROACHES eV ALWAYS USB A v . U. 8. Qorernment Bay It . - SOLD BVXkTWHEtX-ejo sad ties of Country Life. , - . " - - - , ' k . l-v - '