THE SCIl ANTON TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 28, 18il5. 11 Of and About Makers Notices of Recent Interesting Volumes and Chats Concerning Literary Men and Womeft THE EVOI.VTION OF A WOMAN. The distinguishing; feature of Mr. Hamlin Garland's art 1b its fidelity to the commonplace. As a' verttlst tv deals with verities, but with the com mon and familiar ones rather than with those which' lie in the depths. If a difference may be detected between Mr. Garland's fiction and the realism of Mr. Howells, with which comparison seems natural, it is a difference in the vital ity and in the temperament of the char acters portrayed rather than in the fundamental standards of the portray al.' Both aim to hold a mirror up to actualities, Both eschew the liberties which the imagination is bound to take with the writer and with the reader of conventional romance. But Mr. Howell's actualities are for the greater part tame and subdued; while the ac tualities focused by Mr. Garland's lens are stark naked and prlmevally robust. In the one case the men and women whom the author dresses with the fine drapery of his rhetoric are carefully selected typos; in the other, they are Just m and women, and the rhetoric Is less of a consideration than the fact. Hut perhaps the best way to establish our point Is by Illustration, and to this method we shall adhere In the present notice of Mr. Garland's latest work, "Rose of Duteher's Coolly." which has recently been Issued by the enterpris ing Chicago firm of Stone & Kimball. I What Men Call Death. There is something almost biographi cal iind yet withal quite touching In the way In which Mr. Oarland begins with his heroine almost at the moment o; her birth, and parent-like, follows her every deed and thought through the varying episodes of Infancy, childhood and school girlhood up to the moment when potential womanhood suddenly ceases to be a potentiality merely, and be comes a glorious fact. Rose was the daughter of a plain and silent Wiscon sin farmer, and at the age of five, her mother died, leaving father and daugh ter alone on the old homestead. There Is an. effective reference to this unex pected deprivation: Rose got up the next morning after her mother's last kins and went into the room where the body lay. A gnomish little fig ure the child was, for at that time her head was large and her cropped hair bristled until she seemed a sort of brownie. Her lonely child-life hud given her quaint, grave ways. Hhe knew her mother was dead, nnd th:it death was a kind of sleep which lasted longer thun common sleep, that was all the difference; ho she went In and mood by the bed and tried to see her mother's .face. It was early In the morning and the curtains being drawn It was dark In the room, but Rose had no fear, for mother Was there. Hhe talked softly to herself n III tie while, then went over to the window ami pulled on the string of the curtain till It rolled up, Then she went back ami looked at her mother. She grew tired of waiting at dast. "Mamma," she called, "wake up, Can't jvu ivtt ufr. 1 1 J (l 1 1 1 r 1 1 . She patted the cold, rigid cheeks with her rough brown little palms. Then she blew In the dead face, gravely. Then she thought if she could only open mamma's eyes, she'd be awake, - no she took her - fuunr and thumb and "tried to lift the lashes, and when ahe did fte was fright ened by the lott-f the set faded gray eyes. Then the terrible vague shadow of the Unknown settled upon her and she cried convulsively: "Mamma! mamma, I want you!" Thus she met death, early in her life. ii. ine insnnci or interrogation. John Dutcher was not. a talker, and the questions of his motherless daugh ter, asked him in childish prattle, be cause Rose had none other to address, were seldom answered. And yet this silent man, this seemingly Indifferent '.' plougher of the prairie soil,' was 'by no means a clown' or a clod. We are told that: often at night, as he saw her lying asleep, her long lashes upon her rough ' ened, sun-burned skin, his heart went out to her in a great gush of tenderness. Ills throat ached and his eyes grew wet as he thought how unresponsive he had been that day. His remorseful memory went back over her eager questions to which he had not replied. Dear, sweet, restless little heart! And then he vowed never to lose patience with her again. And some times standing there beside her bed, his arms closed around the little mound un der' the quilts, and his lips touched the round, sleep-enraptured face. At such times hlB needy soul went out In n cry to tils dead wife for help to care for his child. 'John Dutcher had many a trlul be cause of Hose's questioning. liy and by the child's queries took hold of deep er things; and the father fdund himself confronted with the duty which even mothers sometimes shirk. Says the author: Ho saw that the day of petty Actions hid gono by. Tho child knew that little lambs, and calves and kittens did not grow down in the woods. She knew that babies were not brought by the doctor, ami that thev did not come from heaven. "Good Lord!" groaned her. father one day, after an un usually persistent attack from her, caused fcy the appearance of. a little colt out In the barn,- "I wish your mother was here, or some woman." , There, were moments of pathos, too. in the young girl's loneliness. Once uur weni uj ine railroad siauon, ana the long lines of steel reaching put into the unknown Impressed' Rose with a new sense of the Immensity of the world about her. It was after that that she asked her father to take her to the top at a hill near by. . They climbed slowly up the steep, grassy Itpe and stood at last, on the flat rock which topped the blurt. Rose stood there, dlziy, out of breath, with her hair blown across her check and looked away, at the curving valley and the river, gleaming ' fiere and there through the willows and elders. It was like looking over an un explored world to the child. Her eyes expanded, and her heart filled with the same, ache which came into it when she looked down along the curving railroad. Hhe turned suddenly and fell sobbing against her father. ., III.-Tho Assertion of Sex. Very Interesting, too, are the chap Directory Wholesale. BANKS. I.ackarrpa Trust a ad Safe Deposit Co, Merchants' and Mechanics', 42 Lacka. ' Traders' National, 234 Lackawanna, Wast Bid Bank. 10 N. Main.' Scranton Saving, U2 Wyoming. BEDDING, CARPET CLEANING, ETC. Th Scranton Bedding Co., Lacks, - BREWERS. , - ' Robinson, R. Boas. 43S N. Seventh. . Robinson, Mlna, Cedar; cor. Alder. . CHINA AND GLASSWARE. . Bupprecht, Louis, 231 Penn. - . ' TOTS AND C6NFECTIONERT Williams, J. p. A Bro., 4 Lacka. . . ' FLOUR, FRED AND GRAIN. " Matthews, . P. Sons ft Co., M Lacka. -The jjVeston MUI Co.. 47-4 Lacks. -' -PAINT AND aOTPUES. . . ,' Jlencks ft MeKet, M Spruce. the ters that tell of the girl's first education of her walking miles In the coldeBt win ter to and from the district school and of her mad desire, while at summer time play, to be as one with the boys, to share their roughness and exhlleratlon and not to be put into a separate class on account of the as yet unrealised thing called sex. To our notion these portrayals of the formative moments of Hose's girlhood constitute the author's most interesting work. They exlilbii with peculUr vividness albeit quite na turally the gravity of the responsibility of parentage and the Importance of the duty of motherhood in respect to the proper guidance of the child mind and the child life. There is a chapter con cerning an Incident of the school period which teaches a lesson, and gives a new point to the carelessness of the aver age rural school system. The winter Rose was 14 years of age she had for a teacher a girl wnose oeautitut presence brought a curse with it. She was small and Kraceful. with a face full of sudden tears and laughter, and dreams of desire. She fascinated ine children, anil the larger boys woKe to a suauen sav aifcrv of rivalry over her. which ho one uiv derstood. The older boys fought over her smiles and her low-voiced words of praise. The girls grew vaguely Jealous or were abject slaves to her whims. The school became farcical In session, with ever-Increasing play hours, and ever-shortening recitations, and yet sucn was me teacner a mower over the . students that they did not report her. She gathered the larger gins around ner as sne nineu wun iae young men, until children like Carl and Hose became a part or it an. At nlg-ht the vounir men of the neigh borhood flocked about her boarding-place, absolutely lighting In her very ipresence for the promise which she withheld, out of coquettish perversity. She herself be came a victim of the Btorm of passion which swept over the neighborhood. She went out to parties and dances every night, and came languidly to school each morning. Most of the men of the district laughed, but jthe women Degan to tain ex r.iieillv shout tho stories they heard. At school the most dangerous practices were winked at. The older boys did not scruple to put their arms about the teachers waJst as thev stood by her side. Al the reserve and purity which is organic In the Intercourse of most country girls ami boys seemed lost, and parties and sleigh rides left remorse and guilt behind. There was something feverish and unwholesome in the air. Do not think that this bold Bcene is over-colored. It Is to our knowledge true In many country districts, especial ly In the west, where parents are so much occupied with the care of cattle or crops that they have no time left for the care of their children, and shunt the whole dutv over without compunction nn to the shoulders of the Indifferently- pnld school ma'am. The character of this school ma'am Is determined mainly bv chance; rarely lit it a subject of care ful advance Inquiry. If good, well and good; If bad. heaven help her pupils! In such scenes as this Mr. Garland sharply differentiates his theory of art from the more anaemic and lifeless realism of the Howells cull. No doubt his boldness will In some quarters be pronounced shocking; but like the lightning's shock, It clears the air. IV. First Gliramsrings of Romance. One day this school now emancipated from Its thralldom to Delilah was thrown Into paroxysms through the riding past of a courier In a glided box, who, as he went, scattered gaudy bills proclaiming the coming of a circus. The children read eyery word of those high sounding posters, standing In knots by the roadnide.-It was the mlKhtlest event of their lives. The whole country awoke to the significance of the event and began preparations and plans. At school and at church it was talked of. The whale population awoke to pathetic, absorbing interest in tne quality ot tne posters and .the probable truth of the foreword. The circus was the mightiest contrast to their slow anil lonely lives that could be im agined, It came In trailing clouds of glo rified dust and grouped itself under vast tents whose lift nd fall had more majesty than summer clouds, and Its streamers had more significance than the lightning. It brought the throb of drum, and scream of fife, and roar of wild beast. For one day each hum drum town was filled with romance, like the Arabian Nights; with helmetcd horsemen, glittering war maid ens on weirdly spotted horses; elephants with howdahs and head-plates of armor, with Hons dreadful, sorrowful, sedate and savage; with tiigers and hyenas in unman ageable ferocity pacing up and down their glided dens while their Impassive keepers, dressed In red, sot In awful silence amidt them. There was something remote and splendid In the ladles who rode haughtily through the streets on ipranclng horses, covered with rot and gold trappings. There was something heroic, something of splendid art. In the pose of the ath letes in the ring. From the dust nnd drudgery of their farms the farm boys dreamed and dreamed of the power nnd snlendor of the pageantry. The girls planned their dresses nnd their hats, and the lunch they were to tnke.- Everything was arranged weeks ahead. Rose went with her first beau, Carl. There Is an exquisite realism in the description which Mr. Garland vouch safes to this eventful episode in his heroine's - mnidenhood. The daylight start, with Its preliminary of a wakeful anticipatory night; the entry Into Tyre with the first dinner ever eaten at a real hotel; the procession to the tent, past the alluring prospectuses of the ubiquitous side shows; the passing scrutiny of thn wild beasts in the men agerie, and finally the open-mouthed oc cupancy of tiered .seats in the circus amphitheater these are touches which carry the most blase-of amusement lovers back, to the gala lay of child hood. But passing all that, we come to the scene which follows: Rose sat In a dream of delight as the hand began to play. It was an ambitious band. and played operatlo selections with1 modulations, and It seemed to Rose to be the most splendid music in the world. It shook her like a stallion's - neigh and soothed her like the coo of a dove on the barn roof. At last the band blared an an nouncing note, and the uniformed attend ants tiled Into the ring and took positions at set points like sentries. Then the music struck into a splendid gallop, and out from the curtained mysteries beyond, the knights and ladies darted, two and two. In glory of Crimson and gold and green and silver. At their head rode the man with the brown mustache her hero. He wore blue and silver, and on his breast was a rosette. He looked a god to her. His naked limbs, his proud neck, the lofty carriage of his head, made her shiver with emotion. They all came to her lit by the white radiance: they were not naked, they were beautiful, but he was something more. She had seen, naked of Wholesale MONUMENTAL WORKS. Owens Bros., 218 Adams avenue. '.. MILK. CREAM, BUTTER, ETC.- Scranton Dairy Co., Perns and Linden. ; ENOINES AND BOILERS. Dickson Manufacturing Co. ' - DRY GOODS, MILLINERY, ETC. The Fashion, 308 Lackawanna avenue. - PLUMBING AND HEATING. ', Howley, P. Ftft- M. T 231 Wyoming av " . , . GROCERS. , , . Kelly, T. J. ft Co.. 14 Lackawanna. Megargel ft Connell, Franklin avenue. . Porter, John T., 26 and is Lackawanna . ' Rice, Levy ft Col, 80 Lackawanni, . HARDWARE. Connell, W. P. ft Sons, ill Pen, Foete ft Shear Co., 11 N; Washington. -Hunt ft CeiuMll Co., 4J4 Lackawanna. boys, and her own companions occasonr ally showed themselves naked and' cower ing before her, but these men stood there; proud and splendid. They Invested their nakedness with something which exalted them. They became objects of lumin ous beauty to her, although she knew nothing of art. As una grew clearer-eyed, she saw that 'on, was little too short, another too lean,' but he of the -rosette was uerfect. .; Once more he came back, leading a woman by the hand. Something new seized upon Rose's heart, a cold contrac tion that she had never felt, and her teeth pressed together. She wondered If the wo man were his Wife. The woman seised a rone with her richt arm and was drawn to the tent roof. He took a strap in his mouth and was drawn to his trapexe, also. There, lu mid-air, they performed their uangerous evolutions. It was an marvel ous and Incredible to the countrv artrl. She heard him clap his hands, then Ma glorious voice rang above the muslo, and the lithe figure of his companion launched itself through the air, was caught by the shoulders In his great hands, thence with a twist he tossed her, and hooked her by the hands. Kach time the blood surged Into Rosa's throat, as if to suffocate her. A horrible fear that was a pleasure, some way rose and fell In her. She could not turn away her head. She must look. She was a powerful girl, and the Idea of faint ing had never come to her, but when at the conclusion, he dropped In a revolving ball Into the net, far beneath, she turned sick and her eyes seemed to whirl in their sockets. Then as he leaned to the ground bowing and smiling, the blood rushed back to her face, and the perspiration stood out itKe rain. V.-What Romanes Will I'o. Mr! Garland, as a verltlst whose creed In part at least is that the age of great romance belongs now to history, comes near to confounding his own dicta in the pag.es whereon he traces the conse quences of Rose Duteher's first dip into the intoxication of romanticism. Coming home from that memorable circus Elysium, she undergoes a nota ble transformation. When she roan tho next dav she was changed. She began to live for him, her ideal. She set him on high as a being to be worshipped, as a man lit to be ner Judge. In the days and weeks which fol lowed, she asked herself, "Would he like ine to do this?" And every night when she went to sleep it waa with the radiant figure in blue and silver before her eyes. When the sunset was very beautiful, she thought of him. When the stars seemed larger in the sky, ahe eauld see the star on his grand breast. In all the talk of the circus which followed among her com panions, she took no part because she feared she might be obliged to mention his name. When others sooke his name she could feel a hot flush surge up all over her body and she trembled for rear some one might discover her adoration ot mm Vast ambitions beean In her. She dc termined to be a great scholar. She would be something great for his sake, in snort she consecrated herself to him as to a king, and seised upon every chance to educate htrseir to be wormy or mm, Every effort was deeolv pathetic, no mat ter how absurd to others. She took no counsel, allowed no ronfldants. She lived alone among her playmates. This, ideal came in her romantic and nerfervld period, and it did her immeas urable good. It lifted her and developed her. It enabled her to escape the clutch of mere brute passion, which seizes so many boys and girls at that age, and leads to destructive early marriages. It kept her out of reach of the young men of the neighborhood. These were the days of formless Imag inings and ambitions. "1 will do! I will do!" was her ceaseless cry to herself, but what could she do? What should ahe, do? She could be wise; that she would be. So she reud. Hhe got little out of her read ing thut she could make a show of. but still It developed her. It made her dream great things, impossible things, but she bud moments when she tried to live these things. ... VI. -Reaching Womnn's Estate. One day a fatherly physician owning a tine practice and an elegant home in Madison, Dr. Thatcher by name, visited the district school, heard Rose recite, was Impressed with her reserve powers and by some Indefinable quality which seemed to mark her out as a being superior to her surroundings; and end ed by calling on her father and persuad ing him to send the daughter to Madi son, to the university. The half-dozen chapters which describe the girl's un folding under the more wholesome in fluences of a university center possess exceeding Interest, but wo must hasten forward, pausing to make but one quo tation. Hose In course of time became very beautiful, with a beauty which came from a thoroughly vitalized and developed physical organism held In subjection to a searching mind of con stantly growing power; and twice in the university epoch she came near to falling; in love. In both Instances her favor was primarily won by the phy sical excellence of the object of her re gard. The first young man, however, revealed himself as narrow of mind, a circumstance which proved fatal to his wooing, and the doom of the second was brought about as follows: Once he took her to the theater. There was his mistake! The play was one which pretended, at least, to show New York and London life. .Men In claw-hammer coats came and went, with strange accents and with cabalistic motions of hats and gloves, and women moved about with mystic swagger. The theme of the play tilled Hose with strange new thoughts. A hus band discovers his wife to have been a lover and a mother in her childhood, and In a tempest of self-righteous pussion flings her to the ground In scorn and horror. She' clings to his feet (In approved stage fashion), pleading for mercy: "I was so young." He would not listen. While Rose burned with shame and In dignation the outraged woman, on the stage grew white and stern. "Who are you to condemn me so?" she asked In Icy calm. "Are you the saint you profess to be? Will one offence contain your crime against me?" "What do you menn," thundered the man and hufband. "You know what I mean. In my weak ness I was stained. inefTaceably ; I admit It but you, in your strength, have you not preyed on weak women? The law al lows you to escape disgrace nature and law force me to suffer with mine." The self-sufficient young man besldo Rose snld as the curtain fell: "There was nothing else for her hus band to do but lust Are her out." Rose heard him but did not reply. She felt a sharp revulsion of feeling toward him for his coarse, hard tone. When he jpld bis hand on her she shook It off, and when tie-asked a nuestion of her she did not reply. That night put her girl hood far from her. In her heart she knew that the drama was a lie. A woman can set her foot above her dead self as well as a man. She grew five years older In the weeks that followed. But she did not marry the second young man. VII. - Different Points of View. ' Graduation came at last; and with It the problem of a career. A proud man was old John Dutcher as he drove Rose home, home to the old farm and to the brand new house which he had built as a surprise for her. It was the honest farmer's Idea that, schooling now being; over, Rose would return to live with him, assume the place which her mother's death had vacated, and perchance, in and Retail City and Suburban Representative Business Houses. FRUITS AND PRODUCE. " Dale ft Stevens, 27 Lackawanna. ' ' Cleveland, A. 8., 17 Lackawanna, . : DRY GOODS Kelly ft Healey, 20 Lackawanna; ' " -Flnley, P. B., 610 Lackawanna. ' LIME, CEMENT, SEWER PIPE. Keller, Luther, 813 Lackawanna. , :: . HARNESS, BADDLERY HARDWARE. Frlti G. W 410 Lackawanna. , ' . Keller ft Harris, 117 Penn. . . ..;::,'.. : "VNE8 AND LIQUORS.' ' WalghEdward J., !2ckawanNj' "; ''.. LEATHER AND FINDINGS!'""." Williams, Samuel, 221 Spruee. -t - ' i ' BOOTS AND SHOES. ' " '.' ' ' Goldsmith Bros., 804 Lackawanna; . ' "., v Wallpaper, etc'.- Ford, W." M., 120 Penn. , : CANDY MANUFACTURERS. : Serantoa Candy Co., 22 Lackawanna. the course of time, marry a sturdy rus tic who would help work the old farm fon shares. But the inevitable impossi bility of such a destiny soon became manifest to this girl of great powers and even greater ambitions. For months she fought in silence to bring herself down to compliance with the parental wish. She, in her way, loved her crude old father, but even that love, deep and passionate though it was, could not obscure the truth that she and the limited horizon of the farm career were elementally incompatible. Very touching is the scene wherein she shat ters John Duteher's modest Ideal: His heart was big with pride and affec tion when this splendid girl came over and put her arms about his neck, and put her forehead down on his shoulder. "O pappa John, you're so good to me I'm ashamed I ilon't deserve this new house." "O yes y' do, daughter." His voice when he said "daughter" always made her cry. It was deep and tender like the music of water. It stood for him In the place of "dear" and "darling," and he very, very seldom spoke It. All this made It harder for her to go on. "No, I don't, father O, father, I can't stay here I can't stay here now!" "Why not. Kosle?" "O because It's so lonesome for me. There is nobody for me to talk to" (she had to use phrases he could understand) "and I want to go on with my studies." John considered a moment. "Hut liosle, seems to me you've got enough; you're graduated." Rose saw the hopelessness of making him understand that, so she went back. "it's so lonesome for me here, pappa John." He considered again. "I 'spose it Is. Well, you can go to the Siding every day if you want to. Hitch up old Doll every day" "I don't enre for the Siding; It's Just ns lonesome there for me. 1 want to go to Chicago." John grew rigid. "Chicago! What you wont to do there? "I want to study pappa. I want to go on with my work. I'll come home sum mers JiiKt the same, I'll come home Christ mas if you want me to. It won't cost much, I'll live Jast as cheap as I can" "'Tnln't that, 'taln't that, Rose," he said. Then he lifted his head and looked around. She read his thought nnd the tears came to her eyes in a blinding rush. "1 know, pappa. It's terrible to go now, when you've built this nice home for me, but what can I do? I thought maybe I'd get used to It, but It gets worse. I can't stay here this winter. You must let me go. I'll go crazy if I stay here all win ter. I must go out Into the world. I want to be an artist. I want to see great peo ple. I can't stay here, pappa John!" The terrible earnestness of every sen tence stabbed John Duteher's heart like a poniard thrust. He put her away and rose stlllly. "Well, well, Ttosle, If you want to go" He did not finish, but turned trembling ly and walked out. She remained on tho floor near his clinlr and watched him go, her heart sick with wretchedness. Why Was the world so ordered? Why must she tortura that beautiful, simple soul? Why was It that all her high thoughts, her dreams, her nmbltlons, her longings, seemed to carry her further awuy from him? Alone, In the meadow, among the bees, John Dutcher wrestled with his trouble. It was the bitterest moment of his life. His eyes were opened to his fate; he saw what he had done; he hail educated h's daughter out of his world. Never again would she be content In the coolly beside him. Ho saw how foolish he tind been nil these years, to suppose he could educate and keep her. Kor a moment tie flamed with resentment and said to himself: "I wish she had never seen a hook." Then he grew tender. He saw her npnln In her little blue apron with Its dockets full of wheat he saw her blowing hair, her sunny face; he heard ugnln the wind tossed chatter of her cunning I'ys. Ho ran swiftly over lur development how tall she had grown and how snlndid she was now, the hundsomest girl in the coolly, and he roftennl. She wan right. So he rose to a conception which had never come to him before, and even now It was formlessly vast; he felt the power of the outside world, ami reached to n dlvlna. Hon of the fntnllty ot It all. it had to ht, for It was n part cf propn-sp. He was old nnd bent nnd th'll. She was young, glo riously youne. The old must give way to the young. She was queen and he was subject. VIII. -The Conqueror. Rose's conquest of Chicago was brill iant and rapid perhaps just a bit too rapid to be altogether in iceeplng with the requirements, of plausibility. She calls with a letter of Introduction upon a woman doctor, whom ahe subJuBat"s by one Imperious outpouring of her domlnatitiK nature; is Introduced at once Into the heart of Chicago's Intel lectual and nrtlatlc net and proceeds at somewhat staggering speed to impress herself upon It. Two or three men long hardened to the wiles of conventional womankind succumb to her untutored graces und assertive Individuality, but there is only one who succeeds In arous ing her deepest Interest who, In short, compels her love. Hingularly enough he is an editor. In whose extraordinary mentality and complex sweep of sym pathies nnd of eccentricities Mr. Gar lund embodies a signal if not alto gether a convincing tribute to the Fourth Estate. It is this omniscient journalist, War ren Mason by name, who teaches Hose Dutcher what creative Authorship im plieswhat breadth of knowledge and of sympathies, what discarding of con ventional molds and models,-whut burn ing nnd painful fidelity to self-mastered truth. We should like, hud we th" space and time, to give our readers an insight into Musnn'n original make-up. To do that would take pages, so elab orately has Mr. Garland portrayed him. It must suflice us to reproduce only a few of his views concerning marrla" vlew3 that are expressed during Ma son's reported talks with an engaged bachelor confidant. This friend had asked Mason why he had never mar ried. This was the reply: "For ten yenrs I've been trying to marry, and I've been conscientious and thorough In my heart, too." "What seems to Be the matter?" "Kor one tlilniv, I suppose I'vo gone too far In my knowledge of wome;i. I've gone beyond the capability of being bambooJed. I've seen too much of the ropes and props that sustain the pasteboard rcsetree." "That Is flat blasphemy," put In San born. "I know more about women than you do, and " "I don't mean to say that women de ceive In a base way often they ere not In tentionally deceptive; but hereditarily transmitted, necessarily defensive wiles lead them to turn their best side toward men. I know perfectly well what any young woman would do If I called upon her tomorrow. She would take a seat so that the softest shadow would fall over her face. If she had good teeth she would smile often. If he" teeth were poor, she would be grave, if her arms were fair, her sleeves would be Ioohc; if they were thin, she would wear ruffles. If she had a fine bosom her dress would be open a lit tle at the neck" "O look here. Mason," Sanborn Inter rupted, "I can't listen to such calumny without protest." "I don't mean to say that all this would be conscious. As a matter of fact it Is Jnnodent and unintentional. A woman loi not deliberately say: 'I have a dimple, therefore I will smile.' She in FLOUR, BUTTER, EGGS, ETC. The T. H. Watts Co., Lt.. 723 W. Lacka, Babcock, G. J. ft Co., 118 Franklin. MINE AND MILL SUPPLIES. Scranton Supply and Mach. Co., 131 Wya, - ' FURNITURE. t, Hill ft Connell, Ul Waahington. " ' " ' CARRIAGE REPOSITORY1, Blume, Wm. ft Son,422 Spruce. ' .i HOTELS. ; ' Scranton House, near depot MILLINERY ft FURNISHING OOODa Brown's Bee Hive, 224 Lacka. City and Suburban. ' .ATHLETIC GOODS AND BICYCLES. Florey, C. M., 222 Wyoming. ' ' ' HARDWARE AND PLUMBING. Ounater ft Forsyth, (27 Ptnn. herited the dimples and the smile from long line of coquettes. Women are pain fully alike from generation to generation. It's all moonshine and misty sky about their infinite variety." "Suppose I grant that who's to blame? Mind you I don't grant It but suppose I do, tor argument." . "You are k lover and a fortunate man. You have In Isabel a woman of character. Mark you! These wiles and seductions on the part of women were forced upon them. I admit that they have been forced to use them in defense for a million years. Had they been our physical superiors un questionably the lying graces would have been ours. At the same time It doesn't help me. I can't trust such past-masters In deceit, albeit they deceive me to my good." But Mason Is brought Into close asso ciation with Rose, and being a man of naturally fine instincts albeit turned cynical, he comes to regard with unsus pected admiration her extraordinary Imagination and regal potentiality of character. It was after this acquaint ance with its new revelations had taken hold of him that Mason, talking again to the same friend upon the same theme, soliloquized rather than argued: "I manage to live here and support this fire, which Is my only extravagance. I keep the establishment going, and a II. tle more. I'll anticipate the usual argu ments. Suppose, for a little while, it would not increase expenses. It would not do to bring a woman here. It would not be right. When children came and 1 should hope for children they should have a home in the suburbs; I don't believe In raising chil dren In a Hat. That would mean an es tablishment which would take every cent I could hook onto, ami it would mean that the whole glittering fabric would be built on my own personal palm." 'Hut she might earn something you say she is a genius." "She is, that's the reason she'll never make money. Holding the view I do, I could not require her to toil. 1 do not be lieve marriage confers any authority on the husbanu you understand my position there." "Perfectly and agree with It, to a lim ited extent, of course." "Going back, therefore I do not believe I can assume the risk involved. I'm not c&ipable of twenty years' work at my pres ent rate. I'd break down, some line day, und then my little home, upheld upon my Atlas palm, would tumble. No, I can't take the risk Resides, her career Is to be considered. 1 don't believe I can af ford to let her marry me." "That's mighty kind of you," Sanborn dryly remarked. "Thank you. She is younger, and as her adviser I think I must Interfere and save her from the power fit a vivid im agination and abounding vitality. You see, there arc a great many considerations Involved." "Real love, I must repeat, wotiU not consider." "I wish you wouldn't repeat that; It does you an injustice. The animal passion of youth would not consider. With youth it Is marry marry, even if within Hie year you are picked up by the oatrol wagon, u vagrant In the streets. The love of my time Is not so heedless nor so selfish; It extends to the question of the other party to the transaction." "Then," Mason resumed, nnd his tone was cynically humorous again, "there Is the question of the 'possible womin.' I can't give her up. There she stands In a radiant mist always just before me like the rainbow of our childhood. I can't promise liny woman to love her until death. I don't know as it would he safe to promise It even to the woman with glamour. Another mlirht come with a subtler aloiy, and a better llttlng glamour, und then" "What then?" "It would be all rn with the flr.t wo men." he said with a gravity of tone of which the words gave nn hint. Still further on, Mason says: "The woman In my thought is moving past ine lilie a queen sjdciulld, supple, a smile of conscious power on her lips, the light of success In her eyes. It's a terri ble temptation, I admit, this power to stretch out my hand and stay her. It makes my blood leap, but my sense of Justice will not permit It. I shall let her pass on, beautiful and rapt." "To many some confounded pin-head, who will make her a domestic animal, und degrade her Into 'my wife, gents." " "Possibly. However, my respcl-slblllty mds when I say good-bye." "Don't shirk don't shirk." Mason turned on him. Ills voice lost a little of Its coldness. "la n man to have no credit for letting such a glorious creature pass him, un harmed and free?" "Why, yes, certainly. Hut the world of art will not satisfy that girl. She's sure to marry she must marry nnd she Is en titled to more consideration. You've got to look ahead to the time when she regrets the lack of husband nnd children." "Ah, but It's a frightful thing. Sanborn to arrest that girl, to mr.l;e her a wife and mother, to watch her grow distorted, stiffened, heavy with chlld-b'iirlng. I pre. fer to see her pass me, in order that 1 may rc-member her. lithe, radiant, moving like music and light." "That's title. Mason. I honor you for that spirit," said Sanborn, deeply moved. "Hut you must remember that tha wo man's nature moves on from this beauti ful state you've described so well, not merely willingly, but eagerly. Half the girl's joy, which we men seo In her face. the smile of anticipated mothorhood. If the girl knew she was to be olwa.vs young nnd childish, her youth and beauty would be of no value to her It Is the un tried pnlns and pleasures of other years nnd conditions which make the beauty so radiant now." "All of which merplv means she makes the best of an Irresistible nnd tragic Im pulse, a force which she dons not orig inate and cunnot control. Therefor I say It Is a sorrowful business to hew down a temple or tear a lily to pieces." IX. -Tho Conquered. Ro much for the man's view. Now for the woman's: As the winter deepened Rose narrowed the circle of conquest. Whe no longer thought of conquering the world; It came to the question of winning the approbation of one human soul. That Is, she wished to win the approbation of the world in order that Wurren Mason might smile and say, "Well done!" She did not. reach this state of mind smoothly anil easily. On the contrary, she had moments when she rebelled at the thought of any man's opinion being tho greatest pood In the world to her. She re belled ot the Implied Inferiority of her po sition In relation to him and also at the physical bondage implied. In the morn ing when she was strong. In the midst of pome social success, when people swarmed about her and men bent deferentially, then she held herself like a soldier on a tower defying capture. Hut lit nlKht when the llsrhts were nil out, when she felt her es nntial lonvlflleas and weftkncM nnd nee.l I when the world seemed cold and cruel and stilish, then it seemed ns If the sweet est thing In the universe would be to have him open his arms and say "Come!" ''' X.-The Surrender. What was Inevitable of course befcl. Mason proposed and Rose Dutcher ac cepted, but the proposal and acceptance were both unique. The former came by mail and it read: This letter may be considered an offer of marriage. It is well to say that now, and then all the things which come after will be given their proper weight. Let me state the debit side of the account first, and if you feel that Is too heavy you cn put the letter down and write me a very short answer, and the matter will be ended. First, I say to you: Whoso weds me weds sorrow. I do not promise to make you happy, though I hope my influence Cowles, W. C, 1907 N. Main. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Rogers, A. E., 218 Lackawanna. ' BOOTS AND SHOES. Goodman's Shoe Store, 832 Lackawanna. FURNITURE. Barbour's Home Credit 'House, 125 Lacka. ' CARPETB'AND WALL PAPER. . Inglla, J. Scott, 419 Lackawanna. GENERAL MERCHANDISE Osterhout, N. P., 110 W. Market ' Jordan, James, Olyphant. Barthold, E. J., Olyphant. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, Snook, S. M., Olyphant. , , ; ' ; C. PAINTB AND WALL PAPER. Winto, J. C, 815 Pann. . - . ,v , , t ' " "TEA. COFFEE AND SPICE, Grand Union Tea Co.. lot 8. Main. will not be always untoward. I cannot promise any of the things husbands are supposed to bring. ' I cannot promise at home. My own living is precarious, de pendent upon my daily grind ot newspaper work. For though 1 hope to achieve suc cess with my novel, great successes with novels do not mean much money. I do not feel, either, that I shall ever be free from money cares; luxury and I are to continue strangers. I cannot promise to be faithful to you un ways, nor to bow to your wishes, though 1 will try to do so. I cannot promise to ossume cordial relations with your rela tives, nor accept your friendships as bind ing upon me. I cannot promise-to be faithful to you un til death, but I shall be faithful so long as I All the relation of husband to you. I shall not lead a double life or conceal from you any change in my regard toward you. If at any time I tind a woman whom I feel I should live with, rather than with you I shall tell you of her with perfect frankness. I think I shall tind you all-sufficient, but I do not know. Men and wo men change, grow weary of things, of bonds, of duties. It may be that I shall become and continue the most devoted r,f husbands, but I cannot promise It. Long years of association develop Intolerable traits In men and women, very often. On the other hand, let me say I exact nothing from you. I do not require you to cook for me, nor to keep house for ne. You are mistress of yourself, to come and go as you .please without question and without accounting to me. You are at lib erty to cease your association with me at any time, and consider yourself perfectly free to leave me whenever any other man ccmes with power to make you happier than I. I want you as comrade and lover, not as subject or servant or unwilling wife. I do not claim any rights over you at all. You can bearmechildrenor not. Just as you please. You are a human soul like myself, and I shall expect you to be us free and sovereign as I, to follow any profession or to do any work which pleases you. It Is but Just to say that 1 have nevtr been a man of loose habits. No woman has any claim on me for deed or word. I have thought at vnrlous times that I could marry this woman or that woman, but I have never before made a proposition of marriage to any woman. I have written you in good, set terms what you may expect from me. I am not a demonstrative man by nature, nnd my training from childhood has made me sav ing of words of endearment. My love for you must be tnken largely for granted af ter It Is once staled, for I regard the word "love" ns a Jewel rot to be carelessly tossed from hand to hand. I have written frankly because I be lieved it would prejudice you In my favor. Had ( believed otherwise, doubtless 1 should have written In terms of tlatte-y and deceit, for of su"h Is man when seek ing woman In marriage. As for the acceptance. It went by tele graph, and It said simply "Yes!" XI. -In Conclusion. Unfortunately for the value of this Interesting novel as a sociological study,, the record here comes to an ab rupt end. What follows is left wholly to conjecture. In so odd a courtship of so "new" a couple there Is bred the curiosity to peer ahead Into future yeurs. Did they live happily? Did children come? Did the "possible man" or the "possible woman" ever step for ward to mar the harmony and to feed the divorce courts? Mr. Garland should remember the dictum of Howclls that the real verities of life occur after, not prior (o, marrlugc. Hut for all that we should not quarrel with hint. He has given us a bold and an original book, with merit that stands out despite a certain carelessness of gram mar and of diction. U S. R. MINOR FICTION. MAMMY MYSTIC. By M. G. McClelland. Cloth, 1H ino 75 cents. New York: The Merrlam Co. In Mark Twain's "Hudd'nhead Wil son" It will bo remembered that two babies, of the same age, one wnite, the other negro, are exchanged surrepti tiously, tho negro child growing up as the white planter's son, and his real son, as a slave. A similar transposi tion forms the nucleus of the present book's plot, similar except that the wnlte child dies and the negress, or rather Creole, Is reared In its place, marries a respectable white, bears a child and dies leaving her Infant to work out alone Its peculiar hereditary tangles. The elaboration of this plot makes an Interesting story, which is additionally attractive because of some readable studies of negro dialect and superstitions. COl'RTSHIP IIV COMMAND. A story of Napolion al Play. liy M. M. liluk". Cloth, m mo. New York: D. Apple ton A Co, The central Incident of this Interest Ins volume Is the union of Eugene de Heauharnais with Augusta of Havarla. It Is a caprice of Nupoleon's, nnd the two principals In it are for a time great ly incensed at the summary wny in which they are moved as pawns on the matrimonial bonrd of Bonaparte's am bition; but ere long they learn to love each other and In the end are unex pectedly happy. The story presents the great emperor In a characteristic light nnd is a really creditable addition to Napoloonaflia. A MAN OF TWO MINDS. By Francis T. Ruck, cloth, 12 mo. New Y'ork: The Merrlam Co. This double-minded man engages himself to marry a lovely girl in the country,' comes back to town, meets n handsome married woman whoso hus band Is abroad and is soon neck deep In a physically Innocent but morally guil ty liaison with her. In the end, though, he returns to his first flame, who la hardly to be congratulated. The story is not specially noteworthy. -II- AN OLD FOGY. By Mrs. J. A. Walworth. Cloth, 12 mo., $1.25. New York: The Merrlam Co. A picture of a real old-style Southern gentleman, noble, chivalrous a:id brave. An admirable story. THE DESIRB OF THE MOTH. By Capel Vane. THE KING OF ANDAMAN. A Saviour of Society. By I. McLaren Cobban. Numbers In D. Appleton ft Co's favor ite Town and Country Library; Inter esting novels, both presenting careful and original studies of contemporary social problems. NEW MAGAZINES. The January Cosmopolitan looks rad iant In a bright new lithographed cover representing the full length portrait of a beautiful woman gazing afar In a mystical way. A poem by Arthur Hardy, a paper on "Amateur Photo graphy of Today", a sttjry by Maurice Thompson and a discussion by Mrs. Rennselaer Cruger of the question "Wan George Eliot a Hypocrite?" are some of the interesting new features..;. The Stevenson and James Lane Allen serials are continued, each gaining In Interest. " " " FLORAL DESIGNS. ; Clark, G. R. ft Co., 291 WaJMngtiij..,' ; . . CATERER. Huntington, J. C, SOB N. Washington. GROCERIES, Plrie, J. J., 427 Lackawanna, . .: . UNDERTAKER AND LIVERY.-- . Raub, A. R , 425 Spruce. , ' . ,7 "'..-.'. , DRUGGISTS. .. . . . McGarrah ft Thomas, 209 Lackawanna.' -Lo rents. C, 418 Lack;. Llndvn ft Wash. Davis, G W Main and-Market. - -Blo."W. Sv tookvUlfgv . " - n rj rfXrw Davles, John J., 108 8. Main. CARRIAGES AND HARNESS. Sim well, V. A., SIS Linden. - - - T PAWNBROKER. Green, Joseph, 107 Lackawanna. CROCKERY AND"'aLA83WARl" Hardin-, J. L., Sit Lackawanna. The addition of artistic color palntlnr to the Cosmopolitan's list of attractions obviously - presages a new era In magazine Illustration. II II II The January Godey's Is a "woman's number" and It treats In readable fash ion nearly every phase of the current "woman's movement." There are papers explaining what the new woman has achieved and what ahe promises to achieve In education, philanthropy, politics, business and the fine arts. Tha number is decidedly original and also decidedly instructive. . ' ' II II II As for the January St. Nicholas' opin ions will differ, but for our port we think the Samoan letters of Robert Louis Stevenron to a boy, another In stalment of which appears In this Issue, the most Interesting single feature. Still, the whole number is full of good things, that must be read to be appreciated. Number three of the Pocket Maga zine offers as its piece de resistance Kipling s qyaint sea tale, "The Devil and the Deep Sea." with which our readers are already familiar. In it Kipiing at least exhibits his versatility. Other famous contributors to the Janu ary number of this new periodical are Gilbert Parker. Frank R. Stockton, I-oulso Chandler Moulton, Ople Reed. The venture is said to be meeting with, very encouraging success. 'I 11 'I The December . Looker-On eulogizes Mme,. Saville's new Juliette, discourses upon the mimetic genius of Miss Olga Nethersole, criticises Irving and Terry in Macbeth, contains a paper on Shane speare's dramatic construction, traces the influence of poets on music, mints a dramatic story of a Virginia romance by Gertrude liluke Stanton which in places suggests Amelic Rives cx-Chan-ler, and has finally another charming; "Olive-branch Observation," this time On the Departing Woman, which Is so npt. and ito apropos that, with the IOoker-On'n consent, we Intend soon to republish portions of It In our Wo man's department. As we have here tofore sold, the Looker-On Is a journal which restricts Itself to the higher forms of criticism and comment con cerning music, letters and the stage. It represents In our judgment really the only exclusive exponent of artistic cul ture that we yet have In this country among the monthly magazines, und we are glad to note Its success. MTEUARV(iOSSIl. To the younger gtneratlon of book lov ers a great acl ot Interest and not a lit tle curiosity have lately been excited by the a-'lilevfiiif nt.i of that hew steliar light In the twinkling dome of American let ters, Sir. Stephen Crane. Their Introduc tion to Iiiin has been recent. Some poetry thu:, while Nlolallng With serene self confidence well-nigh all the traditions and conventions of versification, nevertheless fpoke forth a virile message, deep In its philosophy, daring In Its Imagery und un mistakable in 'the subtle play ot Its writ er's genius; this and a strange perform ance in prose comprise about ull that the majority of ordinarily Informed reader yet know concerning Stephen Crane. To be sure, some of them have heard, In a faint way, thut he Ib 8 young author who3a future Is brilliant with high promise. Mr. i-iuwells has raid as much. Mr. K, J. Ed wards, the reviewer and correspondent, has frequently reiterated the statement; and in New York, within the partly coin cident circles of Journalism and letters, sevetal persona of equal or less renown have undertaken In a modest way to uct as Mentors to the young genius and to aid In "bringing him out." Hut to the muss, he is known, if at all. only as thn author of "The Hlsck Riders" In verse, nnd of the "Red Radge of Courage" In prose; efforts, both, that challenge study und bntlle understanding rather than soothe superficiality or pander to tha wishes of mental Indolence. In these two works, and especially In the prose one, there existed a quality which, rmong the curious, courted investigation. To those who knew that these strong, strange writings, these bold Teachings Into the d-ths of nature and of truth, were tha achievements of a boy scarcely beyond hi majority of, a lad who at 17 had placed pen upon paper with the confidence and In, some degree with the warrant of well seasoned maturity they amounted to a piquant challenge. Some there were who felt It a duty to extend the hand of fra ternal recognition: and a pleasure to make of this duty a chance for personal scru tiny and for s.tudy at short range. No doubt it was this motive which Inspired the Society of 'the Philistines, an organiza tion of bright newspaper ami literary workers which has its axis about East Aurora, N. Y., tha home of H. P. Taber. Elbert Hubbard and "The Philistine'' magazine, to scheme the emprise of a riln ntr to Mr. Crane, the consummation of which was p.v-asantly commemorated at the Genesee hotel. In Buffalo, eight days ago last nlirht. The dinner Itself was an exquisite effect In artistic gustatatlon; but It was chiefly notable as an incident In the early career of a possible Immortal, nnd perchance as a refutation of the die turn that no good thing can come out of Ji'dea. There were present at It represent ative brluht minds in letters. In Journal ism, In medicine, In the law, In architec ture, and In the art which speaks through colors, not to mention a liberal sprinkling of men who orsetice the less ethereal art of nractlcal buiness; and these men. one and nil. extolled what Mr. Crane had done, ttnred thpt he rr main true to the best In ftlncts within him. and pleaded for room and recoxnltlon for the newer generation of writers w ho aim to sneak a true thought In a wav not cramped by the archaic con--entlons. In this personal age. to speak of arv achievement Inevitably incurs the comple mentary duty of exploiting a personality. There Is little to be suid cf Stephen Crane, the Individual, further than that he is a youthful-looking, modest person, with a fnco that suggests at once strong men tality and supersensitive nerves; and with a nrnnn-r that shows no signs of snoillng. He In now 24 years of age, nl Ihouab he looks n year or two older, The "Red Bsdge of Courage" was begun ere he was IS and finished before Its author had become a voter. An oracular English reviewer of It the other day. In n preten tious Anglican quarterly.-exnntlaP-d at fonie lencth upon the book's internal evi dence that the writer of it h-d expressed his own emotions as a soldier bearing arms; whereas. Mr. Crane had probablv; never smolled even the gunpowder of sham battle "prior to -the -book's acceptance by the Aoplrton's. Mr. Crane has been at In tervals In active newsriaper harness. Ho Is one of the craft, nnd Is thoroughly one with It In its sympathies and Ideals. Twoi yenrs ago, upon an assignment for Mc Clure's magazine, he visited Scranton. and made a rtudy of mining and Its social nmhiYiii If I mlstnkft nnt h has rein. lives In this city. Although the tempta tion is before him to work fast nnd care lessly. In order that the financial crop of his nonulsrlty mav be harvested at . Its seem'ng rlneness, he refuses to not-boll; m l fl-m friends ar sustaining him in It. T'1 "Red Bad"0 of Courage" has fascinat ed England. The critics are wild over It, and the English edition has been pur chared with avidity. Mr. Crane hn let ters from the most prominent of English tnbH"hr asHne for the English rights to all of his future productions; hut th yo"ng sutbnr refuse to he hurrld. "t writ" wli?t l In me." he said, at Buffalo, " and It will hf enough to follow with ohe dienpo the nrompt'ntrs of thet Inspiration. If It bt worthy of so dignified a name." BROKER AND JEWELER. Radln Bros., 123 Penn." ,t DRY GOODS. FANCY GOODS, Kreiky. E. II. ft Co., 114 8. Main. . CREAMERY ' - -. Stone Bros., 308 Spruce. BICYCLES. GUNS, ETC. Parker, E. R., 321 Spruce. DINING ROOMS. Caryl's Dining Rooms, E06 Linden. TRUSSES," BATTERIES A"ND RUBBER GOODS. ' Benjamin ft Benjamin. Franklin ft Sprue. ; MERCHANT TAILOR. ; . Roberts, J. W., 128 N. Main. ' : PIANOS AND ORGANS, fiielle, J. Lawrence, 803 Sprues.. - DRY- OOODa . CLOTHING,: BHOEaV HARDWARE. Mullty.Ambrose, triple stores, Provldsnc,