Show v 1 y i r I Jt I re r QI S i vt i iI r I f 1 iOUS r f J n hl I OU may not nt at you 01 may I not y yet t 1 a walt serenely and bo bot boL d 11 L u ing li bass Is II but a t tord 0 r rt 11 t I t n tOP lib Ile valo and 1 ake vu ou doubt pJ l and goal od alone e reo TO TOme l u I Ilm me jO joy ao 0 welcome e r u 1 most desire a s I t r door dur and enter dI era l I I tr strong pHon shall I fl VI loud IUd un unI i iII I shall be heard heardA II I DI at u j L A n en a o sl a to Gods own LELLA ELIA Wll WILCOX uTES i t t n Peck after II wr r d 4 the peat ten years eurs and Barrie are I tbt Kiln K ng weds r whose II work will fur sur surI furI I U I l E lIu all this mats mass massis is z t I i rB ra a the mInd mIndo o r d I Kipling who I I r v I il I t th tit past pilat ten tan W IW gr n a t I In ri world some soma maly th 1 It IL and that has 1 g C a enduring admit dinar force and bb t fn of hi 1 r It r n IreN audacity of ofa so e a r I 1 i 1 that verges up 1 n 1 tOo h literary manner mannera a rod III unique and In t r F I tit e r round II a of ofin io in II q u all and a 11 I Irl 5 I t of what bat la II lar r n nl that CAnnot I III be beI II I cure of any iKo n r m Phat of the pelt era I h h l ren rl anything inh In Int t h t I 1 c durr It U Is perhaps 11 1 11 II r wnM hOIM command of I m more than 1 a J rv I and the tho thor thes s a r f ar I intuitive I I fn l to th the very lr t 11 s and laughter Yet 1 II r In bf be remembered 1 hr v hI h s Jungle and his hie hief f r I It n a s nh for In hla novel It Jn b P I a d eo 10 ho Is II I It Pae and not attain to 10 the tho n A that marks his hiss s t In hike ilkI manner Mr P I n n ly be remembered t I r f his ha at the thea 1 q a r I m lf bellevo that s n will live e through h 1 r II d force torce which he heto heI I to cr Mil amp to t Ir r J kin n and Mr Ir Ihle rihl T he bl forgotten b be tl rs 1 g n t our fur language nn an d I r a or r tho r 1 UI V If man mant manI t I r to In Iho N York Times v hm ahan the tho h a rr r pear tM the uptown p e n Hebrew scientific c al J and writ S e u n n ankles about I T ST Its rat is a man about 1 C I tl n native of I r n r th the provinces j ft r n t ra b t rt t cad I 1 F II fr V not orth cored ct States n nr 10 the he United to r a 1 nil tIme taught let e 11 n 1 brew While him attu rh r 1 6 I b ani at nhIa nh et elde r f i qs f air Ia I Mr I F 1 I II rl orlo r ra t n of nf the funeral of ofa a r ud Is too to he be J It III t IU r 1 of what B ch a at 1 t t i t 1 I tyl r ct to r t I n L Lon n i follo which M i r album ot of a young ty t lIat tAm nam e t tt fI As 11 I me m and r r I e Man at he J t 11 eth o I I Ih or r taI earo for Then b t r h her Ir be granted ran I f n I t d will VIII a II to r ra t of Yann I r rah tal ale I Ice ee I c m r r l real name n arr t 1 na ht he was very ery r e p J J him In th the v Ir I a Ir irony ny of If t recently rat nt Port hr Ii FI r I at I P to tr naval ra I t ma matr 1 n 1 h legation In Per PerI I r I h b had ha y offered orraNd his TM n I ar n r was Ver Vert very veryl t at th beginning or l ct bok tw k i ms dents 1 Ihl this In Int t Ile fire t cur sur la Sombre ut o ba t nt rat of the tho Lan tt Ut a that the c tI I t b II Ot t Ii I h t 1 th e Heine II dace b ben tt moor onar n tin ass a very el melan boly alar A dozen or 10 chiefly German anti met In the r in III bitterly told cold The poets tomb waa AI ly If decorated with dowers A few tew visit visitIng Ing card were pinned to the wreaths and after a little subdued the company departed Mra 1111 W SY 1 K Clifford the J t lees a deul of her writ ing In at night but once confessed to Huxley lintt she very foolish foolishly I ly gels scared when everyone has hall gone to bed I 1 always hear best burglars burglar Ino Inow w about she he said So do t I said the great tent 1111 man Instantly When hen I am amal nt al York I see Iff them watching me through the crack of the door It le 18 rumored that In Ins play pia Is to bo be the last Jut one he intend In tend to write It Is said Hid also that lIe lIeIs lieIs Is now his hlA pipers papers with a aview view viti to their ultimate publication as memoirs Mr Ir Cecil Rhodes has a 1 sister sillier with n a taste tute for tor authorship Miss Edith to II now no at work upon Ullon some IOme artl cite Il LIfe In has written a nett story about one ot of his Th Three e Private Another character In the tale tole la Is dog Germ The nC Rev Fr Frank work on The Tho of Tomorrow slows hows him to be first Bret a and then n a n It Is a broad cud lId wise wile survey ot or the subject to nil varieties of thought yea ret hOlding to curtain essential A logical and well vell constructed survey ure ot of the field It SUg eug geets JUnn many new nel ideas Idu to t the c us UI Some Idl of but breadth and reverence may Ra he be obtained from the following There la III wrong with II a th theology log that Is II from intellectual contempt only by respect for its sub jt t lea tier Gods 00 object for tor us le II Maher higher than tan to tomake make tie liS do right It II s to make malle us be right J every er dogmatic truth contains n a tol falsehood No dogma fa 19 true without the It must inUIt the bl ble 11 advance In begins to In skepticism not lh the irreverent sort which revolts at religion because It for tor bids sin but tilt the reverent sort which longs for a wider Ider word for a widening Idea Idoo Ones personal Influence alone re remains mains In the world as the net result of ofIl nil Il he has hn done livery I cry scientific solen discovery Is a new of God Perhaps at last pod teal may be proud of us God values us not for tor what we e are but for Cor what lie Intends to make of ofus ofus us It III n fascinating romance that Mr Ir Robert Hobort has hils worked out In the The Slave Ills l is as fantastic ns as Ruder HIller laggards but its quality Is infinitely more interesting lie develops his hili melodramas II In the heart ot of London instead of oC In the wilds of Africa find and takes take his from conventional society rather than from savage tribes The heroine of the new lIeW book lit le n a woman whose hose passion Is III for Cor jewels for Cor whom there le Is nothing else In the world but the of these fascinating stones The Tho most mo t hardened novel render reader can cannot not the that Collow ona another In the of this book bookas Yet 1 e emont t as It ls one the thethis mont to bl be Mr shows here his hla skill In the tho manipulation ot of language nil as lie be has done dona In no other book and It casts aspell a alp spell lp upon the reader Mr Ir Gordon Craigs clover cloer portraits of henry Irving und and J Ellen Terry In their different characters have hao given Ien him II a at once umon among the now naw and rising English draughtsmen lie He maims them fit so vivid Id with slight material that one can oan not escape the flavor of oC the peculiar Individuality of his subject lie knows ho hen to make a line IIno express thought anti the result Is that In these drawings the tho whole Inner Inn r personality come oUt from behind the color The book In which they the are published la Is one une of the tho most attractive to be found up upon upon on the counters counter The rho subject taken up In n Mr Richard Two Gentlemen In Touraine Is II immensely attractive To any 1111 one for whom architecture has n a meaning th the chateaux In are what the theOde Oil Ode on a 11 Grecian Urn Is to the tho poet pott They have a lyric quality which noth ing Ina else ollie quite reaches and there are few books which appreciate It aN Mr Mir Sudbury manifestly does docs In his hll The or of wonderful build loge are aro even en more welcome than the text and the he charm of the book as II a whole Is greatly enhanced Ly by the dee dec decorative bordera In color which carry out lilt the character or of the time and locality Mr rr Arthur Arlhur Lawrence hue hs made the personality of Sir Arthur Sullivan so 80 vivid In the tho biography which he bM bas written that every reader nader feels that he hela la hi a 11 personal friend Ire has haB not ex cx his merits nor mitigated his suits There Is no pedestal and con one fears no crash The man In these pages genial generous u J making wherever he goes gotS And mixer taking tuo lie He lieIs Heis Is net the kind ot of for whom there le III nothing else In life hits but cum com composition position lie is III quite fond of a 11 good dinner or It a good stor story as the moot adaptable man mall ot of the world and out of his experience of l people Je and things ho he heis is hI able to produce melody that ox IX presses the multitude and to It ills UtI letters are KY gay and charming and the anecdotes of his hll intercourse urso with distinguished men Sill and women have CL a Mr Ir Lewis Life of Thack cray eroy is II taking tilt the place which II by right belongs to It The char characterizes It as admirable and asye Doubtless It wll long remain whAt It now to bl be the tho host III t and fullest lift of greatest novelist Scott It says further It is III not n a flute record of life for along with the story runs the account of the great novelists friendship anti and friends This OI n vistas Into the molt attractive places of English liter nt ney lift of the present century and ami brinKs brings us nearly all tine the great figures since Scold and Wordsworth Itis It is IR 1 a book of every cery library This from n a review begins At last WI we have hae n a good and nOlI tull biography of oC Thackeray Mr Ir Melville has hIlS done dont hi his work With marked ability The Corn and considered In relation to Social gee Problems Is III the tho like of a bro brochure brochure chure by F 11 In which theauthor the theauthor author discusses the question whether or not options In cereals are or the contrary It is IIa a little Wok book that Is s ell worth R No oI 9 east street New NewYork NeWYork York Senator Beveridge J In his I speech In th the United SinteR Senate told ono one side ot of his hll experience In the pines The other and more personal he saw and heard of the American soldier In the field II he will 11 toll tell In nil an early number of tho rho Saturday I Il l of Philadelphia Colliers Weekly Week for February 10 eon tame a special article on the U b by Senator hoary Henry Cabot Lodge bodge of This Is In of the tho recently announced editorial policy polle to impartially present both sides of great groat public question In articles article from the pens Inns of loaders and tire the public men The same Bame number the Kentucky political turmoil the and the tho war ht 11 South Africa The stor story of Gen Oen JAW tons death Is written and pictured by Frederick Palmer In an article In the number of Cassells Magazine Mr Ir Fletcher gathered this experience from Crom froma a 11 former soldier to In the Watch It must he bo nervous work goinG Into action netlon the first turn Of course sir and I dont believe bellec theros theres II a man whO wish Ish himself well out of It Il till he gets warmed to his work I bet ber once oneo In the old days that I 1 was wal holding a tray tra for the engagement cards at 1 a regimental dance when the captain of any company passed with n a ayoung nouns young lad lall lie It was Wall as good an officer anti bravo brae n a man III as over oer stepped Ole Oh Captain says the girl what did you ou feel like when you ou wont went Into your our allt battle Peel Feel like II says S he My Iy dear young lady lally I felt like milking making for tor forthe the nearest hedge that thai would hide tie me She gave gao him a look as much ns as to Nty My she think much or of him after that and the they passed on but bUI I was wall night splitting my sides with laughing Mr ML 1 IL 11 upon the medallists art In England In the Magazine of Art tot for thus thull concludes nn an interesting peper p per As I 1 write 1 think of the opportunity which presents Itself In these sal sad times for tor to take tak advantage of It th thurl the theart url art Within n a tow few short weeks mourn mourning InC ing has been carried Into a thousand for tor the brave brae and no noble hie ble who hero fallen tallen In n battle Who would not wish to retain some om mem r III al of hero heroes who have hac gone who would not place In the hands of every everyone one of his even of at the wider circle ot of his countrymen an effigy U 11 beautiful and nud truthful of oC the face tace that turned its Ita last la look up upon upon on the toe foe and bravely earned tilt the laur laurels els or of Its martyrdom It Is thus that the tho art of Mr tr and hl his coin peers peen itself It lf st al th the service of the dead daad and the die cowl ot of the living find otters If t not an an earthly earth Immortality at least IMSt n souvenir In perpetuity recalls and anel es to lo present and future generations generation the glory glor of the hero nM the love loe of survivors and 11 the tho homage to his features and hIs fame rame that only art can adequately tely bestow One Onn feature of Verner Magazine for tor February Is II a symposium lum ot of tione from a number of prominent JIe brows brews and others on the artistic and qualities of the lie Jews Jew nee Be hewing that origin heredity anI and en ore are very er Important If not the tho moet mout Important factors In determining Ing the power or of n a raie or Individual to express Itself artistically and that this thOr theory is 19 beet besl Illustrated b by the tho origin n and history of the Jewish people Werners Magazine hn lies secured the tho opinions of n a number of prominent men nut and women on this subject The sym symposium Is followed by nn an editorial sum aunt mary of the facts presented in the tho con York Marcus Dods has undertaken en the chapter r on Calls to Discipleship Disciple ship In the new Lifo Life of Christ now nOI ap appearing In the Quiver and the first part of hits hili is hi In the February number tn In the February number or of The Na tonal Magazine Jou Mitchell furnishes n a clover reSume of Affairs at Washington Maitland Loro Os Osborne borne brno pays pas n a tribute to the tho evangelist Moody Mood iii nn an article entitled Moods Moodys a con conert convert vert ert at tells the ot his sketch ot of Sir Henry Irving cannot fall Call to In erect lovers loers of the drama Two III Glee or of special t to the ladles lalIe are areAn An n lu tho rho Hospital anti Shop Girls Girl all as The They Are re Loth Illustrated letor Mil National Magazines r special come carre who accompanied Gen lien Hem Hemr r ry W Lawton to the tho Philippines pays a 1 personal tribute to the tho fallen tallen heroes Jefferson Jerrerson and anI the tho Dark Days of If 14 the second of a series of articles on the tho twelve events ot of the cen century century tury treats of a momentous crisis In our III national history The department contains pertinent conti mends on affairs or of th the day current RUd nud undercurrent comprising II a resume and of oC the affairs of the month 91 Bedford St Sl Boston Dotton Maas A number of Interesting short stories torl appear In the Youths Youth or of this walk A Contest of cor tb I OP peering on the nr first t peg and low Jim Wont to be War an and A Nosh NOlIn Noshing In ing on oil the Yampa following Prof Spoon Newcomb contributes A Chat About the StaN Blare and a 11 lit of other articles and II make mako tip Up the tho issue Among mon the special f features of liar Har Harpers pers hear Hazar for toJ Feb 10 are I r on PIano lino Playing homes on this Uphill Hoad to lu and AmI Children ot of O Great at Fam m 1110 The Tho frontispiece is a portrait study of f by Junes Apostle Joseph F F Smith is I the sub jest j t of the sketch In the aeries ot of Lives of our Leaden Lendert In the Juvenile Instructor for tor February mb tl it the subject In The History of Na dons anti and Who leally Was WaR Land of the 31 Midnight ht Moon oon the Self l J Brave raVe with mill a 11 noys Meu It pettry b I |