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Show THE DESERET IV, - JULY 27, 1925. WS, SATURDAY, WRITTEN FROM BOULOGNE JULY k, 1S3S. My Osar and Worthy Hans, I am extremely sorry that 1 cannot show your friend. Mr. Billie, the attention and Interest that It would indeed be a great pleasure to testify any friend of yeure. But 1 have left London for the summer, In order that I map work the more freely and pleasantly In the midst of a praity garden here. You know, dear fellow labourer, what the distractions of a London Hr are, and what a relief it ie to escape from them. You wilt not be surprised at my remaining from it aa long aa I can. and not Intending to return to London until kite In October. I cannot write to explain this to Mr. Biliie tnyself, .because I bavj not received with your IcNer which he left at my house in town' any card of hla. and consequent y I do not know gl address But when you neat see him or with him pray do me the favor to tell him. how glad I should have been to have tiVi to make his visit in London more domestic and agreeable, if I had keen there. Tou have too rich modesty to be able to tail him, how delightfully and cordially should have taken a hand that had been lately in your grssp so I will tell him that myself when he comes again. . And you, my friend, whan are you coming you say) have flown away, since you were among us. In those nine years you have not faded out of the hearts of the English people, but have become even better known and more beloved, than when you saw them for the first Rousseau v Ernest Hunter Wright Explains Meaning of His Philosophy. know he heard God'i voice and cake. Brought all he had across the sea To live and work for God and me ; Felled the ungracious oak; Dragged from the soil I only Professor Hunter give as hit fiason tor writing this excellent treatise on Rousseau, the fact hat efter ail our years of controversy tver. him we here stil. no document In English and but few in any language, that wilt simply tell as what he meant to say; and in consequence a treat deal ot our eontroversv hs been er things ha naver meant at a.!." He considers t,rt of all whit Rousseau meant in his advocacy of a return ie nature. Jt was net that he meant us 10 g.va up the hard won rains of fulture and tret back to avagery, with ail that his critics have read Into such an interpretation. It is rathar that one Is to continue natural through ail tba 'hanges in hla growth, to keep aiic development In tunj with the mental principle of our own being. Theare two principles, to Rousseau, ara self lovu and sympathy, which ara nrt in upositiorf ona to tha other, but nther In harmony provided neither It perverted by artificial condl With horrid toil roots and stubborn rock; The Thrice-gnarle- d ; With plenty piled the haggard mountain-sid- e And at the end, without memorial, died. No blaring trumpets sounded out his fame, He lived, he died, I do not know his name. com-munlc- c-- No form of bronze and no memorial stones Show me the place where lie his mouldering bones. Only a cheerful city stands BuOded by his hardened hands. Only ten thousand homes Where every day The cheerful play Of love and hope and courage comes. These are his monument, and these alone. There is no form of bronze and no memorial stone. ' fun-("- Audi? Is there some desert or some pathless sea Where Thou, Good God of angels, wilt send me ? Some oak for me to rend; some sod. Some rock for me to break; Some handful of His corn to take And scatter far afield. Till it, in turn, shall yield Its hundredfold Of grains of gold To feed the waiting children of my God ? Show me thd desert. Father, or the sea. Is it Thine enterprise? Great God, send me. And though this body he where ocean rolls. Count me among all Faithful Souls. Edward Everett Hale. t'ena Natural education a Rousseau conceived it. is far leas revolutionary now than it was when be set forth hi theories In Emile. It is an unforced training, a training which followa tha line of the child s natural Interests and which decs' ops those interests in ths vital and fundamental thinr of life tatber than In these irtlftUil and Natural society as expounded in the Social Contract is familiar to Americans ss to much of it appears in political thought developed during the formative years of tho Republic. Rousseau holds, aa did Jefferson Inter, that each man g.vea his all to tha society on equj terms for all men and if tha terms are tsuly equal no man can wish to make them tyrannical fog hla own rake at tor that of hie neighbors 1 ha only natural power is th genial will, which means that no ors man or group can have supreme pdwer. When ss it to often happen, the member of the s'tte may entertain a mean cf mors or less conflicting alms which can not nil be met, ail personal considerations mutt be put ast.'e. and the general will be allowed full sway. Tha general will la infallible tha gendesiring' only eral good. Ita basis Is that absocornea from l.terty which lute surrender to tha idea of gen- - Keep or Correspondence) D. C.. July J. frond Utahns gathered th other afternoon to listen to the sweet choir, trains of th Tabsrnacl sdveritsed to broadcast over KcL hook-up- . nation-wid- e through Her in Washington, at least, the result was disappointing. Tha music could bs heard all right, and sounded good, reminding the transplanted aoula here, whose roots ara in the west, of many hap-- , py hours spent listening to John ' McClellan and Ed Kimball and Tracy CannotT pley that marvelous organ, and of th meetings attended by the Saints at which tha music was furnished by the famous choir led by George Careless or Evan Stephens or Tony Lund. But, along with ths music the Other evening, came a most distracting static. And when th music would get louder and threaten to drown tha static, the atatle would straightway get louder and threaten to drown the music. All layal westerners did their best to ignore the discordant Interruption, but in vain. After a few minutes of the torture, the local station turned to New York for its music, condiannouncing that weather tions were such that the Salt Lake cnees b properCity program could not My dear Anderson. I havs had ly heard. Then, shortly thereafter. eur-cbe- from you again, and I assure you that I love and esteem you more than I could tefl you on as- muen road paper as would pave fhfrom here to Copenhagen. Ever your affctlort friend, Charles Dickens, ' Keep a eong in your heart; it will lighten The duty you hold in your hand; Its music will graciously brighten The work your high purpose has planned. Tour note to the lives that art saddened May make them to hopefully yearn. And earth ahall be wondrously gladdened By sonrs they shall sing In return. - , -t ; - nJp-lo- i In Cedar C'.fy In those Down days, not so long ago. when the Machine Novel. Men slave-runner- t'nw, Susan Ertx New Novel. Pan, published in 1104, when the author was 14 years of age, was ths firat of Hamsun's books to gain him an International reputation. This one book, critics have aald. stimulated 0 many other authors that a school of writers on nature sprang up with Pan as a achieved the guide. But non or w.mth of their grandeur original. The English translation ot Pan by W. W. YVorstsr waa first published in 1021 by Alfred A. Knopf. Tbe demand for it has been so steady that Mr. Knopf is now including it in his popular dollar series of Borzoi Pocket Books. Though tha praise of 'Pan has been great, reviewer hv found some d'fficulty in defining its appeal. They have recognized in it a feeling for nature akin to that of St. Francia and of Thoreau, and they have cemented on tha extraordinary vigour which always marks th author of Growth of tha Soli. But on thing at least about Pan ta certain:, it will be read, understood, and appreciated aa long as any remain who feel th lure of tha forest and love the life of tha free man. per-wrt- .lwn tion that has caused the writing of countless essays and booki, form ths background for Id wall Jones' novel rtteel Chips. Lw Dartneil, ths youth about whom .ones construct, his story, is diverted from a bent tor scholarship whew his mother die and he is placed by his father, a saloonkeeper and breeder of fighting cock, as an apprentice in the Atlas iron works. Reluctantly, at f.rst, he resigns himself to the machine shops. Inen aj he makes friends he gains in stature as a man and a workman, becoming at last foreman of the shops. In developing his story Jones brings In portraits of the artisan and laborers who work among machines and pictures their live, drawing extens.vely upon knowledge acquired as a mechanics n in Schenectady, before he became a newspaper man. The atory contains, too. a view of radicalism and labor unionism. Dartneil'- - closest friend is ths oid engraver Zellner, a man of giant brain and ungainly build whom Jones may have sketched In pvrt from Charles P. Btelnmet. Zellner publishes in his leisure hours a radical monthly and Dartneil marries the old engraver- Ruyian protege, Bertha Mankowitz. 'V slightly better results The fins here were told, however, that Ted Kimball was the owner of the sonorous voice that roared over th air from KSL and those who know Ed Jr., were glad to htar him and did feel a littl closer to home. a Strang how any slight Interrupa ruin tion will good song or a good speech. Aa aur as anyone gets up to opan a window or pull down a blind, tha entir audience has to sea that the Job la properly done, and forgets all abouta tha linger or speaker. Or if fly happen to light on the bald pat ot a man In front of a listen, er. he immediately cease to be a listener and becomes an observer of that fly. is it skates around on the shiny baldness. There is s story told of a smart attorney who took a mean advantage of this tendency of an audience to become distracted. As hia opponent arose to addrese the Jury, this lawyer seated himself tn such a position as to be out of slcht of th speaker and of the Judge, but in plain view of the Jury. Balancing himself precariousof his ly upon the hind" leg chair, he proceeded to doze, nodthen and head starting inding his to consciousness at intervals. The so completely Jury's attention was taken away from the speech that it might as well not have been given. a Fleas refer to the telephone dith rectory If you want to call ba number White House. Th been changed. These telephone how much companies don't care ua to. Even inconvenience they put th president is not exempt from their rearrangements. It might be Imagined that the his chief executive could select own number. But not so. Hs must bow to ths will of the hello girl, who must have ail th numbers ar-In artistically a certain district ranged. At first ths number was 1. This Jas Msy 10. 1878. and the reason for this number was piobably that It was the onlv telephone. Athat telephone was more early date, theornam-manv ay t rr less of an nobody had 'em When aa mnn wanted to send a message to ne'ghbor, he'd hitch up the old gray mare and take it hlmalf. If he couldn't go to a party, he d have them he 10 go anyhow to tell wasn't going. House White 1900 the About cumber was changed to Main 4. were does Just who the first five not appear, but they were probably comthe telephone directors of d least pany. But the Main at was a perthat th aubacriher son of some Importance. Now the number ara.gned Is Just National- - 1414. The cnly concee-elon- s to the dignity ef the presidential office are the patriotic sound of ths word national and the fact that the number, with iu repetitions, is easy to jemember. Knut Hamsuns Pan. g r' J-- for-gi- Smile On Your Lips takes this man for a great person are discussed. There is a caretul portrayal of tho rebellion within the French foreign legion In Africa and tho trial of tho American. The truth ot Arotrican-Mexic- o relations and' the failure of United diplomat to support AmeriThis story from the Russian, is Statescitizens abroad are revealed. Keep a task In your hands; yon a detailed history of a family of can Is rich in experiences, book The must labor; four brothers and their father. thrills by ita will and narratives The aeitlnf is Russia pf a former By toll la true happlneas won: understand better to reader help poot For foa multitude and for friend and for peasants, era. A land even if it should prove (ta) wej neighbor. lice, priests, women and children othtr bit little be a to exaggerated. Natural religion la not so simple fill up the background f over, Rejoice, there la much to he bad done. scone, and scenes of filth, is the nstursl dedication. Even l.ouseeal vii far from satisfied Endeavor, hr crowning life's duty. blood and hypocrisy take up the with whst he evolved In this fieid. With foreground uf the stags. True, sorg end witn He believed there are glimpses of a searching mile. in an omntponent, among the characters, and the To In make the world fuler of beauty piorldentiaf deity. Immortality, few good lives dp have their efin a natural moral gns often Because you were in It s while. fect upon some truth oeekera or artificial teachNixon Waterman. by wrong But In the main, this story of oid ings. and in certain essentials such Russia it true to life as it was ca charity, tolerance, faith, etc. He lived in a decadent age. The Happy Parrot. humor, delightful by th rapidity th. Inner a!wi)n If n undemanding of the po- - of jljeif movement and notion and WV th, the Mme santUI creed A gallant tale of pirate ships, their prob.ema, of their' p!o of Ruseia, to read becu lh, same stage of hit advance. a fa.r heroine and be- shortness and clear concise lan-- i ahelI 11,rVU.r!- - ,hirJ mi diwr..ninate dld a valiant hero resounds througn eocUl customs.l tuiie- brief wh0 derds, Ukc. one anvth or!d re. cf rr.a, W- - Chambers is desired, then this book will snappy Ay yarns with an occasional ;;giong- a fact which was likewise the pages of Robert help. It Is Indeed a picture on a touch bordering on riequents wi.l ere disconcerting to his age than The Happy FarroU on her slave Mr. in Chambers hour scale. a But in tae it pieaeant grand the book for the stones are,. ura 9 t0 Wright bold outlines of asketching romance etory of light reading is planned, one enjoy But there attar! o h!U presented hifrof(.,or good. truedf Inter of .nictation had better take up another novel. against the brilliant colors of a a secondary reason for it p contradictory theories with historical The short story lover would gToan be and this is ,,.Ty lication In the particular 'mlrahG skill and insight and has one of hisbackground over this long tragedy it he had wnich gorgeous tales. It appears. 'eel forth Rousseau's concepts rather Laid in the most troublesome days for persistence enough to pass tbe there is a preface In whlt interestingly then have any American shipping that preced first shojt chapter. i"r, . . author toThe the magazine forerunners.- -B ton Trans- ed the War of 111.', the story conyielding CENSORSHIP REPEALED. cerns the handsome young Jack tin their selection of material ho cammandJ ths ship introduction to TOU CAN'T PRINT THAT, by and then M Un.Mc fakirs and ,Sirak. ,he Tbe Happy aPrrot on her slave 4 , m45;c,n3 men :&ry of which there ar lih iIra Biad- George Beidea, Fsyifon ar.d Clara. heavy bended i which 4 New Tork, pages. Fr.ce. U & brief quotation jmr-- ey aRj her husband the reader, t master. Clearing the dangerous 14 00. isit a iably bend another sharp dir at 0f this volume may lT Yore Strake New waters about . and thetr known people and country i the periodica.. m Amcet A foreign correspondent for find much that is fasrinatjnr and hcaf? dictated fiction. ot r aave quarters ncaa newspapers, ansered be- The writer denies ever bavins 'thrilling in tho adventure. hen Cnthla. the spirited young cause of the censorhj imposed jal any trouble with the nisco of Captain Quinn, turns up SKEX IN SOUTH AFRICA. upon his repons by European n4 an4 his record In having hi stuff (o add to his difficulties. There Mexican authorities come back to accepttd bear wiinfk!t'hat kb follows a ter.es of adventures with L wuiTr MAGIC, by Johit native Und and tells the trutht angry at rejections, but uu do'S irRirix PhT- - APPef; Harjw- - a Breth-- ; p.rater. foreign men of war. wh about the great leader of the pres- ,0 ant to cuim the right to com- r savages sr.d storm. un.l ths ent dsy. Tha author spent ten poaa good etories without tn'eif story has come to 'Its years abroa-- l from 1S1I to 1S2S. '' ence of those who dsire to se.i, Tho wh ,ova th Ilr of r we in ail kinds of trouble. tooth paste, teth tubs or womens on unexplored territory Lark Continent, fought things out with th auththe throbbing orities and eit expelled from varEsseys. Among th stories are tom deal- note. ef the tom-toth shrill ious countries because he would Ir.g with almost every phase o. ,.ry 0f tha native as they For all over of eesave in gennot comply with the rules they im- modern American life. T ie thetr game, and the many jrs,ie other of th wild, will find an eral, and rf Miir.e in particular, posed upon news writing. His book jarn teils of a scientist who wen' to is written In the brilliant stvle of church, saw a cockroach on the unusual appeal in this new book, here is a new collection by this master rf Er.gllih that Is a literary the modern Journalist, pepPy. full bsck of a seat, studied it th.nush-- ' Africa's White Magic, event. They ars Irght. sparkling n of Ufa and color, concise and clear. oat th sermon and has his interest in a most Hr.tmg tthat have appeared in as sn It is eay to read and has a great- therein mlsmte-prete- d style, with occasional expressions other magaz.nes, new fund of entertainment and valu- enir.g to the seriousness of in t;s of modern slang, the author tends "Punch" inand , book form for th first to surround his views of Africa printed tor-able information. sermon. bv E P. Dutton and time admitpublished with warm a persons! of humor. He Others tell of syed cate Hinderburg feeling New Tork. slon to the author that tha Air.r-h- J compose stor.es ta order, of le.ls of "Gods Stepchildren, the and Company, lean Infantry won the war. the book lover who brag about the natives, and of ths reef, rorky of- - vu.umes known as St. Helena, wher Netruth about th great Bmtsh-Ger- The Galaxy. wonderful Influent man sea batt.e in the eer'.r da (they have never read, of ,1 g r's poleon epent hie last day. Also, Gerald Gould, the famous of tbe World conflict a revealed ,po go to th c.ty and good the reader firda an excellent d- London critic. writes of Busan n;! scription of th .j ci.v women who are gaud Kimberley by the German commander are features the outstanding leads them array. The' rn0Bi mines, as well as the path Erstzs new novel "The Galaky.'l country There is a carful analvsls of Soviet t ict ct civilization marked out by Cecil which will appear on Aurut secnrk I r.cht full of var.i Russia and ths reasons whr the wn jij aimcat 4, r s'terr.o m slur--, John Rhodes. ond in this country; "M.is Ertz Commun ts rems.n in control. l possesses the supreme certrsl gif; les aa(j Th secret cf Mussolini power of the novelist, snd it never dei g countrw and the serts hr- Sha is unfsfl.ng'y intersnd why tna ou'side world rv.s-- ) TRA ELING AD HUNTING hunt for ivory. esting. TRAILING THE TIGER, ry Mar-- . D Ersd e THE GOOSE GIRL. Hast.cgs . . A , New f .t fags, The Goose Girl end Other Tales 13 54. from Grimm. The Little Library. 2.0a. The MacMillan C. Th s book L the chron.c'e cf s w a b search for t.grs tv jirar Written in th lovable, fsmilisr eme hun'er ad her In ir'.icity langusg. remlqiscsnt Mbrad--o- f J ' TraiUns To-- T sr. : of the old fairy teles, 'The Goose ' rc'Sb a j Girl no will doubt pleas many m - d r . r a . and among ,a chud of princess-gra(jfr. stories witches and heggsra. t 'k s!k magickings, fill of this littl th pages me h ,un chirar--r-izecolor in book, illurrated bnght her otb-- r The dear to th child heart. me d yit The most admirable quality of sole In the f Is ap- - th storl Is that, though written in h,r. 1 ot. ti that In the al'mphr. "they do not "talk down u a? on con- gesfs th tj,t yoxir.g rader snd tbsy Utter the r.cn ts:n coDsidersbis detail, ths i reader inerest ie aeer &. lowed always sppeshnf to tbs chlldren t to lag. love of ths magical, ths adventur I About will no riujs'raJijin bring out Ths Goose Girl u -th. slong whnh.aoubt prove a wonhr addition to That Delicious ?5 fh v.vui r of collection LSttls Library AsA charming tales for ths younger jtirst which e in the dsaip'jtns Spread for Bread A FORMER ERA. RUSSIA THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV, by Fyodor Dostoyevray: translated by Constance Garnett; The Modern library. No. lit; 1 paces; IS cents. (Sped! WASHINGTON. head-runne- and machine, a combina- "Th Galaxy. th new novel by Susan Ertz which Appifton is to publish, in this country on August 2, baa Just appeared in England where it has been started off with some tremendous reviews. Among the most enthusiastic is Mr. St. John Ervine. the English critic who Just returned from a stay in America. He write in the London Da.Iy Express: Th work of Mis Susan Ertz steadily grows finer in quality. 'Madame Claire was good; 'Now East, Now West, was better; and The Galaxy is best. In a single volume Miss Ertz has given us a brilliant picture of the, period which Mr. Galsworthy has described in the various volumes of tha Forsyte Saga. Her book can bt placed beside that fine work without any fear that it wiil be put to ahame.- s ultra-moder- - prose-essa- -. y J - p-- 0u-,- b ..,. never-ceasin- DONT FORGET A Pound - Gone to Earth. Wt C-- of -e C bmksihi trav-og;- at frrt i ?: COSTS LESS COES FARTHER gorgeous wlh theyrrin . ALL GROCERS dale form and tower. r.g in folk Ju- rour'af rcuai f'r castor a ad the Mr.a.g INTERNATIONAL YEAR BOOK. A resume of the presidential, campaign, a discussion of prohibition. an enlarged necrology, ex- -' tensive articles on scientific sub-- 1 Jecta, and a comprehensive sketch of Italian literature are only a few h of th high lights ot the annual edition of the New Book. As Year usual .International an alphabetical arrangement of (topics, with adequate heir.. makes J.t twenty-sevent- s- da"'. ARTHUR William Eiegei'a conception of a author, whose latest tale "Swansea Dan has been published by Coomopolltan Book Corporation. ' illustrations Indexing-cm-necessar- y. -c Vhomas Beer, whoes biography curious of Mark Hanna will bs published by Alfred A Knopf In ths autumn, Ters Kabau sailed for Europe a fw data so. Maiv tribe whre n!s a? Mr. Beer is now In Florence, parMatriarchs, as4 everywhere are taking of the bountiful sunshine ths tack ermon.i , pa I - Bebecca tt'4 of this novel of "Wild Tales, whr the people flam out into primitive paaelon-wheIt wa first published. Th. year discovery hsa been Mery I Webb. She Is a genius and shouldn't mind wtgering that she 14 going to be the most distinguished writer of our 'generation.- - Published by Dutton and company. New York. A;,-e-o- I g i ! There are numerous ar.d tables, and maps are generous--! iy interspersed wherever occasion demands. Th impressive l'st of erntnbutors names. contains fifty-nin- e - j ' 4 a for it Is a sort of. Eternity for man to have hi Tima all to himself. It seemed to me that I had mors time on my bands than I could ever msnagt. From a poor man, poo In Tims, I was suddenly lifted np into a vast revenue; I could see no end of my posse-Ionwanted some steward, er judlcioii bailiff, to manage my estates ia Timqjor me. Charles Lamb's experience, for it Wes his own, is similar to that of quits a number ot superannuated government workers, and will b t he Jot of even mors it ths retirement act becomea 0 generally lenient as to retirt a man at with a good silowsnee. if hs has put in thirty year for Uncle Sam. ty Whereupon Senator Harrison Democrat of Mississippi, remarked: Im surprised, senator, that you should 'dtctivs your wile. Tha aolons get considerable amusement out of teasing on another in public. Last week at ono of the tariff committee hearing, the cigar manufacturer were tea. ths tifying in an effort to hav t r.ff on tobacco increased. They passed around the smokes, and. of course. Senator Smoot declined. ShortridSe Whereupon Senator snorted, "Smoot, why don't yen a smoke more and talk less? Already there are old cronies In "Shortndge,'' retorted th Utahn. th government who are Miking Why don't yon amok jess snd shout spending their last dsy in think more?" world travtl. This msy sound fantastic snd Impossible to those who Another little pass between know what small salaries most ef these two occurred when the eruth clerks receive snd what small dite and valuble Shortrldge sugretirement pittances they are al- gested in a long winded and round lowed. The fact remain, however, about war, that Senator Smoot that for 01.800 a year a man of speak louder so that he could be modest habit can apenl his days heard by the men who were seatin traveling wheresoever he will, ed at the other end of the table. at least so says ons worldly wise This auggestlcn and request, were man who is planning to try it being stretched out into such a year and who already has a long speech, that Mr. Smoot inJ'?t fellow worker in Europe tne proving terrupted with the practicability of the idea. I'll speak louder, if 11 you only giv me a chance to This man says that for $780 be peak at all. can e purchase transportation around th world, and that this It la gratifying to read In th Salt Lake figure include an meals taken on papers there is stcut shipboard. He aays that ha can and determined opposition to- the live for less than five dollars per latest effort to remove the Pioneer Monument. Next it may be day on land, and that his arrangement with th world-tou- r anticipated some newcomer out companies permits him to stop off there will be wanting to move the wherever he likes snd as long as Temple to Ensign Peak. e a h likes. He say his friend does It la devoutly to be hoped that not, of course, put up at those hotels that are primed to demand all such sporadic and ill considth top prices from gullible Ameri- ered attempts wiil result In the can tourists. CtE the other hand; h Ignominy of failure. Th present a.:e of that monuto the native hotels or pengo and there he stops His ment was selected because it la sions, friend is a linguist and enjoys talk- the most conspicuous site in the ing to strange peoples in their own first city thst was founded by tha - Pioneers cf '47. It io on ie spot tongue. where Brigham Young .said: These two old cronies in govern- - "Her we will build a city." It ip. at the Juncture n!l th b ment semce both of them bach- elora, plan to meet next year sd. y forlhL talk about their days in the light-- ! tha S'1 ot pent-u- p wnera office There Is no they put in so many years. As be adduced to argument that can Justify any change the? talk, they are going toi te in location which wae given strolling along the French Riviera, the fullest consideration pot when the or gazing into the blue Mediterran- s; iv promise'-"Shortrldg- ye - "f Lamb, they hav be y- - woi? th "!!10mon7ment. task-- E?!5 j protecting fren themaAKVrh6 th?f 0f!he day! thelr IM5citett fcfore the acred ' structure shall be touched, 'inl. -- iz pleasant and a;erhoon the twi-lig- Ciose in upon them very gent-- ; Zane Greys Wanderings. Senator Smoot haa heard many! yiri k 0l) vh! T'?y a facetious remark about his anti- ,lyQ h,, L tO About th CMnaia Pfs! nwi .ih building f a new schooner and Jo worJv n,h for Mmon. Af,.r that- - ha rik. ?h erhn crl f misunderstood during lc;d la. quarter of a ceniury and now seems, to derive a certain amount of en- Joyment from the criticisms. Some oj went into hi offic the, oher day and said to Truman, Young, who is one of his secretar-- j ies, Tvg Just been composing little verse. It runs as follows. Drop that Lucky and reach for I w,u Newfoundland. When ho his home In th. west, ha plan jo take h!s children on a thousand mile horse back rid through Utah, across three great He canyons to Rainbow R.dce, want to th th pot wher "bad men" who will figure in h.s next novel, lived. Mr. Grey seldom about a place he has not seen. He recently returned from the South Seas ERNACU j Verses by Al Osmond tndl-iote- I vt 11- Senator Smoot a dints that tha American housewife is someyaat prejudiced against beet sugar. In a session of th finance committee, he is reported to hsv said; Once I took a sack of bast sugar to my wife wbo rejected U. saying ah d;4 sot ilka to cook with beet sugar. Later I took th sack off and gav her th same eager. 1 said: 'Mama, that' very much better sugar than I first sent, isnt ltr and th aid. Oh, yea.' By Henry Hoshxn. time. Whan Aladdin hail have come cut of thoee eaves of science to run a triumphant course r. earth and make ue alt wiser and better as J know you will you ought to com for another vzit. You ought to com to me. for and stay in my house. We would do to maka yoe beppy. 1 am hard wt work at Little Lor-rl- t. and aha will hold me prisoner for another nine or ten months 8h is a wonderful favorite In England. Tha mention of my country nam reminds m to asp. that you how writ English most admirably, and that this letter of your now lying on my desk la a perfect E?g llshman'a. Mrs. Dickens wishegjn to toll you that sha would havs been mortally offended if you had suspected her of forgetting you and, that you only do her justice In supposing that you live ts her remembrance. Sbch of my children as you 'aw at Broadstaira by the sea, and especially my, two daughters, who are now young women, are very Indignant at your dreaming of th possibility of their forgetting Hans Christian Anderson- - They say that If you knew them half aa weir as hey have for years known Tommellse In the Ugiy Duckling, you would know better, llowefer, v they send you their love and Keep a smile on your Ups; it is better To Joyfully, hopsfully try For tbe end you would gain than to fetter Tour Uf with a moan and a alfh. There are cloud In tns firmament ever The beauty of heaven to mar. Yet night so profound there is never But somewhere is shining a star. te BOOKS OF THE DAY 'a THREE gar beet. IN AND AROUND WASHINGTON To Hans Christian Anderson The N ameless Saint I SECTION a sweet, If it's mad from a Utah A Letter From Charles Dickens 'erafatre ,1 j ' whole town we hooked to the seme bell, end it "rang whenever anyone was wanted at the phone, a certain good brother waa sntertaining distinguished guest tom 8s!t Lake in his parlor. Tha phone rang three short rings snd a lone one. The host made no move, but proceeded with his conversation. Soon ihe phone rang again, three short rings snd a long one. Stillththe host guest paid no heed. Finally . tn t asked. Why, brother the Yes. replied vour ring'" that good man. indifferently "I believe teleanswer your t is' "Don't vou visitor phone 7 pressed th urbanrespondnot alvmye." "No. smiling. v. "Only ed th brother of lmport-sree'- .' when it's something pia-td'- ' the Hoover - It Is reported that ancestry hs been traced back to 1710. when hia great cams from Germany. But where do the Mayflower and the Conqueror com in? Now it can be undresiond why Mr. Hoover abandoned tlie presidential yacht. Charles Lamb tells on Interesting story of a superannuated man, who. after some 20 years at a routine clerical task In a London counting house, was retired by his employers upon a pension and given his leisure' for the remainder of his dsvs. He tII what great t in adjus-t-i- r difficulty he had at himself to ths new order of t.ilngs after hia many years of eight, nine and sometimes ten hours attendance in ths prison of his He writes? For ths first day or two I felt stunned, overwhelmed. I could only appreh-n- d my Miclty. I was too confused to taste It sincerely. I a h nktng 1 ;w indexed a bo u happy, snd knowing that I was a I In' was cf the condition not. prisoner In th Old Bsstile, suddenly let loos after a forty years' ronf.nment. I could scarce trust myself with myself. It was likepassing out ot Time Into EterniWll-,l.i- m ti'-s- of-f.- ;t LIFTIN' Liftin is not easy work when the world is bearin down. If you ere a lazy Turk, you will let your native town sins Into the lowland low. while you growl snd whin and shirk, never strike a ingle blow, never do a lick of work. Ltfin is no sise7 game that a tenderfoot can play. Liftin' make a noble name like the sunlight of the dsy. I would rather be a toad, livin in a dungeon than to fail to lift my load when I've had my share of sleep. Liftin may not make you nch, but it's sure to make you strong Drain a swamp or d'g a ditch, if you want to linger long m the valley of unrest, in the land of constant tryin. If you wish to f.nd the best, never thm nor talk of dyln. Livin' is the thing to do; liftin' it a sane condition thst Will help you struggle through while you're Sn your earthly mission. Liftin keeps the muscles fit. keeps the freely flowin'; helps you do your little bit on the debt thst you are owin'. Many men pretend to lift, but they leave their mue'.es flabby. Wishy-wasis their g.ft and their ways of da.n shabby. Lift,n xs a manly thing; it's an effort of the spirit It becomes s kind of wing that will fly to all we mer.t. Them that lift and them that lean seem to be a group of brother, but tn tlm it wilb be seen that the leaner shame their mothers. Liftin in the latter day is a kind cf inspiration that will help us mend our ways, while we're gett.n' our salvation. dp. Ilfe-bio- hy PAIN YOU have, no doubt, used Aspirin for headand you know how promptly and completely it relieves the pain. But until you d try it for some pain such as neuritis or neuralgia you will not know its full effectiveness. Try using it to ward off a summer cold, or to break-u- p a cold that has a start Or use it as a gargle for sore throat or tonsilitis. Then you'll realize why millions of users depend cn it These tablets are utterly harmless, as any doctor will tell you. Every drugstore has the genuine pro- duct, with Baver on the box and on each tablet aches deep-seate- ! 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