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Show ) THE DESERET --NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1926 He Subject, Art Walt Whitman Peculiarly American Be Saw a Fragment f the Divine , Other Eyes Saw Nothing Bat Vileness. THE WHEAT WIND-SWEP- T Faint, faint and dear, - Shape His Plots sion.Such that in' dreams we hear Faint as the curtain-fold of Bleep, phasing the music I That shuts away The world's hoarse voice, the sights and sounds of day. Her sorry joys, her phantoms false and fleet, - "" John Galsworthy answers critics that his plots are not con-- 1 constructed but rather Just interevolve as he writes,- - to-- aa In the current International Book Review. The British literary genius also states that ho rewrites stories many time. hich mag ila account for his style. no idea, as such, comes to me at once for a story, Mr. Galsworthy says: Usually some lit- -tie Ironical incident, some occurrence. some character, appeals to rn and takas form, so that I see it in the shape of some kind of a Story. I do not deliberately shape K to carry out an ideed. It seems naturally to shape Itself. Tt la lm-,t- 0 - ,So softly-softly-stirs- la taper, Walt Whltmaa seems leas American than any other o 1 our conspicuous writer. ' It does not follow that In some aspects bo hi not vary American. Indeed. Almost as certainly as Hawthorns, though very differently, he hsd the true artistic temperament; life him to moegs which morel could find relief only in' expres- Galsworthy Does Not Deliberately - -.-, - . , - - - atempsrntment would bars oxprsesH) Itself anywhere; and Whitmans would probably- have found the most congenial- mate- rial for expression in those pean regions which bare been moat disturbed by French revolution-vieexcess. lie chanced, however. ulr to ho born, and to attain the na- Wirity which ho awaited before he Kuro-clous- kcnrii ' As American, surrounding. viously as Hawthorne a experience confined to New England. Whitman's was confined to that of the lower classes In those regions which were developing Into mouera New . Y ork. Whoever remembers the growth of this region wiU remember what sometimes seemed the ugliest thing . the eye, the most overwhelmingr to of T, Instinct ' Sometimes 1 have a vague idea taste,PP.r?",v the most sordidly hopeless and cluster about It a KrouPotaLmopliere possible to human How or where they pertencs. Now. Whitman. inj come from I do not know. came to his Dlmb9r, maturity . H aom1..t.i.i, GaSswerthy . Svvut vi ine sum A iva. . " Ea- -tnd River,xvjvrr; separst- ,n ?j l nV h t was Nw Tork hil w hit te . ,. ima Km Brooklyn, A .iwvt working. Sometimes this happen. mo shxVtaTh TtB,ln,y distant from Ideal Eh.2...U beauty. Tat the contemplation of JoK f r ard Eart River evoked from (this aery I such times. which soms- What Mr. Galsworthy has assn,'Whitman thehUpoem roo Bear,Y or heard, he says, takes hlte two or UIUl" ' three weeks to got on paper. Then when it is time for the story to. Here U A, sample of IBs lest continue he will awakes and stanxa of this Crossing Brooklyn another length will be revealed. Ferry: I never make scenarios or cut Flow on, river; flow with the flood-tidand dry anything he adds. and ebb with the ebb tide! There Is no pattern In my mind. I in Frolic The idea the incident grows. on, crested and scallop- and ths characters go on from day I ed wares! to day. Week to Week. Ho It an Gorgeous clouds of the drench with your splendour gets to bo coherent in the end. 1 I never know. me. or the men and women I cannot use a typewriter. I! generations after me! use pen and Ink. I revise and re- -- Notes and Newslets About Workers Local yLiterary Field. In Biography Croee from shorn to shorn, eount-- . less crowds of passengers! Stand up. tall masts of ManhatAs we grew elder our interests tan! stand up. beautiful hills tn fiction seem to change. In childof Brooklyn! hood we prefer eur fiction tn story Throb, baffled and curious brain! throw out-- questions and sn-- - form; later we enjoy It more In nwers the form of biography and autoSuspend here . and everywhere, biography. eternal float of solution! . That which we are able to regard Case, loving and thirsting eyes, is the house, or street or public as true Is always that which interaseembly ests us most; when we come to Sound out. voices" of young men! disbelieve In the fact of Rants me call and musically loudly Claus we lose Interest tnJhlpi as a by my highest name! The entire pom is very like character. Id childhood we can believe In and this confused, inarticulate, truth of more aaaertiona than surging is a mad kind gf rhythm the which sounds as if hexameters we can later; which accounts, nu for tha shift in Internet to sewdoubt, were trying to bubble through I have referred- age. For all these faults. Whit- - which The of a biography subject has here aoeompUahsd a won der. Despite his eccentric Insolence makes a great deal of diffetwoce. so not as the art and but much both of phrase and of temper you the point of view. feci that in a region where you would say that Joan eye would have seen only, of Offhand Arc was a better subject for unspeakable vflenrse, Jto has found ' er biography than John D. Sullivan, impulses which prove It, like every would you not? Welt perhaps not, Y At nil events ths palm Tor the -dullest biography of ths year of the ten I have read goee to Albert Bigelow Paine for hi account of th Maid of Orleans; whores R. F. Dibble, m his account of " John D Sullivan,' achieved g con'play,siderable success. It is not in the same class with They bend and bow and sway Werners Brigham Young;" It is With measured beat, thinner, less philosophical lees Important in every Implication. But But never rest through shadow and it is assuredly reedable-- ' John 1 Bnluvmn was a man through aun to bo remembered. As Mr. Dibble Goes on the tender rustle of the wheat seyu, "In September, lift, the tradition of New England supremacy received two terrtblo blows. John Dreams more than sleep Groenleef Whittier died, and Joha D Sullivan of Massachusetts was ! 'Fall on the listening heart and hill its knocked out by "OenUesnaa Jim Corbett of California. . . , care; I quota from memory, and inDead years send back accurately! but you perceive ths Importance of the Incidents Some treasured, unforgotten tune. Next to Werner' a "Young' I should placa Herbert Quick's Ah, long ago, ' Thank heaven, hs to srttr it When hs When sun and sky were sweet d id Ills death preceded Its publication. Since Hamlin Garland's In happy noon. Son of the Middle Border ws We stood breast-higmid waves of ripened have had no such picture of the middle west amidst Its growing grain, pains. 1s copy made, again I revise and SWEETHEEART IS STILL LIVING . I like Mr. Quicks story tha betAnd heard the wind make music in the revise. The same with the second ter; It Is lees sentimental, equally ' typewritten copy. In fact, J revise, j- Not aU thoee who hgve smiled-a- t wheat Into a microphone the other friendly, equally sincere. I know no other man equipped by age. exrevise, revise. Mrx she who Blht lsuri Frasier, .... the love story Mark Twain wove was Thatcher In Mark perience and art to produce a third statement of editors that his work about the childhood days of Tom Twain'sBecky Not for today of literature. story to place with those two. masterpiece Is so perfect It is almost Impos- - Sawyer know that the best known told the story Mark Twain a autobiography o t the childhood lore Not for this hour alone the melody sible to eliminate a line from U. book of most widely affair. Becky is eighty-eigyears has added little except to the cost t know writer was Us no small mea- - old now. libraries! these Tom is dead many. of So soft and ceaseless thrills the dreamer's sure an autb.ogrsphy; that he was years, and few, if any. 'of their Robert Benchley, In "Pluck and Borderland. are left to Luck, has a parody of It, cruet ear: (Tom and that Toms sweetheart, erstwhile playmate but not tmreasonabla HWng personality, share ths reminiscences. Becky, TBer I. ytlo borderland that gai S the Kansas City Journal-Post- ., Of all that was and is, of all that yet shall ' I can only agree to Benchlry'a What a span of Ilfs is eneo lies Her name was Laura and Sammy passed by Becky's recollections. estimate of Its worst; but 1 m ght Just past the limits of eur work- - Clemens was her first saeetheart. which cover a period of more than add regarding Its best that a very was seien years old and she 'He ,worlar years. How few ere left to few peerages Imaginative meIf holds a part . And it is ptopled with thv friends wag s year his Junior when In front eighty know first hand of her theme! Tet mory of background details ara we met, of her home he turned handsprings Becky Thatcher foe an boor was great writing. Love, sorrow, longing, pan. And loved s year, a month, s week to attract her attention. Dove e young Tho autobiography of the year, again and shared her root day. The restlessness that yearns. dream in youth or age Is often as mulct with the' myriad of llsten- - however. Is Antis Loos' GentleSi And from rowith man The era hi. Sammy Clemmons for the Prefef Blondee. Ring Lerd-nparted aching transept. years pass and The thirst that burns, - ma nee Is mislaid. Then U all comes hour was more than a memory hearts, yet knew la "ncgllgay," a cloche hat In recollections as life nears he' was Tom. her little sweetheart. and a That back mus we distance the through wrlat watch! like The bliss that a fountain overflows. ' the sunset and memories alone ere Not the famous lose the hold Mr. Augustus Peabody, writer but the lntrodnc-nOf hand with hand, and only clasp left to those last leaves that only barefoot boy who turned hand-th- e who Introduced me to the blonde. The deep repose, - 4 wait the autumn wind. thread springs that his powtn might My wife prefers "The Difficulty of Good that we might have known, but shall Of memory. But still so close we j Sammy Cleihens ran away to be find favor In her ayes. A living Getting Married," and my students womanto boatman. Laura feel this grew land. presence of the past paid tribute Max Beerbotuns Ths Happy Hyp' not know. ocrite. but give me Gentlemen So euro ere we that these same Bood and gave her hand to an- - to the long ego. 'other sul.tor. It la the way of JuveOf the child romance of Tom Prefer Blondes Do road it. hearts are true. The hope God took, the joy He made ' Blla romance. came had What been Weber James Linn in Sea Franand Sawyer Becky Thatcher That when In waking dreams there a lifelong Immortality to both. Bo long as cisco Examiner. puppy love remained comes a call complete, That sets the thread of memory friendship to endure throughout books are read these two shall sar-tb- s Life's chords all answer from the wind years. viva. Tbere I No aglow. We know that lust by stretching LOVE AND MYSTERY. swept wheat! Critic. Wai Art Shaw out the hand Dear Tleart MART AIKGB DB VERB. In written word of love or book or THE DANGEROUS GAME, by Wll. Stop planning for thyself tonight, I am Le Queux. the Macaulay flower. Shaw's early Bernard Georg Wbeq darkness seems to hide the Company. New Tork; 424 pages, days to literary London ara deThe waiting hand will clasp our light. . hto to own once more Pennell scribed by Joseph For He who holds tho universe Across the silence tn the same I The Adventures of an Illustrator. Haas Inplanned It all aright. The that of game, dangerous way Telling of the founding of Tbs LonJ ternational con piracy coupled don Star, with T. P. O'Connor aa Its HELEN FIELD CRIPPTN i Dear Ktart fathe daring and beauty of a Mr. Pennell says- "Shaw New Tork Times. with in Loves plan for thee tonight mous wgmu spy-- Is vividly por- - editor, was th art critic. I suppose It was Rest 1 And when the morn In radiance this with thriiltog The on art that gave him the I. so story fined writing utterly foAA A TRUE NARRATIVE, and cab always mak fun ofJhldMaanm the few beatttv spots bright was an authority on If le 8etoB Darvilleisa Ba1 idea that he but their to solve the mys- - stands out remarkably clear by . ,c.ha1 to this day he Reveals Hto face ths source of TEA LADY 8AHEB. by Grace teries attempts i ro- - tbs subject, hi lie time, and offer a besolution light his contrast. of The lovely F.ngllah girls know ths difference A wn at which Thompson Be ton; Harper th Brit.sh doesn't Twill pray there to no night. tween a photograph and a paintthey laugh, but In their youthful purity are Brothers, New Tork; 4(4 pages, which to always correct to he but Mcratservlca. ANONYMOUS. reality to tha end. feet foils against which Louise ho prefers the photo44.44. ro th ing. though nona of tha stories Hardings picture to drasra. There PT Naturally, and all his art notions are ?enehje books received from esn be retold her, the and graph, Is nothing of value to tha New York Dreans a as h City. cased book. authors oh tho photograph, with Part works ars A womans adventuring sufficient induce- - however, and much to be avoided. , unpaid for hla work to tha Ha did not keep A striking article by Alfred o art writings prove. mysterious India. Being not a ca unravels R the wo to read are one this women In roIf such there one If the art criticism long there was to ths London novel but a true narrative of tho rack clue to The Scarlet Plmpernal world as Loul--e Harding one hopes Vy Pursuing not enough advertisement in it for Noyen toappears which the famous poet author's personal venture Into Pempernal ! al go and remain tn Africa' Many dangerous experiences are, him, so he went In for music, catl- Times, and etc they Rosemary, unoften and half who has Just returned from a trip wholly lonely, The suspense to keep their stories to thera- -, enoountered. jand ing himself sorno do Baseetto for, to ths Unltsd States, 'deplores civilized countries. But with the maintained throughout the book, BY MICHAEL A KEEN. ; selves. hs said, he was going to blow hla of f story toller's truo Instinct so clev- -misunderstanding who keeps his real occu- - as Darville, own horn until It was heard. I then America. by Michael Arlen; Geo.) ) patioRi a secret from his associates. arly and fascinatingly has she por- PIRACY, TALES OF INDIAN DATS. Hover became Unknown Artist and. of a Doran, New York; 427 pages. He writs lyrical description trayed her subject that R teems has a social standing- Many that name which I used, wrote my New Tork City-- calling Ka archiFIGHTING RED CLOUDS WAR friends high with all ths eparklo and romance to hto exten-H- s are 8 haw got ms th port RIOR8. by JB. A- - Brlnnlnstool; iivVtraveli. acquired opinions of a real novel. tecture 'on of th most vital pomet a young girT I think I was th only artist ha etic fores com: m th ths world has over Tiger hunts to wildest Jungles x7..er,adr of Th Orson Hat a gmo'untoin year to succeeded knew I but , before. thla bok will need with only natives for guides, known. In ths great Independent Yf. ru palV Columbus. Ohio; 241 Th association to eontln- - rather wall known and to getting out wasand aho at rants and companions H 1 . pAtt of endless scrapes, from a threat- towsrs and soaring white columns ajtaJb Lova play f tied frora ,hoM or nny . . - you seem to discover ths one th hsroln of her own story; ,B th f!nl triumph. ened libel action with tha family of new dimension when th Wert was seasons stories. A Indian day at which oom of aho enters into tho sanctums of E. most A. Marie Bashkirtseff bT newsthreatened to a Uvee unusual had Brlnnlnstool, whose east women of th and remarkable nic- - T00. ths cubists wyrs aiming end magazine writer, author thrashing by Walter Crane Nei- It to a sight that suspends the never before been shared with an fur to drawn of the two as Th May Buceeas contains many ther, however, cam off. Magdalen Gray and of "A Trooper with Custer." "Trail outsider, ah lifts their veils of character, breath, and holds on rapt, to Lady Tar yon. For comedy and sa- Duat of a Maverick." "Fighting Interesting articles. or an Among them mysterious harems and Joins though hs caught a gi mps - Bsrhank Loved CBIldrea. Red Clouds etc. tire and This deft Warriors moveare: revelation of Tour Know world. Do varieties Fam of the human religious cthoreal you many city beyond In ths light of- publicity brought book, volume two In "ths frontier ily! ments In order to mors reallstlcly Drtlvra thia author to unsurpassed. series." by Manner White; "The to dedicated to Mrs. Mary Ferhap one could wish he used E. Dream That Cam True," by Alice forth by th death of Luther reveal tha rams. Her power of de- less Grave. Sterensons to Granham. now to telling hla tales, her 47th year, Booth; The Old Band-Lthe personality of this truly Grow scription to marvoloua given the they language first white woman to settle to Better 'C. great man to being presented to the certainly wordy, but If one th Frederick by Men, scenery of unsurpassable beauty eare are Nebraska. She was Davis; "Be Touraolf, There was a good deal of talk republic for the first time. which aha deals with and the pow- much to overlook that, there la northwesternof the Ralph American American Indian Conway; Tho Hand Thatby Rocked of beauty, charm and naive champion Hs who was generally conceded to cently regarding th reported deseerful charm of countries of the and friend a of tha recluse wizard scientific and be a great to personal make of each cration ot R. L. Stevenson's grave ths Cradle Rules Beattie," by Paoast, bar story to thrHUngly and or hlainterspsrssd books a more one Bioux chieftain and warrior. Red tricia Maloney; "Do th People has been till lately as little under- to Samos. Th story was that cersuperbly depicted. the last, when Interesting as his methods of creating tain people had carved their names Bhsr-ma- n stood thht had been Cloud.to Mr. Good tho Lika Still Tbs volume to beautifully Jacket- than Best," by Brinnlnstoors Intention It delightful by itself. plant species. Now It to real- or initials upon the tomb, a gross ed. tbs paper to of highest quality, entirely "Making Movie Mon- new In A usual, the cover and maks to present to their sters ftogerq; other en- ized that Luther Burbank was hu-as but very human ptee of sacrilege. up truethis book and and It to profusely Illustrated with to Move," many Indian stories of the is light of highest quality, the general remsrkabls philosopher and In- It appears, however, that tbs adfeatures. real photographs each one a work volume make a beauty spot on warfare-- H feels that correction Is tertaining manitarian aa a scientist. Hla ministrator of Western Samoa has of art in Its finished state. Many any bookwin due the Red men. "My sympathy ahelf wlth-to-and and love was all embracing. taken th matter In hand. Ths lures terest one were of thee pictures snapped at to to with his tha hs cays Indian. him. scratching hav now been oblitersee to attracted pages Just Is so Children what beespecially kodaks of risk danger, great Sunset (Ban Francisco) preface. The contents of this book Tbs Shortly before hto death he wrote on of th most suspected of enticingly arrayed as this. and there is in th office of ing ars presented to ten chapters: The Is th May travel number. It features to Nicholas Rlcclardl compliment- ated. 11 Instruments with which th th New Zealand government In Phil NOT of Fort new a Seas. South Kearney, Tragedy th serial of WHOLESOME STORY. and on book hto Boy 'The him ing is a which trotter ths Strand usually equipped. globs "The Wagon Box Fight, The 'IsRogers Hia Future. "Tour book," wrote shows that ths photograph Ppmaraa," by Isabel THE WOMAN TEMPTED, monument Is well Th Buffalo Wal- Btradlelgh; land of Death, atby travel me aa and the special Mr. ' Burbank, Impress LITERARY TREAT. A Countess of Catheart; tho Mac- low Fight. 'Tobey Riddle Modoc tractions eared for. T administrator. Sir by Barrett WHIoughly, best tn Its very Important field. To- -' George Richardson, lives in Voluaulay company. New York; 407 Indian War Heroine, Jim, Bridg-e- r, WallAc Smjth. Katharine HavR-ki- d too much Interest to me. th house that Stevenson , UNRAVELLED KNOTS, by Barday altogether built pages, (2.00. CalamGreatest of Plainsmen," and others. Also appear, Cantered to bank stock, liv stock oness Oresy; Geo. H. Doras Taylor . near' Apia. Boston In the Days of the Buf- short stories, "Th Wooden ity Jane, to hu- far himself than stock rather other and Company, Nsw Tork; 494 pagoa; the Using Across mysterious places of falo," Transcript. "Freighting MOO. by D. R. Lane; Th Nature man stock. Africa for a background the author "Remember th Alamo.' meg. of the Beast, 'by Brevard Mays has made a perfect setting for her Plain, of HE KNEW ABOUT IT. Because of their many locale, ot VI. Men,' to Code by Bert collection thirteen a of This Tbs Mountain and ths wicked heroin. Louise the chapters are especially Inter- Connor; Homer King Gordon snd verse by contrast between tb sea Jack London had his own Ideas mystery stories. When as consum- so beautiful that all men Harding Tho communto thto mad of readers go esting mate skill as this author possonet bbout her and all woman are Jeal- ity. The author mentions Utah, Salt Ethel Brooks. Stillwell. Nancy Burr and th mountains is a favorite as to the relative excellence ot his to used to ravel and unravel tangled ous to a ' Mavlty. Elizabeth Evelyn Moore, one. and has often been made, novels. n frenzy of her, this Lake City, and Great Balt Lake Roy Ivan Johnson. Jails Boynton "W were arguing tha point once H. Los, In hto proso-snr. threads Into stories one to assured wrecks the Uvea of all who several he times. Incidentally, Dawes. The of a treat. Th powerful manner com near. A splendid young man who Green. Mary Carolyn departments, vers -anthology. on"Th Lur of th a another fellow and I. In an office paints Brldger aa a man to which eho treads through her from England, newly arrived Sea." He goes to quote sucti in Sydney, as to whether The Cali In would command a second glance regular Interesting th issue. contrast: mtocetlan and to mors a like mans complete of tb Wild. or -- The Sea Wolf style Rhodesia, falls victim to her charm Th mountains give plots anyone; admired and respectwawas children than a woman's, making all ths and commits suicide because of from and lost berries book.i a letter their th better says hto of the ed by all superiors, and OBEY THAT IMPULSE. mors attractive her work. ter; ths Sea mocks their thirst and signed by "Michael Earle, of Vandisappointed love, a young girl, strictest Integrity and honesty, far Cown An eccentric old creature wear- also newly arrived, loses her spotto B. -, die. hav Tb lets mountains tn them the 8yd couver, deep feeling your published front being th drunken sot which Trust a grand, stupid, lovable tranquility; ney Bulletin. "True to tho Instincts Of what Is right sad true; ing born rimmed spectacles, dirty, less reputation and suffers social The Covered Wagon producers mors like, hug ostracism for many months to or- would foist on ths America sea ha a fascinating, treacher- Of our kind, ws took no notice of a to ths thought appealing . Trust th baggy trousers, pubous intelligence. The mountain stranger who cams to tho counsucks tied at belt and ankle, hi der that- - Louis Harding 'may re- - He. To what is beat to your,- - face wart) and bristly always, end main unsuspecteddwarf mankind and foreshorten ter. Presently he said, 'Excuse me, When another Mr. Brlnnlnstool to an Interest-in- k ' the processions of Its long genera- I know something about that; Ths lover begin attending her eh falls sitting constantly on hto stool In writer, forceful to his manner Trust in tha intuition corner' tying and untying knot In In love, then tfe teal ttoviltry of of presenting hto material. Fightth lies That says: Hers way; tions Th ssa (frowns out human- Call of th Wild was ths better. a string to tho medium through II ths woman comes to life. Bhe ing Red Cloud's Warriors," to filled Trust to ths high snfbttlon ity and time, it he no sympathy Would you mind showing ms Into whom ths author deduces her mys-- crushes everybody and everything with many ezeittng adventurea with alt her; for It belongs to eter- ths chiefT . That stirs your soul today. teries. This odd character has con- -j which crosses her path in a wild to E. GEORGE well iflustrmted WRAY, - nity and of that It sings its Ths volume "Tho stranger held out a card-I- t ' .? : Balt Lake enr a tth actual pEotographx. tempt lor officials of detective scr--' determination to Win th fellSW. wag Jack London. tong fursrer mod forever." ,, From west to east , The warm breath blows, the slender heads - - - droop low As if in prayer; Again, more lightly tossed In merry -- .... i. ' it. ui iThmon 1'. .wVJ 'v. ly w ultra-polish- The winds low murmur in the rippled wheat. , -- bu e, J other region on earth, a fragment of the divine etrrnites. The glories and beauties of the universe are really perceptible everywhere; and Into what seemed utterly sordid Whitman h.s brrath ed ennobling imaginative fervor. Cultured and , academic - folk, are disposed to ishrtrtk from what they i call base, to Ignore It, If sneer at a; looking closer, Vhltmsa tells us that even amid base things you cannot wander so far as to loss sight of the fasavsoa. with all their fountains of glorious emotion. -But what is this emotion! Just here Whitman aeems to stop. With singular vividness, and with the unstinted sympathy of this fervent faith In equality, he tells wlyat he erne. Thougn often his Jargon Is amorphously iWieenlnriesa. his words are now and again so apt as to sp prose h that lnevltabls onion of thought and phrase which makes laming poetry. When he has reported what he sees, however, ut- terly confusing Us values, hs has it. At nothing more to say about leaves yon wfth-- a sense of new realties concerning which you must do your thinking for Barrett Wendell. yourself j sunaetrf' T7I h, xzj ssr :s ss ' mk T FARNSWORTH. Lake newspaper woman, w ho has la the part contributed many articles to The Deseret News, presents 1 the May Everybody's Magaxtns (New Tork) an interesting feature, How Mary Lick lord Btsye Mies Farnsworth spent Toung some months on ths coast and became ecquaimed with many movie stars in Hollywood. In ths present article Mias Farnsworth tells of Mary Pick ford s ideals of retaining her youth. Frank'd Robertson contribute; to the April 20th West ,(New Tork) sa entertaining story, Gun Mr. Reberuoa iw a pop Brooke. alar fiction writer of tho west, re- In Lake at the present Balt siding to tha story time. A reads: A double siege solved this , mystery of the range. M IBSwellATHENE known Balt sub-capti- -- Ths art number of tha University- of Utah Pen, literary magazine, recently appeared on the cam-pu- wasc-tndtree1 ?ecky? I0 ht ;--f East Lynne. Worldwide literary Interest has been stirred by tha publication of ths real story in "East Lynne, in a further volume by tha anonymous author of "Uncenaorod Recollections. which created such a furor a year or SO ago, Tho author says Thackeray told hla father the facts and that his father told them to Mrs. Henry Wood. East Lynne, ha said Is aim-pl- y the true story of Lady Augusta Fan, an of tha fnrat beautiful women of her day, who ran away with Sir Arthur Paget, leaving her husband, tha Earl of Morley. -Bhe left a llttl baby but came bock tea year later as a nurse when tho chld. Lord Bonington, was dying, and took car of him to the end. Her husband recognised her bqt never let her know be had dona so. Another good story hi th volume tells how th present prince of Wales was one day told by his grandfather. King Edward: . Ton must be a good boy, David for if you arc not, when you become king they will cut off your bead as they did to King Charles. said the thea I dont cars. small prinea. T shall never .be king" (By Universal Service) -- Night ' - llur aerv-men- ta roys-ealt- - er Pra ' - otwnf?1 I ... ikrgi fni PPr ' - Bur-han- k. ot 7 i a annual-woma- d- -- -- . - - 1 ' . mon-stotur- ak Thelma in the Erisudaom Martaa Mark. Pries, Irrtn Baron. The Patty Behind ler. Vara Tra Kearl, P. M. ' F.. and Bam HamllL It is announced that there will be a special Mother's day Issue of the Pen. m Several Utah poets. Edith Mrs. Clift oa Brooks; WalFeChaar ter M. Horne, Hanson and Minnia J. Hardy, are in Anthology of represented a vol Newspaper Verse for ume (the seventh) compiled by Enid Franklin Plane Davis of honor Oklahoma. It la a distinct It writer. Utah thus accorded the is interesting, also to not that tha sweetest editor says. Soma of tha tributes to babies that It has baau appeared, m Utah newspapem - . e e O. "A. Fitzgerald, of this elty, nigh-wacontributes to April Western article of ( Los Angeles) Utah Dealers Find local Interest March a Brisk Month." Other Items of interest" her appear la this Issue of Westers Highways One. "Arbitration Clause In New Utah Contracts." 1 alau H - Mr. Fitzgerald, "Feeders and Grower Digest. U the name of an Interesting tittle orfAB issued by the Feeder wd Growers Berries Bureau, thia city. se of A or 11 24. contains The much oi interest, especially woolmen of this state. , Cod Is Foand Xhorywber. To ma 'remains nor place nor tlms My country Is to ovary dims; 1 eaa be calm and free from oare , On any shore, since God Is thera. Char-rtngt- en, my-piaa- aur ys -- , While plao w seek, or plaoc we shun. The soul finds happtosas to none; But, with a god to guide eur way, 'Tn equal Joy to go or stay. Could I he cart where thou art net That were Indeed a dreadful lot; But regions pods remote I call. Secure of Hading God to alL Ah, then! to his eemfcraeo repair; My soul, thou art no stranger thsr: There Imre divine shall be thy guard. And peace and safety thy reward. MADAME GUTON. - A BREEZE IN THE MOONLIGHT . G. p. Putnams Buns have arranged for tbs translation Into Eng- lish of La Bria an Clairs d French version by Lune," th George Soulle d Morant, of one of tho oldest and most famous Chinees romances. The flowery title, which Is a poetical formula equivalent to "A Love Story," will probably he rendered Into English as Th Breeze in th Moonlight "Verses paste-diamo- "V THREE ERNACU er '' k. contains a number of stories, essays, poems and Illustration. In the issue there ara two full page Illustrations, one by Frances Rager by Adolphus Harand, the other vey. The cover. Is by Vern Dams oreaiix. Ths contributors Include; Eileen Mulholland, M w Auua Mqeser, Grace Hosier, Fslrel Anderson. Cecil Btreeper, Mauds Bltxti Trone. It ass 1 , SECTION M Our Home Writers , And Viewpoint In Regions Where f y Al Osmond the narrow mind. narrow be both deaf and b Und than have a dog-o- n mind. feller with A narrow m md Is Just about as bad a curs to all hto kith and kind as any they havs had. H nevsr wants to a bird with do a thif g that makes his townah lp grow, hut, llks broken wing that has to take It al ow, hs trie to step th human flock from flyin out of sight to q nest of somethin like a shock that mud sad rails finds th brighter light. He wants to wallsr against th plan to quit our chew to of th cud end learn to be a man. H builds a great big ugly wall around hto sens of sight end never heeds a single call that corns from what to right. If hs decides to keep a store h cuts a n all in two and takes th hlnres from th door and tries to maks it do nntll ths business hs is to begins to Call and fall and than hs thinks it fa a sin to drink hto Adam's Ale. The biggest Rsubsn yon will find Is him that has a narrow mind. IdThrather -- s A NEAT LITTLE PAMPHLET Ths Duttons havs mad a and to anyone asking for will It is only to tha gift of aa old it, a aend neat llttHa pamphlet by Kathbook that th giver may affirm ths leen Norris Charles O. Nor excellence af hto own tests and rto, to whichabout Mrs. Norris tolls ths compliment that of hto friend. No story of Mr. Norris dsslrs to writ on can hav mors than aa inkling fiction, and of tho suocess which of what value lies to new books; attended hto efforts when ones ha they oom like strangers, 'TTuttilng could glva himself up to his long from th press, wanting to b tab togs. n tote ana's boms long before their Worth is known. Yon Nervous? New books may occasionally b Are enjoyed and valued; they ars not Why Wait For a Breakdown? loved untU tholr vanities hav been stripped from them, ths fins Jackets destroyed, th buckram worn and thslr stiff backs mod supple by contact with humanity. It la to ths old hook shop that they tovtts sympathy and may evoke affection, for their presen o that they have passed through human hands, that man havs listened to thslr voloslses whgperlngs snd have spoken one to another of what these book hav told them. Hors even tbs poorest among them has somewhat the dignity of age; they stand together a motley foolish, company, th wise, th Jesgrave, saintly book and bawdy chilters of old time; some are ths dren of Babel and havs foreign tongues; some bag qulokened th appreciation of rich men and been clothed in purple and fth linen; some stand In tatters but their value being known tholr pries Is that of a rare Jewel By Gordon Ray Young,, from "Dawson Book' shop. ' Th Ektund Stadia. Mrt. Jennie King POES APOIOGY. A letter of apology written by BILLINGS, Mont. believe Poe to a creditor Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Edgar Allan whom be was unable to pay a dehk Is th greatest help to week wore of S4 was sold at auction to New en of any medicine they can take. York tb other day for 1(94, or tea Bom few years ago I had a nertimes ths amount which th post vous break down brought on by aU hto exertions could not meet. through toward weakness and over The letter has no literary value. work. My nerves went all to Men who felt the humiliation of the it we Impossible for ms to pleoea aleejN position less keenly or were bent I got so all run down and weak on making a good ease for them- - that I Jurt had to give up and waa selves might eaa ly have made a in bed when I started taking Dr more picturesque narrative of their j Pierce's Favorite Prescription, but' woe. Yet th simple note from alter taking a few bottles of thto on sine grown famous is worth medleln I got Well and strong. It ton times the debt .that dictated relieved tn of all Inward trouble, th apology. my nerves in good condition. put If Poe had received an eqnlva- - Strengthened every organ to my lent per word for hto tales and body and mads m feet Ilk a new Mrs. Jennie King, fill poems hs could hav lived to lux- - woman. died rich. . snd would But that 24ad ury An, South. havs been Obtain thto famous "Prescript contrary to th fate the world ' usually reserves for poets, tlon" now. to tablets or liquid, frora snd Poe might have.srritten with your druggist. Writs Dr. of th thslancholy that makes President invalids' Hotel to Pierce, Buffa. work so distinctive i-iBan lo, N. T, If y Chronicle.- advice. Adv. Charm of Old Books. j T . ; r |