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Show , , , , z- , , OUR SECTION -- , . (1,1 .;,, 4'1- - ---- 4 a. ftio .1 ,;.... i 1 0 fib ' t.:t :4 ,,''' , r Ilia re.t the reel Mime el' rrtn ariractort iihtetIt I. th of A I 'Fria ar,t) la arid la pi, a ,.i iv', 04 meteit,ed !,. rrt,I v.. 11 I SEA THE WAR. Ohlitalt4 ,.01a 1.1 INC fbiHri tit tale, t, , 4 II lie bf ., it.j,.... iit lim imittLiel i.i.s I as the l'inwer in the vik,na 1,,, iIi artrA. it tb O4 b010Mabl Ilsm,,. ,,..', . - , ,'' c, fill? ffb lit A ' h ....., 11 tl ' . .4 Si. 1111...il' 04 ik lmt .n it, it lit 7 .'44.4 l'i ,o Ntes,, anti IiiAet mil ,,11,ti V411,1 ' ttli (Mei ;h f MA! A koll,torotlo.w 1,!!!, !I Wien). J Of L1111rrh.11 tAtwhitr41 in pat dile! UUI4II44 at (lib.: to the lool, 1110,14 ( ,cler9Amt4 11 1,1,t4 ) It,. and ( tt lat.' his.ol) i tabulated . ,"'-''''''''- JL'; 1,1'1 ; k .. our day are ntlci t":,! a notlion! tisata , , , r Christian age! Ft 4114e Nfurder in secret feat -re t The cruiser "Sorrow tree" rodes on the mare. Crawls to its keel the ambuNhing The hero, though he be Ventureborne, brave, Sinks and drowns eitsti 11;r111;any. I.11 vim rIpe re and the a orid ',sea h, IF. oh a toitthm fot the pi osi eks of outlet) treats ou.th.tot The final ;lie Aimistoe and Titati petool and tht golleAlogleol tAlot,i of Illf !tiling laii t'll of Europe. A , coloi ia,111. index and nine maps tate the use of the to,,,k. 441 hey uphold. ill ghoul; GINII.A HOOK. A the whirling pool. in E. IN Bow VALLEY Vrederok ,roer) 1.011). Denied is the hero death. Victims that fall; The treacherous "sub- st.ahs the ship Nor is the poet's breath a the back. in in 1 NI ;stokes Mow - 4,414- the old woman's sack. unrelentinz Rages and roars, Befouled and disgrace a by the snares in the doer, Only the taunting Cowardice crows Mars starts, himself distractedCo weep. A i ll.e IL en.mbeted foreniot weigeta and teachro. and w 14 14, and engin. Writing.' - mace. there being also an editorial. as rA Nlisinfornied l'op!a " aml well as -- Reminiscences" by 11,,aria tore. Success. and Money" are sub-- 1 Young Ibiugall. "A Tribute." by Prtst. .iecoi to Pitch atten tion is gl in in the M artha It Tinge y, at m a story -- rift"' Current Literary Top- - Years Ago." by Ruth May Fos. Th. department. The Nianuacript Market ' Is full ' illustrations include fine portraits of ice" .f information front 'dittos as to their l'reet Brigham Young. EIJI R. Snow, -prePient needy', and Th. Writer's Di- -- Elinins ki. Taylor. and th three adof the l'eriodicale," giving rctory constituting the present pre.- (trusses Of publiciiiions that buy manti- - IIVOIlICIV of the Y. I. !it. I. A.. leo a of moat,-script... and teliing what kind interesting group of eleven earlYmanuscripts are adapted to their use, day workers for women's advance-i- s Ed,tores -- The girl reader alto became ro terested in "Anne of Green Gabl..a and her fortureedue suiroundings the north, it'd coast Just 0er the American line. iii the Iii te Illage of he more than Glen $t. Mar). a her 'draped to folioa the oine a little farther along lifea as)in the perusal of "Rainbow Valley.Anne as young matron has lost nom her charm. but. like most married folks. falls rather into the background hen her youngsters 1111t1 their tompamons experience It series of adentures and incidents not unlike he a n. Just as thrilling and pinioning. While Anne. now Mrs. Dr. Blythe. is away in Europe with her small family, a new minister, who is a good preacher but wholly impractical oan a family man. is Fettled with his four motherless children in Ihe church of Glen St. Mary; and the story relates mostly to the undinciplined family lire of this little group, The neglected children become the "disgrace of the town." unconsciously, of course; anti their escapades and attempts to retrieve mistakes. form an amusing anti at the same Utile touching story. Under the influence of genial Mrs. Blythe and her interesting children many difficulties are overcome. though the lat. ter, as well as the miniater's children. nearly become contaminated with evil by befriending and associating with a lit4lo girl named Mary who has run away from a cruel guardian and uses all sorts of dreadful words and tells most stories. However, the learned father finally discovers through a village gossip the sad plight of him home flock. and takes to him. self a very charming and wife who soon straightens outpractical all the difficulties and establishes a proper around the atmosphere parsonage. The Implacable Mary is also cared for and reformed. "Rainbow Valley" is not only a good story, hut it contains also a vast amount of good common senne calculated to help one to appreciate the conditions that may confront children and to obtain a better understanding of the Child mind. . t to call. death Ne lb) A continued. -- Other feature!' of the present ment - coer page' Juvenile Inatructoc---F- or the November Juvenile has it hand-- ! Lonely colored picture of a hillside New England farm, with the "(rout on the punkin and the corn," Mg'WM! of Thanksgiving; and a poetic expression. "Thankful." is by Grace Ingle" Frost. The principal article, which la prettily illuatrated. la "The by Hyrum C. Tetnple in Hawaii. Pope; but the Thanksgiving theme Is carried out in two pioneer stories by Annie Lynch and Flora B. Horne reapectivelv. and in 'iA Discharged Soldiet's Thanksgiving." by L. Lula Greene Richards. An important paper to thone engaged in Sunday School work la the Questionnaire. with General Supt. David O. McKay an preceptor. given at the general cotiference t S. Ft. Union in October of the D last. on "How to Conduct the Sunday School." leime are stories by Elsie, C. Carroll, ".I. G. 11.." and Ruth Moench Bell, while the 'esteems, notes, queries, etc., are tnvaluahle to those engaged In the work which The Journal so ably cham- pions. The Chilareteit FriendOne thing that must be said for The Childrena Friend Is that it is never behind-han- d in date of publication: the becember number has already been mailed to subscribers. On the- cover page, as a vignette, appears a pleasant picture of Aunt Louie Felt. general president of the Primary associations whose organ The Friend is: and as a frontispiece Is presented a portrait of Prof. Evan Stephens ("Evan Bach" of the charming pioneer story for little readers which Is concluded with this month's A number of carefully installment). Christmas prepared and selected stories and games are given; and Primary instructors will be greatly assistYoung Woman'a JournalThe No- ed in their work by a close study of vember number of The Journal com- and acquaintance with preview of memorates in picture and story the the various departmentthelessons and Jubilee anniversary of the organizasuggestione for the year ISM As 11 tion of the Daughters of Zion for mulesson in the practical spreading of A poem on the tual improvement. sunshine. the visit of Granite stake IIINPet is by Ruth Msy Fox, and the Primary children to the Old Folks In iprose sketch is by May Booth Tal the county infirmary is commended. le the peace of a rural lationships-- -it place around which the theme is woven, in that golden time of the year when summer and autumn Wend. A THE PEHENet 41, MOTHER GOOSE. poet sits by the roadidde. near a rustic pans a gently flowing bridge that Tit E Hi le P s51 IT II NioT H ER Gott isi ;:- stream. Across the bridge come in awL verifted c and ollated hy text rerwe Elmendorf. M A , l'h D.; ;. F. their turn the humble country folk. Putnam's Sons, New York and Lon- - and the poet in his shaded restlng don place meditates upon them. one come the passersby: an One 5Ir. E. Boyd Smith is to be credited urchin by on a big white horse: another drawJwith the original and amusing lad, trudging along with hie string of tiny fish; two rustic" belies; an ings from which the numerous thus- - ditioned youth, a Shuffling Tom"; a rations in color and in black and white pair Of lovers. to whom the landscape that gleam from the pages of this- seems Arcadia; a furtive farmer in delightful book were made; and beof straying twine; a bronze- sides the editing of the teat, Dr. Eimen- - search farm-han- d faced with black, cur:y a most interest contributed has dor( of the hair; a splendid youth. type of the tng foreword. telling the hist-irnation's strength: a pathetic widow. touch beloved and discuesed Mother her dere:ict of the countryside but patient Cootie, her origin. her family, memory of bygone home. and her work. The conclusion and serene in thebroken-hearted a pair of this foreword. reproduced for the happiness; benefit of bibliographers, is as fol- - bearing a tiny casket which enfolds in their infant dead; two wayfarers with tHrs: "Mother Goose originated was evil in their e)es anc '. an air about France between 1650 and-16( translated Into English by Robert them that betokens desperate deeds. On they go. this variegated Sambers in 1729, and did not reachuntil 1785 when Isaiah Thorn- pany and the poet mtutes on them as Newof the es gave us a reproduction they pass. In each he sees a human Author ot "Joaraal of a Dinappointett Maa," happooed by Many to I. if. Ci bery print in England. As the differ- - soul that wakes a contemplation of been have of life's mysteries and brings him closer' Newbery wenn, 11 am Brace Frederick CantomintroOae of Moot Meloarkablit cnt editions added to and changed, tk3 has the to the great heart of humanity. I. Literetureit Mre Malay Aohtordi Will Have comes Thomas edition. until today we have and the quiet stare Evening NO More Childhood Works of the same. appear. while Prlittedhothor et "The over the many different versions fleidel Voider,. . frintly some' very modern-rhymis Wafted a seen OperationWbore Did Plirase .10 Strik4e- ineluding absolutely nothing to do notes of the sacred hymn. the blendedi 'LATEST in their) worshipers MAGAZINES1 American volume little church village the. trees The i pith the original which. 'LON DON IJTEIUItY LETTER - of must be ac- - poet rises andamong the. road. Isaiah Thomas, turtle into In ter. AmerleaP u to the rule teded to be the first American publi- Far off the eity'ri twinkling lirhte in- - of alternating month rsuant in the by cation of '.1.tther Goose." 4 i Special Correspondence.) vite his raze and he trudsres toward use of the tract attention In the United States, ' arla ia The present onmpliation, makes a them. thriEed by the thought of Love guages, the English November ONDON, Nov. 12.News of the else It is hard to account for the connumber of 240 pages and this some of VOitall4, and Home. goqdly ts.l. magazine is printed in Spanish, the death of W. N. P. Barbellion," viction, which I understand has been Tt is a sulemtid hit of is 'flivided in fifiur parts: (I) Mother literary work. contents being translations of articles general-- among the books many readwhise ienutrkahlA "Journal .of - ere-eloose melodies as collected bythe- r' feel-irA Thu in and in craft that have appearedIT-- newspaperstha tWeits was- "Bis ceradded are to which a to society, hellion." Well's denial, which was Percy Disappointed Man"appears associat- - manship. To the discriminating reader and magazines of the United States. usually rhymes nursery fain to it min not but the Westminster Gazette, . refreshing and Fine tribute Is paid- to the late Andrew have made Its big a sensation In the Pol 1 with Mother Goose; (2) original -. delightful. The prove honk itself. In make- - Carnegie in a bulletin of the Vational United States as It did when issued was definite enough. 1 Mother Gode with a separate prei "It a it of euperlor City Bank of New York, and in an edigenuine diary,"- - he wrote. edi- - , face (the. prefaee to the. NewbetX and most attractivea die- - torial from the New York 'Evening earlier here, will Trobably have reach- - It wail brought to my notice "by my Lon- - onet in written referred to,' bion above e.rodit to the combined eff(rts of Post; and from The Yale Review is ed America before this letter is print- - friend U. H. Mar, and I saw it first-don In 1765, and, as far as is known, the paper of Prof. Henry ed. In which case it no doubt will when it was already In prlot. The ever written for chil- -- the puhlisher ..and the author. who, as reproduced A. Beers on Roosevelt as a proofs were sent to me by my brilan ianrttihmet Irneatlh rreenf'is foporks ) i literary have been revealed that Barbellion's" liant helsldf nansw;;ells1 roifenndasinatilingk h(14s)3k) i'ithenepri!!saanndt contemporary, Mr. Frank Swinman, Other authors and publica- - real name was not. as so many s a J of Little who had arranged for its pubnerton, tory criean reviewers seem Insistently to represented in this tesue'óf of Tom Thumb;" of letters. 4 "the famous historyfollowed lication, together with a bale of 'Barhave believed, H. G. Wells, but Bruce are Edward Bellanly-Partridg- e, a few by litils latter being hellion's' original publications in vari-- 1 in Sunset magazine; F. S. Frederick Cummings. A PEARL Or PRICE. are shielded which I Dates ,of notes 31. the authar of this, one of ous scientific periodicals. The writer In Church, Scribner's; Henry theAged eyes by the legend on Ti-had expressed avibih that would TIT kern inquisitive"All 4 Mn()N by Psvid Anderson: C. most extraordinary huntahdocuin - the Corrance, Intern'sforbidden il dren a preface to the book and. under the ch. ' the first page, obban41rrill Colopany. Indian- - tioaal Journal of Ethics; Sam ments ever published, died on Wed- -- circumstances, There are 201 to- go beyond here, his wish was a comuel MeChord Crothcrs, in the At- - nesday last at Gerrard's Cross. Ox' colored plates, and the piee mand." A 4 where Bernar fordshire !antic George to The almo.st Thomas and Wabash are has the author. J. gone Monthly. white Smart, Shaw also lived for a while), the The Real "Barbellior0 'tures In blackas and the jingles themseivea River flats of Indiana for the locale of I In the American Journal of Sociology. The real "Barbellion," Bruce Fredas numerous , cause of his death being the creep-- . a is It gift .,c Cummings, was the son of a ' the ing paralysis' which for years hal erick liall oana. y child Mexican ReviewAdorning i howokhltcht'atiswtoouPlidaYn' tfoi et! df oprf irel.. hap- - !trim storytrulyi:vir he for itionand 1 afflicted him and which he knew only West Country newspaper writer, and cover of the November . page Review !hunters who ply their 'trade on that are PY- For many developed when a boy a passionate of Lie. Luis Cabrera and too well was incurable. ) t enthusiasm for zoology. Entirely una new and picturesque Hon. portraits Carter Glans, secretaries of the Months it had rendered him utterly aided, '1 he taught himself everal lanAN IDYL 151 LAMBOLIII. NE. is a rough and i treasury of Mexito and the of characters. fine his save It for group dead -. helpless, already --United I in order to further hie studies. e o amatic life they liveor did States CROSS intellect which, I am told, remained guages an and roUNTRY tnieresC:1 respectively: It was when be was about IL that Lani-!livFACE: a prose for The Blue Moon, a matchless ing personal sketch is given lf Col. 'clear until the end. I ROADS. Ms forties,. Pauline Fones, who w orked his WaY.I Thus death h as stippild the $310 he began to keep his "Journal" which, bait Lake ,p4aarL,- - was'foand beck bourne; Tbs DeserseNews, when he made the tart entry in it. ex:Vincennes was a village and the from brakeman to clirector-genera- l ' City. Uteb of ilförl 10 one- Of the best guarded liter - tended to Over I Antwenty volumes of Mr. fl'rItler mysfar 'not recent lay beyond. the of National , year.a railway. lines. The pe. ory.,mysteries . local As readers of it will have is the latest addition to Indi- - view is f Meet with 1 informa- - ter y to which scarcely half a dozen manuscript. ' ' dndThis neW work t Larnbournewriter. a.derson general as was he ardent and painslearned. na's list of and by this' tion concerning Mexico, its resources.1 persons outside of "Ba.rbeillott7a" own maintains the high standard of Lis first work he will have won the friend- - !'development. condition?' and needs.; family possessed the kiy. As yet, this taking a naturalist as Henri Fabri', had it not been for that to literature..lt ly consideration of Ile chief among the latter being a better ' writer's story, one of the most Wit-i- s himself and, previous contributions a sketcha bit has attempted to ewe breakdown of his constituthe spell of true i understanding arid a leas euspici-iu- s at- - I nant in the hist iry of literature in complete scarcely more thanhumble arid earth might have become equally reromance where no previous writer had titude On tjle Of life close to the I i rt of the Volted Mates. which genius and tragedy so often tion. heart-throb- s as a nature student. nowned itthis-el-Its- elf be-- 1 Each jEstj to the been with quiet find has 'a scarcely contains hand hand. in thought number -of go pulsating large While still in his early twenties., but lifted up la) !trig somewhat notable; and he has, interesting pictu.res, and in the press even common more humanity bin outlined of the 'he was appointed an assistant at the 1 with high- - produced so acceptahle a story that I Lrlicies are many which'among possess a here. I am able to narrate it in some- Britieh Museum, poetic vision and portrayed of hisi (the ." Is riothlng Bor- .- his friends. his :mbliehers and himself distirct literary value, while of course ll like detail, thank' thing ly artistic skill. would be may well feel gratified with his sue. i. t hose that are more or Jess stalls- - tion supplied by one Who was mainly "Journal';) but soon afterwards thet what ordinarily in did it: failure of his health obiled ' I tical in character are useful for study instrumental 4 In arranging . for"lifiu-r-the complete considered trivial episodes of every- - cesa him to resign; v ' seen in higher perspective. The lierola a youth of twenty. with and reference.. publication of his now famous war. he accidentally ,dayare the remorseDuring most no takes and other' exalted of the name one the is than t11 Pearthunter. nal. surety sommonplaceness an unsealed letter addressedt The WriterThe November num- - I lees and itiumingting ezamPles of self- - opened Its próper place as an integral part of who brings up the giant rrtfipmel with a doctor at a recruiting office to to paper. by comnfitted if 'the literever this for and ln finds it ber peculiar markings, poston magazine cl to un 'analysis . knfinity: biti-ol- in' -- Toed ilvokwilke Aprillost estlei 1 'alutt:erroneous .c'on7 moon in a cold 3".mt IL G. Weill Whit to be little less the,, a sentence ofe Novel celebration 'Canons of denial The by sky, Writing.' goriest ;Johnson's gibe York HUH wrote a preface to "The Jottrilini of a fdsoeimuandk. nooluwttitstnahgastpotenbliyaseawtflytiefterwwhaearlIddsthat t h negation,- for the word Peace" in these of the find. the dickering about the,l the article to which the New best short Disappointed Man," that he waantanawarded the prize for the 111 Jewish the ended days of war has- brought-. sale. the nuirder of pearl tately ' the arrest or- - thp lau'o and his article by any author on any phase thor..yaait glinted in thiscorreaPondence ft) the mind the thought .1f- interna-buYerfor. at life could only be lea Touche Hancock Presumably the Journar- had Rut in this work we are ortamPted lfnehing . lila escape and 1 of tionalw-mity- . at- - most. three 01 four years. ta or man begun with some rehunt the then dimbeen which SlYell published. rg.speriences stIo follows. amusing the with Polltical a:l . concerned not . ' ,. ,e, - ' " . NEW BOOKS I. i hair-rainin- g 97. corn-Ameri- i - I Literary Mystery.Cleared Up By Death of "W. N. P. Barbel lion" es da , us ) trtt-rlr- e ii- -- - - Am-Ro- ' Inter-Ameri- ' rr ": ( - . tull-Pag- I I I , Almost the last work he did was to artang tig extracts from his dairy. Diepublished as The Journal of appo'nted Man." Tha volume is the of a young man, so frank intim in parts, indeed, that Mg publisher obi) Menially undertook its laublica(ion chansed his mind. nd gave Chat-t- o and NVindus the opportunity of issuing the volume. It WWI brought out here about lb. beginning of April. Cummings did not expect to be alive then. and he added to his last page the sentence: Barb, Ilion died on SI. The reviewer of the Westminster Gazette. being unable to discover that any former govornmetit official named liarbellion had died thus recently. hinted at some mystification in conneetion with the work. Inflamed by this discovery." wrote H. U. Wells in reply. your reviewer seems to uspect me of enough cleverness to have forged the entire diary. I wish I wee a quarter as clever as that Barb Ilion is: it is of course. a pen. name. if only on account of the wit. and other people who figure so vividly, in the diary: the date of his death I. also incorrectly given. But that is the only camouflage about this moving and remarkatie book." "Wells and Cummings did not meet." said Frank awinnerton. who ags "reader" to the firm of Chatto Winding. arranged for the publication of "Barbel lion's" book. "By the time that his 'Journal' had been brought Wet Ile's to attention. Cummings' paralysis had extended to his whole body. and it warn impossible for him A number of mesto see visitors. sages, hi:mover, passed between the two. , Pen-Xtun- e. ' I , . story-teller- s, ' noyel-reader- s. fb. - , 3 t-- , "B-M- - -- leal-rrian.- '-zin I . 1 g. --- not ,i."-..- , Mt --------- . --' Awhile of "The Rosary." Ira Florneo L. Kerr lay's many American readers wM be sorry to hest that she has had to undergo a Mous operation. but will be piesibed to know that it was quit succeesful and that the poputar author of "The Rosary" I. going on well. She is the wife oli the Bev. Charles W. Barclay of liert ford Heath. Herta and it Is in a pretty summer-hous- e oLtrdits in th vicar that she does most of her ,itorary work. )11re. Barclay has a wonderful heed of grey hair, but she is still well this sid of modlum height with a ruddy. handsome face. She Is a fine keen religious worker. pianist and At one time she used to conduct a women's Bible reading class In the London suburb of Leyton. which had over bee members. The Charles-wort- h family, to which she belongs. has an unbroken record in the church ince the days of Queen Elizabeth. One of her eight children la a "bust parson" in Australia. Origin of Word& Strikes, seem to be the order of the day the world over. It would not be surprising if many persons had been set wondering how the word "strike" came to be used In this connection. On this Interesting light is thrown be the latest installment of the Oxford English Dictionary (the great lexicon In who. compilatiOn so many American scholars assisted). issued only a couple of weeks ago. In its erudite are pages no fewer thah 29 columnsmean-, given to the word In its various to the toga. and attention is called fact that the use of "strike." In the sense "to refuse to work." is an etch,. teenth century development from the nautical use in "to strike a mast." A quotation from the "Annual Register' for 17911 tells of a body of sailors who,' having grievances which they set forth, "went on board the several and struck. (lowered down) ships their yards in order to prevent tttni from proceeding to sea." In the sam volume of the "Regimer," of & late date in the year. there is an entry! that "the hattErs struck and refuse to work until their wages are raised, the Italicizing of the word indicating! that it was still a novelty with thist signification." Few things are more interestingi than the derivation of such curioull everyday words and phrases. earth.; for example. did the phrase, , "raining cats and clo()J" originate? Here is the explanation. according tot leof - st t d. - - - - s - of Heart UY:W&TJT , , - MASON' , itVII 111E -- .N. . .. pomENS, r . Change . .0., Bward . e, i It." l er i la-he- to tam.. a Miss Marktrnale nd Mrs. Blount. and Is to bo (two In London by Wan 1:Alyth Goodall. ho crostod th part of III. horolmi of 'Hindi Wakes. I ront.as. how ov.r. that I am very dubious about known Why He Mose Meanwhile I have been told by a brother of the diarist how his pseudonym. W. N. P. Barb. Ilion. sea evolved. "Barbel lion was merely a name that appealed to my brother." he said. it ie. I believe. the name of a grocer or something like that. and the prompting to use it was typical of his humor. When I questioned him as to the W. N. P., he explained that one had to 'talent's' such a name and that the initials could stand for Wilhelm. Nero. Pilate." Frank Swinnerton. who as literary The Journal of a taster. accepted Disappointed Man" for the firm which , published it. will probably be recognized by most readers as the author of bee-sell"Nocturne." an AITItnetti of a year or so ago. of "Sh Ops and Houses" and "September." the last named published only recently. No More Daley Ashford. Swinnerton was also the discov ' twee of Daisy Ashford, and it was he now acorrespondent of. the adonE. who Induced Barrie to writs the Vizihietoric preface to "The Young Ash- -- prom "In northern mythology the cat I. ten." I asked him when Miss supposed to have great 'influence on ford's other juvenile noveI , "The the weather, and English sailors still! he told Hangritan's Daughter," whichwould be say.,The cat haa a gale of wind int me took her a year to write. tail: when she til unusually frisky.! published, and which we were prom- - her "Witchee that rode on the Worths were Used some time ago. and was astonsaid to assume the forms of cats. andi ished to have him reply. :'Never.', wind is 'called; the wormy north-we"Acting 'partly on my advice," I? the Nara even-at- 4 Swinnerton explained, "Miss Ashford the the- - present den Vie dog. like the! -has decided not to publish any of wrote wolf. is a signal of wind, and bothfl others of the 'novels' that shenone of were supposed to be that ttaetis Tbe cat. there-Youn- g Odin, the storm-gothem is anything like as good as 'The Visitors.' (though there are fore, symbolizes the downpouring mini . and and the dog the strong gusts of windi amusing 'bits' in all of I them,) am afraid, which accompany a rainstorm. ' AI' would, their publication w add to the 'twin of cats and dogs is thus a, heavy; detract from rather-tha. here. It isn't rain with,wind." reputation that is now ofthe samet 4'. either, as if, teem a finanelal stand. fur newspaper; however, has a quite dif-- I point, she needed to publish them. .;.,, . her profits from 'The Young Visitors' ferent theory. cats and; have already reached a big figure and ,."The hephrase- 'raining writes, is a corruption oft will reach a much bigger one, enough dove," to gratify any wish she is likely to the word 4catadupe,' meaning a cat-- 1 The Greek',Kata,doupolthe. aract., .., have." . had - heard - that "rhe - Young sataracts'of the Nile. frhm Katadoua fall with sound. a1 It heavy Visitors" was to be made 'Into a play, pooto r- ..k but had been unable to believe It. for rainier, eats an g dogsit is raining' , cataracts," -- -what is there to "play?" ' Next, said please! Swinnerton. ., true." is . "It quite ,141: CHURCH. ' "A stage version- Of, the 'nelver has Marshial. ),....'4 been made by two ladies as yet un- - Copyright. 1111t 4 , river-7--surel- - 1 MEOW s. GODDARD IN "THI: M sewn" Heber Goddard, once one f ia here hoen in The Missc.o.the f:rit opera in w hich h Appe.rred with the Fall lAk Opera The deli. wall 1597 Lind the character he sustained Itits that of tottipany -to Lentil. Ptalag and thir Pippo the plietd He pirord 4,rpoolt refiditiim or i Ii.. taw... "Gobble- - Gobble- - duet neer fdiled to draw rounds of upplaue and ratite encolep Mr Goildrd was one of the fountirra of th opet ompaity and he 1,1'14111rd a fltiIIIIWr all his lite Among bin pupil v, r many of the uceaqui eingeto of the day, Ili soutiled n the c.00. and 1.0 grant in graoll opera in Chicago but him profetenct iiIi a 1.4) in teaching and lighter ope;ntic work in the home field 1111: h, Great Ameina : MatthewsThe WinOt of Barbara WorthTheir YesterdaysThe Eyes of the WorldAVhen a Ian's a Man Over Eight Million SoldBuy Them Anywhere Pubtlahera, The Doc;lic Supply Company, Chkago 0,10 J rests of great deeds 06. r of Dan 414", tiimelieell k That Printer of edeIrsThe Shepherd ofthe iiillsTbeCalliag (,,- 0ifbitif lb it 1001! 000 ur7": Other Books by Harold Bell Wright ' - I ,ort. IN rs Itm,,,,t) A, .) I 1.1 Milos' Copies Already Sold 1 IP' I The istory is as sweet and dean and wholesome as the atmosof Gods unspoiled world of the phere of the ()lark hills. The story carries a message of comfort and hope and courage and confidence. There are thrilling incidents related with such vivid realism that one reads with breathless interest. And yet the fascinating power of the story is rather in the skiliful visualisation of the clash and conflicts of life's invisible forces out of which the thrillin: incidents come. f , 'd 12mos-31.50-11Iu- strated Nnarly Ono , ' A 1 ' 11 v04.4 111 , ,.; ,. , THE RECREM1ON OF BRIAN KENT Cloth, er Are' N ' , mmIllimetimei esti v , ' , litoet 44I1I mt t) ' 1. ., 11,e ,.J mie, i. iv-- .., '' ' titioist tt1 mei J ' I " ; A it. iss. :. limmt fling. ilk, .410.6. .11 ' kv,ernv.! ill. ! r .001 ai I, Iff Ole L.IL. iti!! .0 - ,,.,, -- '7 .1 11ss,41 eit 6,1 )1 . ow-0- lie tl,t io"t 110 mallcad 44 , ", ' : :1,' ''' me. tO Ilet f. I ,,e 64,10 I 1..' ..411 k - pia, !,t 13,simma!lssi fl.:,!ol ) -- mss t,ol, At ,':t ts ,m 1;11st4-ail- t tit I..le Now on the ocean No battles rage; The sea 11.01. 11,, 1) I 4 e 'edam e I'm 9. human bents they us and put them down in the mystic, enchanted Ozarks to live in this story ) SW I ctillis, list he 1, brit cat' I04 I awl retie! Brave the ht- tel.,t et Asti kwords kre pprIngter7 ore the Lg.td, how Then one could b.tttlf ! trzed b i st 10i I t 11 I 0 r CA.. lel t, ttliot runes to enrtae 'Twee formelly deemed .n motion The dragonlkee!a On hitt foaming ereJt as cantering proud on the ina,th ot the sast. A bb heist.loo, v, of heroes, the neat, honors H. Moot. 'owl,. fl line te.Ori I iI . .04 i,to ti, til "r 1 me,Iltell 0( Ilir te! 4g- sim !tot is. ,. wete a I e P - cal toile am ,11,04 in Auntie Sue. The author knows life and how we live it or he could never have made Brian- Kent. Auntie Sue, Judy and Baty Jo the actual,. hying ,t I Crir, s v rd tAveetest .0 1 !s t i iui,r 0.0.-- p0 fir , l , p !ha ide rolling ocean, Iiill notai,:a Jst"i ftic. I Bell Wright Harold created the character in fiction tot i I 1.00t1lf 'the fah. I.,r TA. Nemo Aos to !Aoki. J:r. ticgdahl, cititestihot l oftrrthil miust eH9 b te,oe by 1, collivig Ifs aftevor:,,ti l e s kroothotot, IA. ettehrerd .seandin a ran i y.,(1, prtPlCti I f '!111,;a r i. 4,,I1 r et 'le th ha it hriget," Utah Po!elt, i also dit. (0 Mr. 1,thg,Icht tor (At rigorous tromille;on Tried !7.7;;Z, 1, put,'" hit, D, I hIds OP Z-7.Zt- I - V 06 lances Auntie Sue's Philosophy of Life Brian Kent illuitol iteIt V.:..,jilme1A .e.1 ,6, ttdi ,,o1A .1, 4,11 It lillellet telt( I lilt; 1.41: 1 A111 .) AND ALBUMS Re-Creat- ed I., Over till theelem IA.! , .,,m,.. LEAVES FROM OLD liahl I sit 11.e 1919 22 NOVEMBER -a I he ele, fur.! hut leltli ah rsipt4'tot) action I. th9 )e41) of ht tirti a haws and Wee. lh Pria.,14111) e, 4 eatorr awl hath Of the hightey ,I Aim coiled it'd V ild Mask. the idelitity iI 5,1111 at.d Isla lrrtely tirligttrt a ir toettihtto h a tri Ptaritturiter 1,rti I, the t,h11,11 4 widi ............ (b.. THE SATURDAY EVENING NEWS I . glib nEsEitrr a- a..tu re, . ..161;141,110. --- - - DESIMET NEWS1. N, , I ,, .Thr'1.1 , ,,,,,i,. rifr ,,,,,A, ' It , go. o7,1-- rt :',,, N: , to hate the horrid Hung and longed to slay him alit).n gull: bet .. its dky4.my hatreds seem to nolt alwayi I find ft1.- IUSED war hao,had 'aria eall---to grind rn;t my teeth and stamp ;mon ti;u leilrel tank ot. . kn.ow. cannot touch I I a do when foe. on nob a gent down curses halm ',:Tik rtie some 'chaps aft--y skate who'd make 8 worth 'my vhile -have wrought me ill: they handed ne a bitter pill: IAA I forget them sad, their deeds. and spend my evenings stringing beada, and thinking of the boisk, N. I've known who never caused ma grief 01-- groat. And there are men who hate me well and of their enmity theytell.and lily that op on day- re- mote they'll haply bear awe, my goat. My neighbori tell me of their word...74, e-InelHriee stibirme, and tilli 'riie.lawhen tiarinY my the blamedest kind of'timi. They'll all get tired of in n'iveata.ind. handed back their differertéithey' Fee; Serers foolish, threats. the Mr wota soon be full of fur. and teeth and whiskers. as s dome on . It were And hatred is the tiling I hate: no man can keep-hi' :. f brain.-In his be has hatred tully'saae.-lstraight. and te . . -- andM111-1warble-Il- - Mid-hav- kei ll'I-Indulge- . , T - ::.J r 4,,:e4 J. , "-k- g |