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Show I. L. , e ....i4E i '''''...4".1 '' - ..1 'Si A ""...0.00"4,..,...,-,- . a '''' .... ...--- ,..,- ' .'- - s. v,'"'",'!!",'"" , , t - ,. ' ' ' . ..., - ,- --- - - - ,. . 1 .,, - . - .s , - , , ' - - - ' i - , - :, io , t;,, ' J. I I , i - well-love- - k 4 , . tt t ,, - ' S ,,'' 2 1 , I ,:, , , i. , , I - . ' :'' 1 - . , Transcript - BOOKS OF THE DAY! I ?I . 1: - pie of the author' work. It fol. GATEFT or THE GAY. lOWE THE LITTLE LESS. by Alehle Moccasin Trails, Corn& P. Pharall; Appleton . 305 New York; mat There are well worn trails. through piny. - .' ' ' ' i : - ', ., - -- - $3.00. quiet vales. Cut deep In the mossy peat. this They weave . For an unusual change and wind. like paths fol. Austria. in takes of the blind: story place JOWint the Great War. where the - These trails of moccastned feet. , of exchange on money favors everybody in gay Vienna. except the . natives themselves. Valentine Forrester. thil beau-Mut , t English girl who is secretary , in one of the commissions. becomes 11 popular member of the best sets , socially. and all the men fall in with her. During her first six months in Vienna the entire tenor , of ...Valentine's life is changed. e r rom a heart whole. sophisti, , cated; rather cynical young ''mod-er- e she. too. loses herself emo: : 1: tionally and faces a, desperate cris'1' t is with the odds against her. Two meet love her. one. in a shallow. selfish fashion. the other in the ,,.., sense of that greatly malign. 1..., -, ,, ed,word. her heart for Val, Unfortunately ' 1 of the two. goes to the unworthy .. story cornea - ant the climax of the decision and in how she makes iter k the man she finally chooses. . Naturally a story Mud be read to be appreciated. A vertidelight- ful picture is drawn of the'social life of that gayest of gay citlea at the hour of its greatest brilliance when money niad Americans and e folk . and all the rest 1 , English flocked there to spend a few weeks it seems a bit of the "seaso todd for a member of the working ii ,: I, order to be included in the social li mita:tele of such a city. but sirenger things than that were made de- commonplace during that great war of nations after the ade ,rate . , ,. '; , '- ) ) , vg g i - -- lir, k , ., , 1 -- -- t i ' 4, , , 11.' VI : Ylds story Ins 12.ot the ordinary there are 'plot of a 'triangle,' and ideals of a different sort characters of unsual appeal. which be 'will go far toward making talked ,I,Ittle Less" one of the a Ita hi year. .abort novels of re- Style is pleasing with clever Parte and tender love making to even critical hold the attention Of - , : I 1 - t . . , readers. , , POEMS Or TIRE OUTDOORS. by E. P. MOCCASIN TRAILS. I s. - , ''''' . e I ) i '' . i : s... : I t ! t ; i. .1., i i ; - - , 5.., - : -, i i Made long . one-ti- too. Who lived in the great outdoor: He was wild and brave. and no man'. slave, Craved freedom. and nothing , MOM. On the lakes and streams, that fill our dreams. They floated their birch canoe. They pitched their tent. 'neath the firmament And worshiped their Idaniton.. lave had their day, and gone their way. Leaving us memories sweet. ladian lore. of the great outdoor. "Trails of mocessined feet." NEV OUTLOOK ON WILSON ,THE POLITICAL EDUCATION OF woormow by James .:Kerner The witsoN, Century Company, New York; 408 pages, They - The a.uthor of this book was for many years editor and Publisher of the Trenton. New He was an intimateJersey, Times Woodrow- - Wilson from friend of the - time the latter was governor of New Jersey nal hiwdeath. Mr. Ker. ney was intimate also with Joseph P. Tumulty. who was secretor,' to the president. Mr. Kerney writes freely,. ant frankly of his illustrious friend and deals.with intimate phases of his public and relife. private The sult is a new Into some of the thoughts, insight emoopinions sad tions of the Iota who has been Called the, most famous international figure produced by America sine the days.of Lincoln. .in his introduction. 2iir. Kerney lays in part: "Those of us. who lived In the inner Wiltion circle While he was playing the w him change frompolitical game a conaervative Democrat to a very mat. d itan,t Radical, and.. with the coming of war. into an equally Autocrat. Some of us bad front seats for several acts of the mating performance. Doling his occupancy of the White Howe I spent a great deal of time there unofficially. The writing and interpreting of haPPen, Inn. over a period of thirty yew.. has brought association with pun-li- e men of all shades and of varying &area of importance-- There was no other such tidies& interesti experience as watching the forward march of Woodrow Wit-- Pga two-fiste- "Philosophy In Rhyme." "Poems ,from ther Northwest." This volume contains verse of the outdoors that wiii tan enjoyed particularly by Ahem) who Mk to get out in the Oen and who have some know!-edg- e ,. of the woods, mountains and Supplementing the text Cr. lac. 'streams. The book is attractive in similics of numerous letters anti appearance and arrangement, with other documents by and to Mr. one poeutto a page and with mar- Wilson Friends and foes of the late thud decorativa sketches on every Pate. It is pleasing In appearance president will be intereste4 end and would stand out IIMOngt other stimulated by this book. - :books in the library table. Humer- one hair tone photographs of ENTERTAINING AND LIVELY. inountain and woodland ...scenes sorxrnxo BRASS, by Ethel ?din. impplement the text.- ' Duffield & Company New ills. Hayward has dedicated his , York; 340 para. $2.00 balk "To one who loves the north Irlada. mY beloved wife and best here cr.i have another "Rabbit." 141,,. Carlotta Brown Hayward." but on EnaltFhman. and one can leading poem, for 'which the I conceive of nothing Intkre far fetca tahutte is-- mama& Is a good aaio- - adi This character la fascinating - , - . - - 4 - t- 4, 4. 44. t-- - .".,-,--r-4.,,,- ,,, , ip, ' , --- -- " . ..v...,k.s".- - dn., ---,- AIL Boob of Today Demand ToterAnce e, I't r A r r A , -- - :l3t..t - - . . - - Two principles must be coneed tui is standards that do not fit the aa old an the so. id if we are to view literature with ti who today wears skirts that tolerance. First.- - that the author mew,. of a serious work of imaginative , must ft 'w; tokrant literature is a creative artist and realise there la a new frank- that his look is a work of art and ness in that our lives. as our in books. must be judged as such. We may ; about famlis life. with ask: ties the author revealed pro- - A frawkneus . its selfishness and mashes tundity. sincerity? lias he told ran ny as well as its 'beauty his truths concerning ?do mem. and ty about that is joy. rably? Has he written with such only akin deep--Ju-respectability st deep enough eloquence and such sweep of the tocover Imagination as to carry with him , that are sham, about convenuon6 largeir meaningless. About The poet William Wordsworth the finely penetrating mind of relations between Men and was born in 1770 at Cockermouth reader who is attuned to all that Is the women. "out sex., We may not ask: I. this Cumberland, England . where tht beautiful? Along with this frankness b the fit-- reading for the young girl? Derwent. of spirit about lift. Will shock it the sewing society? We are nodisillusionment Fairest of all river". levee longer satisfied with the The second PriociPle Is. "1'; old To bend his wormers with mr The world la philosophies. being k work of art, piece 0' questioning. nurse's song. And as being And from his alder shades and imaginative literature. such as tic- - ithe best means ofauthors, lion Or poetry or drama,. Is not a I expression the rote world has ere found. yet question- author is under no ob- And from his fords and shallows tract. The ligation to expolie the evil of the try. the new hooks. eent a voice especially the world. to exalt the good. to teach new That flowed along my dreams. fiction. differ from the old in I moral conduct 'nor to exhort' his more more frank. plain lino., readers to conformity with ar- - 'being Ant It is almost a shock to one who copied they differ In being freer custom. I from . knows Wordsworth only by his ideas of bow preconceived Ho II to Ilia oreatte calm end noble poetry so read that unhampered. do act. in being less In his own Our ;moralistic and didactic. he was of a moody and violent part is not to lay down way. in being the rules temper, and' that his mother de- nor dictiite the content. but to say more ready to cut loose and seen ;new to old weer, her of him alone among quoit:on.. spaired the work is well done or five children. She died when he not. If the author has a narrow idactisism.-- eays the of the perioi . killa art. was but eight years old. but not experience of life. a shallow con- iNot what men should do sod feel till she had exerted an Influence eelitien of its meaning. a table which lasted all his life. so that lief as'to the nature of man, if be aspire to,but are the materais he could remember her as the mistake evil for good. or good for of art. Thus art is divorced from as it is divorced from ethics. l, heart of all our learning' and our be will Inevitably expole all at codes an.1 from moral propaloves." The father died some six these deficiencies. and even though years later. and the orphan wail he speak with the tongue of men iganda, the older school of writers taken in charge by relatives. who and of angels, there will be a sa ys: sent him to schom at Hawkshead. false note that will invalidate his Ludwig In the beautiful lake region. Here. work. For shallowness and nay- 'They wrote not to interpret re-apparently. the unroofed school of rowness and falsity and sensuality I &thy but to illustrate a superim- nature attracted him more than are They need no posed theory' of right and holy living." And, reluctantly . we have the discipline of the classics, and critic to condom them. This does not mean that an au- - I to admit that this is largely true he learned more eagerly from flowers and hills and stars than tiler mood write only of the true. Even George Eliot let didactisin from his books: but one mud reed the beautiful and the good. Art stultify her art. Take Maggie in She Wordsworth's own record. in The cannot be absorbed merely in the The Mill on the Floes. " could not, in the end. elope with Prelude. to appreciate this. pretty things of life. nor yet in the- her because lover. neither she nor Three things in this poem must lovely things. The artist who con the author of her being dared to Impress even the casual reader: fines his efforts; to the production go against their consciencewhich first. Wordsworth loves to be of pictures of charming bowls of 'defeated So she gave alone, and is never lonely with roses. or dahlia, or yards of kit- - UP Stephen and went back to dull. nature; second. like every other tens or puppies lo appealingcon-in ness from which a is. innocence their only sportive 'cataclysm child who spends much time alone like a flood couM rescue her. in the woods and fields. he feels fessedly not the one who stirs and us. May Sinclair shows how the new the presence of some living spirit. uplift. can is Neither who the author who realist. aloe a new paychelis real though unseen and compan- an artist in the most plastic and t gist, handles such a situation. In ionable though silent: third, his' of mediums. be expected I The Life and Death of Harriet impressions are exactly like our sensie to confine his attention to pleasant Preen.' she has her Harriet full own, and delightfully familiar. romances fit for i of cherished inhibittons drawing-rooand of biWhen he tells of the long summerl table of the Ideal the remote hertted home. far standards of conduct give day spent in swimming, peaking from passion and turmoil and sin. up the rnan she loves because her in the sun. and questing over the The more his knowledge friend had first claim on him. Self. hills; or of the winter night when, of life the profound more earnest hia put'. sacrifice sustained her for a on his skates he chased.the reflec . in presenting what he con- - Rut what did it do eventually? Miss don of a star in the black Ice: or ceives aa truth. the more faithful Sinclair takes of no caof his exploring the lake in a boat. he Is to the high demands of hb !tinny to avoidadvantage iasue. Instead. and getting suddenly frightened 'art. the more certain will he be to she lets us see the Harriet ruined and when the world grew big and select unpleasant sub- - the man she loves ruined. strangeina all this he 1".. simply jects and to eat things that shock had thwarted the best thingsTheyin multitude of our own the fine sensibilities of fine people themselves, hence. they decayed recalling vague, happy memories of child- who are incased in prejudices. peo- - and died Lillian C. Ford in hood. lie goes out Into the woods pie who are trying to remain faith- - Los Angeles Times. at night to tend his woodcock snares; he rune across another "I SHALL REMEMBER hoy's snares. follows them. finds a SIMPLE THINGS" woodcock caught. takes it hurries away through the night. And then. WI en I go back Into the earth I heard among the solitary bills The Royal Socieirs Gold Metal Low breathings coining after ma The again. that I than miss are things for literature wee presented at the and sounds simPle things. of undistinguishable motion. Not lips. not seeking .hands but recent centenary dinner of the society to Rudyard Kipling. who rob;nte wings That is like a montal Photograph And heavy branches bent beneath made bhp first public, app:aranos since his recent illness and took a n - home Any boy who has through the woods at night win The rivet streaming with the sun- little fling -at the critics. "Fiction.he said. "began when set sky. recognize It Instantly. Again he tells us of going on A wet leaf blown against my up- some man invented a story about ' another man; it developed when the cliffs: turned face. r man told tales abouta The homelylorelineaofQueen anoth-Ott. when I have hung woman. This strenuous epoch beAnne s lace Above the raven's nest, by knot' the first bead-dregat school of destructive a butterof a Wearing , of grass as well as the fins' critic. fly. h And fissures in the sliphis short but vivid life When I go back into the earth Icriticism pery rock to explain that a man again. But and almost (so it Remembrance not be a hen to Judge the of such quiet things merits seemed) of an omelet. He died. I'd take Suspended by the blast that blew As water but the lilies sleeping on a lake. question he raised is still amain. . hollyhocks along a country at issue." Shouldering the naked cragoh. And lane. The famous author. who received at that time. the from the hands of the While on the perilous ridge I bung I 'have loved trees and tram 29 Earl medal of Balfour . expressed greet tenderly. alone. -I them .near. shall apprinelatiOn. The fletion saying: seep that I With what strange utterance did Knowing am woraty of that honor happily. the loud dry wind be Moore In upon ycur heads." By Elizabeth Evelyn Blow through my ear! The Sty Sunset.' Speaking of the search by authseemed not a sky ors in all ages for material and of earthand with what motion '..SOMETIIING TO GIVE methods of expression which would moved the clouds! life. express Kipling called 'Vachel Lindsay since the death truly attention to the few who had 'No man can read such reeords et Mark Twain is the one Ameri- reached the highest pinnacle. really -without finding his own boyhood can author who has something new All mn." he said. Interagain. and his own abounding 101 te give Europe and the world, and ested in reflections on "are themselves of life. in the poet's early impres. be gives --it abundantly and well.' in whether surroundings. From The Guardian." London glom heart of crystal or in a 3. LONG. I muddy pool. and nearly every . therefor the on. commonly it used. wrPer who supplies a reflection may , and the novel is entertaining and Perhaps one is too hard. desires a share immorsecretly of ami L. that thle is 'free thinking." lively to its last word. i for the pains he has been The author is realist with '1 that growth of the "real our is tont, holding up the mirrers ethic): strain of satire in her slant on Eng . draws: nevertheless. In the re- Iot in reflects of said leas himself, fish life. she has caught up the viewer's opinion. the in every age some men rain Jazx and brasm of modernity and such stuff. the better- I favor temporary because they have both to the conservative applied met the temporary need of their A711 DiPTHUCVIVE WORK. life of her native land to a daring age. as Tet; their future. PSYCHOLOregards extent- - Her gusto and method of THE MEANING OF l stand on a pert-e- t equality GY. by C. K. Ogden; Harper at ; they expression impress one as being with fellow craftsmen. The too American to have been coined Brothers, New York; 32d Pages. I utmosttheir a writer may hopelefor is 43.00. by an English woman. I that there may survive of his work The story will not be retold here I a fraction good to be drawn will be enough that volume a is I just this: the young Hobbit is a Berge UP011 later to or embellish chap very modern but likable. who read with interest by the psycholo- Isome sncient uphold or truth turns his clovernessandgenuins gist and the layman- as well. In some old delight reborn."Publicability into power when the real this volume. Mr. Ogden summariz- ; Lodger. , "show down" comes and after es the contributions- of others to all hope had beengiven up for his paTchologras a whole, pointing out ' SEEKING INSPIRATION'. He loves where the defects of various psychologireal awakening. Edgar Lee Masters has kit New and how he wilt. but eventually he cal studieashowing what is lacking is forced to bow, to a greater pow. to make psychology a complete York for Santa Fe. where be will , study th prehistoric ruins of Art. er in that. he enters politics and be. science. and the old myths and emslcomes successful, and skt the end of It is rather a. technical book. Ii WM toms still to be found In the Indian are TeS112011 ,follocontents the story one be has, made but the easily that word "advertise" and Rs soul wtd: Mr. Ogden presents his mater- ' tillages. for this material ail has mate "publicity" the most import- ial in a well writien and enter- la bearing on the subject of the ant words in the language of any taining faehlon. Moreover. be long poem "Atlantis." on which knows his subject At the present he has been working for the paw country. This is the second nor 1 of this time he is director of the Interna- year. . writer. her first of two years ago ional Library of Psychology. PhiMethod" ISOM; AND POOLE- - AND FAME gave much promise but did not ad. losophy and Scientific feel that Wes deep .or- equately prepare one for the Magdalene c011ege. Oanibridge. and t row growth undergone" betwe-- the two. editorof "Psyche." He knows what I One critic says: I h more than I can bear: this novel he is writing abott therefore. and falter lest tomorroW will invite considerable curlositY is in a position to advance theories II fear Holds more than Just my shareand comment. A new English and criticisms. writer who treats British eomplacAccording to Mr. Ogden ,there ' e are yet many unsolved psychologi- , I smil and think that lires dart ency to a dose of bitters meaning intruding upon prerogatives of the cal problems. For instance. the co- 1 ,Seerns not so dark today: Irish. Her methods are similar to ordinating faculties of the mind. those of Lewis and Menciserr. She This matter is not fully under . to the gicsigrite hope and ha-thas reserved irony for her close- -- stood; how impressiors are gained. II Of flowers on my way. Is the control in how obtained is by present pity implicationon I trustand know that urea great the main narrative is a gorgeous mind. etc. . s ,., Mr. Ogden does not give remedies. trials cartoon."' A good deal about paYchologY-0Perati- ons Are great because I doubt; . I feel he etc. find and mind. the says that of dill!! are they ,ONE MANS 'LIFE To point ftesdla Is still uncertain. and it will be out-xwisdontr PROUD REVELRY; 1,of Amtwr sometime, before he continues. the Leo: Thomas Seltzer, New York; comN.. science of psychology is made . lei Pnacs. $2.So. Biography of Amoy Und. plete. The book is divided Into some of reverteen the A MAE. book to chapters. alike herrest of The author of "The Women I Am" has written another effusion captions of which are: "Mind and rrs and the general publie his been of the Pam. rancid flavor. This --Pody.". "Impulse and Inhibition.' written by Idrs. Raymond 'Maude. How the Brain Works." "Purpose entitled the "Life of Jenny Lind time. howeler. the central characand Interest." 'Mental rirowth in The author, who is Vie daughter of ter is mana male at least. Ths rams sort of life is depleted Man," "Pthavior." 'How We the groat winger. g;Tirs details of as in the formee etory: the un Think." 'Emotion and Character." special importance from documenhealthful atmosphere of "wine, etc, tory evidence. and letters.' from women and soar seems the 01141, The volume la well illustrated' ktendelasohn and other Contomt-- 1 most attractive to the author, with photographs and drawings. poraries are Included. Boyhood ;;;tob; : In Wordsworth '"' - "ea rk- be-la- mot-evi- Leari, 1 , e. m I time-pos- Kipiing Hotiorzd By Royal Society the-rai- bird's-nesti- ss Itheir , - - , sob--a- nd ad 1 - THREE - rilliallEMINIMIMPOOMMIMMMOM The Bible Teachts ---- . . What One Should - Our - Home Writers I Notes asid ,JNews lets About Workers in 4 the iLocal ' Literary Field. ie Abend." VII. by W. interesting bookletinterest. AN There is se whitewash: In the Bible. It Is the frankest book over printed. There is no boating about the bush. no dipping of sentences I diplomatic antieeptics. no coloring Of facts to suit a theory. It a saint stumbled. the Bible says so. It Peter collapsed In loyalty. the Bible says so. It Davi& the charming bent:grumped like a paper bag under sensual strain. the Bible says so sever anywhere is there Judicious sprinkling of rose water or talcum powder over soiled saints or disastrous defeats. Al) le out In the open: things are called by their right names. For utter realism and candor the Bible takes the Da kn. The hunmeity of the Bible Is one of its major fascinations. Coffins and cradles. glories and gloom. mrstsI7. comedy. and tragedy. all the ups and downs of human experience, all the moods and mothew, dream.. and desires of man an in it. A FIJI lelander said. "I am in there." We are all In there. This ,book is saturated in the old him of human nature. Bin and virtue. weakness and worth. the trystery of Me and the majesty of death meet us as we ponder Its poem.- Here is a map of 'ourselves. a masterpiece of acute psychologg. We do not look to the Bible. bowever. for A teat book on science. history, or philosophy. Its supreme setaice lies in another field. It is a morally authoritative and ,adequate guide to religious faith and conduct. It teaches how to think about life. feeds the heart with vision and ideal. discloses the supernal pattern of manhood in Imes. reveals the dim contour of tb,ings invisibie. Its religious truths are potential to mans health in character. man's hope in eerries. and manti triumph in death. As simple as the alphabet Dad as deep as eternity . it is ow the aide of homanfty from beyinning to end and has for every human woo a t beim. Etiecrepanrics in the writings of the Bible need not trouble ha. Written in three reprementing three continents. by some forty of a over a.riters. eight hun . period died years . the wonder is there are so few faults and contradictions. And the real ethical and spiritual unity of these sixty-si- x t ooks demonmrates their ,livine 1- K Pete Amon: story. 'Edward R. by Harold H. Jensen: Parry. the "Swat Fly." by Depthia Phillips an editorial. 'The Sunday School is by no l'iace for David O.: McKay.. "Signe of the Times." by J. M. Sjoda41; the usual instructing lemon derartments. Children. Section contains. 'When Dishwashing is Fun."' by Jennie p. Stewart; "Frisky Rah.. bit." by Mattis Lee Collier. and a selected poem. Contributors of prose and verve to the Children Budget Box. include: Francis Foster, Elphytt Haus. Cr Ace Crape. Mona Bowen. Tessa Turnhow. l Marva Cannon. MC14111111 and Aria Robinson. Ta-i-- true pioneer Lug, not only bseauso It is compilation of facts and informa lion. but also because of the artistic and attractive way in whelk' the materibi b preenedla the nOW "Utah County Fact Rook." just issued by the Provo Chamber of Commerce. It la a pretentious publication. filled with various departments boosting different lines of industries. attractions. etc, The booklet is generously illustrated with some unusual photographs and an excellent topographical map. - Frank C. Robertson. well known western short story writer of Salt 'Ake City. contributes to the Ausuct Triple-2Robbinsdale. Minn.. a thrilling yarn of the west entitled. 'The Nevada,Demon." Mr. Robert. son's story is leading feature of the onaga.ine. and is a gripping dranui filled with incidents. Me and action. Millie May The July Cbildrea's Friend opens' with a poem., 'The Code of the Flag," by Helen Waldo from JohnIs Martins Book. Leading features "N'Clui has the Fun in a Fight.," is by Ida Stewart reap..el ThenM there poem. "In the Litn of Miles OverhoIdt. former la Ida Salt' Alldredge; 'Along by Lake newspaper man. Teddy Bear Trail." by liarto a recent issue of the San Fran-- I cisco Examiner. an impressive and rison R. Merrill: the story of "The Temeraire." by Nelle Al- attractively illustrated poem, "City Fighting Ten Talmage; "Golden Tonkue's Han Sq uar e." i War on Pumyfoot and Hookbill." F. Cowan: the interesting John by The July (MidPoem. vale) contains some interestIng lemon departments. and a Bertha safety-firmlecellanY. article& ."Grandmother's Cake." by A. Kleinmann. editorals. etc. This little publication is the employes magazine of I Joseph Conrad Fehr. former Salt the United States Smelting. Hennnow in man. ing & Mining Co.. and subsidiaries. !Lake newspaper 'Washington. D. C. contributes to Association Leading feature of the Denver the June American Bar & Rio Grande Western Magazine 'Journal (Chicago), an interesting Our Claim. "Paying (Denver) is a well illustrated arti-- 1 !article, cis given in account of the Salt 'Against Germany." Mr. Fehr is now counsel for Uni'- Lake band winning the trophy cup. Then there is n article. "Train- ed lita.ee before American-Germa- n clidime commission. He, therefore. load." by B. H. Decker. Exit Lake division: news writes with authority. A notes about Utah and other items his article reads: "Release of Allen Enemy property and Payof Interest to Salt Lake readers. ment of our war claims against The leading feature of the July Germany have apparently become Juvenile Instructor is "The Apnea inreparably united and constitute on a continuation of the report perplextng plan Is of conference held here !eat April first serious and definite as There is a poem. 'A Pioneer thus far suggested remedy." Grandma." by Mrs. Alice Morrill. This sums up his artic'e. It is writThen foliose. "About Clouds." by ten Pi interesting frtyle. and is im. H. R. Merrill: "Wolves." a poem by portant in the material which it Ellen L Jakeman: :Rover the Vag presents. hair-raisi- - ace-Be- st I - train-mast- coo-hin- lane-nage'- -- - . , 1 4 nel:ration. Why should we worry about tht minor miteakes? We do not give up Hamlet because a ghost walks there. nor Mato bemuse he v hei.aed in demon. nor John because he eelieved in witches. We do not abandon coal fields becautte we find slate here and there.-- we do not give tip eating fish btcsate of a few bones. We do not tarn away from a Eisler of Charity Lee.use her grammar may be faulty. Let us use the FP MO common sense In appropriating the maJor relielotts messages of the Bible rnd !a ignoring the minor 41irerepanc.c.s Hugh Elmer Brown in sago Tribune enigma-,-Mell- me-as- I PA Al or - .:11 1 VERSES 'et,-sto- - . Osmond ly , G.I3I ES. I tell the boys I like to play most any kind of game what keeps me young and fresh and gay and is not arrow and tam.. That one about MacDonald's, farm just gets my little goat and takes away the cheer and charm ou which I ake to dote. And then have some other ways of makin fzlicre small and leaves Out all pey the fancy I of and balk Ike the game that make me aweat golf volley plays and keep my mind alert. what make you work for what you aet arid where the hazards lurk. I tionl care what you call the game. if have got a chance to run the gauntlet up to fame from Germany to BRET HARTE France. I like' em cieen and hard anti straight upon the public square. to face the irony of fate and f.ght it fierce -and fair. I like the eames Bret Harts..like many an able that bristle up with ',anion andI delight and- overrow the hrimmin like the 'let 'cr buck gllore" that cup of cleverness and might. writer before him to whom we for- calls upon the team to give the crowd what wants some more the the suffers publicamuch. by give lunch and pep and Kean' what makes us think that greater thine, are on their way to earls than ever come to ancient kings of rank tion of his private letters. ;, - caret birtlwThe gamettwlval--leta-t- s it lelh-r-she- . I on-r- At whom be left in America in 137.$ sly will come to there the re,(11 will meet and they will have to Ilia in the summer time. If you would with their four young children ane Come out into the fields of play. whom be did not see again until drive your cares away and keep your livlprime. he came to Enaland a few Years - SONG before he died In 1902. Perhaps wives Were made to be the recipiis not she fair to outward view. ent of their busband's petulance; As many maidens be. and maybe. too. dotneati.: epistles Her I never knew ! the lovtlinem Mrs. Gene Stratton Porter. each as theme show the hero In Until she sm led on me; some snob light aa the valet's novelist who wrote cheerful and Ohl then I saw her eye was bright" would be. At all events. Mn. "uplifting" books. including "The Harte can ocarcely have fauna Girl of the Limeerlost." is left an es-be A writ of love, a spring of light. tn not of She tate $501,0oe, them tonic reading. They express Rut now her looks are roy and cold, the proper connubial sentiments confused with the ether Mrs. Per. the To mine that neer reply. and even In the properest connu- ter. who...wrote "Pollyanna." net And radiated yet I cease not to behold glavinest. bial idiom. But they are Itten maiden who mere catalogues of depressing news cId she make as much money. The love light in her eye; Gene iztratton POI,. Her very frowns are fairer far or outbursts of querulous lamenta- probably. Butwell at -(hal with an Than smiles of other maidens are. tion . and they are never without ter did pretty HARTLE Y COLE R I DO e.tate $580000. of plausible excuses for eleferring the As a writer whose works are the family reunion. Bestdes. the,crestN DATION it OF THZ ed notepaper of one's hermit, antithesis of Mrs. PoVer. M.chael M REPUBLIC hosts. er evert that of new own Arlen is said to make more than Mob (if that club be the Roes $544.0100 a year. Calv!n Coolidgea most rece t The sueeens of the books of the Thames Tech. hardly seems the Porters la used as an sr- specches and aderesses have been fitting stationery on which to up- two Mrs. for braid one's wife for her extrava- guntent Mc, arvertion that astembled in book form and will gance with the fie a month allowed Americans only 1t ant devitalized be pte.alished tin& r the title 'The Tel earnings of 111- - Frundat:cans her for the .upkeep of house and literature. of the lispub.ic" by to the are cited support Mien thael family. Charles Feribnees e in The consularyears in Crefeld view that Anrericens only want her. The coll,action will. cover and Glassowleave an equally un- sophiricated literature. which the president has Of course the real explanation "leeches pleasant impression. Of Germany the last two years during lute people and will serve as an PVen better hs notes its horrid language and is that there are 115000.00 It. filthy fat and vinegar; Its doc- In America. and while we have a recantation of his vicws ncernaa many h g fnutiamcntal Antaarican tors and dentiata are the most pro. higher rate of illiteracy than found boirnbugs In thq world: it Is European tellIttrifil; we - have a i.:es than "The Fria!" of Free. a land of awilling sots. and even much Itixher ratio of people v:ho alcm." which was ettler:y romansed "musical Germany is a humbug?: read bound books. They may read his uttorat ces afi vifc rres.dt lit. The Rhine is inferitt to the Hud- books of which critic, disapprove. lay son: the Califondan mountains are but. they readss well as Ileten E Kure Yet. movies and Italy superior to "these famous to radios stud trOit tostando to 'reAhichent figure- - ever received drive auto.and Alps:" the "hardy and liberty-lovin- g aucti.e fat the Swiss". are the biggest frauds son they are going ' to read better, at an Eng-tsmanuncr Pt of an English author he ever. met: Nor dote Scotland se be sold his some within there in may be better. der Before lifeme is 11500,, fare gettled Glasgow, be recorded that all be lbook.. money in authorship as there recent y pa d for part of the manuA Pair of Blue Eyes," oil or automobile manufao. script of bad heard of the Scotch was dread. Francisco Examiner. by Thomns Hardy tut; and ultimate;y he decided that his transfer was a ghastly farce. for Glasgow was a' hundred times . worse than Greek!. It would seem that Hart thought .107himself .the Orin hundred per cunt American.. It made his heart sick ' to see American owning every year i.,: to throw money away upon a Pio.; tig,,1 He ple effete as these.Earopeans? declared himself consumed write 4,its, 01,4 shame to obverse how- despicahiy and shameless.), English the A sno,s I 1 ), i , leans were becoming. So one '!0 P,'' these letters asking. and asit-I I log again. bow it game about that's-Parte never once returned t9.I America, and how be managed for 20 year to endure tie hneeittlitr of the Manchester Guard.lan., al Rewards of Merit 1 1 . ' ,Sept-ma- , - . ,a t 1, Old Folks Needd 4 ., ..4 , Sin-lob- e. a Mild Laxative , , L .other. CALMW. ATTHZMOS3 Hundreds of. stars in the pretty Most men and womee past fifty sky. Hundreds, of shills on the shore mud give to the bowels some occasional help else they suffer from together. hundreds of birds that go singing enlist potion. One mCht as sell refuse to atd weak oyes with glass. Hundreds of lambs In the sunny el as to neeect a Tennis aid to somither. weak bowels. Hundreds of dewdrops to greet the Is your prtoent laxative. in what. ever form, promot'ne natural bowel muW you purge 11"adre4it of bees in tho- purple 1"regularity eover. :and "physic" every day or two to 1111sterods of letterties on the avoid rick headache, ilizzittess. lownent. colds, of sour gamy atom. ' But only one mother Hui "rid ach? over. world CaldweICS syrup Pepsin helps Dr. I By George bowel Cooperilb,Roston to astableals natural. trenlh000 movement even for chronic). Transcript a "Physic' NGL ,,s,.N;lir DM W. O. . . ally consrpnted. It never sickens or upsets the syste-gripes. Br. sides. it is absolutey harmless and pleasant to take. Buy a large bottle at any More thnt sells rued:eine and hist see for yourself- - - m- Pella 'or Sly7ttliP , , PEPSN t - I: I.!, t41: 1; ' - SECTION ) . . en . . . .. . - Readers Who Inept That Imaginative Literature Be .14oral18tic and Conventional Are Closing Their Minds half-Inc- 'ago. by our e , - - "- An entertaining book of poems Is Moccasin Trails.' by E. F. Hayward. author of "Two Bits." 1 , Dab len, Hayward: Hayward Idlpneapolia. Minn.; 176 pages. & e - , -- ' - ,.... .... - Peculiar Errorsi Is Found Again ' , .- Sole of Whitman's! One's , I 1 - I .... Whit-Imat- i - , - .,- , - . ' THE DESERT NEWS, SA'rURDAY, RILY 17;19211' - - Say not that beauty passes! In Lai the passing mortal Never years. I William Sloane Kennedy, who Nor IIn that last immortal timelessness knew Whitman intimately. and Beyond all time, shall any beauwhose own wide reading and highty pass., to ly analytical faculty qualify him Nave you known beauty? Rave i examine the' workings of . you seen her face? mind and brain much more And heard her singing In the than the typical Whitman silent night? Rave her strange fingers brushhave been in the bahi enthusiasts ed upon your hair a little at some laughs hot doing. ' I When you were lonely and your errors of isnet-queer were ot the poet's eyes knew no who things? Whitman. remembeting dear norance, And have you heard was fond of usIder passing feet that pass and i foreign language, "canierado." come agaln, ing foreign words. like 'ensemble; 'Forever, anti forever. and for- 1."allonst "libcrtado," ever? he writes 'same in the singular; he got where knows no one and Not In a garden is her dwelling In 'Chant Dem- I"me imperturbet Place. he bad-- to change, in the. 1 roses bud and bloom and i 'Where semitic" to "sem; ISSI edition. bear their seed: was what he Noe where the meadowsgraes is ' lute; for "seminal" meant! Kennedy winces at "ye fursweet with clover; at "Francies in twit debouche' Not on the golden shore nor doubt "gamut No ' Navvesink." plain; peaceful et-Not in- - a forest, nor a sky-- sof Bpirita" can be excused, as an I stars: tempt to Impart a feminine chard voice, nor ' acter. Net in a that dear face compliments WhitKennedy . Fairer than all things fair. ', man on the word "exurge." which is good Latin; also on the word When- - these shall vase. 'preside:Iliad." which now has a ' And loveliness is withered from recognized place In the language: your sight. did Whitman coin It? Kenne. Arid love that smjled upon you but also shows that Whitman could dy smiles no more. not have claimed plenary Inhave and as And silent are sad you . spiration for himself. since he the grave. 'made a good many changes from Bo sad and silent edition to edition. He toned himself - In that very hour down a great deal as he went on than your omitted phrases that were in bad Beauty is taste. and greatly condensed his breath is near. She is the sadness in your Mient "catalogues." lie certainly made heart. some vivid improvements, proving She is the memory of all things the poetic sense In him. as when dear. he changed And she Is every longing and I waited unseen and always desire. And Slept while God carried me KIM is your deathless dream of through thelethargir mist ecstasy. The ageless daughter of eternal toiled! love; A field of white immortal as. I waited unseen and always. And slept through the lethargic Phodel. mist. The gong of songs forever ever ' more. But why. In "The Sleepers." did he obscure his conclusion by leavAnd in that day ''' lines as'When all thing'', else, shall fall ing out those really fine , and fall away. serting his belief in- metempsycis Bile never pass. hosis?-Beauty will the bright ' eternal in star your Memel Not you will yield forth the dawn night. again more surely than Bh is the sun of your eternal You will yield forth me again: , day. Not the womb yields the bats in its , Sh Is the endlessness of love time more surely than I - and truth. Shall be yielded from you In my BARBARA YOUNG, .., In New- York Times. ton time.The Listener in Bos,' . , - -. , , Beauty Passes it - , - - . t -- , , Say Not That ., - - - . (4. '' - , -- . ' . 1 'O. , - ........ - ' ' ,. , ; . . ) ' ,, , , , t - .. - - . ; 4 , .,44e 01.4,4..ttl414 0: 4'4'. A ' 1 |