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Show THE REVIEW. . last completed, and not the least to which they were sent, to be circuinteresting pages are those which give lated under given regulations to any the romance of the great poet's life. person desiring to use them. The New York rules are perhaps the simBut we are more than ever convinced that poetic justice is not naplest, and as they have proven satisture's justice, for the man who wrote factory there, would probably be " found to meet the needs here. O, my cousin, and Falser than all fancy fathoms, etc., etc.," was rewarded by such The Pennsylvania Department of constancy as few mortals meet with in Agriculture contributes much to the this wicked world. social entertainment as well as the He met his future wife, Miss Emily instruction of the farmers in the state. It has arranged for this winter several Sellwood, walking with Arthur Hal-lain his father's grounds. Tennymeetings in each of the counties, d and Miss son was twenty-on- e many of the meetings to continue for a slender girl of seventeen, two days, and each to be supplied and it is related that he greeted her with experienced workers who can with the words, Are you a Dryad or cover a wide range of topics. Where the meetings are limited to one day, an Oread wandering here? Six years later they became enagricultural topics will be about the gaged, shortly after the marriage of only ones to be discussed. In every s institute the evening session Miss Sellwood's younger sister to the poet's brother Charles; the lovers, of the first day is to be an educational however, were forbidden to corespond session, and is to be distinctively in on account of the poets unpropitious the interest of the education of the farmer and his children, and all that prospects. concerns their intellectual nature and The prospects continued unpropitiTo this session all ous for thirteen long years, but Love development. school children and school teachers took up the glass of Time and turned will be invited, and school directors it in his glowing hands," and in 1850 almost twenty years after their first and county superintendents are expected to be present. N. Y. Post. meeting, they were married. Iiitetfatare and Women. ' Miss Wilkin's latest book is ning favor in London. ) . win- - - . Mr. Hannish Hendry has just published a book of verse for children, under the taking title, Red Apples and Silver Bells." . shallow-hearted?- Robert Herrick has gathered his Literary Love Letters" together into m a volume, which tempts fresh paragraphs from , the critics, on western work. Sell-woo- In the quotation from Hamilton Mabie in the column on Literature . and Women" in the issue on Nov. 13, the. word virtually" should have been vitally. ? two-day- Singing Verses for Children," by Lydia Avery Coonley, illustrated by Alice' Kellogg Tyler, is a western book 'which : suggests pleasant possL bilities for our little ones. Springville Woman's Club have touched upon a pertinent question in their topic for February 4th, The Influence of Dress on Development." This would be an interesting The Northwestern Monthly, pubsubject for discussion before the State . Federation. lished at Lincoln, Nebraska, contains Children in Literature" is another a report of the progress of the travelfascinating subject to be found in ing library of the Nebraska State Fedtheir neat, little eration, established two years ago: This library contains 163 volumes, By the way, what has become of mostly books of reference, haying been Are selected solely to suit the general needs the reciprocity movement"? the clubs so thoroughly satisfied with of the clubs. their own efforts that they do not feel Kentucky, Kansas and Missouri are the need of outside stimulus? Why also testing the traveling libraries. don't our large clubs set the example? Why should not Utah try the experiThe Ladies Literary, for instance, ment? What has become of the committee to be appointed for that purwith its department for Skakespearean diffistudy, would surely be interested in pose? It would surely not be a the Nineteenth Century Club's cult matter to collect a library nucleus American Contributions to Dramatic of from 150 to 200 volumes, and these Literature," or the Aglaia find in the divided into classified groups of from Cleofans study of English literature a five to ten volumes, could be sent to pleasant analogue to their own work different clubs on application; or if it was desired to give them general cir- with American authors. culation, they could be arranged in The long expected memoir of Tenlarger groups and be put in charge of nyson, written by the poets, son, is at some responsible person in the town, ; The 4 year-boo- k. The plan adopted by the woman's department of the Exposition of appointing a patroness for every hamlet in Nebraska to work J for the Boys' and Girls' Building for the exposition, would be a good plan to carry out b) the Education committee of our State Federation, in having a thoughtful, energetic woman appointed to look after the general welfare of the schools in every town in the State. Trans-Mississip- pi . . -- JBSTlf You are going East this fall, Elec- why not try the Steam-HeateVestibuled trains of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway? The Short Line from Omaha and Kansas City to Chicago and the East. There is none better. For time tables, maps and other information, call on or write to L. L. Downing, Commercial Agent, Room 2 Atlas Block, Salt Lake City. d, trie-Lighted , |