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Show - - - ...;.. r t . ' ' - ' f . c .i;v: i; 1 .t V. :t r. V. c;1 I 1 I ::::t:; j rc .j -rev r..... I . t ; T 1 ; n r.::v i::u:.t!;..-j cf n:cn cau?rl mere Y,"lil:.JLlLY l rccr?-culture arJ tLat at t i! t :: : . :': l (f tl ( ' U i... 1. j cf : f. . t v :!1 ; i . r..re Lrillnt retime 11 ;n zv.yiL'.:- cl e tl ;t 1 1 ever trcn ccmrc?cj, vtcull c!rav,- a crov.I crr r.y from ''.Macbeth" or THIS STAGE Or THE WORLD. The men and women in charge of the great libraries li-braries of the United States are paralyzed that so great a majority of the readers who seek books at the library ignore scientific and sacred books and turn to fiction. It is the most natural thing in the. world. In this intense life that the Americans are living, when they have an hour for relaxation they do not want to think they simply want to be amused. In the eld severe days when men's lives were following a simple round, they used to go and listen to a sermon ser-mon on Sunday, which, was but little less than a tragedy, and through the week they would sit out patiently Shakespeare's tremendous plays. But the modern life is too exacting. It exhausts their energies, it causes nn to think simply about, business. The material things of the world occupy them' in business hours and they go to a library as they go to a comic opera, simply to rest. ' If Shakespeare were to come to earth and attend at-tend cna modern performance in. the theater Jie |