| Show J vI vIm vII m r ra I a I Ii i 1 f ANSWER We IV do not want OW Fatherland Your veldt your our golden Jolden Hand Band We have on an empire tar Derond the morning star And all within It like the sea living f roe One ye 0 were vere noble men who Sooner than chouch to tyrant pride For Isle for Content to your our Fatherland Ye sh the throne One strip of earth to call your our own Why are arc you ou altered Can It be That fromon Cremon Grudge another frO roe Yo gag gog our ol f hold u us down Beneath your fortress frown Crown ae It for thia we freedom gave Ourselves to dig our grave crave Talk not of at raid It WM d dIn In blood and the wrong atoned Say not yo 0 Ik avart to Yo Ye love lovo our Ingot far too Dy B nil all xe 0 I nil all c 0 swore Give Olve us our right We ask no more mol I What do we ve ask nik To use the tongue That Hampden and sung ung ungTo To ro shape the statute share the tho power elms our freedom er every hour Proud or of n a sovereign right to own No liege no lord tord but law alone I Why do we ask alk It 11 Jot to live Pleased Will lIh the tho dais that Ihal d despots give To blush the shame that tel fil at al a 0 masters heel heelAnd heelAnd And bitterest of all to know Our own weak hands once dealt the blow I Our hand once Now NOI one and nil all allAre Are re joining l an call That says Not ours oum th the blood or race To brook Ignoble hireling place A stain on u us Is III on them diadem AU Australia Canada cold and heat New 9 the voice repeat That everywhere beneath the tho sun All Saxon hearts In this Ire are one Born norn ot of the Northern tI sea l They must tx be Ilk Its waters vaters tree Cree Ono One must be first yet It but In name A common flag is 9 common fame Knit on to us the make n a part lIart Of heart heart Henrt h vast a t broad and high Is II au all thy temple L Liberty rt The Spectator OTES iOTES Recently Miss Pam Pamela Colman Celman Smith the cola illustrator was Ite Rev RevS S 8 Barding GOUld at his Devonshire home and there met Sir Henry Irving The actor Was AI so Impressed with the originality of her work that h he her to de alga II a Poster for his hll use In using the which has her lorl early distinction MIlS SmIths fI enthusiasm Is Perhaps for tor illustrating the Jest beat ot of the old Bag lish ballads and folk tolk Using the tho songs mainly a as a suggestion for stud iet of the country and life In and abOut early England In her the these e more then illustrations they take rank as remarkably unique find and accurate studies of an atmos Phere nil all but lot lost to the l England of today The They are free and fanciful In and almost bold In coloring but Lut never neer grotesque rote que Two books Wid Fair and The Van VanIty Vanity Ity and 0 Green fled be lI shortlY by the Doubleday McClure Co the first In an f e tUon tIon limited to It cOI each nun and nd containing nn an original sketch In colors b by Mice Smith The are particularly interest tag Ing jus now ni M a company of singers singe Is announced 1 III as about to pro duc these old ballads ballad singing them In costume and with under the direction of Mr Ir Pemberton who will tart thom theta In The artists vork rork vIII be 1 by the stencil printed b by hand co that It will willbe I bo be to realise the flavor and the full vigor of the cl Sir Irenr Henry Irving n as II a remarkable colored portrait Is to form the ot of 11 Pamela Colman Smiths Souvenir of Irving and Mica OU Terr Terry Sir Was WAI are ar I roused by her The Golden I and e Fair and h hu boa given her unu unusual al opportunities to study his characters anet aM those of Mica Terry from behind the K sen The result is II a collection of drawings altoS allo remarkable All MI the quaint out outline line IIno lad nd the daring rotor color of her former Work ork have rune frune into the making of thu new collection of drawings but bul with m added d and nd vigor r In eluded In the work will be Sir henrys Henrs famous well coat coal together speech h delivered recently at tM the Lotos Club I dinner one of the most allu alone to ship ever made by an Jn Doubleday Co will publish the book with In en introduction by I Brain Stoker who 00 h bce been Sir nO Henrys men man mena alier a er for many tr Pata 4 f p Mr r Markhams The Man with the 11 hoe is II to bo brought out In a small volume with n IL noteworthy Introduction by the poet This will be particularly Inter in view of al all the tho Mu caused d b by the poem as It will be Mr Ir Markhams first words worda of explanation of his rugged beliefs of p h Charles a 0 D nob Roberta rte has hae recently b been n spending some weeks with Mr Ir In rural England For some seme sometime time he has haa been engaged on 1 a nw new novel the thIrd In his hIe series or of old lire life tales It I to be entitled Green Orn alis and Waters and will appear aerially In Magazine ns ao IO roan n na as It Is completed l 1 i p Bun Wheel or Wilcox will wI not f ze turn to New York this fall but will spend th winter at her large larg Dew amy hou house erected near her bungaloW at Sound Conn for tor the sake sako of her aged mother who requires her constant contant care oare and attention nA q w Mr Ir W IV Clark Russell hn has another sea Ica story In preparation for publication In Inthe inthe the spring It Is the story of the sav savInI av lag InI of a ship nd cargo In the Atlantic b by n a man and a gin Airl and will appear peor un under der the title of The Ships Adventure 4 i It lit is that a prophet Is without honor In his own country countr IbIs state mont Is 19 by the experience of Booth author of from Indiana Mr ton as is known Is a resident ot of and three book stores thc reordered one da day recently their heavy hay initial order having been exhausted That the sale Is us well 11 as local is shown by the fact that the book Is already tn in Its thOu so nih 4 The announcement that E U If Sothern will produce The Sunken Dell drawl especial tnt In terest lerest to Mr Charles ChArle Henry elters English of the work which has hns been taken over by k Mc McClure Clure company from R It U II nu Russell sell Mr fr translation is Ie tr tree but It brings out with f fidelity the strength and poetic fire of the original Die Thie new edition Includes some ot of the music writ nit written nitten ten for the lla by Mine Almo and will be eventually Illustrated with views or of Mt MI production Edwin Markhams answer to the tho question suggested In The Man with Ith tine the Ioe would probably ably lie be the lines of his hll poem The crest and crownIng of nil all good Lite Lifes final star Is II Brotherhood For or It will viii bring again to Earth and MIrth will semi neW light on every face faceA A A kindly power poyer upon the tho race Anti And till tt It c cOme me we men are aro slaves And travel downward to the tho dust of I I I gra graves eSt Com Comi clear the way then clear the way Blind creeds and kings have had their day dayBreak Break Drenk the dead branches from the 1 path lIth Our hope hopt Is In the aftermath Our hope hop Is In heroIc men Star led to build the world again To this event the ages age ran Make Mako way for way for tor Man ManThe 4 of I The Tho haunting dreAm th re rebe be such lIuch a The Brushwood Boy Doy has baffled illustrators from the start The announcement therefore that Orson Oreon would undertake the work on a large o scale Ie brought to nanny for the tack tuk ts is not so 10 much to pIcture thy vigor hoor as to catch those thOe Ot ins Ing which h the story tor stirs to life tn In tI the readers mind Whether the artist has hili succeeded is h of oC course n A personal matter with th the In render reader but those who have seen Ittin the fort forty pictures he ha made for Doubleday McClure Cos new edition ot at this remarkable love story promise for It a genuine 10 q p 4 it Julius Chambers Chamber MYS In the Phils Times s e Son of undertook to a complete edition of the master of French prose to those who hl h have tI not ma mastered the tho beautiful Ian guage of France It was a gigantic tn task k and the completed work now fills Is large duodecimo volumes After weeks c careful examination of the tin BArrie Darrie n including varl van OUR 1 by the theauthor theauthor author It l is only fair to sa say that the theno very no nearly unattainable has haB been In till the tacit mOlt dangerous Pants larU of the ork nn an point IU as taale coarseness has hll been n voided without expurgation I I Mr r hiram Dram Stoker for so eo man many years enN manager and man to Sir usury Irving has baa ventured Into the dangerous realm of literature and to lY cay with success The story of I a human sounds lOund rather but toot that quality alone could never for the of Bra Dra Dracula cula la in Indeed many UlD have Utile it tine enact daringly work of ot of reo p cent y It promises to lit be lita bea a strange story a story that flatly re no tueN Cu to be puI over oer among the novels novel of the week 4 4 4 Mr fr W lIck Dok the editor of the Ladies lIons JournaL earn came to this country from holland u AI BOO a boy and has hall worked his 1111 way war upward with such uch remarkable that his Look book Sue Suo hu has an 1111 Interest unusual to books 0 of this nature And at as might hn have been expected this book which points out squarely l and how a ayoung young man ma may m ke something of himself has passed already Into the tho sixth printing The present century has witnessed the awakening or of on unusual interest In metaphysical scIence Methods of reo re research search devoted hitherto to in are being applied to physical and aM ad phenomena that for tor centuries have been contemptuously rel relegated b by practical minds to the realm of or superstition are under undergoing going tine the came NIn or of precise oh experiment and dedUction lon that have been used In determining the place and value alue of phenomena pertain pertaining Ing to the material The so 10 clety for Psychical an or having at Its head and In It its bod body men graduated from the highest of learning In all the civil lied iced nations for tor mast have been data Cretin frolD c credible sources l to te metaphysIcal l and the result of their has hall brought about what Ir to be the beginning of an era ern of nt nill In the hitherto ly Iy realm of r cal edn Dl from th so 10 far carried on have found a plentiful number cr f coner to the belief that important laws law govern guern th the hun of mental and spiritual phenomena and come of these h liate e attempted to formulate and carry Into effect these laws by personal experiment Prom intent In the literature that has sprung prun from the new thought are n a series of books by Ernest Loomis dealing with the he question of mind forces and power In determining circum circumstances stances and destiny In human life lite Their aim Is to chow that thought force torce alone mn may be used as the determining I factor In deciding the condItions with which each Is surrounded and that n a thorough tending and rightful I application or of this force may create creal or change the events or ot Of me life In Force Methods one or of th the series recently published the au an author anthor thor AS We Ve little realize the creative power or of our thought though It Is It ItIs itIs Is unlimited All creation ts is through thought Mans lIn I power ower to think Is In Infinite finite anti eternal To him there is II nothing unknowable nothing he cannot In time do If he sets Bets about It right Control your our thought moods and you will In time control your our 0 Every thought creation whether In the form of desire hope imagination faith aspiration r ot thought Is building for tor us ua the thing de desired sired and actually bringing It nearer Let us Ul form true conceptions ideals anti and standards and then hold to them until the currents thus thU formed bring bringus us Into actual Contact with their cor COf corresponding rv responding external embodiments desires are retarding motions which cart cad Into temporary whirlpool of downward gravity The vibrations of truth within are the whirlpool of at up upward word ward gravity In mans The hook book Is full tull of such passages and the explanation of the laws law which are stated as aJI unalterable of the phenomena of human happiness suffer suffering Ing and destiny lit itt general I wll bo be La In v and helpful el especially eCI lI to the despondent bell believers In a fatality that them to misery and 11 ill LoomIs a 4 Co i Dear Dearborn born street Chicago 4 I 1 4 That the elm pest et or of truths logically worked out should be flatly and widely misunderstood stood has haa long its devotes Nora Arch Archibald I Smith for her The 11 Children D of et the Fu Future u ture tUN and for The of Child Chilli hood hoed and The Ston Jour hour written jointly with Mrs rs Douglas Dourlas Wig Wiggin gin tn hOI has conic com to the def defene of ef the with The In Ina II a In which she he tells what It II means how It to hi carried out and how F Il wonderful work e can n be an d to the smallest community and followed In every Ir home Doubleday McClure Co will publish the book t 4 tV ot of Geology b by Joseph to Le Leon Conic on II Is II on an volume issued b by the American n Book Dook lOmp n In it th the author leads th student front from dna rainal geology In mien I through truo geology In art II to the conduit sUon of historical 1 geology In part m III The hook loa is II too lart large t nor too for till this ordinary high school cl The writer h ha not popularized tIM the subject at t the expense of at sel scientific and yet tt the book is It exceed exceedIngly interesting 4 4 of The Tb American Book company nr offers n a anew new MW Steps with cm and British Authors Author by Albert P 11 This book alms aims to provide t students with n a JudicIous And methodi methodical I cal to 18 the standard texts It hi intended to te carte tene as AI tb the baa baste ot of 1 a regular coor course of stud study In fn literature nough Is furnished l for at leot leest one years work end ond the book tl is arranged In Q a way tay that the work upon nn an author may b be abridged d or extended u as the ho time al I fur or the course COUrte of I and t the ht age Ige sand Ind capabIlities ot oJ Ih he student may permit 4 4 The New is II tine the title of a no new historical volume by the well known historian Hubert Howe anti and published br the Publishing Company New Zw York In this volume the tho author gives Rhe a vast amount of In information f formation on the Pacific and subjects relating to of which that of tine the wend has been heen the cene A good idea It the scope COile or of the volume ma ninny be formed from the tho titles of f the cha chapters tera Nu NoW and Then The Year of J uro m In America New War ar with Spain The AwakenIng Irn ImperiAlism the tho Pulley Policy of Tine The Other Side of f the Que Question Ice Attitude of the Nations The Passing of at Spain The Far Europe In AsIa Time Tho Ocean and Its CommunicatIon Re fib sources of the Climates of the tho Pacific Mines lIlIne and Commerce ot of the Pacific A hawaii the ot of the Pacific c Philippine Archipelago anti Asiatic Isle Idea Race Problems No Notable table Voyages Into time the Pacific Cru Crusoe Cm I sob soe Island Leaves from the Log Hook of the Pirate The Terre Terrestrial Story of Queen of California As will 11 be seen the aim of the volume Is II to present the resources and romance of the tho countries of the Pacific and al all is II In the interesting style and with tIme the lila hIs accuracy for tor which the his hist t works ot of Mr Ir are known It 1 is n a volume Without which tIne the lIbraries ot of the reading pUblic will willbe he be rather incomplete The cover Coer tie de deIgn sign Ign Is striking It Is the tho work of Miss Maitland Armstrong It Is In gold on onIlea sea Ilea green and represents ocean waves and with the ancient mariner telling to the tho wedding guest the story |