| Show t H 1 F I f 0 I rUE COMINO OF LI ERTY r 18 g r II ing flIT I I C i f 1111 4 4 tailing falling fast tast TIll h 1 behold fl array I I awa away I h i r II II 1 tilt Ilk the throne m 3 rG 1 IIi reign I I 1 n Inlo nil Re Ita own J I g 1 j r I p I It A t new lIew birth t I bring to earth eartha 0 I I a II gi and you OU litem dm I iJ j II 1 poets glow glown n dream A huld ud you kaow Ii 11 thIs life ot mIll mait r and a plan i Ir r human night 2 I I 1 on r I breaking tight fight I n fl nIt 1 It l glory dro p a 1 mountain tops i h hot I h and the pain 4 J 1 t f r fro turn were not lost j t ben In vain t C I TheIr will bo be bet sue t pt ril 1 g r y will view g and with happy h J Ill lI the vision Islon new newt Ir t I hIt IshII 1 P i Y ana anel p peace aco Gather her her Increase I I f 4 J ft i will be no more H 1 from lr urn shore to shore 1 T Ii then will bl nd t ll L J Into ito one onet he Jit t of the sun lun sunI I I r I 1 II 1 r I It II will be fed fedI I I ha alt all alth 1 h Iad ta J us UI truth and aud andr t r Ii world Its light J i kind ma may bask r 1 fur earh ot at you youa oU oUI I a L h 1 f our I t I 1 u must do doth dor r th ro Fm land to land Ilind n f m 0 bond bondT T r Im r 1111 I pread the tho light lighta c a th work who may maya a f nl Iii dawning bright In 1 augh nor the srn Irn Ii J ur f ward th tha morn mom I f Let II If I ry ring around 1 It i l W tn the bounds of at g 4 J r ru rei II 1 nay ay he be foUnd strange C mil I who ho then will see seeL L u Liberty OTI S Sr r 1 fr n ot of the late S I none Wat more I i r Wilcox i I greatest triumph Yia a her ot i s ir poem ilow Sal Sai 1 frIendship between S Putter sey sev Ihl Ih latter Out first re ie II York Mrs lIre t I K box and ot at the t the audi Rudl r until the ther I III r F r r appeared upon al ai Hd i I IV V ii I I I f her lIr fhe tl be beL Ie L II and 1 r beauty Itself r I Tt n h her r white out cat outa a Ir waiting the 1111 death h l hoid told her was wal wast walf t f a I the I more Lii In public I I r a not lr f tr r 1 I il t men The They told t s I Ie that hu her V v va t I Ino t a J rv improvement In 4 tl uld ld be allo allowed to toJ toj J I nA again and on r 1 r un I on one IrrepressIble 1 I 10 nd which came I Iru II ru Ii 17 S I to recount hr 11 I and Its Ila ambItions I i 0 11 a an 1 I q r oHa Hotel Mrs tr I 0 this suggestion and andaU I A MIs aU Potter would I II N I hl recovered sum j so JO JOt soS t S ao ben k copyrIghted I I Diehl ot of 90 west welt New York city by 1 1 shortly In Li II ONeill Potter t f I If r Life DurIng 1 N r dictated to Mrs Ir 4 I mil l of her r and romanA roman U a t o t hat 15 she ahe put pj the ate story J boo by 1 Proc proceeds 1 of the cole I 10 be In fl sTealing 0 to y 1 21 iii grate Mrs I Is II filed nned I t nf lp ot f I I could 1111 ta a ItOI by b tt tans ibs h wa u u I I conventional What its did Will wee pon without thought sa to results And without any attempt to todo todo do so she ahe made her own romance liS as she went alop J I knew her for tor ton ten years and she Interest d me from first to last The authorized Life UtI of t Dwight L Moody which h has haa been p prepared pu 1 In accordance his expressed wIsh Ih bt b his son William It Mood Moody this week from th the press ot of th the 11 company Advance orders alone require a edition of copies The book fa 1 being printed In New and end Ind live five large a printing establishment and a half dozen binderies are In tUrn lion with the work The publication ot of The International Year Boo has been announced It Is Isa isa a com ot of the worlds world progress for tor the year ear 1 This rear book like the be on lot lor 1 issued by the same firm has been edited 11 by Moore Colby II t A ot of tc II In N New V fork ork UnIversIty The volume covers th worlds hI hIstory tOry for tor the year Iset 1811 on ot of the th most important In the and s pages with ml maps tend and Illustrations S S The ot of Meredith has hae J Ul Its 18 DI into F J h appreciation of American ary work Is growing SO rapIdly la says a James Walter Waltor Smith In a London letter lotter to the Literary Era for tor Mft May that the tIme appears not tar far distant when the reviewer wIll he can oan do to cope with the output from over overSell over oversea Sell sea an fiction Is already flood floodIng flooding Ing the market and American Amerlean novels share with J novels the ready reldy consIderation ot of both the mat and the classes It the to remember that the bone and sinew of Amerin people are arc derived from the bone and sinew ot of the England ot of three hundred years eara ago alO and that in III readIng the he work ot Americans he Is II giving his attention to Englishmen ot of but another mothr and trans transplanted planted grow growth III Scarcely had he laid aid flown down David When Knighthood Wu Was In and ini Carvel when he found upon his 1111 table another tale ot of Colonial Ameil OIl Ca which bids faIr to eX exceed In I popularity the tilo ot of p pro Mar John on al 1 though to him at once onCi com coin commanded his By y Order or of the Ule To Have Hae and to 10 Hold is 18 known on this side the walerI sit ai read certain ot of success In Grest lint Brit Britain ain am and tong long will lInd herself one ot of the most mOIl writers In the entire world TIle sire are already vying with each lither In her praise and ono one ot of them gOt goes so SI far OF ns as to call fly lIy Order of Company the tiie most log Ing hIstorical romance we ha have read In a l tong n Urns Ume and he further Johnston u uin Jn a 0 notable achievement S S In Tune With the Infinite by Ralph Waldo Trine Trin Is now tn lii its twenty t lh thousand An n edition has hall re recently been published by Me ra George Sona LondOn the publishers ot of the famous nohn flohn LIbrary series Thc They ate are already In press preM witha second edl lieu An edition of It the German will shortly IH be published by the old sic house ot of George Wigand A French translatIon Is IA also being made which will be by the losch bocher In Paris the publishers of Drummonds works In the French FrenchS S I C will have two POPO peper In the June Jun and July Atlantic Monthly on The Thc Independence of the They will be read with much Interest b by men of both parties S a I Most of our thoughtful critics hue have united In to 10 James Jamos Lone Lane Allen one of the tho foremost places among living Am American novelists A style ot of nOted log ins beauty beatify and purity 1 a tenderness of voiding with an exquisite sense ot of corned comedy that no oth other r writer hM has In quite the lie same degree a 11 deep penetration lion tion Into tim purposes I ot life lite line fine spir spirItual perception lInn and an eulIse ut of nature that steeps his hili work ork In then are come ome ot of the quaIl qualities ties to bl be found In increasIng In alt all that Mr Allert hu has Yet given us ua What his first short stories stones promised premised those thOle collected In Flute and anel Violin was more voiced In A ICon tucky CardInal A nl 1111 Aftermath where the action vas blended with the gentle harmonies of n nature ture where Ufo lIfe and nature were so 80 inextricably mingled In Impulse that one scarcely knols whether to call them or It If In A Summer In Ar Arcady Arcady cady nature forces too t Ire a 11 part In the lIle storys shaping to altogether 1 please It is III none th tine loss IN INa ft a wonderful study tudy Of who whose e high put pur pose poM there can an 11 be no sir Ir Mable wrete ot of this book Tile ihie story tOl I ii 1 ft kind of at ion of the tremendous vitality of na the sweep of tM fore whIch for tor tile lite So completely 4 Is thi reader In Inthe Inthe the of Uw the opulent ab about ut him so d deeply pty dOl he rehe the forces fortell rushing tumult tumultuously u through that that at times the human a as subordinate al 95 those In Corol landscApes Mr lIr Aliens AUtin was growIng arid and andin in The ChoIr It full liberation It 11 was a his hili Ont first serious seay 11 1 si a novelist 00 Wile his hll both bolh materially and artistically that In his new heW story to be published by the Macmillan In inJune June Juat he be has baa chosen choNn a theme Ihme once oDee more Ibis Um time It I Ic the upheaval that in III at Ih the civil lIU War Vur and the he scene acne Is II lel iti the hemp neill of jen en tacky I In Mr story t II to be called 1 lbs b Reign of law but In the title n for It Is In IncreasIng creasIng II as over there the duke ot of hu his already mad s II famous us III ot of The of law Mr Allen II Just now no ot of lii periodical revolts against PublicitY and 1118 ha n d to Ii t wilderness u where even eren cannot find him an ml tb the interviewer I Iba Is ba bellIed from pursuit I I IThe The long expected Ililda Wade ade Is IR that melancholy In lite lit 1 a posthumous no I I to make Its rr rum m the pre press this The tory story of It 20 lion has hall b been en often enough repeated to 10 hR become familiar but It t Is still to tell hI hw promptly one sprang pran to heip another r who ha hal fallen and In r remembering m that Ont Allen voice olce trusted the ending of Wade to hll Id friend DI I Doyle DoI the II book gains aln a apathetic apathetic pathetic interest Mr Ir II H 0 Welli whose WhOM MaY live powers are making hint him dangerous dangerously ly hal ha just JUI fInished novel noYel which is II to be published In Lon lIon tion by harper it liros white while till the F A hat ha the handling ot of It over liars It bears the happy title ot of Love Ln and Mr and those thOle who have read rad It In manuscript In thIs case not a 0 anonymous group ot of named as such well V T T known judges RI as henry James Jame nod W WB WIL B IL Henley are generous In their praises Mr Wells sits SItH very ery near the test feet of genius and the announcement mont ot of a nw new work b by him always quIckens ion that he may have hae greatly lIr ar rIed I There Thre are new chapters in the spirit history ot of the race but bUI there is io new volume says AYS Hamilton W In a recent criticism on George Idward Woodberry poet and critic It I is a continuous stol story a vItal In Greece Orne a aIn as asin In modern modem I 8 as genuine Inti intimate mate and true to life In the Italy or of Dante is s In tIne the ot of Whitman Mr Ir W Woodberry knows this great gnat story the romance ot of the heart he feels fets Ita it vital quality I is lit In touch with It its passion for tor beauty and recreates It i In ir hit his own Imagination by virtue ot of the sympathetic unit unity which he with It and Ind the sympathetic In insight sight which he brings to ft He has hall gained to Ih the heart ot of literature by his hll possession ot of this spiritual divination and he 10 hll ha alto also given hi his own tools fineness of fibre and keenness ot of elI In verse vene and prose hll Corn CAlm ot of expressIon is II notable for tor Be ae ran range and that wholeness or oro o ot of structure which Is Ia th the or principle of IU all true style I W v D In harpers has bas to say ot of Miss Evelina is n a masterpiece and she could not very II well be b spared from the group of tent great and reel The means of realizing her are now as quaint and obsolete alm almost t as the man manners mannara ners nara of the outdated world to which sIne was born Nobody writes novels noels In letters lettera any more just Juat an people no longer call each other Sir Ir and Madam and are favored l and obliged l and corn oom upon eer every slight occasIon Just Justas as al young oun ladles ladies no longer cr cry out when hen strongly moved moed ai God sir Ir In writing to their guardians or receive prodigious loul compliments or make set speeches or have verses to them posted In or 01 8 go to umu where tile Uie are to tol l bL with Ith dU vhs Is II forced 4 to ee nn I thin fl W scarcely Idl and It I Is Isher her busIness lit In tM the Ion bug letters he be writes her to scenes or unionS her It milk make lb the reader and crepp She other s nR nes among people or of fashion which url are not 1101 I Iular less vular ular and art are f fi like hike that bat two gentlemen ot of rank renk have two poor old women ruin rail C a Tle a awater water and u the hapless res reson on to 10 the contest ith It and A whole world of lIn I C char end hf her herbut r but she outlives them all In th Ih In x a s or of n ft girlish h which pt pollutes and nd In tho Ihl furl purity ot of A nature to 10 which shIeh thing and unkind Is III RbI he I is at al tImer to 10 laugh at thin that other funny but bUI she seems a little liner nhI VIII than her In inventor In all this end and It 1 lees Evelina than Miss who el X you to enjoy Ihl h ot of Captain pranks at th the ot of MAam J In Inline InfIne line fIne vElIDa bou b a IrOle I is per It lisps the Ibe sweetest sod slid dearest goose In itt all C The or orders for Jill His Lord Lordships ships Leopard by Well author ot of Un lo exhausted the lit III Ion and obliged the tn t Iut thc second u ln the pr press e before th dM da of Emet rnest popularly known II as Wolf Volt on the friend ot of wild animals nd author of Ph ot of a has bOIl become 1 a popular Mr r Thompson a that hi his leaving for or Ne New NewYork York was SI In du to aft an order for tor over R a v thousand drawings of birds bird and an ani animal mal to illustrate trat The Century DIe On finIshing this task ten years ago he be went vent immediately to lari where his first III ing given a conspicuous lace on the line at the sali The writing of his hla book whIch all fir first t In The Century is 18 cold to have been prompted by RUdyard who lao had listened with breath I less interest to Its relation at the din dinnet nr net table ot of a mutual friend I 1 The ecumenical conference Is using a pamphlet ot of hymns and made up UI ot of selections from the pub published by bT the Century The Tb sue Ie of the hymn books book I is issued sued lIed by that company I Is nearly 1000 copl COPIeS Ernt ar of the I late Wisconsin State commis I Ion don I ha written a work on North American moan Forests and Ind Forestry in which h ha alma aims to show how their relations relation I to the national life of the American people ml HI endeavor I to combat tb the which wastes Instead ot of u us big Int the riches nature has hAIl prepared for tor toru forus u us that do doss not take the trouble to do it best bat the greed tint itself In haste to get all the selfishness that carp care not for Its neighbor though h he suffer flUtter and Perish TIme The book Is not addressed to the forester but to 10 the man many who tAke a In all questions affecting the of at the nAtion and to those thOle who It Ive v the life lite of nature without standing apart from I this more strenuous current ot of humAn existence Mr discusses tIme the I North American forest In its 1111 I arid and peculiarities the Iciest In its relation lion to 10 man ruan Ue time forest Industries tile tite and I oration of forest life tIne Ihl difference be between tween rest RI forestry a and 1 that whIch sometimes passe by that name forest finance and management tins relatIons I it and to Iah arh other T fightIng re and thle and taxation reform In fl tr moth oils and finally Mollie collie remark Oil oh for try III a a profession Mr maintains that forests forta ar are necessary to GIlt air country es great ot of me at the effects of storm a and nil tunI keeping erosion down to 1 a and clImatic but bul h he does not nol It a r In order tp p our forests to refrain trout frolA our product for the hundreds of u uses to which mans han put them On the hI he holds holdt that a wise would enable us III to tn gain vin tn inure of those 11 products product than the natural forest would furnish and yet wt lily Ia leave e Its assured hut but II increase It Its 1 Igor lOr and value This con nIl ha be effected by Ill legIslatIon d b by public pInion and the of the work I is isto to 10 |