Show I i e et t r kI t t If I i ij v l 1 t I J t HILLS or oP TUE LORD r b plowed on one day with sn an arth quake A and 11 his hi furrows deep n 91 plain no TI r hills were all aI a hut Dut that I Is the mountain ret hidden In Ih their t u Is III A AID the worde of their rat lit ratHe Jre He path mad them the haunt aunt ot of beauty rh om elect ot of Ills grace rac II 11 I ad th op them Ufa Hi sunsets their fact tread In music tf pf echol long AL A arry majestic AI und the silent III winds bring brine to them Wild storm news Worn the Tb y sing It down to the valle valleys In the love pong of the sta Gr Grin n tribes from tr far come Om trooping Aud over er the uplands dock nt bath Woven the 1011 zones together In rubes robe for tor JIll Iii liMn ideen rock Thep rh are for tor young flyers tl for tor JIll hie flying cloud for or newborn ace Masterful free and proud The people o of tired elUte cites some lomp up to their shrines pd pay Gd CI freshen again them As Aa lie Ht lue by all dy day dyAn An And pre lo I have caught their secret Tha beauty deeper than all 1 me hard bard When the jarring sorrows orrol befall Ar Are but God plowing lils III And the retsina yet t shall be b Th Ih source or of JIll Ills grace and freshness I and Anil peace to m me WM W f CHANNING S le I life lite RI as to whether 1 Iel t Gant title Uti to hit his nw new look Il Dread Bread mea mesa I hard and imd unpalatable kind or that r re t Ii to 10 by St Paul Pul a the 1 tread of oC sincerity and truth It If Iii u Ut later r II I Interred Inferred Ih the ruder reader WIll 1 conclude that It ft Is II Ironical 1 ot of the read reader ot of Rob Son ot of who sent for tor pictures ot of that collie ollie will be pleased to know th t Alfred d the author ot of tb the st rt was thoroughly with ti 11 Wiliam U Brett Drell librarian of the theand c and aM public II library r that UIt th h arc 1 no now In the pUblic libraries ot of th Ih rolled I States about vol volun 01 unlA un s Thus Is III An 1111 o of volumes volum which enormous It Ir a i he attributes attributer to an 11 ti rl Ing taxation for tor tree libraries and private benefactions t b millionaires I has hal two books In the tbt l s of to be Issued this t t I a short horl tory story whIch era con r I f for before her III late Ie illness Lean ban I th h 1 Iy explanatory title Roy or Ill hie Ii h T he other book which WIll h b by Dodd Co is I f t I Id The Mater Christian r n letters to tit the t fi York herald from the he front In e are familiar to many hu has fl 1 n lIon from the with to form II a record or the tb p I ours I ar under the title tille of 1 i a or of Tennyson are arc much In InI p I d I over the discovery In an old tI x In 11 England which for tor o had hild lain or of II a number I ers from Tennyson and Arthur Arthurm 11 m the subject ot of In 1 t W n Brook II r Ith ot I Eaten and nd The Lady d tt The on the i ir bar r date 1531 and au 1838 which I I Illy after arter Tennyson left Cam l al l t tT 1 T C l 1 et 1 were ere BOld nold BOldI I t hn m tn In London about three weeks IJ 1 principally f works ort of art realized Maya daVI un one pair PilI o of Van Pan Ia or about sUI sUII l lt t I alt 11 that h has been sold said of at It j wade Thal story 1 late Grant Orant Allen or of which pr Dr pry y It I 1111 to write h I r ll I h It appears that there I 1 m ther list lat word rI ot of the nl novel I m h scarcely the thet 01 t word ord to 10 apply to 10 one olle who was al each on one excel III I refs an literature but It Ilia Is as I rf fI that his hi name ha has hast t up again of nt laU late It seems th h Se New Amsterdam hook corn com cornIn I I h In a title II The LInnet whereIn A n nil Ier t is depicted with ell of Mr Ir I happy directness A of f the London n Aea Aa ny writes to tUr furnish one ot of these little mule o 0 Instant In I u to ono ones that the they seem long to have been hovering on the verge of being said 11 III dl sides Id memoirs memoir into three kinds Autobiographies hl and Ind Ought Not to be 1 The London correspondent deat of oc th the Nw New York livening 1 Post announces tM the Convalescence ce Of f Richard au an of No Ho Ii 6 John Street after a aeN seven eN attack ot of pleurisy and peumo oh nta II H lives II a he put pull It In lib ab from pen Ink and pater and ad also allO from all but th the must ele thoughts The Th publication III book form ot Mr Ir articles on Parts Irl of Toda Today now appearing In Inthe inthe the Century Catul with nile Ane II 11 may a be expected in the fail all Mr Ronald Roaald MacDonald the sort ot of Dr George Jore MacDonald who ho len leaves al althe Ute the Scottish laurels laurell to the writer nowadays is I about to make his hll first artt appearance as a novelist In The Sword tit of the King a story tor ot of ad adventure adventure venture In under James tilt the Second Th be book bouk which I to be pub hiked b by till Century company is I silo Ala Alato to have havo a awing and nd spirit all It IU own on The Th reading world h has been taught by bT the reviewers to expect worthy worth ot of from Mr lr Ben Swat and nd thy they will receive with well respect the announcement o of the completion o of his sixth novel Nude ude Sousa Soult The chap chapter ter n u as announced In one oae o othe of the London paper are ex extraordinary x and In manner Thu Chapter I Warns the ruder reader ot of the true nature ot of the took book Chapter II warn the reader ader to expect no romantic non nonsense Ie hen but a mot most tragic buln business Chapter III Jo e that alt 11 persons for tor what they all will II by this time Ume he have laid the book down at last t Eat then is I absolutely none of th the ex x quiche drivel here MIe Which warn warning In It ma may be ed will discountenance tb the average v reader who ho hu has to do material materially I ly with the thousand Into which every evry author hope hopel hI his look book will mount amount One ot of the liter literary events ot of the season should be the publication ot of Yr Mr George Bernard Shaw new novel novI An Unsocial III I w which h nn ta I now has hal under way w Mr earlier story Cache Cachel I Bron Byrons Profession printed more than thab a dozen year ert ago aro arond and nd not halt the attention It brilliancy deserved except from the only people who count ht u t the end ot of bookmaking but not at t all at the financial w was recently reprinted by this genie ume house and lId has hae hd had an excellent sale all writing ot of It at the time of its appearance Stevenson expressed hi his pleasure In It to 10 air Mr William Archer In the following hearty terms I 1 hn have read your our friends book with singular relish It he hill has written all any mOre I Ibel beg bel you ou win let mt me see t It Ove the Ihl I howled with Ith derision and delight I dote dOle on Bash could real read or of him forever torver That readers lire are beginning to Pet let a distinct value IllIe upon our Amerl can writers writer or of fiction I h shown lIy by 1 a note flute published In a recent issue of the Nw New York Evening Post Jot from It Its correspondent cor respondent In England While Eng English lush lish fiction he II say It is It at the present time a drug In the market Mr or i come almost u a ion to readers ot of English fiction be canes of their simplicity purity or of tone ton with nature and aDd entire dl din from that with which English h Is III so 80 often orten tainted Mr Allen concludes I YOUNGEST YOUNGEST POLITICIAN I I I h hI hI hI hI hI I I I I I I I i l 1 t w 1 V cr cri cra i a x Francis Francl or Delaware Ohio b has had an of 0 only six years eara but already Iad he be I In poll tics tic holds a t commission as asan an ft ot of the state Itta CJ oer nor Nash Nuh Just Juat h hiving appointed him superintendent of squirrels la In the Ibe State nOUN grounds at C Columbus the writer com comes to English readers like lib an 11 breath of sweetness or ref w Mr Anthony 11 I e It is said to have made mad a nw new de for tor In his latest latt story which F A Ito Stokes Co II to brill bring out la In Ute the autumn Ia um On this occasion It will in not lot appear serially II as hat has been the common custom with his work a v vIt It la II recounted by br a contemporary that when Item Tristram Shandy was U first the te booksellers ot of that dY day one hundred and forty years ago 10 indignation Uon re returned turned to the publisher u Im Imperfect their copl copies ot of tile the volume volum containing the sheet ht ot of marbled paper that thaI was u In Inserted fluted to take talce the place ot of th the pap pale Un Unde Untie tie de Tob Toby was to have torn out In a pet The company is II having a experience with their edition ot of the work In the handsome English At least half halfa a dozen dOlen hn have been returned with the request that perfect copl copies be sub lub and all because of at that laser Nan Uon o 0 the marbled 11 paper leaf leAt 1 a aThose Th Those who are fortunate enough to own the Ibe two little musio books aO so rich In actor by Crane Crne and published In London some twenty years erI ao ago with lh the titles ot of The Opera Open Book and The Dab will be 5 to learn that Frederick Want Warne A Co Ca have In preparation for or Ue the next holiday sea lea leaIOn season son IOn a book o of old IOn songs decorated by Walter alter Cane Cran and set let to music by Th Maria arlla s The Red etl nat Rats I is A pretty title to set Ht beside I lack Wolf a Breed for tor instance in III the exhibition the bookseller Is II to otter the pubic this UtI Mr Guy OUy II the author 0 Of Ih work or of th scenes oene are diversely lal 1 In London Paris Parle Hong and SIberia and which l 18 e to be published at once liT by the Nw New Ameter dam Book ook company c The Th London 1 y r recommends Yr Mr Churton Colli Collins ot of the early poems poem ot of Alfred Tennyson as one olle ot of the most mOlt ht volumes that a ayoun ayoung young youn poet Oft or spy young Oun writer can put on nn hll hie thel It l In foot tont footnotes lIot notes all the alts iotla Iona ot of phrase and melody which Ie I lIO introduced Into these poems let In u I es editions and andIn andIn In a scholarly cholar 1 Mr Ir Collins Collin summarizes the ra elect eel produced I by these thle a The student can an thua follow ten step the by which Tennyson poem to its final beau beauty I Take as al an n Instance the tn In the lines It th Dream of Fall Fair Women One drew a sharp 1 rP knife through my tender throat then theR no race more Into The ht death at the sta Um tim s throat and I Iee no mo more 1 Mr John La Lane the publics Hon ot of a book that IbM iii Ii sure to nuke make something ot of a I Ir lr even nowadays when people are lapsing Into a torpidity regarding the moral questions involved In the taking ot of our Jur sew aw possessions This I la a work ork bearing the challenging title ot of The FIlipino Martyrs a Story or of the Crime ot oft February I IThe 1505 The writer I is Mt Mr Richard Sheridan un barrister who had occasion to Manila MII lla at the very time or of the occurrence of the events yent that changed entirely the II as peen or of affairs HI His narrative is t then ther fore ore that of an lIe is I care are i HON JOHN D LONGS lONG SECRETA SECRETARY Y Of THE NAVY l I J t r i t 9 1 l lV V I 1 t tI t f I sr f fi fr ft ff ft t i r f t t rte I r rv h v N tut ul to explain la ID tits 1111 preface that lit tore fore h ha sailed Ailed for lor Manlin mm J lil lilI I Kong on h he lied hd nu no ut of ting hi his views or to pa paper er or of American poU or Am Amer I can In III the Philippines lie HI HInt went nt then merely fro title to toe e tM the islands nod the Polle p I le In con on sequenced f what hilt ht he IV being lit In the MI Me decided II slay tay until he rIle I Information en II that II he pla place fin on record without nUll II a statement or of th those events for forthe th the benefit enat ot of the tbt American people Wit who should hould be made to see the thing as It II BOOKS The Monk and nd the Dancer III fe the title ot of a volume Olum ot of short bort stories b bArthur by Arthur Clett Smith There Then I is a dare dar log disregard Of of possibility not tb speak or of probability It In some of these Immensely clever cler tI tales In some lOno the riots In others th the r ai aitern 1 tern lem l is acute but they are all 11 brilliantly and provoking In the fullest manner There are ar moments fragments of at henry James Jmes scraps o of Bret Hartt and Richard Davis Yet Tt It cannot bl be said ald that this bright aspirant fur tur public favor far is III merely from trum lt It ItH H Ile has his hll own quality but h he is III tully fully In Instructed with the ripeness of our OUI time It Its necessity for tor wl wide l allusion knowledge of men lIIn and customs and honks and nd the gossip or of the hl world Mr Ir Smith will find many readers a and all as many admirers who will look for all ull h he heran ran nth furnish of oC entrees so agreeable and ande nd e savory avory among the Ih familiar roast and boiled and th the common of the th literary feast t If et course th these little plat mad The They do nol pre end to to bed or the soil 1011 or the artificial dell cade that art are meant to tickle the pl pal palate nt ate tot to teed feed ot or strengthen the In inner ner lIer man Th The leading story tor Indeed might claim to have no emotional quail t ty Inasmuch as 1 It nominally deals with Ith some ot of the primitive elements element or of hu bu buman hulpe man feeling But Dut It II so 10 y sudden so 10 dramatic even scenic that It need scarcely disturb th the serenity ot of cheerful enjoyment ot of its surprises and cleer cut contrasts whIch might Indeed be shocking It if they could be taken sr r louly A Continental CavAlier I Ii the title ot of ota ofa a book by Scribner Wt We are told In a biographical sketch ketch prefixed to this volume b by the publishers that the authors first volume wu was Issued In 1557 1117 It I Is now 1100 O and hero here we e lave Mr sixth venture In fiction Mr Ir Robert Hobert Chambers and Mr Ir Clinton nON evolve eole fiction at An even en greater reater rate rat ot of speed peed but who reads fluent narrative a time Mr r Scribner Scrib ner writes just aa a fluently so 0 far lar as al W we can see ee It if not with quits quite so much vigor but hi his work hi has even I less staying pow power power er than theirs The tale I Is or of the period of at the American n Revolution and nd does doel not tack laok for or Incident but th the tse I Ii often lib stilted At as to be impossible as may be wan n from the following talc take en at al I I 1 thou thought ht to find you ou on the road mad Clark Youre You are ot of the Caro I I IA A smile touched tile the corll cornea ot of the others otherl snout mouth Twee Ta the picket kt told you acid Id he be know now you ou of Bourmont house I am bound thither Clark hence u a you surmised Jm lag InK from Ute the picket that a wu was me I made mad heat haat to over overtake take him 1 Is It a from Captain bone mont The other paying Which I Iam Iam am to In haste hute to Oliver for tor before an another n nother other sunset I UIt rIde forth n nWe We feel teel quite toe that an American sergeant and nd a 11 1 raner would not have convened In till this copybook tuh fah Ion 1011 In 1716 an any more then than amen ot of that tbt day would hv have Bald Id a as does dOli on page pae 38 to the mans nerve It is wonder wonderful tu ful There w nerve ner enough and to spare In th those d Us but It bare pother name Probably a uncritical reader will not bt be trou by the I he lack ot of lit PratT In h he hook but vt it ft Air Scribner I be taken seriously rte Is a novelist h he afford to style tle altogether In the future The title lUeL The Immortal Garland b by Anna Drown Brown is I a non lion noncommittal committal one and u d ft la II A as well weH that tbt suds wu was c a Oren for the |