| Show 1 I J i 4 w Z THE HUMBLEBEE DUI dozing humblebee Where thou art Is clime for tor me mo moLet meLet Let Iet them sail for tor Porto Karoff heats beats through seas aea to toI I will follow allow the I Thou animated Zigzag desert de ert cheerer Let Iet me chape thy waving lines Keep ICed me nearer mo me thy th hearer over shrubs and vines J I Insect lover loer of the sun eun Joy A thy dominion Sailor Bailor of ot the atmosphere Swimmer through the tho waves waVell of ot nir of or light and moon of at Juno Walt WIIt I t till I come corne of ot thy hum hurn humAH All AH without Is martyrdom When the till south Bouth wind In May days With a net of ot shining haze the tl horizon wall willi wallAnd And softness touchIng touch InK all Tints the tho human countenance With a color of or romance And In Infusing subtle heats Turns the sod sad to violets Thou In sunny solitudes Hover of or th The green ence dost displace With thy mellow breezy buss Luss 4 Hot petted crone none Sweet 10 to tome me inc thy drowsy tone Tells rOlls of ot countless sunny hours i Long Iong days and ami solid banks of ot lowers vS Of Ot of ot sweetness without bound In iii Indian wildernesses found Of Ot Syrian peace lence Immortal leisure Firmest cheer and birdlike pleasure l I II J I Aught Au ht unsavory un or unclean t Hath my Insect Ins et never seen J A flut Dut violets and n bilberry bells t and Grass with green creen ling Hag high f Succor to match ma the tho sky I Columbine with horn of ot honey haney I fern anti and Clover Cloer catchfly tongue And AntI dwelt among All AI beside was ws unknown waste All was picture as he Wiser Wf cr far than human seer Feer philosopher Boeing feeing only on what Is i fair Sipping only what Is Id sweet Thou dot dost do t mock at fate and care Leave the chair chall and tall lake the wheat When the th fierce northwestern blast blost Cools sea and land fo o far ant and fast tast Thou already del dep Woe and want thou cant Want Vant and woe oe which torture us Thy Th sleep makes mak ridiculous Waldo Kinerson l NOTCH NOTIS This Thill week witnesses the centennial birthday anniversary of ot W Waldo iHo iio I and tho the literary world to torether together Kether rether with cities of ot his birth and an In Intimate intimate associations hove hal Joined In cele ceic celebrating brating braUng the anniversary of ot tho great essayist The attention which Is U being paid to Emerson by b nil all sorts orts and conditions of ot people at t this time proves con COO conclusively that his fame Carne has hns transcended the transcendental blight under which It languished for tor a n good many years ears Emerson gifted with an un amazingly receptive and mind a learner gifted beyond all nil other learners e since began as IlS a II sort of ot sub sublimated expression slon of ot all the mos most spiritual systems of ot thought The pro A nf oC tho th accumulated i ri ii In l and behind i l lul him seemed ai at first to carry him beyond the tho reach of ot human sympathy Hut But a man capable j of ot learning so much could not help learning n it lesson far tar above aboe the exalted find and rational Puritanism of ot which he lie had made himself the prophet as ns well velI as ns the personal exemplar As men look at nt him him today toda Emerson appears big enough to Include every everything I c thins thing thin Everything can be proved out of ot him He himself had no concern for or j consistency and believed that It was wasi i tho the very last thing that a IL noble mind should trouble Itself about With his motto was to tho the thelast last I still learn It 11 takes a strong stron strongman strongman man to be willing to let go 10 this year car what hat he lie knew last year Emerson merson was quite quill willing to do this John Jones or lUchard Hoe floe may be willing to do b It II too but bat Hoe noe and ani John Jones are nrc not likely to possess posses tho the prodigious enlightenment that Emerson I merson possessed possess cd to build a new knowledge upon At this maximum Emerson was wa quite high enough to be beyond the tile reach of et the UIA ordinary citizen The great Amer American ican teRn world has haA mostly got him and andi i gets him at second hand littered down through the higher minds and antl this not because lie jie was waA Incomprehensible ble for no man wrote more luminously but because he ha la Is morally too lofty loCI for Or most men to 10 care to measure their Mature against al his The TIle thought of ot the whole country has been more or less I since the The Tho Im mi Impress press R of ot his mind has cut deep le p Into every cery mini mind that ever came cam Into con contact conr contact r tact with It and the Impress has hns been heln rasped passed ed on not much blunted to thore who ho bo have rubbed up against tho the minds M o Influenced Thousands of at people p who vho never neer read rend Emerson Emerlon use his words wordA Ivory every day Ilay unawares they the have become proverbial they the seem to have come como dOn clown from tho the antiquity of ot English Ho no better than he hel hel l l kneis Goodby proud prou world Im go goIng goIng lIng Ing home Beauty Is IR Its own excuse for tor or being All 1 lI mankind loves a lover lowr these and antI other sentences art are habit habitual habitual ual uni nod prove the genius of oC their au author author author j thor for tor or putting a II universal thought In Inthe Inthe inthe the mot most striking way wayNo wayt ay ayI t I No o other American poet struck so a n note lIoto as nil he lie It Ills Is as a n poet that ho s strongest hold on Oil the people Yet his poems his philosophy are nrc too strong vin for tor the nines He lie wrote In no fine fiM frenzy and generally he lip dip ped his hi pen Ien In his lila brain Instead of ot in his heart Yet Yot his Product Is II wonderful und nod Inspiring Whether or not America has pro a greater r mind than Emersons l It Is certain that It II has produced no other such Ruch mind ns as his nod and probably It l never will He remains the greatest l p of cf t tho ho Individual that the modern world has produced und and he hea a the greatest not because ho Ito was va I willing to upset existing I I to 10 I In some way a the nn political rights of at the thc Individual but because he preached In the clearest most convincing most moat Inspiring way vay wa HOOKS No one knows Mho sho ho the author of at The Tho Garden of at a n Commuters Wife may lOa be b beba i but ba the th books popularity proves as ns per perennial ns its Barbaras garden of ot which h she writes with unfaltering charm From the time of Its publication nearly two to years ago n o the book has enjoyed a n demand comparable In steadiness s only to 10 that of ot a n textbook text book This Ibis Is IA probably owing to the books atmosphere atmo here of ot cheery companionship of ot human friend friendship friendship ship of ot Mowers flowers am birds and nature and of at It n rarely delightful personality Its philosophy ophy Is wholesome unselfish kindly but Jut above all 1111 alive alle vigorous energetic and entertaining It will be he good news nes to Its thousands of ot readers for tor the book has hns gone Ione through many man i editions to know that Its successor leopie of ot tho th Whirlpool In is being published this week by the Macmillan In tilts this new nel volume liar Bar Barbara bara continues the narrative but the tue new book has something In the tue way vay of ot ofa ota a plot It II Is said At tt t any nn rate there Is I no nc need heed d to know knots anything whatever The a ft Commuters V ife to relish the coming coining book Hap Happily described characters are sail said to tobe tobe tobe be among Its 1111 attractions which Include In lutle pungent humor Some SeIne New Yorkers Yorker build cottages near the home of ot liar Bar Barbara bara and Evan l an and Barbara records s their amusing doings a a aIn In Its Ita field Miss MI I Bucks volume on Theory and antl Practise In Boys Clubs promises to fill an nn Important place pIne The boys club Idea IMn took root a few tew years ears ago aio In our large laric cities Since then It II has hM grown Biown developed because It proved pro successful Its aim Is to furnish n It meeting place where boys can enjoy enjo themselves and still 1111 be bi out nf of the range of t f bad Influences end and mischief and where they can con be turning themselves Into Inlo good men Miss Buck has gather gathered ed up the facts anti ami theories regarding re these clubs and their conduct and set sets them th m forth Corth In chapters on such themes n os OR Ethical Le sons of oC the tho Playground Preliminary Arrangements tasting Starting S the tue Club and The Place of ot the Club III In to Play In General The Tho book Is really ft tl t contribution to the lit literature literature literature of ot philanthropy One of ot Its IIA Rood good points Is Us its suggestions n regard re to las In the club another Is Its explanation of ot the development of ot ethical Perceptions through discussion In business meetings of ot the club MA You will rarely see ns nil Interesting n a table tabla of ot contents as ns that of ot the June number of ot Magazine lie Be Beginning ginning with the frontispiece of ot Thomas Wallace who linn has aken place lilace an as a leader In the fight for Cor or freedom an ending coiling with some additional remarks remark by Simeon Ford fortl with his quaint and Irre Irresistible humor the tue magazine Is brim I full tull uil of ot bright snappy entertaining work ork by b good writers rs some ome of ot them well vell known knowlI others who are sure uro to be beThen beThen beThen Then Ireland Will Be lie Free I rte by Fred red James Gregg g makes mas romance of ot Irelands long for tor or liberty and nt at the same time reduces to simplicity he tile much question Justus Forman Jorman In The Needle of at tho the Damned weaves a difficult choice Into a n somewhat strenuous love loc story tol Intimate Portraits ns as usual are arc exclusive and Introduce you rou to people peopleS ople S whom you OU very ver er much moe wish to know The Wooing of ot Ah Te continues the IndIan Idyl begun In the May number The und and Iu Sally li Is I a Western story by Jy 0 Twice Horn Born by IJ Edmund Russell Is n it 1 de tie of at childhood la ilL II India which conjure conjures up tho the atmosphere of ot the tue east Gast In A Dakota lomance M MW Mv W v lAw Zaw telling a 11 strong love loe story manages to paint n t n a convincing picture of ot emigrant life ou jt e Western prairie James L I Ford Is II ut at c t his hlA best be bestIn 1 In Jn The Corning Coming Queen Quean of pf Corned Comedy Lillian concludes Toilers of ot the Home tanking mulling many man Interesting statements about the lives rind thoughts of ot servant girls Head Autobiographies If It you would know knos how It feels to be Lc lifted train from a n small western town Into Congress and out outa again a aln In The Imperturbable vores Will vili layno has ha written otto one of ot the thc character studies that has over ever ap op appeared Peered In any magazine Herman r In The Tho Wheel Shoei of ot the Pot lot Potter Potter ter tel gives us Its S a 0 stirring tale tall of ot the northwest The fhe four our Stories of ot otHeal Heal Iteal Life Ilfe In hr this number are nio above II OVe the tho average Stewart Cuttings Glad Olal Tidings In is an nn exceptionally good story etor With tho thio Procession sll n 4 full tull of at interest und rind n a great rb y bright things s Dont IJ n t iiI fall t U to tol land lI H HA i 4 a iv sS ivA A it pretty anc anti cover de tie design sign appears In the Youths Companion for tor this week seek In tin lion of ot Memorial day It 11 Is In iii the Iho form arm of ot a II III i I LEAVES FROM OLD ALBUMS J j jI jI jr jl I I T i I Ii Ii It a i r i r rr rI t r I II I t E fr I I 0 1 X 1 I T I HI t Ht M H H I 7 i JOHN AND DAN SPENCER A QUARTER OF A CEN CENTURY CENTURY CENTURY TURY HACK flACK John D 1 Spencer r Is easily cosily recognizable r In this old picture but his com coot pun Ion will be ba less lew l u readily r known Tire Tho face acl boeer M is that of ot D S 8 present assistant general passenger agent of ot the lira II Oregon Short Line as ne Ij he lie looked In iii the thio days da of t his callow call 0 II youth Contrary to the general belief the tho two Sp brothers J I L D N I th the uncle un le and D S 5 tie the t e nephew t cannon entwined with garlands of or roses and Is most attractive A Soldiers Quarrel Is the opening story llory and deals doali with Incidents of ot the CIVIl war tar An ar article tide of ot Charles W King KIM entitled Hard Times ut at West est Point Is an nn Important contribution anti and the entire number Is IA tilled with the choice material which distinguishes tile the Jour Journal Journal nal nil J H In Horn font In Boston Bo t May In 26 25 li Entered l the Latin I School lS d Moved to Concord Conconi to lUe hIe In the old manse e 1814 1114 to Boston lUG 1811 Entered l Harvard college August mi 1817 Graduated 1821 1121 Taught laught In a school for tor young ladles In InD ll D ston 1 hemmed to Cambridge to study stud stull dl di Hilty Licensed to preach Oct Oc 10 1826 Went ent south for tor his health Nov No IS 2 5 June J ne 1827 1821 Spent a n year In Cambridge preach preaching i ing lug often otten Ordained as colleague of at Hev ne lIen Hen Henry ry 1 Ware are Jr minister of the Second church Doston March U l 1829 1129 Married to Ellen Louisa Tucker Sep heath euth or of his wife wire 1831 1131 He l his Die D 22 2 1812 Failed for lor Europe Dec nee 25 1832 Returned September 1833 1813 i Began H gan to lecture November 1833 Went W to Concord to live Ilse October 1831 ISM Married to LYdia Jackson September 1835 Secured the publication I llon of ot Carlyles s artor 1836 1136 Published Nature September 1836 Delivered his Phi Beta l appa address s son on The American Scholar Aug Au 31 1837 called Dr Holmes our Intellectual Intellectual Declaration of ot Independence e Took part In the founding of ot The Dial 1811 1810 Published his first series of ot Essays Elsas ISH 1811 Published his first volume of ot Poems 1846 1840 0 Made a second visit to 0 England r 1847 1147 to Concordi Published Representative Men Olen 1850 1550 Published English Traits 1866 1566 |