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Show SECTION TWO DESERET EVENING NEWS LEAVES FROM SATURDAY JUNE 16 1917 " Co ths annoyance of nerng told the Mmt thing about what you believe to be nw Joke The real book lover seldom read the magazine and very few magazine reader are book-lover. San Francisco Chronicle. OLD ALBUMS No Quitter BV WALT MASON (FOR THE DESERET NEWS). tha Many readers art unaware Mrs Belloc Lowndes and Hillatre Belloc are sister and - brother. Both are now engaged in writing the history of the great war as fas: as it is made. Beside writing a child's history. Mrs. Belloc Lowndes Is recording the war in fiction. Her eleventh and latest novel is electric with war 0 beautiful for spacious skies, ! ! SEXTETTE OF MISSIONARY S beautiful for pilgrim feet, Whose stem, impassioned stress A thoroughfare for freedom beat Across the wilderness ! America ! America ! God mend thine every flaw, Confirm thy soul in Thy liberty in law! O plot for the reader to enjoy That idea about the difference of $1,090 and there ia not much of romance and men Stories are by scarcely any of yet Hugh H. Fullerton. David Grayson, keen interest throughout the book. Gladyp Johnson and others, and natural gift of the author SUV editorial ha a punch in every ' iai them r and keep line. The serial etory by Edna Tfct ed to an expectant haa a generous installment, and .... end. where he can, the "Interesting People' department pit ktry if h. .kooaea, dispose of the princi- and Family Money are filled wjth pal characters to his own suiting. The good things, artist's two maiden aunt, living in a Com panion The ttaid manner in their stately English Womans n are home, character July number of The Companion Is sketches of the early Victorian pe- filled with helpful and entertaining riod; and the way in which their erticloa and stories Agnes Reppller young nephew with his Bohemian has written a stirring paper called Irvin ways end artistic disposition upsets "What Is Patriotism?" Cobb, ? ail their traditions is an irresistible with characteristic humor, tells Piece of humorous work. On a small some of his experiences in writing for wooded island to the west of the har- the tnoviee; and "Outdoor Piaje" is bor of Prswle lived the once famous helpful for amateurs who ere thinking artist Marmaduke Dax. shrouded in of acting outdoors this summer Other seclusion and mystery, and he, too. is good thtnge are "Bargain in inte the story, through seeking tions" and "The Patriotic Garden." antiques for his collection at Hatty's The fiction includes stories by such old shop where be encounters the well known riter Sophie Kerr, ambitious artist and also sees the Eleanor Gates. Eleanor Hoyt Brain M erd. Mara. Grace Elsie 8lng-thhim Cooke, and wonderful girl Through The Tegular department on boy receives help in his art and maeter. also through him tha mystery sur- - embroidery. Sables, motoring, and rounding the strange child model is other things are up to ?hir standard, the and cookin and picture of after much trial fashion, solved, partially j sections are especially valuable. Al- and tragedy is an excellent number. It ia unfortunate that the name of together, it the story detracts from its merits. 1 Number 7. Volume 2. There is so much of real rubbish Egle printed these days that the self-- , of this monthly, published at Ogden in is and the interest he Utah chosen title. "Rubbish Heap." happy and meaningless It would- school for the deaf and blind, is the not appeal to, but would rather dts- souvenir edition of the school for the the average reader; and (blind handsome courage Mechanically it is were it not for the popularity of the number, with art rover, numerous author and the fact that all her work portraits and views, first in all hows her cleverness, it is doubtful if respect aa a specimen of the printer's such a title would receive or deserve art The f in a graceful examination at the hands of the critl- - testimonial, the for which he set cal. Sometimes th choice of a title himself, althoughtypetotally blind, says win. for a work It place In the pub- f,mr bpy, did ,h. composing Hr taste simost ss much is the sub- - ,tha, and f)fth the prfM.ork on lhe pr In any event it should ent edition. The Ject matter literary par! has never h unfair to itself. been no less excellently done, there are biographical notes of the various THE TRAGEDY F III BLIV Instructors and of former and present year graduate, historical sketches, DOING MY BIT FOR IRELAND, by much general and valuable InformaMs rgaret Skinntder; Tbs Century tion about the worthy Institution Company. Nsw Tork. which The Eagle represents Th Min Skinnidtr was on of tbs ac- article are all characterised by tive participants in the revolution in vivacity and freshness altogether enthe Green Isle a year ago. and sh For Instance, spsaking of attempts no concealment of th fact joyable who did 'what nor of hsr pride In it. In a spirited one of the Instructors h ever did. among the narrative. Instinct with the poetic slm little growing at Lehl. th panegyrist piielty. the glamor, and the thrill of sugar beets th .race about whom it la written, says: "He was never remarkable' for he tell intimately of th rise and elze: In fact, he prides himself that h fall of the outbreak Her is no cold, can wear a lady shoe and s boy's formal, second-han- d story: she was suit, but he always affects a man s in the midst of what she writes shout; hat, whether It fit him or not was wounded three times and was a Napoleon and Stephen A Dougcomrade In arm and In council of tbs las were tiny men and Mr T com men bodies The Naand bines th greatness of both revolutionary women responsible for thl heroic, if poleon was unconquerable and Doug-a- s i unsuccessful, national geetur of a was a talker Mr remarkable race atand out vividly on a grest andgreat unconquerable talker. th pages of the book Jamea Connolly. Padralc Hearse Joseph Plunkett. Thomas McDonagh. the Countess Marklevicz and others The little book will be found valuable as s revelation of the mind and spirit of the Irish revolutionists. The author Madeline Tale Wynne, author of "SI herself, though quite unconsciously, Talks " th collection of amue-incannot help discovering to the reader Briggs anecdotes of New England writ-tethe soul of the revolutionary moveIn free verse and just published ment In Ireland. Not only the revoHoughton Mifflin company, has lutionists are in the book, but the by no metrs exhausted ber store of revolution is also th why of it. the by tales. When permission was courage of It, the ultimate invinci- jmch to include one of the verses ih asked bility of it. as she and her colleagues ths paper published dally at th resee it. The concluding pages cent Allied Bazaar in Boston. Mrs contain a collection of the songs sung 81 Briggs is very by th revolutionists, some of them Wynne replied to b invited to the Banew. all of thorn full of the swinging much pleased It He of makes him think zaar says of inthe movement which poetry ths child when its mother set It down voked them. hard on s chair and Said; 'You set where you're sot. I brung you here to have s good time. Now you have LATEST MAGAZINES It!' heroes proved Fer-be- . well-draw- Till all success be nobleness And every gain divine! beautiful for patriot dream That sees beyond the years Thine alabaster cities gleam Undimmed by human tears! America! America! God shed His grace on thee And crown thy good with brotherhood From sea to shining sea! O Vaca-draw- BOOKS MEDLEY. THE FRAGRANT NOTE BOOK; by C. Arthur Coin, Llf B, O. P Putnam's) Rons, Stw York and London. Dr Coaa and hia Frances d C Oaailanor Coan, have together a with pen and pencil most debook and for the lightful charming AN ARTISTIC or the poetic dreamer lives in the "bricked-ii- p dwell in to and who those city ?ht open country the book will be equally refreshing and interesting. To the one it will bring the fragrance of sweet flowers and growing things with the beauty and harmony of running brooks, and tinging birds, and sighing wind; and to the others who live always close to these beauties of nature it will bring knowledge of their secrets and romance, of their mission in the world, it will tell them how poets have used ,the flowers in expressions of love, and passion, and sorrow; and how philosophers have taken nature's marvels to unravel the mysteries of their thoughts. The reader is first introduced to the Iumb Porter of the Lodge, and this does though personage not talk. he leads you through wonderful garden where the flowers and trees and running vtnes and brooka and other lovely things tell their own story and history. and fh songs of the echo and fh winds repeat and carry them along 'hrough the different seasons. The book is throughout a beautifuT but. at the same time It contains so much real knowledge that the reader is learning wonderful truths and gleaning the sweetest thoughts from the world's greatest poets, while he idly fancies he is dealing with an allegory. The Quest Book ly rtfr open In the lodge of the Dumb Porter gives a greeting to the pilgnm who would pass through the gate into the great garden of the year; and from Spring's promise to Wfrter'W varnered fruits a most pleasing, delightful and helpful journey is taken during the hour required for the book's peyisal. natart-lova- r Both to him who j un-jb- v j editor-in-chie- STORY FOR ROYS. THE BARBARIAN; by Brewer Corcoran; The Page Company. Boston. This virile story by the author of that other strong and tale, "The Hoad to La Rev, will furnish wholesome entertainment to school, boys as well as to such fathers as still retain the interests and enjoy the The Barbarian triumphs of youth. is Will Bradford, and the book tells of hi school days at St Jos. There is a fair measure of originality in the plot, enlivened with the spice of sprightly and witty dialogue, and much vigor In the general narration. Nor are dramatic situations wanting, for each of which the hero Is found to be convenient and capable. The story is mainly concerned with the adventures end experience of Will Bradford and Charley Fulton. The former ia an uncouth youth who enters the school with various mistaken impressions, and gets himself in bad with the other students On the other hand. Charley Beenmgg at once a general favorite: and when he ia taken sick, his chum Bradford, out of loyalty to him. takes hi place In the big debate Later Bradford submits to a transfusion of his own blood (o save his friends life. These and other acts of courage and sacrifice improve his status with his school associates. but he is not entirely freed from the attitude of an outcast from their society until the close of the 1CH.YITILER, baseball season. His complete vindication and hia restoration to full comReview of Reviews Outstanding panionship come with the final game article In th Juns number of the COMEDIES OF WORDS; by Arthur of the season. The story Is lively nd American Review of Reviews ars those Schnttxter; Stewart A Kidd Comearnest, clean, and to he pany, Cincinnati. U. 8. A. with dealing with t". B recommended for boys' vacation Its allies, the new army draft law, Not th least important part of thl of the readiness the navy, the war volume i the erudite, classical and taxes, bureaucracy and food control, A GOOD STORY lengthy Introduction by Pierre Loving, the farmers etc., these viewpoint, wbo I the tranzlator of the play into particularly to the American English from the original German. THE RCBBISH HEAP: by Rita (Mr. sida of current history. Of larger Desmond Humphreys); O. P PutHe assures a that Schnitzler. the nam's Rons, New York and London. scope and world wide Interest ther Autlrlan dramatist, is the finest psyAlso numerous contributions, char-ectare In chologist th theatre today that The English seaport Prawle and the even In Berlin and Munich sketches cartoons and Illustrac mountainous yrlld of the west coast hie pieces are already ranked on of Ireland eqwm a setting for thl tions. Frank H. gimonds. the milia par with those of describes the progress of expert, hi German con- somewhat strange andr rather compli- tary frere. Hauptmann and Wedekind. Yet cated etory about a young French art- the war during the ominous month of s n trong contrast with them. ist, a fairy waif, and other Interesting May, and Igaac Don Levina offers , fcnt' foremost a child of Vienna observations on Russia's transicharacters. Katty Quirk, an Irish timely iennsee of the tion to stable government. There la Viennese warm, woman, keeper of a second-hangraceful and with a sense of piquant store in the poorer district of Prawle, an Interesting sketch of General intrigue almost a Gallic, in a theatrith new French commander, and receives into her home as a daughcal sense, a that which operate an odd but beautiful child, Paul V. Collins makes some surprising In ter. Pari itself, a a satirist, he is ever whichMara, her husband, who is a seafar- statements in his discussion of the aiert. and he attacks. In his play as ing man. found wandering u as in his books, socialism and rocks on th Irish coast. Inamong the sisal twins monopoly. the attic monarchism, semlttsm. of the old house in Prawle are tha disand American There Is a blending of in fact any subject which carded pieces of booka, old seriousness and fiction in the July " mastery 0f the art of the theatre clothes, etc., which unfound Katty that give a reader the American ! timely for the great stage salable; and here, in the midst of this proper proportion of helpfulness and wrld. The more open the sore. collection, sitting with k torn , In "Markleys Methbook in entertainment. relentlessly he proceeds io her hand, a young artist discovers tha od" ia a serviceable Idea that can be probe it a trait noticeable, a all child and at once seizes the thought of put to use by all: John Hays Hamneatre-iove- r. wills agree. In Brieuz a picture, which, when mond thinks Cecil Rhodes was the - How he Ihen of Scandinavia. Shaw calls "The Rubbish Heap.finished, he moct wonderful man he ever met. and et VncBritain But along with hit aatire obtains permission to have the beauti- tails some new things about Rhodes. mysticism (his great inter-- ! ful child for a modal: how eventualCan Do for What the Middle-Age"vcrlasting problem of the ly, through torn papers In this same Their Country' is full of timely sugV 2e ,;,ver loses bis sure sense discarded heap of whatnots, her iden, the Falrtnnks writes gestions; Douglas dramatic; and in the realm of tity is learned and a mystery concern- about and Darwin P. the movie h es- - ing his own he haa PlE is InNew York parents cleared, are preeldeni of the nLahtd undisputed supremacy cidents in a very cleverly constructed Kingsley, Life Insurance company, gives hia fan-.as- life-lik- e, i g dra-meti- d Pe-tal- n. bric-a-bra- c, - d well-nig- n e 8chnitrlers Introduction to Ameriand whatever of apcan patron preciation he may have here, dates probably from the production in New York, several ago. of the year An&tol series, with John Barrymore n the title role. That venture could hardly be called a success, finished performance though It was. Of later Interest is "Literature produced by the Washington Square Players. This one Of the pieces presented in th present book, the others being "The Hour of Recognition "Great Scenes. "The Festival of Bacchus." and "His are by no means Helpmate. They easy reading one perusal of many may not suffice for their understanding; but the one who has grasped their content and significance may confidently feel that he haa had a session at school with life itaelf. STIRRING "Pan-dost- 1 KATHARINE LEE BATES. Ho-ve- r, g n Isaac Don Levin, whose book. The Russian Revolution." was published last week, and reviewed in columns. ws born at Mozyr. the Russia, and came to America In 111, the reaction that followed hi after Interest m the unsuccessful revolution of 105. Though h did not' speak English when he arrived, three years later he was contributing stories and article to a Kansas newspaper, and soon after he was writing for The Independent and The Outlook and other periodicals. He made Russia and its conditions hia chief study and his Russian article ars now syndicated throughout the couatry. The difficulty of spelling American name la almost a great for the average Swiss paper as it is for an American paper to spell correctly a Russian name says a dispatch from Bern. When Brand Whitlock, the American minister to Belgium, came out recently or. hi way to Havra, the Journal d Oenav referred to him flatteringly a 81 r Frandt Chltlock. The mistake was called to tho attention of the Bund of Berne, which In Rs next Issue rectified the "ridiculous misspelling of the name of the American minister to Belgium. Whitlock Brand. never of Jeffery Farnol' On th tt Is latest "Tbs Definite Object. written: This story haa act been pubmeans Which lished serially." that when the reader mention It he It la no danger of being cut short by th person who says. "Ob. I read that long ago In a mxgastn. which is next Dramatising the novel for tha stage ia a practice that has old and reepect-ebl- e precedents as when Shakerpear turned Lodges novel of "Roaalynde" into the dramatist's charming comedy of "As You Like It In recent years, however, the practice hue grown exeven tremely, Thackeray's "Penden-nla- " and "The Newcomes" being dramatised. Nine times in tan the reason is the desire of the theatrical exploiter to make money Only by exceotion ii rhe desire of Iforrifc great actor to render the part of a famous personae of fiction the ruling motive for the dramatisation of the romance or the novel. Sometimes the experiment result in dramatic success. When some popular fiction has won an army of readers it is not unreasonable to imagine that several at least of th factors which cause iu popularity can be put into rhe shape of a play. Not a few reader like to see the personages of a fiction impersonated and made to speak and move before our eye by living men and women In the case of a " dramatisation frequently on account of the is effseted eaMi book's interest depending on action and the story being brief and unified. But dramatization of so superior a novel as "Tese of the DUrborville. ' In which character counts for at least as much as plot, is another matter Debate over the dramatisation of novels also is an old story. Elizabethan critics pointed that Shakespeare. In dramatizing Greene's as "The Winters Tale. repeated the novelist' error of place and time. The difficulty of dramatizing fiction which contains many characters. covers years and involve profound probing of personality haa led some critic to deny that making plays of fiction can be done effectively. Bliss Perry, for instance, asserted that the playvand the novel are no more alike thaA fish and bird nd that the novel dranuktized must be as clumsy as the flying fish. nr1s may be true for such novels as, those of Meredith and James, but'tome sorts of novels closely approach some sorts of play Borne plays have been changed into novels a easily ar some novels into plays, as in the case of Read a Peg play It originated aa Woffington. which Reade had helped to write, and then Reade by himself rewrote it as a novel. As a rule, however, the novel is great as it recedes from the condition which is easily dramatized, while the grest a it withdraws from the pjay hape in which it may easily he novel Novel fashioned from drama zed are likely to he better than plays from fiction, because the novelizer than the dram-tize- r has more elbow-roo. Spokane Spokesman-Review- j j m Famous American Couple To Visit French Frcnt IVnnrtl and His Lifted Wife, Elizabeth Robin Pruned. d b it l ighting I mo-A- nbt Will (rovernirmi to MaUc Sketches and Wife Will rtti- - Her Impression Sir .(arocs Barn, io Occupy Their Fiat In Imilor Ilali Caine (elehrales Ch Birthday Ha liaised tZSb.OtU) ,r Mar ami charitable purposes Gaby Heelys to spend 2k.O(n on Family Tomb, Joscqih 1 V London. IJirrmrj "best-seller- SS.jOO-a-ye- g, In liberating strife. Who more than self their country loved, And mercy more than life! America! America! May God thy gold refine NEW 25 YEARS AGO. This interesting group show aa they lookad in the ix Salt Laker British missionary field in 1SS2. The subjects are, upper roij, left to right John D. Owen. John, Kelly (deceased t and B B. Clawson Lower row, It was Ralph Savage, Bishop T A. Clawson and Sam Barrett (deceased-- ) in honor of the last named that hia mothei; gave (he funds for the erection of Barrett Hall. self-contr- 0 beautiful for -- The Novel and the Drama. For amber waves of grain. For purple mountain majesties Above the fruited plain! America America God shed His grace on thee And crown thy good with brotherhood From sea to shining sea ! ! adventure It contains a description of a Zeppelin bombardment which as close to fact as a newspaper keeps account. THE BEAUTIFUL AMERICA L'ncie Sam is not a quitter; he is dow to ehed his coat, slow to draw hit lethal weapons and demand another's go:. But when once the fuss is started, though the scrap be fierce-anrough, L'ncie Sam will When th go the limit and wi!! never say Enough warlike captains thunder, and the brazen bugle blare, l'ncie Sam will join the scrimmage, with hi coattaili in the air, he will wing hi- - shining sabre, he will whirl, hia deadly brand, till the Honens cease their zoltern, and the kaiser has been canned. You will see his banner- - flyTnp. a today you see them n. and the last dog flung, till he fetches' home the o has been hung. Though Hes slo to indignation ag our neighbors long have felt he --in whip an anaconda when h tightens up h; belt; oh. hell scrap and keep on scrapping, never think to end the scrap, till the foe is shot to nieces and goes tumbling off tha ALT kUrrs- imp; he !! conduct his redhot r ot on th- - sea and n the land, till the Hohens cease from inltern, and the kaiser has been canned. Lriter. (Special Correspondence I .appearing at the Globe theatre wher 0 My Henri was played for ONDO.Y June t Joseph Pen- u.lcal mix-- , J ?,00. net!, the f.moue American art- Suzette. and appear u and hia jifted aif. alao an be making exceedingly good with tt. fact I have heard claim that th American, Mrs. Elizabeth Rob-'Jonly London playhouse in Pennell, have received an inviia- that ha.i the "8. R, O.' eirn out tlon from the French government to for averalhadmonths. A few dajri it the front, and are preparing to fore thn open in. I met Harry and Wa ik he and Gaby were ex- start almost at once. Mr. Pennell. ut th who is the author of "Our Phlladel- th I'r o .. phis. Nights, and other gracefully written volumes, will record Impres-- ; slons. The result should he an un-iuaually interesting document. While the Pennell are away, their flat in Adelphi Terrace House will be tenanted by 8ir James Barrie who for time has occupied the apartment just underneath theirs. Another re- y i 18 p'rhnJ'"' the good and ;of sufficient reason that the money that had been put into It was their own. In gazette Gaby wears bigger hats ; ,"35 dance she ia auppoaed to' he a canary while Harry ia a th bird. designs upon Amoiif thoae who have seen "Buz-so,Tf,. s Ki Manuel late ot Portu- ?a, in a - KTi '?'" filled cage 'ih ,;& xb,:,rr oThTof joh!r,ortfhyh'.h.n,; returned from France wher. he ha- imends to'r.ct been acting as a masseur Georg . Bernard Shaw lives on the other side1 rr , of the street and the story goes that esoto.Tlv ! Sir James, when he wanted to attract ... Shaw's attention, used to gain that sod Pncd"n, by bombarding Shaw's window with po"d- - to 1 Italian hunk, of bread, but now that we are;, n.bv aH asked to eronomL of suafi thr sumption Sir Jmw employs ...... (regularly aeh year, ss u tha custom 9)g '? ,r(n' L. 1 Franc. t Borne time ago it was reported in Three American novel which ar the notes that Barrie had become n keen admirer of th novels of the lam being exceptionally well reviewed here 0. Henry, ami that he had recom- - rf The invisible Balance Sheet. by mended them to all hi friends, In- - Katrina Trask, Fincus Hood," by ' Arthur Hodges; and Ruggles of Red eluding Mr. Asquith, the and Mrs Asquith, the famous original Gap' by Henry Leon Wilson Regard-o- f 'he latter, th- - critic of The Week "Dodo." Since then a lettvr ha ban mad public which Sir James Dispatch writes Scarce. Prize If wrote to "O Henrys" widow, Mrs you buy s copy of Ruggles of Sarah Coleman Porter, in which hi Red Gap, an American by HenTh shad of Sydney Smith might described himself as "captivated" by ri Leon Wilson, which norl ns juat been be pardoned a smile on hearing that the American s work, adding I "If published in England by John Lane, in 117 th trustee of a leading AmIt first and then burn It. Don't had discovered him before hie death. I erican university, authorized to be- should have considered a trip to ths lend it to anybody and dont give tt I read it stow prizes upon fhs best American United States well worth while to away first and then gave it away and th giftee lent it nfter-w-arnovel, best American play, best Am- msk his sco .ntancs " Having best and of the Aequiths to "O. Hsnrjr." biography, erican work and now every one of th work In American history for the year, Barrie has now. I hear, presented the lends- - as well as i lie gift talk withheld the first two. gave the fourth former prime minister with a com- to me of nothing els every time I of the see any one of them to a Frenchman,, and In th third alone plete edition of the works enNobody crowned American effort The award American I Msu passant. joyed more than I did this screamingr-)- y AH of which reminds me that I Ambaaeador Jusaersnd will strike humorous story of an English valet wI!-derve- d tribute to recently heard two storis of Barrie who was lost at poker to a wMtsrn j -- very one a, a scholarship Uteran charm.- which illustrated the common eensedn American family that wanted to take ton, discretion which governs h of Francohome the real thing In man serjnd fin spirit of hisas study revealed Ir. some generosity. The first of these vants.' snd who had to pose as miAmerican relation In is tales wonderthe connection with of Rochambeau. rareere lord of and who tried to teach the the Dhases U Enfant, and Washington. The award ful film of "Mask. and Faces," Tom Yankee how nobleman's flunkeys famous but hang it ail. specially th to the daughters of Mrs. Julia Ward Taylor and Charles Read which has been made here, with author: I don't want to of nothHowe, given in a year whan careful play, an funds to build ing else all my life. AndtalkI particulives of such other public servants andall star acast, to raise In with theatre connection to people who tall m. larly object ss Marshall. McKinley, and Booker the equip art. in with laughter, about bits of a book academy of dramatic is as clearly Washington appeared. This academy, originally I have read. A novel ought merited But every one must come re Bloomsbury. of Sir the Tree, is to be a memory good Herbert not a nightmare gretfuliy back to the temporary or now enterprise a by representative governed The next copy of Ruggiea of Bed permanent withholding of the pur ineluding Sir Arthur Pinero, Gap' I huy fand T want to read tt It is said that 25 council, ly literary prize Sir James Barrie. George Berhard again) 1 shall bum Otherwise, 1 shall works of American fiction appeared in Shaw, B!r Squire Bancroft, the first of and there was a host of Amerl Britain's theatrical knights and other ' get sicker of th novel than I Am HAYDEN CHURCH. can plays. Is it possible that th judges great ones of the theatrical world here pf,w have not read th "blurbs of th pub The corner stone of the proposed the theatre was laid by Lady Bancroft In Ushers extolling the novels, or I I7nmiblift)wfl SrnH Letters. press notices in advertisements of ths and fa;r progress Was made with the is It that the hardly possible plays? building itself until the outbreak. judge wer bewildered by mritprjqsia.f the wee. -- wherrrite funds ran lew. !! The Anderson gallerv of New York New Tork Evening Tost After trying with little success, other reentlv a number of device, for filling the treasury. C. M i the administrator of the scad- - Btibitebed letter of 8ir Balter Scott, No More. Grub my badly needed real theatre to act many of them being to his solicitor. In Could Sir James com to the rs- Gibson In nt ,1.' ,h. Sir James listened sagely cue? who has deeueai" Involved by tbs AtJm.OIt Joyce Kilmer, presented the finish he said, with his Scotch Baliantvn.a, in hi Juk published book Literature ij They ar. of bankruptcy In ih Making' th opinions of the burr. 'Ah'm thinkln that all these r "tereat some of ih.m have been known American writers on :hlr , boys and girls might be a deal bet- in eagle-eye- d the by England And that ended the profession, doss not believe that starv- ter employed Clement Shorter They will doubt! ation if a necessary training for 3 In full some day; mean-"Maspubltthed Previous to the nim vrrlotTSf 1 have never had anv bread-lin- e writer, while to give so ms and Faces Itaelf, we are treat- - wblie it is Inspiration, say Mr Ri mer to an exceptionally interesting one passage from them Scott write to an Interviewer who interviewed the of the aale of 'Wood stock interviewer. 'I has' been like Msrie hr,win 'be council of in academy in Gtbaon the Life of Napoleon." So tha, perhaps US. 00 th. others Getting hi j . 'been""aMe " to" LteriTuu mu,t have ?ou oj I think you will find cake bVpSjbl maa. taak. Id appear aound raa- did the traditional real ! onn a?unt te a pity to el th. would be country: There j . atarving ar. a herd, of mak.-h.Uev- e ?.n fTuV post, who Literature li. lll. aV.rfin Street bt rTre P" thi '" iil bn hU' akT forTota quite wall 20 year or more ago but none of whose members he haa since Bm ma, yy upon it tha f wl ! always ..nmtn, wiIh !lit ,h. tix on that the exert!- ns b which I am at proclaim ha ia a poat and wont work and prefer to starve haimt got & glimmer of big poetry in him. 1oopla ,T. member of the household ,hva! I? will oe rewith inspiration toil waa Barrie , particular friend 'L- 'i membered that Mr. Kilmer ia a writbout that length of time ago er of verse .la well at of prose. surviving member of the family, who are old people, have fallen on evil 9 y h T?nfab a mutual acquaintance daya. and Sub-Debr ? What is a loeon at the plared their cane before Sir Jamea hf novel. The thin g terms Barrie. He promptly came to is a new book by reacue. very generoualv. I am told. Bab a Irapowi1!? He taiked of publiahlt&E a n edH. and ira it to be aup- Roberts quarto Rinehart, author of Mary f. to have ,h 'K. "The Circular Staircase," "Kings. Hall Caine, who was C4 last month f tha:" Besides, aa the Queen and Pawns. etc. ? ork What I a Ltea finally the wi- August. 11 , he ha. devoted himself A is that most effervescent almost entirely to British uIne ' nA,u rouch more than ?hoee proparandat and entertajglng personage In the en- in the I'nited States, having aent more "f fh he novel), not to tire world a sweet, young girl, 'aome- - than 80 column of gratuitous articles m'--' t. ri hat 'he labor incurred by irh r m " where in her teen. juat ready for over the cable to prominent Ameri R' r' llun double The success of 'Woodstock' life, yst theoretically an onlooker in can newspaper, thereby contributing the game of Ilf, because she hs not as much as any English writer toi'?r,iz!? reiornmends the minor , made her social debut. But Bab is not a understanding of the Issues 'ion " only an onlooker. Sht a intensely Involved In th war it is said that! An-- in a ihlrd letter we find the a alls romantic, adven- during th paat few year he ha follow ing: turous. loyal. Such a girl a our sons raised 8250.000 for charitable pur- It would be easy to carry on the will marry such a girl as only this Poses from various charity books, the Canong:. 'e Chronicle' to two volumes have brought moat conspicuous success being "King more o that you might pos- day and generation Albert'a Book." which he edited foi y velv announce your dividend fqrth. of 0 This is Bab a the girl be- the Belgian Fund of The Dally Tele- - jpd ' - v shillings arht eightpence. loved. said to be Mary Roberta Rlne- Of thia book 500.000 copies third). I will put other Irons in th hart'g most humorous. engagl ng char, were aoM fire ail dispatch, but nut let f the n the folk direst 'Napoleon.' for b have just been received by the Dm for the Gaby a her and stomach of boa American p lump Desly ere- - New Book Brora. partner. Harry Piloer. are strlcior. i Th.? 11. ! Sub-De- b h- Sub-Deb- Rub-De- b - Sub-De- b. one-grap- h. j 1 1 |