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Show 4 V VHMKAT K t OlMr-XKW- MAY SATURDAY S 25 1018 SECTION" THREE to read A Week Without Wheat" and the children are not forgotten, as they have their Own Cireu to cut out t Abdul the Damned National Geographic A stirring story of "The Gem of the Ocean:-OuBY WALT MASON (FOR THE DESERET NEWS). r American Navy," by Secretary Jo- -; sephus Daniels, is the appropriate- - and j highly interesting opening article In I stood by Abdul Hamid's grave, far from the world wars storm, and J the April issue of the National Geo-- 1 with some three! saw the johnny-jumpuj graphic. Illustrated wave above his sleeping form. By all the nations Another cabinet; j dozen fine pictures. he was member who contributes a timely slammed, when be was on his throne; die world pa- -t per 1 Secy. Franklin K. Lane, ho pronounced him doubly damned, and named him with asks and answers "What Is It to Be! a groan. Now all unhonored Abdul lies, in his eternal '-an American?" .Frederick C. Walcott discusses "Forerunners of Famine"! sleep, and greater criminals arise, and he looks pretty with d illustrations); David writes on "Forming New Fashcheap. And Abdul had his points, methinks, some virions in Food. 11 Uen, tues him adorned; he wae not like some royal ginks A. W. (irMley has Illustrations); to sayi CRIMSON MAID OF about "The Nationalsomething he scorned.' He did not 'blush to wade in Bo-- ! hypocrisy in War Time (SGeographic vriy illustrations); I he wallowed in his shame; he did not say, with sin, and Stockton Axson, national secreevil grin, that others were to blame. He did not pierce the American Red Cross, extary ofhow-tbhumanitarian-movement plains CnlTW-etgreatest Utah. a . countrys breast with snickersnee or Creese, and Vroro, B y AJJnTO OSWDND of the Brigham Toon of modern times originated In a practical attempt to meet a prache always did his best to keep the world at tical need with a remedy, He did not, from his filthy den, watch babes peace. this paper being alsopractical freely Illustrated. and Another women of shot, and harrow up the souls of men with as feature of the blurb fair daws , The mil'lrn ras this Issue is a noteworthy ' series of reproductions Me and Gott. The dripping sword, the burning of talk .That k lines th i.ialrm hlllr, , of drawings by Lucien Jonas, the eminent French artist. brand, were busy 'neath his flag; but not a moment did he stand to springy And as wild add free as the prairie fawn tbe kultur gag. I stdod by Abdul Hamids grave, and said, J must admit That bounds where hut fancy .wills. Tbe May number of he didnt But cow that her In' fr had marrhei' away, piously hehave. and failed to make a hit; we should not judge this monthly is published m bpanish, i ' The better to bear her loss. him lyire below, hes reached a higher court; but, lined up with one king lha articles being translations from rontobullons by American authors I know, he was a dead She left her boms, on a' summer's day, game sport. appearing in American A matd of the f'rimaon Cpoea The authors represented publications. are Senator William K. Borah, George M. Janes, Richard Gffner, Joseph 8. Ames, Alma Her veeeet was stmek by a bunding shell (.aider .Johnston, Vvstiter U. Merritt, j That shattered her timbers strong. Alexander Harvey. Maxwell 8. Burt And the maiden of mercy helpless fell and James 1 Slayden; and the col- umna from which the selections are! In the midst of a drowning throng taken are abuse of the New York1 - But s strong, brave hand, beating back the waie Times, Quarterly Journal of tbe LniAlfred Sldgwick, Umw Note), "Salt of the Earth, Has Appealed That manes of thlr anger toes verslty of North Dakota, The Dial, AtTo Americans So Strorigly, Had German parents. Though Bora and lantic Monthly, The Bookman. The froth of the the r Has snatched from liquid graves Economic World, Current Opinion, Brought "Up in London Sir Walter Scotts Prevision Tlutt Woods The Maid of the Crimson Cross. Scribner Magazine, and The Annala At MbbotfordWoul4 Scre Vr Purpose Author of. It:inient of the American Academy til Bulat-c- al GOLDEN KIMBALL AS A STRIPLING. and Social Science, Philadelphia. American Play Score In Of Women" Would be Book Keriewei In the fields of Prance where the Hliea Woora. I seems that of the runaway. the for occurrence day an It isnt .day every Ixmdon Whole Herd of Irish "Bulls Turned Loot tbe use The gentle and tender nurse a boy to ride on a runaway horse and young Kimball had borrowed too peaceful American Boy Baseball, in fact, fighting' a plague in the open tomb, have the militia coma to his reecue. of a bay horse with none for , Stood the first fiction and picture, ia the predominattemper. Ising spurs But that la arhaX happened to J. GoldLONDON LITERARY LETTER. i - the Theptagne of the war prod's curse. overdid lad thing, rather ing intereet of Tne American Boy for en Kimball when he was a lad of 12. time, the mare the June. A the 0 bay But fear for the fate of her lover bold First there with result to that In is was taken At the time this picture Starred, then a different kind of a baseball son seems likely to do as well with It 1 SC7 he And grief o'er her fond hearts loss By Hayden Church-(Speciaccompanied his father, Heber started out dt a breakneck pace that, bad story, full of fun, entitled "Shorty the as he did with Stop Thief, and has C. Kimball and President Brigham might have resulted m disaster Correspondence.) Has Increased aO her danger an hundred fold. Traitor. some boy mounted followed given not military ara While by practical Toung. on a trip to St. George. ONDON. Hay ll. Recent let- done recently with a revival of "BrewThe Maid of the Crimson Cross. Million the Journey was being made by his chase and come InUr the rescue.was Just ticle which no boy wno is interested in the game ought to nuns. "Baseball. In Mr. Kimball those day ter from the United States ster's There was such continuous laughter elder with a aertous religion purIn- the School and eehools the fintehing the grammar first of a series Gut, make It evident that not much on the flrzt, nlght ot Be Careful. Oh. clever and bold Is the soldier's hand. pose, the boy oaw it only in the light and participating In the of three articles by George H. Sister of a great adventure. Today the only fifth readerbook 1s known there regarding the Baby, that its success here seemed to And clear is the maiden's eye. of th rly keen of St. the Louie the cony Browns rivalry are first remembers he London loves a good "Fighting episodes of Mr Alfred Sldgwick. be assured. awarded was schools. personality he for lover and sweetheart Later the .over stand the baseball serial, Fairview, day Together farce particularly just now, aa is long tiresome desert reaches the In a life University reaches redwhoae a the of novel. Salt a acholarsblp very Earth,' second and needs interesting stage which they traveled, shown by the fact that a piece of this To fight and, If be, die. when It first began its ses- then there is another exciting (called here Salt and Savour,") ap kind, "A advenheaded lad In St. George who thrashed of Deseret Little Bit of Fluff. has the But little he wist that the fair disguise in the old Council house which ture in t ranee, this time to have been so popular with observpears an in him for trying to win a few extra mar- sions longest run of any play now being News Deseret on the stood American of site the ation balloon. As gold Is enmeshed In drees reader. Besides tbe this ia not a there In approved by bles a way here, having recently been done of today. In writing, as she does In this tale, acted patriotic story by Clarence B. Kelland for the 1,111th time! Some of the Concealed from the gaze of his loving eyes young J3L George citizen, and third building Germans in England critics and other good fiction. The issue has of naturalized tow1! also tbo usual number of speak slightingly ot this AngliThe Maid of the Crimson Cross. and of the Teuton breed in their own too. came through the gracious agen- stream and lake, lies the little helpful versiori of "Twin Beds" aa a and stretching near Its tlcle. and departments. land, Mr' Sldgwick writes with sure cized but Dan Beard cy of God that other thought iscame they all have compliments true border are ranches with pome, and wmes on lhe UM Where the ranks of the dead and the dying lay so clearly and vividly I know It the Geoe knowledge, for. though she was born play, for Helen e who came over will rejoin my cattle, while nearby is the jd. Johnson tells boy Bow to make and brought up in London, aha te tha from U. S. Raymond, that out beyond A. to eppear In her origi. battlefield, , On the blood-re- d the of Louie home Butlrwe Her trapper, money m y,e wuod business. Waiter daughter of German parent ' boy. . tmii hnv hn rt A maiden Is threading her gruesome way. who lead hermit Ufe until one day jr father came to England early in the nal part. In various papers 1 find her last eenpiry and became ardently likened to Ada Rehan (twice), to By mantles of night concealed. A CHARMING NOVELETTE. English in hte sympathies, always Ethel Levey (three timee), to Mies and there on article horseback Che is lifting with care her lover's head arpj tbe and the one woman whom ait the men the largeness and freedom Copton. the gifted wife of R. C. Carcontrasting the Harold HOUSE: nding, HR? IN GTRI. saluting flag, THE by coming of English aocial, political and com- ton (twice), and to Gengvieve Ward, the small village seem to adore. Brora the damp of the meadow moa MaeGrath-- . Harper A Brothers, New in In the one look from the man to the solar eclipse, etc. mercial life with the oppression and the renowned American tragedienne. . York and London, And her tears fall fast, for she deems him dead. te perfect true, and it is there narrowness of Germany 7 years ago. Tbe only critic who does not call Mtee girl maninimitable Mr. hie in MaeGrath The Maid of the Crimson Cross. he. the lone trapper, whom she He brought up his children to be Eng- Raymond "masterful describe her ner unfolds a charming and refresh- choose as her guide across the deslish, Just as many Germans emigrat- as "compelling." to America willingly see their ing story In his new novelette nove- ert when her father dies and she In the fields of France where the Hliee bloom. ing a about are because there lette only leaves their rude surroundings for a children become American With Ireland so much In th body and The maiden with bated breath. hundred and fifty short pages, but home with a rich aust m Chicago. souL e It Is that there In hia booklet, "Right Above Race," Is guarding the door of an open tomb. Mrs. Sldgwick married Mr. Alfred should be aappropriate every one is full of bright dialogue How her strange lovers follow her. i Otto recrudescence, ae d Kahn, an American of German Sldgwick. the well known writer on and piquant situation. The tale has land their many adventure and of To keep back the angel Death. that say, stylists essentially to do with the adventure of a New experiences, wild though not at alii birth, declares: 'The greatest service logic and a cousin of Prof. Henry Irish product, th "buli. One of th 11 be true to the cause," she firmly said, York club man with something more unlikely, form an Inter eating story. J which men of German birth or antece-on- e Sldgwick and of Archbishop Benson. last Irishmen that one would expect to ... all dent can t not to can rerender which the reader the country of For the last 10 years they have lived have been goitty of an undeniable and " "If I must endure this loss; than aix figures to his credit, who and yet on that unfolds their origin te to set their faces like in Cornwall, and have built themturns from a protracted voyage to find anticipate mixed metaphor amounting Ill know that bis precious blood has been shed subtle flint against the monstrous doctrines selves a charming house there not far flagrant in natural a though , had he thoroughly whom with his to agent, trusty "bull is that wittiest of Hiberact of In defense of the Christian Cross." left a ia no one from made niana orator iaand which the unhappy has rulerabip Newlyn, village fishing left poiqer of attorney, gone with half way. That "Tim Healy. M. P. But to the end, and that no real trageuy oe- . robbed them of the Germany which celebrated by Mr. Stan hope Forbe his fortune and his home sold for they loved and in which they took just R. A., and other painters -- of bis Mr. Healy. in denouncing the new climax, the curs, When the melting snows from the hills of France unexpected the Just principal bin in parliament, the why 'strangers school. Daring thMr married lives "man power described times the .tale te brought to: pride. it as a "mere leaves so much luxury and good fel- several Rush down to the valleva fair. day, to. "We will nob permit, says Mr. they have oftea paid long visit to other In the wilds the verge of a dreadful deed, onlyone himself hides to and mask home rule. stiletto lowship manner with their trains advance And the queens of 8pring and know many German In Jot the that biood it "the of Kahn, our Germany veins to escape sudhe This almost beats the Irishism of a of South America; Just why A descripwould most desire. The hero to a de- - drown the conscience in our breasts." cities and country place To gladden the earth and air. gunner wounded in the withdrawal on denly returns, just how he feels when cidedly unusual chancier with hi tion of Mr Sldgwick present sur- the western front. When all the dehe finds his beautiful home on Fifth strange philosophy, ha ernd lov- Then helover who bravely fought and bled novel in her rounding is to be found G w ,u h was down, an o Ulcer rail to Avenue occupied by a strange young "In Other Day" and the country tachment s To share in his country's loss of the her and servants, retinue gun, seized the lanyard and was In house described girl "Salt of the Will marry not death but a maid Instead, about to Just the why and wherefor of these pull it when the wounded Earth belongs to friends and neighthcTread-- 1 gnnner shouted, For tbe love of heavIlia Queen of the Crimson Cross. .... bors with whom she is Intimate- teresgcharactereohonr things It would be fair neither to the uLS" In reveal en, sorr. don't fire the gun; ut's not author nor to the reader to in this thoroughly HrL p2L.Y tr 1s Introduced A large part of th Some of the woods on the estate of loaded!" a review, for these are the surprises story volume will be devoted to the subject Abbotsford, Sir Ed weed Sullivan, despite the Walter home Sir of and pleasure that the book itself af- original the ef a League of Nations and will con- Scott, are to be cut down for war fact that, or development the "new fords in its reading. It may. however, although he te a great surTO BEAT Tint KAISER. sider such topics as the nature of such purpose Is movements are repudiated, leaving be safely promised that no one will be geon. he to not a veterinary one, gave Strangely enough, there a league, the means of realizing the evidence that Scott almost foresaw skillful treatment to The Irish Bull the piece, if conventional, truly dig- disappointed who spends an hour or that this might be their fate. In a this week tn aa amusing addres nified and scholarly; and the return! two in the perusal. That there is some WAR GARDENS, by Montague Free; idea, ns powers, its relation to imperialism, th future of monarchy and letter written to Joanna Bail lie in No- helped by a mellow and to tragedy, free from the sensational-- 1 mysterv la true; but it ia not deep Harper A Brother New York. unmistakable the war aims of tbe Western allies. 1 SI 0, he says that part of brogue, which he delivered to the A TRAGEDY OF POWER. vember, Ism and the bizarre effects as well as enouglf to worry over, and ithere is no Mr. Free is head gardener of the the pleasure of planting lies in the Royal Nurses' association. He pointed the morbid tendencies of it recent philosophy or new experiment or so- Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and in this Just a little volume he offer as an expert, "Worrylhg Wont Win," by Mon- reflection that your very acorn may out that the house of commons had THE TWO CROMWELLS; bv Liddell te manifestations, is a movement as com- cial problem to be bored with and that some little story confined to a email a pocket guide for home vegetable tague Glass, te just published by the send its future ribs of oak to future been a prolific bull-rinStewart 0, Kidd Company, mendable a it is pleasant. happy victories like Trafalgar. Here are Potash and of its most distinguished members had . to state Harper Cincinnati. circle of very nice people ith a few the being purpose -grower. . i e in in experiences released them. Mr. Gladstone on one rather urpneing and somewhat rt a ri- simply and clearly the ways and mean both humorous HARRY LATDER'g BOOK. lives of the Historical only as Clemence Dane told me the other occasion, when and wise. Abe and ccsoarv to obtain the largest ret orris Interrupted In a spdech ling situations. In these tragic days ' Lord Protector and his son serve as second she her that book, day Mawruss. prefers in the idiom of the of ama'J said, It te no use for the honorable reading from small plots of land. Every page garment a motif and the England of the ComA MINSTREL IN FRANCE, by Harry when almost every to "First her famous Blade." the member to shake hte head tn the teeth bristles with the horrors across teur has doubtless come to realize -- trade, discuss the various phases of maiden volume, Lauder, Hoarst International libra- matter monwealth a setting for the piece, this "Regiment of Wom- Of his own word European situation and mix up en. In the lords. Lord the sea. a cheerful bit of reading, with tf not by actual experience, at least tbe ry Company, New York. was an obses- Curson. first book My German tragedy takes for Its theme the secret on a licensing bill, union amuse with tn service, and labor, sion. observation that the conditions enough humor to said she. "l had to write It announcedspeaking and obligation of a ruler and the hundreds of Harry Lauders book Is altogether good literary workmanship, te like a by in other Interest of ema "the that be will subjects cnee of that the many plots She First the Buds was glorious renunciation prompted by a the most unique end remarkable litof sunshine through the cloud. need as war gardens" are anything book about the war, which probably added that she enjoyed pleasure."books ployers and emptoyees were the same consideration for the cost of power. erary production reading has less In war thus far of the war. gleam it most than 14 I would seen peaceAnd Just thus welcome, and Just such but ideal In such case Mr. Free's time hooka aa much as she does writing them nine times out of OHver Cromwell is shown stern and Tbe terrible conflict In Its In earlier tragic side, The Girl in His House." book will prove valuable as telling I should like so say 9 timas out of 14. and said, quaintly, despotic only in his unflinching re- tie lighter side alLof it is here seen a story, is tn condilower th 8tr Patrick overcome adverse to day how house, th a much to be because then reviewer, ligious devotion, and his broken-hearte- d through the eye of one of the world's In the Camp Wadsworth Gas At- on could read ail one wanted with- OBrien passionately proclaimed. "My tion either bv adapting th crop to POEMS MADE FOR Mt SIC. end the culmination of a career genuine art lata, a patriot and a father soft and situation, or by modifying tack, during the early . weeks of Us out feeling that one was lazy or unhappy country is swarming with ab,inho-h- a given- - his eon to his coun- sentee landlord are to soil suit the the Anieon B. there appeared a aeries should be doing other things publication, crop. l:n bard, his son. turns from a life of try's canse, and described in simple MELODIES IN VERSE: by Mary In Dublin at the height of tbe reEhrmann: Stewart A Kidd Company, also given to a multitude of questions of Love Letters of a Rookie" which diwtoluienem to an analytic, impotent words, lightened by flashes of kindly were the champion laugh makers of in Easter week. 1914. a small arise in connection that will Cincinnati, Ohio. Discussion as how the name of bellion attitude that affords no strength to hie i humor and with a homely sincerity ' bark--inevitably vacant-lothe who escaped from Sackvilte street, with t garard and These litboy In camp. letters ) are now pub- Pepys the Diarist, should be prothis True to title, the poem father in his weakness, but finally that is vivid, impressive and pathetic lished and described to sells den a in that thoroughfare to hte volume melodious relating with are filled questions the volume in thg extreme. bearing simple nounced has revived hero of 1st makes glorious the resolution of Everybody knows tle fertilizer insects and disease when but eloquent title Dere Mable." They Most people elect to call him either friends as "alive with corpse" In in the renunciation of the' Harry Lauder for 35 years he has rhythm of their own, and footnotes and numerare to a These what etc. perfect guide to courtship of a "Pepps plant, or "Peep" but apparently commenting on the death of a famous "No moPs coining of played before great audiences, at a tell that quite a number of them r. have ous protectorship. rL Lieut. Edward Streeter phases of the subject are dealt wrote there ia something to be said for at Irish judg Baron Dows Th Times men's groans and tears Into great-ti- e salary of thousands of dollars for a been set to music by the Bill Breck. camp cartoon- least four different pronunciations of said: "A great Irishman has passed The author herself refers to with in a practical manner without the letter is the expression of a spirit that few minuted laughter. Then his eon, needless detail and without theorizing. ist, furnished the picture in the Scotch Highlanders, them aa "little songs, a bit the cognomen of the quaint creature away,- - God grant that many who love finally leads the ruler of the Co mm on - awascaptain are th Of Interest chapter shot of them particular down so a and few who painstakingly recorded his dally their country will follow him," by the Germane. The might on to his principles, into faith, a martyr Diss - Fir Edward recalled th case of a "Insect Enemies and "Plant No longer i it necessary to forsake doings vecythlng put every be regarded. But this doe nob mean, eases. during T roya'fisf-mo-Ti surrounding While- to learned From that these it bull, made In very tragic clrenm-- 1 Boston culture for California climate. of Charles the 8econd. of course, that they are without balL As protagonist. Frances Sllnee-,-" Its has stance every A prisoner who was await"d A Is tbo On practically vegetable London an " of Th Golden State alma to please all charm. the contrary there correspondent ' bv. wife of a condemned conspirator. attractiveness about them for all read- particular enemy, with th possible worthy comers, and now a San ing death at Kilmalnham Jail was takDally Express writes: idcns the breach between Richard Franers who like simple and wholesome exception of th Jerusalem artichoke. cisco paper declares, standing upon "Peppies Is right, and there are no en seriously ill on the evening before end hte father, and. unauccessfu, t each parasite succumbs to statistics, that when two about It Lord Cottenham, his execution. The prison doctor was of 0 feeling and atmos- Fortunately reading te in who ways brings try he has visited 7 cities from Bo- - terse Ofgenuine the these and te the present representative of called in. He sent a hurried note to kmd of proper a a them poison; the author says California phere. n her own destruction- - Treacherous question has the East All are enumerated tn these pageton. to Lot Angeles spoken to mil- - preface note: diarisfk family, ought to Dublin castle to this effect: lashed to the mast- - for with, a the great --feaerals or counselors w Jtb serfidloua his-naan tc to follow Mr.- Free's well, one has-tmvn-lo ther front. "In my epinkm, the prisoner cannot vj ooohave population but S per cent that of the know. and he pronounceThese verse are but little songs, rounterplotUng work oul the episodes The newspapers kind at the and recipes the Peppie he removed from the cell to the place pages apply right printed United State California 20 of the play and incidentally make about him. for he has reads 'one per may say; e and place fn order to put cent of the of tin In this proright of emphatic spite recently glten without Imminent danger book more important sublime, fay contrast, the eelf- -' valuable assistance published nouncement. however, another reader to execution ; Perhaps they'll cheer a heart that's sad the enem to rout. Jt may be well to in this to the hte life." country." terrific and chosen oblivion of Rich-- 1 Loan, the Red Cross the Y. M.Liberty And drive some tears a Way. of the same newspaper rushes Into remark however that th family cow VA. "An " Irishwoman brought an action i. s i and other national causes rd CromwelL He te also. tbe fray. a neighbor for threatening te The dedication reads: In memory should not he turned loose In the cabSmall, Maynad A Co., have taken The weakness of the play is In the raising a fund of five million dollars i of my father, whose "Your correspondent's contention against bage patch or apple orchard after, over was murder influence the publishing righto of Wllllanf that Pepys should be pronounced did th her. "What particular form language whiih. for the stage, should for the relief of soldiers and sailors the inspiration of my childhood, and say. arserse of lead or hellebore haa threat take?" Inquired the Is hardly borne he be above all direct and Mbrant. A disabled In the war Now, at the to my husband, whose constant and been spraved around; for cows have Stonier Braithwaite's anthologies of Peppie magistrate. "Begorra, your worship, height of all this activity and promithe incautious habit of eating nearly magazine verse for 1014, ljis and out by the following rhyme: purist might object to such wobbly nence inhas said been the the encouragement loving inant. "she threatened cotnpla 1014. As they published the anthol- " 'Him I must comes hte book, with It mesfigures ss: everything of these verses. praise who open'd hath to whitewash tlje lane with my blood. sage of fresh courage and consolation spirationdeal ogy for the last year they now have In my lip some with fundaof the They This comes fo lh like an echo their hands the complete series of Sent me from Navy to the Ark by fo those who are lonely, downof the daylight blowing off into a cast or bereaved. In hi ringing words mental themes of Me: love. hope, the Mr. Braithwaite's anthologies of magPep)-- ' .. . zest of tyring and the joy of memory. . . of faith. . Editorial Troubles. Act I) royal azine verse. Several were written in France and The lines occur in some verses by 'The last words LauJohn Captain or this: a was who James a and definite contematmosCarcaase, Algiers convey toe said der before died were "Carry Th esteemed New York Times re porary of Pepy and te often menEditors have as a rule good reason on!" He meant them for hte men, phere of their locale. The nature "Can it be the same power that Woman'- - Rome Companion In the fer to Major Ian Hay Beith as "the tioned by him in the famous diary. for their but the father has taken them for poems are especially appealing. opinion when they say that shape conquest from the dust author who English June indue write is under the th this given is easiest contributors to himself; and that what he. in his of surrender, that crushes wrong pen name of Ralph Connor All within a week or Id day three sr those who are known deal withthe amazingpfresult periodical own way. te trying to do "Carry on of the Dime Drive Connor Ralph THE HI ITER, In the egg. by purifying the Inaa wellfor binding the wound of a soldier may laugh at thi but the es- more America 6 plays have sought the known. Why shouldnt knowing that the son would wish tention. they be easy? (Act 1L Sc. 1 )-teemed New York JO, bon Sun mailacof favor cannot. audiences here and It soi "I have sung my songs to the THE ffl'NTER, bv Watson Dyke;. G. the of It which kept alj un- They are need to the ways of newspa-pe- r aim, snowed P. Putnams Sons. New York and ing department But more serious te the verbosity that soldiers, he says. "I have lived with under for cuses. H. L. Mencken of being Owen them eeem to have gained It quite they have access to many marLondon. New York World. , This j4,ue also contains Mar- Hatteras. These pieces are "The ket. they day dull an otheraise fascinating scene them in their camps. I have been mistakably. hamjuorw orders than iney Dciand on ? s the Wlf'-1Lot garet article and with them in the mud and blood- tx such speeches as; second Naught)! "Be can Till, they One of the stra neesl Honks of are too busy to write tong We tn France Todayrand Hi first" "OtKntlahaTRic 1s the title given letter whose ahlch a of Careful, In Baby, "Songs season Yet all editors have from time The Hunter strange In part of Alexine ; "is this tne studied Insolence Stalwart, was recently published, te to the London modification land seen ac- to tiro and tales. in I their amusing deeds. have Hey its Its troubles and caused by eminent -- " settling. -- sens ahead by ueurpatioiv to clear style, strangest of story, fOb Annice' Then there te In France- - in the artillery branch of cordance with the views of the censor name visited their hospitaler I have talked all in It characters. since no writer, however fa- Of numer- the conclu-io- n the way for it. or Is It the ef- - . with tbe wounded the American from the Before army. Mn "The of of and maimed. Borne ous stories of western Ufe the of war the Margaret plays) mou te Mayo's farce, on ranches Air. and short always at hte top form. You r. he was well known as a writer of Twin Bed" In The fervescenee of a coffee-houwill neier more walk the shady lanes, or In stories by Etoie Naughty Wife, find one of your best men in a slump most bullv. gone unduly long without Maria Paviba or the little streets of their home have a sort of swing and places, sporting i articles. at two popular favor- he ke?ps sending Thompson the Playhous flavor of the In, you pub- Gtl1 the drubbings that enwisdom him towns; some will never gaze upon the cowboy end his rough and and Eve Strong. ites. Gladys Cooper pnd Charles Haw-tre- lish some of them things In the hope that he daring William A. h'lahr in picking safe target for hi Peter Clark Macfarlan trees and flower bn the hillside, nor life; but The Hunter' goes beyond tell about Th Pag author of and the critics have been appear eoon wlir recover hte batting eye he k look Into the faces of loved ones; th shew of outward hectoring ? (Act II. Sc. l.) Girt," Thomas L. Maa- - "Held to Answer. haa gone to the unanimous in this doesn't recover, you nurse trappings and him along war sons tn Europe on special service. American vehicle declaringboththat still they laugh and talk and sing. deals more with the The th gives and many others- - This tendency to- but best he and well thoughts gets 1 1a send you a eon suddenly, on I In Scate)B 10 France. bare been Hig realize now soul of the different character diity on a tqrpedo de- of chance "Lot 7 has been pro- corker and then, silence! ward the academic, no wearisome in more 81 The. our hard ever ' writes about before than son that eons te stroyer. Nothing my stonr duced here by Percy Hutchison, a from him except a note absorbing, a psychological sailor bm, Rtar Cllf the thestre, raises some question as life was not There May. Baying that given in vain. I came study of human nature In of Sir Charles Wyndhatn. and he has decided the nephew to the stage possibilities of the drama,, away are rough, to other no write a more and with the conviction Uiat every Doubleday, Page A Co. have post- - with Hilda Trevelyan (renowned as new, true. departments fin picture good Technically the traredy offers noth-- man, no matter what hia'life, will butSomewhere paper articles for the present, being section- - The fashion de- poned untU next fall publication of Wendy In Peter In the .middle northern tn the part of engaged Pan,) of fen raany good and helppartment the upon startling in the way of structure paas into the life beyond. And then. tale amid a landscape composition an 7 heroine. of forest and ful Lot has made the onuolor th. which will take him two or of ' a suggestion,, overy house will want iq y (Jaruen. three most promising of starts and Hutchi epic Th New Republic. year r Fair-chil- CROSS. THE THE e y. V Intra-Ameri- ca II u An Author Whose Gennan Types Are Portrayed With Knowledge -- . , J hut-lik- see Hme-Ug- i 1 1 I 1 EiXr-s- oZ a g, Perl-mutt- er war-tim- ' : see poetess-compose- -- J -- see -- the-time- hisn travel - .. m me 1 iu -- m se Slng-maate- y. Movie-Struc- V 4- . - . |