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Show , - - ' .............. ,, SECON ,TinEE -- .' ommo .1, ., : . ,. , - VIE DESERET NEWS' , SATURDAYS-P-RILL- - 9, - 1927 ,' , ' I . ' 7 , IIP 1 , , . . .. - , .. - , ' , - , , . ,, 17 ' -Sitn : : , - e - - I "$o He glvetb His beloved sieep."I lie sees - Sato. Ds on tsd b) ,4,-- . a sett. komp. - - - 21011 , - He igiveth -- -7 will hush . T. Bo- - , ' .bfre. for , -- - t with-many- a Pie igiveth ' it! there. of the solpful wards se bad - ' ,. - , Frank All dread of the distant future, all ed the day, fa the lie feirs that oppress- Like mists, that clear in the sunlight, have noiseless., passed away; Nor call- nor clamor can mime them from slumbers so pure and deep, For only His voice can reach them, Who giveth His loved ones sleep. , , Weep not that their tolls are over, weep not that their race is tun; God grant we may rest as calmly, when our works like theirs, is done! Till then we would yield with gladness our treasures ,z , to Him to keep, And rejoice in the sweet assurance, He giveth His loved ones sleep. family r chit., urn of rch la very. truth. J. W. frittent tr. VI. i cons- - indreip s than Lndivt so One mased niches Lite . , , dren. - - 4 - By GOLDEN W.- -IN A.414. . - - De-cl- ip the-bes- t sti Voltaire Defended Free Speech. EA N JACQUES ROUSSEAU.' the French writer. made enemies without muck difficulty and the clues of each successive year during his ntost productive period usually found him bitterly assailing the men who had been his firmest friends a few months before. His most famous foe was Voltaire and their violent Quarrel, lasting for years gave Voltaire a Chance to make famous his stand for tolerance. He protested vigorously when the authorities at. ten eve burned Roussates book. "Contrat Social." Voltaire thought Roueseats ideas were childlike and al,- sured, but be also thought that it was- el4i4ilks end absurd Iv persecute a man Who said what he , thought, i do not agree with a word that Iron say." was his famous principle. "but I will - defend to the death your right to to tut News. on the Wheatley text Published in ten volumes, r. Ford. - DAY-- 1 - odt--41- .. e. re ,ar. . ciamond-in-the-roug- , " blood-drinki- ng . , Mr" ., bioed-thire- NI :: ' , ,., . , .: - I I . poor late - Sprang." short Bounty." to the April 5th West (Garde& City. New York). A reads; it waa a question involving & coy- -. SoOur task here below to Ia It pleasure I sow. Shall I not reap lot,e? QucDesntiotrinbuotelf a ote pelt. a half forgotten murder, and the snaking of a man." The story is Interesting in plotanclAlrell written. We are pleased to welcome Mr. Rosenvall to- - the eircie of:Utah 'Writers a magazine of national circuld lin whwitows-"Wrni5ed- - alth a poem. Itettees or Then tbere are poems. of Balt Lake sine opens T. ROSENVALL. Its al)4111.,.!apliar, 7..'arK J': C. &na,s. I 1.t . - . 14, .4 , ,' - ;i s -- 1- the Org. . ,,,' . by Mr& :ooyuenrdr..:s;Corinurags - . . . Collard Baker; "Mary." by Lula Greene Itichardavi"Spriztrinie." by ii ,1 , i 1.. by Mary --Hale Wooleey-.- Also stn.- - -- -pear "Place- - of by Phelins, Fletcher Horner; "Clean- L. H. up Tirnf, by Male:. the di. ------,--- - , - - . 4. 1 ,' --- ",t , -- ', e - ' , - ct is Mon-tab- - ' ' r Mini-,-,- t- Lis-so- y: . d. , - 1- interest-througho- - - , , :- - Irk ii I - 1. ', ,..( .,,, rij :I , . Osmond - . . - - . . - , - ,c,. ,. ' , - 1 ' - epitaph-and-of-the- . -- Modern.Poetesi, , Hap-pines- & ':I - I - WHAT IS SUCCESS? bas achieved succesi .. who has lived well. laughed often,,and loved much who has gained the respect of intelligent men and the lave of little children who has filled .his niche and accomplished his tisk, whether by an improved poppy. a perfect poem. or a rescued soul; who has never lacked appreciation of earth'. beauty, or failed to ex. press it: who has always looked for the best In others and given the best he bad; whose life was an Inand whose memory spiration e benediction.---BeesiA. Stanley. '47.71-.- - " ;,,: -4 ly or , itorr 1 - - SALE i - -- Fine large house and lot, strictly modern. Will be sold to highest bidder. Tuesday, April 12th, 10:30 a.m. D Street at 326 REAL ,r OPPORTUNITY A ,,,,,, THAL6 ISI7IDERRICK, Auctioneer. KirLAAD 1142 FOR INFORMATION -- ' - , ' t, love-sto- ry d - - ,,,- or he - t . - , - , st; , her-wor- , -- p - for-"n- may-shelte- , highly-colore- - 1. ' t - . ; : ... .. ...7..",77.,,217.,,V4Ef 7,, il,:- t,,,,, LEL, tr--1 -- , c . Veor 0,,,o-,,,,- Shift sideways suddenly. end-fier- tym, eP he r - of ft. In her of poottl, Mrs. Teasdale shows exquisite literal,' taste end restraint. A new. book 'bark of the bloom"bas recently been published.. In private life Mrs Teasdale 3. Filainger ot St. Mrs. Ernest LOLiift She was born there and educated by tutors. travel and in private schools. Sh-- has it slight physique and likes to watch the small animals In the park.s new book contains a, numImwr of poems of the autumn of life portrafts of personalities and love songs--to- r which latter type of poems she is perhaps best known. Ons of them' is the-: following. entitled &Vim Beloved"li enough of honor for own-hook- 701,.. VIKil..14.,M.....,,,,,...:;. ,17,. ee d . me s tomb of steel and atone, But leave one window free. That I may feel the spring come back And you tome boa to me. JOHN HALL WHEELOCK: ie, W0,1,1.12L.M.CAMAr - N.m..--- xsz.k.km- ,NN, N.NNN . D .1,R. r- - v 4"' A ,. - - . - k - " ; 1 f 4 ' - 2 - . - 1 ' ; , , .. . . . - i ' . -- a -- - - - , - ; ' .. And remember this: Castor's is t - c, - - ' ta ten-:Bi- t' - ger essentially a baby's ryriedy The sad laughter and the pride As to be o he o he t but to he and not a cure-a- ll for every member of the family. What might of pride. - a babe. Yet Peen UK, oft. tamitiar with Iterl, hcdp you is too oftendangerous when given The tenderness; the 'depth of ; thin' p.ii-et- I 'To avoid imitations. nisrays fog41 fol:;h;si,gl'Y' as the earth. and wide' Wo:imrxtbra-ocelid.urItc.A1 of heaven 11118. LILLIAN CAMPBELL... ALZXANDER POPS. Pte---"Ti directions on each raciraffe, Physicians everywhere recommend It. - e, ,. , - . , . . cluo,.......,..,..,0,,....1,r,...e.,110,17.1,0.60.....1,,,g i . . 1.2.,..11r1.11.1ZAN10021.141.1V,,V;41. . WAMIIINEAMegfttgrt,' .0.6.4..- - 01," 4, '":, ImitAAAP.L.K.W..-,A.EV-V,I- - Ant ; . .4' ,' ;,-- IL -- -i - E.-E- . - , tI iA When Baby Gimplains. .. s , t, 1 , , . -- .NNW .. e p' 6. ietANNNN.N.,,,NANN.xxNN.N,NxNN.NNN.NN-vv- . - . CAST() ie . , ,.. 1.4C.P.......V.r,,,,,a . 1 There are Many ways a baby has of BOOKLETS OF POEMS. expressing any pain et Three interestitur booklets 'of irregularity or digression from its normal condition of health, DM lesued were by and happiness. A short sharp cry, a prolonged irritated recently Poetry A. Stokes company (New ay.. a constant turning of the head or of the whole York). These pamphlets, attractive 1 Itestleuiten, fretful. contain these well In in form and body, and other ways a baby tells 3Pon there ,indexed, poems of William Blake, Andrew - Is something wrong. Most mothers know that a disordered Long and Austin Dobson together with a brief biographical sketch' of i stomacB, or bowels that do not act naturally are the cause of the respoctive authors. baby's sufferings. - A call for the doctor U the first They art ! 1ZObt Books of thottcht, but in the event of issued in the Augustan -any delay there should be ready time Poetry eeriest. at Lar.d a safe remedy sub aS Tletcher's Castoria. TO have known you better than . Tbe English publisher is Ernest . the rest have known. 4. Dena. ,Ltd.,S 1301:vertu St-- . Cattcrrit has been used for baby's allnients for ever 30 The shadows and the colors of Landon., , years : , voice.Las merited the good will of the Ltd your in a family ' Your will. imutable and still as phyrician meatus not equaled by any other-taby'- s medicine because of stone. VICE its harmlessness and the good results achieved. The shy heart. so lonely and no Vice is a monster ot so frightful .. 'Ai.' , 7L - . - . There'is no room for death a( all Sara Teas& Ie.'. , In earth or heaven above; He never Yet believed In death CCORDISCil our one to modat A to love. Who over learned 4 IA, ern poets,. Sark TeaMale. the I an; dead, when Build tomb must a lyric poet, hart a single But ins leave a wtodow free devotion-to-thearted tht belallOwd and must be That I inaylaktelf truth' tut IL: is flight candid and tearless in the telling And spring come back to - . - Ch.1.1.'0,tén-Crk.,:.::Fciii:-.-:- : ' , , ,,, Me air is full of dawn and spring; Outside the room I see A swallow. like a shaft of light, , ,4,...t- SPRING. - , , . I , -- sub-titl- , ' , - 1 stury.9!AY' Where I atruggis in rain; Ging. - , ! - -r'; tonal and lesson . de partmenti; '. - ' "Frank L. 'Stanton Goes Home," ' by Frank C Stetie. Aprii itooes b Dar." L. l --Jakeman: Lt.ed.-eitt thefts channing,linvil of- n"-t,Ity le rep- -yEllen -se, --- ' : Notvg by AmY in the April Lariat &attn. Brown anger; One- - nay : faney described' resentedwith some Interest. and Lyman, an Oro.), interesting poem.' ing Lb. career. the suffering& the 'The Ghost," Laura mfacellany. Beebe. of salt t three genius. the gentle nature et Gold, poems. "Fu:''.. The April Improvement Era esteem in which-, tile." "Riches," "Nameless Child." : bemost To a the with teaturo be we bold him? .. poem and Edith Cherrington, formerly- of opens The Sea Gull." by Edward H. . loved of. English writers, what a Magna and now of Los Angeles, Anderson. Also title that la for a mans eppear poems.."Thrt I d "If writes, wild youth. wayward, but full Were Queen." Lamont Johnson is aUllit." by tare 4 Poulsen. 'The ' Modern Ifiracje--- -, Title of the of tenderness and affection, quits represented with a poem, "LearnSea Gulls. by Margaret BaU Dick- his boy, ing." the country village where r n one-ason and a haPPY drama. "The Res-- . hood has been passed-itome by Contributions by Annie D. Palmer., Other musing. In Idle .sheiter...in fond neer neighbors. Include:- - "Easter cue," in this issue are by Grote - - s. poems - longing to gee the great, world out ILeve." cover poem by Marie Frost, Irvin L. Warnock. O. of doors and achieve name and of Powell. Wyo.. "Tortured Ingleit F. '. J Ursenhach. Bertha A. Kleinman. dire After ot years Minds." by Ruth Day( of Casper. Joileph L' fortune; and -' Longking Townsend,struggle. and neglect and poverty. Wyo.; The Miller," by E. Rich. erv& Pinkerton Mattle-Critci-Troy, his heart turning back as fondly ard Shipp. COQ ofCasper; "Little low Jensen. Samuel B. Mittoa; and toJiii tisitiffei Place' lus Devil," by Meth Barrette, of Black- a song, a ords by M. Charien - Woods ed eagerly for change when sheltfoot. Idaho; "Jasmine," by Olive and musks by S. B. Milton. Among ered there. be writes a book and May Coo. of Twin Palls, Idaho; the features are I. Utah Civilis- ' t' , a poem. full of the recollections To My Tramp Lover, by Stella ed? by L. P. Roberta; "Aloohol and feelings of home; be paints Anne Creek. of Rork Springs, Wycs. and Humanity." by L. Weston the friends and scenes of his youth. -Oaks; "The Little People of Minsand peoples Auburn and WakeRandall L. Jones. of Cedar City, hune." by Lee Is Taylor; 'Easter field with retnembrances of service of the Blossoms." by Elizabeth park Cannon representative Wander be must, but he car- Union Pacific, contributes a full Porter; "Notes on the Book of with him. page-o- f ries away a home-reli- c illustrated matter descrip- Mormon," by J. M. lijodabl; 'Itstand dies with on hie breast. His tive of the southern ttah winder-lan- oric Old Cove Fort." by Frault -- -- , ; nature is truant; in repose it longs and appearing in the Sunda,' Beckwith; "Westerners in Action' , for change; as On the journey It magazine section of the Brooklyn. M. Mo. Peter John Baxter. by looks back for friends and quiet. New York Eagle whichecame from Kinnon; 'Athletics in our Hien Hs pandits' today in building an ate' promo Mardi 30; kkhools." by J. K. Tinnetts; "MI. 'castle or tomorrow. or in writing Johnson? The , 600, by Lamont YeeterdaY's elegy; and he would lesson usual editorial Arrowhead The and for depart. magazine fly away this hour but that a April contains a leading feature went'. & story, "In the lipring, by 4 Mille,,e.cage and necessity keep him. G. H. tilia'negstocnomNp.legeortdhogra. by Gov. George W. Dern. What is the charnt tit his verge. Grimm. assistant to the advertiaind ta , His agent of the Union Pacific of his style. and humour? system. sweet regrets. his delicate .com- who la now in Salt Lake. says Lee Keytistif, of at Margaret that , pamion.' his soft smile his tremu- this issue of the Arrowhead will Lake, contributes to the April Cat's- '-lous sympathy. the weaknees which create ' considerable olio World an interesting sketch. he owns? Your love tor ittm.--t- s - -the from the half pity. You come hot and tired fact that it callstourers,also to the of St. attention from the days battle, and this advantage and attractions of this contributes & poem. The Kings . Who to minstrel you. sweet sings state. The entire issue a devoted Secret." The poem Is divided into could harm the kind- vagrant to Utah. "inthree parts: 'Psyche Speaks," harper? Whom did he ever hurt? vitation." and rho Body Bouto. ' He carries no weapon.' save the MeteRelief The guises." April Society to he which on you; plays harp and with which be delights great ' and bumble. young and old. the , ,.., captains In the tents or the eol''i .rt diem round the fire, or the wo, men and children in the villages, , and whom be 'totes , at porches sings his simple songs of love and i ) beauty. , With that oriet story of the .. . , . mercial parlance uses "re." which "Vicar of Wakefield" he has found is a Latin ablative. The true Eng- entry into every culla and every 1"...4' lish word would seem to be 'ten-- 1 hamlet in Europe. Not one of us. 416,.. ; eat. If our writers would unite to however busy or hard. but once ' employ it, they might succeed in or twice in our lives has passed . , HARP OP THE HAPIPE(E8S,. ceattoring it to the language. But an evening with him, and undereven thia prophecy is doubtful. for gone the charm of his delightful 'Well; I cannot play the fiddle and t cannot beat the drum. language, like the breath of which music- --,When I try to guess & riddle. I am Ignorant and dumb. But there It is composed, bloweth where it is-kind of banjo that I like to try to play when my- teelin's dance Think of him reckless, thriftless i liatethA7From the Providence Jour- vain. if you likebut merciful. the tango in a kind of graceful way.- - Then, again, I Like the harpist i nal. ' , gentle. generous.. full of love and ' that has come on earth to bless with the music,. that, le sharpest of Happiness. Talk about poetic dancin whoa the band pity: lie poses' Out of our life. In his Harp PAY FOR POETS-- A and goes to tender his account bebegins to piaYi talk about the tones ntrancire that can cart," one away. But when I am in the Valley of disaster and distress. the New York poetess. Mbra yond it. Think of the poor pensionhas made lacqoa in ers weeping at his grave; think of the thing that makes me rally Is the Harp of Happiness. I caa and hear a lot of groanin' from the dungeons of despair. I can bear royalties. Poets at picking up; In the noble spirits that admiredright-emu, s the days gone by It used to be mitt deplored hint; think of the a lot of inoanin' from the barbintere ot care. see a lot of that while it was a fins thing to be , cheatin' right before my open eyes, I can see the truth la beatea pen that wrote his Able U. wonderful and unaniwith a hungry pack of lies. I can see the yaps deeelvin' people were numbers that rarely had any mous response of affection with ame what I can see the crowd a leavin" weak ' good and kind. dollar-mar- k in front of them. which the world has paid back the This here sort of leads to sadness in a and Ivillin" ones behind. love he gave it. He bumourdelsecret. even silent men to and madness of lt drives softAnd Way; ' 1110 in the days, of ighting us still; his gong fresh finer But I like to tents up ray ' end beautiful as when first he distress.clay. and the thing that's most beguilin is the Harp of charmed with it; his words in all If you have to do some toilin' that will muss - you up with , weaknesses his our - ... very mouths; I dirt, when your blood begins to boilin' throw your hat and jerk , beloved and familiarhis benevot - 4,r.t1 lent twist the strings a little tighter. If you want to have your spirit seems still to smile upto some shirt; a make little ever 'Yet heart than fun; your you lighter en es;, to do gentle kindnesses; done. Drive away your sin and sorrow to the valley of - to suceout with sweet charity; to treas.. There will come a - bright tomorrow; play your Harp of , and caress., 1 forgive; soothe, ;A 17 Happiness. With" the fortunate for the plead : t, and .khe poorWILLIAM unhappy MAKEPEACE 'TRACKERAY. . , itna'aPllaitnri;ta What wonder. should spring To my lips my dole? Godsaitt to me, 'Sing! down-trodde- ! , - .J '' Jo-hs- K When I 'have ceased to sbreak My wings hove, Against the faultiness of things. her And- learned that compremiaes , I wait tat he- Behind each hardly opined gate; belore When I (tan look life in the eyes at her calm and very worldly wise Crown end 4 mance translated from tits French Life will have given me the Truth SY EANE GREY. t000d In exchangemy youth. And taken earand bearing all the literary of hie BY SARA TEASDALE. UNDER. THE TON"TO RIM. b)1 marks of authentic local color of Zane Grey; Harper a Brothers., the old French colony on the Isle never New Turk; Tel pages. $2.00. of Bourbon. This tale of the blacks Anton Karigren author of "Rol, One scarcely recognizes the focal., and whites dwelling in the tropics shssiat Russia." is professor of Pd tot an old with deals negro chiefly Slav at the University of Copenover which this story spreads. it' ry. W. cook dominated by an absorbing hagen. and was formerly Rumian sand being not like the ordinary father-lovHe leaves his quarto the Swedish press . correspondent a is wilderness But it "Dare territory. de la Reunion et and go while this is different from ters Chris- to find his seta and off waywart1,1 the ,desert lands so familiar to all' tea oil, ' I 'The English translation of Carel Who read this author. the wild lorie-- 1 runaway son. This quest takes him Capek' new Czech novel. "'The ' to still and leads Into queer places lines& the uncouth. uneducated., riduct. et will noon wrr, Improving a Language "on" .'11, "' h sort of pop., queerer entanglements. .nt. le Is a Kaffir. a How shall obVious defects in a negro Glynn aro all peoent. &le l'eank--- , it slimy be maiden.- elementarpassiorut and a- primitive,, A young and lovely "God be thanked for books! They language rrIntir in ire"et to point them out. yet Impossore" blacks. The talc tare the voices of the distapt and easy Lucy. comes out of her tasters the tyre te sible to correct for them, language home to save the poor. offering. Dal.' Eliery Chaohs a psychic- product, and. since n k women. and men. of, deals mainly with bis conversion to the ', mans mind involves emotions as at the mitilstering of "::f a country where such training de--nsl aChristianity , fine old Catholic priest. In the lasting hills but the background le' wail .as thought, sentiment May I has been hers is unknown. She ande hie lien and peace new, the characters well drawn and Veto whatreamon urges. New words aides to be & redeeming Agency". to end gang is broken.; !the theme so sanely presented that are amity added for new ideas; hut bring beauty. sanitation. hygiene, as the . old Imperfect way of theand work-Princinal witch-doctup all the rest of the social I "Garden of Flames" is- - destined to to change an expressing an - old idea, that la the the scaffold. be talked about. repertoire into full action in' sent to charm difficulty. The of this erie romimca all the homes of this vast wilder The deepest-seate- d reform - that oi the more of the Indien ocean M the vivid ANIMMA. red. She begins in one has been made in Engilisti for SOS AtInto French farthe in life one where insight promising houses. is the years simple adoption of well and humans are separated by away plate. thebYweird sorcerers' ANIMALS. & by Leon Underwood: "its" as the possessive of "It" The rites a$ practiced the blacks. the ' Payson Clarke, Ltd., New old ", at least a wall; the aovernmeat exotic possessive of both he" and York; 24 pages. - agent has seen to it that the girl jungles. the vlb.rant days and was the bibhcal Win "it" "his." should come by degrees into the velvet tropic nights. The old abbe, his "If the salt have lost e The of this book is phrase, The a prieet vtittt unbounded love for worst part of her chosen work. more saver." normal -- its- is In this first home Lucy wield.' a mankind Irrespective of - race or 'Fibs About Beasts. Engraved on practically unknown Shaketo within a color. IL des Vayseaux and his Wood and Ensnared in Verse." who gives us examples of strong Mfluence for good; established daughter Iffena and several other Both verses and illustrations are speare. few- months she haa the transition form, "It" used unr cleanliness and some attempt et minor characters all well drawn. rather grotemue. Mr. Underwood changed as a possessive, for inis a young English wood cut artist stance. "That it had it head bit off wov, good manners. has put the men to including an Idyllic Work to make a. few nectozary con- en into th tale. all combine in with established reputation abroad. by it young." This usage sounds like e Chief interest in his book "Animaof making this romance of the tropics enie n tea to lighten the burdens baby talk. but it may still be beard lia" Ilea in the wood-cut- s. from the lips of unbookish Englisn by the way. do a novel somewhat different. , the womenwho, . 4 men. With that supreme effort of f.' Scoot all of the work accomplished SCIVITIFIC MONTHLY. , adding a third letter to a pronoun ranches. There are OLD STORY DI NEW DRYS& , , .., or: the whom reform of English Lucy some small children 1 The April Scientific Monthly. the fundamental -FLAMES. by E. S. edited by to have stopped: but not for trains daily in kindergarten work. GARDEN 't J. McKean Cattell and seems - A. - Stokes publisthed by-tlack of needs to be supplied.- - ,..;. 21he mother is &stalwart sopport in Frederick 4 Stevens; Science Press , For instance, the English verb Com Penh New York; 3311 pages. (New York) contains many interevery endeavor. lit fact ail become . girl except the articles. Leading feature Is needs a present passive more defready slave to the oo S0e. esting ; ', "is walking" and less a group of articles by Dr, C.- - H. inite thanthan eldest son. And it to obviout from is being made; lino containing his nameE. A. Stevens presents a good Richards. Dr. Frank Schlesinger. clumsy eventbad the possibility '.. of '' it t ' that first will Though him it is upon Lucy novel in "Garden of Flames." a Professor Henry R Ward. Dr. concentrate every effort, thd novel of appeal if only for Its Charles H. Horty. Professor Jo- forming the passive as German allowed its correcontrast and a peep behind ! eeph H. Willits. Professor Heinrich does, English It wont give away the author's word to be lost and veal ts scenic Professor Gilbert Ames Bliss. sponding never ., ,,, also privilege to state that this man is the scenes ot a British pit field, in recover it Engliah num for whom Lucy arid Persia.. England, the barren Professor Randle C. Rosenberger, probably a pronoun in the singular as I happilythecontent to give up her ides- desert of Persia and the cool slopes Dr. J. McKeen Cattell Then fol- needs as indefinite the plural is, "They: trainto What Transpires in ambition and settle down the "their!' and "them" of the Lebanon mountains with the low; are T. '!, by path of an Ideal blue Mediterranean beyond. each in Kingdom of Research." ing him along the sex. as That is to say. ,to husband. There are secondary love turn is the background for a tale Swann Harding; "Investigatiort ot there should be a singular form to in slater Life . the Sea." by Profess& W. take Gni Indio& ono between Lucy. of domestic trials and tributations. I. of the awkward ex:. her boy lover. On. of the girls with her E. Allen; Th. Mongolian Age of pression place in and Vera. or England he which living she.' usually , ranch has & love affair over delicate little daughter. learns that Mammals." by Proferwor,William drags in a his or bet" a form that watchful eye, her husband out in Persia has fall- K. Gregory; "The Life Hbrtory of would allow us to refer to a person a Lucie 'which keeps ' " . and there are numberless incidents a married woman. the Fish Astroscopuk" by Profes- without indkating his or her sex with en love in t which add spirit and seat to a Distraught between the prospect of sor Uirto'Debigren;.Chemical any more than the word "person" roscopyTirneE- and Labor Saver," does. English should completely somewhat trite plot. The hunt of leaving her beloved little girl beM. 1210et Chasnot. Professor The the "..11 ,i the wild bees Is really adopt the word "one" for the hind and bar dut$ as a vrile yore by departments) complete - ;114$ "on" and the German aboorbiag part of the dory. sod undertakes the torrid journey over- usual, , i8 . number. , 'French Or find some other word. At lends new light to this theauthor's and only land to Baghdad Persia, wild one Is not -on an easy Powers. The tracing of to find that her suspicions were- .THE licrxr OF' THE nosis. bees to the trees which contain wolf founded. Then follows airfooting. ;' Ipronominal Is c:1. of honey., attires practically needs, that their aro when Fate there Lot great do eumstance which terminates ......., to an ' but tkpressive pendant Yellen light out to ,....," hosband 'her drop - she leaves whkh the !French have If. along With most of the readBright dreams of the past, which assertion - pas?" en- - of sight' as far as he and his friends "West-c- e In over you world (prenotinced the she can not destroy; log public are concerned. She leases a tour, nespa) and the Germans base in JoY Zane Grey. you will like this lett hotel In the Lebanon MOWS of "nicht Which toms in the oight-tim- e wahr?" Standard English re, latest book even if you feel It tame and makes a success of the sorrow and care, us7 to repeat the verb., as in may not be as strong ea game venture only to encounter more And brirg back the features.tbat quires a "it is charming day, bn't it?" On others from the same pea.. aco joy used to wear, one hears "ain't it?" problems with the arrinal of old had the Bowery who AMC loot bo mY heart with such so?" after any form of asquaintances and memories filled. WEIRD ROMANCE, loved her in happier days. Fifth avenue has not sertion. But , The Intricacies and complexities Like the vase in which roses have yet attained to this degree of conULTSFIE AND THZ SORCERER. , once been are exceptiondistilled. versational ease., Another much labiond. Fred- of modern merriest by Marius-A- rl Et author You may bmk, you heeded Enalioli ord is a short - - rick A. Stokes Company., New ally well handled is by modthe frame if you will. for :In respect to,"La and while the tale distinctly York SIS pages. S2.60. roses will ecent of offensive the fathe hang - reiraritte,;""cencerning." Bukthe ern it is never blatantly round word is ''about," but this milier plait reinter. avenges to the fli tqltrinella4 ' antlatild Distinctly THOMAS MOORE. has another distinct meaning. Corn re. 'of the- story is as old tie the ever.. d ale iiihrearetta" a , Baint-Pier- r.:.;J; - Jo-hst- ; 1,1BOOKS OF- THE iid ,.Net 1 y - RIL ItIOLT - he editions. I ' Chinese"-,-continu- But no reifies,' oan adequately give even the flavor of this rich mine of wit., wisdom and humor. with pew and then its sly- - bit of satire. It is naive, at Mmes, cynical. sophisticated anti shrewdlY wise at other times. The old scalawag was honest, et. least. in so far as he never attempted to.ehield his own shortcomings, and they were many- - and varied. But . he was one of the most human human beings that ever penned a diary and It is for this frankness that, he is loved by ail who read his richly colored record of his goings and comings. doings and sa5inga. The original diary is contained in six leather bound octavo volumes which stand en the shelve.. of the Pepys library at Magdalene colof lege. The first transcription the original was made by John of St. Smith,. an undergraduate John's College. It took him three hours a day twelve years. working and nearly ruined hi. eyesight The first edition was publiehed in 19:4. edited by the third Lord Barbrooke. - , Con. ' ' cut-A- nd -- friend's the dearest can never this boon bestow; But lie touches the drooping eyelids, ad placid the features grow; Their foes may gather about them, ana storms may -round them sweep, But, guarding them safe from danger, ' He giveth His loved ones sleep.- -, CelsoY. - to the tale aft . who lived Pies Ching the eapital of the Sung, Emperors. .whe ' 7 m!'reb"11',' never artr,aatArise early each morning and go to bed eikh ' a Peeve was a gay old boy. Me dearly loved the ladles. but in spite of' this all too prevalent weakness of the men- - of his time, for it was an age clf ligense and ribaldry. we find Pepya foreewearine his fondness for wine, being shocked at and the dancing. swearing,-gaminlax observance of the,blessed Sab- - - both and , and Johnson.- , , Nfres and Newslets About Workers in dm Local Literary Fief d.,7.,. 1 1 - chillen 'tc sleeping. .wan always full of schemes and plans. never ern. barking upon any enterprise be Ives littrill of profit, -- years- he became-71 Afterr,sottle T.: wealthy and then-b' .tolerably tried a plan which he hoped, would make. hint .rich forever.what- is- - the Chinese-wiln. With"such a beginning the end like?. And' in 'what way does it Is ea Inevitable as the course of differ from the Western mind? any Greek tragedy. Note the words How many calami"And then!" Books. like- Mr, Howell'e---"T'Restitution of the Bride and Other ties drama and fiction reault Stories From the precisely from that penultimate action which we may calk the behis translations of the claws There is the Chin Ku Chi Kuan" (Observations ginning of the end? on Strange &tatters New and Old).- doggedness of miafortune. . The said to be the best known fiction Chinese knew tt as wen as we. work in Chinaare welcome. since-- There to III familiar and Infinte!y better than limy work of foreign simple touch in "And now I wish-t- o tell you the story of one who. traveiers, they open So tie doors to the quaint edifice of the Chinese while walking - -- 'upon firm ground. yetIt mind. And IMpped at testy- sts ii- be took may at once be said in :he depth. of povthat some of theme stories have that and remained charm. peculiarity Chinese. which erty. Yet- -sHere we pee the should attract the young as well story revereed for great fortune s. as the old. Intense 'sophistication was promised the lucklees is- - blended ' with a !childlike sim- - and the stars do not lie. That PlinitY, scrupulous realism with a "Ifet.":promises much and we are And not to indeed. which belongs yet, disappointed. sprightly fancy often the pettiest flay, tiara,. -- Of Word sensuousness his things have ease there is little; this may or may not beginnings and in be due to translation. ' they are related to.something inYet occasionally there are herent in his character. Accidents glimpses and matches. of pictorial have a place. but even accidents qualities we find in the prints and are no mere chance. but are deto the paintings of the Far East, as when creed by the fates which see eternal fitness of things. .. we see thw beautiful courtesan These stories. as narratives of en board the junk just after us adventure. entertain completing her toilet. "raising the picturesque blind of her window for a moment in the sense that the Arabian Nights ay. but a more mature with one Jade-lik- e hand while she is in .evidence here. empties the water from tser basin Into the river." "The Courtesan," 'entertain capricious fates their virtues are extolled and by the way. Is one of 'ton.' '' condemned ir a quaint Ind!" is 1011n.'.1hC,:boök,. Eastern fashion whose novelty pro. a paean- to a woman and eludes our taking offense at any love as is to be todnd in e Implied Sermon. And there is de:story of the West.- - And the touches and the psychology are not cidedly 'enough here to justify the There is' dramatic Chinese mind in Its existence. Need futility either. intensity in the last scenes which ..t be jus:ified? The minds of all one does not look for in a Chinese peoples :meet at their best. We have our David and Jonathan. As tale, Oh the isbole, the narratives are for the Chinese. well--- "I wish now fairly direct' and the only digres- to tell of two friepds who met to!sions are of common gether by chance but. became sworn sense and bits of fatalistic philos- brothers. Each sacrificed his life ophy. which lend the true Chinese for the other. thus leaving behind a color and make of the book a real him reputation like to endure for brother and companion to .''Yanif 10.000 years."--Joh- n Cournos in Chu's Garden of Pleasure." a tiny New :York Times. - to them weep; soothing promise He giveth His loved ones sleep. - For , Toso's be only wants foreigner trade coneessionst,lutauch concea manna inevitably carry with them conceseione.of the mind. It follows that the- Chinese may be- 'emulous- roncertied ly,4 or Tuncortaciously about the preservationof their par-ticular ntind.their : particular t Pepy's- was one of the world's merriest souls. Be. thor- mil enkqed MS; be Alas determined that iposteritY should be mid aware of his feeling and to that end he wrote-which diary. in it complete form contains over , 1.000.000 words.- - I. ao doing. he ' created one of the world' most interesting books. In its entirety it le too formidable for the averager reader to digeat but dn an abridgement it becomes available to a Wide circle.' As everybody.: knows, PepY's Diary is a unique book. In it that wise old man about town. ' repro !records in minutest detail his loves i and hates., seccesseig end failures. ' Ws and, reflections. Ianibitions on his contemporaries s are so shrewd end-hiapprateers so full that he may be said to have done for his age and its men and institutions what Boswell did for breast; Forgotten are now the tHals and sorrows that made . A. WWI --- - , - S ; mt.-st- - -- ...., peaceful penetration made by their literature abroad assumes a peOae obvinuslY Cullar- interest. out of doun't ones country unleu one has something-of The babe that she softly pillows so tenderly en her w vidual Ett hu- - it, oh, so gently! as a mother es t ,Islii.'i,illist whenthe Chinese ars 4sheolorktowahlitelohvl:reas orfecthoimnmisecandeidneoe,tt. driving .the ,"fortign Here is the characteristic formula:: . devils" out Of their country. the , sweet repose; So He calls them in from iheir labors ere the shadow& around them creep, And silently watching o'er them, He giveth the loved ones sleep. - f!eis Of Samuel1 Pepys -- Famous Diary -- S 0 u t,lit).'i'0..ff'rlt.V.fitet ..', ..;:)3ildi..ifIgililliV, , ' Pa A benttime 4 1 - ! I Like weary and womout children, that sigh for the daylight's close, He Iknows that they oft are longing r for home and its' - att. wore- i Butts Howell's TranstatiOns of Chinese Stories Opens Doors to ets,unaerstanchnt of the Naive Chinise Mind. - . . Ablidgei Edition 1.. - Miss kworot 3. -- - , Wash. I -- r - -- - IF who family "two emit 'Nairn -- 1 1:40), --- sh. - -: , -- 1 tonal Y Y In. tit :- ' when their footsteps falter. wbentheirilearts , grow weak and faint, HeTairks hentheir strength .caMnrinct listens to etch complaint; ' Ile bids them rest for a season, forr the patgway has grown too steep!' And folded in fairgreen pastures, - .H1 giveth His loved ones sleep.-- - ec),,,kbet, at ' ' - a - -- - I 'II nee A. it. App , ' ' I) It ,,.,4116mb ... 1,3 ., ," E. ':" ' - - -- I . -- ,J I 1 R..''I''.:iRi:.ilitil.-!'d.iii''..ilictiO-i'- ... . - ti,-.' 1.0.1ii-p.Goltliiiii- 4i - ,, ,( , t om44.41 . It 1, 'I ., , r , -- o , . , 1.4-- 0 S.", IP, A- - , 4...01.-01- ,0 , ..011. $ ,,- ,- -- - - .1.100.0.-41,., .., ..t. , . , .06.-- 44.14 1.4.7"0......, .. .. . -,i, , ,.4. . -. -- ...,,...,...1,1..r4, 0 ,.. . ) -. -- Ald,,madl.."1.......06.6.1.41k .A. .? , , . Akaailarman.:.......n& Alt 15,,,,A it, . ' |