Show 1 L NOTES I Katherine Cecil Thurston author o othe of the memorable The Tho Masquerader e eha I ha has a new novel tall tI tIMax Max Mac Is II runnIng UN as 1 h Masquerader Masquera cr ran rail Uti as a serial In Uati HaIp ers JH the authors T are arc therefore tree t to learn whether the tho thon I n w story will offer oller them anythIng o othe if ifS S the thrill o of that other uthel about a j who looked so like another man that lie he was able to play husband to the others without her It IL Certainly Certain the tho situatIon In Max with without wIthout out In the tho least suggesting The Tho Mae su suggests a masquera masquerade Only n this tIme e the masquerading one OM Sm Is not a man Tower o of Ivor Ivory the title of Mrs 1 forthcoming noel Hovel Is a az z phrase that goes tar far back Into the tho past ot of literature It goes s so far back Into the past a of literature that Its origIn Is unknown It Is quite true that Solo Solomon non mon used It In his songs sans but there It had no relation to the meaning that It has since Inner Innel temple templo of oC man the tho soul In which he dw dwells alone In thIs sense Bonso It Is said that tha 1 Plato used It and In modern literature t tho phrase has been In contInual use among the tho poets pacts and more poetical o othe of the prose writers However that may maybe t be It Is a very different kInd a of title than the ones which Mrs Atherton has chosen for tor ex er o other works t Mr James OD Bennett writes at length In the Chicago o or of the tho reception accorded by the tho audi audience ence of oC D a theater In Chicago to William Vaughan Moods Moodys The fl Great DIvide Quito Quite recently this play was published In book form meeting with the serious attention which is II naturally given to what Is recognIzed ns as a real addition to literature he popular reception of the pIa play there thorl therefore tore fore when performed In n a theater devoted to melodrama and farce Is naturallY a matter o of Interest Mr Ir Bennett was surprised with the thereal thereal real appreciation that the tho audience gave voluntarily Externally It did not seem scorn a 0 cultivated or intellectual yet both the silence and up ap use showed how keenlY alive It was wasI 7 I the significance of Mr Mo Moodys dys ark ork It Is Indeed significant that this In lay so strong In Its situations and home heme and so poetic In Its treatment should appeal to all classes or of theater theatergoers r goers As AJ a book In an age when plays In book form farm are arc none too taa popular Its is IB Ono One of ar the man many ways In which the growth of the tho suffrage movement In ilL Inthis this country as welt as In England can be measured I is by the Increased ale mend mand for far fiction on the subject as well as aB for serious work Thus Tho Con Convert Convert vert which Elizabeth RobIns pub published published some Bomo two years ears ago Is now noV soil c Ing as though It was just from the tho press It Is a 0 novel o of English life Uto when suffragette violence was just be bc beI I to attract the attention of the ho I world and had not yet et become somo hing a of nn an old aId 8 story ar After Arter publishing almost almat books boak In Inthe Inthe the past paRt year A C McClurg Co Conter Conter 1910 with n a strong spring lI list t ot of 25 titles includIng half a I dozen novel Four Faur o of the stories deal with and a I novel o of American po political O Ute life It Is also promised Tw Tnt of aC the earliest spring novels will be Hop iong Cae n a stor story a of the tho J I Clarence E Mulford author authar or of Bar 10 and u LL sea sen senale I ale by Lawrence Perry The ThO cir Car Pawn a strong stron hIli to rI cal novel by a I now writer Ie IC Ls L 01 cry will be In the Inns r now nosY series or of 75 cents cloth books the fIrst of aC which The rho Woman and the Sword wa was issued with gratifyIng notable last summer Among Amon l cc s Joc other othor than fiction will wili be B BY tine Das In n a o of collections or of the tho Garden City In intile tile by FrederIck F Co Cook ole and In Territory by Edgar Beech Beecher r BronsOn n a narrative or of hunting In the closed lands of British East Africa south lOuth and west of at Nairobi the same territory over which Col Roosevelt lt Is 18 Isnow now naw hunting Gertrude the tho novelist pu thor of The Tho Conqueror Rulers of I ICIngs ICIng etc 1 boca boen writing for tor forr I r iff Harpers Bazar on The Woman irs In InLove Love In her first two papers Mrs Atherton dIscusses those thase women omen In history who whose e love lave episodes es have been the most striking things about them In her third paper however not yet published she makes some sarno predictions concerning the place that love will take In the future Mrs Irs Atherton dals not go so far as Mrs Belmont who predicts that there will be a war nr be between tween the exe duo due to the tho fact that men will not give gle women the tho su nsf rage frase Mrs Atherton believes and states however that from now on the love lovo element will be a tar far less vital thing In lives than It has been heretofore She thinks that the broadenIng out ot of Interest the entrance of women Into new fields the Intellectual development o of women wamen are aro an all factors which will vili fill lives to the tho comparative exclusIon o of that other factor which heretofore has been supposed to be her whole existence It Is 15 now announced that the musIc for far TrilbY the tho operatic rights o of which were recently arranged for be between between tween the tho Harpers who published Du novel and Mr 11 Charles lingham will bo be written b by leslIe Stu Stuart Stuart art The adaptation of oC the tho story Is being made by Harl Harry n B Smith from the novel and from Paul Porters play which Is based on It ii The Tho proud and sInister features of Edgar Allan Anan Poe Poc ma may well remInd the imaginative beholder of ar LucI for ter His chief sin like was Intellectual pride hIs one ane obsession the tho beauty of oC corruption Like the Lucifer In Marle Mario Corellis Sorrows of Satin be held a 0 peculiar fascination for wo women women men Professor In his LIfe of af Poe Pac dwells upon the mall magi gal eal character of af the tho poets voice He appealed to sentimental women by his figure his history and his actions and to kindhearted women b by his suffer suffering ing Mrs irS Sarah Helen Whitman ono of the tho poetS loves In a poem unearth unearthed ed by Eugene Eugeno L Didier describes his portraIt In words wards that sus suggest est the tho prince or of darkness as Haull Hauff and Holl Hoff Hoffmann mann have them Mrs plaInt for the do de departed parted poet thrillingly suggests Cole rid ridges gos maiden wailing for her demon lower Poe Poo himself hollowed believed In demons Ho He was afraid of goIng out In the dark darle for tear fear of invisible and malevolent presences Like Swin burnos burnes heroes marked cross from the womb and hIs life was ono one long reiteration o of failure He was In ho he attempted Whenever he soared seared heavenward ho he fell An Inexplicable gloom oppressed his life like a nightmare In the tho olden days would have havo saId that he was wall possessed b by the devil And It Is Ismore ismore more than coincidence that the arch archpriest priest o of literary diabolism Charles Bau author of The Tho Flowers of Evil sil was wa his first disciple and amI In Europe demand for tor AmerIcan tIc fic tion Is a surprise From th so records for tor ono one week of oC a 11 singie house hause Harper Brothers are taken the tho following notices of now Austra linn lien editions all a of them large larg The Thc largest lamest two arc aro of Rex The Sliver Silver Horde Harde and Will N The Tho Redemption o of Kenneth GaIt Galt Others Othern are nrc The Tise Moccasin Ranch hunch by Hamlin Garland Options b by O 0 Trix and by Amelio Hives Lost herders Borders b by Mar Malj Austin Tho Image of Eve by Margaret argaret Sutton The he involuntary un tar Chaperon by earn oran Peter Peter Poter b by Rad Radford ford Cord Warren The Tho Real Thing b by John Kendrick Bangs B Christmas Party by Booth ton tan and Captain Visit to Heaven b by Mark Twain Tho largest free circulating library In Inthe inthe the world Is that connected with the Now New York pUblic schools school according to Dr Lo Leland land superintendent o of librarIes This fact and others In regard to the use ot of general Jeneral books In education are developed In The Library u and the tho School a little volume prInted b by the Harpers for tor tho benefit or of their educe friends In It leading educators In New York Chicago and amI six Ix west I ern cm states describe the systems In various states an and their II I remarkable development |