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Show I SECTION THREE o DESERET' NEWS T1IK jin the war wee chairman at th !cmouflas commlUa ot the national raaeart h council, lla la alao Ilia author ot a number of atandard work on th aubjM't which h understand ao wall; and hi amlnanr aa a aclan-lila hardly aurpaaaad by hla rare ability aa an entertaining writer. Hla preaant book la profuaaly llluatratad from photograph, which add Inter-eaInatruciion aud ettraciivene to (h last. OLD ALBUMS FROM LEAVES VII SATURDAY JULY 3 1020 . st ' - t . t.' J t : ' , ' t - -- t - 4 tin. Tijuana merchants sell you win, or N Maxi co, across tb t. any kind of sudden death with wt)lch you like to paint your breath. And dead gsmo sports go (her to drink thslr favored brands of purpls Ink, : TKNDKH ton liLtHK rOt.K. 'v v and rough up seven bits u throw for little drink of liquid we. And 1 when they've toured through sundry bara they climb Into thalr motoi' Tins HOunK OK i.vk. but or rare, and throw on all th motor's power, and hit n hundred mil ass poem by Will IX Mj.., in Curnhlil lioaton. Company, hour; and oftentimes they break their neck and leave hair costly autos, This little volume U veil named, wrecks; and, falling this, aom cop stands In tha road and bids for pracllcally all of Ji more than them stop, and leads them to tho nearest Jail, and than a Jurist Uk V three score poem take love aa their their kale. Oh, gant who mourn our freedom lost, and say th dry law theme lot for aetharl. wtf or la a frost, raasa rhsddlng tears aad journey down to old Tijuana, freemother, fur abwM fn. nd or dear one called In death, lose lor life Itself and dom' town! Thera you may drink a peck of gin. and no cheep aelutb (he good things of the world, for niem- - will run you In, ar though you wade In beer1 and rye, no magistrate j whan you've had your ory of happy da) a or th roy hops ofi will bat an eye. And r r- - i poisoned drink, eome back giadnaaa yat to be. 1 he vere are Full j and tall ua what you think of this punkJyrant ridden. Jand, where All. of tenderne and t nipathy. There - - ri ..i . g ia no fur fine phraaea or! the bugjulce graft' l banned.' i t i. r it . n ; wpoetic effect; the port i content toj . . Ing to tho heart of simple humanity,! V ( and aa a result hla lines ar characterit . I V ,: t.-- t V I zed by sincerity and a beauty that la . ireal. It fits Into my heart," aald an n p i S l A . Amertcan aoldler boy of Mr. Musa's , v v i 'V M c i i f poetry, and ail who read It will feet-t"r- - 4 i 4 echo that tribute. v t 101. i Debate Over Aesrwsrtattea ter h ar Graves CtwaWba RaveaU Skat Brtte of tho and Something poet's aplrlt ,t o.1 it 1 fJk. Is expressed In the introduction ; . : ala's War Cemeteries Naaber 4.00 u4 feeling ( Half Mllllea RaaS-. jL 1 iww to th book, which read, in part, a Maat f f FreetrS Leaq I alSeatlfleS Aatbsr e( Literary Parody r foHows: U rr,vrnrr?r-.I Pallet kziiuirtl.-.- ! ' pj t, r f . 111 L.I. 1 Feet may grow weary, handa may t be tired of the holding tangled akalnj r . cK , LONDON UTERARY LETTER of Ilf, and shoulders may ach ba-- J J f- f , 7, . -ff neaih th burden of tho days; hut there la a road, a road that lough fare the other day. (Special Correspondence.) Taking never turns back, leading on and on ONDON. June II Rudyayd a second glance at the oeo- through all tho days of endless waiting, and all tha nights of tortured ale?. Klpllng has rebuked the rels- TrhVna I Than CZLinUtAX VTELBB AM A rOBTOTB-Hl'-NTEI- l. A road aver winding beneath the twirecognized Robert live of British soldiers killed home return and thst this sutbor-p'sy- atat n,arng fortune th of great big light kles and aver lighted by the Henry Walsh, chairman In ths war who hsvo been rcne(1 Bine than I v sunset's crimson wrlght had recently returned from' It lath road Republican committee, declare there Mr. Walsh added. gleam. have built that leads ia th House of Love." war day In the 'Wild WtM When dona eome protesting against th action 6f th Algiers, whara ha has been for oomlohave dug holes a man reading Mark Twain' Rough- eonve roads, war graves commission, of tlmo for tho purpooe of collectingof the Imperial cal color" for th was aaarch of sudden wealth and have r could baiiav that h CANNIAU AXD KKirilO. ing which la a seslous member dramatic version ofproduction someKipling la novel, "The W turned 'boms' many tlmaa; but reading hla owe biography. In deciding that th headstone wera broke.'' h aald, and th wora how th pull of the waat haa alway A LITTLE In Garden of Allah" which la to be staged FOR BOOK PRESERVING to Pevlova'a the Drur Lan M ,ooa big for wear, but all quit aura that w brought m back again A LITTLE GIRL: by Amy L. .Water- - Britain's war cemeteries 'must be season comes and. to an wera going to atrlke It rich. Thoa stretches and weatarn paopl."' H thare Th man; standardized, and refusing permission Pag Compaq, Boston. Lend on haa had to wait a long wera th day whan Bret Hart was recalled the mixture ot race rapr In simple story form, tho author to individuals to aract tombstones of tlmo for Th Garden of Allah," which writing hla atoriea of th weatarn min- aented in th mining camp of those every thalr choice. What he haa aald will w produced In New Tork In pro ing camp and when auch camp war times Chinese, Italians (who warIn of this small book explains rather exciting place at tlmea. Th only then juat beginning to com man step In the process of preserving and be of Intana Interest to tho thousand war daya Th American production, above picture of Mr. Welah was In large numbers.) Indiana, white canning fruits and vegetables, and in- of Americans whoa loved dead 11 la supervised by the anthor, waa supposed to b th last word In th realism taken In 1882 at Eureka. Nev., whan and Mexicans all struggling together clude also a chapter on tha govern- France. aa a young fellow he had com out for th glittering bits of pay rock ment way of preserving egg. and effects," but at Drury Lno. Tho Th waa subject raised In Parliahero things aro dona rogardleaa. they ( from Maasachuaetta to make hla for- which had lured them to the desert principal persons In th atory are ihe ment in recently a connection with a with wilds. He country. He also confessed, tune In the American two little glrla Adelaida antf Jessie vote of t, hop to go It aavaral better. Arthur m, 000 for ths imperial Colllna, states that at the time he was store- twinkle in hla aye, that at th time May, and tha former's mother. Jesmanager and producer of r rvro commission. was Winston was he roustthe taken, Th really sie May was Adelaida s most picture Lana," general keeper. bookkeeper, accompanied Hlchena to Intiwar minuter, then stated Biskfx and the about and sometime surveyor at Cor- priding himself on being much of a mate friend, who had bean away all Churchill, two collected acoroa of r war cemeteries number native costumes, a bunch of camel , t,n clothes modal, hi suit being one of summer: and In her letter from Ade- 4.000. tez, for the well known Simeon. Wen-dowho afterward pulled a great th beat of broadcloth obtainable In laide there had bean conaUnt hints stones and that half a million tomb- with Arabs to look after them and a have to b erected. , fortune out of the Nevada mines. In the west, with hat and high top boots of a wonderful Tho album of photograph secret. Bo whan they Th work will occupy tan years In whole those days I Just wanted to make a of best make to match. aoma thraa waakz left Algiers party met again, and wandered Into th ld Mr. Churchill. Ten,t If mother's preserve closet, the secret individual choic la ths mattar , of go. priced opera, and art and the peo- emphsslzea th economic phases of wellcame out of with tho the head atones sight If is unusual an disBpoonortwn." M tha question, and gives permitted. It will taka ple." Even in these latter lines of laden shelves, and the on girl was Sir James Remnant cussion Mr. Kahn s no mere dilet- not stimulating treatment of the whole as Americana who delight In Spoon-artemwaa as to the anxious hasr other voiced In to th manner calculated a viewpoint of many In movtante, Inasmuch as he holds the posi- problems claaoio traveling as to tall how tha "secret had bean ing a reduction of tho vote. Ha agreed to Londonsuch thathatown drain" tion of chairman of the Metropolitan make the American people think. and' by achieved. The book narrates th that thera should be aa well French Theatre the limitation with two rags and a bug" will bo Joyad to Opera and ARTIFICIAL LIGHT. atory. tk COlt IDd lUl of ClOQU hear as being a leader In many other Instithat tha famous Oxford scholar! Besides tha egg chapter above men- menu, but declared that, within the tutions of the musical and art world. to whom many of them hav boon la one wajl ARTIFICIAL The book throughout LIGHT TTS INFLU tioned there are grouping of th vari- limits, ths relatives were clearly an- - credited la going very strong at 78. Ho ' ENCE ON CIVILIZATION: by M. ous phases of culinary work Into eight i!!Ld,st0wy wh,t yp of headstone worthy the careful perusal of every haa, howavor, just bean obliged to re. Luckioh: Tha Century Company, general divisions: marmalades. Jama, erected. thoughtful American. of th Council , sign th conNew York. Jellies, preserving and canning, . M.r; Kipling's latter was than read of Oxford chairmanship House, which flourishes and r- - B Ufd and 11 tu frulta, pickles, aptced serve, tU'Co -T- his-bonkdescrlbed be onU aa a fol. carries brlefly tnsy good work In the grimy -- . ' CHAtriOjr OF"TBE as containing the story of man's con- canning the government way, this lat- lovtw Green Bethnal district of London. for We Instructions have no grave to go to. Our THE NEGRO FACES AMERICA: Dr. Spoonar la warden ot Naw Colquest of darkness; btA it deserves ter Including special and th frulu,' Herbert J. Sellgman: Harper t1" t Looa. The ground more than a description so brief, for canning vegetables lege, Oxford, with which ha has bee .f cur- - battered and ruined be-4Brothers, New York and London. th author has mini It aa thrilling principles of jelly making, and fruit connected since H42. Endless Spoonfor butters. written youthAlthough hop of Any tree of him erisms" most of them familiar, have as a piece of fiction. Most people do of th the housekeeper ful reader 1 wUh aom Among tha serious agencies at work not realize how much of health, people been fathered on him, but a friend , unwill more attitude little at treatise a future the enlightened aiming we owe to our abilAklng this trouble would vouches for ona which ia naw to ma. and Wisdom aow more than fortunate toward the race problem." In the ity merely to dispel darknes at wilL doubtedly be of yalue and Interest to J" "Ha was a at oner corn I mean, a they United States must be included th To all such th book will prove l hyo those of maturer years who are alname on a headstone corner stone." remarked th warden efforts of Mr. Sellgman, tha young stimulating' opener and qulckener known comotory. housekeepers In a real senge. in ready of once, with an apologetic am He. In tb . Burdett-Coutt- e, author of this volume. Formerly a the mlnd Moreover, the viataa of new without always being aa aU a mem- - course of a lecture. member of tha editorial staffs of th developments of light to come In the concernloFthe putting up" of toothimp . HAYDEN CHURCH. va. com-ThNew Y'ork Evening Post and Tha New future are our as foodstuffs wholesome some and so from hl1 that Marshall Edward entrancing; tho by (Copyright, Agreement. rSPr!T? trained and consequently Republic, one which juvenile friend Adelaide showed herthe nation." Syndicate, Inc.) In any angle the volume is In Journalism as well as being self to be. To make two Jars of jam. aid, ought not so to act can claim almost universal Interest. close touch with th necessary scienRoman In cottage or ten? Tha author traces tha history of the gleam where only one was seen before, tific and social facts, the author hereof artificial light,' and and to make them better by doing mant can say to haroeif, My man Imprestioiu of H G. Wells. development in briskly .reviews the conclusion of describes f- -- Influence lha . great , th its died - the 'upon human them Just right , household anthropologists with reference to al- progresa Ha begins with oAtto for th aaeriftca, of asm true ths causa symptoms phllanf primithat There aro men, ouch aa Dr. Johnson. leged racial differences in capacity, tive man one; why ahould ho not hava aaasbeauwith beneficence. huddled fear and helplessly Who ayo mentally actlva and pbystoal- -' thropy tiful a monument T " analyzes tha social and psychological and cold In hla cave as th last rays ' and tharo ora other mas. factors at wftrk in different parts of of sunset are .; a In sup- - Jy torpid, extinguished by speech race question ,the tqofititjtxyhere and was fol such aa Jack Johnson, who aro very th .progress made OJUofotAndArdisatlon, Is acute. Iflya 'b&re' tft Sinister ihFm- J-hwed r H. Tltismaa,- thq labor alert phyeio&Sr, bat not finite pa alert . , method" ence of selfish and callous Individuals by man when he discovers a when leader. Th latter told of a visit to he on whom must In large measure rest for kindling a firs and later In their .mind.' It seldom happen dwel-ling- ., G"-Paraxiise a, halKoldcknjeUiry Wherb he new gessrally the responsibility for the snort tragic adapts the fire to illuminate his a man combine great physical frb ot that unidentified hew Thomson's create, as British Loet" .fiooa,.cxa.2.4 pretty lengthy, aspects of the Negro situation, and. by with great Intellectual energy-'- . energy arthoa as of and but of "Seasons" and -ways Raymond Taak;" producing light, Cowper'a ; bis open at Wided attitude 'toward the Buch a man la Mr. Bernard 8baw. 8o , aldaot son Asquith, of tha mors with becomes abundant ar abort tificial these Spen compared light future almost succeeds in creating an young Tennant, the poet. He Is Mr. H. O. Well I Imagine that Mr. and lesg expensive. It is put to hun-dre- ser's Faerie Queens," which la easl and optimistic mood. -even p uck ed A let.from - the grave -- and Walla la more active, both n body and. . of- - tiew- - uses and ly- the longest-poem-EngUahr 'The 'of he had mentlonad tha epteode at in mind, than Mr. Shaw, despite the , -p'The iinIqueness'in and"pathos the author attain-e- after the United States more ?and more essential to the prog- -- as it stands. Hadreached Negro problem the twenty-fourt- a. public meeting, bo roceived a letter fact that tb latter to tha slenderer ' hla object and civilization. The story Is writrest In the fact that so few Amerl- - re book, no other poet would from a blind woman In Leicester who man ot the two and that his tongue cans recognize it aa a problem. The ten especially for th man In tha been in it." It la only a quar said ah believed that this grove was works moro rapidly In conjunction' usual attitude Is that a pretty good street who la not Interested In tech- havo Thomas had, ho with hie brain; for Mr. Shaw feels' scientific term and formulae, ter of th original plan, yet the that of her-- on job la being made of a very vexing nical added, tha melancholy pleasure of fatigue sooner than Mr. Wella I doubt but wbo looks with admiration Qpon Faerie Queene is aalong aa the Iliad, situation. Mr. Sellgman takea sharp tosending her the leaf, and an assurance whether Mr. Weils suffers from fa-- , and the Aenefd put issue with this complacency. He is tha huge signs which flash and spar- the Odyssey Dith position of tho grave. tlguo at all or to any serious sxtent aa as Dante's concerning twice long to more of gether. know wants their and desirous at once of banishing the bland kle, At th close of th discussion. and three tlmea aa Sir He takes few. If any, holiday workr . smile from discussion of American origin; who marvels at th color and vine Coromedla," James ParaRemnant and Lost withdrew hla mo- for many hours every day. playi.' long as Paradise spectacular theatrical dise color problems and of challenging the brilliance of Tlt-B- lt tion. and voto tba in on. of tMtMOO waa games very assiduously, and is on hap-- : Regained" shabby indifference with which the production and deairaa to know how s agraed to. In read who baa la It py If he has not got aom work or. of Unitaccomplished; colored in the wrongs people Wrote "King Solomon's Wlvea." beginhand. He begin to writ a new' bool , about camouflaged Ilia general public la Juat .worth ed States are greeted. And ha is no the newspapers la Soon after Sir Kidcr Haggard' Immediately - he .has. -completed - timid err Incapable protagonist. He 1 ships; automobile, road and what ning to realize that money. having no- bUe& seem novel. Klng .Rolomon a sympathetic as he la courageous In not and wonders how such maglo U moro In th purchase of book than Mines" of almost any was published, away back In 1214. a ingiy, in fallow time. his defense ot the race and In his conceived; and who takes a natural It ia In tha purchase ' While manufac- parody of it entitled. When he la not working or playing. crltlclanx of .those by .whom Jhe Injus- delight Jn hearing, aiout scientific dis- other commodity. advanced King Boloroon'a was brought out certainly V lv on both side he is talking. His conversation has , tice toward the Negro have been In- coveries when they are explained fn turing costs have not leas than SO per cent, th average of th Atlantic. Th author of thia curious resemblance In Its shape. If I , stigated 'and condoned. In this book the simple language he understand price of book has advanoed only parody, quit a clever one, put it forth may use th word, to the style of hi at beet. ha has gathered- hla Information Mr. Luchiesh la an authority on hi about IS per cent That tha book anonymously,, and not until the other writing. One llatena for the auapenf , first hand and down to date in Chicato keej.th day waa hla Identity ravaaJed to th ed sentence, for th four dot with He la director of a research publishers have bean able go soon after the Hots these: in Wash- subject. elec- - price of books down In ; yid." past la public here. which, in his pro, he breaks r , ington following th two-da- y struggle: laboratory of perhaps tho largest is. how long hli true, but th question The author of in Omaha, and Tthr localities. He tflcal Industry ln the world, and dur- - can King Solomons, thought o that tbMr.reader may thia happy atata of affalra con- Wive" la about tho last .man to! 8hw once who elf complete It tinue? ... - might hav boon suspected of writing me that ha could not work at croaih It. Ho la Blr Henry Chartre Biron writing for moro than two hour over - A work by the famous DanlaH who waa knighted recently on becom- day, and I suspect that ha mitteJ writer, Julius Magnuaaen, entitled ing chief magistrate of London's po- moro from physical fatigue than God's 8mlla, la announced for Amer- lice court Mr. Wella work for con attar boon '"for will admjt having reIt ican publication at onefc. a aUpendary magistrate. atdarably more than two hours art many years authe of cords certain' experiences He has long been known as ono of day (and sometime during th nigh' thor by which hq waa converted to those most keenly interested In all though I do not suppose h work L belief In spiritualism after having concerning Dr. Samuel tha two coneeoutlv hours at any tim been for year a skeptic and agnostic., great lexicographer, andJohnson, a year or you aro a guest In hla house, you w -Tha book la said to have aroused two. ago published aa Interesting volhim engaged, ?ln ocm gam te1 much Interest In Europe and to hav ume, with th title Blr I Said Dr, aea or nls hockey or that wild gamor Of In a month gone through ten edition He la a recognized author- own Invention, barn-ballpr - - Johnson." in Denmark. on is and extradition laws, th hap playing demon patience; a ity of Biron and Joint Chalmers author to ar Inclined Imagine th new book Onwhen Miss Extradition." It la a fas cry. ha 1 you Boston settling down to a Jong day "The Old Coast Road from aa auch caliber from of works however, part to his game you discover that h la t ' to Plymouth , lately published WHAT HAPPENED JULY SRD. parody of Rider Haggard, which longer with th player but In back -1 of tha celebration, of thand Plymouth i recount must hav been perpetrated, when he study working oa a manuscript.- t tercentenary, describe (Copyright, 1120, New Era Features) in North Amarto. Ervin highway was a' mere youngster. of th ancient, John St, th history of General Wood predict Aa a' barrister ha. made hla name Review. MIL . army which th Massachusetts legislature to ba sent to Franco beCommis- widely known, those h defended at Group of American bankers, arha Instructed the Pilgrim war onda Germans fall back fore -Col. Arthur sion to- - mark through It length with tha bar having included Another poethumoua manuocript t ' range (100,000,000 war loan for toward Loot berg before Russia a ton Lynch in th letter's trial for high WlUtam board of been foaii ha and Muen-ter- ." Da sign Morgan or milestones t Death." at Regiments rrank Ho) England treason In 1401. ' Unlike many British by Mr D Morgan end will be pub and bronze. never llahad under th titl h Ml. - a German aympathiaaf and. aalf-v- e -- e r Th Old Man magistrates and Judge Americana burl back counter reeled a maw wqo set off bomb In Joke on th bench, and boasts that Touth, menueertp Tb fall. started next x been ha movement Vaux at American army attacks of his ever .hssbeen waa, wot quit complete whan found 'In Capitol ahoota sad slightly passes hav the various academia no wbaesa" to Seva 1IM.IH mark enemy prance Th Rtta Sir by Mr Da Morgan otter har hus or jotL author In. the pub- quoted in th prea wounds J. P. Morgan, a proleat-- airplanes . downed by Americana aa.it merit th rood munition export" Th point, 1 William Gilbert, himself a magistrate, work in Marne battle; (t D. 8. C. citadeath, there being gapa tw their of againstvalued lication 7 ? 1, 000,00 1 and band humorist" have tion cabled by Pershing; satirized Judicial th at U. 8. t Aillea at various plaeea Tbaoe but stuffs total of coat narrative the bringing .'made that Ko-Khad o announce h tb eton n from that been exported making American casualties to date, .144 sha haa filled aerloua work haa become 'eo great mad of the forty-eigNevertheless Blr romplete; bat thirty-fou- r French advance on throe mile ' athat 11A will vatuable treatise him on th llat." not only era been hav front comment on lower Italian advance Btrona th pubUshervtay. Old of day. but owing Henry French. In great drive In Par- ' Plava Gormans Invade norther chapter the never light The own ban Law aro made for by Da Morgan never ba widely quoted. ronn. capture flva towns In mT they to discouragement Russia Ratrbstag ratifies 'peace of wlvea," ha one eb Madhouse." th poethumoua aarti far . bill advance; British also . written. Th echeme is welcomed by th protection President Wilson dreary with Roumahia.' " srto La Boisell financial severed, and on another occasion b which Mr Da Morgan but public, th reading ; . withmi announces plan for gradual Dont talk eluding chapter le rroorted among aald to a police wttneea: la not yet- - In"iht. x Lloyd Georg, apaakhtg . before drawal of Americas troops from There 4 " the finKt,' plea. twelve beat celling book te Auo' about a a Mexico. House af Commons eras 11 nations herriblt la It called Inat. month tfuanesrl-a - lair. . a a Tb autograph of Moltere is will demand kaiser's axtredttioa , ' ' from Holland. Defends a scares' aa that of Bhakespwsre. Th jargon." atrirt All American ship reach Franca A comoiWtlcu ba would II In hand transAllah." our mak Moltere portbit of 'Gerdria at pear term; twice attack London's writing largest of book publish ad hr number the ion to wars fattrre aecoont Denikin vivid is-- a of Crtel m for plot money 4 consisting ports. receipt frest tilsht In which capture city of Tsarlteln, on th TMrt A rwarthy Arab, In his native eoa-tu- this country during cevwrad c.f ooegB-ba- tt The C- - F. Gunther collsc-tiotb Mg line by e our warships aarlt oeo aubmarlnn. Volga river. In an order of tb day th- by a very dappara during tb Priodof ttee accompanied 'purchased by recently h? a - aonounree hi cocatder-sbiof th Ad, output Mator waa Theodora chart recognition mope . attracting perhaps t Historical Rometr. tt Is said, con- Engliahma Rcc'seveH. Jr., and Captain A re hi -- tniral Kolchak as supreme govarkbr attemuon In Long Acre when I was 1444 and a at ftcOo lUltc-tain a signature af Holier, doubbear af Russia. Tribe York baid Roosevelt arrlr lb Fraac New tborthat te pass through baptaoed j the only on la America ,i..i t . , e - zr ;'- P j.. - i. N- -- i i total mll Following U an extract from a poem which the author it writing ' o "Mount Tsmpanogee'V- - In view of th interest Mm being taken in the lordly mountain, and especially in view of the fact that iany of the W. E. A people will make the " Timpano goe Hike nothin the next few day, these passage e will doubtless provide timely and enjoyable , reading, '' 4. nil iu ' E Of War Heroes'Headstones' slow-draggl- L trail-blazin- 1 - Jt. ' n, ,, af The Indian Chief who give to thee thy name And all his kindred tribes are here no more. They perished and the gilded halls of fama Will never know that they have gone before; But Timpanogoe, still the tempests roar Around thy rugged ersgs of ice and snow; Thy cataracts still swirl and dash and pour y Their foaming waters in the gulfs below, To swell the mountain streams that from thy caverns flow. a a a But he who loves the record of the rocks Knows well that they are books of priceless worth, A history of those internal shocks That revolution izetf and formed the earth. Not useless dates, they give the ages birth, Their evolutions and their destiny, Their mournful musing and their songs of mirth These, like the Master Seer of Galilee, Bear record that lives on when nations cease to be. see. it - r.yr !' hap-plne- 11 sa well-inform- ' -- - V And are they not the records of our 'Goa, The books of wisdom that His hand hath sealed, Till through the blasted rock and riven sod Their priceless testaments might be revealed? The hsndthafemade the mountamzkoseestei, . But.that it did and does an dwill exist Is palpable to all who have appealed, By instinct, to the sun behind the mist That shines with dazzling light, too brilliant to resist. "jo, Notes. . - - -- - i ?a -- dark-ecee-- - i - r- The shock of battle and the blight of tima Leave death and desolation in their course; But thy untarnished form still stands sublime To mock the boasted ravages of force. Een earthquakes, all too feeble to divorce Thy deep foundations from their massive tower, Have left thee standing, an eternal source Of Inspiration for thy native dower To lift our lowly thoughts by thy resistless power. is '' T a But robes of night will mantle thee in gloom As dark as Erebus, save where some star Shoots downward, as descending to a tomb, Some white-robe- d angel speeds his shining car. And so the ages come and go nor mar The majesty of monarch such as thou. Unseen or visible, thy bulwarks are As adamantine as powerful now As when the sun of youth fljumed thy rugged brow. erv.' ' r. - V--: Kipling For Standardization - f.'.: Tba dawning day illumes thy rugged peak While all the world i wrapt in gloom below; -- Each guidon ray at easy meratag eeeke To et her jewel in thy crown of snow. Th dazzling gem of sapphire gleam and glow, Till all thy creg with bursts of glory blaze. Nor pomp of pride, with all its gorgeous show, Emblazoned with the charms of artful ways, Can so entrance the soul, so glorify its gaze. i i v over-reachin- r r' e f: bwn -- da In dally-becom- -- - Lake Emerald, with strands of ice and snow, Lies shimmering in the sunlight, (ieep and clear. . The rugged crags, reflected there below. With softened grandeur, vividly appear. One pauses at the brink with timid fear . - : That borne submerged enchantment of the deep - ' Will tempt the trembling limb to move so near .. That they, with-ainvoluntary leap, May seek the hidden charm where death and dangers sleep! -- Tx-mo- . A lone and lordly eagle, soaring high, ' Above the blazing glory of thy crest, At times seems but a speck against the sky Some predatory beast disturbs her nest, Ignites the fire thst smoulders in her breast Ths speck becomes s fleshing form of fores That, startled by the cries of the distressed, Swoqp downward like the lightning in It course, To wreak, the sweet revenge that never knows remorse. Alfred Osmond, of the Brighant Young University, ' ' 4 Provo, Utah- . ," an la non higher born-- of and based on wide authority g New Books In .this practical experience. volume he, dteeusses th railroads constructively, he expoaea tho FROM A FINANCIER'S VIEWTOINT. Uxatlon. fallacies of. an of and hi lays bare the fundamental - detls HeOCR ECONOMIC AND OTHER PROBstructure. our economic H. Kahn: Georg LEMS; by Otto HNaw with conditions ss they exist today, York. Doran Company. but be brings to his diecuselons the chapter on Th nam of Otto H. Kahn earrisa vision of tomorrow. Is Hie a -- profoundly The Task Ahead th world groat weight. H la on at beat known financiers, a mam bar. of Irapreaalv in It warning and "Counsel th famous prl vat banking firm of as It hi Inexorableof In Its logic: and h Fatdmaliem, In The Menace Kuhn, Loerb and Company in New and eloquently phinta out that tt would b York. Though of Carman birth conbitter Irony of fate If. while democparentage, h la an of th most on trurbloody field American, racy triumphed spicuously public-spirited of war over the arch representative and b made a notable record in war of th pa tma Hat lo eyetam and aplrlt, work, having publicly embraced th aodal conAllied causa from th beginning of our own government and end practice were t be In- tba world war. Franc made him a ceptionswith tha Pruaalan polaon of chevalier of th Legion ot Honor forjteried his service to tho Alllee: Italy and paternalism end bureauerscyr Parte II and III deal more epecin-call-41y Belgium mads him a commander of with tha auMect eomprlaed Crown at Italy and the order of the . th title, these parte bain. .ConcerniBelgium and Bo much tor tha author of this brilng Businas and andEconomic."HalaWar' Forin liant contribution to th baffling ques- Concerning 'rikrg mono- -tion - that Is now confronting man tion." . Part t. M kind- natrelv, What must b don te'rreph on th late Edward HaarHarthe Ust fixor ol an epoch et th world again on lie feat flnan-jnmaArt. hs, Tart IV, Concern-tr.dally T Occupying a h does aa of chapter on observation in n an. .ar wj ternatiopal posUioir la th world pc pu finance, b apeak with aa antbOrii America, a experiment than which thare illum-fnatln- -- -- rep-c'Jvely- n. In-la- Agnea.-Edward- - -- . 4 4 ' i ri; , ht -- 1 ca, , m n. 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