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Show mm s THE DESERET NEWS SATURDAY FEBRUARY r-- 18 1922 SECTION, 'M Jfy' ure ef moet evening. Scott (and ft la no Ught task ta road "The Pirate" aloud, or even to do Justice to the broad Doric of tha Lowland novela). Dickens. Thackeray. George Eliot. Charlotte Bronte. Fenimor Cooper. Macaulay's Essays and Hlatory (dull! muit the child be who would not thrill to the story of Judge Jeffreys and the Bloody Assize), Shakespeare. Tenny-aon- 'a Idylls, Scott'i narrative poems, much of Longfellow, all were read aloud and ell enjoyed. I believe much Of the faulty English we heil'r today la due to the decay of the practice of reading and being read to. No wae erer yet learned from grammar booka or by the eye alone. Thie la abundantly proved by the fact that hers are thousands of educated EngUahman and women who can read and enjoy a French. German, or Italian book who cannot convene for five minutes In any one of those Language. Their knowledge one of booka and of the eye. But the tongue has not been trained to apeak, at.ll less the ardo hear. And personally I am sura that the ear l i more the Peoof two. the Important listen ple lack the power. to correctly. AndsowegetDnilnry-wordmisused, or at any rate mispronounced.- ' The, cadence of noble prose or the beauty of poetry cannot be appreciated by the eye alone. Artifex in Mnchesr Guardian. lan-gua- 1 That doubt and trouble, fear and pain. anguUh-r-al- l are shadows vain, That death itself shall not remain; And BREAKFAST table in the A mg. clean and whtte with its table- - morn-- 1 cloth coloied with the cups and saucer It and glittering wtlh the tespot Is I not a cheerful object, reader?" quota the question from one of Jh has Hunt Leigh tines charming rjd though written about breakfast. a little too went friend Hunfa Leigh far when he maintained that One cap hold A ellver-foeand breast of pheasant on't. by thinking of sheer tea add. , bread and butter. there are breakfasts in books' from which a good deal, of enjoj merit an be obtained. 1 hen one remembers the wits and men of genius who used io aesenible round Rogers ' l,i eakfaal table In 8t James p'ac'e fot more than half a century. ,one feels that ths literary history of tlieukfasl would be a book well worth writing WhAt Rogers did for real breakfasts. Oliver 1 fee Wend!1 Hnlipee r" real, though Impalpable, breakfasts that have never been eaten except in books. I eaa k. -- -- it. d-- No breakfast table in fiction can him with "a breakfast more suited t1 modern tsste." though we are not told what were its ingredients ,j , Mr. Jerrv Cruncher, by the wav, lq Dickens s 'Tale of Two Cities." wh rium have been a contemporary, of Mr. Oldbuck. drank It, at breakfast, as we know that "between ths cups and saucers a r rang, d for breakfast, and the lumbering deal table, a very clean white cloth Was spread" by Mrs. Cruncher. On the morning following Jerry's unsuccessful expedition as aiv honest tradesman, "there waa r.o fiahj fob breakfast, and net mutb of anything else,' so that the Cruncher family sometimes biesVfasted as bedlv as I he five' small boys yi Nichoia- sNlckieby, who met Mi Squeer at thv, tsf Saracens Head Fnow Hill in Mt-be taken, to Dothebovs.Hall a before uneaa nim had small Bqueers ure of coffee, a plate of hot L'4- and a cold round of beef, but he wss at. that- - moment Intern on preferring!' Two breakfast for the littleriioya penes worth of n.llk end bread andj butter for three was all tbst waa pro-- ; ridfed i or tho five. Mr Jt'iueers add.nJ precept; "Conn tier vouri passions, boj a, and dont be ea with Riles" In contrast with this meager is the exTrellenr Yorkshire bujAkJ fasti at Jont Brow dies on the Sorn ing that. Mx bqueerss estsbiimenC 5 was dispersed. Jjr Ths entrance of Mrgf Browdiej with a smart cap on dnd'very many; apologies-for-'-thehaving ben d- tected in tha act of breakfasting lit the kitchen, stopped John in his doe- -, cusslon of this grave subject- and hastened the breakfast, which. bsrafL composed" of vast mounds of toast ; new-lai- d eggs, boiled ham. Yorkshire; pie and tffher cold substantiate (of which heavy relays were constantly i . it-- . tXi - the-mor- compete in magnlfir-nr- ,. with Archdeacon Grantlv a. described for us by In "The Warden The arch Trollope That weary deserts we may tread, . deacon, as the phrase goe-s.- always didhimself well, and The breakfast A dreagy labyrinth may thread, tabls at' his comfortable rectory of . Through dark ways underground be led; When Goethe was a small boy there Ptmnslead .Epwcopi is an Indication of Waa billeted In his fathers Frankfort this- home a French officer, one Count "The urn was of thick and solid silYet, if we will one Guide obey, PRESIDENT GRANT IN PANTALETTE DAYS. Thorane. He was a dilettante in art ver, as were also the teapot, coffee cream ewer and soxsr bowl- - The POL. and on considerable had influence the Few readers of The News will The dreariest path, the darkest way er. The-rant homa . was pulled youthful Goethe's Interest in art. A cups Were old. d m dragon china, in- thir down when the big department store relative of Count Thorane now an- worth about a pound apiece, but very picturesque .lad of four . Shall issue out in heavenly day; summers. President Heber J. Grant; a as erected. Some years ago. Presi- nounces his existence Count despicable in the ejes of the unim dent came Grant across a man who de Sartoux-Thorgnmho ittaled. The silver forks were so and yet at a recent birthday anniver- had old photographs claims that her has a number of paint- heavy. as to be disagreeable td any but purchased many And we, on divers shores now cast, sary, his guests were shown tha.. rare of pioneer, days, taking them at ranin robust persona. The tea consumed old dagtrerrotype, as being possibly dom on tho chance that to some one ings at his castle, Mouans-SartouShall meet, our perilous voyage pastf light on ths was the very bent, the coffee the very the earliest taken of the presiding at some time they might be of Inter- Provence, which throw which be blackest, the cream the very t h tikest. may "Koenigsleutnant and official of ths L. D. 8. Church. At the est President All in our Fathers house at last. Grant finding in the of in clearing up the Josef there was dry toat and buttered appearing from another kitchen Un-- ; help time, the child and his mother Were collection a picturo of his first home, pluim muffins and crumpets; hot tier the direction of a ve the young Goethe ie alleg-e- toast, living on the Grant homestead which paid tho purchaser 50 centa for R, and epic towhich was admirably adapted tn have- - written. The matter has bread and cold brtal, white bread and servant',) Whateer befall, tis true that love. included a large part of the ground then commissioned home-madbleak e tho the jeeslvsdt late gold bread and John been placed in the hands of Profes- brownbread, mornlngand where Z. 5 M. L now standa A high Hafeo, the-weknown artist, to make sor Paul Piper, who will attempt to Blessing, not cursing, rules above. cobMestonewall some Ml feet south He who of these delights car of Res decide the autnenttcity of the paint- - oaten bread; and if there be other IlMjainling pleterc for many years adorned his office. The must have a high opinion os And that in it we live and move. breads than these, thev were there: judge 5 street, diytded the Grant property photo was evidently taken from the Brewdiss housekeeping. Mrs were and in there eggs napkins, crispy from that of Daniel H. Wells, the Ut- eite of the preeent Deseret News build- What wonidptie not give ts havd- of bacon under silver covers;. and bits , ter including the property on which seems at strife Despite of all little box, been present at- the breakfast in "Ess Shaw Desmond asserts Thai HU there were TOO fishes Tn Zions Savings the Standard Joining buHdtngsfth e"oId wall, and,ad-in laid his shanf mond when Esmond bank, and deviled kidneys frizzling on a d FurntttiT-Ann With blessing, all with curses of the Z. C. the background, diagonally through novels are not novels, but he ex- s. dish which, by the bv, were "Spectator" paper on the tabls lit M. I. building now stand. Ths Grant the The "symbresl," In of the rest Beatrix front of 8aK ptsce the block, Lake to the plate Theatre, which placed closely contiguous faith is blessing, this. is life," tbo novel of the future Uhe remainder of waa then property furnished f the worthy archdearon-himselfi- . newspaper! IVe should have been able Just as If is to- plains,-is viA symbolic realideas it the Z. C. - M. X Main street site, the day. The practically advances to watch how "Beatrix pished and quaint pictures of the boy ism. The symbreallat writes his book Over and above this, on a snow-whit- e RICHARD CHEVENIX TRENCH. Furniture store site and the In pantelettes and skirts and the old spread upon the sideboard, psha'd over the paper." heard beg rite of the building nett south on family The general effect i napkin, home are among the treasures synthetically. was a huge ham and a huge sirloin; complaints of Mr. Steele' growing Main street. The next 1(5 feet was most highly the scenes, dialogues ths latter having laden the dinner-tabl- a dullness, and seen her sngsr am ahq prised by President Grant kaleidoscopic; the property of Bishop Edward Hunt today. and Incidents at a casual glance seem on the previous Such suspected the truth. Had I th(. but the was the ordinary are evening. however, the breakfast tabla unrelated, and mystifying, at Piumstead choice, improbable, and the things that hap-pa- the babes In fiction at which I should have sa of that facet epigram is L one of that narelationship appear to be brought about Episcopi." OF DOOM , and speak the truth. In this IS Mr. Spencers in Fig Tree court, trf a diamond to another; the aggregate Mr. Oldbuck. in The Antiquary, turally as logical consequences. The case, fools class Is represented by Ancient in his breakfast the Temple, as described In "The Vir effect is the superlative expression was principal character. Dr. Alast&lr, is a the the latter Mildewed In I would a agent reality madman of an abstraction." "a tangible ren- fare, as well os in other mattera ginlana" And the morning merry companion, eccentric but conWHAT HtlT BE TOLD. ' DemoOn the morning that Love! break choose would be that on which Mrv of scientious, who kidnaps a patient in caped from an asylum "who went the Books intangible." are dering liable to many aliments read part of his play MORIS' THAT MTJ8T BE TOLD; by Sir order to keep him out of the toils crazy readln the works of Bernard "Passion" and his mor re- fasted with him. "Mr, Oldbuck. de- Warrington and. He has a record of marrying but curing them is a delicate and ex- cracy'." the gentlemen pres Philip Gibbs; Harper A Brothers, New of the law, until his tired mind shall Shaw. spising the modesn slops of tea and Carpezan, are cent "God symbreala fourteen women had uncomj York. and proving an ideal pensive process. The skill of the book be sufficiently rested and restored to ' coffee, was substantially regaling lilm. ent pronounced that It learned Drt th husband mon "Even to them merit. with acid roast Otherwise." surgeon has been responsible for the The psychology of tha Jiobo la pre- self, more ma Jorum, This volume Is natural sequel to enable him to clear up an apparent the guard fells us.all. he Is was invited, was good perfectly preservation of many literary treas- sented In Jim Tullys forthcoming beef and a glass Of a sort Of beverage Johnson, who the searching and dramatic book by crime of which he is suspected and harmleaa" But this man of much exof fat ale, enough to say that the piece ures which would otherwise have abduction gives rise to a game of "Emmet called mum a species novel. the same author, "Now It Cat Be this showed talent,', - For Dr. Johnson some rather inperience does to their injuries or to the autobiographical new to brewed from wheat and bitter herbs.' a Is Lawler Lawler." type Told," published after the close of hide and seek that is continued with teresting truthsjtreach would even desert Beatrix herself. f but to drink man and ravages of senile decay. the detestable, the Lovel found younr cleverness. exceptional American fiction, a tramp, a prize- the hospitality of the is dice supplied "Penguin" --4n London Observer. the war, and containing disclosures J woman; as for Instance. A kiss is alThe The sixteenth who to tome author, which of the century who been man prior has which, for obvious reasons, 'It would world part the first kiss and the last or it has lain for years in a cellar, with fighter, a war had already had an adven- ways childwith fisher the novel life his side never do to print while the conflict since latest of the seamy is "You should not stifle torn pages, stained by himelf, and to whom ths,I men around dealing and was In progress. Sir Philip, writing turous career, and who served five lovenothing; the Lofoten Islands, hag but whose xeet for life and on papers were left by lady Dorchester's with nor encumber crumbling with mildew, damp ' will return hood, ultito now of conditions In Europe since the years in that conflict, makes this ex- civilization civilization, him soul lead captured the hearts of his own peot wiih with love:" "Marriage Is from the "hospital without a trace conquerable I to his owe "I planation publishers: war. again turns a searchlight on an the pie and made him a prophet also af so small that there Is no room of Its former decrepitude, good for mate victory. It is Interesting to not geneels of The Mind Healer to ain nest Siiice Christmas Dr Grenfell has home. It for disagreement." indisputably vital epoch in world his- my good another 400 years of life. The clean- thst several writers living In Los AnIn audiencsumfortune the different many spending In new disIts volume. tory; and his This play, with others of ths Btew-a- rt ing treatment consists In lmmarsing geles, among them Rnpert Hughes spokebJiefore Sand in a large number of cities coavaleecent C. Lincoln, genial authn cussion of the recent turbulent years, mer of 1919 at a military and Baal! King, read the book and es Kidd editions, has been published the stained sheets in a bath of tn Massachusetts sod New York. Dur of Joseph hospital at Fowey In Cornwall. There, to meet aft ei "Galusha the Magnificent, about were enthusiastic it. promisee to claim an equal distinction as Increased the his lecture of months This two demands of removes the theVnext soon in potash. as winters in New York returning strength perwith that of Its predecessor. The au- mitted alt the stains, but turns the whole him through the spending several and take public; the ; will Itinerary publishof his I to the former whole now it, spent returned has s my ers promise that no effort is Rudyari! Kipling impress upon the thor has seen what few ethers have life on the water fishing. Ths influ-snmiddle western stales and City, being sheet brown, and R la foflowsd by a American consciousness Is manifest ail northern Jersey td ueen, and he has learned from personCanada. Detroit. Milwaukee. MInne home. Hackensack. New spared to secure the beet works avail- bath of very weak sulphurous acid across of to Saskatchewan my Hf( environment tales from and the of map thdus-tnd8t. Louis and Clave live during, the winter months. s contact conversation and Kansas with al to restore whiteness. The leaves are City. spoils. able. are ths for than continud will on there nofswername land are among the places where he summers Cape Cod suggested the thought of people of all classes through- that smugglers then .treated with sise. which revital- Louisiana, "Two 8latterns A morand his which now bear a offices King." Is Cornish the work coast post would undisturbed. eight form al speak Dr. Grenfells out Europe startling facta which centhem, and are finally toned down There is a Kipling station in Sas- swiltnational interluds.by Edna St. Vincent Mil-la- izes institution; his books are sors and secret Influences have hith- an Ideal place fo( a glorified game of author of Aria da Capo, was to match the color of the rest of ths katchewan. a Kipling in Ontario, a always in demand and go through ediA collection of' hitherto unpublishin boats. played sailing in Montana, a Kudvard and tion after edition. erto kept from the "pitiless publicity! To first pages Kipling Vaasa at produced r ed manuscripts by Jan Austen wi( rest to the game I decided college. in Michigan, a Kipling In Besides damp stains, seme books e which he, at last, boldly gives them. that give Kipling Chance Vice the is the characmain issued in England during oths be the should be the police, Carolina, a Rudyard in Mlssia-slpp- l. He directs the shafts of his criticism and from seekers especially those printed during the North and "Succ by, Lord Beaverbrook, spring. Written by the author tn hep this fantastic Idea the story ter, he who gives the collogue and nineteenth in Louisiana Tha a Kipling the of seems "leaders there once when ths century, particularly against prologue and who plavs the hide- to hlch will be brought out at The Mind Healer grew. I believe, teens, the collection contains, among Rudyard and Kipling were amiss with Michigan the old tradRion." the "old gang" stnl of named by the president of toe So In this country. I had no such intention, that ous prank on ths king In search of a the have been something already in its third other works, two novels and a short of the become for the most part In command of the though composition paper wife. received who a how Just Lin deLord poem tidy Chance Reaver, Railroad, in by the tone of The blind Healer reflects edition Eng'and. history of England. termines that on a particular day. pitted with masses of email brown Kipling eelebratirg his two new chil- brook was born in , New Brunswick, machinery of government the men the known as unAn England. Francs and Italy who bookstages of my return to health. The Tidy, tha spots These north. foxing." dren the of falsa Blattern. shall fall A tit hors the son of a Presbyterian minister; associations have been opens on a gloomy note that from less removed spread rapidly and pass were playing the game of joUtlcsbe-for- e her usual modes of neatness, and on and he became the "cemett king" of Can- formed rerently. in Melbourne gives way to one of lightths to disease other Mildew letcollection pagea of The the tr7 fighting - for place and gradually true unpublished the Slut, 'shall for ones is the most hearted irresponsibility. ada. and during the war hs had charge (Ldney to promote the Interests of I was weak In her life be Slattern, of book into deadly whicl diseases, Lord ters of Byron passed power, and belonging- to the Inner and miserable forfha tidy, the of propaganda Australian literature, A campaign i when I plot of and, unless checked, R win eat its the hands of the hos- the on the of the British bureauwas circle o that system wfilA under pital. and my spirits entered littls play which has much lady Dorchester pos- way from eovee- - U book "Cnad In to be conducted against the Imported rose e-- e His Ck- gradually' 'previous Lord of her father. name death of "representktlve gov- till I was able once more Broughton the fair s, sibility for reproduction i Ty cause the leave to efumble to In- - rtanaer" tBeTfT!HaLhfstoiT of th; serial story. fully Cam the poets (John a Hobhousj), ernment" arranges the fate of peoples delight in the hart of B long giTw- sry only sun and tha . aml tne If ths page of a book ars torn, the tlmate friend, are now at last (though first Canadian contingent. without their knowledge, or consent. spindrift. The Mind Healer was not list of excellent works being issued edges frayed, or If mildew holes have after death has prevented the ownWho put the story in history" this Looking back at the "three years of written with a purpose, are attractcompany. They but If it by, a delicate operation must be er's intention of publishing them Johan Bojer has thus far been jI yurast Sahstini is evidently ths man. blundering, moral degradation, and re- should have the effect of refreshing ively bound in paper and sell at a appeared, performed and the missing or diseased herself) to see the light. The work more popular in Denmark. England. judging from tbs success of ht"Scar-- , action to the lowest tradition of na- the Jaded nerves of some poor moderate cost. of the French Revolution and America than In parts replaced by (rafting on new pa- Is to be issued by ths British pubtional politics," since the armistice, with a of the magic of per. Ia such a case the first, earn lisher Murray - whe is editing tha two way. il ls said.- - however, that his amriuche." now In Its eighth printing. a lger-ea- ,. tie affirms that the most tolerant of the sea. It will breath diary of ths surgeon Is is see that the new Justify Its existence" minds examining into the causes of MT LIFE IN PARIS FirTY YEARS paper exactly matches the old. not FORMS BY A CHILD. thst evil period ef history must form-ulaAGO; by A. Ellen Stanton; Tho Strat- only in texture and grain but also In a grave Indictment against this ford Company, Boston. its watermark. For this purpose he by Louise Hart; The Corn group or company of leaders. He, at POEMS: filed under data, a collection hill Masa Although It takes a different view- keeps, Company, Boston, not hesitate to bring any rate, does of old paper which ho has gradually such indictment; and while he does In this little volume are point from that of the professional often by taking the fly not mlnlmtso the guilt of Germany in score poems ' which are about four historian, this book Is nevertheless a accumulated, leaves from old books which In themrepresented genuine' bit of . the 'war, he believes that if the lead- to have been written no value. selves ars of history which Is. perby a little Southerers of the old tradition had been as valuable as if It ware haps Suppose the corner of a leaf Is mi quite n-girl was who greater in leadership and had called only ten years old more and less It Ing. The book surgeon cuts his paper all people to a new phlloeophy of in. when the book was published They tells ofponderous a time when moderngossipy. France-J- ust to a size slightly larger than Is reternatlonal life for tha sake of future represent some of her best work, exnow In the world's eye more than quired to replace the missing portion and the common weal of tending over a period of six yearn, perhaps any other nation was In the so that R will Just overlap the frayed peace told" to her great- making. The author's Europe, the German people would one having been of the edge. Having pasted this in positions t doesn't talc e children Jon to ttke have paid more willingly according grandfather when she was only four. daily life of Parishavepictures the effect of ribaf this uunzuanbfld vivid photographs she Invests to their power, and would on eech side the to them strip, overlapping GhirvjJelUx.The; craving fort hi sit quietly pondering on some with more than a personal In- and teases the edges until the two with all their might of indus- would scams instinctive. of the things about her and then terest;much Savory food-driadded to her descriptive papers are grafted together, with no and try to build up the ruins they had would Nor is there anything better for chilcaused. Then he proceeds to discuss that onego to someone near and tell poser, she haa humor and keen phil- sign) of a Join. If the letterpreas her thoughts had said osophy the .combined product con- or a design has been injured, this is the ideals of the humanists, the "need to her. whjit dren on the go and grow! For Ghir- some of the earlier stituting a work of of the spirit," the new Germany, the verses in Thus compelling inter- then Inserted by pen and Ink from ardellis is a tasteful blend of fine the collection were present est. care the of book, social of perfect copy being price victory in France, the not really "written by the child beand pure suar two natural As a matter of fact, ths pgrlod re- taken that the color of the Ink excocoa revolution in English life, the warning cause had not yet learned to ferred to Is more than fifty years of Austria, the "truth about Ireland," write; she were y. ago; actly matches that of the original. energy-food- s. Soy' dictated to someone, they receive attention. the United States and world peace, who wrote them exactly ax the child the first entryIs from the authors The binding next; D. GHIKARDELLl CO. Is new It from and leather source built Corners this are up. diary and finally "the chance of youth." that FnaetKS Sisce itjx the whole volume is up is dat- grafted on. lettering or design reIt goes wfthout saying that the directed. .Assurance is given in an interesting ed October S, 18(7, made when th,e party newed, and perhaps a new back is supbook is excellently written. As an ex- introduction Nathan Haskell Dots whose experiences are herein record- plied. author that the workbyis really the perienced Journalist the little girls ed left London for Paris the knows how to sharpen h(s points and own. She is descended object of the book surgeon ,1s a line boys to remain there until the Expo- notThe to transform gn old book Into a drive them home. Terhaps he Illus- of literary people, and from earliest sition closes. the others her during the new one. but simply to preserve It in trates rather strikingly how much training was such as to develop her the last entry is dated !t original form from further decav easier it is to oritielse and condemn imaginative powers and the ability to winter; and when the return 'trip to and so prolong its life. London Daily than to construct; yet he appears by express. A steady growth may be dis- April, 18(9. Englapd was made The period thus Mail. no means as one. who fail, to Indicate cerned In her work from year to year, covered Stanton's diary is a remedy for conditions which he de- and many ofl the poems would do therefore byat Mia end of the showy plores. On the contrary, he indulges credit to a writer of far rfiore mature regime of it he the Reading Aloud. third Napoleon, and in n reasonable amount of optimism; years and experience. There is in thundering of the German and of his sincerity in dwelling upon them, moreover, a freshness and na- guns the is good reading aloud so rare? In the war pf 1ST0 changed the ThsWhy tho blunders onfy. to make their cor- ivete that ia most delightful. The de- whole tenor is obvioua The art is no answer French of The history. rection the more thorough end im- - dication. Jpo My GrartRniother" I wonder how many peomaidens is full of cultivated. young record daily Mary Blackmaf Bullard indicates freshness and piquancy, and It makes ple in England during the last week peratlve, there can be no doubt. of flavor the character end something have either read aloud, ph been read reading. RBSTPLL FOR JADED 'NERVE, of the childs writings It is as fol- lively Yet reading aloud As a postscript, written after read to, for pleasure. ) lows. , ones a recognized source of pleaswas , Ing over the pages of hef Journal fifty THE MIND HEALER; Ralph by time of Miss Ausure and from .Te the to later It for ths prepare year MypAandnether. Durand: G. P. Putnams 8onS, New York and London. prxss. Miss Htar.ton says the friends ten. In whose novels there are freThe love In her sweet breast of half a century ago seem to spring quent references to the practice, down Makes her face Ilk a rose, Tight novel in the' best sense. Her ere like Jewel to tpe -Into life and she lives the to the end of the Victorian period it one that can be recommended alike to Her mouth ts a sweet thought from the happy days of long ago." again' Some she bulks big in otir social history- When holiday-make- rs and angels , knows, have passed away; hut, taking I waa a lUtle bQtIiaaa fortunate characterised by delightful comedy. She looks saintly eh a nee,-Bgto long jiddrcsscd a Tetter enough to know one, home where the the written In exeellent style.-wi- th one who waa. almost the youngest mother, an hunt who'aiwaya lived with TWO LITTLE PLA1S. plot and situations ingeniously conof the original party. In the that the family, and a second aunt, a fretrived and deftly kept at ail times well TWO' SLATTERN'6! AND A KINO; he might be atill alive. In hope quent visitor, all three sisters of a in band such to "The Mind Healer." SWEET AND TWENTY; Edited by her "tramp letter had reached its professor of English literature and in which are told the adventures and Kidd were Frank Shay; Stewart Company, destination and had brought a reply, language, xquiaito readers. s were then not dreamed mishaps ef a Mating aad fishing Cincinnati. saving that he was well and that his Picture-housemusic-hall- s werewae eldest about Just of; the holiday ia aad out of the picturesque grandchild regarded genThs Stewart Kidd modern plays, seme age that he himself was when erally wltfr6 reason, as disreputable: In little harbors of Cornwall, England. edited . two new Frank-have by Shay, Clean aad genuine mirth run hand in the Author knew him in Paris. With the particular home 1 refer to "res hand with the thrill and mystery of additions. "Sweet and Twenty, a this incident. her Pans journal angusta dpmi made frequent vislta to . a saspeotsd crime aad the bunting comedy In one act by Flovd Dell. au- endethl the theatre Impossible. A pantomime down f an Innocent aun; and while thor of "M6on Calf." haa already been at Christmas, aad-- a visit out a year ' some of tho ottontlona prove absurd, produce d.by .the Irovincetown players to a traveling circus, or to "Pepper's Is Is almost on little a adtire ft not to sny bohrterous in pieces, and and Anything elreJJeorgran Gboats.or some Similar entertainsparkling ' Fiction: Almost else Four s crass young pre ment. were about tha limit of such character, the anything purposes end misunder- marriage. r. And so front September indulgences standings are perplexing and tangled, man. s younp woman, a guard and tending it 'is sex. Cleveland to Easter, reading aloud was ths pleao- yet ta there, nothing that can be called the agent,, present rather effectively Notes - -- ir ae - h - e. x. -- IV-T- that noi-wa- tsr "sym-breaJ- one-thi- Co-o- p. n ,'DPnflnOn to and ed play-readi- ee 1 y, e." 1 bv-ae- - Nor-man- ce suf-fri-- er park ts fust know thrive onit have-labor- ed nk j Gar-mr-dtU- Io , v - - hr ten-da- ys - '' Piain-Deafe- "I |