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Show 4 'Jr wy - V- 'x a THE DESERET SATURDAY NEWS m MARClCj.O922 tit Is largely a social audience, well educated without being "highbrow, and tolerant andklndly jo a degree. ln fact a bat the people mainly want li to nee the lecturer. They.' have heard all about G. K. Cheat erton and Hugh Walpole and John Drlnkwater; Lirfnsl Johnson dled-ilG2.-a- t the beat current criticism 1 written' la the and so when these gentlemen come to town, the woman club want to pave age of M. He flourished In the 9's weeklies. a look at them, just as English, peo. and he mixed with- the-- j other young And, as I have observed, the lies 'must have their articles wsrtj short; all crazy about animal pie, who-er- e jjienuWhailtUrtslie4jRieiiuhiiLhje. had They otter no eeope ar.d considered judgment They don't expect the giraffe about as much, spiritual. affinity wt'h examination giraffe. to-aat4i.Ctan a'huiA siorMi- dra d Lan-tmfror and Don They anything lit particular all one can do in the par they of- WKl Id' see R, that all. So with the and "i.wn far is to make a point or two and American woman's club audience, Henry James , After they have seen M r. Chesterton whq also- - lived through that apwh. He throw -or yurliHAtU A very damn A Christian, a marr wrrrr tr.ueh another ae they come Wat they ask- one . MvacJous writer, may possibly pro- matter oat Just as an incidental de-- p af-- ; a man of and common sense, rtuct. tor' Did you understand - his' lecture? (f ,h, worth, and the answer la, I cap't say I did." factions. He waa not gFeai, but be which when rnnted. as reading But there la no malice about it. They waa genuine, and he had talents. seraph No man can now go and say that they have 'ra al- Johneons eaaaa'a, rejrird, in such it space couid to produce , seen Mr. Chesterton: thats worth two hpe re to .t uxij sound. nob -tut ir:ch pctir!ry for a hun dollars in itself. The- - nearest thin though, to this attitude of mind that I heard !y, very thrilling. 'Why' Th raon drd juars would an'ornatioally refer Shall I deny my brotbar th mueew , of in England was at the Cifcy TertrpTe is and That be baa won within the fields of foil, ned judgment in London, 'where they have every short review Maatnay eesay Cast your mind hark rcaK on Jonr.ken na I fui of bias. Hie week a huge gathering of about two ,.0r try to make bis snm of values less, . , f over he the ftneweH crlueiu of English past. picture may h grotesque thousand people, to listen- - to a Or seek by'st<b to filch the wine and oil h.s pkiure-o- f Johnson tnav omit lecture. - When I was what are the critical" ewos n par'll- - J popular l aoout Johnson. , . That flow to bint from well-kethere I was told that the person who ular authors which kurvi-,--- , vines and soil,' bo th" ev ay n lvai as ezhaus- - ' had preceded me was Lord Haldane, e.- - r. of course, jJntfl the glory of his fairer fame . prime ig thinking, Ml, auIav ou,d mak on it. Einstein's lectured theory wtigrtiad WORK TRAIN ON U. I IN 1870, j. Joe pseru view and support Embitter all my thoughts and so embroil of relativity, I said to the chairman, says, not of book corn pom lTnb newsi-ap-column .The-twabout erwomen couldn't kind 52 -' of audienco in Ths of manv Th.'. r? above is an Interesting relic There are not years. 'Surely this ,1' ally My baser passions that I blush with shame n ''J 'tie :nore than make He tain composition- - of Ltn.h ani Hz-- , J the early days Id railperched on the cowcatcher of the understand a deeeure like that! To see the lamps of love that glorify his name? vu.uments and quote r after engine are wearing crinolines, and Shook his head. . No," he said, they RUE there arrlHcauU-- . ; ' roading, being in 1110, '" anecdotes- ,gnif the "marriage of the Union and Cen- not bloomers or knickerbockers, or didn't un ierstand it, but theyHTt en says, there' areMat'i,f-Ar:. : . . - :n. ! ; or rn con in Leacock tt. tral Pacific roads at Promontory. The knee skirts, and French heels are perhaps ore neglected Joyed Stephen The lean and hungry look that Caesar saw f our age ; cri, locality - is Rock Cut near Green splcuous by their absence. Tremen- Harper's. from whlfh have no Steal forth from meager Cassius jealous eyes, River, Wyo., on - the Union Pacific dous improvements and changes have pa for echa or the wd expensive 8 pnrdad. The difference between rail- taken place in faiirosdtng since 1870; that never Critical Estimate of Scott- - essays To flash to his intelligence the flaw " tr.dpv more, tha? tinted,- way operating and construction equip? but the line of, the V moo Pacific reeCAlalcA Which from the world war shrouded ln disguise, ment then And now is worthy of note, mains pretty much the same ' except .ecraphook; Lives Pi !n-IT H T"f fthort of wi ;not istory critical the size of "the locomotive particularly, for cuUlngoul the efirvi-- s a rtd redacs -- f Excluding cmifd! blsg-.j-- h ,h'iual; them Stilt kindles Tn the" rfrioiis that despise Issued hv the Oxford Uni"urvlv Tn,T rly while the attire of the persons shown tion of grades. - A fine . illustration of single perse, n. thrr? is ..ry I- ;- . err-T. Archibald Dr. If Press, bw'k Strong, versity of c,fUd line "The fairer forms and finer goods of life, tr, between Ogden Ijone Johnin the lar.gUHBre that re an? a In the .view is an additional illus- this last Is the liv el associate professor of English lan- knem ' '' rsr't of our luing Itierafure It'd n'o- SorJ tration of the change in things gener- - and Evanston. part Which ljft our lowly naturea to the skiee In the University mere grazing for antiquaries.-- ' And it guage and literature too pes- r,,t lrrr ! a rule of Melbourne, makes brief survey is significant that those has more than on And break the flashing sword and gleaming knife various tendencies that- - have raised Aquarian Age Prints rrlnra, of the subject from an opening Chap- which hl;" l a worthy surv-Uarc n:i That-fi- ll "f" the human race to what it now la of ; '''''"T.' the world of peace with bitterness and itrife. op-- , il'.ri on to the ter From the Beginnings tr;ra Monument of Gull to nLaq .,r icy The author's chief aim has been flderable leng-Story' vr.rd-to J6.00 otde. apifre pnod and hd m literature, and on - 'The Victorian Novel. velopment which ono is apt to lose le The March issue of The Aquarian chapter CTJeaTousy, thou monster of the mind V'''' are "The was perhaps a goodness works to show how the entire Age," a California publication, sound a con- Others of his chapter, tljles larger d 'inv- 1 alt d?wn ln front of Who overcomes the forces ofthe will, of Chaucer in England." critic as Bagehnt, but most of bl course is directed by tains an article by W. H. 'Apperley of Aftermath works which ar in and John the and was Poetry work Dryden cnnt'lbtited (o in particular how the great Ice Age this city .on Mormon Yenbranon for 'The noble natures that ye seize and bind," Drama of the Restoration. 'The Rise which would .ueriirrb under'weeklies lrorea of becoming Jassirs, and at- - "i an end to the long lethargy of the the Guiis,- how put of Presw.a-MTThe hearts of heroes that ye wound and kill, . At word" about-"of from Thom- 8fT'6f' an arsTeTe of i. Oio 1, J primitive-huma- n and . brought--abou- t ths'8raruDx"6Wodpeddon upon the sonthoto 'Blake." andPoet' Scott and the The "nensesof Injustice that ye thrill conditions which explain the There ta etiil room for cay on civilization. But another aim is to crops of the early Utah settlers and Novel. - On the latter subject Dr. time are principally err.po4d m writ- With savage joy, all show that ye are worse Strong says, if Scott's work In itself ing articles of from I.6A to 2 88 Rickens Tnd MHto.n. Shelley, Keatt correct the prevalent misconception of of the .monument later erected in were the of them which not so noteworthy, it would still Than pestilence or famine, and that stilt the moral status of the older civiliza- tribute to the gulli by a grateful peonWI,apcrs and rP i will summart tho Uvea for conjee- tions. Mr. McCabe takes issue with ple. Mr. Apperley supplements his be conspicuous because it marks one rtews The queen of death and ruin is the nurse The center of me-e- r and of u. ' those who In their histories have done article with a poem a prayer that of the great epochs In English Who mires with our joys the poisons of thy curse. m.f ,hhr pw'ul'ar dualities and point He did for tho hhttoncat novel fluence has shifted The monthlies far less than Justice to ancient Egypt God Will give ta the world peace,' food realis-t,L0lAhf I1! Prnni1 at do done the what for i quarterlies occamonallv publish mil?tra:!lfin' ' Tha o!awlc Fielding had and Babylonia have been to Athens aa well as temporal faith, cwaVs on Thom-mak- e spiritual that is to sny, he first touched erary .articles of weight. Rut I could and Rome profoundly nnjust." .He love and song. a"d and W. - B a reser-,a,loin faior of The waving fields of service are so .vast the form with mastery, and made It holds that modem research has made Irate hare yet to beBridges written: critics ' young which to I handle for his 'dare of monthly old possible scarcely end these eountryjnten of with in misconceptions That ample harvests ripen for us all, Mark T tvains Anger Wwurenay yet arte who will m err non thrfr It with success His industry and rapare mainly the .character ofthe oldest clviliza-- , their existence by writing . Bui limitations- - hold- - ua firm and fast and their literary articles are justify idity of output were prodigious and political Subordinated to tion. and it is sn essential part of the them, the $$ let production of long not common! written by the best com on Khakespearean; his thirty-on- e Within our narrow circles, all too smalt Is wot the only work story that we should understand the not now the by whichthea great plete-nto- i critic may Justify his One Sunday afternoon I saw some If we can only rise when others fall. shuda were all of written within novels, "the long luxury longer permitted hoodlum chasing and stoning a Then keep us,-- gracious Lord, low in thedust. ur lnat 18 the most useful. dering at. the iniquities cR Babylon. '7aden with the period of idxreen yearw. And if tie Is monthly successors were, most of our -J. C. Squire in London Observer. Athens, or Rome; to the rightly in- weekly wash of his Christian cus- deficient in - Shakespeare's subtlety Till we shall hear the bugles cheering call Is sense reof the finest issues, he formed man, indeed, the wonder tomers and I noticed that a police- - and Mark ' To found a government of faith and trus.t him again In the largeness of blla-io- u Twains Own handwriting and hunting and fishing trip m Sonora. that from the moral and social point man observing --this performance sembles with hts characteristic hu- Mexico. Mr. Grey left the west .r so in little his serene we have view of sweep, immaculate the , and advanced, On laws of life impersonallove; coast and just. with an amused Interest mor, authorizing the puhlishera to with two is here, more. He did not interfere. Inothing numin and communities. bis of' It ships and a goodlv number the these ity outlook, beyond wrote the poem if they saw fit. RealizAlfred Osmond, of. the Brigham Young Umveroitg, , of old Indian gun fighters. more than elsewhere, that history be- up the incident with considerable ber of unforgettable figures he has Pno Is It the value of the little poem, that he 'is bound for tha wildest said comes tho science and art of living as warmth and holy intlignation. Usually given to Ihq literature of, England ing havegreat Provo, Utah, piece on to the Mark Twain of country on the sent they and world. of deatha and the as The spirit of his age is estate, where itit will well a record I didn't want to read, in the morning, continent, that he b held until the will leave hi ships in In evident the love Gulf his remote of of I what had written the night before; periods return from Europe of the official t altfornla while he and hts men go In and climes, of his country's scenery In It had come from a torpid heart -- arch of Albert Paine. biographer. Bigelow pronoun, but anything else would have NEWSPAPER. A a lost gold mine. If they find N08KL, OF this Item had come from a live one. its Highland beauty and wildness, of seemed artificial and 1 b d the supernatural, of the humor and New Books Thie rrfiFPfrnnir "booiT titlT iLthy will work it. ' other author would ba accused of Any SIWESS: r Samuel Hopkins Adams; unliterature and ao I sought for romance which he divined In lowly which Th Houghton Mifflin Company; Bos-'- it conscionable vanity and most offensive suggest religioun litSince James Jowe attract'd attenlit in the paper next morning wiih lives. But if these qualities make erature might . a te -- The Kverlasting ton. Whia-per.- ' TOl'IMfi THE TEAR EAST. egotism for setting forth in such detion "with "Dubliners, Scott a wasn't It a voiumeof there (eagerness. It his romantiwasn't right romantic, 'The Beautiful tail tha multiplied evidences of aduand Damaed Samuel Hopkins there the next morning, nor the next. cism i for the most part Success In Hi SauI One Marching On." short stories, no Irishman has made and true .'A CRUISE TO THE ORIENT: by the lation with which he was everywhere kept so Adams has produced hi second novel j I went up to the composing room and and steady bv his broad and virile san- But Tfie Everlasting "Whisper pronounced an impression in ficD.D.; The saluted; but in Charlie , hp-pen- a Rev. Andrew story of newspaper life and newspapers, his found it turked away among The to be a Jackeon Gregory novel of tion as Daniel Cbrkery His Stratford Company, Boston. ity of soul. Whatever be his faults He this is ingenuous and Chaplin's efHounds of Banba, innocently on matter the never consists of shr.eks in the falsetto dear to adventure in the California mountain one having been '.The Clarion. jdemned standing g&llev and its absence would spoil . With 4 interesting illustrations and fervescent. short I stories fix that revoasked the about it. Irish In The both foreman 1914. said in his and Hugo, 1 of at lution for greatest pages are those which permanently diapoe tale. In short, he baa written just which was published had found it in a galley In which he is nearest to "four maps showing Germany's Lost about history as no history ran common life. 1ear a half dozen men: The Beau as he might be expected to talk, books "the power of the press" Is Mr. Barnes do. The Smn Fein movement proand ordered Its extinction. And He saw romance with the same steadi out. proof tiful Austria Re and his popularity Damned la F. Placa in the "Sun, Fitzbrought and Bcott strongly and vides the practical good themes Barnes Is for the stories.' .Mr. book written furnished his reasons ness and clearness with which Field- geralds new novel, a decays ting eat Mr. Adamss latest duced, Turkey Dismembered, and sense will be not a little enhanced withtouch-ti- t a Irony- - The hero of tna.tlther tame or. ta the foreman, ! donlt ing eaw-rea . The Cruise," aeefion Treon of The Snd American Rfer manliness indicating the reute thereby. It--4 society, "of" its book. Banneker by name, comes to .remember which; bat they- were com-Ne- and A cable received br which make him be- while Hi Soul Ooe Marching Ort Is "traveled hy The author and described kind and a good kind. unique too. He said that the loved generosity Tork from a small western town merciaHy sound as a man are evident everywhere a story by Mary Raymond Shipman minister at Washington states that E. in this narrative,. Dr. Archibald has was Cali the paper of the poor; it was throughout his writings Equally A Tl,DY or HOBS. Powelo the author of and determines to reach the pinnacles Andrews in which Theodore Roosevelt j Alexander given herein a fascinating account, apt goes "Where the Grange Trails Go Down It gathered and concise summaries of the work in journalism. In a few years he is the only cheap paper. fishing with a email boy.- compact yet graphic In its portrayal. its livelihood from the ' of journeying! in the Near East under WITHOUT COMPROMISE: New national "The of an. writer poor, repute, editorial Frontiers andmust Of many othei English writers of sf Freedom. and j by LHikn Thompson and .George Hub-bar- a truly successful figure in the pon-- 1 respect" their prejudices, or perish, prose and poetry may be found in Courtney Rvley Cooper, author of other books published by the Scribthe changed conditions of the present - BennetTbs been A commander of has ners, success, The lrlsl were Ijie poor. They were Prcf Strong's pages, made Tlte White Desert. ventlonal . sense, and yet-h- i Century Ckv. Sow York. 1 time., including . clearly-etche- d recently &nd worm- - be Jtny end cupport oi the Moraine tRe In' Idaho prltigs. Colo- the irder of the Crown-- of Rumania of the wonders and antiqui-"'tie- s -- This is announced as the first Joint turn out to be but Cell; without them the he of lies And Celt herein problem wood." He that rado. ran Morning king thg away from home and by country of such places as Rome and novel of the authors,. Oldest Folk-Tal- e. became a clown In a circus at fifteen though they have with which the book deals at length. could not survive a mmh and thev Constan Athena Cairo and hated 1 the written a intent Chinamen, a scorching rose wonto gurh touch be and later he work together for done the deal good an.gssaull last and general and manager Jerusalem, by Lord Byre tinople I had attempted could rouse the "More Jataka Tales. to he pub- For a number of ears he was with before hi death In magazines. Before turning to fiction arraignment of newspaper ethics and-awas the ders and curiosities as the Pantheon Hiss January whota Irish The Be and lished damNew The in hue, Co. Tork. nnet Bill Buffalo picture and collaborated with writing of a preface for W. D. Mcby this month, seriously Gentury Thompson has done both practices and Parthenon. St. Peters and San editorial I the unfortuThe a age. but Call paper. second could Is a dark one, of not volume in C. Mrs work BabEJien and the the on Cody "The writing biography of Cracken's forthcoming book advertising copy; painted Sophia., the Athenian Stadium and Mr. Hubbard, though he has been nately, to the uninitiated it may appear afford to publish articles criticizing bitt's adaptations for children of these the celebrated showman. The White New Palestine." The preface, which Pharaoh mummy, Jaffa Harbor and and one. the hoodlums for stoning Chinamen. famous translations from the Sanskrit Desert. bv the way. ts not a desert an actor and chiefly In Maude Adams's as an inclusive and has Just reached the publishers. isjn of the Bosporus, etc., etc. Mark Twain In Harper's for 'March. The tales are Ifae Lord Bryce's "ow n handwriting and The volume is a sort of sequel to companies, has not been upon the No defense, of course, can be made of children, keen critic that invariably ice lying atop the Continental Divide. was signed by him two days before whtefa otatety stage for some years but ha heen lie mighty-conflicMr. sense that this clam of In the' Letter take atnewspapers authentic, his to unreservedin Creditor death. worlds occupied writing. has been engaging the The at dry centers around the social Adams's attack is properly directed. With the advent of the typewriter, ly to their hearts as they did Joel R- - L. S- tention; at the same time it contains account the He into to take But Chandler failure a Savage Harris's Br'er The Century Co. reports; "It look Says Rabbit handwritten manuscripts of authors not a little of classical, of archaeol- phenomenon of lynchinr, the men exof higher moral tone stories Pr. E. R Cow elLprofet-so- r t; avc become tncreasinglv rare and a like a to me Sincerely. citing scene being that in which the newspaper ogical and of BthUcal loro popularised, A hitherto a half but to tell causes In book bvthe of Sanskrit th heroine on Camas the reactloh of one of of corrected University calls the Mencken,'letter her lover, who has proof unpublished gallev writer of wherefore scholars anfi others will In problem stories. Robert Louis Stevenson has come into bridge. Is head of the Guild' of Jataka has taken on added value. At a re- our most- - ramhunctiously outspoken Is usual as been tale, elected sheriff of reference the purfor to find it acceptable county, the account of Banneker's success the possession of Sir Sidney Cullin' Translators which brought out a com- cent sale at the American Art Gal- and '.east strokable (as wetl as most poses, wltb the excellent index to defend his honor and his prisoner, In great metropolis, it would ap- It Is a humorous epistle, addressed plete ed.uon. of the Jataka Tales be- leries. the corrected gallev proof of discriminating) critics to Harry Her -Ite design is to stimulate the even though he knows that the mob In thethat help. not enough stress Is Mrs. MacMorland, whom he met tween 189a and 1907. It is from this "Wellands Sword. with pear SftoaDavos mobilization not of troops but of trav- which demands a victim has been on niany vey's caravans By N.ght," the difficulties which would natur and whom he owed-in Kipling . small source that Miaa. Babbitt has retold changes and correction elers for a peaceful penetration of tha collected and 'worked upon for a from beset his path. His rise 5U m for photographs of himself takeii some of the stories Three hundred hand, brought JJIO. Young Men at The last work done by Lord Bryce world's greatest centers of interest furely political purposes to put ally in a small town to pro-- 1 at that place. It refers to another first corrected proof. America years hefore Christ the tales were re- the Manor is A. 8. M Hutchinson's under the new conditions. Always a him into the inextricable diffi- station agent New in social , eminence as and historic. s and The wnt ,Jov-oulo her bv hl wrf(, garded but John If Winter- - Comes: t,r Knfghts of the They are said to $3a, St powerful magnet to draw pilgrims culty of choosing whether he will Tork Is gained with an ease and rap- son's ft he the earliest Adventure." collection correctfirst letter of reads: folklore Galsworthy's "to Let which sold from all the continents of tho globe, shoot, at his friends and potential which his genius in no, wise -- MyJJrao'Mra. MacMorland: "And extant. The meaning of the name Is proof, brought 484. is listed not : the Orient has now been invested with political, supporters. or be untrue to idity England, Jn .copies Where a man with million ao It was this painful truth even -- among --the first ten American hu "birth stories, and they are supposed an additional charm and spell. There his oath of office. That his response warrants. Is dented entrance toKew.Tork'sLmost and nor orherwlse. to refer to" former" incarnations of The Isfesf Zsne Grey outing is a best sellers. 1 am a and will.. bp a greaterdesire then.. evor to her challenge involves exclusive club. Banneker as a reporter Buddha, the cleverest or most-.- trtuous naked savage adorned-wit"to see the regions, whose future was of her brother and the ultimate with open arms. In this scalp. I do nothing now but scalp, animal or person in each ofthe stories' and social- - ruin of her father Is welcomed hook being determined in the shock of batweakis somewhat the neglect to meet my liabilities; being a former incarnation of the tle, and especially . te see redeemed naturally creates a situation in which respect ened. But despite any or all its except my posftion as a fraudulent bankrupt master." while the whole collection of Jerusalem. . no longer under Turkish the course of true love is nob smooth. faults. an is "Kuccesa absorblngly la the only undeniable civilized tales is regarded as sacred Buddhist and Mohammedan but under British But one of the interesting things shout Professor p.hvs Davids rails interesting book from beginningclarit-to about me. thing l I have been ill; I have lore. hr that very picture of a end and Christian rule, with the opporis written with force and done no work for eight months: I them "a priceless record of the vhild-hoo- d woman who. without y.-- and tunity bf tho return of tho Jews who reboth A of the race." The stories have deltghtfnl romance, have about ruined my father; and. as havo been expatriate for nearly two being an impossible piece of perfecfrom theic-w.gfreshing and entertaining. Is woven I have never answered in north.a letter nor descended thousand years. The author has suc- tion or Inhumanly strong, yet hold into of a and happitourh the ern India story, 10" Greek. La;m; Arabic. a aimed to produce a volume her man to the finest things of his ness debt. in I am, paid cessfullywill la breathed sad the with ' Persian and tinged languages-Aesop's SllfflrUnt ARDS European St qiost ka "kUk In my abasement and into the tale when Banneker at the'"'0"1 fables bre adapted front the guide, as to the main, things to be see clearly just what actions on his height of hi wierfw return to th wrP It?1!fn th Prat Ky$.n Greek tales and Professor 1 seen, .for those who plan to go to the part that rectitude may require. The town from which he came, because of m to keep Cowell Jataka irhat In n1a heller world considei s that the Jataka I Orient, and a satisfactory resume for author have furthermore mads their unwillingness to pay the price in my hand tn. themes not onlv in ' those who have been, as well as a book tbealdee this fine mv again find and attire mvaelf in Aesop and I.a, Fontaine but an which Ihst success exacted. in Boc' succinct what once I used io call niy virtue. caccio and Chaucer- - compendium for those who interesting study of lynching and of a cannot gratify their desire to make the mob. They be lie vs that the cleansing Or perhaps, when I recollect the var-jo- u PtoOFITLKM AND ISPLEiHNG. trip, but who still wish for thd Infor- of politics is necessary to establish a trunks, boxes and cases with -mation that is essential to ny person atate of thinga where resistance to BEATUIUK EDEN; a Play, hv. rsul which I have bestrewed the fair face .i eduBosNotes The Stratford Compan-mob violence a Mayo; and claiming to be at all' adequately of considerable the prnpor.Europe " prosecution and . rated or well read 1 punishment ofjand mob murder will he so tion of the Plate of North "America, I sure and swift as to discourage such Three unpublished works of Count Readers not objecting to a tragic may find, in ope of them, the aged CHARLIE CHAPLIN AS TRAVELER. outbursts, and Tolsroy1 are to be included In Iho for 8r' evert a disagreeable theme when and. leathery remnant of ;my con they 4- the But In of memorial their edition which hts daughthe keyrtone meanwhile science. an take Instance plot MT TRIP ABROAD: by Charlie Chap-lln- ; which demonstrates bow corrupt per- clothed 'In poetlo llnea of consider- me .for what I am, a devil Incarnate, ters ace planning to Issue The mosl Harper A BroUierz, New Tork. be will able beautv ttf interested sonal politics may operate to produce bilk and bandit, ahtan Important of Jhiyse is a diarv in eight i an unrepentant Beatrice Eden by Paul Mayo. In this rollicking and, fast moving such a tragedy. While of SOU pages eirh. The. hut the opportunity to rum volume's there is no hor-ro- r scenes - j,rks In the Rocky Moun-j are laid ' n for film mere horror's me. 1 diary was begun in 1850 and contrv excuse narrative-the to sake, the story and much of the fugxed am inexcusable, Is necessarily dramatic and thrilling-an- ulna 1879, then abandoned But write and give tinued until The almost unceasing activity with which-childrecomedian describes a breathless visit 889. when the writer resumed -- until onq that will appeal to to England and the Continent. In a men Itandseems v It and kept 9 uefH two da vs bfoi.p women alike,. Praerf . j riaftr-h- r very literal sense b was completely the zwnuhtcrTrhfrf his death in LSlO..eevond of work off their surplus energy, makes K. L 1. cTvrLvcXv .the mobbed and SCIENTIST-toswept off his feefTTx-lis well IMF WORLD PROG. ern mountain snow storm works r an unfinished unpublished la "Chalet Solitude, . cheered everywhere, and overwhelmed " Characters REMS. depicted.-romance . called ' of Ihoroughly , Hyeres, Yar. France. the good and nutritious food a continual by demonstration and Invitation. Ameriran move through a tragic sitPeter the Greet." It deals 8tory with revI have added, as you will perceive, greater THE EVOLUTION OF CIVILIZATION- - uation touching on the Passion FlowRoyalty itself never received olutionary plots of that, time The to my signature. 'a '!. third of popular ail the food brinks .necessity-.O- f r'tLbt: o- - P- - Putnam s er theme, and aa far as such a situa- a ntow initialThe homage .or evidence ,Tph. New' Tork and London. the mind writtenworhri a comedy Nin five' acts, significance ta possible work it out in a rath- fatal capital. miracles. Nor was this -- all confined tion ' 1840. The hiltst. in tu shudders to conceive. to the populace! Areek ending with er consistent manner. Cocoa is the mbst perfect,' supplying as Not only is Mr. McCabe almost which are presented for the fead.r's - . II. O. wen and dining wrlth 81r .. However, ona cannot help but feel,-- . amusement tdesliKts.-- ' literary workman, but the came Into be personal James Barrie?, short-haire- d wwnten and other Rue- - t of big work is of the first or- In 'reading the, play Chat Air. Mayo, Audience IS Satisfied it docs much valuable material for' the- contact with the grestrst literary-mind- s Quality no contemporary writer is able could have used his talents to much three j See In Parts, he was der; to In England. Celebrity Simply to explain the dtacoverl several .vims of modern tfrtwble subject. There cannot short: kissed by the French cabinet and upbuilding,, of fheir;grqvying bodies. , science in aiinnUp ang mom ,.1 j stories, ome:,..utiLrushuLt-A.cnrting-f-re- , 1 till hi head swam..' The ii. r onfvKir Hfe-rto Prom d!ffdrencee!ieen u s Ttjstoy he exacted is p'TheVeTf there om wheh ' tanguagr.mor mysteries bf Pans were unfoIdedT and In qne's J',r!unjr' through -- a ! American and English audience which promise from Jiia daughters wot to I RU u(4; J ustlasi good4f or ol der .people. Jt is .V his writing rag, then he was whirled away to Germany of - antf . at drab tragicnararI'rf the-- 1 copywrlght- which is. would he . situation, IfinXJ at his "his works subjectflaf all the exception, not the usual, outset any American lecturer who therefore these new hboks will be where ,h met lb. beautiful Pola 'w . ... delicious, too, of fine flavor and aroma.' . 4" life. Not on ray of humor, no might go to .England. The English published simultaneously Negri, and found himself unknown. he has an throughout ambitious attempted of humor brisk tale task. e It in to be found in this en. - audiences, from the nature-ola cheer of ' world. the Throughout the ;blt w. charlaal szy tha eritle iw.e MADE ONLY EY Ur ptay nd tb l hardly f in which they have been brought to- And - human Interest, eights and t hu Mhiedit cridlt.hV ,n ,U nnra,lav'1 drabness and I get her. expert more. In England they sound hiHv!! e . An unpublished Mark Twain poem g small no a of compass make ) Of course the narrative WALTER BAKER & CO. LTD. pathos not only a tired but actually (still associate lecture with informa- - has been sent in to the humorist's s literary presents the gory of civilisation from j . bored eensatlcm. . There ar seven tion. We don't. Our American lec- publishers, the Harpers, pretenaione - to Jilgh-cla-commend by Mrs E. B. what he'ralla the it brute will and this but Established 1780 ebatgetere father, mother, daughter, ture audience are. in nine rases out C. Hanington of Kimberley, British quality, . . more to those who have a homely man down to our. own stage of culture; a neighbor apd his wife, a caretaker of ten, organized by a womans club Columbia.' letan In accompanying. romance and time or the so of la enter- and hi wife. The final scene Is one of some kind and drawh hot from the ter Mrs. "DORCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS liking for the author in the flesh Hanington explained that the on the screen," Probably no book of tainingly told' that the reader ran of renunciation without one promise working class, but from whit jhiU. poem was Booklet oiflnM Rsdpss tent free who! don, T for written hef the earns else ever published made hardly fall to be Induced to trader of happiness or cheer for any of the we eaH itT the class that doesn't have was st that time just a ydungster. She detailed study of the character concerned. to such a heavy draft upon tha personal take a mor at work, or, any i rate, not too hard. . 7 r r do I n -c- WDde.-'Beasdsle- fT" n r i siihpiej:-lhY-Wfc- , A", h re (so-calie- d) 1 , . rn one-yea- -j ' -I -- thl-le- 4, .Uit-Eoels- Eogiish-T.lt-erature,- " -- -H tnrrWiltet 1 c, 1 - - J h, J i - world-condition- s; ho - I rt ! - fic-tio- n. i .lb ' li.t-re- ya -- -- -- a' - st con-fir- i- - - .Jj w : -- d; It z word-pictur- es u -- ( t" ly best-selle- 29.-9- -- he-death d, v h -- e. fl. v self-respe- love-moti- GIVE THEM i BAKERS" COCOA have-cboae- TO DRINK Tho-wh(- test-know- r - KTSTir.::;' . ' 1 Tl Jokers , long-beard- ed heref cah-aret- ttrr ... -- ( pnteK,f -- apCrtA-fliacou- a i f radr -- 140-pa- lc , . V- A, s - t 1"' , pub-TDfle- d. t-- -- 4- - |