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Show A J STOTOtT .1: -- . THE r DESERET -- NEWS ; ' . .. SATURDAY y .L - -- MARCH ii ' !' - 18 392- 2- t IX i ae an essayist, ears the thtn, onpra--' tentlous, and Inadequate thumbnail sketch by Mrs. James T. Field. Allowance . j for yaay must be made ia It taste. popular to comprehend why we E Huntington,' California Flammarlon. tha FTeipch astronomer. paid 375,000 for the hi. works "j''nalre.. existing edition of a work of blnln an edUIonof Surprising ,j years ago aa English magapolnted out the folly of a book Crane. The question of materials jVj.OoV' Wthe omv" may be equally Important. Though bv Unn. Arthur, I. -- 7fci absolute standards Sarah Orna Jewett byPCaxtoT bnoks the writOT: protested, wera not aa as be The Jack the London, great hundred farthings. may tha question: Answering What ! worth threa book and engrossing life of the make collector chocked up, these book desirable and val- - other day tramp explorer, and advemurerwhom Prlc these same books would Arthur fl Maurice former 'CharmUn London has described In uable? H totaled more than rdltor of The Bookman. yi ln the bring today, and two vo umes cannot be compared with March hundred thousand dollars! . th rarHy j three he quiet existence of the New Eng- - tha ftm requlflt.K The choice of the most famous ,hr 1 " or how odd bookyQ m?y bTlt how is a matter of in- lifI hw hook fn the world lf there are many copies dividual Uste. . Of course, every !lt HEdwfdT EvereuBHa?e" i11 waked h f BIble tille'.' deaih f Book.otherwise ; aouldhave the Br bloxranhr v,ue through their oddity, top. or very near H. Other booksd , though N P WlllUrq hit hltn In had buty or even because of a likely to be conspicuous select nyA"e. land 5S?S? tSiSS Nolumra WTkSde Wbrfe iT thine, combined A," j Swamir 1'.P- n- hook.m the1 InlMl for -- hW. It'mJ It rard.ntIi.Ch?vU.nnort-' waited sufficiently long since the vUWT Bibles VaJimblo. death of Stockton, Warner, Norris! , and Crane. If there were any dif- Eccentnelty, especially in the case (iculty i appraising their literary po- - of, Bible, has made books valuable. altionl If therr wera any controveriai 'There are the Thumb BiWe. the Mur--i ftrt French edition of .Boeeacctov thw Hater Bible, j episode whose treatment might of- - deta-Bfhl- e o J James ' Tuil2m H,nrT .ITd ghnB oS;, wh'ol: genius was truer and 'higher, but less of I I The Cherokee Lament J?',u s'- Oh soft fall tha Jew in Um twilight deacamding. And ll grow the ohadoavy tree on the plaip, olfht o'er the forest is bending .'7 'bv Cray far-dista- W ! Like the stopn-epir- it dark o'er the tremnlans main. But midnight enshrouds mjr lone heart in its dwelling, A Annuh of woe in mjr bosom is swelling, And a tsar unbefitting the warrior is telling That hope has abandoned the brave Cherokee. .. . ... n, Alhanl,, Rarg gnj rnmei BthUi Upseehe of American QPgU are book Bible, the Lda Bible the Wicked i Cb a tree that is torn from itstoot by the fountkin,'" The Bible, and the Bryant Tamerlane; Bible Bug In the The pride of the valley, ' . and fair, Breeches- Bible; wtiti-ft- in Tina con'd:- -' EihbArgh." WrltUh Whan the POO tlon is exceedingly valuable it ap- - tb'iHeeri years old: tha Bay Psalm ' Can flourish removed to' tKe rock of the' mountain, pears that "Adam and Evemade Book, first booh printed In America;, Unwarmed by the sun and pnwafered by care? " And the Ha thornes Fanehawe, breeches, the Bible uaed the words "parable,Vinegar Though Vesper be kind her sweet dews in bestowing, of the' first New York CJty Directory, uh- . vinegar" instead of "vineyard", thelltkhed In No g brook in its shadow ia flowing, Wicked Bible omitted the negative1 ttcMce Vnt Valnabla. , And when the chill winds of the desert are blowing, from the Seventh Commandment. A C, J high pjice paid for f? Aflusr Belfast BlbT published jn X7iff has So droops the transplanted and lone Cherokee. Iran books has led to a research of tha "mTheon more for "sin nrt more wilh tha result that tbonaanda att'e. ,f the Escorts! In palace Bpaln has books six feet htxh and of valueless books have bean dlMn-terre- d. Loved graves of my sires! Have left you forever! ' At the time Mr. Huntington New TorlEvenlng Post. four broad. Th "Thurrb Bible esn- biography. How melted my beer t when I bade you adieu I famous Gutenberg Bible ' talna coppee-plat-es, yet la no larger bought the believed that Mr. Oaten- than a pnnta stamp Rut r n copy many people Shall joy light (bo face of the Indian? Ah! .never Pocket Bible for the Blind.- - of Babage of berg, having but recently diad, hi Hpc!mens While memory sad has the power to renew, wm printed In London Widow was disposing of tha family Bible Society I a -- As files the fleet deer when the bloodhound is started, vol- - Bible for 359,900, and that a substanof SorlP In 7lTet'ita-3rrY'wrntY-oavoluma & small hand on hundred thfre T i nd tial fraction of this sum would ha paid ars ll broken-hearteSo fled winged hope from the poor ture e fifty-oncolored papera for any other old family BHla offered. nok t0' variously BEFORE DR. CAMERON FOUND SOLACE IX SCIENCE. There t a popular Idea that age In 0! could she have turned ere forever departed yTand.lng hr tha aged A- -d toWJien this little lad. a resident of Engineering, and resigned a associate dBrlf "V a book makes vatu, whereas some of And beckoned with smiles to her sad Cherokee! by for carrying ew Idsnd the oldest books hars ths least worth. ot on ot the foremost German dignified old Cathedral street in ! greend.'rk book represent a valued llghtTC Unless anor o!d 'scientific Journals at the beginning of b1 erv' moderate o for the timers, posed XXI deals with quaint and curiaccompanying .author, t the war. lie la also a fellow in the d ron,tlned Is if the Tha paseage ot j print wUm through the wet willows rushing widely Circulated. ous he had not atarted the long subject, or records a bit wirtba among lhoee for That fills with its numbers my listening ear? and arduous path leading to higher has the record of writing 30 scien- Scripture cherished history, or exhibits a fine specimen of Christian bjr vereally aojorea'paDer education, nor could he have dreamed tific papers, and is the author of a Instruction, comfort and inspiration. Or some hermit hill, in the solitude gushing,' printing from a famous prase,- or Is There have been oddities of bind- embellished with charming engravithat In a few yeara he would be sliced volume on soil solution held in high minstrel whose music I hear! Tha blind era not only handlcappad The strange-pleyin- g the of ing. by hla government to vleit France to esteem in Europe. In addition to all France aristocracy laughed ngs. or Is the first edition of torn fabut by tha ne- at give expert advtee aa to potash and this ha la a member of the local Uni- seriously by blindness, f.,n JaeqUe. Kouueau's "The So-- mous work. It Is likely not worth- tha Tis the voice of my father, slow, solemnly stealing, - HowBrtnt11 th.rueondn their rHns cnt to trouble of carrying down from- tha phosphate properties there rM7 versity club. I see his dim form where the gloom gathers, kneeling k edition the French garret. The ever, ae the years passed, and after The above quaint picture came Into K. ..inoliad for SO cenU. an revolutionist To the God of the white man, the Christian, appealing. established a tannery w fit only fnr the rubbleh heap In tha out taking high degrees at Johns Hop- the doctors possession only a short Average emboXMd Bible coats aver , use kins of Amhuman mhe skin on the of view a quaint moat after when householders university, time ago, being sent to him working an (50. Tha 50 cent Ink print Bible He prays for the foe of the dark Cherokee. was tak.ng fts dally toll. At old school book, an almanac, a book herst and Cornell faculties, after train- - aunt who had treasured It for by years weighs about a pound, while an aver- guillotine log other scientists for their doctor': He was eight when ft was taken and. age Bible for the blind weighs ovr 3Carlbereugh House. London, there of law, may outweigh ln value a In whole carefully stored library of solidchemical following out the modern Idea, he did degree, Great-Spirspecializing of God, whose abode is the heaven. it ly bound tomes In which ft take tho dynamic, being head of the soil lab- not begin hla school work until attainWhose wampum of peace is the bow in the sky, ' oratory of the department of agricul- ing the age of Biner instead of at the eleven to fifty-eigplace of e'a ture at Washington, writing numerous traditional six. His case proves that Wilt thou give to the wants of the clamorous raven embossed system used, to theatre In th United State aa well to the lng motion picture varies from tha scientific articles, etc., etc , the man the youngster making a late but make a . Yef turn a deaf ear to my piteous cry? Bible, the pages of which are as a fascfnstlng account of personal The whom'Balt Lake well knows today as worthwhile start printed etory only ln that It tells need not by reason 13x14 Inches, on an average. an relations and Intimate revelation Its Dr. desolation. of K. oer Cameron F. hearts was commishome, the ruins Oer my story with captions to supply what thereof be left behind In the game The smalt volume will conslR of beIncident or atmosphere Is lacking in sioned, at the close of the world war, Dr. Cameron's ttfp lo France was approximately 40 sheets. e . 4 nches of a personality that, as seen from No more shall thou hear my unblest lamentation. d wonder-snh(Bd has tha been to do that vary thing Dr. Cameron made at the time the Versailles nethe whereas the printed story flights, weigh about one Poun- and attractive to two uses picture, For deaths dark encounter I make preparation. held ths Saga fellowship at Cornell. gotiations wera under way; so he had will will pictures to supplement what Is n ren approximation of fully agreeable the be theatre-goe- r. of American a generations tn chemical of member and the memorable many lacking print. Mr. Beach intends of being on a He hears the last cry of the wild Cherokee! pocket edition ever Issued for to go walrus hunting In Bering Strait other scientific societies of thl emin- - j'the ground whenexperience the chief blind. diplomat the to Desk ambition advice Josiar Chekhovs Canning. this summer with Fred Stone, try and Europe, and U now associate of the world were trying to adjust young writers was to write ss much of tha Journal of Phvsicw and 'dlfions after the most destructive as In "The Reminiscence possiblo. book - The Frank Tannenbaum Chemistry, tha Journal of Industrial cataclysm In the history of mankind Notes of Anton Chekhov." by Gorky. Kuprin Labor Movement. has been officially to-ea tlr aud Bunin. Chekhov ie quoted A city boy. Ing. or theorizing, or trying Bamuel Hotchkiss. bv the Department of Ecocriaia of emotlom and Insight those "It doe not matter If adopted up trouble between employer and em- forced by hi father nomics at Yale and Cornell. Tannentq moment when play disappear - On of the mot romantic episodes it does Kuprin. coma will off. In a .way, the experiences spend a summer tn Cspe Cod. and as and we dwell for the not ployeesorvjt Lqter baum. It will be remembered, 1 the brief Instants In the ta recoma off. The chief thing 1. donot erstwhile I. W. W. leader who. after depicted may seem to the reader to a result of his first day's experiences presence of life Itself Thl resder. of nineteenth century history worka clerk that called thelrepArt by be superficial and artificial; yet they he feels Justified in complaining about I taka it, I more waste your youth and elntlcfty.It-noserving a year ln graduated willingly, and leas ing In the. Evans dental school of the fulfilled their- - object In the author's tha deadly dullness ot the place. Inthe time for working. See, you from Columbia withprison, highest honors. counsel of Ah school University of Pennsylvania, has disfearfully, taking to feel wanted for at she but It r write superbly side of twenty-fouleast; new book "Wall Shadow." which of eyes, His your hours, however, for which Mr. Shaw speaks when he vocabulary SNOWDRIFT A Story of the land sevwith after making sway words and deals with American malt You must the Strong Cold; by James B. Hen-- 1 herself the general "atmoephere of he has become better acquainted with advises us "to dissect out the absurd appeared problem eral hundred thousands of dollars of turns of speech, andacquire for this you must will he published byprison Putnams this dry ; p. P. Potname Sona. New Tors. a Job. several Jobs she wanted sua-to- Uncle Seth Nickerson, a retired tea sensational incidents of the borrowed the The school. Ths dental of funds know the workers without any write month. a owner of smart and day. every rocaptain, from tha genuine Shakespear money stolen la that left by Dr. ThomCarter Brent, the hero of this piclon on the part of the girls and called the "Cynthia B.; and from that story Southerner women I shall not . boast mance, la a that as W. Evans for founding the dental among whom the labored- that day forth, Sams vacation Is filled ean tissue. Master Skylark." John Bennett' Miss Maude Roy den. the English whoee fondnesa for cards and strong thay.wara r . dl"rerB school. Dr Evans was the American f In with more adventures than ha had i "Investigatedci?.Lhe being of Shakespeare s time, has had social reformer, la soon to coma to tory ust,. who ixea many of h'l finer j drink neutral of the Eugenie, dentist Empree world aha -- anted to eee their Its nineteenth It ha America to. gddress an International ever hoped to enjoy. Uncle Seth Is not My im i Jt massed hi fortune, at and Snowdrift the heroine, ghort .thele-ey- e. that the and i. -- however; conference of TKe TT'W.' r. A. 'Mtas 'native Cape Cndder himself h is teacherspreesion j-- qualities; was large- had a "very Unusual 'pab'luhtnir hlnmy who the moet beeotiful girl In the Yukon. and Second and the critics our of time will Empire th for being, altogether, more wer tim, a sort , of "adopted" specimen; but fall below Xhait Is author of "Sex and CharcDte de- Royden ftt-t- he of the ln that not only instrumental flight daughter of a Scotch pioneer and gold Hrr roncIulinn i( that, despite all the he ia as filled if from the ly privilege if In twenty-sixtlore manded it as nautical than acter ' which Putnam will bring .with year eeeker. ia adopted, after her parents' J- pgjmbrts. -- theretsTi growing labors of the skeptic they do not de- Empress at the fall of the Napoleonic in Its In were mors been in but he out the bad born brine, having first, required Secshortly "A Gentleman With a by an Indian squaw who make- rtrnrv lo increase the welfare of hit the general government. His memoir. "TheImmelied in bis youth and mature man- rive means for delivering the last year than In any previous yeai Buster" has made Mis Roydetf tha f, her believe ehe ie a d Brent ,an beings In Industry, though even hood ond delu-lo- n French reader appeared from the Emplr, that all to faraway climes In distant seas, been s subject of one of his chapter In after his death and are pub- of Its history. It has always . goes to the Klondike gold fields a;the bMt o aXlattng conditions are of and passed all the .experi- things In Shakespeare are excellent, diately the first ten "Painted Windows." which will b little ahead of the great rush, ndcouraa far from ideal Where the ences of thethrough mariners lished by D. Appleton and Company, favorite Juvenile, for but and. more, Shakethat whose In particularly,, the last published next month by Putnam yeara moving steadily, hardy makes a strike which yield him mil- - j ereatst need of all Ilea ia that the is a flawless artist Karl exploits have made so fine a tradition speare In In sixteen mounting even more rapldly Aow Andrews, i lions, aftsr which he plunges into thjh(iman beings In Industry, the Chapman Roy North American Review. Young. Maestro Fuelto. now tha .China as leader of the American Mu- In popularity. whirl of Dawson, the city of(p)oTer and tbe employees, shall better In American history. He not only tells coach and accompanist of Giovanni men gone mad. Tor a Urns luck sat understand one another, and society young Nam many stirring and truthseum of Natural History third Aalatlc old auAustrian Nantucket whaling kf the The careef of Henning Berger, Martlnelli of the Metropolitan Opera, Joan of Arc. upon his shoulder and hla very reck- - ' at larga better understand both. Mra ful talea Expedition, had an experience recent- thor and other romances of the great of "The Deluge." parallel that he'd this enviable position with Carulessneas only added to tho admiration parier ly which he report as tba first testifies that her own amateur days a he also makes so of manv Hamsun quite Knut ln skipper which way during hla years In this country: from a Chinese official lavished upon him by the iycophant and humble experiences recorded In deep out of him, and even Born In Sweden, Berger led a vaga- and his book. "Caruso and ths Art of exhis In ever many found and Imitators of those wild times But this book have added much to her and fisherman the has he helm of the "CynIs tW result of his Intimate In this Casa ha and Capt. bond' existence as an Immigrant In Singing a day comes when fickle fortune turns' understanding of tha problems of both B." in exciting yecht race raid'd 7. 7o plorations Jftd W. F. Collins paid a visit to General Ch'cago and the Middle West from knowledge of tho great tenor ae man her back upon him, and when the rtv minl(r and worker; and eh hopes this book The hleh sb wins 1192 'service handsomely. Hftr to 199. observations of and artist. bv red liquor of Alaska knocks him out. Fang, th Tuchdn ot Shan!, whrre may add "even a fraction to tha throughout is wholesome and hearty. each w.th the purpose of making her the explorers had been hunting rare American life form the material for and becomes his ruthless and perms- - they of somebody else. . and besides tha entertainment which his stones. novel and a national heroine. One of the The story of Sir Ernest Rhackle-ton- 's upon Through hit nent master. 8uch Is the unpleasing understanding antelope. Politely calling the perueal affords, there Is a con- remarkable InHanrer of thl theIs most here he ' was enabled to was to have last expedlt'on HFlI.Pfl IA ENGLISH STIDT. experience beginning of the, tale but It ia only the general in his tent, the visitor were ind of element siderable disturn fai'ure to success by writing been published ln England by Can- Austrian Joan. In 11. when Vien- surprised by being met by gross the beginning; for the reader is soon on AND O many F 5 formation ENGLISH subjects HISTORY practical us OUTLINE about na was beginning to feel the flsrt keen courtesy. their host expressing ths after he returned to his sell Those publishers have nowr thereafter carried with him Into the AMERICAN LITERATURE: by Clap-- made' arrangements to Issue the acs. . great northern night and tbq pangs of a hunger for ths satisfying most violent sentiments accompanied native country. SONNET ,ANU OTHER TERSE. enca E. Ackley; The Stratford Comdirected on his of count was which of no table, .there food. this last tlp," which Will be between the pany, Boston: "straight rtorth, Georg by poundings Rex Beaehruns'of the Mackenzie and the Bay, where the written by the Boy Scout on board Luclu M-- Terra mare began, an historical novel especially against CaptCeHlns ae a Poem by ALLEN STARS; r -- a novelists writing for the screen, says. the Quest. -- thg Mr. Ackley ia superintendent of city Pn. Beebe, The Cornhlll Company, Boa- - entitled , "Daa Maedchen von Dom- - Briton and 'friend of Ha completed It tn 11T, but false but. heavy burden of shame, school in Winchester, Kentucky, and remy . Jn was held is to ft let The him lle tha treatise forced .being until to find great happiness the present symposium the gun outgrowth helps i fond Of were silenced. amid --the ley wastes His regenera-- . of nine years of experlenoe in the thaThl author evidently It has appeared, end England on tbe question. "I the novnearly all the selection in despite the homanc bon la not sodden nor it is allowed teaching of literature In high school, his sonnet; In element el the played out? Is proving a rather little volume are of that form. author's name and the Gallic soul of an unimpeded progress; but in the during which period he tried many first part of the book consist of Jeanne d'Arc, tbe Austrians are .now trying affair for those who initiated end it is convincing and thorough, and devices both for Interesting his pupils The it. Arnold Bennett says the question of twenty sonnets of love and victory crown his long fight back to In the subject, and for enabling them a series proclaiming It ss one of their most is quite absurd. Compton Mackenzie of lovera la tha heM manhood after his moral purging by to retain the essential facts concerning the separatlon naHonalnovcl and "MV". collection which comprises that the discussion reveals s self- the cleansing cruelty of the Arctic. for It a wide circle of readthe various authors and periods of last part of the book the eonnet spcaklng ers. The work Is usual for Its de conscious and neurasthenic stats of ? The story would adapt Itself ad- literature studied in the classroom. the dominates but more no becauee of the spirit mind. W. J. Locke claims that so mirably to the screen auch fate the The Outlines here presented, while not the love poems,- - which tails. In which It h been conceived When long ss such novelists s Hugh Walauthor may have had In mind when offering any strikingly new method, sr Aside from end meditative reflective, largely h are liv Shell wrote It. - It Is well knit together do offer c carefully considered develout- thp cloak of death is laid on the Maid pole and "Occasional containing though It In plot, is strongly and opment of a plan whose great virtue is bursts of more Impassioned character, she says: "Is It then wrong to long j " nl writing, you might as well ask love for as includes a variety andpresented, Is Inlife mOon to have the and the world? Tha played out? of that Jt makes so definite certain natu the poems are mainly descriptive-descrip-tion terest that ia compelling. range In spits of ral groupings that any reasonably ' the impressionistic priest replies: "Each of us must stand- doubts about the continued and en of sordidness and repellant realism pupil will be enabled to get type.. Thus ws have "Connecticut by at his post and work and pray." Lat- during value of the novel a a form into which the author seems to feel telligent such a conception of English relation - Night. Burgundians of art and of many of the novels that "Leaves. "After tba Storm," er. Terramares has two it necessary occasionally say: "Tou Frenchmen from the south sre being written to ships concerning fundamentally 1m "Walter Marsh HampMists, There le plenty of action in It,lapse. vou are such - kind Imand portent facts and den as Hamlet.? and so on, the sing and laugh, hardly a scene without it distinct portant personalitiesfundamentally a It would be general character of tha rraee being people." Joan replies; "You moke Among lost and abandoned fciaater-plece- s thrill observation as though an apology easy to remember and difficult to for- reflected ln their titles Though they this of tha past century may be ware For such novel a necessary." all teachers a novel ot Peruvian advenof get. reckoned Among to of English do not rise the distinction AMONG TOILERS TAKING NOTES. really literature there is genera) agreement great poetry, they are above tha medi- to have come out of Austria during ture compounded of parts of Prescott. war a la the Austrian hopeful sign. now on two thing. First, lb Is better ocre ln both conception and Haggard and Jules Verne, writWKING WITH THE WORKING that literature is weak in works of histori- Rider ten by Jackson Gregory at the ripe pupils read a large number of WOMAN; Ntratton by Cornelia a is novel cal of This fiction. distinct ;selections of from the A Parker- Harper of seven. H declares himself to masterpieces Brothers. New merit And Ju as Germany derived aga York. . literature rather than spend their have been poaeened at that time. Ilk Read erg Skaketpeare from unstinted Schillers the young Robert Louts Stevenson, inspiration "Connie" Parker, as she was call- energy in the atudy of elaborate detai's a hundred by "Jungfrau von Oriean"so is Take New Viewpoint snd ed by. those with whom the experi- of the history of literature. ..Second, sense of Impending dlseo- a strong bT-fifteen years ago, remnant apno- -. ences herein narrated caused her to that it Is absolutely essential to absorb h b.effort V head at her Austria op present lifting few become associated, facta a the. a ln to frant'c went to work thoroughly concerning grindstone f!n!h - Is ft then true that "at no time In and ot lessons hope and hla book before death overtook him. learning the with the. working woman" because periods, the movements, and tha mas- our llterarv history-.wathe courage from tha cpl-o- f Terramsrea He succeeded, I wanted the book Is lost; tha daily life ters In the development of our lan- public, ss represented by its English critics He we would a new but he now hasthough think, merely f the woman factory worker aa near. guage and literature, and that these and leaders of taste, less qualified to a half dozen novels to outworn. In a tale teller of truth, ha facta associated should each with as seen through the Ip possible admire and celebrate William Shake- however, the etory of the Maid trill his credit. venige workers own eyes. So aha other according to some logics! plan speare? never before have lost its appeal only when courIs It true-tha- t " answered newspaper advertisements of arrangement. Mr. Ackleys purAmong the New Tear honors given his fame been "so low or so con-- f age and beauty, daring and mysticism, . and. disguised In dress and manner. pose in this little volume is to provide has ... : be glory and tragedy- have disappeared at the - beginning of lVtl own answer by King used would V sucH iij took Jobs in Industries of various a plan, and to conserve the'tlme that never before have Shakespeare's from the earth. The Literary Re- - George was that of ths-O- . M. to Blr - kin as. 8h worked in a candy fae-,- 2 and energy of pupils for an James Barrie. The enly other living ; I . nerally snllghtened, view. tory, a laundry, a brass foundry, etc., study OF lltenttura rather Th.n eritica writer wlth'the Order of Merit tbe potencies so clearly felt, not as an Investigator, bat- - as a girl ABOUT literature. The book should bla man. other who that la la only chiefly secure, and his contem. Vagarie of Biography.. who had found a Job. She kept her make a ready appeal to teacher, par- his fame so known, as a wrtier t aw obvious. And thts good purpose . eecretfrom berem plover ticularly thoeewho have to deal with poraneity Mr. la It Kipling. Hardy. understood, fortune arises ln large measure, I and the women with whom she tolled. the more advanced high school pupil. Ae&lned a correspondent of Th. has this honor, among oth- think, from the fact that ln there 4r.Whsr. agkshas The result is a dramatic, amusing and no life of Stephen ere; tho dead Utererr member of tho readers of his nlnva bn mnw FOR BOYS,. true story of woman In American in-Jwritten? wer. dlriStv order W.lto Georg. Meredith and Hen- IMS ' dustry, with the emphasis on tha Y consider?. Crane the IpG.rthe decoration being be-Jsme. MADE ONLY BVy of.ry M. . SKIPPER OF. THE CYNTHIA B : human Interest aide. The experiences THE la In N 'stowed hair the and ili- n1!h 6n the latter h century, laet Milton during are In Tar'" loeing Interest thonevei.d I described make a atorr that even BraleV t omn.". the " more 'interesting than fiction, because ttr!tenhto own VSSS2 wdhen It la real and human, and full both of This is a boys book, and a good nqu,ri?5 to biographer.1 flrient honor, have, one for youngsters with a fondness for silent about tha handkerchief. and Unfortunately, the query cannot ' pathos and of humor.- stand, John Drew reminiscence of hla ' ESTABLISHED l.'SO sea attribute of why Hamlet pretended madnee we alone to there no biography though a college woman, makes t stories of the Why varied and long experience, covering more direct and ardent In our of Frank Norrto? Why to there no' half a plain that she found life, even lgt .a reoet lads at some period of their lives, are the anas actor, "Will he factory, wall 'worth living; and her whether their home Is near or in eight attention to? Macbeth. Deedamona, life of tlftft rollicking humorist whose pu Wishedcentury this spring by E. P. Dutbook is both valnabla and Interesting! of salt water, or. so far Inland that and Hamlet themaelve I venture to "Rodder Grange" will be chuckled ton Co. under the till "My Tears , tn that it gives a vivid picture of con-- 1 they on!? 'get the lure by hearsay, or believe that the Informed reader Is over for generations? Thor Is no on the Stag Booklet of Choke Aedpcewnt free The work ' dtliona.as they are An ectual section j reading, or in some second-han- d t giving himself more artlessly to Che book, upon Charles- - Dudley Warner, to- - be an Interesting and promise valuable moekrak-leor or ms tHli noBttewpt at hnaglmRlon. thought, the utter the poetry, the distinguished a a Journalist as wall contribution to the history of the by the powar ,f orctJo-lh- la jraumgpt, BoL, th ngt the case. All four have lain In thetr graves twenty yeara or -more; such- merii if our generattcri neglects tho next may feel no reason to re- member them. Biographical material have a way of yielding Yo the looTh lament. In tha time. Don' Belt prefaca'to his life ot Artemaa Ward, a book which appeared fifty year after Ward's death, tha disappearance of hundrds of letter dwcrlbed asbeing the funniest of Ward's writingsGreat Britain shows much more alertness In tha field of literary green-spreadi- I -- -- life-givin- J , Itit I pro-duc- tn 'it. thwiA l'ttanbi Bal-1dIt- low-win- t Amer-plcture- Wru0k'I'lTiJ - mel-aUl- -- - unllkely-looklngboo- ht - con-edit- 1 I cat-bo- )tuu, blue-blood- . J f t h ) ten-deat- h, half-bree- eee id . ban-stor- e hbn' Sugar-coate- bar-reti- best-know- n -- - - us Kaye-Smft- In-t- Bakers Cocoa and Bakers Chocolate Appeal strongly to the healthy petites created by vigorous exer cise in the open air, They are the. most satisfactory of all the food ' drinks, as they have 'a 4most delicious flavor and aroma and are nutritious and wholesorne. -- s 1 - - bn fid w ' Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. Tho-autho- DORCHESTER, faah-ijfia- MASSACHUSETTS te n, 1 1.:' - y . : , .ys ! . 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