wers . the Dureaii roe ted wichare scarcely less ob- 17ill)i,1 upo d-sfpair, bccon isible IInthle j ectiovabe,. 1These ideas ,are in the mind's eye. And "thes paths of glory naurfo es il te quality men- Iad ut to the gr-ave." This philoso- by ILVfin- U3 rtsopiansN calli ltea-TH JDhirDe Rak104r; l oyl ~~b T.rk: ply "The D, idlan dcr:"'as ;1'ith e D ea32 rgldy lea. "(1 1)wellr in te' rca htliteratunre be Rsf eviewed ,lby ack Berkia lkiInFoeg(tic 9JR"~itl, y H GWells;, Pub. " j wonder'l, tas I ]lay tICherr'k a. de, 'ous sysem'1, i'6 ta.Conte-ntion scarcely through a period of mionths ,an'ld . ; "move the bal on "foreign games" InI- ;shed by 7,eMlIlnn, 4i.O how Mdr. Wells doe, it.. IHeois the moost ieii;.dsu o1 t will sufficesemnl aligo,-bcrkt hhyad eviewed by Robert S. Mlansfield prolific of the present novel yriters, to repeat, Mr. Mlachen's simlile, which with fate, though11we ,alppear to he her foblwic a lasbee n 'arnac had worked almost contin-' and he contrives to pu1t somleting en-! f;ilrees the test. to absurdity. A mes- master while we wal1k the tighLt ropes, tained by the ass;ociation. The penalty }l-"If. G. Wxells' new novel, tirely Ine?,xinto each one, som1ething pa;ge 1;is recel'ivcdby a Nwoman,-which 'of chance in a daeeil apoahto- 'for mem ber1s who particfpate inl these ,,j e; Draml," opens inauspiciously. I trong and appeaing11, and wile o e 5ICjPadIs .a llowvs: "Ra,ilway accident- wards the hoped 1for enld which shall9games or encourage them hnas breen confusion of birds singing", it ends,, people feel that literature ,does notI father hliedI." Who canl doubt the' be that culmination of triump1lhal SUtC- fixed at ex,_uls on from the associa- efly noted, the same way. Between require interest for its existance asI emotional effect of threse four words Bess to life's labor. Somentimes we tion. 9e two phrases, however, there Is such, r. Well's has; added interest to ,i-y-et ) ° they. d C constitute fine litera-reach the end of the r opeinhaett-o- .king which can be called inauspi- his work, and maikes the results'more 'ture? arnd win the congrallons ci t O h hho lalogtnli uis or purposele:,s. Satire. strong strongly than ever pairts of real litr- I ;gutialjasurd is the time-worn ex- entire world. Sometime ,, we fail-1fi O the 16tilflMay, Hoht nwiad- I pointed runs through the book, Itare. "Thle Dream" may not go dtown I res-ion~, "interesting.", Any artifice and then we imake' up the fools o ,f hu)- venture and myste;ry story by V alen- ig it as a. river fills its banks. in history, but posterity would profit ,erving merely to gratify the lowest, inanity. 'tine1,illiamsl, "Clubfoo,0t the ,wner" phecy is there, and some psycho- should it do so. curiosity would by such _a standard We play with fortune tht she;ay a ookt of practical biness e,~peri- Ical discussion of present day social- be ac'coulnted as literature. aid us in the re<.lization of onr rnb- nc,"A M.erchant's Hlorizon," by A. ges. Ii. G. W ells has combined eT.1r Rtegardiing art in literature, the ar- tions. She treats us with her bes t, li:ncoln 1 1,.,(; a n~e vl'me of X r 1., three, satire, prophecy and so1ciol- . ergtpn csgment against sensationalism as a land, for the time. we think fi.a nl nd i i3