THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, POETLAND. APRIL 24, 1904. The Busy Authors: Mew Books Continue to Pour From the Presses 40 m&r oiftWVfiEfe "v.a.vs;Cto5 i .. is L. J- VjaTwSPTJtf:; i?r -srf' iSZm&T OENI HECKER. Aifi." - BIRD CENTER CARTOONS dollars and Democracy, by Sir Philip Burne Jones. Illustrated from drawings by the author. $1.25 net. D. Appleton ai Co., New York. Sir Philip Burne-Jones, to use a phrase popular among his own people. Is rather an ass. It Is a fact usually overlooked by writers that he -who sets on paper his observations upon a nation is In reality setting forth himself. Anyway Sir Philip has writ himself down an Englishman of the English, and, as we have remarked, rather an ass. Here Is a quotation to prove it: The Americans themselves often have the audacity to refer to an English accent which always amused me. French may be spoken with an English accent, and generally Is by Englishmen alwa s Is by me or German or Italian, but for an American to speak of an English accent is like a einger who habitually sings flat commenting on some one else who Is singing In tune! It's absurd. An American may speak English with an American accent, but surely an Englishman speaks English. This needs no comment. "As for cocktails," says Sir Philip con fidingly, "I grew to like them extremely." A compliment to our cocktails melts the American heart, so It is with Interest that we discover a second reference near the end of the book to this peculiarly racy drink. Sir Philip Is at Niagara, where, by the bye, the "commercial spirit" was in full display with sickening results for vthe visitor. We had a capital view of the rapids above 'the Falls from Goat Island, and then crossed the bridge into Canada, where, at an hotel by the river-side, we had quite one of the worst lunches on record. It would have been noth ing short of disloyalty to have drunk the King's health In the disgusting cocktail they brought us. However, my foot was for a mo. ment on British soil, which was Interesting to think of, bu"t I should like to hare had a bet ter opportunity of showing my American guest what the colonies can do in the way of lunch eonfor I suppose that is not the best they have to offer. Passing over the tactful reference to the "colonies," It is interesting to note that the man who deplores the commercial spirit shown in advertisements by the falls finds, apparently, his chief object of attention in what he had to eat. It is not difficult to imagine Sir Philip being asked, on his return to England, "And did you see Niagara?" . and answering, "Oh, yes; 'ad a nauseating lunch there." But It must not be considered that Sir Philip is a bad sort of fellow at heart. Here is what he says about American women and the pertinence of his re marks anent the shop-girls and so forth will be evident to anyone that has seen the slouchy girls of England: One of the first things that strikes the stranger In New York Is the extreme smart ness of the women all of the rich and poor. In their varjing degrees they are so well "set up," so excellently "turned out," so admirably "groomed." They hold themselves, too, beauti fully, and in what we should call the lower middle classes shopgirls, telephone girls, etc. there is none of the slouching and stooping we are accustomed to among the similar or ders at home, nor any flaunting colors or cheap imitation Jewelry. In New Tork they all dress neatly and walk splendidly. The high average of neatness is very noticeable at once. One rarely comes across a really badly dressed woman In any rank of life. To dress well and make the very best of her resources seems a gift peculiar to the American woman. Her Parisian sister, to whom I suppose she would herself admit that she was occasionally in debted for ideas, is not her superior in this respect. I imagine' a well-dressed American woman la the best-dressed woman in the world. t And when the author gets back to dear old Lunnon he Says: How quiet the streets seem, and how slowly the people move, and how small and low the houses are! And, ah! I grieve to say it, but how untidy and badly dressed nearly all the women look, and how they stoop! Strange to say, the only rudeness Sir Philip chronicles was used towards him by a young woman. "You're an English man, aren't you? I don't like English men," were thexflrst words she said to the visitor after his presentation. But this incident Is only mentioned because of its strange contrast with the "almost univer sal courtesy." Sir Philip at home misses the snow white American bath-tub and the tele phones, but he is away from the yellow journals, which certainly to use an "American Colloquialism" handed him a bunch. And he winds up his observa tionsamusing, if jejune with a tribute to America's "gracious hospitality" and the "spontaneous, touchingly cordial wel come of the land of El Dorado." A SPUR TO PRIDE. Steffens' Articles on Civic Shameless ness in Book Form. The Shame of the Cities, by Lincoln Steffens. McClure, Phillips & Co., New York. This book contains the series of articles that attracted so much atentlon when published in McClure's Magazine. "They were written with a purpose," says Mr. Steffens, "they were published serially with a purpose, and they are reprinted now together to further that same pur pose, which was and is to sound for the GOLR WOMEN GENEVIEVE-HECKER M-CHARLES -T-5T0UTJ IPIIPSS njflCijafcj9HSu&CB THE ADMIRABLE f" TINKER 1W By EDOA1 JEPSON SpT' ROBERT J&l CAVFJJERijJliy : Scur Oc Lit SuBc -vrd W tHMMvtnj of Uc Mitluppl I ACMCU;rCGOtHU.Q. I i l i.in hi yHo s llHSSOSPJ HENRY TH.T.ARP. civic pride of an apparently shameless citizenship." These articles written with a purpose are now published practically without re-edltlng, -with the addition of an introduction, which contains the writer's conclusions. As to the extent of the corruption, "When I set out on my travels," says Mr. Steffens, "an honest New Yorker told me honestly that I would find that the Irish, the Catholic Irish, were at the bot tom of it all everywhere. The first city I- went to was St. Louis, a German city. The next was Minneapolis, a Scandinavian city, with a leadership of New Eng landers. Then came Pittsburg, .Scotch Presbyterian, and that was what my New York friend was. 'Ah, but they are all foreign populations,' I heard. The next city was Philadelphia, the purest American community of all and the mos nopeless. And after that came Chicago and New York, both mongrelbred, but the one a triumph of reform,, the other the best example of good government that I had seen." It is the "good citizen, the typical busi- JT . nyi i hi . Ak '1 ySisrc! jfc4 . ?Ks5 Ilia JOHN T. irCOTCHEON. i MiMZmv'immrvmtfzaMJZMZGavjni 0k, MS? $j LINCOLN STBFFEN. ness man," that neglects politics, thinks Mr. Steffens. The small business man is too busy for politics. The big business man is busy with politics, to the hurt of politics. "I found him buying boodlers in St Louis," say3 the author, of the big business man, "defending grafters in Minneapolis,, originating corruption in Pittsburg, sharing with bosses in Phila delphia, deploring reform in Chicago, and beating gooa government with corrup tion funds in New York." And In conclusion Mr. Steffens says "We Americans may have failed. "We may bo mercenary and selfish. Democ racy with us may be Impossible and cor ruption Inevitable, but these articles, if they havo proved nothing else, have demonstrated beyond doubt that wo can stand the truth; that there is pride in the character of American citizenship; and that this pride may be a power in the land." The articles themselves have the merits and the defects inherent in Journalism. They are to be described by such words as brilliant and striking. The very titles are Journalistic masterpieces "Pittsburg: A City Ashamed," "Philadelphia: Cor rupt and Contented," "Chicago: Half Free and Fighting On." They are ex cellent examples of what may be termed good descriptive "writing. ROCKY MOUNTAIN EXPLORATION Book of More Than Usual Interest to Northwest. Rocky Mountain Exploration, by Beuben Gold Thwaltes. With Illustrations and maps. S1.2S net. I. Appleton & Co., New York. To the Lewis and Clark expedition is given, by far the greatest amount of space in "Bocky Mountain Exploration," which is the first volume dealing with the history of the range in a connected form. While the limits of the volume (252 pp.) confine the accounts of most of the expedition to a more or less skeleton form, Dr. Thwaltes has managed to make his story vivid. Much of the volume is of especial in terest to the people of the Northwest The book opens with a chapter on "Ex ploration of the Northwest Coast." Tne deeds of Juan Perez, Cuadra, Cook, La Perouse, Gray and Vancouver are enum erated in this record of early mariners. The second chapter deals with French explorations from the East, and the third with British explorations from the same direction. Then comes a chapter on the Missouri as the path to the Pacific, and one on the Louisiana purchase. Then five chapters are devoted to tho Lewis and Clark expedition. As Dr. Thwaltes Is editing the original Journals of these explorers for publication this year, he is peculiarly well .qualified to deal with this section of his work. And it Is refresh ing, by the way, to see the journals quoted -verbatim et literatim. We can appreciate tne "Jentle brease" that cheered the explorers and note with sym pathy that Clark was puzzled over tho number of t's in Saturday. The remainder of the book is devoted to chapters on "Thompson, Fraser, The Astorians and Pike," "The South Pass," "The Conquest and California," and on the final settlement of the continent. N STORY OF LA SALLE. Central Figure in a New Romance of Much Vigor. Robert Cavelier, by -William Dana Orcutt. With six full-page Illustrations in color by Charlotte Weber. SI. 50. A. C McClurg & Co., Chicago. La Salle's career is romantic enough to exceed In Interest all tho romances of the Imagination. This career has been fashioned into a compact story by Mr. Orcutt, who has Increased the vividness of historical narration. Versailles and the wilderness court beauties and squaws, frivolity and privation furnish contrasts and add dramatic effect. The story ends "before the death of La Salle, so that tho reader is not disap pointed by anything but a happy ending. The book itself is another of the Mc Clurg success. The chapter headings. are appropriate and effective, wlille the color pictures are excellent, and set a new standard In the somewhat neglected field of novel Illustration. Tinker, a Jolly Kid. The Admirable Tinker, by Edgar Jepson. McClure, "Phillips & Co., New York. An extravaganza of the liveliest type is "The Admirable Tinker." Tinker 13 tho young son of an English baronet, who nas less money than means of spending It, and the adventures that the seraphic youngster goes through are diversified ana astonishing. He runs away with an airship, drowns his step-grandmother if there be such a relationship rescues a kidnaped child and a kidnaped girl, whose father is an American millionaire, and finally marries his father to a suita ble girl. The admirable Tinker Is certainly an "amoosin" little cuss." Women That Cry "Give, Give." The Horee-Xeech'a Daughters, by Margaret Doyle Jackson. $1.50. Houghton. Mifflin & Co , Boston. "The New York woman of the kind that supports the dry goods stores," says the author of "The Horse-Leech's Daugh ters," ''has no very serious pursuit In life, and she is inclined to be fat and overweening from idleness and too easy 'i f - .-tf-'V "- iTtOwiiM r JBr living. But as a class she Is very pretty, a creature of clear eyes and a soft wholesome skin and a most endearing self-conceit, and the New Tork man wor ships her and slaves his whole life away that she may be the highly fashionable. Indolent, luxurious product she is." This Is the theme of the book. Leone Cleworth is a beautiful woman with eyes like a cat, eyes which are brought into play at opportune moments for the fur therance of her selfish ends. She ruins her husband, who Is of the generous. Ameri can type, but in the end he obtains hap piness through the love of another woman. Through various phases of New York society the book pursues Its way always Interesting. It Is a strong Indictment of the extravagance so often displayed by well-to-do Americans. BOOK ON BIRDS. Interesting Volume on Those Found In Neighboring State. Birds of California, by Irene Grosvenor Wheelock. With 10 full-page plates and 78 drawings in the text by Bruce HorsfalL "Birds of California" Is a unique com bination of handbook and storybook. Small in size, it can be conveniently car ried in the field; detailed In Its nature, it is a complete catalogue; interspersed with pleasant description. It affords in teresting reading for tho library. Mrs. Wheelock has studied the birds of California in their homes, and her per sonal observations give the book a life that it would otherwise lack. The physi cal conditions of California make it a state possessing an unusually diversified list of birds, and although Mrs. Whee lock has confined her studies to the neighboring state, her' book is largely ap plicable to Oregon. Of the Illustrations by Bruce Horsfall too much cannot be said. They are at once scientifically accurate and full of spirit, and the color he gives his pen and ink work is most unusuaL Health of Some Famous Persons. Biographical Clinics, VoL IL The origin of the ill-health of George Eliot, George H. Lewes, Wagner, Parkman, Jane Welch Car lyle, Spencer, Whittler, Margaret Fuller and Nietzsche. By George M. Gould, M. X. Cloth, 392 pages, ? 1.00. S. Blackiston's Son & Co.. Philadelphia, Pa. In this second volume Dr- Gould brings another list of noted men and women to prove that "migraine," or eye strain, is the chief source of ill-health and suffering of those whose labors are on lines of lit erary, scientific, and artistic effort. The author Is not only a well-known physi cian, but is also the able editor of what is recognized throughout the United States as one of the best medical publica tions, and whether one is inclined to agree with him or not his claims deserve a serious consideration on the part of the medical profession, at least. Dr. Gould, however, realizes and frankly admits that the great majority of the profession do not seem to consider the eye as an ac tual or possible source of so many afflic tions to the human organism as they should. It Is because of this that he now offers a second volume of clinical life histories, and ho reminds his readers that his convictions on the subject are based on the experiences of each day of IB years, representing the result of investigations of many thousands of patients, whose troubles, upon the correction of eye-strain, often disappeared as if by magic. In the chapters devoted to eye-strain and the lit erary life, and eye-strain and civilization, the author in a very clear way presents his line of argument, and the average reader will find In these chapters, as well as throughout the whole work, much that is Interesting and instructive. A hint here and there also reminds tho reader that of all scientific branches of human endeavor, the medical world is the one that moves the slowest, and the author is certainly justified in the observation that "the knowledge of the relief of the dis orders of eye-strain has largely come from the lay world and from, patients themselves." The subject is undoubtedly one of great importance, since eyestrain has certainly become a disease of civilization, and the timely contribution of Dr. Gould should receive a full and fair consideration. An Economic Year Book. Social Progress, a Year Book and Encyclo pedia of Economic, Industrial, Social and Beligious Statistics. 1004.. Joslah Strong, Editor. S1.00 net."-Tho Baker & Taylor Company, New York. The Baker & Taylor will hereafter issue "Social Progress" on March 1. Tho scope of tho volume Is indicated in the title. Dr. Strong Is probably the best-known writer in our country in its various re ligious and sociological phases. His pres ent office, as head pt tho American Insti tute for Social Service, which is organized for the dissemination of information on topics relating to sociological work, fits Mm admirably for his task. The statis tics are generally for the year 1003, and will be found to bo later than those avail able in any similar publications. A few of the topics which are taken up are "ChlldLabor," "Civil Service," "Co-operation," "Divorce Reform," "Education," "The Housing Problem," "Institutional Churches," "Public Ownership," "The In itiative and Referendum," "Social Settle ments," "Tax Reform," "Temperance," "The Hours of Work and the Wages of Men and Women." This book will show the growth of the various, reform, political movements, and especially of labor, and reform legislation. Illustrated Book on Japan. Japan,' the Place and the People, by G. Waldo Browne. Illustrated with over 300 colored plates and half-tones. Dana Estes & Co., Boston. From "Japan; the Place and the Peo ple" tho reader will obtain a very com prehensive view of the country on which all eyes are now fixed. The wonderful history of the empire Is tojd In a very readable fashion, and the customs of today are depicted In an entertaining man ner. The volume Is printed In large and clear type, and Is lavishly illustrated, some of the colored full-page pictures being un usually effective. All About Women's Golf. Golf for Women, with a chapter on American golf by Rhona K. Adair, English and Irish champion Svo, with 32 full-page Illustra tions and many decorations. $2.00 net. The Baker & Taylor Company, New York. This book, by the leading woman player of the countrj't not only contains the best of golf Instruction, which win be useful to men as well as women, but Is also a com plete guide for all details of golf for wom en. It Includes matters of dress, training and links for women, and, furthermore. Is so prepared as to be a guide for the be- GEORGE EDWARD ginner and a complete manual of instruc tion for the more advanced player. Miss Adair's chapter will be found full of interest to every woman golfer. The only "kick" she has to make about golf in America concerns the lack of good, re Habel caddies. Domestic Life in Turkey. Turkish life in Townand Country, by Lucy M. J. Garnett. Illustrated. ?1.20 net. S. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. In this volume, which is one of the "Our European Neighbors" series, there is a readable account of life In Turkey, a country that Is known to tho American about as well as Thibet. Assassinations, atrocities, harems and Turkish baths, are the principal features in the usual con ception of life under "Abdul tho Damned." This book will give quite a different view of Turkish manners and customs. The slave and harem, systems are explained, and are shown In more accurate, If less, glaring colors. Particularly does the vol ume enablo the reader to gain a good Idea of domestic life in Turkey. Idyllic Bird Center. Bird Center Cartoons, by John T. McCutch- eon. Boards, 10x12 Inches. S1.25 net. A. C. McClurg & Co., Chicago. Bird Center Is Just as real as Chicago and a great deal more Interesting. It 13 the most delightful place In America, for tho people are always In the best of tem pers, and their dqlngs are of Interest to all who admlro good country fun. The cartoons by McCutcheon need no comment. Cap Toy; Smiley, tho popular undertaker, and Rev. Mr. Walpole, with the rollicking young Walpoles, are made to live in the pictures, while the accom panying letterpress Is quite as humorous, parodying the stylo of a country news paper In quaint fashion. William Greenleaf Eliot. William Greenleaf Eliot; Minister, Educator. Philanthropist, by Charlotte C. Eliot. $2.00 net Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston. This Is a memorial of a man distin guished in all the ways indicated in the sub-title of the book. Dr. Eliot was for 39 years pastor of the Church of the Mes siah in St. Louis tho first organized Uni tarian church west of the Mississippi. Ho had much to do with founding Missouri's school system. He was the first chairman of the Board of Directors of Washington University, and became Chancellor of that Institution In 1S73. Dr. Eliot was also a National figure during tho period of "reconstruction," and his life was indeed useful to his country. The Training of Boys-. Bringing Up Boys, by Kate Upson Clark. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co, Now York. Unlike most books on the treatment of children, "Bringing Up Bojs" possesses common sense. It can hardly fall to bo of aid to mothers, whoso teaching Is first among tho formative influences that shape tho boy's life. There are chapters on "The Boy's Manners" which seems an Irish sort of heading "Boys Versus Sentimentality," "The Boy's Library," and other topics. A Classic in 'New Dress. The Odes of Anacreon, translated by Thomas Moore. With 54 designs by Glrodot do Roussy. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York. This Is a very artistic little volume. Moore's rendering of Anacreon, a poet his own qualifications enabled him to translate with such effect that his work has become a classic, Is reprinted In a book of attractive appearance and fault less typography. Tho famous Illustrations of Do Roussy are excellently reproduced, and are print ed upon Japan tissue. Endearing Kitty. Incomparable Bellalrs, by Agnes and Egorton Castle. $1.50. The Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York. Kitty Bellairs, of whom readers of tho Castle books dealing with Bath In tho frivolous eighteenth century have pleasant memories, is, of course, tho bewitching heroine of the present story. And O'Hara and M. Stafford and Miss Lydia are all In the bustling, reckless company, and In the train of the incomparable Kitty they make comedy for the reader. CONCERNING SOME AUTHORS. Lincoln Steffens. Mr. Steffens has been writing special articles for McClure's Magazine. His se ries' on civic corruption has been published In book form, and is reviewed on tills page. John T. McCutcheon. Cartoons by Mr. McCutcheon have been WOODBERRY. one of the most popular features In the Chicago Tribune. His series on social life In Bird Center was very successful, and Is now published In a handsome volume by A. C. McClurg & Co. Genevieve Hecker. Mrs. C. T. Stout (formerly Miss Gene vieve Hecker) Is probably the greatest woman golf player that America has pro duced. Her book on "Golf for Women" contains useful hints for both novices and experts. Henry Villard. Tho publication of Henry "Vlllard's Mem oirs, which were noticed editorially Tuesday, has created Interest. The two volumes are principally concerned with the events of tho Civil War. The Hearst papers referred, lately to Oswald Villard, who controls the New York Evening Post, as the son of a "pirate of finance." George Edward Woodberry. William Morton Payne, editor of the Dial, said in a recent Issue of that publica tion: "Of the American poets now living, George Edward Woodberry Is probably the most distinguished. We think of but one other, William Vaughn Moody, who might fairly dispute the claim for this primacy, and if quality alone were to be taken Into account, we should be Inclined to award the palm to the author (Mr. Moody) of Nutshell Notices of New Books The Merchant of Venice, first folio edition, edited, with notes, introduction, glossary, list of variorum readings, and selected criticism, by Charlotte Porter and Helen A. Clarke, typography and presswork by the De VInne Press. 2S0 pages. lOmo, flex ible cloth, gilt top, 50 cent3 net. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co, New York. The "First Polio" edition of Shake speare's Works, now being Issued, play by play, is a noteworthy project to repro duce In handy volume style and modern typography the original text of 1623. That text represented the authoritative collec tion of the plays, and It Is now so rare and valuable that, when a copy finds Iths way to the auction block. It Is eager ly seized at a cost of thousands of dollars. The Peril of tho Sword, by CoL A. F. P. Harcourt. $1.50. The H. M. Caldwell Company, Boston. "Tho Peril of tho Sword" Is a lively story centering upon the famous siege and relief of Lucknow in the Indian Mutiny. Lord Koberts figures lb, the story, and the accuracy of the local color Is assured by the fact that Colonel Har court himself served through tho Mutiny. The Man Who Pleases and the Woman Who Charms, by John A. Cone. 75 cents post paid. Hinds & Noble. 31 West 15th street. New York. This little book contains much advice that cannot fail to bo useful, and the ad vice Is enforced by illustrations drawn from history, romance, current fiction and many other sources. It 13 at onco read able and instructive. Among the topics treated are "The Art of Conversation," "The Voice," "Dress," "Personal Peculiar ities." How to Get the Best Out of Books, by Rich ard La Galllenne. $1.25 net. The Baker & Taylor Company, New York. Mr. De Galllenne has written hero a popular guide for reading. Unlike the usual works of this sort, It does not out lino Impossible tasks, but eliminates the books which tho busy man 1 unable to reach, and gives instruction and guidance to him who would read to the best ad Vantage and to gain the greatest pleasure. A Woman's Will, by Anno Warner. Illus trated by I. H. Callga. $1.50. Little, Brown & Co., Boston. The story of an American woman's Sum mer on the Continent is an entertaining novel, whose charm is in Its skilfully drawn characters, bright dialogue, musi cal atmosphere, and the realistic painting of the scenes in which the events take placo, Munich, Zurich and Lucerne. A Knight of Columbia, by General Charles King. Illustrated by George Glbbs. Tha Hobart Company, New York. "A Knight of Columbia" Is a story in General King's usual graphic style. The time of the action Is during the Civil War. Cherry's Child, by John Strange Winter. The J. B. LIpplncott Company, Philadelphia. John Strange Winter's books, while con taining no deep study of character or carefully evolved plot, are always light and amusing, and "Cherry's Child" is no exceptl6n to the rule. Henderson, by Rose E. Young. $1.25. Hough ton, Mifflin & Co, Boston. "Henderson" will remind many readers of "A Gentleman front Indiana," which It resembles In Its faithful pictures of Western types. The hero Is a Mlssourian, 'The Masque of Judgment and 'An Ode In Time of Hesitation.' " Mr. Woodbury has been professor of comparative literature In Columbia Uni versity since 1S91, and provlously occupied the chair of English In the University of Nebraska. Mr. Woodberry was born at Beverly, Mass., In 1S55, and graduated from Harvard in his twenty-second year. His latest volumo Is "America in Liter ature," which is published by Harper & Brothers. NOTES OF THE MAGAZINES. Popular The May number of the Popu lar Magazine (Street &. Smith. New York) comes freighted with a surprising cargo of Interesting stories. In addition to the usual complete novel of adventure, there are two new features. One, the beginning of a series of short stories of the race track, bearing tha generic head, "Romancea of the Race Course," by Charles Steinfort Pearson, is extremely In teresting. The first story, "The Crimson Cap," contains a vivid description of a famous race. The second feature will be particularly at tractive to the large class of readers who enjoy tales of the theater. The series la entitled "Little Stories of the Stage," and the first In stallment contains personal reminiscences written and signed by Robert Edeson, Otto Skinner, Charles Warner and George Riddle. The new serial in the May number is "Tha International Disappearance Syndicate, Ltd." Harper's Edwin A. Abbey's superb draw ings In tint which were made to illustrate "Hamlet," are the most distinguished feature of the May Harper's. They are accompanied by critical comment by Theodore Watts-Dun-ton. Mr. Watts-Dunton inquires why It 13 that we have no "sensibly arranged text" of this master play, despite the fact that if the vast body of criticism of "Hamlet" "were inscribed upon a tape, that tape would form a. black scroll of plater's Ink reaching from the earth to the moon?" He announces that in the faco of charges of heresy which will doubtless bo flung at him, he proposes to disregard this great library of Shakespearean criticism and to take Independent views of the plays about which he Is writing the present series of articles for Harper's. Smart Set The May number of tho Smart Set more than upholds that monthly's reputa tion as "the magazine of cleernew." Be tween its coers one finds brilliancy, strength, sparkling wit, delicate fancy, originality everything, in fact, except dullness. The nov elette, "Veronica's Lovers"; by G. B. Burgln, author of "The Shutters of Silence," is aa English story of enthralling Interest, in which attention centers upon half-a-dozen characters whose striking individualities are skillfully de veloped through the unfolding of h. most in genious and novel plot. Pearson's Pearson's cover for May is a fine reproduction of a painting of Roman Xoao, the great chief of the Chejennes, by Charles Schreyvogel. The story of Roman Nose's mag nificent charge on Forsyth's Rough Riders of '03 at Beecher Island, Is told by Dr. Cyrus Townsend Brady in this number and the pic ture of the gallant litUe band of 50 scouts de fending themselves heroically against the de termined charge of 500 of the bravest of the Cheyenne warriors stands out vividly on hla pages. Century There will be two portraits of un usual interest in the May Century one of Tol stoi, another of President Roosevelt. The Tol stoi likeness is from a drawing made by Georg T. Tobln, from a photograph, and shows Tol stoi at 20. as an officer In the Crimean War. The President's portrait, in tint, will be the frontispiece- of the Issue, and is from a photo graph taken by Arthur Hewitt at the White House, January 20, 1904. Wayside Taleti The leading story In the May number of Wajslde Tales is by Ashton Hilller.'the famous English short-story writer, whose stories of army life in India are second only to Kipling's. Other stories are by Frank H. Spearman, Eugene Katz, William Emmet Moore, Dr. Axel V. Grafstrom and Frank N". Stratton. high-spirited, kindly, and tenacious, who pursues his rugged way with Indomitable courage to success. His winning of pro fessional fame, of independence, and of the woman he loves, Is a story of unusual "grip" and attractiveness. The French Wife, by Katherino Tynan. The J. B. LIpplncott Company. Philadelphia. Katherlne Tynan's Irish stories aro al ways welcome, and "The French Wife" adds another name to the worthy list. It has plenty of plot and the characters are skilfully drawn, while tho atmosphere of "country" life Is well indicated. Parliamentary Terms and Procedure, by Mrs. Lillian M. Holllster. 307 Kirby avenue. West, Detroit. Mrs. Holllster, who Is the supreme com mander of the Ladies of the Maccabees, has made a useful compilation in this little handbook. Ufo and Death, by Henryk Sienkiewicz. Translated by Jeremiah Curbln. Little, Brown & Co , Boston. "Life and Death" Is a collection of short stories by Slonklewicz. Most of them are allegorical, and their simplicity Is In contrast to his longer works. Twisted History, by Frank C. Voorhles. $L00. The O. W- Dillingham Company, Now York. This Is a wearisome attempt to bo funny. A Lamb to the Slaughter, by Lea Welling Squier. $1.25 net. Tho Patriot Publishing Company, Greensburg, Pa. This Is a story about a girl named Helen Malcolm, who goes to tho Orient as a missionary. All's Fair in Love, by Josephine C&rolln Sawyer. Illustrated In color by C B. Falls. $150. Dodd, Mead & Co., New York. Tho popularity of Miss Sawyer's first book, "Every Inch a King," insures a favorable hearing for her second story. Liko Its predecessor. Miss Sawyer's new book Is, first of all a lovo story. A girl who is betrothed to ono of two insep arable friends loves the other, and while knowing that she 13 loved devotedly by both she contrives to keep her secret so that It is unguessed by either of them until tho climax of the story is reached. Add to this that the scene is laid on tho Scottish border In the warlike days of old, and that tho personages are from the families of Douglas, Percy and Ne ville, among whom the slightest Indis cretion on tho part of tho maid would havo brought on a bloody war, and you have a story that possesses audacity of plot and tenseness of interest. The Frontiersmen, by Charles Egbert Crad dock. $1.50. Houghton, Mifflin & Co, Boston. These are stories of early pioneers in the country that Is now Tennessee, a region which the author has mado her own as completely as Scott mastered tho borderland. With every story from her pen, her skill grows at painting the land scapes with which all her readers aro familiar, and never were the Great Smoky Mountains and the Blue Lick Springs, the early forts, tho log-houses and their valiant buckskin-clad defenders, so depicted as In this volume. The first story, "The Llngulster," Is a charming tale of the harmless wiles of woman. Tho book has the flavor of rude, new life that to many readers will recall Cooper, for it holds the quality of tho soil and U genuinely. American. ' t