A True'DoIly story lllft mm ffl M Q BY ANNIE C. MUIRHEAD. ONCE there was a 5-year-old girl called Mabel, who had a doll named Grlzel that she had possessed for a long:, long time, as far back as she could remember. There was no other of her dolls that fhe loved so much, though Grizelwas only a rag doll and bad not beautiful golden curls like the waxen Emily, nor the pink and white china complexion of Sarah Jane. Mabel loved Grizcl a great deal more than cither of these, and lugged the shabby old thing about with her wherever she went although Grizcl had become terribly dirty! Every year she had grown dirtier and dirtier, and every month she got blacker and blacker. Once she had had black hair and blue eyes, and. red lips. Nowadays, you couid hardb'4ell her hair from her eyes, -and' when you wanted to kiss her on the mouth, you had to guess at the place! Being soft, the was not the sort of.doll you could wash. Mabel had tried it, but it only made her look worse than evar.. Mabel's aunt, who wore spectacles, used to look severely at Gr.lzel.and say something: unkind every time .she saw her, "What, Mabol! Are you still playing with that. .disreputable rag doll or yours?' I wonder your .mother allows it!" and - then' she-would- add something about, "-germs." Mabel only hugged Grizel tighter, and tried to keep lipr out of "her aunt"3 way, in case something olse might be said to hurt Grizol's . feelings. But her aunt was '.not Mabel's only trial; there was Lang, her little .broth er, who took- up. the -cry about Grizel being so dirty, and .always wanted to burn her up! He thought It would be pueli fun to make a honllre, of Grizel (Just think of it!), and he was al ways teasing Mabel to let him do Jt That frightened her ' dreadfully, and she was very careful, not to let Grizel lie around. One day Jang '.fH...iii and became very sick. His cheeks wore .flushed' and his eyes . were .heavy, and be did not show the least Interest when Ma bel tried to amuse lIm and show him picture books. The doctor came to see him and ordered medicine, and mother and nurse talked gravely about him, and Mabel could see that they were anxious. One day hor aunt bought candy for the children, and Lang actually would not touch it, and turned his head away impatiently when Mabel held a choco late peppermint out to him. Then Ma bel knew that ho must bo very 111 In deed. There was all the more left for her to eat, but somehow she did not enjoy it so much as usual. The truth was. Mabel was getting anxious about "Lang-, too. Perhaps he was never go ing to get well? This suspicion made her very unhappy, for she was very fond of lier brother yes, even fonder of Lang than Grizel, if you can be lieve it. So she began to think and think what she could do to make Lang bet ter. She wanted so much to hear him laugh again. All at once she remem bered how Lang had always been so eager to make a bonfire of Grizel. And do you know what she made up her mind to do, at last? Actually, to let Lang burn up Grizel if he wanted to. Of course it was a terrible sacrifice for her to make, and she cried when she thought of It; but she loved Lang so much that she Great Back-Yard Shooting Match By Surali Noble Ives, Illustrated by the Autlior. THERE was a target practice on at the Back-Yard Shooting Club. It was to be a match between the president, the vice-president and the secretary. Tho treasurer did not shoot, and they let her hold the stakes because she was always fair; the treasurer was only a girl, any way; she liked all the members and showed no partiality. She was also um pire for the same reason. "She's just as good as a boy," said the president, "only she can't pitch. But I ain't blamin' her for that neither. Girls is built different in their bones, so'st they can't throw good." The treasurer was good to look upon, with her round, red cheeks, big brown eyes and tousled hair. Not a boy in the club could beat hor running, and as for climbing trees, she was liko a squirrel. She could climb higher than any of them, because, as the president explained. "She's light, and she dast go out on little limbs 'at would bust with us boys." But. as I said, there was a target prac THE PRESIDENT TKOWNED. AND would rather lose Grizel forever than have him look so queer and quiet-" She would try not to mind very much, if only Lang would think the bonfire fun, and get well again. She lifted Grizel out of her cradle very gently and then nearly dropped her in surprise! For what do you She Lifted f.rixel Out of Her Cradle And Then Nearly Dropped Iter In Surprise. think? Although still dressed in her shabby cIot)ie?fs' Grizcl was no longer black and battered. Her face was quite clean! Hor Hps were as red as they had evftr bcen! Her hair was a glossy black! Her eyes were bright blue! Just as they had heen when Grizel was entirely new! Mabel screamed- with delight, and nurse camo running to see what was the matter. Nurse was extremely sur prised, too. She said she couldn't get over it! Then Mabel ran to show the miracle to Lang. He was as excited and delighted as herself, and wondered how it could, have happened. Ho even began to quarrel with Mabel, because he wanted to keep Grizcl In bed be side him. -while Mabel wanted to run and show hor to mother. Then Mabel knew that Lang was got ting better, for nurse had told her that when sick people get cross it is a sure sign that they are going to get well. Of. course she was very glad of that ail the more because she did not need to burn Grizel. It amused Lang quite enough to have the old friend with a new face to play with. Her nurse made a pretty frock in the latest fashion for the clean Grizel, and Mubel was so proud to have a boautifui. dear, old new doll to iShow to her aunt. and asked her however did she suppose such a wonderful change could have happened? Her aunt looked rather funny and said she thought she knew something about It but, strange to ,suy, sho never would tell! tice on. The guns used were Brlcky Smith's best improved, unpatented Goli. ath pea-shooters, and the target was an old leather carriage cushion, on ono end of which the secretary had painted a fresh spot of white painL The carriage oushion was neatly tied to the post of the clothes horse, and was all that could bo desired as a target. oBcausu, you see, n you nit it. ex plained the president, "the pea will make a spot on the paint, and we'll know who gets nearest the middle." It was bound to be an excitinc affair. for the stakes wore high the president's second-best jack-knife, the vice-presi dents Jewsharp. and the secretary's red crayon pencil were in the hands of the treasurer, all to be turned over to the winner. The shooting began promptly at half past three of a bright Saturday after noon. Three shots apiece wore the limit for the trial. "First tho worst!" said the president, so the secretary had to begin. He fired his PLACED ANOTHER PKA JN THE SUNK. first shot wild; nobody ever knew where It landed. Blng! The second hit the edge of the bull's-eye. Bang! The third thumped on .the car riage cushion somewhere, but left no mark on the white paint. The secretary saw his red crayon pencil passing from his possession, and'he jsighed as ho stepped, back oqt of tho eye of the public. "Second the same!" called the president, and the vice-president took his place in tho arena. His right hand trembled slight ly, but his eye was firm, for he longed to possess tho president's second-best jack-knife. Blm! Tho carrlago cushion responded, but left no sign. Boom! A tiny ypot appeared In the bull's-eye Just far enough In to make tho secretary emit a groan of despair. Bam! Still nearer the center, and the vice-president retired with the fire of hope burning In his right eye he had shut the other so tight when he sighted tho mark that It hadn't popped open again as yet. "Last tho best of all the name!" it was now the president's turn. He took his place haughtily. He measured the distance and calculated. "Ping! The pea flew far, but there was no thud on the target. The president frowned and placed another pea in the sling. Whang! Twang! There were two dis tinct thumps. All gathered around the target Tes, there was the tiny mark of the president's pea, farther in than the others; but square In tho very middlest middle of the center of the bull's-eye was a larger mark, and a small stone lay on the board beneath. The treasurer laughed so hard that she nearly dropped the stake "That r my stone." she said. "The president wasn't doing much, and I turned around to fire that stone at a pear, and it supped out or. my hand and went backwards." "The stakes- are hers." said the presi dent manfully. "She hit the middle." Tho treasurer smiled Joyfully and then laughed -again. "I don't want 'em." she said. "Th knife's too mortal dull to cut anything; I can't play the Jewsharp. and I couldn't draw a barn door with the pencil: so von can all have 'em back." -won." said the president, "if th.t inn l just jikc a girl!" Can I Have It? I ITTLB JACK NACHETT had a habit L of saying: "Can I have it?" every time he saw something that he thought he might like; and he liked nearly every thing that he saw. For a while folks thought It was funny, and they used to laugh at him; but after he had begun to grow hi relatives and friends became very tired of It. and they tried hard, but without avail, to break him of the bad habit. At last he was broken of It, as you shall hear. His mother took him Into a big store one day and at tho counter among a lot of other customers stood a man with only ono arm. Jack looked at him in amaze, tnent for a time. Then, unable to control his curiosity any longer, he asked: "Please, mister, where la your other arm?" The man smiled and said: "It was cut oft In a sawmill." , "Can I have It?" asked Jack Imme diately. Then there was a .roar of laughter tbroughoutthc vstore. you may be sure; and before Jack's mother Jeft the place some of tho other, customers had spread the story through" the' town, so that when Jack appeared he was greeted on all sides by renewed laughter, and by shouts of Can I have It?" and "Did-you get It?" till he was near crying. Jack was a proud llttio follow, and the Joking stung him so that lie broke himself of tho bad habit after that. The new volume of Uncle Remus stories, Told by Uncle Remus." by Joel Chandler Harris, is now i In its third edition. At the outset of the publishing reason of 1000 a perceptible lull occurs at what may be called vale center, although It Is reported that st the publishing houses work is brlFk in the preparation of books far the market. a There's a Rood newspaper story In tho January Reader, entitled "The Hostility of the City." by Henry Oren. A decided nov elty and well worth reading Is "As You Kind It." a monologue In one act, written by Richard Mansfleld. "Brownie Primer" is In pross. It Is In tended for the very littlest readers, and will be lsoued by The Century Company In the late Winter. The Brownies will be taken from Palmer Cox a Brownie books, but the text will be, entirely new. "Industrial llartyrs," telling of the mor tality In those trades commonly classed as dangerous, and "From Alaska to Cape Horn," being the story of the Pan-American railroad system, arc two strong features In the January Technical World Magazine. I Since the publication of his "Rachel Marr," Morley Roberts ha been counted among the number of novelists whose work deserves closest attention. A new novel from his Pn is promised by L. C Page &. Co. very soon. It is called "The Idlers." The Architectural Record for January de lights froth eye and mind with articles and Illustrations. Some of the subjects intro duced arc: "Japanese Houses." "The House, of United States Senator Clark. New York City" and "The Proper Use of Terra, Cotta." "A Day in a Premier's Life," describing the treadmill existence of a British .govern ment chief: "How Kid Brady Won tin Championship." and "The Tower of the Fre," the latter an interesting rrscme of newspaper revelations, arc chle'f features in the January Pearson's. "A Tenderfoot In Texas" and "The Story of Houston. Texas. are two of the principal features of this month's Sunset Magazine. Dane Coolldge's "Passing of the "Cowboy" will Interest all those who love 'a horse and who does not? The pretty cover design Is a study in San Francisco's Chinatown, by Blanche Letcher. Fqx. Duffleld Si Co. will soon publish a new novel by Nelth Royce (Mrs. Hutchlns Hapgood), called "The Eternal Spring." Mrs. Hapgood's first novel, "The Forerun ner." was decidedly one of the notable books of the year In which It appeared. Her. sec ond book was "The Folly of Others." a vol ume of Bhort stories. Karl j Issue Is announced of two new vol umM of tho Century Company's American State Series. "Local Government In the United States (Cities Excepted)." by Professor John A. F&lrlle, of the University of Michigan, .and "'American Legislatures and Legislative Meth ods." by Professor Paul S. Relnvch, .of tht University of Wisconsin. . . Th Nurse as Tenement House Inspector," by Johanna von Wagner, noted for Its well marshalled facts, is a feature of the current numtfer of the Nurses Magazine of the ciflc Coast. The other articles are also 'well chosen, and the little magazine continues to be a decided attraction to thote tInterests whoso welfare It has at heart. In tho current number of the Forum. Ja pan's status after the war and the newly awakened China, form the subjects of two seaconable articles. Alexander D. Noyea gives a careful review of financial matters, and Henry Litchfield West writes a thoughtful review of questions now sub mitted or about to be submitted to Congress. A quarter of a million copies of a single book (not action) Is the remarkable record of a llltlo volume by Abbs R. Brown Llad- CHAPTER ir. rr FTER Joe had been an inmate of the f. poorhouso for two of three- days, he learned that there were 32 people there besides himself. There were two boys under 10 years old, three young girls, and the rest were old people. Some were so old and feeble that they were un able to work, and others could only do light work, as sewing or weeding In the garden. Everyone whowas ablo was made to do something, and neither the superinten dent nor his wife had a kind word for any of them. There were old men and women there who had once been very well off, and there were orphan children who were Micro through misfortune, the same as Joe. The provisions furnished to thfc inmates were of the plainest, and they did not have enough of any one thing to cat. No ARC KOT CjjLY, UKC BUT IMPUDENT tea or coffee was allowed, and though plenty of vegetables were raised on the farm It was only tho poorest of them that the paupers got. The main article of diet was porridge, and It was copked and served out In most any sort of way. If anyone refused to eat or complained he or she was shut up for tho day In a dark room. If It was one of the children, they wer whipied by-f the superintendent or his wife. The beds were of straw, the rooms al most wJlho,ut furniture, and the house was not kept clean unless a visiting com mittee was expected. For the first few days of his stay Joe went about ready to cry and wondering that unfortunate people could be treat ed as he saw them. One of the Inmates was a man named Phillips. He had lost Opmu tie book ym rt)6 say. entitled "What Is Wortn While." It was first published by Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. In 1S93 and has been reprinted In con stantly increasing editions until it has now reached the 250,000 mark. And tho end Is not yet. A new Issue In the Century Company's Educational Series Is S. E. Formanii "Ad vanced Civic." which treats. In addition to more familiar topics, of the care or the poor, labor disputes', secret ballots and the duties of a voter, civil and constitutional liberty, and the American spirit. The New York law against bribery Is given as an appendix. "The Ransom of Billy" In the January St- Nicholas U Just the seasonable story It pretends to be for little folks. It has the right ring, "ills Dorothea's Recital" Is an engaging tale about a young piano stu dent, and "The Ballad of Brace's Bowl." by Paul R. Heyl, pictures a romantic Incident In the life of the celebrated Scotch King of that name. Dr. Otto Nordenskjold. the famous ex plorer of the Antarctic regions, will soon begin a lecture tour of this country His book. "Antarctica, or Two Years Amongst the Ice of the South Pole." !. one of the most stirring narratives of Its kind in litera ture, while at the axne time Its author was practically the pioneer In exploring the South Polar regions. Busy people have heard more or leas "of Esperanto, the proposed universal language, and this month's Atlantic Monthly has a. -well-reasoned article on the subject, written by A. Schlnz. John W. Foster explains the Chinese boycott, and Maurice Maeterlinck discusses "Our'AnxIous Morality." L. 11. B. Knox's, article. "Impressions from Chicago Faces," gives food for thought. What would you say If told that tho moon originally dropped from the round space now occupied by the Pacific Ocean biweeji the two Americas and from Behrlng Straffs to Australia? An article, "How the Moon Was Created," and written by A. F. Collins. In this, month's Smith. -magazine, discusses the weighty problem. The remainder of tho magazine Is filled with readable stories. "Salve Venetia," Marion Crawford's book on Venice, went out of print Immediately on publication. In spite of the fact that he Macmlllah Company prepared air unusually large first edition to meet the expected de mand. The two Tolumes, including the photogravure plates, require nearly a month for printing and binding, but the publish ers hope to hav the second edition ready by "Wednesday. The Immense proportions of the mall-order side of the boolcpubllshlng business Is not so often brought to J.he attention of the public .aq the large sales through the book stores. Nevertheless It is one of the most Important parts of the publishing business. For ex ample, on the- Friday and Saturday preced ing. Christmas- the Funk & WagnaJIs 'Com pany shipped out by mall and express, to "fill, retail ,inall orders' alone, 75,600 books. The Sagebrush Parson," by A. B. Ward, announced for publication the latter pert ' of this, month by Uttle. Brown Co..' Is a Writ try Korjr, depicting tho unconventional life in the sagebrush wastes of Nevada; The characters are all atrongly marked. Tho hero. Clement Vaughn, an Englishman, Is aid to be particularly' striking. Tho 'denouement of the novel Is vlvldly.unfolded. The atmosphere of the sagebrush wastes permeates tho story. So virile and spirited are the biographies of the explorers and adventurers . on the west coast of 'America t forth In "Viking of the Pacific" that most people have con cluded that. the author. A. C. Laut. mail be a man. " A.' C Laut's arst name, however. Is Agnes, a will be remembered by a great many reader of her tw former books. "Lords of the North" aad "PathSnders of the W-" Several of the press notices hare referred to Mrs. DoaaeU's "Jtefrecca Mar-" as a fol both legs In an accident, and having neith er money nor friends, the county had sent him to the poorhousc. He could not get outdoors to work, but they provided him with straw and he made hats for the men and boys wljo worked outside. He could also knit and sew as well as a woman. Ho had to bo wheeled about from room to room, and Joe got a bed In the room with him. There was another boy, but he was a half-Idiot and paid no attention to what was going on. Joe felt sorry for the cripple, though he was a rough-spoken man, and rendered him many little services. It was two weeks before the man wouldNtalk to- him with any freedom. During these two weeks Joe was assisting one of the hired men to plant corn and potatoes. Some of the other boys had girls who aided them In their work. One would have thought the hired man, who was married and had children of his " AS YELL, own. would have treated these poor or phans in a kindly way and not over worked them, but the contrary was the case. Ho kept them on the jump all the time, and whenever any one of them grew tired, he called out in his harsh voice: "Here, you little pauper, hurry up or I'll report, you to the superintendent and have you licked: - Joe worked as hard as he could from the start. He was naturally industrious. and he wanted to gain the good will of the man he was under. He did more work than any two of the others, but he received no praise. On the contrary, the man found as much fault with him as he did with any of the others, and one day, though Joe was. working his hardest. he shouted at him: "Why don't you get around faster, you lower of Mrs. Rlgg's little heroine. Rebecca. As a matter of fact, "Rebecca Mary" ap peared In print same seven or eight months before the little Sunnybrook Rebecca, as the first chronicle of her doings was published In Harper's Magaslne for February. 1903, under the title of "The Hundred and Oneth," and '.'Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" was Issued In the Fall of 1003. " For candor. Isaac F. Marcosson'a "The Fall of the House of Quay," in the January World's Work, takes precedence, i People, of course, have already suspected much of the Pennsylvania tale of graft and thievery, but It has rarely been placed under such a strong searchlight. 'Statehood for Arizona and New Mexico" voices Arizona's call to be heard before her fatIs mixed with that of New Mexico. Mary Crawford Fraser writes most Interestingly on "The Leaders of Ja pan." Peter Rosegger, the Styrlan peasant writer, whose story of the Christ "I. N. R. I." has re cently been published In America by McClure Phllllps. Is the national poet of his native country. His first productions, written in his early youth, when he had little or no educa tion, were folk poems characterized by some naive simplicity that Is the most attractive quality In bis Christ story. The quality of his genius aa a poet is well indicated by a. little poem taken from his very first volume, "Zither and CymbaL" . The first number of the new monthly magazine for youth. The Golden Age. edited by' Logan Douglass Howell, has been re ceived and merits a cordial welcome. "Where Ponies- Ran Wild." describing scenes In an Island off North Carolina, and "The Angular Coat,' the latter telling about a goat that Insisted on attending the village school, are to" most readable tales. The little "magazine is well edited, the pictures are .excellent, and the healthy, moral tone 'displayed ilt the general bill of fare augurs well for prosperous and useful future. A sheet of paper blown by the wind and a. mysterious disappearance, in the beginning of E. Phillip Oppenhelm's new navel, "A Maker of History." lead to one of the most complicated and -remarkable plots which this author has ever constructed. Important .per sonages In tbn diplomatic and official life of England, France, Qermany and Ruwla. have a place in -the story; and the ingenuity of the .secret rollce of three countries Is In volved In the maze of Incident, plot and counter-blot through which the reader Is carried. Little. Brown & Co., of Boston, announce "A Maker of History" for publication Saturday. One of the most entertaining chapters In William 0Brlenc volume of "Recollections" of the political and popular disturbances In Ireland during the years of the Parnell movement, narrates bow the author edited United Ireland for months while he was actually confined In Kllmalnham Jail. The pollrt -chased the paper over Ireland and England, arresting everyone whom they could accuse of complicity, even newsboys, and smashing up the printing offices whence it issued;'but never could discover Its author and editor, who meanwhile was under their mre'e:in the Jail Into which they had put him. "Federal rrand'Jurles all over the country are astounding monopolists by letting cer tain cozy precedents go to thn wind, and by actually Indlctinr railroad men for giving rebates and rate discriminations, aad pack ers and shippers for accepting them. If the present wave rf popular Indignation against these practices continues, there Is no telling what big fish may be flung high and dry on the land of public disgrace and long-deferred punishment. Ray Stannard Baker's article on "Railroad Rebates" In McClure's openly and specifically charges some of the bvst-known men In the country with break lag the law. There has been so great a divergence of opinion regarding the locality so realistically described In France Squirt's Bevel, "The Bal llngtons," that her publishers have feeea re quested to supply authoritative Htfonaatfon on that pclau Tfce author Is snjHllgg a year lazy, good-for-nothing pauper? ItI had such a boy as you I'd thrash him every, day of his life." . "T am hurrying as fast as T can.-" re plied Joe, a3 he wiped the sweat off his forehead. : "Don't give mo no Impudence,"; roared the man. j "No. sir!" , "I have.- had my eye on you since the first day. You think you are too good for this place. You want pie and sweet cake and honey, and -you like to swing under the trees In a hammock. I'll report you to tho superintendent, and we'll see what'U happen." "Please don't!" begged Joe. "Shut up, you pauper." This happened Jn the afternoon. When they went up to supper at 6 o'clock the hired man saw the superintendent. He reported that Joe was lazy and saucy, and In so doing he told deliberate lies. After the wretched meal Joe was called Into- a room upstairs, where he found the officer with a whip In hand. "Please, sir, but I work as hard as I can," replied Joe. "Don't tell me that, for I know better. You are not only lazy, but Impudent as we.!, and I am going to freshen you up. Uncle John Makes Wise Decision He Gives a "Sew Sled Away and Generous Bob Gets It. U NCLE JOHN was a funny raaq. Vhen you saw his blue eyes twink ling you knew something was going to happen, hut you could never guess what. .One January day he came from the city with such a sled as-had never been seen In the vicinity, and his nephews, Tom. WJ1I, Sam,' Henry and Bob, caught their "breath and wondered who would get it. Uncle John looked mysterious and said they must wait; the sled belonged to the boy who deserved It most. Next morning Uncle John said they. might take the sled out on the hill, only they must be generous and let each have his turn- Tom wept down first and he declared with glowing face that the sled was out- of -sight. Will wen 'down and returned with a similar report. " By that time therd were a dozen en vious village boys on the hill, and among them was ragged Tim Jones, who had never owned anything better than a bar BorMri Do$'3 iSfifi ;Uh In England, and In her absence Frofessor Willis Mason West, a fellow.membcr of the faculty of the University of Minnesota, says: "For the background of her story. Frances Squire pictures In a masterly way. the nlmpl homely life in a modern village In an Eastern state kept wholesome by the survival of a somewhat uoftened Puritanism. No other book that I know does the thing so well." It Is asserted by the newspapers that wemen are writing the best fiction of today. The head of a large publishing house goes further and declares that "nine-tenths of the good fiction of today is written by women." The substantial profits many women receive tell loudly and convincingly that In thl channel their, work te rated beside that of "mere man." In the light of the present discussion of the subject it Is Interesting to note that the Janu ary Llpplncott's Magazine presents a novel ette by a woman Marie Van Vorst; five out of six of the shorter storieH are written by women; five of the eight poems are signed by women. Yet this Is not by any means a "woman's number" In any other sense. Judging by the amount of what he has visibly accomplished. Winston Spencer Churchill must be a young man of unusual attainments, and of unusual Industry. His service In the English army and In Parlia ment would have quite absorbed the time of almost anyone during recent years; and the first announcement of his forthcoming biog raphy In two volumes of his father. Lord Randolph Churchill, was greeted by the amazed exclamation, "How did he ever find time to write It?" He is one of the rising young men In English political life, and a typical Instance of how English men In public life combine political Interests and literature. Mr. Gladstone. Mr. Bryce and Mr. Morley are other examples of the same practice. Houghton. Mifflin & Co. have In prepara tion a manuscript edition of "The Complete Writings of Henry David Thoreau." hand somely illustrated with 100 photogravures from nature. The edition will consist of 20 volumes, limited to 600 signed and numbered sets, each containfng a page of original manuscript. The last 1-i volumes will con tain Thorean's journal, edited by Bradford Torrey, the larger proportion of which Is material that has never before been pub lished. The Illustrations are from photo graphs by Herbert W. Gleason. who has made a careful study of Thoreau's writings and has explored with equal thoroughness the woods and fields about Thoreau's home. The edition Is printed In the best style of the Riverside Press. A few seta will be bound In handsome leather with water color frontispieces. "The Conquest of Canaan." Booth Tark Ington's Intest novel, is running into edition after edition. Tho general opinion seems to be that the author has now. come Into his own. In. choosing as the scene of bis story a middle-sized American town. Mr. Tark Ington lias given himself opportunity to de scribe a kind of life which Is perhaps most characteristic of us as & nation. His types are not exaggerated nor grotesque, but Im press every one as real, and .he has drawn them not only with sympathy, but with a humor which partly resembles, while It transcends In' subtlety, that of George Ade. The secret of his success is that in writing of the great American middle class Mr. Tarklngton has penetrated beneath every conventionality, and the tap-roots of Interest In "The Conquest of Canaan" strike deep into the soil of human nature itself. The Macmlllan Company will Issue some Important Sctlon this month. A new novel by Edea Phlllpctts. "The Portreeve." Is said to be of the quality and strength of his "Secret Woman" and "Children of the Mist." Wlnstqn Churchill's new story, "ConUton," does not belong to the author's series of historical novels, but Is a love story; Owen Wlster3 "Lady Baltimore" Is a tale of a Southerner and a love entangle ment Into which he Is betrayed by hts tem perament. Other announcements by this firm are: The third of W. S. Harwood's book oa the work of Luther Burbank, "New Creatlos la Plast Life"; the scoad of KIT 111 .V2jtfn-A-jJ'fc. -4KT ft 4 U:'rVA,VVl ' ""'" " 1 - I - - - ----- - ' ,1. knew pjhen I Jlrsjt -saw, you, thai you" Joe begged and, pleaded, but the man caught him by. the collar and gaye him , a cruel whipping. When he-was through ; he satdr " , ' "Now go to bed, and If you don't do better in future I'll take the hide oK, your back." ; Joe went to him room weeping. He xlldn'.t care for the pain so much, though the lash had drawn- blood, but' he knew , that he. had been unjustly punlshe'd. Both his bpdy and his .feelings had been; hurt. The half-Idiot boy looked at him." in won-.-' der, but said nothing. The legless man was there, and as he saw Joe's tears helj ; asked: .-- "Well, has the boss been putting on the whip?" As soon as Joe could control his votco he told all about it. The man listened till the story was finished and then said: "That man Tompkins Is a brute who ought to be lashed until he shouts for . mercy, and the superintendent deserves still more. Boy. sit down here and let me talk with you. You have got one friend here, even If he hasn't got any legs." (To be continued.) rel stave fastened to a string. Tim did not say much, and he did not mingle much with the other boys. He gazed with open-mouth delight when Sam sped down, and edged a little nearer j and chuckled as Henry flew over the . snow like a bird. Their the sled was brought up and de livercd Zjj Bob, and Bob went straight to Tim 'ami wild: ""Ypu can have my turn. Tim. I'll have ; 5eny of chances. See if you can't go farther than any of the boys." "Me?" Tim blurted out the word me chanically, as If he hardly understood what ho was saying. - "Yes, you. Nowscoot!" And Tim did" scoot,' and sure enough he , did go farther than any' of the boys by at least 20 feet. That night Uncle Joint's eyes had an. other spell of twinkling. "I've -been studying about that sled ' business," he said, "and I find It belongs to Bob. But I feel sure he will lend it to you occasionally." in 6. tcrr-ibU vva,. h&A direct stack one e&naee. Oiildrenishe cried, In the -WKet toddy, oered. some E. V. Lucas "A Wanderer in Holland"; tho second of "Rational Living." by Dr. Henry C. King, president of Oberlin; the third of 'Th Fair Maid of Graystones," by Beulah Marie Dlx. and the fourth of Marion Cruw ford's new novel, "Fair Margaret." Once 'a year, at New Year's, th United States Naval ObaervaUry at Washington; D. I., allow itself a llttlp diversion that re quires a good deal of trouble to arrange. At midnight on New Year's eve the scientists o( the Institution send a telegraphic greeting around the world. The sending of the mes sage is Interestingly described in the cur rent Harper's Weekly. The achome Is prear ranged wltk the telegraph, coble and telephone companies, and the progress or the message from ' point to point Is Indicated on a large map of the worW. '2lxA'2 feet, by the flashing of little electric lamps. The speed with which the message can be transmitted tu various points, bus been observed and recorded For example, the Lick observatory In California 1m reached In no time at all five-hundrftdths of a second; the Tacubaya observatory In Mexico "In eleven-hundredths of a second; Manila In. 'thlrty-eeven-hundrcdths 'ora sec ond; Greenwich. England, , In 1.33. seconds; the Coast Survey station. Alaska. In, 7 sec onds, and the Cordoba observatory, Argentina, In 7,7 seconds. -- v Justiut Miles Forman. whose "Island of En chantment" Is ono of the most successful holiday books of the season, is thn author of .the new serial, "Buchanan's Wife," which begins in the current Issue of Harper's Week ly. The opening ecenes of "Buchanan's Wife" Introduce the reader to Herbert Buchanan, aT man of selfish and repellent nature, and hl beautiful wife. Beatrix, who has been forced Into a mistaken marriage with him because of his money Beatrix has hud, previous to her marriage, a love affair with a young explorer. Harry Faring. Her husband, realizing that she Is unhappy with him. and actuated by a mallclouM Impulse, insists upon her inviting Faring to Join a house party at their country place, Buchanan Lodge. Faring arrives before dinner and. during a brief moment together, he and Beutrix discover that. In spite of her marriage, they are still deeply in love with eaeh other. Thence onward, Mr. Forman leads his readers through the mazes of a narrative as engrossing and dramatic as anything In recent fiction. "Buchanan's Wife" promises to be one of the most memorable serials of the year. s Few writers can boast so many books to their credit as a certain author of Portland. Me., well-known to Juvenile readers a "James Otis." Mr. Kaler his full name is James Otis Kaler went Into newspaper work at the age of 14. and later strayed into politics. It was during a lull In a political campaign that, haxlng a few Idle days on his hands, he wrote his famous story for boys, "Toby Tyler, or Ten Weeks With a Circus," which was first published serially in Harper's Young People, and has now become a classic The great success of this story led Mr. Kaler to give up his newspaper work, and since 1S80 he has devoted alt his time to writing for young people. He haa now 10-1 books pn the market, "which would seem to he all that an Indulgent public could swal low," he recently observed, "although the publishers and little boys appear to have a different Idea on. the subject" Mr. Kaler re ceives many letters from his youthful read ers; it Is seldom that the week's end finds blm with less than 30 to be answered, but he makes It his rule to reply to every one, and somehow finds time.. In which to do It. In many ways the .roost remarkable char acteristic about the career 'of Justin Mc Carthy, who has just completed his famous "History of Our Own Times" by the addi tion of volumes IV. and V, (Harpers). Is the tremendous .amount of work that he has accomplished. Novelist. Journalist, historian.' politician, and party leader, he yet found time to travel widely here and there, esp ctally la America, and to cultivate delightful social relations with most of the leading literary and artistic people of the time; and his numerous sketches of the notable figures of the day. which give so personal a note to his histories, are kindly, finely dis criminating, and Just. Doubtless the time and energy and thought which for years Mr. McCarthy unselfishly gave to the Na tionalist cause prevented hlra from giving that attention to literature which would have brought him greater success, so far as regards worldly goods; but his political career has affected neither the reception of his books nor the calm judicial outlook, upon life which Is the historian's requisite. la spite of his other exhausting labors and re sponsibilities, for years Mr. McCarthy was continually pushing- on some special literary undertaking-, either Actios or history- Bat how he found the way for doing alt he did no one ever qttlte fofend. out, except, perhaps his wlfa. " 'We " A.--' - -tiii'i'j'-j.:-.