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THE SUN SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 17 1904A

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VKIT BOOKS

JMJ A Co and Mri Wallace

Mr j J Bolls story of Josa Co

Harper A Brother U an amusing

of characters Wo wero going to

Dtn v r

the grocer nnd Mrs Wallace the widow

lady were not altogether elmplo Mm

Wallace was aunt to Jesa and Jess waanlfn of Davie JOBS and her husband

who was a carpenter by trade and a lioniTultiirlot by nil the of his soul

made up the firm of Jens Co The readerat the story will find this to have been a-

very partnershipJess wan young and we are euro she van

pretty though the story does not explicitlyno Sho was thinking that Davie would

rnaM more money If he paid lew attention-

to the flowers in tho garden and moro to

tho business when that veryand rather sarcastic lady her

Aunt Wallace dropped In on her MrsWallace lived In n cottage about a mileAlong tho shore to which sho hod retiredon a small annuity on the death of herhusband pome ten years ago

OlasROw horn and bred and had neverrosily Rot Into nympathy with tho Kin

lochan natives and their ways whichwern ways of extraordinary procrastinationand laziness

Davie was as lazy as any of thorn but he

had his redeeming virtues Of this Mrs

Wallace was aware It was during her viltato her aunt in Kinlochan that Jess whowan also from Glasgow had come toknow David Houston andalthough the oldlady was fond of holding up tho mans obvioiia faults to the had never actuallyattempted to interfere with the course of

true IOVP Kfter a hes a dacent lad shewould Fay to herself an maybe Jessllmake a man o him Theres naethln1-

poelywally aboot him onywoy We canonly at tho moaning of pcelywallyhut wo like the word In spite of our Igno

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stud

say Imple characters as well an homely-

but we on reflection that Mr O

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rancBMrs Wallace remarked without timidity

upon her nieces taste In parlor arrangements Yore the yin fur folderals 6hpaid with a critical stare round the room

Vern like yer mlther wi yer ee fur usolesThats th

worst o a lassie takin a mans job in aioffice an gaun oot at nicht to clauseUphrn But every lass nooadoys is a yunloddy an o ver fine fur the things that wl-

guld enough fur her faythor an mltrfeiDeed yo sud lute malrrit yln o thon

chap that dae naethln hut pu doon thelcuffs an dance aboot the flure 0 thedrapers In Glcsca Yin a thon chaps wu-

chairly please ye better nor a plain jinerIn our own upecoh Jess should

married a Glasgow floorwalker hut MrWallace did not mean it The young womalaughed and left the room to prepare te-

As she returned with a neatly spread trathe crtical Mrs Wallace resumed I stirpose ye CA this terntme teat she said wit

a sniff Im extremely vexed I dldnama vecsltln curds wl me yer ladyshliBut I left them in ma cairrlagepoured out tho tea calmly You can senthe footman up afterward she said Fromwhich It will be seen that Jess also hahomor and that she did not use the veiocular

Mrs Wallace was a genius in all tho wayof housekeeping and she was wonderfulat darning stockings Ma guidmun use

i to say he preferred the darns to the restthe sock she said to Jess She addedthat tho late Mr Wallace was dlstlngulshofor two things namely paying oomphments and making complaints He wagood at both His complalnln mlchhae been waur an his compliments cudnhae been better Ye see he nye peyod

f compliment jlst afore he made aso I wls aye ready fur the complaint

an I jlst never heedlt Theres naethln-curea a mans complaints quicker nor peylinae attention to them Yer uncle nevecomplained twice aboot the sameHA aye had something new an that kefhim frae gettin tiresome

Mrs Wallace went on to say that she hafound it effective now andsoft answer to Mr Wallaces complaining

I mind ylnst he slep In i tho momln trcam in lato to his breakfast she sold

Whit kep ye says I Oh says hesmilin that sweetllke I couldnaturnln ower an haeln anlthor weedream about yc ma dear Thet win thicompliment Jew an I kent fine thero wlmalr to come This hams hauf cauld hisays lukin at me across the table Thawi the complaint ye Weel says Iwioot lossln ma temper if yo dlnnait quick itll be quite cauld He nevespoke abost ham again An as I wt

answers worth tryin noo anthen

was In trouble owing to his lazinessand the clover and energetic Jess got himout of It Mr Ogilvy the grocer was litrouble owing to his state of bachelorhoodand the difficulty of getting hot thingsRood things for his meals andand oven ardently that Mrs Wallace wasjust the woman to get him out of it If onlj-phc would There is a flne supper ofand eggs In the story which Mrs Wallaceprovided and at which Mr Ogilvy was anenraptured guest Mr Ogllvy was a mostdiffident man in the presence of Mrs Wallace hut ha said quite boldly at the end ofth repast I never tastit ham near tanicely cooklt Mistress Wallace As furyer scones Im no exaggeratln whentell ye theyre the finest I ever encounteredin a ma born days Mrs Wallace was noencourager of sentimental conversationIn response to his compliments she calledMr Ogllvy an unco blether which shuthim up effectually and perhaps disturbedhis digestion

That Mrs Wallace was capablo on oc-

casion of something more than merewas discovered by Mr Dabble a

young merchant of Glasgow who camedown to Kinlochan one day under tho surprizing delusion that he could recommendhimself sentimentally to the heroine of thisstory Jess had just sent him aboutbunineM In her own not too ruthless waywhen Mrs Wallace appeared upon thescene Confound this lock said MrDebbie tugging at the recalcitrant frontdoor Bad Innguagell no holp ye obTvrft Mrs Wallace In her own effective

manner Whos the old party demanded-Mr Dobhle meaning to be noticeablyunpleawnt Auld party cried Mrs VJ

throwing sarcasm to tho winds Illauld party ye ye tailors dummy ToPenny masher Ye

Interrupted but Mrs Wallace hadstarted Hand yer tongue lasslet ImJist lw glnnin The old sarcastic humorreturned upon her and took dreadful form

Whit has man stolenf she InquiredJo replied that he had not stolen any-thing MTU Wallace was not at a tornntinuo Im gled yo catched him Intime sho said But Ill put the polls onhw trncU onyv y Weel Maistor Burcular

hit y got to say fur ycrselMrs Wallace went on for a period when

n rnrnged victim roared Do you know-o I am Wha said Mrs Wallace

My name Is Dobbie sold he Im mailcurious to ken whit yer natur Is saidMm Wallace Ill tell you now that

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Mrs Houston has compromised herselfsaid Dobbie Whit said Mrs Wallace

It for a single moment Thenshe strode forward and struck him overthe head with her umbrella splitting hisfelt hat and crushing It over his eyesyln fur you I she cried He ran down thegarden walk and she after him YlnlTwal Threel Fowerl she called At thefourth blow the umbrella broke at thohandle Dobble escaped I doot Ive beenwhit the gentry ca vulgar panted MrsWallace as she returned to the cottageThe thought did not seem really to distress

herMr Ogllvys testimony was hardly neces-sary to the proof that Mrs Wallace knewhow to mako scones Mrs Wallace oncedropped In upon her niece when Jess wasengaged in the manufacture of some of thisdelicacy Site found the young womanIn the kitchen with her print sleeves rolledup and her arms up to tho elbows In flour

Preserve usl Are ye tryln yerhaunat tho bakln noo she exclaimed seatingherself In the arm chair

Scones replied Jess with a somewhat rueful smile

Yere the yin fur tryinlDyou think I never succeed auntWhiles Ye canna oxpeo to ken

mucklo aboot keopln a hoose cfterIn an office But nao doot yell learnLets see yln o yer scones lassie

Jess with even more color in her facethan the fire had given it passed one ofher productions to the old ladyand awaitedher verdict with dire forebodings

Wallace fingered the scone bit It

swallowed the fragment with exagger-

ated effort and much facKl contortionand solemnly laid the remainder on thetable

Her verdict was delivered in a singleword Cahootcby

She was not always nt pains to flatterJew We have been enterJalned by thostory It is very naturally effectivelytold and Jess and Mr Ogllvy ami MrWallace and the others are better com-

pany than plenty that Is more pretentious

She pondered

work In

Mrs

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Japan Described by the Up nr rThrough the courtesy of Mr Sellchl

Tegima Commissioner General of Japan-to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition wehave received an interesting and Instruc-tive volume of permanent value Japan In

the Beginning of the Twentieth Centurywhich U published by the Imperial Japa-nese Commission It has been preparedfrom official sources by Mr Hnrukl Yamawakt Secretary of the Department ofAgriculture and Commerce and a member-of the commission and was printed inEnglish at Toklo While a quaint word

out here and there the English is verygood nnd tho statements are clear and com-

pactIn over BOO pages the present state of the

Mikados empire is put before us Firstwe meet a description of the land andnatural features of the administration ofthe land tenures and a statistical account-of tho population Then follow tho manyIndustries each with a brief history and ac-

count of how It la carried on agriculturesilk and tea raising stock breeding forestrymining the fisheries and the many manu-

factures There are recent statistics to befound here but tho articles are more thanabstracts of figures they intelligentgeneral descriptions of how each handiwork is carried on

In the same way in the succeeding arti-

cle on trade finance communicationseducation and so on the explanation of howmatters changed from the old to tho newmakes the figures attractive The account-of the army and navy is very brief At thoend is a supplement devoted to the island ofFormosa The book forms a convenientand authoritative handbook on Japan andthe author has contrived to elucidate as hegoes on a great many terms and miscellaneous matters that usually puzzle foreignreaders in things Japanese It is perhapscharacteristic that book should bebound In silk

Other Dooki

If the reader does not take him too seri-

ously Mr Wolf von Schlerbrandsthe Welding of a World Power

Doubleday Page Co may prove In-

structive as well as entertaining It Is

made up In part at least of magazinearticles and what Is not might just as wellhave been There is a good deal aboutthe Kaiser and about various phases ofGerman lifo told from a superficial jour-nalistic point of view where the author Is

bound to mako a telling point even at con-

siderable sacrlflce fact There Is nodoubt however that his hook will provemore readable to many readers than a-

more accurate scientific statement wouldHasty generalizations are attractiveThe author has opportunities to ex-

amine recent German conditions so thathis statements will have a value for per-

sons who already know Germany and areable to supply the needful dose of salt Forothers there is no particular harm if theytake Mr von Schlerbrands views In prof

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erence toOf unusual interest is the latest volume

of Mr Archer Butler Hulberts series onThe Historic Highways of America thofirst volume of The Great AmericanCanals The Arthur H Clark CompanyCleveland The story the canals hasa more tangible perhaps a more practicalmaterialistic Interest that of the oldIndian trails and the superseded mainroads though in point of fact the canalsare nearly as much historic survivals asthe others In this volume two Important

that connected the country east andwet of the Alleghenies are described

the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and therelatively shortlived Pennsylvania Canal-

A helterskelter chase round the worldafter a red headed young woman the light-est sort of frothy love story which properlybelonged In the days of summeris Mr John Harwood Bacons The Pursuit-of Phyllis Henry Holt k Co It makes-

no pretensions to anything but extremelightness amMs readable enough Readerswould enjoy It more without the two pict-

ures tho caddish selfsatisfied freshmanpresented an the heroat the beginning andthe fashionplate young womanat the end Nothing in the book gives

any excuse for eitherThe hunting tories told some years ago

In TilE SUN by the late H 8 havebern gathered into a volume called Fergythe Guide Henry Holt A Co illustratedby appropriate and unobtrusive decorntlve Illustrations by Mr Albert SD Slashfield There U plenty of fun as well assport In them which makes them wellworth preserving by those who know themand will make thorn certainlyfed withpleasure by thoss who have not met thornyet

Tabs of various queer animals from3o gulls to snails are told by Mr Charles

Frederick Stansbury In A Kittiwake ofthe Groat Kills The Orafton Press Inthe title story the author seems inclined-to indulge In the sentimental naturalthat U now fashionable most of theothers he limIts himself to a tt ment offacts particularly when describing his petanimals and the stories IOM nothing in

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PUBLICATIONS I FUIILICATIONSuu I

II

H men think thatshould be made

of cast iron I think that theyshould be made of rubber

that they can bev

stretch-

ed to fit any particular

j case and then springback into shape again

jf The really important-part of a rule is the ex-

ception to itA book for every American OLDGORGON GRAHAM

being More Letters from the Selfmade Merchant to His SonbyGeorge Horace Lorimer 150

1NAMBUCADOVBLEDAY PAGE CO THE WORLDS

WORK

Deliverance ELLEN GLASGOW Thebest novel of 1904 55000 sold In7 months llluttratttL flao

SOME

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covrmrt UiE

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pat hoe by that process He has a tale of ilittle hick with a wooden leg that will

to every one It Is good workare good too

Sore of the Stevenson flotsam and jetRan has been gathered Into a very prettilynotion up little volume The Story of iLie and Other Tales by Robert LouiiStevenson Herbert B Turner A Co

Boston There arc two other tales ThMisadventures of John Nicholson andThe BodySnatcher None of these places

would add to tho authors reputationif he had had any say about the matter he

would probably have preferred to leavethem In oblivion Still there lit the moderncraving for completeness to reckon withand many parsons be glaito add this volume to their Stevenson col-

lection A good portrait Is used for thifrontispiece-

The and addresses atmeeting held In commemoration of JennyJune tho founder of Sorosifl are printedwith portraits and facsimiles In a volumi

entitled MemorIes of Jane Cunnlnghan-Croly G P Putnams Sons A bio-

graphical sketch of MrsCroly by her brotheiis prefixed and a number of articles anc

letters by as well as tributes and lettenby her friends appended It might havibeen in better taste to bring out morestrikingly Mrs Crolys services as a pioneer

in newspaper work for women than as tnhead of what la now only one amongwomens societies but the memorial wll

prove acceptable no doubt to many women

as well as to Mrs Crolys personal friendsA new volume the sixth of the Americat

Jewish Year Book is issued undereditorship of Qyrus Adler and HenriettaSzold by the Jewish Publication Society ol

America Philadelphia This Is for the yearof the world 6565 which being Interpreted

means from 10 Sept 281905Among various articles of Interest it con

tains will be found a series of biographical

sketches of many Jews who have made

their way in the learned professions In

America and a short discussion of the

passport question as applied to RussiaSteadily the great undertaking publish-

ing the translation of the documents re-

lating to the Philippines Is being kept up

by tho Arthur H Clark Company of Cleve-

land We have received Vol XVII of

The Philippine Islands 14831808 edited

by Emma Helen Blair and James Alexander

Robertson This includes papers coveringthe years 1600 to 1016 Inclusive In an

appendix wo have a useful piece of editorialwork a very complete list of all the Gov-

ernors of the Inlands from Miguu Lope de

Icgazpi in 15C5 to Diego do los Rios who

made the flral surrender of Spanish authority to the United States In December ISB8

Mark Tvains antivivisection ntonA Dogs Talc is published by itself by

the Harpers in a very thin volume with

four Illustrations In color by W Q Smed

ley Why the artist should have selected

the portraits of well known political men

for the bystanders in his frontispiece we

cannot make out The story Is very pain

ful and may be accepted as an argumentby persons who will shut their eyes to

what modern science is really trying to do

with experiments on animalsProf John Genung of Amherst

College Injects himself Into the Book of

Ecclesiastes with Words of KohelethSon of David King In Jerusalem Hough-

ton MUffin A Co To his new transla-tion he prefixes an Introductory study ofover 200 pages the text Itself In large typetakes up part of 100 pages the greater por-

tion of which to nlnotonthsof each Is taken up by Prof Genungsown running commentary We should say

that the inspiration and poetryiof Koclo-

lastes can still best derived from thoKing James version of the Scriptures andthat a proper understanding of the bookwill be greatly aided by letting alone ProfGenungs Introduction and abovo all his

appeal and

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and

the

many

tin

Sept 1004 to

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commentaryMiss Aurelia Henry of Ynlo University

gives us a thoroughly scholarly piece ofwork In The Do Monnrchla of DanteAilghleri Houghton Mlfflln A Co Thisis a translation of the treatise with a shortIntroduction and compact but Instructivenotes and will be a great help to those whocan only rend Dante In English translationWo regret that the author has not providedthe Latin text of the original The mono-

graph would then have boon complete Initself and a real American edition ofDantes tract

An excellent treatise on Earthquakesin the Light of the Now Seismology byMajor Clarence Edward Dutton 17 S A

has been added to the Science Sorleapublished by John Murray in London andG P Putnams Sons It gives nn account-of tho modern theories about earthquakes-and their causes of tho many Ingeniousinstruments devised for measuring anddetecting commotions of the earths sur-

face and of tho deductions drawn from theobservations but also contrives to relatewhat happened In the more notable earthquakes that have occurred Thopart uf tho treatise is no clearlyfchntanybody can understand it

J ho Into John essay on How theUnited States Became a Nation Is re-

published by Ginn A Co with illustrationsand many portrait ro nuspoct ao a school

or for auxiliary reading For thatpurpose It Is well adapted-

In Royalties by lethal MoDougUlFleming H flevell Co we find some

of till moro commonplace stories ofroyal children related such as thoMof thePrinces In tho Tower end the EmpressMaud and the Dauphin Louis XTCL and

N

scientific

flfI leos

hook

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tho little King of Rome A good many oftho tales seem to be inspired by famous

ml

hanoi I anti Infant Don Balthazar They probably will Interestchildren-

An elaborate History of Education In

the United Hlates of moro than six hundredclosely printed pages has been written byProf Edwin Grant Dexter of the Univer-sity of Illinois Macmillons Tho authormodestly but wo think needlessly apol

for being so brief It seems to he a-

very well done piece of work presentingcompactly a great many interesting factsand should prove useful book of referenceWe regret to see however that the ex-

pectation seems to be entertained that Itmay be used as a text book Surely theburden of pedagogical lore has been madeheavy enough for unfortunate teachersMust they be compelled besides to loadthemselves down with tho post efforts andpresent statistics of education in America

A volume of connected miscellanies byvarious hands is added to tho AmericanSportsmans Library in Guns Ammuni-tion end Tackle Macmillans The firstarticle Is on The Shotgun and Its Handlingby Capt A W Money tho last Illustratedin color on The Artificial Fly by MrJohn Harrington Keene Between thesewill be found essays on the hunting rifleon the theory of rifle shooting and on thepistol and revolver which read more liketechnical papers The contrast betweenthe tone of these and that of Capt Moneysarticle should be Instructive to one curious-to understand the English sportsmanspoint of view

Books neoelvrilA DeUe of tho Fltllet Mrs Clay edited by

Ad sterling Doubleday Pate ALyrics of Childhood Edward Mayliujh

The ration IreuFree America Dolton IUU I S Dickey

Co Cblcaio-Ecboei from the Oleo In Divers Keyi William

Pare Carter Oration PressOld Gorgon OrAbam George Horace Lorlmer-

Doublelay pale CoOahrtel Praels Cattle Jones

D Turner CoA flock of Uttle noy Helen flaws Brown

Houghton Mirflln CoLawrence IIouitnan Mac

mlllaoaThe Little Kingdom of Home Margaret E-

Sangtter J K Taylor A CoReport of the Philippine Commission 1XU

Three vols Government Printing omee Wash-ington

York State Department of Labor TwentiethAnnual Report of the Bureau of Labor Statistics1902 Report of toe Commissioner of Labor ofthe Tree Employment Bureau In New York CItyof the Board of Mediation and Arbllrallou Reporton the Growth of Industry In New York Threevols The Argu1 Company Albany

If I Were a Girl ArAin Lucy Klllot KeelerFleming H Revel Company

Letters of an Old MetnoJIst to His Son to theMinistry Robert Allen Fleming H KevellCompany

Children of the Pores I certoo M YoungFleming II Revel Company

Love In Chief Rose K Weekes HarpersThe Flower of Youth Roy Dolfe Gusto

HarpersThe Story ot the live Rebellious Doll

Nesblt Illustrated by K Sturaf Hardy ErnestMiter E P Dutton Co

The Remit of the Culebra Mountains EvereltMcNeil K P Dutton Co

The War Chiefs Frederick A Ober E PButton ft Co

How We A Clothed John Franklin Chamber-lain Macmtllans

The Mastery Nark Lee Luther Uacmlltans

Orraln S Levett Yeau Longmans Green4 Co

nALttO SAYS liE WAS irflOVG

Handwriting Experts Testimony In CaieDismissed Policeman

Solomon Cohen who nearly ten yearsago was a policeman attached to the WestIZith street station and was dismissed-by the Department when James J Martinwas Commissioner had a retrial yesterdaybefore Deputy Commissioner Llndsloy-Ho Is to be reinstated because David

paintings of childen like Children-of the

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Alias Her-bert

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N Carvalho tho handwriting expert whotestified at the first trial made many im-

portant changes in his testimony when hetestified yesterday

Cohen was dismissed from the force onFeb 5 189i He was tried with aevehother policemen who were accused ofhaving run in a dummy In taking tho civilservice examination and the physical ex-

amination At the first trial the policesurgeons book the civil servicetion papers uiul oth r reourdu were allegedto be In handwriting which was not Cohens

testimony supported thisCohen has fought and ro-

il YesterdayCapt Ward who ten years ago was aman and now retired but atthat time a sergeant testified that on

Nov 30 1891 saw Cohenname to tha payroll They said that

they had been toMeakin now dead In order to get-

a cose against Cohenas a witness ex-

amined tho original signatures and paperssubmitted in the case thatopinion the handwriting was all of tho same

CohenAt the former trial he said I had

some feeling in the case 1 have thoughtsince man had had andone him so five called him

office and a careful investigationat to handwriting As a madoan affidavit for to in histo tho Legislature I am convinced thatall these signatures were made him

I have this case carefullysaid Deputy Commissioner cameto the that Cohen

in the machinery of a perfervidinvestigation and an

as happens in the course ofupheavals

however wasP rMerved Cohenmania reinstatement and back pay

8o1cently a act through thelaturo authorizing his

pay-day

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YOU SHOULD READ

The

A NOVEL

HENRY LEWISAuthor of The Ross

Uniform Edition

Illustrated In colors by JAY HAA1BIDGE Price

A story full of dramatic incidents absorbing in its interest ex-

traordinary in its inner of the great game of national politicsis more thoroughly a novel than Boss in the

velopment of love It will be heard fromwhere The President and The Boss arc novels that compel-

a reading

The Pagans ProgressB-y GOUVERNEUR MQRRIS

HOW THE PAGAN FOUGHT AND LOVED-

is shown in the singularly graphic pages of

this fresh and stirring romance of the days

WHEN THE WORLD WAS YOUNG

Illustrated by JOHN RAE 100Facsimile Frontispiece in Colors

Have you read

CAPN ERI By JOSEPH G LINCOLN

Publishers A S BARNES AND CO

PUBLISHED TODAY

George Barr McCutcheonsN-

EW NOVEL

GRAVSTARKAUT-

HOR OF QRAUSTARKCASTLE CRANEYCROW c

Beautifully illustrated In color by Harrison Fisher

FOR SALE EVERYWHEREDo-dd Med Company Publishers New York

Now Ready SCRIDNERS

OUR BIC CAME-By Dwight W Huntington With 16 fullpage illustrations rom

photographs 200 net Postage 15 cents

The cordial reception which the to Mr Our FeatheredGame his to preparation of a complementary volume carried out on thesame lines and Big Game the of view of theman who is also a lover of nature work is divided into four books treatingrespectively of the individual members of the Deer Family the Ox

and theCat Family The appendix technical informa-tion likely to be useful to a game

AN IMMEDIATE SUCCESS

Henry SctOi Merrlmani THE LAST HOPET-

his is not the best of all Mr Merrimans novels It Is the bestbased on French History that has appeared in the last five GlobeNew York

Charles Scribners Sons New YorK

PresidentBy ALfRED

SI50

tI

Fifth dillaIo tutrsils Canada

BEVERLY i

i

yearsThe

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AmericanagIun

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MISS RIVES NEW NOVEL

THE CASTAWAYIS

TIlE STORY of TIlELO VES ofLORD BYRON

nil Jlalllorv tr

AI I-

JII iiIFTHE t-

B1SHOPSCARRJAGEll-

I a tho

C OU dbts d100r aeiiith ion ci

atRt Zrnlnf fleesmr TeaM Cefreeua

WOVE FOR nunso nninoKHoard of Ivillmato Appropriate RinfHK

to Draw Preliminary IlansThe Board of Estimate yesterday npprc

printed 110090 for surveys ni preliminaryto a final consideration nf tho proposal tobuild a across Spuyton DuyvilCreek to mark the trlccntennlnl of thodiscovery of the Hudson Hivor liy HenryHudson-

A delegation from The Bronx also appeared before the hoard to urge the adop-tion of the plan for tIm preservation of theold burying ground at Hunts Point InThe Bronx The delegation explained thfttseveral dJstlugulihed men had been burled I

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PUBLICATIONS y u

In tho old graveyard Amont bodies whichlie thero are those of Joseph Hodman Draketho poet and of Magistral Jesup whotiled in 1C08 anti who vn ono of the twooriginal patentees of a great part of theterritory now Included in The Bronx

Itecent maps of that part of The Bronxshow that tho city intends to run a streetthrough tho old burying ground Thoplan suggested is to discontinue Whittierstreet between tho InMern Boulevard andEast Bay nvenuo and acquire ai a smallpublic park about six ncrns between thoEastern Boulevard last Jay avenueLongfellow and Halleck slrel

The hoard referred the matter to ChiefEngineer Lewis for report and promised

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PlIDtlCATIONS

HARPERS BOOK ttEfrS

The GeorgiansT-he scene of Will N Harbeaa

nevi novel is that of Abner Dan-

iel and Abner himself with his

shrewd humor pervades the wholo

story The plot is wholly original

and has to do with characters largely

new to fiction It is the best story

of Georgian life one can call to mind

anywhere

The CastleComedy-

An engaging story of the time ofNapoleon written along comedy

lines The sprightly way in which

the story is told the dashing impu

dence of the hero and the charm of

the heroine combine with the beauty

of the volume make this book un-

usually attractive With illustrationsin color and marginal byElizabeth Shippen Green It is anideal gUt book

A Dogs Taleby Mark TwainT-

his wonderful littledog story byMark Twain is published in attractiveholiday style with illustrations in

color by W T Smedley It is aperfect type of a perfect story Itis told from the dogs standpoint andmakes a wide appeal to all classes ofreaders

Imperator-et Rex-

A new book about Emperor William

of Germany by the author of TheMartyrdom of an Empress whoseknowledge of royalty in Europe is

unrivaled and whose entertaining

style has been shown in her widely

popular biographies of the Austrian

royal family The new book pictures

the home life and human side of thisUnusual

The Flower ofYouthT-

his is by far the most importantbook that Roy IfcLEe Gilson haswritten It follows the delightfullines of his former successes andean-be compared only with

is full of quaint humor and senti-

ment and the parts dealing withchildlife are handled with Mr Gil

sons inimitable touch

Love inChief-

A tale of English rural life withthe most winning of heroines DollyFane is altogether charming withher sturdy independence and originalways The dialogue is frank aadbright

HARPERBROTHERS

The Leading Art Magazine

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