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10 theMinneapolis *\t |pU4#t w^^ Mi Ml^l*- S^^w^ffijfrj^ffiP^pp ^qkffiffiHgSfeffi Women*s Outfitters. PEARCE'S 403-405 Nicollet Av. After Christmas Sales FURS, FUR LINED COATS, CLOTH COATS, TAILOR MADE SUITS, SKIRTS, WAISTS AND TRIMMED HATS. BIG BARGAINS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS. You will save money here if you have been waiting1 for end of 1905 sale. sNONE SUCH I IN 2-PIE 10C PACKAGES IMEHRELL-SOULE CO. JSYRACUSE ,NEW YORK $? I! All Bath Robes, House Roties, Kimonos, Shop ping Purses, Lace Neckwear, Children's Coats, Trimmed Hats, Costumes, Tuesday at exactly HALF PRICE The Best Spread for the Daily Bread EXCITING SOCIETY ADVENTURE BY HAROLD MacGRATH.Harold *MacGrath is clever at inventing stories of adventure with modern society set tings. Hi latest is Hearts and Masks, the story of what befell a young man who for a lark decided to attend with out invitation a masquerade ball of the Blankshire Hunt club near New York. There was a novelty about the plan that appealed to the adventurous spirit ol' the young man. "Two packs of play ing cards had been sent out as tickets one pack to the ladies and one to the gentlemen. Charming idea, wasn't it? These cards were to be shown at the door, together with ten dollars, but were to be retained by the recipients till 2 o'clock (supper time), at which moment everybody was to unmask and take his partner, who held the cor responding card, in to supper.'' A young lady, also caught by the oppor tunity for excitement, decided upon a course similar to that of the young man likewise a deft thief who saw in the function a chance to add to his collection of diamonds. One can easily see the chance for complications and romance. Mr. MacGrath makes the most of them, tells a moving story and leads .up to a fittin climax. Harrison Fisher' illustrationg that illustrate add to the pleasure of the books. The Bobbs-MemU Co, Indianapolis. *w .J A SPECIMEN OF CONCENTRATED BOY.Perhaps children are not orig- CK inal pedagogs say they are not never r theless no two are exactly alike. They fevmay not be original in individual C. BRAND BUTTER Made under sanitary conditions by THE MINNEAPOLIS MILK CO., Cor. 9th Av. 8. and 6th St. ,HE DIARY OF A BRIDE.A tempting title that, whether to man or woman. That it should arouse the curiosity of womankind seems wholly natural, and who is to say that it is less, instead of more, natural that it should arouse the curiosity of mankind? And there is added reason for local curiosity as to the book |M.mmMwmwwmiirrwjj fact that the author well known and otheris cities of the state, being Mrs. Charlotte Sherwood Martindell of Hamilton, Ohio, a sister of Mrs. A. W. Eankm of this city. Mrs. Martindell's name does not appear on the book's title page, which suggests that the story, in part at least, is per sonal experience, and the vitality and vividness of the narrative support such an assumption. Title, author, substance and style, then, give the book an es pecial "claim on the interest of Minne sotans. The diary begins with the beginning of bridehood, recording those question ings which must come to every thought ful girl who has just stepped across the threshold of a new life, and from the first is more a record of thoughts than of events. As thoughts and events aie closely related, however, the story is just the kind to show most satisfac torily to the reader the bride's daily life and its impulses. There is much bright philosophizing on the marital relation, on home life, domestic economy and kindred subjects, much dreaming, some ebullient girlish extravagance, and, naturally, a considerable show of sentiment. But all is pervaded by a wholesome common sense, which gives assurance that the almost ideal honey moon pictured is of the kind that does not endsurvives the cares which put an end to diary-keeping for most brides, and is good to know about. The reader is charmed with the life and exuberance of the story, and pleased with its intuitive sanity. Friends of the author will be pleased to know that the book has already gone into its second edition. Thomas CroweU &, Co New York Monday Evening,' MOST DELICIOUS PIES, FRUIT CAKES, PUDDINGS 5 AND COOKIES. a Tel] the- whole story when vou write a Journal want ad It will be seen $ by the proper persons and you will get satisfactory answers not omit & $ the points the reader will want to know about befoie he investigates Take $ $ a few inoie lines and publish the substance of your proposition. You will i be surprised at the results &$3*SxeS$SxSx$S HNOEMKAi! ARTHUK STBINGEK, I fc Author of "Lonely O'Malley." ^.'/ff'OOf y'Mt* traits, but they certainly offer infinite variety their combination. Lonely O'Malley, by Arthur Stringer, is the record of a boyhood not unlike many another, but possessing its own peculiar combination of traits, traits which in the ensemble make pure boy. It is a study of more interest to him who has passed the boy period of life than to him who is still in such period. Lonely is nbt one of the precocious yariety, al ways doing the right thing at the right time, and often attaining the heroic. He is, in fact, a good deal of a rascal in miniature. His opportunities have been limited, and he acts according to his lights, and for that reason he is pure boy, and vastly more interesting than the made-to-order variety. He is worth knowing whether as a study in boyhood or merely as a means of di: version by the reader who wishes to get away from the artificial for a glimpse at realism in boy life. Houghton, Mifflin & Co Boston. $1 50. "-*T3S THE SIN OF THE FRENCH NOVEL WRITER.French fiction writers have sinned and sinned gravely against the French national character. Miss Betham-Edwards in Home Life in France, answers the comment of an English friend, to the effect that "ac- cording to French novels, the only oc cupation of men over the water is to run after other men's wives," with the statement that so gravely have French writeis of fiction sinned against truth and the fitness of things that "the average novel must be accepted as a travesty, no more resembling French domestic life than the tradi tional caricature of John Bull by ourplicity neighbors resembles the typical Eng lishman." The writer adds: "Th plain truth of the matter is, that aver age existence, in France is too unevent ful, too eminently respectable for sen sational handling.'' One reads this de fense of French home life with great interest. But it is not all defense it is for the most part a straightfor ward account of home life in France covering almost, if not quite, every phase of that interesting subject. It is "It is difficult for a woman to keep a secret, and I know more than one man who is a woman." La Fontaine. I $ -$ A prettily appointed Christmas wed ding took place this afternoon in Bethlehem Presbyterian church when Miss Ethel A. Hobart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Hobart, and Granville A. Trier were married. The elaborate decorations were very suggestive of the day and a great star of greens and electric lights blazed above the altar. The balcony rail was festooned with greens awd bright-berried holly wreathed the lights. Palms and ferns were grouped about the altar and to the right of the green tangle was a great basket of pink rqses. The Misses Patterson gave a program of nuptial music as the guests arrived and were seated by the /ushers, Evan L. Hobart, George Hamley, Arthur Hoak and Mell Hobart. Miss Elizabeth Pat terson sang "Beloved, It Is Morn," and Miss Clara Patterson, A Mad rigal." The bridal chorus from "The Eose Maiden" was given by the Misses Elizabeth, Clara, Edna and Adelaide Patterson, and Miss Edna Patterson played the "Lohengrin" bridal chorus as the bridal party entered and sounded "Traumerei"as an accompaniment for the service. Misses Catherine Crocker and Belle Kiehle, the bridesmaids, were in white dotted swiss with pink sashes and earned clusters of pink roses tied with pink ribbons. Miss Ruth Hobart was her sister's maid of honor and her gown was of pink flowered net over white silk and she also held pink roses. Little Marion Amy, the flower girl, was in white dotted swiss and she scattered rose petals in the bride's path. Miss Hobart wore white airline trimmed with ruffles and valenciennes lace. Her veil was caught with a wreath of white rosebuds and her flowers were bride roses. Roy T. Tyler was best man and .the service was read by Rev. Stanley ^B. Roberts. An informal reception1 booko followed at the Hobart residence^ 913 West Twen tv-flfth street, to which only the inti mate friends and relatives were bidden. The rooms were decked in the holiday colors with the exception of the dining 100m, where a color scheme of pink and green was carried out. Messrs. aWd Mrs. Hobart and J. A. Tyler received with bridal couple, and Misses May Kilbourne and Lillian Fowler assisted in the dining room. The out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Everett and the Misses Maude and Ruth Ever ett of Redfield, S. D., and Miss A. I. Hobart of Boston, Mass. There was considerable Christmas the reading omind which can onl serve broaden the and delighy the reader. K^-, wi /uwht A C. McClurg & Co Chicago. $1 50. *!,l,",.1 MOUNTAIN-CLIMBING IN AN EASY OHAIR.There is a good deal to be said for the mountain-climbing that one may do while sitting by his fireside in his easy chair with a book. It all depends on the book and the ease with which the reader's mind yields to the spell of the author. A book of the right sort is In the Heart of the Canadian Rockies, by James Outram. Mr. Out-matrimony, ram's health being impaired, his doc tor prescribed mountains in allopathic doses. The result is something for which the author needs to make no apology, as he does 'in a preface. All that need be said is that it is a book that makes mountain-climbing via the easy chair route easy and delightful, tho it does give one a touch of that kind of mountain fever which only real mountains will allay. The fine illus trations contribute much to both effects. The Macmillan Co New York. $3 00. ""^TSZ AMUSING COMPLICATIONS GROWING OUT OF A SEARCH FOR A FOURTH WIFE.Alice McAlilly has told The Larkins Wedding, a humorous story of a double romance growing,, out of the efforts of a three time widower to find a wife. Silas Bnndle, decides that for his fourth wife he would like to have* a buxom girl. He goes to Widow Larkins with a request for her daughter's hand. The widow likes the idea, and Patty's future is arranged for without her consent. Soon after\ Charlie Baxter, a lover of the girl, returns from a long absence, and Patty's troubles grow serious. But Silas is a sensible man, despite the fact that he seeks to marry a fourth time, and all ends well for Patty and her widowed mother. Moffat, Yard & Co., New York. $100 REALISTIC AND ENTERTAINING STUDY OF GIRLHOOD.There is no attempt to make a "heroine" of the central character in Ruth Kimball Gar diner's The Heart of a Girl. Margie Carlin, that same central figure, is just a plain, wholesome girl of the middle west. She comes of a good family. Her father is a newspaper man, and her mother is a lady in the good old fashioned sense of the word. Margie wins the heart of the reader at the outset of the story, and she at least maintains the reader's interest until the close. If she loses some of her win someness, some of her grip upon the reader's affections, that is but due to psychological processes that take place in us all as life robs us of the sim and sweetness of childhood, and it speaks well for the author's art that it all seems so natural. The reader fol lows the girl thru her school days to her graduation from the high school, which one familiar with the scenes sus pects is in St. Paul, and realizes that the story is true to life, the life that is familiar to thousands and the results of which are seen in the women of the middle west today. Tho there are no heroics in the story, the book ig one of absorbing interest, is full of laughs, and THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. spirit manifested at the Commercial club today for any number qf people entertained at dinner at the pretty clubrooms, which were gay with Christ mas greens. Among those who had guests were Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Salis bury, who entertained a party oft ten Messrs. and Mines. P. G. Hanson, C. F. Hatch, Thomas W. Kenyott, who had groups of five Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hack had four guests, as did Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Allen and. James Rob ertson. Judge and Mrs. C. L. Smith and Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Sessons had par ties of six guosts and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Parker entertained seven. The Com mercial club orchestra played during dinner and thru the afternoon. *Miss Tressia Virer and Otto C. Stelz ner were married Saturday afternoon at the home of the officiating minister. Rev. G. L. Morrill, 3356 First avenue S. Miss Lillian Lundeen and Guy E. Wolfe were the attendants. Miss Lun deen wore blue organdie and carried white roses and the bride was in white batiste and her bouquet waB of bride roses. Miss Katherino A. Monahan enter tained a group of friends Friday even ing at her home on the island. Misses Nellie and Estelle Purdy of St. Paul assisted Miss Monahan. New Year's afternoon Rav MasW of Dayton avenue, St. Paul, will give a.roller skating party and New Year's night Miss Edith Prescott will give a dancing party. Misses Catherine Mona han, Estelle Purdy and Margaret New man will have charge of the favors. A group of university girls had a Christinas luncheon at Dayton's tea rooms Saturday. The guest of honor was Miss Jeannette Baier. PERSONAL AND SOCIAL. "Be' E. BusLnell was called to New York last eveninsr by the illness of his brother, Robert Bushnell. Mr. and Mis Lee J. Tenipleton will leave next week to spend the winter in San Antonio and Gaheston, Texas Minneapolis riople at New York hotels are as follovs- Hotel Astor, G. L. Davis. L. 8. Braleted. A. r. Fulton. H. W Hoffman. Mrs. S. D. Cargrill Imperial, G. H. League Mr. and Mrs. Samuel V. Morris. Jr., are spending the holidays in Texas CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY House of Hope Church, St. Paul, Holds Elaborate Commemorative Services. House of Hope Presbyterian church, St. Paul, held services yesterday morn ing and evening commemorative of the fiftieth anniversary of the church and also taking the form of a Christmas celebration. Dr. J. A. Moffatt, president of Wash ington and Jefferson college and mod erator of'the Presbyterian general as sembly, occupied the pulpit at each service. An extensive musical program was a feature at each meeting. At the morning service, following the Gloria, Dr. W. H. W. Boyle, pastor, read a par agraph of a prophecy from a sermon by Rev. Edward N. Neil, the first pastor, in which he predicted the future great ness of the church, now realized. Dr. Boyle bespoke even greater things for the House of Hope parish in future years. The morning sermon of Dr. Moffatt gave an explanation of each of the termsthe way, the truth, and the life. In the evening Dr. Moffatt spoke from the text John xiii., 17, "If ye know th*se things, happy are ye if ye do them." Dr. Moffatt left this morning fos St.cream SEASON'S OFFERINGS FOR THE WORLD OF READERS $ Diary of a Bride/' a New Book by Woman Well Known to Minnesota Lifelike Boy Story by Arthur StringerNew Novel bylMarie Van Vorst. By W. P. KIRKWOOD. the people and the life, so accurately delineated, are good to know. A S. Barnes & Co., New York MERE MAN," a medley of quotations, compiled by Jennie Day Haines, with out prejudice^whether from Mariw Corelli, Israel Zangwell, John Oliver Hobbes, Emerson, Holmes or Voltaire. Spinsters, wives, widows, queens, ar tists and servants of sovereign woman are opposed, page by page, by mere man in the guise of bachelors, husbands, widowers, kings, and poets. Love, coquetry, cooking and fads are among the subjects analyzed for both sexes. Paul Elder & Co., San Francisco. $1 00 net COPYRIOHT, 1 Frontispiece by Gordon Ross "Sovereign Woman Versus Mce Man Paul Elder and Company, San Francisco YULE BY THE INGL.B. Like hopes faint-faltering from the lip The last leaves drop from off the briar, Where now the shriveled, ashen hip Shows once the red rose lit its Are But by my genial ingle glows Her cheekthe summer's fairest roseI The garden copse is reft of songh No meadow choir salutes the sun The wan night long, the white day long, Pale Silence keeps its orison: But where my ingle sheds Its cheer Her voicesweet autumn's ownI hear! The branches writhe against a vault With tattered vapory streamers strewn* Where outcast winds make mad assault, Blurring the vespers of the moon But by my ingle, in her eyes, I see spring's hyacinthine skies! So all the year meets at the Tale, Transmuted by Love's wonder art His glass, as doth a magic pool, Mal^e rime and bloom seem one at heart Yule by mj ingle means" for me The crown of life's felicity! Clinton Scollard, In December Smart"* Set. WHERE PAIEY TALES' WERE REALLY SO. I wish I'd lived long, long ago," When there were mermaids in the sea, And brownies would have played with me, And fairy tales were really I'd like on Santa Claus's sleigh Next Christmas eve to have a hitch, And I would love to see a witch Upon a broomstick ride away. Of course, there still are lots of knights, And there are princesses besides, But nowadays men don't win brides By going off on dragon fights I wish I'd lived long, lohg ago, %^kt When fairy tales were really so. k*~ OfeMary Street, to December Lipplncott's. Louis, where he hopes to help complete the arrangements for the union of the Cumberland Presbyterian church with the Presbyterian church of the United States. The semicentennial commemoration services will be continued in the House of Hope next Sunday morning. Dr. Boyle will continue a historical review of the church. Letters will be read from five former pastors. A statement of the history of the many activities of the church will be presented, showing the very extensive benevolent opera tions of the church in the past and in the present. The healing household remedy. Satin skin should always be handy. 25c. SOVEREIGN WOMAN VERSUS Desmond, roughly stated, is that a taste, if not some taint, of real lifethe life that sins and suffersis neces sary in order to make a truly sym pathetic and helpful character. Miss Desmond of the story has grown to mature years in seclusion, a winsome creature knowing nothing of the tainted atmosphere of the life of "so- ciety." Then she gets "si months of life" and ever afterward, if one may make a sweeping inference, she is a "tender, compiehendmg com forter." One is not disposed to quarrel with the author's position, ex cept to say that not very many live such a life of seclusion as to shield them completely from the taint of life. The story is brief, the complications are natural, the characters well drawn. In short, the story is a bit of modern realism, the chief pleasures in which are that it is clear cut and that it ends well. The Macmillan Co, New York. $150. VITAL QUESTIONS DISCUSSED BY A PROMINENT PHYSICIAN.It is worth while to pause awhile and listen to a physician of ability and repu tation discussing some of the questions of society and the individual, such as are found in Vital Questions, by Henry Devight Chapin, M.D., of New York. Tho the author takes some of the best known questions, they are the ones which come up for continual answer and doubt, such as- "Inequality," "The Child," "Health," "Educa tion" and "Success." The discussions are free from motive, except to find the underlying truth or set it forth in plain terms, and are ably handled. Thomas Y. CroweU & Co., New York. $1.00 net. December 25, 1905. rmws^0t^^fTto$pt%FfflL f^&Q^&J^ MERCHANTS OF HNE CLOTHES. Entire Clot Coa Stock We offer at $25 the choice of our entire winter coat stock up to $60except a few fur lined coats. This will include TASTE OF LIFE NECESSARY IN ^\CAX.*r*AAiA.f,/.f*J^K*JCKX^KexitJC.3iK3 THE MAKING OF A HELPFUL j* CHARACTER.One naturally looks for a thesis in Marie van Vorst's books, and the thesis of her latest novel, Miss THE MAGAZINES Much Good Reading In the Century. It Is not easy to choose for special men tion any one feature of the January Cen tury but most readers are likely to turn first to the new chapters of Mrs Humphrey Ward's "Fenwick's Career," chapters which tell of the Christmas sea son in the Westmoreland county, of Pen wick's growing rebellion against all thearticles conditions of his earlier life, and of Phoebe's setting out for London. There are short stories by Israel Zangwlll, Elsie Singmaster, Katharine Holland Brown, Grace S. H. Tytus, Beatrice E. Rice, Florida Pier and Mary Hallock Foote. Publication of the late Secretary Hay's study of "Franklin in France" comes with happy timeliness, just as the nation Is about to celebrate the two hundredth an niversary of the birth of Franklin. The address was prepared for delivery in Chi cago several years ago, but ill-health caused it to be laid aside. Other articles of timely interest and importance are the discussion of "Railway Rates and Indus trial Progress," by Samuel Spencer, pres ident of the Southern railway (the other side to have a hearing in the next num ber of The Century and Oscar King Davis' narrative of that remarkable feat of engineering, *'The iAicln Cut-off." The Century begins the year with no letting down of its standards of illustration, An Automobile Number of Everybody's. ,The January Everybody'* is virtually Velvet Goats Persiana Jackets Newmarket Coats 1 Choice 3.t Pp Fancy ^louse Coats I y*J2^Kr Empire Models ^fc^AiL. Opera Coats g|\ ^B^^ WBi Box Coats in mixtures and broad- I "*H B^L cloths B|^ Mm Hf^k Fur Lined CoatsCollarless and \U^ MT ^*^B with fur collars /sE WL^m Fitted models in Kersey, Cheviot HHI ^t^r and Broadcloth Novelty Coats in various textures and styles Plxl "uuQ I The remainder of the stock up to $35 is divided into three large groups and includes our usual end of season bargains. A About 300 new coats, some in the department less than a week, Group 2, Group S, Group Uy $20 $15 $10 A Sample of the Offer. On this clearance no exchanges, refunds or approvals. Corner Nicollet Ave. and Sixth St. A HURON, 8. D.A few nights ago, the stock barn on the Irvin Thomas farm, fire miles feouth of this cit was destroyed by flre, to gether with sixteen head of cattle belonging to Clarence Oobb, the occosant of the farm. The total loss is about $2,000. There was noit insurance. "J. A. CLOW & CO. Builders and designers of artistic furniture for the home. Interior decorations and draperies. 806 Nicollet Avenue People-f I* CAPTAIN A. T. MAHAN, Author of "Sea Power in Its Eelation to the War of 1812." Little, Brown & Co., Boston. *j yrrtrxw* an "automobile number" There is ex cellent reading in Arthur N Jervis' spir ited article, "Car Coming'" with its desion. scription of the Vanderbilt cup race and its discussion of the present high and significant status of American automobile racing. On the other hand, Eugene Wood, in a sprightly essay, "Do I Want an Au tomobile?" treats the same subject, Charles Edward Russell, who has been studying European solutions of American problems, tells, in a remarkably signifi cant instalment of his serial, "Soldiers of the Common Good," of the phenomenal development of municipal ownership in Europe. There is also a brief but pithy instalment of Mr Lawson's "Frenzied Finance." Other special articles, fiction, poems, and humor complete the number. The Technical World Magazine for Jan uary vindicates its right to be called "A Magazine of Action." The r*ader needs no technical education, nothing more than the ordinary desire to be informed as to where and how great things are being done, to find this magazine a valuable part of his regular reading. The leading article it. an account and forecast of the great Pan-American railroad system, which is to stretch from Alaska on the north to Cape Horn on the south. The author, Edward B. Clark, is an experi enced Washington correspondent. Other are of like interest. 800,000 Jews In New York.There are 800,000 Jews in New York 105,000 ar rived during the last year and many more are coming. The writer, Adolphe Dan ziger, LL D., in The Metropolitan Maga zine for January, has lately made some very careful observations on this sub ject of immigration in England, Germany and Russia, and he says the battle for existence, the sanitary and moral con ditions In New York are of a nature to fill one with the keenest apprehension. The January Metropolitan is a special holiday number and offers much tempting reading. The January Smart Set.In her novel ette, "The Outsider," which opens the January number of The Smart Set, Beatrix Demarest Lloyd has written a romance of Italy, a story of literary charm and distinction. Short fiction in great abundance is to be found in the same Issue. Arthur Symons, the dis tinguished English critic and poet, is rep- w9 IRONWOOD, MICH.The Michigan State Telephone company is making exceUent progress with the construction of its new long distance line from the Marcuette iron district and the popper coantry to the Gogebic iron range, and la exDected that service will be instituted some time in January. resented by an essay, "Aspects of Ver lalne," wherein he writes sympathetically the unfortunate French poet, and gives nine hitherto unpublished transla tions of his lyrics. Longevlty and Liquor.It has come to be generally recognized as a fact that the alcohol habit is one of the main factors in determining length of life, says Rene Bache In Pearson's Magazine for January. Figures furnished by insurance companies in England show that the average life of the total abstainer is nine years longer than that of the drinker. Another article in the same magazine tells the true story of the Jerome cam paign in New York. It is by Robert Adamson, who was at the elbow of Mr. Jerome thruout the fight. The magazine is long on fiction and special articles of interest. The Iron Trail for December Is an at tractive Christmas number, beginning with "The Bulletin Board," a department of editorials of interest to the railroad world, and continuing thru story and poem and special artiole to the transfer point, which is headed "Transfers." This second number of the magazine is an im provement over No. 1, and marks the purpose of the management to climb tho grade of success. The National Geographic Magazine fof December contains an interesting xai comprehensive article on "The Parsee* and the Towers of Silence" at Bombay. India, by William Thomas Fee, United States consul general "China and the United States," by Sir Chentung Liang Cheng, Chinese minister to the Unitec* States "What Has Been Accomplished By the United States Toward Building the Panama Canal," by Theodore- P. Phonts, chairman of the canal commis "Russia in Recent Literature." bv General A. W. Greely, chief of the United States signal office. The Christmas Money MT One way you may j^ spend the Christmas money which so many of you will receive this morning, so that it will bring to you during the year the greatest amount of real pleasure, happiness and en tertainment, is to send one dollar of it today, to us, for McCiure's Magazine for one .year. II you are prompt, you will get the November and December numbers of this year free, which means the beginning of Carl Schurz's Reminiscences, the beginning of Bay Stannard Baker's Railroad Bate ar ticles, Kipling's great airship story, Jack London's great Love of Life story and all the good things for twelve months besides. All news stands, 10c, $1 a year. McClure*s Magazine 44-60 East 23d Street. NEW YORK til i i i 4 T.