m fw \w 8ATUKDAY EVENING. JANUAKY 25, 1902. THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL.

and Blerstad and Church, Moran, Column, gieat battle or a dog fight The sketch of ten South sea islands to the British empire, Jervla MtEntee, Inness, Wlnslow Homer, Marion Crawford is good It seems Craw­ an illustrated account of the art of jumping Chase, Dow, Inman, have shown that theie ford attributes his' skill in writing English on skates, and a thrilling description of a is inspiration and artists to be inspired by It laigely to the letteis his mother u«ed to write ride on a handcar from the summit of the to portray the splendors and beauties of to him when he was a boy at school Of Ham­ Oroya railway in Peru, 15,666 feet above sea Ameiican atmosphere There are Intel es*hig lin Gat land, Ine author l elates thai- he plowed level, English reviews and their principles, with of a century ago, the results of European of the west fiom the time he wa* a babe at portraits in black and white of John Wilson study on American art students found ex- the breast He never writes until he is in Cioker, co-foundci of the Quarterly Review, piessloa in their canvasses at the Centennial the writing lood Of Winston Churchill,who Rev Sydney Smith, John Wilson, of Black­ exhibition and othei art exhibitions aftei- has suddenly come to the front as a success­ wood s, J G Lotkhart of the Quarterly, | AUTHORS AND CHARACTERS . wards, the trend to technical perfection being ful wiiter of fiction the author says no other Sir William Moleswoith of the London and «it»»i«mii(tiiim«t't>iHmiitntmMiiMii)m(iu»»wiiniintiiinii>ilV very pionounced in the new school wherein American author of iecently acquired fame Westminster, John Morley and W L Oourt- are many artists who do little besides reflect­ has been followed about bv so many hen- nev of the Fortnightlv The great English _HE brilliant Mrs Craigie at a recent meeting of the New Vagabond's club ing foreign art The authoi Intelestlngly worshipers He iegaids Rlcherd Caivel ' reviews had sharp struggles before they got 3 in London, where -were assembled many eminent litterateurs, discoursed criticizes the aitists of the Wer school, nota­ as an extraoiCinanly powerful story, and a footing The quality of the reading fur­ I interestingly upon what she called "an unaccountable association in the bly Rider, whom he credits with the cieative sajs veiy li'Mi about "The Crisis " Tlnre nished has nevei been suipassed, and they re­ I popular mind between a writer and her heroines " faculty are portraits of all the authors mentioned tain all the dignity which In the earlier day I She illustrated her subject by citing cases of authors, the most correct The second volume is devoted to Ameri­ in the book distinguished the older ones Mr Matz illus­ trated paper on Dickens and His Illustra­ and high principled women, who, having Introduced -nomen and men deficient in can sculpture, the art of illustration the condition of American- art in Eurooe, an! tors ' is a strong feature of the number In­ n *••*••••*• moral ideas in their novels, as women deserting their husbands and children and there is a chapter on latest phages in Ameri­ cluded are several portraits of Dickens pub­ elopiug with infatuated rakes, have been credited with the possession of vicious can art In sculpture we can boast of such Minor Mention lished foi the first time from old photo­ inclinations themselves "It is unreasonable for readers to suppose that an author names as Crawford, Powers, St Gaudens, i graphs Mr Matz' paper is crowded with in­ approves and holds up for example every type of character which he or she may Joel T Halt Stoiy, Harriet Hosmer, H K L C Page s Mrs Craigie And, continuing, she remarks "Plain facts, with­ Browne, Rogers, French, Ward, MacMon- seivice for childieu la the publication ot and yet he savs in closing that he has a thousand and one things more to write about out comment, from a woman, are considered very alarming indeed This is why nies In illustration Thomas Nast was an ' The Rosamond Tales, ' a volume contain­ early development of the civil wai and he him George Gisslng supplements this article she is too often driven, in mere self-defense, to frame her narrative in solid moraliz­ ing six-teen shoit stories intended for children, was our first great cartoonist La Targe and hy Cuyler (Reynolds, authox ot Janet, a •'K th one on DicKens m Memory, m which ing She may. perhaps, tell anything she pleases, but she must make it quite clear Howard Pyle are at the front as illustrators Character Study The author has long been he inteiestingly tells of his impressions upon on every page that she is pained and shocked by the moial instability of mankind Frost and Vedder, Abbey, Kejiyon Cox, Cline- a student of the child mind and its opera­ reading The Old Curiosity Shop" and "Pick­ and the disastrous fascination of her own deplorable sex " hnst, Smedley, C D Gibson, Remington, tions He writes in simple words of two wick for the fast time * Included are pic­ Parrish, Howard Christy are noted among syllables and his effort Is to cause the child tures of Dickens reading The Chimes ' to his friends m 1844, of Devonshire Terrace, where And yet Mrs Craigie knows that it is peifectly natural that "plain facts with­ those artists The author gives much space to reason and inquire and to acquire natui- to Whistler, who stands high as an etcher, Dickens wrote many of his masterpieces, and out comment, from a woman," the kind of "facts" to which she has special refer­ ally a good style of diction Bishop Doane but lives in London Veiy properly the of Albany writes a highly commendatory in­ one of Bleak House where Diet ens often ence, are somehow always repulsive to allr readers except those with tolerably de­ author condemns the tone of many American troduction The illustrations add very great- stayed and worked The ' Real Conversation" praved minds ' Plain facts, without comment" from a man, do not have the same artists residing in Europe, who disparage lepellant effect But, when a woman produces a novel of the quality of George their own country and pride themselves upon Moore's "Esther Waters," the reader is, to say the lea&t, greatly perplexed en­ being the product of foreign schools. He be­ lieves that we should have more thinking deavoring to dissociate the author from the apparently libidinous or vicious cre­ <$> DICKENS AT $130,000 PER SET ations between the covers of the book painters like Hunt and Fuller and Inuess and others who were ' insensible to mercenary <$> temptations and faithfully accomplished the <$> The sum of $130,000 seems a comfortably high price for a set of Dickens, Mrs Harrison, whose pen name is "Lucas Malet," was present at the meeting ideals of their youth and whose gen>us was but that is the price placed by the publisher on the St Dunstan's Illuminated of the club and, as she is the author of "The History of Sir Richard Calmady," a powerful enough to stiuggle against the in­ Dickens, work on which has been In progress for over a year Besides being book in which vice is described and painted with fidelity tp detail found in Meis- difference of a whole nation ' These volumes a most complete edition, it will be notable as the most costly publication ever are profusely illustrated souler a canvasses. Mis Craigie no doubt, had her in view when she spoke of the put before the public Altogether fifteen sets will be printed, eight to be sold popular tendency to associate authors with characters in their books In "Sir Little Pilgrimages Among the Wom­ in this country, and seven m Europe Each set will contain 130 volumes, and Richard Calmady" there is no sign given that the author is "pained and shocked" en AVho Have Written Famous <*> the cost is, therefore, at the rate of $1,000 a volume Three years will be over the pictures of her own painting, which may be described as ' plain facts with­ Books. By E F Harkins and C H L required to complete the work Six volumes are now in type, and four com­ Johnston Illustrated Boston L • Page 1 <*> out comnien* " It is comprehensible bow George Sand took easily to this Kind ol plete sets have been sold. The publisher is George D. Sproul o£ New York. & Co Minneapolis Nathaniel McCarthy •work Hei mannish tendencies In dress and habits shut her out of French society Price, $1§0 of the culthated and polished kind and brought her into the company of men more This is a remarkably attractive book It in­ <^<8x$x$>nn There are de tion, ' is ia southern story of post-bellum developments of prehistoric civilization in ?••••»•«»«>• Matthews, his daughter, the well-known lightful sketches of Mary E Wilkins and times, by Terry Gordon, who introduces two Asiatic Russia Late results of Pompehan Oar Demoted Friend, the Doff. By lineaments of Kate Chase Sprague The Mrs Amelia Barr and of Mollie Elliott Sea- or three love affairs and a wicked English­ excavation are giyen and there is an inter­ Sarah Knowles Bolton Illustrated Bos­ author portrays very interestingly the presi­ well The latter is a Virginian by birth, man, a lord, too, who robs a southern gentle­ esting account of the inscription found in the ton L C Page & Co Minneapolis Is. dential ambition of Secretary West, which brougnt up in an atmosphere of books and man of his bonds while he was entertained ancient tunnel leading into the pool of Silo- McCarthy Price. ?150 was destined to be rudely shattered, and of good literature in one of those large, old at his house, and contrives to have the lover am, which verifies the statement made in the Mrs Bolton has certain'y produced a dog Portia s overreaching solintude in his be­ rambling southern country houses, where of the gentleman s daughter, a very fine, Second Book of Kings and the Second Book book par excellence and one watch the half impelling fcpr to unfortunate interference, there was a library containing many books honest fellow arrested and jailed for for­ of Chronicles s The number Is well illus­ ABSOLUTE SECURITY. friends of dogs will immensely appreciate is a study well presented A feature of the which Thomas Jefferson bought in France and gery, which he had nevei committed The trated She not only relates the most interesting story of a noticeable quality is the love epi­ England for her great-gra ldfather, Judge author mgeniusly gets these things straight Municipal Journal and Engineer gives a stories about the value of dogs as protectors sode of which Virglria the secietarj s niece, Tyler The portraits of the twenty-one women ened out and the various loving couples are very interesting account of the city of Spring of property and human life, but she deinon- is the central flguie in the book are very fine and make an at- nappy The portrayal of the negio servants field, Mass , and is government, which seems Genuine CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS stiates *he instinctive canine gratitude, caaine ti active feature about the Lee mansion is very well done At to be a very excellent and economical one, gnef and affection She has collected a large The Wild Fowlers, or Sporting SceneB the period of the story many negroes clung the mayoi being vested with unlimited veto number of stories fiom the newspapers and and Characters of the Great Lagoon By Florence. By Grant Allen In two vol­ to ithe old plantations where they had been powei on all legislation, a two-thirds vote umes Illustrated Boston L. C Page born and biought up New York F. Tenny­ other sources and suggests that the dog has Charles Bradford, author of The Deter­ &. Co Minneapolis N McCarthy. Price, being necessary to pass any measuie over his most bear signature ol /6L~?^*£ never received from man the care and grati­ mined Angler ' New York G P Put­ $1 50 per volume son Neely Co 114 Fifth avenue head Springfield has a city forester who tude due to bim bbe devotes a. chapter to nam s Sons Minneapolis Ni McCarthy The simple word "Florence ' is so sugges­ The Ameman Book company has issued IOOXS after the welfare of the trees and pre­ citations from state statutes embodying very This is a very interesting book of sporting The Art of Teaching by Eraer3on E White, vents mutilation and the hitching of horses T«ry small mmA a» east/ experiences, detailing attractively the ex­ tive of art and letters that these elegant cruel treatment of dogs and sugg^ts that volumes need no longer title The author LL D , authc of a series of mathematics to trees He has organized the public eohool to take •* svgaxb i the friends of the dog obtain the passage of ploits of some New York sportsmen on and and ' Elements of Pedagogy, fto The au children into a tree protection society There along the waters of Long Island It is dedi rightly says that the old town is a ' museum laws making the dog propertj undei the of its own history ' and in giving the leadei thor lays down three fundamental ends of the are interesting illustrated atricles on the new FOR HEADACHE, ( law The illustrations aie numerous and at cated to Giovei Cleveland, who is something teaching piocass ay knowledge power and biidges at Washington and on the proper of a sportsman Doctoi Bradley is conspicu­ the details of the contents of that ' museum ' tractive he opens up the history of Florence and we skill, and he sets torth how these ends can requirements for street signs and fixtures, SEE FOR DIZZINESS. SEE ous as a crack shot fiom beginning to end, best be obtaia^d, examining the vanous meth­ the latter containing some excellent sugges the activities being on the Great South Bay discover why the city on the Arno became FOR BILIOUSNESS. Jnr>l» 0* Harvard. By Reginald W such a center of art It became the intellect­ ods with caie and then laying down the tions to preserve the symmetry and artistic Kaufmau Illustrated bj Edwards Boston of Long Island at first wheie the party hid guiding pnn<~ipie3 in all the phasei- of train­ aspect of the street, notably in the placing of in the high salt meadow grass for black duck ual and artistic capital of Tuscany duiing GENUINE FOR TORPID LIVER. MINE L C Page & Co Minneapolis X Mc­ the middle ages, after being a Roman muni- ing, fiom primary leading upv and showing names of streets The number is packed full Carthy Pi ice, Jl GO. These sketches remind one of Frank Forres- the important part psychology pla>B in the with information., not the least feature being FOR CONSTIPATION. The author in his preface says his purpose educational piotess an entertaining account of the Berlin fire In writing this book was simply to tell a <^><$>^<5>ts and diamatists of the oeventeenth 253 Broadway temptations everywhere, but there is a dif­ The mystery of the publication of such inordinate quantities of worth­ century He was so precocious that he could ference in degree and persistence In this less novels has never been solved Possibly the authors bear the expense speak Latin when five years old There is iiiiimiMtitH «»»»»«•••« mt,«»»t,,« book the career of Jarvis, the Harvard real sweetness m such poems as "I Prithee $ student is set forth in a strongly didactic of publication, but this is not very probable Occasionally an author has so much confidence in the merit of bis or her best book that after it has been re­ Send Me Back My Heart' and "Honesx Literary Notes way The man fell morally before he went to Lover Whatsoever " the university, and there he went from bad jected by all the publishers the author still has the courage to place it on to woise, chiefly through the agency of ' The Field of Clover" is a book of fairy the market But the number of authors who do this Is, I believe, very small tales by Lauienct Housman, with very at­ The Lippmcott company, of Philadelphia, women He went into the deeps ot vice, but It must be that publishers as a rule are the most benevolent of men, and are will publish in conjunction with the Dents, of during his career, he encountered a woman tractive engravings in black and white by London, the authorized version of the Bible who was courageous enough in her love willing to publish books merely to please the authoi s, and with the moral Clemence Housman (Ne#r York John Lane, in twenty-four volumes, of which the first, to take him after she had full knowledge of certainty that the books will never repay the cost of production I have never The Bodley Head pi ice, $1 25 net) The the Book of Genesis is readv This Is edi Sore Muscles cover design is in gieen and gold The con­ ted by the distinguished scholar, Professor Jarvis' career of vice A woman must love <$> personally met with that sort of publisher, but if he does not -exist how shall <$> Sayce a man much to do this But he had risen spicuous story is "The Bound Pnr-cess," de­ <3> we account for the publication of hundreds of novels that are without a single <§> scribing the adventures of a yoith who had An appeal has been made in England tb to a stronger life of victory and had put the merit'—London Letter to New York Times ^ protect the tomb of Robert Louis Stevenson, old life away as a foul thing Better, indeed, been adjudged a simpleton by his wise par­ at his former Island home, in Samoa, by an it would be if pure womanhood could always ents who turned him out into the world His inclosure to keep out the relic hunters, who be saved from living with married men who <«x»$x§><§><$*$>^^^ name was Noodle, but being befriended bv are the only menace to its peace various wonier v orkeis, he becomes very Frank Norris, who has written some suc­ have defiled their lives by repeated deadly cipium in Roman times The Tuscans are cessful novels, warns people not to take up sins But it is not so to be There is some tei s enthusiasm for good shooting, and out of wise and ultimctelj marries a princess The all the fun and excitement th*> inquiring descended from the old cultured Etruscan story is a good specimen of the medein won writing fiction as a business, as it does not strong writing in this book and the chap­ pay Very few novels are sold to the extent , reader gets a lot of valuable information race and inherit the art instinct In the re­ dei tale Much of it is prose poetry There ters on athletics and class collisions aie o' vival of learning in the fifteenth century, of over 2,500 copies, and 2,500 copies yield only special interest. about hunting and shooting wild fowl, which are othar attiactive tales, as 'The Pas­ $250 in royalties He thinks a novel selling cannot help being of service afield Florence was conspicuous for her scholar­ sionate •uppet, ' The Wishing Pot" and to the extent of 2,500 copies is really very The Story of a ioang Man. (A Life of ship, while up to the close of the thirteenth ' The Feeding of the Emigrants successful Christ) by Clifford Howaid, with a foreword The UTew England Society Orations. century the town had effected no great artistic W D Howells accurately says of Maxim ' by the Rev Amorj H Bradford, p D Addresses, Sermons and Poems Delivered achievement, not even having a great cath- Gorky's Foma Gordyeef ' that "it is a work erdal It had become important commerci­ that saturates the soul with despair and Illustrated by W L Taylor and T Guern­ Before the New England Society in the blights it with the negation which seems the sey Moore Boston L C Page & Co City of New York, 1820-1885 Collected and ally, but in Dante's time the artistic spirit The Magazines only possible truth under the circumstances Minneapolis X McCaithj Price, |2 oO edited by Cephas Brainerd and Eveline W asserted itself and the constructive period The late Hoi ace E Scudder completed his The object of the author, as he states m Brainerd In two volumes New York The commenced with the building of magnificent MeCluies (New York, 141-155 E Twenty- important literary work by his fine biogra ' his preface, is to present the human side of Century company Price, $5 per set churches and a great cathedral The erec­ fifth street) for February is a very atti ac­ phy of Lowell, one of the most chaiming Christ, view Him in the light of His human The orations and sermons and poems in tion of the Church Santa Croce by the Domi­ tive number, a leading feature being an books of the kind ever published He dis ity, and emphasize His wondrous personali­ these handsome volumes contain mu^h of the nicans was the beginning of the glorious illustrated paper by Ray Stannard Baker on tinguished himself as editor of the Atlantic efflorescence of art in Florence The author for some years and proved himself a worthy ty 'as * (main, yielding tip His life for the best and stiongest and mos* suggestive "Marconi s Achievement, ' of which he can successor of the noted literary men who had sake of an ungrateful and iniquitous world— thought of many of our sturdiest thinkers enters into the details of the construction of write intelligently, having gone to Newfound­ preceded him in that chan He had a won­ a sacrifice trascendeat inscrutable The and men of action Mr Stedman> in his many of the buildings, notably the cathedral, land and witnessed the experiments and ob derful gift for writing children's books and author, in pursuance of his purpose, ends all brief introduction, says that the granitic which was built in honor of "Our Litiy of tamed from Marconi a full account of his juvenile histories that concerns Christ with the death on the conviction of the early utterances now re­ the Florentine Lily' and was so named The aerial telegiaphing achievements Marconi Samuel Smiles, author of the widely known cross, as the fulfilment of His mission- The called was the basis upon wnich grew, from old cathedral was Tuscan-Romanesque in having found that electric waves follow tne book "Self Help " recently celebrated his authoi relates enough of the life of Christ decade to decade, a hospitable structure, style, while the new structure is Gothic So curvature of the earth, expects no difficulty eighty-ninth birthday anniversary The and of his miracle working powef* to suggest touched with beauty, warm with patriotism, through the two volumes we enter structures book has been translated into seventeen lan­ Omeda Oil sending signals 6,000 or 10 000 miles as easily guages His divinity, and* his aim Is to let the ques­ inscribed with ancestral tradition, but stead­ closely associated with great names Mke as 2,000 There is a very attractive llius tion of His divmitv be de-ided by the life fastly open to Increase of light " "Granitic Michel Angelo, Galileo, Cimabue, Perugmo, The correct treatment of sore trated paper on Lieutenant Peary s "Cam­ TWO ALMANACS and works Of coutse, from the Christian conviction is good It as because this "gran­ Fra Angelico, Giotto, Andrea della Robbia, paign for the Pole," by Sturgis Rand who standpoint, the mission of Christ was only itic conviction," this sturdy fealty to high Titian, Albert Durer, Lorenzo the Magnificent details his progress so far Ppary's most im­ "The New York Tribune Almanac and Po­ muscles or tendons is very sim­ completed by His resurrection and ascension principle existed and still exists that this So many great painters and sculptors and portant achievement is the discovery of the litical Register ' was ifiist published under The author stops at His death There are nation has been brought through all the storm architects had to do with the making of insularity of Greenland The art feature of the title of "Political Register" by Horace ple. First take a good warm eighteen full-page plates and marginal ilhis and stress of its manifold vicissitudes and ex­ Florence The galleries contain contributions the number is wonderfully attractive It is Greeley, in 1838 and was intended, as he said tiatlons The cover design is in white and ists to day the wonder of the world because from all old-world lands where art has had on Raphael and his work, by John La Farge, in his announcement "mainly to embody the bath before going to bed, and gold of its facts accomplished Looking over the development and nurture The author has who includes photographs of Raphael's great­ election returns of that year and compare names of the twenty or thirty speakers in­ taken pains to show the reader how he may est paintings as "The Marriage of the them with those of some preceding year" then wipe yourself dry. This My Strongest Case. By Guy Boothby, cluded in this work one is impressed with see all the beauties and glories of Florence. Virgin," the large "Holy Family" in the This was before starting the Tribune, but the author of Dr Nicola, ' etc Illustrated by the mental power, the lesources of wit and The illustrations are numerous and attractive Louvre, Paris, the "Slstine Madonna ind reception of the little annual was such as to opens up the pores. Then rub Brldsman and Hurd Boston L C Page wisdom, the fearless adherence to Christian There is so much to see and study va Flor­ ' Madonna ol the Chair,' and The Vision ot justify its continuance- each succeeding year, & Co Minneapolis N. McCarthy Price, principle characteristic of the men The ad­ ence, that it is difficult, as the author says, Dzekiel " There are stories by Alfred Olh- only 1842 being excepted It went for a while Omega Oil into the pores, keep­ $150. dresses were delivered on Forefather's Day, to assimilate all the objects to be seen These vant, Josephine Dodge Daskam, Hamlin Gar­ by the name of the Whig Almanac, and in This is a very good detective story—one of during the period indicated and are prefaced books, however, tell the reader, if a tourist, land, Luclla Lathrop and Mary Stewart Cut­ 1856 took the name of the New York Tribune ing up a brisk rubbing for sev­ the kind few readers can resist The author, by a sketch of the origin and early life of how to go about Florentine sight-seeing in ting A feature '«» William Allen White's It is a valuable compendium of political, who bas given us so much of Nicola in his the New England Society of New York the most intelligent manner paper en Cleveland commercial, industrial, financial, educational eral minutes. If you have timo other novels, drops him in this story and con­ One may read in these addresses the domi­ The Smart Set's completed novel is "The and sporting information These are the gen­ structs a very thrilling omrrative of the find nant thought of the day when they were de­ eral topics A great variety of subjects are when you get up in the morn­ 1 Little Pilgrimages Among the Men Flash of An Emerald," a very thrilling story ing of a treasure vault among some ruins in livered Several of them reflect the disturb Who Have Written Famous Books.- of some New Yoik girls, with a detective treated, but it is particularly valuable for its southwestern China by three men, containing ance of the public mind before the war on By B F Harkins Illustrated Boston episode in "It The conspicuous fool in the statistical information as to politics, fraternal ing, rub in some more of tho a vast store of rubies, diamonds, pearls and the /subject of slavery The earliest ad­ L C Page & Co Minneapolis: N. Mc­ stoiy, Phihppa Fordt infatuated with a sleek societies, finances and trade gold The men were adventurers with rec­ dresses are flavored with the religious in­ Carthy. Polish scoundrel who posed as a martyr to "The New York World Almanac and Ency­ Oil. This cures sore muscles ords, and started on their quest from Singa fluence of the Plymouth settlement Die Among the twenty authors included in this 1 the cause of Polish liberty, allows herself to clopedia" was established in 1869 The num­ pore Their records were not very pious, preservation of such addresses as appear in volume, some ole and new favorites appear be drawn to the verge of moral ruin by bim, ber for 1902 is perhaps the best of this splen­ caused by hard work or by severe and, after the treasure was found, one of the these volumes is a duty The sketches run from William Dean How- but is saved by the ingenuity of a girl did annual It is prepared with great care men, Hayle, adioitly abstracted ninety-three ells to Winston Churchill The author admits friend The number is full of amusing and and is well named encyclopedia. It is a com­ exercise of any kind. Omega stones from the pockets of his partners and A History of American Art. By Sada- that cherished names are left out, like that entertaining things pendium of general Information, and has been irade good his escape, the booty being worth kichi Hartmann In two volumes Illus­ of the gifted Maurice Thompson, but, of The Open Court contains an elaborate de­ found verv valuable by those who have used | Oil is the favorite rub-down of a quarter of a million pounds The Search trated Boston L C Page & Co Min­ course, he could not include all conspicuous fense of the Jesuits by Henri de Ladevare of it from year to year Among the features for Hayle is what the storjr is about, the nar­ neapolis N McCarthy Price, $2 a vol­ Americas lite.a'y talent Howells is allowed Nice, who attributes the prejudice against of the current number are the principal trusts nearly all prominent athletes in rative being put in the mouth of Fairfax, the ume to speak through his own autobiography them within and outside the Roman com­ in the , deaths of prominent per­ detective It is very thrilling. No detective Art did not have much vogue in this coun­ chiefly Mr Harkins, however, informs us munion, to the acts and words of a few sons, statistics of railroads, banking, insur­ America. It keeps the muscles ever had more wily game to catch Mr Booth­ try previous to the founding of the National that Howelltf is "hospitable and genial," al­ extremists among them The order has been ance, census returns, political platforms and by has certainly written nothing better than Academy of Design in New York West and though he has been made an LL' D and is a disturber of the peace in and out of that election tables, sporting records, religious in fine shape. — this. Copley and others who developed some taieirt ' admired tbe world over Bret Harte and communion Pope Clement XIV decreed the and educational statistics, indebtedness and went to England West in some way, flour­ Henry James have apparently deserted t^ieir suppression of the Jesuits and through their finances of the leading nations of the world, Man's Mission on Earth. The Waahlngtonians. By Pauline Brad­ ished and made money there, although he native heath, for Harte, after his consular whole history, except at the commencement, and a review of scientific progress in 1901 DR. WYATT, Medical Book Free. ford Mackie (Mrs H M Hopkins), author was a mediocre painter, as the works he left life closed in 1885 at Glasgow, has lived in when Loyola and hia company went forth to "Know Thyself," a book for men only, reg­ of "A Georgian Actress," etc Boston L behind show Allston and Poale and Trum­ London, and James, who originally went to win the world for Christ in the genuine mis­ SUITB 3, 4 and 5, ular price 50 cents, will be sent free (sealed postpaid) to any male reader of this paper, G C Page & Co Minneapolis N McCarthy bull did a little bettei Copley did 3ome good England for his health, has lived there for sionary spirit, their intrigues, chiefly political, Service to South Dakota via 230 Hennepin Avenue, s Price, $150 work Gilbert Stuart was a true artist and New ninneapolls. cents for postage Address the Peabody about a quarter of a century past Bret have provoked Justifiable animosities and Manlrato. Medical Institute, 4 Bullfinch street, Bos­ This is a story of Washington life toward his portiaits of Washington attest his skill Harte's old stories are his best and keep brought explusion upon their heads, as in The Oldest and Most Relia- Sully lived to see brighter days for Ameri­ able Specialist in the North' ton Mass , established in 1860, the oldest and the close of 's flrsfa administration, his name alive Mr Harkins tells us in this France and Germany Dr Carus, editor of The North-Western Line is now run- ( best in America Write to-day for free book, can art Cole and Doughty were our pioneer west for the cure of when the war was dragging Its slow length book that James is a wonderfully hard worker the Open Court, comments caustically upon nmg through sleeping cars between Hhe CHRONIC, NERVOUS AND "They Key to Health and Happiness along and Washington was an uncouth city, landscape painters Both attracted notice in and his most brilliant writing is accom­ the paper of M LadaVeze An article of value Twin Cities and Redneld, leaving Minne- SPECIAL NOTE—For 40 years the Peabody England where they studied Durand and PRIVATE DISEASES. straggling and dirty, and full of barracks and plished only oj the hardest toil He works is Yorke Triscott's [ The Parthenon and Its 8 Medical Institute has been a fixed fact, and It moving troops and commissary and artillery Kensett, Gifford, Cropsey showed the gift of during the moining, writing very slowly Possible Restoration [' with illustrations The ^f^rivfng Redfeld^O a"m VsS M^ suffering from evil effect, of youthful will remain so It is as standard as Amerl- originality in landscape and the artists in that and arriving Keaneia a tu a m , passing m ind|Scretlon later excesses, recent ex- trains and forlorn negroes who had fied from and he rewrites laboriously and is some­ Parthenon nray be Irestored, but a restora­ through Tracy, Brookings and Water- ' e nervous debility, varicocele, unnat- Ca line of the later day, like Gay and Sonntag thing of a recluse Mr Harkins, after set­ Doaur The° Peabody Medical Institue has many **& the confederacy and slavery The story is tion will not bring back the work of the town, with connections at Brookings to urai discharges, lost vitality, failing memory, Imitators but no equals —Boston Herald. J*| ting forth Mark Twain's remarkable career, original constructors Had not the Venetians and from Huron . unfitness to marry, bloo*. skin, kidney or pri- r «<$>^8x$><3xeKmx^>3>$^^ says "The Hteiary historian mus' record in bombarded the Acropolis with their cannon Day Express making connections vate diseases are speedily cured. Drwyau r%f 4 his case the picdiglous achievement of an at the close of t^e seventeenth century, to tbrougn to Pie- leaves Minneapolis l^^^^^f^^i^f^ Every Woman author remaining for at least thirty-three dislodge the Turks, most of the beautiful 7 10 a m, St. Paul, 7 40 a. m except «tena^oup«™ COtt^ence# at moderate ex- WRITING TO ORDER years—and who knows how many more will original architecture on the acropolis would Sunday pense la Interested and should know follow?—in almost steady demand in print have been in plac^ to day New Ulm local leaves Minneapolis 4 20 | ADIES Buffering from any form of Fe- about the wonderful Not a few successful writers of the day—their brains already mortgaged and on the plat'orm " The author commends Pearson's for February has some attractive m , St Paul 4 60 p. m , connecting via j !• male Weakness, Painful or irregular to publishers for several years ahead—will read with envy of the courage Kasota and does not go beyond New Ulm. ' Sickness are quickly restored to healtn MARVEL Whirling Spray James Lane Allen tor bis modesty and re* fiction features* including a verv ''creepy" ThenewV««ta»ISyrU». Inten­ fusal to exploit his habits imd manners Al­ _ . , i ifin»nnnnito a on - i r»Dr- Txr»otWyattt viahaos YtnAhad a30n vearayears' -exoerienc«xperience ana of James Russell Lowell as revealed in the recent biography by Mr. Scudder. Hindoo tale by Sarath, Kumar Ghosh, and the Train leaving Minneapolis 9 30 a. m, been located In present offices 16 year«. Prov­ tion and Suction. Beit—Sw­ To bis liist eselt -to write every len has a steady success, although be cer­ neTial, "The Suitors ot Yvonne," hv Rafael eat—Most Convenient. St. Paul 10 00 a m tor Omaba. bas no ing himself an honorable, reliable »»a »nntva ItCbtuM laataatly. week, though I have no doubt that I shall be able to," and twenty-five years tainly made a bad break In "Summer in Ar- 1 abatini There ie, an entertaining illustrated physician. ^ , „ . Atk yomr draggUt for It. cady " Richard Harding Davis is defended connection at Kasota or Mankato for If he oannot supply tthl e <$» later he dechnei an offer of four thousand dollars a year to write four Ascription of CeeSil Rhodes' home in South points west on Chicago & North-Western C REE Consultation Call or write for list MARVBL, accept no from the charge of superficiality < He has not Africa, which bears the name "Groote Schur," • of qneBtions Home treatment sate and other, but send •wmn forU >t> pages monthly It was a great price to pay for , but Lowell decided written "the great American novel," but he or "Great ©am," .and Is situated five miles railway sure. * "> <8> that he could not afford not to pay it —«New York Times. For further particulars inquire at 413 OFFICE HOURS-* a. Vfc. f 9 ». m has created Van Bibber and written some from Cape Town Other features of interest ; excellent stories and has shown himself to be are an aeeouar~ol the recent annexation by Nicollet avenue, Minneapolis, 382 Robert Bandar io a. m. to IS- ^J s.;v <$&&&&&$&$Q>&&&&&$^ a first-class reporter, whether describing a Lord Ranfurljr, govewikop of New Zealand, of street, St Paul, or Union Depot in both cities. f .

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