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The New Scribner Fiction

JOHN FOX, Jr.

THOMAS

NELSON PAGE

F. HOPKINSON
SMITH

EDITH

WHARTON

RICHARD

HARDING DAVIS

ALICE DUER
MILLER

FREDERICK
PALMER

FRANK H.
SPEARMAN

W. W.
JACOBS

A. T. QUILLER

COUCH

W. A.

FRASER

CYRUS

TOWNSEND

BRADY

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A Doctor of Philosophy.

"Thoroughly absorbing."-Boston Transcript. $1.25.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, New York

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NEW SCRIBNER BOOKS

Senator Hoar's
Autobiography of Seventy
Years

First impression, November 21.
Second impression, December 8.
Third impression, December 15.
Fourth impression, January 10.

"These two large volumes are of extraordinary interest, written not only with that ripe and abundant knowledge which Senator Hoar has acquired in his long life, but with informing eloquence and humor and a mellow lightness of touch. They show him the sound scholar."-Philadelphia Press. Two volumes, $7.50 net (expressage extra).

General Gordon's

Reminiscences of the Civil

War

First impression, October 1.
Second impression, November 11.
Third impression, December 15.
Fourth impression, January 6.

"There is not a page in the book that bears the stamp of prejudice, not a sentiment which can offend any honest man. It is a big, brainy, fullblooded, manly American story, passionately thrilled with a high spirit of American hopeful ness."-St. Paul Dispatch.

$3.00 net (postage, 21 cents).

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The New York Tribune says: "President Hadley's discussion of these themes is throughout, on a high plane, worthy of him and of the great University he represents."

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CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, NEW YORK

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The Bookman for 1904

HILE, during the year 1904, THE BOOKMAN will guard jealously its conceded place as a magazine which speaks out fearlessly and with authority on literary subjects, its programme for the year includes a number of features which will appeal to Americans whether interested or not in books and bookmen. We do not intend that one of our readers shall forget for an instant that THE BOOKMAN is not merely a magazine of Literature, but that it is also a magazine of Life.

One feature which will undoubtedly prove of permanent interest and importance will be:

This work, which will appear seTHE STORY OF rially in THE BOOKMAN during TWENTY YEARS 1904 and 1905, will describe the most By Prof. Harry Thurston Peck significant events that have occurred in the political, social, and intellectual life of the nation between the time of President Cleveland's first inauguration in 1885 and the end of the McKinley-Roosevelt administration in 1905.

While replete with historical material and aiming at historical exactness, the narrative will be free from the conventional constraint of formal history. It will give a graphic picture of a period which has transformed nearly all the conditions of American life; and it will show in their true perspective the occurrences which have made this period memorable.

A peculiarly attractive feature will be the vivid, impartial and analytical estimates of conspicuous men of the time-statesmen, financiers, labour-leaders, journalists, authors, and educators—and the author will avail himself of those innumerable side-lights of anecdote and intimate personal impression which conventional historians are accustomed to ignore. The human interest of the narrative will therefore be continually felt by all its readers, who will find in this work, as a whole, the fascinating story of a momentous national epoch written with perfect fairness, frankness, and lucidity.

THE AMERICAN

This series will describe the lives and work of the men whose arduous endeavour, zeal and highly trained intelligence have brought the American newspaper to its present high

NEWSPAPER

state.

No reader who appreciates the vast influence of the press to-day will be willing to miss the above-named feature of THE BOOKMAN.

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The first paper in this series will deal with The War Correspondent. It will tell what the war correspondent is, what his qualifications are, how he starts for South America or for the Balkans at a moment's notice, what his equipment is, how he gets the news of a great battle, and, more important still, how he gets the acquired news on the wire and transmits it to his paper. It will be a narrative teeming with the intimate side of great events that have made history.

The second paper of this series will tell of the newspaper men at Washington who send the news of the nation's capital to Europe and to the remotest corners of the United States.

SHORT STORIES and

Last May we began the custom of SERIAL FICTION including in each number of the magazine one short story. It was our aim, inasmuch as we printed but one, to make that one as distinctive as possible. This department, in the few months of its existence, has included such contributors as Mr. Jack London, Mr. Brand Whitlock, Miss Grace Denio Litchfield, Miss Louise Forsslund, Miss Mary Moss, Mrs. Annie Nathan Meyer, and Mr. George Hibbard. We have found the idea a good one and we are going to better it. We take this opportunity of announcing that we want short stories and that we want the best.

The REVELATION
OF HERSELF

which began serially in the November number, is a real love story told in letters. These letters are not senti

mental twaddle nor are they morbid analyses of the emotions. They are the simple straightforward letters of a girl to her lover-letters with the ring of truth and real sincerity.

The author of this serial, Mary Farley Sanborn, is by no means a new figure in the literary world. Several years ago her books enjoyed a wide popularity throughout the country. For a long time, however, her pen has been idle, and The Revelation of Herself is the first fruit of her renewed activity.

Professor Frank Moore Colby, whose striking articles on various phases of literature and life have been so widely quoted in the newspapers, will during 1904 contribute to THE BOOKMAN a series of papers which, we are sure, will more than justify the contention of those who rank him as the equal of Chesterton, holding with the brilliant Englishman a unique place in contemporary criticism.

Dr. Frederic Taber Cooper will contribute each month an article in which he will sum up those books which show the rapidly changing tendencies of contemporary literature.

These and other plans that we have made for the strengthening of the magazine enable us to promise our readers in 1904 a better and a more far reaching BOOKMAN than ever before.

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Putnam's Spring Books

Matthew Arnold

An Exposition and a Criticism. By WILLIAM H. DAWSON. 12mo, with frontispiece.

An endeavor to give unity to the ideas and theories, the admonitions and warnings of a man who combined with poetic insight the trained judgment of the thinker and the prac

tical sense of the world of affairs.

The Angler's Secret

By CHARLES BRADFORD, author of "The Determined Angler," etc. 16mo, illustrated.

The combination of

scenery, pure air, nat

ural exercise and general exhilaration, these go to make the Angler's Secret.

Mediaeval England English Feudal Society from the Norman Conquest to the Middle of the 14th Century.

By MARY BATESON, Lecturer of Newnham College, Cambridge. No. 70 in The Story of the Nations. 12mo, fully illustrated. Cloth, net $1.35. Half leather $1.60 (postage, 15c.).

Christopher Columbus

His Life, His Work, His Remains. By JOHN BOYD THACHER, author of "The Cabotion Discovery," etc. 3 vols, royal 8vo, comprising about 2000 pages and 300 plates.

Vol. III (completing the work) Just Ready.

Price per vol, $9.00 net.

"The most complete presentation of the story of Columbus. One of the most notable features is the facsimiles of important documents seen in print for the first time." Brooklyn Eagle.

The Works and Letters of
Charles and Mary Lamb

Edited by E. V. LUCAS.
7 vols, fully

$2.25.

illustrated. Each, net

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Liberal Christianity

Its Origin, Nature, and Mission. BY JEAN REVILLE, of the Theological Faculty of Paris. No. 4 in the Crown Theo

No. 10 in Our logical Library.

12mo, illustrated, net $1.20 (by mail, $1.35).

Previous issues are:

French, German, Dutch, Italian, Swiss, Russian, Spanish, Danish and AustroHungarian Life.

Previously issued:

I-Babel and Bible. II-Virgin Birth

Christ.

of

III-My Struggle for Light.

NEW YORK

LONDON

G. P.
P. PUTNAM'S SONS L

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