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Prizes of £250 and £150, offered by Methuen & Company, Ltd., for the best original detective stories sent to them before May 19, 1928. Particulars in September WRITER.

Monthly prizes of $1,000, $500, $300, and $200, offered by the True Story Magazine, for true stories, each contest to close on the last day of the month, the final closing date to be August 31, 1928. Particulars in September WRiter.

Manuscript Poetry Book prize of $500 for a group of poems, not exceeding 700 lines, or a book of verse, by a poet with no book to his credit, to be submitted before May 1, 1928. Manuscripts should be sent to Mrs. Grace Hoffman White, 122 East Seventy-sixth street, New York. Particulars in September WRITER.

Prize of $25, offered by Poetae, for the best poem not exceeding fifty lines received by December 1. Particulars in September WRITER.

Prize of $20, offered by the Chattanooga Writers' Club, for the best nature poem submitted by November 1, manuscripts to be sent to Miss Sarah Stansell, 2101 Duncan avenue, Chattanooga, Tenn. WRITER.

Particulars in June

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Memorial prize of $100, and the Young Poets' prize of $100, for poems published in the magazine during the current year.

Prizes totalling $20,000 offered by the Columbia Phonograph Company for the completion of Schubert's "Unfinished Symphony," contest to close in July, 1928. Particulars in September WRITER.

Prizes of $200, $150, $100, $50, $35, and $15, offered by the Echo, for all classes of material used in the magazine from December, 1926, to November, 1927.

Laemmle award, consisting in $5,000 in prizes, for the best ideas for the advancement of the quality of moving pictures, contest to close December 31. Particulars in April WRITER.

Monthly definition contests conducted by the Forum, payment being made at the rate of five dollars each for all printed. Particulars in June WRITER.

Prize of $1,000, offered by the Chamber of Commerce, Hot Springs, Arkansas, for the best scenario for a historical pageant depicting the history of Hot Springs. Particulars in October WRITER.

Witter Bynner Undergraduate poetry

prize of $150 for the best poem printed in Palms during 1927, open to undergraduates in any American university or college. Particulars in November WRITER.

Prizes of the Poetry Society of South Carolina Southern prize of $100; Caroline Sinkler prize of $50; Society's prize of $25; Harmon prize of $25; Skylark prize of $10; and the Ellen M. Carroll prize of $15-all offered annually. Particulars from the Poetry Society of South Carolina, 62 Broad street, Charleston, S. C., or in July WRITER.

Annual poetry prize of $100 offered by the Nation, poems to be submitted between Thanksgiving Day and New Year's Day of each year. Particulars in February, 1923, WRITER.

Edith M. Stern, author of "Heart Strings," which she wrote in nine weeks' time, was for several years a manuscript reader for a New York publisher. "I think I unconsciously absorbed the technique of novel writing," she says, "by helping to pass judgment on some five thousand stories in manuscript form."

Mrs. Belloc Lowndes says that she works from character to plot, never from plot to character. She never begins a story until she has clearly visualized every detail, and she always knows what the end of the story is going to be. She seldom takes an idea direct from life.

In response to the recent request of the New York World for original short stories, more than six thousand manuscripts were received, and of these thirteen have been accepted. The World, recalling that O. Henry began his writing career with a story in the Sunday World, hopes that the publication of these original short stories may bring recognition to hitherto unknown authors who have real ability.

Little, Brown, & Co. have just republished "Jolly Good Times," written by Mrs. Mary P. Wells Smith, and first published fifty-two years ago. Mrs. Smith, who is now eighty-seven, lives in Greenfield, Mass., and is the author of about twenty books for children.

Two of the ten college men who went to Holly

wood for the summer for the First National Pictures have been awarded five-year contracts. They are John Westwood, of Princeton, and John Stambaugh, of the University of Chicago.

The First Edition Society has disbanded, and its list of subscribers have been taken over by the Book-of-the-Month club.

The Modern Library, Inc., has removed to 20 East Fifty-seventh street, New York.

Deems Taylor, formerly music critic for the New York World, and composer of "The King's Henchmen," has been made editor-in-chief of Musical America.

Harry Leon Wilson has testified in court that his income for the last fourteen years has varied from $15,000 to $97,000 a year.

The Florida State Legislature has appointed Franklin N. Wood, of Daytona Beach, to be poet laureate of Florida.

"The True Story of My Life," by Hans Christian Andersen; translated by Mary Howitt, is published by the American-Scandinavian Foundation (New York).

Charles Scribner's Sons have published "John Galsworthy as a Dramatic Artist," by R. H. Coats.

Literary Articles in Periodicals

COLLEGE COURSES IN PLAY-WRITING AND JOURNALISM. James L. Ford. Scribner's Magazine for September.

AMY LOWELL OF NEW ENGLAND. Elizabeth Ward Perkins. Scribner's Magazine for Septem ber.

WHAT IS "ENGLISH"? Gordon Hall Gerould. Scribner's Magazine for September.

OILY WORDS. Frederick Adams Wood. Century for September.

ON MAKING LOW PEOPLE INTERESTING. Albert Jay Nock. Harper's Magazine for September.

A SOCIAL SURVEY OF THE LITERARY SLUMS. Samuel McChord Crothers. Atlantic Monthly for September.

THE FIFTEEN FINEST SHORT STORIES. John Cournos. Forum for September.

ON RE-READING PATER. Logan Pearsall Smith. Dial for September.

OLD BOOKMAN DAYS. Arthur Bartlett Maurice. Bookman for September.

MY FRIEND GEORGE STERLING. Upton Sinclair. Bookman for September.

THE EARLY WORK OF NORMAN DOUGLAS. Edward D. McDonald. Bookman for September.

THE SACRED POESY OF THE SOUTH. Clay Fulks. American Mercury for September.

OUR MEDIAEVAL TYPOGRAPHY. Douglas C. McMurtrie. American Mercury for September.

THE DIALECT OF COOPER'S LEATHER-STOCKING. Louise Pound. American Speech for September.

"IN LIGHTER VEIN." (Keith Preston). Harriet Monroe. Poetry for September.

Are you blindly groping for words to fit your thoughts?

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STRANGE, isn't it, with all the marvel

ous wealth of our English language that you should find yourself groping blindly for the answers to such word questions as those above.

Strange, with a language so full of expressive words, that it should be so difficult to find the ones that express your thoughts clearly.

With more than 150 words describing various shades of beauty, or over 400 words denoting various degrees of goodness, for instance, why should it be so hard to find the best one for your purpose?

Yet it is not strange either, when you consider that dictionaries are arranged on the assumption that you know all of the more than 200,000 words in the language and seek merely their definitions-that all attempts to make the language available stopped with merely listing the words by ideas, and then not always in alphabetical order.

No wonder the average working vocabulary is less than 2500 words that you find it so difficult to express your thoughts and your most powerful ideas become mere vague impressions in the minds of your listeners or readers.

But now comes a new book which revolutionizes word helps-a book which finds the words for you, and at the same time defines them. Now you can have at your very fingertips the definite, living words that fit your thoughts and leave no doubt as to your meaning.

The illimitable wealth of words from which the ablest writers and speakers draw the whole living language-becomes your working vocabulary through the remarkable invention and eighteen years of untiring effort by a master of words, which gives you March's Thesaurus Dictionary.

It places the whole living language at your instant command No matter what thought you wish to express, or which particular shade of meaning you desire, March's Thesaurus Dictionary gives you the word instantly.

No hunting through hundreds of words and definitions-just a flip of the pages and your word is before you, grouped with its related words under the part of speech to which it belongs and defined so that you know you are using it correctly. In adjoining columns are its antonyms - enabling you to develop versatility of style.

Foreign words and idioms are also arranged so that you can find the words to fit your ideas immediately.

Let us send you this remarkable volume that you may judge it in your own home. We want you to examine it at your leisureto try it for ten days at our risk. We want you to see what complete mastery of the English language its 1462 pages give you. It is bound in handsome buckrama worthy addition to any library-74" x 10" x 24", and surprisingly handy because of the thin, light-weight opaque paper used.

Just send in the coupon. If you do not find that it completely answers the word problems which confront you, you have but to return it and it has not cost you a cent.

PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Dept. W-10
1334 Cherry Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.

Please send me (postpaid in U. S. and Canada) a copy of the new Amplified Edition of March's Thesaurus Dictionary. I will pay the postman $3.00 plus 12c postage, and if I keep the book will pay you $2.00 per month for three months.

If for any reason I do not wish to keep it I will return it in good condition within 10 days and you are to refund my $3.12, which includes postage I have paid.

Name.

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UNIVERSITY GRADUATE, twenty-seven years old, would like position on author's country or suburban estate as critic, proof-reader, secretary, typist and general assistant. She has had two years' experience editing on well-known magazine and can furnish clippings of her published articles as well as references of worth. Address, box 309, WRITER.

Manuscript Wanted!

16,000 to

(17,000 words

should be written in bright literary style and carry a strong Christian moral throughout, suitable for children 8 to 12 years old. AUGUSTANA BOOK CONCERN, Rock Island, Ill. Attention Dr. Geo. A. Fahlund.

YOUR WORDS re-typed like engraving on Agawam Bond paper. Professional, correct and corrected. Fifty cents one thousand words. Hand script seventy-five cents one thousand words. Carbon, of course. Return postage. Manuscripts: Typing-Correcting. CLARA J. DAVIS, 268A Stangon St., Portland, Oregon.

Manuscripts, plays and poems typed and revised. Rates on application. Richard & Co., 1024 Linden Avenue, Ridgefield, N. J.

SAVE

TIME AND MONEY in mailing your manuscripts SEND FOR

100 Kraft-paper envelopes 612x9. For mailing manuscripts of more than six pages, folded

once.

100 Labels, attractively printed on white paper, size 42 by 21⁄2 inches, with space for your name and address, and gummed all ready to place on your "out-going" envelopes. Note: These labels can be easily inserted in typewriter. A carbon of each is a record of mailing the manuscript. Envelopes can be used more than once by pasting one label over another. All for $2.00, postpaid

$2.36 west of the Mississippi

THE WRITERS' BOOK-SHELF, HARVARD SQUARE,

CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

Enclosed find....for 100 Kraftpaper envelopes 61⁄2 x 9, and 100 labels.

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FREE LANCING FOR FORTY MAGAZINES

By Edward Mott Woolley

The author of a thousand published articles and stories lifts the curtain on the career of writing for publication.

A FEW OF THE CHAPTER SUBJECTS INCLUDE

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This new department is in charge of Mr. William M. Tanner, who is widely known through his courses in advanced writing in Boston University, and as editor of "Essays and Essay Writing" and "Modern Familiar Essays." Mr. Tanner will criticise various types of short prose articles, such as the brief familiar essay, book review, editorial, satire, or résumé biography. Any subscriber to THE WRITER desiring to submit articles (not exceeding one thousand words) for criticism may send them to Mr. Tanner in care of THE WRITER. Authors' names will not be mentioned in any article.

The distribution of THE WRITER to newsstands is limited to the known
demand. Make sure of receiving your copy regularly by placing a stand-
ing order with your newsdealer, ar mailing the coupon below for a sub-
scription at the special rate of fifteen months for $3.00, (foreign, $3.45).

THE WRITER, Harvard Square, Cambridge, Mass.

I enclose........(cash, check, or money order) for a special 15-months' subscription, beginning with...

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