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Henry James, who for years has lived in London, and who recently surrendered his American citizenship and became an English citizen, has been dangerously ill.

Ian Hay is Captain Ian Hay Beith, and he is now with the British force in France.

The price paid for the six articles by Rudyard Kipling on the British fleet, published in North and South America, England, France, Italy, Russia, and Denmark, in five different languages, is said to have been about a dollar a word, probably the largest sum ever paid for articles of 2,000 words or more each on current events.

Harper & Bros. will not publish William Dean Howells's reminiscent volume entitled "Years of My Youth" until February.

The Appletons announce a book on "Newspaper Editing," by Grant M. Hyde.

"A Study of Charlotte Brontë : The Woman," by Maude Goldring, is to be published in London.

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"Three Score and Ten," by Amelia E. Barr (D. Appleton & Co.), gives personalia supplementary to Mrs. Barr's autobiographical volume, "All the Years of My Life."

Advance announcement is made by Doubleday, Page, & Company of the forthcoming publication of "Booker T. Washington: Builder of Civilization," by Lyman Beecher Stowe. The work was begun many months ago and most of the material was authorized by Dr. Washington himself.

The volume of recollections written by Theodore Watts Dunton in the years following the death of Swinburne is published under the title, "Old Familiar Faces."

"Making the Movies," by Ernest A. Dench, is published by the Macmillan Company.

66

Morgan Robertson the Man" is published by McClure's and the Metropolitan Magazines.

A translation of Eugenii Soloviev's life of Dostoievsky is in preparation in England. His letters were published in this country early this year.

Douglas Z. Doty is now the editor of the Century Magazine.

Cyrus C. Adams has resigned as editor of the Bulletin of the American Geographical Society (New York), which is to be issued under a new name and in a new form.

Sunset (San Francisco) will be enlarged to the size of the American Magazine, beginning with the January issue.

Mrs. Mary R. P. Hatch has sold the movingpicture rights of her novel, The Strange Disappearance of Eugene Comstock," to the Universal Film Corporation, and negotiations for the rights of "The Missing Man are under way.

Elbert Hubbard left an $397,845.

estate valued at

Mrs. Elizabeth Flint Wade died at Norwalk, Conn., December 1.

Auguste Pitou died at Hobe Sound, Florida, December 4, aged seventy-two.

Stephen Phillips died at Dent, England, December 9, aged forty-seven.

Walter Learned died at New London, Conn., December 12, aged seventy-eight.

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Henry James, who for years has lived in London, and who recently surrendered his American citizenship and became an English citizen, has been dangerously ill.

Ian Hay is Captain Ian Hay Beith, and he is now with the British force in France.

The price paid for the six articles by Rudyard Kipling on the British fleet, published in North and South America, England, France, Italy, Russia, and Denmark, in five different languages, is said to have been about a dollar a word, probably the largest sum ever paid for articles of 2,000 words or more each on current events.

Harper & Bros. will not publish William Dean Howells's reminiscent volume entitled "Years of My Youth" until February.

The Appletons announce a book on "Newspaper Editing," by Grant M. Hyde.

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"Three Score and Ten," by Amelia E. Barr (D. Appleton & Co. ), gives personalia supplementary to Mrs. Barr's autobiographical volume, "All the Years of My Life."

Advance announcement is made by Doubleday, Page, & Company of the forthcoming publication of 'Booker T. Washington : Builder of Civilization," by Lyman Beecher Stowe. The work was begun many months ago and most of the material was authorized by Dr. Washington himself.

The volume of recollections written by Theodore Watts Dunton in the years following the death of Swinburne is published under the title, "Old Familiar Faces."

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'Making the Movies," by Ernest A. Dench, is published by the Macmillan Company.

"Morgan Robertson the Man" is published by McClure's and the Metropolitan Magazines.

A translation of Eugenii Soloviev's life of Dostoievsky is in preparation in England. His letters were published in this country early this year.

Douglas Z. Doty is now the editor of the Century Magazine.

Cyrus C. Adams has resigned as editor of the Bulletin of the American Geographical Society (New York), which is to be issued under a new name and in a new form.

Sunset (San Francisco) will be enlarged to the size of the American Magazine, beginning with the January issue.

Mrs. Mary R. P. Hatch has sold the movingpicture rights of her novel, "The Strange Disappearance of Eugene Comstock," to the Universal Film Corporation, and negotiations for the rights of "The Missing Man" are under way.

Elbert Hubbard left an estate valued at $397,845.

Mrs. Elizabeth Flint Wade died at Norwalk, Conn., December 1.

Auguste Pitou died at Hobe Sound, Florida, December 4, aged seventy-two.

Stephen Phillips died at Dent, England, December 9, aged forty-seven.

Walter Learned died at New London, Conn., December 12, aged seventy-eight.

[graphic]
[blocks in formation]

Henry James, who for years has lived in London, and who recently surrendered his American citizenship and became an English citizen, has been dangerously ill.

Ian Hay is Captain Ian Hay Beith, and he is now with the British force in France.

The price paid for the six articles by Rudyard Kipling on the British fleet, published in North and South America, England, France, Italy, Russia, and Denmark, in five different languages, is said to have been about a dollar a word, probably the largest sum ever paid for articles of 2,000 words or more each on current events.

Harper & Bros. will not publish William Dean Howells's reminiscent volume entitled "Years of My Youth" until February.

The Appletons announce a book on paper Editing," by Grant M. Hyde.

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News

"A Study of Charlotte Brontë: The Woman," by Maude Goldring, is to be published in London.

Dr. Lyman Abbott's "Reminiscences" are published in book form by the Houghton Mifflin Company.

"Julia Ward Howe, 1819-1910," by Laura E. Richards and Maud Howe Elliott, is published by the Houghton Mifflin Company.

"Great Authors in Their Youth," by Maude Morrison Frank, is published by Henry Holt & Co.

"Three Score and Ten," by Amelia E. Barr (D. Appleton & Co.), gives personalia supplementary to Mrs. Barr's autobiographical volume, "All the Years of My Life."

Advance announcement is made by Doubleday, Page, & Company of the forthcoming publication of "Booker T. Washington : Builder of Civilization," by Lyman Beecher Stowe. The work was begun many months ago and most of the material was authorized by Dr. Washington himself.

The volume of recollections written by Theodore Watts Dunton in the years following the death of Swinburne is published under the title, "Old Familiar Faces."

46

Making the Movies," by Ernest A. Dench, is published by the Macmillan Company. "Morgan Robertson the Man" is published by McClure's and the Metropolitan Magazines.

A translation of Eugenii Soloviev's life of Dostoievsky is in preparation in England. His letters were published in this country early this year.

Douglas Z. Doty is now the editor of the Century Magazine.

Cyrus C. Adams has resigned as editor of the Bulletin of the American Geographical Society (New York), which is to be issued under a new name and in a new form.

Sunset (San Francisco) will be enlarged to the size of the American Magazine, beginning with the January issue.

Mrs. Mary R. P. Hatch has sold the movingpicture rights of her novel, "The Strange Disappearance of Eugene Comstock," to the Universal Film Corporation, and negotiations for the rights of "The Missing Man" are under way.

Elbert Hubbard left an $397,845.

estate valued at

Mrs. Elizabeth Flint Wade died at Norwalk, Conn., December 1.

Auguste Pitou died at Hobe Sound, Florida, December 4, aged seventy-two.

Stephen Phillips died at Dent, England, December 9, aged forty-seven.

Walter Learned died at New London, Conn., December 12, aged seventy-eight.

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