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Show Anthony Hope, whose new novel, "The Intrusions Intru-sions of Peggy," has reintroduced him to the reading read-ing world, has been in collaboration with H. G. Rhodes, in dramatizing his story written some years ago, "Captain Dieppe," which is to bo staged this season by Charles Frohman. Frances Charles, the young Pacific coast author, au-thor, whose "In the Country God Forgot" attracted attract-ed so much attention this summer, has gone to Boston to consult her publishers in regard to another an-other novel upon which she is now at work. "John Ermine of the Yellowstone," by Frederic Remington, for whom The MacMillan Co., of New York, are publishers, is a clever story of breezy Western life, elegantly illustrated by this adept in both lines. "Indian Boyhood," by Charles A. Eastman, Mc-Clure, Mc-Clure, Phillips & Co., publishers, is a real story of real aboriginal life, written by a full-blooded Sioux Indian. The whole of his childhood was passed with his people on the borderlands of civilization, and he sets forth his recollections in all the simplicity sim-plicity and strength of knowledge of the subject on which he writes. |