Show LITERATURE CARVING AND SBBVINO by Mrs D A Lincoln 1 Lin-coln author tit The Boston CookBook 1 Cook-Book Boston Roberts Brothers Salt Lake Dwyers Bookstore Price CO cents II 1 lie Boston Cook Book is one Of the very best being the erabo unieut of the experience of an intelligent woman in cocking and now Mrs Luicjln follows fol-lows her former valuable volume ith another in the same Jine Nest to knowing Low to cook a good meal l is knowing how to serve it und in this little volume the author has given the instructions Besides the general Directions Di-rections as to the carving and serving of all kinds of game and HUMS ° f vegetables soups desserts salads etcher etc-her insructions will be found of incalculable incal-culable value not only to the total re s of the hou e but to the master as well 1 Atlantic Monthly Mr Lowells livepage poem Credl dimustTovem Regnare will undoubtedly undoubt-edly be the first thing te which readers of the February Atlantic will turn Iu it Mr Lowell half seriously half humorously hu-morously expresses the belief that the former days of faith were happier than these of speculation Th poem abounds ui clever hits and wiLlgbe iced with gre it interest JohnGrMleaf alo contributes a port t elpiut1l A Day and William Wmljjr l one named I II Pcrdita so that the poetry of this number quite remarkable The that pntof unusually welltold damus IIIK story called The Lidy iroiu Maine stems to indicate that the Atlantic At-lantic bas again been fortunate enough to hit uj on a hitherto unknown writer of good short stories The iwo troy g serials f The Seco d Son by Mrs Oh phaut and Thomas Bailey Aldrich and Paul Potoff by F Marion Crawford are cont nued and Mr Fiske has a paper on The Federal Convention The Blue Jay is minutely and brightly rip ribed bv Olive Thome Miller and tfA Glance Backward by Susan Fenni mure Cooper contains reminiscences of her father and his work while William Chauncy Langdon tells about Au Experience Ex-perience on the Island of Capri The longer reviews which are remarkably full are devoted to Brooks Adams Emancipation of Massachusetts and Lowells Democracy and Other Addresses Ad-dresses and an article by Harriet Waters Preston considers recent volumes volu-mes by Vernon Lee and W S Lilly The Contributors Club and Books of the Month complete this number of the magazine wInch by the way appears In new and elegant type Houghton Mifflin Co Boston Scribuers Magazine The second February number of Scribners Magazine opens with an article of general and scholarly interest entitled The Likenesses of Julius Ceasar by Mr John 0 Ropes the wellknown writer of military history which is superbly llustrated with eighteen portraits reporductions of photographs from statue II J S ofDale begins highly original novelette called The Residuary Resi-duary Legatee the first chapters of which are sufficient to arouse great interest Half a Curse is a short story by Octave Thanet the scene of which is laid in St Auuustine during the war The second instalment of ex Mimster Washburnes Reminiscences of the Siege and Commune of Pans is even more interesting than was the first dealing as it does with the most exciting incidents of the siege Seths Brothers Wife grows more interesting interest-ing as it proceeds The pleasant ollmpses at the Diaries of Gouverneur Morris with their descriptions of life in Paris during the Revolution are con Jndcd An article whicn will arouse unusual interest and discussion is that of Prof J R Soley of the navy who writes on Our Xaval Policy in an extremely ex-tremely forcible imeresting manner A story The Ducharmes the Baska tonge is by a wrier new to most magazine readers Mr DtwcanjCampbell Scott whose connection with the Canadian Cana-dian Department of Indian Affair doubtless had its influence suggesting to him the picturesque surroundings and action of his tory Brauder Matthews contributes u particularly interesting article on M Coqelin the greatest of French actors and Thomas I Sergeant Perry closes the number with a short but strong critical paper on 1 Russian Novels There are short poems by Charles H Luders Charles E Markham and Mrs Louise Chandler Moulton i New York Charles Scribners Sons Salt Lake Dwyers Bookstore The Popular Science Monthly I Professor William James of Harvard College occupies the first place in The Popular Science Monthly for February with a paper onThe Laws of Habit The article gives a clear explanation on physiological grounds of the way in which haoits come to involve all the functions of the organism Of great interest also is the discussion on Materialism Ma-terialism and Morality and Science and Morals in papers by Mr W S Ltllv and Professor Huxley Concluding Conclud-ing his paper on Science in Religious Education Mr Daniel Greenleaf Thompson defines what lie conceives to be the scientific position regarding the teaching of religious truth in schools and seminaries An illustrated paper entitled The South African Diamond Mines furnishes full information on all the ordinary aspects of the subject prepared from official documents Mr Bunces Some Points on the Land Question embodies one of the clearest and most logical expositions of the principles on which the right to own land is vindicated that hasbeen made Mr George fellow in Fetichism or Anthropomorphism reviews the position respecting the origin of fetichworship which was declared de-clared by Mr Spencer in his controversy controv-ersy with Mr Frederic Harrison Mr Frank P Crandon in his concluding article on the Misgovernment of Great Cities expresses the belief that good government is possible for cities and essays an outline of the way it is to be obtamed In Views of Life in the Crazy Mountains Mrs E D WHat W-Hat h gives lively glimpses of what is going on among tne animals and plants of that curiously named region A paper pa-per on Massage by Ldy John Manners Man-ners is of practical andhygienic value A sketch and portraiture given of Dr C C Abbott the keensjed naturalist and archaeologist author of Upland and Meadow New York D Appleton Company Harpers Magazine Harpers Magazine for February is a peculiarly strong number being freighted with three serial stories anyone any-one of which would beau extraordinary feast four richly illustrated descriptive articles a short story by Grant Allen and an attractive variety of hurt poems one of them from Cowleys The Mistress being cbttnuiiuly illus trated by Abbey and Pdriuii The striking frontispiece Moose riunting by Jicklight is one of Mr Frosts brilliant illustrations to the JIIIWr on Moose Huning by Hnrv P Weils Jharlts Dudey Warner de cribe the Bayou TVclie counuy of south rn Lou i iana f known asf lie ACidiau Land Mr flowers new novel April dopes begins with every assurance of celling even his hush standard tak IIK Boston of tlJdiy fur hid theme The conclusion of till Edward Red a survey ot the continental navies of Europe I Eu-rope carefully measures the naval trenuth of Italy Russia Germany Austria und lurkey The war corres pendent Frank D Millet contributes a sequel to his illustrated description of summer life among the Cossacks Cos-sacks in the January number The eleventh part of Blackmores novel Springhaven rapidly progresses towards the close of Nelsons ipleudid career Abraham CowleysDoemlhe I Wish contained in The Mistress is exquisitely ilustrated by ten drawings from Alfred Parsons and Edwin A Abbey The second part of Narka Kathleen OMearas dramatic story of Russian life moves powerfully amid stirring events George William Curl sin s-in the Editors Easy Chair talks with his general raciness of the American opera rue limits < if newspaper proprieties pro-prieties the value of censure domestic service as an employment for American women and Joe Jefferson W D Howells in the Editors Study makes a most careful and delightful estimate of short stories as a peculiar phase of modern literature and enumerates the most successtul writers of them The Editors Drawtr is well filled with spicy humors New York Harper Brothers Salt Lake Dwyer book store at Nicholas A new serial story by James Otis the author of Toby Tyler is begun this month in St Nicholas The author calls it Jennys Boarding house avery a-very quiet but very true story of New York life Hjalmar H Boyesen opens the number with a stirring and reasonable tale of Icelandic adventure entitled Between Sea and Sly En es Realistic Novel is a very cle er sketch by Alice Wellington Rollins in which while telling an amusing stars of a little girl who tried to write like Mr Howells Mrs Rollins manages to convey an excellent idea of the methods ana purposes of the modern school of fictionwriters There is a brilliantly illustrated descriptive article Among the Gaswells and the Rev Washington Gladden has a numberof valuable thoughts for the rising generation under the suggestive tite If I were a Boy Palmer Cox tells about The brownies Singing School and a Japanese story translated trans-lated in English but illustrated by a Japanese artist is not the least striking feature ot the contents Mrs Frances Hodgson Burnetts Story of Prince bairyfoot comes to an end all too soon Lut Miss Baylors serial Juan and Juanita is continued with constantly con-stantly increasing interest There are oher stories by Mrs James Herbert Morse Avery McAlpine and Delia W Lymanand poetical contributions by William H Hay ne Mary Mapes Dodge Frank Dempster Sherman and others New York The Century Company The World Alnnnac Of all the almanacs and they are legion le-gion the New York Worlds for 18S7 is i the boss It is a book of over 200 pages and is literally crammed with lacts and figures and general information informa-tion useful to everybody and absolutely necessary to the newspaper fraternity It is a complete handbook and reference record for the politician the soldier anc sailor the railroad man the farmerthe historian the sportsman and in fact for all everybody being able to find in it something if not everything that he desires in the way of statistics dates facts and figures The price is only 25 cents Address The World New York |