Show LITERATURE The supplement to Harpers Weekly fof I Weelly important April 15th contains the first of a series of articles on Australia by Park Benjamin copiously illustrated from draw inSS by W T Smedlev dr1W The popular Buck Ewing captain of the the New Yorks has written an article for Boys Department of Departent The Ladies Home Journal for June on the Ins and Outs of Baseball in which the famous catcher will tell how to play the game how to form a nine the hardest positions and how to fill them how fl to throw a ball etc This la Etvings first article and it Is et to be tho best est which has ever been written for boys on the great national wrtten natona In the April number of the Phrenolofjlcal Journal and Science of Health several Prenoloaiea fea tures of special interest will invite the tention of that magazines readers at instance i an appreciative sketch of ofGeneral Sherman with portrait Forces in Early Education which teachers should Eary The Brethern or Dunkaras a sketch of this peculiar people from the moat 1 au thentic sources with fine illustrations Early Progress of Phrenology in Great Britain Brt with particular references referncs to George Combe The Talent of Mother lalent hood Do You Stand Properly Por a traitknd Por trait and Sketch of Dr U E Traer a dis tinguished phrenologist Phrenology the Physician y and some new observations of J a valuable sort that should be widely known lA Suggestion in Koch Suggeston re by the editor has a practical application Address Fowler Wells Co publishers 777 Broad way New York publshers 7 I A MODERN ROSALIND A story Calvert Chicago Band By F Xavier Price 5 cents and McNally Co The title suggests the character of this story but it does not tell of its cleverness its preposterousness and its roliickinsrman ner The Rosalind is pretty girl with lots brains grl brins and plenty of money who becom ing disgusted through being made love to by an old professor concludes to dress like a man to mingle witn lko mngle men and learn Just what kind of creatures men are She en ters Harvard as a student and there studies men to her hearts content soon falling violently in love with a handsome gener ous young fellow who does not suspect her disguise A venerable professor however does suspect the truth and falls in love with her much to her annoyance Finally in a proper and decorous manner the fellow to whom she is devoted learns the truth and marries the heroine and in the closing of the book the lovelorn professor is page con siderately drowned that being the readiest and most convenient disposition to be made of him MoNEY By Emile Lola Translated from tha French toy Ben j R Tucker Boston Benj R Tucker As in all his novels in this Zola has made a careful study of his subiect and the result is a story worked out in the painful repulsive detail which characterizes the writings of the great French author The story is intended to portray the dishonest methods of conducting business in the stock markets of the day It is a rigorous ar rap of the scoundrelism which is ra-p by the meteric financiers and far is a praiseworthy effort but so faZ a novel by Zola which which did not get down into tho nastiness and filth of society could not be In Money there is the usual detail of amours and intrygues and of thing which It would have been better bad thej b men left out The translation Is excellent |