OCR Text |
Show j i5 Cents a Copy " Z,. Maeterlinck's Studies o! Me By the Author ol'Tio" ; Howard Pyle's Best Pupil ; Robert Lcuis Steyenson's Janes Hanekera Dramatic W: - -TT ) JV; 1 : r J , HHHE great Belgian psychologist' THE author of'"Pam" has ! TTERMANN C. WALL, per " ' Successor- , Jewi ' p'p, ;M : . . i f J ! 1 will continue, as a contributor 1 shown herself capable of writ- JHL haps the best of Howard Pyle's A RTHUR T. QUILLER- ,. Y otjunts Huneker is 0, p 0 j j . 'fl " to The Metropolitan Maga- ing short stories that ring true i industrious group of pupils, is COUCH, by many discriminat- X toown to rwdera of The . , , . j "S1 zine during 1906. For Uterary fin- and "strike home." She has not ob- ; familiar to all Metropoutan read- ing critics esteemed the legiti- . . metropolitan Magazine and H ; , 'A J I ish and power his masterly studies served the workings of the human e"- He will do much of his work mate successor of Robert Louis Stev- . $ weir Constanpoy. Bi Uant, dar-- i ; . - . f - liSS of the modern European man and mind in vain. Her short narratives for this magazine during 1906., His ensos, did one of his best stories for wearui, this cntic will continue ; j ' pisTSfrt. woman, as they exist among their have color and fire and a sentiment drawings for "The Doomsman" will The Metropolitan Magazine when to review the wrrent drama, month fc5 ! .' Ssp' various complex environments, will clear " and wholesome. The Baron- ; also he seen in succeeding numbers he wrote "A Jest of Ambialet" Mr. by montn, m -1 he Metropolitan in r-gv) j I ' K' - stand alone among the finer achieve- ess von Hutton does not need to trade ' until the end of the noveL Quiller-Cbuch will be a frequent con- 7JP f department !i XCZ 77 ments of latterday letters." 7 upon her title to win her readers, i Flcfinn Stml! nf Wl.l f If. tributor to The Metropolitan in as distinct irom au similar depart- Ti' 7,, I 1 IX- ; . - .; She i. a gifted fictionist and some of : f "li0!11. 1906, and some of his stories will ent. m other magazmes as day is BTarkl W-.K i Mlr-S' ' AnLhonv Hone's New Stories her strongest short stories wiM grace .: O AROLINE DUER depicts cer- assuredly augment his already ex- 'rommght il . c , -! ture isss of The MetropoltVan. : charactc of alted place in literature. rrl8er5 Stories 0! India JS'fcf V ? Wjr'x-- A S a creator of exquisite femi- with that sureness of touch ZiSSV t-J -- fnine types this author is not ex- . - : i which springs only from a complete Jules Ouerin's Pictures . VF W. A. Fraser The Metro- -p 'N-i t&'- celledjand in his new stories for Drawlnfs fiy Henry Hutt ! knowledge and full undersUnaing . JULES GUERIN, perhaps the Vwutan Magazine has already cg f y ' the coming year we may expect the T TENRY HUTT, the disciple of of one's subject. Her men and wo- J only illustrator of to-day who can . said much by way of apprecia- t ; V j ; J r" , creation of a heroine who may even daintiness in art, will be repre- ; men are true types of modern society draw poetic conceptions of rather tl0n It is quite impossible to ex- y . , t V ! ' V ' - 1 I take precedence over that other clever sented in the 1906 Metropoli-. and they are generally clever persons commonplace piles of brick and aggerate the value of his art as a J , ; c I ' "C 1 young woman of Mr. Hope's fancy, tan Maozine by many of his choic- worth knowing. This author's stories stone, will contribute color pictures to story-teller. He will contribute a J !L.S ; E j t y, ' the dainty Dolly of the Dialogues, est productions. An augury of what will find a place in The Metropoli- the 1906 Metropolitan. One of his numher of short tales during the 3 " j (j . i Short stories from Mr. Hope are rare is to come are the two-color repro- tan Magazine from time to time and finest works a Dutch tulip garden, coming year. These have to do with i 1: K J j 2 S occurrences of late, and the readers ductions in the Christmas number of they are certain to be engaging in ' in full bloom will be reproduced in the colorful life of India modern A 1. Jl j fry ;JjQ of The Metropolitan will appre- The Metropoutan now on sale. j both motive and handling. full color in an early number. India, about which he is as well in- JO j I rKi-' 'ia ciate them accordingly. ' ' - . - formed as any man alive. CS I j Crg- j 7 . . 1 : ' " '. " 1 Remington's WUd West Types SQ ' ..TTi 1 MIlnc!eBmna,,ImBrQTeawithA Noted Authors who will Contribute to The Metropolitan Magazine during 1906 tjsrederic remington, Pk- S) JoelChin4leHiiTf ? TV 'T ORE "Uncle Remus'' stories '-' A ' ; t, v TI 1 tonal historian of the West, will t " ' "X1 VwiBiei cams . V . : ',,-,. Geokx Ade. Philip Vemill Michels Anthonv Hope , fc V Jt f - jJA- :; . Mil' J.YJ. from the pen of Joel Chandler - Rex E. Beach - Auce Duee Muxe Tames Hcnekee be represented in this magazine I A. T. QniHer Crach Tvf. l"rT3 Harris will appear in forth- E. F. Benson :. Habwet Monkoe Wallace Iiwin next year bv a series'of cowboy and Lit-.,., -.:tM ! ' -SrwrJ?. . ,r Chaelotte Beckex " Gouvebneuk Momus Robext Undeiwood Johnson ... . lUivijVmi'i" - JMi ; coming numbers of The Metropoli- Stephen Bonsal - - Ethel Watts Mumfobd Lieut. H. M. Kelly, U. S. A. Indian pictures executed in his ww wS' X . : tan Magazine. The very best of ' Bmuchton Biakoekbvio Owen Olive Albebt Kinboss . miliar and masterful style. To these JS ' mJtZ&v v-vl - Porter Emerson Brown . William Hamilton Osborne Rudyard Kipling . , . , . JZU'-i' 4!IV. xs:vtt these unique fictions were published Fred'k Walworth Brown ' Thomas Nelson Page Charles G. D. Roberts 1 drawings Mr.Remington has brought Jtff 3U FT" , bv The Metropoutan during IOOS, Major Robert L. Bcllard Albert Bigelow Paine Theodore-Robebts . his exhaustive knowledge of Western ' ' K : V . . Gelett Burcess Samlel Minturn Peck Morgan Robertson , . B?T jt 3 e - '. arid those to appear next year are in Buss Cabman . Maby E. Peixotto Retcher Robinson types and a dash of method unmis- r - s ; 5 I point of cleverness and artistic merit Madison Cawein Eden Phillpots Henry C. Rowland takable and always delightful. He Jri J V J . ,. TT , Agnes Morley Cleaveland .... Emery Pottle Ijwin L. Sabjn . . . 1 I V V representative of Mr. Harris highest Joseph Coxbad a. T. Qciller-Colxh Clinton Scollard has had many imitators but no equals U , J Ld ? attainment in the art of character Edmund Vance Cooke Iohk Fox, Jr. Frank Dempster Sherman in his peculiar line of picturement. . VJ 1 1 bi'W J .. . . , Grace MacGowan Cooke W. A. Fraser Bernard Shaw - . 1 . , .... r V 1 Wv r .1 j delmeation and that subtle kind of Clinton Dangerfield . Charles W. Firlosg F. Hopkinson Smith He is so typically American, his sim- L jt ' v J : ? 7 humor peculiar to the old-time negro. Caroline Dcer ' Theodosia Garrison Harriet Prescott Spofford : plest line is so full of meaning and ft. A f if 7 .vv i V . -i-i Paul Laurence Dunbar Harry Graham Thomas Wood Stevens f, e , ... ,. . . . 7 ? ''-' Each of these masterpieces in little Dr. Charles A. Eastman (Ohiyesa) Colonel Fred D. Grant, U. S. A. Van Tassel Sutphen the freedom of his style so refreshing My ; ' ; ; 1 '& will be illustrated by A. B. Frost in Edwik Emerson, Jr. Commander - Booth Tarkington that his smallest study is like a breeze wv tf5 ss----(SJ- LttWZyZsk Elliott Flower Judce Robert Grant Katherine Cecil Thurston . x. , . r t l t. WCmK- . iVi . Wfe - that artist s mimitable style. Sewall Ford David Gray Charles Hanson Towne from the plains. Mr. Remington has JSRS i fSfjr ' ' Colonel C W. Larned, TJ. S. A. T. Jenkins Hains . Arthur Train 1 never achieved anything so wholly ':'iy 7' VTfSr ' ... . ... . .Richard Le Galuenne . Beatrice Ha nscom Charles E. Trevathan i , . . , ff . .. . s(cScniy J .-I Jack London S Best Fiction Tack London Joel Chandler Harris Baroness von Hutton ' Characteristic of himself and his art ' TS1) Tinrinwnnv John Luther Long Juuan Hawthorne Carolyn Wells as in these forthcoming delineations fyi'-.- i'".... IX Jack London TACK LONDON, who wrote his Charles Battell. Loomis . Arthur Heming Helen Hay Whitney , . . fe. Vf: vJ I !' I -.. I Ki.rtclinrt storv" "The Game "for Ernest Neal Lyon O.Henry C N. Williamson of cow-punchers and red men. IV Thomta Dixon, Jr. l ' fefvuT ''"A hest snort story, ineuame, lor A. E. W. Mason Oliver Herford Robert Burns WnsoN J . .. .IJ tfpSrWj THE Metropolitan Magazine Maurice Maeterlinck George Hibbabd Stewart Edward White Bernard Shaw at His Best ffeftffl ' PSg in 1905, will be among the fiction con- Marguerite Merington ; Charles F. Holder William Allen Whit ( aciduIous mannerisms and 0jT t-JP' xSaH ' tributors in 1906. If Mr. London I ' J picturesque iconoclasm of this riS f - 7--writes less than in former years it is - Wilderness Stories by White Owen Wlster on Western Ufa The Humor 0! A. B. Frost witty Irishman is in nothing he dpjV.; ,. jp F ' -J .onlyjbuse.he has. oecorne more JEWART EDWARD WHITE, TjOPULAR throughout the land "TXEAN of American illustrators, has done so marked and withal so W'fr " I' - V-v t , self-cntical and what he achieves m W o wiM naturCt ; as the author o "The Virgin- II no one drawing for the maga- delightful as in one of his contribu- f f I f f 1 ' K '7 j - the future he means to have as good will be found among the writcrs iarf," Owen Wister has not been zines to-day has a more dexter- n to appear in The Metro- f 'p W ! ! S ( J as anr master of pencratt can turn mafce next frequcntiy seen in periodical litera- ous technique or a greater gift of politan Magazine. The author of X I I 1 ! out of hand. politan Magazine singularly dis- ure of late. His tremendous han- humor than A. B. Frost The very "Candida" and "Man and Superman" . k - fcN. ! ' !y tv ? til P a tinguished and . desirable. -Mr. dling of far Western themes and best work of Mr. Frost will appear throws off the cloak of literary af- ft " ' l-'XA aL ' -JA Thomas Bixon S exposes White's great audience of readers characters places him in the world of in The Metropolitan Magazine fectation and appears in his working EC ;V. : rTHE sensation of the year, in w,n find him at his best in these books where Frederic Remington is during 1906. clothes as a plain outspoken writer; R&V"4 i''p,. " j gS'-.rfjtliV'-tSgia X magazinedom at least, was in the world of art. A virile article it is Shaw dissecting and analyzing dCClj -'l I Thomas Dixon's "inside story" J. by Mr. Wister will appear in an early Mrs. Williamson's Stories Shaw with a frankness that is at once S5 I J wrx of the Ku-Klux-Klan. It was dis- Thomas Nelson Pae as a number in which he picturesquely 7k JW RS. C- N. WILLIAMSON, ingenuous and satanical. It is the j Thomas Kelson Psfef cussed from Hudson Bay to the Gulf Playwritht describes the modern men of buck- XVJL t known to the readers to apotheosis of self-criticism and , , 1 - .'il of Mexico and formed a topic for . TV if" R. PAGE in an entirely new skin; prototypes of the extinct this magazine as co-author captivating. Shaw is the most daz- C. OwenWbUr -rf Alf"" UrifeMl weeks alike from the Golden Gate to xVXs11"56 cannot interest pioneer and the marauding red man with her husband of the motor-car zun personality in the world" of let- iY , , - ' .'wS' the shores of Cape Cod. Other arti- those who read and know the of early American history as pictured novels, "The Lightning Conductor" ters a the present moment and his ferfcX 1J?SJ?I0 mJrrf' cles of great importance and far- product of his graceful pen. An un- by Frederic Remington. No writer and "The Princess Passes," has notable contributions to The Metro- Q&f' ipjfp 'rp , reaching interest by this author will acted play a-brim with sparkling wit , of the hour is better fitted for the written several short stories of un- politan will represent his highest ySY ' VvT-- "3 be done j for The Metropolitan . and full of fine character delineation , task than this vigorous delineator of excelled brilliancy. Her work is the achievement No one who cares at V Jr ''zTtfs" 1 Magazine in 1906. Mr. Dixon writes is among his earlier contributions to the Western plains and hills, where synonym for all that is clever in dia- all for the trend of modern literary W' "u It only when he has something to say the 1906 Metropolitan. As a writer much of his life has been lived and logue and captivating in description art can afford to miss the treat af- 7 "T and his. message is never an idle one of plays, Mr. Page is no less an adept : many of his characters known in the and she will be read in her happiest forded by Shaw's radicalism and t t ? , " ,y nor his language conventional. than as a writer of novels. flesh. vein in the 1906 Metropolitan. humor. K Z v V f - ' 4 ':hL::n 3 Wes4 , 291th Street, New York j k . " 1 ' -- ' ' ' ' ' " ; " ' ;". ' ' '.""'!'"' ' ' '.' ' ; ..- ' ' -..-,. i -.( |