THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 1, 1912. X X X I t 1 m J J PfK T? J " cfT THY 1 l " -4 Beginning September 8ih, 1912 4 ! t - will add to its other Sunday features inniicpmTHii Appearing the second and Fourth Sunday of each Month A, beautifully printed magazine brimful of Fiction and Special Articles by the most prominent authors and writers in the United States, and illustrated by the leading artists of America. ARTISTS AUTHORS Richard Harding Davis Owen Johnson Rex Beach Lillian Bennet-Thompson Jack London James Hopper Maurice LeBlanc Hesketh Prichard Grace Sartwell Mason Grace MacGowan Cooke Mabel Herbert Urner and many others, y i - t Howard Chandler Christy -Charles Dana Gibson W. T. Smedley Albert Sterner C. Coles Phillips J; N. Marchand B. Cory Kilvert Charles Sarka -Paul Bransom C. B. Falls William Oberhardt and many others. FEATURE ARTICLES Hon. Champ Clark Samuel Merwin Arthur I. Street Ivan Narodny H. Addington Bruce Brander Matthews Edward Lyell Fox Harris Dickson Horace Barnes Emmett C. King U and many others. These Authors, Artists and Special writer are all contributing to the highest class and highest priced Monthly and Weekly Magazines published in the United States; and their combined efforts, more than anything else, have conspired to build up these great publications. We now offer this same class of superior literature to you with bur regular Sunday edition on the second and fourth Sunday of each month. A 'glance at the contents of the September 8th issue: ' K HON. CHAMP CLAR Speaker of the House of Representatives has written "Presidential Lights' That Have Flare and Failed" An able and scholarly retrospective of the many, great men who have failed of the highest gift within the power of the people, and why.' , . . Speaker Clark's comprehensive review of Presidential Campaigns from the days of Washington to those of Taft is written with an intimate knowledge of traditions and conditions. He writes with a master hand from a mind stored with historical anecdotes and illustrations, and from a vividly recent personal experience. This is the first of two notable articles'by Speaker Clark that will appear in the magazine section of this newspaper. The second article, "ROUGH ROADS AND ROUGH RIDING TO THE WHITE HOUSE," will be published in the next issue of Base ball- comes next topolitics in popular interest at this season, and the article vTTTV 11711 a 9 IT TTt f or W hat s lln It Moongwei. The Son-Daughter I By Grace MacGowan Cooke A gripping romance of Indian life in the .Southwest, is the strong fiction feature of the issue and is vividly illustrated by Maynard Dixon. PP OTHER FEATU RES ",THE WIDOW 'WHEN," a cleverly written story of an elderly wooing, by Minnie Barbour Adams; a remarkable prose-poenentitled "PRAYERS," by Marguerite 0. B. Wilkinson, strikingly iUus- codesign "THE PIRATE," by W. G. Krieghoff, in two colors; emblematical of. the summer girl burying her treasure of captured hearts at the end of the vacation season. ' This magazine with its literary and artistic features will be included in the Sunday edition beginning September 8th, and continue thereafter twice a month Absolutely The unusual demand that will be made upon us for the September 8th Sunday edition that wil. contain this great magazine will probably exceed the issue before a great many of our readers are able to get it unless ordered in advance; so be sure to place your order in advance with us or with your newsdealer. ? Sememtjer tlie ate -Sewday, eptemljer Ei X I X t X X V X v Edward Lvell Fox I shows how thenational sport has developed into a great national business a,trust for supplymg honest base ball to the people of the United States.. The facts are new, and many of the figures giveu ar dtartlmsr. .i ; it 0 9 s