THE EEEt OMAHA. MONDAY, .MAY Z. No Statement Made by C. of C. On FrecUridge Attack ou tct HflilwayAr gument Issued hy Voluntary Committee Chamber Against Bond Issue. Statements challenging published arguments of the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railway company against a free bridge were issued by I tjri'c voluntary free bridge committee 1 organized to campaign for the bridge and not by the free bridge committee of the Chamber of Commerce, as in dicated erroneously in The Sunday lice. The last action of the Chamber of Commerce in reference to the bridge was adoption of a resolution which declared: "U'lu'lf. we rerriirnize the necessity of additional bridge facilities be tween Omaha and Council Bluffs, it is the sense of this committee that bonds for a new or free bridge should not be voted at any time withont full " information as to location and cost of approaches and full specifications as to construction, size and capacity, also the .total estimated cost of the completed structure. Since no au thentic information is now available covering these items, the proposition 'for bonds does not commend itself to this committee at this time." Revised Tax Program Proposed by Mellon (Continued from Face On.) taxes on fountain drinks' and the mis- cellaneous taxes levied under section 904 of the revenue act. which are dif 'ficult to enforce, relatively unpro ductive and unnecessarily vexatious. The repeal of these miscellaneous special taxes, would, it is estimated, result in a loss of about $50,000,000 in revenue.. The transportation tax is objectionable, but this ta produces revenue in the amount of about $330,-. OdO.000 a year and could not safely be. repealed or reduced unless con gress is prepared to provide an ac ceptable substitute. 4. Impose sufficient new "or addf tional taxes of wide application such as increased stamp taxes or a license tax on the use of automobiles, to bring the total revenues from inter nal taxes after making- the changes' above suggested, to about $4,000,000. 000 in the fiscal year 1922 and 1923. The only way to escape these addi tional internal taxes, to an aggregate amount of between $330,000,000 and $350,000,000 would be to make imme diate cuts in that amount in current expenditures. In the event that this should prove iimpossible, it might be feasible to provide perhaps as much as $100,000,000 or $150,000,000 of the necessary revenue from new duties on staple articles of import and the balance by taking more effective steps to realize on back taxes, sur tTs war supplies and other salvage Able assets of the government. - ' 5. Adopt necessary administrative Sinendinents to thef 'revenue act .in order to simplify its administration nd make it possible, among other things, for the commissioner of in ternal revenue, with the approval ot the secretary of the treasury and consent of the taxoayer to make final determination and settlment of tax cases. In this connection it would oe well, in the interest of fairness and in order to scimplfy the administra tive problem, to provide, under prop- fcr safeguards for carrying forward net losses of one year as a deduction from the income of succeeding years. -' Fined on Liquor Charge. : ; York, 'Neb., May 1. (Special.) Henry -Brants of Gresham -was ar raigned before County Judge. Hop Inns on the charge of giving whisky to two young men who became in toxicated and were jailed. He pleaded tuilty and was given a fine of $100. and costs. ri Kearney Teachers' College: ' Ths Ccelin Glc club gv concerts, this weik U 8ht)ton, Urand Island,-n Aurora. Tha Dramatic Art department gave thraa plays In the Auditorium, -tws iihort plays, "The Traveling- Man," and "Wlll-ft'-the-Wlap." and William Butler Teats' fairy play, "The Land of Heart' Deelre." A Girl Scout club has been organiaed in ' Ihe training school. The Latin department under tha direc tion of Mlse Evelyn Dllley put on ai Roman wedding at convocation Monday.' Tha costuming waa very beautiful, and tha ceremony, highly Impressive at times, at others was very diverting. The origin of the modern custom of treating to. candy and cigars was derived from tha ceremony of scattering nuts by the bridegroom.' In stead of catching tha bride's bouquet, tha lucky bridesmaid was the one who caught tha torch which, the bride had carried in tha procession. Tha wedding -ake also had us place in the ceremony, the bride groom taking several-large bites out of his piece and bestowing tha remainder upon the bride. The ring Ceremony uued in thla wedding was originated by the Romans. -' The Camp Pire had charge of convoc-, 'Hon Wednesday. The girls gave a, lively .representation ot a day in camp, call to breakfast, setting-up ejterqlses, games and 1 singing, and planning the hike. The members of the Nutrition class have been weighed with soma amusing results, , ' Certain ones have gained five pounds; othera have gained tjiree; and others, who have consumed the ' largest numbers of calories have gained nothing at all. Miss Katherlne Oaks, assistant librarian . tha past year, has resigned her position and gone to her home at Geneva, New Tork, for rest and recuperation. Her placa ' will be taken by Miss 8tlla Pearson from tha library school of the ' University of Illinois. Mr. Powell of tha1 rural department la planning a spring festival for all of the demonstration schools. This Is to take jlaoe about tha middle of May, and wlH include a track meet, various other con- f i lasts, and a picnio dinner. Midland College.. .. . .' ,' ' Miss Anita Edmiston,' a gr&uuata of Cen tral high. Omaha, played tha leading role in the "Passing of the Third Floor Back," presented by tha Wynn society of Mid land college. Mlsa Edmiston is a sopho more and vary popular in dramatics in KremonU - ' Tha second annual conference ot pastors . and students held at Midland during tha past week ended with a banquet in tha college dining hall Thursday. Miaa Bessla Friedman ot New Tork ; City, the world's accuracy champion on tha typewriter, gave a demonstration Thursday to a large number of atudents gathered in the Commercial 4epaxtmeqt of jhliaiana. - Coach Slaty apparently delight! in mak ing tha "no pie" verdict, -but Just wait until tha track meet it held and tha seem agly coid-heartedsest of Comeh Slaty Will ., a explained. i . . Chadron Normal. ' . Contestants in the essay and oration are making a strong effort to complete their work this week. Monday 'and Wednesday preliminary contests will be held. Thoss who are to represent Cbadron normal in tha Wayne-Chadron contest are la be i-hosen at thla time. Miss Oraca Russell appeared before a large audience last Thursday evening In sang recital. Misa Russell ia tha first to ' plase upon her atudent recital programs aar aria from oratorio. A number of normal students end a tew lf the faculty appeared In the minstrel Thief Grabs Gem From j Lawyer Driving Auto 1 . While he was driving downtown Saturday evening A. II. ' Sturgis, attorney, 2333 South Thirty-second street,' was robbed of a -diamond tud valued at $2,000 when an armed man jumped 'dn the running hoard pi" his automobile at Thirtieth an.! Harney streets, confronted him with a revolver and ordered Sturgis to stop the car. , "Bcfofe I had a chance to stop the man leaned over, grabbed the stud from my shirt front and. after jumping . off again, disappeared in the 'darkness." . Mrs. Sturgis was with her husband when the robbery occurred. , Neither was able to. furnish a very", reliable discription o the robber. except that he wore a gray overcoat. . rr : : t:V Former Leader of Ak-Sar-Ben Parades Dies in Hospital A. E. Blaufuss, 67.' 291.1 North Thirtieth street, resident of Omaha ; lor 40 years, died at the Ford hos pital Saturday following j an opera-i tion last Monday. , ' ; Mr. Blaufuss was well known here; as a musical director, v He was leader of the Krug theater orchestra for 11 years and leader of toe Ak-bar-Ben parades for seven years., He was a member, of the Elks lodge of Buffalo. N. Y. Mr. Blaufuss is survived by his wife; three so.ns, Alfred George and Frederick; and three daughters, Bertha, Julia and Mrs. Walter Carr, all of Omaha. Falconer Denies Charge That Park Being Spoiled Say a Allegations .That Natural Beauties of Elmwood De stroyed Concocted for ' Political Purposes. Thomas Falconer, city commis sioner in charge e-f';the park. '.Sad, boulevard department, yesterday replied to campaign opponents' wlio have been publishing criticisms about Elmwood park. j " 1 ' "'. These critics stated that" ;Mr, Fal coner has been cutting live trees and shrubs in ' Elmwood and thus de-. I stroying the natural beauties ot the park and also making this tract -less" desirable as 'a bird sanctuary. "These allegations have been ab surdly false," said Commissioner Falconer yesterday, ' "It is evident that they were concocted for polit-; ical purposes. We have been clear ing out dead timber and brush,, as we do every year and has always been done in the parks." This is a safety first measure, for one thing, to lessen the fire hazard. This work, is in charge of W. R. Adams, the best authority m Omaha on trees and landscape gardening. The re moval Of dead brush promotes the growth of other vegetation. : : "The only live trees that were cut down in Elmwood were to make an opening through to Pacific street and this was done some time ago and was in accordance with the gen eral plans for development of the park. "If these criticisms had not been repeated in all of their absurd as pects we would not have noticed them, but we believe they should be answered. Mayor Smith visited Elm wood ' park recently and told me that the reports of unnecessary tree cutting were without foundation." Fish Tails Become Popular Hat Trimming Long .'Beach.. Cal., "April 30. Scomber Japonicus. The latest in trimming for wo men's hats. Natnc sounds jntricate. doesn't it? But it' in't, for just between us Scorber Japonicus is a fish. In other words ijt's the mackerel. And the part recommended .for decorative pur poses is the tail. The usefulness of the Scomber Japonicus. as an asset to feminine attire was discovered by Lester F. LiiiKle, director of the preservation laboratories of the United States Bu reau of Fisheries, operated bv the California State Fish and Game commission For many years mackerel weigh ing about two pounds each have been caught in local waters, but their tails have not been considered of value and were thrown away. Lingle has proved by experiments that the tails of these fish can be dried, deodorized and transformed into objects of variegated and bril liant beauty by the aid of aniline dye. J t:.- if.... nrr'nnnolt T nm Beach, secretary to Lingle, has tried out mackerel tail trimmings on a sailor hat. Sewed side by side to the crown they presented a highly serrated border completely surround ing the hat and observed in the sun light glinted like jewels. Miss McConnell said enough of the fish tail trimmings can be dyed for 10 cents to trim any hat. Tronged grips that fit the palm of the hand have been invented for handling cakes of ice. Jack Leivis Is Recipient Of Presents From Elks Jack 4-eyis, (sport promoter, who successfully conducted the Elk Ath letic carnival recently, received three presents from the B. P, O. E. as a token of the honor in which they hold him. He received a solid gold member ship case, a gold vest chain, and a gold mounted double Elk tooth watch charm, Mr. Lewis and his committee cleared over $5,000 profit on , the carnival. fere's a Reason why GrapeNuts msflces a helpful bre&ktast and a profitable lunch fbr the worker vho must be awake and alert during the dtaj. Grape-Nuts is the perfected goodness of wheat and malted barley, and is exceptionally rich in nourishment It feeds body and brain without tax upon the digestion. ' ' "There's a Reason" FreeiBridge Js Costing St. Louis $665 8 in Interest Every Day j k :i o 1'. , Tf . ra4e if&C Review Shows that Pro ject ;WilI Have Run;to$6,288,63 1 Total by April lJandhatftCkHasSReceived Nothing; oh. Investment. $54,000 Raised Here in Gunpaign iSt ReHef iini Irelam the solicitor M'ho eredttAd with tl ltt,l IT..- ' Tift Cim-Democrat herewith present' a detailed flnanclaa statement concemms tne municipal rr . -""(. Sf W; ahowi just -wt th bridge has; ot the ity o . far and howmuch .the daily, coat has bden for .the , whe Mme- JS. muaienanco or ;mci structure, - . ' ' OniAPl' Jp ii. whlen wiU bo the cnS of te pr.esent eity fiscal year, the bridge will have cost the ity a total of $e',28.31?J5 This sum iaclulr all amomjta actually expended in the construction of the brldge,-th lintereat ehar. and thealnfcaace chargeb. jYte KU , this lM't rftYenue-producUi.tactor ana xnai mo aiy niiB.iincr ,rraiira ' , .rfK" ZJ!' urZH. A l ,ro- hv thminanrtll nt vh(e flu atace 1U completion. rL 1 .. . ' . 7. fu..HAHAA . . ..I va .it 9 hA .,,rri rr- I rolls ana mi Fiin'dWill'fBeSweUed $75,000 byTomorrbw Banker Says? . Receipts In the St. Louic cap for relief in Ireland, have to far $54,000, according to Raymond Nally. treasurer of the MiBsourl of tho American Committee ' in Ireland. The returns, whlcr tabulated at tile National Ba' merce, are byno moans torn ' of thsm are slow in comr Nally estimated the total w than $70,000 by Saturday. Many pastors and par have not yet made colle have returns come in fr where successful camp . held. -' Clayton raised Groves VX and Kir' erous response. James Y. Mytton, committee ar. St. . wired his city woulc1 though Its original r M0.w. J. B. Hendrit ' of the Campaign In portea 30W in ie' o. I210O mors in sight., ' ported KTi.ma. mostj ready bean collected Judgo Daniel K. ; at Sedelia, reports mora coming. W. . flptil MtimjLt.A th. paign there, at about) ntbal and M.erly' suits, n , The money' rece . boxes has been e L tk.. uimit mtxA' m.atntenance tost ot the frea bridge; according to figure', compiled yesterday st the ComptjfoUer'a otrioi; is 73B.78. Of this ampurit'th daily, interest charge -is M05.TO. while the mauitenanos charge tt t0. pr, day,.. .- . ' Thr ' interest: . figures 'are- based ,iaptn the following calculation: . The first bridge bond issue was passed in July. (W. arnoTlntlni .to ISOO.OOO-, with an an nual lntefen of IW.OOO; the second issue was passed in October. im amounting to 3,000,000. with an annual interest of SiaO.000. : The-third ue was passed in' AprU..lWii,n'"ting to J2.75O.000, Srtth'an annual; interest of 123.ti. i A totaj of 4398,000 of -tha bridge bonds have been .retired at rarious dates., wr fduolng the ' total Interest figure by aB.0Tu? and leaving it at a total of 23,68G,. which would represent- the Crwant annual Interest charge. Divided by' 386 Hays. this, would mean a daily -Interest eha! of W85.T8. ft i.aftO AakedY for 1921 -22..: Siaca' the A Issue' of $650,000 were used totAJ.of $3S,1.70 has been irntnUrA ' or.- AainUnance. including Tbta would increase the total dally tn teree't charges by fib It may be men tioned fn this connection that an appro Variation of 421,360 has been asked , for . tor the year of 1921-21 & salaries, jna 1 Urials and for the upkeep of -the bridge. i As. has. been' said, before the total amount .of money, tnvesteo m me ormse was- B,2S8,e8l.75. This-amount, now--wtvtT 0a "hot .represent-'the- outlay of thsMaapaycM for the structure. i-U must' be remembered that large sums ot the' bridge bond Issues are still Jincot- 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i iii M..0v v " lj.tJI ..J tViat nft alt r9 the MlirriA &K pended have found their way back into me Bin King ranus. . . At' the Comptroller's office it was said yesterday that trie bridge up to data had .cost the taxpayers a total ot ,iw,tfi. .this sum ineiuu; Us eoilected into the sinking fund. These figures will b beater expiainea if it is shown, that tha. first bond issue fr . t-nr, A.-, .AM T,,l,r 1 lortft f t De vi. psw,wv, 41 U1U . wt toberi, lMItcost a total interest charge of 575,000. The second issue 0 $3,300, 000, from October ' t1009.-4jtU -October 1 IAOI rmtt in Infor.st a. total Of J1.390.- 000,. while tho last issue of $2,730,000, from .April 1, 1015, until octooer 1. iw". cost not less than J7f ' $105,527.SaVedi. ... t2,S91,MO; but. the Comptroller deducu from them a total of l0B.&i7, whicir the city saved by purchasing the- oonaa prior to their maturity. With tWflde duction the total remains $i,913; to . b-tk w ror wnicn 1. anava unum i t --- . fully paid Bond issue items, making tne grand total cost 01 me Dnuec i St. Louis taxpayers. up to date $u,108,- .973. . ' Following are the Items paia w. rtous interests fcduring(the construcUon of the bridge: , ' - .To the Missouri vauey unueo Iron Company, $521,440.T$i; to the Amer ican Bridge Company, i',W0.368. : the PrUin-Celnon Conatruction Com pany. $22,359.57; to C. W. (ac count piling). gU3JJB2.t: to ithe ouer Hodge &' Balrd'- tforrmmtyj'aKt.eUS.Wr lor paving blocks. 23,84 for paint ing bridge. $73,100; forpurchase of land on the cast-side, $208,377.86; for pur chase of land on the -west-'SUM; for special nt?.-?: for investigating f Arbitration Committee, $1801.90 forj In- KromTterWs 'aadexpense $725,515.57. . ' . . . '6,22i9,6r0.81 Total. .AH of those Hems repreaont total of i 2 C70.S1. invested in . tno brtdpe. There must br- added to the total, .the amount .f $53,840.94 for addiUonal pay fdlls ami materials aJnoe me comple tion of tha structure, .naking ihe grand total $6,283.0(0.75. as rot forth before. All of these figures, however, do not include the taxes which tho State of Illinois is trying : to impose upon, the I:astern approach of the bridge. Ali ready, the city has patd. under ;ro twt. the sum of approximately $17.00U for taxes, as miuested by St Clair County, 111. Hcwever. this matter is etlll Dendina in the United Slates Su- Treme Court nd there is a -possibility that tne nignst courts may uara u the Munhipal Free Bridge shall be ea-: nnri irvn. j manent record Jt ' scnoers and Ot tha relief raovei PAGEANT0! t . T0 S An faster P. tion. "The. Da at St. John's . highway and Sunday event tain a cast o ing characte' twenty, will 4 bess men of . Tne pages on tha morr ' the day aC cansion, ou' in front c -near the U GEN. WOOD'S MAFOT;. ST" . Store Hours: 9 to 5:30; S&tvrday, P, iThc "Free" Bridge Buriden is Proving o Heavy to St. Louis Tax payers That Converting it Into a Toll Bridge is Being Advocated. :' ' Long Lost Heiress ' Is Found in House of Hate Dorcas Remalie, Who Disappeared Two Years Ago', Is Discovered in Peril in North Woods; Early Rescue Is Promised; Lucy Pirani, Gone Twenty Years, Also Located; Both' Linked with Puzzling Case of Charles Blake. Three mysterious disappearances, all having a like sen- . sational interest, have simultaneonsly yielded to solution. All three cases involve important personages, each has its element of weirdness, and at least two of the three run high ' in romantic interest, through adventures calling for display '. of the finest courage. One of these mysteries leads deep into the New England pine forests; another surrenders its riddle on a coral atoll in the South Pacific twqf hundred miles from Tahiti; the third, rich in humorous values which counteract its pathetic and painful elements, links Paris and New York in one of the most absorbing instances of loss of memory yet disclosed " to psycno-anaiysts. The three cases, at the time of solution, exert a definite influence upon each other. The stories plait into a single interest. One solution ends the mystery of the strange disappearance of Dorcas Remalie, This dashing and beautiful daughter of a family of wealth, equally well known in New York, Newport, Whit$ . Sulphur Springs and Palhi Beach, an un disputed leader of the activities of the fashionable younger set, has been found immured in a castle of hate in a remote lumber town in northern New England. Girl in Constant Danger ' . Thither she was sent by the strangely exacting terms of her late father's will to sacrifice two of the best years of her life. She was forced to abandon the luxurious ease to which she had always been accustomed and though she possesses" a large fortune, she has been compelled to live for nearly two years on the coarsest fare in the most uninviting surroundings, and to be exposed constantly to dangers which at times have, so alarmed her as to threaten her health if. not her reason. Rarely in the history of peculiar wills has one, meant to be beneficial, been so productive of misery. Dorcas Remalie, it is now re vealed, was required upon the death of her father, by the terms of his singular will, to forsake society for two years and. spend that time with his little known but outwardly de vout brother, a rich owner of timber lands, who exercises the power of a baron over his region. This uncle of Dorcas, John Remalie, bachelor, is described as a grim woodsman, a man of the harshest cruelty secretly exercised and cap able of any act to enforce his will. Arouses Dangerous Enmity It is now learned that Dorcas Re malie took up her new life in strange surroundings with a spirit of resignation, but that she soon unwittingly made an enemy of John Remalia's housekeeper, a forbidding spinster and a confessed mother. To her attempt on the life of Dorcas Remalie, planned vith heinous cun ning, is due in part the disclosure of the whereabouts of the long missing young woman. Some phases of this mystery re main to be cleared. They involve, in a perfectly honorable way, a handsome young woodsman named Jevons, whose history, carefully concealed, is in some way wrapped up with that of John Remalie and the. housekeeper, whose name is Labo. Jevons appointed himself Dorcas Remalie's protector early in her stay in the pine country, and his interest in her has provoked a situation already dangerous to her safety. Further light can be thrown upon this mystery only after the narration of some of the details of the other two mysteries. One Searches South Pacific On a steamer beating out from Suva to various South Pacific islands by way of Naula were two prospectors and a little woman in a dull blue dress. They were bound for Remora Island, a palm fringed atoll. Other passengers were trav eling to Fiji and various points on various errands. The two prospect ors, Kirwyn and Shaw, made no secret of their mission. They were simply to examine the island for possible riches before its transfer from a ' copra company to a new company interested in its prospects. But there was a mystery concern ing the little woman in blue. Her name was Lucy Pirani, it might be Lucy Shaw, to leap ahead of the story. Arriving at Remora Island she led Kirwyn and Shaw to a. hut built -long before of coral blocks, and told them that she and her hus band, Pirani, an Italian scientist, had erected it. Twenty years be fore the three landed on the ivory beach, Pirani had disappeared. His wife, long lost to civilization, had passed from the minds of those who had once known her. She had spent these twenty years cruising the South Pacific, searching island after island for some trace of the missing man. . Pirani tha First Flyer To Kirwyn and Shaw she told a story which to them was at first in credible. Pirani, she said, had been the first to conquer the air. Long before the Wrights perfected their airplane, Pirani, with one of. the most remarkable discoveries in the history of science, had been able to fly at will with wings with which he equipped himself and which re quired no motive power, as power is commonly, und.er8.tood. Hit WHO, she said, were made of Piranite, his invention, which, electrically ener gized, employed the law of atomic activity. Once energized by power ful batteries, Piranite contracted and expanded of itself, and, when 1 arranged in the form of wings, its action produced, for the first time in history, flight exactly like that of a bird. On one of his flights Pirani dis-. . appeared. Then began Mrs. Pi-.-rani's tireless search. By virtue of one of those strange coincidences which happen often enough in life, but strain creduality in the- novel ;v or play, the solution of the mystery came through the accident of the simultaneous visit ot-the three to . Remora Island. Blake's Case Baffled Science And like the mystery of the dis- ' appearance of Dorcas Remalie, the mystery of the disappearance of Pirani can not well be further ex- ' plained until reference is made to the third case. v In. 1904 Charles Blake,' then irj .h his twenties, vanished from his ac-; customed haunts and was lost to hi friends. In some respects his dis- ; appearance is the strangest of the three which now find explanation. He made no secret of a departure for Europe with his rich and much traveled sister. He, too, was rich, -and his visit abroad was for cul- ' tural iiurposes simply that. ' .; - Ha iirob an iVnnaoainnah a VAitnif man, far more so than the average youth of his age, and strange ex -periences markedly affected his : nature and his thought. Wishing to .' have him make an acquaintance with the world, his sister took him much' about, and their explorations ; led them one night first into onei I Paris theater and then into the . other, where' for the first time, he '. experienced the dubious pleasure of two French revues, bold shows, the appeal of which was mostly ana- ', tomical. ' Acquires Strange Delusion' A display of nudity so startledf i him that he became afflicted nex day with the delusion that he was unclad, and for sixteen years that delusion persisted, until at last, re- , cently, he was cured of his obsession . by a young psycho-analyst of in ventive mind. It is learned that during the first few months of his delusion, Charles Blake was held in, a sanitarium near, Paris, but was afterward returned to 1 America, where, lost to his friends, he has. been in an institution; an entirely, harmless and exceptionally amiable and winning victim of a strange de-, lusion. Blake, his , mind cleared,, - has lately enjoyed a brief period of freedom, but is now again lost to -friends and family, save one of the latter, who is aware of his where abouts. .He is again, the victim of his delusion, and the cause of its return is one of the most peculiar instances of the power of suggestion encountered by alienists in years. There is a tragic side to his case, : but there is also a boundlesslv numorous siae, m wnicn is revealed with striking effect the degree in which important aspects of Ameri can life have changed in the years -since 1904, when Charles Blake ' first lost track of the world and the world of him. .1 These three mysteries, whether marked by adventure and romances or pathos and humor, have a direct bearing upon each other in that they find employment for the same pur pose. . Now Told for First Tima The thrilling story of the strange" experiences of Dorcas Remalie, the absorbing narrative of the well-' nigh incredible feats and the dis appearance -of Pirani, first of the bird men, and the keenly satirical,' mellow and humorous record of the case of Charles Blake are now given to the world for the first time. - The case of Miss Remalie is de tailed by the gifted writer, Clarence Budihgton Kelland under the title of "Conflict"; the exceptional story of the successful outcome of Lucy; Pirani's long quest is related, under the title of "Lost Wings," by Beatrice Grimshaw, who knows the South Seas as the aVerage Ameri can knows his own front yard. And the touching and diverting history or ine peculiar oDsession of Charles Blake is set down by a master of numorous narrative, Booth Tarkmg ton, in "Jeanette." For pure rich ness" of satire, "Jeanette" is the most striking story of recent years. These three narratives and ten others are set forth, each one by a writer of commanding abilitv, in the Mav issue of THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE. At all newt Uuds.