ItiE IRRIGA llOtt 



go at from five to fifteen cents per meal is 

 told by Mr. Wyckoff in the April chapter 

 of ' The Workers" in Scribner. He re- 

 veals one of the day-laborer's greatest con- 

 solations, when he says: "When living is 

 a daily struggle with the problems of what 

 you shall eat and what you shall drink, and 

 where-withal you shall be clothed, you 

 take no anxious thought for the morrow, 

 quite content to let the morrow take 

 thought for the things of itself, for suffi- 

 cient unto the day is the evil thereof." 



MCCLURE'S MAGAZINE FOR APRIL. 

 In the way of personal memoirs of the 

 Civil War, there has been nothing more 



interesting published than Charles A. 

 Dana's "Reminiscences," and much the 

 most interesting of these thus far is the 

 paper in McClure's Magazine for April, 

 giving Mr. Dana's recollections of Lincoln 

 and his cabinet. Living in the closest 

 official relations with Lincoln and the mem- 

 bers of the cabinet for a considerable time, 

 Mr. Dana's opportunities for knowing them 

 were perfect; and he has set forth his inl- 

 pressions of them with that perfect frank- 

 ness and that sure sense of the central 

 characteristic which make his portraitures 

 so real and definite. The portraits from 

 photographs in the Government Civil War 

 Collection add to the interest of the paper. 



