WITH OUR EXCHANGES. 



31 CLURE. 



The March issue of McClure's Magazine 

 contains a character study of Edward VII. 

 written by George W. Smalley. Theodore 

 Roosevelt. Vice President, contributes an 

 article in which he describes clearly the 

 personalities of some who have labored 

 with success in New York City for "Re- 

 form Through Social Work." An article 

 by Ida M. Tarbell is entitled "The Dis- 

 banding of the Union Army." Among 

 the other contents this month are, "What 

 We Know About Mars," by Edward S. 

 Holden; "Billy's Tearless Woe," written 

 and illustrated by Frederic Remington; 

 "The Law of Life," by Jack London; 

 "Dan McCarthy," by J. Lincoln Steffene, 

 and other short stories including an in- 

 stallment of "Kim," by Rudyard Kipling. 



THE FORUM. 



The March number of the Forum con- 

 tains an article on "British Rule in the 

 Dominion of Canada," by Sir John G. 

 Bourinot. "What of the Democratic 

 Party," "The Growing Powers of the 

 President" by Mr. Henry Litchfield West, 

 ''Labor Conditions in Switzerland," by 

 Walter B. Scaife. Felix Volkhovsky, once 

 a Siberian exile, has an article on "The 

 Hopes and Fears of Russia," "The Nations 

 in Competition at the Close of the Cen- 

 tury," by Jacob Schoenhof, "The Career 

 of King Edward VII.," by Mr. J. Castell 

 Hopkins. Other articles are: " The Sup- 

 erintendent from the Primary Teacher's 

 Point of View," by Alice Irwin Thompson; 

 "Tabloid Journalism': Its causes and Ef- 

 fects," by Mr. Maurice Low; "Homicide 

 and the Italians," by Napoleone Colajanni ; 

 " The Boer War; A Study in Comparative 

 Prediction," by Mr. Herbert W. Horwill, 



and "The Machiavelli of Chinese Diplo- 

 macy," by Robert E. Lewis. 



THE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL. 



"The only American Girl Who Ever 

 Married a King," ' ; The Loveliest of All 

 Kentucky Girls," "The Anecdotal Side of 

 Theodore Roosevelt," and "The Author's 

 Reading at Bixby Centre." by Kate Doug- 

 las Wiggin, will have a wide reading in 

 the March Ladies' Home Journal. And 

 "The Gibson Play," too. Edward Bok's 

 editorials and Helen Watterson Moody's 

 "Girls Who 'Go In' for Something" are 

 helpful in counsel, and will be profitably 

 read. "The Story of a Young Man" is 

 completed in the March Journal, and "The 

 Successors of Mary the First" presents 

 new and extremely funny complications 

 and vexations. "A Successful Country 

 House at Bryn Mawr. " "A Suburban 

 House for $6500"; a page picture showing 

 "The Old Stage and the Turnpike," of W. 

 L. Taylor's "The Last Hundred Years in 

 New England" series, and "Through Pic- 

 turesque America"-rtwo pages of photo- 

 graphs of views in Cuba and Porto Rico. 

 A feature of the March Journal is Eugene 

 Field's "Armenian Lullaby, "set to music. 

 SCRIBNER'S. 



In Scribners' for March Richard Hard- 

 ing Davis leads the number with an account 

 of a-journey "Along the East Coast of 

 Africa." Thomas F. Millard contributes 

 to this number a concluding article on "The 

 Settlement in China." Henry Norman's 

 Russian article in this number is of un- 

 usual timeliness in that it deals 'with the 

 personality and the achievements of the 

 greatest administration in Russia, the 

 famous Minister of Finance, M. de Witt. 

 Allied to all these articles which show ther 



