idAECH, 1914 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



109 



By Richard Harding 

 Davis 



<J Breaking Into the Movies 



How a great picture-play is produced. The 

 way "Soldiers of Fortune" was put on the 

 films at Santiago. Illustrated. 



By Howard Crosby Butler 



CJSardis and the American 

 Excavations 



The wonderful discoveries in this ancient 

 Lydian city. Illustrated. 



By Madame Waddington 



*IMy First Years as a 

 Frenchwoman 



III. M. Waddington as Prime Minister, 1879. 



<ITougourt— North Africa 

 and the Desert 



By George E. Woodberry 



Pen pictures of the Desert. 



<JThe Appeal of the Winter 

 Landscape 



By Birge Harrison 



In "The Field of Art." Illustrated from 

 paintings. 



qWith the Navy 



Three spirited paintings by Henry 

 Reuterdahl, reproduced in colors. 



Stories 



<IThe Fete of M'sieur Bob 



By Mary R. S. Andrews 



Author of "The Perfect Tribute." A story 

 of the woods. 



<JThe Bravest Son 



By Mary Synon 



The story of a hero of the North country. 



^ Experience 



By Gordon Hall Gerould 



A romantic episode in the career of Peter 

 Sanders, retired gambler. 



<IThe Ghost on the Stairs 



By Mrs. W. K. Clifford 



*IThe Stuff That Dreams are 

 Made On 



By Gerald Chittenden 



CJCormac O'Brien, Piper 



By Amanda Mathews 



An Irish story. 



$3.00 a year; 25 cents a number 



CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY 



From the Baltimore American 



"In the magazine field SCRIBNER'S has so uniformly sustained the high standards for varied and thoroughly 

 popular articles and stories of the kind that interest the greatest number of persons that the announcement of the 

 publishers for the coming year is remarkable, not because of the merit of the programme, but for its superior excellence, 

 even for Scribner's. 



"There is no figure of such' world inclusiveness either in sympathies or undertaking as that of Theodore 

 Roosevelt. His travels through the South American countries will be marked by contributions to research and 

 adventure of a range that cannot be forecast. It is enough to believe that the recital will have even more vivid 

 interest than the matchless depictions of his adventures in Africa." 



The Readers' Service will give information about outrmobiles 



