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The Eclectic Magazine (New York) is to have a new cover for next year.

Count Emile de Kératry, delegate from the Société des Gens de Lettres, who has come to America to further the cause of an international copyright law, was the guest of the American Copyright League at a breakfast at Delmonico's, December 7. Among the speakers were Dr. Edward Eggleston, ex-Senator Chace, author of the Chace bill; President Patton, of Princeton; General Horace Porter, Frederic R. Coudert, A. D. F. Randolph, George Parsons Lathrop, and W. A. Coffin, of the Free Art League.

A new monthly shorthand magazine, The National Stenographer, is to be published in Chicago. Isaac S. Dement will be the editorial manager, and the board of editors will include Fred. Irland, Detroit; Irving E. Rockwell, Chicago; John G. Bowman, Philadelphia; R. S. Gray and George W. Smith, San Francisco; L. E. Greene, Washington; and Edwin W. Sprague, Chicago. The magazine will be impartial, not devoted to any system, and all articles printed will be paid for.

Miss Fannie Murfree, sister of "Charles Egbert Craddock," is to have in The Atlantic a serial story, called "Felicia."

George W. Bungay, widely known as a writer of prose and verse of excellent quality, is prostrated with paralysis at his home in Brooklyn.

General Francis W. Palfrey, of Boston, widely known as an historian, died in Cannes, France, December 5.

William Allingham, the poet, is dead.

The Christmas number of The Nationalist (Boston) contains a fine pen-and-ink sketch of Edward Bellamy, author of "Looking Backward."

. The Kansas Academy of Language, Literature, and Art held its sixth annual session at Topeka, Kansas, November 29 and 30. About fifty members from all parts of the state were present. Papers on "A Plea for the Study of Language," "Pronunciation," "Wordsworth," "The West in Literature," "Some Recent Kansas Books," and other topics were read, and the following officers were chosen for the coming year: President, E. C. Ray, Topeka; vice-president, G. G. Ryan, Leavenworth; secretary, Ida A. Ahlborn, Baldwin; treasurer, O. S. Davis, Topeka; executive committee, A. M. Wilcox, Lawrence; L. E. Whittemore, Topeka; Robert Hay, Junction City. About twenty new members were added to the academy, the object of which is the upbuilding of a higher literary standard in the West.

A "Life of Mary W. Shelley," by Mrs. William Rossetti, will be the next volu ne in the Eminent Women Series. It is said to contain much new and unpublished information about the Shelleys, Lord Byron, and others.

Dr. Holmes writes the article on Emerson in the fourth volume of Chambers' Encyclopædia.

Paul B. Du Chaillu will pass the winter in Egypt.

Wilkie Collins, by his will, directed that he be buried in Kensal Green Cemetery, at a cost not exceeding $125, that no scarves or hat-bands should be used, and that a plain stone cross, placed over his grave, should bear only the inscription which he had prepared. An English writer says of Wilkie Collins' modest fortune that the personality was only about $50,000, and adds: "Those who think this little in comparison with the immense prices he was paid at one time must remember that his figure went down in his old age."

John Adington Symonds, who has lived in an Alpine region for many years for the benefit of his health, passed several weeks in England this year. He has only recently returned to his home at a higher altitude to continue his literary work.

Martin Farquhar Tupper died November 29. The Burrows Brothers Company, of Cleveland, secured Mr. Blackmore's sanction for their handsome pictorial edition of "Lorna Doone," and sent him a good-sized check in recognition of his courtesy.

Robert Browning died in Venice December 12.

Mrs. Dora R. Miller, of New Orleans, is a talented writer, though as yet not very well known. She is a contributor to Lippincott's, the Century, and other standard magazines. "The Diary of a Southern Woman," which appeared in the August Century, under the editorship of George W. Cable, was written by Mrs. Miller, though the article was presented in a rather ambiguous form, which may have misled the public as to its authorship. Mrs. Miller should be recognized, and a place assured her among the talented and remunerated writers of the present day. The interest evinced in this writer by George W. Cable should alone prove her claim to talents of a high order. She has occupied a distinguished position as teacher in New Orleans for many years, successfully and meritoriously filling the Chair of Science in the High School, and locally known as contributor to scientific and educational journals. Such intellects as Mrs. Miller's should be recognized, and the right hand of fellowship extended by more experienced writers.

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WRITING FOR THE PRESS. The Authors' Clipping Bureau

By ROBERT LUCE.

THIRD EDITION.

REVISED AND ENLARGED.

JUST READY.

The third edition (fifth thousand), just issued, contains half as many pages again as the second edition contained. The work has been rearranged and amplified, so as to be more useful to writers for the book and magazine press, and added instructions are given about newspaper work.

This manual embodies the knowledge about "copy" acquired by the author as desk editor on the Boston Globe, having been written in the main from notes made while he was handling manuscript

there and elsewhere.

The first edition received the remarkable compliment of being reprinted entire in the pages of a newspaper,-the Cincinnati Enquirer.

The second edition was made the text-book of the Department of Journalism at Cornell University.

makes a specialty of supplying to authors
notices and reviews of their books from news-
papers and magazines. By securing its aid an
author may have brought to his attention at
small expense every printed reference to his
literary work, thus not only gratifying his natu-
ral curiosity to see what the critics have to say
about his writings, but also gaining real benefit
from the criticisms that are made. The Authors'
Clipping Bureau employs trained readers to
examine the literary departments of all the
newspapers and magazines, and no item of in-
terest to patrons is allowed to escape their
notice. By devoting itself to this specialty of
supplying

Personal Notices and Book
Reviews

the Bureau is enabled to do thorough work, and
to collect from thousands of papers the scat-
tered notices which an author relying upon his
own unaided efforts, or upon the courtesy of
his publishers, could never hope to see.

The service which the Bureau offers is to supply any author with every printed notice of his literary work, or personal reference to himself. The clippings will show the name and date of the publication from which they are taken, and no duplicates will be sent, unless by special request. The charge for the service will be

Five Dollars a Hundred Clippings.

This fee of Five Dollars must be paid in advance, and covers all expenses until one hundred clippings have been mailed. After that the charge will be five cents a clipping, payable when bills are rendered. The advance deposit of Five Dollars for the first hundred clippings is required in every case.

Quantities of both editions have been bought 15 Special arrangements can be made by which

(and so approved) for distribution to editors, reporters, and correspondents by the managers of many papers, among them the Boston Herald, Journal, Transcript, New York World, and Chicago News. Special rates will be made on quantities for distribution in this way.

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writers will be supplied on the same terms with clippings on any subject in which they may be interested, or which they may be investigating in the course of their literary work. The whole vast wealth of periodical literature, containing the latest information upon every conceivable subject, is thus opened to writers, who can secure in this way material that cannot be obtained from cyclopædias and other works of reference.

All orders for clippings should be addressed, and drafts and money-orders made payable, to THE AUTHORS' CLIPPING BUREAU,

186 WASHINGTON ST., Room 7, BOSTON, MASS.

Mention THE AUTHOR.

"THE AUTHOR" FOR 1890.

SPECIAL OFFER TO NEW

SUBSCRIBERS.

THE FIRST VOLUME of THE AUTHOR will end with
the number for December, 1889. The publisher has reserved
a limited number of sets for binding. The first bound vol-
ume, with full index and title-page, will be ready for delivery
about January 1; its price will be $1.50.

OF UNBOUND SETS of the first volume a few are still
on hand. So long as these hold out subscriptions will be
received for THE AUTHOR for 1889 at $1.00 each; or to
new subscribers THE AUTHOR will be sent for the whole
of 1889 and 1890, for $1.80, in advance.

NEW SUBSCRIBERS may order now the bound volume
of THE AUTHOR for 1889 and a subscription for 1890, for
$2.25, in advance, or a subscription for 1890, for $1.00, in
advance, and to all such subscribers the numbers of THE
AUTHOR for November and December, 1889, will be sent
in addition free of charge. Names will be entered on
the mailing-list at once, and the bound volume will be
sent as soon as it is ready, - about January 1.
ANY OLD SUBSCRIBER for THE AUTHOR may get
a renewal of his subscription for one year for eighty
cents by sending the name of a new subscriber with his
order. In other words, a commission of twenty cents
will be paid to any old subscriber who will send a new
subscription with his own renewal; by sending five new
subscriptions and five dollars, he may get the renewal of
his own subscription free.

THE AUTHOR FOR 1890 will be better and more
valuable in every way than THE AUTHOR for 1889. Many
improvements are projected, and the efforts of the pub-
lisher will be devoted to strengthening and improving
the magazine with every issue. THE AUTHOR is sure to
grow in interest and importance, and a complete file of
the magazine from the beginning should be in every writer's
library.

SEND YOUR SUBSCRIPTION NOW.

ADDRESS: THE AUTHOR, BOX 1905, BOSTON, MASS.

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