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[The entire contents of this Magazine are covered by the general copyright, and articles must not be reprinted without special permission.]

CONTENTS OF ST. NICHOLAS FOR JANUARY, 1915.

Frontispiece. "Hi! you up there!" Painted by Arthur Rackham.

The Little Queen of Twelfth-night. Story..

Illustrated by M. T. and T. M. Bevans.

"Kiss and Be Friends." Picture.

A School-boy's Exercise of 1700 Years Ago.

Illustrated.

After School. Verse..

The Boarded-up House. Serial Story...

Illustrated by C. M. Relyea.

When the Clock Strikes Six-When the Clock Strikes Seven....

Photographs by Katharine Bingham.

The Lost Prince. Serial Story..

Illustrated by Maurice L. Bower.

A Matter of Color. Verse..

Illustrated by the Author.

The Pages of the United States Senate. Sketch..

Illustrated.

Page

Katharine Elise Chapman.....193

Painted by Arthur J. Elsley....
Sketch..

.199

.Bertha Johnston

.200

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.210

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Eunice Fuller

Seymour Barnard

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234

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Thrilling Escapes of Wild Animals. Sketch.

Illustrated by Norman P. Rockwell and Bruce Horsfall.

Try It. Verse..

Stories of Friendly Giants. V. The Man Who Went to the Giants'

Country. Story.

Illustrated by Pamela C. Smith.

Practical Mechanics for Boys:

How Boys Make Furniture from Boxes..
Illustrations from photographs by Brown Bros.

A Small Toboggan-Slide That Any Boy Can Make....A. Neely Hall......
Illustrated by the Author.

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The Century Co. and its editors receive manuscripts and art material, submitted for publication, only on the understanding that they shall not be responsible for loss or injury thereto while in their possession or in transit. Copies of manuscripts should be retained by the authors. In the United States and Canada, the price of THE ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE is $3.00 a year in advance, or 25 cents a single copy; the subscription price elsewhere throughout the world is $3.60 (the regular price of $3.00 plus the foreign postage, 60 cents). Foreign subscriptions will be received in English money at 14 shillings, 6 pence, in French money 18 francs, in German money 14 marks, 50 pfennigs, covering postage. We request that remittances be by money order, bank check, draft, or registered letter. All subscriptions will be filled from the New York office. The Century Co. reserves the right to suspend any subscription taken contrary to its selling terms, and to refund the unexpired credit. PUBLISHED MONTHLY

The half-yearly parts of ST. NICHOLAS end with the October and April numbers respectively, and the red cloth covers are ready with the issue of these numbers; price 50 cents, by mail, postpaid; the two covers for the complete volume, $1.00. We bind and furnish covers for 75 cents per part, or $1.50 for the complete volume. (Carriage extra.) In sending the numbers to us, they should be distinctly marked with owner's name. Bound volumes are not exchanged for numbers.

All subscriptions for and all business matters in connection with THE ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE should be addressed to

WILLIAM W. ELLSWORTH. President

GEORGE L. WHEELOCK, Treasurer

DOUGLAS Z. DOTY, Secretary

JAMES ABBOTT, Ass't Treasurer

THE CENTURY CO. Union Square, New York, N. Y.

A Child's Curiosity

about any one thing lasts but a few moments before another has claimed his attention. If we want him to learn, we must tell him all he wants to know while his interest is still warm.

If you do not know about the things he asks, you must turn to books, and you must have the books at hand, for you cannot afford to wait for someone else who knows, or to send to the library for the book. By that time the child's interest will have waned and the chance is gone. As with older people, the most of the child's thoughts center in people and places and events. Two volumes,

The Century Atlas

and

The Century Cyclopedia of Names

give just what children should know; complete, interesting, and accurate articles, unspoiled by too much detail.

First the Atlas pictures for them the place where this event happened, and all the surrounding towns, rivers, mountains, etc. It is so vivid that they cannot easily forget. Then the articles of the Cyclopedia describe the very men or women concerned, the cities and even the streets or buildings, and, if the event is at all historical, that is covered too.

Thus the two volumes are supplementary-wonderfully complete and perfect in themselves-but doubled in their value and interest when the information in one is added to that in the other.

Mail to THE CENTURY CO., Union Square, New York, to-day

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Orders for Canadian or foreign shipment will be delivered without charge, and duty free, if 15 per cent. is added to the above prices.

All books will be delivered free of charge, by mail or express.

The volumes are 91" deep, by 12" high, and take up 5" of shelf space.

They are bound only in a very dark green morocco, with buckram sides of lighter tone, and gold titles. Mark X in the space at left of volume or volumes desired; attach check or money order; and fill in proper shipping address below:

Name.

Street.

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GET THIS BETTER BABY BOOKLET

NOT

FOR YOUR MOTHER

OT everybody knows what a Better Baby is. But you do because the WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION told you about them in the Christmas ST. NICHOLAS.

Now that they have done this for you, will you do something for the babies?

Down in the right-hand corner of this page they have left some space, especially so you can do this favor for babies without any trouble at all.

They want you to show your mother this page. Then if she says "Yes," take a pen and write down in that space her name and address (street, city and state). If you have a little baby brother or sister, mark an in the little square reserved for it: like this [x]; then write down the name and address of some other mother who has a little baby.

Mail the little coupon to the WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION, the magazine of Better Babies, and they will send this little book (pictured here in miniature) to both mothers.

Of course every mother wants her baby to be a Better Baby. And the

WOMAN'S HOME
COMPANION

beautiful thing about it is-every baby
can become one! Lots of mothers
don't know that. That is just why
these pages are printed in ST. NICH-
OLAS. We want them all to know.
We want you to help us. The babies
need your help!

Will you help all babies become
BETTER BABIES?

Will you tell every mother you
know about the BETTER BABIES
BUREAU which the WOMAN'S HOME
COMPANION has? Tell them to find
out about it on page 33 of the Jan-
uary WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION-
for the babies' sake. You'll remem-
ber, won't you? Don't forget.

P. S. Confidentially, BETTER BABIES
are what we make ST. NICHOLAS
readers from By and By.

What Every Mother
Wants to Know

About Her Baby

THETTER

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My only name is Judy,
I've no other name at all.
I'm just a little orphan,
A Daddy-Long-Legs doll.
If YOU will be my mother,
And love and hold me tight,
You'll help another orphan
To be tucked in bed at night,
And to find a really mother,
Which she hasn't now at all.
Let me be your little Judy,
Your Daddy-Long-Legs doll.

There is a book "Daddy-Long-Legs," you know. Jean Webster wrote it. And there is a play "Daddy-Long-Legs." Jean Webster wrote that too, and everybody in New York is going to see it.

Now come "Daddy-Long-Legs" dolls, and every doll that is sold goes to help place some homeless child in a real home with a real mother and father, through the State Charities Aid Association.

A "Daddy-Long-Legs" doll, in a box, all
dressed....
.$ .50

Of course you want to help. You can find out all about it by writing to

DADDY-LONG-LEGS

Care of St. Nicholas

Union Square, New York

Dear Readers of
ST. NICHOLAS

The February chapters of "The
Lost Prince" are the most ex-
citing yet. Marco and The Rat
think of a wonderful plan to
help Samavia's Secret Party, and
there is a rumor on London's
streets that the lost prince is
found, and-but you will want
to read it all for yourself in Mrs.
Burnett's own magic telling.

You will want to read, too,
Thornton W. Burgess' story of
Tommy and the Wishing-Stone
and Reddy Fox, and what
Charles A. Eastman (who is a
real Indian) has to tell you
about the language of foot-
prints, and Frances Adams-
Clark's true story of a red
squirrel.

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They will

for your own reading, for gifts-these books. delight both the traveler and the stay-at-home

ABROAD AT HOME

The American adventures of two happy fellows, Julian Street, writer,

and Wallace Morgan, artist

Julian Street and Wallace Morgan made the trip from New York City to San Francisco and back, stopping in many of the principal cities and seeing much of the life outside the cities. And they got right down to the very roots of American life-they picture it as it has never been pictured before the amusing side, and, above all, the human side.

What Mark Twain did for Europe in "Innocents Abroad," Julian Street has done for America in "Abroad at Home," and Wallace Morgan's fifty pictures match the humor and local color of Julian Street's description.

The gift book of the year

Octavo, 517 pages. Price $2.50 net, postage 12 cents

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A close-range study of the Panama Canal and its workers by a prince of vagabonds and raconteurs. It is a vivid, fascinating, racily humorous description of things as they are, below, as well as on, the surface of the Canal Zone!

Many illustrations. Price $2.00 net, postage 10 cents

Cuba and Porto Rico

By Robert T. Hill

What the average reader wants to know of the people, government, and life of the West Indies. The best of steamer reading on the trip many an American will take this winter.

Interestingly illustrated. Price $3.00 net, postage 12 cents

Your bookseller has these books. They are published by

Union Square -:- THE CENTURY CO. -:

New York

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