THE SECRET CAUSES OF THE WAR WITH JAPAN BY GENERAL KUROPATKIN THE AMERICANIZING OF ANDRE FRANaeOIS BY STELLA WYNNE HERRON AIN'T YOU GWINE TO COME? BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE JUNGLE BLOOD BY ELMORE ELLIOTT PEAKE AN AMERICAN MASTER OF LANDSCAPE BY T. M. CLELAND THE HOUSE OF MUSIC BY GERTRUDE HALL A CAVALRY PEGASUS BY WILL ADAMS IN THE SHADOW OF THE SCAFFOLD BY HARRY GRAHAM THE BURIED ANCHOR BY PERCEVAL GIBBON A FOOTPATH MORALITY BY LOUISE IMOGEN GUINE TAFT AND LABOR BY GEORGE W. ALGER Transcriber's Note: For convenience, a Table of Contents and List of Illustrations have been added to this version. [Translator's Note.] The suppressed memoirs of General Kuropatkin are in four bulky volumes and contain, in the aggregate, about 600,000 words. The first three volumes are devoted, mainly, to a detailed review of the three great battles of the Russo-Japanese war—Liao-yang, the Sha-ho, and Mukden—from the standpoint of modern military science. The fourth volume, which is entitled "Summing up of the War," covers a very wide field, dealing partly with Russia's national problems, her military history, and her policy in Asia, and partly with the causes of the late war, the rise of Japan as a military power, and the reasons for the overwhelming defeat of Russia's armies in the Far East. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE |