. The Argonaut. f The Log of a Sea Angler, etc., andDAVID STARR JORDAN, President of Stanford University, and Author ofA Guide to the Study of Fishes, etc. With four colored plates and many illus-trations from photographs. $ net, by mail $ The authors are, respectively, probable the most prominent amateur and profes-sional ichthyologists of the country; and this volume tells their unusual fishingexploits and their best fish stories. HENRY HOLT and COMPANY %&%& March 13, 1909. THE ARGONAUT 169 > 3 ° •S n C/5 c Urn H a^ > H ^ rr P0m s^w 3 <? ° 3 DC h en <; tn R E AE will be


. The Argonaut. f The Log of a Sea Angler, etc., andDAVID STARR JORDAN, President of Stanford University, and Author ofA Guide to the Study of Fishes, etc. With four colored plates and many illus-trations from photographs. $ net, by mail $ The authors are, respectively, probable the most prominent amateur and profes-sional ichthyologists of the country; and this volume tells their unusual fishingexploits and their best fish stories. HENRY HOLT and COMPANY %&%& March 13, 1909. THE ARGONAUT 169 > 3 ° •S n C/5 c Urn H a^ > H ^ rr P0m s^w 3 <? ° 3 DC h en <; tn R E AE will be 3 S=,T3 5 ST~ «rn ^ o T AN WEI ened for bu N, toheld oeleven, if^o J» 1 s r - c^b: s- ?o g P o A N CO ly. Marc T A V ., Inc h IS H c« o> o 3 O (—1- P- K- VT -« ** ^31 J- r=B^ Jl ^ ^s tag*; ^ y **, 11 frr m R\s I®*1 li_Ss ^ I fe M>T ^-ji i: 2=^1 ».*<« &KE31 i&fe ^? • THE ARGONAUT March 13, ?GIRLS/- AND LHEVINNE. By Josephine Hart Phelps. Clyde Fitchs Girls is a comedy, althoughaction and situations are sufficiently absurdto make it possible to stamp it as a farce-comedy. But however it may be classified, itis a jolly little play, and the weeks ran atthe Van Ness Theatre will probably show abetter ending than beginning. The root ideais not at all new, but with so many suffra-gists and suffragettes abroad in the land it isquite as timely and up to date as if it werethe fruit of the hour. Three girls, self supporters, are, theo-retically at least, in an inflamed state of ani-mosity toward men, against whom they renewnightly their vow of exclusion. Xo followersare allowed in their bachelor bower (a studioby day, a bedroom by night) in spite of thefact that none of the three is plain or charm-less. This is regarded by a female neighbor, thejanitor, and other attaches of the building asa most pitiable state of things, which point ofview is something of an eye-opener to the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectjournal, bookyear1877