Part 62 (1/2)

*Visit of the Master.

(4) *JONES, (E.) CLEMENT.* (_for biography, see 1917_).

Mongrel.

*JULIUS, EMANUEL HALDEMAN-.* Born in Philadelphia, July 30, 1888. Self educated. ”I left home as a kid and meandered around doing odd jobs-from being a bell boy in a school for polite young ladies to holding copy in a newspaper proof room. At twenty I became a reporter in New York. Later I did newspaper work in Chicago, Milwaukee, and Los Angeles. I have edited and contributed to many labor and radical periodicals. I am managing editor of The New Appeal, which is the largest Socialist paper in the world. I am also director of a thoroughly capitalistic bank.

Married in 1916. My chief interest right now is in getting the baby weaned.” Books: ”The Color of Life,” 1916; ”Somewhere in Europe,” 1917; ”The Pest,” 1916. Lives in Girard, Kans.

Ring.

(3) *KING, BASIL.* Born in Charlottetown, P. E. I., Canada, Feb. 26, 1859. Educated at St. Peter's School, Charlottetown, and King's College, Windsor, N. S. Married, 1893. First story published, ”The Eleventh Hour,” Atlantic Monthly, February, 1901. Books: ”Griselda,” 1901; ”Let Not Man Put Asunder,” 1902; ”In the Garden of Charity,” 1903; ”Steps of Honor,” 1905; ”The Giant's Strength,” 1906; ”The Inner Shrine,” 1909; ”The Wild Olive,” 1910; ”The Street Called Straight,” 1912; ”The Way Home,” 1913; ”The Letter of the Contract,” 1914; ”The Side of the Angels,” 1915; ”The Lifted Veil,” 1917; ”The High Heart,” 1917; ”Abraham's Bosom,” 1918. Lives in Boston.

Going West.

(4) *KLINE, BURTON* (_for biography, see 1917_).

*In the Open Code.

Singular Smile.

(4) *KRYSTO, CHRISTINA* (_for biography, see 1917_).

Mother of Stasya.

*LEWIS, SINCLAIR.* Born at Sauk Centre, Minn., Feb. 7, 1885. Educated at local schools, and graduate of Yale University. Newspaper reporter, a.s.sistant editor of Adventure and of Transatlantic Tales, editor of the Publishers' Newspaper Syndicate, editor for George H. Doran Company and Frederick A. Stokes Company. First published story appeared in Pacific Monthly about 1905. Books: ”Our Mr. Wrenn,” 1914; ”The Trail of the Hawk,” 1915; ”Job,” 1917; ”The Innocents,” 1917. Lives at Port Was.h.i.+ngton, L. I., N. Y.

*Willow Walk.

*LIEBERMAN, ELIAS.* Born in Petrograd, Russia, Oct. 30, 1883. His parents emigrated with him to New York in 1891. Graduate of the College of the City of New York and New York University. Head of the English Department, Bushwick High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Aside from life itself, magazine and newspaper work has always been his chief interest.

First published story, ”The Open Door,” Lippincott's Magazine, September, 1913. Books: ”The American Short Story,” 1912; ”Paved Streets,” 1918. Lives in Brooklyn, N. Y.

Tower of Confusion.

(3) *MARKS, JEANNETTE.* Born in Chattanooga, Tenn., 1875. Educated in Philadelphia, Dresden, and Wellesley College. Has travelled much in England and Wales. Fond of outdoor sports. Lecturer in English literature at Mt. Holyoke College. Member of the Committee on Habit Forming Drugs, American Public Health a.s.sociation. First story published, ”Mors Triumphans,” Outlook, May 20, 1905. Books: ”The Cheerful Cricket,” 1907; ”The English Pastoral Drama,” 1908; ”Through Welsh Doorways,” 1909; ”The End of a Song,” 1911; ”A Girl's School Days and After,” 1911; ”Gallant Little Wales,” 1912; ”Vacation Camping for Girls,” 1913; ”Leviathan,” 1913; ”Early English Hero Tales,” 1915; ”Three Welsh Plays,” 1917. Winner of the Welsh National Theatre Prize, 1911. Lives at South Hadley, Ma.s.s.

*Haymakers.

*Old Lady Hudson.

(1) *MORRIS, GOUVERNEUR.* Born in New York City, Feb. 7, 1876. Graduated from Yale University, 1898. Books: ”A Bunch of Grapes,” 1897; ”Tom Beauling,” 1901; ”Aladdin O'Brien,” 1902; ”The Pagan's Progress,” 1904; ”Ellen and Mr. Man,” 1904; ”The Footprint,” 1908; ”Putting on the Screws,” 1909; ”Spread Eagle,” 1910; ”The Voice in the Rice,” 1910; ”It,” 1912; ”If You Touch Them They Vanish,” 1913; ”The Penalty,” 1915; ”When My s.h.i.+p Comes In,” 1915; ”The G.o.ddess,” 1915; ”The Seven Darlings,” 1915; ”We Three,” 1916. Lives in New York City.

Unsent Letter.

*MORTEN, MARJORY.* Born in New York City. Educated in boarding schools, studied art in Paris and New York. Married Alexander Morten, 1909. First story published, ”Sophy So-and-So,” Harper's Magazine, August, 1915.

Lives in New York City.

*Nettle and Foxglove.

*MOSELEY, KATHARINE PRESCOTT.* Born in Newburyport, Ma.s.s. Niece of Mrs.

Harriet Prescott Spofford. Privately educated in Was.h.i.+ngton, D. C. Her father, a secretary of the I. C. Commission, spent over twenty years in his well-known work for the amelioration of railroad employees. His life was written by James Morgan. Miss Moseley's life has been spent between Newburyport, Was.h.i.+ngton, and Boston, with trips abroad. Her chief interests are in music and gardening. Her home is at Deer Island, Newburyport, Ma.s.s.