v mmAiuuiL's "wi"niiir"1 'w. w -., .mu - - - l i- irw it I ? '& ; ? v a r . ki t IS 6 ANTWERP CRUSHED BY HAIL OF SHELLS Cnntlnntd from rant One reaching tho Avar Office were received nt llio Belgian Legation, but It was etated there, that no official confirma tion had been received. Conflicting reports are received con cerning: the historic cathedral of Notre Dame. Some stories of tlio bombard ment say the structure, was damaged severely,' others state It was not struck by shells or bombs. The War Offlco admitted today that the city had been evacuated yesterday. It Is understood that come of the Inner and outer forts are still holding out, but they cannot teslst Ions. The strongest forts were those first at tached by the Germans' 16-Inch guns. They fell, and the fate of the weaker forts will be the same. The hope that Atitwer: can bo re taken by tho Allies Is voiced by Colo nel Itepington. military expert of the Times, lie says thero is no reason why the Belgians should not join the Allies hacking their way north of Arras. ALLIES RETIRE AS ANTWERP SURRENDERS, BERLIN SAYS BBULIN. net. 10. Complete occupation of the city o Antwerp by the German forces was announced In the following statement Issued by the Wnr Office today: Antwerp Is In ouv possession. Wo have had control of tho city since yesterday afternoon. A few forts remain In the posses sion of the Belgians, but our occu pation of the city Itself is com plete. A statement Issued by the War Of flee shortly after midnight states that the flanking operations of the German troops In France had met with such steady success that the Allies' left wing Is In serious danger. "Our offensive Is increasing In strength," said the statement, "and tho ALLIES ARE HARD PRESSED IN NORTHWESTERN FRANCE PARIS. Oct. 10. German troops are making heavy at tacks upon the Allies north and north west of Lille, but the situation Is satis factory as far1 as the Allies are con cerned, according to tho official French statement Issued at 3 o'clock this after noon. It says that the French troops have gained some advantage north of the Olse and have made progress about St. Mlhlel, at the eastern end of the battle front. The official statement also announced that Antwerp was taken Friday. Tho official commtmiquo follows In full: The battle continues under satis factory conditions. Our entiro bat tle front has been maintained de spite violent attacks by the enemy at several points on our left wing. In the region comprised between La Basse, Armentieres and Cassol (27 miles northwest of Lille and IS miles from the coast of the English Channel). The engagements between the opposing cavalry have been of an Intricate nature because of the nature of the land formation. At the north of the Oise our troops havo gained some real ad vantages at several parts of their zone of action. I CZAR CHECKED AT PRZEMYSL, ! AUSTRIAN STAFF DECLARES Russians Suffer Reverse Near Jaros lnw and in Carpathians. VIENNA, Oct. 1". An official statement from the General Staff announces that part of the Rus sian troops before Przerm.il havo been compelled to withdraw bocaunp of click i administered by the AustrUns. Tho statement follows: "The advance of the Austro-Huncarlan tr'Soops has checked the R msians in their fruitless efforts in the direction of Prze mjsl. Fighting was at its fiercest Thurs day nlsht. During: the following mornlnj the enemy's artillery fire, directed against the forts. comraenM to weaken The Russians then -vUtndrew part nt tnelr troops "At Lanrut cfet nnrthwet of Jaro slaw). heavv fighting is jt.'l It prof. ii between strons hostile forces The Ilus- TJ3E FfcftgllNG ANewwpvelby GEORGE GIBBS Bolted Door." .sickofdissi- If I m .Author f.,,Tht Ik iiii A young mn jag i a pat ion, whom ks to end his K " UE life a light-li use keeper's W ' 19 artless daug! it -r who saves 1 lJffB bim, uncoD6 i us from the Wm. ffl$ sea hi show ; ir! sweetheart W IB "who tru to e upt htm back Charmingly told description of the haunU of j , f B to lhc 'd U e RboUt tb"' Dickens's characters, and of Dickens himself J 'I IS UeTaVtoJy'ofGabSrbing illustrated wlh charcoal drawing, by the author, I M ML Interest and intense dramatic artl!t which give, as nothing else can, the true I ffl IBff Pr. atmosphere of soot-stained London. Kff B ATJAU-BC ( KSELLERS S3.50 net.- boslaSe extra. JM K2EH' TZ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS AT ALL BOOKSTORES j:;ZZZZZ::Z ffl Fifth Avenue at 48th St., New York. JOHN LANE GO. .NEW YORK : A concerted attack on England will follow, It Is- believed. The first great German plan, the capture of Paris, haa failed, and tho Germans now aro enter ing upon their second objective This Is a scries of blows at the English Channel littoral and the seizure or ports In northern Belgium and north eastern France. British reinforcements, perhaps Ca nadian troops, aro reported to have landed at Ostend, where Belgians also are reported to be In considerable force. Klghtlng may be expected In that district, as an unofficial dispatch states that German Uhlans havo been seen south of Ostend, Two-thirds of the city Is wrecked by the tremendous fire of shells which German batteries poured on Its build ings. When tho surrender of the capital was decided upon the retreating troops blew up the famous fort of Mnrxem, north of tho city, to prevent It being ullli2ed In future operations by the Germans enemv has suffered so tremendously In his attempts to arrest our advance and outflank us that he has been compelled to withdraw from several iolnts about Arras. "Though wo have suffered heavily we are In a position to reinforce our lines, whereas the French and British commanders aro unable to strengthen their forces to any extent. "Tho successful termination of the siege of Antwerp will release the Ger man forces that have been besieging that fortress. It can be stated that the decisive phase of the war in tho west ern theatre has been reached and the advantage it all ours. "The situation in the eastern theatre Is unchanged." In the region of St. Mihiel we have made evident advance. ' In tho Belgian theatre of war it is announced that Antwerp was taken yesterday, hut It is not yet known under what conditions. In the Russian war theatre se vere fighting continues on the frontier of East Prussia, where the Russian troops havo had some par tial successes. They have occu pied the city of Lyck. The siege of Przemysl continues under condi tions favorable to the Russians, who havo taken by assault one of the forts of the principal line of the fortifications. Information to the headquarters of General Gallieni, Military Governor of Paris, Is to tho effect that the Ger mans are again striving against the French right on tho Meuse. The high est confidence prevails, however, that I the French will not only hold their i own, but will eventually oust the Ger mans from their position near St. Mlhlel. and roll them back toward Lux emburg. Although the German centre has been weakened by tha removal of troops to support General Alexander von Kluk, the positions held by the In-' vaders at that point are so strong that the French have not dared to try to take them by storm. ?" have already been driven from emewadow In the Carpathians. "The situation Is favorable for Austrian. " the Alaska Coal Bill Killed in Senate WASHINGTON. Oct. 10 -No Alaska coal bill will be passed by this Con gress. Senator Meyers, of the Confer ence Committee, told the Senate this afternoon after a vote by the Senate of K to 3 rejecting the conference report. , The Hon. JOSEPH H. CHOATE in his Introduction to the New Edition of Germany and England refers to the book as "One that every American should read . . . because it explains very lucidly not the occasion, but the cause (the deep-seated cause), of the present war ... It is a life and death struggle between two mighty Powers, each entitled to the respect and admiration of the on looking world." By Prof. J. A. CRAMB tl.OO net in all bookstores. Published bt E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY 68lTOiVVIS5o5r,v Just Published Today IN DICKENS'S LONDON By F, HOPKINSON SMITH EVENING L'EDGER-PHIEAPELTHIA SATURDAY, OCTOBER OIL TANKS FLYING U. S. FLAG BURN IN ANTWERP Americans Suffer Loss From Bom bardment by Germans. WASHINGTON, Oct W.-The German attacking force at Antwerp set flto to oil tanks there' while the American flag was flying over them, according to a dis patch to tho Stale Department this morning from Consul General Henry Dietrich. The tanks were burned with a total loss to American owners. The Consul General also notified tho Stale Department that he had been forced to leavo Antwerp when the bombardment commenced on Wednesday. State Department officials of the United States are of the opinion that the United States can do nothing about the destruc tion of the oil tanks at this time, but that the owners will have to wait until the war Is over and then put In their claim for the damage done. ANTWERP REFUGEE TRAIN IS STRUCK BY PROJECTILE Fugitives Were About to Leave for Holland Hospital Burned. AMSTERDAM. Oct. 10 Fire raged throughout the southern quarter of Antwerp, as well as In tho sub urb of Berghem, alt of last night. The orphnnasc on the Rue Louise was set on fire. Happily the Inmates had left when the blaze broke out. Stulvenberg Hospital, wlier 3w wounded were being cared for, was struck by two shells yesterday. The wounded were trans ferred to two ships moored in the harbor. It Is stated now that no fire has broken out In the harbor district. The Palais of Justice has been partly destroyed by Ilamos. There is no water to extinguish the flics. At 2 o'clock this morning a train filled with fugitives about to leave for Esschen, on the border of Holland, directly north of Antwerp, was struck by a projectile. Belgian engineers hae blown up tho bridge over the Antwerp-Turnhout t'anal, as well as tho bridge near the railway station No more fugitives arc reaching Esschcn this morning as tho destruction of the bridges has stopped traffic on the rail way north from the city. FRENCH RENEW OFFENSIVE IN ALSATIAN CAMPAIGN Advance Beported Along Extended Line Germans Lose in Vosges. PA HIS, Oct. 10. A dispatch from Basel states that the French have taken the offensive in Al sace and have been advancing over an extended line. It is stated further that the Germans lost 37.IVO men In trying to storm Schluct, Bon Homme and other pusses In tho Vos ges Mountains. A shell fell among a group of German Staff officers, killing them all. CAPTAIN COLEMAN ASKED TO EXPLAIN WAR TALK War Department Investigates Al leged Charge Against Germans. WASHINGTON, Oct. lO.-Pecretary of Wat Garrison today called upon Captain I.e Vert Coleman, of the coast artllleiy corps, to explain an Interview In New York In which he was reported to have stated that Gorman atrocities weie com mitted by the direct order of German offi cials and that the Kaiser instructed Ills men not to give or take any quarter. This Interview Is considered at the Wnr Department to be In direct violation of tho President's order foi bidding army and navy officers to discuss the wnr. 63,000 PRIESTS IN ARMIES Vatican Learns of Aid Given by Clergymen. ROME, Oct. lf According to reports received at the Vatican, more than 63,000 ecclesiastics are now serving In different capacities with the armies in the field, especially with the Belgian, French and Austrian forces. Most of these clersmen are engaged In hospital work Thev Include seven bishops and 19 other prelates. FIGHTING IN MEXICO WASHINGTON, Oct. W -Further fight ing In Sonora. Mexico, was repotted to Constitutionalist headquarters here today by General Hill. Telegraphing from Naro. ho said: "Two assaults wero repulsed yesterday and skirmishing continues. Our position is such that the enemy will never be able to tak It. I have plenty of am munition. Our firing Is accurate and mi fortifications strong "I expect a reinforcement of "n men from PlgerP In a short time our fori es will outnumber those of the enemy and an offensive operation will bo pos&lht AMONG THE THE ACTOR'S ART A Little Exposition by Brander Matthews. In a neat and compact little volume, "On Acting," (Chas. Bcrlbner's Sons, N. T.) the distinguished professor of English who for so many years has lent unwonted distinction to that usually lugubrious af fair, tho chair of literature at Columbia, Brander Matthews, by a grace of -wit and felicity of expression, backed by ' sound and practiced knowledge of his craft, has compressed much wisdom of affairs the atrical. The spelling of the volume-flc Mr. Matthews! In ntroclous. The hu man mind Is not ndapted to withstand the mental and moral shock of the word "dls tlngulsht"! Especially In a series of es says on the art of acting, which, ns Mr. Matthews so Justly observes, Is largely n matter of appearances. A fitting title for tho book would be "The Actor's the Thing." A reasoned critic, a man who has endured the aw ful boredem of Innumerablo first nights, when the very angle of the pitch of tho chalrscat adds to the misery of the fail ure of n piece, Mr. Matthews has lived to bo able to tell the vital truth nbout plays and plajers. lVo are accustomed to go to the theatre, to be unsatisfied and to blame the actors, the piece and every body. Rut Mr. Matthews Is not of this sot-t. He has put the blame and the credit where It belongs. V the play docs not please. It Is the actor's fault. In his hands rests tho success or failure of any stray masterpiece that may come along. And masterpieces may not be so rare as It Is sometimes thought. Mr. Matthews says: "Every one who has studied the recent history of the theatre will admit, If he Is both competent and candid, that the outlook for the future is far more hope ful than It was 40 or fin years ago. Ibsen and B.iornson are dead; but Hervlcu and Rrleux. Rostand and Luvedan aro writ ing In France, as Sudermann and Haupt minn aro In Germany and D'AnnunzIo In Italy. In England thero are Plr James Hirrle and Mr. Shaw, Mr. Jones and Sir Arthur Rlnero: and here In America thero are half a dozen men, still young, most of them, nnd still learning how to see life the life about them, nnd how to re produce It on the stage, who nre enrnectly peeking as best they can to hold the mir ror up to nature." So our outlook Is not so bad as wo aro wont to think. Mr. Matthews quotes Colley Clbber. That versatile nnd rather snob bish person who wrote nnd ncted nnd gor slped for T( fruitful years onco asked Con gree why he did not write another com edy. Tho old wit retorted promptly: "Gut where nre your actors?" And Mr. Matthew3 goes on: "Where nre the Booths and tho Kcm bles of our time? Is the nrt of acting, with our syndicates and our rtar systems and our- long rims, without hopo of re covery? It calls for little hardihood to deny this and for llttlo knowledge of tho theatro to disprove it. The Booths and tho Kembles nnd the Garrlcks did not nil live nt once, and It Is absurd to suppose that we can match all the mighty actore of tho past In a single quarter of a cell- turv. But we can easily call tho role of a dozen or a scoro of actors who are ar- tists, gifted by nature nnd cultivated by I long exercise of their powers, possessing each of them an individuality of their own." Mr. Matthews closes his volumo by an assertion of the following fact: That the art of acting must bo rulnpted to the : nature of tho theatro In wHIch the actor , appears; that the scene-ripping proclivi ties of the stars that once were would be out of place In the modern little thea- I tre. Tho book Is Interesting, clear, lucid, ( worth while. To every student of tho i stago and the art of the actor, to every I plivgocr It will be of value. Our present ' days nre, days of trying to understand ' ono another. This little volume helps ' us to see how tho man behind tho foot lights tries to please the man before. And perhaps If wo tried to imagine his difficulties; wo should have a Juntor un derstanding of his achievements. HOW WE ARE RULED An Exposition by William M. Stone of the Way Our Government Works. Mr Slnane. in his modestly entitled vol States" n-irpers), has presented a history of Amoiican noil tics and an exposition of partv political tendencies In practice The tariff nnd the slavery question, the Monroe Poctrlne, rotation in office, the veto, party conventions nnd party machinery, plat forms, civil service reform, interstate commerce, tho beginnings of socialism, the ballot reform, the silver question, the growing power of the executive all these aro treated fully and understanding- in this book. The major part of this volume consists of lectures delivered bv the author ns ex change professor from Columbia In Ber lin and in Munich. Mr. Stone, who has devoted many years to tho fcturty of our governmental affairs. Is peculiarly quali fied to speak with authority on these mat- FICTION SUPREME A ROMANCE! OF OLD PARIS ?se THE afssttf Dl H II. DG VERE STACPOOLE Author of ' The Blue Lajoon " "ChlMren of th.- Pa, ' eie Colore'! Frontispiece, by Earl Ste' son Crawford Cloth. $1.30 net. A romance of Paris not the Paris of today, grim and sombre, but old Pans of the daya when Franca was under the rule of ministers and favorites. A conspiracy is on foot to prevent tho presentation of Madame Dubarry at Court. How the plot Is discovered and defeated by a gal lant gentleman of the Court is thrilling told. A L1TKRARY EVENT THE REVOLT OF THE ANGELS ANATOLB FRANCE'S LATEST NOVEL. Limited Library Edition. 11.75 net. Popular edition. 81.S5 net Anntolo France is not only the greatest living French stylist he Is a world celebrity. His latest novel prc-ents graphically the irrepres sible conflict betwen science and theology and Is a brilliant piece of A REMARKABLE NOVEL BELLAMY ELINOR MORPAUXT Author of "Slmpion," eto Cloth. II. .1 net. "It resembles a glass of sherry and bitters stimulating, leaving a sharp, enjoyable tang behind. Un like so many novels, 'Bellamy la worth ii rareful and attentive read ing." .Vru) Yorfc Timet. AN IDYLLIC ROMANCE MAID OF THE MIST By JOHN OXENHAM Author of "Rei Wrth," etc. Cloth, Ml ... A tale of adventure and romance under the most original circum stances. A book you'll enjoy and keep. SKMT NEW BOOKS ters. His work Is not only authoritative, It Is Interesting. On that matter which Is gradually arousing the Interest of thinking men tho country over, tho power of the President, Mr. Stone's remarks are remarkably il luminating. Thero Is little question that tho founders of tho Republic had In mind a weak executive, yet so little Idea had they of the future development of the country that the very limitations they Imposed upon the executive have proved Its strength. There is no doubt the" the President of the United States Is In some respects the most autocratic ruler on earth. Just how this has come nbout Mr. Stone well explains In this volume. "AS GEORGE SEES IT" Or, "Sizing TJp Uncle Sam," by George Fitch. Some years ago that slmplo and kindly soul, George Fitch, strolled into New York and went to the late lamented Hammersteln Opera House. In fact, he did more than that. Ho went behind the scenes. And there he met Trcntlnl, the bewitching little Italian prima donna. Now, nt that time Trcntlnl did not know how to speak English, nor did George know how to speak Italian. So when he was Introduced to the "little devil of grand opera" he was perforce obliged to compliment her In English, which was painfully translated Into some language the little lady could under stand. When finally the compliment reached her. Trentlnt turned to George and exclaimed! "Kees me." And after ward George said he was really flus tered. But, being an American, as he sees It, not for long. That's the point of the volume under consideration. If any one can truly be so dull as to consider George. Ho 's not to be considered. He speaks the truth. And no man who tells the truth must be taken seriously, He la funny. Ho Is bound to be. That Is why George Is funny. Life Is not a Joke to him or to any one else. But If you look at It steadily for a while It Is not devoid of the things that nuke the normal human being smile. And George, being a hyper normsl human being, smiles all the time. "Sizing Up Uncle Sam" (Stokes) is up roariously funny but pretty straight, ns Gcorgo would say. "THE DISAGREEABLENESS OF NEW ENGLANDEBS" Th folks who pretend to know about such matters have been, lo, these manv years, sitting tound looking for "the great American writer." As they sipped their tea, weak, they have sighed for that day when somehow, somewhere, iti this broad, but horridly uncultured, land of ours, some writer would struggle up and write "really write, you knowl" It's all rather silly, but, like most Billy adver tises the year around because it alwavs has fresh books of every sort and real value to sell. Come and see. Open all ilny Sntimlny 1701 Chestnut Street 'A Man Would Die in the First Alcove" "r-TTHEl ffl ur I I-' JL ea IIEHE are RSO 00O vol- umes in tne Imperial Library at Pari.," eald Emerson. "If a man nere to read In- du.trlou.ly from dawn to darlc for lly ear ho would die in the nmt alcoe." And lie would not die a well read man. Hut If a man could know that few great books a.re endurlngly worth while and could read thoie fr- histories, bionra pliles, dramab, works of travel, fiulon. poetry, philosophy and religion he would become well read. een though he could de ote to them but a few pleusura moments a day. Expert Adilee on Your IleudluK FUKB For ears Dr. Charles W. Eliot, Tresldent Emeritus of Harvard, has inatntnlned that the books really ensentlal to the Twentieth Centurs Idea of a cultivated man rould be contained In a Five Foot Shelf, and from his sixty years of redrtlmr, study and teaching- forty of hlch were spent at the head of one of the world's greatest universities he has put aside those few books that he considers most worth Mhlle the few that best picture the progress of the human race from the earliest times down to the present day, through the writ. Ings of those who have made our civilization what It is. 150. COO was spent in compiling and Indexing the set. arranging foot notes und Heading- Guide, and the result was finally pre sented at a cost of $15,000 as The Faraoui Klve-Foot Shelf of Uouks) tl8 Masterpieces at a. few cents s piece. Any man who cares to read ef ficlently. Instead of wastefully. should know what few books Dr Eliot selected, and why He should know why 100,000 suc cessful men are finding In the Five-Foot Shelf lust the mental stimulus they need. Kverytning you '""vl. " """ about The Famous Five-Foot Ehelf of Books is In a free booklet There Is a copy for you no obligation; wtivir cup in coupuu. P. L. K. 1P-10-H P V. Colli.,. I Son. 41SW nth St. N. Y. City. Mall m. wlrhAii Obligation oil mv part. your free (Jukle Rack! .A Books." containing tha v. n rive-jioct cneif. THE 7 BOOKSHOP BOEmfilfik anaBaa 10, IQI'4. ththjrs, sad. Because there tvro & large number of people, most of them very active nnd hafd working, who aro writ ing qui to welf. The trouble Is that the ''literary bunkers" to coin a word we sadly need when a aenous-mlnded peo ple talk about literature aro blind. "Blind m bats In daylight." They can not see what Is happening right under their eyes. TVhlch Is, simply, that the American short-story' writer Is about the best there Is. A well-known Italian novelist, after a brief visit to tho United States, ex claimed In admiration, "It's a clnamo nation! Toil Americans have got to get things quick and photographic. You havo a most amazing capacity to Under stand the truth. And still more, you have an Incredible desire for It." If his esti mate be Unflattering that we aro n. mov-Ing-plcturo crowd, yet It Is true. Your typical American differs from all the other people that havo ever lived be cause ho likes to know the truth. And, having discovered It. as Walt Whitman obscrvod In this Camden retreat, he Is amused by It. "Mrs Mary Wllklna Freeman Is an American. That she writes well, ovon tho highbrows are agreed. She sees "life In the real," and tells It as she Bees It. Tho charming talcs In "The Copy Cat" Cllarpers) are Imbued with the spirit of truth. One who knows Now England can not fall to recognize tho truth of this picture; ' 'Nobody says that dear Annie? has not a sweet wlsposltlon,' said Imogen, taking a careful stitch In hor embroidery. 'But a sweet disposition is very often extremely difficult for other people. It constantly put them In tho wrong.' " The Irony that underlies this Is the typical American Irony. Wc like to state facts, but state them so that tho spiritual SCRIBNER FALL FICTION NIGHT WATCHES By W. W. JACOBS A new volume of this famous humorist's most delightful stories of seamen, longshoremen and the people of sea towns. "His pen is of a robust and well-authenticated sort which has many prototypes. He is the most successful writer of humorous fiction who has come to light in recent years." Springfield Republican. Illustrated. 11. IS net; postage extra. GIDEON'S BAND A Tale of the Mississippi By GEORGE W. CABLE The Ncrv York Tribune: "Mr. Cable now proves that for one of the original masters of the financial picture of the Old South the malerial is still far from exhausted. His story is sure to inlercst you. The picture is of a beautiful mellowness." The Boston Transcript: "Mr. Cable reveals here a strong pic torial quality. His people and his scene meet the eye. They are instinct with life." Illustrated in color by F, C. Yohn. Sl.SS net; postage cxtrn. THE WALL BETWEEN By RALPH D. PAINE "Mr. Paine has made a substantial and attractive monument to the Marine Corps in his narrative of peace at the Falmouth Navy Yard, and his stirring account of their adventures in Nicaragua, which looks much like a bit of recent experience in Mexico. . . . The slory is writ ten in Mr. Painc's customary virile style, and it will be no less appre ciated by all good Americans than by the marines, who are given a new glorification." Boston Transcript. Illustrated. fl.3S net; postage extra. THE CITY OF NUMBERED DAYS By FRANCIS LYNDE "Mr. Lynde has told us some rousing good stories, but this one is far and away the best he has done. . . . The reader is not likely to lay down the story until the end is reached. Then he will close ii with gratitude to the author for several hours of real tension." N. Y. Tribune. Illustrated. tJ.35 net; postage extra. THE WOMAN IN THE ALCOVE By JENNETTE LEE "It is not the least of Mrs. Lee's achievement that she has pre sented a truth of which ihis modern day needs much to be reminded, in a way that wc may all of us want to read. 'The Woman in the Alcoves' is exquisite. It is significant. And, again, it has charm." Acn York Times, Illustrated, il.00 net; postage extra. ONE CLEAR CALL By FRANCES NIMMO GREENE A story of the real struggles and real success of life today. The novel centres about the personality of a young physician who becomes involved in many difficult problems of love and honor, and presents a situation that is very tense, but essentially human. The book is even more absorbing than Mrs. Greene's last novel. Illustrated. tl.SS net; postage extra. PIERRE VINTON The Adventures of a Superfluous Husband By EDWARD C. VENABLE Holds up in the white light of brilliant satire the ridiculous figure of unnecessary divorce, and through its vividly clever telling is an incon trovertible condemnation of one of the growing evils of our day. tl.OO net; postage extra. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Fifth Avenue at 48th Street New York By Frances Nimmo Greene Author of "The Right of the Strongest." ONE CLEAR CALL An engrossing love slory involving an intensely real situation. The central personality is a young physician who saves the soul of his patient when he finds his bodily ills incurable. Illustrated. $1.35 net; postage extra. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Fifth Avenue at 48th St., New York. "WHAT A VAST DIFFERENCE THERE IS between an empty teacup and an emptied teacup." To have no longer any place in the Tray of Things, to be a little soiled by use, and, wilh a little of the sweetness of the Past in the depths of you, to belong only to the Out-of-the-Way. is, as I see it. to be an emptied teacup. From the first chapter of PIERRE VINTON THE ADVENTURES OF A SUPERFLUOUS HUSBAND By EDWARD C. VENABLE First to last a burst of perfect spontaneity and pungent cleverness. $1.00 net; postage extra. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS significance underlying them Is manifest. Tnat phrase sums up Now England, The talcs In the volume arS all of In terest, humanly. Few In modern letter equal In delicacy of perception nnd charm "Daniel und Little Dan'l." To laugh and yet to keer--that Is an effect that stamps the creator as an nrtlst of the first rank. And that assuredly Is Mrs. Freeman. A book lo linger over, Is "The Copy Cat" a book to go back to and read again. RIDDLE RELATING TO RUM Why Do Prohibition States Send Bibulous Representatives to Congress The declaration of Joseph Walker, can didate of the Progressive party for Gov ernor of Massachusetts, In favor of nation-wide prohibition on the theory that the Htalo application of this principle Is relatively ineffective, recalls a conun drum presented by his distinguished father In conversation some years ago, envs the Boston Herald. "Why Is It that tho prohibition States" naming several "send the worst drunk ards to the Congress of the United States?" The question wns not without point. It was undeniable nt tho time that the States In which liquor drinking was under tho sovcrest legislative restriction were represented In Congress by men of very liberal Imbibing practices. A number of answers suggest themselves. Perhaps tho men In Washington wore tnklng ad vantage of opportunities denied them nt home. It Is posslblo that they were not Inured to the temptations of tho llcenso system. At all events the question, char actcrlstic of tho Incisive spirit of the "Gray aglo of the Qulnslgamond," sug. pests ono of tho many anomalies of tho long-persistent liquor question. Fifth Avenue at 48th St.. New York. J- I1H s v i i 1 i . j u II J f if fi" SKfcetf iMmfmmmmmmW jjifc . fJlmtmmfmmBmmmWmmmwmwmKmmLfmLWmt ' KflHilHlaHBBHBBBHBlBBaBBBBBaHBBHlHaBBBBBBaBH