afgyy Jr'3LiAAjfiMBBHBW i Mtpm&Q&iver, -w)ijitiB": 'firiljilhfys'wii4vi? i is. I f I r M. r, FAIRY TALES. FANTASIES. BAEDEKER TO BOOKS mction. Attff. F. A 8toW, KeW Yet. A iBp kh or Montana aim two women nro im c Mariners in eno or me most dpioiii cmetlre American noteta. . . I 1HSVOLT OK 1KB AKOEtffl,4 OT France, Jonn un (jomixinjr new ln ivhuh iht trreatMt lltlnl norellM It the. teoli of tt fatten antela .In m time. Un of me most wttmlorfm e of th century. .... VIA-a AlAHUlAUK." I)y Upton Sinclair. imm V. Wlh.tt.tt HMrhJ. riuiaqelMlw. A nwat poInit the "eur of false modest!" W H.lnR with ttre probteiiu ot itAi 4l& WAItD DP MCtiUfBtt." Ur CritUn- Marriott. J. U Uipplneotl. ja'r,n? Afl htotwkal romance, uflstllns With auien. Wsff Cullom... 0t, 'S&'Wi prim. A Mtai t,oiei, ra-iow"", "WJL! wtfh a tret.tonM labor lr. .. "Wjit ,t ntiri iha c-ftnuiri imwrcii vimi w ST "isrs e" 4ff wirs op silt Isaac HAnMofc." ir fit Ui O, Vlls. Th. MserMIInn Company. . var. 4talinst -with n womans ' indtpensenca and ieIf-eprtslon. I ' S'OK-riCTION. ItAr.F-HOfn PLAYS." Dy J. H. lUrrio. t3Smi i Brtlllnef- Hon.. New .Con win lh Mr. uarrlo- mom .lellahtful ri-cent plays, with Inimitable tK direction. .. 'una. PASKiit-nars own stoiiv. uy Mr, ttmhullng Vankburst. Jlmfat 'J A national l.lorary Company, Nw ,i4.1oI grlpplne account of llie origin ami "'"EK menl at miutancy, wlih a """'."X.JSfi nt Into th Uie of one of the grtet wvmrn ot 4immiTennANKAK nnoTURnuooD." Hy. Julian jiawimrne. 'c"',U'-,.1;vm.ni In' K i'ork. A Mlrrlnit human '""' tilth ffifu?hw,avwt4.-.iatoiiitt : pritont. SftnVr- Bona, Saw York. Colonel nooje- valfa account of Ilia haaroou cPii- - 41l5rm-JuS?e BIBB OF VLAXTB.J hoI AT Di.on. V. A. BJa. ?n A book de.ltt.fd iBmikt IMrjn ttJL,5iV,m" adults familiar wllh tho 'S.,1J,'nS0,Jl; Vaicinatingiy treata plants a? creature human attrlbutra. ENGROSSING JOYS IN VARIED BOOKS FOR CHILDREN Books for Boys and Girls Teeming With Humor and Adventure A New De velopment in Literature. Wo all remember If we nre old enough or young enough tlie adventures of tho Frinccrts Unpunzel. of the golden hair, and tho Gooso Girl In Grimm's "Fairy Tales": tho marvelous tales of Andersen find the ndventures of tho Brownies.. And then os we grew somewhat older' we fol lowed the trails of Indians In tho Leather tocklnc Talcs of Fcnlmore Cooper and vlcrtrlouBly had adventures on the sea with Captain Marryntt's hefoes. "Little, Lord Fnuntlorpy" beguiled us In more uedate and pollto hours, and then, hy candlelight or with the volumes hidden within the covers of our geographies In school, we surreptitiously reveled In the forbidden exploits of Nick Carter and Diamond Dick. Twenty years ago the literature for chil dren and young people was decidedly lim ited.' It was concerned chiefly with woolly Wild West stories, sea adventures ana fairy tales. Of late years a change has come. Tho rarlety and Interest of books for "Perez, the Mouse," in the fairy tale written for the King of Spain. John Lane. young folk la almost equal to that of fic tion for their elders. We have fairy atorlea still, to be sure, for the allure of the Imaginative Is eternal. Now, where IHb Unwnles once delighted children, we have the fascinating youngsters of Jessie Wilcox Smith and the "Kewples" of Iloae O'Neill. What Is most notable In the season's output of Juvenile books is the place taken by tales of school life and healthy outdoor sports. There are books dealing with baseball and football and the nodal life of colleges; books telling of life In the army and the navy and deal ing vlti modern methods of warfare with aeroplanes. There are romance and ad ventura In these boobs, but they are tho edventufW) of believable actuality, pic turing tho Ufa of the modern boy. In beauty of Illustrations and attractiveness of manufacture the publishers have out done themselves. Sleuths in Mexico The enthusiastic youth with healthy red giooil in his vein fairly revels In heroic narratives and tales of adventurous achievements, especially in the face of ..verwhelmtng difficulties. Topulcr indeed ttien wilt be "Our Army Boys in Mexico." bi Captain C. J5. Kilbourne (Pcnn Com Ii4Bi J. which relates, of th secret mission icnKt with hardoua risks that takes Boo " and Harry Kearney, two young Amtricun offleers, to Mexico, there to ob tairi Information and make; maps for the ttfturnment Their encounter with the Ynqul Indians, apd how they eventually overcome many obstacles, u),timatly wn yitnK honor and sueoew, makes stirring ?atUnr- k a s-w jt o vel IFftUKMM Ufmmim m$ CtRAR if me won? pr a younf phjW who savea tiw sou m ms tNi tkiii wheit fee tatuui Uwt i iiu bodily m were ir3trbte. IJf.fS attj pe WSBiwflK -. " m--i'":- t safTiiiiiiiiirnii wMiiiiilii 'TMPIlHi HW Ill ill, i' , "i " Ml l f 1..:. -. . 1 tgifgtjiggfMaamjMgjjLiagjiga KV1SN1KG Baby Darling and the Kevvpies And We Have With Us the Kewpies Most children have already met tho "Kcwplcs," those droll creations of Itose O'Neill, Children nro now nfforded a more Intimate acquaintance In "The Kcw plo Kutouts," Just published by Stokes. Miss O'Neill, tho nrtlst, explains her book, which Is replete with charmingly colored "Kewples," which can be cut from paper and clothed: 'This tells the Kewples latest caper. With Kowple dolls cut out of paper And how a sad affair was mended And Baby Darling's sorrow ended." In thi5 book Miss O'Neill recites tho ad ventures of various children with the "Kewples." She advises: "When parents lean more than thej ought To harsh censorious -forms of thought. To systematic growls 'and gi'umbllng, 'TIs best to do a little tumbling.' They rind themselveB fur leas sarcastic When their habits nre gymnastic." Then we see the Kewples and parents doing most amazing acrobatic stunts on horizontal bars nnd Jumping. The Kewples exist tor the purpose of malting peoplo happy. They are never Batlsfled unless trooping off to kidnap a poor little girl nnd tnke-hereto ''the-country, or reforming tho .scolding aunt, or helping poor Mrs. McGraw to take care of her children nnd doing tho washing. Their continual broad grins and mis chievous eyes are Irresistibly contagious. Miss O'Neill concludes truthfully: "Thanks to goodness, children bad .Arc very seldom to bo had. At least, 'tis sure thoro nren't many In fact, we don't believe there's any." Mother Goose in j New Garments ! It has remained for Jessie Wlllcox Smith to present "Mother Goose" nnd all her children as they have never appeared before. Of course, all of you, big and , little, are familiar with SIlss Smith's II- ItiafMtlAiiB TlHf fla Smith linM HAV,r ! been more happy than In her pictures for the "Mother Goose" book Just Issued by Dodd, Mead & Co. The frontispiece. Illustrating the "Hush-a-by baby, on the treetop, when the wind blows the cradle will rock," reveals a bonny Infant In n crib way up among the boughs, almost nenr the moon. We learn from the historical note In the book that tho first eight ''Mother Goose" tales were published in France In 153S by Charles. Perrnult. ,Some years later these tales reached England. There were only 51 rhymes In the original English edition, and ns tho years passed others crept in. In tho present book there are more than 200 thymes that have not ap peared In any volume Issued before. Miss Smith's Illustrations include both full-page color pictures and pen draw ings. They will add a new charm .to, "Mother Goose" and delight the child heart. A King and a Mouse , Once upon a time, according to Padre Luis Colona, who wrote this tale for the King ot Spain when he was a child, there lived a king called Bubl I, who was Very kind to poor children and mice. For tho children he built a factory for making dolls and cardboard horses, for the bene fit of the mice he made wise laws to stop cats catching them, and absolutely forbade the use of mousetraps. Of course, the mice were grateful, and the king had a charming time with his friends, A quaint child story of humor and pathos, translated from the Spanish by Lady Moretop, and published by the John Lane Company In a series of dimin utive, exquisitely Illustrated books. In the series are also "The Three Bears and Mother Hubbard," The Sleeping Beauty" and "Puss in Boots," done Into verse by Walter Cranu "Puss In Boots" will ap peal to all children: "A miller lay dying he made his last will; Ha left his three sons his oat. ass and mill; To thi eldest the mil;,' to' the second the ass'; The third Md the eat, and he cried out, Alas! I must starve now unless I take pussy to eat.' ' The modern woman fpaWMaaiM aaasjsisiswaBaiBSBsaMaBas-aMaBi maBaiaaasMamaBa is the subject of the sparkling new cora- yjESSE LYNCH WILLIAMS AN1 SO THEY WERE MARRIED Satirising the conventional view of marriage which involves the iubjctien of woman, and bristjiitg with the present advanced ideas ajr her right to independence and' indi vickia! dvelopfnnt. t $1.25 aat; pottage sirs.. CHAKLmSCftiBNRl'S SONS -. - - LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER ABVENTURES7M0DERN AND OLDENflN JUVENILEOi "The Kewpie Kutouts" Stokes. History Dramatized for Children The valuo of drama In education Is no thoroughly accepted now that each new book which adds to Its lltcraturo Is eagerly accepted. Tho "Little rlays from American History" (Henry . Holt, New YorkJ which Alice Johnstone Walker has arranged for young folkfl are excellently composed so as to give some breath of tho ntmosphcro of life to- the scenes of American early nnd middle sears. It Is not so hnrd to make children learn facts as some peoplo Imagine. It Is u much harder thing-for children to teallze thhti ordinary "peopre lived ami moved in. the times they nro reading about Necessarily these scenes which arc suitable,, for production follow his torical lines rather closely, hut they In volve ordinary human beings, quite apart from historical personages, Tho first Jlcnls with a regicide hunt In New Haven, (he second with Gcticral Howcln a Rev olutionary War escapade, and the last with the Civil War time. In which tho figure of Lincoln, never appearing, domi nates the spirit ot the play. Pleasing Juveniles "The Jolly Adventures of the Cottontail Twins," by L. J. Brldgman, Philadelphia: GcoYge W. Jacobs Company, B3 they frisk and frolic through life will transport tho little readers Into tho wildest Joy. Tho clover drawings, full color, nro hu morous In the extreme, nnd add much to the gaiety of the little volume. "The Children at the Pole." Holt. , '.'They mounted high, they glided, low, And from the mountain top They sped llko arrows from a bow Which, started, did not stop." Boy Tires of School "Off Side," by William Heyllger (Apple ton's), is the story of Price, a young orphan hero who finds school dull and persuades his uncle to-let htm give up school and go Into business. On the Brlcktown Chronicle, a small dally paper, where he has landed a Job, Price comes under the tvholsomo direction of McCar thy, a level-headed-and ambitious young editor, and In this atmosphere shakea oft the slough that has been Impeding his progress, discovers his latent, Inherited art talent and studies architecture. PERSONALITY By EDNA FERDER Author f "Rout Bttf, Mti'um" Here is the Emma McChesney of "Roast Beef, Medium," help ing her son Jock begin the advertising busi ness, It is humorous and touching, ' At all bookseller 'r?e'ii;r 'MBKy'y-f ,si Tv is Fn Avm. UmA St.. mm TtilrYl Mtr-S i'H'i ' ''' ' "i ui( kfiu) V "' :-''':-'-"' '"':." V 1,1 -I '. '!,. ,n I v vi'. .,u; 'i,.. W ,!,!;'!,, 'J,,'! j "kin yvU 5Kf, !.!,; , if, fe t'-.'-lM Adventures of Wee Little Indian Girl The adventures Of n. little Indian girl who Is stolen by a young brave ot an other tribe, as told In "The Little Buffalo Bobe," by IlUtU Everett Beck IHenry Holt, N. T.), make fascinating ronitimf for palefaces of any age, If, so be It, they have hot been nurtuied In the inllh that all good Indians are dead. The Indian picks up the girl, nets her on his pony and gnllopn nwny. The et end night she slips out of the hulTolo roho In which ho hn wrapped her nful guided by tho Btnr-Thfil-Movffl.Not, takes up the trail that will carry her back to the smoke fires of her own wlgwnms. First she faces all the terrors of the darkness, ghosts nnd wild beasts nnd birds of prey and then comes hunger, which Is worse than fear. One night she sleeps In a cave with wolf-cuba, nnd coddles up to them for warmth. She kills a rattlesnake Just In lime, narrowly escnpes being trampled by a herd of wild biifTRdoes, cats roots and birds' eggs while the Big Light tmVels many times around thb earth. Her llltlo moccasins are wtrn thin and her courage, too, be fore her adventures are over. She encounters tho bravo who captured here, once more, when she Is older, old enough to llflten to the fluto calls nnd to receive gifts left overnight outsldo her lodge. A delightful story, told with n child's directness nnd nalvettc. and lull of the pagan poetry of an Imaginative race whose signs and iiorlcnts nre tho sun, moon and stars. i Fairy Tales of Many Lands Wonder tales of many countries even from Indln make up the 60 or more stories In "Tho Diamond Story Book," by Penrhyn W. Coussons (DuIIIeld, New York). Here nre fairy nnd folk tales, legends of the saints, tnlcs of kings, princes, fairies, of magic fishbones, Jnrs nnd rings, wicked ogres and fair maidens. Bobiti Hood, William Tell and Tamerlane flguro among the characters. Few books havo ever been published so replete with the legends of olden days. They nre de lightfully presented, nnd the book Is ef fectively Illustrated. "How All Things Began," by Emlllo Kip Baker (Macmlllnns), tclln for chil dren tho stories of Thor, Odin, Brunhyldo and the finga heroes of the North. "Imnglna," the heroine of tho story of that name, by Julln Ellsworth Ford (Duf flcld), Is the Imngluary heroine ot n little boy, nn artist nnd poet, who Is very, very lonely, and who mnkes friends with Kit. n dog, nnd n benevolent- tree. ta should happen to all with n happy Imagination, "Imnglna" takes form In real life, and this child's story ends with n symbolic meaning for dcepcr-thlnklng adults. Tales of Heroes As a rulo books for children are writ ton In a vein cither too profound for youthful minds or so puerllo ns to make them worthless. Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York, has succeeded In Issuing tho first live of a scrim of his torical volume under the general title of "Heroes of All Time," which are well nigh above criticism. Well written, well Illustrated and "wells of Information," they nre worthy of serious attention on the part of adults ns welt ns children. From a literary "lewpolnt the series is above the average. Concise nnd Interest ing, the fivo little volumes contain n fount of Information. Anecdotes and fables of other days aro so cleverly Interwoven nnd so skilfully rclnted as to mako them n homogenous part of a valuable whole. The scries consists of "Alexander tho Great," by Ada Iltisnoll; "Jeanne D'Arc," by B. M. Wllmot-Buxton;' "Alfred tho Great." by A. E. McKllllami 'Slr Wal ter Itolelgh," by Beatrice Mnralmll, and Augustus, by Ilcne Frances. Either as n gift or for tho mdre serious purpose of education the scries can be recommended in all honesty. Big War Series American boys are deeply Interested In tho war In Europe, because not only Is It a gigantic struggle but their own future will be largely Influenced by the outcome. The fenr of spies In London, Paris. Berlin, Vienna, Pctrograd and In other cities has been one of tho early and pronounced facts. That the uoy reader snail gain a clear knowledge of this great war of the na tions, Its cnuses. deeds nnd results, Is the object In "Tho Search fdr the Spy," by Boss Kay, (New York. Barse nnd Hop kins) and a thrilling volume Is tho result, full of hairbreath's adventure of the kind that the young thrive upon. Early Discoverers "The Treasure Finders," by Oliver Clay (Duffield's), is on account of the men who explored and conquered the new world ot Columbus. French, English, Spanish, Norse and Dutch are all represented, from Lief Erlcson nnd his Vikings to Henry Hudson. The romnnce of the dls covery of America Is picturesquely de scribed. Tl FIrAi SWORD ANewpvelby GEORGE GIBBS Asthor of "Th Boltid Door" "George C il bs in his new two strongly novel presen contrasting :ytee, a light- house keepi r daughter aid s innocent a snow-girl "who is verj wide awake. Mr. Glhbs tell a story real people, Sword", is caows bow to h s people are The Flaming tnbst admirable in every resW ct.'.'-- Buffalo, JVrws. ATAU HOOKSEIXEXS D. APPLETON And company JVUitKen NYrk J PERCH of THE DEVIL By GERTRUDE ATHERTQN Author of "The Conqmror," et. Do you know Ida Comptont Mrs. Atherton's new heroins la one Of the big women ot American ttctlon Skh ot the strongest, most MuUtwi moat carefully asveioosa women characters ot whts tn tftst h&it cn tvtfy ttawt-TM Book man. At tH $. wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 3E mmG !RISrtsP!ssss1fek & . ,'' ' ' fM S Tsi? $ Ife i .HPS9HsBslsBHPdiBsw!9H "Sce-saw, Margery Daw"The Jessie Wilcox Smith "Mother Goose" .Dodd, Mead & Co, Rousing Books for Boys In "The Scouts of Stonewall," and "Tho Sword of Anttetnm" (D. Appleton & Cd, New York), Joseph A. Attshclor has written two rousing Civil War tales. "The Scouts ot Stonewall" Is a ro mance founded upon Stonewall Jackson's famous campaign In the Valley of Vir ginia, nnd nnrratcs tho fortunes of Harry Kenton, a Southern boy assigned to duty as an aide on the staff of Stonewall Jackson. Harry Kenton's friends of his own age, Arthur St. Clair, Happy Tom Lnngilon and George Dalton, come In for their share of glory. Two Southern colonels, friends ot Harry, aro also con spicuous. In "Tho Sword of Antlclam" Mr. Altshelor chooses for his hero n young Northern lnd. Dick Mason. After engag ing In the grcnt battle at Shlloh, Dick returns on service to the East, and takes part In the Socond Manassas, nnd with his comrades shnres In a heroic fight against tho triumphant genius of Lea nnd Jackson. Three great battles Sec ond Mnnaosns, Antletam nnd Murfrees boro arc described In this book, but McClellan Is the chief historical figure. There Is n vivid picture of the scenes attending Left's Invasion of Maryland and tho remarkable series of events lend ing to Antletam, A Boy's Classic Chnrlcs Scrlbner's Sons (New York) have Just Issued n new edition of "Tho Boy Emigrants," by Nonh Brooks, pub lished In 1STC. Tho tnlo is of Eastern boys who seek fnmo nnd fortune In tho gold fields of tho West In other days anil find both Incidentally aiding the old folk on the fnrm at homo and bringing back with them an orphaned lad who Is ndoptcd with enthusiasm. The book Is written In a vein n trifle out of date, hut Is Interesting withal. It Is a seemingly truo account of tho hard ships the pioneers of tho gold-rush days suffered In tho crossing of what was for merly known us "tho Grent American Desert." Tho trials and tribulations of tho young heroes nro stirringly recounted, ns Is tho love story of nn extra territorial momber ot their camp. But ns Is usual In such hooks, they re turn snfely, with whnt must have seemed a' goodly pile to them $15,000 each via Cape Horn. And how tho home, folk greeted them and acclaimed them ns heroes! A BIG STNORY OF A BIG MAN IT XV 0jt? mvicp? m YOUR X INTEREST CCV TO THE LASTX PAGE Price $1.35 Jacobs Books and Stationery 1210 WALNUT ST. PUBLISHED BOOKS! kx V O'.Jv MS -S. x p- RALPH TO-DAY CONNOi THE PATROL OF THE SUN DANCE TRAIL Tho bravest book by tho author of THE SKY PILOT a dramatic story of the scouts of tho North West Mounted in a savage Indian up rising; the wonder of young lovej the freedom of life on a ranch in the shadow of the Rockies all the virile fineness which has made Ralph Connor one of the most beloved Picture Jacket and decoratira end-papers. Net, $1.23 GILBERT PARKER YOU NEVER KNOW YOUR LUCK The Virility of "Th Right of Way" andaNtut Ttndtm "Does not suffer by the inevitable comparison with THE RIGHT OF WAY nnd THE JUDG alENT HOUSE, for in neither has Parker pro duced such characters." Baltimore Evening Suh. "The dearest, bravest, most lovable heroine in many a long day."New York Times. Illustrated, cn-i-paper and jacket in color. OIQRGE H. DORAN COMPANY, Puhlhhm NIW YdEE 14, 1014. Old Tales in New Verse Children, gather round and listen, and having listened, tell your parents buy the four llttlo boolts In n scries known as the "Willie Pogany Children" (Henry Holt, N. Y.. You will enjoy tho treat and your parents will have a few hours of quiet. These boolts will keep youngsters en thralled until they havo been devoured with oyes and cars. Tho first of tho books Is "Bed Riding Hood," In prose and verse, by Edith L. Kilns, with a plentiful sprinkling of col ored pictures. As tho book relates: The prandmothcr wn 111 In bed. And loud In rear she cried. The hungry wolr no mercy knew And toon she was Imlde, "Hiawatha" Is also depleted and In a manner truly engaging. Third on tho list is that noted Infantile epic, "Tho Three Bears," nnd last, but not least bv any means, "Robinson Crusoe." Of him the book rclntcs; And then, nln, the rhln was wrecked. Ail elre on board were drowned, TJut ho nehore alone was snept And Rvnttv put aground. Tho cornea tho movlui; talc of Robin son nnd his man Friday mid how finally they were saved from their lonely late. A ship wna sighted nnd Crunou signaled: Tlifn,Cruo' elirnl enuRht their eye, And out they put n bont; They ftlched tho couple to tho elilp And both were nafe nflont. So whence our. Crusoe first set out To leave his home tind friends He now returns, hln pockets full, And hero the story rh.ls. "Scintillates with wit, keen humor and pure comedy" MR. H. G. WELLS'S NEW NOVEL The Wife of Sir Isaac Harman BY H. G. WELLS " "" Author of "Tono Bungay," "Marriage," etc. "Beside the interest of the theme, this book is full of the most amusing reflectiona of life and character which Wells has ever indulged in. You are constantly being surprised into delicious chuckllngs, you find yourself responding vividly to the author's felicities in summing up a situation or n nernnnntlfu nr n t.-lti of mind. . . . Mr. WcllS' style in this book has found a vim a jcuccuun not niuicnu atincvcu. Hildcgardc Hawthorne in the N. Y. Times. "The book has all the attractive Wells whimsies, piquancies and fertilities of thought, and is absolutely good to read." AT. Y. World. "Mr. Wells is a writer of brilliant parts. His latest novel is filled with wisdom and it scintillates with wit. Sir Isaac Harman has in him the red blood of a vital character in fiction." Boston Transcript. "This wife of Sir Isaac Harman is one of Mr. Wells' most successful woman characters. . . . The ending is humorous. . . . Alto gcther Mr. Wells is atTtis best, which is just a bit better than anything else now being done in the story line." N. Y. Globe. Cloth, $1.50 net. FubDy8hed The Macmillan Company 64ew5tUve- j r B", o m j four s5ig iv ew among authors. Nat, $1,25 wmmmmmmmfi A Contemnorary Account ofGreyfnarshJobby .... ..hiuhrs of . "S- -- ' . t.H lllftl . nf n. little Scotch '"V" A.... received on original ri0taZmZe. seems a man nsmed Gray, ot nothing now Is known except that ne wi poo r and lived In a auLt - some obscure part of the town, bured In old Greyfrlars Churchyard Kndg a", these , th. , faithful dog has kept ---- . ! KIM ""' from his master "- Heroes of Chivalry Heroes of chivalry bdoniC to no on age or land. They nre not necessarily clad in armor nor riding war horses. Young Louis Qrandprc. defending tho Spanish fort at Baton Rouge against overwhelming odds, was as truly a hero of chivalry as was tho famous Chevalier Bayard or Sir Philip Sydney, and so. was General Gordon, holding the EWP""1 outpost at Khartoum. With this In view, the author of "Historic Heroes fit Chivalry" (Georgo W. Jacobs, Ph lndet nlilal 1 Rupert S. Holland, has gathered. C her the life Incidents of famous men of chivalry that take us back to the early days of Chorlemagno down to the more modern time of Gordon. Writ ten In simple stylo for the young patriot o nnd ambitious reader, It attards romantic nnd delighting reading and should prove a popular acquisition to the " "toi-lo Scries for Young People, of which n volumes havo already appeared. Boy Scout Heroes Tho Boy Scouts (Penn Company), as Us name Implies, portrays the dally exP-. enco of Scout life nnd nl that PorWlns to It These four Scout heroes, with rt young woodsmnn, Pat Mnlone, for a. guide! search for "Lost Trail." an old way through tho woods, used by lnd art war parties from Canada to tho United States. Tho boys havo adventures with wild nnlinnU and some amusing mtihnps. during which their Scoutcraft s ands them In good stead. The author, Thorn ton W Surges, Is an old favorite with young renders. A new excellence, it fits his thought I . "" At all bookstores. Hooks MA HIP KWUSHSB ARIE mMr INNOCENT: Her Fancy and His Fact If a great author should love a character through years, and lavish on her all the craft and power of drama would the character not have charm, reality, intensity of romance, like life itBelf? Such was the making of INNOCENT, into which Miss Corelli has put such art and passion as appear in few books pince THELMA. With picture jacket in color. Nat, SI .35 I BARONESS ORCZY THE LAUGHING CAVALIER SSr?fthB, ancetor o' THE SCARLET PlMPERNEL-the perfect hero of romance daring and debonair, meeting life with a laugh and a quick sword-arm, and finding the wonder, fill love when he rode on a mlsalon strange and desperate. With picture jatktfc ia eolor. Ksl, $1 3 AT ALL BOOKSELLERS TTf"!Ttt'l?wMEK?mmtimBBmS3fwlfTFHmPlmmT ifWFiWTT'mmyWjmrm'Vmmmm9mK'BmmT irinsnwmrrnirisr lil6 Tnn.rnw fliumww, ammmmmmjin , i ii u hi "' u , ,.-.. .1 i ..,. , iniiiii j i.iuuhi '' -' t ,. -i- :r-r ' "l-'V- .. ,. 1 iF'AMSinHniRSlSSfajSBfSjsVSHBSJBBBJil jEci:iSi i ior1!S?fjm jiS?vr-