frS fS" WJW"- " C?" fiVByrafl EEtn-RPTTTLADBLPTrTA. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY '?, X91S: THE BOOKS Storo Opens 8:80 A. M WANAMAKERS J Store Closes S:S0 P. M, L " r - ' G. K. Chesterton's Philosophic Detective .. w.q verv llttto difference Whether E'if Is "Tlia Innocenco of Father Brown" U n! In the present caso, llio "Wisdom" lit that roiypoiy gemitiuwn """ " holm Lane. New York) present tlio ... nnveltv In short stories that the jfhfli'h bookstalls lmvo seen In many gXhfl novctly Is not in the plots or tho W...m i- Uift mildly wondering excllo- . it.-. AlinMrinnt. ftinitrrrl nil tlinnn Si novel cnouBln Tho notablo thlnB Silo Priest Is O- K. Chesterton and 'ill point of view on life. If you Iiavo a. 'iiltlns for eatnono inyflucuun. you su hi. IS" ffet If you haven't, you slt-as ho Knishl express It-at his head, nnd havo livery good time watching tho wheols bo PU',d,.....i..ll.. ,. nf n Tf. r..t.m in "The Wisdom of Father Brown" Is .. . . it... Anttnvt atnrlnn nrn AtnrlrtR if croracanda ns well. Sometimes tho " . .- ii.- ., .nt llm r.Hi.ilnr.1 la nn Khdt. Somotlmes It Is merely a matter ..11.11 nrlnf A a f nn.t I n c n. mnn nf .. a.,,1 nil Ihn limn Intuition In trl. '' nmnhln over deduction ns a method of , detection. '--". ' " . :t In Ml own very yiaut uuuui. mu Iruth of vlolots and tho strength of In- ferlonty, anu uuw m iiuh. i.mu ,(el and other things that happen to ilrilis him In Just that mystic way. .. !.... 1m nv tin Hnltiir. vnll rrfif f t final Impression of a certain sort of wgy of lOOKWg at mo worm. Jiven in a . .V. itt fir Atifnrfntntnpiif. lii In n uhlllsopher and Indirectly a propagandist. .. .AitAni na IVfr. Chesterton can't heln i Mttlnff his omU3omcnt Just whoro ho Beta his Inspiration. It isn't any tho less cn- ttrtalninff ior mat. Germany's War Mania u "Oennany's War Jlanla" (Dodd, Mead It Co.) should provo particularly soiacins to Iti British readers. It Is a compilation f,lo provo that Teutonic Breed, both com mirclal nnd political, a deslro to rulo tho f world's marts of trado nnd to establish a i vnrM rtmnlro. nnd tho lntolerablo Insist nco that German kultur must bo tho Tr that Is now shaking Europe With a brief Introduction, employing the i,',irar pamphlet by tho Hon. Viscount Errce, tho 'book Is a collection of speeches V and writings by leading Gcrmnns, includ- Ins the Kaisers, which reveal tho Ger man war Bplrlt. Thcso speeches and wrlt lnja unquestionably show that tho Teuton has long sought hls-placo In tho Bun nnd that ho would uso all manner of forco to . tain and held It Writings nro cited from ' hft TTnlsflr. hn fwivm Prlnpn. Tlnntnr vin TI(hmann-IIollweir. Prlnpfl Hn.rnhnrfl vnn " Benlow, General von Bernhardt, Baron von der Goltz, General Carl von Clause- j.ttIU, Prof. Hclnrlch von Treltschko and Prof. Hans Delbruch. How to Enjoy Pictures Mrs. Henry Head's book, "How to En Joy Pictures" (Frederick A. Stokes Com pany, New York), Is written for chll- Kdren, and will be found very entertaining for grown-ups. It should help decide the question whether tho child's tnsto shall ffc degenerate Into the average acceptance of pictures as unimportant playthings or ft whether he shall be encouraged to appre ciate iur nimEcu uie dcsl in arc. The book Is beautifully Illustrated. There are 34 colored plates of famous plc- Vtures that arouso Interest at once. Italy ' and her painters, early Flemish painters. !f,Man van Eyck and Hans Hemllng; tho I' German, Albrecht Durer nnd Holbein: later Flemish artists, Rubens and Van Dick: Dutch, Frans Hals. Rembrandt and .Pleter de Hooch: Spanish. El Greco. 'Velasquez and Goya; French, Clouet, ,watteau and Chardln, and the English ..acaool from Hogarth to Morland, Includ ing a little group of lata Italian painters, are all covered In a manner that la a Joy for even the connoisseur. The reader Is led through many ages of painters, with many varying styles, nil so attractively treated that tho book Is cast aside only with recret. The render 'U taught never to forget to love beauty ana truth, and to train hlmsolf with all I, diligence to appreciate them. Tho re- s -.ward will be great If tho reader asslml- ''fUte all the author's Ideas. Ei 1- .. .- r jwisj lucre infl ha rni ihu nil .in i.!ini, .That itaadowjr though can win', " AJ?'F' 'orcn and a caaement ope at night i, To lt tho warm love In Li The World War ''!? 'W'orld "W'w." by Elbert Francis rv TL --"aa imyiiuy, Alow uxoxt), purports to be an analysis of the iw or -now it looks to the nations Involved and what It means to us." Al- mourn In a MAM4..I.. .. M 1L. PM accomplishes what It alms to ao- i rlr . "l ansoiuteiy just ana tm- i; ' " "-'wiiioiit uiiu conclusion it 13 Key no means satisfactory, from the point ri i uccpor unaiysis or ine so- Ijai and economlo forces which havo Ii "u' o connici. una neea not im very much on guard against oneself to - . 4uiiuriiai in uio analysis or ItanMMM Bnd dlpIomatlc negotiations t?im.es' n ls ull a different matter Etl aUthnr in nU. ... - ji tV'. 7r w ihw w closer discussion &,!? 6ok ets forth in a very clear fittm?1". ? po,;t,on8 oi the respective ln.. "UDtriH, ana eervia, itussia. th n. ' Ji"B"l"o mo ningusn ana iBsTurk.v 2 K " "" nnd Italy. rHfU... 1 ? u iorica. wo una here a lKui I,,?0?" statement of the par-I-Br!"w PolIUcal axa which .ih of n. flroiSlntMnatl0ns haa t0 erlndas well llffit.! .7 ,Y, . ' aciuaintance -with po Bat L h a'P'oraatlQ affairs In Europe. rftli T- ' uaa w,lat is unquestlon-U6nS?ir8,!Spor,ant-th9 oonomlo fac- Khlch .Vvr "." Paicuiar aipiomatlo ase lbVrt.ch of tha vers was compelled. IWhiS J orc of circumstances, to grind, fSei?t,,mef t0 ftnalylne this phase of di.iin,.. auinor or mo book shows Rellhtt.blam9 i.r. w struggle on the HthVr ,. "noinons or Individuals, , -, . uVaa irresistible and Inexor- oblo forces of soclai and economlo de- J.nSmn,;i. "e .cn.n b9 n't0Kelher lm-pnt-tlal in tho analysis of these forces, for i.Jr..!i,eh analysl8 w' th6 thinker nnd satisfaction and a positive reply to tho nst mass of argument nnd disagreements which havo caused so much Ink and paper A Sonnet Sequence Ever slnco George Meredith wroto his Incomparable Bonnet sequence "Modern Love," poets with discipline strong enough for them to master the sonnet form, and emotion deep enough to mako a sequenco possible, have offered their work against that "Incomparable." Not many have been publlahedj not many were as deserving of publication as tho Sonnets of a Portrait Painter" by Arthur Davison Flcke, which Mitchell Kenncrley has Just brought out. Mr. Fipkp nttempta In tho strict form or the Shakespearean Bonnet to do what Mr. John Hall Wheelock did with such .3a.?rdlnary, ,flUc.ccss '" tho Indioato shoutings and In tho freoly metrical out bursts of his "Human Fantasy." That Is. ho suggests tho outlines of a Btory. blzarro nt times, and tragic, and nt the samo tlmo ho develops an astounding va-r,l?y,?mm??58-. Mr- Floko's qunlltlea aro ii. mcuLt of dannt'n- He has an evocative phrase, and a clear Imagination! ho has charm of expression and depth of SniL m.'t "Ith,0 " 8onn6ta whlch ex pose tho llttlo book, very few nro perfect. Ono can mention tho 13th. lBth, 16th and -1st The nuthor'a fondness for tho feminine rhymo Is unfortunate; bo Is his attempt at the commonplace, which suc cess, nnally. n belnB like Sir Herbert Boebohm Trees Hamlet, "funny without being vulgar." Yet Mr. Flcko deserves fi, bolter than thls- from his pub Usher's announcement: "Delicacy, charm and llneeso mark Mr. Flcke's work, but tLJ,BS YiBOr and.vltallly ns well." Mr. S ,'s Precisely ono of thoso who know that vigor nnd vitality compose tho only substratum upon which delicacy and charm can be wrought. Tho "but" protests too much. Interpreting Party Government in U. S. In "Party Government In the United (Harper Brothers, Now York), tho au thor, who is Seth Low professor of his tory nt Columbia University, displays a f.ar.nnd Tunusa"y calm manner o fkl!f ln rnla b00,t h0 "ta forth, from tho conservative point of view, the !,d ?f ?. IHcal t,,OUEht an "vlS" ment in this countrj-. Tho work, for ,,"1? ,Pnr.t: ls pxlTely theoretical, con servatively theoretical. In a certain sonso tho method of analysis used by Professor Sloane reminds ono very much of tho abstract method of thinking which ?, dlaracteristlc of tho French mater ialists of tho eighteenth century, when they endeavored to create a "perfect system of social legislation" upon tho abstract and vaguo principal of the brotherhood of man." Professor Sloano seems to bo using tho same method of thought, only applied to conservative ends ends which do not represent a great transformation, a tremendous so cial upheaval, but tho perpetuation of tho status quo. The book contains a fund of valuable Information which tho student as well ns tho general reader will llnd of great value. Tho conservative Interpretation of what tho Government of tho United States really Is nnd how It came to bo formed is found hero In its purest form. hub ui mi cneap una superiiclnl attempts to laugh tho radicals off tho arona of dis cussion. All thoso who are Interested in vital questions of government, past and present, will be amply repaid by reading fills book. The book ls a history of American poli tics nnd an exposition of party political tendencies In practice. The tariff and slavery questions, tho Monroe doctrine, rotation ln office, the veto, party con ventions, party machinery, platforms, civil Bervlce reform, the silver question, tho growing power of the executive, state paternalism are treated fully, with all their causes and effects as the author sees them. Parties and Congress, the formation of the Electoral College, the committee system, etc., follow next: then parties and tho Judiciary; parties and city gov ernment and parties and public defense. Tho trend of the United States Govern ment from tho Revolution ls traced down to the present Mexican trouble. A theoretical work mostly, but a valu able one. Theories and theoreticians help to bring romanco Into tho processes of the Intellect. And whether It bo revolu tionary romance or tho conservative ro mance, it stimulates thought and con tributes greatly toward tho final solution of tho questions of government Involving tho establishment of tho exact oxtent of social responsibility on ono sldo and In dividual liberty on the other. The New Books A !(t ef took received tor rftu. iror ezttmtve comment urflt fc made on tno tonoat mjior(Sno warrant further attention. nprorut nrn onwao camjd. Br cier- Jtude Atherton. A reprint ln one volume of '? XSXlT novels of Catltornl, "IletanoV1 nil "Tho Doomavoman." SC9 pages. S1.35. Stokes. N.it York. THE KAUNTKD HBAIIT. By Agues and Egtrlon Caitlo. A novet of modern eoelety wiwroln a couple ttranged ly n. moment ? aT"" that breaks In upon their love. 300 pages. Jl.ats. Appleton's. New York. TyM. WISDOM OP FATirpK BHOW3J. Vr Gilbert K. Chesterton. Further eiplolls of tn prlet-dtctlve, showing Mr. Chesterton a propagiinitlit een in popular notion. 324 pnge. $1.30. John I.one, New York. A riLbAIt OP SAIT. By lloraco Vf. C. Newts. The story or a "hAppy" wlf who Is led Into tho tragic deetructlon of her home by the lelre for "eomethlng to imp pen." 320 pages. S1.3B. John lane. Now York. J THE DRLDO OP TflH BUN. By Qaston Kroux. .A. romance of tha Inoas by the author of "The Mystery of tho Yellow1 nu the creator of Areene Lupin. 803 pages. lias. MoDrlae-Naat, Now York. THD HOMR OP THE BMZZAIID. By Blr OnuKias Mawaon. Two quite sumptuous volumes of polar adventure, "with many col ored plates, maps, lmlMoncs and photo gravures. CM pages. 19. Uplncott, rhlla-aelphla. FICTION SUCCESSES REAL DETECTIVE TALES THE WISDOM OF FATHER BROWN Farther ex ploit of tha canny pricif detective, Father Brown By OILBErtT K. CHKSTEIITON, author of "The Innocence of Father Brown," "The Filling Inn." etc. Cloth. 11,30 net. "Tnles of crlmo and discovery, clues and false leads nnd all tho rest of the thrilling material which will make any normal human being sit up and keep on sitting up long past the proper hour for bed. Mr. Chesterton deserves n rousing cheer In fact, threo rousing cheers for giving us nnother scries of real and fine detective tales." iVcto York Times. Ditconlcnted, Tahe Warning! A PILLAR OF SALT By HORACE VT. C. NEWTE. author of "Sparrows," "The Home of the Beien Devils," etc. Cloth. tl.SS net. "That 'Idle wife" to whom novelists and sociologists aro Just now paying such devoted and exclusive attention Is tho centre of this study. Tho story ls developed with the Insight for real con ditions, for real states ot mind, nnd with the regard for detail that so dis tinguishes all of Mr. Newto's work." Washington Star. A LAUGH IN EVERY LINE ARCADIAN ADVENTURES WITH THE IDLE RICH By STEPHEN LEACOCK, author of "Be hind the Bevond," "Nonsense Novels," ete. Cloth. tl.lS net. "Crisp conversation and paragraphs Jammed with American sarcasm of the gilt-edged variety characterize this latest effort ot a really humorous humorist. Mr. Leacock penetrates upper-class sham and satirizes it cheer fully. This Is almost certain to gen crate llttlo chuckles and long smiles for the Intelligent proletarian who treats himself to these 'adventures.'" OMoago Evening Post. AT ALL BOOKSTORES JOHN LANE GO. NEW YORK "A Benevolent Friend just saved me from missing 'The Rose Garden Husband.' It is some thing for thanksgiving, so I send thanks to you and the author. The story 13 now cut out and stitched, and in my collection of 'worth-while' stories, in a portfolio that holds only the choicest stories from many magazines. There is a healthy tone in this that puts it above most of these choice ones. And a smoothness of action, a reality of motive and speech, that comforts the soul of a veteran reviewer." From a Letter to the Publishers. The Novel they're all talking about The Rose Garden Husband By MARGARET WIDDEMER St. Valentine would have recommended this' handsomely bound and illustrated message of good cheer and love to all his votaries. Look for the Red Rose behind the Green bars in the scaled rice paper jacket. At all Bookstores, $1.00 Net J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY Jacobs' Book emoval Sale Pebuary 20th we move to Jiew store, 1628 CHESTNUT STREET. Anis is your opportunity to buy worth-while books at a fraction, of the regu r price. Act quickly anti get first tfioicc. acobs Ss& An Old-Fashioned Preacher of the Old-Time Religion Billy Sunday somehow appeal I to that popular tense wherein all special tastes and interests merge. Whole comtnnnlriea aro changed for a cleaner, healthier, moral atmosphere. This is the record wherever Billy Sunday has labored. There is no logic like the logic of facts. "BILLY" SUNDAY THE MAN AND HIS MESSAGE By William T. Ellis, LL. D. AUTHORIZED BY MR. SUNDAY Telia the story of Mr. Sunday's eventful life, gives a kean analysis of hla manner and methods and trace bis remarkable success as tho most conspicuous Christian leader In JUnerlcs. and also contains the Heart ei nis "TanK "i'vH iota. includuiK nis vivia uoru;i. mw.u ..j,. ...... .Uv. .... - mi til i an ea or ayct o w . -- t1 ii a t ! al land nhotOETaoh The Only Book That Explains "Billy" Sunday flaiV. 498 ssiei. lUslrltd. tlSO. Csm Oats editiss, (1 00. At nil booksellers or from iho Bablukera. pUWert THE JOHN a WINSTON COMPANY PfcU.i.liU. Making Ready at Wanamaker's For a Great Sale on Monday of ricntal Hugs (Now the Scarcest of Merchandise) At Very Much Below Their Market Value It won't make Oriental rugs more plentiful for any storekeeper to ' sit down and groan about their scarcity. On the other hand, one must look facts in the face, and it is a fact well known in the trade that there are now very few small Oriental rugs to be had and that their wholesale prices have risen 25 to 50 per cent, within some months. In all such crises it is the store that has at all times the largest and quickest outlet that gets whatever worthwhile goods are going. Certainly we get them in this instance, and we will sell rugs at unrisen prices while we can get them to special advantage. We have secured 76 Large New Boxes of Mossouls, Beluchistans, Hall Strips and Anatolian Mats for which we made a special forehanded contract with the New York representative of an Eastern firm. The goods were held up in London for a time, but today they are at your disposal priced on the old, low, unrisen basis and guaranteed in every detail as to quality. In the same purchase are a number of fine carpet size Kermanshahs, Serapis, Mahals and Persian silk pieces, including several fine antiques. These we shall sell for less than many stores have now to pay for them at wholesale. Such are the facts and here are the particulars: Small Rugs Beluchistans, 2x5, $15; 3x5.6, $19.50; 3x7, $25. Mossouls and Guendjes, 3x6, $15.75. ' Mossouls and Hamadans, 3.6x7, $19.75. Cabestan and Shirvans, 3x6, $17.50. Anatolian mats, $5.75, $7.50, $9.76. Irans, Kurdistans and Hamadans, size 4x7, $30 to $45. Hall strips, 8.6x12 to 15, $25 to $45. Kermanshah Rugs Persians ' Carpet Sizes 12.9x 9.7 $175 14 x 8.8 $245 14 xlO $295 11 x 9.1 $225 12.8x 7.5 $175 11 x 8 $179 11.6x9.6 $135 11 x9.6 $185 13.3x9 $197 12.6x8.9 $235 11.5x9 $225 10.6x8 $195 Small Kermanshah? 3x5 $22.50 to $35 4x6.6 $37.50 to $65 (Fif(h Floor, Serapi Rugs Persians Carpet Sizes 12 xll $108 12.5x 7.9. .. . $86.50 11.8x 7.9 $72 11.2x 8.9. .. . $88.25 11.6x9.5 $97 12x10 ....$75 13 xll $129 12 x 9.7. ... $95 11.8x 8.3 $87 9.8x 7.5, .. . $72 24.10x15.4 $575 , Mahal and Savalon Rugs Persian Carpet Sizes 12.6x8.7 $123 12.7 x 8.7 $127 12.7x8 $135 ll.llx 8.9. . . . $115 10 x7 $65 10.1x7.2..., $70 10 x8.6 $115 12.7 x 9.1. . . . $105 11.7x8.9 $89 13 xlO .... $145 12x8.7 $67 13.6x10 ..... $75 NOTICE All our regular stocks of Oriental rugs remain at the old low prices, not withstanding market changes, and these, too, present a fine field for selection and safe investment. Market) JOHN WANAMAKER mi m IW WALNUT: ST, mmmmmtmmmmmmtmsmKmmmm muMmftmsn