Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 23, 1916, Night Extra, Page 5, Image 5

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    EVENING LEDGER-PmEADELPHlA', SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1916
NEW BOOKS ON THEGREAT WAR BY DICKINSON, WELLS . AND CHESTERTON FRESH NOVELS
Wrf ,
M
(,- .THREE ENGLISHMEN PUT
TRUTH ABOVE PATRIOTISM
Xowes Dickinson, H. G. Wells and G. K. Chesterton Join
-'. uriucism oi
War-Girt England
By the Literary Editor
Iff TUB face of Ireland, Casement, Orders
In Council nnd the censor, this much
frinr t snl1 tnT England and this much
mar mUo her the noblest ny she has ottcn
teemed the Basest ot the belligerents:
Among her wrlterB of repute she has pro
duced more critics of her own national
weaknesses than all the other fighting coun
tries together. France has Ttomalno Hol
land; Germans1 has Maximilian Harden; but
to Bernard Shaw's voice, which. spoke out
loud and clear even In the beginning of
rhnfllct when many werovnad nnd many
K" client, she has added the voices of II. a.
WriTO. WJWM juii;iiiiv,i n.iw v.. .v. .iasici-
ton. Wnen wnrnnK countries uiacuen ineir
enemies and themselves with the pitch of
wh.l atrocities. It Is a splendid record and
k'sv record that should mean much townnl the
Du santr, moro loirra.ni mm inuro imciiiRcni
world wnicn is necessary oeioro war win ue
rt'toded.
nf ths three-new books from these Eng-
!IUh writers Lowea Dickinson's 'The Eu
ropean Anarchy" (Macmlllan Company,
. , jjew Tork) ft easily the soundest nnd most
Ft valuable. He makes his apologies for Eng
r land In the first few pages. He finds Eng
1 1 land "as ambitious, ns quarrelsome and as
'laspesslve as other states." I!e admits,
.(that In the matter of peaceful Intentions
j"our past Inevitably discredits our future.
' And when we profess peaco It is not tin-
M .L...1 hnt nth.- nnllnnfl nlintlM Hllnrt n
riaiutAI vt.fc wv.w. .., ....... .... -""
snare." He sees that to nchlovo poace "we
mii elvo ud. In nil nations, this habit of
j-.itin nn thn iinlnim nntl necullar wicked-
Iv'- ... t.t (Ka ttnmv."
ti9a .w v..v...rf.
rt.rlnnlnir deen In the historical back-
f k..,wla nt hn nnrlv nlnfttennth rentllrv. ha
tt&tes and analyzes the conflicts and al-
'( n.nM which havo linked hnlf n dozen Eu
ropean nations In n. dozen dlfTcrent com
binations. In them ho finds the common
factor of an International anarchy which
has thriven marvelously of late years on
the new lease of life given the political
philosophy of Machlavelll by the uplrlt of
Bismarck. It has "made every budding
ttatesman and historian a solemn or a
typical defender of the gospel of force. But
though this be true, wo have no right,
therefore, to assume that thero Is some
peculiar weakness which marks oft German
policy from that or all other nations. Mach
larelllanlsm Is tho common lierltago of
Europe. It Is the translation Into Idea of
the fact of International anarchy." He rcc
egnlics with Walter Llppman's "Stakes of
Diplomacy" the common resting place of
all conflict In tho common rush for the un
developed countries.
Tracing thus the course of European con
flict. Lowes Dickinson sees the only hope
for peace In the abolition of anarchy through
International action to enforce peace. Here
he has a message for America apropos of
preparedness: "Preparedness for what7 To
enter that European competition for nrma
ments, which alone Is sufllclent cause for
war? Or to put armaments. Jointly with
ether States, behind law nnd against ag
gression, from whatever Power aggression
may be threatened?"
Naturally this man cannot look on "crush
ing" foes and setting up commercial wars
aa producing anything but "a bitter and
unforgiving hatred" to "reign forever be
"tween tho victor and the vanquished."
There Wells and Dickinson "apltt. Wells la
Ui ready to excoriate England. Ho knows
V.that Bhe Is never suro whether she "Is a
p "Crowned republic' or a Germanlo mon-
Jiiarchy," He has no time for "anti-German
liW.leagues" and for peoplo "who profess to
.. believe that all Germans to the third and
'fourth Ken-rations (save nnd except the
iHanoverlan family domiciled in Great Brit
ain) are a vile, treacherous ana impossioie
race, a race animated by an Incredible
IH racial vanity, a race which Is Indeed scarcely
anyining cut a conspiracy ukuiusi u icd.
i of mankind." Ilorecognlzes that, "after
all. the Prussian dream of world empire'
la "hut nn imltntlvA resnonse to the British
fP Empire and the adventure of Napoleon."
But when it comes to tne traae alliances
and contemplated tradjjjirars of what Wells
delights to call "the pledged Allies," he
cannot see the. sowing of dragons' teeth.
" Wells Is such a natural ontlmlst nnd such
eUn enthusiast for his desires that ho can
' bend even this Blnlster move into a step
J toward world federation.
) Wells's book, "What Is Coming" (Mac
tntllan Pumtviiiv Vw Vnrkl. Is full of a
Iff great deal besfaes, and a great deal that Is
rich, thought-provoking and always gooa
reading. He reflects on "lawyer govern-
Alio AnAitliu nf tlA ni-ADa ft ft A US
1 education to replace Oxford classicism; tho
winning of the vote for women among the
i ' military dangers of tho munition factories ;
' a new nnd "natural" man of Europe, with
Ireland and Albania under cantonal govern-
;, mem, Bombay and Constantinople interna-
. tional cities, Africa under the rule or a
; Latin league and Arabia a nation risen
train; a world navy' directed by Great
u-
m-
-.
.Wr
iryrus
r-
Townsend Brady.
The More
Excellent Way
Color l'rontliplece. II. S3 Net
A story of modern
society and the di
vorce question, the
scenes in New York, ,
Sorrento, Bermuda and
Reno. The really serious
purpose and tellinc les
sons of the book are for
the moment forgotten in
the swift succession of its
dramatic developments.
All Booksellers
Putnam's
0. P.
N.w Ytrk
Sons
London
J
DANCINO
V fl 17 CCD'C NIXON TIIEATEK BtPO.
LiUHOCiK. O !U fe. Aid Mrtrl
', Tiles., Thurg. & Fri. Orchestra
t a F t aWa
i-ji. n.cepuon mon., wea, cc sax.
P'tLFlUVATR LESBONS pAY AND KVENINO
w bliol Claii oixut FrliUr afleruoeo,
UrUber 0. :S0.
Prof. Frank J. Owen, Instructor
nermann's Celebrated Orchestra
LW A G N E R r- D A N C I N G
MW OUltTll HllOAU J'llUKB D1A. 030
SCHOLAR NIGHTS
Honda,)', Tuesday and TburaJty
Reception Wed. & Sat. Evgs.
frivol lunai NooUo II P. il.
Nw l'Mturbts fKttl" fax Trot
I
STElCTtY PKIVATK UCUaM0, U . .
.t'"-X W(" vou niut caulr yoia n foot
u u,, irVza'Tzjz-j'siarhazi,
tbs rawiTimw flni
1 U-utsii
tl.rnU?'lni,,.,ro.colonl"'' France. Ituwla nnd
nrnM!re0rvPrt of th9 b00k l0 lhe
nviTf .,That wl" ha,nn t0 commercial,
tHJn .uback ,rom th trenches. "In the
MHih t her? re worl who have broken
thori n oU' s,BcUlnlf " eahotage. nnd
Ep,ror't' . Th'" '." " writes, "has
greatly rtcmorallaed nnd discredited the gov
ernlng class In Great Urltaln. and It hlg
utl.. " uncmployed nnd unfed peoplo. no
longer strung ur- by the actuality of war,
mc.,..nT ,rsl,'l " arms and with many
oilf ,lhtllc. 0,r,ccrs available, are released
clumsily and Manlessly Into a world of risen
prices and rising rents, of legal obstacles
nna forensic complications, of greedy specu
lators and hampered enterprises, there will
do insurrection and revolution. Thero will
he bloodshed In the streets nnd tho chasing
of rulers."
-T!l? S2fwr Mr' -w,e,ls nm,s ln e tate
ment: TV nre beginning to agree that rea
sonably any mar. may be asked to die for
his country: what we havo to recognise Is
mat any man's proprietorship, Interest,
cm ms or rights may Just as properly be
called upon to die."
.-As J".r i,r' Chesterton and his book.
The Crimes of England" (John Lane. New
vork), It Is easily the best reading of tho
three, Tor rhetoric, humor nnd vigor; and In
It ho strikes, as nhvnys. for fundamental
democracy. Hut. though Chesterton sees tho
faults of his native land with a thorough
ness thnt neither of tHe compatriots can
eqda . ho sees them only for tho very
Cheslertonlan purpose of blackening Ger
many. Accusing his hypothetical German
proressor of always defending his own coun
try and abusing Chesterton's. Chesterton
rails into the Interesting nnd only slighter
;rror of abusing both his own nnd his ene
my's country.
With a master hand ho paints tho wrongs
that England has wrought staggering
wrongs; but "whoever we have wronged."
says he, "wo have never wronged Ger
many." Not forgetting to Inveigh with Wells
against the Hanoverian family upon the
I-ngllsh throne, he mnrshals still greater
things. "Again nnd again wo havo dragged
her (Germany) from under tho Just ven
geance of her enemies, from the holy anger
of Maria Teresa, from tho impatient and
contemptuous common sense of Napoleon.
We have kept n ring around the Germans
while thoy Backod Denmark and dismem
bered France. And It we had served our
God as we have served their kings, there
would not be today one remnant of them
In our path, either to Blander or to slay
ua."
If only Chesterton were n better catho
lle! He doesn't half appreciate the simple
equality of all men and alt nations, ln
good and In ovll.
DO CO-AUTHORS MAHItY?
Four Writers Reach Altar Via Publication
Do coauthors often marry? Four of
Henry Holt & Co.'b authors havo reached
the altar via publication In quite recent
years. Some years ago appeared 'The
Runaway Place," a novelette, tho scene of
which was most of tho time Central Park.
New York. Tho authors, Walter Prltchard
Katon, tho well-known dramatic critic, and
Miss Elisa M. Underbill, were married
shortly nfter tho publication of the book.
Mr. Eaton has fathered qeveral books and
magazine articles since. And now the en
gagement of tho two authors of the Ameri
can prison play, "Punishment," has been
announced.
They are Hiss Louise Qurlelgh, daughter
of Mrs. Robert Fletcher Durtelgh, of Cam
bridge, Mass., and Edward Hale Ulei'Jtadt.
The Dor an books
published Septem
ber 23rd which still
further justify the
reader's confidence in
the Doran imprint. Ask
for these titles at your
bookseller's :
THE TRIUMPH QF TIM
By Horace Annesley Vachell
California, Brittany and England as
a background for the biggest novel yet
written by tho author of Quinncyt',
Spragge's Canyon, etc. $1.40
THE MYSTERY OF
THE HATED MAN
B) James Montgomery Flagg
"Authored by the Illustrator." Clev
er fooling on subjects like "Whisker
Culture "Tho What-to-Wear Col
umn," etc. $1.25
AN AVERAGE WOMAN
By W. Dane Bank
The story of a boy who married a hat
finisher in his father's factory. By the
author of Jamet and Treature. $1,35
THE WOODCRAFT GIRLS
AT CAMP
By Lillian Elizabeth Roy
The experiences of a group of city
girls camping out. Officially en
dorsed by Ernes tThompaon Seton for
the Woodcraft League. $1.25
BARNACLES
By J. MacDougall Hay
Fulfilline all tho promise of that re
markable first novel, Gltletple. Sug
gests comparison with the exquisite
art of Bsrrie. $1.40
THE DAUGHTER PAYS
By Mrs. IS ait lie Reynolds
A very modern version of Beauty and
the Beast. The romance of a girl who
was true to herself. $1.25
DEAD YESTERDAY
By Mary Agnes Hamilton
"A novel of rare fineness, Wo have
not had from any country at war so
sane, aoenduringa point of view pre
sented In a work of fiction." $1.50
THE TOWERS OF ILIUM
By Ethelyn Leslie Huston
Problems of feminism maternity
elf support In the exquisite story of
a girl who dared to be different. $1.35
There is not one of these
books that is not conspic
uous in quality in its own
particular field.
jvr
WHERE "JULIA PAGE" FIRST CAME TO LIFE
:;!iUftLa JaliL.-, . iMBBsgaEBHEa
HiHiHHBBHiBaHV-rrMtrrt'v ' -, - . .,..fc.. ,... . , fei
' Hu 'wWK'' "Vf h ''.;'- - . - a
B JV"j 5f -a ")L . Pat
p . F X ' W I a v i i 9
i , - r -.. " A V," - 4
At least, it was in this home thnt of Kathleen Norrls that that
well-known fictional figure was conceived. The author, who lives at
Port Washington, L. I., is shown in tho photograph.
WIGGIN STORY ACTED
IN A METING HOUSE
Unusual Performance Given in
Maine Timely Notes of the
Literary World
The little Tory Hill Meeting House at
Buxton lMvrer Corner. Mnlne, was tho
Mecca recently for hundreds of admirers of
Kate Douglas Wlggln. who gathered there to
nee the dramatic performance of Mrs. Wig
gin's New Kngland Btory, "Tho Old Peabody
l'cw." Probably no other play has ever
been c'ven In such an unusual setting.
Tho nctlon took place entirely In the
wing pews of the church, and the actors and
actresses were local people, many of them
Mrs. Wlggln's summer neighbors. Before
tho play began Mrs. Wlggln told Informally
the circumstances surrounding the writing
of "The Old I'cabody Pew," and gave an out
line of the opening chapters, bringing the
audience with her up to the time of the first
scene. At the close ot the laBt sceno she
read a prologue In verHi, followed by a coup
let. In which she called out each member of
the cast.
The cast walked up the left nlsle In front
of the platform, curtsied to the audience
nnd passed down the right nlsle out of tho
church. Threo performances wero given.
r miWJM
THE -(B
r
1
n
DARK
TOWER
PHYLLIS BOTTOME
IffDlIIE powerful story of a
lEa grand passion. And tho
adjective grand" is hero
chosen advisedly.
Set in rural England and
enow-capped Switzerland.
Saturated with humor and
lighted with brilliant satire.
Recommended by tho pub
lishers with the utmost
confidence.
Fivm full'pag Wuttrationa
Pric,Sl.JSn,tr
Publiihed by
THE CENTURY
CO.
nnd nt ench of them
crowded to Its doors.
the church was
Tho Century Company's September pub
llcatlona include: "Wilson nnd tho Is
sues." by George Crcoi; 'The Private
Secretary: Ills Duties nnd Opportunities,"
by Edward Jones Kltduff; "Society's Mis
fits," by Madeleine Z. Doty; "The Cnmern
Mnn," by Francis A, Collins; "On the Bnttlo
Front of Engineering," by A. llussell llond,
managing editor of the Scientific Ameri
can; "The Dark Tower," by Miss Uottomo.
"frdfcRp
U
isni.
iiVJ'b'
"H
PROFIT
AAMEL1AE.BARR
"What shall It profit
a man It be gala the
whole world and lose
hlsownsoulf"
AROUND this idea
Mrs. Barr lias writ
ten a striking hovel
of the career of a young
man who started life under
mistaken ideals. He plays
the game in a spirit of
worldly ambition, steadily
losing all the things that
are really worth while.
But ultimately, through
hard luck and bitter dis
appointment, he gains
clearer vision and sees the
things in life worth achiev
ing'. "Profit and Loss" s
in no sense a preachment,
but a strong, vital novel
written by a remarkable
woman.
At all .bookwtlera. 11.11 w.
t
THIS 18 AN
AWMTON BOOK
y
i
i
OLGA
BARDEC
DY STACY AUMONIEPj
ljriNE of the most striking
ItSJj and memorable novels
of the season.
It centers upon a strange,
beautiful, mysterious mu
sical genius her loves, her
struggles, her victories.
A group of characters al
most uncanny in their
reality.
A background tapestried
with riches collected by
an extraordinary temperament.
v5 '. PricS1.3Snti
V 'ijtWkwkt T1IE i)
jSOSmhi CENTURY CO. JC
Cap'n
Gid
By Elizabeth Lincoln Gould
s a "type" Cap'n Old Is part and
parcel of quaint New England.
But the Cap'n refuses to conform
to "type" In many ways and that
makes him enjoyable. Ho falls
In love when he's far from young
and this story of his romance Is
filled with the cheer of life that
keeps your eyes glistening.
.At All Bookttorea, $1,00 Net
Penn Publishing Company
Philadelphia
PARROT SHOWS WIFE
THE WAY TO LIBERTY
Bizarre Interest in Novel by Au
thor of "Ships That Pn33
in the Night"
It required the voice of n parrot, trained
by Its admiring owner to utter a few moro
or less meaningless phrases, to nwaken
Jonn Itolbrook, the country-bred wife of
R great scholar, to the fact that tho learn
ing she had acquired In the seven years of
her married life was nothing but the re
flected glory of her liege lord's uncommonly
brilliant mind. Also It convinced the
young woman thnt her pundit of a husband
had well-nigh succeeded In his avowed
purpose of "re-creating her soul" nnd
dominating her Individuality. Tho parrot
alone was responsible for Jonn's sudden
revolt. She broko the bonds of her men
tal nnd spiritual nervltudo by running away
In Bcnrch ot tho freedom sho had lost
through her marrlnge. Leaving her hus
band desolate In the forlorn homo thnt had
been a prlton to her, sho started out on n
pilgrimage that carried her from England
to America, tho land of tho free, and sub
jected herself to n scries of unusual ex
periences before she finally realized tho
true meaning of liberty, nnd how It con bo
reconciled with love. This Is the etoty
told by Bcatrlco Harradan In her latest
novel, 'The Guiding Thread" (Frederick
A. Stokes & Co., New York), and It may be
said for It that It has all the blanrre, Inter
est that gave tho samo gifted author's
"Ships That Pass la the Night" Ha popu
larity a good many years ago.
Taul a. Thompson's latest addition to
his "Classmate Series" Is called "The
Strange dray Canoe" (Charles Scribner's
Sons. New York). It tells of nn expe
dition by four wideawake youngsters
through the Canada lakes In one of those
frail but fascinating craft that nre the de
light of summer vacationists, nnd Is n rat
tling story for boys, with enough adventure
to cngngo tho Interest of readers of riper
years.
How a New York cabaret singer, a
dainty and virtuous mold for all her lurid
environment, captivates the scion of an
NEW AUTUMN BOOKS
A BAFFLING
DETECTIVE MYSTERY STORY
THE HAMPSTEAD
MYSTERY
By WATSON & REES
Cloth. Net, ?1.35
An absorbing story of a mysteri
ous murder in which tho detective
element is most skillfully handled
and tho mystery wonderfully sus
tained until the end.
VITALLY AMERICAN
WINDY
McPHERSON'S
SON
By SHERWOOD ANDERSON
Cloth. Net, ?1.40
Tho soul of man as the author has
found it in America is tho theme of
this really important novel. "In its
paces lies tho promiso of n new,
fresh, clean and virile spirit in
American Htcraturo," writes Ben
Ilccht in The Chicago E 'veiling Post.
RICH IN LAUGHTER
A LITTLE QUESTION
IN LADIES' RIGHTS
By PARKER II. FILLMORE
Author of "Tho Hickory Limb," etc.
Illustrated. Cloth. 50 cents net.
Mr. Fillmore is already well known
as a clever delineator of the child
mind, and this, like his previous
stories, is a true picture of American
child life the humorous chronicle of
a neighborhood.
AMERICAN SATIRE
A LITTLE BOOK
IN C MAJOR
By II. L. MENCKEN, Co-editor of
"Smart Set," Cloth. 50 cents net.
A collection of about 225 original
epigrams with a singlo point of view
running through them. As very few
books of epigrams by Americans
have ever been printed, this volume
should have considerable vogue.
REMARKABLE POETRY
DOREEN and the
SENTIMENTAL
BLOKE
By C. J. DENNIS
Cloth. 75 cents net.
In thirteen poems, written in the
slang peculiar to Australia, are set
forth in most convincing and touch
ing fashion some experiences in tho
life of BUI, lately a Melbourne crook,
but now, througn love or uorccn, on
the straight
verse.
A decided novelty in
AT ALL BOOKSELLERS
JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK
Oat
Souls Resurgent
, A novel ot the West whose
courage and veracity in pre-
. senting typically American
situations and conditions give
it a national significance.
By
Marion Hamilton Carter
$1.35 net
Charles Scribner's Sons, New York
mmmmmmm
nrlstocratlo house nnd successful architect,
who pays n chance visit to a restaurant
and hears her sing- "My Old Kentucky
Home. Is told In attractive form by l'hlllp
Curtlss in "Beween Two Worlds" (Harper
& HroR, New York). The story Is n frank
r,..?1 of ,no 0,t n1gc that "blood will
tell. for Dora Middleman nnd Sidney
presham nre nbout ns far apart socially nnd
Intellectually ns It Is possible to Imagine
under our democratic system: yet under
Mr, Curtlss' romantic pen we see them
limned "limned" Is tho word nt the cul
mination of their great adventure ns "two
touts with but n single thought, two henrta
that beat as one."
. Ti!cra '" "c-'nelhlng charmingly readable
In Stephen Chnlmer's 'Tho fenny I'lpe"
(Ilnughtoii-MinUn. lloston). It tells of one
Jhort winter of Stevenson's life spent In
the Adlrondacks, trying to regain a. bit
n.f his lost -vitality under the patient
guidance nnd friendship of Doctor Tru
'. ..u' AmI ,ho 'fining anecdotes, so welt
told, ns well as the glimpses Into his rela
tlons with others, make tho little volume a
worthy addition to nny Stevensontana.
As tho United States Is now the dominant
rower In tho Caribbean Sea nnd ns Its
Interests there nro Increasing In Im
portance every year, Prof. Chester Moyd
Jones, of the University of Wisconsin, has
done a public sorvlco In writing, "Carib
bean Interests of the United Stntes," r.
Apploton A Co.. Xew York). In tli 31D
pnges of the book he covers tho ground Ade
quately. Students ot special phase
the subject might wish a fuller treti
but for the general reader no more
factory volume has come from the
A Nottl of At ovts Carlo Al Ik HeiftU.
The
IMPOSSIBLE
Mrs.BELLEW
By DAVID LISLE
It it right for a woman, having
once itravcd, to accept the. love
of a good man and her chance
for happiness, or mutt her put
and the world's Judgment keep
her down forever? This question
is answered at thea story is
brought to a surprising and
dramatic climax.
.
STOKES, Publisher
Now Ready
Mr. H. G. Wells' NewNovel
MR. BRITLING
SEES IT THROUGH
In this stirring story Mr. Wells reveals the
true heart and mind of the English people.
He pictures the England of today in a way
that cannot be easily forgotten so vividly
does he draw his characters and the scenes
through which they move with high courage
and heroism. Mr. Wells' new novel carries
a profound message to all Americans, but
the chief interest of the book is in the story
itself the life of Mr. Britling and his fam
ily this is what wins and holds the reader's
attention.
cs
An Early Reviewer says of Mr. Wells' new novel:
"There has been nothing so fine before. . . . The war
has reacted on Mr. Wells : his books for all their brilliance
have seldom before brought a catch in the throat. ... He
is growing in humanness, surely, as he grows in vision."
Now Ready At All 'Bookstores. $1.50
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, New York
Published today
The Melancholy Tale of
"Me"
(My Remembrances)
By
E. H. SOTHERN
This is a volume of autobiographic reminweences of
the celebrated actor, in the pages of which are presented,
with an extraordinary sympathy and skill, most of tho
leaders in the dramatic world of, say, the last half century,
including, of course, the author's famous father. But it is
by no means to be taken simply as a conventional volume
of reminiscences: it is a combination of incidents, sketches,
portraits, observations, some of them whimsical, some fan
tastic, some pathetic, so interwoven as to form a complete
presentation of the author's personality and career.
Profusely illuilraled. $3.50 net.
Charles Scribner's Sons
Fifth Avenue, New Yerk
'.
"ThU it a "War Book" that It of REAL IMPORTANCE."
Armu osd Kavv Journal.
HILAIRE BELLOCS
Elements of the Gret War
Two Volumes Now Ready
$1.50 Net Each
Vol. 1 Cause and Forces Involved
Vol. 2 Tho Battle of tho Mama
The Elements of the Great War is not a partUan document, but "a mas
terly presentation of truth, written in a. scientific spirit which scrupulMttiy
separates fact from conjecture and sets down the judgment of the nTttlsrt
elements of civilization. A great military history by a' man pwuMeJly
fitted for the task.
"Th rnd.r nnd. profit In Htlloo tcaiu a ra la fuoUa
for ovtry Uttmut." Bait 'roHrtco C"m)nlcJ, . '
. ..."A,,""1,01 ,n3 Mtor'.u,,., ot o of th wrt4'a cWW
bttle.' Oltvtlaa I'lalu Dealer,
"A iai tru of Tho rt I'hiM.' Mri SoHoe'a Moa4 Wo U
written li) a yivM and dramatic atyla. UVln taaiirTIoia Ut ttw
tua of tiatlla." T Haunt Ojt fllor. ' '" t
"Mr, Belloo'a book U a rara achtavaBwaAV- Tiin'Mtnt.
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