families m Liabilities SARAH GRAND "Written With The Skill Of a Genius." Mftdame Qrand'i ready wit, her sparkling humor, her discernment of the faults of human nature, her analysis of the real and the false, her irony, her epigrams all are included in this book' with such remarkable cleverness that English critics have ac corded "The Winged Vic tory" a conspicuous place among the year's novels. It is a strong book touching occasionally upon the, tragic in which the author of "The Heavenly Twins' traces thecareerofanEnglish girl who rose from a lace maker's shop to the highest position in society. It H ooolulleri 11.80 Ml. THIS IS AN APPLCTON BOOK .t Mw J have you met Richard Richard in the new story of that name by Hughes Mearns? ho did not caro for wealth, or for work, or for women. his story makes a most readable, quotable book. .411 Bookstore, tt.SS Kl The Penn Publishing Company Philadelphia rPARAPISE I -V - !?. V. S-. A. I "d Ar GEORGE GIBBS Enjoyable." ? H -New Ym(&m Mr. Gibbs' new novel tells the unusual experiences of a 1 young man who is let loose in New York after having been raised in total igno rance of the existence of woman. It is a remarkable book original in theme and one that is not only extremely readable, but often delightfully amusing. For sale at all Booksellers. Illustrated, $1.35 net. THIS IS AN APPUCTON BOOK . i 2 ERMIQNE cD0N MARQUIS isn't the Dhagapttd Glta , . Simply Wonderful! It has nothing to do with Bagdad. But let Hercnlone tell you all about It. She and jer Utile Group of Serious Thinkers www everyl those things of eat. Ask yi "Hermlone." w .DMexy, ami satiric! sleet a chuckle on meant, spend a Bhagavted Glta Sveolng with HermUwe. You'll njoy lt4f yo get what we " . net. . THIS IS AH APPLETON BOOK s.)iMH"m Msf Z9K Wn til tH, iutt everyl. especially ,ey know teller for collection lidouily k with By all EVENING BJDOER-PHrCABfeLPHlA:, BATtTBDAT, OOTOBfeR 21v, MG " y A. H. FlUk ..A.Jfcf a4 feicJsastag i4ture &&K&&Xi: iiy.- . ( feUTMtW Mirrlx "" e4 e-Weaiura. "for Jfr,t4,, i M asi. PubiUk by Pwtmmu 55TOWS FROM THE LITERARY WORLD PITHY EXTRACTS FROM NEW BOO BOOK BY POET PRAISES MOVIES AS BIG FORCE FOR SPREAD OF ART Vachcl Lindsay Writes First Esthetic Philosophy of Screen In "The Art of the Moving Picture" OTHER NEW NONFICTION "'TorY.1"' UnA" MnllUn Company New The voice of Vachl Lindsay Is the first voice of a poet to be raised In apprecls tlon of the photoplay. Some would deny Mr. Lindsay that honorable title, but they must be persons better acquainted with his "red bartender" than with "The Art of the Movlpg Picture" (Macmlllan. New York) Nothing less than the warmest ap proval Is possible toward the Volume. In earnest Interest. Jn Just appraisal of the past and fine foresight. It stands alono In current letters. It praises nobly; It con. demns fittingly; and It Is backed In praise and condemnation by that thorough know), edge of subject which cannot be done with out l'roperly enough, the book has for hero David Orimth. Mr Lindsay's brae efforts to allot to this producer the role of villain aro amusing- As he goes on and on he realises the futility of doing this, and he finally takes D. W. a. as the archetype of the best In pictures. But before ho does this, he submits certsln definitions of a a rlous sorts of photoplays. These hs calls d-amas of action, Intimacy and splendor. ..it!i iiugui u translated ror the laity as melodrama, psychology and pageantry. Through pages and pages of swift-moving, lld, plangent writing he carries his reader on to the heart of cinematography, not the mere Indulgence tn costly sets, nor yet the loe of rank excitement, nor again the futile admiration of certain male and fe male types among actors. Because he has vision, being a poet. Mr. Lindsay goes far ther than this. If ha does not prove that the cinema can be mad a thing of peer less loveliness, a lifted taper In the dusk lie at least proves that he believes that It can. And that la all that really counts his belief. In subdivision of subject, he hsa worked so nicely that his chapter-headings of rarer suggestive power than any criticism are given. In part. here. Boms are: "Sculpture In Motion." "Painting In Mo tion," "Furniture, Trappings and Inven tions In Motion," "Architecture in Motion," "Thirty Differences Between the Photoplay and the Stage." "Hieroglyphics." "The Or chestra, Conversation and Censorship," "Architects as Crusaders" and 'The Prophet Wizard." The latter theme probably was suggested by Orimth, whose Influence Is palpnble all through the book. The Griffith production, "Avenging Conscience," Is described In a concise bit of prose not unworthy to rank with that macabre masterpiece, and there aro analyses of popular productions, such aa "The Birth of a N'at.on" and 'The Spoil ers." and of unpretentious comedies like those of Sidney Drew. To the feet of Mary Plckford. the little girl, he brings singing rhapsodies that are not for Mary Plckford, the keen business woman; and fingernail sketches of old Blograph pluys, "The Bat tle," "Man's Genesis" and others, form In terludes to more weighty businesses. Like all men who read books, as well as write them, the author quite often finds himself seeking an analogy In poems Ills suggestions In this respect might be profit ably read by all directors (If theyocver read anything but scripts). For the mere picture-goer th ample discussions of more general Interest are recommended. Mr. Lindsay makes one or two errors of Judgment As an Instance, he disapproves of tnuslo aa an accompaniment He also haa some rather dim notions on communal and clvlo pageantry that are not germane. His most terrifying piece of adocacy Is advice to the Imaglsta to put their works on tho screen. But his repudiation of the censors, his demand for permitting quiet speech at the shows and, most of all, his splendid apocalypse, alono, for these mis takes. "It has come then," he ooncludes, "this new weapon of men, and the face of the whole earth changes. In after centuries Its beginning will be Indeed remembered. It has come, this new weapon of men, and by faith and a study of the signs we pro claim that It will go on and on In Im memorial wonder," LITERARY WORKMEN IN MORE OR LESS UNCONVENTIONAL POSES The "Literary" Method Works of Robert Ilrownlnr. poet. Ufa of Kobtrt Drowning-, n7 tVUwallader IJf of CadallaIrr Caper, th men who wrote ttie Ufa of Kobtrt lirownlns, lljr Karrnla Jibber .Ufe, of Kutenla Jibber, who wrote the life of Cadwullader Caiwr. whs wrote In 11 the rorrr.pondenre between te eif, and whs la tbl work, rsmpleted aurlnr hi lut Mix. a;lted br a beantlful trained nun namt all Mabel llrdtlcker. lAtt of Mia Mabel Bedllcker, the trained nor who l.ted, HlU.fleld Kerfloperton, wbe and o on ad Inflnltom), London Oploloa. PS T J Tl' W ' Bj JBeBalHHiSliflB " RPl aTfc if at VmT :aaaMaarWLU-L JsPk aaaaaA 1 HIHiaaaaaaslBaaajBaB gtMJ JV V 1 falaSfaHC lftmmmmmmmmmnXZ-WlUwLw,''LWar9Mmmmmmmmmm - "' SMVV- illl jaftaBl . ' JaiafaiaBI III 1 V 'l Ail" Bl,N Smm H V I TrWalaa ' CCV gflfaiBfai aalBfalBBlBK ' sbibbibbibbibH'Vv bB sXrttlUr' TI7lJ 'W'sliPelfifaBVsPlaBiBBiBCl Jb v hHaflrc!! Albert Pnyson Tcrhunc. who hat HMvJlHHsmHitfi " ," 4 bHK deserted tho novel for the movie VJRaelBPuKMflaABeeiaeaHBaiai v 1 4 saiaaiaal -3 '" "TtlC Crltn,0n Stoin'" fsflfHaHUfaiffialljHBaRiaaiaaiaa P1 VfsaVlm T PWjSsa M PaBS JaaHPXJSm, as-.SWwrlL TSLmmmmmT --' 4taVfaVK.x " Vfc kfvSLaJaMaPBiTjTjTJsHSjajBSfanK JaaiTjTjTjTjTjTJr J v r iSgas atBBBsSaHaalSBimpaSlHDK:' jaiTTT9Ea--'i - ' fsaB rli" tislsaHsRHSir iKTVMfslr "5 u T X. . M . ItlF' q flHsrkLaiaBfsanL ( V v V fBlSBlSBlSBlSBiaHBBiaHBHBKBlSaBV It isn't precisely tho medical gesture, ns Doctor Munyon has Ustt , iv jik i.uic is at linst the author of "Hcof, Iron and Wine." (Uoublcdny, Paso & Co.) Arnold Bennett at the front When ho is bnck'ln England ho busies himself writing booka for the George H. Doran Company. MORE PRINTED PLAYS FROM PUBLISHERS' LISTS GREET THEATRICAL YEArx Pinero Lends Off With Fir.o Drama Already Produced in London, "The Big Drum" BOOKS ABOUT THEATER Djr Sir Arthur Wine Pinero. Visiter IK Daker A Co., lloiton. So- many dramas In book form reaqh this office that It was impossible to give lm presslons of all the recent ones In the sum man printed In these columns lately. The most regrettable omission was a con sldcratlon of Sir Arthur Wing Plnero's newest drama. "The Big Drum," which waa put on tho stags In Ixndon a year ago, but which has yet thanks to tho myoplo vision of somo of our theatrical producers, to reach the American footlights. Walter II. Baker & Co , Boston, aro the publishers. It may be said without much fear of con tradiction that Pinero das again wrought with that large modeling power that mads his "Mldchannel" nearly a masterpiece. Again he takes fairly ordinary men and women, and, endowing them with something of splendor In their great momenta, and more than enough of vulgarity of emotion In their smaller moments, molds from them fine drama. Not, perhaps, the Intellectual Btuffs of Maeterlinck or Verhaaren (peace to thatr poesies!), but drama sound In tlasu and strong In character contrast and highly suited to public performance. One hardly knows whether to pra'se "The Big Drum" (which Is not a war play, as some think, but a travesty on social cllmbjng) more as a reading drama or as a piece for the theater. For It Is both. bur energetic younger Impresarios, like John D. Will ams. would do well to cast a critical eye on the play; but ha had bet ter, It he la going to buy the rights, sign up some good actors. Tho parts of Ottollne and her lover need a Florence Reed and a C. Aubrey Smith. Representative, English Plays Edited br John 8. 1. TatlocSc and Robart Mar tin Century Company, Nw York. "Representative Kngllsh Plays" (The Century Company) Is the only volume In the language giving a view, with examples, of the progress of the native drama from the moralities and mysteries to the comedies of Oscar Wilde, taking In the spacious days of the buxom Bess and the equally huxom Restoration drama. Tho selections have been made by John S. 1", Tatlock, of Inland Stanford Univer sity, and Robert O. Martin, of Northwestern University, who have also supplied Intro ductions to the various periods and brief analyses of each play and playwright There Is also to their credit a considerable body of notes, explaining moot points of toxt or obscure allusions. Credit Is given to the specialists who have restored various texts authoritatively, though the editors have not hesitated to make their own collations from the best available editions. The critical ap- Also at the front Lieutenant Con- ingsby Dawson, nuthor of "Slaves of Freedom." paratus Is scholarly, but by no means un necessarily recondite, and the Introduc tions hae value for substance and charm of statement The main thing, of course. Is that the texts are accessible In full of tho striking and representatle dramas of tho entire period of Kngllsh literature, omitting our own contemporaries. Thero are very few names missing and none of any real Im portance, . The choosing of plays has been dono with such a nice senso of discrimination that there can be little criticism of the table of contents. One might prefer either "(Jam mer a ur ton's Needle" or "Ralph Roister Shakespearean dramaturgy Instead of the Play selected, John Lyly s Mother Bomble." These plays. howeer, are aallablo In Pro fessor John Manly'a, unfortunately uncom pleted, "Specimens of the Bro-Shake-spearean Drama," hence, possibly, their omission from he present work. Yet they have In them more of the germ of what haa developed Into Hngllsh comedy than the play of Lyly, who wrote for the court, and even In his one "popular" piece, "Mother Bomble," has certain refinements of ex pression and academic limitations of tech nique. The other dramas were written, of course, by men of rare scholarship for their time, but they had the advantage of having been designed for presentation at the uni versities, and hence are of robuster sub stance, coarse-grained, with more of folk feeling, and a raclness of the soil appro priate to their origin and their purpose Just like the college plays of today, they have more of the "roughhouse" ejjment of com mon things In them and are more loyal to the gusto of popular enjoyment than closet drama, A Book About the Theater Or Orandtr Matthew. Charles Bcrlbner's Bon, Niw Tork Professor Brander Matthews, of the Co lumbia's chair of the drama, hay gathered his papers and essays on various phases of tho play and amusements In general Into, a portly and Bomcfchat self-important vol. ume, "A Book About the Theater." The book Is not at all recondite; In fact. It Is a collection of popular presentations of enter taining Items about entertainments (In a largo sense) written obviously In tho main for mugaxlne readers' consumption and henco predlgestod and not making any ex tensive demands on the thinking faculties. Yet tho work rescues from oblivion many quaint and curious facta and fancies and ranges over a wide field of Interests. There are papers on puppets, the dsnee, the opera "As direct and exciting a tale of adventure as any of the modern masters of sea fiction have concocted." New York Sun THE ROMANCE OF THE MARTIN CONNOR "To anyone who likes stories of the sea, of adventure and of foreign shores, the adventures of the Martin Connor will prove red-blooded enough for the most v . exacting. The book is extremely well written, having more in common in point of style and general excel- lence with Stevenson's novels than with the contem- - porary tales of adventure. It is genuine romance." 1 ' ' . Boston Transcript By Paw aid Kendall JUuttraUJ. $1.35 mi, At ail hklrH BtMlM HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY Ntw York libretto, collaborated plays, drnmntlied novels, negro minstrelsy's decllnn, scene painting, circuses and what not Many of the papers, written years back, Have been brought to date by supplemental notes. The proofreading hns not been performed thoroughly. Thus. In the chapter "Tho Book of the Opera," concerning two librettos drnwn from Victor Hugo, we learn that "Urnanl" was tsken from "Hernanl," though It was "Hernanl" which atarted the romantic movement In France in tho early thirties of the Inst century There Is a dis parity nlso In the piece about puppets on page 43 "Pocock" Is given as one of tho practitioners of this nrt, and on the plato facing page 4! the name Is given as "Pol lock." The book has tho merit of clenr writing and entertaining qualities. Tho chapter on "Why Flvo Acts" Is comprehensive and authoritative and easily the most valuable In tho volumo. Symons In Cornwall Ur Arthur Hrmona. John I. in. New Tork, Since the vogue of Masefleld'a "Tragedy of Nan," with Us Cornish dialect and vivid tragedy, several writers have looked north for the flame of Inspiration Arthur Sy mons, one of the few really poetically minded authors left over from Victoria's days, has laid the first of his "Tragedies" In that locality. It, Is called "Tho Harvest ers." and Is a flno It rather leisurely piece of work. Single lines, like "I have wept all the water of my eyes," leap at you from tho page, and the blank verse In which It Is written Is generally sound and melliflu ous. The two other dramas In the book ar of an older day and are reminiscent of Mr. Hjnions'a earlier efforts In tholr cloy. Ing, erotic tono. More l'lays Among other prlntod plays which missed the round-ups may be mentioned Percy MacKaye'a elaborate and beautiful masque of "Caliban" (Poubleday, Pago & Co., Oar den City, N. Y ), performed last summer In New York as tercentenary commemoration of Shakespeare. Tho Macmlllan Company has brought out two volumes of collected plays and poems by Mr. MacKnye which embody his best and most rcprrsentatlvo work. Tho Macmlllan Company llkowlse Issues a new play by Jack London, "The Acorn Planter," largely written In verso. In two new plays, "Jane Clegg," a fine piece of work by St John O. Krvlno, pub llshed by Henry Holt & Co., of New York, and "darslda's Career." a study of a rising young workman, fay Harold Brlghouse, author of "Hobson's Choice," coming from tho A. C McClurg Company, of Chicago, wilt will be found the words 1 "Produced for the first time by Miss Hornlman'a company at the Gaiety Theater. Manchester." They are both characteristic products of that theater, which has created a school of drama new to England. There are four pieces In each of the two volumes called "The Bymphony Play" (Charles Kcrlbner'a Sons, New York), and "Four Plays from the French of Emlle Auger (Alfred A. Knop, New York); but the Continental dramas are full-tlcilsed and famous pieces, while those making up Jcannetta Lee's volume are only one ncters. But hers are very far from the usual casual playlets, because she has schemed them out In spirit and mean ing ns n consecutive series bearing a relation to each other similar to the move ments of a svmphouy. This Jeannctte Lee explains entertainingly In a preface. For Augler's volume there Is not only an In troduction by the tramlator, Barratt If. Clark, but also a preface by the French playwright Brleux, 1 Soon Lauretto Taylor will bring to the Broad a new play by her hUBband, Hart ley Manners, who wrote "Peg o' My Heart" Mennwhllo you may find tn his play on tho drug habit. ."WrecknKe"(Dodd, Mead & Co,, New York), a singular con trast to the early comedy. A play of similar feeling la "Punish ment" by Lou Iso Burleigh nnd Edward Hale Blerstadt It la a drama on prison reform which has elicited a warm Intro ductory commendation from Thomas Mott Osborne. It has humor ns well as power. From the Century Company, New York, comes a book of "Plays for School Chil dren," by Anne W. Leutkenhaus and Mar garet Knox. It sVould prove n. useful sug gestion not only to teachers, but likewise to mothers who wish to find something to occupy their, children's creative energies outside school hours. From D. W. Huebsch, of New York, we get "Criminals," a one-act play by QeorVe Middle ton, dealing bravely and sagely with one aspect of marriage. Tho Fred A. Stokes Company has is sued In "Bernard Shaw, the Twentieth Century Mollare," a very thorough and scholarly study of England's greatest playwright written by the French trans lator of his plays. Augustln Ilnmon. For American or English eyes there Is a good deal of obviousness In the volume, but there Is also the spice of another raoe'a point of view. ENGLAND SUBUMATC3 JOmNALMOfMOitt Gilbert Murray's "Stole ? loBophy" Another PofHttar Masterpiece in a Long Dim Dr ailtxrt Murray. S. P. fatftam's See. irs For more than a centray SmrMasl IkM dmloped public men of letters and mh W publlo Utters. A singular faeutty for trtV Ing lucidly and simply about the blwr things of life politics, philosophy, bMogr has descended on the writers of the 9rit lsh Isles. There technical knowledge Is cosa btned with a rare faculty for express, And the result a sublimated Jounwllesw which brings home to the average man eVee matters that the writers of other nUeM too often cloud In a welter of literary scurlty. Such an expositor Is Pref. Gilbert Mttrrsvr In this reprint of a lecture on "The 'HaH Philosophy." No beter advice can be ttvest the average man, contemptuous of philoso phy aa ha has become by Ita muddled at scurlty, than to buy this little book at enter a new world where old truths ats4 their modern apllcatlon become one. A University at nomeTSc, 11 r J.fUrsan butler Fleiaber. ! . ur v. Aiuon rhtntr. rotrcra&E JUT IN KNOLANDi th U0Wii Uy William b. Dnton, The new In th J torn University Lnrerr. DANTB. IAN I). THOUOIIT run. vntum.a Henry Holt Co.. New Tork. Professor Murray happens also to be oM of the editors of a series of small popular volumes by some of the greatest of preeetrt day Englishmen, the Home University Library. For this collection of the preeetrt world's knowledge, Maseflold haa written e Shakespeare. Illlatre Belioo on the Frenel Ilevolutlon. Hobson. J. It MacDonald. Hot house on politics and economics. Chester ton and George Moore on English liters ture, Professor Murray himself on Qreee. To theso high lights among some eighty authors are now added William L, David son on the utilitarian economists of Eng land from Bentham to Milt, W. Alison Phillips on embattled Poland and Jeflerso Butler Fletcher on the Poet Dante. It la only a pity that among the thousand vH of war has been the slowing1 down In th number of these books Issued each year. Men of tho Old Stone Ago Dy Henry Fatrfltld Oaborn. Charle Berlbser'a Son, New York. Unfortunately this spirit of eubllmate4 Journalism seldom gets across the water. Here, for Instance, we have a fascinating; book on a. fascinating subject yet a book that must be read with the deepest de termination to maater Ita "sclentlflo" pres entation. It gathers together an Immense) amount of comparative knowledge on-the men who lived on this globe thousands and hundreds of thousands of years ago. And It Is filled with photographs, cuts and charts) reconstructing. the lite of the past EVERY Auction Playeni Must Have The Latest and Best Hook on the Gam THE COMPLETE AUCTION PLAYER By Florence Irwin "Not only the best writer on Auction, but the beat exponent of any card game I know of." An Old Card Player, 400 pages. fl.SO net. Publlihtd by Putnam 1 gum jnLm S- v-v w E i A 1 t r 1 Z What Was The Wonder-Girl's Secret? What teas her claim on the Scotch munitions-maker? What teas this gor geous creature doing in Laclasse? The most fascinating and most mysterious heroine of modern fiction will capti- vate you in j "The Tiger, Coat" by Elizabeth Dejeans 0 beginning now in Pictorial Review for November Here's a thrilling romance in which in tensely dramatic events happen one right after another. Don't miss ill Go to your newsdealer Get your copy to-day. Pictorial Review sells out every month within a few days after publication. To-morrow may be too late. h '