Ufa -r " !" Ui H. G. Wells' New Novel MR. BRITLING EESITTHROUGH Nov) SOth Thousand "The Great Novel." "Mr. Britling Sees It Through" is today the best selling novel in America and England. This remarkable story that has touched the hearts and imagina tions of men and wom en wherever it has been read, is now in the SEVENTH LARGE EDITION (The GOth Thousand) 200 Reviewers have praised "Mr. Britling Sees It Through." "Remarkable . .. not only Mr. Wells' best book, but the best book so far published concerning the war." Chicago Tribune. "Tremendous . . .. H. G. Wells' greatest achievement... the great novel of the war." N. Y. Tribune. "A transparent portrait of Mr. Wells an amazingly frank por trait" The Nation. "A great work... A searching an alysis of humanity's soul." Boston Advertiser. A war epic . . . Infinitely moving and potent." Chicago Herald. "A veritable cross-section of con temporary English life." N. Y. Times. "A powerful, strong sUry . . . wonderful pages . . . gems of emo tional literature." Phtla. Ledger. "The Spirit of the Age' MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH has been read by KMany Clergyman "Has made a profound impression upon my mind and heart. . . . Tho greatest book from Mr. Wells' pen. . . . Has stirred mc to tho very depths. I shall preach this book for many days to come." Rev. John Haunts Holmes, Church of the Messiah, N. Y. C. "1 regard the closing pages of tho book as among the most powerful Mr. Wells has over written. I think also that from tho religious stand point these pages have a significance as showing tho trend of Mr. Wells' mind toward a deeper and more positive faith in the spiritual veri ties." Rev. J. H. Jowett, Fifth Ave nue Presbyterian Church, N. Y. C. "I have read it with growing in terest and wonder . . . remarkable . . . certainly will give strength to bear sorrow." Rev. Henry A. SUmson, Manhattan Congregational Church. "My urgent advice to every reader Is that he at once buy 'Mr. Britling and read it through. Then let him sit down and read xt through again." P. I. R. in The Christian. Work. England Finds Her Soul in MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH For the first time we have a novel which touches the life of tho last two years without impertinence. ... A really remarkable event . . . a proud achievement" The London Tunes. "Assured of immortality. ... A revelation of the mind of England." The London Express. "He shows us ourselves in all our stages of discovery and disillusion. TiV Tne.roT,ls nothing greater in Tolstoy and Dostoevsky." The Lon don Star. v r,3!f ?i?vo1 Is. F4-,' ? iht e spirit of the age." The London Telegraph. Every American ought to read this remarkable book. H ,""- n. U. WeuY New Novel. M" a . jMR, BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH (Important Not The steadily increasing cost of paper will soon make It imperative to advance the Price of Mr. Well,1 novel. BUY IT NOW THE MACMILLAN CO.. Pubs New York. Richard Richard By HUGHES MEARNS ,. A new novel about a man who avoided wealth . work women ' until but that's the J7' is a clean book' " and may be giyen to any hum HkeS thoueltful ' t all lookHort, tt.tl n,t. .The P., Publwhuif 4 I iBVBnmfG LlSDaElPHILADELPHlA; SATUKDAY, NOVEMBER IX, 191(5 NEW BOOKS AND WHO FIGURE IN THE LITERARY WORLD TOD. NOVELS OF VARIOUS KINDS IN FALL LISTS FROM THE PUBLISHERS New Books by Will Lcvington Comfort nnd Mary Raymond Shipmnn Andrews. Others EMMY LOU COMES BACK "THR I.A8T DITCH," Comfort. (Korea li. nr Will Larlnaion Doran Companr. New There Is an unevennms about this work that robs, that Is dlMppolntlna;. At one tlm tha author of "nutlcdga Hides Alone," Is again nls remarkably Inspired self: yet later ho loosens his grip and the story ootes away In consequence. Descriptively 'The Last Ditch" Is an exquisite piece of work! Its author knows his China as he doea his Uussla. nnd has caught the spirit of the Orient. Best of all nre the scenes In the desert J In these not once, but twenty times a picture Is painted with the pen that stands forth In vlvld. bold colors. Klpllnuesque, really superb In Its exotlo sort of beauty. In these Mr. Comfort, who Is nothlns If not a follower of the futuristic school, sains added cjfect by shoVt, almost choppy, phrases patched together by dashes, which are generally pregnant with meaning. In the matter of characters Mr. Comfort un fortunately adheres too closely to his orl enlat touch. As rt result, many of hla per sons aro fantastically unreal. The character of Nlfton Dend Is the particular example of this; he Is Intensely fascinating, but noer quite lifelike. Both of Mr. Comfort's worn en are i compelling figures, but they would be more humanly charming It they did not possess qutte so much Idealistic heroism. Woman "THE KTErtNAI. FEMININE, mond Hhlpmtn Andrews. Charlaa Bcribnar'a dddi, iNew iora. nr Marr nr- Readers whose memory treasures recol lection of the nig perfect technique and lofty spirituality of "The Terfect Tribute" will nnd much to enjoy and to admire In Mrs. Andrews's recent collection of short stories. She Is a skilled craftsman, and It la next to Impossible to cavil at the form of these stories now first collected. Dut they have something of a par with contour, and that Is color and character. Her people are richly human, her scenes are credible and the reader breathes Its "pure serene" whilst living In the story. "Her Fling," the open ing tale, Is the narrathe of a "gray," emo tlonally suppressed slae-to-her-famlly type of woman, of real brilliance of mind and mellowed loveliness of aspect, who en franchises herself from the domination of an absent-minded professional husband and a big, blonde and somewhat stolid daugh ter. She discovers that life can be a very lively thing, Indeed, with a few new gowns, a spirited maro and a few of the younger members of the faculty dangling about. Her Independence Is harmless and effective. The tale of It should set many a woman on the temporal latitude of the early forties to serious thinking There Is drollery and nalvette In "The Eternal Feminine," a ery faithful transcript of the young roman ticism of a novel-reading miss who makes an elder sister the subject, or victim,, of certain laboratory experiments In match making and the dialogue of sentiment, Mrs. Andrews's girl Is ap natural and as di verting In her self-revelations as Mrs. Wig glns'a "Jlebeccu of Sunnybrook Farm." A Bit of Blue Grass KIl.DARKS OF 8TORJI. Rllen Merceln Kelly. Century Company, New York. ,From the Blue Grass region of Kentucky to the, crowded thoroughfares of New Vork, and even to the gates of Paris Itself, Ellen Merceln Kelly leads the characters of her latest story, "Klldares of Storm." Vital, vl!d personages are these products, of a semlbarbarlc clvlllxatton, whose deeds and thoughts. If lacking In conventionality and sometimes trending suspiciously close to themes 'on which polite society Is wont to draw a discreet veil, are nevertheless thor oughly Interesting as well as original. It Is modern, up-to-date Kentucky which the author, herself a native of Maryland, but apparently well acquainted with the main locale of her romance, pictures. The cen tral character, Kate Klldare, a big, beauti ful, perennially youthful and fascinating woman, "a woman with a past," has two daughters of widely differing temperaments, and the loe affair of one of the latter Is little more strenuous than that of the highly efficient owner and manager of a plantation called "Storm." By Conlngsby Dawson SLAVKS OF FREEDOM. By Conlnrabr Dawson. Henry Holt & Co.. New York. "Slaves of Freedom" Is a novel which strikes at women who value theattentlon of men only for the pleasure that It brings them, not as the means to a richer life. The heroine Is willing to receive everything that Teddy gives her or Is pleased when he follows her across the ocean to America and finds her greatest happiness In his presence. Yet she Is unwilling to bind herself to him by anything which may compromise her freedom. He, on the other hand, Is so fas cinated by her that he becomes her slave temporarily, to the detriment of his pro fession. The greatest value of the book lies In tho keen psychological Insight that Mr. Dawson shows in treating his characters, especially in the discussion of the state of Teddy's soul. But as the state of Teddy's soul was rather unhealthy, and as the ex positions of It are ever present, the book takes or! a. distinctly effeminate tone. The secondary characters do stand out as dis tinct personalities, but their function Is ob scure. The descriptions aim at being star tling, but they abound In overdone, pathetic fallacies. Moreover, the book Is not, strictly speaking, true to life ; there may be "slaves of freedom," but they are not like Desire. As a whole, the noel falls short of its mark. A Novel of Variety MX TUB OARDEN OF DKLiailT. Br I IT, J liimmnnil . Thnmi rPAli jl tvT&w York. "In the Garden of Delight" la a story which may be said to Include a love affair rather than to center arqund It, for a great part of the book is given over to descriptions of nature of bird Ufa especially and an other great part reads like a "Journal In time," having more to da with tho thoughts and feelings of the author than with the romance of her adopted son. The love story Itself Is sweet and natural and the characters throughout are very real. Moreover, the tale la told with an Insight arid an unselfish sympathy which make up In part for the somewhat unhappy tone of the hook, springing from continual emphasis on tha physical and mental suffering of the author. We feel that the artistlo effect would have been greater If this element had been subordinated or left out entirely. Emmy Lou Is Back "'Sf'il "' ROAD TO ORACE." By Otorro York """" D' WK Co., New As an attempted treatment of Juvenile psychology and the' queer philosophy of childhood, this new "Emmy Lou" book 'may be decidedly worth reading. Jt is not. however, anything Ilka what Its name. Its advertising or Its general appearance would lead one to suspect. It may be a sympathetic study, but It Is certainly not a pleasant one., The rellgloua element which Is so constantly Introduced seems In congruous and out of place. At times It grate harshly upon the lighter mood which aooompanlM It. Every chapter deals with one or another of Bmray Lou's perplexities regarding forms of worship, why some of Mr nwsli to to other almrahes t (iin awnni X t if tlM FACES IN THE LITERARY LIMELIGHT WADSWORTH CAMP The author of "The House of Fear." (Ooublcday Pago & Co.) HVsHsflsttSsis I LasasasasasaBEFW LaaaPSjCOaseBaaaaSBSy JB ah fiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa . !asaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaBaa I sHssaffiHk ---Tllssetetv BSBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVJaaafisBBaV aaaaaaaaPSBBaaakaaPS. MssBMMb 'jsHHPfl BSSSSSm V .1 SSSBTT ssBssKsiisHslslssV -.ssilslaHH PHILADELPHIAN WRITES DELIGHTFUL NOVEL OF LOVE AND LAUGHTER William Hughes M earns Hns Charming Humor and Fancy in New Book, "Richard Richard," Just Out OTHER FRESH FICTION m"A,5.D....n,c,,IAnD- Kr Hushea Mearna. renn Tubllahlns Company. Philadelphia. "Itlchard nichard" Is nn Interesting and amusing r0el Mr. Mcnrns Is to be con gratulated on IL Ills short stories, while uniformly good, gae no promise of such an excellent first noel The tnle has an unusual breadth of appeal. It Is distinctly amusing, vhldly Interesting nnd flavored with brightly written conversations on phi losophy and the nnture of life, which make good reading, though they seem fnr re moved from the purpose of the story. The sparkling wit of Phoebe N'orrls, a little Irish widow, nnd "Jawn" CJnllowny, pro fessor of Columbia, Is a thing to chucklo over. nichard Itlchard meets Miss Qeraldlne Wells In Italy, Just at the time the lady grows utterly weary of the "conducted pnrty," her mother's "mlnd-domlnlon" and tho subterfuges of her paraonlao brother nichard Is luxuriously laxy, and haa brains enough to keep from that which Is likely to disturb his ease womankind In particular. Tho way In which he yields to the wholesome Influence of Geraldlne nnd arouses hlmsolt to the point of saving tho Wells name and home, and subse quently taking his own place In society, makes a corking story. By Old Irv Cobb LOCAt, COLOR. Br Inrlnr Cobb. Oeorse It. Doran Company. New York. Maintaining his preference for short stories, Mr. Cobb has collected another series of his briefer works, which he pub lishes under the name of the first nnd prob ably most widely read of them, "Ixcal Color," that rather Bomber, always plvlful, talc of prison life and the harm It wrought In one man. Unlike some of the author's earlier collections of stories, the present contains only one story whose locale Is laid In Mr. Cobb's favorite South; the delightful Judge Priest does not enter nny Thcte are ten tales In all ; three of them aro pow erful examples of the author's serious muse ; two nre characteristically humoroiW ; two more are briskly dramatic. The less said about the rest the better. "Field of Honor," one of tho most serious of the stories, may well be considered representa tive of the very best In Its author. It shows vividly and poignantly how the European war finds apathetic echo In the streets of New York. "The Great Auk" Is the grip ping tale of an old actor, the victim of a strange hallucination, which causes him to re-enact his old roles dally before nn Im aginary audience in an empty and decaying theater. Infanother story Mr. Cobb brings his whimsical humor Into play on the sub ject of undeslred charltq. In general, the author shows himself versatllo and wholly delightful. , Oxford Life of Years Ago IDY CONNin. By Mra Humphry Ward Hearts'a International Library Company, New York. . While the scene Is laid In Oxford some thirty years ago, Mrs. Ward has made Lady Constance Bledlow, or Lady "Connie," a very lovable and ultra-modern young woman. Although she Is only a young girl, Connie Is as much spoiled, ha self-centered and as charming as nny petted society bud of today. Besides, she rides alone, meets the man she has refused to marry unchap croned In entrancing forests, umokes ciga rettes and has acquired the art of turning tho heads of the stronger sex with an ease which Is surprising. The book deals to a great extent with the havoo a young, spirited and beautiful girl can wreck even unintentionally. Connie 1b twenty, beautiful, rich and amazingly clever. She captures the hearts of "profs," "dons" and the "bloods" alike, and com pletely shocks her aunt and uncle, with whom she has come to stay. Not that Con nie Is bad. Far from It. She has lived most of her young years abroad In the best so clety, and Oxford Is too slow ror ner, so she proceeds to wake the old university town up. Connie Is deluged with attentions and In vitations, and suitors flock about her. Of these, hbwever, the story deals chiefly with two Douglas Falloden, nephew and heir to a marquis, who Is arrogant, handsome and snobbishness personified, and Otto Radowltz, an Interesting and lovable young musician. Both adore Connie, but hate each other as only the bitterest rivals can When Connie dances all one evening with the artistlo and soulful Otto, Falloden and some of the other "bloods" haze the musi cian unmercifully. In the mlx-up Otto's hand la Injured permanently, and he pines away almost, seeing that through the In Jury to his hand his career as a musician Is- wrecked. , The romance centers about this accident. Falloden has an awakening. He changes his mode of life and h.s spirit Is trans formed. Although the episode has made Connie hate him, her heart softens when she learns that he has lost his money and is devoting the little he has left to taking care of Otto, formerly his most hated enemy. Both Connie and Falloden take tu nursing the young musician, and the end ng la happy even for him. He sees his way clear to realize hli ambition as a composer. Corra Harris Once More TUB CIItCUIT IllDEIl'S WIDOW. By Corra Harris Doubladay, r A Co., Cardan City, "The Circuit Jllder'a Widow," by Mrs. Corra Harris (Doubleday, Page A Co.), Is a vlvld, clever and .convincing character sketch of a chureh. The weaknesses and shortcomings, the ideals and dreams, ths bigotry and faith, the real Inside of the. village Heinoaitt church, with Its Itinerant pastors, are described with a fidelity and felicity that make the book stimulating and charming at the name time. Mrs. Thomp son, "the circuit rider's widow," a church member for thirty-five years, declares at tno outsat inai an u going "to tell tne family history of a hro." and the result U a pi MWra ..H aXsVnmea of u a prtiesssioj acHatftr reaaateM awur OaMMsW sBaaaaaaaaaV SBsft sssM taJMUUMr - BLr- i; ANOTHER WAR BOOK ON AUTUMN STALLS A Popular Volume on tho Strat egy of General Joffre. Other Nonfiction OBNKrtAi. jopmi: Hnymnnil Ilecouly New York AND 11IS rtATTI.Kq ny Charlea Scrlbner's Soni, Itaymond Itecouly, a stnff oftlcer In the Trench army, gives an Interesting account of tho battle of the Marno and the battle around the fortress of Verdun In his book, "General Jottro nnd Ills Matties," published by Charles Scrlbner's Sons. New York Ills narrative, nlvvnjs Interesting nnd vlvld. often dealing with a rooro or less technical question involved In the operations, Is not new to the readers of the Scrlbner's Mnga zlne. In which the chapters of tho present volumo had appeared under the nlgnnturo of "Captain X". ltccouly's pen name. How ever, collected In book form, those chap ters will be of lasting usefulness to stu dents of the world-war and to those who fpllow tho events of the terrible tragedy under which Europe Is still laboring. Travellntr South WINTER JOUrtNBYS IN TltR SOUTH P-y John Martin Hammond. J. 11. Upplncolt Com pany. Philadelphia. For any one planning a trip southward as the snow begins to fly Mr. Hummon's bcok will be a humorous, n valuable and a delightful traveling companion. And tho grentcr multitude, too. who remain in this climate through the winter because flnanoes and not fancies determine their trips can find In "Winter Journej.s In the South" pleasures to fill many hours As In his pre vious books of travel. Mr Hammond Is writing of somethlng which he knows down to the very A IJ C's Ho has tramped, motored, golfed, fished and at times simply rested In every corner of our southern States, from Whlto Sulphur to New Orleans nnd from Aiken To Palm Ueach For each man's special hobby he has found the most suitable place. Literary Men's Fancies TUB CrilTAIN HOim. riy Jamra Hranch Ca bell Ilobert Mcllrlde & Co., New York The title Is well chosen Mr. Cabell In a collection of short stories, hns touched upon the certain hour or time "that comes In tho affairs of men," when love and pas sion make them all human and brothers, easily susceptible to the Influence of Hve. Ten men are Its heroes and the names of several! at least, aro written In the Halls of Fame. "Judith's Creed" shows Shakespeare In middle age In company with the Dark Lady of tho Sonnets: and "The Drown Woman" portrajn Pope ns one of tho most human of men, forgetting alike the fact that he Is a cripple and a poet. Somo of the other ftorles are about Sheridan, Lord Herrlck and William Wycherley. Others are of the darker sort, filled with court Intrigue, duels and some pf tho other stage deeds which sometimes befall the lot of man when "the hour" Is upon them Round the Horn The late Elizabeth Christopher Hobson's "Recollections of a Happy Life" (O. P. Putnam's Sons, New York) has been given to the public after n private circulation. From the opening chapters, which deal with a voynga In n cllppor ship around tho Horn to San Francisco and with a wedding trip across the Isthmus of Panama in the fifties, to the record of the organ!, zatlon of the Ilellevue Hospital Training School for Nurses, New York, and thence to the chapters dealing with travel and sojourn, this memoir, rich In personality as It Is in anecdote, offers the variety of In terest that attaches to a replete as well as a happy life. w PUBLISHERS OFFER MANY NEW BOOKS List of Forthcoming Volumes In cludes War Stories, Verse nnd Other Subjects Deferred publication Is responsible for the fact that an uncommonly large number of Interesting books will be brought out by George II. Doran, New York, next Tuesday. Among them may be mentioned "The Lion's Share," by Arnold Hennett : Irvln 8. Cobb's "Local Color"; Hlchnrd Dehan's "A Qllded Vanity": Will Lcvington Comfort's "The Last Ditch": "Men. Women nnd Ouns." by "Sapper": U V. Lucas's "The Vermilion Ilox," and "More Wanderings In London": Henry Oyen's 'The Snow-burner," and Per ch al J, Cooney'a "Kinsmen." The Thomas Y. Crowell Company an nounces for publication "A Fire In the Snow." a Christmas story, by the Rov. K. Jefferson, of the nroadway Tabernacle. Charles L. Jefferson, of the Broadway Tabernacle. "Chrlstus Consolator and Other Poems." by Rosslter W, Raymond, Is the title of a little volume also announced by the Crowells. The title piece Is already well known to thousands of persons who have found In It consolation for bereave ment The November list of new books published by Longmnns. Green ft Co, New York, In cludes "The Reminiscences of the Rt. Hon. Lord O'llrlen. J.ord Chief Justice of Ire land," wilted by his daughter, Hqn. Geor glna O'llrlen; "Chapters from My Oniclal Life." by Sir C. Rivers Wilson, O. C. M. Q., C. 11, edited by L'vcrllda MacAUster, and "From Sail to Steam,'" a collection of Jiaval recollections, by Admiral C C. Ten rose Fitzgerald. Terhaps we might say that "present-dny France stands first In the eyes of the world In a way that recalls her pre-eminence In 1300-1600, when she was distinguished for continuous political growth nnd her attain ment of a permanent 'territorial unity. So In his history of continental Kurope for thnt earlier period Prof. Chalfont Robinson, of Princeton, has used n French work by Uon dols and Dufayard ns tho basis for his vol ume, translating freely, supplementing from other standard sources, excising nnd ex panding nnd In general nlmlng to make an acceptable textbook for American colleges Continental Hurope. 1270 to 1598," will be published by Henry Holt ft Co. next Thurs day. Harper ft Rros announce that they have put to press for reprlntlngs the tol lowing books "The Thirteenth Command ment, by Rupert Hughes; The Hidden ?JK.'n,ro. by bronco Uudlngton Kelland. The Story of the other Wise Man," by Henry van Dyke; 'The Elements of Naviga tion, by W. J. Henderson; "The Red Arrow, by Klmcr Russell Gregor: "The n.r".nRnrH '"v. ,,y, Zan ar'- nntl """- Hyatt VcfrllT Book" by AI,neua irnVn'Sn "i bnnd,l.t" Rre '" Pleasing con trast In "On Parole." a tale for bojs of ban- nZ Ann". yin " The authors are Anna and Frances Plcrpont Slvlter ""7 "11!t & 1"0 Issued tho book wUh striking Illustrations by Ada C. Williamson! Tago & Co , announce for ELLEN KEY SUMMONS WOMANKIND TO ESTABLISH EVERLASTING P The Scandinavian Feminist and Pacifist Writes a Pi ate Plea Much News of Europe's Little-Heard-of Peace Movements & Vi WAR. TRACE AND TUB FUTUnE. Itr Ellen Key. O. I Putnam's Bona, New York. THI3 tremendous opportunity and respon sibility of creating everlasting peace rest In the hands of women. At least that Is tho message which one thoughtful paci fist sends to America. nilen Key Is an Idealist; It is foreign to her nature and to her philosophy of life to see purely the practical aide of a problem, and so her "War. Peace and the Future" will be all too quickly condemned by those who live entirely In the present and who nr a little confused by such terms as "soul culture" nnd "democratic state." Mut grave intelligence gave birth to her Ideas, a clear brain nurtured them to logical conclusions, and a heart as big as humanity tempered them with Its feeling. To Kllen Key It seems of the gravest Im portance thnt women begin their campaign by forever shutting their mouths to praise nf the glories nnd conquests of war, even If they be cnlled unpatriotic. Working thus, they will create "the love that puts humanity before the nntlon," which Is far greater than "the love that puts the nation before humanity." They rrrost learn to give their fathers, sons nnd husbands to the Stnte Instead of sacrificing their lives for the State. They must have fewer and bet ter children nnd none. If It be only for their drnth nnd destruction. Finally, they must consciously work against war by Influ encing public opinion and using their voices always against It. And she quotes some one ns saying not from his "hard heart." "but from his "clear brain" that the women might even strike and refuse to nurse their fathers, sons nnd husbands back for another career of death and destruction. This will all lead to a new patriotism. The author says that: "As long ns the most Ignorant and crudest expression of the hatred of peoples Is called patriotism, as long ns women will have a feeling of pride ov er their country's evil deeds ngalnst other countries, they wilt not educate tho jounger generation to a right International senso of Justice." Few of us ever think of peace, vvni and ostracism In such a spirit; and It Is alwavs the spirit that makes Kllen Key a prophet nnd n conscious and tireless worker toward the larger alms of humanity. In this tlmo of slaughter nnd great mili tary strategies, we hear far too little of the r.cbler movements toward an ultimate re gineratlon of the warring countries, which seem to bo going on with conscious Inten sity and force. Wo have heard little of the league called the "Neues Vaterland," which Is working, even In tha war-ridden Germany, townrd leavening "the policies and diplomacy of tho Huropean States with the Idea of peaceful competition and the.thought of nn Interstate union for the purpose of pollticnl and economical ngreement between the cultured peoples of Kurope." And other countries aro working townrd the same goat. The llngue, London, Lausanne, Blarl cum, Uarcelona and Berne all have seen, nt least In part, that there Is nothing to be gained from this everlasting struggle In Doubleday. publication during the laUer part of No v ember, two additional bnnV. i .,.' Vi " JnSKVtrTl;r Tn"hlngton S1"" Plays" ! and "Malvaloca." by Serafln Joaquin Al- I varez Qulntero The former volume Includes , four of the most striking successes or the Washington Square Plavcrs. all by you I American authors and all produced during the last two seasons. They nre 'The Clod " by Lewis Reach; "Overtures," by Alice I ?51Sber7; ",:u"B'My Speaking." by ' h, "i k ,?u,1mn' nnd "Helena's Hus- band." by Philip Moeller Kdwnrd Goodman, director of the Wash. ' Ington Square Players, has written a prof ace to the plas and there Is a longer Introduction by Walter Prlchard Knton The Century Company announces "Repre- ' sentatlve American riays," edited by Arthur Hobson Qulnn, of the University of Pennsylvania, the first nttempt to Include In one volumo n collection of plays nius tratlng the development of our nntivo drama from its beginning to the present day. All the plays In the collection are the work of native Americans, and all have had actual stage presentation by a nrofes slonal company. Of the twenty-five plnvB chosen, the scenos of sixteen are laid in this country, while bo far ns possible all tho principal types characteristic of our drama nre to be represented. A i.-i.e i troductlon to each play explains Its slg- ' nlnninnaj nnrt aria . I a n J ""'--""" "'" "'" ui"Bmpnicni sketch of the author, with a selected bibliography imD A D A Dl SE ? - GARDEN "i!lJS DM V H By GEORGE GIBBS aims, and that something new rmtet : up to save Christendom and humaftMft. Few of us have read the mi amusing stories of the Peace Confai ins Hague. April. lslL Those women who wanted ttf Attend were passports ! England was rVnresontMt a three women ! French women could net i sioiy attend a conference with women, whose patriotism would not let I uiaavow meir country's wrongdoing asi the German women who braved their MfjWai ouium were lorever denied further i of influence In the Federation of WMri Clubs of Oermany. Such rare facta sM&i bo welcome to the students of real meWs tlcns. ...1?!!en. Ky bM "-I1 nr theories M-a raiin in the Inmost strength or womkmtH nAtUre " What a dreamer! What in HI How little does she know the !.' and stresses or dally llvlnr! flu a saaat many more criticisms will lead the feMtr patrlotlc to shun this tangible metheT if working toward International unders4anHt and to class all these SDlendld Id a 'altogether lmDrctlrhl" , h..- -' less. " """Vy The Experience of A Modern "Adam" t twenty-one he was ig norant of the existence of woman. He leaves the se cluded estate on which he had been raised and goes out into the world. His strange ex periences and his attempts to adjust himself to society make up a novel unusual in its theme and startling in its denouement. At all booksell ers llluitralrd. $1.85 net. THIS IS AM APPUCTON BOOK . NOVELS YOU'LL ENJOY A Fiction Event THE INVISIBLE BALANCE SHEET By KATRINA TRASK Author of "In the Vanruard." ale Cloth, tlmo. tl.40 tlti. The story of a younp; man of. com plex nature, who is given tho chole betwecn relinquishing the girl )m loves arid inherltinjr sixty million dol- '' "c as uvea in mat guttentur circle known ns Now York BOcietyrW (iicacnieu in an iu anzziing allure ment.. In it: nne flnrla ftnlff-tn,, 1...-M.... M the sparkle of "In the Vanguard," the I pquosopny oi -ine Mighty and the Lowly," and the poetic quality of "King Alfred's Jewell." A Love-Duel IN SPACIOUS TIMES By - JUSTIN HUNTLY McCARTHY Author of ."Tha Olorloua itaacal." "1ft Were Klnr." etc. Clofs. 12mo, $1.83 M. An old-time romance of the days of Good Queen Bess. It is a love story told or rather it is a love-dtud fought out in this famous author'? oest vein. i AND Locke's Greatest Success THE WONDERFUL YEAN By WILLIAM J. LOCKE , " '"Tha IJeloved V4- fcWJi, i.j ner. Author of Jafrery, bond." ate. "There is somethine of the charm of 'The Beloved Vagabond' in Mr. Locke's new novel. Altogether the story is one that no lover of Mr, Locke's writing, can afford to miss.' It has humor, atmosphere and quaintness in admirable combina tion." 77ie Outlook. OF ALL BOOKSELLERS JOHN LANE CO. NEW YORK The Booklovers Library S01 Widener Bid p.. Chestnut & Juniper St. and 1619 Sansom Street AH the newest books of Action rented at two cents a day. 0 tF v -jnalliii, mWmWmmn -:, WE SEVEN ARM tea .'-si I 25c a copy Author of "What Women Want." The NEST ' BUILDER By BEATRICE F.-R. HALE Miry, a steadfast, home-loving woman, a creature of wingi and flame. Stefan, artist and lover of the beautiful. Their marriage and the rctultant chub of wills and temperament make the story. "Feh, absorbing and pro fouadly moving." vPA0aWM(a Sttmn$ Tetfra-ph. , MCUdr eaBttVd M M"aV ' "I1" aawaajji, r-naaaaaaa aaaaiaa, 'I $2.50 a year The first issue of this magazine is now on sale The Chicago Evening Post says; ' "To no one organ havo wo been able to turn and get a clear Impression of what the complexion of our native writing, picturing and music making was. "In the 'Seven Arts' we Bhall have 'such an organ. There the live "American artist may bring his offer ings. There the lover of the arts can find out what his contemporaries are doing. It is our earnest prayer that It may reach wherever two or three ore gathered together throughout this country, and even be a witness tyr us In foreign lands." During the first three months, then will be contributions byt Robert Frost Sherwood Anderson ' ' Amy Lowell Van Wyck Brooks Wilbur Daniel Steele James Oppenheim Edgar Leo Masters Theodore, Dreiser Louis Untermeyer Wlllard Huntington Wright Barry Benefleld V and such Europeans' as '" Romain Rollahd ,t J, D, Bereaford ,... Allen Upward ana D. H, Lawre&M 1 On sale at newsstands. Ask your dttahr to get ym emmy- That you may become j The .Seven .Arts Vvb. Co., ' r . a . i m mwm AV., v a, viasf ntuttuniou w a i H a no Svm Arts from iu k& ajSaaafLiaai jtaaa. aAlljfll aaaaaaaCaaa aaaajaajajaajl lAjtajfljaft S1SSwS W aaaaaaaaimpp Ibe ; PUtute setiA tn Ota'Ant thr numbaravW Bm Harm AMc M- J HtttteMd AM (etvMk) m mW$jet aaaaaaMaaliaaamiaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaaaaT,atatt ,f-r .Jr., .g. --y-,wliW, - .-' '1 j lie x. ., v-iee-i . ....!.' , miajmnmuatSiniBm-, m. s . i "'7,S( V$y& ?!!leBV MM