'V ' ,' OTERNACONFLICT'BETWEEN RIGHTEOUSNESS AND i THERE ANY FUTURE ft ' FOR A WOMAN WITH A PAST? $ Basil King Answers the Ei nve in nis lNew iNovei, a Book WifV. p a Living :.L..w iAfmtYinn Jn thft eaunfrv. nntl aMI Hi .wo aro more thnn a hundred thou. I . iUnM n litlHrlrnrl ttlnll. 'nd of ihem, ought to read Basil King's EL novel, "Tho Lifted Veil." Every -irried woman, and only Mr. uaueii in dM City Hall or somo census statistician fc Washington knows how many there Vv v. n ronrt It. Every husband. r affl. oubi fcw " I. - ...... tVtnm le untinnandlv no i tnd the numud "." - --.-.-, - t as that of tho married women, but "iflgurcs ever compiled maUo tho num Lr agree, will profit by Us persual. '' ifld every woman "with a past," and Xy alas, aro too numerous, will find 'tFlt ft revelation that shines like the 'iun;when the storm clouds disappear. 4)r King has dono that rare thing : Wtten a novel with a soul In It. And k. hts done a rarer thing, lor no nas B " ,., .nnnn,. I.n tlm ;ihown in a coni"-ib ..."v-. .. "ul In a modern pagan woman of society ' ZL awakened, If not created out of noth ing by being brought into contact with ,'gpirltual Idealism of a man who tries to put into practice the theories of Chris- tunny- ' .The story itself Is of absorbing Interest. Indeed, if It wore dramatized It would pake a play "full of thrilling situations 'thit would strain to tho uttermost tho 'skill of any woman now on the Amcrl- an stage to play tho heroine. In a way, tfibugh tho themo is somewhat different, It vis as great a spiritual document as The Scarlet Letter." The heroine Is a young widow who had tarried an old man at her mother's so licitation. Her father and her grand frther had been modern pagans. Her pother was of tho same kind, willing to jtcrlnce a young daughter that she might havo somo one to take care of her. The hero Is a young clergyman with spir itual Insight, who has been engaged to julst tho rector of a New York church. The old rector is a business man who has trganlzed material success Into his Ohurch, but feels that there ought to be joffis religion In it also. Other persons tho move through the pages are a col lege friend of tho young clergyman and J The hero and heroine of Basil Kinc's new novel. I, kit wife, a Canadian baronet, the daugh ter of the rector, and n girl of tho poor Who has slipped into evil ways. The young widow has had an Intrigue with the college friend of tho hero. "It Just flared up" Is the way both ex plin it. Then it burned itself out, leav- I fair Itporo i The widow who has heard tho clergy ton preach Is moved to co to him. heav- r 1Y veiled, to confess that she Is a sinner and to ask him what to do to get back lier Belf-respect and peace of mind. He kter falls in lovo with her without know ing that sho was the veiled woman. He r dlicovers also that his collego friend was we man In the case, and that, too, whllo lit and his wife were active In the church. , All these people come together In numer- ws ways. The reader Is admitted to tho . et of their relations, but the char- ' tiers slowly discover It. and somo of them do not discover It, all. There Is ;, jiery ana complication and suspense WUs t0 tlsfy tho most exacting. rerelops and what tho outcome Is must :, P to the book for enlightenment. We .wall not spoil the pleasure they will get ty-dlscloslng It In advance. ?lK t Is not for thn stnrv hnworpr ihnt l' eerlous-mlnded will read tho book. It .". fOr the Rnrlfll nhllncnntiv thnt it mn. .njhs. The philosophy Is not new. It hlUbeen Preached for ntnrlpa. nnrl nrncv Hed Well, if It tnn nrnrllmrl nt nil '?' WorW would be a much better place b which to live and be happy. liK.Ljt us take tho vounc woman In whom iton "flared un." Sho hnrt n fhniitrlit Tt She Was not n. crnnrt wntnnn nt thn t"ie, and it took her years to discover yw mistake. She was -shocked because young clergyman told her, when sho 5ea him in disguise, that she was not In discussing the problem sho l''o'm0 tha, what you mean by KOoi ji-.'" ue wnoso thoughts are kept as i)"t'y as possible with good." H . r "" wum Kina 01 a woman woum t be?" FSuh the gathering darkness, "The err.' ",tt- you can ask that" ''X5h0W8 tnat w'ien I thought I was a ifiJfc j0man was really a bad one. if-5 vInat yu w going to say?" piluui " miner uil juu vo never tltih what a K00i woman really i'..T"v mo ininK is menial, us a 5 '" ot understanding. If your mind fffi .n8 wropg. It cou dn't have fawned." ', -Sltm.K .. ... . IWL-'. "" "cro B woman - ane oegan .-K doesn't matter whether I'm a or a man. In good there Id u J5!f nor Q'ek. neither male nor "i. V".not question either of sex osoKmsoMsFij JvJ jjffioflhi ir?ffL ?JftLsMsssBisfflLssfllJ EVENING Question in the Affirma- Soul ..J".0.1 n wrong-"Wc-u",8 Wro,,,R ln nn' way-" In Itself "!-. Ir Cn:!, other' That When 'at h".?1?? Bomo ono clso?" tho yolrr h ' t,,G revelatln comes and N vicious "B1;man rca,lzos that thero circles o" thTr,r'BhJ '" th ""Potable a rnomnn. ?XUKh 'lSclf ho dou,,ts tor wonn wh ,.w,iethcr n" thelr "t Is nut him . ' ,nkM th0 oU1 rcctor t mn" Wl. him that wo can see human beings from the angle ot vice and depravity. . whlch caso !L,' ""I ?.r .Wo can RC" them from the ..,. .u mar struggle with evil, "In wh ch case you applaud them as soldiers, or like Some One niae. you havo compas- i. on on the multitude because they aro as sheep haying no shepherd." They are all fighting In their way against the baser things receiving grievous wounds ln tho struggle, but still fighting. But this sort ot thing does not fill tho book. It. however, Is Its heart, what gives it vitality. There is plenty of bono and muscle, flesh and blood In It to mako It Intensely human. Indeed, tho fact that such a book can be written at all should enable ono to tako heart of hopo for tho futuro of American llfo as well as ot American literature. OEOnOK IV. DOUGLAS. "WSES V,U"i- ." "II Kin author of iiib innrr Shrine." I uitratcd by Jnmeit First Steps in Soldiering Unless nil signs fall, tho Plattsburgs, that is, the Federal military training camps, will bo crowded this summer with citizens who wish to prepare themselves In some meas uro for the service of their countrv. Hun dreds of those who went to tho camps last year had no dcflnlto Idea of what was ex pected of them. They wasted tho first week of their stay In doing things they might us wen nave uono nt home. In order to make tho work of the future camps more effective two army oftlcers who served as Instmctors at Plattsburg last summer hao prepared a manual which gives all tho In formation that Is needed by those con templating taking a course ot Instruction that will qualify them not only for service as privates but for entrance to tho ofllcers' reserve corps. No book on tho market at tho present time will bo more valuable to the patriotic citizens who are willing to serve their country under arms. THE PLATTSBiritO MANUAL, a Handhook for federal Tralnlntr Camps. l!v o. O. Kills nnd J.. 11. Carey. With more than 1,10 Ulmtra. tlonn. $J. J,cv VorU: The Century Com pany. Small Talk About Books and Writers of Them The social comedies that can evolve from differences In pronunciation aro more than suggested by ltupeu Hughes ln one of the stories In his new volume, "In a Little Town." A native ot the little town is talking with two men. ono from Slassa chu&etts and the other from Georgia. "Xelthcr of you can pronounce tho name of his native .State." said the native. "He calls It 'Jawja' and you call it 'Jahjar.' " "What should it be?" ".lorrjuh." Mr. Hughes, who has lled In N'ew York long enough to learn -to say "bold" for "bird," docs not tell us how we should pronounce the mime of the southern State. Harper it Bros, announce that they were obliged to reprint "The Lifted Veil." by Basil King, beforo publication'. They are reprinting nleo "The Day of the Saxon," by Oeneral Homer Lea; "L'nder Western Kyes" and ".Vostromo," by JosephsConrad ; volumes 12 and 15 of "Tho American Na tion. A History"; "Judo tho Obscure," by Thomas Hardy, nnd "The Puritan ln Hol land, Kngland nnd America," by Douglas Campbell. Wo noted last week that tho soldiers on tho Mexican border were so Interested ln poetry that tho first book of a lot tent down thero by tho New York library to bo worn out by much reading was a volume of verse. But It did not need this evidence to prove that verso with a human appeal Is popular. Tom Daly's first volume, "Canzonl," pub lished ten years ago. Is now ln Its fifteenth thousand. It has become what the pub lishers know as a standard work and has been selling at the rate of a thousand copies a ear for several years. Only 291 volumes of poetry and drama were pub lished In 159G, while last year SCO volumes came from the prers. Pure literature Is looking up. Houghton Mlfllln Company announce that the demand for "Pip," Ian Hay Belth's latest noel, published March 10, has al ready necessitated a second printing of the book. A new, thoroughly revised nnd materially enlarged edition ot "The War and Human ity," by James M. Beck, author of "Tho Evidence In tho Case," has Just made Its appearance under tha Putnam Imprint. Tho section on the rights of noncombatants and that on tho submarine Issue have been en hanced in Importance through the addition of further material. Theodore Roosevelt contributes to the new edition a foreword. In "Tho White People." Mrs. Burnett makes one of the characters, a wise old Scotchman, say: "Man has not learned all the laws of nature yet. Nature's n grand, rich, endless thing, always unrolling her scrollfwith writings that seem new on it. They're not new. They were always writ ten there, But they were not unrolled. Never a law broken, never a now law, only laws read with stronger eyes." This Is ap parently her own philosophy. This is the love story of a Capo Cod woman, with brains, money and a sense of humor, set down in the super-sophisticated AnRlo American colony of Flor ence. A novel about peo-, plo worth knowing, in an environment worth beinjr taken to. Something fine and wholesome and thor oughly enjoyable in mod ern ncuon. AURORA THE MAGNIFICENT .By Gertrude Hall 8 full-page illustration. PrU: $1.40. Ctt it from your booMoro today. A. rG EDQER-PHILADEIiPHIA, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1917 "" &Tvi:'fiCC.'' IHBHllHi Ha SjBjSbjhKIjV """ yH HHI1K "'''"' IB ' BBBBBBBBk ' &IBBBBBBBbh BBBBBBBB& 'BiBBBBBBBBBBte dStk HBBBBBBBBjh j ' JNjPNjNjNjHy9jNjNJlBBBV9 HnHHBB -"aiiHBHBB9H BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBH aBBaBBaBBaBBBBBBBBBBBVBBBBaBBaaBH BBBHBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB BBBBaMHBBBnBBBBBBBBBBBBBBKiBBl MRS. ERNESTA DRINKER BULLITT Whose fascinating honeymoon diary about Europe in wartime is one of the most interesting spring books. DIVERSIONS OF A IN THE Mrs. W. C. Bullitt's Honeymoon Diary Is Full of Interesting Gossip About Statesmen, Princes and Duchesses TASTB In honeymoons differs nbout ns widely as tasto in brides. This Is a benefi cent dispensation of Providence, for through H thero Is Juht enough competition for each type ot girl to make tho wooing Interesting, and It leaves wldo freedom of choice In the way of spending the first weeks or months of mairled life. If every bride Insisted on going to Palm Beach, to Atlantic City or to ICurope tho rest of us would be crowded out of these Interesting places. Or If they all preferred to llo a month In a hotel In Broad street that thoroughfare would have to bo given up to caraansarles and rice, confetti and old shoes. The street cleaning department Is put to it, as It Is, to keep tha paxement free from litter Yet It It were glxen to eery bride to chooso such a way of spending a honey moon ns came to Hrnesta Drinker, of South Bethlehem, who married William C. Bullitt, n' this city, last year, thero are few who would prefer a different one, Mr. Bullitt took his brldo to Germany and mado side trips to Belgium nnd Austria and Hungary. He had letters of introduction to the Amer ican Ambassadors and to the leading men in tho governments of tho countries nnd was welcomed by them ln a most friendly manner. As a result his wlfo was tho din ner partner of General von Blsslng, Gov ernor of Belgium; sho talked about peace with Zlmmcrmann, theGermanForelgn Min ister; was the guest of Countess von Bern storff at tea, and was entertained by many lesser persons. She had a delightful tlmo In Budapest and ono morning after dining out with notables the night before she heard her telephono bell. When she answered tho ring a volco camo to her over tho wlro: "This Is Graf Apponyi." Oh, hello," sho gaily replied. "How are you today? ' The Count said that ho wished to see Mr. Bullitt "What mado you get up so early? she chaffed back under the Impression that the Count was one of the family whom she had met at a recent party. But this nlry American brldo was talk ing to tho Hungarian Prlmo Minister, who had called at the hotel to seo her husband. Wo know this happened becauso Mrs. Bullitt wrote It down in her diary, extracts from which have been printed In a book that all may read. She explains that the diary of her grcat-great-great-grandmother, Eliza beth Drinker, kept during tho Itevolutlon, had interested her very much, and when she went to tho warring countries last year she decided to record her experiences for the benefit of her great-grandchildren. It sees tho light now, a century beforo sle expect ed It to be of Interest, because a publisher hoard of It and how sho managed to get It by the censors and decided that It was of great contemporary value. No one can read It without agreeing with the men whos business Is making books to sell. In the first place, the diary Is the Intimate :!4 tT I i far i m VSaT s 22ZZ r.urL- .jt The Road To Undcrsfandincf By Eleanor ItPorfer AH the qualities you like in JUST DAViD, POLLYANNA and Mrs. Porter's other books, and an appeal ing lore atory beside. jr4omto . 4;'jmrt M tn mxssnrr- . x' ,-Aht BRIDE WARRING LANDS record of the Impiesslons of an educated woman. As such It has all the Indefinable charm which attaches to the writing of tuch a woman, than which there Is nothing more delightful In the whole realm nf literature. Mrs. O'Shaughnessy's Impressions of Mexi co given in letters to her mother, published last year, have the same charm. In the second place, It Is the iccurd of Hie expe rlences of n oung woman Just emerging from girlhood. This g!ea It a freshness nnd vltaclty as rare In cold type as It Is fascinating In personal contact. Sho tells how at a luncheon with sofno attaches of tho Foreign Ofllce In Berlin In nn attempt to Meer clear of forbidden topics they discussed almost everything. The range of subjects apparently Included Amer ican sports, for hho says: Wo decided that tho Krledlanders. who own all tho coal mines In Ger many, must ask us all to tho country In order that I may show them how to ride on a board behind a motorboat Billy (her husband) and I don't know the Krledlanders, but apparently they won't notlco that. One of tho guests understood that sho needed somo new clothes and Insisted on making an engagement for her with threo of tho largest dressmakers in tho city. This Is her entry .on this subject: They all four (tho guests nt tho luncheon nnd her host) marched mo down to Alfred Mario's and commanded the models to stand forth, t can say I never expected, when I camo to Ger many, a serious-minded woman seek ing Information on the "woman ques tion," to go dress hunting with von Jagow's secretary nnd two more men from the Foreign OITIce. I had nothing to say about the clothes; Hortsmann THE SON Of IV. ;.:..;: ;:.v::: 'At All Bookstores knew a great deal more nbout It than I do, so I came nway with a lint nnd a blnck-and-whlto dress chic enough to ruin my reputntlon In Berlin, Tho volumo Is full of such touches which throw moro light on conditions ln Berlin In wnr tlmo than can be obtained from rending columns of ordinary news dispatches. She wbb contlnunlly .meeting the suggestion tnat If It were not for American munitions the Kntento Allies would havo been defeated long ngo. l'or example, when she went with her husbnnd to a Ooernment office to nr range nbout going to Belgium, sho says: Tho nrst thing that tho Hcrr Major did was to band mo a shell made by the Bethlehem Steel Company I mado n dreadful face, which might havo meant either: "Why didn't tho wretched thing explodo?" or "What a wlckcd'shamo for Americans to have mndo HI" "Don't blnmo mo for that now," I said. "I come from Bethlehem, but my father Is only a harmless collego presi dent nnd not In the steel company." "Oh!" cried Hcrr Grlesel. "That grant unlfcrslty Lehigh I I haf n cousin wot Is married mlt n professor there. They haf sent me putlful blctures ot Lehigh." So I was saved from scorn. Another entry on the same day deals with Prlnco IJluecher, sho had dropped dead that day. His son was to have been a guest nt n luncheon In honor of Prince Christian of Hesse nnd his wife, which she attended, 'Tlio prince," sue writes, "must bao been a charming old man." Most of his llfo Is spent trying to I'tiiuu ma ucraian laxes. lie had an Island off the coast of England on which he kept a great many kangaroos. Per V,np.s, he thouB1" they added n touch of British atmosphere to his estate. He wished to know If he couldn't como to America nnd live thero nbout a week, in order to become nn American citizen, as he found his Island didn't get him ?."i . .p?yln Wa "man taxes; but l?a that It would take een i! ,iln wePk t0 come nn Amer lcnn citizen he gave up that Idea. He sm i'!U Cl lntcrcf'",'l "n America, but J ',e thoKht It must bo dangcroux to nao so many buffaloes around. And ni i . llcnr' of tho lynchlngs our peace-loving citizens occasionally llko ..V.,,?0 In ho ""Rgested we let our ..I, u'lans out t0 "ubduo tho lynchers, i . .', wo,ll(1 soon put a stop to such riots, said the old gentleman But Mrs. Buiutt does not confine her entries to this whimsical sort of revelation of tho German point of view. She mado n careful study of what tho women nro doing to take tho place of the men nt tho front nnd to succor tho widows nnd orphans of tho war. Her credentials gave her access to tho highest sources of Information, nnd sho has tecorded primarily for the Informa- nun m me great grandchildren yet to be, and Incidentally for the Instruction of those .,.. nu.v mie an opportunity to read her diary, many Importnnt facts nbout tho way tho German women havo arisen to the oc casion nnd how they nre proving that they have great otganlzlng and executive ability. She tells of the pensions paid to mothers, rf tho care of dependent families and how tho poor nro fed. She summarizes the terms on which Ilathenuu, tho greatest com tucrclnl genius ot Germany, told her that peaco could be made. She puts down tho Interesting remarks of Max Warburg, the Hamburg banker, that American hankers ,aro surprisingly ignorant of Intel national arrairs and know bo little about their own countty that It li easy for Paul Warbuig, of the family, to seem to be a great man Just Published . a 'AS i-K. Mr. ;"'! -- : w WilsoWVS? Woodrov iljV3VK-v- SB- HORNETS NEST AN UNUSRaV MYSTERY STORY '-Vrj-- A love story full of thrills in which tho powers of law and order battle with underworld forces for a man's honor and a girl's fortune. At All Booksellers. $1.35 net. LITTLE BROWN & CO. Publishers Boston Edgar Rice Burroughs K$assai?' 3?sees2KferA:v sL-TWKH gS IVJu.' flnp L ? Raw r iltlw v w. More Tarzan Thrills Like father like son. You know Tarzan, "King of the apes" the wonderful man of the jungle. Here is his son inheriting the lure of the wild. Hit adventures rank with those of his father for sheer danger, action and thrills. Follow him with breathless 'interest into the impenetrable jungle and en joy the best of all the Tarzan tales. THE POWER Wl here. And when a duchess tells her of vhore "delirious lingerie" can bo bought she shocks the noblewoman by remarking that her handkerchiefs usually cost twelve and r half cents aplcco nnd have her name written In the corner with Ink. She found Austria nnd Hungary refreshing after Ger many nnd was delighted with Budapest. Tho best way to enjoy her Impressions Is to read them nil, 7i!?ni!'. t.MII"KS. Hy ,Erntii DMnkr liulMtt. New York: Doulilrd.iy, rco & Co. Difficulty in Being "It" TUB MAN WHO TniKI) TO UK IT. By Com- it. Do- ron Jiackenile. Mew York: George .nil uilipail) jonn bpcilden did not fit his new nnd bigger Job. Ho was a round man In a square Job, or, lest there bo no imputation on his Integrity, a square man In a round Job. At nny rate, man nnd post could not bo related according to tho solid 'geometry of populnr proverb. And the story of his llttlo tragedy of "big business" llfo Is told circumstantially and coldly by Cameron Mackenzlo In "The Man Who Tried to Be It." Translated from a $20,000 salarv on a smalt town payroll, where ho was tho live wlro of tho burg nnd the exccutUe manage ment of a prosperous but moro or less pica yune business, to a $50,000 salary as prcsl dent of a momter comnr.it Inn In n matmn. olK with other, and many, bigger men, be failed to "make good" In bis two years' test. Ho could not sco the business lor the de- . . . IIn ll'l, ,0 ,lnUer with everything, to dabble In nil departments, "to keep In touch" at nil times with everything. That was the secret of his success In small busi ness. He thought It would bo tho touch stone to namo and fnmo, fortune nnd suc cess In big business. He thought wotklng hard nnd untiringly would win tho way to his ambitions Hy degrees the rills of dc tall nnd routine turned Into a flood, nnd he was swept out Into tho black seas ot failure Vet be did his best, according to his lights; be slaved, he planned, ho thought. Ho did everything except vision. Ho did not grow with his Job, n big Job, which meant he should concern himself with tho big things. So he failed from oorwoik and undcrvlslon. Mr .Mackenzie tells the tnlo starkly, neu trally, artistically. A Boy Who Made Good Tho latest In tho series of children's classics, which the J. U. I.lppincott Company Is Issuing Is "J. Cole," by ttnma Gclll brand, which tells tho story of a boy who secured work as a page In a private house and served faithfully almost unto death. It Is a moving tnle that deserves a place In tho library of every boy and of every mother who gives herself the great Joy o'f reading io ner ennuren nt bedtime. The book has four Illustrations In color by Maria I,. Kirk. J. COJ.n !1- nmrrm Oolllbrnnd Philadelphia J. ii, J.lpplncolt Company. The Book of the Hour "The War and Humanity" By James M. Beck A Notable Sequel to "The Evidence in the Case" "Mr. Beck's volume was a classic the moment it appeared. We know of no more logical and lucid dis cussion of the essential facts and problems of the great war, nor any more truly, consistently and even vigor ously American in its spirit. We should be well con tent to let it stand, if there were no other, as the authen tic expression of the highest aspirations, the broadest and most penetrating vision, and the most profound convictions of the American nation on matters which have never been surpassed and have only twice been rivaled in vital interests in all our history." New York Tribune THEODORE ROOSEVELT'S OPINION "It is the kind of a book, which every self-respecting American, who loves his country, should read." REVISED AND ENLARGED EDITION Nearly 400 Pases. $1.50 Net. By Mail, $1.60 AT ALL BOOKSELLERS G. P. Putnam's Sons Publishers New York THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN NAVAL OFFICER Life at the U. S. Naval Academy Ralph Earl, Rear-Admiral, U. S. N. Chief of Hureau of Ordnance. Navy Dfpt., Washington. D. C. 12'. T.'l Illustration. 2.00 nit. Bu Halt, 12.13) "The one thing that Is needed more than nny other Is a greater nnd moro Intelligent Interest on the part of the public In the many sided llfo of tho Naval Academy. This boolc satisfies n long-felt want and also gives the history, llfetind alms of the greatest national Institution ot learning. Its publication Is especially timely, for the Increased Interest of the people in tho building up of a navy must make them realize that the safety of our coasts and of our whole country depends not only on tho welding together of Bteel In tha form of ships, but on tho training of a greatly Increased number of officers for the proper use of these ships." FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT, Asst. Secretary ot the' Navy AT ALL BOOKSELLERS G. P. Putnam's Sons NEW YORK 24,000 copies sold in A STUDENT IN ARMS By DONALD HANKEY Introduction by J. St. Loe Strachejr, Editor of Tho LotutW Posstbly the one real and great Iiurnan book of the;wr. commended by the leading men and women of our ee enrich your understanding of a triotUm and to, stir your, soul. . w . I mixed ivienta in uavi Stories y1,' vnanes Belmont Davis does hi and his own reputation a wrong byJ iacK or uniformity of the stories Iri "1 uwn sort nnd Others." The title l$A up to the best standatd of the "novellww theatre," In which he Justly won & fa which equaled In a few stories lht of,! more celebrated brother. This onenlnr it Is human, poignant, told With economy means, yet fullness ot emotion. "Her Man is also human, direct. The story of tt;' Mrglnla tragedy has splendid character!. uon ana compelling suspense. The othr RtorlPfl. nf llin mati nut 9 Uk m !. SUlcllle. "Tlln Men Wlin WmiM mlj ' Her" these lnrlr mibatnnrA anA ,itm ' 3 Knch of them contains an Idea from which tj nn excellent storv could be motivated ta' '., handling, however. Is Inefficient; suspenee ,vJ l litnl.lnl !. M1 I. !...-... -1 - Olrl o i... mi, , uio jiiui. io jiuirieu aion lu mn obvious climax. They are potboilers, anil tho reviewer doubts If Mr. Davis would ac-'f. cept them for any magazine of which he,j was uciion eauor. .;, HEP. OWN SORT A-ND OTHEHS. By CharlM l. lielmont Davis. New York: The Century i Company. " , BALDY of NOME By Esther Birdsall Darling ll.nhlv la a real don k everybody In htm. Thla 1 AtnalcA hit heard of ih storv of bow he was taken Into the kennel ot racing dogs owned In part by Mrs. Darling how he saved her Hie. how he became the leader of the great racing team and mad good. There are thrills la It but it is all practically true. All Book Stores. $1 .75 Net THE PENN PUBLISHING CO, Philadelphia' Londc - LONDON? England in one month ' i V -I ;.?- Af.,V ' fr a; wa UJBIKB .soldier's purpose,; to . J.': -, KM St. "$ Ka r,fl 'a 1H4 THECENTURYCq. A. C. MoCLURG CO, fuMi.W. ..fWjw-W'.W "IKIi'Zi i :z.m- fv wm i -. :f ' W., r.y- x:1-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers