k rfm.wym 'fTCStrr ' Pi? r " m I i W Rv B IMPLICATIONS THAT ARISE IN MARRIED LIFE AND IN INTERNATIONAL EN A RICH MAN'S SON TAKESAJPOOR GIRL TO WIPE rs. Eleanor H. Porter Tells of the Tragedy That r unows ana ot the Way to a Better Understanding UdHT a poor girl, with no social ex- 'perience, llttlo education nnd no train- . for domestic duties, to marry the son it, rich man who has had nil the advan- fcgtB that weaun can provido7 E"One does not have to look very far mck in tho annals of Philadelphia so- FcUty to discover how unsuccessful bucIi It marriage can uccomo, .Marriage Is fAomethlng more than a union of the ytH. unless there be a similarity of !(..-. rniil trnlnlntr. thnt Is. nnlouu 11m i xaat" - " - - -" .. physical union bo based on spiritual har- f monls the chances aro that the fruitage will be tragedy rather than mutual happl- MtitBS brought about by the adjustment of Aftwo lives to a common purpose. , Under the most favorabio circumstances this ad httstment is sometimes difficult. Under unfavorable circumstances it falls, not be- p'ause it is theoretically Impossible, but Kjt'teoause neither the man nor tho woman WhtM the patience to work out that perfect Vi solution which is peace and Joy. These obvious reilections on tho most tetacred institution of society are made by fit way of preface to somo remarks about Rl Eleanor H. Porter's description of the at- ttmpt or two young people 01 uincreni S social training to adjust themselves to Ct (ICn OUiei no uusuaiiu uuu mic. .inn. fX t.rr does' not need anv introduction. i?Rhe is the woman who wrote "Pollyanna" hi and "Just David," two tales that have delighted hundreds of thousands. Their ' distinguishing characteristics ai e sweet- isress and feminine sentiment. In 'this new ;tale she has attempted something more Wt .mhlflmin. Its title. "The Road to Un- jfc ... Kii derstanding," suggests its motive. The A greater part of the action takes place In mll New Encland city, but the reader r Is carried to Boston and to several Euro- i pean capitals as well, and is introduced Y to a varied assortment of persons, rang- ;., ing from ignorant women to men of edu cation ana rennement. mi. a .a.. aa.a I 1. n nn.nl! nt... A . .1 tf, ino BC.UI," ujcua in mc niuuii .ii.j . i wltn a meeting ueiwcen me son 01 a suu- otssiui manuiaciurer unu wiu nuisuuimu '.? of a visiting relative. The nursemaid is f the daughter of a small village merchant who had been reared as so many girls are 'ifi reared in absolute Ignorance of every thing pertaining to the care or a nome. She had devoted herself to "having a good time." Her parents died, however, and l she was thrown on her own resources, and IH had discovered after several attempts to do other tilings mat tp.e oniy worn 01 $ which she was capable was that of watch ing over two small children to keep them out of mischief. She had been spoiled in a small way as thoroughly as tho son of . i i Roosevelt as an Insurance J Agent When Warren Jr. -JIornet the Min- W neapolls general agent of tho Provident IJfo and Trust Company, of this city, says that a young man who wants to be an insur- AAAA A.VAH. 1A..1aI A . . 1 . . 11. A Ml n r Fl nl d Tl ttf f1Q w -.1IIO O.BC111 SHuu.u Diuu; llic tltlliuki.i..i (W of ex-Presfdents Taft and Roosevelt, ex- ; Premier Asqulth nnd Premier Lloyd George and President Woodrow Wilson, his inten tion Is not tn dlnrnurneo the ambitious, but fh to emphasize the qualities without which A-BAlA. .AAA. Ia - AAk-AHAA.A C. t T A t H A H 3 r 9 & uivro can uo in huuucsm. "!, uwiiici o.ij, that neither Mr. Taft nor Mr. Abqulth pos- WARREN M. HORNER Wljo tells how to be an insurance agent. .(esses th requisites, but that Mr. Roose- ,Welt, with his qualities toned down, would 'intake a great Insurance solicitor, and Lloyd f George would not be a bad seconu. 'inese fctwo men possess the natural qualifications vtor the work. Mr. Wilson, by his adapta fbllty. could "still attain very creditable t accomplishments." Il These remarks are made In tno course Ht an admirable book on "Training for a kv mm. I a a ( .t.tAt. nnnAfirwl in kaju- insurance j-ecul, "'wi ,.,.-. ... . i Llpplncott's training series. The idea dbck i "i mMwKmm --ll-------------r JtlDGWELL ULLUM'S New romance is the story of a btwiness battle between father and son, with scenes shifting from Wall Street to Montana and almost as many thrills as pages. Read . he manufacturer had been spoiled In a argo way. Yet tho t0 were attracted to each other, and in spite of parental ob Jcctlofi the boy leaves college and marries the Blrl. A child was born and It In creased the complications In tho small home, which had to bo run on the wages the offended father paid to tho son. There came a break nnd a imposition on tho miners pnit that the young wife take a vacation. He gives her $10,000, which tho son sends In n letter. The young wife does what most spirited women would havo done under the clicumstances. She disappears with her child, leaving no word behind. Yet she does what few young women would have done. She sets out to educate herself and her daughter so that tho young husband may not ba ashamed of them. And she lives In hope of a rocon dilation. It comes after slMeen years of separation, during which both she arid her husband havo been traellng tho road to understanding in loneliness and sorrow. The reconciliation comes about through tho child, a daughter, who, without know ing anything about his Identity, has been made secretary to her own father, after it appears that he has come to regret his mistakes and desires to atone for tho past. Tho names of men and women who could tako such a situation and mako a moving psychological study out of It will occur to every one familiar with contem porary Action. Mrs. Porter has chosen nnother way. Instead of going beneath tho surface and analyzing motives and emotions and disclosing their complexl tlei, she lias contented herself with tell ing a story. It is an unpleasant story in the early chapters, but It Is transformed as it proceeds into something most pa thetically appealing as the wife, loyal to her husband nncf his child, struggles with her self-imposed task. The Interest Increases as the story pro ceeds, and In the last few chapters It be comes absorbing, until It ends In a dra matic cllmas. In the young daughter j Mrs. Porter has created a character of great girlish charm. She seems to under stand girls and their ways and emotions, doubtless for the reason that she has not forgotten her own girlhood. Without doubt tho story will enlarge the number of her followers, who will And in it a new manifestation of thoe qualities which delighted them in her former books. GEORGE V?. DOUGLAS. THE ROAD TO UNnKKPTANDINO liv VWa nor H. Porter, author nf "Jut DaWd" lllutratol In colors lv Mnrv O Wiimen nrhcln. Boston: Houshlon Mlrt In Company $1,111. of. what Mr. Horner has written is thnt life Insurance In Its arIous forms Is of the highest economic Importance, both to the Individual lind to, the country. There might have been a disposition a generation ago to dispute this hypothesis, but Its truth Is now generally admitted. Begin ning on the sound psychological basis that a man must believe in his business If he Is to succeed In It, Mr. Horner gles both general and detailed Information about tho llfo and work of an Insurance agent that will prove Invaluable to the young man thinking of going Into tho business. Ho sets forth Its attractions in a most entic ing way The rewards are great when success comes, and they nre cumulative. The field Is unlimited, for In spite of tho large busincus done by the legal reserve companies tho field has been barely touched. TRAINING FOR A LIFR INSURANCE AOKNT. By Warren M. Horner, llfo Insuranrp neent and mansser Illustrativl I1.2S. Phlladel. phla: J. II. I.lpplncott Company. How to Be Happy A working formula for happiness with univeisal aipllcation never has been writ ten and probably never wllhbe. Some very practical recipes for this much-sought con dition, however, are contained In '"Gho Hid den HappU.ess," by Stephen Berrien Stan ton. Like Shakespeare, Mr. Stanton regards happiness as subjective, not objective ; de rived from oneself, not from external con ditions. The philosophy which "Tho Hidden Happiness" strives to teach Is not a new philosophy, and reduced to Its simplest terms It simply Is optimism and a love of life per se. With almost nothing new to offer, Mr. Stanton, with his felicity and charm of expcsslon, gives us, nevertheless, the old doctrines In such n new and pleas ing garb that they win our Immediate In terswt and Inspire our belief. There Is a modicum of fatalism, too, In the book: not fatalism as regards the Individual, but rather the conviction that all things happen according to unchangeable principles. For the Individual, he holds, there Is a choice whether he will put himself In accord with these fundamental principles nnd win, or go counter to them and lose. But even aboye the necessity for being In accord with tho universe he rates enthusiasm..- Misfortune and sorrow, too, are as es sential as success and Joy, he asserts, for our misfortunes humanize us and our sym pathies are awakened by our own need of sympathy. Paralleling Joy and sadness In the natural word, he writes: "Night and storni are as much part of the natural order as Is the genial sun." The book Is divided Into twenty-two chapters, which cover In brief virtually the entire gamut of human emotions and experience. T"F "'OPE? H4 WW foriSMe-. rjen canton, i rlen Stanton. 1.23 net. Bcrlbner'a Bons. - '. THE SON OF HIS FATHER By the Author of ''The Way of the Strong," "The Night Riders," etc. At All Booksellers, $U5 net : GEORGE JACOBS & CO. EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA. SATURDAY, MAttCH 31, 1917 I . r - T - fi ' t i & itflBlllBfOKaEv JotfliK ! '4 m ' m -'IlftW liVl iff vws W&Bwk v s BETTY DENBY A charminp; girl who became her father's secretary without cither know ing of the relationship. A character in Mrs. Porter's new story. RIGHTS OF ,THE WORLD IN CHINA MENACED BY JAPAN Frederick McCormick Insists That War Is Inevit able Unless America Backs Down An Epoch Marking Book WAR .comes about because of a conflict of interests and alms. It Is like the wreck which follows when two railroad trains going In opposite directions at full speed meet each other on the samo track. It Is tho common belief In America that tho T'nlted .States and Japan aro going in tho same direction on parallel tracks and that there Is no danger of a collision: the rights of the Japanese In the United States can easily be adjusted by treaty, and when this causo for dissatisfaction Is removed there will bo no further trouble, as we have no ambitions In tho Orient which iuii counter to those of Japan. There nre a few persons who nre con vinced that the country does not realize Its peril and for reasons of which tho nvcr ago man and many of our public olliclals are Ignorant we arc headed straight toward war. The purpose of Frederick McCormick In writing "The Menace of Japan" has been to inform the nation of what ho regards as Its perils. Ho says that thu great rtuestlon between the I'nitcd States and Japan Is ono respecting the rights of nations in Bast Asia, and does not depend cm the social and racial relations between Amei leans nnd Jnp-anei-o in this country Whether wittingly or unwittingly, wo have placed ourselves sciuarely ncross tho path of Japan In China. There Is not tho slightest doubt of that The most optimistic mus't admit It Tho logic of the t-ltuation, according to Mr. Mc Cormick. Is that wo must either abandon our position or suffer tho consequences which are war on sea and land. Who is McCormick that he should seek to teach us? Ho Is a specialist In Aslntlc affairs. Kor sixteen years ho has been a special correspondent In Japan, China and Koiea. (to has tiaveled more extensively In eastern Asia than any other American newspaper correspondent Ho Is personally acquainted with the leading htatcsmen of China and Japan and with the diplomatic representatives of the Powcis in those coun tries. His book will not suffer by com parison with thoso famous works on tho Far Kastern question written by the famous correspondents of the London Times. iiiinniiiiiiii n mil ma i, 'I il l,m Miim iiiii'ii'IH'i iI.iiih mm ! 'i tmvt n I' H " IN DAYS OP STORM AND STRESS Fiction That Diverts and Kclaxes Is More Than Ever Necessary. We especially recommend the following new Novels: IvCr An absorbing love story by the author of "JUST DAVID'' THE ROAD TO UNDERSTANDING By Eleanor !i. Porter If you have enjoyed Mrs. Porter's other books you will like thia now one even more because it has all the qualities that have made "Just David" and "Polly anna" so popular and is an appealing love story besides. Illustrated in JERRY By Arthur Stanwood Pier "Tho story of an Irish lad who has all the tenderness, sentiment and clean-hcartedness charapter istic of the race . . . his strug gle to keep his ideals and earn a living, his love story, are all wonderiuiiy wen xoiu. un.i.t Aae, Illustrated. $ldu nei. . THE WAY OF THE WIND By Eugenia Brooks Frothingham "A love story of rare individual app-jat and of a literary quality which should add greatly to the satisfaction of critical readers." New York World. $1.40 net. Houghton Mifflin Company' " At AU Tho fact that American news associations and American newspapers hae kept Mr McConnick In tho I'ast so long Indicates that wp have begun to appreciate the great impoitance of securing accurate Informa tion of what is happening on tho other side of the wot Id. Whether ono agrees with his conclusion that war with Japan Is in evitable, his discussion of the cpiestlon de serves the attention of evcrv one Interested In tho progress1 of tho world, and of every ono who wants to understand tho Par Kastern question Indeed, every largo Amer ican banker ought to read It. and It ought to bo studied by every American manufac uier who hopes to expand his trade lu foreign lands If these persons weie better Infoimed cm such questions as aro discussed In the book. Max Warburg, the famous Hnmburg banker, would no longer find It possiblo to (-ay that American bankers nnd business men nro Ignoiant of International nffahs and Incapable of comprehending the significance of the gieat world movements. This Is sn because Mr McCormick has written a brilliant and illuminating history cf Asiatic affairs for tho last fifteen or tvvcntv yea is, with especial reference to the part which tho I'nlted States has plajcd in them Ilo b'egins with the Portsmouth confer ence, from which dates tho present .policy EL SUPREMO By EDWARD LUCAS WHITE A Ori-Ht American Novel Drilling with South America Tho Independent said Mr. White has enriched our literature by giving us this absorbing account of tho man as history and legend show liiiu, of his court and the plots and consphaclos that surround him. The novel Is ono to tend all day and all night until it Is finished. $l.nn net. Postage extra. All Bookstores. V.. 1". Diitton A Co., (181 Iifth Ave., X. Y, H'lr' 11 V m i I am i .iw mull n 'II I H.WI Miriill BIIIWH) II I" iW MIIWHI I'll'k If you have never read a Porter novel may we suggest that you be gin with this by far the most dramatic and interest ing sho has- yet written and learn for yourself the reasons for Mrs. Porter's world-wide popularity. color, $1.40 net. THE. PHOENIX By Constance' M. Warren "With unquestionable cleverness it delineates perfectly recogniza ble types of Beacon Hill men, women and activities. The novel can hardly fail of a wide audi ence." Boston Journal. Front ispiece. ?1.40 net Iloiton and Mw Yer. of Japan, formulated by Komura nnd car ried otiticoiislstcntly since then. This policy Is directed lownra the nullltlcntlon t the open-door program formulated by John Hay nnd nbandoncd by President Wilson. Our efforts to secure tho territorial Integrity of China lun counter to Japanese ambitions, for It Is the purpose of the Jn.pane.so states men to secure with llus.sla a monopoly of railroad control and commerce In Man churia nnd Jo dominate as rapidly as pon slblo the rest of China to tho exclusion of tho remainder of tho world, Wo crossed Japan when o protested ngalnst tho par Mtlon of China. We crossed her when ' Cnn.ntn.i. tfint'a .iiiiritAudn.i tifn anttplit In tinittrntln tlin Mutir.nirlnti rnlhinvn. We ' crossed her when wo arranged a cur rency loan for China to put her flnnnclnl affairs on a sound basis. Our rights, ko cured by treaties, to participate In loans and railroad building In China, ato fought by the Japanese. And the Japanese have been gradually and persistently ousting us from Asia. The effect of this policy Is shown In tho dcllno of our trade, for In 1H05 Ameri ca n exports to China were $58,000,000. They have shrunk to $0,oo,000 and then to '23,000,000, then to $:'1.000.000. nnd. Ilnnllv to $15,000,000. our shipping has lrtually disappeared from tho Pacific and Japan Is doing the carrying tiatle. Ml MtCormlck charges that when President Wilson with thew Government support ftom the financ ing of trade In China we weir forced back to the position we occupied, In 1811. and when ho signed the seamen's act we were in the position we occupied In 1781. when our merchant marine had to be created The Japanese unilei stood this better than we did, for a distinguished Japanese i'i maiked that whether Intentionally or not we had ninde a gift to Jap.m of tlw tiade of the Pacific Q. W. D I 1H frMerlcU Mo I Hostons Lltt! run jtnNAcr. oc japan. CornilcK. With a map Drown & Co. J2. Pleasures of a Dilettante i The llfo of a dabbler in preaching poeti and painting can ho delightful to the man who lives It. Indeed, there are thousands of men ana women compelled to keep their nose to the grindstone to eat it a living who would find nothing pleasanter than gratifying their Intellectual and artistic tastes by traelllng wilting verse or pioe ns suited them and now nnd then painting a picture of a scent' which had touched their fancy. Christopher Pe.nse ("ranch found a way tn do these things and In doing them nrhlcwd a certain amount of distinction, lie wrote some ven-i', little of which Is remembered, lie translated the Aeneld of Vergil Into musical Hngllsh meter and ho did some painting. And in the doing of these things he came lu contact with some people who nchieved much greater distinction. Tliete weie the Brownings W. W. Story. Bayard Taylor, George WIN Hani Otitis, William Henry Cli.iunttig and many others. Ills llfo and letters, written by his daughter. Mis. Leonora Crunch Scott, will bo pleasant lending for those who like the gossip about the great Its leminlseences nf famous people are Its soutco of liitf-t. t to the general public, though tho smaller circle who like Onnch for himself will lie equally pleased with Its lovelatlons about him. tiii: i.it't: and i.rra:R8 of christophcr I'l.AIISi: I'ltANCIt. lly Leonora Crnnrh Siott With Illustration!!. JS.fiO. lloston: lluiiklitnn .Mifflin Company. in THE DARK FOREST Hugh Walpole reveals the soul or Russia, in terpreting the Russian mind to American people so clearly that he establishes a new meaning to Russian de mocracy. (Discriminat ing critics agree that no more important novel has come out of the great European conflict.) GEORGE H. PUBLISHERS At Your Booksellers' NetS US DORAN COMPANY NEW YORK NEW BOOKS OUT TODAY THE MAGPIE'S NEST By ISABEL PATERSON Author of "The Shadow Riders." Cloth, $1 to' net. ' Should a girl depend on chance for her destiny? This is tho big engrossing question that confronts one in every absorbing chapter of this American novel. Last season "Tho Shadow Riders" appeared and created a sensation. A still greater success awaits this second story. AUTUMN By MURIEL HINE Author of "Tho Individual," "Earth," etc. Cloth, $1 40 lift1. A sympathetic and appealing story of a woman, who, passing through some turbulent years of married life, found love's fulfillment in the autumn of her days. LEONARD WOOD Prophet of Preparedness By ISAAC F. MARCOSSON Author of "The War After the War." Frontispiece. Cloth, 75 ccyits net, A character study of the most dis tinguished living American soldier whose life embodies in deed and speech the National Service that the United States must have to maintain her world place. THE ARISTOCRAT A Play in Three Acts By LOUIS N. PARKER Author of "Disraeli," "Pomander Walk," etc. Cloth, 91.00 net, Mr. Parker founds his new play on a stirring incident of tho French Revolution. Louis of Olonzac, the aristocrat the most aristocratic of all aristocrats is a creation worthy even of the author of "Disraeli." OF ALL BOOKSELLERS mz? Is This Comedy or Farce? It U with mingled emotions that one layB down "The Itlb of tho Man," Charles Itann Kennedy's now play. Mr. Kennedy ban a spiritual nnd a moral philosophy which found brilliant expression In 'The Sorvant In tho House." President Hyde, of Ilowdoln College, has UHed It as a splendid example of tho preaching of tho gospel of good will outsldo of formally rcllgioiiH works. Those who read "Tho Rib" expecting to find In It anything like "Tho Servant" will bo dis appointed. It seems to bo a sort of a tract favoring the mating of alllnltics with out benefit of clergy, yet that may pot hao been Mr. Kennedy's purpose. Ho talks, of a world In which there shnll be less sex and more love and he makes the action of tho play move around the dlscoery of nn old altnr dedicated to tho Mottter of the Gods. It Is amusing reading, but It Is dllllcult to take It seriously. Till! Itltl OP Till: MAN A lilnv nf th New World In (He urtu, sceno ImlMdu.il, F"ttlnz forth the stury of nn nftmnoon In Hip fill, litis uf days H' rinrlis llann Kenned. i .r ,w lorn: iiurpor nro. More Cleek Stories CleeU. an old-school detectlc, set amid modern environment and meeting Admira bly up-to-dnto machinations of criminals, solves a number of startling problems In the new book devoted to his skill, wit nnd Intuition. This time ho Is again In tho cm plo of the Itoya' Government. Instead of worlilng as a private) operative. Mr. Hen shew has created a number cf Independent cases, which makes each story Individual These are some of the more important hooks of the month. You will discover new novels by favorite authors, each of which de serves and invites your consideration and pur- ,. chaae. All are on sale at your booksellers' from March 31st onw&rd. THE WONDER Author ot Tlieu Iwkrr,, Tkc Janh Still Tril'v;, The lint m Dtmrlni Raid, tit. In thit uncanny concept of a child whoso 1ncnt.1l capabilities possess no limitations, ihe creator of "J.icob St.ihl" crosses the borderland into i realm that has fascinated scientists and philosophers for fenerations. The tiny, awc-inspirinR figure of the "Wonder," etched with an' intriguing craftsmanship, will farinato all lovers of the eimou in literature. Net $L40 LILLA: A Part of Her Ltfe By Mrs. Belloc Lowndes Is another new novel of definite individuality, Mrs, Belloc Lowndes added un-atly to her multitude of followers by "Good Old Anna." In "Lilla," she displays the same cool restraint in the handling of a sensational theme. . Net $1.35 THE CHASTE WlfrE By Frank Stvinnerton Since the publication of "The Happy Family," Mr.Swinnerton has had a place on that comparatively brict list of novelbts who really "count." And this is easily the best tiling Swinncrton has done; a novel admirably finished, written with delicate accuracy, so perfectly balanced that (to quote the A'cir Ymk 7'tmcs) "it us like coming into the sunshine and fresh air alter n long, Milling period in a datk building." Net $1.50 MADAME PRINCE By W. Pett Ridge The New York Tribune lia described this story in a phrasa: "A novel without slang, without i-randal, without sex problem, without a moral pointed and vera jilttnanl nailing ' Net $1.35 THE MAN WHO) TRIED TO BE IT By Cameron Mackenzie A novel for every man in busincM and especially Tor the man who is letting his business dritf him. For every wiTc who is alert enough to sense that her husband is working too hard to work efficiently. The story of a $20,000 a vear man who couldn't swing a $50,000 a year job and'why! Net $1.00 SCARS AND STRIPES By Porter Emerson Browne' Stimulating to every American a repnrt to every mmi who has to ex plain his citizenship. A book that touches wilh the acid point of sarcastic eommonsensc the most dangerous canker in American life puWt'c in difference, Net $1.00 THE BOYS'BOOK OF CANOEING AND SAILING A uniouelv vractienl book on riggwg of sail craft; on canoe handling and motor boat management Writ! en by Ihe veteran editor of Field and Stream, with diagrams and plana that do riot call for an expenditure beyond the average boy's allowance. rrofuBoiy illustrated T Afi.'J0 At All Booksellers GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY, New York Publishers in America for HODDER & STOUGHTON Every American should know the real character of the people who have proposes that some of the States of this Union are to be acquired by conquest and made a part of a vassal state on our Southern boundary. THE SOUL OF GERMANY By Thomas F. A. Smith is a study of the home, social and domestic life of the German. Tw years ago it was accepted with some reluctance by American editors read it today and discover that it is an under-statement rather than an over-statement. The Boston Transcript says: "The book is full nf information which explains things that have puzzled Americans violation of Belgium neutrality, submarine warfare, and German diplo macy.. It is true the author's feelings arc evident, but the'significant tilings are substantiated with references that may be easily verified.. And if these things arc true, no one can understand Germany with out a knowledge of them." Net $1.35. But if bv anv chance you still nave failed to take the full measure of the common enemy of ' freedom and civilization- read this book it is a documentation by intellectuals of Germany a j shock luminating to the intelligence of America. " J HURRAH AND HALLELUJAH from the Danish of Dr. J. P. Bang, with introduction by Ralph Con nor. The teaching of Germany's poets, prophets, professors and preach ers men distinguished ior the clearest reasoning, tne hnest think ing, the most liberal culture in Germany during the last quarter cen- tury. Net $1.00. At All Booksellers GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY New York Publisher. In America for HODDER & STOUGHTON PROMPT APPRECIATION . Accorded the new story by tho author of "The Conquest," ono of the ten noteworthy novels of 1916 selected by H. W. Boynton, thojioted critic. The Chosen People By SIDNEY L. NYBUR6 Second Printing v xtttit im-nir cmurc "A brilliant piece of work. . . . A- story of distinction." NEW YORK TRIBUNE ' "The author has an almost un- ' canny gift of piercing to the marrow of human motives." "Mr. Nyhurg $imhkt; AIM RELATlO; and separable, but has linked' them thr a general clot, so that there Is thanw of a novel. The man-ln-bkck, Uw,G7l win ot ijeain, -lier i-uugrilitr xaynn tho Hindoo. Gulam KhiKli these urn' boi of the persons who inhablf the new Cl tales and who mako the experiences of tl sleuth thrill with excitements. V CI.CKK'.H aoVKUNMENT CA8E8. irnhw. Garden City, I,. I.; Face & Co. fl T. Doubled Mystery That Entices $ j If Leslie Probyn believes In hypnotls mysticism and the other occult "Isms," M mystery novel, ,The Shifting Spell," Ills ait . .mat n ..... k... If mm .1.4 m..1m..mA ,,, BilvilhWi uif.UIII1.-lll, .., HB 1I1U IIVIUn-TA j (nn avowed uonbellcver) feels con vl need,' 1 ' It Is n satire, then the book defeats th nuthor's purpose. For "The Shifting Spell1'' nna,u n ,fn,.lA,1 u..aII r..A ,1.a ai..1am A'.f' ....o ..vviviu ntjvii uisi v,i icnui:), i-t. m ....l,A 11.A fAA. it. A 11.A A..1.1.A. ...A.. I.'.l j9t r,nv iiiu .ii;v iiiuv iuu nuujL'Uv inuivt:! in v. true and tne treatment Is on the popipovs A , style of the pre-Vlctorlnn era, which no V longer appeals to the Twentieth Centutyl' mind. Mr. Probyn ensnares rt passive, In- V nocctit HngUsh country family In n wcl 1 of charms, counlor-charms and uiesmei 4 .1 ...1.1..1. ...... i . i.i n ' f' linillll 111H-11 1UIK Ul IU li CUII1U1IICU CHIlljlA. n ill.,, lu ..A. , AA At ...V ,.. A t.l(l. .1A..AAA .A.. tl 11, .IV l. llll tint,!,!,. IU lb 11IK11 llCrilUU. 1 1IU1. f k. on top of all, comes tho announcemejU that S rpiriiuuunni is ueniuu ine oincr conuiiica- .,?i tlons which havo myRtlfled tlio reader. "Tint ' fll Shitting Spell" Is weird, Interesting and V'f' quite easy to rend. Tho rambling nnrrntlv ! h style unexpectedly urges ono to read en j'a rather than gtve up In disgust, due to ft ' 1 clever ability to sustain the mystery. Tin: sniFTiNa opui.l. Ilv t.fsll- I'rnbnL. trf J1.S5 net New York: DuCl-ld t Co. . riffl By J. D. Beresford By Warren H. Miller canoeine and sailing, on the building V-c r 'J. i,v . I ' 1 - j. ; ? . 'J hJ BOSTON TRANSCRIPT :, t "Of exceptional quality. .tt brings .tefllfe , a little, todi aspect bf our civilization." j . BALTIMORE EVENING, SUK '..? ' "The Interests unftagfrfn frw N beginning to!endr' ,J .- -V 1 mrw vopir wnm.n - ' t -,, -.,"" has -written JhM& J? V' rriurcl!a.".r, -" " -,.. .cls Itia i1' I 5-1 WJi m 3?i ?. ? . w:j am Vi i I ! LSftesa. iffiafoHiirK'ffi jH )HNLANE CO. vlW.TC