B h' ?nr ajj , itfr-TWlffi in . iTyyamtain EORIES ABOUT WAR-ENGLAND'S GREAT DEMOCRAT-JEWISH $ERTR AND' RUSSELL'S PLAN . TO KHuman Instincts and Passions Must Be Changed , Beiore trre meal state Can Be Eormed. War as a Symptom PyfAS wondering wncmer tno time 'Vpuld ever como when men would not .. ,n lrl.t In 1afltl(ia tt .l.n.... 'tf 'Willing " S"- " .., wi n.uau l thing '"cy Prlzco' wiien me uoorueu l'-v.nir In n moment Doctor Mcl'nbre nnd ftf his wife were shown in, anil I put down P iht book I lmtl l'cen reading. It was R wa in blood-red nnd hod it title, "Why Is Men Fight," printed In large black letters j? before she was seated. V "Another horrid book in dofenso oT l.v - .. .Vi exclaimed. "When will thev jar, BERTRAND RUSSELL to I" top trj'HiK to make us believe that It is " .... ' ... ... I.llt n nMntlinlll" t line UllllK lur mull li, iwii uitiz aiiuiuui . She picked up the volume and noted the name of the author. ' "Bertram! Hussell," alio read. "I sup pose they call him 'Uertle;' Think of a man with such a name telling us wo ought to flpht." "Do you know who 'Bertie' is?" I asked. 'No. I never heard of him." "You tnlKht be interested In finding cut,'' and I handed her n copy of the English "Who's Who. While she was looklilg for his name Doctor McKabre, who found tlmu from his pastoral duties to read the current news, remarked: "I understood Russell vasto come over here as a lecturer in Harvard. Do you know whether he has nrrlvcd?" "The Ungllsh authorities refused to give him his passports after he had been removed from his lectureship in Trinity College, Cambildge, for preaching paci fism and opposition to tho war. I suppose he Is still in Kngland, keeping a discreet silence. You know that ho smuggled out of the country a plea to President Wilson A Fascinating French Novel ylNCELE ByEDMOND TARBE H.WBARJOL Angele will take per place with many of the noted French "women of fiction Her tragic romance 'makes an unusual story. She gives her soul to a brilliant, thoueh weak com- :l 1 poser; ho draws upon her mag- 'A it! nificent. nnnlitina nf minrl nnd Wk character, rises to the hni'ghts j W and nroHncps nn nnorn In which, a .ffciuaps, mere is more oj nor joul than of his; then conies his weakness and he betrays his r highest ideal. It in a. hook full t of musical and artistic atmos- Enero, of idealism and rich umanity. Price, $1.25 net. AT Al,L BOOKSTORES UPPINGOTT SmiSSSKSSWSSKSSSSSS King of the Apes Again Thit time it is m The Son t-V!t m 0- of Tai r z an m ? Edga' k "Ricr Burrought s. H-r . , ".! I 1 J I ft hriiixB!rl wsn t& vw.r. wr v CURE WORLD ILLS last December that he Intervene In the war Jn the Interest of peace. ItUBsell then said that neither of the belligerents had any hope of winning a decislvo vie tory, and that tho slaughter ought to bo stopped." "Why, he'll be an carl some day!" ex claimed Mrs. McKabre. looklnir un from the book, "and ho married Alys Smith, of Philadelphia, in 1894. I have heard of her and of her father, I'cnrsull Bmlth. Ho went to London to live years ago. Mr. Russell's grandfather was hord John Hussell, who was Prime Minister nnd he has written a lot of stupid books. Here's one, 'Foundations of deomotry,' and an other, 'Principles of Mathematics,' and some more about philosophy. I don't see how a man Interested in such things can defend war." "Hut he doesn't," lenimked her bus band. "He's opposed to the use of force." "Then I think I'd like him. I'll take back what I said about 'Ueitle.'" "I don't think you would like him," I rematked. "He thinks that tho customs of society and Its moral standards should bo so changed Unit no disgrace would attach to mi unmarried woman with a child. Indeed, he thinks that society ought to bo so icurwinlzed that this might happen. "TIp beast!" uns hei only comment. inu nun, or IUh l,ook does not do It full Justice," I continued. "Mr. Hussell believes that society is out of Joint; that it needs reoiganlzlng fiom top to bottom on a different plan, that our system of education, our man lage customs, our niothod of holding pioperty and our e llglon aie In as bad state as our method of conducting our governments. War, he says, is the pioduct cif Instinct and passion and Unit leason, as It Is pi cached by ttadltional moralists. Is too negative, too little living, to make a good life, 'it Is not. by leason alone.' he says, 'that wars can be pi evented, but by a positive life of Impulses and passions antagonistic to those that leud to war. It is the life u. impulse mat needs to be changed, not only the life of conscious thought.'" "He apparently looks for something like that which we theologians call a hew birth," remarked Doctor McFnhre. "Yes, something like that. But I am not surprised that the English silenced him. He Is like a man who should rush up to a surgeon trying to save the life of a police ofllcer bleeding from a severed artery and force him to listen to a discussion of the theory of the circulation of the blood. Such a discussion Is pioper enough unde'r other circumstances, but theory has to wait on tho Immediate practical task. Hussell In this book says that nothing that England or France or Germany ran win is worth the cost of the war In money and blood. Why not let Germany havo what It wants? he asks, nnd live In peace. If Napoleon hnd been permitted to domi nate Europe the world would have been better off, nnd ho suggests that a pax Germanica brought about by the consent of the other nations would bo better than any other outcome of tho struggle. Let England give Germany some of her colo nies' nnd let Germany exercise military control over the whole world, while the non-German States weie permitted n cer tain autonomy In their prlvato nnd local affairs." "He evidently does not understand the age In which he lives and has little com prehension of human nature," said tho doctor. "Well, what would you expect from n man who had devoted himself to writing books on mathematics, which have no more relation to llfo than theology has to religion? And philosophy? Tho student of philosophy deals In abstractions and spins fine threads out of his brain which 'he weaves Into a fabric of gossamer too thin to protect a man from the chill winds of everyday life." "What Is the use of such a book as 'Why Men Fight'?" Mrs. McFnbre asked. "It makes men think. Russell repeats tho did platitude which has survived be cause it is true, that there Is nothing so vital as thought. Plant an Idea in tho world nnd it will come to fruition. It may take centuries, but the result Is certain. Ho has been planting seed. Whether its fruitage will bo weeds or good grain no one can tell. His is but one of many voices which have been expressing dls nnntent with existing conditions. Discon tent is healthful. It is a sign of llfo nnd u harbinger of progress. When we nro discontented enough with settling inter national disputes by war, then the peace of God will come. It has not yet como because tho way to it passeth all human understanding. "Doctor, would you like to Tead the book?" "r would. Indeed!" "It is well worth reading, whether you ngreo with Russell or not. for he Is a sincere man, honestly seeking after the truth and willing to be n martyr to his conception of it." GEORGE W. DOUGLAS. WHY MRS K10IIT. A method of jbnllnhlnir the ini.rnltlonRl duel, lly Pertrand nuell, M. hJternktlonM ",tlm, ye,,w ,rrt Lecturer hT' Trinity C'olleie. Cmbrldw. New York: The Century Company. ll.BO. A Spring-Time Fantasy . Whoever has felt the primal instincts movlw Wm In the spring will read with dellirht Meredith Nicholson's new novelette. I Tf called rT-he Madness of May.;' nnd It fuintls the promise of Its title. When the Lrassitrow green and the sun ,1s warm on fho8 hlf.Wes8and'th. horizon ,, enveloped In a warm hate conceallng great mysteries the call to tne open ruuu ........ ...... ..... Irrcsls ble force. Those of us who do not rVimond inevy those who break, looBe from conation nnd yield to their Impulses. Mr. Nicholson's hero Is a man who surrenders. he purpi. of his yielding In the story f. to amuse himself with the banker who hu been seeking him for months in order ?0 turn ove oh" a fortune. The man cills i Wmwdf Robin Hood, and he Induces Si banker's son. who has taken some of i.i! father's securities, to Join him In search Si .dventSreC Friar fuck The young man meets a girl in the moonlight dancing 2 Pierrette coitume, and later sitting on in r Vipi j . n r m0(vn made .MOM wi ."-"T-J-tju . ,, a4 "ie lnitier that tlicy butler ndinllR n,, nro expected. The Tlicy are lecclved In t he sanio spirit In which tlicy enter, nnd tho young man Is 'astounded when Pierrette ...?" hpr S(,nl besldo htm at tho table, and sun more perplexed when his own Bister, ror whom he had been vainly seeking for Jlnys. takes her place beside Robin Hood mere nro two loo stories running through tun tale nnd tlie explanation of nil tho com. ...ii , comc" nt ll,o p'"1- simply and suddenly, so that one lays down tho hook w ui a sense of satisfaction. No one who wisnes to be charmed out of himself or nerscir for nn hour or so should neglect to rend the story. T"onSIAMlfil?il.0r !,AY- "' Meredith Nlchol- HOW A POOR "BOY BECAME PREMIER Romantic Rise of -Lloyd George to Dictatorial Power in Greht Britain i.Tl,e.rlff "f. 0axll! Uod OeoiKo to power s prolmlily the most portentous event Hint ..." ircurrru m tho English-speaking world n n hundred ye.vs Important cents han happened In America. The abolition of slavery and th establishment of tho I nlon. however, worn hut tho natural con sentiences of the Hovnliitlon, which resulted In setting up a free nation on this side of the ocean The rloe of the Welsh lawyer Is tho triumph of democracy over nrlBtoc tscy. When King (icorge called Llmd (leorgo to tho Piemlcrshlp of (lrc.it Britain ho was overturning thu precedents of centuries. Great Hrltaln has liven governed fiy a ruling class Its distinguished statesmen hao boen men with titles of nobility, younger sons of the uohln families or members of tho great county fain lies without title. They hun been urii.-cr.lt) graduates and men with fortunes. The few exceptions have merelv served to prove the uile tint l.iovu t.eoigp Is nnl tho miii of n Welsh school teacher, who died in his Infancy. Ills mother was a f.nmei's daughter, lie was leaird by a cobbler In a little Welsh village, a 1111411 who winked at his bench in a shop In a wing of his cottage lie never went to college Ills uiile tho Welsh cobbler, learned Latin so that he might teach his nephew add thus save the expense of a tutor to ptepaie the boy for thu caicer of a koIIc Itor The family was so poor that when the .voting man was filially ndmllted lo the bar it did not havo $1.1 with which to buy him the gown ! must wear when he appealed In vouit. The oung lawyer set himself to earn the money American history Is .full of the achievements of men who slatted from such humble beginnings, but It has been until tho present unprecedented for such a man to ilse to the preinlcishlp In Great Hrltaln When the Klrg asked this Welsh lawyer to '01 in 11 ministry jllie demo cratization of Knglnud, which had been progressing for twenty jenrs, reached Its culmination; nnd the time will never return when a man will have to be the son of kis father In older to have the highest olllcc.s open to hint It means the boasted detnoc tncy of 111 eat Hrltaln Is at Inst becoming genuine One lias only lo study the careei nf Lloyd George to dlscowr how much he has had to do with bringing about this condition. Ills story Is most Interestingly told In a brief hlocrnphy that has Just come from the press Its author Is Frank Dllnot, 11 British Journalist, mid personal friend. It Is hardly 11 Judicial estimate of the man. That cannot be expected fiom any one at the present time when the 'contioversles which he stirred up still tnnkle in the memory. Hut it Is an admliable summary of the prlnelpil facts on the cateer of the man who Is directing the affairs of (Ircat Britain with .. firm hand and an unflinch ing purpose In tho present emergency. It Is enlivened with nneedotes nn'l contains an Intimate description of tho I'remler and his methods of work. Its description of the way he called to his assistance some of his severest critics and some of the men whom he hlmfolf In the old days scored most unmercifully will remind Americans of tho way In which Lincoln niboullnnted himself and his personal piefcrcnces to the great wotlc of saving the Fnlon. Americana should bo grateful to Mr. Olli.ot for making available for them the story of tho career of the man who at the ptcstnt moment Is next to President Wilson the most Inter esting public chniacter In the wot Id (! W I). I.f.OVP (lIHllUli: 'I ho Mnn mid Ills Slnr H Frank Dilnot. uuthor of -'I'lii Old Outer Clunsetli." tl New Ynrlt: Harper llrna. French Fiction Some of the slnndanls of l'aul de Kock, onco read surreptitiously by the iiild-Vlc-torlan generation and now relegated to tho dusty limbo of second-hand book shops, aro "found In "Angele." a tjplcal example of French fiction, by Kdinnnd Taibe This story of a woman who gives her soul to a brilliant but morally weal; composer and Inspires him to musical success Is a good deal better ahan tho "yellowback" of Fiencb fictional commerce, but It Is undeniable that It Is based on conditions and Ideals that do not find frank utteranco or recognition In our more wholesome Anglo-Saxon litera ture. The titular herolno Is a woman of deep spirituality, but of bad environment nnd heredity. Her downfall Is not due to evil, but to love. And she loses all for love, as the man she has made out of the potent exercise of her matveloiis Intellect and taste abandons her and she dies heart broken, a suicide. The translation by II W. Hartol Is couched in xery admirable Lngllsb. in which ho has not tried to gloss over tho essentially dalllc chaiacter of tho work. iwnr.l.ri lly ndmond Tnrt.e. Translated h II. W. Ilarlol 113.1. I'Mladelphm: J. n. I.lpiilncott Company Tennis for Boys .The moral valuo of clean spott Is ad mitted by every ono who has hnd anything to do with training bojs. There is no cleaner sport than tennis. It puts a player on his honor. Its etiquette requires that tho opponent should always havo the bene fit of the doubt. What tennis can do for a boy Is told In "Tho Good Loser," by K. nlchard Schayer.a tale of the development of a little fellow into a crack player, who has the courage to lose a match inther than lose his respect for himself by accept Ing n mlstnken decision of the umpire. It U a book which every fnther. whoso young son plays tennis, should put In the hands of his boy. It Is equally good for girls. THK HOOD t.OHKR. lly 13. "'chard hchajcr. Philadelphia; David McKay. 3U cenia Sea Tales Flaln tales of adventure with more than ii dash of lawlessness In them, aro con tained In II. DqVto Stacpoole'B new book, "Sea Plunder," from tho press of John Lane. New York. The first half of the book Is devoted to the story of a cable cutting expedition undertaken by two Ger mans, and tho chase of the guilty Bhlp by both German and' British Warships In the south Pacific. The rest of tho volume con tains tho adventures of a Snn Francisco schooner. In all sorts of haiardoua 'and thrilling expeditions. They will appeal to the unregenmto youth, who has nn ambi tion to bo a pirate. Margaret Prescott Montaguo Is revealed as the author of "Twenty JIInut.es of Re ality," an account of a strlklnaj nnd mys terious experience which attracted much attention when It wob published anonymous ly in the Atlantic Jlonthly. K. P. Dutton & Co are.prepnrlUK It for early publication In book form. Included with It In the volume are a doien or more letters which the article called forth, discussing Its state ments und describing similar experiences. "You see we can't rule our' Heavenly Fdlher the -way He makes it, so io-Und nt didn't make It .that i mil iiiiliT' i 'Ifiltlri makes it, bo u must women the THE JEWISH RACE PROBLEM IS COMPLICATED BY RELIGIOUS ISSUES ' Sydney Nyburg Has Written a Searching Study of the Conflict Between the Rich Reformed nnd tho Poor Orthodox Sons of Abraham TIIHKI'3 per bent of tno populntlon of America Is Jewish, Tho .1,000,000 de scendants of Abraham here arc about equal mi number to the population of tho t'nlted States when the Constitution wns adopted, Next to ItujRla, this Is tho strongest center of Judnlsm In the wot Id. Russia has fi.000, 000 Jews. There nte 1.700,000 In Poland, 1,300.000 III Austtln, 000,000 In Hungary, liOOlOO In Germany, 250.000 In the t'nlted Kingdom nnd 100,000 In France Theie nte as ninny .lews In 1'hllndelphtn its In Lon don, and there are more In New York than In nny other clt'y The prejudice of the Christian races, con tinuing over 11 period of centuries, bus forced the Jews Into a most peculiar posl- tlon. They live among us. hut thev aie not of us, They havo their own social life nnd they inMutalti their own historic cus toms and praitlces In the business world the men nnd women come In contact with the rest of us. but they are unknown In tho social world And this Is so In spite of all our pt effusions of dyiiiocmcy and social equality Vet. when wo think of the race ptoblem In Ameilcr. it tu-vei occuia to Us that the .lews present such a problem or that the, .Jews themselves have nny problems the solution of which perplexes their best tblnkeis tine cannot lead "The "lioeu People.' Sydney L N'.vbiirg"s new novel, without get ting a broader view of the pioblems that confront America and without coming to a better until, nailing of the nice which gave to us our :oltglou. Mr. N.vlmtg is a Haiti more lawyei, who published his Ills! book. "The Final Verdlit ' In 1IU5, when be was thltty-foitr .veals old It was followed by "The Conquest" last .vent Ills woik has exhibited him ss a t-eilotis-iiiludeil num. not content with tho meie telling of 11 stot "The Chosen I'eople" Is a searching study of the contlli't between the orthodox and the leliumed Jews and a lev elation of the lack of svmp.tlhy between the .lows of Ger man ilcMcnt. vvh.i have acquired wealth and assiiied social i.osition within their own i-nilimutiity. and the Itiisslau Jews, who havo lied from peisrciitlou to llud liberty In Amei lea The German .lew Is the imployer and the llusslau Jew Is the emplo.vi'd. The ' have lints" am.nig the Jews lire ns bitter against those who have ns among liny other nice And the orthodox Itiis slau Jews feel lb( same hostility to the re formed Jews Unit the con-el vatlvc Presbyte rians fell a few .vents ago toward such liberals a.s the late Doctor Ilrlggs, of tho t'nlon Theological Seminal) .Mr. N'vburg has made his tale revolve mound the attempt of a young liberal minded I alibi In Haltbnoio to mouse the 1 Icb mid comfortable German Jews of bis cong! cgatloii to a tcalUntloti of the mean ing of their faith and to tiling about a feeling of sympathy and co-operation be tween the implojiT and the employed based on a common obligation of loyalty to a common racial anil tellglous heritage. The book will be enlightening to Jew and Gen tile alike, for It leveats the Jews to them selves and 1 oinpels the thinking Gentiles to consider Issues which most of them have Ignored. Hiinnlng through the larratlve is an Intel estlng love stoty with some un usual complications, but this is embroidery oil the solid fabric of n serious economic and sociological sltnlv The book is likely FRENCHMEN FORESEE END OF GREAT WAR Write to Stage Manager of "Fair and Warmer," Asking His-Aid in Staging Numbers While the general Impression seems to he that tho great xvar Is Just about beginning with the advent of the Fulled States ns a belligerent, it would seem that Kuropeans either have liisldo Infoimatloti or else mo supremely optimistic Last week Hurry C Fortl. stage manager of "Fair nnd Warmer," nt the Garrlck, te celved a letter from Messrs Ilorney and Dupre. managers of the Casino de Fails and the Folio Mnrlgny. In 1'aris. circling him an engagement which would take him both to tho French capital and to rctro grad. The letter stated tint tho ennliact was to go Into effect Immediately nfler tho war ended. They seemed to think that would bn In the very near future, and fo deslro Jlr. Foul's services, especially for I'etrograd Tho Idea Is that be Is to pio duco certain American numbers such ns aro seen In this country In ifiuslcnl comedy, Jlr. Ford did n revue for these managets In Fails In lfill nnd another nt Antwerp In 1012, both of them being done strictly In the Aninlcnn fashion. I'udnuhtodly Messrs Borney nnd Dupro bellove that now Is the opportuno moment, or shoitly will be, for n similar production In tho ltusslan capital. At tho time Jtr. Fotd put on the one In Pnrls he could not speak Flench nt all nnd had to do all his work with the aid of Intel preters, two of whom vvcie provided. In Itussla It will have to boj done In similar fashion. CIIINESK WILL I'KOBATEI) Unusual Testament Accotnpnnicd by English Translation A ('him dc will accompanied by nil llng llsli tiniislatlou was admitted to probate today and will fouu the first recottl of Its kind on the books of the office of lleglster of Wills James II. Shechan The will Is that of Young Chun, who died March 1-' at 1829 South Fourth stteet. leaving to relatives effects valued at S1300 Hequests of $HI each to the I'enusjlva nlu Tiact and Jllsslonnry .Society, the Lutheran Oi plums' Home and Asylum for tho Aged und Infirm and Kviiugelk-.il Lutheran St. JImcus Congiegatloii are In cluded In tho will of Kathailne Ilium, who died In tho Samaritan Hospital, leaving property valued at Jlliuu. Other wills ptobated today Included those of Frank M. Scott, 2511 Xoith Seventeenth street, which disposes, of an estate woith $11,8(10; Abraham . Foster, sainatiian Hospital, flO.OOO; l'dwnrd J. Jones, 1C0 Jlaryland street. $1700, and William Hosscnfus, 2010 South Hancock street, V2230. THE WAR, MADAME. ... FJ.'OJf THK FliESail PAUL GERALDY TIUSKLATIOX HV WARREN BARTON BLAKE "It Is-tho most charming and the most poignant literary picture produced by the war both as a human document and ns n product of art It bus not been equaled." I'hUailrl' fthia y.rdser. v , U Cents -Vrf, CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS mi KivTIf. AVENUE NUW'YOIUC CD TllafBBBP'jaBBBBBBBBBBBB aH jattMaHaaV , t- t aaaaaK vCw&'fA. HLaHl aLaacaaaaaaaaaaaPHaaaHLaaaaaaaaaaaai & 'J HHflaaaraaVlBY'HaaaaaaTBaaaaaaaaaW 1 r!?Sl-as'3SRs!3W:VSiw.J SYDNEY L. NYBURG to have a huge salo In Hnltlmoto because of Its discussion of local conditions, nnd because of Its pAullar tneilts it ought to be in demand 'K!vety tily where there Is any consldet1 , ''number of Jews. As a lite' f.v oroducl. however, the hook Is disappointing Mr Nyburg's style lacks ease and llexlblllt It Is as haul ns nn amateur drv point etching, and Is more satiable foi 11 legal document than for a work of Met Ion Although style can be cultivated, it Is fundamentally 11 matter of temperament It Jlr. Njbuig's manner reptcsetits his temperament ho would do well to make a determined effort to soften It somewhat define lie writes another dook. G W T. Tin: ciiosi:N nr.oi'i.i: iiv sninev 1. Nv. burir, author nf "The i'nmiu'M " $1 40. Phil uilrlnllln. .1 II l.lpplmntt Company SPRUNG NOVELS SOUTH SEA ADVENTURES SEA PLUNDER H. II. DE VERE STACPOOLE Author of "The Gold Trail," "The Blue Lapoon," etc. Cloth, $1.30 net. A typical Stncpoole South Sea tale that for character-drawinp: and sus pense and action surpas&es most of the sea stories heretofore written. THE ENCHANTING FAR EAST THE WANDERER ON A THOUSAND HILLS By EDITH WHERRY Author of "The Red Lantern." ffolfc. J1.40 ncf. A dramatic narrative of a youth of EnRlish parentace who was brouRht up iia a Chinese. The splendor, the glamour, and the ro mance of the Oriental World aro pictured with sincerity, rare power, and reality. AN AMERICAN NOVEL THE END OF THE FLIGHT By BURTON KLINE Author of "Struck by LiKhtniiiR." Cloth, $1.00 lief. The .story of a younj? man who, leaving the Harvard Law School with a stout will, a large ability, and a baffling silence, sees a quicker suc cess in a small inland town than in a .great city. A FRANCO-AMERICAN ROMANCE MR. CUSHINGAND MLLE. DU CHASTEL By FRANCES RUMSEY G'Jolh. SI. 40 ntt. Daring in idea, masterful in treat ment and beautiful in phrasing, this is the first real International novel since "Tne American" of Henry James. HEART VS. HEAD THE MAGPIE'S NEST By ISABEL PATERSON Author qf "The Shadow Riders." Cloth. Il.tO llff. Should a girl depend on chance for her destiny? This is the big en grossing question that confronts ono in every absorbing chapter of this American novel. Last season "Tho Shadow Riders" appeared and cre ated a sensation. A still greater success awaits this second story. A QUEST FOR HAPPINESS AUTUMN By MURIEL HINE Author of "The Individual," "Earth," etc. Cloth. 1. 0 net, A sympathetic and appealing story of a woman, who, passing through some turbulent years of married litv found love's fulfillment in the 'autumn of her days. THE "HUMAN" SIDE OF STAGELAND THE GAY LIFE By KEBLE HOWARD Author of "Merry-Andrew," "Forked Lightning," etc. Cloth, M.30 tier. "It's not very oftea that I read a novel not very often that I read any kind of book, in fact, though I write about many; but when I got hold of 'Tho Gay Life,' I found myself car ried right along into it before I realizedjust what I was doing. Tho story was a rattling good one, a fictitious account of i Great English Comediehne, a story of stage life by a man who knows something about the theatre." Baltimore Evening Sun. , OF ALL BOOKSELLERS &&X333K PROBtEM A Practical Garden Book Frsr.cVs Duncan, who whs for eeversi yenrs the garden editor of tho Ladles' Horns Journal, has put her knowledge of garden Ing Into a working bookfor the Instruction of those who aro fottd of flowers, but do not know much about raising them. For example, sho gives suggestions for plant ing which will harmonize with tho color of tho house, a detnll which is too often Ignored with dlsnstrous results. The treat ment 'of tho backyard of the city house receives attention nnd suggestions are made for tho more spacious grounds of tho sub urban dwelling. The fninllv which spends the summer months In tho moiAitnlns or at the seashore Is told what flowers to plant In order to have bloom while they are nt home, and tables are given for planting In order to hno continuous blossoms through the season. There nro plain mil simple directions for pruning. The decorntlvo use of lattices ami arbors Is explained, nnd tho mistakes tovold nro Indicated. Indeed, tho book Is nn Invaluable guide to gardening for those who must do the work themselves without culling Ip a landscape architect or employing a professional gardener. TIIK JOTOt'K AltT nv II MttlKNINO A Ilock if I tret Aid to the Amxleiir lly France tlimmn, lllilatrnted ll.fi New York' Charlra Rerllinr's (oti A Schoolmaster Off Duty Scattered throughout tho pages of this slight volume are thirty-one essays touching on ninny subjects that have como undor the observation of a schoolmaster. The author freely admits ho Is n schoolmaster nnd constantly reminds the reader that school masters are not such n bad lot ; that often times, oh' so very often, they are even optimistic in their views' Anyhow, In each of theso essays, or. ns the author calls thorn, reveries, there is n magnetic frnnkness. a charming Intimacy, and, above nil, a mellow humor thst can not be Ignored. iti:vr.mi:s or a soiiooiaiastkr nr Fran. rla II Pearion. New York: Charlra Kcrlbner'a OUIll. "A Thoughtful, Absorbingly Interesting Novel" Changing Winds St. John G. Ervintfs New Novel "Bound to be popular . . .1 a well written book, with the interest sustained from beginning to end." New York Tribune. "Those readers ling' absorbing Winds of compelling interest." Philadelphia Ledger. Now Third THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publisher, New York Doubloons and The Girl By JOHN MAXWELL FORBES 12mo, cloth, illustrated and with colored jacket By A. O. Scott. Wet fl.25 s 1 The Mission Sully & Kleinteich itAiUiwiiiB.iiaiiH'iiininiB'iiiiniiiiTiiiiiiiiiiin'iiiiiiMiiiiiiiioHiii i Antony by Leslie Moore v Author of "The Peacock Feather" Where there's a will, there is often trouble as well. as a wau, and the will of the eccentric old Nicholas Danvtr-l un..nht much trouble indeed to Antony Gray, his heir: In the storu of how Antony's own determined will found th,(, wau out for him, all of Leslie Moore's charming telling md& synipatlieHC sum in ivvuvmy u tuvc aw, u uc vw(i. At All Booksellers. G. P. PUTtfAM'S SONS York THE CALL OF By COL. JENNINGS C. WISE of the Virginia Military htfityta With an Introductory not A vital and vigorotu pUa He brings out very clearly the new eoUOM-t ine all the resources of a Nation. ItJs a wSJ?1 volying read with profit, ad one which, well-being and, security.-: From , can rrtc -.;.,. ;, fiiwi vrtf yi-j. ' ., Ai- 'yVi.'11 'hi .V. by' Count lly. .! u . TOLSTOY '"ill JAMEM II. TOND, Publlahtr, Ncvr Tfffc? , A BOOK for every JTx. member of the family, for reading aloud, for YOU if you felt the charm of such stories as "Little Women" .and "Rebecca of Sunny brook Farm." Watch your book' ullmr't window Jhe Middle Pasture S.MAI.I.. MAYNAHD CO. ns- I'UOUHIIERS BOSTON who found will find 'Mr. Brit Ghanging Edition, $1.60 of Janice Day VI By HELEN BEECHER LONG 12mo, cloth, illustrated with colored jacket. Net S1.S5 -373 Fourth Av. New York ii,lH!!B;S: tilL J 1 THE . , by .GENERAL LEONAAD .WOOft for viWfrM mtmWufy MMm if heejted, wJ M General - WaiffiO REPUBLIC r -t m m kali sr m2m&jAim&$hm$:m
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers