,&iWf$$C&" mD'f ' ' ' Xf ' EVENINGS LEDaERPHILAD V m' $. " t V ! ;' " 4 ; V ; " ' i , ' , i , ,. I tl - f. : 'i " - 1 u KIPLING THIRTY YEARS AFTER HOW BUTTERFLIES AND A PRIEST REFORMED AW & m A fc $ 8 f KIPLING AND MARK TWAIN, . TWO GREAT MEN OF LETTERS yhe Englishman, Famous at Twenty-two, Has Lost None of-His Cunning in the Intervening Thirty Years A New Volume of Stories iT HAVK been reading Klpllng'a war 1 Bluff," ouns Cabot Ames remarked to his uncle, Dr. Mcl'nbrc, across my library hearth, "and I have como to the conclusion that ho Is a very much over rated man " Didn't they teach ou In Harvard that It was unsafe to Benernllzo with InsuITi dent data?" Dr. Mcl'abro asked. I do lomcmber something of that kind," Ames admitted. "But It does not apply here. It is not necessaiy to read vrrv thing that a man has written in order to get. a tute of his quality. The I quality of Kipling's war siurr is oau. Theje are men on tho regular staff of a dozen American newspapers who can wrlo better." ' I think you are pretty near the truth In jour last remark," said I. "Kipling Is like Feeral other men of letters with great gifts who hao been tempted to try their hand at describing war condi tion", only to discover that they liavo never learned the trade of special news paper writer. Success in that trade can not be achieved unless tho man possesses peculiar gifts as distinct and classifiable as those which bring success in fiction writing or In tho construction of pWvs" "Rut jou do not agree with my took iure nephew that Kipling Is overrated?" This fiom Dr. StcFabre. "f Ames had lead moro of Kipling he would think illffoicntly. Klpllm U one RUDYARD KIPLING f the gicat wilteis of his genctatlon No man's education is complete un'css he has a gcneial knowledge of what this englishman has done. lie and Mark Twain occupy a place apatt, they arc so much gicatei than their contempot rules. Thci both seem to hae nn Intuitive un derstanding of life. When ou lead them jou aie not leading Just a htoiy, but aie going to school to thee skilled Interpieteis of human emotions and sine commentatois on the social and moial problems of the times. Tho ersatl Ity of Kipling Is mai eloiiH. Unless we had evidence to pioe it 1 would not bellee that tho Mime man wioto 'The Brush wood Bo' and 'Holdieis Tlnce' And the Jungle Books aro so different fiom these that we need moio than Internal cvl dence to establish their authorship. 'Stalkv' Is In nn entliely diffeient vein and 'I'uck of Book's HIT Is a hlhtoilcal romance which m:inv of m fi lends have read and lciead as thej turn again and gain to''Illgilm's Biogiess' You know, of com to, that Kipling was famous at the age of twentj two This Is jounger than ou aie, Ames. And in the twent fllne jeais that he has been wilting he lias justified the distinction which came to htm in his outh. His fame is not confined to the Hngllsh speaking world, for the Nobel prize for literature was eonfened on him ten jeais ago." "He lias not been wilting any fiction lately, lias he?" Ames naked. "Yes, ho has been wilting short stories and they hiva been piinted in tho maga zines. 'A Diversity of Cieatures,' the Volume In which they hao been col lected, which has just been published, is, hovvcvci, tho (hat book of fiction with his name on tho title page that has ap peared for about seven jeats." "Aro the new stories up to nil old Btandard," Dr. McKabio wanted to know. - "They beem to me as good as anything that he has done In that line. 'The Vil lage that Voted tho Eaith Was Flat,' is R Vlelightful faice which eveiy motoilst ought to cany In his car to lead to tho countiy justices who fine him for ex ceeding the speed limit. It Is the stoiy of a speed tiap and how the men who et it weio made ildiculous. A music hall manager and a newspaper proprietor had been caught In the tiap and fined. They conspTro to make tho town of their undoing the laughing stock of the. world. nd they succeed. .My Son's "Wife' is a biting satlie on the silly people who be. llevo they can improve tho organization of society by making experiments in foclal lelatlons. Many a novel has been conducted out of s'immer material. If he had been In the mood, Kipling could have expanded the tale Into a volume by filling Jn the outline of his plot, and It would have been n good novel. The Honors of AVar' is an army story in hieh a bounder is enticed to his un tolng by a group .of gentlemen. And Reguius.' You ought to read Ilegulus,' Ames." "Is It about that old Roman general ho was fool enough, to go back to Carthage to be tortured after advising h Romans to refuso to surrender?" "The same gentleman," bald I. "Kip ,'ing uses it as the peg onvh!ch to hang discussion of the lelatlve merits of classical and scientific instruction In the 'fublio schools. He has a class In the Wth form transiting Horace's famous iwld pdo of his fifthbook, which tells ; "" Slry of Regulus. The Instructor Is Jm) manof imagination and Insight who a i.eves mat there Is moro education (JWtviil Wj)lle , pte BUch LaUn od6 tha 'wbolt.votame.ot idcrittflc fact that way havo to be discarded as wrong In twenty j cars when wo learn more." "Ho Is ijght theie," said Dr. McKabic. "I knew that is what jou would think. You seo, Ames, there is something more than a mcro story In Kipling. But If I wero asked to select the most beautiful and moving of the fourteen stories In tho volume I would chooso 'Swept and Garnished,' which tells of a German woman who always kept her house in Berlin swept and garnished for tho Master's coming. When tho story opens sho is In bed with a fovcilsh cold, for which sho has taken a dose of aspcrln She Is slightly delirious. As sho lies on her pillow a child cnteis the room, walks about curiously inspecting everything on tho dressing table, passes behind the bed and gors out. Tho maid, who had gone to tho drug HtoAo for moro medicine, comes in nnd tho woman rebukes her for leaving the door open to let the child in. But tho door had not been left open Tho maid goes Into another room. Then half a dozen Httlo children enter holding ono another's hands. They walk about looking at things and the woman orders them out, but thoy tell her their parents told them to como to Berlin and wait for them. The larger children sit on a sofa, and as they lift the littlest one up ho cries with pain. Tho woman sees blood dripping fiom his wounds. In ter ror sho ordeis them away again. But tho llttlo Belgian ghosts calmly keep their seats. 'They told us to wait for them here' is their nnswer. I cannot help thinking that thousands of con scientious German women have been seeing tho slaughtered Belgian children In their dreams a'l these terrible jears and have felt that their efforts to keep their healths swept and garnished have failed when such ghastly litter stiews the floor." "Kipling is ono of the few- great men wilting todav," was the comment that came from Dr. Mcrabio's chair. And The Lady who came In the room while I was talking remarked. "Doesn't ho make the Belgian horrors seem leal!" GnORGH W. DOUGLAS. a mvnnsrrr or cnnATtmKs ny movant Klnllnir Harden I'llj. Doubled ly, l'.iee & Co $1 r,0 Economics Made Easy In these times of soaring prices con sideration of eioiiomlcs In some form Is forcing Itself home upon nearlv all of us Kor tills leason 'How the World Make's its Living" Is a li.irtlc-iil.ulv- timely book, al though It treats of national r.wl.i than In dividual problems Both the f.iMs and the philosophies of business mo presented In a Htvlo shorn of anv confusing technicalities The economic activities arc Interpreted In .the light of evolution, and the goal toward which this Industrial and commeicial evo lution Lk tending Is shown to be a status under which each person will receive benefit from others In the measure that he con tributes to their benefit The need for In dustrial prepaiedness with the end of the wai Is stiongly emphasized. HOW TUP. WOULD VIAKBS ITS 1.1VIM1 Tlv l.octn Untiil VkPlicrcon e York the Ontury i'ompdn $.' un A Death Sentence A tjplcal novel of the lelsurelv mannered Knglibh Uvpe Is offeied b l.elle Moore In "Antony Oiav, Hardener " The stoij is ono of a curious benevolence The motive figure is Nicholas Danver all eicentrlc lecliiAe. who Is henteiiced to death in a scant twelvemonth by his phvslclans He decides to use the limited time at his dis posal In good deeds The scheme brings in Antony Graj, who tuins to agriculture to LESLIE MOORE fuinil lj,s part f tl'e pact with the rich and doomed man There is also a fascinating Duchessa. The Interest lies In the co operation of (Jray In the great scheme of Improvement and the Inteip'ay of differing temperaments. There is some, but not a preponderating love Intel est and a good deal of lomanllc feeling. The bcenea are laid on an Knglish estate and In South Africa, and in both locales the author has nnnnrentlv a. cood knowledge of background and atmosphere. Those who have read The Peacock Feather" and "The Wiser Follv" need not be told that Leslie Moore in the possessor of a gracefut stle and a fine gift for narration. ANTONY onAY, OArtDEVKn By Ltl Moore. New York! 11. 1' 'Putnam's Sons. 11.50. Richard Canfield in Fiction Many who read "Peter Sanders, Retired," will note a striking similarity between the hero of this entertaining Etory and a certain Individual In life, whose name appeared fiequently In the publlo prints not so many years ago. Perhaps it is only a coincidence that in his vocation and his avocations the fictitious Mr. Sanders should be so like the real Mr. Richard Canfield, late of New York and Saratoga Springs, but it seems more than likely that in drawing the character of his hero Mr. Gerould had gained some in splratlon from the character, aB the world knew of It, of the once-famous gambler, who in his leisure moments was an art connoisseur and collector and a lover of beautiful things. If. In fact, Canfield was the basis for Sanders, it must be said that the RUthor In his development of the char- I acter wornea in m i""" ucmh,, in- Sanders, besides being picturesque. Is In , mffWUKth-ul appeaii. At 'Z7Z zz :Ok any rate, he is a brand-new creation In Ac tion and as such Is entitled to respectful consideration. A gambler who la generous Is not a new figure, but a gambler who Is actually altruistic Is quite out of the or dinary and would not bo at all convincing were the character less cleverly developed and managed The story of Mr. Sanders Is that nf a gaming house proprietor who has been driven Into exllo by a reform prosecuting attorney. A scholarly gentleman and an Indefatigable book collector, he finds In his new life, after a certain season of boredom, a Joy and delight that he was never able to extract from the old. New Interests are found, new and true friends aro gained, and, as Mr Sanders tells his valet at the end, he Is "rather pleased with his nice new suit " ri:TErt SANDfinS, RETIItKn. By Gordon Hall Oerould $1 50 New iork Charles Scrlb ner 8 Sons STRANGE THINGS HAPPEN IN CHINA How an English Boy, Reared by n Native Woman, Preferred Oriental Customs Apar from the exploitation of nn Intl. mate knowledge of Cnlneso lore nnd of the mvstlclsm which from time Immemorial has pervaded that portion of the globe first made known to Burnpe.in civilization In medieval davs bv Marco Polo under the designation of Cathij." lMlth Wherr.v In her storv of 'The Wanderer on a Thousand Hills" has woven a romance of more than common Interest ono that Is virtually as. pured of n welcome from the reading pub lie not Inferior tn the same clover author's "fled Lantern From the very beginning of the tale, which Rhows Kung, the school, master of tho Village of Henevolcnco and Virtue, troubled In mind because ho can find no ono willing to take care of his three veir.old daughter Winter Almond, while, ho goes to answer a summons from tho great I.u, rich but llllteiato mngul of the com. munlty. nnd compelled to take her with him on what proves to be a fruitless and exas perating errand through all tho extraordl mry sequence of events that ensues the story glips attention even though It lends to a conclusion hardly convincing to com mon sense of the Western Hemisphere It Is borne In upon the reider's understanding nlmost In the opening paragraph of the nanatlve that girl ihlldrcn In I'hlna are unpopular Indeed, and tho oriental practice of destrovlng them at birth, or very soon thereafter Is vlvldlv set forth Wherefore It Is not a little surprising to learn that lit tle Winter Almonds tcholarly nnd widowed parent Is so far removed from the national nntlpathv to female progenv as to be reallj fond of his niotherless child The visit of the schoolmaster to the local tvrant Lu while disappointing alike to tho dignitv and the antlclpitlon of the former, nevertheless paves the way some vears after that event to a love match between the tittle girl nnd the son of the wealthy Lu, greatly to the rage of Mrs Lu nnd the less active disapprobation of the village potentate So thev are married Winter Almond and Jung Kuang who is not dlsninved by tho pirent.il dlspleasuie, and he takes her to tho Lu homestead The bibles tioub'es are mauv In the home of the village Head Man. to which she is a most unwelcome addition, notwithstanding the undoubted affection of her spouse Suddenlv, a ear or so after the maiil.iKe b a series of uncannv and tiaglt ociunences, she Is deprived of her husband ns well as of her biby girl, her falhei -in-law and mother-in-law Dlsttaught bv her altllctlon the oung widow wanders on the mountains near her home and she comes upon the still living bodv of a little Kligllsh bov, who like her self, has been lost in a sloim In her hv teilcal frame of mind, which Is nothing les, than Insinltv, tho unhappv wonnii per suades herself that sho has been divinely guided to the tescue of the child and she takes it to the home of her father, the old schoolmaster Kung 'Iheie she dlscoveis that the boy Is the son of nn Lngllsh family in l'el.l', 'n whom she had become gieatlv attached while serving in the oupaeltv of muse gill befoie her imrrlage to the ilch .lung Kuang Veveitheless sho clings to the child, anil brings him up as her own son, educating him by means of the vast wealth she has Inherited from her husband. 'I he bov who develops Into a learned Chinese scholai, believes Tung Mel (Win tet Almond) Is his leal mothei, and not until be is about to take the highest honor possible to Chinese scholarship does he dKcovei his Identits s the son of a gal lant Lnglish gentleman, prominent In the foielgn colonv of the capital city of IVkln He upbialds the hapless Tung Mei for so long deceiving him as to his origin Koes to his fathei's home where he Is received with the most lavish display of nffe tlou by his own flesh nnd blood Hut ami here comes the strain on the credence of the reader who has followed his nrtlflcla life this voungjnan, to whom have come back recollections of his childhood with his own parents, a jouth of puro Anglo Saxon stock. Is unable to reconcile himself to Luropean civilization and manners He becomes obsessed by what caqnot be de scribed otherwise than as a religious frenzy, and lices back to his adopted mother, the unfortunate Tung Mel, who, It is due to say, is overcome by remorse over the deception she has plaved through all the eais of the oung man's childhood and adolescence, but is all the same de lighted bv the leturn of her darling The story ends with Hslo Chin, which Is the Oriental name of the joung Lngllshman, passing up and down the land ns the 'wanderer of a thousand hills," in search of the legendarj lost epistle of St Paul to the Laodlccans, and varlantly regarded as a sage, seer or plain ordinary "crank," depending on whether he Is viewed by oilental or occidental ejes Jn contemplating this bizarre tale one can hardlv lefraln fiom recalling the gos pel admonition against putting new wine Into old bottles, lest the bottle be burst, tho wine be spilled and the bottles perish This latter fate seems to have overtaken the central flguie of the book THE WANDKItr.lt ON a thousand hills lly Udith Wherry. New VorU. John Lane Company Jl 40 Sociology and Thrills A man who can write a story of such ab sorbing interest that factory girls will sit up o' nights to read it and with such a solid basis of sound social philosophy that those engaged In the study of the Industrial prob. lems of the times will be attracted to It. Is as rare as he Is welcome when we find him Such a man Is Richard Aumeile Mailer His latest novel. "Gold Must He Tiled by Fire," Is a story as thrilling as a "penny shocker" It moves with the rapidity of a well-constructed melodrama, with a climax at the end of every act There is a fire on a steamboat, an automobile wreck a strike, with strike-breakers and dj namite and a burning mill, a Uphold epidemic, a night ride on a hand car, a fight between nn In. dependent manufacturer and a trust, nn elopement frustrated and two or three love stories. A lesser man would have been con tent with making u story out of these ma terials. But Mr. Maher uses them as a setting for the beautiful unfolding of the character of an appealing young woman, Daldle Grattan. an Irish mill girl, Is transformed from a w reckless, dissatis fied rebel against her surroundings Into a ministering angel. She passes through the fiery furnace and comes out pure gold, '.fence the title of the book. She discovers .he great truth that people In need can be helped most successfully by those who have felt the same need, and that hired philan thropists may find amusement in their work, but are as a rule unable to get Into sym pathetic relations with those whom they would. relieve. The book breathes that spirit of human brotherhood without which no book has ever achieved success. It deserves the popularity which Is bound to come to It. , GOLD MUBT BB TRIKD nT FIHK. lly nichtrd Aumn inr. minor or --rne onpnri ol ' SS'Oi N,w Tor,,! The ' cw- FROM BURGLAR TO BUTTERFLY MAN The Magical Transformation Wrought in Slippy McGcc by Contact With a Priest When "Slippy McGec," first class burg lar man, mado his last pef-away from the "bulls," It was not with the eclat that chaiacterlzed previous exploits of a simi lar nature In fact, Sllppv "blew In" to Appleboro, S. C, or lather lolled lu, from beneath a freight train leaving part of one leg on that side of the track farthest fiom the town Thus was sustained the icputa tlon of ' Dead Man's Cros'ln" " nnd ended tho criminal career of the grandest guy that ever filled a safe with "soup" or gave a "smooth spiel" to tho cops And so, with the exception of that chap ter introducing the reader to the charming town of Appleboro, Father Around .lean P Rnuce, tho Catholic prlct, nnd other Interesting characters lu the book the story opens. Slippy, unable to understand anything but the rigors of his own hard trade and that of his perpetual mlversailes, the rollce, is unable to comprehend the gcntlo advances of friendship fiom Father Do Ranee The Itttei hiving recognized from newspaper descriptions the mangled mnn brought to the pirsh housp ns a bright star in bis choen profession, tnvs as much And Slippy's nnswer Isf For (Jods sake, don't stand there star Inc like a bughouo owl. Well, whnt are vou going to do" Him I for the bulls? What put vu wlc"" Hut tho padre did no such thing nnd fiom then follows the Intellectual advance ment mid spiritual regeneration of the "slickest i rook In America." And what happens to him" Just this. Ho becomes u butterfly chaser The hands that had deftly sensed t. time lock on a bank vault tuned themselves to handling tho most delicate and beautiful of the creatures And ns soars the buttcrflv Into th blue itvrssiaaxoSEiuKCs. MARIE CONWAY OEMLER of heaven so soared the soul of Slippy McGce out of Its lankeied house to mingle Willi the singing cieatuies lu nn eternal springtime of h ipplness The melamoi phosis of the gnili into the fullness of tin: hiilterflv taught the e liuiglai llfes lesson When one spring the lli-t Tin mis of the vear set Itself about the Impoitant business of becoming a but lei 111 Mlppv and Father I Ranee watched 'Iheie came into .Sllppv s fare another look, and fiom his eves shone u more poignant detciiiihi itlun And as the graceful creature it leased from tho tlu.vsaln .irose from the open Itible on the p igt s pf which the trans ient!! itlou had taken place P.u vein ' said tho Hultcrfly Man "Par sou don t It beat hell?" It docs It does Oh. Hutterflv Man." answered the pi lest, "by the grate and gloiv and wonder of God It beats htll" The book bv .Millie Conway Oemler, Is the first ot her piodiicllons and If her fm ihcomlng wcuks maintain lu stjle, hu man mteiest iinJ psjclile Impiess the pietedent sho has established, booMoveis inav feci glad to welcome such an addition to the field of Ameiiraii w l Item Miss Oemler his made excellent ue of southern sentiment In Its llowei and while keeping tho cential figure, the cilppled e buiglai In the limelight, has woven about him n tale where love beautv, villainy and politics all figure to mal.o tho reforma tion of Slippy MtUce a thing cal ed blessed M.IPJ'Y McOnn (.nniftlm known ns the Put lerfly Mnn Mv Mario Conwa Oemier New lork Tho Ontury Compvnc Jl 3", A New Barbour Book A new Ralph Henry Harbour school life story Is alwajs an event In the youths' literary season. The gridiron, diamond, cin der Hack, dounltory pranks and tho many other elements which make sehooldajs de Ifghtful memories In after jeais and dajs of wholesome cnjo.vment In the immediate pres. ent are exploited by Mi n.ubour "Winning His Game' Is his latest work Loiallv, as alwavs, Is thn thtme of his slor. Dud Raker never seems able to make a success of nuv thing he undertakes His el ratio dls. position tauses the number of bis friends gradually to dwindle until Toinmj Logan, his loommate, In Ills only booster How the lovnlty of Toinin) to Hud utables the lattei to become the Idol of the Grafton School is cleveily led up to a stirring finalo that will please and delight even the grown-up boy WINNINi! HIS ILVMi: 11 Ualph Henry Har bour lllustrnlfil by Wall I.aucttrbaric New ork I) Applelun ana Compan tl .13 Behind the Scenes There is conslJeiable Innocent curlosltj about what goes on behind tho stage setting In a theatre or opera house Gustave Kobbe, thioilgh his long experience as n musical critic In New 'v.ork, has acquired much In formation on the subject He has strung this on the slender thread of n storv of a supposedly lm.iginar foundling left nt the stage dooi of the Meliopoiitan Opera MadH t A dilapidated orange grove, a feeble old grandfather and no money Certainly a discouraging outlook for young and. pretty Annie Laurie McAllister. She wanted to live in Florida and liail invested Iicr last cent in a glowingly-described plantation, only to lind she had been swindled. Hut she is a good fighter and MCALLISTER'S GROVE By MARION HILL tells of her determined efforts to make her land produce. The handsome j oung Knglisbman next door tries to help, hut as soon as one obstacle is overcome a greater one if 4 y arises. Docs she win out? Head this charming romance. It is a fine story and a realistic pitture of life among the "poor whites" of 1 lorida. At oil Jlootiilleri 11,00 net THIS IS D. Appleton L Houe, In that city, who grew Into a prima donna. The details of stage setting, stage carpentry nnd the conduct of the singers behind Hie scenes occupy the greater part nt the space In "All-of-a-Sudden Carmen." the title which he has given to the story In Its present form The story first np pearcd In tho Ladles' Home Journal III 1902, under the title of "A Child of the Opera House." Calve. Jean de ltczske, Plancon and other vi ell-known opera singers walked through the pages In thlnl dis guised names, and tho baby, which became the pet of Calve, grew up to sing Carmen as tho greatest Carmen of them nil sang It Tho tule ran through five numbers of tho magazine, filling ten of Its largo pages Mr ICobbo has expanded It till It fills a volume of 278 pages of largo tpe U lie stoi suffers a llttlo by the dilution, but the book will satisfy tho curiosity of those who like to know what happens In tint mvsterlous region back of the proscenium arch. AM.-OK A-llTlDEV CVnvtE.V Oustnv Knbbe Jl 35 New Torkt O T IMtnam Sons Things Worth Knowing When Pope said that the proper study of mankind Is man, all save a few specialists who were Inteicsled In other natural prod UiBs, such ns birds and bulteiles flowers and tree", believed hlni In 111 eais since the Twickenham poet wrote wo have ills coveied that there are other things worth knowing Tho world Is a much more In teresting place to those who have learned something nbout the plants and the living things than it Is to those Indlffeient to such matters A walk"ln the field Is Just a wall: lu the field to the unlnstructcd Hut If one has the most elementary knowledge of blids nnd butterflies, of wild flowers nnd trees a walk becomes a visit to a museum full of specimens of the greatest beauty. Iho popularit of nature books In recent vears Indicates that nn Increasing number nf persons nie finding entertainment In sludlng growing nnd living things Double da Page & Co, who publish a series ot eliborate books on outdoor subjects, have this spring Issued four Inndbooks lu what they call a Worth-While Series that are condensations of the larger volumes for the benefit of beginneis One Is about birds, by N'eltje Blanche!! which needs no coinmen ditlon to those familiar with this woman s larger books Another Is about butterflies, bv Clarence M Weed, an expert on the subject Thev are both excellent Introduc tions to n wider knowledge The books on the botanical side are like wise concise, accurate and attractive 'Ihe arrangement penults brief but highly In formative Introductory nntter concerning tho form habit and classification of trees and flowers and detailed description of the principal American varieties N'eltje Hlanch-in's well-known "Natures Garden" has been condensed admirably by Asa Don Dickinson, and the specimens described by families Miss Rogers's book has been adapted fiom her standard work on trees with the grouping fived bv habitat and other chaiacterlstlcs nintlS VAOItri! KNOWING "Selected hy the nmhor from the wrltlnc nf NeltJ nlanrhmi With for tlrhl Illustrations In color Jl 10 HflTKIM'l ir.S WOHTII KNOWING By Clar enc M Wrc.l II Sc Illustrated hv forty elcht nl-ites thlrtj two In color tl no FI OWKUS WOI'.TH KNOWING daptfd hv Vsa Don Iilcklnson from "Nature's Garden " In NVHJo III nidi in Fortj-elnht Illustrations lu color $1 i.o rniiKs wo in it knowing iiv juiia mien Itocers Willi fortv-richt Illustrations, six fen lielns In tnlor I Co Garden Cltv Uouliteddl I'asn & Co How to Save the Pennies A particularly helpful little book to the joung housekeeper In these dajs of the steadlh Increasing H C of L, when the need of Intelligent discrimination In buvlng. looking nnd serving Is greater than ever befoie Is Miss Gieen's ' Better Meals for I.tss Mone) " The prlnclp'es underljlng scientific looker) are here set forth so cieailj and concisely that even the most lnevpeilinced cook can understand and grasp the essential facts of dietetics. The author sa)s lu her preface. "Good meals depend not so much upon expensive material as upon caie and good Judgment In the use of ordinary material Tho time worn boat ding-house Jokes about prunes and hash mean simply that these foods, In them selves evcel'ent, are poorly prepared and too frequently served" General suggestions for economy are given, the Judicious substitution of less ex pensive foods, the use of left overs, along witli common'wa)S of cooking food, soups without meat, toothsome )et simple des serts .mil In th back of the book Is an easily understood tuble of weights and measures pioper temperatures, caloric values and the normal weights for men and women The author doesn't preach the total elimination of "cakes and ale," hut the sort of sensible economy that the housewife can readily practice. nr.TTKit jtBti i ron i ks monut ny mrv Orn New Tork Henrs Holt & Co. Jl ;5 MISTRESS ANNE By Temple Bailey 4ufJior of "Contrary Mary" The heart-story of a Maryland school mlbtress and of two men. a writer and a ph)siclan, who came to the little country town of Crossroads. It Is a cheery, wholesome story the kind vou finish with a sigh and lend at once to a dear friend. Jacket by Hoi leau. Illustrations by F. Vaux Wilson. $1.35 net all bookstores The Penn Publishing Company Philadelphia AN AFFLBTON BOOK Company S3 W. Sid St., New York, Indian Lore for Boys The boys of the present generation who do not "play Indian" aro losing more than they can gain by other forms ot amuse ment. It gets them Into the open, develops their Imagination nnd keeps alive the ro mantic history of the early life on this rontlnent Some day wo may hove Indian play organlred mid made so nttractlvo that the Hoy Scouts wilt have to look tn their laurels In tho meantime no father who wants to Interest his ho)s In Indians wlfl make a mistake If ho puts In his hands ' White Otter." by Klmcr Itusseli ft -r sasssnr-'-"" tjrssBSxssxs? t;S - lH -IM MSifci - zJT&.'lslslslslslslsKT 2 ELMER RUSSELL GREGOR' Expert writer' on Ind'ans nnd out door life. It Is a tale of Indian life In America beforo tho white men came White Otter, tho hero Is a seventeen-) ear-old )outh who has won the warrior's eagle feather Ho has yet tg win tho crown of feathers which will make him a war chief The story tells how he achieved this distinction In a belles of daring adventures Mr Gregor has woven Into tho narrative a wealth of Indian lore which ought to delight any boy who wants to play Indian In the way the Hcd Men lived The signs which Identify the different tribes are eplalned by a de scription of the way they are given. We are told of tho movements of tho hands which Indicate friendliness, lind the great ceremonlis aro given with enough detail for any group of Intelligent bnvs to repro duce In their own fashion It is .i great Indian book WHITI3 orrim n i:imr Ilusell Greitor 11 33 New York I) Appleton A. c'o A STUDENT IN ARMS By DONALD HANKEY Introduction by J. St. Loe Strachey, Editor of The London Spectator The ono soul stirrinp book produced by the war. We would like to feel that every Father and Mother of America had read qf this wonderful experience. Holyoke Daily News: "The 'Student in Arms' strikes a hiffh, clear note of spiritual understanding. It is the note that is to lead us out of all this turmoil into peace. It is a buRlc-notc, a white flame, a rift in the leaden sky of war." Price $1.50 Net. Postage Extra. At all Bookstores. E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave., New York yr" They arc: "The Way of An Eagle," "The Keeper of the The Knave of Diamonds Two Large Printings of "The Hundredth Chance" have been necessary to supply the Booksellers, before date of Publication. AT ALL BOOKSELLEr.S. 570 VAOES. COLOR IT.0XT13. J1.00 NET. New York G. P. Putnam's Sons Lornta m B One Year of Pierrot SB Eg script called it, "as impossible to analyze as it would be to analyze the perfume of a flower"; while the New York Times said of it, "There are moments when one feels as though one were reading words printed not upon paper but upon a woman's heart. Yet it is a happy book, for Pierrot was a joyous and an adorable baby who found the world all sunshine and blue sky." OURELY a book that as this from the critics must be far out of the 1 ordinary. Your bookstore can suvdUi illustrated with eharmiiw tint Lester G. Hornby, for $1.50 net, you u7iu cip me jaincriess cnuaren of prance, jot wnose ocncjii,; part of the profits will be used. , - HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY Boston and Chivalry in Modern Dri Take a princess whose father and ' have been killed In war. Take a wk 'inclo vho wants to marry her to a of tho country whose soldiers have ItM her kinsmen. Make the orlnceii bar kindly feeling toward the prince but a'll for his country. Have her flee from!) to keep a vow to her mother. Inject at i point a knight 'errant with the heart' I a virgin, who finds the princess alone f oi est, and proceeds to rescue her and,' fall In love with her In the process, ai you have the materials for an old-fashion tale of chivalry such as Cervantes rldlcu out of st)Io by his roaring farce sometln Miown ns "Don Quixote." Drop these en ncters Into tho heart of a Tennessee mou tain country nnd let them work out th complications nnd ou will have altogether delightful fantasy which Maria Tj Thompson Daviess has written under th nnl tllln nf "flllf nf n rlfi- Rlrv." i i Miss Daviess has mado her princess a nelglan nnd the prlnco Is a Orman. Thay father nnd brother havo been killed by th Oerinau soldiers who ravaged the llttl-( neutral kingdom Tho princess has fled toy, Amcrlca with a maid and her Jewels,-' whither sho has been pursued by her uncla 'J: mill thft tlnrmfln. Sh rsrnnes frnm a. K V York hotel only to find 'that her pursuerafjj!1 wj mo "i uic civuivi iiuiii iiiui, io v,ai i j J un nwa IA- na Hv tlm cnnnKnncn nf lnr malrl !, drops from tho train at a water tower art $?$ fl,A,, Cl.A IfltArAallni. nnmnllnnttnn. knala . V V 'J he princess herself tells tho story In quaint J; " Anglo-t'Tcticli, with a simplicity and aVis -'. charm that will fascinate every eighteen--f ) ear-old girl who reads It this Rummer,, J? OUT OP A CLEAR SKY. . Ily Maria. ThomMo toV2 Ilivless XI. rscew YnrK! Ilarn-r A nrnM. -ti'!t Marshal Joffre The. one popular hero that has come out '-fVi-s of the war thus far Is Marshal There Is that about his career and his per sonallty, combined with his dramatla achievement In turning back the German llrln xtlinn It iaa altnitt it Iniinqln 11ol .M ..1.1.1. ...,--,.. . .1.. . . mv. j. t" , ,,,.., , ,ii't'v.,,a it, uiu iiiiHfillliCUUll. Alia UV- iii inn ior iniormaiion nDout mm nas Deen .fji met ny jvicx.inaer iviinn, wno iiajj written sy, i me Mory oi nil uie. .vir. ivanm DOOK IS : not u dctlnltlvo bloeranhy. neither is It m. ..)? scientific analvsls of his mllllarv rumnilmi' W'Vj It Is rather a summary of tho Interestlnc .mil picturesque facts in tho career of tha',"' facts in tho career of tha V1 'tv! i In nnecdote nnd lncldent.vft Hilary affairs will not find 'i?,! In It, but the average man rlJ great soldier, rich Ihe student of military Mill... (no. a,....!.... ,.. I. ...a. .. ...ba . I.t.lk IIIIIUVIIUII II, 11, IIUl UIC I1IBIHKB (IUU1 fV who Is Interested In the human side of a tS S RIIPPOVRflll mnPMl it III f-ffl n mmkIi tm ' "Va I M undei standing of Joffre from Mr. Kahn'S x f$b book than he could obtain from a military ,WU blogr.iph) ; It Is ln.loffro the man that wo nro Interested Just now. In fact, wa shall always be moro Interested In Joffr the man than In Joffre the strategist-. LI IT! or OHNHUAL JOFFRE Rv Alexander halm A II New York. I"rederlclt A. Stokes c'ompnny SI c rou can buy Jewelry elsewhere, but -IACOBS SJ BOOKS 1628 CHESTNUT STREET STATIONERr AND ENGRAVING IEET MC AT JACOBS" The Hundredth Chance By. Ethel M: Dell "The Rocks of Valpre." Vty in No dcscriptioi of this exceedingly powerful book will aj" carry the weight that the mcro mention of tho author'a Jk"! other novels (nil of them immensely successful) will bearA,SJ$ Door," "Bar. of Iron," HW- EVER before has the first year of a baby's life been portrayed with such tender ness and magic charm as in this anonymous story. "A veritable literary tri umph," the Boston Tran calls forth such enthusiasm v t v "One Year of Pierrot." vrotuselv and black and white drawings bv and by adding it to your library ?J w New York" v f JotTr. H.m w-1 Ir l( m iU2 ,- -& "' ,,,V .t . Xki r.V,