, V j; .1 '. H ' gNU U DliJTYjLWELLS GOD TtiJU UN VISIBLE KING AS HE SEEMS The New Deity Found by the Creator of Mr. Brit ling Is a Finite Being Struggling -Upward With Humanity- ryifTOIl McFABHK hiul Just liccn wy. jLjng that ho wns Intensely inlet eslod In Professor Kent's book on "Tho Social Teachings of tho Prophets nncl Jesus," about which wo had a llttlo discussion n while ngo when his eye rested on H. G. Wells's bonk about God, that lay on my table "Oh ho'" he exclaimed. "So ho lias told us about tho God that Mr. Hritllni; found' What is Ho like?" I stretched out my nrm and took n volume fiom a bookcase, opened It and read Some necks ago 1 said In a letter. The dream of my life is rest; not rest from labor because I am weary, tint release from itnv or all of my burdens, tut .Sud s rest , the rest of a soul nt one with "In, and filled with Hit great life" I thlnU t have cat oft all created forms of trutl and tried to grasp with literal touch of oul the things themselves I have tried to realize Ood and touch Ills tubstai e tr'cd to make faith give me, not tr h but Milistanccs (if courso It Is Imp "Iblc. yet I cannot admit that It foolih or an.v thing else than the very beft fit 1 or any one else can attempt Thl letter was vvittten, I suppose, about fiftv vears ago by n voung Haptlxt preacher in a central Now York village. There was and still Is n college in tho lllage A few vears befoie he xvrolo the letter in 1S59. to bo exact ho de livered an address to the students, in tho course of which ho disclosed tho attitude of mind which led hint to seek to get In touch with substances. Let me read a fen sonteni es from tho lecture- Truth (lows beneath the matrilal world In an ex 01 -mixing changing stream A man mav dip cupful b a statement, but that Is nil and when It rests in his cup It has lost Its gie.itest character istics for It has lost Its relations and Its flow Thete Is no isolation of any truth Statements do cany oxer truth from the great ocean of truth nd puur It Into the spirit and conscious ness of men but these xessels In which It Is carried over are small and can earn but very little at most. and. more over thev ore often verv leaky, so Mint by the time thex get to us there is noth ing in them nt all "The president of tho college In that Tillage put tho matter n little dlffciently When he said a fexv years later that tho man who writes a cieed for himself fences out a great deal moro than ho fences In " "But what has, all this to do with Wells'"' tho clergj man's nephew asked. I was not aware that he had been listen ing, for he knew that Doiothy Owen was expected, and his attention seemed to be directed toward the door. "It simplv means," halil 1, "that the great discovery which Mr. Wells thinks he has made, the ill&covotff that no creed can express all thcio Is of God and that God can bo found by earnest souls looking for Him is not new. Mi Wells icminds me. in a way. of n ounc mathematician In ouo of the Gox eminent depaitments In Washington, who had never hea:d of a book of logarithms, so he set to xv oik to prepnio one. It wns printed nt public expense, and when It appeared It was full of errors and xvas r.ot half so good as a book picparcd ears hefore bv men who had been export mathematicians befoie tho Government clerk was born." Miss Oxxen entered just then, and after a fexv moments' geneinl conversation sho and Ames went into the next loom They PUBLISHED TODAY By ANNA MERRITT EAST Formerly New Housekeeping Editor The Ladies Home Journal The problem of meeting the dif ficulties of this new phase of our economic existence has been the cause of much scientific investiga tion, accomplishing more in tho last decade than tho aimless ex perimenting of our forefathers achieved in generations. Tho re sults of this intensive study arc set forth in "Kitchenette Cook ery" in a straightforward, con cise form that cannot fail to prove of great value to the mod ern housewife. This book not only tells what to cook in a kitchenette and how to cook it, but takes up also tho more difficult problem, in these days of high prices, of what to buy and how much to buy when cooking for just two persons. Illustrated. $1.00 itef. AT ALL BOOKSELLERS LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY Publishers. Boston Russia Then and Now 1892-1917 By Francis B. Reeves Crown 8 34 Illus Jl 50 Net Mr Reeves headed the commission sent over by the United States In 1S92 for tho relief of Russians In those terrible famine days. His comparisons of the Russia of that period and the Russia of today are Illuminating, This volume will hold for the reader a peculiar interest at this unsettled time. The photographs areTartlcularly well chosen. , All Booksellers C.P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York London TO H. G. WELLS eio dlscoxorlng things of moro Immcdb ate interest to youth than theology. "Then you think that Wells' book Is not worth xxliiie." Doctor Mel'abre ven tuied when we were nlono ngnln. " no mentis do I think to. It is ery much xvorth while It deserves tho tespeet that Is due every earnest and sincere effort to find the truth. We ""u" HO niiie nbout sti ritual matters that the experience with them of any man Is instructive and Inspiring. There uro doubtless tnan.v men like Mr. Wells lie was reared in tho atmosphere of ho old-fashioned theology which made God a creatine of wrath with a lake of fire and brlmstono in which to torment all offenders against Ills law lie savs he icvolted against this kind of a God when ho waj thirteen vears old He Is now fifty. The war has turned his thoughts to tho great spiritual problems, and be thinks he has found a Ood who Is differ ent from tho God of his youth, dlffeient fiom the God of Christianity, a new Invisible King to whom all must bow tho kneo nnd whom all must servo with their whole heart. Up ims many blttei things to snv of hoth contempornrx and historical Christianity." "Outrageous:" This from Doctor Mc I'abre. "Hut manv of the things ho says are true. Vou remember Professor Kent said In his bonk that Chilstlanlty had not been tried It Is tho thing which has been masiiueiadlng as Christianity that Wells condemns He docs not seem to understand that he is righting 1m posters and not tho genuine thing. He demands n needless religion. Doctoi lirooks, the preacher from whoso book I lead n little while ago, nnd Doctor I-hidge. the college piesldent. nntlcipatcd him by half a century, nncl their church has been orcedless slnco its foundation, no ono knows how many hundred vears ago. The Quakers are creedlcs nml tlmv find God And even tho churches with creeds nil admit that their statements are but feeble attempts to express a cer tain phase of tho truth. They are nt best what Doctor Hrooks called leaky vessels. Mr Wells has dinned his cun into the stieam nnd has held tip to our gazo a thimbleful That he has got ex en so much Is to his ciedlt. "I havo no doubt that much that ho says will offend many Christians nnd provoko controversy but It should not do cither. His God Is neither omnipotent nor infinite. He is not the Cieutor. but only a 5-01 1 of a gloillled friend ever icady to help us In time of need, tolerant of our mistakes nnd leatly to foiglve us when we repent, as a mother forgives her child. It xx-as Voltaire, wasn't It, xxho said that God created man in his own Imago nnd man returned the compli ment? I do not want to be flippant, but It seems to mo that Mr. Wells's Ood Is the kind of a deity that Mr. Wells would bo If ho xveie God " "Is not Wells?" that rather sovero on Mr. "Oh. no. Hvery one has to express God In terms that ho understands, Just as a blind man describes sight In terms of touch. What wo all need Is tolerance for tho God of our nclchbors. When xxo learn that we aie all sincerely seeking tho same Truth nnd aio willing to com paio experiences in tho hope of mutual profit all religion will gain ti nexv life and tho distinction between believers and unbolleveis xxlll giadually disappear. If you did not read 'Tho Gospel of Good Will,' by President Hyde, of Bowdoln College, which appealed last xcar, you missed an admit ablo description of how Christianity is doing Its work In ways that vxould havo seemed strango a gen ciatlon ago. If Mr. Wells had read It hn might havo been moro tolerant of Christianity and might havo been less certain that his new religion Is to dis place tho old." Just then thero camo from the next loom tho voices of a tenor and soprano sinking: The king of loxc my shepherd Is, Whose goodness falleth never. I nothing lack If I am His And He Is mlno forever. Doctor McKnbrc listened with a pleased smile. "That's Interesting." he said. "I never knexv Cabot to sing hymns before." "Perhaps ho Is putting a meaning of his own into them." Gi:ORGG W. DOUGLAS OOD TUB INVISim.K KINO By It. (1 Wells. New York The Marnilllan Company. It J.I. The Livery of Eve By F. W. Rain j; froiiffj. Jl 50 fby tnofl J1 60) A tale told by the Moony-crested God to the daughter of the Snow concern ing Aparajlta, cunning as tho Is beau tiful and rixaled in beauty only by her own reflection, and Kins Keshaxva, who. at first adamant to her attractions, for tified against the xvlles of women by the teachings of the Pundits, succumbs to a ruse of Aparajlta's devising, hav ing first through her sorcery been dls tenanted from Ills own handsome body to dwell, .until released, In the unsightly shell of a deformed barber, who In ex chango has slipped Into tho body of the King Mr. Bain' Other Well Known Indian Tales aret A Digit of the Moon A Draught of the Blue, with Euence of the Duik An Incarnation of the Snow A Mine of Faults Aihes of a God Dubblei of the Foam A Syrup of the Bee At All Booksellers G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York London EVEyiffq LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MAT 26, 1017 WOULD BE IF HE WERE GODOLUTION OEnMOmfDEMOCRACT: 4 . &F stsKV X 'M. 7 WSzr HERBERT GEORGE WELL8 DEMOCRACY IS -ASSERTING ITSELF The Political and Industrial Rev olution in England Has tened by tho War Just xx-hat the war tins done t.. tho Uritlsh I'tuplro will not be known xvlth nnx definite noss of detail until xears after the pace treaties havo been signed Wo know mm, howexor, that It Ims set 11 polltli il nnd social revolution In progress Ihiglund is not tho same country todnx that it was In August, 1014 Its Indus! i Is conducted xxlth elllclencv Its women have cinergod from iheir seclusion and nre devoting them selves to tho service of the nation In numerous vxuvs Its pohtiial parties have fused for the moment umh r the heat of a common loxnltx its labor organizations aro xxorking In harmonx xxlth unorganized labor All thesn changes havo como nbout through tho necessities of tho situation Promises h.ixo been made that the old order will ho restored xxhen peace comes, hut these promises cannot ho Uopt When they are broken thero will come n struggle It is foi the reason that no ono can fore tell xxlth tertalntx xxhat the outcome of the strugglo xi 111 he that xxo cannot fore-cast the effect of tho war It Is Important, therefore, for any one xxho xxuuld understand tho significance of the developments that aro to como In the net ten xears to understand xxhat has been happening in the past thice .xenrs Kor fills reason Arthur Ulcasons ,liook, Inside the llrlllsh Isles," is bound to havo moro lasting value than main of the xxnr books xv Kh which the publishers are Hooding tho countrv Air fJleason Is 11 Socialist and he is plcupd xx Illi the hociallzatlou of in dustry xxhkb the war has foii-td upon xlreat Miit.ilu Hut his bellel In S01 Inlisin does not blind him to the Uiflleult of making tho change permanent Ills book is really a study in tho way democracy is, estab lishing Itself. Hngland has been theorct Icallv democratlcfl but It xxas governed by a ruling class, xvhlcn told the masses xvhat they must do. It Is now goxerncu ny 1110 people who tell the ruling thiss xvhat to do The people have selected experts of various kinds to do the work of the empire, They huvo not cared whether tho experts vvero Liberals or Conservatives, or xxhether they had prexlous political experience. Tho work had to bo dono and tho men fitted to do it havo been called to the front. This Is a rex-olutinn the slgnllcanco of which must not bo ox'crlooked. The rexnlutlon In the tabor xvorld Is equally signlllcant Workmen who made thirteen rlxets netore tne xxar aro mailing scx-enty In tho same time The prnitke of limiting output has been abandoned, and tho men are tiylng to seo how much and not hou little thej can do Their disagree, ments xvlth theli omploxcrs nre being set. tied by arbitration In xxhkh tho rlghtt- of the employes are recelxlng greater at tention til, in oxer hefore Women to whom the vote was denied by tho politicians aie doing their share or work along xxlth tho men, and they xxlll become political equals xvlth tho men xxhen tho linxernment Ik fiee to tako up tho question. Tho nation Is committed to It. nnd the politicians must respect the popular demand Mr Olinson is Lonxlnced that In ni(om pllshed reform the llrlllsh aro a genet atlon ahead of the Pnltcd .States, and that thev ,eo nioie clearlv than we the Immense lesponsihllltles which the principle of dem ocratic control rentes Ho bellexes lh.it It Is necessary for the good of tho xxoild that the t'lilted' States should open Its es In xxhat Is going onjn other countries should abandon lis solf-Inotuelt and should in op erate xxlth llnglanil nnd I'lunco In the great work of the fuluie IIIh book Is an Impor tant contribution to the literature of de mocracy. ivainn Tin: nitlTtSIt IS!,ns m Xrthur Nexx illeasnn author of oidn York. The I'entury fompanj Lads S-' Love in the Desert Those readers of fiction who specialize nn the hlood-nnd-thunder variety will find their hearts' desire In "Starr of the Desert, bv n M Hower The author xvrltes this tvpo of fiction well enough to make It thor oughly Interesting flora has not been sullied on cxery page of tho book and tho v illaln does not delight In killing other folk to put him In good humor .Mr Hnxxer has 11 clever and interesting story and this volume is nulto an Improvement over his manv other stories of tho West The hero Is one Mr Starr, a t'nlted States Oov em inent agent who has liocn fent Into the Southwest to iheck the Illegal transporta tion of arms Into Mexico While wandering through the bills of New Mexico ho en counters Helen May. tho daughter of old Stevenson, the goat lancher. Their loxers' lano" leads them .through many exents, mysterious, exciting nnd humorous Then the author goes Into detail and tolls the reader all about a m.nrlago certllicate and the event which generally folloxvs STARIt OF Till! 1)I:s1:RT lly II M noxxer, lioaion Little, II rem 11 L Co SI 3.'i Serious Trifling A hook that will mako you think Is The Trlflers " This Is a story that has strayed away from the beaten track, a story that preaches a honey-coated fcermon nnd jet n love tale, charming In Its simplicity The hero is a young Philadelphia millionaire and the heroine Is n lovely girl who Is also the scion of a wealthy family Montague Covington adhered to the Bame schedule for many years after he left college. For a few months of the year he would patronize the French race tracks. Tarlatan cafes, ttols chateau and the lHvIcra. Another fe months he toured Knuland. Mpain, tier manv and Austria, while the remaining "u'iiiiii xvere passri in sinnrwge wnere 1 t. .1 ... ..... -. i. . ....... .... ' ,,.- ,1 .iiiii-u int. iuuimuii lofin nun aiiieii wit ' h. m to xxhlp u xvlnnlng team Into shape for his alma mater. After ten years of this chedule" he wearied of It all nnd xvns 'Jolly xxell disgusted with living ' until he met an old ft lend, Margiret Htoxkton tin had aluaxs Mked Margaret but had never loxed her nnd Margaret felt the same toward Monte Hut they both wnnted com panionship and m Ither cored to lie married Monte suggests that they wed, but that each be nlloxveil to ro where he pleaded Voxv conies the tilnls and trouble of this un natural pact and the proeiss of .a husband falling In loxe xxlth his xxlfe Is well told Th loca'e of the tory is for the grenter part In sonthirn France nnd Italy TIIR Til I Ft. Kit SI in ll.i.li.n llx rtrd. rieK Orln nnrtlett MnuaKton Mifflin rimiumx An American Locko A first novel Is nlxx-axs Interesting even xvben It Is uninteresting to the reader wrho folloxx-s dexelopments In the field of fiction So mnnv young authors have become famous almost over night In .the last few vears that guessing nbout whom tho light ning xx III strike next has become a fascinat ing sport It is always unxvlse to make predictions In mntters literary, but after rending "Second Youth." Allan I'pdegrnffs first nox-el, ono Is Inclined to cast dircrc tlon to the winds nnd enmn out flatly with tho prophecy that here is an American author whose nnme, now comparntlxely un knoxvn. Is likely to command attention nnd respect Certainly there have been verv fexv xxorks of fiction offered to the public In tho last fexv years that possess greater Intrinsic tfierlt A capital story to begin xvlth. It Is made the vehicle for some really admirable character drawing, xvhlle a de lightful struln of humor runs through the book With nil thesh elements conspicuous there Is everv reason why the book should strike the popular fancy In breezv narrative and with i Mxle so charming that one Is tempted to refer to tho author ns an American I.ocke, Mr t'pdegrnff tells the storv of a Nexv Yorker a salesman In tho silks department of a big store. Into xvhosn prnsnle life Romance (xxlth a. capital "Il" boisterously enters Ilnlnnd Torn oil Francis, scion of a once prominent family which had met xxith catastrophe, xx-na nlxvaxs romantic. This the author makes ipilto cleat Tint 1; xxas not until Kate In the form of a fncln itim; xx-omau xvlth n fain y to inndiii t 1 en.un e perlments, walked up to bis munler and bought fixe yards of "that nexv wild ger anium" that the romantic drain began to dexelop After that hoxx-ixer exents tnoxe tapidly, and Mr Fiancls has flxn loxn affairs, or near-loxe affair" with n manx xx omen In a period of four month" He nl'o dnxelops in many other and Interesting xxnyH and ins Mime remarkable expeiieres In xxhlch pathos touches clo.sely upon humor, liefoio the experimenting woman li madn to realiro that Mr Francis far fiom being a lay figure Is a man to ndmlre honor nnd love. srci"O.VI) YOUTH, lielns In h nnln -nine , munt or the middle eomeOv in th, life ,r t Nexv York hsrheinr fix Allan I il kt 11 Nexv York. Harper A Pre" SI 33. Jckyll-Hydc-Orrick-Johns No better noim of critical Judgment on thd merits of ' old-fashioned ' poetry ,is op. posed to unshaikled xcrse inuld he found than III rtrrlik Jnliti" 1 "plult and 'Mini I'oems " What Mr Johns cck- to do ami xxhat hn does ire n usual among tic imngistea und ine in.iijlv mixed modem ists, different tlraxelv he Hart 1 out xxlih a series of pictures of ltv life told rnughlx ill the city's tongue Nexxshoxs In language of perfect verity, utter their raucous rails, electioneering Is flailed in the phiases of thn gutter: hospital lifo and suffering are limned, but not xvlth the art of William Ernest Henley There aren't many IIenlex xvrltlug verse today I3ut thero are today a lot of capable, fluent, sensitively attuned writers of lyiic-i with thn lyric impetus, if not the urge of more grnvc-broxxed harmonist One of these is Dr. Jekyll-Orrlck-Johns He can xvrite such a thing ns this Love la n proud snd eenlla thlni. a bstter thine to oxvn Than all of th" wln, impossible atirs oxer the heaxena blown. Ami the llltle gifts her hand slxea are careless Rlxeti or taken. And thouKh His whole, treat world break, the heart nf her l not ahaken Lovn is a xlol In Ihe xjltld a viol nexer Hilled And mine of nil l the eurrat that oxer tlms lias xvillid.' ... And the thinas that loxe elvea arter snail he as they xxere hefore, Kor life la enl a small house ani loxe Is an open door We think that proves the caso against Mr Ilyde-Orilck-Johns better than pages of polemics Jekyll should exoiclse the spirit of Hyde and tho verse that Is free, because It Is rhythmically and mentally licentious ASPHALT AND OTIIKR POHJIS lly Orrlik Johns New York Alfred A Knopf St ..-. "Mademoiselle Miss" letters from an American mil aerxlns xvlth the rank of Lieutenant In a Trench Army Hoa pltal at the front. Published for the Iteneflt nf the American Fund for French Mounded, Price, SO Cents W.A,BUnRFIELD,M,ToSJ,ST- Beaten at Their Own Game The manner of choosing iliplmnnts In America lcnp mm h t he deii.cl It lm resulted In seudlne nhrnnil men xxlth no prexlous rxperlcme and xxlth no tempera mental or mental equipment for the xxoik Yet there have been hi Pliant diplomatists chosen under this svstem The late Joseph II Choate made a record In London which compares favorably with that of any llrlt ili rriuesentntlve In Washington Ollicjr big inerlcans have also undertaken the work of diplomat y and succeeded In It by tloli .iihiitahllltx, its thev have succeeded in wliitcxci else they have undertaken rhe hixe not often appeared In fiction, li men 1 axe hs caricatures of themselves tt his mnaitied for "Unvrence Uvrne" tc pilot a sxmpntlirtiP and Just portrait of an 111erl, hi Xmbassador In the person of lohii T 1'olliorne "Iiwrenee ltvrne" Is a name asiumed to conceal Ills Identity by nn Mnerlcatt with experience In the diplomatic -eiMre He has xvrllten n novel of life in the American embassx In n southeastern I l.uroiean c mntry which will increase the respect of Americans for their reprrsentn-tlx-es abroad Colbortie, the hiro, Is n type that every ono xxlll retognlxe n hard headed business man. successful In polities xho Roes abroad to accomplish a specific thing, does It nnd cotms home. He plavs the (tame of diplomacy -.o skillfully that hs heats the Uuinpeana at it. It Is a tale of love and diplomatic Intrigue that will make the reader forget the clock TI'K IMKIIU'W AMKASSXAnnn Ttv tjvwretiei ftyrne Nexx York fhnrli srlbner's font tt 3 Inlerviews With Authors What man or vvomsn would not be pleased If nn opportunltv xxere afforded to him to hnxe a t ilk xxith his favorite author" Such nn optnotunltv comes to few, hut Tnyeo Kilmer has made 11 his business In the last two 1 r Ihlee years to Interview n group of Amerlian novelists, poets, essavlsts and short storv w rltei s nnd to get from them their views of their own work as well as on matters of contemporary literary Interest. Manx- of these Interviews were printed orlnlnilly In the Public ledger and the w York Times Mi Kilmer has gathered them Into a book cslled "l.ltcratine In the Making" Home of the xxrlteii xiho unburdened themselves to linn are I tow ells John Htirroiighs Amy l.owell, .tames Lane Allen. Hex Beach Arthur (iultermnn, Kllen llasgow. tM iv In Arlington Itoblnson. Mon tngtie Glass nnd Hubert W. I'hambers ier talnlv a atholli list I "et sons Interested In litiraix lilston nnd liter.ux misslpwill tlnd the book Instinctive mil i in. ttiilning It has hlstniliMl xalu. .mil in flft veirs It will doubtless be used ns a t-ouri'e Uic.k bx the men who then set out to write the his tory of the llteratute of the present period I.ITKRVTI'RR IN Till' VI VMM! tlv some i.f Itauiiik.rs rr.aent.,1 l, J.im Kilmer N. lurk llurpi r llrna HoniG-IUado Candy In the "Candy Cook nook. ' the nuthivr Mice llr.idley principal of Miss Farmer Si hool of Cookery, glxes three hundred re liable reclHs for candy that inn be made 11' homo without any special mnttilmry Sim takes her readers through the vntlnus stngei of candy making, fiom an explana tion of the xnluci of different kinds of sugar nnd their aitlon to ihn proper packing of elabointo sxxeets after thex hnxe been mnde The recipes, all of which hnxe been thoroughly tried and tctrd bx the author are simple and xxell ndnpted for ordinary use bv the Inexpeiiemed The process of c.-indx making Is nn enjoynhle one m.tnx of lis too soon foi get, but nfter a perusal of these pages one feels Impelled to go down Into the kitchen nnd hnxe a good old-fnshloned t.iffx pu'l or sticky pennut biillle pnrty Clear and explanatory Illus trations liberally sprinkled through tho booli ninke the different processes c-aslly under stood bx exen n child THE fANDV t IK11C IKinif llnstnn l.lttl., Hr.HXIl & tlv Alleo llradley. St Mystery Not Too Mysterious In these daxs of "fiilck-nn-tlie trigger" detective stories nnv hook that shows lels urelineas In dex eloping the plot must seem old-fnshloned The Lady of Mvsterx House ' Is a readable story of Mexican gun runners, but it must be admitted that it Is nny thine but swift-moving at tho start Latei o'i this fault Is overcome and the stirring events of the narrative folloxv ono another xxlth suftlcient rapidity to keep the reader xxell entertained The "mysterv" of the lonely Florida house where the scene Is laid is a bit too obvious to warrant the title the author has been pleased to Mint but this Is n fault that will be t.a.lih forgiven bv those who bnve n taste fu fit Inn of this imiticulnr si hool. inn i.adv or vnTi:nv not'sn nx- oren. i' Minid SI . V Virk The Vt ir nil 1 em! m qfieflTan- in, Eveninq iLlotlies tlT itKrn JOHN STOTT Author of The Cab of the Sleep' ins Horse,' Th Colonel nf the Red Hussars," "The Impostor," etc. Debonair, relentless, faultleatly dressed and fully armed, thi mys terious black-hooded figure terror ize Washington Society and baf flei the police by his smaiincly bold and cunning robberies. He is believed by many to be a member of the Social Set. TliU very cleverly constructed t.ory has a surprising denouement. At all boohsel'ers i: rolor fronds St S0rr l&imifltl 80) Published by Putnam's New York J Donald Ilankcy, hardly known by name during his life, has suddenly become a household word throughout the Enfflish-speakinjf world. Donald Ilankcy stands for all that is loyal, brave and in spiring. His book, "A STU DENT IN ARMS," has been read and commended by Bishops, Clergy, Diplomats, Army and Navy men and Captains of Commerce. Have you read the book? If not, you have missed the one beautiful and inspiring book of the war. For sale everywhere. fc&fcjjjL fcns-v-jl Kit. i w A Tale of Crookedness The Hornets ct Mrw Wilson Wo id row 1 iitit novel, li an nliMirhing tnvstery tor tepiete with 1 h ir.i 1.1 li ,11c 01 .c tr luminals The null! r has elected a ' lexer and unusual thenn for her story which holds the reader fiom the very be ginning The characters are differentiated in a masterly fashion, and with one excep Hon. are members of the Whittled family nil extremely clever-sand rejourn rut The principal charm ter in the novel, William Whitfield milllonntre traction magnate ixho has pa rt li lp.it cd In many Miiki business dulls Is ho ding and spending the fortunes of his niece, Muriel I'l. tcher, an his nephew, Fletcher I lempsti ad thc'lloriut. without their knowledge Kff.n-ts by the Hornet,' his nephew, a cynical crook and doe fiend, to recover papers from him that will assist them to regain their ot fortunes and other papers that would cause Imprisonment of the unscrupulous uncle for crook I traction ilea's proxlde many leiire situation The Hornet," Muriel and Ashe Colvln. whose loxe affair with the girl adds a touch of romance to the atorr. nre In a plot to re gain their fortunes nnd ruin the suave old t rook They are ex i ntually successful TIID . Jt"nXKT B NnsT. tlv Mrs 1 ?i?lr"S IHusirstiit by Pnul ftahr l.lttle, nrotvti nnd 1'ompanx ft Hi Wilson P.islon' Romance in the Stool Mills 'The rtond to Ambition the first novel fiom the pen of Hlultie Mcrne Is a smash ingstncess Met diaiiuti nation and ablU Itx to 1 rent, the nttno ilicie of i glgnntle steel plant M) that It .veins real le id the leadei to believe that the novel surelx nui-t hnxe lieui written bx a man Itlir Poll MntibewH, the hero li ., nun uth nn I ambition one who will not be ih tiled How In lists from n humble Hisliion to tin bead of the Ilethel Steel Work, vxinnliiK ng'ilnst all (Mlds I- t .1 1 xxith m.inelmn lealism The book Is n story for the muss,.,, nnd ilnsses It is tho kind thnl giv.s hope and encouragement to tho-e xxho think the world is retrogressing, one to Instill ninhltlnn in the hearts of young 111. n 01 " that shoxvs that work nnd perslsteme xlll ultimately- win sucress Illg Ulll Matthews won wealth and fume xx-hen he dKcoxerel i new process whii h 'revolutionised the stiel business, but he looked after tho lnteu-ts of his workers when he renched the enlth of his ambition mil's efforts to win TVnphne nn t. 1 r tho proud Indifferent daughter of .Tuilc. Van Steer for his wife forms 11 hlghlv In terostlng pirt of the good storv nir rtovp to llluslr il. I llrllt, n I 11I Its xmi 1 no I v N .1 I 111 Pi AND THE ALLIES IN THE WEST By E. Alexander Powell the famous xvar correspondent xvho has Just been appointed U. S. Military Attache to tho Italian Army Vivid descriptions of tho most picturesque fighting of the War.. Surprising revelations of Italy's splendid offensive and defensive. 1 Interesting side-lights on the great generals and leaders of Italy. With 63 illustrations from photographs and two maps Published To-dav For Sah at cl7 Bookstores $1.50 net 3 CHARLES SCRIBNER'S mxgfl&smzs&sz&mwMmw&smzwzz ByE.TEMPLE THURSTON luthor of "Tin City of lleautiful Aoncnj" Delightful Romance Told with Irish Charm Ciiy, viitty Patricia Desmond, keenly In lore xxlth life, learn that the fm been made hostage ns n pledge for lirr father's temperance. lie breaks his pledge, thereby surrendering Patricia to the Churcli. Hut she nncl her loxcr have other pi ins Hark of Mr. 'I Imrston's perfect handling of the exents that transpire, back of the romance, the senlimcnt and the cxcllin,; climaxes Is a vein nf gorgeous Irish humor. "Uncliantinrnt" 1-. Indeed a rare literary treat. 41 all eooHjeHeri . SI 50 THIS IS AN APPLETONoBOOK taiwurnTfiifrtft'Mir'- auM "77c Greatest Story This Spring" Ernest Poole's New Novel HIS By the Author of 'The Harbor" "Great in its grasp of life, great in its masterful handling, great in the sincerity of its . purpose." Phila. Ledger. "Riper and more significant than 'The Harbor'." Boston Herald. "Verily a section of life real and vital worthy the best traditions in American fiction." N. Y. Times. jVou leconof edition. At all boohsloiret. 41.50 THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, New York Rooks for Children A keen imagination and a sense of beauty are combined In "The lalry House keeper" Nature stories Jjow ecem to be In the lead xxhen the dexelopment of quite young persons la to tie considered, and Norma. Ilrlght Carson, author of the book. , has happily shown the features of the changing seasons as the work of fairy i? housekeepers for good Mo' her N'nture One . Is reminded of kindly old Mrc Doaeyou- wouldbedoneby and the little water babies. Tlte llltle lmueekeeners bring the flowers at tlte proper sMsoti and cause other de- t, light ful things during tho year Tha book . Is admirably llliutrated bx llarletlno Few ' smith. 4 "Story flays for Llltle f'h Irlren" consti tutes a p'easurable hook tint flmuld have a distinct appeal to nil llttl one The authors. Mary Lenra Hall and Sarah I'.llzn beth 1'Hlmer, graduates of the National Kindergarten College ut I'hli igo began their literary careers by composing songs needed In their xvoik. and xxlilili rlscxxhere (oiild not be found. Their ston plays and finger plays are bright mul iina. tlxo and luive a rate charm that t.ttmot help but radiate Into the heart of childhood STnnr ri.Avr itih I.ITTI.K "Mil DHKVi With Musi, , HiiKcr Plsys anil UliMiie py Mary t..ors II ill nnd Ssrnh Kiln, 1 th I'nlnv r. irllh fr, nllsrliH, stlit tun nt .1 Inks llneton' l.nthrep, !,ee nnd Hh.nnrtl 1 1111 nn SI W Tin: fvtnv urn hi:m:i pi tt iiv Norm Pilrlii 1 nen VVttli lliiisii t . nv md ilenrA lints h Hi, irtln, f -it 1 I l stnn Ita lic p U I I Mn lull i 1 11 1 FRANCIS LYNDE'S New Novel II ;ifiAJMDliT IN Published iS8Bttk5r'Tf : SSiw? A "Lj- For Sale W4' w Dook' i sSa .'W' s,or" 1 PBeSaSLi , st.3Sntt , I ciiAtiii- scHinNnrs sons I - SONS i' E Alexander Po'xvvllV t FAMILY n to y