J"is "V a. r- - r- J-Tj , 'V', v-jrt-, .7? X': ) - v ;v s " " v SS (, sr i ks Published Mr ft rt i 8 .y v . i -.,. S HHV99W I Iakarilly IN LOVE Stilt K MAJflAJtS tfMlMMrf wwfflxr or cunu usi ua at AMARILLY IN LOVE By BELLE K. MANIATES Hero is a further record of tho joyous Amnrllly of CIothcs-Line Alley Tho sweet humor and helpful ohceriness of "Amarilly of Clothes-Lino 'Alley" is ever pres ent in this new story of tho Jenkins family. Tho se:rot of Amarilly's charm is in tho "glad-you-are-alivc feeling" she gives you. Sho will share her opti mism, her joy in life, with you if you will but let her. $1.25 net TheLookoutMan By B. M. BOWER A story of life at a' Forest Re servo Station on a California mountain top, a tale of action and excitement and love, full of tho charm of the great out-of-doors." ' $1.35 net , tiVENIKG LEDGteR-PHJLADELPHIA, SATxhlDAY, AUGUST 25, 1917 WHAT HAPPENS TO UNMPRAL- MEN AND NATIONS ', .. , i- . .-. DOES GREAT PASSION JUSTIFY DISREGARD OF THE MORAL CODE? John Galsworthy's New Heroine Thinks It Does and Acts AccordinglyA Story With- out a Conscience Plots and Playwrights A Comedy By EDWARD MASSEY "In all their brief history," says one New York critic, "tho Washington Square Players havo done nothing that, as satire, or for sheer fun, compares with 'Plots and Playwrights.' " $1.00 net At All Booksellers LITTLE, BROWN & CO. Publishers Boston I THREE GREAT BOOKS The Only First-hand Account Of the Russian Revolution Published So Far in America ine kE BIRTH OF RUSSIA by ISAAC F. MARCOSSON Author of "The War After tho War," etc. 28 Illustrations. Cloth, Net $1.25 ', This is the first authentic ac count of the Russian Revolution rtho greatest event in world ' history since tho French Revo lution. Mr. Marcosson was in Petrograd during the wholo drama of reconstruction, and enjoyed personal acquaintance with the men who made tho astounding upheaval possible. His character-study of Keren sky is a brilliant analysis of the "Russian Lloyd George." Locke's Greatest Success A WARTIME NOVEL OF COURAGE, LOVE AND MYSTERY "This 'Red Planet' is going to live. It is a splendid tour Vo force . . . worthy of a Place alongside Locke's 'Be loved Vagabond' just aB ro mantic, just as tender . . . The one great charm of 'Tho Red Planet' is that once having started it you never put it down." Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Cloth, Net $1.50 Seventh Edition A Sensational Success CARRY ON LETTERS IN WARTIME By Lieut. CONINGSBY DAWSON Author of "Tho Garden Without Walls," etc. Frontispiece. Cloth, Net $1.00. "To1 those Americans who aro preparing to take their place at the front, to thoso fathers and mothers who must stay at home and wait, this little volume bears a fine, an inspiring mes- &ge. Hero is the spirit we want to have, tho spirit which , ihould animate us as a nation, .expressed very clearly and very g simply." New York Times. ALfc BOOKSELLERS "" WtWVOMK Y l0k ns lf you natl becn eat'" something that left a bnd taste In yur mouth," said Doctor McFnbrc, as he settled himself comfortably In an easy chair and lighted a cigar. Ho Is one. of thoso clcrgjmen who. llko Spurgeon, smoko to the glory of God. "It Is worse than that," said I. "I havo been reading something that left a bad tasto In my soul," "Aro you fnmlltar with Daudet's 'Sapho'?" I went on. "No, Indeed. I don't read such things." "You ought to," I Insisted. " 'Sapho' Is a great moral preachment. The motive of tho story appears near tho beginning, when tho young man carries Sapho to his room. Tho burden li easy and delight, ful up tho first flight of stairs. It be comes a littlo heavier at tho second flight, but It Is with gieat dlfflculty that ho car lies her up tho last and sets her on tho floor. Tho wholo purposo of tho book Is to show what happens when a young man succumbs to Illicit love and trusts In tho faith of hh mlstresM. Its dedication to his son 'when ho shall xbo twenty years old shows that Uaudet dellbeiatcly nin...i .. . ..... . . I'luiuii'u n iireacnrncm. uui pornograplllc aeti esses and dramatists have perverted tho thing for tho sake of making an ap peal to thoso who revel In plays of pas sion. I sfiould like to seo It dramatized in English In tho spirit In which It was written, with a competent actor playing the part of tho young man. Then it would ? rarrS 'ssrrrryrv!Tr! '""'""vi it ::l ..:::. I ' J i I I1. iimyum itf.XCA!.kw &&?3 .v& tSX lUt. awaXCwv ' - 'i &z.xH JOHN GALSWORTHY be a play that you would not bo ashamed to say that you had scon." "But I don't often go to tho theatre," said tho clergyman. "You could not afford to miss such a dramatization of 'Sapho' as I should bo glad to seo made." "I llko to read such a book as 'Tho Awakening of Helena Richie,'" said Doc tun- McFabre. "That Is a great novel." "I agreo with you, It is one of the greatest that this genoiatlon has pro duced. Mrs. Deland has a philosophy of llfo that is based on tho fundamental moralities. All that sho writes is pro jected on tho background of that phi losophy." "Then it was nothing by Mrs. Deland that left tho bad tasto in your soul?" tho clergyman asked. "No. It was John Galsworthy's latest novel. He calls it 'Beyond,' meaning, I suppose, that lovo which goes beyond all tho conventions of llfo Justifies itself. He would havo tho lovo of his hcrolno take Its placo along with what aro sometimes called tlio great loves of history. They would bo moro correctly described as the great hlstotlcal lusts. There Is some thing wrong with a philosophy which finds a Justifiable placo for such passions. Galsworthy's book seems to Justify them. His heroine has two or three years of what sho calls happinoss with her lover before ho is killed. Sho says that sho has no regrets, and that her cxperienco will bo a precious memory for tho rest of her life. The author lets us think that It is possiblo for pcoplo to disregard tho com mon moralities, to swim across the cur rent of orderly life, and not suffer any evil consequences. Ho has mado a woman without a soul, perhaps becauso he thought it was only such a ono who would bo accepted by tho reader as likely II "MademoiseileMiss Lttter from an American lrl ervlnr with thi rank of Lieutenant In a French Arm Ho "pibHihed lornVho n.neflt f tb. Amerl.aa 1 ITund for Trtnth Wounded. Price, SO Cents A.W.BUTTERFIELD, so uitoMFircr.D ST. uusiu.-h BY MRS. HUMPHRY WARD Towards the Goal "I pity any one who can read it without being thrilled through and through YgrkIIerald, "Never in her best ro mance writing has sho wielded her pen with more alluridg charm; never Jn her most trenchant essays has The produced a more convincing impression of truth'L.Ne-w yorfc Tribune. (1J!5 net g5iig&55 MWlLlIIZStMMMMlR 4 .',' I . to fall to perceive the fundamental wrong In her course. Sho would say, as Helena nichlo said to Doctor Lavendar, that sho had done no harm to any one, but Gals worthy docs not perceive, as Mrs. De land does, that to live a lio is to do vio lence to society In general." "Mrs. Deland Is right In that," said Do tor McFabie. "Of courso sho Is." said I. "And Gals- worthy la wrong. His book has hardly a pleasant character In It. Gyp, tho heroine, is tho child of a married woman by her lover. The husband, however, Is de ceived Into thinking that ho Is tho father. Both lover and wlfo llvo a He for a year. Tho lover Is proud of his passion, and a few yeais after tho mother had died in giving birth to tho child, tho husband also dies and makes the lover his trusteo and guardian of tho child. If tho lovor had been ns false In money matters as ho was In his social obligations ho would havo known that ho was a thief, but ho goes through tho book with hardly a twinge of conscience. Tho daughter when sho becomes a woman marries a Swedish violinist, fascinated by his music and his flattery, but without loving him. A child Is born to them. Sho condones his un faithfulness until ho abuses tho baby. Then sho leaves him. 'Within" a few months sho Is tho mistress of a young Englishman. Her father, remembering his own experience with her mother and her Inheritance, countenances tho new relation and i egrets that ho cannot light duels with tho neighbors who speak dis paragingly of her, as though tho "field of honor' wero a placo on which to wlpo out stains of dishonor. It is suggested that lovo Is nothing but passion anyway, and that It excuses everything." "Kven violation of tho marital con tract?" This from tho clergyman. "Of course," said I. "When passion burns nothing can stand In Its way. A nlco philosophy this, isn't it? According to It, a man may bo tho soul of honor In everything elho. but ho may stoop to tho lowest and most despicable acts In his boclal relations with men and women. Passion excuses and Justifies violating a neighbor's wlfo und foisting upon him an heir of which ho Is not tho father, and it Justifies a woman who has mado an ill-advised manlago In being falso to tho husband whom sho has deprived of the most precious possession on earth by marrying him without love. But I cannot stomach this sort of doctrine." "But Irregularities of this kind aro all about us," said Doctor McFabre, sadly. "Yes, and wo wink at them as though they wero petty faults, or, as Mrs. Wharton has said, 'tho custom of the country.' I do not believe, however, that they are so prevalent as a certain class of novelists would havo us believe. I hold that there Is some honor among men and somo virtue among women. There must bo or society would go to pieces." "I was going to read Galsworthy's book, but I think I will pass It by lf It Is llko this." "I would not do that," said I. "Gals worthy Is a llteiary artist of parts. Ho knows how to write. He can enter Into tho mind of a woman and turn It wrong sldo out. His analysis of tho mind of Gyp Is masterful. Wo nro mado to per ceive her pathetic struggle with tho forces which sho has conjured Into action, her acceptance of tho theory that the manner of her birth makes her a sort of an outlaw and her braving of tho conse quences of her actions with perfect In difference. If you carry your own philo sophy with you when reading tho book you can supply what Galsworthy has left out. Indeed, you could rewrite it Into a novel that would stand comparison with Mrs. Deland's great book. Tho characters aro real men and women, but, of course, that Is to bo expected from so experienced a novelist. But you will not get tho impression that ho likes them. The touch of sympathy' is lack ing." Just then Tho Lady Joined us. "I seo you aro talking about Gals worthy," sho said. "I read 'The Dark Flower' a while ago and I was sorry for it. The book had such a disastrous effect on my confidence In men In general that it lias taken mo a long time to regain part of what I lost." "If I did not feel that Gyp and her mother wero exceptions, this book would destroy my faith in women," I said. "It would tako moro than ono book to shako my confidence In women." said tho clergyman. "I know too many who nre so true to tho highest human instincts that they would nover surrender to the lowest under tho Impression that they woro actors In a great romance." GEORGE W. DOUGLAS. BEYOND. By John Oaleworthy. New York: Charles Rcrlbnere Pon. U.TS0. his spirit to his on body and leaves the cobbler to his unsatisfied longing. She bears the king a daughter, who grows up In her likeness, but while the child Is still a babe sho returns to the woods whence she came and leaves her husband to tho mercy of the mortal women who surround him. Professor Uafn U the master of a style wetl adapted to the romantic beauty of the talc. Ho makes a prose poem of It thnt will be read with pleasure by all those who appreciate tho tuiusual In fiction. THE LlVEnr OF EVE. Translated from the original mnnuacrlpt by K. W. lialn. New lork: o. 1 Putnam's Sons. II SO. SCHOOL REFORM IN A CHILD'S STORY "Understood Betsy" a Charming Tale of How a Little Girl Came Into Her Own IRRELIGION AS THE CAUSE' OF WAR Professor Peabody Has Written a Great Book on Religious Education ' ' IT ' 7T Mrs. Dorothy Canfleld Fisher eh soee, tlmes writes under her maiden name lfl a school reformer who believes that therj are better ways of educating children than thoso In oguo In this country. Tho Mon tessorl system, she thinks, has many merits and tho system of grading children and attempting to treat them as if they were all allko has many defects. In the current Century sho discusses the French school system, which she ha been looking Into, because ono of her children Is studying In a lycoe, tho school to which tho well-to-do French send their children on payment of a monthly tuition fco of $1. The communal schools aro free, nnd thoso parents who cannot afford tho lyceo tuition patronize them. Mrs. Fisher finds many things to ndmlrn In the French system, particularly tho recognition of tho right of a woman teacher to marry and hae children and the employment of clerks to do the ndmlnls trntlo and clerical work not connected with Instruction. Sho has set forth moro of her views on tho management of children In a pretty story about a littlo girl who had becn reared In a small city by solicitous aunts till she was nine years old Tho child was nervous. Ill-nourished and helpless. When tho homo of tho aunts Is broken up tho child finds hen-elf on a Vermont farm with somo other kinsfolk. They were wholesome country people who believed that nothing should bo done for a child that It can do for Itself. Tho day after sho arrives on the farm the littlo girl Is sent to a district bchool alone. In fear and trembling Hut when she dis covers that tho schoolhouse Is a building of one room with only twenty children In It sho Is surprised and relieved. Sho finds her placo In the new llfo quickly nnd gradually grows from a nervous, dependent weakling Into .i strong, self-reliant young creature, full of delight In tho simple llfo nnd tho wholesome affection with which she Is sur rounded Mrs. Fisher fills tho book with comments on the difference between tho way tho little girl had been brought up nnd tho way In which she was IMng and learning, comments that will be especially Interesting to ndults The f-tory of the child's experi ences will delight other children Indeed, It H primarily Intended for children. The remarks on educational methods which nre Interjected In tho courso of tho narrative aro for the benellt of molhcrs who will read the story aloud at bedtime Perhaps it may tench some of them a better way than that which they hao followed. UNDERSTOOD IlIITST. lly Dorothy CanneM. author of "The Uent Tl." New York: Henry Holt & Co . Jl 30. The Way of a Goddess The mythology of India Is rich In romance. We know little of It becauso It has not been Interpreted for us In a popular way. Scholars have attempted to master its mys teries, but they have not told us much of Its beauties. Francis William Bain, pro fessor of history nnd political economy in Dcccan College, Poona, India, has set him self th task of translating Into English some ofthe most enchanting stories of the Hindu gods and goddesses and their rela tions with men. As one reads him the Im pression Is produced that tho tales owe about as much to his literary genius as the Bubalyat of Omar owes to Fitzgerald. Pro. fessor Bain might well regard the work of rewriting the Indian tales as a relaxa tion" from his work of teaching history and political economy, but he does not. He confesses in the English "Who's Who" that his recreations aro golf and philosophy, a combination which every golf player will regard as particularly appropriate, for what golfer Is not perforce a bit of a philosopher also? . The latest book of Indian lore from Pro fessor Bain In "The Livery of Eve." the tale of a goddess of surpassing beauty who fell In love with a king taught by his father to be a woman-hater. She Is loved also hA formed cobbler, who conceives the fplan of transferring his own spirit to the body or tne Kin nu non wwmw " goddess. He makes the transfer, but the coddess and the power of love) undo him., tor "Mw kin Ww?' succumb toth mwi; ol. VM ,?! ", " JiT"5TCi1' . What Mexico Needs C W Barron, manager of tho Philadel phia News Bureau, the Boston News Bureau and the Wall Street Journal, went to Mexico a few months ago to study the oil situation He has put tho result of his Investigations into a book that he calls "Tho Mexican Problem," for he found that tho solution of tho business problem of Mexico was tied up with tho solution of tho governmental problem. Ho characterizes ns fallacies tho vldely held theories that tho natural wealth of Mexico has furnished a basn for con tending business Interests In the United States to promote Mexican quarrels and that tho land question Is at tho bottom of tho Mexican troubles. Tho fundamental cause of disorder lies In thn fact that a backward country Is brought Into contact with progressive countries nnd has not been ablo to adjust Itself to tho new economic situation The political troubles growing out of economic unrt-st havo made justice unknown nnd prevented tho creation of a feeling of confidence without which no business can prrper Yet Mr. Barron dis covered that tho native Mexican, when en couraged by tho great business Interests In tho oil region about Tamplco and Tuxpan, can bo developed Into a trustworthy In dustrial worker. Mexico needs foreign capital to develop Its resources as they havo been developed In tho oil region and sho needs a stablo government. Mr. Barron has much to say of tho mistakes of the Administration In dealing with tho pcoplo across the border. Ho would like to see tho Government in Washington co-operating with the Government In tho City of Mexico In tho preservation of order nnd In tho creation of courts which would recognize tho sacrcdness of contracts. Tho sophisti cated may bo Inclined to regard the book ns the work of a press agent for the Mexican Petroleum Company, for ho has much to say of tho brilliant prospects of that cor poration. Yet tho book ought to be useful In removing many misapprehensions about Mexico. THE MEXICAN Pnoni.EM. ny C. W. narron. With n prefare by Talcott Williams, lloston Houghton Mifflin Company. II. John Galsworthy's novel "Beyond" com pletes Its serial publication In tho Sep tember Cosmopolitan, and Chambers's "Tho Bestless Sex": London's "Mlcal," nnd Cynthia Stockley's "liluo Aloes" are con tinued. Thero aro short stories by C. N. and A. M. Williamson, Fannlo Hurst, Theo dore Dreiser and Gouverneur Morris. Tho reminiscences of Mrs. Langtry aro con tinued. This Installment deals chiefly with her acquaintance with Oscar Wilde. George Ado contributes some now fables In slang and Mary Boberts Illnehart writes of roughing It In the Cascade Mountains. There is a poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox. The relation of religion to life has been tho subject of about as many essays as the relation of literature to life. Thoso who have dlscursed these questions In this form have, ns a rule, becn ns Ignorant of literature and religion as of life, for tho mind that can concelvo a difference between llfo nnd religion, for example, can conceive neither tho ono nor tho other, for religion Is llfo or It Is nothing. Tho war Is turning men's thoughts to religion and wo are getting a clearer con cept of what It means nnd tho consequences of disregarding It. No better exposition of what religion Is nnd means has been made than appears In Francis Greenwood Pea body's "Bellglous Education of an American Citizen," Doctor Peabody defines religion ns the conscious association of tho human soul with the will of Cod, nr.d states ngaln the well-known truth that It Is broader and deeper nnd fuller than ecclesiastical history, or forms nnd ceremonies, nnd finds expres sion outside ns well ns Innldo the church His book Is broader than tho nvcrago man might think Its tltlo indicates. It deals with tho moral enlightenment of tho citi zen, a. subtect of which much needs to bo said. In tlo courso of his argument, which starts with tho religious education of a child, ho comes to tho relation of tho na tions to tho great war. Of thlfl prcgnnnt subject ho writes: Behind nil the diplomatic strategy nnd political ambition which havo provoked the carnage thero lies a long series of mornl wrongs which havo loft their stamp on national honor nnd their sctws on neighboring Stntcs. Tho awful catnstro- pho Is tho Inevitable consequence of cap tured provinces, broken treaties and cyni cal aggression. Never wns thero such a fulfillment of tho wnrnlng of Moses to the children of Israel: "Behold, yo have sinned against tho Lord: nnd bo sure your sin will find you out. The doctrine that statesmanship lies outside the area of tho moral law could have, It now nppe.irs, no other consequence than this apparently unlnterprotablo war. It Is an Inspiring volume, and should bo read by every ono who Is Interested In seri ous things, becauso It Is tho mature wisdom cf an old man who has devoted his life to tho consideration of tho spiritual problems and their application to every-day living. THE ItEI.tCHOtla EDUCATION OF AN AMER ICAN CITIZEN, lly Francis Greenwood Tea iKxIy. l'lummcr r-rofeMor of Christian morals (Mnerltus) In Harvard University. New York: Thfl Mncmltlin Company $1 -a The Latest Magazines Former Minister Henry Van Dyke's In dictment of what ho calls tho "Potsdam gang," the first Installment of which ap pears In the September Scrlbner's Mag azine, Is likely to nttract almost as much attention as tho revelations of former Am bassador James W. Gerard, now appearing In thn Public Ledger. Mr. Van Dyke rep resented America In the Netherlands when tho war began. He tells what he saw of tho German preparations for war early In Juno before the Austrian Crown Prlnco had been assassinated, nnd ho makes nn In tensely Interesting story of It. Other articles hearing more or less directly on tho war In the magazine aro on tho con struction of American warships, on tho training camps for tho soldiers, on tho English In Franco and Flanders and on tho railroads and tho work they must do Theo dore Booscvelt contributes an entertaining description of his experiences In harpooning devil fish on the Florida coast; Maurice F. Egan, minister to Denmark, has n poem, and Mrs. Gcrould's serial, "A Change of Air" Is continued. Thero nre several short stories and other poems. Many readers of tho September Century will turn first to Count Tolstoy's Illuminat ing article on "The Evolution of Liberty In Itussla," for It contains much that those who aro trying to understand tho situation In that country wish to know. Other serious articles deal with questions connected with tho war, such as n discussion of the food problem, by J. Russell Smith ; a record of tho relations between tho American and British fighting forces In China, by General George Richards : a description of the voy. ago of the first Installment of our troops to Franco nnd a summary of threo years of fighting by J. B. W Gardiner. David Jayne Hill's fourth paper on tho reconstruction of Europo Is called "The Vision of a Common wealth." Dorothy Canfleld's discussion of French schools Is referred to In nnother placo on this page The fiction Includes a second Installment of Phyllis Bottomo's serial, "Tho Second Violin." which thosa familiar with Miss Bottome's previous stories aro reading with Interest. Thero Is a coloied frontispiece from a painting of tho Municipal Building In New York by William Jean Ueaulcy, which proves onco moro that American cities aro fast becom ing as plcturcsquo as thoso of tho old world. No book touching on tho war contains such a variety of matter for thoucht and im agination as theso letters written by a young French artist from the trenches. A SOLDIER of FRANCE TO HIS MOTHER The Rochester Post-Express says: "As a human document the book is wonderful." The Netu York Times says: "There is more Inspiration in theso letters than there is in many of the volumes that are full of the glory of tho soldier's life." Translated with an introduc tion by Theodore Stanton, M. A. Price $1.00 A. 0. MtCLURQ ft COMPANY asp; i TL. .. " . - 1 1 rWf "" i -t 1.VaiW .1 . !.- I. fc. 1 TJI.' ' ' The roonaiit "The heat tho war has produced." A STUDENT IN ARMS By DONALD HANKEY Rellman "Ono of tho most forceful and Bfnulne Looks Inspired by tho world's con flict." Bafltmorr Sun "nurstinir with thlnn wo all want to know." SECOND SERIES OF A STUDENT IN ARMS Richmond Timf-Dlspatch "Tho human touch, the revelation of a centlc and yet heroic personality, comes to us so ptalnly In Its paces that wo set to know the umhor a a friend nnd to feel that the world which can produco such a man aa Donald Itankey Is worth living In." Each $1.50 AVf. Pottage extra, All bookstores. E. P. Dutton & Co., 681 5th Av., N.Y. ff w The Best Selling Book in America Today And for Good -Reason Because OVER THE TOP By Arthur Guy Empey u THE TRUEST MOST VIVID picture of that which Is In tha hearts and minds of all of us. AT ANT BOOKSELLER'S. 11.60 ret , By mll SI.IO. O. P. NtwYtrfcl futnam't Sent Ltft4M ' v A"? Get Away From War Talk- In these hectic days of war and war discussion a good story is a relief a mental tonic. Lose yourself and your war-time worries in the ages of a spirited romance HALLIE ERMINIE RIVES (Mn. roic Wheeler) the famous author of "Satan Sanderson", "Hccrr ' Courageous" and a long line of successful novel has written another a love story of the New South THE LONG LANE'S TURNING which will stir the most jaded spirit to enthusiasm This Year's Big Story For Sale iVjw at all Bookstorei Illustrated in Color, 11.30 DODD,MEAD&COMPANY,NewYork fflSil r BdFsBH -7vv 2 Published Today HftHRsKK ffsiwHFfi,,! &1 1 -wr f Galsworthy's NEW NOVEL BEYOND At All Bookstores $1.50 net. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS (jrfiooKjvM. 'Jj.MACAlIN &K FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK THE BRITISH NAVY AT WAR By W. MacNeile Dixon "Contains within a small compass an astonishingly com plete account of the manifold activities of the Royal Navy and its auxiliaries from the beginning of the war until now, includ ing full and clear accounts of the battles of the Falkland Isles, the Dogger Bank, and Jutland illustrated by, excellent maps and plans." Manchester (Eng.) Weekly Times. "The author has with remarkable brevity and brillianqy told the real story of the British Navy in the recent war. It thrills the reader, and it is as authentic as it is inspiring." Boston Transcript. 75 cents net. OBSTACLES TO PEACE By S. S. McClure The Nation says; "In respect of its content this book is probably tha book of the year in the field of tho literature of tho war. ... So admirable is the information contained in it and so poignant the lessons revealed that we devoutly wish, ns a matter of public service, that it might bo recommended from one to another, nnd read ns widely as possi ble everywhere, up and down through the land." ?2.00 net. THE MARNE CAMPAIGN By Major F. E. Whitton The London Daily Mail calls this, "Tho best analysis that has yet appeared in English of the operations of the allied armies in tho last manoeuvre-battle fought in tho West." With maps. ?4.00 net. THE RETREAT FROM M0NS With an introduction by Field Marshal Lord French. The full story of the British retreat from Mons is here, for tho first time, authority tively told from official records by a member of tho British General Staff. 50 cents net. , FAITH, WAR AND POCY By Gilbert Murray Americans who are looking for light on such questions as How CanJi Ttr- t., Tin wio-iit. TJi 'Evil and the Oood of the War. Democratic Con-. I trol of Foreign Policy, The Future of Ireland, America and the War T'-l Tho Sea .roucy oi ureal .uruuiii wm iinu it, -i "a uuua, f..w mi. WILLIAM THE SECOND By S. C. Hammer A book that has created a sensation abroad, and that will bo &) with avidity nere lor me iigni n inruwo on uio tujmwi wu -" tho German Emperor. ?1.50 net C -')''"' In ttr.tr. ttf nil uuihaforsim " . ..,."! ntic ui. """"' s. ... ..",,;-' .V". jr-"'..'?' ?"' v .&- 'Jl AB . .14 ylMtM . NOUtl h.kM ) 'jyWf.j
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