EaS2-BK3! -; te ' r .l- . K fN i iv- 3t -afci faffing o&s HUSBANDS MIGHT IF WIVES U)l Married Women Learn "Rigor Mortis" of Suppertime Melt? Man Says "No, Silence Means Peace!" IF TUB married woman steps cut of her kitchen to tako a wartlmo posi tion will she bo ablo to come home nt night and revlvo tho lost art of makliiR her husband talk to her at the supper table? This Interesting possibility has been suggested, based on the theory that man will talk about business when they re fuse to talk about anything clso, and that when the average married woman fearns to talk "shop" Intelligently her husband will be willing to exchango table conversation with her. The possibility hangs on many threads. In the first place, will a man talk busi ness with his wife now? Yes, if Bhe Is a good listener and has the gift of regis terlng admiration and Intelligence In her expression, even though she hasn't nn earthly Idea of what he Is talking about. This kind of business conversation Is very uneven. It isn't for one Instant the new sort of boncst-to-goodness "shop" talk that Is scheduled to come as a by-product of the war. This new kind Is going to sparkle with epigrams about freight rates and sixty-day discounts. It's going to bo In terspersed with thumps on the table, good, hard accentuating thumps, nuch as Jog the salt cellars In a busy noonday lunch room. Sometimes, of course, It's going to be Just placid Interchange of buslnoss axioms Interchange that will dispel for ever tho rigor mortis that sets around the dining room table at exactly 6:30 p. m. UVtpn.1., Isn't It going to be?" ' V "No," said the first married man Interviewed on the subject, "It Isn't." He said this In splto of the fact that he had Just been talking shop for one solid hour at the dinner table with a business woman who happened to be there. Ho said this In splto of tho fact that tllence frequently reigns at his dinner table when there are no guests present. I forgot to mention that this man loves his wife. Two more men who love their wives on being questioned about this echoed the sentiments of the first man. None of them objected to their helpmates taking jobs under pressure of war conditions, but they all agreed they would rather "forget all that after 6 o'clock." THE WOMAN'S EXCHANGE r.ettert nnd Questions submitted to thlt department mutt be written en one tide of the paver onlg and tlgned tcllh thr name ot the writer. Special queriri live fioje oli-en Velow are invited. It it undiritood that the editor does not nrcettarilv iniiorie the tentlmrnt ?r,Vft?.-u .?.",.n:i'.',.".'.'cn"0, H" " department thanW be addretstd as follout. TII1J .WOMAN'S KXCHAMli:. Evening Ledger, Philadelphia, ra. TODAY'S 1. What Is a Rood "home" pulKh and pre serrstlre for patent leather shoei? 2. How tan a child' hair ribbon be kept h plaeer 3. What use can be made of tftiall bits of toilet nonp? ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY'S INQUIRIES I A fl!ilFfl,l Turn t"lulfa iiju1 in tin .emu will be found to s'tie u cood bit of time and temper. -. An ordinary paint brush tvilh a Ionic handle Is the bent "duster" fur tho Intricate part of a seulnc marhine. 3 A fen- illees uf rau potato plured in n kettle here ilouiluiots are belnir fried will preieiit the rnkrs from absorbing too much Itrase. ' Use of Irish Moss To tne Vditor of Woman's Pane: Dear Msdsm Will yi li'nrt'y publish data about !rh mosa and civ food and medicinal value and recipe for onnlcln it YORK nEACH. Maine. Irish mrss or carrageen Is a species of seaweed found on tho rocky seashores of tnoat parts of Hurope and on the eastern shores of North America, large quantities of It beltig prepared for market In Massa chusetts The kind mostly uued for com merce Is from two to twelve Inches long, branched, flexible and reddish brown. It Is prepared for use by washing and bleach ing by exposure to the sun. Its food value, an expert chemist tells me. Is low. Its chief nutrients are carbohy drate;, but the substances that make them up are not easily digested and nullify tho nutrition they might otherwise give. Car rageen makes a rather pleasant drink and a delicate blanc mange which takes on nourishing quilities through the sugar and milk used with It As a medicine carragean Is more valuable It has toothing qualities raid to be good for ecldr catarrhs, etc When used this way, after bleaLMng, I'- is made Into an emulsion. Soak ten minutes In cold water enough of the moss to mako the emulsion. Boll, strain and sweeten with honey or sugar and flavor with lemon Juice. To make the Irish moss drink, follow ' this same method nf treatment, using this time, however three pints of water to an half ounce of carrageen. It may be taken plain or with spices added. In making the blanc mange milk is used instead of water and the proportion of carrageen used greater, sufficient to make a thlcklsh liquid. After this Is boiled down flavor with sugar and spices and cool In a mold. Chocolate Fudge To the Editor of Woman' Page; Tr Madam Will you bo kind enough to Jubllsh a recipe for maklnr fudae. tlllns; me ust how lone to cook it and the Inrredlsnta? OEIITRUDK M. The ingredients for choco'.ate fudge, which Is more commonly made than any other, are one tablespoonful of butter, two cupfuls of sugar, three-quarters of a cupful of top milk or cream, two squares of chocolate, such as can be broken from the large cakes of cooking chocolate, and one teaspoontut of vanilla. Melt the butter In a saucepan, then add chocolate, milk and sugar. Stir gently until tht chocolate la melted and then bring to a boll, and boil without stirring until a IlttU of the candy dropped In a cup of cold water can be rolled into a soft ball. Take the. candy from the fire, beat Jn the vanilla and stir with a wooden spoon until the candy begins to get sugary.- Four Into a buttered pin or platter. Mark In squares with a. knife. Recipe for Prune Pie To fat JEdtter of Woman' Pant: ., , Dear Hadam Can you ptaase rife ma a jeelp far pruoo pia? I know how to make tba crpat. (lira.) K. R. i'ou will require two cupfuls of cooked trunea. one-half cupful of sugar, one table poonful pf flour and the grated rind of one-half orange. Take the stones, from the i,j-unes, quarter them and put in the pastry- lined pie plate, which haa been previously prepared Coer with the rind, flour and IV augar I'ut the upper crust on and ttympen a very little with milk. Bake in a .- hot vn fr half an hour. Purtng-th tift tMJmUf.f- of the baking redue !P or Women Atf itew'ue Supper Ta We TaA: TALK AT TABLE GET WARTIME JOBS to Talk Business' Will A light-gray velvet cap, with gayly colored striped band of silk and gray aigrettes! ' "ITfHAT does It mean? Skipping all the mean little things that suggest themselves like "Jealous" and "stubborn," and giving the men the benefit of believing them, what iloc.i It mean? One man. the last one Interviewed opened his heart and answered our ques tion "What docs It mean.'" hctakl. "It means that the average homo man and that's what America is mostly mado up of, aver ago home men will never want to trado his wlfo for a bunch of noonday lunch conversation. Tes, wo do talk business oc casionally to women who aren't our wives and we seem to enjoy It. Maybe It's tho novelty. Maybe we get so Interested in tho topic wo forget we're talking to a woman and think we'ro talking to a man. And yet, taking It on that basis, If talking to men all the time were bo attractive, we would probably never marry. "It's not women who marry for homes : It's men. It's homes we want. Homes with fights In them and supper silences. Silences don't always mean boredom; they mean peace. Wives arc our reward. They represent a different world. Please don't take them away from us." I wonder If the last man meant what he said. Who Is willing to venture an opinion? INQUIRIES 1, What Is the difference between an military and a rrorklnr (roup or the Red Cross? I. What Is a TurkMi hem? . 3. What embroider? Is Men on (he new lells that were In vonie In crandinolher's day? 1. Period furniture Is furniture built ami nam.Ml after the ktjle of that used in the larlotis periods of hlator.r. Colonial, Ixmla Fifteenth, etc., are specimens of period furni ture. 2. It la not proper for a man to remain sealed when n woman enters the room or rises to leave It. Indulgence In this matter, hoitfrer, Is as a rule extended to a man br his Immediate family in the privacy of family life. 3. A bit of rreaselesa cold rream robbed thoronchly Into the nose before powder Is dusted over It will prevent unslrhtly raklnr of the powder. To Sell a Scenario To the Hdltor or Woman' Paoe: pee' Jladum Kindly Inform me through jour valuable paper If thr Is a nhotopiay rominnv that purchases scenarios. If so. how could I coirmunlcata with It' a, x. Most of the big photopiay companies employ men especially to do their scenario writing. On tills account they do hot pur chase very many scenarios written outside of their own studios. The moving picture play Is not the easy thing to write that It appears to be. There are. however, agen cies that make a business of placing M.enar!o written bv "outsiders." If you think you hue done something worth wlille. why not send it to one of these? You will tlnd the names of them advertised In the Photopiay Magazine. Go to Theatre With Young Man? To tht Pditoi ot Woman Page: Dear Madam Is 1t customary for a nunr Klrl to o In the t.-.eatre alone at nlirht' with a muiie msn" OI.ADYS. It dtper-ds very much on the age of the joui.g girl and whether she has known tho man for any length of time. It would be a mistake for a sirl under twenty to go unleas she and her parents both know the man who asks her very well ; but It Is not a very good plan to go to a place of amusement unchnperoncd with .acquaintances of a few weeks or a month or so. Otherwise it Is considered correct to go. To Name a Uniform To the Editor ot Woman' Page: Dear Madam I am wrltlna these few lines to ask you in answer this question for me In tho Kxnimj LKPniit. What do those alrli rep resent who wear blue unlformo with brass but tons down the front, brown hats with anchors on them and brown ahoea? ANNA B. No organization questioned on the sub ject of the uniform you describe seems to be able to Identify it A chief jeowoman of the navy wears a blue uniform with brass buttons on It, but she does not wear a brown hat. The other yeowomen wear blue shirtwaists and skirts. The Motor Messengers, a band of young women con nected with the Emergency Aid, who run their own automobiles In the service of war work, wear khaki. Girl Scouts wear brown hats and brown shoes, but the rest or their uniform Is also brown. Perhaps the garb you iiaw belonged to some church or Btiiuui urnaiiizaiiou not generally Known. Maybe some pf our readers will be able to help you out. ' The New Giant Turbine Plant To tht Eiltor of Woman' Page; . Dar Madam Would ou pleas tell ma nhtr I can set Information about the Weattnahouse factory In DsslnKton. I'a.T I have tried tht library, but hava not been successful. B. B. In the library ot the Public and Evekino X,kdoer, Boom 318, Pablic Ledger Build ing. 606 Chestnut street, yoq can get de tailed Information about the Westlnghousa plant, now In course of erection near E slngton. Ask the librarian for all of the clippings on Westlnghouse, and Lester, Lester is the name of the small town In which the plant la being bftllt The factory which will manufacture turbine engines and which will give employment to at least S0.000 fs, of course, not nearlnr completion as yet If It Is just Information about the employment of women you desire, write to the Westlnghouse Electrical and Manufao- I luring. Company, In Pittsburgh. That ad- I Vyvettes - EVENING tBDftBBPHILABBLPHIA,- gATTjSDM gBBTBMBEB -22-, GOOD HEALTH QUESTION BOX' DjOHN HARVEY KELLOGG, M. D., LL. D. In omwtr to .o!t awtloiu, Joelorlloci M snaee will dailu Blue of?'",", ?!!!S'JmS' medicine, out In no com will n lake the rtsb ot making dlagnottt of or P"tcribinpOTaU- ment requlrlnn auroleal treatment or drngt. Health ouettiont will be- Trornttly an- icered hit jeroaJ teller to Inoulrert who Ineloje stomped envelope Sot reviv. Arteriosclerosis THIS disease Is much more common than formerly supposed. Tho cause Is tho circulation of poisons In the blood. There arc many poisons which produce hardening of the arteries. The most active of these are syphilis, lend, alcohol, tobacco, caneiii, tho poison of tea and coffee, and last, but not least, colon poisons. It Is probabi that notions Eencrated In the colon from tho putrefaction of undigested portions of meat are the most common and most serious cauKo of hardening of the arteries and pre mature senility. A ery common sjmptom which results from hardening or tno ar teries is a rise of blood pressure. The normal blood pressure la 100 to 110. In arteriosclerosis the blood pressure rises to 180. In arteriosclerosis the blood pres sure may rise to 200 and even 300. In mxny cases changes of the arteries occur without a rise of blood pressure. An elevation of blood pressure generally gives riie to very little Inconvenience at first. Later comes shortness of breath. In somnia and numerous other distressing symptoms High blood pressure Is an Im mediately giav symptom and when found present should lead to an immediate change of habits In renouncing the use of tea. cof fee, tobacco, alcohol or any other nault drug. Condiments must be discarded rrom the dietary ; also meats of all sorts. The bowels must be made to move inrcc or four times dally. 12erv possible means should be taken to suppress the development and aborptlon ot poisons. An out-of-doors llfo. a inrge amount of moderate exercise and warm fnot hot) baths are of great Importance In reducing tho high pressure. The electric light bath used In niolleratlon renders most valuable service. Massage of the whole body and thorough friction of the skin should be applied dally. In many cases these simple measures bring down the blood pressure thirty or forty points, some times even more. Arteriosclerosis la natu rally a progressive disease, hence must be fought with great thoroughness and per sistency. A person who finds himself a victim of the malady must prepare himself for a lifelong struggle with the tllseas as the only condition on which ho can hope to extend his life for any considerable period PATSY KILDARE, OUTLAW By JUDD MORTIMER LEWIS Seeking Information AFTEII I woke up this morning Itowdy Jumped on the bed and we were having a dandy pillow fight when one of the pil lows busted and filled the air with feathers. So then I got up and dressed and made the coffee and stirred the pancakes and when my father came I had them ready for him. He said they wcro very good except for the feathers In them. But of course that did not keep me from feeling proud, for It was I who made tho pancakes and God mado the feathers, so I was not to blame if the feathers were not all right. It Is a kind of a long way out to where the ojd man thinks he is planted when ho li really burled and I did not feel sure that I would have a good time out thero with no bull to chase nor nothing, bo I sat on the steps a while thinking It over and I con cluded to go up to the Vacant lot and see whether thero were any kids playing ball. When I got up thero tho kids were all dressed up and thero was no ball game. Then I remembered that It was Sunday. Just after that I met the preacher and r said, "Good morning." He stopped nnd looked at me and said, "Oh, it'i you. Is it?" I said. "It certainly Is." Ho said, "You ought to bo taken In hand by the Child Welfare Society and cared for." I looked at myself all up and down the front nnd as far around behind as I could nnd I did not see nnythlng wrong. I sajd, "For cat's sake, there's nothing the matter with me. But I want to ask you something. Do people grow?" He said, "Of course peoplo grow or they would al ways be children." I said, "I mean when they are dead and burled. How about It?" He put his fingers together and said. "We place what is mortal of them In the ground and they grow up and grow up from the earth and blossom In heaven." I said, "Are you giving It to mo straight?" He said, 'Most assuredly " I said, "Well, that settles that. I know a girl who was not half so crazy In the head as jou are and they kept her locked up " Rowdy and I went out to the graveyard and looked around and there were no stems growing anywhere. If the people who were burled there were growing and blossoming the way he said the graveyard would havo been full of stems. My mother's grave was looking pretty well, for somebody had put flowers on It There wero no flowers on the grave of tho little girl who&e mother had cried about her being In heaven till I told her how silly that was, so I took the flowers off my mother's grave and put them on the llttlo girl's grave, for what does my mother care about flowers when we havo got each other .' Then Rowdy and I went across the bridge and up the street and it did not seem to be Sunday over there, for the kids were not dressed up and a woman let me hold her baby while she got dinner. They had pigs' NAVY RELIEF FUND CONCERT High-Class Program Arranged for To night at Academy of Music A high-class program has been arranged for tho concert to be held at the Academy of Music tonight In aid of the Naval Bene ficial Fund and the Navy Relief, headed by Chaplain Dlcklns, of the Philadelphia Navy Yard. Many professional artists of note. In cluding Instrumental and vocal soloists, will be the attractions of the performance. The Academy is now being fitted up for military drills, motion pictures, vaudeville and a large symphony orchestra. Commander J. H. Rcld, of the navy yard, and other prominent officials will add a martial touch to the affairs. Hospital Unit Members at Meeting More than one hundred and fifty members of, the University Base Hospital, Unit No. 20, attended a meeting In Wetghtman Hall last night. Addresses were made, by John C. Bell. Major J. B, Carnett and Major Thomas II. 'Johnson. THE CHEERFUL CHERU5 TKc other people stzs indoors ax mom. And sit in leather ctairj wound the h$kt. But 1 go out and jpre&d my win5 nd -jy And spend the. f j eveninp; with the stars nd sUv: . ITC"? The final' result of arteriosclerosis Is apo plexy, might's disease, heart disease or a combination of the three maladies, so-called cardlo-vascular-renat disease. Harelip What la the cause of harelip? MOTHEn Harelip Is a congenital defect due to in complete development. Consult a good surgeon. Many operations for harelip are often advisable. ' Nightmare What In the cause of nightmare and the beat remedyT IAJC1NUA. Nightmare Is a nervous disorder occur ring during sleep and Is most frequently caused by Indigestion. The remedy Is to avoid heavy eating at night; eat a very light evonlng meal, avoid lying on the back and see that tho bowels arc emptied before retiring. Angina Pectoris What la anglni pectoris? I It nUe1 It is hardening of the arteries of the heart. This condition can be arrested. There Is also a condition known as false angina pectoris which Is reflex, due to some disturbance of tho stomach which Is very readily curable Salt in Food Is It necessary to rut salt In ones 'Jjrt , No : we cat salt simply because we have a liking for It and our palates hao been trained that way. Food In Its natural state Iirh all the Ingredients necessary for the human body. However, a very little salt may be ndded to food without material In Jury. Tho large quantities of salt which many people cat are Injurious. The kid neys aro overtaxed and other harmful ef fects nro produced. Tho less salt wo use the better It Is for us. Weaning At what ai should an Infant be weaned? I,. O. N'lno to ten months. (Cosyrlcht) feet and boiled cabbage, which makes a ver good Sunday dinner, I think, and so did Rowdy when he got a piece of pig's wrist. Then we wont out into the country to grandpa's grave and as sure ns you aro alive there Ik a. skunk cabbago growing on it' That has got me guessing, for that is exactly what grandpa would be if he sprouted. I guess thero are a whole lot of things that n llttlo girl does not under stand. "first Aid," the net !'nts HihUre adven ture, appear In Monday's Hienlnc ldrer. Tomorrow's War Menu BREAKFAST Canlaioupo Chicken I.lvern and Bacon Cinnamon Buns Coffee DINNER Chicken en Casserole with Rico Lima Beans Tomato Salad Grape Sherbet SUPPER Blushing Bunny on Toast (Made of melted American checso and a half a can of tomato soup. Served like rarebit ) Baked Apples Ginger Cookies IN THE MOMENT'S , MODES I Foil Frock of King's Blue Jersey Cloth Jersey cloth, that fabric for which many of the style creators pre dicted a declining vogue, has re fused to be left out of the season's fashion running. It is a particu larly fetching little frock that is pictured in the adjoining sketch. Here the material is king's blue Jersey, with Hudson seal supplying the embellishment. The single pocket, the girdle arrangement and the iMftiomng oi the collar are eGwetTwrtaWnty wertiiy of More J J I 16a WHEN A MAN IS PURSUEjD BY WOMj MEN ARE THE WEAKER SEX When Skilful Woman Sets Out to Capture a Man He Might as Well Surrender at Once. He Cannot Escape CAN a man escape when a woman se'ts out to marry him? This Is tho question which Alice l)uer Miller answers In her latest novel, "I,adles Must Live." It Is a story ot the deliberate kidnapping ot a man by a designing woman, not physical kidnapping, but tho entanglement of him In n chain of clrcumsta'nces from which he flnds it as Imposslblo to extricate himself ALICE DUER MILLEIt as If ho had been bound hand nnd foot by ropes and tied to a tree. If a man had written the book he would havo been de nounced from ono end of tho country to the other as a libeller of women. Mrs. Miller l8a woman and she must be credited with somo knowledge of tho temper nnd temperament of her sex. She Is a suffra gist who beltees that women are deprived NEW POLAND SMALLER THAN OLD H. A. Gibbons Explains Why the Restoration of Ancient Boun daries Would Fail The tragic tale of Poland and tho Poles proves that It la impossible to destroy the national feeling in a race, and If wo may acctlit Herbert Adams Gibbons as a com petent authority. It also proves that there Is no more serious blunder for statesmen than to attempt to organize a State on purely racial lines. Weight must be given to other considerations. Poles lle In all parts of the territory once under their HERBERT ADAMS GIBBONS political control, but, In the opinion of Mr Gibbons, It would be impossible to organize a new Polish State with tho old boundaries. There has been a mingling of populations on tho fringes of the old Poland and an ac ceptance of tho new political order bo gen uine that disorder and discontent would follow any attempt to change the political allegiance of these people. Mr. Gibbons In "The Reconstruction of Toland and tho Near East" gives a clear picturo of the present status of the Poles Tho Congress of Vienna In 1815 guaranteed the preservation of national institutions for the Poles and assured them of national representation In the governments of Rus sia, Austria and Prussia. This guarantee has been disregarded. Austria, It is true. has allowed a certain degree of political independence In Gallcla, but she has put the Poles In economic bondage. Thero has been no pretense cither in Prussia or Rus sia to respect the political rights of the Poles. In Prussia there has been eco nomic prosperity, but the Government has exerted Itself to destroy Polish Institutions. In Russia there has been a considerable de gree of economic freedom, so much In fact that tho Intelligent and industrious Poles constitute one of the most prosperous groups of the Russian population. The Poles, however, trust the promises neither of Rus Bla nor of Germany. They may have greater faith In the new Russia than In the old. The present Polish State which Ger many has created by decree Includes only that part of Russian Poland which the Ger mans have conquered. Mr. Gibbons would have the Independent Poland to be set up after the war Include about two-thirds of Posnanla from Germany ; tho kingdom of Poland. Including Khelm, from Russia, and Gallcla, excluding the Red Ruthenla, from Austria. This would make a homogeneous State capable of an Independent life and It would set up a currer Detween uermany onu Russia that would be of great value. Mr. Gibbons goes with equal thoroughness Into the problems Involved In the disposition of Constantinople ana tne uaiaan oiutes. THE RECONSTntirmON OF POUA.ND AND THE NEAH KAST. My Hsrbart Adama atb bone, author of "Tha Now Map ot Europe." Naw York: The Century Company. IJ. Retreat Prom Mons A member of tho British General Staff has written a chronological account ot the retreat from Mons, beginning on August 24, 1914, and continuing to September 5. He does not attempt to apportion pralso and blame. Blame enough was heaped on the British officers by the people at home when It was discovered that they had to flee be fore the onrushlng Oermans. Field Marshal Viscount French has written an Introduc tion to the little volume containing the story of the retreat. In the course of which he says truly that it Is altogether too early to "Laugh and Live" Douglas Fairbanks Latest Hit . v. The big non-fiction book of 1917. SorintjAtld Union says.' "If this g-ret Inspiration al book does not develop Into tint! not sort of best tiler, theAmericso tub liqlstoelnsitstute' AUBooluioret JLMNei IOB,jkWV WWmm iggsiass.'ssxaf.a.-ig.si' v'rv,mm',rzs!2!2Z3i.i I ' w 1917 by men of their political rights. It may be that her book Is Intended to niouso her sisters to a consciousness of their power and to Inspire them to uso It In order to get tho votc. This Is not probable, however, for the book, on Us surface, appears to be nothing moro than a social satire. The hero Is a young man from tho jst who has made a fortune In airships. Ho Is called Max Rlatt. a nnmo that sounds to much llko Wright that tho nssumptlon that the Dayton Inventor might havo been In the mind of the nuthor Is not forced. Ho meets two beautiful women at ft Iong Island house parly, ono of them unmarried and ttvo other married The latter plnns to nttnch his scalp to her belt nnd tho former decides to marry him. There Is a. lot of plnylng for ndvantage In the first hours after the cnlranco of tho young man on the scene. Hs Is amused but not deceived by It Ho Is soon trapped Into proposing marriage to tho jounger woman, nominally In order to save her reputation. She accepts him and at tho same time agrees to release him within two months. She has won tho first skirmish in tho bat tle. She continues to play her game and Rlatt continues to play his game, and wo havo tho nnel situation of an engaged couplo who must act In public as If they loved each other, whllo In private each Insists that the agreement of release must be respected Tho outcome is Indicated In the llrst paragraph of this article. The uonuiii wins and wlndi the limit about her flnger, whllo ho thinks ho I a frco ngent. Tho mbllliers describe the book ns u ' pirate storv of NVw York high society " Whether Mis. Miller would so dencrlbo It is an open iUcstlon. Hlic doubtless in tended to show men how powerless they nro and hrm completely they aro at the irercy nf tho weaker sex when that sex fights with the weapons of which it is mis tress Men should read tho story for their edification nnd women for their amusement. LADIK8 MUST 1.1 vn. ny Allen Dufr Mlllrr. author of "Com Out of the Kitchen." Illus trated by Taul Melan. Nen- York. Tho Cen utry Company. II. -3. pass any final Judgment on the movement, for all tho facts cannot be known for a. long time to come. It Is known, however, that the Ilrltlfli expeditionary forco was scat tered over a wide stretch of country while It wasfleeing. and that scattered groups of men from different regiments thought that they wero tho only survivors. A hostile critic might say that, tho .whole army be camo demoralized, but tho staff otllccr who writes tho story does his bet to creato the Impression that the army was retiring In pretty good form considering nil the circum stances. Those military experts who are studying tho movements of the armies will find tho book an lnvnluablo compendium of facts. THE ItF.TnKAT KltOM MOXS. Willi a rrefaoe by Klrhl Marshal linl French. Uoston: llouthtou MlliUn Comti.iti. Co cents. October Magazines - The October Century has an excellent as sortmeiit of fiction. Including a, story by Arthur Maclien nnd an installment of Phyl lis Uottume's serial, "Tho Second Kiddle": but the serious-minded leader will be particularly Interested in the articles on iiuestions of public Interest. Ipcelnll uutable Is n discussion by Harold Kellock of the efforts now making to form a now liberal paity In America in the Service RHYMES OF THE ROOKIES TT. K. CrKlST.AN Rollicking camp life ballads of our men in khaki. Army verse for army men. Just the size for a sdditt's, pochst. Cloth. $1.00 limp lei-ther, 11.50 DG3OT, lUUO C3UANY I II For Your Soldier J THE COMING DEMOCRACY By HERMANN FERNAU Author of "Because I Am a German" Tlu X. Y. Tribune sans: inspired by the great war." Price $2.00 Net. Postage Extra. At All Bookstoret. mK.rfrS!wntW IP3HrLV "SB mil & sW rt 4.- The subject was dlscuas.rt i . T dispatch In the Evbnino LEooi.lt" and tho movement seema .rV headway. Davld Javn inn " ..? relation of the future of .;,"'"' i German plot; S. K. IUtciiir.T". crli esting summary of the aetlvltleai .J h nan intellectuals, and Erlo Pi.h.ir' tributes n character .u...u8?'r.?rcos for whom ho has unbounded admSjl Former Mlnfster van Dyke'. . a the dermaii character nn .J1""! method of waging warfare. whiv v0" tho September Scrlbncr'g Mar.uJSi t nucd in the October number S ticio unacr mo lino of "The .." Lnrge," In the course of whWY .of tho thlncH which i .. J li ta the conduct of the Gcrmahs In juii11 ought to be read by e.rv in. I.?- to learn from unimpeachable RUUwrhV ma urcii iiuiipeinng. The eA,C Henry Jnmes wilt be Interested l. ? I.n-.nnl.lnnl ...... --.... .W lO SB s, u,uSii.iiU,L.L i'tici, entitled "Tk. 1 Years." Much entertalnlne ni.5 his llfo Is told In hie Inimitable L" would want to Imitate lt v-.?.1 CJcrould's serial. "A Change or AlrM? m tlnued, nnd thero aro several short i.S and two poems. The frontlsplec, (, production In color of 'The jwi Goya, and there Is an article on u2vJB in America by Helen Churchill CanlttT? Keivtvy By (he author of the $10,000 prise novel "Diane of the Green Van When you've read it you'll want to talk about it Read it I At your bookseller's 11 Aj tfensy .KowV By the author of "Why Men Fight" POLITICAL IDEALS By BERTRAND RUSSEliJ It can be done. The a: women and children of wonu can uc maae more con fortablc. more valuable imbi. selves anil to others, hippitf. The author tells how with tit" clarity of a practical, wise ma' pud with the passionate di quence of a poet. i Price $1.00. At all Bookltm. Published by THE CENTURY CO) New York City The best idea of what confronts commissioned officer in the wr. The most complete account of prisoner's life in Germany. The author was five weks on tbs Sommo firing line. , After being blinded Captain Nobbs was for three months a prisoner of war, during which time the first chapters of this book "were- written. $1.25 net. Charles Scribner's Son, New York mWWWW j f , 0ntheRiMe "We commend the book to everv serious reader c s one ofj the foremost books of universal and permanent value thus far. E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Avenue, New York i A new RINEHART story) Long Live The King By the author of Mrs. Rinehartf rreatest novel- 1 tale of love, mystery and adveaJ woven about a boy king whose w was Abraham Lincoln. 1 T M.ri jacKet m tuu color by mm j- Keller, illustrations in tint by Arthur E. Becher. 1 $1.50 net, at all bookstores HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPAN 4 Park Street, Bwrtoa ft A JJtL i.f ttMt V$ 'If JW-kL-. T6 ..4.tW wr .V4 ..!" V,. :. C.-i'.'' ?&Vr"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers