If a"B,t.",,'7 EVBMKG LltaWKR-.pHliAiUJU'JJXii, SATUHDAY, SlJPTKiVIBBR 32, BIT EDICINE FOR THE ILLS OP THE WORLD WHAT DRINK DOES TO BUSINESS MEN IIJIX'' H ij,)ifl)ffrMyas)i i r( r'i 'v. memtmims HOW THREE MODERN HAMLETS . PRESCRIBE FOR ILLS OF THE WORLD A Form of Socialism Is the Remedy of Bertrand Russell and Upton Sinclair Sherwood Ander son Believes in Marching Men IWWS leading a little rod-lcathcr-cov. eretl copy of "Hamlet" In the beautiful Temple edition and thinking of the per plexities which troubled tho young Dan ish reformer. He did not find tho world ho Knew a ery satisfactory place In illicit to live. Things wcro going wrong and the necessity of setting them right pressed heavily upon him. The door bell rang and In a few mo ments Doctor McFabro and hi" niece, prlscllla Amos, were shonn In. Prlscllla Is a sister of Cabot, and sho has como to stay with her undo while Cabot Is In the armj As her cyo rested on the little book in my hand sho delivered herself of a sniff of contempt. "I neer had much uso for Hamlet," ho said, settling herself comfortably in tin easy chair "A man who ilnds tho time out of Joint nnd regrets that ho is called to set It right haa. something the matter with him Ho ought to bo glad of the chance ' "Prlscilla came under tho influence of Vida Scuddo when she was In 'W'cllcs Icy," Doctor Mct'abre explained. "That will explain a great deal.' said I, with a ciilr?lcal smile at Prlscilla ".Miss Scuddcr Is all right " sho said. 1 know that thcie are people who do not UPTON SINCLAIR like lici opposition to capitalism, but if the had been Hamlet tho story would hao ended dlffcrcntlv " "I suppose she would have Jumped at tho chance to ve-v the lottcuness out of Denmark '" I i emm ked 'Of louibc she would and she would have matlo a good job of it." "J don't know about that," taid Doctor HcKabre "I am afi,ild sho is too vlslon ary Yet I cannot help admiring tho sphlt that Is willing and anxious to mako the world better" "You are engjged In that kind of work j yourself, doctor," said I, "and of course jou sjmiMtnlze with the motives or ethers trying to sDcuro tho samo ends. I - hm A ft, ...... I.nnlra I1A1 a . n n tin.tnlu nml mv iiiivv uynjim nvi c, iwt iiuvcio utiu u, olumc of political essays that would in terest you Tho men who write them are not satisfied with the world as It is " "Who is satisfied with It?" Prlscilla de manded. "And the) think they have dlscoered a way to make It better," I went on. "One of them Is liortrand Itussell, who wrote 'Why Men right,' that we talked about somo months ag6. Another is by Sher wood Andeison, an advertising agent who has begun to -write novels. And tho third is by Upton Sinclair." "A revolutionary Socialist!" exclaimed the clergyman. "A social prophet" said his niece. "Georgo Brandos agrees with you, Prls cilla," said I. " Ho has written a flatter ing Introduction to the book, In tho course of which he describes Sinclair as 'one of the not too many writers who have con secrated their lives to the agitation for oclat Justice." Sinclair, jou knqw, thinks Draiimiiiiniiiniiiiinnmiiiinmraiiimiiiiitiiiiiiiii!ii:jii;niiiiiii:iig WEST POINT I 1 By Robert Charlwood I Richardson, Jr. ! Captain 2nd Cavalry. U. S. A. 1 Lata'Attlit Prof, of English a U. S. M. A With a Foreword by I I Maj.-Gcn. Hugh L. Scott, I I Chief of Staff, U.S. A. An intimate picture of the g National Military Academy and s the life of the cadet. 1 The volume gives, aside front g a brief historical sketch, tome thing of the feeling of the cadet from the moment that he report for duty until he graduate four year later the custom, tradi (font and method of training of the Academy. The author ha translated into word the spirit of the institution. The book i addressed primarily to the gen' tral public to that that public may become better acquainted B with the aim and ideal of their National Military Academy. To E (At prospective cadet the book i y invaluable, g CV. i: 32 lllus. $2.00 net. (Bv Mail, (2.10) 3 G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS i 1 New York London g eraiiiiuiiiiiHiiiiiiiimitiiiiuiniuiHiiiiiimiiinmiimuiitiuiuiiiiiiiri gf K; bbbbbbbbbbKi. B k5 " bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbv 8 1 BF J' 'bIbbbbbbbbbbbbHI Bi JHaafeJaaW'' aaBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaf Received the prize of the Academie Goncourt, of Paris, for the best book of the year . UNDER FIRE 126,000 Copies Already Sold in France (LE FEU) The Story of a Squad . ?1m InUn h:-vr'-.T,-"'i!..'",.M!" j".v. ",:i' lm.,A .tvu ...vl.... wl,K IT1.Bff.rlV -T .v.i"l- in. oaiijr 111- t am luri, vu he has dlscoered the cause of all injus tice nnd can tell how to rcmovo It." "Yes, 1 know." said Prlscilla; "ho advo cates tho abolition of private ownership of property." "Ho wants something like State social Ism," I continued. "His book is the story of tho injustice from which the coal min ers suffer. It Is written about tho great coal strlko in Colorado in 1913-14. Al though it Is in the form of a novel it Is a propagandist document, so constructed ns to make the plcturo of life among the miners as depressing as possible. It It full of special pleading. He says that every Incident In It Is based on a similar occurrcnco In tho mining region, and that every charucter of Importance is a portrait of an actual person. Yet with all tho unfairness of It tho book Is worth while. Whether tho disgraceful condi tions In tho Colorado coal regions arise fiom the evlli of prlvnto ownership or not there Is no disputing their oxlstence. Tho surest way to euro them Is to mako them public, for the more we know about social injustlco the more emphatically will wo demand social Justice fllnclali has done a public service bj e"mindlng those of us who lte in comfort that tho v.orkeis in a great industry in some parts of the country aro living In conditions that should not bo tolerated a momont in a free country." "I think wo are all agreed on that," said tho clergyman. "Fortunately we are," said I. "And there aro many reasonable men who aro agreed on the most practicable way for Improving conditions. They do not think It necessary for a social and economic revolution to precedo reform. Tho laws wo already hao would mako tnattcis much better If they were enforced and ns soon as there is public sentiment which demands their enforcement tho condl tlons will begin to lmpioe. Uertiand Itussell, however, holds with Sinclair that soctoty is organized on a. ladlcall) wrong economic basis If we change tho organ izatlon, ho sas, we could abolish abject povcity In twenty years and allow tho widest freedom to tho Individual to work much or Ilttlo as ho chooses. It Is n beiuttful dream, based on the fallacy that tho moral and Intellectual habits of men are dependent on their social Insti tutlons." ' There Is a great deal of truth in what he tays," said Prlscllla. "I would not ad mlt It to bo a fallacy." "I do not like to dispute a lady." said I "but I think that jour undo will agree with me that thero must bo somo inward change In a man beforo the externals of his life are made better. Wo talk about tho effect of democracy upon tho develop ment of America, and comparo this coun try with backward Ilussla. Hut ou must know that there was democracy in the minds and purposes of the rcvolutlonaiy fathers beforo It became embalmed In their political Institutions. Mr. Russell's essays aro interesting becauso they show how far a man who detaches himself from the meat facts of llfo and from tho great forces that move men can wander astray. Why, ho says that no man can have more than ho needs without taking it from somo man who has less. He would have tho Stato take charge of cer tain activities and place tho management of every Industry In the hands of the workers In It, thinking thereby to bring nbout a fairer distribution of wealth and greater content and comfort. Ho would abolish all interest and all rent and re move all incentives to industry." "But rent and interest are robbery," Insisted Prlscilla. "Aro they?" I asked. "I have heard that stated before, but I have been told by somo economists that Interest Is merely the wages of stored up labor, pre served for uso in emergencies, and that rent is Interest for a, labor preserved In another form. If tho wage system Is rob bery then perhaps jou might say that these other things aro robbery also. But the wago sjstem, which is tho product of centuries of evolution, is working pretty well, save In exceptional cases. And where It does not work the trouble Is duo more to the workers than to the system. We may find a better way for wo have not yet arrived at perfection. So I llko to read such books as Sinclair's and Rus sell's in the hope of finding light." "I gather you have not found much in them," Doctor McFabre remarked. "I regret to say that I did not," I ad mitted. "I did find something suggestive In Anderson's book, however. It starts, like Sinclair's novel, In a coal-mlnlng vil lage. Its hero Is the bon of a miner who goes to Chicago, where ho conceives the Idea that It some one could unite the Douglas Fairbanks hat again delighted hi friend His new book "Laugh and Live" fairly bub bles with kindnecs, courage and sheer good humor. It'fl tho big non-fiction book of tho year. Get it. Read It. AUBookulUrs 11.00 Net DltrrXON PUBUSHINO CO-.N rTerk w From tho French of Henri BhujM d A .tun with masterly llt.r.ry skill ,0' ,5 i;,Mih,r mlndi 2nd aqvils. IH.r.rV BK1I. V. --' .. . ,:sv.:i.m inside out weir ... "..., o,l,. ,,,. - workers into a great body of marching men, disciplined and walking shoulder to shoulder, they could conquer, not one an other, but tho terrifying disorder of life. This is the motlvo of tho book. Tho hero does organlzo tho workers, but unfortu nately they do not accomplish anything But tho Idea of tho workers ns soldiers working for a common cause is Inspir ing, If we make tho term 'workers' bioud enough. In both Anderson nnd Sinclair tho story is subordinated to social propa ganda Russell's book Is nothing but propaganda " GUORGI. W DOUGLAS. roJ'1T,(y'.Ij '"1-At.S ll llrrtrand nuwrll. New vork Tim Lrntury Compn. il. MAHCIIIVO MKV II) Sh-rviool Andercn. Nr Torn John I.an Comnatu. fl.DO. uVNOJ cP.Kt- "r t-'plon Sinclair. With iin In trpourtlon bs lr, (trorga Urnndc" .New York The Macmlllan Companj SI SO. THE SEAMY SIDE OF CONVIVIALITY What Happens to the Man Who Drinks "In the Way of Business" Tlie man who spends two hours or so at lunch with bis frlcmls. talking and drink ing, li well known in every city Ho rats his dinner downtown nnd spends the cvo nlng at a tabic on which n waiter keeps the glasses filled and gets homo at mid night He drcscs well nnd spends $5 n day or morn nn himself Those who do not know ht fnmlh llfo assume tint he lives STACY AUMONIEK In a good house and provides well for his wife and children Sometimes this assump tion Is warranted Nn census of men of this kind has ever been taken In Philadel phia, but thero are doubtless hundreds, If not thousands, of them It anj one Is curious to know tho truth nbout them bo can find It told In n. Ilttlo book by Stacy Aumonlcr. n 1ondon landscape painter, who has proved that he is an artist In words as well ns in pigments He has told the story of such men with a calm realism that makes his typos recognizable oven in America, In splto of'tho fact that they nro Londoners "The Friends" describes tho life of a brass bed salesman and a sales man of bed springs and the effect of their conviviality on them nnd their families Thero Is no preaching, ho simply bIiowb what happens nnd then stops "The I'acltet," tho second story In the volume, has n plot a little moro complicated than that of 'The I'rlends." but It Is the samo story with the same kind of men, meeting a similar end. And "In tho Way of Busi ness." a similar problem is handled In a similar calm and Impartial manner All three tales show how tho curse of drink bla3ts the lives of men nnd destroy the happiness of women Tho book Is a powerful preachment, powerful becauro It does not moralize at all. It showB what can bo done when n, lltcrarv artist of great gifts seta himself to a ttudy of a boclal problem If the professional preachers do not uso it as a text for sermons they will miss the opportunity of their lives TUB FIUKND Anil Othr .Stcrl Hj Su.j Aufnonler New lorli Tho Ontur ttm pany. tl. A New Humorist David Grajson his real name is Ila Stannard ISaker has Increased tho happi ness of thousands by ills delightful books His shoulders must benr the burden of re sponsibility for a book not his own, as Christopher Morley confesses In "Parnassus on Wheels" that his hook was suggested by "Adventures in Contentment." flraj son's adventures were those of a man. The story of his sister was not told. Sir Morley has Imagined a similar man nnd his sister, and describes what is really an adventure in dis contentment. The sister is a household drudge, producing biscuit and bread and other food every day for fifteen jears with out any vacation. The brother, however, throws off the burden of responsibility whenever the mood Is on htm and goes tramping about the country. He says he Is seeking local color for his books. Tho opportunity for the sister's adventure comes when a traveling book seller, with a van fitted up for comfortable living on the road, arrives at the house with a proposition to se.l out to her brother. In order to prevent the brother from buying, tho sister makes the purchase and forthwith starts off with the seller as a guide and Instructor in the art of persuading the farmers to buy the kind of books that will help them. There follows a series of Interesting adventures which hold the attention to the end As the story progresses. Its characters Indulge In entertaining discussions of books and read ing Kor example the, man who owned the van remarks that "a good book, like Eve, ought to come from somewhere near the third rib and have a heart vibrating In it" The story, which can'cnslly be read In an evening, will leave a pleasant Impression, for It is sympathetically human, Tho van owner might have been created by Frank Stockton, he la described with such a whimsical humor and he has such genuinely Stocktontan adventures. If Mr. Morley cul tivates this vein ws are likely to have a new humorist In American literature to appeal to those who dislike the slapstick style that Is altogether too common. PARNASSUS ON WHKEL3. By, Chrlatopher Morley. Cardan City! Doubleday, J'age t Co. 11.18, Life in the West The very cover of "The Lookout Man" characterizes, describes and criticizes the story contained within. But possibly the cover will arouse fales hopes, together with fend memories of "The Virginian" and "The Great Divide," the novel and stage models of the Western story. "The Lookout Man." of which p. M. Bovver Is the author. Is certainly not epoch-making. It follows beaten paths. Introduces time-honored char acters and Is Interspersed with enough "local color" In the way of mountain scen ery to satisfy all the rules of this partic ular brand of literature. The best that may be said of It la that it makes easy and pleasant reading and has not a single objectionable feature. mtsLL ti WsssssssssWsVssLmk tststststsWtsm. WL mMmmnmmmW 'mmmwBBaVmm '' ' imWmmmmWh 'tstsW jUWiX?W uW smatwBmWOsT J-J SOCIOLOGY IN THE GREAT WAR A Cnll to England to Make Her People Worth Fight ing For Persons interested In the progress of British politics beforo and during the early das of the present war, and suggestions for social reformations as a means vt tempering with a bit of humanizing In fluence tho work of Hngllsh statesmen, may find something that will touch a responsive chord In Stephen McKenna's novel, "fa'onla: Between Two Worlds," Tho nppnrcnt purpose of the story, per haps, may be summed up by Its central figure, n.tvhl O'Rane. son of an Irish lord, whoso llfo Is Imbued with a. desire to lead In -tho social nnd political reformation of England On tho 475th nnd last page of the book he is made to say : ' Is It a great thing to ask? To demand of England that the criminals nnd loafers and prostitutes nro some body's children, mothers and sisters? And that we've all teen saved by a miracle of suilerlng? Is that too great n strain on our chivalry? I'll Ko out If need be, but but must wo stand at street corners to tell of what wo have scon' To nsk the bystanders and ourselves whether we went to war to preserve tho right of Inflicting pain" Tho Idea evidently being- Wake up. Kng land, nnd do something for jour hitherto neglected ones, or you'll breed a degenerato race that ever will bo In social conflict ono with another, and therefore of little valuo when tho nation most needs their concentrated effort In u crisis O Ilane Is tho dominating character In the book Tho reader follows him and tboso who form a part of his llfo through early school days, seo him flogged for breaking rules , see hlin through Oxford : seo him accumulato wealth in Austrian oil Investments; seo him loso It at the out break of the war; seo him enlist, and then see him, blinded by shrapnel, charging a trench, and his sightless eyes leading him In tho wrong direction, caught by the Ger mans, who, with characteristic efficiency and Ktntiir, crucify hltn, pinning his outstretched bands to a trco with n pair of bayonots But destiny, not vlljlng to countenanco so Ignoble, a death of a favorite son, in tervenes O'Rano Is rescued and nursed back to health and strength, but his sight fotever Is gone Irfvter he ngaln meets Sonln, who in earlier days nearly blighted his hopes by callous treatment of his .if fectlons, Sonla then being occupied with serial ambitions nnd attendant gayetles. But the war and Its consequent bunnnlzlng effect upon persons In nil grades of llfo oftencd the girl She ramo to O Banc In his blindness and a great lovo filled her heart And they were married The average reader, perhaps, will find In the earlier chapters of the volume too Iingthy a rcferenco to llfo In ICngllsh schools or too much political ramification, but with pi-rnlstenco iwlll como tho romance that in.iv Impel forgiveness for tho arldltv of preiodlng pages SON'H IWTVVnhN TWO WOKLllS. Ily StThen Vlckmna Vork tlcoree II Dornn lunipjm si rn How Not to Choose a Vocation The modern cult of efficiency haB Its vlr tures, but suffers overmuch from tho tend ency to "expertize " Tho era of experts Is at hind, vo arc told, and Indeed wa nlready have experts galore scientific man agement experts, educational experts, food experts, nnd so on Wo hivo with us also tho vocational expert "How to Choose the Right A ocatlon," by Holmes W Mcrton, Is an example of the expert Idea running wild It alms to bo a scientifically up-lo-dato guide for tho young man seeking to avoid tho unfortunate condition of a round peg In u square hole, but really It Is unscientific ,and reactionary Kor careful students of tho problems of vocational choice and place ment know that clnborato cataloguing methods aro folly both for employer nnd employe, actually causing moro mistakes than they prevent. Tho students who arc making tho most progress In tlio field nro tho ones who aro going slow Tho present book assumes to mako eisv tho choke of vocation "by presenting i practical analy sis and description of man's vocational men tal nblhtles and characteristics," "by sug gesting a large number of Interesting men tal tests, which enable ono to self-chart one's vocational aptitude," and 'by citing tho different mental abilities and charac teristics, beforo described, which nre spe cifically required In cub. of tho H00 dis tinctive vocations AH of which sounds "Mademoiselle Miss" Lattera frnm an Am-rican srtrl nervine with the rank of Lieutenant tn a Trench Army Hos pital at tli front l'ubllaheil for the llenrflt of tho American Vend fur rrench Wounded. Price 50 Cents A.W.BUTTERFIELD, SO DROVIFIi:! U ST, UOSTON Jutt Published MY WAR DIARY By MADAME WADDINGTON These impressions, lojjether with innumerable personal, yet universally interesting, incidents relating to the war, Madmc Waddington con veys to the reader with rare vividness in this chronicle of unique interest. S1.S0 net. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK She also wrote "Come Out of the Kitchen!" LADIES MUST LIVE By Alice Duer Miller This new novel is a sort of pirate story' of New Vork high society. The incredibly clever cutting, thrusting and ma noeuvring of two beautiful buc caneers, in one of their classic contests for a rich and hand some, man, the author, reports with dramatic intensity and power. Accompanied by a run ning fire of brilliant commentary on men, women and events in the polite pirate world, of the Atlantic Coast. 8 full-page illustrations. 91.25. At all bookstores. Published fay THE CENTURY CO., Nr York City .. JjIACAJINIjK' J good, but (1) vocational capacity cannot be analyzed and catalogued In such detail as the author attempts: (2) the mental "tests" suggested are a snare and a de lusion, both to the Ignorant and to the devotee, nnd (3) there are not 1400 dis tinctive vocations (there may be more, there may bo less, but certainly thero aren't exactly 1400). If how-to-wln-sucVess books havo been valuelfss In tho past because of too broad and general advice, this one errs at tho other extreme, through lis excessive precision nnd system. Something like a science of vocational cholco and placement Is being built up, but It still places its main dependence on two things Interest nnd trial This Is unsatisfactory, but It Is far bettor than the unscientific and un refined techntquo exemplified In Mr. Mer lon's comprlslngly orderly volume. HOW TO rilOOSK THK HIOIIT VOCATION, vocational aelf-meaaurement baaed on nat ural abllltlen. tly llolm-a W Marlon New lork' lnnk JL Wainalls Company tl tiO. Gilbert Murray on the War It one Is curious to learn what effect the war has had on the thinking of an educated Kngllshnun who Is opposed to the use of force, save as n last resort, there Is no bet ter place to look than In the pages of a volume of articles and addresses by Gilbert Murray, reglus professor of Greek nt Ox ford. I'rofessor Murray took to the con sideration of tho subjects he discusses the Intellectual detachment of a scholar Inter ested In tho broad principles of morals, philosophy and statecraft. Thero Is a. calm ness In his manner that Is reassuring Ite Is not a special pleader, and he admits that his own country Is not wholly without blame for the conditions that preceded Die war Ills book will not be Interesting to the man In tho street It will bo Interesting however, to tho moro limited group of readers who aro familiar with the history of the great moral and political movements of the last half century Yet the avcrago man would doubtless V.,d the two chapters on America and the war worth reading They arc much more fair-minded than wo havo been led to think an Englishman could bo They wero written before wo entered tho war. but they 'state our caso as well as It could have been stated by an Amer ican Those who have conscientious scruples against war might find some enlightenment In the chapter entitled "How Can War liver Be Right?" rAlTir, WAH ANT POLICT, ny Gilbert Mur ray, noatont llourhton Mifflin Company, tl -5 C THE FLAG, by Homer Greens, A most inspiring story of patriotism. Prlco 51.25 -lACOBS 1628 A I s--S;.- CHESTNU JL BOOKS STREET CHESTNUT STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING IE AT JACOBS THE WANDERERS By MARY JOHNSTON In n series of unforgettable short stories Miss Johnston pic tures the ever-changing love life of men and women from the days of the caveman. The result is a book of unique and striking inter est a panorama of the develop ment of love and of the constantly shifting status of women that il luminates from a new anglo tho oldest problem in the world. Decorations by Pogany in color. 140 pages. $1.75 vet at all bookstores HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY BOSTON and NEW YORK Published Today THE MASK By FLORENCE IRWIN Behind a mask we all hido our thoughta and feelings from the world. Alison Terry woro one, though she never realized it until she faced a crisis in her married life. A story of disillusionment, tragedy, and at last mutual understanding and encourage ment. This story has not ap peared serially. $1.40 net. How Are You Feeling Now? Ilr KDMIN I.. SAUIX A little book In which you shall aea the humoroua aids ot auch experiences nln tn (ha dVntlat. or blna on a diet or even havlns your appendix re- Illustrated eu. 76 cents net. White Monarch and The Gas-House Pup llr It. O, KIRK The tala of the battle of Oaa.Houaa Pus, Mm of pit terrlera, and blue rib bon champion White Monarch of Qten mere Anyone who ever owned a dor will read with a quickening pulee thle movlni atorr. Illuatrated. S1.00 net. Familiar Ways By SIAKfl VHKT BHKKWOOII Author of "The Worn Doorstep." A volume of enzaslns eaaaa on aubjecta close to everyday Ufa; de lightfully Individual In llliiKhr wood's characteristic style, II 23 net. AT YOUR BOOKSELLERS LITTLE, BROWN & CO. Publishers, Boston Waiting for Clock to Stop J, J, Dell has wrltlan nothlnr to rival In popularity his first book, "We Me areror." Ills' latest la In an antlretr dif ferent vein, and la rood ot Ita hind. "Till the Clock Stop" Is & dettctlvo story with a complicated and unusual plot. It turns nbout the disposal of a lot of diamonds that Christopher Craig had taken to England from South Africa, and the fate of a nephew who had disappeared. The unele dies, leav ing Instructions that nothlnr Is to be ilone with the diamonds till his clock stops u clock which would run a year and a day with ono winding. It would spoil the reider's enjoyment to tell him what hap pens but many things do happen which no ono expects. TIT.!. THK CI.OCIC STOPS. .Br J. J. Bell. Torki Ouffleld i. Co. tl.SS. New The Argonaut says "The best tho war has produced." A STUDENT IN ARMS lly DONALD HANKKr FOIl SAM3 UVEItrWHERE IJ.B0 net. Postage Extra. All Bookstores K. 1 DUTTON CO., ! Fifth Av.,N.T. Just Published The Rise of David Levinsky By Abraham Cahan So real that it might ba tho genuine autobiography is this imaginary life-story of a Rus sian emigrant. Ho plans to be come a Talmud scholar, but on his arrival in America is caught in the stream of commercial struggle, till the penniless ped dler becomes tho founder of one of tho largest industries of tho city. And through tho years of his success ho is always looking for tho tvomnn to share it with him. fl.60 HARPER & BROTHERS Established 1817 Just Published Beyond By John 'Told with an art never surpassed In his former writings. His analysts of hearts Is searching and Inerrant to a degree Beldom approximated In our LUrrent literature" .Veto 1'orfc Tr.bune. . "Galsworthy's 'Beyond' Is probably the most Important work ot fiction of the last few months." .Veto YorA. Bverina J"t. $1.50 net The Green Jacket By Jennette Lee Mllly Newberry, head of the soma Ideas of her own Hhe was tired pollco, and the police handing them them over to th nrlson. Khe made she was going t. havo something to Detective nsrenctes had been worklnar for two vearn on th rilannnaran of tho Mason emeralds, and without result. Mlily Newberry goes to the MaBon home as a seamstress, and wins her way Into the hearts of all. When sho left, the green Jacket she had been making was finished; there was no "story" for tho newspapers; but there was happiness In the lbon homo. $1.35 net Running Free By James B. Connollv With a background of the sea and touch of humor and adventuie run ning thioughout, Mr. Connolly hs here grouped ten of his best sea stories. Illuatrated. $1.35 net The Wages of .Honor By Katharine Holland Brown This volume of stories by ono of the best-known American short-story writers, besides the title story. Includes the three stories of Mexico that have attracted wide attention, as well as some of the best of her atorles of the Illustrated. CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS MESSRS. D. APPLETON & COMPANY Announce the Publication of a New Novel by the Author of "The Sailor" MR. J. C. SNAITH The Title of Which Is THE COMING A soldier, wounded, war weary, who has learned in the trenches to forget the mean ing of hate; a village vicar, voicing the venom of those who do not fight ; and John Smith, simple, determined, working for the brotherhood of man around these three characters the author of "The Sailor" has written an amazing novel of the spiritual and ethical side of the War. Cloth, $1.50 net FOR SALE AT ALL BOOKSELLERS THIS IS AN APPLETON D. Appleton &; Company, Pubiehert, Nw York Are yen one of thm? This book will not save D0RMIE ONE Bv Holworthjr IMMai-r ruui aHTa -iS . An epic in prose of the erK- UK MiiiAicur. mi iicuun ana nwv ot color, action and humor. Car nca the hero, the tvne of He golfing amateur the world over,.' through a series of various co-; icsib vvivii ;numiuuiiou9 enemies, animate anrl inanimate as thrill ing as the contests in Book IV t of the Aeneid. "Dormie One" , will aggravate every golfer's awful condition. 4 full-page illustrations. , tl.S?. At All Dookstori Published by THE CENTURY CO., New York Ch ib otuuor Ch A Jh tti4&OS$ s &&(. JMoMfiJ Laid in f lander in the tu multuous day of the late 15th Century -blander, war torn today and even then menaced by the rivalrie of Europe. Her Highnet it the daugh ter of Charles the Bold, whose death at Nancy ha left her the perilou rule of the threatened realm and the heart of Her Highnet well, that' the story. "A charming and charmingly written narrative." Chicago Herald. 12'. Color Frontts. S1.50 .Vt. G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS ' New York London Galsworthy Milllcent Newberry Detective Aa-enov. harl of catching criminals to turn over to the over to the Judge, and the Judge handing ud her mind that If she did fh ratrhinr say about the punlshmnt and she.dld. $1.35 net FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK i k- JljftMasif. t v,fl WTJ .l V. BOOK ismxr j j . S&tav. UilKL Pric $1.10 .Vet. Postage Extra, 4, -" - r- , , P nirT-ro. a, rci mi Fttk AviBMa.JNaw. Y THK If. Sawar. Rm. X T.fcrfSICTr ijJWj , V-" V m -T J VIMM VSI'i VW.i I Il.SKlC JL. I 5St5sE '-V ?S8H3lS . .Stomas wt ,. - --- Hkj.hTi i BPiUTi IT TOW L-iru sMmerivt -hi Jiv'.t msf . hi- Wiwl . .,?:& l.r sT'.h JJW i4, ifl T a m vq.-j . - r.zarviM (OKOVT MAN. Vr V KW&j !BEy33feii3P MIL 3Lj3Bt. . '' KsatjX'ja '& .- vwt . rt J' Jr jibtv&t.-.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers