fi-j M n tr w ' n . J. f .'1 v ' 1628 CHESTNUT STREET BOOKS tyatioNERY AND ENGRAVING KI.HT HE AT JtCOBI' AMERICAN SOLDIERS' AND SAILORS' DIARY 1918 Co"oi'ed by Mary Parker Convene tlrirt CiimlliriCl "I liu-li irui'K'il r . ... nil In Itpmnin titir. with lnl ' - lilutnrv At flm Int, k.rri .1 IVi'i ' - " ! .' JnS i Mnrcus Aurullus trt Tliyiiiira ntrrlt -trprnf lilwllnri piiltct I?.m three . , " """ M"il- "" ""1 tmiiT "', prr Tlmt lour Til In Ktmkl ,...rr ''""' .' nilTTON 4 CO.. 681 5tn Ave.. N. Y. -' 1 "wwiiSV -VVS N.w- H Ofr-W Msf I IMP lk JS W -- ATTHE FRONT By Second Lieutenant B HECTOR MacQUARRIE I Royal Field Artillery "A Masterpiece" New York Sun jj "Second Lieutenant MacQuar- rie . tells you all about it with open mind and open heart H nd an honesty and fervor that A represents the finest kind of n message that anyone from 'over 8 here who has been in it, can ring . . And the young soldier oill like the information, the 3 -runliness and the brotherliness i hit Inspires these pages an makes the volume a true vade 9 necum in these days of trial jj nd tribulation." Philadelphia a 'ublic Ledger. " g 13 Illustrations. S1.25 Net rrnsuAT AM. IIOOK 8TOIll.Sn tinrasl IACOBS On Sale at Alt Bookstores To-day Fighting for Peace By Henry van Dyke A vivid view of the origin, conditions and right con clusion of the war, from the standpoint of one who was very close to it and who had intimate personal experiences which illumi nate the subject with the light of reality. Henry van Djke was Minister to Holland from June, 1913, to February, 1917; he was right at the heart of affairs in a neutral country, with Germany on one border and Belgium on the other. No man had a better chance to see and feel the whole tremendous situation. Since he resigned his diplomatic post Dr. van Dyke has u'sitcd under the best circumstances the French and British war jronts, and in England he has been in communication with the leading men. A Lieutenant in a United States Army Oamp writes: "Each chapter has quickened my cal (already adequate, I had thought!) and made me a better and happier soldier. I thank God that you were permitted to resign jour post, that jou might write these things." $1.25 NET Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis Edited by Ms Brother, CHARLES BELMONT DAVIS Richard Harding Davis's letters are full of his experiences as a cub report er, editor, war correspondent, traveller, and of his theatrical activities. Into his descriptions of those thousands of " waiters, generals, actors and princes" whom he knew so well, is breathed the very breath of life. ' These letters enable the public to share with Davis's friends the pleasure ofb close acquaintance with this remarkable man, who took from life so much of romance and adventure. Profu$ely illustrated from portrait, photographi and nap-thoti gathered in all parti of the world. $2.50 NET W IW CiwrlesScribner's H&. INTIMATE LETTERS OF GREATEST LITERARY MAN MARK TWAIN, CERVANTES, LE SAGE, GIANTS DF WORLD LITERATURE i I . unaiacter and Methods of in His Letters A ments tne earlier Biography T 11A l: been limlcliiK ovoi tho 1 Uh In my library latelj." miM Doctor McPabre us he htood hcfoic mv book- uisci, "untt I hae been Impiced hy tho l liigo number of gicat woiks by foiilRii-l em. I hao begun to vvoiulu whethci America has pioduted any men of Intteis who can take lanl: with the big men of other nations." "There Is J. Pcnlmorc Cooper," ic marked Owen. "Ills stones aie lent In nnglind, 1'iance and ItiisMi as well as In America And 1 do not know Into how nnny luniru igcs 'Undo Tom's Cabin' has been ti .instated " "llut j on don't call 'Uncle Tom's Cibln" lltcrnttlle. do Mm'1 Miss Anus w lntn.f I to know "And C'oopci's sttulrs au wilt- i ttn In Kloenl 1'iuMlsh " I 'People n-itl tliem and like them, nil tho same." Owen Insisted "And jou know Longfellow s one of tho f.ixcnltu lwets of tho Kngllsh ' "Vou hae not jet mentioned the gieit ! tst name In Amu Iran llteratuie " 1 raid. "What Is It?" Miss Ames nsked ' Is It Howells or Janus or Poo or Walt Whit ' man?" A STUDENT IN ARMS By DONALD HANKBY IKillcJ in iclioo Oct 26 1916) The Impact olt1usoliimchnMlrrcl I nshiirl tottHileptlis lliestitsof ILeurcil wnr iiut wlnt it mentis to the soMIn rr (xiik-,',1 itli pouct iiiulMWilntM imniiiilleil in ethii books of the soldiers lift mi friend in klnk.1 need it Sou will cniov cverv piKe NOW KI'ADV Ihc necond irnei ot A htudent in Arm' tnc'ii line the limuui ey "Hon l Won " l'rae ticli olume net 51 50 E. P. DUTTON . CO. 6S1 IMih Atnu BW-JT Alter a photograph IvvyrU I n 1'iiir Mieltontlt Ilmrj Tin Djke Fifth Avenue, l)BltM-t EVENING VLJflJDUER-lHlLADEU'HIx, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, the American Revealed Book That Supple "Tlioso aic all kic-U nuines," I ndmlttcd, 'blt 1 think theio la a Btcatcr one. Wo li no pioduced a man who even now takes nH u,0''? with Ccn.intes". the Hpinlard, '""' 'c "ise. tho rrcnclimin and oh wc h-i uitiier fiom him wo are likely to iteognlzo his gicatnca more and more. Ho looms aboo tho rest ns Tike's l'c, - ilk lifts Itself aboo tho plains His namo Is Matk Twain." "What! You don't call that buffoon great'" said Doctor Mcl'abrc. "Vou Interest mo very much, doctor." t said. "Vou mo tho second man of In telligence who has nmlo such a icmatk to me. Thc flist one was the editor of a wickly migazlnc of laifco circulation 1 told him when Mark Twain died that Ti" ought to lia(. an edltoilil aitlclo about him. but he bald that the m in was not ot inough Impoitnnco to Justlf tho use ot tho necej-snrj npirp M filcnd was n good editor, however, ami when he dl.s coveiul that tho whole World was pivlng ti Unite to the dc.id author ho consulted "Mnik Twain was moie than a humor Kt, llko ArtermiH Waid," I went on. "I would not say this If jou did not seem to bo unawnro of it, doctor. AVo do not think of Cervantes as primarily a humor ist, nor does the fame of Lo Sago rest on his ability to imko a. jokf Humor with these three glints Is merely the eloak of toleramo which thev tlnow over hum in folblcb. Tli v all wioto common tailos on life, cnmrmnt-iilcs so tiuo and mi full of insight th.a Cei antes and Le Pace nro still lead with pleasure and Pioflt And If t mistiko not Mnik Tw iln will Ik- lead when nine tenths of his contemporaries are forrotten lie was one of the biggest men of letters tli.it the woild has pioducf.il In splto of the fall tire of Mime to npprcol-Uo htm, be was iidmittodh the greatest living American wiltir for several vear.s befoio his death There ate men who fa, that How ell i Is now our gieatest living w liter. Curl ou-.lv enough thoso two men who were "o different wee intlm ito ft lends. Two volumes of M.irk Twain's lettei.s havo 'ost been published More o them are! wiitten to Howells than to anv one else. 'Lettcis are dicaij reading," sild Doc toi Mel-'abre "Vou would mike m CMcptlnn In favor of Muk Twain if ou should load those bo w I otp," I I rplled ".Vo mora delightful conespondent thin this genial Mlsoui!an ever sent a message to a filcnd tluougli tho post.' They nio full of humor nnd BOOKS THAT CHEER A New Chesterton A SHOUT HISTORY OF ENGLAND By G. K. CHESTERTON. Author of "Heretics," "Orthodoxy," etc. Cloth, $1.50 net. The momentous contest between the forces of self-government and ab solutism lias inspired Mr. Chesterton to write this brilliant commentary on English historj, und lie will be wel comed in this new rolo of political philosopher for the fresh interest he brings. Startling Revelations FRANCIS JOSEPH A 0 HfS COUIT By HERBERT VIVIAN, M. A. With 10 Illitstiation. Cloth, $J.r,0 net. Mr. Viwan hns compiled this re markable book from the memoirs of Count Roger de Resneguier, a son of Trnncis Joseph's Court Chamberlain. The history of the House of Hapsburg is rife with violent tragedy and it is r'nined with scnndal. In addition to many other startling disclosures, here is told for the first time the truth of the famous tragedy of Meyerhng. Soldier or Slacker? T UC Q I U I MM ammnto HEIGHTS B I. A. R. WYLIE. Author of "The Daughter of Brahma," etc. Cloth, $1.50 net. Though not u tale of the trenches, this is none the less a story of warfare, fought with the weapon of Science. It is a powerful novel, in which love and sacrifice play a tremendous part, and the characterization is unusually ex cellent. BEST-SEfUNG BOOKS The Best-Selling Novel THE RED PLANET By WILLIAM J. LOCKE. Author of "The Wonderful Year,' etc. Cloth. Net, $1.50. A war-time novel of love, courage and mystery just as romantic, just as tender as "The Beloved Vagabond." Twelfth Edition CARRY, ON: Letters In Wartime By Lieut. CONINGSBY DAWSON. j Author of "The Carden Without Walls." etc. Frontispiece. Cloth. Net $1.00. "One could wish that a law might be passed compelling every pacifist to read 'Carry On.' " N. Y. Times. The "Who's Who", of the Pvssian Revolution THE R 'BIRTH OF RU3SIA By ISAAC F. MARCOSSON Author of "The War After the War," etc. With 28 illustrations. Cloth. Net, $125. The only authentic and first-hand account of the Russian situation pub. 'ished to far in America. fK wit, and the kindly, aftcctlonato aplrlt of j tho nnu shines on every page, I do tint l)cllec J ou could road them, doctor, with. I ot.t icRrtttlng that .ou did not know the man, nnl, Ml Ames. If ou should rend tho few notes to his wife which nro In- mo I c,udc'1 -vou uoui1 &? to measure tim love letters which jou get ' I don't " nho staited to fay. "Mas be vou don't get any to talk about Just now. anil mavbo ou won't talk about them anvwav," l went on. "but tho man who could address nucli tenderness to her and such ndoiation would bring tho most confirmed s-plnstcr peillously neir to the point of iccantlng." "I'ilellla his not taken any vows of celllncy," sild Doctor McPabre. 'Owen will bo glad to bear It." I said , u- . , ,, , , . , , , ,.,,f and befoio be could lntcirupt 1 hastcneil 10 saj: -me collection of letters is in most as good as an autobiography. In j . komo repects It Is bettor, for tho lotteis wero written without any eApcctatlon that thev would ever bo pilnted. An excellent bloginphy of Mark Twain lias been written, but theso two volumes would serve, vny well If fuller detills wero not accessible. They aro picceded bj .i biief sketch of his life, which gives the miln facts of his wueei. The letters themselves nie full of Intel cstlng and lm poil.int Information nnd Illuminating comment on his eonti mporarles. Vou admlio Koo'cvelt, doctoi. What do ou think of this description of him?" And 1 ie.nl tho following extract from a letter to Doctor Twlehell, of Haitfoul. dited November 4, 100 1. It eiei nio to citch nivself pnislng tho clean private cltiren Hnoevclt and blimlng tho soiled President Itooscvclt, when 1 know that neither praise nor blame Is duo to him for any thought or word or deed of bis, ho being merely a helpless. Irresponsible coffee-mill giound by the band of Cod "Th it's nothing but bosli," slid the elrigjiniii, "t won't argue the point," I continued "The litteis have things to say about Ocnet.il Cr.int a- well as about llooevelt You know tint Mnik Twain's publishing lioii-e Issued Oiant's lomtntsccnces Theio was gossip at tho time nnd nffi-vard that Griut did not wilto tho book which boio his nunc. It was said tint he hid given the mttctltl to some olio who had whipped It Into sh.ipo to pi lilt Indeed the critics were astonished by the superb literary stvlo of the book Some of them eotilil not believe tint n nun who had not been trained to write could have pioduced It. These letteis piovo that (Srant did the writing himself Ho bad i stoiv to tell and be told It In tho slmplo direct sUlo which Is the despair of little men. Tho men who sild tint Giant could not wlte In this wav evidently foi got that. Caesir pioduced a book tint Is a model of cotnpiet statement." "1 suppose that Is so " said Doctor Mo raine, "but I don't like Mark Twain's icllglous vlew " "Ills wlfo was troubled about them also," I admitted 'hut do ou know that one of his most Intlm ito fi lends was a distinguished cleigvman of Hartford-' 1 am Inclined to think tint theso two men got along so will together because tln-v wcro so much alike. Thev cpa!ined mit tcrs In a illfietent way. but nt bottom thev weie ngiecd Theio was something lino In a thorny of life that could produce such a imn as M.uk Twain You know bis wife onco said that If her husbino went to hell she wanted to go with him for heiven would bo hell without him, and sbo givo up attempting to csplilr, him by any of tho futllo formulas which tho cliurehes have put out for the salva tlon of men If ou icid tho letters ou will discover some of the ieaons which led her to this conclusion. Their publlea tlon Is teallv the mt Impoitant literary event of tho uutumn." GKOHOn V. DOl'OLAS. MAIIK TVV VIN's ,i:rri:its ArraiiBM with rimnifiit l" VU rt ll'iclrw Pilne iwo vol uiip i New url, HirpT Uros. Helps for Soldiers Kicr new recruit or conscript In tho Witloml Army who Is 'inxlous to become nil ciTiiient soldier nulcklv and nt the same time to lessen the Inrdshlps of tho early ilavs of training will find Invaluable sug gestion ard directions In three moderately priced little books Just published The hooks, too will bo of greit Interest for olvlllins who expect to bo In tho service In the near future "Do s and Dont's In the Arm" (itrltton Publishing Com "an) supplies much needed concisu lnform.i tion for both officers and men The little volume, which ma le curled In a vest pocl'et e isllv, contains a number of short cuts through the tortuous lints of detailed knowledge every new boldlcr must mister. "Grenade righting" (George )l Doran Companj) in textbook on the ti.ilnlng ad tho tactics of grenadiers, who nro pl.iing such an Important part In the present army "Tim Man in tho Hanks" (Houghton M flllii Coni"an) Is simply a rolleetloii of frank, friendly words of advice from one who h.i gone throufih tho entire gamut of mlll'.iry experiences and who knows tho dllHcultlia ot tho flrct day In camp. Career of Mirandy The rerles of short stories written by Armlsteid C. Gordon and published under the name of "omtnlnnd ' really constitute one character study and very little more There is not much of tho drimatlo about these tales of a Virginia plintatlon. and the comparison which they naturally invito with the work of certain well-known writers of southern stories Is -perhaps r.ot flattering to Mr Gordon But there can be no den. Ing tho fact that the ono central figure of tho old before-the-w ar ncuress transplanted to the unfamiliar environment -f post-war d.iH Is finely sketched The theme of the devotion of a former slave to the master and family she has lived her life with Is not new In fiction; It' Is, so trite. Indeed that It la all the more to this author's credit that be has made the tvps seem not onlv convincing, but almost nrlglnil Loyalty Is old Mlr.indv's most notah'e attribute, hut she Is Interesting In other ways. Her satiri cal humor, her sharp tongue, her manner of ruling all the other servants of the run down plantation all thee make her a character that one cm study with Interest OMMtrtANDY, Hy Armlstfsd C. Cordon. 1. lustraten by Walter I1Ib. :en York! Charlta crllncr' bnns It. 3 Schoolgirl Allies Life In n Belgian boarding school for girls 's not so very different from life In such a school In Amer'ca If ono may trust Rebecca Mlddleton Kamnon's description of it In "Schoolgirl Allies" (Lothrop, Lee & Miepard Company, Boston), she has -vrittcn a story of the experiences of two American s'sters In a' fashionable finishing school In Brussels. Their schoolmates come from distinguished families in France and Eng land as well as In Belgium. We are told that many of tho characters are drawn from llfa. but tb'a assurance that tha story la lotin4ion fat do not'datraat from' lt A PHILADELPHIA pn . ppz-je-rp LKJLil li I lJOi-i Logan Pcarsall Smith HflS Writ- ton a Volume of Enchant ing Little Essays "Hut bow Is ore to kerp free from tb se nienlil Nilirntio tint worm-ent people's brains those Theories anil Wets nnd Kn tliusiasnis and Infectious Doctrines that wc nro tilwaH liable to cstch from what seem tho moit Innocuous contacts? ' nnks Logan Pcnrall ''mltli In a rciii.irl.iblo and uniixii.il volume of little cras. Ho remarks tli.it ' book"" niul new "papers aro slinplv creeping with them" ami wonders whether 'this struggle for a hc.iUh) mind tti a maggoty unlvemo is reilly after all wmtli It ' The ."isniT, niicr reiaing ins nonit which snows tlmt lle ,us ,.ucc(,uI,,, , ccaln(; tlle COI1. tagion Is that the effort is worth while Mr Smith Is i Phil idelnhlan be birth Ills father was thu late it P1.1rs.1ll Smith nnd his stater A s mirrlid tlcrtr.mil ltU9scll, a ill tingulshed Ilrltidi pbllos ipher lle was edue.ited at liaverford nnd Harvard and added to his uicntil ciiulpmcnt by reading at Oxford He his lived in Kngland for several enrs and his produced one or two hooks nf a Bolld and serl ais clnr.icter that please men without linagliiitloii His new book lm been written because, be hid somo things liL, f, it HI,,, si lug He confesses try wonder whit bis tire it Work shill be. Miould lm ' complain against the mutabll. tty of I'ortiine and Impugn t ato and the Constellations" or. should ho denouiico eon tuiiporaiy VIcih but as hi reads In mod em bonks about ' the Vied of tho Age" ho feels 'an Impulse to gi, out nnd comfort It and spoiK i irncst words of Consolation to It" 'I hen lie wnndcis what peoplo would lead Ills book 'theso Thoughts (If I may call them so) dipped up from tint plnn tismagorii and phosphorescence which by sumo unexplilncd procc-s of combustion, flickers over the In go lump of soft gray matter In the bowl of mv skult," and be speculates about tliem 'Their tlsto Is c oulslte." be wiltes 'they llvo In Geortlan houses, n a world of Ivcry and precious chliii, of old brick work and stone pilasters In white dnwlng looms t seo them, or on bluebird-haunted liwn-. ' Ho win certainly hive reiders, for a nmro ench mtlng look b.n net come from tho presses In a vo.ir at an rate It is filled with the tefleetlons of a poetic and oilgln.il mind, detnehtd from the turmoil of life but sinsltlvel conscious of It all Tho thoughts tint lilt through his mind, vet not so nulcklv that be cannot cipture them and imprison them In piper bonds for us nro those wh'eh hnvo found lodgment In the minds nf thnusmds of thinking men and women And tho way In which ho has expressed them could not bo Improved Theie nre whole poems sometimes In n sin gle phrase as for exnnple when be speaks of ' tho spdi and tremendous Incantation of the Thfilght of Deith" The bnnlt Is ono which those who delight hi literature can not afford to miss Tltivrx 7t I.ocin r.nrsill Fmlih Carden ll Pouhledis Pit- & Co 1 21. In the Days of Napoleon With the greatest war of nil hlstorv in progress it seems a bit odd to de ve Into the conflicts of the pist to find a nnrtlil rotting for a novel, mil et that Is win Itiioness Orcv his done In "A Mieif of Bluebells " Tho stnrv Is a rominco of Prance in the davs of Itciipirte. when the Itov.illsts weie foment'iig plots to overthrow npoleon Just tit a tltuo when vlctorj- over ill foreign eneiiilis seemed within his grasp lu thos,j d ijh as now, there were no slick ers In Prance, and tho bltterne3 of the RACCOON LAKE ' MYSTQECr 1 By Nrvil M0HI10E IIODUNS. PH.D. 1 lilfctrlcil nJ Mtcluniol Emlnetr. j ' A Thrilling and Humorous J MASON BRANT Story. J i 1 H "A combination of thrills, , humor and love making. The j crux of the mystery is worked 1 I out ingenuously by the author. 1 The plot is very original and very good and the whole tale is crisply told. An unusually -f good mystery tale." Philadel- j I phia Inquirer. ? 'd Illustrated in color, $1.35 net 1 ;' AT ALL BOOK STORES LIPPINCOTT EM by Emanuel Swedenborg at a nominal price OC Any or all of thr follniring four volume mil be sent, prepaid, to any address o reeetpt of 5 cenf per look "Heaven and Hell" 632 pacta "Divine Providence" 629 " "Sha Four Doctrines" 635 " "Divine Love and Wisdom" 618 " Each brink is printed in large fitx an gnod pmrr, and is well hnumt m sli'f paper cover, the price nf be in no troji indicates the etintfy nf pavr, prtnftny and binding, ulieh are high grade in, every respect. The Mind That Thinks and The. Heart That Feels of Orthodox or Agnostic are equally touched and stirred by Swedenborg's religious and ethitvl teachings, which are based upon la wonderfully profound Interpre -tation of Jfi THE HOLY BIBDm They will help you personally'to a rational understanding of the Word of God to a clearer conception of the spiritual signification of creation; of the loys of heaven and the miseries of hell of the process of djing and the life of the real man: and of what the final 'udgmenl consists. This Society 1 Incorporated and Urrslr endowed for ths purpose of prlntlny and dlstrlbutlnr Swtdrnbors's Wrlllnrs. and the offer Is rotde In pursusnee of that object. Tbe nominal price or ie per rolume la named to Insure that the epplleante for the books show sufficient Interest to warraat eadlnc them. a ..actress all orders to RootA 104 -..Tha AHMrtcan dwatwNMM i UA"' -.i -- -at' I at'iLa"' mJit '. .. L KPfSwaaBam esr esfeeRPnaK aawsaaBBBm t WTa IsfteL MSmLM.Mlsm?9 1917 OF AMERICA conflict between Bonapartlsls and Royalists was accentuated by the lack of any luke warm supporters of either side. In spite of tho dnngers, tho newly crowned emperor generously granted amnesty to a number of his bitterest enemies, who renew eM the plots against his head as soon as they re turned from exile. The story works out th details of ono of these many plots, nnd Interwoven In the fabric of the plot Is tho lovo iiff llr of two of the leaders of opposing fictions. In tho end love conquers fac tionalism, and coincident with the collapse of tho machinations against tho emperor comes the happy culmination of the lov affair Like most of Baroness Orczy'r novo s. "A Sheaf of Bluebells" Is a grlppb story which stirs tho blood to action and arouses every scintilla of patriotism In the soul of a man, An?''!nivi?',vn''uKJ'P'-i-'''.. I. Dxram "- . ''. luii. urocEe li nnr.in I'nm. 11ll tl 31 Century for December When the flrst detachment of American troops mirched through the streets nf Lon don they wero welcomed with enthusiastic cheers, but tho men marched silently, look ing neither to the rlrht nor to the left A cockney who was watching them remarked to the man besldo hlrn 'They're solemn looking blokes, nn't they?' Stacy An monlcr tells In the December Century Magi zinc tho story of this famous mnrch and be dlscovired on the faces of tho Ameri cans nn expression nf determination nnd of soemn rendition of the task which thev hid undertaken And when a friend aked him that night what news ho had he replied "t have seen a por'ent. Tho world Is s.ifo for dem eracy." Whatever eIo one m iy re id In this or any of tho other current m ig.izlncs no one should neg lect lo read Sticv Aumonler's article. It Is as moving a piece of literature ns has been written about tho entrance of America Into the war There are Christmas stories In the number, as there should he and articles on different phiscs of the war and n continuation of Alice Duer -Miller's serlil. "Tho Happiest Time of Their Lives " "America's Mr. Britling has come at last." Out of the turmoil of the world conflict is born a new ...... l .r ... f JL-Hjtr uj simcricas re sponsibility to the Tvor, Id. BY BASIL KING x .r v .& TV Newport and New York, the romance of a girl loved by two men, one an ardent patriot, the other indifferent. Illustrated, $1.50 HARPER & BROTHERS, Established 1817 By the Author of Wat Jvosarp' a tKije Oi)tte labies of Ooneatet Florence Barclay's First Novel in Three Years "Red-blooded human nature, very much alive. . . . and with : : , a vein of spontaneous humor." N. "rAnfmiiifflw ,i,riitmn. nnA nntlMim th ammniit. mlon,mw,t lr. M-nvLJ & decree." Phila. Eve. Ledger. "For decided power and charm, for dramatic effectiveness and C j. ....... .....w ... .. v . .. .. nicnmuiiu inKB'viflfu.bii. All Booksellers. Color Frontispiece. 440 pages. $1.50 net. iieto gorfe S. $. Putnam's cfeons lonbon I .44 ltfltKtmf The World Thomas Kelly and By Arthur Train author 0 "Ihc Cold Vtsh," etc. A story of "Society." Tom Kelly, an ordinary enough young student at Harvard, suddenly, by athletic prowess, leaps into -fame. "Society" takes him up not only the Harvard "Gold Coast" but Newport as well. The story of his reckless career in pursuit of luxury and wea'lth and how in the end he escapes utten moral shipwreck is one of the best Mr. Train has written. $1.50 NET. Charles Scribner's Sons Top Jor a two days "DECIDEDLY "we, wily kar, ), 7, jfffTATfflEj i w v ... JTk issr 0. : MISTRESS ANNE ' ' by Temple Bailey Twcntyfifth Thousand The kind of book you finish with a sigh, and buy at one for a dear friend that's Temple Bailey's new story, which you will like evn bat ter than "Contrary Mary" Illustrated At all lookstcrestt.iS rut. The Pcnn Publishing Company Philadelphia US$3199 The Wonaer Woman By Mae Van Norman Long A story of love nnd of life close to the great heart of nature At All Bookstores ftJ5 rVl The Penn Publishing Company, Philadelphia 2? jQk jUsh jSS jB jR jSSs7 & What you have often thought about America's coming into the war and her great responsibility you probably have not been able to put into words. So Basil King has written this book tffe for you, filled with your own hopes, your own pride. In addition to this, the author of "The Inner Shrine" tells a splendid story of , J m4ti,'fSl,s",''1$'' T Y. Tribune. -.--.f-v- . v.. ..,. m ,.w ..wv.... V Fifth AveBUNew Yerk Over the Top BY Arthur Guy Empey In a suburban town, near New York, a patron jgf . tM Library asked permission to retain her copy f "Ow tke) extension. NOT," REPLIED THK' LLlSSi&a sf syJ & w V : j.-k'j J 'i -x J?..' m m I .-TJ 2 wj xVfc I A An U f' rvU M t-i m S"2 i r. sS $ 'ti .. 21 'IS. J AH nt m .n? iJte H'A 'fc' tTKvi ,j.' ' fi V! jit 1 1 Hm i i i.i fiiiiiJi, M. i,MkL. i.W SkJ&S.tLJjM
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