Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, December 15, 1917, Final, Image 15

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EVENING "PUBUO IiEDGKEK-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER -'tf. 1917 M ' " J n n V
,
tt-
W"..'H
f
m
ILLUSTRATED BOOKS
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
A Revolutionary
Pilgrimage
llr Llt.SEsT PKIMtTfO
Vwtlnir lialtlefteMa nn.l hi
lorlc KitrKf Mr. l'eimilto taken lilt
rea.ierti. step hv step, to nil llm
Imiiortttnt leriilllle innnectctl
with the American Involution,
filustinfret. S.5o ml.
VoyaBes on the Yukon
and Its Tributaries
My III Itxos TI ( K
.1 rcllrtll o.l ot the YukoA
The nuthor velni wrote imi sue
remtfullv i AliiKkt In Inter III
"Ten Thou-Mil .Mllen Willi hI'ci
Hie.," clettrrllicH III thl new Vol
urns Alaska In Mitntntr
fllufrtllcif. l.."il nt'
On the Headwaters
of Peace River
II) I'AI i. iivnoitTit
Tim fnstlnatlliir story of a
tliuuan 1 milts eiinte trip tliruuuti
the Canii'll.ill llocklei.
Jliuslraliti, It.vu nrf.
The Lue and Art of
William Mcrrit Chase
r K.vni klm: Minr.u.r hoot
l llli letter personal icinlnN
reners -mil IllJstrallle tnaterltt
intrntlurtlon hv Alien elerstin
e'hnse, Mllli reciro.Iin lions, uf thu
artist'" wutks. fl.no net.
Charles
Scribncr's
Sons
Fifth
Avenue
New York
S4P
All tlio Mnrl 1 crewt holH LouTliIrut
for h ruiMlcr'w imk fouml lit
EVERYMAN'S
LIBRARY
73 1 Voti. .Veiirf for cnlatoa i'rite nnj zne
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5th Ar., N. Y.
D
ACOBS
1628
CHESTNUT
STREET
FOR
BOOKS
STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING
Ak w
JfF fBOOKs'j.'w.
Nothing Better to Give Than
A BOOK
It Costs a Trifle and Lasts
The White Ladies of Worcester
By the Author of "THE ROSARY"
a
'( it a splendid work, full of dramatic power ami (rue to uulnre. net
reverent with thiwjs Hint arc saaed, uud altorclltcr one of tltc finest
books that has hct't the light for whhj i( duy." San Vmicwco Call.
A Unconquered
By the Author of "CAPTAIN DESMOND, V. C."
"There is uric depth, a new power in Mm. Diver's btlcnl tstoru. . . .
There is more xpontancitji in it; a surer nutization of the facts ot life;
a truer sense of human values, and lur increased simplicity of phmsing
adds force to her talc." Melbourne Aust)atasiau.
r The Heart of Her Highness
By the Author of "EVERYBTODY'S LONESOME"
.1 slorn brightly gemmed with discriptiie excellence by Claia K, Laugh
tin. "Not for yturs lias so delightful a tale of aldin times appeared,
far mote meritorious tliun anything Stanley Vcyinun ever did." Cleve
land Plain Dtahr.
d The Safety Curtain
By the Author of "THE WAY OF AN EAGLE"
"In cxtraoidinary power Kthcl M. Dell's imvels, as ucll her short
Writ, challenge comparison with any writings of our time. Here it is
sjdcudidtii apparent, combined with murvelously tender witchoy and
gentle charm quite irresistible. The intcniest primal passions range
through these tales, but never gel beyond the iqual sway of swict
womanliness and loyal manhood. Totes which nobody with heart
and red Mood can icad without a quickening of the pulse, or can lay
down without u wish to take them n) and read tliem again." iV. ,
2'n7ii(iif.
e The Hundredth Chance
In the days of jadtd novel readers, it is quite a fiat to ia)ry one buck
to tlie "St, Klmo" type of novel. One does not judge a noicl like this
new book of Etlicl M. Dell's till afli'r it is finished. One simply devours
it without stopping i-rn'i iced criiicully, it is sentimental, melo'dra
tnatic. and the chaiactcis arc iithcr "pitchy black" or "uugcliiallyl
while," but it's a tattling good stoii while you're icudinq it.
l.l, IIIIOKSIM.I. Illls
NEW YORK
G. P. Putnam's Sons
A New
Qualermain Story
Finished
Hv 11. ltlDKlt HACCA1U)
.lHilmr of "Matte." "flilld of
htorni," rlc infi totnifil
ftonttijtirti and ttit&t icrap
per. (loan mo. tl l nil.
"Of tho iiitciest uud swing of
tho naiintlvo it is simiily
liceessar) to speak The jiassin
)ears have titkin nothing fiom
the spirited nullity of th au
thor's style; this ttory holds tho
leailcr'ti am ntii'm lliinij mini
beginning In end II Is a talu
within whoso pages one ma
llnd temporary loigitlulmss of
tho bljodsheil mid woo of thu
present, living for a whllo In tho
midst of a win Id that is past."
Ariel Yoik Tlims.
LONGMANS, GREEN
GREAT LOVE STORIES
OF THE BIBLE
And Their Lessons for Today
i By "BILLY" SUNDAY
B 12mo. Mluitrated. $1.50.
The first booh by the grTSf evangelist.
Billy Sunday, whose eloquence ha$ drawn thousands up the "sawdust
Jtrail," loses nothing of his power when addressing his audience through
the printed page, and his vivid personality is felt nearly as much as when
he in person stands before his public.
; ,T AI.I. I.OOKMIM.IHIS
New York G. P. Putnam's Sons London
A STUDENT IN ARMS
First Series By DONALD HANKEY Second Series
From one of the boys in cam to the Editor of The Churchman..
"You can hardly realize what a comfort it is to have a book like 'A
Student in Arms.' If you read the article in it about college training
and military training you'll realize what I mean. I'm passing the book
on to my friends 1iere."
. Jmnfcuii :d(Iou rr( Scries In Us lith Ji'diiloii, Scebinl Hcries in Us tth
Y Vdttlon. I'rite, eocft f 1.50 Xct. 1'istage Extra. At all lookfore.
.,T,jmjm ,CQ.,.61 Fifth Av.s.N.YorksCHy
BENNETT, BENSON AND
Masterpieces for Children
Pictures nro tlio nuiext iniicnl to the
heart if tlio chllil. v lintcv'or the elenrco
of Imagination lie or t-hu m.iy bu lilcsscel
vvltli .tnl tlil heliiK t-o. tlin iry nt
trnctlvn llttlo volume, "In Picture Laml,"
llliittrutcil luofmcly with Fklllfnlly exo-t
rnteil conlci of masterpiece ot art lv
painter of ivoilelivlilo etlelirltv, ninl nil '
of them f.tMirlUH v.llli the nut mill lo
or Bill, Is imro to tnnkn tin npiioal to any
iino loohlipr for u Htiltiililu Juvenile i
ChrlMlmaM lionK rnein urn moie, inan
11 huniliLil paces of orlKlnal tri8 il
scrlpllvo oY or nppropil.ito to tlio pic
tur icproiluceil wltli jihotui;riii1ilo llilel
Ity Tlio nuthor ot the lines!, rhirenou W
Sulutoii, a In her foreword, ml
dtecsed In her "dear children." "In
Iwrlllmj this book for oii I Iuino tr.i
, eled trnik throiiRh elll when 1, too, wnt
u llttln Klrl. lhlUK 111 thought thon hap-
Prv chllilhood da!, when I iluanit that
i conio ilny perhniii t would bo tlttliiK
I nt u tenUier'rt desk And then, oh, I
would tee th.it tho jouiiKsleiH would
obev oiery t.lngIo loo'.c and word"'
i Tho book l dlildcd Into four fee-
t'ons, repiccentllii? the t-eacoiiH of tli
ijonr, cull nectlon contalnlnu leproduc
i tloiiH of bucIi well-knottii worl.H ni
VokcI'h pnliitlnif'At I'lay," a beautiful
I fiontUplecn J l.ebrun'H f.iiiioiit ".Madauio
U.ebiun and Her IUURhtem." r.ennlds,H
I "Ako of Innocence" mid othctw, fully u
mole nml u half of them, equally well
I knoun mid popul.it
Aitltlo In tMiotti.ipliy, tasteful III tho
reliction of tho NUbJeitH mid wholesome
In its utniostiheic. "lit l'ltturo l.ind" oc
cupies u conspicuous place anions lecent I
Juxcnllo literature ,
IN I'lrTt'ttl! 1AM' I'hihtreii's rmnrlto
Muftcrplte-s, With l.lltlv Morl In ire
ll 1 "Ion-nee W ,snton lllu'truUU. .Stn
ork i: I' Iiutlon A. Co tl. I
I Dorothy Dainty
Doroth" 1-MliiU. who cnJon tho ills-
Mlnctioii of a copj rlRhtnl name, has had
more books wiltten about her than hae
hi en wrlttin about Joltlo or l.lojd
ICcoip! or many another fanious man.
And Doiothy Is only a Ctrl who lias tut
'cNlstemo ixctlit In the Itu.iKlii.itloii of
Amy llroolis. u wrlln of i-torlcs for ihll-
Idieu. Tho t.ei nti cnth book about her
Is Just from tho press) In tlmo for the
holiday miimiu. This uno deals with
' 1 er iidicnturi'H at bo.irdltiK uliool. Those
who know what llMly K.lrla do nt siuh
places will know what to iMictt mid
they will not bo illi-appolntcd.
IiOltOTIIV IlAINTV AT ill.KNMOIti: IU
Ann llronks lllutnilil
h th nuthn
lloctnli l.othlOp. J,e
UII tl
.".hpiird i'uni
LONDON
The Book of the
Happy Warrior
Hv SIR HICXItV XKWHQLT
Author of "Tales of the fiii-nt
H'ui,' ' 1ic 7ooK. uf the
Thin llut IJnr," etc. With
rinlit inluliil jiiiifrs IS
pfelnrcs la bUuL anil uhltc
bi It .1 I out. ('loan 6tj.
il ;.: nit.
"Who Is the hnpp warilor.'
Who Is ho
That oveiy man lu arms
should wish to be "'
"Anolhir of those stilling col
li! lions ot heroic story which
makes one envy tho boy of to
day for whom It Is wiltten
llappll tho Juvenile bookcase
has no key." 7ic Otifrrrr.
i
h
& CO., NEW YORK
mmmmmmm
Topsy-Turveying Santa
Claus
Hail It tml lie. ii for the M1 In tho
niiloinohlH'. Mr. William II. Alklnn, iillaK
Softy, nll.n Hilly thu Hopper, might
hnvi' fpriit liN t'lirlKtm.m lu u nice
mtrnt, vturiilly furnlsheil nml wcurciy
fuHtonctl lull cell Am It turned out lie
ptajul Santa Cl.ui, lnlc.iel, nml let uh
hopo tlin tern ilmlcr of till ilan will lio
occtipleil with no moro h.iz.iriloua pas-
time.
The curious thine nbout Jlr. Hopper
wa that ho rmlly had Intended to ie
form when mjiiw person threw mi op
portunity Into hlsi mental machinery
and eloKKul tho wheela thereof. He
Just had ri tired front a well-orBanlsid
and successful buslnc of safe crack;
ItiB. In the futuro he would raUo lieiW.
Ho cen had Marled to raise hens. Then
camo tho aforementioned opportunity.
Willi nil tho zeal ot an Inspired breeder
of plain nml fancy poultry Mr. Hopper
tried to ilodk'e It, but to no purpose. Ills
feet Mlpped and ho lelded to tho Im
pulse. During tho succeeding twenty-four
hours he pkked a geiitli m ill's pocket,
stole n motorcar mid assisted In lobbing
two houses As a hen inlser, Mr. Hopper
was a line burglar.
(loudness kuons what might hae
happened but foi the oungstcr In the
automobile. Almost us mioh as he t-aw
tso ihlld, Mr lIoppir'M reformation be
gan, mid before ho knew It, the burglar
had agreed to play Santa clans. Tor all
theso cM'ltlng things happened on
l hrlstin.is I Ac.
A m:rusiiii.i; kvxta ri.trn n Mcro-
llth Nkhntson With lllu'lriillons hy
I'lorrme II Mlmrl lloslim lluuklitnll
JtllTllli rulutMii) II
Fun for Little Children
Tin io books to gladden the hearts of
ihlMrcn aio among the lecent Mutton
publications. tIicmj me "Tlio l'miny
fiatlurs," "lleond tho Mountain" and
"The II i)pfats and tho (linlieh "
'1 ho tlrat uaniiil deals almost tntirel)
with tho ilolngs of tlio tluekh, chUkeus
ami plgeoni Many an Interesting barn
j. ml tale Is untoldid and tho llttlo nail
cih are bound to ltani wh tlio ilucks
llku piidillcs or the ililikins can't swlni,
and why tho pigeon pouts.
"He) ond the Mountain" Is a iiilleition
of oibcs telling of ilus who llo In
imionbtatns and tloweiH. the story of
the shooting st.itx mid the shafts of sun
light; and all nbout the wild blossoms
that iowr tho hills in springtime. Main
nt tho miscs piovlouslv h.ic luen set
' " - i - .-... --
tp mip-Ic.
"Tho llnpp) fats' me Just what one I
would suiijioo tluni to be ji gioup of
Jollj ihlldieii whoe i hlef business Is to
cliaso tho Cioiich lu this pleasant lie
cuiMtlon they work lu tho ganb n, t-lt
wl-e Mr. Owl, make .1 men igerln mid
I glie a ).uty to whiih ale luited the dog
nml puss cat, the blnl and lotH of other
i little hapiif.its like tbeniselies. 11 ich
I book Is piofusLl'Uiid hiiiidsouicly illus-
tiatcd.
I Till: rfS.M'j:ATlli:lts. Written nml II
! InMmti.l lu l..mslni. r.iinphell New
I urk i: 1" Hut linn & i"o JI..-I)
Ill'.MlMl 'I Mi: MiirNTM.V. Hv Aunt "-aille
(sirih stelxs llalk-tl t Illu-iratH.I h
K.i I II. rill" l'le New urk I: I". llultoll
Tni:t""lllMH'A'IH AND 11115 llltOlTH
Mor anil liuiur-s i, t u juruan. .m
oik i: r iiutton a
Democracy in the -Making
I One of the benefits of the Hoy Scout
niuvenient ailses from Its Inspiration of
jwi Iters of seniles for liojs A book ill
i which the scouts aro the heioes Is
bound to lav emphasis on the stnudniils
, of honor, helpfulness and demoenu v,
mil tho bo who leads such .i book w.ll
' frequently get more good out of II
I than fioui a dozen leetUK s b the si out
master Ho sets other lio.vs acting In
the wny he Is told ho should "act and
i I unconsciously Influenced for good
One of the best books of tho hind has
'been written by Joseph II. Ames It Is
tho story of the caieer of a newsboy
who w. is admitted to a company of
couts mid received at flrst with slights.
Ho has the right sort ot stuff In him.
and under the guldanio of the scout
master he Iln. illy Is accepted at his real
ivorth Tho stor readies an exciting
tllm ix when tho newsboy saves the llfo
ol the lid who had treated him with
tlio gicale-t scoin In tho beginning Tlio
beck has the approval of the Hoy Scouts
ot Anieilc.i.
I'VDiat iiov siot r 1'iii.ims ih ius. pti
ti .,..., in....... . .. .. ,.. t. ...
I,hi 1.
II .11
.. ,...- iiiu.ii,iu ... ,, in iiiiinitr.
Neil vurl.. Ire l.nturi l uinpHn.
Campfire Girls
j Hoy Scouts nin not the onlv pet sous
Ivihn can have exciting ndiciittnes, as
theso villi li.iiu who icad C.uvipfiii
lllrlu f.t.il Mi.llnl III... 1... I 1. lu ll...
stoi of a coiiip.tii of ghls in tlio III ik
'shlro hills of iiortliHcsteru Massachusetts
who set out to scale .Mount l,ielock
I They have encouiiteiH with bears and
i t lamps, Thero Is nn exciting nseiio
i from drowning, mid there Is a valuable
dog whoso courage nnd beauty 1111 the
gills wllh iiilinlrutlon. The gills lead
u outdoor llfo and train themselves so
jt as to bo of service to their enmity In
any euicigenc It Is a wholesome stoiy.
CAMPKIHIl IJIItl.S AND Mr. liltHW.OrK
H. li
il.. I llurnllrouk lllu-nr.il. . I l.i .lulin
l.u
Co
llestull l.olhrop. I.ee A. Miepiru
II 3."..
When Animals Talk
I'ew things delight llttln chlldicn mom
! than tales of nuhuats that talk and jic't
like human beings Their Imaginations
lire sufficiently lively to cie-ato the ueces
I sary atmosphere) and they am so un
sophisticated that they tiro willing to iio
iiipt the fanciful ns teal. All 1 ..cedent
t stoiy of mt( a and clogs and cats uud
i people has been written bv Trances Mun
roe under tho title of "Johnnie Snoozlo
I Mouse hi tho Hlg House." It will please
the llttlo folk not ct okl enough to read
'mid Milne who aio big enough to read
It for themselves
I joiivNiH ri.soo.t.i: jiousi: in tiii: mo
MOt'St-: Hi Tr-inces Monroe IllunrHled
l,v laalisl VV. C,ele. Philadelphia The
I'enn Publishliiff Cimtpau.
' Saving a Derelict
IUos who love tho tea will bo fas
cinated with tho talo ot three dating
ouths who set outl n a tnolcri'u.it to
I salvage a dere let with a valuable cargo.
I It Is .full of thrills from beginning to
end and Is wiltten with a thorough
knowledge of tho sea and Its perils
Just tho kind of book for a led blooded
' boy with a llngc of romance In his coins
position. .
Tin: vi:.ni urn-:
W reek of llm
llarls Willi
1'oiit.n, New
l.SS.
liovs AI'l-OAT: or tho
t'ausla. II) llunsrd H
illustrations hy Here i:,
VcJTk: Hnrper t llrus.
Daytime Stories
'I hero aro many bedllmo story books
for llttlo children. Ituth O. I)cr has
written a book of stories for day time.
They nro grouped under sultablo head
ings, beginning with making ready for
tho day, mid running from buttoning
the shoes through washing the fare,
ccmbtug tho hair and trimming the nails.
to the time? fur a nap. Iho stories nro
suitable for the small child who has to
be helped lu 'tho course of Its toilet.
The book has a frontlspleco In colors by
Antoinette Inglls.
THU UAYTllli: HTOIIY HOOK. , Jly Hutll
U. Dyer. Hontcin; Lolhrup, I.eo . tihep.
brd Oompan, ll.
THE FUNNIEST BOOK IN YEARS
LOG OF THE ARK
By I. L. Gordon and A. J. Truth
$1.00 Net. l'o.taft Extra.
For Sle Evwywhre
c r. winon co mm av. y.
MONAHAN,
THE ART OP WRITING ESSAYS
It Is Exemplified in the Brilliant Work of E. P.
Benson and Arnold Bennett, Which
Monahan Should Study
Till! ess.i
111 let cut
has fallen Into .dlsrcimle
Mais, probably for tho
icas-on that the cssnista did not hnc
tins thing to sa. Yet It m.iy bo that
tho teeming c.iso of jdoducltig nn essay
tcmptul llttlo minds to make the hazard
until idltois mid publltlurs rt fused to
look nt tin thing which boro tho name.
Tho Oxford illcton.il )'h definition of the
artlclo may hao had siinio lnllucnce
In bringing about a Hood ot futile wi It-
lugs, for that excellent work of reference
sas that an essay Is "a. literary com
position (usually imise anil short) on
any subject" Now, what is easier than
to wrlto a short lumposlthm on any
subject'.1 The amateur will sit him
down nt his desk and dash off something-
tlin amateur nl.is dishes it
oft and send It to an edjtor Now and
then It Is print! d, for theio must be
something In tho magazines besldis
llctlou mid irno In oribr to gle dlgult
to tho table of lontents. And It the
namo of the issajlu Is well known,
so much the better
Hut a man who knows how In wiite
does not h,ie i depend on a well-known
. -s-:
Vi
X
'V
tl 1 in.-. T.i . . i .1 u in , l ml ("..it
hi III, iK.piilaiitv .f thearti.lesl.v .l.uob !
Toiis.ui whl.li .ippeand in tho Now Aw
.1 T s ago
lu Loudon fiom I'KiS to Hill Thev were
wittv, sp ukliug brtllt.iiit .l.uob Tonson
wielded a i.iustle pen and expressed his
oiilotis of contemtioiary men mid
women of letteis and l.imllsli lustilu
tlins with iidmii.iblo frankness It Is
now known that Tonson was Arnold Hen
nett The best of tho New Age ill ticks
have been g.ithircd ingelhet In a bonk
for the delight nml edlllcntluu of the
iiidieious liven those who. having met
Ml Hemiitt when he was in Aine rl
found libi personalis ef somethliig to
L ,. 1 Jt I JEj
mmm ., i
I wm i
VRN0L1) IIKXNKTT
ier-iill.llll ll 1 w Miiiie-iiiiiiK ee'.the' VolUll
will enjey tho sp.ukllng 'f 1 hturlet.
so long as they can see the! Mloyt ' M!)
be desiled
his lute lied
coitui-catloiis while he Is leagues away
Hut Iln. v- will ehucklo when they lead
his confession in the course of A ills,
agt cement with Che-lertou ; "lluu'o I am
un un'pi.ikablo Ihigllshnian "
Those who Judged Mr. Hcnnett's m in
net outside of his novels h the loininoii
pl.iceness of "How Ui Live Twent-four
Houis a D.iv" will bo suiiirlsed by the
dbcoveiy lliat he reallv cm wilte some
thing besides fiction Take the deuip
tlnii of the eleith of Swlnbiiino and Its
effe-ct on London for an i x.iniplc It
appeals In 'Hooks and l'rsons, the
volume In which the New Age articles
me iiilliitul It In gins with the state
ment tb.it on i If nd l'lldav- night In was
out lu High stie a "at tho cross-mads,
wheic the warp and woof of trifllc as
sault each other under the gnat glue
of ..imps' llien follows a description
of night In the stieets cov 'ring two
pages 'The policnien and the lo.iters
in the ring of llio made by Ihe public
houses at the c ir-s-ioads ven these
well) giavei villi tho universal affliction
of life and grim with tho leliiitltss. uiii
xeisil egotism Lovers walked us though
theio were no heaven and no eaith, but
onlv themselves," and so on And he
continues-
V ft l v.ll.ls l.ejoiti Where lite liutn
t.ust-H lurne.1. was li eerlelll llnuito with
IlKhlttl uetit r whiilows. nml lu Hint h'.in"
the sreitltst 1 rle Vt-rs'tler tliat l,lli-llinil
eier li nl mil one nf Ihe flout ports uf
tlie whole. worM nntl er Mil iPf h
iUIiik a n.tiu liiilntrlitl Hut
loolitsl, tiit1tn.lv stt-uittl to inn.
if ..... i.tt. thrtitsltl uf It Tilt e
Hurt
lielHt.ll
I tlulll.t
iitrniitus
foe Id
letltuenet. iiin.iirttl In mo ttt I
Ih in itnllln nll.t huinin
'lheu Iio savs tluit the next d.iv the
shops weie all open, tho flags w.iveu
on high and bulntss went on as though
nothing hail happened. This was ne-
c-auso the nation urn not i.now ni in-
burnc. And lu a parenthesis lie saS
"11 'tho nition" I mean newspaper
readeis. The leal nation busy with the
problem of eating, d Ing and being born
nil In one room, has never heard oteltln r
TeiitLVson or Sw Inhume or t.t (Icorge ll
Sims.' This essay Is a work of con
summate ait It produies the elTeit
Intended and onlv a master or literary
Lonstiuitlou lould have written It
The Milunio Is full of billll.iut and
penetrating e onmicnt Of Hrleiix be
s.is that If tho Frenchman wen- In
England Hcrnard Shaw would eat him
for ho Is a vegetable Ho speaks of
a h potlietlc.il spectailo In Loudon "that
Anieilcans would pay to see" Ho re.
marks of Oalsworthy that he thinks the
Original Will, or the first cause, "made
a gtolcbciue and fundamental mistake In
the conception of our pal titular planet "
He sas that Heniy James Is skillful lu
making stone soup and dismisses Alfied
N'ojcs with the statement that ho Is
"thought by many to be a poet,"
It will bo evident fiom the foregoing
that Mr. Helmet e-ould bo "sassy" when
wilting under a pseudonjm. He an
nounces n"vv that he Is allowing the mat
ter to be published under his own name,
that ho stands by nearly all of the crit
ical Judgments, "though perhaps with
u less challenging xivaclty, to this da-.'"
Another Kngllsh essajlst whom It Is
u pleasure to read Is H. K llenson. In
"Tho Kreaks of Ma fair" ho has pro
duced a collection of scintillating com
ment about and description ot the tjpea
common lu every large city: the snob,
tho unliable oung woman who passes
for a man, tho widow who has to havo
fourteen servants to wait ou her In order
that she may maintain tho viosltlon to
which her family and blrtl
the childless wife, who
every fad that ts going
who take pleasure In po
of their nciiualulances,
Tho Illttenhouso Square set
will doubtless find many portraits in the
volume. All that Is necessary to make
then! local Is to chunee the place names
from those ot London and Its environs
to those of Philadelphia and Its suburbs.
Ladles ot leisure are likely to find It
more exciting than a noval, or they will
recosnlie the. portraits ot their acquaint
ance. net.to Hi' oC their .bosom friends..
lAtltlo her;
ttIWi up with
I VSPoclal asps,
MEing the lives
Ir5 a lot more.
In this city,
noei, MH.IO sr oi laeu-.oiwu-a jrienus, . "i.iiK, Aiiatln. 7r llluatratad vVIUi DtuUo-
Mtt-wSishtr, M-phKM s'lsnrili
:J... am . .-tt. . ,.. a I'll - . . .r.i . : W.
ESSAYISTS
don -his put forth .. xolu.no of cWj
till, season that naturally groups Itself
with the work of lleiisou mid Hennttt.
Ho Is Michael Monahan, born In County
Cork, Ireland. This Is the reason we
beg his pardon for calling him a llrlt
Islier Oneo mi Irishman, nlnnxu an
Irlshmiu, Is the rule, even though tho
son of the sod bo brought" to America
In his i.irly youth Mr. Mountain's
"New Adventures." Is dltllcult reading
for ono who has Just laid down Arnold
Hennett, In the iouiso of ono of his
iss.-ns he sasa that Stevenson onco re
marked that all Americans wroto like
amateurs?, and then he proceeds to prove
that 111 ono Instance at least Stevenson
wns tight Ills Htle Is that of nn np
lirmtletf, while tho stvlo of both llenson
and Hennett Is that of Journevtren
masters of their trade, llut. after all,
them are some goeid things 111 the book.
Tho best sentence In it occurs 111 a dis
cussion of the "Kiee l'oets " H tells
them that 'The wny to discountenance
ti.ul poetry Is to wrlto good lioctrj."
but ho siolls it by Aithur Hrlsb.inlng It I
into small capitals so that tho liist Side
New Jorker. though a fool, m.iv not
miss his meaning Another excellent
SelltelR'n OlCUrs In t IO s.lllio ess.iv Vl hell
ln S.1VS. "I iln. lu.f I eiiiemher In Inen
'ever heard an ordinal' peison quote a I
line of Whitmans, though-and hues
a paiadnx for oii-I have known not
I a few peisons of ipilte urdluar talent
tr to write like him '" The excellene'e
heii". however, does not lie in tho stvle,
foi that is cm it able llut Mr Moiialuii
has a following and his admirers will
find ill this volume reason for continuing
their admiration (i. W. I
HOOKS
NU I'llllSOVi HelnB I'nniments
nil h Va-1 Kisiih l'liis-mii Hi Arn.iM
H-nnett Nmi Vork. eji-orire Ji. lier.ni
e'uiiit'iiii. -
1 in; niK.vKH ov M.Mvin itv k r
lluis.ni lllustrHteil h (hnrir.- 1'lntik en
erk (heme 11 Portm ConiMtij. SI r.u
N'HVV At'VKNTl'ttns Hy Mlehnl Mom-
h.in N ork elcerg" II Iiorar e'otu-
I'llll $J.
In the Wrong House
Mntgery Mnuls was a spoiled child '
,.l..... -l.n 1..T, I,, n , -. llr... ..I l......n
I , . , . .... ,. .
to I
spenu uie winier wnu per Kranoi.uiier
'In a New Jeiscv village. The vlltigo
was full of Monlses The telegram an-
nouncliig her arrival was diliveied to
'the vvniiur fainllv Tho grandfather
there was In.tho habit of welcoming his'
relatives whenever they came, and he i
was expecting a giaudd.iughter about
that tlmo mi)ii ,ir Ho was not at home, I
however, and his housekeeper .nut grand-
children who lived with him welcomed
the stranger. 'I he girl went to school I
and pla)nl with her cousins and lost I
much of her snobbishness nnd began to
act as n child should, when nv aci lele nt
she discovered her re il grandfather. The
story of her expeilenccs. some of which
are" thrilling and. ill of which are enter-
talnlng. has been told by Violet Oordoi
''"I' l ' '""' "''"V1 "l ,,1C t'lFt0 .",
nlon
t
children fiom ten to fouiteen jears old
Mmii:in Mimm nv Uei.t (i.inioii
ilrn. tl!utriitfil hv Ailn i VV llli.inis,iu
Phil iile'lphla J lie Pelin Publishing e'oln
lian. II .'"
Famous Mystery Tales
l.lva S Smith, ct the Carnegie I.ibt.iry,
Pittsburgh, has edited mi admirable col
lection of ni)stery tales Intended for
I... i .mil frtrls. rhe tnt.-s 111., llite.l In
t -0iunlP. 10wcv.r. aro not chlldten's
Among them are some of the
nious mjMerv stories. Thero
Is l'uo's "Ihe Cold-Hug." William
Huff's '"Ihe Spectral Ship," Washing-
ten Irvlng's "Don Iloderlik and the
.Magic Tower" i nel "La Mott-roque's
"As'.iugi's Knight." Tho inflection Is I
not eoulliietl to piose. for Alfred Noes's i
"Tlio Admiral's llhost," Cole ridge's
"llluie of tho Ancient Mnriner" and sev
eral other wel'known poems mo In
eludeel. Adults who enjov tho unravel-I
Ing of strange complications will Until
the book wot th while and bojs and
gills uf the high school ago ought to
ie id as part of their Uter.it education
the stc.rles .mil poems that It contains, I
MVsTHKV TV1.KS 1 Ol! IHJVS VM (illtl.s. i
s, lot leil In i:ivh s .snillli, of Ih.- I urni'tlo
I lltr.tr . I'lltsliurvli I rotillmiieee hi .1
ll ii rs Huston l.uthrup, i.e. A. Shtptnl
i timpani. $1 r.o
Adventures in Mindanao I
Adults as well as joung jieople viho
wish to learn scinclhiiig about the life
of (ho natives nn tho Island of Min
danao lu the I'hlllpplne.i e'.illlinl do bet
ter than it ad I'lorence l'artello hluart's'
"IM.ing, the Morn Jungle Ho " l'l.uig
Is tho hero of a largo number of In- j
ten Ming and exciting adventures, lu the
telling of which Mrs. Stuart surrounds
him with the utmii'-phcio if tho e-ouu-try.
She ih scribes natlvo customs and
points of view and shows how the curl-'
oils superstitions affect the tl illy life uf
tho people Ono of the miit thrilling tales
In the setles deals with tho effort of
1'i.ing to latch u ni)sterloiis monster i "i" loniantlc niMlis of tho icihneii If
that Is pre) Ing on his village lie ills- the makers of books fur them tan pre
ccvers accidentally that tho monster Is vent It. Two or three new Indian fair)
a giant pjthon that lives In a mango'
HCo nearb). The p)thou Is trapped,
but breaks loose, and there Is a des
perate light with It befoto It Is killed,
und in tlio oour.so of tho tight tho boy is
severe!) Injured
thk Am i:ti'hi:s or i'iank tiii:
Vlimil JUAUI.Ii Itui lt Sloreliee
I'artellj Slunrl Illustrated li Lllmlorlll
luuiur. lew Vork. Tho I'cutun Culll-
And the Girl Won
Whoever Is Inlet rated In Jaehllug will
bo Interested In Allen Trench's stoiy ot
tho tomcat for tho golden cugle, a truph)
awarded to tho victor In tho races off
tho t'oast of a New lhiglund summer
resort. There are many udventures on
tho water, exciting and otherwise, before
tho story ends. The llnal race for the
trophy Is won by a girl, who proves that
sho lias courage nnd Judgement at a
critical moment and can manage a sail-1
boat better than a cotky boy, who wis
contemptuous when ho discovered that
ho had to meet her Instead of tho bo)s ,
whom ho had expected to humiliate. It
is a wholesome, open-air talo for joung)
people,
fllll (iOI.HUN KAOI.r. 11)' Allen Trench. !
IlliiMraieil -sew Vorli: Thu Century
Compt t. Il.-i.
Statistician in Novel JLlfe
Oscar l'helps Austin, nt present el.
tlsticlan of the National City Uanlt or
New Vork. formerly thief of the Hureau
of .Statistics ill Washington, has bios
somed out iib it writer ot stories for
)oung people. Ho evidently thought tint
the facts In such books vvero not sullt
clently authentic. Ills latest book- Is
"Uncle Sam's Hoy lit War." It la the
story of the adventures of a boy xvho
went to Kuropo with a consignment of
horses for the urmles. The ship Is tor
pedoed but not sunk. When ho reaches
Krunee tho boy rides over the battle
fields lit a runaway ba loon, he decs tho
llfo In the trenches nnd visits a military
hospital. Then ho returns home, Mr.
Austin's reputation for accuracy Is suf
ficient to Justify the reader In accepting
his descriptions of life In the war zone
as correct. His book should Interest
all boys of all ages.
UVU1.K HAU'fl BO
AT WAR. Uv Oscar
YOUNG PEOPLE'S BOOKS
OMi,, TIT.. .-.!. ml,n. 'T.-.',r,A I
I i Jiu lUilttJIl -L IUIL YYcuntuiiiujoi iwuiuuit
Like a Man '
According lo tlio .lapntiese, thorn Is
n liajl, or Hdrlt, IMiib In eery tree.
II Is n beautiful tnitiorstltlon that adds ,
poetry to the life of tho lniaglnntlxo
orientals, l.ulgl Uarlnrl, mi Italian
writer, has made tiso ot this belief In
a most delightful tale for children about
' "l"1''" ', 'fn "a V w to
,lIu,J ,, i'0,,' V " ' ?Xn, , "
himself, resotled to a favorite play t f
his childhood Ho broke ono of the
matches lu two for tin1 alius mid an
other for bgs, and tied them to the
other match with thread mid set his
creation on the floor. To his astonish
ment, the bltlo wooden man began to
talk In a, voice about as loud as the
nolso made by pushing a needle In a
cork Ho tells tho tale of tho willow
tiee from which ho eame, and how It
was finally cut down mid rpllt Into
match wood, and how he, the oplilt of
tho tree, kept Hitting from otic niati h
to another until ho was In the hist
match lu tho last box. He has magic
powers, aim when tlio real man Boes,,,,,,,,- following his coMimi, the nuthof
to.war tho match man saves mi urniy i
by running ahead and tiring a mine
that had been set to destroy It. lie
gives his own life for others. It Is un
unus.il kind of a story, but Harzlnl
succteds In, creating a personality out
of tin ce bits of match wood Tho story.
preposterous us It seems. Is told
so
plausibly that It Is most entertaining.
Tln. ,,,TTM: match MAN. Tran.h.te,l I
from the Italian of l.uut llurzlnl lllua-
r. noil- .j inuii i imk-sireei i nilllil. I
l.hlu
Tim IVnli Publishing Coinpanv.
li :
What a Little Girl Did
Winning u oung man from pie
in. mile old ago and misanthiopy 1 the
abotindli g love in her inu happv lie.ut
Is out one of tlio liinumi table delight
ful achievements of Wllll.iiuln i, who,
taken all In all. Is one of the most lov
able little girls that own their existence
to the imaginative f.uultv ot the
wribrs of llclloii Sim Is a thoioughly
ill. inning plson, iiidnwed Willi the
spirit of frlendlliKss to nil mankind
and all iinlmals, if exicpllou In made
of snakes, low aid wlilen n. distinctly
feminine antipithy has developed Itself
hi tho halt seme ears of her sunny
lifetime
This sunshine It Is undeniably tl ni
ls l.u mh .ittrlbut.ible to the n-ittir.il
kindliness of tho oung man whom she
leseiii" rnim the Isolation and dejection i
In which ho had burled hlni-elt on In
)nB tinned down bv the arm aiilhor-
Itles when he applhd for cnll-tment in
""' v,,tvlie of his lountrv. the duetois
having dlseoveied a weakness In his
'"ngs Ills name Is William Knvv In, mid
his illh.iiHilntiueiit bo withdraw h
himself fiom Intercourse wltli his fel
lo"' ""'' "ll1 nurtures a contempt for
humanity as ,e whole. One d i), after a
dreadful stoim. ho Ilnds a girl b.ib) In
a lowbo.it which has drifted near his
herniltlll.e home. William makes ever
possible effort to discover the patents
"r lle waif, mid, falling to do so, takes
upon himself the luring of tin little
"tie in a purely masculine but none the
less practical fashion. 'Ibis labor (,f
love itstores his mental anil spiritual
equilibrium, and tho affection which
elcvclops between the mature William
and the diminutive Wllllanilna is de-
1 scribe tl 1 Miss I-'ianees I: Stenett
who Is the author of the stoi. with
tho hand of an aitlst porfee tlv well at -
iiujliilid with the moro admliablo traits
of human e li.u.utt r.
I "William anil Wllli.unln.i" is by no
I means a children's story pule mid
I simple, even though Its heroine Is a
i llttlo gill, who, without tho priggish alls
tli.-t all too often lilll.it.. nailers nf
'tubs of Juvenile piodlgles, nevertheless
performs sundry htnprislng "stunts,'
brt allies the splill nf tho most elevated
iiiptimlsin anil altiulsni and dlsplavs
un cirlglnallty that gives a novel twist
lo the Interesting situations in which
tho story abounds. Tluoiigh It all urns
a whimsical vein of humor, with Just
inough of tho haven of sentiment to
Pleaso tho lover of romance.
VMI.T.IAM AM) Wll.T.IAMlN V Ilj
I rumen II. Merrett lltustrHie,! l.i- ii.n--inal
VVrlBht llnrlKtit. el or, 11 .Vp
plctun i. Co II to.
Alhambra Tales
Tho l.iu-st volume In the seiles ot dill
dlen's el issIos,Jksuci1 b.v the J 11 Lip
pint nit I'fliiip.iii, Is a etilleellon of tabs
from Washington Irvlng's "Allianihr.i. '
simplified h) Lilian Chine) The vol
nine contains the stoi v of the i tich.iutttl
town, the Ivvu discieet statues, Ih,. t p.
th lilted solellei, Iho thrto beautiful in in.
eissts llm grand master. I'rltno Ahnietl.
Iln ailveiituro of the uiason and sevtial
otheis Theie me four Illustrations In
color by Uiorg" Hood. 'Iho one. show
Ing tho beautiful gardens which the
three beiiillful princesses had for their
l ci'ri.it Ion has tlio decorative fpiallt) of
Maxfleld I'arrlsh's best work.
TALKS OI' WAslllMililN HtMNU'H AL
IIVI1UV SlniPlltlttl hS l.eU II I 'lieu, v,
Willi llliit.lnilionri lu i.tlnr hv lltorce lleoj
I'lillHtlrlphla J II I.lpplncolt CunilMliy
I'irt It ills
Fairy Lore of the Indians
American bo)s and gills aio not to
bo allowed to lenialn lu Ignoianeo of
broks have been Issn.d alieady this
)iar. One of tho best Is "The Ho) Who
Went Last." by Lthel c Hrill. Tho
author has gono to tho repoits of tho
Hureau of lhnoli.gy for her versions of
tho originals. Sho has rewritten theni
and mutinied them so as to muku it
tractive tales for tho .voung.
TIIK IIOV WHO XVKXT KAST and Other
Intllan al'lri Tales Hi
Kthel r
Brill
lllu-lratttl hy llus-li hpt-nt
H I". Uciltini A. I'o ft. .11
T Nell
Vork
What a Little Gjrl Did
The latest volume In Allio Turner Cur
tls's series of historical tales for i hll
dren Is "A Little Muld of Tlcondeioga, ' I
In which sho tells how a llttlo gill acci
dentally learned of a seH-iet entrance to
Kort Tli'onderoga, told Kthaii Allen of It
and helped him to tako the fort from
the l'liglMi 1 1 latin y und fiction aio
skillfully blended, wltli tho history nc
eUiuto mid the Action entertaining Tho
book Is sultablo for children from seven1
to fourteen jcirs old. '
A I.ITTLI! MAID Of TICONDKllOflA. Jly
Alice. Turner Curtis. Illustrates by
Wuunitu !nilih. i'hUutleiphta, The Tcim
rubllslhnu Coinpan). tl.
At All Bookstore Today
By
Theodore Roosevelt
National Strength
and
International Duty
The past and present political
nnd military blunders of the
United States arc here exposed
to clear sight. It continued
they will, in Colonel Roose
velt's belief, bring disaster.
M.00 Net
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If they no longer believe In Santa and
his n Itideer, coiuo two cxeolent books
by rrancls Koll-Whecler, a prhno fa
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enlecn tiir
Ono of them has to do with something
as mlinciilous ns wo used to deem M.
Nlek's nvrl.il equipage. "1 ho Wonder
of tho War In the Air" Is fin exciting
stoiy, with a joung American serving
In the Trench. II lug nirps ns hero.' Hut
It has moie than thrills, abundant ns
theso are. It gives a comprchenslblo
account of tho technical sldn ot avia
tion, and any lad who reads It will
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egy. The other Is a new xnlutnc 111 Mr.
Wheeler's "I'nlted Stntes Service" series.
entitled "Tho Hoy Wtt.i the Weather
tomblnes useful Information about this
Important p.ut of I'ncle Sam's govern
mental system with nn Interesting nrn
having a llkabld mid bright boy hero.
TIIK WONDIirt 111' Till: WAIt IN Till! Alll
ll I'runiU Jtnlt-W In Hi r. Ilosten: ljth
rmi. I.ee A .Hhepiril Cuiepfin II .15
Tilt: 1'IIV WITH Till: I'NITIlh hTATL.S
vvi:atiii:u ii:n itv rnmei itoit-
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A Girl Who Was Lost
Mi and Mis. Aituir K"hIm h.ivo wilt
ten a nijsteij sloiv of I'lvll War linns
lu New Yolk and Washington for the
enlt italmiieut of wiling people. It deals
with the se.'iich for u voung girl fiom
the South mIhni f i lends had lost track
of her because It was tmposslhlo t
commuulcito wltli un one within tlu
Confcdet.ito llm s. V llttlo Irish I.i-h
Ilnds a gill In New Yolk who she thinks
Is tlio one wantid. She meets her llrst
lu the midst of a lot uilslug out of nil
attack mi the negroes The stoiy Is full
ot ixilteniint mid suspense and will
hold the attention of outhful renins,
while giving them Information about an
Interesting American historical period
Tin: I.o-T IITII.n I HV lis H It nnd
A Klilpt llluntliiti
i t utur ionu in II '
i lllilrtlliitt.l New vorK Tim
9r
The Wonder
Woman
By Mae Van Norman Long
A btory of lovo
and of life close
to the great heart
of nature
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the present wai. lllus
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After a photograph
Copyright ly I'irtt Mat, Donald
Fighting
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By Henry Van Dyke
lllnillrr to Holland tor the FtriS
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Author o "The Spell o llic llolu Lani,"
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gentle mites nf the geisha. It la But
merely a IstuU nttout Javnn. It la a Plata'
of Jsptin itself." A'eltl Vork THftu. " jt
THE DEFENDERS
fir rti?9uinirBnfir is
ur ubmuuinnwi ;q
A Hook Dedicated to Our Sailor,
aoiuicrs una .Nurses
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lnrr On'! It Is this uplrlt of a new,
iiiiniiiiiri u iivei uaiuiii inri i avuiiii uif,
bonk thnt linktH It bulH il Dnrtrntlnr
Huch a oniprehrnlo interpre tattoo o(
'war.' Atv 1 orfc 7imcs, J
OP ALL BOOKSELLERS
JOHN LANE CO.
NEW YORK
tS
SCRIBNER FICTION
FOR THE HOLIDAYS a IvJ
In Happy Valley
G
fr
By JOHN FOX. JR.
Mr, I'rtv; hirrn mnked notable ad
dition. lo thoop Kentucky moun
tulnpern which hit "Troll of lh
iMjiipnomr' IMne" nnd "The lIttl
Misiipn1 nf Kingdom Comft'
havp endiare". tn ho many thou s
r-an til, lltintiatvd. $1,33 net.
Beyond
By JOHN GALSWORTHY
"The Htor in h trairfdy of BfX.
two truKMHei, lntlel. rutlly a
inovlnw ami rclcntlei!, tourhej
yih i-on.euhrit the Homo color
1'iit make ' rh lii-K I"lowr' o
mmlirdj ulowlnj.' Dt'tl ll.oU uci
My Story
By FREDERIC J. STIMSON
.ttiIajrinnJ- to Arpcntlnr Republic -
:.riN( Titr. mmhuics or hkne-v
Hill AK.MII.I) '71
"H hum trllt(-n In the form of
Arnold nmnoirH h romKntv of
thi lteolutlon which an iliwr ro- t
tiinncf 1m of fnKcltiatlnc lnttr4it. t'
urn! ulitth hh history U probably tp
thari nine tenth of the actual ,-jfcj
liUtnrv Isuokh on tho uubjitt.' "W
ck; oris Uribune
m
Illustrated.
The World and
Thdhias Kelly
By ARTHUR TRAIN
The jvtnry of Tom Kellj. a
ouiff man of plain ieotile. who
h cauxht up In the rapid current
of Kwlety life and finally barely
t hi aping moral deKtrurtlon.
iTiirriceM with a trua tcntt of th
rpal alUM In life. $1.S0 nrfifj
The Green Jacket $
' Jennelte Io huo tin en ted an
pxcmnjj ueiw ute Mory un a
rare and whlmtkul iharm,M
.Yfttf 1 ork Times,
Running Free
iu jwin it. rNNor.i.v
Illustrated. ' J 1,33 ntts
A Change of Air , jsj
11.' It ntlin rln lnllart nti 4f!ainilal V?V
ItluHtraifd. 1.1'3 ttclrft ,;
Tin Frtiti" CnrnT 'tlrW .v "
of the World .yl
11. A. 1! U. MASIIV tl rn m1
" " " "" - .,..,
The Wagei ol Honor j-'t
n katiiakim: iiiu.lvmi imnwv-5
llluitratcd. 11.33 (.'
jmmiraiuy ? -
I'luniaunn iiitt al uincxmlll, -. 1
llv AI1VI1hTI!1I I'. r.llMllelV ..1
Jlfuslralcil. 11.3.1 tecl.tl
The Fighting- Mon ,-Vl
llr AI.IllJv' liKUUKh 11.33 ne(. 'I
The Deaerter -
ll UKIIAKli IIVHIllMi DVVis .
IVO criils net.
Charles
Scribner's
Sens
ifSl
nYcas?v,
NewYMfe
NOBB
5 weeks on the firing line on,!
. v rmZ"J.
A weeks mourned as dead.
tfi
oi
O months a prisoner of,?
aj nfter hciner blinded. T.?U
His thrilling story is t
On the Right of
British Line;
!
I1.J5 neU ff
JaMAtUllM.iig
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