X EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERPHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, APRIL G. 1918 Send yoiH1 soldier boy or friend LEADERSHIP Md MILITARY TRAINING Ww-cofct. e ivoncvii.u . a .ill h!P Mm UcJUi.f n oftler arid ",1 -Xr of tn n It explains ' ' ef leader HIP thorn, how Mc. ", .- 'rt ii rr low to milium ',W d ! "" "-W"'- i V " ",u r,n" " "'" '" "",b, vt, ... tOuk l. 11.0 ,Ub. J l.hrr M'ln I" -"MIT-. ti-'.Ol) net I .' or .1. H. Ippliwolt To.. I ! ,r,U ri.MMier-. 1'lilla.. To. pwk'IO"" ffOW AffiJV 4A WOMBAT ADJUST THEMSELVES TO STRANGE CONDITIONS ill April Country Life A generoua uvnount of tpjco h Bivon in the New Country Lira to tlio national IUd i-ro-svagoHiii, vvhu.li was given ttret nt no..m.irv Theatre. llunllnRton, Long Ii-lnnd, on Octobir f. u,t Map, ml re ik ur,i rt rjrueKl Hull uu.i the Metro pollt n Opetti llousr- In N.CH yoih Tl0 full t. xt of the pageant In prlnli.il. anil It 1, Ulubtrated b .Ibm fun.,"2e dra". Iiibs In rolor liy r. Kltf.m Trow ley Those pcrtons v ho luvu binned to .-om-bine country Irvine vuth a telf-support. 'iir lit Hi farm will be Interested Huth Deanii story of tho platinlni; of . twe-iity-iicre pl-ieo In t-u-h u f,v ((s ... 1....1UU1U urauij- Hlifl utility Tlicic REBECCA WEST'S GREAT NOVEL I A First Effort That Gives Promiso of Big Things lo Come I It tg iiln.ijii Interesting to teo the wheel ko round, hut In tho study of literature It In not iiIuujh catty to dis cover the nialneprlinj which moves the trtHclilitcry. It In nft. ti tl.lllfully con cealcil to that one iMimot discover what urn other aitlcki In the number which '8 'no '"ovine power. win ,iiJi-ii. in .over ei ilia countrv "10 " "ot no .win ucm tj rbifl .. l.rlliuK llin. II... I . .. . . . amm .. ui rinpr i.irv ill., in inun ... ..... m --- - hi .von uj- iiy. "When I Dived Through a Cloud!" " TTMVE thousand iect in air, I baw be- j"1 low me a cloud that looked as boft and fleecy as a pillow. 1 divrd through it. And on the other side, d- 1 came through, 1 haw two feet away"- liut the stury is too good to tell heir. Let the man who dived through tell ou. 1 Ic ib a brave and gallant fighter, who. into hit. short young life, has trammed enough adventure to fill a thousand lives of other daw Roberta is an Ameiican ace. 1 1c wai two months in the wilds of Canada before lie knew war was on. 'Then he hcard went .straight tp the front. lie luib been a despatch rider; he has been in endless bombing expeditions; he ha& brought down eight German aeroplanes -for he is an "Ace." I Ic has been gassed and wounded' and shell-shocked; he was brought down from the air four timcb in tour days by the CJcrmans. lie has volumes and oIumcb to tell; to tell with a humor, a sincerity, a charm as delightful as his keen face as alert as im bum, athletic bod), He has packed it all into one gorgeous, vivid, thrilling book. THE S. H. YINf, FIfiHTER PM wight bin ininortiiiit nn.i1. "Th linlurn of tho Soldier." It Ik u moung and trade tale of thu emnlloiib. It deald with the war. for the reason that tho life of tln soldier offcr.-il tho bfst Held for tlio Uevelopnient of MImb Wcbt'M Idea. Mie puts her fuud.iuicntal proposition In tlio mouth of a .Motor, who na that the mental llfo tint can bo controlled hj effort In not the mental life that mat Urn. a there Is a deep pelf In one, the Morula. ef. that hat, lt wl&hea If those wishes jro hiippriHied by the BUpcrtlclal Mlf tho real t.elf t.iltts ttu ri-tni;i. It sends an obtcMdoti which doetn't fecm to bear any relation to tho ouppreHscd wish. Now tho problun whMi eMdently pr. seated ftnlf to Miss .t was how to initiate thin theory i 'f the medical pujiJinloKlHt In action I Mils In the ui nhc h.i8 dono t. tji,f f- t .Kin ,m l.ngllsh euithnuin or I'une. niarikd utul apparently hap-, I' win. had hart a loo affair In hie '"Hh which through .1 intuinlerhland-ni- fiirt.d by Mi .ep.ir.nlon from th. rl. followed fonu jiars later by her ' .rilaisc and his own. She h.i tin man i ' his as an orliivr In Krauti. Ho buf 'is from sh.ll ,o- nut) lna.a hlj ' -i. inorv of all .cuik that follow .d hl3 r pom to the Mrl In hl.s vouth olid her , e.pt.nit of him. IV , tahtn hom. ' i f .IN to rtiugnlzc his wife IM ha ' 'i told that In In nairlfd but he i not K u,, u Nullum? thm th.. .,r.. . .1 do buiceedi in uuillitiB hoi- to In-! union. He InsltitM that li. x, .. iiir rtri rrA1f1 XTTTlTTTTVn 1TfTTmT7 'I- Joull, She fortunately" mw" tn I U VJUd IN 111 V HjJX YV ttl 1 111 iii-iKiiiioruoou. married to u laboring I ii iiien- is u pathttle reunion HKe ' i''t ot .1 man who mtt IUb b. loved the i '. afcr Rhe had accepted Mm. with riill-reneo that the ciri knnus thai Muatc I t7 CI. msb 109U1 Jim, us LL J EH'tOipcif 286 H M'UITfWAWl 336 Jr?cn;t Ln&pft7vt376 .BlfjQRftyHV 448 ' AfeWlCUlTOftr 442 Qi MCDICIMC 450 L tmi f""" 'T rocs saj Uk i J POCTBY-DRAMA SSr L JHIroRV 76& 5L fRCHClOM4-TMEO.bay ygg tl rcciotocrrEccroMicB ooa H ou J .FICTION KEYf WOKS 384-9 - Mi .. incrcam: TVU5 EVfCP!T10H?I2H TOTAL 10.060 TOTAL FOR 1916 10.445 AMhKUA.N HOOK OUTPUT l'Olt UM7 n graphically fsliibUe-d by Trcd U. Woodward. HOW WAR SEEMS A Soldier's Primer i TO AN ATTTRTANI MuJr Kllner n"d Lieutenant Mac- i j vim AUOinmiM 1;iro, h.le prtpnrcd a ,,.inoboou fori u,p inftructlon or tho recruits which A nin.fi'nie irvnndiifa nf tJlP ' " lo ',0 well adapted to Its pur A liltlbtinir; ,p08Ule Ol inClpo6P ,t ueucrlhe. In detnlf the setting- ' Workings ot "Militarisni by , ",1,"r,;lK? th" ma,lunI ot "'" r''u,,4 13 " ' flrlll Iflfrl,. mtn m.1 .1,.... -.... ..,.n. ll ' ...w, KUIIJU UUL. UU. 1-II..1. ..- and the arllclen of war. fiicclal UN t.ntlon Ih nlxen to proldlnR tho proper Information redorillnu tho euro of cloth ing. 1'ipjlpinetit und tlio like, ho that thp soldier iiiav t.np himself fit under all clri-iiiiiMani-o 1IJK I ANT'-NMhM MANUAL nr . m-ta ! l..r IJvrry MMIr Ity Major (. Wi , ,r ' " ii I I.f-ut. imnt A I Ma I l.ll I f A Ve.v .orli. 1 At'Ul lut. i l t ii Inn Who Is Part of It in PSYCHOLOGICAL NOVELS '..'ler'ptirrrX'riBul Such Stories Sometimes Make Men and rsiand th it the obesson of u'lhapplnes-i i , rpi'JDD. lio i, a ! J- I.n ins inarried lite iirrints !,.-. .-...,.tr.i '-11 ' t the nun iron) wIMilnif to recall I' rii. n i onus the problem Khali they sit ' nipt to ictore Ms memory by nri ap " il to Mm 1oh for Ms dead ch'Id or -..ill tht kt him remain in blhsfu! 'niuratiie ot the trasedv of his lite? 'fiiln decide In faor of nnhltis him " i t.illj whole, and with the aid of tlio woman whom he Iotd In his uth they sin , eil i 'Hits is the machine of the Morv. ! i Inarticulate tl -leton of hard lact and thcorj'. MIkb tliottlit of mo. We t has clothed I' h- retitlment and Tbf.rn Is im .louht of uliat that ilOU I'-"- o Kue.e-srully that It Ih a Mt.i! ' TlKro ' " U0UUl 0t w"al1 ' B ti uitf It ihu wom.in'Hstor. Non. but ' trjlns to ey," rciiiiirUcd Doctor a Ionian could hai- written It from tho JlcKabrc. p. 'nt of Mew which tho utithor lia I ...., ,.,, ,,r.1)--. i ,w,i ..M!-. i..u If M.hs West can do more booliH "None whatoor, 1 atnecd HI3 hIm tin -in . ii. noxi-list r.i ti ns L..ti..i Micubul.iry Ih limited, but c under- will 11 tlif ,liHtor of .lint, nilinis-iri U, . in,l li i.rnrlv uidl." Vou uiigbt to bear tlio way my ll l-rt III 1n. 1 . ... . ...... I V ..... ,a .. lih (lliisiraiio i in ! B """ lu ,l10 w"u" ' tu,"u """" Women Mere Brutes One That Does and Another That Doesn't Iiiilf-brctd eoillc bad bis front pciwu on tny unco, 'with hts nose rcnchtiig up l'or my .face, and vnu try Hie to toll mo In bl- fu.Iilon bow much he ii mi Ul ii Pit i n Ml un VI ur. n "It Is ii ery nturj ut nUbt," tald Owen. - p'cu-unt wclcomo. Truth About the "Movies , 'no J0U K,,0, slUcmfn-,' tai,a r- ir tin- moM,,B.pi.-turo i,iusi0. i, tlH "l lluc ,,ften ondBrd huUler d0B,3; in un infancy, uh nome people wcem to I If tliey bad a .rlttcn Uuiguacc. would thuiK ii ceitalnly n, t,o wltli reuard liny nny .atlBtnetloii in wTltlng l"i' to the tuinnir.itlwlv few bnnkn wbicb .i...i-....... ....i.. .. I,..., ,.,!.... .!.... .. ,.. . ' :: CIIOlOKI.-l ilO.B. 'Of courcc not," Uootor Jlcl'abre In- , lia.i been wriUcti about it. Mont of the wi-'ters huo dotfd their energies I toward tho urt of icenatio wrlilnir but l!oii Wacncr now .ointt, forward with a I I oolk .iliout tho men women and children J who iiuiliu the innMet Mont ff thesd ' storkf in thlh book anneaifd llr-t tn 'tin Patuldiv i:enlnt; Post, whem they ne tn'ov-u tor their Kcnulno intimacy sistcd. "Thcj nro too ulmplc and they lacK tbo bclfsiontcloubiiesa tlut lmicla mun to nnalvo their einotloita ami bpcculdto about tho rcaonu for bdf evident tblnsu" I'crbaps tbia la why that man I fJWy ?( (( k By Ueut. E. M. ROBERTS, R. F. C, lltaMhlitil IH (! Yeil, HARPER & BROTHERS fmitim I BIiHV i'm4l i You Must Read Some New Books. Maybe These DONALD THOMPSON IN RUSSIA . By Donald Tliompaon All ainnzilli nvn.U'iftinau rofnivl nf IllsS(i:i ill lip.vollltioil UVi jo American moving-picture man and photographer. Supported, ipy a camera exiiuricnen mi i?vnrv front in Eurone that is with- S?t a parallel, he kpew liow to make tlio most of the biggest p,s story he had ever dreamed of when, half by ehunre, he 10 1 lrtlA. !l it ...... . ii ..!...' !.. I Sr II "elC 11L' lellS t,le Sl01'y 1U WOl'(1S al1(1 l''Kl'llre8 U1 Sll,a8he saw it. us it linnnnno... 6 remarkable illustrations hom photoiji aiUs. Pru-r ?'J,00 ROVING AND FIGHTING liy Major Edward S. ("Tex.") O'Reilly i ,, ,,, j. .. , - i i'cnuipa una iw .J in iiih nun .an mere is u snusc or , , ,.. .,,., ,,,, . .,i,i ,i, ..i, ... ...... ... .. .....lhao forcottcn iiih n.imo tald tlio l inidauiu in ..-,i, UK III" -IU1 IUB -H HOJl form, for it la not dIMicult t pi. k out inoro bo thoueht about men tbo bet I tlm real personalities hidden under flc- ttr ho liked dORS," Owen put in. titiouKjiamcs Thero Is uIho much that , .. . ,. ... I will Interest tho casual reader, for nob " UJS a cnc- n0 "lattcr no "c i Wamr has developed an original stylo w-aH," I remarked. "I bavo alwaja ol writliic that 'a delightfully droll as ntied neonlo better than dosa and to bae both of u. Hut to get bacls to novels-. I liivoJUBt read two that no doc would ever liavo vultten." "Tnej must bo prctt; b.U. then, ' chin Klcd Owen. 'On, no," taid I. u nusuuder btund mc. No dot; would have written tlioin becauae dogu arc not troubled berloualy by adjustmniit of tbmseJC3 to unaecutitomcd conditions. That U io far us wo ktow. Thoy accept now. surroundings with commondablo phl lobopby ami they aro not veicii by tho complications of an artificial clvi lliatlou. Tho Uo btorlea aro psycho IorIimI U. 1j. Grant Watbon a new Knt'llah writer, is tho iiuthor of one of them und Uleunor If. Tortcr pro duced the other." "Mr, lvrtcr a pi-jcholopitt! ' c--el.iime.l Uoctor McFubre. "That cun't FlasllillffOVer the Wires be. The woman who wrote I'ollj.inna' .'. --Ks , . .. ,i.iHn , 1.,,. 1.. 1,i nor nwv no anj niniK iov u'.i- w..w . .... paj choloRlcal." -You limit tbo term too mrrowly. doetoi." I replied. "Mrs. Tortcr in not u Hcnrj- James and probably would not bo If alio could, but her now -,.rT- deals with tho effect of a. elft Do you want to know what or $100,000 each n tho Uvea and it means to hold the line eharactors of three families. SU? han- 0Eainst the terrific on8,auCht -J fX i of the furious Hurt? If o, read .VhBr,on. v,ut uh0 pcrceUoa tho prob- will as iustructlve. IIo has u f.icult tor Rhine Information of thu finmnn ei ,-ort in a manner that i" lulRlit and ipi Tllm TV II. m tho liiht "!umo wnt n abreit tin molet thai nail iri ,n hi oume ind well bo jtrd u-. a irn di tn the work of th. .iudloJ .i m Is U-lt to the imagination about ihr -MighUHt detail, from the mti.ibitantb nf ii-ic nt.ir drcssiiiK room.1, to tho etu a.-tfTn emplocd In tbono productions wh'eh require "atmosphere ' Tho tech nieal departments of the studios, an well ii the homo lives of tho film fol are clearly shown In a descriptive way that ia reallv flank. 1 1LM KOT.Te e.loNe-Upi nt tho Mn. Wom-n unit l luldren Who Mnke the Movlwl ny llul. VVdincr N ir ur! Tlio Century Cutnpaio I- "The Line Is Holding" comes trus from the front, bring ing comfort to millions of anxious hearts. H ii., M.: r-j ..i c i.-r n'lj.iii.. j LriBeach look nn incident from Tc 'o'Reilly'a lite and made a HOLDING THE LINE Ef . v.j. ce33XUI novel irom it. uiieiuys own laci-siory oi ma . tit Chin; ". :... """S' i'"uie-r. .ueA.em. . .i i - ... "-"-'"" i uv Sernt. Harold mitjwin, .,, ii v uiiiiy. cic. is ns tnrii line unit cuioi-iui as n nun uotvii . ' - . wlalieea nn.l :. . .. '. .. ..... . . . i!l.. , ...t... !. luan tri.r uiiu il is mi tniii wiiii .in ivu nrss linn .'ntrairinir siiiiinici.vi a man wuu iiaa wv. ...v.. 7Vlre lf'J.00 I JiSH are nai-l. nf n.n .....l .. m.. ,-- .. .. i.u.i.oi s iciuiuiiiey. iKusrrncioiia ro;n pholouraplis. E. rii-ivi ruu.rw Wie-Up, 0f ,l,c M Women and Children WJio Make the "Movies" , . Bv Rob Waener JlOlin" lif r i. !..". . ' ."..... . . i T PttW f" II '" l" lUSiaU Uy OIIU WHO Knows It. il Bull, ui e,wa iKruin f,,"""1'? imes wnercin appear tne sionen, xoiu in mo mt Bk....0,1 le hnndaomo film actor: the child vvondi-r: the studio mother: bok ..I ,,!a.n' '10 "slioolt the films"; the scenario writer in short, the teW cd "mov'c" world that hns its center in the California city. tatain i . i Clt'ar laeu ot "ow t,w ",ms artJ ,1,aac wm,e ne l5 uett'B felon" b0I"e of tllc ,lloat t'it'inul nnl humorous stories of recent !' A I all book'torei. Price one dollar and fifty cents of the cousins of the millionaire and she did uot set JlOO.uOO. 'i'oor JUe ?lc, tbo cousliii. call bcr. Tho csperl tnenter In bencvokneo mcotu her .tfler a tlino and thtn goe-s to hor houso to board, IIo tlnda her cheerful, plillo bophlcal and ultocctliur desirable. Sho hud to take fare of hor stepbrothcra und sister when their mother died; sho had to fftvo tip solng to colli go bo cauuo Ucr invalid father noidcd her cure', and she hud lo Klvc U) ull bcr other plans bceaut-o tbo d ni.iitds of utbors on bcr undo It ImpOhslblo to carry them out Mrs. l'orier ban made of her a cbur.ieter vihlcli Is lll.cly lo be as popular ui Poljuun.i hirbtlf. MiiKgic Is drawn to cncouraKC und chcor tbo discouraged itn.l down hearted, und alio will do It. You will have to read tho book to find out what happens to hor and her stcpkln, but you caji 5,-ucss pretty well. Tbo book is by all odds tho best Unit .Mrs. l'or tor has written." ' That Is uot ea Ins much," taid Owen. "It depenrld on 'tho point of view," I replied. "I bava no quarrel with thoso who llk.i In r itorles. They could road u great dcnl worto literature written by persons inoro hlnhly com mended bv ptofcbdots of UnRllih, I would mueh rather read 'Ob, Money! Money!' an sho calls her book, than 'Whore Bonds Mv Loosed,' tho other novel ubout tbo way p oplo adjust themselves to unaccustomed condi tion., which I have "tce'iitl HiiMicd. .Mi- 'WatbOu. iti uutnoi t- a fooloKlyt with oxpc.-leni-o in the fouth sjew. i ivl.ind". It la his tirsi &to- , and it ii bo good, at cording to tho uual etuml One of the in.wi moving books wrliun about tbo war Is publMied this week. Il Is ".Men In War,' l,j Andieas Lit- , xico, an ofhVcr In tbo Auitrtan ntnn. I It Is tn bo bop.d that this I" onlv i u pan name, and that the author s Id'Mtlty ia well concealed from tho chiefs of tho Teutonic military ma chine, olhcrwl v.e- ffar that tho gnl. lain man who wrote this ,uperb book will faco a llrltiKT gnuad It teenu to Us far the mott vivid description of thy undescrlbablo horrors and d. tradi tions of war that has e-ome Into print And It Is a remarkable proof or tho growing dlsutt and hatred of tho "nlKiwnllerii ov.rlordshlp which It tii"! fcpri-adliig, In the dual hlncdotu. 1'iob ably the author U a lIuiiR.irl.in. At uii rate he mali.t no attempt to coneeal his hatred of the Insane- and cold blooded ambition that uiiebutmd tho turhs of mankind und throw busy and I bappv peoples Into the red tut of war Latzko describes n number of Jn eidciita on the Austrv-Itnllau front, and hlK book shows the helpless fpilverliig so tit of men ciiuimIhh Id the thunder un i calanilt of the struggle, bUffer iii?. bl.tdliit,- and roittn ut the word of u comfurtalile bureaucrat In yerlin or lentil Tearful und appalling us thli hook is to read, it must be read by every bon citli-n vi ho vvariie to do b a ilm-c 1n lifting humanity out cf tl K trit-u- .elter One of the moi-t ap o.allug ilietehes n the volume Is lnr i.titk-J "BaptlLm or blre." in which '!' lnl'ldle.aged kind-hearted Austrian -ipUlu .oiii-ile a bitter hatred and .ontenipi for tlil keen ouns lleu t"uan. bicausi. the latter lint no un- Iderstuiidlng or riium'hy for the tuficr ing3 of ihfiir plodding, pitleiit con.- i pany of lumlttuniicrr doling Lieu tenant WVMel. gl'bly prating of thr 1 men's "oath lu their b".ether!and and l.mpcro. " lursca and hounds tho men on to action , ard iho captain, sick at heart, feeling In himself the echo of all the dumb pangb and pleadings of hit men, knows that It lu the lieutenant who Is plalng tbo part of the "hero," uc , cording to mllltarj standards Hut for himself, lita soul rebels against tho I old "patriotic phrnfcs, Uovv enn he I utter to bis men tho pre&crlbeil "dulee 't decorum est pro patrla morl V C'iitln vtjr i huor was oshnnu .' V . rMl nlivalihl rai.t-a at iho rjart In li.J I Juit plaicd ov-riHino bim Wliut was , there ltt for ihefu thnpl poplrj to do thetfl brleMH em aed eontrni-tori ami i ul- tl.Nlurs nf Hi terth win, bent over tli-tr dili- toll had ll.Kd without virion Into tlie futlir, liat Wat (liei lft for tin in to do h-n th(- srand tolkf lh learn-,1 peepl., thtlr on ii raptaln with tit Hirer KOldeu biirn o-i Uia .ollHr. usured them It v as thitr dmj anrt w mot prtlB, wortliv (hlliK lo Khirft Italla.t brl-l.llr arid farm liaiiilti Into fniriiientK? Th( went. RaBcuu behlii-1 him ami li. h led them on T.eil thetn aalriKt lit Iniiel eonvtrtlau li cauiie of bin pitiful covar,l lie, and uin, d lliein to tn. . ouraRoua uh.l i ontemptuoub Ol death He bud lalKr 1 ttieni hitu il, h.iil atiu.ed tlvtr eontld i e hoi made eai.iiul of their law for tb i l,i'H ami ililliireji Ih-i aun if ho uetil In the servli- of a i lli-u waA a .llih, of tile. . iiiilmutiiil to live mid even roml!,-i liaerf Inline wife ticHln, wlille If be wtm'k to tho trutti he l.llsvid hi that wiin lb mrtub ty uf In j n-ln &louU up abuhidi a uull tinil ah,it. And lln. ill, when captain and Iuu tnant uu- bo'h Killed b the same Italian thcll. Miirwhuer dl bapp be . ause ho has .1011 llnr's lace, in Us death ngou, reveal Its Urst sign of Immunity and uudi-itt.iudlug of suf. l'erillg. 'file man who wrote this book bus dono a magnlliei-nt and tearless tervlce for humanity and democracy Te--tl-monies suih as these v. Ill do mueh to help struggling and sorrowing humanity to iv In Its way to hlsler and happl.r HERBERT HOOVER say of The Earthquake By ARTHUR TRAIN "Vol h,iv written a sane nnrt hem bit book on the lllos' ) re liig hiibjei t bi-fme the nieil-nii peopbi toda It l a moit effectlVH pi.itntatlon of the war situation as It touihes men and women of u largo class of American "o. elet; It I' Intenselv Int. rent ing and atlniulatlng i'J.-0 A', t HARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS jT-r-ffi-pyg1 1 ' JfigjMMh Start the Volland "Sunny Book" Series for a Child Today The VollanJ "Sunny Book" are wonderful new treasure I of happiness for the children. They ore written by the beit authors, Illustrated by well . Tcnown orfrsu. printed in won derful colors, bound in board and boxed and yxt yon can buy the entire terie lor your. chUd for only SO cent a book. Make n Child Happy Today With Volland "Sunny Book At All Good Dealers IACH BOOK SHAM TMI MM OKOtWUTY P.F Volland Company PUBLISHERS "BOOKS GOOPCHIlDREN lOVOPUt. CHICAGO TORONTO it I ) tl j ' i v 6 By John Galsworthy Five Tales Mr. Galsworthy here returns to the type of character he so masterfully depicted in "The Man of Property," "The Country House," etc. , These are very real stories, intense in feel ing and action each built about a single domi nant figure. $1.50 ncl CHARLES SCRIBNER'Sgi SONS Vi ,tefllO0lll3.J 3 FIFTH AVENUE. Sr NEW YORK 1 1 lefcls Llttlt. by llt Oay by day, we lire bMrtiln? lion th' tfUe uf anytr .inU UlritfUbt i rtnln: In tho huit ot muuy u man who hai Ik en made a to-jl by tho Hnlifiu-ollern oabal Hut it will not l.ibt We m under If tlu AlI-IIlBluvt will ovtr toe thcee uords of Latzlco: V t uifd to Nptult ulth horror of the tyrants of th darlt Ktp. tn iir-w livlp t tn-n unJ .olnell to the Itoui utul tlcem. but now Is ihtrv one of ua who woulil not nientlon them with retract In coirjparteon with ttu ruUrs who utt at ptveont dirertine tli truce It? betuen mn anil inachlnca, hh thoimh It were t ruppvt ehow nt tb Mid of tiprraph It uni wlto u.re riijtnmtvcl U the .1l(ghtfu liopo that our aupu'i of liurnan tlt-hh wuv outlHUl tru" t honv ' bupplv uf kUtl uul lron' r v 31 V 1 . 1. nnie IVliovd .Jwnntuii Ir f ir.'ited ihi .-hniaiHr ot tn. wIuvhi "Little 1 oloiii 1 ..on li on a aai , 110 on. lhou;ht that the luvubl. little .-outhcrn girl would be the initial llgui. In .1 t,erlis of boolts which v.oulrt iiiuin ardt,. that ll accepted by the first tain their ,ff;ulari. and command large oi.fc.a i.uu.isricr iu wnom 11 was suo- .such nut, men me case, nowever, unu milted. Mr. -Watboii tells of tbroo v''e 1'aee romwnj has recently ordered v , "', , ""uu now printings for coven volumes In tho men und u. woman who lived among herle tavagca in tbo South Scaa vihcio all tho restratiita of civilized llfo wore re moved. Gradually tho primal bruto emotlona ngbcrt themselves. Two of "America first America only ' America always" is the inotlo of the heroine of Oppcnheim's new novel of international intrigue The Pawns Count By E. Phillips Oppenheim The first German spy story Mr. Oppen heim has written since "The Kingdom of the Blind," which is now selling in its eighth printing. "The PawnbCount" ia a typical story of German intrigue, with its principal scenes laid in the United States. 1 .1 HookitvUiTs, SI. 50 nt-l Little, Brown & Company - Publishers - Boston 'iih iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiidiiiiiiii'iii iimiiiiiiiiwnmiiiimii Ma. RTIuYj tl- illustrations from photographs. Price ?'-(.00 AMERICA AFTER THE WAR By An Amrricnin Jurist 1 KrZ v . ,mtcrial which when first published us spcciul urticles in iTwll i, 1 ,me drovf xcitod comment from nn ustontilicu Europe. Lw. nell'. rcpaix Anioricu for the almost revolutionary political I "" uinu' rom thu wur chnnecs which luno alreudy begun. Price S1.00 THE WOMAN VOTER'S MANUAL EA m.,j 1 , "N. t. t-orman and Marjorio Bliuler 1 EUlde-bnrib 11 i.i.i 1 o 11.. .. 1 1 .....1 .r ,,,!,.,- Wittiheei II ",v lIIIUl-UU. ClupiniDB u uutntiuumi ui iiuunw- 'arMSeHl'1 ? "daptetl to Women votMs, .in to tin- organization of tho K , 1IIK MJ voiik TIMi:.-i tay of TheEarthquake By ARTHUR TRAIN "This new book of Mr. Train's is a call to fccrvice, sensible, fervently patriotic and ad mirably clear. It is also by far the best piece of vsork ho has ever done." sfl.50 Net CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS nent. 11,0 1.1-. ., .. - .'., . ..:..... : j n i...j iWu. v nisieii-y-01 ll'e i'liU'1 political panic-, aim uine-i- tviiucu iriat uQ Indisnensiililo I., ilm .lMrrii. 1 Price $1.00 W THE CENTURY CO. New York, y. Herald aa llo brlnn tn runi- em reU- vihut inj iintu runt before war l t rl" urtri OVER THERE XND BACK yLWteJfefl'S,STMfc F0K HACK HYtUtYWUlUW i..m of the adjustment of lll'o to the unaceubtomed, and fabo describes what ,n.,fins wltb a Keen undcrbtaiidlns huniaii nature. I vsotuu noi ran u knrv nreat uioraiuio, ivr mu ., .. An ....,.,1, .,,1.1.1. tu un Hn reason inav wu ii.uuii ....... .- .. ....u.t la s,o peculiarly 'ereat' that it lulls to protJuco any Imjireealon on eou or iBf-. Mrt. I'ortcr'a atory Is. Lnnplo and BtralKbtfonvurd. as caty to read as 'Poll anna,' and I tputt tay t it credit that It lu much les.H ten Mmcntal. You mav tay that lier plot it, UnpoiBlMo. I vvlll admit that tbo (.veil in bha describes aro Improbable, but alio makes them ecni plaublblo. She baa a Chicago millionaire, a bncb olor fifty years old. troubled about tho final disposition of bla fortune, clvo a larso uum to each of three, distant cousins llvlntt in a, bmall Xew T5nUnd e-lty. Before tho money Is paid ho koos to tho city In dUculse to seo what tho cousins do with the money. What would jou do, doctor. If ou should eot a check for $100,000 In yoUr1 mail tomorrow morning?" "It Is tso unUltely that I alian't wasto any words talking about tt,M tbo clergj-man repllod. After a tec- ond or two ho hastened to add, "but I could uce It.'1 "Well ou may not bo surprised," T went Ci, ''buV the happiest charhcter the men want tlio woman. Ono KOts bcr and tho other Mils blm In an e.- 1 cc&s of lUhty raBc. Then .tho woman, with thu udmiratlon of a beat for the moro MKoroUM unlmal. accepts tho vie tor und beirn blm a child, ricubant, isn't It? Tho author e.plains In a prctaco that he bau bouuht to eftahlibh two propositions. Tlio (ii-bt Is that I w hen all rcbtrulntb aro re-mov ed human ' nature cannot readjust itbelf until .til its former habits and prclnrllees have 'ieen burnt awav nnd until tbo primal foundations of Individual dcslro are left bi"b and drv tn tbo ebb of all p..t,t aIuatious. The i.econd Is that life can fcurvive ull bludeeonlnir. provldcl tbo Individual soul U o vlolcntlv shaken that all old valuations do tall I conuiietel awav. 'Out of tho luuu.. then.' b.tjs lie. 'life, naked und with out hhanic. but beautiful in that naked vitality, cm rlto to new eDrcbHlou.' Now, as an experiment In writing a rnctanhvhie'il thesis in tho form of j fiction tbo nova! U brilliantly auoe-cts- fill. Jlr. WaUon is a man, whoo Work is worth Vecnl" track of. He U renllst of tbei rualNtt. vveitlmr from the Point nf view of tho oohvrUtH To -'Cf bick to finch. It it not too much In kiiv Ibm hi-, clmrncter-t nt tbn end nre intle- better than Itc-hmh with an ni-tici'iiie l'in"""'fl. Alt thir o'l vnlnnllnnM .ih olv'lle.1 hiiiivun belli" llVM fMlln an'IV. Wliollloe th llfo Vint f.rner' l root-e. ti b-t.ii',il rtpeMds n'-' on b rnnl nf view Vnu vvoiild Un"! It ptmIIi'o iloclnr" "f think I kiinnM tnn" uflwitiwi fwou. OWflv W. rxMlfJI AS' vt Me"-vi ri n-v, n, ll,rtlej.j. N". V. Timra lien "So .lmiil-. to rln ere. ,a niKtter of f.irt tn Ita quiet telllnw of what happened that It Is well worth reaillnjr " OVER THERE AND BACK By Lieut. Joseph S. Smith ran bALii WLitrn m:itu IACOBS 1628 1 FOR CHESTNUT tj BOOKS STRECT I STATtONEnV AND ENGPAVING Md I'ua Rccoid i.mi ' W" iio been uoiln; for a bot fvm tt frunt wrli ten b b 'vouns man v ,joe xoul l touched by iho deeper nieaniii.a of lhr "OVER THERE AND BACK By Lieut. Joseph S. Smith ton tAiv nrvnvmiERi' ! t If Stevenson had fell this ivar, he would have written stories like !THE FIREFLY OF FRANCE I By MARION POLK ANGELLOTTI It is not u novel of horiois, moblcms, shock or depression, it ig tha7 sort of htory people enthusiastically cull "11 rattling Kood yum." It is in the manner of the romance the manner of Scott, Dumus, Stevenson' It chielly concerns a French aviator and a wonderful American girl, Jt openb in the Korjrcous St. Ives Hotel in Now York and cuds behind tho Allied lines in France. "The 1 ireliy of France" gets on its way on the liit pape, and moves swiftly from then on. It is ull beautifully done, beautifully done. f Illustrated. Price $1.10. Published by THE CENTURY CO., New York City Vi wit n ,iMtiniii i r.o - ti Vi n v. Alftvi Z(jHi:u Teltgrnph fcy; mid nl anblo doc um tut 'A try human of th trat "OVER THERE AND BACK ly Lieut. JmciA S. Snkk VOU BALB VVKRY'wmBRZ, The Flower of the chapdelaines Dy George W. Chblc flu t' n 1m tile tl , I 1 f il ! ouartfr of Ne? OrUune iir 0offro ChtB'tr, u sounic knur ti utru'k tliw clMrni of h Crtol, Leuuty v,liom ha dally tueta on hi my to tlie effkv. On hCLOunt of the v) - lufclw t hHractr of tK Creotd cot-ie to which h Iteloncu thers i tittle hope of their mertltir hut book be 1 1 r conutta him ubout cu old manuscript und he ilndx t t A'lne ChatiHlcUln U th owner The fati of this inaiiUKcrlpt und the.r love tg tho Ihm" of it romance of creat delicacy nalwauty. C1.3S net. THE AIRMAN and THE TRAM By Jennette Lee A lit of rent romance tin lonely htlrtlt. thin: remote tn th but cM home. tb niodorn flrliu: nun Mir-TtfurulMt- to 'be bIrt by aVIhv ilclittul m itery. n J lli happy clear lM up of llm reculilne bltuatiou T3 real i.cl. Chulcs Scrlbicr'i Shi Fifth Atmuo Nw Xttk FOSTER ON AUCTION Uy U. 1'. rOSTEIt. for the l'asl Twenty-llve Years le Recognlzotl Authority on Curd fJameu Throughuul tho Aorld. THIS IS THE ONLY TEXT-BOOK GIVING ALL THE LATEST RULES FOR AUCTION BRIDGE If ou want to learn how the best plaje'ru win ull the time, how they bid and why, how they play the hands and win game after game, this is the book ou are looking for. It contains everything:,1 from the simplest description of the gamo to rules for tho beginner and tips for the expert. Illustrated by 130 deals from actual play, Price f-J.UO Net. ruUje l.ilro. At All llooUltureo. E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth. Ave., New York THE UNWILLING VESTAL By EDWARD LUCAS WHITE Author of That Wonderful Historical Novel "EL SUPREMO" No institution, of any Country or period, was more notable, more peculiar or more interesting than that of the Oder of Vestal Virgins of Ancient Rome. Thl book embodies all the existing In formation concerninp the Vestals and their life, and anyortc read Ing this book will, without effort, merely ih tho pnjeess of rcadjajt an absorbing story, assimilate all the extant Knowledge relating 5 theso wonderful princesses of a vanished democracy, their powiA .-j . !..11 ... n.l .1... TAH.nn Unlle A...I nAM. ,V1.L .'....in aua pnviieKca, uiiu eiie ivutt.u.i uv.iud a.tu tuawiiia vr.feu v and maintained, the order. Prt'ea $tJS0 nof. Postage JE&ra. At AUMoktor4. e. p. dutton & c m rm Av ' ilK I i llwlTlllilliMMIII l"Pi,.!l iiiiWiiiiM 1 il in' H porterAi book is a etepaiitef ---- V
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers