wri '3- nLSAv.Vy t-1 -JATl.1 1 Ir ' " ,-i" , ' Vj $W rr - -, - ,i$pi iA. W;V V fclV&w 'fevW ft. 1 - , 1 t ' -,- --. v' - ' ,-' 'lMi SATURDAY, JUNE S, 1918 BVEN3XG- PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, ''""; -i' & I ?ARJ LETTERS OF md Genet I by Grace Ellcry Charming. Prefatnrtl VW Iii ! r t jt fvim ay K,napman Genet, tho jrrcat, prcat. n of the first French Mln- Jfor the French Republic to mtted States, was the first lean aviator killed flyinc the and Strines. Barrlv seven- when the war came. Genet the United States to enlist in (Foreign Legion. i charm in civ bovlsli letters tell his fifterti months' service! in S Lesion, and later, after his iftsfer to the Lafavetto Ebca- itle, of his life at a fighting lator at the front, when the let- are full or such heroic names tin Chapman, Prince and Lufbery. ?Sl Illustrated II 3n nt lAlU.ES SCRIBNER'S SONS m5- -' Flower and the Ree M, 'plant Life and Pollination fl John H. Lav ell fjh popular exposition suitable tof amateur garuenets, bee-Kocp-tri and nature lovers of the sub ject of pollination. Descriptions are given of the life histones ot blc-bec floweis, butterfly ers. nocturnal lowers, flv .Wers, etc., and the stiangc ad ventures of tnetr insert guest. Tho bec-keeDcr will here learn where his bees gather nectar, and the fruit-grower -why, in the ab- wnce Of honeybees, his trees re- mam unproductive. ,-A Profusely illustratrtt bv rhfitooraphs A , taken bv the author. . no rl CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS A novel of which American ? fcrnest Poole's New Novel MIS SECOND WIFE - By the author of "The Harbor," "His Family, rtc. il'JNcver jet has Mr. Poole, and seldom lias anj American writer, done :ttcr work. . . . Instinct with ft Tribune. fIN THE FOURTH YEAR -H. C. Well' New Booh Hii most convincing pictute of '.present world conditions, present fed with characteristic strength ;ind clarity, showing the real JeroMem of democracy after the war and the only way in which it an be safely solved. $1.25 r'A real novel of genius by ' Q' FOE-FARRELL Arthur Quiller-Couch's New Novel at' Hl. ,y iJ'Here, ladies and gentlemen, is a work of Renin'. It contains mwen, ?Bycnoiogy, aaenrurc ana numor . . . veniimciu, roinaucc, ura-??!'.?- . . vi i n .l.. .. u .. : i. i. r i !...- ;raaiic situations; inacca, nu inai wc toum nwi in a uin ui .tusuiuii. iantLtriumphant fascination." A. Y. Tribune. $1.50 Vmr ,wt, r,r,r. ixiEi iiniv rnuriici ; JIUSSIA'S CRISIS 1 Ernest Poole' m New Booh "We have read no book which got ''closer to the heart or to the mul 'titudinous hearts of the Russian people of all classes, and which foiore Graphically revealed the V-S - .t e . .1-- j-.. CvRienis incrcot 10 inc readers fN 1 . ,. rr lit vinion." N. Y. Tribune. III. VL $1.50 asy mp" Admirable told with ?HE BOARDMAN FAMILY fflfc Mary S. Watts' New Novel r& . " , ., , . . iJ,'anara iioartiman. tne r.iscinaiing behind the footlights, will win w 1 ' rife Macmillan Company, & t were times when God . f3J Mien, friendless, l'undlcss, ,onuun, bite siiuggieu iur ijrjes. when food was all les her path was heset -ft n,v ZP. A Girl hd rich, palpitating story of a plucky j-oung woman, who, Monc struggle, beat the world that tried to crush her. Yet, (fough it all the author preserves our faith in humanity, and P-in UlC very ucpiua iiicic Kp of liuman kindness. PiiSII'Bookscllers "A Girl Alone," by Howel Evans. $1.50 net k --f Ywk G.V. PUTNAM'S IE PROMISE OF AIR Alsrernon Blackwood, PLt.Vallon, Ten Minute Stories, Day and Night Stories jfc"' The New York Times 6ays: "The Promise of Air is like!y to be itiM BQt widely read of all Air. 'precious quality 01 ucill uiucicnc, ui uim-iiii; euiiicciiiuk iihimuc mtrialBm spiritual, its romance has that golden plow which alty, Always loyes, ana me .'ifin,'yLr. v i mmut mmt WHAT SHALL THE COUNTRY DO WITH THE RAILROADS? DANGER OF POLITICAL CONTROL OF RAILROADS Advantages of Government Regulation Over Public Ownership Discussed by Samuel 0. Dunn. Railway Expert D pLTOlt MclWRni; and Owen were pcra because thcj could not ngree on .what was to be done with the rail roads after the war. Owen Is most blttorlv opposed to gov eminent ownrr- I ship and Doctor Mel'iibre thinks the j nocrnmcnt could run the railroads as well as It runs the postofflco. "lint It makes a miserable failure of running the postolllcc," said Owen "If the men who operate the lallroads wp-c In charge of the collection and distribution of mall the would do It better and make nionej." The railroads are hlghwajs and tho nation should control them," the clcrp31n.cn Insisted "ou are drawing a dangerous com-pari-on there. Doctor." aid I "I Know that It Is customar to liken the high wa. which are built at public ex pense and are free to eerj one to the rulhoads which arc prlvatelv owned and controlled But the falseness of the analocv became apparent vrrv c.irl in railroading Von know that some of the first railroads weie merelj rail highway on which am one might operate his own car It did not take long to proe that such a plan was not practicable The trains must be run on svstcm and on a timetable con trolled by a central authorltv So the railroad companies built their own cars and carried goods and passengers for literature may well be proud" life and human svnipathv. ' $'0 THE END OF THE WAR Walter Weyl'M New Booh Lays down the principles and ideals of ictory, explains our place in the war and shows how we must lead in the great recon struction of society. $2.00 THE MARTIAL ADVENTURES OF HENRY AND ME Wii7iam Allen White' New Book "There has not been a more 1 ichly, unctuously, infectiously humorous book published in cars. Yet there has been no war book more comrruous and more in harmony . , . , , XVHI1 IIIO lIHsi'C SCCCll'B OI US theme." N. Y. Tribune. III. ?1.G0 unfailing interest" r , , , sannra who oancea ncr va to jour licarn applause." $L50 Publishers, New York didn't seem to care a stranger in great teeming a luoitioici. 1 ucrc were that mattered, and at all with uncertainty and peril. Alone is iuuiiu mi; ncipuiy nauci auu London Author of The Wave, Julius Blackwood s stories, for It has the nero s quest ot me air it?aus ine w - v , -.. g - rfi - rr jit. ail MamMamrea. v.- m T - .-,.. hire ami the railroads were at once i differentiated from a public roid. ot t per cent onlj of the operating and maintenance epenscs of a railroad are consumed In keeping the roadbed In repair. The remaining 60 per cent Is consumed In operating tho chicles that run oer It. "It would be worth jour while, Owen, to read what Samuel O. Dunn sajs about the relations of railroads to government In his latest book. Mr. Dunn Is the editor of Rallwaj Age and Is one of the best-informed men we hae. Ills book was written after the Oo eminent took o rr the roads. It Is a discussion of the railroad legisla tion of teccnt jeirs. Its failures and Its successes And jou. Doctor, while jou might not be convinced that Gov ernment ownership Is not wise, would team a gteat deal from the xolumo. I do not mean to Implv that ou are not alreadj leii ncrl. hut this book brings Into a compact form a vast; ma's of information which we all should h.ue Just now when the rail road Is-,ue is looming large on the'po llth at hoi Izon." "I shall be glad to read it ' said Doctor McTabre, "but I should like to ee the man who can persuade mo that government ownership is unwise," "Suppose we should sjj Impractica ble?" said T. "No, I do not think it Is impractica ble " "It is one of the most .nexpcdlent tilings ever suggested in this tountr," Owen exclaimed. 'I think I agree with j on Owen," saici i Ann i was conllrmed in my I p0WPr. una they would hawe It. The Impiesslon b the summai of the pOMPr to make contracts for cxpcnell praetlcal difficulties In th" wa which ture, amounting to billions annuilb Mr. Dunn makes in one of his chap. wol,1(1 n gr(,,lt power: and thev ters. In the first place, he reminds us uolll(i hlUe lt Tile power to determine that the 'book cost' of the rallwas is whether millions of men should be al about 1 7,000.000,000. He sa s that '.i0WC(1 t0 keep their jobs would be a the average annual amount of newjBreat power: and the would have it. capital Invested in railroad extensions Ti,P power largel to dctcimlne how for the five ears preceding the millions of men would vote, and there was more than Ti00 000 000, which Is b i,al men K)10uld hold public onice, twelve times the maximum annual i WOuld be a great power, and they amount appropriated for rivers andou),i ilar n And these would be harbors and about the total appro-, poners which once acouli cd, might be prialed for such purposes from the be-i transferred fiom one group of political ginning or the t.ovrrnment Can v oil , imagine the 'pork' In an annual tail I road appropriation bill of ."i00 000 000? I Mr, Dunn also reminds us that the I railways spend JS30.000 000 a v ear fot I equipment and supplies. Can't ou Imagine Congress, f We had govern j ment ownership, ordering that certain I supplies should be bought In certain parts of the country In order to build up local Industries? And can't ou imagine' Congress, also, ordering exten sions ot railroads as It orders new public buildings, regardless of the needs of the district? Turther, there are about L',000 000 railroad emploj es whose wages and the conditions of TIMELY BOOKS The "Black Monk" of Ruisia RASPUTIN AND THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION D.v IntNCi:s3 CATIIURIXE X.D- Illustrated. Cloth. J1.00 (iff. Hrrc the author of "Hehlnd the Veil at tlic Rii'slan Court" presents the details cf thp extraordinary cmer of tluit sinister personage CJreRory Itasputln vv Ith truth and accuracj, and explains how the re cent chances which have taken place In that country have been rendered possible. Secret in the Live of the German Prince LOVE INTRIGUES OF THE KAISER'S SONS Chronicled l WJUI.IAM LIT at nr. lujerafcd C'oth. 2 00 net. Here th" veil In 1 fted from the piivate lives of the Kaiser's mvi, rhovvlnfr how thcj were frequently Involved In afTalrs of the heait with Blrls in all classes of society How Haig Fight and Feed Hi Armie THE BUSINESS OF WAR H ISAAC F. MAJU-OSSON Author of "The Ilel.lrlh of Uussia." Th War After the War ' etc. 1CI U:Jutratloas. Cloth M..10 ncl. 'The onl hook of it kind In the field of war literature It presents a huge area of Intricate und humanly fac'naiiiig energies co-ordinated In effort for a mighty end. and It covers the whole territory with an econornv of text little thort of being mar velous " - Philadelphia Iiecord. TO CHEER "A Proie Epic of JHeroitm" THE GLORY of the TRENCHES I3 I.t CONINGSBY DAWSON' Author of "Carry On " etc. rrontlspitcc. Cloth. 11.00 ,tr. "Krom beginning tcv end "The Olory of tlie Trenches' la a happy booh. It Is happy, not because the author has escaped suffering: or even horror, but because whether or not lie puts lt Into plain words of literal statement he has grasped tome thing beond those things." '.veto York Time. "A Book of Comfort and Good Cheer" THE FATHER of a SOLDIER Bv V. .1 DAWSON" Author of "flobfrt Shenntone etc Clolfc JlOO net. Th a bevjk comes from the heart and goes to it.. It Is the effort cyf a father who has reached a great c git to make others realize that po lesser height is possible," .Vetc Vorfc Evening Pott. ) AM BOOKSELLERS whose labor would bo fixed ultimate! by politicians. The party which con trolled this vast body of voters might control elections. Government owner ship, urged b some In order to take , the railroads out of politics, would Ut.Shp Combines ri Tale of Penn- an proDnoiiii put mem more uoopi into politics than they have ever been. This, at rale, Is Mr. Du.in's ' opinion. "Mr. Dunn malcs another point which dc,eres serious consideration, lie sajs that Ooernment ownerhlp rex crses the tendency to differentiate J j political from economic functions which has marked the progress of mod ern civilization and contributed large! to it." "Bunkl" cclalmcd Doctor Md'abrc, with more emphasis than elegance. "It maj be 'hunk'," I went on. "Hut you know that feudalism was a com bination of political and economic rule , , . , and that the doctrine of '""" was enunciated as n protest against meddling by government In the eco nomic life of the people. That doe- ., ,. mi ...Mb IIIULIII l .1,11 II. I.r I .. I IIIWl trine wiis ran led loo far, but wc findlfjs imc,,usp nl tho crM, tho ,KiltfU Its most ardent supporters In Amei lea ! advocating government ownership of lallroads and telegraphs and tele - -..... . . phones. We should not forget that in; bn-ut uuitiuiniifiK ui luiiiiuni iit'f-jHjiu dom accompanied Ihe cmsncipatlon of business from feudal control and the freeing of the hands of the industrial forces In older that thev ml'ht nnrl. out their own salvation, (loverntnent ownership would pill Into the hands of the political leaders the management of clectli ns on the one li..nd and the control of Industiv on the other, as Mr. Dunn sajs. lie goes on: 'Thcj would then exercise a total power in-I comparably greater than was over c erclsed by anj bod of men in this countr They would have the samc political pofcer of the oidlnary kind that the leaders of the part dominant In Government now have The power' to determine what rates and prices should be charged b concerns earning billions of dollais would be a great' leaders to another, but which could never be dissolved Into their elements without abolishing government owner- shlp ' Now, this strikes me as a pretty serious arraignment of the plan," "I admit I had not thought of it In that light before," said Doctor Mc- Tabre. "Wise ; tcr than overnment regulation Is bet-. i i- i.. government ownership, in the present state of society," said (Jov eminent ownership is popular in certain quarters because of disgust . with the abuse of piivate manage-1 re.! ment. ISut government regulation has J cured moat of those abuses. Now tho abuses of regulation need to be cured. The railroads after the war will not go back to the old conditions. Theic must be radical changes In the laws Mr. Dunn has some views about what the changes should be. One does not need to agree with his conclusions to s,ork. and the virtual assurance m uni find his book valuable. It is a tlmelv Ucrsal vlclor.v for "the cause" within a discussion of a subject about which comparatlvelv short time. Ins provided the nation should bo better Informed." the immediate iruson for the puhlicition OrOUGI3 W DOUGLAS. iof 'Your Vote and How lo L'fo Tt" and I.EOILVTION or BAIWAW. lnelItn. ' T" " Voter's Manual " notl. k. dlBru&Blon of 5oernmrnt ownership r.f thpsf hooKs aro ilolKnocI not only to rriHi coernincni i-unmn. i miuuri O Piinn sew York I) Applftur A I o II Major Wood's Experiences Major Hrlc Ilt.hcr Wood's ".Vole Hook of an Intelligence OfTlcei ' is a alu- abl ble addition to his alreadv well-known olume. 'The Note Book of an AtUch." " Ji1".' '"rKJ: "." r:eJrl ' , author's recent experience as an intclli-1 gence officer with tho British army. The writer Drone on ni sccicies at tho Beaux Arts ill Tarls to serve tins American embassy during tlie trst during the first months of the war hince then he has i . pntreU aade from its Inform.! I developed as a writer, a l.een observer ,he "hallot each book Ii of I alrid a good soldier. He has been con- J , , ,, ,n aeo.iialntiug women I 'lnuou3ly In the thick of great move- Vhht'hr-lr right" citizen-. I ment". T.p , oiume bv Mrs. Brown bears tlie With his American birth and conncc- indorsement of the New York I tlons and his experience In the British Won,Bn Suffrage party, and In- ' armv. he is able to give Americans an,'.. .. .... ,,.. niPa fnr the corren. i Impression of what constitutes warfare i ' obvious wrongs agilnst they will get in no other way than by womtn ,n Ncw York "The Woman' i actual participation. Voter'H itanual" contains a dlgCFt of the i ' In addition to the narration of the,yfw York State election laws that will manner in which actual fighting Is done undoubtedly prove of special value to and the impression of the soldier whomanj readers has been in the midst or it ana wounaeci, lie also gives authoritative Information' as to the manner in which soldiers are transporccu. nuuo.-.. Ui.u .....u . .. ( hook contains a personal study of that interesting Britisher. Lord Northcllffe, J based on the author's close personal re. latlonshlp with tho great journalist ' The account of the British censorship I also is of unusual Interest Major Wood's story of the battle in which he was wounded Is vividly realistic. The book is entertainingly illustrated with photo graphic reproductions of scenes along the battlefront TIIK VOTKBOOK OV AN IVTP U.IOEVCB OFFICFtl nj Kric Flhr Wood New York' Th Century Comwni, II. 73. 7 a Man Die At a time when so manj are suffering from the awful harvest which death has been reaping In the great war, the book "If a Man Die' wll bring great com- fort, especially to xnoe mourning tne loss of sourg men full of vigor and hopefulness for an active u.eful life. It' Is the outcome of the personal grief at i l d development In outdoor life the loss of dear ones of the writer, thai"'""' " ' Itev. Dr, J. D. Jones, of Bournemouth, (England. His argument for the reality of the life beyond rests, not upon con jectures, but upon scriptural truths, I mainly upon tho Resurrection of Jesus. After a consideration of man's nature lie confidently holds that "our dear lads have not perished. They have only ex changed time for eternity " One of tho .great things Christ did for us was to give us deliverance from the enslaving pnd paralysing fear of death. The life to come is something we should long for "Our broken and Interrupted hap piness Is prophetic nf a real happiness to come." The fact that "(Jod l love" leads to the belief "that at the long last all men and all things will be restored In Christ, that everyHwanderer wll) at length be, found end oery lost son will ftmlthl.1 wav home." k. , , u HELEN R. MARTIN AS A PROPAGANDIST sylvania Dutch With a Study of Labor Conditions Helen U. Martin Ins written a good old fashioned mcloilriin.i In "Fanatic or Christian," her latent novel. Its scene Is laid Jn New Munich, the home of the Pennsjlvanla Dutch, whom "he has In troduced to the public. Its hero Is a joung man whose stepfather abandoned him and deprived him of his fortune, and then made a secret will restoring to him the fortune with lis accumulations If he ever appeared to claim It. Those who are cnjojlng the monev when the story opens are tho widow of tho scoundrel and his two dan daughters. Tho eldest daughter Is a selfish, scheming joung woman, who plots to get possesion of all the property bj Influencing her Igno- r-a1, lltnltlnH tn .. lit It . .-. lino ltflH nlnl owner. In love with her sister, nescits his claim and straightens out several l,omj?,lt'al10"" - r" "l" 1,'"I flllt"1 I her book with soilological dlstlS"! on re- ' n(r tho iIbMs r thP ,M,rI(lng people inu ii'iuHi oi int'ir cin inn cth iu treat them properlv She has a strike i prevented hy the cinplo.vincnt ot a le- vlvalltt to distract the attention of the IICLEN MAR TIN workers fiom theii pin -ic.il tiouliles and turn their minds to leliglon. The decision to bile the revivalist Is made bv the selfish sister, who believes that It will be cheaper to pi him thin to 'give better wages to tno workers In the family factory. I There are pagri of Mis Martin's char acteristic rennsivama nmcn ronvirsa- tlou which lighten a somewhat somber and preachy tale. The title suggests the point of view. Tlieie is no doubt that the author icgaids the attitude rif the ung sister and that or tne bero as gejiulnely Christian and not fanatical and that the application of the theories which thev advocate would solve the ."' " nr- ,, ,. M,rtci fIO, what Mr- "iBPPHl R. 'Mimm alreadv been tald that the novel It a sociological tract as well as a melo drama. Tho-e who rein ror me cxiir Hlfi 31UI. 111.1 cni, .i. i'vr. " --.e- ment. and those who are InUresiei! in propaB,inaa ma skip the stmv and find food for thought In the niguimut rANAnc Oil LlimsTlVN" A Slm "f Hit I'cnlnolcunlH Uutili Hv llrlcn It Marlln r.ar'ln c'ln PoubWlav !ce . Co il 40 Aids for Women Voters Woman's suffrage triumph In New ncqualnt the noman votir with the technical machinery of the ballot and Its use hut also to quicken cfresh her civ In consciousness, hy providing a clear and concise account of social conditions una liws which the authors believe should be reformed. The wealth of practical mronn. i.or Sl" PV of aufVi.ntlal t",,tn; ! majority of men as well I ac;eito .mmarl.J- th. scope f these information contained In ine volumes ... Knnira la manlfestlv Impossible The I .iine nf each lies In the fact that It Is ., irthook. not merely a prop I" ', ,-,,. a.,i t, , ...!.. vnri, lnli iq nriornerl riv an . , . Mr Carrie Chapman! TO,,u otb ANn HOW TO t'.sn IT ny Mrn Itasnmnd Hrown Ne Tori., llurrcr I ("' 7V VOTr:n.p MAN, AI, nv f New v t'nmiju onH Mfir lorli MlUil Tork Thf Ccntun Compuin Jl Information for Campers Man of die disappointments and mis. takes that are commonly deemed In evitable In the amateur camper's e perlenee may be. avoided by utilizing the knowledge which the veteran has laboriously acculred. Such knowledge is provided in palatable and beguiling form In a ccasonable book hy the editor of Field and Stream. The book Ir partly nandBook, partly personal narra tive, presenting a wealth of useful ln- formation ;n the author's chatty and In . inrmai np.,itint of the adventures of i nnlf,if and his friends. Ho covers every i pms0 ,f thc MJt,ject. discussing outfit I and m.thod for "de luxe" ramping. . lnt(,r and automobile camping, horse-. b . hoatinr and mountain adventures To apply the suggestions embodied In the book Is to enjoy a substantial, all- civipin otTT ny Warren H Vllller. Jrofusly lllutrll. II lorn Company. New Tork, II SO. Qeorca j Spiritual Realities It is a brief but stimulating little essay that Doctor Matter, rcctgr of I Grare Church. New York, haa written, under the title 'The Holy Communion." His purpose Is to Imbue the yoinmuni-' cant with a deeper, personal sense of, Christ's presence hy emphasizing the close and Intimate relationship between the phjslcal and the spiritual 1 Iniploy Ing tlie atomic law as the basis of IiIh . -. II-.I.M 1.. ..a lsu ,,. -1m.., 41.. 41.A ,.. n ' are virtually identical. Hence his con clusion, "the only happy way to live, Is to have God's character, through hrlst fused -nltli ours,' MISS DEWS DRAM A OF ELEMENTAL NATURES 'Greallipart" Is Moved by Powerful Dynamos of iwmantu: rassion 1 thel M Dell's gifts as a story teller are levcaled nt their very best In '(reatlitart ' The novel has great emotional force, roinblnlng In greater degree than an of lis prcllecesors tho quilltles which bavo undo her stories enormoufly popular Strong, unsterful rlminctera such as Miss Uell delights in drawing are tare in nresent-dav lie tlou The) are reall.v eleinenlal tjpes, placed In a modem "-citing, and It Is doubtless because of this that their foi times appeal so powerfully to tho most primal emotions of the reader The liaracters in "Urentheart" arc presented with bold, virile strokes, frankly devoid of siibllet. They aic vei liable cJ;nunos of romantic passion, and In the drama beie woiked out the veneer of iinivenilonal clvlllitlon Is frenucnth peillonxlv thin, "Greathearf Is an j;nglsim in whose unbllltv ot soul shines In striking outlast to the plnsl Cll ,rutnlitv mid oveiwhelmliie rcmi.in 0r i,, titled anil hiindoiiici brother Sir i:utncc lirrathcuf rets himself res- oluttlv to save an inicnnliMli ill il vnimtr Sri flom the ,""l"i"l?lnB sir ulZl nnfi hIo to c a n for their sister v bov bealth and inlml have become KerlmwU deranged from blooding over the tiaglo drntli of bet ndci-eil husband. Tin- hero pits IiIh iilct but reroluto rtrcnglh or character against Hie bull lug vva.vs of Ills masterful hmthci until his liltiuiph Is complete mill a loinmtlc lomluslou rinhientlv siuMm torv u the mmiIci'h , s.vnipatliles is re.u lied The Ititnis.- Invi'-in.iMiig of the titled i"iavc man' Is clironlchd b Mis Dell without a slnei of lettrvi 'I lie em ph.isls or inelodtanvi Is frev Invoked, I both In portraiture and In Incident, but clesptto t lie roughness bc readers at tention is riveted bv the author's un deniable power to keep tho emotional in terest at fever beat The M-cims, of the story are lild in Switzerland null Hue. kliiid and the dcsetlntloiis oMbe foimer are excellent while tho author makes Ihe moiinnins ii0 (.ettlng of an Incident I of much dr.innlic significance I r,ni:,vTin vnr i i:u,ri ji Vorlt II I' I'lilniniH shiib J I Vi Over There and Bach I Over llien mil Mack a vivid pen plrluie of life (t tbe fiont. In a eoldler I who has served in tluee uuifoinis should eanv ,i pirticulir appeil tn I'hll idel phlans b. i,iue Its author was born In I thl't rllv lie is Lieutenant Joseph Smith, at present serving with the arniv of the I'nitcd Slates I I.lelitcnint Slultlt first enllste,) u nil with the '1 went -ninth A uiicnuvei' Rattntlon In I'an.cd.r, and went in Plain c. lie scivcil Willi tbe Ciindi.ins received a comnils-hioii In the Hrltlsb armv -1111 was attached lo Ihe Itoval Suits lie was at the flout with his icgl ment until August. I!il7. when be ie signed his commission, i itne home and put on Ihe uuifniin of Ids own couutrc During his three mis ef lighting lie went through everv big battle on the Ilrltlsh einl of the western front. In cluding St i:ioi, the S'omnie, the Am.ro and Arras There Is no plcisc of flgbtlng tint is mil de ill with In Lieutenant Smith's book Tbe aiccunt of the "zero hour." which is whin the men go over the lop, Is more thin vivid The ai count of the. ami s first cxpnience with Oennan g is also lf Riaphlc Tbe book Is well Illustrated ov 1:11 iiii.ni. n nrk m lieutenant losn.lt s stnlih .e Vork. K V Dut Inn S. l 11 SI .Ml IACOBS 1628 I FOR CHESTNUT jU BOOKS STRECT I STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING "MtCT Mg JACOB" "The hi rain of demon aey rutin throunh all of his addressen and mextianes like ft gottlrn thread." President Wilson's Foreign Policy MKbSAGES, rAPKRS. ADDRESSES Edited by JAMES BROWN SCOTT . . Wealinit with the nentralitr of the United Mate. 11 en tin b wHti forrlcn anil Honiellr aflTnlri nllnp w uhfn infn wiir mii th deruiuny heenied nimliif nt. Iirulln with affair after our entranre Into war. A HOOK OK rOMI'Ul.l,G IN iniUIST AND IMPOKTANCI. ,! 50 M.T Al" UOOKSIOIIUS. oxroitn university tress A til c r i c a II 35 Wcbt 31icl Stiect B r n n c h New York " Doran June T1H1E AMAZING INTERLUDE Mary Roberts Rinehart "As lino a story ns this prolific writer has given the public, and that is saying much." New York Hot aid. "A joyous talc of youth unafraid, couitige and unfaltering tenderness that carried on despite dismay." Boston Post. Illustrated. 12mo. Net, $1.10 WINGED WARFARE Major W. A. Bishop The self-told story of the most Hying honors of the world in a brutalities of wurfarc on curth. WHEN THE SOMME RAN RED Captain A. Radclyff e Dugmore For hair-breadth escape and completeness this record of personal experience is one of the most rcmaikablo that ever got by the censor. Illustrations, maps, ctv. 12mo. Net, $1.75 JAPAN or GERMANY Frederic R. Coleman, P. R. G. S. The inside slory of the 'struggle in Siberia showing why .lapan should be trusted. 12mo. Net, $1.35 AIRCRAFT IN WAR AND COMMERCE WU D.. With an Inlro- II. DCrry dnetlon liy Lord Montagu of Beaulleu, C S I. A real look behind the .scenes to day and what aeroplanes will mean to tlic futuic. Official photographs passed specially by censor, lllus. So. Net, $1.50 . THE UNCIVIL WAR Porter Emerson Browne Author of "Seal'- and Stilpes, ' i;tc Shiewd, searching, nmusing. Ciooil sound Americanism with n punch. IU1110. Ncl, $1.25 THE NEW BOOK OF MARTYRS Georges Duhamel "Few of us Know the soul of the wounded soldier. Ileic it is. The book is ii masterpiece." London Star. l-'mo. Ncl, $1.35 MAN IS A SPIRIT J. Arthur Hill Author of 'Tsjchlcal Investigations" Most intcicsting evidence by one of the leaders in the movement of Psychical Research. lmo. Net. $1.50 GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY Publishers New York PUBLISHERS IN AMERICA FOR HODDER & STOUGMTON How Much Longer Can the War Last? tlcimanj thougl't it would be over in a jear. Hut she failed to reach Venice Pctiogiad Paris. Wlij 7 Will she relieve" her attempts on there capi tals? Can she hold out for another ear? 1'iiid the answers to these and htindicds of other lucstitvns In THE WINNING of the WAR By Roland G. Usher This is "an optimistic book for pessimistic people a book vvhlrh nnaljzes the present situation friyiu every angle and shows why and how the Allies will win in the end. The effect of (lermanj's great blunder, tho likelihood of her defect through starvation, what is meant hv hei "Invlsiblo auny." what she g.ilii'i fiom this source nf information how tlie Russian revolution helps .mil how it hinders the Alllid cause, what vie-, loij must mean, when America's lirst offensive Is likely t lie launched, what the true military .objective is, why the HARPER & BROTHERS. Established 1817 When Davy Joslin quit killing Tor n hundred years those genuine Americans of tlic Kentucky mountains had bren killing each other. They couldn't read or write or think. They were a people apart from their countrymen, until one of them, a gaunt7 ignorant mountaineer, resolved to quit murdering them, and instead to sae them to bring light into the "shut-in regions. Read of his tremendous task and his equally tremendous achievement in thc romance of thc New Cumberlands, THE WAY OUT By Emerson Hough . His struggle with the outside world, Ihe powerful influences oer him of two beautiful women, his return to thc feud ists of thc mountains and their re'ecption of his offer of help, all arc splendidly told. "A is an intensely interesting to mance. Thc best thing that Mr. Hough lias written, and one of the best that anybody has ccr written about the mountaineers." tfew York Tribune. . At air loocerj II 50 THIS IS AN APPLETON BOOK D. Appleton & Co., Publishers, New York' K Books 1918 V.C..D.S.O..M.C. British Royal Flying Corps famous of nil airmen, who won the single fighting season. None of the Illustrated. 8o. Net, $1.50 THE FLYING POILU Marcel Nadaud The blithe, fcttrlcss, romantic exploits of n Parisian street uichin in the avintion coips. ll!mo. Net, $1.50 THE LONELY STRONGHOLD Mrs. Baillie Reynolds An appealing heroine, a stranga setting and a stranger hero. "A novel with the right ring of ro mance." New York Herald. 12mo. Net, $1.35 RANSOM! Arthur Somers Roche Surprising mystery talc. 12mo. Net, $1.55 ' FORE! Tales of Golf Charles E. Van Loan Inimitable tales of the Royal Game by the champion writer of spoi t stories. All types arc here. 12mo. Ncl, $1.55 HOW TO SWIM Annette Kellermann Miss Kellcrniann's full story. A fascinating book, full of tlic in timate details and secicts of the art. Many photographs, din gianis of strokes, dives, etc. Octavo. Net. $2.00 PHYSICAL BEAUTY HOW TO KEEP IT Annette Kellermann A beautiful woman tells how she got her. bodily perfection and how she Keeps it. Many photographs of Miss Kellermann. Octaxo. Net. $2.00 tlnal defeat of Germiny is assured these are only tome of tho big ques tions that ou wlllfind frankly an severed. In tills remarkable book 'llieio are mips showing clearly the various battlefronts-ouo as late as .March. 101 S and there are dlvlplona and subdivisions, of thought, so that vou can tlnd easll what ou want to 1 now. But ou wiy not want to m'sa a single pago of this wonderful book, for it Is a vivid account that goes deeper than newspapers or magazines. Get it today at your booksellers. $2.00. BASED UPON FACTS Few Americans realize the appalling conditions which c isted among the poor Kentucky mountaineers until tho lie. J. A. Uurns "Burns of thc Mountains" erected his famout college in the region. "The Way Out" Is based upon this wonder ful work, and elves perhaps the only true-to-llfc picture of these people people ns thor oughly American as the name Itself. nurns's Indomitable courage and perseverance nrc n ihlnlng light In the hMory of Kentucky. a 1 -MsrtJI i s I , w -. r c ysk 3KCS .... ..... . -vr. ----- ..." .-Vj.,-1. IU .ttu . Du.. ,.& kfcfc ! X rii mamma L&itoJl&AA& t? m '-ii '.I mm tr.-A tv 7 trfc '