m SLS 371 mx v4s.. IP iv CT a- r. rl) ' ARMYCASUALTY 4 lumuju ivuni t. a r Department An- AV tt uuuuuca cieveniucii niiiuus Killed in Action 1 ; SOLDIERS WOUNDED 11 ashlnj:ton, Aui? 17 ' The War Department todav announced ninety; disunities from the vvcatrrn-front .fllhting-, divided ns follows I Killed In notion, 17, died of wounds ' died of accident and other cnusei 2; jtrounded seerelv. 11, wounded, degree Undetermined, 20, and mlsilng In ac tion, 19. Tho officers on the list were K11J.FI 1 ACTION 1 leutenant ICE BF.rtNAIlP l.EO Spurt SF.1 KRIXI 11 01 NDKD l.leutenantM BF.1X. Dl m.Kl K . nrlntol, rn. HAIIDINO. VICTOIl H Kast Penbrokl, N. T ' Tho remainder of tho lift Kn.I.F.n IN ACTION Srrseant YlllTMAV. A J Columbus O SCHOCH. II. C, Mellnftrovr. P. I Corporal" AIIMSTRONO 1 V Jonrsboro Tnn "MULLIGAN, E s New York 11 as oners fASSET J It Princeton V C , SCOTT. C E . Hutchlniion Kan rrlvnls mmnmvs m voi, s d COOPEnlDEIl I. ria nids Ark CUMMINOS C E North Hanover. Musi TIENSI.KV, C . Hlvertnn. Utah I .ODNNEI.L. n. K , fit Kllinbeth nvrnue. Arlington, N.. J. HOPI.AND. O .Elfa Mix . MEAD J . Samluslo li I TIAMSEY. It II lloxton Ms SWEARINO. H J Kansas City Mo TSIOTrtAS. P . lndlani Harbor DIEM OF 1101 I1 Prlate JOHNSON J . nellftlre O tnd DIED OF AlCIDKNT CM IKS Prlvnle BAKER. R . Rennselr HESS, A., MrKeex Rockx. AND OTHFR Y Pn WOL'Nnr.D SK1MIM. Sergeant inoiVSKI T M Chliaeo OTTO H . Toman 11 Is 8PRET0R. C, Russia Corporal HLE1VER. O IV Sjracuse. N T KOSEK. d . Talor Ark T'IMPANET O Jamesvllle Wis Unnonrr JENN'ERJOHN E 1 Koroxlvlll- Wis fc Private 'nRMIRT. S , Curtln, Pa. JI1ECK. R B Denmark J1TROV. D . Ilrlahtuood Sla CALDWELL. I. O . Concord Junction Mass. 'CHISHOLM. W n scjmour. Conn .CLARK. IV. South Co entry Conn lDII.L. r . Ornnd Rapids Mich KARLY, K , Cambridge. N T K3RUSH. II J Mount Morrlt 111 "HART. A. I. , Humphrej Ark ..HUMPHREY. 8 . I.oBonla la .LEWIS. C M, Wh'evlllc. N C iMcREYN'OLDS, P Hazelton Kan MOELLER. J M . South Noralk Conn 'OLSCHEFSKf D IV Hartford. Conn Jill.SON. H K . Chlcaio. J'Al.IJSTER, H U Sturgeon Hay Wii VTRMN8KI. A . Torrlnaton Conn mVEEDAIiF. V. J StUfSeon Ra Wl JlVEAVINO. P S . Naugatuck Conn rtVETHERINOTOV It 1, . Klnaton. N C JYU&HJK. N , Cleveland. O WOCNDEH DKfilthl-. I NDKTKRMINfcl) Coriwrnl Fairfield la JSAI.TS. It HOFFMAV V Merlianle J Pirk Uldkf III llueoner fcchoolflehl Va Il-AROE. 1 . Pmatrx IIURNS. J II . Oltumwa la 'CUHWOItTH. J I. Woodbine la piAIltlY. I" W MIourl Valle U ,HAXBY. J W Clarlnda Iu JONES H I) si Joseph Vlo KOLACZEW HM, II New Iledford Mass M,AHHON J (lowlnian s I) "LEWIS. F l)es Molnu la XKRLOW C V Daeorah la iMIW.EH H . Rett Onk la MULLEN. K A Hrooklsn 1 YUVN'DER (I W lied Oak JPEACH. A Kedford fa la Kjir.u.i j enuai.o SANDERS L, Atlanta Hi 'HANDI.OU. R. J. lilH Vlethank trert. (amden, N, 4. JWHITKHEAI) I I Walden N V J M1SMM. IN 1CT10N toriMimlx Ic.AI.I.inW. R. J., New llrunswlrk. N. J. vHINCHEY. J F , Hjdi-vllle Vt jKFJSTI.EK. J. E , llaltlmore. Md. i 8PYCHL.KI. F J South llend lnd Prltalrs lATUs, II,, J81 N. (Illi street. I'lilliulel 1. phla. HIELI1Y. S O, Deposit N" Y B0KR. N.. Trererlon. Pa. I IllUDUEMEYER K H Clmlnnall (.CHANDLER B J , Leieu. Vrk rCORK. O. 11.. 61 hat Phll-F.llenu street. Philadelphia. I CBIHTKKE. I.. II, 1101 llarlnc .treet, Philadelphia. sD'ALESSlNDKO. V. 821 south Hihlh street. Plilluilelplila. VDRBW. I. H Ni-port N II JFUCCI. V . Italy ICIAKRIV i: I. Pmvldeme H I HENDEE. II Ilium III M'IPAShY. M Chltauo MINNICIf llrldneport l onn 'WIIITI.OCK. C K Exle h Ottana. Aug i7 rht name.', nf ihf 1 - following AinerlciuiK appt.iretl on totlnv s overseas casuiltv lists J Wounded A C Cook, 31b loj sii.ct .Mount Pleasant, la W I .Sohov I .us -Cato3, Cal , Lieutenant I II Hoik Beaver Falls, l'a C Giant Ileaver eton, Mich : C Gatehell Wairrtonn, S D.and W V Collins 32JJ West I-ike I street. Chicago t Died of wound. C l Hoe, Arkansas OFFENSIVE GERMAN EJECTED 5m k s&K fAcw nvitt Inil Wlln 5nVa Afinta. k "f r .' ." . -.' ,'Z ler L.iea nuuiu i.aier ffiXf Ministers and la) men forcibly ejected Sy -an aged German from tne National Park jr tcamn-meetlng yesterday when he In- KiPfe1" flerrupted a patriotic speaker wltir a i. 'shout that he a lying about tli .Kaiser. lie would hae been roughly & handled had not Hie Ite J W Xli J5. Bon, of Gloucester. lalen pity on ml. -a . Aa ntirl tiAralln rlorl (ha nlliara rit . 'lchoI- on his iace and persuaded the others not to in- sjuiB mill. f The trouble started during an address VliV thei lleV. JaniCK 11 l.akp fnilnilee k of Ocean City and National Park. The . Cupeauer ueviareu tne Kaiser had once SJaoucht to dominate the churches No sooner nau tne oeciaration neen made than the German In the audience rote . and shouted- ' i:erjthlng ou hae raid tlioiit the Kaler Is a lie" Ha rill v hail fSlti. t he spoken when he was hustled from the r , Jttnt and off the grounds tEAT WHEAT CROP IN FRANCE rtt. i.a . i t tf tri m mt ciimnrnfi inomniA -if '"- uw krfvAsuwkVfVti m.,m..w w miv . li " Ceat Over That of Last Year 1 1-arU, Aujr, IT The total production wnMi in KTanca tnis year is esti- at ij.o.bb uuajteM A . Lstn true to ta "It S S H NEMICO RESPiNTO ALFRONTEITALIANO Gli Austriaci Iiivnno Attacrano lc Posizioni sulle Montague Published and Dlxtrlbilted Under PERMIT No 311 , Authorized t the net of Oclolwr n ".ITt.on ne at the Postofflce of Phlla. Uelnhla Pa Ilv order of the President A H PURI.ESON Postmaster Ueneral Konin. 17 aKOXto Halle notlzle Klunte dal fronte ill bat taplla si rileva che Rll austriaci hanno In Snn a ttnnnn tn 1a tnnoWlrttit nrr)iinol daKll Itallanl sulle montaRne, special- meniP nPIln rorrnno riI TY.nf..n r I'attacco f, I onerato con irande Mo.en sulle posltlonl aan7ite. chc recente-1 .... .,- pvhu Miuc utiufjaie iut;ii ii.iu.tiu ,1'n altro nttncio rlpetuto pir ben tre "ni piniw uit:iuvu iftii iicilliiii truuiiii. II dlstaccamento dl trutme Itallnne che lerl 1 altro, occupo" una Isoletta a sud-est , dl drace ill Papulopoll, e.itturando la SuarnlRione nemlci she l si trovava I tre altncchl furono tutti rexplntl ed anche qui' rII austriaci suhliotio perdlte conslderevoll Ecio II tcsto del comunicato pubbll- cato, nel pomerlcgio dl lerl. dtl Mlnlxtero della tluerra In base al rapport, del Comindo Supnmo Jtallano 'Xella reglone del Tonale 11 nemlco ito" una podcrosa alone eontro le I tent poxlzlon avtnzato recentemente ecu- niilw rtulln nnatra Irtinnn mil ftl rifciilnln pate dalle nos.re truppe. ma f,, r. spln.o Sul 1'iave, a xud-est dl t.ruve dl i-apauopoii, II nemico per ire vone ai tncco' 1 isoletta pres.i dagll Itallanl nel nnra.li.iiA iH..rn Tlltll a Iro -ll nt , ......... .- .. ... tacc.l furono resplntl .on gravl perdlte pet II nemico Quattro aieoplanl ivvertari ed un pallone fren ito furono abbattutl dai nostrl avia.ori ' Dal 1 route llnllano IB ngosto l'.iricchl membrl della Croce Ho-si Amerlcim, nddtttl al servlzlo dtlle amuuianze xono pim oecoran neoa Croee ill CueriH Kalian i per 1 e. eel- , lente iondott.1 sill Monte Urappi nel prlml del giugno scorso I decoiatl souo I'apltano It V Hates dl Cambridge Mass , John Cloud dl St Iouis . loeph Wider dl New ork , James Itaker dl uinneapoim en u j.uoKuieiieiue vjiuuue dl Kloridi l.a Croce Itossa American! ha in atigurato uno spUndldo servlzlo stabtltn do delle cuclne per la dlstrlbuzione dl mlnestre nlla popolii7lone Indlgente dl Trivlso l,i cltta che dall epoea delle rltlr.ita sill Plavc e' st iti empre sotto II fuoco austrlaco 11 nuovo servlzlo e sotto la din?lono del magglure l'rni&lo Fabbrl, axslstltn dal iipltauo M i Leowentritt (ilornalmente vengono dlstrlbuite TOO r.izlonl ill inlnestra carne Tali razloni Fono date al it- tndlnl rlmastl senza easa. i Uall. non-1 ostanto 11 .ontlmio bombaid.im. nto non I . , , I,l.,lnn,r. II u,,f.lr. haino voluto abbandonare il suolo natlvo 1 rapprf smtanti del (,onmo lt.ill.iuo hanno avuto parole dl mas-1 slino eloglo per tanto lavoro tllantroplco ed um inltarlo Dlspaccl giuntl dilla .Svlzzera recino eho .1 Ooverno Austrlaco ha dec. , dl I pienueit scrii' iiiifuit: iici irI ,tle 11 movlmento Jugo-hlavo i RINGRAZIAMENTl AGLl italiani di Chester II 3 aprlle u s . In Chester, l'a 11 Generals Ougllelmottl In rappresent mza del Regio Hserolto, ed il Heglo Console Cav I'ff I'ociardl. lapprisentante II Governo Itallano, rleeverono In con segna un unbulanza destlnata al prndl soldatl d Italia, I fondl per la quale furono riecolll id Inlzlatlva della Log gia Dinte- Mlghleri' dell Ordlnc Tigll d'ltalla In Anuriea o da un comltato piesleduto dal farmaclsta Nicola Al Ko l.,.nTlrtlin nmhiilniiza 1 21 ' -" glugno seorso glunse in Oevona. ed ora II Uegio Console Itallano In Philadelphia i,n r,.tt nervenlre al Sic Albnnese la seguente lettera PreKiatlsslmo Slgnore (on i Iferl mento a pirVedeute lorrlspondenza ho II -nrecio dinformaie la S V che II sentitl rlngiazlamentl per la generosa offtila e dl esprimere loro i sensl del plti vivo plauso per I sentiment! di ulto patriottlsmo ill devozlone che "'" , ,, ..... . uru,. t, eodestl connazlonall nutrono verso U Madre IMtriu Nello nssolveie laic u.i.iiin imarlio colEo 1 oecaslone per . I ., gradlto intarho colgo I oecasione per Mlnistero dela .uerr.. inrezone .en- photographing wild anl- j That delightful and lrrepresble heio f,ale. iLnnonzIo dell rVlv'o 1 in iu- nvnls In the African jungle mule hlrn M""" Scarlet Pimpernel lives ngiln , In fclmito lannunzlo dellarrlvo dl una" valunhle for cout work f,ct dominates Ilironess Orc7 s litest toambulanzi donata a. nostro Kserc ito f M U J W' ,,,'us In ';,' ' '-"' Ton Wife' lird Tonv della folonia ' H " I" ,,,, aftpr 1)cnff c-reptu.e-d and sub- '" bo re.nmebered b .eaders of the arlia dl far Klungne il 'inl'ut ' ' sequently , scaping from a G.rnian prls- P'mpernel ' romances of the French feiente ed alia ( olonla dl I Hester I piu , n.. . M ,,,, ,., ,,, ., ,, ,, .,,, '" . :, , Qlirnme I ' e Hiniio "wii in ii'iiv ifriiiiti nuiifi- rlnnovar Le Pf' ,'as' ""' T," ,.'t', Bh His account of the greit battle Is sensl della ml dlsllntastirna II Ketlo in,pIe ,,, h ,,, ofl(n inpss , ,. Console (nrmato) I. tocearai ' wavs Imbued with the soldiers pride In II Sic lbanesie nel renUire ui puo- bllca ragione la surrlportata lettera. cl prega ill porgere 1 suoi vivi rlngazla mentl a quant! eontrlbuliono, sla motal mento che malerlalinente. al suei easo della nobile e patrlottiea Inlzlutlvu a pro del glorioso Kseicito Itallano Teutons Seize Kronstadt Port I (ontinued from Paie One hut befoie we withdraw we hhall close tho doo, behind us vvlth su, I, force that thev will remember us roi a veiv i .i .1, VZ other hand the ia,l .,. cu patlon or Petrogrtd In the Geim.ns Isespected They wish to organize .e slstance on the line between I'etiogtad nnd 7.u.ink.i .iiriilnst the Allied tmsli mid Zwanka .iRalnst tlif Allied push fi om thu Mm man coast All the Moscow and Pi-tiogud p.t peiH hae been tjuppressed exct-pt Hoi lsheik Journals and poHters In the Htirets thienttn heerp peniiltltH fm the hpiea-dliis of dlhiiuletliiR rumors 1 NeWH Ih whlsierod In the ear at cafes 1 and In barbel whops for fear of spies, I u In the time of !aonarola All telegraphic communication with Kntente countries having ceased, the latest eentb on the western front aio learned only from flerman com nmniqueH The proclamation bj the Kntente (',oernnients to the Russian people legardliif? the landlnRH on the Muirnan coast and at VladUostok is not known A state of siege has been proclaimed In all the regions near tho Czecho slovaks and English Recently a state of siege has been proclaimed at Kol tan, the prehent point where contact Is possible between the CzechoSlo ulvs and English All foreigners hae jeu expelled from Koltas The. watchwoid of the Iiolslielkl now Is "neither with the Entente nor with the Hermans, or, perhaps, against both " Yet this political hypocrisy which recalls the Drest-Utoisk declar atlon neither peace nor war eildent 1 cunnot aert the approaching Bo. she! Ik catastrophe V. S. CONSUL POOLE TO STAY IN MOSCOW By the Associated Press HilIiIpkIhh. Aug. 17. Ameilcan Con. ml General Poole at Moscow wjio recently burned his code book and turned the consulate oer tn the 8wedUh conrul. notified the State Department In a cablegram ieceled today that he In tended to remain In Moscow to assist the British and f rench consular officers there, who are In great personal danger. I T') conMit general reported that, with WGV&23&XSi EVENING PUBLIC lease of pevcrnl hundred Kntcnte cltl senii. chiefly Hrltlsh and French, who were arrested b tho Ilolsholkl nnd held aR hostnRet for soltt tnemhera Im prisoned In the north l.ntrnte lllrenx Held About ninety of these tMllnnt were still In nistody. Mr l'oole snll he had been able to ameliorate their situation .Mr l'oole reported nlxo that the Jnp nneso consul han left Moa-ow undel lilnitirfi nt ilf, pnmllli t and Mr 1 oole ! mid he, too, mlsht hae left with nlm- llat promise, but thai ne cmniun u dut tequlrcd him to remain Die Jap anese representative will make u com plete report of conditions In Moscow to tho Allied nations Members of tho International lleil i'ioxs InelmllnK severnl Aniirkati", are dolnp excellent work In Moscow tin lonsul Keneral reported, nnd an ruelv Intf adequate protection at ireiit The are Knatl asxlxteil hi mi mbers of the 1 M (' A, who .ire also af forded prottctlon Prom rinnlsh news buieau lejwrts trunnilttetl throush Sweden tin lt') Uipnrtmelit heard toduj that the -imiei ' eminent Is maklnK hu-tv PI'.ra l JA'!to".. '"' ..aJw5?," .,",' , ' ""-" v v.w tl. .-y -- ...... 11119 h(nK, rs aml freght tratllc from Moiow pax been sloppeu Itenortx Irkutxk Taken ' "I'ture . i i. of Irkutsk, the Important U lie rt of the Trans-Siberian rail-, tin Czerhn-bhivaki aided b ,n peop't" ..rmJ on Julv 7 Is " ''""' ,w road hi me Moernn peoples aim on "' ' iiiuiounced In a belated dispatch from the slberlin peof American ronsui iiairi" ni irKiu-jn. i dated Julv .'2 and received todav at the i-iiiio lA-uui uiii-iu rne consul lepouei tnrougii ine ...- I"1?"!. S ?". .'i ix7lI."J..ill .lhl... . " 1,? rden,orall,ed londUUm of .iie firu?M 0f lommunlratlun nnd the pusencc In IiKutsk of Holxhevikl foni",s finished In old Ivorv and peacock Hed (linrdx and Herman and u-tilan i,luc je ,irfts )nt() nn f.nBaBeinetit to Prh; ', Samna Is open from ' . I 111' .111" it lit fiillllllH IS '"I'i" ".""' Th; Ollu nwo ,,, y Is njrmn ,la,1H ,p , rininliiK through to Mos-, mi Tin Crecli tonimnmlii he i-.iiu hid riported that as- late as Julv I" tlleV hill lllt Jul) IIICII kllleil lllld 1J0U . . , "''..dvlieH also .epoit th. iMnhll-h- llunl 1)f th( neu sibeiim iluvi ininint nth hendiuait rs at ()nik wlure the p. opli ind the (iov erniiii nt lepudl ited ;h. T ,ti tt ' , , AM v1Hi lean- In tile stei n lbe! i in etlounu icporled safe . - ....... j - riTrrr7v ne lrKIllAl ) 1 1 I L A IJS , ., t r, ,.,.,,,,, ..,,,, U tiKt.AlK If 1 1 It KhlJZ) Ih the I ni led 're's 11 iiHlilngton, ng 17 Genmti iihi n lion to break with the Uolshev ikl and throw an aimv Into Itussla to lomhit the Alllid forces in tin cast was sien bv l.ntinte diplomats in various devtl opments In the east reported here In ollli i il t ililcs todav Withdrawal of (leimaii Ambissului von Mumm from Kiev Is declared lo indle lie tint the IJerm ins intend to iltptnd upon theit mllitar fonts in the I liiatue lo t arrv out thn tlabn.itt tiro- groin of levies on the wheat crops of southern Russia N t In import ince Is the airn il from Moscow of the Bulgarian and Turkish IT1,,'i ,"tr";, f" H,'1 , 1,etlin,!:1 K."""" Ollt II llf thlSC lllplOIIiatS H satl ) f )uen tjjI ()n a'tcolln, f u am, T, n.h . iniuiin.,u' nt i..0i,. ri. 0ra intigrltv and reports wen tint stvii.il .iltimpts on the lives of both mill vvue frustrated bv the HolshevlUi The opinion here Is that the (fum ins reillze that the Holshev Ik powir has '- 'Jj" ,- ftbZl. o'lTrse 'Z ' )li JHI1 for tile I C-l St.lhllSlimeilt Of tilt eastern baltlelini us far within lliis - slan leiiltorj as Is possible j nuinoer oi miiu.irv men noiu uie view that Oerminv will makt a spei - in i ' i-'iiogr.iu aim .iiso - tfzznx& Mos.ow ind along tin Iionoi ilgi Hlveis, to the I aspian sta - ,, .. , . , . ... , ,, I IIP tiritish 'Die rilSIl 0 The Hritih faiultv of taikling the task of war as though It were a gigantic game Is reflected In even page of the account of the Battle of the Sonime which Captain A Iiadthffo Dugmore has written It is this happv fneiiltv whlth will eventunllv help to win the iur ami oil m-e apuuii KUKinore is .1 .. -- . .- ... . ,. . ... t-. . . , true Briton It lightens even the d irkext PaK' of his mrratlv. with a lertaln Miuovancv that Is at times almokt boy- , ish The earlv stories of atiocitles In Bel glum prompted the author to enlist al though hi was well bejond the age for (in I'll mil iniL in .nil uiu nr tin nil " "" "' .'..r . ..... ni.iti. mil- rrance with a commission as captain in dare-devil -i tompiiiloiis in his audacious the Kings Own Yorkshire Light Infan- raids righ under the noses of the fero tr did much useful scout work md , clous and Implicable teirorlsts of '91, Weill lllllill,ll llir Kirairri iiili-ii in- n e BaUIe )f t(i ,01))m( ,n ,l(, uInt.ntH . TeceM loss nf .,' , ,., ..,,, went through the greatest lliltisli nf- tn llf 'HI"U- - luiiiiinn tin .'i. in i"-. . .. (h Kn,llm, ,(n n that territll, Ktnig- a colossal mlll.ar tsl. brllllantlv per- theii devoted heads levoliitionlst a formed At a later stage of the battle hufferer from this aristocrat's oppres the author was partlallv 'gassed and alons In his das of powir lures father Incapacitated for further attivi seivlee I alu) daughter liatk to France bv a pre The book makes pliln as to newspaper tenso thit deceives everjbody hut My dispitches posslbl could the fuiv and LorU Tony and, of tourse, the Scivrlet slzi of the great ' push ' pimpernel HIIFS T1IK rovime ltN Ri.ii Hi i dp Sew lork" lliorje 1, iTo-an , u nia ' For Free Self-Expression Sententious utterance nf the obvious Ltientlflc slloglsm a fact which Dr .Mauri. Pirme.ee ippiien.lv does no, Is not to he eonfused with authentic ireiognlre In his 274-p.ige discussion of ... !... ,- , ,K 3' Jl e difficult to ascribe orlglnalltv i0 the aJ ,hor for his discover that there 1, a vital relationship between essential per- ...i ,.i,....,,,i,i, ...i .i, .mill phnrapl prlstlr s unil tht. nvurca slon of human nature and tint per- snnalltv should enjo the fullest po"s. hie development and si op ho long as il does not result tn hirmful invasion of thi well-being of rthirs Hut the doctoi llnils hls idea so fas cinating thnt hp lours tirelepalN every conceivable phase of the subject, lepent ing with gusto in un things that are no lesH interesting lo him because the are finilllnr to the imjinilv of leaders He gives us the siirpnwliig Information that alcohol Is an inti xlcant and a nar cotic and that lis use Is largely due to tne uesire to i si ape tne mrellcitles of life He adduces the startling fact that manv unnatural phenomena of sex are the result of repiesslon He tells us that gambling and reckless deeds are prompt ed by the Innate love of adventure All of this Is unimpeachably Innocuous, but the thrill of novelty can scarcely be ( claimed for It The doctor possesses an ornate vocabulary and heivlelds It lav ishly and Impressively ' I'nitlONAI.ITY AMI lONni'CT Hy Man rice Parmelee New ork Moffat lard Co .' Dr. van Dyke's Latest Verse The best thing In Henrv van Djkes latest book of verse "The Hed Klower" Is "The Heavenlv Hills of Holland." a beautiful tribute to the cloud moun tains which bound the horizon In that flat countiy It starts. The heavenly hills of Holland How vtondrously they rise Aboa the smooth i.reen pastures Into tho asure sklest Mlth blue and purple hollows With peaks of dazzling snow. Along the far horizon The clouds are marching slow Halt of the little volume Is devoted to ' poeinR about the war It must be ad-' mltted that Doctor van Dyke'a muse muse imc uccii uruway wnen ne wrote, for the lerse seems to lack fire The other half contains poems about Holland, starting with the one referred to. THB RED FI.OWER. Poem. Wrltte varum;.- , nr nenry van Dyke erkl-Cnarlei Bwlboer's, Sons. 'W. V LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, GOOD NEW HE WAS NOT A HEADY-MADE HERO JLucko H rites of a Man Who Entered the War to Find His Soul Wllllnin .1 lxA'ke. In "The lied I lanet," shpued how the suul of a moral weakling breaks down under tho sre.u strain of war. The man In this case was lo all external appearances a heroic soldier who won gloty Hut In the end ho hilled himself rather than face life with tho ronscltvusniss of his essential '"worthiness upon him Jn "The Hough Hoad ' ail Loike has shown how n .oune man dellcalilj reared, to whom war and all Us hardships are tepulxlve, can make a hero of himself as a private t-oldler by sheer force of moral nnumirn i i the hetolne of the story says, he is vij-iiiumi iitiu, uui nils riiuue or i,lnBef wnat ,le ha b'econle P,.. . . ,, V" course It Is a morv of the war ;'" of oun.lt is l.ngllxh It opens nm a ieati-made luro, but hat mude of i ,, . .. -- -- -- ,...., " " Mulct cit James Mnrmaduko ur io exniuiieu in tne surroundings In which he was reaied b his widowed inoiiier ills rather had been the cathe- ,lril, dan . llK n . ., In all hl tastes and habits He em broiders, Is Interested In wall papers and Ills favorite room In hlx nnn liituu ,m,rM hls "' The war begls. but i, ,!,-., ,... . .. . .... , , , taught to no Interest In It, as he has been believe that he has a delicate nmjlltutloti He Is flnnllv graded bj the- receipt of a white feather into tak "'c -v iujaii.-ui examuniion iie uis ".'".''"l "'"e nothing the milter 'with him After hiving a eommlsslon secured fm hlni through Influence and i aflei hiving been pnlltelv kicked out of SX "ir"!, '0r ."""'r" "" ! '" jneipilr Then he enlists as i private , ho'1"''' to piovo lo hiinelf tint he Is not contt mptlbli The splritti il disci- pllne that he undere'oex lx ..oiere hm It ing ,i phjslcal examination He dls does not bleak him for his nil sc-ul Is like flni steel that Can stand the tem pering He meets a French girl who his seen her fither nnd mothei killed lufori lit r ti and she divines that he has siifTired One day she telln him tint ho is fighting to save his soul Ho hid not expressed It In this vviv even to himself but he admits at om e tint it is true Of course there aie love .iffilrs In the bock Thev will entertain the reider. but thiv are not what lmlvis It i great piece of literature It Is Mi l.otke's perception of whit the will of man can do with himself TI1K Itni llll HOAB 11 IMlllum I I oeke New lork John I ane I onipaiu 11 oO Harold McGrath's Latest Haloid Mcfliath can bv counted on to produce n tile of unusual plot deillng with prettv girls and gallant men He h is sust lined his reputation In The Olrl In His House" It Is the storv of the coming back to civilization of a rich New Yorker, who had gone into the - )r "re the stor, opens l"1 nunfo LtIK K.une III oruer lo lorgei 10 - 'Hsippolntment In love He nturns I when he accidentally learns that the .xiusnanti or me gin wno niu jilted mm is dead He discovers before he reaches Xe York that he no longer loves the tzzrrr h r"h her h0 "" 0ccuplnB his house a charming vounf? 1......1...1 i- inner 111111 houkiii ine house from the man's faithless agent The agent had disappeared taking half of "' voung mans fortune with hlrrf Tim an. ,1. !.. .. l.U .t- .. . 1 m- -i,,i ,11 nr. wiiti iiit .iti eniiires 01 the voung min in his own house without tUe knowledge of tho girl with tho ills cm er of the whereabouts of the ab sconding agent and with the progn s of the voung mans love affair It cm bo nad In two hours without attaining the Intelleit but with unfligglng Interest THE Olltl Miflrath tl ..' IS HIS HOI'HE Ilv Harold New lork Harper .1 Hrolhers. 77i Scarlet Pimpernel Intervenes nna lie proves nlmself a worthy fol- lower of hl leadei Tin litter, how- Hi1Tx Iu fi-i 1111.1 un nufnri r. IIia n t . t . n -vs .n iiiiuiuilini'ill I IU Hlt7 CAllll.il tion of Ills ft 'end and his ilmmlng nun in ins n fim nun ills urill oung wife the daughter of i Tn arl8()1 rat Thp(i. , ar(l pxlwd , their native land and with a prlci rench from nrlce on Iord Tonv's vlft ind her father are 'f ,tr""' aH I'nnl't,"' ,b.ef0re Jj revolutlon.ii iribunal and It may be taken ns an assured fact that their shilft would have been shoit had It not been for tho bulldog tourage of Lord Ton, whlih Itself would have been mll; ""J1,?"', "" ma!flc nh,' tl" " ' J ' 7'rL ''?" .dn;'r' ,,,'",";, . , , ",, , " ,,,"' ,ni,i.; at 1. Instant to confound the bloodthlrst J- - W, w ends .jack " !' ml, ' " ' "uaddU.3 ,Z , , he I on ,, u P mS: ' ," '",'' JUxon rtZy3 "m"er- nei sei ir '''"Vi Wk $i j-, 1 Will. Hi Haronesi Orczy Ijeorne II Iloran Company JACOBS 1628 I cor CHESTNUT Cj BOOKS " I STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING UIT Mt AT JACOB! GENE STRATTON-PORTER has written a thoroughly American story of a woman's achieve ment. It is a book that fits the times perfectly, though there is not a word about war in it. Kate Bates, the chief character in this new novel, is as original as the "Harvester." as alluring as the "Girl in the Limberlost" and as unforgettable as "Freckles." More than 6,000,000 of Mrs. Porter's books have been sold. A DAUGHTER OF THE LAND , Net $1.40 "GENTLEMEN AT ARMS" A book by a man who has been face to face with war and knows how to write. Here are twenty-one tales of high cour age, unfailing humor and oheerful courage of the men who fight on land and sea. By "Centurion" (Captain J. H. Mor gan), of the British Army. Net $1.40. "TALES FROM BIRDLAND" Ten stories written for children about the amusing and curious things birds do, by T. Gilbert Pearson. Illustrations in color and black and white' by Charles Livingstone Bull. Net $1.00. FOR HALE AT ALL BOOKSELLERS I DOUBLEDAY, UAHDEK CITY W NOVELS BY WHAT LIFE DOES TO KATE BATES The Heroine of Mrs. Porter's New Novel Is Refined . by Adversity Mm Gene Btratton-Porter. who may be called the feminine Harold Dell Wright of American fiction, has created a character that Is likely to appeal to tens of thousands of Americans In her latest novel "A Daughter of the Land " Kale Bates is the daughter of a farmer who give 200 acres of land to each of his sons on their marriage, but gives nothing to his daughters Kate Is not content with the system, and when her father refuses to allow her to prepare herself for teaching school she borrows the mono and leaves home This Is the beginning of her break with her father, which ends In his refusing her tho house She is an Independent, self respecting oung woman, and she makes) her cwn way over serious obstacles The opportunity comes to her to marry a rich man and live In Chicago, but she decides that life In the clt Is not what she wants She loves the land on which she was brought up, and she stajs In close contact with It. The storj Is full of thrill and excite ment but Katu and hit career hold It trgether She Is so thoroughly under stood by Mrs Porter that the reader loses the Impression that she Is a char aitcr In fiction nnd regards her as a real wonnn Life deals hurdly with her for man) ears; but she remilns true to the bes-t In herself and Is refined and purified lo the battering she receives When a family crisis eomes with her fathei s suddiii death she Is the one to whom all her brolhers and sisters appeal fi r hcli And at the end, nfter an un fnrtunntp marrlaire and a foitunate wid owhood, she flnallv inaTrieu the right man The siorv Is one whlih will dellghl Mrs Porters public, and If It does not enlnrgo her following It will be burprls Ing . A DMC.inhll OF THE LAND Us Gene Miration Portfr Harden Cltj Doubleda 1'iiue & ( u 11 4il He Became Somebody Else H De Veie stacpoole his not written! .1 moif rnscinatlngiv interesting tiorv than ' I he Man Who Lost Himself" The heio Is a joung Kngllshinan who has lived In Amerlc i for jears He finds himself sti.mded In London after hav ing gone there for a Philadelphia steel firm to siiure a contract He had failed In hi i mission He meets a min in his lioti 1 who Imprisscs hint li resemblance to some one he has si en before By ehatn t he in ikes the man s acquaintance and then discovers to his surprint; that, eich Is tho otht I s double After a con-' vlvlil evening ho wakes up the next, morning In a sumptuouslv furnished bed-1 room .md In the course of time dls-i covers that he l In the house of the Harl of lloehester Later he also learns that tin earl had committed suicide after leaving him The earl had taken f rom the joung man's clothes nil papers bV i which he could be .Identified He coll-1 eludes that tin earl has cmplojed this novel way of disappearing from life nnd plajlng a practical Joke upon his wife,' with whom ho has quarreled, nnd on' his friends bv folttlng another man nnj them to plav the put he his nb indoned j Tho voung man In n quandarv How ho extrlcites the affairs of the earl f rom i serious eoinpllcitlons" how he meets' the earls wife and fluall) becomes her i 1 !...! 1..... t.A 1.. .... 1n.l I ' liiituaiiu nui in- is 1 1 Kin in-u us in-, inn when he tells, the familj what has hap pened ate what make the story an un usuil one and Just the thing for nn afternoon In a hamtnot I: in the lountrv THE VIVN WHO LOST HIMSl.I.F l f DeVire Star poole New lork John I.ann I ompani 11 11) SOLDIERS' SPOKEN FRENCH By HELEE CROSS rh ery bent porket COMIlA!K fur tin AmerU an Boldifr In h th rn p It runtutnn nil tht nip,ar wordn for an American soldier acqulrlup a qui k Upuwledtfp of hppnklnff hrtnch 1 ho lurn Hale in 1 contlnurd dpniind fnr this 111 tie book hao nmdt) lutllspeu Ntibl V Nph nnd KelNrd Itl.tton t fie ?t Iotagc xtra KU Uoohstom E. P. DUTTON & CO , 681 5th Ave , N. Y. THEBODHTHATi HELP5T0MAKL1 BOTH ENDS M ECONOMICAL COOKERY By MARION HARRIS NEIL I ormer Cookery Fdttor "The Ladles' llone Journal" ECONOMICAL COOKERY dots .not " mean a lowering of Amcritt's stm-' dard of living. It means the use of inex- I pensive fooas served in an attractive and palatable manner, and the utilization of left-pvers. I The "00 recipes rorlde for the uie of butter substitutes, for syrup or honey in place of , sugar, and for Tsrious flour substitutes in place of white nour. 32 pages of fflustr&iions. $1.50 net LITTLE, BROWN & CO. - BOSTON t wmammmmmmmMmmmmm PAGE V CO. J5W TBBK i W4,v.aI. ?vj?-.jj- rPJ ns fw tkt -v A Va mnn.rl vmr U-J-LJ afiA,! IK" AWUST 17,' 19f$ AMERICAN W. J. l.OCKE Author of "The Rough Roail" A Thinking Machine When Percv James Hrebnei's collec tion of detective stories was published in '914 under the title of "Christopher Quarles, College Professor and Master Detective," It wis so populati that two printings of Ihe book were required within three months to supply the de mand As Its popularity continues It has been printed a third tiine this ear. Quarles is n psvchologist who Is Inter ested In the solution of mjsterlci?, not beciuse of IiIh concern with the pun ishment of irlmlnals, but beciuse of IiIb desire to understand and unravel the processes of the huinan mind Mr Brebner's method of using Ills hero Is to stuto a i ie nnd then have the old professor put his analjtlcal mind to work on It For Instance, a man Is found beside a lountrv roid with hls head cut off The head Is missing A similar crime had hem repotted from France two i.us before Qu irles begins his investi gations ind lajs the crime nt the door of a lountrv m igistrate who had travel ed among the head hunters of Borneo, become mentally unbalanced and on his leturn home had begun held hunting on tho quiet on his own account A more unusu il gioup of plots was never gath ered togitlur In one volume than Mr Brebntr has loncelved CHRISTOPHER QF.VItf ES Colleao Pro fessor ami master tletettiie. Hi pri y Junes llrebner New lork. E I Dut tor & i o .S". kSBBBBBBBBBBBBsV L ' XBBBBBBBBBBBsi bIbBBbV -' ' 'xlxiaWlBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBT " BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBr .SSsIbBBBBBBBBBBbPI bibbbbbbbbbbbbbKvbibbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbibbbbbbbb1 BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBUBlf IbIBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBLbB slsBBBBBBBBBBnH'aBslBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB! FOR YOUR SUMMER Jamesie By Ethel'Sidgwick Author of "Hatchways" etc. MNt MdruUlt Ih one of tho wuprenifl, HtifrlNh noellntM of tndio Not only In .lumesle doH he triumph hut In eerv tharader In tha Htorj ' -Uobtan Tran $tttvt .( $1 10 Merry Andrew By F. Roncy Weir " better book than Po11tinna ' M ac- ordlnff to one pnthuslatlc reader and a bltf whole Bouled fitorj," urcordlnty to nn other. Art $1 II Perils of A Private Sketches of Camp Life By "Ted" Stanley VU of the cvrtoonn lnduled In this boo have been ' (ensured ' by a squad of roi licMnff rookies, who pronounced them the real stuff " .Vet 0c Published By SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY iammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmiamtamammmimMmmtammsmKammmmmmmmm Would You Sacrifice Your Happiness for a Million Dollars? Andrew Forrester was a self-made' business man who had married a beautiful young society "bud." With a comfortable income of over $50,000 a year, he had settled down to enjoy life with his beautiful young bride. The round of dazzling social affairs and house parties in his wife's circle of society acquaintances awakens in Andrew the ambition to become a mil lionaire with unchallenged social position. lie is offered a position in Mexico that will make him a millionaire in five years and allow him to achieve his ambition but at what a cost. To accept means a five years' separation from his beautiful young bride, and the breaking off of his home ties. READ WHAT ANDREW FORRESTER DID IN . OWEN JOHNSON'S NEW SOCIETY STORY In these days of many war stories, Mr. Johnson's new novel comes as a refreshing change. VIRTUOUS WIVES is a strong study of both char acter and cpnditions prevalent in our large cities just prior to America's entrance into the war: a most interesting story dealing with ihe effect of social environment upon married life. ' Owen Johnson has depicted a phase of New York society life, difficult to portray, in a most realistic and interesting manner, and we believe that VIRTUOUS WIVES will be the Big Society Novel of the Year. $150 net At all Booksellers LITTLE, BROWN AND ENGLISH WRITERSli THE ORDEAL OF A JEALOUS WOMAN The Death of Her Rival Pro duces All Sorts of Complications Mvstery stories are so Often ttnmjs terlous that after the Ihracters have tnken their places In the setting the sen sation of surprise Is lacking with the denouement the author almost Invari ably reserves for tho last chapter or two This cannot be said of "Mrs Marden'p Ordeal," a recent addition to the endless volumes of fiction, which even the great war has not only failed to halt lu their march across the mimic etoge Not that the ordeal of the lady mentioned In In the slightest degree nffectcd bv the prerent world cataclysm; In fact, tho dreadful tragedy that has wrapped the nations of the earth in sanguinary garments Is far removed from the scenes and Incidents related lu an autobiographical form by a jouns and lov civ lender of the exclusive circles of a large American city Tho narrative reveals a woman ex trcmelj Jeilous and utterlv miserable by reason of her husband s attentions to other women Among these Is the beau tiful Marjorle N'esblt, and Mrs Mardcn s ifforts to ionee.il hei unhapplness have created In her a nervous tension visible to her family phjsiclan, who, by the way, Is one of the most remarkable characters In the storv When at a social function at the homo of the Mardens, Miss N'esblt Is 1 SIMON B Of international fame as an inventor, especially along submarine lines, tells the wonderful story 1 THE SUBMARINE IN 1 WAR AND PEACE in his new book of that title, which is packed with infor- gi mation, entoitaining and valuable both to the general g leader and to the deep thinker who is especially inter-x e ested in the scientific study of submarines. It tells what P the submarine is; its mechanism and operation; the comedy and tragedy in submarine development; the ex- H periences of pioneer inventors; the evolution of the sub- g maiine; the use of the submarine in war; the possibility j of defeating the submauno; the submaiinc in time of j? peace; the destiny of tho submarine. There are seventy- m one lllustiations on all phases and uses of the submarine N and a chart. Price, $3.00 net. I AT ALL BOOK STORES I J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY I PUBLISHERS, PHILADELPHIA 3 "IT'S A WONDER I" H. C. WITWER'S rollicking new book FROM BASEBALL TO BOCHES Nine Innings of Mirth! Vcf. $1 IT Ml 1 1 ui hi ' 1 1 & COMPANY Publwher. iH" found murdered In tho conservatory, the hostess Is so overcomo with emotion that she suffers n sudden loss of memory. By S, porno subtle psychological trick the un ,3 happy woman Is ennb'ed to fix her iier-J irj sonel suspicions on a joung mascullnaNjnrl friend for whom she has long enteri M talned n platonlc affection, nnd she I ,M overwhelmed with grief ny tne Knowi- ; edge that she Ins carelessly betrayed, this suspicion to nn unsympathetic policeman, who loses no time In arrest- ji log the joung man, clapping him Into jnn ana piling up an uiiiJurenuy niwn- trovertlblo mass of circumstantial evl denco ngilnst him 1'ndcr n revolutionary method oi treatment that must appeal to tho novel render who goes In for psjchology, the good family doctor succeeds In bringing the wretched woman back to a vivid recollection of the Incidents preceding the trrglc death of Miss N'esblt. The denouement then romes In an unexpected, form, nt which It would be unfair to tho reader even to hint, but this much may bo told4 Restoration of memorjr brings also to Mrs Mnrden the domestic peace nnd happiness so lonp denied to her MRS M VUni'N' S ORDEAL. Ilv Jamss Hav Jr With frontispiece by Admanijt, , l.oill. 1'uaiuii i.ii.i.i u.uni, v.v. GISx' -I US Sexual Knowledge S20 Panes. Illustrated. Cloth Hy 11 Infield Hcott Hall, M.D.. in. li. 8F. FAITH MAI1K PLAIN What everj )oung man and every voung; woman should nr'jBaBBslHI hand nnd ever vouna wife know vvnal every iiiunir nus 17( should know What every far i i ia r,,nt Bhould know. Mailed In " Table connnl.n cad "" plain wrapper lox on rroiiet VMFR1CAN Pill CO. MH Winston Hide.. I'hllnUelplila i LAKE ' I lilli.illlllllll'tli'illMIIIIIIl.lIIIllIll! READING The Whirlwind By Edna Worthley Underwood A Ten story of Itusslan Court Intrlin "It i not too much to vny that alnco 'Quo Vndls' no more powerful hlntorlcal mmanrp has been produced." .Yew York hie. tosf. ,JV J1.50 The Heart of Arethusa By Frances Barton Fox "With her Joyful heart nnd her win Mime vus Arethusa Hlmply demands loe anj admlrutlon " Bonk .Vittj Monthly. bet tl J3 The White Flame of France By Maude Radford Warren Author of "Peter Peter," etc. ' A flame of courage, to lUe orU and hoiie '1 ho spiritual recoimrrut tlon of h generation Mau lo Hailronl arren be hell this nnd demrlbes It vlvl lly In a book vibrant with lt.oruus Individual lt. ' lloslou Herald. .Nil tl DO 41 Mt. Vernon St. Bo t ton BOSTON 'vti, l J Sis'- l V t ., r'. rf 3 : t-V "" JSa""lt .,Wfc- r TV. .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers