:l i S$ Pit3feiiv,g OQg agotr yfflggjg e&i -NEW! L 1 i"iT' ; BMIS MMtinis Turner r la the- literary dlseovsvy I yer. He Mionm io un; uc- or jacons nnu j.wr. m vltiallfv Itf nultft A4 t.'4rk?U 4r. This Is a romance of King stun (the Duke) nl I'm Heg- fold ( ahop-rdrl). JUt It l nitrlnre" not nrlv by Its hut hv Its wealth of charac- at once typical, realistic ami &1. i H I Iren of the Cotswoldd tr Atlen Harker L Marker here presents, with t' e that ennractonzes n ,"": the people of the beautiful old region Among the stories "Mr. Blrkln's llonnet. a iwnld Harmald." "Finxy u- Watch." "A Olotto of the i ois. Runaway Woman r'XAuis Dodge .'CM- Hupert Hughes sas: I r f la a in InrlncrlV real an llobln- on Cruse. The principal charnctcr its t a not a castaway sailor, out com monplace woman vvno rui" '""", tMu from soraiu comiumn. ,""". "" "'.. .. nttmiK Is when en i(UMHt.it itt ihn nrtiinl world Mr . TVulre has made a contribution of hlh value to American literature. tllitotratal. $1 BO net Levers of Louisiana 3r George W. Cable 4K- "There la a full mcniure of Cable k ni eM-tlme cnarm o. c... "-- I ,f went ami sprccn " " ".",,"" f ' tale of beauty and svmpathetlc ap- .' peal to the heart. ' -" .Veto Vor. Tribii nr. $1 CO net CflASUSSCRIBNERSSONS FIFTH AVEAT48ST. NEW YORK Jdsselyn's Wife fT JS i 1 ' Vl', The story of Kllen Latimer, a i Country girl, who become the wife .Tti-of Glbbs Josselv n. the Mn of a in in ."f wealth Olbbs Josselv n's father iifUM married a younit and beautiful C:oman. It Is she who eventual! aSTeomes between Olbbs and Kllen. The R-alr la critical but by in means .Jahopeless. and Mrs Nnrris does not tjWrnlt It to become so The crWs "! their lives Is rather falrlv on the " to be stralBhtcned out when the 'JSTwmlor Josselv n Is lnex.llcabl miir--seiratered. ,' .5 The murder followed a quarrel be- 11L"tween father una win ine imerft l ! ! .rllf.nl fpl.itlnnq litwien AHJ.i'Olbbs and Kllen Is now clKtrarled .diid lntensined by the desperate xltu- I-atloh In which the Min find lilmtir Th. t niunler trial The Kre.it ? ir'eompulslon upon Kllen Hto Hand bv "K'Jier hutband. She doc It The end- ilne ot the dook humk-iui) ';' f has the accent of retllty The solu i tftlon of the murder msster Is start - V'1ing, adroit and convincing .St" "An excellent story of Kitlilecn n .KorrlBS most excellent nrauu "rom .review ( "The .Veto Yorl ; jk t h 1 e e n N o r r i s MORGENTHAWS STORY READ The Near East from Within WJ Sfi rfi f It ylves the fullest significance to the erents Mr. Morgenthau describes by tracing German Intrigue through the twenty preceding jears. The author's name cannot be given, but there is no questioning his startling knowledge " JDOUBLKDAV. PAOi: t COMPANY 5JpJfF0A YOU READ AMBASSADOR j r4The Near Hast from Within." AVI. : no E. P. SUTTON & CO., 681 5ti Avert. Y. TWMt -was the 1 McrttoT imn Hirer GorA? VMMMed carefully for yean W AU.ll.AlU. .ndMurr.v L I.L- i' . t' jvuu nui in nis Dig NMWane way tore apart the ! al Taterr and laid bare a faarrol tkekton of the (actt. ""fit I.L I , t jot use a nory colored r with the red ot ldven. the yellow of sold and of romance, read Triumoh of John Kars Ijr Kdfwell Cujlum a man of i.iaaes wno been there and wt. 'A your bookitore, $1.40. PubEdud br . W. JmoU A Co., Phi'l.d.lpM. TAWS NAVY, WHAT IS IT AND WHAT WE OWE TO IT Silent Watchers ! lr BENNET COPPLESTONE , Author of "Tho Ixnt NhvuI I'air. ' !".. Illustrated with ! miitis. naparably the best descrip- i of the British Navy, of which Eric Geddes. now in this an try, is the official head. Au ritativc in statements of fact. . reveals the inner spirit of this at navy by its glorious past its deeds m tne urcat War ft-1' et. ioo , Ps BUTTON & CO., 681 St. At.,N.Y. Four SO FAR THE ONE BIG nrsemen &1 UIC NOVEU.OF I THE UOTH alypse century VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ BOOKS Just Received ' cation of sitmr Adams, an rapny wun an introauction caDot ixuge. 13.00. ion & Company Mil Walnut 01. 3t B . fJk rar x-iiB W U cB 4 v3 ilT itH 1A '4j(V xm Mm I i WMak tth9 c ' THE FIFTH WARD IN A NOVEL Macfarlancs "Crack in the Bell" Appears Between Book Covers A Hon1 of Utii human IntereM. filled with Incident, character drawing and 'tempered with phltoophlcal oberatlon, jv drama In which hue plna a H'lllklenS i IV ConsiplciloUH nnrt In thi letplnnment of an Inatructho leison In tho solution I of political problem nnd their relation I to me honest and economical ndmlnlK It ration of municipal (rnxernment thH li what that capltnl writer of flrllon I aim expert In the science of lnetlcn tlon. Peter Clark Macfarlane. nrbleted In hN nnel of real life. "The Crick In I.i.v ... niiiui'in ui INC l.lini Pl'tlf.u T.l-tnfii.n t. Ill Mnll .. Itk lll. (pleasure the admirable tale, which bad rmiiiieipnia n Its setting and wlilrh was published In serial form In ttie col- limns of thin newspaper several months , nco. It need not be told here what a pro found Impression Mr Macfarlane's pic ture produced In the public mind durlns tv ii..iiri, ,i, iiiv-ii in,- iiuiiiir in uriti up to nature day bv day to the die of more or less startled cltluens; nnd It ran be left onlv for the future to demon strate whether the truths deplsted with a master hand shall lne lasting effect on the public const le.ice. With unerring strokes of an nrtlst brush the author of ' The Crnek In tho tlell" dellne.ited political 'bosses," big and little, nnd It j did not require n very ncute Imagina tion for the Informed reader to adjust I the portraitures to certain Individuals seen and heard In and around City Hall find In the councils of ptrty politicians. Imiglnary events were recounted In this stirring serial with a realism that brought distinctly to mind sundry hap penings In Philadelphia's munlclpil life. In Its way the tnlt Is entitled to the dclgnaton of a classic I It must not be supposed becauso the I political element Is given conspicuous n hl nnrl iVin .(nnf n a I h I la llal nlll a II H Its environment. It Is purely local in ItsVto appeal and contracted in Its Interest, or that the tale is lacking In the softer touch of romance tint nowadiys Is re garded as iscntial to the modern novel On the contrary. "The Crick In the Pell" Is wide-reaching In Its scope, and nny well be enjoved by the discriminat ing reader, be he or she within the I Miadovv of Independence Hall or thou I smds of .miles distant from that his toric shrine of liberty, while as 'all the 1 world loves n lover," It Is safe to say the joung fighting hero of 'The Crack In tl-e ltcll" and the equilly coungeous sweetheart lurolne, daughter of the dominant personality who bosses the bossis. will engage th evmpatlutic at tention and admiration of rtndcrs of both sees and In all places TUB CHACK IV THK IIKI.I, Ily Teter Clark Mmfurlnne Illustrntnl O.rdcn i It Uoublidn) Pe t Colt to IF 1 1 AT THE BONDS ARE TO PREVENT 0nc Cm rhul 0ut b Read. ing of What Happened in a Picardy Village The fniirth Liberty Ii.in bonds would be .v ersub-crltied if evervbody would get a cnp of Ituth Onlms's book, " VIII urn In Tliardv." It contains only 190 pages, hut In that short spaccivlvidly deser'bc.s th horrors endured hv the peasant people of Trance when, In the voir lilt, the Hermans entered the little town of C.mlzv. in rie.irdv. and burned thilr homes, sep irated the fam ilies and perpetrated Innumerable atrocl- tle.s The storv tells of the work of the reconstruction relief unit i-ent out under tho auspices of Smith College. :orth amnion. M.it.s Miss'Caines brings jou ip contact pcrsoiwllv with the members of the little v lingo or i-nniiy in me 'Plain of Death." ns Plcardv Is i.illed Thev were unassuming. 'Ill'et church- iovlnir neonle. i-r.nie wealthier than others, all with their little eccentricities and all very human In 1JH. before the Oerni in ravages, the little town boasted of 44S Inhabitants with nbout forty- seven dwelling- When the reconstruc tion unit of Smith Colli ge found them, ! In 1917 their dwellings were in rulnn, thev had onll about Ino inhabitants, funllles were hepur.ited,, but with It nil tin SB br.ive neonle d'd not lose courage. liut livid In cellars and ruins of their firmer homes. In the nope mat once again France would come Into her own and they could peacefully rebuild their old homes It Is a great help to those at home win- want to learn and understand what Is going on 'over there" In this great war and nuke them des're all the more to help our own bos who are protecting us from the same fate As our way of helping Is by bujing Liberty Bonds. o much more will we realize our duty after reading about the village of Picardy , a ii.r.A(ii: iv PicAntiT ny nuth rjalne New Ynrk K P pulton L Co Sandman Stories Children from Ave to ten who are trented to the delights or reading aloud will rejoice In the publication of a new volume of the "Sandman Series." This Is the "The sinuman ills inuian Stories." by W S Phillips (i:i Coman- cho), an authority on Inntan lore anu ethnology Mr Phillips has retold. In simple hut attractive language, the folk, fnlrv, and animal stories of the Indian children, many of which have come down the years veroaliy over many a nuriu-oui campfire His book Is particularly rich In the animal stones or me race, it 's Illustrated bv nui-eroua full-page and marginal cuts from pen-and-ink sketches by the author T1IK HAVflMAV llli Indian Morten. Hv VV s Phllllpa Uoaton The Pane Com pany. M.."o Memories of a Dog John Oalsworthys' story of his dog still retains Its worthy popularity. First puhl'shed In 1912, It has been reprinted seven times In the Intervening years, and an eighth printing has Just been made In a moderate-priced edlt'on Mlth the original lllustratcns by Maud Karl, In colors and In black and white. Pog lovers will prize It as a precious re minder of some animal they have treas ured and lost. MVStORIKS. II John Oslaworthv. New York: Charles Wcrlbner'a Kona T centi. Rhymes for Children Mothers who 'like to read cheerful verse to their children will find In "Child Songs of Cheer." by Kvaleen Stein, a book to their taste. The verses nre about puppies, circus processions, decoration dav. the baby's ride, the blue bird, the organ-grinder and such like things that Interest the little folk. There are four colored Illustrations. CHILD feONCJH OP CHEKR. Hy Evslrrn ard Company. tt.SA. "-IACOBS tea SJ BOOKS "" STATION! WtAND ENMNflM THE WONDER THAT IS THE MIND OF A CHILD Mrs. Bacon Opens the Door Upon It in the Slory of Her Own Children There Is no more fascinating occu pitlon for tho normal adult than that of watching the unfolding of the mind of a Httlo child. It docs not burst Into bloom as tho blossom of tho evening prlmroso while ou nre looking at It: but first one tendril straightens out nnd then another and sometimes there la u sudden development of a fneulty that had not previously manifested Itself at all Josephlnn Daakiim Haron'B new book, 'On Our Hill," Is written for normal adults It Is the story of her three children, their unylngs nnd doings and her sstom of educating them and car ing tor them. The render will be charmed bv It, not because the chil dren are unusual, but becaupn they are normal children, permitted to express themselves In n normal way. Kvery parent will recognize his own children In these. The things they do nnd aiy may be dlffennt In detail, but their mentnl processes are the sime. The book begins with the remark of Secundi, that she used to think that people's bones were like "prune bones," and there follows a discussion nbout skeletons nnd the proper name for prune pits, which ono ot the children Insists should be called prune seeds Hut the point Is that there Is a certain" reticence In children which they pre servo lest they disclose their Ignorance. It Is not until they lenrn better that they let their elders know what they onco thought. Tor example, a grown man confessed not long ago that he had been told, when a child of water so deep that one could not see the bottom, nnd thnt ho concluded that the muddv pools In the road were bottom less pits Into which It would be death fall He said tint he walked by such pi ices In terror of his life, but was afraid to let nny one i lse know how he felt The remnrks of Mrs llacon s children Indicate that they have such secrets which they confess to no one. Certain parts of the volume will be en tertaining to all children and other pirts will ho most Instructive to parents. Indeed, Micro Is a sounder philosophy of education In Its Informnl nnd racy dis cussion of what the children read nnd study thin In mnnv a serious disser tation on the subject by a doctor of philosophy. The book ought to be In the possession of every parent and of every tencher and of every lover of children It has the qualities of permanence In it, and, If wo mistake not It Is due for a long life. OV OCIl HII.I. Hi to.ephlne Daakam lljrnn New York Churlca 'crlbner s Sons J.' A Drafted Quakers Diary The straightforward even naive, diary of n joung Qnnker who was drafted for service In the Union nrmv In the summer of 1863 Is vltnll.v pertinent tod i.v when the sincerity of conscientious objectors Is roundlv denied, and their dec'arations elicit fierce contempt nnd wholesale con demnation nut thoe who read the simple little diary of Cjrus Cuernsey Prlinjle covering three months of the Civil War. and reciting without rancor, complaint or self-pity, the cttremc hard shlp he suffered at the bands of unsvm pathctlc military officials, cannot with justlie question Its utter honesty Hufus M Jones, professor of phil osophy at Haverford College, who cdn trlbutes a bland Introduction, npparentlv believes that ii iwund of discretion Is wortli an ounce of frankness 'This Is not the psvchologlc.il moment to studv the highly complex and delicate problem of conscience," he savs, which, nt least, clouds In mvslerv the reason for pub lishing the dliry If not actually imply ing tliat It Is superfluous Tim nRronn op , quvKP.u cos M !i:Ci: Cvrus Prhisl Dlsry Intro, durtlon b nufus VI Jnns Vew York Miimlllsn Comiwni i.n rents Conan Doyle's War History The third volume of Mr Arthur Conan Dovle's "Hlstorv of the Oreat War" deils with Hrltlsli operations on the western front during 19K Its chief ilalm to attention Is tint It prcsenls the most detailed nciount of the battle of the ,,. hleh Iras it been published. In which specific Information about the vnrlous forces emploved replaces the dramatic but centralized recitals that have bien published hitherto The nuthor's ardent patriotism as an Knglishman lends considerable warmth to his chronicle, which is calculated to leave no doubt In the mind of even the most casual reader of the part played by the British In the world conflict None w bo reads the book can doubt the unquenchable character of Kngland's confidence after the most desperate cam palgns of the war. The work thus far might more accurately be called "A History of Great Britain's Conduct of the Great War" A HISTOIIV OP THK (IRKAT WAIt Volume three. Ilj nlr Arthur Conan l)ole New 1ork Ueorke II lluran Compull ' History of the Christian Church An amazing amount of most valuable Information Is to be found In "A His tory of the Christian Church." by Wll llston Walker, U D , professor of ec leslastlcal history In Yale University. The vast Held of the story of the church Is divided into seven periods, the lat.t being the transition from the reforma tion to the modern religious situation. Brief sketches of the life and or are given of every prominent leader In the thought and belief except those of recent times, the greatest space being devoted to Paul and his letters. The prominent part which Philadelphia took In the eccleslasth.il history ot this coun try Is clearly shown. Here the first American Methodist conference was held, the American Bible Society had Its origin, the first American Presbytery, the first general convention of the Prot estant Episcopal Church, the flrBt Luth eran synod were held and here, per haps, most comprehensive of nil, the Sunday school wax started For minis ters nnd teachers It Is an Invaluable work. A lIISTOnt OK TIIK CHMHTIAN CHUltCH Ily vVIIIl.ton Walker. Dll. Titua Street I'rofeaanr of Kiclealaalkal lllitnry In Vals Unlveralty. New York! Charlea Scrlbner'a Kona, 3, Dave Porter Under Fire The Dave Porter seiles has now reached the great war. In the latest volume. "Dave Porter Under Fire," Hd ward Stratemever, details the thrilling adventures of his joung hero, now a futlfledged civil engineer In France as a member of the engineering corps of the United States army. The way Pave Porter does his bit and his duty Is what might be expected of such a typical specimen of American joung manhood How his natural ingenuity and altrtness brought him Into danger and out of it and secured him promotion forms the substance of the new Dave Porter book, which will appeal handsomely to all the lads who have followed the exploits of this red-blooded, wholesome hero In the several other works of the series. DAVE POBTKn PNDEn FinB By Edward Hiratemeyer Uoaton: tothrup, l tihepard Company, II. 2i. a " V li lBJBJBJBnaBjBjajBBBMMlL BHBJBVajaBBjBHBjaMajaHBMMBjBBiaBJBjaBjfM I aaaV MKfij?t4 "HV ' W t 'i i ism T"ttr f f s - ;l ? ' I ' 1 1t?,K riaflHR 1H11K LlK. J' I 1 fi fc j r O laLr JKuy iihiiB ailililililViBP &1'1 It In i v Kr AaililH BiiLiH aLiLVILiair Ja i - V K l IiiLiLb t LlLH """'iLllaBBIllW ' ? I iA.. EjpWHB j LaaaaF ' KHCsWasi MRS. JOSEPHINE DAsKAM BACON AND HER CHILDREN Who arc llic characters in a delightful book about life and education THE MAN WITH THE CLUB FOOT Reading About Him Will Give You an Evening of Blood curdling Joy If vou ever had .our doubts as to what was meant preclfcly, by the ad jective "gripping" ns applied to a talo of 'love intrigue and adventure," read The Man with the Club root," by Valentine Williams 'Gripping' means that our hair rises on end nt the flrt chapter, and does not subside until the tale is done, and that whereas jou may have begun reading sedatelv bv tho library fire. .ou end In the cold gray dawn, with the quilt .around vour shoulders and the candle guttering out its life in u pool ot tallow-. No milter how rational vou .are. no mutter how rigid a stickler for probabili ties, vou cannot put down a book when a chapter ends: "What was I going til do about the body? Just then I heard a low knocking nt the door. I remem bered with a suddin sinking of the heait that I had rorgotten Ui loclt it." You i.innut put It aown and go calmly to bed And i,ich chapter leaves j,ou In Just such suspense. An English olllcer receives a mys tirlous message which he knows comes frtni his brother, who has been gone somo time In Germany on hecret serv ice The officer decides to search for him. and gets into Germany himself by a singular mixture of chance and strat agem He becomes involved in n Ger man spy ostein and sails perilously under false colors Into adventures which are calculated to turn the hair white in a single night it Is onlv from Die fact that he himself Is writing the story that jou can draw a crumb of comfort In the uncertain belief that all will come out will In the end If v-cu arc ono of those luihappy peo ple who cmnot mjoy a story unless jou feel quite convinced that It Ih thor oughly probable, jou may not be able to abandon jourself to the thrills with which this tale is picked: If, however, jou are ready to take what Is offend In the proper spirit, J'ou have before jou an evening of blood-curdling Jcy TIIK MAN WITH TIIK CMJ1I FOOT m Valentin. VMIlUnia fw ork Itobert M Melirlde & Co II. SO Navigation The great fleet of mesrhatrt t-hlps which tho United States Is now building at record speed holds the lertaln prom ise of great and unprecedented oppor tunities for the youth of America on the seven seas after the war is over Consequents, there should he a large audience for the very comprehensive nnd well-illustrated little handbook u,. the subject .that ias been prepared by Pror Alfred G Major, of Prince ton I'nlversltj". The manual Is address ed sptclflcally to "joung men who wish to qualify ns ensigns In the United Stntes navy nnd to officers In the Naval lie serves and the merchant marine" ft embodies the latest principles of navi gation and requires no knowledge of mathematics other t!i in simple arith metic. NAVIGATION. By Alfred Oolilnborouuh Msnr. Ilh'Mrated hv rllscrama Phila delphia; J, B. I.tpplneott Company SI 50 Christian Verities , Christianity Is futile in ho far as It fails to harmonize Intellect and emotlen. This Is the keystone of a modernist Chrlstlnn philosophy enunciated by A, CluttonrBrock in the five chapters on Christian ethics and philosophy which make up "Studies In Chrlstianltj." The author's primary purpo-ie has been to vitalize ancient truths by emphasiz ing their significance for the present generation. Practical Christianity he believes to be entirely compatible with the conditions of the daj-, by diligent search for the immutable principles of the Faith which survive through the shifting theories of successive periods of time, i.ven war, tne author believes would end. If men would forget theories nnd think only of men nd women. STt'ntKS IN CHniSTUVITY. By A.'flut. ton-Brnek. New York: K. P, Dutton & Co. JI.'.'.I. With the Black Watch Scout Joe Cassells, one of the few survivors of the "contemptible little army" of Major. Moraht's characteriza tion, tells tb story of the fighting re treat from Mons to the Mama In "The Black Watch." He elves a close-up from his Individual experiences with his his tor'c regiment, which was almost entlrelv wiped out. and he nl-o pictures the full film of the hundred thousand troops whose hardihood and grit In those early days of 1914 made the living barriers to the onrush of the grav splke-helpieted Huns to Paris. A fighting and not a writing man. Scout Cassells glvea a "record In action," ns his book Is Justly subtitled. It Is graphic and It Is Inspir ing. TIIK BLACK WATCH. By Bcout Jva Caa aetls. Garden Cl(yi Doubleday, r Co. 11,13. , A REPORTER AT ARMAGEDDON Will Irwin Writes of What He Saw on the Long West ern Front So many avowed chroniclers of scenes nt or near the battlefront have been more the psuedo-phllosopher than the authentic reporter, that It Is a relief to find In Will Irwin's fourth war book a vivid description of what the author saw and henrd, unclouded by a plethora of per sonal speculation. Hxcept for the casual record of im pressions en route, "A Reporter nt Armageddon" deals chiefly with the author's observations In France and Italy, ag well as Switzerland. He re turned to the western front by way of Spain In the sru-lhg of 1917. nnd found many things of Interest In that country, full of spies of both groups of belliger ents After varlou difficulties at the frontier, ho eventually got into France, nnd he bears eloquent testimony to the high courage of the French on every hand. Despite the Increasing' pall of the world tragedy, he found their Bpirlts ebullient; but it was the ebullience of dauntless resolution. The long Journey which Mr. Irwin took extended from the upper French battlefront, through Switzerland and into Italy. He witnessed the work of the British fljlng forces, he luard stories of the cruelties practiced upon Belgian workmen who refused to accept meekly and without 'protest tho deportation edicts, removing them from their homes in contravention of international law He also saw in Switzerland the stupendous task which the British are 'doing In rehabilitating those tsorry wrecks ot men released from German prison camps. Incapacitated for further usefulness The splmdld feats of the Italian military engineers are en thusiastically praised, and of special In terest Is the account of the Impression created by the arrival of the splendid American soldiers In France. It Is a vivid recital, and Its enthusiasm Is al waj's controlled and animated by a hound sense of proportion, by the veteran writer's faculty of dlscrlmlnat-J Ing observation a iiBPonrnit at abmaoeddon. b Will Irwin. New ork. i. Aprleton fc Co. J1.5U War Speeches Virtually every phase of the war Is discussed In tho various papers by many public men and women of International fame which make up the 3C8-pagc octavo published under tho title, "What Every American Should Know About tho War." The book is the direct outcome of the national conference of American lec turers held In Washington last April: the speeches delivered on that occasion have been grouped for the present pub lication, according to subject, by Mont avllle Flowers, secretary of the, con ference, who Is thus ideallyvsqulpped to edit them In this permanent form. The avowed purpose of the conference was "to organize the American platform Into power to win the war." The scope of the volume 'is actually broader than this, however, for the remarks con tributed by the distinguished European delegates give It a truly International character. Tho case of France, for In stance, is presented by M. Andre Tar dleu. French h'gh commissioner to the United States. In like manner the Karl of Heading, the minister from Belgium, and the minister from Serbia present the causes of their respective countries In the war. WHAT EVKItV AVtKRICAN SHOUI.fl. know aiiuut -run vvAK A sjmpoalum of the leaders tn all branehea at war srtlvltv. IMIteit liv Montavllle PUiwers. New York! clenrue H Doran Company. 12. FIGHT! BUY BONDS! Fighting the Boche Underground By Captain II. D. Trounce The first story of mining and sapping the most Imirartant and most dangerous activities of tha whole war Capt, Trounce writes of this strange form of warfare untfer the trenches and No Man's Land with great clarity and vividness. He deals with the most thrilling subject, hitherto untouched by war writers, In n way which Is no less Informative- becauso uu technical. Illustrated, SI. GO net. Present-Day Warfare How An Armv Tralnj nnd Fights By Captain Jacques RouVler . Conditions of warfare In the pres ent day are made clear to the civilians of this country, whose boys are "Over There." . Iliufrnlcd, (1 3S net QUIvlESSOvJBNrmSONS FIFTH AVE AT48SI NEW YORK T WHAT WAR DOES TO THE SILENT LEGION A Novel Describing the Revo lution in the Life of the English Middle Class In the midst of nil the stories from the front nnd tho tragedies of life ovcr- seas, comes J. I J. hucktosos pucuru "i Tho Silent Legion," England's middle ctns who aacrlflce and suffer uncom plainingly This class ntonc.ln the au thor's opinion, possesses the strange In stinct which forbids It to blow Its own trumpet. The upper class,, he explains, has blown delicately for' ages through long, silver trumpets: 'nnd now tho working class has suddenly begun to blow brass ones so lustily that the sil ver trumpets can no longer bo heard. Through tho Simpson family and their simple neighbors Mr. Buckroso Il lustrates the changes brought nbout In England by tho war. Jim, tho only son, Is killed In action. Mr. Simpson's business goes to pieces nnd, lato In life, he Is forced to take n small sal aried position ns clerk, bossed by a young man who was once his ofllco boj. Mrs. Simpson's health Is broken by the scries of trials. Barbara, the elder daughter, fresh nnd eagerly ambitious, Is called from the hospital where she is studying to become n nurnc, to become housekeeper since a scrvnnt is no longer possible. And Elsie, the joungest child, has a weak back. As calmly as possible they meet the air raids that Inwardly terrorize them, tho unrest nmong tho domestic servant class, nnd tho Tood shortnge. relieving their bottled up feelings by manual labor such ns they have never been accustomed to. In every simple change tho author sees a sign of something stupendous. Even the thin ladv who steals her neighbor's pat of butter at tho boarding house table because It looks larger, and talks Incessantly nbout tho two dajs n week she works In a hospital. Is a sign that tho middle class Englishwoman Is no longer ashamed of work, but ashamed of Idleness. Though their faith In God Is shaken by war's disastrous results, these middle class folk, consciously or unconscious ly find a little window opened upon heaven, opened by the bojs who go up there. The story Is not powerful or gripping, but It Introduces a certain pathos that holds the reader. The love story of Bar bara Simpson and the wounded soldier, Brooke, forms the heart of the storj-, while" the courtship of the confirmed old bachelor. Blnny, nnd Miss Pclllng lends a simple humor to the tale. After nil the sorrows nnd hardships the book ends happily leaving old Mr. and Mrs. Simpson nlone looking "with hope and Joy through the window their boj had left open." THK SII.KNT I.EQION Bv J E nuokrose. New York: George If. Doran Company, li ro I It he WHEN the Kaiser's high powered car flames through the streets of Berlin at 70 miles an hour, the roads are cleared as if by magic. When one of his smaller representatives the meanest officer in his army appears upon the streets the German world stands aside in reverence. But with all his power, one small book turns on him and laughs. For much indeed might he like to stop the reading of this one book. Much indeed might he like to see each and every copy burned, torn, destroyed. But his power is not enough. This book of revelations by Dr. Arthur Davis shall go trium phantly on with its message. For fourteen years Dr. Davis was -dentist to the Kaiser, to the royal family and the German court. For fourteen years Dr. Davis saw intimately, with masks off, these people who played a part in public these people who played at being Demigods; "Now America must pay all the Bills of the War" The Katitr to Dr. Dot is Read What the Kaiser Said to Dr. Davis About Invasion of Belgium Sinking of the "Lusitania" President Wilson Theodore Roosevelt King of England Lloyd George it The Katitr to Dr. Datli ' Red what wn tiid to Dr. Dayii by the Crown Prince. Prince on Pleii. the Ksiier'i closest adviser, and von Bethmann-Hollwej. Read whit Dr. Dtvis siys bout Miiimihia Hrdn and von Hmdcnbuig. IN UeMSERaslknowhim 9 TteNMSerfc Dentin -for HARPER & W E are too often forced to read tions come about. In THE SUBMARINE IN WAR ANU PEACE by Simon Lake, published by Linnincott. wo luve an account of ono of tho greatest marvels of the ago by one of the inventors most instrumental in bringing it to pass. What Mr. Lake does not know about submarines is hardly worth the knowing; his book is, naturally, packed with information for those interested in the scientific Bide of the subject, but his story of the development of the submarine from the early days when the mere idea was met with open ridicule is told with humor and simplicity. Mr. Lake says that he has been for twenty years collecting the material for this book, and it should rank with Darwin's "Voyage of the Beagle" for its autobiographical charm as well as for its technical authority. MR. Lake tells us that "Twenty Thousand Leagues' Under the Sea" was responsible for his early experimental work, but we have a veri table Jules Verne romance in THE GILDED MAN written by Clifford Smyth and published by Boni and Liveright. It is a tale of in trigue and adventure, of the mystery of hidden forces and tho search for buried treasure, in that region of ancient Peru still marked "unexplored" by map makers. The legend of El Dorado has been from time immemorial a lure to the imagination; but in this fantasy the writer has so succeeded in creating an illusion of reality that such fellow craftsmen as Richard Le Gallienne and Gertrude Athcrton pay him the tribute of enthusiastic praise. IF Mr Smyth has been able to make seem truo to us scenes and people far removed from common experience, what can we say about the reality of the people we meet in "Cheerful-By Request"? (No heroes and heroines these just ordinary human beings like ourselves, but made as absorbing to as as we are to ourselves by a writer whose .keen sense of the comedy and tragedy underlying the little things of life make her the arbiter of our laughter and our tears. To take the dull beings we jostle against daily in the streets and to reveal them glowing with color takes imaginative skill of the highest order. O. Henry had it: EDNA FERBER has it; and in this book bf stories, just published by Doubleday and Page,' we live and move so intensely that the real world pales by comparison. IN WOMEN WANTED, by Mabel Potter Daggett, a recent Doran publication, we have a dramatic account of what women have already accomplished in the world's industry, but it is the vividness of the way the writer puts things that makes her book so extraordinarily entertaining. She goes well under the surface in her reasons why women so often fail to succeed in industry, and her forecast of what is bound to occur in the case of those who have known the thrill of being even a cog in the world of affairs should give thought to all who keep wondering what will happen when the soldiers return. THE mi TTi HE other side of the women most amusing story int, wnr. tvuiuttK, issued under the Knopf imprint. It is tho work of E. M. Delafield, a new and brilliant n-Titur and the dauzhter of Mrs. character study of the social leader who works herself and her subordinates to death rather than abate one jot of her authority will awaken an answering chord in the souls of the many who have suffered at her hands. The con trast between the adulation of her followers and the independence of the stenographer who is always sure of her job shows the essential difference between the paid worker and the volunteer, and opeds up a most fertile field for discussion. In any case. Miss Delafield has achieved a story which will be characterized as simply lolling by any woman who has ever done war work. Each iceek Miss Weil will recommend im partially few ot the book worth while. iJJSHLVffj could stamp it out J. P. Morgan Henry Ford William Randolph Hearst American Army Irish Question The Balkans International Law? There Is No International Law Any More" "fry IfcisHavi $2.00 BROTHERS fl . K ." at second hand of how tho great inven in industry question is presented in a Henry de la Pasture. This inimitaht Jl&iU Monroe Doctrine Andrew Carnegie Alsace Austria Italy Rumania NEW YORK CITY I sfl c --., V , 793m LV $& ri. 'i i J-&l X2"A i J& iV If