Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 09, 1918, Night Extra, Page 9, Image 9
. . -TW EVENING PTJtiLIO LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 0, 1918 , THREE WOMEN AND ONEMAN DESCRIBE RUSSIA i s LOVE LETTERS TO ;eii '- v I ! I 're s n. r f f 'fc I'' if . I t v .5 Between Them Stood the Other Man She loved him but lie knew that she be longed to the other man the man who was his dearest friend in all the world. And yet, in that hidden cave, where they had (led to be safe from the raging storm, the girl so fair so lovely so unhappy was the one thing his soul desired. Read about this conflict between love and friendship the bitter struggle in a man's soul that poisoned three lives. Foes By Mary Johnston Uuthoref'SlR MORTIMER" Etc. IS the story of two men A then, such was the beauty ot their friendship. And then came; the war the glorious Scotch Rebellion of the olden days. On that battlefield, in the purple mist ci the Scottish " moors, these two men came suddenly face to face, haired bitter and lasting kindling between them hatred where there had been only devotion and friendship. It is a powerful story, wonderfully told a story of a ringing struggle for rightof pride, anger, bitterness, revenge, love and in the end victory and reconciliation. Get it at once at the nearest bookstore. You must not mus it. $1.50 HARPER & BROTHERS Ct.MM.rd isi7 Head it and pats it on to a "' 'fr. GUYNEMER KNIGHT OF THE AIR ' -" f . BY HENRY BORDEAUX TRANSLATED BY LOUISE MOKGAN SILL INTRODUCTION "BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT A BIOCBAIM1ICAL INTEni'RETATION One of the great and appealing stories to come out of the war is this fascinating account of the great French "Ace," of his life and of his thrilling victories in the air, inspired throughout by the author's keen and sjinpathctic understanding of the greatest of air heroes. FRONTISPIECE IN COLOR FROM A DRAWING OF THE "KNIGHT OF THE AIR" BV RUZICKA. ILLUSTRATIONS IN BI.ACK AND WHITE FROM DRAWINGS OF AERIAL SCENES. BOUND IN IIORL ZON BLUE. GILT TOP. WRAPPER IN COLORS. $1.60. YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS NEW HAVEN 120 COLLEGE STREET-280 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK The Great NoYel The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse By VIPENTE BLASCO IBANEZ Authorized Translation by CHARLOTTE B. JORDAN THIS NOVEL AS TRUE AS A HISTORY SUni the hide off the German beait, The beau of treachery; Pierces his murderous heart, The heart of Cain; , Lays bare his tyrannical soul, The soul of death; Hangs Germany where mankind may see. The scarecrow of time I Four Editions Are Exhausted fc" Of) Fifth on Sale, Sixth in Press X. net ETl T fy ,vT. JLUTTON& LO. Xl David and Jonathan peopU called ' of the Great War . 68 1 Fifth Ave Publishers Now York MORE BOOKS ABOUT RUSSIA Accounts of the Struggles for Self-Expression by the. Slavs Written by Observers Tho rent Imulc nbout rtussta slnco .March of last jcar remain to he writ ten, ntid It probably cannot be written for some, vcarr In ihe meantime every book nbout the country which nppears Is renil enfterly by the larse ntitl In crcaslns American public anxious to understand what happened. Pour new ones have appeared within a month, written by obscrers of ono 1tlnd or nnotber. They nre "fnchalned nusia, ' by Charles Kdward Uuiicll, a Socialist, who was a member of the ltoot commlr slop; 'The Tied Heart of Ilusla," by Ilevslo Heatty, a correspondent of the San I'ranclsco llulletln, who spent six months or so of last 5 ear atudlnir con ditions In arlous part? of the country: 'Six Hed Months In Itu'sla, ' by Louis lirjnnt, the wife of John Itccd, n Social- IM, describlnp the woik of the llnlshe vikl, nnd "The City of Trouble." by Mcrlcl Buchanan, daughter of the Ilrll Ish ambassador In retrograd, who writes fromMhe point of view of the embassy liich of them books Is woith while ber.iuso each contains Information and each approaches the subject from a point of lev different from the others If there Is nnv likeness It Is between the books of Mrs Heed nnd Mr. Itussell Tho puiposo of Mrs, Jtced scemp to have been to Interpret tho liolshevlkl, who nro Socialists and Internationalists, ns s.tnpathctlcally us posslblo nnd to de fend what they hae set out to do Sho denies many of tho penrattonal stoiles that hae come out of the coun try and her ersIon of what happpened Is certainly plausible. Tho Boh'hevlkl ,11 e not fiends and she Insists that thej ale conscientiously striving for what thej retrard ar the pood of the people She denies Indignantly tho charge that either I.enlne or Trotzky has received Herman cold and she explains that the famous old woman who was known as the grandmother of the 1 evolution lived fur a while In a single room on tho top il"or of the Vlnlr I'alace, and not In ha Czar's npartments, and that she remained In the palace becauseTrotz sltj Insisted. Most of her book was pilnted originally In tho public Ledger Mr Itussell Is ns sjmpathetlc with the Bolshevlkl ns Mrs Heed lie was the one member of the ltoot Commission who could get In close touch with the Huxfiau leaders and the only member with whom those leaders hecmed to care to deal. He traversed tho ground tint has been traversed before In dis cussing the woik of tho women, tho the f.ill of the Czar, the mission and purpose of I.enlne nnd Trotzky, but he does It not from the point of levv of a newspaper writer, but fiom that of n rtudcut of political Institutions. He has hct out to try to explain that the Uus slnns nre engaged In an Industrial as well as In .1 political revolution and to show the dllllcultles that beset their path Ho does It well. Miss Ucatt's book Is a splended piece of newspaper reporting. It Is brilliant and Impartial. She and Mrs. itecd vvero together when some of the events de set lbed happened. Her story Is thnt of an observer. Mrs Heed's story Is that u partisan of the leaders In the revolution, They both tell of the fall of the Constituent Assembly and of the The Thrilling Experi ences of a Y. M. C. A. Worker With theA.E.F. It gives what the par ents, sisters and wives of those at the fiont have long craved a look into the very heait of the soldier. "I have tried," says the Author, "to show the expeiienccs of the Hoy 'Over Theie', on the transports, when they land in France, their welcome theie, the leactions of the trench life; something of their self-saciifice, their ,vil lingness to serve even unto the end; their coin age; their sunshine." Illustrated. " ?l.f2o net. kCIIARlIS SCRIBNHfc SONS FnFTII AVEAN84ST. NEW YORK Kathleen Norris Has written n story of an unsophisticated country girl and a man who has been everywhere and knows everybody. It is like a play in its dramatic climaxes and swift action. A woman's faith is the inspiring motive. Mrs. Norris has never made a more convincing portrait or written a better story. Net $1.40. At your booksellers. DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. Josselyn's Wife i SOLDIER , ! SILHOUETTES VON OTJR FRONT m. 1 W m HlkSIK HKA'lTi M) CHARI.Kt HOWARD RUSSKLL Who have written hooks nliout Rut;ia seizure of power 1 the Uolsheviki nnd miiii JiCVr'tirtT f0 both accounts must be read bv one Who t wants :i thorough knowlidge of tho I sltunttoii Miss Buchanan, although she Is an nmb.issndot s daughter. Is not a. trained writer, and her book Is net so easy to j read as tliopo of Miss Heatty and Mrs Ilrant, but It Is nn entertaining account of tho experiences of a hlghlv placed oung woman during the davs of the revolution Sho starts with u review of the troens hv tho Czar while he was Mill 111 nnurr. nnd elves a Er.itihli . - ., i...i.. .. i.iriii Una. .',- .,.'".,.,.,.. fn.. . ,1 1.. ..r 1 riii . iil 1 iiiit.nij hihis-s .iV ....v ,. the dethronc-ment. the story or the Kcren-kv and Kornlloff dlsigreement , nrtsimr mil nf .. mlsiinderstatidliig, tho ' finliMn,. In ,Iia ulrnnlS. flllll the IlttaikMO n . w..-.., -- , on the Winter Halnce, her fatlier s stnte ment to the press on the mistakes uf tho Hiu-slnns nnd the desire of the Allies, and ends with nn account of the departure from Tetrograd of the famllv t'f the ambassador. It Is an Interesting and informing volume UXi HAIi:rt nfssIA tl riiarlrs IMnanl Hussell Ni ork. 1 Apnlcton & 1 0 M llY.I) MONTH'S IN Itl'S.SIA. Ilv Louise llrviint New ork Oeoruo H Doran niiBu lti'v'nT of nt-ssiA in.-ne..i. Ileallj New Y.irl. The Century to J. inn r(rr ok Tmifiii.vi Hy iiertt iiu rhanan New York Charles Sirlbncr n Sons Jl .11 The Making of a Soldier The faeilitv with which America .has taken men from civil life nnd converted them Into soldiers of the "shock ' xnrlety has commanded the wonder of mllllaiv Ilurope, not to mention ourselves A erv thoiough explanation of the policies nnd methods of traln-ng which bad most to do with tint mllltaiy miracle Is con tained in 'William hlavens Mc.Ntitfs vol ume, 'The Yanks Ate Coming." It Is a bieev poitr.iv.il of the Intimate side of cantonment life wlt-i which the author came In touch thiough his f-tudles nt a number of tho laiger encampments chli fly Is one impressed by tho spirit nnd enthusiasm wh.ch animates the work of the citizen soldiers nnd their officeis But the author does not In dulge In generalities to thn eontiary, he is very specific as to the principles and basic Ideas of the national armv, as to what they aie taught at the various camps, and bow ; wh they s-Uute thtli officers who are representatives of the power of the people , why tho ling Is held ns the sacred symbol of American lib erty, etc The volume, because of Its simplicity of expression should have an nppeal for all tho persons with relatives In tho national army. Tim YANK'S MIC rOVtl.Nfi llv William Slnvena MeNutl Iloston 'Hie P.1B0 Com ijani It 50 Philip Gibbs's Dispatches Ono of the most Illuminating and spirited of all the war correspondents who have won fame during the past four vears Is Philip Glbbs. as leaders of I'VKMMi I'tini.tc I.fiioeii aie aw art' Many of his dispatches havo been ot enduring historical value, presenting not only the sweep of mllltmj events on tho western front, but also constituting an Informing, human account of social aspects In war-torn Franco nnd among the various British forces In the trenches. The dispatches which have been In cluded In "From Bapaumo to Passchen dnele" cover practically everything ot Interest and Importnnco that happened on the western battlefront during 191". The author's facilities for obtaining re liable information were unusual, and this, with his highly-trained news sense and faculty of observation, gives his book definite and unlnue value us a con- trti.iiiton to the 1 ternture or tne war Vivid accounts of the battles of Airas and Messlnes aie snarpiv contrasted lth annealing episodes of bravery In n ctlqi of Vr ()ii, the fortitude or me om women ranee, the, iiumor ot me ireiimcs. encountets with obstreperous -movie men. and fighting under all klndi of circumstances. moM HAiwt'vti: iiv riiiitn nihil. Dorun Company TO I'VS'-f'linVHsKI.TI New York- (leorga II J2.30 The Heart of Lee A graclousness of stle entliely In keeping with the charm whlih charac terized the life of Honert V. Lee has been attained by Wuvne Whipple In an Intimate study of tne lemarkablo per sonallty which In everv sense was the heart (if tho rebellion It Is entliely nn unbiased study which does splendid Jus tice to I.ce the man, T.ee the sold'fr. and I.ee the Chiltlan -nd that chapter which delineates the fearful mental and moral struggle through which I.ee went In arriving at his decision to support the South Is especially r.no. Equally touch ing Is the author's p..r-raal of the clos ing 5 ears of the great southerner's life and tlio path":, which pervaded them Till! linAflT OP Mill 11 Wnme Whipple Philadelphia Ocorse W Jacobs & Co. S centi. Rations for Every Day Students of took books have" despaired of finding one thnt was different. It has remained for Thetta Quay Kranks to produce a eook book the, like of which has never befote appeared. She calls It "I),lly Jlenus for War Service," nnd In It she has given Hirer; menus for break fast, luncheon and dinner for evety day In tho ;,rar. with nil lndlcntlon of tho sUf of the portion to be served to each person, together with the number of rnlorles In the portions, In her Intro ductlon she estimates tho cost per person of each of the three menus for each ii al. For example, one dinner wltl cost sixty-six cents nnd provide 1025 calories, nnother will cost forty cents nnd provide 1010 calorics and the third will cost only 23 9 cents, while It gives 1015 i.ilorlcs to the eater. The book contains n mass ot recipes, simply set forth and easy to compre. hend. and opposite the page of menus for tho dns there Is a blank space for entering the costs of tho food provided While It Is written to assist In the con- servatlon of food during wartime, those who have learned by practice what economies can bo practiced without loss 1 of health or strength will be, likely to flmMue noon userui vvncti peaco conies I1A1I.Y JtKNVS roil VAN HHIlVirr Ilv" Thetta Quay FranKs New Yor y T 'UUMin' H"- ! IliU I O J .JllJUJT I OF VCCFl ji hjajiuo ' ,'v , C( ,'ro, file Point of ' ' . Fti . it I VWIO Of a I lieoriSt and Of (I Practical Business Man Much has been written nbout making tile-'others clllclent, but comparatively little lias be, ii h.nlit iibnut one's own method of thliiKlnir Mnrltlne-nnd netlnir Hv w an i - n -- "f relieving this illrth of Introspective "Utlng two book'? have Just been put ""ril to help the nsplmnt for success div eloping his mental and ploslcal faiultbs tn the end of getting the most out of them In tli.it struggle It 111.1 v never have oicurred to you 1tl1.it even in our digestion nnd In jour hours of fatigue psychology plajs Its little part, and et not so little nt that, as lldgar .lames Swift will convince oti should v nil read 1 Ihe Dav s Work ' his "Pschology and It reall opens one's eves to learn how persistently psclioi ogv Interpolates Itself Into most every thing we come to do, even Into m tlons which one would think quite devoid of the thought processes. All of which behooves us in our quest of efllciency to sui render ourselves now and then to Introspective thinking which may bo the means of removing great obstacles from our road to success Vmong other Interesting topics, the iiuthoi has a good dial to s.ij nbout the pschology of learning, cuiiosltles of memory and suggestions for its improvement, and the part habit pluvs in one's preparation for tfllclenc So muiiv persons are wont to regard .1 succc-s'ful buslnchs mnn as a curious combination of flint nnd soullessness that It 1 plealng to come acrosi a man of commeiclal nffalrs discoursing on the spiritual side of success. In his 'T.iving the Creative Life" Joseph II Appel en deavors to establish thn thesis that all creative power, that power which has mndo possible the great Industrial nnd commeiclal achievements, comes from within, from the all-orlglnatlng forco of original thought Successful men, be snvs. built ui their machinery of suc cess through thought, application nnd bard work, and then give themselves up to the creative power wmen runs uie ninrhlnc This volume Is not so abstract as a brief digest would lead one to be lieve, and hns lidded foico In coming from a man who really has done things. I'SYCH OI.OO Y NI Till! DAY'S WORK Ily Hdffar Jnmr s Sivift New York. Charles rrlbner's Sens 12 LIVING Till! rltr.ATIVn T.irK Ilv Insenll II Ainiet New Yolk llobert it JIcDrlde Co It 50 Throw Physic to the Dogs It Is not at nil fashionable these davs not to be well, and It's positively nntedlluvlin not to know what's causing tho trouble with our "Innards" when vou aren't well. 1'or those who are curious to know all nbout their various Indispositions, a perusal of "Thiow Physic to tho Dogs' will nt least prove suggestive This volume Is dedicated to the attainment and preservation of health by diet and 11 coirect handling of the body, the mnln theme of which l the banishment of the Injuries of cathartics Some, succestlons for menus calculated to eliminate physical disorders bring this I new health book to a close THROW PHYSIC TO Till: fleorsn and Alice l!ort n 11 Di un C'lmuauv if DOGS ll New Yorn Soldier Silhouettes Admitting the f.u-clnatlon of stoiles of trench life, descriptions of the actual scenes of battle and alt that. It never theless Is refreshing to como across a somewhat philosophical study of the re action of the expediences of battle Uon tho thoughts and behavior of our Amer- lean soldiers. Such a study, In a nut shell, nio the "Soldier Silhouettes," brought Jnto relief by a Y M. V A worker at the front True, the author Is concerned chiefly with tho religious reactions upon tho thousands of men he w'orked with, but at the same time his "silhouettes" letleet tho comradeships, tho lojaltles, pleasantries and even come dies that belong to t-oldler life Just ns do tho heart-rending scenes of battle SOI.UIHIl SIMIOCErTK ON OCIt TRONT Hv VVllltnm I. MhlKer New York Charles Hcrlbner a .sons M -5 Last Days of Jesus A helpful book. eieclall n this time of great stress, is Dr I.viimn Ab bott's "The I.ast riajs of Jesus 1'hrlst " It Is a series of sevin meditations, each prefaced by a selected poem nnd fol lowed by a prajer, on tho main truths affecting our beliefs and lives brought out In tho closing scenes of our Sa viour's life. It will help to dispel doubts, stiengthen faith, and lead to greater service and sacrifice. To many who are at the front facing death it would prove most encouraging and Inspiring. TUB LAST DAYS Or JESUS CHRIST Ry l.snian Abbott. New York K. I' Dut ton & Co 00 cents. The Great Expectancy Another of tho "little books" Just off tho press Is Margaret Prcscott Mon tague's "Tho (Ircat l'.Npectano," which first made Its appearance In the col umns of the Atlantic Monthly as one of a series of papers nbout the effec"t of tho war on a secluded southern valley. The special message, which is holds! seemed to make its publication In some permanent form desirable The author describes "The Greater KNptctancy" as a fuller Incarnation of the spirit, nnd she pictures many souls ns uneasy In the expectation of sonio great develop ment to arise from tho war At the end she asks: "What does the future hold?" And sho answers: "Agony, death nnd war. no doubt, but also our souls, clod and the Oreut I5xrectanc." Tin: ORKAT KXI'ECTANCT. 11) Msrsaret I'reseott MimtiiKuc, New York 13. 1 Out- ton Compum, 3.1 cents j Christmas Picture, Book " -"" '"" ...... 15. Hod Smith has completed his stoo lot Noah's ark In pictures In a volume which ho calls "After They Came Out of the Ark. There ore twenty-two' delightfully humorous colored plates, with brief explanatory text. The nrt will j gratify the ndults and tne numor win please the children. AlUKR THF.Y PAMP. Ol'T Of Till! AH1C lit K Hoyil Smlili Nh YorU O l 1 u'ium's Suns, t.Z'i. WALT milTMAN 'Those Written by a Brilliant , English Woman Are . Printed at Last There will alw.vjs be dls.igieemen' about thn proprlrtv of publishing the I Intlmntc love letters of the dead Thomas u, Hained, who has edited the letters of Mrs Anno Oilchrlsl, widow of Alex ander (Illchrlst to Walt Whitman offers ' n hnlf npolagv for maklmr them public b citing precedents nnd Insisting that "one muRt lo"k upon thlf form of pie sentlng biographical material as a well- I established, if not a valuable, convention I of letters " ' j What Mrs Gilchrist thought of other eyes seeing her confession of love fr ' Whitman we know, for In writing of her I fear that her first letters hnd not ' reached him, she wrote "I rnnnnt j face the thought of these words1 of ut termost trust nnd love having fallen1 Intli other hand" ('.in both be slmplv lost" Could any man suffer n Ii.im' 1 curlositj to make him ko n,r.inl treaeh- erously cruel? It seems to cut nnd then . burn me." Vet In spite of this Mr Hartifd prints the only one of there letters that he could find and he would (loucs, i1!lX0 printed the otb-r If H had been In his possession Whitman I kept most, If not all. of the Utters tli.ft he received from this gifted admirer When she came to I'hlladelphl.i In 1870 anj ,Cmalnecl hero till ISTS he called on her rrequentiv iinu tnc irienusnip continued until her death tn 1835 But he did not love her enough t, inarrv her It Is explained that in lSGt he had fallen ml ovo with a married w Oman to vv bom ho remained loval ill though they were never nble to nal' their mutual affection. It was to hei that he wiote "Out of the rolling ocean. the crowd," a lyric of poignant grief, nt separation ' Mrs Gllclulst became a passionate admirer of Whltmnn's poetr In 1869, when sho flrfct came across It She wiote to W. M. Hossettl. who gave her tho volume, that until she lead It she 'had not dieamed that words could ceaso to be vvoids nnd become elcctr'i atrealns jk0 these" She later wiote nn cf.s.iv of appreciation published In the Boston Hadlcal In Ma, 1870. In which the enlarges upon this sentence and In her letters to Whitman she con fessed that ns revealed In what be bad wiltten he was her ideal nnd besought him to irako her his wife and tile mother of his chlldicn ' If we pass over tho propiktv of pub lishing the most Intimate of the letterB evei admirer of tho great poet will welcome this contribution to Whitman lltciature N'o ono has sunendeied more completely to hlsr m.ihteiv than Mr? flllchrlst, nnd she did it when most of the other people qualified to pass Judgment on his merits were rldi cullng him, attacking htnr or passing him by In scorn flllJ I.ETTKnS OF iK Oil l llltlST A.N1 WAl.T WHITMAN l.dllwl b Ihtnnastt llarned Harden 1'iU Double daj I'.iBe A. Co JJ If the supreme function of tragedy be, as the Gieeks de clared, to arouse in us pity and terror, it is not as, an artist alone that Louis Raemaekcrs will go down into history. The scathing iiony jf his carieatuies stirs us, by the subtlest of all methods, to a" sense of shame and of horror: he has laid bale tho very soul of Ameiica in her passion of pto te.st against unbearable wiongs. AMERICA IX THE WAK, pub lished by The Century Company, contains over one hundred of his unmatchable cartoons, printed in color and accompanied by text from men and women of distinc tion. It is a book for all time. To be taken behind the .scenes is always fascinating, nnd never more so than in the case of the newspaper woild; but THE STOKY Of "THE Sl" as told by Finnk M. O'Brien and pub lished by (ieorye II. Doran Com pany, is much moro even than the intimate narrative of the building of a gieat daily. Its story isi the story of tho city where it was born and of the famous per sonalities that grew up with it, related with such vivacity as to form a veritable human docu ment, endowed with wit and color and chaim. Ghost stoiies, like the super natural beings that flit through them, are bound by no limitations of time. .1. Wulker McSpadden, editor, -and Thomas Y. Croicell Company, publishers, aie to be congratulated in bringing to gether the literary masterpieces of their kind under the title FAMOUS GHOST STORIES. No psychical research phenomena these, with the crudities and puerilities of the parvenu, but honest - to - goodne.s.s apparitions whose power to chill the blood has been vouched for by delightedly shuddering geneiations. Who has not sought the Blue Bird that phantom of desiie for the happiness that must eternally lure us on? And who has in vested the time-old allcgorv with such enchantment as Maeter linck? In THE BETROTHAL. a sequel to his former fantasy, published by Dodd, Mead & Com pany and about to be staged by Winthrop Ames, he touches again both the heart and the imagina tion in his tale of the quest of Tyltyl, now grown to man's estate, for the mate about whom his boyish dreams have centered. Ring Lardner is more than a humorist he is a character sketch artist, if ever a writer was one; and his cx-star of the White Sox team has became almost a national institution. In TREAT 'EM HOUGH, just issued by The Uobbs-Merrlll Company, we are initiated into the mysteries of the breaking in of a private. The letters of our old pal, now "Jack the Kaiser Killer," to his ever faithful "Friend Al," are as naive and as excruciatingly funny as over in their descriptions of tho little amenities' of camp life, with side lights on married lifo thiough the ever-diverting Flor rie. jP I I VJdtft, M Cri STrvU V" jl Jl: "What of America?" asked the world. Our boy3 have answered. "What of America?" we now ask ourselves. William allen white answers in his new novel IN THE HEART OF A FOOL I he new book splendidly carries out the promise of "A Certain Rich Man." It portrays the life of a typical middle western town, from its fust settle ment on the open prairie to its present state of a flourishing industrial center. Here the spiritual drama of America is played, with its clash of ideals so vividly brought into the light in the throes of the Great War. The final triumph of the new American ideal social justice, an equal share tor all in the higher spiritual life, is boldly proclaimed in a story of most absorbing interest. IN THE HEART OF A FOOL By WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE Author of "A Certain Rich Man" On sale today at all bookstores, $1.60 THE MACM1LLAN COMPANY Publishers New York The Boreham Cult Is Growing. ESSAYS BV F. THE SILVER SHADOW I'. VV. lliirrliHin touches midline nblili he does not adorn with the xpnrkllng hrlKhtnen of a Punrtli of Jul) Itoniiin rnndle. Ills books of essnjK bine ulreiidy won for lilni h wide popularity In I'.nKtaml and lie Is ruplillt bring discovered in Amerlrn. THE GOLDEN MILESTONE One reviewer Mild of llnrrlimn's essnjsl "ustrnlla seeins to tome of us liter the edge of the horizon, miMile ,,f the world wherein we live, nnd for such h book to tome out of Hint fur-iiwny and unknown lunil, sinning nnd Hushing Its nuj Into nur hearts, bringing qnalnt niirrlls, genuine wisdom, and stlinillntlng Ideas, nltnost takes pur breath uwn.i." THE LUGGAGE OF LIFE 1li.Tr U h iiunlnl humor tlint alnnvn plnyn about the horizon of Ilnrrhiiiit'M tlintiifht like hrnt lightning;. You htul better reud him nloml, for tf jou don't the family v,U keep Interrupting you all the while to ask what the joke U, If oil hate 11 confirmed tnste for human nuture aiul like to look nn it through lennrg of humor and hi mpiithj ttt utiiuninteil ultli Air. Itorrhnm, THE OTHER SIDE OF THE HILL AND HOME AGAIN of one of the itorehuii. bookN the London Quarterly Review id ' V moat ftiiKKrntlble person I thU Titmnnlun enaylM. To him every event nnd object I. MiKR-eMlte, wherever hl jtlnme strikes It ricochets to nomethtiij? ee, IIU ee U like the poet's, which f.een a poem hnnfflnsr on the b-err hu-.li; like 8h.tkeNpenre'N. to nhtrli the whole Mreet In n niiiM,ueruJe when lie punter b. An expert derlver of thought, from thing nml llliihtrutor of hleuM by thlugit U Iloreham. Me bis the gift nf Mom " l.'nio. (loth bimllng. 1'IJt OI.I Mi;, N KT, $1.35. TOSTPATD. l Till. IIMIDIt ItOOK SHOPS, THE ABINGDON PRESS d'onmled l.HU) New lork Inclnnntl Chicago ltoMon I'lttiburgh Detroit Kantian City ini Francis o I'lirtlumlOre., baletroora Order from the nearest Addre Case of the United States against Germany As Set Forth by JAMKS BROWN SCOTT, A.M., J.U.D., LL.D. 'resident of the American nstitutc of International Law, Major and Judge-Advocate, V. S. Army IN THUKC VOLUMKS BASED ON OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS Diplomatic Correspondence Between the United States and Germany. ' $o CONTAINS the diplomatic correspondence between the United States nnd ilcrniiiny Thin correspondence forms the background for all the I'resldent mid and wroto to Oermani and Is, In n tery real sense the case of the I'nlted Stmts against German A Survey of International Relations Between the United States and Germany. Net $3.00 CONSIDI'HS '" nair.itle form, each Untie as nn episode and dls ciisen it In the llRht of tho correspondence, the practice of nations, and the ilews of publlilsts, Includlnir those of llermnny C)er 100 pares of translation from licrinan authorities showing the German conceptions of the unite nnd International lnwr.ar Bhen In th admirable urie Dr Isioit 1ms then us the most ciinuirehenaltr and Inost tliorouuhlv documented exposition i( the relations nf tll United States to Hie (Ireat War which lm been published It l tbrouKhont im.larljrln Its uuthod and workmanlike in lt esecu- President Wilson's Foreign Policy Messages, Addresses, Papers. A' $3-50 CONTAINS the inessaRes, uddresses nnd papers of President Wilson, alntlnc In his own words, every principle which, before nnd since our tpt ranee lnln Ibo wur. be has deemed estentlRl lii a Just and permanent settlement of the Issues Involved. In a brief explanatory note to ,eeji successive paper or address -the full text of which is reproduced Ui makes Its particular relation to tho rest ama ipuly eleiir T.aeh annotation Is a mar ".I of brevltv, releuincy and aehntarshln. Without ever beln arsumentatlve, with At AH Bookseller or From the Publisher OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS A M n B I C A N BRANCH rhirtyfivo West ThjrtySecond Streot,, N, V. Join His American Reader W. BOREHAM linn . The volume la quits In. dispensable to the International lawyer, will le extreinelv useful to the historian find lias inuth Interest for the central reader " llim IlaUd Jayne Hill In the .liurrfruii Joitrocif of iilernatloaal Ltm. out even dtpartlnc from the Impartial, Judicial tnna tnal i naraetrrlsed nia pre vious works, Mr Hcott has contrlvea lpt present mf iihi rvuiici ,i. .ijnirinporarx Vnierltan history In manner that vrffl educate. Interest and Inspire avcry true American " VMlatelpMa Yen. ! f,i ' "tj. 7 fi K - . 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