PPsrraT f.. Afi ., toli. ' ' ''l ' , i 41 F!V - vr ' vi .,.!" ' " EENING PUBLIC IliDOERrPmLADELBaiA, 'SATUKDAY, NOVEMBER 16, ' 1918 TB' . i "-- r - .... , i i. .-H -'. .- t" i"iy ! If f t i i ? ft I Is BJV li If iY. 1 A f;,'t h rc - JtiMjM, gft A Cowboy who becomes an Aviator ffBjl jSj KAa9 s the hero of this new Ranch Story BSajSE Jffl PubIiihersLITTLE,BROWN&CO.,Boiton " JR.. ' That Star in Your Window is now a VICTORY star. So also it is in Olive Higins Prouty's romance of an American girl, THE STAR IN THE WINDOW, whose heroine in a determined struggle against environment sees at last the once blind and visionlcss house in which she lives given sight and soul by a star in the window. J For those who like tales of danger and daring in the Great Outdoors, told with a quaint afild quiet humor, we suggest TOM AND I ON THE OLD PLANTATION, by Archibald Rutledge. q For ounger readers there is STOKES' WONDER BOOK OF THE BIBLE, by Helen Ward Banks, the entire Bible retold, simply and clearly; Patten Beard's book of cleVcr fun ideas, THE JOLLY BOOK OF FUNCRAFT, and Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Hale's jolly tale of the adventures in patriotism of three little New Yorkers, LITTLE ALLIES. J At all bookshops. Send for full descriptic circular, gratis. Publishers REDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY New York $wm!SMss,siss!ajs5SiS!aKiSs m. oxsn. a WHAT DID ESMERALDA DO? She couldn't sew, she couldn't knit, She couldn't make a comfort kit; What did Esmeralda do? She filled the ranks, and manned the tanks, And drew the shekels from the banks; For what she did, this hypnotizer, Read a6 men rus'1 ft to fieht the Kaiser. ESMERALDA Or Every Little Bit Helps By NINA WILCOX PUTNAM and NORMAN JACOBSEN Illustrated in color and black and white. $1.00 net. Th brr-ezr, humorous story of n cirl from California, who upoU tlm traditions of New York's smartest not And Incident illv doM some Hnleo.Iirl 2 War Work. This Is a putrlotlc tale, up to ths minute, startling- and Oe- & llehtful. tliat no American will uant to miss. ' Filled to the Brim with "American Pep" Yon'll Recommend It at AT.r, I R I IPPIMrTiTT sTk rcBLiHiiisns HOOKSTOKES ' u. -. uu. a uivv a w. run msmstJK. Z&X&&0, The Garden of Survival By ALGERNON BLACKWOOD Author of "The Wave,""Juliu8 Le Vallon,""The Promise of Air," etc. 'There ore a few authors, though only a very few, whose work serves as a test not so much of the keenness as of the quality of a reader's perceptions. Of these writers Barrle is one and Algernon Blackwood another. . . . This extraordinary ability of Mr. Blackwood's to write, and to write clearly and Intelligibly, of those elusive varieties of thought and emotion as dim cult to put Into words as the song of a bird or the fragrance of a flower," was never more evldentthanit is in this latest book of his, "The Carden of Survival." New York Times Book Jevleto. tl.tS net. To select this as a gift to a friend is in Itself a compliment. ORDER AT ANY BOOKSTORE OR OF E. P. DUTTON & CO. Booth Tarkington's Great American Novel is a book that you and every other American will read with joy. It is about people who might be your people or your neighbor's and describes your town in its big growing time. There is no villain in it, but a girl you will surely fall in love with and a hero who turns out most unexpectedly to be a hero. Thousands are buying it now; tens of thousands will, buy it before Christmas. If you have not read it you will be embar rassed.' If you do read it you will tjiank us for reminding you. ' ' Net, $1.40. The Magnificent Ambersons Your bookseller has it. - Doubleday, Page & Co., Publishers. M ,.:v 'A II.ADKJ.I'HI.V ssomsiiss'swsMMra 08l FIFTH AVE,, NEW YORK WAR FACTS CONFESSIONS OF A NATURALIST Two Fascinating Boohs by an Author Whose American Fame Is Just Beginning W. II. Hudson, bom In Arffcntlna of an Kngllnh father nnd n New England mother. Is one of the greatest writers In Knsllsh at the present time. If wo may trust his admirers. John Galsworthy, who dedicated "The Country Houc" to him, says of him that "as a simple nar rator he Is well-nigh unsurpassed; as a stylist he has few If any 11 Ine equals." Yet almost nothing Is known of his life save what he hns revealed In his hooks. Tho English "Who's Who" says not a word nbout the place of his birth, or the year, his parentago or his residence. It simply Rives a list of his books, begin ning with "Argentine Ornithology," pub llshcd In 1888, nnd ending with "Adven tures Among Birds," which appeared In 1913. Ills autoblogrnphy, published under the title of "Par Away and Ixng Ago." gives little Information about the time he v.as born. Nothing Is said of the part of England his father came from or the New England State In which his mother was born, and one has to conjecture when he first saw daylight. He was nbout seven years old when the Argen tine dictator, Hosns, was deposed. As this was In 1852 Hudson must be about seventy-threo years old He has had to wait a long time for fame to come to him. But It Is moving his way with such speed that it Is likely to envelop him In the near future. His autobiography stops with his fif teenth year, savo for a little discussion of his mental and spiritual experiences after he wns older. It Is the story uf the boyhood of a loer of birds and I Honors on an Argentine estnncli In the middle of the last century.wlth incidental revelation of the manner of life of the people of the country. Its stlc Justifies the praise of Galsworthy, for Its English Is slmplf. clear and beautiful, without pretension of any kind. Ho tells his story with tho. directness of Bunyan In "The I'llgrlm's Progress." Tho book is filled with love of nature. Here Is the wny he tells how It affected him when he became aware of the beauty of the world as a child: It wns not, I think, till my eighth year that I Iteiran to Iio d.stlnetly conscious of something mora than this mere childish tlelltrht In nature. It may have been there all the tlmo from lnrnnc I don't know, but uin I besan to know It consciously It was an If norne hand had surreptitiously dropped somethlnff Into the honeed rup which Rae it at certain times a nw fla vor. It save mo little thrills, often purely pleasurable, at other times startling, and mere were occasions wnen it ucriinie an poignant as to frlBhten me. Th sluht of a mapnlflecnt sunBet was sometimes almost moro than I could endure nnd made me wish to bide mvsclf unay. Nature and the lovo of It Is the sub stanco of all that he has written. It fills "A little Boy Lost," a child's hook which he has recently written In order that there might be In existence the kind of a book which ho would have liked to read when he was a child. His own childhood has Inspired the part of It that Is real, and a vivid imagination and a lino rcnlUatWn of the desire of a child to hao Its mind stretched by wonders Inspire the rest. It Is the story of a little English boy In Argentina who wandered away from home and was lost on the plains. The Queen of the Mlrago with her train of attendants found him. One of tho attendants said: "He lovus wandering; let him have his will nnd be a wanderer all his days on the face of the earth." Another says: "A wan derer he is to be; let tho sea do him no harm." And the Queen adds: "So be It, and to your gifts I shall add a third Let all men love hlin." And so the boy continues his wandering over the plains Into the mountains, meeting w ith strange adventures, and the book ends with the child asleep on a raft at sea. It is a story that Is likely' to be as popular as Klngsley's "Water Babies." FA 11 AWAV AND 1,0X0 AGO Ily W. II, Hudson. New York: E. P. Dutton L Co. A LITTLE IIOT LOST. Ily W. H. Hudson New York A. A. Knopf ll.fiO. Dr. Adriaan Uy LOUIS COUI'EItCS THAT long-awaited fourth volume of Tho Books of the Small Souls Is here, and Couperus, past master In fam ily psychology and the eternal comedy of family expectations and Jealousies, has achieved another triumph In this story of the growth of a great soul among the small sjuls. The unfamiliar Dutch setting gives these Books of the Small Souls a touch of added Interest for the American reader. Dl the author of "Old People and the Things That Pass," etc. Translated oy reteelro...1.50 Doddn Miad & Company Neu York - V IN FICTION DOROTHY CANFIELD AND W. H. HUDSON Whose new books are among the best of the J car A Naive Optimist' Popular essays on simplicity In liv ing, cast In tho semi-fictional form of conversations, make up "Mr. Squcm and Some Mnle Triangles," by Arthur Hus Bell Taylor, The primary purpose of these genial little sketches Is to demon strate "the masslvo decency at the heart of the common man," as exemplified In the optimistic and common, exceedingly common, person of Peter B. Squcm, peri patetic peddler of automobile tires, whoso temperament Is as resilient a the rubber he sells. Mr. Squcm has distinctly correspon dence school Ideas of etiquette nnd what a gentleman should be. But ho Is haunted by the suspicion that he docs not, sotnrhovv, manage to live up iu the cut of his clothes. In real emergen, cles, however, ho shows that his simple philosophy Is more practical than that of his "highbrow" chance acquaintances or railway coaches and theatres. He knows Just what to do In a wreck, and he finds mo're "plot? In a Charles Chaplin Aim than In "Die Walkurc." Yet, des pite his unashamed vulgarity he Is the soul of kindness, thanks to the Inspir ing Influence of a plcturo postcard of the Christ child he constantly carries In his watch. Those who revel In the obvious may find Mr, Squem entertalr Ing. MR SQUEM AND S.OMII MALE TRIAN GLES. Ily Arthur Hussell Taj lor. Now York: QeorKe H. Doran Company. II. What Our Navy Has Done Nobody who reads Lawrence Perry's account of "Our Navy In tho War" will again Indulge In the thoughtless remark that "the navy plajs no part In this war." For ho will learn Just how ef fectively submarines have been fought and captured, that our anti-submarine activities now cover in war areas alone moro than 1,000,000 equate miles of sea, that "In a six-months period one de tachment of destroers steamed over 1,000.000 of miles In the war zone, at tacked eighty-one submarines, esrortel 717 single vessels, participated In elgh-ty-slx convoys, and spent 150 days at sea. There has been more than a six fold Increase In naval man power and about a fourfold Increase In the numhci of ships in service. When present plans have been carried out and all projects are proceeding swiftly the United States will probably rank second to llritaln among naval 1'ovvers of the world." Tho book Is enlivened with many In formative and Interesting anecdotes Tho author covers tho activity of all branches of the bervlce, und even pic tures the llfo aboard a German subma rine. He includes sketches of command ers and men, tells of naval camouflage, and describes the organization of auxil iary naval departments. The scope of the book Is as large and varied as the navy Itself. OUR NAVY IN TIIK 1VAR Ily Lawrence Terry. Illustrated with iihotouraphs. New York: Charles Scrlbner's sons. II 50. A "Tommy Waajs" Letters "TTimmv Atkins" has told U9 his story of and In the great vvnr many times and In many ways. But now, for the first time, "Thomaslna Atkins" comes for ward to tell u of the "bit" she Is doing behind the lines to aid the fighting man In the trenches and tho whole nst British military organization. The anonymous author Of "Tho Let ters of Thomaslna Atkins" Is a private In tho "WaaeB," more formally known as the Woman's Army Auxiliary Corps. Mildred Aldrlch, author of "A Hilltop on the Marne," vouches for Thomaslna's reality and for the authenticity of the letters, which are of value, chiefly, for the manner In hlch they reflect the un failing cheerfulness nnd optimism of the author and her fellow "Tommy Waacs." She tells "Darling I'eachle" very little of actual condition in her own particular part of tho war zono "somewhere In France." But iho does have a great deal to say about her own emotions and reactions, and memories of her former stage life, as she pursues her clerical The ietters run from last fall, during preliminary training in England, to the beginning of tho German drive in March of thin year, inure ucjr whuihij s"; but the writer's vehement cry, Wlnl" has been splendidly ir.A thnan dark days. "We Shall vindicated THE LETTERS OP TltOMASINA ATKINS. 1& 'iM-Wate (Wl A A. C.) Active Hervlce.' NeW JDIHi UCUIKV7 4 Is II. Dornn Company. Engineers in War Work The success or failure of a modern battle may be controlled more by the ability of ft single engineer than by a whole regiment of Infantry. Indee. without the work of the engineering forces, no military operations of any son would bo possible today. While the public reallies this In a vague way. the full scope and vaBt Importance of the engineers' tasks are by no means gen erally understood. A pppular account of all the manifold nd difficult labor which confront ttie engineer In modern warfare Is provided by Francis A. Col lins In "The Fighting Engineers." He tells In clear, simple language how they support the fighting army In the field and in the rear. He tells of their vital Importance In reconstruction work, an in numerous Illuminating anecdotes shows how American engineering forces have set a new pace In France, per forming formidable and difficult tasks smoothly and In an Incredibly short time The book Is an admirable, well rounded account of the part new being played by "tho mtnuto men of our In dustrial army." TIIK FIOHTINO ENGINEERS. By Frncls A Collins. Illustrated. New Tork: Ths Century Company. II. SO. Paris Sketches by Symons , A series of sketches written by Arthur Symons between the years 1890 and 1907 have been gathered In a book called "Colour Studies In Paris." They Include a description of the gingerbread fair at Vlncennes, a criticism of Yvette CIUI1 bert when she had just emerged from obscurity, notes on the Paris of Paul Verlalne, songs of tho streets and similar matters. Theyvwlll be prized highly by admirers' of Porta and those'who delight In the limpid English of Mr. Symons. ' COIWIl STUDIES IN PAnia By Arthur Hymonj, Nw Tork; . P, Dutton, Co. FAME OF W. Verses by Three Women With the casualty lists war's sorrows have crept closer to tho homelands and roust d new poets to pour out their emd tlons In rhvthm. Among these nro three women whoso homes have been touched by the new regime. It wns tho death of her brother. Cor poral Frank 11. Loverldgc, wounded In action In France, that Inspired I.llllan Leverlduo's "Over the Hills of Home" which Is already widely quoted. She nns mado it tho title poem in ncr noon of twenty-llvo short songs. Touched with tenderness and pathos though they are, there Is a monotony of rhythm that wears on the reader who scans them closely. Kntherlno I.ee Bates, who wns previ ously heard from In "Fairy Gold," has given some beautiful lyrics of the war In her "Hetlnuo and other l'ocms." She has a mastery of descriptive words that lends Itself to )ovverful pictures. Ver satility Is hown In contrasting poems of dainty humorous quality. One cannot be satisfied with one read ing of Margaret WIddemer's new poems. They grow In depth and meaning with acquaintance till one Is fascinated by their artistry ns well ns by their Innnte sweetness. The theme so many authors are using, that God has again been found through tho tragedy of war, Is treated by .Miss Wlddemer In her title poem. "The Old Itond to Paradise." OVi:it TIIK HILLS OF IIOMU Kv Lillian LeverlilKe New York: II. 1 Dutlun & lo 1 TIIK nUTINUB AND OTIIKIt PUKMS )fv Kathrrlno Lee Hates New York. 12. P. Duttnn 4. Co II TIIK OLD JIOAI) TO PARADLSK 11 Mar- ??r.r'. WHdemer. New York, Henry Holt H Co II .10. French for Adults One of the best books for the Instruc tion of those adults who wish to learn couversat'Diial French or to refresh their memory of what they learned of the language In school Is "Colloquial French." by William Hobert Patteri-on. The chapter on pronunciation Is really Informing and Its directions arc .o sim ple and Illustrated so completely by com parisons with familiar sounds In Knglisli that the student can get a pretty fnlr knowledge of the subject Mr. I'ntter s n. however, wisely advises every one to get the assistance of a Frenchman in perfecting his pronunciation. There fol- ' low lessons In tho elements of the lan guage, the U"ro of the article and tho gender of words, followed by simple con versation, Increasing In dllllculty as the lessons proceed. The Idiomatic expies slons arrc explained nnd there arc lone lists of thein One who gois through the book faithfully, following the Instruc-I tlons, will be able to carry on a simple conversation In Frnjich. ; (cii.ijioi'l.VL rilKNl . Ill William imn Patterson Niw lurk 11.25. I' Dutton & Co Life at the Front I-tfo of the common toldlor at the front In the present ar Is de scribed In a remarkably Interest ing maimer by Cornelius Van rut ten in "Kiltie McCoy" A Mlchlgnn bov bv birth, ho enlisted In a Scotch regiment at tho outbreak of tho war under tho name of Patrick Terranco Mc Coy, and served for more than two years untM n svirR wcund dl.sablcd him. His blmple account of his marled experiences! In camp and In the trenches has an un- usual personal touj'h which adds much to Its Interest. A strong attachment to his comrades Is fhoii throughout his narrathe, nnd there Is a hearty appreciation of their faithful scrv- i Ice In the statement "In the nearly ! three years I was In Franco I i never knew a coward." But he leaes J a terrible impression of their foes, glv- i Ing In one chapter an almost Inconcelv-1 ablo account of their frightful deeds. "Just once," ho says, "did I know a German to show nny mercy to one of cur men." In ono of his most "desperate scraps" a youne comrade fell at his bide. There was Just a breath of life left when he reached him.. "Please, corporal, ten mother I did --my duty," ho whispered and was dead." K1I.TIK McC'OY: An Amsrlran boy with nn Irish name flKhtlntf In France as a Hcotch soldier. Uy Patrick 1'rrrance Ml Coy. Illustrated with photographs. Indianap olis: Th Bobhs Merrill Company. A Noncombatant at the Front A -Wld and Informing description of war on the firing line Is to be found In "Ambulanclng on the French Front " The author, Edward It. Coyle, one of the first Americans to scre as ambulanco man, spent ten months In Ited Cross ambuiance service ncaV Verdun nt the time of Its siege. The strongest Im pression, which his story lcaes, Is the aluc of thfi man who, though In tho heart of tho conflict, does not fire a shot If ho did not take food and munitions to tho men at the front, at tack or defense by them would be Im possible. In addition to his own ex periences he gives much Information In regard to lomo of the present methods of warfare, as "snipers" or sharpshoot ers and hand grenade work. There Is also an enthusiastic chapter on the American Y. M. C. A. The value and Intercft of tho book is increased by the twenty-three reproductions of his graphic photographs. AMltULANCINCI ON THE rRENCH FRONT Hy Edward 11 Coyle. Illustrated New Tork: llrltton Publishing Company. $1.33. A Jockey Who Fought Some additional sidelights on tho workings of German ICultur upon the noncombatants of France and Belgium have been assembled In book form by Fred Mitchell, n noted Jockey, who ob tained his information through personal observations In the war zono at a heavy cost In the way of danger and hardship Of particular Interest Is the author's narrative of his experiences while a prisoner In the hands of the Invaders. FRED MITCHELL'S WAR 8TORT. Ily Fred Mitchell. New York; Allred A. Knopf. J1.60 . A Christmas Masque Percy Mackaya has written so many Plays, operaB and community dramas i that he needs no Introduction as the author of 'The Evergreen Tree," a masque of Christmas time for community singing and acting. The scenlo nnd cos tume designs are by Itobert Edmond Jones. This volume also cotalns three monographs on the masque written by the author, the scenlo designer and by Arthur I'arwell. composer of "the music. THE EVERatJEEN TP.EE. Uy r.rcy Mac kayo. Hew York; Apujttea Co. 14 H. HUDSON WAR FICTION BASED ON FACT Dorothy Canfield Has Pro duced Literature Empcy Has Told Tales If Dorothy Cnntleld had written nothing else her Intet book, "Home Fires In France," would nsuro her of distinction It Is made up of a scries of tales of the war, based on facts Sho has assimilated her material h fomplctely thnt her narrative moves ,wlth freedom nnd ease. Her stjle and method of treatment remind one of the French masters of fiction nt their nest -rno Pcrmlsslonalre," for in Instance, is equnl to nny talc that has come out of tho war nnd It Is su perior to most. It tells of a pollu who i had fought for three ears without go- Ing home, for the Germans were In pos sesion of the village where his wife nnd family lived. As soon ns the Ger mans were pushed back last spring he asked permission to go home and ic celved leave for all the tlmo due him He starts Jojously, stops In Pnrls to buy tools and seeils to cultivate and Plant his little garden, leaves the train miles from his destination and walks on still cheerful. But his steps lag as ho sees the devastation that has been wrought. Finally he reaches his village. Not a house is standing Kverj thing hns been laid waste. Af ter a little bearch ho finds whirc his own home had been and falls face downward upon the ruins In an agony of despair. His wife, who had taken refuge In a dugout some distance nvvoy, discovers him there some hours later What happened Is told with a sym pathy nnd restraint such as ono finds only In literature of tho highest class It is a great story. The volume con tains others almost as good A book of nn entirely different qual ity Is Arthur Guy Kmpey's third vol ume about the war. It Is a group of tales of the soldiers and their life In nnd out of the tranches based on the author's cxpcrlcm.es while In Kurope. Xo one has ever accused Mr. Kmpey of being a man of letters, and lie Is like ly to escape the charge The ntw book Is ns lacking in literary quality ns his other two. "Over tho Top" was popular because of the Blangy and un conventional way In which the life of the soldiers was described This new book, "Talcs From n Dugout," is writ ten In the same style. A literary 'ar tist, handing his material, might have made something out of it that would be of more than temporary Interest Hut Mr l.mpey handles It so crudely that those who will find Dorothy Canlleld's book so moving that they will treasure It will be likely to forgtt lanpey'u ut ter the flrht reading. IIOMK miKS FTtOM KRANCK By Doro thy Canfleld New York Henry Holt & Co It. 35. TALKS KItOM A DUGOUT Hv Arthur tluy Kmpej New York. Ihe Century Co. It. .10. t-IACOBS 1628 tj BOOKS STREET CHESTNUT 6 STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING THE BRITISH NAVY What it is, and what we owe it The Silent Watchers By Bonnet Copplestone Author of "The Lost Naval Papas." Illustrated with 9 titapi. Incomparably tho bet decrlptlon of the HritMi Navy, arid far more than that In narrating the Klnrinus past, and the Immeasurable tenlco rendered in this war, he reieals the inner spirit, the xnul, rt tho great guardian of the safety of the sea Net, $2 00 E.P.Dutton & Co.,681 5th Av.,N.Y. Joseph C. Lincoln's New Novel Will "Keep Them Smiling" "SHAVINGS" An inesistible romance of Cape Cod by the author of "Extricating Ohadiah," etc. "Shavings"! You never ran forget him. He's the most whimsical, the quaintest, the wittiest and most genuinely lovable old Cape Codder, imaginable. Folks called him "queer." He lived alone in his little workshop where he whittled toy windmills and such things and nothing ever happened to disturb his equanimity until that pretty widow and her delightfully meddlesome little daughter came to town. If Cape Cod longed for excitement they got it then. And "Shaving-." was the vortex around which all the be wildering events revolved. The way he see it through will give you many hearty laughs and not a few heart throbs. "Shavings" epitomizes the wisdom, the sympathy and the human kindness of the world. The book is not merely an irresistible comedy but a com prehensive comedie hutnaine." New York Tribune. $1.50 net, "Shavings" has not been published serially. Successful New Novels The Golden Bough By GEORGE GIBBS A continuous succession of thrilling incidents with a young American and a girl trying to outwit Germany's cleverest agents Illus. $1.50 net. Jimrnie the Sixth By FRANCIS R. STERRETT How Jimmy Capen convinced Mary Louise that lie could be a successful "man dressmaker" and still remain a regular he-man. Illus. $1.50 Tier. The Black Opal By MAXWELL GRAY Tho strange circumstances under which a girl commits a crime and how she paid for her sin. $1.50 net. Uncle Abner By MELVILLE DAVISSON POST The amazing exploits of an old Virginian who solves a series of baffling mysteries in a most unusual manner. $1.50 tier. Minniglen By AGNES AND EGERTON CASTLE A love story of Scotland, "that is rational as life itself, as pure as the prayers of a child, as hon est as the day; and yet attains a perfection t)f dramatic and- narrative art." N. Y. Tribune. $1.50 ne(. For Salt ot AU Bk$tllt r Germany Quits! Mr. Morgenthau tells how of the Potsdam conference, July 0, IV 14, was' $ r. i 1 t. 1 I -I Al 1 f conhded to him by the Turkey. The full history near East. READ AMUACCAnnR MnRr.FNTHATFS RTnPY 'S nmunuufawvii i.vvaJj.s w v... j Mr. Henry Morgenthau, formerly American Ambassador to m Turkev. had extraordinary opportunities for getting at eavcrvf tial facts at the center of German intrigue. He knew Talaat and Enver Pasha intimately. He had the confidence of Von Wangenheim, the German Ambassador. He was at Con stantinople when the killing of the Christian Armenians was planned and executed. This book will be used by historians as evidence of Germany's guilt for many of her greatest crimes of the last four years. A vivid picture olfi history in the making. Net, $2.00 at your bookseller's.- Doubleday, Page & nts Fragme from Bairnsfather NEW SERIES JUST OUT! New episodes in the careers of "Old Bill, Bert and Alf," inimitable pictures of our own "Doughboys," and delicious sketches of the perils of the Italian Front. QVARTO. FRONT1S. Or CXPTA.V BttVCB BMRh'SPATUaK. INTRODVOTION BY 1I.U011 OSOltOB IIAVSX PUTNAM. PAPBIt COYBIt IN COVOltS. SO CBNTI NBT. FOB B A LB AT ALL BOOKSELLERS. New Tork. O. P. TCTNAM'S BOND. Landoa, I LEST WE BE AS UNPREPARED American of Reconstruction A National Symposium Financial I'.dited by ELISHA M. FRIEDMAN Part I. A PERSPhCriVK OP THE I-ROIILEJI Crmtubutors. ljllhha M, Friedman, Alexander I). Nojcs, Georce W. Perkins. I'nri 11. u'hiiemi ix riuinccTioN rontniiutois; GpnrRe Otis Hniltli Wlllli n. Whitney. A. A. Potter. Allen ltoer. A J'rank It. nilbreth nml Lillian Moller ueic, jnuin jj enic, minm j. Part III. AI.ITTSTMi:VTH IV TUAIlK Contributors: Hay Morris Charles J. UranJ, Emory R. Johnson. Edwin J. Clspp. O I AuHtln. Chauntey De.iew Hnow. Henry E. Cooper,"Itobert L. Owen. Kra.lv cln H .SIttftnn Purt IV PIMK.It MN, MONETARY AMI riHCAI. . Contributor: Irvlni? risher, K. V. ICemmerer, Frank A. Vanderllp, 13. R, A. ' fifUjrmnn. Freuerltk A. Cleveland. "A nlnneor work sure to bo in wlilc HUtli ceneral topics nn efflclenoy in production, adjustments in trade and flnfcnceJ! !llont1lrj it II' l iptui jriuti4Miit jet tin ill for lNcuslon of the lountn mineral j-hlpplntr problemn. International ommerce. foreign exchange and roreiin inveai rnnts -cjpntirr maniiReinnt fapltal and labor and a host of questions looking; to the promotion of lndtfstrlnl efficiency," Boston Herald. Cloth, $4 00 iief. Postage extra Order at nny tt P nTTTTHTV J& Pft 681 .Fifth At., ItookKtorp or of GIVE BOOKS! These' aie Appletpn ( .' she began. The real storjTU berman Ambassador to4 ,v. of German intrigue in thfc $' St tf Company - Publishers AlwpvtWBT iuw; "X.tery 9oldtr ear! rics a Ffekl Mar thaVa baton in hU tenapab r tits aluo carrimm A few other thimff$.,. FOR PEACE AS FOR WAR. REA Problems .&' - j '(r on the Economic and Aspects U u With n Foreword bv FRANKLIN K. LANE s rf Gllbrcth. Charley M ocnwpu, uerasraO'i uoi er. ANn riVAVfT. ilemnnd. . . It contributor lcin b nun t'luuu iiaiiicnutn viicic ib .iiiyv twin and chemical resources. Its railroad find Ai ew xorK Timely General Books i i ? France i 1 Party1;- d 1 BBBV Unchained Russia By CHARLES E. RUSSELL With Germany defeated, one of the biggest problems facing the world is the stabilizing of Russia. To know the real situation there, to understand the different parties and their aims, "j read Mr. Russell's book based on first-hand information. $1.50 net. The Woman Citizen By HORACE A. HOLLISTER How woman's progress of recent years in in dustrial life, politics and the professions paves . the way for rapid gains in peace times. . $1.50 neUnf j . - j- , lhe Little Democracy By IDA CLYDE CLARKE What every citizen should know of the com munity organizations and their recent develop ments. $1.50 net. An Ethical Philosophy of Life By FELIX ADLER In a helpful and inspiring book, Dr. Adler dis cusses the ethical problem of life in its philo sophical aspects, based upon his experience of forty years in active social service. Second Printing. $3.00 jtef, ' -i Books D,AUhm-4k,9,rM ; (mmumtTW, n.ljt iJ.'fi ;i' . " V. t' .ftva "" -i ; a y,i ir n f Vi 41 sw ( I iVJ :m m- a P'-.i t, r a fU -J or. ""if IK ii?ii ' n er. t , 'M . . ;( - $t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers