jr- . lW . "S .V. 13' X EVEXIXG PUBLIC LEDGER JH1LADEJJH1A, SATURDAY, .MAY ', WW M' r Exceptional BLIND ALLEY By W. L. GEORGE , Author of , "THE SECOND BLOOMING" J " 'BLIND ALLEY is a wonderful book .... A deep understanding of men and wo men. A book the depth, the scope, the range of which put it absolutely out of the class of anything that, the war has produced. .... There are many who will fly into de nunciation of this book, but it is beautiful to find someone who flees from sentimental gush and dares to stare a situation in the face. " 'BLIND ALLEY' is an extraordinary novel. But it is more than that. It is a cry in the night. Chicago Daily Netvs. q '"BLIND ALLEY'isapro- duct of cool intelligence and ex ceptional art." Boston Herald. q " 'BLIND ALLEY' is full of a passionate protest against war and vivid pictures of the de struction it has wrought in the lives and hearts of the English people. Mr. George's hand is always skillful, as he is a close observer of life. . . . This book is quite up to the high standard of his other work-" New York Tribune. 431 Pages, $1.75 Net. LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY, Publishers, rfoston New Scribner fiction; a picturesque mountain novel, and another to be read for the sheer fun of it. ROSY By LOUIS DODGE' Two men come to Rosy's mountain cabin, both fugi tives but for widely different reasons. The picture of her sitting calmly in the door of her cabin, a shotgun across her knees, bluffing the search party, will long linger in the memory. And in the end the girl and one of the men the right one win out. $1.60 CHARIIS SCRIBNETS SONS HFIH AVE! JKT48ST. NEHTYOKK 1 , TKe Clintons, By ARCHIBALD MARSHALL A new book more about the Archibald Marshall's scholarly, tranquil pen; a book fat leaves a recollection both pleasant and profound. Mr. Marshallias achieved that perfection of art which conceals ait; in which flf and style are always subordinate to character and incident. Hcfcan convince without emphasis, be impressive without being traic, humorous without caricaturing, profoundly and subtly interting without theatricism. His many admirers will enjoy this latft contribution to good literature and the uninitiated will find "Tn Clintons, and Others" a delightful introduction to this sterling I?BHsh author. OTHER BOOKS BY MR. MARSHALL n Manor fTlii (Jruftonw Aputon AblWr Kldfdt bon II iiNidonU 1 1? IJoun of .Merrllees At all Bookstores $1.75 net nqiiire h uauKTiier me iionor oi line the Clinton1 Dodd, Mead & Company AS MOVIES STIR THE SO ALL SPAIN THRILLS AT THE&ULL-FICHT Blood and Sand " Br VICENTE BLASCOE IBANEZ. Translat by Mrs. W. A. GIL LESPIE. Introduction by Dr. ISAAC GjLDBERG. Net, ?1.90 "Every touch i3 essential, vigorous, enthraJig." Phila. Record. 'Rich with color, more gripping as a storwhan any Blasco Ibanez works that have been translated." DctroiSlinday Neivs. "Every paragraph has the glamour of theptotic." New Yoik Sun. "Vividly full of action, wonderfully rielfin action." New Yoik World. " "Vivid, colorful, dramatic, with an extraoniarily rich background." New York Times Book Review. V BY THE SAME AUHOR The Four- Horsemen ojf the Apocalypse Translated by Charlotte Brewster Joidh Net, $1.90 .The Shadow of the .Cathelral Net, $1.90 Translated by Mrs. W. A. Gillespie, production by W. D. Howells ro'0rJu:?0yro7 E. P. DUTTfN & CO. "VUve- m m m m r- " (Fitter Jcimu AH lovers of western rh stories will enjoy this new and excltintt tale of "Skyrider" RV, Jewel, and his aeioplane in the Southwest and across tjf Mexican Border. How Johnny was unwitiBly made, a catspaw and liow in the end ho turns the tables and'6,?8 ns greatest ambition, is told X the breezy humorous slj 30 characteusttc of B, M.v Bower. With FronlisiiecefV Anton Otto Fischer, $1.50 net UttLlTTLE, BROWN &OMPANY Publiihen, BOSTON yr i r '7' ' I ii r--ij ! JLrTrJnrM n -" J ' ' -mrmT n 1 I ''y' W p - ff W ( ' - -q Praise for q." 'BLIND ALLEY' is a compelling, disturbing, powerful novel. It i the first attempt, ac curately and courageously, to de pict English society of all classes in its reaction to the war. "Here we have the only real picture of English life when English men and boys were dy ing at the front. "If is a far better novel than 'Joan and Peter,' which it is something like in theme and trcat- ment Clncago 1 nbune. i- THE ROMANTIC LIAR By LAWRENCE PEERY When Trent told tie first lie, a "white" one, he1 failed to reckon upon the Aement of love at first sign and then he has to pave tie wnote rough' road that never did run smooth with Stepping stones of falsehood.. $1.50 ! and Otjiers interesting Clinton fhiily fiom tirrairni 01 iiiftcu i iiiu tinipr i Changetli' 449 Fourth A cnue, New York PULSES f AMERICA The nvDER Bird By W. ML BOWER Adventures of SK)'RIDtiK Jewel, the Cowboy-Aviator)' lii 1 I'l 1 M MM EX-DEAN LEWIS'S DEBUT AS A BIOGRAPHER HENRY VAN DYKE AS A MORALIST Uis "Valley of Visions" Ele vates Lofty Ideals Before the Gaze of Man Henry an Pjke Is not the srontest man of letters in Anieikn, but lie ii one , oC the most popular The publhhpts anuoume tlint 'JO.OOO topics of liU "The Va1cy of Vision" verc soM wlthlu n few (Iiijb of Its first appear ane. After remlhii; It one rim readily understand the demand for It. Doctor vnn Djke has Imludcd In the oluine a group of stoiles, sUetdies and Impressions of the war. Thev aie nil written fiom the point nf view of n humanist nml n moralist. Take ihe tirst one as nn example. It is a dieani which he sajs lie had twenty .flic venrs 1 iiro. He saw in his islon two men in onwrve standing on the steps of lathcdral in a t-traiiRe foicijjn citr. Thev weie of liciole sIst- and they re I s-embled eaili other, but the face of one 'was calm nml full of compassion. The I face of the other was proud and pas sionate. The passionate one, nfter n while, said to- the other, "Miae done with j ou. I do not believe in you." I And the ionipassu3iiate one i ithdrew. One was (iod and the other was Alan. It was Xew Year's ee and the ill earner went iuto the cathedral crowded with people. Man stood on the steps of the nltar proclaiming, "I am the Lord! Tlieie is none above me." Then the cathedral began to tremble. Stoues fill fiom its roof and from its towers and the people lied in terror from the Thing that was happening. The ilteam is n suit of n piophetio allegory with appli cation to recent events. "Ashes of Vengeance" is another fable with n moral and "A Sanctuary of Tiees" is a moMiig tale of German biutnlity tolil with epic diiectuess. The com hiding taje, "The Hoy of Xamieth Dicnms," is n story of the ilnldhood of Jesus which will appeal to all iidmireis of "The Other Wise Man." The book as n whole fits the title, foi as l)ottor nn Dyke explains in his piefuce, the vnllev of suffeiiug lis the plate whcie the deepest mean ings of life come to us. He regards the outcome of the war a victoiy ovci the mail illusion of world dominion which the (Jeimans saw from the peak of their military power in 101 1, and loncludes that the united foue of the Allies Intel grown through vajle -visions into nu iuesistible might befoie which the (ierman will to power went down to i win. The book will be read not for its literary excellent e, hut becautc of its elewitiou of the moralities befoie the gaze of man. HIE VAI.T.KT OK VISION A book of ro mance anil some half-told tales By len- an Ike New York Charles Hcrlbner'B Sons $1 00 That boy of yours WHAT sort of physical speci men is he making of himself? Will he be one of the 30 "0 of phys ically unfit revealed in the draft? ' Get him today Wal ter Camp's book on physical training based on his experience as athletic director in the training camps. ATHLETES ALL By WALTER CAMP Illustrated $1.50 taiARUESSCRIBNERSSONS 'FIFTH XVEAT48SINEWY0RK ixfTanders fields the Doouies blow Beluven the crosses row on row" 1HJU XBI nd th other beautiful poems of John McCrte, the iol-dler-poet who fell In Fnnct, have been publlihed in one vol ome, with an intimate bio craphieal eiiay by hU friend. Sir Andrew Macphall. InFltmdcrsRdds y'JOHNMKRAE At all bookller l JO nit G.P.PUTNAM"a SONS MitoT.'o5t5- SERVICE AND SACRIFICE By Corinne Roosevelt Robinson A fresh volume of poems sby this poet whose work, according to William Lyon Phelps of Yale in his "Ad vance of English Poetry," comes from a full mind and a full heart." $1.25. ALICE SIT-BY-THE-FIRE By J. M. Barrie Barrie's delightful drama of the invincibly youthful Alice is now ready in the Uniform Edition of his Plays. $1.00. ICARUS SCMBNERS SONS pHFniAyEAT-18SENEryTORK Not a War Story The TIN SOLDIER i By Temple Bailey Jh Thousand Atoll htiQlaie tt,m rENN UBMSHINQ CO.i lh(illphl .1UUH 1 m Ur,r m MM mm KSfflMWFW MW n f t9flflflfls y'fP' fBBiiirfBflflflflflr riSBSVB k. Bflflflflflflflfl UII.1.UM IiKAI'ER l.lii. . Author of n new life of ItoosevcK Rumania's Ideals Leouatil A. Magnus. LL. 1 . k!ps 11 1012 is told in poiisidpuiblp dptail fiom oomprehensirp ew of n ?ubje t about 'hrst-lmnd knowlcilnp. Jlr. Lpwis ad whith most Americans (most oIIipi- nn-jmlts what the ultus of ltooseplt hae tlouals also, for tlip inattpr or that ) ate ihaiRpd. naimh that when lip left the iIpuspIv ijcnornnt, in "ItuinaiiiH'H t'uuseVhitp lloii'-p hp had niuliitioun to iptinn nml Ideals." Itumaniu's hpsitnncy intlipip and that Ins fontlurs for the enterlus the nr made a pi.v b.ul im- i np.iiliiii- iippi left him. Jlr. Lewis pipssion on mnny of (lie Allied peoples, tnakps him a willing inipjeut of the but that there were many leasons be- J nomiiiatloii in 1P1J and not a man jond the apparently ub!otis one of i who took it leliu lanh The nuthoi also baitei is made plain In Mr. Magnus, justifies the rulings of the pipsldiug olli Scttiid by Itomaii leKiouniies, sppakitigUer in the Chicago i indention uuilir n Itonuiuip toiigup. nu island of Latin (iilturp and i il i?ut ion surrounded bv n bca of Slavism. Rumania hud dehnite tendencies towatd sjmpntin with the great I.atiu tfatlons. France and Italj, bclligeient against Hun kultur. These were finally realized bv entiy into the war on the side of the Kutente. Jlr. Jfagnus gies n omise suney of the Uistotic backgrounds nf Rumania, aim lyzes its uutionnl nml iutpruatinuiil problems and pxpiains its cause and its ideals for the future in au uudetstand ablp wa. At n time when people aie closer togetlipr thau epr bpfoie, llus little book will do Inuch to make the Ru manian situation understood and up predated. Rl'MAMA. C'AfSK AND IDFAl." . B ljonnrd A Magnus New York Dutton A C'f K V Lively Memoirs ' I'urtlier Indiscretions' continues the wide tanging and wldelv interestlnK reelatlons begun bv "A Woman of Nn lmpoitnnce" In "Jlemorles, Discreet ami liullicieet." Whatever the rating the nnoinmous writer elves herself In hei mantle of pseudonm, the n,i!etv of persons, personalities and personages who people her lively Pfagea Indicates that she wis Important enough to en joj a remaikablp acquaintanceship She writes with a light touch, nlmost con ersatlonal In its facility and lack of consciousness, and her gossip Is nlwajs delicious In addition, her memoirs gie excellent close-up pictures of innuv prominent, eminent and engaging In dividuals and with the warts on. Among the subjects of her later discourses are Queen Victoria, Queen Alexandra. i:d ward VII, Cardinal Vaughn Archbishop Temple. Lily Langtrv. Mr. Balfour, "Lobby," Joe Chamberlain, the Duchess of Cleveland, the Duke of Connaught, the Duke of Hamilton and the former no. tabllltv. known since November II as William irohenollern Fl'nTHHIl INDISCRETION'S Hy " Wo . man of No lmuortince ' New York E I Dutton & Co J3 Ferrcro Pleads for Italy CiiiRlielmo Kerreio's nevv liook on "Problems of I'eaee fiom tlie TIolv Al linnee to the League of Nations" U reallv ft plea for tlie inncuition of tlie dninis of ttalv. adiliesseil to the Amei - ican people. He insists tlint the Italian I'laini to the Trentino, Triest and Istihi is modest when compared with the pi ire Itaiv has 'had to pay for the slight territorial gnitis wlihli she will make if evei.v thing slie asks for is granted. And he insists also that Itnlv 1ms nf- fcied greater proportionate mnteiinl damage bv the war than some of the other nations heeause her foreign tiaile has been demoralized and because she nas nail to snend nlionf n..n.i,nir her total wealth. His book deserves the senous consideration of those who wiMi 10 lean an SKlllful n statemenf f .1.. Italian ease as has jet been made bv any one. I,RI?u?oa'nS ?vlrlKfJkfiB A ?"" f ?ll-lmr.an.Terro r Nn'ork",r. ry l!?,',' nam's Som t So r' ' ul BOOKS RECEIVED Fiction THE SHKIKKI.VO PIT. ny Arthur T R.. Xwv Vorlc John Lane Compans II ?5 " TRAVEMXr: rOMPNION'S Hi if. ?nVIiVh iffilin.'iJnpa-n1"',, -1,1 t.lKH WHIT E AND Rt.n n. t iCannconVpaarnV ?f DO Trk """ RScrrlbn..I'bnoU;.,,Tr"raoNW Yrk Cllttrt AIRMEN OF" WAU Bvnojdralle New York.,E T Dulton . To II 71 WOOIIEN SPOOF, ny Vleior Itoeau New York: Ueome II. Doran Compans II no Juvenile ! DAVE POUTER'S WAIl IION'ORS Ily Ed J"Ma,S,JlBVO,,0,,! ,'0th,0l, '" wovpnna of waii at sea bv rr.nci, I Shiparrar-n.110"- 'othrop' - wiicn r was a ami, in- memco bv I Shepara Co. 75 cents i RAINBOW ISLAND Til TMnn A T3 .. Xfl Boston: Lothrop, I.ce & fchfpaid Co II 5o General I rnOBI.EMS OP PKAC'E Bv Ousllflmo Jiersi)r0 Trk' P I'utna"' "Sons ' A DICTIONART OP 0000 r-HRASf-S Ilv KJwiu Hamlin Uarr New York! a P Putnam a Sons II 7.1 TIIR runTAI.V OF STKKI, By the author of "In the Northern Jliata " N'w York: (Stone Doran Company $150 TIIK 80CIKTV OP FBKK S rATK Hy nnrtcbt W Morrow. New York; Harper t Bros, II, 25 ' A PILOHIMAOK IV PAI.K.srrR Bv John Finely, New Torkt Charles Scrlbner's ADVIMv-TURKB IN PROPAOANDA Hj Japtaln Hebr Rlankenhorn Boston' Houghton SlltTlIn Compans II r.o rOMTICAI,, I.EADKRS IN TROVINCMI. PKNNSrM'ANIA. By i.aau Sharp!-.. in., ,u.n. iHiiiiiiait viuvuiiy, . fj(f ALTRUISM Bv (loorie Herbert Palmer New Tork; Chsrlfa Sirlbner's Son. Il.-o, SERVICE AND PACRIKICK Poems lly 1'arlnne Roosevelt Robinson New York. Chsrles Porlbner's Sons, II 25. ' AI.U-E-RIT.BY.THE.FJRE By J At B.r. He. Nsw York: Charles Scrlbner's Sons TUB EARTH TURNS 8011111 Poema By Clement Woods. New Tork. K P Dutton & Co. $1.00, COtmAOR, By Jesnnetle Jlarka New York: The "Woman's Pres.. II, '.'5 WITHOUT TUB WALLS A Reading: Play By, Kstrlna Trask New Yorki ilac- mlllan Company. 11,40, 8TUDIB8 lN,ltAUK'rt OOSPKIi By A T Koblnson New .Torki .Maimlllan Com. uanj. jl,2S, 1IJK KROrlC MOTIVE IN 1.1 1'KltATURK Hy Albert Morrtell, New York; Jic.nl & f.iYcriffnr., si, TO. OTHKh PLAT8 OF" TUB BKA, By Ell, fWtlNll, New rorkf Bonl k UUrlkht, i FIRST COMPLETE LIFE OF ROOSEVELT William Draper Lewis lias Produced a Readable and Entertaining Booh Till" ilUtlngiil'ilieil iiialllRnlloii of William Draper I.pwN ns tlio lilocni)li"i nf Thpoiloro Koosc('lt lio in Hie fut't I tlint lie Know llip tntin )iriMnnll nml was n liollpvrr in his policies Jlr. l.ruis. lioncpr, hoiiIiI iluiibtlP'R In tlie fitst to insist tlml Ills lite of Hip Hlieuii ous Amiriinn Is wlml tlie cipcit mil ilofiuilp It Is ton Piuly jet for any one to uite u IkhiU about UimisimpIi Willi Ii v 111 Riiiuntp nppt iiiwc linn. Jlr. I.phN's "Life of TIipoiIoip IoosppH" mis pntpiitlv pippurfil for tin ptii pose of gittliiK 011 tin" marlrt nt flip (atlipst i(islip numiPiit a book wlilcli would iocr tlin lomptptpil uirtpf of its sulijpct. If tlip author liad iIp otnl tlnpp rw instpad of tlitpe months to his tusk the xolunic would liap hail greatpr uIiip. Vet It has mm h niPiit. Tlif stor of tlip pi ojti psn'n c I mo Piiiptit itilininaluiK in tlip noininn tion of Ttonsptplt fnt tin. ii psiilpnt v in I which tlip uoiulnatiou of Tuft was made possible He does, howetcr, cliurge the committer on uedputinls with ig noring tlip pideu(p in stating the Tuft delegates fiom the distiicts contested liv Hoosevelt ilelpgntcs and he insists that a inn jni t of tlip Itepubllcnn otPis of the lounliv prefpned ltoosexelt to Tuft. Stinlentsiof political hjstoo will find the diapteiH dialing with these matters full of Interesting and impor tant lnateiinl The storj of Uooseielt's caieer lias been told sn nmn lirnoo ttinf lt "" " " ." ....... ...uv Lewis's naiiatlve as a whole contains little that is new. He , has doubtless , .lefTersnn, JIadison, Webster and I, in dinvvn laigelv fiom the twelvp to fifteen oln. whose vvouls of inipeiishnble wis Iivch tlint have pieviously appeared, dom have been heie formulated in a hut he has digested his material n,iid I new lombinnlion nud for u new pui prodtued a consecutive and iuteuseh pose. interesting narrative. TUB t.irK Or nilKODORK ROOSKVKI.r Hv William Draper Inlsi With an In Iroductlun l VMIllan, llnuard 'Inft rhll adelphla lha John C Winston Compan. J- J. Portraits of Early Americans "I'oitinils of the Founders" is a most inteiesting and valuable c ontribu . 'ion to the eaih history of our lountrv.l I'orti aits of 1"" distinguished people nie given', together with short biogtaph-1 ii nl sketches of cuch bv Chailes Knonles Iloltou, libiaiian of the Bos ton Atheneum The frontispiece is Hannah I'enn, the wife of the founder of this state. She was a woman noted for her brave spiiit. and who greatlv aided her husband in his lemarkable rnteipiife. There nie to be found nlso several other portraits of leading I'liil ndelphians Of the early dajs, as Samuel Carpenter, trensuier of the (piovinre; Andievv Hamilton, leeoider; .Tames f.ognn, Venn's seuetnry and business agent, and Isaac N'oiris, niavoi of Philadelphia in 17"4, nud' his wife Man. parents of n faniilv of six sous and eight ilaughterK, noted for theii "love foi languages and 'polite liteiu Ime'." The headmaster of the first tjuaker school in our citv, tlie Itev. (,'eoige Keith, "u very militant Cluis tian," is also portrajed, as well us Johannes Kelpius, Tietist, who, with a Chapter of 1'eifection in 10!)1 settled, ou tlie banks of AVissahickon Cieek, mar the present I'aiimount I'aik. I Tlieie their dioss, their docttines nnd their holj living attractfd mm li uotiie, ' and there, ns Whittler relates : I "I'ninful Ivolpius from his hermit den liv Wissahickon. innddest of good men ' Dreamed o'er the Chiliast dreams of I I'eteisen." I THE FOl'.NDEHS Torllalls of persons I 1 irn abtoail who earn to the t'olotilfa In i ."orlh merlca Leforn the jeaj- 17111 Vlth i an introduction biographical outlines and ruiuuiviiiN uii inp poriraiiK. iho volumes Bv I'harles Knowtes Ilolton. Boston Ihe Boston ' Athenaeum. Anew ALFRED NOYES volume contain ing all his new poetry since 1914 and many other poems hitherto unpublished in America are collected in his volume just published, THE NEW MORNING It contains such well-liked poems as "The Avenue of the Allies," "Piinceton, 1917," "Kilmeny," etc., and is teimed by the Philadelphia Press "the greatest volume of verse that Noyes has written." STOKES, Publisher KIPLING HE STANDS alone in interpreting his tune and li is people. It is a short step from interpre tation to prophecy, but a step that only a great poet can take In THE YEARS BETWEEN Kipling has taken it. These poems have, to gether vith the old vigor of utterance, the pro found note of prophecy. Kcad "The Outlaws," Kipling's poem proph esying the German in vasion of Belgium At AU Bcokicller Net $1.50 Doubleday, Page & Co. qAWIIS, CITV, frKTT YORK 1 Tsfw 1 HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN'S CREED The Unique Patriotic Docu ment That on Haiti mote's SI 000 Prize As n fpntllin nT'tlic nnh.ui ,. I.I. pfltgn fin UnieiKniilntiiiii. prolinblv j 2.nnn,o(V) S,1(1 , 1,11,1, ,. ,emol7r,i "The Amen, nn, Cicd' during (he first few months f , pmin Ipntlon In the win Id nai I J,.,- tlut -jo 000. 000 iiump i,lt , ,1,,. sanil m M n,,or """ ""t l the child, en but thilrl imients mid all adults mnv know this creed and how it ,,i. t be p,P,io, Matthew I'ligo Audi em. hn wiitten a little ollime entitled "The Amen, mi's Cieeil nml Its Meaning " As the j. in 1010 diew toward its close and it beinnie nun noil mole ob mous that we weie to be dinwii into the wnrllenn Steiling Cliiipui. of New "' comeied the iilia of pioniotmg a nation-wnle loutest fr ,,. nl,n. ofn iiatloiml ci. id with h should be the1 briefest possible Himinni of Ainu nun pohtlial faith, iiltimatelx well e picssed 1'niH in 1!H7 the lontest iui. an 1101 'I H a iipiisiiitatne githnnv of Ameinaii nutliors nitistn and nil ' toil A little Intel .Minor I'lctnn. on behalf of the ulv ,,f ltnltinioie. offi 1 ed a piie of S1000 foi the winning of the1 reed The siifipssful cmnpi tilm wis Wlllllllll Tjler 1'ngp, deik of the Mnuse of Itppiesentatics of the t iiitnl States. Congiess, The need committee was swamped with lequests f,u uiiies and all nian- ner ot questions about it i'limllv li Andiews, (hairman of the inminitlee, , itf self defense prepiued the little book. ' "The Aineiiciiu's Cieed nml Its Minn ing." Here he tells the whole stun of the oiigin und deeIopinent of the idea, the original documents fiom wliuli the ireed wns ilinwn, as well ns smne thing of the lues of tlie gunt Amen n .. .... 111. . in i.n- 11411 .lllll'll ' can statesmen. Washinirtiiii. Ilnuimk run AvtnuK'VN s iii:ei ni us Mh.ANJM! Il Jtntlhew Pane Amlrews I llataVn I'lts IJoubleJav Page & u JUDITH BLUE LAKE BNCH "by JacKson Gregory "I have told my secretary," writes a Chattanooga minister, "not to begin 'JUDITH' on Saturdsy, for she would surely break Sunday finishing it!" - rou will like "JUDITH," too. $1.50. kCHAMES SCRIBNERSS SONS rnFIH AVE AT48SE NEW YORK James Oliver Curwood Miki and Neewa go out into the world together. Miki is a pup with a shady family tree, Neewa an orphan bear'cub; and both are fighters. Their friend ship begins with the mutual re spect gained from a fight. Nomads of the North is a story full of thrills and laugh ter. The human romance in this book you will like fully as much as this strange animal com radeship. Ncl, $1.50 at all booksellers. Doubleday, Page Sc Co. Garden City, New York, D VENTUROUS days and nights afoot along the dusty moun tain ways of the Holy Land days filled with the dramatic and colorful contrasts of this most traditional of lands over run with Anzacs and Highlanders nights alone with' the peace of the hills and stars that looked.down upon David and Saul. v These have been described in a mem orable niw book by John Finley, late Red Cross Commissioner to Pales tine. A Pilgrim in Palestine By John Finley Profusely illustrated, $2.00 kCHARUS SCRIBNERS SONS pnrni aveambsstnewydrk -IACOB5 (628 UPOR CHESTNir BOOKS 5TRECT CHESTNUT STATIONERY. AND ENGRAVING Tsrii If JsB Bolshevism By JOHN SPARGO (Jnlni s,lrt , ,,, ,,, ,un,p, lfrn, mt,P fnr ,il Hook) ' ??a,rK', V"1 bool " overrunning storehouse 6f facta for which a I Will be .grateful." Charlei Edward Rut. ell, in New York Timei. "Admirable atudy of the Ruieian Revolution and the Soviet." Simeon Strun.ky, in New York Evening Pott. "If all American, who talk, often to ignorantly, would read thia book they would be immeasurably better for the epe. nencei."New York Sun. J.Thf. fir,t carefuI' intelligent English." New York Globe. Fon,una,e to Ilave book ,ike John Spargo's 'Bolshevism'." Ex-President William H Taft, in Philadelphia Public Ledger. FOUR EDITIONS TWO WEEKS AFTER PUBLICATION At All Rooks tores Today $l.r0 HARPER & BROTHERS Kerensky's Book THE PRELUDE TO BOLSHEVISM By A. F. KERENSKY. Former Prime. Minintr.r nf Russia. , . . .' '"""'' "J II rHH Marine, , nUSSiatl Army llii" volume tells er.v (iiaphicallv and eiy completelv the first chapter in the diama of Bolshevism. Few understand how this doctrine, which was at first kept in check, suddenly spread like wildfire tin ouch the Russian nation. One of the few men who lcally knows the inner secrets of the lise to power of the Bol sheviks is Kerensky, who was the greatest power in Russia during the penod between the abdication of the Czar and he triumph of Lenine and Tiotsky. ' At AU Bookstores, $2.50 , DODD, MEAD & COMPANY, NEW YORK Christopher By the author of "ELIZABETH) AND HER GERMAN GARDEN" L W English hearts, but German r' and a'f. So they hail to leare England for America. And then America got into the war. Enemy aliens they would have remained if Mr. Twist, resigning as mother, hadn't mad them citizens by but you'll read that for yourself. Net St SO DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. GARDEN CITY, N. Y. Pieph ere rta tadtnw oijminn it hiiKclv or v.iing eUremel) wroth over it. The critics prod.iim it .i notable contribution to LiiRlish biographiL.il lif ature ami .in altogether remarkable performance. This audacious bioRiaplicr's eiv candid, wittj and altogether brilliant essajs on Cardinal .Manning, Florence Nightingale, Dr. Arnold of Rugby, and General Gordon are revelations in their treatment of more or less romantic celebrities as er human human beings. If Mr. Stiachev's book, contained his life of Florence Nightingale alone, it would be well worth ov ning, but theie are aho three other biog laphics in it cqiialh as rate. 1 (ill bnohvcUen G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS LAD : A Dog ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE Whose stories of Lad have brought him scores of letters, has collected them into a book which must appeal deeply to every one who has ever known and loved a fine collie. Lad was a real dog, Mr. Terhune says, "the greatest dog by far I have known." Net, $1.75 Oulri Mini nnu llnohtloic ui of E. P. DUTTON & CO. 6Sl 'HUB IIIWIMB m '' M ''M Ma Pettengill By Harry Leon Wilson Further adventures of our old fiiend, "Ma Pettengill," petticoat lot" of Arrowhead Ranch, who appeared in "Ruggles of Red Gap," told by that shiewd 'and kindly old ranchwoman in delightfully humorous and slangy ver micular. Net, $1.50, at all bookstores. DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. llllBllilBlll IIIBIIIIIBIIIIIBIIiilBIIIIBIIIllBllllWillllBIIIIIBIII 1 "Of Absorbing Interest and PoiOer" THE HIGHER POWERS OF MIND 'AND SPIRIT A NBW "MFtj-BOQK" BV I RALPH WALDO TRINE I Author of that 'VVortd.''sinou CMssilc, IN TUNE WITH THE INFINITE ' (33-Tir THOUHAND) ' '" 'v ami QTiir.it iNHi-iiiiMj nnpKs. U All Honlstor. 1 BO hncl for Vrrr Ilooklr-I j "nAi.ru Vai.uo thinki thkma,n ani ;a vvohkv JDodd, Mead & Company, 449 Fouitk Aygnae, Nevy Yr)tp study which h as been done in Est. 1817 New York ' -" --- w-. a)Hl UommaiUter-tn-UMCf 0 ltl and Columbus Ltron Strachey's MINENT ICTORIANS II ilh poilrallt, ,1,30 tier. New York and London Fifth Are., tir York II.M IIIMI MM II MIHIlM 'I'iB I, M ' IB .MIIMBHM rl New York H1BIIIIiBi',iB'.IBiiIB.'I iniypi r fJ,i ! J'tTMl : y.-ii ' Vfft ii ii ii m "V. &i & m fljsJ jJ 'fl ifl ;;j iu. ' ? &. i?" ?! 1 V ,xr r 1 W V Vt nv". C 'tu.- r' H Si IVA- !- if '' - -C i 1 K " p - ir Vs" ..-v: r. . f.va via. i. i- ; w t- ' j. a tit .&m. ,m A:ht m..'.. was. . i Jr..., K.v . "
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers