Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, December 13, 1919, Postscript Closing Stock Prices, Page 12, Image 12

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EVENING PUBLJG LEDGERPHirABELHIA; SAlDAX DECEMBER ; 4," ,191&'
- wAVii "r'
i
- .
NEW HOLIDAY BOOKS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
war
Make Your Christmas Gift
The Bobk of the Year I
BOOKS FOR THE YOUNG
OF BOTH SEXES
FROM BROADWAY
When in Doubt '
TO THE TRENCHES
? ?'3W
THE YOUNG
VISITERS
HMHBannBaannan
By DAISY ASHFORD (Aged 9)
With a Preface by J. M. Barrie
"the funniest book of a
generation. "Chicago News'7
Just Published
THE VITAL MESSAGE
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Author of THE NEW REVELATION, etc.
THE VITAL MESSAGE is an original and
startling discussion of the question, "Are the
dead-really dead?" Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
scholar, physician, writer,, is a recognized ex
pert on psychic questions. He here carries on
his -declaration of faith as set forth in THE
NEW REVELATION to very definite con
elusions.' "He-sets forth his views" and' reasons for his
faith with a simplicity, a sincerity and absence
of either dogmatism or fanaticism which must
commend him to the respectful attention of
even those who are the most skeptical."
GEORGE
Publishers
H.
Li J"
An ideal book to send at Christmas time to all your
x friends, to a young boy or an old boy, to everyore
who loves a dog and a good story. $2.00 net.
"'Lad' carries more keen interest and heart appeal than any other
volume of the kind written -within ten years." Eva. World, New York.
"'Lad wins you the moment you are introduced." Christian Science
Monitor.
"Tho manner of its telling 13 delightful." Boston Evening Transcript.
"SS SSS-ffS" E. P. DUTTON & CO. n.TfcV-
Red
Pepper Burns
again I "Red" of the flaming
hair and sunny smile and the
understanding of human hearts
and "Black" Robert Mc
Pherson Black, tho exception
ally human young" clergyman
who came to preach at the
Stone Church. And then,
there's the lovable woman
whom Black loves, and the x
trifling little flirt who makes
so much trouble not for
getting Mrs. R. P. Burns, of
course 1 A wholesome uplift
ing book.
RED AND
BLACK
-" BY
Grace S. Richmond
Author of "Red Pepper Burns." Etc
Net. Jl.CO
Published r
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO.
eusxests that you buy
Books for Gifts
W hve the boobs miscellaneous,
rellstoua. sift books. Action, Juveniles,
lbl8 aleo unsurpassed assortments
M Chrlstrau cards, booklets and cI
tatara. rspoon Building
ifer'nti Saiukhu Street
t xM JwwVw
:w
WiAn
New York Tribune.
DORAN
COMPANY
New York
By
ALBERT PAYSON
TERHUNE
THE BOOKS THAT MAKE
YOU HAPPY!
COLAS BREUGNON,
BURGUNDIAN
By ROMAIN ROLLAND
Colas lover. flshter and plain
spoken wag. la the embodied braery
and gayety or medieval Trance.
"Seven or elsht hours of delight
T7is Reilew.
$1.75 net.
THE HAPPY YEARS
By INEZ HAYNES IRWIN
V'lt r!i2?be " Earnest" found
out that "There Is no such thing as
uid Age.
oH.1iff.fc,he real ""Its of tliess
stories Is the amount of natural emo
tion they can suggest without falling
over on the wrong side." A', r. Ztc.
nmg Sun, l'
$1.60 net.
Henry Holt & Co.
10 .west mn st.
NKW VOHK CITY
KM
-
Books on
Civil Engineering
Philadelphia Book Company
17 South 9th Street
-lAe&Bs
IWtUC
ottsTwrr
ctrec
SJ!
BOOKS
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grmaHtvKjmt.Mmm
mmmSBBBSm
3 flOii i& 1
1 I n
l IBS v M
iC!S??STrtr-r . 3
GEOHOE O'NEIL,
A tu'rnly-ear.oId poet vho Is
writing verse of lino quality
A PROPHET OF BEAUTY
George O'NeWs First Volume
Reveals a Poet of
Rare Charm
No Inrer of poetry should overlook
"The Cobbler in Willow Street." the
first volume of verse by GeorRC O'Xeil.
It is one of the mo.t promising collec
tions of poetry which hns nppenred in
many a year. Mr. O'Xcil N only twenty
j ears old. but he hns an appreciation
of beauty and a sift in versification
which many older men lacl. In the
few short years of his life the beauty
of (he world has impressed itself upon
him and forced him to nttempt to ninlte
others sec. and feel as he feels and
sees. He sets forth his compel in the
introductory poem, the first two stanzas
of which run in this -way:
I cannot find the truth that men have
told.
But onlv know the beauty of a congr;
And nothing truer than tho white se
foam Feathering where the Bold beach-grass
Is long;
Or truer than a high complacent pine
Pointed to stars upon a lifted hill ;
Or any eloquence of harmony
Telling as much as w hen. a w Ind falls
still.
He writes of "such simple miracles
as sons and spring," of "yellow iris
wading nt the edge" of a pool, of "the
slender fingers of an April rain," and
of "unopened violets catching the hour's
first sunlight'as a crown." lie is fas
cinated by the charm of things about
him. and he has that gift of langunge
which can convey to others some of the
emotions which stir in his breast. If
he fulfills the promise of this volume
we shall in a few years have an Amer
ican poet of whom we can be proud.
THC COHrLEP. IN -WIT.LOW STTtnET And
other poems Bv George O'Ncil. New
York- Hon! Llerlsht J 1-55
t
wrote "Walking Stick
Papers." Did you read it? If
not you missed something
"monstrously clever," as
James Huneker remarked.
is his latest. Do you know
the people you see every day?
Are they to you a great sport,
an adventure, a romance of
the majestic destiny of the
ordinary man? Here you
know for the rich joy that
they are: your tailor, your
washwoman (and her hus
band), your lodger across
the way, or your neighbor
next door; through the eyes
of "America's most original
man of letters" you become
the pleasantest thing in the
world, an amateur of people.
If you are not a crabby her
mit you'll declare this the jol
liest, humanest book in the
.world.
Mr. Holiday's books are for
sale in all bookshops, PEEPS
AT PEOPLE, BROOME
STREET STRAWS, WALKING
STICK PAPERS, the best of
company wherever you go.
Want a present for a man?
Give him PEEPS AT PEOPLE
Book
Shops
IB H ffl w H lm .
U 1 1 1 Ea
PEEPS
HT PEOPLE
Ii()
I Bftt"'
About Birds and the War and
Heroes and Heroines and
Other Things
,T. Walker MeSpndden, who Is one
of the most popular of "popularizers,"
nnd vho has condensed Shakespeare and
Dickens niiiK opera librettos and many
another author of Interest, lias fol
lowed his customary method of concise
. nHnl,trt nABA,nU.. In "Tl,n Ttnvn'
,T-l. fIUl 111. JIl.-ICIIKIltUU W -fc.. ....,. .
Hook of Famous Soldiers." Among his
Mibjerts are Washington, Orant. Lee,
Napoleon, Wellington, Gordon, lloljerts.
Kitchener, nnd of the recent -world
war, Hnig, Joffre, Koch and Tershing.
Mr McSpadden incorporates n good
deal of useful information, carefully
verified, and his book, while written in
, readable style, is vcr free from "hero-
izing" or the kind of mnwkishness thnt
such books are singularly liable to.
The field of Charles II. I. Johnston's
' Famous OeneralR of the Oreat War."
an the title indicates, is more restrict
ed than that of Mr. McSpaddcu's work.
And Mr. Johnston just can't help sen
timentalizing. His stories, which urc
full of interesting data and rich in an
ecdotes of the subjects, very often read
like the nterngp Sunday newspaper sup
plement's flowery nnd extravagant
character sketches of personalities which
have plunged into the news. Doubtless
niilitnry nnd political critics will take
exception to some of Mr, Johnston's
appraisals. The fault, if indeed this is
a fault, in Mr. Johnston's book is that
it has no sense of the rompnrative-all
is superlntive. Rut lots of people want
their heroes 100 per cent or nothiug, nnd
Mr'. Johnston will satisfy them with his
percentages. It might be pointed out
that his estimate of Field Marshal
French, for instance, will not be con
curred in by the majority of Uritish
military men or statesmen ; his attacks
on the dead Kitchener have stirred a big
row in British urnij circles, and former
Premier Asquith, who was at the head
of the government over the period when
French was failing in Flanders and
France (for which he was supersedeil
by-Tlaig), has discredited much of the
marshal's claims made in his lately pub
lished war book. In addition to such
predominant personalities of the war as
Joffre. Foch, Albert of Belgium, Fersh
ing. Haig and Diaz, sketches, very val
uable, are given of Petain. Alleuby.
DTspery. De rnstelnnu, Jan Smuts,
Stanlej 'Maude and Julian Pjng.
In "The Ilovs' Book of Battles"
Chelsea Curtis Fraser tells interestingly
the stories of eleven famous land com
bats. They include Bunker Hill. Sara
toga, Yorktown, Au-terlitz. Waterloo,
Gettysburg, Sedan, Ypres, Verdun, sec
ond Mnrne, Argnuuc-Meuse. The book
is well illustrated.
"Thornton Burgess's Book of Birds"
tells In the familiar nnd easy-to-read
stle of this favorite writer for the
ouuger children the life stories of tome
of our best-known nnd bet-loved na
tive birds. .Louis Agajssiz Puerto, one
of the masters of ornithological art. fur
nishes a liberal supply of lifelike illus
trations, many of them in color.
"Singing Onmes for Children" are
written by Eleanor Farjeon, who bases
her games on fairy leinds and stories
of nature. Full directions arc given for
staging the several pieces and the metri
cal text is lilornlly- interspersed with
singable ltrics. .1. Littlejohns. It. A...
has. supplied some very charming pic
tures in colors.
A classic much beloved by the Ital
ian children is made available for their
American cousins in "The Little Lead
Soldier." The story which the writer.
Anna Franchi. has written about the
toy is full of liveliness, od adventure,
and it is told with engaging simplicilv
and with much literary distinction. S.
F. Woodrull. who has turned it into
English for -the first time, hns to his
credit an ndmirable translation, and the
illustrations by Hattic L. Price arc ef
fective. -
I "Pioneers of America" tells in easy
going story form, yet with historical
accuracj, some hero-tales of the da.s
I when America was Jint the great re-
public thnt it lias grown to be. but was
I a wilderness offering opportunity to the
brave and brawny and brainy to new
out a new nation. La Salle, Boone,
Pontine, Lewis nnd Clark and other
well-known figures of the early dajs
appear in the pages. The authors art
Albert Blaisdell and F. K. Ball, both
well-known writers for the joungcr
generation.
"Billy Vanilla" had a real name of
William McMillan. His friends were
the Shaggy Boy, with hjs woollv things
for cold weather; the Boy a Thousand
Years Old. who knew almost every
thing; the Man With the Red Whiskers,
who was as good and kind as he was
strong; the Little Old Lady, who
wasn't so very old nftcr all; Little
Silver Locks, just a gTT-1. but a likable
oue, and Carlo, that had to have a
nart in and of even thing, even the
cream caramels. There were many
snowbirds aud some other birds, more
dogs than Carlo, nnd even some wolves,
aud one big red bull that fortunately
was a coward. These children hunted
fur buried- treasure -organized a cru
sade, went in search of the North
Pole, and figured in some very exciting
times A delightful story for bojs and
girls from live to ten.
LOYS' DOOK OF FAMOUS SOLDIERS. By
. J Walker McSpadden. New YorK. T V
( rouell Co
FAMWS QUNEHALS OF THK OUEAT
WAn n Charles K. L. Johnston. Boj-
I mi Th rns" Co.
EOYS- 1'OOK OF I1ATTLF.S- By ChelM-l
( urtu 1 raser. new ioik: i. l . rowen
Co
THORNTON' BURGESS'S BOOK OF BIRDS
U Thornton W Burgess. Boston, Little,
Brown & Co
THE LITTT.1: LEAD SOLDIER. By Anna
Franchi 1'hlladelphla-. Tenn Publishing
Co 1 Ml
BILLY VANILLA. By S N. Sheridan.
Boston. Lathrop, Lee & SheparU Co.
$1 5
G1HLS- BOOK OF THE RED CROSS By
Mary K. Hde Ntw York: T Y Crowtil
''I.
SINdlKQ OAMES FOR CHILDREN. By
Eleanor Farjeon New York: E V Dut-
ton Co
PIONEERS- Or AMF.lilCA. Bv Albert W.
Ulatsdell and Franrls K. Hall Boston-
Utile. Brown . Co II
ULLD
ARN
W. A. FRASER,
Author of MOOSWA,
FOOL'S GOLD, etc.
"Thrilling episodes in the ca
reer of a law-defying latter
day Robin Hood of the
Northern frontier the most
reckless of modern adventur
ers." Philadelphia North
American ,
Fourth Edition Now Ready
GEORGE H.
Publishers
DORAN COMPANY
New York
EY
w 1 .
Sgt. JFoolcott Writes Dough
boy's Book on Doughboys.
Other War Books
From the risks nnd rlsqucrles of
Broadway, where he was ' a first
nighter employed by a newspaper to
'analyze, criticise nnd maybe deodorize
the now shows for the advice nnd In
formation of the public, Alexander
AVoolcott, by virtue of the astonishing
mutations of the war, found himself In
Paris and nt the various fronts ns a
reporter for The Stars and Stripes,
tile official weekly of the A. E. V.
In "The Command is Forward." Mr.
Woolcott has irathered from the files of
the Stars and Stripes a number of,1
articles written with the newspaper
man's keenness of observation and
surety of impression. He had especially
favorable auspices under which to do
his war reporting as the field corres
pondent of the A. E. i official news
paper, and made so much of his oppor
tunities that this anthology of what he
considers best worth preservation of his
writings as a member of its staff makes
one of the most human books of the
war, a distinction which It shares with
u book on the enrlier phases of tho
career of the A, E, F. by his fellow
Gotham dramatic critic, Hcywood
Broun. Mr. Woolcott has written no
work on strategy, no chronicle of battles
that already seem long ago, but a very
lively,, vivid scries of stories in which
contemporaneousness and human, inter
est vie for predominance,
"Why We Fought" is the arguments
of an ex-nrmy captain In faor of the
league of nations. It is rather slight
in material and tcxturo but presents,
in the word of' ex-President Tnft, who
agreeably introduces the author, "the
testimony of a witness who was u sol
(lTer on tho fighting front."
"Helping France" tells the inspir-
ing story of the reconstructive work of
the American Red Cross in the devas
tated areas of the battle-torn country.
The story is graphically narrated by
Iluth Gaines, who wns n member of tho
Smith College lied Cross unit. She is
remembered for her other books, "A
Villa in Picardy." and "The Village
Shield." "Uncle Sam. Fighter." gives
an account, partly" Impressionistic and
partly statistical, of the vigor of deter
mination, aud energv of enterprise with
which the United States drafted,
equipped, trained, cared for and utilized
the great army of uenrly 4.000.000 men
which wns the determining factor in
winning the war for the salvation of
civilisation. The civilian ns well as the
military aspects nnd workings of the
great war mnchinc are concisely stated
bv the author, William Atherton
Dupuy,
Sartwell Prentice. D. D.. out of his
experience as a Red Cross chaplain
with the Americans in France, hns
written a graphic book describing the
war from an individual angle. lie calls
it "Padre." nnd very rightly, for it is
permeated with the atmosphere which
is part of tho personality of n welt
beloved minister of the gospel. His book
is simple and sincere and it gives a good
idea of what a chaplalu does in war, a
subject on which many persons arc
somewhat ignorant.
"The Amerionn Front." by Ernest
Pcivotto, who during the war was a
captaiu of engineers assigned to repro
ducing in paintings and drawings the
multifold scenes of tho war. especially
as they concerned the American forces
nnd activities, prints by authority of
the War Department a number of his
striking drawings, which arc supple
mented by text equally facile and
graceful.
Elsie Janis tells in jolly fnshion of
her career as an A. E. F. entertainer
in her book. "The Big Show." Miss
Janis, canceling all her theatrical enter
tainments, entcied heartily into the
work of entertaining our soldiers in
Fiauce, and gave more tlinn tiOO con
certs. "The Soul of tho C. R. 11.." by Mme.
Saint Rene Taillnudier, is the story of
the American Commission for Relief
in Belgium and northern France, a
story that will always glow brightly
ou the pages of American history tor
its service nnd sacrifice. Coming, as it
does, from the pen of a noted French
woman, the tribute is all the more ef
fective. These books view the war from many
angles, and in nearly every case aro
the record of personal participation.
Any of them would be admirable for
Christmas giving, and most of them
would bo permanently tieasured.
THfJ SOUL OP THE C. R. B. By M'adarne
Saint R"ne Tilllandler New York:
Charles Scrlbner's Sons. SI. 7.1.
THE COMMAND IS FORWARD. By Alexan
der -Wooirott New York: The Century
PADRE. By" Sartwell Prentice. New .York:
E. P Dutton & Co $2
UNCLE SAM. FIOHTER. Bv W A. Dupuy.
New York: F. A Stokes Co. SI. SO.
HELl'INO FRANCE. By Ruth (mines. Now
York: IS. P. Dutton i. Co, $2
WHY WE FOUOHT Bv T. O. Chamberlain.
New York: Slnemlllaii Co. 1.
THK BIO SHOW. Bv Elsie Janis. New
York: Cosmopolitan Book Corp. $1 oO.
THE AMERICAN FRONT. By Ernest
Pelxrtto. New York Charles Sorlbners
Sons.
Symbolism of Wpmen's Clothes
.Teunette Lee says the idea for her
now honk. "The Rnincoat Girl." origi
nated from the problem of fashions aud
women's clothes. "I suddenly realized
one day." she writes her publishers,
'.'that, far from being trivinl and
ephemeral, fashions and women's cloth
ing are vitally significant indices of
deeper, social conditions. The thought
came to me nb a kind of Sartor Resnr
tus, turnrd other end trf. The fashions
of the 'COs, with their crinoline and
ringlets, were so thoroughly typical of
the spirit that spread itself in Fourth
of .Tulv oratory nnd the windy ideal
ism of Brook Farm. Where fashions
rh'aneo oftenest and with the most an
parent caprice, I discovered, there is
the fullest life. Fashions in the Rain
coat Town of my story change, oh,-so
slowly. From this idea tho story
arose."
LOVE
LAUGHS
S. G. Tallentyre
One hundred years have passed
since love laughed over the un
expeced ending of this tale.
Yet its charm and quaint beauty
remain as pleasing, its crinoline
as fresh, its square rigged ships
as swift and graceful as on that
memorable day when Captain
King waited in the
wet shrubbery for
Camilla to come
and the story to
begin.
At All Boohtllen.
GEORGE H DORAN COMPANY
m
IsMiiNf ; ', ijfpm
MHsBWBMwcZ5PisHsi.isisisissB
CAPTAIN ERNEST PEIXOTTO
Wlioso official war pictures are re
produced In "The American
Front" NOVEL OF NIPPON
FuiabaleVs Work First Native
Fiction to Be Englished
An inslght.jnto Japanese customs nnd
domestic life is given, in "An Adopted
Husband" ("Sono Omokagc").. which
Is n translation from the Japanese of
Futnbatei by' Buhachlro Mitsui nnd
Gregg M. Sinclair.
Tctsuya Ono Is the adopted husband,
a figure common enough In Japan, but
singular to occidental minds. Aud the
other points of 'the 'triangle nre Tet
suya's wife, Toki-ko, and his wife's
sister, Sayo-ko.
Tctsuya turns, finally, from the nag
ging of his avaricious wife to the shy
love of Sayo-ko, whom Toki-ko had
oppressed and abused and finally tried
to eject from the shelter of the only
homo she know. '
Then it is that Toki-ko awakens to
a realization of the folly of her atti
tude toward an honest husband and es
says toaiin him back. Sa.o-ko. unable
to forget that Toki-ko is her sister, sac
rifices herself aud her love with the
phlegm which seems so characteristic
of the .Tnpanese in these crises and takes
herself beyond the reach of Tctsuya.
The now wretched lover tries to restore
his own self-respect nnd his regard for
Tokf-ko, but fails, nnd the close of the
book finds him a voluntary outcast.
"An Adopted Husband is mildly in
teresting, but, like so many translations,
has doubtless lost much of its power
in tho translating, which, if mnv seem
to some readers, is not as skillfully done
as the book perhaps deserves. This
i .described as the very first Japanese
novel to be Englished.
AN' ADOPTED H"SRAND. TninFjltinn
from the Jnpnneaf of Futabatel Bv B,
Mitsui and GreKB M Sinclair. Nev. York:
.Alfred A Knopf. 1"8.
Robert Cortes
v Holliday
Author of "Walking
Stick Papers;" Etc.
Haveyou a Broadway
mind? A Fifth Ave
nue habit of thought?
A Wall Street point of
view? A Bowery man
ner? A 125th Street
cast of culture? You
may have any or alj'
of these, yet your edu
cation is incomplete
without a" post-graduate
course in Broome
Street, that little
known thoroughfare
of Lower New York.
The pieces' that go to
make up this volume,
Broome Streetian
though they are, range
from Indiana to Lon
don and turn ,from
books to boarding
houses. (Everywhere
there is the delightful
.flavor, the original
slant of mind of the
author of "WALK
ING STICK PA'
PERS." Book
Shops
STREET
&"(tira
aJ&l s
From Ono of toe
Theodore Roosevelt's
Letters to: His Children
. Every two or three years there comes along a book so
entertaining, so refreshing and utterly charming that it is
called by everybody who reads it "the, book of the year."
"Theodore Roosevelt's Letters to His Children" has
universally been recognized as 'one of those rare books.
Make it your, gift to your friends and they will really
prize your gift.
A perpetual delight to grown-ups already a classic
for children!
Edited b Joteph Bucl(lin Bishop, i
At All Bookstores. Illustrated villi "picture letters." $2.00
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
FIFTH AVE. AT 48ST. NEW YORK
The Oxford Books of Verse
To the lover of poetry no volumes could be more welcome, than these
choice anthologies. Their very physical appearance conveys a sense of
ripeness and ease and grace in the intellectual life and their pages are
a source of unending delight. A perfect gift in the best of taste. '
A NewVolume
THE OXFORD BOOK OF AUSTRALASIAN VERSE
Chosen Gy W. Murdock
Net 4.00
A bode with the tang of the antipodes: the fresh and rspidlv moving picture of
new lands and scenes. An interesting selection of some two-hundred poems by
Australians and New Zcalanders, from Wentworth and Adam Lindsay Gordon to
the pocti of the present day.
Other Volumes in the Series
OXFORD BOOK OF ENGLISH
VERSH, A. D. ujo-ipoo
C&ottn and Arranged by Snt AbthUK
QUULBK-COUCK.
EDINBURGH BOOK OF SCOTTISH
VERSE ijoo-i9 .
CWm by W. Niacneoii Dixok.
OXFORD .BOOKS OF BALLADS
C&mci nj EJtiid by Si. Akthuk
Quejji-Couch.
OXFORD BOOK of FRENCH VERSB
XIII Ctntury-XIX Century
tin Frrnekt
Chotrn by St. John Lucu.'
OXFORD BOOK OF CANADIAN
VERSE
Qsuen by Wonuo Camvbhu-
Each Vol. Cloth, Net 4.00,
n fW -iotn, gut
t
ii; r"" moroe?' "P
-r- vw. Mi
Oxford University Press
vmencan
35 West
NewYbrk
This Is the Book Germany Suppressed '
THE MEMOIRS
OF VON TIRPITZ
Ask any bookseller to show you, this important
work. Issued in two large volumes at $7.50
fJcicrlj)(ft-e circular will be sent by the gubltsicrs an request.
ruoMMiKBsDODD, MEAD & COMPANY k
Vo you live South or North'of Marled Street?
In either case you must read 1
THE BOOK OF
PHILADELPHIA
s By Robert Shackleton
Never was there a study of the city at once so
anecdotal, whimsical, humorous, informing, analytical.
Mr. Shackleton explores forgotten 'nooks, finds a hidden
church a'nd an old Pickwickian courtyard. The soul of
the city is laid open as you read. You'll want to rush out,
book in hand, and explore for yourself, and you will be
amazed to find how little you know a,bout your city. This
is a fascinating new volume by the author of
THE BOOK OF BOSTON
THE BOOK OF NEW YORK'
. Drawings by Pullinger and Boyerand many photo
graphs. Frontispiece hi color. Price: Leather, $7.50;,
Cloth, $3.00.
At All Bookstores ' y
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, 925 FILBERT ST.
' ' PHILADELPHIA
Why Not
Our complete stock contains some
thing for every ace and taste:
Gift Books
Latett Fiction
War Books
Also a full line of the latest end most attractive Greeting
(ktrdt, Calendars, Holiday Novelties and Stationery'
' t THE DAYLIGHT BOOKSHOP
1 CkMlsutSt. (N.
"Picture Letturt"
DUBUN BOOK OF IRISH VERSH
173S.1909.
EJiitJ by John Coou.
OXFORD BOOK OF VICTORIAN
VERSE.
CWn by Six. AxTHU QinLLn-Couot.
OXFORD BOOK OF ENGLISH
MYSTICAL VERSB.
CWn by D. S. Nicholson end A. H. Lib.
OXFORD BOOK ef ITALIAN VERSB
XIII Cmuur-XIX Century
fin Italian). i
OWn by St. Jokh Lucas.
OXFORD BOOK of SPANISH VERSB
XHI Century-XX Ccnaiy
(in SpanUi).
CWx by Jaues FmnAEiuos JCsur
eages Net s.oo
Net S8.00
orocco, boards Net S'ixjoo
kronen.
32nd Street
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