kmrkhod "S? C (r yi hi ' K 1 Uo 10 EVENING? PUBLIC EEDG-ER-PHlDABELPHTA", SATURDAY, JANUARY tf, 1920 r i '-" '! -10 M. m 1 urn t m m vn .M ma ' tl'l i& u m m 3 w t I Mil hiai m f 13 1t?M 'J 41 :J8i 1 Grant M. Overtdn .is'i'. j'i,ft- rw i r f ! fKi'ornierjij Literary j&auor ;fi' of the N. Y. "Sun," has written a novel! MERMAID I A former sailor, Mr. Overton has come back to his native Long Island vil lage to live. His story is a sea talc anchored on the Long Island coast, of a foundling who grew up clean in the presence of the sea, and gave more than happiness to the three men who loved her. At all booksellers. Net, $1.75 DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. IF YOU CANNOT KEEP A DOG YOU CAN OWN By ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE "He holocs a dog will adoic the best dog's boo1, of age?." Chi cago Herald. "Delightfully written ... To read the book is to find u new and dear friend in 'Lad: a Don'." N. Y. Times. $2.00, poslaac extra. E.P.Dutton & Co.,681 5th Av.,N.Y By Hugh Walpole the tender and charming story of little Jeremy Cole, an idyll of childhood by the author of THE SECRET CITY, FORTI TUDE, etc. GEORGE H. DORAN COiMPANY SWEDENBORG'S BOOKS At a Nominal Price 10 Cents Any or Bit or the followlns four volumes Wll f sent, prriulil, lo an address cm r-rMpt of 10 nH ?'"P book "Heaif l nod tltll" fi3! I'ttl Ulvlno I'rotlileme" Kit) ' "Hie four Doctrliifs" W3 " llviu Lovp und Wihdum" UI8 ' Kndowpd for that purro"" in Mo ,t offpra 10 ind mi iItps. bonis williout cost or ob't on olhei llinn 10 c -nt each for ipaihnR Th bool.s r rrinlil in Hrs 1 n on (food met' iml tr su.i.jnti t ly bound iu Miff papn co r The American Swedenborg Print ing and Publishing Society Boom "II .1 iOtli Sf , N, ork Don't Miss The TIN SOLDIER By Temple liuiley rnss pi ri isiiim, ( i r"i n fin adelplila IS'ot a War Story The TIN SOLDIER lly Temple Emley unih rho iarnl At (til b () n e Pn.NN rtnisHlM, ii) . fi r,n idelplila fn By Robert Cortes Hollidav A new booh of essays by the author of WALKING-STICK PAPERS. GEORGE 'il DORAN COMPANY THE HARBOR ROAD Sara Ware Basset t simnl urcp rrintlnc V 'tory of homely folk on Cape Cod with humor and pathos and a dianmtic love story l lt Uuuksturcs. 51. Co nrt. The Penn Publishing Company Philadelphia Rare and Unusual Books, i Our new 1920 Catalog of interest ' ing New and Old Books will be mailed , free upon request. POWNLR'S BOOK STORE I tilt II" sr nf n Wr'ln, .oo.l 33-37 North Clark St., Chicago, III ! Storm ui i h , rtgo . l . u 1 a i t.f AuKilep C By Christopher Morley MINCE PIE Full of wii, happiness and fauman kindliness vivid essays and humorous appreciations of famous people. "A most lov able book" Philadelphia Rec ord. GEORGE II. DORAN COMPANV POETRY, FICTION, ECONOMICS AND BOOKS ABOUT THE WAR Lure, of the Sawdust Ring "lfrr lllepliaut Mini," lv l'cnrl Doles Hell, is a romance o tlio tcutlmcnt ami excitement of tlic "big topi." .loan Keunerly, the heroine, istbc tiny stnr ot "the prrcntcst show on earth. " She is depleted by the author with feeling for the psychology ot n growing lnss under iiiiuMiul conditions of environment and her story is told with nn understanding of tho uu-ious phases of clicns life, l'liillp. "the elephant mini," is the hero In n sense, the man whom .loan leariud to low because he was so different fiom so muii) of the sawdust personnel. Anil she almost lost hiiii, too. Then flictc Is Uncle Jerini), a quaint, grufT, lovable old chap who is mentor and chupcroiu and guide and friend to .iouu. Others, too. appear, liders, clow us, barkers and all the aricd crew of the circus arena l'or those for whom circus life has the line of fascination, "Her Klcph.int Man" will prove a very rnjm.ittV book. una i.t'.nrAvr v .v. nv run Doles Hell New lork. Jlobcrt St. Jlcllrlde 1.T5. CyruM Towntend Brady It wc n Malnxr irAs ' it was a maiay WIS an Ugly Weapon .11 j r in the hands Ot a beautiful wnmnn Deauurm woman, that told him who h . . j e was and cave she was and cave him the lost clue to thetreas ure he had buried, he knew nni .knvn J ,. ...UC-U U: not where, and tor which his country was waiting. It started a race across the Pa cihe, between him and an other, his own and his country s enemy. The woman helped and the man won. Which man? That question holds ou Cl in suspense till - ' Sfi.Q' . last chapter of this thrilling ,N V V ;? IN' NEW YORK the theatrical success of the season is ABRAHAM iNCOLN olcott in the Times calls it: ".1 beautiful and itir uny thing. Yon 'it eii ihialUd as it unfolds, and route away a better citi zen." To see "Abraham Lincoln" you must y;o to Xew York, but to read it jou nfed go only to your bookseller. The sale of thirty-two thousand copies, of the book shows it to bo one of those rare plays that read as well as they act. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. -,$1.25 net DRINKWATER'S POCMS, $2.00 net For sale at all boolctoic HOUGHTON MIFFLIN CO. By Oliver Her ford This QLOBE "Full of pictures, puns and poems, one of the merriest books of the season." N. Y. Tribune. GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY THE MAN WITH " THREE NAMES Widely knovi. as George Cotter, novelist. Widely known, also, as Brandon Cathewe, tho jour nalist responsible for the Ban nister reform movement. The third name is at pres ent unknown. Information leading to its discovery and indentification is invited and will be treated confidentially. ""-IMUES 1688 I fOR CHESTNUT F JRflfWS STREET ' P) fly m? The Jpfan Whol (f Won ' ml By I i CyruM Towntend Brady i i w ! hi I V & & .ir-' -w 1 1 p amiiini ii iinwmgaaacaB an -''w.w I STATIONERY AND ENGRAMMA 1 iiy.ii,L,"jgaL-UBrB L CABELL'SJIANDLING OF ANCIENT MYTHS k In "Jurgen" lie Has Produced a Prose Romance of Great Beauty Not to overstate the matter it may safel) he said that .Ininett Hrnnch 'obeli's ".lurgeu" Is one of the most remarkable books that has been written in the l'nglisli lai.guagc within twenty five )cars tf one chose to )lehl to a natural impulse after leuding the book, one ipisht make it lift) or a hundred .vent-s, but It is ulwujm better to restrain one's uilhusiusiu within the bounds of moderation. ".luigeu" l a poetic romance in prose, a prose so ital, so limpid, so beautiful that it makes much that passes for poetr) seem .stale nml unprofitable It is the stor.v of u poet who had spent his jotitli iu the worship of beauty, but in his matyrer .tears hud married the daughter or a rii h nawiibrokei mid . carried on the fundi) business. His wife turned into u shrew and .lurgeu en dured his lot as philosophlcall) as he came a poet who knew that romance does not grow on ever) woman's lips. A monk passed his shop one day, stub bed his toe on a stone in the btreet und cursed the devil for putting it there, .iurgcii protested" and suggested that the devils had enough to bear as it was without being cursed bv mortals. The monk bundles words with him, but .Tur gen persists in saying" kindly things of t lie devils, who are doing only that which has been ordained for them Later in Ihe d.i) Jurgen, when passing the Cis tercian Abbe), met a gcrtlcmun dressed all in black who stopped him ami thanked him for his good word. The) talked together and Jurgen confided to the man that his wife did not under stand him. As the) parted the gentle man in black was wondcrine how he eouhl reward the man who had spoken , oil oNiim. When .7urKeii reached home t'lnt right his wife was gone, and sin did not return the next day. Someone tohl him that it would be the manly tlllns for llim to search for her. Hc acts on the sugBeIon mid bcKins la search which takes him to a cave. wnere lie nnus a centaur anil the slint nf Xisu. Tin. ninnr i imm in. confesses that he is seeking justice, has him don the shirt and tells him that i ir their search they must pass over 1 1n uvave of a dream and through the malice nl timp. Thej nt ,Nit Ulj K.inlcn tliat lies between dawn and sunrise, wheie voting men and maidens in the glamour of their first love walk aim in arm con tinually. Jurgen finds there his own first love all alone apparently waiting for some one. Later lie discovers that she is in the fnini of Helen of Troy, that woman whom no man could see .mil afterward deire an) other. Theu he sleep nnd when he wakes he finds that the centaur has been changed into an ordinar.v horse. He mounts the horse and enters on a spiies of ndven tiues that takes him to the heaver or hell of the old mv tliologies nnd brings him iu contact with the moon ni.vths and .the sun m.vths. Indeed. .Imgen himself , at this time is a sort of a sun m)th. the personification of the procreative energ) of nature. As a natural lesiilt he ha most enticing uflaiis with the fabled women of gicat bcuitv and even with a vampire in hell and with the wife of the devil himself. But he finds jus tice nowhere, not even in the CluUtiau heaven. In explaining himself .Tin gen sa-, to one of the archangel. "I did but search for justice, and I could not tind it in the eves of) our God. but onlv love and such forgiveness as trou- bled me." The anhaugcl replied. "Hi ......LA nf fl.i.f , .n lViimiIiI t-Aminr. nrwt ,n should till that lives rejoice; and more naitidilarlv should we rejoice that dwell in heaven and hourlv praise our Lord God's negligence of justice wherebv we v.iut r. .ii.ii. .'vi -...j,.... ivjw. v, , ...... .-.. aie permitted to enter into this plane. ' At the end of what seems to him a' vear .lurgeu returns Home ami nmis his wife sitting tpnctly b) the lire at work with her needle us he would have found her if he had returned to his 'house on the evenirg of the da) when 1 the monk stubbed his toe on a stone iu 1 tlic street in front nf his shop. ' With all its beauties the book is not for the unsophisticated or the piudNh I or the narrow-minded. To the educated man and woman with n broad to'er.iuce for the great natmal forces and theii I methods of operation and withar nn- preeiutinn for a lomantic philosophy which finds the onl) lealism in the things I of the imagination "Jurgen" will be n 1 iov ami u delight. There is humor in I it and satire and a deep tenderness and an all einhiaciug svmpathv aid a pro I found faith in something teallv fine in I lniiuiiii nature that ought to insure to it'u Ions life and inn) possibh give it a permanent place in the literature of the language. We should be proud that an American has produced so gicat a work of constructive ami irformed imag ination. Jl nOKN V comedy of Justin Tiy Tam"s HimiicIi Cnbel! Nt York Itobcrt M. Mc- Hride .t Co. J2 Recouly's Life of Foch 'aptuin Becoul). nuthoi of the hook "I'odi: the AViunei of the War. wlncli ' I harles Scribner's Sons are publishing I shorllv. has frequeuth written under I the name of f.'antr.iu X This book ol ' his reflects his know ledge gained from i ii Inn;.' and close contact with the great general and is an extraordinarily vivid i iieentation ot l oen s cnaracter anu lradersliip. Jack London might have written this tale o the Sea and the Northwest; of a tenderfoot among strong men, hardened by suffering, spurred on by love, and coming out of a terrible, spirit-breaking test, a man. THE SHEPHERD OF THE SEA by Henry Leverage Net $1.75 Published by DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. THE VITAL MESSAGE Sir Arthur Conan Doyle "His wonderful ability to write, brings to Soiritualism a cham pion worthy of the armor." -N. Y. Mail GEORGE 11. DORAN COMPANY Zfi'' " ""XSf ' ' vJ 4 . sW ycy yK ji RUDYARD KIPLIXU Whose eise fiom ISS.I lo 1018 has been collected into a single volume RUDYARD KIPLING REIGNS AS THE KING OF THEM ALL The Inclusive Edition" of His I krone as Chief Poet 'lhoe who expect to find the "In clusive IMition" of Iludyard Kipling's verse a complete edition will be disap pointed. It is called "inclusive" nd visedl), for it includes the erso writ ten between lbS." and 191S. The earlier veise. produced between 1ST0 and 1SS5, is omitted. The lntter is bo.v isli stuff or frankly imitative of older poets. Mr. Kipling evidently now regards it as 'prentice woik. The new volume thus contains all that he has wiitten from the time when he began to find himself down to the beginning of last ear. .The concluding poem in the book is the tiibutc to Roose velt after his death last January. It is impossible to give even a slight 1 study to the mass of verse iu the more I than "00 pages of the volume without a new und more vivid impression of the power of the man. The first conclu sion that obtrudes itself upon the con sciousness is that here is a great mas , culinc force manifesting itseif. There ' arc persons who say that poetry is all er) well for womeu, but men have more ..... . ..... i , themselves witn it. Ana tins is true ot I in'K'h poetrv churacteiyed bv nothing but u skill m versihcatiou and a pretty ' imagination. But prettincss is the last Hung that Kipling seeks, ile has been for the most part a commentator on the , greui rmni m mi iimr, i-skviiij creai events in inc uruisn empire, iie has been called the poet of British im perialism, and there 1s justification for the title. He has also been called a great writer of political editorials in vei.se, and many poems iu this volume can be found to give warrant to Jhis description of him. So much of his verc deals with the events and the problems of his time that one cannot help wondering whether, when it has lost its significance, save to tne student ot nisiory, iimi uc rein; an .. . , . .. . , . . ' ii . ,t ,. ' !..! ail. Mill ciimiiiaiing nn uic iraiiinii conteninorary comment there remains a bod) of verse that will not depend for ,. , Ar Me.. .n ,,...,1,1.,.. v., if !ta ti raiment of those things which aicas, old as thc human heait ami as varied : as human perversit). i lis ii'ii!? ui nil- uii itii. it.aiJM i.,.i. jl?' I nlikc Keats and hwinourne ami Tenuvson this mnn did not rcort to the classical myths or the Arthurian legends for his material, lie takes his imagery from the Bible and addi esses the "Lord (!od of Hosts" rather than thc Muses. He finds the sulTeiings of the moderns suthcientl) moving without having to write about the tragedies of past ceutuncs Indeed, his cnnteiupn !.rlness marks him annit from all his contcmporaiics and fiom his immediate predecessors, nut mere is in iniicu oi SOME PROBLEMS OF EMPLOYMENT Boohs on Shop Management, Industrial Psychology and the Economics of Labor Both tapital atlJ lahnr arc astir with realization and recognition of their separating mill their mutual piohlcni. l'olitieallj this has beeu shown by the 1'rrsIUent'a two coimuisKionH to relate and aecoiniuoilate the crises that have arisen since the war, b the pioimtlca tion of Hit? I'luinb plan and other I schemes fur new controls of industry and. ot course, by the steel and coal strikcK Tartly antecedent to the keen interest Uisplawil muring economists, capitalists and labor leaders ami partl. of courte, as a ielle of dcliuite move ments are numerous honks dealim; with shop psycholog and industrial psy t'holog) . ".Manugenicut and Men," by Mejer Hlooinfield, an authority iu the Held, is one of the most important. Mr Illoomfield writes from a first hand and intuiie study of conditions in this country and abroad. His book is main ly an analysis and interpretation nf the momentous industrial dcelupinciitn In Oreat ISritain, wheie shop steward, shop management, etc.. hate progressed cry far. Iloth labor chiefs and execu tive managers co-operated in furnish ing materiul uud criticism. The appen dices furnish u comprehensive exhibit of the joint industrial management which is prevailing more and more iu i the T.ritisu Isles. . i "ninployuieat Psychology,' by Henry C Ldnk, is n guide to practice rather than a theoretical exposition. It bets forth tho practical application of tho new psychology to the selection, train ing, grading and retention of employes. Doctor Liqk makes a strong case out against the usual hit or-mlss vvay of employing men nnd not ouly urges hut shows how system may be beneficial to (lift ('iiipU)jea and profitable, to tho plant. "Organizing for Work" is by II. I,, (iautt, remembered for h! "york, Wages and Profit," It Ureases ths KRjhOFt Verse Contains His Title to ihcXNtoXZ" of His Generation it a contemporariness which has an eternal quality, for he measures the doings of the men of the present by the Melehisedeekian standards whirh have neither beginning nor end of da)S. Justice and truth and lo.valty and ten derness nnd compassion aic the themes that recur again and neain in aning form, and they" aie handled with such XUllll, mm IHUV ULl' JIUllUll'U Willi bUL'll skill nnd .,.... hum- n,i i,.ui,t nU tn justifv those who insist that he is head X.i oi...i.i i n .i ?. .i. and shoulders above all other men who i have written verse in his time. Those who know him only by his1 tiat IlU frielld harry was shot" for cow Z,UEaVat ?' V.Mlioo-and .he was one of the bravest and the "Itecessionnl," or thiotigh his ballads of the sea, such as "McAn diew's Hymn." have only a partial kuowledge of him. "If," notwithstand ing its great popularity, is not a great poem. It is a preachment and frank didacticism has never yet charactciized the finest cisc. And the "Itcccssion al" is a religious outgiving in meter which served as a rebuke to British pride at a time when it was preening ittelt and strutting about vaiuglori ously. Kipling has put the same idea into a really great poem that will be read when the "Becessional" is for gotten. As it is short we give it here and -venture the opinion that it will appear in the anthologies for centuries to come : Cities and Thrones and Powers, Stand in Time's eye, Almost as long as (lowers, Which dally die: But, as new buds put forth To glad new men. e St unconsidered i;arth, iik LiLiea i iae 2,1.111 Th's season's Daffodil, Kho never hears, What change, what chance, what chll! cut down last year s ; But wItIl bold countenance, I.Ul Anil knowledge small, Csteems her beven days' continuance, To be. perpetual. .. .... . . - m. tnat iso cr-Kma 0rdali;s U3 -cn a3 blind, As bold ua she. i That In our very ueatn, And hurlal sure Shadow to shadow, well persuadril salth, "See how our works endure!" L significance apparent. RUDYARD KtP.PLlNQ'S VnRSn Ini-Iuslve edition. 8S'i-191S. Garden City. Doublu das. Page . Co. J5 point that our civilization depends upon the effectiveness with which our indus trial and business; systems combine in a practical adjustment and co-operation. "Sr. (Inntt makes the following basic suggestions: Make industry democratic bj placing authority in the hands of tlioe who know what to do nnd how ,t. An 11 Irrpttmpl 11 o nf W'Vinl lipr Mini are the ow tiers of the tools of produe- Hon or not. Second. Seek thc solution of all indutrial problems by present- ing fill the facts available or obtainable In a mnuuer reauiiy compreneuueo dj all. This chart system would be educa tive for both emulojcrs and cmplojcs, in the author's opinion "Creative Impulse in Industry" dis cusses the quest ion of how the Indus trial efficiency of America necessary for our national progress is to be created and developed without Prussiaiii.iug the workers, .whs .viaroi wrote tins Iiook alter a survey in conuiiions lor the Hureait of I'ducHtional 1'xperi meuts, and it is a substantial and stim ulating contribution to the subject. "The (ilrl and the .lob," by Helen Ilocrle uud Florence S.illberg, Is di rected to the girl who isn't sure what kiud of work she wants to do, who doesn't know what sort of work she can get, and who isn't happy where bhc is, and who wants u better job. It has much snge counsel and is but tiessed by stntiBties uud illumiiiiitcd by example-). MANAdEMI.NT AND. MCV By ?Vjr Hloomnelu .ew ion, iu i. ciuury t-o. . CIlKA'riVi: IMI'UI.SU IN INDUSTRY Hy Helen .Mi rot. Nnv lorh: 1Z. P. Uuttoii 4, OltfJANIZINO roit WOntC Uylf I. Clantt Nw York, llan-oiirt Ilraco L irom Jl :'.1 i ttHKN Ilin WOUKMEN HCI.t' lOU MAN AIJi: H W. Jt. UaasQtt. New York Tho I fl-ntury Co r.MI'I.OYMnNT I'HYCIIOIjaT. Hy llonr, C. Link New York. Tho Marmlllan Co il! 60 THB Cilt'.I AND'TlIi: JOB fly Helen Hoerle m1 Tlorenco Hdltzlrfri; Now York Henry Holt S. Co. Jl CO Just Fooling Oliver Hcrford's "This (iidd.v Globe" is u burlesquo geography, with questions at the end ot cacn clmpter to bo nsked of tho diligent student. It Is 1111 nmli. blu piece of fouling. The best part of the bonk, however, is the dedlcatl,,,, "To 'President WlUon (with all his faults "SSS' ux ottv. tora N.w York Georn H. poraa Co' """"' The volume is attractively piinlcd ari ?& '(W Slni n hT bound nnd has an index of titles and nn , '?' "J ro ' ?' - f IS' .""1 ' ow . to index of firht lines. Brief explanutor) 'r'J fl fLV J S VCfil ' inv,''&tlea1t,0.n as neeci iiicm in iirui'i iu luunu muii HOW WAR SEEMS TO THE MAN WHO FIGHTS Two Remarkable Boohs Deal ing With the Human Equa tion in tho Soldier The best books about (he war arc be ginning (o mnkn their appearance. No reader who really wants to know what went on fn the hearts and minds of the men can afford to neglect Stephen 0 rah am "A Trivalo iu the Gunrds." Mr. Graham 'spent eighteen months in the Scots Guards, went through their famous training camp at Sparta Bar racks and saw hard service in France in the later days of the fighting, including the last great advance and the occupa tion of Cologne, if is a book written with fine and courageous spiritual in sight the kind of book that is grcatl) needed and the kind of book that lias been almost wholly lacking in American testimonies of war experience. Mr. 'Graham, while making plain the horror and disenst felt hr everv sensitive snirir in the rack of the struggle, also finds ' III tllO nilfnnlnn .f (linen .Ipnrlf.il ilnia of sacrifice the hope that the nations may draw nearer together in a spirit of human pity. If all men were of the same fine fiber ns he. there would be more hope of this. Particularly inter esting to American readers is the ac count of the Americans who enlisted with the Scots Guards. One would like to know who was the policeman from I'hilndelplUa, nicknamed "IJIgsev." and "Mrs. 'Wlggs," who got a "blighty one" at the Canal du Nord. Another book of stirring quality is "The Secret Bnttle," n novel by A. P. ! iierDen, u young English wuter hither to known chiefly for liis witty poems in "Punch." It deals with' the gradual sapping of the morale of a brae and ambitious young officer under the con stant and brutai stiain of war. In the end he is shot for "cowaidice," due to a momenta! y loss of self-control under heavy shellfire. Mr. Ilerbett's descrip tion of the Gallinoli enmnniirn is one of the most lviil and moving passages of i uuuwu jui-usis, wie unuiierauie wean ness and ghastly futility of it all, ear ned on under a blazing eastern skv and in the Hushes of gold nnd crimson Medi terranean sunsets, makes nn indelible picture on the reader's mind. Mr. Her bert's delightful stvle shows the value of the l'nglisli classical training in forming a lusty sense of prose c.pics sion. It is simple, logical, informal and teise: lich in the telling epithet, giving the render a curious sense of ,iri,ii,-, .. ......... a- r , . i fading a . translation of pine nnd rigor- ". ??"? , lme ,a.nu u"Di,e b0., :. showing the heavy workings of the m i- tary machine on the clear spirits of men rPI,A stnrT anile . "'PI,..- In ,1.- t. e :t . men I ever knew a rmvATi; in- thc quahdm ny stepii-n i TWO BUSINESS BOOKS Commercial Research, Collec tions and Mercantile Cred its Discussed the inauguration and development of business schools, such as thc pioneer i Wharton School at the Uuivcrsity of i I'cnns.vlvnnia, hnvc been a marked' and growing .feature of our educational in stitutions over the last three decades. Businessmen no longer sneer at the eollcge-brcd youth, but are anxious to ff VnoV.'r . . . . . . . " . " i mercial or banking enreer. And the wise business men, those whose vim speeds them to new successes, by no means scorn but rather study the' new books on commercial subjects written bv the academic authorities. Two new books of this type will repay perusal. 1 "Commercial Ttescnreh" is by Prof, i f. N. Duncan, of the University o ' Chicago. lie was a special expert for the shipping board during the war and ils statistician at tho Paris Peace Con ference. His book, drawn from the ex , perienccs of his classes in commercial organization, contains an outline of i working principles for the solution of explained I .Mercantile Credits and Collectinnq ' by Charles A. Meyer, is n moro spe cialized work in its topics and its hand ling. It traverses the theory of the subjects of credits and collections nnd diicidates it with much practical ma terial. It is n book tor both the student and the experienced credit man. C'OMMI.HCTAT, nnhlJAlirrr. Hy C. S. Dun rjTi rv York The Macmltlan To. Mmu'ANiii.tes cnnutTb and colt.kc- i iu.-ns uv- i nancs .. .iieycr. TorK Tho Macinlllan Co, New I The Variorum "King John" Some idea of the mass of material surrounding the plays of Shakespeare ' is given in the announcement that three and a half years were required to com plete the manuscript of "King John, the new volume In the variorum edition of Shakespeare, edited by Horace How aiul Tunics', Jr., iust published by the I.ippiucott Co. Moro versions and comments demanding nttcntlon were en countered on this play than on any oiuer ot inc ciguieeu now comprising the variorum tct. The story of a land deal in the Southwest, and a swin dled American's refusal to stay swindled. Against the lsnav ciy of the wily Mexican seller, he fought his lonely fight to build an irrigation canal in an arid land. Hc fought against treachery, heat and cold, he fought against time . . . and want. An absorbing love story besides. THE IRON FURROW by George C Shedd Jrl bl nrr. IUU IJhi;Bh.l 7.,. ' IbSI J '"'"sC "V I DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. " SSfflitoiCTSi yin.Tmmiiimniiiiuimniiiiimriiiii;Trrm. Modern China tvf Totitlcdl Study, Z?i S. G. Cheng. fljcl 25 A vIuable nd timely volums tluowing a clear lightl on the diitf problems of modern China with constructive uggeittons for their , solution. The discussion is notably temperate and free from bias and deserves the close attention of nil interested in Chlnesa matters Direct and Indirect Costs of the Great World War. B$ Ernest L. Bogart. Net $I,oo An able presentation of the plain facts gathered from official sources If the figures are so stupendous as to make them difficult to grasp and the loss of life disheartening, nevertheless the work has a wide range of values not only to economists but to business menu vvclL Napoleon cA 'Play Z3ji Herbert Trench. , . ac $2.00 "One of the surprising events of the English dramatic year has been Mr. Trench's play 'Napoleon. Like Mr. Drinkwater's 'Abraham Lincoln' itj has been successfully performed as well as read and emerging from the propaganda drama of the Shavian School it becomes a work of art and characterization, of spirit and passion" The Listeners Guide to Music With a Concert-goer's glossary By Percy A. Scholes. ac( $2.00 This is a book for every one interested in music. Provides the lis tenerto any form of instrumental music with such information as to its' character and purpose as will enable him to better understand enjoy and appreciate it. ' cAt all booksellers Oxford University Press American branch BgaaBSBWi "An amazingly rich collection." Neio York Times. Leonard Merrick's Stories "all intensely alive, all fascinatingly told." Now ready, each $1.75 Conrad in Quest of Mis Youth; The Man Who Understood Women and other stories; The Actor Manager; Cynthia; The Position of Peggy Harper; While Paris Laughed; In Press, Ready January SI The Worldlings These Books are on sale in any Bookstore or may be ordeied direct from APoPsrtSex?raet E. P. BUTTON & CO. I "MARSE HENRY" Recollections of Men, Women and Events During Eight Decades of American History By HENRY WATTERSON gTTT Henry Watterson is the most picturesque figure in Ameri J can Journalism, the last of the great individual journalists. He stood at Lincoln's elbow at the inauguration. He was inti mately associated with the careers of Grant, Cleveland, Roose velt and Wilson. Among his friends were Mark Twain, Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, John Hay and all the other celebri ties of our literary, political and dramatic history. His Memoirs are a flavorsome, intimate and racy history of Ameri' can affairs, from the Civil War right up to the present moment. Illustrated. 2 Vols. Boxed. Net, $10.00 GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY Publishers New York A LANDSCAPE PAINTER By HENRY JAMES The Great American Novelist 4-1 Professor William Lyon Phelps of Yale University, in a long article in Thc Ncto York Times, says thc following: "They the stories are the work of an absolute master of plot and style. ... All four of these are love stories white hot with passion. . . . "I hope Mr. Thomas Hardy will read these tales, for even hc can hardly dramatize the irony of life more powerfully than it is set forth here. "I regard this book as a truly great addition to American literature." At All Booksellers. $1.75 net. Postage Extra. First edition nearly sold out in two weeks. SCOTT & SELTZER, 5 West 50th St., New York MARE NOSTRUM (Our Sea) By VICENTE B LAS CO IBANEZ ' "Stands Supreme In Contemporary Fiction" says The Nciv York Times editorially. A GREAT SEA STORY AND MORE A GREAT LOVE STORY AND MORE A GREAT WAR STORY AND MORE The romance of a Spanish Captain, whose adventures afloat "d,118'"?)! involve him in tho tragedy of tho German submarines. A P',of0wfSi. moving &tory, rich with all the history, poetry and beauty ot tno aieu' tcrrunean, whose history is that of civilization itself. $1.90 at any Bookstore, or may be ordered direct from "piKrii1 & P. UTT0RT& CO or from the publishers Street vNewYork City 681 Fifth Ave. New York C8l Fifth Ave-: Nevf Tr -ihwAf