: V 7i , .WF ' bVbNINGF PtiBLIC ' LEDEit-PttLADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MAROfi 6, 1920 13 0. Henry would have loved this story 1 A PLACE IN THE WORLD by the author of "Simple Souls?' JOHN HASTINGS TURNER gay, sparkling, rainbow colored story laughs to you from its pages. wja&k S1.75 CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Publishers, FIFTH AVE. at 48th ST., NEW YORK The Swmti of the Pendulum ' by ADWM SEKDONl "A book which will arouse a gro.-lt deal of discussion and which will -step into the spotlight of opinion with particular distinctness." Philadelphia North American. ' $1.90 BONI & LIVERIGHT, NEW YORK V Frank II. Simonds considers Arthur K Page the greatest critic of Americans operations in the ivar. OUR 110 DAYS' FIGHTING By ARTHUR W. PAGE What every combat division did, from Cantigny to Sedan. A book that leaves tho reader thrilled with the feeling " was thero" or "He was there." Adequately presented for the first time is the thrilling story of "thi fight behind the lines." Net $5.00 at all bookstores D0UBLEDAY, PAGE & CO, Garden City, N. Y. Mid- Winter Sale BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS Wc have just received a shipment from England which contains some very attractive items. Some Illustrated Books on Sport A Few Titles of Unusual Interest to Architects A Large Quarto Volume on Scottish Plaids, Beautifully Illustrated in Color George W. Jacobs & Company Publishers, Booksellers Stationers, Engravers 16?8 Oenut Street. Philadelphia Birds in Town and Village Charming sketches of bird life as tcen in old London gardens, in quaint Cornish villages, along Devon lanes, and tho Argen tine land of the author's youth. Illustrated in color from tho beautiful originals of E. J. Detmold. $1.00 Books by W. H.' HUDSON Far Away and Long Ago. With Portrait. $2.50 Idle Days in Patagonia. Illustrated. $1.75 The Purple Land. Introduction by T. Roosevelt. $1.75 A Crystal Age. Foreword by Clifford Smyth. $1.75 Obtainable at any boohitare or may be ordered direct from E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave, New York The TIN SOLDIER By Temple Bailey Liked by everybody 'K all boQltatorts st.75 reSNTiaMHIIINO CO.. Philadelphia LE LIVRE CONTEMPORAIN '. 5&28W? SCHOENHOF BOOK CO. I'YenUi Bookshop " Beacon St. n.... .. uuninn nns """I "" wbirferian Rnnlc.Sfcso yfe Desirable in Books ''valor to 2nd Floor roncss von Hutten HAPPY , HOUSE SgjLDoRAN CoMpANY ' r (Ufa ty tin JS I I By W. H. Hudson Author of "Far Away and Long Ao" Headquarter For Engineering and Technical Books Philadelphia Book Company 17 South 9th Street JVBT IBSL'VD THE TURN OF THE TIDE Uy Lieut WISH Col JUXNISQS C. ft 50 Tho author of tho "Ixmg Arm of Lee,' "CJunncry." etc, writes from Intimates knoul edfro of tho notion of our troops in which ho hlmscir took part. Later lio was at tached to tho Historical Sec tion tjf tho Oenoral Staff JANE AUSTEN Uv O. W. FIRKIXH A slmplo nnd striking niialy. hIh of her novels and especially of her rcnllsm lly the author of "Italph Watrio nmorson" and tlio ilramntle critic of tho "Itovlew." Henry Holt & Co. 10 W. 44th St., Now York r 4 MANY BOOKS ABOUT RUSSIAN PROBLEMS SOME VIRILE TRENCH BALLADS Human Note, in Garrett's "Poems Other Notable War Verse ,.In ..'"-Tnfli Hallnds nnd Other tM, 1wl" Clnrksoti (Inrrctt, of mis city, Ims complemented his previ ous collection, "Army Halloas and Other Verse." The poems In his new pook do for the world war whnt those n the ear ler did for the Spatilsh-Amcr- lClin-rhlllllllitin ltnlipni.lt. 'I't,,. .1,, It ' ,,ctiCV lor tnp inspiration wns greater , and Mr. Garrett over the Intervening ....ma ims gaineti in iccnuicni mastery, in command of cadence und surety of rhythm. Thev shnrn In rnmmnn h same red-blooded Impulse nnd the snmoj t. .! I''noiiHiiiy. iut mc sympa thetic human note sounds more strongly through, the stanzas of the new poems; the attitudes are more tolerant with out sacrifice of Individuality of oplulon, tho feeling Is more matured and the moods mellower. These ballads are truly representa tive of tho trenches, whero their nuthor served during the war with one of the most notable outfits of shock troops, the Iirst Division. Above the draft ago, i .Mr. Unrrctt went to Franco to enlist in a command that would see enrly action. Up was a ptjvnte In Company vt, nuticetuii iniantry. in tnc Mpan-Ish-Amerlcon War ho was with the TwiMltv.llllril Tnfnnlrv n.4,1 hn Vtftl, Cavalry (Regulars). His poems have all the sincerity that comes from nctuol experience as a participant in the sights and scenes described. Many of tho poems are touched with the fine senti ment of honest nnd unashamed emo tion, buch as "War Mothers" and "Tho Colors of Blighty," and others, suqh as "Interrupted Chow" and "The Fly," have a decided sense of humor, An A. 10. F. nnthologr is contain ed in "Yanks." This collection is from tho pages of The Stars and Stripes, tho official newspaper of the Ameri can expeditionary forces. LIko fugitive verse in general this collection runs a j varying range of merit. But one notcitcred the war he wns stationed in Kl in pi edomlnuut, thnt of sincerity. Tech- bcrm by the American committee on nirully sonio of the poems arc not pol- public information and learned much of Uifii or sundpapcrcd, but without ex- j what was going on. I.cniiio. he says, eeptlon whether grno or gay, they is a man of fixed ideas. He has thought ntc marked by genuine feeling. And out a system of social organization based sonio are of a higher order of metrical on tho theories of .Marx, llluunui and merit. Many 'soldiers who hnvo been ! Nietzsche, nnd ho is now applying it currying around worn clippings from with relentless logic. He lias divided Stars und Stripes can now. hi this , society into arbitrary classes subject volume, obtain tho best of the verso to the emotions which he hns assigned that appeared in tho A. H. I journal. , to them nnd ho finds It difficult to ud Ucrtou Brnlcy's "Buddy Haihids"' ,mit that men and women are u complex arc "bongs of tho A. 13. 1" They of various conflicting emotions. He vcrsifj and poeticise tho routine of objects, both In thcorj and practice, to camp life and uction from tho stand-, majority rule "because tho majority noint of the soldier Mnnv of them lime n definite thrill WENCH BAM.ADS AND OTHKn VHTISES. Iiy Edwin Clarkaon Garrett Philadelphia: John C. WlnUon Co. S1.40. TANKS. A K. l- VEUSK. New York: O. p. Ititnim Hons. J- BUDDY HAI.I.ADS. ?tS'nE&.?co0n Vi"-7' N!,T ,to inltinto anything. So he wants rev It. Doran Co. 1 .... -lutlon for the nconlc rather thau by Tunc, lieoruo "Raspberry Jam" The interest in Carolyn Wells's latest detective f-tory, "Itaspberry .Turn." centers wholly on tho plot. This Ih Ingenious, having to do with tho discovery of the caiiho of death of n muu found in his room in a New York nportment the morning after he had had a quarrel with his wife, and wth the accumulation of sufficient evideneo to warrant the arrst of ono of live suspected persons. Two of tho fho hud a motive, hut no opportunity to do the murder, three had nn opportunity, but only ono had n motive. Tlmt was the widow. Her room adjoined that of her husband. Uoth rooms were locked on the Insldo and they were ou the tpnth floor of the building. When tho official detectives have decided that the widow is guilty on circumstantial evidence Fleming Stone is called iu, und with tho assKtuncc of "rrisby." well known to renders of Miss Wells's detective stories, he unravels tho mystery. The actlou of the story takes place in New York. Newark and 1'hilitdclphla, and the disclosure of tho truth takes place in this citj. Tho book has ,n striking frontisiiieee in color bv Gavle Hoskint-. n1geg.T.,,j",B. Afflffl Y.co: BOOKS RECEIVED General Titn OPIl'M MONOri.Y ny i:iien N, Ia I oil. V Vwk MacmillKn Ci.. ji. ' m.BMKNTfr OF Uin-AIL. KA1.KSMANSHIP. I lly Poii W. Ivy. Now York: Mucmillan J caS3' tiii: cunini simvivn the ca- lUNOINO ortDEU. Hy Albert V. Fitch. New York! Mnimlllan Co.. 11. PAniS SKES IT THIIOUOII. Hy II. Tearl Aduin. New lorlc Oorce It. Doran Co. SATiiui is Tin: Victorian novki.. nv Frances T. Buasell. New York: Macmlllan BOCIAI.1HM VH (TVIM7.ATION. UyVotin ' IlraaOl HOW iqn. viluc. ouhuikji n oitu"wni.r., rv know how womi.n AUK. Hv Irm & Cubb and ISN'T THVT I JUST MKli A MAN. By Mary Rntwrfi , Illncliart Ncs York: Ueorso IT. Doruri I t'o PnAfTICAI. VI.Y 1-ISHINO. By narry St. John N.w Yoik Marmlllan Co.. J1.28. THU OHAND CANYON OF Till! COLO- UADO. iry John C. Van Dyke. New York: Charles SrrlbnerM Sons. $2. rOKMM OP TKNNVSON Chosen ana edited by Henry vin Dke. Now York: Charles Hrrhner Sonn. K STUDIUtl IN Ti:NNVSON. By Henry nn I'ilte. Ni w York Charles Scrlbner's Son, '"' Fiction UAI'PY HOl'i-r. Ily naronem on Ifutten. Nn- Vorlc (loorue H Doran Co SIMULA J.Tl.llVUNi:S. By htoplien Mo- Kenna Nt York Oconee H Dorun Co. KOnOOTTKN MIIHNKH. I'ocmn llv John Chlnnan 1'irrar Now Hnven. Yule Unl- verHlty I'rens nAHPncitUY J Mt By Carolyn Voll.i I'hll- iiMn'Mii J II l.lpptnnilt Cn , 1 00 MISKlt'H MONFY Ily ):Jen I'hlllpotts. Now York: Marmillnn Co.. t'i. CATHY IlOiMli:n lly Strn Victor Blclt- ard. New Tork. Ooomo If. Poran Co. Mil. WV. Hi IrfiulBP Jordan .Mills New York: P A Strkea Co, "An uiutsuallu good book" THE SPLENDID OUTCAST Tho New Novel by GEORGE GIBBS Author of "The Yelloro. Dove." At All Booksellers, $2.00 Net. Tills is on Apploton Book That was a good story You will sail so after you read The Han From Tall Timber All Bookaellera George Sully & C.,foy York RUSSIAN REVOLUTION - FROM MANY ANGLES Bolshevism Defended and Attached by Various Writers. Relations of America to the Slav Problems Tho Hussion revolution is likely to bo the cause of the writing of as many books as the French revolution. Tho full, 'authentic history of It In nil its phases cannot be written for many years. In the meantime nlmost every writing man who has been In Russia at any time within the Inst threo years has written a book about what has been happening. That bolshcvlsm is of interest to the whole world Is evident to the most casual render of tho newspapers, John Xpargo, u Socinllst who Ims withdrawn from tho extreme wing of his party, has Just written of "Itussla ns on American Problem." Ho elaborates the thesis that America is vitally Interested In the economic nnd political rehabilitation of Uussla. The relation of Iluvdu to the rest of the world will depend largely, In his opinion, on whether American, (Icrninu or Japanese capital Is ucd to develop its resources. Of course he would like to see American capital plnrcd at the disposal of the Hussions. His book is really a plea for tin1 eco nomic Intervention of the United States. In "Tho Psychology of Holshcvtsm," Mr. Spargo says that the Itolshcvlsts arc the "victims of hysterical hyper esthesia." "Their thought processes ore spasmodic nnd violently emo tional. " "Their typo of mind has been tho subject of much extensive observa tion nnd study, particularly in connec tion with religious forms of listeria." Mr. Spargo elaborates these statements in his examination of the subject. Arthur Bullard, in "The Hussion Pendulum." has rmuch to say about I.enlne, the originator of bolshcvlsm, which justifies Spnrgo's views. Mr. Dullard was tho secretary of the Friends of Hussian Freedom at onu time, and in that capacity met Lenine In Switzerland in 100.". After wo en- novcr knows what is cood for 11. JJU n nn nis mini nn inc e iiiik niencii mili tant minority," "the olite of the prole tariat." Ho insists that the-, majority would bo benefited by what tho minority iln.a fnr tt lint thnt it 4 Tlflt. nl)l(! them. All those woo t-tunu in tnc way nro tn'lin dnatrnx'eil us tho shortest XMIV for setting up the kind of Institutions which "tho elite of .the proletariat" thinks best. Mr. nullnrd's book is more than n study of Ienlnc. It is u brief rcsumo of the swing of tho Russian pendulum from autocracy through de mocracy to bolshcvlsm. Albert Ithys "Williams, a Socialist, has written u tribute to Jvcninc. whom ho rcgnrds ns a great social reformer. His Uook, "Lenin: the Man nnd Ills 'Work," is an enthusiastic and discriminating eulogy of tho revolu tionary lender. If one rends it with tho knowledge of the nuthor's predilec tions one will not bo grievously misled. The book contains nlso the impressions of Colonel Haymond Robins and Arthur Uanome. Tho conditions that immediately pre coded tho Bolshevist revolution are set i forth in "The Prelude to Bolshevism." by A. F. ICcrcu8ky, tho premier who FRENCH VIEW OF WALT WHITMAN Leon Bazalgetlc's Life of thc Poet Now Printed in an English Translation If tho theory is sound that thc judg ment of n foreign country is the judg ment of history, then Walt Whitman's fnmo is secure. T.con Haznlgctte. a rench man of letters who translated "Leaves of Grass" into French, hns written n biography of thp poet which acclaims him as ono of the great gomijscs of his time. This biography, which nppenred In 1007, has just been translated into English for the benellt of American renders. M. Huzulgefte has drawn largely on tin America,, , nooks about Wi tman for l,ls fnefs Hut he has drawn on his own apprecia tion of tho man for his estimate of his poetry. In his introduction ho makes the in- leresung stntement that no (lectures innt wiiltmnu more an. more dominates the L-rmm. There nn a few Americans who will agree, but there are moro who will dispute. Vt tho fact is that thc farther wo get from inc living w unman tnc lugger heseetu to be. Mr. Pnzulgctto's book accepts Whitman in his entirety tls thout:'' everything that ho wrote were great. If he had been a little more critical in hi discriminating tho unprejudiced would hnvo been better pleased. Yet the book will servo to interest Americans in Whitman who have shied awuy from him iu the past. It is divided into eight parts, each devoted to a separate phase of tho poet's life. It begins, of course, with his youth and follows him through his life In New York, IJrooklyn, WiimIi ington and Cumdcn nnd ends with a description of the funeral In Harlelgh Cemetery. H ,H WALT WHITMAN. The Marr nnd Ills Work I H Ily Leon TlAZnlvette. Garden City- Dou ! fg uicuuj', I'aca & "JO. JJomc Nursing 1 Abbio 7 Marsh In "Home Nursing" htm written tin Informativo manual nnd ; guide for pnreuts, teachers and those living nt a distance from tho physician It tells whnt should ho done in the or- 1 dinarv nilments of life and tells it in 1 evervdnv language. I Tho book describes and nlrturcs germs H the homo medicine chest ; earlv signs nf 1 sickness; when the doctors should be iiiiL-iii r-iiiiiuc iiiviiiuua ui trciumeni ; how to handnsej how to caro for the child and for tho aged; food for chil dren: cooking for the sick; bedmnklng. nnd how to heln tho doctor in nursing Much other advieo Is given nnd the de srrintlons are elucidated with admirable I nictures. It Is so written that it can ho used ns a textbook In schools for I girls, to supplement tho usual courses H M m In nnatomy nnd physiology. Students of it would face the necessary ills to which tho body Is heir In an intelligent manner, much suffering would be pre vented and great comfort given to the SICK, "OTIW ftSSN1" ssBispm t;tnerson. Thorenu nnd Whitman " Ami ... ., ' i Vi." ," ." . .uiVnaVr ""arp s' was displaced when Lenine came to power. The book is n reprint of the minutes of the examination of ICerensKv hv the commission of inquiry Into tho Komilov affair, with an explanatory in troduction. It is Intended to be Ker ensky's defense before tho bar of pub licity. Tolfn Heed, in "Ten Pays That Shook the World," takes Up tho story shorth after Kerenkv drons it nnd tells of how tho Uolshcviki seized the government in the Jiolslicvlki seized the government in , I'ctrogrnd. Mr. Ilced is a Socialist and he writes from the point of view of one u-lin RvtnnntMxn with the. revnliillr... . who sympathizes with tho revolution ists. Arthur Itnnsome. also a Socialist, vN ited Itussln In 1010 nnd he has written a faithful description of conditions as ne.ionnti tnom. jus uook, juts-.m m Hill . contnins information which is muni iiinrp irusmoriiij mini musi in the dispatches in tho newspapers -.out , out hv propagandists of one kirn another in recent months. Different phnses of the situation lire touched unon in books bv Carl W Ark rrmau, Oliver M. Snvler and Robert Crozler Long. In "Trailing the V.ol slicvlkl" Mr. Ackcrmnn has reprinted tho news dlspntchcs that he wrote to American newspapers while he wn with tho Allies in Siberia. Mr. Snlrr. in "Russia, "White or Red," tells of his experiences during six months, the rronter part of which lie spent in Mos cow studying tho Russinn theatre. It deals with; the life of the people during tho revolutionary period nnd discloses conditions which hnvo not been con sidered nfc length by other writers. Mr. Long, who has been the Associated 1'ress correspondent in Rusln for sev eral years, writes in "Russian Revolu tion Aspects" n scries of Intimate sketches of men and things trom the point of view of a mnu who understands the Russian people nnd the Russian rroblcms. Thnrles Kdwnrd Ru.ell. in "Bol shevism and the United Slate-. has eltemptcd to set forth for the informa tion of Americans tho fatal defects in the theories of Lenine. und to show Low the worst sufferers under their ap plication have been the ury persons for whose benefit they were said to bo formulated. And OIo Hanson, former mayor of Seattle, has told In "Americanism ver sus Bolshevism," how he fought tho Bolshevists during hjs mii.iornlty arid how they were unable to understand the fundamental principles of Americanism. As a record of achievement in democ racy it deserves attention, ni-isiA. As an AMnmcAN tooblem. Ily John Spurso. New York. Hnrpor & l!ro. $?.2ft. Tin; psycholooy op holmu:vipm. By John Hpareo. New York. Harper It Bros. si Jo. tub HUSSTAN PHNDULUM. Autocracy. m llv Arthur I)ul-1 IlUCw"rk? ?l'y '"!'. mro. kw vorK: Tho LI.NIN: Tho Man ami vcmuvinu, ..uianf-vism b"rt niiys Williams. And tho linprenslons pr colonel iiayraond Robins and Arthur Itanjom-. New York: Scott & Seltzer. 1.35. T1JU PIlKMJDn, TO BOLSHEVISM. By A. K Kercnsk). Now York. Dodd, Mead & ( o. '2 no. ti:n days that shook thc woni.o. Ily John need. Now York: Iloul i. Ll8- rlffnt. 32. BUhSIA IN join. By Arthur Ilansome. New York: H. W. Huebsrh. Jl SO. TJIAILINO THU UOL&HCV1KI. By Carl -VV. Aekcrman. Now York Charles ficrlb- ner s Sonp. 2. RUSSIA. WHITI5 OH BRD By OlUer M biiler. Boston: Utile. Brown & (. sy.r.o HUSSIAN IIBVOI.UTION ASITCTJ). By Itussla of th Aesociuteri prd in Anier- lea. New Tork i: P Dulton Co JL" ,10 ' bolshi:vis.m in Tin: unitijd htatc"' By Charles IMwanl ItuKell Indlanap- I ..no uuuu.'jicrnii o. si iiu, AMERICANISM 'KltSrS BOLSIinVISM. Ily OIo Hanson, former minor of Heattl Onrun city: Doublcday. Vago i. Co. The Public Schools The duty of parents to send their children to tho public schools is the burden of Prof. Dallus Lore Sharp's little book on "Patrons of Democracy." Professor Shnrp occupies the chair of nnglish in Hoston University and lives In Hinghnm. lie sends his childien to the public schools, where thev do not meet the children of his neiglihnr- and friends. The friends and neighbors -av the public schools arc not good enough for their children and Professor Sharp retorts that if they are not good enough for their children then they are not good enough for the community. His theory is thnt tho way to develop and Protect democracy is by bringing the children of nil social groups together in tho public schools where they miiv discover of whnt sort of btuff the hov's ami giris nro made with which tlie r Vn in V .i . w,1,cn "1C "??' W? '?. thfi ort of Bomnmeui iiiuki join in inc arts or government wnen tncy become men and .Separating society into class groups for education ho regards ns undemocratic and dangerous. Tho book, which is expanded from nn women i essay printed in the Atlantic Monthlv, PA,"l0Nj', OF DEStnritAev -n t,.,,.. is. I-oro Sharp. Boston- Atlantic Monthiv . j iic .viiiiiu.i nrovoted n i-rent .Inn! .,f n,,... ., .. ..i...j ... ...w ui,tt u,,. iinvi io iirovoi.e 1 11111111 nfn1 nnti I HI ' HUH i!ILBIil!'H!llliM!U!1! Wlillllll'HJM.nMWi W., !rai!!!!ll!lli,Ba!J!,Hi; B.'li B?l! K II Ollil Bl'il U m What America's Leadine Newsnanprs Snv ;. : THE GREAT n IMPERSONATION By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM (Now in its SIXTH Large Printing) "No more successful mystery story was over written tlmn Tho (,r.-,. ...... .... ..i...v.u.. u. mi- .i.iuv! iiuiii iirst to last. -Philaihl. M plua I'ublto Ledger. icuu. H "Mr. Opponhoim, well esinblishcd master of mystery, hus in "n... B preat Impersonation,' ouldoni' himself in his exploitation of tin " hitherto unsuspected." Tho New York World. ,mauon ot c j. "Tho Great Impersonation' will bo, ami will deserve to be one of tho best sellers of tho year." The Boston Post. l0 uo' onc of Q " 'T.h0 Great Importation' is a thoroughly good story with M Rcnlous plot, and a series of exciting episodes that recall A g Doylo of the duys when he was writing about Sherlock Holmes " 2 The New York Tribune. j "For ingenuity of plot and cleverness of treatment is ib a maiter. m piece among contemporary mystery The Best Story Oppenheim Ever Wrote! A Book of the Hundred Thousand Class $1.75 net At UTTLE, BROWN & COMPANY, PubUshew, Boston, Mass. I mwmu "HORSE'S NECIC A LA VOLSTEAD "What to Drink" Gives Eight eenth Amendment Recipes for Beverages "Cocktails, Fizzes. Highball and Sours" takes up the large middle sec tion of "Whnt to Drink." Hut what's fA "SSSianSLr nrTVi ' "based" on fruit Juices and shrubs and! vinegars, 100 per cent innocent of aleo- mil. Herthn Htockbridge. the compiler of this whlte-rlbbou blue book, puts i no red likkcr in her roe-lurk. Tlier nn. naughty in name only. She nppea'rs to i. " ,, ,..rrr i,ii , ?',', i,, ',?. m od '?. "l?, Ul fj nfn fnfr' '" ''pr b"Tv ionVnlni toK Wnfc ih! JZNZl "": .""'Pf .l0 break the provisions of the Volstead net by having a little distillery n tho houc. The recipes ore varied, numerous, practical nnd potable rounding. Thc iiiuuiouH nre cienriy sec lorth in tin technical language. Some fnmllinr in- grcdients. though not tho most fnmllinr 01 nil, nppcar. sucii us mint nnd ginger ulp nnd mnruschino cherries. It does nns seem wanton wastage to n.( three fourths of a cup of mnrnvctiitio eher ri.es to garnish "Marsbmullow Siiiipo ,o. Z," where once n singlo blushful specimen served amply for a decoration. "Marshmnllow Kmice No. I i-ocmi more reverent It makes no demands on thc maraschino cherry tree Mint Is em ployed individually rather than sev erally In some beverages, such ns hot tea with, mint and mint -ginger -lie. the latter n combination once considered two-thirds of a drink with the hetter half missing. (Hut preserve us from the oitfnlls nnd the gins.) Tho only thing Irish indexed is Irish moss, bcorch is not mentioned nt nil nnd Kentucky is another, easily ex plainable, omission from this eighteenth (nmendment) edition of that obsolete classic, "The Harkeeper's (iuide.- Heers function In three form., .. root, mnple and ginger. Sonic rut her gratuitous information is totichtiifcil on Tinge 8(1, under the head. "To Keep Cider Sweet and .Sparkling " There arc 11 number of mock drink-., such as mock champagne cobbler and mock elniet punch, nnd lhe uie ,r - leiidiihlo. "Currunt shrub" fdntelM.'ii hopefully looked up. lends onl to disillusionment": the chrono'ogy should be "date 10111." "General Harrison's egg-nogg" is an other disappointment; jes. one is dis appointed in the general. Ills cam paign song simply (ouldn't lime been "Tipsvcnnoc and Txlcr Too." though that was the hard t ider campaign, if we remember our American history. "Happy thought" i- not n deep in the glass or as wide in its range as "Mary's favorite." but 'twill -ere ns an ct umple. It culls for one cupful of jeed ten, one tcuspnonful of lemou juice, three drons o' Wlter. and ginger nle ad bib. "Horse's neck" is now made thus: "IVil a lemon In one con tinuous strip: nlncc in u tall, struight sided glass with one end oer tho edge of thc glass, nnd add Mucral pieces of lee. I'our oer this ginger ulc (one bottle). IF one desires it. a nf 1)IUprs mnv be '"1'lP'l-" few drops WHAT TO nrtJN-K. By Ttortha n. I.. Ptprk iirinre. Atw lorK. u. Appicton i. Co. J1.&0. Carlotta in a Play Arnold Uennctt has recast "The Hook of Carlotta" into u four-uct piny with an ending different from that provided In the novel. The piece has been suc cessful in London, and is now being presented In this rountrv with Klsie Ferguson in the part of Carlotta. 1'or tlie uenellt of llio-e who like to rend plays, ,1-,u-..it "ru.mn,i::.aU 'nukes -Jtimi Mr. ltenuett lias hail tin- on printed iu u book. It ulating reading. Tho author. deprived of nil the aids of descriptive I'u,snSp- mnK, ,MV Cllllr'"'-"S reveal theinsehes and their mciitnl processed, passage-, make his characters reveal so that they seem to be liviuc persons and not mere automatons uttering words through tho mouth of a ventriloquist. As a piece of literature it Is superb. As tin advertisement for the play it-elf it could not bo surpassed, fur it makes one eager to ..see it acted. SAcnno and pnor.vNB i.ovc a pi,. - in four nets, foiimlfd upon th" nml. ' Ttio Hook of Carlotta " Bv Arnolii Henri- it Now Tork, Qeorco It. Doran fo More Dostocvshy Admirers of Hussion liter-it.ite will tind "An Honest Thief iiml lllher Stories," tho Intest translation from the tales by Fjodor Dostoev-k. mu h to their liking. There nro romod.v und tragedy and satire and philosophy in the book. The concluding story. "The Dream of a Ridiculous Man," iloul-i-less contains his philosophy of life "Hobok." is biting satire, and "An other Mnn's Wife" is comedy on the vergo of farce. If it wete druniatiri ! .t would bo ns popular a- the bedrom i plays that have been filling the thetitr,- in recent years. VN HONEST THIKI And nther rtorl-p Hv Fodor DostceMtks Ne.v York- lli Micmlllun Co. 2. The Harbor Road By Sara Ware Bossett A atory of hoim-iy folk on rum rod with humor nnd imthoi and a drnmatlo At All Hoolitorcn. 51.73 ,(, Prnn PubliiMng Company, Philadelphia n H .-1 U B 4 H H H H J m A m M '4 m SI a m nn in- stories." Tho Boston Herald. nil Bookseller m Ji II :::- fM?Biriiri,vll-rWBiii.-B Ever since NOCTURNE by Frank Swinnerton was issued his position in the eyes of American critics and discriminating readers has been assured. It is a fa miliar occurrence for a writer especially a writer in a foreign countryto produce excellent work for years c -mpara- tiv?ly unobserved by Americans, and then, qiiHrlpnlv. SOtn OMft hook strikfift-the Snark for ss' ------ j w-.-v v..v .- , jr the tinder and popular imagination is fired. So it happened with Hugh Walpole in FOR TITUDE. So it happened with Somerset Maugham in THE MpON AND SIXPENCE.- Swinnerton did the same with NOCTURNE, and now thc publication of SEPTEMBER has started afresh the really impressive tributes to his very fine art. His work has a finish, a controlled intensity, and an unstrained originality that are the more remarkable in a writer still in his thirties. SEPTEMBER, just published, has been pointed to by critics everywhere as one of thc most notable novels of 1920. Those readers who have made this happy discovery for themselves will find the earlier rovels by this author of a piece with his later work,' finely sensitive and creative, looking upon life today with clear eyes, realistic and romantic in one. Other Novels by Frank Swinnerton SHOPS AND HOUSES THE CHASTE WIFE NOCTURNE ON THE STAIRCASE THE HAPPY FAMILY The pit blishcrs will be glad to send on request a brochure containing appreciations of Swinnerton by Arnold Bennett and H. G. Wclls and a biographical sketch. Address George H. Doran Company, 244 Madison Avenue, New York. At all Book Stores WSC, """X vftiOKQe'w NX More than Five MiMon People Have Read and Enjoyed the Works of IRVING BACHELLER Tae Leading Banker in America write in an Article on Lincoln: A Lincoln tttnotphete to bemf crrated throughout the Aficlo-Suon world, and surely then cookl be no better Influence for food citueniUip. A MAN FOR THE AOB3 portray. Lincoln at A hoy, u a young man, and up to the time he became a national and an International figure. The real LLncoln, the real man u beautifully ejpretied m thn booV of unu,ul teem, -Uence. M j, -A. Barron Unburn p $30Q THE BOBBS-MERRILL CO., (Publishers) Elsie Singmaster yAFTER ten years of steadily ripen M - ing work, Miss Singmaster has written a novel that will take its place in thc front rank of American fiction. BASIL EVERMAN takes its name from a character who never once appears in person, but who dominates thc entire story. Thc presentation of this character and of thc shadow he casts across thc sunny landscape of a Pennsylvania college town, makes a story as fresh, authentic and profoundly interesting as the best nf thc novels that are now coining to u; from England. HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY W1IVT WOULD YOU READ ON A WINTIU NIGHT? V Story of intrigue, ami passionate love? Story of superb character portrayal'.' V Story of tense, thrilling adventure? Onc full of the warm color of Spanish mjun? M ARE N is, for combination of these qualities, quite unriwtleil in reennt fieLion By BLASCO IBAMSZ Author of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse The Shadow of the Cathedral Blood and Sand (Sangre y Arena) and La Bodega (The Fruit of thc Vine) Those Mtal novels e.u h of special Interest, aro to bo followed thin Spring by Woman Triumphant (La Mojo Desnuda) Each 41.90 net, at any bookstore, pr may be ordered direct from E. P. DUTTON & CO., G81 Fifth Avenue, New York KTVfcW.VM JAJi'l K9 The Novel on Abraham Lincoln A MAN FOR THE AGES 1 At All I Bookstores $1.00 net OSTRUM 't 4 si i; 'Sl a i ril -a 9 , 1 a I tl 11 " l ft 7t 1. A'V:.; :tY . , i'f y. M J. l-C A .. . L-.-lf, ... t 3!i:ii!!&la- ' ,?: . u i,. st&mflto 3 ' H'