Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 31, 1920, Night Extra, Image 17

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BVBNINGP VVBfitO DaER-PHILADELl?HIA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8f, 190
Hearst's Magazine a Liberal Education!
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Maeterlinck
. on Life After Death
Is thero Life after Death? This is tho
greatest of all human problems. Many
ofus Profess to believe in Immortality
o of us want to--but.how many of us
really tfo believe? Maurice Maeterlinck,
the great Belgian philosopher, has been
lecturing in America on this subject.
But he wanted to reach a vaster audi
ence so he had his lecture translated
into English and published in Hearst's.
See "Eternal Life or Eternal Deaths
' In Hearst's for Afiril.
"The'apga In tho pre-war days were good enough.'
I ASK YOU WILLIAM By K. C. B.
In Hearst's for April
Bernard Shaw
on Ireland
Will the Irish question ever be settled?
In his latestdesperate effort toplease both
sides, Lloyd George seems only to have
succeeded in enraging both. His vacillat
ing policy is severely scored by Bernard
Shaw, who in the April Hearst s suggests
that the too easily swayed British Premier
"visit America and there learn the cult of
the man who can look his fellowman (or
newspaper) in the eye and tell him to go
to Hell' See "The Betrayal of Ulster!!
In Hearst's for April.-
"Heart of Flame
you called me and I
AT FOOL'S ACRE
By ROBERT W.
CHAMBER8
In Heart? for April
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Two Great novels
j of the Year
Hall Came! Vicente Blasco Ibanez! What other
living novelists have been so universally acclaimed
by critic and public alike throughout th entire
civilized world?
The Christian, The Eternal City, The Prodigal Son,
The Woman Thou Gavest Me; The Four Horsemen
of the ApocalypsefMare Nostrum these were not
only great novels in the literary sense but were
all tremendous popular successes as well.
Hearst's now offers you simultaneously
r-the 7ew novels of both these great novelists.
- . . . .
THE Master of Man, by Sir Hall Caine, just
started, . will continue into the summer. And
in the April issue, now on the newsstands, you will
find the first chapters of The Enemies of Wtfmen,
the great new novel by Vicente Blasco Ibanez.
4
IF you are content with an ordinary magazine, if
you are not willing to pay well for the very best,
you won't want Hearst's this month or any other.
But if you really want the works of the world's great
'writers the words of the world's great thinkers
make sure each month starting today with the
April number of your copy of
v.
Magazine with a Mission
Many newsdealers tell us that their supply of Hearst's Magazine is
sold out completely a day or two after the magazine arrives. Since only as
many copies are printed as are ordered in advance many people are disap
pointed each month. It is, therefore, always well to buy your copy of Hearst's
at once, and, where convenient, to leave a regular reservation for all future
numbers.
ArnoM Bennett
on Marriage
What is the matter with Marriage? Last
month a New York woman lawyer told
why men dislike their wives. N6w
Arnold Bennett, the famous British nov
elist, wrestles with the same problem in
a series of stories "The Married Life of
Jack and Jill." This month he gives us
Jack's side of the case next month,
Jill's. Man or woman married or single
you'll enjoy and perhaps profit by
this unique scries.
In Hearst's for AfirilA
amiaWaLSSmmtB
Vcan Iceep Wee this for ten minutes help quick."
THE BEGGAR By MAURICE LEVEli
In Hearat'a for April
Georges Clemenceau
on Poland
Georges Clemenceau, ex-Premier of
France, is as polished a writer as he is
a diplomat, though his fame as a nov
elist and playwright has been eclipsed
by the brilliance of his political career.
In Hearst's for April, Clemenceau, the
writer, gives a vibrantly realistic picture
of Poland as it is to-day, not of its
politics, but of its people, just as "The
Tiger" saw them on a recent trip to
Cracow. See "Into the Muds of Poland'
fn Hearst's for AfiriL
"With a bold eweep
of the hand, the thief
flung off his mask."
TWELVE SEATS
IN ROW E
By ARTHUR
SOMERS ROCHE
In 'Hearat'a for April
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