;44 tr v If I " IV (?, Mi,-" .1. r 1 Vi I .w- .- Si'.14Vf rS lf-v. t. I t, '?,' :? I j .' I? r RH If i- t- -t; )- lV t W k M m 9ft i B r h K .-,Vw K I s'l Si JL 4 ...ijr-.fv ! 14 r; 41 WK nuv DIAMONDS mJGOlD & SILVER ,' ( iii .. ni Mi wiiio ijie.iieat rrlree raid Smelting & Refining Works I. '.-il 900 Filbert St.. Phil... P.. "th ow aold sno' fsW" " WKHT L'M AT Till: I'VIMisitiiin Real Estate it SE IJpwiiT.iffiiiiniJiaiiBHiiaiiaira PHOTOSTAT I PRINTING William, Brown & Earlc, Inc BIB CHESTNUT STRCLT H Dapt. I. y ieniinQiini!nn,i!iBiiiwsi:,B;i TALKING MACHINES! ' Repairing Al.t. MAUI'S (Flnlslifd In 17 Hour.) LATEST RECORDS IN STQCK Imperial Phonograph Co. 1350 V. Girard Ave. Open Ermines l'lionp 1'onlar 2'flesa Call tin Villiam L. Craven's Sons .' REALTORS ". I' llir ".'rMbl'lOM UllfrT KK'IIMI'.IT AKMOUY " April iith to April 10th WATER METERS ... SAVE WATER-SAVE MONEY rniu'.. MKTKK CO., vis Ileal i:st, Tr. ... lllrfir.. tr Vmir l'lunilier. FrotlriMif. ------- -- -- . fmiDENT M WATER METERS M m THE Rcstauranta listed below are famous for their dining service, superb cooWng and their scnial atmosphere. A clance thronirh announccroentB will assist you your purse. Ever Try Hanover for a Sunday $1.25 Dinner? Wn ha" n repiii' 'U "" e Ui( biwt Table (Jll..i ninn"s in town - tualin' la li.i, Mri . Herved from It "i ". .1 to S . ' M Special Sunday Platter. SOr linked .Mioii f'aullltow r Roiled .Veir 'o'a'orj $1.00 Filet .l'Kii'rti ' In Unifier re-nrh Fried I'mntof iMIsv, N .S'irnuf $U3 Onr-haf Hf'tiii "lii'-ken Southern .s'vlr Irenrh Fried Sv eet i'olafor- font Fritters Lettuce arA Toma'o Sauce I rAeBUDWEISER 18 South 15th St. Open from 7 A. ,. to IS P.-M. Daily Platter Luneheonn and Dlnnerx of the Season's Fresh est SEi FOOD. Special Platters Senrwl In I'KACOCK ItOlIM anil llUlI.lt. Baked Shad 65 Large Shad Roe & Bacon .75 Cold Sea Food (Platter) .95 Oral era riaina. Li!itteri and ,"ruh Meut frrth dully vtALAA 'fl2SSNrte 111 Sontb 131b St. (Below Cntitnut) Special Easter Dinner Strifil It n m to 9 p tn. For Jtarwation Phonr Hi. I nut litU MOELBERTS SEAFOOD AND GAME Served Pau and ,V(uil TtBone Mrloln tUenk, I'oH.n,, !(, Ilrrail. llulter Coffee YOU WILL K.VJOY YOUR Jllllllirj ! ntulKrAbi or lunuh If You Take It at the lHrfiitHraKt,-3N.iith I I i w-j ii H Onr-haif .s'ti'-im iifke IS a .Sonlheni .Vi- -g a trench Fried Sv ret C 5 ! Corn Fritters (Q Lettucn arA Toma'o Sauce fM I TFEW t y pSJOVER I H Twelfth and Arch Sts. W Pyj Ct.AIDE M M"H1 Mit- Jy, wsnA? mm I vT - I t I ..8 teM SPRING BOOKS OF WORKMEN HELP IN MANAGEMENT lmlustrial Consultant. Writes t i an Informing Labor Survey ' With the Plumb plan indorsed by the four great railroad brotherhoods, with socialization of Industries, public utili ties and nationul resources, importnnt planks in the Ilrltlsli Labor pnrty'a pro Brain, nnd with some American workers and executives definitely interested in flip "nhori Dtpwnril" nlnn. Mirlrn lvnillt na O "William It. I'usstt's "When tho Work , 3 men Help You Mannge" possesses n emit deal of interest What is the remedy for strikes? Wlm in to blame aud how oqu the feud, be tween capital and labor bo terminated? .'i'lieve are the question Mr. '"asset eh dcavors to answer. He points out prin ciples upon which can be based n solu tion of the labor problem. These prln- ciples. ho states, have actually been ' tested and have proved sound nnd prnc I tical. His experience as au industrial i engineer nnd hi study of conditions in j more than 1.VH) industrial plants have ' convinced him that what the working man is striving for is the self-expression I in his work that machinery and modern I efficiency have robbed him of. Mr. llns ! set succeeds in supplying this interest, I that tho passing of crnftsmanship has I tnkeii away, by granting the workman ' n vninn ffi thnntni tlin n1 tut no' .f Vi.. plant in which he works. lie docs not believe in profit-sharing, but he does ( eirait e.l .-IlltwiUk ll 'VM.I. U M believo in guaranteeing to the workman a minimum daily wage nnd steady em ployment the year round at this mini mum wnge. 'Hip purpose of these principles is to provide the workman with the kind of interest in his work that will make it moro of n pleasure than, u chore and will enable him to earn, more money with less effort. At the same time it will result in greater production from the individual work man nt the cost of less physical fatigue and will thereby increase profits. WIIKX THE WORKMEN HBI.P YOV MAN-1 AC1E Hv V n. nansct New vorK' The Century Co. la choosing according1 to yoar dsalrM Hotel orraatve aBassi'' W. B. KUGLEIt. Manascr Broad at Fairmount Ave. EasterSunday Dinner $1.50 C"lry nnd Ollv Snupip Soup KukI-t IlroileJ Wealulsli l.orruln Kaeter I'linch lloast 1'hiladeliihU Chicken Aparnf;uA Tlpi Sane- H lanJaise Frl"J Sw.m t 1'oUtur nomatn & Cucumber Hatad fulii Krulti In, l'rem offi' Special Platters Deviled Crab qa I'HmI )lrr (role lw)iJJC K.-lpiI hwret rotatoe Chicken Salad d ff nihile meat! Q X. JJ tried OyMeri Tenderloin Steak J O C llrulied leeh X 1 .lO Mualirrxtmn Tiny June 1'eua 1 j l'lankcd Georjria Shad and Roc ullh liamlVh $3.25 (for three. DenKiiik) RESTAURANT DEPT. Thns link"! M.1'1 ir, r kr.wk sir-:Ji:t. vuu n- of KUGLER'S RESTAURANT au 1W6 r . --- r -- r v ! f Candies Pastry Own Baking Announcement of the wpcninu ot our JTeslCautbtWD MALAMUrS RESTAURANT 21 N. 10th St. Durlnc the I'luiovfr Hnlldaya, lit Will Kerr Only Htrlctly KOSHER MEAL5 at 75 Cents and One Dollar Jlir Mentn lime the Home Conked Flavor, Juiil I.Ike Mother I iied tn Make. KELLY'S 12 N. 9th Open Day & Night Oysters in Every Style PLANKED STEAK or SHAD With nreftd, IJuttcr and f(c toffee DU A POPULAR SPECIAL DINNER 75c 0TEL UNUSUAL SERVICE.' uraers Taken and ueiivoroa PIPING HOT MEALS Comnlrtn dlitiHT soup C 1 OC nV.irrt rnrd nt jour ItttJ noma br auto delltary , Finest French Pastry Sfrird In unci froin our Pastry A Ice Cream Shop NORMANDIE HOTEL aU.KJ riiona Paring- ltefl jji 01M4ND1E1I . EVBtflNa Ym - LEONARD WOOD . I GREAT AMERICAN Tivo Biographies Which Dis- close the Soldier's Title to Distinction Tho candidacy of Leonard Wood for tho presidency has already produced three books dealing with his career. Tho first, by Joseph Hamblen Scars, came out last year and was noticed on this page at the time.. Of the two which have ap peared this spring, one is written by Prof. William Herbert Hobbs, of the University of Michigan, who is n mem ber of the executive committee of the National Security League, and the other is by Uric Fisher Wood, formerly a civil nttnche to the American embassy in Paris, who saw service in the war and left it with the rank of lieutenant colonel and two decorations. He is not related to General Wood. Colonel Wood has written the story of tho life of General Wood with sym pathy aud fairness. Ho has not merely compiled n book from newspaper nrtlcles nnd official reports, but has made per-, sonal investigations which have re sulted in the enrichment of bis book with much intimate matter never before in print. He tells the story of the general's youth on Cape Cod, his entrance Into the army ns a contract surgeon, his re markable achievements In tho Gcronlmo campaign, his participation in the Spanish War and his success nB gov ernor of Cuba nnd later in tho Philip pines. Much space is given to bin cam- I paten for preparedness nnd the story is told ot now lie nun uoru uouerts, wnue watching the ninucuvors of th,e Germany army In 1002, were impressed with the fact that the army was being trained for attack upon England and America and not merely for the defense of Germany. Lord Roberts returned to England nnd began his campaign for preparation to meet the impending nttack, but he was laughed at. Geueral Wood made his recommendations to the War ment. where they were filled awny In a I"Kiu uic. jiii as un- jri-ura iiomuu iiu ! .- 1.1 T... .U. .... n..J l.A 1 college training camps which developed enme into ine upeu uuu niKuuiiiu me ' into the riattsburg camp and ultimately provided the rnw material for thousnuds I of officers for the army which had to lp raised. The book is tnn storv of d s- tinguished achievement ns a soldier and'oped in .lean, her heroine, a most in-1 as an administrator which ought to be !.,. K,Hr , ,. ,,,.u, , read by every une who wishes to know ," . , ' , , ,,, ' " something about the man who has played feminism. Like Hardy's Tcss, like lb it large part in the history of the ten's Hedda, .lean is ,not cribbed, I'ljited Stntes in the last twenty-five cabined and confined by man-mado rou- Tofpor Hobbs-s book Is not so large ,!iucs', hM" or conventions She ns that of Colonel Wood and it has been ,lns Iicr p,'1 stundurds and Hmlta prepared in a different way. .The author tions." She U a highly interesting admits in bis introduction that It Is little figure Fimply nT the central perwuioge more than n compilation of the work of L. .i,...!.!.,,' ,,,. u. ,u j ...i.ti. others. He lets General Wood tell his .il?3nB-bf biK Xi,nS nnlwl n5 own story- where he can get the docu- ,? "?"?' tfe.8h!SrdHnBV.al'? mitnln i,n,l ho mmfp Itlirlllll fpnm ,i.i.,.. uu.a IIV Mu...... ...., ..u... auotes Theodore ltoosevclfs writings about the inan. 'i lie book is more ot a pica lor military preparedness thnu a biography, for the greater part of it is devoted to jiip eiioris ()i ns siiDjeci to ir uis coiiiitryiiien to n realisation of the need ur "'"' V""' ;,' , ':""-'r"- """-"she is not Incking In tender understand he, nnd a few others foresaw. in rpi-p ,,nr,,r f her lieroln.. IS. oT Yhc two books supplement each other. for what is lacking from one is supplied by the other. LECIN'AHD WOOD. Conerater of American- lm Hy Erie Fl-her Wood. Illuatr.ited. New York: Qeorae II. Doran Co. I'.'. LKONAKU WOOD. Holdler. Admlnlstr itor. ('It lien, lly William Uerbert tlnlibs. With an Introduction by Henry A. Ve Wood. Illustrated. New York: O. P. I'utnnm fane. 2. If,... C;,. 'l,.,nn,,,,.,,f Modem bales Management It is particularly gratifying to find im mnt nopiootpH nml. lii Hip Inst analysis, the most vital department of rnsiness enterprise so aoly discussed ns is the field of "Sales Management. " by J, George Frederick. The business literature ot recent years has contained almost an oversupply of books on salon-. manship. the detail tactics of selling. Mr. Fredericks1! volume discusses the true strategy of (.filing that is Involved in marketing u commodity over a wide, area. This sales strategy may be said to fall under three heads, the 'Strategy of i approach oi organization ana ot con tinued development of it territory. Its 1 very importance has made this strategy I a carefully guarded business t-eeret up 1 to the present. To disclose the prin ! ciples nnd methods of their sales sue-1-f.s hu seemed to many a prosperous business little le-is than disclosing the set-ret process that brought it value. Hut , here, in a broadly founded nnd well- considered handbook, Is discussed the whole range of those problems that go tn make tin the science aud art of con structive sales mnnngement. They reach from tho personal qualifications of the f-alcs manager through tue nrm s rela tion with its field representatives and its public to the development of mar kets nnd the strategy of merchandising on n national nnd international scale. MODERN SALESMANSHIP. Ily J. Oeorae Frederick. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 12.00. THE NEW BOOKS Morr riwndrrl rftlm nd miitlon will tie mulft UN iare warrants. General THE TtfPSIAV IlBrUBI.I''. Hv l il Ma lone. Now York: Harcourt, Hraco & I Howe. Colonel MMone. British naval aviator and I later an M. P , traveled to Ru.sla and elves an unensnred account of conditions. THK NONPARTISAN LBAOUK By II E. Oaston. New York: Harcourt, lirace 4 T la'anthnr. for threa years connected with it. Hi farmers1 co-operative WUtlral oruar.. r &" no-"a'nltcVpo3.-y- "" U'"T "" prop" runt mystery 1'LAY9. Ry Ruiioinn steinor New York: G. IV Putnam's Truncations by well-known Oxford and iimi-ii'iB rchniars. . LIVING ALONE. II y .Stella Benson Nen- An aileory. which com'bl'nea verbal love lln. . symbolist, poetry and touches of Pi".,';'S.Ul,l' tll??V.'.,ity- tw;,.- r,r. WALTnn PAMP'S HANDIJOOIv Or HEALTH New York: D. Appleton Co I The famous Yale authority on athletics ' I and noted member of tha navy'i committer on i tralnlnw camp '.ctlvltlea. tell" what ood I health Is. how to attain Jt and how to muln ' tain It full of valuable sucKestiona of practical merit, i MANY. MANY MOONR. ny Lew Saretl. New York: Henry Holt Co. Poems of the Indiana and the north woods In which they llv. I Fiction ! KTIVTIIEfl iHRONICLUS OK AVONLRA fl;- L. M. Monttomery. Boston: The Pare Co. Additional delightful episodes In the career of ih ever-popular Anne of Green Gables. i THK GREAT APCIDKNT By Ben 'Ames Williams. New York: Tho Macmlllan Co. A typical American town furnishes the . . roclal and political backgrounds for this novel I In whicn the "dry issue nrures. AT FAMfJ'8 OATKWAT. Ily Hennle T. Mis New York: Henry Holt & Co. The etory. humorous and otherwise, of a ' planlsttc feminine r.nlus from an oil boom town neeklni fame In a metropolis. 1 MAItrHINO SANDS By Harold Lamb, New Torn u. Appieion a vo, Advtnture yarn of a vroup of Americans In the Gobi denert seeking for lost whlti race. Thrllllnc THE LA CHANGE MINE MYSTERY. Hy p Carleton. Boston: Little. Brown & Co. A dream girl and a rotd mine furnish th Ingredients for a corklne good story that holds the Interest THE CHINESE LAREL. D J. Frank Davis. Boston: Little. Brown ft Co. A atorr of th I'nlted StAtes secret service. I (nsensatlonal. but clever 1 TRAIL1N'. By Max Brand New Tork. G. P Putnam Co The tale of tho trarklnf down bv a club man wlHi the soul of the lYest In him of the I man whom he believes has slain Ms father ' THE ailtL FROM KOUll CORNERS, By Re..ecc& N Porter. New York: Henry Knit tc Co. The romance of a girl who grew up amour coarse surroundings, her mother fighting to Instil Ideals Into her .against the opposition of h aelf.rentered and dissolute father. The locale Is California, whlclbthe writer knows -w-,Tmnr , FICTION AND FACT FOR READERS Wh&4? It LOUIS COUI'KItl'S Dutch novelist whose books nro being introduced to Aninrlcan readers FEMINISM IN NEW WRITER'S NOVEL "The Siving of the Pendulum!' Introduces Adriana Spadbni TIlP Htln .if "Tl.n i..n- .r ,V. ) i Bepnrt-Jv11,1j1.m, , 0!-t(i-,., ,,,,, .,., ,, !1u,l'ra " slgnKleantinml symbolic of the long nrc swept by the life Vf the modern woman. Adriana-Spadonl, the writer a pew American novelist of great future promise and decided , Present achievement, on the basis of this 'inuiai ncuon has devised nnd (level. I .... - . ... i - .... x. ,. v, i that the modern "feminine unrest" hns made outstanding iu the realm of wom ankind. Miss Spadoni kunws her sex inti mately its foibles nnd its finenesses, i jts wcakn(sses Hnd its strengths. .She i is not spBrinK iri l(,p k(u sntlrPi but course, a complex of the possible lives of several women, not the literal tran script of the emotional and spiritual ex istence of a single woman. The selec tive process, however, bus been so well employed and the details so dexterously welded that unity of impression, both of character and career, remains. She j takes her heroine through an unsuc cessful, somewhat plutoriic marriage, in i which she in only philosopher, ana throUBh n tense emotional romance. Fi- I "ally comes, after much dubiety nnd fmritual uucertitude, the test of life's I fulfillment in love. And Jean proves not feminist, but womnii. TJIE HWINO OK THE ri"NDriAM. nv Adriana Hnndunl. rlKht. It. 00. New Y'ork: Konl X: I.tvo- Mcrcier's Memoirs "Cardinal Mcrcier's Own Story'' brings within tho permanence of bpok form tho notnble and noble utterances, pastoral nnd public, of Desirce Joseph, nrchblshop of Mnllnes aud pcimntu of Itelgliuu, the weapons with which he defied, waged war, joined battle and otherwise not merely met l'russlnn jiiukerdom, but with which he aroused the sympathy of tho world. Iu the present translated form, the work of a group of English -Hcni'dictinc), the ma terlnl now brought out In volume form hnd wide circulation through the eol U 111 lis of tllP I3VKNINO I'l'W.ir LKDOKn uud excited great enough interest to make many pcrsous desire to possebS in con vnnlent form the impressive papers of the prelate-statesman, The book In the main consists of the nctuol text of the historically important' documents interchanged between the primate and tho satraps of tho army of occupation and bis addresses delivered to his Belgian flock of which ho was so genuinely tho shepherd. He says? "Hero are my war experiences in their most tei.se nnd vivid reality: all tlm is sues I fought with the occupying power, their methods and mine clearly defined. undeniably fixed .,in black nnd white." Cardinal Gibbons in a commendntory , letter writes: "In It the reader will i realise the full meaning of the cardinal's i attitude during the wnr and posbess a . true, historical account of the great , moral fight which was carried on by him as Ileglum's spiritunl leader." ' The adroitness, the strategy and the ' moral rectitude of these papers explain j , llOW the Iirclate was able to couailcr ' ',js adversaries; tlioy show the truth of ' th- statement that th, cardinal, wan' north a German (UvInIoii ; they mark ti. fnct tiat ev, America 0VC8 a debt to him for awakcnlutf the conscience of' the world and bhowiiiK nil aemoeruclen , way short introductions and nil- merous footnotes elucidate the InHpiring text. ''AKD1NAL MERCIKR S OWN STORY New York: George H. Doran Co. Baby Gaining? This is an important ques tion -because it tells you whether the food you are giving your baby is really nourishing him. Dr. J. I. Crozcr Griffith's book t Care of the Baby tdlB you just how much your baby should gain each month. And morci It tells you how to modify the food to make your baby gain tho proper 'amount. $1,60 if Imtratcd. At Roolcstorcs or B. SAUNDERS CO. PHILADELPHIA V . ! V jjffli m lari'Ji tt-iiA i " - '" BOLSHEVISM A GJZRMAN PLOT Princess Cantacuzcnc's Booh Discloses How the Peasants Were Demoralized The surpassing merit of Princess Cau tnciixcno's new book on the "Russian People," which recounts her revolu tionary recollections, is that she writes with full knowledge of her subject. She Is n granddaughter ot General Ulysses a. tr.ant and she married Princo Can .tacuzene about twenty years ago nnd went to live In Russia. She divided her time between St. Petersburg and the estates of her husband's family in the province of Poltava In Little Russia, whero It owned 2.",000 acres cultivated Intelligently with machinery. The princess begins with a description of life on the estotes prior to tlie revo lution, showing the relations between the peasants nnd the great family on which they were dependent. 'Ihcn comes a description of how German agents with vodka and German gold entered the district after ttfo revolution nnd prenched bolshevlsm with tho result that In the course of timo the peasants began to seize the horses and cattle from the estate nnd at last burned down the chateau that had been the scat of family life for 300 years and ruined the farm machinery nnd destroyed the 'fac tories managed by the family. When this had been achieved the German agents disappeared, leaving the peasants demoralized and Icndcrlcss, What happened on the Cantacuzene estates hnppened in other parts of Rus sia. The princess mnkes It impossible to believe the assertions of those who say that bolshevlsm was not foisted on the Russian peasants by the Gertnnns in order to weaken Russia and make her au easy prey to Germany when she was ready to reach out and take her. Of course, she writes from the point of view of the aristocracy, but wo have had so much written by the sympathizers with tho revolutipnists and by defenders of their purpose if not of their methods that such a book as this American woman has written out of the fullness. of her knowledge is much need ed by those who wish to know whnt has been going on behind the veil for tho last, three or four years. nUSSIAN PEOPLE, revolutionary Itceollre tlons. Py Princess Cantnoutane, Countena Speranky (no Oram). Willi lllurtratlona and mapa. Nw York: Charles Scrlbner's Sons. .T - An Artist in Alaska r Men wenry of the interminable dis cussions about the peace treaty, the high cost of llviug, the filthy streets and such like things can find relief In Rock well Kent's Journal of quiet adventure in Alaska. Mr. Kent is n painter with a fondness for Blake, He went to Alaska with his nine-year-old son in Sentember. 1018. found n vacant cabin on Fox island near Seward and stayed j UH.TC uii .uuri'ii ot tue iouowing year. He painted pictures in the intervals , when he was not chopping wood to keep his cabin warm or was not going to i Seward to get his mall or was not ' wandering' about the island. He kent a ' daily Journal In which he wrote down t tho state of tho weather, the activities of the little- bov aud the remarks of Olsen, a Swede, who was the only other Inhabitant of the island beside Kent and his son. It is n record of the mental activities of a man of imagination iu tho wilderness undisturbed by what was going on iu the great world outside. Reading it is as refreshing as a cold bath on a summer day. The book is illustrated by reproduction of Mr. Kent's drawings. They are my&tical after the manner of Bloke, and deco rative with the same peculiar quality that makes Blake unique. WILDRIINE.SS. A Jounml of quiet ndve.-i. ture In Alaska. By llockweil Kent. With dniwlnit" by tho nuthor and an introduc tion by Dorothy Curfleld. New York, a P. l'utnhm'n Sons. IS, RASPBERRY JAM A "Fleming Stone" Defective Story Sanford Embury refused his wife an allowance. He iB found dead in bed. Was his wife a party to the mur der? Tho clue that discov ers the criminal is one of the strangest in police an nals. RASPBERRY JAM will hold you spellbound until the surprising finale. By CAROLYN WELLS ? J. B. LIPPINCOTT CO. The TIN SOLDIER By Temple Bailey Liked by Everybody At all bookstores JI.7J CO,, Philadelphia PENN PUBLIHJIINO kIACOBS 1628 jm. I .i2 CHSBTNIT j BOOKS CHrSTNUT STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING 'msit r" TJtcoas. GLORY RIDES the RANGE DyKTHELand v JAMES DORR ANCK 31.75 Net A STORY of the " great out doors. Pull of awlft dramatic climaxes which hold the reader spellbound. THE MACAULAV CO., Publishers, N. V. $1.60 Net I I j! ' P T : A DUTCH NOVELIST OF FINE QUALITY . . r .H Louts Coupcrus Notable for Polished Style and Deli- ate Intuitions Louis Couperus, the .Dutch novelist, two of whose works, "Ecstasy" and "Poctor Adriaan," havebcen, published In this country andhave won a follows Ing for him that is alre'adv trrowinc. is an explorer of some Actional "misty mid-region of Wtir," an nlmoat Mac terlinckian land of subtleties, dubieties and Incertitudes of tho soul. Like Poe and like Maeterlinck, he Is the stylist as well jis the psychologist, tho master of tho "mot juste," the follcltous phrasing, the sense of fitting environ ment and tho illusive, atmosphere. His stylo is polished and delicately wrought; If it tends to the precious nnd the pur pic, It Is riot at the cost of affectation and fiorldlty. There is a curious es sential likeness to Henry James in Coupcrus, but it is not external Imita tion. Tho similarity is In the close knit wenving of emotions, moods nnd motives, and not in conscious Involution of verbal patterning and spinning. Coupcrus, in material 'and manner, docs not give his readers the homespun trngi-comcdlcsof commonplace life, told vividly nnd actively; nor does he pic ture In fiction tho genre scenes of the old Holland painters. He writes about what is gray and elusive in life and charac ter inchoate feelings that grip and con trol men nnd women, and not the ac tion that follows swift on red-blooded Impulse. He bclonra to what might bo called tho "scnsltivist" school of novel ists, who stand nloot from tho routine passions nnd activities of life. "Ec stasy," the third nCvel of Coupcrus, tells of the supremo moment ot lovo of a man and woman, the ecstatic peak of love, nfter years of routine living. it is delicately astir with romance. "Doctor Adriaan" Is almost Ibsen esque in Its relentless probing of emo tions and motives. It is a study in family psychology. Coupcrus shows with unerring intuition and remarka ble Insight the growth of a great soul greatly evolving to great achievements in the cramping environment or small souls, of pusillanimous persons whose native force is run down. In the hero Is concentrated all that remains positive and affirmative in his family's blood. He Is very humanly drawn, very Idealist! cally conceived. Alexander Teixeirn De Mattos lias made fine translations, rich in literary Quality amfdistlnction of English otyle and admirably communicative of the messago of Coupcrus. ECSTASY. Hy Louis Couperus. New York Dodd. Mend A Crf. 11.60. DOCTOR ADRIAAN. Ily Louis Couperus. New York: Dodd. Mead & Co. II. BO. c4 British Army Officer, a Stunning: Girl, and a "Mr. Maltwood" of Scotland Yard match wits with Th. DOCTOR of PIMLICO A Capital New Ditcctlva Story by WILLIAM LaQUEUX. TVaf, 91.75 t Alt Book-Shop,. 1THKMACAULAV C0.. MKW YORK Marc Nostrum The wonderful adventure-story, sea-story, nnd love-story, by BLASCO IBANEZ Author of "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse," etc. $1.90 at any bookstore E. P. Dutton & Co., 681 5th Ave., N. Y. GLORY RIDES th. RANQE By- ETHEL and V STORY of th Rreat out doors. Hull of swift dramatic cJImaxen which hold thn reader spellbound. JAMES DORRANCE $1.75 Net THK HACAULAV CO.. Pobilaber. W.V. "A ROUSING AND EXCITING talo of intrigue and vast estates and deception and discovery, re pentance and true love, worth at least ten of the novels of similar themes which appear each .sea son," says Heywood Broun of Leonard Merrick's Worldlings $1.7f at any bookstore . E. r. Dutton & Co.. 681 5th Arc, N. Y. SWEDENBORG'S BOOKS At a Nominal Prico 10 Centi, Any or all volumes will all ot the followlnr three It be sent, urebkld. to any address on receipt of 10 centi P"r tiooli: "Heatm and Hell" est Faiea "IMtluo VroTldence" ! "UlTUie Lore and Wisdom" SIS " Endowed for that purpose, this Hocl.tr otters to send you these books without cost or obligation otber than 10 cents each (or roalllnr, The books are printed In laree type on rood Paper, and are substantially bound In stirr paper cover. The American Swedenborg Print. inc ! Publishing Society llooin 711, S W. tDth St., VW York 1 !-- I THE A powerful thrill ing atpry'involv inga distinguished British Army ON fleer, a etunning girl, and a "Mr Maltwood" of Scotland Yard. DOCTOR of PIMLICO HyWIIlismLeQusus eA DETECTIVE STORY OUT OP THE ORDINARY Ntt.Sl.7S Tha MACAULAV CO "ubllahara.N.Y. Everything Desirable in Book ' WITHEHSPOON BLOQ.. Walnut, Juniper aad Sansera Sts. Klevatai Sa Oji4 SIaav I : OTliBMnlmMMWWlMnMMIMillill? THE DARK MIRROR . ; . ( x By the author of THE "FAIiSE FACES Louis Joseph Vance Was she Priscilla Maine, or Leonora? Was the man she loved Mario, or a figure in a dream? , . In one life 'she is a fine, rich girl; in the other; a haunting!; beautiful denizen of the underworld, the "brains" of a gang of desperate criminals. As one girl she oread in next-day newspapers of the crimes her other self had committed. Was it dualjdtntitu, or second sight? i "Vance's .most sensational mystery story." Net, 13S, at all bookstores. DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO., Publishers ISltitJSKll "one who CARDINAL MERCIER'S OWN STORY By His. Eminence, D. J. CARDINAL' MERCIER Archbishop ofcMalines "My war experience in their most tense and vivid reality; all the issues I fought with th6 occupying power, their methods and mine clearly defined, undeniably fixed in black and white." Cardinal Mercier. The passionately moving record of the greatest straggle between spiritual power and brute force the world bas ever witnessed. A great book worthy of a great man. Prefatory letter by Cardinal Gib bons. Beautiful frontispiece reproduction of new portrait of .Cardinal Mercier. Octavo. Net, $4.00 At All Bookshops ' GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY, Publishers, New York ANDERSON CROW ! DETECTIVE "by JT!m si i GEORGE BARR MXUTCHEON toutefyJO'HH fflffievx l x traUji-v Read DODO MEAD f vS I rfvt j-u-ouonar-jorjijajtity JreaFS. t v Sr Al Bookstores. $2.00 cm$yi' The Cresting Wave By Edwin, Bateman Morris Tho story of a man who made monoy his god. Ho was looked on as a big man. Then a girl called him a pigmy and proved it. And ho found what was wrong with himself and i ousiness Americn. There is a lovo clement, humor, a big shipwreck, and all in sprightly style. m At all booksellers. Jacket in Colors $1.75 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmSmm ' . . i .If i KATHLEEN by CHRISTOPHER MORLEY Formerly "Socratei," of the Ledger. Author of '"The Haunted Booh thop," "Sandygaff" and "Parnattut on Wheeli" A little letter from Kath leen accidentally dropped' from Joe's pocket and the fraternal ties of the Scorpions, academic duties, and dignity, were all for gotten; and the great Kath leen quest began. A little book in Morley's happiest comedy vein. Net, $1.25, at all bookstores. DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. , Headquarter For' Engineering and Technical Books Philadelphia Boole Company 17 South 9th Street LE LIVRE CONTEMPORAIN A magaxlne devoted Bent free on to French Literature implication. 8CHOENHOF DOOK CO. French Booltshop IB Deacon 8t. Ooston. Mas, The Impossible Made Possible by tha teutons detetttr Arseae Lupin in the marvelous story THE SECRET OP &AREK Wkeemr tnWert -U The MacauUy Cotapaoy, ftd-thlm, New York showed the world its way" New York Timet i T. MXUTCHEON it and smile COMPANY New Yorh PATCHWORK A .friendly book ! A delightful romance set in tho quaint Pennsylvania Dutch country. A true nnd vivid picture of life among these sturdy Americans. Brimful of cha'm the irre sistible charm of Phoebe's friendliness ! ANNA BALMER MYERS Illustrations and frontispiece in color by Helen Mason Grose. Every bookseller has it. Sl.io George W. Jacobs & Company Publishers Philadelphia For an ercnlni of thrilllns sdveo ture, read THE SECRET OF SAREK a new Arscne Lupin story. You won t lay It down tUl you finub. it ,!; .!.. THH MACAULAY COXCPANV PubUihere New York One of the senseitional fiction sue cesses of the last three year. SLIPPY McGEE By Marie Conway Oemler A Century Boofi Price $175 The Harbor Road By Sara Ware Basiett A slory of homely folk on Cape Codr; wltli humor and pathos and a draraalio )ov story. At All BoekitoVce. l,75 Pew PiialiiUci, Coapiajr, PJalladelpfcU I &' Jj) jB w wen ubov ars( lntlnutwj. J . T .-.,-,- ,., n n(ff V '- J" ( ' ,'ti4PWt "rfNtf? VJ.,'','C'!', a , - mfct-.-t. .frt LAS-.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers