w v V J. t ir jf' JA - i K- W , ' I-."- k wv "ym -Dili Jtfl NEWi ;MffAD n HARVEST i". Humphry .Ward Author of "Helena," "Missing," etc. ' Mrs. Ward's heroine is a striking woman of thirty, one of England's woman fanners. At the period of the full ripening of her life, there cornea to her n wonderful lovo affair. But in her girlhood she had married badly, tragically. That is the dark cloud that hangs always on her horizon. Mrs. Ward wove the warp and woof of this story in a way that showed her ripened and mature art at its best. Illustrated. $2.00 MANY JUNES Author of "The Honour of the Clintons," "Sir Harm" etc. Another of thoso leisurely, sane and delightful stories of real, everyday people, in the telling of which Mr. Marshall excels. As the New York Times says: "Readers of Archibald Marshall soon learn that to read one of his novels is like being introduced into a pleasant home and sharing tho lives of its inmates." $2.00 TO WALK WITH GOD By Anne W. Lane and Harriet Blaine Bcalc Thoso remarkable spiritual lessons, obtnined through auto matic writing, are interesting in themselves, but it is the high quality of this book which brings joy and comfort. Thousands have been helped by "Christ In You," nnd this book carries the same fundamental lessons of love nnd unselfishness. $1.-5 THE GREAT MENACE: Americanism Or Bolshevism? By George Whitcficld Mead The Great Menace is the subtle, determined movement for the complete overthrow of the present social order, including the Church, and the creation of an "Industrial Republic." Mr. Mead discusses this insistent and vital problem in n sane nnd enlightening way and his book carries a powerful message to loyal and intelligent Americans. DODD, MEAD & COMPANY, Publishers for Eighty Year DM yVhen Life Was Swift CrJ1 vMBI W Warn V vBl OH, YOU TEX! WD The romance and adventures of a TexaB Ranger in tho old time cattle country, by the au thor of 'A Man Four-Square ' WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE Sl. DO net At all bookstores Houghton Mifflin Company Red Terror and Green The Sinn Fein-Bolshevist Movement By RICHARD DAWSON A btudy of the growth of the society which, under the control of an anarchist labor clement, has become a wealthy international revo tionary organization, tho western wing of Leninism. It is a story of vital interest to those Americans who want the truth about Ire land of to-day, and are asked to subscribe funds to aid the Sinn Fein movement without fully knowing its aims and nlliances. S2.50 Ireland an Enemy of the Allies? The results of an independent study of the Irmh question by a Frenchman who for years had accepted at their face value the theatrical abortions of Nationalists and .Sinn Feiners. A well-informed, clearly-written book which deserves to be widely read. 52.50 E: P. DUTTON & CO., G81 Filth Avenue, New YorK THE RED LADY A Mystery Story by the Author of "The Branding H tT 7T H Iron" M Co- BnHnHnSH A LITERARY "FIND" In the Shadow By Horace A. Wade Age 11 With a Preface A Wonder of a Story for 1-Jvern Man Who Han Been a Boy and a Chortle of Delight From Beginning to End Irvin Cobb says: "He's a genius" rulillsheil 1 ebruarj- -, cloth, l'-'ino. 1'rlre 1.25 net REILLY & LEG Publishers Laughter and tear and a rattling food plot. SLIPPY McGEE By Marie Conway Oemler A Century Book Price SI. 75 asDM By Archibald Marshall $1.2 New York eDM and Death Was Sudden BoMon nnrl New York Translated It. (. from the French I5S101M,.IKE Katharine Newlin JBurt of Great Peril America's Youngest Author by George Ade Chicago The TIN SOLDIER By Temple Bailey Liked by Everybody At all bookstoita H.ti I'L.NN 1'UllLlhIIINO CO.. I'hiladelDhla MSMaSMMHNHSNMWMM I 't LIVE: SOME OF THE NEW NOVELSOF SPRING Sunken Treasure, tho Sea, Pa ranoia and Domestic Psy chology the Themes The average person first heard of pnrnnola at the time of tho Thaw "cntipe eelebrc" nnd the term is now pretty .widely distributed in the nubile potiM'iousness. Dr. George Lincoln Walton, well known for his books on ulIenlMii nnd neurasthenia, Mich as "Why Worry" and "Thoso Nerves," has departed from the field of the popu larized medical trentlsc in "Oscar Mon tague, I'ornnolne," which is a piece of interesting fiction. "A pnrnnolnc is n person who is out of joint with his surroundings," nccordiug to the defi nition. This maladjustment Is explic able In the ease of tho most brilliant of the Montagues, the hero of this tnle. His mmtly nml lilt environment arc shrewdly sketched by Doctor Wnlton. Tho book is dramatic and wittily writ ten. It shows that many of us are In a more or less limited sense tho sub jects of paranoia. Another story of n family development through heredity and environment is "The Mnrbccl: Inn," by Harold Uric house. Mainly it centers about the hero, the son of an English working family, who strides upward and ahead. Ills business career, which is success ful, is told in relation to his marriage, which Is not successful. Then comes his real romunee. The record is almost like the ehronlcles of one of our Amer ican self-made men who become mag nates. The deelopment of the tnle Is logical and the characters ore convinc ing. There is n decided comedy sense to lighten the more serious matters of psychology. "All the Urothcrs Were Valiant." is n somewhat epical ynrn of the sen, but with Its lyrical tunes, too. Tt lias more of the quality the red-blooded - i)fs of .luck London s fictional sea- M'apcs than the atmospheric marine painting of Joseph Conrad, though Mr. Williams is not nt nil imitative nnd lie writes very colorful descriptions. The pagan of n family is found on nn Island i where he is a pirate nnd a pearl hunter. His brothers quest fur to find him and when they discover him It Is only to , enter upon a most thrilling and absorb- J ing story of hidden treasure, mutinies i nud tropic love. I Sunken treasure trove also is the ma terial about which Hoy Norton builds . his exciting novel, "Drowned Oold." 'The hero is n young American shipmas ter who searches for the treasure of n ship sunk in the great war. Of course, ' there is n romance in it, too. The style lis far nbove that of the average adven ture tnle. am. tub nnoTHnns were valiant. I liv Hpn Amor Williams Now Tork. T.io Marmlllnn Co. PitOWN'nO OOLD Hy Hoy Norton Doston. Houchton Mifflin rn Tltn MAItnncK INN Hy Harold, lit Ik- hme lloplon- I.ltllo tlrown A To. OS' WIS MONTACll'E. VAllANOIAC. ny (!-oro 1. Walton Philadelphia J V. 1 ppin "Oil I o LE LIVRE CONTEMPORAIN A magazine devoted Sent free on to French Literature "npllcatlon. SCHOENHOF BOOK CO. French Bookshop 15 Deacon St. Boston, Mass. People xr.n cUraortnt; for Maxwell The Devil's Garden Irreiiilibljr readable SfirlngftttJ Republican m,mammmmmmaKKMmtmmmmmmmimKmmimmt j-rr v r JjlO LsttlCOlil JVOVCl A MAN For The AJ By Irving Bacheller At ntl Dooksolters HHamaaaMnmiisssBassiM F. BRETT YOUNG'S Crescent Moon is a love story of haunting beauty in a wonderful setting on the border of the African jungle. $1.90 1 "cw book by this author The Young Physician Will be published in April ; ! your bookseller ot tier mv E. P. Dutton & Co., 681 Sth Ave.,N.Y. Summer Complaint The best treatment for Summer Complaint is its pretention. This is simply a matter of proper feeding, proiier clothing, proper ImthinK. Dr. .T. P. Crozer Griffith's book Care of the Baby tells you just how to modify tho food to make your baby gain; how to clothe nnd bathe it how to build up its resistance to sickness. ?1.G0 illustrated. At Bookstores or W. B. SAUNDERS CO. PHILADELPHIA Vl A Novel A By W. B. J Anthor of ES jMm ' VfTK TswM mscBmmmmGmcfim ahVhkkkK hkkv itif .MKS. REGINALD DE KOVEN Who tclLs how sho lias communi cated with her dead sister CALE YOUNG RICE'S POETICS AND POEMS "Shadowy Tliresholds" Offers Definitions and Illus trations Neither the free verse forms of Miss Lowell nnd her disciples nor the tem pestuous gallops of Hnhert Service servo ns models for Tale Young Itlcc In his latest volume of poems, which he en titles "Shndowy Thresbolds." Mr. Klce, It might be claimed, follows nn one mnster, but he tends, in the present volume, at nny rnte, to the stricter poetic structure of English nnd curly American traditions. In his long nnd interesting although by nn means definite or overpoweringly novel pref ace, the poet gives the following defini tion of poetry. "Poetry is the rTpression of our ex perience in emotional word-rhythms more lyrically measured than those of prose, and hnving some permanency of appeal not possessed by mere verse. With so general n model before him. Mr. IUce could not very well stray far from his own definition. The poems vary to such an extent that It might be asked if nil the subjects included hnve come within the range of the nu thor's experience. If so, he hns led one of those roving existences thnt serve to distinguish many modern writers. At other times his poems reflect the sedentary nnd pensive type of verse. This gamut of subjects causes n rather skipping motion In the mind of the render, but if the latter likes variety he can find it here. "A Poet's Childhood." which opens the volume, contains twenty short poems, i It might be judged from them that the poet s childhood was n terribly unhappy one. The charm of a Hiley or n Field is somewhat marred by the constant nn penranee nnd repetition of death. In general somberness nnd pessimism these iwicms follow the old example of Crnbbe i or the more modern one of IMgnr Lee .Masters. 'I hey are written in the form . of blank verse. The contents of the remainder of this 1K0-page volume are too varied to place in nosirive categoric. I here rtro n positive categories 1 here number which reflect the wnr in odd. but not htehlv nn red. thouchts. Sev ernl verses with Chinn ns n setting bring 1 up the question ns t Mr. Rice's I knowledge of thnt land. A sen rbnntcy. i several poems about the fen. one verse j with n Floridn setting thnt contains splendid imngery, the usunl assortment of nature studies, not too well done, n l"' Study of a murder in n liclgh- ' bor's house after the npproved modern - ' Ntle fashion, a brutnl piece called "The I Courtesan." In the manner of Hrncst J fow .on, aim u Krcin umiij imm-iuh uuui ing with the immutable nnd ngeless question of the purposes of the Dotty, comprise the volume. One of the Intter. entitled "A finmbler's Guess nt It." exemplifies the more cynical side of the author: Whit are. tho stars but dice of God nunr on the nlsht's uncertain sod vht to the etaVe Ifo Isys with ITats r Hut whether Life's for love or hati Whnt if lie loses to the roe' Forfeit we and He must r What If H wins? Pecurltj I or all throush all eternity -HADOWT TimF.SHOI.DS Ilr re Toun Ulc" New York: Tho Century Co. BUTLER ON AMERICA President of Columbia Dis- cusses Whether It Is iForth Saving I-,., . ,1., f "Vtf.l.rtlnQ Mtlcinr T.,ll- I ''llllML .il IIUIll .'Mil 1 H,l 1 III I 11 I of Colnmhln Tnlveisity. has rnlleetpil n number of his more important paper nnd nddrcs.opi into the permanent form of n volume entitled, from the initial en trj. "K America Worth Saving:" In view of the fact that Mr Ihitler is nn avowed candidate for presidential nom ination on the Hepuhllian tiiket. this 1 voicinc of Ids opinions, attitudes and , tiew points takes on specially timely in terest. It elves the hodj and the spirit of his politicul, economic nnd social philosophy. Naturally his philosophy is what is called conservative in fome quarters i and ".standpat" in others, dcpendlne i on which wing ol tho (t. O. P. thrt commentator helonES to. 'I hat he is one of thoso who would conserve nnd pre serve is nothlns to Doctor Sutler's dis credit, however, nH history has demon strated the necessity of controlling the lialance wheel or rmldcr in eras of storm and (.tress. Doctor Murra 's utter ances are what might he rea-onnhly ex pected from the vice presidential can didate on the Taft ticket of 1012, on which the national committee pluced him after the death of the roti ontion nom inee, .Tnmes Schoolcraft Sherman. , Historical backgrounds, as well ns current tendencies, are taken into ac count hi tho formulation of Doctor Ilutlcr h views. Jlis liook Is divided into two sections "National Prob lems," including the labor issue, the cost of living aud tho League of Na tions, nnd "Party Policies," dealing with progress in politics, the present duty and opportunity of the O. O. P. nnd niihu Hoot as statesman. There aro also several Important papers on educational subjects. Naturally tho Interrogation in tho title address is an swered in the affirmative hy Doctor Uut ler, who holds that tho American peo ple wllT prefer to save America in their own way without nny alien radicalism or Imported holshcvism. ia AMEItlCV WOHTII SAVIN'U' riy Nlon olss Murray Duller New York: Charles Htrlbner's ttons. tl. IijzH ISWW t MRS. DE KOVEN TALKS WITH DEAD SISTER At Least She Thinlts Spirit Messages Arc Authentic. Some "Ghost' Boolts 'Following the death of her sister in the spring of 1018 Mrs. Reginald Do Kovcn became Interested in discovering whether the dead had a conscious exist cncennd could communicate with the living. Through the Influence of a friend she went to n "medium" withlmn week of her bereavement ntvd was so deeply interested in whnt hnppcned thnt sho continued her visits until she wns con vinced that ehe hnd been put in com munication with her sister. She has been converted to a belief In whnt is called spiritualism for lack of a better name nnd has written n book about her experiences. Rhc calls it "A Cloud of Witnesses." Sho gives n brief history of the various theories advanced to explain the spiritualistic phenomena before setting down her own experi ences. Sho inclines to the belief that tho mediums have peculiarly sensitive nervous ganglia which respond to thought messages from tho unseen world, nnu she accepts tho accounts of ma terializations through the exudation from tho bodv of the medium of a curious substance which takes human rorm. The report tint Crookcs. the in ventor of Crookes tubes, cut from the head of n materialized spirit a lock of hnlr which he still possesses, arouses in her no skepticism. Her book will be in teresting to fellow-believers ns well ns to students of psychology who refuse to nctcpt tho evidence of communication with other worlds. Tho value of the book, such ns it hns, lies In Us definite Identification of tho persons mentioned in it. "Our Unseen Guest," nnother "ghost" book, lncks this value. For it is published anonymously nnd the identity of tho persons who give nnd re ceive messages is concealed. It pur ports to be written by the husband of n woman who accidentally discovered thnt she could receive messages on the oulja board. She nnd her husband found such a board in the parlor of n boarding house nnd sat (town to amuse them selves with it. They were astounded to find that n mnn who hnd been killed in the wnr. n mnn of whom they had never heard, began to write n message. They were skeptical at first, but bought a oulja board and continued their in vestigations. In the course of time they found thnt the woman knew before the pointer got to it whnt letter was coming next. Then they found out that she could write the messages on n type writer nnd finally that she could write them with n pencil. In the course of timo they began to get messages from n Mr. IC. nnd thev communicnted them to Mrs. IC. described as a writer. Mrs. K. wns Interested, but doubtful, but ns the messages continued to come she wns finnlly convinced thnt she was In nctunl communication with her husband. One of the messages, for example, mentioned n boat with red snlls nnd used the word l lorence. .Sow Mr. K. hnd once owned n boat with red sail nnd its nnme was Tessa, after the heroine of "Itotnola." the -cene of which Is laid in Florence. Mrs. IC. according to the book, decided that Florence was used to suggest to her the name of the boat, hecnuse the medium could not under stand the wor,d Tessa, and this was one of tho messages which removed her doubt. Circumstantial evidence will lend those familiar with the story of her life to infer that Mr. IC is Mrs. Mar caret Deland. of Poston. If it is not she we beg her pnrdon for mentioning her name, nut ns tne puniisners nn nounce thnt nearly nil the persons men tioned in the book nre well known, there will hi' n lot of guessing nlxiut their identity One of the disembodied spir its sets forth n new philosophy which is given in the book. The render, how- ex er will be more interested in the I reports of the identifying messages re ' reived thnn in the philosophy. now pclitinn of Sir 01irr l.nflso s Plrt 2itri.ti.nl nt Mnn" hnK itlf nn- pnarr.1 to ,,,ocl .!,. domuntl for 1.1k vlnw; ; on the Pilbjcot. It rivpb n record of fnmons nisps which enmc tin ut the firit meeting of the Soclct, for lehlcal RoHcafoh. ii uoll ns n hNtnr.r of tho first three decades of the society. The results of the Piper sittings are given as well as a report of the "controls" of Myers nnd Hodgson. Professor Hens'ow's "The Proofs of the Truths of Spiritualism" is n com pilation of the views of manv spiritual ists, bv a man who accepts them ns true. Profcs-or IIciislow has no doubt as to the nulhi'tilicin of spirit photographs and spirit materializations. His book will not convince any one who is not nlrendv convinced. A Cl.orn or WITVF.SSKS Hv Mrs Annd TieKmen V'v Vork n. V niittort fn Oflt t'N'SEIJN cil'l'RT. nonymous. New VnrU Itsrrer ft Hro ? TItn HL'UVIVAL OK MAN A ptufly In un reminlreil humin faculty ny Hlr Oliver IxidRe. LL I'.. V So , I- H. f. New Tork: Oeorc H Dorsn Co Tim PROOFS OF TIIK Tntmis OF Ml'iniTUALlSM. Dy ths Itev. Prof. O. llennlow, SI A . r. L. fl , F. O. II , r. II II C. With fifty-one Illustrations smt spirit drswlnus New Tork: Oodd, Mead A Co. 12 Bn A Thriller by Lc Qucux William I.e Qucut. has many a thrill ing ynrn to the credit of his loom, hut he hns never spun one more Intricate in pattern and stnrtling in color thnn his latest, "The Doctor of Pimlico." The title chnrncter is another rrofes sor Moriaritv or Doctor Tu-Manclm In his control and command of daring, desperate aihenturoiis men, nnd like the fanner he is a shrewd, scientifically trained, profoundly able director nnd dictntor of a band of criminals of in ternational scope. His camouflage of tin- practice of surgery both affords pro tectlve ciiloritloti for nefarious enter prises nnd affords him means of getting intimate knowledge of Intrigues ami other affairs. Hut his secrecy is penetrated and his camarilla of crooks exposed In a rare and sensational mnlching of wits between him and a writer of detective fiction, who also "makes up'' as a Scot land nnl detective. Till! POTTOH or I'l.MLiro. ny William Le Quem Nsw York. The Mscauley Co Jl "' Jane Austen Appraised Headers of .lane Austen who nre de voted enough to her to wish to have her plots dissected and anitlyze'l and her characters aporaised. will find in a book by Prof. O. W. Firkins, of tho depart ment of Dngllsh of the Tnlversity of Minnesota, a discussion exactly fitted to their taste. The volume contnlns about 250 pages, the greater number of which are given over to detailed examination of the woman's writings nnd to a run ning commentary of such biographical detail as is available. There nre about a dozen pages of fino and reasoned criti cism of Miss Austen which correct the misconceptions of her worshipers and put her In her proper place in the tie plopinent of the English novel. They reveal Professor Firkins as n critic o'f knowledge and discrimination. JANK M HTIJN l!y O W Firkins. New York Henry Holt & Co $1 73 ijyyfaiaiilkttri! Everything Desirable in Book WITIIERSPOON BLOC. Walnut, Juntpar and Saniom Sta. Ulivator to ZnJ Floar LORD FISHER'S VITAL BOOK Two Volumes of Memories and Records of England's Great est Admiral Unless this reviewer's judgment is nt fault, Lord Fisher's two volumes of "Memories and Records" will be ono of the most popular biographies of the season. They will be popular for two rea sons. The first is thnt Lord Fisher is n man of force and originality who suc ceeds in producing in the render the im pression thnt ho is' In contact with a real man. Tho second is that ho deals with questions of naval strategy ns they related to tho recent nnd more distant wars and talks right out In meeting about the blunders made by the British Admiralty. He produces the impression of real ity by tho way in which the. book was produced. He did not sit down in his library and wrlto it. but dictated it to a stenographer whllo walking up nnd down tho room. The stenographer has reported faithfully what ho said, in cluding his digressions nnd his apol ogies for ranking the digressions nnd his belittling of the written word. For ex ample, on ono occasion ho says that if the reader could only see him walking about and shaking his fist, then he might get some impression of his per sonality. But, alas! ho concludes, the printed word is cold nnd impersonnl. If he had been a literary artist of su premo skill, ho could not hnve con trived better to give the lie to his words. The parts of the book dealing with the political and military history of the past twenty or thirty years will com mend themselves to every officer in the navy and the army nnd to every serious-minded man interested in tho solu tion of the problems of world peace in the future. MEMOniHS AND 11ECORDS. Hy Admlrat jr the Meet Lord i'lahcr. In two volumes. with portrait and Illustrations. New lorlt: Oeorgs If. Doran Co. IS. THE NEW BOOKS ,Jore extended notice, ns space permits, will bo. then to such hooks as seem to merit It. General THE LIPE OP LEONARD WOOD. By J. O. Holme. Garden City: Doubleday, l'asre A. Co. A popular account of the career of the presidential candidate. WOODROW WILSON, nv William E. Dcdd. Garden City: Doubleday, Pare . Co, Tho professor of history at Chicago Uni versity utilizes the methods of historical re search and consideration In dlsruailns- tho I'rcsldcnt. his policies and his administra tions. Sheds new light on his .Mexican pn gram. MOMENTS WITH MARK TWAIN. 8elccted lv Albert lllaelow Paine. New York: Harper tt Ures. The distilled wisdom of the wise and witty humanist and humorist. STORIES OF THE SAINTS. Ily Grace Hall. Garden City: Doubleday, Pnee & Cd. Lectends and traditions of hndloloiry retold Viy,,!nirAn?ln,orinlnslv for old and younir THE ORIENT IN UUILB TIMES. Ily Ellhus Grant, Philadelphia: J. D. Lip- Plnoott Co. Presents a comprehensive nnd historically accuratn panorama of the oriental world Its peoples, civilizations and history, durlni, lllbln times. THE HOOK or COURAGE. Ily John T. Tnris. Philadelphia: J. II. Llpplncott Co. An Inspirational volume, with msny ex amples quoted of various types of hardi hood nnd bravery. 'HIST RKFLUCTIONS ON THE CAM- l'AION OF 11)18. ny R. Jl Johnston. Now York: Henry Holt A Cc. Major Johnston, formerly of tho historical section of the general staff. A. E. P., had specially good opportunities for observa tion uml on these ho bases his analyses and Interpretations. PARLIAMENT AND REVOLUTION. lty Itumsny Macdonald. Now York. Scott & Seltzer. . A sclentllle and thorouch nnrumoit nsalnst bolHhosm in favor of democrotlo insti tutions, bv a noted Hrlllsh labor louder. IRELAND AN ENEMY OF THE ALLIES? ny it. . i;scouuairc. ;sow York! K. r, Dutton i. Co. An ntltmpt. bv a Frenchman wrltlhir In Iflis to nroo that tho Irish were pri'-Oer-man. Tho London Spectator sios: "M. hr'ouflnlre is ono of tho few forelnners who I.rvo takn the trouble to study tho Irish ouestlon Instead of accepting at thlr face alno tho Ihoiitrlcal insertions of National- ' lets Hnd Finn lVlllers j 'rKha'rl.ri " Nw i Vlrst i-ollectlon by an early American I"'1"'10' '?"?:?, ,"?""nr -w?" notable dtirln SJ .hra.eraVrMeTsenTer on! T.iSf horary editor of tho Stvr York nvtnlnz j-oni now it can- all nn told nv riuiip Olhbs New York: Harper & Ilro. Hturtllnc; reflations of tlitnxs that wnr correspondent)! had tn keen kprrnt nhmit durlnK tho conflict. LKAUNINtl TO WRITi: Succestlons nnd counsels from tho wrltlnns of Ilnbert Ixiuls fUcenon. Ntw York: Chos. Kerlbnor's Sons. THU .lOKK AUOLT HOl'SINCl. Ily C. H. WhltHker Iloston: Marshall Jone Co. An analytic snd vnstruetlve icmsldcru t Ion of tho American housing problem. ELKCTUICIANS' WiniNO SIANtTAL Ily F r hens-stock. New York: Modern Publtshlna Co. An atithorttMIc and complets handbook on the subject Fiction MAnQORnATS PURL ny Anthon Froude Nw York nobert McDrlde & Crt. A forceful novel centerlne about . man's threefold strursle for love, frlendshlo and self-mastery. Tha teen 9 Is fashionable Lon don. THE nnp LADY. By ICatherlns Newlin Durt. Iloston: Houghton Mifflin Co. Mysterious ndventuren of a yourur house keeper In n rambllnc eld southern mansion. TUB BYE OF ZKLTOON ny Talbot Mundt. Indianapolis! nobbs. Merrill Co Mystery, ndventuro und romance In far off places. HOMK OF US MARRIED. Ily Mary Stewart Cuttlnc. Garden City: Doubleday, I'ncs k Co. More of tho penetratlnic and very human fhort stories of this author on nuptial rela- tlons. TUTT ANP MR. TL-TT fly Arthur Train. New York: Chan. Hcrlbner's Bons. Tho ingenious jams of n pnr of shister Inuiors and their quaint clients. Till. HF.CUET Or HAHF.K. Ily Maurles Leblane. New York: Tim Macaulay Co A numelous plot Inijenlously concclrd iri tho brain of tho creator of Arsene Luntn OI.OUY ItlDKS TIIIJ RANOB Ily E nd .1 Dorancc. New York: Tho Macaulay Has all tho mysterious lure of & tale of COMI'-ON niAnLI-Y llv Thomas Addison Indlsnapcllii llobbs-ilerrlll Co. A novel of lilch flnanre. WORTH-WHILE BOOKS Since man sheds his coat in tho spring, women arrays herself over and with new millinery, gowns, shoes, etc., book publishers also lmvo their recurrent fashion and season. Saturday, April 17 is date set by tho publishers to make their Spring an nouncements' of their newest publications in tho PUBLIC LEDGER nnd EVENING LEDGER. Uiogrnphics, His tory, Economics, Homnnco of tho most interesting type, Fiction of gripping force. Watch for their announcement. rPRIL 17TH IS THE DAY "it mnn ! ti iMniln i-Vin iiiuii rriu iiuv; iiw Mit vvtujuhuui r Even the "well informed" will be amazed by the revelations made, in this book: Germany lostithc first battle in her preliminary plans for a world war in 1902. A postage stamp settled the canal route. How "T. R." foiled the Prussian plans to strike In 1905. Why Germany conspired to prevent the build ing of the canal at Panama. Proof that the United States had no hand hi promoting the revolution of Panama. The details of the great victory won for Panama without bloodshed. i fiT The Great Adventure of Panama And Its Relation to the World War ("The Man Who Made the Panama Revolution") At All Booksellers. Net, $1.75. Published bv DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO., Garden City, N. Y. The Cresting Wave By Edwin Bateman Morris The story of a man who made money his god. He was looked on as a bifc man. Then a girl caller! him a pigmy and proved it. And he found what was wrong with himself ami business America. There is a lovo clement, humor, a big shipwreck, fnd all in sprightly style. At all booksellers. Jacket in Colore $1.7S THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA .(rWHHgSSHIH r- ' illPi "I Want $25, Today" Into his rooDi she cunic ' as though she had a perfect right to he there this woman so young, so allur ing, so daringly gowned. Could it bo that she knew the seeret behind his sud den rise to fortune ? Was it need or blackmail that brought this fascinating creature to him.' All his fortune was at stake, all liers and all that of another woman the woman he loved. How did he meet this situation? Read the answer to this only one of the threads in this tangled story that has a thrill on ever" page in Arthur Somers Roche's Greatest Mystery Novel With Jamet Montgomery Flase'e illuttrations. Love, mystery, tempta tion, business, romance all these are woven into the lives of as swift a set of men and women as you have over read about. And around them blaze the lights of Broadway, gleam ing into dark corners, illuminating some mysteri ous, hidden things. It is a book you cannot miss if you love to bo thrilled touched fascinated. Clot it to day at any store that sells books. It is $1.75. And you can't go wrong on a Cosmopolitan Book. nopolitan Book (orporation Publishers Ir? Wilt ronTiiTH SraiiT, Ntw Yo The Harbor Road By Sara Ware Bassctt A etory of homely folk on Cpo Cod with humor and paths and a drauutlo lovo etory. At Alt UooHitorre. f 1.73 net. Pcna Publiitini Comptnjr, Philadelphia UNEASY STREET Pnnnmcl It-nimlti-f in. J! PATCHWORK A friendly book! A delightful romance set in the quaint Pennsylvania Dutch country. A true and vivid picture of life among these sturdy Americans. Brimful of charm the irre sistible charm of Phoebe's friendliness ! ANNA BALMER MYERS Illustrations and frontispieco in color by Helen Mnson Grose. Every bookseller has it. ft.75 George W. Jacobs & Company Publisher Philadelphia International Commerce, and Reconstruction By Elisha M. Friedman An essential book for every banker nnd business mnn who would appreciate the iiinprnitudo nnd tho trend of the chnnpe in the world's commerce since 1914. Price $5.00 E. r. Dutton & Co., 681 Sth Ave. N. T. SWEDENBORG'S BOOKS At a Nominal Price 10 CenU Any or all of tho followlnc thrjj volume will tie nent. orrpnlu, to " uilclri-ns upon receipt of 10 cents per WOK' "HraTen nnil Hell" J" ' "DlTlnn VroililMir" . JJ " "Uliino Late nnd WUdom" VIH Unilownl for thut purpo, tills Roflair odem to nfnil you theo hooks without tot or obligation oilier than 10 centa mch fur luullliiK. The bookti aro printed In largo tJT on goo J. paper, and are aubituntlallr pound in atlfl paper covers. The American Swedenbortr Print ing and Publishing Society Itoom 711. 3 W. XOtli St., New Vork MERRICK'S Worldlings "Conrad" was a study of youth; "Cyntliln," n story of loynlt. fn "Tho WoildliiiKs" Lconnul Merrick uses the two supremo themes a man's honor nnd a woman's love. Price, $1.75 E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5tb Ave., N.V. People aro clamoring for By W. B. M Author of The Devil's Garden Irresistibly readable ' StrnglUUnPtWn Vj35av in A Novel ?:.! ' -v I s ,. , A, r . J ' 'a.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers