Ch T"i- ' i-f Tj ' 1if l V' - . -l- 'f h '! J : , . . 7 r i. 4 em U r. - X J !.' v 0 I Moslem Architecture" If" Onginr and' 'Development y G. T. Rivoxra An original work of the grrtttcjt ofthe' Mojque, and illujtratedwn'th Napoleon qA Way By Herbert Trench. "One of the surprising events of 'the Engliih dramatic year has been Mr. Trench's play 'Napoleon'. Like Mr. Drinkwater's 'Abraham Lincoln' it has been successfully performed as well as read and emerging from the propaganda drama: of the Shavian School it becomes a work of art and characterization, of sprit and passion." Diplomacy and the Study of International Relations By D. P. Heatley. Net j3.7j An attempt to portray diplomacy and the conduct of foreign policy from the standpoint of history. In the history of diplomacy we see the fruit of each aee in treaties which express the moementa of thought and mark the development of conventions that are widely recognized, A Day-Book of .Walter Savage Landor ? Chosen by John Bailey Net fi.2j "Landor's main topics were two, books and liberty: the Iibtrty to seek truth and follow goodness . . . where he excel all but the very greatest in the world is in the intensity of his bet thought and the astonishing perfection of its utterance." Modern China By S. G. Cheng Net t2 A valuable and timely volume throwing a clear light on the chief problems of modern China, with constructive suggestions for their solution. The discussion is notably free from political bias and de serves the dose attention of all interested in Chinese matters. Ireland the Outpost By Grenvillb A, J. Cole Net fr.jo Th:s essay pictures Ireland in the new light of an outpost not only of England but also of Europe, which has been profoundly influ enced by the auccessive and overlapping waej from which her people and civilization have been drawn. zAt all booksellers or from the publishers. OXTORO UNTVtRSrTT pRISS ymmcan, "Branch RfcMJSfl IWW swrrfflVjvSlHWVNIsU.AnK nVa.v lur. IP rCTu'ftCSlCljiNlHIiSIW Dt 01 Introducing Mr. Tutt Destined to Be a Famous Character in American Literature Tutt and By ARTHUR TRAIN Author of "The Earthquake," Etc. (Published This Week) CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS FIFTH AVE. AT 48ST. NEW YORK Theodore Roosevelt blocked the Prussian bully in 1905 and the World War was post poned nine years. Germany had just awak ened to the desirability of controlling the canal, so she attempted to seize a slice of Venezuela, to that end. Read how T. R. foiled her plans for world conquest and get the inside story of "the great adventure of Panama." By the man who made the Panama Revolution. (Net, $1.75, at all bookstores.) THE GREAT ADVENTURE OF PANAMA And Its Relation to the World War BY PHILIPPE BUNAU-VARILLA DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & Gal loping In the Shadow of Great Peril A Stirring Storu by a New Author Horace A. Wade 11 Years Old With a Preface A Real Story by a Realjloy Packed with Action and Peppered with Punch A Tonic Volume for the Tired Duiineit Man Great Stuff! l'rlre S1.Z5 net REILLY & LEE Publisliera The Cresting Wave By Edwin Bateman Morris The story of a man who made monev his god. He was lockejl on an a big man. Then a girl called him a pigmy and proved it. And he found what was wrong with himself nnd business America. There is a love element, humor, a big shipwreck, nnd all in sprightly style. At all booksellers. Jacket in Colors $1.75 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA wmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Net in.oo value describing the development a remarkable' series" of t j8 plates Net $2.00 35 Weal 32nd Street New York City Mr. Tutt, long, gaunt, in stove-pipe hat and tailed coat, with his reputation for short ness, his nimble wits and a touch of Don Quixote in his kindly old heart, is of the stuff to take his place beside Colonel Sellers and David Harum. Here are the battles and ad ventures of the celebrated law firm of Tutt and Tutt one of the most human and appealing books that has appeared in years. Mr. Tutt Illustrated $1.75 CO., Garden City, N. Y Ad venture! by George Ade Chicago EVENING PUBUG BIG CROP ROMANCE, EMOTION, ADVENTURE, SENTIMENT I The Motive of New Fiction by American and English Writers, 1 Including Rita, Vance, McCutclieon and Baroness , Von Huttcn "Ultu" lm left the (kid of erotic nnii neurotic fiction which she dwelt In 1 under her pseudonym mid In licr own i rinino, Mr.. Desmond lluinilirejf5, give in r striking novel of rent ernntlonnl value In "Dlnnn of th6 Ktiheilnni." The title cleverly Inillcnfei he (Jreek I ilerlvntlon of the heroine, n girl from the Aegean NlnniN. whose entry Into I hud progress through London society l rapid nnd sensational. She lias the 1 ninlnclty of llecky Sharp nnd the same sort of monumental egoilsni. Self t nlorlllontloii N the bfiiU of her phi- i luvophr. Nothing In her estimation is lieynntl her powers or her nvld nplrn- I tlons. She Is xpectnculnr in her ' (nethoils. daring In her enterprise. This story of the ndynry of her quest for fnmc nnd fortune Is written In n style thnt well bellts the passionate tures of soclul lenders, snobs, notables and notorieties nre shrewdly conceived nnd keenly drawn. Mrs. llumphreyM's clinrncter of the heroine. The pen pie hook Is one of the )f tno "novels oi mc sen- -r -.. i .. ' son." Cleveland Moffett .iKHicu. once Known has written a powerful pltfntls nnd the gins of nnee known ns n rnuckrnker. ..t.t... ..f !. matrimony In "rosseswd." Mr. Mof- n'"-'I- The name persisted, pioiigh fett has been known mainly for his ?J ",". nnd the hopes It symbolized "expose" stuff "crusade." though he (n1ni"h'(' ,.r " ''' W "' ''er mnr .lid write one fictional "thriller." ',,r'1 , '"' w'nVh dispel led Ideals con "Thrniigh the Wnll." notable for Its'"'"'"!: matrimony and Illusions con Ingenuity nnd complications. Ills J0'" ''7, flltl''. iinsuecCsSful spouse, "cipose" experience and his writing of " her chl dren. too. lolet wrfs not sln m.Nstcry fiction hnve stood Mr. Moffett "nrly hlewd: they gave her nnieh In good stead In this new novel, which. " nnd toll. She herself Is n success however, has n serious purpose and Is ''' novel sf. nnd In her nrt she ilnd not lacking In nrtlstlc merits of novel- , ""J") beiilson for the gifts of domestic ivtle contour nnd character. The book I ""'If ' hat life has denied her. Her N reallv the kerti psychological and optimistic personality, her capacity, her emotional study of a woman's states of I of life, make her life tolerable at mind and of soul. In Its externals If 'nit. And It Is her personality that Is tells of her waywardness, her suffering the binding tie In keeping properly ns and her regeneration. The slip cover .semhted In the reader's Interest the way. snv.s of It that It Is "The Truth About wftrI. unsuccessful group of people that Wnmeii Which Nobodv Tells." This mny ruic expectations in some readers' minds of a scandalous human docu ment In fiction. .The bonk is not thnt. The character o'f Penelope Is not Im moral, not even essentially unmoral. LE L1VRE CONTEMPORAIN A magazine devoted Sent free on to French Llteraturo uppllcatlon. SCHOENHOF BOOK CO. French Bookshop 15 Beacon St. Boston, Mas. The TIN SOLDIER By Tempi Bailey Liked by Everybody At all lookstores ll.lt fr.NN rUBUSKINO CO.. Philadelphia U hai tke line kind of cBfcrm that made "Daddy Long-Legs" famoai. SLIPPY McGEE By Marie Conway Oemler A Century Book Price flJS The' Secret of Sarek ANEW ARSENE LUPIN book, but as you read you forget that it is a book. The story moves with lightning speed. The char acters and inci dents picture tncma elves on the film of your mind, and you plunge from thrill to suspense through every page. $1.75 net. By Maurice Leblanc TIIK MM'WIJW CO.. I'uMUhfm. N. V. The Peace in the Making By H. WILSON HARRIS As Special Correspondent of the London Daily Newt, Mr. Harris enjoyed unexpectedly fortunate contacts with the dominating personalities who dictated the Peace. His inti mate personal impressions are stimulating and picturesque. Price $2.00 E. P. Dutton & Co., 681 5ti Avc.N.Y. HILLS" HAN A Rbmantic -j Nnvl 1 C Jjyjunuci iivnm SWEDENBORG'S BOOKS At Nominal Price 10 CenU Anr or til of th follonlnr three olum will bo sent, prepaid. ,lo any addres upon receipt of 10 cents per book; "HmTea nnd lied" e l'arw "DlTlo Worldwide" Jt "Ulftii Lot and Wlidem" 1S " endowed far that purpose, this Society otters to send you these books without cost or obligation otbor thtn 10 csnta each for malllnc. The book art printed In larts tys on eood paper, and ere substantial? bound In lift piper covers. The American Swedenbor Print In and Publishing Society hoim 711. 3 V. iM St.. Hi rt r" A p'1 """i Cm 't"W I JfcM LEDGlMl-XlAlSlmiA, TSAlJOTtpA.' JSAe tig) 'JWN OF INTERESTING SPRING FICTION The felling of the story is brisk nnd Rfrtphie. There Is nothing of the pscuilo-rd-mnntlcNm of "Orauitnrk" In Oeorge McCutfrieoirss new book. "Anderson Crow Ueteetlve." It's n delightful. nnd droll set of ynfns of n midwest village, told with ft high Comedy (mich some time tinged with farce. The hero Is different from most liprnes nf lirHnn. o fftr ns the nge limit-Is cowrrneil, nnynowj lie linppens to be past seventy lire, nut Is nlerf mid rexoiirroftil nt itiaf As village innrshnl h scks to sleuth lllK'olle inrsterlpN. nfton wllli anrli In. Icrou results thnt the render Will he weak from honest Intighter. Among his other Important Jobs are street rnmmls. sloner, lire chief, post mmmftnder of joe it. a. ll., truant ollicer nnd turn key of the culnboooc. In any one of llic.se enimcil es III' Uillllil hn n iirrnnm Irnnglnfe what a regular fog horn siren he Is ns n sjndlcnte! The other Mc- J.A". "s "jnilh-nte! '. "J''"' " T;j nPIJ ' nn.I lliinilnatlnB pi pplle.s fhurncter nlctnres. The title nf "Hnntiy Holise." the -". "."'- ,,""' newest novel of jlnrones synililollzes the wi-nlth newest novel nf ltnrnneus vnn irnffnn i n ----- .-- .......... ".""iiioiizes tnc .weami of hope nnil .-.,,. , ,. : ., i ,,.',. ."," "' ' f t i r thnt Molet nlhrldgc J W't ' n bride to the home she thus Implnp on VlolctV life. ItnronruK von Jinttcn iin writtPii a novel of iniicli tindcrxtaniliiiR of domestic life. It Iibh tome power nnd much charm. It In said to bo based on tlic life utory of a noted 1-nelifli nnvcllpt. There it pnmethtng of the melo dramatic in "The Olrl From Four Cor nern." by Itebeeea N. Porter. The fa miliar material Is thnt of a girl who peekH fame nnd fortune in rt crent rlrv. TbN time It ! San Francisco, the debo nalrly Ilohemian ntmospberc of which Is conveyed, illusively but without too much scene pnlntlnu, in a part of the book. The melodramatic part deals with the Rlrl's earlier career. She is the daughter of an idealistic, earnest mother and n father who In no better thnn he oneht to be. Like Kathleen Norrls's Julia Pace In the novel of the Mime name, Freda, for short Frcder- lca Is licr name lifts herself out of a crude und crass environment, mnlnly aided by mother-love, that battles al ways with the selfishness and ne'er-do- wellness of the father. The diameter drawing of Freda is a nice bandittis of the clasbicc motives of her heredltr the dissoluteness of the father and the ngni impulses or tne mot&er. The oat. come of the conflict is well-won happi ness. "The Dart Mirror" marks a devia tion from the sensational situations and methods of Ixmis Joseph Vance's con ventional Action. Sat it has its own sensations as well as novelty. It is a mystery story, but not the routine mys tery of externals nnd apparent adven ture. The heroine is a sort of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Her dally llfu Is law-abiding, but in her dream life she Is a lawbreaker. The marvelous opportunities for striking situations presented In thhi novel posture of events are cleverly realized by Mr. Vance, who has written one of his most Interest holding novels. And it is strictly up to date In its turning to fictional account the present wide interest In the psvchlc. The author of "The Untamed" has written another dashing nnd Intrepidly imagined story of a West that is both wild and woolly in "Trallin. " An easterner, but by no means effete, con ducts a vendetta against the man who Is believed to hnve been the murderer of his father. This is in barest outline the theme on which the author develops a series of stirlrng incidents thnt keep the interest contlhti6us. Romance col ors the pages, and there is a definite and appealing love interest. Mr. lirnnd shows n genuino understanding of the temperament and conditions of the West. DIANA OP THE EPHESIANB. ny Mm. Desmond Humphreys (nita). New York: K A. Htokes Co. POSSESSED. Ily Cleveland Moffett. New York: James A. McCann Co. TUB DA11K Minnon. ny Louis Joseph Vance. New York: Doubleday, Page & Co. the ami. rnoM four con.vEns. n nebecca Porter. New York: Henry if bit. itArPY HOUSE. Hy llaroness von Hutten. New York! aeorga H. Doran Co. TltAILlN1. Iy Max Vrand. New York: O. 1. Putnam's Suna. ANDKU80N cnOW. DETECTIVE, Py a. II, McCutcheon. New York. DoJJ, Mead A Co. WHAT WAR IS REALLY LIKE Philip Gibbs Has Described It in a Great Argument for Peace Philip fiibbs, whoso war dispatches tfcfc printed In this newspaper, hns written a new war book that ought to be read by every man and woman in terested in the peace of the world. It is the story of the human, or rath er the inhuman, side of the war as seen by an Informed, high-minded mnu. Mr. Olbbs has searched his memory for the impressions received during four years of nctlvc service as a correspond ent In the field. He has found mang heroic and many pathetic and moving things, but the impression which re mains strongest is that war is a brtltril thing, unworthy of civilized human beings. The spectacle of men devoting themselves for years to the business of killing one another is to revolting that be rnnnnt corittmnlnte it without horror. He describes the useless slaughter of men through the blunders of officers, the Intense fiifferlne that attended life In the trenches in winter, the hard ships of the woudded arid the occasional heartlcssness of the attendants In the hospitals. He exhibits all the ineffi ciencies which caused needless suffer ing. And he ends with the confession that he Is not able clenrly to decide what It was all done for. Of course, he admits that It began as an attempt to prevent the Oermans from succeed ing in their plan of world conquest. Hut why rould riot a better way have been found? If ever it peace argument was written, Mr. Olbbs has written It. ,Yet the book is not difficult to read. It III so filled with Incident rind color that it is difficult to lay it ddwn. When the) books nbout campaigns are read only hy specialists this one will be Ic the hands of thoso who wish' to know what the war was now jtcaM -k Tofii. fir MU$ dlfibS. New York: Harper Bros. II. :sHHIHiBk'yssssK siaissssssssssssiBfoiaiissssssssssssK ssssssslsliaiiaiisissssssssHi y ! V. SCOTT .KITZOKIt'Atl , Twenty-threo-year-old jvm'th" who has written a successful first novel HEWLETTS SA6A "The Outlaw" an Epic of Old Iceland Maurice Hewlett tells a tale of a mnglc blnde, first n sword and then n spear, which brought dentn and mis fortune to Its succession of possessors, in an Icelandic saga-epic which he calls "The Outlaw." It Is a vivid story of the days when life was rough and death was swift and violent, when men foiisht nnd killed for w'hnt they wanted, whether that was a hrimc or a-jvlfc or n cherished weapon. 3et, despite its savagery, "The flntlnw" linn Its centle WOlrien and men of noble Impulse nnd kindly hearts. Such a man was lie irom wnom the book receives Its name. And it was the curse of thnt fateful blnde which miiile him an outlaw, yet served only to strengthen a domestic love which warms and Inspires the reader. "The Outlaw'" Is written with that skill and charm nnd absorbing Interest which arc characteristic of nil that'Mr. Hewlett hns done, nnd one puts the book aside, finMicd, with real regret. THE OUTLAW. Py Mfiurlco Hewlett. New York: Doild. .Menu ft. -o. Robertson on Hamlet J. M. Robertson, the well-known I'ngllsh scholar and statesman, hns written n new study of "The Problem of Hamlet" which Hnreourt, Ilrnco & Howe will nnbllsh this soring. The older explanations of Hamlet's charac ter are auaozed, and n new anu original Interpretation Is suggested. THE NEW BOOKS More extended notice M Space permit. trill bo irrett to eoeh books a seem to merit It. General MASKS. One-act plays. Dy.OeorKe Middle ton. New York: Henry Holt 4 Co. A series of significant plecaa of dramatic writing by one of the most Important of th j-oungr American rlayvrrlshts. fcCHAMHLED EOQ3. Hy lwiwton Mackall. Cincinnati; Stewart A Kldd Co. Whimsical humor by the manaclnr editor of Judxe. Illustrated by Oliver Herford. Clever fooling end kevn satire, such an the story of the unprogresslvo hen who think woman's sphere Is the egc. HOW TO 8PEAK FRENCH LIKE THE FHENCH. ny Jeanne Marl Yersln. Philadelphia: J. H. Llpplnrott C Tenches by parallel translations of Idioms. WE MODERNS. Py Edward Mulr. New York: Alfred Knopf, A criticism of the modern spirit and a plea for the esthetic .and artistic Ideals ot tho Orcek 111 n convlnus revival. The nu thor Is a young- Scotchman, ana appnrentli tree from tie Inflwnrc of John Calvin ana John Knox, judging by his desire for tlm abrndonment of the View of life ns a morot force nnd Its ncceptanro as a great adventure and the pursuit of beauty. THE PAD RESULTS OF OOOD HAPIXa AND OTHER LAPSES. Py J. Edgrtr Park: Iloslon: Houghton Mifflin Co. This collection of quaintly conceived and oft-n perversely posed viewpoints Is an, at tempt to sell n few sites In heaven to Kin dred souls with Ihx author, to whom com pany Is more Important than climate. HOUSEHOLD ARITHMETIC. Hy Knthailno Hall and Miriam West. Philadelphia J. II. Llppliuott Co. A rornprehenslvo system of arithmetical tearhlnir on n novel plan, especially adiiptd for girls. The subject matter for the prob lems Is taken entirely from the realm of home economics, and there Is n, definite at tempt to produce habits of logical thinking and planning, A valuable textbook and one which, on account of Its various. tables, should proe of value to many housewives. THE MENACE OF IMMORALITY IN CHURCH AND STATE. Py Rv. John Itoach Straton. D. D.. pastor of Calvary Ilaptlst Church. New York, New York: Oeorgn II. Doran Co. The militant clergyman who last week made t'i round of the "rqundera" resorts .n New York, and exposed conditions obtaining on the Ilowory and Droadway and the vari ous way stntlons, such as nohemla, writes a series nt rqessigeA nf wrath And Judgmert on the text. "Is America Ilelng Destroyed Like Ancient Greece and Rome by Immoral ity?" Fiction THE nniDOE OF TIME. Py W. IT. Warner. New Yirk: Bcott ft .Sejlier. A unique novel that ranges In time from the Egypt of the Pharaohs to New York of today. WOMAN TRIUMPHANT. Ily V. niasr,o Ibanex New York: E. P. Dntton & Co. The story of a great artist's life ana career. THIS BIDE OF PARADISE. Py F. B-.-tt Flttgirald. Now York: Charles Bcrlbner's Sons. The first novI nf a young TrlncetOn tn flent aged twenty-three. OH. YOU TEX1 Hy Wm, McLeod Ilalne. Pojton: Hougt.tnn Mifflin Co. nother of Mr, Ilalne's western stories that are thrllllngly adventurous, but that ring true THE VOIPE OF THE PACK. Py Edlsen Marshall. Iloslon: Little Prown Co, The touching and effective novel of n Easterner who goes back to the clear-alrea West to tho home of some frontier ancestors specialists have left hi to spend the last .hsir. year or lite luns The cUrloUi transfiguration of tht hero nnd the unex and the pected denouement will Interest readers of a peeled denouement well-wrltten novel 8AII1R OII1L. ny F. F. Moore. New York: D. Appleton Co. A tale nf adventure In .the China seas. with a striking heroine who Is the owner of a line of Pacific steamers which are get ting a ma name, and wiio goes orr to invee. iigaie ineir managrmeni, ann runs into and runs Into n IventUre and. of mnnee, Intrigue and adventure and, course, oe, for this Is a, spring novel. HILLS OF HAN. Py., Ssmuel MerMn. In dlsnrpolls: nobbs-Merrill Co. A pure adventure yarn, told with lilffn spirits and much atmosphere, and totally iMfferent from the Henry Calverly sequence cf novels which has brought sucn popularlt to the nutr-or, HIS FRIEND ANfl Iltfl WIFE. Py Cosmu Hamilton Jlostpn: Little, nrown & Co, K typical novel of the unholy triangle nf the man. his wife and the other man writ ten In the characteristic fnanner nf the nu. thor of "The IlllndheSs of Virtue" Mul "Scandal," Deals with an Infraction of tho moral cod and 'ts social consequences. THE nOMANTIC WOMAN. liy Mary Por den. New York: A. A, Knnpf, In flcMonal guise! the story of ft ChlcAgo heiress of .the Ingenue type who marries Into tho rlrltlsh military aristocracy A contrast bstween rud. -rasj lgnrou up standing, and doing Chicago and the super cultured and debilitated English upper cIshj dom with hypereslhetlr senses, a perverted code of conduct, finesse of manners and tory Instincts. TRIMMED Wltlt ftErt. Py Wallace Irwin, New Yorki flenrge IT, Poran.Co, A sgtlre on rsj;asrn In .politics And the arts and a very refreshing story, TIME AND ETKRN1TT. liy (Jllbert Canai. Nsw York) Oenrge H,,Doro,n Co, Story, ot three x)le In. London set Sjralriit the hecilo backgrounds of isrltlsh botasraum Ism tnd preudo-n-t. fjearrhlng nl poignant and well up to the distinguished writer's standard In creittvenes and handling, YOUTH WRITES , ABOUT YOUTH 1(6 First Novel of a Very Young Man Reflects What Is in the Immature Mind ills publishers' describe F. Scott Fit!-., gerald, a youth o( twenty three, as "one of the m6st interesting new literary fiuures of thrf year." They base their estimate tipori his flfst novel, "This Side of ItondlseV' The b66k lj rta(hlv different in form nnd substance ffdrri tho novels of more F experienced wrifefs. Tt is said that Mr. Fitzgerald rcw-roto it three times before1 hevf&i satisfied with its form. If It wcro not for 'this assurance .that Its struetrire Is" liii result of deliberate Intent one would" lie Inclined to the opinion that it had been thrown to irether with no idea of forrrf whatsoever. H is episodic. .. Tho chapters are dl- 1C1CU by subheadings nnd encb siibliend precedes nn episode or n bit of descrln- tion varylngrom half a pAge to a score of pages. They have little connection wtvo aS the nil deal with the life of Amofy Blaine, the hero. Part of the ".ook '?', a"t In the form of drama with stage directions. Poetry is interspersed among the prose nnd there are numcr OtW .passages' of rhtfns&dleal English hi ? mch,for.th6 forrrt. The substance 1i ,- 8try 6t t,ic, cOucatloii of Amory ljlaiiie in scholastic matters, nnd in the, ways of flappers from his earliest joutn to me age of, say, twenty-three. It is flagrantly Immature, being filled With the Imnctnlhcs of vnnfli nn nil Mrts of topics religion, philosophy, lit croturcj economics nnd women. Hut it must not be understood that this is wild by way of unfriendly criticism. The book could not be true to the life with which it deals if it had not been ruunlcR over with immaturity. If Mr. titzgerald were afi older man one1 would be inclined to bestow high praise updn him for his ability to interpret the youth of the immediate present with so much sympathetic understanding. As it Is, the immaturities ard doubtless those of the author's own mind. Yet after all a man without unusual gifts would have found It impossible to in tcrpret his own generation with the fidelity which he has achieved. The scene of the action is in Minneapolis-, Princeton, N6w YrK, Phila delphia and Atlantic City. The hero is graduated from Princeton and a large part of the novel is devoted to n de scription of the life of that university, including the efforts of oile nf tint snn 6f Graver Cleveland to democratize the cuius, xiierp arc lour girls In the hook with each of whom the hero falls tn Tnvn and oift again. There arc cbllege sprees. There Is the effort of tlifc" hero to earn a living, and the book ei:ds with the youth walking to Princeton because he has not money enough tn pay his carfare and finally exclaiming, "I know myself, but thnt Is all." It is likely to nave great vogue with fic tion renders of both sexes between thn ages of sixteen and twenty. THIS BtDH OF iAP.ApiSE. By F. Saolt iruzceraia. ixew lorn: cnarles Scrlbnsr's Bona. Everything Desirable in Books WITHERSPOON BLDO- Walnut. Juniper and Saosoba Sli. Elevator to 2nd Flodr The Harbor Road By Sara Ware Basselt A story of homely folk on Cape Coa . with humor and pathos ana a dramatic lovo story. Al Mt n&iuMti. il.ii net. Peon Publiiaing Company, Pailadelplu'a HeadquAftcrs Fdr Engineering and Technical Books Philadelphia Book Company 17 South 9th Street ine Doctor or Pimlico Wlillam LeQueux A POWERFUL detective atory In which a. great criminal n n c n. ereat fletectlvo match wlta. A thrilling melo drama, with a charming lovo epl sode. Net, I,73. TIIK MtCAHIJlY CO.. Publishers. X. Y. RED TERROR AND GREEN Bfr RICHARD DAWSON Of vital interest to those who want the truth about Ireland, the Sinn Fein movement drid Ita Bolshevist alliances. Price $2.50 Ireland an Enemy of the Allies? By R. C ESCOUFLAlrtE A well-informed clearly written independent study of the Irish qudslioh. Price $2.E0 L P. Dutton & Co., 661 Sib Ave., N. Y. PATCHWORK A friendly book ! 'A delightful romance set in the quaint Pennsylvania Dutch country. A true arid vivid picture of life among these sturdy Americans Brimful of charm the irre sistible charm of Phodbe's fricridlirtdsa! By ANNA BALMER MYERS Illiistrdtifins tthd frontispiece In color by Helen Masorl Grose. EDttii bo6kstU6r tM ty $1,7$ George W. Jacobs & Compriy Publishers PJbaJeipHU (Published Tin Week) The Letters '"ST Henry itt two votiiiiiea With .photogravure portraits Edited by Percy Lubbock Tti6 rhdsf rerViarWbW boofc'hich has atSpeaMd in. English literature1 since the war. Itprese'nts in, a series of immor fjaliy brilliant letters" the beWilderingly fascinating person ality of James the man to the world who has hitherto only known James the noVelistl ttis page's are! full of vivid pictures ot the' m6st interesting' arid entertaining person alities 6t two generations in Amerida, England and France, including letters to Mrs. Edith Wharton Robert Louis Stevenson rf. G. Wells rftfgh Walpole William James n George Dii Maurier At Bookstores Everywhere CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS? FIFTH AVE. AT 48STs NEW "YORK I mm The m riuk The Vh revelations of the admiral of the British Fleet. MEMORIES AND RECORDS by Lord John Fisher is one of the most remarkable dociimerits of our times. At Alt Bodftthopa Illustrated, 2 vol; octavo. Net $8.00 Fourth Printing Now Ready PICTURES OF THE FLOATING WORLD By A thy Lowell "Miss Lowell is indeed a conspicuous figure in American literature today. In range of technical skill, in the com mand of all mediums from metrical verse to polyphonic prose, in the great variety of her subjects, in her wide sympathies and her democratic spirit, in her sensitiveness to all manifestations of beauty, and her marvelous com mand of diction, and in her power to interpret the multi tudinous aspects of American life and thought she is unsurpassed. 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