.'?'. 1" 1 V ' Ji .Vr. 'V: ' u EVENING PUBLIC kMKlV-P , 1 JJMMMy U-, nssi : t Everyone who sees the tide of Sophie Kerr's new novel fPAlNTED MEADOWS 7 vwnll K riiriniia fr Irnrvur fVi monninn V m Y ' 1 i I Kipling's disclaimer of a common 'r frtA nmwwA 14 mm (lrAit (vnm & Jo 'ground for the meeting nlaco of the i-Ji&s cg5, 11 icanAft "UU1 a UC" Orient and the Occident comes irrcslst- kkU.. AMMSM i.A' I U' I - ilb1'' t0 raind ,n ""dime Louise Jordan JNMitrul song in Love s JLabor s Lost, ! mud's unuuiteiy bitten and Piausibiy FICTION BY AMERICAN AND BRITISH WRITERS , r ORIENT AND OCCIDENT ENVIRON SPRING NOVELS Mcnvin, Irtvin and Curtvood Offer New Books Several Prom ising Talents Represented by Firstlings of Fiction ' t ;(..' When daiae pied and violete Mm Do paint the meadowe with delight romance, rich in the atmosphere of a quaint" town, vividlv characterized in its lyf Pple and highly dramatic in its story, is the tT mtt substantial and finished novel Sophie ( Kfcrr has done. PAINTED MEADOWS J.' evinces a sincerity and power of conception ; which entitle it to a place among that group of fine native books which are authentic and have their roots in the soilviV;, American life. lKltTi)Kl yhbt n.47 Bookahops nura pericnecs nmong anrlety of Intellectual and temperamental folic. The theme of the story is tho contest between music and love for her h"eart and soul. The writer has a nicely humorous touch of fct.rlc, which enlivens an interesting book. 'Trimmed With Ued" also deals Tilth temperamental nnd Intellectual persons. Parlor Sociallstx. bedroom freo versi fiers and bath Bolshovikl, needless to say of American origin play their little parts and recite their Uttfo pieces on Wallace Itwin's diverting pages. When we have mentioned tho name of the writer tho reader of this review will know that tho book contains no weighty considerations, under tho camouflage of fiction, of Soviets, communism, the I. W. W. and other such ponderable topics, but that it is rich in light and atlrie touches with a good deal of basis for the ironic treatment of Green wich Village, the socially and Intel- There is authentic and deep-seeing in- ilectually "liberated," and the other per terpretatfon of American life in "The I sons and places of the plot. A droll Outbound Road." by a young nathc and delightful book we'll say so writer, Arnold Mulder. It is, of course. , , only a ceoiranhlcallv sectional slice of ""fl. a nonchalance that conceals the American life, as all our genre novels i versatility of the man, Samuel Mcrwin psychologiied "Mr. Wu." Tho central figure is an Oiford man with all the veneer of culture that that Implies, but there are other and deeper-lying impli cations in his temperament. lie Is in exorably true to the profound and subtle traditions of his raco in emotional and other crises, such as where ho plans to wreak a typically Chinese vengeance on a "foreign devil" ho bad, he was Mire, violated tho lares and penates of his family. Miss Miln has command of sentiment, emotion and other factors of the novelist's art, and in addition the power of summoning terror and horror to intensify the effect of her situations so that they grip the reader hard. It is not merely a readable book, "Mr. Wu," but a memorable book, too. feliilMisMssil WmmOaM isM u&WMMlrmWm I w;W jBMiEiaiSHE WSM I sLBIMKBLVll jBBBBJBSBBBKVB9jkI turns from tho Impassioned episodes of is iienry uaiveny ana tno Keen nna swift action of his business novels to the Of "INVINCIBLE MINNIE; by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding, the Boston Transcript ay: "Minnie is an achievement; she is the most extraor dinary woman in recent American fiction. Minnie is 'invincible.' Yes, Minnie is real, inlife, but she has not been made real in the Ameri can fiction of our day until Elisabeth Sanxay Holding created her torus in these pages. Min nie Defoe takes her place as the true Ameri can cousin, also the only American cousin, of Ann Veronica, Hilda Lessways, Sonia O'Rane and others among those British maid ens we Americans have blessed and cursed,'discussed and admired, and perhaps intensely admired, as the perfection and type of modern womanhood. But the greatest pride we can take is thai: she is 'our Minnie, detestable, mysterious, wilful, pitiable in her weakness, yet magnificent in the use of her womanhood to overcome all the barriers that stand in the -Way of the things she desired." arc bound to be, in view of tho diversity, complexity and extension of the map nt .he. TTntf,l (2m Kit. .Ilia Uma life Mr. Mulder disects authoritatively, jheer romance and glowing color of tho The locale is the Lake Michigan dunes ' rent in "Hills of Han." Tho book it. and the people described an Isolated . n story ,of China of course with Rood rnmmunltv nf tlntph farmers. The ' ana typical Amcrirans for nrincinals pit otat ficure is an aspiring, forward- tyllic.lj I?. vssontially romantic, though looking youth, who is alien in deep nature and even superficial traits to the people among whom ho is thrown. His ' struggle to extricate himself and his life from tho peculiarly cramping and pitiful I bounds and barriers of his environment makes a story that Is rich in romantic 1 undercurrents and faithful in its ex terior realisms and results In a book that i will make its readers look forward to , Mr. Mulder's next novel. "At Fame's Gateway" is another tory that details the struggle of a young person of rich nnd passionate nature to break the trammels of a narrow en tironmeut. The heroine is a natltp of n crude, crass oil boom town, which has the (Mails arc carrW out reallsticallv, It is built up in a theatric way so that the reader's Interf st is held from climax to climax. Stylistically It is well up to Jir. .ierwin s rastidioua standard. "Tho Voicn of th P.U" n MM tous blend of ndventure story and lovo story. Edith Marshall has as hero tho quasi-invalid grandson of a frontiers man, who comes back to tho Oregon forest Scenes of hts prune.!'., ntnneer. ing. He has received his death sentence from n tuberculosis snecialist nnd ex pects to spend his 'ast few .months out in the wild. But this lifo n the open imply turns out to bo the making of mm. no nears tno summons to the SHALL A WOMAN TELL EVERYTHING? An Unsatisfying Answer to the Question Is Given in Mrs. Ward's New Novel A. 11EVEBLX BAXTEB Author of "A Blower of Bubbles," Tolumo of whimsical short stories A LONESOME MAN And the Predicament Into Which He Got Himself When He Married w knowledge of culture nnd probably primitive in his nature in tho call of the little use for it. Her beauty, charm wolf pack; he hears, too, tho trumpet and musical talent eventually land her call of nature; most of all, ho hears the in New York in search of famt and j elemental call of love through Snow fortune. The author gives sketchy but , bird, the daughter of his mountaineer reliable pictures of musical, art and host. The voices stir in him new asplra 'itcrary circles there and tho girl's ex- lion, new desires, new liking for life. : lho author manages his unusual theme bclicvabl nnd skillfully. He. has written a book of more than ephemeral north. At all Bookshops Net, $1.75 Si Tamarisk Town A new novel by SHEILA KAYE-SMITH "Tamarisk Town" is the creation of one man's strength and of his vision of a beautiful seaside resort among the Sussex tamarisks. Later another great passion comes into his life for a woman who hates the town and is jealous of his absorption in it. The book is the story of the struggle of these conflicting forces told with a masterly simplicity which makes it distinguished. $2.50 at all bookstores. E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave., New York Read JJOCKlTlS Latest Romance ffiefissionfir MI ?sm mmmmm I ALLB00K5ELLERSU75 I The Cresting Wave By Edwin Bateman Morris The story of a raan wl, made mney his god. He waj locked on as a big man. Then a girl called him a pigmy and proved it. And he found what was wrong with himself and -ijusinces America. , . , , '- There is a love element, humor, a big shipwreck, and all In prightly style. At all booksellers. Jacket in Colors $1.75 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA BRUCE By ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE Author of -'Lad" How Bruco came to "The Placo;" the thrill of his narrow escape from living death ; the wonder and beauty of his devotion ; they aro revealed in this splendid story of what a collie can do and be. f 2.00 at any bookstore. E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 51b Are., N.Y. "The ISridgo of Time" spans n rood tleal of ime nnd space. It is one of the school of stories that take n hero from ancient days to modern, and from ex tinct civilizations to the present-day developments of culture and progress. The hero is a prince of the house of Hnmee"), who Is permitted by an in genious urrangement to live in con temporary Eurone and Americn. This J esoteric theme has been clevrly handled and the book will please readers who arc fond of the unique and original. "Nomads of the North" is n char acteristic James Oliver Curuoo-1 book. The "protagonists" are n young dog with a strain of wolf crossing his blood and a black bear cub. Their life in the I wilds, their comradeship nnd their re lations to mere humans the man and the girl who have n romautic story are the components in a mo.t impressive and appealing story which will be greatly enjoyed by those who have liked the animal stories of .Tack London and the earlier ones of this genus by Mr. Curwood. Archibald Marshall has mastered the secret of interesting the reader In tho everyday lives of onUnary people. He writes with calmness and simplicity, detailing Incident after Incident nnd suggesting the motives behind the ac tions of bis characters, yet ho makes his people bo real that try as one will to lay one of his books down before finishing it, one reads on and on, fasci nated, to tho end. "31any Junes," pub lished in England some years ago, re written and brought out in an Ameri can edition, Illustrates his method very well. It is the story of a man unable to follow the career ho hoped for, who, because of poverty, is compelled to live alone. He finnlly becomes .acquainted with n spinster whose mother is at tracted to him as a possible husband for her daughter. She cultivates him and then ns he does not propose marriage, drops him. It suddenly dawns on the ifian that he had been expected to marry tho youug woman. Ho does not love her, "but he is lonesome. He proposes from mingled motives of duty and a di'sirc for companionship. Then he suddenly comes into a great fortune and fails in love with n charming young woman. Sense of duty forces him to marry the girl to whom he is engaged, nnd j ears of unhapplness follow, coming to an end when he asks his wife for Fortunately for the fame of the late Mrs. Humphry Ward her last novel was not her first. This Is not to imply that her last novel Is not a gooa one, dui rather to Indicato that her reputation would have begun ns that of an exploiter of sex problems rather than as a i stu dent of theological movements. Har vest," tho new novel, is an exhibition of the predienment in which n woman finds herself after she has had an Ir regular sex experience and the struggles of that woman over the decision whether to tell the story of her life to the man who has asked her to marry him. Mrs. Word decided that the woman must tell. The lover accepts her after her con fession, but Mm. Ward has not the courage to face the consequences of married life for .her heroine and merci lessly kills her at the moment when all her troubles seem to be ended. If the story bad been written In the form of a play it would have made a fine sensational melodrama. There is tho marriage to a worthless man who abuses the heroine, is unfaithful to her, and is divorced. The heroine spends three days and nights with a man soon after her divorce. Sho takes her maiden name and inherits somo money, and rents a farm to do ber sharo In win ning the war. The farmhouse is said to bo haunted. The divorced husband turns up and spies on his former wife and is mistaken for the ghost. He finds her wooed by another man and on the evening when the man ugrces to marry her notwithstanding her mistakes be shoots her through the window 'of her house and then kills himself. Incident ally the story gives a picture of life on the land In Enrland in the last year of the war. But it is really a discussion of the doty of a woman to tell every thing to the man she is to marry. The name of the book suggests that Mrs. Ward had a moral in mind, but it is suggested in no other way. IIAnVEST. Br Hi. Humphry Ward. New York: Dsdd. Mud & Co. 12. TURNPIKES An Entertaining History of Famous Old Highways in the . Eastern United States Frederic J. Wood has written a book on turnpikes which will be interesting to, engineers, antiquarians and motor tourists. He calls it "The Turnpikes of New England," hut he has not con fined his attention to that part of the country, although he has given most attention to it. The early turnpikes of irginia. Maryland and Pennsylvania j, j , .i-..tu.j m.. Ll.t..- forgiveness for his Indifference to her, , , Lancaster pike is told in detail. THE THUNDERBOLT By G. Colmore "An outmandlnr novel. . Shows mastery of comedy and truedy. . The style ts beyond prals " . , 1CU' ' Von Wuck Brooks, n the Evening Pott "-""Thin la a novel of such striking power, of such wide Imagination that I, places the author with the forsmogtf EnrtnoveM. y The whole novel Is not only far above the commonplace, but It Is of ueh a nature as to tempt the reader to predict greatness for It and a jSiltion among the classics "The Dututh Herald. At All Booksellers 12mo, cloth, $1.90 THOMAS SELTZER Publisher 5 West 50th Street, New York Urn. Hhe'bukeof Chimneyftufte G.W.Ugccn YIlrl his We Hannah Bye By Harrison S. Morris A clever picture of Quaker life in a present-day com munity. The life of Hannah Bye, a sweet but courageous Quakeress, is filled with strange happenings by contact with the "careless, Mnful outside world." At. nil booksellers tl.75 net', THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA old - fashioned safety bicycle a "long- horn steer on wheels," they called it he looked like a ten derfoot for sure. So 'when Jim Wilder made thia itinerant peddler a present of the meanest outlaw pony in the Bad Lands, they looked for fun and they got it He got a job "fence-riding" for a girl bosa protecting her herds from "rustlers." How he was nearly lured to a fiery death, and how he kept his trust, are told in a rattling rapid-fire narrative that keeps the reader keyed up to the lart page. ah .-v A. C McChov k C. liookttorea PutJkW , mm - - and the book ends happily. The book is the study of the life of the young man of smnll means and hon orable purpose who has to make his own way in London without social connec tions, n oung man a little morbid per haps, but yet with fino feelings and capable of giving nnd rccching human sympathy. MANV JUNKS. Bv Archibald Maribull. Ncv York: Dodd. Mead i. Co. J2. Bolshevism Riddled The publishing house of Thomas Seltzer. Inc.. announie the immediate publication of "Parliament nnd lteolu tion." by .7. Hamsey Macdonald, the famous English statesman and labor leader. This book ! the first scientific nnd entirely uublncd urgument against bolsheism in favor of democratic gov ernment. It is said to he as important for our day as was the essav cm "Liberty" by John Stuart Mill for his time. "The Blower of Bubbles" is the title given tho story of a series of really ex cellent pieces of short fiction bv Arthur Beverly B.ixter. The stories have the war as n background, but they do not fall under the now somewhat irksome category of warj fiction. A bit of whimsy, u touch of the quaint and fanciful, mark all the stories, and in tin telling of them the author has a light i and bright touch, with glints of humor. The "heroes" and such in the conventional meaning of the TII1- Report ok Tin: sEniKnT i-om irruis, uui us iuv uuniur t'Aputius in a jiisaiu; u.n si'iui t uai.ism. E'hilu clever preface persons who never ilelphia. J I'. Lippineott Co. dreamed of the parts they weie to plaj ,A "uPJb?iT.0' iSSXft.?0 during- the iow ...'... ' ui one of in neriodlcal uavas jif nurit ,n in tne world s greatest drama. plrltlm. th University ot I'tnn8lania THE nillDOE OF TIME. Br W. H Warner ' ponored the Imeitlcatloni of a commls. New York. Hcott 4 heltler. II 73 "."'!. " """ " u m-iiuiara. M Curwood New York: Doubleday, I'st L NEW BOOKS More extended notlir, un iure perinlU, "III b thru to hucli books lis arem to merit It. General THE TflUTII ABOUT SPIRITUALISM I)v --iiiui" uiira iitemona liumNrcj-j Philadelphia. J. 11. l.tnninrntt i'.i The outcome of many tars' aludy of 'ihn uiminsumifij with its method of construction, itn original cost a mile and the receipts of the turnpike company which operated it. Pome attention Is given to the'Perkio men pike nlo. and to other roads lead ing out of Philadelphia. The part of the book devoted to New Bnglaud contains maps showing the lo cation of all the old turnpike roads. A history of each is given and the volume is illustrated by reproductions of many photographs of scenes along the high un8 described. The engineers will find the book in structive for the details of road build ing which it contains. The antiquarian will find in it a wealth of information nbout the early history of transporta tion in the I'tilted States and the motor ist who rends it will find new pleasure in touring when he knows the history of the highway on which he is traveling. The book is a hnndsomc large volume bound In blue buckram, with a gold title on the back and on the front cover, nnd with blue lining paper. THE TURNPIKES OF NEW ENdLAXD By Frederic J. Wood. Iloiton. Marnhall Jonea Co. UO. heroines" nr nnt ?.")?r side--py tno writer. ...v..u . ...... iiriiiMM nni it. NOMADS OF THE NORTH. By Jame. Oliver 'uj"nt5. "VS5..S'tiii! .ri" """am r,cr Co. SI BO THE VOICE OF THE PACK. By Kdlwn Marihalt. Boaton; Little. Bronn Co II 73. HILLS OF HAN By Samuel Merwln In dianapolis Bobbi-Merrltl Co TRIMMED WITH RED. By Wallace Irwin. New York. Q-orje H. Doran Co THE OUTBOUND ROAD. By Arnold Mul der. Uoiton Houahton Mifflin Co II rt'i AT FAME'S GATEWAY By Jennie Irene Mix New York Henry Holt (Co 1 73 MR. WU By Louise Jordan Mlln. New I TorX! jr. A stoxtt co TIMELY. BOOKS Baxter. New York: D. Appleton & Co Everything Desirable in Books VlrTHERSPOOr BLDO. Walaut, Juniper aal Sanaam Sti. Elevator to 2nd Flaor BLASCO IBANEZ Woman Triumphant t,13. Order of Any Bookstore or E. P. DUTTON & CO., 631 5tk At,, N. Y. 1 M JEm&'Wlu The TIN SOLDIER By TtmpU Bailay Liked by Everybody ,4t nil boofcaforea PENN PUBLISHING CO., tl.TS Philadelphia Der. Dr. Robert Ellis ThomDaon. nnw nr.,L dent of the Central High School and then secretary of the (acuity and profess6r of literature: Dr. 3 Weir Mitchell and Dr Horace Howard Furness The present ol ume Is a reprint of their findings uft.-r numerous seances, hearings, etc PLAYS. GOUTH SERIES By John Gals. worthy. New York. Chas Scrlbntr's Sons. Contains '"A Bit o' Loe," "The Foun dations" and "The .Skin Game ' ' UP THE SEINE TO THE BATTLEFIELDS ' ity Anns nowinan uoua jsow York Harper A Bros. THE BLOWER OF BUBBLES By A B. , ,,?nr.3"nreoDY. .?i"l.Vi SV t" "S oi war kmu it, in. iiuutii 01 reconstruction A charming- and appreciative olurne i I 13 VIOLENCE HE WAY OUT OF OUR IN DUSTRIAL DISPUTES? By John Haynex Holmea. New York: Dodd. Mead & Co. Tho minister of the Community Church of New, York endeaora to apply to the perils of the present Industrial and social situation ' htha doctrine of passive resistance, of which I nan ions uccn mi urueni ana notable advocate. AN AVIATOR'S WIFE By Adelaide OWnsT- ton New York: Dodd, Mead It Co I An Interesting nairatlve of the romance of Earle Ovlmrton. now president of the (.'urtles Flylns: btallon Gives from a fresh viewpoint many of the Interesting- human sidelights of aviation and a running- narrative or IIS marvn. THE ART OFFigilTINO. By Rear Admiral i Bradley A. Flske, U. S, N. New York. I Century Co. Discusses authoritatively but entertaining. y the art of warfare toeether with Its evo lution and progress, with Illustrations from i campaigns of great commanders of the ' norld'i history. I Fiction BRUCE. By Albert I'ayson Terhune. New i York: E. F Dutton fc Co. Tho romance pf a collie, by the animal lovinr author of "Lad: a Dog," MARY MAKIB. By Eleanor II. Torter. Boston: Houxhton Mifflin Co. A charucterlatlo story, In the earlier vein by the successful author of the "Pollyanna" I LADY FINOERS. By Jacltton Gregory, New I York: Chas. Scribner'a Sons. I The story of how three women tangle up I the aketna of a min'i destiny and how the , knota are loosened at last Into a true lover's TAMAniSIC TOWN By Sheila Kaye ! ( Smith. New ork E P Dutton & Co. I Th. nntahla author of several mmoi..,,,! ' novela of English provincial life again writes of ber faorlte fiussex, this time caatlni: her novel lntbe nftlea of tho last century. THE SECRET bPIJINO. By Pierre Uenolt. New York. Dodd Mead L Co. A mystery, atory which has taken France by storm. It has an Intricate plot which will be tnsoluabla to even the most hardened reader of such talea IllBTlUriB MVBTKBT. ny Ad.la Luehr- i mann. New York- Dodd. Mead L Co. 1 Three mysterious deaths, within a week's time, of three men or intimate relations makes the mystery Ila solution murder, accident, suicide forma an enthralling- nar rative oi "'.""WJnS' ivv' ,YA '"?: noi.ll wu y B. Dlnsle 4sMjfflh r W V W Here's an American story of mystery and adventure that takes you to Washington, D. C. Bailey Harbor, Maine, Cornford, Vermont, New York, Cleveland, Ohio, Chicago, Huddleston, Mich., and holds you breathless with its entertaining plot every mile of the way. If you en joy losing yourself in an en tertaining story where you can't guess what's coming, read Blacksheep! Blacksheep! By Meredith Nicholson At Bookstores Everywhere. Illustrated, S1.7S. gNCHARUS SCRIBNERS SONS 'FIFTH JBfLAM&St NEYTYURK LEUVRECONTEMPORAIN A magnlne devoted Sent fre on to French Literature application. SCHOENHOF BOOK CO. French Bookshop 19 Beacon St. Boston, Mate 1628 CHESTNUT Macobs FOR CHCSTWU- t J BOOKS n STADDNERYAriD EN0RAV1HG IP 1r m rr Jtao A love atory of the South rich in irresistible humor, SLIPPY McGEE By Marie Conway Oemler A Century Book Price $1.75 m V, Headquarter For Engineering and Technical Books Philadelphia Book Company 17 South 9th Street " J iture story of many thrllla. i'B ISLAND, Iiy Florence Olm New York Cbas. Scribner'a OUT OF CELEDES. Hy Captain A. Dingle. Boston: Little, Brown A rji. An adventur STA"""" atead. The romance of two young lovers. Set amid an Idyllic environment and charmingly Srottll COUNTRT POLLY. By Grace Mil- ler Whtte. Boston: Little. Brown Co. A typical and Interesting work by the author of the highly gucceeaful "Teae of the &Vi?PnENCY EDOAR. By Clarence Bud. elland. New York) ilarper ft roe. Ington Sbowlmr some, of the aattrei and Ironies and cgadvantageg of too much "enirieacyi Have you Ouijamania? THE ROAD TO EN-DOR By E. H. JONES Illustrated. Cloth, $2.00 A remarkable book which will cause consternation among Spir itualists and ouija-board fanatics. It is one of the most amazing stories of perseverance, fortitude and adventure ever recounted. Is Divorce a Cure? THE SUPERSTITION OF DIVORCE By G. K. CHESTERTON Author of "Irish Imprtiaiona," etc, CJoln, 1.60 tier. There is obviqus need at the moment for a book which shall set forth the main principles on which the orthodox position with regard to marriage is based. Such a book Mr. Chesterton has now written in his most brilliant manner. Of Special Timeliness IRISH IMPRESSIONS By G. K. CHESTERTON .lulnoCjO "lltretlct," "Orthodoxy." ttc. Cloth, 1 50 tiff. "Something everybody ought to read. At his best, G. K. C., the critical essayist, can be in dead earnest and highly edifying on large and important subjects more agreeably and divertingly than any one else we know. 'Irish Impressions' represent him at his best." iVcic York Sun (Editorial). 1920's "Best Seller" THE HOUSE OF BALTAZAR By WILLIAM J. LOCKE Author of "The Rough Itoad," "Thti Be toveu" VaoabonJ," tc, iOlh TStmrnitJ. Cloth, $1,00. "A novel worthy to rank with William J. Locke's best is 'The House of Baltazar.' This novel has in it tho same ingratiating qualities that made 'The Beloved Vagabond' and 'The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne' literary gems cf extraordinary brilliancy," Phil adelphia Record. OF ALL BOOKSELLERS JOHN LANE CO. NEW YORK t t - . -j-wj fjoanf nntfttttndlna bookft tJSVSnuSTS, Century Ce. MXlV fork CUV. They're sold at all bookstores. THE CONQUEST OF THE OLD SOUTHWEST . , Bu ARCHIBALD HENDERSON U ,aw- ... . .,i.il . n-H-n .U.I thai m wilderness. ,HuJlrof.d. U.tO.) It Is a hltto dartnsr men and Into the American THE ART OF FIGHTING By REAR-ADMIRAL BRADLEY A. FISKE, U. S. Hi of history. (Illustrated, ts.00.) at New and Unusual Novels , LUCA SARTA By CHARLES S. BROOKS ($i.rs.) THE MATRIX By MARIA THOMPSON DAVIESS i .,innt iov story of tho Blue Grass country, faueA on h?nllw. ewlrtlP wd marrlare of Lincoln', rath and Nancy HanUs. (tl.lt.) THE FARMER OF ROARING RUN ?MARY DILLON ""l IKvTr.nbyorththoaK oi tV&mM country, (tl.1l.) "zzz ' Once you met her 'utt tv iWMN. You iWm '11 never forget-Aer MARY MARIE " the sunbeam girl " By the author of "Jait David" ELEANOR H. PORTER Illuo. by Helen M. Groie $1.00 net at all bookstores HOUGHTON MIFFLIN CO. 4 PARK ST., BOSTON -3 Striking Novels- the golden scorpion Sax Rohmer's latest oriental mystery story. 2nd printing. Illustrated, ?2. marqueray's duel By Anthony Prydu "It's a big book . . . such a book as Stephen McKenna might WTtte," says the Philadelphia Press; and a reader calls it "tho best written and most entertaining novel in years." 3. maureen By Patrick Maegill A grim, heroic novel of Ireland of today and Sinn Fein by the author of The Ratpit. ?2. Robert M. McBride & Co. Publisher. New York iE!l!!: FOR THE NOTICE OF GOLFERS or of any who feel the value of maintaining balance Man's Supreme Inheritance JOHN DUNCAN DUNN writes: "One of the best books for the beginning golfer and the older player Is 'Man'H Supremo Inheritance,' by K. M. Alexander. Here is a man who has studied out conscious control and has given it to ua In book form so that we can really understand Just what Is required of us. Conscious con trol Is one of the absolutely necessary requirements of the golfer. If he Is drhlng the ball all over the lot, to right, to left, sometimes too high, sometimes too low, he wants to know why he Is doing this thing . I have had many pupils congratulate me after a course ot lessons that they got a great deal more out of the golf lessons than the golf . that they could do things they never dreamt of before." That Is the re milt of conscious control. At ull bookstores, SZ.30, E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave., New York The Great American Novel of the Immtaran t SARAH and HER DAUGHTER By Bertha Pearl ..,'rTY,,Ji!UJ!d.'J,t3r ti fact Bertha Pearl has made SAnAH AND HEIt DAUCHlTnil the most truthful novel of the Cast Side that we have read. Our hope that a really Inspired document would oomo from the Ohetto Is reallred." Tho N. Y. livening Mall "I think BAHAII 'AND HER DAUGHTER Is splendid. 1 don't know when I have read any fiction that I liked io well." ., . , Allan Benson, editor of'Keconstructton At All Booksellers. ISroo, cloth. Price, 8S.0 THOMAS SELTZER ' Publisher Five West Fiftieth St, New Ywfc I v,,- v M &aWl I'!, tei i Vv
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers