Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, May 15, 1920, Night Extra, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rrra
,i. :?' s ' ' v
TOf' , , .tiv
.s -1
I'j-ri
- . va
A
rv "
EVENING PTOLIG
JUST PUBLISHED
WAR, MYTHS AND ECONOMICS IN THE NEW BOOKS
'It never
forget htr
.' A Novel of Lightning Vividness and
RECENT WAR BOOKS FROM
SOME IRISH SAINTS,
Tremendous rower
SINNERS ANDFAIRIES
Two Boohs of History and
Folk Lore of the Em
erald Isle
m ?TzzS?rTT .
"1 -r-
Cince vou 've K iWtMS You
met htr JftflRKa
n
ENGLISH AND TEUTON ANGLES
Origin of the Fighting Tanks Work of Dover Patrol.
Apologias by Tirpitz and FaUtcnhayn
&V
' ,f
HIS FRIEND
and HIS WIFE
(!OSMO HAMILTON
M
I"
KV
e"
ft
B
t.
am
' i
I
I.'
I
1
I!
-
E
m
'
'M
if
-U-
This is the story of the effects upon the young married
anfc nf tho wnnHhv Quaker Hill colonv in Connecticut, which
followed an infraction of the social code by Julian Osborne
and Margaret Meredith.
Mr. Hamilton has written a
powerful novel of present-day
American life the underlying
themo being that no un
righteous act against the es
tablished social code can be
committed without the price
being paid as dearly by the
innocent as by the guilty.
$1.7.'t net
At all Booksellers
OTHER NOVELS BY
COSMO HAMILTON
Scandal
Who Cares?
The Blindness of Virtue
The Miracle of Love
TheDoorThatHasNoKcy
The Sins of the Children
LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY, Publishers, Boston
aijmiiiiniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiHiiin good FiCTioMiiiiniiniiiiniiiiniiniiHiniiA-:
THE REAL DIARY OF
THE WORST FARMER
Judge Henry A. Shutc
"Judge Shutc is pcculiurly satisfying as u humorist. He lecounts
at a leisurely pace happenings that are delightfully ludicrous,
and mingles with them a ncn lunu of humanity ana n keen leoi
ing for the poetry of
REAL DIARY Or
ER is a book heartily
page to the last."
SHIPS
ACROSS
THE SEA
Ralph D. Paine
'These stories are so real and
vita), the hazards they detail are
bo thrilling, J hat those allured
by tho brlcht face of danger
will yield themoehes gladly to
their spell." Milwaukee Sentinel.
llliu. It 90 net
the natural world. THE
THE WORST FARM
to enjoy from the first
Providence Journal.
lllua. $1.75 net
WANTED
A
HUSBAND
Samuel Hopkins Adams
"Wlttv ant wholesome, realistic
and wlldl romantic, a new er
slon of Cinderella In a fresh
eln vlth an American setting
and atmophcrc ' Philadelphia
Press
lUus :i 'i ntt
"Darn of Glory" Is the sketch book
of n etcrnn wnr correspondent at the
front iu the rent wnr. Tho "vet" is
none other than Frederic Tilllers,
whose career Roes back to Tck-el-Kc-ber,
tho Turkish atrocities in Serbia
of fortj years njo. Port Arthur and
many another bnttlo which Is now almost
forgotten except by the professional
diplomatist and historian. Ills draw
ings arc grnphic, full of action and full
of something more important of hu
ninu Interest. The book opens M
" Paluti- to Frederick Villlers" by
Philip Glbbs, one of the most note
worthy of the war correspondents de
veloped by tho recent world war.
Major dough Wllllnms-Ullls and A.
Williams-Rill are the joint authors of
"The Tank Corps," nil nuthorltathe
and genuinely interesting account of the
origin-!, the dcrlopmcnt, the strategic
value and the actual accomplishment of
this new engine of warfare, one of the
orlglnnl contributions of the recent war
to military art and science. Thero is
un informing introduction bv Major
General II. J. Kilos. C. .. D. S. O..
who wns the commander in the field
of the liritlsb tank corps, from its lor
mntlon to the nrmlstlce.
"The Dover Patrol" Is a stirring
narrative by its commander. Admiral
Sir Reginald llncon. K. C. II.. K. O
V, O.. D. S. O.. of the notable ftcd
war-winning work accomplished by the
Uritlsh fleet protecting the transit from
Rngland to France and Belgium. In
the xkulking of the German grand fleet
nt its protected bases there was no
chance for a display of sea warfare on
n great and brilliant scale and the work
of the Dover nntrol was by the nature
of eents ruther routine, except for the
fcrrctiug out of submarines and the
' protection of the coatline and the
! transports. Hut It was not lacking in
I its excitements Hud its thrills. Both
I the btrategy employed and the adten
i lures exnerlenced arc well told by the
commander.
Admiral Sir Percy Scott. K C. P. .
IC C V. O.. and Hon. LT...D.. of Cnm-
brldge I nlverslty. has written a piquant i,i ns thnt , , ,.
nj ..M.. mi - :"". V1""V
"My Memoirs" Is the story of the
world war as Grand Admiral von Tlr-
Eltz saw it. His story will remember
Im as the treat proponent of the un
restricted 'submarine wnrfare, of nith
lessness on the seas and of Prusslanlsm
to the highest degree on the land. De
spite tho fact that hla book Is on elab
orate apologia it contains a great dcnl
of Informing matter. It is particularly
valuablo in setting forth the personali
ties which dominated tho formation of
German policy in the latter part of the
war when war of position and of attri
tion foreshadowed the debacle of Ger
man nrmn'nnd Prusslanistic ambitions.
IIo lays tho downfall of Germany not
to arious militaristic and economic
factors., including the mastering pres
ence of thq Americans, but to the
spread of radical and Bolshevist ideas
In tho German navy. The book Is de
cidedly one for the reader who wishes
to master tho wholo history of the war.
FIFTY YEAns IN THE IIOYAIj NAVY. Hy
Admiral Hcott. New York: dore II.
Doran Co
TUB GERMAN GENERAL STAFF. IJy Oen.
eral on Flttenhyn. New York! Dodd,
Mead A Co.
THE DOVER PATIIOU ny Admiral Bacon.
mm: ueorse II. Doran Co.
TIJP.. TANK CORPS By Major Wllllami-
fcllla and A. Wllllnm.Elll. New York:
Ueorjo II. Doran Co.
Mi?.!ESt9,nBJ. "X J?rand Admiral Non Tlr
plts. New York: Dodd. Mead A Co.
L,';!,?...or i!I'y.. Picture, by rrederlo
iiiirro. .-New rork: Qeorco II. Doran Co.
JACKSON'S VALUABLE
"YEAR BOOK" OF CITY
wtm.a
IDY GREGOnY
Who has rompllMl two volumes of
Irish traditions, legends and, fairy
tales v
SHE SEEMS TO SMELL
SOMETHING BURNING
Compendious Manual of Phil
adelphia, in Second Edition,
Informing and Accurate
"Jackson's Philadelphia Year Book,"
for 11)20. the second year of its projected
annuul issuance, makes considerable
strides over the pioneer edition, admira-
nni inreroHtlnp hnok. In ',Kift 1 earh
in the IlojaJavi" he net- down the ,c"a, arrnnMme
recollection of a lifetime, of slxtJ.five or ouh a feahire S lh. ,Xil? mt1'
tear, half n century of which was tr p",i..ir,atuS.?f..tP.e original edition
.in pit.
. .. . - -. it " iuwnu-u. iiip ruirnr. .inqnnii
-pent in tne arme. service oi nis rnun- mcmb.r fo.-mnn ," V- i -
try He entered tnc nay wnen most ,iitorini fnff nf - V,7,, V. "' ."v
IIMJSSKT"! "I!? ' ? 'ln It Zu sHcar
retired when modern science had revo
biiionized motUe power, gun and all
the other paraphernalia of a great navv.
His account of nnal evolution is erv
i
reiearch and compilation has effected
mnny improvements in details, while
adhering to the formulas which made the
illllllllllllllllllllll HOUGHTON. MIFFLIN COMPANY III 1 1 1 1 1 111! 1 1 1 1 1 1 IIHI.-
IT IS UNPRECEDENTED that, month after month, two
novels by the same author published a year apart should
appear at the same time in the lists of new books most in
demand in both the bookstores and the libraries. The
fame of
VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ
grows steadily. Read
Woman
Triumphant
By the Author of "The Tour Horsemen of tho Apocalypse," "Marc
Nostrum." "Blood and Sand," "The Shadow of the Cathedral," "La
Bodega," etc. $2.15 in any boohttore
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave, New York
lis account pi nnal evolution Is erv l orlclnal enfe rwl..,n 1...11 it t.
n.trnrthe Many important tames of , flnlne'e m'ade manv Mf
)er-onR and nlsces and the admiral's from- .i,.i .u?. ii, .,!' ?... w entries 01
imprevsions of them liven up Mi page. 1 mnmn : Vnd will lit .&iiain,llMlrc
In "The German (Jcneral Staff and , t"on The henSlnli Z$ ' iat,0Tmr
Us Decision. 1!14-101." General Kn" number 7 7Wn.-lh,i' ?$, "l
Krieh von rnlkenhavn. who was the "j, nun,bcr 0, ns aKalnst 093 for
German imperial minister of war in I " ,
1!U4. nt the outbreak of hotill-,.. ThP,'u? for 1020 N n larger volume
ies and Inter the imperial chief of staff, tlln1n tllnt for 101ft. There are 2(50 pages
tells from the insWe the considerations . aml ns ""ich reading matter as in three
which were motUe and dominant In the averuge. length noes. Many of the
htrategN of the lirt two years of war-1 tatlstica I articles have been prepared
fare trom tne ucrmnn viewpoint. Jie 1 ; ''.'J;;""' 1,ur ul" 111 mis volume, Bhlp
reieali many secrets of opposition to '"""'"B' the trade wifli I.atln America,
his decisions nt critical times and argues the fire losses for 1010. the production
for the merit of his actions. Of couise HU5a.r. n Philadelphia being only a
the olume has much special pleading few ot tlie instance,
and the general is by no means beyond The text of the citv's new charter is
being a self-npologist. but his bonk is given in the addenda to the book A re
one which must be rend and weighed . Mime of the principal features of the
in formulating any definite opinion on eitj's growth in given in the foreword,
the Mrntegy of the flret half of the war. and is likely to prove inspiring to Phila-
delphlans. Added this year aro chronol-
I pgies, Doth local, religious, etc. The
business and political Information is of
I nterest to all who do business or vote
The wnrlr to nmnl,- .tmnl(..i i.i. -
'tstlcal tables on mon subjects, nnd
I these are of value for reference.
J JACKf,ON"S PHILADELPHIA YBAP. nOOK
I MV Jnfnh .Titebunn Tlll..i-.w. I'v,""v
n."niaT KMito" Truat IJIJ,""" JacK-
Mrs. Gcrould Sniffs Superiorly
in New Essays at Our
Modes and Morals
Feathers are burning in the atmos
phere of our cultural nud social en
vironment nnd Mrs. Katharine Fuller
ton Gcrould's nose has sensed the pun
gent smell. Currying her head superior
ly nnd "pointing" with superb direc
tion nnd directness, she analyzes the
aroma In the new collection ol Her
Lady Gregory, who has done so much
in restoration to present-day llteraturo
of Irish mythology nnd old poetry and
who has added to Irish literature by
her own creatlvo works in drama and
verso, is tho compiler of "Visions nnd
Beliefs of the AVest of Ireland," two
good-slrcd volumes which are a treasure
house of traditions, legends nnd fairy
stories. Fancy nnd folk lore, taken from
the lips of old peasants nnd more so
phisticated persons too, are skillfully
retold with much of the simplicity and
largeness of line of ancient myth. Some
one hns spoken of "the haunting chnr,m
that inheres in the Celtic conscipus
nciM of an immanent supernnturnllsm,"
and I-ndy Gregorj's readings communi
cate this pervasive charm. Seers nnd
healers, witches and wizards, wlc
women, herbs, treasures, charms, bogies,
friars cures and sea legends are only
a few of the subjects given first-hand
treatment. Thero arc two essays and
some notes by W, II. Ycnts. The stories
and talcs arc translated into the Irish
idiom of the English lnngunge, one of
the two media of verbal communication
in present day blllngunl Ireland. Of
course the words of the sldhe, the fairies
and the wonderworkers were originally
in the Gaelic. For, as an old woman re
plied when asked what language was
snoken bv the little nconlo nnd strange
folk she had been nmong: "Irish, of
course, they did be speaking."
"Stories of the Saints" fs n retelling
of many of the inspiring nnd affecting
legends and histories of such notables
of haglology ns St. Patrick, St. Bridget
of Klldare, St. Anthony of Padua, St.
Nicholas, St. Louis of France, St.
Margaret of Scotland, St. Mary of
Fgypt and many others. Grace Hall,
the author, has made extensive re
searches among the numerous books,
such as the Lives of the Saints, Fox's
Book of Murt.trs nnd the illuminated
records of the monnstic orders, and has
retold the stories with straightforward
interest and many graceful touches. The
cssa.is. "Modes unit Morals."
Sneaking out of trones one feels that '!"","?',""" i"' f "S.'"' ,tV't"t
?$ AtriX; sectarian bias or nngle of approach It
J ?nu? r JRr m r. J,m,V-u w ,0l,? ' concerned simply with tne broad
lw I lift ',. hi I Christian virtues nnd the romantic
sight into conditions that doubtless in . ,y. ..niT,i ,i-tD Tf t-
St. John Ervinc's New Novel
THE FOOLISH LOVERS
Everyone who enjojed "Changinp; Winds" and "Mr.s. Martin's Man"
will want to read this new novel by tiic same author. Keenly drawn,
humorous, realistic, it is Ervine at his best the finished work of
one of the most brilliant of tho present day novelists.
To Be Ready Next Week
THE FOOLISH LOVERS
By St. John Ervine
' Author of "John Ferguion"
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publisher, NEW YORK
.sp -.zii :-z ' z
Lindy Loyd
A TALE
OF THE MOUNTAINS
A romantic story of moonshiner life in tho hra'itiful Tennessee
mountains by a woman who knows of what sho writes.
"The battles with the revenue officers, the feuds, Urn great
etorms that roll down the mountain valleys, the loyal devotion of tho
mountain people to each other, the quaint philosophy of the wan
dering preacher all these make an intensely dramatic narrative,
and in Ita portrayal of tho primitive passions it is an especially
successful piece of literary workmanship." Boston Herald.
Br MARIE E. HOFFMAN, of Germantown, Philadelphia. Price $1.75
MARSHALL JONES COMPANY
2)2 Summer St. Doiton
Something Nmw In Bird Book
WHAT BIRD
IS THAT?
By FRANK M. CIVAPMAN
Curator 0 Bird in T4 Ammean
Mutum of Natural HUtory, author of
"Bird Lf;" "Our WinUr Brdt." et.
NOVEL FEATURES
Sliea of Birds. The illustra
tions not only show tho birds in
their natural colors, but also by
means of group pictures the
relative size3 of all the birds
ore clearly shown.
Seaaonal Grouping. By
means of the group pictures tho
birds aro shown in the correct
Beasona when they appear.
Every Land Bird. East of
the Rockies (S01 in all) in pic
tures and a clear description
given of its characteristics,
habits, haunts, song, etc.
TWO EDITIONS
Cloth, $1.25 net.
Fabrikoid, $1.75 net.
At all Booksellers. This is an
Apploton Book.
D. APPLETON& COMPANY
Publishers New York
TUB NEW OERMANY
new lorx 'fnrrourt
LEONARD MERRICK'S
Worldlings
One of the very best novels In year.
Price $U0
E. P. DUTTON & CO., C81 5th Ave, NX
Everything Desirable in Book
wrrnERSpooN bldo.
WilouU Juulper and Saaiom SU.
Elevator to 2nd Floor
!
Hannah Bye
By Harrison S. Morris
A clever picture of Quaker life in a present-day com
munity. Tho ilfo of Hannah Bye, a nweet but courageous
Quakeress, ia filled with strange happenings by contact with
IhO ' carcicstr, biiuui uutsiuu unu.
LELIVRECONTE MPORAIN
A magazine devoted Bent free on
to French Literature application.
8CHOCNHOF DOOK CO.
Ftench Bookahop
IS Beacon St. Doeton, Matt.
; :t
r i fU hnnlmnllera
f,ti THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
W) t PHILADELPHIA
$1.76 net
IACOBS
FOR
1620
CHESTNUT
STREET
SJ BOOKS
STAT1DHEBYND ftNGBWIrlQ
I!giij4gyy
Stevcnsonia
Oeorge n. Ilrown haH compiled fln
alphabetically arranged culdc to Steven
Minln which will be useful to thoie who
are Interested in the subject nnd like
a convenient reference volume. Tor ex
ample, more than five pages are devoted
to "Trennurc Island." concluding with
tlio announcement thnt a copy of the
first edition has cold for $.'W. Itpgin
ner In llternture will find an anonv
mous completion of Stevenson'H re
marks upon the art of writing most
profitable reading. It Includes what he
has said in his books, his essays and his
letters.
a nooK or n 1, s nr Ofnrg k nmwr
. ?Sj.X)i' rhI"'," Serlbner-a Sone 13 so
LSARNINO TO WHITE Huraettlenaana
NEW BOOKS
Mora (sHfrntlfwl nntfjt .. ..
will ! rlren to och boikiTa. wem to m.rli
General
Ijv O.orrii Touni.
A dljtlnrulBhod HrlilKh diplomat ind jiur
nail" of ljbra t-nd-nel. dlncuiiea the "
yplrltual tote., ut ork in Germany under
the demwratlf rflm. and th Influence of
" " " fac,or" ,n P'fmanent woriu
8TOIIIRS OF i.ittiikh nunnANK AVn
Mri'A'T fcCHOOU IMItM by Uiira?
Sunn .ani acrlbnern
Chate In simple. nontecuTileal lanruare fit
th. wonder wroutht In hybridizing and bo
tanical beitermentu by Mr. nurbanlt.
TUB NEW INDl'STniAI. UVHK8T Hy Tlar
Stnnrd Baker New Torlf Doableday
Par Co
A trained lourn&llat nnd mihllele .h.
his lnetlatlon and obervaton. end eu
Rema repi'dlee for allelatlon He dlteuiee
approvingly iho ibop council eyetera, whleh
a favored In the report of the President a
II1L4111V1 1(1 I L IMI1 III inKIIl
A Jl?J?4: riiniRTiAN iMiuirmiAL or
TiF.n Hv llonry Slone Coffin. New
lorlc Tho Mnemlllen Co
The minister of the Madlsnn Ai.nn. n
bvtrts.n Clmrrh and asiocltte professor In
tho I'nlon Theoloalcal Pemlnary orfera con
rrete aur'fstlona for practical rhrlttlana to
iimiuw in o-uiy connni wim ineir reilowa.
whether csDltftlitt or vrnrker
MY r-HF.SH CAHFEIl By J n CapablancH
New Tork. The Macmlllan Co
A champion at the ancient itsme reeorna
hie experiences In bis tournament and also
lets the readers on the Inside of gome of his
fipeclallst's knowledae,
HIOTOItY OF THK NEW KVOI.AND SO
ciett op cjiAnLESTON. a. c. nv
William Way. Published by the aocletv
An excellent piece of eperlsllied writing
nf Interest not only to the metnhere. but alsj
to the aeneril rejler Interesred in the trans
blared by New Englandera far from Plyra
cuth Hock
EAST I.ESSONn IN EINBTKIN ny rviwln
K Sloasan. New Tork: Harcourt, Draco
& Howe.
The editor of the Independent outlines 'n a
way tntelllalble to the aTerate peraon the
more Intelligible principles nnd features of
the complicated theory of relativity.
SOCIAL THEOIXT Ily O r II. Cole. New
Tork K. A Stokes Co.
A dtspaaslonate and clear stihted anaylsls
of aoclsl theories and the comejex auestlone
of man's relationships In tils isrloua ass
clttlons from the family to the state.
Fiction
ENOTAND TO AMERICA Jl Marcaret
rreecoti iionissue. new roras JWUDle-
day, Pajre & Co
The flrat prlie-wlnnlna etory In the ron
test for 1910. conducted by the O, Usury
memorial committee.
suoiiT HToniEs rnoM tub ppanisit
Ily Charles 11 McMlcnael New Tom:
Ilonl Uverlrht
The dlstiuzulshed Judce of the Common
Pleaa Courts of Philadelphia county la e.
litterateur ot distinction In his leisure from
Jurlatlo duties The present collection Of his
translations alvea a representative and fas.
clnatlnr view of the estate of abort Isnatb
fiction in Spain.
HANNAH DTK. Dy Harrison 8. Merrte.
rillluriiu.at viii. miiw.... ww.
some ciises need rectification, her far
ulty of swift und sure Blzlne up of
trends anil gituntlons. ner wide
informed knowledge, her breadth nnd
depth of backgrounds for comparisons
and contntHtf.. She Is n vnlid thinker
and n searching critic. Hut Bhc does
not nlunjM display a fine and healthy
tolerance. She does not quite pontifi
cate, but one feels nt times that she
does not deem her head an un
place for n triple tiara of noine intel
lectual pjthoness of Princeton If
Princeton boasts a pythoness nnd the
ptthoness wore n triple tiara, ccrtnlnlj
tlir combination would not be complete
without Mrs. Oerould.
It Is n pity. then, that 5Irs. Ocrould's
manner incites resentment in some
readers, posslblv many readers, mainly
because she is in n sense academically
class conscious. She is a proponent of
the rights of Intellectual minorities.
That in itself is all light. Hut the
democratic mass has rights, too. and
wssiblv larger rights. It should not
be sniffed nt. In "The Xew Simplicity"
Mrs. Gcrould makes her best plea for
the Intellectual and social minorities.
Her views on "Fashions In Men" nnd
"The Newest Women" make lively
reading. In fact, lively reading is a
marked feature of the book. Probably
the essay, of most value, because best
thought out nnd less affected by the
writer's cerebral and stvllstlc manner
Isms, is "Ilritlsh Novelists, Limited."
in which she sets In the place that mnny
renders and some critics, not fans or
faddists, think is proper for them, on I
the basis o flieir attainments, the
lounger school of Ilritlsh fietioners.
TCcresford. Mnckcn7ie, Onions and Can
nan. Tho book is generally stimulating
even where one docs not jibe wilh the
author's opinions.
MODES AND MORALS. Ry Kntharln "ul
lerton Qerould New Tok Clmrles icrili
ncr'n Sons
career of the canonized subjects. It is
full of miaint thoughts and odd cus-
n,wl I loins "Nil ii llun luuuj un uuji-ci JCSNOn
all(1 . nf I !. nlin.lli nnA nnlttlllM a.
IIL IIUUMIUIIJ, I.IIUIII; IIUU UVUIltkjr iUI
the reader.
VISIONS AND RELIEFS IN THE WEST
OF IRELAND. Collected and arramtea
by Lady Oresory New York: O. I. Put
nam'M Sons Two olume
STORIES OK THE SAINTS. By Grace
Hall New York Coubleday, Pare & Co
German Spies
James Hay. Jr., hns exercised his
imagination on the ways of German
spies in America and hns put the result
in a book which he calls "The Mel
wood Mystery." The lllaln of tho plot
turns out to be a "Germnn-Amcrlcnn,"
who hnd been denouncing the govern
ment for its failuro to discover the
spies nnd punish them. The novel opens
with the discovery of n young woman in
her apartment unconscious from a stab
in the breast. She is suspected of be
ing a spy. The plot is occupied with
the discovery of how she wns injured
and why. Jefferson Hastings, an un
common type of detective, solves the
mystery, nnd smooths tho way for the
lovers, without whom a tale is sup
posed to lack the essentials of popular
success.
THE MELWOOD MTSTERT. By Jamee
Hay, Jr. New Tork: Dodd. Mead & Co.
The TIN SOLDIER
By T ample Bailey
Liked by Everybody
.11 all bookstores 11.75
PENN PUBLISHING CO, Philadelphia
Dean Graves on Religion
The erv Riiggestive and helpful book,
"What Did Jesus Tench:" is the sub-
stance of the instruction ghen a nor
mal training class of students of the 1
University of Pennsylvania by Frank '
P. Graces, dean of its School of Kdu
cation. Beginning with n brief inqulr)
into the historical sources of t ho teach
ings of Jesus, he describes his methods,
his ideas of God nnd man, his ooneep
tlon of the reconstruction of life nnd 1
what the future hns in store. The con
cluding chapters nre upon tho founda 1
tions of the church nnd the relationship I
of Jesus to modern society. An illus
tration of the dean's methods of In
struction is his stntcmrnt that "Money,
Jesus would seem to hold, is not owned,
but owed by the rich; it constitutes a
trusteeship, not a possession." A
valuablo list of recent works on the
subject treated is given after each chap
ter and nt the end of the book.
WHAT DID JESUS TEACH? Ily Frank
Plerrepont Graven. Pr. D. New York The
Macmlllan Co. II 73
Headquarter For
Engineering and
Technical Books
Philadelphia Book Company
17 South 9th Street
BRUCE
By ALBERT
PAYSON TERHUNE
Author of "Lad"
How Bruco cme to "Tho Place,"
tho thrill of hla narrow escape from
living death; tho wonder and beauty
of his devotion; they ore revoalcd In
this splendid story of what a collie
Cin do and be, S.OO ut any bookstore,
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5th Ave., N.Y.
MARY MARIE
" the sunbeam girl
By the author of "Jt David"
ELEANOR H. PORTER
Illui. by Helen M. Grote
$1.00 net at all boolutores .
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN CO.
4 PARK ST., BOSTON
rJwA
Kindred
of the Dust
A story you will never forget
A NOVEL, of the sort of
people who grow only in
the Great Northwest in
this soul-searching story
of Nan of the Sawdu3t Pile,
the mother of a child, who
cries for a father he will never know of Donald McKaye, the
young laird of Tyee, who is torn between the love he has for
Nan and the love he bears his father of the old Laird, the
proud ruler of hi3 rich little principality, who loves his son
with such a fierce and hungry love that he would sooner see
him dead than married to Nan.
By PETER B KYNE
a writer whose pen drip withtheteaiaandiotTowsandtritunphi
of a human and sympathetic a set of folks as you will ever find.
He's a wonderfully fine fellow, this Peter B. Kyne. He writes
about men, for men that's why women loVe his stories.
"Kindred of the Dust"
i a novel with a problem as old as time itself and as new as
the day that dawns with the coming of the new sun as
elemental as man, s great as humanity a story of people
you will love in a novel you will never forget.
Wherever boohs are sold ....... $1.75
(osjnopolitaii Boole oration
"You simply can't go wrong on n Cosmopolitan Book"
A CRY OF YOUTH
You would expect someihlna rather unusual In a
novel that toon the author ten years to write,
wouldn't you ? Well, you are not going to he disap
pointed when you road this book by Cynthia lombardl, I
"A Cry of Youth" is an unusual novel In every
way. There Is no use trying to sketch the plot of
xnts spicnaia romance or a neautitul American girl I
and a young nobleman In tholr mountain retreat Itlgh
up In the Apennines, ft might mar for you too good ,
a story. Lot It suffice to sav that It has all thn '
warmth, the gorgeous coloring, the romantic aimoa
pherm to bo found In the beat novels of Marion
Crawford, Rpbort Hlchons or Hall Calno. Ask your
bookseller for
A CRY OF YOUTH
Of "INVINCIBLE MINNIE,
by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding, the
Boston Transcript skys: "Minnie is an
achievement; she is the most extraor
dinary woman in recent American fiction.
Minnie is 'invincible.' Yes. Minnie is real, in life,
but she has not been made real in the Ameri
can fiction of our day until Elisabeth Sanxay
Holding created her tor us in these pages. Min
nie Defoe takes her place as the true Ameri
can cousin, also the only American cousin,
of Ann Veronica, Hilda Lessways, Sonia
O'Rane and others among those British maid
ens We Americans have blessed and cursed, discussed
and admired, and perhaps intensely admired, as
the perfection and type of modern womanhood.
But the greatest pride we can take is that she is
'our Minnie,' detestable, mysterious, wilful, pitiable
in her weakness, yet magnificent in the use of
her womanhood to overcome all
the barriers that stand in the tfr l VjiT$cwyV
way of the things she desired." lBixJa.iii
At all Bookshops Net, $1.75
By CVNTHia lOMOAROf
D. APPLETON 4 COMPANY
Ths fat an Appleton Booh
PUBLISDEBS NEW YORK
Mystery!
f
THE SECOND LATCHKEY
by Co N. and A. M. Williamson
Tho authors of "The, Llon'h Mouse" present
slnrtllngly new mystery. $1.7,)
THE DARK MIRROR
by Louis Joseph Vance
A sensutlonal stroko in mystery writing a talo
based on n psychic 'phenomenon. Better than "Knlso
Faces." ?1.75. Doublcday, Page & Co., Publishers.
A pertinent and arrestln sictura of ores
ent-dar Uto In a Quaker community by th.
f?rmr 4ttor of florncoU-s Maajn.. a(
formsr director ot (ba JiiJdWlJki "m
The Cresting Wave
Bu Edwin Bateman Morris
The story of a man who made money hla god. Ho waa
looked on us o big mnn. Then a girl called him a pigmy and
proved It. And ho found what was wrong with hlmbelf and
business America.
i Tloro !s.a lovo dement, humor, a big shipwreck, nnd all In
prlghtly stylo.
At all booktellert. Jacket in Colors $1.75
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA
Tamarisk Town
A new novel by SHEILA KAYE-SMITH
"Tamarisk Town" is the creation of ono man's strength and
of his vision of a beautiful seaside resort among the Sussex
tamarisks. Later another great passion comes into h s
life for a woman who hates the town and is jpalous of his
absorption in it. Tho book is the story of tho struggle ?
wtvpu uU.in.uii(; Auitutj iuiu wiiii a masiuny dhii'-'-
whjch makes it distinguished. $2.50 at all bookstores.
E. P., DUTTON, & CO., 081 Fifth 'Ave., New YsrU,,
Art. mr,
ffl?
' t
;
,1 y
i
l
i
v
$te&Jit&i'itidl!?.i!&i.
.tULb.i..
. 14
' v;
.'.... ii.-,..
au'v.
h,ru -
oir. t