M- Wil.im Lyon Phelps ' writes of tEONARDMERRICK IJ I have react wim Keen in terest every one of his novels that you havo published thus far. q Tliey are nil works of dis tinction, of high literary art JThe best thing about them is that every one is a good story well told. IJ They ore so well-wrought the plot baits is so admirable, that apart from one's con stant interest In the story, it is a pleasure to sea such workmanship. I quite under stand why Barrio calls him the novelist's novelist. I Some of his short stories re sernble O. Henry in the ele ment of surprise and decision. J tint Rendu The House of Lynch Uniform with: Conrnd in Quest of His Youth The Actor-Manager Cynthia The Position of Peggy Harper The Man Who Understood Women The Worldlings When Love Flics o the ' Window While Paris Laughed 'Each. $1.90 E. P. Dntlon & Co., 681 5th At., N. Y. Heaven and Hell An account of things heard and seen there By Emanuel Swedenborg Swedenborr, makes a rcaiontblo claim to nave been admitted into the spiritual world while bit physical body remained alive and active in this world, and has recorded hit ex perience in a war that is convincing. This book of 632 pages will be sent prepaid to any address on re ceipt of 25 cents. Also any of the following works by Swedenborg will be sent, prepaid, for 25 cents each: DIVINE PROVIDENCE 629 pp. THE FOUR DOCTRINES 635 pp. DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM 618 pp. The books are printed in large type on good paper, and are substantially bound in stiff paper covers.. The American Swedenborg Printing and Publishing Society Boom 733. 3 XV. 20th St.. New York Theodore Roosevelt and His Time Shown in his own letters BY Joseph Bucklin Bishop A nionumsntnl work plnnned by Colonel Roosevelt himself r.nd niapped out by him with Mr. Bishop. With Portraits. 2 volumes. $10.00 Charles Scribner's Sons The Best Definition An Example So said n great Frenchman. And as a definition of a "rich" book we oiler tho now story by tho author of "Slippy McGce." It is so grati fjingly full of good things tenderness, humor, memorablo char acters and plot, a delightful manner of telling a story that carries tho THE PURPLE HEIGHTS By Mario Conway Oemler Author of "Slippy McGee" At all bookstores. Price, $2.00. Published by The Century Co., 353 Fourth Ave., New York City. A Splendid Book for Boys by Rupert S. Holland Author of Neptune's Son nhd Lafayette, We Cornel REFUGEE ROCK &A stirring, thrilling yarn full of tho lure of tho sea and love of adventure that appeal to every boy. Colored front ispiece und drawings in black and white by Ralph olcman. Every bookseller has It. ?1.7G Gcorpc W. Jacobs & Co. Publld lers w Philadelphia it 'V; -:T; "Mote Interesting than a novel." President Thompson of Ohio State University. What's On The Worker's Mind By One Who Put on Overalls to Find Out Whiting Williams Mr. Williams left his posl tios ns personnol director of tho Hydraulic Pressed Steel Company in Cleveland, put on rough clothes, disguised his name, and obtained a laborer's job. Tho greater part of tho text af his book is mado up from his diary. He was in tho coal mines. Ho was in tho iron mines. Ho was in tho steel mills. And ho was there as a laborer, as one of the "hands." His story Is important to all who aim to bo informed on the lnboror'K psychology. Illustrated, $2.50 'CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS A Swing Around The Pirate Circle ROAMING THROUGH THE WEST INDIES By HARRY A. FRANCK Author of "A Vagabond Journey Around tho World," otc. The beat travel book of 1920. Presenta theao "stopping atonoa to South America" n only this author can get plctureaquo peoples and romantic places on paper. Over 100 illustrations. Prico $5.00. THE CENTURY CO. r Rooseveltian Days Kermit was his father's com panion on many hazardous adven tures in Africa and in South America. Colonel Roosevelt's son tells all about theso trips in his new book. The Happy Hunting-Grounds nr Kermit Roosevelt Author of "War in the Garden of Eden." Illustrated $1.75 OIARLFS SOOBNHfc SONS j FIFTH AVLAT 48ST. NEW"YURK I A Book for TODAY John Philip Hill's THE FEDERAL EXECUTIVE "An illuminnting study of the growth of the executive power in this country." Re view of Reviews. "To bo nn American a good one means that wc must pos sess an intelligent interest in our Government. Mr. Hill has provided us with a long-needed book." N. Y. Times. "No better book on tho sub ject." Phila. Ledger. tt.SO at all bookstores. Houghton Mifflin Company Read Before Election The Big Fall Novel John Fox, Jr.'s ERSKINE DALE Pioneer Illustrated by F. C. YOHN At Bookstores Everywhere $2 CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Read a good book tonight The Splendid OutCaSt Georgtcibbs Tht Oct .tdvcnlure Novtl of tht Year At All Bookstores This Is an Appleton Book v, ;---ry;.4t4-l ' !'". 7W. y'WkI "r i$$nm(ty ntiio ., .- , ANDREW CARNEGIE'S LITERARY MASTERPIECE ANDREW CARNEGIE'S ' AUTOBIOGRAPHY A Book Likely to Take Its Place Among the Classics of Its Kind One of the most fnsclnntlne autobi ographies of recent years Is that of An- i drew Carnegie. It was written at odd moments during a long period lu order to put on record matters In which Mr. Carnegie thought his friends might be , interested. Tho mnmiscrhit tin r."Pii , rillted by Prof. John C. van Dyke, of Rutgers, who has added explanatory ( notes to many passages. The book discloses to the general pub lic the kind of man Mr. Carnegie was, in matter hitherto known only by those 'who wero Intimately acquainted with him durlne his life. lie 1ms been pnllnii a selfish and sometimes n brutal money grubber with an overweening vanity. Yet the facts set forth In the book re cal him ns somewhat of a sentimental ist and always a man desirous of doing something to Improve the world. When he was thlrt.v-thrco years old with an lncomo of $00,000 a year he wrote a memorandum in which ho set down his determination to retire from active busi ness at the one of thirty-five; spend some time at Oxford University in get ting nn education and then buy a mag azine or newspaper in London, which he would devoto to advocating the bet terment, of tlicvorlci. Events made it Impossible to carry out this purpose. Ills interests from his early youth were Intellectual as well as commercial. While he was n telegraph messenger in Pittsburgh he -got access to the library of a generous man who wished to help working boys, nnrt tho books he read were Uancroft's, History of the United States, Macaulay's Essays and His tory of England, and ho says ho found great delight in Lamb's Essays. This is not the kind of reading usually so--lected by fiftcen-yerfr-old boys. A year or two later ho began to road Shakes peare. When ho was a mau grown and was making n tour around the world he tcad Confucius in Chinu, and in India he read the KuddhNtle books and Zo roaster. Ho founded libraries, he says, in order to give other boys the oppor tunities to get the cdficatlou which was ) denied Iilm in his youth. He tells how he became superin tendent of the Pittsburgh division of the Pennsylvania Railroad nt the age of twenty-four; how he entered the busi ness of making iron and of how in later years Jay Gould offered to buy n con trolling interest In tho Pennsylvania Railroad and make him its president. Ho tells also of the Homestead striku and tho mistakes made by his. partners. and be. expresses his confidence that If he had been in the country the strike would not have occurred. Ho refutes the charge mnde at the time that ho hid himself in Scotland to escape the trou ble and says that he wanted to come back, but that his partners most strcn uouslv nbicctcd. One' of the roost striking passages appeared in a chapter devoted to a discussion of the problems of labor. He nays: "My experience is that you can always rely upon the great body of workingmen to do what is right, pro vided they hove not taken up n position and promised their leaders to stand by them. But their loyalty to their lead ers, even when mistaken, is something to make us proud of them. Anything can bo done with men who have- this feeling of. loyalty within them. They need only to bo treated fairly." He gives several Instances in which fair treatment prevented trouble In his stool mills, and other instances In which an appeal to the men to respect their contracts was successful. The book is likely to take Its place among tne autobiographies thut will live, because it Is the disclosure of the mind of a remarkable man who nchlevcd great things in commerce and then achieved still greater things in pkllan- tnropuy. THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ANDREW uAii.M.uiu. muniruicu. notion: liouun tun -Mifflin Co. SO. Hcbrciv Secular Books The aim of tho author of "Itypaths in Hebraic ISnokland" Is to reveal to his readers the Jewish spirit as shown In literature from biblical days to the present time, w ith this end in view he gives sketches o writings from u tale found in r.gypt In the fifth century It. ('.. to tho poems of Emma Lazarus, one of which is inscribed on the monu ment to Liberty in New York harbor. He docs not confine himself to comments on works of Jewish authors, but calls attention to writings of Shakespeorc, Hyron, Coleridge, Drowning and Long fellow. Dcsirins to take his readers into "bypaths loading to pleasant places," ho often directs attention to works et no special Importance, but having sig nificant Matements. For Instance, he tells of n book by Joseph Hohn, n littlo known writer of the sixteenth century. In which is a truth of deepest meaning now : "What you eat profits the body j what you spare for God (that is, give to the poor) profits tho soul." The illus tinHon. including six portraits of writ ers referred to, add much to the Interest and ottractivouess 0f the book. HYl'ATIIS IN lir.UnAIO UOOKLAND. Ily luracl Abrahams. 1). D.. M, A. I'hllndel !hln: Thn Jo.vl.nh Publication Society or .tmorlc.i, AT THE FREE LIBRARY . I looks added to tho Free Library, Thlr. tetnth and locust Btrettu. durlnic the weilt ending Octobxr 14: Miscellaneous Hall. J. N. "L&rayetto njlnit Corp," 1! volumes. ' liuniker. J. O. "Kteeplojnclc." s volumes, Whlteley, Opal "3tory of Opal." Fiction Ilnlley. Temple "Trump'tir Swnn " llarclay, K. L. "Returned IJmpty." UIkb, OtrHld-,'Onor of tho Unreal." llyrne, Donn 'Toollnh .Mutrorm." Camp. Wadnworth "Orav irask." Karnol, Jefteri "Oestn nf Duke Jocilyn." Fletcher. J. H "Dead .Men's Jloney." Hall, llolworthy "Kgan." Harben. W. N. "DlWne Event." Hay, James, Jr. "No Clue!" Howells, W. D. "Vacation of the Kel vnn." Johnson. Arthur "Under the Rose." MacOrath. Harold "Drums of Jeopardy." lacilanus, Beumas "Top o' tho Morn- McRpadden, J, W. (ed.V "Famous Detro- tlve Htorlm." KcSpodden, J. W, ted.) "Famous l'sycnlo Stories." Nlven. Frederick "Tale That la Told." Oemlor, M C. "Purple Helshts." Hire, A. II. "Turn About TaleH." Rlnchart, M. U. "Poor WIo Man." Hlnulalr. 11. W. "Poor Mnn's Rock." Tracy, I.ouls "Sirdar' tUber." W"ll. t'arohn "In thn Onvx t.obbv." ,,'unK "1) J" mui. 'H 'H 'suimhiiaV Tie Prairie Mother By Arthur Strinaer Author of The, Prtlrla Wlf "How does a mere man know and exploit with such truth and delicacy tho in nermost mind and spirit of a woman." -New York World. ttyK&3tf! WILLIAM ROSCOE THAYER'S "THE ART OF BIOGRAPHY" Some Reflections on What me Art Is and Should Be Suggested by the Discussion of an Expert t Dy FELIX E. SCIIELLING rrofnsor of Enillsh I.lttruture In the University of PeansilTauU IT MIGHT bo difficult to find a more attractive subject than this, tho art of biography, not a mere enumeration of that enormous eotegory of books, those written about other people, but u talk on the manner, the nature, the art of tho thing. Delivered originally In the shape of lectures on the Harbour-Page Foundation at tho University of Vir ginia, Mr. William Roscoe Thayer hos contrived to give to his little book the charm that belongs to the familiar essay whilo losing none of tho meat of a topic not to .Tjc mooted cxcpt on tho basis of a 'scholarship both broad and sound. BIOGRAPHY is In n sense an out growth of history ; and without cavil be it said that biography Is always close in its allegiance to fiction. Historians arc still much agog over the momentous question how to write history. Is the narrative ot a scries ot events, or the narrative of a man's lifo, to be regarded In the nature of a map or in the nature of n picture? Do we rend the past as we lay out a journey, the clilet object being that we may find our path and not go astray nt tho wrong turning? Or should we read, somcwhnt nt least, as many would prefer to walk or to ride abroad, for beauty and significance of scene and the exhilaration of motion? In a .map you can Identify this village and that hillside and determine with accuracy the relations of tho topography of the country at large. In a picture you lose most of these particularities, but In place you have light and shadow and atmosphere out of which comes tho rec ognition of reality. Mr. Thayer has somo valuablo pages on what might bo called the three volume modern statesmen series of biographies, in which vntlcty of "life" the map is meticul ously drawn in every petty and trivial detail and the subject Is seen us in a glnss darkly. The ease of Mrs. Charles Klngsley's life of her eminent husband should be kept in mind by those who, under the stress of example and for hire, write long lives. She reduced her two volume book to one and It Is surprising how much was gained in the reduction. T HAS been suggested above that bi ography is closo iu its nature to fiction. This last Is one of those troublesome words which can hardly be employed without a double or a three fold meaning, -lo ten a tniug which never happened as it it hud actually occurred may bo either art or false hood. It may be both. DcFoe is credited with an unexcelled power in "grave and imperturbable lying." Hut DeFoo was likewise on artist ; and many nn occurrence of the novelists', the dra matists' or the poets' fiction, though never an nctual fact, is truer In the large than are often the recurring falsi ties of life. The old-fashioned histor ians, Thucydides and Livy, always put a line rhetorical speech into the mouths of leaders before the sounding of a charge. This is sometimes very absurd, but when, as often In tho former of these great writers, these speeches and their like in other situations arc nicely cal culated to reveal tho personality of the sneaker, his point of view on the oc casion and the like, wc have art, not lying., Such outworn methods biograph ical are scarcely as reprehensible ns our weary marshaling ot all tho facts," with the result of a wooden Imago Instead of the portraiture of a man. WE- THAYER'S long experience us historian nnd his distinguished success ns well In the writing of biog raphy give to his words in appraise ment and on tho practice of his art a peculiar authority. It is good, there fore, to hove our faith in tho pre-eminence of Plutarch's "Lives" for .an tiquity and Doswcll's "Johnson" for our own day so unmistakably reaf firmed. It is better still to have our own somewhnt nebulous arguments on these subjects so ably nnd authorita tively re-cnforccd. We hear from the Shakespcareans that Plutarch alone of nil his sources was the one which Shakespeare could not better at nil times; and that" despite the fact thai the old dramatist read his life of Caesar and of Mnrc Antony only lu nn Eng lish translation of a French transla tion of a Latin translation of a Greek original. When wo add to this that Plutarch himself wrote long after th" waning of "the glory that was Greece" and "tho grandeur that was Koine," the freshness of his material, its vitality and power become the greater marvel. Mr. Thayer finds, among much else, that Plutarch's power lies largely In his defining each of his personages wltn a daylight clarity, In the circumstance that he was u great und wholesome moralist and in his coming into his art Mnc. vttriel untie ntt fanitre nermltq Vtllt be 'given to such book nx xfrnl to merit It. Fiction l'AH.VDIHE DHNI). Ily W. I'. White. New Yora: iinutieu.iv, i-urb k io. A story of tho West of old when. It was wild. Tho' hero has a delUhtful loo ro. innncc. CHILDREN OV STORM. ily Ida Wylie. ?ieV. OTK. UUMn 1.UI1B -U. rnn marrlaire out of one's social class he ,,-.Hifurf The author endeaors un an swer In her interesting novol. STRONQER THAN HIS SKA. ily Rohe-t Watsou. iew ura; ucurau ii. ljuimii Co ph. tnrv of ii boy and man who from earliest ears loumi mniacii me iiutii'ifi-tu' family to nis mowifr umj ,1111-10, i Mro- mt jtory with it nulnt charm. HAMUKL I.YI.K. CKTMINOUKHHT. llv Ar- tnur trauu, ,eiv iura; mo uvmurj ru'srlnatlnc story on Sherlock Holmes Inductlvo lines Ol.U RKLIAUI.B IN AKniCA. Ily Harris Dickson. New York: V. A. Stokes. Judiie. uiCKson inaea nts laminar uaray hern to hlv native continent, vher his ad ventures are mirthful. MAIN STREET, ily Sinclair Lewis, New xora; iiarcoun, urnca oc iiowet This clever and observant writer has pro- .liip.l nn arresting novel about the renl American small town. The heroine Is the town doctor's wife. Her struggle Is to suf fuse village, commonplaceness with beauty and courage. JAN. ny M. Morgan Cllbbon. New York: Doubleday, I'ase & Co. The fetching chronicles of it willful, unei pecled, disconcerting slrl, told with rase and lnclty A stormy woolne; and many eati tlvntlnnT Incidents mako this u novel of sus tained Interest. THE TRL'Ml'KTp'j ,H'A'N' - Temple Kalloy. Philadelphia: l'enn I'ubllshhik- ?i . . . The hero- of this newest novel by a very favorite writer comes homo from Franco to face the commonplareneaies of everyday ex Istepce after the atrange experiences of wrr. How he nnds himself and the girl who la to be all tn him Is told gracefully and char acteristically. THE FOOLIWl MATRONS. By Donn Dyrne. New York; Harper & Ilros. "What makes u successful wife!" this novel asks, and then proceeds to answer tho nuory with an Interesting romance. THE rtOMANTIO, llv May Sinclair. New Yura: The Macmlllan Cn The story of an Englishwoman, hv all the tendencies of her natlro n, "realist " an I tho effect on her life of a man after whom the book Is named "The Romantic Juvenile 1 HE ITALIAN TWINS). Ily Lucy Fitch Pai-LlllM. IlnBtnni Hntlrhlnn 1 rflln r.i iKLVi...... 1- !.- """-v.'' r' . vr- 1110 ini"Bi tii nip ininuui ' 4W,n atTh les. liluaiAtvi my win uumgr. T,lKuKAi,i,S.,,.,PPS:0,r T0IE3 FOn THE HTORY.TEL.L.KII. Ilostont Houghton simiin i'o. 1 . KfTOlLr'.,1P.a ?Um,9. torlei drawn from :, folklore.-nalotlv Und,niMaW"nrradvc5: : I'-'X-? v,.,i-V ' .- " PROFESSOR SCIIELLING most happily before tho world bad turned to Introspection and becomo more interested in how one thing becomes something olso than in either thing in ltscn. TO MEDIEVAL biography the au thor gives no disproportionate space. His words of Eginlmrd's "Life of Char lemagne" Invite us back to that im portant, but forgotten, bit of biography, whjch is conspicuous among biograph ical writings for its artistic brevity. In three famous works the author finds medieval tilncrniiliv "T.H typified ' t'mv are Do Joluvillu's life of the saintly knight, l.ouis l., the bcuutilu .al truistic "Florettl or Little Flowers" of Saint Frnncis and the "Imitation of Christ," thut notable tractate on tho pressing question "How shall I bavc my own soul?" Another source for Shakespeare, Cavendish's "Life of Cardinal AVolsey," bridges lis over by way of Hoper's "Life of Sir Thomas More," and Izoak Walton's delightful "Lives." to modern times. To voice u personal taste, I could wish thut there had been more room for autobiography, though that is reull.v a very different subject; and I miss two important and favorite old books, the omission of which I confess none the less might bo readily defended. They arc Fillk Grev lllo's so-called. "Lifo of Sir Philip Sidney," which Is a "life" nnd likewise a creat deal more, and tho delcetnble "Autobiography" of Lord Herbert of Chcrbury. fN MODEUN biography this little '-'book Is exceedingly suggestive. It lias always been a matter of wonder that the greatest of all English biog raphers, James Hoswell, should have been the coxcomb that ho was, and the contrasted portraits of Doswcll as drawn respectively by Macnulay and by Carlylo have been time out of mind mntter of comment. Doswell was n coxcomb, but n sheer fool docs not write tho greatest biography In the Euglisli language. Doswell is often nc credited with being the first biographer to document his ense and let tho subject tell his own story. This is not quite wholly true nnd when Dr. Johnson did tell his own story in his "Autobiog raphy," he mnde a poor list of it. Dos well was really a splendid literary artist endowed with n marvelous sense of pro portion, howsoever some have said that lie did not know a triviality as such when ho suw one. And again, Doswell wns In love with his subject, and the wit. the learning, the odd nnd distin guished personality of the great Cham of letters made him a peculiarly happy subject for minute portruiture. These are some of tho reasons why Doswell will outlive tho biography of that greater man, Cnrlyle, told malevolently, if not dishonestly, by Frond, or other notable "lives," such as that of Tenny son relnted by his son or that of Scott by Lockhart, a son-in-law, admirable ns this latter assuredly is. Relatives tire congenltally too near to view a biographical subject in a true perspec tive. There should be a law against the dragging out of any inun's lares and penotes by such as ovcrloved or over envied him. To that last phrase of tho biographical sketch, "ho was happy even In his death." Is to be ndded another, "raru as violets in winter'. snow," "Ho was blessed in his biographer." THi: ART OF lllOOIlArHY. Ily William Itoscoo Thayer. University nf Vlrclnla Ilnr. bour-Paeo Foundation. Now York- Charles Scribner's Sons. NEW BOOKS IIONNIli PRINCE FKTLAR. Ily Murihnll .Siundlrs. Nsw York- Oconto II lloiun I'c. The title of n pony ,md his frlnds by tho author of the famous prize story cunoceriilnu iI.iks. "Ileautlful Joe." El.tKAllETH: HER FRIENDS, Hv llarbara Kuv. Nw York: Uouhlvihiy. lMge t'o. 'iho second volume In tlio series of rtorlcs for, n rls buitlnnlns with "KlUibulh: Her lolks." A delightful story. THE ROYS' BOOK OF MODEL IIOATS. Ily Raymond Yates. Ntw York: The Cen tury Co. Tells how tn mnlf iit, tn run nil .nrt. nf nmp.ll boats. A dandv work for tho out-of-door bov. Till! ULl'E PEARL. Rv Samuel ScoUlle. Jr. New York: The Century Co Another well written Ilov Scout story by 11 prominent worker arnnnn the Scouts. INJt'N AND WIUTI3Y. llv V. .. Hart. UnMnn: Houuhton Mifflin Co. . The well-known movie tur hta written a bok full of .brills foi bo. General 'l UK CHILDREN'S! OREAT TEXTS OF THE IIIISLL. Edited by James IlHsllnns, 1). IJ.. Ntw Yurk: Choi les Hcrlbne.-'s Sons. Threo volumes am nlrcadv published of this useful series designed to cover the lllhle In fifteen volumes. The plan takes tho various biblical hooks and expounds tho Im portant passages, with full historical and theological explanations. Tho series Is di rected to youru people, who can read the work themselves, and It also contains helpful material for parents and clergymen In muk Inir cleur the Scrlptures'to the younger mem bers of their flocks or families. REVEI-VTlpNS OF UJlMHli llv A'bert Crockett New York: F A rilok.a Co A striking hook on rsjchl? phenomena hv k former newspaper man ut this elty .mil New iota. '""vJ.V.H'.'hI .J'", Alexander 1,lol(- ' Yolk: II. W. I'uehsch. A puent. translated Into fren urse by Ilabetto Damsel) and Abraham Yarniol!mKj. by one of tho most notable, of thi Slavic writers, distinguished, for his mysticism and his sense of folk feeling. It should be read y.iat,.l,Lh0"xn,u'.r,A"!1 .'" temporary verse makllng. The translators supp y an appre ciative and keen Introduction. COLLECTED FRUITS OF OCCULT TEACH !?.- lv.A. P.Slnnett. rhlladelDhhi Philadelphia: J. 11. LlDDlncntt r.n An authoritative work, on theosophlca) lit ture oy a 1 oted satant and Investigator. eia Mifflin CoAWr'C"- " -loiwfflSn Trie reminiscences of the widow of the noted New England poet, TWENTY KENTUCKY MOUNTAIN HONCIS inllectnl and nrramted by Loralna w. Oliver liit.onco. ,"0CKW'' "".ton: lh?UJrKin".W Co1fttr.miS.f 5SJ." P2VK i". UW'.WJSriAK'W'i'yh.havelaifirdoiiS ofthemSre balIad".oVm rfh'dioubTi. represent the survival of ancient balladry among a mountain folk Uiat bo bail? a many respects tp their EltiTabethaiV and Jl cobean jmMfor .whi'crat Vamrf to th nw isLLKLVl sssW sBPPistfstssH f w .- '-. rpigTOBERie; 19; w. HOWELLS STUDIES RURAL SOCIOLOGY And in Doing It Produces a Novel That Justifies the Fame. He Won Tho old saying that there can be no disputing about taste referred to mat ters of liking nnd not to matters of coh'dnet. If n man likes a florid neck tie, that concerns him nlonc. If a woman wears n large hat because she likes largo hats, no one need question her. Dut " one l rude In mnnners it concerns all one's friends. These re flections nre suggested by the action of tho lato William Dean Howells In withholding from publication till nftcr M ,lenth a novel he wrote twenty years ,ngo merely because he did not think it good taste to prim u enruer nome oi tho characters in it nre saiu to do drawn from real people. He did not wish to Uiirt'tucir feelings ny nnving their nmlnblo weaknesses exhibited nt a time when thev might be recognized. This Is why "The Vacation of the Kel wyns," written in 1000 nnd put in type In 1010, has not seen the light till the autumn oi ihu. The novel was produced when How ells was nt tbe height of his powers. His art hod developed and mellowed, and his observation liad broadened and his tolerance hnd grown tender when he wrote tho book. All this Is mani fested in it. It Is a work of art so perfect thot the reader forgets that there is any art in it. The story is told With a simplicity and a directness nnd a calmness that arc refreshing. It is refreshing, too, to read a novel in which there nro no cabarets nnd no jazz bands nnd no ncurnsthenlc females experi menting with life. There wns none of this sort of thing in the period when tho action tnkes place. Thls was in the ntimmpp nf 1R7fl. Tho TvplwvrtM nre col lege people. The husband is a lecturer on sociology In a New England college. He has a wife and two small boys. The family leases u farm from the Shakers in southern New Hampshire and plan n nlcasant vacation, with n farmer and his wife looking nftcr the crops und the household arrangements. Tho problem which Mr. nowclls con siders Is the adjustment of a professor of sociology more than forty ycurs ago to the sociological facts of rural New England. The professor does not ad Just himself very well. This is done more successfully by Elihu Emernncc, a young man with dreams of doing various things, who happens Into the community. lie understands the coun try people much better thau they arc understood by ICelwyn, though ho pro fesses to no expert knowledge of sociol ogy. His understanding comes from the fact that ho regards them as humnn beings, which Kelwyn canuot do. The professor, sprung from u farm the same as Emeraneo, bus so far forgotten his enrly lite that ho regards the country folk as belonging to n different order of beings. Hut Emeraneo, with a kind ly tact, helps Iilm over many hard places nnd in n gentle way preaches what Is apparently the social philosophy of the author. He is a most interesting creation or portrait. One cannot help wondering whether it was ho or Kelwyn or both who was modeled on a real man. and who the man wns. , The love story of Emernncc and a cousin of the Kclwyns Is told most charmingly. It begins quickly, but Is slow In progressing. The girl's feeling that Emeraneo is socially beneath her holds her back, and the modesty of Emernncc prevents him from making any attempt to force himself upon her. The proposal 'and acceptance nre so dlllercnc irom iiic usual iiciionai iorm ' that they convince the render of their historical accuracy. This phrno is used advisedly because tho book im presses the reader not ns fiction, but as the telling of things that actually hap pened and iu just the way they came to pass. The book will confirm the verdict long since reached that Mr. Howells was n novelist, of rare distinction and deserved the place he held in American letters. ' TUB VACATION OF' THE KELVYNH. An Idyl of the Middle Kluhtetn-Scvulitles. Niw York: Harper & Ilros. Boys Like Altsheler Tho Indian stories of thut master writer for boys, Joseph A. Altsheler. appear to be maintaining their very great popularity undiminished, for D. Appleton & Co. announce the twelfth edition of "Tho Uillcinen of the Ohio." the seventeenth edition of "The Young Trailers. " the tenth edition of "The Texan Star." the sixth editlou of "The Keepers of the Trail" and the fifth edi tion of "The Hitlers of the Lakes." Hergeshelmer In Braille Joseph Ilersesheimer's story. "The Thrush in the Hedge" (from his vol ume, "Tho Happy End"), is being done into Draille type for tho blind by the American Library Association under the direction of Miss Ge.-trudo Hhler ut the Library of Congress. world, Iloth words nnd music, In piano ar rangement, nre kIvoji MAN'S UNCONSCIOUS PASSION. Ily Wll ft lil Lay. New York- Dodd .Mend & Cu Examines objectively and pragmatically tho passion men (till lute. SPECULATION AND THE CHICAlltl HOARD OF TRADE. Ily Jnmes Whtfo. New York. Tho Maeinlllnn Co. v A straightforward buslenss-llke study und a lucid ueiount of the advantages of specu latlou. THE NEW WORLD. Hy Frank Comerford New York. IJ. Appleton A.Cti. "'""lora- A searching study of unrest In Europe a forecast of thi new world and a solution of the problem of capital vs. labor. au,u"tn ol THE VIEW VERTICAL. Hy Winifred Kirk. land. IKratun: Houghton Mifflin Co Ltsuys that can make tho readrr .mui. taneously smile and think. They have a MIV tll.j4V llU, THE CAUSE (IF WORLD UNREST Ww Tout! I, ) Tutnam's Sons. w , This remarkable, book dwt rlbes with ni historic detail an .alleged far-tiathl ," slnTs ti-r ruiisiilrnct looking toward world 1I01V1I11.T l'.1?.".' inie publishers declaim uavris A ' llllty for the nnlnuiiH of the linkiinwii ,.n tain J.wlsh wintn 1.1. """" tt" r CLOTHINO. Uy Me.rv Woolman. Phll.ri.i Phln- J. 11 Llpplncott Co, n"lel- The choice, care and cost aro discussed by an expert domestic economist. SONUS OF THE TRAIL Uy Herbert Knli.h. Huston, llnuahtnn MPrriln iSI""" KMbbs. HnBt!ffirt??u"hl,n"1" POCma "' me" ""lure CA8TINO TACK LB AND METHODM n KI.I.I ' m""' l',BC"'i"HtS5r. "i A valuable book fur the angler THE RURAL COMMUNITY, llv v-..... . S mi. New York. I'lin-lV; JTT."" Cn- ..., (KB Scrlbner'a subject, both ancient and modern phases i,1 Ing discussed. The author Is profes.nr ,, Coire?l0"":' '" Mu,8ttcllu" ArSrlc"uura ON THE TRACK OF THE TRAni-i r, Lewi. Freeman. New'Vork: ftftlSi ,?S envVpateu'r y&.T he THE SECRET OF XVERYDAY Tllivrm tuVco"' "w-fw York: Th.(S5: T,ns S"..1 French scientist's obseriiin. andf reflections on a multitude ofTnTeVV.'tlllg Booth Tarklngton In Leather Doubleday, tngo & Co. hftvo Just is sued a lenthcr-bouud edition of four of Booth Tarklugton's books, ''Pcnrod and gam. ."The Guest of Quenay, .'Xho Flirt" and "In U10 Arams' "m" Aa "A tnor. anil pu iiisn tne uook. they explain mi he extraon Inary furore It has create j on the other side of tho Atlantic While thn author does not accuse elthttr thn European freemasons or tho Jewish race, as u Xf. us engaged In the Plot, he declares that it u the hatohlng of ctrtn n Vri,.;. .!', " iJ x r BLASCO IBANEZ' new novel THE ENEMIES QF WOMEN Probably the most brilliant of tho people who frequent A richly colored, tensely dramatic story of a pleasure- loving Russian Prince, who with a group of friends undertook to turn their backs upon all feminine society. But having sown passion diligently, they reap a whirl wind. It paints brilliantly and without mercy a phase of life that has undoubtedly existed among the idlers of the world's capitals, dazzling, colorful, selfish, and in time meeting its due reward. Only a master of keen and wide observation and a deep sense of truth could create this absorbing story.' BLASCO IBANEZ' translated works include The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Mare Nostrum Each, $2.15. By tho samo author Mexico in Revolution, $2.00 Obtainable through any bookstore or from E. P. DUTTON & CO., Kim A ROMANCE OF By HJALMAR Tho true story of a who forsakes city life make a homo in The Land of Snows for the girl he left behind. How ho overcomes almost unbeliev able obstacles of Nature; his safe passage through icy torrents; his many breaks from jail; his stead fast and rewarded faith in Providence: -all told in a beautifully simple way, make ALASKA MAN'S LUCK an unusual contribution to current American literature. , $2.00 (Postage 10c). Interest on every page The TRUMPETER SWAN " By Temple Bailey Author of "The Tin Soldier," etc. An old-fashioned love story of today. The season's popular novel. First printing, 50,000. Pictures by Alice Barber Stephens. Jacket in color by Coles Phillips. Price, $2.00. At all bookstores IMt 1-fcNIN rUBLlSHlNU A Novel by Roje 9 Off For seven weeks England's best selling novel Nonr an American sensation. Frank Svinnerton says: "AH England will read it with enjoyment it is delightful a relish to every page." The N. Y. Nation aaya: "Both brilliant and skilful, a notable story and an incisive criticism of life" Are you a Potterite, perhaps? Find out. $2.00 (Postage 10c). Ttie Sea and the Jungle By H. M. TOMLINSON The exceptionally fascinating travel book s,o very highly praised by Christopher Morley in the Evening Post's "Howling Green." Grant Overton says of it in Life: "He gives us one of the most vi brant and living impressions of both (the sat and the jungle) that have ever been put on record." New American Edition. $5.00 at any bookstore or direct from E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Filth Ave., New Yorli JUST PUBLISHED Jail Fr F By Doris Stevens (With 30 full page halftone illustrations) This inside history of the lonfj duel between the Admin istration and the Militr.nt Suffrarjisto is not only a dra matic ptoryj replete with intimate and sometimes almost incrodible incidents: it is also an invaluable document .on tho actual technique of American political strategy. 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