Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 23, 1920, NIGHT EXTRA, Page 4, Image 4

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHIIABELPHIA, SATURDAY, OOTOSftR 23, 1&20
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William Lyon Phelps
Writes of
LEONARD MERRICK
J I have read with keen in
terest every one of his
novels that you have
published thus far.
IjThey are all works of dis
tinction, of high literary
.art
JThe beat thing about
them is that every one is
a good story well told.
J They aro to well-wrought,
the plot bail ia o admirable,
that opart from one'a con
stant interact in the ttory, it
la a pleasure to tea tuch
vrorkmanthip. I quits undnr
ttnnd why Battle callt him
the novelitt's novelitt.
J Some of hit thort ttoriet ra
emble O. Henry in the ele
mentof turpriteand concition.
Just Rendu
The House of Lynch
Uniform with:
Conrad in Quest of
His Youth
The Actor-Manager
Cynthia
Tho Position of Percy
Harper
The Man Who Understood
Womon
The Worldlings
When Love Flies o the
Window
While Paris Laughed
Each. $1.90
E. P. Dutton & Co., 631 5th At., N. Y.
A new and
dclifflitfid volume
of essays by
Agnes Repplier
POINTS
OF FRICTION
It is a pleasure to got tho
point of view of a inind so
clear, so keen and so original
on such questions as:
Money
Woman Enthroned
The Cheerful Clan
Cruelty und Humor
The Virtuoua Victorian
The Strayed Prohibitionist
etc.
At all bookatores Hoiuhton-Mlfflln Co.
SI 7.1 Uotton Nw Yorlt
I
tiy Step hen McKenna
Authrr of SONIA. BKTWKEN TWO
WORLD3.SHE-ATlNTERVLNE3,.te.
LADY
r n . t n w m u
LBL
An engrossing picture of con
temporary English society, as
only Mr. McKenna with his
penetrating knowledge and ob
servation of life in London,
political and social, could have
written it. This brilliant char
acter study of a woman abso
lutely unrestrained in her egot
ism, yet possessed of a singular
power to charm, is realism of
the highest order.
All Bookshops H
3S3
A Splendid Book for Boys
by
Rupert S. Holland
Author of Neptune's Son and
Lafayette, We Come!
REFUGEE ROCK
A stirring, thrilling yarn full
of the luro of the sea and
love of adventure that nppeal
to every boy. Colored front
, ispiece and drawings in black
and white by Ralph Coleman.
Every bookseller has it. $1.75
George W. Jacobs & Co.
Publishers Philadelphia
Contemporary
Verse Anthology
Introduction by
CHARLES WHARTON STORK
Poems selected for those who
onjoy the true poetry which ex
presses the heart of man's life.
Wm. Rose Bcnet, Gamaliel Brad
ford, Daniel Henderson, Willard
Wattles, Clement Wood and many
other American poets contribute
to it.
$2,00 at any boohatora.
E. P. Dutton & Co., 631 Slh Av., N. Y.
LIFE
Dr. SERGE VORONOFFS
own account of his study of
the menns of reatoring vital
energy and prolonging lifo.
Now ready. $8.&0
E, P.jD.tlon & Co., 681 5ta Av., N. T.
PL
!
fi i
m
Dtha author ol THE
FOUR FEATHERS,
THE WITNESS FOR
THE DEFENCE, etc.
T5IS SUMMOHS
A. E. IV. Mason
Ho saw a vision of himself
if lie etnyed gradually ab
corbed in cards, lovo affairs,
nnd a lifo of case and this
Englishman shook himself
i f rco from tho ties that bound
him regardless of the cost
not only to redeem tho
honor of his heritage but to
reclaim hla own soul.
This now novel by a distin
guished writer ia one of tho
excellent stories of tho sea
son. tW,
wprewiftiaww'H'iJWumjiiiJWuwu
A Swing Around
The Pirate Circle
ROAMING
THROUGH
THE
I
By HARRY A. FRANCK
Author of "A Vagabond Journey
Around the World," etc.
Tho best travel book of 1920.
Presents these "stepping stones to
South America" as only this author
can get picturesque peoples and
romantic places on paper. Over
100 Illustrations. Price $5.00.
THE CENTURY CO.
Intrigue!
Mystery!
Thrills!
Do you enjoy an ex
citing, carefully worked
out detective story ?
Read
The Adventures of a
Russian nobleman
masquerading in this
country. By
Rupert S. Holland
Every Bookseller has it. $1.90
George W. Jacobs & Co.
Publishers Philadelphia
A Stagniiek doesn't
read A MODERN
BOOK OF CRITN
C1SMS, or VILLON'S
POEMS, or IBSEN,
OSCAR WILDE, HEN
RY JAMES, HOW.
ELLS. D U N S A N Y ,
ANATOLE FRANCE
or NIETZSCHE. So if
you'ro a Staenuck or a
Potterite don't read
tfr MODERN
LIBRARY- si titles
R.EXIQLE HANDMADE BINDINGS
Send or Catalog- Sold Everywhero
WE Ann SELLING
Stee! Preferred
YOU ARK BUYING
Steel Preferred
BECAUSE IT IS A FINE,
BIG, FORCEFUL, COUR
AGEOUS, RED-BLOODED
NOVEL OF AN IMMENSE
LY IMPORTANT FACTOR
IN AMERICAN INDUS
TRYSTEEL. By HEKSCIIEL S. HALL
$.00 at any bookstore.
E. P. Dctton & Co.. 681 5th Av., N. Y.
RsWgtoiBookSfcff
Everything Desirable in Books
VriTHRIiarriON HI.UO
Walnut, Juniper and Ransom Sti.
Klrt'tor to 2nd Floor
YOUTH storms up to VICTORY
over the battlements which life erects
against it. In this story of the upper and nether
sides of life, of the struggle of the old against the
now, of tho love that came to Willie Cameron
and Lily Cardew, Mrs. Rinohart has created a
brilliant romance of the new spirit of America.
POOR WISE Mem
Mary Roberts Rinehart
"Mary Roberts Rinehart is to
is to tho bird cage. Human,
the lev dependable. It is a
Mrs. Rinehart dips her pen
1
ENGLISH DRAMA, PAST AND PRESENT
MODERN AMERICAN PL A YS
AND WHERE THEY FAIL
In an Effort to Be Realistic the Playwrights Overlook Tluit
Genuine Realism Not Found in Merc Actualities
By FELIX H. SCHELL1NG
ProfMoftr of JCntll.Ii I ttr-ntur
U A MEItlCAN drama 1" and vc hold
fc up our bunds in protect nnd bgln
to talk of coinmerdtliimi and theatrical
trtiftts. Or we start down the deadly
lane of nnrallels and glow In compara
tive praises of the drama In France, in
(Icrninnv. In Russia, anywhere. Or we
Innuciivutp movements, following the
English afar off in pageantry or civic
playn. (Jr, It we do none of tlito thing,
at !pnt we start a society provllluc
otmllfied tasters who visit the theatrcH
from time to time and, over a late mip-J
per. ticeicie by vote what we hUouio
like and what we should adrertNc by
our disapproval. Professor George P.
Baker, of Harvard, did something quite
(llfTrrrnt from all this, it Is now a
goodly number of years ago. He Part
ed his "-17 Workshop" In a quiet nnd
Industrious endeavor to foster our
drama, ko far an such a thing ns drama
rati bo fostcri'd. by precept ami collegiate
guidance, and he has long since Juntl
lied hN t'VjiArlment in the turning out of
sevoiM playwrights wltov work 1m alike
u ciedlt t'i dramatic craftsntuii'dilp and
n practical and acceptoJ succc upon
(ho (agc. Viidcr these circumstances
PruteMor Baker is peculiarly the man
to collet, for the general reader, a
group of American plays which shall
fland as representative of our drama In
Its procnl state of development. This
be has dene In a volume with the title
of "Mooern American Plays," prefixing
to the text an all too brief introduction
on the plays selected and tho reasons
for their selection.
SUCCESS on the stage is Professor
Baker's first crlterlou of selection,
and his second In variety. The opening
piny of the volume is "As a Man
Thinks." by Augustus Thomas, a com
edy of contemporary life, which touches
on prevalent feminism, lightly but sure
ly, with not quite tho glib solution which
Is on the lip of the current feminist.
In its es.cuce this play is didactic, "a
tendenz-drama," however deftly con
cealed In the skillful workmanship of
one long tried and approved. The
Adaptable Mr. Belasco's "Return of
l'j.tAi fir!mM Itlrnivlun tnnnhec nn ft fnuli
lot the hour. Interest in that beyond and
Ihneaftcr from tho bourne of which we
i ore not quite certain whether the trav
1 eler can really return. But Mr. Bclasco
i cleverly leaves the matter less proved
than suggested. Mr. Anspachcr's "The
: I'nchastcncd Woman" la notable in that
1 1' contrives to Interest us In an un
i intcrextlnc aud miHvmDathetlc heroine
' and to leave us nt the end with thlngt
continuing and unadjusted very much as
they carry on in life. Sir. rlhcwou a
"Romance," by far, one should think,
I tho ablest play of tho volume, contains
the element of its existence in its title
' and realizes at lcat one character of
' a holding personality. And Mr. Mas
,hoy's "I'lots and Playwrights" is satire
of plays in a play, a time-honored spe
cies, old wheu Dryden was ridiculed In
I "The Rehearsal" and older still by tht
time that Sheridan plagiarized that sa
tire in his "Critic."
! TDLAYMAK1NO in tho English lan-
l -L guage has been variously presided
over In different times. To avoid rising
I out of our topic Into tne region of the ill-
i vlnlties, uryucn, greatest oi ungusn sa
' tirlsts. ablest of general poets of his
I time. theorNt and translator, was once
I the foremost playwright. At a subse-
I quent time that post was occupied by
Nicholas Howe, poet laureate, who 'fol
lowed Shakespeaio," but a long way off;
at still another by equally forgotten
Sheridan Knowlcs, whose most veritable
dramatic asset was his borrowed sur
name. Later times bring us triumvi
rates and oligarchs in the annals of
tho drama and we become bewildered
among the Barries and the Shuws, the
Pineios and the Joneses of times which
arc now, or were not very long ago.
In America we may be a little lesn
distraught, howsoever there are precious
few of us who have not written, nre
writing or planning to write at the
vtry li-ast a farce or a pageant. But it
would seem that it Ih not long since
that our master playwright was the late
Cljde Fitch, and who shall deny that
wo an- still under the benign and ver
Knille fwbv of Mr. Bclasco? Now. of
i such an art we must at least confess
ihnt it has had Its ups and downs, and
that the amplitude of its vibrations, to
put it In anothur way, has made varloun
n'ise.s In the world whereof some have
been high and others not so high. Nor
1 we expect it to be otherwise. The
drama is, by the most honored of all
figures, the mirror of human nature,
however we leave thut mirror at times
to tarnish lu neglect, however we may
Jewish Children
VMd and Interesting pictures of a
Jewish bov's lifo in Russia are to be
found in "Jewish Children." bv a well
known writer, Shalom Rabinovltz, under
the pen name of Aleichem. whose works,
have caused him to be called tho lid
dlxh I)icknx. It Is a series of nineteen
hfiios told by a boy of his experiences
nt home, at school and in his sports
with his companions. A thread of ro
mance uins through It, for it begins
with an account of his affection for a
clrl it'isie, who l'.as come to live In his
homo, and ends with nn Intlmatjou that
they were married. From his lovo for
her he is constantly reminded of verges
in the "S.ing of Songs." The only
reference to Palestine U In a prayer
thai the Messiah should come, "and we
I would go hock to the Land of iHael.
where wo should be happy. Of the
I religious festivals, and especially of the
!'iiwr, there are constant reminders
i . n.a om Alelrhi-m ' AuthorlMd Vfr-f
I .i ii uf llnnnMi Jifrr.mn. ;sw jorn; ai
! A Knorf I
ttre fiction world whnt tho bird
interesting;, alive, she ia one of
great story.
One feels that
in
magic.
FffffjETCl
Chicago News.
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..in , . .. ..... . ...... . it. I, ...r . OlliHatJYAI:?' ifc. ..,., ;.. ...I..,. ,.... ... .l-lVi',. (v .. . r .. . -, , .( H. all-. .,(! Ulfti.lfeMtf'fAT.NiywW - . . J . .iik . (. . ... i ..... X rt, ''.idM
tit hr'rrtAf ttf jlifotfUti
i i. f r nv i. .iW ifctt'ii i iiV t'l' I. MUlm 1 1 '' ' .ri.LiiaAaJjaajLhijMti..MiMBMiaMidiJAfcdtJAiLJfclia&AJaMI.L hH . j xr4 AJjftfUjAmr . . usafllB
In lh Unlvmlty of rtnntrfranta
cover up a part of It or refuse to accept
as veritable the Images whlcli it rcuects.
All tho movies In Christendom, and In
Heathendom besides, cannot kill the es
sential drama In us. The musical com
edies have made a good try at it as did
the old heroic play in its time and
melodrama and opera since But the
essential drams will abide when all
these "sporU" and offshoots are remem
bered ouly by the historian.
TN READING Prof. Baker's rep-
resentatlves of tho accepted American
drama of today, two or three things
occur to the let us hope nonc-too-biased
reader. Let us be frank about It ;
all of theae plays read more or less
baldly, at least as compared with much
other former drama, also accepted for
tho stage, both English and foreign.
Prof. Baker is right when he says that
"drama Is a collaborative nrt," one In
which the author, the actor (and all
who help his Impersonation) and be
sides, the spectator as well, co-oporate
to a cumulative result. But I rather
suspect that these modern plays of ours
depend somewhat more on this co
operation, somewhat more on the nctor
and on the setting than did many of
tne piays wnich have gone ueioro, xney
are at tho mercy of their presentation
because thev are wanting In distinction
of manner and of ntylc; because their
dialogue Is so clono a. replica of our
dally speech; because their personages
arc so obvioualy llko everybody or any
body whom you or I are likely to meet.
And now wo arouso our "realist
friends, those who object to blank verse
because they do not employ It habitually
In discussions with Margery, those who
resent soliloquy and the aside like Mr.
Shaw because they do not happen In
what thev call "real Ufa" nnd the like.
But, my dear "realist." the stage Is not
the world and, even If Hiinkespoare diu
say it, not all of the world's a stage.
NEITHER distinction of manner nor
distinction in the subtle thing which
we call stylo Is wanting In actual life,
cTen In actual American life. But to
catch it or anything else for that
matter for the stage, you must trans
late It nut of the language of life that
Is the manner In which It Is presented
to our senses In life Into the language
of the stage. And you ennnot make the
lauguage of tho drama more realistic by
forgetting Its essential basis in art.
These plays, excellent as they aro and
fully deserving of their success, seem
to one who knows somewhat of a wider
dramatic literature Hat in perspective,
wanting In color, unlndivlduallzed In
a measure as to their personages nnd
unldiomntic, theatrically speaking, not
withstanding their undoubted mnstery
of that tf'chnlquc of tho stage of which
Prof. Baker has hnpplly made so much
In his "workshop.
IT IS not altogether vision that wo
lack, or poetry even. But wo seem in
these latter days to be a little afraid
of seeing things or nt least of putting
down what we see: while poetry
stampedes us with terror Into an effort
to get as far away from it as possible.
Are we getting to be afraid of our emo
Hnns In nrt uh of n disnlnv of our feel
ings In religion? Shall wo orrlvo
shnrtlr at a noint in which the gentle
man 'will not only discuss either
politics or religion, but will recognize
that any show of emotion for art or
anything else Is taboo Wit, numor,
spntiment. romance arc as common lu
every-day life as they were when the
old dramatists used them. There Is
scarcely a sparkle In the dialogue of
any of these Ave representative plays
anil Prof. Baker surprises us when he
tells ub of the success of the only bit
nf nathos In them all and that Ironi
cal which occurs In the extravaganza.
"Plays and Playwrights. " With all
our chatter about the freedom of the
arts, our stage seems conventionalized
all but to the point of stagnation. What
n one! is the stock husband whose "past
is accented aa an essential part of nny
husband and played off against the
wife a present or attempted future
And how delicately the neat distinctions
of n double code of morals are drawn !
And the heroines I air. Jlassny Is right.
there Is more real drama In the rooms
of u New lork lodging house than In
all the theatres of tho Great White
Yav. Why not get some of the noctry.
the color, the aroma of actual llfn onto
the stage by an honest translation of
all tuesc things into dramatic terms in
place of all this pussyfooting repetition
of mere actualities.'
MODHIlN ASinniCAN PI.AYS. Edited with
lnirodurtlon hy (JMirirt P. linker. Ntw
xom: iiarcoun. uraro & nowr.
AT THE FREE LIBRARY
noks added to th !( Llbrarv, Thlr
.1th V? ."nt mrf.ts. durlna (ho week
fndlna October 21 ! wo
Miscellaneous
nJd'cfoi.V" v. M. "Story or ths American
0.rnm"nl"'- " ""' American
n!i , Kflward "Amerlcsnliattoti of Ed
rrt link." u
M"d"r,BaVy.'Ale"n,,'r ",,ub"0 f"k,n
Uwine ""' M' " ",rnn',hMk of Ildllroom
frSfuVflon.'F- J-,'"'"-'r.ln for Milk
ronnelly. Antoinette "!nw in n.dure '
KerlK J. T "Srelnv th far West"
Krotlilnhsm ttoliert "flonitu of Iforais "
Hardy. Tliemsf- riierted roerni?"
nisyf'y' "unlness L.tUrs Jlsd.
' Klln. Herman "n.n nt patt
I pslllonn. . nifhyr, -"Th. Junkman."
ofIAm1:rlen,foitr7""U""Um' "'
"MlM'I'uny of American IWtrv."
SHiiva" .P,I',''",,,B,lra"ta v"" "
nYst!"0""' ""American Enclnetrs In
PMI.'rri. ir.
, . Autnraslle Plutole."
J - Dlctlnnary of Iinokkacp-
rorters. R.
Ins."
Sadtler, B
Ihlnn.'
H "Chemlelry of familiar
Tcill. (lardner "fexiiureii of rvilertln."
mllnT" ' ' 'Schoolln, of ih. fm-
Tldl. r W W "nutter and Thee.
t'ntermeycr. Ixiiita ".Vrw Adam
Woolman. M n "nothlnr."
Fiction
?"hle'"TMMhS"n"Cl,al',SIr"rc,''
iM-iiti'''! unsinn
C. hboti "Tan "
m-.v m, win A'lve
Nyburic "flam of Ivory "
Rowland, H (""Tho Peddler."
Heaman. A, it "Crlmaon Pitch
W.h.t,r. It K-Mary Vol e? o
Wedehou.e "Mttle Warrior."
Woolf Vlrslnla ."Voyaeo Out,"
"Otoeplajaok" In a Third Edition
James Huneker's much. discussed
"Steeplejack." which was published on
September 10, has none into its third
edition. "Kteeplejack." which Is pub.
lished by Charles Scribner's Bona, U a
mcrrv dissertotlon In blojrophy form
on Mr. Huneker's varied experience
in life during the nit forty years. l
fccinunuics wun iniaxcsung anecaotea
tJitins "wounded Haul) '
!:uttf,""v.r,in,.ln. lh Midst."
McOlbeny "JJ-Callber
Mantln "In tha Unv.e nf Another."
Marx MtMellne "Woman."
Mason "ThA Mummnna '
r m v--)SS?j2PrjBysjMSflSVHS
SB & ' t'V&'&kivHjK&SzJSrR S
iSlft (QjLir '2Jst&irMiiiiiiaV 91
t SPy ?' 'WlBlllllMet'otiailBavlTOTSSilllHl
ieAii.
J. f-i f"
CAPTAIN aiHPLEi THOMAS
Whose "History of the A. E. Y."
fells what eveiy ono wants to know
HISTORY OF A. E, F.
BY A PHILADELPHIAN
Capt. Shipley Thomas Writes
Admirably Compact but Com
prehensive Narrative
V
It has remained for a Phlladclplilan
to wrlto the first compact, all -round
account of the operations, achievements
and victory of American arms In
France. There have been inauy divi
sional epics, but Captain Shipley Thom
as- "Tne History of tne a. u. dv- n
the first attempt to applv the historical
method to tho entire subject. It Is an
Important job, well done. Not only did
Captain Thomas have first-hand per
sonal acquaintance with many phases
of the work of the American expedition
ary force, both in combat and staff
capacities, but ho has nlso, combined
an observant intclHjtence and n trained
oapoclty in a lirst-rato method of han
dling his materials. These were
voluminous and scattered, and to take
what was salient out of the mass of
records and statistics was In Itself a
formidable tack. Captain Thomas has
mastered It with an excellent selective
faculty for what is intrinsically Im
portant and organically related to the
evolution, progress and ultimate
triumph of the A. H. F. His book
might very well bo likened to an ath
lete trained to the pink of perfected
physical form, with every muscle nnd
vital organ alertly functioning, and
without an ounce of fat to retard speed,
strength and skill. There does not seem
a word of superfluity or a fact of
supererogation in this "History of the
A. E. F." It Is a masterly accomplish
ment, the difficulties of which will be
especially appreciated by those who have
had to compllo something unitary nn
essential out of a mass of material.
It Is just such a book as the publli
has been waiting for. nnd it goes with
out sayiug that It will have A particulat
appeal to the ex-service man. In spite
of the enormous amount of materlnl
compressed within Its fiOO-odd pages It
Is written In nn attractive style; Indeed.
readableueBg is one of tho prime quali
ties. And though it Is compact it Is lu
every hense of the word comprehensive:
none of the factors of the whole have
been omitted or neglected. It has a
sense of proportion and perspective; it
has historical accuracy and It has hu
man interest. Of especial note Ik the
fact that th book is really authoritative
without being in the strict sense of the
word "official." Captain Thomas'
manuscript has been read nnd passed
by several commanding officers of the
operations described, nnd tlioy unite lu
praising it. Much of the material con
cerning special units or arms of tho
service has been obtained or checked off
by the historical officers of the branches
concerned. In addition to tho annuls
of the A. R. F.'s several drives the book
contains complete divirdonal histories,
account!) of tho various auxiliary serv
ices such as the S. O. S., etc., aud u
very valuable "Visitors' Guide to the
Western Frout." Thero are uumerous
good maps.
Captain Thomas was born in this
city in l!)-, graduated from Chestnut
Hill Academy in 1011 and from Yale In
1018. studied at n technlcologlcal in
stitute in Munich, and with a well
known firm of New York architects,
and was a graduate of the first 1'latts
burg School, concluding his courw)
with a commission ns second lieutenant.
Ho landed In France In September,
1017, and his service up to the armis
tice included combat duty with Com
pany I, Twenty-hlxth Iteglment, First
Division, aud us regimental intelligence
officer,
Tiin Jiifron? or thk a. k. v. riy ship.
lay Thomas Now York; Oeonca 11. Doran
Co.
The Kind You
Want Your
Folks to Read
CLEAN SWEET
THRILLING
Grace Livingston Hill's
Stories have been "best sellers"
for thirteen years. They have
delighted thousands of pleased
readers and provided enjoy
ment in full measure. They
are full of action, lively inci
dents, good character drawing
mingled with fine romance and
the uplift note.
CLOUDY
Sao WW En 9m
Is tho fourteenth puccosb by Grace
Livingston Hill (Mrs. Lutz). Tho
story of Julia Cloud, family drudffo,
nnd her rejuvenation under tho tui
tion of her rich nleco nnd nephew,
who lovingly name her Cloudy Jewel,
rosults in an exquisite romance and
cheerful story as heart-satisfying
as n fresh blown rose.
$1.90. At all Bookstores.
J. B. LlPPINCOTT CO.
. "" " (H
tMflaam. P ,jfl
Announcing the
Publication of
EDITH WHARTON'S
Brilliant Novel of New York's Four Hundred
THE
AGE of INNOCENCE
A LITERARY event of Supreme
importance to the lovers of the
best in fiction. A story of
N New York in the early seventies
when 42nd Street was far up-town.
, This new novel by America's fore
most woman writer will add new
lustre to a fame firmly established
in "The House of Mirth."
At All Booksellers, $2.00 net This Is An Appleton Book
D. APPLETON &
I ." ' i
TheFourGreaiAmericanAutobiographies
j In the Boston Transcript, Lindsay Swift
f Public Library says: To the great trio
ington'8, and
fourth
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF
ANDREW CARNEGIE
A truly great and permanent contribution to American literature:
absorbing, inspiring, true. Nothing stranger ever came out of the
Arabian Nights than the story of this poor Scotch boy who came to
America, and step by step, through many trials and triumphs, became
the great steel master, built up a colossal industry, amassed an enor
mous fortune, and then deliberately and systematically gave away the
whole of it for the .enlightenment and betterment of mankind.
Boston
A Powerful Satire
THE PASSING
OF THE
NEW FREEDOM
By James M. Beck
Author of the EVIDENCE IN THE CASE
A MASTERLY dieaection of WlUonUm and a spirited defense of American In
stitutions by a noted Constitutional lawyer, narrated in imarinary conversa
tions between the brusque, witty and practical Clemenceau, the urbane and
scholarly Balfour, the adroit and subtle Lloyd George and the scholarly idealist,
Wilson. The diamatic form of this discussion by a publicist of international reputa
tion is both witty and illuminating. Tha last chapter is a masterly analysis of Presi
dent Wilson's personality and achievements.
At All Booksellers
GEORGE
Publltltera
A nocel which will
cull id the epoch in
which it is wrlUtn.
WOUNDED
SOULS
Philip Gibbs
Author of NOV IT CAN BE
TOLD, THE BATTLE OF
THE SOMME, etc.
Is the passion for human jui
tice ana for individual contacts
aroused in the past years of
struggle to giveway to the old
aloofness ? Philip Gibbs makes
a memorable plea for the new
order of understanding between
men. In this story the Truth
about certain men and women
who stand face to face with life
after pawing through the sear'
ing flame of war, emerges with
an unforgettable power and
beauty.
At All Booksellers
-lACOBS 1620
m B -JLJL,m-. CHESTNUT
J BOOKS STRECT
I STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING
Mtfitrta
JnMirTjTcoBTJBl II
COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
Henry Adams's, must now be added a
Now on Sale. Illustrated, $5.00
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
Net, $2.00
H. DORAN COMPANY
244 Madison Avenue, New York
ir ' ""1
BLASCO IBANEZ' latest novel now ready
THE ENEMIES
OF WOMEN
Is a brilliant picture of Rambling at Monte Carlo by probably the
greatest novelist of our tlmo.
Its absorbing story presents with retention verity a society
which has undeniably existed among tho idler of European
capitals colorful, dazzling, cowing passion and in duo
time reaping a whirlwind. Only a master of keen observa
tion, wide opportunity and doep aenso of truth, could so .
depict for the world to pee, such a disease, for tho world
to cure.
BLASCO IBANEZ'
The Four Horsemen
of the Apocalypse
Mare Nostrum
Each, tt.lS. By the same author Mexico In ReTolutlon, (t.00
Obtainable through any bookstore or from
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Filth Ave. New Yorfc
Interest on every page
The TRUMPETER SWAN
By Temple Bailey
Author of "The Tin Soldier," etc.
An old-fashioned love story of today, set against a background
of Virginia hills, of Boston streets, and the blue 6eas and sm 0l
old Nantucket.
Pictures by Alice Barber Stephens. Jacket In color by Coles Phillip
Price, $2.00.
' At nil rinAitf'
llll-
THE PENN PUBLISHING
" " i
of the Boston
of American
New York
Ready Noti
tiWiiW
translated works include
The Shadow of La Bodega
the Cathedral Woman
Blood and Sand Triumphant
COMPANY PHILADELPHIA
. ' - -