.? a i .ivrff7rP0,?TBwrwTr C " , ' -tt '!"? .,"',.. . V rii-lf , !.., - t'1 H U) EVENING PTJVBIC LEt)GfEJPHlt;ABELPHIA, SATURDAY, QCTOBER 30, 1920 , v ' BRILLIANT FICTION B Y WOMEN -. - f ' " ,. A Powerful Plea for the Single Standard ot Morality - MRS. EDITH WHARTON SURPASSES HERSELF ROSE MACAULAYS l? mwj ' i if ;.j"'Kir 'ti Cox Count Witte's Startling Revelations Tho Czar and Czarina danced while multitudes of their people , perished in the bloody massacre of Khodynka Field. The oncoming revolution and the, misery of their people were ignored while for months they sat at seances of the charlatan "Dr." Philippe, who "promised0 them a son. Tho inside stories of these and other amazing atrocities are graphically told by Russia's great Prime Minister in the first install ment of his memoirs in the November WORLD'S WORK. Other Important Features - ADVENTURES IN PROHIBITION-in the "moonshine" country THE SINN FEIN IN IRELAND-a .fatement of actual condition! THE CHICAGO PACKERS Armour, Swift, and Wilton, Butincin Men NEW AND OLD SOUTH SEA BUBBLES-wriffen by Arthur BTReTZe ADVENTURES WITH AFRICAN ELEPHANTS ' All this and more, including twenty-six stirring editorials in the "March of Events" On WORLD S WORK 'Moro 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 hla position m personnel director ot tho Hy- 'liaullo I'rtiRsed Steel Companyln 'lowland, put on rouch clotliea. MgulHcd lila name, and obtained laborer'!) Job. l'lio crcater part of the text of ' ii book Is mada up from his diary He was In the coal mines, lie wax In tho Iron mlnen He w.ih In tho Heel mills And lie was there as a laborer, as one of the "hands." Ills Ktory Is lm poitnnt to all who aim to bo In formed on tho laborer's psychol gy illustrated. t!.i0 CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS HAVE YOU READ MR. WALDO'S NEW BOOK "With Grenfeli on The Labrador"? Henry Van Dyke writes to the publishers: "7 run greatly obllped to yon for tending mo Jfr. Fullerton M'rlilo'H ivcellcnt book on Dr. Witred Or en fell of the "Laliailor." It la a vivid picture of one of the finest men of our upe a man who is rqnal to his work and who has been greatcned by It. The devotion with which Dr. Gren feli consecrated himself and all his manly powers to the nerv ire of the brave, poor folk on Hie coast of Xewfountlland and ihc Labrador has a heroic uunllty n it; and he has coi ned on 7ifi lost, iiotti them any years, with that won ilioui practical skill which i nmrit not only from a nature of r raordinary endowments, but also from steady loyalty to ideals. This bonk, which tells of the man and Ms life, Is a good one for young men to i ead for inspiration and t ncouragement." Ark for It nt your Bookseller's Price $1.50 or of FLEMING H. REVELL CO. 158 Fifth Ave, New York Do you pride yourself on your ability to guess the solution of a detective story? Try the, test if THE MAN IN THE MOONLIGHT By Rupert S. Holland Intrigue, mystery and thrills aplenty. And you win If you can guess tho ending I Every bookseller has it, $1.90 Geo. W. Jacobs & Co.' Putliiim PUUdelp.it This Month Read the Signed Articles by and Harding in tho November WORLD'S WORK. Sale To-day At All News-stands THE Look for the Eagle OT merely an imaginative novel butt a seg--ment of real life, depicting a true man's handling of real problems. JUST I'UULISIIUII POOR MAN'S ROCK By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR Author of "North of Fifty-Three," "Big Timber" and "Burned Bridges" "There can be no question of Mr. Sinclair's ability to tell a story. Few of us ever doubted it after 'North of Fifty-Three,' but 'Poor Man's Rock' settles the matter once and for all. A famous American writer has said that a story is successful in proportion to the amount of curiosity it arouses in its reader. And 'Poor Man's Rock does arouse one's curiosity. Not the breath less, half-terrified curiosity inspired by the teller'of mystery tales and romantic adventurings ; but the curiosity of a reader who enjoys watching the working out of a problem which, but for the vagaries of life, might well have faced him." 77ie Boston Transcript. $1.90 AW. At All Booksellers LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers, Boston 'Fulfills the promise of 'This Side of Paradise." CMcrpo Tost Flappers and Philosophers by F. SCOTT FITZGERALD Author of This Side of Paradise At Book Stores Everywhere $1.75 kCHARLESSCRIBNERSSONS ?FIFIU AVE AT48ST NEW YHRK SATAN'S DIARY by Leonid Andreyev This fantastic Novel by one ol Russia's greatest writers has just been published in this country only. Its appearance is considered an event of real lit crcry importance. $2.25 everywhere iyzassisi NOW READY A brilliant novel of Monte Carlo and Itu earning. By probably the greatest novelist writing today. BLASCO IBANEZ' The Enemies of Women A'l all bookstores, J2.15. E. P. DuUob & Co.,81 Stk At., N. V. sfc 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 lure of tho sea and love, of ridventure that appeal to every boy. Colored front ispieco and drawings in black and white by Ralph Coleman. Every bookseller has it. $1.75 George W. Jacobs & Co. Publishers Philadelphia Heaven and Hell An account of things heard and seen there By Emannel Swedenborg Swedenborj mtkei reasonable claim to bara been admitted into tba spiritual world wblla bit pbjiical bedj reaiined alive arid attitc in tbii world, and bar recorded bli ex perience in a war tbat la convincing;. Tbii book of 032 pares will ba lent prepaid to anjr addren on re ceipt of 25 eenli. Alio anr of tie following worlti br Swedenborr will be lent, prepaid, for 25 cenli eacbi DIVINE PROVIDENCE 629 pp. THE FOUR DOCTRINES 635 pp. DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM 618 pp. Tbe booki are printed In largo type on food paper, and are inbitantiallr bound in itiff papar coren. Tho American Swedenborg Printing and Publiehlng Society Itmnn 71. 8 W, S9tn .St.. New Vork Her Latest Commentary on Life Reaches a High Artistic Level After Edith Wharton is dead may that unhappy day bo long postponed ome pupil of Freud will doubtless apply to her literary output the principles of psycho-analysis, in an effort to explain how and why she has done what Bhe hag. It would bo ungracious to do It while she Is still alive. In her new novel, "The Ago of In nocence," Mrs. Wharton handles in a new,orm the motive which has inspired most of what she has written. In doing it she has produced a work of surpassing art. Thooowho read merely for the story will find it absorbing, but the more discriminating will be delighted by the skill with which the characters are drawn, the mastery with which the crises arc approached and developed and the poetic and touching manner of its end. It is a talc of New York in the seventies of the last century. Its heroine Is the Countess Olcnska, a member of n New York family, who married a Polish count, lived with him a few years and then fled from his brutalities and in fidelities to take refuge with her own people in her native city. The hero Is Newland Archer, a man who had ployed with her in her childhood and who. when tho story opens, is engaged to marry o beautiful girl, a cousin of the Countess, who in merely a young woman of tho conventional type, with no in sight into life and no intellectual in terests. There would have been no story if the countess had remained in Europe. But Archer, who is a htudent of art and literature, has traveled and 1ms interests otttsldc of the routine life of a narrow and exclusive social ret.. I finds that he and the countess meet on common Intellectual grounds. When "society" plans to turn a cold shoulder on her because she has left her husband, he goes to her rescue with his social influence and when he finds himRelf fall ing In love with her he hastens his mar riage. Then follows the struggle of the man t make his wife happy while his heart is not in her keeping. lie meets the countess occasionally and the ntor of those meetings is told with n knowl edge of the human heart as it beats in the breast of honorable men and women which is possessed only by few novelists. This love affair is a moving tragedy of the emotions. The countess, when she discovers that it is imprudent to'remaiu In New York so long as Archer finds it impossible to refrain from seeing her, goes to Paris. The book ends thirty years later, with Archer In the street outside of her apartment unable to bring himself to go up to dee her. As her blinds arc drawn in the growing dust he goes away cherishing his romance as a precious thing. As the story progresses Mrs. Wharton deals with the New York society of the time in a most penetrating manner. She describes the he-gossips, the unfaithful husbands who profess indignation at the conduct of the countess in leaving her own husband, the concentration of in terest in family and the pride of the families in their conservatism. There is a delightful touch when Mrs. Archer Is made to say of her husband that he hiiH no difficulty In dlsnoslne of his time for "when lie has nothing else to do he reads a book. Mrs. Wharton has never written a more artistic or a more satisfying novel. THE AOl! OP IN'NOCBNCn. By Kdlth Wharton. New Yorlt: D. Appleton & Co. 12 The Will to Be Well The nim of Doctor Walsh in hi "Health Through Will Power" is to revive the appreciation of the place ot the human will in life. Education should be founded on the training of the will anil the formation of Rood habltn, as it waa in the old monastic schools, not as in the present day on the ac cumulation of knowledge. With this end in view he Rhows the important part the will plays In enabling one to keep in health, an well as it place in diseases, t rom his own wide experi ence ho demonstrates its great value in helping recovery from tuberculosis, pneumonia, asthma and other ills. One of the blessings of the war is that to many it has revealed their latent will power. The man who has this pro found experience "has learned thnt hit will Is capable of enabling him to da things that he would have hesitated about and probably thought quite im possible before this revelation of hlm- Belf to himself hnd been made." From now on he will bo convinced thnt upon his will, more than upon anv other single factor, depend his health and recovery from disease. Among the special diseases upon which he dwells is the "Hhellshock," which was bo prevalent in the war and whose success ful treatment "was all founded on the will and not on the mind." The main purpose of the book, which is written in simple, not abstruse and technical, language, understandable by all, is to help the sick to help themselves. HEALTH TimOUai! TVILI. POWEH By Jama J. Wri. M. D. Boston: Little, Brown it Co. II. BO. AT THE FREE LIBRARY Honks ndded to th Free Library, Thir teenth and Locust streets, during- the ucek ended October 2H: Miscellaneous Hanson, II W "Cnx. the Man " rtarker, J. E. "Economic Statesman- shin." llrnwer, Harrlette "Belt-help n riano Study." Carnesjle, Andrew "A "tohloitranhv " De coster Chrls "Flemish Legends." Knlsnd. C A., ed "Atnena " Tlndlay. Hueh "Handbook for Practical Farmers " Franco, Anatole "Bride nf Corinth." Kranck. II. A. "Iloamlnr Throuch the West Indies." Frothlrurhsm, Robert "Bonis of Roirs." Ilu.tncr. B. S "Marine iii.-nnre." Knowles. Morris "Industrial Houslna " Lane, It. VT, "Maklna of Hcrbeit IIoov- er." Msrden. O. B. "You Can, Hut Will Tout" Paine, A. II. "Marie Twain." Phillips. C. A. "Bank Credit." rteplnatnn. Charles A'Court "First World e.r. 1014.10 IS," Two volumes. Tieppllrr. Ames "Points of Frlrtlon " Sherwood, V, A. "Ollmpses of South America." x Fiction Comfort. W I., and Kl Dost Zamln "Son of Power," Couperus, Louis "The Inevitable," Dell, Flovd ."Moon-calf." Frank Waldo "Dark Mother." Hamilton. Cosmo "niueroum." Jepson. Kdar "Iiudwater Mjstery." Kelland C II, "Touth Challenges." Ion Is, Sinclair "Main Street." Ixitdon. Jack "Hearts ol Three." Lull. O, U "Cloudy Jewel," McCutcheon. a. B. "West Wind Drift." MrKenna, Stephen "Lady Llllth," Reynolds. Mrs, Balllle "Also Ban," fjtraus rtnlnh "Penrard Awake." Wharton Edith "Aa-s of Innocence," White, S. E. "Boss Dawn." Children's Books Ashmun. Mararat "Marian Ftear'a Bummer." Mathews. Bnsll "Arronauta of Faith," Mullstt, O. M. "Betey Lans. Patriot." Stevenson, Mra, Sinclair "Bridget's Pair, lea " Tasrart. M. A. "Pllarlm Maid," Waldo, L. M.t d. ''Btorlsa of Luther Bur bank." I v mmmmmmjBttsBKmHjEmJflp BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB1 fflTBBHHBS 'BSSSSSSSSSBH f"; " . :" JF'aTsTjTsTsTJ I'XvXwIsMvXvfW f''ffiSvfl M K -';'! '-'KiSVi;'' aaaaaaV iLvf'C ?': t&' 'HH MKS. EDITH WHARTON Whoso latest novel, "The Ago of Innocence," will delight all lovers of good Action MYSTERY AND THRILL IN NEWEST NOVELS Science and Myth Furnish En ' vironment for Some Strih ing Fiction Edwin rtalmer, who, in "Via Wire less," "The Indian Drum" and other novels, collaborated with William Mc Harg, goes on his own in "Resurrection Rock," hi new story, which projects on exciting plot of adventure, mystery and surprise against the background of the great outdoors. The placp of the title is a small Island off the Michi gan coast, of limited and rocky acre age and with an empty house on it. The house is one of mystery. It is of especial concern to the grandfather of a girl whom the hero meets on his way to the West, summoned to the local ity by a strange message that reaches him. The young man is just returned from the war overseas and the mys teries and hazards he encounters in his new ndventure arc abundant enough and thrilling enough to keep even a somnolent reader wide awake. Sir. Ilalmcr hns the element ot tmspcnbc well under his control and his plot loses nothing from its constant recourse to the unexpected. "Who Killed John Theobald?" You'll have to read a very Ingenious mystery detective story to Hnd ouf. It is called "The Witness of the Sun." and is the production of Henry Smith Williams, who is widely known for his popular interpretations of modern scientific dis coveries and inventions. lie develops his plot with the strictest scientific ac curacy, jet not dully or dryly. The temptation of n writer In handling a story of this tMe is to be too technical in terms or abstruse in rensouing. but l)r. Williams carefully evades auythlng of the sort. The tun is liternlly n wit ness in the murder trlul, following the death of John Theobald. That is very definite testimony and is ghen by a series of remnrknble photographs which controvert with absolute success a well-built-up structureof circumstantial evi dence. By the keen and unerring eye of tho camera the ultimute truth Is re vealed and tho 'frailty of the human reasoning powers and detective logic is demonstrated. This is a htory that will J delight even while It perplexes the lover of ratiocination and ingenuity. "Hidden Kyes" is apparently n first novel. If it is a prentice work it cer tniulj has nothing nmnteurish about it. The writer, Eric I.eWnson. is literally "more than mysterious" in his plotting and development, as the book's jneket nnnotntes. His story is also provided with a further asset in being engugingly written, and with more of the love in terest than this school of story cus tomarily carries. There are criminals in It nnd dark deeds, and the veil of secrecy, but through its curtain for crime the "Hidden I'yes" penetrate. It will furnish a good evening for any reader who wants to get away from the routine. We say "an" evening, for no body will postpone the finishing of a perusal overnight. fiernld Biss has experimented suc cessfully In the weird nnd uncanny in "The Door of the Unreal." It is a story of the grotesque, the arabesque, tlje su pernatural and the horrific. Basrd on the old Idea of lycnnthropy it makes almost disturbingly credible the primi tive belief in werewolves. The author has n keen faculty for devising nnd developing the mystic, tho unreal mid the ingenious. Terrifying nocturnal and supernal orgies, mjhterious disappear ances, the habits of the men-wolves, all are part of the enthralling and com plicnted plot. It may give the reader the creeps, but he will want to read it to tho startling end, THE DOOIl OF Tim INnRVL. By C.erald Hiss New York: O P Tutnam'e Sons HIDDEN EVES. Ily Krlo Levlnaon. In- llannrll! Hobbs-Merrlll Co. THE WITNESS OF THE BUN. ny Henn Smith Wllllama. New Tork: Doubledaj. Pare it Co BESUnnECTION BOCK ny Edwin Dal- mer. Boston: Little, Brown & Co, The Law as a Profession There is a fine spirit in former Gov ernor Baldwin's discussion of the law as a career which should commend it to every young man who is thinking of becoming a lawjer. The writer, a lend ing authority in the profession, begins with htatlng clenrly its attractions as well as the objections to, choosing it. Then he shows what nre the personal qualifications and education requisite to success, nnd emphasizes the fact thut law is a progressive science. One is impressed with his remarkable acquain tance with the literature of his profes slon from the numerous and well-chosen quotations from the leading authorities, from Cicero to Abrnhnm Lincoln. The spirit with which he regards the legal profession is shown bv the fact that the closing passage of his book is a dally prajer of a leading judge of out country n which he sought "to promote his Ideol of justice on earth." Tim YOUNO MAN AND THK LAW Simeon B HMdwln. M. A,, LL I) Yorli. The Macmlllan Co. $1 so. ll Ne.v Where Coolldge Got His Ideas A graduate nf Amherst, who was Ir. college with Governor Ooolldge. both of whom were pupils of Prof. Gorman, professor of philosophy a mnn who Amherst men, at any rate, believe was onti of tho greatest teachers this coun try ever had after receiving a copy of "Have Faith in Massachusetts," wrote back: "Isn't it wonderful to think of the enduring power of a teacher? Here is the philosophy of Prof. Gorman como to life nfter twenty-five years, peak!n with the. mot powerful voice that spcaVs'ta America today," FINE SOCIAL SATIRE i Under the Name of Pottcrism 1 She Flays Modem Philis 1 tinism Skillful Satire is rare and satire of any kind by a womnn is almost un known. Therefore Rose Macaulay has achieved doubly in "Potterism." It is penetrating satire of a quality that has not been surpassed in recent years and It Is written by a woman. Pottcrism, as she described It, is merely the Philistinism of Matthew Arnold under another name. Percy Potter is the publisher of n string of London news papers and periodicals with large cir culations. He insists that he docs not lead the public, but that the public leads him. He lias an instinctive knowledge of what the public will buy, nnd he provides it. A group of people of better taste and finer ideals invent the term Potterism to describe Ids school of journalism. Matthew Arnold said of the same thing in his day : "On the side of beauty and taste, vulgarity ; on the side of morals nnd feeling, coarseness; on the side of mind and spirit, unintclligencc this Is Philis tinism." Miss Macaulay's story deals with tho .tcf. faml,', a Potter editor and the antl-Potterites. There are twins in tie latter family who profess disgust with the family point of view. They have as much contempt for the Pot terlte novels written by their mother 5Vor tho Pottcritc stuff that their father prints. But in n delightfully cf I1 enl mood Mlss Macaulay makes the KJ twln,nnTy one of her father's i . i.rs' n,jyslcally a Gibson man. nnd intellectually a complete Potterite. i? Ile, ,ms n sIstPr ot 0 girl, also o lotteritc in mind nnd morals and standards, push the man downstairs so that he breaks his neck. Then she lets suspicion rest on a perfectly innocent man. The chief nnti-Pottcritc falls in love wiUi tho girl who married the editor and when tfie editor dies she agfs ,0 ,marry him. While he is waiting a decent time before the mar- rISg! he ,BS to Russia to find out what Is happening there. The Red soldiers attack him when he defends some Jews and when the Reds get through with him the White soldiers finish him. ".Murdered by both sides, being of neither, but merely u seeker after fact," is the way Miss Macaulay comments on the incident. The success of the story in London is due partly to its thinly veiled allusions to existing commercial institutions there, but the American public will iii , ?n',rtaIning because the same kind of institutions flourish here. And in addition It will enjoy the rapier thrusts which the author gives to many popular delusions. It was about time that some one renewed the fight which Matthew Arnold began courageously against intellectual and moral flab- fillT" unr ,M"lu,n",s nicthod of fighting it is skillful, for she exhibits ''"' action and lets the reader see what happens even to tho extent of the defeat of the chief unti-Pottcritc vV,V." i?M; . "V n"" Macaulay lor.f Honl 4 Llerlirht. ulau"ly New A DUTCH TRIANGLE Mrs. Martin Writes a Novel of Marital Complications in Pennsylvania m,,'" "'""''nyder Martin, Ion; rec oenlrd ns n keen observer of the Ira is the AiWsh and the Mennonites. nnd an acme interpreter of their psxehic mental proce-.es. has mided to he? lone list of novels on thnt contains nil the elements that brought llton.rv diMln". tinn and popular success to its nred. eeesiors. ' "The Schoolmaster of Hessvlllf" hns plo . movement, direction and chnra.-. IcHznMo,, If .eercMte (he psjci.olo nnd the conduct, the codes nnd the creeds of quaint, literal, hw-honest people reduced to racinl remnunts now adays and of queer, curious, intolernnt "vts thnt nre perceptil.lv nnishinz. : The crudeneses nnd restrictions that marked the life and the limitations tint Me HPiund tli- belief., wrenl; Ntninii" fantasies in the mind nnd Mood of "' in .1110 custom and environ ment hae even n mure than dominating grip on chnrncter. Mrs. Martin knows all nbout these people. .She puts much of her knowl edge in her new book and much of her sjmpathv for the unfortunate vic tims of such a heritage and such nn environment. She turns tn artistic uses the curious lingo known ns Penusl vanlo Iiutch, the old folk feelings and impulses, the almost religiously intoler nnt thrift, thp antiquated customs summoning from these background nnd ntmosphere, against which she projects the inevitable drama the action of her stnr. The protagonists nre the fa miliar trio of fiction dramaturgy ot the divorce court, of life, for the mat ter of thnt. The man is strong nnd self-willed, conscious nf the values of life, but insensitive to their finer phases on account of n mad, a wild infatuation for the other woman. The other woman is coarse-grained, rank-growing, nox ious without bvlng entirely toxic to idenls nnil of a distinctly inferior char acter, which does not lift hut lowers those in contact with it. Against the primitive but picturesque drop curtains of Hessville is ncteil this more sophisticated scene acted in tensely and ine.vitubly. Tho schoolmas ter hns happiness on his horizon and loses it in the quest of a phnntusni of passion. TIIK SCHOOLMASTKIt OF IIIISSVII t t.; Ily IMen R, Martin New York Duubk duy race & Co, Everything Desirable in Books wriniiisroo.N m.io Wnlnnt. Juniper and Snnsom his. Klrvitor to 2nd l'loor Rooseveltian Days Hermit was his father's com panion on many hazardous adven tures in Africa and in South I America. Colonel Roosevelt's son I tells nil about these trips in his H new boolc. The Happy Hunting-Grounds nr Hermit Roosoclt Author of "War in tho Garden of Eden." Illustrated $1.75 Xg CHAMB SCRIBNERSSONS iBiBAuuu-ra-ji.acn lutui JUST PUBLISHED (Already In its Second Large Printing) THE BLUE ROOM "Into the Blue Room thou shalt not look" COSMO HAMILTON Author of "Scandal" (Now Playing at the Plymouth Theatre) Tn ftlia nnTirnrfitl nlnn -Tr.1 flirt aitirvla afonrlnr1 f rfra4-r COSMO HAMILTON has promising a great deal. For the ultra-modernist school is uiu uiusuinuing success 01 me last ixew xorK uieaincai , season. And, lest you forget "His Friend and His Wife," all come from thn npn nf this While this delightful novel has a moral purpose back,. 01 it, and on this account will be widely discussed, it ia above all else a novel with interesting characters and an unusual plot, and is sure to be in wide demand for ltt charm as a story alone. $1.90 Net. At UTILE, BROWN & Interest on 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 seas and skies of old Nantucket. Pictures by Alice Barber Stephens. Jacket in color by Cles Phillips.' Price, $2.00. At all bookstores 1 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA Perhaps you won't approve of SUSAN even so, READ The Bok of Susan By LEE WILSON DODD SUSAN isn't a bit like other women ; but how entertain ing the world would be if other women were more like SUSAN : $2.00 at any bookstore, or direct from E. P. BUTTON & COMPANY, 681 Fifth Ave., N. Y. Just Out Poems of Henry van Dyke New and Revised Edition This will be a welcome an nouncement to the wide audience of van Dyke lovers. Tim new edition presents, in one volume, all of his poems to date, includ ing those from his two Litest volumes, "The Red Flower" and "Golden Stars." si. 00 t till lmnKliop !2fc ni4Tirc crwnvrcTK envc IUUUIUW JVIUUJ14U k'UIIJ f riFll! AVE. AT184St N'DVYORK and this is Emma McChes ney (now Mrs. T. A. .Buck). She keeps a good man out of work again. but for a purpose that will stir every reader's heart. Read EDNA FERUEK'S Half Portions Ker, $2.7., at all book sellers. Published by DOl'ULEDAY, PAGE & CO. Should a woman trust instinct or reason in dealing with men and life? the powerful new novel by AMANDA B. HALL answers this question. ?1.90 George W. Jacobs & Co., Pbila. 1628 Chestnut Sireel "MEET ME AT&ACOBS" 1 1 Is) Lf ACOBS I S I FOR Ubooks 1 done his best work, which is T this distinguished writer of Z the author of "SCANDAL," rI' hrillmnr. writor. 'v all Booksellers CO., Publishers, BOSTON t every page IN CHANCERY A New Novel By JOHN GALSWORTHY Author of "Saint'M Progress," "Thm Dark Flower," "Th Man of Property," etc. Thus story by the distinguished Eng lish novelist is an amazingly power ful presentation of lif in the upper classes in England. Sou. on sale ot all good book s7op, ft.t$ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Fifth Aienue at 48th Stretl, New Yrk A Swing Around The Pirate Circle ROAMING THROUGH THE WEST INDIES By HARRY A. FRANCK Author of "A Vagabond Journey Around tho World," etc. The beat travel boolc of 102C Presents these "stepping atones ta South America" aa only thla author can get pictureaque peoples and romantic places on paper. Over 100 illuatrations. Price $5.00. A THE CENTURY CO. THE BARK MOTHER the new NOVEL by WALDO KItANK author of "Our America," is In tlu opinion of the I'hllddelphU I rilprr, 'h very powerful drama of life toil.iy ' Ueplctlna; "the contrast between New Yorlc anil Middle WeHtern nnd New England custom nd temp'-r.imentK In manterly f.ishlon, ulth fullnrai of psycholoeYa insight $2.50 everywhere B0NI & LIVERIGHT KV 10IIK IS Ptrkapi you won't approv ef Susan tvtn to, you MUST rad TheBook of Susan By Leo Wilson Dodd Price S2.00at all BookttlUrt K. P.DirrroH A Co, Ml MflhAV H) Vrk,jOr )l II 1 r 1 1 hi )' f'1'1 i i 3 nt m i 1 1 i'i i 1 fl A ti t y JH! t--t.ii.lj S.Y.J " - - . - , .'fcusfi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers