tr.MtT W i V 'V?aw1 V 1-fi Vfi- , . .)t , .' j .' iU 4 .i'r. i ' --. P . .e-V- Ik. tt U.i f ." .. F u EVENtNG PUBLIC 'liEDGEl-PHirADELPHlA; SATURDAY, ttOYEMBER 13, 1920 WflT,:7 &jnmmm fmm" . H'Ate " - ? m 1 C MpVels Werth Reading. ' ' ".. : r r- Nancy Gees te Town Frances R. Sterrctt 'A novel that is full of humor and alive viththe spirit of youth The romance of a girl who takes up a career as a trained nurse in a hospital with the idea of marrying a rich man. Deliciously amusing. $2.00 net. ,Lucinda By Antheny Hepe A book that will take rank with this distinguished author's greatest success, "The Prisoner of Zcnda." The thrilling story of a stolen bride, who undergoes many vicissitudes of fate 'and fortune before she is restored te the arms of her distracted levor. $2.00 net The Parts Men Play By A. Beverley Baxter An international love story of fascinating interest combined with a powerful psychological study of nations, individuals and nationalities. A keen .exposition of our present-day life, hold ing the reader by its tremendous grasp of today's vital problems. - " ' $2.00 net. The Sleuth of i St. James's Square By Melville Davisson Pest Introducing a detective of an unusual type in Sir Henry Mar quis, Chief of the Investigation Department of Scotland Yard. .While the principal scenes are laid in America-, the reader is transported te many strange lands and fascinated by the lure of ingenious criminal conspiracy plot and counterplot. $2.00 net. At All Booksellers These Are Appleton Beeks D. APPLETON 6c COMPANY : NEW YORK -. Rlack Jnst mbllshed MAKTLEMYS (TREASURE J A Remance of the Spanish Main in the days pf the Pirates, j Jeffery Farnel brings back the By 5irate) days of the Spanish Main FJPIP1?JPI?V n this new novel and net since J&f: F Hit I "The Bread Highway" and "The IP A RNHT. Amateur Gentleman" has created such a company of pic turesque characters or related such romantic adventures. :- J The engrossed reader will ly fellow the adventures of the treasure seekers who set sail en the geed ship Faithjull Friend and the unique experiences of, Martin Cenisby and the fair Lady Jane Branden whose family the here hated as they find themselves' alone en the island which con tained the buried treasure. He will en counter some rogues as bloodthirsty as any pirates who ever sailed the Seven Seas, anddiscever love episodes that stir the emotions. I Mr. Farnet has never mada wider appeal than in this, his first sea story. LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers, BOSTON HIDE AND SEEK This well beloved young American in his old familiar rollicking moods and some distinctly new ones. Christopher Merley "Te nete him is ie possess a friend, a de lightful companion." San Francisce Chronicle SONGS FOR A LITTLE HOUSE "'Kit' Merley is just you. He makes you sing with him these little songs of the happy heart." "The Best Bey's Story Bays William Stanley Braithwaite in the Bosten Transcript MITCH MILLER By Edgar Lee Masters "Edgar Lee Maitcrt," remarks Mr. Braith waite, "in MITCH MILLER jeini theie clastic authors who have written immortal terjes of American boyhood the mett entertaining picture of boyhood since Tem Sawyer." "It's a boy' story told in boy lingo, and great stuff, It'a another Tem Sawyer and Huck Finn," said William Marien Reedy enthusiastically. jj nr Order at your bookseller's today. Price, $3.B0 IMC MACMUXAN COMPANY, Pa, 94-H FiM At ,-N. . s J2 !nR he Auther of "THE BROAD HIGHWAY" eager 12.15 net. At All Booksellers. MINCE PIE "A literary cocktail" Outlook. A book of clever essays and humorous appreciations of fa mous people. THE ROCKING HORSE "Mr. Merley's verse is utterly delightful; at every turn some unexpected beauty or sweet fVMiuiajr tuoiiie auu .ijj u twinkles." mm New Yerk Sun In Our Generation"' "Edgar Lee Matters in MITCH MILLER, says the Chicago Eve ning Pett editorially, "has scored a hundred per cent success and written a permanent piece e f American literature, . . , Here It an indubitable addi addi tien te the small list of American elastics." I , Nw Yerk rWfcr-'G- 'V DR. SCHILLING IS TOLERANT OF SANDBURG CARL SANDBURG A FORCE TO BE RECKONED WITH But It Is Yet te Be Shown Whether He Has Justified the Repudiation of the Muses and the Denial of the Graces IJy FELIX E. SOHELLINO rrofmner of rfnrflMi T.llrrntnrf I n T IIAVE tried te read Cnrl Sandburg's J- new book, "Smolte nud Hteel." with out predisposition! mid prejudice). I have tried te forget the Iowa nnd rules of the nrtii. I linvc put aside prosody mi inapplicable, rhetoric as superfluous; grammar and the deft iitiiRen of culti vated speech n Impertinent, nnd I hepe that I hftvc nchlcved nn honest detach ment. Seme of us nre born rebels. We are net content te walk in the steps of ether men ; we want our own ways, and it is our right. Heme of us find in ac cepted nrt, ns In accepted science, elinlns of the past; In the accepted usages of men, chains of the present. And we threw overboard likewise the accepted explanations of much In life, for example, and in religion, lest we forge chains once mere for the future. The Intellectual rebel, the rebel In nrt, is n fascinating iteure wherever we meet him. Marlowe blaspheming, net high heaven, as we used te be taught, but the orthodoxy of his age. which is net rhe nrtlioilexv of eurs: Iivren Hcendal- eusly shocking Mrs. Grundy: Wait Whitman, glorious brenker el images, nlnutnr. Ii(nmtf lirniir.1 nnil marble these are some of the refreshing rebels of literature. TUB rebel may he a Prometheus nnd, bring down the fire of heaven for the geed of pirn nnd net merely upon his own devoted head ; or the rebel muy be only a naughty boy who won't wash his face and go te school. De net Jump at conclusions, dear reader ; I have net classified Mr. Sandburg yet, nnd I may net succeed when I try. I once knew n small would-be poetical rebel who showed his insubordination in the color of his socks nnd the gorgceusnehs if hi neckties. He has posed new and dmpescd for a geed many years, but I still call him a small rebel be cause, whatever mny J)e the fact, he eaves with me nn impression of insln crity, in which, If I wrong him. I nm .eartlly sorry. One feels of him, ns the congregation of Laurence Sterne 1m said te have felt, in doubt as te what he is likely te de next te Mirprlsc. If net te scandalize, in doubt except that it will be unclcricnlj his wig whipped off nnd thrown in your face or n pas de soul In the uulplt. OF ONE thing I nm very certain as te Mr. Sandburg. He Is very much In earnest, nnd I like him for Unit. Moreover, there is nothing Weak or mawkish about him. He is also net out with n i.hetgun after his renders. His pieces I am net ready te call then poems yet have, tee, much the air of being overheard rather than heard, anil this is n great thing te be able te say, even of n poet. New, when a man is without pose, in earnest nnd nuiuly, you respect him, even although you mny net admire his manners. And in using this word I am snd'v aware that I am in troducing something trlvinl In the face of what Cnrlyle used te delight In call Ing the eternal Verities the capitalized Verities. Mr. Sandburg Is tee virile te be insincere; he is se virile, indeed, that at times he is brutal. He seems one of these who. seeking for Htrcugth. And it best typified in a blew between the eyes; who. looking for truth, discover it in nakedness awnre that it is naked ness ; who, searching for nn escape trem affectation, find sincerity and integrity only in the conduct and the language of the slums nnd worse. Fer example, speaking of the exquisite musical com poser, Grieg, Mr. Sandburg tells us: "Grieg being dead, we mny speak of him and his art. Grieg being dead, we can talk about whether he wa,s any geed or net. Grieg being with Ibsen, lljorusen, Lief Kricsen anil the rest, Grieg being dead does net care n hell's hoot what we say. Morning, Spring, Anitra's Dance, lie dreams them at the doers of new stars." This is the "poem" complete except for measured printing. The concluding thought, though no original eue, is n tine hunmu sentiment, But why smash it with the incongruous brutullty of a "hell's hoot"? Norway, we ar told at the moment, is much disturbed ever a bit of American desecration of this very music of "I'ecr Gynt" into ragtime. Is Mr. Sandburg.'.! "hell's hoot" any better? IN EVERY work of art, picture, piece of music or bit of writing there is obviously the idea and the execution of it. Seme people think that It is in the perfect union of these two things that successful art consists. Mr. Sandburg is strong In the originality of tlie irenic and the grotesque. Take "The Alley Hats," whose Jargen classifies whiskers as "lilacs, galways, feather dusters," and who are appropriately "creaked" one day at "n necktie party." Or the Irony of the iden "they (that is, we) all want te play Hamlet"; the whimsi cality of the query, "Hew deea a hang man behave at home?" or the daring thought of Ged as a crapshoeter: "Ged is Luck and luck Is Ged ; we nrc nil bones the High Thrower rolled; some arc two upets, some double sixes." This is as grotesque and compelling as the dance of death itself. At times tliu irony, if lighter, is none the less ad mirable, as in "The Sins of Kala mazoo," which "are nelthcr scarlet nor Crimson," but "a convict gray, a dish water drab" ; or the manufactured wooden gods which answer prayers and make rain quite "us well as any little tin god." If we ask ourselves honestly Tlic enternal mongrel, the tniur. eTtirbenrlnr, crlng-lntr "respectable" who upreams "Orucly lllml" when the "Bit Yellows" five the cue, and thcin rreets costly fnnea for the ado ration of the one whom yest-riluy he execrated und murdered, .Meet the t'UJt exumlne him then, after Imv. I nit absorbed the exquisite revelation of that abomination In the great lioetle tragedy that has astounded the Kmllili tpenklnr world CAIUS GRACCHUS IJy Odin Gregery examine trltleallr these about tee TO DAY) Hew maiir of the roenirrJ tribe de jreu knout At all booksellers, tt net) or BOM & LIVERIGHT, New Yerk PEACE ON EARTH GOOD WILL TO DOGS A Christmas Story by Eleaner Hallewcll Abbett Auther of "Old Dad," etc. Sparkling with youth and gaiety: full of the. originality and wit which distinguished all of her charming bec-ka. t fl.SO at any bookstore E. P. DUTTOK'fc CO- 6S! SHrfy, NX "MLi'--" VlKNKRAt. JTi. It! tha Ilnlrrrilfr of rrnnfulrnnlit could these keen, bitter, odd, contorted IdcMbe better conveyed mere musi cally, metrically or in n less bald and direct hiRnncr. the nnfewcr in "no." Mr. S.indburR'H manner, Milts his mat ter, even in Its collenulallum, It slang. Its short unmusical phrase und scera of the graces. TTOWEVER, M'r. Sntidburg i's net without Imncery, most of it re markably Orlzlr.al. Nnmi nf If rnmnrlffl. bly finethe river described as "the upper twist of n written question mark," the white cauliflower faces 6t mlnera wives" nwnitlnr their htnbands. purple martens "slinging ciphers" and "slid ing figure eights" in their "sheaths of satin blue." Hut mere commonly they arc misshapen into something gro tesque. A certain wemnn Is "turned te a memorial of salt looking nt the lights of n forgotten city"; two levers pre described as "ehlsel-nals" j the East shakes a baby tee at tomorrow," and en the verge assuredly of inco ince herence: "There was n late autumn cricket und two smeuldering mountain sunsets under the vnlley reads of her eyes." there I have volume is nut of the a flflA Aiiilnlntif In All is Vnnltv. Here we have vivid imngery: "The woman named Tomor row," with "a hairpin in her teeth, doing her hnlr"; the ccder geld-bound doers of "the greatest cltv that ever was" nnd "the golden girls" who sing its greatness. Then the wind nnd the rain nnd the crews, the rats and the lizards. It Is notable that much of the effect of this variation en a theme at least as old as Solemon Is here pro duced by what Miss Amy Lewell Is fend of dwelling en as If there were anything thnt Is new In the "new poetry" te wit. as "the return.' here almost a refrain. Reme of the phrases almost fall into the regular cadence of that unhallowed thing, verse. Strange it is nnd most happy that genuine emo tion often restores te the rebel nnd the theorist the utterance which he has re fused, as the presence of death may bring back the atheist te Ged. Mr. Sandburg is te be reckoned with. Thnt he has Justified the repudiation of the nine muses nnd the denial of nil the graces is yet te be shown. SMOKE AND S1EKL. IJy Cnrl Banubur. New Yerk: Harcourt. Urace A Howe. TY FAR the best poem called it a poem of the Kenr Preludes en Plavtlil Ind." n riiinhriii NEW BOOKS An outline rlinrnctcrixntlen of the I at tut nubllcntlnns. More extended rtrlew will be clven books worthy of special notice, JUVENILE Fer Children OLD FIIENCH TAIIIY TAI.B3. Ily Com Cem true da Settler. Philadelphia: l'cnn Publishing- Ce. ' neprlnt Of a. classic with illustrations by VI rein te. Starett. UNCt.K REMUS: HIH S0NQ3 AND HIS SAVINGS. ny Joel Chandler Harris. New Yerk: D. Appleton & Ce. Holiday edition of an old favorite, with pictures by Kret nr.d Kemble. a nnewNiE rteniNSON cnusen. ny Charlette Hcrr. New Yerk: Dedd, Mead & Ce. Adventures of.e, hrewrrte who went through the adventures of Defee's here. TAiniES AND CHIMNEYS. Ily Hese Fvle- man New Yerk: Clsorsie It. Deran Ce. A little book of fairy peemi for these hIhi nee the world with the mafia eyes of childhood. Fer Girls THE SHELDON SIX ANNE. Dy Grace It. Itemlck. Philadelphia: Ptnn Publishing Ce. Anne's father called his famllv "The Shelden Six" and appointed himself chauf feur of the Imatlnary car. Anne was the steering gear, and though she had te Rive up school and had ether dlnippnlmmentn In order te Rulde the ethers, she did her duty llke a little woman. An Interesting story about n sextet of bes anil slrls all children will like. NANCY GOES TO TOWN. ny Frances Mterrcti. .New Yerk: I). Appleton ft co. Nancy has te support herself when her father, a country doctor, dies. She taken un nursing. Her hospital experiences and thnas among her own patients ure full of vivacity and are told In charming style. The fact that there la delicious romance will net mar the book any from the standpoint of gins who use wnoieseme love aiuriea. OH. VIRGINIA. Ily Helen S. Griffith. Philadelphia. Penn Publishing Ce. She Is called Jinks for short, nnd has many air escapade and experience which keeps half the neighborhood laughing nt or with her. Girls from nine te fourteen will enjoy this well-told tale. A YANKEE GIRL AT FORT SUMTER. By Alice T. Curtis. Philadelphia: Penn Publlnhlng Ce. The adventures of a llttle Ilosten lass In tha charmlnir southern rlty of Charleston Just befere the opening of the war between the states. It gives a geed and accurate picture of customs and Ufa at that period nnd has a let of adventure, tee, JOHN nARINO'S HOUSE. By El.le Sing master, nostem Houghten Mlftlln Ce. This story for young girls In tnslr later teens has the quality touch of real liter ature. It Is written by a story writer already widely and well Known for her fic tien of the Civil War, particularly centering around the Hattle or (lettysburg. This story has some of tha aftermath of the great battle. Rlnce the stanch heroine ! the granddaughter of a man who Is supposed te nave guinea me innreaerate iroene into Gettysburg. Shs disproves this chnre. rescues ner nretner irem Kidnappers nnd has a variety of ether adventures and experi ences. MARJERY MORRIS AND PLAIN JANE. P.y violet Qorden Oray. Philadelphia: Penn Publishing Ce. A new volume Ire the perenlally popular Marjery Merris series. Jans la a shy girl whom Margery meets at the summer resort. Her Influence lends Jane out of shvnesa and Inte neaitnrui outdoor sports, Fer girls from 10 te 14, A LITTLE MAID OF OI.D MAINE. Hy Alice Turner eurtis. Philadelphia: Penn Publishing Ce. The oerled Is the Revolution and the inn heroines are very patriotic and Interesting. The, author pictures ronuiuens witn a real Istla touch and gives authentle Information historically nnd In regard te manners and customs. Fer Beysj THE HIDDEN TREASURE OS" RASMOLA. Ry Abraham Rlhbany. Rosten: Heughi ten Mlftlln Ce. The author of "A Far Journey," "The Svrlan Christ," etc, tells hew, ns a boy, In far-off Syria, he went trensure huntln with his comrades. The young reader will like the IntermMnu and vivid portrayal of oriental life and wavs, JIMMY QUirjO, OFFICE ROY. By Hareld 8. Latham. New Yerk: Macmlllan Ce Story of n lad who had te get out nnd help the family and hew he succeeded dur ing his first year In an office. An tnsplrlnv tale for the every-day American boy. Net preachy, but very wholesome. THE BLACK BUCCANEER. Br Stephen W. Meader. New Yerk: Harcourt, Brace Howe. The thrilling and enthralling story nf n boy who was carried en from the Maine coast by pirates. There's burled treasure in It. tee. True te the time of mere than s, century age. THE MUTINEERS. By Chsrlee rj. Hayes Bosten! Atlantic Monthly Press, A tale of old days at sea and of ad venture In the Far East, as set down by the here, Benjamin Lathrop. M. Hayes has the knowledge ei what beva like nnd vet does net furnish the unnecessarily sensational. His book Is thrilling nnd well written. THE DREADFUL RIVER CAVE. By Jnmes W. bcliulti. Bosten! Houghten Mlftlln Ce. TakIm with rnl tlvn Tnillina fttlr ,t- 'story of Black Elk. Plenty of action and Indian tore, ine auiner was "aaeplecl" by the Blackfeet Indians, MAKINO GOOD. Br Captain McKsan. New Yerk! Macmlllan Ce. A boy's experiences In ranch life In west. em Canada, preluded by nis adventures st sea. Olves lively and true pictures of life among cowboys, A true te fact etery that hv many thrlHs. INTO MEXICO .WITH ammtAt, BCOTT. RyEdwln L. SUbln, Philadelphia! J. M? T.lMllRPOtt Ce. ' ' A .new vn""ln the Trail Blaiers' series IIHHAH NTHKKT Till- TZZ". aasaKiasaesFv-'iaBBvasasasav ww4wHmK VtiiiilaW I7v.rBasH VJaVrv'BBBaeBBBE1 aB i t , " J bbbbbbbKbt''.4bLiV j1HvH II. G. WI5LLS Whose long heralded outline his tory of the werlii is published nt last Feed Distribution in War Albert N. Merrltt. Ph. I)., who dur ing the war worked in the feed ad ministration in connection with pub licity nnd censorship, has told In do de tail the Interesting labors of the distri bution division. His book, "Wartime Control of thn Distribution of Feed," net only lays down principles nnd pro pre ccpts deduced out of the emergency, but nlse gives a geed account of prac tice and practical difficulties. Docter Merrltt has written mere thnn n brief history of the distribution divi sion. The snirlt and co-encratlon of the work of the feed administration Heme, the Encyclopedia Ilritannica, and is well illustrated 1y the following i ether well-known hooks ns his sources, words of the auther: "All worked te- He crammed for the task and rewrote gcthcr. All spent their days nnd part 'with copious quotations what he rend, of their nights pondering ever the vex- 1' assumes te find a process of develop i, -- .m... L t t.. i,nt nil, ment In history, which Henry Adnins IUJJ Jll uuiLiim i4L-n.uiui .. .....wn. cases the net results were produced by combining the Ideas nnd views of nil, and the fact that a certain Individual was In charge of a section of the dlvl- tlnn lines nn!- menn that the activity of that section can be entirely attributed te this Individual, but It must be attributed te the staff as a whole, as all were con sulted and were always glad te render any advice or assistance peisible in everv 'mpertnnt phase of the work in hnnd." WAIITIMB CONTROL. OF THE DIBTninU TION OV KtJOn. lly Albnrt N. Merrltt. New Yerk: The Macmlllnn Ce. 12.23. The young here Is nttnehed te thn corps of Old Fuss nnd Feathers, as General Scott was nrTectlenately nkkrmmed, nnd fought side by side with U. S, Grant, then a Bee end lieutenant, Glcs a thrilling and in spiring picture of a stirring period in American hostery, GENERAL THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY. By II. twill Mau Yfl.lc fnpmlllitn Ce. In two -elumes Is given a conspectus and HIDE AND SEEK. By Christopher Merley. New Yerk: Oeo. II. Deran Ce. A new collection of poems which shows the genial and lovable writer In his familiar moods and In some new ones that v.'!i sur prise and delight Ms renders. Humer, satire, sentiment blend In these poems. THE STORY OF A STYLE. By V. B. Hale. New Yerk: B. W. Huebsch. A psyche-analytic study of Woodrew Wil Wil eon. THE BOOK OF CHICAGO. By nebert Shackleton, Philadelphia: Penn Publish Ing Ce. A parallel volume te the author's rom rem bllngs In Philadelphia, New Yerk and Chi cago. He outlines the history, describes the local customs and manners and discusses the city from the standpoints of art. music, drama, llteratuie, eduontlen, etc. Written In a vivacious and casy-te-read style and handsomely Illustrated. KOSCIUSZKO. By Menica Gardner. New Yerk. Chas. Scrlbner's Sens, Tha first biography te be published In English of the Polish patriot. Deuls with his country's stirring fight for liberty and, of course, devotes a plenitude of attention te the general's participation In the American war ei independence. THE SHIP TYRE. By Wilfred H. Scheff New Yerk: Longmans. Green a Ce. A discriminating and Informing study of the commerce of the Dlble by the noted sec retary of the Commercial Museums, Phila delphia, an authority en subjects of trade and commerce, ancient and modern. An ad mirable monegrnph. THE 8ECRET SPRINGS By Harvey O'Hig- glns. New Yerk: Harper & Bres. A fasclnntlng studv ut the motives that nre back of gued and evil nnd particularly the motive Dener. It applies the methods and principles of psychoanalysis te lite In se simple ana caey a way ns te be readily . understandable. The writer Is a well-known ' novelist und Imparts tha uualitles of Imast- , Inatlen and literary distinction te this bonk. , GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED i STATES. By J. TraWs Mills New Yerk: Oxford University Press. I This critical view and Interpretation et I the historical relations between the two! countries Is by the learned staff-lecturrr te the University Extension Societies of Oxford, I uamDriage nnu i.onnen. Arucn or the ma terial was originally delivered In lecture form te units of thj American armv of occupa tion In Germany After the armistice. It la really only nn outline, nnd has the advan tage of presenting- the British viewpoint en many meet questions for American readers without nny obvious propaganda except the natural desire te cement frlenillv relations between citizens of both notions. The writer discusses goed-naturedlv the pbii,.. of claeh nnd conflict between the two ceun- ' men mai nave developed in tne course et history, THE PRICE OF MILK. By Clyde L. King Philadelphia: J. C Winsten Ce An Informing examination of the milk In duMry nnd the distribution of this vital fluid by n, Whnrten Scheel professor who la widely and well known for his soelelorleal and economics! researches and works. Cem- ' rnrjiuru uy firn-Ti Hoever LOMBARD STREET. Bv Walter Bagehet. New Yerk: E P. Butten & Ce. A description of Lembard street, Re vised and enlarged bv Hartley Withers. FICTION POOH WHITE. Bv Sherwood Andersen New Yerk: B W. Huebsch Anether fictional depletion of tynlral Amer ican life by the author et "Wlnesburg Ohie." IT PAYS TO SMILE Bv Nina Wilcox Put nam. New Yerk' aee H Deran Ce. A talc or mvetery nnd love 'old with of treasure hunting In the Seuth Sea Island WANTED' A FOOL Tly Philip Curtlss. New Yerk: Harper & Bres. The remnnce that fo'lewed sn actor's nn swerlng the advertisement of the title A"ialnB nnd Intriguing cnnneiiuences fol lowed. THE NIGHT HORSEMAN Bv Mx Brand. New Yerk' O W Putnam's Pens Desperate adventures, hslrhrradth escapes nnd whirlwind triumphs of the silent, mvs mvs terleus central flg'irn will enthrall the lever of this tvne of novel, HIGH LIFE By Harrison Rhodes. New Yerk- R. M MeBrlde A Ce A sparkllmr cemedv In which anpesr amid n Swiss environment n let of exiled klnss nnd the disturbing presence of an American widow, THE TERRIBLF, ISLAND. Bv Beatrice Orlmhaw, New Yerk- MnptnlUan Ce Adventure. mvBtery. romance In n story n measure hunting In the Seuth Sea Islnnds SPENDTHRIFT TOWN. By Henry Hudsen'. Jr. Bosten i Hn-irhlnn Mifflin Ce A novel of New Yerk life MAJlin CLAIRE'S WORVSHOP Bv Mar ru rite Audeux New Yerk Thes.Seltser N'ttr.ly..?. "0,". Rf'.'.r ,.h s"ntlenal sue cess of "Marie Claire" the author writes a new nnet about this typical little French working girl. THE DirPERS By Ben Traara New Yerk: Jtihn Lane Ce. A refreshing and humorous story of a pair of professional dancers their creed and centretemns that result from some of their experiences. r CHERRY I8IJ3. By Evelvne Clese. Phlla delphlat O. W. Jacnhs Ce. The story at a remarkable woman a girl with a wonderful voice who. happening te meet a celebrated tehnr In tti Munu , cherry bloom time, allows herself te be eri suaunu iu miry mm. hj vi ner act news romance and tragedy and, revenge, told In a Hww wt ti H.G.WELLS' MOST AUDACIOVS STUNT The Wonder Is That He Did It at All, Rather Than He Did It Well or III In subllme intellectual audacity II. O. Wells, has overtopped all his literary contemporaries by writing an outline of history from the Creation of the Peace Conference. Ne timid man would hnvn nttnmtitpil utirli n Htunendeus task and no broadly educated man who was ' aware that historical experts after civ- , Inir vrnt-4 te tlu ntudv had already i successfully told the story would have been se rnh as te think that It needed delmr aenin. Mr. Wells is neither broadly edu-1 r.ltrit nnr lx In' timid. l'erlniDS the i one is the natural result of the ether. i At any rate he has produced a book In I two volumes with n total of UtOO finely printed pages which he calls "The Out- I line of History," with the subtitle, "llelng a Plain History of Life and t I Mankind." New for a man te sit down . te write n history of life nnd mnnklnd I In eighteen months or two years Mr. I lenitiT thnu this I en his task requires a large measure in . i'ii , . it must be said te the cicdit of Mr. Wells that he was awnre of his audacity, for he explains In his Introduction that he met with 4 "scarcely n single instance of irrlta- I tien or linpnticnce" en the part of I "specialists whose demulus he had In- ' raded or trnversed in what must have scorned te many of them nn cxaspcr atingly impudent nnd superficial way." We enn let the Impudence pass, but the Indictment of superficiality must Btaud. It is impossible for a man who has net devoted himself exclusively te t the subject te be anything but Miper licial when he tries te write a history I of the development of mnn nnd of secl- , cty from Its earliest beginnings. The ' wonder is net thnt the book is super ficial but that Mr. Wells has been able te de it nt all. The outline of history is a literary tunt. Mr. Wells has used Gibben's sought for In vain. Hut then Adams was net audacious. He mastered a subject before he presumed te write en it, ana wncn no wrote ne made n con trilmtlen te the sum of knewlrdirc. Sir Wells thinks he has made n contribution in the theory of progress te establish wntcli be set out en bis great task. I lie discerning will regret that Mr. Adams is net still alive te dismiss with nn epigram the presumption of the bril liant Ilritish novelist who has turned his attention te history. Xe one can rend far in the book with out recognizing the Wcllslan touch. The mnn confessed two or three years age that he had never written nuything which was net inspired by n desire te change the world. This desire is mani fested in "The Outline of History." It is reullv n book of propaganda for his plan of making ever the world into a human society with the national spirit extinct nnd with a sort of n glorified socialism displacing the present sys tems. The preceding remarks should net deter nnv one from rendlnc the book. It is well worth the timi that It will take. The style is brilliant, rising nt j jes j0 eloquence The arrangement of the material is surprisingly well thought out when one considers the shortness of the time In which the man hed te digest se much. If there arc oc casional evidences of Indigestion they nre te be expected under the circum stances. Hut with all Its faults the book will serve n useful end. Its pur pose is te combat parochial thinking and te brenden the knowledge of this generation en what has happened in the past nnd why it happened. The fiim of tltnnawN nf nernns who will read it there is no doubt thnt it will be widely circulated will lay it down with n better appreciation of the sig-nifiran'-e of nrci-ent world movements thnn they had before thev began It. Specialists in various fields will find it full of flaws, They will dispute his i ifcrcnccs nnd sometimes ehnl'cngc the accuracy of his statements. Hut as the experts de net all agree nmeng them selves no one need he disaulctcd by their disagreement with Mr. Wells. THE OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE WORLD Being n plain history of lif nnd mnn klnd By H. O Wells New Yerk' The Macmlllan Ce n -,0. Twe Beeks by Mabel Ansley Murphy Jlttwtretcd with earefullu selected jjerfralfs Greathearted Women tis&?et '& men who hnd n vision, and In following it made a great mark en thelr day and generation. The author has the rare gift of putting Inte cenclsv attractive, nnd readable form the meat striking and Interesting character istics of each of the fine women she here describes It is u book both te read through and te be turned te again and again for better acquaintance with each of Its heroines. American Leaders &: of men he ha W' made America great Net enlv bnH nnd iiri but parents and teachers will here find In attractUe nnd readable form Just what one would like te knew about tach of these great men who hae helped te make our country what it is today. Euch 1.3.1 neti by innll, S1..13. THE UNION PRESS IRIS Chestnut t.. Phil i., pu ::vH AH The New BOOKS Soen as IsRued Campion & Company 1313 Walnut Street "Amazing and Smashing!" ifraf, De Ci ins CAIUS GRACCHUS By ODIN GREGORY This gorgeous, thrilling, colorful, poetic tragedy of love lust, loyalty and betrayal, la the IweK cultured men and women nrn metnerUInt; by the page. It Is the book ou will carry with you te rend ever and ever again for sheer delight. 12 net At all boetarnrcs HON! HVKKHIIIT. X-w Yerk "Rarely does JT gory perpetrate, u false line, nnu a talse or urulra mntic idea Jr he has the main thine, ich is a Dig Humnn Emotion, BjjNngly presented. The most picturesque of the Gracchi comes through the tragedy as 'Con 'Cen vinclngly as a Shakespearean Char acter " is what the San 'Franciete Bulletin saya of "Calus Gracchus," by OdinGregery. All booksellers. Behl & Uveright, Publishers, New .Yerk. ?2 net. Adv. LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANYS NEW BOOKS JUST PUBLISHED THE BURGESS ANIMAL BOOK FOR CHILDREN By TEIORNTON W. BURGESS This is a companion volume te "The Burgess Bird Boek for Children," which has had such a wonderful reception since its publication a year age. It is written in the same vein, a story book which at the same time is an authori tative handbook en the land .animals of America, se describing them and their habits that -they will be in stantly recognized when seen. Every child and net a few adults will delight in going te school te Old Mether Nature with Peter Rabbit and his friends. With 32 full.paee illustrations In color and 16 full-page illustra tions in black-and-wlrftc from drawings bg touts Agasslx Fuertts. Crown 8ve. Decorated Cleth. $3.00 net. A LIFE OF ARTHUR JAMES BALFOUR By E. T. RAYMOND, author of'Uncensercd Celebrities" A keen nd penetrating biography, from the subtle pen of the author of "Uncentered Celebrities, of one of theie exceptiena' figures in modern history who have always occupied in the public eyea position apart from and superior te the mere record of their achievements. With frontispiece. Crown 8ve. $3.00 net RELIGION AND HEALTH Bg JAMES J. WALSH. M. D author of "ITcalth Through Will Power." The old fashioned Anglo-Saxen words health and holiness in their etymology showed that both come from a common root, "hal" or "heel," and hale and holy meant eri'inally exactly the same thing. Dr. Walsh hat brought ou- the practical elements of this relationship between the conditions new represented by the words in an interesting and non-technical manner. Crown 8ve. JjJ.25 net THE NERVOUS HOUSEWIFE Bg ABRAHAM MYERSON. M. D. This book analyzes the sources of the housewife's difficulties and traces their effect in her aches and pains, her complaints her moods and changed emotions. It aims te discover the housewife te herself, te give er husband understanding and sympathy and te teach the physician and society hew te he'p her. Crown 8ve. Jji.Jj net FOR SALE AT ALL BOOKSELLERS LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Publishers, BOSTON S3S5.Sr5S3S.mSSSJSSS sxsasif. I Teems with Life and Action Gilbert NO DEFENCE 1 9 "The book has dash, lire and romance, dramatic & I situations and incidents, vivid pictures of West f Indian forest and plantation life and an ap- J p pealing love tale." h I The Outlook. I 4 Illustrations. $2.00 NET AT ALL BOOKSTORES J. B. LIPPINCOTT Si&MVsrS!8SSS3VS, 'S Te the Man Who Doesn't Read Nevels THERE are novels and Nevels difficult te pick and cheese, but there's only one mt Oliver CurwetJ only one man capable of writing "The Valley cf Silent Men." It is mere than "just another novel." It is a fine piece of literary craftsmanship it is distinguished it is Curwe)Jt the nature lever, it hn ieu. . If you haven't read a novel in months or years if you've ntvtr read a novel, get a copy of this book TheV alley eSilent Men By James Oliver Curwood Auther of "The River's End" who pictures mystery, moonlight and romance in the land where ' the mountains are nameless and the nvcrs all run Ged knows where." Don't miss the joy of this book just because you 4tn 7 rtad"mveli" Gtt jtur capy lidaj, whertvtr ietki art ttld S2.00 iopelitan Boek (orperation (19 Wtsr feirricTn Strut. New Yerk mmmmmmmsm Just Published Life of Jeseph Hedges Cheate As Gathered Chiefly from His Letters By E. S. Martin That great power of leadership which made him one of our greatest lawyers and diplomatists, that genial and witty personality which endeared him te thousands he never knew, are revealed largely in the words of Jeseph Cheate himself in this notable record of his life. With Portraits, 2 vels. $10.00 f j m CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, Fifth Avenue, at 48th Street, New Yerk I It' :.:xx;smxu:s:KiS3' Twasasjassssrs St. Leuis Star. Parker's COMPANY, PHILA. "SUV. . XKV.S rfwwfTwrtwiwni i m Pfffftrrmfrw a? c m in 'ii wii "xifiiiii nn u ''ln'"" iiiiiniMiiiii.nmiuii.iuj 1 ' R W M 71 fl -M s i i r ;.: h'r vm -i i-1 1l"t 'S": i. .)r ..n.i;i ""-' 1WJi M v- V'A :ftWfrtt t.rtY. ."'' w.. - Aki rr'i5iV;ritf'i i