Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 27, 1920, Night Extra, Page 11, Image 11

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EVENESTG PUBtt'C liBDGERr-jPHItABELPHIA', SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1920
-II'
Many of the books
you enjoy bear the
DORAN mark.
We wilt send you
en request an IL
LUSTRATED CATALOGUE of
some of the very
best books of the
yeer. Ask also for
sample copy of
The BOOKMAN.
mi
Let us new talk of Mary
Roberts Rinehart and her
novels of American lifeef
romances that encompass this day
and generation in a bread sweep of
dramatic presentation. On every hand in
this kaleidoscopic age is the material for a
thousand and one wonderful stories. The
men and women te people them rub elbows with
us everywhere. The jeya and tragedies, brave
struggles and passionate devotions enough plots
te make a hundred talc3 touch our lives for a
moment and are gene. Hew often have you said :
"I would give a let te knew what her whole story is."
Or: "That man is one of the most extraordinary
people I have ever met. I wonder what his htsteiy
is?" If life in this great country wh its multitude
and solitude is a subject you like te find reflected
in the books you read then you have two great
pleasures in store for you in A POOR WISE MAN and
DANGEROUS DAYS by Mary Roberts Rinehart. These
two vigorous novels reflect the highlights and the shadows
of American life as it throbs about us. Of the, former
one critic says: "There is no denying the vigor, the dra
matic intensity and the fine romantic sweep in this novel."
Again: "One can only say it is a book for everyone who
takes pleasure in the reading of representative American
novels." "The book is intensely American and the types
of homes and of people which it presents are such as may
be found in any American city." Of DANGEROUS
DAYS: "One of the truly notable novels of American life.
Charmingly written, moving, poignant, a brilliant study of
married life." Mary Roberts Rinehart has found in the
jife of today a rich store of dramatic material and te her
in a special sense belongs the distinction of having held
up before us a bread and flashing mirror in which one
beholds vividly re-enacted the loves and hates and brav
eries of our time. The dependable enjoyment te be found
in her romances, the fact that in each of these stirring
American stories one enjoys a fine constructive skill and
a human warmth and understanding which make her scenes
and her characters live in the memory these qualities
have justified the fine tribute paid by the New Yerk Sun
te Mrs. Rinehart after reading DANGEROUS DAYS:
"She is the foremost woman novelist of America."
illiUVXliiXi irJd.XJJJt.UXJUJ:dJLXy., wa.xvxw.e..'.) - --. t ,, fi
BIOGRAPHY AS HISTORY REDUCED TO PERSONALTIESj
MARGOT ASQUITH'S
INDISCREET BOOK
The Wekan Noted for Saying and Doing Imprudent Things
Has Justified Her Reputation in Her Autobiography
The first thing te be said of Mrs.
Asqutth's story of her life in that she
has net published her diary of which
Henry James wrote her nftcr being al
lowed te read it. "I take off my hat
te you as te the very Dnlr.ac of diarists.
It Is full of life and force and color,
of a remarkable instinct for getting
close te your people and things and for
squeezing, In the case of the rcselut
portraits of certain of your eminent
characters, especially, trie last drop et
truth and sense out of them." '
Mrs. Asquith, wife of the man who
was ler nine years IJrltish prime min
ister, snys thnt net mere than fifty
pagrfl of her book arc taken from her
diary, She, found the diary tee full of
cabinet secrets te be published. If
the diary justifies the verdict of Henrj
James, it ought te see the light at semt
time In the future when its revelation
can de no harm.
The second thing te be said of the
autobiography Is that it is essentially
(i feminine production. This was te be
expected from the woman who wrote it.
She is woman raised te the nth newer.
net In nny bud sense, but in the sense
thrtt she never seems te have-forgotten '. rcat happiness ; the love of
her sex, nor te have been Ignorant 1 JJren nnil seventh heaven."! She
GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY, Publishers, 244 Madisen Ave., New Yerk
William Lyen Phelps
writes of
LEONARD MERRICK
3 I have read with keen in
terest every one of his
novels thnt you have
published thus far.
J They are all works of dis
tinction, of high literary
art
IThe best thing about
them is that every one is
a geed story well told.
O, They are je well-wrought,
the plot bails it se admirable,
that apart from one's con
stant interest in the story, it
is a pleasure te see such
workmanship. 1 quite under
stand why Darrie calls him
the novelist's novelist.
Seme of his short stories re
semble O. Henry in the ?le ?le
mentef aurpriseend concision.
J tint Rendu
The Heuse of Lynch
Uniform with:
Cenrad in Quest of
His Youth
The Acter-Manager
Cynthia
The Position of Peggy
Harper
The Man Who Understood
Women
The Werldlings
When Leve Flies Out e' the
Window
While Paris Laughed
Each, $1.90
E. P. Dntten & Ce., CS1 5ta At.. N. T.
BLASCO IBANEZ' latest novel is
THE ENEMIES
OF WOMEN
Is there anything stronger than the appeal a woman has for a man 7
Blasco Ibancz finds the self-sufficiency of the male
routed all along the line. In his Alicia he has concentrated
all the resistless fascination of the female of the species as
she was found in the old Europe of the pre-war days. But
hew the lure of sex may in great crises become a regenerator
df character is shown in this new volume, which does for the
war's ideals what "The Four Horsemen of the Apecalyse"
did for war as a conflict of material forces.
BLASCO IBANEZ' translated works include
The Four Horsemen of I The Shadow of the La Bodega
the Apecalyse Cathedral Weman
Mare Nostrum I Bleed and Sand Triumphant
Each, $2.15. By the same author, Mexico in Revolution. $2.00
Obtainable through any bookstore or direct from
E. P. DUTTON & CO. 681 Fifth Avenue, New Yerk
Ishments. When she wns a Rlrl, living;
In UnnMnnil tliAn ...no 1.n...11., m ..n.tnM
111 uvuitttuiii iiiciv n u iiuiiii ti juuuft
man who visited the house who did net
propose te her before lie left nml his
declaration was net without provoca
tion. She exercised her wiles upon
every man whom hIic met, if she thought
it worth while. She unt next te the
famous old Duke of Argyll at dinner
once and the next day he wrote te his
hostess, "Hew dare you nsk me te
meet n siren?" Se, a a matter of ceuisc,
the book is filled with accounts of her
cenqucstH. Kven Gladstone waa moved
te write poetry te her.
Hut there was mere te her than mere
sexunl charm. That was net enough te
held for her the friendship of the most
distinguished men in Knuland for a
long period of years. She is intellectu
ally brilliant, and the holds her own
with the keenest wits. If ,nhc had de
voted herself te literature, an wan bur
gestcd te her in her youth, she would
have achieved fame, that is, if she could
have disciplined herclf te consecutive
and orderly work. Hut the manner nnd
method of her autobiography indicate
thnt she would have had te put herself
through a severe course of training be
fore she could have accomplished this
result. The book Is fragmentary nnd
disconnected discursive, ns the best
conversation is. Perhaps it reveals the
woman's Intellect in its true form, let
she discloses a brilllnney in clmrnctcrl clmrnctcrl
natien which many professional literary
women might envy. Fer example, in
the course of a description of various
women members of Seuls, the famous
Londen association of intellectual men
and women, she speaks of one as a
Iteman coin, of another as an Ital
ian nrlmltlve and of a third as a Scotch
ballad. Of another she nays that "Hht
added te chronic presence of mind un
disguised effrontery." And of Lady
Wcmyss nlie says, "Hhe was the
kind of person I had dreamt of meet
ing and never knew that Ged had
mnde." She writes of Lord Cunens
"enameled self-assurance," and she
says of Arthur Balfour that "He either
finessed with the ethical basis of his
Intellect or had none." Yet both Hal-
four nnd Curien were her friends.
Her skill In saying merciless things
..tuMi tin friends is net accompanied
by resentment when sharp things arc
said of her, for she quotes with appre
ciation Halfeur's remark, when some
.,i,.i Mm If he were coins te
marry her, that he rather thought of
having a career 01 ms uwu.
She summed up her own life better
than any one else could have done when
she wrote of it as: "An unfettered
childhood and triumphant youth; a let
of levemaklng nnu a muc uu,
little fame nnd mere abuse; a real man
con-
early
LIFE AND LETTERS
OF JOSEPH H. CHOATE
Edward S. Martin Has Made
an Interesting Beele Out
of His Material
"Edward 8. Martin, brilllnnt essayist
and commentator en contemporary life,
has assembler! In "Thn T.lfn of JOBCnh
Ifedgcs Oheate" some of the materials
from which a definitive biography may
ultimately be written. Mr. Martin's
book is made up largely from the let
ters of Mr. Cheato nnd from newspaper
cllnnlntrs nrcscrved in a scrnn book. The
whole is arranged chronelogicnlly and
clippings preserved In a scrnp book
whole is arraneed chroneloeicnlly
It gives an excellent picture of the man
CLIMBS AND FALLS
OF A STEEPLEJACK
Vanities, Dreams and Avowals
Mark Jim Huncher's
Reminiscences
.1. --.I a nrnti-illtri memorial FCTViCC,
the consummation that is still defcred.
perhaps te the regret of many en whom
she has used her tongue.
m,. ur u full nf indiscretions and
transgressions of the, rules of taste, but
se has her me own. ."""'", j,
you have when she tells Its story? It
is a remarkable book by one of the most
conspicuous women in Londen society
of the last thirty years.
winner VaSOUITH. An auteblpsrjphy.
Mt5S wlime?. New Terlt: decree 11. Deran
Ce. T.S0.
Humorous Anthology
Carolyn Wells has added "The Heek
of Humorous Verse" te her series of
anthologies. Her definition of humor
is but an incident of he slight moment
thnt only these with a fine sense for
It would be able te find it. On the
ether hnnd she has Included a let of
whimsical verse the humor of which
nppcals te a limited few. But en
the whole the book contains a Reed
representation of all that large class et
English verse which is lightened up by
nn appreciation of the Incongruous.
Among the authors quoted are i rnnkltn
1. Adams nnd William E. Aytoun,
Hlllnlre Hellec and Lord Byren, Phoebe
Pnrv and Lord Chesterfield. Austin
Dobsen and Jehn Drydcn. Jehn Keats
and Charles Lamb. Edmund Lear and
Alexander Tope, Oliver Herferd and
Edwin Arlington noblnsen.
-run hook or la'Moneun vetibb. Cem-
piled by Carelynx Wells. New Dorics
Ueorire It. Deran Ce
TODAY'S MYSTERY STORY
By PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN
and of his many activities, net only ns
a lawver. hut as n imhllc-Hnirltcd citi
zen of New Yerk Interested In all geed
works.
The book contains the story of seme
of the most famous of the cases with
which Mr. Chentc was1 connected, In
cluding the Cesnela libel suit, the Pcty-John-Perter
cese, the Laldlaw suit
against Ilussc 1 Sage, and the argument
en the constitutionality of the Income
tax law. And extracts from many 01
Mr. Chentc s famous occasional ad
dresses are given. Netnble among them
are his address at Harvard university
when Governer Butler attended the
commencement exercises nnd his fnmeus
speech te the Society of the Friendly
Sens of St. Patrick In New Yerk, in
which he recommended thnt all thti
Irishmen In America go back te Ireland.
Lnwvers will be nartlculnrlv Inter
ested In the description of the modest
offices in which the lending attorneys of
New Yerk did business sixty years age,
when Mr. Cheatc first began te prac
tice. Mr. Chente's fipst fee was ?2,
earned by pleading the case of two ' er er
ment farmers who sought damages from
the rnilrnml rnmnnnv becnuse two Car
leads of potatoes had been ruined by
frost. 'When he was taken Inte part
nership with William M. Evarts, with a
gunrantce of 10 per cent of tne prents.
Mr. Evarts told him thnt his share
would be net less than $3000 n year.
At this rate the earnings of Mr. Evarts
and his partners, constituting one of
the most prosperous leirnl firms in the
city, were only about $20,000 a year.
As Mr. Uhentc was nwc in later years
te support the dignity of his ambassa
dorial office In Londen, It Is evident that
he lived te profit by much larger fees
thnn his distinguished early partner ever
received.
The book confirms the general Im
pression nbeut Mr. Cheato thnt he ex
emplified In his own person the ob'
maxim, suavitcr in mede, fertitcr in re,
for there wns never an attorney or n
mihlle BnenVer who could make his
points with greater suavity, and few
who could cling mere tenaciously te the
real points at Issue. But ns a blegwphy
it leaves much te be desired. Mr. Mar
tin admits as much In his Introduction.
Indeed, the book forces one te regret
that Mr. Cheate himself wn net able
te finish the autobiography which he
began in 1014. What he wrote of that
autobiography is given in the first vol
ume. The manner nnd method is
such ns te premise much for what the
man did net have time or strength te
write in the remaining years of his life.
tub urn or jeskph iiodebs cheatk
us aathered chiefly by his letter j ny
Krinard Snndferd Martin. Including his
own story of his bovheod and youth. Tvrj
volumes New Yerk: Charles Scerlbner'a
Sens. 110.
REDESDALE READ
SCENTED GARDEN I
He Tells in His Memoirs oft 1
This and Many Important
Political Experiences
Twe Historical Masterpieces
Belgium
Bu Brand Whitlock
The final, definitive history of
Delglum'fl martyrdom by the only
nmn In position te write It.
Twe vels. 17.10 net
Memoirs "
Empress bv
m . Comte
Eugenie Fleuru
The Intimate life story of one of
the most romantic figures In nil
history.
Twe vels. 1010 pagc$ tl.ZO net
These Are Appleton Heeks
AN ENGLISH WIFE
IN BERLIN
By EVELYN PRINCESS BLUCHER
The Bosten Transcript says: "It is se fnr the most revealing; and
absorbing personal record. These pages are filled with personal touches
that (lash with a vivid and realistic Impression of the experience."
Anether critic says: "Te begin Is te be lured en nnd en in growing
excitement and sympathy . . . one sees the war from an angle
entirely new."
"In solid contribution te the history of the war, the book is scarcely
less impoitent thnn it is interesting."
"It is certainly one of the most fascinating books of the year."
Price, $6.00
This book should be en sale in your bookstore; if net, order from
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 FIFTH AVE., N. Y.
"As a historian nnd a realist, Mr,
Gregery lwuea Utile te be desired.
" The story of the Gracchi,
their devotion te the state and thelr
ultimate betrayal by their own pee-1
pie meKea one of the most dramntle
Peen of Hainan history. Mr.
Oregery has unlrersallsed
It 'there Is lltUe beiitlmr
about the bush almost tee little.
In fact In some of the remnrks of
I.ydla, the courtesan, and of Coins
Vunnlus, the Censul !
est tee true for eemfert.V the
If, Y. Herald said, of-"Calus drac
thus," by Odin dritirery. All book-
sellers, f I. Donl ft Uverlght. New
( vu
L'i
Yprkv-AdTt,
m ;Mit(t 'i,..t,Vaiy. i.' ivfv i-',
The LITERARY DIGEST is telling its million readers that
The Boek of Susan
By LEE WILSON DODD
"is much above the average novel, and the author's insight
into feminine psychology quite remarkable. Moreover, it
has the great quality of interest, and these who read it will
welcome the author's name upon another title-page."
Frem an extended review in The Literary Digest, Nev. 6
$2.00 at any bookstore, or direct from
E. P. DUTTON & CO. 681 Fifth Avenue, New Yerk
THE BOOK OF PHILADELPHIA
By Rebert Shacldcten
Never was thore a atudy of the city at ence se anecdotal, whimsical,
humorous, informing, analytical. The soul of the city is laid open
as you read. This is a fascinating volume by the author of
THE BOOK OF BOSTON
THE BOOK OF NEW YORK
THE BOOK OF CHICAGO
Drawings by Pulllnger and Deyor, and many pho'tegraphs.
Frontispiece In color, Dexcd, Price, $3.50 net.
tIU ' At All lioekaioTf
THE PENN PUBUSHINP COMPANY, 025 FILBERT ST.
f PHILADELPHIA
, .n,.,. .eA'ilA
I
Yesterday's Mystery Solution
THESB were the fourteen points et
.e.w..,Hu,. rr-ndenlnir by which Har
vey Hunt pointed out the murderers of
Mounted ratrelman Kret in the cass
of "Scorched Wires."
First. Kreb's body found at opposite
end of the city from bent probably
taken there In automobile.
Second. Herse found beyond his
heat, returning te It-Encounter took
place beyond beat. Aute naturally
reuld have passed en way south before
Ilyan turnc.l Inte read and met horse.
Third. Deuble wire hlndlnc Kreb y
feet hn.l Insulntlen scorched at one end
nnd copper slightly mcltrd-Uscd te Ig
nite explosive or fulminating enp.
Fourth. Seap en this wire Frem
bends of n snfe-brcaker, who used It te
step up cracks.
Fifth. Skillful bnndairfng Some Seme
'...ilv with medical knowledge.
Sixth. Tern skirt as bandage A
vnman, probably a nurse.
Seventh. Hands bound with Insu
lated wire showing exposure te weather
ut one end. nnd senked with grcnHO in
SII0t3Wlre te rear lamp en automo
bile Net likely te be thought of ex
cunt bv one familiar with the car and
Its equipment, in short ItB regular
Eighth. Wound In chest wns hnnd
aged Krebs didn't die at once. Seme
attempt mnde te save Mm.
Ninth. iicnii eniiuun "' """
eag Captors might be discovered with
i.t.v. -...I nirumtnnces were such that
this would net be suspicious unless the
man could tnlk. Only place In which
'uiured man is expected te be found Is
lu ambulance.
Tenth. Particles of grey wool en
front of uniform body covered with
Mnnkct. Ulnnkcts arc carried In am
bulances. Kleventh. Why would a safe-hrcalt-er
tnke a woman with Min?-l'eii'
because she supplied the Information
regarding the "crib" te be "cracked.
Hn'd leave her out of It If he could.
Twelfth. Where would she get such
Information? Assuming that she wns
a nurse, she might get It from a patient.
Thirteenth. There wns no robbery
reported Hcnee none had yet been
illhcnvcred. The explanation of this
ind nuppert of the preceding nsumptlen
mild he furnished In the case of a pa
'lent still In the hospital, whose house
was closed up while he or she wns there.
Fourteenth. This house should he
oeked for somewhere north of the mur
lered patrolman's heat.
Acting en Harvey Hunt's advice,
Detective Krebs made the rounds of the
hospitals and found a man who lived
uirth of his brother's beat. Investiga
tion proved that his house had been
nbbed. lie had spoken te the nurse of
valuables in his safe ever which he was
Worried. .....
Mounted Patrolman Krebs had seen
Mm ambulance nass toward the north,
"lie actions of tlie driver and the nurse
made hi in suspicious and he followed,
''hey distanced him. Later he enceun-
eiell them coming back nnd stepped
them. The chauffeur shot him. hear
ng discovery through him, and unahlr
te agree en what dlspesnt te make et
lm, the)' trussed him up as described,
nter, when they found he liti'l die'
n wound, they dreve te the ether end
if the city nnd left the body In a let.
The ambulance was supposed te be
'a the repair shop. The chauffeur hnd
'alsely represented It ns being out of
iidcr.
XII
Can you solve this mystery
of-
The Invisible Thief
"It's quite plain that the securities
were taken some time before I came
lack from dinner at 8 o'clock," said
Uehert Faulk. ,
"I want veu tVlt anvbedr who knw
I they were tuckjJrnutr these ether
Under thn gencrnt title, "Steeple
Jflck," James Gibbens Huncker, of
Philadelphia, Paris and the world, as
well as the seven nrts. gives a chronicle,
sometimes nnnnllstlc and sometimes im
pressionistic, of his long career as a
journalist, critic nnd Interpreter. Many
of the chapters appeared in the Phila
delphia Press a couple of years age. at
flip time when Mr. Huneltcr craced It
with his perambulating criticisms of
musical affairs Here, mnKing tne great
anerlflrn nf enmlriff ever from New Yerk
te cover the most Important events of
this city. . .
The writer of this autobiography has
known many men nnd been much te
nnrnn of the'm nnd something te many
of them. Nowadays with the ranks of
criticism swollen by the Menkens,
Nathans, Van Vcchtcns. nnd ether
modernists who arc for anything
provided thnt it is new or strange or
unusual, and especially If it counters en
or contravenes what thev call convene
tlennl mernllty (by which they mean
Puritanism), the fact frequently Is lest
sight of thnt Mr. Huneker, together
with the late Pcrrlval Pellnrd, and even
mere, peslbly, than that coloratura
stylist was the great pioneer in in
troducing te the American public a
large number of creative artists whose
prestige and Influence nre today ac
cented ns tmrt of the possession of con
temporary culture. Mr. Huneker tooted
fifes, banged drums and waved banners
for many of them nt a time when they
were gcnernlly damned either as im
moral or inartistic. That's one great
and fine intellectual capacity of his
catholicity and tolerance. Alse he has
feeling and understanding. In this book
we get at first hand the record of his
long sweeps of the horizon from his
elevated, and in a sense exalted, pest of
a steeplejack. His questlngs and ad
vcnturlngs Inte the world of art make
a fascinating, because sympathetic and
valid, esthetic and emotional auto
biography. The book Is very individual in its
viewpoints nnd its style. Often it is
couched In the staccato and occasion
ally syncopated diction that marks
ether Huneker books. There arc florid
passages and grace notes and Italian
ate decorations In the score verbal
arias of traditional opera type and
there are many very beautiful sections
in which the themes have real substance
nnd are dovclened In n snlrlt that is fit
ting and nuthentic. The Celtic tempera
ment of the man shines out its mngic
of words, Its wistful melancholy, its
wit, and yet there is a countervailing
through what may quite properly be
called the American tempernment, which
knows what o'clock It Is, nnd Is common-sensible
almost te the point of
practicality. It's all very engaging,
this book, with its intriguing blend of
emotionalism and enthusiasm, acuity
and ardency, insight and vision.
ETnErr.njACK. By Jm Olhbenn Hune
ker. New Yerk: Chrlf Scrlbnrr'n Sen.
te
, (fj
;l
The memoirs of the Inte Lord Itcdc!
dale, which attracted wide attention '
hcn they were first published in Eng
land, will 1ms found by American read'
ers te deserve their popularity, nor
thnt the book is nvnllablc for them "'
here.
t n-.l Y1-.1 1-1- -A. 1 f A. th,
jru jiuiiuHuuii; wns nunciicu iu "if,
British foreign office for forty year.
nnd served in Chinn, Japan nnd Russia' f
He had a wide acqualntnncc with pub-" j
lie men at home and In 'the countries')
where he wns en duty. The late Klnf i
Kdward wns nn intimate friend. He i
lived neighbor te the Carlylcs In 1
Chcyne Walk. He knew Disraeli nnd
Sir Ilirhard Ilurten. He was a kins- i
man of the MItferd who wrote the ftt- '
meus history of Greece. And he tr
n mnn of letters, a musician and a
sportsman. Above most men, he had
the experience nnd acquaintance which
mr.ke the ,materlnl for Illuminating
mrmnlra nml hn lin.l tl.A llt..Mf ..1.11..
: ' - "" vm; iiiiihij mm..- ..
Ity te like this material In such a wajr 1
ns te raaKe It interesting. Ills chap
ter en Ilencensfleld gives ns geed a
picture of the mnn ns Is contained In
the six-volume life which has just bea .
completed. Ills estimnte of King Ed
ward is probably much nearer te that
which history will ultimately fix upon
than the estimate by Sir Sydney Lee
in the Dictionary of Nntlonel Biogra
phy. Believers in Article X of the
Lmgue of Nations cevennnt will find
in his story of the diplomatic prelimi
naries te the seizure of Schlrswig Schlrswig
Helstcln from Denmark by Prussia
mero ammunition for their guns than'"
can be found in the same space nnjr.
where else.
He is one of the few men who bad
the privilege of rending Sir Itlchard
Burten's "Scented Garden" in the"!
manuscript which Lady Burten pru
dishly burned in order te prevent Its,
punucatien, ana liurten allowed him I
te read the first chapters of his trana-1"
latlen of the "Arnbinn Nights" whlle
he was at work en that monumental, J
task. The story of all these things ap-
pears In the book.
MKMOlIt!? B Iird Rnltaililr. O. C. V. a.
K. C. I). With two- photogravure, pUlAa
nnd sixteen Illustration, Twe volume.
New Yerk E. P Dutten A Ce. 12.
papers in my desk drawer could have
walked in and taken them ; but what I
can't understand Is hew anybody could
have known they were there."
Wasn't; your office deer locked?"
asked Harvey Hunt, the criminal In
vestigator, "I thought se, Lut it wasn't," ex
plained Faulk. "Miss Dougherty must
have thrown the latch en before she left
and thnt was before I even knew I
wns going te get the securities, mind
and when I went out I must have
thrown the latch off, thinking I wns
throwing it en. I remember Mint I did
net bother te try the knob when I
closed the deer behind me."
Harvey Hunt glanced out the office
window. There wns only a blnnk wall
en the ether side of the light well.
"Are you sure nobody was In here
after you brought back the securities?"
he questioned.
"Net a soul except Jim Travis."
Faulk replied. "He might have seen
the papers as I slipped them Inte the
drawer, hut why. It's simply ridicu
lous te suspect a mnn like Travis."
"Nevertheless," said Hunt, "either
Travis or some ether person who knew
Just where they were took them. Let me
examine that desk."
Harvey Hunt seated himself in
Faulk's chair nnd let his eyes ream ever
the expanse of glass -covered iial- ('
fully removing the few papers, he took
a little box of ponder from his peeket
and dusted it ever the glass surface
evenly.
Then he blew nwnv nil thi nmr,w
thnt did net ndhere te the surface.
"Helle," he exclaimed. "This Is
mere premising thnn I thought. I was
afraid there would be se munv finger
prints en this glass fhat their very
number would defeat us. Hut this
smear en the corner here leeks mere
premising than a flimer print. Your
thief must have rested his hand here."
Hunt bent ever the desk, his keen
eves searching the falntlv-indicated
lines where something, probably n
cloth, hnd been rubbed ever the rIess.
Suddenly he leaned forward until his
nose almost touched It, nnd sniffed.
When he strnightened up there wn. sat
isfaction in l.is glnuce, and something
of amuscmint.
"As a matter of fact you dhl have
another visitor besides Trails," he
saw, even u you turn t remember him
a mnn who comes in here te see veu
every day, I Imagine, though I can't
exactly Dinme )ou ter ovrleoklng him
He'll probably be in this afternoon
again. I'll come back nnd wait for
Mm with you about il e clock. It wns
.1 o'clock you came in yesterday with
the securities, wasn't It?"
"Yes but but " spluttered
Faulk.
"Ne," Hunt laughed, "I won't ex
plain new I'd rnther save It for a
surprise. It'll be a surprise te both of
you."
Can em tell what odor it tea) en the
ileik that told llarvev Hunt xrhat kind
of n t'fjfifer Faulk had, a viiiter he
couldn't remember t
The imiiuer trill appear Monday.
GRIM AND GROTESQUE
Ted Rabbins' Stories Are in
tlie Style of Edgar
Allan Pqe
When VOU rend the first sentence nf
"Silent. White and Beautiful" you
think you are going te like the hook
Immensely. It Is: "Tomorrow at this
timn I shall be dead." But the freight
ed premise of the phrase Is hardly
borne out by a cnreful reading of the
subsequent pages. There veu will find
gretcsquerle. horror. vividness of
phraseolegical coloring, neat plotting,
but no chnrm of style.
Considering the preface, by Rebert
II. Davis, this is mere thnn a disap
pointment, since Mr. Davis, himself a
remarkable journalist, thinks thnt Mr
Bobbins has "developed an entirelv
new method of treatment." Can it he
that Mr. Davis is unnwnre of a man
named Poe, and can It be that he has
never rend "The Tell-Tale Heart" or
"The H!ack Cat"? Plainly. Mr. Boh Beh
bins has rend them, though his fingering
of theme is hardly se delicate ns Pee's,
nor his word-building e felicitous. But
he Is nn admirable example of the
journalist turned author, and he hns
the nuthentic grip en the short-ster
form.
Of the three nnrrntives in the book.
"Silent. White nnd Beautiful" stands
out ns most grnphlc in sterv anil most
concise in treatment. "Who Wants
a Green Ilettle?" hns Stevensenlan dia
lect nnd imaginative power. "Fer Art's
Sake" is the best of the let. since in
it the writer unfurls his lasting nffec nffec
tien for the supremely morbid. It Is
written with less "swank," tee. Mr
Bobbins mny be recommended te the
excitement hunters, but as a craftsman
he Is hardly what his prifater claims
for him.
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