".WW?1 i&$r"'m$i&!& n"" ' U EVENING TUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1921 VrfsfippwsM '1 Wit tuf -aafi IV !fc ,-SWJ H5 !3 n I i 5 P J w ! it: a s yoi $2! if di&y in "' ivfl imf 'ii ril Vi .'to-fto 'l ' Sm R. fit Jr PLAYGOER'S WEEKLY TALK BEN WELCH, tho well-known come dian, ana one of the featured play, cfb i. , the musical co.iiriiy . '- Rlnit'Tt Monilny " nlng, went blind recently while "Jim Nile" wa plnvlne In WmhlnRio" ' ha Insisted on continuing ttf plav his part ever since, however, and .will ap pear In Philadelphia. Mr. Welch man ages to do so without Klvlng any Indica tion of his amictlon. He lost his sight When he left the train upon his arrival In Washington, and eye specialists tell aim mat ins optic nerves are uenu. A apccliii rug has been provided foi him to work upon, tho edgen of which warn him when he approaches too close to the ootllghts. He In led from his Cresting room to the stage, hut from th time li linvp tlin wines needs no as- 'alstance. except that of tho voices of tnose airout him on mo singe. .MJwum that he did In the show previously has had to he omitted, and ho nines. JQkes and dances Just as ho always has done, without Its being In tho least apparent that he cannot see TpUANCES STAlllt told the Playgoer she Is frequently naked what the In fluence upon her n.ituro mnv be of mr various parts she nssumrs In the plays In which Mr Jlelnsco has presented her Miss Starr's answer Is that It has been RUKgested that a woman of the singe endanfiers her moral nature by Inter preting moments of moral crisis In woirvn of tho singe There, nre alwnvs questionable women, glorified In somo artistic pulse, but no matter how becom ing this mnsquerade, the woman of this type Is rnther an ugly, useless, undesir able association. An actress can depict with perfect un derstanding n woman's ch-vrneer w'th out being Impressed favorably by it herself. Miss Starr holds. She mav glvt a verv fine performance of n most un desirable character, but that does not mean that she herself Is In sympathv with It. Of course there enters In'o uch performances the quaMtv of abandon which Is so Important In drama Hut It Is an abandon always kept In perfect control, Just as the palmer controls the brush wltn which he colors his sympathy for the scene ho Is paint In?. Acting Is something like thnt. There Is a subconscious duality of percep tion, for while the actress Is playlnc a part, she Is never unconscious of the tact that she Is acting There Is not uch a thing n complete abandonment of one's mind, one's soul, one's morals. In tho theatre. The women of the theatre, like other women of the world, have their own moral responsibilities, their own obligations, their private standards, which thy do not surrender because they are tmporarlly cast In tormy epiotlonal roles. There Is, o course. In acting, a great deal to be said about personality M.uu of our favorite actors and actresses have enjoyed their fame through thin appeal. fTSTIF! f nt tlnia tHrantlnn nntl tiro. ! .. .... . . ..... ... duclng Is one that enn only be re quired throuch leng years of practinil experience The majority of atage direc tors are not actors, but they have the gtft of visualizing a scene and can also show tho actor or actress how to rend a line bo as to give the audience the Impression desired One of the mont Important factors In stage direction Is to nrrange the movement of the play ers so that their arlous exits and en trances shall be natural and. aboe all to put Into a play those various bits f "business" that give It a human touch. There are a few actors, however, who have this ability One who Is really noted as a stage director, as well as a. leading comedy star. Is William Col lier. Not only can he dlr-ct but he Is elso a playwright. Tnere have been few plays In which Mr Collier has starred that his creative work has not played an Important part. In "The Hottentot" the star has In troduced quantities of new material which arouse roars of laughter. Mr. ' Collier personally staged and directed I "The Hottentot" as co-author of the j piece with Victor Mapes, During the luur wecKS 01 rcnearafun. ti. rcwiuif several of the scenes, studied his own role and worked out the situations for the. other players. TN VERY few enterprises does the ele- ment of chance prevail to such ex tent as In the vocation of theatrical mnnager or play-producer. On the other hand the emoluments from a really successful play arc so great that managers never lose ambi tion to play for the winning stnke. An Instance In polnl Is the remarkable success of "Krminle." believed bv Ju kobowskl. the composer, and Harrv Paulton. the librettist, to be a posltlvn revelation Willie Kdouln nml Frank Sanger purchased the American rlghu . after the first London performance, ami Ttudolph Aronson director of the Vow Tork Casino, ventured nil he possetsed en Its production The hit It made Is a matter of hlstor Profits ran Into fie millions. The running expenses of the Cilnn were considered heavv for thn davs and a weekly average of I4S00 was neceesarv to mnke ends meet, while at least 17000 weekly had to be reached to assure a substantial profit all around. An Inspection of the figures of todav affords a startling contrast. Oeorge C. Tyler. In association with William Far num, the screen star, haa spent, or rather Invested, approximately JSO.nOO In the current production of "Brmlnle," as against a probable $::.5fm for Its first showing The salary and expense sheet of the present production headed by Francis Wilson and Tie. Wolf Hop per, totals n trlllo over J12.Eno weekly. 3o taking all th" figures of today Into consideration It is necessarv to convert the H8IW of the first "Krminle" into some M 8.000 a week for the preient "Ermlnlc," If a Just and due profit Is to be made niA.NCY an exceedingly attractive young wom.-vi arraying herself in super-modish gowns every night, and then posing as a "horrible example ' The "horrible example" In question Is Miss Teresa Maxwell Ponover. who plays the part of a very much sonhls tlcated mother-in-law In 2Slmhallt musical comedy, "Honevdew," a rr' that culls for her to net a tlpiv sren whlch sb enacts w'th so much clever neis that she conveys the pplrlf- of "Illumination" with naturalness, minus offenslveness. Realism In her acting Is made nil the more rea, in the corktalls provided bv .Toe Weber for her They look so much like the real article thev seem to have been hut recently caressed bv the patron saint of gin, who not bo very lone ago stood behind a shrlno of shining ma hogany attired In the most Immaculate of wnlte coatK With all this atmosphere attending the scene It reerns almost like taking 'In romance out of life to be told by Mls.s Conover that what she really drinks is nothing more than cold tea "I tried almost everything." says Miss Conover, 'everything from ginger ale. which made me 111. to sarHaarllla which too much resembled grenadine to sug gest a martini Then finally came the nappy compromise 'f cold tea. Genius and nutnorv of English tustoms fur nished the clue " MEW brides of the spring season, hero ' Is a wedding veil hint for you hee that your bridal drapertes ale arranged as Mis Cowl wears hers In "Smllln' Through" at the Lyric, and If you are us pleuslng to the eye as this brldo of the sixties you'll have nothing to regret modlshly Wide widths of tullo are placed over Miss Cowl's head, perfectly smooth In cap style, then tho fabric Is divided in ho canter to form two side drapes fall ing to the frock hem, which In this In stance Just sweeps the ground. Tho crowning glory If. a simple wreath of orange blosKnns that tits around the head, falling low at the napo of tho neck. As Miss Cowl describes it. "I carry n nlll little bunch of (lowers wrapped up in a lace-trimmed paper napkin " This absurd nosegay Is at tached to a wide piece of white satin ribbon which hangs from n wrist brace'et. Nothing could be lovelier or more alluring than this wedding gown nt the daj gome by Walt until von see Jane Cowl In It If jou already haven't, and If you nre tho veriest con firmed bachelor-ma Id jou'll change vour Wind Immediately and bay "yes" to him AFTER Beverul years of being a fea- tured dancer In musical comedy, Kitty Doner, for several reasons one of the principal supports of Al JoUon In the Winter Garden shows. Is to niako her Initial bow In vaudeville In her own production CAlled "A League of Daiice Hteps.'' Sho Is supported by her sister Rose, and her brother, Ted Doner, tho Guide to Photoplays for the Week to Come New rimtoplays STANLEY "Earthbound" took a year to make, but It In declared to be Gold wyn's best picture. It shows how Basil King's powerful story of the unseen, spiritual world and tho conflict of earthly things can ba depleted In an understandable ' manner. T Hayes Hunter directed It The principal creeu or tne tnree men invoiveu in "No God. No Sin, No Aftr Life." Mahlon Hamilton, Wundhnm Stand ing, Lnwson Hull. Naomi Chllders. Flora Ilovaltes. lllllle Cotton. Alec R. 1'rancls, and Csar. a dog, aro In the cast. Striking examples of double exposure photography Is disclosed. Henri Scott Is tho soloist for the wetlt. STANTON "The Passionate Pilgrim" was directed by Robert O. Vlgnola from a story by Samuel Merwln, Matt Monro and Ruby ileRemer have the principal roles In a talo dealing with n young author, who to protect his motlicr-ln-law from tho consequences of an Involuntary crime Is himself sent to prison for a term. I'ALACi: "Nomad.t of tho North" Is a James Oliver Curwood story of that far away region where the people are rugged and the country wild. Lon Chnnc, recalled for his woik ns the legless man In "Tho Penalty," Is In tho oast, as Is Lewis Stone, as an of ficer of tho law ARCUHA "Beau Revel" Is by Louis Joseph Vance and tells of tho ultra fashionable set In Now York and one of its members who delights In stealing the love of beautiful women Florence Vldor, Lloyd Hughes. Kath leen Klryham and Lewis Stone ure In the cast. John O. Wrny directed. ItKGKNT "Are All Men AllkeT" shows May Allison finding that every man wants to spoon with her. Arthur Stringer wrote the story which A. P. Younger adapted. In the support nre Wallace MacDonald. John Elliott and Ruth Stouehousc. P. E. Rosen di rected. CAJitT0T' "Thc Stealers" Is a William Christy Cnbanne production with I''na nnlU", color titles. William H Tookcr. Ruth Dwyer and Norma Shearer are in the oast. VICTORIA "Thc Prlco of Rcdemp Hon has Ilert Lytell in the adapta tion of I A. R. Wyle's story. "The Temple of Dawn." presenting a pic ture of llfo nmong the villages and army garrison of India. Thc star plays four parts. D. Fltrgerald di rected. Itevlcwcd Heretofore COLONIAL Chaplin. In "The Kid." first half of tho week. Norma Tal madge In "Thc Hranded Woman," last half. MARKET ST. ChapUn, In "The Kid." first half. Narlmova, In "Ullllons." last half. .17.,I.V.l "Thc Rookie's Return." with Douglas MacLean. first half. Lon Chaney, In "Tho Penally," last nair li'l'J;5l'ibJX!'!Z'r- GREAT NORTtl. &&' !iT,nAD.'"ut R'YOLt "The Kid.' with Chnrles Chaplin. CEn'i'L -"Midsummer Madness" Mon. and Tues. : Fatty Arbucklc, "The Life of the Party." Wed. and Thurs : Douglas MacLean, in "The Rookie's Return." Prl. and Snt. LKA HER "Heliotrope" f)rt half. "Con- -nr'firV'irSil"'t "LW? Youth" last half. LOUlihUM "Midsummer Madness" .Mon and Tues "Red Foam" Wed.; Idols of Clay" Thurs. and PH.; Con way Tcarle, In "Marooned Hearts," BJiH?;'r -2"'!. LOCUST "Forbidden t rult." a Cecil De Mlllc play. latter being well known to the devotees nL.vnu.t,cv"l-' , .T1,e-V Wl,l orrcr thdr new act at Keith's next week. i. i. 11lcredi'y hns anything to do with n-r. t?nl" na,ural expect tho Do a?,H ,ue, c:tPert dancers. Their parents ana their grandpa rents were also ?! icf"',nnil her mother was at tho very top in her day, Just as Kitty Is at 'fnSfu"1-! Mot onc member of tho Doner m iln ,hrr.e Kenerallono has followed any other calling. Kitty Doner la really a genius of terpslchore. Not only does she originate ideas In dancing, but executes them. "A League of Danco Steps" Is a distinctive novelty that Is a creation of her own brain. QUY BATES POST tho man and tho ..T.-.arllst,'7T,ar.e dosely associated, nnd If vnio s ho Is a guide to character and career, wo may believe that on the stage as the artist Mr. Post reflects the love of the man for his art. "The art of pleasing people." Mr. Post declares. "Is an art sufficient to tempt any man s ambition. It Is big enough w .. V.U1U1 wane wiinoui nnv tnought of doing more than brightening the playtime of the world. It Is a large con tract to fill and It cannot be done bv one man alone It must be accomplished by unity Team work ' everybody con nected with nn organization whether It he u theatrical company, a bank, a newspaper, anything everybody work ing together Is what wins." TVTR POST'S success at the Walnut T'5!,!!,,n, ,,n,s American star as one of Philadelphia's favorites. It H to be lioped his next American tour will be jo arranged that his appearance will not be delayed In this city until the fifth year of his new play whatever It may be whether "Hnmlet" or a play fash ioned along more modern lines. Mr Post has several plays under consldera tlon. and three welVknown American authors havo read him their latest efforts during the last week. It la al most settled In Mr Post's mind to give Hamlet a "ti y" before closing definite contracts for his next production. GOLDWYN'S CAUTION Warns LetjUlators Against Endan gering U. S. Movie Lead Samuel Ooldwyn, president of the rioldwvn Pictures Corporation, sailed for Europe on til Aqult.inla, last week. Mr Goldwyn's parting message was a warning to American legislators not to sacrifice the leadership of tho United States In photoplay production. "America has gained a world's mar ket in motion pictures and. If wo are not careful wo will lose It in a short time " he said "The proposed legislative limitations on the motion pictures will have a serious financial effect on this big In dustry which, solely through the aggres nlvenees of American producers, has es tablished the United States ns the load trig nation In this new art "Foreiffii film producern are Increas ing their output with startling rapidity ' (Tlijtetionable themes In motion pie. lures are bound to be eliminated !-alH lousness Is doomed not only be. eau.se it is not artistic, but because It Is not profitable " Mr Ooldwyn will visit England and continental Europa to study cinema con ditions Ruth Draper In Character Sketches r,unWV , "J, Uuth draper's recitals In Philadelphia are successfully In the background Mio romplctely captivated her audlenoes on both of her uppiar unces in the Ai ademv foyer Alone on a stage (ontalnlng only a screen and a chair, rolylng upon no disguises of any kind, her power of suggestion was so Kiem mai aii i-onjureu uerore her au dience whole retinues of creatures of her own vivid Imagination Mists Draper makes her last appear ance In Philadelphia on Wednesday at 3 o'clock, when she presents tho follow ing program. A Hoard of Managers' Meeting A Dalmatian Peasant In the Hall of a Hospital. An Advanced Course Introduction An English House Party n the Porch in a Maine Coat Town A Scotch Immigrant. Folles Bertjere Favorite In "Whirl" Mile miii Codee, comedienne In the "Folles IWgere," Paris, arrived In New York last week aboard the Rochambeau She will play the leading feminine role In ttie century Promenade production. 'The Whirl of the Town." a new revue which will open Its Philadelphia engage ment at tho Chestnut, Monday evening, Miireh LI Mile Codeo Is a Jleljrian bv hlrth, and has made a great success In continental muhic halls Elaine Hammersteln's Latest "Handcuffs and Kisses ' will he the title of the noxt picture starring Elaine Hammersleln. Miss Hammerstoln ex pects to begin active work on the pro. ductlon the latter part of the month. The story was written by Thomas Edge low and pluturlzed by fowls Allen Browne.lGeorgo Archaltibaud will direct Uio proarucuuu. THE CRITIC TALKS TO MUSIC LOVERS "MOTHINO has more amply vindicated ' the wisdom and foresight of the directors of tho Philadelphia Orchestra Association In raising Its endowment fund while the "getting" vvm not only good but possible than tho position In which some or tho unendowed orchestras of the country now find themselves. Thc forced amalgamation of the National Symphony (Dodansky) Orchestra with tho Philharmonic In New York Is a caso In point, whllo from both Seattle and St. Louis come talcs of such finan cial distress as mnke subsequent sea sons uncertntn When It was proposed In Philadelphia to raise tho endowment fund so soon after tho war and at a time when "drives" nnd "campaigns" were as plen tiful as berries In July, there was con siderable doubt, both silent nnd ex pressed, In many quarters as to whether It would not be better to wait a while until things became more settled. It Is fortunate for tho fund that this view did not prevail. Hut whoever It was decided to hold the endowment fund drive while the people through several years of con stant practice had become proficient In thc nrt of digging down Into their pockets and coming across with almost the whole contents thereof, acted wisely or fortunately, as the case may be, be cause It Is practically certain that If tho movement had been put off a year the fund would not hav been raised without n far greater effort IN THE case of tho amalgamation rf 4t,. VThllH.I .. T1llll. .. I.. ft ii,7 nnuuiini llliu x lllllllll IIIUHlii Orchestras both thc management of the former and tho musicians themselves were the cause. In Its eagerness to no qulro n fine organization Immediately the National whooped salaries up to a point where a huge deficit was certain beforo tho orchestra hod held even a single rehearsal. Not that a tlno musician Is not worth all that can bo reasonably paid him. for the orchestra player has only about thirty weeks out of the fifty-two In which he receives pay, but the salary limit after all must be Judged by the nblllty of thc organisation to keep within a reasonable deficit. The bnlt was most tempting, and many fine orchestral players swallowed It eagerly, among them several from the Philadelphia Orchestra. What will be come of these players under the amaV gamatlon Is not yet known, but If thc best players of both organizations are to bo retained It Is safe to say httt most of tho ex-Phll.idclphla Orchestra men will be among them. In anv case, with the formation of the National Symphony It was ccrUIn that one of tho permanent New York orchestras must go under. Including the eight concerts of the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Boston Orchcstru series, pecas onal concerts by tho Detroit. Cleveland. Chicago, La Scala and other organizations. New York had an aver age of about one orchestra concert a day. including Sundays, during thc en tiro season, which was manifestly more than the traffic would bear. The amal gamation was probably the best solu t on certainly the best as far na the Philharmonic was concerned, us It gives that organization an exceptional oppor- JUlly t0. !!lcct u "ally ,rroat orchestra personnel for next season. PHILADELPHIA has eomo unlquo iiiiuiui ursniiiianonj, nut few of which stand practically alone In the country In Its own field as doeH tho I'alestrlna Choir which Is under the directorship of Nicola A Montanl. Un like the Muslcnl Art Society of New lork. for Instance, which was a profes s onal chorus In the sense that Its singers received compensation, the Palestrlna Choir Is the only community chorus In America which devotes Itself to the study and pcr'ormanco of thc highest typo of unaccompanied church music, such as the works of Palestrlna. v Ittorla, dl Lasso and others. For about hevon years tho members of tho I'alestrlna Choir, which was formed by the present conductor, have faithfully attended rehearsals In alt kinds of weather, and have been at tracted thereto solely by tho power of this, one of tho purest styles of vocal music. Entirely apart from the artistic alms of the Paletitrlna Choir, one of tho objects of tho members and the conduc tor Is to give Philadelphia an organiza tion as distinctive and as unique au that which Bethlehem possesses In Its famous Bach Choir. As In the case of the Bach Choir, the conductor of tho Palestrlna Choir has made a life-long study of his subject, und today Mr, Montanl stands aa u recognized authority In the field of Cath olio sacred music, especially that of the earliest composers, which for popular purposes haa now largely gone out of style. TvTEVERTHELKSS. this ancient music much of It composed In a day when a display of contrapuntal skill was one of the first requirements of composition, still has enormous vitality and power If rendered correctly. Like the tnuslc of Bach, and for that matter all sacred munle ' thc highest type. It does not nccommodnto ItBelf readily to thc atmos phere of tho concert hall. It requires the physical surroundings of the church, as well as an attitude of devotion on the part of both the members of thc choir and tho conductor. As a general rule, tho sacred muzlc which sounds well In tho concert hall loses, or at least does not gain In power, when sung In a church. This ancient music goes almost to the verv heg'nnlngs of composition a nav when music was tho handmaiden of the church and the greatest compuneis wiole almost exclusively In tho sacred forma Yet, notwithstanding Its severity of out line and the strictness of the counter point, there is still considerable emo tional feeling In It, although in that day emotionalism was not considered a necebsarv part of either church or secular music. Tho Palestrlna Choir does not devote Itself exclusively to church music nnd on every program appear some of the secular motets of the old church com posers, which, however, are In tho same general style as the sacred music. While the absence, n a modern sense, of tho emotion to which wo have become aecuKtomed In music makes some of It sound "old fashioned" tho dignity of the compositions makes hem well worth reviving and hearing. rpHE composition of great religious works seems to have become u "lost art" among tho beat comjiosers of later yenrs Formerly all composers wrote voluminously for the church, tho Prot estHnts composing oratorios and the Catholics writing masses or other forms of their own church service. But this seems to have changed, and of tho com posers born during the last seventy five years U Is difficult to find many really fine religious works. Probably the attitude of the public Is more largely responsible for this than the feelings of tho composers. With the demand for shorter, lighter and more emotional church music, the writing of works In tho larger forms has naturally become less, and the oratorio has been succeeded largely by the religious can tata, not. however, the cantata In the manner of Bach. Modern insistence upon exactitude of performance may also have had some thing to do with the lessened number of great religious works. With the pass ing of the a cappella form of religious music, and beginning about the time of llach, tho orchestra was used In vir tually all tho larger compositions. This Is or course, an Impossibility for churcn uses, except on exceptional occasions, and the organ, an undeniably great In strument, Is by no means an adequate substitute for tho orchestra. And now adays, when a. work Is written for orchestral nccompanlment, the concert goers want to hoar it so played. Mask and Wig Club Production "Somebody's Lion" Is the title of the thirtv -third annual production by the Mask and Wig Club, of tho University of Pennsylvania, which will, as usual, be at the Forrest Theatre for Easter week. Rehearsals ure going along swimmingly. "Somebody's Lion" has been written by E M Ijvvtno. with lyrics and music by Charles Gilpin. The piece Is described ns a "nautical tall In two knots " The first sceno la laid on hoard tho private yaeht Fishtails, on a cruise around the world, and the second act soene Is pic tured on n beach of an Isolated Island in the South Seas. All the muflc ban been written for this v ear's production by Charles Gilpin, and It is said to be In his most melodic vein. Among the many numbers ure song and chorus, "Oh, Iand You Look Good to Me." A rattling song "I'm a Whaler of a Sailor." "Hand Andy" and a duet. "Zula, My Little Zula " Tho production will bo staged and illreCtfd by Charles 8. Morgan. Jr.. who ilias rlei-'-.d nd Is xeheorulng tnauy novf 1 numbtra, , . . . THE VERITABLE QUEEN OF ENGLISH FICTION Soine Personal Aspects of Jane Austen Set Forth With a Little Too Much Zeal by a Kinstvoman By FELIX K. fiCIIHLUNa Professor of Kntllnh Literature In rpHIH is n somewhat nnlvc little book After, the many works which the fnmc of .Tnne Austen lias attracted, books of criticism and appraisement, of collection nml biography, nftcr thc publication long since of unfinished frognynts, some of them never Intended by the author for publication, and of such letters as a kind of prudery on the part of her sister, Cassandra, in par ticular, lind not succeeded In destroy ing, we may certainly feci that vvc have harvested nnd gleaned up nil on this subject that there wn left for uh to know. And it can ns certainly not be sold tliat Miss Austen-Leigh's volume hns moro than n few corroboratory crumbs to offer. And yet if thc render happens to be of that choice and de voted brother nnd sisterhood who feel, perhaps rather than know, that Jane Austen Is, without question and com pare, the veritable queen of English fic tion, It is a Joy to finger over these little personal things that once were hers, be they no more than ft reproduc tion of thc pleaslug and well-known Zoffny portrait, penciled drawings of Stcventon nnd Chswton. "accounts" from her father's Parish Register in her exquisite handwriting and chnrodPB we should call them riddles with which these cheerful, gentlefolk of a simpler age beguiled the' tedium of the long winter evenings when ways were foul and social life beyond tho family circle impossible. IT IS fair to say, however, that Miss Austen-Leigh 1ms been urged to thc pleasant task of compiling her little book, less to preserve such mementoes as these than to protest against n tendency in critical writings about her great kinswoman of lato to appraise Jane Austen somewhat narrowly and in the direction of negation rather than bv wny of a reconstruction of what we have. Miss Austen-Leigh repel" the accusation that Jane Austen did not love children, I should say, both suc cessfully and conclusively. Aud taking n position, which I am sure most lovers of thc delicate and consummate art of Jnne Austen would think altogether unnecessary. Miss Austen-Leigh nrgues in onc of her chapters for a certain serious intent which she finds In Jane h emphasis of repentance nB a motive in most of her stories. The mornllty of thc arts Is always n dnngerons sub ject ; and there is a type of mind which remains unsatisfied with the play which does not preach and the novel which does not moralize. Jane Austen wrote no such improving books for thc young nml others ns did her distinguished nnd forgotten contemporary, Hnnnnh Moore, for eznmplc. Hut does Jnne Austen need justification along these lines, with her eye for truth, her power of anal ysis in a flash, her delicious wit and her nound heart? When Miss Austen Leigh. In n chapter sngely ifntlol "Morality." quotes Jane ns writing I urn very fond of Sherlock'B Sermons nnd prefer them to almost ony, vvc wonder if sho mentally added scr mons." Jane was quite capable of such on equivoke. The salt of ft rcadj, wholesome wit was in her. IT SKKMS that Jane Austen ban been the subject of late of n dissertation. "Sa vie et son ocuvre" have been scru tinized "par Leonle Vlllard. Agrcgec do I'L'niversitc. Doctour cs lcttrcs, und the doctorate has been bestowed by the Sorbnrnne. One wonders how Jane would hnvc received the news of so unheard-of a wonder. A woman doctor, too. at that. Now n doctor h disser tation is ft grave matter, to the doc teur" nnd to others and the reac tion" as the psychologists have taught us to say thc reaction of a young French woman studying nt Paris iu lDir. on thc novels of a young English woman of a century ngo, whose subject was her own contemporary life in what is. after all, almost wholly the provinces, is decidedly intcrestiug. I have unhup pi!y not been able to see Mile, Villard a thesis; but. of course, as Miss Austen Leigh Informs us. Mile, thinks "Mees Austen" of a hundred years ago narrow, parochial and wanting in religious feel ing. She cites "authorities" to show thnt the Church of England was. iu Miss Austen's day, "destitute of re ligious fervor," "a thing mode up of traditional rites." wherefore no one of Miss AuHten's novels deals with thc sal vation of a soul, wo may Mippose; nnd many other important tilings unknown to Jnne nnd to her world arc wanting. It is a prevalent doctorinl temptation to judge a thing meticulously for what It is not and never could be; and this method of judgment is not confined to the doctorial thesis. Jane Austen did not travel; she ought to have traveled. She did not write romances, "historical romances on the house of Coburg. as suggested by the Prince llegcnt 8 li brarian, ur, CiarKP; sue iiuim-uic .". sense not to. Hut people who write hi-torical romances arc supposed to have a wide range of Ideas. Jane Austen was not lcarnrd. nor a linguist, nor scien tific, nor n poetess; ergo, she must hnve been narrow. And valiant Miss Austen Leigh rushes to the defense to prove that her Jane knew a little French and a little less Italian, that she painted prettily, was n skillful nccdlewomnn. wrote charades, was "thc best musician in an unmusical family" nnd had really traveled ns far us Until and Southamp ton and even London. GENIUS is not to be measured by these trivial standards. Let us be frank about it. The estimable provin cial life of tho gentry of the Lngland of Jane Austen was narrow and re stricted. Intellectually, socially and spiritually. And Jnne really "knew" no other life than that In which she had been reared. She shared in Its limitations. I am willing to arept the omewhat splenetic report of Miss Mlt ford's mother that Jane was at one time "tho prettiest, silliest, most affected, hushand-litintlng butterfly she ever re membered." remembering that the ob server was herself young, perhaps not so pretty nnd not yet married. And I will also accept the very different re mark of another young woman that "si lent observation from such an observer (us Mibs Aubten) wns rather-formidable." This was, of course, much later. Allowing for thc reticence in woman, which was then regarded oh an eighth to tho seven cardinal virtues, it is Im possible to believe, that so rendy nnd witty n writer was not rendy and witty in conversation, though Jano appears to have been woman of kind heart and an admirable self-control. She was doubtless very variously estimated by those who knew her, and the gamut of her rich personality ranged all the way from a love of company and dancing to thn deepest and tendcrest insight Into character nnd emotion. The candor of Jane Austen's young pooplo In their love of pleasure Is delightful. Viss Klrklsnd has recently written n witty essay on "Victuals and Drink In .lane Austen." I hopo that she may be prevailed on to write another on "Hus band Hunting in Jane Austen." Why not accent thc world as It is? It is be- cause Jane Austen does precisely this, the UntterMIr ef rennnjlrnnl because she is interested in the trifles that go to make up daily life nnd char acter, because sho is absolutely clear sighted and n great artist In her power to transfer nil this to her pages, that she Is the Inimitable novelist that she Is. The measure of art is ever qualita tive. Leave quantitative analysis to science. The subject Is nothing; It Is the degree to which tho thing under taken approaches perfection that counts. With the approach to perfection as our criterion, the degree of achievement in tire thing undertaken; Jane Austen stands almost alone. TKnBONAti A8J'ECT8 OF" JANE AU8TEJJ. Uy Murv A. Auatcn-Ltlrh. New York: 12, I. Dutton t Co. 14. Red Cross Work Fisher Ames, Jr., who was nn notlvo participant In thc work, writes of "American Ited Cross Work Among the French People." The scope of the book is the relief work among the civilian population, the extent and variety of which Is hardly appreciated nmong the American people who financed the vast enterprise. Mr. Ames undertakes to show the fruitful way in which the dollars of America were spent. His volume con cludes the series of books Issued under Iltd Cross nuspiees to give the Amer ican people an adequate idea of thc tremendous activities of the lied Cross organization and an account of a stew ardship worthily carried out. AMERICAN P.ED cnOSB WOnK AMONG the Fnxvcii rEorr,s. nthr Ara., Jr. New York: The Mscmlllsn Co, THE NEW BOOKS Fiction WOODEN CnOSBEH. Dy ItoltnA Dorseles. New York: O. P. Putnam's Hont. CALL Mil. FOIVrUNE. Dy II. C. Dallty. New York: 13. I. Dutton & Co. The striking story of a frte Unce rival to Bcotlsnd Yard. HELL'S HATCHES. Jly L. It. Frmn. New York: Dodd. Mct A Co. A novel Vif far-awty Itlands In the Pacific!. rth In mlvAnturo unit chsrfcctftrltatlon. THE PLtlE WOUND. By duret 0rrlt. New Tors: u. i: i-uinams pons. A strange book, neither fiction nor al lfory I1Y AnVICI! OF COUNSEL. H Arthur Train New Tork: Charles Serlbner's Hons. Htorlcs, some humorous and some mtIour, rrtrrlnir In the el affair of the author's fictitious firm ef Tvitt and Tutt. THEY WENT Uy Norman Douglas. New york itona. sieaa t;o. A utory vtllh many quaint turns and odd Implications. General the rAMiminon history or Ameri can LITERATURE. Vola. 3 nnd 4. New Tork: O, P. Putnam's Pons. LIFE OF WHITELAW REID. Ry Royal CortUM). New Tork: Charles Scrlb nr'a Hor.-a. EFFECTIVE PRATER. By Ituasell Con well. New York: Harper A Broa. An li.serrMIni book, enpeclslly tlmMy In Lent, by the paatnr of the Ilartlst Temple and the pretldent of Temple University. Dr. Connell aavai "Prayer the right kind of praer, Is annwered." His book on the sub ject la atlmulatlnc. INVALID EUROPE. By Alfred Sellrsberg. New York: lloni & Llverlght. The author, an American professional man, from Ills early knowledxe of Europe and hla later obtrrvatlon". Rives a singu larly clear arrount of preaem condltlon In Europe. He diagnoses the maladies and pre scribes remedies. AT THE FREE LIBRARY Books added lo the I'reo Library, Thir teenth and Locuit streets during the week ending March 10: Miscellaneous Bemnn, I T. "Selected Articles on the Cloeed Mhop." IWnhurdl, Frlcdrlch von "War of tho Future." Ulucher, Evelyn Prlnccse "Engllih Wife In Berlin " Burton. Alexander "After Dinner Speeches." Carpenter t. U. "Inereaamg Production, DecreaalnR Coats." I-lKh. Ruth "Human Side of Retail Selling." .Mrl'alr?. a. N. "War Ratlona for Penn aylvanlana." Msrklnloiti. H R. "Originality of tho ChrUtlan Mensanr." Murphy, J. J., and others "Homing Famine." Plgou. A. C "Economics of Welfare." Stowell, J. S. "Near Side of the .loxlcun Question." Hnaln, R, K "What and Where Is Ogd." Fiction Block, Alexander "Seventh Angel." Buck. C. N. "Roof 1Tee " Doaiowgky. Kyodar "Friend of the Fam- Dunn. .1. A. "Man Trap." Flemlior, Brandon "Crooked Hou." lUmaun. Knut "(trnwih of the Holl." a v. Harker. L. A. "Montagu Wycherly." Ilarraden. Beatrice "Spring Shall Plant." I." Queux William "The Intriguers.'1 M"efNan, Alexander "The Curtain," J'f.Ivenna, Stephen "Sixth Sense " Mlln. I,. J. "Feaat of lanterns " Mulder, Arnold "Sand Doctor," Olilmeailow. Ernest "Tho Haro." uZZZ' iaTn,n'".".';,'U'..,h', (io1a Beloved " Reevo. A. II. "Film Mystery." 51?,?' Mr,V.lclorr-"n""k'",s Puritan " Matron , Mlddletnn A. "Sesirlnu." Vv ."" 'A. "Fourth Dlmennlon " Wallace, Edgar "Daffodil Murder" Children'! Books P'ston. II II. "Firelight Fnlrv nook Fllllmore. Pb.It.f Talen." "Uieeno-Slovak Fairy Lindsay. Maud "Joyous Travelers. Richards, U E. "Joan of Arc." Everything Desirable in Books WITIIEnSPOON DLDO VTalnnt. Juniper and Nonsom 8M. Elevator to fnd Hooa Headquartert For Engineering and Technical Books Philadelphia Book Company 17 Soita 9t Slrttl Fannie Hurst SaVS: "Not enly In th. brilliant 1 ' telllor of a brilliant novel nave you scored, but you have flaahtd coaat-to-coast spat light upon condition In Amer ica of which no cltlsan haa right to bo linorant," SEED ofthe SUN By Wallace Irwin AlAllBoo,tetittM Across America with the King of the Belgians By PIERRE GOEMAERE The Informal frankly stated im pressions received by a dlstln riulshed Belgian Journalist "prlvi eged" to accompany the Belgian royalties on their visit to America, His shrewd comments from Europsan viewpoint make It ex sremely entertaining, 12.00 Order at anv 6oofcfora-or Jrotn E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5t Ay., H. V. NOTABLE BOOKS OF THE WEEK Life of Whitclaw Rcid If tiny one is looking for a critical nnd Judicial estimate of tho rarwr of Whitclaw lttld. editor of IheNew York Tribune and nmbansatlor to Trance, arm Great Britain, ho will not lind it In Hie "Life," by noyal Cortlwoz. which the Bcrlbners havo Just published. Mr. Oortlsw. was an employe of Mr. Ilcm nnd he Is still on the staff of the Tribune, which Is owned by Mr. Kcld's heirs. Ho hns done nothing- more than to present Mr. Held aa he would like to be presented. Mr. Held wag frequently urged to write hH recollection". He knew they nuld contain much lntcretinc nlitori. esl mutter, but he could never bring himself to the task. Mr Cortlsroy, however, has had access to Mr. Re Id s papers and has used them with Intelli gence nnd discretion. The result lift friendly and sympathetic Hiorjr of the career ot a man whose activities covered the- period from thc Civil War tilt 1012, or two years before the great war be- .. 1. ..IIIap nt tbn Trlhlino he WHS firoi'mht In cotitnct with nil the groat public men ot ms time, anu n yon trlbuted In large part to the ranking ..f ,l.. !.!,.,, nt (Via narlrut. 'Thei lmnk deals with affairs In Lnropo as well ns in thn rnltetl Mintcs, tor u tens luny of Mr. Relil's activities In Paris and In London. The publishers havo Issued It In two dignified volumes. The first con tains a portrait frontispiece of Mr. Held In his prime and the second has a pic ture of the Amcrlcnn nnd Spanish peace commlsalonfrs signing tho peace treaty in I'arls. It. Is Just the kind of a hook which thoso Interested In .public affairs will find much more Interesting than the latest novel. Barbcllion's Last Book W. N. 1. Uarbelllon, the namo under which the late uruce tredertcK uura mlnis concealed his Identity, was a man who nttemptcd the impossible tnBk of disclosing hiniBelt utterly antl com pletely In a book. His "Journal of n Disappointed Man" is n remarkably frank revelation of personality. In "A Lost Diary," Just published by George II. Doran Co., Uarbelllon has contin ued his revelations. He admits that he had changed his point of view after the Journal was published and that some of the things he put in it were wrong. Thc Journal whs written In anticipa tion of death, but in the months that he survived he did moro thinking about hinife1f nnd nbout life, thinking which took into account things which he hnd ignored before. He records the results in "rue .bast uiary." American Literary History The Inst two volumes of Putnam's "Cambridge IlUtory of American Lit-t-raturo" linvn at last appeared. Their gniernl tone is like that of tho preceding volumes. The editors have not tried to make n sprightly work nor one thnt will be startling' in thc originality of its opinions. It Is distinctly conservative. Some of the radical critics of the pres ent will disagree with itn conclusions, nnd even thc conservatives will not nl ways And its judgments agreeable. Hut for Its purposes It is probably as good as could bu expected. The third volume devotes n chapter each to Mark Twain, to Henry James and to Lincoln. In another chapter Hnwells is grouped with A Best Seller Everywhere THE AGE OF INNOCEIVCE Edith "Wharton's brilliant novel of New York's Four Hundred. $2.00 Thin Is nn Applcton Book The Man in the Dark By ALBERT PAYSON TER- HUNE, author of Bruce and Lad A lonely and embittered man, mis understood und In porll of his llfo through mob violence, j a loyal und hcrolo irlrl; a nobler lovablo colllo doir these uro tho actors, net ng-alnst a bncUirrouiK? of nlghtrlders nnd moonshiners, In a. mory of mys tery and adventure as vlKoroiisly huninn lis It Is Ingenious and tensely dramatic. It. Order of any bookstore or from L P. Dutton & Co., 681 5th Av., N. Y. From the crack of the hidden rifle in Deep Swamp to the climactic end every mo ment is filled with the thrill of breathless adventure in TWISTED TRAILS By Henry Oyen At All Booksellers $1.75 mm $ 'All England Is . Reading" '-- All America Will Read THE SHEIK By E. M. HULL A powerful novel of love, amid the glamour und col or of the desert. THIRD PRINTING Small, Maynard & Company Hnrrlcf necchcrBtowe, 13. T. Itoe, Lew Vnllnce nnd Ihr dime novelist. Thc fourth volume contains chapter ou patriotic Rongs, the popular bibles, meaning the iiook of Mormon and Mrs, KddyS "Hclcnco nnd Health," on book publishers and on thc English language In America. And In addition It treats of the German, French nnd Yiddish lit erature produced here nnd on the litera ture of tne American Indl&nt. The great merit of tho work lies In Its Inclusion of all kinds of writing, political and economic, As well us belles lcttrcs. Realism That Is Real Those who like to debate tho diverting but profitless question about who Is the greatest woman novelist In America will have to take Dorothy Canfleld Into their reckoning If they would keep up with the times. Harcourt. Brnce A Co. havo just published a novel by her which la worth reading. It is the kind of realism that is real becauso It brings Imagination to bear upon the Intcrpre- i tloJ? J flm."lc ttlnn. The scene of the book is In the mountains of Ver- Imi.L110.1 't le, but In a little settlement about a wood-working fac ul' . ThcrP e children in it with dirty faces. There is thc smelt of cook in and the repugnance of a refined and K.!c-ii VrVnn.n toJLomo ot '" homely household tasks. There Is murder in n..in rcn,orr '', warring passions. But It Is not sordid, nor Is It melo- &!E!i,c' . U in. ,n.l"lr human from beglnn ng to end with a humanity that recognises the fine and enduring things. The book is called "The ifrlmmfnr: Cup because the heroine In her youth Important Scribner Books The Life of Whitelaw Reid By ROYAL CORTISSOZ 'T'HIS authoritative biography of the celebrated editor and diplomat affords a panoramic picture of American life in his time. Among other aspects of his career it treats of the following: Mr Reid in theses capacities: Civil War eorrespontent, writing despatches which rank as classics Editor of the Now York Tribune. Author and orator. rrosldcnt-maker. Diplomat serving; aa Minister to Franco; deltgate to Jubilee of Queen Victoria; Ambassador to England, etc. e volumes, with t photogravure portraits, 1 10.00 The New Stone Age in Northern Europe By JOHN M. TYLER limcritus Professor of Biology at Amherst College A fascinating account, written both for scientific and general readers, of the development of the human race through the Neolithio Age and up to the dawn of history. Illustrated. $3.00 The Poems of Corinne Roosevelt Robinson This volume presents to the many lovers of Mrs. Robinson's poetry all of heryeree to date, as assembled from the separate books, "One Woman to Another," "The Call of Brotherhood," and "Service and Sacri fice." S2.25 How to Appreciate Prints By FRANK WEITENKAMPP , Chief of the Art and Print Division of the NeiO York Public Library This book, written in colloquial, simple style, giving all the facts necessary to enable one to select prints with judgment and knowledge, should be in the library of every one interested in the graphic arts. Illustrated. $S.OO CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONSfift FIFTH AVE. AT 48ST. NEW TORK W Popular American Novels Play the Game By Ruth Comfort Mitchell A clean, wholesome novel of American llfo today. A big- human etory of love triumphant after a lerles of exciting- adventures and tonso situations. The scenes range from America, to Italy, . with a smashing- finish on the Mexican border. $1.7$ net The House of the Falcon By HAROLD LAMB The thrilling story of a romantic, but high spirited and courageous American girl, lured to India by a fascinating, plausible villain. A worthy successor to pits author's earlier novel. 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Miss Canfleld makes the urn boll over with the fullness of fe and unlike many novelists of the present day, she does not find that her heroine his to desert her husband and children In order to find the complete expression ot herself. Yet tho woman was tempted to do It. A page could be written about the problem of human relations Involved' In tne talo and about the art shown In handling It. But it Is enough to say that those wholciome-mlnded people who with to read a most satlstactorv story will find It In this book. Released by the Censor v When noland Dcglores' "Woodn Crosses," a book nbout the life of the French Infantryman at the front, was submitted to the French censors In IDld they refused to permit Ha publication. This was doubtless for the same reason that the American censors ordered the suppression of "Men and War," by An dreas Latxko. It was too real and gave too accurate a picture of what war is to be circulated when It was necessary to get men to engage- In It. Deglorea' book has been published In France re cently and hns received a' literary priic. A translation of it has just been issued In this country by thc Putnams. It be longs on the library shelves along lUi Barbussc'H "Under Fire." the Latxku book nnd one or two others in which men of literary skill havo told Just what jvar means to tho men engaged in It. These arc the books which will da more than any other kind of prnpa. ganda to bring about an era of peace. And Identified with these eventi: President Grant's quarrel with Senator Charles Sumner. Thedlsputedllayes-Tltdenalectlon. giving tho authentic history of tne famous cipher dispatches. Tho row between Garfield and noscoe Conkllntr. Dlalno as a presidential candidate. Hoosevelt tho coal strike, tho Portsmouth and Algeclraa con ferences. Miss Lulu Rett By ZONA GALE The book that actually set a new itylo In America fiction. A genuine masterpiece of sincerity and sim plicity. 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