(I 'j 'Ar: f. iLtja,: "- ' &. i.. ?: :,a V- .,'" K' .-. )" -'A' ' '''- "' EiVSJNING PUBIilO liBDaEEr-ffllliABELPHIA, SATURDAY, u JUlNiii 2, 'O-WSX ,4 T feSoKOH 4 MAKER OF STEAM PUMPS WHITES ON EDUCATION "Shackled Youth" by Edward Yeomans, of Chicago, Is an Enlightened and Inspiring Booh Tliat Ought to Be Read by School Boards Ky FELIX B. SCIIELLINO rrofemor of English Literature In (lis University of rennsylTsnte NOTABLE BOOKS OF THE WEEK .T&TinTKftfHEWORLD A fr endless -. without 7 A0 Thus fate leaves tfvMerSn to face life Pa?yfZcan. The story of fJb&SSt struggle to toTer finest vein. ? $2.00 t All Bookstores . n T.TPPINCOTT COMPANY THE HUSBAND TEST By hlarU Carolyn Davlea a clever satire on Greenwich ,Vill3?o Hfe At All Boohtoris. Price, $1.7S. The Pcnn Publishing Co. PHILADELPHIA I i t" J r j 1 A Chair on the Boulevard Unique and unapproach able Paris as seen by LEONARD MERRICK Feel the gaiety of her at mosphere even at home. 11.90 at any bookstore or from & P. Dotton A Co., 881 5th At.. N. T. The French Book Prices Current Annuaire de Ventes de Livres A Record of Books Sold fct Auction in Franco, 1918-1920 Price $8.00 Onsaleatyourbookstoreor A. L. P. 29 E. 28th St., New York DON'T MISS TRUMPETER SWAN By Temple Bailey Author of "The Tin Soldier" At All Bookttoret. $2.00 The Perm Publishing Co. PHILADELPHIA JACOBS ins I KO CHI5THUT U BOOKS 5TREET rBUY A BOOK A WEEK" rpHIS la a book after my own heart Have you ever held peculiar views for years and been looked at askance by your friends, smiled at Indulgently, allowed for until you havo becomo si lent, not with the silence of acquies cence, but with tho silence that comes from that terrlblo auesUon: "What's the use?" Well, such Is my caso an to tbo schools as men have made them and an to the men who have made tbo schools. And hero in one of the olcct for the elect are they who write In tho Atlantic Monthly who has justified my heresies, expressing in criticism upon criticism Idea? which conform to con victions which I have long held and ex pressing them In a manner and with a chnrm which any man might well bo proud to equal. I had read some of these chapters already in the Atlantic. They make n fine cumulative offect thus collected. Mr. Yeomans, wo nre told, is "n Chicago manufacturer of steam pumps, who enjoys playing tho cello, sailing n boat along tho New England ronnt in summer ana niisslne tbo winter In California." But all this only partly describes him. Mr. Yeomans Is a man with an eye for the significance of beauty, with a heart tender to tnc children on whom the absurdities of our educational system heap many in dignities, with a large apprehension of the greater things of life. I tako .my hat off to this book. MR. VEOMANS, In discussing schools In general, declares that much of our human society "Is still immersed In neolithic thought" and asks perti nently "what tho proportion of dis criminating and Intelligent people is, who knows?" At the outset ho recog nises two classes, "practical people wboso mental structuro is mechanical. exploiters of men slnco all eternity," and "tho emotional, tho po etic, tho nrustlc, the lovers of bcouty and tbo distributors of a peculiar hap piness." Boards of education, whether of college or school, seldom belong to tho latter class, and superintendents and tenchera except for the few of tho latter who escape nro herded nlong by the kind which chooses them. It is the mechanical croup which is nt present exploiting education and tho momen tary enthusiasm is charts, intelligence tests and percentages. Perhaps tho next cnmusiasm win be time clocks. Mr. Edison, we nre told, conforms his labors to one. Much to tho scandal of schools of pedagogy, Mr. Yeomans bo lieves that a teacher is born, not manu factured, und Hhould be taken, even un certificated, when found, as a rare prod uct. IIo has tho audacity to doubt if a teacher can bo turned out by mennJ of courses in how to do it. lie even believes that "the life of n teacher muy easily disqualify him to teach" nnd thnt Information Is tho least important fea ture of education pace Mr. Edison when nil has, been said. "rpHIS is rank educational bol- shevism!" I hear the professor of class discipline exclaim to tho superin tendent of manunl dexterity. "It is awful to think that there nre such peo ple outside of Russia, just as wo had got everything into npple-pio order, everything nicely graded, n certified teacher in every clnf-s," not one of them, we may ndd, not properly vac cinated with tho virus of pedagogic training. VALIANT is Mr. Yeomans' attack upon the idea, only too prevalent. thnt "the Way, tho Truth and tho Life are along a rooa thnt leads to recogni tion." In our colloquial phraRO, "Am bition is the viro of noblo minds." And wo lay a stronger emphnsls on the no bility than on the vice. Hero in Amer ica we havo come more and more to consider lifo as a great game in which it is decent, nf cmirn to nhsorvo tllO rules, but the object of which, after nil. is to win Thcro Is somo good reading on this topic In this book. Ho acknowl edges the vnlue nf thn mni in main taining mornlo, but confesses that the English sense of tho gamo and ours givo us a relish and n safety valve, s to speak, that makes for cleanness and health. But ho ndds, "Tho tendency to BurrciKicr too inucu to group-ioyaiiy, and to jdolizo victory and aggressive Mess generally, is always present and often overshadowing. People 'deter mined to win' nro hnrdly more whole wmo than people unnble to win, because In winning they usually lose moro than they gain." The temptation to quote Mr. Yeomans In his pertinent nnd tell ing phrases is overpowering. Ills idio matic sentences need no explication and cannot be pnrnphrased with any sav ing of words. With a world of wonder and romance about us. with nature In a thousand silent voices calling on us for n closer acquaintance, it teems Knock ing that man must herd under nwnlngs nnd promenndo on asphalt. Mr. Yeo mans is a devotee of tho out-tloor life. esteeming the naturalist the happiest of men. In two canltal anecdotes which have tho marks of actual experience upon them ho tells of tho paltry little scaoQimnrm wno "taugnt geography, tho geography of Information," ut a thousand a year, but knew not the al phabet of "tho geography of Inspira tion." Tho other story Is of an astrono mer who startled his superintendent as well ns a book agent by nnking for a tolcBcopc with which to show the chil dren tbo stars: not diagrams and In genious textbooks, written for two bad purposes to sell new, but to teach nt second nana. BOOKS (Old and Modern) (English nnd Foreign) CataloniM Frca GEORGE WINTER B2 Chartnjr Cross Honda LONDON. ENGLAND WITH so much that Is good, it is diffi cult to nick nnd choose. . Inarnnr-fq of Mr. Yeomans' felicity of phrase nro these. Society's only applause for n man, ho tells us, Is "when ho is seen running, like a tired dog, under n vehicle called a career." Or his remark conenrnincr n "rnthnr me tallic" teacher of English, "just juggling English words." In that classroom 'nothing nllvo is ever exposed." And he ndds: "If you have not a Hon con cealed about your person, dear teacher, haven't you at least a rabbit?" An eloquent passago on this maligned and beautiful world of ours ends: '"Steam ers and trains poko painfully along like insects in high grass. In little bpots, illumined by electricity nnd smudged with smoke, thcro is a rather repulsive swarming of otherwise invisible human beings." AMONG the many independent ideas which make up the all too brief pages of this book there seems to me none so suggestive as the chnpter en titled "cross-fertilization." Taking the ways of plant life in this regard, Mr. Yeomnns nsks why men mny not profit by the example or nnturc. Mint up each class within itself, wo tend to tho pcr-r-ctuntion of our own limitation with our own specie. The upper class es tablished In ltH mmuy. us social group, Knows only its lice. ith children be fore sophistication's winced fret over take them, there Is no huch barrier as n little more wealth or a grade more luxury. And so between tho middle nnd tho lower clnsses. In line scorn Mr. Yeomans tells of nn old man who could conceive in his mind and build to com pletion a schooner, trim nnd capable, a thing of beauty, n mastery of the ele ments. And such a man is patronized as a laboring mnn by bank clerk nnd salesmen ! It Is one of tho advantages of a sojourn in tho country the real country, not toy-shop suburbs thnt you can meet thcro on terms of equality tho man who tolls with his hands nnd lives with nature. It Is n beautiful thought, this of human cross-fertilizn-tion; the most ideal, the most liberal, tho most democratic which I have come ncross for many a day. SHACKLED YOUTH. Comment on Schools, Hcnonl People mil Other Topple. Hy TSi wiirrt Yoemana. noaton: Tho Atlantic Monthy rrean. Correcting Popular Errors It is the prevailing impression that zsw Knglnnd was founded and devel oped by a group of men fleeing from religious persecution and that nobody else hnd anything to do with it. John Xruslow Adnm m.i, !...., . vttf TCne- nd,cr' A?8 ,n "x''e Founding of New England" (Atlantic Monthly Press) done his best to tell the true story of what happened. Ho has dono it so well thnt no reader who once starts this vol ume will lay it down willingly. In fact ho Ian put the discovery of America ?i. , ?ub?e'iucnt settlement by the English in itg proper place In world history. Tho discovery in the. fifteenth century, ho says, was inevitable because tho expansion of the power of the Turk 'along tho eastern shores of the Mediter ranean had forced Europe to find a now route to tho Indira Tim nvoenero bcIiooI boy Knows that It was to find such a routo that Columbus saljcd. but ho docs not know whv if tvn ninmrv to find U .Th.en tho economic condition in England was more responsible than re ligious persecution for the migration to tho new world. Sixty-five thousand persons left England In tho twenty years between IOL'0 nnd 1040 for America. Only 10,000 of them landed in New England, and of these 10,000 only 4000 joined tho New England churches, al though they were disfranchised If they were not members. Tho 12,000 came because they wished to improvo their economic condition. They could get title to land which they wished so much that they wcro willing to submit to political disabilities Incident to their un willingness to nffiliuto themselves wun the Purltnn churches. And this migra tory movement, says Mr. Adams, was not confined to America. It was part of the expansion of the Empire. Mr. Adams' book is n careful and pains taking study of the question modo in the light of tho most recent available data. "Beauty" It is usually said to be tho duty of a reviewer to strive to find out what an author nttemptcd to do and then to ten wnethcr be has succeeded. A con scientious reviewer would find it diffi cult to apply this rule to n considera tion of Rupert Hughes' novel, "Beauty" (Harper & Bros.), for it is Impossible to discover lust what Mr. Hughes was trying to do. It may be argued that beauty is ita own excuse for being, but this remark was not mado about tho product of this novelist's pen. Tho book is the story of the udventures ui a j.cxu3 cowpunciier in me iasniun nblo society of New York. It begins in tho Adlrondncks when tho body of ono of tho heroines Is found frozen in tho ico of n lake. Tho reader is led to sunnosn that the rminc woman has been murdered. The "book ends on the plains of Texas, to which the cowboy returned and whither lie haB been fol lowed by tho real hcrolno of the book, a member of the fashionable st, who has fallen in love with hlra. Mr. Hughes has stretched the probabilities so far that if they were rubber they would break and fly back with a stinging blow on the hands that held thein. But who cares about the probabilities when read ing a story of lifo In New York society? head being Colonel diaries B. Hyatt. From Wilmington the institution moved to West Chester nnd later to its pres ent location nt Chester. P. M. O. has furnished many notable figures in the several wnra In which this country has engaged slnco its foundation. Its rec ord in the World War was especially distinguished. Mr. Buxton's history, written In graphic stylo and nrotuseiy illustrated, covers all phases of past and present activities. A feature Is a long series of brief individual biogra phies of alumni of mark. Modern Italy The reader of "New Itrfly" will feel that tho title Is well chosen, for as compared with the conditions a half century ago it is a new Italy. The writers begin with,, a sketch of the political history of this period, em phasizing the progress made through the part now taken in the government by the people at largo. Tho educational growth is shown by the fact that while fifty ycara ago tho nvcrago of illiterates was 09 per cent, in 1015 it was only 37.8 per cent of tho population. The agricultural development, tho improve ments of tho intcrnnl means of com munication, the reforms in adminis tration and taxation, tho measures for the protection of workmen nnd children nnd the intellectual expansion are all carefully treated. Tho closing chapters show how Italy was led to join Great Britain and Franco in tho war with Germany and Austria. Throughout tho work there are numerous rofcrcncca to tho men who have been tho leaders in the reforms which have mado tho new Italy. NEW ITALY. Dy Helen Zlmmern and An tonio Afrret'.l. New York: Harcourt. Braes ft Hong. " 11 ': -. " I I1 i fltlptlft AT THE FREE LIBRARY Booka ndded to thn Free Llbrarv. Thirteenth nnd Locust streets, during mo wcck ending June -: Miscellaneous Bloomfleld, Daniel "Labor Maintenance." Boyle, J. K. "Airlcultural Economic. Eaton. W. I'. "On the Edge o tb Wil derness." rippln. K. O. "Rural New Tork." Hammond. J. If. "Th vntnar . llay. Jan "Llrhter Bldo of School Lite." w. "Tralnlne rt. Indui trial Finance of "Buy a Book a Week," say the publishers. "Excellent advice," you reply, "but books arc expensive these days." Stop! Every copy of THE DIAL is a book a remarkably good booh Nothing goes Into The Dial that Is not worth bringing out In book form. The Dial docs not bother with ephemera. It prints every month the significant work of the creative minds of the world. Not a single short story in 1920 but was a work of distinction. This was Edward J. O'Brien's verdict when of America's leading magazines he rated only THE DIAL at 100 A year of The Dial is the equivalent of a dozen books a dozen superlative, contemporary books. And for the pleasure of sending them to you we will odd another for good measure. Any one of the following with a year of The Dial FREE. Main Street, by Vmmm ' Sinclilr JLewu Moon-Calf, by Floyd Dell Anderson The Age of Inno cence, by Edith Wharton THE DIAL, 5Wut ijth Srurr, NiwYok Citt For the enclosed js 4en me VMr of The Dial and kk Nanc , I Aiirets . TUB TKMI'Ll! . ... -, i . Broad and UttVt at. (1000 N.l WSI. DYHF. McUUHDY. Af apclalB PEtKf' , tit iIi.l ...I ..Willi". ji.M-.v... ------ r i. Frederick mark. Ontanlet. ' Mr. Conwell will preach at 10:30 1 and TIIE, Temple Choruaei will eln at both rvlej. Bible School. Jere L, Crew. fluPJv at 2:30. Prayer Meetln Friday. 8 P. M. -,.., Mualcal Extravagama, "A Day and NIkM on the Campue.'7 Combined Temple Cho rueea paelated hy prominent eololatf. Tnure. day. June 7. flsltf P. M. For reiervatlom phone Diamond OST. l'rlenil 0TiTMKH10N MEETING , Montgomery avt. nnd Meettnr .? '. Marrla H. Dmin editor of the Quaker, expected to be ureeent. Flnt day (BUB- day) ai li a ;w. ii wuiuuinu. ricaeant nutomobllo ride from the city, er nuto m leave 03U nnd Market ts. every half hour. l'reliyterlnn . AHC1I HTUEET ' CIIUllCII. 18th and Aroh 10:45 The admlnltrntlon of the Lrd' Hupper. The Communicant' Prayer Meet ing at 10:18 In chapel. ..-, 12.00 The Bible School. 7:00 C. B. 0.00 Dr Macartney will preach o3 "Hra for Hold " The tragedy of for eaken purpose. . Ideal from which the light of heaven haa faded, and principle which have been eold for pieces of illver or bite of the tlneel vanltle of a con demned and perlahlng world. A a Chris tian man have you aold the shield of told and Ignouiy ncceyiuu a -iib ,. .i. . Ti-vlttfht nnvlnr time HKTOND i;ifK.NITKIUAN CIIUllCII Vint Run iiiui eiai - Ilev. ALEXANDER. MacCOLL. D nev.'ALVI.V B. OOni.EY. AMl.tant. iir. MacColl will preach at 11 and Mulokat 8 P. M. will Include: Ood lie Merciful Unto U" Garrett "Clod That Madest" Naylor "Alia Trlnlta Ijeata." . fifteenth Century VI SITIinS AI.WAY WELCOME. , BETHLEHEM I'KKMIYTKIUAN CHUUCU Broad and. Diamond t ... Jlev. WILLIAM L, auiiJii.i. "'' 10:30 A. M. "China," by -Mr. Joseph Vo sin' A M Children Church: "Sotdltr of the i'ro." by Ilev. a Curry. 30 P. M. Sunday School :.Vr P ,m "The Look That Saved." by thV. Pastor, nev Win, 1.. MeCormlck. D.. 8 fnltirlan gjgRBs i U in As Manly and Tender a Tale as Ever was Told The Kingdom Round the Corner The Story of a Grown-up 'Peter Wan By Coningsby Dawson THERE'S a different kingdom for every different person, Tabs used to say. Then this grown-up Peter Pan awoke one day to find the kingdom of his dreams slipping from him. Tabs Helped Them Find Their Kingdoms Terry, who had promised to wait for Tabs, now strangely told him she had given away "little bits of herself and was in love with s&IF'&i IT is there for all of us the kingdom round the corner. When things look blackest, ue may dream of it, for one more bend in the long road, and it may be waiting for t tie land of fulfilled desires. This is the story of one man's search for his king' dom and how he found it just round the comer. h.1 w mm Braithwaite, a General who had never lost an inch of trench the very Braith waite who once had been Tabs' valet Maisie, delicious, desirable, to whom Tabs turned in search of his kingdom only to help Maisie find hers Lady Dawn, the most beautiful woman in all England, who had never cried. Tabs brought her tears and happiness. Coningsby Dawson Is a EretShcarted human being. He has a 'rare gift of giving you n peep into the very souls of these wonderful people In this book- You will forcvcr.chcrhh the memory of this tender, whimsical story. IHujtTated by W. D. Stevens Ask your bookseller about it $2.00 kprit3! Bsok IpiMtioi. no West wth Street.Newftrk "The Kingdom Rouml Oie Comer" Is a Cosmofolian Book, chosen for you from lh outputo th uotld s greatest writers by the editors of the ffreafeit publishing orsaruzfmon m nni. High-Handed Worlt E. Phillips Opponheim hns written bettor stories thnn "The Profiteers" (Little, Brown & Co.), but ho hns not written many with n more ingenious plot. It Is tho tnlo of how nn Ameri can millionaire frustrated tho plans of nn English ("peculator to corner tho whent market. The motive of tut Amer ican is revenue. The rivalry between the two Is made acute by the love of both of them for the same woman. As it Is a ftory of incident the plensuro of tho reader will not bo spoiled by dis closing the plot. It Is enough to Rny thnt tho American millionaire, by the use o simple and obvioim menns the means are simple and obvious when Mr. Oppcnhcim explains them succeeds not only in breaking tno wnent corner, but in mining his rival nnd marrying the woman whoso husband fortunately dies in timo to prevent what would other wise have resulted in a scandal. "The Old SoaV' Squeamish nnd puritnnlral readers should avoid Don Mnrquls' "The Old Sonk" (Doubleday, Page & Co.), as they would nvnld n corktnil. They will find nothing but horror In It. Others whose hense of humor Is developed enough to appreciate n light nnd un moral discussion of tho history of tho saloon nnd of its place in the social life of the time when it flourished will find Mr. Mnrquis book most delightful. The story of the man who tried home-made hooch on a parrot and nnd of the mnn In tho hnblt of falling downstairs when intoxicated who tried to fall down an escalator coins in the opposite direction will burst several buttons on the gar ments of the onc-timo bibulous. The description of the effect of prohibition on tho manners nnd tho morals of the community is delightfully distorted. It Is n book for the cognoscenti of a highly specialized class. The Next War Will Irwin hnst-rnu'lo nn appeal to common senso In u'book on "The Next War" (E P. Dutton & Co.). It Is an exhibition of how war starts nnd whnt war costs In money nnd in 'Ives, followed by n plen for the formation of a society of nations with a body of laws. Ho says that domestic pence did not como unttl people living in the same community agreed on n code of laws for regulating tho relation of men to one another, and he insists that, so long ns tnero is no entorceanie international codo regulating tho affairs of nations. war, that is, tho use of force to take what n nation wnnts, wi'l continue. He is arguing by annlogy, usually n dangerous pastime, but in this caso thcro beems to be justification for it, for tho analogy thnt ho draws Is so closo that a universal rulo will apply. Veto One by the Williamsons Despite the death of one of the col laborators of the financial firm of the Willinmsons, scvcrnl novels have np peared. These productive writers had some typlcnl manuscripts in hand nt tho timo of Mr. Williamson's demiso recently, one of which Dornn has ,nist Issued under tho tltlo of "Vision House." This is n tjpicnl Williamson novel In its actively developed plot, its speed of narration, its underlying ro mance and its constantly shifting lo cale. Travel was the prime quality of the earlier Williamson romances, nnd In this one they hnve certainly varied the scene. Knglnnd, Manhattan, the West, tho big nond. all furnish stnr.n settings for tho story. It is nbout n woman who whimsically asks n mnn to marry her platonlcnlly because icr amour nropro has been damngv'd through her jilting by another man. The victim selected for her sacrifice nappens to no very much in lovo with her. And there you have all the rank ings of a capital talc. A Century of P. M. C. Under the title "Pennsylvania Mili tary College 1821-11121," Henry John Muxton, n well-known newspaper mnn nnd formerly on xno stun of the isvk Kelly. Worker." McCaleb, W. F. "Public iuexico. r Mortimer. CI;orr "Aluminum.". Naylor. E. It. "Trade Astoclallon." Not. W. F. "American Forelim Trade. Pearjpn, F. 11. "The Teacher." Sheridan, Clare "Mayfalr to Moscow.' Sim. N. I. ed, "nural Community." Van Vechten. Carl "In the Oarret." Wilson. O. W. "How to Measure." Fiction Hate, S. C "Oolden Answer." Bed ford-Jones. II. "Mardl CJra Mys tery." lluckroae, J. E. House With the Golden Windows." Cabell. J. n. "Flg-ure of Earth." Chamberlayne. E. S. "Little Back uoom. Dawson, Coningsby "Kingdom Hound the Corner." Lcblane Maurice "Three Eyes." Leon. lUcardo "Son of the Hidalgos." Lutz. Q. L. H. "The Tryst." Morley. Christopher "Tales From a Roll top Desk." Mulford. C. E. "nar-20 Three." Pedler, Margaret "Lamp of Fate." Illchardson. Nona! "ragan Fire." nohmor. Sax "Hat Wing." Tarklngton, Bnoth "Alice Adams." Vance. L. J, "lied Masquerade. " Wells. Carolyn "Come Hack." White. W. !. "Heart of the rtange." Williamson. C. N. "Vision House." Children's Books Colum. Fadralc "Doy Apprenticed to an Enchanter." flreene. F. N. "American Ideal." Hull-land. M. S. "Modern Physiology. Hygiene and Health." Olcott. V. J. Story-telling Ballads." Sanford. C. M. "Modern Europeans." Swanson. Margaret "Ncedlecraft for Older Girls." riiiMT i sitaiilVn iiitucii ftfv FKK&miCK It! aniFFIN. MlnUter. 11 A. M. Mr. OrlHln will preach. Subject: "Who 1 Philadelphia' Moit Useful Citizen?" V 15 Communion service. CnTtTuian ciinicii or okbmantown Sundiy. .Tune l service at 11 A. M. llcv Il60r n 0. FOnilES. Minister Subject: 'The lesson of Holland." Classes for children In parish house at the same hour All ar- invited NEW BOOKS Drama LILIOM. By Franz Molnar. New Tork: llonl k Llerlght. A striking play by the author of "The Devil." admirably translated with an In forming and stimulating Introduction by Ben jamin Qlaezer. formerly a Philadelphia news paper man, and now a successful playwright. Molnar deviates from the usual construe tlonal canons of playwrltlng. telling his story, that Is n curious mixture of sordid I ness and spiritual urt. in a succession of scene which. howeer. have a decided In tegration. Tho theme Is the development of a human derelict, what would be called a "bum" In America, through his career on earth and In heaven. Fiction THE BIO MUSKEG. Bv Victor Tousseau. Cincinnati: Stewart A Kldd Co. n absorblnK novel of the North In which romance nnd tragedy stalk. The pisslnns of love, hato ind revenge run through this thrilling ntory of a man who left to his best friend a legacy of trouble and strife. STEPSONS OF LIGHT. By Eugene Man love Khodea. Boston: Houghton Miftlln Co, A light-hearted nnd dramatlo Western noel. told In the Irvmliablo style of this !Hor!!o wr'ter. who can develop a plot of lightning rapidity and narrate a story with u touch nf genuine humor BEAUTY Hy Rupert Hushes. New Tork: Harper & Bros A mystery stnrv. Jgi helm. Boston' Little, Bronn Jt Co. p-.i typical Oppenhelm plot. General IMMIGRANT HEALTH AND THE COM MUNITY. By Michael M. Davl. Jr. New York: Harper (6 Hron, An Interesting new volume nnd one of Importance In the valuable "Americaniza tion series." The disparity between the san itary and healthy MnnJards of American city folk and European peasants Is clnarly shown, and remedial methods suggested for Improving the habits and ways o transported aliens on American soil IN HIS STJil'S TUWA. By Robert W. Chambers THE LITTLE RED FOOT A novel that takes its place beside his famous CARDIGAN. Hero in its fresh, romantic appeal is a tale of one of the most adventurous periods in the making of America. If you enjoy a love-story in which there is tho stir and excitement of great events, in which the white moon of romance vies with the signal flame of the skulking Iroquois, then read this tale of John Drogue and Penelope Grant. $1.90 By Frank L. Packard PAWNED On the hot, wave-lapped sands of the South Seas, through the softly lighted luxury of New York's most quietly conducted gambling halls, in the dark and winding streets of the lower East Side, John Bruce, who had pawned his soul for unlimited means, played out his game to the end. Bv the author of THE ADVENTURES OF JIMMIE DALE, THE MIRACLE MAN, etc. $1.90 BMEwfl That Will Not Burn SHEETROCK WON'T WAKF. EASY TO KIIKCT PEARCE FIREPROOF CO. 1345-47 ARCH ST. r hones: T.oenst 3IKSI.- Rare 4-!U II I r : Pat." June 18. 1012 ''31 i At All Booksellers tiHlrHi i r.f-TAw,.tj fntV Pat. June 18. 1012 "No Splash in Sink" "Positive Shut Off" Name "SAV1LL" On Faucet "Ask your plumber" V Thomas Savill's Sons, Mfr. 1310-12-14 Wnllare St.. Phlla. New York Charl-s If. Fleming H. Revell Sheldon. co The author of "In His Steps." of which moro than 2.000.000 c iples havo been printed elves a striking presentation of wnat he think Jesus would do. In person. In soiving the grae and many probuma nf today. In llelv dialogue hn given a thrilling und en lightening exchange of lcws be'ween the Christ und the rcpresentnthes of th prin cipal factors In modern life In this unlquo treatment of tho trying and perplexing que, tlnns nf the hour, the author I" duly reverent. LEGENDS. By Any Lowdl Boston: Hough ton Mlrtlln Co. , A collection o: her latest strange symbolic stories In free ere and polypli""lo prose. PSYCHOANALYSIS AND THI". UNCON SOIOUS. lly D II Lawrence. New York Thomas Seltzer. An original contribution to this field by a well-known English poet and noieltt. rOL'Il PILGRIMS ll-t William Uoultlng. New York i: P. Dutton & Co. Studies. In Trubnar's valunbl- Oriental serifs, of the imrmmo nna career or nuartat of pioneer medieval tr-e!ers In As'u Including the Interesting Saewulf. an Englishman who went to Palestine n UOa. end I.udoslco Varthtma. of Bologna, a rene gade pilgrim to Mecca. THE StiNATE OK THE UNITED STATES. By Henry Cabot Lodge. New Yurie Charles Scrlbner's Son. Tho senior Senator from Massachusetts, who ha often been called the scholar In Politics writes on the subject of the title essay und on other topics, literary and h.stnrlcul. Ills nddresse on the uilu.i of the classics and the Pilgrim tercentenary are Included, ... ,, CIVILIZATION. Bv Edall Carpenter Now York Charles Srlbners Sons Covers science anil monilltv CRITICAL ESSAYS I THE EARLY NINE TEENTH CI NTIRY. Edited by nay mond MacIlnnaUl Alden. New York Charles Scrlbner s Sons. 4 ll rhni.li nnd stlmulatlne rnllpetlnn of essays, addresses eic , by notable poets nnd writers of th p-rlod under discussion on tho mechanics, inspiration nnd material of i literature. Inclu.-a ..--B" adsworth's ; Prefaces; Shelley s "Defence of Poetry," and monioMPie ppcrB aim cruii-i'.ms y Colnrldzo, Keats. MacauUy, Newman. De Qulncey. Leigh Hunt. etc. Dr. Alden. who Is Professor of English Literature at Leland Stanford University, has written a so'ind and Informing Introduction, discussing cr tlclsm in Its larger aspects and thi theories ex oressrd by tho writers Included In the vol- ....... In "Thn Mrtd-rn HtllitpnfN t.lt.ru-i. ' SELECTIONS FROM ADDISON AND STEFLE. New York: Charlep Scrlbner's Anoth nlume In the "Modern Students' Llbraryf In which Will D Howe, formerly Profesiir of Literature In Indiana State Uni versity and now general editor of the scries, has made some erv choice solectlons nut of a treasury of rich material and splendid prose He contribute also a noteworthy Introduc- A WEFIC ON THE CONCORD AND MKR. A lliMAC RIVERS Ity Henry David Ihoreuu. Now lurk: Charles Bcrlbnor' One of the most distinguished work of American thinking and prose style, newlv edited with u fine. Introduction for "The Modern Students' Llbrarv ' by Ode 1 Shepsrd professor of English In Trinity College. Con-nectlcut. IN ESSENTIAL AGREEMENT WITH THE AUTHOR OF "THE NEXT WAR" By WILL IRWIN are ' PRESIDENT WARREN CI. I! AROINT.! "There Is rlndnB In my ears Ilko an admonition eternal, an insistent call It must not be. asain' It must not he HKain " God grant that it will not he and let a practical people join In eo-npc ration with Ood to the end that It nhall not be." Speech In New York on May 23. ntEMIER LLOYD GF.ORC.Ei "Huropean diplomacy works always In the denso thickets of ancient feud, rooted. fntanKled and entwined. I did not realize It all until the Peace Conference : I did not realize, how deep the roots are In Central Europe there are blood feuds which every ono thought had been dead and burled for centuries . If this war Isn't the laM war. the next wUl leave Europe in aslies It la essential wo should tind some means of dragging tho n'atlous out of this lahvrlnth of hatred, this degradation, for our own tafety." Speech at tho Pilgrims' dinner in London, May 19. DR FRANK CRANE says that Irwin's "Tho Next War" Is "the great et book of these times. Unreservedly I place It ns the best book In the world right now for every man and woman In America to rend, Including the Tresldcnt and tho Senate If I had a million dollars I would seo that every teacher, preacher and legislator In the United Stntes owned this volume. I would hnve It taught In every public school, for. like ou. I have rend much of war nnd am callous But this book staggers my Imagination. It sweeps awav tho laht cowardly subterfuge of my Intellect, It grips my heart In Its amazing revelation. If you buy no other book, and read no other this year, buy and read 'Tho Next War,' by Irwin." .An incomparably 3on(lcaiit boofc. Jl 60. Order from any bookstore or E.P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave., New York Libraries Purchased LARGEST OLD BOOK STORE IN AMERICA Every one, with the book hunting in stinct s o o ner or later makes Tearv's their Club. 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