rJJWHV mf&w HI1!lPvleEa7PaBVsBojflH IHll ' t ' - ' ... . ' jU-J -- --- ' T s in dfli fcr-fl r- "' L'-1L n T i ii in rilmri ' rajJPRMf " P& BENNY $ NOTE BOOK By Lee Papo THE rAHK AVR. "NEWS 'Vcal-licr. Mixed. Eilcr! 1'iidiH Slmklns Oocs Under OnoratJpn 1 A. pcck "' ''"at wns Mow nue erronml lnut SntliMny nml It K In ruds Hlmklnscs c.vo nnd he iiMptit make it fome out no mutter Stat Million Iip stood In wile he nib wTlt so he wont rrrotiml to AMtes Am torc nnd Mr. Wile held his eye mv,h with "n 1,n"'l n,,(l ,ook ll 0,,t iSth the other, nnuilig those prewnt S bring Henny Potts, Artie Allx- ndcr, Skinny Mnrtln nnd I.croy gliooster 'S ..... T ... tin via Vino ft fnrni-tln Bnonrin. .-;-";,"" o" .1 ' i"" . Indoor sponriB, nm. ...... -...., -..M-jjj, nnd 3rd, dreemlng of eating, romp bv Skinny Mnrtln THE IGNOIIBNT INSECK t found ft bomcllss grata hopper And tried to make it my pet, nut It dldent tnift my Intcntlohs Of dtH I mite still have it yet. ' cu.lf.tv. Miss Maud .Tohnbon made inllnMC3 candy lafct Therstlny on the) woks day off, not tcrnlng out Ixnrkly like c upectcn " to om iwinj Dcuer lUn no candy at all. AH kinds of china and fancy glass fixed with Invisible glue so you ennt tje the erncki unless you try. AVrlto or ut me 011 the btreet. Ed Wornlclc. j (Avvertizcment.) Intriftlng Fncks About Intrlstinjr PKplc. Sam Cros4 cant drnw good hot he rnn li nil is fine. Lost nnd Found, billing. riXANnrfi. jilB AMKHIt'AN I'lrK MANUFAC TURING COMPANY H COLLAT ERAL TIIWBT CEHTII'IOATKS, . SEMES "A." "UK OCTOBEH 1, 1027 Notice l hereby sthon that pursuant to th terms of tru" Agreement, dited October 1. 1U07. IBU.OUO ot th above oer nflcatea. numbered as lelow, have been Jrawn fci redemption at HUttSo and nccruol leierest. as of Octorer 1, lU.il. out of mnne Sen pijable to Sinking-Fund. U. it hv 2 I"'-"' ) "- "tl 820 tot $ :oi 44 nno tnu V4U M2 s.w 124 S51 30" "'U7 70J 7r.2 HK1 Vr.t 164 281 310 ! 08 Tim 7111! 817 SO.' IIS is 4111 4 03.! 710 H10 Nit H8U Kortj.nvo c-rtltlcules for tlUOO each. 018 U70 IHM fW7 1UIR 085 PU-' WO'I 100.1 10,98 Ten certllUatcs for 1300 each, The above certificates, with all unmatured eoupena attached, should bs proasnttel fur piiment M the off lea of the Irualeu on ur lifter October 1, ID'Jl. when all Interest theto en w 111 cease. , Attention Is called to certificate hereto fore .drawn for pajment and still outstatid. lag ' berles "V" agreement an above. Cilltd for painent October 1. 1018: 771 (er IIV'IO i.irn. 1U.V fur S.'Ull each. Called for piument Ootob"r 1, 92l. optional pajmciu on or after Auguet I. i:i. 9. iui. 177. L'jo. uoi. an . 4, 5i:. iH 642, 101 7U. 74.1. 757. SOI). N07 for 11000 each. 008. 01.1. 1002, for 1300 each. Ceilen "IJ" attreetuent l-ebruary 1. 1UOJ. C11l for payment Kebruory I. ilU2, eptlonal pavment on or after Aucut I, 121, 107, 170, 1115, 200. 233, H08, 331, 342, J2, TOO, 014, (128. 034, 043. 030, 0(10. 71.1, 7, 71. 770, 778. 810. 813, 814, 8S8. 839 for II00I) each, 028. 1008. 1035 for IB0O each, GIKAItl) TKl'ST COMPANY, Trueteo OEORQE If STUART 3d. Trenurcr. PhllaOelphln. Pa September 0. 1021. CAMMIIA COUNTY COAL COMPANY fikvt Jii ni:. sinkino ri'Nti iki.ndm Under terms of tho Slnl(ln Tund. eale froposals will be received until 8 p. M. Sep tember 20. 1921, lit the office of The Penn nrhtnla Company for Insurance on Lives nnd Oramlnc Annuities, Trustee, for thi nle to It at the lowest price not exceeding 103 end eccrued Interest of as many of the aid bands as $14,820,111 vlll purchase. Pro. poult should be addressed to TIIBrEXNNiLVANIA COMPANY FOK ' 1.N81KANCKS ON I.IVKS AM) . (1IINT1N0 ANNLITIUS 317 Cheetnut St., Phlla., Pa. Tenders for 8inklnir Tund Cambria County Cosl Co. CLEAR SriMNOS WATBK COMPANY NOIICK BeidnMera unler mortgase of the Clnr Pprlnn Wuter Comnanj, dated August 1. 18U, are notlllotl th.it tho Guaranty Tniht and Svfe Deposit Compint, truote there, under, now holds sinking fund of 2.0S(1.2.".. trador the terms jf said mortgage, for pur chii of ald tonds ut lowest prices offerel, rot 'xceeilng 101 and ncciued Inloiost. Of ferlnts recehed by the underalgned un or Ufore noon Snitemlirr 25 llitl. OU.UIA.NrEH THUST AND- SAI'li DC POSIT COJIPANY 310 318-320 Chestnut st PhllatHlphla, Pa. rENNSlLVAMA CIINTICAL IIHEWINO CO. Fidelity Trust Company. Trustee, under the mortgage of the Pennsylvania Central Brewing Company, dated October 2.1. 18B7, Invite proposals for the sale to the sail Xruitee of all or any part of fifty thousand dollirs (J'.O.OOO) of bondi secured by the lilj rnortsaie, proposals to be addressed to th said Truelee at Ita ofllce, No. 32.1-331 aeetnut street. Philadelphia, to be opens 1 ;nd acted upon ThursdJi, September 15. Hit. st 12 o'clock .11. flDCLUY 'fltllHT COMPVNY Trustee dm. . . . .'lVM' p ERT. President. PhlMMtiMa AinrMst "ft 5121. r PronosaU rtS.NSI.VANIA IIKPAUT.ME-NT OP . , A IIKAI.TII seiled nropos.tU for the construction of Plihouse and tunnel at thu State Sana, (orlum for TulK.rculcsls near CreVson. Cam brlt County Pcnnsilvanla. win bo received by Edward Martin, state Health CommTs. loner, at his offlc In HarrlVburg uml Monday, September 20, 10J1. '" The prlnclpnl Items of work consist nf . cns-itory conciete-anrt.et..no rna.SS?' build. wv r; ;' a.vj'rt..a " ft"u ....VSVW4 vnv.lVtU IU1U1UI a xo xou feet In ri. ..Wini ant specincatlon Kiatth. ltarrlai.nro'. . may l ntn at ..department of IapI.. n st tfc tv.iuui, urcafon ntu oiaio Man. SpeeJniNntif,., garTTAKK MiTKK THAT TufrTCZ porallo, wmil;8 i?o,se'.l"re!.,"h .""lr "r-I the pur ;, of hi'di,.. ,Vr,n,"r " tO-'l. I tho ihar.noI.1-r? "' ""nu'" '" ALEXANUUit TAYLOn. oecretary. Spechil Mfctjn. EAT MKKTINfS OP Tll,rFlT.l7lT7)7' ? His lnJn,. i.?,,"'ar,!j Almighty do,! llUfoll,. llr...M. r l? " ,t0 "" " '"t our fellow dlr,.tors TherefS. niirr,Kl,Mt of "' Jjr admlraMon I "? 'hfs vn1.1"0"' ""'"" 'Py of ll, J iL. , "", nssoclat on nnd i ur eaT men,:jrSmC'1 '" "' f""'"' Attt r CHAS aA,.rKl:il T Pecretary. "llriVs 'i:BKllY fllVKN Tlf VTllr77n dlnoUfrt r'jiii:7.tVi 0,l3 "' h",B mutiiilly K.lfcN'l.n.s'u iVeU"n"n ."."'n.M'I Prossi, ri.ir..iffi."d .""!). p.rXL biKinss unler th- '. ;".'""S. K1.111 au & V n"1-;?,; ''fr,"1:: cnipSnvA lui av; i'M to Vsinuli ni1" .',pl1'" ,,u" rn tn !i ""f Printing !""!; ow tHi.T ns Wi'Srl iVni:5!A!C' " 'AMI. A.'e1;!5'' ES8I.i;H. WlNir"ix'1! Ii''1'1 pS.V.r-'n iyj'".M1AN:a...rM,1 i"1"!" ..iter nnrt"1!'."'0 ?;"'"'" b'twlon j" am 0, .' ,,l,rrv II'CK, Era n ell- .timber 0 is .i i b,on rt'ssolvrd ns of dtp I " u.l by nmtu connnt i ary.J- "'Nai'i1 v.inni.i.n l.vt.JJH, rr.niiY iiurK. ' w.v " ana at the nflMr. f il.w. WaVidne0, ff wflfA cUck'for 'S "2, """mpinled by 'er will re Jill "',' T1" ""ccfiosful bid- 4S0,T 1"un"",lc n- &&kJnteriVGK.ii " n, .. L.. IitlA'., N6M&LB koOKS ' OP THE1 SEASON The Failure of Communism tnn-iJii llo,orlo,1, todny that tho com munlstlc experiment In Russia has in ed mlBcrnblv. t How nnd why It has failed are bet forth In "The Economics of CommunlM!,," (tho Mncmlllnn Com l'nny), by Leo I'nsvolsky, a Huslnn now living In New York. Ho was for merly editor of the Husskoyo Hlovo nntl tho Russian Review. He has tnken Ins facts from tho Hovlet documents: Hint Is, he has let tho men who havo attempted lo apply the communist the ory tell how It has worked. Mr. Pnsvolaky describes how the So viet leaders enmn to rcnllzn thnt rnm. munism was Impossible without the ap plication of compulsion In tho ccdnomlc life of the country. They applied com pulsion with (llsnstroiiH effects to thnt life. Then they discovered that eco nomic production Is Imtwsblblr- with the application of compulsion. When they reached this conclusion they begnn to relax their communist regulation nnd to permit som degree of Individualism, or to allow the return of what tho com munists call some degree of 'tho capi talistic system. The Soviet leaders hove recently been saying that they would hnve to modify their economic theories still further If they would retnin their political con trol, and thnt they would make such concessions ns were nccesnry to retain thnt control. Mr. lnsvolky's book Is nn Impartial exhibition of the failure of tlie economic experiment. It ought tg be it wholemme corrective for thobe who have been tovlnz with academic coin munism nnd other economic theories which take no account of the funda mental Inws of human conduct. A Neglected Waif One cannot gather from reading It why William Dean llowclls neglected to publish In book form during his life the serial which ran in the Atlantic Monthly in 1875. under the title of "Private TheatrlculH." It followed "A Foregone Conclusion," which come out In 1874 and preceded "Out of the Ques tlon." thnt was published In 1870. Tho year 187(5 Is blank in the chronology of hU novels. Yet the Atlantic serial, which has just been published under it new title, namely "Mrs. Farrell" (Harper & Rros.). exhibits all the facile skill in the delineation of feminine charnctcr which gave Howells his early fame. The rer!al title was descriptive, for Mrs. Farrell, the heroine, Ih repre sented as a loung womnn who is con tinually nctlng n part nnd is never taking life seriously. The book is n study of a woman who cannot sec a man without mnklng n deliberate at tempt to entice him to make love lo her. She is not bad nt heart, bill flic has no seiibe of social responsibility. As he is beautiful nnd possessed of many feminine graces bhc finds It easy to get admiration. Rut she discovers one summer while sho Is boarding on n farm in the country visited by two young men from Now York that there can be emotional trngedy as well ns comedy in her sport. Rut the tragedy dora not touch her inner nature and she con fesses In despair that bhc cares because she cannot care. The book deals with emotions. Although it was written ioru than forty-live years ago it is as con temporary as though it were written nbqut events last summer. Of course there arc no telephones nnd no nuto mobiles nml no phonographs in it : but the reader does not miss those things, which is a tribute to the genius of the novelist. Tales of Lost Ships Mnnr n fnnil mother who trembles when she thinks of the desire of her bov to eo to sea will doubtlcs buy for him Ralph D. Puine's "Lost Ships nnd Lonely Sens" (the Century Com pany). It is n collection of tnles about the perils which abound on tho ocean, tales of shipwreck, t.ilea of piracy, tales of mutiny and of nil the other hazards of the great deep. Mr. Poine hns not indulged In rhetoric, but hns told his stories in a straightforward, matter-of-fact manner, ns befits a record of ac tual happenings. Whether the book will euro n boy of his desire to go to sea will depend entirely on his dispo sition. If he longs for perilous ndven turo he will soy to himclf the sen is the place to find it more plentifully tbun the land. Essays on Boohs A. Clinton Rroek. the art critic of I the London Times, has gathered in :i : little volume fourteen articles on men and women of letters which were printed I orlginnlly m tho liteuiry supplement of i the Times. He calls It "Essa.vs on I Hooks" (E. P. Dutton & Co.). Mr. j lirocu writes grocciuiiy aim minus clearly. His btyle lnclts distinction, jet the voluino Is worth while because of the uniform soundness of the au thor's critical iudgmvnt. He writes of Shakespeare, Dickens, Swinburne, the Rrontc sisters, Dostoevsky, Samuel Rtitler, Turgcncv and otherB. A Murdered Bridegroom The mjstery begins where the post nilbtrcs in the village finds n letter in the mall addressed "To the person who committed tho mrrder at the old Itoc wick farm. East Ilurleigh, I'Kler Country, N. Y." She nhows the letter to a detective who is in fhe mountains for his health and on his ndvice blie bnjs nothing about it to mi one else. Thcjf the detective goes to the farm and is startled to find n young womnn hid- "This strange, powerful story A tragic sweep of FfM The Story of a Sin Hall Caine's new story has struck fire on the critics' anvils. Some say that it is an apology for sin. Others compare it to Tolstoy's "Resurrec tion." "It may make the year memorable," writes the Chicago Tribune. "Mr. Came has revitalized the much-disputed question of equal standards for both sexes by forcefully placing before his readers the true mean ing of the standard of morality embodied in the law. The denouement is dramatic in the extreme. The author has put his entire genius into this terrible story, in which every human passion is treated with the powerful grasp of human understanding and the literary style of a consummate artist." Pliila. Public Ledger. Price, $1.75. At All Bookstores J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY : PHILADELPHIA JBSa.jBSsBSsBSsBneSJB.SWf y& TT PJJBJJBJJBSJBJBJR VvlBBfeMSBBJBK V ..bIbsBd iHtiv kp xbibbbW. BBnKsj&sj$j! jre5BBBiBV MARGARET WIDDEMEIl Whoso latest novel Is n sort of a falrj' story I"g In the nttle of the unoccctipled lipusc. And pretty soon he sees n man imiuK among the trees, nnd in hunt ing for him finds himself nn the brink of n deep bhaft In nn abandoned quarry. then ho Is (old thnt the husband of the young womnn hnd fallen or been pushed into the shaft on the very tiny Of IMS Wedlllnff In ItTI.- fTnnlnlmn.l Letter" (Dorrnnre & Co.). Anno. M- sjiurc oiioii teng HOW tho smiinn. wnnnii was forced into, marriage against her will, how both she nml lm mnn she really loved are arrested on tho charge of murder nnd flnnlly how the mj story of the letter nnd the murder nro ex- piaineu. it is the kind of n story that ..Ill 1.I til s . . t I iii mud me interest and attention of those who like a detective story out of the ordinary. Miss Widdemer's Fairy Story Margaret Wlddemer herself would doubtless admit thnt her latest novel, "The Year of Delight" (Hareourt. Rrace & Co.). is n fairy story. Such things ns happen In h.cr book ore com mon enough In that land of the imag ination where by the wnvlng of n wand anything can be made to happeu. Rut in tho town wheic you live? Well, i ii- ' IIUl (ll.V . Delight Lanier, nfter whom the book is named, Is a little girl living In nn endowed school maintained for the orphaned daughters of clergymen. De light Is nlwnys careful to explain that It Is not on orphan nsjlum. and that the dresses nro not uniforms, beenuse although they ore nil gray nnd oil cut on the same patttrn, the girls may choose for themselves whether they shall be trimmed with blue brnld or with red. Delight is a (tiict nnd obe dient little girl, but her quietness is duo to her absorption in n dream of what will happen the year nfter next. When she is eighteen it rich cousin of her (lend mother takes her to her home as her secretory, nnd then nflcr two or three jears dies suddenly nnd leaves the girl a fortune of .$0,000,000. At about the same lime a doctor tells the girl that she is suffering from per nicious anemia and has only about a ear to lie. She decides to try to make happen in this jear oil the de lightful things that she still continued to dream might happen In the year nfter t. In doing it she gets mixed up troublcd her dream, but in Ihc end. n" in all good fairy btorics, "they were 1. u .". ... u.....lVM..V',..-. .(,,11, lUYCl My Brother Theodore Roosevelt By Corinne Roosevelt Robinson From one of the picture letters in which tho youthful Roosevelt tells of bringiner in a dead bat. At any bookstore Illustrated. Charles Scribner's Sons inv, uiuiua ui uLv aim luvc. juuwiu iviarKnam. ALL tAINE New novel is an unforgettable hearr mmanre on a subject that has fascinated many great writers. It sets the pulses throbbing. OF MAM .-, sJl..ftftnAWrf I.-. , rLA . r , , t,s t.. . - . .girl Uio palho ofUhoso situation' win touch "Iho heart of every ore to whom sentiment makes any appeal. The book should bo rend ns1 a romanco of fairy land. Don Marquis' Stories "Carter"" (D. Arplcton A Co.), n volume of short ttorls by Don Mnr quls, suggests O. Henry, with ft dif ference. Mr. Mnrrjuls has written about odd phases of New York life such ns moved O. Henry to write, but he does not always hnvo the courage to let hlrt twigc(l7 ploy itr-elf out. One of the ex1 (options Is in the story of "Old Mnn Murtrle." Tills might hnve been writ ten by I'oe or Do Maupassant or any of the famous musters of the short ttory. In form it Is a story of the annoyance of Death that neither God "or the dvll can decide which want the old man when Death takes him, ind Death enn not take him until the declrden Js reached. In substnnec It is n study of human frailty, of tho conlllrt rf the good and the bad In men nnd of the hv pocrlslps with which n man clonks the bad. The volume as a whole !h slightly morbid, but ns there are times when cue is In n mood for that sort of thing It will find readers. The War in Glen St. Mary The story of the people In "Rainbow vnllev" Is continued oy i- .". .Mont gomery In "Rllln of Ingleslde" (Fred erick A. Stokes Compnny). There ore Mrs. Illy the, who will be remembered us tho Anne of "Anne of Green Gables," nnd there arc her children nnd the Mnnnlng children who appeared first In "Itnlnbow Valley." They are older and are beginning o pair off In the pre liminaries to mating. The story opens In tho summer of 1014, when rumors of war began to reach Prince Edward island from Kiironc and it covers me lpril f the war. The i boys en 1st n the Canadian armies nnd the little, vll- Wc O'en bt. Mary follows the war through the fortunes of its own soldiers, ,,ll,n' nftcr wllora e l'ook. is named. I" ulc younK ,l Q"B"lr "' ".' llnntHAmnmr linn enndii HAf srr fts-1 ll s Montgomery has made her worthy of her mother, and In doing it she lias made a book which differs from Sher wood Anderson's "Wlncburg, Ohio," us n sunny, flower-bedecked meadow differs from n hospital ward. No bobbed haired ,Grcewlch Village maiden need bo ashamed lo have her mother read It. Diversities of Chesterton A new book by Mr. Chesterton and a reprint of nn old one show him in some of the diversities of his intellec tual critiinmcht. Tho old book is a re- f print of the Introductions to tho novels of Dickens Issued in the Bvervman Li brary. The new one Is a collection of ionrnnllbtic essays published under the title of "The Uses of Diversity" (Dodd, Mead & Co.) Tho Dickon" c-says were written at leisure with an attempt at some llnalitj of judgment. They exhibit Mr. Ches terton ns a critic of sympathy and tils (s'rnment. Thnt there should be a con tinued demand for them In separate form ten years nfter they were first collected in this way proves that he hns said some things which arc of per manent value. The volume of essays Is made up of the spnrkllng comment on books, men nnd thinzs which he contributes weekly to n London periodical. The comment is suggested by a current play or n new book or n social development of momentary interest. Mr. Chesterton, however, has n way of getting from the specific to the general, and Ills comment Is worth reading long after the thing that provoked It is forgotten. For ex ample. In the course of n discussion of Mrh. Eddy's "Science and Health." and n volume on "Mediclni. nnd the Church," he dbircsscs lous enough to The life cycle of the great man seen through a sister's eyes. . None but a sister could have written these recollec tions, so inti mate almost confidential are they. or news-stand $3.00 Fifth Avenue, New York j h; ia rmln ought to have priroU pi"crprt5 but the wretched fthtl-soclallsts will glvo, thembclves aWay b trying to mnlntaiii that only n few people ought to have private property, nnd even thnt only In the shape of tho monstrous Ameri can trtisfs." Now, n man who had not done somo pretty sound economic think ing could not hnve snld this. Again, In writing of the old conflict between religion and science, which was cspo dolly ocute after Dorwln announced his theory of evolution, he cays: "The rough upshot of it was something like this: Thnt some traditions too old to be traced came In vague conflict with somo theories msjich too new to be tested." And again : "Tho truths ol religion ore unprovable! the facts of science arc unproved." In short, Mr. Chesterton briugs a great deal of calm reason to bear on whatever he discusses. He has his prejudices, of course. Rut for nil that these two books are full of stimulating reading. NEW BOOKS General LOUT 8HIPS AND I.ONKI.T SEAS. Py Ralph D, Tain-. Illustrated. New York: The Century Company. rMODB CHEMISTS. The men and their work. My Sir William A Tlld-n. F. II. S. Nw York! n P Dutton & Co. Professor Tllden halt attempted to satlsfr the demand for Information about th- men m-nt of the cinre of chemistry. It- trts with Itobert Hoylo. who lived from 1S2T lo 1001. and Is known as th- father of chemistry, and he ends with Hamsay. who was born In 16.12 and died In 1010. As he could not include all th- great ih-mlsts he has selected those connected with tho de velopment of the atomic theory and ha written about them In a. popular manner for the Information of tho general readr. llin AMEIUCAN1ZATION OP KDWABD IIOK. The autobiography nf a )utch boy nfty years after. New York: Charles Scrlbner'a Sons. A popular edition of th- book which was first printed last Heptemb-r and since then has gone through eight editions. OPERA SYNOPSES. A guldo to the plots and characters of th- stnndard operas Ily J Walker McHnaddcn. Third edi tion revls-d and -nfarg-d. New York Thoma Y. Crowell Company The first edition of this useful handbook contained the plots of sixty-four operas This was enlarg-d to c'ghty-olght In th- second edition. Thl edition tontalns, the j;0'-". I more thsn on hundred and forty. Th- Plan of the olum- Is to give nrst a brief history of opera, with the date of Its first rrf?"n ance In various cities abroad and In Amer ca. Then foUos the csst. classified as bass, soprano, t-nor. barlton- and contralto, ine argum-nt Is ghen In brief cone uded with the story as developed In each act. AlrCr.ICAN ECONOMIC I.tKK. In Its civil -nd social ssp.cts. Ily Henry It d llurrh Ph. D.. head of th- department nf history and commerce In the West Philadelphia Hlsh School for nos. New York: The Macmlllan Companj. The hook la a roatatenu nt of the elements of -ronomlca In a form lo meet the Im portant phass nf American economic llf H Is planned for use as a text book, but It can b- rend wlih profit by those ihj wish to refresh their memorj on accepted nnomv theory. OH. SHOOT' Conf-eslons nf nn Acltat'd Sportsman. Dy Hex Ueacli. New York. Hsrper A Ilros Th- storv of bear huntlntc In Alsski pnd cougar hunting In Colorado bv .Mr. Ueach who took with him Pred Stone, tre well known comedian. SEA POEMS Ily Cale Tount nice New York! The Century Company. A collection of pn-ms about th- sea bv a Kentucklan who han procd by his erse that ho Is also a poet. Fiction THE UNCLAIMED I.ETTEn Hv Ann McCluro Sholl. Philadelphia: Dorrance & Co. niLIA OF INOI.ESIDE. By I.. M. Mont comry. N-w York: Frederick A. svno nave been responsible for the develop. utoges & o j MUS. FAIlHEI.t.. Ilv 'William Dnn , Howells. With an Introduction bv Mil dred Howells. Now York. Harper & Uros. I THE THIRTEEN TRAVELLERS. By Iluch I walp.il-. ion.: ueuia,e ji, Uum.i Companv. , SNOW-nLlND. Ilv ICatherlne Nenlln Burt. Boston: uougnion .wnim uompany. A new nmil by th- author of "Tho Brnnd. in,r Iron " It Is a storv of eonflipen. paslons In a lonely mountain cabin. ti EVERYBODY oyAo Inierlakeja JLibraiy Mft fluUY?fkn?WS' a Bi)od book bindinB. ke a good article of clothing, is a wT,?J uJl U V satlsfact,onr a"d economy. For the guidance of readers, therefore, NTFRIATCFM lr uT if ,he ,CUr7nt oks of importance that are bound in INTERLAKEN-the book cloth that for thirty-cight years has been noted for its tasteful color tones and sturdy wearing qualities. HELEN OF THE OLD HOUSE by Harold Bell Wright A rnrran.-. nflif In .nv Am..i..- iJ....-i-! community todav. Dletlnctly the beet etory ever written by the moit popular novel.it in the world D. APPLETON &. COMPANY. PubluSer. HEXAPOD STORIES By Edith M. Patch Cleverly llluitrsted itorlei about ill-footed Iniecti, told In lingusge suited for very young children THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS GOLD SHOD By Neton Fuesslt A etudy of mlidirecteJ tempersrrenprevesl int the undetlvlng currente of preienr djy exutencee nd tricing the titonlehing "Sue ecu" of a bunneii men of the Middle-Weil DON1 U L1VEHIGHT, rubluSerj WONDER STORIES By Carolyn bhernin Bailey The chokeit itorlei of indent nmholojy thermlngly retold In ilmple Ungusce. Besu. tifully llluitrsted In color by Clsrs M. Burd MILTON DRADLEY COMPANY TEN ONE-ACT PLAYS by cyllice (jerstenberg A collection of itr.Ung plsyleti which hive pro. ed their worth on the etige. Including the suthor's well-known "Overronei" DRCNTANO'S. rutliiKtri ROMANCE OF THE RABBIT By Francis Jammts Ribht'i feer. end low. hli own life on thu eirth, hli p.lgrimsiie to Tarsdlie with St I rsncli snJ hli snitnsl companlonii n.l his death A SfcAGLLL LIBRARY EDniON NICHOLAS L. nitOWN, PuUuhcr THE BAND-WAGON by Hon. 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TUB BOY SCOOTS BOOK OF CAMPFIRII JF P sj Against a background of the forcit wilds of British Columbia a land of primitive emotions, where justice is simple and revenge remorseless Edison Marshall has unfolded the love of a strong man for a real woman. His mag nificent portrayal of a sturdy woodsman and a city girl fighting for their lives against the forces of the Northern winter makes a sforji you will never forget. $1.90 uhercver books arc nold LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY, Publishers, BOSTON Fourteen Hundred Years Ago Islam rose and flooded the civilized world. Today the world of Islam it in n ferment in Africa, Egypt, India, Asia Minor, China which hns pro duced condition of (harp menace to the white race. 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