! 'V'H " rr,iiy i(,..v' .(ifi rv.e', imriT .m F-tfT? rJ75v?Ti V7 vrTTOj;,'''"'-- 11 1 t H-'" ... . fSwwiHP ' fi ' Bvaamrq puBEieBiiiiiiiAPErpHiA; satubpay;- September 24, 19.31: it WPORTANT BOOKS FORAMERICANS ABOUT OTHER PEOPLES OF TODAY FICTION OF EARLY FALL Noteworthy Nevel In Prese and Verse The experiences In 111? "Ileglnnlni! el ' -i.5nm" were certainly variegated i fcl for tbe here of Stephen Vincent ?,D01?' first novel, which bears that HK nnd will be ptibllnhrd by the Holts. i"1.6 ?. w th Ins Idyllic birth In Call- Jiii and continues with an equally 11 lc love experience at Yale. Then , nreercsses mere rigorous y te his ' :ri- n Arizona with some escape from erld War, 'innrtfltTen In Arizona wl lle Zi. ..nmn" nnil tllO YVi -? cmls P with Leve bringing him fritlen The. author, through but a little t twenty, has already made n mark .., rueniy, l uii-w., niv.w .. mum P Ml Loet and docs net hesitate in this ' "i1..!, tn ctvltrh off Inte versa when KTsplrlt moves him, An Expert en Flappers Sylvia Thompson, whose delightful novel, "Tlie Iteugh CresMnc." win re- cently published by Houghten Mifflin Company, is a nineteen-year-old Eng inn gin, new a student at Oxford. It was during her school days that she wrete thlH sudden, spontaneous nnd quite autobiographical novel. In Rn. land many of the critics have assumed the book te be the work of nn embit tered Veman of thirty, but the morn nntute readers have guessed,' and guessed rightly, that the young author has written herself into the character or uuzaDcui. she almost gave way te sudden, blind terror! NOTABLE BOOKS OF NEW SEASON SHELTERED, pampered, protected from the rougher side of life, the bleed of a long line of fighting ancestors showed in this one moment of tense peril. A heart-gripping episode in Ethel M, Dell's newest long novel, "The Obstacle Race." The story of a girl's supreme struggle te escape from the maddening j whirl of a pleasure-mad society. Better than "The Hundredth Chance," better than "The Lamp in the Desert," better than "The Tep of the World." Best of the long line of novels by one of the world's most popular writers of fiction. Net published in serial form. , At All BoecseZera, $2.00 G. P. Putnam's Sens New Yerk Londen ETHEL M.DELLS J2VJ57TV- ZSTO-V&Xj kJ th Obstacle Race skm Bach from tht Last Outpost of liemanct lias cemeTie Greatest Adventure Nevil of our Time nMtiN By James Oliver Curwood Auther of "The Valley of Silent Mtt. " and "Tlit River's End" '"THIS is the third and last of Curwood's tense novels of the "Three-River Country." His first two sold ever 250,000 copies. T hat would hive been flattery te rnejt writers-te Curwood, who lives the vivid north weeds life of which he writes, it was a fighting challenge. Read, and you'll spend breathless ha with, the wonderful new book Curwood has produced igL It's the dynamic tale of David Carrigan, who pursues a deadly mission into the seething furnace of the flaming forest Of Marie-' Anne a girl you'll love despite the myteries 6he refuses te explain Of St. Pierre, a modern Viking of the Northland. It's a book you'll want te read even if you haven't read a novel for months or years. Turkey; A World Problem One always thinks of Dr. Talcott Williams as a nntive rhlladelphlan. en account of his long Journalistic nnd cultural association with the city, but tue truth is exposed conceding the former Philadelphia Press editor nnd ernvltui director of the Pulitzer Scheel of Journalism at Columbia; In a note which his publishers, Doubleday, Vasts & Ce. send with the new book, "Turkey." Dr. Williams is a Turk I At least he Is ene of the geed Americans who could, an they list, claim Turkish nativity, for he was born and brought up In Turkey, where his father was nn American mis sionary. And for years Dr. Williams wem rjjjwly connected with the Uni versity of Pennsylvania Museum In his specialty of Oriental -languages, history and archeology. Thcse facts give a specially wide and nappy equipment for the writing of this book, which considers Turkny as n world-problem of today. Persiflage aside of Turkish nativity, there Is no writer new contemporary who Is se well fitted, through observation, study and experience, te interpret Turkey te fellow American countrymen. Dr. Wil liams hns given a saga nnd scnsnnable conslderatlon te a very serious inter national matter In this book, which Is the rewritten and reworked subntance of thu Lewell Institute lectures of 1020 the Wimbledon, Derby or World Series of scholarly lectures in this country. Fer Turkey with Its issues nnd ques tions In n state of suspension Is un doubtedly hazardous te the safety of the ueria. it is 11 congeries of races and religions, an ethnic and crcedal complex. Suggestlve and corrective ideas for constructive handling of the Turkish problem are a part of the Williams book. Largely It Is n thesaurus of valuable Information nnd of vital sta tistics. But It has Interpretations as well as facts concerning Turkey, by which Is meant, for the purposes of the book, the Turkish Empire. it Is pointed out that Turkey Is the connecting link of thrce continents, Europe, Afrlcn nnd Asia. Fer three thousand years it has been the cause of wars and holds the seeds of count less wars te come. In a country where there nre many races, but n common religion, there is n hepe of unity ; In a country where there are ninny relig ious but one race there is a prospect of ir, mil -.lurKey lias neither. Its only hepe for prosperity is nn American mandatory, thinks Dr. Williams. A few of the significant chnptcr heading are Hew Itnces Divide Tur key. The (Jeed and Had of Islam, the Sultan nt Werk, Where the Turk Went Wrong. Armenia, The Arab, The Bankruptcy of Asia, The Industrial Revolution nnd Asln. Whv Ti,l Xnt Turkey Improve? nnd The Fruit of Bad uuic anu (eurtn Unfit. Holidaying With Holliday "Personality plus" would bp a phrase te distinguish "Turns About Town" (Deran), by Rebert Certes Hollidey, If Mr. Holliday weren't tee geed n writer nnd, obviously, oceut te be- epithcticlzed by se peculiarly bro bre bro midietic a bit of the admen's "argot. One con almost hear the nntiphen in kind: "Yes, ir's 'nlright.' ' It's net. But it Is nil right. Hellidaying is geed fun. These who remember "Walking Stick Papers," which means these who rend 'cm, knew this. It tnkes you en launts te Wash ington, nt the birth of an administra tion : te FrlHCe's streets and wntersldcs, te Philadelphia in the originally viewed "The uiiusualnct.3 of Parisian Phila delphia," te New Yerk in many man ifestations. It introduces you te Cab inet members, editors, undertakers, boarding-heiiHo mistresses (giving both the economics nnd economies of land land ladyiem, or. nheuld It be landlndyish ness?), barbers, writers, newspaper men and jeurnalists: simple souls, m pfcistlcated souls aril subtle souls. Yeu get the dope en writing in rooms and rending in beJ among ether mngnulia, nnd inside info, concerning the creases, presslng, scouring nnd dry-clcnnlng qf the pants, vests, etc., of htatesmen and personages, te suy 'nothing of their nex. tlieir manneis, their personalities and their policies in the line of trivia. Yeu gtt an informed t-ttidy of "Jim" Ilunekcr (Jim (he Penman, tV some times subvribed himself) and close ups of Joyce Kilmer, (iilbert Keith Chesterton, H V. Lucas nnd ether no tabilities of te pen or tjpewriter. Variety is certainly the splice of life for these otherwise detached pnpers, se widely separable in theme and style. They are observant, pungent, pi quant geed-humored in outlook nnd humorous in insight. About them the publishers blurb, with mero than or dinary jusuin'ntien: R. C. II. is back In town, stroll- Explains Turkey HHHHHHK&vurjdHKaltii llt. TALCOTT WILLIAMS Who lias nnnlyzed the Turkish situation for American readers in a book based en Ills Lewell lectures Ing amiably about nnd noticing things. Yeu overtake him when he has stepped te leek into n small, dinky shop window en Eighth nvc nvc nue apparently entranced. "Queer thing," he begins at once, 'bout undertakers' shops. Loek at that In a bust of Ged. Fact! Any how, leeks just llke pictures of Ged William Blake used te make." Or he may tell you, If you are lucky, 'bout the distinguished haircut he had at the Brevoort one dny, or the plcasantest oddities of an interview with O. IC. Chesterton. Truth te tell, there's no telling when he starts where he'll finish. Mnybe It'll be nbeut traffic cops, mnybe about edi tors, mnybe about situations wanted, mnybc nbeut landladies. But anyhow he's a friend of yours nnd he cer tninly enn talk, and talk well. The blurb Is en pink pnper. Holli Helli day's robustieus quality deserves a mere manly hue. But it Isn't perfumed. PlnknesH, no mero than perfume, has any part in these neatly turned "Turns About Town," In which one may stroll about taking the air with Rebert Certes Holliday. He shakes a limber limb nnd twins n menn wnlRing-stlck, he docs. And he has a wny with him. Disappeared! One jf the best fictional presentations of a disappearance In reH:nt fiction iV the central theme of "She Who We Helena Cass" (Geerge II. Deran Com pany). This is, pe for as we recollect, the first no el by the author, but en the basis of it Lnwrcnee Rlsinsr is bound te be heard from again. Fer hy linn abundant capital. He knows hew te ' plot" nnd hew te develop n plot. He has n gift of psycholegizing his char acters se that their motives and moods, in relation te the narrative, nre clear te the reader. His capacity for rharacter rharacter 7iitIen ia keen. And he can write grip pingly nnd graphically. Mr. Rising keeps the reader en a con stant guess. He suspends his mystery udmlrably nnd holds the reader in cor cer cor tespendlng suspense. Teeming, Throbbing India "Mysterious Indin" .(Century Com pany) shows mere thnn the surfnee of this subtle nnd mystic, gorgeous nnd sordid, opulent nnd pauperized land It gets under the soil of the country' under the skin of the people. Rebert Chnuvelet, son-in-law of Alphense Dnudet, novelist himself of rnre pnrts traveler with the eye te see. memerv te retnln, intellect te analvze and f-tyle te communicate, writes fully and fascinatingly about n fasclnntlng sub ject, out of opportunities rnrely vouch safed te the ordinary glebe-trotter who visits this teeming, throbbing land. He has been nble te penetrate that defensive and delusive courtesy with which the high-class native fdiutn out the tourist from nny real knowledge of his life. He finds new ptcturcsquencss In this much-described lnnd since he has known personally a number of In dian Princes nnd seen the inside of native high life, which he presents. in a gay, colorful style. M. Clmurelet la chatty, witty, with n flair for the amusing and the glamour glameur glamour ous. Throughout he preserves that per fect respect for the mood. of sheer en joyment of which a Frenchman Ib usually master. lie does net discuss policies nnd unrest, and the India of tomorrow. It is India as It Is. the amazingly Interesting fact before his eyes, that en grosses him. That India, forever nnd forever the land of mystery beyond mys tery, its ruined cities antedating the known history of man, Its pcople mov ing upon its nnclcnt, teeming surface as insignificant ngninst the enormous background of time as a puppet-show in the Forum that India Is made pres cnt in M. Ohnuvelet's easy clarity of phrase. The book Is profusely Illustrated from photographs. An accurate and colorful translation has been made by B. S. Brooks, The Hely Land Today Dr. Ellffu Grant, professor of biblical Hterature in Haverford College, has written nn Interesting work in "The People of Palestine" (Lippincott), which Is a worthy compnnlen te his "The Orlerft In Bible Times." The present work pnlnts n picture of present-day Oriental life. It is n new and amplified edition of the nuther's "The Pensantry of Palestine! Life, Mnnners nnd Customs of the Vlllnge, the vlllnge being taken ns the most fertile type. Fnr from being n "dead" country, though Its Inngunge is n dend Inn gitagc, Pnlestine has in the last few years been very much In tbe mnrcn of events whnb with Us plnce In the World War, Marshnl Allcnby's capture of Jerusalem, nnd the stntus of Zionism under the mnndnte of the Lengue 01 Nations. The Hely Land of the wor shipers of three grcnt religions, the hope of the carth-scnttered and sea divided Jewry, the snored shrine or Chrlstlnnity, there was indeed room for this welcome book of Professer Grant b about Palestine. The writer hns put his material Inte shnpe from his nctunl observations and experiences. This is net a boek-mado book. It Is a man-made book and made by nn observant, reverent and scholarly man. Such n first-hand and first-ratio presentation of conditions nnd nffnirs in modern Pnlestlnc Bheuld 1,0 . t.-I1e rnnilln? nt a time when the world Is discovering nnew the truth of the Tcrentinn touchstone, mat neuiing that concerns mankind anvwncre is eiinn mnn evprvwhere. The forty- five illustrations from photographs nre well selected nnd grnphtc. Parable of the Pebble "The Sirnnge Adventures of a IVb IVb bie" (Centnrv Compan) If a new vol ume in HnllnmJInwkswnrth, "Adven tr..a in Vnfiii? Wendcrlnnd seriew. The author is highly qualified for his , tuk of prefcnting selenUnV principles ' nnd evolutionary facts in a iinn-tivhnl-cnl nnd nberbing way. Phis veliimy I ns much te interest nnd Inform both old nnd young. The writer literally tells the story of the earth s huterv nnd hew te rend it in the Inndxcape nnd the i-tones. Yet the book Is fnr from n for- mal or conventional geology textbeek. I It hns humim interest n well ns scien tific grounding. Through the pr.rn ilc of the pebble It unrolls n vast tale which will interest these te whom the challeng ing enigmas of nature make n definite nppeal. The book is abundantly nnd htriklngly Illustrated. Economics for Scheel Children Prof. Henry Reed Burch. Ph. D.. head of the department of history nnd commerce of the West Philadelphia High Scheel for Beys, has written n ,rihnnL- en "Americnn Economic Life" (the Mncmlllan Company) In tended for use In the secendnry schools, i Tf (q e conservative summary of eco nemic thought, with especial reference' H te the problems 01 .merica. At win time, when there hns been the meet serious nttack in history en .what is called the capitalistic system, it is re gretted that Prof. Burch's chapter en money is net thought out a little mere clenrly. The Bolshevists set out in the beginning te destroy popular faith in money by printing rubles in such vust quantities rs te destroy their vnltie. Thev snld they were going te hbelish cnpitnlism by nbellshing tbe thing en which cnpilnllpin thrived, nnd when thev had mnde Russia a money meney less country they wen going te nhelisli money in the rest of the world. Barter, that is, 1 he exchange of one commodity for another, was te be the only form of tr.-id. Nothing better illustrates the nhallewness of their economic thinking. They think that barter has disappeared from the world, when, ns a matter of fact, all trade Is barter. Meney nt bot tom. Is nothing mere than a third com modity used te facilitate the barter of ether commodities net cnslly inensurcd In the terms of ene another. Geld is accented ns the most suitable thlml com modity. All ether forms of money that nre economically sound nre promissory notes nnynble in cold. Thev nre used for convenience, hut they nre converted into geiu every day ns geld Is needed In international transactions. There is no theory of money which is se simple and se complete as this. Prof. Burch Indicates thnl he Is nware that there is such n theory, but he con fuses the thinking by writing nbeut legnl tender notes ns n standard of de ferred payments nnd by saying that metallic money is 11 step beyond barter and by nn admission that fiat money mnj be justifiable. An Unmoral Weman The heroine of "The Broken Laugh" (Rebert M. McBrlde fc Ce.). by Meg Vlllnrs, nulher of "Betty AW Alene," Is nn uninernl wemnn. She It neither nil geed nor all tyul, In the cera inen acceptance of (he words. Through out the novel, which Is well told, nh remains morally Indeterminate, nut is Its progress, If she deen net becema re re spectable in the Grundlnn sense, ill becomes worthy of respect. In Klssy Klssy the heroine, the author hns creatively protected n figure thnt intrigues th icndcr'H interest, just ns Becky Share did. In Hpite of her weaknesses, sh is interesting nnd even engaging. Mts VlllarM' book Is likely te be both con detuned nnd commended. Huge, Tolstoy, Dickens . . . Caine" rwATlLKS OABRIEL IN THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE writes: "Caine is the surviving member of u school, the founders of which were Dickens, Huge nnd Tolstoy." Nail Caine, like his great predecessors, gives te the full the desired measure of life, with its hopes nnd passions, its joys nnd its defeats. Iall Cain New novel is above all an unforgettable heart romance which sets the pulses throbbing THE HASTE FMAN L The Story of a Sin "Seme say that it is an Apology for Sin." In a letter te the public giving an interesting viewpoint en life and liter ature the author has replied te this unjust criticism. A printed copy of this will be mailed te any one who wishes te judge for himself. But ethers say "It may make the yeaP memorable." Chicago Tribune. "It is a great book. The autherhas put his entire genius into this terrible story." Philadelphia Public Ledger. "A tragic sweep of the chords of life and love." Edwin Markham. Price, $1.75. At All Bookstores J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY : PHILADELPHIA Ak Your Ilnekurllrr or III" I'nhlUhrr fnr Cnm'illmnt-'rv lloeklet by Hull Caine "SCENKS AM) CIIAHArTKItS" Miiniiiiti.i;."j 111 1 j mnn iiiiiriiH.iHttiifiHtiiiiiiiiiuiiiJiiiiiiiuuiiumyuTitTir.iuiLMHn.fi.iiiimiiii.iiiiLiijinq,;!. It has the surge of full life in it the threes of souls, the deep loves of men, the clash of rivalry, the pain of sacrifice. It is the story of David Littlcdale, of Little dale, Connecticut, a man awake te the problems of the day his philosophy of life, his passionate love affair, his keenly critical attitude toward American institutions, and his bitter disillusionment with respect te his generation. Walt Masen calls it "one of the real achievements in recent fiction." Wallace Irwin says it is "a thoughtful book, full of questions both answerable and unanswerable." OWEN JOHNSON'S Great American Nevel 1 j n This hovel raises its author from the ranks of these novelists who reflect life and thought into the company of these few writers who meld them. It is an enthralling story of contemporary America. Mere than that, it is a convincing exposition of the failure of modern education te instil in our young men the ideals and the love of service which are inseparable from true Americanism. "'1 he Wasted Generation" is a book for all thinking Americans who are alive te the dangers threatening the new America. $2.00 wherever books are 6eld LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY I Rniniiiiiiitlini7iWi7fiTllUUii,tijiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiirrmTnT. Publishers : BOSTON UajlJLIll JTTlTTTri i-TTi 1, fl 1 RTfmrWrVm THE NEW BOOKS Call for it today. Wherever books are sold-$2. 00 Hpclitan Boek ((oration 119 We.t 40ih Street, New Yerk Surely the Great Nevel of the Year IFWfafer Games A. S. M. HUTCHINSON aKvUCte. . m Everybody Likes iii r&S.S f.. demoiselle V Menk Carle. y William Le Queux ;ou, e,y i"1-'" .f lltu " " (e"-- J'Pects. I Vi ,..."". ll, l'nroiiiiitle.M " KmnCe. y et l,ltr'Kue' mysteiy ft. wM "." Booksellers. Jl.75, ! Ce., Publhlitri, Nw Yeik QUIN By Alice Hegan Rice Auther of "Mm. Wiggs of the Cabbage-Patch," etc. yLREADV a iucccii, Print ed twlce befere publica tion. Bookseller! nre doubling and trebling their orders. A full-iizrd novel of great whinnies! charm in which Ihe author's humor plays ever a love story intensely human and appealing. (At all book, stores, $2.00. Published by The Century Ce., 353 Fourth Ave., New Yerk City.) "One of the best books of our times." New Yerk Times. "A masterpiece of modern fic tion." Bosten Trunacript. "An amazingly fine contribu tion te modern novel writing:." Chicago Tribune. "Quite outdoes anything that has gene before." Philadelphia Ledger. "A grout piece of literary craftsmanship." Detroit Netva. "Quite a nplendid book." Washington Herald. "Nevel is one of the season's bust." -Oakland Tribune. Fiction THREE flOr.Dir.nS IW Jehn Ie rns. Nbw Terk: Gserft II Deran Company. A novel In which the Judicatien of th rebellion of jeuth aeft'nat thn established order Is set forth In the tery of three veune men who terel In th war Vy II C T. Putnam's I Why airereB 'What ! hpr!n? The nre some of the QUMtlens which th- nu nu iher selM te answer In a clear, common-1 jumble was. The book Is Intimate, personal, human LOOKING AT riCTL'RKS. Hy S. C. Kalnes ' mlth. l. A . M H E. New Tork Oserire II. Deran Company MKnRV-GO.ROfNDr.I.ATS Ry Edwar.l Anthenv New Yerk The Century Com Cem paty I nei rhymm of topical nature whleh i.iTT ',unw 1. uuut'iunn iciuin in xneir in- Galsworthy's New Nevel TO LET TIip LEATHER I'l'SHERI Wltwer. New YeiV. G Sen A real nnd srlpplna story of the anuared circle, telllnff hew a eurr collegian feuaht hln wav tn triA rhnmnlumhln nnr, n .... the irl. A really eT-tllently developed novel I renleui verniritatlen A number of them with a (lenee of character and flavored vv.th ! 'c"n'" or arm llfe. The author la one rn quainiiy pnraaea pnuonepny of tha rlnr slde. FAR TO SEEK. Hv Maud D'er. Bosten Houithten Mifflin Company. A noted fictional interpreter of Drltleh charncter and mpn-ially of their nffnirs In IrMla. wrlte an Ininreaa'va nevi wriih rcenes laid In Lahore, diirlna the outbreak nf the nrrlnir of 1H1U Whlle she haa net turned actual pople Inte fiction, she base the opinion of her Hindu personages unen actual cnnvoreatlonw with natives of India HIE TRIUGER OF" CONSCIENCE. Uv Rebert Orr Chlnperfleld, New Yerk Rebert M Mcllrlde & Ce A past master of the fiction of crimi nology and detection has written an en en rresslnR story of a murder and !, miminn The rcenes are laid In a fashionable sum inrr l'l oil absorb vantase. tce, In that he vvrltee much b-tter Kncllsh thai, is found In the average raj r tery jnrn TEN IIO''ni Ry Cnnstince I Bmlth. New Yerk' ltorceurt, Hra & Ce A novel which. It lb forecast, win mBL. the reputation of a -ut Rrltlsh writer In- nf the most minted of the contributors te F I A a column nnd U t'i hrlclst of a. vicuihe ... . unui musical ceineay LAWN TENNIS t'P-TO.DATE Hv S Powell I Tllitckmere New Yerk Gorce It Deran' errpanv An Interesting and tntertaln'ns; r vel- hv Rrltlsh plajer of exprtnH Rrd reputation It contains contributed artleles bv Tilden Johnsten and ethers. There ere twentv eUht Plates of notion pictures, shewlnc th "tre'tee I etc of recent champtnne The author line' ecidd vlewa en a number cf points, and his boeK will doubt ess provoke nm ,.,,. . treversy. " TINY TOILERS AND THEIR WORKS nv ft Olenvvned Hark New Yerk Th Onturv rnmninv - All about buns, and trrld In a very ,., ,., hlmi.n tun.. mI.K .. . ..: ' va" Here's Remance! Daughter or the Sun rr colons The author 's net stinting of J'"1 humn w"-'' yllh constant allusions te s suspene and surprises nnd he hns woven '"'., ''0.u,,rJ'V,, J?1" Insects nmcnr pod! it of thenr a plot that will hehl the reader r.nd "'r. 1abl,"i Should be both Inferma. iserbfd Mr Chlpnerfleld has another ad- , v "J Interest PR te young readers vv.th a treduced te the heroine as sh quietly starts ' "'ui'' ;'in Mer'"' "1 her das's market ng. the reader fellows her ".m?infi V', ' V.,n""1"re1 breathlessli until at o'clock In thj ," F y br,1"lln w' 1'JVi.T . r-UAT 'ItU.r and Ilenard Darwin, II. Deran Cnmnnnv. Ihu collaboration of two nremlnnt nrltlsh pelfers and irelf critics. Th, techrlqiie of the same Is presented and the form of SIXTH PRINTING 37TH THOUSAND S2.00 wherfver book are sold LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY Publiihers, Bosten ulna, the most fateful decision In her life Is made, THE OTHER SfSAN. Hy Janette Lee. New Yerk Charles Scrlbner's Sens Conflict of love and duty In a New Enr land farmer s vvlfe COmVKIl Rs Ororge Agnew Chamberlain. New Yerk Harpe- tr Hros A dashing, laughing stmy nf the leva af fair of a mn and a girl whom he inrrd wllheut knowing who she was. He foil 'n leve vvi'h her from seeing a furtive tear trickle down her pensive cheek. DAl'flHTER Ol" THE SUN Ry "Gulen Sabe New Yerk Onarles ScrlbTwr " SILVER ROW inuianapena: OUTWITTING OUR NERVES By JACKSON, M.D.,and SALISBURY Fer all who have "nerves." Au thoritative. Practical. Easy and stimulating reading. Handbook of nerve-health. 4th printing. $2. 50. All bookstores. Published by The Century Ce., 3S3 Fourth Avenue. New Yerk City. THE SHERIFF O! Rertei Drules Merrill Cenrpans A dashing novel rich In eltuat'e hasnrda and with a del ahtful hrntn. " " . ... ...- ... .. ----- -." tins erpmn u lie 1110 irii lull nn.ih ha. .i i.. a writer krmvvn for his enormous output of occasional and topical vetse. He haa maris a geed Jeb of It The book is exciting In content and ers readable. General YvlLLtlM LLOYD OARRISON. p.. i h. P?' hpman P""'0": Atlantle Menth"; V Hfrnn! edition of Mr niM..n - i.i. llsnt bleir'vphv of an euntnnillng tlgur ' Ameitcan hlstnrv one. Indeed, whom Mr Chapmnn rnnslder "th,. etrnnTeM man in taste for natural history. SOME MODERN TRENCH WRITERS hv ft Tjirnust-Mllnes. New Yerk- R. "i r.ueM and s-mnith(itir tiMk . -. hr of pJsTnlflcant contcmnerarv Ilternrv I flsTiirA nf FrhFifst rieii.t . .-X.Vi n.v I .... . ... . ,.,.,..- " nan. rinnrs inPI&si Maur!c lUrrea nrt ! In a aaarchlns ami 3 rilEirNT-DAT QOI.P nv Oenrr. Dun.n ' 11 n sj uacn'ir1 Ti a ., .. - - ii""ri;V.V-." " rw rK!uere, 1 TO LET combines the passionate sense of the beautiful revealed in "The Dark Flower" with the steady scrutiny of present-day life se marked in "The Man of Property." On Sele at All Bookstores A tale of Aztec treasure - of American adventurers, who seek it - of Zoraida, who conceals it. Buy it te-day, yen will read it te-night By Quien Sabe tl.7S Charles Scribncr's Sens BOIIQlIIIIIIIf Every Weman : will read atigefttetti e$ as eagerly as she would her own biography. Fer the tome reason and because it is nn even mere brilliant and sparkling novel than POTTER1SM, every man will read it, tee. N. P. D., that most searching and discriminating critic of the New Yerk Glebe, says in n long and en thusiastic review of DANGEROUS AGES: "Above all, Rese Macaulay is the most spirited and readable of modern story tellers". from ms Instrurtlve.v l.lustrated from photeirranh THE YOI'NO MAN TROM JKni'vI.rv Ry William O 'Rallantln, Ilostei Houehten Miff, In c0mpans " THE PKOPLK OP PALESTINE Orant Philadelphia J H Company F- I"lh , Llpp.nc tt TOMMY nil YMKP. Rv Aithur V Dl-hl . ..,. :...,r.,n a juijr 1 nrnDAm Rr L A ; r,'.ef. ,M";,?:.e"-su.buiri" . i Hebbs- jlclpatlon'ef th. b in.h Veldier. in wlnSnr. r. e ' '""..'" ". W"V- mese rnvmes have much n nfl I fantlmsnt and humor underlslns their .. I ICC! rilK SEVEN AC.KS OF MAN R, Ralnh Reraenrren llnunn i,i.,i. '.'?;"" Prei. ......b jienmu 5i:..J1,."S.ST' " JlW.li" .! '" '. 1- .-. -'-. " 1 enj mnnner mi are mere of a unit .lnt of suhstnn ' V, M,dPerV " " h"""-"l net cmKjl MYSTEUIOrs) INDIA,, Rv Reh.rt I h,m, ' ... .. 1., m ,,- 1 eniurv l nmran m J I " $2-00 everywhere. W I Ta3i --K&mm. (X&S Fifth $3.00 Edition " ffl&J 1 VCffii'i Avenue, 8 Kf fr FrJ New Yerk The MJ&z ;,r Americanization Pri m LTJints .. . r KvbJitM 1 1 FOR ruircru.. AVM&iTl mt . nu f tvkiw i'.-x-y - i UBOOKS street tdward Bek -ISLl WlWIIlilf II IIMlll MsimiiiiiiiswisiiIm W Charles Scribner's Sens i Vhtf .nl.f n-.K. 1. L-.T ",r" 1 I'"'1"' .....w What 1. th. rn.in ,,;.. "'"".""'"sraienessi I lermuias, net a wnai la Hi mala purpeia et human llfalKsn Unll carried reause, and can la ths vest Decket, e' t eon. SLPr5&8tetiaiiBefll(5ter Evcrythingr Desirable in Boekj sITilCRXrun.N IIUMl. "I rank it with Franklin s Autebi- egrapny. WM. LYON PHELPS . "The best Autobiegraohv et our I i r a " I n i- ma n . r- 1 niil iwUKU WUK H . KKP GUILES WINDOW GeweBarrMSCutchewi 1. iValaul I, Juniper and Niaaem Sla. XUfata te Id Jflsaa "" Charles Scribner's Sens At Uoekstores. $2.00 Dedd, Mead'& Company PublLlicrs NewVArif & . -w-sss, Si'.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers