V U i ; JCirrn wmmfr" Mi,3 MKt ' TA..V H 'V feVENING PI RM Oi ' ' fc .UJ. LEDtfEJ hrmiinwf rx:xxjuuji.xjcj i, KSSP SSffiS :v i r'-.. i '' "' -V v-.1 '-nki iP :eting called wrs. 10 DISCUSS .'PROS' . . i , X'i isr:'JW ctr ' -v. rr fMlenalism and Recruiting of Scheel Stars Menace te .t Sports, Say3 Stagg ipTUTORS MAKE SUGGESTIONS A m(A vmm m f'vJS vSi .1 .Vfimttffrv ft Vn ntrnci f nti &' """" " '-"ee1-" " fe Ftgit Professionalism m H , J, 'Following nre various methods 4V1....a..i i i i- nt-.. auaswau u.v concur- i --Mtin football trams te overcome the temptations thrtin before collegiate athletes te play en professional teams: First. Enforce present rules in letter and spirit. Second. Professional org.iniza erg.iniza org.iniza tlena should leislutc against col lege men. ' Third. Crrntc m strong n sen timent among the plavers and the ' public thnt it would be impossible I' I te Induce n college man te turn pre. Fourth. Make athletes believe they are beins Honored when they make a team Instead of permitting them te believe they are honoring college. Fifth. Abolish professional football. LAND OF THE BOLSHEVISTS NEW FICTION New Attempts fe Explain The Mystery That Is Russia RUSSIA is se vast and 'belongs te a period no remote from our own that it is impossible for any visitor te the country te come out with knowledge' of mere titan one phase of its many sided and complicated life. It emerged from the civilization of the Middle Ages a century later than the rest of Europe, and It moved mere slowly than the neighboring na tions. Se the Rus sia of 1014 was mere like the France of 1750 -than like the Eng land of 1870. or United Stntcs In 1770. !?" ASiiJyB I sm twgPQkvQewk H "'--. .:.&' ssTH H ' 'fmM FTUS'lv A. VANDEULir even than the All Aninrlniii nr in Fnellshman visit J .!. . ..-.. tlA- LI ..tiff ..Wlt.Mlf adequate standard (ei judging Uus-, cities and only such concessions ero The Soviets themselves exercise only such power as pleases these higher up. If a Soviet asserts Itself it Is dissolved. The committee system of managing pub lic tervlec corporations nnd industry has been abandoned, and In its place there Is a system of one-man con trol. The Commissioner of Trans portation, for example, frankly ad mitted that he puts a slngle man in charge of a railroad nnd holds blm re sponsible for results. Dr. Quest reports also that the army Is thoroughly organized and is In evi dence everywhere) te such an extent as te produce the impression that the Government rests en military power. The political power is concentrated in the workmen of the towns nnd cities, which contains nbeut one-tenth of the population. The pensants of the ceun try districts arc compelled te submit te the dictation of the workmen of the !A , Chicago, Feb. 7. Declaring that the "preselyting of college athletic through recruiting of hlgh-chenl tuM by vn ridua universities had become a menace et only te amateur .ports but te American youth" Alenzo A. Stagg. athletic-director nt the University of Chicago, today called a meeting of "Western Conference athletic directors te decide what action should be taken te prevent professionalism in the con ference nthletle ttams. The athletic directors will meet at "an early date," Mr. Stags announced. Mr. Stage is president et trio comer- sin. He Instinctively compares her Institutions and her people with tne people and institutions of his own country. He rarely makes allowance for the difference in the historical erns te which his country and Russia belong. And these who have visited the coun try vince the revolution of 1017 have, for the most part, gene with n romantic theory about the significance of a dem ocratic revolt against despotism and have reported little beside what they found te justify their preconceived ideas. v Thry have ovctleoked the fact that neither the Bolshevists nor any ether human peirer could move the) hands of the Russian political clock, forward a hundred yean in t penty. four hours. THIS does net mean that what they write i- uninteresting. Take, for examnle. "Through the Russian Rev elutien" (Beni & Llverlght), in which made te them as the peasants by their control of feed supplies arc able te force from their rulers. Thus Russia today is a military autocracy of the town Communists rUHng en the backs of the InditiM InditiM ualistie peasants. ALTHOUGH Frank A. Vanderllp has net been In Russia, he spent three months In Europe Inst summer studying economic conditions, and In '"What Next in Europe?" (Hnrceurt, Brace & Ce.) he has reported the result of his observations and of his conversations with Russian spokesmen whom he met They were the tpekesmen of the Uolslio Uelslio Uolslie vi&t Government, and of course they de fended it. Mr. Vanderllp, however, draws his own conclusions, and one of them Is thnt until the rest of the world is convinced of the stability of the so se called Si viet Government there can be little economic recovery In Russia. The collapse of Russia would have been enough without the war te have brought economic chaos in Kurepc. The Ia4 bbbbbVbbbbbbbbbbbib j!ih"k THE JOKER OP THE PLAINS A picture of coyote by Will James from Milk' "Watched by W lid Animals" die Western unlverMtles In Mntcmcnts j i" its recording of the impressions and "r rs ence Athletic Directors Association. n,. th,. wiuinmii tms written hie u i ..:,..n i-i ,.-.i i- .i. - iiwM athletics." lie said. "It lin been (le- I " ""'-"--'-" " "- v .-- itiinun mumimnii piuv im iirewui ment. ll is a dramatic taery uucu , policy Mr. Vandcrlip docs net see Hew with thrilllni: incident after thrilling anything can be done te help the coun ceun incident. Rut Mr. Williams is a Se-, lTyt Discussion of the Russian situa ciallst in hearty smpathy with every- i tjen occupies but n small part of Mr. thing the Bolshevists were trying te , Vanderlip's book. He devotes himself de. lie llnds himself deeply moved by ri,iflP n .muMprinr- m-Iii muni- h iinne a serious matter, for certain h,atcrti j me euens ei VkuViv w ,1"'"" uu- "" i te relieve tue existing crisis. His point colleges have strongly enter-d the neitloKe et oppression. j.ucir icauers arc of vcw js tnnt 0f a banker of competition. Ihis is tne wen iit-mi- taints ana martyrs in Ms eyes, lie am eus of all the forms of professionalism net tai;e wjth him the necessary Mb- nd cannot be easily ernuicnti. ine tericai an,i nsvcholecicnl background en moralizing te the morals of hish school. beysj Competition among the lellegesl of the East for hlsb choel athletes, I am Informed, ha1' become a M-ramble. I "EaU Competes for Atldetes" "In the Middle West it has become ANIMALS STUDY MEN Mills Says They Are as Inter ested in Us as We Are in Them If we may believe Enes A. Mills, the mountain Hen of -Northwestern America Is less likely te attack human beings than Is the common bull of the n7ai', Mr- MllIs n "Watched by Wild Animals" (Deublcday, Page & Ce.) says that he has never known of an authentic instance of an attack ou a human being by a mountain lien. The animal, like nil ether wild animals, Is intensely curious about man, nnd will watch him from cover, and even fellow him for hours te see what he Is bout. Mr. Mills says that en one oc casion, while he was following a snow covered trail ever the mountains, be discovered en his return by the sam route uiac a lien naa accompanied mm a little way in the rear, and that when he bad stepped te rest the Hen had stepped also and remained hidden only a few feet away from him. Neither will the wolf attack human beings, ac cording te Mr. Mills. He is wary of tbe scent of man. Hunters hnvc shot a deer and left it out nil night and found It untouched in the mernine be cause they had rubbed their hands nil ever the carcass. The coyote, which Is a 6iuall wolf, is the practical joker among nulmals. Twe nights In succession a coyote stele n chicken from a ranchman near whose house Mr. Mills was enmping, nnd each time he ate the fowl near the camp, leaving the feathcra en the ground. The evidence was se damning ngainst Mr. Mills that the ranchman told him he would better pitch his camp farther from the hen roost. Mr. Mills has been observing animals for j ears, nnd In this book he has put down his discovery that nnimnls are also in the habit of observing man and that they have Btudlcd the ways of man about as carefully as man has studied their ways. WHAT THEY ARE LIKE Intimate Portraits of a Greup of Noted Britishers Heiketh Pearson has treated a group of British men of lettere nnd men of the stage with as much uncon uncen uncon ventlenallty as the anonymous nuther et "Mirrors of Downing Street" treated the statesmen. Mr. Pearson Is kin te an English bishop nnd he was an un derstudy te Sir Geerge Alexander. In addition, he has proved that he can write with as much facility as many men who make of writing a profession. In his book, "Modern Men and Mum mera" (Harcourt, Brace & Ce.) he has much te say about Geerge Bernard enaw, Htr Herbert Beerbohm i.ree, nir Georte Alexander. Frftnk Harris. Stephen Phillips, Lytten Strachey and several ether distinguished men. In the second part of the volume he has in eluded a group of brief comments en Wells, Gesse, Mrs. Asqulth, Hall Calne. Winsten Churchill, Jeseph Cenrad nnd a let mere. His essay en Shaw, with which the volume begins, Is an enthusiastic ap preciation of the 'man whom he de scribes as the greatest English drama tist since Shakespeare and one of the most brilliant thinkers In all British history. Of course, be known that Shaw ls an Irishman, but he docs net think it necessary te stress that point. The picture of Phillips deals with the last period of tbe man, when be was in financial straits and was indulging In bis cups. He calls Phillip a miner poet with moments of inspiration. Tree ap pears under his pen as a man of erratic disposition and uncertain tcmncr. con stantly making an attempt te be witty and epigrammatic after the manner of uscar wiidc. Vt Churchill he remarks that nothing but death can prevent him from "becoming Prime Minister of the country for which he has se nobly sac rificed nil his principles." and that "the man who can survive the Antwerp and Galllpell hazards of the late war will survive everything except national edu cation." These quotations give a taste of bis style. The book will delight all these who like Informed comment about men and women who have moved con spicuously en the stnge of life. Appreciated at Heme A. S. M. Hutchinson's "If Winter Cemes" Is new reported te be the best tcllin'g novel In Knglnml as well as In the United States nnd Canada. Over a quarter of n million copies have been sold in this country In five months' time. A pocket edition of Mr. Hutchin son's four novels, "Once Aboard the Lugger." "The Happy Warrior." "The Clean Heart" and "If Winter Cemes." will be published by Little. Brown & Ce., February "5. , TRUMPETER SWAN By Temple Bailey A delightful love story At AU BoekstortillUttreUi. $2M The Pens Pabllihiag Ce., Phlla. """WALPOLE The Yeung Enchanted "Tat old femilUr delights i of WslpeU's BITtiiTirlS XMtt. tM KING OF KEARSARGE By Arthur O. Friel The story with punch At All BoektioTttllUtlratti. $2.00 The Penn Pahliihiag Ce., Phila. An extraordinary study et medtra nurriuv. A . JusiPubUshe The Everlastu Whisp A new novel by JACKSO GREGOR S1.78. iA PLAYS Tim only place In the city where thy are ebtalnnble. If you cannot call, wnd for a new Illustrated oataleirar. The Penn Publishing Company 023 Filbert fitrfrt Philadelphia EIl Charles Scribner's Sens, New Yerk Itttutratieni bfHfbReth v i"itywt xr PV jBEet Edgar Rice urreughi The author larzan has "rung the bellM again in THE MUCKER All Boefutorea A. C MeCLURG 4b CO, FaMuti imx 4 Western Conference must Jind Foinewuy te overcome this evil. Athletic directors of seventeen .Mid which te project the picture of what he saw. Such value as his book has lies ?i te the Associated I'rc-s suggested dras tic ways of combating professionalism in college sports and agreed thnt prompt action must n tnken, particularly in regard te football. Summaries of the statements fellow : Heward Jene. Iown : "Faculty and athletic heads of the Western Confer- nce should meet at once te decide hew J te combat pre football unci te act ou J summer, baseball." r Dana Evans, Northwestern : "The way te prevent professionalism is te strictly enforce the present rules. These :irc strong enough, but nre net enforced." E. O. Stelhm, Indiana: "The pre ! organizations should legis'.nte nguint college men. We must dewlep nn honest ana Kenuriuuiuv wKivruiriii in nui i .i r .. . rr. -.-..:.. . .. . , Bchoels te present our men from piling )" - 11AUC" uur.i is inc puy Tire tramps. - jii iu iwum u-ivi; juei iv N-. A. KeUesc. Purdue: "The fact I, that the summer baseball rule has itver been enierceu uns causeu a ieei TCethiug that any hanker says tcill get a respectful hearing in Russia et the present time. experiences of a sentimental enthusiast during one of the great moments in the hitery of the world. He cannot sec what was clear te an English physiciuu of whose book I shall speak presently. This man was in Kussla in 1020 with the British labor delegation. He found men in high office who had suffered un der the old regime. Their bodies were crippled by their buffering and their souls were warped. Te expect justice and equity from the. icarped soul is at futile as te expect te gather figs from thistles. just ferred. lie is a member of the Fabian Society, of Londen, u society of med erate Socialists, who believe ia the co ing among the football men that they ; ,utlenary rather than the revoiutjennry "'"v V'ul" i"a- '"" ." " .. " ". mnihnrM rif rrmeripllner Rnrlerr nnri h U7HI ' te Russia in 1!U7 te sec the revolu tion in progress nnd te write his pergenal experiences. Mrs. Marguerite i.. Har rison went there in 1020 te see what had happened since 1017 and te report what she saw. net from the point of view of a partisan, but from that of an impartial ob server. The repult is a book "Ma rooned in Moscow" (Geerge H. Deran Company) of greater lilvtericat value thnn that of Mr. Williams. Tt Is a record of the experiences of an Amerlcau woman Seme New Nevels and Short Stories H ... JM E. iZiH MAHQUISIUTE HARRISON ifcs .v iVh it ivp mn, PiYfnrce the. tirpspnt metnecn et remodeling society, nna ue ei gevernincm. i u-. " ,Ver lrLTtt reu h.. been active in medical relief -hVffe'nfprirtc, unferce them." in the poorer districts of Londen. Cen-1 ?"'?" ?tiei u ?.,'- K.V-.. i-J T The here of "Wnndcring Fires" (Jehn Lane Company) is Eddie Theme, "u rnce horse of a mnn who fellows wandering . . fires." Mary Trcfusis, Diverging ,hc herelnPi 8 a PP Comm feminiet: that is. a Together modernist of woman kind, but "no mere a ceddess of wisdom than her grandmother. She Insisted en open ing the jack-in-the-box te sec the bogey jump out nnd when he came she was half Inclined te run nnd shriek." With these two Delf. Wyllarde baa written a brilliant society novel, cost i In Londen and England mainly, of the after-war period. Delf Wyllarde knows the ins and outs of society It foibles and fads nnd fnscinatlene, and In the sparkling pages of "Wandering ! Fires" she sets her knowledge forth i ripely and convincingly. Her charac terizatien in clear cut, yet deft net merely photographic, but artistic. Theme's experience with his moody, introspective, pensive Russian wife half barbarian in a flamboyant Slavic way and MnryV career as a movie ui-tresH, her idealistic "affair" witlf a tbespian, her cu prices and her essential soundness, all work toward tbe de neuement, In which the paths of the two, divergent for long, make the same turning and ruu together. jam "Thli provocative book." H. Canby. The Literary ittvttw. mere Intolerant ana tyrannical iuuii ; she found the Russia of the Soviets! chapter she gives ' the present tendencies are. Communism has broken W kA Inn niH n (i'.rnrrt eY LT.,. tAAn In eHj-titfnti te "Nhiil. I!, - nK(.aMn tn rtrwl . !.., U?T OI1II1IUU. 1WII UVJ iuitui V ej'in-"" IJUh" Ul 1IUCUI3, 11 HUUIViuu V "" '" l;.r7i m. .! I . what she calls state capitalism, by . ewy Thresholds" and Alice Hegan Rice, eds of the men in power, lie reports' "Inch she apparently means that the his ""ft ' "J ""Steh." that democracy is unknown In Russia. ; l'ita Irtic wrteui wi be reste cd yi Y Vilurn-Abeut Tales" ThR cnuntv Is in the hands of the Cem- but will be under the direct control et .,- . ., m nitcrn..te as sler.v ft' mw MS IvJ,' ' If cr b f j Fielding II. Yest, Michigan: "Strict , sequently he is sympathetic with what enforcement of the present Western the Russian revolutionists announced as Conference rules is all that U needed." jbelr general purposes. In "The Strug ." Tem K. Jene, Wiscensin: "Wc cle for Pewcr ln Europe" (Geerec H. ;nuBt create se strong : wn f ment : among , Dern Cemi)any) he has reported the i MC leuml la n" "' SrCi,: eIa1;! r- of W. observatlei, with the I- a- cl di ,,g chap . tnv Hirn nre " British I.nber Commission, net only ' n(T impriMieus i '"" e lum 1 1 . ( Ttc! i,. in fh rn(r,.i vrn. I tendencies are. Cemmunis U 11,J linve In in Im'nnl W,.!iu.i. fnfu tin lm.l OTPnllsnt nm.n.. (leWn in pmCtiCC. Tbfl nCXt Step, In IUU I 14.' .- "V ''- .,...-., Vtv- .ll. ...... n. --x. -.v w-..v..w wrt.v. " ... bear toil way. 4. W. Wllce, Ohie State University "There is no need for hysteria. Simply enforce t lie present rules and the public will see American youth in clean, 'wholesome, red Weeded sports." Abolish Pre Football JCnute Ilechne, Netre Dame: "Pre --football should be abolished, even v in men who are through college. Pre players work one duy a week for a few " months. Thus many become loafers 1 who de net want te work " G. Huff, Illinnis: "I le net believe professional football is a geed thine. even for gradual-, but if the public wants it there's no use kicking. The thing for us te de is prutect the colleges with stringent rules stringently enforced." Fred Lueliring. Minneseta: "One trie first things te de Is te abolish the Idea some nthMes have thnt they honor a university ny playing en it teams intelligent, alert of great audacity with the thine that aees by the name of government in Russia, She was in US, ICIJ ui because she disobeyed the orders inicnuea te preeu , . ..Tupn.Abeut Tales" (Century her from finding ou .tue trutu. ine . Company) (l unlque enterprise .in short government of the Czars w-aa never 6tery conaberatlon is successfully cur ried out tnreugn tee joint effort of two authors, well known in the fields of the novel and of poetry Mr. and Mn. Rice Collaborate f'nle Yeung has published Rice many i tellers, each writing with individual I personality, yet both giving a suggestion of a unity of purpose. Thcre arc ten munist party. That party is a close " uevermueui. corporation, te which new members are) . admitted only after six months' preba- rpHESE four beaibn treating Russlun tien. Applicants for membership may, -L affairs from four different points of be, nnd are summarily rejected if they i view still leave the mystery of Russia yjg ROGUES DISAGREE arc net satisfactory te the men in con- unexplained. Thcre are bread fields' trel. The pnrty Itself I governed by j which they de net touch about which an executive committee which exercises . the curiosity of the world remain te G. W. D. unusual stories In the volume, each with Its own interest of motive and characterization. When an author prefaces his novel by warning the reading public (hat all his characters arc fictitious, although most of the Incidents are based upon fact, then Swagger Hie old truism of "fact but Sordid ec'inc stranger than tictien ' rides high In the literary heavens. Such n warillm- nrrfnees WIlfrnH Ewart's "Way of Revelation" (Putnam) ana indicates tnat some of the strong meat of the book might preve tee much for some readers unless given this brief alibi. The mental shake-ups incident te the war have provided present-day novel ists with much te mull ever, nnd "Way of Revelation" takes full advantage of the offerings. Laid in England, Jt 13 the story of the lee affairs of a con ventional quartet of the English swag ger set. Twe buddinc romances nre nipped as the war Ftenn brcnlcg and tin- two men chums stnrt off for the front, leaving the girls behind. One is the mid-Victorian type, and remains quietly loyal, while her companion seen is en meshed, in the "fast" set thnt cropped up during the tepsy-turvy days of the battling abroad. All war heroes se it seems must become embittered, and Sir Adrian (one of tbe heroes nnd the fiance of the giddy one) does, what with being jilted, wounded nnd then jilted again. Ills final blew comes after a wild Victory ball scene with a tragic denouement which recalls the "nilllc" Cnrleten death and Its subsequent expose of the held drugs had en a certain English set. This menace Is Interwoven into tin; latter chapters of the novel, which might be termed a warning of something that Is already widely known. The strength of the story lies In Its realistic revelation of the sqrdldness of social uuconventleitalltleb and its quickly moving plot. It deserves te rank high In the list of boeka et similar' import. TOILERS OF THE TRAILS By Geerge Maish Wonderful stories et Hudsen's Bay Profusely Illustrated. Boxed $2.50 At AU Boehttoree The Penn Publishing Ce., Phila. Km HKJBM"?S5EIe CrUtefer Colombe A Comedy of Discovery, tn the mB nerefJatnee Branch Cabell One of the chapter in A PARODY OUTLINE OF HISTORY Donald Ogden Stewart "Ne recent book is quite as funny Heywood Breun. N. Y. World At AH SoekteUere $t.S0 1 fS9 CALL AT WOMRATH'S LIBRARY FOR THOSE BOOKS YOU WANT TO READ Save manor br rfntlnc all the new popular 1 fiction nnd the rnent tRlkcd it book et Travel, 111 111 terr. Blerrnphr. etc. Prompt ktrvlce of clfen ceplra. PHILADELPHIA BRANCH 15 Seuth 13th St. autecintlc pev.cr. be satisfied. SHERMAN ON WHITMAN IN STUDENT'S LIBRARY NEW BOOKS Walt Whitman's "Leaves of Grass" lias jil Fiction THn WHITIJ DESERT. By Cnurtney Itylny Cenner, liestnn: Mill. Brown ii Ce. . . .. , 1U A thr'Hln1 nnv1 nt fhrt hlfljle White .. !... :n.A.. .n liar IPH ITIII. ' -- .... ....... .. --. , ...-..-; 1 ucch .sbuvu hi vvu..v ...- , etretchm uteD tlie continental illviac. f and that thi-y thus arc privib-gwl te de I ner s hens excellent series et ciassich BL,ArK GOi.d. By A. P. Terliun. ' ! as they please. Let the indent knew known as the Modern Student's Ll- TerU: ojewj; fc Djjr-cempany. Le is.bclng honored hm he makes n,I)larJ. It h.s an introduction by Stuart 'aLUAN TA Tranat, fr ew , j team BLAME FAULTY IRONWORK t, FOR FATAL THEATRE CRASH fcKf?''r. Corener's Inquest en Knickerbocker 4 Disaster Opens rain 1 t the Purtuffue by Ibhhc QeIdbrr. Hee- inintb ten: Fuur HfRB PubllKhlnir Company. ' .,..! Tl. tW.i .rMiin nf iihirt rt(li-in Kv lb O'-l V leadinn writers of (In fltr republic te be put into our liincuftgc. Tlicy tiava an exotic rharni uf their own. niU MYTi:nY ami lly rarelyn Weill. Ph iarlclphU: J. B. Upplnuett Cem- rany. will net be pleafcd with what rrofesser tlve story. 'Wafthlnsten. Feb. 7. (Hy A. V.) Sherman has te a. Neither will these ; famous bteriks fhem FOrtma.N jren construction intended te support ' ...w. think that Whltmau never wrote' reuNTHlES. iioaten; reur a-as com the reef of the Knickerbocker Theutic. I Hnv neetrv. But the Increasliis number 1 P. Sherman, professor et i.ngusn in the University of Illinois, in which the jreattief-s and the littleness of the poet are mu-t dlscruninatcly set forth. These who think it sacrilese te regard Whit man as anything smaller than a demigod Honest Men Recover Their Faith in Providence There Is something about the sea ! that stirs the imagination of thinking men and impels them te write nbeut it. ! Them arc Coencr. mid Melville and Clarke Russell, and Jack Londen, nnd Jeseph Cenrad and William McFec and David Bone te mention only 11 few of them. One of the latest seamen te become nrticulate and te put his imag- i0i paper is 8. U. II. Wurst. wue seaman in inn m long as a AFTER WAR'S ALARMS 'The Lonely Warrior Attempts te Interpret Discontent The war aftermath is giving novel ists new and old a chance te pound their typewriters with recklem abandon In nn attempt te interpret by Freud causes of world-wide discontent or merely te act ns chroniclers of this mental condition. In "The' Lonely Warrior" (Harcourt, Brace & Ce.) Claude Washburn steers clear of of fering any panacea for tiie present ml- Cent lie Modern It'emmt Live bv Leve .tleiic? YOU By MAGDELEINE MARX Auther of "Weman." .Vein Yerk Timti: "Kxcellent analyses et fine nhadex of thought and feMlne. a method of narration striking In Itu omls emls omls elens. ardent, neldem falllnc te produce an effect 01 tension." J.V10 Verfc lleralit: "A book which Is llke no ether semctlilns lyrical, atlr rlntf, tenutltul nnd understanding. " $2.00. THOMAS SELTZER, New Yerk Read the Newest Fiction at The Booklover's Library Ne. 1619 Sansom. Street Membership fee, $1.00. We hava the book you want Yeu hardly can compare "THE RICH LnTLE POOR BOY" with any ether ' modem novel. ELEANOR GATES hat created a character in Johnnie Smith te 'real, se human, se peculiarly attractive that he stand apart from the crowd. Yeu will like him. $1.75 at bookstore. This is an Apple ten Boek. THE GAY COCKADE By Temple Bailey Her Latest Boek At All BoekitornllUitrattd. $2.00 The Penn Publiibing Ce., Phila. DIVORCE is the great problem which the newspapers, magazines, theatres and preachers are all bringing te public attention. BRASS, by Charles G. Nerria, visions the situation mere fully than any novel has yet done. It is net a novel of propaganda but a picture which any man or woman, married or contemplating marriage, will find supremely interesting. BRASS is generally recognized as one of the greatest American novels a fascinating study of the age-old struggles of men and women te have each ether and yet te have themselves. S6th Edition en Press. Avv bookshop can cupplji. $2.00 E. P. BUTTON & CO., 681 Filth Ave., New Yerk The Absurd BUT I'-ar Spread Deception that the people In etlne for t'.ie man who prom prem ised voted against hi promUeii. Id, In the opinion of many Mateemen, the craveat ebMacle In lh way et our entry Inte geme continuing wclety of nations for the pre. ervatlen of peace. The nation new united In npplnudlnsr the Ann achletenunta of the Wushlnsten Conference la eacerjy wnltlnit te support that next consistent and neces sary nuNf. the fulfillment of the pledger of the 'ampalim In a league or association of nations, te complete tie assurance of world peace. They trust and would net hurry the President W.10 Is metlnir exportation. Coh Ceh flrtent that In his own le way he will ful. (Ill the premise, they wait le show a united and enthusiastic nation behind him when In Ilia own a-nod time he takes th step. V'er a complete expesure of the absurd de ception or nilalnterpietatlen of tha people's mandate, read M GREAT DECEPTION By SAMUEL COLCORD SIMON CALLED PETER Bg ROBERT KEABLE. Auther el "Standing B" Alluring as tlte very devil is JULIE. PETER, the padre, striving te understand the souls he desires te serve, finds nothing in his ex perience te interpret the hectic, whirling world into which he is suddenly sent. Hencethe most brilliant, poignant novel of today. $t,00. If your bookshop cauitet supply If, t can be had from E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Avenue, New Yerk 11 .nn...... ;---.,. u ,i rler nt t'n mttn. wne irauns . . .....! i.iij ..-im,, h ffrcnt lieru us wne mm liiiiiu " -.-,",. the collapse of which cost the lives of !ui,e regani Whitman us one of the most Wt awfjm V-. ninety-eight persons, was wenk in cer tain neiuts. and was below the rcnuirc xaents of the plnns huhmltlcd for the construction of the thoetri. Hebcrt Jienry uavis, engineer m 111c uutriet Ceiiimtiiii liiiuning jnspecter s et. today testllii'il ut the enenine of tne Corener h mriueft into the catas trophe. Sir. Davla expressed the opinion, in ,rfcnl te nne-aieti-,. that the "insnf- WfMjA .flelency of the conHructlen" Mieuld 7Jj -have been dicevcred by proper iiihpeu- nrltriiinl unci inrllvidual neetB this retin try has produced will welcome tbla little volume becaiiv; of Professer Slier nian'w essay as well as because It puts "Leaves of Graes" in n convenient form for fireside reading or for carrying about lu the pocket. AT THE FREE LIBRARY najiy Tales that have wen note for their wrltsra. translated by Edna W. Underwood from the '$ , I fA'.f T 1'i.f- tlen. 1 J. O. Donnldhen. nn Ironworker, de clared be bail reported te these in curse of construction thnt two of the btains brine placed in the building were shorter than would hcem te bi required. , These beams went ever tJie stage, he nalrl. nnd lanned ever their siinnerta enlv i.Li . --, ----- . - -- . . m POM or two ineiies. -i nn uuiieing mper gjLvtaiaadent laughed at him, the witucr mW'-jiM, when be mflieunced thnt lie neve Hid -witness u perieniiiiiiec 111 idlng beraiibe of the duiiKer. m ii.'.. rs r the !f t rm' il BRAKEMAN J. IS HURT -LA4 . .. .. a.1.. TT fAt..(.j .1 I -. 1 v r. 1 1 11F I'nlttni. 11 m tMlf " "., " .. Biylvuniii uuiirenii nraKeiiinu, uiu rgc vlv, fccrleilhly today w lieu hlu heiid n tclesrupli pole its lie leaned .'Bfrtliht carat the Nertli rlillii rrAnU Mildd te the Tree Library. Thlr- teenth and Locust streets durtris the week ehdlnir February 2 Miscellaneous TjnitBCH. lUbetle Modern Jlusslan Poetry ' MttfKlwea. 11. K "Wharf Management. Mantilla, Hen "rems and I'eriralts." Mills, k! A. "Watched by Wild Animals." Nathan. O J. "i-rltle and the Drama." Wells, II. J "Washington nnd the Itlddle of l'eace." Fiction Dlvr, Maud. "Fr tn Fe;lf.'' (Jerny. Mltr "Three of T12"1m' , Hepburn. U. N "lnB f Time Macarath, Hureld "llaeecd Udte Children's Beeks Demlns N, H.-'Tleces for Kvery Day the (--hoots L'e'ebrate jlcI'Ve. 1 N. .Stories of Ameruan In- v,!fitnlvh T. K "Hey Sceuta KoeK of (Jainp H' Htnrlea 10rdl. ,. I I.UJTB IVI1U OWS ui evi ; and Construction.'' . . rushed up tbe river and wrecked every- thinir In Its paiu. " " " .-: cded that there was no god nnd hu deV-lde. te BO te Mecca nnd shout his EiLU Xud in the market place. iransiatea ey cans, y. unaerwnea irem ine , uiev.v.rf -.- - - . t..,nal. nn n shin anndh'J?u,cnh. Arm""8n' "Une",an- F,nnl'hi0fcnaVaH0rakSnu?eK 1,13 General , was planning te Helze , the , .hip fe, b I TIUUMPIIANT DUMOCRACT. By R. I'. Pettlerew. New Yerk: The Academy The story of American public life and poli tico from 1870 e 1020 by the former Senater from Seuth Dakota. TIIK DAI1'ON LIBRARY TI.AN. Py nvln I ueey. .New or; i., -. jjuiten Ce D scussfs the need of a new type of educu i tlen and describes a plan that has been I tried out te remedy many of the Ilia et the elder methods, WHY LINCOLN' ZJVUGIIED. Jiv Russell H. Conwell, New Yerk: Harper & tires. The illsllnrulshsd pastor of the Daptlst Tempi" end president of Temple UnUerslty, himself j. soldier durlrnt the C'vll War. and ene who tame Inte rentact with IJnceln. studies the humor et the martyr J'reat. dent. Sympathctle and readable. WORKINU WITH TUB WORKING WOMAN. y Cernelia Htratten-I'arker. New Yerkt Harper Bres. Th story of actual experiences undersene hy writer who did such Jobs tie flUInc choc chec nli in boxes, rmld'ns brass flltlnxs, laundry. I Ine fam.ly washln. etc. the book which bv a masterly marshalllnc nuiniiutci J1.50 everywhere, or of the Publisher I2bbbbbbbbbbbbbEBC"D333bsbbbbbbbbbbb "T I I mltferllv lllstllrherl ctliln nf nfTnIrs rnll ..i . . ... - ( ".- .-.-.,, w....v w. v........ ,,u...- i mn ,,u., ..,,.., i ,.. u. iiiapirriv m) Kast. in "Coomer ah. u.,. , iral, and contents himself by resorting fU'Tanscreua m.sto.l'ien?"' u Uretherf.) he has told n Mery otM)eimr t0 hc en-old panncea of "true love All. n Mohammedan oeaiinnn . " ' rewarded," na n finale. Stacey Carrell, back from the war with a D. S. O., a captaincy nnd a perfectly full-grown crouch, tries te "find himself." lie if, disgusted with I war mainly wuch brutal blunders ns would sacrifice thousands of lives en Armistice Day intolerant of bolshe belshe vistic ideals, but admitting grounds for enmnlnlritft. Tn turn ItA tnst ltytt ImUn i,.,nu Tlin eantlllll BOtS forth .strikes, the raen riots nf Omnhn whIM, his nlan te n crooked nntlve who man- ),y thn way. are described vividly nnd aws s tch affairs and then gets in r telyaiid radicals of the curbstone the toils of a half caste. The body alld ,mrier variety, of the f-tery deals with the plots e ene mH ante-win- sweetheart no longer Mt of scoundrels against another set, i appeuls te him, except in a physical in which the laiai UCH-1--IB " ', I "" nnii sue marries nneiner. wne unl Instinct are csuiuiu-u "-"" iiirns out ie ue a enuntier. ins ue.t man friend dies. 'Ihreusli it all he wanders, getting into the fray new and then, but usually uctlng merely us u uiseententea Dj'Mnwicr. Rev. Dr. ERNEST M. STIRES praises ANMV1US HEDULIO ADVENTURES OF A ROMAN UNDER THE EMPIRE By EDWARD LUCAS WHITE, Auther of "El Supreme" "This book of life in the second century has the vitality and speed of the twentieth century. Here is that rare event a book for every one. Uecently I asked u Junier nt Harvard whether he thought the book tee long. He replied: 'It was tee short,' and I heartily agreed. Frem first te last the six hundred pages propel you, until with the fascination of the story and the swiftness of the action you are almost breathless. I recommend it without reservation, and lay it down with the full intention of reading it again." $2.00. Fifth printing en prcelt. Can be had at any bookshop. E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5th Ave.. New Yerk Trapreck Lectures The famous explorer nnd author.- Or. Walter K. Trapreck, whom "Crulee of tin) Kuv.a" has been the outstanding book of Up kind, in leaving New Yerk for an extended lecture tour under tbe I 1 l.,i l tint end. wit the return of Coemcr All te i.".,!.....,L,.V l.ln rllsceverv that his wife and child had net been drowned in the roui9t,MXe: rth'-nfftrawl. of faith against dlwter "? the c.en "ct of. enc criminal with another nnd the undoing of them all is one which Cenrad would hava bandied with most illuminating skill Mr. Hurst Is net the rqual of Cenrnd. But he has home glimmerings of the Cenrnd t-ptrit. nnd has made a moving Htery of adventure thnt will interest thobe te whom the sea and its hazards appeal. "David Harum" Still Sells The fact that I"" '"" ' rl'rH' i"0 ban net et its popular appeal Is eyl That lie gradually hecs the futility of mere muttcrtngs at tliings-us-thoy-eueht-not-to-bc and decides ou hard work n the best wuy of cettlne thlnca ns-they-oiight-te-ho Is the oil max brought nueut suddenly te the nocom necom nocem panlmcnt of a quick 'romance with the widow of his chum. "The Lonely Warrior" is mere of a chronicle than a preachment. It has moments of rare vividness and power lu Its unulysls of the dltscenlented nnd of nenie who really htrlve te reach fiindii-mentals. The first Going Up edition of .lehii Drink- flenced by the printing of the ninety- water's "Abraham Linceln: A t'luy," "A Little Gem of Literature A Nevel of Rare Beauty" CHAPDELAINE A Tale of the Lake St. Jehn Country By LOUIS HEMON "Maria Chapdclaine stands among the beat of these novels that make the reader richly aware e'f inexhaustible stores of strength and dignity in our race." Dorethy Canfield in New Yerk Evening Pest. "Quietly beautiful painting of nature. . . . The notes are struck 'with sure fingers. A translation remarkably supple and faithful in spirit," Phila delphia North American. "A great little book real literature. A story te linger in your memory like a song heard at summer twilight." lioden Herald. $2M at Ul bookstore a or Jrem "An absolutely charming book with a style se spontaneous, se unaffected and unmannered ... a combination of native geed taste and native fine feeling." Mary S. Watts. "His pages are poetry." New Ywk World. "A quiet and beautiful story with a fine imaginative power." New Yerk Times. "Maria Chapdelaine is a tale of rare beauty. Leuis Hemen bus the soul of a poet and an artist, and his book is the product of his soul." Rochester Ucmecrat and Chronicle. I 1 nr. rvijrti -nnii i Bru r-fisjiDAiuv sa i s-..i .. -. i jiii iiii. inni luin ii.n ivh rem ana luh una ! wri iiiuiri ma aAa ssi a w wtmuus-si a tuiiii m srxH.srs m ..sl ySflftin . rf-.si ' :, . I -1 . . . . 'iliaaaaaaaaWl'.'ilV . .,.., ,t '' - . " l l . St WMm(kMm, -l, , . -. - ,,. . .-:' 'tiU&m . . ,-.., ,: .. J ',A& ,?, ilM-rYJaaatTUl -ri.iV.i,. ii'Ail