WhW1 PPl mm-1 vWOTWEiRf r?,wfc mmm r! ran t'-ivwi TM iflinir. r' ' v $W f P' 11 iFi 1 mm WtylM i ; 'a t-j V. & BURNETTS NEW NOVEL WITH A LITTLE ClRL IN IT tderers of the Human Heart t Who Repert Their Discoveries W -Xv tiisfm ....;.,' ' fim fc.4i'' ' w TV wlll crown-up people persist i in anklac what is the beit nereL j(ir pecmcvcr written, as though mcre were an ae- Ef? lAiSOtv! wlul" Biuiiuaru vj .." flKtvi which a niece of literature can be judged? School Scheol Schoel boyB dobnte whether Washing ton or. Napeleon jwere the greater -man, but even though there may be n positive an swer te this ques tion, therb cer- SJV ... , - iWIE"'A n-n-i lamiy is none 10 I'tJ 0TIXII Ikn MllnallnM IVS.rt " " 1l ! the ercatest man wne ever :. , mnn hnti nnnremn mini- iya usiu w" - ref ene kind and another has su - MnllHes of n different kind. gay that ene is greater than the f 13 I1K0 Saying Wim uru in grcuiui .nr nr sutrar greater than salt. hfcte remarks are suggested by the of the Travel Club of Araer- i te find out which are the best travel As ever written. The club hopes flnd the answer daring the week, March Ja te April j., wnen me nat tonal Travel Exposition will be In the Grand Central Palace in Yerk. Any one se disposed may nit a list of net mere than ten tl books. The twenty-five books tins the greatest number of votes be nut en exhibition at the fair. the ten which receive the highest ar of votes from visitors te the will be acclaimed as worthy of a tee en what is called, with fine dis- ud for anti-uerman sentiment, a vndcrtest Shelf." IThere doubtless are ether books as but i would suggest as worthy a ploee en the shelf j Hakluyt'e h Principal! Navigatiens, Velsgea Discoveries of the English Ne en," Thercau'a "Cape Ced," and II. f. Tomlliwen's "The Sea and the Jim- t." These cover a wide range in oft, and are se different from ene n- ber in subject and manner of treat- at as te have that varletr whirrs tht condiment necessary te keep the nieresi anve. it nny reader of thin eiumn is interested enough te send in l.iavorite list of net mere than tun avel books, I shall be clod te fnr. ird it te the cemmlttpp. j Thertau said he had traveled muck m Loncera. There arc otter mhn lore traveled much in the human !cart. at first, but when she succeeds better than they de they begin te respect her. She is a managing sort of a creature with a will of her own. But she is also a feminine creature with a longing for a husband and children. The book is the story of her love nffairs and of her farming, with an interlude about the love affairs of her younger sister. It telle the tragedy of a woman longing for a mate. The neighboring 'farmer who wants te marry her docs net appeal te her in that way. She falls in love with the son of a neighboring gentle man, and they arc engaged, but the man dies. Heme years later she In at tracted te a worthless scamp because of his resemblance te her dead lever, and she is engaged te, him for a little while. He betrays -her confidence and is brutal te her. Then she breaks with him, and the book ends with her selling her farm and planning te go away te htde her shame, with "her lever, her sister, her farm, her home, her geed name, all lest." As a type of the woman left alone in the world and struggling with fate and betrayed by the finest Quali ties of her nature she is d moving and a tragie figure. DON MARQUiala noted chiefly as a humorist, but he Is morn than that In "Poems and Portraits" (Double (Deuble day, Page & Ce.) he exhibits both sides of tils mind. In addi tion te some bit- ingly cynical portraits, some what after the manner of the "Speen River Anthology," the book contains a group of poems which reveal Marquis as a man perplexed with the mystery UrZ W-n KwsXL m fJ ' JsHr sr'JSlNtHv I4P; ' ?satsr. WmWsWW v4wFtWA kstt tf WOliam OrtStm EDNA FKRBER Caricature of the novelist from the Beekman UUS MAKUU13 & ,NB of these explorers .of that mysterious region is Frances Hodg Hedg Burnctt. She has rcnertcd the eeYcrics of her most recent veyage in 'he Head of the IIouse of Coombe" edcrlck A. bteken Cemnanv). It is novel of KngUt.ii life eoverlnz a i- led eC nbeut nineteen years, ending itli th aw-abslnutiens at Surajeve in l. it is devoted clucriy te the study the development of n clrl fmm in. ncy te the age of eighteen. In nlnt. e story is melodramatic, ultli n viiinin he wemH te be the geed angel of thece i aiBircss a frivolous nnd selfwli ether, who isnercn thn miitmin. er child, n kldnnnnlnc of tbn lmpnlne J a pander, nnd her rescue In the nick . ..mr. ana tncre is n benevolent lucness, and n faithful n,i,c ...i handsome Jeuth who loved the' heroine vm.uuoeu nnd is fascinated by her !?iy-,1n,, c,mrra wIlcn "e meets her u ener many years. The steni in tfipijtMtMj;H .' ..,.. mtt it is told irith ihr .;...... 1 j . " '(""-tHiae una wvvu (OJtB 01 an Knnl 7.7. emedy. society IHC little girl around whom the story revolves is one of he mnf n.n,.i lly appenllngflgures in modern fiction, rs. Burnett knows the Iirnrt nt i.n,i nd from the first description of the xrer ei tne year-old baby, finding it If alone In the dark, nnd finnllr i.h. ng Itself back te slcen. te the nWrin. en of the grief of the slz.venr.ni.i lirl hen the first child who had ever ejcd wun nor falls te appear where had premised te be, there is re- taicu a sympathetic Insight that is al al iest uncanny. The playmate who did )t ceme is an eight-year-old boy, bey, stincd te become in time the heir te e head of the house of thn rmi,. place held by the mnn who Is the n.' In of the piece. He and the little elrl d made friends in the Londen par. ie Bin ions nor pathetic story te him. e is the dnughter of the frivolous Oman. Whnn hllle ni-n nnt.l l. .1. - - ' - w... uku 2u.u ujr tin- ed of the house of Coombs. The lid does net knew what a mother 1 she has no playthings and no play tes, but lives with her nurse at the D of the hnuiD. The Inn- Kn ,n,. m about mothers while he playM with Jr, and she Is rapturously happy, with first happiness that she ever knew. Then the boy's mother discovers who jje little girl is and takes him back te Country at once. He rnn't under. Kind it and suffers with the sufferings " the llttle L'lrl who would tn in tlie Hrk te meet him. "She lias nobody ft me!" he exclaims te his own pother. Of course, he ennnnt forcet girl and she cannot forget him. And ey meet agnln aftr twelve years. The y en tnpir meeting In th Inst chap- Of the novel is iilvllta. There la the nd of romuuee in it of which young rls dream, and there Is that nearness tfagccly ih it which grips tht hearts tue old nnd the experienced. What PPenS afterwerd. It m illllmimnml I"! be told in n sequel. As the sequel jLally n part of the novel as written, "this time. Hut the book demon- Jtes ence uiore thut Mrs. Burnett " tell u btery in a way te stir the "itiens. and tragedy of life, and as a man who can take the common things and- llltiml llltiml nate them with a vivid imagination. Fer example, in "The Towers of Man hattan" he writes of hew the great structures were put up te gratify the greed of selfish men without any deliber ate purpose te create the beautiful, yet By u baffling magie Is the work of these builders transmuted Te temples and towers that are crewned With a glamer transcendent That lifts up the heart like the smile of n god. And in "Only Thy Dust," a tribute te a dead friend, be has written a piece worthy of the best period of English poetry. Only thy dust Is here, thy dust But when chill May unclcrses Her petals and Is June. I feci A heartbreak shake the roses. Earth nnd the sun were sweet te us. Green grass and books and laughter And I canifet think of thee ns a ghost Without some strange hereafter. And se en it gees for three mere stanzas. In "Heir nnd Serf" he writes of who and what is man Is he the In heritor of nil his ancestors or the slnre of all thut has gene before? "I s-ny that I cheese for myself, but that is an luie beast, for here in my house of being ghost Is nt war with ghost." He is a humorist who has te laugh in or der te keep his mental balance nnd he wears a smile as a mask that covers n face af tragedy. Q. jj. HOW ADAM GROWS New Nevel Tells Progress Dublin Waif of A flOtcl Which leaves thn render r as unsatisfying at a StarMfl (litlnlm .?, ;. j. . fjWIH question whether women con f vrite mero understandiugly about yWCIl tlinil men enr. .,111 u.n k a .. "" "'" i"u"uiy ITW be finally answered. But what- E:! a truth about It may be, most Hffik , ' cencl that Rhelln Kay C? . Uncw what b'e was about when E" urew the portrait of the heroine of EjMnna Geddcn" (E. l. Dutten A m oesnna is a capable young woman ner rarm en the marshes en OUthraat mitt n$ v.i...j -u. ;?t5.w dies. The nelihberin farm- W at h,er efforts with contempt "Adam and Carollne" (Geerge H. pernn Company) is a brilliant t-cqud J?.4,hntJ Kl'ttering first novel of Cenal ORIerdan, "Adam of Dublin." Mr. O Kierdan, whose real name, it new spenw, is Nerreys Cennell, knows both contemporary Dublin and the Dublin of the early days of the Celtic Renais sance. His first book showed the street wnif, with a slnlstercd pedigree, adopted by a kindly disposed idenlist am vistennry a cultured, scholarly, sophisticated man whose life experi ences, hinted at. have left him with a bitter-sweet nhlloeenhv. The new book, which Is ns sparkling in m eiyie ana ns penetrating in Its comment, takes Adam up in the mal mal Ieable teens, and shows the reactions of nn unusunl lnd te the stirring Intel lectual life and political ferment of noeut naif n scere of years age, when every environment was influenced by the nascent Gneltacht. Adam's school days with Jesuits, his chances te meet lenders of the nrts and nelltlcs. nnd the contacts he made with an interesting Presbyterian minister, several priests and a German musician among ether people rurnisn wie author mntcrlnl for n background that seems vivid and vital of Dublin. Dawning of sex conscious ness and religious breeding and troub treub lings nre set ngnlust this background, in the limning of nn intiinpte und Individ ual picture of the grewlng-up centra! figure of this intriguing story. Careline, saucy, capricious, half-baked flapper, runs In and out of the texture a pa thPtic figure, half understood and net half understanding herself. The book ends with the implication that there will be ether volumes In the evolution of this young Irishman. Want te Knew About Marriage "Brass," Charles G. Norris novel of marriage, which the Duttens pub lished last summer, is in Its twenty fourth edition, and the demand for it Is constantly growing. AT THE FREE LIBRARY uoekb aaaen te ine rree j.iDr&ry. Thir teenth nnd Locust street, ilurlnic the week endln February 8: Miscellaneous riell. neyil "Were Teu Ever e, CMltV Mfllsaee, F. J. "Teny Bars Martenttte Heek " Mlild, Jehn "Within the Atom." l'emiell. B.. n. "JVhUtUr Journal." Prate. J. A. "Elementary Machines Shep ilehb. 'A. A. "AbtoleU Relatiene of Time arl Hpaee." HoeeevMt, Theodere "noeeerelt In the Kama City Star." Stefunnen, Vilhjalrnur "Friendly Arc tic." flvedberr. The "Formation of Colleldf." Hwete. If. 11. "Introduction te the Old Testament in Oreek." Weaver. It. M. "Herman MelTllle." Fiction Fletcher. J. 6. "Hcarhaven Keep." Oartland. Hannah "Heuee of Cardi." )Ierveahelnrer. Jeeeuh "Cytherea." Kyne. P. B. "Pride of Palomar." Ilelimer, Bai "Fire Tensue." Children's Beeks MeNelL 'jJverett "Ourlrd Treeeure." Hewell. C. W. "Leaders of the Qreat war." QUICK ON TRIGGER Battle, Murder and Sudden Death in Wild Weat Yam Years age. when the bloed-and-thnn- dcr drama was "the thing," Harry Clay .Blaney nnd Langden McCermlck wrote rival plays en a bet as te which would "kill off" the mere characters. Blaney'n ln,t scene called for his here and heroine te be seen standing en the smoking ruins of an old fort the only survivors in -the cntlre cost. A quick tabulation showed the score of "dead nnd dying" ns exactly even. Blaney quickly grabbed his pencil and wrote in n scene calling for an attack en the fort by a band of natives. The here was te drag a machine gun forward and the curtain was te fall te the rat-a- tat of the gun while the stage was fill ing with the toppling forms of slain natives. "Beat that." muttered Blaney. Mc Cermlck admitted he couldn't. Inci dentally the nlny was a real money maker and the machine-gun scene its chief drawing card. But Blaney probably wouldn't have wen his bet bad It been with William Patterson White. Net If Mr. White's "The Rider of the Gelden Bar" (Lit tle, Brown & Ce.) is any criterion. Mr. White does net rebert te machine guns or poison gas, but his death list sounds like the casualty report of a major en gagement of the recent war. Out in the wild, wild West Billy Winge, geed-natured, geed-looking and goed-intentloned cowboy, finds himself unexpectedly elected chcrlff. Billy is expected te "take orders" from the gang which has ruled the frontier county for years and waxed rich and arrogant by its nefarious tricks and the complacency of "hand-picked" of ficial. But "the girl" slips Inte the story and Billy becomes a hard customer te handle. Then the killings begin. The "gang" starts killing Billy's friends nnd then starts n little side slaughter match among themselves. Billy at one time finds himself charged with n couple of murders, holding up a stage, horse-stealing and n few non essential crimes. Needless te say he is victorious, but net until the entire gang has been wined out in some way or another. Which does net mean that Mr. White's story is net entertaining. It is. Hn has made even the wholesale "laughter convincing. And he doesn't have a single funeral from cover te cover. Majlie there weren't any under takers in camp. DR. CONWELL EXPLAINS WHY LINCOLN LAUGHED Whether Dr. Russell II. Conwell prenches, lectures or writes the result usually is interesting and informative ns well. "Why Lincoln Laughed" (Harper's) presents no deviation, it is n bhert, briskly written llttle book, based mainly upon n long interview Dr. Conwell. then a .voting army officer. bad with the President in plendlng for tne lite ei a leiiow-senuer condemned te death for an unwitting infraction of military rules. While Lincoln's penchant for deco rating his philosophy with sparkling tales is nothing new. Dr. Conwell has elabsrate.d upon his interview nnd stresses tne intiuence A r tenuis nrd had upon the joke-loving propensities of the Great Emancipator. Publication, coming as it Osi's nt the time of another Lincoln Blrrliduy nn nlversnry, "Why Lincoln Laughed" will serve te fill as an interesting and instructive hour for nny geed Amer ican who can appreciate the value of the doctrine of cheerfulness as it is set forth by Dr. Conwell, no less than by the martyred President. "Growth of the Seil" In the Movies News of the first performnnce of the moving picture made from Knut nam sun's book, "Growth of the Seil," has just been received in this country. The first showing wns made December "0, in Chrlstinnin, for an Invited uudience including the royal family. It was produced by a Swedish cempanj with most of the scenes played in the orig inal betting of the novel. Gunnar Som Sem merfcldt, the producer, spent seven months and 250,000 krener in prepar ing the picture. Plans are under way for the production of It in America. NEW BOOKS General TWEU'K IIASKRTB FULL. Br Slhyl Mar. vln Huae. New Verlt; Q. P, Putnam'a Bena. A book by a pupil of Augusta Stetaen, Ci. H. D.. In which aha Intermits naniiAKM of Bcrlpture which have purplexed lilble etu- dent. MAJIOOT ABQUITK. An autoblecraphy. New yetk: ueerse u. ueran company. A one-volume edition, with twenty-three platee. of tills frank. Intimate record of a remarkable woman. FOBTKK ON AUCTION". By Jl. F. Feiter. New yern: u. i uutter ft Ce. A cemnleta expee tlen of the latent de velepment! of modern auction by an au therity. Fiction PUJiri.n BPllINOa. By Nellie I McClurur. Bosten : llouchten Mifflin Company. A etery of the Weet and a portrayal of Ita every-day life. The heroine la a real Seraenallty. WJ5CT WATKI13. By Hareld Nlcholeen. JOHN GOULD FLETCHER ON LIFE AND ART OF GAUGUIN PanI Gauguin, whose memory was revived when Somerset Maugham put him in a novel two or three jeers age, has been the subject of much writing since, and he has wen a fame which he did net achieve during rls life. There Are some who might say "notoriety" is a better word than "fame" In this connection, for the art of Gauguin does net please every one. It pleases 'Jehn Gould Fletcher se greatly that he has concluded his "Paul Gauguia: IHf Lifesnd Art" (Nicholas h. Brown) with this remarkable scntenee: "In Rousseau's prose, in Whitman's poetry and in Gauguin's painting we see the only gleam of hope for self-tortured humanity and the premise of a land where nature and man are ene and where reigns a peace that passes all understanding." Mr. Fletcher has told the sordid story of Gauguin's life, from his birth of erratic and revolutionary ancestors te his death in poverty In the Seuth Seas. uoeten: uousii'en miitiiu company. Asalnet tne coierrui etreeti of Ban Frarr- clce la set u etery rich In adventure, re mance anu imruiue. TJltl PARLOn TlKOAT AMOH. By Arthur Hlldebrand. New Yerlti Harcourt, Brace ft Ce, The study of the Influence of a conven tional and timid middle-class American family en a ajneltlv? boy who etructles te get out of stuffiness Inte life. EtIIKI. Ol'ENB TJlia DOOIt. By David l'ux. 'New Yerk: A. M. McBrlde 4 Ce. A new mystery sterr lm whlnh iiu thAr-i. band of reformed criminals, "The Bbaden- ers rpvim. mm uuta areai work In .ir.lrhtenlns- out a bafMlns ntni. FinK TONUUW. By Hux Ilehmer. Yerk: Doubleday, I'ase Ce. mic AM Story of man aemaed ef . erlnu In wtalcb ,2R J'SitSSf MJ'leywhle8 endures teelte dUtrset maA ertn eWrudu- New "ar." "Stories one never forgets" such are Mrs. Burnett's boeh. Here is the least forgettable of all, her most beautiful love story. FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT'S first long novel since 1913 The HEAD of the HOUSE of COOMBE A story whose compelling beauty holds you fascinated, whose romance warms your heart. In a slice of a house in Mayfair lived a lovely young widow, se light in nature that she was known as "Feather." In gloomy kennels of nurseries was her girl child, Rebin, unknowing that mothers and love existed. Her story and that of Denal Muir, the. young Highland chieftain, Coombe's heir, lead one along tremulous. $2.00. Second Large Printing Before Publication "Mrs. Burnett's books reflect life because they reflect perfectly herself; she has had that courage. And because the things in herself are fine and true, her books are something which many, many thousands of people have been mad te get-" William MacHarg in February GOOD BOVBEKBtiPWa. Publishers . FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY New Yerk Albert Payson Terhune Auther of "Baftt A Cellie," "Ladt A Deg," efe. GOLDEN ingots black geld hidden in the mountains. A haunting presence and a foot print trail that vanished in mid-air. These are but the beginning of a series of mysterious epi sodes which confronted Barry Gale, rancher, when he found Maida Drace captive in her father's house. The right blend for anyone who finds solace and joy in an ex ceptional story of mystery and danger.' 1 .75 BLACK COLD Hergetheimer at hit belt' KING OF KEAKSARGE By Arthur O. Friel Th story witk a punch AC All B-ksteTts Illustrated. $2M The Peu Pabliikiaf Ce., Pkila. V V, s "A. finely. merlB an er,freelnj' j tale." CMeape Jtvstung Pett - a Poems & Portraits By DON MARQUIS Cue Bnttstmnw. Hekasmtrtmettytjr The beginnhx of one of die Smart Portraits, which prompted ft notable commentator te write: "These de lijhtfully compounded phials of acid. The poems of serious beauty are purely lyrieaL" At Boek Storma, ttJSO Doubleday, Page & Ce. Garden City, New Yerk V F,3. 4wt "Vmf v n.ktttttt7 trw w 'Vrfv' yFsssw vwyp.i fssaktmK SSa Ty!xSxiitiiii ItAl-- JKTirt.'iTOK DON MA RQ U I S Breaking All Recerds: IF WINTER COMES By A. S. M. HUTCHINSON OACTH thousand en press, and the OULJ D00k is net yet six months old $2.00 Publishers, LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Bosten SHEILA KAYE-SMITH'S new novel " JOANNA GODDEN alone would place her at the top among modem novelists LOUISE MAUNSELL FIELD writes in The N. Y. Times: "Gcnor "Gcner "Gcnor eub, warm-hearted, impulsive, courageous, nuick te forgive, farsighted and adventurous along certain lines, Javi&h both with her love and her meney. . . . She is drawn with a fidelity, a glow and vividness, an absence of cither idealization or exaggeration which are truly remarkable. . . . Johanna is one of the mernorable women of fiction, vivid, faulty, human, real through and through. Big and bouncing and buxom, witl a touch of the barbaric, warm and glowing, impulsive and pas sionate, she radiates vitality from first te last." Miss KAYE-SMITH is author also of "Tamarisk Town " "Green Apple Harvest," etc. Each $2.00 ' .Any bookstore can supply these novel or, if net, they can be had from E. P. DUTTON ft CO., Ml With Avenue, New Yerk Vxxndemarks MmmmmmmkWsmmmmsmsWsmsmmmswmswm, felly A Nevel by HERBERT QUICK Horsewhipped by a cruel stepfather Jake Vandemark runs away from home struggles for life en the Erie Canal forces his way into the West with the Pioneers fights prairie fires conquers the wilderness cultivates the soil and builds a home. He meets Adventure en counters Danger finds Remance loves and dreams, and hopes in strug gle and sacrifice. With toil and courage he does his downright sturdy part te make his fortune and win his happiness in the HEART OF AMERICA. Eight Striking WYETH Pyerurea AT ALL BOOKSELLERS, $2.00 The Bebbs-Merrill Ce., PubUahera e Intex-laken Library AS EVERY book buyer knows, a geed book binding, like a geed article of clothing, Jr is a source of satisfaction and economy. Fer the guidance of readers, therefore, we are listing below some of the current books of importance that are bound in 1NTERLAKEN the book cloth that for thhty-cight years has been noted for its tasteful color tones and sturdy wearing qualities. ARIUS THE LIBYAN by Nathan C. Kouns A sterr of the early dsy, of Clirlitltnltv, In gripping scene, passing from the simplicity of the Libyan Desert te the pomp of the D. APPLETON & COMPANV THE ELEPHANT AND THE WISHING FAIRY by Cerinnc Ingraham Part Three of thrie charming snlmal irerles for children. M.W BRENTANQ'3 A TREASURY OF INDIAN TALES by Clara K. Daylus The author, who list written ether book, of Indian Tales, has hsd unusual opportunities te obtain this material ttem the Indian, ihemieKcs. Net, $.75 THOMAS Y. CKOWELL COMPANY JANE ALLEN RIGHT GUARD by Edith Bancroft The second volume In the repulsr Jsne Allan College Series for girl. 51 50 net CUPPLLS &. LEON COMPANY THE HOUSE OF CARDS by Hannah Cartland Net even the most confirmed reader of detective fiction will curst the real criminal in this murder myitery story. 51 75 DODD, MEAD U COMPANY. INC. THE GARDEN OF MEMORIES by Henry St. Jehn Cooper A tale of an old garden and a lonjaseltne story thst would net stay in the pat, by the author of "bUNNY DUCROW, "JAMES UEVANWOOD, DARONbT." etc tl 75 GEORGE II. DOIIAN COMPANY MY LIFE OF SONG by Mine. Tetntziini The life of the "Queen et Vms " Ten pictures of imnv ciuei and el Latum. Ml. CermscL., iUtnmerstein, Ciatti Cua::s,Tslt. Penning and Wllien. M CO DOKRANCE St. COMPANY AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PROBLEM OF GOVERNMENT W. W. mtleushby and Lindsay Rogers A welk of the greateit importance during this immediate period of reorganiratien and recomtructlen DOUBLEDAY. PAGE &. COMPANY AUTOMOBILE PAINTING by F. N. I'anJeraalkcr Frem the viewpoint of the car owner, the (stage rcpsltman, snd the home painter who withes teenter the field si an of! season builnen. J1.50 I-REDERICK . DRAKE & COMPANY GRIMM'S FAIRY TALES Mere stories by the Btetheti Qtlmm thsn most people knew eslar One hundred ilhis ilhis trstleni by Leuis Khead and beautiful color work by Frank, h. Schoenocr. $1.75 HARPER &. BROTHERS LEARNING and LIVING by Ephraim Emerton Nine enavi en the relations betmeen patents, school,, celleses, snd students t a fine expression of true Americanism. JJ 00 HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS MUSICAL JOURNEY TO THE COUNTRY OF THE PAST by Rema in Relland A charming book that revesls much that h unknown In the history snd development et music HENRY HOLT tk COMPANY DANIEL H. BURNHAM Architect and Planner of Cities by Charles Moere The definite e biecraphy of one of America's greatest architects snd city planners. Illus trated in colors. 2 elumei, J20 00 HOUGHTON MirFLIN COMPANY ANDERSEN'S FAIRY TALES by Hans Christian Andersen This bet bclexed collection of fairy tales is new published In the besutlfull illustrated Washington iquete Classics. $1.75 GEORGE W. JACOBS fit. COMPANY INFECTIONS OF THE HAND by Allen B. Kanavel, M. D. Cevers fully the Lnevi ledge recently Rained upon gas bacillus and strtpto.e.ci intentions, a new ihapter en the restoration el function In infected hands. $5 50 net LEA &. l'l.UICER ALL TIME TALES Selected by Hemer P. and Elizabeth Levis A delightful concoction of fables, foil-lore, legends, tnwhs and fairy tales retold and simplified for litt.e children Children's Classics Series, ll'ustrattens in color $ 75 J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY THE HAPPY WARRIOR by A. S. M. Hutchimen "A great story this, and one which must sutelv win fet M author a huh plsce among the novelists whee wetk. endures" L I fcdeett In Tie Bosten Tr.inicn t $2.00 LITTLE. BROWN &t COMPANY THE BOY WITH THE U. S. SECRET SERVICE by Dr. Francis Relt'lVhceler The real Secret berviie story is reld with vividness but without loose sensationalism, with accuracy, et witneut dryness. Illus trated ttem uilicial photograph. Jl 75 LOTHUOP. LhL c bllLl'ARD CO. DREAM PSYCHOLOGY by Dr. iiigmuud Freud With a manual urn h as Dream I'sviholegy there shall no longer be any extuse ler ig ig netame of the must revolutienarv ps,cho ps,che ps,cho Iegual system of modern times JJ.iO THE JAMLS A. McCANN COMPANY RACE DECADENCE by Dr. II illiam S. Sadler An honest, unprejudiced effort, by no means pesilmistk, te tke the facts vencernlng ta.e deterioration, with assurance that present conditions ian be corrected 2 0 A. C. McCLURG c. COMPANY THE STUDY OF AMERICAN HISTORY by Lord Bryee This brilliant discussion covers the Revolu Revelu Revolu ejenaty snd Civil Wsrs, the Constitution, the effects of Immigration, and the American achievement et petsenal hberry. $1.50 THE MACMILLAN COMPANY FAMOUS LEADERS OF INDUSTRY by Ed-win IVildman Lifei stones of maker, of Ametica. "Twe boeits that prove real life is mere wonderful than romance" Clevelard Topics. First series. 6th Printing. Seiend Series, 2d Printing itlfc PAliE COMPANY BELGIUM, OLD AND NEW by gcergc Wharten Eduards A vivid picture ef Belgium before snd since the Wetld War. together with a descrlprien of her remarkable resurretrlen. lllus- rrated-$7.50 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY CREDITS AND COLLECTIONS by R. P. Ettinger and David E. Gelitb Fer both the experienced credit mensger and miner employee, ir covers the theory of credit snd outlines the best prscticc In the modern credit office PRENTICE-HALL. INC. SNOWDRIFT by James B. Hendryx A story of the "strong cold". A vivid tat of danger and heroism true In subsrsnee, in stmesphere snd scene, by the author of The Premise", etc. G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS THE TRUTH ABOUT HENRY FORD by Sarah T. Bushnell A humsn document of absorbing interest about a famous, but little understood Americsn An suthrntic tevelstleti RE1LLY &t LEE COMPANY OLD TRAILS AND NEW BORDERS by Editard A. Steintr A revelation of conditions today In the countries of Lurepe from whuh the ranks of the immigrant have been largely recruited ILEM1NG H. RLVELL COMPANY NUTRITIONAL PHYSIOLOGY by Percy G. Stiles This book discusses the role ut esch organ. ea,.n sctretlnn concerned In nutrition. The latiguake is simple and non technical W. B. SAUNDERS COMPANY PLAYS - 4th SERIES by Jehn Galsworthy Modern In matter and treatment and extra ordinary in their etmality CHARLES bCRlBNER'S SONS MASTERPIECES OF MODERN SPANISH DRAMA Edited by Barrel! H. Clark Thire plays that fellow the best traditions of 'pain s kelden ai,e, highly commended by noted authorities linguistic, dramatic and literary. $2 50 SIEWART &. K1DD COMPANY BULFINCH'S AGE OF FABLE OR BEAUTIES OF MYTHOLOGY AVIS' Rn'Hcd Edition ) Rev. J. Loughran Scott Contains a nutnbet of new featute, v.hich J" t supeiler te any ether work un Mythology. Nearly 200 illustrations. J2 CO DAVID MtKAY & COMPANY 1NTERLAKEN MILLS, Providence, Rhede Island THE STORY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT by Edgar J. Goedspetd Ihe author tells uhy snd when the New Tesiainenr came Inte existence. It selves many perplexing problems. "It's a great book." $1.50 net UNIVERSITY OP CHICAGO PnESS hterlakem Boek Cleth fe: '! f. m sm-J s.M ii . n in r.l fl j ii m '.1 f jtYz 1" lit' m i ft mi .t MWZ II II .Hi .. . . . ." www ma av waf svsjvr JKMMM w ; immiMmAti;.. , mjk . i ai- ( ii.pi. .,. in v-vvv(vasssiiSBBSBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBBmaaB ss, sasakii'.! wwv m.. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers