llipw?PfI ?' . - - EVENING" PUKLIO IiEDGE-l'.tlllJAlU!JJriiA, ;'juua.xf Ejwu.tui. ct "" ofaRemadeWerld An AutheritativeTribute te Literary E " ! i ii m r yht: s i ft ; f ft IIM '- iv 1 -m&&!m 1 C ; i S!; fl IMWlWlMwn 4f , J Pill -Cssi- IjM iv j ' u Mg-s-r; -rssMfcMEapB- I 9 BOOTH TARKINGTON The Red Boek Magazine Aj M list in the number of prize stories of 1920 chosen by the Society of Arts and Sciences. These masterpieces of literature, among these rated hie-hest bv the Award Committee of the Society, .were conceived for and originally published in THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE an unparalleled record of editorial understanding. The most distinguished authors have given te The Red Boek Magazine its place as a dominant influence in the home. A CONSENSUS OF OPINION The Publishers' Weekly recently obtained from booksellers throughout America their opinions of the relative significance of American authors. The three authors who steed highest are: . EDITH WHARTON . JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER They will all contribute te The Red Boek Magazine in 1922. LLOYD OSBOURNE who, as Rebert Leuis Stevenson's collaborator in another story, writes here of an American consul at the world s end. GERALD BEAUMONT whose heart-reaching race story, "Oh, Susanna I" will never be forgotten by any reader. FANNIE KILBOURNE who has made the young woman who works the heroine of a real romance of business. I FRANK DAVIS who tells another story of Cap'n Bill Titus, late of the Texas Rangers, as gallant an old chap as ever fingered a six-gun. O. F. LEWIS . who, in "Alibi," reveals his knowledge of the mind and thoughts of these whose days are spent behind prison walls. GEORGE GIBBS who, in "Mamselle Cherie," gives a vivid picture of exalted American society in this day of swift changes. The distinction defined above is maintained in the March issue by EDITH WHARTON whose fascinating novel, "The Old Maid," offers you the latest achievement of one of the really great writers of our time. TACK BOYLE who contributes still another lustrous picture of a corner of Chinese life in America. RUPERT HUGHES who, in Kis great novel "Seuls for Sale," reveals the inner workings of the moving pictures. . PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM who, in "The Hener of M. Lutarde," carries en his remarkably ingenious series of detective tales. MARY SYNON who never wrote mere dramatically or with deeper feeling than in "The Croupier." JAMES K. HANNA who tells the final story in his series involving the opera tions of Mr. Murchison's amazing graft syndicate. F. R. BUCKLEY who, in very few words, paints a picture of the old West that readers will never forget. THOMAS L. MASSON'S satirical social editorial that will delight you. TOM A. DALY'S singing poem of the season into which we are entering. BRUCE BARTON'S . inspiring editorial for the average man in these shifting times. QP Parents may keep abreast of the current of education by reading the Residential Scheel Announcements Qrf in each issue of THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE 2? THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE March Issue at all News Stands Price 25 cents h 9 i te V 9 V $ b.: M Vl2 --a M am mtiJAl. Va -tlA 1 '1 m Jbf 4 A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers