Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 07, 1922, Night Extra, Page 18, Image 18

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHlUADELPHlX TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1922,
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SPRING BOOKS OF INTEREST TO THE GRA VE AND THE GA Y
M
olenel Repingtens Way
te Selve World Problems
mm
1 'Cv. ,-urft aL...
$ Pharlc. a
itarlea wilt
tN' ' "" sit? -
Lieutenant Colonel , pOMlTLSOKY nrbltrntlen, however,
Court ltcpInRten's i J Involves much mere tlinn most per-
prebnbly be mere H t-erm who advocate It have realized.
predated 1 n Colonel IlcplnRten doubtless under
fifty years than Mauds all its implications. It has ire
it is new. We , quently been caid that as men have
arc se close te learned te submit their disputes te
the r-vcuts and peaceful adjudication nations ought te
have rend s6,be able te get along without going te
many and se wnr. Hut the unaleev between men
and tuitiens Is fnlse. Tlic men are cltl-
.varjing c e m
meats en tliem
that our curi
osity is dulled.
et it could be
wished t h a t
ever y public
man in Amer
ica and every
I. - ...,..
' ;ceu BEWNOWN ere.ted' in
public affairs might read the f-ecend
olume of the diaries, just published
" pnrler the title of ''After the War''
(Houghten Mifflin Company). It cov cev
trs the period from .Tnnuarv S te De-
ccmber
record
zens of n nation which lias power te
enforce this decrees of its courts. The
i.atiens arc net members of any com
munity committed te nny cede of laws
enforceable by any common authority.
I.neh Is a law unto itself, or had been
until the League of Nations was formed.
Hut net even tin; League has power te
enforce its decrees against a recalcitrant
member.
it Is foelMi te talk of compulsory
arbitration until a super-state has been
organized with u common police force
pewirful enough te compel the accept-
a lire of en arbitration award. There
, . , ....... in ii, in uili UIIU11 unuiu. Allele
4 of last year and contain. it ,must be federation of States, each mem mem
ef the lmin-os-slen rln i-olenol i..,- - ...li..i. ,.. .. .m.. ... .
r?i r ..a M"ninnpy th0 "nfurmn- i, milch of lts seu,r(.gnly u3 ,, neccs.
tien about the state ..f il. world that Wlty te glve the ccntra, ailtherlty pewcr
Sif m ,iUri"B " ,0U1 . ' vr, I"-"' te vntem its ,Iccr('t, evcn t tlie extent
5T1 fc i v K"rei1' el11,l"5 ,uith n!et InlUctiiiK punishment en a. member
month .in New erl and A ashlngten State.
at the beginning of the mss,iiin of the
Conference ou the Limitation of Anna
Stents.
The leek trill hnve prcnl lusteiical
value, but it has even greater nirtcut
importance hecause of the light it
threxes en the pr'ehleiiii tcith which
the tcerld is new struggling.
rcenling te present indications
the I nitcd States has a long way te
go heferc it icill be ready te become
a member of any such supcr-state.
MARGOT IX ACTION
Drawing from the Jacket nf E. V.
Hensen'n "I)ele" that lias been re
publMied because nf the revived
Interest In its heroine, Marget
Asqulth.
"DE RERUM NATURA"
What a Modern Among the
Ancients Had te Say
About Creation
lrHAT he has te say about the
Wa
Till: clash of selfish interests in
Europe, with various States sceklnc
jwhnt they wish without regard te the
rights of ethers, s responsible for Cole-
liii-l Hepingten's ennclulen tliat nrbltra-
rashlncten Conference will ileiibt- ,len ''J compulsion is the only way out.
less be read fuM by most Americans. If "? I'ener desirid justice above all
It forms n fitting climax te the book, 1 """'nR' compulsion would be unnecessary
Which is an inquiry into what the.na- n'"1 "nr" e"ld cea-e for lack of provo prevo prove
tlons arc doing te find a a. out of t'im 'Ciltlen- 1" the meantime, we lnu-t gel
eompllfatiens produced b the ln-t war nln8 "-Ith such makeshifts as the
and te discover a way te avoid future '"' "f Nations mid the treaties of
Wars. He wns pleased with Wash-' tl10 "nhingten conference.
lngten as a conference city. lie was , .
impressed by the abilities and sincerity ! "CnWAHD LUCAS WHITE objects
of President Harding and Secretary j i-J te my remark Iat week that hi
Hughes, and he gntiiered tin impression "Andhitiu Hedulle" ranks with "Sn
that these men were fully conscious of i lammbe" as n historical novel. lie
their responsibilities. "The real hope writes me:
of future success, lie writes, "lies in
Ihe combination of the characters of
the, two ruling men here, with the por
tentous wealth und power of the. United
States, whose word no Power can re-
aist, assuming It cvntlnues te ring as
true as it does here new. We Euro
peans are all tee much involved and
tied up in our treaties, interests and
bickerings in Europe for nny Eure-
, pean statesman te take the lead in
"Palammbe '
was a
the
the
.
ml
Kit
C?6.
h'
this affairs. America stands apart, un-
veekine. unselfish, righteous, well-in
tentiened, Olympian in her detachment,
yet with 'means of constraint at need.!
both moral and material. I see no
power but America's te redeem Europe
and Asia from all the terrible troubles.
which my inquiries this year have made
tee poignantly manifest te me. Re- j
pensibillty gees with power, and has,
rer se gene since the dawn of history." j
Time alone can tell whether
United States will disappoint
hopes of the tcerld.
IT DISAPPOINTED them once when j
it rejected the Versailles treaty. The j
"Washington Conference was the begin
ning of an effort te de in part what
could have been done better and mere
completely through the League of Na
tions, and it proved te the world that
the American Government was in sym
pathy with the fundamental purposes
f the League.
There is no evidence jet that the
United States is ready for the program
-hlch Colonel Itepingten insists must be
followed if there is te be rapid recovery
from the effects of the war. Ills study i
ef conditions in the European c.ipuaJs
convinced him that something must be
'done te remove the dread of war and te
restore the equilibrium of international
exchanges. He would relieve the ex
change situation by bringing about
through the uctlen of the governments or
of the bankers a return te Eurnpa of
part of the geld that accumulated in
'the United States during the war. This
would put the European current y en u
sounder basis ami de something tewaul
restoring its value.
lie would remove the jcar of war
y an arrangement for compitlsei y
I arbitration.
Is n sham Flaubert
' .. iwei uiiiSiCI- ill 1IVJUUII, IIU
doubt of that. And he mastered every
scrap of Information about Carthage
and Its people that has come down te
us. Uut In his book there Is no aroma
of the spirit cf ancient times He had
net caught the spirit of Carthage.
There is In "Salammbe" net one
Carthaginian or Creek. Every char
acter Is completely French, Parisian
and Quarter Latin
I wish the spirit had moved ou te
put. Instead of "Salammbe," 'The
I3f luge." In my opinion, which may be
all wrong, Slenklewlcz produced the
greatest prese Action of all time se
far when he wrote "The Deluge." Of
course one has te read "With Fire and
Sword." its forerunner, ter get the set
ting and scenery and background for
"The Deluge," Its sequel. But It is a
sequel Immeasurably greater than Its
forerunner. As the presentation of a
period, as a tale of adventure, as the
nnalysis of a man's soul and of Its
development, as a series of pictures,
as a romance with an Ingenious and
tangled plot, it cannot be beat It is
pre-eminent in all these nt once. And
ter think that the same man' wrete
that drivel "Que Vadls" ! Ah 'incred
ible as that .Stevenson perpetrated the
Imbecilities of "Prince Otte" and rose'
e the Ineffable heights of "Weir of
Hermlsten" and "The Master of Bal
nntrae "
Nothing could be mere opportune
than the publication just new of an
English trnrtslatlen of Lucretius' "De J
llcrum Natura,'' in which is set forth
the advanced scientific nnd tdiiltwenhl- I
cal view en the origin of matter, man
ami animals, and the origin of natural
phenomena which was held in the first
century P.. C. Lucretius wns an epi
curean who devoted himself te com-
bntttiE superstition ami implying the
rule of reason te all things. His long 1, ,5-"';
nnd in England
"PURPLE PEARL" CUTS DOWN
MAE, THE FLAPPER'S JAZZ
"Somewhere in Philadelphia" Is n
flapper of the nth degree who began
life as simple Mary. New, with both
hair nnd name shortened, Mac leeks
toward heaven as an enlarged jazz palace,
where patent leather-haired angels will
twang the latest celestial "blues" en
their harps nnd life will be one long
telephone conversation interspersed with
"Posetiveis," "new you tniK, "woou "weou "woeu
night" nnd similar ilapperlsms. Heeks
te Mae usually arc something ,te keep
the newspaper from blowing n'way or
te till the bookcase. IJut
The ether evening the current "boy
friend" was late and Mac opened up
'The l'urpie 1'carl" lUedd, -Mcail &
Ce,). Hy the time Sam, Tem, or what
ever his nn'mc was that week, arrived
the crechcty old nobleman had died,
leaving his fortune securely hidden away
and bad partly itftrustcd the nccrct of
Its hiding place piecemeal te each of
three sons.
Illecks away the earthy jazz bands
blazed away while Mae delved into the
mystery It. K. Weeks nnd Arthur Prydc
hnve evolved about the pearl, which is
the piece de resistance of the hidden
fortune.
Of course, the three holders of the
secret quarrel, as their father had
anticipated, and refuse te peel their in
terests. Instead they start en inde
pendent but futile searches. Then one
of the clues is stolen by a rascally Ger
man valet.
Leng-suffering Sam had departed by
the time the three grandchildren of the
old nobleman nppearcd upon the scene,
including n pretty girl beloved by both
her cousins. The war breaks out be
fore they can attempt te peel their
clues, and anyway one of the missing
key words is in Germany.
One of the suitors gees te war and
i Is captured by the son of the valet.
some exciting scenes in Germany
England in the search for the
fortune. Hairbreadth escapes, recap
tures, dungeon keeps nnd mere thrilling
escape rush pellmell through the pages.
Finally there -is a race across Eu
rope as the missing c.ues arc pieced
cases and had stolen away before Mac
learned Just hew true love could sur
mount obstacles and every one be happy
en the final page a page, by the way,
that simply recks with mere surprises.
"Seme story. Posefivcl," was the
sleepy comment about 4 A. M. And
what better praise could Messrs. ecks
and Prydc nsk, coming as it did from
the Queen of the Flappers?
philosophical poem hns been translated
Inte l-.nglish verse by A llllain Lllerj
Leenard, of the University of Michi
gan, nnd published by the Pultens in
the Everyman's Library under the title.
"Of the Nature of Things." Prof.
i.eennrti cenievses in a note m. ins jirei- tl,r,,tlit,r
ace that the suggestion thai a new ?,,. ,' ,.
translation be made came te Iiini in n
letter from the late Prof, (iunimere, of
Hnverferd College. The first two lines aaaaaaaaaaa
of his translation, ilaTX 4taf
Mether nf Reme, dellsht of gods nnd "" I JjCJVS
mull, i
jazz band had folded Its
Derfr Venus, that beneath the gliding .
. stars, '
he has taken from Prof. Gummere's
letter.
Its publication is opportune because
of the recent attack upon the modern
evolutionary theory of creation by Mr.
Hryan and the Kentucky Legislature.
The views of Lucretius differ no mere
radically from the ohl-fnshlened ortho
dox views of the Kemnns of his time
than the views of the evolutionists differ
from the views of Mr. Ilryan. Theiei
never were nnv centaury, says Lucre
tius, nor any creatures half fish and
half Hen. nnd he reasons against the
possibility of such a crossing of specie
very much as a man of sclenre would
reason today. Thunder nnd lightning
are net cnused by Jupiter, but by the
Collision of the clouds forced upon one
another by wind-. The collision makes
the noise and the friction of the clouds
against one another produces tire, which
Is called lightning. And be explains
that we see the lightning before we hear
the thunder becnuse sight is quicker
than hearing. In proof of tills he cites
the illustration of n man chopping a
tree, the distant watcher of whom sees
the ax fall before he hears the sound
of the blew.
Scholars have been familiar with this
book In the original Latin for centu
ries. Tills is the first time that it lias
been published in a form easily accessi
ble te the general public. Thousands,
who have heard of It, with enlv a loose
Idea of whnt it is, will welcome this op
portunity te add it te their library.
"I
FOR
BOOKS
1628
CHESTNUT
STREET
"BUY A BOOK A WEEK"
HEll
kl
EltE is another letter of a different
Ind frtim Jehn P. O'Denncll, of
2.".., North Tenth street. Mr. O'Donnell
writes :
Hew lc ynu set that way? "The
Itpmaiitic Lady" Is net Michael Ar
ln'.s first book. Three years age he
wrote "The Londen Venture" and I'll
wugir ou will find It as delightful In
Its way as "The Lady of the Camel
lias" or ".Sapho " Don't miss It. It
has an Indescribable charm and you
can read It In forty minutes. Little
white edition pecket size. And I
think he has committed ether crimes
previous!).
The only answer is that when se
distinguished a nuin as the one who
was claimed by seven cities after his
death occasionally makes a slip, a man
who was born in the country may be
pardoned if he is net infallible. But
whither "The Romantic Ludy" is
.Michael A rim's first novel or net deet
net nffeci its quality. It is n geed book
worth reading. (J. W. D.
"Three Soldiers" in College
The University of Callfernln has
adopted "Three Soldiers," by Jehn
Des Passes, In its schedule for the
American uevel course of IOL'1 nnd
102.
NEW BOOKS
Fiction
New Yerk- K
Inte PalKnup for exnmpl "Aileniln." 'Th
.Vn'iant .Mariner." Yent s "The Death of
t'urhulaln." Hren' ' MfBO of I'erlnth."
shoniiter.e'n '"Id,- Schoelmliitrem," etc The
1k.ii! inukes en inter-stlnu addition te Every
mun'n I.thrJr with Its ttell-cheaen eel of
luruc-r 1 rlce-narratlvu poem
TIlUOL'Cilt nUBHIA. Merlm by Maxim
tierl-l New Yerk: V Dutten i. Ce.
TresB typical short utorlen of en of the
mi r.ett-d of mndnrn .Slav wrltern have been
nitlutpd from the Kuaalan for Kvcryman'i
Library by C J. Hesarth, vbe contributes a
brl'f Introduction
NQLISH SHOUT STGIUUS
i V. Butten i Ce.
' A selection which show the devnlepmcnt
ef the form from the fifteenth te the tw.
,1 tleth century. There Is n brkf but Infem
t Jn tntro-luctien by the cdllur. Ernest nhyn.
y in ttveryman n t.init.rjr
ntr Tvr -mm nlrtrrnQ t!i r Pun.
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a r ' Isabel I.)r(l. New Yerk: Harcourt, Brce
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W. I tr, by the author et The Air 1'lrHte. nf)1(, Sci(,n(.0 and Art)1 or iratt intlttite,
ifrtS't FA.THEHS AND, SONS. By Ivan Turcenev. Uroekiyn. Klvee Invaluable advice te the
riih-h TTaniiniea Dy u. j. jieKarm. .ew lern nouncK-r-rer i Tioauer.H n ln9 uuugci unu
33 "t!1 E. P. Dutten k Ce. family purchae.
raWl . In Everyman's Library, with Introduction , ivrTneru'CTION TO EINSTEIN AND ITNI.
RSi i Rrnet Khy. VEllSAI. HKI.ATIVITY. Hy William F.
William Lyen
Phelps, ietu.
Vandemark's Felly
will make an indel
ible impression en
the reader's mind.
Vandemark's
Felly
Herbert Quick
One of the best Western
stories in years
THE SETTLING
OF THE SAGE
By
HAL. G. EVARTS .
"The Settling of the Sage" is
recommended te you as one of
the finest Western stories
written in recent years. Evarts
knows the cattle country and
the people who live there,
comic and tragic, geed and
bad, but always lively human
beings. Levers of tales of the
open range will thoroughly
enjoy this fascinating story of
the old West.
THIRD LARGE PRINTING
$1.75 wherever books are sold
LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY
I'ublishers, Bosten
Have YOU Read
OWEN JOHNSON'S
Great American Nevel
THE WASTED
GENERATION
Gertrude Athtrten sayst
"A welcome tonic te both
mind and spirit. It placet
Mr. Jehnsen definitely among
the few arittecratt of mod
ern American literature."
KaU Deugtat Wiggin tayt
"It it fine, thoughtful,
sincere, uplifting and enter
taining."
Maurice Franeit Egan say:
"Thit it decidedly Mr.
Johnien's bett novel ... it
taket a very high rank among
the noveltef the year."
N. P. Dawsen in the New
Yerk Glebe sayst
"If recent American nevelt
that have made a neite in
the world had -a tenth of the
imagination and geed writ
ing that fill many paget of
'The Watted Generation' we
would have mere hope for
the 'new tendency' in fie
tien."
Frederick Taber Coepeer in
the Boek Review tayit
"With thit book Owen
Johnton hat definitely taken
a place of leadership in the
tmall band of nevelittt who
really count."
FOURTH LARGE PRINTING
$2.00 wherever boehs are Meld
LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY
PUBLISHERS BOSTON
AN ORDEAL
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A chtrMterlittMlt- dramatfn remanre by
the aathar ef "Mtrantrar't Datl," etc. W
McBride, Publisher, New Yerk
I A aeTtl ef rttrktd diitrnctien I
I ky MURIEL HINE. $2.00 I
I DODD, MEAD ft COMPANY I
THE
EVERLASTING
WHISPER
by Jacksen G'rtgery
"SHrn the ireader out of him
self." -Bosten Glebe. 1,75
Ckarki Scribatr't Seu, Ntw Yerk
Just Published
THE
"Watch Fitzgerald."
-Chicago Daily
News.
"Fitzgerald is an
artist, an' apt and
delicate weaver of
words, a clever
hand, a sound work
man:
II. L. Mencken.
"The victor
belongs te
the spoils"
-1
BEAUTIFUL
AND DAM
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"THIS SIDE OF PARADISE"
KID
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time."
Sidney Heward.
0ri8alc
everywhere
$2.00
By F. SCOTT FITZGERALD
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
Damning Evidence!
Jutt one of thi many eluet te the murder
of Docter Waring clue that brought a
airangaij eaauuiui Bin ir
meaheaef the law. Read
girl into the tlnliter
A FLEMWO STONE DETECTIVE STOW
By CAROLYN WELLS
A novel that keeps you duelling, with an
astounding climax. And again we meet
Fleming Stene, master criminologist.
At Alt Booksellers, 33 00
J. B LIPPINCOTT COMPANY. Philadelphia
Our Unconscious Mind
AND HOW TO USE IT
By FREDERICK PRICE, Research Psychologist
The flrst practical book by an expert Riving men nnil womerf a clear
understanding of this tremendous tueurce of latent power. Applications
nr- explicitly plven ; te personal relationship, te the home, te training and
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ts.00. At any baoketere.
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Avenue.New Yerk
afe Inierlaken Library
THE books you lend, the books you take alepg when you trayel, the book you buy for children, the
books youkeepenyour library table and the books you consult from time te time in reference work
all these books require serviceable bindings. ' '
Fer thirty-eight years INTERLAKEN Boek Cleth has made possible bindings that maintain the excellence
of their appearance in spite of hard usage. And since the current . editions of popular interest, listed
below, are bound in INTERLAKEN, their purchase insures the possession of well bound books.
ALL BOOKSELLERS, $2.00
Bebbs-Merrlll, Publishers
New
imMJlCK BEAUTY ny Anna Sewell
Thla reprint of an el-l faerlti". In Hvery
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:Kmpweicn.
. CARAVANS OP KK3IIT I
P Nw Yerk. TdB Centii'y Company
Story or remance, inirmu-j una uaveniure
In India.
TOtMETT UAWLEIt. Ilv Tim Tully. New
Yerk: Harcourt. Brace & Ce.
The development of a waif.
HHB DEAVKS AFPAIR. liy Hulbert Toot Teot Toet
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lIudKlrm. New Vcrlt: Arrew Heek Cem
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A ncDUlnr r-XDlanfLtlen of tha KlnRteln
thtery thiit upprearhei ar. artual vlauallzR.
I. en 'ir mm miricaie sujct. it in writttn
nen-tecn-
THEBODYJUeBLUEROOM
By SIDNEY WILLIAMS
Literary Editor of The North American
An intriguing tale of
Leve and Mystery
At all Bookstores Illustrated $1.75
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY Philadelphia
teMillllllllilW
Ilv llnrrv Hjry In clear, and se far as possible.
: n ' 'nll Innrriair.i
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IWL1
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A thrilling mytery rennnce
TRAOKDY AT TUB IIKACU CI.UI1.
y William Jotineten. iseatnn: Little.
rewn d2 L.O.
Baaed en a murder of almost Inenpllcable
(Ircumstances, this Involved story will k-cp
ta tana or mystery Action suesslni;.
ir
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MODERN CITY AND ITS GOVnilN
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OYNT. Ily Hanrlk Ibsen. I-Vw Yerk
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ns.l-.tfHl with an introduction bv far-
taeit Sharp f,er Everyman's Library,
GROWTH OP POLITICAL LIHEUTY.
Hew Yorki E. 1. Dutten 4. Ce
. apurre book of t-riifimu nistery, solecbd
iladlted by Ernest Rhys.
r. New Yerk! E. P. Dutten Ce.
translation of the books referring te the
aatballe and Macedonle wars. In Every
Vs) Library.
ttatana psychic life op insects, iiy rc.
- r'lir I Beuvler. New Yerk: The Century He,
I Jl, ISPNnJHS UUU ,1. II.IW ...... ,n V"!
YeiX iresil u iiiv f,i7ijriui icuir.
liewaru, me nuieu
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ntomeioKist,
TREASURY Or IXNaER ENQ-
JEMH. JSflitet ay isrneai iinys.
uuiien l.
rait ra es. ramous
i none ana iiYrics.
"WWW
i awtauaa
Iwurtk. tiaiXflr
AT THE FREE LIBRARY
Heeks rocelvcil at the Tree Library,
Thlrtci-nth and Locust Btreets, (luring
the week ending March -:
Allen, f. H. "foreman and ills Jeb."
AuKtilriUiuHh. W. V. "Advertulnir for
Trade In Lat!n-Am rlra."
lUhren, II. W "EndurlnB Investments,"
lltman L. T. "Selectwd Articles en Cur
rent Problem In Taxation "
Helland W. (' "Y'lir Heeks."
Jlrlnckmeyrr, Ilermunn "Hutre Rtlnnes."
Enslvn. P. P. "Cempulsury Scheel At-l-ndinr
and Child Laber."
Kr iL-ht Traffic Itd Henk.
(lullck L' H. "Philosophy of Play."
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