friff" V. r .tvvl... ..-,, r .... - v-pv-f . wftKWMNiwap M i-u,. if w JCi V JCi XXI VT X- VJ DULJ UEJUKXSUXV-r' X'JI.lllJa.JLJCiUl'XII-a., X U XTiOlft. i BP1frPSSlSSSSiili?SFllH m.l w i.rr k " V '' l.X te I'll lvi t tfSi S? ", &r ir n. 'r'i P I ii m 1 L te VJp UTNAM ' IKS AND AUTHORS WitSgraU Has r&0'l"tfc ' Duster calls her in his latest S'$lhBUi aft.,... ..It. U.- I., t.l. Iitnal Iff - irtek, "The Glass of Fashion." ,Js iiTi.. -i... e L..v.un u V . iliu uwea 111. rusniuii -. n ll-.' afMA-tMr AVMllfHtMAHf of certain ediiikiii - ma, i.inviit. fct aallAHa of HaaJau llatl 4-1a1 society, devotes i,, m.s i hivulth unwi. Et i 'Mr. ' Dilator nartliMilarlv t.itimz: --.' ------ fejtbnaeff " te Morget Aseuitlx and faalenpl Reninerten. i'6k VJ?y , ti U net tee early In resm e n copy of fa first vetum of rrofcsier Thornten s $$' monumental tcerfc. """" ' .," i Net exactly a hair-raiser, per- i.. l i i ,l , j... .i.,t haps, but a book that does -izzlc Wth excitement, is "Snowdrift, by James B. Hendryx. And, net even the Arctic wastes, where the story is laid, have a cooling effect upon the ardor and recklessness of these exiles from civilization who fight .ferlife, fortune and love "between the Mackenzie and the Ray." - Levar of the epr will find (tld mine of information and ntarlalnin- reading in the Complete Opera Boek, by Gui r tara Kebbe. What is a seul-stlrrinjr novel? "The Dragen in Shallow Waters," by V. Sackvillc-Wcst, is one. Seme people say it stirs mere than the soul, tee. Che trio! Twe choice tidbits purposely post poned until after Smile Week. Net mile" books, net joke books, but full length novels, guaranteed te anni- iiiiawv till: fctiuwa, icvna tinu iuinw) . with a humor se really genuine that j it is infectious. Oh, yes, the titles The Wayi of Lau-hter, By Hareld Bagbie. The Jey of Living, By Sidney D. Gewing. Are you recovering from the ftut MAY LAMBERTON BECKER in The New YeVk Evening Pest recommends Minnigcrede's :" 'OH, SUSANNA" "for a nan ichetr disposition Jim tetn1 wrecked hj the inuM4n: for e young fellow dreaming of the tea; for n middle-aged perten Iceking ter a rattling geed yarn " MOhj' Susanna" is a tale of the clip per ship days, the ferty-niners, Ori ental adventuring and old New Yerk. -Ask any bookseller te show you a copy of Jescph'McCabe's "Evolution of Civilization." Just skim through it. Read a para graph here and there. If you iden't find it an interesting, in . ffermative and entcrtainint: sketch of the entire course of '.civilization, a book you will vwant te read and want te keep, then we miss our guess. The price is only 51.50. ; G. P. P. THE POCKET EDITION I OF THE NOVELS OF I.S.M.HUTCHINSON Willum Lyen Phelps in The N w Yerk Timet says : "Kotchtneen hai published four no ne ela and I heartllv woernwl them all: 'Onra Aboard the Lucgar '; 'Tha Haper Warrior': "Tlia Clean Heart": If Wlntar Cemca ." IF WINTER COMES Th novel that every one ! red- Jfif. Over three hundred theujind t copies have been aeld. "Read It ' today se that you ca.i talk about It . with the rest of the world." The Hilten H'rald. Once Atnard the Lugger Ttwuoed. Breun sn'jt " Oree Aboard tha J.UaTter" la one of the, merriest books ever written." ,The Happy Warrior JS. F. Eigttt k Th Bosten Tran serpt says. "A Tet story which must surely win for Its author a , high place, tun en g the novelists whose weric endures." The Clean Heart , The Neit Yerk Bun saw. "Power and itrenrth and humor and human nature are here." Met Kiffflea .Imp Tathtr. Knr.h, t 19 ttul3r KdMan. Clalh. Eth, 12 a at 411 BoeWellera Aa laterratlng baeklet ahaat A. n. M. HCTCniNSON will aat free nn request UTTLE, BROWN & COMPANY Publishers t i t Bosten "Nan LoeH s . aa W- . .. Lj Vl. fr y. , erv OVER. 35,000 opt,, $elJ lh I5vetfe$ 'tIn eWStLr9Lm BaPBaaajBaH YOUTH MA YDARE, BUT DOES NOT ALW A YS KNOW f1 IV a Classic nor uejinea jne A MAX with .enif knowledge of his- " Inr.v nml political silence happened tf lie crossing the ocean n few cars age en lh .ninp It I p with a handsome .uting woman Jiim out nf .ir Cel-; iege who ,n iiltrnr.tlng censldcinbli1 at t r n I Irm liv ttf.i nut linalAKt it rminniat of ' In f'liml siifft.ige cum'. Sim linil been , making spnp'-lics In iipplniifliiiR n'lill- . pllr?, ,, n .,,,, . ,n( Kn,ti When It wn dbcm.-r.-d thai she win cm heard1 senip ndmlrcrs who Knew her by repu-1 i lallnn arransiil that she should address the prnj;ers. 'nn man mih nni ' knowledge ef'liiMnn mnl political scl. rnpp wfl ion. tpp pdIwn..r n lrt. audience About ion minute1 Inter hr was found walking en deck by I another mini why had nut born Inter-I rsted enniigh In llie jeuntj woman hnd le sin te I heir what slir t j en wen- nt the n Id the ninn who had meeting," ia la.ved anai', ' I w.is," onme renldn't xlniid ii llie repl? , "Imt I I iiewr inn any i I j 'j j 1 V, AMt J. Art HV.lWfti4ma w aa atrtJ K. SCOTT F1TZGKKAM) WImsc .vrciiinl noel has all the faults of his first one before who knew 'e 111 lie about nrj thing who M't was mi i ecksurc about everything. She is dislertlnc n- hi , ii V . " . r 111- Inn fttnrMilnf.s ,,f v.,npn,ft .,,.1 ,1... i.i.. -...i -.... i..... ... I net seem te Knew what n feel "die i j making of herself " I'. Scelt rit7gerald is uittlng about tl.e sanif llcure n. n nnvclt that this jeutig we'iian cm n a pelltlrnl re- ' former. lie has ti" ame audacity. His fnrlllti wllh wenl-i jjles him some- ( thing of ihi charm tlint personal inajc r.etlsm gac te the jeung woman. And his thinking l about n rrud'' nml .ti petficlnl as htn. I et l'it:arrall ran hr n youth nnd rnulilij 1 'ieic st'flfns 0 greinmj up. 01711 CM hr ifil UVrOKTtWATni.Y novel "The !, his semnd MUtlful nml the Unmncd if liarli"i S'crlbncr'.s Sensi. has nlieiit nil the faults of 'TliN side nf Paradise," Ids firt. It Is 11 record of hew far two yeiins peepln going le rhe devil get 111 een or eight enr. Intteid of telling n straight ".lery. Mr Fit7g(rald Interrupts his nnrrati'e with all sort. of illscusslenn, nnd wilh mon ologues bv one or another of his char acters which read as though tlicv had been written for another purpose nnd Incorporated In the novo) hccatitp he thought they were cmait Sometime" lhi dialejue Is written in the inual novel stvle ,i ether times it Is writ- ' ten in llie manner of n play, with tii name of the speaker In miill capitals1 at the hesiniiint of enrh remark. And sxinbnlii-nml iham-edli nl Interlude, ec . cur. the pertineni'e of w lil h jt i dif fifiilt te undi runml Anthenv I'litch, the hern and ('.lerla. the lieielne. nn iincleubleil M pei te he found in Philadelphia nnd New Yerk and llnsten and nil eihei Imce lines Anlhenv i". a inllii' gimluiilc witlmut energy enough te ie nniliing lie tin . enough mnnev 10 1 1 en and feels hlni'elf by talking about what hf will de when he gets ready. Hut h 1 teallj I waiting for n rich grandfather te die, when he will enjoy himself In miiji impossible en his limited Income, filerln is a beautiful young woman, en ' Nevels, Travel CHAItl.l'.S i Immplen CIIAI'I.IN, the weild's pie thrower, like, the limelight. Alse he iioen'l mind being limited n hoi 1 1 In i tm,N -e lung n1- iliewi rrotvil rretvil nie fnendh In fact. Mr ''hapim"i nioile might be jmt down as ' av wlni nu wnnl about m" n long n. nu Chaplin Boek of Travel Mlk hIieiji me Theve thoughts, jf i.Hr the mnv be dignified, in' alieut the enlv ones thui intrude iftir a peiusal nf I Trip Abroad" ill.irpersi bv the en" and only Charlie Starting with a ud den detertnluatlen te see what Londen cum ds really would de le nnd fei him Chaplin tells of his trip in minute de tall .Much of tlie lioek is ii dCM-rlp-tien of throng after throng, nil ueem luglv inleni i ou pulling tnc lumedinn In iieiMs, Inn In u fiienilly spirit Vlslu te I.IemI tJerge, Wells nnd ethers, ns linleil in their icstricted fields ns Is C C in his own. serve te illumine tlie pages whin the first pergenal pinnrmn heroines n lut hiu.ng Although fianklj ndiiillllng hue el ilu calcium's glim Chaplin in times dieps into a nuhei snilricnl mood when emnirntlng upon ihe furore he mused whetewr he wen' ,M Trip Abroad" will Interest Chap lin fans, hut A meld Dennett ami Mir Hall ("nine need net slinki in fmr for their Inuicls, Child M Seskice h,.i. emnd. i mp was Ferd .Mndnr Hrewii. Hie nnlntcr nn wrlli'r, and n lendins llciiri- of tlie lliollierlieod. ilieiicli iii'lllii'r t-e ndviinnd us Reme of iliriii nor ricntually no, ipIp. Iirnted, iIieiikIi Im uiin a in, m of maik III hlfc iln .lulli'l Se(.lin was n rnlld In tlie ItnskPin circle and lirr book is pneplcil with tlie iiciMiiialllleH of CIiiIh Una Hesbcttl, 'lliain Merris and the ether members of llie dhtineulahpil reupwh left tliclr impren en Drltlsh art. litpratiire'iind soelelojclcal thlnVlnj. her rrmlnJcrnccn ene meets poets, i1 fc g ml I'af Mi 1 :". "' Ki&w ' .1 aHHIlla""" bHHHHIIV If, X V . ! K i v Baaaaaaaaal f ijiK m -m aam afaaaaaaaS kattHHHaW aLaiiH' BaiiiiiiiiiiiiBk..iiiiliiiiiiiH I BaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiaiiHB.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH 'LaBHalllHi TV HOES nf ir,e nlP.ltniili.li. IHI,. no -a, ,.-.,.. s-i rien rini: out in i'uiptrr I mm l" ",", v ; ..i'i .'. n:OT,"K ' iChlldhoed nr.'.m.t. lira.,. & v i'ly, ,"'t Its chief Interest Is In the Tin. Loek is si,l,.tltl.ils""'V of .'Cry rechch.e nm' "P'te-dnte . 'Uenilnl-eeiiceV of n ' pp,t "V ln VU C'h? rflctrr'"'1- Tn1'' A Pre- AiiiM'H Cranddaiig - i J.'"1, h.fl yre"J ebr"'l environment of a i i ... iinnu fliiniiirii in L-nnn inn i innnnaiiir? iim u nil in rtar iniia. i iji .,.,- m- . ,, - ' ti'uim aa. i ri r Neither Written f I 1 7 X. tlrcly abinrbcd In herself, whee rule of llfe l te take what she wants. The ttrp go about, the nljtat restau lantt of New Yerk, drinking mere and mere ns the yesri go by, till Antheny bcoemf n hopeless cot and they lire se extravagant!) that their money has at at inedt dliappcarcd. whn they succeed In breaklns the grandfather' will which had left the fortune away from the drunken grandson. The "Damned" e the tnru em le be Ihr rirh man's kin with noth ing te He hut trait te tnhetit vealth, and the "llrautiful" utemi te le the ieintg leeman trhe'e damnation cow fit in the iflfish pilrttlit of pleasure. 0F COUHSR n nerel is primarily a story. There Is tery enough in ihl one. Hut i great novel In mere than a Mery It Is an Informed and tolerant commentary en life. Ne bet ter illustration of the superficial qual Itv of Mr. Kitrgerald's thinking raft be found than in the definition of a clastic which he puts In the mouth of his here, "A classic," siicsested Antheny. "Ii I a successful hook that has survived the t cad Ien of the next period or genera tion." r',itnnn.A tkU t,t,1i wKll Saint. ilenvc hail te .ir en the subject : "A .. , hi. .i.... ,i ii . - ...,i.. .r, i, nn. riehrd fbe liitmnn spirit, who has really enlarged its treaure, who has taken a step forward, who has discovered some undoubted moral verity or who has re- .", " "" uiiiii. ...... illceMied some external passion in the j 1 cart wliere nil i-eemeil Known ami ex- ; 1 iiiercu ; wne nas out nis ineugni, nis observation or his Invention In no mat- ter what form se long as It is large anil Ignilled, refined ami Intelligible, sane nml hcRutiful in Itself: who has spoken te nil in n tyle of his own which yet prnes te be the tyle of every one. in a sole new without neologism", new nml nnclenl, eillj contcmpernrj of all the ngc." Te trnlr temcthinp thai ran njM (Am trl iheulil he the amhilien of rtny man of letter. IT CANNOT be done, however, by a jeung man who sets out te be smart, for net in I hut way is the human spirit enriched. Ner is an external passion tedlscevered thus in the human heart where nil seems te be known. There flippancy and triviality " bout Fitz- gerald's lioek which Is the result of a sirivlng for brilliancy. In conversa tion he has n character reply te a nung woman who says she has Ideas, lut cannot put them in werds: "As finliath said, hn understood hew David felt, for he couldn't express him;elf. The remark was immediately adopted for n motto by the Philistines." And in writing of the entrance of the I'nlted States into the war he savs: "Wilsen nnd his Cabinet a Cabinet that In Its lick of distinction was strangely rem iniscent of the twelve apostles let loose the rntefully starved dogs of war." These passage, along with the defi defi nlllen of n classic which I have quoted, are charai leristlc of the whole book. Tlie pursuit of cleverness for its own nke blinds a man te the larger truths, the statement of which in the simplest terms is mere moving than the most Mirprising tut n of phrase or than the me't flippant or Irreverent gibe. Hut icith all his faults I'ltigeinld has the story-telling gift, lie proved it beyond n doubt tn his volume of therl iterics last yrai . TT IS 1 that rT IS. In tllA fVMlfitnwtlnr, nf a nm.. I .' .,, ...' MnHiik.iu i. .. IIUXI - he tails, mis second novel lias .. ,.. . . . all the faults: or the nrst, lie is aware of these faults, for he confesses through one nf the charactcis in the new one that the old one is net true te life and I- '.heddy lealism. If Is because he haw gifts and liecause he mav be able te de -emething of permanent value If he will la!e himself In hand nnd put his thinking and his stjle through a rigid discipline thai I hate written thus at length nbeut him. I should like te e him devote five years te his next noel, tears given te wide reading and sincere lefiectien nnd te careful ami palnstnit ing ebenatien of life. Then the hook might have one or mere of these quali ties which Sninte-Beuve aid harac tcrlzcd a classic qualities thai are eter nally in style, regardless of the chang ing fashions. G. V. I) and Biography refermcis. painters, srhelars and so cialist" of the brand tietv called par lor. The l,enk is rli Ii in nnecdetul touches and as well has m charm for I he spontaneity of Its impressions and its maiter-ef.fact impersennlness In lh pntls tieatlng of childhood It is tinged with humor also, and will gie some inlftestins hours le leaders who like memoirs and nulobiegraphr. TT1DDIK TIIORNK Is Hie phllandeir -L- in Delf Wyllarde'" ' Wanderlnp 1 1 f." (Jehn f.ane Cernpan I. Onn of t ip lights vhM, lure' te a year. Hut it seems that heis differ him is hia mendv mel- 'from their elders In ne.vcr lettii'ie go (.t anohely Riiflnn wife, nn old favorite. At the fame limp that half a barbarian, wholly ,thev publlfli a 11m of the new Iieih' ii .Slav. Anether Is books, T. Appleton & Ce.- fln. The Way of the Philanderer i ec,"' Persen, neunee the twentv-renrlli pruning of flrl - of - the - period, 'the famous "Cruise of jhe f'arhelel," ni.ie arlresi. Despite her tephlitlca- ' by Frank T. Rullen; thp inpiitieih tien ehe was "no mere n Redflem of wis. 'prlntinjc of Harbour's "llehln.l the (lern than her grandmother." who lacked i Mne" and the teventlt of th same pep. Hie advantages of metlernltv and the ulnr writer's "Forward I'as"; t, asset of femlnlnlsm in which Marv is eighth of Walter Camp's ".laik Hall no favored. Mary "insisted en opening st Yale." the fiflli of William Hi -the .lock-in-the-box te cee the bogey llger's "Ktrlke Three," nml. i ,,,, iunii out and when he came she was 'from fiction te mere serieus wilting half inclined te shriek and run." fourth of "Your Ulggesi ,Ieh Scheni IMdle's wayward career, his errant nr Business," in which IIpdi.v I.pwU philosophy, hid .siiperabundanee of tern- Smith, president of Washington ami !,.. peinment magnetis Mary's interest, university, gives counsel inn way whhh Milt while he is tied te h'ls capricious I .T- ftrp K,a '" ,,,?,,'' '' '" "viijeni Musrevltn ipeuse, she has her ewnl,nBt n 'd boys' book keeps Its itpjical amour, nn "affaire" with an actor 'rneet Indefinitely, inesp cress-interests provide compiles lflln value lacking in some contemporary """is Thn book i uriiuanu.v written In Delf Wyllarde's usual flashing Myle, in which, however, the epigrams are never flai-h. Stringer'! Pralrla Trilogy Anhiir Stringer's new novel, te he published in the spring by Bebbs-Mer-rill, Is entitled "The I'mtrJe Child." It Is the third of the Prairie trllety, tba 'previous volume belnt "Tha Prairie Wife' and The Prairie Helher." BaPFt!Bmmmmmmmmmarc9aammmiBBmml l-aaaiiiiHPIIak2i3PIPRBI 'BammmmmmmlaBa.'BBmmYaBmmmmmmmmmV 'A'rrBakBalllllHalllBalH ASnV ''ii'fJ-fAJBi'p' t 'j 74 , lBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBr aVaElaBBaH '' :-'..'--i4iammmw-.-"ammm rTf-iHtiira -limMmm' ivmmm ;,., r.ffir, mzrrirMr IJiOYI UKUKUK One of the fifty. one caricature In Max Beerbohm's "A Survey" BEERBOHM CARTOON3 Witty and Pungent Cemment en Politics, Literature and Society M1X "eerbehm is a man whose work I people cltlier like very much or den I iiAp.".t.""v A man of fine literary taiie , rpjin neven .aim the ether rinv. nt tracted fe It by the enthusiastic com ments of bis friends, but the ennul'lle satire left him cold and the drawings 1 disgusted him. "The sketch book ef1 almost every art student, contains things I just ns geed." he said. 1 In spite of IiIh inability te see any thing unusual in the drawings in'"Seven . Men., this man would doubtless find ' some of the fifty-one rarlcatures In "A 1 Survey" (Doubleday, Page & Ce.li which would force uppreval from him. Hecrbehm'8 drawings In this book are n pungent comment en the man or the Idea caricatured, and bis accompanying iTuai comments nave tlie qualltv which endears him te his admirer, l'er In stance, he has written under the picture of I.leyd fJeerge, drawn in 11120, "Ne longer n democrat nt heart? Come!" If this does net place the shifty opportunist it would be difficult te find 11 form of words which would better Indicate his ability te use phrases without saying anythlnjr. In another vein is his picture of Geerge llrnniles behind the counter in nn old clothes shop, with Geerge Bernard Shaw offer ing him some garments, for sale. Here is the explanatory text : Geerge Ilrantlcs ('Chnml tl'ldees) What will you take for the let? Ceerga Bernard Shaw Immortal ity Geerge rtrandes Come, I've han dled these goods before". Ceat, Mr. Schepenhauer's: wnlstce.it. Mr. lb sen's; Mr. Nietzsche's trousers Geerge Bernatd Shaw Ah, but lock nt the patches. Seme of tbc pictures nre better than ethers, and although they nearly nil deal with Hlltisll issues nnd nerMeniilltliu. the American reader will find them en- ' tcrtainiiig. whether he leeks nt them ns ! nn art critic or ns a student of con- , tempernry politics, literature and se- ! ciety. , A DANISH BEST SELLER ' ABOUT THE SOUTH SEAS' The popularity of Seuth Sea hooks In America has Induced A. A. Knopf te bring out a translation from the Danish of Lain ids Druun's "Vnn'nn ten's Happy Days." This book purports te be tlie Merv of the ex periences in I'elll Island of n Dutchman who went tlieie from Ytip, where he bad been stationed ns a bujer for n Dutch mm in lfatavin. nn.nnten nmim. I mndatcd himself te the native customs, and man led a dnughtcr of the Klngl . . . And tnn.tl,. n . ,.,l..,l,u .1 et me isiana. ey whom he had n son. ' The story ends with the drowning of. the wife and child when the sea is driven ever the island bv n typhoon. The island customs are faithfullv de scribed and the steiy of the leve of the King's daughter for the while man Is1 fold with sufficient frankness te Indicate the difference between courtship in tlie1 Seuth Sen nnd in the. northern illmnles. VnnZanien niay have been a real man. ' Bruiin in a pieface says he was, and announces that the story is tcteld from his diaries. But the leader may be pardoned If he assumes that this Is hut a subterfuge nf the novelist. The book, which was written some years age. lias been tinnslateil Inte most of die lan guages of Kurepe. nnd It has had a sale of half a million copies. The Ger mans alone have bought 200,000 copies . of it. As a story the bonk Is tender and touching. It accepts the customs of the Islanders as n matter of course, fln, makes nn attempt te judge them bv the standards of n different order of civili civili sateon, With these customs the people led an orderly life nnd withal had standards en which Ihey insisted ns I nrnuy ns the standards of our ilvilljia ilvilljia tien nre insisted en. Se n love unrv vritten nbeut life In such surroundings becomes of unusual Interest, especially when It Is told simp'y and ilircnlv anil when it ends in the erderlv marriage of the levers nnd their adjustment of the life mound them. lis popular Itv in Europe is net surprising Beeks That Beys Like It la nnnimnnlr rnllmnlA,! il... ordinary novel's life is from six mnnihs Literalism In Washington Henry C. Wallace. Secreiaij of Agri culture, lellK an nmilMng ntei. iniicem ing Knet Hnmsun's bonk, "Ciinwih of the Seil." A frimd sent him n copy of ths book. The package was duly opened ami promptly fprwardfd te the Mmeau , of Seil Survey. After Hip lapse of time ' inefessary for rensclentlnus examination 1't "fts dropped again Inte the pteppr channel nnd teacjied iIip Secu'taiv with the etiicisl notation attached: "Tlili book does net deal with the f-clcnl Itlr aspect of the neil, as might he sup posed ftem Its title, but with n small group of people ruled largely by the primitive emotions. The Secretary might enjoy' Reading It for himself.'' Ths Beeretary didwhen It flnallv mMMnUmA lata f n NEW BOOKS General nee nrsic and this Monneiv n .sir rU Duki. New Terk: PiiublciS'. Tflne Ce (tienlurts nt lnveall(allen In Pelt Ituciis Mr I.irE OF SONO. Rv !,nl Tetrsixlnl. I'hllRtlelphlA: Derrsnc ft Ce, The famous dHa, formerly Of the rhlls. illphle.('hHi!e Opra Company, gle htr recollection. BHKOS OV Tt.Mj:. ny Jehn nrlnkwiler. Ilojlen- Meushlnn Mifflin Company, Nsw lyr'.en by eti of, th authentic reeln of ln rerleil A.MEntly renTnAtTS Vf nsnsllel Jtrnflferd, Uotten: Ilouahlen .Mifflin Cemranv. Sktrtis fanclna'.lnaly and accurately elnt psrfen1llla of the lil quartr of ih lat reattiry, Includlni Mark Twain, Jee Jeffer Jeffer eon and dreer Cleveland. Fiction MASTKIt SKTt.APK n- Jehn nnnett. w Yerk: Century Ce, Peenteenth edition of a modern chlc MAPIA CttAPDBI.AINB. y 1-euIk llemen Nesr Vrk! Maemlllan Cnmn,iilv. A remant-e of tha Lake Hilnt Jehn ceun try. The Everlasting Whisper A new novel by JACKSON GREGORY "This is a most ex citing tale. . . . One nebbles it eagerly ' from cover te cover. It is the sort of hook that, once started, one gallops eagerly and absorb ed ly through, hat ing te put it down until the final page. . . . The whole story is excellently done and is bound te en tertain." A'. Y. Time. At all bookstores, $1.15 Charles Srrlbner's Hens, New YerU Dante's Divine Comedy A new translation by Melville Ii. Andersen A linc-fer-lirie version in the rime form of the original. This clear, natural, and vivid rcndeiing retains in unique, degree the simplicity and di rectness of Dante's style. Price $4.00. lined by Mr. Griggs in his Forum lectures Alse limited de luxe .edition Fer sale by Presbyterian Boek Company WORLD BOOK. CO.Ur.WY Yonkers-en-Hud.on, New Yerk - Our Unconscious Mind and Hew te Use It By FREDERICK PIERCE An expert's practical applica tion of a tremendous potential power te the telatiens of every day life se as te increase poise and te lessen fatigue. $3,00 at avy bookstore or from E. P. Duttcn & Ce., 681 5th Ave., N. Y. Andivius Hedulie By EDWARD LUCAS WHITE EDMUND LESTER PEARSON reports a book dealer as saying tlint theie are two books which men who liku a geed story arc simply "eating up." This is ene of the two. I.1 00 at any Mek-tnu. nr fnun E. P. Dulton & Ce., 681 5th Avc.N.Y. THE MODERN CITY and its Government By WILLIAM PARR CAPES Director N. Y. State Bureau of Municipal Information A summary of the informa tion gathered during a com prehensive study from various viewpoints and in different cities of thu problems of city government. , 00 At my hnnhstaie er10111 E. P. Dutlen & Ce., 6S1 5th Ave., N. Y. Jein tb Oldest Librarr ie Phila. Eicluiivcly for Renting Medirn Fiction Booklovers' Library 1610 SANSOM ST. Membership Fee, $1 "-" a i i il lUliJ K J ft 1 1 fm I 1 1 al 1 1 eawLy 1 1 1 UltlM i READ ITI V Ilnw n nrnllh, willful tlrl f luirnrd ti rrnivet Hie l.iw S anit n man, j X . DODD, IVIEAD&X COMPANY X 'I I -Ready- THE WITCH MAN kn' M.R(I.RKT nKl.t.R IMtSTON A noel of the Virginia Mountains, which radiates charm nnd dlMne tinii, ns the mjstcry of the "Witch Mnn" and bis love Idyl Is un raveled nmeng the curious tnnun 'tnlneer.s. These Individualistic pen. pic. their manner", their customs, their Miperstltlens nre depleted with sympathy nnd understanding. v Net $i.i,i THE ANGEL OF TERROR n.r EIIOAR WAr.t rV. Anllier of "T Tour 4ut Men." "The IlnffeOII .Mur tler." etr. A diverting, cntcrlnlnlnc mystery slnry by a master of this type of Klery who teally writes nnd makes his absorbing plels genuine novels. "It's a cerkins story, rend it. is the general vetdlrt en everything1 Wallace write". Net ?t.i3 THE BEST SHORT STORIES OF 1921 i:,iited ir rmvARe .1. e'lirur.v The Slnndard Annual of the Short Sinrv In America. A landmark: in the literary j ear. Net ?-.00 THE FUTURE of the NOVEL Conducted hr .HKRKniTII .STARR An eplleme nf their views nn fiction bv the lending I'tigllsh novelists. An li'ivnluablc hook for nil interested In the art of fiction N't SJ.00 SUCCESS nr the nifiiiT iinv. i.eitn nr.wr.n- ItllOOK A book of inspiration nnd nn ex planation of what success really means and bow it may be obtained. Net $1.1X5 THE MODERN KU KLUX KLAN n.v 1IKMIY l IRV The complete cn"c ngninsi the Klan se far ns brought te light from the Inside, the prcs nnd the Congres sional Investigation. Net ?'J.U0 SMALL, MAYNARD & CO. A New Nevel by the Auther of TO HAVE AND TO HOLD a3s5g2fJS3 e5 MARY JOHNSTOK The period of Mils Johniten's new story n the lixteenth ctntury. end the place j the town of Middle Ferest en Wander, in Ilngland a market ten whose spiritual life is well guarded by the Friary of Saint Leefric en the one side of the liver and the Abbey ef SiHer Cress en the ether. "Silver Cress" I as the charm of narra tion which ras alwa)s marked this author's books, and the atmosphere cf the period is se accurately reproduced that it leaves the reader feeling that he has had a part in this unusually colorful sequence of events. SECOND PRINTING f2.00 tvhercver boehs arc sold LITTLE,BROVN &C0MPANY Publishers, Bosten SIMON CALLED PETER 77ir llosten Transcript: "Hew few authors could have seen or depicted Julie! She is wayward and intoxicating nnd tender. . . . Meht of all, she is lovable." By ROBERT KEABLE $2.00 ec tiny hnnhihep E. P. Dulton & Ce., 681 Slh Ave., N. Y. By the author of "Limbe" CROME YELLOW By Aldeus KaxTcy "Tlie brat rcadirrg. tee gajx rd iiiucv piauiuvc SZUITE, .. all hdd together by frfS At L.( t MM ILlfcS&Bi " M-MWrpi ,UV fiSify!!' - ! ,ww "Z ' ' " & ej Nations and the disarmament RFAn asreementsremll"efwar? Or -mil Oppenheim again Kt(AU teve te be a true prophet? TH PRINCE By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM owier of THE GREJT IMPERSONATION S an ab50lb;ns && 'Z n& &" " Third Large Printing Ss.oe Wh. . Hs.1.1 L . . rv, books are Sold Pubh8heri L1TTLE BROWN & COMPANY Bcteni - Beeks of y A ,- ' fKAUCi AND DIlEiAlf X.a. IN TIME 1 By Jane An intinmtc history of Miss Addnms' little group of women associates in the ? United States, and their, connection with the vremen efr .. emer countries, in tne women a nucrnaiienni Licague ler,.,,,. Pence nnd Freedom. $1.75. ' '" C Four Spring Nevels THK I'JtlSONERS OF HARTLING By J. D. Bercsferd The vivid struggles of A group of people te break awny from a domineering influence which is crnmp ing their lives. $1.75 HUMBUG , By h. M. Delafield The story of a sensitive, suppressed girl and her ultimate cscape te free dom; a characterization stamped with Miss Dela field's fine clarity. $2.00 Miscellaneous .SONGS OF THK GLENS OF ANTRIM AND MORE SONGS OF THE GLENS OF ANTRIM By Meira O'Neill Te" a group of chnrming Irish lyrics Miss O'Neill here adds poems In ether manners endowed with the same singing quality. Tire volumes in one. $1.50 CREATIVE UNITY By Rabindranath Tagore A new volume of essays in which- Tagore pleads for Unity of life maintained by the introduction of Eustern philosophy into Western civilization. $1.75 S .If all bookstores or from THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 Fifth Avenue New Yerk City SSSHSH9aaHBK3HSaHaHBMMBBaMBk1 "Vigorous and vivacious. ... A geed story consist censist cntly interesting." William Lyen Phelps, Literary Review The HEAD of the HOUSE of COOMBE BY FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT t Auther of "The Shuttle,". "The Secret Garden," etc. "Mrs. Burnett is a mighty geed "slery teller," says Life, "a woman of very great talent and fine skill in character building. We are glad te record that .she has lest none of her charm. We like THE 1IKAD OF THE HOUSE OF COOMBE very much." Second Prin'ina. $2.00 at all Bookstores Publishers FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPAHY New Yrk i LEONARD MERRICK'S novel ONE MAN'S VIEW Introduction by Granville Barker gees straight te the hcait of his subject a broken marriage as it affects the man in the case. The novel commands success net merely uecausu of his characteristic whimsically sympathetic way of looking at life, but also because of his giasp upon the eternal verities of social life. MERRICK'S works include Cenrad in Quest of His Youth, The Acter. Manager, Cynthia, The Position of Peggy Harper. When Leve Files Out of the Window, The Man Who Understood Women. The Heuse of L.Mich, A Chair en the Beulevnrd, While Paris Laughed. i llaili. f l.nn ,in.v toefrjroir ,nn supply ilinn; or, if net, they can be had from E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY, ,681 Fifth Avenue, New Yerk THE" RfllW II THE By SIDNEY WILLIAMS Literary Editor of The North American An intriguing tale of Leve and Mystery At all Bookstores Illustrated $U5 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY Philadelphia E.GRIAT A Fascinating Story of World Politics in 1934 the week ni,M WT-1 OP WAR , Addams ' t the .efforts for peace mtdebv THE HOUSE OF ' R1MMON By Mary S. Walts l A novel of. veuth and genius and the' struggles of a young poet te preserve his Ideals in the brilliant artistic circles of New Yerk. . $2,00 ONE By Sarah Warder MacCennell '.'A story worked out with skill and success keenly observed and cleverly per- t r a y c d characters and phases of )l(c." New Yerk Times. , $1.75 AMERICA FACES THE FUTURE By Durnnt Drake An attempt byva liberal thinker te recall young America te the progressive alms antt principles which j are the best cure for social " unrest and violent radi calism. $2.50 THE NORTH AMERICAN SLIME-MOULDS By T. H. MacBride New revised edition with new material. The book contains a general dcjcrip. tien of the group under survey with a classified list of all the species se far re ported for this continent anu norm. or ranama. III. $3.00 BLUE ROOM -? if. J SWAN II, ff ss vn . i '5.. -J' Kv'Ma. . .. sM J lmMtitkM,,. '. ;A8ttLuV ,'?. I..V . Ys.a jr.. 1 ISieA'i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers