LkrTJ nprn V. VW'tf33 t j.-tfl BgSSSK1HBffi!1iiDtf Li'' 1 t :&' tffl S i1 PAIV 'aiiS .., A TvJ k. Harding LEWISOHN FINDS IT HARD FOR A :MAN TO ROW UP STREAM 'Three Big Spring Beety Eri..MsW?&TT!!raH$SSd5 rv . s'i-ive . . jmi.ttr .twkhj.'ivw w. . 'jkaskm..-' T . ,.TUMra.v.sw9v Part in the & if' 13 i EV k ti f-t. sy I H & IK T' iik t-At - lit, h Be is " m j ia f E l. Eli i r w. r A i? v 51 5 Ar ma tftt-ti KU kVll A nl0 KSW IHC11 show that Republican voted WWf tntt his election nicnnt either nn se- iv wmeti or nation which veuw uc n Mfe ami continuing Insurance nsnlnsti ' nethcr nerlil war or else the League i., 'Of Nnllnnn "niiieiiilnl or rcvled ' .4.- r-" i .. .. tSFACT I'lVH. Snintrn iinniinc. S.(.frefn Ihe liStli of Amint. en te the tiny . "?& tie etei were rant. In etr-rj Important Awrtrnpulcn tiltcrnnce, theush lie.reunillv v,Wnoiitieed "the"e obllsntletn (the MS1 fippeKcri Mipcrrtntc feature of Artlele fj Xnd tin Lensiie "In-enclit exer from, - rami' niiicn ciiiunim'ii mem mm ui"" f which he mid lip would. turn his bicU. , pledged nn nocintlen of n itlnm te prevent wm or the evMIn? Lcastf. of Nations "nmem'ed or nlcd. If It is e entwined nnd lnteiween It) the p"iiv of Europe that it geed mint b" pre wrveil." Seen mll'Ien inalerilj e'cted him. Wax It In lepuillntleii of these premlfei or In reliant e upon them'' Till U mil te rhal elite or burn mm. n ! te'cxpresH rnnflilewe that the father of the great Wahlngten Conference will Ik -fits nun ffoeil lime li"lne te llili the fulfillment of his premise PAP r SIX. The nart.v nlatfm-m bc- ddci approving the Kepubtltnn Senate -stand, Vhl.li w for the Leapt- of Va- MeiiRwith refervitlen-. pledged "an In- tcroatienal a-Mxlatien m that tcrnatiennl nssixiatien m tnar the nations may exercle their lntlueme nnd power ii.r the pieventien of "ai TACT SIMON nut in that e.im-Mi,jt, paW as nlwejs in national political campaigns, that in which the voter put l Hs trust mere than In plntfeim pledges i or lenders' premii-es. was the consistent partv record. What wns the party record en the tpiestlnn jf weild peaie.' Jfwn tnis. an.l ein liu-. ................ this, iittlfkatleu Ot tiie l.eague i "vena nr ,.... m-...mAv- t ;...i., .., i n,n st..eniP UenuhlUnn a I.-.. pniiinriiniie ieervntieiis. "majeritv, Tnnt record of their pirtv, IMM). and was giaduated trem Charles discussed fiem one end of th land te ten College in Seuth Carolina with the rpOUTl'.VATKLY theie bus just ap- 5 tlie etner. was me iiiuii, aim umn nuu the ether, was the faitli. anil untrv into tteetlif'iruSubi!: 1 tnf"l ' .' "0 ,han , , i?" .Lc.rs J"f "?iL n , K.un,. ,;, t,, rmmilintten nliKn'ef their leaders' ad- rice, the iilatfeiin anil leeen! i their part and their own scar-long insistent could tenMi. He 'svh he wns re position the reversed themselves en ieeted because he is a .Tew and that election davV 'I hose are enlv a few of i , 0m,.t i,,,essible for -i .lew te the t'empe'lhig fact- which establish thr nnd )(!lU(, 0 f, null , ,. l &Jtti!y IVentSi Am7U.n ..!.- As he cnuld net Hnd enu tin ppraiiveimin 01 n noiier. ns ... . . ... -f ,-..1. , . . Arneld nennett Hall kivs of it. ill "lhe Great Deception." by Jpninel Colcord. . -r. i n i j , r, a j l.e0 of Baekdtahr. or Postpaid. Ml IlT.UIbHLVJ J-IMI1.JI.JJ rrr bbbbbMbbbbi nrannaariiiai i hi A murder myntery story that defies solution The Tragedy At The Beach Club WILLIAM JOHNSTON , . . 10. Phillips Oppcnheim says: "The Ttagcdy at the Beach Club' is the best murder mystcn etery I Iiave read in cars. The identit of tiie murderer pu7led tnc te lhe end ei the sten " SECOND PRINTING U.7S at All Beekstller. Ul ILL, BROWN & COMPANY I Publiiheri, Bosten "Thank goodness for an occasional story like this!" says the Chicago Daily Neics of The Everlasting Whisper liy Jacksen Gregery At all bookstores SI. 73 CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS lA New Nevel by the Auther et TO HAVE And TO HOLD rgs MARY JOHNSTON Kotme Hamilton, in the fhiladtlphia Ledger, taysi "I knew of no book le which 'Silver Creit' cm be cempered. It itandt by itself, juit ai deci the munc ei the 'Coq dOr.' It it fine, iplendid thing, and should weep ever die nnglurf-ipeakiny ywerld like a tidtl VNave." SECOND PRINTING $2,00 whirtttr books arm sold 1IHLE, BROWN & COMPANY Publishers, Bosten AnOdeax e' Hener By ff' . '""eny rryae '"V .."fltartlinclv vivid. ... It in n ViiiU MV;JliLnt piece of work quite unique of its KM'kljKl, and strongly recommended te Kypili vvne want iiicir puise-ucais rrV'JeneU." Bosten Transcript, MW-'W rrtnttnff .a HNiipt w was ifstt rjvTr mmk$jM& Tragedy of an Intellectual jew Displeased With America ii (V THK many published records of the experience of immigrants with American de mocracy none with which. I am famlllnr 14 mbrn pnthctl- ally tragic than Ludw ig lie wlaeh n 's "Up Stream" fllenl & Lhe rights. It is the tragedy of n dlillunlened and dis.ip dis.ip 1einted in a n who found it Impossible te de the thing which he fitted him elf te de nndl was (omnelled I '.UmviO I.KWISOItN H " jaaBBBBBBBBBBBBF' aa4Bi JsWSMkWWWWWWf BBPIW BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBK T SOPaaaaaaaaV I aHaaaH N4laamaaaaaaaaH SB "bbbbbbbbbI bbbV ' aaBBBBBBBa BaBBk aBBBBa saaaal bbbbbbV bibbbbbI BBBBBBr tvBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl awaBajBJBJBjBXBBBBV le enin it living doing ether thing I1. s ",f'le Puritanic capitalistic Hya tt hich failed te sntisf him. ttm" et America Is deemed by Its in- Ul inihlishers iav tlmt l,u hnn), ' " "3",m,m'V,n " ratl"' "t "enrv Adams, e these "who found 'Th ih.tllcnges rompiiisen with "Tiie IMu-1 and iiImj that " wiee who found "The Amerhaniru- tlen of Kdward Uok nn entirely satis- Mng book 'I p Stream' may ieme asi 11 H,"n U'lnimler that there is another et tle mc,ia.- , .,,.,, , , . " iitmim ee .'xpiameu in tnc msi place for tic lienetit of these te whom Ludwlg T.cwKehn it net even a name nml there tire niniiv such iust ns then' nr( InaMV wl0 ln(1 neHiIne of Heniy Adamsthat lie nn. 1,,,.,. of lrninn- ,,,.,,, ,,., ,,, ,,,.., . no ,,t. - -.v....... ,,. . . .- !e came with his family te America in negiec in ii. A. nnd m. A. in hum, et lpg.c t 1J. A. nnd M. A. In 1001. nt t",;a;t an?,,h bV,,id pest-graduute work in Columbia Lni- wrsitv for two je.trs te fit himself as ! te.wher of Knglish llteratuic. He was unaeic 10 nnu nnv enege in wniui nc ...M., I.. .... . M.K.. !.. t A.lt... nt IV.Min uiiiiihiuiuuiik -unm u ....n.v. 3 l.iuiar.v ut f lie Werlils lst Liter- ntuie." Then he was en the cdlteriul "'off of Doublcdev. 1'age & Ce. for a 0 mer(1 e ,Mt JhK hrm in (,)s. ,'iiK tn 100." and for the net live jcar he wiet" fe- the magaines In 1)110 a friend seuired his appointment as in in stiuder in German in the 1'nivcrsitv I of Wisconsin. He staved'there a vear. when he went te the Oale State Lni verslt ai assistant professor of th" German lanKiing" and literature. H- lemained in Ohie until lfUJs or 301!. when there wns -e mudi ttitiilsm of his allcKed pre-German sympathies that In n!signd. H insists new that the tumeur uemojiiirnueiix uuring mi war wete a iti-utien from suppressed ' M-sual emotion. Since 1010 he. has beu 1 erumatif critic of the Natien, a radical weeklv of New Yerk. He ha written several- boehs and translated Ilaupt irann's p'as from the (iciman. His tirst short steiies were icjected b.v the ! Atlantic Monthly, but the editor of the 'Smart Set accepted them and asked for meie Ills hrsf novel did net sell and t.! 1 .. 1 !.. .t en n-njiiu iu '.uiiiiirem ui .iiiujuui conixrech lit' book i mi eihibitiim m tltt pencrsien of iihal migl t haic been n siceetly anc natuic bi a meibid 'ensitiieness aheul hs ince TT WOULD be felly te deny that the 1 .lews suffer me.c or le.vs from the fa, I nf tt.nl.. . . t r. 'I"in.. n n I.ilIa.I . ml crei.nds for it. though it cannot be, justified bv anv aisumenN that np- peal te pure reason Heme .lews ac Snme .Ten. n,. cepr the bitiiatlen and make the best I of it, proud of belonging te a ince which has rueseivd its solidarity for mere thousands of jears than any ether iaie in th Western world. When treniliTi' of the -eunjei races . piesume te leek down en them thev te call the iemarkef Disraeli te an V.nf Huh lord boasting of his ancient family, i that when the British were barbarians his ancc.-ters were vve'eemed at the civ- i lllzed court of Kins Solemon. Others are as sensitive us Mr. Lewisohn nnd permit themselves te be soured, nnd as sumo that the whole weild is out of joint becntie they have net be"n able te find In if the place which they heugh' Tbe most notable eftp"! of this sen- ' Mtivencss of Jir l.evvisehii is the d velepment of u i emp!n ent fgetisin. He tells us that when his tianslatien of i a poem hr Herace was rad in tla's in high suioel the teacher paid' "That hey will se far " He udmlts thnt he was a reir.ailtably sud tssful teacher, and he says that when the war broke out there were enlv two professors in the university who kept thelr heads himself and anethei New, Henry Adam", with wliehe hook we are in vited te femnaie this one. was nhe a teacher, and one of the meat successful tcatheri of histety Harvard Univeraity ever nan, nut nc miisieu tuat as a teachei he was a failure. He had an .deal se high that be could net attain it, a,nd he abandoned teaching against the pietcit of theve in autheuty. The Adams book is the story of the striving of en earnest man te find a hey te un lock the ilrid'e of the life of man en earth and a tonfcssleu of a bitter dis appointment ever his fuilute I ,e Lewisohn boeh t? e cechiure tn iilciiiiiatmii of the crutef order ttud a confident assertion of ability te show the tray te a better political, uiduitiial and social system. It r'tiRCIULY reminds one of what Tolstoy wrote two weeks bfeie his dentil namely, that "humility is the greatest and most needful virtue." Te illustrate his meaning the great Russian explained that a man is like a fraction In which tne denominator indicates his opinion of himself. When the denomi nator is zero the man bus a true slg nidrance. but when the denomlnstet is irfinit.v the significance of the man dis appears entltely. Tolerance is a word the meaning et which Mr. Lewisohn does net seem te knew. William .Tames bad It in large measure. Even in the case of theories which he could net accept, "he be lieved," as Geerge ftantayana has aptly put it, he believed "in the right te bclicyp that you might be right If you believed." But Lewlsebn is indlgaut tit t the remff in utlVjroeai i-wmt. 4-t A, U1 .' universities m which he taught would persist In believing in the "dogmas of a fifth-ratfr cenventicle" after taking a course in philosophy ; and he damns the nvcragc American intellect because It refifes te abandon religious faith after the study of theories Inconsistent with that faith. Indeed, he wrs as tounded that the teacher of geology in Ohie State University wai allowed te held his professorship after being "con verted" by Uillv Sunday. Lcwisehn attended the Methodist church in Charleston and had been n. member of the Epworth League, but he began te lese his religious faith In his ecnier car In college and new le leeks down In contempt en any one who believes In religion. He has become an agnostic in te- " n nnv n K0C,nllst ,n economics ami IJelItlci, and Is lenvinced that what he ternal rettenneis. He believes In freer cxun' gelatiens, in biith control nnd n "10 abaniioninent of all anti-vice cmaaues. vv nen tnese tilings come te l'M hcra will be a finer America. At present "life among us It, uglv nnd "-fan and, above all things, false In its assumptions nnd measures ' f icpeat icliat 1 said at the 6e(7i ting that it is trcpie flint iii inpenti inpenti ein youth with a hopeful outlook en life should have become at the ape of forty a Man iche finds almost nothing in Antrica that he can a't geed save n OIC t'rffO. peaied along with Ml I.evvisehii's 7 S";-"J": -Km en "Tl,e Ornma nnd the Singe," (Harcourt, lirnte & Ce.). It is for. tunate because it affords an opportunity i appraise wnat ilr. description of it would indlenre. Hi, has based his comments en a wide knew 'edge of dramatic literature and en a tn,.nj .k . ... . when he Is discussing something beside I T . ceru ,01 ncf Per,,"" ,n"" himself The vnti.tn . ","lns D,cs'ae of her impressions of the people whom r r 1 iT t mu,ls 'n,u!c "p ?f re" "he hns met. Her kinship with the views of books and plnys reprinted fiem Jereme famllv of New Tork. te which tllC -Natien. Ullf It la mnrp thnn tlile . horn nnlher .,n.t tiepnnnf. T.nrlv Ttnnilelnll and rieriture Cm l! l It "' -ecletv i'lth a capital "8" hns little use. fore ?1!, i 'u"6' ! ls n in temnients. Mrs. lore nave permanent value such as Cornelius Vnnderbllt, for Instance, she .areiv accrues te criticism written feri found stupid nnd uninteresting, and the pres. He knows his subject and living in n house without grace or he writ's about it brilllnntlv, laing,harm. She wns delighted with Iterant d down fundamenta'I principles while he I Hnruch nnd Mrs. Otte Knlin, nnd she talks about this e that play or school of acting. Whl'e h iu iiu.nn.,,1 about the stste of the theatre in Amer ica, he yet has found some fine things en the stage from "Llllem" te "The Hill of Divorcement." And a chapter en The Passing Shew of 1021 " lifts that entertainment from a mere appeal te the tired business man into n renrn. uuutien ei tue eeauty of form and move ment of classic times. Sir. Lewisohn as a clitic of dramatic art deserves-respect - ful attention Mr, f.ciciiehn has pieied U is mere difficult for a man te icrite a leek about himself than about something trith a icidti appeal. 1 1 vIIAT I' Sretf Viiiviy.A, i I I . . - -" ' "" "" "iUII j. Qdmirers wa sale of !,l (,( nni'f '" , "" ,a',s,'- per hnps it ls the mere interesting iei i ' -.m.i V m noveI,enii, bv the rs! that. Itea.ling it is like listening te this i demand for his second. It is net sui- i .' iVngUshweinan with n wide expert prising, therefore, that some of them ,.nce in the world tell frankly what she resent it when his weaknesses are saw nnd did and thought for a long! pointed out. as I tried te indicate some et tnera list Tuesdav. lis the fir.il mail en Wednesday merninp t .i,.,i the following inUlgnant letter from n. " 'fa, of 1G23 Oxford street: TXT n 11., t. .. . . de te you that calls for such a-reprl- '''-''1 f'. , I le Ble 1,lm ln .' " ul "'"n 11. I am only one of the theijini. nf American people who liavr read and are readlns novels by the new and 1 ever Increasing number of new authors It seems te me that leu aie unfair. I unreasonable and unjiut lu &ur criti cism of his vrert.s ' As an author Mi. I'lligeiald Is far r o-e worth while thin veu are as a ir.t.c and If I am any Judge, will be '. ,.. n.l . !.... S . . ... ni.iv.t ,i),u miucu itir lin ceiuriDU- tlens te literature long nfter veu have been resting In Laurel Hill, with yeui criticisms lone since forgotten Did jeu ever consider Unt what mav net apnea! te you. miv appeal te a million ethrs, Including these from VU P.et.i Knpea te Ka,pa iteta rhi" Ueme was r.rt made In a d" Tf this correspondent wished te say something rea'lv important about the greatness of Fitzgerald he would net hnve attempted te diaw a parallel be tween a novel nnd newspaper criticism. There is no printed thing that, dies mere quicklvthen a newspaper article which Is usually forgotten the day nftei it appenra New ii he hnd written that uhn Vvciis himself, analyzing the fa fa euld be known and valued ""' nUther of "The Outline of His- Fitzgerald w long after DItkens had been forgotten ne would nave saiu semctnmg. G. W. D Hutchinien Meets Lewis When A. S. M. Hutchinson met fein clalr Lewia recentlv n Londen he had te own up that he had net read "Main Street." Lewis, however, wns able te retaliate by stating that the perusal el "If Winter Cemes" was n pleasure still In store for him. Once this confession was out of the way they became geed friends. I Te an interviewer Mr. Hutchinson I stated: "I am net sure that I think reading ether writers' novels helps au i author. But, then, perhaps I am net a ' ludge, for it is about twelve years since T have lead a novel. I used te read hundreds of thcra when f lcWewed books." Apropos of the nieeting between Hutchinson and Lewis, it is interesting , te nele that "If Winter Cemes" has ' succeeded "Main Street" a the best 1 selling book in Ameslca. Published in the autumn or jv-u. -aiain atreet" lias sold te the extent of 3,10,000. "If Win ter Come"," published nearly a jear later, has already been sent te pi ess for its 345th theuaand. "Religious" Literature ' The Tellgieus literature department ei Charles Scrlbner's Sens is contemplat ing with amusement the large number of orders which it is receiving for three I boekB: "The Everlasting Whisper," "The Beautiful and Damned." and "His Beul Gees Marching On." "The Everlasting Whisper" happens te be a Jacksen Gregery novel of adventure in the California mountains which perma nently disposes of at least a half dozen men: "The Beautiful and Damned" is P. Scott Fitzgerald's new novel, a devastating satire en a section of Amer ican society, while "His Seul Gees Marching On" sa story by Mary Tlay Tlay Tlay roend Shipmaa Andrews in which Tem dora-ReoatrtU get Jibing with, Mai VOJ4 . x iiateha. '. - & ' BBBBBBBBBBBhBBBBka.BBB aBBBBBBBBBBH flBBBBBBBBBBfek ' BBBBBBaBfTv BBmaBBBBBT . . -C-XBBBuAxv SHHP BaBBflaBMaBBHaBBV iK'-'A 'XSBbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI w"-;1?bbbbbbbbbbbV ; ..jUIbbbbW'' - .1.!ISbbbbbbbbbbbbb .,'BBBBBBBk.,-k SMaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB i 'V ' 'BBBBBBBBkV: AJBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBa ''aVaBBBByBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBA ivbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbIIbbSsbbbbI bx! '- -'"t. VsBBViaaBBBWHBffiEBBBBBBBBBl fi jBl Jf"' JHbbbbbbbbbbbbI L JaBBBP ?J"w -.BBBBBBBBfllaH l-- r BBBBBBW 7. : ' ,5''jrBBBBBBBr' Br f BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBV rjt BK BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBW BBi BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBr'BBBBali't BBBBBT KaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBT-'' MRS. CLARE SHERIDAN Whose American diary is full of cnatty indiscretions, . CLARE'S DIARY A Chatty Recerd of Experiences gracious manner are shown in nctlen dm jii. vt v t with such satisfactory results that there in Philadelphia, New Yerx nm net ue n woman reader of the Jioek and Other Cities who will net envy her the possession Mrs. Clare Sheridan's "My Amerl- of they! nui-lltic, nml nimilrements. can Diarj" (Bendl & Llveright will , the book is net widelv read. It be found much mere Interesting te will net be for the reason that It docs Americans than her Hussien diary pub-1 et deserve te he. for it Is one of these lished liist vear exhibitions of men and women in ac- t... ai...Mn' it. in i, -n.i trtien which increase one's respect for Jlrs. Hnerldan, it will be recalled, iri,,.,.:!.. nn,i inu for t.i, fellow. a member of Uie Ilrltish nristectnev. I "mnnitJ nn" 0,1C s l0U Ier '", fPlltw- wldewed by the war, who 1ms cast her'",en let with the artistic and bohemian a groups and is supporting herself as Fibre's Heme te Be a Museum a sculptor and n lecturer. She is a Tllc prcnLh Chamlicr of Deputies has woman throbbing with vitality und. In vet0il te ncnuirc tiie house of Jcnn Henri a moeu et revolt against tne eiu entcr. A psycheannljist might make nn In- ISTZ, l TJi. .?,! iTSrlh infield from the environment in which she wa's born. " AmcrlcAn diary makes no pre. Churchill, bilenited. envc her the entrc- t0 s"(w Yerk society, nnd her artistic nt"'' attracted te her the pninters n ml eriilntepii nml Hfprnrv folk for whom liked llavwoeil llreun. The Philadelphia Orchestra she found "henvenl.v." She wns pleased with her ( visits te this city, though she was a littie staggered by the strenuousness of her entertainment. The person about . whom she grows most enthusiastic is Charlie Chaplin, whom she met in Cali- ' fernta and" of whom she made n bust I which nn observer said, suggested I'an. It is n Chaplin little known te the world that she found when she came in inti mate contact with him. He explained his Artistic creed te her, and that was te "make something because it means something te eu.'Ubecnuse fame and admiration are tnuisltniy. There is nothing se beautiful ns te make people forget their cggs.nnd bacon for break fast, he said, nnd "ns for admiration of the world it's net worth anj thing there is no end but te plcnhe one's tnlf The book is full of indiscictlens nnd ' peiled in the United States rAMnne RVCTCDV CTnOIPQ r coir A AWH CI IRnPC t OF AMtKlLA AWU LUKUfE. .. The fourth in J. Walker McSnad- den'a series of collections of tales denl- , ing with mjstcry and the supei natural , has just come from the press of the Themas Y. Crewell Company. It is called "Famous Mystery Stories." The I previous volumes in the serlc'3 contained Ehest. psychic nnd detective stories. In 'this volume Mr. McSpadden has drawn Ien the literature of England, I-ranee, 1 nnminnr and America. The autheis -..... .le AlniinnuRnnr. inpein tier. Anna Katherine Green and. of course. Anonymous. ,,,,,,, ' The GautUr tale selected Is his dream fantasy. "The Mummy's Feet. lhe Crawford talc ls the srucjome one about , 'The Upper IJerrh." The book enens with Rarnham's "The Specter of lap- i pingten" from "The Ingoldsby Leg ends" and closes vlth Anna Katherine Green's "The Thief.", It la e geed col lection of representative talcs of their class An Outline of Wells" "An Outline or wfiie, . .. m TIT-11- 11 n book terr," is announced , by xutnam8. it is written Sidney Dark, editor 0 the English journal, Wecklr-" Jehn O'TiOnden's "Mirrors of Washington" Leads Over 150.000 of the three "miner boeKs" have thus far be?" "W; Iu,-.l nams .announce. . The "MJrreis of , Washington" leaes wiui i ,, tee 'Mirrors of Downing Street" Is rrcd ited with 45,000, and already the 'Gless of Fashion" has reached the 30,000 mnrkj AT THE FREE LIBRARY teeWnS'M M? 0,.V!nbB"tn'0 endtnr March IU. Miscellaneous lin i ft-... . i t ... A me Smiln wor.-euiou vmiw u i- .iu " AtlclnHen,, P II T0';Un,0n n ra,n!,n V'btI&w. B"fc"ln-"SecW Hliter, cf ,hraAmTbrnanT.NSri-0"Th, J..lt. " TSiln 13 T "HeUal Werk' DoVtey'evilty, Alniei "FyeUui Doiev ,ktr Kllzabftti 'M'rchardlie JIanual for Qraham. Stepuen Europe Wh tliei Beuniii HHrrlBen, ElUabeth "Urseen S.de or Child un " IHpKIni, A. Krauie. I.. j "Mu'lcal Instrum-nti ' Jl "Bet'er lhiilneis J.I- brarlea," Mnnalev. A. il ' (tecolleetlens ami Re- fleOH0v"r."e W -' Plant Culture ' nv. J. 6 'nadner nemlnUctncea Seblninn. I H ".Mind In the Mak ntr "h?rrlll. C. II "Prim Mlrlitera anl Preatdentf " . , , , Smeillev, Emma "Scheel Lunch 'lh.nault. flfenen "Story of lha Ui rytt E" iytte Eicadrllle " Fiction Benntt, Ainelrt "Mr. Prehiiik.' Coppard. A. E "Adam and E and 'lleneyl' Harry "Cara ana by Night.' Johmten. William "Tragedy at the Beach Club." i fal La Quaux, William "Strtten btreet At- MeU'enm. Bt'sliin'Sferet Vl'-ter.'' oppanbalre. X. 1'. "Orea-t J'rlu Bhan." naalt "toum.eA, au; wtp. C.Mt. I,' J -VrifissjK.- j ri . i j, i.. .1. .'.l JMtttixm fW IkMfe... t. Lewisohn writCH "" l" "V immure, mi, in uinrn iiiv represented are Hichnrd Harris Uar- ham, ErcUmunu-Chatrlan, b. J . ' Hoffmann. Washington Irving, I . Mni - lien Crawford. V 'it.- Jame-j O'Urieti, In... ,ie itniinnsRnnt. Theenhllc -Gau- "MR. PIM PASSES BY; TURNED OTTO A GOOD. NOVEL .. The attempt te turn a play .into a novel is net always successful. A. A. Milne, however, has succeeded with ' "Mr. PJm Passes By," for he hns made ,a most delightful novel out of the .play, the title of which he has shortened te i "Mr. 1'lm" (Geerge H. Dornn Com pany). He has put In the novel what happened off the stage in the play, nnd 1 he has introduced descriptions and com ments written in a charmingly humor ous vein In harmony with, the comedy ' pplrlt of the action. The piny was one of the most hu morously tender things' which hns ap peared en the, stage In n year of blue moons. This tcn'der'nnd kindly humor is preserved nnd elaborated en. And 1 the characters arc se real that they 'teem te be living pcisens. Mr. I'im ' himself is n work of consummate nr. i jus simniiciiv nnu sincerity unu inn desire te get things straight nnd htJ If ride in his tthc me.inerv. which is nil I the time plajing tricks en him nnd i i i respensible for the complication of 1 the story, are all Ret forth with n genial teleinncc that keeps the render smiling in spite of himself. And Olivia, who was one of the most charming feminine 'fhnractcrs en the ktage' in ihe play, ' becomes even mere charming in the book. Her gentleness, her tact nnd her ' llrmncss of purpose hidden benenlh n r b nt Scrlgnan as nn adjunct of the -if.,--..,,, nf vntrnl Hlsterr. A few goeci books hVBRYBODY Ttddt some ttdtn se much ismbushta. 'But you read it and forget it. Vfet se with the thought ful book that improves with successive readings. Yeu read it, remember it, and regard it as a proud possession. ery Oxford book holds tnese qualities for someone. ' WILTSHIRE ESSAYS' 'By Maurice Hbwlbtt tft 2.50 In a happy mood Mr. Hewlett Mrs of these cuys, "they were all written m my county. Seme of them deal with the doings of my neighbeurs as I view them from here ; some deal with literature as I think about it here.'' THE LEGACY OF GREECE By Gilbert Murray and ethers "Net $1.25 A remarkable book written by dozen of die world' create diuical ichelvs te hew what modern avtluatien ewe te that of Greece, and what it can mil team trem her. THE MUSIC OF INDIA By Hhrbbrt A. Peplby 2.00 An authoritative manual which leads the reader by gradual step te a knowledge of the standards by, which Indian music should be fudged nd te the conviction that it is net only an ait but a difficult and inmate one. GOVERNMENT AND INDUSTRY 'By C. Delislb Burns TS&t 5.00 A study of actual practice with a view te ditcevcring fundamental principles. It is net a statement of an ideal nor propaganda ter a policy, but such a survey a may be useful. A MUSICAL PILGRIM'S PROGRESS By J. D. M. RORKB Het 2.25 Written with candeur and without convention this book record the psycho logical development of en imateur music lever. A charming book for anyone te whom miuic means mera than sounding brass et tinkling cymbal. THE AMERICAN INDIAN 'By Clark Wissler . 5.00 " Never before, we think, has se much authoritative information en the Indian race and it culture been presented in a tingle attractive volume. METAPHYSICAL LYRICS AND POEMS , OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY By Herbert J. C. Grtbrsen Hgt 3.00 Professer Grienen's selection includes verse ranging from Denne te Buder. inspired by a philosophical conception of the universe and the part assigned te the human spirit in the great drama of existence. "Jp home 'is t real home without book. Everybody, Everywhere Is Reading The HEAD of the HOUSE of COOMBE BY FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT uther of "The Shuttle," "The Secret Garden," etc The best liked and most interesting of all Mrs. Burnett's remarkable stories. Ne one should. miss it one of the most delightful and readable books of the year. . Second Printing. i FREDERICK A. Publishers St COLD-KILLER De you happen te knew of the insidious invasion of New Yerk's upper West Side and upper East Side by the forces of the underworld? De you knew that the modern creek has become a social figure, his outlawry cloaked under a new found respectability? It is happening in every city. Read this modern mystery-adventure both for its gripping plot and truthful picture of modern criminal methods. At AU Bookstores By Jehn Pr&sper i. - T . u . .U.V., V . , ' ...&Mtii THE ATLANTIC BOOK OF MODERN PLAYS i i - ' 4 .. i Asa counter movement le the coin- i merciallzed theatre, In recent ycats, there hns been a-marlccd tendency te- . ward the publication of piny.'- .Of course the drama in performance en the stage is better tlian.tlie urnme 01 ;nc printed' page, but renders can develop n nice sense of mental stagecraft by persistency" .Certainly the rending of nlava ! 1.tr.r.,t In 'aMlilv nf dramatic ntmctur nid rhnrnctcrlwitiens. Aml4 It is InValttnble in developing the mng mng Inatlen, which has become, atrophied In modem playgoers through the vast, de tailed "and illusive spectacles vhlch are put en the contemporary stngc.J "The c Atlantic Heek, of Medem Plays" (The Atlantic Press) -is an cx .cellcnt gathering of a number of otic etic net pieces most Of which hnre,hnd stage production nnd withstebd its tests. K iti intended for class use, nence gives n representative selection, but it Is equally interesting for the general render. The editor Is Sterling Andrus Leenard, of the Depart men t of English of the Uni versity eT Wisconsin and of thd Wis consin High Scheel. He has written n helpful introduction en getting the most out of the reading of plnys and hns provided informative nnd stimulat ing comment and nn annotated bibliog raphy, together with brief sketches of the dramatists. Such plas as Lady Gregorys "Spreading the iNcws," Dunsnnv'a "Fame and the Peet," Eugene O'Neill's "He," Onlswerthv's "The Sun," Svnge's "Riders of the Sea," Kcnts' "Land of Heart's Desire," Tercy Mackaye's "Gettysburg" nnd Hareld Jlrigkeuse's "Lonesome Like" show what contemporary playwrights are achieving nnd give genre pictures of life of today or of the past. Drlnkwater Lecturing en Robinson Jehn DrinkWntcr, whose latest vol ume of poems was published March 3 by Houghten Mifflin Company, is nt present delivering n tcrles of lectures In Londen en "The Poetry of Edwin Ar lington Robinson." can make a home ft.OV at all Bookshops. STOKES COMPANY NSw Yerk The Underworld , of the . Upper Crust $1.75 N u- M B E R 87 ft Amuring ' t jf Mystery Tale ' A (NUMBER 87) '- Harrington ' , ' V Hext J An original and startling: talc whcreln occurs a mysterious succussienil of murders and catastrophes the only clue te. which is a sinister'! winared creature who nnncavs antLdisannears in the wclrtlest fn0UvrJ Only after long speculation is the Edgar Lee Matter,? Nw Nevel , CHILDREN OF: THE r." A big dianintic novel of American pioneer days, recreating the stit- nng years from 1833-1801, with the vivid personality of Stephen. Douglas as the central character about which moves a rich, shifting panorama of men and events. Sir Ress Smith's Thrilling Experiences Above the Clouds . 14,000 MILES THROUGH , THE AIR The story of. the fiist flight made by aereplane from England te Australia, told in simple, straightforward style by the man who commanded the plane. His crisp, matter-of-fact style gives a Tine of genuineness te a most picturesque narrative. Many illustrations. $8.00 Fur sale at all bookstores or from , THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 Fifth Avenue New Yerk By the author of "This Side of Paradise" The Beautiful and Damned "The victor belongs te the spoils" "In 'The Beautiful and Damned' Fitz gerald fulfills the magnificent premise of 'This Side of Paradise'; the premise of a young man who remains young, sec life through his own eyes, bows, te no writing tradition, and borrows' from nobody. He is pre-eminently the his torian of his own generation, the biog rapher of men living in his own hour." r Harry Hansen in the Chicago Daily Neuu. F, Scott Fitzgerald At all bookstores $2.00 Charles Scribner's Sens, New-Yerk . A By y HERBERT QUICK mf Xandettiarks felly BOBBS-MERRILL Publishers The Modern City and Its Government. By WM. PARR CAPES; ?ir?'f " f w Yerk State Conference of Mayers and Other OmcMs; Director New Yerk State Bureau of Municipal City Information, Co-Auther el "Municipal Heusecteanlng." The Bosten Herald: "A comprehensive studv of government policies and problems in our American cities, both East and West. . invaluable te city officials and te every one, whether in city, town or village, who wants te see the community se organized and managed as te produce mere comfort, better health and better burreundings and conditions." ' $5,00. Any bookstore can supply it; or, if net, it can be had from E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Filth Avenue, New Yerk THE BODY 1BLUER00M By SIDNEY WILLIAMS Uterary Editor of The North American - An intriguing tale of Leve and Mystery At all UouhHteies TH PENN PUBLISHING s e.. f V. a . Srfft4. I LkmJlhfA .in. . ...i.s. i" v.i N. U M B E R 87 v perplexing mystery unravelled!' 1 IA'l MARKET PLACE. . ,l $2.05 Full of abounding, tumultuous life, it makes an indelible impression. William Lyen Phelps J Illustrated VS.'J COMPANY , Philadehri kMtthMMM; aiftAla tar. .m n 1 . SiM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers