Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 11, 1922, Night Extra, Page 20, Image 20

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SPRING BOOKS FOR ALL SORTS OF READERS
Thank
" C)0ltl1P fin
.III UC'i'.lSiOII ll
ster ile Hi J
Vhtcaua rirs
.yM'' feasate.-.
KJEWtf.-. Ksfctg
r-txrfi ftj
t gr-rr1',
-WWw. -
The Everlasting'
Whisper
Hv ,Tui!en
Grcserj
f1 '"'
ri Charles Srrilfnr Sen Efl
The German Eulenspiegel Legend
Made Over Inte a Flemish Epic
j'TMlAT n real hook villi curvlvp nllMiinml Inte something illffprent. Ills
II
I
"- sorts nr iipglppt Is pros oil liy (he to te
ival of intprrn In Clinrlps De Cos Ces
tot 's "The1 l.pgptitl of ripiiMpli'Kcl," ti
liniisliitinn of vvliieli lias ju"t been pub
lished li Dnubledn.v. I'iirc j. Ce., in
two volumes.
Dc CesIpi ln a Holdim, born 111
Munich while lilt fntltpr was nttnelied
te the limiM-held of the pnpnl niiiii'ln
In t lie Itiiinrlim ;.ipilnl. Ills home
pvns In Llpgp. He deveteel hlmpf te
i llternturp nntl um nsseeintPd with a
1 tlUlllllPI' Of JOllllg I11PI1 in
t-linrl - li imI
wrote verse uiul nroe nnil he sppnl
ii celli RC
honk l a rontempernty Mery of the re-
ell of tin- Nrllipi lands, told fiem the
point of lc of thp simple prep'?.
Mntlry til hi Mie'ef'thfi Hutch
llcimlilir" and "The Unicd .cther
landi" Inn tnlit the iteiiQU a differ
cut hut much tci aiaphie ttfty.
TMii:
A In t
ife of l'lillip II. wlie wnt liem
he s.iine I par lis llip I li'lsipgel
founding II , f li., intii.r u'tnld nliaie with llinl of
llteiuiy publication. Hsl.i.,. . here. Tlie father of I leu-
uni nrep nnil up snpni ....,', , i ...i i .i u n
tl... 1-.. .... .. i.ie li fl, ItpiPKPI W" lliMUMiii. in nun iMiin... ..-
iiiv niiri .viii iil 111 hit 4tn li I'm
till' IH'I
HpiPRPl
llCK'tll'.
Ill" metlin nftrr tertut'' iIIpI
01 Sheila Kaye-Smith's
Jeanna Gedden
MAllV JOHNSTON write?
'I HUed It ettraeiilinarih.
A lilpr book nbent n b k
neinftii True Rren'ticx m
tbe b.inillliiR
I! 00 at any boekstoic, or umi
E. P. Dulton & Ce., 681 5lb Ave, N. Y.
V
- i t
iiinriwr, up wen rim1 iiiiiiiii'immi - - , , . , . ., . , ,i, .i.,
I...I.,.. i.i. nr. n i-.i n fiem crlef. nnil I lcnsplPKfl t lien up
limr. ., 1,1. .'! l,...,k (li., I'lnMvlilpfrpt ! VelPS lilllltt'lf tO till' PUIIM' of t ll 0 IPO-
li'KPiul, nnil whrn It wn- piiblNlieil It ' !! WIipii tin- rpelt besins Iip i' ene
im pxpenslM' illinlrntiMl itlltlen In l4'!)". of thp nithp nEPiif of thp part wblrli I
it nttinctPi! no atti'ntleti It wns net ns trins te tlirew ort tlic ,mkp "i
until IMl.'f, wIipii n rri'iiili ti.in-liitieti , Spnin. ' Up afl-ts Wllllnm of DiniiRP
freii tlip eriBlmil KIpiiiIsIi wns pnbll-liPil i,,,.!, ,iir,iK nnil imllrpptlv. He eh-
3 -d -'; " E
.iinlikk,i
.-HHHHig
Hencjhk Van Loen's
THE
STORY OF
MANKIND
"The one indispensable book ,
for even civilized home."
The best sellinp non-fiction book in
Atnciiun teilay. (Sep llakcr & Tnjler
Bulletin Ter .March.)
?e 00 eu'ry where
BONI&UVtRIGUTi
publishers NEW YORK T Zim
A New Nevel by the Auther of
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD
nt H low tirli'p. tlmt iIip fnmp of tin1
work was spread outside of n sinnll
clri'lp. An nbrldspd I'nRlI"li trniiln
t Ien nns piibllohed in tills country two
or thrpp years ape. TIip present n nn--latlen
is ceniilptP Tliat It Is ipgiinled
ns worth while by the publishes who
1siip it should console ltp Cesier. If
lie Is aware of whnt happens nineiis
tin! IiMuk. for the negleet from which
lie suffered duilni; his life.
Itut pmthnntnu fnmr, yrnliuir;
n it mil' hi te thr dwenrnntf ipfif.
iicki mmh' ttfr en; emirr or thr
In inn mun nf trttrri.
A
told
Hrri twLMg...
Slir l'Al'I. IUKKS
llrillslt spy in Huvsla, who lias
of his eeripnrcs in a lioeli
THE REAL THING
tnlns iIiIiiipp of the tipacherj of l.R
inent. And at the enil Iip dips, enl te
ii-.p fietu the prae betetise the spirit
nt rinmlera innnet be killed. I
Tlie book is n reirmrknbln llteiary I
iiPliiPM'inpnt it will in dlifipuli te nanu! Hazardous Adventures of
n ether book m which the suppiti- i British Spy in Russia Mere
Thrilling Than Fiction
"-pin:
the
111" rienspii'RPl of Mc CestPr i net
I'uleiispiegel of thp (Jenil'lli
leceinl. The tiprmnn iienant. iireund
whom the KitlenspipRel leseml his gath
ereii. was brirn in tlie fourteenth peti
tien, the intolerance, the sensiialitv
of the period arp se falthfull; Ml forth,
lie CeMpr tnlRlit liaM' bt'en a ceuteni
perarv of ripii-plcgel writinz from Ills
point of view with no knewleilRP of nil
that has happened In the IntencniuR
ppiit'liips Thorp l net a false mile in
It from the first pbrp te the last. TIip
characters IipIIpxp In witchcraft. Tlrj
believe that the devil vUlts the earth in j row
person and debauches slllv women. One
or the ihiiracteis has a dntiahtcr whom
she brllees is a child of thp tlell. Tlu
ilauchtei is reared ns the fester sister
Mery of the Ingenuity of n spy In es
caping capture. If novelists de net
'resort te' it In thp futuip for detail In
thp construction of nilventurc stories It
i will net be brcnttm It lacks that sort
of thing. Incidental!., flip book revcali
tlie mctiieus or the despots wne are in
power' In Ilussla nt the present time
and their utter disregard for the rights
of e,pr,v one who did net hall thciri ns
the saviors of the nation, ll Is n his his
terical document of considerable Inter
est and importance.
A Deg and a Man
Albert l'aysen Terhiitic's new deg
story. "Ills Deg." which 13. 1. Dutten
Jt f l,a.n lu. .wiltlltlinl Intlu II fnln
'of the relations between n man nntl n
deg n man en the down grade, n lonely
fnnti lltln In 11 rnmnlinrklp llOUSA Oil
1 n stenv. cheerless New Jersey farm, nnd
rnpidly illslfltegralliig through theer
lenelliipss and hepelpssnpss, and a opttyt epttyt
dld big celllp. Apeldent brings them
together nnd mutual service cements be
tween them n filcmlslilp nnd love whose
Power surmounts nil ether censidcrn-
i liens, It Is a touching sterj , notable
for Its Insight Inte both human nnil
deg nature, and Is told with Mr. fIVr
hunt's wide knowledge of collie dogs,
which hp has shown before In his deg
uterles, "Lad" nnd "llrupc. '
Des Patios' First Nevel
Cimrsfi H. Dornn Cemnanv has pur
chased the American rights of Jehn Des
Passes' first novel. "One Man's Initia
tion." This book was published In
I'ng'and during the war nnd prpnted a
sensation.
in
tin He was an li responsible jei.pr , ( f vipnspiegel nnd n the book t.ipnies
and neer-de-wcll of Saxony who went h ,I)0ther spirit of the Nethetlands.
lai.j Thiiips that h. nee, dul e K'l. i- hmiI. Hie two see in ll'in
that liappened Ions jenis after Iip dlpd the spirits of the earth, who send them
an ii rihed te him. nisi ns a 11111111111110,01.1 te dotre the -ev-ii giants who aie
of lorie of which Lincoln neer heaid ln.iing wane the kingdoms of thp world
aie snld te have been told b blm te tl t10 end tliev leain that these giants
some one who met him lu the White .iri, ,um, and Amice. and (ilutten.
Uoil'e Hut the (erman Ihilpuspiegpl 'nm Stllti.ir mcps wlibh must be trnns-
r iiwigmis uiu in. puiiieM' in mi flm-,i ., !, .,, Thrift nnd An-
pelilP and the like.
(jgS)
'fl
MARY JOHNSTON
tCotme Hamilton, in the
Philadelphia Ledger, says:
1 knew of no book te which "Silver
ICreit' can be cemnared. it standi by
itself. jut a de the munc of tKe 'Coq
d'Or.' It ii a fine, splendid thina. and
Itheutd tweep ever the Enghih-speaVinf
(World like n tidal wave.
SECOND PRINTING
$2.00 wherever books are sold
llITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY
Publisher!, Boaten
Ind ii" puipesr in what
he did. Up wns content with the sport
thnt lie rei out of Irs pianks.
Ip Cester's I'lensplesel is the liro lire
nrpssiblp spirit of llbert in the Nether
lands of the sttoeiith centuij 'I he
name Is a eentrm tien of the Flemish
'in leden splegel." meiinlng "jour mir- ,
rer." nnd was given te the Flemish
lieasnnt in allusion te one of Ills pranks
He went about the count r with a
tent and ,1 pit Hire frame We set tlie
frame up in tlie tent mill iinneiiin ed
that he bad ,1 mirror within In wlilih
ativ one leuhl -ee hi- real character
Vhen a glutton enlered I lensplpgpl
would heist a pis up Inte tlie flame, 1
and "e en for nil sorts of people.
But De C'e-ter Ins made u-e of a
ensliler.ililu parr of the Kulen-plesel
Ipgenil In tlie ileMlepmenf of the pi.mk
ih 1 hariu'ter of In- heie. I'm he In
uxil it as freelv a- Habe'ii- 11-nl the 1
leRciid of tl Id slants in bis "(lai-
smitua and lVntngrtiPl " lie ha-tak n
the raw material mid digested it and
Thr hnnl 11 nil nlWnery, hut thr
nltrnnr dnr wet edurfe iftrl. e
im te mulr it a piinahh nnd pimrhu
document. It m inlUckitialil prank,
iih nn thr wjnrr, Thr mrniiiiil
iilMtf he teunht fm .
Awnitw s,
ti'inslnlien
should be -aid of the
bv F. M Atkinson
lie has put 1 he original Inte ignreil
idiomatic Kneiish with such -1 111 tlini
lint once will the reader get the im
pulsion that he is tending n translation.
It i- the Kngli-h of the sixteenth or
seventeenth century and fitn the narra
tive a- though H had bem the tongue In
whlili it was first written Se few
translation- nre made by anj one with
literal y perceptions that spicial prai-e
should be given te such weil: as Mi.
Atkinson ha den !. W. I),
Fiction, Fishing and Criticism
If Sir Paul Dukes, who sp,vpd
Hussln as a iiiuiiiber of the secret serv
ice of the British (Severnmeiit, had
ihoseu in wiite n spy novel based en
bis experleneps lie could mil have wilt
ten a meip thrilling book tbnn the nc
tun story of what Iip saw and did, which
appears in "Hed Dusk and the Mer-
I Deublcdnj , Page ic Ce.)
Sir Paul wns In ppril of his lift from
the moment Iip crossed the Finnish
frontier into Kiis-ln. Yet he did his
work nnd wns in eentnet with spies of
the Soviet (levernment. whom he used
for his own purposes. Including nsslst
fug the wife of nn I'ngllshmnn te es
cape from the country. The Soviet
tiRents winked for theie who would pay
them the most tuetipy and Sir Paul had
(tieilgh te buy tin1 KPrvicp that Iip de
sired. Yet lie had te act di-creetlj . In
order te pretpct his life he raiph slept
In the same plate twice. lie went'
under se many different names that he
1 an net remciiibei nil of them, lie as
sumed different disguises and made
himself unipcegniablc by his old friends
in Petregrnd. where he had lived for,
several jtnrs before the war. lie PU'ti 1
enll-ted In thu Soviet Armv, and it was1
through thp assi-tuncp of his command
ing officer thnt Iip finally csenped from
the country when his work was finished.
Tlie army was filled with men who were
wearing the uniform under meial com
pulsion, but they were willing, as Sir
Paul discovered, te protect tho-e whom
the Soviet was trying te ile-nej.
The book Is chlcflv Intel I'sting ns the
juttvtvutwAvmiHmvvwtw '
i BOOK EXCHANGE I
Rare First Editions
A.N KM11AURIINARI1Y ritOKH AM)
" CTKIIU'M inllrctlen of peiih mil .
unigun book lltiliM Iltres anil classical
llter.ituri' Complete and lahcr unibrldceil
tlmiilallens I'nvitclv iriiiul, llmliei
edition tlrit edltlnii ushuclritien iui ft.
autekr.ipl,d ltti-ix. Dooka Illustrated b
c'rulkshHiik I'.uiv'nndien i-ti.. fine set.
Hliletu jieiu un request Unrry t.
r.rU, 11(1 .Nnniinu -!t .V V Clt.
pThe Presbyterian
Boek Stere
Withtrapoen Building
(Second Heer)
nB
Juniper nnd Wnlnut Streets
The beat books of all
reputable American and
English publishers.
M.
late-t novel
MOKtiAN ;inilN has taken n
iiagp of life in which te wiap her
' I lie rnari-i e- ' 1 u
dnv Page & Ce l nnd
.Vf;.t Gibben's then, .if'er weaving tier
SuJv of I'1
Character
SSHSESHSZHHSESHSHSHSaSciVS
"The author of this book has H
done ti tine piece of work." 3
Life.
The Heuse en
Charles Street!
"Such fieliRhtful people as
threnj: these paces. The grace,
the urbanity and sane uhole uhele uhole
semeness of the anonymous
writer illumine every page."
A 1'. Times Literary Re.
t it'if.
SI. 90 Xcf
Duffield & Company S "ii" 'warned
G uiul the -ei re
b2SESaSE5Ebditl3E52S2SHSHSa5Ci
ha- allow ed le 1
elf t siiei ulate long
and voluinlnetislv nn tlie
1111 nt nl haracteristles
of Iim puppet each of whom mu
rine te the u-iial nevell-tlc meid
Kitn. ihe iinletteied bin attrailhe
dnughtei of 1111 Ihigli-h tavern keiper.
fall- 111 love with the son of ' gentrv
He ha- the milking "f a veil nun. bin
has been 1 eddlpil and pe'ted until he i
.1 1vp1e.1l ' ui'iiumii - pit " IP- niai
ri ige i- his tir-t su.11 k of independent
action and pieies viitualiv Ins last'
until lie blows out hi- brains About
these lentral hgmes pled 01 skip hnlf
11 deen mere whose little leinnnie- anil
iieubles make up the background of j
the -lore.
' The Phaiisei- " while haul v note nete note
werths iither In ilipnip e' tieiiimiit
milijte- tlie 1 iintiuued iihani 1 ne'iit of
Mi tiibben in Ih" tii'd of tii 1 1r.11 Hei
tuili -' ellis tu he 1 11,11 icti I I Hint lilh
plot or -itu.ru n
W
Germany hated E.
Phillips Oppenheim,
because he was the
first writer of fiction
te proclaim the Teu
tonic menace. Will
the League of Na
tions and the disarm
ament agreements
remove all threats of
war. or will Mr. Op
penheim again prove
te be a true prophet?
READ
THE, GREAT
PHNCESHAN
A Faacinating Story of
World Politics in 1934
By
E. PHILLIPS
OPPENHEIM
Auther of
The Great Impersonation
THIRD LARGE PRINTING
$2.00 at All Booksellers
tirm BIW & COMPANY
PpblUjurt, Bosten
rill'N 11 liind-enii -tnlwait nciu-
nf tie Northwest Hoval
Mounted Police -tints after his man In
n sturj he usiiallv 1 1-
li 1 in Tl.l- is true in
The 'Meunter" fm ns will a- fiction.
Gets His Itut when said -tnl-
Man wait 'meiinni ' tinil-
1 1- man apparently
dead and a beautiful
211I iiiniuns anav from the ncni with
itle in iiei im ml -. and lieluiiii- thir
man i" In- own unisin
1 husbaud of thp In .'in iful
gnl who inlmlis -he ha- 1 i-t find a
shot at her spini-e, wins,. n,,)j ,i
app'ais wi 11 what 1- 1 !"i.il moui.t meui.t
tl ' 10 de '
( Un 'eiislv te ' jc I h -I
-1 ' e th.ir 'hi benutili I
'i '- Vlil h exuein
Ii tins attempts te de 'n
N.-i'li Star" (Alfieil A
Neaih .III (-tulles of
11 nn nun e
Hi I i- b aim
vvli.it Unwell
'"I he I ndi et
Knopf I nc 1
th Niiiliiwi-t
art melded nlens conventional fm 111 111
nltheugli Mi limns, an I"nt;lisli ilngv. (
mnu. sucks 1 1 ,s,. te his cliitti bv Inn
ins his Indians mi.v snrli surprising
I nsa 11 'I ns a men stripling un--ul
te battle ' "I then bet' ci gl t iih '
mil 'Tis pa-sing stranse ' Hut out
Mile these and oilier d1 1 ejue lapsis,
- Tin l.adv f .Nn tli Star ' - a falrlv
itiRie-sIng 11 v 'civ -ten It lias liianv
I e ibilitlis lli.'il eicnis- ihe reader ill 1
tl telling, eitti if the unfuMuiR proves
1 out eiitiOlllllUld
with him. There are te be i-een the
beat, the lelsteis, the nets, a m-hleu!
for the fisheiman te rest en. his book'
of flies and above all n fat-bellied, I
blm U liettb suggestive of main things,
nil connected with fishing Suielv,1
lnanv 11 itieit eye will -trnv from tlie
printed page back te the deal, forgotten
ilujs a- this pictiiip tlnslie- into view.
(). tenipera. (I 111010s, I) Velstead! '
I he n'lirint of this rme wmk. with'
it- Information and meditation, will
pmvc a been te anglers because Sciepe's '
lioek is rlRhtlv considered worthy of
pinie lie-ide 1aak Walten Salmen
lisluns 1- net m widely known heie as j
along Iht Tweed, but It i- mtei e-ttng '
te these who love a battle with a same
fee And what Screpc doesn't knew
about salmon, II. '1' Mieinigliam ti-h-lug
editor of The Field, has supplied
In footnotes.
JOHN' JAY CHAPMAN, publicist and
critic, has perfeimeil a valunhb
service In his I'lnnie Tevvaid
Shakespeare" 1 Atlantic
Menihlv Piessi Tin-1-
1 d.miniiiive linni,
In.r niie 1 eiiipiii t w 11I1
lulpful and siiggi-tn,
iiiiin tial In uiideistaud
nig the poi t -all Jim r si
u- fertli in a del.glitful
waj, ileulv and -emetimes culei fully,
his own ili-ieverles in 1 he opulent Iu
illes of Shiil.pspp.irt. Hi- papets aie
brill ant -tvli-tn nllv and in-pn nu 1 ritl
callv Thev will be found of interest
by tli spnir.l student of the Rnrd,
no mutter hew well read in (iellaniz,
Tjrwlutt. Miilent, Sidnev l.ce, I'uiiu
val. ed And te tlit gitieial .readi r
tliev will be a been, sii replete nre
thev with valid points of view ami
iiu tf in,' cxpl.iniitiens and helptu1
bints Mr Cliapnian has a verj vital
paper In 'The Plavs ns Peetri" and
1111 inieiiiing one "On the Stiine ' 11.
then iiiiisiders swrnl of the plavs spe
elticallv and winl up with a lou-id-iratieu
of liak. ioaie s Tvpes "
Nete nu F.nuni latien' and Ainerii.ui
I'rentim iatlen "
rj"itK HOOKSTUn lis I.exInBlen Ave . New
Verk e.1 I irn eiliunna, modern nnd
eiaieilr ether unusual hook. iatalesi,
liiued nienthh, sent en reaUfst
pOR THH IIHOK 1.0 i:it Rre honks
I'lrit ed.tien- Denks new emt of print
T.niet citilouiie sent en teciueet. C
ejerhnrdi '.'A W 45J ,st , m erk.
Literature of Other Nations
LtHRwim: l'RANCAtsi:. iietki, brk-
voert, N"t Verl;, will mnil unuul In In In
foittn'en ou Kronen pub itatlens
Wlir.Nt II HOOK'S il descrlpt nni Src. listi
1" riiiiHt. 1 tench-Air eric ih tl hk simp
Tt Wen yi.'li si e' New Veru flij
- - --- -- -- --- -fi 1 iii iai nil
FIVR BIG NOVKLS
WHICH YOU MUST NOT
MISS
SHEILA KAYE-SMITH'S
Jeanna Gedden
"The most vivid, original, real
person that was ever put into
a book." N. P. DAWSON in
The Glebe. 6th edition.
CHARLES G. NORRIS'S
BraSS A Nevel of Marriage.
The power of this novel's un
sparing truth is making it
tremendously effective.
Forty-fourth edition.
EDWARD L. WHITE'S
Andivius Hedulie
One of the big book dealers
reports two novels which men
who like a geed story are
"simply eating up." This is
one of them. 7th edition.
ROBERT KEABLE'S
Simen Called Peter
Life calls it: "A geed book
that deserves te- be widely
read." Thirteenth edition.
BRETT YOUNG'S
The Black Diamond
The Tribune says: "Few pass
ages in recent fiction surpass
in brilliancy of conception
these that give flame and sus
tained fire te the closing chap
ters of 'The Black Diamond.' "
Kuril, S3 (XI. Al nit bookstores.
Y.
If net. order from the nittillkhepH
P. Dutten & Ce., C81 5th Ave., N.
THE SENSATION Or 1922
ASenkSah&ra
TUB aREATBST OT ALU
DE5ERTINOVELS
9y LOVISsZ ds-JtA-xv
Tliit ulvea Ten Ihe rent
llirlll nf the Bahnrn with Its
Wild Bedouins
Its Slave Markets
flle LuxurUi et
Sultan's Harem
ITbt Capture of
White Weman
Her Keicue
Andthebbji
Finiihf
' tT s m!
DMV H'lO tbDIT'l
18 A BsSKJrJSfeM
WmmmMm
mwmmiMMmmm
P t !'!
A Spring Fiction LUt
THE SCARLET
TANAGER
Clare Sheridan's
MY AMERICAN
aitBiidlK
aaaaaaaaaaavKrS
DIARY
,T NT I, MATE, I
'sparkling,
gossipy rev ela-1
tiens, deliciously 1
frank, of the im- j
pressiens made
upon this famous 1
English s e c i ety
woman and sculp
tress by our lead
ing men and wo
men of society
and letters.
Richly illustrated. $.1.00 everywhere
BONI&IMRIGUTi
publishes " NEW YORK
fl
1
r-MfliJiJiJBM
-nn
By J. Aubrey Tyson
1 . !-,- mtiatni'tr ntni'V? ivifli 41i...1,
l V COIlSUIIIIUWn; iiij-ei-s-jj -v-,.,7 , ...v.. ini-cuus I,
I mnrveleuslv and ingeniously tangled; Sea.'
falcon the elusive quarry, and plotters, counterplettcrs and t
the beautiful Scarlet Tanager, chasing madly through the s
plot.
CHILDREN OF THE
MARKET PLACE
By Edgar Lee Masters
"This remarkable book is
nbevc everything- else a study of
Douglas nnd ns such it is net
only nble nnd fascinating, but
strangely timely A picture
humnnly nttrnctive nnd Ifnr
rcnchingly instructive. 'Edwin
Bjerkman in The New 1 erk
Herald. ?2.00
MARIA CHAPDELAINE
By Leuis He'men
"A delicately wrought tale a
simple, slender theme, but one
trented with rare grace, linving
n background of the Canadian
country thnt stands out like n
pnlntinjr." The Outlook.
"A geed book, a great hook
nnd n true book." Life. $2.00
THE HOUSE OF
RIMMON
By Mary S. Walls
A novel of youth nnd genius
nnd the struggles of a young
poet te preserve his idcnls in
the biillinnt artistic circles of
New Yerk. $2.00
$1.75
THE VENEERINGS
By Sir Harry Johnsten ' '
A new novel In Sir tfnrry
Johnsten's brilliant and 'gossipy
etyle, pursuing the fortunes of
the Veneering family nnd their
circle in Victorian England,
Frnnce and Seuth Africa. $2.0e
NUMBER 87
By Harrington Hcxt
"A book of unusual interest
nnd importance, both ns litera
ture nnd ns n highly suggestive
tract for the times. ... A fan
tastic mystery novel de luxe. It
has the elements of a veritable
best seller." H. L. Pnngbern in t
Thi Nem Yerk He.rnld. SI r.n
r i
THE PRISONERS OF
HARTLING
By J. U. Ucrestenl j
"Exquisite artistry n succcs succcs
sien of delicate strokes that bug.
gest with cxtrnerdinnry nicety
the pcrsennlitics nnd emotions
lie tries te evoke." Amy Love Leve
man in The Literary Review,
$1.75
-a
Fer sale at all bookstores'
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
64-6B Fifth Avenue Nw Yerk City vl
Ne wemnn has ever wielded greater influence ever these in her care
influence for a superb womanhood than the author of Spiritual Pastel. A
New Yeik fnther was se impressed with the worth of Spiritual Pastels and with
the giaces nnd endowments of its author that he sent his daughter te the Phtln
delphia college where J. S. E. guides. With such a guide, such an exemplar,
he is happy in the assurance thnt the one he loves will surely be something moie
thnn nn educated snob in this socially shallow nge.
SPIRITUAL PASTELS
By J. S. E.
Literally the heart and soul cemmunings of an intelligent, educated, cultured
woman a Nun with an all-wise Christ, the Christ of the masses of the peer, the
Christ of Lent, net the golden crossed Christ new shekel owned by the richest men
in the world and capitalized by them and ethers as a means te an end.
Just the book for daily reading particularly ideal for Lenten reading. If your
prayer book is mislaid take "Spiritual Pastels" te church instead. If you don't go te
church if you are agnostic, even atheistic, "Spiritual Pastels" won't argue or quar
rel with you, but it will positively will inspire and comfort you. If you are inclined
te 'sneer at "the kind of religious stuff the servants buy," read "Spiritual Pastels" and
then you will commend it te your domestics and te yourself.
Hints
en Shakespeare
Mr 1 h.ipinaii
The
BAPTIST BOOKSHOP
1703 Chestnut Street
(2d Fleer Take Elevator)
A Complete Stock of
RELIGIOUS BOOKS BIBLES and TESTAMENTS
CHILDREN'S BOOKS WORTH WHILE BOOKS
OF ALL PUBLISHERS
SUPPLIES for the CHURCH and SUNDAY SCHOOL
Easter Cards and Booklets
"Spiritual Pastels" is as foreign te kitchen theology and drawing
room cant as Heaven is te the Regu es' Gallery.
Fifth Edition Ready April 3d
Beautifully Illustrated. Price $1.50 Net, $1.60 Postpaid.
hditien after edition of this really vispvmn work has been sold. "Spiritual
will be sent te any reader of the Public Ledger, and your money promptly
if even slightly disappointed. At Bookstores or
THE DEVIN-ADAIR COMPANY, Publishers, 437 Fifth Avenue, New Yerk
'flfr(.s
refunded
B
s
iir.Aii
THE
BRACEGIRDLE
pt rnft
'a.
Thi intinin'rt J.eve. S r
' thu Imriin tif ilie lini
III IILRIUH .lhhls
S.'.OO, ut nil Hunk-lures
J. B. LH'I'IXCQTT COM!' Y
V a i. i:ti
trlhutPil
Anether
Murder
Mystery
'A1.I:NTIM; Wll I.IAMS m, mil-
ntieiliei i oiiveatieii.,1 mis.
ten shiiv te the eelii;i of ' pii-s tin -'
inline ' tirns of the
piespiit spilni: in " 1 lie
ellevv s.tn.uk I lloiicll lleiicll lloiicll
ten .Miftl'ii ( e i A
i ii li ei eentrie is found
iu'iiiIpipiI in Ills studv
An a ii in I I e i of his
finmee If nispeetul I lie plot revolves
alieui Ins iiilunpl te mlvr t lie mjsiery
anil ileae himself. That tins Is ileue
j;ees vvii'ieut fnj Invr, Inn I lie unfold, iik
of ill" plot I- accompanied In iiuv
number of fnsiesnK Munitions That
tliev aie inti resiiiiK slietild tie sulh
i lint. Time Is t he Munler. tlie Falsely
An used the Heiiitlful Heroine nnd
the runny liutler. Whnt nmrp inn
lie aslviiP
HIS DOG-
LEONARD MERRICK'S novel
ONE MAN'S VIEW
Introduction by GRANVILLE BARKER
'l lie Sen Yerk 7'imn says:
".I. M. BA11K1K once said, 'A noel h Leenard Merrick i.s te mi mi
otic of the events of the year.' Yes, and that is the way we nil feel
about it. . Afttr lending it vvc arc a mete enthusiastic Mer-
nkite than i-sei."
J'hr El Pane Tune says:
"Mr. Mei rick's characters nre se tt no. se essentinlly human thnt it
would mutter little whether he s.et them down in modern Pans or
the Seuth Sea islands or ancient Heme. Se great is his art that
his picture gees straight te the heart of the reader."
77ir- Atgenaut miii:
"Kxquisitely written and gently dealing with human weakness, it
is yet one of i lie since) est of modem novels."
Han- j en lead his Cenrad in Quest of Mis Youth, Cjnlhin, The Man
Who Understood Women, A Chair en Ihe lleulevard?
,'eiri $1,00, Any bookstore ran supply them; or, if net, elder from
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Ave.. New Yerk
By ALBERT
PAYSON TERIIUNE
A deg story with a genuine
thrill in it, bv the author of
LAD and BRUCE
M. ."id. At any ItDiiksiiiit.
E. P Dnlten & Ce., 681 Sth Ave., N. Y.
QfrgnSgnSgnSfca&am
bf
ll (idl.INi; nwnj In a new edition
Wllllnm Siiepe'e pisintml.ll
lftSMP, "Dun nnd Nights nr,rjHlmcut
I'MiInc," just ISSlllll
OV s,,,wrt . M,, )n
their si lies of famous
outdoor lioeUc. is a little
ilinvvliiK li V.. I'oeke.
It shows n hank en the .
I vveeil nnd Is intended
THE
BRACEGIRDLE
re In man. lne Vnrv of Anna
lie liiri nr of l he I en Inn Slate -
IW HI IIH1S .IKNKISs,
-' (Ml nt. nil llai,k.iiirr
J. II. LIIM'INCOTT COMPANY
A Heek
for Salmen
Fishers
-JACOBS
J
1628
FOR CHE5TNUT
BOOKS STREET
.te Jllmtrnle the thliiK every well- "B
tpaneplled salmon isbeiuu fctwli kavt I wA
7 1 K
,UY A BOOK A WEEK"
i
tssssssssssssssssssssmsms '
wtsssssmmtmmmrnktw
li
58
By Chauncey M.
Depew
Ti' lioek ievpis a vllal pi rind of
en- hlstnij from thn threshold of the
i ivil War down te thn end of Ihe Ki'-it-est
war of all recenled llnm
'Ui author Illuminates ninn linpor linper
tanl civentH b,v Kllmpses of IIrIU vvlileli
will nlTerd utlcemn aid In the ie
aPiuehps snd speculations of hlntei (aim
eif our nelltlis A book pervaded
1' u fpirii of optimism nnd wntten )V
a man of hfnw ' .luilpn Willaid
llarttctt in the Sew Yerk Herald.
My Memories of Eighty Years
Xe ether incrican could write such a book of reminiscence's
At all bookstores, $4.00.
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, Fifth Ave., New Yerk
m
t
I
c
i
c
I
i
i
s
s
a
SAINT TE RE
By Heeiy Sydiiei0 Hanison
A few of the contreversal reviews that are making
this Ihe most talked of book of the season.
ntxaia
Al
"The book contains a chapter the sen
sational nature of which can seldom have
been equaled in English fiction. The re
action et women te this chapter will be
one of shocked disgust. They will allow
no excuses te be found for Teresa De
Silver and they will accept no explana
tions of her conduct. And the fact that
they are wrong will make net the slight
est difference."
Grant Oierten in the Xete Yerk Herald.
"This young lady and young gentleman,
after trying te outwit each ether for
many chapters, finally engage in a rough-and-tumble
light. . . . This is a fight
surely worthy paying $2.00 (no war tax)
te see. I would net have missed it for
anything ... A rattling geed story . . .
a remarkable piece of fiction, a well
wrought work of art."
William Lyen Phelps in the A'nr l'er Pout.
"In every way, one of the most notable
American novels of recent years."
Worcester (lazrttc.
"Certainly (he most powerful novel of
the present season. ... In this book Mr.
Harrison is at his best There is'thc
accustomed courtesy, quick sympathy
with what is best in life, stern purity e(
thought and incident, chiseled style, pa
tient artistry and careful workmanship;
but along with-this there is a rapidity of
action, and a growth of strength for
which the admirers of his previous writ
ing will doubtless find themselves unpre
pared." America.
"This book is of absorbing interest from
the first page te the last. . . . There
never was anything better and truer and
mere sincere than the terrible, long, hand-te-hand
fight which is the inevitable
climax of the book. There will be a let
f criticism of this criticism of the type
that 'that sort of thing doesn't happen.'
In some people's lives apparently nothing
ever does happen that is net agreeable te
discuss at a dinner table."
-Mice Duer Miller in the Sew Yerk Tribune.
The storm of praise and denunciation that has
greeted SAINT TERESA is in itself the best proe?
et its extraordinary power and absorbing interest.
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
SJ-mrAMrew
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