Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 18, 1922, Night Extra, Page 20, Image 20

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PBIwG
WAwWhTS -
mwtm?fmm?mmfmmmmwmmmmmm
tiaan'HBL u-v i
,.rT ut.it;
K-
r
w- i " vf - v-.ii' j. -- ;"iaMi'vi. (Vi . -v lm ', ji(s " - w-v-.3''.jW5;t"
' 4JW
i - --, .. (j . -T . ,. V i i - ; v ,-e.i- i,
W:M!fl
:&
!M
t-uni
i-sar-;
S.,-:M
IPl
ffl3
'.
:triSK
$
.'Ve
life
Eft'
A .
.-
f.
B
W
tl'
..
liki
HI
Mrl
ft I
-I .-.;
L?J
tffr'mWB nrrr vntmt a
&FOR SALE WHEREVER
BOOKS ARE SOLD
SHEILA KAYE-SMITH'S
Jeanna Gedden
"The most vivid, original,
t real person that was ever
put into n book. N. V.
DAWSON in The Glebe.
8th edition.
CHARLES G. NORRIS'S
. BraSS A Nevel of MarriaRC.
The power of this novel's
1 unsparing truth is making
it tremendously effective.
Forty-fourth edition.
EDWARD L. WHITE'S
Andlvius Hedulie
One of the bijr book dealers
reports two novels which
men who like a geed story
lire "simply eating up."
Tin!, is one of them.
7th edition.
ROBERT KEABLE'S
Simen Called Peter
Life cnlls it: "A geed book
that deserves te be widely
' read." Seventeenth edition.
BRETT YOUNG'S
The Black Diamond
The Tribune says: "Few
passages in recent fiction
surpass in brilliancy of con
ception these that give flame
and sustained fire te the clos
ing chapters of "The Black
Diamond.' "
i:nli. M.Wl. M nil iMmkstere.
If nut. order from the publisher.
E. P. Dutten & Ce., CS1 5tb Ave., N. Y.
The
Forsyte
Saga
Hy
TOHX CI A LS WORTHY
"Every one interested
cither in modern litera
ture or modern life
should own a copy of
the Forsyte Saga."
W'm. Lyens Phelps.
In one volume. $2.50
Charles Scribner's Sens, New Yerk
A booklet which sketches Jehn
Galsworthy's life and work is
being prcjxircd by the pub
lishers for free distribution.
Write for a cejry.
NEW VOLUMES IN
Everyman's
Library
Gerki: Through Russia.
Turgenev: Fathers and Sens.
English Short Stories of Six
Centuries.
Rhys (ed.1: The Growth of Po
litical Liberty.
Rhys (ed): The Gelden Treasury
of Lenger Poems.
Ibsen: Peer Gynt.
Sewcll: Black Beauty.
Livy: Reme, Vel. IV.
Lucretius: Of the Nature of
Things.
Send for a list of 750 vels.
Vach il.00. At any bookstore.
E. P. Dutten & Ce., 681 5th Ave., N. Y.
SIMON-
CALLED PETER
By ROBERT KEABLE
Auther of "Standing By"
"is a revelation of the power of
the eddies encircling the whirl
pool of war te engulf a man's
soul. . . . It is Julie's story as
well ad Peter's Julie, vivid, al
luring. " Phila. Public Ledger.
$2.00. At any bookstore.
E. P. Dutten & Ce., 681 Sin Arc, N. Y.
"Like zooming nlnng in an airplane"
The
BEAUTIFUL
and
DAMNED
By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Auther of "77IJS Hull of Paradise"
"A whale of a book."
Chicago Daily Nw$.
At all bookstores, it 00
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
LCOBS l28
FOR CHESTNUT
STREET
llMMAWm-l
JOHN GALSWORTHY'S
Beauty Has Ne Fellowship
With the Lust for Geld
NO WORK of (lotion la likely te
npppnr this enr, or next year for
tlmt mutter, which con stand cempnrl-
son with Jehn
(Jitlswerthy's "The
Forsyte Saga"
(Charles Scrlb
nrr's Sens). Such
books de net hap
pen often. And this
book did net really
hnppcn. It grew.
Headers of O a I s
worthy are nwnre
that it N inade up
tfKu...-.. ..'wv.. . v. .. . a-
JOHN avtswenTHT wert,1y wns then
thirty nine years
old, and he had been writing only two
years, hut he had evidently been living
and thinking and observing. After grad-
inning irnm uxieru nc naa stuuieu law,
but after practicing a ltttle while he
I save it up. He did net have te enrn
llds living and could gratify his tastes,
I lie traveled about the world for a while
and, ns I have Intimated, wrote his first
novel when he was thirty-seven. It
I was nor a very goon novel, nut it was
nec marreu ey tue tresuness
news that characterize
that undoubtedly gifted
graduate, r . Scott
Man of Property" was the beginning
of the thesis, which, after thinking ever
It for fourteen years, Mr. Galsworthy
I returned te In "In Chnncery," pub
lished in 11VJ0. and concluded in "Te
Let," appearing in 10U1. the three
I large books new Issued ns parts of a
I whole In "The Forsyte Sagn." There
I are two shorter ones Included, dealing
lcaling
In the I
a vel"!
I
with the intervals untouched In
1 longer books. The whole makes
time of mere than S."0 pages.
The theit. nt Mr. Gahcerthi in
dicates in his preface, deals with the
disturbance that Beauty effects in
the lives of men.
iB
L'T this does net tell it all. Per
haps It would he bptter te say, tells
I It tee broadly
The book Is really a
study of the. lack of fellowship between '
i, ;u.fi... i,,cfint n,i the t,,stt,ier
til. til ' lU'lU'V .l.-Hi.Vt. H..U .. ,......H.
acq
for beauty.
I The Forsyte family Is materlalls
'tic. It sprang from an I'nglMi fnrmer,
or a yeoman, ns one nf them likes te
a . whose son, n Mniicma'-en, went te
f.iuii'.en, became a builder and. when he
died, left a fortune of fJ'.d.fliKt te b
divided among his ten ill. Mr. u. '1 hee
children, by thrift and geed Inve-t
ment, increased their ue.iltli until,
when the stcry begins In IhSl!, the fam
ily was reprc-entatlve of the upper mid
dle rla!. Sonnies V'nvvte. n grand
, fen of the steuetiiii-iin and "the man
of property" of the story. ha the en-e
'of poss-en'-ion strongly developed. The
value of a thing in nienej is what in
tercuts hini, and if it iiinnet be nld
for mete than was. paid for It lie wains
'nothing te de with It. H-1 bnjs mint
' ing and peicelalus wl'li an "jc te their
fiitiiie market value rather than tn
their llitriiisli' beauty. Itui lie m.uiirs
a jeiing woman whee only fertuir ix
A POETRY ANTHOLOGY
BROUGHT UP TO DATE
Amholegies are like encyclopedias. In
that they have te b revised periodically
and brought up te date. This Is appar
ently the justification for "The I.e inl
lleiine Boek of English Verse," which
lias just come from the piess of Itnnl
& I.iverlglit. I'aigave s "ueiuen
Treasure" wns geed In Its time and U
still geed for the period that it covers, i
The Oxford Heek of Verse" brings j
English poetry down te a later period
ana new this I. a (inllienne. book includes
poems bv Hupert Hroeke, Walter de In
Maie. Hiegfried Sassoon, Richard Al
dington nnd severnl mere of the younger
generation. Of course. It also contains
the famous pieces which have responded
te some call in the heart of generation
after generation. There are Milten's
"Lycidas" and his sonnet en his blind
ness. The lyrics from the ruyn of
Shakespeare are included. The whole of
Coleridge's "Ancient Mariner," Wilde's
"UaJlad of Rending (Jael" and Francis
Thompson's "Hound of Heaven" are
given. Mr. I. Oalllenne evidently likes
Matthew Arneld, for he devotes several
pages te him. The collection en the
whole is satisfying, and if It gets into
the hands of only these who de net own
the earlier anthologies it will justify
itself, for It will spread a knowledge of
fine poetry and muke for national cul
ture. NEW BOOKS
General
Gi:NKIlAI. I1KAMH1.K. Ilv Midre Maurels
.Ww Yerk- Dedd. Mead & Ce
I Humorous sketches of wiiiiimn I ranc and
the linpreielen made hv the Hrltlsli there.
Hme a mellow flavor and kindly fiellnc
KlNI"OI.KH I'v Ann Cobb. Uosten:
I HnuKhien Mlrtlln emrany
1 7th rii' i of lh K'-ntucky people
HKX KNiiWI-EDOR. Hy Nervti March,
i ' New Yerk: i: P Dutten Cemi.snv.
Dlscusss In a delicate and eclentlfle wav
iruch subjects ni "The C.revvth of the Mind
In Regard tn Hex ' i-ryrho.I'hysleloglcal
Helatlenshtpa" and "The l.tnlis of hex
THK HO-'AI.I.nD HLMAN UACn. Hy llert
lysten Tayler. New Yerk: Alfred A
Knopf
A rprlr of material from the late la
mented author's "J.lr.a O' Tpe or Se "
TUB POUTIC MIND Ilv Y C. Prescott.
New Yerk The Macmlllan Company.
The profeiser of rJnBllsh at Cernell writss
en an abitruse and complex subject In the
llnht of the resources of Kreudlan research.
MIL'RAI. CHILI) WKLrARK Hy B. N. Clop Clep
per New Yerk The Macmlllan Company.
Secial and ecmomle conditions nrfecttmc
young- folk are discusser In this inquiry made
I bv the National Child Laber Committee.
.OVEtlWUKIHT? OCAnD YOl'Il HKAI.TII.
I lly Reval Cepeland. New Yerk: Ces-
mopelltlun Heek Corporation
Dr Copeland, Commissioner of Health of
! New Yerk, writes a common asnse book for
' practical persona en the subject of "this tee,
I tee 'solid llesh " Obesity lu treated from th
I .nnji. .list and exerrlje points of view.
and there are many helpful Illustrations of
symnastl's, etc,
auonei: nnYAN and 'nirc cestitu-
TION W PKNNSYIA'ANIA. Ily Hur.
ion Alva Konkle. Philadelphia William
J Campbell
An authoritative bleirraphy. well-deru-mented
and illustrated of a notable flur In
the Commonwealth's annals Hryan was a
stanch supporter of Lloyd's i.onstltutlen
i.f 17(11, ami carried many of Its previsions
ever Inte the erisanlc law of the Revelu.
tlenarv period. n was for many jears
"President of PeMisylvanla.'' ns thu guber guber
r.nterlni office vv.iH thun known, and was
i honored with ether public eftlcs, Mr. Ken
kle has written in a way mac eneus new
llaht en many of the phases of I'ennsjl
vttnla as a, develuplni: neverelrn Htate.
SUKOCANT YOItli AND HIS PKOPI.i:. Hy
Ham K Cuwan. New Yerk: I-'unk &
Waenalls,
A blecraphy of the douuhbey who Marshal
Kech said achieved the createst (Initie deed
of any soldier In the (treat war. It la net,
however, n war book, but the aterv of the
America of a, tvplcal American. .Sergeant
Yerk lias refused many lucrative prepositions
for In advancement of his nwn rnrtiinaa.
j ecvdiuik nn enerciea te the wairare
yancimjni u aim sapui.iunetr peepia
tj,'c'f,i-hl
ana '
fmThii
tnt,A ifxvmg
PUBLIC
her beauty, who, because of her mother's
iirclnc ncccptr. him without a full
icatlzutien of what mnrrlace means.
Kiie in iiie incarnate ncnuty mat causes
disturbances in the lines of the mate-
rlnllstlc Fersytes.
As there can be no love heliveen
Beauty and Ureal of Possession the
marriaae fails antl the wife leaver the
husband.
"DEFOKB thl linppens, however, the
wife lun fallen In love with a young
architect, encased te marry her niece,
EVENING
of five books each j The architect Is the personification of
dealing with the I the Ieve of Heaiity utterly out of sym
Forsyte family, j pathy with the acquisitive Instinct.
The first, "The And, of course, he loves the wife. In
Man of Property," ) order te save the situation, he is killed
was published 1 n by an nntomeblle in the street with
KUllI Mi. HnUJll.. .1 ..... .1 .1... I.. i.iiL
i lUU irUlIK llIl-MllilllllUIl IllHt 11R (1P1ID-
erntcly threw himself In its way. Hut
the situation is net saved. The wife
leaves her husband and. liter some
I years, marries a cousin of Seame who
,1s nn artist and n klndlv soul, and
weames marries the daughter of a
French restaurant proprietor. And the
son and daughter of these two mar-
jrlages, without knowing what had gene
before, fall In love. When they learn
of the pest, the boy gees off te Canada
and the girl marries a suitor for whom
sue nees net care, bringing te her bus
round of that spiral by which life moves
slowly upward.
It has been called a xteru of
trantitien period in English life.
IT IS mere than that, for If it were
rmen.lr n .im- f n f,...i ....
T? ,V01 1, MmVe t i, J.'rnJ ',erl0(
Vmu" lmve ' ,0 be classified ns a novel
"rnCr,9, Man"CrSlrtor,,stMr - rJnIs - Man"CrSlrter,,stMr - rJnIs - Man"CrSlrtor,,stMr - rJnIs -
worthy only se far as they are needed te
T?wenld'linvp tnim in.,in 1
u would nave te he classified ns a novel
give his characters reality. He is mere
1 Interested in n study of motives,
The problem that he has studied is ns
I rtl.l nu tlulllvntlnn T ,.. ..
self out In ancient Syria when Esau, the
tnver nf tim i,,ir f .i.i
m-i v. !..m f f wl(lc",I,?n "Pems
w.,. u biMii.uiiitii, xi. mii werKini- ir-
which he could enjoy through the pleas-
anil cruue- uanci me same kind of tragedy that be- rIS0I has a following is demonstrated by
the novels of fell her father In his first mnrrlni-e h tin publishers announcement that half
young Princeton ' the story ends where it began after i n "lllllen copies of his three earlier
Fitzgerald, "The ' completing, net a circle, l.nt ih. DO0Ks "ave DvtD eela-
...lc ui n.v num. u3 ee muiiierent te preity near as naru. lie takes the jed
property values that he was willing tlmt f eSRcc maneger of Tercsn's newly pur
hls brother .Tnceb should have his in- c'""i(;d bteel company despite hfs an
ncrItarip. ,. ,, ,.,, . 7, ' ,,, "" '"
P"1130" 'f "c would feed him when
. rt .nu ..Ir,... fPKft- I - -i
mv "r "ubj j-ucia i nn cicrniu
war between "the man of property,"
who puts a price en everything, and that
sense of beauty which Is never for sale
and cannot be bought. And the tragedy
cf It is that "the man of property"
heldem realizes that his materialistic nt
t. tude is the provoking cause of the
v.ar. The book ends en this note, for
the last sentence in it Is the reflection
of Sonnies Forsyte that "he might wish
ind wish and never get It the beautv
nnd the loving In the world."
This book is likely te take Its place
with the classics of the English tongue,
for two reasons. The first is that Itls
n mtIeus and sincere study of the .re
lations of men and women te one an
other nnd te society, nnd the second Is
that It is written in a style befitting
the theme clear, simple nnd diiect,
hut with n Hew and a music that Is
found only In the weik of the masters of
prose. O. V. D.
raphy It la
Kr.mhs taken
wll Illustrated
'en th iipet."
Fiction
fiem photo-
THE PAI.r. OF SOUI.S Hy Iturfrt Hushes.
New Yerk. Harper Brethers.
A new neH, 8tu'llnr the ilia of current
eclftv anil Institutions by u. writer who
Inn hail ei-Neral sensational successes In Mo
tion and the meWcs
! THEN CAME MOI.LT By Hsrrlet Osxlen.
rnuaiieipwa. Vnn rubllshlnB Company.
f..h enid 'Semh.rn'hSfn. SSi ,"n-?i?;
. ...ii"- ""..."-.. .T '..
Yerk te study art She rinds adventure und
romance and a ureat Iee.
vocations. "wr.ij o'Denovi
AuLTcVcT'n- t
mi.
h ,ithnr
of 'Cenaupst ' Altheuih tlm new ,e.)k
lias the Imprimatur of Oeereq .Moere
who l an llkelv te fly off Ihn hmnlle
en certain u.Jvct If Is net liv hiiv means
up te the hlt-li lael of th curllxr tmek, it
l written In a sour stjle. and lines net
show anv deep thluklns and wide nbra.
tlen. as did "Cecnuesi." which set forth all
the sides aid ancles of the Irish Question,
"locations' Is rather shallow and dreary
IMMOKTAI, ATHAUA Bv Harry Haley.
1'hlladelrhla Dorrance A Ce
Thu author of this exotle tnle l culled
"Tha new Jack Ixinden" by the publishers.
The story Is a t trance one. of eun
American here and a heroine restored te
earth from the ream of delties, Cleopatra,
Helen of Trey and the Incaa htm all Invoked
te k!e color te a most unusual rimanc?
M.Ap. liv Penalr McQIbney. Indianapelis:
Illbbselerrlll Company.
A novel of steel and stocks, capital and
labor ih8 native-born and the alien, the
nnanclT nd Uie belaheMat all am skitched
with a Muoreus touch, and the plot l
clilnir and eenslitent
THE C'ONul i:.T. Ily Hva Hm-rv Dv
.Vew Yerk Deubledav. i'aK ' Ce
le alery of the nniiMr hr William . m..
mti alery or tne nnn.nrnr W Hum .i.
and the final exploration of the North Amer
ican continent.
I THi: PRAIKIr: CHILD nv Arthur Stringer.
I Indianapolis' Uebhs-Merrill Company.
T!,H, 'Jlril In the author's trllecy of "The
Prulrle It li a story of a mothers deve.
tien and passion for her offspring
INJt'N AND AVHITr.Y Tn TIIR RKSCl'E
,Mi;eAyl"r.am H Hart I,0'10n "mhten:
Mifflin Cempanj
A new itilumn In lha ..nlll..- .-A,
tVest Uevs" Series, bv thn fornmest dnin.r
&))''iK? the" advenVu'resMid" Kre?j; mentally. Hut the reformation expcrl
rattling geed yarn. meiit ends nbruptly. The widow marries
AT THE FREE LIBRARY
Heeks added te the Tree Library,
Thirteenth nnd Locust streets, during
the week ending April 13;
Miscellaneous
flamallel "Amr!ean
Bradford
traits '
Per-
llurreughs Jehn "Mv nojheod
Church, A. L. "Training of
tary "
fleer.
Conyngton, Themas, and
Ustat'S and Trusts." 2 vels
Others "Willi,
(oeper. C. H. "FVirelgn Trade."
Depew, C M. "My Memories of Eighty
Devvey. Uvelm "DsJten Laboratory
Ulion. F. II "Railroads and Govern
ment. Drlnkwater Jehn "Seeds of Time."
Dur.sany, Lord "If "
deleter Edna "It Is te Laugh "
Gregery. Lady "The Image and Other
Plavs."
Hill C K "Leading American Treatlei."
Huel.ner S. B. "Hteek Market."
Landau-Aldanev, M. A. "Lenin."
Ixird. I, K. "Getting Your Meney
Werth.
McCabe. Jeseph "Kvolutlen of Clvlllxa
tlnn "
Moulten, I! P., ed. "Trlsl of Slelple Mor Mer
rlsnn ' Painted Windows "
I'eltl Geerges "Thtrty-six Dramatle Sit
uations. "
JMnsch. P S "Secret Dlpjemscy
Hlllvrr, Celeman "t'ederal Income Tax
Primer."
Starr, Meredith "Futura of the Nevel."
Silewart, D. O. "Parody Outline of His
tory." Telrazzlna, Lulsa "My Life of Beng,"
Thnnipunn. Wallace "Mexican Mind."1
AValey. Arthur "Ne Playa of Japan."
Day, Clarence. Jr, "Crew'a Nest."
l'arls. J. T, "Seeing the Sunny Seuth."
Fiction
Dutten. C. J. "Out of the Darkness.'
Kave-.Hmllh, Sheila "Johanna Gedden."
Macklln, A i:,. 1. "Twenty-nine Tales
Frent me rrencn
"Children of the Market
!&7?'Mfi"-,f-&,
til... . i 4
Milne. A. U. -''Bed Meum Mstery." j
yaicaS
, , (..JtiVtM'yg
r .nii&.-r
LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, AKRIli 18, 1922
GREAT FORSYTE TALE ISSUED
I I MfMM,
LOGAN l'KAUSALIi SMITH
A Beekman caricature of a Phil
adelphia man of letters who lives In
England
A TRYING SAINT
Heroine of Henry Sydner Har
rison's New Nevel Lacks Vir
tue of Humility at Any Rate
"Saint Teresa" (Houghten Mifflin
Company) Is a somewhat slew-moving
and hard-textured book. The author,
Henry Sydner Harrison, is known for
his best seller of a decade or se age,
"Quecd," a story of Individuality and
charm, and for "V. V.'s Eyes" and
iVngcla s Business." That Mr. Har
Thcre is seme of the erielnalltv of
character conception that marked
"Queed," with its here who had sched-
tiled his lifetime In advance. In edu
cation, culture, etc., In the title char
acter of "Snlnt Teresa." nut Teresa
I De Silver, daughter of magnates and a
I mdern woman feminist, perhaps would
I be a better and closer ascription docs
net somehow engage the interest nnd
, i,n evfT,n,i n. ,iu n...j ui.. i
'net somehow engage the inte
, ti,p sympathies ns did Quecd.
1tho 1tho 1the heroine of many n?wspn
page exploits, and a damsel set
spapcr first-
1 tint" in hntr.
lng her own wav. no matter hew ex-
traerdlnary her bent may be and hew
vln'cnt she has te turn te achieve her
end. She lt nn hnerl na tifiila renblpna nt
.-.. : . . "" -." ..v..... -.
5Uni!S.0p,Ii,0B,i.f nd.uni,er.
aspects net without passlc
The here, whose steel c
!icr virginal
passion.
' j the duel' with wits nnd motives, is
tagenism te ncr principles, of pacllism
and she. knowing his hostility, keeps
him. This posits a remarkable situa
tion, and the novel extensively deals
with the ups and downs of control. The
background is filled with estimations
of the pre-war feeling of Americans
concerning the Armageddon in France
and Flanders. There is much sagacious
projection of war hysteria and propa
ganda and a geed deal of pre and con
talk of justified positions of Americans
under tnc circumstances of official neu
trallty and personal nnd racial sym
pathy. Teresa wants te close down the
mills te prevent adding fuel te the
flames of war by supplying munitions.
Masury wants te keep the supply going
across the Atlantic. There is n real
caveman episode by way of grand cli
max In which the "here" litcrnllv
"beats up" the irritating "heroine."
nnd is bashed se hard himself (hat he
has te undergo rtnnits. And In the end
they love each ether. In the pre
nupllal scrap. It Is assumed, they have
worked off all their mutual dislike.
BACK-BAY BLUE NOSE
POKES INTO SOCIAL ILLS
The se-called "fast life" in Uosten,
according te Rebert Swnsey, is n con
tinuous round of dissipation en soggy
sandwiches nnd ginger ale in dimly lit
lunchrooms. In "Kennedy's Sister"
(Little, Urewn & Ce.) Mr. Swnsey nt-
-JV.T lt ICKL-IICIUIIUII UL LWU Jllllt
sisters of the street by transnertlnc them
from their orgies of soft drinks and
sandwiches te a nriiuly furnished tint
uher,. ,, ntnid New England "gunrdhin"
cheers 111) their finei-lni' Miiiilw liv rvml.
Inir In thorn from T-Vit'u "Murtwu" ..r..l
n phonograph grinds out "The Maiden's
l'rayer." And the author seems rather
bitterly surprised when one of the girls
staggers back te her old haunts te order
another ginger nlc. Rut the ether
bravely keeps en and takeH up her life
work of sewing buttons en overalls in
a factory.
Frem which it may or may net he
seen that Mr. Swasey has aimed his
shafts ut the smug self-satlsfieduess of
n certain section of our bread (geo
graphically if net mentally) country.
A war widow decides te de something
te broaden herself, nnd sociological work
Is the result. Alse in her search for
contact with these net even en the out
skirts of the Iinck Ray set she meets
and nreuues the interest of a "primeval
A . .,!,.,,., ' itl,n,,nl, In 1... III. .a
.American." Although net In the Illuc
. . , i ., t.i. .. i ...
IliKil; he has amassed wealth and enables
her lirether te de the -niiie. When he
naturally explains his feellngi toward
her the Hack Hay bleed res nnd Mrs.
Hack Hay is distinctly nnd hysterically
shocked. An is brother, who can nee
Mr. American ns n buHiness associate,
but net as a brother-in-law.
Then everything gees te pet. There
Is a struggle. J'hysically as well as
some one rrem tne Meciai ltegister and
gees off te Europe secure in thu thought
her sociological plunge wns a success
because at least one of the girls is rap
Idly advancing in the techniriue of but
tonhole making.
Mr. Swnsey has written his story In a
rather slew tempo nnd has avoided any
sharp strokes te drive home his points
of eatlre. Probably Hack Hay won't
like "Kennedy's Klster," but thousands
of ether renders will.
Anten Chekhev at Columbia
Anten Chekhev's "Notebook." pub
lished by I). W. Hueksch, is being put
te a novel use in Hcvcrnl short-story
courses nt Columbia University. The
Instructor has prescribed the book te
the member of his clns&es and given
them tlm following practical assign
ment: Tnke some Idea, situation or
fragment in the "Notebook" nnd do de do
velep it into n short story.
It will be interesting te see-what the
Cehimbln writers will de with n few
Idr-ns lilie the following, picked nt ran
dom from thn "Notebook." "A scholar,
without talent, a bleckhcnd, worked
for twenty-four rears niul produced
nothing geed, gnve the world only
nchelnrs ns iintnlcntcff and an narrow
I minded ns himself. At night he secretly
I bound books that wan hln true voca veca
I tlen ; in that he wtxa an artist and felt
the joy of it. There came te him n
bookbinder who loved learning and
studied secretly at night. Hut perhnpn
the unlverne Is suspended en the teeth
of some monster. A schoolboy treats n
lady te dinner in a restaurant. He hns
only one ruble, twenty kopecks. The
bill tomes te four rubles, thirty ko
pecks. He has no money nnd begin
te cry. The proprietor' boxes hl ears,
lie was talking te the lady of Aby
WW a si ifif m
"
t.rw .
-ii.f'
Vjfl
7;n
As. ''&', ;!.eiirivi-JWi
STORY OF A WOMAlN WHO
LIKED TO GO CAMPING
Many a man with a liking for life In
the open will envy .Tames 0. Wllkln Wllkln
en his wife, Marguerite. Mrs. Wil
kinson hns accompanied her husband In
camping tours In Oregon, California,
Xew Yerk, New Jersey, New Knglnnd
and old England and Scotland, nnd hns
apparently cnteyed the experience. She
has told about it In "The Dingbat of
Arcady" (The Macmlllan Company).
It Is a hook nf kindly and genial human
experience, filled with joy in the benu
ties of nature and lightened by a
friendly tolerance.
The book has fortunately appeared In
the spring, when these who read it can
yield seen te the irresistible temptation
BOOK EXCHANGE
Rare First Editions
AN KXTRAOnDINAIlILY CHOICE AND
" CURIOUS collection of scare and
unique book, llelles Letlres and classical
literature. Completa and ether unabridged
translations. Privately prlnted, limited
edition, nrst edition, association copies,
autographed lettere. Beeks illustrated by
Crulkshank, Howlandsen. etc. pn
Catalogue gent en reiuest. Harry .
Jifarks, lie Nassau St., N. Y, City.
THE DOOKSTER. 148 Lexington Ave.. New
Yerk City. First editions, modern and
classic, ether unusual books, catalogs.
Issued monthly, aent en request.
WOK THE HOOK LOVEK Itare boeka
First editions Beeks new out of print.
Latest catalogue sent en request. C.
Oerhardt. 2B W. 42d St.. New Yerk.
Literature of Other Nations
T IDRAIRIE FIIANCAIBE, HOTEL DRE DRE DRE
voert. New Yerk, will mall unusual, in
formation en French publications.
pBENOII BOOKS all descriptions. Spec, lists
en request. French-American nook Shep,
71 West 00th Street, New Yerk City.
Autographs
AUTOORAPH LETTERS of famous people
bought and sold. Catalogues Issued.
JOnN HEISE. 410 Onondaga Hank Uldg.,
Syracuse. N. T ,
AUTOGRAPH LETTERS of famous people
t..-i. n.t .nt,l - n. Ttenlamln. 147a
Broadway. N. Y.' Pub., the Collector. 1
year. Established 1887. Sample free.
Beeks Wanted
WALT WHITMAN. letters, MSS.. photo
graphs, books wanted. Alse all ether
celebrated autrers. Harry Stene. 137
Fourth Ave., New Yerk'Clty.
OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS FURNISHED.
v Catalogues Issued. E. R. Robinson. 410
River St., Trey, New Yerk.
General Items
RIGHT THINKINO epeni the way te real
health and prosperity. Read The ARC
of Higher Thought, u foundation for con
structive thinking. SO rents. Address
Milten Hubcr. Pelham, N. Y.
n
;THE
Purple Pearl
By Antheny Pryde
Auther of "An Ordeal of Hener"
Selving a mystery,, facing
perils, jumping from one
complication te another,
thrilling feats of courage,
two charming romances
that is the Purple Pearl,
and it's seme book. $1.90.
DODD, MEAD &
Publishers Since 1839
COMPANY
New Yerk!
inpHE Bert of story that tells Scott Fitzgerald and
A the ether young men who write about the 'modern
girl' just" where they get off. An extraordinarily frank
and entertaining novel." Marguerite Moeera Marshall,
New Yerk World. A startling picture of our gay young
people from the "Prem" girl's point of view, written by
one of them.
DANCERS i the DARK
Dorethy Spectre
At All Bookshops $1.75
Lilia Chenewerth
By LEE WILSON DODD
Auther of that untuudl novel, "The Heek of Susan."
Once in a blue moon comes an uncommon story, with unusual peo
ple in it, but also with an added, indefinite quality an imaginative x
It is net what is called realism; yet it is net unreal. Its characters
stand forth and live. Te benin it and net te finish it would be dim
cult. It has in it that added something that imaginative x which
is "the breath and finer spirit" of creative writing which appeals
te all readers of fiction who de net think meanly and mechanically
of human life.
AVe recommend "I.llla Chenewerth" an such a novel. At nil bookstores ?" 00
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 Fifth Avenue, New Yerk
MR. PROHACK
By Arneld Bennett
Auther of "THE OLD WIVES' TALE"
"ReUickmg, brilliant, gay, buoyant, debennaire.
vivacious, brisk, sportive, jelly, frolicsome, waggish
in a, word a rattling tale." Chicago Tribune.
At All Bookseller $U7S
I
The Red Heuse Mystery
By A. A. MILNE
A charming murder story by the author of "The Dever Read"
ail. v V rfMnMi
jie . 4. ..u.. inn ia me
there is tlie charm of th e.iv
"This Is the
,. , " v eijiu, me ueucieus oils or Wit.
The Sum MA well-nigh flawless taie of the unraveling of murder."
Utywoed Breun calls It: "The best murder story we hav rA.i J-.
Sherlock Helmes shut up shop." " u r olery we " read since
ts.00. Any bookseller can supply it; , 0f, ( can be had ,,
MsS" COm 681 fth Ave Ne,Yerk
$&
'JLfMMki
te fellow the example of Mr. antl Mrs.
Wilkinson. Little money Is needed for
the enterprise. The first camping trip
was made In a beat which Mr. Avilkin
Mil built himself beside a saw mill en
the banks of the Willamette Illver In
Oregon because he did net have money
enough te buy one. They had no tent
cither, but carried seme canvas with
which te protect themselves from the
rain. They rowed down the stream,
fishing nnd swimming as the spirit or
necessity dictated and camped en the
bank at night. They made frlends with
the few people they encountered, and
one evening Mrs. Wilkinson recited
poetry te some children from a laborer s
My Memories
of
Eighty Years
Chauncey M. Depew
"I have found a great
deal of inspiration in
your book." '
President Harding. j
At all bookstores, $4.00
I Charles Scribner's Sens, N. Y.
A Sen
the
Tte Greatest of All
DESERT NOVELS
By LOUISE GERARD
GKes ree the
real thrill of the
Sahara with lis
wild nedeulns
and Its ilnre
markets.
THe Presbyterian
Boek Stere
Witherspoon Building
(Second Fleer)
Juniper and Walnut Streets
The best books of all
reputable American and
English publishers.
perfect detective story.
penect aetccuve story. . . . And alwavs
wh mi.ni ....i ..-..'., .!1.1 i-iways
By
Sahara M
I'iai
m in J3HI
JKmTHWH iB I Osnyal
yPJLM iuigjfi L 1
-... ...... , limK vt.aAjl ... , ; ..H'ff ' i
. t . ... . .. ix.vti ?;,. is . ""r
trt:i'i"i'Li . ir...i,r,' ins.'i.W'iTv.v.vi.'iijwrf.v. ri w i
. , .I : j'ii " 4 i. .. j . . v..i tu. - v .jt Ji.ff- . i u
""' '--"- .tiaJf ifta.ri
IN A SINGLE VOLtJMi
family nnd learned In the morning; that
the youngsters wcre se excited by the
beauty of the verses that they could net
get asleep before midnight for talking
bout It. Mrs. Wilkinson has written
Ak, 'iM
JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS
j By the Honorable lichire Tofiutemi
s A a honest, forceful discussion of our mutual national atti-
j tude.s, psychologies and present relations. Originally written
I purely for the Japanese public, it is peculiarly qualified te reveal
t true Japanese oninien without nnv Knrl-. nf nrnnnininiln SI.RO
The Scarlet Tanager
up . Aubrey Tyson
The mystery tnle of ageless
appeal, with threads most in
geniously tangled, and an
amazing denouement. $1.75
64-66 Fifth Avenue
jn
The
CHILD
A WOMAN'S own story of her struggle
,. for happiness. A woman with enough
of the primitive te make her universal, always
human, sympathetic, appealing.
The author approaches the delicate problems
of married life with shrewdness and vision. He
has a keen insight into the heart of humanity,
aryk competent grasp en this thing called Life.
the Auther of
All Stere.
f Miff
I . ' . ; T: " Tfssaasiii -."-ft.-w.
J 1
a book of fellowship with alhcmii
things save, perhaps, cows, At 29
she Is nfraid-and the reading mS
leaves one with a. pleasant and Milifi
warmth around the heart. ""
-A" T,
agKTD j4PTsSfcSztJKijwilBM7rfc3Mywlllva.asj4IEa. '
SgsFftLjIfefeSBBsjBiBMBMSBaBBLsBMBHHSBBHSHeBtaBJ
Descartes said, "I am because I tliinlc."
He might have said, MI am nvhat I am because
I think." Oxford bceh appeal te thinking people.
PRINCIPLES OF REVOLUTION
By C. Dbuslb Burns c( '?"
"This is net an apologia bat tn aipatjilen of certain historic idesli ta4
their application te the drcunutancsa of out own time."
CHILDREN AND CHILDHOOD
y N. Nibmbybr U5
An attempt te tee mere dtttty & , subjects efMrJulegy fa the""rfc
and pUf of mlehfldren. It u .the wmiwm Amtttitna of the fta,
drawn tram life which mktbi book valuable te psmtandtttcht. '
A HISTORY OF GREEK MATHEMATICS
Sa Themas Hbath t. Svoh.fi6.re
Tbe tint competent EegW werfc. b many ywrs eM adwhsatf widt
die history of Greek methtmatk. Ejperw have promoted it a mex
nmatkabie piece of work.
SIR EDWARD FRY: A MEMOIR
Edited by His Daughter M.e
A volume which will stand high rttbe cempered wly amel Get of tern.'
petent biegraphiee of greet lewyet. It recenU a Ide of esmerdmeraV
reried interna end public service merked ec its closer by hie appointment
as Ambassador Eitteerdinaty te the second HegtM Conference.
GOVERNMENT AND INDUSTRY
By C Deuslb Burns Net f5-00
A study of actual practice with e view te discovering rtmdementalpiiadslcs.
It it net a statement of en ideal nor prepagande tee a policy, but such a
survey as may be useful.
GREEK HERO CULTS AND IDEAS OF IMMORTALITY
'By Lewis Richard Farneu. $6.00
This new volume continues end supplements Dr. FernetTa great' work
Ctlu cf tie Greek Stotts. Readers interested in the culture end religious
thought of ancient Greece and students of competitive religion wuTfind
this an indispensable work.
THREE STUDIES IN SHELLEY WITH AN ESSAY ON
NATURE IN WORDSWORTH AND MEREDITH
'By Archibald T. Streng Ss.se
Deals with the' thought and symbolism of Shelley's poetry rather then
with its formal characteristics. A pleasing volume valuable alike for the
light it throws en Shelley and as a study of poetic thought.
p home it real home without bocks.
BOOKS OF THE WEEKl
Snap-shots of winter Washington
PEACEMAKERS BLESSED AND OTHERWISE:
Otscrvajens, Reflections and Irritations at an International
Conference
B Ida M. Tarbell
A delightfully intimate account, acute but never acrid, of
Washington and its peacemakers during the winter months, re
flecting all the currents of feeling, catching all the little flurries
of gossip, that made our capital city such a fascinating location
for the expert news writer. S1.60
A romance of the high seas
""',,,,1ellajajj'ajss efcfcTiV fl astsS0A4SsVss0MsXSsVs4 0jlAAIVfttltft4iV4k9sjfl
CAPTAIN NATHANIEL BROWN PALMER:
An Old-Time Sailor of the Sea
By Jehn R. Spears
The life-story of one of these old, weather-beaten seafaring
New Englanders, the "iron men en wooden ships" who played
such a gallant nnd colorful part in our histery: his discoveries,
fur-sealing voyages, nnd trading trips te the newly opened Orient.
lTSMsJbl en e,gmtic 53
Twe intriguing mystery st oriel
Number 87
By Harrington Hexl
"Head and shoulders above
the average novel of its typ
. . . with imaginative range
and philosophic insight." N.
Y. Evening Pest. 51.50
AX AM. UOOKSTORBS
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
NwVf
A NOVEL BY
ARTHUR
STRINGER
AIRIE
The Prairie Wife WThe Prairie Methei;
BOBBS-MEBJLILL J
. . " 'I .a r TT V.. .?- VlTTTZL J Mvt-mftm
i"( -erm tT!aU's-mTTii.Te--v-j
iktru .iftx.'yiv. .w . .h .-. Jtiri
i.vVt KWWikTft.j;i' a
&&&;'.
vvfinatCiarasiyi. .. J-fs
ua 71" ni in. lau cu .. i' -:. r. i.t." , I I 1