Vi IT" ''' is; i ; ft ' i J 9 1 N : I , 9 i ft I m i 9 V K I K :; t t k t HsawHia lrTgS3TPl 1lnr rrnrfffTT rr -"'" " " ' .-.-,. McCmm m Wm aegg!igi6!waMiawiai n The Ma p . . - - : - . . - . p-" -- . 7.VVk- .! ;-" gazineefaRemader :., i j- i' ,ir fjajttaa, i n """ ;-i..h,l - .',. .i-.-;-Trr-- ., , .M,.,'i . gfjpaggii , "y. ; . , . . . Seme forms of literature attract differ ent types of people, but the novel is in its appeal universal. And se there is great need of clean fiction, which, like the poetry of old, shall win the mind from wickedness te virtue, or, in ether words, shall aid in building up the character of the American people. 0 The estimate of the value of right fiction given in his letter of March i, 1922 te the editor by the distinguished president of Bowdoin the famous old New England college that gave Longfellow and Hawtlierne te literature has always been shared by, and reflected in, THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE. Thus in the May issue RUPERT HUGHES tells the truthful story of a modern girl's achievements in the new art of the motion pictures in his novel "Seuls for Sale." . CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLAND begins his new novel of this day and hour, "Contra band," in which a modern girl engages in'cembat with the new forces df a new evil; GEORGE GIBBS pictures in his moving novel of modern society, "Mamselle Ghi ie" the remaking of a girl's soul and its test, by fire. "The Miracle? in the same issue, is another of the heart reaching stories of the Mexican border, by J GERALD BEAUMONT "InhibitingWattles" is a Freud ian story of a very timely sort of complex, by a delightful humorist, MAXWELL. STRUTHERS BURT "Fallen Arches'1 is another story of that gallant old knight of the border rangers, Cap'n Bill Titus, by- J. FRANK DAVIS "The Winds of Heath" is the best mystery story se far in the new series of detective tales being written for the magazine by E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM "The fyiarter-MUlien Nete" is a story of a man's character as meulded te his greater geed by his wife. By LAWRENCE PERRY "Drifters" is a singularly moving and dramatic story of an old animal trainer and his lien by COURTNEY RYLEY COOPER "A Certain Something" is a deeply revealing story of one of these "girls of service" who wait en you in our great modern stores, by GRACE SARP WELL MASON "One Minute en the 600" is a story of what men de for each ether, told against the back ground of a great Western mine, by REUBEN H. MAURY "The Man Smith" is still an other character-revealing story of intense dramatic strength and punch, by O. R LEWIS "Tlie Steve" is a most unusual story of the "eternal moment" that came into the life of a frontier woman, by M. L. C. PICKTHALL " The Miracle of the Feminine " is an editorial that all women will appreciate and some men by THOMAS L. MASSON The Heme -Trail in May" is another poem that sings what's in the heart of most efus these days, by TOM DALY "On Being Toe Careful" is one of the most stimulating edi torials ever written by BRUCE BARTON rf Parents may keep abreast of the current of education by reading the Residential Scheel Announcements in each issue of THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE May Issue at all News Stands - Price 25 cents MS T-i-rja W Jl'J '4 vm m$r r "'flniie rtff.kV . ;&a 'W'ii J&tLJAXt S'AL'.'l .WSM tfjsa J'Wi m fiw. . m 'j m jw jM jjea Vi i-M fHJ -L Afl M . ' K SM $ 4Si l u . M ' mn A. 'J 5S v Ml y 11 m K4 ;i it " 'ii v 1 ; j M :a m ,!' Vf' -. I l ".I Ik A- 4 '' - u ,2. It ,X)M a :: fh Z sm 'ffl Tea xTtz: :tyi 1 V'.J V nftt: -"1 ii .'r'MS.H flSOJ iM V w ..,. . u w,, ,at t -j j v i ife&l& 'T n J v- . -. ?. C mt'M .i.r7C .AMi . "i! .. TBFAT fli
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers