S. i .T v kr , Kj& lrf "V $ s If ty 24 tA I. hw Is. U" & M- 1- Kf. RKt : r r.T t- -f tfV J ? feu;- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEK PHILADELPHIA, 'THURSDAY, MA$? 25, 1022 , , The Magazine of a Remade World Smtmbtitenfti. professor 0 (English jOterafere at Williams Allege IhE possibilities of Fiction are infinite. It can t uncover the miraculous beauty at the heart of the commonplace. It can lend effectiveness te the most tenuous hopes and dreams. It can reveal, beneath the surfaces of life, the conditions of man's being, the truth that underlies his existence. It arises from an indestructible instinct in human nature, the instinct for self-expression and self-realization. 3 t(JV4 1 3. WMrtu Dr. Duttens splendid definition of the infinite possibilities of Fietien expressed in a letter of March 31, 1922, te the editor is in perfect accord with the ideals of THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE ideals that are expressed in the June issue by IOSEPH HERGESHEIMER RUPERT HUGHES BOOTH TARKINGTON who in this number begins his glowing, who writes with a rare sense of drama and who reveals again his magic insight into the romantic novel of a young man's adven- feeling for reality in the greatest novel of hearts of youth in his delightfully whimsical tures in Cuba, "The Bright Shawl" his career, "Seuls for Sale" story, 'Renfrew and the New Generation" WALLACE IRWIN whose gentle, eminently human satire was never mere delightfully ch-c'eed than in "Her Ovsn L-je" MELVILLE DAVISSON POST who justifies again the honor ,if being re garded 'n America and Kurepc as the great est living my uery w nrcr in " The Diamond" TOM DALY who contributes te tlr iuc another m" Ivs biting poems, "'The M'dland Ma rer Manner" GERALD BEAUMONT v. he.c sporting stories have all appeared in th.s maga zine te the increasing delight or" readers and who here wmes "The Bull Batten" JACK BOYLE A distinguished Rkd Heek. hiiWih author who leaves Chin this men'h te tell a d'tfercnt s-irt of sterv, "Without Merr" CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLAND who writes of today and tomorrow in a new novel of mystery and achievement "Contraband" M. L. C. PICKTHALL a new writer who here tells in a new and tensely gripping way a story of high achievement - "The Men Who Climbed" THOMAS L. MASSON whose tenderness and human sympathy is beautifully revealed in "Salhe Jenes" HONORE WILLSIE who tells the .story of a girl engineer and what great thing came te her at last in "The Swimming Master" O. F. LEWIS whose stones in the past have wen him signal honors among our newer writers and who here tells the story "Crime Crime" E.' PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM who has nccr written a mere engrossing scries of stories than the one which is repre sented in the June issue by "Bexes oGed"i GEORGE GIBBS whose novel of American society is the story of a house built upon the shifting mds" Mamsele Cherie" BRUCE BARTON who again rings the bell with one of his common-sense editorials, "He It'euld Have Xe Bess" mP Parents may keep abreast of the current of education by reading the Residential Scheel Announcements in each issue of THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE g) Tf vr ijfiir. June Issue at all News Stands - Price 25 cents lilJlILH 1 M m irj i Ta . ! M ( a 1 J .1 J ( ) I I ; J ;! I L t I ( I 1 I I ) m& 1 ST. , H '&;? ; 2SS fes. -u 'ii S i KrtiiMt.' ' ' . . j. ,,k1 .' m& I; Kl &mm&s.. lVGx&Ki.. ,1 ,,., -"Vl..jtf " Wllt J. ,r, V m :t 'ft. wryAy.ffaa:A.-fvjig' , w&inmitu .tr! "-'-'rV-i-.'Lsiil I ..ll. r..., I