SPHr? I'AJ T ,JpgJ!iSS3 J -' '4jM wmm i s MEMOIRS OF THE . CROWN PRINCE or GERMANY & te read them through te the end- They, are t0 l";i.-.:ni1v written: (C are often naive and always human. New Yerk Herald Ve found the memoirs fascinating. . . . Yntcnse y personal; but honestly searching." yew Yerk Mall i irAUSTItATED. $5.00 At all bookstores Charles Scribner's Sens lELLEN GLASGOW naa tariff n A Nevel of Courage It is beautifully wrought. There is net a slurred passage in it. It is one of the most entertain ing and thoughtful stories Miss Glasgow has written. At Boekttortt Evtrywhtre $2.00 Doubleday, Page & Ce. Garden City, New Yerk ONE MAN IN HIS TIME INVISIBLE EXERCISE Stun Stitdies in Self-Command with Practical Suggestions and Drills By GERALD STANLEY LEE The story, told with character iitic originality and humor, of setting-up exercises taken with out getting up ten minutes early or interrupting one's work. f 3 00. At all bookstores. 1 P. Dolten & Ce., 681 5th Ar N. Y. THEN CAME MOLLY by Harriet V. C. Ogden An eld-fashlnnprl rnmnnrn ftinf. will be enjoyed by all who like s dean, wholesome love story. At all bookstores $1.76 THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANT Philadelphia BEST BOOKS of all reputabhAmcrican and English publishers PRESBYTERIAN BOOK STORE Whv Delav Renrlinr' That Boek Yeu Want hen you can rent it promptly for a small fee from Womrath's Library Our dhelTf are tilled with elean copies of the latest no tion and the mere popular books f athtT Mnai. PHILADELPHIA BRANCH 1R QH..iL TLJ . e. w yuuui inininnm ar. DAne.irN IN U8ED BOOKS ACOBS ,.2. VOR CHESTNUT 'BOOKS tt UY A BOOK A WEEK" witherspoen Buildini ML, f Sttomrjeor) II JjLJUt"Pey and Walnut Sii.rfJ 77 ATOFEL ,4 USEFUL INSTRUMENT OF PROPAGANDA Wells Hopes for a Better World Through Enlightened Selfishness HO. WELLS 1b an unmitigated And confessed propagandist. Every ene of his novels In recent years has been written te further some theory In which he was interested nt the time. He became interested in religious things during the war and he created a new god whom he described in "fled the Invisible King," and then In "The Seul of a Bishop," a novel filled with reli gious discussion, he had u dignitary of the Church of England discover the same god. These two books en religion were a digression from his chief Interests. He Is necking te remake society en a plan of his own, and he has set forth that plan In various and differing forms in n series of books. His latest, "The Secret riaccs of the Heart" (the Macmll Ian Company), is In the form of a novel. Indeed, it Is advertised as a wetk nf fiction. But an a novel it is negligible. It is a scries of discussions of the place of man en earth and of the imperative necessity of solving the world fuel prob lem according te a socialistic plan. The first part of the book is occupied by a discussion between two men and the second part te a discussion between a man and a woman. The man and woman arc chance acquaintances, who remain together for only a few days, but Mr. Wells has them fall in love and separate lest their love should prevent them from doing 'what they can' te solve the fuel problem. But at the end Of the book the. man dies of pneumonia and we are left in doubt about what .hap pened te the .woman. But it docs net matter, for sbe Is introduced only .for the purpose of getting a new point of view en the general problem 'of- the book, and perhaps te induce .women .te read what he has te say by Indicating that women, as well as men, can be interested in great International ques tions. The book as a sociological tract i much mere readable than it would have been if Mr. Wellt had met put his arguments in the mouths of dif ferent people and thus brought about a clash of ideas. THE chief character is Sir Richmond T IIUIU, tt AJllliau I.VUI urciaiut u..t tne neaa or. n tuei commission. J. no career of the late Lord Rhondda was doubtless drawn en for some of the detail in the career of Sir Richmond. The man in the novel was near a nervous breakdown from overwork and he Is introduced in the office of a nerve specialist, who advises ,that he take two weeks off from work and tour Western England with him while they discuss his case. The discussion becomes really a discussion of the place of man in the world and the duty of man te forget himself in his efforts te conserve the natural resources for the general geed. And naturally, under the hand of Mr. Wells, the way te conserve the general geed Is through his form of so cialism. He has the nerve specialist, who is writing a book en the psychol ogy of the new age, say that the "con scious getting out of one's individuality is ene of the most Important and in teresting aspects of the psychology of the new age that Is new dawning. We, this small but growing minority, con stitute that part of life which knows and wills nnd tries te rule its destiny. And ns far as we are concerned we are the true kingship of the world. Neces sarily. We who knew are the true king." The discussion centinues: "I agree," said Sir Richmond pres ently. "One does think In this fash ion. Semething1 In this fashion. What one calls one's work does belong' te something much bigger than our selves.. Something much bigger." "Which something we become," the doctor urged, "In se far as our work takes held of us." Sir Richmond made no answer te this for a little while. "Of course, THE TROPBLED ORIENT Economic and Political Ferment Discussed in Twe New Beeks Students of world affairs are sound ing the tocsin of alarm and urging Eu Eu Eu repe and the United States te watch the fermenting in the East Far and Near and te take heed of what are termed unmistakable signs. Japan, China, India, the Philippines all these are being 6tlrred by the war aftermath, political, religious and eco nomic. These conditions are largely economic, according te Frailer Hunt, who went out as n reporter, and in "The Rising Temper of the East" fllebbs Merrill) tells of conditions as he found them, without attempting te argue. In the mass of argumentation this state of affairs In the Orient has brought forth the work of Mr. Hunt is refreshing, te say the least. Inte India he went and chatted with Gandhi befere his Impris onment by the British. In .Tapan he met Kagawa, the liberal, who Is al most as potent a power in his own land us Is the "Sulnt of India" in his. , In Korea, the Hermit Kingdom, In the Philippines, in Siberia and even In China Mr. Hunt heard the cry ''Lib erty nnd Land" rising in different tongues. In some places It still Is a mere mumbling, but Mr. Hunt feels It Is a crv that seen will become a rear that th'e rest of the world must heed. T ntlirmi Mtmlrinrrl. who .ilreadr has warned of the perils of the Kant, bus mere te t-ny in "The New World of Islam" (Scrlbners). His viewpoint is i mere of the student than the reporter nnd. therefore, is poselbly less Interest ing te the casual reader, but the sltua , tlen apparently is such that reporter, 'savant or even casual traveler has a message that should be heeded. Dr. Stoddard declares that from Morocco ' te China and from Turkestan te the I Cerge 2.10,000,000 followers of Me- 1 iimmcd are switjiib m new ..u-n. .im pulses and aspirations. These changes Dr. Steddaid feels are climaxing In ro re llglcus lines and the evolution bodes ill Mr! Hunt tells of conditions as the reporter sees them and Dr. Stoddard delves deeper Inte the fundamentals. Each has the same message couched In different terms. Still Read After Thirty-five Yeare The fact that a new edition of "Lit tle Lord Fauntleroy" has Just been published by Charles Scribner's Sens draws attention te the remarkable lon gevity of this childhood classic and te the sustained careers of both its author nnd Its Illustrator. Although "Little Lord rnuntlerey" first uppenred In 1880. Mrs. Frances Hodgsen Burnett, the author, Is etlll a leading novelist, while Reginald C. Illrrh, the IlltiHtra IlltiHtra ter, has redrawn his original illustra tions for the new edition In pen and ink, we trail a certain egotism Inte our work," he said. "Could we de other wise? But It has ceased te be purely egotism. It Is no longer '1 am I,' but 'I am part.' One wants te be an hon orable part." Thus docs Mr. Wells Indlcate his be lief In the cxlstcnce of men who are thinking in terms of the general geed rather than in terras of their own profit. Few will deny that the solution of the pressing problems before the world depends en the enlargement of this number of broad-vhiencd men. THEN the novelist comes down te the coal problem In England and the Ceal Commission. Sir Richmond wants the coal in England te be mined and sold for the benefit of all the people and net for the benefit of the mine own ers, and he wants the coal and oil of the whole world te be treated in the same way. But he says that when he says this te his commission "they stare at me like a committee in a thieves' kitchen when some one casually men tions the law." Vet he insists that every member of the commission is dissatisfied. "They pursue their own ends bitterly and obstinately, I admit," says Sir Richmond, "but they are bitter and ob eb ob stinate because they pursue them against an internal opposition which is en my side. They are terrified te think, if once they stepped fighting me, hew far they might net go with me." In another place Sir Richmond Is made te say, "Given a change in 4aws and prevailing ideas, and the very same peeple who are greedy traders and grasping owners will work together cheerfully, even generously, for common ends." And Mr. Wells, speaking through Sir Richmond, says: "This is my chief discovery about life. I began with the question of fuel and the energy it af fords mankind, and I have found that my generalization applies te all human affairs. Human beings are feels, weak lings, cowards, passlonate idiots I grant you. But they are net such feels and se forth that they can't de pretty well materially it once we hammer out a sane collective method of getting and using fuel." Curious stuff, this is, te put in a novel, but Mr. "Wells has the audacity te de it and still call the book a novel. THE last two or three quotations are from the conversation of Sir Rich mond with the daughter of an Ameri can oil millionaire, the. girl with whom he fell in love while talking socialism and fuel control te her. An American girl is patently introduced in order te get what Mr. Wells is doubtless pleased te regard as the point of view of a wom an en the merits of a problem which she could regard without the precon ceptions that Invariably arise from inti mate connection with ownership and personal responsibility for vast proper ties. The girl agrees with Sir Rich mond, se Mr. Wells says in effect: "Beheld what the women who are te have an increasing share in the politics of the world think about this socialistic solution of the fuel problem and take warning." All the story there Is in the book could have been told in twenty pages. These who read for a story will doubt less threw the book aBlde before they get half way through it. Fer their benefit it should be .said that it Is in the latter half that such story as there Is is told. But, as already indicated, the book is negligible as a work of fic tion. It Is the latest feim in which Mr. Wells has set forth bis plan for a better world. GEORGE W. DOUGLAS. CORNERING RADIUM "Men of Affairs" a Genuine Thriller of Many Hazards Reland Pcrtwee's "Men f Affairs" (Alfred A. Knopf, Inc is labeled en the wrapper "The thriller of the cen tury." It's net n bad description. Of course, the century is still young, se te speak, If Is meant the current century, which may yet de something sensational In the literary line. It can't be the last century, the blue ribbon of which be longs te the "Count of Mente Chrlste," or the eighteenth century, which had "The Mysteries of Udolpho" and "The Castle of Utrante" for Its thrillers, nor the seventeenth, which In ."Robin son Crusoe" supplied all time with thrillers. Certainly Mr. Knopf's claim for Mr. Pertwce's Ingenious, lntricate and well-written book Is sustained by nu merous predicaments, complications, hairbreadth escapes and hatr-ralsing hazards. In fact, "Men of Affairs" is ene of the most thrilling books that ever kept readers from turning off the gas and going .te bed. The plot concerns the rival efforts of two groups, made up of men of wealth and position, te get possession of terri tory In which lie vast deposits of ores from which radium Is extracted. There are really two heroes te the plot the man who knows the secret location and gees off te get the concession, and the man who leeks like him enough te be kidnapped by the opposition, while the one he Impersonates is gaining the treasure for his group. There are two interesting girls, tee, some clever sleuths, several callous financiers and a delightful old mother, The plot Is capitally developed and the action is of the breakneck sort. A Christmas Card Peet Albert J. Kinross, the English au thor of the recently published "The Truth About Vignolles,' Is rather well known te the American public for a number of novels which hove been pub lished here, as well as short fiction in our magazines. But hew many knew what he has confided te' the Century Company? that he was at ene time foreign correspondent and bookkeeper nnd finally poet in a Christmas card factory. "One of the few modern poets," he remarks, "te earn a living by the nrt!" Rockwell Kent In Patagonia Rockwell Kent, the American artist, author of tbe book "Wilder-nets," wherein he describes a year spent with his nine-year-old son en an Alaskan Island, has Just left en a tramp steamer for Patagonia. Mr. Kent will put In sonic eight months en the southernmost tip of Seuth America painting, drawing and preparing an illustrated book of ex ploration which the 1'uluams expect te publish next year, THE POET IN ACTION Illustration by Stuart Hay from Den Marquis' "Bennets te a Rd- Haired Lady" PRISONERS OF WAR! Harvard Lad Shows Up French Internment Camps B r i t i s h Captain's Escapes Frem Fees Edward S. Cummlngs. a Harvard boy, enlisted with the Norten -Hnrjcs Ambulance Unit long before the United States entered the war. Tempera mental, admittedly a follower of the Harry Kemp sartorial manner, young Cummlngs nnd a chum ene day found themselves under arrest as spy suspects owing te seme lU-advlsed letters writ ten by the chum that fell in the French censer's hands. Given chances te clear himself, Cummlngs deliberately talked himself into imprisonment and for many long months was held nt a French internment prison. "The Enormous Roem" (Beni and Liveright) is the re sult. It is without doubt one of the frankest, most uncensercd and withal at times superbly written of the many war books published. With tts object candidly a bludgeon ing of the French prison system, Cum mlngs has adopted as his style an un restrnlncd method of expression thnt would make even Eugene O'Neill in his wildest dramaturgic moments sound like a biblical lecturer. Terms of the trenches, expressions heard in every army but deleted even in the most free and easy of homes nnd avoided by the most audacious sub-deb, slither through the book" in appalling fashion. This unbridled license of language nnd a fidelity te detail that becomes nauseat ing nt times give "The Enormous Roem" its only black marks. What are sometimes called "chalk words" or "fence words'" used ostentatiously, net organically, mar the merits of but de net ruin this book of real power. But Cummlngs would have been just as powerful and mere effective if nt times he had net tried te "show off" and "shock." When describing his companions In misery and filth Cum mlngs reveals ownership of a pen thnt can portray patnes or humor with vivid and unforgettable strokes. It Is the almost superlative merit of some et these passages that makes "The Enor mous Roem" worth the trip through the muck that clutters it. Anether belated war book but of In- terest from preface te finis is "The Escaping Club" of Capt. A. J. E. Evans, R. F. C. (MeCann). Cnpt. Evans was unlucky in being unable te keep out of the clutches of the enemv. but proved himself an adept In proving that "iron bars de net a prison meke." His story is a stmple narrative of the multitudinous tricks and daring of Al lied officers In various German nrlsen camps. Then, after finally getting away irem ucrmany, wvans had te be captured again by the Turks. Escape, thence, tee. followed in due cehm. Probably If the war hadn't ended Evans today would be getting ready te be capiurea or re mane another escape. NEW BOOKS General THE OnEAT SECRET, ny Maurice Maeter linck. New Yerk: The Century Com Cem puny. A discussion of metaphysical subject of me eiucr vrnriu Dmiosepniee. A GATE or CEDAR. 71y Katherlne Morae. New lerk: Macmlllan -Company, Verses by a Jeunrer neet. whlrh h much loveliness of concept and melodiousness ei exprreaiun. IN HARMONY WITH UFE Tty Harriet Prentiss. Philadelphia: J. I). Llpptn Llpptn cett Company. Provides mental end spiritual shock ab sorbers against the cares nnd frets of hur ried modern llvtn. Kull of valuable and rmrtks I surseatlens toward making life mere uvuuir. AT THE MOMENT OF DEATH. Ry Ca mllle Flammarlen. New Yerk: Century One of a trlleay deallnc with life after death, by the noted French savant and as tronomer. UNDER THE ROOF OF THE JUNCJLE. nv Charles Livingston Bull, Hest en: Page Company. A book of animal Ufa in the Guiana wilds. The text la entertainingly and ob eb eervlngly written and the noted author-artist ha supplied nfty-nlne plates and many miner decorations from life drawings. BUrrrT AND DEMAND, ny II. D. Hen Hen dereon. New Yerk: Harcourt, Brace It Ce, A elume In the excellent Cambridge Eco nomic Handbooks, of which the noted crltle of the Versailles Treaty. Jehn Mavnard Keynes. Is general editor. This contribu tion Is by a, fellow of Clsre College and Cambridge University lecturer In economics, and Is an up-te-date restatement et the topic, briefly but agreeably written, EVERY DAY USES OF ENGLISH. By Maurice Weaeen. New Yerk: T. T. Crewell Company. The language Is considered as an every day tool. Principles are discussed and Illustrated from the point of view et appli cation te everyday life. The book will be found conveniently helpful both tn office and clasjioem. Fiction TWO OUN flUE. ny Douglas Orant. tr Yerk: R. H. McBrlde Company. The ftrht of a Western jrlrl against great odd Is the substance of this thrilling novel. THE CAMOMILE.. By Catherine Carswell. New Yerk: Harcourt. Brace A Ce. The effect of a continental and musical environment en a Bcetala. daughter of a minister, la developed In this well-written noel. DESERT DUST, By Edwin L. Habln. Phil- adelphla: O. W. Jacobs Company. A novel of Western Amerlea In the mak ing. It Is ret a cowboy romance of the typical wild and wooly kind, but a carefully developed romance with atmosphere and characterisatien. But there Is also a plot et gripping quality. THE MAKING OF A SAINT. By W. Bem- erset Maugham. Bosten: The Page Company A romance of medieval Italy. HAPPY RASCALS. BvP, Morien Heward. New Terk: E. P. Dutten A Ce Slerlee, of the ceastwlee British sailing man. full of the reek of the forecastle and the salt aaer of sea air. Ingenleua and amusing ahert stories, THE CITV OF KiRBi , Pr r,e Living. sten Hill. Philadelphia: j. b. Llp- plncett Company. " Anether of Mr Hill's delightfully de- velered and substantia,! terUi. The here- Ine I the beautiful daughter et a email town minister Inte whose life cemre a mur" der myatrry ImelUng one whom she lees The eterv ha, of course a high moral tone, but Is net preachy. The tragedy finally yields ti happiness, after much testing of BURLESQUE SONNETS Den Marquis' Tributes te a Red Haired Lady Contain Real Poetry There Is delight In Den Marquis' Tntest book of verse for these who like burlesque and genial satire. He calls the book "Sonnets te n Red Haired Lndy" (Doubleday, Page & Ce.), and lntlmntes thnt they are writ ten "by n gentleman with n blue benrd." The sonnets, addressed te Sue of the flaming locks,' tell what happened te thirty previous wives and warn her te bewnre of their fate. Here is the first one, which will give an idea of the style of them nil: Comet, shake out your locks and let mem na.re Acress the startled heaven of my soul ! Pluck out the hairpins, Sue, and let her roll I Don't be se stingy with your bloom ing hair, But let the whole created cosmos share The glory of Its color, flashed and swiriea Like nets of sunset flung te mesh the world Don't wear it in a little wad up there ! And yet, Suzanne, my comet and my star. At times restrain these locks (t little, tee My first wife let her hair go qulte tee far In culinary ways. I beaned her. Sue She looked se wistful as she passed away, That dear, lest woman, Sue! All, welladay I And se it gees, with reminiscences of the whole thirty, most of them end ing with a wistful and regretful "Well aday!" And each sonnet is constructed with a skill In rhyme nnd n versatility In epithet which will command the ad miration of every one nt nil interested in the technique of verse making. And there flnsh out two or three lines of real poetry In each sonnet. The sequence cutis with three sonnets in a serious vein. In Which Mnrmilq confesses ns he has done before thnt llfn Is se terri ble that he can contemplate it only with a inugning mask, less it should break mm completely. He appropriate! v Includes in the vel ume fifteen rhymed stories of famous leve affairs from that of Adam and Eve te that of Othelle nnd Dcsdemena, written with the same combination of colloquial slang and poetic metaphor that distinguishes the sonnets. The book Is illustrated by Stunrt Hay, who has caught the spirit of the thing. Zane Grey Gathering Material J5anc Grey has left Flne,tnff for the Indian reservation out around Knyentn. One of the feminine members of the party Is Mrs. Westbroek Robertsen, of Phoenix, who will illustrnte the novel for which Mr. Grey is gathering ma terial en this trip, and which will suc ceed his Just-published novel, "Te the Inst .Man." Mrs. IlohrrtKen is nnr- ticularly ndept In portrayal of Western scenery nnd of Indian life. A New McCutcheon Story Geerge Bnrr McCutcheon has deliv ered the manuscript of his latest novel te his publishers. Dedd, Mead & Ce. "Viela Gwln" Is Its title nnd we under stand it is a romantic story of Indiana nt the time of the Black Hawk War, early In the nineteenth century. Who Can Tell? Has Bertn Ruck been smitten with psyche-nnnlysls? Her publishers mij net, but her new story, te be published in the fall, is called "The Subconscious Courtship." and thnt rnlses visions of suppressed desires, complexes nnd lib idos. Perhaps every courtship does. AT THEREE LIBRARY Boek added te the Tree Library. Thlr. teenth and Locust stream, during the week ending May 2.1: Miscellaneous Afdanis. Jnne 'Tence nml nrd." Cram. K. A. "Toward the (Jreat Peace " Maclver XI. M. "Community." Replnsten. C. aC "After the War." Shaw. K. R. "National Question Heek." Fiction Comsteek. H. T. "'At the Crossroads." Lutr. a. L,. II. "City of Fire I-yndr, Francis "PIrntes' Hepe ' Ralne. W. M. "Mtn-slze." Reel. A. J "Moen Heek Turner. J. H. "Where Your Treasure Is " """"Trf sf"slsTish-J'T':sW'"-sJ"-srsyig 1 -T---- rT"" VVvvVVO -ffUjf 6j GRACT LrvlNGSTON ;H!EiX zy- aW l( k fcN'V'eSW A man's heart is The City of Fire which flames with love, hope, passion, heroism. Mrs. Hill has woven her tale with great skill. The characters are intensely human a beautiful girl, a minister who is a man, a millionaire who is net, until but wait, every page thrills with action. Mrs. Hill's stories please every member of the family. They pass from hand te hand nnd are recommended everywhere. eince sue wrote "Mnrcla Schuyler" give ner readers just what thev is a Sprinjrtime romance that will finer emotions. . . LILIA CHENOWORTH By LEE WILSON DODD, author of "The Boek of Susan" The New Yerk Times cemments: "Lilia in spirit is a liberator. She attempts everything, even the impos impes ible. With passion and zeal, with her tiny lamp held high she pen etrates beyond the commonplace where beauty 1b always defeated and never defeated. Lilia is subtle in temperament; she is delicate of mind; whimsical, tender, clear-visiened and bold. She is a romantic figure of literature. And once created she steps blithely into the story and carries it forward at a brisk pace." tt.OO. Any bookstore can supply it: if net, it can be had from E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681FU th Avenue, New Yerk BLOCKING ZEEBRUGGE Commander of Vindictive Nar rates Heroic Effert te Pen Undersea Scorpions Today, when the events of the late war rapidly are becoming obscured by the nevcr-fnlllng onrush of memory destroying time, some heroic events of that stupendous struggle still stand out unchallenged In the annals of hcrodem. Oqe of these was the successful block ing of the Zeebrugge Canal, where the Germans had their submarine base from which scorpions of the sea started out en death-dealing Journeys, sparing neither fee nor neutral, combatant nor Invalid ncr dying, men, women or children. Captain A. F. B. Carpen ter, V. C, R. N., has told the In side story of Ulls exploit In "The Uloeklnir of Zeebruffee" (Houghten, Mifflin Company), und his narrative surely deserves a prominent plere In any war library. Captafn Carpenter, who commanded the Vindictive, the craft that enrrjed Its men te the Mele, where a side at tack was carried en while the block ing ships slipped into place, was In a position te observe nil that was going en. Alse he, with Vice Admiral Keyes. was. one of the authors of the plan of blocking. Therefore, he speaks with authority. The first part of the book Is taken up with a painstaking discussion of the plan itself, its difficulties and its haz ards. Everything is told in a plain, simple manner nnd se interestingly that the mass of detail never bores. Then comes the quick, thrilling story of the fight. Contain Carpenter never descends te grandiloquent verbiage, but succeeds, almost, In making his pages Hve the gallant fight once mere. All In nil it Is a well-done contribution te war history. Mrs. Lee's Ghost Story "Uncle BIJeh's Ghost," Jenncttc Lee's new novel (Scrlbners), offers nn explanation of spiritual phenomena of the sort described by Sir Oenan Deyle. "It is, se far as I knew," sayB Mrs. Lee, "the first attempt te show in a commonsense way, se that ordinary people can understand, thnt most of the 'supernatural' eccurences are cap able of being explained in terms of science, nnd thnt all Indications point tn u clearing up of the whole subject by science when our knowledge of scien tific phenemenn Is mere fully developed. The book docs net question cither the geed faith or the Intelligence of people who hue hnd experiences nnd relate them. It merely does net ncccpt the su pernatural explnnntien accorded them. It Is net based en theory. Many of the experiences related In It were ray own, nnd it was In thinking en these and trying te understand them, thnt I came te believe what I have put down In the book." NVe,vvVVVVVVVVievVVVVVSsyV I BOOK EXCHANGE I Rare First Editions W A. OOUUII. 41 East uOtli Street, New " Yerk, Issues n monthly list of old, rnre ani curious books which he wilt be nliased te eend te collectors en requeet. When writing please atate our Interest. Autographed Letters kUTOQRAPH Letter of famous people beueht and sold. W. R. Benjamin. 1476 Broadway. N. Y. Pub. the Collector. II r Eatahllshetl 1S87 Samples free. WAMi: II! Association of historical Fourth Ave.. autographed letters, M3M, hooks, of famous people or Interest. Harry Htone, 137 New Yerk t'ltr. Beeks Wanted 0UT '-Or-rRINT BOOKS TURNISHED r-RtnlnRues Issued E. R. Robinson. 410 River St., Trey, New Tork. Second-Hand Beeks W ILLIAM H. ALLEN, 3417 Walnut St. Philadelphia. Pm end-hand boeka In the humanities Catnleuue of classic, phllos phlles phllos eriy and general llterature ready shertl. Want Hit luit out oed net of the New 8chan-I(erzeg Encyclopedia et Bellgleus Knowledge, twele inlumei, published at jne 00 for 140.00. Telephone Preston MS.1 ZXSXXXS xt s-SJSJX in lBea she has never failed te want. The Citv of Fire stir te life new thoughts and 52.00 at All Bookstores. TOA frAiragr viAN'WITHABi &' S AND w FAMOUS LOVE AFFAIRS BY DON MARQUIS Drawings by Stuart Hay . . I've heard your brother call you Burning Shame: Seme day I'll bend that peer simp's vital frame Beyond repair 1 Suxanne, sweet Car Car eot Tep." At your boelutore $1.7$ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. GARDEN CITV NEW YORK The Sensation of the Way of Revelation A Nevel of Five Years. By WILFRID EWART The greatest book about the war since the war. Leaves yew with strong convictions and n sense of having known the characters and having lived through their experiences. The author pictures with remarkable skill the effects of the war upon a group of men and women in a novel of which Sir Philip Gibbs says, "Ne mere truthful nnd vivid picture of life between 1914-19 has been written in English." $2.G0 Tramping With a Peet in the Reckies By STEPHEN GRAHAM, Auther of "EurepeWhither Bound?" The account of a trip through the Reckies made by Vachel Lindsay, the poet, nnd Stephen Grahnm. The book abounds with charming descriptions of the primitive route they selected, and relates the delightfully intimate talks en all manner of subjects between these two distinguished men. Illustrated by Vernen Hill. $2.00 The Mercy of Allah B hilaire bellec i The keen satire and brilliant wit of Mr. Bellec flew untram meled through this entcrtuining novel of a modern Oriental's amazing business ventures, in which the reader will recegnize the application te our own business world. ?2.00 JAY WILLIAM HUDSON'S Abbe call Qasceny JfjOfefaO Pierre ... M (Cf f V 7'tmej. THE MOST rSMVErtSALIr PRAISKD NOVEL) OF Tlin SEASON Fer Sale at All Booksellers D. APPLETON & COMPANY An Instant Success in Londen THE LOVE-STORY OF ALIETTE BRUNTON By GILBERT FRANKAU Auther of "Peter Jamesen," eiv. A POWERFUL dramatic novel which has had a remark able success (both popular and with the critics) in Eng land, where ever twenty thousand copies were reported sold within a few weeks after publication. The Tatler says: "Every character stands out as a real human and extremely vivid picture of Londen society." It is the passionate love story, clean and fine despite its location beyond the conventional social cede, of a woman te whom her husband refuses te give a divorce. ($2.00) THE LAURENTIANS By T. M. Longstreth The author of "The Adiron dack's" and "The Catskills" gives here at once a sort of glorified guide-book and a fascinating nar rative of travel in the quaint Canadian mountain country beyond Quebec. (Illustrated, $3.50.) PLOTS AND PERSONALITIES By E. E. Slosten Auther of "Crentlrr Cliemlhtr.T," etc. ar d June E. Downey Fer the literary person in par ticular and for every alert-minded reader in general, dealing with the imagination and the possibility of testing it. ($1.75) THE CENTURY CO. THE CENTURY 0tir- ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE THE AMERICA! 353 FOURTH :A&2 SBSBSBSBSB' GENTLE JULIA By BOOTH TARKINGTON "Don't miss this boek: But don't try te read it aloud te any one. Yeu couldn't de it justice, net in its best parts, because no ene can speak distinctly who is all broken up with laughing." New Yerk Times. "Tarkingten at his best; it could net be mere readable. It is simply delightful from cover te cover." New Yerk Pest. At every Bookstore $1.75 Doubleday, Page & Ce. $ Garden City, New Yerk SUNNY-SAN By Oneto Watanna Auther of "A Japanese Nightingale," etc. t Delightfully quixotic romance of the adventurist 'a little geisha girl in New Yerk. Four young Americans had syndicated her education in Japan and when she turned up in New Yerk Well, it is a humorous. warmly human, lovable story. At All Bookshops $2.00 I ' T - 'it Season in Londen ROMANCE OF GASCONY "Never did a mero delightfully human, Kym pathetic, loyal, clear sighted and shrewd, pleuii. jet worldly wise and altogether leable perionage his hotne than the Kcntle Abbe A novel of beauty." Xew Yerk tt.09 These Are Appleton Boek New Yerk Londen dim THE GREAT SECRET By Maurice Maeterlinck Anether of the author's pros masterpieces in which he presents in beautiful and memorable style some of the occult questions that have haunted mankind through the ages. (Cleth, $2.00. Leather $3.00.) AT THE MOMENT OF DEATH By Camille Flammarien The second volume of the famous scientist's great trilogy en survival after death. This new volume pre sents fascinating evidence of man's phenomenal psychic power at the very moment of physical dissolution. ($3.00) MAGAZINE ER E NEWVOR.K Si, J . Hk W. '- i ri.'j, rm ' , j '.,", .ni ' it?1 &1 "fy m a t .&&1 i$S 7 i IT GR" vAn ' V !tf arWw$U:.'-VK;, ?HiJftt K-t ttVUVi ., . VJ. . v , . Vl "I t.1 l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers