&m.:i KHW T.,v' .". V 'V , " WT If vv W w !"Vffl" iJ k t'l ai litmr.x m -m avvkjyr. KM iin lf''MI I r II .KJIlHKHnVI I & jr :HTr avb. v i) rft mu bfj.n. titer. rtOPtUC VIEW OF HEAD 0 flttOf canthena thb Java ape mm, c- CO.VSTSCCTKD PROM TIUI SKUIX-CAP. THE OUTLINE " OF SCIENCE Edited by TROF. J. ARTHUR THOMSON The wonderful story, simplv told, of the whole field e'f scientific tlcteleitiicnt since the leglnnl:ifcef time. 'Knscl natlluf rradlnpr, n.f thrilling ns n romance. I'lrst elumcf new ready, contain mere than 200 photographs (lliigrnmi and color plates. $3.73 at all bookstores, "4. colonial xvttcrtaUri . , true public irritce . . an tpr liHklnp tieretmirnc tncalaila'ltt iBlne.'' ,s. r. t!rIJ. O. r. I'UTNAM'S SOS New Yerk Londen imw$ nam "Tft r "rnnnn We Envy Yeu Your FIRST Reading OF A Vagrant Tune V BT Bryan T. Helland Grandsen of Mrs. Gaskell of "Cranford" A book te read, and read again, for its charm, humor and gentle, kindly spirit. SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY 'U t ..- 're cacn nave out litllm tquarc en the cheat beard. I regret that mine It a black one." The Unspeakable Gentleman By J. P. Mar quan d A story of sralleplns Incident, snift narrative tremendously alive. . It Is Immensely read able rlean. bright, wholesemo and Inspiriting ' .Vcie Yerk Jleiaid At all bookstore Jl 73 Charles Scribncr's Sens THE VEHEMENT FLAME MARGARET DELAND 'This latest volume, with its depth of sympathetic insight into human na ture, its arresting situa tions and the dramatically convincing power of its inexorable denouement, will add new luster te Mrs. Deland's fame." Cleveluntl Plnin Denier. At all bookstores. S! 00 HARPER & BROTHERS Established IQ17 New Yerk ''A finely conceived, delicately tind intelligently worked out theme." New Yerk Herald, By MARGARET RIVERS LARMINIE ARCH . 71. SMI SMMBaMMMMMMMrti----a. SMMMea "T f &. II .WV! ir .," bvi is .. m . j iwwviwwwww. .n. !.' jsTsTsTsTar v ?j r' V A A NOVELIST WITH A MORAL SENSE Margaret Deland Has Written Anether Great Meral late IT COULD be argued that Margaret Deland's novels arc a product of the N'cw England conscience, notwithstand ing the fact that ehe was beiu and brought up in Allegheny County In thla State. When she was twenty-three years old 6hc vhB married te Lerln Deland and mpjed te Bosten. Thin was mere than forty Tears age. She has lived In the I New England atmosphere long enough te have become, thoroughly Impregnated with the New England spirit. All of hec novels and short stories rctltct this spirit. They nre written ' with n Bene of moral responsibility and they deal with moral problems, this ' doc net mean that they -ujrc "prcaeby," hut that they arc based en the. nsitfynp- ' tien that man Is n' mernt crtaiure nub- Ijt'et te certain laws which cannot "4)e tielated with Itnpunltj. 'The Awakening of Helena Ritchie" has long seemed te nip one of the finctl novels produced in America for year". It could net have been written by an author who assumed that the gratifica tion of self was the supreme geed, as se many of the younger novelists as sume. These younger writers are, tee many of them-, moral and political an archists. They preach- that there Is no law that binds any one and they as sume that man by merely declaring him self above law can lift himself te that position. . Then forget that there it a laic in thr physical unherse tchich Keeps the start in their ceurtei and bring ..ifteMf fAe orderly succettien of day j 'and night and the beneficent ireur ' 'rence of the seasons. TTELENA RITCHIE'S life was AX wrecked by discard of the moral' law and It was net until old Dr. I.u endar pointed out te her the taue of her catastrophe and the wn te re cevery that she was transformed from a mere human animal Inte a llv.ng seul.J with whom he was brought up as n bej S 1i , t. .1 f .. .atlnt. .1 nf avail AMI li I a atl TA had kann Anlvltn i nevrnn wne nns tue vision ie sec linn ort of thine In life is immensely greater than one who pretends that every per, wn Is a law unto himself nnd exhibits men and women acting without nn realisatien of the great realities. Such people find no enduring satisfaction In life, however complacent their ex ternals may be. The novelist who does net perceive this and make it evident In whit he or she writes is superflciel. Mrs Deland la her latest necI. "The Vehement Flame" (narper & Bres ), has produced n stud, of selfish ness manifesting itself In the form of jcnleusv. The title Is taken from the I Seng of Solemon, where It Is said that ' Leve 19 utreng as death; jealousy Is cruel as the grave; the cools thereof nre coals of fire, which hath a most tcheincnt flame." The bcek is the story of the married ' life of a boy of nineteen with a woman J of thirty-nine. Nothing is commoner than for a boy te fall In love wllu a woman elder thnn himself. The Fiei- dims would say that this is due te the mother eemnlex. the survluil of tne 1 i.hi.ilih lenelnir te he mothered, which Impends itbelf en n mature woman wlnn Beeks of Fact THE executive editor of the New Yerk World asked Francis Hackett If he could write a history e ireianu In tliren davs. Hack ett replied that he An Irishman might be able te de It I en Ireland In three weeks He was ordered te de It. The reKult Is "The ifterv of the Irish Natien" (Centurx Company), which eriglnallv appennd in K.itlnnu in thn World. It took Mr Ilackett mere than three weeks te write Lis narrative. It is evident that he 1 consulted 11 let of books, dtgested hit material as well as he could in the time me (emeiiy munner. lie calls ir a at his disposal nnd then arranged it in melodrama In three acts. It Is mele. chronological order. Mr. Hackett htm- dramatic enough, but the comedy over ever self would doubtless be the first te ad- IT? the melodrama. The book opens rait that better histories of Ireland have with the announcement bj an astrouo astreuo astroue been written. And the seeker after .1 mer te hln wife at the breakfast table complete nnd rounded narrative would that Venus has a satellite nnd It closes lav down the book with disappoint- with the hen ,of the aMronemer rpad ment. Mr. Hackett is nn admirable mg with indifference a newt-paper item cssajist, but be has net the qualifies- that a Japanese astronomer had dls dls tiena necessary te write an impnrtial covered a satellite of Venus In the history of Ireland. He is an Irishman vears that intervene the son has grown and the spoliation of Ireland aretices te manhood, hns nnrtielnated In the his indignation and excites his Interest war. has gene te Mente Carle and has te smh nn extent thut he finds. It Ini- had an affair with n young woman who nepsible te tell both sidcs'ef the story might have been a relncnrnatien of the His book is an exhibition. of the wrongs geddness of, Cvtherea he had become et Ireland. As such It will pleae all a satellite of Venus has broken with Hie Irish patriots; Perhaps that is the her and after four or five jiars has end for which It was written. returned te Mente Carle. The ster is , realh about his affnlr with the modern meMORROW We Diet, lv Nina 'gnming tables and of her determination of fratcrnallwii. It Is bv tin1 Utv 1 Wlleex Tutnam (Geerge W.'Deran te leave the demi-mende and enter the Themas W. Davis, former ihaplniu of rvimnnnvi 1 a book the fclcnilcrncss monde. It is n ga.v. iirespenslhle tale the Senate of the Commonweal! 1 of empun. 1, which IS a sym- tilled with the adventurous spirit of Penns.vlvnnin and founder of tin belicnl vhepe fer1 Its veuth nnd will make entertaining read- "Cheer-1 p. Don't Werrj Club ' 'I he Bright Boek renders endowed vitlming for every one except these obsessed en Dieting evermucu 01 1111s. tee. tee se Id llesli. It tells bow te be "just light" physically. Written in the i.uthei'H piquant htjle. the hook tells of hei adventures In testing nil the ndvei . tibed reducing remedies and In r own sane treatment of obesity and smh like worries. npui: i -L Loul Hi: Health Care of the llabv.' bv WugnalN Ce ), should find manv readers. This handbook for liletHerR ami liuriejf. In Kiailuntc Medlral .Scheel and Hefjiiuli I or tins ncv etmien 01 inn nireaiiy Kni- i.mllv Mffpnted slandird en its mibic t i. ',.; i.. ,u .BtvPlM... in. .1. r!f I 1 the author lm lewr tte 1 iniich of (lit; text and thn eliime In literally a com- ,tndium of information in its llel,l. LQK O ;.- !. hv 11 'nruetiUener nhd1 pneimn 01 niuwi u.cu i unnui ite-1 ii,. ,,. stniiilliiK liirr unn iiik iinnn 111 ' iiWciicter etlie Wll rep" ci,i ' behind Mk book. "Niitlinn liule I" mu IntiMarkeund lFr-, , . " , the official. "Wh , I alw.ij- ilmurfht crsici.- Ile'tiltul?. NeV ; Verlc'B-in'' .tonejtE&j btewaqf ij d;m i w none J tlint v.n .1 Htntiic of Heuellnl , r..ni......... nn,l the NVw'iVnrtfnPnut'. . -s'-" JiP?." ...?..&"""'' '.?? . . . .. J I t acterlatlc novel by a wilter hi .....,,... . ih early Wait Ilia purticuiar He SVMl'HIi MEBWIN llUN written love aterv and a romance of tha . . .... . , , .and the hardihood of pioneering , V". h "P;iV,ft'r,,m'Cn,",lri I WAT TIMMIR OID . JJy i jind has net tltzgeraliled her Inte a , napper. xue nereine of "Geldle Green" Coldie Net (Rebbs-Merrlll Cem- a Flapper pany) Ih anything but a damsel who has 11 0 t h Ln s tiuder her belibwl thatch and uehl ;' t,,?.Ul,,II"nld behind her takurn der. Oeldie Is nn nlerti hmurt (If like, in every nenbe). mere than asd America,, irlrls. who j.iu llftk pew uer. vim lllfi iiveruK iiiiHTJL-uii jjuib. wiiii jiiii mm , hpraiUf In Ktieref.s in leift and linslncKH by her own bootstrap, tBe(l npard with her family the lipart-boweddewn dadd, the fleesy and lndelpnt mother, the two brothers, each .with foibles nnd 'fallliiKs. 8heMn what who herself would; pall ''wUened' te the world and thn men who prowl abeu;t It. Yet her tdang, her brushm", her brUkneFH nre net nVAa.nlvjah f Ptin mam tlaM aaIu lint' 1a I 1T yill'unirr. r irgrr m n ium i.cin tn . a tJt.ln.1 Ainrrican alrl el the period of a ecrtnin irtnin etrnttim ijiie. . Mr. Merwin has written lightly, but lias written lightly, but lepthAinder kls tmtinlnjf 'P,W ieae a believable ibere reucn aeptn Mteace aad 'EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER--PHILADELPHli TUEIlY.raE i3, i922 the mating instinct .is aroused. In, this novel itlSire-cnferced by a. chivalrous Instinct te 'rescue the woman from un pleasant surroundings." The youth; with his Impetuous wooing rushes the wom an oft her feet and she, wild has n longing for happiness, 'Ik ever-persuaded te consent te an elopement. The opening chapter of the novel, which describes the happiness of the newly wed, is Idyllic. It Is written with n fine perception of all the beauty of which the boy dreamed and of alt the happiness of the wife te whom mar riage hud' come when she least expected it. Mr,s. Deland proved her skill wi long ngq that it is almost an imperti nence ,te remark en the masterly way in which hic has handled this scene. There Is poetry and romance In It and consummate art in the telling of It. TAe "vehement flame," heieever. begin) te burn atmeit at once, for the bride become jeolem of the youth of her hutband. ' OUT of this jealousy the tragedy develops The wife does net under stand the boyishness of her husband, nnd his need for the soclctv.ef ether persons besides herself drives him te seek friendly companionship elsewhere. H. flnds'lt In a young woman whom he had rescued from the river Inte which she had fallen. The two drift Inte an af fair and a child Is born. There are .rears of tragic misunderstanding nnd he chlldlchs wife, aware of Iho chll W "ie euier woman, iries ie tirewr. ier!e,,f 'n ""'" thnt ht,r husband may by the ether woman have his child by marrying the metner. rPlin ! 4Ta llan ! ihA !. I a m .1 n ft i n j...c w.i; uia, uui uic uuiwiiiiu u.in " lone strunlc with himself decides that the only way that he can retain any influence .ever the boy Is by refraining from marrying the Ignorant and com monplace mother. And the book ends with his discovery that n euug woman and of whom his wife had been jealous Llees him well enough te marry him. It he had net married the elder woman, he would doubtless have man led her anwn and when his wife fulled him he dibceterrd that he loved the euuger woman. The incidental characters arc drawn with Mr. Deland's usunl skill. There Is Mr. UouEhten. the guardian of the , youth, who marries the elder woman, who is se real that the reader almost cxptcts te meet him en the street. And I his wife Marv. who understands him I . , , ,. ' e li. iui.. .-in ..,i... i and Is tolerant of his foibles, will make etery woman who reads tne oeok chuckle. If women de chuckle, at Mr. Deland's perception of the weaknesses of men and the way a woman can make use of them. Their daughter Edith, who finally mnrries the young man, in troduced at the age of cltcn, j" as rial a young girl as ever made her way through the pages of a book of hctlen. The fact that Mrs. Deland Is an art ist first nnd a moralist rifterwnrd liftn hrr books into the ranks of Hteialurc where the bepks of the mere moralist never Intrude. GEORGE 'f DOUGLAS and of Fancy .and sympathetic Geldle. cbaiucterlzatien In INT A" of a ORMAN DAVEY. In "The Pilgrim Smile." demonstrated his nbll- Itv te write cynical satire. The book was a collection e f episodes connected Youth en In enlv by their relation Adventuret te the efforts of a mnn tn find out why the sphinx smiles. In "Guinea Girl" ifJeene H. Dni-mi empany) Mr. Davey has shown that be ean write n tisteined narrative in Venus, of her winning a fortune at the 1111 tun.mii iiicuiii-tuuiin NEW BOOKS General japav s pacific pei.n y Kawakaml. rvevv Yerk I. Hv K K r nutten 4 Ce :ACUn0l "; VrTri" -uliar problem ra'aed by lici Ececraphlcat mtuatien. HOW TO PCLb AT nETAII, n VV v ('hnrtan Uo"ten "ouBhten Mlftl n 'lhla0TsPanboek en alnmanh p vhich lllii net hew uccsrul fBllInK dheuld l,e done but hew It la done It In lux-J en u careful niialyala 6f thn technlqun end alllne exprl enr of 30O efflelnt almr! It 1 a 00m author of "The iiratabeunder. jiminv. bc eiit cjybriei .s , Yerk- 0erg II Der.n Oenipanj I A. whlmilcal and dnllcate's written Idyl of. the queat for perfect lee rn cevnnFD WAOO.v d. Kmer.en ijeu.... n.w Yerk 0 pp at, . Ce. . , acterlatlc novel by a wilter hu haa made the early wait ma purticuiar Held. It la a open apacen Mr.. Ilellep I.ewndet New Vrlc (ieerite II. Dorati ("nmnflnv A inyitery romance wllh the ahlrery atmoa atmea phere of the unknown ' Drama Um.K 'I'HKATRR TLASatC. Adapted anu tuneu uy numuei a tsuet, Jr Hes ten: I.lttle. Drewn & Ce I vXnm. Vo'u'r'-e? vaPu.b'e and nr.c .tlcal aerlea eentalna "Hakuntala," ilana 5?' farce et Tha Wanderlnir HcheUr". SB,dfi PiAu , rno'llaVtjrireln . ,irHcle nlay. .'The Martjrdem of All." iThnre ara Critical Introductions anil dhre 'n '"'!":. ,hB cxcn from then wetlrknewn drama THK OIIO.HT HTOnV, ' ten. Cincinnati; Vy Beeth Tark'nu ijtewart Kldd Cew pany Ne. 1 of a new aerlta et plan adapted te Little Theatrei wruien in Air, Tarklncten'a characterlatle way, MIItAT)K Hv Oeerne Ilalrd. Clnclnnat' atewart ima company. A one-eet play adapted for atace u, .-,,r. t.r. . ,..,,, .. Ml UntuT'ai'rSrcini w ide. n liSi en". i.utie. Urewn a Ce. ' Thn .muther haa written minv am m. lava which haa had aucceiaful stare nrea. ntatlen. In thla volume are collected elfht I hl,aruiiiu lemwur viayiaia. ' 'v. ARNOLD BENNETT A cartoon from Jack O'Londen's Weekly of the novelist who has Just written a brilliant ceeudy 'THE LOVE MATCH" Bennett's Brilliant Comedy of Married Life That Suggests Oscar Wilde When an author of distinction turns his hand te a bit of foeltnc, he cen- wire et inc cum. cmiiy mnkc9 of that foejlshnesi some semo seme , tries le tirewr. ; thins; pretty close te a masterpiece. I T.. "Tli. Tn. a Atnl-..' -!. U Dornn Company) Arneld Bennett re- I. 1 it i r-m . uirns ie tnc inoeu et ujs "urcat Ad enture, ' and some of his narlier novels. "The Leve Mntch" 1b a com edy in five scenes, nnd pokes u great deal of fun. in the author's best satiric eln, at some of the commonplaces of married life. Where It Is unusual is that It begins In n very "sexy" manner, and ends by being n neatly turned thrust nt the dullness of do mesticity In n dismal flat. Prebablv never has Mr. Bennett achieved the smoothness nnd rare flavor of dialogue ns he ha here. Certain scenes, while they mnv be said te smack Htrengly of "Lady Windermere's Fan" and "A Weman of Ne Itnnertance." succeed In adding te the Inevitable j smnrinesa 01 wuuc an undercurrent of baMc truth Hugh ltuss, a man who has made his mark many times ever In the money weild. Is a splendidly drawn "r"c'e.r' l linl' eMnn" " ,M' Bennett s masculine creations. He Is ln.,,m,ln, mltnre f rmii.m .!,. leal exactitude nnd keen philosophy. Though he carried en an affair with the wife of n friend, he refused te appear In false colors before thnt friend, and thus gave the liaison nvvny. And when, nftey a ear, he married the same wemuu and found her unsulted te the everydaj commonplaces of mar ried life, Jie Rave her a rather harsh lessen by pretending financial ruin. Tust hew far he succeeded is a matter te be cenjectuied. Nina, while a fasci nating creature upd Interesting te read about, does net strike one, even nt the end, as the liiesjt agrecnble matrimonial mate. A nentlv limned character Is .Straker. the butler who was human one-half day a week and whose will -continually collided with Nina's when she became the mistress of the Ruus household. St. I'nncrns, the landlady of the house where Iluss, pretending pevert.v. forced Nina te live,-is another ue'1-cenecived character. It may be said in passing that '"Iho Leve Mntch" is a plav which will ic ic qulre the very best of nctlng. There ere a number of speeches, allotted te ltuss and te Nina, which arc much tee long and much tee delicately phrnt-cd te admit of the average slurring, Indelint diction. TRIP OF THE ELKS FROM COAST TO COAST "Coast te Const With the Hlks" U. T. Hunttiger Company. Camden 1. is an informal chronicle of the cxinui'iue and observations of three Philadelphia members of "B. P. O. K." in 11 tern bv autetruck ever the old Suut.i IV Trail from the (Quaker Oitj te I.es Angeles. This VAk trio, stnrting two months ahead, acted as a vangtmtd te1 a delegation of .ISO brothers of the Philadelphia Ledge for nn annuil urn- , cl.ive. The itinerary took the trio through twelve States and the efiieiallv visitel KlkB headquarter In meie than hftv towns en route. The chronicle te'ls if manv interesting scenes viewed and 1.1 - teri-stlnc! nersens met with. The hook Is n testimony te me rtiin-i-n in inrii 1 hook Is extensively illustrated in iilmie graphs snapped b.v the hlkeis fiem Ulkdeiu. The Fame of Heudinl 1'li.it Ueudlnl. mahter magic an ami author of n new Dutten bee!.. "I'.ipu vrnt.;.. " nn 11111CH nn iislenNhlni: 1111 1 , ul1 Vn '.olneu 7 "l . pie. Is shown l)V n tale new In nu '"Id around the Municipal nulliling in New 1 ymk. I It j,, l,ispP1e(l that when a 1 iU eflieial was showing the buildings ,ire did i'liy Hull I'nrk ICCCntly III nil lull -of- town vlclter. tne Higui-wei in nit noire reference te (lie Htatuc of N.iUmn il i Captain Bene's New Boek ..i.,-'(.,urll tnnifp " In Dm id V ineheii fixewne, e imm tt. Beiih, whiHi hns hint 1C(I1 lllllilklieil I), K p Dutten & Ce.. i a rolleitlen of bf arH, (miijk and Nenius In the " ,r nf iUnt ,,,,. of . HllIln. uliip. "The lliawdjeumler," also a Dill- inM linrik , T, .. ..n,0tfn f!teuai!'" i, lii.ti.i from the seaniun'H tcr.11 for the small pui-Untces which nre lined te fill up the odd lernert) of the tnrKO of a mm-keiiiv, i lll)nnd in Indicative of the liuniet 1 and putheH, the geed and bad fortune, .ind the varied epcrlcnreH en rca and in pert which hac Rene into the inaltltu I of tin' boeK. AT THE FREE LIBRARY Koel.i ndded te Iho Frre I.lbrar Thlr Lteenth and l.ecuil itreeti, Uurlni; Ihc ucek endlnc June h Miscellaneous Ucwcy, Jehn- "Humn Nature nml Con Cen duct " Helme. J. II. "New C'hiirchen for Old" Hh..rj(lan, Clare "My American I).ar." Fiction flln r;iln'r"Xlan and ilald ' llaaaard. II It "Vlmln of the Hun," Huahea, Hupert "Heula for Male" Klnreii. Albert "Truth About Vlnriellea.t l.nwndei Mr. Velii niuu YI vhat Tlmtny, rlA ii Pedler, Manart--"Ieen Out. of Reach.''. Tracy, keuia "iieua 01 rti," ,tt , J I BOOK EXCHANGE Autographed Letters WANT Kill auUtraplri MUra, MSfl, AMMlalleit book, ef famdus pmpI or of historical laltreat, .Harry Stew, 1ST Fourth An., Ntw Yerk City. AUTOOnAl'H Ltttars et famous fetople beuaht and aetd. Vf, R. Btnjamtn; 14T0 Broadway, N. Y. Pub. tha Collector. II year. ISitabllahed 1S87. Satnplaa frta. Beeks Wanted r EOHQE KIRK, 1804 CharUa Read, CI4V- lanJ, Ohie, would ba plaastd te aend you hla new Catalesua et Heeka Fartalnlns te I,)prn(iir and tha Tina Arta. rtiT.ep.rniNT ROOKS FUnNISIIKD. V nntntnrufi laailftH H. ti. RohlnaeB. 4ia "I B. It. rtlvr "ft., Trey, Naw Tetk, CODE-BOOKS ril. HlINSINOKn CO., 10 Whltahall at., K. Y . meit widely known publlahara and dla dla trlbutem of Cemmarelal CODU'AX)KH, IIUY. BKI.b. Tradlns encouraged, clrcutara free upon requt. "-JACOBS MM I ten cNiSTNtrr XJBOOKS STMKT "BUY A BOOK A WEEK" N. Y. Sun: "It is one that make one grew tired of laughing before one tires N. P. Dawsen: "The book is genuine ly humor ous. Any- 0 n c who objects t e 1 a u r hinpr should net rend it. A poed nnti d e t c for THROUGH THE SHADOWS A new novel by Cyril Alington $1.75 at Alt Bookstores THE MACMILLAN COMPANY ei-ee ruth Ave., Cincinnati Times ing a bit of comedy a long time. . . . It A meM'c. KIAri4. le. PVi 1 ' - u man e ncai u 10 xjic wi ui x'lic viiiv;ii uaiiice with love, hope, passion, hereism: Mrs. Hill has woven her tale with great skill. The characters are intensely human a beautiful girl, a minister who is a man, a millionaire who is net, untilbut wait, every page thrills with action. Mrs. Hill's stories please every men.ber of the family. They pass from hand te band and are recommended everywhere. rtince sue wrote "fliarcia Schuyler" Kive her readers just what they is n Springtime romance that will finer emotions. . . v , r Vi ' ( "7 m zz -J'. Q (xA? r&i' tSv5T5-. vJiV sfrWSr MnsjpJa' JIS 'mmmmimmmmmmmKmmmm 1 iilPTOlJ-.- Hal afc " tSlllllS I 11 K UJ V III Ky tiu HI. UltllH-t! M&t jlffl 1 hat. 1..1. JMri " "1'l" " "7" Wtr M1 y.t.rn UUf TW' ' "J "M C"" H 3 . . f.. t. tn.t I . ll " U WU ,,,, .. t Hp t, .u lrl J la w.t , eti. rt tr. f !' ''" ,,,h ' Isflal . Y far th. .u.1 HMI ,Xm i, " " " " Ell i lStaH M JHH HI Mtefll 13, 33, 3. 2l " " BU JBH 7, 37, t, . ". " R IjjwH tlncit.ly jtat, , ljjL' IH fi Y.rt City. - I M 1 f9Ei BEST BOOKS of all reputabhAmerican .and English publishers PRESBYTERIAN BOOK STORE . WUhcrspoen BfalldW af tuaaaaf . M M luntye- and Walnut Sk$. MARGARET SKSCjEWA Birth Control lfifcPIVOM emmmw ,lntrodactienkvH4"TYUS' AU BO0KtOlUtSMa BlNTANOK?Wa of the rather rare boehs of reading it. Phil.. Public Ledger: "I chuckled ever it, and believe i f you read it. you Will de the same. A mere en joyable few hours I have rarely spent." w Yerk - Star: "As dash as has appeared in is a rollicking story" i4. -P 17A l?Vt AnwiAM in laea she Has never failed te want. The Citv of Fire stir te life new thoughts and S2.00 at All Hoekstores. TOA if AiPPn Y A p'jx--zJzjyy eM''' """'VBHhj'n AND "Ms ru' " '"d FAMOUS LOVE AFFAIRS BY DON MARQUIS Drawinj-t by Stuart Hay ' 0 Levely Griddle where my Cakti of Seng Are baked! 0 Gulf Stream of my ocean deep' 0 Human Thermos Bettle! xill you keep My love as het at this our whelr lives Iens'1" At your boehitora tt.TS DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. GARDEN CITY NEW YORK - - I 1 I "Any one who objects te, laughing 'should NOT rettd Cyril Alington' ncw.mvrtl THROUGH THE SHADOWS t is N. P. Dawsen's opinion. She further calls it "a well-writUn story with a laugh in every situa situa teona goed'antidote for Confer ences." "As dashing a bit of comedy as has appeared in a long time." Cincinnati Titnei-Star. 91.75 Wtmm A book of unusucd imlueand charm THE PRINCIPLES OF INTERIOR DECORATION By Bernard C. cAtMjr Se fascinating, adequate and beautifully written that it must appeal te every one interested in the practice or theory of art. Ill;, $2.50 64-66 Fifth Ave. Yeu Boek Readers . Yeu Boek Sellers De net say "forget the war !" We say "remember it!" "Remember the War!" D. Appleton And Company 38 West 32nd Street, Ntw Yerk OERE are the 87 titles which Mr. Tumi ordered (out of a total of 95 in Modern Library) : t Htrtndbera Married 3 Klpllnc Soldier Thr ft II. O. We'l. The War In tba Air fl ,b," ;,u . A Du, " , . uu' An Kntmy of th feesle J A"1'01 ltiw The Krt Uly s le Maupaeant MadamaUtUe cul, ate. Thva spake Zeratheatra, ft Metiathe 10 DotejevUj Peer Peepl ii .iiaeicrunrk n .-umuie or Nt. Aathenr, , etc. It HcliOD.nl. aurr eituaiea le reaelmlem Ibe War of All Pleab IS Namurl llutler 1 .iltirdith in liernard Shaw uiina or tn ireatwaya An untoeiai aeeiallat alena of it uuas Jlan iu uee, aiuere Lonreikien or a iune.tr ! '.7 Ilardr TtlA Sfmrrp lit Pma.AwhvtAmm. IS Ite.t Rnatlan Hhert Nlbrlaa tp Nletiicbe Uryend Uoed and ErII il ur,!,?ev father and Bena 22 Anatele Franc u Crime of Nylreetre neanard JS Kwlnburne Peama JO . H. Gilbert - . .. , ,. The ""M"1 Other Plaje 21 !? ? WA,U v Ann Vtrenlea, ?J (lunav Flaubert Madane Horary 5? !"-?'" ?l$in a" Mr Jl Anten Chekhev t , , , RetharMld'a llddl. tte. li lnllr Anatel nnd Other Playa S.t Suuermann Data Car 35 (1, K. Clitalerten 36 liibeii lledda Oaaler ."ll,0,.rl!(K,", Th Mesffr BullflS .1? llaecktl, Thontien, etr. .c i.voiucen or siedtrn Thauiht ss l'rflncl Thompaen S' Nehnltaler 40 Dnliac 41 Th Art of Radii. Cfinnlet Poema Derina, uarian Hhert BterUi ft The Art of Aubrey tteardiley 43 THtnaanv , Dcek pf Wnmbe 45 Leonid Audrerev 46 Geers- n?X?Un nU WW " 48 Malm Oerky csndM Creature Th.lt Once Wen Men and A Jla, ftlrner Th Kro Va'e - ) , uruirr I-et' Cemlns of At WOULDN'T you like te knew which till - lumuny ttwn't order? Send for our Complete Modern Library CeUJeii Uluitreted. IOJ WKST4OttST'NiWY0RKCTT t. ' I, - 1 "1 iWv m , Ji r't .. . I -. , t ". FOUR GOOD BOOKS "Wells at Wi rWf cltdm one critic ' ;M" u n. u.ii.t .xh nw novel THE1 SECRET PL ACE5 vr iruntLART ,8ayi P. P. A.: "Reid ,Th'e $L Places of the Heart' of H Ttr.1l. m.A S J Ji 1 .V "."."' "MU ou" II IU1I of UavJ wisdom and the sort 6f cahdeSl a ae aamire in nun." "A tnim-1 mnSfiJSm Hirald. $1,711 L?L1 Anether witness4 te birth of the Russian - democracy RUSSIA TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW Awl, AT. MWukoe 7 BSTaa 4aaaj tl J.3 a . a u ' uMi,urauunua , Americans .y wish te unda.rata.nri b ..t JiH tien in Russia will find this cot'! ptete aurvey, based on.inferiM. tien obtained from nrivat. i. as well as published decumenti,1 airnoae uuuspensaeie. 2,jj At all boekitoreu or from THE MACMILLAN COMPANY Ntw Ysrki The strongest weapons against a re-enactment of the her rers of the war 'just passed are books! Yeu may say "for- J get, but every one will knew in the bottom of his or her-i heart that such advice te the world means certain renewal of the carnage. Te us it seems a duty te keep alive for ourselves and for the generation new maturing the rich , treasures of bravery full-tested and the stern realities of the horrible years of the World War undergone. . "j. 'Ti A wonderful literature can blossom from the mud ef.ths ; trenches. It is springing up new. It is the rtrengtHt weapon for peace. Believing this, we are publishing such .1 novel as "Way of Revelation" by Wilfrid Ewart 1 truthhil picturing or lite between 1914-19. a subiect.etvl truly thrilling interest. We publish this and will puhhshv ether novels of the war because we feel that these who say "no war books!" are wrong. ' Wa Qair :-l M 1 ' Publishers of "Way of Revelation" fWjJJ 1 tX "A neyel of fiv. ywa" by Wilfrid Ewart, of which Sir Phili Gibba aayai "Ne mere truthful and vivid pietura of Ufa ba.; tween 1?M-1S hai been written in Enflith." ' - V K9 JMbImJI..- Mla JuUt and OUW I AS ThMDhUa Oautler Mu. t ' B4 Ibaen V The Wild Duck, twam Th Utttftf lit Jehn Mtr . , . . , .. . lu Spirit of Americas I4M at I MftBDMaant Sit VVennnla Vlllan S Kllrn Key. Ilavelerk KIM., etc 50 Frank Nerrla , Hj 51 Mttsache Otnealesf ' S3 Hanry Jam , . , ,.,,i Plr Mfll.tr nnd An IntwalU IV ! " 'Dean of Iran Hrll.h -.' S3 OabrUle D'Annunile ame.i S May filaelalr 04 nteace Iban TO rViedelnlre II (tertraJe Atherton Tail Tkt( rrt" ' .K 7n.M.np....ntTeMiii)d0(Wr(J ts neat one piMrie ,, 74 Poema nd Preaa of ."': 7H W. I. OtOTf A 9 rl 70 c. ana J, at uonceun j 77 ToUtey . , . n,fc, i Redemption and Oti(f i ak ... . W SI A Modern Boek of CrltljUinii Jt. .. rrrernat "a lvrde . ma w..i n.l The 1 B Amr'e-T Hanioreua 8MfJ r iiiire i'.xe ..!. W tl VFnUr- T-r Marlu tM ' 1.1 WllllMM. ntI.A' U " ir...iin of it. ' rS MirJert rtemln' "i" .j...atl 4 PJerr. MVr.B v!?B en irei'H nine -'..i. , e.er wi.le M Wl WJiHm-.n . SO Centemtc r eln iw annur mrrie. . ..., inie i Ifll rilHV reaaen , '"I I OS Htphn Crane Men. Wrn af 104 Bhuwoed Anderwn WlRr"-' 1 1 ', , -! rt ."p. j i YJ mi a t& i&'kifef ? . J u. i . .. ,.....H i.jJ!iJ iur,jj LSikitiiiaii. &&zMihti&L