wm mm i?ppp WIS '&i: i-i"-,i, MjY "juuiiinnnnnnm-r--n7-innn ' affNBiff ! ; -VS7 swhmmshJktr' "Beyend Rep. and Fnc V DAVID QRIW It in animal ttary matter matter itect. Tht best bee f Iti EhMl sines Tht Call af tha Wild, My tht Dstrelt News.' Cancurrlni In this tnthuil-. Mtlc eplnlen ara Jamta 5)lr Curwaadf Calln H. UvlntitMi. Pnt af tha Day tcsuts af Amaricat Tha Naw vShc Tribune, ft Uuls Glaba - Dtmaerat, Chleaga Tribune, Philadelphia Ledger, ate. The best animal story and the mast whalesame and re freshing tale af outdoors far many years." y Everywhere - $2.00-- BONlfrtlVCRIGMT fA THE SWISS TWINS By Lucy Fitch Perkins Just in time for Children's Boek Weak, THE SWISS TWINS arrive te delight the hearts of thousands of boys and girls who have found in the Twins Series the very nicest of all their boekland friends. lllus. $1.75 at All Boek Stores HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANT IntheDaysef Peer Iftchard Wy Irving Bacheller A book that will be read ever the length and breadth of the land. Dead and gene heroes become real and friendly human beings in his hands, full of humor and laughter and longing, immersed in the struggle of lining, understandable and lovable. -HUdtftrde Hawthernt in N. Y. HERALD AlAR Boekitlltrt PRICE $2.00 Va BOBDS-MERRILL COMPANY, PaKe.M War Amassaiter te England The Premier Boek of the Year The Life and Letters of WALTER H. PAGE By Burten J. Hendrick "...entitle; Walter Pnge te high and permanent place among our men of letters." Albert Shaw, Editor, Review of Reviews. Regular Edition oft vels., 1 10,00 De I.uxe Edition of t vels,, tii.00 DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. Why Net BOOKS? futei1.1 Jhe JlllMt companions et SSiibVinS!le ?' ' raithiSL W.ftoek bwir6 'elected emetmug te iuit every age and taste. Hetien juvenile Boekl General Beeks Atw and Standard Religious Beeks Bibles and Testaments Greeting Cards and Felders Calendars and Novelties THE BAPTIST BOOKSHOP 1701-1703 Chestnut Street Wa Jler-tak, iltpahr) ACROSS THE MESA nv Alker .1 "TkreUh Meckiag Bird G.p" hi r.T ."rrzy ",ery of 'he Seuth. c ?.'! of teilftvr fmi . i..i., -j thrills, that win hii? p,l Bn" "" te,r j .. hela any " e the end. 4i All l-lut 75 Met bVbbIbW PREA T CONTEMPORARY A Life ofLleud 9 T ' . Is lMet a Lampaign Document laaaaaaaal " aBHfekSaHBHBHBHBHBHBHBHBHBHBHBHBlBHBW BHBHBMaWlKjBHBH BBBBBBaBaL BBm '" ' BBBBBBBBBB DAVIU LLOYD GKORGt. JT IS difficult te write the biography of a contemporary with eny approxi mation te n Just estimate of the man. Although mere than enough books have been written about Theodere ltoese VOlt te fill n fivp-fiwit klinlf tint nun of them has mode n Judicial appraisal of him. Httrh n book remains te be rit ten. If n man with the equipment te appraise the men of America which L. 1. Raymond lias te dlseuss the public men of Great Krltaln arises in the near future we may expect such a book within a year or two. Other wise we shall have te wait until .both he Roesev.elt hate and the Roosevelt idolatry hare been cooled by the frigid years. I hare snid that n man with the equipment of E. T. Raymond eeufd de it because Mr. Rnymend has just writ ten a life of Lloyd Oeerce, published in this country by the Jeerce II. Deran Company, which' has nil the intimacy of contemporary knowledee and nil the detachment of nn impartial critic writ ing long after the events. It may be that its freedom from the defects of the ether books about I.leyil Oeere affects the judgment and is responsible for the favorable Impression that It creates, but I de net think that this can be wholly responsible for my conclusion that it is one of the most admirable pieces of biographical writing about a living man that I have ever seen. It should be naiil at once that Mr. Raymond admits that Lloyd Geerge u one of the few meat statesmen that the British isles have produced. "DUT he qualifies this estimate, for he -lnslsts that the Welshman's great ness Is like thnt of the elder PHt, whtcn Meeaulay said was "net complete and well-proportioned greatness." If hiM achievements in the war period could be separated from what lie did before and after the verdict would be different. It was in this period thnt he accom plished marvels apparently beyond the iiiicr ei nny etiicr man living In (Jrcat Britain nt the time. Mr. Raymond Is I generous in M. praise of wlt he" did in this short period, and In hein . creus he does no mere than reflect the common opinion of mankind. It was Lloyd Geerge who supplied the munitions te the soldiers at the beginning. It was he who insisted en the making of big guns when the mill tary authorities said they wcre net needed. But when the military au- uiuriucu i-iinncce. ineir mini IIic Mir., i meus i number of guns which he had ready ""'""""wtthedemnmN. It wns lie who worked te bring about unity i of cemmnnd against the opposition of strong influences at home. It wns his vision and driving power which fore saw approaching crises nnd'i-purred a weary nation te meet them. Men who had hated him a few years before worked harmoniously with him In this period and were forced In spite of themselves te respect his qualities. It is en his record as a civilian wager of war that his ultimate famejivlll rest and It will be rery .great. " Brief Notes of IT IS net generally known thnt the United States has the blezest Hclit- house service in the world with the na tion's extensive lit America's ternl of two oceans, ".!.- "'e Great Lakes and beMUine t,,e (Jlf of MoKjce F A. Cellins has used this fnct for the basis of his informing and very interesting book, "Sentinels Along Our Coast" (Century Company), which tells the story of the lighthouse service that provides safeguards and beacons along the 4S.O0O miles of na tional coastline. lie tells ninny tales of heroism and resourcefulness and dan Iser all linked up with (lie oftentimes 'hazardous werkVf the lighthouse keen- ei's. Tlie coming of the inille cempnss mid wireless hits ndsl iiii.ucnsurahly te the safety of navigation, and thee Mr. Cellins tells of authoritatively in his narrative, it covers the seaboards, tiie Island possessions, the Mississippi and the lakes, mid nil in a most read able fashion. MQHOL'TS und Murmurs" (Century l3 Company) byAlexnnderWoellcott narrates adventures among plajers, p!n wrights and plays by tlie urnnuiiii! eiiiter 'of a New Yerk news Stage Echoes paper, who discusses the perennial values of I'eter run, tnentrlcal criticism, translated plays, Eifgene O'Neill. Barrie, the Barrymeres, Mrs. Flske, Frank Tlnncy. etc. It is a road read able book and one well informed. Lov Lev ers of the theatre will enjoy It Immense ly for its range of topics, its "inside stuff" aud its substantial comment en things theatrical. THE dUeusslen of American foreign policy by Prof, .lehn II. Lntnne, of Jehns Hepkins rniwrslty, published In IHtS under the title e . . " Pre in Isolation te American i.Pdeisljip" (Deuble. Foreign Policy day, Page & Ce,) has been Issued in levised und enlarged form and brought up te. date. Prof, Latane says in his preface that soma one, in view ui we uviruc ei the Versailles Treaty, suggested that 1i the Versailles mtviuj, du.mmvu he cell the new version ei tela '"We lNUttob;te Leadsnklp DOOK aaa Geerse That BL Perhaps In Ml years some ether biographer will be insisting that ,the very qualities which wcre the cause of his weakness In his earlier career were the qualities without which ht could net have risen te the occasion when war came. Mr. Raymond suggests it. but h cannot find It in him te admire these qualities. lie advances' the novel theory thnt the vagaries of the man's political record arose from the condi tions of ids life. He was bem peel and for years had te struggle te sup- pert himself and his family. Mr. Ray mond seys that th peer man is never able te take n long ledk ahead flnancinllv. He cntuint commit him self te a course of life because" he never j knows whether he will have the money te pay the bills. ' He literally Is com pelled te live from hand te mouth and te meet each crisis as It comes. As Lloyd (teeivte had acquired the hnblt of livlntz from hand te mouth financial ly he found this habit governing hix political life. In order te preserve it he seized held of the nearest straw In order te keep his .head above water. The fact that in the next crisis he had te reverse himself never troubled him. He forget 'the pnst and never looked far ahead Inte the future. Rut lie man aged te keep abevC the surface even though at times it looked as if he were about te go" under ncvef te come up again. This theory of political opporun epporun opperun ism arising from the confirmed habit of financial opportunism gees some distance en the way of explaining tvhnt has been explained by ethers In a much less creditable manner. BUT whether these qualities explain why he succeeded during the war In doing what ether men had failed te de, Mr. Raymond insisted that his free dom from the various social, cduca tiennl and financial inhibitions which bound ether men had much te de with Ids succevs. The traditions in which ether men had been reared made theiA see Impossibilities where Lloyd fJeorge ignored them. He wns net a financier, and when money wns needed he said.it must be get and it wns. He wns lfet a manufacturer, and when guns were needed he said they must be made and they were made. And se en through nil the varied activities of a long campaign te defeat the German pretensions. The book starts with his birth and I it ends just before his Coalition Get- ernment in-olio down this fall. Hut the breaking down of the Coalition is foreshadowed. It had survived by a curious magic long after It had actually died, Mr. Raymond says, just as the man In Pee's story survived for seven months witli all the appearance of life, but dissolved nt once ns seen ns the magic passes that had vivified the corpse had been reversed. This prophecy was a geed one, for the Lloyd Geerge government collapsed as seen as the Conservatives said they would go into the approaching election alone. Mr. Raymond does net gIe ever anything, even going Inte the details of the Marconi scandal, In which Lloyd Geerse was Involved. The hostile British newspapers talked about his nT- 1Wenl, "em lT"m , "C . L ZT Jl'STS , " magnificent villa in the south of France. They printed pictures of his liouse in England taken from such an angle ns te make it leek much bigger than it was. This sort of nn attack en a public mnn in England jnny Airprlse these geed people who think the sensational American newspapers are sinners above I nil men In such matters. But Llevd r! ,,. ,.in,iu..i i. i! :. nry Inquiry, in the course of which he Mlid thnt his total wealth was enlv enough te slve him an income of sennh I . . . . "-'V n year in excess ei ins snlnr.v. Since then he has doubtless saved a little mere and Andrew Carnegie has left him an income of $10,000 a yenr for life une boeK, whlle it is an excellent life of the man, is also a compact and readable mimmary of the history of the political life of Great Britain for the last thirty years. It will, doubtless, be widely read by all interested in con temporary history. GEORGE. W. DOUGLAS. Interesting Beeks Back," hut he insists tliui il, ..i verdict of the American people has net yet been renched, and that we shuli '"'""""" un our lespensinuttles as u tverld power. He has rewritten Hip I'liAnfn, .r. uu imr Aims or tlie Inited States," and has added two chapters, one an BTnUntmef tl,e HWtIntlen of tho'Ver the'Ver tho'Ver Milles Treaty and Its discussion In the ?ienni' ,n.ll(1 tM0 etller a account of the Washington Conference. The book ,. ... -- '""I'm ii u u Munus contains mere informntien i .I,.,., .1.. t'Ztl" "'- "HINUIUII ! u....i . .eruign peucy of the United Mates tlmn can be found In nny ether volume in such small compass. It m , en admirable handbook for tlm-e Inter, ested in the subject and Invaluable for reference. milE Frederick A. Stikes Cempnnv has reprinted from its "Wonder Boek of the Bible." edited by Helen Ward Banks, tlm in.-,. Lift of Jesus Retold for Children of the life of Jesus in a book intended for children. The story is ,a Kill"3 hinguageef the BIhle itself with such explanatory text 111 Itiflte n .iAi! .. . ns is necessary ::::lv;; , & f'z , , " :,",",",u' i-iiiicireii who find nn i ""I, V' f0,l(?w ,l,u R""-y in tie ,,,Ib,r . Ir '" f"lieiisly illiistrateil in colors by Florence Chente and In black and white by Elizabeth Curtis. ncK rjNE of the most satisfactory books y for little children that have appeared this season is "A Little Child's Boek of Stories" (Outfield A Little &e.; edited by Ada Child' Boek WW n"d Klea - of Stories ""-.Skinner, IIIuh- ""' trnted by Jesse Will- . , cek Smith. The lllus. tratlens are of little children done in Miss Smith's sympathetic and artistic manner. The stories ,ire modern niid ancient, but the modern ones nre In the nininrlti. The. Imve been selected fr!i i in the books of (he must successful wrlten of stories for uiy little i hlldien. Thev ate. all told in simple langiinge. some with a moral such ns parents like te inculcate, and some are entertaining and harmless adventures that delliht the youngsters. It is excellent for reading aloud at bedtime, and as the book is printed in large typt it will ' J " tot the children who aave Jwt Bsiere4 that art BIOGRAPHY LalBWPjBBf'aJBBlBBBBWBBBBBBBBPa PfpyajBKy t sHbbVbbbbHf x3 'SEVVbbbbbbbbbbbm bBBBBE.BBBBBbVW i "VVBBBBBBH Pf&BBBBBBBBB&2&u: JT MBbVbB''.BBBBBBBbV bbbbbbbbbbbbbbVbbbbbHp'-''1' .bbbbbbV RSHHHK. lftfBfBfBfBfBfBfgf. bbbbbbbHbSTv -"'-jbbbbbH BBBBBBBBBBBBBbHbsM' '"" JBBBBBH bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbf'' ''bbbbbbbbV BBBBBBBBH ' ' - ...BBBBBbI BBBBBBBBBBBBBK'. '' i'BBBBBBBBBJ BBBBBBBBBBBBBBB '' '"fBBBBBBBBl BBBBBBBBBBBBBBE V r 'mkkkkSU BBBBBBBBBBBBV ' BBBBBS KATIILEKN NORRI8 Whose latest novel Is populated by s bewildering multitude of x characters THE CRABTRfcES Mrs. Norris Fails te Make This Very Large Farriily Interesting At the beginning of Kathleen Norris' thick novel, ."Certnln People of Im Im 'pertnnce" (Doubleday, .Page & Ce.), there is n genealogy of the Crabtrec stock. One Is grateful for this. With out if, one would be lest In the maze. He ninny character) are there In the book, one feels thnt the author herself needed te check up ever and ever again. And this leifdn te perljnps the least favorable criticism of the novel. A lurgw portion of it is ns lean of Interest If the phrase may be used as the stnrk genealogies of all unfamiliar families. Toe. Kathleen Norris method seems te be that of r- photographer who snaps se much utere tlmn needs te be photo graphed. There nre pnges of common place conversation, significant enough in that it suggests the sort of people these interminable talkers certainly are, but as certainly commonplace and un-1 inspiring. The story treats of the marriages of se many girls one forgets them, nnn of lovable, stupid, bitterly cruel mam mas who. out of the "goodness of their hearts" aspire te see their daughters comfortably married off. Twe of these marrlnges might he culled successful one Js n business arrangement, the ether is that of a rebellious daughter for love. The rest of them arc quite usual and somehow indecent. The author Is minute In her deline ations. The shome of this wholesale waste of love and youth, the acquisi tiveness and deceit where the Crnbtree inheritance is concerned all this Is presented with triumphant faithful nests. Hut there are no high places in the story only gray crippled lives and drab, undlverting tragedy. The novel makes one irmgnnt. One wants te Mieit: "If this be life, I forswear Ir. Its inevitable tragedy Is net even nmus ing." MILTON RAISON. A Gifted Peet Who Intends te Become a Writer of Prese These who knew Milten Unison say that he is likely te be mere successful ns a writer of pree than of iieetrv. Among them Is William McFee, who writes the introduction te Mr. Unison's first volume of erse. "Spindrift" (iieerge II. Pernn Company). If he can de with prose what he lias done with poetry lie will achieve distinc tion. Indeed, thnt is liin ambition. He naively confesses that he wishes te equal Cenrad. This nnlvete may be pardoned, for he is extremely young. He wns en the sen intermittently be tween his sixteenth and eighteenth years and wrote when he had an op portunity. But he has given tip the sea. "Spindrift" doubtless contain the verse which he wrote nt this early age. If the whole volume were en the high level of the dedicatory poem many would regret thnt he Is nlnnnln abandon poetry. Here is the gem: t hove the simple need of vpu M have of meat and drink Of fiecdem, beautv, faith and fi lends And lecly thoughts te think. But you nre everything I need, Faith and feed and friend, And you are fused with beauty In my thoughts without ap end. I need of nothing en this earth, Yet I go off te sea. Te seek the freedom that you steal In dominating me. There are ether geed things, in the volume, but none is se perfect a piece of imnginatlve literary expression ns this. Rese O'Neill's Verse Sema O'Neill, creator of the famous Kewples. stepped making these delightful creu- tu or seven ears nce Rese lures and went te Paris. Since then- from time te time, reports have been received in America of Miss O'Neill's work abroad stories of new and strangely powerful drawings in a man ner entirely different from nny she lins done before. A few works showing Strenclv the Intlucnrn if nn.1l., .. exhibited last year nt the Wildensteln Gnllerles, At the same tlme n few of - " - s '" ": nil "er POnis, In tlie same new vein, were Printed in some of the magazines New for the first time after Miss O'Neill's "turn te America, u collection of her poetry and pictures is te be presented i it is published l A red A. Iv,if and Is called "Tlie Master Mistress." ' AT THE FREE LIBRARY ii ,.i Jleiiki nd.leil Id tlm Kro Mbrarv Thir tenth and Lecuit Btreeia, Uurlnu- th wi.i" enain Neteinbcr l: eu MlieMUiiraai ranbv. jr. S "Pnnltlen." Hryant. II. C "Lumber ." C'hapmnn. It, It. "Kerent Mciinurntlen Ksure. Kllf "llliterv nf Art"' '.0en' . heebel. V. II ."Anglo-beuth Amirira Ilnndboek for 10'JL'." American I'atrl, Angeln Child Tr.ilnlna." Hliav. Frnnl(. e 1 "i'uiitinierarv All I' RV of 1921 ' (XllllTien ' " One- thitunrrvt n n llr.irt ' 'lliifi .i. ... nun." u '" " ", ;....- III of'1Meflon,.11, C-"'"'ery of " Retathitv Welk J. W. "Itfnl l.lnreln " Wboelecli, l.uty -' 1'tIK te Methrrr Church ami iuouen, i.-. u "uimerv cr tlm v.n "Nsgre In uur Hlaterj." ""'" Fiction llftcht. Ben 'Oareyle " ilbald "1'lDDln . Marahall, Archibald Watdtl, lr K" " II. If. "Jeiieph Urcir and in. Daughter." "Mere significant than lf Winter Cemes.' -H. Y. Times THIS FREEDOM By A. S. M. HUTCHINSON Auther of IF WINTER COMES , 201th THOUSAND 3.00 Ev.rylvker. UUe, Keaji ft C, rWUktM. bl. - , I I II - I I I lUlBBTIl - IN . i" BBVBBBBBBBBBBBrB&BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB BkHBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBIIBBBBBBBBB rBBBBBBHBBBlBIBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBVLA BBBBBbW VHIBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBSBmaBBBBBBBBBl HHBBBBBBBBBBB&jeBB-TWHBiBBBBBuaBBBBJ BBflHnHMfr3HlH ' aBaBBaaBBHBfc"i3HBB BBMBBvPSSIflKBB. JBBVT .' .W '? gMHffPyBtanHa. sm PACED with a crime which would bring every man's hand against him Judsen Clark young, ' handsome, the owner of a hundred million dollars fled in panic te the corral, saddled a horse and he&ded at a mad gallop for the mountains in the' teeth of a blizzard! What connection could there be be tween Jud ten Clark rich, notorious, infamous and dead and young Dr. Richard Livingstone, from whose mem ory the past was shut off as by a veil ? Seme men cannot face reality. Te escape it they will make supreme sacrifices. Others build up unconsciously in their minds a defense against the truth they cannot bear. The modern psychologist calls this the protective mechanism of fear. Recollection snaps. THE BREAKING POINT is the story of the erection of just such a 'barrier of forgetfulness and its re ' suits upon a group of people who are in volved in a tragedy net of their own mak ing. This new novel combines the charm of THE AMAZING INTERLUDE with the mystery and drama of THE BAT. It is a thrilling story that will held you from the first page te the last. THE BREAKING POINT By Mary Roberts Rinehart At AU Booksellers The Boek of the Year for Yeung People The VOYAGES of DOCTOR DOLITTLE By HUGH LOFTING Aittlter of "The Story of Docter DeWtlc" Thu kindly little Docter almost as much a hou-elield werJ ns the fumeus Alice keps en another nmazinir vevutrc. "Thcchi1 drevn bookstores, the chUdren'H librarien, the children' house hold will want 'Voyages' even as they wanted the geed doctor's fiYat volume."!. Y. Tribune. A handsome lelnme. $2.50. Published 1920: THE STORY OF DOCTOR DOLITTLE: Ninth Printing, $2.00 THE GIRL'S BOOK OF VERSE bv mary g. davis DAYS OF THE COLONISTS bv l. lamprey Sterk h of our early ia.s. i,y nn nuther who k"s t . . iiv,. for her facts ami inns them into talcs a thrilling ns fiction lllii.innl. si'ie THE MOUSE STORY bv k. h. with and 'ul,Mr"cn!,dtrT 'I'iluiyeVS:" f '""' '" " ' r "10U'0 STILL MORE RUSSIAN PICTURE TALES By VALERY CARRICK Illu.?ru"r3! "s'm-C"5 t''l'PS frn' ,h nu"!111'- t("'' "l. U..ig it i I uinei THE DANISH FAIRY BOOK , By FREDERICK H. MARTENS M.BaTh' "0,,t f nfnmarU"s ffliry ,al0B n a beautifully ,au nnw 443 Fourth Ave. FREDERICK A. OLIVER HERFORD'S The BIRD-NEST t Bearding Heuse T Jifei W VtRBENA REED . . . WM llr tliln MAau nf -i-. -- -rmstmm tTiarit, una i criiiisirtc v, story the most Cel. 0. W 0 ut-Werm el lnc ycar- The Pinafore Pocket Story Boek ..jjii iwr E".a By MIRIAM CLARK POTTER, is full of auain t and rhymes for little folks just beyond the MethS Ooehtage!0"" Koef theDucky Daddies" steriw.8 Ak ahe,tER, ? ALL, tvjfn girls of four, very true te life and'jusl eSineugn.'tle Veretchka's Talcs r mam,., , LTiffl W little girls by K gV 42."? Sing a'Seng of Sleepy Head Bv iampc ni!r' Auther of "Beys and Girls," a favorite wi ?nuKJ W ffi. firtiit fnr nn llhi,tnr.l r .-, - i,..-i .. . 12.00 ,vv,... ... ... ......,. mi .ib jnoturcbeoka te ateriea for the T"4 - E.. P. DUTTON & CO. $2.00 STOKES COMPANY New Yerk enchanting drawings in t-t- a t " original n tm n r amusing child's book S2.5Q Mr. Tie. Reperte- u; uuuns jer unidren from boys andgirlt blihii, teen, teens MWi vSS5 1 An.. I I A Thought for Children's Boek Buyers THIS is "Children's Boek Week." In making your selection of books for young people, you can cheese confidently from the lists of the house which publishes LITTLE WOMEN and the ether favorite stories by Louisa M. Alcott; the books of Susan Coolidge and Mary P. Wells Smith; Owen Jehnsen's famous Lawrenceville stories and Thornten W. Burgess "Bedtime Story Beeks." LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY'S NEW BOOKS FOR BOYS and GIRLS LITTLE WOMEN: or Meg, Je, Beth and Amy Xew Popular tttustrated Edition Hy LOUISA M. ALCOTT Millien of American children hae bn entertained mid slaildcnerl l,y tldt rlnlc. and It In still tha melt popular of nil books for eunir people. Tlili new popular Illustrated edition, with ne'v tpe. ree mnralnn, nod rlsht lnutlful rnlerM llliiitratlena by Jeli Wllcet Smith, In the meat attractlM eer nihllliil. II or hejn and stria 10 and uimmdi.) H"ceinl I'rtii Un,-. II M KRITTEWSOF THE KITCHEN KINGDOM and hew te make them By A UNT JO and UNCLE GEORGE Thli neielty picture-book for thf ltldrtla contains a collerllen nf Jelly ere,. with funnv little drawlnc mattered alerit th line-, t-lllni: hew th' nmiilnir teya can be made with mjci ordinary thlnan an plin mid il,i mid i leth' ulni and common M-getable') or fruit", Hlxteen lllulratlen Inn color, ,ind drawlnaa by Palil Brown. l SO THE ADVENTURES OF DIGGLEDY DAN Tha worwlreua tala of the merriest Clrcue Iind. With llluftratleni In girls 7 te II.) FUR SIGN The Intereetlnic adventure- e' two 'al r etn tn. c tv slum,, ns trappers nnd ranchr, S"llh Illustration. !.. 1. nn 11 uu Hunt Her l,'is l-j nnd epwnrda.) ."Jci-end rrlntliiK 11 03 ARNOLD ADAIR WITH THE ENGLISH ACES By LAURENCE LaTOURETTE DRIGGS Tha further flytna- adenturr- nf Arneld Adair TIiIm fa.clnntlna' I'oek la filled with exciting epltedea and lauahable Hrldentn nnd eheuld prove nn cucceeeful na tha author's previous atery. With Illustrations by Henr f Watsen. H"or hove IS and upwards ) SI.79 OY SCOUTS ON SPECIAL SERVICE By CHARLES HENRY LERRIGO Bev Scouts who d 1 net tli 'Jrcaf War will thurnughlv enjoy thin Mery of llllly Han.em'H ehar- In in utirrlni.' cent. With lllti.tr.itin i hj ij"eti,e A. Newman (Fer bejs 1 nnd upward-.) $1 75 CAROLINE AT COLLEGE By LELA HORN RICHARDS Thla Is a squel te "Then fein" l.elln''. Tt li a n Id i-trir ' " life In ',,, d'' cellese with a sreup of jnun penplw who are full of Me and fun. With llle tratleni hj M I, Ure-r. U"or rlrls Ja nml upwards I j 7s WONDER TALES FROM TIBET By ELEANORE MYERS JEWETT All-Amertcsn bes and irlrls will be Interested In t!ws .lelishtft.l neil wonderful tale told bv the Mddl-Kur. With Illustrations In e ler by Mjun,,. Uav Cor bes and Kit la 10 te Iti ) u) FAIRY TALES FROM FAR AND NEAR By KA THARINE P YLE Ste-es of witfhe- and Reed fairies, of enchantments nnd ep-lis of loiiihle and braver With Illustrations In color by the nuthe- tl"er bej, nnd unu in ",' 15' hecend I'rlntlnc. J-.00 REAL AMERICANS InterestlnB and entertalnlnc ate-lea of the Mm and deeds of Edward i:eratt" Hale, Herbert Hoever Theodere Roosevelt. Ienard Weed. .Mark Tw alii nnd lehn Burroughs. Mth Illustrations Irem photeuraphs. (Ter bevs and Ulrls lii t" 16 ' !. WHITEFOOT THE WOOD This Is th th rd veluir- In the "Oreen I'erest Scrips" and tells of th manv and evcltlnc ndvi-ntures of Whllefoet. the meit tlnild of nil the llttln trraturps tffi Illustrations in color bv Harrison Cadv. (Ter be.vs and Klrls I te 1" ) ' $ "e CHILDREN OF ANCIENT ROME nils Is a companion veluma te "Children of Ancient Hrllaln" and t-IN of th. iirl. 10 te ill ...-.. .... Thcue Beeks Are for M5H LTTTLE BRX WN 6i CO.. Companionable Beeks 'By companionable books," says the author in hi preface "I mean theso thnt arc worth taking with you en a journev where the weicht of lutrtraKe counts or keeping beside your bed, near the night lamp." This delightful volume of literary studies, s-e companion able in it.self. it, issued in a style uuifeim with Dr. van Dyke's ether books. Illustrated. Cleth R'00 leather, $3.00. ' '"" ' At all l)oel:-'.ore. CHARLES SCRIDXER'S SONS, Fifth Avenue. Xew Verl The Mether of All Living By the Auther of "SimcHi Called Peter" PllLDEURADK H.UYTHORNT- "Tliee who ta.e for a nth an.J interesting tei, who feel the thrill of atlventure . . . and of mectm real men und wen t n are going te Unci a great delight in this Afuum novel, a en' ) or, Herald. LOUISE MAVNSELL KIELD: "Far and away the me.st interesting chatacter in the book is. the ivid. passienal.-, intelligent, luthless and strong-willed, but generous Pamela, who dabbled in . -uime arts and run strange ri.sk, besides playing an ugly game fiein ex cellent motives." Xev Yerk Times'. DOROTHEA L. MANN: "Mr. Keable has peuer we knew befeie but it has grown with use. He is a bigger ma.i than when 1. wrote hin.en Called Pour,' and no ha stagul a aster -(.no . . this is a hook with a nunnnig and it poss-os potent appeal.' '1 It, i;0Uni I rauxcri)t. w" i no pealnKe etrn. E. P. DUTTON & CO. Beasts. Men and Gods By Ferdinand Ossendewski DR. ALBERT SHAW. Editor of The Rene of Revuws calls if "The most extraordinarily interesting mnnu cript I lmU. passed under my eye for vents. " ' Pel. KALPASHNlKeh.' writ s: 1 defy au one te beg,., thu hKeJuunSd." " "l Ut ' ,,iS hnmK Unl" tllP '"Sl "" ,S' .'lAKCOSSON writes: "It u, one of the most enthralling and .,..vT1V?.8v,mw hum,m ,iet,l""'' that I have yet seen." BENJAMIN MUSSER in The Trend: "It u, every word of it trngicully true. Ne novel could held the thrillx of t!K be u i he Bosten Transcript: "The narrative is replete with adventures the most 6vtartlinK intermingled often with th ?....? m' rrtet. SS.M. m m ,... . -.. 1". By EDWIN P. NORWOOD ciewn In e't t''" world nml lilt adxenturea In color hy A. Om) l'etnn iKer heyn nna Third I'lliitlnB $1,75 By HAL G. EVARTS By MARY H. WADE MOUSE By THORNTON W. BURGESS By L. LAMPREY u, j.u,ia i. nan njDiti. II. ,r bejs and Jl Se Sale at All lUekcllers Publishers BQSTOM 13 By HENRY VAN DYKE i i ii 'i ii r m Uei j itifa Jf i .vA fi'j'w . i A ! 'Vl Ti 4 :1 P i 1 fili W i 11 'f; F. DUTTON CO. : , , w ,tm 1 1 S MM n 3 BJM BBBBfaBBM mWaMlU H W&MMiM:. IK ,11 '. 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