u. ijm s&, SETT t-Vj . 'MYinsth .Vf4'' jyvw ?wwHiaiiiBWr9r HiHUiiHfaKrir MMg . . -w'tyi-rV''?'! ??' v" fv.fflTAtayy wsv wrria aaaaaaavaawaaaiaaaaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBja.' i v 4 4 :aV, L"' IB Maa ,,"aa"v 7,f.7.'., .rt i'I Tl"y WL.. aW I Ml CWLDREM READING? m Glue ThsmWketofme Bsmk Penelope's Problems Dr'Deretfces CaeUefcaa "wlST who mreta litr Many neblnii ! with a aunny smile.. Her - nSl In lntinUnei.ii and tlile etery about Mr l a unlfn.lld fontrlbutlen te . ,er.f ilrl-. Ubrinr.j., Henrietta's Inheritance A Seette! e "Oni Henrietta" fly tela Hern Klrnards "Thla li ni' of llw.nwil .rlMirmlnt Denise of the Three Pines Br KdHh A. Sawyer Drnlte la arnedtrn hmlBt. Jmjj and ihtrjITlBf, wit ball, thjtppjaljwl nil the clmrni which fe te mane a raici imt S Slaracter. Mlaj Byr lia i rren marten' hnni wliliher prarlent hJ fur yevim girl. Illustrated, tl.Oi Fer the Grewing Bey .. Ttie Bey Scouts at Camp Lewell By Anwar Corcoran PublUted with the approval of I lie Bey Scout, of America. One of tlioae whols whels whols teme boeka that (te far, toward maklaf worthy awn of prorejoliijr bera. The Fighting .Starkleys By Thtodere Rebrrta Auther of "Comrades the Trail;" tte. A itlrrlni tale of the Canadian north MfKKlt. Tha mntraat between a atrene itml n wrak Iiarncter develop, n .plot that l repli-te Willi drnmntlc nltiiattunn. Iltislrated, $J.as Fer the Younger Children When Fairies Were Friendly By Eralrcn Stein Auther of "OebHd and th$ Heur Boek," etc. A collection of unuiual fairy talet. Farrnta, aa wall aa children, will ap preciate thla little Telame. for the cliarni of atyle inakee the aterlca partic ularly adapted for fading altmd. Illustrated, $1.06 Leve Me, Leve My Deg By Carolyn VerheeT Child comradeship and klndneu te anl mala are the demlnint netci In thla nwctt and. endcatlnc tery. . m Illustrated, tl.OS Little Glad Heart By Linda teten Almend The appealing etery of hew Jean War- ii leaner 1 Ri wick, der.efthi ilelp-n-blt Club, brlngt hapnlneia te the whole Tillage ana eame rer ueraeu me name or -Mi- Me Ulad Heart Illustrated, tl.OS The Sandman t His Fairy Stories By Helen I. CaatalU The Handman Serin,- of which thla la the eleventh relume. haa been adopted br the tittle enva aa their own. and thev will hall with dellaht thla new addition te their collection of boeka Hint "mother readt te inn before alii puts tne te bed." Illustrated, $1,73 Christmas in Many Lands 'Xlil li nn Ideal book fur yenig ppli; at L'hrlMmaa llni" or any ether time. It rnntuln nnuilifr of xlurt uterlpn of the t'hrlttmaa aenien, each u etery of n different country, written by an author of cetablHhed reputation, who It futnlllar with the child life of tliete leuutrtea and their Chrtatmaa mitnma. Prefuitlv illustrated, tl.iO Chatterbox for 1923 The acknowledged King of all jurenlla boeka. "Santa flaua would net at tempt In de bualneaa without It" Bos:en Herald In cluth, H.1S Jllumlnatcd boerU cover, tl.CS Fer Readers, of All Ages The Read of the Leving Heart "A New Little Colonel Beoh" l) Annie Feltewa Johnaten Thla alary nf a little prlnrps and her faithful pet bear, who llnally rilncnter 'the rmd of the lerlne heart," la n maHtcrplirp of aynipntliy unci unJcr atnndlntr and beautiful thought. WUh special tfluafratfeni, $1.11 'The Page Company have a highly Prifllrifd plnce jn the hearen of childhood. Sleat or the ehelreat hoeka from PIIIXVANNA emvnrd. helmed hy children, und. If they ueitld cenfeaa It, liy their eldera e. hear the PAflK Imurlnt." hamlly Herald and Weekly Star, m Montreal W, Publiehcrs THE PAGE COMPANY 1 U a a ltj ',! u wnmrMfrmmTmmjmmmiwmi iiiL ,f' k'.,:i,inti -.' ' . ' 'st- t , - r -' . .".I EFipi?Sf6RIES Gentle Melanehbly of the Early ; Middle Age Pervades -, - Artistic Tales Edhn Ferber ii preoccupied wiifc the prebtani p.nd phlfoeeph'y et mlttdle life In most, of the vitally conceived and capitally told abort iterlea that cerri prlsa licr new boekr "Qlfole" (Dou (Deu bletlay, Peje St Ce.'). 'Age, from mid tllln te the Paalmlat'a Hue, from -jttat' touched-with -tmy te hoary, is the1 con cern ' nnd substance of these intensely Interesting, Intensely hnmnn chronicle of the "fJeiitedlr." Mlxs Ferber aeem perfncnteil with the.tentlc melancholy of cerly mlddle nae, which ceniiders and in n bit wistful ; and wonders, thlklna; en the, future, whether the part was nl together worth while. r3e these stories nre mlumbrateil by the pale cost of thought. But they are net sicklied o'er, Indeed; there is something-, rather, of the richness and loveliness nnd color celor coler fulness of the enrlv sunset alew. Such stories ns ''Old Man Mlnnlck" who prefers the quait-lndependence of inn "atcd gentlemen's neme" Kinuiy ntitecracv of a practical daughter-in-law ', te the genereui but ! "Net a Dav- Over Twenty-One,". In which the moods of the perennially, and pains takingly, youthful actress lire acutely analyzed; "The Biidden Sixties," tell ing hew age, with a sweep of imme diacy, deprives a cemnetent. successful woman of any transitional period these stories nre penetratingly and poignantly human." ' Uut'all the Nterles are net threnodies of senescence or genre pictures of the middle life of men and .women. Youth, tee, is served In "The Afternoon i of a Faun," with its elusive woodsy tem perament, its tricksy spirit, its location of a large-aired Vale of Tempe in soft smoky Chicago, and its hint of half half geiH if net of Apelle, under the garb of a hey of the day, native te, but net of that sooty, sprawling vital chnes of a city. The title tule. tee less for tunate In structure, Inevitability and tender tiiiderstanillngneas thnn the oth eth ers alto deulH v. Ith youth of it war scarred Ind who full.5, from fortune and vrncc through false pride and of his comeback wrought by the tender and true girl from back home. A "Gigele," you ask? Miss Ferber replies; "In the first place Gigele is 'slang.' In the second place It Is French slang. In the third place 'the gig la pronounced shig ; and the whole la net a respectable word. Finally, it is a term of utter contempt In the mad yenr 1022, A. W., a gigolo desig nated one of these incredible and pa thetic mnle creatures, who for ten francs would dance with any woman who wanted te dance." K SlaBaiSeaBBBaaBBBBBBBBi NsliBaaaaaaaaaHii?'j' BaBaaBaaaal BaaaaaaaaaaBRvtaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaSaKBBal aaVSlBBBBBBBBBBBKraBBBKaaal Bwaa! vi'' i'GaBBBBBBB&BBBBBai I ' ':'-:; Ta'Laaaaaaaaaaaaaaal N W. L. GEORGE Whose novel, "Her Unwelcome Husband," is written In the style of a play GEORGE'S NEW NOVEL LONDON By Geerge Wharten Edward If Londen Tows you'd view, And all it. tight, tad place, "de," Sani trouble or delay; Or if you're anxious te diviae Tha Ancitnt Inai whtre you iheuld dins Where belt tbe feed it and the wine; H all about tha Town you'd knew Of Strtn Dials or Rotten Raw; I'd council you at eace te go And buy .the book by Edwards With famous pictures, talk and witt "LONDON" is the aaaie of, it. Mr. Edwards lias lavished all of his ability and his art upon this splendid book. At "Alt Bookstores, $7.80, THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY Philadelphia The Franklin of our Day .vSlm of War Ambassador te England 1913-1918 The LIFE and LETTERS WALTER H. PAGE by BURTON J. HENDRICK "Page's immortal letters . . . am using the words with sober deliberation." J. St. Lee Strachey In The Adventure of Living. IrVJifcs V.HJ POUBUDAY. PAfll k CO. ei i.smi4i !, ,-, 4 4 . W -t. st British Writer Turns te Rather Trite Happy-Eiiding Comedy Although W. L. Geerge steps into tbe supposedly sacred reserves of the dra matist by opening "Her Unwelcome Husband" (Harper's) by having a cou ple of servant! act as chorus and lay the foundations for his story, he adds variety te it by intreduelns two cocka toos who ere "mlnnvic" and Imve "Ihifculcni heads". " After the dlctimi my haw bren interviewed tbe story of romance and its turbulent voyage when it leaves the stream of Youth and en ters the wnltrs of Middle Age moves along mere or less smoothly. It is Mr. Ueorge once mere applying his literary scalpel te the mind feminine Ills heroine, middle aged and de serted by a drunken rogue of a hus band, finds solace for her rejected leva in nn affair of years' standing .with, a young politician. By her incentive she reuses nlm from a humdrum existence and atarts hlra en the way te fame. Her romance la shattered when she finds him in the arms of a younger -woman nnd gives him up. Later she refuses a long-suffering admirer who conspires with the suddenly returned husband te have himself found in her apart ment. Thin touch f burleNque is fol lowed by nn unexpected finale of the ac ceptance of the lius'band bark te his old cenjiiRal rclntiens, he meantime having been cast off by his mistress, who de sired the attentions of a younger swnln. . Mr, Qeerge's thesis seems te be youth te youth, middle ace te middle age and old age te Itself. His denouement is brought about mere by the author's will than any logical deduction. There is no reason for the reconciliation of the blackmailing, no-geed husband and the wife who had erred for love's sake ether than Mr. Geerge's inclination. Ah in nil of IiIh novels, small talk usually cleverly done carries the bur den of the progress of the story. In "Her Unwelcome HuRbnnd" none of the characterisatien can be termed mere than mediocre. Mere Sinned Against Than Sinning Perhaps Washington never told a lie, but some of bis biographers hare Knmv talllne them about him ever sines the days of tbe cherry tree. One of the two things that we all knew about Washington ia that he eiherted his peopie te beware of "entangling alli ances." William Hescoe Thayer new tells tis, in bis "Geerge Washington" (Houghten Mifflin Company) that the phrase In net Washington's and, In fact did net appear en tbe political horizon until it wns first used by Themas Jeffersen in his Inaugural ad dress, 1801, sixteen mouths after Washington was dead and burled, Woelleott's New Jeb Alexander Woellcott, who haa just had published a second book en the stage "Shouts and Murmurs," an amusing volume of fact, comment and erlUcisav-aaa left the New Yerk EDNA FSRJSER Craeier'ef fenvM MeOlMeeer has wrrr4ea 'eeate aeetlraele slrt'ote slrt'ete rlee te a Totem entitled! "affeJe." ggagagagahK gggggggggggBVaw aaaaaHPiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa smsWsmW aaBaVaaaMaflgagagaaSSgagagaflgaW' ftXJtlKSMWSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSsm B ' I '' ' 'HHRHiaaaaaaaaal sWM$&zMlms smWfmMsiisSsSs1ssssWsWssWssW'J;' k'fy4"H'jksm FKa! ISBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaK -. '-' t VJSaaaaaaaaaaH aJaffiraaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaF? v "'- J ' '" aaaaaafJIaaaaH ,SaW' SsgaflBgaHVaain ' ": ''' : - laflPgei taaaaaK74aBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVmaaaaaaaaaH -' i--JstWi ajataaaai iBLaf'aaallaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaHaaaaaaaaaaaaaaal , , li ii -'jfaaW' J&Psmk raBBBBBBBBBBBmTeSiaBrBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBS V ? S'SS ' raBBBBmj MBmMJgBHBVRMM2aBWf7SasBBB?eBBBB-XSaaaBav A REPULSIVE HEROINE aanaaaaaaa t In 'East of Sue?' Somerset Mau gham Has Made a Powerful but Unpleasant Play J There are two places In which W. Somerset Maugham is completely at home ; one Is arrEngllsh drawing room, the ether en an East Indian veranda. In "East of Suck" (George-HDernn Company) itsis the atmosphere 'of the latter which permeates 'the seven scenes of the play. Aa a matter of fact, the t atmosphere is spread a bit tee thickly for high artistry. In that "East of Suez" differs greatly from the adapta tion of a Maugham story seen 'en 'the stage here recently, under the title of "Rain." In this grim tragedy of the Seuth Seas the atmosphere was unob trusive, but nevertheless vital and striking. These who were acquainted with the leeallly marveled at its au thenticity, ltvtM a question' jftst hew the scenes in "Uaat of 8uen" will strike them. Otherwise this is a well-written and decisive drama, somber throughout, and slipping a bit in its effectiveness at the end, but a tragedy of splendidly con ceived cress purposes and, characters which live rather than strut about pup-pet-llke. The chief character a woman Is pretty nearly the most unpleasant in dividual the stage has presented In a long, long time. Daisy Andersen, loved by her husband, yet false te him, adored by another man. yet tricking him into the le-"i of hi honor nnd Reed name, Is net the ort of heroine n Victorian author would have pic tured, but in the hands of the sardonic, cynical Mr. Maugham she' Is tremen dously moving, even though he be re pulsive. Unfortunately, the dramatist haa been se successful in his creation of an unpleasant person that her even tual suicide, when her lever has put; a bullet into bla head, and her husband Is coming te demand an explanation, Is net by any means se effective aa it might have been. Daisy has forfeited nearly every claim te sympathy and un derstanding, and yet' Mr. Maugham has se arranged her self-destruction tbet it Is meant te be' a thing of pathos nnd sentiment. Possibly, enacted by u great artiste, that result might be, achieved; in the cold light cf r-tiuiy-reading there is n decided Ict-ihwn'ln this second tingedy. We only feel that Harry Andersen is sincerely te be con gratulated. ' A WOMAN DETECTIVE WITH NOVEL METHODS These women who have long wished te be a detective will doubtless be in tensely Interested In Jennette Lee's "The Mysterious Office (Charles Scrlbncr's Sens), the heroine of which is a woman detective. It is a story about the disappearance of $25,000 from the desk of e business man while he was nbsent from the room. Every member of hi" offlce force entered the office in the interval, bul the man has se much confidence In them that he does net want te suspect any one, yet he -wants te knew what became of the money. The detectives whom he sum mons decide that a young man is guilty and the employer half bcllcvesthey are right. Yet he Is net satisfied and .gees te Mllllcent Newberry, the woman de tective, whose methods arid whose theory of her responsibility are peculiar. She finds a romance, in fact two'remances, In progress in nnd nbeut tbe office ; she finds three persons who admit that they took the money mid ultimately she dis covers the real culprit, who ie some one ex wneae existence tne reaaer is un aware until the very end of the story. It Is the kind of tale that the reader has te finish et one sitting. y IRONIC EMANCIPATION Clement. Weed Writes Imprei- sive Nevel of What "Freedom Means te Negro Just what "emancipation" means te the Negro Is something that Clenent Wded, the poet, has tried te interpret te' the whites of the" country who shud der when they think of the race problem and.then let It go at that. Te them Mr. Weed's "Nigger" (E. P. Dutten ft Ce.) m an explanation rather than an answer. In a careful and frequently neitnant nlcture of Nearo life, Mr. Weed has laid bare the life etery of a nmiiy rercetl out et the weutn ey the sudden conflagration of a race war. The old former slave granddad de cides thnt education Is the real key te emancipation nnd he struggles te have his breed get this key. This education is obtained after n fashion, but one by one tbe children fall nrey -te the adverse Influences which beset the Nfgre everywnere. une girl tires el-tne strug gle and takes tin the Scarlet Letter, another gives herself te a white man as his mistress, but gees back te her peopie when her child betrays the secret of her bleed. The' boys try te lift themselves up by means of book knowl edge, but find themselves forced back te lower labor and fall before the temptations of Hener and dire comean ions. Even the War falls te brlna the answer, although the young Negroes' give tneir best in It. With dreary desolation filling chan ter after chapter, Mr. Weed leaves the answer In abeyance. But his matter-of-fact story will open up many lines of thought ter readers, who cannot fail te nnd their heartstrings played upon by the pathetic story. a THE WIND BLOWETH By Denn Byrne Auther of "Metser Marce Pole," etc. A distinguished, amaiingly different sort of novel. The New Yerk Evening Pett aaya: "It ia a tale aa fine and keen and if.pple, as Teledo steel." (Illustrated. Price 92.00. Pub ished by The Century Ce., 383 Fourth Avenue, New Yerk City.) wttimWmmmtMSSSSSSSSS l gafaBsaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVa aaaaaaaaaaaW eaVsaWalaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVVVaaaaaaaaaaal aaaaaaaaaalaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaQkeaV wVaaaaaaaaaaaaaaalaaaaai BaaaaaaSHBeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaH rWBr" RsgtaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaalaaaaaaaaaaT aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaacaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaV 9LHgfLBl gaB HsagfBaaaaiHaaaaaH EffiftalSIBIJanl aaaaaaaBfcp'TaaBaaKflSJsir.Lir"' aaai i Y flH 3MiatWS239B&!$asWtV&KM MaW.', -.V-W. "' TRACED with a crime which would ' M bring every man s hand against him, Judsen Clarkyeung, handsome, the owner of a hundred million deU , larsfled in panic te the corral, sad' died a horse, and headed at a mad gallop for the mountains in the teeth , of a blizzard) 1,5 Can a man be two men? Could Dr. Dick Livingstone, j se young, clean,' lovable and straight-forward, en gaged te marry a charming girl could he be one with .the panic-stricken fugitive, one with Judsen Clark, the self-same man-who,ten years before, had fled ,with breaking mind and reeling senses from the horror of a crime which made him forever an outlaw? THE BREAKING POINT " . aaaa by Mary Roberts Rinehart ' Auther of "K," "The Amazing Interlude," ete. nsrans AT ALL BOOKSHOPS $3.00 uM3n UlsTfilfifl THE TRAIL OF CONFLICT BY Emllle Lerlng A marriage of convenience of the East becomes a stirring love affair, of the West. While winning a fight against great odds Steve wins the leve of his wife. At All Boeksteres. $t.TS,Net THE PENN PUILISHING COMPANY rUladttpMa HAVE YOU REAI SIMON CALLED PETER By Rebert Keable Auther of "The Mether of All Llvlag," etc. IT IS probably the ment widely talked of novel published during 1922. $t (postage extra) all bookstores E. P. Dettn ft Ce., Ml M Are, N. T. UACOBS FOR BOOKS 1628 Cfertniit Street Letters of James Gibbens Huneker s Edited, with a preface, by JOSEPHINE HUNEKER "Letters which tell a atery of pathos and beauty and brilliance. . . . My copy of the Letters lies beside me bristling with little scraps of paper marking- pages which cry te be quoted from. . . . They are the letters N of a true cosmopolite. , . . They are the woof of a life which wbb a rare tapestry." Fanning Butcher in the Chicago JVttune. . a .,.......,i.,at..t.-:ii .,V-.-..-iaMltvairf atfiflUZ"" . the ereattet Dlavwriahl AiuMae. has produced are about the hmfi A.aJUal aaaauk Latafai aaaaBCaa J aataaaaaa. ffl ?..: CaU of the Wild". kVsbetuti fullfSMde book, tee. ', Aim elea'c overlook two of the finest books for young ralnde that have bcea published recently t aMABaM LAaiaABaVa Mfl a THI WEAPON MAKER ($lI) has gene Inte Its 6th edition, and t 'f and Its sequel, KUTN AH) I SON th eth" volumes such as The ' I OP FIO. Ne one need go into a reading we have ever put lae i' Srlnt. The volume ncNOMf xvj NNA0HRIET1E,THEHAII7 ;? ara. inarmer aauara ("! HBNDRIK VAN .LOON Is back from Europe with the news that THE ETORY OR MAN KIND ($3.00) of which 100,000 copies have been printed in thla country, is new being translated into French, Dutch, Italian, Oer man, Danish, and Swedish. The new leather-bound $7.50 holiday edition of thlibeat of all gift books has Juit been issued. TRAMPINO ON LIFE by HARRY KEMP($j.oe)hat atlait gene into it third edition. In spite of having received the most en thuilutlc reviews that any Aute biography has gotten In years, tta ssle for the first month was dis appointing. New, however, we're safe in predicting that ft will be come as popular as LUDWIQ LEWISOHN'S UP STREAM (Jj.oe) which has already sold about 20,000 copies. Put Tramp ing en Life en your Christmas checking list. JOHN COURNOE, the Areer- fcan-Engliih author of BABEL 8.3e) is new touring the country, e writes from Pittsburgh that the day he get there one oeokttore had four copies of his novel and the dayafterwards they were all gene. There are ever 2500 book steresinthe country telling books. We hope Cournos makea every town in America. Burten Rascoe, Shella-Kaye Smith, May Sinclair, Jehn Macy, and scores of ether tine critics consider Babel either a masterpiece or close te one. EBi We can't reiterate tee often that BEYOND ROPE AND PENOEby DAVID OREW(Uoe) is the best animal story of recent years. If you love horses and the outdoors, if you have children in whom you wish te inculcate a love for geed literature, which, at the same time is highly diverting, don't overlook this book which The Detroit News considers the best book of its kind since "The aivd Its sequel, KUTN AN I OP PIO. Ne one need ee bookstore wondering what stories te buy for their children wncn these two fine re-creations of the age long age are te be had. Once mere we urge you te buy HEARTBEAT by STAOV AU MONIER tfj.oej. In these dsys when se many novels, each one liketheether.arebeing published, it's a blessed relief te get one from at fine a writer as Aumenler is recegnised te be en both tides of the Atlantic, which doesn't dlt cuta the tame old preblemt in the same old way. Heartbeat may be a bit melodramatic, but only at life Is melodramatic. Add te the B. & L. list of the best Autobiographies that have been written by Americans in re cent years, THEODORE DREI SER'S A BOOK ABOUT MY SELF ($3.50) about which Themas Alexander Boyd says: "It would teem te me te be the mete Important book en any Ametlcan Eublither'a list this season." This ; the first book that Theodere Dreiser, America's leading novel ist, has written In several years. A Boek About Myself Is the sort of publication that makes theB. &.L. imprint worth loeklngfor. Ready November 35th). Emperor Jenee (!.oel Beyond The Herison ($ws), The Moen et the carteees (91.73). etc are tn at great demand In the libraries as are the plays of Ibsen, Shew, ana Hauptmann. All of the O'Neill Slays are te be had In uniform Indlngt. ErBFIs amar Interested in the political devel epment of America during the past century (and who are net) there can be no mere fascinating work than THE NiY. BVBNINB POST, A OBNTURY OP JOURNALISM f.oe), by ALLAN NEVINS, profusely if luttrated and beautifully bound. We feel privileged in being the publishers of the history of one of the most tlgnlficant journals that America has known. THE STORY OF UTOPIAS with an introduction by Hendrlk by LEWIS MUMPORD ($j.oeJ Van Loen has just beenpubllthed All we need say about this book is that many able critics consider It the most illuminating challe te fresh, thinking all alena tt line since Robinson's The Mind ?sb We can'tthinkef abetter holi day book than KEN N ETH MAC OOWAN'S THE THEATRE OF TO-MORROW ($5.00) with its 8 beautiful color pages, numerous line cuts, and 32 full-page half tone Illustrations. It supersedes all ether books en the new drama and en the new stage-craft. (Neu and reviled edfrim ready Dee. tst). Everyone who taw and read LlLlOM ($3.00) theuld gallop te the nearett boekatore and ask for FASHIONS FOR MEN andTHESWAN ($3.er),thenew FRANZ NIOLNAR volume(Eng litn text by Benjamin r Glaxer). Beth plays will be produced in New Yerk thlt teaten. " THE CRITICAL GAME by JOHN MAOYr-eUi the best bet of the season in belles Iettret. Don't miss it. Which reminds us that Macy's The Spirit of Amer ican Literature is in THE MOD ERN LIBRARY. Anyboek-buy-er who overlooks this excellent series of attractively bound and printed, and interestingly chosen selection of one -hundred bett books of modem times, should apply for a mental guardian. We hope that hundreds of read ers of this advertisement will send for net only our general catalogue (Geed Beeks) and the Illustrated MODERN LIBRARY catalogue, but also for "AN HISTORICAL READING LIST FOR CHILDREN." BONI MIVCRIGMT t Publishers r NEW YORK" iua-3 west 40th Street With photogravure frontispiece. At all bookstores. 98.60 CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, Fifth Ave., New Yerk The Old Tiger's, lelf-revelatlen in his articles and speeches collected in France Facing Germany By GEORGES CLEMENCEAU should be read by even- one interested In his visit te America. His famous speeches em Alsace-Lerraine MoreccoPeace with Oer" many the Conference of Berne the Zabern Affair, and the impris onment of Hansl show hew he meulded the spirit of France before !.. ,hta speeches en The War-Frem Charleroi te the Marne Wsr In the Trenchss-g,. War of Endurance-A visit te the Trenches thrilled fighting France during the war. The book reaches sa eloquent cflataaTn his famous Verdun speech -We Mustl" The book is in itself a portrait Imperishable. S.lSTU re IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS SAMUEL TRAIN DUTTON A Biography By Ctaarlca H. Lereraaere A review of Mr. Butten's beliefs and work along the lines of education and Inter nationalism. SS.B0. A HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA" A The American Period Br Beber OUee OleUnd Represent the fruit of long research and etudy. S4.00. THE DISRUPTION OF VIRGINIA The remanen nf wnrM hlalerv. Amnlv "' Jumea . -ucurecnr '""THE M.1SIJ.WV AND I1008KVKI.T ,A" l"""'.'"'" treatment ADMINISTRATIONS. 1887-1009 of. Virginia' aectlenal dim- By Jamea Ferd Rhede cutties. 12.00. A thorough and masterly review of the ' Spanish War and ether eventa of the time. .oe. RURAL MICHIGAN THE TREND OF HISTORT j- AUB Bh-. Origins of TwentteUh Century Problems 7 Uen Vhw Dy William Kay WaUawe p.. and reant nnnenta of A brief, yet careful, survey of the faetera . J"r . . . ep, 5 which have determined the course of events Mienl11" a ngrlcultural and during th pact century. SS.ffO. rural life. 2.ne. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 Fifth Avenue cw Yerk jKsiWMEiaSs AN INTRODUCTION TO POETRY Rr Jay n. Hubhcll and Jehn O. Baty The bpst groundwork for underatandlnc nnd enjoyment of contumnerary pestry. $2.80. A remarkable new novel by Silts Sinclair. SZ.00. z'mi r ale, Mttaee.estM at au teektt 'as - Published by E. P. DUTTON GO. Surnh BttrkhaH had the hnrt pf a Afadenna. "' Madenna of the Curb rfy ANNA BAiMER MYERS nh..Hnl'i? wl1'0 Wwem novels of the Pennsylvania Dutch S5rwif.r.ll'-ti2uh,.h!r-KSr,weunt wh strong centrasta and keen-humor MyeiV ea?ilewer wEoUre "Mry d ' that marked Jaffa uJarslftl0n,Sl.?S.tt Utk" th,t you may haV6 the iey 'knowing "Carolyn Wcllt milts thai rare thins, a really geed ddtdice story" Bosten Transcript Ne read led from the great stone house en the sea cliff except the ene en which Betty Varlan'e gueets steed waiting for Betty and her father te join thorn. Then Mr. Varian wee found dead. He hed been shot. And Betty was . . . nowhere! Thue began e mystery se complicated that even the clerer detective, Penny Wise, and his odd helper, ZtsI, could de little but fellow events te the thrlllini climax that solved The Vanishing of Betty Varian By CAROLYN WELLS All Bookshops, $1,75 GtertsW. M T n-A-vfjt fUtiH Publisher PhibdDhfe In theDays of Peer chard By Irving Bacheller A iWft tkwt witt ec rW eyer t he UngthsmdhrtUUfftheUnd. Dead emd gem htnm become reel end friendly humem beings in his hands, full ef hurmr and laughter and longing, immersed in the struggle of living, understandable and lovable. -WUefarbHawkaM la N. Y. KaHAlD til as SniiiMiis nucisa.ee essmrSaSWWf) SPVsvvssO'ew By KATHARINE FULLERTON GEROULD Valiant Dust This volume of stories offers another notable example of Mrs. Gerould's skill in the field of fiction. It will even enhance the enviable repu tation which was built up by the publication of earlier collections, such as "Vain Oblations," nnd 'The Great Tradition," nnd se admirably con cen hrmed by the success of her novel, "Lest Valley." rh's new collection represents Mrs. Gerould's selection from her stories of the past six years. $2.00 at all bookstores SCRIBNER'S SONS, Fifth Ave., New Yerk CHARLES mum I W&A V j, !! :m w XNf M I yiJ J-1 'V J m A 1 & TWV A 'I 'mms&'m BC imrtrvvm i V r -i.'V7fctT'.ir.2i' .. ' . t 'f h BY' 't?y "'A. 1 it v TJj.'stsJij' rr - , :.; i f r 4. 9 TJ mmmmmtiifkVSMtu K . v t . tea??
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers