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BOOKS: AUTHO
. _ i
Novels by Henry James, Lincoln,
Barclav, Chambers and Buchan
Novels by Henry James
Two Works 1 rft l 'nhniahed. but
With Copious Notra
tthi rrovi i 3*n"* yim*
tt gra t }*****
4 j ~'r-'A ,0
these twe ,>nt' ?*
the M n- llc
had probablv intend. I 1 ' ea h'*
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? . m ich he
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n inUrropted aad
? ght de
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?traint
.rr,.. At the
thui later
? ; flt Bii
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ar'fl ep>
? unflniahad
ectiona
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D ekens
? u v art;
pirina* a pe that no
"? ?>' wita
I be ai
? ? which
?
_
?/us/ Olil
TBE HICH COST
OF
By Fredcric C. Howe
Commi??ioner of Immigr ation
at tbe Port of New York
Including
The Fe?<"-. r of tbe Nation
- . ' | and Di-tr:butcr?
Jl.e Caal of Lrvrng and the Food
The 1r__?; I rtation Fmbargo
?JV.y Ti.-rt h N-t Metfl Food
Food Contrt! m Germany
From Prod- rr lo lon-umer
tht Land to A.nrulture
?
MUDIE'S
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MISTRESS
ANNE
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Twenty-fifth
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r.tw elory.
* erert ttt'
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Al o.l boe.kstoret-ti.li met.
Tbe Penn Publishing Company
Philadelphia
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I teristlc stvle. hi. intentions for the
, devclopmeut of the plots and the nlialy
tii an.l pntravsi ot the chiu actcrs. Ifl*
1 deed. the reader cf the nnflniahefl
BOTfllfl "'.:'V with aasjirance leurn how
thev iBflflitably wi) i!,l have "come out"
hy reading these notes. Of flOOrfl*. the
notes were not meant for pnblieation,
tny BflOIfl thflfl thc novels wi'ji' m?ant
to be left unfiniflhed; bnt liaefl tho au
thor's purpose wti thwi.rtcd in the
lat'er eaat there is no impropriety Ifl
OTfliraliflg it m the former. Indeed. it
was a most flXCflllflflt thing to print the
notes, linea thfly net only IBggtfll the
wav in which the novels would have
heen completed. but also which is far
inoro important pive us euch an in
Eleanor M. Ingram
("Tho Tw:..B Amer-ran": Tne J. B. JJppln
?"!' I
light Into the author'p mental Mee
r-^o? 8<4 we could have obtained in no
other way.
It remain* to atld that the major
part of both works wflfl completed, and
that both are Anglo-American?or per?
haps Americo -Fnglish tales of the
nl time. "The Ivory Tower" hns
ita scenes laid larpely at Newport and
deals flrith the wn?fltionfl and doinrs of
a voting Ameriean who has aflCXPecl
fd!y become the mhentor of a larire
fortur.e. while "The Sflflflfl of the }'h?i."
as its Bfltni ? psy
ebolflgieal Btady of life in London.1
Loyoh of Mr. Jamefl'i writingfl, who.se l
name may turn tfl these un
linifhed BOTfllfl and the r.ote. which
ficconipany them with confidence of
great joy. Thfly are eharacteriatifl of
nnd flrortky of tne'.r author al hifl best.
Dignifying Labor
MABOriNT, MIN IU Sve? -. ?'. A- lr-r??. l.mrj,
PP 14. J ' I?M ' ?? ;*aj |
There was never before a time in the
hlftory of the country when the proh
|i rr.s of labor so occupied the public
mind. NflXl io the war il is the tupic
of pmeral discti??:on among think ng
people. In "Marching Men" Mr.
Anderson has a ciever and original
iden. but, unfortunateiy, he has not thfl ,
couraee of his convictions, and there-1
fore tne book bflffl its point and sir.ks '
at the end to anti-climax and;
the commonplace. i
Thu story is the life hist4->ry of ?
"Beaut" McGregor, the son of a half
crazed Scotehmflfl whom hin feliow '
HBflfl called "Cracked McGregor."i
7t.ne is laid in tha coal mine
of Pennsylvania and later on
tal Side Ifl Chieago. Mr. Ander
? flwi his background and paints
it flrith tin* realism. "Heaut" Mc
Grflgor, through hia hatred of tkfl
I rronndlflgfl in Coal Creek,
and afterward through the
? a: 1 expanding of his aoul
"When Sergeant Empey
Holds Forth About the
War You Can Hear Him
From a Seat in Z. But
You Can Hear His Audi?
ence From Away Out
Yonder in Lake Michi
gan."
i~hirarro Tribune
And because his
book has the effect
of his speeches, you
can now hear his au?
dience from Mata
moras to Nome, from
Santa Catalina to
Nantucket.
Wherever there's a copy of
"OVER THE TOP"
Empey is playing to
a crowd ed house.
.' 16 /Iluelmt4o?a 11 -0
Wherever Men Sell Booka
Hear Empey Lecture in Carnegie Hall
Sun. Eve., Nov. 4th
|BE1BE1~BEIBBBBB
It's New Portable
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WRITING MACHINE
10 Many Typetsfiterfl in One
io ??ta tt tyM ?!??>? I* Ih. m.ihlr.? J_j
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AUiM. lo U.4> -l?:>ia_ fle'.L, 0. mfltai
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lltw_r> Peeple bflCflMM t Hfl iMUflttl IH
__gtt Ifl >V WtUm, xllli p-i
ALL TYPE STYLES |
Aii lant\ua\e
.1
especlally reprflaentfld rh
in one MULTIPLEIX
a)
Kflflflf a
PATBONS:
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lll IHE HAMMOND TYPEWRITER CO. I
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^*3*3*=j*EiT=ll3r3r=J'=il=il=M
T y p ? In t * a o n <J
F'-tlr'ent Woo-?- Wltton.
Lwula Jo??pri V?ne?. f..n? NMSfl*
Pcrtw. Wnlt Muon. Wllllflm De?n
i-..- > tm, rtt.
;?;.??, l / ifetti mai il rtt
.. Hrb :' r Ma. I.lr.rti ai a vrlr\e rtni
0,/ in'-m. M ? tl I ?>??
a^ft t ?l?lofl'.? flfld ? flflBl fflfl ?*>?
RS: PUE
when he goes to live In the big eity, ll
on fire with rebellion at the WTOBffl et
hia fellow workmen. aad _ < es h remcdv
in the old ideit of clrs- oli,l_rit \.
which has for bim a new nnd MBCrete
mcaning. He note. that tb. wt.rkmen
slink und slouch lO nnd from tbe
faetories, nnd hr renliies tbnt the nt
titude of their bodies reactu upon nnd
intensilies tbe grovelling of their .mih.
and so be teaCBefl .heflfl to march. aml
hia marching conipanK's. head. erect
and shoulders bark. flteppiflg side by
side in unison, through tlnir unity of
physieal action come to think ns n
grenp and to reali_e their pewOT.
Vr. Aadereoa writea ia un abrupt
style, which at times makes his book
auarn like rather unskilful ttanalatien
from a foreign tongue. but thn v- ry
ahortneai ef elipped leatoacei la many
places rrscs to a crude but moving
Florence L. Barclay
Werceflter**. o.
? >ii? i
(??Th? Whita Ladtee or
Putnarn *
eloquence, a* for inr-tnnce in such
paaaafi ai the followipri
"Criukod MrOrepor died in the
;tun reach ol thr door
to the old enl where the tire baraed.
Witl I "'I bol tive of the
Impriaeaed miBera. All .lay partiei
0f mea tried to fai d< a ?
mine. Below in the h; Iden pai
ander their own homes the H.-urry
. . - ? m ? I'nrn
ins barn, whila their ?>?
shaw!. o??r tl i
j.tii embanli
In the evenirj. thfl BOl nnd hi*
motl
the houfli tered t
came thfl flOBnd of women weepinf."
A slight love stotv TOBfl through the i
book.
Captain Noah
How He Circumvented Balaam
and Reocued Obadiah
I _ UTI B) J"';' '
... ...,.,
A.. ?' A > ?
How loag aee did Sally Pratt Mae
lean writa "cape Cod Pelka"_ And,
bow many boo'-;* have since been writ- :
ten about that oaaiat regioa bi
people 1 WT? nakfl bo eatiniate. Wfl
always did fiunk Ifl Bifbfll Mnthe- ?
matiea. Hut we voatara the eoi
jurigment that not one of them haa ,
been tuperior to the eolanfl befon
afl, and that, indeed, very few of them
ha ?? approximated iti ita'ndard of ex
cellencc.
ln I'aptain Noah N'ewcomb Mr. Lin?
coln has created u fenataa "charac?
ter," as lovablt ? i h ne aad aa
true to life us life Itaelf; nnd ho has
.urrounded him with others -Balaam,
Obadiah, Clifford, Weatworth, Mary
Baistow and Melis.a Mayo of
greatly varying types. but all rso life
that Wa involuntan'.y begin to
wonder whera it was that we met
them, and whether it was last .im
mer or the year before. Eoaall]. con
vinclng of reahty are the doing. ia f
lajiagl of all these people; with no
extravagance, no burlcrjue, no arti
Aciality. ?et witb all aad tl
?OTHfl nf thfl author'i higheit aii
there is no oggeation of mere photo
graphic meticnloaity. The aeeBfl ifl
the work of ? pamier with vision, not
of the camera and dry plate. An?
other fine touch of art i<- at thfl eloae.
In le.-s authontntive hands the actors
and events would have been led tfl ?
Foneral climax, with the entire com?
pany grouped upon thfl stage and red
fire blazing in thc wlflCf. Not so Mr.
Lincoln. He lets Taptain Noah dispo^e
of the two aconndrels, Raiaam and
Wentworth, fleparately and apar*,
without sttenuosity, but, oh, so efTec
tlvely! The two weddings are s:mi
larly eflfected, and then all the o'hnr
loo?e ends are gathered up nnd fas
tened -te change thc figure in the
most satisfactory fasliion. In brief,
. verythlng is made to bappen not as
it would on tho stage, but as it would
in actual life.
It ls a work which from frrst to last
will be a Joy to ihr reader, with a
promise of ro less joy at the flOC 11
reading which dOBOrvea to follow. nnd
onc which maal be plaeed la thc front
rank of the fletloi of the year.
From Convent to Bridal
mr whtti LAom oa woaenma n.
? i. Rurliy. Will ?:?'<? ?
i.v i if T_- am i Ua .. iv- Ul Q. V P ??
I Ih.'l Sot.l
The author of "The P.osary" has here
eaaayed a romance of the twelfth cen?
tury depictinpr the trials of a nohle
lady who, tricked by liea into believing
her bctrothed lover tO haTfl been fall
to her and to have wedded another, en?
tered a convent and beCBfllfl it* head,
but was reelaiaaed therefrom by her
loyal lover, and was married and douht
lei lived happily with him ever after.
She ha* told th.s atroBcly lyB-pathfltie
tale with much dotailed reeonatroetion
of the convent life of those remote
times, with red-blooded human BBtorfl
viry much alive under the wbitfl rnbe?
nrd aeapolariefl, and with a eeia of
spontaneous humor that is often very
JLISHERS-NEWS:
Received and Reviewed?
Books of the Current Week
(Thr faUawiaa numed *a*k* have. brrtr rrcrivrd ba The Tribune
during the week. Some of the wore impmliiu! u?d timely. toi/ether u-ith
'other* of un riirlier date, am reviewed in the cdumn* of to-day'x Tribune.)
The War and Patriotism
11? Ii Am." n k Cn
A ,r.i. I.r 1 flflcM ui?nu?l.
THK < Ild li I IU : nd ' s ?<? " _?* rnr"n
am *?i> in? -'K 0*6* ***** * <0 , _
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what li lo eimi" -">*r Ums ***?
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IJ.u.'raie* Stfl-o. flfl. II -W Oflflflflfl ?. P?*?
Vo^'l'lte U.elilrg and tr_lntrf nr _?n_/ller.
A JOIRSAI, tmOU <> U UUATION IV H1X
(JI1M ll? Il'n' nih-uri liin.U-u**- ???. PT
pnul r.l.r I'M" A fo
Ai .uUmoUc wor* uy th" lint aerr-Ury rrf _?_?
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MY APMATI I.I I fll A (JtJIlMAV aj**rT.?J*
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Ten i_n i?i? patrtefla; na lhr?- rnr>r
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A mW*m* Ii_e flf MTHnl M 1 K*ilaiil?l!t,.
Juvenilia
sTnwr.TiT AHKAD Ut h_?-'~ Wia__k m_
. mtfld {te* pt. ffl n Apii:<-__j a o
? rc^eTi!."''0 "f ''' :*Z>' ?* M!" mm * -'o:t *ul(i
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, a t'Hii.riH vr.Mi BOOK H it.jth ptmrtm B.
??_??n! 47. w HaiflM * flr.?
A 1*?'' ?'?' .r-.l I'l^tur. for e*eti moo'h
WTNONA Of CAUT KaKosia liy Hu.*--**
" ' I ?'-*1 ItM TO II^'tS
( J. H L-flptBODtl I .r:,.-_r,f.
4 Clafl 1 .tor*/.
MTf-rYitv T.M.rs roi BOTI ast? rjim., 8e.
l-r-?l bj >:,r? S Sn.:?..'. i: i_>:r?fj i_i_ _-.
.4. ]_ I/.--., I_^ fc BhtflMffl I-?,p.ny
I'Lir. ?.;-rtr m :r. i,r.*a _fl !.K)B[ry frum iren
' wrlterv
nouoniv nAiN'TT at r,i.i?*s-*,forir nT Amy
| Mi n Wlntat i:mn. i>p ttl. Th# Lxhruo
Ir- A II i<ir i i .lnptoy ^'
A flr'.' lioar-llrf , Juall Jtl*.
THK IiAYTIMIJ filtinr ICX?K Bt Riith o
I>j-r l ?lrat*i J'-.i. ij. 191 ir? I_,rrirop;
I Mfl A BMM I ^m|.a- ,
A !.*?. M m"'.:.er uul rhllrl
tmf venn or no: MUfliinrrt ny d raj,?
Illi'?'? ' flfl flflfl, Ta I^tiij;. I__y A
?MflflTfl I VWT.faaUljr.
An iPdl-u ra.. V (*jt|j War Umt_.
: A BON nr Tlin l*ITV hy H.rTuin fJutreil
fleely Iliuit/.Jed Uri,... ft) Bfll A (' JI,
? A Cu
F.n lf? at ayrnr.. and lo a
(?ffective. Thcro is nt times more talk
i than artion, and at timos tho narrntive
:s lacknif, in IflMOtaflflflfl. Y't-t Kl ap?
peal to interent is fltrong, rin<I its illu
eidii of mt'iii-Bval condutt and cotuli
j tioni i.s ?ufli_ieritly j;erfeet to command
Hpproval.
The Huns
I1Ani*4I!!4V, T'\ It/ihert W f? _mr?? Tllufl*
l.y A. I KflUflT. tflfl ;. ? 1' Ali
j ? ? ( u
"Toddy" worild have liked it, because
it is "all blttfg"*.'* As for us. we con
fp?s tn a hflarty ijnflpathy wuh tha
spirit of it. The RflBI flflphflflliflB for
Pnnfliflflfl Wfl a* jrrent Mtvrbariafll au
Mr. Cbaflabflt-fl dapletfl thrm, wh:'.!- in
view of rectnit revelations of latollet
tlsm it is not an flltflfffltllflr ur.forgiv
abtfl flxaggflratlen to sHy that
There wan trearhery in the .Senate,
treason in the Ho'isc A plaffue of
BY
Maud Diver
UNCONQUERED
A Novel of the early days of
the war.
Tho Soldier, the Pacifist,
tho Slacker, 'thc true-bfuc'
Girl, andtheGirl who w.sn't
F've amazingly well-drawn
characters, inastrongstory
By the author of
"Captain Desmond, V. C,"
"Desmond's Daughter,"
"The Great Amulet,"
"The Hero of Herat,"
"Judgment of the Sword.'
Color Frontis, $1.50 net, at all Booksellers
NEW YORK 0. P. Putnam's Sons LONDON
TWB PtXIB fit T IWMlRS li, t..,ir* Rnuntrn
Nmiin i pamtatat u, mim i?n. or, ut, a.
< U C r? A l .,
A ir. mm f.i,, 'tney.
BOKBjnAN'a TWINI Ttt Bulfi?1 r H_?np
l Iralad >??, w J?? 0. I' Pwinarti'i Kuna.
A ?tlirtn| .lor* ut Wr?t?ni ulm iure
Tttv. rotTKO UKMKM Ur Waat tmaantm
UlaMraUd l.'iu.. pa IM. Rmall Majrr.arl A
Ol
A tUrrtnf flfth to'.ttma rt th? "CBflflJ ie1
Trall" -rrlM.
Misoellany
umv mit MABBYf Hr Ai.r.a Mar** Weh?f"l-_a
j Dlitfiltd itma, ii' Bfl H"W>? ilxfrtli I'ora
| Baaa
lutormxl rliala almut dnmmlle Hf*.
0U> bkapobt rowjia nF TUF. HniTll Hr
| MlldrM I'ram lliir?frat~1 Ir A'lrui 0 iViru.
I M* M. K_ |, ,i,i Mra.1 A , ??
A i-h?n/ aairaUfa >* -t?Tra'j~it in hifiiTV
i p;?~?
IIAMH1.I.S IN <i|Ji riil.l.K'lK T'rtWfl By BIM
f?il-, Bawtbef i -"iHil br John Artwrt
htatoi 1 mo. i,. ttt Llf?l(1 Mr.1 A ln
Oi'rruiirlnr pn*or___J imtta atui mmtttm ot
i Am-naaa i*>!!(fea.
Woman AS DBCOaaTIOM Hr Batti Pn-.uik.
UhMraM <??,?.. n m r?i-i t. U*aA A Co.
A aump'.wxia NlMM nn ut ::. ftmlnln* al'dra.
iHAKDlCAPfl OF CBII-D-IOOD I?i B Aailnftno
1 Wtmta . ? ? . \ i' -il Waat A l <>
A MNltl kflfldM <*l tho eerniitr p?" tui'taj
j of rMUr-fl
< ntr. DTNAMIC or M.wnoop p.y T_ith.r n
i in Mr, <_! D. llmo pp Ifl cl?_>rf? W. l?ui
I Caaat
llew t!i<? tiat iral dmlnw tt Mfl Hfl IB b?
?ra!l", 1.
makim; Tinr QBADB Rr r v M~hy m n
lr'nv. pp 14-. Ti - tUtMaat l'r>*J? (Sl UsiM)
I i?v -.ti .. i Dn ii.-rni Iti ttt
pkhhian xiivivn uis nr n a r>-n_tiv n
iiiM-?t..i ?... no Kin, j:n. T>-.i>..?\t). riga
k Oi
a fav-t: a'nic MrtH "" Nnflaa ?>><?? i.-*
Bl Kl:. MAS I CH-DfUTBT n> Kl?. *1 IterArilL
i |m pp --| Ha;-' a !??
A ttatOt ll kMtfM I ? tli? laytran.
I IF I WBBI TWDfTl ONB Hr WUIIttfl Maiwr'l
I tutrtlad : ti. ? pp HO J ll Upplno'.t
' OBrapeap
jA liuauma m.in mi t?i?li.~? hpla
, rm: HmaaauErBB'- appus boor nr i.
; (>r*r. .? M.-Ki. |*ae, pp ltl I4ul? tt?i
A .'??
A , iU?rU '. al n?-rpo,
POST.U. KATIKIM Ii, ?_?__ M|Mar K-rrm-r**
Sro. ip .lil ! 7-t Tl- ITI-. vtot In rtntll P --?
An lUitorlcai ?n I rrUleai *tul> iJ lBt Anii?1.-*n
?
Of_D ROAM ruoM TR ht.art or BflO york
I. Bmli r?itudl Wlr. , I nl lllmtrartniii ?M
'***'? ipa l.'i . '. !?;? ll r. 4 ;1 0 P i
A I'OM. STIHV niiH-r IV HK.I.TII ANI)
Pl l.Ti Kl: Ul BOOI ANH Mivn Kr Hrnrt
r ' , Ig
i RaMaa v n?nr_,
TIU: HK-H '<'.*T nl I.IVIMi pv rrH_rl. r
? PP i n - - - .-- rtbnar'i
\ ? " ??? !,- lr..'\'?.
1 (i\ THE mCAOWATEl ? Of Pl ,t r KIVKR. Pt
Pi .. I ?? . i iii. - i liMtri ad. ?,'.. pu.
Irtl. :?',. DiirW rr,-ibnrr-t tam
miikkk TO RKLl tfAXrOCBI-Tfl BV.LO?
? ? . ii UM PuMUblOfl 0* i
r? r .'iltl ?
A iMral ri i? te "-Ht-n.
000 I Ml- ? ri - i Kt aM CtaBflM tr t
1 ? -I rtj, Vir FMbllAhln*
i ?..:.?.- -
A pujiT f .r .. ln tha T'ar.
Portry. Drama, F.ssays
WIBCO.N8I.N BONNETfl I'.t o ?- ... It \v k.
?P H 1" '- - P . ? | i'i*mp?rrr
0 i 1 . ? ? .?
I BOW TO ur WHAT >'H WAWT Hr ')rl?ri
c ?*' " <m__ T
i Orarall Pompanr
I iitl" MMJI.
Wiri.lirs AMi UEAft'BXfl P. F-i-.klln P.
Atiti? Itao pp 14 DouMrdij Pifi A tu.
> m. i*.. ? tt. I !? -?? ??_?? .-v iii V P A
ORRN tkaii.- anii UPLA-fD PABTtmi n?
. w >tl? !??? ? -u-' tatem I . . t_ril?d ,
; ||i i rv ,:: .13 l> .'ii/.i.ti, Pafli A <??
.-!? t.mttcb*a ' ? '?? a I,-, _t.:,t to i!>n
PRoniTM'- op -nrr PLAIWRIOHT nr ri?r
? ?:. llunUtim l.'rr..>. 1.;. i'.iI. 131 II.;. 17 Ilc.t
i A Co
?MU iti m.-r phMM rt OIWUtM irttlllfl
Tlli; Hri.l. OF IN. it.lSH AND THK BtTKFT
Bi BargM ' . pp_ , 141 UUIft
I
k_.i-a.ti nn Um r!f!it m<i ','. Er.flljh.
MOTIIF.lt NATi BI PBOORtaa Bf Gn?tiT?
?.... .s- ?-? pb ' ' ??'? Wtama A ro
T? 1 Balfllaa pi?>?
.SdMi.s op BBNT1MEMT By Ida P?r-Hlrn Harr-:i
H01 ?? porirUl ISma, pp. US, laa *e..?
1 . i'i:i.f.r.l
i'i,. ? louL
I Arri"'?': Tlli: RABI Hy < liar'?? Frrrf*' WtmtW.
: pp. 51 T ;? ".- ?' ? 1 I'limpaiiy.
!Triu.- 1 I ? ? ' I*trn ,'*:*.
History and Bioj^aphy
T1IK llOMANCK OF THK HOW AVOF/B Bv
, j.hpt'i m '-'? 1 utra ? ?! -?? .. 1 Datt,
U .1 A l>>
A rlri.l |?.i*i:ir '. . t Kr-.ia:; t',v?irrl?ri?
1 ' '
THE DIAB-EI "F 1X0 TotsTOT. TVaaaUM tu
r J H mant ar. I a. aamU in ttau n
!\ ,1 1 routh; .?)? t- 1053 B*KI - . - ?
1. C 'ii^'.T^ Wrtfhl Wtth portralu 12aw,
pp ir. 171 I P Duttoo A 1 ??
,.- 1 I Im ??!'.? r, V. Trh-rt
y I
I AN ANCKRIPAS- DI TtlF. MAKIN'i Hr M. E.
llntl, !*? pp r'.ii Han1-* * BfOi.
Tm Ma Ptatt "? ? Baaaaalaa t?Mflraafc
COTITBIBITIOXB JOWABD A niBTOBT. Of
AIIAIIU'O OOTHTC Cl l.H RK Br I**;' \M-n-r
fo - .. ? 1 T!.,i Nl a" 1'
. \ a ,,t tmmatOt llteratur* to I/r>w
lAt.n aad Antit*.
THK IITF. i>F CAU-OO-f. Bt Wlllam M M?ln
, aama **o, : Um; ttt
Ti- Seal* !''? U?l im &TO1; , u. ,i?..
%b ??*?? '* ?? htotarr ??' ' ? '';rl " 1 h:* ? '
RF...iM'.TiriN-. 0? a cALiroaxu Moinra.
pp db. na
.? . . ._,.,?_,. m::..ed,..
i.i,,, ,-r:.iVS of A rnv.-mniATK IWJ
../,p. IM. Iha Sala 1
\f?-?.?a? '." Appmna1' 1
' TIIF IM.I i: '>r I..MF !!> I.?.!v ->'?->? 'n Wtt
? riii nr *ar** ***? **? *"?
I 4 i.l PWl Ui'l "-"^, . .
Thi t.^tury of * flWil Ki fllah hroaa.
lisrn iafeated tha republic; the land
u.i.n rottinif Wil
At the name time, from the point of
view of hterary ar'.. Wfl hav.- an idea
that It woiiM hr as well not to make
the eoiors .0 .radfll* .rim.on nor to
lay them on quit.' fo thirk. Strenuo.
ity i_ good. but to keep it at fever heat
and concert pitch for _S4 pae** ia to
' give us rather toe much of a good
' thintr. Still. there 1s no question of
i tha lateaafl intere?t of thc story.
A Waifs Home-Coming
THF IWlfl AtflnUCA-l _0 aotam M Ib*
| fT-m DlUitnUd ln .?:-? 'it K tn ir 1 Frr.1
,, pp :.. J n Upptoeoa Cam
1
A shivering waif of th- New Vork
ta, and B titiy dauifhter of the
rich: with h?art ? BOBeiior to his ratfs
I ar.d tatters and her silks and velvets -
? theflfl al tha befinniaf. A maaterfal
I rear. of men and of fortune, and a lovely
and true-hi arted woman; with hearts
The Wonder
Woman
By Mae Van Norman Long
A story of love
and of life close
t<> tlie jrreat heart
of nature
At AU Bookatorte?$tJt Nei
The Penn Publishing
Company, Philadelphia
REVIEWS: COMMENTS
Winston Churchill's New Novel
THE DWELLING PLACE OF UGHT
"(Inc of thc most absorbing and fascinating romances and
one nf thc most finished masterpicces oi serious literary
art which have appeared in this year or in this centurv.
?N* Y* Tribune. *LW
?Other New Succeisful Novels*
H. G. WelW New Novel
THE SOUL OF
A BISHOP
"As brilliant a piece of writing as
Mr. Wells has ever offered the public
. entertaining from beginning
to end."?_V. Y. Sun.
"An era-making book. vital and com
pelling . . ? handhd like 'Mr.
Britlin<*,' in unforgettable dramatic
style."?Brooklyn Eagle,
y $i.r,o
Upton Sinclair's New Novel
KING COAL
"A novel that should be put in the hands
of every man and woman in the United
States . . well written, a great
human documrnt . nothing
so brilliant and thrilling in many a day."
?Chieago Xavs.
"Undoubtedly impressive, a masterly de
lineation."---.V. >'? Tribune.
Hamlin Garlanda New Book
A SON OF THE
MIDDLE BORDER
"The most sensitive interpretation that
has been written of pioneer life in
America . . . an admirablebook,
a revealing drama, told with more genius
than America has yet been able to mus
tcr/'__\YTt. llepublic. HL $1.60.
Autoyraph Edition $2.50.
Mrs. Cholmnndeley's Remarkable Hook
CHRISTINR
"Absorbingly interesting . . . so
real that one is tempted to doubt whether
it is ftction at all doubly
welcome and doubly important."?
?_V. Y* Times. "Whether fact or
fiction it is unique among all thr* books
evoked by the war."-- I'lti/tuli Iphiu
Press. $1.25.
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY,
PUBLISHERS,
NEW YORK
constant amid all changes of circum
tlnca thaaa at the eloae. Betweea
thfl two th.-re arc many chnnfrs of
thrilling adventare. of fa einatiai woo
ine of homor and of human vitality.
II [? a eaplUl story which Miaa iBfram
Bi, with many BUrpriflflfl but BO
rmpoaaibillti-8, and with true g ImPMI (
, i rarted leeaea of life, both Ib Now
York aad in th? wilderaeaaea and
among the revolutionists of i^outn,
Aiaenea; eoraraflBdabU to all maakiadU
rncp "all mntikind love a lover."
Darin? in Old Vir.;inia
balcti i" AOT-tBTcaBaa. _a uaa b**
4 r ,? ii. ?*?? H Doraa
lompniy
Saiute to Mr. Huchanl It was only a
! little While airo that Wfl had occasion
1 to accluim his "Greenmantl*" as a sin-(
\ guXatXj aathralliBg tale o' daring and
romantic ndvi nture. Also, wr have ob
' lereed that he is writing, volume after
; volume, one of the very best of the
i nrreBt hiatories of the war. Now
COBIflfl an admirable historical romance
; of early Coloniai days in Virginia. Wfl
? call it hi?torieai because it deal* to
om.' extent with actual historic char
act'Ts, and gives in peneral a faithful
! oicture of the typical life and doings of
I'hose days. Whether the exploratiou
| of the Shenandoah Valley really was
1 affeeted year. befon Spottawood _
i nunting party may be matter of dis
pate. lor tha preaeat purpose it does
i r.ot matt'r. Neithef does it matter
.that in parts the tale is reminiscent of
.Scott, again of Stevens on, aml v't
(apain of Maud Wllder Goodwin; which
i ia simply beesnae Mr Huehan is telling
i of the same times, places and types of
. mea aad womi rr ot which they told.
I Such reminiscenee does not impuir the
I tine, apoataaeoaa oritrlnality of the
i work nor leaaen its vivid iatereat aml
i-ompellirg nower. It must have high
rank among romance. of high ad
eeatora and ahivalric love. o
Book News
Granfland Rice's new volnme of po
ems, "Songs of the Stalwart," will be
I pobliflhed by Applctons next week.
' Franci. H. Ilerrick's "Audubon, the
N'aturulist," will also be issued by them.
Harper & Brothers announce that
*hey arill pnbliah early in Noretaber
"Mark Twain's I.etter-"; "The Advent
ir.-ss." bv Arthur B. Keeve; "I.aughing
Bill Hy'de," by Kex Keach, and
"Grimm.- Fairy Tale_," Louis RheaJ
edition.
Important among the fall books on
?he theatre, and of particular conse
? juence bflCBBflfl of it-i historical inter
?flt, w;ll be thfl ftnt volume of Mon
troM J. Moeee'fl lelectiona from Ameri*
| ean plays, which arill be published
about mid-November by B. P. Dutton
| Co. Iii thlfl work Mr. lioBOl has
I cone back to tha rer* bcffinninffi of the
? American stage BBO brought together
the boal and moal repreeeatst.ee playi
of those early year...
The Devin-Adair Company bolievo
: thnt civiliy.ation is Iargrely a mnt'er of
1 deaa literature and clean womanhuod,
: and this rather aphonstically dflfinfll
the id'-als of th?-ir imprint. Tln-y will
ihortljr have ready "Tho Two Dreams,"
by .lus'rn Kaaae, with an appreeiatioB
bv Piem Leti, of the French Academy,
and "Th. Liffl of Eliaabot N<v," "the
best cquinped of women sculptors" and
OBfl of the few of her sex to brtnk
throuifh the bile-encrusted heart of
Schopenhauer. Edttion after pdition
of the peraiateat best leller, "My Ua
kaowa i hum," goes qalcklp to al! parts
of thfl world. la preparation is the
1 third large edition of "The Heliotro
1 mm." the book of God and the indi?
vidual "fhe God nf Jew and Gentile."
They will offer for holidav readera,
"Th- kight to Work." by J. Elliot Rom.
leetorer io ethiea at the Uaieeraity of
? ? i : "Innocenco ar.d Itrnorance." by
M. 8. Gillet, of France, ar.d otn.-r works
thfl texti of which further atteat their
claim that purity In literature. aa in
viomanhood, has an all but intinite
home-regtorinif iafloeBCe, so much
seeded "' the.-e lex-erazed tinea.
SOLDIERS'
SPOKEN FRENCH
By Helene Cross
Prei -i Otmaatr ttt tka Proi I If tl
-- tnii^'
-arn kltd flMMl iBitruiliVi llttlfl
t.ink *\>-i pul ilih-! VI;.
I > ' Bi Bl ' ? I I] .un U-glri
nlnfl lo pronotinei rreneh ? llttlt nori
?Iag it "
>?-nil *our loMiflfl I ri.'iu| ,, Cop*.
A atAtrngtmat maamgy?egmtOmt *>iie.
tat aat /'..s-: ta tttrt i . _??
E. P. DUTTON 4C0. 6.1 *Mm Ay??N.Y.
Whal Have You Done to Encourage the Soldier ?
Thf* Government furnishes food for his stomach, you furnish
food for his brain. A mind healthfully and happily occupied
will relieve many weary hours. Send him at once a copy of
WORLD PATRIOTS
Lincoln?Bolivar?Napoleon?Peter the Great?Bis
marck?Ito?Cavour?Gustavus Adolphui?
Pitt?Waihington
By JOHN T. M. JOHNSTON
Inlr.Jui I '.ry \'ott* fcy
Speaker CHAMP CLARK and Senator ROBERT L. OWEN
"Hiilory ii the lenglheneJ shaJit*
of treat men" --EMFRSON
A dear eoneeption of the underlying cause* of the great
world war by a series of brilliant biographical studies of the
foremost statesraen of the countries now engaged.
llie history of any great event may be epitomized in the
life of a single man. As Pitt stands for the colonial greatness
of England. so Napoleon typines the modern spirit of France.
The unification of modern Italy is told in the life of Cavour.
Japanese supremacy in the Pacific is the creation of Ito.
Modern German history begins with Bismarck. The transition
of Russia from an Asiatic to a European .State was accomplished
by Peter the Great. The story of South America's struggle
tor freedom is the story of Simon Bolivar. Ihe great event in
the history of Sweden was the birth of Gustavus Adolphus.
The reahzation of Ameriean independence is most vividly
told in the life of Washington, and the ensis of the rebellion
is mirrored in the itory of Abraham Lincoln.
336 Page?, 17 Full Page Illustration., 8vo. Cloth.
AU Booktellers. $1.50 Net; $1.60 Postpaid.
WORLD PATRIOTS CO., Inc, 489 Fifth Ave., New York
???????????????????????*
^',jn[JiIi^rJiZ^^^U'^D'^^AJ-r^n^^LEI S-.r?? *L^JS 5-' S T..'' <t}: ? tv **t? tt tt *nr_nL_c:
".4 Landmark in the Season's Fktiori"
THE WANDERERS
Ry MARY JOHNSTON
Nineteen unforgettable stories pieturing the develop^
ment of love from the days of the
cave man.
"A great work of creative imagination."
?II art ford Courant.
"It is difficult to say that Miss Johnston has ever done any
better work; certainly she has never produeed any more
interesting reading."?Clerrland Plain Dcahr.
"It is a noteworthy book. with a charm of literary work
menship which will gratify the fastidious, and with an
appeal to human sympathy which must be as universal
as its theme."?Xtir York Tribunr.
"The book is a fine piece of imaginative writing?a land?
mark in the season's fiction?and enhan.es Miss John
ston's aiready conspicuous position in Ameriean letters."
?Spriiiijfit'ld Rf publican.
Itrroratiovx m rnlor by Potjany. $1.7.". net at all bnohtttore*.
16E40AS.. ROUGHT0N MIFFLIN (OMPANY N.wTork