Newspaper Page Text
an wtmm 1 THE SUN, SATURDAY,JTARCH22, 1918. i BOOKS BASED ON THE TRANSPLANTING OF WOMEN What Happened When a Brahman Priestess Married an Englishman and Went to England. And What Happened When an American Girl Married a French Marquis and Learned. Perennial Interest in Women Alienated From Their Natural Environments. w hors and everything pertaining there, unto to their hearts' content. TIiIh Is n now edition of u book published years n no. We lenrn thnt Amorlcnn women do not como up to duchesses nnd mar chionesses, though, ns n rule, when thoy marry lluropenns thoy become fairly yielding nnd obedient. The heroine of Company, IndlnnnpolM, I "Amerlrnn Nobility" becomes such n It. Wyllo tolls of yet one , model French wife. ii ormgo over imp gun i i imoui me lime tnnt the verv wealthy nnd very sure of herself Miss Vlllars of Washington Square, New York, nrrlves in Pnrls for her first visit, one Mnrquls d'Angullhon, who by the right of birth given an impression of extreme., even ultra refinement. Is reckoning tin his debts, tin hnu ni.n t'io Hrnnch," gives nn Infallible nnd 'decided to iro to Africa. An ,m sting recipe for how nn American ,1a suggested to him nnd b en.,. , h upe.rn to look at : T happens when a person ,' irtU ulnrly n woman-la trans i to alien soil and unsympathetic re has long arniu.od the Inter rv ' lists, mid among the books h mil this week there are no i foul based Oil tills IhiereSt. I'michter of llrnhma" (Tim M. -fill I A. nipt i the !;nst nnd West of the love aiig Ilrnhmnn priestess for a Unci slininn nnd her tragic nt- m Into hli life in conventional b circles; "American Nobility" (H. iii ,ind I'onipiiny i, In which Pierre 'I'nln, well known as nuthor of i. i moans may become the sm . - I wife of a l'"ri neh at Istocrnt ; ' Women" i PulMi Id nnd Com ; , n i In which Mnrmuiliiko l'lckthall r. 't 's the story of nn KnglMi govern .io ilnds faor in the eyes of nn '.-.pt.an Pashn's son becaue she Is i mi nnd manle him, and of how i, h temperament meets .Mohamnie .n as'oms: nnd "Tl e Wings of Pride" iMi. In which Louise Kennedy v nnnsports a heroin.- from picas . . iu in n soi In! set of New York .)!. is in the West. T'o Daughter of Brahma" tho t'ia underlies the actions on both underlying the evil nnd the good ' 'i I'.nst nnd WeM, Is made felt A . -1 t' e nralimnn, though he ndmlts, .iii tsc; ' v i ill vll's religion' Who are you ! ii ise a faith that dates Its birth ir'.s liefoio Christ, that taught - .ml love and ttuth while the st. II clamored for n tooth for a ' .m eve for nn eye; that rocog- i tii' Almighty God while your nn - - .shipped wooden Idols? Think . ' i.it night's deviltry? !. k lit ""lirt-t . and look at Ills churrbes, v'.i 'hr- r cant, their empty ritual, their Ho ir bloody persecutions, their ' blcmrv ' t ' ' i ,.. ,t pooplf ,'in th.. blub tenchlng of the Vedas!" T i. line sn bov, erlipled, shy. un 'ow bv bis mother, ibatl'-es to soo the i .ii:.- i ons.Tr.itlon of the girl child Si'iM.t! ;u Sua, tin- hideous idol of !! i r.-i sees her smile of wondering. '. M piiiiMite. nnd holds the mental wis" The boy. who bus found God in Hip siinet, is s"nt to TCnclnnd to I inn! Ins. s. nnild Christianity, " i 'wit of worship So he returns to ir.iit.i nnd bitterness discovers ' him the path which leads from K the h dd"n tem(ile and Pn ' ' II her: .- '.'.an knelt before the nltnr, her ' . ! : her face turned to the open '. r.v.i .. In r eyes llvd sightlessly on ' ii. it'rs beyond. Her eyes were ' 1 Th" i tnred out from tho por- f h' r face like lamp- whio - 1 .. 1.. i n extinguished, nnd on'.v 1" llenlh the olive skin nnd .M' and fall of the silken scarf ' r brrnst spoke of the warm .- ' I'e heneatli." ''.I not see him; her soul was I'rihnia where there is no c u. i passion, no desire, only nn - i n.platlon. ' - the woman the nnglishmnn - fi. ni her sanctuary, making of . . 'ii. nt and of hlm-elf and his ; ' l '"f of deadly hatred. That Is v .! in he carries off to Kncland ' ' i msplant the lotus Into tho cold I., a of the peace and warm sun-t-'-'ne Into tho north storm winds. And bo ran for office! Thnso who do not know have told n m faith Is a lie," laments tho little f'' I'-n.an priestess Tho inevitable happens. It Is very n1 m read about, as nro nil Inevitable 'Mr.cs, lier for the nlternn. live in jiiss Washington Square, lie decides tliat lie can be capable of fall ing In love with her nnd proceeds to do so. lie koos to vnrlous friends nnd tnlks It over ln-n pentlemnnly mnnner, and his friends tnlk It over, nnd noon tho Faubourg St. Germain hns decided that the marrlaRe would be the most . desirable. It Is now time to meet the ' future marchioness and one evenlns the American Rlrl notes In her diary: "Haw a live marquis " ' The mnrquls Is n Rood sportsman. He ' plays a "cold Rame" nnd wins. The marrlaRe Is nn event discussed in nil the chateaux of Frnnce. Tho marquis hns lonR had n dear ' friend, n, duchess, nnd his honeymoon J does not prevent his wrltlnK her every day. This does not mean that ho hns mnnaced to fall truly In love with his marchioness, with her brief enressc., her limpid eyes, her cool hnnds nnd the ' sweetness of her love without either nrt of artifice; but of course he renllzes tho I wiille thnt she feels only tho material I beauty of things, whllo for him Is the 1 spiritual. i The marchioness, wonders whether her -anil tlien. if you uare. husband lias really been full of Iniquity, who have fallen nwny'ns Americans nre tnucht to holinva rf Kuropenn men, but she loves the coronet embroidered on her linen nnd on her toilet articles nnd is content. Of course she feels nither like n widow in I'nris, where she finds family life very different from whnt she hnd known It in America. The marquis sees the duchess every day, but tho marchioness does not know this. The duchess Is described as nn Intellectual woman of tho sensual type, so that her presence is to the mar quis n source of exquisite Joy nnd emotion. And so, ns the author puts It, Annie was !etrnyed ns every Mar chioness d'Aniuillhon hnd been. Two years pass nnd every one Is happy. Tho American machlnness, who nan been before her marriaco nfrnld I of the widely celebrated Krench incon stancv, n..w., characteristically, no l.incer foars it. Suddenly her .suspicions nro nrouspii nnd th fatal duel of I women is on. With her little democratic hand she I administers a roUKh slap to her nrlsto cratic husband. li-F, iuiu you were raise to nil your oaths, to nil your promises, Just like the most ordinary of men. I do not really know why one should export to llnil moro honor nnd more loynlty in tho nrlstocrncy than In other clashes of so ciety. I nm reading French history now nnd I find thnt dukes, princes, and mar quises have betrayed their country, their kinKH have treated with the enemy nnd liavo been Rullty of every kind of In famy." Hut this story- does not end trnKlcnlly, even though tho mnrquls nppe.isod his duchess who hnd catiRht him kisslnR Ills wife thus: "The kiss that mad- .dencd you wns only a husband's kiss Cannot you understand now? HUMOROUS, FATALISTIC, SATIRICAL, IDEALISTIC BITS OF WISDOM FROM AN IRISHMAN'S BEAUTIFUL BOOK "The Crock of Gold," by James Stephens, Is a maRlc potion made up of smiles and tears nnrl fact nnd fnncy -which few hut nn Irishman could havo so wel compounded -Rtiarnnleed to renew your faith in fairies. Hear some of tho things thoy have to say-the philosophers and liilldicii and uoiin nnrl fail les nnd human folk he tells nboiit and who spenk with the widom of simple hen its: You mint bt fit In girr brfnrr ynu ran be fit In reetirf. Unmrlrdyr brcomc lumber in a vrrk, IhcrrfnrK grt rid nf U. Tho box must he emptied before It can ho refilled. lirfllllnp In progrc, A award, a tpadc, and a thnughl fihnuld nrtrr br allowed to nwl. Tho toxin Roneratos tho antitoxin. Tho end lies concealed In tho begin nltiR. All bodies grow nround a skeleton. 1,1 fn Is a petticoat nbout death. You get nlrepy whither ynu like it or not. Like many other curiam, nueh an ringing, dancing, muric and acting, uleep ha crept Into popular favor a part of a rcliginu ceremonial . Xoirhcrr can one gn to srrp more carily than In a church, Quletnis I the beginning of ilrtuc To be rtlent I to be beautiful. Star do not make a nnlc. I'lnallty Is death. Perfection Is finality. Nothing l perfect. There nro lumps In It Beauty I urefulnc. The art a veil a the craft, the grace equally vlth the utilities muri riand up in the market place and be judged by the gombeen men. A thought I a real thing and word arc only it ralmmt, but a thought lahy a a virgin! unle it is fittingly apparctUd tre may not look upon it nhadowy naked ni; it will Jly from u and only return again inihedarkne, crying inathin.child ih roiet which we may not compnhend until with aching mind, lltening and divining, we at lat fahion for it thone Kymbol which are it protection and it banner. Men nre not fathers by Instinct, but by chance, but women nre mothers I beyond thought, beyond Instinct, which is the father of thousht. I Right I a word and Wrong i a word, but the sun thine in the nornln(7 and I Mr rfnr fall In the duri without thinking of Mcce irortf u7ifrn have no meaning. I All pood people like eating Every perron who i hungry 1 a good pcron. and cxery person who I not hungry i a bad person. i better to be hungry than rich. When you are hungry you arc alive, and when you arc not hungry you are only halt niir. Decency Is not clothing, hut mind. Morality Is behavior. 7sn'( If windom to go through the world without fear and not to br hungry Ina hungry hour? The greateri thing in the world i the Divine Imagination, A man ha raid Commonene and a woman ha xaul llapplnc are the greateri thing in the world Theer thing are male and female, for Commonenc I Thought and Happlne i Emotion, and until they embrace in Aoir the will of Immenrity cannot be fruitful. The deeire of a man riiall be llcauty. but he ha fahloncd a riave in hi mind and called it Virtue. The dctre of a woman hall be Vidom, but he ha formed a beari in her blood and called it Courage; but the real virtue i courage, and the real courage, i liberty, and the real liberty i widom, and W'Udom i the ton of Thought and Intuition: and hi name alto arc Innocence and Adoration and llappine. A gift is never little. You have varied all my time. . . . What the i time fort Hoy do thing for no reaeon, and old people do not. That I the difference fceftrcen age and youth. I wonder do we get old becauee ve do thing by rcaon inriead of inriinct. For Isn't it true that if there Is n good thing coming to n person nobody takes much trouble to Hnd him. but if there Is a bad thing or n punishment In store for a mnn then the whole world will lx sonrchod until he lo found? An innocent mnn cannot be opprend, for he I fortified by hi mind and hi heart cheer him. A man ehould alway obey the lav with hi body and alvaydi obey it with hi mind The unilluminated juriice of humanity that juriice which demand not atone ment but punihmcnt; which I learned in the Book of Enmity, but not in the Uook of Friendship; which call S'ature hatred and Iauc a conplracy. But she hnd discovered thut hnpplness Is not laughter or salli-fnction, and that no person can !o happy for himwlf nlono So she had como to understand tho terriblo sadness of tho gods Happiness, that divine discontent which can not rest nor lie at enso until its bourno is attained and the knowledge of a mnn Is added to the gayety of a child. have attained to all the wisdom vhich I am fitted to bear In the pace of a week no new truth ha come to me There i no longer an horiton before my eye. Space ha narrowed to the petty dimension of my thumb Time i the tick of a clocJt. Good and etll are tvo peri in the one pod My vife' face i the same forever. The pine tree take root and grow and die It' all boh (lond-by, brother. 3The Heart of the HillsV ' JM John Fox, Jr. jm I "The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come" Mj lifl ffii&V'The Trail f ,hFe Lonesome Pine" Eic'Mj I iffi niory is a cry . nnd Insistent part the for the lost Hettina. Tim reader who Is qualified will ac cept this tule. As for us, wo nro far from beinc qualified. We Iohvc It to the marines, strongly doubting thnt even thoso willing heroes will be able to swallow It. HOW THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE GROWS. there nnd I saw n man sheltering under the clieMnut tree at our Rate. He lifted Ills umbrella and seemed to malto n sign: 'May I come in?' " It was the Colonel. Tho daughter, under a strong emn- tlonnl Impulse, declared ns much. "Why. there Is Col. Dover!" she exclaimed. Shu records that she could have bitten her tongue us a punishment for making th! announcement, but we cannot think that her Impulsive utterance wns heinous. She sets down' "My mother tind moved away. Sho seemed not to hear, not to have seen. I stood half I ehlnd tho curtain praying God to keep him out. I prayed so hard I felt m temples prick with heat, nnd n moisture in my hair. A blinding flash made us Mart back. Almost simultaneously came a shock of sound like a cannon shot off In the house We thro were clinging IT Is conceded generally that no people have ndded so copiously to the Hnglish vocabulary ns the people I of the Cnlted Stntes, though the con cession Is often pointed against us In ' speclllc regard to our slang. Apart from slang, however, we are creating and nsslmllntlng reputuble words every day ns is well evidenced by the large' number of entirely new words mnklng their first nppearnnco In the forth coming New Standard Dictionary, nounced 1 y Funk A Wngnalls. There was n time, for Instance, when ' tho hi pin nr was unknown, the cabaret shjw formed no p.irt of our civilization, 1 the rattalo. cltrangc. plumcot, tanyclo, H'hras.i and tchrule did not exist. Tho rurlof;rim i fust displacing tho wire less telegram, and although we havo aerogram and ninrronfnram, these terms being, so to spenk, proprietary terms, they mav perhnps some dny be discarded except In the special u.es of the com- I panics which hne acquired title to them. ' I'terro deCouIevaln's" tnleof the com- Somewhero In tho book the author I mnkes some chnrncter utter the belief thnt Providence sends Amerlcnn girls to Krance nnd Itnly that they may learn their trim role. And tho marchioness passes through her transplantation ap prenticeship successfully, learns to bp. commodntn herself to tho tnstes of her i lorn ana wnen last heard from is pre paring to nccompany her nrlstocrntle husband on a llttlo visit to America. plIiTitions which nrlse when nn Amerl ran ptri marries n Frenchman, which "f g' neroifsly entitles "American No H'Pv" is quite different; different In e'mnsphrre, loon In, characters, effect, fii 'j lito d.fteront In treatment, Sho 'Ml'e? containedly, handles her evenly r-inn'ns series of events In n most or '.er'.y manner, nnd nllows hrr chnrnc 'r to dlcuss themselves, their neigh- A SHOCKING NOVEL WRITTEN BY A LADY . jSitn Robins' story of "My I-.lt-.-.r iD.idd, Mead and Company) '"I 'intense" In n description nf- v the publishers. It deals with "o .'on king subject that engaged ' " y T. Stead In his startling nr : . til ng the "miildcn tribute" of i .N'.ii urally In such a tale we i to encounter ardors nnd - "t .-tyle anil expression, nnd ni The girl who purports -ry tells how ns a child .il with tho fear that the h A-er wus going to marry i iiioiher. i. ii'e. d in maity novels the ,''i w.uch diughters .speak ' in i . I lore wo remark: h i" ilie most beautiful per i i ei seen. Hvcn as. quite !' n n were dimly con ' ' touch of pathos In the finll, ns though we guessed i ) glow old." The child years records this was I'v at tho piano playing "a HttJn wultz tuno" encltltd i it Isle." The mot tier cried i ! er time, observing that the ' not a dirge; to which the ,.i'i d, dropping her bunds 'i n I 'ie performance: "How ' i expect me to bo ns quirk i n had to do retrospectively ' "iiel who was feared ns nn ' ii f iher-ln-law. I i i ril through a few pages to 'I'trr entitled "A Thunder mi hoi, i wo llnd nn explana ' o Hi tie player's outcry. We n e Colonel had come visiting ' noiiR. walking 111 a natum! null entered tho front yaid. I anlnarv paragraphs are with omen "Two Sundays in ".on," writes the elder sister, "wo ' been to church, As we were going out nfter lessons on Monday morning a thunder storm iiimo on. So Hettlnn nnd I played In tho upstairs passage, i remember how dark It grew, although there was a skylight over head and a window oiieiiln on the staircase" Wo may pause n moment to let It bo known thnt we nro g'ml that tho window "opened" upon tho stair case; In most KnTllsh novels nowadays windows "give" Instead of opening. It Is n pleasure to us to find them behav ing In tho old and fairly approved man ner. Wo like It ton when we find It said of frightened people (hat they "turn" pale, or "grow" pale, or that they "pale." Nenrly iilwayw nowadays In the r.ncrllsh novels they "go while." If our Inslructlon Is accurate tho nn nient Hrltons went hrltrht blue. Tho tale horn goes on: "We groped for our plnythlngs In tho twilight till quite suddenly the crolseo of the case ment showed ns Ink black linos cross ing a square of blue white fire. Th shadowy stnlr wns fiercely lit, our toys too and our faces. Tho moment nfter we sat In hlnckness waiting for tho thunder. Par off It seemed to full, clattering down some vast Incline. Then the rain. Thudding torrents that threatened to batter In the skvllght " The mother came In. Col. Dover ap peared outside. The description I" full of vigor "Our mother enme out of her room In time to receive the next flash full upon her face. I see the light now, making her eyes glitter and her paleness ghostlike. She drew bark from the window. He fore the lightning died I had seen that she wns frightened. I had boon fright ened, too. till I saw thnt she wim. In the Impulse to reassure her my own fear left me I went to her In that second blackness nnd put my hand In hers. When I could see again I looked through the steaming window pane as we stood fireo-rgre Lee Iiio-ton AWtHOK, Ol TmiNU MMKIMONr. together" that Is, the widowed mother, the very sensitive daughter, who writes tho story, and Hettlnn, tho "little sister of tho title of the tale. The mother obsetved that the llRht The dead Colonel was presently borne In. The recording daughter makes note "People said the steel ferulo of the um brella had attracted the electric current 1 knew God had heard my prayer, There Is an extra, a subsequent shock In this. Tin- nurratlvo goe on with an attention to detail and an explanation following upon memory. "Hut In striking down my enemy." the elder daughter writes, "God had struck tho chestnut tree. It was riven from foot to crotch. Thiit was the day 1 had In mind when I excused my labored playing: 'You ex pect mo to bo as quick ns God'" The willingness to startle will bo observed It Is abundantly observable in tho later part of the story. It Is told how tho sisters went to London to visit their mint, n lady whoso misfortune or felicity it was to tie en veloped in moonshine, and how they were decoyed into "mm of the most Infamous houses in Huiope." It was n wicked and a very hold person who met them at the railroad station, pre tending lo lie their Aunt Josephine. The reader will suspect that only great Innocence and great Ignorance could linve been deceived us the sisters were, i'lio elder sister records: "A wonderful scent had como toward us with Aunt Josephine nothing the least lllte thnt faint gulden smell that clung to 1 1 fctjKJ rt v, ISWfaKy 1 1 their first nppearnnco In the forth-I BSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS. BSSSSSv 4SSBSSSSSm mni urimi5- jstW.vt; 1 7A autmo o SrV" umo or thi uitius orav tsot l'AY "vwihinc, roiNTa- JlWY 2d Large Printing otmmmmm Robert W. Chambers' funniest novel. A delightful fantasy on the woman suffrage and eugenic movements. THE GAY REBELLION The individual who christened woman "the weaker sex" evi dently had never been in the same community with the in stigators of "The Gay Re bellion." Read this humor ous account of their crusade on man. Pictures by Fred erick. SI. 30 net. ill D. A PPLETON & Publishers COM PAN Y, New York J our speech. The publishers of the new dictionary engaged an axpert to define 'these enst African terms. Sir Henry Hamilton Johnston, considered the great est living authority on the subject and formerly Imperial Commissioner for the the spelling- of which requires tljlis teen letters. All of her Southern romances hwro their settings In Harpeth Volley, (& most picturesque nnd flowery section of the Volunteer State, and Harpeth Hrltlsh Government in eastern Africa. I Valley has thirteen letters. The first linen from the sprays nf lavender nnd dried verbena our mother put newly each year tinder the while paper of our wnrdroho shelves. Such a chost of fragrance could never have survived The necessity for morn rapid Intercom- municnnon led to tho coining of leffcr firam. day h ttcr nnd night letter. The suggesting of the term mfnxrifr recently helps to recall thnt such n personage as n suffraartte or such n thing ns a , hitrhriifttr wns unknown a couple of decades ago. Our new methods of loco motion h.Ae given us tho taxirab, popu larly cut to tnxl, the tarlmrtcr, tho mo- i tor boat, motor bu and motor cycle, noi to mention the automobile, llinou xmr chauffeur, garage, speedometer, &c. We h.ne also tho dirigible and various types of aeroplane.", as the monoplane, inpiaiie. hydroplane nnd hydroaero plane, together with tho hangar Which gives them shelter, nnd the velodrome where some are tried out. Manicure jiuid Jiioiilciirfit nre old terms compared wim mamtagr, mamteur and tiumr ne, ijei tney nil form part of our everyday ... ....... . i.-i ispcemnnw. The dictagraph nnd rlicta- t phone, met almost dally In the nows- I pnpers, nro of moro recent birth, nnd with I 'hem may bo classed the .if;nnrnpn I his perfume nf Aunt Josephines I i,nd piitmtittn: Although the i'oniifljf much strong as dominant mid Pnpnerat have como nnd gone, we sooiy, acrid smell of the have new subjects In the i'roffrcjislnc Mini Josephine's house wnU'iind the null Moose. In athletics, tho revival of the Olympic games hns given us Olympiad, mniathon, decathlon and K'Hfllltloll The New Stiindurd Dictionary nlso pays especial attention to denning cer tain African terms. Kver since Col, Roosevelt's well known trip to the hunt ing grounds of Niilhorl nnd since Pntil Raineys experiences great Interest has been taken by the Kngllsh speaklnjr races In tho manners, life and customs nf eastern Africa, and mnny words used in this region, which wore once as dead letters to us, have now become part of The pronouncintlon of English has also received particular attention in the new dictionary. Among those on the ndvlsory board are Dr. Philander P. Claxton. I'nlted States Commissioner of Kducatton; Dr. Andrew 3. Draper, Dr. William H. Maxwell and Dr. Ella Flags Young. The universities on this board nre represented by Profesors Brander Mntthews, Rnymond Weeks nnd Calvin Thomas of Columhln, Prof, Chnrles Mills Gayley of the I'nlvcrslty of California, I'rof. Theodore W. Hunt of Princeton, Prof. Kellx H. Schelling of the Univer sity of Pennsylvania nnd Prof. Alice Vinton Walte of Wellesley, MISS DAVIESS LIKES LUCKY NUMBER THIRTEEN. Marls Thompson Daviess holds thir teen ns her lucky number, nnd with sev. oral good reasons. In the first place, ! Miss Daviess was born on Friday, tho 13th. Her home Is in Nashville, Tenn., Dig dook .miss unviess published wu "Miss Sellna Lue," a title of thirteen letters. Next came "Soap Box Bante and airsln thirteen letters wore used. Last spring the author submitted an other novel which she called "Meltlntf o'Molly" thirteen letters as usual but the title wns changed when the) book wns published nnd appeared as "The Melting of Molly." But the jrood fortune that the original spelling; brought to the book evidently remained with it. for it experienced a remarkable sale nnd wns universally popular. Now comes "Andrew the Glad" as one of the first novels to appear In 1913, and It has thirteen letters in the title too. Not to be overlooked, however, is tho author's name Itself. ChrtMoned Marin Thompson Daviess, ber Christian namo and middle name are composed of thir teen letters. In nil her Informal cor respondence she signs herself Maria T. Daviess, thus bringing tho Inevltablo thirteen into play ngnln. AUTMOIt Of "THI COMBlNtO MML hero. not SO routed th stnlhai." as paipniiiv meretricious ns her per fumery. The windows were barred with Iron tn prevent the miserable inmates from getting away. The story tells how the sisters passed their Hist evening in this evil plnco nnd how the elder sister was enabled to make her escape, thnnks to the our i assistance of a "client" whom! con- s-olenco bad been aroused. He was wonderfully cool He would have been the first of palndiiiH If he had saved Be Ulna nlso, but this apparently was Impossible. In lta particularly horrific Psychology and Industrial Efficiency By HUGO MUNSTERBERG "So brond is thn Kcopo of this work that it will interest not. only tho stu dcntH of psychol nnyund sociology, hut uxecutives in all linos of busi ness endeavor." Cleveland Plain Dealer, Whoover reads Dr. Mun sterborR's book will bo sur prised at the larRO number of plauHihlo suggestions whioh lie has deduced from his ex periment. , . . His work cannot fall to be serviceable to managers of mills, railroads, mines and other employers of labor on a largo scale. "Har vard Graduates' Magaiine, $1.90 net. Postage 13 cents. "One does not say too much when ono declares tliis work of Dr. Munsterbors to bo tho most interest ing and the most significantly vital volume on applied psychology y e t written.' CMeogo Infer Ocean, boiob' HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY NewYot Si ""TlTaf8-