THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTE3IBER 24. 1922 .1 2K The Chain, by Charles Hanson Towne. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. Mr. Towne's prologue to hia novel Ib as fitting- a beginning for Its re view aa it is for the book. He writes; "There is a chain around us all. The links are forged by some high god before we come fnto this world, and we cannot escape from our gaoler, whose name is Circumstance. Sometimes we compromise with him, and the chain lengthens for a while until the inevitable hour comes when we must compromise again. "However we may deny it, we are never quite free. The happiest are those who realize their bond age, and are not afraid of destiny. "John Darrow was one of these." In a general sense perhaps every novel is a story of the chain of circumstance, but it has remained for Charles Hanson Towne to pro duce one showing directly the forg ing of the links, the tightening and the lengthening, and the futility of struggling against the unbreakable thing. It is 'a tremendous subject and Mr. Towne ha produced a tre mendous novel from it. He has written the story of the important events in the ordinary life of a brilliant man, John Darrow. His writing is so close to life, so full of the vital interests in each man's days that in his style there Is nothing more outstanding than there i. in a day of life. To read It is almost to be in it, and this remarkable interest is gained through the -vividness with which John Darrow is portrayed. He comes to be so beloved by the reader that his smallest tribulation is the reader's sorrow, .and the least Joy a happy page. To a squalid part of Brooklyn John Darrow comes from upstate, and writes clever things for the "Ladies' Banner." For a companion he has Nick Deeley, a likeable bad boy, bad by nature, but with a vein of genuine good in him; one of the best characters to grace any fiction this year at least. Through his early struggles with the chain, which sometimes twists cruelly, into a degree of success, but with the chain still tlgljt around him, Darrow works. His friends, his place, his nature form the chain; sentimental catastrophe twice visits him to form new links, and then just as all these things have bound him, they combine to. contrive the lengthening of the chain which trives him in the end all the free dom that he asks. There- is a succession of fine characters. Martin Shaftsbury is one, a poet of undeniable genius and overbearing and crude in per sonal contact. Every clique the world over has its Gedley girls, lit tle pebbles played with on the beach now and then, persons who are never nearer than the edge of things. Constance Muin is another, the actress who schemes to bleed his genius with the bait of love; and the whole pleasure-mad idle rich Westbury set is real, in the midst of which Darrow finds his salvation In a girl. There is apt to be disappointment In this girl, Janet. Somehow she doesn't seem big enough to pay Darrow the happiness he has earned, although he does find happiness with her, perhaps because she is his complement. - But that is the charm of the book; there is no glamor save what is purely natural, and its characters are as they are found, not as a romantic fiction lover would have them. ' i The time written of Is the . age Just past, when Victorianism still hung on against the encroaching freedom of the present and before Charles Hanson Towne, author of The Chain,"' a brilliant new novel just published by G. P. Putnam's Sons. constructive essay, it takes on In spots a flavor of editorial argumen tation. The title might indicate a variety of treatment; a novel, a sermon, a criticism. It is hi fact a good sum ming up of the currents of economic and social tendencies of the present day, explaining the Influence of con ditions and historical changes which have taken place preliminary to this age. Professor Ross discusses In a readable way such problems as im migration, folk depletion and rural decline, the influence of frontiers on sociology and the" influence -of the passing of the frontiers, the economic causes for the assumption of a place In man's world by women, prohibition, war, and current psy chology. , An interesting glimpse of his writing can be gained from his chapter on the changing domestic conditions for women. He explains that woman's place was in the home up to the time that manufacture ceased in the home and began in factories, and then how the In creasing efficiency of the age has changed the home and deprived it of many of Its former functions. He is almost strident in demand ing a place for women in all lines of endeavor, and claims that the whole scheme of civilization was originally designed for men, with little or no consideration paid to the nature or needs of women, espe cially in a spiritual way. He pays a tribute to the present for the in creased attention people are paying to government and general public conditions. Such a .book can be very useful, especially if it contains a good hon est survey of the social trend, for humanity as a whole dtes not watch carefully where it is going and needs, consequently, an occasional setting to order. Northwest, by Harold Blndloss. The Fred erick A. Stokes company. New York city. Mr. Bindloss has created a char acter, young Jimmy Leyland, who is a weakling and the prey of gam blers, crooks and schemers, and who is blamed for a murder which he did not commit, although he runs away. With the Canadian mounted , ..... , - - . ., iviivo a ' w a. j a ii w l uii uia 114a.11, pronioiuon gave me f"" .takes to the Canadian Rockies 21.UUl.IlC!r SCSI. J.UT3LC3 lO ,11111. " . ni autobiographical in the book, espe dally when the author, who has been editor, poet and novelist, is compared with John Darrow. And there is a feeling that most of the characters are well-known persons of the present. Towne has written one of the best novels of current fiction. The Children's Bible, translated and arranged by Henry A. Sherman and Charles Foster Kent. Charles Scrib mer's Sons, New York City. While the importance of the beauty of Biblical language cannot be de nied in forming impressions in the minds of children, neither can it be denied that the application neces sary to comprehension is often a strain which creates an aversion In the youthful mind. The conti nuity and the dignity of the Bible are not such as to attract the aver age young reader. Of course, the whole Bible is not In this one volume, which is printed on heavy paper and in large type. The co-authors have selected the important passages to give the child an idea of the constitution of Chris tianity. These they have interpreted into simple, straightforward Engllsn and regrouped the verses into short paragraphs, so that the story is told in direct and easily understanaaDie passages. The volume is beautifully gotten vp and has an abundance of illus trations that are attractive and valuable both in their color and subject. It should help many a child to absorb the message of the Bible.' Gifts of the Desert, by Randall Parrlsh. A. C. McClurg & Co.. Chicago, 111. The story is placed down on the Mexican border, and follows the type of the western story of ro mance and adventure so popular in current light fiction; a girl for hero No. 1 and a redeemed or misunderstood outlaw supporting her in the cast. This time Deborah Meredith is forced into a marriage with a brutal, repugnant man, and to escape him she takes to the desert, where she meets a character who turns out to be an outlaw. Of course there is considerable gun play, a lot of unwelcome love of ferings and one offering of the right sort on the last page. Villa's men play a part and there - are chases and pursuits, captures and killings. These western stories, as common as western - movies, are rather hard on the west as she is today. The Wonder Book of Chemistry, by Jean Henri Fabre. Translated from the French by Florence Constance Blck nell. The Century company. New York City. The simple device of inventing a man, in this case Uncle Paul, to explain in easy fashion to a pair of young, attentive pupils the work ings of a branch of science is re sorted to in this volume, and with good effect. Uncle Paul talks to his two nephews about the wonders of chemistry and explains to them, bit by bit, how to understand and apply it. The book is limited to in organic chemistry. The Social Trend, by Edward Alsworth Ross. The Century company. New York City. Save for, or because he has, some ideas of his own. Professor Ross has written an interesting and meritorious book. Whether his opinions improve the book or whether his keen observations make it, is a matter of opinion on the part of the reader. By nature a where he experiences all kinds of adventure and hairbreadth escapes. His closeness to nature, the trials he undergoes in his fight against bleakness of mountains in winter and the things he learns from his trouble make him into a strong man and liberate him from his weakness. There is a splendid girl for him in the end and there are several good, red-blooded characters in the story. "Northwest" is another out door story, with plenty of fighting and struggle all the way through. It is not particularly mature and will probably be more appreciated by younger readers, and there is nothing in the book to harm them. introducing it. that the book "has been the deliberate and organized outgrowth of the common efforts of like-minded men and women to see the problem of modern American civilization, as a whole, and to illuminate by careful criticism the special aspect of that civilization with when the individual is most famliar." The essays on the SO subjects, and their authors, are as follows: "The City," Lewis Mumford; "Politics," H L. Mencken; "Journalism," John Macy; "The Law," Zacharlah Chafee Jr.; "Education," Robert Morse Lovett; "Scholarship and Criticism." J. E. Spingarin;- "School and College Life," Clarence Britten Thn Intellectual Life," Harold E. Stearns; "Science," Robert H. Lowie "P h i 1 o a o .p h y," Harold Chapman Brown; "Literary Life," Van Wwck Brooks: "Music," Deems Taylor "Poetry," Conrad Aiken; "Art," Wal ter Pach; "The Theater,' George Jean Nathan; "Economic Opinion," Walton H. Hamilton; "Radicalism,' George Soule; "The Small Town,' Louis Raymond Reid; "History,' H. W. Van Loon; "Sex," Elsie Clews Parsons; "The Family," Katherine Anthony; "The Alien," Frederick C. Howe; "Racial Minorities," Geroid T. Robinson; Advertising, J. Thorne- Smith; "Business," Garet Garrett; "Engineering," O. S. Beyer Jr.; "Nerves," Alfred B. Kuttner Medicine," anonymous; "Sport and Play." Ring W. Lardner; "Humor,1 Frank M. Colby. In addition there are three essays on American civil! zation from the foreign point of vley. The English, by Henry L. Stuart: Irish,- Ernest Boyd, and Italian by Raffaello Piccoli. . Rogues Haven, by Roy Bridges. D. Ap- pleton & Co., isew torn city. Distinctly within the classifica tion of adventure, yet with traces of the romance novel and marks of the mystery story. "Rogues' Haven' is an entertainment book of the best sort; a pure story without motive, moral or discussion of problem. It belongs to that school wherein have ehined during past years such books as "The Port of Missing Men," "The' Daughter of Anderson Crow" and "The Brass BowL" For its kind it is exceedingly well written, "full of action and excite ment, suspense and pleasant de nouements. The story concerns the fight for recovery of a grandfather's fortune against an avaricious uncle whose dishonesty and unscrupulous methods provide the plot of the story. The. setting is the English country and the characters live in an age when coaches and fours were the. mode of travel and braces of pistols the mode of defense. Rogues' Haven is the name of the old estate bf Edward Craike, an aged man whose past is covered with mystery and whose surround ings are covered with decay, while his servants seem more like the crew of a pirate ship than house men of a peaceful old English man sion. Here at Rogues' Haven takes place the struggle for the unex plained wealth of Edward Craike, and also a love story that is pleas ant in spite of the grimness of its environment. Talks to Mothers, by Lucy Wheelock. The Houghton-Mifflin company, Bos ton. Mass. Lucy Wheelock has done a seem ingly splendid thing in this com pilation of writings concerning the training of children and the guid ance of parents in such a task. To be exact, 39 every-day problems of childhood are considered, with sug gestions intended to make for the children's mental, moral and physi cal welfare. How children develop tastes for different things and how those tastes should be encouraged or cured is one phase which is dealt with. The teachings for such things as thrift and honesty, the curing of such things as anger and habits are explained in logical fashion and in a semi-scientific practical way. Civilization in the United States, an In quiry by Thirty Americans. Harcourt, Brace A Co., New York city. It would be difficult within the limited confines of a review to give an adequate criticism of all that this book contains, so far as real review style is concerned. As a matter of fact each of the 33 parts of the book is a review, not of any piece of literature, but of 33 dif ferent aspects and phases of Ameri can life. The Inspiration to compile such a volume is one entirely worthy. Har old E. Stearns, the editor, says, in 1 Will fiii If wwwixr AvwWjra Kimono, by John Paris. Boni & Liverignt, New York city. Read "Kimono" and then pick up a book of Japanese poems or prose translated and read from it. The difference is protesque and incom prehensible. While "Kimono" de picts the ugly, the sordid and the, squalid, the poem or prose will breathe the beauty of the Japan most persons have become acquaint ed with through literature, or else return home and tell that they have seen it with their own eyes. Mostly it is because John Paris has sought out the other side to carry his point; otherwise he would have had a hard time writing his hook, but it would have been be coming to have given the bright side a hearing. Then, too, there is the bright side and the other side in every land, and such a book could be written about any country with equal Justification, which is another way of saying that Mr. Paris has failed to Justify himself. There Is apparent on almost every unmoral as possible; and without the grace of philosophy or the dignity of intelligent discussion, Mr. Paris criticizes the country and the race because it falls below Christian standards, without considering that they have - the standards of a philosophy and of a religion of their own. While it is true that Japanese life falls short of our own ideals, yet it is Japanese and they have a right to lead it as they will. In the fact that Geoffrey Barring ton, an Englishman, married Asako Figinami, a girl of Japanese blood but of European instincts and edu cation, there is sufficient material for a novel, for inter-racial mar riage is a problem. In this regard John- Paris has talked with com parative Intelligence and he has set forth the very natural complications in his story which would follow such a marriage. Certainly it Is right to take a discouraging stand, but the point would have been bet ter carried, because it would have seemed .less like propaganda, had the ugliness been put into truer proportion and some of the beauty j admitted page an eagerness to make Japan ! every way. He conducts his and Japanese life as ugly and as father's business through a gigantic crisis and then simply says he doesn't care . for work and would rather paint and sculp. His life is overshadowed from the start by a trick marriage. Here is (.where Parker might be accused of clumsiness, for this little sub-plot is very thinly constructed and the only excuse is that the author' still has his story in front of him and is so anxious to get to the real stuff that he neglects careful construc tion of his foundation. Few persons would have been so simple as to have fallen for the crude marriage plot into which the boy is drawn and CarnacGrier is certainly not of such ilk. This same carelessness of the minor parts marks the entire book, but the main story is well 'told and well acted by cleverly construed characters. For readers who are concerned with pure entertainment of the thrilly sort and not with literary merit "Carnac's Folly" will serve the purpose most admirably, and it is a book that will be read quite widely. A Dana-liter of the Sands, by Frances Everard. Dodd, Mead & Company, New York City. It is not likely that the lover of pure romantic fiction made to oraer will find & single fault with "A Daughter of the Sands." A verit able nath of romance is chiseled ou of the mountain of reality and the best sort of heroes and heroines, vHllans and props pass through. The unfaithful lover meets his just desserts, the girl marries the man she has saved from a terrible end pure happiness is won by those who deserve it and every one of the vn iians get punished. - For its kind the novel is extreme ly well written and well arranged It is thoroughly exciting Wth care fully calculated suspense and an abundance of sympathy correctly directed and properly placed. The setting is in northern Africa, with description accurate and elaborate. and colonial life clearly depicted. Saada Medene is a girl whose father is a shiekh who has lost his money and forced her to earn her own living. She is as beautiful .as can he Tound in a year of beauty contests, and in spite of the Arab blood which is supposed to flow in her veins she is beloved by and betrothed to Lance Rallsford, young consular officer in straight ened circumstance. Raflsford has no scrupples about her Arab blood when he asks her to maTry him and in the face of strenuous objections resolves to carry out his promise. He secures a post in Africa which permits him to marry and takes his fiance there before the wedding. Enroute the girl has an adventure in the native quarter of a city and I saved by a drug fiend who has given up the fight. In turn she saves him and he cures himself of his habit. Raflsford inherits a large fortune. At the same time he is snubbed by all Englishmen for his intended marriage to a lady of color, and an hour after his marriage he deserts his bride to return to England to claim his inheritance. Saada in the meantime has been told 'by her father that she is of pure English blood and an adopted daughter, but She has not told her husband. Rails ford repents of his own accord, but d'es on his way back to Africa to meet his bride. She, however, has ceased to love him and marries the man she saved. Carnac's Kolly, by Gilbert Parker. The J. B. Upplncott company, Philadel. phia. Pa. The struggles of men . with virgin soil to reap the natural wealth fights either against the soil itself or with rival reapers, have been the theme of many a good book, and this new novel by Gilbert Parker is another which comes within that classification. Gilbert Parker has built for himself a reputation with his stories of the Canadian woods. and while this new one will not particularly strengthen it, neither will it weaken it. As a story it is extremely good, with all the ingredients so vital to rugid tales of rugid men in rugid places, but the literary merit might easily be questioned. John Grier is the typical king of industry, whose life is his work and whose work is his life; his family and his home being incidental necessities. He has two sons, Fabian, a capable man who turns against his father and joins the rival lumber company, and Carnac. This second son is able in "Great stuff: the -whole, a notabln bonk nf its kind. Nobody should miss it who enjoys what one may can outdoor nction or tne first rank." New Tork Tribune. FLOWING GOLD By Rex Beach The Tribune reviewer says further: "Mr. Beach has for gotten nothing. He knew how to turn out a lively, colorful, full-blooded story of frontier life: He had gusto, as if he enjoyed writing; and he could: communicate it to his readers. All these .gifts are still his, as evidenced by 'Flowing Gold.' He has chosen the Texas oil fields for his scene, for the same reason that made him years ago not only write of the Klon dike, but go to the Klondike before he wrote at alii The material suits his talent. It is both dramatic and realistic" I N Wherever Books Are Sold Harper & Brothers Established 1817 New York OLD BOOK STORB TO MOVE. The laying of the corner stone of Gill's new building, which will in the future house Gill's old book store, should arouse a certain poignant feeling in the hearts of book lovers. There is a fascina tion about the old stand which is truly bookish. Real book buyers like to browse, and generally with out molestation. Bookstores are to be explored and current methods of efficient salesmanship are somehow amiss in the atmosphere. It is to be hoped that the spirit of the old store and also the spirit of the sonnet of dedication written by Charles Hanson Towne shall prevail in the new shop. Mr. Towne's sonnet follows: This shall be more than any shop or mart: This is a shrine, a temple of the soul, Where one may come to make his spirit whole. Drenching In dreams the passions of his heart. Here all the shadows of the earth depart. With friendly folios for comrades true; Here Love and Beauty tell their tales anew, 1 Gushing from pares of dlvinest art. Here books shall breathe their wonder. Tired men. Sick with the clamor of the world may come, Finding- release from pandemonium. And the old silences and peace again. Here poets shall whieper, day on rushing- day. In the old beautiful eternal way. THEr LITERARY .-PERISCOPE' "B BY JBXNETTE KENNEDY. Assistant in Circulation Department, Public Library. LOOD AND SAND." Blasco Ibanez's famous novel with a toreador as the central figure, was considered by W. D. Howells "a complete exposition of every phase of Spain's national sport when ideas give out.' of bull fighting," say the publishers, E. C. Dutton & Co., who have pub lished many of the translations of Ibanez's novels. book "The Mistakes of the Kaiser," now being written. "Dear Mix Gale." wrote a rlub woman to the author of "Mies Lulu Bett," "I have to write a paper for our club. I heard you wrote a story on civics. Will you please send it to me? I want to use it for padding XJttle Women, by Louisa M. Alcott. (Popular illustrated edition.) Little, Browne & Co. This is a. new edition of this classic for girls and on a slightly more magnificent scale than pre vious editions. It is . beautifully illustrated in color by Jessie Wilcox Smith, and quite well turned out as to style. The Sahara Bumhard School. Sir: It ismy opinion that The Sheik, Desert Love, and other novels about the Twin Bedouins and Oster- moors should be bound in Morocco and kept there. Dove Dulcet in the New York Evening Post. Into his latest novel, On Tiptoe: A Romance of the Redwoods, Stewart Edward White has put the profound beauty of the untravelled forests lying along our Pacific Coast. Mystery and adven ture, a keen plot and an unusual knowl edge of Nature's ways make this story re freshingly different. ON TIPTOE It is said. that Lord Northoliffe's career furnished the inspiration fo W. L. George's novel "Caliban," published several years ago. . Tom Masson, the humorist, says of William Van Loon's admirable "Story of Mankind": "It is a perfect illustration of the value of genuine humor when mixed in the right pro portions with g-eniline knowledge." e In the introduction to Stephea Leacock'a "My Discovery of Eng land," the editor of Punch. Sir Owen Seaman, says: "English and Ameri can humorists have not always seen eye to eye. When we fail to appre ciate their humor they say we are too dull and effete to understand it: and when they do not appreciate ours they say we haven't any." 'A Russian writer who has been described as "the real reigning prince of Russian fiction," is Alexis Remizov. "The Noises of the Town," a collection of short stories written In St. Petersburg since 1917. is said "to be very representative of his work. Prince Mirski says of him in the Contemporary Review: "Hla vo cabulary is the largest, I think, in all Russian literature. . . . He excels in bringing out the intrinsic human dignity of the most vulga and lowest creatures, whom he rep roaenus in all the glory of taeir firth with inimitable humor, at once whimsical and poignant and then suddenly puts them face to face with the greatest ordeals of life." As a reply to the "Memoirs of the Former Kaiser," France's war pre mier, Vlviani. will soon pnbllRh his A new French book which is In tended for commercial use, is Pro fessor R. Lus-um's "French Com mercial Terms and Phrases." This work, now in preas, contains more than 6000 terms and phrases alpha betically arranged, with special at tention given to idiomatic uses, eve "The public taste, artistically," says Remy de Gourmont. "is always 60 years behind the times.1 On that computation we are Just appreciat ing artistic events that should have been "on schedule" during recon struction days after the civil war. . e "Dethronements" Is the significant title Mr. Laurence Kousman has) chosen' for his coming volume of three plays, each depicting a notable political figure at the finish of his career; Joseph Chamberlain, Charles Stewart Parnell and Woodrow Wil son are characters chosen. e The Hispanic Society of America has purchased the entire set of original . illustrations by Ernest Pelxotto, which are a feature of his new travel book, "Spain and Por tugal." e e e "H. J. M." in an attempt to analyze the "hold which Mr. Hutch inson won over an astounding large public in "If Winter Comes." sums it up with conviction in the end. He says: "And I say I know why Mr. Hutchinson exalts and wrings hun dreds of thousands of heart. It is his dear, delicious, incomparable, quaint, extravagant, winning, eager, kind and kittenish manner. He goes on, "and you Just atare, with damp but kindling eyes." Stephen Graham's "Tramping With a Poet in the Rockies." an account of a roughing trip taken with Vsohel Lindsay. Is appraised In an amusing but sincere way by "Punch." whlrh says In part, "The wanderings of these two Inspired lunatic. Lindsay making the welkin ring with odd verse, and his com panion loving everybody from bears to Dukhobors. are a thoroughly di verting business. One reads, indeed, with a spasm of envy, and rret that one allows oneself to be mn tlrrt to hot shaving-water and all that It implies." BREAD UNIT OF VALUE Staff of Life Mandsrtl for Both Wages and ;mmIh. Colin Ross in Vosalsrhe Zeltung (Berlin). My little Russian teacher tin Kiev) is a young German woman of Russian birth very reserved and taciturn. When I asked her what I ought to pay her for a lesson, she looked embarrassed for a moment, and then said that when I had been long enough in the country. 1 would understand her terms. They wero a pound of bread sn hour. In fact, except In wholesale trans actions, a pound of bread is the unit of value for both wages and goods. In larger dealings ths gold ruble is the money of account, even the soviet government employing that denomination In measuring sal aries. Public officials and clerk, however, prefer to be paid on a pound of bread basis; for even reck oned in gold rubles, the price of pro visions fluctuates widely and stead ily rises. This is due to political and seo nomio uncertainties and to the famine, which is slowly but stead ily spreading from the south toward Kharkof and already holds halt of the Ukraine In Its grasp. Iron Discolors Potatoes. It has been found that the black discoloration In canned sweet pota toes Is due to the Iron dissolved from the can, combining with ths tannin-like substances In the pota toes, says ths Scientific American. Although the access of air Is neoes sary for this to take place, thereby emphasising the need of tight seams, the danger from this factor Is apparently greater than from the Invaalon of bacteria. Special Bargain Sale World Famous (O Books on Sale Until October 15 QJ rer Book This Is the most extraordinary bargain offer ever made In the history of book publishing. Your choice of 2R0 great masterpieces of literature the best of every are nd every land here In a compact, readable form at only 8c per book. ir oroer is manea Deiore mianignt or uci. 10, xvzz. xnis na tionally advertised library has sold as hlrh as 26 cents rr copy, which was a bargain but in order to Introduce these wonderrul books to one-million new customers, we have de cided to make a limited offer of 8c per book. If order Is mailed before Oct. 15. Over 20 million of these neat, attrac tive books sold In last three years. Slse of books SxS Inches, bound neatly In card cover paper. Quick service guaranteed. These books are not extracts; each book con tains complete text. Ran: In slie from 4 to A0 pt Just the right thing to carry with you to red In your spar moments. Can carry four or five of these books, and they will not bulce your pockets. This Is abnoltitely a clean-rut sale your 8c Is not a first payment It In positively pay ment In full for any tide you pick out binw. Within th past two years millions of these hooks have nen sold at i'.V. After this sale, the price will be or, but until thai time, we are making you the attoitndlng offr of S rent pr copy, postage prepaid by us. Kmemrr you osn gt 20 r. more titles In this wonderful library at only ec It ordsrs are sent at once; before Oct. 15. Drama 134 The Misanthrope. Moliere. 16 Ghosts. Henrtk Ibsen. 80 Pillars of Society. Ibsen. 44 Salome. O. Wilde.' 64 Importance of Being Earnest. O. Wilde. 8 Lady Windermere's Pan. Oscar Wilde. 131 Redemption. Tolstoi. 09 Tartuffe. Moliere. 81 Pelleas and Mellsande. Maeterlinck. 226 Prof. Bernhardl. Schnitzler. 808 She Stoops to Con quer. Goldsmith. TAKE YOUR PICK AT 8c PER BOOK History, Biography Fiction A Romance of the Redwoods Stewart Edward White At All Booksellers $1.75 renewed on this procured GILL'S The"Qrand Old Man of oAmarican Jiciion" In Hook Jorm oAt Last I CAPPY RICKS RETIRES TSc beck that amis hdvs seen written only in Peter B. Kyne PETER KYNE if the creator of the most famous character in modern fiction. And this new book takes him through the most exciting years of his life. A - 1 1 II r-. i , . Doom, to own ana loan in r mui ici yf aAll bookstores 42.00 opolitan Book (prporatioa intibbft eg! 1 I "By th Holy Pmt-TixJ Pnphal" Yes. It'i the tame eld. famous eld. "Cappr Rlcki." "Other-writers havedel ved into the seas, have pro jected their thoughts into the vastness of space and visited distant planets, but Mr. Burroughs has made an original adven ture which eclipses the .Verne sea journeys and the Wells unveiling of the life on Mars." So says the Philadelphia Record. Have jjou read this astounding book by the author of "Tarzan? At All Bookstores A. C McCLURG & CO., PUBLISHERS 845 Clarlmonde. Ge,utier. 292 Mademoiselle Fifi. De Maupassant. 199 The Tallow Ball. De Maupassant. 6 De Maupassant's Stories. IS Balzac's Stories. $44 Don Juan and Other Stories. Baliao. 318 Christ in Flanders and Other Stories. Balzac. 230 The Fleece of Gold. Theophlle Gautler. 178 One of Cleopatra's Nights. Gautler. 814 Short Stories. Daudet. B8 Boccacio's Stories. -45 Tolstoi's Short Stories. 12 Poe's Tales of Mystery. 290 The Gold Bus;. Edgar Allan Poe. 145 Great Ghost Stories, 21 Carmen. Merimee. 23 Great Stories of the Sea. 819 Comtesse de Salnt Gerane. Dumas. 88 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Stevenson. 279 Will o' the Mill; Markhelm. Stevenson. 811 A Lodging for the Night. Stevenson. 2T Last Days of a Con demned Man. Hugo. 151 Man "Who Would Be King. Kipling. 148 Strength of tne Strong. London. 41 Christmas Carol. Dickens. 57 Rip Van Winkle. Irving. i 100 Red Laugh. Andreyev. 106 Seven That Were Hanged. Andreyev. 102 Sherlock Holmes Tales. Conan Doyle. 161 Country of the Blind. H. G. WeJIS. 85 Attack on the Mill. Zola. 158 Andersen's Fairy 158 Alice ln Wonderland 87 Dream of John Ball. William Morris. 40 House and the Brain. Bulwer' Lytton. T2 Color of Life. K. Haldeman-Julius. 198 Majesty of Justice. Anatole France. 215 The Miraculous Re venge. Bernard Bhaw. 24 The Kiss and Other Stories. Chekhov. 285 Euphorlan in Texan. George Moore. 219 The Human Trag edy. Anatole France. 196 The Marquise. George Sand. 239 Twenty-six Men and a Girl. Gorki. 29 Dreams. Olive Schrelner. 232 The Three Strang ers. Thomas Hardy. 277 The Man Without a Country. E. E. Hale. 839 Thoreau the Man Who E s c a p e d From the Herd. Finger. 126 History of Rome. A. K. Giles. 128 Julius Caesar: Who He Was. 1R5 History of Printing. 149 Historic Crimes and Criminals. Finger. 175 Science of History. Froude. 104 Battle of Waterloo. Victor Hugo. 52 Voltaire. Victor Hugo. 125 War speeches ef Woodrow Wilson. 22 Tolstoi: His Life and Works. 142 Bismarck and the German Empire. 286 When the Puritans Were In Power. 843 Life of Columbus. 66 Crimes of the Borg ias. Dumaa. 287 Whistler: The Man and His Work. 61 Bruno His Life and Martyrdom. 147 Cromwell and His Times. 236 State and Heart Af fairs of Henry VIII. 50 Paine's Co m m o n Sense. 88 Vindication of Paine. Ingersoll. 60 Emerson's Essays. 84 Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun. 26 On Going to Church. O. B. Shaw. 135 Socialism for Mil lionaires. O. B. Shaw. 61 Tolstoi's Essays. 176 Four Essays. Have lock Ellis. 160 Lecture on Shake speare. IngersolL 75 Choice of Books. Carlyle. 288 Essays on Chester field and Rabe lais. Salnte Beuve. 76 The Prince of Peace. W. J. Bryan. 86 On Reading. Bran des. 95 Confessions of an Opium Eater. 213 Lecture on Lincoln. Ingersoll. 177 Subjection of Worn en John Mill. 17 On Walking. Tho reau. 70 Charles Lamb's Es- 235 Essays' Gilbert K. Chesterton. 7 A Liberal Education Thomas Huxley. 23S Thoughts on Lit erature and Art. Goethe. 225 Condescension In Foreigners. Lowell, 65 Meditations of Mar cus Aureltus. 65 Ruriorph Eucken; His Life and Philosophy. 4 Age of Remon Thomas Peine. 56 Herbert Spenrrr: His Life and Works. 44 Aenop's Fsbles 165 Discovery of the Future. H. G. Wells 96 TMaloffue of Plain. 825 Essence of Buddhlim. 103 Pocket Theology. Voltaire. 182 Foundation of Re ligion. 138 Studies In Psl- mlsm. Schopen hauer. 211 Idea of God In Na ture. John .Stuart Mill. 212 Life and Character. Goethe. Stuart 200 Ignorant Philoso pher. Voltaire. 101 Thoughts of PmhchI. 210 The Stole Philoso phy. Prof. O. Murray. 224 God: Known anil t'nknown. Hutl-r. 19 Klelxache: Who lie Was and What He Htooil Knr. 204 Sun Worship end Later Hellefn H. M Tlrhenor. 207 Olympian Gods. 11 . M .1. Tlrhenor. 221 Women, and Other 184 Primitive Beliefs Essays. Maeter linck. 10 Shelley. Francis Thompson. 163 Chinese Philosophy of Life. 30 What Life Means to v:wi Vt-nus and Adnn's 89 Did Jesus Ever Live? inn ControversT ea rhrmtlanlty. I -aroll and Glsd- Inn'. 43 .Marriage and Di vorce, florae Clre.ev nnd Hob- ert Owen U'l'S !ht in MlrlM I'ontrol. Mrs. Hanger and Win ter Iluseell 1-9 Home or K'unn Ingersoll snd M n n ti l n a K'2 Spirit ijllem Tonsil lny! and Mc- b" 171 H Life Any Meaning? Frank Harris and Terey Ward. 206 Cpll l-m m 8o lMllm Heiifman ii'l ,Sar!n IS Is Free Will a Fart or a Fallacy? 134 MrVeal-Hlnrlair r hste on eWlsllsrri Ml Weuld prmtir ef 'lirlt's Tearhlnes Muke for horlel Pros re. sT N sar ins and Ward. Shakespeare ?47 Mrl.eth o-.ii K..COIO and Jullel. .' .Iullu rr-sr 2lt Merchant of Vea ! 146 Hmlet 2H tlnliuiimirr Nights (Team ; King Henry V 88 Brann: Smaaher of 289 Pepy's Diary. Me. Jack London. Shams. 163 Sex Life In Greece and Rome. 214 Speeches of Lincoln. 276 Speeches and Let ters of George Washington. 144 Was Poe Immoral ? Whitman. 223 Essay on Swinburne' 299 Prose Nature Notes. Waif Whitman 813 Pen. Pencil and 81TB A Hhropshlrs I -ad. Poetry Poison. Oscar Wilde. 813 The Decay of Ly ing. Oscar Wilde. 86 Soul of Man Under Socialism. O. Wilde. 121 Keats: The Man and 298 Francois Villon: His Work ISO Lost Civilizations. Finger. 170 Constantino and the Beginnings of Christianity. 201 Satan and the Saints. 67 Church History. H. H. Tichenor. 123 Life of Ma (Inane Du Barry. 169 Voices From Past. 266 Life of Shakespeare and Analysis of His Plays. 139 Life of Dante. 69 Life of Mary. Queen of Scots. Dumas. 5 Life of Samuel Johnson. Macaul- Student. Poet and Housebreaker. R. L. Stevenson. Maxims, Epigrams of Inger- 174 Trial of William Penn. Humor 18 Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow. Je rome. 166 English as She Is Spoke. Mark Twain. 205 Artemus Ward. His Book. 231 Eight Humorous Sketches. Mark Twain. 187 Whistler's Humor. 216 Wit of Heinrlch Heine. Geo. Eliot. 20 Let's Laugh. Nasby. Literature 194 Lord Chesterfield' Letters. 63A Defense of Poetry. Shelley. 97 Love Letters of King Henry VIII. 8 Eighteen Essays. Voltaire. 28 Toleration. Vol taire. 89 Love Letters of Men and Women of Genius. 186 How I Wrote "The Raven." Poe. 87 Love, an Essay. Hontalgne. 48 Bacon's Essays. 56 Wisdom soil. 106 Aphorisms. Geo. sand. the 168 Epigrams. O. Wilds. 59 Epigrams of Wit and Wisdom. 85 Maxima. Roche foucauld. 154 Epigrams of Tbsen. 197 Witticisms and Re flections. De Sevlgne. 180 Epigrams of George Rrrnard Shaw. 155 Maxims. Napoleon. 181 Epigrams. Thoreau. 22a Aphorisms. Huxley. 118 Proverbs of Eng land. 114 Proverbs of France. 115 Proverbs of Japan. 116 Proverba of China. 117 Proverbs of Italy. 118 Proverba of Russia. 119 Proverbs of Ireland. 120 Proverbs of Spain. 1'Jl Proverbs of Arabia. Housman. 284 Poems of Robert Burns. 1 Rubalyat of Omar Khayyam. 73 Walt Whitman's Poems. J Wilde's Ballad of Reading Gaol. 82 Poe's Poems. 14 Michael Angelo'l Sonnets. 71 Poems of Evolution. 146 Snowbound: Pled Piper, t Oreat English Poems. 79 Enoch Arden. Tennyson. 68 flhakespeare's Son nets. 21 Lays of Anelent Rome. Mscaulay. 178 Vision of Sir Laua- fal. Lowell. 222 The Vampire and other Poems. Kipling. 237 Pruso Poems. Science Mental Series 107 How to Strengthen Mind and Memory 108 How to Develop a Healthy Mind. 109 How to Develop a Strong Will. 110 How to Develop a Magnetic Person ality. 111 How to Attract Friends. 112 How to Be a Lead er of Others. Philosophy, Religion 124 Theory of Reincar nation Explained. 157 Plato's Republic. 62 Schopenhauer's Essays. 94 Trial and Death of Socrates. 217 The Pussle of Per sonality: a Study ' In Psycho-Analysis. Flsldlng. 190 Psyrho-Analysls The Key to Hu man Behavior. Fielding. 140 Biology and Spirit ual Philosophy. 275 The Building of the Earth. C. L. Fen ton. 49 Three lectures on Evolution. Haeckel. 42 From Monkey to Man. 238 Reflections on Mod ern Science. Hux ley. 202 Survival of the Fit test. H. M. Tlche nor. 191 Evolution vs. Re ligion. Balin forth. 138 Electricity Explained. (2 Hypnotism Made Plain. 58 Insects and Men: Instinct and Rea son. 189 Eugenics. Havelock ElUs. .I King 11'nff VIII. 241 Mrrry Wles of Wlndaor 2.'.4 Ths Taming of IB Shrew 24? As You Like It. 24(1 The Tempeal 548 Twelfth Mght. '..A King Lear. o'l3 King John rrj I'nmedy of Errors. ?ao King nirhard II. 27 Perli les "rt4 King Richard TTI 245 Meaaure for Meas ure. 257 King Henry IV Part 1 288 King Henry IV Part 2 244 Much Ado About Nothing. 1.12 Othello 21U King Henry VI Part t. 260 King Henry VI I'art 3 261 King Henry VT Part 8. a Sonnets 2'16 Life of Shakespeare Miscellaneous 326 Hints on Writing Short stories. Finger. 12 Book of Synonyena. 23 Rhyming Diction ary. 76 How to Ue an Ora tor 82 Common Faults In Writing Kngilah. 127 What Eipert.nt Mothers Should K now 91 Care of the llaby. US Child Training 137 Home Nursing 14 What Kvery (ilrl should Know. Mrs. Ssnger. 81 Case for lilrth f'nntrol. 91 Manhood: Faef ef Life Presented t Men. 83 Msrrlage. past. Present and Fu ture. Pesnt 74 On Threshold of Sex. 9S How to Love. 172 Evolution of Love Kll-n Key. 2"3 Rlshta of Women. Havelock Kl I. 2"9 Anpecta of Hlr'h I'ontrol: Mdlral. Moral. Soclologl' ral. 93 How to Live lod Tesra 1B7 Plutarc h's Rules of SPECIAL BARGAIN If you order entire library of 280 vol umes. Our special price Is only $19.60. carriage charges pre paid. If ordered before Oct. 15. HOW TO ORDER Simply check carefully with pencil (not Sen) books you wish, making the check mark before the num. er. Then fill out attached coupon, giving your name, ad dress, and the amount of your order in dollars and cents. Tear out the complete announcement and mall to the Hal- Read in, Odd Moments Slip three or fotir of .these books Into a pocket. They do not bulge they are not noticed but they are there, ready to help you make the most of spare time anywhere. On street cars, at lunch, on trains. In the evening, you can draw mental strength and knowledge from these volumes. Do you want the best books the best food for your mind? Then Send Your Order Now. Series of Debates 11 Debate on Religion deman-Jultue Company. Dept. A-43. Glrard, Kaa will he mailed Immediately by oarce! noet. h-n. and check, draft, money order or registered letter today. you order 20 hooka send (1.60; if ftO, send 34. and so on Postage prepaid on cash orders. Add 10c to personal rhrk for exchange. Orders will he sent C. O. I. If reuueeied. but carriage chargea are collected on C. O. I. orders No t o. r orders to Canada or other foreign countries. K L'811 ORKF.Il TODAY. t h I The Prin- e. Maehla- Velll. Tlie boos your order r i Haldeman-Julius Company Dept. A-45, Girard, Kansas Pleas and m at one, tha fflll In number of tv"k) books which I hava ehck1. T am tnclnalnf cft'l In amount In dollars and cent,, this to b full payment for my order. Th Haldeman-Jallus Company ars to nd th okt, post prepaid. Name . e Straet Add raas.. , ... , City Htat CDo not ttar off this coupon. Cut nut and mill romplrt announcement. Haldeman-Julius Co., Dept. A-45, Girard, Kansas