Show f dv Adventures illi I Interviewing j jt I t Pleases ses I I II I Isaac r P. P Adventures In Interviewing Is a book or of per lali- lali lie tieh as Il It has his been called This volume 01 vol vol- ume urno is r readable 0 at t nn any page C. C l i It has that catch can grace whereby where where- j i b by tho the reader can ean pick It up up at random ran lau dom donl and find Iud something readable o 01 01 any an- page The riLe numerous Illustrations enhance this volumes volume's value v. I Mr J Marcoon has had ball an unusually unusual unusual- I j ly varied aried and Interesting career as reporter re- re j porter editor and aid it t. t lII HIa ac activities ac- ac which wore v begun in hi Ills seventeenth sev sev- year eal under j lenry Will rMon nc-j nc of oC the Loul Louisville Courier Journal 11 slut slut- c cd him on tho lie ho IO road load v which eh led leJ to the throne room loom of tC British ih s statesmanship in Downing street lh Loudon he he had hall Ills his historic Int s io l' l iov wll It Llo Lloyd Geor George e In omu o of the ua dark hours homs oC or orthe the world struggle Gifted with sym sympathetic 1 n pathetic vision rare Insight imig-ht and t a n of the dramatic Mr Marcosson lla has made hl his booK Ad ii in Interviewing lewin as ai interesting and absorbing ab Ih a as a romance It 13 tn intimate history told In terms of personalities Among the c celebrities j he ho tells about and HIli reveals ut at close Iuso II lan l'an range e arc are Lloyd Llod George Goore e. e Woodrow ow Wilson Wilson Wil- Wil lson l- l I son Sir Hir Dou Douglas las Mai anal Foch i Lord Lord French Ker j i sicy J Maj G Ion Gen H Leo Leonard IHU I Vo Wood l. l t tr Ir James M. M 1 Barrie Mark lark Twain L Janes Lane Lanc Allen Alice George o O. O Henry II G. G I Frank Xo i iDa DaIll Da- Da I Ill vid John Drew J. J Morgan an Andrew Carnegie John Hay Thru Theodore Roosevelt elt General Pershing General Smuts Marconi v 1 tf v son PE Ethel ioD Barrymore r h j Julia l Marlowe Ir rl c I Th Thomas mus F. F Ryan Rall 1 L' L II H and Charles and Daniel Ills lite i chapters entitled Some Literary Friendships an and Other Literary Friendships are as intensely el InterestIng Interesting Interest Interest- in ing as those re regarding arllin the leaders In statecraft or war For instance his hl graphic close close up up of oC O. O Honry who oho ho lie tells UH Uti was Indolent and PIOU proud of or it The Idea of or writing on a typewriter typewriter type type- writer w-iter or dictating to a stenographer filled hi hun him m with terror lIe He wrote all ll his stories on pa pads s of rou rough h h A I and in ill lead pencil John John Lane L. Co Now New York I Book of the tile Damned Is Daring Venture r r One of the tho most roost extraordinary books that has been published recently is Charles Forts Fort's Book Dool of the thc Damned It is is strictly speaking surprising It is also Just ns as trul truly interesting in interesting in- in rea reading Blood carved stones ln ll living animals and remains ot of super- super mammoths and icebergs icebergs if if things have fallen from the sk sky if Ie vast alt dirigible structures and hosts of ot Inter- Inter I voyagers or angels or crusaders crusa crusa- a- a ders have been seen close to this earth It If If all aU were of orl origin ln not terrestrial terrestrial- I i what hat conclusions can we draw An And other planets communicating with us I either oither with design or otherwise In Inthis Inthis I this era of ot the conquest air of supposed communication with th the spirit world may not Mr Ir Forts Fort's In Indisputably I proven data llata and his conclusions bo be of ot tremendous Importance to mankind I He lie has set forth mysterious and ing irig facts that science has not yet et been able to classify an and put in neatly la ha- ha abelle a- a I belled belle pigeon eon These facts science sd- sd ence once has heretofore dodged They have ha I been excluded the they are the tho damned Hence the title of the volume Hence th the writer tells about rains o of blood and fishes raining from the sl sky also of 01 red suns sunG and ond blue moons He lIo quotes au nu- nu promiscuously arid and in a a. most roost matter of ot fact style leaves tl conclusion conclusions con con- to be bo drawn ra wn by the rca reader reader- er- er wh which ich the reader rc most certainly does doe thus enhancing the tho charm of tho the book bool for each individual thereof The impression sion gained alne is of tho the labors of a laughing skeptic who ho denies donics the cut and dried theories of or modern sl once ence PUlls out th ot- ot Cn 1 n t r biology an and 1 a astronomy and nd other sc sd- sd as ns it were and shakes them be before before be- be fore an audience quite amused and aull much nuchi interested if it not a l little fearful ns a a. result One thin thing Is certain Mr Forts Fort's book bool II Is readable Ills His work Is not to be shunned shunnell It will bo be discussed b by all 1111 fortunate fortunato enough to have ve the pleasure o of reading it Donl BonI Liveright Live Live- right Now New York i 1 Makes l Deep Economic Study The Flow I of Value Value b by Logan Los Grant McPherson traces In broad brond outline the sequence of ot C cause and effect In determining determining deter deter- mining prices wa wages es and profit It demonstrates that as all things thIng and services bought and sold arc are produced bY the application of ot human effort the greater tho the volume that io is produced in l relation elation to tho the effect applied tho the greater will Ill be the supply and thus thug the greater the thc share sharo that each person nUL may receive tocci It is only onh b hy by means of capital that I there can n be bo tho the greatest Volume of production Business capital cannot be bo provided pro except through h tho tIme Investment of profit b by tho the employer er or of ravings F which are arc of or the nature of profit profit profit-by by tho time Those who do o not spend nil all the they receive have 11 property in capItal cap cap- ital and rna may derive profit from its 1180 under the tho direction of or employers with the brains an and the tile capacity for tor Ico Co both capital and labor I Th Tho Tha employer employs the tho for th the tho purpose of or obtaining renter greater profit than ho lie could otherwise secure and the tho employs the r for the purpose of obtaining a hotter better living for himself than ho could otherWise otherwise other- other wise secure Effective ordination co-ordination In the production of or things and ices In due relation would mean menu employment em- em for all who arc employable and and abundance for everyone I This i Is II the lie extremely interesting argument argument ar ar- ar of this work worl which Is 15 b bI by b a i I writer who first became known through h ibis studies in transportation Research under tinder tho the auspices of th the Johns Hop Ho- kins university where for nine years hc he was as lc lecturer on 1 cn 1 him to make broad application of of the experience of many yearn in Lu Inn active active- railroad service Thus Thua lug his rc- rc fleet tho thic saneness of or u a practical writer r rather than a n mere theorist an and nr tir S consequently readable C CO Cot I York York- I |