Show I I I oss p tW eth 1 I I Cardinal Subject of Interesting Book Mercier the Fighting Fig Cardinal by Charlotte Kellog is perhaps one of the most Interesting and timely books which has appeared this season The story of oit Cardinal Mercier Prince of the Church who refused to allow his spiritual power I to be overruled by the Prussians the shepherd who led his Imprisoned people while the yoke joke of their oppressors weighed them down and who now in spite of his 68 jears is prepared to lead them in their work worle of reconstruction reconstruction- this is the story Mrs Mra Kellog tells The Cardinals Cardinal s recent visit to America gives an added interest Then too Mrs Kellog is well known in Salt SaIt Lake havIng having hayIng hav hay I ing made more than one visit to friends here She was the only onh woman allowed in the invaded war zone at one time durIng during dur dur- ing log the war She gained he her bet information t i from first hand sources while associated j with Herbert Hoover in tIle tUe work worl of the relief commission In Belgium and knew Cardinal Merci Intimately Her writing On Oct the subject of Belgium Belgium's s hero pr priest l is Lot f high practical value J daiy Great e mystery surrounded the methods used bY bythe the he Belgians in circulating the Cardinals Cardinal's a messages and in publishing and circulating the little paper which was as issued constantly despite the utmost I efforts of the Germans to suppress it These things did more to keep alive the I fires people leO h of than patriotism tr all the he and efforts rt r the of hope their iro of lead head leaders e the I I ers era Mrs Kellog explains these mysteries I in a a. most fascinating manner I I There is also an account of how Leo I I XIII followed Mercier Merciers s career as a young teacher with satisfaction and how he selected selected selected se- se seI I I I him as the leading professor of neo schol scholastic neo philosophy and how th this of young joung ru modern oJ professor es scientific developed IO i it n I in n the e I Hundreds Hun hull lIght g i of students inspired by his new teaching of philosophy have gone from Louvain university to Important chairs in the schools of many countries I j Included in Mrs 1 Kellog s biography are some n of if the letters sent by Car- Car 1 1 dinal Mercier Merci r to his people Inspiring them with hope and in an indirect way giving them news that the outer world sympathized with them and that their cause was the cause of the allies It is a great human Interest story It explains many things that thu were Tot rot clear during the conflict Mrs Kellogs Kellog's book bookis is authentic tremendously interesting and well written D. D Appleton Co New York U Vest t Indira Are Shown In Clo eul Roaming West Indies Indies In In- In dies by Harry Han y A A. Franck author of Vagabonding Down the Andes con- con s a a. vivid picture of the west Indies Mr Franck has been vagabonding through the West Vest Indies seeing and feeling and recording the Islands in his lila own extraordinary way He gets a new pe people on paper with unerring fidelity and with a vigor vitality and vividness that is amazing Perhaps no other American now writing has his Mr Mr- Ir Francks Franck's equipment for achieving the tIle kind of books boots he writes For Tor years 1 he has gone one about the earth looking at talking with working with peoples strange to us us- us retting petting them down on paper with a a. mental and emotional integrity beyond beyond beyond be be- beI I yond praise To any new work which I he now writes he brings a background cf ef experience of unparalleled value alue But Roaming Through the West Indies Indies- is more than a travel book There are arc in it character sketches of big and bizarre personalities and places There are narratives which while true 1 have ave the dram tic tension and thrill of the best short stories There are descriptive passages having the beauty and passion or oJ poetry of ot the tho first class I And of ot course wherever Mr Franck toes roes oes his camera goes and the book Is 15 Illustrated with the best things In the Treat great collection JI of photographs rn s he brought h back with him The hini-The The r T Ce Century Cen Cei- tury tory company New York England After fter War Var StrugglE England After the War by Frank is li the first comprehensive and authoritative account of ot the tIle remolding if nt life lite which is taking place in th the British Isles as a result of ot the war While no one can definitely forecast the issue whether it is to be tragedy or triumph it t is possible to present clearly with all the dramatic possibilities ties a picture of the nation in transition transi transi- tion This book is a full and definite I presentation of ot England's England s struggle at atthe atthe atthe the present moment Frank the author is an En- En gush writer and editor of ot distinction During the war he was president of ot the war correspondents In America For many years ears he was one of the principal descriptive writers of ot the London Dan Dali Dally Mail Man and for that paper Japer undertook many foreign mis missions ions Later he organized and edited the Journal of ot the lab r movement the DanY Citizen which under his his his' control control con con- reached a circulation o oJ of over copies He I-fe received from the tie French government for his International service during luring the war war- warthe the decoratIon decoration deco deco- ration o of the l legion of honor honor- Dou day his ay 6 Page lo go Garden City N I I I p Editorials Editorial Are Gathered in Minute len ien Minute Talks With Workers isa isa is isa a short collection of editorials taken from the Times rimes London trade supplement supple supple- m ment nt It is a thinly disguised argument argument argument ment against bolshevism It is SUPposed supposed supposed sup sup- posed to be an answer to the soapbox orator but the book falls short in its mission Among the chapter headings are What Capital Gets What the Boss Does for the Worker What Is the Worker Entitled To fo To What Are ProfIts ProfIts' Profits Profits' Prof Prof- Profits its its' What Do Wages Depend On On The National Purse What Is a Tax The I Ideal Factory The Origin of Wealth The Four Factors actors The Pillars of ot Society Society So So- and etc The subjects appear interesting but upon analysis the read reader t finds find some seine unproven theories thrust upon Im Rim him inI in inthe I the guise of facts and a sided one argument argument ari ar ar- ar- ar i capitalistic against a s e an any cha change ge from flom the It it is hard to believe belie the book will meet with success In the United Spited States It is supposed to perform the mission of combating misinformation given out by Reds but makes the same error The f ete average V workingman r n in t the United t States reads better editorials I every day in in his own V papers and n. n although g he may ai disagree s r with some of them e his l eI intel intel- intelligence fI f- f I is not insulted by an obvious attempt to preach down to him Doubleday Page Co Garden Garfen- Garfen City NT NY Y r T re Writt The Course of Empire by lIy Senator IR n. n r Ii Pettigrew is one o ot 01 the strong strong- est eat arguments against imperialism ever issued in book form For several years the senator Jr fought against the course the Unit Uniti l I tales states was taking in the Philippines Hawaii and other territories ries ries rica His predictions are re coming true in many ways lila Ills I are in three groups groups- th those c concerned with the h Hawaiian fa Islands Is- Is lands the and no nd th the th e r u n u. u u for tor annexation those that were concerned con con- n 1 tion of lV with the Philippines the conquest I sin and and those annexation en that ht I ideal deal with the sturdy opposition of the I Vest West to the imperial policies of the I Eastern banking and business business' syndi syndi- cates The book is an excellent history of I the years from 1893 to 1901 in U b S. S I I government The senator shows that I the country ent entered red a new era between be be- I tween 1893 and 1901 I Senator Pettigrew is from South Da Da- Da- Da kota He lie was elected a Republican but j found himself out of harmony with the I domination of the Republican party by Mark Hanna He fought the annexation annexation I tion of Hawaii from the time of the I revolution until annexation was made possible b bj by the war hysteria of 1898 He championed the right of self- self determination for the tIle inhabitants of our newly acquired possessions and fought ought against the Imperial policy at home nome as vigorously as he fought against it abroad The senator shows that fam fam- own over O of t th the wealth of the United States that ml- ml n s own over 20 per cent of ot the wealth of the U U. S S. and he averts asserts t that ha this shows a a. of affairs in proS produced produced pro- pro thirty years years' time which has S IH the destruction of every free government that ever lived and predicts predicts pre pre- diets that it will cause t the e destruction destruction of ours Bom Boni Liveright New York Dialogue of Two Two Continents Recorded It has been very flare nara for citizens of ft the United S states to understand the dIslikes dislikes dIs- dIs likes and n P prejudices entertained by bj South Americans for them Just no now when the war has opened up new v trade PP opportunities fo for between en the two continents it is particularly Important that a the mystery of this antagonism be Tj has attempted It in The Gulf Gult of Misunderstanding The author has a I grasp of his subject and has listened to the arguments arguments ments on both slopes of the Andes and on P b both h Ides sides of the Mississippi and has hasI classified and written down the things he has heard Among the subjects discussed are the different attitudes of both countries toward to toward to- to ward marriage and divorce religion Imperialism im Im- im- im prohibition woman womans woman's s suffrage education character and habits The book bool boo is published as a a. series of letters which a South American visitIng visitIng visiting visit- visit Ing in the United States State has written to his wife setting forth his views of this country Accompanying each letter is another supposedly written by a Miss Mabel Jones censor during wartime in which she replies to his criticism and forwards It to the wife with his letter The form seems seems' some somewhat w- w what hat farfetched as it is not hard to imagine what the impression would be upon the South American lady when she found that another another another an an- other woman was criticising her husbands husband's husbands husband's husbands husband's hus hus- bands band's letters However the author says The man and woman who are speakIng speak speak- ing lag are arc symbols The The- book is an analysis sis of the shock between Latin and Saxon Anglo-Saxon American The two continents con con- the two races are in close contact con Con- tact There is a shock i a reaction and this l book ook is the analysis of this shock shook of this reaction This book Is the dialogue dialogue dia dia- I logue of of two continents It is the report produced by the tho moral shock of two worlds worlds New Nw NewYork Yo York k I 1 if 1 i i. i i 1 Pleading for Justice oci 1 With Purpose W W. J J. J Dawson who wrote The Makers Makers Ma- Ma kers o of English 1 said It seems likely that the time tim will vIll come h every man who has anything any any- e f thing to sa 3 ar ao or science c n sora or re religion re- re ligion or sociology will seek to say It Itin itIn itin in fiction Judging from the number of propaganda propaganda propaganda ganda novels and message books Dawsons Dawson's s prediction Is rapidly being fulfilled Pleading for Justice by V W C C. C Burns is of this type Whether the reader will like the book or not largely depends on how he or or she likes to have entertainment diluted with messages messages and romance tempered with freight rate dl discussions discus discus- cus- cus sl The novel novel- tell the story of Warren Preston born of ot the people who rises through hardships to place and power Preston sees bees many economic wrongs as he grows and makes it largely his hH business in in life later to bring about reforms i The Th TheaUthor author asserts that the prIvileges privileges I leges the government extended in the h beginning n n to t the railroads has 1 I been e abused b in many cy a ways ways for for exam exam- I Pie e. e by the rebate system the selling e f i I of w worthless t ri the tho combination o na nai i tion of J competitive systems at I increased in- in re if 1 ea creased s valuations and the raising of t rates rates' favoring localities I A romance IS' IS embodies in the the story which tells of young love beset by trials and difficulties Readers who like to read of young love rove with Its Us misunderstandings and find findan an appeal in this element The author has known tho the hardships of labor and the difficulties of pf modern business ss life complicated by the economic economic mic mic- mic matters which he analyzes On the whole the story is a trifle more I entertaining than many others of its type type Justice Publishing company t i Chicago I Fa Far W West st st. Re veal erf I j l S In All Its Its Glory I Seeing the Far West Vest by John T T. Paris Karis Faris is not only a wonderful panorama n text and illustrations of the scenic glories of cf f the states from flom tho the to the Pacific but also an intensely in interesting interesting in- in narrative recounting bits of history and romance and overflowing with personal observations which makes this volume valuable and entertaining both to those who can visit the Far I West Vest ant and to those who must travel by their I own fireside Almost every spot of beauty and in interest interest in- in terest is described The author while i I not slighting scenes already made de de- de I i familiar by many writers has sought to give emphasis also to regions l I of which little has been said said among among I others the great national forests whose I beauties were seen in the course of more I than three thousand miles of travel far fir from the the- national parks and monuments especially those opened in I recent years including Zion canyon that wonder of southern Utah which but one recent volume has touched upon the tue deserts which silently and compellingly I call to the traveler who hurries across them by bv train and arid the amazing lavaI lava- lava built regions of central Oregon east of ot i I the Cascades which will be better known I to Americans when there is a through railroad d from Klamath Falls to the Co Go- lumbia J. J B B. Lippincott Co Co Philadelphia Philadel Philadel- phia English Novel Creates Sensation J by Rose Macaulay Macaula is a novel that makes fun of at us all all and shows how sentimental we we are at heart I even when we think we have escaped the scourge There is a love o e story of I course and tho the conflict in the lives of Gideon and Jane Hobart lures us on in utter for the most unusual un un- usual end To quote Frank Franl I I again It It should not be nEcessary to dwell upon t the e fine skill of Miss Macaulay's Macaulay Macau- Macau lay lays lay's s handling of or character and words lish Of recent authors years so many young English English Eng Eng- have been Introduced to toI I I the American public as the greatest I the the most notable and what not not that we Prefer to let Rose Macaulay Macaulay's s new novel and her subsequent I books which we will also publish speak for themselves i The b book b has haf already run into several large aige large editions in England It is not an involved i in introspective ro g f dJ journal of the im im- im school SChOol Boni Liveright II New York Yorki Irish Stories Storie Make Inke Warm |