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Show LIBRARY HAS SnXHDID LEW BOOKS Oil LIST At the local Carnegie library the following new books are ready for circulation cir-culation today: Tales From the Trenches. MacGIll The Red Horizon. Empey ''Over the Top." A Soldier of France to His Mother. Cable Between the Lines. Cable Action Front Cable Grapes of Wrath. McConnell Flying for France. Masefleld Gallipoli. Seeger Letters and Diary of Alan Seeger. Powell Italy at War. Beaverbrook Canada In Flanders. Why We Are at War. McClure Obstacles to Peace. Beck The War and Humanity. Cheradame The Pan-German Plot Unmasked Wilson Why Wo Are at War, by President Wilson. Ackerman Germany, the Next Republic. Re-public. Red Cross Work. American Red Cross Text Book' on Homo Dietetics. Friends of France The Field Service Serv-ice of the American Ambulance. Hunt War Bread. Jones With Serbia into Exile. War Poems. Underwood War Flames. War Poems, by "X" Books on War-Time Thrift. Richardson Adventures in Thrift Fowler How to Save Money. Canning and Storage of Foodstuffs. Riesenberg Preserving and ' Canning. Can-ning. Handy War Food. Nell Canning, Preserving and .Picking. .Pick-ing. War Manuals. Ellis & Garey The Plattsburg Manual. Man-ual. Parker An Officer's Notes. Moss Manual of Military Training. Moss and Stewart Self-helps for the Citizen Soldier. Andrews Fundamentals of Military Service. It will be a surpr.se to many admirers ad-mirers of Arthur Conan Doyle to know that he Is, besides being a registered physician, a poet, a famous shot and I a novelist, a historian of note. One of tho best histories of the European war Is being written by him. The second sec-ond volume, "The British Campaign in -re - J Tu .1 ft j 1 . . i iA , published by George H. Doran company. com-pany. Elizabeth Robins Pennell's exquisite story, "Tho Lovers" (LIpplncott's), pronounced by the Bost Transcript to bo "one of the few enduring books that havo come or that are to come out of tho great conflict" of the war, 1b selling so fast that tho Llppincott company has had to cable to England to rush new editions, for which orders in the hundreds are already on file. Isabel Maude Peacocke, whose "My Friend Phil" won her a considerable ninount of popularity a few years ago, has written another story of boy life which Robert M. McBride & Co. will publish in August. "Dicky, Knight-Errant," Knight-Errant," which is the title of the new volume, is an account of the well-meaning exploits of a little Australian boy In war time. Published this month are "The Broken Brok-en Gate," by Emerson Hough; "The Secret Witness," by George GIbbs; "The Quest of Ledgar Dunstan," by Alfred Tresider Shoppard; "Treasure and Trouble Therewith," by Geraldine Bonner; "Miss DQlcie from Dixie," by Lulah Ragsdale; " Christine, a Fifo Fisher Girl" by Amelia E. Barr; "Cousin "Cou-sin Julia," by. Grace Hodgson Flan-drau; Flan-drau; "Alexis," by Stuart Maclean; "How to Fly," by A. Frederick Collins. Col-lins. The Princeton University Press will publish about October 1 "The Value of the Classics," edited by Andrew F. West, dean of the Graduate School of Princeton University. This is a record of tho nddrosses delivered at tho conference con-ference on Classical Studies in Liberal Education hold at Princeton University, Univer-sity, June 2, 1917, together with a collection col-lection of opinions and statistics. |