A Complete Sert~ice Is at Your Doot; To.....,..,. in ,_,. oam botnt ., fiOU" ~ BtU 8 Howell Filmo, Eastman Kodascope an~ the marvelous De Vry Home Projector-priced at $85.00. ·To pro4ua motion pictrue~ · Films of your baby, boy, girl, father, mother. Wecldiags, social affairs, club activities, etc. To ..,.,op. print, title IIIJII MitFilms that you expose· in your own Filmo, Cine Kodak or other motion · picture camera. · All .,_..., ;, . _ ri,61 ill oar _ , ....,., llr6olwtorilt loalfM in Wiltattle. To lltl1b th ""' which f10U 110111 IMw ia fJOfU Gam ~lome film' lilarr/. To procar1 I« f1GU ., .,. ol flm ( 16 mm home lize) cowr; , .,,.., _, aabject JIOU .4aire- . . Ethel Winger Doyle is the latest of "Contemporary Poets of Dorlt;!Lnc~e~" to bljq out a coUection of published by Dornnce and ll:~[)IDIDIJIY, Inc., of Philadelphia. Her appropriately caUed "Pot-auhas recently appeared. It is. divided into several parts, Measures of Love," which contains l~cs of rather mild wistfulness; Eternal Isosceles," with queslli(milltK and disillusioned notes: much friends and friendship in "BeFriends"· "Echoes from the nt.lll· .....··; "When Nature Calls," with a bits of mountain description; and ···-.:....-.,_ the Tropics." The last section odds and ends of longer ·erse, llwlaich have more promise and are not tiresomely sweet. Miss Doyle llsl1tO\'II'S her subjects that she is well lltr,ave:led and well versed in life's exYet they leave her acquiesand calm. Her poetry would a wide appeal to those· who care short lyrics in home-spun jackets. We quote one: p,... a Secret Ganlea cllnry blossom.s_, were so while Wile· we /1lwked them, that A#il Rigid; "' Their billowed blurs ogai~~St tile dusk Filled oil the oir with magic msuk. These cltnTy blossot~~.r ore .ro lwoum-1 lay their fllitheretl, dry .slelfi.S douw, For tlaftr f(Jirtl ft'IJII"ddiCt otul "'Y tears HmJe bonv tne back to those far 'jears." -la·e Anal. · Appeal·· ewell of " ... Of Dorraace" I ......_ _......,..._....._...,.__.._ _ _~ BrA.- L Wlll'veclr . In an artide "Main Street Wants to Know," Frank Parker Stoekbridge names the foUowing books as the most read. He has compiled for ·the past eight years the Bookman's Monthly score and has based his article on these. N~xt to fiction, biography has undoubtedly been the most popular. He mentions the "Education of Henry Adams"; "The Americanization of Edward Bok"; Page's ~'Life and Letters"; Papini's "Life of Christ": "Queen Victoria"; "Mirrors of Downing Street"; "Damaged Souls"; "Ariel"; "John Keats," by Amy Lowell; Hughes' and Woodward's Lives of Washington; White's "Woodrow Wilson"; "The Prairie Years," by Sandburg; "Napoleon," by Ludwig ; "Intimate Papers," by House; and Barton's "Man That Nobody Knows." In fiction the most popular were : "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" ; "Age of Innocence"; ·. "If . Winter Comes" ; "Green Hat" ; "Babbitt"; "So Big"; "Little French Girl" ; "Arrowsmith" ; "Helen of Troy" ; "The Constant Nymph"; "AmeriCan Tragedy"; "Elmer Gantry"; and "Main . . , Street." In history Wells' "An Outline of History" was the most popular for years, now ~"Our Times," by Sullivan, is leading. ther books were "Now ]t Can Be . Tol ," and "The Mauve Decade." · · Among travel books "The Royal Road to Romance" has been phenomenal but .tTrader Horn" and the "Revolt in the Desert" bid 'fair to rival it. "The Travel Jliary .of a Philosopher" had an enormous vogue, as also '. ' W.hite Shadows in South Seas." · Other boOks that have proven in t ~ . Travel, Scenic..· Educational, Scieatiic, ladaatrial, ·War, Drama, Comedy, Cartoons, Featu~ Lehle Film .Laboratories (J'n..IWI oi --dufriCilr Ia- . . 'W ILMETTE IIIJ) 514 JAH'Avs. . PHoNE WJL~ 1076 of the Peace," "0 u w i t t i n g our !!~-~~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~mud~:"&oo~k~~q~oc6 Nerves"; Post's "Etiquette"; "New Decalogue of Science"; "This ·Believ-· .~ O.a·llllda. .,...._... caa · .... J., ..... for ·Y ti11t. . , or llialiL Week aJI , · · · · or · S · · · a y to ·ir r·r coawajeMe, iN NEW HOllE financial editor of the IIChiCJago Evenine Post, and family are established in their new home at Virginia avenue, Kenilworth. H. G. Seel~y, ing World"; "Story ·of Philosophy," and "Why We Behave Like Human Beings." · . ' Announce Nest · Week'a Museum Guide-Lectures The program of guide-lecture tour~ at Field Museum of Natural History for the week beginning Monday, January 9, wiD open with the subjects "Indian Art" and "Glass" oil Monday at 11 a.m., and 3 p.m., respectively. Subjects on other days, at the same , hours, are as follaws : Tuesday, "Animal Adaptation to Surroundings" and "Primitive.. Weavers"; Wednesday, "Bronze" and "Exotic Fruits and Flowers"; Thursday, two general tours .of the museum; ' Friday, .,Primitive Hunters" and "Materials of Modem Building." These tours of museum exhibits under the guidance of staff lecturers are free. Persons wishing to join parties should assemble inside the north entrance at the houn spedfie.d. t ·J .W....... ... ................... __... ... CWIII ..... ill .-1 !II' ._....,,,.....,~ , . , . , . , . ;, ,.., . , . 0 , , - ·. , ooacoATs · 8VITI · AND WE MAKE THEM TO ORDER ROAR TIGER OAR Bruce Hulbert, son of the Alfred Roy Halberts of Abbottsfor.d road, Kenilworth. has returned to the University of Kichipn after spending the holidays with his parents. .. BROWN'S FIRST, SALE C.a·e..... IU.at7 . . . we wDI lieN ear tnt _.. ·· . .nnue ···· · .... Watell W· FI'I··J' for we·wt· ntaet10a1. ""r..U . EftDston BROwN FuRNJriJRE COMPANY 1567 Sherman Aye.