son r. Snerwooa* NMr. :Mantle startQtî bis. annual survey in 1919 and this volume includes the best of the plavs appearing in the decade before thatt.* It is a guide, philosopher, and friend for theatergoers. You've no notion how liard it is to find tle things which are so.ablyassemblcd iri this BOOK' priceless volume, countless statistirs FRST FLOOR aotwheb hm and with what casts the plays were produced. iDEPT.ý The ten plays which Mr. Maîxtle ___________________________choose.s.as the best of the decade.and gives bis readers in bspopular peni- micanized.,fôrm are:, "The Easiest> Way," by Eugene Walter; .Mrs.ý Bumpstead-Leigh,." 'by Ilarry Jamesç Smith; "Disraeli," hy Louis, Napoleon1 Parker; "Romanice," ,by Edward Sheldon;."Seven Keys toBaldpate," by George M. Cohan (f rom the. novel by Earl Derr Biggers); "On Trial," b1y Elmer Rice; "The Unchastened, Woman," by Louis Kaufman. Ans- pacher;. "Good Gracious, Annabelle" by Clare, Kummer; "Why Marry. > by Jesse Lynch Williams, and "John Ferguson," by St. John Ervine. THE MASTÊR 0F JÀ4LNA, by Mazo de la Roche.(Little, Brown! Rests Ey es 0f1dcml. iHere is the fourth book in the saga- ofthe Whiteoaks of Jla hc IAf ter Sewing! brigs the story of this turbulent Caadian family down to the pres- Wheu heurs @Peut over a newlng ma ent. It is the story of the red-headed ci ehine or embrodery traime have III-m en wthlsfacnain otwm yqur eyes feel w.ary and strained, Rny ihhsfscnto o on siupir, apply a few drope et tie.trled >en, bis bluntness for men, ani bis rc * XtRINE. Wlthin a 16w miutes th" deep loyalty for Jalna and ail it, P Ured, beavy, feeling wfll have ,entirl difsppe.red and your eyes' win lc.y stands for. Knweg of the former fresh &ad ustei affmala. bookçs is not necessary to the enjoy- D 11178Z20'E bas ma ' yot1h*1ustbiatJ!ment of this added chapter in the li uisl. 18t disabe 1te heep -a bettie aïways hiandy. h gquirkly relleves it,@ story of the Whiteoaks as thiey. go fa Irritation resmlting froin expesuire b> about l iving in their warm-blooded, w> sa, widand ftustseothee away the, quarrelsome and affectionate way. cc baralug feeling cauged long Ip, otor. tripe, ad lea.nexeelled for reduclng the, L(j DiSuensansd rednesse that felloeryin q. Ten eau @se XUINE freely as kt posi. FLUSHl (of Wimpole Street and hi tiveiy entains neo'beiladonna or other1 Broda) yFr M ril(b-t harmfui ingredients. oda),. loaMrrl1Ro-t lu8 applications of t NIJIIN east bat! ert. M. M.NcBride and company). 4#e at drug and departunent stoe. Ys hsï teatborpyo Write the Marine Ceo, 9 E. Ohio St s,.tiisteaoigapy f Chicage, fer a valuable free booek on th..*the.fanouis canine hero of Katherine -proper care ef your eyes.j Cornell's play, "The Barretts of ai Wimpole Street," wlio was the onl.y Pu /V > I I J Z actor of the counnahyWo ver ten man" clurlng the Civil. 'ar wab. the Negro. Although the Yanîkees and- the Southerners were shedding their blood for the cause of the colored man no one was actuaI> conséious i of hlm, and he, himself,.hardly tunder- stood that. it was be over- whoin the white ýmeri Were 'fighting. What did the, Negro think about- e'duriïig the Civil WVar? What did lie talk about? What w~as lie doing. in the mneantine ? oark Bradford' in bis - newv book, KingdoînCointg" gives us as true a picture as ever couid be portrayed of Negro life at the time of the Civil The hero, of *'Kingdom Comnig", is bis ,wbo, when a small boy, .a sent ivitb bis daddy, Messenge ,r , and his-.ammy, Crimp, from \,ew or.- leanis by his master, Juýdge' Wilkins, to the latter's cotton plantation at Shreve's Landing on. the -Missi ssippi ri.ver.. .Gramm*ny's mother .. bad: "bred koark Brdor. h»adhi up widà de young Mos' Jeernis,"' Judge fora ien, n 0- t-ao . Wilkins' son., and, that was why the the auth or oa. tizy in CiCaot Judge was sendîng the . ittie faMi1y (1e atho r QI "Jife ado the tlme . ai de way up to dis God-don't know 'f the Civil wro t kv pd.shd wilderness jest. to gît yo' (Grammy's) thi nonh %fi Iadîep-tsd maw out 'n de bouse befo'. de yalier, Br'<lvthis nwI zçjýîh . apead baby comed, to keep down-'e talk." others. auni (i vi ae.edlUI11hen the "yaller" baby, com es Mes- -~ - __senger is so humiliated and heartý sick that he leaves isi family and ABOUT PEOPLE tries to "make free," but lie is killed Biography and autobiography, in- onl the "blirid" in the attempt, Gram- creasingîy popular in recent years , my grows up on the plantationi naintains its interest amÔng the where be is raised b y a kindly negro eading public, Recent "books aboutvoinant aunit Fret~ Dahlia, wbo had people" include the fôllowing: 1 bougit lier ireedom for $800. By the F'ANNY KEMBLÉ, by Loeta S. t*mehe * marriecj and bas a* baby Driver, (University of North Caro- isonofehis own tlie war cornes and na Press) interprets the life of theltakes away "the master," the over- fascinating actress whose activities ser of. t he. plantation. Grarnniy de- Were the talk and anecdote of two cidest otug Wilkins in -New ountries for almost a hundred years. r lea ns, g o>50eand lis wife and baby 0W G'IMLET EYE, as told to and aunt Frce set out. Tbeir.adveýn- Lowell TIhomas, (Farrar and Rine- tures from t.hen on lead to Grammy's art) is the life story of bloocl-and- tragic ending. hunder -Gen. Smedley Butler. Mr. Bradford certainly understandb Negro life in thé South. lnterw oven BOOK REVJVED in the story are- Negro. customs and dExtraordinary Popular Deluisions spirituals,. which give a lot of color, rîd the Madness of Crowds" was -to the tale. The dialect ils fine, and Libished in 1841. It snooz-ed on li neyer gets monotonous, and the story ýrary shelves. until lately w.vhen Ber- keeps the reader interested every ýrd B. Barucli declared-it h is favor- minute. Mr. Bradford was boni on a CARDS I n* DIÈBIMi STATIONERY On4na GRE. STOPS PANIC, Irvin S. Cobb offers a volun short stories frankly as "One to Stop a Panic" (McBride). are those who declare that it's way to start, one --of laughter. A& new book by Emil Ludwig is pronmised' for publication in mid- Novenber by Robert M. McBride and e of company. It w111 deal with nine great Way statesmen of modern Europe,,includ- here ing 'Lloyd George, Stalin, Mussolini: one and Briand., Whether Hitler, is or is not included deponient sayeth nt