CAPTAIN R. HUGH KNYVETT’S "OVER THERE” WITH THE AUSTRALIANS “ The first book upon Australia's part in the war, and a rattling good one.” — The New York Post. “One of the best written and most thrilling accounts of death-defying adventure and fighting at the front that has appeared." – The New York Herald. “ Captain Knyvett also supplies valuable practical explanations of the duties of a scout and of the importance of his work in aiding and supplementing airplane observation.” — Philadelphia Press. Ask for the KNYVETT Book Illustrated. $1.50 net THE EARTHQUAKE By Arthur Train “ First we had 'Mr. Britling Sees It Through.' Then followed Miss Sinclair's • Tree of Heaven,' and now, . The Earthquake,' a worthy third, but by no means least member of an immortal trio. Indeed, Mr. Train's book may be the most impressive and effective of the three. ...” – New York Tribune. $1.50 net By René Boylésve a YOU NO LONGER COUNT Translated from the French by Louise Seymour Houghton This novel - a revelation of the war and its effects on the individual through the experiences of a young French widow – burst into celebrity in Paris on the instant of publication. There have been many stories which pictured the effect of war on English life. This translation of Boylésve's work gives the first opportunity to see war's transforming influence on life in France. Odette's transformation is a story of intense personal interest, and as a whole this novel gives a new conception, a more intense realization of the war than has been hitherto conveyed. $1.50 net WAR LETTERS OF EDMOND GENET With a Foreword by John Jay Chapman Edited, with an introduction by Grace Ellery Channing Genet was the first American aviator to fall flying the stars and stripes. His letters tell of service with the Foreign Legion and later in the Latayette Escadrille. The qualities of boyish exuberance and humor in these letters add a peculiar charm to his manlike grasp of the cause and enthusiasm for it. Illustrated. $1.50 net JOHN GALSWORTHY'S FIVE TALES “Galsworthy's poignant characterization lives in ‘Five Tales,' and with it the artist's deep feeling and power." - New York Times. ** A Stoic'especially is a memorable and lifelike portrait, and delightfully interesting, but no more so than the subordinate characters in this excellent story. The usual criticism of a volume of short stories, that they do not hold the interest like a long novel, does not apply to these · Five Tales.'" New York Globe. $1.50 net THE FLOWER OF THE CHAPDELAINES By George W. Cable “ If there's ever been a more delectable story written in the United States, I don't know about it. . . . I do wish it could find its way into every household in America.” – Louis Dodge. $1.35 net "Another poet to place beside the name of whose poems, of rare spirit and beauty, are collected in ARDOURS AND ENDURANCES It was inevitable that poetry such as this should win the whole-hearted praise of the critics who know Boston Transcript: “ It is pure poetry that Mr. Nichols writes, and with youth on his side, he English poetry.” “ Nothing can prevent poetry like this from taking its place among the per manent possessions of the race." Chicago Evening Post: “Let me simply recommend this wonderfully vivid poetry of the shock and who knows what it is to be a soldier.” New York Times : “ It is fairly safe to say that no poet has written with such dramatic intensity of the war. ... You know when you read these poems that the author has been through it all. ... There is an unflinching realism in some of these poems, but there is an unwavering bravery and hope in all of them." Net $1.25 By DANIEL CORKERY THE THRESHOLD OF QUIET Author of " A llunster Twilight" This simple tale of a group of dwellers in Cork, influencing each other blindly, but irrevocably, until each reaches his “threshold of quiet" - has a tinge of Irish fatality and humor. It is life — transcribed with understanding. Net $1.50. SOLDIERS BOTH By GUSTAVE GUICHES A novel of France's call to arms — and of two men who answer it. Both are soldiers of the Great Cause, although one goes forth to fight, and the other, unfitted for military duty, shoulders his burdens on the soil. And the man who serves obscurely meets the call for sacrifice, even unto the woman he loves, with the untheatrical heroism that has distinguished Frenchmen of every grade ard calling. Net $1.40. SURGEON CROW: An American in the Russian Fighting By MALCOLM C. GROW, M.D. The personal story of an American " fighting physician" who served with the Russians through three great campaigns. A book of interest not alone to families and friends of army medical men (who will find in it a vividly true picture of how the army surgeon lives and works) but to all interested in the inside story of the fighting man of Russia. Net $1.50. | PUBLISHERS FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY NEW YOR” |