Pascal and Renan. Contrast and Comparison Forain an Immortal-Excavating David's Tomb-Leopold Jessner on the Art of the Theatre-Iconoclasm in London-Art and Frontiers- A Prehistoric Statuette-The Alhambra Threatened with Ruin-The EW CROWELL BOOKS Emperor's Old Clothes FRANK HELLER. Translated from the lish by Robert E. Lee. 344 pages, 12mo. $2.00, postage extra. ing mystery story by a popular European This authorized translation is the first ear in America. s of Girls Who Became ndous SARAH K. BOLTON. 326 pages, 8vo. Net 9, postage extra. d and enlarged edition of this famous book. strations. tive Spirits of Nineteenth Century GEORG BRANDES. Translated by Rasmus Anderson. 450 pages, 8vo. Net $3.00, age extra. ul essays dealing with foremost men of the entury; by a man who is himself a "creative Shakesperian Synopses By J. WALKER MCSPADDEN. 322 pages, 12mo. For twenty years this work has been a standard Making Yourself By ORISON SWETT MARDEN, author of "Peace, Power and Plenty". 320 pages, 12mo. Net $1.75, postage extra. One of our foremost living writers on success topics here outlines a program for the wisest use of one's spare moments, reading, play, etc. Specimens of Biblical Literature By JAMES MUILENBURG, University of Nebraska. 364 pages, 8vo. Net $2.50, postage extra. Treating the Bible merely as a repository of poems, essays, stories, allegories, etc., the editor selects and groups the finest examples, for reading and study. well's Dictionary of Business Tolstoi's Dramas Finance pages, 8vo. Net $3.00, postage extra. exed, $3.50. densed encyclopedia and guide to business, ial, and many legal terms. The most comwork of its kind. 1ways and Highway asportation GEORGE R. CHATBURN, Professor, Univerof Nebraska. 440 pages, 8vo. Net $3.00, tage extra. ctical treatise on every phase of this vital et. Illustrations and diagrams. Complete edition. Newly translated by NATHAN H. DOLE. 464 pages, 8vo. Net $2.50, postage extra. Includes complete and unexpurgated versions of plays, some of which were cut by the political censor during Tolstoi's lifetime. Man and Culture By CLARK WISSLER, Am. Museum of Natural History. (Crowell's Social Science Series.) 368 pages, 8vo. Net $2.75, postage extra. Lectures on contemporary anthropology, which trace modes of life among widely diversified peoples. Diagrams. pes of the Farthest North and Common Sense in Business thest South J. KENNEDY MACLEAN. 319 pages, 8vo. $1.75, postage extra. ed and enlarged edition giving the complete of North and South Polar conquest. With istrations and maps. By HAROLD WHITEHEAD, Boston University, author of "How to Run a Store". 315 pages, 8vo. Net $2.50, postage extra. Full of inspiration and sound advice, not only to the head of the concern, but to the clerk and office-boy as well. THIS WEEK 'KEEP your eye on the Balkans' has long been a maxim among students of European affairs, and it was never more justified than it is to-day. The Slavic peoples of the Balkans and the non-Russian Slavs to the North are gradually achieving a union which a young Serbian writer urges France to join. He claims that the Little Entente may become so potent a factor in European politics as to take the place of Russia on the diplomatic chess-board. The first part of the article is largely devoted to some digs at Anglo-Saxon supremacy. Few Americans, it is safe to say, are deeply versed in Polish or Lithuanian history. Consequently the dispute over Memel has been more or less of a puzzle in this country. The Living Age prints an historical summary of the problem, written, it is true, from the Franco-Polish angle. An 'Entente Orientale' is the chief bugbear of Edouard Rossier, a Swiss, who urges England and France to stand together and save Western civilization from Asiatic clutches. The groans and curses that are now being so widely and loudly uttered all over Europe will cause the skeptical student of world affairs to wonder how |