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It had the look of a good half-hour morsel before bed-time — and it postponed bed-time by just over three hours. Inasmuch as the copy you sent me is imprinted "No. 12" there is nothing to do (if you would have me content) but to send me Nos. I-II and to see that I get No. 13 and subsequent issues. . .

The copy that I received had the most intelligent treatment of the suffrage question I have ever seen, just exactly as I would put it myself, if I knew how to put, and I would like all my fool sisters to be so enlightened, if that were possible.

last.

Hence the inadvertent failure to renew. But, God bless you, here is your $2.50 at

I am a business person with a taste for literature, and your publication comes nearer satisfying that appetite than any other magazine I know.

Can't keep house without this now.

Although the date was more than a year back, the articles are of such permanent value that the magazine seemed only superficially a "back number.”

The publication is unique, in that the editor and contributors have managed to steer clear of those particular characteristics that have made similar magazines so contemptible in this country. . . sorely needed in a country which is chiefly remarkable for the mental rigidity, and the standardized conventionalities of opinion which prevail amongst the educated classes.

I've loaned [my sample] to several fellow preachers. Best thing in its line I've ever read. I cannot refrain from telling you how thoroughly I enjoy your publication. I have read it through from cover to cover since the issuance of the first number. In my opinion, it is easily the ablest review of a general nature we have in this country. It has afforded me genuine pleasure to call it to the attention of my friends . . . and I have been the means of inducing a number to subscribe. — From a Judge of a State Supreme Court.

This quarterly oasis in the desert of undigested facts and harebrained theories.

I had not before known that such a periodical was in existence. I now hope it will never pass out of print. . . It should leave its mark in our national life.

It is pleasing indeed to find, at least in one magazine, so apparent a desire to declare the truth and of necessity — be named "unpopular."

It is far and away the most stimulating appeal to the intellectuals that has yet been made by our periodical literature. I can imagine but one possible hindrance to your abundant success your falling into the snare that has been the ruin of all previous claims upon the Illuminati, viz: the notion that only agnostics are intellectual. From a Clergyman.

[No danger! The number of clergy among our contributors and subscribers forefends that, let alone our own fervent belief in the essentials of religion. Editor.]

Its careful English is a real delight in these slip-shod days.

A breath from the heights of Parnassus. I hope to take it in for the rest of my life.

The Unpopular Review reached its high position at a bound. It has writers without bigotry, and essayists who know their subjects. From a Bishop.

The Unpopular Review has so far belied its name here that I have never been able to catch up with it since I let one member of our faculty take it to look over.

It does my soul good to see this independence of the hackneyed, the conventional, yet without any straining after the outré and bizarre as do some would-be clever publications. To me it seems the ideal presentation of the rock bottom underlying the subjects treated. In it I find more things that are interesting to me than in any publication of a similar kind . . . and yet I do not mean that, for one of its chief charms is that it is so different from all others. Like a new and interesting personality after most ordinary individuals.

In this day of editorial pandering to a gross and wayward public taste, The Unpopular Review comes upon our consciousness as a necessary corrective, as a stimulant to sturdier individuality, a stabler civic spirit and a saner social economy.

Between the many and varied forms of education brought forth by upstarts it was decidedly refreshing to find there were still people who had kept a sane balance.

Not afraid of being radical, though not erratic; and its conservatism does not approach to bigotry. If I can this summer induce our public library to buy it, I shall have the pleasure of reading it from "kiver to kiver."

I am under immense obligations to you for introducing me to the most delightful magazine I have yet seen ... .. something else must go: for I must have The Unpopular.

Now Ready

H. G. WELLS' New Novel

THE SOUL OF A BISHOP

By the Author of “Mr. Britling "

As in MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH, Mr. Wells shows the astounding effect of the Great War on the normal civilian life of England, so in this new novel he shows its effect on that bulwark of society, the church... The publication of THE SOUL OF A BISHOP comes at an apt moment the moment when America is beginning to realize her own part in the world crisis and envisage some of the material and spiritual transformations it may bring. $1.50

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With illustrations and decorations in color and in black and white by ARTHUR RACKHAM. Abridged from Malory's Morte d'Arthur, by Alfred W. Pollard. $2.50. Limited Edition, $12.50. (Ready Oct. 19.)

THE LIFE OF AUGUSTIN DALY
By the late Joseph Francis Daly. An
intimate record of the New York stage in
the middle nineteenth century. Sept. 19
GRANNY MAUMEE

By Ridgely Torrence. Plays for a negro
theatre including "The Rider of Dreams,"
and "Simon the Cyrenean."
$1.50

LOVE SONGS

By Sara Teasdale. New lyrics by the
author of "Rivers to the Sea."
$1.25

THE COLLECTED POEMS OF
WILFRID WILSON GIBSON
1904-1917. With frontispiece portrait of
the author.
$2.00

TENDENCIES IN MODERN
AMERICAN POETRY

By Amy Lowell. An analysis of the six
leading American poets. $2.50. (Ready
Oct. 3.)

THE HEART OF THE PURITAN By Elizabeth Deering Hanscom. A keen revelation of Puritan temperament. Sept. 26 THE RELIGIOUS EDUCATION OF AN AMERICAN CITIZEN By Francis Greenwood Peabody. The influences which direct and the qualities which mark, the religious education of an American citizen.

$1.25

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By Sir Rabindranath Tagore. The lec-
tures delivered by Tagore in his recent tour
of the United States.
$1.50
JAPAN IN WORLD POLITICS
By K. K. Kawakami. "Not often does one
find a book in Japanese relations that will
compare with this in sanity."- N. Y.
Times.
$1.50
THE IRISH HOME RULE CON-
VENTION

By George W. Russell (A. E.) and Sir
Horace Plunkett. With an Introduction
by John Quinn.
Fifty Cents

THE FOOD PROBLEM

By Vernon L. Kellogg. Surveys the food
resources of this country and indicates the
steps which must be taken for their conser-
vation.
Fifty Cents

A SHORT HISTORY OF SCIENCE
By W. T. Sedgwick and W. H. Tyler. A
clear non-technical treatment of the subject.
Ready Sept. 26

RECOLLECTIONS

By Viscount Morey, O. M. The most
important book of its kind perhaps in the
last decade.
Ready in Nov.

A DEFENCE OF IDEALISM
By May Sinclair. Among the subjects
treated are: The Pan-Psychicism of Samuel
Butler, Vitalism, Pragmatism, The New
Realism and The New Mysticism. $2.25

WINSTON CHURCHILL'S New Novel

THE DWELLING PLACE OF LIGHT

Published October 10

America, dynamic, changing, diverse, with new laws and old desires, new industries and old so al rights, new people and old - this is the environment in which Mr. Churchill places the heroine of his new novel. He has never written a more entertaining story; he has never written one that is more significant in its interpretation of human relationships to-day.

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY

Ill, $1.60

PUBLISHERS
NEW YORK

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An American in the Making

By M. E. RAVAGE

A dramatic narrative of the transformation of an alien boy into an American. The humor, pathos, and the romance of readjustment; the toilsome hardships, the stirring adventure, the gritty determination, the inner struggles of the soul, the conflict of opposed temperaments all are brilliantly depicted in the career of this alert youth as we follow him from the moment when he catches the first vision of the New World, through the temporary disillusionments in the slums, and on to the end when his dreams are fulfilled. As moving as the best of novels, this story of actual experience is something more than a mere personal narrative.

The Russian Revolu

tion

By ISAAC DON LEVINE

"The author draws from a full and deep knowledge of Russia; he is able to sum up the salient facts leading gradually and surely to the revolution without wasting time or losing the reader's attention." N. Y. Times. Illustrated, $1.00

Post 8vo, $1.50 Confessions of a War Correspondent

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Harper's Citizenship Series

The Offender And His Relations to Law and Society

By BURDEtte g. lewIS

N. Y. City Commissioner of Correction "The spirit of the book is sympathetic but never mawkish, and constructive rather than merely critical or denunciatory. It deserves to be read carefully by all officials who have to do with the administration of the criminal law and by all who from a humanitarian point of view are interested in the many problems of the misdemeanant classes."-N. Y. Tribune. . . . "I be Offender' should find a place upon the shelves of every judge, lawyer and citizen who has any remotest interest in the great humanitarian movements of the present day."-Baltimore Sun.

Crown 8vo, $2.00

Principles of American
Diplomacy

By JOHN BASSETT MOORE
Professor of International Law and Diplomacy at
Columbia University. Formerly Counselor for
the Department of State, Assistant Secretary of
State, etc., Member of the Permanent Court at
The Hague

Designed to enable the reader to gain a clearer and more intimate understanding of American diplomacy than can be derived from a mere chronological detail of transactions connected only in point of time. With a view to enable readers to pursue the subject beyond the limits of the text, references for readings in authoritative sources are furnished. Besides, various documents of capital importance are printed in an appendix. The object has been to produce a work which shall serve both as a thorough and comprehensive exposition and as a convenient manual of the subject to which it relates. This volume, based upon the distinguished author's "American Diplomacy" which is no longer published, provides a broad survey of a subject which is of supreme importance at the present time. Crown 8vo, $2.00 net

How to Debate

By EDWIN DUBOIS SCHURTER

This book has been prepared with great care as the result of wide experience and observation and much expert counsel. Its plan is scientific and practical. It supplies the needs not only of college, normal-school, and upper high-school classes, but also the practical requirements of members of debating societies, lawyers, and other professional men, and others outside of the academic curriculum. Among the chapters are: "Nature of Debating," "Proof," "Evidence," "Direct Arguments," "Refutation," "Fallacies,” “ 'Brief-Writing," "Persuasion," "Methods in School and College Debating," etc. Post 8vo, $1.35

HARPER & BROTHERS, Established 1817

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ARISTODEMOCRACY: From the Great War Back to Moses, Christ and Plato

By SIR CHARLES WALDSTEIN, Litt.D., Fellow and Lecturer of King's College, Cambridge; late Reader in Classical Archæology and Slade Professor of Fine Art, Cambridge. 8vo. Reissue N. Y. with an American Preface.

$3.50 net. (Ready "But if 'Aristodemocracy' claims and deserves a complete study, we imagine the reader will be most arrested by that section in which Sir Charles Waldstein outlines his idea of a new heaven and earth after the welter of blood is dry. Here is no Utopian creed. Rather does he demand for modern man and modern society ‘a clear and distinct codification of the moral consciousness of civilized man.”” - Daily Telegraph, London

Life and Letters of Maggie

Benson

By her brother, ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON,
Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge;
Author of "Hugh: Memoirs of a Brother,"
etc., etc. With Portraits and Illustrations.
Crown 8vo, $2.50 net. [Ready

Margaret Benson, the daughter of a gifted house, had for her special gift the power of philosophic thought and an inward flow of religion. Without caring to assume a prominent position in the active world, she was an inspirer of others; and this sketch by her brother aims at being not the history of a career, but the revelation of a character which even in the closing days of physical break-down, so grievous to the onlookers, proves that the inner fire still has power to sustain and uplift.

RUSSIAN POETS AND POEMS:

Selections from the Correspond

ence of the First Lord Acton

Edited by JOHN NEVILLE FIGGIS, D.D., Litt.D., Honorary Fellow of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, and REGINALD VERE LAURENCE, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College. 2 Vols. Vol. I. Correspondence with Lady Blennerhassett, W. E. Gladstone, and Others. 8vo. About $5.00 net. [October

These letters are arranged under topical headings and grouped into two main classes-ecclesiastical and general. They afford evidence of the mingling in Acton of political and religious interests with those of the enthusiastic scholar and with a certain flair for getting to know about people. Incidentally they witness to the beginning and the gradual growth of the intimacy with Gladstone.

Being Biographical and Critical Essays on

Twenty Master Poets, Together with a Selection of Their Poetry Englished in the Metres of the Originals, and Introductory Notes on Russian Versification

By Mme. N. JARINTZOV, Author of "The Russians and Their Language." Vol. I, "Classics," 8vo, with portraits, $3.50 net [October Vol. II, "Moderns." [In Preparation

The Russian poets hitherto have been ignored by English readers, although in literary merit they can challenge comparison with the Russian novelists and playwrights. The book sets out to make the Russian poets familiar to the general reading public. The portraits are carefully chosen and reproduced; the selections are representative, preserving as far as possible the Russian spirit. ***The volumes will be sold separately.

BURROWS OF MICHIGAN AND THE REPUBLICAN PARTY A Biography and a History

By WILLIAM DANA ORCUTT, Author of "Good Old Dorchester," "The Spell," "The Lever," etc. Illustrated. In 2 vols. 800, $6.00 net. (October

This book is more than a biography, owing to the fact that it really includes a running popular history of the Republican Party from its birth in 1856 down to the present time. Senator Burrows was the leading orator of his party and many of his speeches are important contributions to our national literature.

THE TOWN LABOURER, 1760-1832: The New Civilization

By J. L. HAMMOND and BARBARA HAMMOND, Authors of "The Village Labourer, 1760-1832: A Study in the Government of England before the Reform Bill." 800, $3.50 net "A brilliant and important achievement. "The Town Labourer' will rank as an indispensable source of revelation and of inspiration."— The Nation (London).

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With 32 full-page Illustrations and 3 Maps. Second Impression. Crown 8vo. $1.75 net "Here we get a fair picture of Modern Italy, of her statesmen, her publicists, philosophers, her generals and soldiers in the Trentino and a full explanation of why she is fighting. The maps are excellent, and so are the half-tone pictures. When the story of the war is told we shall have no more heroic tales than those that come out of the Alpine glaciers where the men are pulled about with wire ropes and where they stand in bitter cold amid the snows.' - Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

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What Germany is Fighting For

By SIR CHARLES WALDSTEIN, Author of "Aristodemocracy: From the Great War Back to Moses, Christ and Plato," etc. 12mo, Limp cloth, 60 cents net.

This book contains translations of authoritative German documents, which show with absolute clearness, the reasons for which German" provoked, and is still engaged in carrying on, the World's War. They show also the undoubted responsibility, not only of the German Government, but of the majority of the German people for the war.

THE METHOD IN THE MADNESS: A Fresh Consideration of the Case

between Germany and Ourselves

By EDWYN R. BEVAN, M.A., Author of "The House of Seleucus," etc., etc. Crown 800, $1.50 met "His book is extraordinarily fair, and perhaps its greatest merit is that Mr. Bevan. has really taken the trouble to master his material. He has made himself familiar with practically the whole range of German war literature." -The Times (London).

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Biography, Art, Literature,

Politics and the War

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JOSEPH H. CHOATE:

New Englander, New Yorker, Lawyer, Ambassador
By THERON G. STRONG

The extraordinary story of a long life and a distinguished
one, that of a beloved figure among the American people,
whose active public service runs back even to the decade
before the Civil War.
Illustrated, 8vo, $3.00

HOW TO STUDY ARCHITECTURE

By CHARLES HENRY CAFFIN. Author of "Art for Life's Sake,"

etc.

An extensive treatise on the study of architecture, by a noted art critic, with an abundance of carefully chosen illusIllustrated, 8vo, $3.50

trations.

LIFE AND LITERATURE

By LAFCADIO HEARN. Edited by Professor John Erskine of
Columbia University. Editor of Hearn's "Interpretations of
Literature" and "Appreciations of Poetry."

A collection of Hearn's lectures on European literature which are most representative of his individuality in criticism. Large 800, $3.50

THE FIGHT FOR THE REPUBLIC IN CHINA By B. L. PUTNAM WEALE. Author of "Indiscreet Letters from Peking," etc.

A semi-official statement of China's case and the last word on the new China in the making by the best-known authority today on the Chinese question. Profusely Illustrated, 8vo, $3.00

SECRETS OF THE SUBMARINE

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The submarine in action explained for the general public by a submarine inventor and a recognized authority in naval science. Illustrated, 12mo, $1.25

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