in one of the little rush-bottomed chairs, but more often he swings his long legs from a topmost shelf, catching his toe in your marcel wave! Once in a while he pretends to read, preferring his own adventures to all others. If he were not such an idle fellow he might pick up a liberal education in the course of a few years by reading his way around the room. Starting with the Alphabet books (C. B. Falls, by choice), he might work his way thru Peter Rabbit, Robinson Crusoe, Treasure Island, Kim and Gay Neck. Soon it would not be work at all, and when he reached Moby Dick and Skyward and the Winged Horse he would be almost ready for Harvard! For yourself you will want the "New Mappe of Wellesley," of course, for its unfailing usefulness as well as its decorative value:-and if you are wise you will provide yourself with a copy of "Into the Void," a mystery story by Florence Converse, with Wellesley and Hathaway House, thinly disguised, as its setting. Unless you are canny what you buy in your freshman year may make you quite unhappy later on. At Hathaway House we have no rubbish, so you will find it fairly easy to choose things you will not repudiate when you view them four years hence with sophisticated senior eyes. You will be thankful then that you had the good sense to invest in a Hugh Fisher etching or a wood cut by Margaret Patterson; a first edition of Edna Millay's "Buck in the Snow" or A. A. Milne's "House at Pooh Corner." New books by Edwin Arlington Robinson, Robert Frost and Thornton Wilder are to be published this fall. Keep space on your shelves for them and money in your purse! Later on these first editions will have increased value. A Bookseller As Lecturer KATHRYN TURNEY GARTEN, formerly of the W. K. Stewart Company of Indianapolis, has left bookselling to become a lecturer on books to clubs and other groups. The program will consist of an hour and a half session, the first half hour reviewing important novels, the second modern non-fiction, and the third novels fresh from the press. This is an interesting occupation for one who has been in bookselling, and the bookstores need to be closely connected with the lecturers in their cities. Change in Price BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY At a recent meeting of the executive committee of the Indiana Historical Society it was voted that the price of bound volumes of the "Publication" of the Indiana Historical Society be increased from two dollars and fifty cents to four dollars. Personal Notes PAULINE SUTORIUS-LANGLEY, director of Harper's Boys' and Girls' Bookshop, was married on September 29th to Allan E. Aird, business manager of The B. C. Forbes Publishing Co. HARRY A. LEVISON, who has been with Putnams for almost ten years in their Rare Book Department is now associated with Harry F. Marks, 31 West 47th Street. Business Notes BOSTON, MASS.-The Boston Book & Art Shop, formerly at 80 Boylston Street, has moved to 400 Boylston Street. BROOKLYN, N. Y.-The Lincoln Terrace Shop, 29 East 95th Street, of which Morris Issacson is the proprietor, carries in addition to general books an exclusive line of children's books, and a small rental library. CANAAN, N. H.-T. R. Moore announces the removal of the Moore's Advertising Service from Canaan to Penacook, N. H., where they will continue their book business. CHICAGO, ILL.-Sara B. O'Neill, 455+ Greenwood Avenue, is working on plans for a Catholic bookshop, under the auspices. of the Chicago Calvert Club. Altho the shop is not yet ready Miss O'Neill is busy taking orders for books. Bookshelf. CLEVELAND, OHIO.-The Inc., 10547 Euclid Avenue, operated by Miriam Brudno, will open with a full line of children's books and French books. DALLAS, TEX.-It has just been announced that the former Standard Book Store, 2061⁄2 Browder Street, will now be known as the Baptist Book Store and will be located at 1019 Main Street. LOS ANGELES, CALIF.-Mary Bosley owns and operates the Wilshire Circulating Library, 507 Wilshire Boulevard, Beverly Hills, which was formerly announced as the Helen Cole Circulating Library, with Helen Cole in charge. Helen Cole is now with the La Brea Circulating Library, 952 La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles. The Weekly Record of New Publications The entry is transcribed from title page when the book is sent for record. Prices are added except when not supplied by publisher or obtain able only on specific request, in which case word "apply" is used. When not specified the binding is "cloth." Imprint date or best available date, preferably copyright date in bracket, is always stated, except when imprint date and copyright date agree and are of the current year, in which case only "c" is used. No ascertainable date is designated thus: [n.d.]. Sizes are indicated as follows: F (folio: over 30 centimeters high); Q (4to: under 30 cm.); O (8vo: 25 cm.); D (12mo: 20 cm.); S (16mo: 171⁄2 cm.); T (24mo: 15 cm.); sq., obl., nar., designate square, oblong, narrow. Bacheller, Irving Addison Coming up the road; memories of a north country boyhood. 316p. O [c. '28] Ind., BobbsMerrill $3.50 Personal records of Yankee farm life in the days of the Civil War and the following decade. Baden, Max, prince of The memoirs of prince Max of Baden; tr. by W. M. Calder and C. W. H. Sutton; 2 v. 401p.; 407p. (bibl. footnotes) front. (por.) map. (col.) O '28 N. Y., Scribner $io bxd. A dramatic account of the final collapse of the German Empire by her last Chancellor, giving an intimate picture of the Government during the war and of the peace conferences. pap. 10 c. Jade; its philosophy; shine of the star of life. 64p. il diagrs. O [c. '28] N. Y., Wing & Co., 255 Fifth Ave. pap. $1 Mahavira-Caritam; a drama; ed. by Todar Mall. 406p. O (Punjab Univ. oriental pub'ns) '28 N. Y.. Oxford $8 Buchan, John Prester John [new ed.] 272p. il. (col.), map O '28 c. '10 Bost., Houghton $2.50 Burgess, John Stewart The guilds of Peking. 270p. (4p. bibl.) O (Studies in hist., economics, and public law; no. 308) c. N. Y., Columbia Univ. Press $4 Burt, Katharine Newlin [Mrs. Maxwell Struthers Burt] Cock's feather; a novel. 327p. D c. Bost., Houghton $2.50 Being the story of David Clay whose adventurous spirit carried him successfully through the humdrum mire of family responsibilities and the social difficulties of small-town life. Canney, Heyward Emerson Sentry. 287p. D c. N. Y., Harper bds. $2.50 Of a woman who loves one man, but marries another because he owns a rich farm in Massachusetts, and of her husband who came back from the Civil war to keep guard over her. Short stories; tr. by Constance Garnett; introd. by Evelyn May Albright. 355p. D (Modern readers' ser.) '28 c. '16-'28 N. Y., Macmillan 80 c.; half lea., $1.25 Columbia College Associates in Economics, Government and Public Law, History and Philosophy An introduction to contemporary civilization in the West; a syllabus; 7th ed., rev. 355P. (bibls.) il., maps, diagrs. O c. N. Y., Columbia Univ. Press $4.50 Bierwirth, H. Conrad pap. 50 c. Words of frequent occurrence in ordinary German. various p. D c. 'oo, '28 N. Y., Holt [Bittner, G. E.] Analyzing retail selling costs. 15p. diagrs. O (Bur. of Foreign and Domestic Commerce) '28 Wash., D. C., Gov't Pr. Off.; Sup't of Doc. pap. apply Book of kindred sayings, The; pt. 4; tr. by F. L. Woodward; introd. by Mrs. Rhys Davids. 318p. O (Pali text soc. tr. ser., no. 14) '28 N. Y., Oxford $3.35 179p. O $1.40 Cady, Harrison, i.e. Walter Harrison Johnny Funny-Bunny's picnic party; il. by the author. no p. il. (pt. col.) Q [c. '28] N. Y., Stoll & Edwards bds. apply Spring moving day; Johnny Funny Bunny helps his friends; il. by the author. no p. il. (pt. col.) Q [c. '28] N. Y., Stoll & Edwards bds. apply Time to get up; Johnny Funny-Bunny helps to awaken his friends; il. by the author. no p. il. (pt. col.) Q [c. '28] N. Y., Stoll & Edwards bds. apply Coursen, Dorothy Fire of spring. 289p. D [c.'28] N. Y., Holt $2.50 The effect of the emotional crises reached during a religious revival in a small mid-western town on two little girls who are visiting there. Crandell, Helen Hopkins Little white cotton. 122p. il. (col.) D c. N. Y., Stokes $1 The cotton elf initiates a small boy to the ways of cotton-how it is grown and what it becomes. Creighton, Ursula Music; preface by Edward J. Dent. 267p. il. D (Simple guide ser.) ['28] N. Y., Dutton 344p. D [c. $1.60 The grandson; tr. by Anna C. Settergren. 273p. D [c. '28] N. Y., Dutton $2.50 A continuation of the story of Sara Alelia in the life of her grandson Per Olof concludes a Swedish trilogy-"The Minister's Daughter" and "The Son" being the first two volumes. Donaldson, John International economic relations; a treatise on world economy and world politics. 704p. (bibl. footnotes) D c. N. Y., Longmans $3.20 Dorr, Mrs. Rheta Childe Susan B. Anthony; the woman who changed the mind of a nation. 380p. il. O c. N. Y., Stokes $5 The life of the woman who made it possible for other women to live independently. Dow, Marcus Stay alive. 229p. il. D [c. '28] N. Y., Marcus Dow, II W. 42nd St. truckman" by "Jim the Stories driving. Downey, Bp. Richard $2 of careless Divine providence; introd. by Bp. Joseph H. McMahon. 95p. (bibl. footnotes) S (Treasury of the faith ser.; 7) c. N. Y., Macmillan Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan The case book of Sherlock Holmes. (Copyright fiction) '28 N. Y., Burt Dudley, Eustace бос. D 75 c. The challenge; a story of conspiracy and the coming crash. 142p. D '28 N. Y., Longbds. $1.60 mans The struggle of two men for the control of a nation embodies the theme of the clash between religions. Dumas, Alexandre The three musketeers; ed. by Odell Shepard. 621p. D (Modern readers' ser.) c. N. Y., Macmillan 80 c.; half lea., $1.25 Twenty years after. 539p. il. D (Rittenhouse classics) [c. '88, '93] Phil., MacraeSmith $2 |