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TERMS: $4.00 a year, in advance; six months, $2.25; a single

copy, 10 cents; postage to Canada, 85 cents a year; postage to other foreign countries, $1.00 a year, excepting countries where the United States Domestic rate applies. BACK NUMBERS not over three months old, 25 cents each; over three months old, $1.00 each; QUARTERLY INDEXES will be sent free to subscribers who apply for them. RECEIPT of renewal payment is shown in about two weeks by date on address-label; date of expiration includes the month named on the label. CAUTION: If date is not properly extended after each payment, notify publishers promptly. Instructions for RENEWAL, DISCONTINUANCE, or CHANGE of ADDRESS should be sent two weeks

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The Literary Digest

INTERNATIONAL BOOK REVIEW

A new, comprehensive, and intensely interesting guide to the world of modern books, containing reviews by famous authors and critics on the latest books of fiction, travel, biography, science, and literary art.

Issued Monthly-15c. per copy at news-dealers.
$1.50 yearly by subscription

FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, Pubs., 354-360 Fourth Avenue. New York

WHEN YOUR WORDS

DON'T MEAN WHAT YOU SAY

Americans who talk most fluently use idioms most freely from the salutation, "How do you do?" to the exclamation of surprize, "Good night!" Neither phrase means what the words indicate. That's why they are idioms.

No one can know English well, as spoken in America, without knowing English idioms. Eleven thousand of these, drawn from standard literature and writings of the day, with elaborate definitions and notes of origins, are now available to you in that wonderfully unique and interesting new book-just from the press-"A Desk Book of

IDIOMS and IDIOMATIC PHRASES

IN ENGLISH SPEECH AND LITERATURE" By Frank H. Vizetelly, Litt.D., LL.D., and Leander J. de Bekker

This comprehensive work has been enthusiastically received and proclaimed the best of its kind by critics and book reviewers. The Manchester (Eng) Guardian declares: "We know no book better, of its kind and size." The Stamford Advocate asserts-"Of its kind it is without rival." New York Sun: "Both an interesting and valuable work of reference."

Says the Buffalo Express: "Here is a book that mirrors these homely terms of which we make daily use without realizing the charm with which they are invested as mental images."

Toronto Globe: "Serviceable and interesting."

This book should be in every home in America and a text book in every school. Open it anywhere and you'll find it so interesting that you will keep on reading. 12mo. Cloth. 506 pages. $2, net; $2.12, post-paid. Funk & Wagnalls Company, Publishers, 354-360 Fourth Ave., New York

62-63

before the date they are to go into effect. Both old and new addresses must always be given. PRESENTATION COPIES: Many persons subscribe for friends. Those who desire to renew such subscriptions must do so before expiration.

THE LITERARY DIGEST is published weekly by the Funk & Wagnalls Company, 354-360 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y., London Office. .134 Salisbury Square. Printed in the United States of America.

Entered as second-class matter, March 24, 1890, at the Post-Office at New York, N. Y., under the act of March 3, 1879.

Entered as second-class matter at the Post-office Department, Ottawa, Canada.

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JUST OUT

PRACTICAL RADIO

By HENRY SMITH WILLIAMS, M.D., LL.D. Author of "The Wonders of Science in Modern Life," Etc. A new and practical guide to the making of radio outfits, from the simplest crystal-detector apparatus to the most elaborate amplifying and super-regenerative equip

ment.

It is also a guide to the understanding of the principles that underlie radio phenomena. When you have read the book, you will be able to make your own radio outfit, to use it effectively, and you will understand how it works. Dr. Williams has long been known for his capacity to interpret even obscure scientific phenomena in terms comprehensible to the average reader. He makes of the story of radio a fascinating, even a romantic narrative. Under his guidance, electromagnetic waves and hurtling electrons become our familiar associates. The radio apparatus becomes in its simpler forms a fascinating plaything for boys and girls, and in its more elaborate development a no less fascinating instrument of precision in the hands of the adult.

Pictures in large numbers supplement the text, and these are chosen not for their interest alone, but for their informative value. If you will follow sequentially the circuit diagram, or practical hook-ups, and the text that elucidates them, tho you began as a novice you will be a fairly accomplished connoisseur of radio art before you are finished.

If, without any other instruction, you will construct sequentially the radio sets herein described, you can hardly fail to become an adept in the utilization of radio as a practical art.

12mo, Cloth, 427 pages. Illustrated. Price $1.75 net; by mail, $1.87 Funk & Wagnalls Company, 354-360 Fourth Ave., New York

ARE YOU

A

GOOD

SALESMAN?

"What'll We Have For Dinner

Today?" Asks the Cook

Well, if you want the family to eat the MOST NOURISHING food, the MOST APPETIZING food, the MOST HEALTHFUL food-the food that will STAVE OFF INDIGESTION and other stomach trouble, and the food that is most suitable for the different seasons of the year, then you want to let yourself be guided by the delicious recipes and seasonal bills-of-fare in that helpful new book

Eating Vitamines

BY C. HOUSTON GOUDISS,
National Authority on Nutrition.

In millions of homes this book will relieve the housewife of worry about what to have to eat and how to insure the absolutely necessary vitaminic lifeguards in her bills-of-fare. She will have before her 200 choice, tested recipes and seasonal menus, dishes rich in vitamines-food combinations to promote health. She will learn how to avoid the foods that cause gastrointestinal troubles, loss of weight, breaking down of organic functions, irritability, anemia, etc.

"Eating Vitamines" will open the door of health to the dyspeptic, better health to the growing child, the nursing mother, and all who suffer from malnutrition. And it's a mighty interesting little volume upon a live subject. Illustrated. 110 pages.

12mo. Cloth. $1.25. net; $1.33, postpaid FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, Publishers, 354-360 Fourth Ave., New York

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Were We Ever Birds?

Did we evolve-or "begin" in the Garden of Eden?

Where did birds get their amazingly humanlike traits-their loves, hates, and fears, anger, morality, and common sense as graphically told in the fifty-four true narratives of that fascinating new story book

Knowing Birds Through Stories

By Floyd Bralliar

Author of "Knowing Insects Through Stories." You will revel in these entrancing little stories. You will almost imagine yourself in the forests, fields, and meadows "fraternizing" with the birds and wondering, Where did they learn to be so much like folks? You'll begin to recognize birds on sight.

Mr. Bralliar's work is scientifically correct. The language is simple and pleasing. Profusely illustrated with bird pictures, twelve of them being full-plates in bright colors that were made from paintings by E. R. Kalmbach, assistant biologist United States. Department of Agriculture. 355 pages. 12mo. Cloth $2, net; $2.12, post-paid. FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, PUBLISHERS 354-360 Fourth Avenue New York

(Double

Your Income

HIS is no "get-rich-quick" pian, but a conser

statement you can if you fol

low the saving, investing and business plans laid down in "The Book of Thrift." This remarkable book by T. D. MACGREGOR, author of "Pushing Your Business," is not a mere collection of platitudes on the subject of thrift, but it is an extremely timely and practical work-at once an inspiration to the reader and a dependable Guide-Book of the road to fortune.

The Book of Thrift

contains a carefully worked out saving, interest and investment table, showing how you can make your money earn as much for you as you earn for yourself.

If financial independence is your goal, don't try to get along without "The Book of Thrift," a $1.50 book worth hundreds of dollars to any one who reads and heeds it. "The Book of Thrift" is a handsome, cloth-bound volume of 350 pages, with over 70 illustrations.

Large 12mo. Cloth. $1.50 net; by mail $1.62 FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY, New York

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The

School and College Directory

LITER

ITERARY DIGEST readers seeking private institutions of learning will find in our pages until September 8th the following Classified Directory containing the names and addresses of some distinctive residential schools; vocational, professional, special schools, and colleges. Advertisements describing these institutions will be found in the first issue of each month.

You are invited to write for information to any of the institutions in which you are interested. Our School Advisory Department continues to serve, as it has for many years, our readers, the schools, and camps without fees or obligation. It is necessary for inquirers to give specific information that may aid us in giving prompt service.

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1223 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Box 157, Forest Glen, Md. .103 Woodland Road, Auburndale, Mass.

Miss Farmer's School of Cookery...30 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass.
Sea Pines School of Personality.
Cambridge-Haskell School.

Walnut Hill School.

Mount Ida School.

House in the Pines

Whiting Hall ...
Oak Hall

Gulf Park College.
Central College for Women.
Lindenwood College.

The Arden School for Girls.
Miss Beard's School for Girls
Drew Seminary

The Cazenovia Seminary.
Keuka College.

Ossining School.

Putnam Hall

Highland Manor

Miss Mason's School for Girls.

Glendale College.

Bishopthorpe Manor.

The Birmingham School for Girls.

Highland Hall.

Beechwood School, Inc..

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Box B, Brewster, Mass. .36 Concord Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 24 Highland St., Natick, Mass. 2306 Summit St., Newton, Mass. Norton, Mass.

South Sudbury, Mass.

584 Holly Ave., St. Paul, Minn.
Box R, Gulfport, Miss.
423 State St., Lexington, Mo.
Box 723, St. Charles, Mo.
Lakewood, N. J.
Orange, N. J.
Box 518, Carmel, N. Y.
Box D, Cazenovia, N. Y.
Keuka Park, N. Y.
Box 7D, Ossining, N. Y.
Box 811, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Box D, Tarrytown, N. Y.
Box 710, Tarrytown, N. Y.
Box 1, Glendale, Okio
Box 251, Bethlehem, Pa.
Box 109, Birmingham, Pa.
Hollidaysburg, Pa.
Jenkintown, Pa.
Overbrook, Pa.

Belmont Heights, Box 14, Nashville, Tenn.

Mary Baldwin College and Seminary

Warrenton Country School.

Lewisburg Seminary

Milwaukee-Downer Seminary.

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.Austin, Tex. Dallas, Tex.

Box D, Basic, Va. Box D, Bristol, Va. Box 989, Buena Vista, Va. Box T, Roanoke, Va. Staunton, Va.

Box 21, Warrenton, Va. Box 80, Lewisburg, W. Va. Box D, Milwaukee, Wis.

Preparatory

.Box W-7, Menlo Park, Cal. Brookfield Centre, Conn. Cheshire, Conn. .Lake Forest, Ill. .Box D-7, Woodstock, Ill. Box 250, Howe, Ind. . Port Deposit, Md. Box L, Billerica, Mass. 539 Boylston St., Boston, Mass.

50 King Caesar Rd., Duxbury, Mass. .Box M, Easthampton, Mass. Wilbraham, Mass. Worcester, Mass.

Special

Miss Compton's School for Girls.

Devereux Schools.

Miss Woods' School.

Box C, Mont Vernon, N. H. Box W, Blairstown, N. J. Box 7P, Hightstown, N. J.

New Brunswick, N. J. Box 80, Pennington, N. J. Box F, Princeton, N. J. Box 118, Ithaca, N. Y. Box 905, Tarrytown, N. Y. Box B, Gettysburg, Pa. Box 103, Mercersburg, Pa. Providence, R. I. St. Johnsbury, Vt.

.3809 Flad Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Berwyn, Pa. . Box 160, Langhorne, Pa.

Military Schools and Colleges

Los Angeles, Cal. Box L, Pacific Beach, Cal. R. D. No. 2, Box 12-D, Pasadena, Cal.

San Rafael, Cal.
College Park, Ga.

Box 800, Morgan Park, Ill.
Culver, Ind.

Box 105, Lyndon, Ky. .435 Waltham St., W. Newton, Mass. 706 Third St., Boonville, Mo. 187 Washington Ave., Lexington, Mo. Drawer C-7, Bordentown, N. J. Box 402, Wenonah, N. J. ... Box L, Roswell, N. Mex. . Box 106, Manlius, N. Y. .Box L, Asheville, N. C. Box 239, Germantown, Ohio .. Box F67, Hudson, Ohio .. Box 225, Chester, Pa. Box D. Columbia, Tenn. .Box 141, Lebanon, Tenn. Box 4, Spring Hill, Tenn. Box 124, Sweetwater, Tenn.

Urban Military Academy
San Diego Army & Navy Academy.
Pasadena Military Academy.
Hitchcock Military Academy
Georgia Military Academy
Morgan Park Military Academy
Culver Military Academy.
Kentucky Military Institute.
Allen-Chalmers School..
Kemper Military School..
Wentworth Military Academy
Bordentown Military Institute.
Wenonah Military Academy.
New Mexico Military Institute.
Saint John's School.
Bingham Military School
Miami Military Institute.
Western Reserve Academy.
Pennsylvania Military College.
The Columbia Military Academy
Castle Heights Military Academy.
Branham & Hughes Military Academy
Tennessee Military Institute.
Blackstone Military Academy.
Randolph-Macon Academy.
Staunton Military Academy.
Fishburne Military School..
Greenbrier Military School..
Saint John's Military Academy.
Northwestern Military Academy.

.Box B, Blackstone, Va. .Box 410, Front Royal, Va. .. Box D, Staunton, Va. Box L, Waynesboro, Va. Box 25, Lewisburg, W. Va. Box 12G, Delafield, Wisc. .Lake Geneva, Wisc.

Vocational and Professional

New Haven Normal School of Gymnastics..
New Haven, Conn.
Bush Conservatory
...839 N. Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.
Chicago College of Dental Surgery..... .1741 Harrison St., Chicago, Ill.
Chicago Normal School of Physical Education.
National Kindergarten & Elementary College.
Northwestern University School of Speech.
Burdett College of Business Administration.
Posse Normal School of Gymnastics.....779 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.
Leland Powers School..
Upper Fenway, Boston, Mass.

Sargent School for Physical Education.
Kellogg School of Physical Education.
Sanitarium School of Home Economics.

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Sport watches created by the Gruen Guild

ERE is a group of unusual strap watches for men and women. In each you will notice that individuality, that air of distinction which marks every creation from the hands of the Gruen Guildsmen. Before being put on the market each one had to pass the Guild's exacting triple test for accuracy, beauty, durability.

The Tank Model - Gruen's newest strap watch for men-is a sturdy, mannish example of fine watch making. Through a new process of manufacture its odd-shaped crystal has been so standardized that it is instantly changeable. Its detachable strap may be quickly replaced with a new one. Its movement bears the mark Precision, the Guild's

pledge of highest timekeeping service.

The Gruen Guildsmen have woven into each Gruen Watch those fine old ideals which inspired their ancestors, the masters of the ancient Guild of Watch Makers. Thus a Gruen Watch becomes more than a dependable mechanism for telling time. Connoisseurs have proclaimed Gruen timepieces the most distinctive of all fine watches.

You will find the cost of a Gruen Watch no greater than that of a timepiece of far less distinction. Sold only through good jewelry stores. Look for the Gruen Service Emblem. GRUEN WATCH MAKERS GUILD

Time Hill, Cincinnati, U. S. A.
Canadian Branch, Toronto

Engaged in the art of watch manufacturing since 1874

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GRUEN GUILD WATCHES

For your protection-see that the name Gruen is on the watch

GRUEN

PUBLIC OPINION (New York) combined with THE LITERARY DIGEST

Published by Funk & Wagnalls Company (Adam W. Wagnalls, Pres.; Wilfred J. Funk, Vice-Pres.; Robert J. Cuddihy, Treas.; William Neisel, Sec'y) 354-360 Fourth Ave., New York Vol. LXXVIII, No. 4

New York, July 28, 1923

Whole Number 1736

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"P

EACE WILL COME," says the Prime Minister of Great Britain, when the world finds a solution for three problems: payment of reparations, settlement of interallied debts, security of a pacified Europe. In the days preceding and immediately following the Prime Minister's speech of July 12th, the headlines over the foreign dispatches in our press indicated that hope of the Allies agreeing on any solution was faint indeed. We Americans take our news so largely from the headlines that the European situation seemed gloomy as the facts were brought home to us by-"See No End in the Ruhr Deadlock," "British Break with France Is Seen in Two Days," "France's Policy Speeds World Chaos, Baldwin Warns; Paris Unmoved," "London Papers Bitter," "Possibility of More War Awes House of Commons." The friendly tone of the Baldwin speech seemed to mollify French resentment over the criticism of the Poincaré policy, but when London read Poincaré's address at Senlis on the 15th, the general feeling was that the French Premier had "slammed the door in Britain's face," as we read in one dispatch. So while our editors await the next movethe action to be taken by the Allies on the British reply to the latest German reparations offer they begin to wonder whether anything really can be accomplished without our help. As things now stand, remarks the New York Journal of Commerce, “there is grave fear that Germany will not only never pay reparations to anything like the amount that she could, but that this issue will be the cause of increasing dissension among the various countries of Europe." Or, as the New York World cheerlessly concludes, “no progress can be seen toward the overthrow of mankind's fundamental obstacle, the reparations issue."

France, Germany, England, Belgium and Italy are compared by the Brooklyn Eagle to "five men engaged in a poker game. All are gambling desperately. The stakes are high. Feeling is intense." Incidentally, we are reminded, "the chips in this game are human lives, and a war or peace hangs on the outcome." Continues The Eagle:

"The tragedy of it all is that there is no one to call the game. The peoples whose fates are in the hands of the diplomatic gamblers are impotent. The United States, the most powerful nation, and the one, apart from the players, most directly concerned in the outcome, declines to interfere."

"Our inaction helped get Europe into the present mess," declares the St. Louis Star, and our action, continues the St. Louis daily, "is necessary to undo the mischief." We are told

that

"The influence of the United States should be put squarely : behind the efforts of Premier Baldwin to force France to an acounting of her stewardship over Germany and European peace. It should be directed, further, to the ultimate satisfaction of the just claims of France and Belgium against Germany, insofar as Germany can satisfy them. But the one paramount aim should be to create conditions which will allow all of Europe to recover her poise, forget the danger of war, and go to work."

"Mr. Baldwin brought the United States into the proposed peace consortium," argues The Star, when he listed the three problems: reparations, interallied debt settlement, and "security of a pacified Europe." It is set down as evident that "with the first of these, we have nothing to do except give good counsel, but the second can not be decided without American participation, and the third invites our earnest support and cooperation." It may be, observes the Chicago Evening Post, that "the door is opening again to us for a great service."

Prime Minister Baldwin, it will be remembered, called for a joint effort to determine Germany's capacity to pay. This, the London papers remark, points toward an interallied commission to act possibly as a Committee to the Reparations Commission. The London Daily Telegraph remarks that "all the Allies would welcome the presence on the Committee, and preferably in the chair, of an eminent American jurist, such as William Howard Taft, or Elihu Root, or an eminent banker or economist from Wall Street." The London Daily Mail understands that “American opinion points to Thomas W. Lamont, of the Morgan firm, as the possible American representative on an international commission to estimate Germany's paying capacity." As described in Washington, we read in a dispatch to The Wall Street Journal, "the so-called British plan of a conference is very much like the suggestion Secretary Hughes made at the end of last winter-that an international commission of business authorities recommend a reparations figure within Germany's capacity to pay." And this writer thinks that the United States Government “probably would accept an invitation from Great Britain to an Allied and neutral conference on reparations and the Ruhr question, if a hopeful chance of settlement were seen in such a course," altho in other Washington dispatches it is stated that there is no likelihood of any change in the American policy of avoidance of official participation in interallied discussions. It seems to the St. Paul Pioneer-Press that there is every reason to believe that if a commission of experts is established, "the United States will have representation upon it." And it is interesting to find in the columns of Mr. Munsey's anti-League and anti-World Court New York Herald the statement that "there is every reason why England and America should propose an international commission and why France should accept." After citing the general reasons for preferring arbitration to brute force, and showing why such a settlement would be in the interest of France and Britain, The Herald continues:

"America is concerned because decrease in the buying power of Europe is felt by our farms and factories. Wheat fell below a dollar partly because of the lessened export demand.

"And of course this country has an interest in the healing of the wounds of war because of its stake in the war. Seventy-five thousand dead, a quarter of a million wounded, an initial outlay of thirty-five billion dollars, a pension cost that will be billions more-America spent a great deal in men and money to bring a peace that has not yet arrived.

"The dispute over reparations is still in a stage where it can be

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as great as Germany took from France in 1870? Is it true that Germany, offering to pay $300,000,000 a year for thirty-five years, can offer no more?

"These are questions not for soldiers or politicians, but for bankers, business men, economists. The two great Englishspeaking peoples appear to be agreed that these questions must be answered and the answers applied to a situation which threatens economic depression, international hatred, and more war."

"Nothing doing!" comes the cry, however, from the Cincinnati Post, speaking for those papers which believe "this is no time for Uncle Sam to play umpire." It seems to the Ohio daily that we should have to assume a position of deciding issues between France and England, and there would be "one more sore spot added to an already sore world." That is "when we do take part in world affairs again, as we must if war is ever to be curbed, even partly, let us do it when the broad principle of world peace shall stand out like a house afire and not be dimmed by any charge that we are serving the particular interests of any particular Power." A similar argument appears in the Manchester Union, while the Washington Post at the national capital can not see why America is called on to help the nations of Europe "out of the mess they are in." "The call to participate in European wrangles is not impressive," we read; "the duty of rescuing Europe from Europe is with the nations of that continent-not with the United States." Further

"There is nothing of the American ideal, as it has descended from the past, in the 'idealism' that is construed as urging such participation. International idealism that would subordinate American interests to those of European nations has shown by proposals as to Turkish and other mandates that its idea of American participation is a joinder with assumption of burdens that is unprofitable and with a consequent lightening of their loads. The American eagle is not a bird of burden nor is it a winged scapegoat. The 'idealists' who argue that it is the duty of the United States to offer itself as Europe's burden-carrier, while European nations are engaged in playing the game of grab, should revise their views to conform more nearly with the duty of America to itself and to its own."

The real deadlock, as many of our editors see it, lies in the essential and almost necessary difference between the French and the English view-points. The acquiescence of the opposition leaders in Parliament and the approving utterances of the daily press would seem to bear out the contention of editors and correspondents that in his speech of the 12th Prime Minister Baldwin accurately exprest British opinion. The chief points of the speech appeared in our last week's issue. Mr. Baldwin emphasized the dangers of the existing situation, the failure of the Ruhr occupation to secure reparations, his Government's desire to continue united action, so far as possible; he said that the British reply to the German note would be submitted to the Allies for consideration, and declared his belief that there is "general agreement to these propositions":

"That the period of conflict should as soon as possible be terminated;

"That the indefinite occupation by one country of the territory of another in time of peace is a phenomenon, rare and regrettable in itself, to which an honorable end should as soon as possible be found;

"That the debtor should not merely be called upon to pay his debt, but should be placed in a position where he can do so;

"That his capacity, where it is in doubt, should be tested and determined, and that united efforts should be made to accomplish these ends."

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The British position is also strongly stated in a dispatch from London by A. C. Gardiner to the New York World and other American papers:

"The French Premier is conscious that he holds two strong cards. He has established France's military dominance on the Continent of Europe beyond its wildest dreams, and while it is destroying Germany, it also is bleeding English trade white.

"Two million people are expected to be without employment in England this winter. France has no unemployed. M. Poincaré exploits this unemployment menace to British existence as an argument to compel his country to endorse war to the death with Germany. Mr. Baldwin knows that the situation can not be saved that way. He is determined to get Europe out

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