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to buy, borrow or steal the Page letters"

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Many a time in those fearful days of 1916 and 1917 Page would sit in his dressing gown at his bedroom desk n the London Embassy far into the small hours of the morning, pouring forth his inmost thoughts in letters to President Wilson, Colonel House, Sir Edward Grey, and others. More than any other man, he helped bring the United States into the war. His letters changed history, et he never knew they would bring delight to countless housands of readers.

Life and Letters of WALTER H. PAGE (Special new 4-volume edition) with THE WORLD'S WORK

for the cost of the original

2-volume set alone

THIS

HIS is the whimsical advice which J. St. Loe Strachey, brilliant editor of the London Spectator, gives his readers after reading the Life and Letters of Walter H. Page.

Page's pen cast its spell over the foremost minds in Europe and America. "I could never resist Page," said the President of the United States. "His letters are the best I have ever read. I hope that some day they will be published." They have been published, and the American public finds, too, that it cannot resist the charm of Page's winged words. 75,000 people have paid $10.00 each outright for the pleasure of reading the letters of our wartime Ambassador to Great Britain as woven into a connected story by the master hand of Burton J. Hendrick. Four former premiers of Great Britain-Lloyd George, Asquith, Bonar Law, and Balfour-after reading Page's letters in book form, were inspired to start a movement which brought a Page memorial tablet to Westminster Abbey. Thousands of booklovers, swayed by the artistry of Page's writings, voted that his letters constitute one of the ten greatest books of the century. And finally the greatest honor that can come to a book, the Pulitzer Prize, was awarded to the "Life and Letters." As you read Page's letters, crisp sentences, brimming over with exuberance and spontaneity, follow one another with airy speed. Here is a word which no one else would use in just that way-and how it hits the mark! And here is a deft quip, so aptly phrased, so original, that you hold your breath in sheer delight!

Always a lively and brilliant conversationalist, Page simply conversed by means of pen and paper when he wrote to his acquaintances. To read one of his letters is to hear the sound of his voice, to see the sparkle of his eye, and to hear him punctuate the phrases with a hearty bang of his fist on the table.

May we send you for your approval, at our own expense, the new our-volume set of the Life and Letters of Walter H. Page and the rrent issue of THE WORLD'S WORK, the great magazine which age founded and long edited? Look them over; read them if you ill; and then at the end of ten days decide whether you want part with them. The fact that we dare make such an offer roves that we are supremely confident that you will be delighted ith the books and the magazine.

Only when you have definitely decided that you want the books to main in your library, and that you want THE WORLD'S WORK gularly on your reading room table-only then does payment gin, at the easy rate of $1 a month until $10 have been paid. Where $10 outright brought you only the original two volumes, ese same ten dollars, payable in easy instalments after the free spection period, now buy you the new four-volume set plus a ear's subscription to THE WORLD'S WORK, a regular $4-a-year narazing.

Send No Money!

Let us send you the books and

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The books are bound in blue cloth stamped in gold. Actual size of each volume 81⁄2 inches high, 6 inches wide, 1 inch thick. Mail the coupon today; otherwise you may forget. And bear in mind that we have printed a limited edition of the four-volume set, so "first come, first served.'

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GENTLEMEN: You may send me for my inspection, charges prepaid, the new 4-volume set of "The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page," uniformly bound in dark blue cloth, stamped with gold lettering, and the current issue of THE WORLD'S WORK. I will either return the books at your expense within ten days or send you $1 a month until $10 has been paid for the books and a full year's subscription to THE WORLD'S WORK.

Or, if preferred-Enclosed please find $10 in full payment.

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Engaged. Gilbert W. Kahn, son of Otto H. Kahn, famed Manhattan banker, to Miss Anne Elizabeth Whelan, daughter of Charles A. Whelan of East Orange, N. J., United Cigar Stores President.

Married. S. Parker Gilbert Jr., newly appointed Agent General of Reparations in Europe under the Experts' Plan, to Miss Louise Todd of Louisville; in Louisville. Raymond T. Baker, onetime Director of the U. S. Mint, was best man. Many dignitaries attended. The couple sailed for Europe.

Sued for Divorce. Alfred J. Kvale, the son of Rev. O. J. Kvale, U. S. Congressman from Minnesota, by the onetime "Billie Stanfield" of the Ziegfeld Follies; in Chicago. She charges that her husband-whose father was elected to Congress on his claim that he was "Dryer than Volstead"-has been "drunk for a year and a half," which is the length of time that she has been his wife.

Died. Sydney E. Mudd, 39, U. S. Congressman (Republican) from Maryland; in Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, from intestinal obstruction.

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Breakfast

That's the way to start the day-all the Summer sun-
shine of the harvest fields in the whole wheat grain,
made digestible by cooking in steam, shredding and
baking in coal ovens- and it is just as delicious for
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Shredded Wheat

is a safe and satisfying cereal containing all the bran of the whole wheat grain-just enough to stimulate bowel exercise. Delicious with fruits.

Made by

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Died. Jacob Ellsworth ("Jake") Daubert, 39, Captain and first baseman of the Cincinnati National League baseball team; at Cincinnati, of appendicitis.

Died. Frank B. Brandegee, 60, senior U. S. Senator from Connecticut, in his Washington home; suicide by gas. Called by political writers "stern and rockbound" Brandegee," he was one of President Wilson's bitterest opponents in the League of Nations struggle of 1919-'20.

Died. Dr. William Arnold Shanklin, 62, President Emeritus of Wesleyan University (Middleton, Conn.); in Manhattan, on the steps leading from the Grand Central Terminal to the Lexington avenue subway station, of heart failure. Under Dr. Shanklin's administration, Wesleyan University doubled in number of students, trebled in income.

Died. Laurenus Clark Seelye, 87. President Emeritus of Smith College; in Northampton, Mass. He saw Smith's enrolment grow under his guidance from 14 girls in 1873 to 1,635 in 1910, when he retired. His definition of what a graduate of a woman's college should be was "intelligent gentlewoman."

STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP POINT with
POINT with PRIDE

MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC., REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF CON OGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912.

Of Time, The Weekly News Magazine pub. lished weekly at New York, N. Y., for October 1, 1924.

County of New York?
State of New York S

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Before me, a Notary Public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared Henry R. Luce, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that be is the Business Manager of Time, The Weekly News Magazine and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management (and if a daily paper the circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form to wit:

1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managers are:

Publishers, Time, Inc., 236 East 39th St., New York City.

Editors, Briton Hadden and Henry R. Luce, 236 East 39th St., New York City.

Managing Editor, Briton Hadden, 236 East 39th St., New York City.

Business Manager, Henry R. Luce, 236 East 39th St., New York City.

2. That the owner is: (If the publication is owned by an individual his name and address, or if owned by more than one individual, the name and address of each, should be given below; if the publication is owned by a corporation the name of the corporation and the names and addresses of the stockholders owning or holding one per cent or more of the total amount of stock should be given.)

Time, Inc., 236 East 39th St., New York City; Robert A. Chambers, 55 Liberty St., New York City; Harry P. Davison, Jr., 4 East 66th St., New York City; Manfred Gottfried, 236 East 39th St., New York City; William V. Griffin, 80 Broadway, New York City: Briton Hadden, 236 East 39th St., New York City; Edith Harkness, 4 East 66th St., New York City; Edward S. Harkness, 25 Broadway, New York City; William H. Harkness, 4 East 66th Street, New York City; Louise H. Ingalls, 11808 Lake Shore Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio; Robert L. Johnson, 236 East 39th St., New York City; Seymour H. Knox, Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y.; Roy E. Larsen, 236 East 39th St., New York City; Henry R. Luce, 236 East 39th St., New York City; John S. Martin, 236 East 39th St., New York City; Morehead Patterson, 15 East 65th St., New York City; Stanley Woodward, 708 N. A. Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa.

3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: (If there are none, so state.) None.

4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company but also, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, is given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than as so stated by him.

5. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date shown above is (This information is required from daily publications only.)

(Signed) HENRY R. LUCE, Business Manager. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2nd day of October, 1924.

(Seal) James J. Duffy. (My commission expires March 30, 1926.)

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NB1 NB1 NB1 NB1 NBA NB1 NB1 NBA NB1 By JOANNA C. COLCORD ROLL AND GO Songs of American Sailormen The songs the sailors sang at their work; with the roll of the sea and the go of the smart clipper ship. The music is as veritable as the words, for Miss Colcord spent eighteen years at sea. A rare and authentic collection; a really glorious book. Illustrated, Price $5.00 By ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

The NEW DECALOGUE OF SCIENCE

The social use and moral control of the new knowledge in the fields of the living sciences, "expounded with remarkable wit and clarity."-Atlantic Monthly. Price, $3.00

By OTIS SKINNER
FOOTLIGHTS

AND SPOTLIGHTS This attractive book will revive happy memories among old time theatre-goers, and offers to the younger devotees of the theatre an entrancing picture that they can ill afford to miss.-Boston Herald. Profusely illustrated Price $5.00

By HENRY KITCHELL WEBSTER THE INNOCENTS

THE INNOCENTS helps to set the conviction that Mr. Webster knows a great deal about this American generation. .. We get its heartbeat.-Philadelphia North American. Price $2.00 By SIDNEY HERSCHELL SMALL Author of Thundergate FOURSCORE

The epic story of the lives of two pioneer foreigners in America, their children and grandchildren, the brilliant account of an alien stock which becomes the very essence of our national stamina. Price $2.00

By JOSEPH ANTHONY
THE

GOLDEN VILLAGE May Sinclair, J. D. Beresford, John Galsworthy and Edward Garnett are among those who have welcomed Mr. Anthony's work with enthusiasm.

In The Golden Village he weaves colorful threads into an alluring pattern. John Erskine says: "It is as charming a picture of youth and romance as we have read in a long day." Price $2.00

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TIME, The Weekly News-Magazine. Editors-Briton Hadden and Henry R. Luce. As sociates-Manfred Gottfried (National AFfairs), John S. Martin, Thomas J. C. Martyn (Foreign News). Jack A. Thomas (Books). Weekly Contributors-John Farrar, Willard T. Ingalls, Alexander Klemin, Peter Mathews. Wells Root, Preston Lockwood, Niven Busch. Published by TIME, Inc., H. R. Luce, Pres.; J. S. Martin, Vice-Pres.; B. Hadden, Secy Treas.; 236 E. 39th St., New York City. Subscription rate, one year, postpaid: In the United States and Mexico, $5.00; in Can ada, $5.50; elsewhere, $6.00. For advertis ing rates address: Robert L. Johnson, Adver tising Manager, TIME, 236 E. 39th St., New York; New England representatives, Sweeney Price, 127 Federal St., Boston, Mass.; Western representatives, Powers & Stone, 38 S Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.; Circulation Manager, Roy E. Larsen. Vol. IV, No. 16.

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An almost forgotten historical work is now brought to ht. Rarely found except in private collections, this hisy gives a most vivid description of decadent Rome. Its elations, taken from the writers of the time, are astound. Not the Caesars, but their women were the real rulers Rome. Never were women mightier in power or more andoned in morals. Their ascendency over the Romans ves the only reasonable explanation of the Empire's tragic solution.

Never in history have women's fascinations worked greater il, as these two volumes disclose. Conditions today present artling parallels-the growing power of woman, the wideread love of luxury, the admixture of races and alien cusms and political creeds.

In Rome we see the greatest depths of iniquity, the orgies and poison plottings of the wives of Caligula, of Nero, of Commodus, of Gallienus. The crimes of the Borgias seem tame in comparison with Messalina. The wickedness of the French court pales before the utter depravity that flaunted itself in Roman palaces.

Occasionally a noble Queen stayed the tide of immorality, but only to add zest to the ensuing Saturnalia. Thus Livia, the wife of Augustus, and one of the most brilliant and virtuous women of history, was succeeded by Caesonia, who drove Caligula insane with a love-potion, and by Messalina, Aggripina and Domita, whose passionate excesses debauched the whole race.

The Lives and
the Roman Empresses

Secret Intrigues of

This fascinating and illuminating history of the virtues ad vices of the Roman Empresses is a true translation from e original French of Jacques De Serviez, a nobleman and nobleman and fted historian. Written presumably as a rebuke to the xtravagancies of his Bourbon court, it stands today as one of e most authoritative and penetrating descriptions of life nder the Caesars.

The pages abound in graphic portrayals of feminine charter and dramatic episodes. We are shown the gentle, oic philosopher, Marcus Aurelius, in his study, while in

FREE

The American Anthropological Society,

an adjoining apartment his Empress, Faus-
tina, is conducting the wildest of pagan or-
gies. The loneliness of good characters
in the midst of universal depravity
grips our heart. The excitement of
the many plots and counter-plots
thrills us despite natural revul-
sions. It is a race drunk with
luxury stumbling down to
utter destruction.

A pre-publication brochure containing specimen pages and the price and terms is now being prepared. This brochure will be sent FREE to all who mail the coupon attached ere. If you wish to consider the eventual ownership of this rare history in wo volumes of magnificent printing and binding, it is highly advisable to mail coupon today.

The American Anthropological Society 45 West 45th Street, New York City

City..

Name

Address

45 West 45th St., Dept. T.

New York City.

Gentlemen:

Please send me at once the pre-publication Brochure with specimen pages on The Lives and Secret Intrigues of the Roman Empresses. This is neither to cost me or obligate me in the slightest.

State..

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