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William Allen White Calls "Vandemark's Folly" the best historical novel of Middle America he ever read

Critics call Herbert Quick's new book a truer and greater historical novel than "Richard Carvel."

R. D. Townsend says in The Outlook of Mr. Quick's novel : "It does for the open Iowa prairie country in the early settlement days, say from 1855 on, exactly what Main Street' didn't do for the small town. It gives a fair picture of men, women, and things."

Here at last is the epic of the Middle West, embodying both the romantic glamour and the bitter realities that attended man's conquest of the soil.

It is a book of terrific climaxes without distortion of historical accuracy. It is written with the singular understanding of the heart of America and the battling of its pioneers.

"Vandemark's Folly" and The Outlook for

1 year (new subscription or renewal) $6

By special arrangement with its publishers, we are able to offer "Vandemark's Folly " for a limited period in combination with The Outlook for one year (new subscription or renewal) for $6. The regular subscription price of The Outlook alone is $5 per year; the book retails for $2. You save $1. You save $2.80 if you are buying The Outlook each week from a news-stand.

If more convenient, you may make a first payment of $2, and may send us $1 per month for four months.

Vandemark's Folly" contains more than 400 pages of thrilling and informing reading—wholesome and bracing reading for the entire family. It is brilliantly illustrated by Wyeth.

THE OUTLOOK COMPANY, 381 Fourth Avenue, New York

I accept your offer of The Outlook for one year and "Vandemark's Folly."

1. I enclose $6 [ ]. 2. I enclose $2, and will send you $1 per month for four months [ ] Please check the offer you

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THE OUTLOOK. April 5, 1922. Volume 130, Number 14. Published weekly by the Outlook Company at 381 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Subscription price $5.00 a year. Entered as second-class matter, July 21, 1893, at the Post Office at New York, under the Act of March 3, 1879

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PRICE: FIFTEEN CENTS A COPY

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The Mind in the Making

By James Harvey Robinson

H. G. Wells in the N. Y. Times: "For me, I think James Harvey Robinson is going to be almost as important as was Huxley in my adolescence and William James in later years. He takes much that was latent and crude in my mind and gives it texture and form and confidence. The book has had the effect of illuminating me not only at its point of application, but all along the line of my curiosities. . . . It is a cardinal book."

Working with the Working
Woman

$2.50

By Cornelia Stratton Parker

The author of An American Idyll actually "worked with the working woman." She wanted to portray the daily life of the factory worker as nearly as possible as seen through the average worker's own eyes. The result is this dramatic and amusing story of women in American industry. It is not propaganda, not superficial investigation; just the plain truth about the plain girl, written by a woman who has learned how to understand. Philadelphia Ledger: "Much originality and humor. As good reading as any novel of the day." $2.00

...

The Life of Elizabeth Cady
Stanton

By Harriot Stanton Blatch and Theodore Stanton Through this life story of one of the most brilliant women of her time are scattered intimate pictures of distinguished Americans and Englishmen-Horace Greeley, William Lloyd Garrison, Gladstone, Carlyle and others equally famous. Mrs. Stanton was far in advance of her times. Her opinions on woman's property rights in marriage, on what children really owe their parents, and a fascinating variety of other subjects will be read with greatest interest today. Her biography-a unique combination of autobiography, letters and a diary-deals impartially with men and women, and will be equally enjoyed by both. Two Volumes. Illustrated.

The History of Art

$6.00

By Eli Faure

Vol. 1. Ancient Art. Translated from the French by Walter Pach Thomas Jewell Craven writing in the Dial calls it: "The most interesting and seductive history of the subject that has yet appeared. . . . His pages gleam with brilliant images. M. Faure's book is most distinguished. He converts archæology into impassioned imagery, and his narrative gifts are remarkable.” N. Y. Herald: "His 'History of Art' might be called history tested by art or history proved by art, for always he sees the poets and artists writing and painting unconsciously in larger figures than they knowthe true historians of the world." $6.00

Gardening with Brains

By Henry T. Finck

A book that gives all the facts about gardening and makes delightful reading besides. Plenty of garden books give all the facts-for reference. But this volume is for consecutive pleasant reading. It bears the same relation to the usual garden book of dry facts and statistics that the historical novel does to the histories. The result of the author's fifty years' experience in his own garden. Luther Burbank calls its chapters: "The best that have so far been written on garden subjects. You get at the facts in such a way that they are irresistible."

$2.50

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New York-The Vertical City that houses a small nation of people-all rushing, scheming, loving, daring--a jumbled mass of terrible force, plunging onward -for what?

This is the grimly beautiful setting which the author has chosen as a background for six whirlwind sketches. One reader has called them "daring inquiries into the lives of people who live dangerously." $1.90

Lost Valley By Katharine Fullerton Gerould

N. Y. Sun: "Katharine Fullerton Gerould's first novel may well be regarded as a literary event. . . . An interesting departure from her recent work, yet thoroughly characteristic. . . . The book has mood as well as motion and richness of invention."

N. Y. World: "As satisfying a response as we can imagine to the ever present demand for the book that stirs and truly entertains." $2.00

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HARPER & BROTHERS, Established 1817, NEW YORK

THE OUTLOOK, April 12, 1922. Volume 130, Number 15. Published weekly by the Outlook Company at 381 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Subscription price $5.00 a year. Entered as second-class matter, July 21, 1893, at the Post Office at New York, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

AMERICA'S BOSS-RIDDEN ATHLETICS BY NEWTON FUESSLE

Stanford Lim

APR 201922

The

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Outlook

An Illustrated Weekly Journal of Current Life

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1922

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