Mr. Lloyd George, by E. T. RAYMOND.

The Americanization of Edward Bok, by EDWARD W. BOK. One of the most widely read of American autobiographies and still in strong demand.

A Man From Maine, by EDWARD W. BOK. A biography of Cyrus H. K. Curtis, head of the Curtis Publishing Company of Philadelphia.

From McKinley to Harding: Personal Recollections of Our Presidents, by H. H. KOHLSAAT. The political interest is strong.

The Print of My Remembrance, by AUGUSTUS THOMAS. For all who are interested in the theatre and its people.

WALTER DAMROSCH’S My Musical Life begins with a childhood in Germany and aside from its autobiographical interest constitutes to some extent a history of orchestral music in America.

My Memories of Eighty Years, by CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW. About evenly personal and political in interest.

Letters of James Gibbons Huneker, edited by JOSEPHINE HUNEKER, and MR. HUNEKER’S Steeplejack (autobiographical). The record of one of our most brilliant critics, versatile in all the arts.

John H. Patterson: The Pioneer in Industrial Welfare, by SAMUEL CROWTHER. Of a similar interest with HENRY FORD’S My Life and Work.

The Editorials of Henry Watterson, edited by ARTHUR KROCK. They complete his own account of himself in “Marse Henry.” The political interest is naturally the main thing and is exceedingly vivid (1868-1921).