FRANCE IN DANGER 



By Paul Vergnet Translated by Beatrice Barstow 



CroTPn Svo. zs. 6d. net 



One of the most remarkable books which appeared before the 

 outbreak of war. 



By a searching study of the progress and intrigues of the Pan- 

 German League, and of the way in which it had come to dominate 

 the minds of Germany and Austria, the author shows the imminence 

 of war. 



Further than this, he foretells Germany's treatment of Belgian 

 neutrahty and exposes the treatment which Pan-Germans con- 

 template for conquered nations — a system of mental, moral, and 

 material slavery. 



AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR 



By Theodore Roosevelt 



Crovtn %vo. 51. net 

 Colonel Roosevelt is unsparing in his criticism of the part which 

 his own country is playing in the war. Quoting Josh Billings, he 

 admits that " it is much easier to be a harmless dove than a wise 

 serpent." He compares " the pohcy of blood and iron with the 

 policy of milk and water " ; exposes the uselessness of treaties not 

 backed by force, as well as the worthlessness of a peace which is not 

 a righteous peace — and condemns " the spiritless and selfish type 

 of neutrahty pursued by the United States." There is not a chapter 

 in this volume which Enghshmen would not do well to lay to heart. 



PERSONAL PHASES OF THE WAR 



By Frederick Palmer (Author of "The Last Shot") 

 Cromi %i'o. 6s. net 

 Mr. Palmer was the first of the war correspondents who was 

 officially permitted by the French actually to visit the Front and 

 report what he saw there. He has proved himself a keen observer of 

 mihtary actions with a capacity for describing what he sees with 

 luminous lucidity. These impressions of actual experiences in the 

 great war are likely to prove an addition to the history now in the 

 making, and to throw vivid hght on the psychology of the persons 

 and nations in combat. 



THE GREAT SETTLEMENT 



By G. Ernest Fayle 

 With an Introduction by Viscount Esher 



Crown Syo 

 This is a survey of all the important problems — territorial, racial, 

 colonial, economic, and pohtical — wliich mil, or may arise at the 

 close of the war. The book is the first which combines a clear 

 exposition of the concrete problems which confront us to-day with 

 a reasoned analysis of the situation as a whole. 



LONDON: JOHN MURRAY 



