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VRANGLI GROTNATO

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Newspaper-itis!

A Mental Habit that Stunts the
Lives of Millions of Americans

MANY of my friends think that what

I know that any person with native intelligence can do the same. I relate my experience because it may be of help to readers of The Outlook, who--in their moments of introspection-may realize, as I did, how narrowing and stunting is that insidious American disease, newspaper-itis!

Let me say in the beginning, that I have no prejudice against newspapers-I buy two each day, morning and evening. But I have learned to discriminate between news and gossip.

A few days ago twenty-two families were driven out of an apartment building by a fire which started in the basement.

"

Tens of thousands of people read that item. Why? What did it benefit them to know about it? Could they use that knowledge in their business? Could they use it in their social lives? Did it in any way broaden their outlook on life? No! It was read because the average American is suffering from newspaper-itis." In the same newspaper I counted 176 separate news items just as unimportant as the above! And that is the kind of stuff with which we feed our brains every morning and evening! Is it any wonder that Europeans are amazed at the lack of culture in America? Is it any wonder that they call us **: newspaper fiends"?

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by newspapers. But a newspaper must be read with an object in view. Usually all the real, vital news of the day can be read in a few minutes. This is proved by the fact that newspaper editors summarize all the important happenngs of the day in two or three columns of editorials! For a great many years I, too, was a newspaper ilave." Every morning at the breakfast table I waded through my newspaper. On my way to work, at lunch and in the evening, newspapers occupied practically every spare moment I had. There wasn't fire, a divorce, or an accident I didn't know all about. I could argue with any one about the day's *ccurrences. But my conversation was inane, and I oon became looked upon as a plain male gossip. In usiness, too, I was a nobody among my associates, ecause my power of thought was confined to the significant daily occurrences which mean nothing. I realized vaguely what was the matter with myelf. For years I was haunted with the thought hat I lacked education-not necessarily a college raining, but the sort of knowledge that would roaden me mentally, that would make me a bigger an, that would enable me to listen understandagly, talk interestingly and intelligently.

One evening, on my way home from work, a riend who was seated beside me, reached into his ocket and brought forth a little limp leather book. myself, as usual, was reading a newspaper. I had ever thought of reading a book to and from work, ecause the ordinary book is too large and unieldy to carry around. I asked my friend where e secured his little leather book, and he told me e name of the publishers.

HAT was the beginning of a change that was a veritable revolution in my life. In the evening I wrote a letter, and by return mail I received list of the small limp leather volumes in this lition. Many of the titles I recognized as ones I had ways wished to read. I sent for a few of the books once, and they were exactly what I wanted. From at time on, instead of wasting my time in profitss reading, I began to devote myself to these eat works. At home-in the street cars-everyere whenever I had a few spare moments, I ad a story, a poem, a play, or an essay. The

books were small enough to carry in the pocket, and I had one with me always; sometimes when I went on trips for my firm, I used to carry half a dozen with me.

Do not misunderstand me. I did not pore through anything uninteresting to gain an empty "culture." I read because I was fascinated. I began to understand that the great books of the past are not called classics just because they appeal to a few professors and "high-brows," but because they have charmed and inspired millions of plain men and women like myself. I read because I could not tear myself away. I began to see why present-day writers themselves call these greater men "masters." I became imbued with ideals of life that had been a closed book. Great characters in novels, which were bywords to educated people, great poems and essays I had heard of but never read, became familiar to me.

In an amazingly short time I was a fairly well-read man. The range of my reading astonished even myself. I had become thoroughly familiar with some of the best writings of all time, and I did this by saving the minutes I used to spend in reading newspaper gossip.

TH

HE change in my life was marked, both from a social and practical point of view. No longer was I embarrassed in the company of my educated friends. I found I was as well read as they. No longer did I feel a secret embarrassment and wish myself miles off when they discussed subjects of which I had been ignorant. My opinions and ideas now seemed as clear-cut as theirs. I could express myself. I could talk about something else than fires, murders, accidents and tittletattle. I no longer had to preface my remarks with "I see by the papers." My social life was revolutionized. More important, my inner life was revolutionized. I had stumbled by chance into a world that was dark to me before, a world now opened up by the greatest minds that perhaps have ever been on this earth. And I prospered in business, incidentally. Whenever I meet a man he listens to me because I have something to say.

I philosophize often about these books and their authors. I look back and realize how much of this Great Show of life I would have missed had I not become acquainted with them. They present aspects of life far beyond the humdrum existence of most of us. They have opened my eyes-they have opened the eyes of millions of men like me-to the tragedy and the glory of life, to its humor and to its pain, to its mystery-and to its meaning. I have broken my newspaper habit by substituting something worth while.-M. B. S.

T

HE name of the writer of this interesting and eloquent confession will gladly be given upon request. The publishers of the Little Leather Library-for that is the edition he refers to-have published these leather-bound masterpieces for men and women like him, so that they can read profitably in spare time. Fifteen minutes a day, usually spent reading newspaper gossip, will within a short time give any person a liberal education in literature. In publishing these works in such a form that they may be easily carried around, a genuine need has been filled. This is shown by the fact that nearly two million of these little volumes have been bought by the American public.

The sixty books, each one bound in leather, are published at a price within the reach of any purse —— 30e a volume, postpaid.

These handy little volumes have also proved ideally suitable for soldiers. They are carried in the pockets into the trenches, where the boys need

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that General Pershing, when he had been abroad but a few weeks, cabled urgently for books? More than that, this need has proved so vital that he has ordered that 50 tons of shipping space a month be set aside for books alone. Is your boy- your son, your brother, your friend-supplied with books? He will need them-badly! He will need them for the long journey overseas; for the wearisome train journeys in France; in the hospital if he ever happens to be wounded; and, more than anywhere else, in the trenches, where boredom sickens the soul!

The American Library Association, acting on General Pershing's appeal, has issued a nation-wide call for books for soldiers and sailors. We are glad to help in this work, and the following offer should help :

If you purchase 10 of our Little Leather Library volumes and you can surely find among them ten that you have always wanted to read-we will give you in addition a Kit Box containing five books bound in a special "fabricated leather," which can be sent to someone in the army or navy. If you know no one to whom to send them, take them to your nearest library, which will forward them to the boys abroad.

Immediate action is advised, if you care to take advantage of this offer. We have quite a large number of Kit Boxes which will be donated in this way but this offer is an unusual one, and we reserve the right to return the money of any person responding to this notice, should this supply of Kit Boxes be exhausted.

References, The Outlook or any other magazine in the United States or Canada. Little Leather Library, Dept. 85, 44 East 23d Street, New York.

List of Titles. 30c each, Postpaid!

NOTE: The Little Leather Library is bound in genuine sheepskin. With each 10 books purchased, we will give free a Soldier's Kit Box, containing five of our books bound in "fabricated leather." Use coupon below.

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31 Fairy Tales Hans Andersen 32 Bab Ballads W. S. Gilbert 33 Mother Goose Rhymes 34 Hiawatha

Henry W. Longfellow 35 Ghosts Henrik Ibsen 36 Idylls of the King. Vol.I Alfred Lord Tennyson 37 Idylls of the King. Vol.2

Alfred Lord Tennyson 38 Friendship, and Other Essays

Henry Thoreau 39 Socialism for Millionaires G. Bernard Shaw 40 On Going to Church G. Bernard Shaw 41 Through the Looking Glass Lewis Carroll

42 Memories of President Lincoln

Walt Whitman 43 Othello Shakespeare 44 As You Like It

Shakespeare 45 Midsummer Night's Dream Shakespeare

46 The Ancient Mariner Samuel T. Coleridge 47 Uses of Great Men Ralph W. Emerson Dante

48 Inferno 49 Speeches and Letters George Washington 50 A Dream of John Bull William Morris Robert Burns

51 Poems 52 Carmen

Prosper Merrimer 53 Confessions of an Opium Eater De Quincey 54 The Raven and Other Poems

Edgar Allan Poe 55 The Finest Story in the World Kipling 56 Words of Jesus

57 A Tilly loss Scandal James M. Barrie

58 Poems Robert Brorning 59 Mumu Iran Turgene 60 The Last Days of a Condemned Man Victor Hugo

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