28 SEPTEMBER 1918, page 15

Gentlemen-at-arms.•

THE conspicuous merit of "Centurion's" book is that it could not possibly be called a " plain, unvarnished tale." We are most • Castlemen-afeinse By "Centurion." London: W.......

The Abolition Of Inheritance.•

BECAUSE of this book there will be many searohings of heart. It is a blow aimed at the hereditary.principle over the back of the war. The American writer, be it understood, is......

Fiction.

FIVE TALES.• VIEWED from the standpoint of vital statistics, Mr. Galsworthy's Fire Tales do not minister to exhilaration. The first grows out of a murder and ends in two......