/Vew Stories of Absorbing Interest ♦ 



77i/r</ Edition * 



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• 7>fe Archbishop and the Lady % 



Bv MRS. SCHUYLER CROJVNINSHIELD t 



If I am any judge, Mrs. Crowninshield's novel is going to make something 



-Jeannette L. Gilder, Editor of the Critic. 

 A book to be read rapidly because of the constant interest, and slowly to 



Cloth, izmo. $1.50. 



ApriV 5 Sowing 



Illustrated. Cloth, izmo. $1.50. 



The Powers that 



Prey 



11 



By NORMAN DUNCAN 



4 



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like a sensation. It has a most remarkable plot. There is a ' go ' in the book." ♦ 



« 



make the pleasure last." — New York Commercial Advertiser, 4 



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By GERTRUDE HALL * 



There is not a problem here as large as a man's hand save the ever- * 

 lasting problem of how a maid and a man shall, through many difficulties * 

 of their own making, arrive at the goal they both desire. * 



tc A dainty little love story in a very dainty form. The heroine will make ♦ 

 willing slaves of her readers." — Baltimore Herald. ^ 



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Stories of Criminals and Police ♦' 



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By JOSIAH FLTNT and FRANCIS WALTON \ 



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A book of unusual interest . . . first hand studies, in short story 

 form, of the criminal regarded, not as a case, but as a man ... a book 

 before the intense actuality of which mere literary work seems somewhat insig- 4 



niticant." — New York Evening Post. * 



Cloth, izmo. $1.25. 4 



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Stories of the Turkish and Syrian Quarters J 



The Soul of the Street t 



Mr. Duncan not only knows his Svrian quarter, he knows it with a * 



poet's insight. The pathos and bitter humor of this ragged patch of * 



Orientalism penetrate him, and he sets forth its obscure experiences with * 



a poignant delicacy of feeling that is well interpreted by the distinction ot * 



his Style. Cover in colors. izmo. $i.z$. * 



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