FOR READERS OF GOOD FICTION. 



GILBERT PARKER'S BOOKS. 



UNIFORM EDITION. 



GILBERT PARKER. 



The Seats of the Mighty, 



Being the Memoirs of Capt Robert Moray, 

 sometime an Officer in the Virginia 

 Regiment, and afterwards of Am- 

 herst's Regiment. Illustrated. $i.so. 



" Another historical romance of the vividness and 

 intensity of ' The Seats of the Mighty ' has never come 

 from the pen of an American." — Chicago Record. 



" One of the most noteworthy examples of historical 

 fiction that has come to us. . . . Must be reckoned a 

 masterpiece of its kind." — Chicago Dial. 



"The finest novel Mr. Parker has yet written." — 

 Loudon Atbenceum. 



" One of the strongest stories of historical interest 

 and adventure we have read for many a day." — Lou- 

 don Speaker. 



The Trail of the Sword. The Trespasser. 



:i. 25. 



"Mr. Parker here anew demonstrates his 

 power of pictorial portrayal and of strong 

 dramatic situation and climax." — Philadel- 

 phia Bulletin. 



TheTranslation of a Savage. 



$1.25. 



"A book which no one will be satisfied 

 to put down until the end has been made a 

 matter of certainty and assurance." — The 

 Nation. 



$1.25. 



" We read at times — as we have read the 

 great masters of romance — breathlessly." — 

 The Critic. 



Mrs. Falchion. 



$1.25. 



" A well-knit story developed in a singu- 

 larly interesting fashion " 



STEPHEN CRANE'S BOOKS. 



UNIFORM EDITION. 



STEPHEN CRANE. 



The Red Badge of Courage. 



An Episode of the American Civil War. $1.00. 



" Never before have we had the seamy side of glorious 

 war so well depicted. . . . The rank and file has its histo- 

 rian at last, and we have had nothing finer." — Chicago 

 Evening Post. 



" In the whole range of literature we can call to mind 

 nothing so searching in its analysis, so manifestly impressed 

 with the stamp of truth." — Loudon Daily Chronicle. 



The Little Regiment. 



$1.00. 



"A series of pictures that convey the actu- 

 ality of war, as seen from the ranks, as dis- 

 tinguished from the view from headquarters, 

 with truer appreciation than anything of the 

 kind that has been done in our language.'* — 

 Philadelphia Times. 



Maggie : A Girl of the Streets. 



75 cents. 



place in literature. . . . Zola himself scarcely has surpassed its tremendous portrayal of 

 throbbing, breathing, moving life." — New York Mail and Express. 



28 



The Third Violet. 



$1.00. 



" The whole book, from beginning to end, 

 fairly bristles with fun. ... It is adapted 

 for pure entertainment, yet it is not easily 

 put down or forgotten." — Boston Herald. 



" By writing ' Maggie ' Mr. Crane 

 has made for himself a permanent 



