By E. F. BENSON. 



•s^ Mammon and Co. «- 



12mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



IN "Mammon and Co." the author returns 

 to the field wherein he made his great 

 success. The new story, like "Dodo," 

 offers a picture of London society ^md per- 

 sonages of large social consequences, but the 

 story is stronger in substance and more bril- 

 liant in development than any work which 

 Mr. Benson has done. His personal advan- 

 tages for an intimate acciuaintance with the 

 social life of the day in London invest his 

 novel with a peculiarly graphic realism. 

 Various phases of stock jobbing as well as 

 social life are vividly described. The good 

 genius of the book is an American girl. 



DODO. A Detail of the Day. IZmo. Paper, so cents ; cloth, $1.00. 

 THE RUBICON. IZmo. Paper, 50 cents ; cloth, $1.00. 



By GILBEDT PADKEft. 



UNIFORM EDITION. 



THE SEATS OF THE MIGHTY. $1.50. 



Being the Memoirs ol C^aptain Robert Moray, some- 

 time an Officer in the Virginia Regiment, and after- 

 wards of Amherst's Regiment. Illustrated. 



" 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. 



THE TRAIL OF THE SWORD. $1.25. 



" Mr. Parker here adds to a reputation already wide, and 

 anew demonstrates his power of pictorial portrayal and of 

 strong dramatic situation and cUmax." — Phi la. Bulletin. 



THE TRESPASSER. $1.25. 



" Interest, pith, force, and charm— Mr. Parker's new story 

 possesses all these qualities. . . . Almost bare of synthetical 

 decoration, his paragraphs are stirring because they are real. 

 We read at times- as we have read the great masters of 

 romance breathlessly." — The Critic. 



THE TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE. $1.25. 



" A book which no one will be satisfied to put down until the end has been matter of certainty 

 and assurance." — The Nation. 



MRS. FALCHION. $1.25. 



'' A well-knit story, told in an cxcfrdiiiLcly iiitm-tiiig way, and lioUiing the reader's attention to 

 the end.' 



THE POMP OF THE LAVILETTES. 16mo. Cloth. 



" Its sincerity and rugged force will commend it to those who love and seek strong work in 

 fiction."— The Critic. 

 i8 



