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Recent Issues in Appletons' Town and Country Library. 



'HE NU GENTS OF CAKRICONNA. An Irish 



Story. By Tighe Hopkins. i2mo. Paper, 50 cents ; cloth, 

 75 cents. 



"An extremely racy Irish story, quite separated from everything that savors of the 

 present agitation in Ireland, and one of the best things of the kind for several years." 

 — Springfield Republican. 



A 



SENSITIVE PLANT. A novel by E. and D. Ge- 

 rard, joint authors of " Reata," " The Waters of Hercules," 

 etc. i2mo. Paper, 50 cents ; cloth, 75 cents. 



" An agreeable and amusing love-story, the scene of which is part of the time in a 

 coal-mining district in Scotland, and afterward in Venice, and a prominent character 

 in which is a shrinking girl whose sensitiveness is suggestive of the little mimosa flower 

 which gives title to \h^\>QoV." —Cincinnati Titnes-Siar. 



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ON A LUZ. By Don Juan Valera. Translated by Mrs. 

 Mary J. Serrano. i2mo. Paper, 50 cents ; cloth, $1,00. 



"A triumph of skillful execution as well as of profound conception of modem 

 Spanish character and social life. It is full of the best traditions of Spanish thought, 

 both sacred and secular, of Spanish proverbial wisdom, and of the humor of Cervantes 

 and other lights of the past in the literature of Spain." — Brooklyn Eagle. 



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EPITA XIMENEZ. By Don Juan Valera. Trans- 

 lated by Mrs. Mary J. Serrano. i2nio. Paper, 50 cents ; 

 cloth, $1.00. 



"A very striking and powerful novel." — Boston Transcript. 



" 'One of the jewels of literary Spain' is what a Spanish critic has pronounced the 

 most popular book of recent years in that language, Don Juan Valera's novel 'Pepita 

 Ximenez.' " — TAe Nation. 



y^HE PRIMES AND THEIR NEIGHBORS. 

 J- Ten Tales of Middle Georgia. By Richard Malcolm 



Johnston, author of "Widow Guthrie." i2mo. Paper, 50 



cents ; cloth, $1.25. 



"The best of Southern tales " — Chicago Herald. 



"The thorough excellence of Col. Johnston's work is well known. He was among 

 the first of the successful short-story writers of this country'. The steady increase in 

 his fame is the best indication of the solid appreciation of the reading public. This 

 public will give the new volume the same reception that made ' Widow Guthrie ' one of 

 the most successful of recent novels." — Baltimore American. 



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