The Erckmann-Chatrian Novels, 



THE CONSCRIPT: A Tale of the French War of 



1813. With four full-page Illustrations. One vol. I2mo. Price, in 

 paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00. 



From the Cincinnati Daily Commercial. 



&quot; It is hardly fiction, it is history in the guise of fiction, and that part of history which 

 historians hardly write, concerning the disaster, the ruin, the sickness, the poverty, and the 

 utter misery and suffering which war brings upon the people.&quot; 



WATERLOO: A Story of the Hundred Days. Being a 



Sequel to &quot; The Conscripts 1 With four full-page Illustrations. One 

 vol. I2mo. Price, in paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00. 



From the New York Daily Herald. 



&quot; Written in that charming style of simplicity ivhlck has made the ERCrfMANM- 

 CHATRIAN works popular in every language in which they have been published.&quot; 



THE BLOCKADE OF PHALS8URG. An Episode of the Fail 



of the First French Empire. With four full-page Illustrations and a 

 Portrait of the authors. One vol. I2mo. Price, in paper, 50 cents ; 

 cloth, $1.00. 



From the Philadelphia Daily Inquirer, 



&quot;Not only are they interesting historically, but intrinsically a pleasant, well-constructed 

 plot, serving in each case to connect the great events which they so graphically treat, and 

 the style being as vigorous and charming as it is pure and refreshing.&quot; 



INVASION OF FRANCE IN 1814. with the Night Mar* 



past Phalsburg. With a Memoir of the Authors. With four full-page 

 Illustrations. One vol. I2mo. Price, in paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.00. 



From the New York Evening Mail. 



&quot; All their novels are noted for the same admirable qualities, simple and effective realism 

 of plot, incident, and language, and a disclosure of the horrid individual aspects of war. 

 They are absolutely perfect of their kind.&quot; 



MADAME THERESE; or, The Volunteers 92. 



four full-page Illustrations. One vol. I2mo. Price, in paper, 50 cents ; 

 cloth, $1.00. 



From the Boston Commonwealth. 



&quot; It is a boy s story that is, supposed to be written by a boy and has all the freshness, 

 the unconscious simplicity and naivete which the imagined authorship should imply ; while 

 nothing more graphic, more clearly and vividly pictorial, has been brought before the public 

 for many a day.&quot; 



Any or all of the above volumes sent, post-paid, upon receipt of the price by the 

 publishers, 



SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO., 



(Successors to CHARLES SCRIBNER & Co.), 



654 Broadway, New York. 



