THE CROSSING 



By WINSTON CHURCHILL 

 Author of " Richard Carvel," " The Crisis," etc, 



ILLUSTRATED IN COLORS 

 Cloth Z2mo $i-5<> 



*Mr. Churchill's work, for one reason or another, always commands the attention of * 

 -.arge reading public." The Criterion. 



" ' The Crossing ' is a thoroughly interesting book, packed with exciting adventure 

 and sentimental incident, yet faithful to historical fact both in detail and in spirit." 



The Dial. 



" Mr. Churchill's romance fills in a gap which history has been unable to span, that 

 gives life and color, even the very soul, to events which otherwise treated would be cold 

 and dark and inanimate." Mr. HORACE R. HUDSON in the San Francisco Chronicle, 



WHOSOEVER SHALL OFFEND 



By F. MARION CRAWFORD 

 Author of " The Heart of Rome," " Saracinesca," " Via Crucis," etc, 



ILLUSTRATED BY HORACE T. CARPENTER 

 Cloth i2mo $1.50 



"Not since George Eliot's ' Romqla* brought her to her foreordained place among lit- 

 erary immortals has there appeared in English fiction a character at once so strong and 

 sensitive, so entirely and consistently human, so urgent and compelling in its appeal to 

 sustained, sympathetic interest." Philadelphia North American. 



" She is the most womanly woman Mr. Crawford has given us in many a day, and after 

 her another peasant, bloody, brooding Ercole, is most alive." Boston Daily Advertiser. 



THE QUEST OF JOHN CHAPMAN 



THE STORY OF A FORGOTTEN HERO 



By NEWELL D WIGHT HILLIS, D.D. 

 Author of " The Influence of Christ in Modern Life," etc. 



Cloth i2mo $1.50 



" In this story Mr. Hillis has woven the life of the Middle West, the heroism and holfc 

 ness of those descendants of the New England Puritans who emigrated still further into 

 the wilderness. The story is of great spiritual significance, and yet of the earth, earthy 

 hence its strength and vitality." Montreal Daily Star. 



" No practised technist takes hold of his reader's interest with a prompter or surer grip 

 than does this author at the very outset. Nowhere else in his book does he demonstrate 

 his fitness for the work of fiction better than in the purely creative work. The style leaves 

 little to be desired, for Dr. Hillis is, as we all know, a stylist. What perhaps is a surprise 

 and also a pleasure, is the dramatic power revealed by the author. The book is forceful, 

 its poetic opportunities are never missed, it is vivid and striking in its scenes, and pathos 

 is a powerful element in the work." Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 



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64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York 



