MARY S. WATTS'S 



Nathan Burke cioth, $ijo 



"The reader can put the book down at any stage without regret 

 and take it up later with the anticipation of pleasure which will 

 be gratified. That is a good quality in a book of 634 closely 

 printed pages."— S'ww. 



"Is an exquisitely delightful piece of literature of a sort that 

 isn't common nowadays. ... A fine, wholesome, and inter- 

 esting book that is a real novel.'' — N'ezv York Herald. 



"In 'Nathan Burke,' Mrs. Watts has produced a powerful 

 book, true to American ideals, which are artistically embodied 

 in a narrative full of vital human interest and bearing the 

 stamp of literary quality that holds out to the author a brilliant 

 future in the world of letters." — Public Ledger. 



WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE'S 



A Certain Rich Man cicth, $iJo net 



*'An American novel, home-grown in home soil, vital with 

 homely American Motives, and fragrant with homely Ameri- 

 can memories, Mr. White has certainly achieved." 



— New York Times. 



Dr. Washington Gladden considered this book of sufficient im- 

 portance to take it and the text from which the title was drawn 

 as his subject for an entire sermon, in the course of which he 

 said: "In its ethical and social significance it is the most im- 

 portant piece of fiction that has lately appeared in America, I 

 do not think that a more trenchant word has been spoken to 

 this nation since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.' And it is profoundly 

 to be hoped that this book may do for the prevailing Mammon- 

 ism what 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' did for slaverj-." 



PUBLISHED BY 



THE M ACM ILL AX COMPANY 



64-66 Fifth Avenae, New York 



