10 Mr. Edward A mold's New Books. 



DAYS OF MY YEARS. 



By Sir MELVILLE MACNAGHTEN, C.B. 



With Portrait. One Volume. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net, 



" A great debt is due to Mr. Arnold, for Sir Melville was at one time 

 adamant in his refusal to write his memoirs, and if he had persisted in his 

 decision many excellent things would have been lost to us." — Weekly Dispatch. 



" Those who imagine that only French police officials can write good books 

 about their work will be surprised at the readableness of Sir Melville's 

 volume." — Globe. 



" A varied and most human hook. "^Observer. 



" A fascinating volume, and written with a grace and a gay gentleness that 

 make, as it were, a fragrant border to the garden of guilt in which the 

 debonair ' detective's ' feats were accomplished." — Heferee. 



" Sir Melville's book is engrossing." — Sketch. 



" Sir Melville MacNaghten strikes us as a man who has enjoyed his life's 

 work extremely well, and his readers, if only they have the normal appetite 

 for crime, will enjoy his book." — Saturday Revieiv. 



" As full of human interest as it is easy and colloquial in its style." — Daily 

 Graphic. 



THE COMPLETE SPORTSMAN. 



By HARRY GRAHAM, 



Author of "The Perfect Gentlkman," "Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless 



HoiMES," ETC. 



Illustrated by Lewis Baumer. 



One Volume. Crown Svo. 6s, 



"For a good laugh let me recommend 'The Complete Sportsman.' 

 Captain Harry Graham has conferred a blessing upon hundreds of new 

 readers beside those many thousands who have already stood up to give him 

 a cheer with ' The Perfect Gentleman ' held tightly in their hands. The 

 sportsman who can get on without it will be dreary company." — Tatler, 



"The better the sportsman, and the more he knows about game of all 

 kinds, the more will he enjoy this delicious caricature of sporting reminis- 

 cences." — Queen. 



