am 



Mixtlire 



—Luxury indeed 

 to the smoker 



—A Flavour and 

 Fragrance of 

 unusual charm 



1 or. S^d. 2 OT. t/1 i lb. tins 2/2 



Of most high-class tobacconists, or send stamps 



to the amount to the sole manufacturers : 



THOMSON & PORTEOUS, EDINBURCH 



DFLICIOUS COFFEE. 



RED 



WHITE 



a BLUE 



For Breakfast & after Dinner. 



In making, use less quantity, it l.eiiig so much sltoni;er than 

 ordinary COFFEE. 



" Drink Fine China Black Tea if you 

 value your nervous system." i 



TE-CELESTIAL 



is the 



FINEST CHINESE BLACK TEA. 



Sold in 31b., lib. and Half-pound 



Canisters, at 2/2 per lb. 



ANY GROCER WII.I, SUl'PI.Y IT. 



Two New 6/= Novels. 



By the author of " The Silent Rancher," etc 



The Rhodesian 



By GERTRUDE PAGE 



In Miss Gertrude Page's new novel " The Rhodesian," she 

 ha^ nnce again laid her plot in Khi.desia — chousing this lime the 

 neighljouriiood ol the wonderfid Zimbabwe ruins, and wreathing 

 around her claraciers beautiful word pictures of the fascinating 

 country. 



A new and original novel 



Mated in Soul 



By G. de VAURIARD 



" Hitherto the story has run on ordinary lines, but now the 

 author shows the reason of it all, which is to propound a theory, 

 suggest a problem — not a nasty one, as such things generally are, 

 Ijut decidedly startling. It is possible, she conends and herein 

 proves, for a mother to so work her will upon her child that he 

 grows into a semblance not of his father in reality, but of the one 

 she would have preferred for him. An ingenious idea and very 

 convincingly expounded. It brings about an unexpected finish, 

 and turns the story out of the commonplace groove into something 

 entirely original." — Duify Chronicle. 



LONDON: HURST & BLACKETT, LTD. 



Three New 6j= Novels. 



By Popular Authors 



The Red Man's Secret 



A romance of the Stage Prairie 



By F. FRANKFORT MOORE 



Mr riankfort Moore's new slory is likely to prove as great 

 novelty in its way as did his early work, " I Forbid the Banns, 

 many ye;jrs ago. It is sufficient to say that the book has hec 

 described by those who have seen it as very bright and Aviiiy, an. 

 something entirely fresh ; in fact, an entirely new note in fiction. 



By the author of " The Strayings of Sandy," etc. 



The Arrival of Antony 



By DOROTHEA CONYERS 



Mrs. Conyers' new book is a spoiting one, on the lines of Ih' 

 " Strayings of Sandy." It tells of Antony, brought up in German) 

 coming over to Ireland to live with his uncles, who are horse 

 dealers, and the adventures which befall him with them. 



The Satanist 



By Mrs HUGH FRASER and 

 J. I. STAHLMANN 



LONDON: HUTCHINSON & CO. 



