THE END


BY FREDERIC REMINGTON

SUNDOWN LEFLARE.

Short Stories. Illustrations by the Author.

Sundown Leflare is not idealized in Mr. Remington's handling of him. He is presented just as he is, with his good-humor and shrewdness and indomitable pluck, and also with all his superstition and his knavery. But he is a very realistic, very human character, and one whom we would see and read more of hereafter.—Boston Journal.

CROOKED TRAILS.

Illustrated by the Author.

Mr. Remington as author and artist presents a perfect combination.—Philadelphia Telegraph.

Picture and text go to form a whole which the reader could not well grasp were it not for the supplementary quality of each in its bearing upon the other.—Albany Journal.

PONY TRACKS.

Illustrated by the Author.

This is a spicy account of real experiences among Indians and cowboys on the plains and in the mountains, and will be read with a great deal of interest by all who are fond of an adventurous life. No better illustrated book of frontier adventure has been published.—Boston Journal.


BY RICHARD HARDING DAVIS

A YEAR FROM A REPORTER'S NOTE-BOOK. Illustrated by R. Caton Woodville, T. de Thulstrup, and Frederic Remington, and from Photographs taken by the Author.

THREE GRINGOS IN VENEZUELA AND CENTRAL AMERICA. Illustrated.

ABOUT PARIS. Illustrated by C. D. GIBSON.

THE PRINCESS ALINE. Illustrated by C. D. Gibson.

THE EXILES, AND OTHER STORIES. Illustrated.

VAN BIBBER, AND OTHERS. Illustrated by C. D. Gibson

THE WEST FROM A CAR-WINDOW. Illustrated by Frederic Remington.

OUR ENGLISH COUSINS. Illustrated.

THE RULERS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN. Illustrated.

Mr. Davis has eyes to see, is not a bit afraid to tell what he sees, and is essentially good natured.... Mr. Davis's faculty of appreciation and enjoyment is fresh and strong: he makes vivid pictures.—Outlook, N. Y.

Richard Harding Davis never writes a short story that he does not prove himself a master of the art.—Chicago Times.


BY JOHN FOX, Jr.

A MOUNTAIN EUROPA.

With Portrait.

The story is well worth careful reading for its literary art and its truth to a phase of little-known American life.—Omaha Bee.

THE KENTUCKIANS.

A Novel. Illustrated by W. T. Smedley.

This, Mr. Fox's first long story, sets him well in view, and distinguishes him as at once original and sound. He takes the right view of the story-writer's function and the wholesale view of what the art of fiction can rightfully attempt.—Independent, N. Y.