THE ODD NUMBER SERIES

THE GULISTAN: Being the Rose-Garden of Shaikh Sa'di. Translated by Sir Edwin Arnold.

THE NEW GOD. By Richard Voss. Translated by Mary A. Robinson.

THE GREEN BOOK. By Maurus Jókai. Translated by Mrs. Waugh.

BLACK DIAMONDS. By Maurus Jókai. Translated by Frances A. Gerard.

DOÑA PERFECTA. By B. Pérez Galdós. Translated by Mary J. Serrano.

PARISIAN POINTS OF VIEW. By Ludovic Halévy. Translated by E. V. B. Matthews.

DAME CARE. By Hermann Sudermann. Translated by Bertha Overbeck.

TALES OF TWO COUNTRIES. By Alexander Kielland. Translated by William Archer.

TEN TALES BY FRANÇOIS COPPÉE. Translated by Walter Learned. Illustrated.

MODERN GHOSTS. By Guy de Maupassant and others. Translated.

THE HOUSE BY THE MEDLAR-TREE. By Giovanni Veroa. Translated by Mary A. Craig.

PASTELS IN PROSE. Translated by Stuart Merrill. Illustrated by H. W. McVickar.

MARÍA: A South American Romance. By Jorge Isaacs. Translated by Rollo Ogden.

THE ODD NUMBER. Tales by Guy de Maupassant. Translated by Jonathan Sturges.


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 RUTH McENERY STUART

MORIAH'S MOURNING, and Other Half-Hour Sketches. Illustrated.

IN SIMPKINSVILLE. Character Tales. Illustrated.

SOLOMON CROW'S CHRISTMAS POCKETS, and Other Tales. Illustrated.

CARLOTTA'S INTENDED, and Other Tales. Illustrated.

A GOLDEN WEDDING, and Other Tales. Illustrated.

THE STORY OF BABETTE: A Little Creole Girl.

Mrs. Stuart is one of some half-dozen American writers who are doing the best that is being done for English literature at the present time. Her range of dialect is extraordinary; but, after all, it is not the dialect that constitutes the chief value of her work. That will be found in its genuineness, lighted up as it is by superior intelligence and imagination and delightful humor.—Chicago Tribune.

Mrs. Stuart is a genuine humorist.—N. Y. Mail and Express.

Few surpass Mrs. Stuart in dialect studies of negro life and character.—Detroit Free Press.


By A. CONAN DOYLE

THE REFUGEES. A Tale of Two Continents. Illustrated.

THE WHITE COMPANY. Illustrated.

MICAH CLARKE. Illustrated.

THE ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES. Illustrated.

Contents: A Scandal in Bohemia, The Red-headed League, A Case of Identity, The Boscombe Valley Mystery, The Five Orange Pips, The Man with the Twisted Lip, The Blue Carbuncle, The Speckled Band, The Engineer's Thumb, The Noble Bachelor, The Beryl Coronet, The Copper Beeches.

MEMOIRS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES. Illustrated.

Contents: Silver Blaze, The Yellow Face, The Stock-Broker's Clerk, The "Gloria Scott," The Musgrave Ritual, The Reigate Puzzle, The Crooked Man, The Resident Patient, The Greek Interpreter, The Navy Treaty, The Final Problem.

THE PARASITE. A story. Illustrated.

THE GREAT SHADOW.


BY LILIAN BELL