Alphabetical Index


THE COUNTRY HOME LIBRARY

VOL. I

The Country Home

VOL. II

The Orchard and Fruit

Garden

VOL. III

The Flower Garden

UNIFORM BINDING

3 Vols. Postpaid, $5.00, Net, $4.50


By Arthur Stanwood Pier

Author of “The Pedagogues”

THE TRIUMPH

The Triumph has fire and pathos and romance and exhilarating humor. It is a capital story that will keep a reader’s interest from the first appearance of its hero, the young doctor Neal Robeson, to his final triumph—his triumph over himself and over the lawless, turbulent oil-drillers, his success in his profession and in his love affair. It displays a delightful appreciation of the essential points of typical American characters, a happy outlook on every-day life, a vigorous story-telling ability working in material that is thrilling in interest, in a setting that is picturesque and unusual. The action takes place in a little western Pennsylvania village at the time of the oil fever, and a better situation can scarcely be found. Mr. Pier’s account of the fight between the outraged villagers and the oil-drillers around a roaring, blazing gas well is a masterpiece of story telling.

Illustrations by W. D. Stevens

Cloth 12mo $1.50

McClure, Phillips & Co.


The Country Home Library

THE COUNTRY HOME

By E. P. Powell. Vol. 1

A practical book telling how to establish yourself in the country and get the most profit and comfort out of your homestead. There are chapters on selecting a site for the home, building the house, laying out of the grounds, the planting of gardens, drainage for the water supply, etc., etc. It is brimful of just the information anyone planning life in the country would want.

Illustrated. Postpaid, $1.62; net, $1.50

THE ORCHARD AND FRUIT GARDEN

By E. P. Powell. Vol. 2

A volume in a popular practical vein on the selection and cultivation of fruit-bearing trees, bushes and vines. It covers all fruits that will grow in this country. It will be invaluable to any country dweller. The author is one of New York’s prize fruit-growers.

Fully illustrated. Postpaid, $1.62; net, $1.50.

THE FLOWER GARDEN

By Ida D. Bennett. Vol. 3

A complete hand-book of garden lore by a practical gardening woman covering all points about the selection of the site, laying out of the garden, choosing of flowers and the cultivation and care of them.

Postpaid, $2.17; net, $2.00.

McClure, Phillips & Co., New York.


By M. Imlay Taylor

Author of “The House of the Wizard”

THE REBELLION OF THE PRINCESS

A book that is a story, and never loses the quick, on-rushing, inevitable quality of a story from the first page to the last. Stirring, exciting, romantic, satisfying all the essential requirements of a novel. The scene is laid in Moscow at the time of the election of Peter the Great, when the intrigues of rival parties overturned the existing government, and the meeting of the National Guard made the city the scene of a hideous riot. It resembles in some points Miss Taylor’s successful first story, “On the Red Staircase,” especially in the date, the principal scenes and the fact that the hero is a French nobleman.

Cloth, 12mo $1.50

McClure, Phillips & Co.


By Edward W. Townsend

Author of “Chimmie Fadden,” “Days Like These,” etc.

LEES AND LEAVEN

No novel of New York City has ever portrayed so faithfully or so vividly our new world Gotham—the seething, rushing New York of to-day, to which all the world looks with such curious interest. Mr. Townsend, gives us not a picture, but the bustling, nerve-racking pageant itself. The titan struggles in the world of finance, the huge hoaxes in sensational newspaperdom, the gay life of the theatre, opera, and restaurant, and then the calmer and comforting domestic scenes of wholesome living, pass, as actualities, before our very eyes. In this turbulent maelstrom of ambition, he finds room for love and romance also.

There is a bountiful array of characters, admirably drawn, and especially delightful are the two emotional and excitable lovers, young Bannister and Gertrude Carr. The book is unlike Mr. Townsend’s “Chimmie Fadden” in everything but its intimate knowledge of New York life.

Cloth, 12mo $1.50

McClure, Phillips & Co.


By S. R. Crockett

Author of “The Banner of Blue,” “The Firebrand”

FLOWER O’ THE CORN

Mr. Crockett has made an interesting novel of romance and intrigue. He has chosen a little town in the south of France, high up in the mountains, as the scene for his drama. The plot deals with a group of Calvinists who have been driven from Belgium into southern France, where they are besieged in their mountain fastness by the French troops. A number of historical characters figure in the book, among them Madame de Maintenon.

“Flower o’ the Corn” is probably one of Mr. Crockett’s most delightful women characters. The book is notable for its fine descriptions.

Cloth, 12mo $1.50

McClure, Phillips & Co.


By Edith Wyatt

Author of “Every One His Own Way”

TRUE LOVE

A Comedy of the Affections

Here commonplace, every-day, ordinary people tread the boards. The characters whom Miss Wyatt presents are not geniuses, or heroes, or heroines of romance, but commonplace persons with commonplace tricks and commonplace manners and emotions. They do romantic things without a sense of romance in them, but weave their commonplace doings into a story of great human interest that the reader will find far from commonplace. The vein of humorous satire, keen, subtle and refined, permeating the story and the characterization, sets this work of Miss Wyatt’s in a class by itself.

Cloth, 12mo $1.50

McClure, Phillips & Co.