Hezekiah Butterworth, in the Boston Transcript, says of "No Gentlemen" that the plot is well managed, and the story brightly told.
"No Gentlemen."
"The story opens in Boston, and concerns New England life. The characters, relative to the soil, are very clearly drawn, and there is a great deal of originality in the plot and treatment of the story."—Boston Courier.
"It is a bright narrative of the summering of a half-dozen Boston girls just out of school, at Red Farm, in Pineland, with Miss Hopeful Bounce, who advertises for summer boarders, but 'No Gentlemen.' In order to make a novel, of course this prohibition must be broken down, and as the girls, particularly the heroine and her special friend, are pleasant company, the story is as readable as if it were a 'No Name,' as it is in fact."—Springfield Republican.
"No Gentlemen."
Is issued in elegant style, being printed on fine tinted paper, making a book of 348 pages, bound in fine cloth, with unique side stamp in black and gold, and sold at the low price of $1.00, by the publishers.
HENRY A. SUMNER & COMPANY,
205 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO
AN INSTANTANEOUS SUCCESS.