1 The Man in Black. By Stanley J. Weyman.
2 Ideala. By the author of "The Heavenly Twins."
3 The Victim of His Clothes. By Fielding and Burton.
4 Her First Adventure. By E. G. Roe.
5 A Pretty Governess. By Mrs. May Agnes Fleming.
6 Miss or Mrs.? By Wilkie Collins.
7 A Double Life. By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
8 The Man Who Vanished. By Fergus W. Hume.
9 Patience Pettigrew's Perplexities. By Clara Augusta.
10 Mystery No. 13. By Helen B. Mathers.
11 Forging the Fetters. By Mrs. Alexander.
12 He Went for a Soldier. By John Strange Winter.
13 Anne. By Mrs. Henry Wood.
14 Down in the World. By Florence Warden.
15 The Umbrella Mender. By Beatrice Harraden.
16 A Grass Widow. By Mrs. M. A. Holmes.
17 Kreutzer Sonata. By Count Leo Tolstoi.
18 Life in a Country Manse. By J. M. Barrie.
19 Derrick Vaughan. By Edna Lyall.
20 The Haunted Chamber. By "The Duchess."
21 A Study in Scarlet. By A. Conan Doyle.
22 The Cricket on the Hearth. By Charles Dickens.
23 A Yellow Mask. By Wilkie Collins.
24 The Shadow of a Sin. By the author of "Dora Thorne."
25 The Squire's Darling. By the author of "Dora Thorne."
26 Maid, Wife or Widow. By Mrs. Alexander.
27 The Shattered Idol. By the author of "Dora Thorne."
28 The Duchess. By "The Duchess."
29 Lady Grace. By Mrs. Henry Wood.
30 A Wicked Girl. By Mary Cecil Hay.
31 A Love Match. By Mrs. Alexander.
32 Wedded and Parted. By the author of "Dora Thorne."
NEW DETECTIVE STORIES. —Paper covers, price 25 cents each. We desire to announce the following New Detective Stories:
Detective Johnson of New Orleans. A Tale of Love and Crime. By Harry Irving Hancock. It contains 250 pages.
Another good Detective Story is: Harry Blount, the Detective; or, The Martin Mystery Solved. By T. J. Flanagan. This contains 225 pages.
HOW TO MANAGE A HUSBAND. —A unique Book, a book that will interest every Married Woman, every Married Man, every Young Maiden, every Young Man, every Old Maid, every Old Bachelor, and everybody else. It gives the Experiences of 100 Women.
We desire to call your attention to the new book just issued, entitled "How to Manage a Husband," written by one hundred different women, each one giving their experiences on this very important question.
If you are married or ever expect to be, you ought to get this book. If you are a husband you ought to buy it to see how other men are managed by their wives; if you are a wife you can doubtless get hints that you have never thought of before on how to manage your husband. Some experiences are amusing, some contain a good deal of common sense. Mailed to any address for 25 cents.
WHY I AM WHAT I AM.—A book you should read. Why I am a Baptist. By Rev. R. S. MacArthur, D.D. Why I am a Presbyterian. By Rev. Charles Seymour Robinson, D.D. Why I am a Methodist. By Rev. G. H. McGrew. Why I am an Episcopalian. By Rev. William R. Huntington, D.D. Why I am a Catholic. By Rev. Walter Elliott, C.S.P. Why I am a Congregationalist. By Rev. Lyman Abbott, D.D. Why I am a Universalist. By Rev. Charles H. Eaton. Why I am a New-Churchman. By Rev. S. S. Seward. Why I am a Unitarian. By Rev. John White Chadwick. Why I am a Jew. By Rev. Dr. Gustav Gottheil. Why I am Lutheran. By Rev. G. F. Krotel, D.D. Why I am a Friend. By John J. Cornell. Why I am a Disciple. By Rev. B. B. Tyler. Why I am a Seventh-Day Baptist. By Rev. A. H. Lewis. Crumbling Creeds. By Col. Robert G. Ingersoll.
The Christian Union says of it: In Why I Am What I Am fourteen representatives of different religious denominations give the reasons for their peculiar faith. The representative men have been well chosen; and the denominations include the Roman Catholic at one extreme and the Jew at the other. We know of no volume which in so compact a form affords so good material for a study of denominational peculiarities, their nature and the reasons for them.