Confessions of a Society Man.

"The book is interesting throughout because of the rapid and continual shifting of incidents which is its chief characteristic."—Philadelphia Bulletin.

"The love-making in it is charming. It is interesting up to the very end."—Nashville American.

A Tramp Actor. By Elliot Barnes.

"There are good things in the book, and it is endowed with an excellent moral."—N. Y. Sun.

Forty Tears on the Rail. By C. B. George.

"The book is destined to have a very extended reading, as its pages are not only interesting, but instructive."—Keokuk Democrat.

The Friend to the Widow. By Maja Spencer.

"This is a love-story pure and simple, but just one of those stories that form most delightful reading, free from heroics and wild sensations."—Chicago Inter-Ocean.

Why Was It? By Lewis Benjamin.

"The chief charm of the book lies in the simple manner of telling the story, and in the fact that its basis and its incidents are precisely such as may be picked up almost anywhere, at any time."—Nashville American.