New Limp-Leather Edition
MARK TWAIN
On Thin Paper
Messrs. Harper & Brothers have just published the last volumes in this new edition of Mark Twain's works. The contents of the volumes is the same, with slight exceptions, as in the Uniform Trade Edition. The price of this uncommonly fine Limp-Leather Edition is: Titles complete in one volume, $1.75 net each; Titles in two volumes, $1.50 net each. This makes a total of $39.00 net. But when sets are bought complete the price is $37.00 net, a saving of $2.00. The titles and prices are:
| The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | net $1.75 |
| The $30,000 Bequest | net 1.75 |
| Innocents Abroad, 2 Vols. Each | net 1.50 |
| Joan of Arc, 2 Vols. Each | net 1.50 |
| The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg | net 1.75 |
| The Gilded Age, 2 Vols. | Each net 1.50 |
| Tom Sawyer Abroad | net 1.75 |
| Life on the Mississippi | net 1.75 |
| A Tramp Abroad, 2 Vols. | Each net 1.50 |
| Christian Science | net 1.75 |
| Sketches New and Old | net 1.75 |
| Prince and Pauper | net 1.75 |
| Pudd'nhead Wilson | net 1.75 |
| Following the Equator, 2 Vols. | Each net 1.50 |
| The Adventures of Tom Sawyer | net 1.75 |
| A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court | net 1.75 |
| American Claimant | net 1.75 |
| Roughing It, 2 Vols. | Each net 1.50 |
COMPLETE WORKS OF MARK TWAIN
| American Claimant. Illustrated. Crown 8vo | $1.75 |
| Christian Science. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Connecticut Yankee. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Following the Equator. Crown 8vo | 2.00 |
| Gilded Age. Crown 8vo | 2.00 |
| Hadleyburg, Etc. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Huckleberry Finn. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Innocents Abroad. Crown 8vo | 2.00 |
| Joan of Arc. Crown 8vo | 2.50 |
| Life on the Mississippi. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Prince and Pauper. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Pudd'nhead Wilson. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Roughing It. Crown 8vo | 2.00 |
| Sketches New and Old. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| The $30,000 Bequest. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Tom Sawyer Abroad. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Tom Sawyer. Crown 8vo | 1.75 |
| Tramp Abroad. Crown 8vo | 2.00 |
| Set of 18 vols. in a box | 33.50 |
| Mark Twain's Speeches. Crown 8vo. | net 2.00 |
| Adam's Diary. Illustrated | 1.00 |
| A Dog's Tale. Illustrated | 1.00 |
| Double-Barrelled Detective Story. Illustrated | 1.50 |
| Editorial Wild Oats. Illustrated | 1.00 |
| Eve's Diary. Illustrated. Post 8vo | 1.00 |
| How to Tell a Story. Post 8vo | 1.50 |
| Is Shakespeare Dead? Post 8vo | net 1.25 |
| Tom Sawyer. Holiday Edition. Illustrated. 8vo | net 2.00 |
| Same in box | net 2.00 |
| The Jumping Frog. Illustrated. Post 8vo | 1.00 |
| A Horse's Tail. Illustrated. Post 8vo | 1.00 |
| Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven. Illustrated. Post 8vo | 1.00 |
| Travels at Home. 12mo | School .50 |
| Travels in History. 12mo | School .50 |
| Seventieth Birthday Souvenir. Illustrated. Paper. 4to | .50 |
| Bibliography of Mark Twain's Works. 8vo | net 5.00 |
FOOTNOTES:
- [[A]] For a full and complete description of the Snake Dance see the writings of Dr. J. W. Fewkes in the Reports of the U. S. Bureau of Ethnology and my own Indians of the Painted Desert Region, published by Little, Brown & Co., Boston, Mass.
- [[B]] This list, with slight variations, is taken from the Cosmopolitan, Vol. XXXVIII, No. 2.
- [[C]] This poem has recently been set to music by Dr. Carlos Troyer, of San Francisco, that is as thrilling and soul-stirring as are the words. Copies may be had by sending sixty cents in postage stamps to Dr. Troyer, 1236 19th Ave., Sunset District, San Francisco, Calif.
- [[D]] This was written prior to the breaking out of the war of 1914-15, when "hell was let loose in Europe." Yet I do not feel inclined to change one single line of what I then wrote. During 1915, I was engaged speaking daily to large audiences at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco—I estimate that I addressed not less than 300,000 people during that time. In many of these addresses I expressed my thoughts about the hideousness, the needlessness, the waste, the devilishness of war, with open frankness, and without a single exception my denunciations of the system of war were received with hearty applause. I refer to this merely as an index as to what I believe is the general thought of all intelligent people on the subject. All except war-mad and war-hypnotized people hate war and desire to see it abolished, and the higher standards of brotherly and amicable conference and equitable adjustment of difficulties take its place. That nations were urged into the European conflict is no proof that they love war. It is rather a proof that they hate war enough to die to make future wars impossible. This, I sincerely hope and confidently expect, will be the tendency of the result, if not an actually accomplished result.
- [[E]] Since these pages were written this farm-school has become an established fact, and is doing excellent and beautiful work for needy children.