His Perpetual Adoration;
—OR,—
THE CHAPLAIN'S OLD DIARY.
BY REV. JOSEPH F. FLINT.
This is an extremely interesting and realistic war story, told in the form of a diary left at his death by a veteran who had been a captain in the Northern army, and with Grant at Vicksburg and Sherman on his march to the sea. Two or three of the great events of the war are told in stirring fashion, but the narrative deals mainly with the inside life of the soldier in war time, and its physical and moral difficulties. A fine love story runs throughout, the hero having plighted his troth before setting out for the front. Being wounded in Georgia, he is cared for in the home of a Southerner, who is at the front with Lee's army, but who has in some way earned the bitter hatred of the wife whom he has left at home. She falls desperately in love with her wounded guest, and to him there comes the sorest temptation of his life. How he comes out of the ordeal must be left to the reader of the story to discover.
Cloth, $1.25; Paper, 50 Cents.
The Arena Publishing Co.,
COPLEY SQUARE, BOSTON, MASS.
THE LAND OF NADA.
BY BONNIE SCOTLAND.