II. Yale Yarns.—By J. S. Wood. Fifth edition.
Illustrated. 12° $1.00
“This delightful little book will be read with intense interest by all Yale men.”—New Haven Eve. Leader.
“The Yale atmosphere is wonderfully reproduced in some of the sketches, and very realistic pictures are drawn, particularly of the old ‘fence’ and the ‘old brick row.’”—Boston Times.
“College days are regarded by most educated men as the cream of their lives, sweet with excellent flavor. They are not dull and tame even, to the most devoted student, and this is a volume filled with the pure cream of such existence, and many ‘a college joke to cure the dumps’ is given. It is a bright, realistic picture of college life, told in an easy conversational, or descriptive style, and cannot fail to genuinely interest the reader who has the slightest appreciation of humor. The volume is illustrated and is just the book for an idle or a lonely hour.”—Los Angeles Times.
The Babe, B.A. The Uneventful History of a
Young Gentleman in Cambridge University. By
Edward F. Benson, author of “Dodo,” etc.
Illustrated. 12° $1.00
“The story tells of the every-day life of a young man called the Babe.... Cleverly written and one of the best this author has written.”—Leader, New Haven.
A Princetonian. A Story of Undergraduate Life at
the College of New Jersey. By James Barnes.
Illustrated. 12° $1.25
“Mr. Barnes is a loyal son of the College of New Jersey, with the cleverness and zeal to write this story of undergraduate life in the college, following his successful use of the pen in earlier books, For King and Country, Midshipman Farragut, etc.... There is enough of fiction in the story to give true liveliness to its fact.... Mr. Barnes’s literary style is humorous and vivid.”—Boston Transcript.