PIP. By Ian Hay (Capt. Ian Hay Beith), Author of "The First Hundred Thousand."

A story of English school boys, their pleasures and pains, their sports and escapades, that might be called a modern "Tom Brown," but a Tom Brown brimming with laughter and with the slang of the day.

MISS MILLION'S MAID. By Berta Ruck.

Another ingenious Berta Ruck plot in which a high-spirited girl of twenty-three, well-bred, but penniless, flies in the face of tradition, becoming a maid of a newly-made heiress. So entangled grow the love affairs of mistress and maid that the reader has a merry time with the author in steering the girls on the road to happiness.

ENOCH CRANE. By F. Hopkinson and F. Berkeley Smith.

A story of New York specially. The scene is Waverly Place, in one of the characteristic old houses of that section. In this respect the story is very similar to "Peter," Mr. Smith's most popular book.

PARTNERS OF THE NIGHT. By Leroy Scott.

Although a detective story, it is one altogether different from those of the ordinary detective story writer. It is a story of the plain-clothes men and criminals of New York, with a splendid romance.

For sale by all booksellers.

A. L. BURT COMPANY, 114-120 East 23rd Street, New York