Mrs. Rowe writes of the country life, character and traditions, and dialect with the sure touch of the observer at first hand.—Providence Journal.

14. UP AND DOWN THE SANDS OF GOLD. By Mary Devereux.

The story is one of sunshine and shade, of smiles and tears.—Boston Transcript.

15. THE KING'S HENCHMAN. A Chronicle of the Sixteenth Century. By William Henry Johnson.

Mr. Johnson has caught the spirit of the period, and has painted in Henry of Navarre a truthful and memorable historical portrait.—The Mail and Express, New York.

16. WHEN THE GATES LIFT UP THEIR HEADS. A Story of the South in the Seventies. By Payne Erskine.

A very remarkable story of the South after the war.—Boston Budget.

17. A ROSE OF NORMANDY. By William R. A. Wilson.

Stirs the blood, warms the heart, and holds the interest in a firm grip from beginning to end.—Chicago Tribune.

18. BARBARA, A WOMAN OF THE WEST. By John H. Whitson.