Striking for the Right. Price, $1.75.

Here are beautiful sentiments whose price is above gold. The book is bright and witty and wise. Our boys and girls will read it and inwardly digest, and talk it over to their genuine profit, as we can testify by family experience.—Springfield Republican.

Walter Macdonald. Price, $1.50.

Walter Macdonald is deservedly popular. Not a few strange and striking events are wrought into the intensely interesting narrative, and the motive underlying all is high and Christian.

The Wadsworth Boys. Price, $1.50.

It is not sensational, but thoughtful, pleasant, and wholesome; truly exalting whatever is noble, and putting under ban whatever is mean, though seemingly respectable.—Episcopal Register.

Silent Tom. Price, $1.75.

The story is startling, and told with great power. It is a picture of the life of our time, and will hold readers with a magnetism they cannot resist.

The Blount Family. Price, $1.50.

In style it is unusually discriminating and careful, and it abounds with scenes of domestic life, which are so striking, yet so true to human nature that they seem to bring the reader into close companionship with the characters of the narrative.—Youth's Companion.