“Is surpassed by none which she has produced in her twenty-five years of work.”

+N. Y. Times. 11: 691. O. 20, ’06. 220w.

“It Is written in her own pleasant style, with a strain of symbolism which reminds one of Mrs. Whitney.”

+N. Y. Times. 11: 853. D. 8, ’06. 140w.

Burr, Anna Robeson. Jessop bequest. †$1.50. Houghton.

This story intense as it is from the human interest standpoint has a more vital significance in the warfare between a clergyman who permits the cloth to shield dishonesty and a frank youth who knows no religion other than that of high thinking and right living. Bennet Sherrington conniving with the intimidated Reverend Wynchell tampers with death records to throw a fortune into the hands of Wynchell’s granddaughter, Diana Jessop. Anthony Brayne, Sherrington’s secretary, unable to endure his employer’s trickery leaves him and becomes the champion of justice through whom the girl’s dignity and honor are spared, the grandfather’s weakness revealed and Sherrington’s villainy punished.


N. Y. Times. 12: 653. O. 19, ’07. 30w.

Burrage, Champlin. True story of Robert Browne, father of Congregationalism, including various points hitherto unknown or misunderstood, with some account of the development of his religious views. *85c. Oxford.

7–6783.