+ + —Ath. 1905, 2: 312. S. 2. 160w.

“Text and illustrations have a common facility and a common lack of seriousness which is welcome, or the reverse, according to one’s point of view.”

+ —Nation. 81: 279. O. ‘05. 240w.
N. Y. Times. 10: 501. Jl. 29, ‘05. 260w.

Meredith, Katharine Mary Cheever (Johanna Staats). Wing of love. [†]$1. McClure.

“A charming child in this book, and a nice young journalist chap, her staunch friend from the day she and her mother find their way to the top floor of the New York lodging house where he and two other bachelors have their abode. This friendship is quite disinterested, the mother receiving only courteous attentions from him, his heart being in another’s keeping—facts concerning which subsequently develop very prettily to connect them with his romance.”—Outlook.

“The chief fault in its development lies in the fact that, instead of making it a short story, she has padded her little tale until it has lost much of its charm.”

— +N. Y. Times. 10: 380 Je. 10. ‘05. 310w.
+Outlook. 80: 144. My. 13, ‘05. 80w.

Merington, Marguerite. Cranford: a play. $1.25. Fox.

A comedy in three acts made from Mrs. Gaskell’s well-known story of the same name. The full charm of the story is retained in the dramatization.

[*] “Written with Miss Merington’s usual sprightliness.”