THE PURPLE LAND
INTRODUCED BY
THEODORE ROOSEVELT

James M. Barrie says: "It is one of the choicest things of our latter day literature."

Galsworthy says: "Hudson in that romantic piece of realism, 'The Purple Land,' has a supreme gift of disclosing not only the thing he sees, but the spirit of his vision. Without apparent effort he takes you with him into a rare, free, natural world, and always you are refreshed, stimulated, enlarged, by going there. A very great writer, and—to my thinking—the most valuable our Age possesses."

Net, $1.50

A SHEPHERD'S LIFE

In "A Shepherd's Life" Hudson takes us into a quaint old-fashioned world, that of the shepherds of the bleak South Downs of England, where in sheltered folds of the naked plains nestle placid little old-world villages, shaded by immemorial trees and surrounded by quiet, forgotten streams.

Net, $2.50

A CRYSTAL AGE
WITH A CRITICAL APPRECIATION BY
CLIFFORD SMYTH, Litt.D.

The N. Y. Evening Post says, "It has the zeal of the open air, kinship with beauty of all sorts, and a relieving glint of humor."

Net, $1.50