Page:The Stolen Bacillus.djvu/310

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18
Macmillan and Co.'s

THE NOVELS OF

ROSA N. CAREY

Over Half-a-Million of these works have been printed.

47th Thousand.
NELLIE'S MEMORIES.

STANDARD.– " Miss Carey has the gift of writing naturally and simply, her pathos is true and unforced, and her conversations are sprightly and sharp."

33rd Thousand.
WEE WIFIE.

LADY.– " Miss Carey's novels are always welcome ; they are out of the common run, immaculately pure, and very high in tone."

29th Thousand.
BARBARA HEATHCOTE'S TRIAL.

DAILY TELEGRAPH.– " A novel ot a sort which it would be a real loss to miss."

25th Thousand.
ROBERT ORD'S ATONEMENT.

STANDARD.– " Robert Ord's Atonement is a delightful book, very quiet as to its story, but very strong in character, and instinct with that delicate pathos which is the salient point of all the writings of this author."

32nd Thousand.
WOOED AND MARRIED.

STANDARD.– "There is plenty of romance in the heroine's life. But it would not be fair to tell our readers wherein that romance consists or how it ends. Let them read the book for themselves. We will undertake to promise that they will like it."

24th Thousand.
HERIOT'S CHOICE.

MORNING POST.– " Deserves to be extensively known and read. . . . Will doubt, less find as many admirers as readers."

29th Thousand.
QUEENIE'S WHIM.

GUARDIAN.– "A thoroughly good and wholesome story."

35th Thousand.
NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS.

PALL MALL GAZETTE.– " Like all the other stories we have had from the same gifted pen, this volume, Not Like Other Girls, takes a sane and healthy view of life and its concerns.... It is an excellent story to put in the hands of girls."
NEW YORK HOME JOURNAL.– " One of the sweetest, daintiest, and most interesting of the season's publications."

24th Thousand.
MARY ST. JOHN.

JOHN BULL.– " The story is a simple one, but told with much grace and unaffected pathos."

23rd Thousand.
FOR LILIAS.

VANITY FAIR.– " A simple, earnest, and withal very interesting story ; well conceived, carefully worked out, and sympathetically told."

28th Thousand.
UNCLE MAX.

LADY.– " So intrinsically good that the world of novel-readers ought to be genuinely grateful."