Page:Anthony Hope - Rupert of Hentzau.djvu/408

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Arrowsmith's 2/- Series.

Crown 8vo. Boards.


Dead Men's Dollars. By MAY CROMMELIN.
Author of "Brown Eyes."

"The tale is told with an intensity of feeling."—Daily Chronicle.

"A very bright and readable novel, full of incident and 'go.'"—Daily News.


On the Wrong Tack. By A. E. WILTON.

"Is a smartly written story, the conversations are well managed and full of "uprightliness, and the plot is interesting."—Literary World.


The Truth about Clement Ker. Edited by GEORG FLEMING.

"Clement Ker is by far the most exciting of the volumes lying before us."—Melbourne Argus.

"There is strong writing in Clement Ker."—Saturday Review.


Elizabeth Morley. By KATHARINE S. MACQUOID.
Authoress of "Patty," "At the Red Glove," &c.

"Some charming pictures of life in out-of-the-way foreign places give additional attraction to an interesting and altogether sympathetic story."—Graphic.


Francis and Prances; or, An unexplainable Phenomenon.

"The idea on which it is founded is, so far as our experience goes, quite unique."—Western Figaro.

"A most readable and enjoyable story."—The Bookseller


Lai. By LORIN LATHROP and ANNIE WAKEMAN.

"It is a bright and original tale, having its scene in San Francisco and elsewhere in America."—Scotsman.


Monsignor, a Novel. By Mrs. COMPTON-READE.
Author of "Rose and Rue," "Sidonie," &c.

"Is decidedly out of the common run."—Bristol Times and Mirror.

"There is a captivating priest in it who has reduced the art of 'lady-killing" to quite a fine art. He is handsome and vain, and the reader pursues him, feeling sure that he will turn out a scamp. But our author is not to be taken in that way, and the end of the flirting priest is a surprise."—Publishers' Circular.


Maria and I. By EDGAR LEE.
Author of "Pharaoh's Daughter," &c.

Bristol : J. W. Arrowsmith, 11 Quay Street.
London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamiltom, Kent & Co. Limited.