This page has been validated.
GOOD FICTION
THE BIG FELLOW
FREDERICK PALMER'S
- A big American novel with a big American for its hero, one of the fine, simple, magnetic big stories that everybody reads and that live for years. Illustrated. $1.50.
THE STATUE
PHILLPOTTS and BENNETT'S
- Scene, England. Period, to-day. A fine specimen of the diplomatic novel, big in conception, powerful in plot and action, vigorously drawn. Illustrated. $1.50.
THE MAN WITHOUT A HEAD
TYLER de SAIX'S
- One of the most exciting detective stories since "Sherlock Holmes." Scene is London, hero a new Scotland Yard man who has to "make good," and does it. $1.50.
THE SIXTH SPEED
E. J. RATH'S
- "Just an amazing yarn, set forth with so much vim and in so confident a vein that, though not really plausible, it is richly amusing."—New York Times. $1.50.
THE STEM of the CRIMSON DAHLIA
JAMES LOCKE'S
- "One doesn't put it down after beginning it even though you know you must get up early to-morrow and it is now two o'clock."—New York Times Saturday Review. Illustrated. $1.50.
THE METROPOLIS
UPTON SINCLAIR'S
- H. G. Wells writes of it: "'The Metropolis' is great. The author has all Zola's power over massed detail."
- "It stands in a class by itself. It is a searchlight."—San Francisco Examiner.