Barbarians - Part 49
Library

Part 49

*Dark Star, The*

*Who Goes There?*

*Younger Set, The*

*j.a.ponette*

*Streets of Ascalon*

A. L. BURT COMPANY Publishers,--New York

THE NEWEST BOOKS

IN POPULAR REPRINT FICTION

Only Books of Superior Merit and Popularity are Published in this List

*TARZAN AND THE JEWELS OF OPAR.* By Edgar Rice Burroughs.

The Tarzan books need no introduction. Thousands are waiting for this volume, being further adventures of TARZAN OF THE APES, and volume five of the series.

*LONG LIVE THE KING.* By Mary Roberts Rinehart.

This is a story of love, intrigue and adventure in a European court. In this story Mrs. Rinehart combines mystery, heart interest, and excitement of her past successes into a story that will be hailed as the most interesting of all her stories.

*WE CAN'T HAVE EVERYTHING.* By Rupert Hughes.

A novel of metropolitan life, of a girl who had never had anything and of a man who had always had everything, and of the manner in which his richness and her poverty colored each other, and the lives of many other persons as well.

*BARBARIANS.* By Robert W. Chambers.

Brave, reckless, idealistic chaps--careless of peril, unafraid of death--who deliberately sought danger and the venturesome life as found during the war, over there. The adventures will hold the reader breathless and the romance will delight.

*THE FORFEIT.* By Ridgwell Cullum.

A ranch story of Montana which centers around the fact that the leader of the "Lightfoot Rustlers" and the likeable but devil-may-care brother of the hero are one and the same. Cullum is a "big" western story writer.

*UNDER HANDICAP.* By Jackson Gregory.

Here is a story which is a strong picture of the changing of a western desert into a land of usefulness, by irrigation. The story has a pleasing romance, yet exciting at times, with adventures of more than one kind. Every reader of "The Outlaw" will want this book.

*THE TRIUMPH.* By Will N. Harben.

Loyalty is the keynote of this story, loyalty of the hero to his patriotic duty, loyalty of a daughter to her father, and loyalty of a lover to his sweetheart. The followers, of Mr. Harben will enjoy another of his southern stories.

*PIP.* By Ian Hay (Capt. Ian Hay Beith), Author of "The First Hundred Thousand."

A story of English school boys, their pleasures and pains, their sports and escapades, that might be called a modern "Tom Brown," but a Tom Brown br.i.m.m.i.n.g with laughter and with the slang of the day.

*MISS MILLION'S MAID.* By Berta Ruck.

Another ingenious Berta Ruck plot in which a high-spirited girl of twenty-three, well-bred, but penniless, flies in the face of tradition, becoming a maid of a newly-made heiress. So entangled grow the love affairs of mistress and maid that the reader has a merry time with the author in steering the girls on the road to happiness.

*ENOCH CRANE.* By F. Hopkinson and F. Berkeley Smith.

A story of New York specially. The scene is Waverly Place, in one of the characteristic old houses of that section. In this respect the story is very similar to "Peter," Mr. Smith's most popular book.

*PARTNERS OF THE NIGHT.* By Leroy Scott.

Although a detective story, it is one altogether different from those of the ordinary detective story writer. It is a story of the plain-clothes men and criminals of New York, with a splendid romance.