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Radically unconventional, and doubtless the truest picture of Western life that has appeared in American fiction. -Commercial Advertiser, Detroit, Mich.

A work which possesses a fascinating interest for the superficial reader, and many excellent suggestions for the thoughtful student of the economic questions of the day-a rare combination.. - Books and Notions, Toronto, Can.

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MAIN TRAVELLED ROADS.

Paper, 50 cents.

This volume has become one of the standard works of contemporary fiction.

"Main Travelled Roads" contains six American pastorals, not eighteenth-century, Dresden-china types, but real idyls of the farmer. Its characters are alive - individuals, not types, that the author's skill has made catholic in their appeal to the reader. Review of Reviews, London, Eng.

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JASON EDWARDS:

An Average Man. A Story of City and Country
Life Among the Toilers.

Cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cents.

Garland is a fresh, vigorous, and original writer. He has lately leaped into fame, and promises as much as any contemporary American writer. Toronto Globe.

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At all Booksellers, or mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price.

ARENA PUBLISHING COMPANY,

Copley Square, Boston, Mass.

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Remington, $25.00 Smith Premior.
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HOW TO GET ON THE STAGE, A book that

every aspiring amateur actor, singer or pianist should have. Letters from actors, etc. Price 15e. The THEATRICAL PUBLISHING Co., Station N, Chicago.

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Do you write tion? Would you not like to do so? Do you get pay for your work? If not, why not? Do you wish instruction and encouragement for little or nothing? We pay for accepted MMS. and return such as are rejected with helpful criticisms. We are publishers of the WASTE BASKET, the new monthly paper edited by experts, for amateurs, or rather for the unrecog nized writers of the day. The editors of the paper are the instructors in the Sprague Conrespondence School of Journalism. Detroit, Mich., which school teaches all sorts of composition by mail, in a way that has proved most satisfactory. Address, for Prospectus of the Paper or for particulars of the school, or both, The Collector Publishing Co., 405 Telephone Bldg., Detroit, Mich.

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THE AZTECS.

Uniform with "Columbus the Discoverer."

Cloth, $1.25.

Mr. Walter Warren is a man evidently in warm sympathy for his kind. His play is gorgeous with the local color of Mexico in the fifteenth century, and replete with fine thoughts, which, however, he acknowledges might not have come to Aztecs, although, again, he alleges they might. Its plot is a noble conception. The Commonwealth, Boston.

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COLUMBUS THE DISCOVERER.

A Drama.

Cloth, $1.25.

A spirited drama in five acts. Mr. Walter Warren makes a psychologic rather than a historic - though not unhistoric study of the character of Columbus, as manifested and developed in connection with his experiences before, during, and after his discovery of America. In dramatizing a story in this fashion, one gets a better insight into the personality of Columbus than is possible from the merely abstract narratives. The Boston Herald.

CECIL THE SEER.

Cloth, $1.25.

In peacock blue and silver, uniform with above.

A strong drama from a literary point of view. This is not the author's first attempt at drama but his most ambitious one. It is rich in metaphysical thought stated in the tersest way. Epigrams abound and they have the Shakespearian vigor. The Sentinel, Indianapolis, Ind.

At all Bookstores, or mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price.

ARENA PUBLISHING COMPANY,

Copley Square, Boston, Mass.

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THE HIDDEN FAITH

AN OCCULT STORY OF THE PERIOD.

BY ALWYN M. THURBER.

The production of a commercial man, who possesses the faculty of combining business and occult sciences in happy union. As a plea for the sacredness of TRUE MARRIAGE the book has no equal. The story is given in the fewest possible words, and aims to advocate every day occult truths as they can be thought, practiced and lived in both the home and business circles. The book is written in such simple language that it cannot fail to reach a large class of readers.

Cloth, $1.25; paper, 50c., postpaid.

F. M. HARLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY,

87-89 Washington Street,
CHICAGO.

HEADQUARTERS FOR

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"THE WOMAN'S BIBLE."

SECOND EDITION.

Part I. of "The Woman's Bible" is now for sale. It is a paper bound book of 140 pages. Part I. Consists of Commentaries on the Pentateuch, by Members of the "Revising Committee."

Revising Committee: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Rev. Phebe A. Hanaford, Clara Bewick Colby, Rev. Augusta Chapin, Mrs. Mary A. Livermore, Mrs. Mary Seymour Howell, Mrs Josephine K. Henry, Mrs. Robert G. Ingersoll, Mrs. Sarah A. Underwood, Mrs. Catharine F. Stebbins, Ellen Battelle Dietrick, Lillie Devereux Blake, Matilda Joslyn Gage, Rev. Olympia Brown, Miss Frances Ellen Burr, Mrs. Chapman Catt, Miss Helen H. Gardener, Mrs. Charlotte Beebe Wilbour, Mrs. Lucinda B. Chandler, Mrs. M. Louise Thomas, Mrs. Louisa Southworth.

EXTRACTS FROM PREFACE.

I. The object is to revise only those texts and chapters directly referring to women, and those also in which women are made prominent by exclusion. As all such passages combined form but one-tenth of the Scriptures, the undertaking will not be so laborious as, at the first thought, one would imagine.

II. The commentaries will be of a threefold character, the writers in the different branches selected according to their special aptitudes for the work:

1. Three Greek and Hebrew scholars will devote themselves to the translation and the meaning of particular words and texts in the original. 2. Others will devote themselves to Biblical history, old manuscripts, to the new version, and to the latest theories as to the occult meaning of certain texts and parables. 3. For the commentaries on the plain English version, a committee of some thirty members has been formed. These are women of earnestness and liberal ideas, quick to see the real purport of the Bible as regards their sex. Among them the various books of the Old and New Testament will be distributed.

SOME PRESS COMMENTS.

We have read some of the passages of the commentary prepared for the "Woman's Bible" by that very accomplished American woman and Biblical student, Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. They are a great deal more satisfactory than many of the comments upon the same texts that we have read in other and more pretentious commentaries. Mrs. Stanton's interpretative remarks are often shrewd and sensible.-Editorial N. Y. Sun.

The announcement that the proposed "Woman's Bible" will soon be published has stirred up many of the the clergy. The work will be simply a commentary on certain portions of the Bible relating to the status of women.-N. Y. Tribune.

The new "Woman's Bible is one of the remarkable productions of the century.-Denver News.

Supreme Court JUDGE GAYNOR, of Brooklyn, says: "A little book claimed and read by every denomination of Christians, has done more for mankind than all the men who ever held public office.

PRICE FIFTY CENTS, ADDRESS,

. 95 Wall St., New York City, N. Y.

PEAN PUBLISHING COMPANY,

When writing please mention THE ARENA.

A charming narrative pervaded by a strongly religious and moral tone.

HALL GREST

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Cloth, $1.25;

Published by

Paper, 50 Cents.

The Arena Publishing Company,

COPLEY SQUARE, BOSTON, MASS.

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