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The Archbishop and the LadyByMrs. Schuyler CrowninshieldA story of modern society which only a writer of very wide and very exceptional social experience could have written. It is cosmopolitan, yet full of romance; modern, yet informed with a delicate old-world charm. The characters are put before us with a consummate knowledge of the world and a penetrating insight into human nature.Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.50.April’s SowingBy GERTRUDE HALLMiss Gertrude Hall is known to the world as a poet and as a teller of tales, but with her first novel she reveals new gifts, for it is a modern story tuned to a note of light comedy that she has never struck before. “April’s Sowing” is that most widely appreciated thing in letters, a young love story.Illustrated by Orson Lowell. With decorative cover, frontispiece, title page in color, and ornamental head and tail pieces. Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. $1.50.The DarlingtonsBy ELMORE ELLIOTT PEAKEA novel of American life in the middle West which deals principally with the fortunes of a family whose members are the social and financial leaders of their section. The heroine is a girl whose education is broad enough to enable her to assist her father in managing a railroad. The hero is a Methodist minister of liberal tendencies. The story is told with remarkable fidelity and unusual dramatic interest.Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.50.Two Unknown Phases of Life Made Known in FictionThe Powers That PreyByJosiah FlyntandFrancis WaltonThe authors of the ten closely related stories which make up this volume have spent most of their lives studying the sociological problems of tramp and criminal life. Mr. Flynt writes: “So far as I am concerned, the book is the result of ten years of wandering with tramps and two years spent with various police organizations.” The stories are a decided contribution to sociology, and yet, viewed as stories, they have unusual interest because of their remarkable vigor and their intense realism.Fully Illustrated. Cloth. 12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. $1.25.The Soul of the StreetBy NORMAN DUNCAN“The Soul of the Street” has a unity lacking in many volumes of short stories. They deal with Syrians and Turks, queer folk with queer ways, and Mr. Duncan has gotten at them with such sympathetic insight as only the poetic heart and the story-teller’s eye can possess. Character, humor, poignant pathos, and the sad grotesque conjunctions of old and new civilizations are expressed through the medium of a style that has distinction, and strikes a note of rare personality.Cloth. 12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.00.ColophonAvailabilityThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.org.This eBook is produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team atwww.pgdp.net.This book is an abbreviated translation of José Rizal’s novelNoli me Tángere, which appeared in 1901. This important work was translated from Spanish to English several times. An unabbreviated translation, by Charles E. Derbyshire was published in 1912, and is available under the titleThe Social Cancer. A Tagalog translation,Noli me Tangerewas made by Pascual Hicaro Poblete (1857–1921). Finally, Project Gutenberg holds a Dutch translation, made by A. A. Fokker under the titleNoli me tangere: Filippijnsche roman. Further translations are in preparation.EncodingRevision History2008-12-20 Started.External ReferencesThis Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work for you.CorrectionsThe following corrections have been applied to the text:PageSourceCorrection23PulfernichtPulfer nicht24CrisostomoCrisóstomo24CrisostomoCrisóstomo24CrisostomoCrisóstomo26CrisostomoCrisóstomo29CrisostomoCrisóstomo30CrisostomoCrisóstomo30CrisostomoCrisóstomo36CrisostomoCrisóstomo37CrisostomoCrisóstomo43CrisostomoCrisóstomo45MalacananMalacañang48CrisostomoCrisóstomo54gavegrave55Crisostomo’sCrisóstomo’s55CrisostomoCrisóstomo59[Not in source]“72[Not in source]”110sacrifiedsacrificed141sacrifiedsacrificed177senoraseñora178EspañadaEspadaña179[Not in source]“179[Not in source]“198archibshoparchbishop198CrisòstomoCrisóstomo205[Not in source]“205[Not in source]”206[Not in source]“206[Not in source]“223havn’thaven’t231CapainCaptain246adminstrationadministration246[Not in source]”246SenorasSeñoras265unhapppyunhappy268buildedbuilt

The Archbishop and the LadyByMrs. Schuyler CrowninshieldA story of modern society which only a writer of very wide and very exceptional social experience could have written. It is cosmopolitan, yet full of romance; modern, yet informed with a delicate old-world charm. The characters are put before us with a consummate knowledge of the world and a penetrating insight into human nature.Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.50.April’s SowingBy GERTRUDE HALLMiss Gertrude Hall is known to the world as a poet and as a teller of tales, but with her first novel she reveals new gifts, for it is a modern story tuned to a note of light comedy that she has never struck before. “April’s Sowing” is that most widely appreciated thing in letters, a young love story.Illustrated by Orson Lowell. With decorative cover, frontispiece, title page in color, and ornamental head and tail pieces. Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. $1.50.The DarlingtonsBy ELMORE ELLIOTT PEAKEA novel of American life in the middle West which deals principally with the fortunes of a family whose members are the social and financial leaders of their section. The heroine is a girl whose education is broad enough to enable her to assist her father in managing a railroad. The hero is a Methodist minister of liberal tendencies. The story is told with remarkable fidelity and unusual dramatic interest.Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.50.Two Unknown Phases of Life Made Known in FictionThe Powers That PreyByJosiah FlyntandFrancis WaltonThe authors of the ten closely related stories which make up this volume have spent most of their lives studying the sociological problems of tramp and criminal life. Mr. Flynt writes: “So far as I am concerned, the book is the result of ten years of wandering with tramps and two years spent with various police organizations.” The stories are a decided contribution to sociology, and yet, viewed as stories, they have unusual interest because of their remarkable vigor and their intense realism.Fully Illustrated. Cloth. 12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. $1.25.The Soul of the StreetBy NORMAN DUNCAN“The Soul of the Street” has a unity lacking in many volumes of short stories. They deal with Syrians and Turks, queer folk with queer ways, and Mr. Duncan has gotten at them with such sympathetic insight as only the poetic heart and the story-teller’s eye can possess. Character, humor, poignant pathos, and the sad grotesque conjunctions of old and new civilizations are expressed through the medium of a style that has distinction, and strikes a note of rare personality.Cloth. 12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.00.

The Archbishop and the Lady

ByMrs. Schuyler Crowninshield

A story of modern society which only a writer of very wide and very exceptional social experience could have written. It is cosmopolitan, yet full of romance; modern, yet informed with a delicate old-world charm. The characters are put before us with a consummate knowledge of the world and a penetrating insight into human nature.

Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.50.

April’s Sowing

By GERTRUDE HALL

Miss Gertrude Hall is known to the world as a poet and as a teller of tales, but with her first novel she reveals new gifts, for it is a modern story tuned to a note of light comedy that she has never struck before. “April’s Sowing” is that most widely appreciated thing in letters, a young love story.

Illustrated by Orson Lowell. With decorative cover, frontispiece, title page in color, and ornamental head and tail pieces. Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. $1.50.

The Darlingtons

By ELMORE ELLIOTT PEAKE

A novel of American life in the middle West which deals principally with the fortunes of a family whose members are the social and financial leaders of their section. The heroine is a girl whose education is broad enough to enable her to assist her father in managing a railroad. The hero is a Methodist minister of liberal tendencies. The story is told with remarkable fidelity and unusual dramatic interest.

Cloth.12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.50.

Two Unknown Phases of Life Made Known in Fiction

The Powers That Prey

ByJosiah FlyntandFrancis Walton

The authors of the ten closely related stories which make up this volume have spent most of their lives studying the sociological problems of tramp and criminal life. Mr. Flynt writes: “So far as I am concerned, the book is the result of ten years of wandering with tramps and two years spent with various police organizations.” The stories are a decided contribution to sociology, and yet, viewed as stories, they have unusual interest because of their remarkable vigor and their intense realism.

Fully Illustrated. Cloth. 12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. $1.25.

The Soul of the Street

By NORMAN DUNCAN

“The Soul of the Street” has a unity lacking in many volumes of short stories. They deal with Syrians and Turks, queer folk with queer ways, and Mr. Duncan has gotten at them with such sympathetic insight as only the poetic heart and the story-teller’s eye can possess. Character, humor, poignant pathos, and the sad grotesque conjunctions of old and new civilizations are expressed through the medium of a style that has distinction, and strikes a note of rare personality.

Cloth. 12mo; 5⅛ × 7¾. About $1.00.

ColophonAvailabilityThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.org.This eBook is produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team atwww.pgdp.net.This book is an abbreviated translation of José Rizal’s novelNoli me Tángere, which appeared in 1901. This important work was translated from Spanish to English several times. An unabbreviated translation, by Charles E. Derbyshire was published in 1912, and is available under the titleThe Social Cancer. A Tagalog translation,Noli me Tangerewas made by Pascual Hicaro Poblete (1857–1921). Finally, Project Gutenberg holds a Dutch translation, made by A. A. Fokker under the titleNoli me tangere: Filippijnsche roman. Further translations are in preparation.EncodingRevision History2008-12-20 Started.External ReferencesThis Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work for you.CorrectionsThe following corrections have been applied to the text:PageSourceCorrection23PulfernichtPulfer nicht24CrisostomoCrisóstomo24CrisostomoCrisóstomo24CrisostomoCrisóstomo26CrisostomoCrisóstomo29CrisostomoCrisóstomo30CrisostomoCrisóstomo30CrisostomoCrisóstomo36CrisostomoCrisóstomo37CrisostomoCrisóstomo43CrisostomoCrisóstomo45MalacananMalacañang48CrisostomoCrisóstomo54gavegrave55Crisostomo’sCrisóstomo’s55CrisostomoCrisóstomo59[Not in source]“72[Not in source]”110sacrifiedsacrificed141sacrifiedsacrificed177senoraseñora178EspañadaEspadaña179[Not in source]“179[Not in source]“198archibshoparchbishop198CrisòstomoCrisóstomo205[Not in source]“205[Not in source]”206[Not in source]“206[Not in source]“223havn’thaven’t231CapainCaptain246adminstrationadministration246[Not in source]”246SenorasSeñoras265unhapppyunhappy268buildedbuilt

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.org.

This eBook is produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team atwww.pgdp.net.

This book is an abbreviated translation of José Rizal’s novelNoli me Tángere, which appeared in 1901. This important work was translated from Spanish to English several times. An unabbreviated translation, by Charles E. Derbyshire was published in 1912, and is available under the titleThe Social Cancer. A Tagalog translation,Noli me Tangerewas made by Pascual Hicaro Poblete (1857–1921). Finally, Project Gutenberg holds a Dutch translation, made by A. A. Fokker under the titleNoli me tangere: Filippijnsche roman. Further translations are in preparation.

This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work for you.

The following corrections have been applied to the text:


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