Chapter 7

“THE RUNAWAY BROWNS,”by H. C. Bunner, illustrations by C. J. Taylor; publishers, Keppler & Schwarzmann. The experiences of Paul Brown and his wife, who escape a tame, adventureless life, with a view of having “things happen to them,” and to this end leave a pleasant home to be gone a year and a day, are just the reading for a Summer’s afternoon, and there is still enough of Summer in the air to make it enjoyable to its fullest. How the Browns fell in with a band of barn-storming professionals; how they became tin peddlers; how they took charge of a lone hotel, and how they finally and gladly reached their trim cottage, is told in these clever and amusing pages, and will bring more than one hearty laugh even from those unused to smile.—N., P. & S. Bulletin.In Boards, $1.00.In Paper, 50 Cents.All Booksellers.By Mail, from the Publishers, on Receipt of Price.“MADE IN FRANCE.”Under the title of “Made in France” H. C. Bunner has gathered a number of short stories, all founded on tales by De Maupassant. Several have suffered so great a sea change, however, that the original writer, if he were alive, would not recognize them. In these about all that Bunner has borrowed from the brilliant Frenchman is what he calls the “ethical situations.” Others bear evident traces of their French origin. Mr. Bunner explains the motive of his novel scheme in these words:“I have selected a few ethical situations from among the brightest of Maupassant’s inventions, and have tried to reproduce them, not as translations, but as English or American stories based on a Frenchman’s inspiration, and I have done this with the sole hope of making that inspiration clear to people who will not or can not read Maupassant in the original. If through the new climes, the new times, the new changes, the new worlds, indeed, into which I have moved his people and their adventures, you catch a better glimpse of the best fancies of M. Guy de Maupassant than you can get through the misleading mechanism of a literal translation, I shall be glad, indeed.”There is no question of his success, for nine out of ten of his readers would find De Maupassant less amusing than Bunner. The volume is very cleverly illustrated by Taylor.—San Francisco Chronicle.In Boards, $1.00.In Paper, 50 Cents.All Booksellers.By Mail, from the Publishers, on Receipt of Price.PUCK’SOPPER BOOKSixty-four Pages in Black-and-white, by Frederick Opper30 cts. By Mail, 35 cts.✳✳✳THIS FUNNYWORLDAS “PUCK”SEES IT.Fifty-six Pages in Black-and-White, and Eight Colored Cartoons, all by Frederick Opper.30 cts. By Mail, 35 cts.✳✳✳PICKINGSFROM PUCKBeing a Choice Collection of Pre-eminently Perfect Pieces, Poems and Pictures from Puck.Crops 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 25 cts. Each.✳✳✳PUCK’SPublished on the15th of Each Month.LIBRARYBeing Puck’s Best Things About Everything. Illustrated Catalogue on Application.10 cts. per Copy. $1.20 per Year.✳✳✳✳✳✳The above are for sale by all Booksellers and Newsdealersand mailed by the Publishers on receipt of priceAddress:Puck,N. Y.NO POLITICS!PURE FUN!An IllustratedHumorous Magazine.PUBLISHEDON THE 15ThOF EACH MONTH.10 Cents per Copy.        $1.20 per Year.InPuck’s Libraryare reprinted the best things of lasting interest, classified after their kind, that have appeared inPuck.By this arrangement the reader who wishes whatPuckhas to give him outside of politics and daily happenings, can have it here in monthly feasts of dainty tidbits.32 Pages, Loaded with Pictures.Send 10 cents to the “Publishers of PUCK’S LIBRARY, New York,” and receive from them a specimen copy and a Complete Catalogue of all the issues to date.NEVER OUT OF PRINT!

“THE RUNAWAY BROWNS,”by H. C. Bunner, illustrations by C. J. Taylor; publishers, Keppler & Schwarzmann. The experiences of Paul Brown and his wife, who escape a tame, adventureless life, with a view of having “things happen to them,” and to this end leave a pleasant home to be gone a year and a day, are just the reading for a Summer’s afternoon, and there is still enough of Summer in the air to make it enjoyable to its fullest. How the Browns fell in with a band of barn-storming professionals; how they became tin peddlers; how they took charge of a lone hotel, and how they finally and gladly reached their trim cottage, is told in these clever and amusing pages, and will bring more than one hearty laugh even from those unused to smile.—N., P. & S. Bulletin.In Boards, $1.00.In Paper, 50 Cents.All Booksellers.By Mail, from the Publishers, on Receipt of Price.

“THE RUNAWAY BROWNS,”

by H. C. Bunner, illustrations by C. J. Taylor; publishers, Keppler & Schwarzmann. The experiences of Paul Brown and his wife, who escape a tame, adventureless life, with a view of having “things happen to them,” and to this end leave a pleasant home to be gone a year and a day, are just the reading for a Summer’s afternoon, and there is still enough of Summer in the air to make it enjoyable to its fullest. How the Browns fell in with a band of barn-storming professionals; how they became tin peddlers; how they took charge of a lone hotel, and how they finally and gladly reached their trim cottage, is told in these clever and amusing pages, and will bring more than one hearty laugh even from those unused to smile.

—N., P. & S. Bulletin.

In Boards, $1.00.In Paper, 50 Cents.All Booksellers.By Mail, from the Publishers, on Receipt of Price.

“MADE IN FRANCE.”Under the title of “Made in France” H. C. Bunner has gathered a number of short stories, all founded on tales by De Maupassant. Several have suffered so great a sea change, however, that the original writer, if he were alive, would not recognize them. In these about all that Bunner has borrowed from the brilliant Frenchman is what he calls the “ethical situations.” Others bear evident traces of their French origin. Mr. Bunner explains the motive of his novel scheme in these words:“I have selected a few ethical situations from among the brightest of Maupassant’s inventions, and have tried to reproduce them, not as translations, but as English or American stories based on a Frenchman’s inspiration, and I have done this with the sole hope of making that inspiration clear to people who will not or can not read Maupassant in the original. If through the new climes, the new times, the new changes, the new worlds, indeed, into which I have moved his people and their adventures, you catch a better glimpse of the best fancies of M. Guy de Maupassant than you can get through the misleading mechanism of a literal translation, I shall be glad, indeed.”There is no question of his success, for nine out of ten of his readers would find De Maupassant less amusing than Bunner. The volume is very cleverly illustrated by Taylor.—San Francisco Chronicle.In Boards, $1.00.In Paper, 50 Cents.All Booksellers.By Mail, from the Publishers, on Receipt of Price.PUCK’SOPPER BOOKSixty-four Pages in Black-and-white, by Frederick Opper30 cts. By Mail, 35 cts.✳✳✳THIS FUNNYWORLDAS “PUCK”SEES IT.Fifty-six Pages in Black-and-White, and Eight Colored Cartoons, all by Frederick Opper.30 cts. By Mail, 35 cts.✳✳✳PICKINGSFROM PUCKBeing a Choice Collection of Pre-eminently Perfect Pieces, Poems and Pictures from Puck.Crops 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 25 cts. Each.✳✳✳PUCK’SPublished on the15th of Each Month.LIBRARYBeing Puck’s Best Things About Everything. Illustrated Catalogue on Application.10 cts. per Copy. $1.20 per Year.✳✳✳✳✳✳The above are for sale by all Booksellers and Newsdealersand mailed by the Publishers on receipt of priceAddress:Puck,N. Y.NO POLITICS!PURE FUN!An IllustratedHumorous Magazine.PUBLISHEDON THE 15ThOF EACH MONTH.10 Cents per Copy.        $1.20 per Year.InPuck’s Libraryare reprinted the best things of lasting interest, classified after their kind, that have appeared inPuck.By this arrangement the reader who wishes whatPuckhas to give him outside of politics and daily happenings, can have it here in monthly feasts of dainty tidbits.32 Pages, Loaded with Pictures.Send 10 cents to the “Publishers of PUCK’S LIBRARY, New York,” and receive from them a specimen copy and a Complete Catalogue of all the issues to date.NEVER OUT OF PRINT!

“MADE IN FRANCE.”

Under the title of “Made in France” H. C. Bunner has gathered a number of short stories, all founded on tales by De Maupassant. Several have suffered so great a sea change, however, that the original writer, if he were alive, would not recognize them. In these about all that Bunner has borrowed from the brilliant Frenchman is what he calls the “ethical situations.” Others bear evident traces of their French origin. Mr. Bunner explains the motive of his novel scheme in these words:

“I have selected a few ethical situations from among the brightest of Maupassant’s inventions, and have tried to reproduce them, not as translations, but as English or American stories based on a Frenchman’s inspiration, and I have done this with the sole hope of making that inspiration clear to people who will not or can not read Maupassant in the original. If through the new climes, the new times, the new changes, the new worlds, indeed, into which I have moved his people and their adventures, you catch a better glimpse of the best fancies of M. Guy de Maupassant than you can get through the misleading mechanism of a literal translation, I shall be glad, indeed.”

There is no question of his success, for nine out of ten of his readers would find De Maupassant less amusing than Bunner. The volume is very cleverly illustrated by Taylor.

—San Francisco Chronicle.

In Boards, $1.00.In Paper, 50 Cents.All Booksellers.By Mail, from the Publishers, on Receipt of Price.

PUCK’SOPPER BOOK

Sixty-four Pages in Black-and-white, by Frederick Opper30 cts. By Mail, 35 cts.

✳✳✳

THIS FUNNY

Fifty-six Pages in Black-and-White, and Eight Colored Cartoons, all by Frederick Opper.

30 cts. By Mail, 35 cts.

✳✳✳

PICKINGSFROM PUCK

Being a Choice Collection of Pre-eminently Perfect Pieces, Poems and Pictures from Puck.

Crops 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 25 cts. Each.

✳✳✳

PUCK’S

Being Puck’s Best Things About Everything. Illustrated Catalogue on Application.

10 cts. per Copy. $1.20 per Year.

✳✳✳✳✳✳

The above are for sale by all Booksellers and Newsdealersand mailed by the Publishers on receipt of priceAddress:Puck,N. Y.

An IllustratedHumorous Magazine.PUBLISHEDON THE 15ThOF EACH MONTH.

10 Cents per Copy.        $1.20 per Year.

InPuck’s Libraryare reprinted the best things of lasting interest, classified after their kind, that have appeared inPuck.

By this arrangement the reader who wishes whatPuckhas to give him outside of politics and daily happenings, can have it here in monthly feasts of dainty tidbits.

32 Pages, Loaded with Pictures.

Send 10 cents to the “Publishers of PUCK’S LIBRARY, New York,” and receive from them a specimen copy and a Complete Catalogue of all the issues to date.

NEVER OUT OF PRINT!


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