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NEW TWO SHILLING -SkOTELB-conHmud.

Crown 8iv. Prici^ picture boards, 2s, ; cloth gilt, 2s, 6d. Postage, ^,

BY L B. WALFORD.

Nan : and other Stories.

'* They show the ease and grace of the author's style, and have that pre-eminent quality of pleasantness that comes of cleverness which is never obtrusive, and art whidi has become second nature. " — Athenaum,

BY MBS. CASHEL HOEY. .All or Nothing.

" Mrs. Cashel Hoey is one of the few lady novelists of the day who write far too little, but who, when they do write, write as if they respected themselves and their public equally. It is, in all points, one of Mrs. Hoey*s best books." — AccuUmy,

BY THE HON. LEWIS WINGFIELD. 'Qehenna ; or, Havens of Unrest.

  • ' Abounding, from b^;hining to end, in touches of nature and life-

like descriptions ; and the story carries us on, without a sem- blance of slowness, through striking scenes until we close the volume in something not unlike wonderment at the art and genius of the man who wrote it. — WkitehcUl Review,

BY THE AUTHOR OF "ST. OLAVE'S." The Blue Ribbon.

    • The reader will be both pleased and interested in this story. It

abounds in picturesque sketches of incident and character, dever dialogue, and touches of pathos and quiet good sense, which will surely make it popular.*' — Athenceum,

Little Miss Primrose.

  • ' Those who like the lighter class of fiction will find this novel to

their taste, and it will well serve to while away an hour or so of a railway journey."— Ctfi/r^ Circular.

Annette.

"The descriptions are as pretty as a painting and as tender as a poem." — Literary World,