Satisfaction, A. K. Kelledy, 148- Scandal, Anon., 147 School Boy, The, Anon., 286. Secret, The, Atlantic Monthly, 7. 63. Silent Dead, The, L. C. Moulton, 176. Singing Itself, Anon., 252. Sir Lunfal's Vision, J. R. Lowell, 148. Sleep, Sir Philip Sydney, 180. Sleeping Child, Eugene Field, 808. Some Day of Days, Eliz. S. Phelps, 59. Some Lives, J. T. Linthicum, 266. Song of the Canteen, Miles O'Reilly, 77. Song of the River, Chas. Kingsley, Song of the Sirens, F. M. Crawford, Sonnet, Arthur Muller, 235. Sooner or Later,H. P. Spofford, 248. Sower and Seed, Ella Dare, 15. Swedish Love Song, Georgia Roberts, Sweetest Story, A. R. Grote, 221. Tender Thoughts,Philip Lincoln,37. This Day, Maria le Baron, 186. Thoughts, A. M. Richards, 119. Timidity, Joel Benton, 161. Touch of Nature, Annie F. Burn- Transformed, G. P. Knapp, 256. Two Brides, R. H. Stoddard, 259. Ultimate Failure, C. H. Luders, 191. Unrest, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 88. Vigil of Adam, Dr S. W. Mitchell, Voices, R. E. Burton, 123. Waiting, John Burroughs, 237. Watch your Words, Anon., 308. Way of the World, Carlotta Perry, South-Way to Sing, Helen Hunt, 168. Shell- Tired, Peter Burns, 146. To an Eagle, Charles Lotin Hildreth, 91. Together, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 13. 172. To the End, Algernon Sassin, 75. Too many of we, Anon., 268. Wearyin' for You, F. L. Stanton, 40. We Two, Boston Globe, 41. What is Good? J. B. O'Reilly, 139. What shall I give Her? Anon., 55. What the Chimney sang, Bret Harte, 126. What the Violins said, E. Stuart Wheel of the World, Anon., 117. "Everybody's Books." Vol. I. Four Hundred and Fiftieth Thousand. EVERYBODY'S POCKET CYCLOPÆDIA: 208 pp., 16 of them Coloured Maps. The Best Book of the kind ever published for Sixpence. Cloth, 6d. ; Leather, 1s. Vol. II. One Hundred and Twentieth Thousand. EVERYBODY'S BOOK OF JOKES: 192 pp. Jokes, Anecdotes, Puns, Bulls, Conundrums, and Children's Sayings. Over 3000, new and old. Cloth, 6d.; Leather, 1s. 320 pp. Vol. III. Seventy-fifth Thousand. EVERYBODY'S SCRAP BOOK OF CURIOUS FACTS: A Book of Odd and Interesting Information upon Every Kind of Subject. Selected by DON LEMON. Paper boards, 6d.; Cloth, 1s. Vol. IV. Fiftieth Thousand. EVERYBODY'S BOOK OF SHORT POEMS: 320 pp. Hundreds of Short Poems, for Memorizing and Recita tion. Most of them not found in other collections. Paper boards, 6d.; Leather, 1s. N.B.-SAXON & Co.'s Everybody's Books all bear their Registered Trade Mark on the Title-page, the facsimile of King Alfred's Jewel, the oldest Saxon gem. This Jewel, now in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, is over 1000 years old, and is a mosaic of precious stones, set in pure gold, representing the figure of St Neot's holding in his hand a fleur de lys. (For full description, see "Scrap Book of Curious Facts.") Of all Booksellers, or Post Free from SAXON & CO., 23 BOUVERIE ST., FLEET ST., LONDON, E.C. C VOL. II. OF SAXON & CO.'S "EVERYBODY'S Books." 135th THOUSAND. 32 pp. added. 192 pages; uniform with "Everybody's Pocket Cyclopædia": Everybody's Book of Jokes. "In so large a collection there is of course much that is ancient, but, as the Editor remarks in his preface, your old joke is often the best; whether or no, there is a large amount of laughter for the money in the little volume." Glasgow Evening Times. "This is the best sixpenny book of fun that has yet been published. It contains more than 3,000 comicalities, both in prose and verse, the freshest bits of Yankee humour, as well as the many quips of antique times."-Dundee Courier. the very thing for the professional wit -Glasgow Herald. "If a merry mood contributes to health, the sixpence which this little handbook costs will be well invested. It will prove an unfailing stimulant of mirth and aughter whenever consulted."-Western Daily Mercury. "A mirth-provoking book such as this may be a better tonic than any lrug -Stourbridge Express. "All the humour of an ordinary lifetime is apparently compressed within the imits of a sixpenny volume."—Admiralty Gazette. "There is plenty of laughter in this little book "-Pictorial World. is surely the cheapest sixpennyworth of wit and humour ever ssued."-Weekly Times and Echo. 66 a potentiality of humour beyond the dreams even of a comic ditor."-Brighton Herald. "Beaming over with fun and frolic 66 "-Berwickshire News. much amusement is in store for those who will pay attention to what is here accumulated, whether old or new, in prose or rhyme. They may learn some good lessons into the bargain."-The Queen. "The selections are remarkably free from anything which may be construed into coarseness."-Cornish Telegraph. Of all Booksellers, Cloth 6d., Leather 1s., or post-free on receipt of price from SAXON & CO., Publishers, 28, BOUVERIE STREET, FLEET STREET, LONDON, E.C. |