Page:Charlotte Teller - The Cage (1907).djvu/353

 BY LLOYD OSBOURNE. Three Speeds Forward. Uniquely illustrated with full-page illustrations, head and tail pieces and many sketches by Karl Anderson and H. D. Williams. Ornamental Cloth, $i.oo. " 'Three Speeds Forward' is an amusing automobile story by Lloyd Osboume, in which the ostensible teller of what happened is the girl heroine. A little runabout is the important factor in the love romance. The book is prettily bound and printed and is illustrated." — Toledo Blade. " ' Three Speeds Forward,' by Lloyd Osbourne, is a very brief and most agreeable novelette dealing with modern society and the chug- chug wagon." — Philadelphia Inquirer. " The climax of this story is original and most humorous. The action is rapid and consistent with the subject in hand. Altogether it is a most enjoyable little volume, well illustrated and attractively bound." — Milwaukee Sentinel. " It is a bright and mrightly little story, very strongly flavored with pasoline, but quite readable. It is attractively and characteristically illustrated." — New York Times. Wild Justice. Illustrated. Ornamental Cloth, $1.50. " Lloyd Osboume's stories of the South Sea Islands are second only to Stevenson's on the same theme. ' Wild Justice ' is a volume of these short stories, beginning with that strong and haunting tale, ' The Rene- gade.' These are stories which will bear reading more than once. They have an atmosphere that it is restful to breathe, once in a while, to the dwellers in cities and the toilers of these Northern lands where life is such a stern afiFair." — Denver Post. " Mr. Lloyd Osboume's nine stories of the South Sea Islands (' Wild Justice') are told with a Kiplingesque vigor, and well illustrate their title. All are eminently readable — not overweighted with tragedy, as is the wont of tales that deal with the remote regions of the earth." — New York Times. "Mr. Osboume in 'Wild Justice' has given us a series of stories about the Samoan Islands and their islanders and their white invaders, visitors and conquerors which are vivid with humor and pathos." — New York Herald. D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK.