FRANK MERRIWELL’S TRIUMPH
OR
THE DISAPPEARANCE OF FELICIA
BY
BURT L. STANDISH
AUTHOR OF
The World-renowned “Merriwell Stories”
PUBLISHED EXCLUSIVELY IN PAPER-COVERED
EDITION IN THE NEW MEDAL LIBRARY
STREET & SMITH, PUBLISHERS
79-89 SEVENTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY
Copyright, 1904
By STREET & SMITH
Frank Merriwell’s Triumph
All rights reserved, including that of translation
into foreign languages, including the Scandinavian.
Publisher’s Note
Very few of our readers have any idea of thetask that the growing popularity of the S. & S.novel imposes upon us.
We don’t refer to the mere manual labor ofmanufacturing, but to the vast expenditure oftime, money and energy necessary to keep thequality of our lines up to the high standard thatwe have educated our readers to demand.
In order that the S. & S. novel may continueto be all that we claim for it, we have invadedcloth-book fields and have made arrangementswith several well-known publishers to printexclusive editions of books by famous authors—booksabout whose great merit there is not asingle doubt.
The S. & S. novel has prospered mightily andfor that reason we can well afford to give ourreaders that literature that is acceptable toevery man and woman who seeks mental relaxationafter a hard day’s work at the office, storeor factory.
The S. & S. novels are great popular educators,reaching, as they do, every city and hamletin this vast country of ours, instilling a desireto read in thousands of persons who would havecared nothing for literature if they had notbecome aware of the wholesome, unalloyedpleasure that the S. & S. novels afford.
Please send for our complete catalogue showingthe S. & S. 2700.
STREET & SMITH, Publishers
NEW YORK
“ALGER”
What a pleasant sound the name of HoratioAlger, Jr., has to boys who read clean, wholesomestories of adventure!
His name on a book means that it is a “good