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in reply. Mr. King's address is No. 45 South Oxford Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., where any communication regarding Miss Booth's letters will be gratefully received and promptly answered, and it is to be hoped that the many friends of the deceased will aid him in giving the public this volume of correspondence. Miss Booth was a woman of broad, vigorous intellect, never out of touch with the time, and her letters would be read with avidity.-The Epoch.

PERSONAL NOTES.

Ireland, Sir Edward Sullivan, a well-known collector of catholic tastes. The catalogue contains no less than seven thousand items, which will take twenty-one days in dispersal! This sale is so far the event of the year in the old-book world. Among the books to be sold are a large number of speci mens from the Aldine presses, a copy of the "Golden Legend" from the press of Notary, a second folio Shakespeare, books bound by Roger Payne, etc., etc.

FIVE hundred dollars is the price asked in a recent catalogue for a copy of the second edition of "Holinshed's Chronicles." As a matter of fact

THORVALD SOLBERG, of the Boston Book Com- this edition, published some ten years after the pany, sailed for England on May 3.

CHAS. A. CLAPP, of E. P. Dutton & Co., sails for home on the 10th inst. from Liverpool.

R. K. SMITH, of A. C. McClurg & Co., has recently been in Philadelphia, Boston, and New York, and reports an exceptionally successful trip.

WE are glad to learn that Mr. George M. Baker, of Lee & Shepard, has gone to Barnstable, Cape Cod. We trust the change and the invigorating air of the Cape will speedily restore him to his usual good health.

OTTO ULBRICH, one of the best-known booksellers in Buffalo, has been in Florida and the West Indies all winter for his health. For years he has been troubled with asthma, and this two or three months' sojourn in hot, dry climates has almost entirely cured him. He will be back towards the middle of May.

DAVID WOLFE BRUCE, for many years the head of one of the oldest type foundries in this country, retires from active business on account of impaired health. His firm was established in 1813 by D. & G. Bruce. George Bruce, one of the founders, being the father of the retiring member of the present firm.

MR. T. IRVING CROWELL, oldest son of Mr. Thomas Y. Crowell, of Boston, was admitted to his father's firm April 1. On May I the new member of the firm was married to Miss Helen

Leland, of Brookline, Mass. The ceremony took place at the residence of Mr. E. P. Storm, of Brookline, brother-in-law of the bride, and was attended by a small number of the friends of both parties. On the 3d inst. the newly-married pair sailed for Europe on a Cunard steamer for a two months' trip. We add our hearty congratulations to the many that are being tendered to the happy couple.

OLD BOOK CHAT.

THE Hart sale in Boston was a great success, and all parties interested appear to be well şatisfied with the result.

THE remaining portion of Baron Seilliere's books are advertised for sale in Paris. Some very fine books are included, among them an example of Caxton's press, a book printed by Wynkyn de Worde, etc., etc.

FROM Sothebys' comes a catalogue of rare books embracing the choicest portion of the collection formed by the late Lord Chancellor of

first, is a book not only comparatively common, but uninteresting. The first edition is adorned with a large number of very quaint and curious old woodcuts, besides maps. These in the secfirst is a much more valuable book. As copies ond edition are lacking, and in other respects the of the second edition can be obtained in a ratio of ten to one, and as a good copy of the first edition is not worth more than $500, the present instance is evidently one of those cases of overcharging which has done so much to spoil the confidence of American buyers and drive them to other fields. At the same time it is only fair to suppose that the advertisers of the book are probably unaware of the existence of any other edition than the one they advertise.

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"A remarkable woman, named Abby Maria Hemenway, born in Burlington, Vt., recently died in Chicago. Her life was devoted to compiling a minute history of Vermont. To obtain material she travelled through the State, visiting everywhere people of information and getting from them family papers and traditions bearing with her printing-press-in two small upper rooms of on her subject. During the last years of her life she lived an obscure dwelling in Chicago, putting her history in type as fast as she wrote it. Five octavo volumes had been printed at the time of her death. The sixth was to have been the last, and the struggling author had promised herself rest upon its completion.'

The work referred to is, no doubt, "The Historical Gazetteer of Vermont," the first four volumes of which were published with the imprint of the Claremont Manufacturing Co., Claremont, N. H. Long before the war, Miss Hemenway, who then lived in Montpelier, Vt., started her work, which was to be issued in monthly numbers. account, when early in the sixties she made arShe issued several parts in this way, on her own rangements with the Claremont house to continue the work. Owing to her erratic way of working, however, her publishers one day found that they had actually stereotyped 1200 pages before issuing a single part, and so it was decided to publish the work, not as a magazine, but in volumes of a certain number of pages. The Claremont Mfg. Co. issued three volumes for her. Then one of the

firm personally took charge of the work, and with Miss Hemenway issued a fourth volume from Montpelier, Vt. A few years ago Miss Hemenway went to Chicago to complete the work. The fifth volume was written, but not printed nor even in type-and certainly not put in type by the author herself. So the pathetic story of the 'struggling author" with her " printing-press in two small upper rooms of an obscure dwelling" will have to be taken cum grano salis.

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JOURNALISTIC NOTES. YAN PHOU LEE, a Chinese graduate of Yale, has started a monthly paper called The Chinese Advocate. It is to be printed both in English and Chinese, and will circulate among Chinese Sunday-schools, of which it proposes to be the organ. The first issue contains twelve pages, with a portrait of Li Hung Chang.

ONE of the brightest women in New York, Mrs. Isabel Mallon, has been added to the editorial staff of The Ladies' Home Journal, of Philadelphia. Mrs. Mallon is an experienced editorial writer, and will conduct one of the fullest and strongest fashion departments ever attempted in a general magazine.

THREE cash prizes of fifty, thirty, and twenty dollars respectively are offered by Public Opinion, the eclectic weekly magazine of Washington, D. C., for the best three essays, not exceeding two thousand words, on the subject: "The Study of Current Topics as a feature of School, Academic, and College Education." The papers must reach Public Opinion prior to June 15, and the award will be made by a committee of three well-known educators, to be selected and announced before the close of the competition. The prize essays will be published over the signatures of the writers July 5.

BUSINESS NOTES.

BOSTON, MASS.-T. Irving Crowell, oldest sou of Thomas Y. Crowell, has been admitted to the firm of Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. The firm now consists of Thomas Y. Crowell, E. Osborne Crowell, a nephew of the senior partner, and Mr. T. Irving Crowell.

MEADVILLE, PA.-The Chautauqua-Century Press is the firm-name of a new publishing house, of which Mr. Theodore L. Flood, the editor and publisher of The Chautauquan, is President and Business Manager, and Mr. George E. Vincent, literary editor. The firm will not confine itself to the publication of the books of the Chautauquan course, but has begun negotiations with authors in this country and in England for novels, historical and sociological essays, and other forms

of writing, all vigorous, timely, and new in character and treatment. Foreign books will be reproduced only by arrangement with authors or publishers.

NEW YORK CITY.-J. W. Bouton has removed from No. 1,152 Broadway to No. 8 West Twentyeighth St., where he has much more commodious quarters.

NEW YORK CITY.-Fletcher H. Bangs has been appointed assignee of the firm of White & Allen, by an order of the Court of Common Pleas for the City and Country of New York, made April 15, in place of Nathan Bangs Williams, to whom White & Allen made an assignment on or about the 4th day of March last.

NEW YORK CITY.-We regret to learn that the fire in the E. A. Stokes Company's store was more serious than we thought. It completely gutted their store and basement, causing a loss of about $40,000, which, with the insurance and sale of damaged stock, will probably be reduced to a net loss of nearly $5000. Fortunately, most of their new spring goods were still in their binderies, so that their wholesale business can go on without serious interruption. They have taken temporary

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NEW ORLEANS, LA.-The old and favorably known firm of Armand Hawkins, established in 1868, changed hands recently, and has become Hawkins & Co. Mr. Armand Hawkins, one of the best bibliographers in the South, will act as Manager and General Superintendent. He has settled up his indebtedness at par with all his old correspondents.

TRINIDAD, COL.-Julius H. Clark, bookseller and stationer, has been succeeded by Clark & Littlefield.

WAUKESHA, WIS.-Ira M. White, bookseller and stationer, has been succeeded by White & Nelson.

YORK, NEB.-L. R. Coy & Co., booksellers and stationers, have sold out.

LITERARY AND TRADE NOTES.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS have in preparation a new volume of A. B. Frost's rhymes and pictures, entitled "Dizzy Joe and Other Comics."

GEO. H. ELLIS, Boston, will publish immediately Mr. Edwin D. Mead's addresses on the Roman Catholic Church and the Public Schools.

D. C. HEATH will publish shortly "Harmony in Praise," a new music book for use in schooland home, prepared by two masters in the Laws renceville (N. J.) School.

THE NATIONAL TEMPERANCE SOCIETY will publish May 15 the full text of the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, affirming the right to sell imported liquors in 'original packages" in prohibitory States.

64

GEBBIE & Co. have in press a new edition of Charles Lamb's "Adventures of Ulysses," with an introduction, etc., by Andrew Lang. It will be illustrated with full-page and other engravings, and a map of the wanderings of Ulysses.

THE CHAUTAUqua-CenturY PRESS, Meadville,

Pa., of whose organization notice is given else. where in this issue, will publish June 15 "All He Knew," a new story, by John Habberton. They have in preparation a story of Greek life, by Prof. Alfred Church.

stof's latest novel, "The Kreutzer Sonata," transBENJ. R. TUCKER, Boston, has just ready Tollated from the German, the only language in which the book has thus far been printed. Its publication having been forbidden in Russia, it exists there only in manuscript. Remington & Co., London, will publish shortly a translation in English.

CASSELL & Co. will publish, probably earlyin the fall, “ Society as I Have Found It," by Ward McAllister, who will give a description of the manners and customs of good society at home and abroad, in the form of personal reminiscences. While he talks of the people he has met during the mention of names. the course of his life, he will dexterously avoid

F. GUTEKUNST, 712 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa., has fairly surpassed himself in the latest addition to his American portrait gallery-a fine photograph of Walt Whitman. The poet is represent

ed sitting, showing a three-quarter length of the figure. The pose is artistic, and the general tone and finish of the photograph is very superior. We can think of nothing more suitable for a study or library than this series of portraits.

MACMILLAN & Co. have just published "The Statesman's Year-Book for 1890." The whole work has been reorganized, greatly extended, thoroughly revised, and entirely reprinted with new type-most of the new type, unhappily, It is an open question smaller than the old. whether an attempt has not been made to include too much in this new revision. The book

remains, however, what it has been for twenty six years, the most useful of all books which aim at supplying current political knowledge.

F. E. BOERICKE (The Hahnemann Publishing House), 921 Arch St., Philadelphia, has just issued the third edition, rewritten and enlarged, of Dr. Samuel Lilienthal's important work on "Homœopathic Therapeutics;" also Drs. Boericke and Dewey's valuable text-book on biochemistry, entitled "The Twelve Tissue Remedies of Schüssler," which has been entirely rewritten and somewhat enlarged. He has in preparation "Boenninghausen's Therapeutic Pocket-Book," a complete repertory to the homoeopathic materia medica, by Dr. T. F. Allen; a work on "Legal Medicine and Medical Law," by Prof. I. D. Foulon, of St. Louis; a book on Diseases of the Skin," by Dr. G. M. Gramm, of the Philadelphia Hahnemann College; and a "Text-book on Gynecology."

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THE HOWE MEMORIAL PRESS (of the Perkins Institute and Mass. School for the Blind), Boston, have nearly ready the first volume of Miss Alcott's "Little Women," printed for the blind. The work which is reproduced by permission of Mr. John S. Alcott, the holder of the copyright, will be in three volumes of about 9 x 12 inches, each volume to be about four inches thick. All the work of printing and binding is done by inmates of the Institute. The edition is not for sale, but is to be loaned to institutions and libraries for the blind. In the first volume appears the following card: "To every reader of these embossed copies of Little Women,' I send tender and loving sympathy.-M. W. M." These are the initials of Mrs. M. W. Manning, of Brooklyn, who has borne the expense of making the work.

HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & Co. will publish shortly, under the title of "The Genesis of the United States," a narrative of the movement in England, 1605-1616, which resulted in the plantation of North America by Englishmen, compiled by Mr. Alexander Brown, member of the Virginia Historical Society. The story is set forth in a series of historical manuscripts, together with a reissue of rare contemporary tracts, accompanied by bibliographical memoranda, notes, plans, portraits, and a comprehensive biographical index. 365 documents used, 294 are now for the first time published. These have been drawn from a variety of sources, both public and private, and include letters from Philip III. of Spain, Zuniga, Newport, Salisbury, Raleigh, Captain John Smith, Velasco, Digby, Gondomar, Molino, etc.; and also passages from the records of the Grocers, Mercers, Merchant Taylors, Fishmongers, and other Companies concerned in the colonizing

movement.

Of

TERMS OF ADVERTISING. Under the heading "Books Wanted,” subscribers only are entitled to a free insertion of five lines for books out of print, exclusive of address (in any issue except special numbers), to an extent not exceeding 100 lines a year. If more than five lines are sent, the excess is at 10 cents per line, and amount should be enclosed. Bids for current books and such as may be easily had from the publishers, and repeated matter, as well as all advertistments from non-subscribers, must be paid for at the rate of 10 cents per line.

Under the heading “Books for Sale," the charge to each insertion. No deduction for repeated matter. subscribers and non-subscribers is 10 cents per line for

Under the heading “Situations Wanted,” subscribers are entitled to one free insertion of five lines. For recharge is so cents per line. peated matter and advertisements of non-subscribers the

All other small advertisements will be charged at the uniform rate of 10 cents per line. Eight words may be reckoned to the line.

BOOKS WANTED.

In answering, please state edition, condition, and price, including postage or express charges.

JOHN ANDERSON, JR., 99 NASSAU ST., N. Y. Fallacies of the Faculties, by Dixon.

Evangelical Intelligencer, any vols.

THE W. F. ADAMS CO., SPRINGFIELD, MASS. V. 8, 9, 10, Bancroft's History U. S., 8° ed.

FRANK BACON & Co., PITTSBURG, PA. De Morgan's Differential and Integral Calculus. Price's Differential and Integral Calculus, 2 v. Guthrie's Commercial Geography, a v., 8°. 1809.

W. E. BENJAMIN, 6 ASTOR PL., N. Y.

N. Y. Common Council Manual, first v. 1841.

THE BOOKSHOP, 75 MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILL. Joshua, The Life of the Prophet of Nazareth, by Franz Hartman.

Pollard's Lost Cause.

Major Jones' Sketches of Travel.

BRENTANO'S, 1015 PA. AVE., Washington, D. C. Helen, by Maria Edgeworth. Diddy Dumps and Tot. Harper. Rumor, by Miss Sheppard, author of "Chas. Auchester." BRENTANO'S, 5 UNION SQUARE, N. Y. Set Lever, hf. cf. or cl., English ed. (not W., L. & Co.) Old Fashioned Roses, by J. W. Riley. Little Miltiades, Peterkin Paul.

All pts. of Little Folks, Shakspere Series, pub. by Peter G. Thompson.

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Collections, v. 2, pt. 1; v. 3, pt. 1; and v. 4. pt. 2.
C. P. Cox, 654 3D AVE., N. Y.

V. 2 Guizot's France. Estes & Lauriat.
V. 3 Knight's Mechanical Dictionary.
Nineteenth Century, August, 1889.
Engineering and Building Record, from December, 1888.
Scientific American and Supplement, for 1889.

CRANSTON & STOWE, CHICAGO, Ill.
Works by Rev. Thomas Somerville, D. D.
History of Transactions of Parties from Restoration of
King Charles II. to William III., 4to, London, 1792, of
8°, Dublin, 1793.

Observations on the Constitution and Present State of Great Britain, 8°. 1793.

History of Great Britain During the Reign of Queen

Anne, etc., 4to. 1798.

My Own Life and Times, 1714-1814, revised ed., 8°.

CHRISTIAN LITERATURE Co., 35 BOND ST., N. Y. Stuart, On the Apocalypse.

R. A. CUNNINGHAM, DAYTON, 0. Ginx's Baby, good second-hand condition.

1861.

BOOKS WANTED.—Continued.
THOS. W. DURSTON & Co., SYRACUSE, N. Y.
Nothing to Wear.
Spirite, Gautier.
Grimke Sisters.

E. P. DUTTON & Co., 21 W. 23D ST., N. Y.
Harper's Weekly, Jan. 10, 1863.

Lockhart, Life of Scott, v. 7, Household ed. Ticknor. Woodstock, v. 1, Talisman, v. 2, Household ed. Ticknor. Catlin's North Amer. Indians, v. 1. Bohn, 1851. Walpole's Letters to Countess Ossay, v. 2. Bentley. ESTES & LAURIAT, BOSTON, MASS.

V. 67-76 inclusive, Niles' Register.

Advice to Whist Players, by T. Matthews, Esq. N. Y., 1813.

Irving's Works, the large pap. 4to ed., issued about 30 years ago by Putnam, 28 v.

Cornhill Magazine, Nov., 1876; May, Sept., 1877; Sept., 1878; March, June, 1882.

Temple Bar, May, June, July, Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov., 1878; Jan., Mar., Aug., Sept., 1879.

S. B. FISHER, 685 STATE ST., SPRINGFIELD, MASS. St. Nicholas, Nov., 1886; Nov., '87; July and Nov., '88. Harper's Young People, nos. 1, 4, and 5.

Youth's Companion, Jan., 6, May 4, 1876; Oct. 25, '77: June 10, '80.

A. E. FOOTE, 1223 BELMONT AVE., PHILA., PA.

Harris, Insects Injurious to Vegetation.
Duncan, Transformation of Insects.

Watts, Dictionary of Chemistry.

Westwood, Modern Classification of Insects.
Tryon, N. Am. Strepomatidæ.

FUNK & WAGNALLS, 18 AND 20 ASTOR PL., N. Y.

Annual Catalogue, 1886.

500 Employments for Women.

GAMMEL & Co., AUSTIN, TEXAS.

Harper's Weekly and Monthly, complete sets, bound, Cheap.

Encyclopædia Britannica, from v. 15 up, Scribner ed., leath. binding.

Old laws and histories of Texas.

F. E. GRANT, 7 W. 42D ST., N. Y.

Canoe and Saddle, Theodore Winthrop.

Squire's Peru.

40 Work on Honduras.

Poems of Timrod.

Scottish Chiefs, by Marbolough, or similar name.

Biographical Sketches of Scottish Lords, especially of Lord Melville.

Scottish Life and History, in Song and Ballad.

Hendlie's Miscellanies.

Life or Memoir of John Summerfield.

English translation of Fanny, by Fedau.

Translation of Captaine Fracasse.

The Western Carolinean for 1835.

Miner's and Farmer's Journal of May 29, 1835.

Biography and Writings of John Hancock.

Fuller's Book of Calendars.

Marshall, Colonial History.

Children of the World, by Paul Heyse.

Lyrics of the Day, by Brownell.

The Works of Fenelon, in English.

Lee's Notes on the Educational Theories of Thomas Jefferson.

Life of Frederick Douglas.

Down in Tennessee, Edmund Kirke.

Among the Pines, Edmund Kirke.

THE JOURNAL PUB. Co., HELENA, MONT. Brokworth's Life and Times Among the Crows, pub. by Harper in (we think) 1856.

E. P. JUDD, NEW HAVEN, CONN.

Wahl, Galvano Plastic Manipulations, pub. H. C. Baird.
W. H. LOWDERMILK & Co., WASHINGTON, D. C.
O'Curry, Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History.
Girardin, Stories of an Old Maid.
Farjeon, Bread, Cheese, and Kisses.

London's Heart.

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JOSEPH MCDONOUGH, 53 STATE ST., ALBANY, N. Y.
Chapman and Hall's ed. of Carlyle, 34 v.

JOSEPH MACLEAN, 2206 PHILA. ST., PHILA., Pa.
Ridpath's World, de luxe ed., unbound.
Matteo Bandetto's Novels, Payne trans.
Evelyn's Diary, 5 v., Bicker's limited ed.
Large pap. copy Slang Dictionary.

Walton and Cotton's Angler, Pickering's best ed.
The Story of Crofe Castle. Geo. Bankes, Lond., 1853.
Gailhabaud's L'Architecture, 4 v. Paris, 1870.
Farmer's Slang and Its Analogues.

Rebellion-Book, giving losses in volunteer regts.
Clara Gazul, A Narrative. London, 1830.
Sue's Wandering Jew and Mysteries, 3 v. each.
Engineering (London), v. 1, 3, and 4, pts. or bound.
V. 55 to finish, Household Dickens. Darley.
Cemetries, book giving particulars and location of all
national cemetries.

Louden's Narrative of the Captivity and Sufferings of
Benj. Gilbert and His Family Among the Indians. 1790.
History of Schoharie Co. and Border Wars of New York,
J. R. Sims.

Frontiersmen of New York, J. R. Sims.

MANAHATTA PURCHASING AGENCY, 834 B'WAY, N. Y. Any odd vols. Uncle Tom's Cabin. 1852. 20 Cosmopolitan Mag., March, 1889, low. Baron Grimm's Anecdotes, etc., v. 2. Biographia Literaria, Putnam, v. 1. Histoire de la Bastille, w. plates.

R. B. MANSFORD, MEMPHIS, TENN.

Mrs. Jerningham's Journal, Jno. Jerningham's Journal, single or in one v., new or second-hand, state price. MARCH BROS., LEBANON, O.

Blaine's Twenty Years, v. 2, mor.
Grant's Memoirs, v. 2, shp.
Prescott's Conquest Mexico, v. 1, 12°, cl. J. B. L. & Co.
Ohio in the War, Reid, v. 2, cl.

S. A. MAXWELL. & Co., CHICAGO, ILL. Dexter's New Haven and Town Names of Connecticut. JOHN P. MORTON & Co., LOUISVILLE, KY.

Tyerman's Life of Whitefield.

E. W. NASH, 80 NASSAU ST., N. Y.

Letters from Mrs. Jay to Her Friends in America. Phila., 1784.

Many penny, Our Indian Wards.

Lossing's Life of Schuyler, v. 2, cl.

National Portrait Gallery, old ed., 4 v., or new ed., 5 V. Phila., 1859.

Hist. of Adams Co., Pa.

Bradford, Hist. of Plymouth Plantation.

JAMES O'NEIL, 521 7TH ST., N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C. Prescott's Conquest of Mexico, v. 2. Harper & Bros., N. Y., 1843:

Dean Alford's Queen's English.

PETER PAUL & BRO., BUFFALO, N. Y.

Vagabond Heroine, Edwards.

Life of Thomas Hooker.

Hartford, 1849.

St. Nicholas, April, May, 1888.
Gladstone's Juventus Mundi.

PRESBYTERIAN BOOKSTORE, 706 PENN AVE., PITTSBURG, PA. English Mechanic, v. 47, unbound. Quote best price on bound volume.

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, 27 W. 23D ST., N. Y. Jefferson's Works, 9 v.

A Boston Merchant, James Gibson. Boston, 1847. Johnson, D. D., Memoirs of Mrs. Thomazin Johnson. Boston, 1835.

Lovell, U. S. Speaker.

Keys of the Creed.

Tales from Many Sources, v. 5 and 6, green cl.
Gallatin's Works, 3 V.

Harper's Weekly, 1861, 1863. Or will sell at low price 1859, 60, 62, 64, 65.

Leslie's Illustrated Weekly, 1860, '61. Or will sell 1862. '63, 64, 65.

A. D. F. RANDOLPH & Co., 38 W. 23d ST., N. Y.
Murphy, Scientific Basis of Faith.
Reference Diary for ten years.

J. W. RANDOLPH & ENGLISH, RICHMOND, VA. Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, v. 1, 12°, cl. Boston, 1853. Guy Rivers, a Taie of Georgia, v. 2, 12°, cl. N. Y., 1834. Garland's Life of Jno. Randolph, v. 2, 12°, cl. N. Y.,

1851.

Randall's Life of Thos. Jefferson, v. 1, 8°, cl. N. Y., 1858.
Va. Politics. 1855.

Life of Gen. H. A. Wise, by Hamilton. 1856.
Campbell's History of Va., 12°. 1813.
Melville's Typee, pt. 2, 12°, cl. N. Y., 1847.

Reverie; or, A Flight to the Paradise of Fools, v. 2, 16°.
London, 1763.

Chrysal; or, The Adventures of a Guinea, by an adept, V. 1, 3, 16°, shp., London, 1783; also, 24°, bds., N. Y.,

1816.

Jefferson's Notes on Virginia, 8°, cl.

BOCKS WANTED.—Continued.

RAYMER & DUNN, 24 W. SIXTH ST., ST. PAUL, MINN. Commodore Perry's Expedition to Japan, v. I and 3. W. V. N. Bay's Bench and Bar of Missouri. Young's Analytical Concordance, or any of his works. W. S. RUSK, 604 8TH AVE., N. Y.

Mullinger's School of Charles the Great.

5 Years in an English University, by C. A. Bristed, v. 1. Taine's English Literature, in 1 v.

SCRANTOM, WETMORE & Co., Rochester, N, Y.

Blow, Study of Dante.

Over Seas There and Here. Lothrop.

S. SHONFELD, ANTIQUARIAN BOOKSTORE, OMAHA, NEB. V. 4 Burke's Works, Bohn ed.

Marshall's Life of Washington, any ed.

V. 1 Bridgewater Treatises, Bohn ed.

V. 2 Humphrey's Coin Collector, Bohn's Lib.

WILLIAM T. SMITH & Co., UTICA, N. Y.
Cradle Songs of all Nations.
Stephens, Central America and Yucatan.

E. STEIGER & Co., 25 PARK PL., N. Y. Bancroft, History of the Pacific States, v. 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 22, 23, 24. Bancroft, The Native Races of America, 5 v., complete. North American Review, v. 1 to 150, complete or single vols.

Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America, 8 v., complete.

THE STONE & LOCKE BOOK AND STATIONERY CO., DENVER, COLO.

Lowe's Life of Prince Bismarck.

TAYLOR, AUSTIN & Co., CLEveland, O. Trelawney's Recollections of Shelley and Byron, Pickering ed.

Trelawney's Memoirs of a Younger Son.
Roster of New York Soldiers.

Maw's Marine Engines.

Riedesel's Memoirs, Letters, and Journals.

TIBBALS BOOK Co., 26 WARREN ST., N. Y.

Campbell and Rice Debate.

Cheever, Studies in Poetry.

Luthardt's Truths, 3 v., second-hand.

Set Brighthope Series, pub. by Tibbals.

V. 1 Biog. History of Philosophy.

J. NELSON TRASK, NEW SALEM, FRANKLIN CO., MASS.

I should like to hear of books published by J. S. and C. Adams, at Amherst, Mass. Their time was before and after 1833.

C. L. TRAVER, TRENTON, N. J.

Arnold, Lincoln and Slavery.

Irving, Life of Columbus, Knickerbocker ed.

Tom Taylor, Leicester Square.

M. O. WAGGONER, TOLEDO, O.

Picture of Execution of Capt. Hale, colored.

Stamp Act, original tract.

1765.

Plaster cast of Lincoln, by Volk.

Declaration of Independence, in verse, 8°, original tract.

JOHN WANAMAKER, PHILA., PA.

Glances at Europe During 1851, by Greeley.

Crown Jewels, by Eila Moffett.

Beecher's Sermons, old ser., cl.

Comic Poets of the Nineteenth Century.

Rob Roy, by Grant.

Bishop Seabury's Sermons and Discourses.

Isaac Barrow's Works, cheaper ed, than Macmillan's.
Layard's Ninevah and Babylon.

Segur's Napoleon Expedition to Russia.

B. WESTERMANN & Co., 812 B'WAY, N. Y. Gabb (Wm. M.), Report on the Geology and Topography of St. Domingo.

JOEL WHITE, 13 DEXTER AVE., MONTGOMERY, ALA. Life of John A. Murrell. Pickett's History of Alabama.

YE LITTLE OLDE BOOKE STORE, SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
Lives of Haydn, Mozart, and Metastase, by De Stendal.
Portraits of Bodiali, Amodio, and Lablache.
History of New York, by Thomas Jones, v. 2.
Harper's Pict. History of the Rebellion, pt. 2.

E. & J. B. YOUNG & Co., 4TH AVE., N. Y.
Talmud in Hebrew.
Bishop Armstrong's Sermons.

BOOKS FOR SALE.

G. BLATCHFORD, PITTSFIELD, Mass.
Good condition.

Encyclodædia Britannica. Scribner ed., cl. $70.00. Appleton, American Encyclopædia, ed. of 1881, cl., 17 v. $42.50.

SAMUEL CARSON & Co., 208 POST ST., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL Bancroft's Histories of Pacific States, cl., $2.25; shp., $2.75

GEORGE P. HUMPHREY, ROCHESTER, N. Y. Forest and Stream, v. 1-16, 1873-1881, neatly bound, hf. black roan. $20.00.

A. M. PALMER Co., Box 111, Newton, Mass. Engineering, v. 11 to 48. $2 each. (Was erroneously printed 2 cents in P. W., May 3).

A. H. SMITH, 249 HENNEPIN AVE., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, Harper's Monthly Magazine, from v. 1 to 67, inclusive.

Ye Little OLDE BOOKE STOre, Springfield, Mass. Brittan's Journal of Spiritual Science, v. 1 and 2, in nos. $2.00.

Journal of Speculative Philosophy, v. 1 to 7, in nos. $2.00. North Am. Rev., 49 nos., between 1879 and '85. $4.00. Harper's Mag., Jan., 1880, to Dec., 1889, in nos. $5.00. Century Mag., Jan., 1884, to June, 1889, in nos. $3.00. Pop. Science Month., 83 nos., between 1872 and 1890. $6.50. Atlantic Month., 1862, '65, '75 to '78, '82, in nos. $3.00.

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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS,

COPYRIGHT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, Nos. 11,429 V. to 11,450 V., inclusive.-To wit: Be it remembered, That on the 7th day of April, Anno Domini 1890, Marcius Willson, of Vineland, N. J., and N. A. Calkins, of New York, have deposited in this office the titles of Charts, the titles or descriptions of which are in the following words, to wit: "School and Family Charts, accompanied by a Manual of Object Lessons and Elementary Instruction." By Marcius Willson and N. A. Calkins. No. 1, Elementary: Familiar Objects represented by Words and Pictures; No. 2, Reading: First Lessons: No. 3, Reading: Second Lessons; No. 4, Reading: Third Lessons; No. 5, Reading: Fourth Lessons; No. 6, Reading: Fifth Lessons; No. 12, Forms and Solids; No. 14, The Chromatic Scale of Colors." In renewal for 14 years from April 30, 1890, when the first term of 28 years will have expired.

"No. 20, Botany: The Classification of Plants." In renewal for 14 years from May 29, 1890, when the first term of 28 years will have expired.

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No. 7, Elementary Sounds; No. 11, Lines and Measures; No. 13, Familiar Colors; No. 15, Zoological; Economical Uses of Animals-Representative of Some of the Leading Orders and Divisions of Quadrupeds; No. 16, Zoological: The Classification of Animals - Class Mammalia; No. 17, Zoological: Class 2, Aves or Birds: No. 18, Zoological; Class 3, Reptiles-Class 4, Fishes; No. 19, Botanical: Forms of Leaves, Stems, Roots, and Flowers; No. 21, Botany: Economical Uses of Plants; No. 22, Botanical: Economical Uses of Plants-continued." In renewal for 14 years from July 23, 1890, when the first term of 28 years will have expired.

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