Transcript

Charles benbners Son*153-157 /|^^\New -•-<-

Fifth A- V%jjy/ City

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itA .New and Attractive Work !

Indian Warsof New EnglandBy Herbert M. Sylvester

Or TIIK BOSTON R My.

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--ati>r an;: author also of "Th« Huh of

CaMaetev'" Th«> two book*, first «dlt>on, stpostpaid ami registered. 1. JI. D.'.0.NA1.r.,Publisher. Box 15S. Hroohlyn. N. T. j

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HOLIDAY BOOKS.

THE ROMANCE OF TRISTRAM AND ISEULT.Translated from th» French of Joseph Bedierby Florence Slmmonds. Illustrated by Mau-rice Lalau. *•• pp. xiii, 217. (Philadel-phia: The J. B. Lippincott Company.)

The material is drawn from many ver-sions of t!i« old romance.

EBISHC THE LUCK GOD. By W. O. Mo-han. Illustrated. (San Francisco: I*a";

Elder & Co.)LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP. By Llllyan Shaff-

n<r. 12mo. pp. 1£- (San Francisco: PaulElder & Co.)

A decorated Booklet of crams.

JUVENILE.STORIES FROM THE CHRONICLE OF THE

<"D By Mary Wright Plummer. Illus-trated. 12mo, pp. v., 155. (Henry Holt &Co.)

Tale? for beys and girls about the Spanishh«ro, Rodrigo : de Bivar. styled El '"id,

who lived and died in the eleventh century.

JIMMY. By Julia .T. Adams. Illustrated byAlfred Russell. 12mo, pp. 101. (St Louia:Julia J. Adams.)

TPliins how Jimmy rot lost In Boston andfound a father.

THE STORY OF GREAT INVENTIONS. ByElm^r Ellsworth Burns. With many illus-trations. 12ci.j, pp. -- 348. (Harper ABros \u25a0

Narratinc in simple ian^ua^p kow ourirreat inventions came Into being, the life—Ftrupples of the Inventors, with an explana-

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BTMBI: STORIES FOR CHILDREN By

Tx>ui«a d.> la Ramea. fOuida). With Illus-tra'ions in color by Maria L> Kirk. Svo.rl.. 212. (Philadelphia: The J. B. Llppin-

cott Company.)Illustrated with eight full pap« coiired

platen.MOPS V THE FAIRY. By Jean Ingelow. With

jtrations in color by Maria 1.. Kirk.Bvo, pp. 2?«. (Philadelphia: The J. B.

Lippincott Company. 1

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WITH FULLY INTO THE SIOUX LAND. BrJoseph Miil3 Hanson. Illustrated by JohnW. Norton. 12nio. pp. 407. (Chicago: A. C.

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A storr for boys abc.it tho campaign of<;<-V,era! Sully against the Dakota Indians inIS«H. It is the first in a ne-w serifa to berailed "Among the Sioux."

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.MINSTRELSY. By Andrew Lang. Svo,pp. x. 157. (Longmans. Green & Co.)

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LECTURES ON GREEK POETRY. By J. W.Mackail. M. A.. LL. D Svo, pp. svll, 272.

--.ii.ir..-. Green & Co.).V study of the progress and evolution of.

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THE POEMS OF CYNEWULF. TranslatedInto English prose by Charles W. Kennedy.Ph. D. With an Introduction, biography

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'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0 Co.;

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ciKned attributed to him.

A. THACKERAY DICTIONARY. Th» Cbarae-ier? and Scenes of the Novels and ShortStories Alphabetically Arranged. By Isa-<lnr» Gilbert

• dge and M. Ear' Sears. Svo,pp. xlv.3"4. (E. P. Dutton & Co.)

A reference book Including; the names of

nil characters either fictitious or historical, 1that take a definite part In Thackeray's |

Itings.A DICTIONARY OF THE CHARACTERS IN

TKK WAVER! NOVELS OF SIR WAL- \TFR SCOTT By M. F A- Husband, B. a. !Svo. pp. svi, 2b7. •-- P- Dutton & Co.).

\n identlncatloii and description of the

multitude of ,-har*cters created by Sir wal-i«r, numbering \u25a0<«"« -\u25a0$"'>\u25a0 including ihirty-

seven horses and thirty-three dag?.

THAT IMAGINATIVE GENTLEMAN DONQDIXOTK DE LA MANCHA. By Migueld« Vervantes Saavedra. Translated into

English ty RoLineon Smith. Svo. pp xvl.tiHS. (E. P. Dutton ft Co.).

;Based on the Spanish Academy t<-xt of

PTj^jprtrs r-IVOV AND PERICLES. With':- \u25a0.-\u25a0-a- Oration of Pericles TUucydldes.

1 %5-46. Newly Translated, with Intn^uc-Uon"a*nd <ut-< By Beriadotte Pen-

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MISCELLANEOUS.AFRrr .v. ,vD EUROPEAN ADDRESSES. ByAFRJ,••Y,irRoosevelt With an Introduction

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tU i' Putnam's Sons.*r, tudiiM the a.'-drefis<?3 delivered at the

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US GOOD TO YOt:rtSi:l-F. By Orison gw«tt

Mur.l.n. Frontispiece- 12» •\u25a0 pp. vli 325.(Thomas V Crow :':

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Indicating tha Importance or kwpuis one'sult ma i-eriect meatal • and.pbysica! condi-jj

HISTORY.THE ROMAN EMPIRE. Essays on the Consti-

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A contribution tiS the interpretation of theImperial system, A-ritten for the use of thegeneral reader and modern politician. Witha list of Emperors and dynasties and an in-

dex to Vol. 11.

THE BUCCANEERS IN THE WEST INDIESIN THE XVIITK CENTURY. By C. H.Haring. With ten maps and Illustrations.Svo, pp. vlil, 20S. (E. P. Dutton &. Co.)

A narrative based on the most authenticavailable sources of the exploits of these searovers, and tracing the policy pursued towardthem by the English and French govern-ments.

Th- con'o'atlon of Phlebotomy, ana AnExcursion into the r.rot«,«,, etc.

ON ANTTHINa rBV

un-

a & Co-' gj pp.

Thirtv-*tch»i!t^?-3-..03 -..OnOrn

lro£...** titles

l£\~ -on a'prophet." On th» M»tho.ior Histcrv "OB tb* Traveller," "On thef-vHf

-vH J' Time.

Ualls Christian Awler-nrrrct ct ;•-, L C3ndo ,,f or Maturity."sen arM *_««=

_______FICTION.

Tim rniTIEN" GAIXEOW. Br Lucas Mal«truX M»rv Si Wr Harrison). IllustratedMl

-,M'

V/ ,• B rm.-k. limn, pp. iflßS_?cSS & pig* Company \u25a0»

Tta romance f a lovaM. oM man..„„

T ',,vv,v~" Bj- Laura E. Richards,

"in which W" ren«^ th» acquaintances ntlw*%2%r'&g% characters whofigured in "Calvin 1arK.s.

T-^SeSgTH OF THE WEAK. By MayT"

P.xon Scmo. PP- 450. (The Broad-,-8v Publishing- Companj.)

The story is woven around the negro prob-

lem of the South.TiTtmrV WATER. By Dan« Ooli<sk*, With£?T,iiMtri«oM Incolor by Maynard Dixon.

S! i^P. «3L tChlcnso: A. O, McCTurg &

°\ raT3tir- of th* Arizona cattle country

cortrSins th« struggle between c«ttta and

rtw Sen for the possession or irrazinsransep.

TOF «T'TnlT TIUVTL. By Kate aM VirgilD.RnvlPs With four illustrations In full colorbvß^nard Dlien. 12mo. pp. 416. (Chicago:,A C. McClurs & Co.)

The story of Hugh Hunt, a frontier mis-«|, na.- and of the Dakota Indians of thoparly 7(Vs. A love episode runs through, thabook.

TTTF r \~II OF HONOR. A Tale of th« WarIn the Bocage. By Burton E. Stevenson.With illustrations by Olive Rush and Eth»lPonn^will Brown. 12mo. pp. 312. (Phila-

delphia: Th« J. B. Lippincott Company.}

Another romance in "The Bastlle Series"of novels of French adventure.

THB GOLDEN HEART. By Ralph Henry Bar-hour With Illustrations In color by Clarencer Underwood and decorations by EdwardStratum Holloway. Svo. pp. 218. {Philadel-

phia: The J. B. Lippincott Company.)

This love story pets Its title from a "teahouse and gift chop" in which the heroine IsInterested.

THE SUPERINTENDENT. By Irene TTV-'.ch\u25a0 Grissom. l^no. pp. 2SS. (Th© Alice Harri-man Company.)

A t<i ie c* the satrmill ccuntry In "WesternWashington.

THE FROZEN FORTUNE. By Frank X.IV.<9Pollock. Illustrations by H. .T. Peck. I2tno,pp. \u25a0 222. (.Tha ila«:aii;ay Company.)

\ novel of adventure, with scenes laid inCalifornia and alon^ the Pacific Coast.

THE DIARY OF MV HONEYMOON. Anony-

mous. V rnn Ep. SOS. (The Macaulay Com-pany.)

In which the heroine "unburdens her soulupon intimate things."

!

; the Question of appointing a temporary

isuccessor pending the action of Congress

|on Secretary Meyer's plan to shorten the

:term of the commandant. Mr. Meyer, ItIs1 said, will ask Congresa to make the terra

four years, instead of until retirement or\u25a0 death, as at present. General Elliott re-tires on account of the statutory ag*> limit.

Colonel William P. Biddle, until recently

in command of the marine parades in NewYork City, but now attached to head-quarters in Washington, is th© ranking

officer of the eisrht colonels of the corps.

It could not b". learned at the department

whether or not he will succeed GeneralEllott. General Elliott has served in themarinA corps more than forty years. Born

in Alabama, but appointed from N«rw York.he entered the s??rvic<s on October 12, MH» has yen fourteen years' sea serviceand became commandant on October 3,

VWZ. He -waa appointed a major general

on May 13, DM

RECALLED FROM GUAM.—As the re-sult of a letter to tbe Navy Department

which is regarded by otH^iala as insarbor-dinate in tone, Major H. C. Davis, com-mandant of the marine cuard at Guam, jhas been ordered home. He will be asked

for an explanation of the letter. Major

Davis will sail on the cruiser Buffalo.

MAT BUT FROM TRUSTS.— Secretary

Dickinson has found that the law willnot {permit him to refuse to buy government ,supplies from so-called trust?, where they

happen to be tho lowest bidders. About ayear ago the. Secretary issued an order pro- ihibiting' purchases from the Standard Oil;Company and the Vacuum Oil Company, onthe Itrand that they had been declared by

the United States Circuit Court for the,

Eastern District of Missouri to be parties

to an unlawful trust and monopoly. From

this order th*» Vaccura Oil Company ap- jpealed, and this appeal was referred to thaDepartment of Justice, which held that the ;law required the acceptance of the lowest jbid from any responsible concern. Seer - 'ary Dickinson, therefore, has rescinded ;

h!s order of prohibition.

ORDER? ISSUED.— followingorders jhave been issues:

AKiIY.Major LUCIEN- G.BEKRT. 3.1 Field Artillery,to

army ?ervie« school. Fort Leavenworth.January ifor ten weeks' instruction; thoiv-e ;

tn Dror><»r station.Major GEORGE W.

1

GOODE. nth Cavalry, fromWalter Reed General hospital. District eCColumbia: to proper euuion.

Captain HUBERT L. WIGiIORK. corps of «-.tlne«Ts, from duty undtr Colonel tOLOMON j\V KOEmLER. corps of engineer*. and a*.disbursing officer and recorder, board of *n-glneers, to Ist battalion of engineers, \\asa-

raptaint°OSICAIl

CJ9"

Cn.VRLES, 17th Infantry,antam OSCAE J- CHAHIjES, l.th Infantry."from MilitaryAcaiemy, December 31, to his

Firs;: Lieutenant CHARLES T. LEEDh. corps of ,enfdnefrs. from general hospital. Fort Bay- I

ard. December 1. to l»s Vnseles vice Cap-tain WILLIAM P. STOKEY. corps of en-:

in«-<-r- to San Franclso and resume duties

uiuler Captain THOMAS H. JACKSON. corp«

Second *ls*uterunt JOSEPH VT. STir.X.VrELI. i12th Infantry, frcmMilitaryAcademr. to baa fFrancisco la time to sail January 3 torPhilippines, to loin his regiment.

___\u0084

L^ave of absenc*: Captain RICHARD K. CCRyAy-

iENS, coast artillery, three months from £>»- jccmb^r i.

NAVY.E^.sltn A. S. TVADSWORTH. to th«» Mont«om»ry ,

Chlvt Constructor W. L. .-APi'S <t*tache«J duty ,as senior member of all boards on hull >

changes in vensela building on Atlantic coast.to special temporary Uuty abroatl.

Major (j^neral (1. F. ELLIOTT, placed on retiredlist of marine corps from November 3<».

MOVEMENTS OF "W~ARSHTT>S.—The fol-|lowing movements of vessels have been re- jported to the Navy Department:

AT.KIVED.\ov 17—The Pauldlc; at navy yard. Ne^v York:

the Potom»o at Santiago d« Cutx*.; th« Ju»tinat Sausatillo: rli« 1>-» Moinra at Cadiz: theTcunrdsee and th# Montana, at Cristobal.

-AIUKL'. i

Nov 17— Tho Hist, from Key 'West for Xl-.urro. |Cuba 1 Urn MavtlowtT. Iroru navy yard. NewTork for Washington ; the Smith, the Flu»-

*«•!\u25a0 the Iwimsun, tne Prt>«ton end tha Reid,Vr«>m --'I Juan for TrtntilaJ: '.:. Potomac.

1 from iliririt.iii.'iuiffur Santiago do Cuba; dMIr.stln. from Mare l*l.iml(or riuusatllic theChester, from Hoston tor Lynnhaven Bay;tho < 'uesdr, from Bunion for Hampton cuds;

the Dea iloiae*. from Lisbon- for Cadiz; the

Special interest is imparted to this inci-dent on account of the gossip it is likely to

excite at the Capitol, where the friends ofthe chief constructor may construe theorder as a desire on the part of the NavyDepartment to send Mr. Capps as far awayfrom Washington aa possible at the coming

session of Congress, in order that he willnot bo so accessible to those who desireammunition with which to oppose theMeyer plan of navy yard control and de-partment reorganization. The naval au-thorities insist that there Is no such pur-

pose in this assignment to duty, and pointout that the information he win gather willbe of great value, and that Air. Capps isthe best officer in the service, for this im-portant task. IIIs understood that SenatorHale, who was a strong champion of Mr.Capps in the difficulties of the last session,was fully advised by Secretary Meyer be-fore the orders were Issued. Of course. Ifthe chief constructor hi desired by theifouae or Senate naval committee jis awitness, there willbe no difficulty In bring-ing him back to the United States.

ELLIOTT RETIRES NOVEMBER 80.—Major General George Frank Elliott, com-mandant of the marine corps will be re-tired on November 30, by orders issued to-

day. The Navy Department is considering

Capps to Make Inspection TripAround World.

[From T!i«» Trfbune Bur»ati.]"U'ashin^ton, Novem^r 15.

CHIEF CONSTRUCTOR'S MISSION.—The detachment of Chief Constructor W. I>.Capps from his present station in Philadel-phia and his assignment to duty which willcarry him around the world on an inspec-tion tour, which -was ordered by the Secre-tary of the Navy to-day, la certain to

arouse livelycomment In the service. Ithino secret that the naval authorities hadexpected the chief constructor to ask forretirement when he resigned, on th© re-

jquest of Secretary Meyer, as chief of the

IBureau of Construction and Repair, fol-| lowing th* controversy over naval adminis-

\u25a0 tration which involved the head of the!Nary Department, the chief constructor

and Paymaster General Rogers. Mr.Rogerspromptly eppiietl for retirement, but Mr.Cappa asked to be assigned to duty, muchto the surprise of the departmental officials.He has lately be<*n on duty in Philadelphiaas senior member of th'; board on ehanjres;in hulls of ships building on th% Atlanticj Coast. It was expected that he would beretained for ecmo time on this duty.

His inspection trip will include a raj)E;o;of observation which has rarely beenequalled by any assignment to such duty

junder the Navy Department. He -will leave j

IPhiladelphia on November 23 for the Pa- ;cific Coast and take tha first steamer for!the Asiatic station. He has been Instructed i10 investigate the conditions prevailing at ;the naval stations at Cavite and Olongapo,to ascertain the facilities for naval repair :work on the Asiatic station, to reportwhether there Is need of further expendi- .ture of public funds, to examine the ships ,of the Pacific. fleet and sea how much work!

jmust be done to keep them up to date, andthen return to the United States by way ofthe Su«v. Canal, visiting the navy yards anddock stations of forcien governments and

'

foreign ships wherever possible, making:notes of new features of repair station.--.etc. Incidentally, he is to investigate theuse of the aeroplane in connection with Iwarships abroad. When this duty is com-

'pleted Mr. Cappa will return to "Washing-ton and report to th» Secretary of the 1

Navy.

ESSAYS.

™°S KfnyneV)A iheaf of -..p<r, on mlarellaneoua cub-

.».- itaNTASIES. By Israel 7.itno-a,i\i!TAr-jA> p^ viH 4OH. (The MacniliiSi-

\u25a0\u0084 lasa cm B \u25a0<"\u25a0'\u25a0 DealFrtfcts, I 6̂ Gay Uczes; Beirut

BIOGRAPHY.REMINISCENCES or ADMrRALi MONTAGC

By Admiral tn» Hon. Victor a. Monti)C B. Willi Illustration*, tvo. pp. v!ij. CILiLnngman?. Oreta it Co.).

The a<}v»-r:tures. Ir.rlrjc.ita an 4 --.i- of xlong- life, aorce of them dating )>a,-K to IH4ICMRA NOVELLI REMIM.SCENV'ES. Comp-

iled by her du.up-ht«r. Ciimosea Val'-r!a dlg-liucc!. "With a Memoir by Arthur D Coif-ridse. Illustrated, tvo, rp. - usne-mans, Grf-en &. Co.).

These recollections reveal the vivid persoj ality cf Uife famous -ser. Her «xpe-rlences ana anecdotes an enlivened bysi:rcvvd and \u25a0winy observations.

LINCOLN AND HERNDON. By Joseph FortjJewtcn. Illustratod. Bvo, pp. SO7. (CetlarliaiJics: T);C Torch Ires».)

Dealing lth the personal and politicalfellowship of Abraharii Uncoln and Tiis lawpart.-:er, Wiiliaiii H. Herndon. The basis ofthe bock \u25a0• a series of lier.-torore unpub-lished letters wluob pawed between Hern-eon and Tlieodore 1arker fremj 1854 to lhi!>.

CACUOSTBO. Th<; Splendor ami Misery of aMaster of Ma(;ic. By V.. n. H. Trow

_bridge. lth n.-"'-"rt)UH lilusiratior.s. bvo,pp. xv, 311. (t- l: Dntton & Co.).

Th-- object of tlie biographer la not bomuch an att.-mpt to viii,l|Cilte ca Bliostro nsto correct and revise- what he believes t<> bea faJM Judgtiient of WatMy.

HCROES OF CALIFORNIA; The Story of the"Found*" of tl;e Golden SUta aa Narrated

\u0084y Th«nselve« <,r fron. OtherPurees. "*' O^-ors.-" \Hharton James. lUuk-O*t«L l2vio

-pp" xxi!- Jl°- (Itoaton: Little,

Brown £ *-"•',v eotnprcbenßlve account of (California's

ART AND ARCHITECTURE.iKOW TO K2COW ABCHITECTCRE. The Hii-

man Elements In the Evolution of Style;*.

By Frank K. Wallla. A. A. T. A. Illus-trate-}. Btt>, pp. r'-'j- (Harper & Bros.*

a discussion of Its development from th«•viewpoint of everyday experience here la ourAmerican hornet, and an explanation Of Tli»

volution of architectural styles. Illustratedby American models.

CATHEDRAE ANT) CLOISTERS OF THEISLE I'1- FRANCE. 'iTv.-iw.tin- Bourses.Troves. RciniF and Rouen.) By ElIn Whit -lock R.^Ee. With iiiuptratlcns from original

i photographs by Ykla Hunt Francis. In twovolumes. Bvo. rr- sis, 3M; *li. IUS. (G. P.Putnam's Eons.)

D^scribinK not only Hi- potiir.s? of past

scenes—

tho ancle of th» arch and the sculpt-ure of the column—but picturing some of tb«historic events which o«"-urre'l in tliesev»n«*ra.bi*s <

-hurohns roumries aeo.

!PEASANT ART INSWEDEN. LAPUAND AND

i ICELAND. Edited by Charlie Ila'.me. 11-lustrated. Svo, pp. vlil, 4s". (The John I>pne

I Company.)This special extra, number of tho "Inter-

national ettidio" treat? of peasant art inKuropfi. There aro over kit hundred fHus-•ratior.s. some in color, "mbrao'Ti^ ounpleaof furniture, potter-,', metal work, tapestry,ia'-''. Jewelry, etc

GREAT MASTERS OK LANDSCAPE PAINT-IN'iJ. From tlie French of Emilo Michel.V.'ith 170 rei^roduotions an-1 forty photo—jrravuro plains. 4to. pp- xvi, 4.-.-. iPh;!ii-

dclphia: Tfrv J. B. Lippincott Company.)Dealing in chronological ord«r. -\u25a0 It] the

masters of rhe art. th*- Ep»cial merit, of ea -hand thf-ir influence on th« dovelcpment ofpainting.

!OUK_LADT INr ART. By Mrs. Tl<-m-r .lennpr."With ten illu.siration?. Bquar* 16mo, pp.i.s-iii. an. (Chicago: A. C. A!-.-' .11. & Co. >

A hri-r Euxnmary of th<» manr- aaxMCta In\u25a0"\u25a0hich Our Lady h.is b«»^ri presented by the |peintera an<l sculptors of ail sjre-s. ;

v ' RAFTS IN TUB HOME. P.v Mah^l iTake Prizeman. "With aeventf-flva iiluw-rations, bvo, pp. xl, '22*. (rhicag-rc A C

McClurg .'. Co.iCovering the f,"',<t of handicraft whfrii mirbe successfully undftriakcn in th>-> 1)...m«.

*!

AKTISTIC HOMES. By Jlabel THk-» Pr!»sr_ jman. 'With eijfiit.v-pf.ven illustrations!. Svo.pp. i!x. US. . ,\. r, McClury &<:o »

Pe9rriptive of roni^ homes In Philadelphia, iJersey ar-.J oth«>r states, how they wr« !built, and how much they cost. "With ius |K'Stions for those who intend to build or !r»n-.oij«!. acrompanic-i by hints for the

'\u25a0irK"i"ation of interiors.

rOBCELAK*: AND HOW TO COLLECT TTBy Edward Dillon, M. a. With thirty-elxillustrations. llimo, pp. ix zii. <X I'I?ufton & Co.).

This little boo); brir.trs before the collectorfwh elementary Information an may a!<ihim in Identifjinc various examp!»a of pr>r-cfiain.

BOOKS OF THE WEEK.

Inher just published "Recollections ofa Scottish Novelist,-! that charmingwriter. Mrs. I-B. Walford. tells someinteresting stories of th« past, handeddown in her family. Readers of Scottwill be attracted by her account of howthe great romancer came to Part fromprobability and right local color in "RobHoy." It is said that the following isthe first authentic version of a famousincident:

When engaged on the novel—which nr.ceded the poom-he (<cott) trtSßSrdKrato Loch Lomond-sid* to collect materialand obtain local color, and pre4nted hini-soif at the then Sir James Colquho^adoor, confident of welcome and "assistanceBut h« had reckoned without his 1 o-i T itSir James was my grandfather, and asstupid a county magnate as existed thouehperhaps it is not for me to say it

g

who and what was a mere Edinburgh" law-yer to the Cnlei of Colquhoun? Mr -n-s,]« prSoott-he was not yet "Sir Walter'"'—mtehtbe a clever man of letters, but he was 'aperson of no consequence, as Sir Jamesesteemed consequence, and he slunk out bya hack way to avoid an intrusive, prvincbodj". having: ordered the butler to showliim round! touch an affront tvas never for-eotten nor forgiven; in "Rob Roy" the Col-quhouns were absolutely Ignored, and "thescene of the "Lady of the Lake," originallyintended to be laid on th« banks of l<ochLomond, was removed to Loch Katrine.

The Macmillan Company brings out anew and completely revised edition ofBryce's "American Commonwealth,"that book which for more than twentyyears has held leading rank in the vastliterature dealing with this country.The author revised it to a considerableextent in 1883. but in this latest editionhe has even more thoroughly rehandledhis work, Including: the latest statistics

—even the 1910 census figures were ob-tainable

—and adding several new chap-

ters as well as many notes. Amongthese additions are discussions of recentlegislation regarding primaries, recenttendencies of state politics, a detailedconsideration of the latest phase ofimmigration, a chapter on the negro

problem and recent movements towarddisenfranchising the negro in the South-ern States, another on the new trans-

marine dominions, and one on the linesof development inour universities. More-over, there are minor alterations and ad-ditions on almost every page. The•'American Commonwealth" stands,

therefore, as practically a new work,

and attention is drawn to this fact withspecial urgency in view of the existenceof certain pirated and garbled editionsof the book.

The new book of Anatule France, inwhich the fall of the angels is the theme,

may be expected some time this winter.

He has also been writing a study of

Pierre Paul Prud'hon, that painter,

chosen by Napoleon to give lessons toMarie Louise, whose art is a curious jblend of classical and romantic feeling ,and whose career was marked by more

than one poignant passage. This work,

we suppose, will be illustrated. !

Apropos of current French literature, It1may be recorded that Pierre Loti was !raised the other day to the grade ofCommander of the Legion of Honor. ;

The collar which is the badge of thecommandership was conferred upon him

on board the cruiser Patrie by Vice-Ad- jmiral de Jonquieres, who. after the cere-monies, offered the health of his friend

and prefaced his remarks by an invoca-

tion in the language of Tahiti. In hlareply Captain Viaud expressed his re-

gret that, having retired from the navy,

he would in all likelihood never again

v.ear a naval uniform in a French war-ship.

ration are among th« practical interestshandled in these volumes.

v.

-of anxious holiday book buy-

c0c0 here ht hi again with "Th» Lilac

2rr*"Book- <LorJgnians. Green & Ca>.

.grated in colors and black and white

§«rSiMui and jrympathetic collabo-**Mr H.J. Ford. Itis vain for Mr.

iS'to protest for the hundredth time

ssat*« is not the author of the Innu-

cable scries in this polychromatic*r̂S

-that Mm lA*tg is their trans-

'at^'and that all he has to do with!fe to tell her r.here they are "to be

j,d a mere -•••-, nothingl "An-

*--«tr Lack's starj books" they will re-

nain so long as children continue to feel

.>,» fx»]l of th*"1 inventions and imas'"-i:iZfi of the childhood cf their race. He

to th.- -writing of introdtJCtions

JC t^*pe TreaFiir<^ of folklore from all

fitoes and clinic?. and in the present iu-

fl&nre. after once more protesting

«gair- the. bestowal of an honor that

does ---"\u25a0 bin-., and once more

lr!s]ctir.g t:pon the credit due to Mrs.

I^asp. he talks in his invariably felicitous

-iarnsr cf fairy lore, appending a wise

r-ord nf uaroißg to those rasa modernsVlle"1^ that they can invent new

dories to match the old ones.

An^th^r firmof collaborators Inthis in-exhauFtih'* end fascinatinsr field, Mrs.

Ka^e Dougl«s Wiggin and her sister,

Mia Nora Archibald Smith, both welljtsofT: tochildren and their elders, some

y«ars ego made a "fa?—- ring" fro the

ycld of Scandinavian, English. French.frar::?1-. Gaelic, German \u25a0ad East In-

dian lora. "Th« Fairy Ring""' (Douole-

c?-

Psge &Co.) now appears in a newedition, with Hiss Elizabeth. TJacKin-sirys jiluFtratiors in colors and black

*.r.d white, for the entertainment of a

later crop cf youngsters. The collection\u25a0 a comprehensive and representative

on*, wisely omitting1 the iiniversal fa-

•rcrit's. pu<-*i as Cinderella and Puss in

Bocts. which are easily accessible Inin-ram?rable editions, for the sake of mig-

ptts Tm less entrancing, but less easily

Joand. The most popular tales—

Jack theG:ar.t Kiiier, Cinderella, Puss In Boots,

the UglyPuckling. Aladdin, Sindbad andthe like may be found in "favorite FairyTales'* <Harper & Bros), with the lateFeier XewelTs fantastic illustrations.Tte book was published some years ago,

but is offered an»w this ?eason in acheaper eaition. The selection it con-tains represents the childhood favoritesof such men and wc*nen :is PresidentsEaijley and Butler. Miss Jane Addams,Henry James, Julia Ward Howe, Dr.Eliot, Mrs. Alice Meyncll and MarkTwain. Another collection of fairy talesfrom man:' sources is Mr. Hamilton W.MaWs "Folk Tales Ev«ry Child ShouldKr<?«-" (Doubleday. Pap-e & Co.). with.CJustratJons and deocraiicns by W. W.FSiwcett. This anthology, too, emits the\u25a0well established favorites and goes far-ther afield. Including even the Xapo-leor.i'* legends of the French peasantry.It is a j?oed custom, introduced this

»*ason by several publishers, amongthem the Messrs. Harper, to indicatecc the slip covers of their books forchildren the age of the little readers tor•xhom they are intended. This is a val-oable aid to book buyers, and especiallyto overv.-crkrd booksellers, dri%-en franticty jnst this question. Miss AnnaTweed's edition of "The Arabian Nights"<ti:e Eak^r & Taylor Company), -withillustrations by Caspar Emerson andLoon d'Erno, is adapted to the needs andtht understanding of 'Vhiidren under ;fftc-en years of age": in other words, the ]e-i.-tor has sJinplifled the originals, re-taining the essence cf plot, adventurezr.i lender. This volume belongs to a !srries called '"Golden Books for Chil-Ifiren/* edited by Mr. Clifton Johnson. !antn.ner -.clume appearing in being .xjsrose -.«=-rsion by Mr. Johnson himselfcf th" preat body of English balladryrhaming the praise and the prowessend virtues of "Robin Hood." Of a neweciticrs of Hawthorne's

"Wonder Book"

ar.ol 'Tar.glewood Tales" f~E. P. Dutton'Co.iit will tufflce to say that it is"•^printed and illustrated in colors by

3?t{ H. Granville F^n. This child-ro«j<3 c.'as?=sr. of classical antiquity Tv?edsr.o;recommendation at this late day.V«rv much the same thins may b^ said<-' Miss Josephine. Brewer's adaptationto the requirements of younger readers«' a of Washington Irvine's'TaIPF cf the Alharobra" <t.h» HoughtonMlffiinCompany). She has confined her*c:torial work to the necessary omission*aad iTcusi-inn! <<mdensaTions, retaining-• r̂r author's' oivn words throughout.7b? nurppry poets, from Mother Goos« to

Carroll, •"hrisrina Rossetti andStfjensoa. :•!! a volume of their own.cpAlf.ri py lUI editor, Mr?=. Mary Wi!d<=rIfltston, "Sugar and Spire and All ThatIs X:-c" (Little. Brown &Co.). The col-kctk.n, first published five ypars ago.

ton' into a n»w edition, Mrs. Tiles-toa improving the opportunity by en- |Jarjrine it considerably.

And now fnr some >•*> the modern weav- j«-rs cf fairy ,

ore# uhom \u0084r_

&Q?asp]y addresses in his introduction to!«w "Lilac Fairy Rook." A jrenerationias reached the threshold of maturity

\u25a0 Mr. Palmer Cox first gladdened :(fcUdfaood with his ingenious, amusing ISK^efnization of the pnomes an«licttJds of old. Modern the Brownies

n their activities and environment, j''"\u25a0 &nt"?r»sts and pranks, and y*»t th»

c-Jlc"' Brownie is undeniably of the. !vintage of lvs"., the German

brother to Hans Breitmann's I*txa the Indian and the cowboy ar« Jweeding into th^ twilight of the!

l***&*4last frontier. H*»re are the be-of * possible classic which an- ]

"es and continues to ignore th« jEuropean element that is be- !

?ti He 5o heavily on our racial |«:?est>«3. The Turk Brownie does r.ot!f^|t«cr d.x=« Bruwnie Chinaman. So

art "The Brownies* Latest Ad-••.*!>

*;es'

<Ule Company), which I'"-''•Of course, an aeroplane, but also*-aA t<l«caticnal interests as the pure >

f^ E'J

*iPb-, btreet repairing and park j

wThts; If,not *"*&?*&.T°-1l'C. which their author probably j

iattudtd thc-m to be. the Brownies j: certainly successfully grotesque."**

ctrtainly app^-al to somethicg in!infant mind.

8.,Xcbo<3y can write a ntw

'fsiT" tale,"

Mr. Laa^, the supreme authority;>"•>« can only mix up the old, old

aad »at the characters into newJ!?^" Jfcaa IcS«Iow did this with a

Z2? measure of Poetic imagination\u25a0 Mopsa the Fairy (J. B. LJppincott

-otapany), a new illustrated «rdition of

ffibin the SeJd this season.' RolandIX

'"cctir.ues to do itby main strength.

J I<J cePfcak. K« mixes up all the

PrhT klUers - PriQC?i! Charming, lovelycessesi, ogTes and monsters of thei^itTl"',11

"*produCfcS •Mine

113 .iL the romance and fancy*"****out of th. m. His new conc<S

is called "J!on-tT-Lar.d" <<;. p.—**"\u25a0- *s'«i£i, and it is a continua-cr "iuas Pippin.- Katherine Fay

jCurrent Talk of Things Presentand to Come.

The political novel which Mr. H. G.| Wells has been publishing as a serial willIbe brought cut as a book by Duffield &Co. in January. "The New Machiavelli"

| Is the F.tory of sn English statesman inexile, relating his earner from his child-

hood to the time of his disgrace.I

The first volume of a work nf practical

interest to the clergymen, but not with-!out its appeal for the general reader, will

| soon appear from the pr*»ss of CharlesiEcribtif 1 Sons. This work, on "TheGreat Texts of the Bible,' has been pre-

pared by Dr. James Hastings, whosej"Dictionary of the Bible" well •\u25a0stab-

\u25a0 lished his editorial authority. In the.;forthcoming exhaustive study the texts

taken from Scripture are supplied withbrief introductions and expository note.*-,

and this machinery, while increasing thepreacher's store of material, is framedin such tee as not to Induce a lazy

adoptiori of rradymade arpum^nts. but,

on the contrary, to stimulate originality|of thought and treatment. The opening ;

volume will be given to Isaiah and the j

second to St. Mark. There will be in all jabout twenty volumes of from four hun-dred to five hundred pages each.

Among tho numerous British authorswho of late years have won popularity in \France Sir Arthur Conan Do:

-is con-

spicuous. One -of his readers across thechannel, himself an author, has just

dedicated to him a bf»ok called "L'Af-fair«i Tenebreuse r.r- Green Park." an>l

the dedication is "in the name of r-uv

common friend. Watson." Only in this

case Watson turns out to be the crim-

inal.

We are to have presently another study |

of WilliamBlake, about whom nowadays jnearly everybody seems to want to writea book- Mr. Joseph H. Wlcksteed baa

been considering the famous designs for i

"The Bock of Job," and in his'

-\u25a0 boom- jing volume he 1s paid to offer a newclew to Blake's intentions in the develop-

ment of his most remarkable series ofcompositions.

The McClurgs of Chicago will bring :

out next year, under the title of "Blood jof the Arena." a translation by Mrs. :

Charles F. Lummis of the novel of thebullring: by Senor Biasco Ibanez, "Sangre jy Arena," which has b^n read with tre- i

mendous enthusiasm in Spain. Troy and i

Margaret Kinney are spending the win-

ter in that country preparing: the Illus-:

trations for Mrs. Lummis' s translation. !

A new s-eries of books for children hasbeen projected by Doubleda y; Page &

Co. -In lhe ten voIu"iS of this "Chil-

dren's Library of Work and Play" a

number of writers will treat of subjectswhich, if they suggest work and evenactually set the reader upon specifictasks, are fruitful of Kh».^r j,,y to theeager youngster who Wants to use hishands. Carpentry and Woodwork^ House-Iteepinf. Needlecraft, Outdoor Sports, jGardening', Electricity u>4 Interior Deco-

BOOKS AND AUTHORS

-\u25a0-\u25a0-'-"'s "fairy book of astronomy.". which she calls "Star People" (the1 Houghton MifflinCompany), appears to agrown-up to require the Interpreting as-sistance of a. more or less astronomicaljfrrovi-n-up to mak^ It of educative valueIto th« youngsters. Delightfully Illus-trated Incolors. "The Steps to Nowhere"of Grace Duffle Boylan (the Baker& Taylor Company) is In reality a fic-

jtion of the roaj to yesterday, fromGramercy Park In this year of grace to{few Amsterdam, the pirate ship ofCaptain Kidd and the vanished civiliza-;tion of the Azt«cs. AH this happvna co-incidently -nith the search of a coupleof children for their father, who is an

jengineer on th*» Panama Canal. ThereIs here a measure of real originalityjmixed up with the old properties. Theold Idea that sus^sted to Dickens bis"Christmas Carol" forms the basis ofMi^s Abbie Powell Brown's "TheChristmas Anger* (the Houghton MifilinjCompany). Miss Terry is a female NewEngland Scrooge, to whom the Christ-mas spirit is an offence and a lie. Sneproves it to her satisfaction by watch-ing the actions of the people who pick

the playthings of her own childhood a? ishe throws them into the street

—andthen the battered papier matiie ancr- i

', that used to hang over the Christmastree lons 50 opens her eyes. Bar.

Kecinald Birch furnishes the Illustra-

tions of this very slender, very shortcompliment to the shade of Dickens.

The animal world, that powerful stimu- ,Ilus to the imagination of the race in Its ;

!earliest stajres, continues to claim Its jannual tribute. Here, too. the old, old 1

stories prove of vice over and overiagain, the whole body of them from •

.Ssop to Uncle Remus. The modern j:nature study writers are not represented j

in the group of books here under dis- jcussion, though, of course, their influence \u25a0\u25a0

is traceable here and there. As in the jfairy world, so in this one the new in- ;

ventions as% not equal to the old. InMary Joss Jones's "Hump Tree Stories"(San Francisco: Paul Elder & Co.) onefinds an elusive quality that promises 1

well for their popularity with children. !In fact, the author warns her little read-era that grown-ups have no business in

her pages. She plays a little with the ;

simplest facts of natural history, but

feels no responsibility beyond that of iamuaing. Only the fate of "high-hopper igrasshopper," who was so vain of hisjumping powers that he jumped straight

into a bird's beak, can be said to have a jlesson attached to it. This is one of jthose attractively made books that thePacific Coast occasionally sends us. with jcapital drawings in black and green by |

R. L. Hudson. "Old Mother West Wind" :

(Little.Brown & Co.) sends her breezes jto protect the weak animals in the story jof that name, in which the author. Mr. 1

Thornton W. Burgess, also solves euch |important problems as why the skunk jwears stripes and the frog has no tail, jthough the tadpole has. There is even ja new version of the race between the

turtle and the hare. Mr. Albert Bigelow

Paine has written a continuation of hishollow tree and deep woods people sto-

ries and called it "The Hollow TreeSnowed-in Book" (Harper & Bros.) Its jinventions are decidedly prosaic; Mr. J.

M. Conde's drawings remind one ofFrost's. Mr. B. H.Harrier's "The Forest

Foundlin™" (Boston: Dana Estes & Co.)

is educated, r.ot by the wolf pack, but :

by the squirrel, the owl and the fox. Helearns much from them and about them,protects them against their enemies,

chief among them man, and ultimately

groes to live v.- his own people. A.readable story.

9M-W-YORK DATLY TRIBT 'ST.. SATPM>AY, 10. 1010.

BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS. I BOOKS AND PUBLICATION!.

Ps jdU By the Author of

C^3 MISS SEUNA LUE XA}^iCr^ Sc'.lr.i Lue 'ii.;dfligh'fbl, »J thousand* VklWf\^ of readers bore happy wimM3. More fTlj\J delightful stillis her new novel The Road £LSI to Providence. The mo"her> hfrome i» IVIf Guide, Philosopher and Friend to « whoi? ffyH Tennessee village

—fullo:ci:ainr,trnr-heartffd Jj

\u25a0V.. /N men and women and comical children. Jfl\Y"*r Scndment, piety,worldlywisdom, humor.1 practicality and coquetry are about equally

% blended in her, with the result thtt Hfe >^^V^I seen through the compound is a beaotkul* Vg^yy£ dignified,useful, serious, happy thing. JJyl

T7ip\ "«wM JlMI^ 1 story

Road to^RvyJdence

By Maria Thompson DaviessBoiktJLrt The BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY,Publishers ££LJ££-.>

tlon. with actric* as to how this may b»stbe attain*-'!.

!GETTING ON, By Orison »w*tt Mftr4*"-nrispi«>-F. lima, dp !x. ?,2.V (Thomas

Y. Crowell & Co.)Demonstrating the theory that "ifyou nr»made of th«» stuff that wins, nobody fan

hold you back." and pointing out porn* ofth» chief caitiMa why ti>«rc ar» failures inlife and in business.

MUSIC.ICORRECT PRINCIPLES OF 'CLASSICAL

SINGING. By Max Ilelnrich.' Illustrated.12mo, pp. xl, 13* (Boston: Lothrop, L*"« &Sh<?pard Company.)

fContaining eswij-s on rimnalm a Te&eh?r:

the Art of Sincing. etc Together with miinterpretative key to Handel* "M«!ilah"and ~r liuhnil'ii "DIo Pchon- Mullerin."

POETRY AND DRAMA.CHRISTUS: A Story of I^ove. By Grace Hoff-

man White. 12n&o, r.r>. 64 fFrivat'lyprinted.)

A poem in nine canto*.HOLIDAY PLAYS. Firs On«-Act Fie?-* Tor

WBabin«toD'a Btrthday, Lincoln's Birthday,Memorial Day. Fourth of July and Thank.-*-Fivinsr. By Marguerite Menngt.on. 12mo,PP. 164. (.Duffleld & Co.)_

Containing "Prlscilla. Hjles and John."A Washington's Birthday Pageant." "Th«

First Klai?.' 1 "At« Lincoln and Little A. D."apd "The Dale« et Decorum Club."

FRONTIER BALLADS. By Till111 Mills Han-son, with Pictures In Color and Otn»rDrawings fry Ma.vnard Dlxon, 12mo, pp. 02.<<-hicago: A. C. rtlcClurs & Co.)A collection of soldier, prairie and riverMega.

SELECTIONS FROM PARTS IAND IIOFFREDERICK'S PEREGRINATIONS. AndOther Poems. By Gus J. Trares. l^mo. pp.<*>• (London: Murray& Co.)

iTHE POEM3OP EUGENE FIELD. CompleteEdition. Frontispiece, gvo, pp. si. 553.(Charles Scribner'a Sons.)

political! economy.\u25a0

STATE SOCIALISM IN NEW ZEAI.ANIX ByJames Edward Le Rosalgnol and WilliamDowbl* Stewart. 12mo. pp. xl. 311. (T. T.

| Crowtll & CooEmbodying' the results of a close study at

first hand of the politico-economic situationIn New Zealand. Among the subjectstreated are State Railways. Sta;» Life In-surance, Old-Age Penslona Lan1 Tenure,

ages and Cost of Living, and Wealth andIts Distribution.

RELIGIOUS.• TEE AUTHORIZED VERSION OF THE! BIBLE

AND ITS INFLUENCE. By Albert 3.Cook, Professor of the English LaniruaK* andLiterature in Yal« University. 12mo, pp. iii.SO. (G. P. Putnam's Sons.)

THE CATHOLIC EN-CYCLOP-CDTA. An Inter-national Work of Reference on the Consti-tution. Doctrine, Discipline and History ofthe Catholic Church. Edited by Charles G.Herbermann, Ph. D.. Ll* D ; Edward A.Pace, Ph. D., D. D.; CondA B. Fallen, Ph. D..LL. D. Thomas J. Shahan, D. D.. John J."Wynne, S. J.; assisted by numerous col-laborators. In fifteen volumes. Illustrated.Volume IX. Laprade-Mass. Kolio. pp. xv,600. (The Robert Appleton Company.)

THE SUPERINTENDENT'S HELPER. lfttl.By Jesse Lyman Hurlbut. 16mo. pp. ISO.(Eaton &Mains.) •

Containing- lessons for the four quarters ofthe year 1911.

REPRINTS.THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRTDGE.. A. Story

of a. Man of Character. By Thomas Hardy.Frontispiece. 12mo. pp. vi, 4*)5. (Harper &Brothers.)

Issued in the new thin paper edition ofI th« works of the novelist. With a map of

the Wessex cf the novels.!POEMS AND DRAMAS. By "Fiona Macleod."

(William Sharp.; Frontispiece. 12mo, pp.I 45.".. (DuSeld & Co.)

Volume VIIIn the collected «Klltlon of theworks of "Fiona Macleod." edited by Mrs-Sharp.

j SNOW-BOUND: A Winter Idyl. By JohnGreenleaf Whittier. With an Introductionby Walter Taylor Field. Frontispiece,lfimo. pp. 43. Chicago: The Abbey Com-pany.)

Published in tha "Abbey Classics" series.NOTTTTA VENATICA. A Treatise on Fox

Hunting Embracing the General 'Managre-ment of Hounds. By Robert T. Vyner. Anew edition, revised, corrected and enlargedby William C. A. Blew, M. A. Revised andbrought down to date by Cuthhert Bradley.With, twelve Illustrations by Henry Alken

I and others. Colored by hand. In two vo!-; umes. 4to, pp. xvl, 1*33; vii, 184. (E. P.

Duttcn & Co.)In the present edition the appendix has

bees distributed throughout the book, andthe biographies ara now collected Into aseparate chapter.

THE AMAZING MARRIAGE. By Oeorsa M#r»-dlth. Illustrate.!. 6vo. j>p. x, 511. ».:harles.-. ribner's Sons i

CELT AND SAXON. A NoveL (Unfinished.)By George Meredith. Illustrated. Svo, pp.vi, £24. (Charles Scrffaner'a Sons.)

Forming Volumes XtX and XX In th«new "Memorial Edition."

SPORT.GOOD SPORT SEEN WITH SOME FAMOUS

PACKS. ISBS-1910. By Cuthbert Bradley.("Whipster.") With ten full page illustra-tions, including- six in color, numerous textcats and a hunting- note by th*> Right Hon.Henry Chaplin, M. P.. Ex-Master of the

TRAVEL.HEROIC SPAIN*. By E. Boyle O'Rolllr- Illus-

trated. Svo, pp. vi,440. fDuffleld & Co.)A record of a Journey through Spain.

THE TOLL,OF THE ARCTIC SEAS. By rx>ltu«il. Edwards. Illustrated by G. A. Coffin,and from photographs. Svo, pp. 3. \u25a0»-*&-(Henry Holt & Co.)

Assembled here are the stories of those !explorers and mariners who have felt the |lure of th« magic North, the tragedies ofParents, Bering, Hudson. Franklin and Hail;the history of the Gr«e;y expedition andthe scientific achievements of Nordensklold,Amundsen. Sverdrup. Nansen, the Duke orthe Abruzzl and Peary.

THE RIVER AND I. By John G. Nefharft."With fifty illustrations. 12mo, pp. lx. 3^3.(G. P. Putnam's Sons.)

The adventures and impressions of afour-thousand-mil o trip down the Missouri.

THINGS SEEN IN' SPAIN. By C. Gas<juoln»Hartley. With fifty illustrations. 16mo, pp.xi. 253. (E. P. Dutton & Co.)

This small book contains much useful la-iformation about Spain and the Spaniards, iana is profusely Illustrated with photo-graphs.

LION AND DRAGON IX NORTHERN CHINA.ByR. F.Johnston. M. A. (Oxon.), FR.G.S."With map and illustrations. Svo, pp. xiv,460. (E. P. Duttcn & Co.)

Concerning the district, history, folklore,religious practices and the social customs ofthe people of the Territory of Weihaiwel.

RELICS AND MEMORIALS OF LONDONTOWN. By James S. Ogllvy. "With. flfty-two colored plates by the author. 4to, pp.x. 315. (El P. Duttoa *Co.)

A record In color of historic buildingsscattered over a wide area. The text give*the history and legends concerning themand notes en the celebrities who conferreddistinction on the old taverns. Inns andcoffee houses.

SICILY INSHADOW ANDINSUN. The Earth-quake and the American Relief Work. ByMaud* Howe. With Numerous Illustrations,Including Pictures from Photographs TakenIn Sicily and Original Drawings by JohnElliott. Svo. pp. xvii. 491. (Boston: Little.Brown & Co.)

The story of the earthquake Is followed byan account of the rescue wortc dene by theAmerican Committee, with descriptions ofPlcily as she was in ancient times.

OCTOBER VAGABONDS. By Richard L»Gall-!»nne. The Illustrations by Thomaa Fr>sarr>\12mo. pp. -"1- (Mitchell Kenneriey.)

Th» account of an uncompleted w»rk'B»tour through New York state.

Blanjcney. 4U>. pp. x!, 280. (E. P. Duttoa& Co.)

Impressions and recollections of s^odtimes spent hunting: with such famoushounds as the Blanlcney. Beaufort. Belvolr,Cotresmore and tha Quern pacJw In Eng-land.

ARMY AND NAVY NOTES

The New York Evening Sun •a;«;."Much space is naturally devoted to th*',mooted question of the extent to which;

Hamilton was responsible for Was *-

ington's Farewell Address. The reviewof the evidence fa complete and fair,closing with th- earnest declarationwritten by Elizabeth Hamilton when!

32 years old."The Pioneer-Press of St. Panl *ayej

"Much new light is thrown by thofbiographer upon the life and character**of the famons statesman."

With Illustrations and facsimiles*'S'oo, $3.50 net: pos'.zjc extra.

The Albany Evening Journal say*:

"Dr. Hamilton throws much light openWashington's Farewell Address, which,

it is claimed, v.-as virtually -written byv

Hamilton himself."

The New York World says; "Hi*book nevertheless ia of very poshfraivalue and Interest in. his portrayal of >

character and career upon which biog-raphers less informed and concerned;

have differed notoriously.• • •

Re*garding the authorship of the FarewellAddress, a moot question, still in his-tory, Dr. Hamilton quotes from letter*which passed between Washington andHamilton in July, August and Septem-ber, 1796, to show 'that there was col-laboration at least, and probably *- 101 0

much of the original material and many

of the suggestions originated withiHamilton."

"

ALLAN McLANE HAMILTON.

based chiefly upon original family;letters and other documents, many*;

of which have never been pub-»lished, with illustrations and fao*similes.

by his grandson.

The Intimate Lifeof

Alexander Hamiltoa

This matter is fully considered in

Write Washington'sFarewell Address?

Did Hamilton

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