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EZEKIEL & BERNHEIM, AUCTIONEERS

FOR THE SALE OF

BOOKS

-AND OTHER

The Cook Book

to go by

is Mrs. Rorer's

A big book of nearly 600 pages. Every recipe in it has been tried over and over again and found to come out

LITERARY PROPERTY right. You are bound to succeed in

Exclusively on Commission.,

134 Main Street, Cincinnati, Ohiɔ, U.S.A.

Regular Weekly Auction Sales of Books of every description.

Libraries and Small Collections intelligently catalogued and sold.

We do not buy or sell any books on our own account, and have no interest in any Bookstore.

Parties having Books for sale will do well to con-
sult us before making arrangements elsewhere.'
CONSIGNMENTS RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED.
Liberal Cash Advances.

Catalogues mailed FREE upon application to
EZEKIEL & BERNHEIM, Auctioneers.

your cooking by the use of this book. Bound in washable oil cloth covers, $1.75

MRS. RORER'S OTHER BOOKS.

Home Candy Making, Canning and Preserving,

Paper Covers, 40 Cents; Cloth, 75 Cents.

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PORTRAITS OF FAMOUS AUTHORS.

These portraits are artist's proofs direct from the wood-block. With a single exception, they were specially engraved for THE BOOK BUYER, and are suitable for framing, or for illustrat ing special editions of books, autographic collections, etc.

BY MAIL, POSTPAID, 25 CENTS EACH.

*F. BRET HARTE

*CONSTANCE FENIMORE WOOLSON
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON

*WILKIE COLLINS

*DR. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES

FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT

CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER

GEORGE PARK FISHER

*MARY MAPES DODGE

*OCTAVE THANET

*MAUD HOWE

HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD

OLIVE SCHREINER

*W. CLARK RUSSELL
HENRIK IBSEN
*PAUL B. DU CHAILLU
*LAURENCE HUTTON
*MRS. HUMPHRY WARD
J. WHITCOMB RILEY
EDITH M. THOMAS
WILL CARLETON
H. RIDER HAGGARD
*GEORGE BANCROFT
*JOHN BURROUGHS
NOAH PORTER
*HOWARD PYLE

*Special Artist's Proofs on India Paper can be supplied of Portraits marked with an asterisk, at

50 cents each.

As the number of these portraits on hand is small, and no more will be made when present stock is exhausted, the prices are net.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743 Broadway, New York.

Scribner's Magazine for April

CONTAINS:

"NOW CHAPLETS BIND." Being the first of a series of illustrations by

J. R. WEGUELIN for selected Odes of Horace.

TADMOR IN THE WILDERNESS. BY FREDERICK JONES BLISS.

HARRY FENN, and from photographs.

Illusrations by J. D. WOODWARD and

THE RIGHTS OF THE CITIZEN-I. AS A HOUSEHOLDER.

By FREDERICK W. WHITRIDGE [To be followed in later numbers by papers on the Rights of the Citizen as a User of the Streets, as a Traveller, etc., by FRANCIS LYNDE STETSON, President SETH LOW, E. L. GODKIN, and others.]

THE ELECTRIC RAILWAY OF TO-DAY BY JOSEPH WETZLER. Illustra

PÉRARD, M. J. BURNS, and A. F. LEICHT.

EXPIATION. (Conclusion.) By OCTAVE THANET.

tions by J. D. WOODWARD, V.

Illustrations by A. B. FROST.

JAVAN HACKETT'S ILL-MENDED FORTUNES.

Story by E. C. MARTIN.

IN THE FOOTPRINTS OF CHARLES LAMB-II. BY BENJAMIN ELLIS

tions by HERBERT RAILTON and JOHN FULLeylove.

MARTIN. Illustra

WAGNERIANISM AND THE ITALIAN OPERA. BY WILLIAM F. Apthorp. IN THE VALLEY. Serial by HAROLD FREDERIC. With two full-page illustra

tions by HOWARD PYLE.

THE NEW METHUSELAH. Story by Sarah Orne Jewett.

THE POINT OF VIEW, STYLE-SPRING PHILOSOPHY-THE PARADOX OF HUMOR.

HENRY M. STANLEY'S ARTICLE IN SCRIBNER'S

MAGAZINE.

Information received from Mr. Henry M. Stanley, at Cairo, and the progress made in the preparation of his material for illustrations, etc., lead the publishers to believe that his article, describing some of the experiences of his African journey for the relief of Emin Pasha, will be ready for issue in the June number of Scribner's Magazine. Mr. Stanley will write for no other periodical. This article in Scribner's will be illustrated from photographs

and sketches.

25 Cents a Number; $3.00 a Year.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743-745 Broadway, New York.

RECOLLECTIONS. By George W. Childs.

Containing reminiscences of noted persons with whom Mr. Childs has been intimately acquainted, together with interesting incidents in his own life. The story of the memorials to Shakespeare, Milton, Herbert, and Cowper, and Bishops Andrews and Ken, edited by L. CLARKE DAVIS. Also an account of the banquet given by the Association of Ex-Delegates to the International Typographical Union on the celebration of the birthday of Mr. Childs, with an introduction on his relation to his employees, by RICHARD T. ELY. With Portrait of author. 12mo. Cloth, gilt top, $1.00.

"A chatty, unpretending record of the rise of worth, industry, and good sense to fortune. Its sketches of people whom he has known embrace a large number of the most desirable acquaintances, such as Irving, Halleck, Longfellow, Motley, Bryant, Prescott, Hawthorne, and others."-New York Christian Intelligencer. "The man himself, crowned by a brilliantly successful life, is a subject of interest to every American, His personal reminiscences of great men who had enjoyed his hospitality, and with whom he was intimate, makes these pages of Recollections' full of interest."-Wilmington (Del.) Ensign.

"The finer, tender side of General Grant's character becomes more evident as we read the recollections of Mr. Childs and others who knew him intimately. It explains the personal affection towards him of such natures as Conkling, Logan, and others, whose friendship was more than the loyalty of political partisans." -Boston Pilot.

PRESCOTT'S "REIGN OF CHARLES V." (2 vols.)

New Library Edition. Edited by J. FOSTER KIRK. Illustrated with Portraits and Maps. Complete in twelve volumes. Octavo. Neatly bound in cloth. Gilt top. $2.50 per volume.

PREVIOUSLY ISSUED :-"Conquest of Mexico," two volumes. "Conquest of Peru," two volumes. "Ferdinand and Isabella," two volumes. "The Reign

of Philip II." (3 vols.) ready in May. "Biographical and Critical Miscellanies," (1 vol.) ready in June.

"It would be difficult to point out among any works of living historians the equal of those which have proceeded from Mr. Prescott's pen."-Harper's Magazine. "Mr. Prescott has long been honorably known as the author of the most valuable historical works produced in the present age."-The Edinburgh Review.

LOVE IN THE TROPICS.

A romance of the South Seas. By CAROLINE EARLE WHITE. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00.

This story will doubtless be a welcome surprise to the many friends of the author, who is so widely known through her activity in charitable and humanitarian efforts. Mrs. White is gifted with fine imaginative powers, and possesses literary taste and ability of a superior order, as is abundantly shown in this lifelike romance of the South Seas. As may be expected, the moral tone of the work is of the highest, in fact, one of the author's chief objects is to show through several very beautiful characters that moral excellence is compatible with a low degree of civilization. The luxuriance of tropical life and the strange habits and manners of the people described add much freshness, originality, and interest to the story.

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No. 108

Author of "Guilderoy," " Chandos," "In Maremma," "Moths," etc. of Lippincott's Series of Select Novels. 12mo volume of 400 pages. Paper, 50 cents; cloth, uniform with Ouida's novels, $1.00.

"Ouida's' stories are abundant in world-knowledge and world-wisdom, strong and interesting in plot. Her characters are conceived and elaborated with a skill little short of masterly, and the reflective portions of her stories are marked by fine thought and a deep insight into the workings of human nature.”—Boston Gazette.

If not obtainable at your booksellers', send direct to the publishers, who will forward the books, free of postage, promptly on receipt of the price.

J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, Publishers,

715 and 717 MARKET STREET, PHILADELPHIA.

Large 12mo, illustrated, selling, in different styles, $1.50, $1.75 and $3.50 per volume. I. NELSON AND THE NAVAL SUPREMACY OF ENGLAND. By W. CLARKE RUSSELL, author of "The Wreck of the Grosvenor," etc. (Now ready.)

A series of biographical studies of the lives and work of certain representative historical characters, about whom have gathered the great traditions of the Nations to which they belonged, and who have been accepted, in many instances, as types of the several National ideals. With the life of each typical character will be presented a picture of the National conditions surrounding him during his career. The narratives are the work of writers who are recognized authorities on their several subjects, and, while thoroughly trustworthy as history, will present picturesque and dramatic "stories" of the Men and of the events connected with them.

The Series will be under the editorial supervision of Evelyn Abbott, M.A., of Balliol College, and the volumes will be issued by Messrs. Putnams simultaneously in New York and London.

OTHER VOLUMES IN PREPARATION:

PERICLES AND THE GOLDEN AGE OF ATHENS. By EVELYN ABBOTT, M.A., Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford.

GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS, AND THE

STRUGGLE OF PROTESTANTISM FOR EX

ISTENCE. By C. R. L. FLETCHER, M.A., late Fel-
low All Souls College, Oxford.
ALEXANDER THE GREAT, AND THE
EXTENSION OF GREEK RULE AND OF
GREEK IDEAS. By Prof. BENJAMIN I. WHEELER,
Cornell University.

HENRY OF NAVARRE, AND THE HU-
GUENOTS IN FRANCE. By P. F. WILLERT, M.A.,
Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford.

WILLIAM OF ORANGE, THE FOUND

ER OF THE DUTCH REPUBLIC. By RUTH
PUTNAM.
CICERO, AND THE FALL OF THE
ROMAN REPUBLIC. By J. L. STRACHAN DAVID-
SON, M.A., Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford.
LOUIS XIV., AND THE ZENITH OF
THE FRENCH MONARCHY. BY ARTHUR HAS-
SALL, M.A., Senior Student of Christ Church Col-
lege, Oxford.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH, AND THE
ADVENTURERS OF ENGLAND. By A. L.
SMITH, M.A., Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford.
BISMARCK. THE NEW GERMAN
EMPIRE; HOW IT AROSE; WHAT IT RE-
PLACED; AND WHAT IT STANDS FOR. By
JAMES SIME, author of "A Life of Lessing," etc.
A full prospectus sent upon application.

THEODORIC THE GOTH, THE BAR-
BARIAN CHAMPION OF CIVILIZATION. BY
THOMAS HODGKIN, author of "Italy and her In-
vaders," etc.

CHARLEMAGNE, THE REORGANIZER
OF EUROPE. By Prof. GEORGE L. BURR, Cornell
University.

THE STORY OF THE NATIONS SERIES. XXVIII. THE STORY OF RUSSIA. By W. R. MORFILL, of Oriel College, Oxford.. 12mo, illustrated, $1.50.

XXVII. THE STORY OF THE BARBARY CORSAIRS. BY STANLEY LANE POOLE, author of "The Story of Turkey," "The Moors in Spain," etc. With the collaboration of Lieut. J. D. Jerrold Kelley, U. S. Navy. 12mo, illustrated, $1.50. "He has produced a volume at once creditable to his literary sense and his historical knowledge, and at the same time of absorbing interest and value."-N. Y, Times.

XXVI. THE STORY OF EARLY BRITAIN. BY ALFRED J. CHURCH, author of "Story of Carthage," etc. 12mo, illustrated, $1.50.

"A better volume than Early Britain' will scarcely be found, and when we say that about it, we mean to praise it very much indeed, for the series is a most admirable one. Prof. Church has succeeded. not only in gathering an enormous amount of information into little compass, but he has also been suc-. cessful in making it read like a story book."-Civil-Service Gazette.

XXV. THE STORY OF THE HANSA TOWNS. By HELEN ZIMMERN. 12mo, illus. trated, $1.50.

"Unique in the series and unique in itself. .. Miss Zimmern's work is admirably done. It will be read with an unusual interest and profit by many students of history who have hitherto had to deplore the lack of any book of the kind."-Scotsman.

KNICKERBOCKER NUGGET SERIES. XXVIII. THE SAYINGS OF POOR RICHARD. Being the Prefaces, Proverbs, and Poems of Benjamin Franklin, originally printed in Poor Richard's Almanacs for 1733–1758. Collected and edited by PAUL LEICESTER FORD. $1.00.

XXVII, THE BOYHOOD AND YOUTH OF GOETHE. Comprising the first eleven books of his Autobiography (Truth and Poetry from my own Life). 2 vols., $2.00.

"It is well that a book so indispensable to every lover of literature should be made accessible in so delightful a form."- The Beacon, Boston.

XXVI THE GARDEN, as Considered in Literature by Certain Polite Writers. With a Critical Essay by WALTER HOWE. With Portrait of WILLIAM KENT. $1.00.

"Altogether it is a charming little book, and no lover of gardens can venture to dispense with it."The Beacon, Boston.

XXV. SESAME AND LILIES. BY JOHN RUSKIN. $1.00.

"It abounds in some of the choicest thoughts of a master mind, inspiring and ennobling, which are fitly framed in the dainty volume at hand."-Boston Times.

List of Spring Publications sent on application.

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, 27 and 29 West 23d Street, New York.

Little Saint Elizabeth

And Other Stories. By FRANCES HODGSON BUR-
NETT. With 12 new full-page drawings by Regi-
nald B. Birch. Square 8vo, uniform with "Little
Lord Fauntleroy," $1.50.

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SUSAN COOLIDGE WRITES:

"The pretty tale from which the book borrows its name has for its heroine a little French girl brought up in an old château in Normandy, by an aunt who is a recluse and dévote. A child of this type, transplanted suddenly while still in childhood to the realistic atmosphere of prosperous New York, must inevitably have much to suffer. She is puzzled; she is lonely; she has no one to direct her conscience. The quaint little figure, blindly trying to guess the riddle of duty under these unfamiliar conditions, is pathetic, and Mrs. Burnett touches it in with delicate strokes. The second story is full of good old fairy-land flavor, with the addition of a delicious spice of modern fun and humor. The third story, which is called The Proud Little Grain of Wheat, is even more delightful in its way. Behind the White Brick, also a story of dreamland or fairy character, closes the book, which is prettily illustrated by Birch."

"There is the same mingling of sweetness and humor in these little sketches which characterizes Fauntleroy.' Hartford Post.

"Four beautiful stories in Mrs. Burnett's best vein, and all of them beautifully illustrated."-N. Y. Journal of Commerce..

UNIFORM WITH THE ABOVE.

Little Lord Fauntleroy. Illustrated by Sara Crewe. Illustrated by R. B. Birch. R. B. Birch. Square 8vo, $2.00.

EXPIATION.

By OCTAVE THANET. Illustrated by A. B.
Frost. 12mo, cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cents.
"A masterly sketch of life in Arkansas during the
War, when the rural population were plundered in
turn by Confederate or Union troops, or by bands of
marauders. The interest of the story never flags.
It is one of the strongest stories of the season."
N. Y. Sun.

BRIGHT SKIES and DARK
SHADOWS.

By Rev. HENRY M. FIELD, D.D. 8vo, $1.50.
A charming narrative of the author's recent jour-
neyings in the Southern States, not only descriptive
and pleasantly historical in its pictures, but contain-
ing much that is instructive and suggestive in its ex-
amination of social and political problems.

Square 8vo, $1.00.

THE LAWTON GIRL.

By HAROLD FREDERIC. 12mo, cloth, $1.25; paper, 50 cents.

A powerful piece of romantic realism, characteris ing vividly not only the personages of the novel, but the entire social life of the town in which the scene is laid. The story has a very strong human and pathetic side, and the trials, struggles, and accomplishments of "The Lawton Girl" are depicted with much sympathy and delicacy of touch.

THE NEGRO QUESTION.

By GEORGE W. CABLE. 12mo, 75 cents.

The address which Mr. Cable delivered in reply to the memorable speech by the late Henry W. Grady is the leading feature of this volume, which also contains the "open letters" by Mr. Cable.

"Mr. Cable's famous papers make a stirring volume that will be read with interest."-Brooklyn Eagle.

ENGLISH LANDS, LETTERS, AND KINGS.

VOLUME II.

From Elizabeth to Anne. By DONALD G. MITCHELL. 12mo, $1.50.

The second volume of Mr. Mitchell's talks about historical and literary England covers the period from James I. to Queen Anne, Shakespeare being the first and Swift the last personage of importance who passes under review of the sympathetic commentator and critic. The novelty of the author's point of view, the suggestiveness of his portraits and pictures, and the unique charm of his style, unite to make the book as noteworthy as its predecessor.

ENGLISH LANDS, LETTERS, AND KINGS.

Vol. I.-From Celt to Tudor. 12mo, $1.50.

A bright, pleasant, chatty record, true to history, "A most charming book for lovers of the purest and full of useful hints and suggestions."-Boston and best literature."-Hartford Post. Saturday Evening Gazette.

**For sale by all booksellers, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by the publishers,

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743-745 Broadway, N. Y.

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