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Some of Henry Holt & Co.'s Spring Books

A Summer in New York. By EDWARD W. TOWNSEND.

With chapter heads and a tail piece by Harry Edwards, and ornamental cover. A love story told in letters by the author of "Chimmie Fadden."

The experiences of Alice Wonderley of Ironville at her aunt's. The aunt, who is a bit of a social leader, tries New York in midsummer for variety's sake with several others of her set. The story takes the reader, among other places, to a well-known Hungarian café, Claremont, a roof garden, the Metropolitan Club, the Waldorf, Long Acre Square, and the Sheepshead Bay Races.

Tioba, and Other Tales. By ARTHUR W. COLTON. With a frontispiece by A. B. Frost.

Mr. Colton is already favorably known for "Delectable Mountains" and "Debatable Land" and his work in The Atlantic, The Century, and elsewhere. This new book is said to contain considerable humor

and to present a highly diversified gallery of Americans. Tioba is a mountain, which, paradoxical as it may seem, takes an active part in the opening story.

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Lord Leonard, the Luckless. By W. E. NORRIS.

$1.50.

A new novel by the author of those truly great novels " Matrimony" and

No New Thing."

The book is in a more serious vein than even they, and impressively tells a story that a less able writer would have been liable to make sensational. Some of the episodes are decidedly tragic, but Mr. Norris's humor does not desert him, and is used in effective contrast.

The Triumph of Count Ostermann. By GRAHAM HOPE.

The love story of Peter the Great's German prime minister. violent but glorified by his will and noble purpose, is strongly drawn.

Red-Headed Gill. By RYE OWEN.

The great Czar, dissolute and

A very original story, though necessarily made, as all stories now are, and as Shakespeare's plays were, of some of the material that has become standard. There is an element that in earlier times would have been called supernatural, around which are gathered characters and scenes that are strong, interesting, and often beautiful; and there is withal a very saving sense of humor.

The Princess of Hanover. By MARGARET L. WOODS, author of "A Village Tragedy."

Thomas Hardy calls this play "the book I have read with most interest and pleasure in the year." The London Times said: "It reminds us at every turn of some of the best of Elizabethan dramatists.". The Academy says: "Here indeed we find the true creative passion fused in poetry of a rare order." The "Princess" is the unhappy wife of George I., whose life inspired the recent novel "The Love of an Uncrowned Queen."

Money and Banking. By Prof. WM. A. SCOTT. $2.00 net.

Written in a plain, straightforward manner, intelligible to the general reader.

Tarde's Laws of Imitation. Translated by ELSIE CLEWS PARSONS, Ph.D., with

an introduction by Prof. FRANKLIN H. GIDDINGS.

The publishers are able to assure the scientific world, which has shown some impatience over the delay, that the book is at last in the printer's hands.

Variations in Animals and Plants. By Dr. H. M. VERNON.

A treatise on biological variations and their relation to Darwinism, which will appeal to others as well as to specialists.

Third Impression of

The Lightning Conductor. $1.50

Second impression of Borrowed Plumes. $1.25

29 WEST 23d STREET, NEW YORK

Please mention THE LAMP in writing to advertisers.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS

By the Author of "Art for Art's Sake"

The Meaning of Pictures

By JOHN C. VAN DYKE

Professor Van Dyke's new volume relates to the substance of pictorial art as his "Art for Art's Sake" did to its technic. It is an explanation of, and a plea for, the beholder's point of view, which he deems as legitimate as that of the artist. He discusses the personal and the decorative elements in a work of art with great fulness and penetration, and he brings out the true significance of painting as he has heretofore explained its modes of expression. Taken together the two works form an original and concise exposition of the philosophy of painting. $1.25 net (postage II cents)

CONTENTS

Truth in Painting Individuality, or the Personal Element Imagination of the Artist Pictorial Poetry The Decorative Quality Subject in Painting

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A Pilgrimage to Poe's Cottage. Lida Rose McCabe
At Windygoul with Mr. Thompson Seton. Lida Rose
McCabe

Dr. Edward Eggleston: Edward Cary

F. Hopkinson Smith and His Work. Hamilton W. Mabie
Glimpses of Edgewood. Arthur Reed Kimball
Scenes of R. H. Davis's Stories. J. F. J. Archibald
Notes About Book-Making. Frederic Sherman
Poetic Trees. Ella Stryker Mapes

Richard Harding_Davis: His Home and Methods of
Work. J. F. J. Archibald

The Days of Oliver Horn. Mary Tracy Earle
The Poet of Vagabondia (Villon). Roland Phillips
Victor Hugo: A Pictorial Review. Frank Weitenkampf
Winsor's Life of Garrick. Ralph Bergengren

Essays

Browning as a Tree Lover. Frances Duncan

Two Famous Bachelors and Their Love Stories. Clara
Laughlin

Wanted: An Old-Fashioned Librarian. Gerald Stanley
Lee

THE LAMP

FEBRUARY, 1903, NUMBER I

CONTAINS

Portrait of August Weismann

ciation

Macaulay's First Essay. Prof. Wilbur L. Cross
Mrs. Humphry Ward. Roland Phillips. An appre
Weismann. Translated by Herbert Ernest Cushman,
Ph.D. An Autobiographical Sketch. Introduction by Prof.
Josiah Royce

Mr. Barrie as a Dramatist. J. M. Bulloch. With Scenes
from his new play, The Admirable Crichton

John Adams and Mary Wollstonecraft. Elisabeth Luther Cary

Letters and Life. Prof. John Finley. Reviews of several
new books of importance

Mr. Henley and Romantic Painting. W. C Brownell
Mr. Paul on the Poetry of Matthew Arnold. Edith
Wharton

Second Canto of the Epic of the Wheat. A. Schade van
Westrum. A Review of The Pit by the late Frank Norris
A Few Current Novels. Mary Gay Humphreys
The Rambler. Literary News and Comment

THE LAMP о

PRICE 15 CENTS

NEW SERIES OF THE BOOK BUYER

THE LAMP is published on the first of every month. Subscription price, $1.50 per year.
Subscriptions are received by all booksellers."

Subscribers in ordering change of address must give the old as well as the new address.
Bound copies of Volumes IV., V., VI., VII., VIII, IX., X., XI., XII. and XIII. of THE BOOK BUYER. $2.00 each.
Volumes XIV., XV., XVI., XVII., XVIII., XIX., XX., XXI., XXII., XXIII. and XXIV., $1.50. Covers for binding
THE BOOK BUYER or THE LAMP, 50 cents each. Bound volumes sent on receipt of $1.00, and all the numbers in
good condition. Postage prepaid. Volumes I., II. and III. of THE BOOK BUYER out of print.

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, NEW YORK CITY

TH

IMPORTANT SPRING BOOKS

THE PRINCIPLES OF MONEY
By J. LAURENCE LAUGHLIN

Professor of Political Economy in the University of Chicago

HIS important work is the first of a truly monumental series of books planned by the author, perhaps the first American authority in this branch of economics, on the general subject of money. In this volume he clears the field for discussion of practical details, such as metallic money and its history in the United States, paper money here and in foreign countries, and banking, by establishing the theory underlying them.

His attempt here has been to make

a separate and orderly exposition of the principles of money quite independently of their countless historical applications," to quote his preface, and the book is an elaborately organized treatment of these principles, and constitutes an original and novel contribution to the science of political economy.

8vo, $3.00 net (postage 21 cents)

AGNOSTICISM

By ROBERT FLINT, D.D., LL.D., F.R.S.E.

Corresponding Member of the Institute of France; Professor of Divinity in the University of Edinburgh; author of "Anti-Theistic Theories,' "The Philosophy

of History in Europe," "Theism," etc.

I. The Nature of Agnosticism
II. Erroneous Views of Agnosticism

III. History of Agnosticism

IV. Agnosticism of Hume and Kant

V. Complete or Absolute Agnosticism

CONTENTS

VII. Partial or Limited Agnosticism as to Ultimate
Objects of Knowledge

VIII. Agnosticism as to God

IX. Agnosticism as to Religious Belief
X. Agnosticism as to Knowledge of God

VI. On Mitigated and Partial Agnosticism and Their Forms

8vo, $2.00 net (postage 20 cents)

Development of Muslim Theology, Jurisprudence and Constitutional Theory

PRO

(THE SEMITIC SERIES)

By DUNCAN B. MACDONALD

Professor in Hartford Theological Seminary

ROFESSOR MACDONALD'S book, of which the title sufficiently indicates the broad scope, is destined to prove one of the most valuable of this important series. To the general reader it will open a new world of interest and information, and to the specialist it will give the latest data on its complicated and difficult theme. It is written in a style of very unusual literary brilliancy that appeals to the reader's imagination in a vivid and effective way, and makes real and living the phenomena that are cursorily familiar to all as the substructure of the "Arabian Nights," but scarcely more so to the general historical student. It is, in a word, the great Moslem world visualized for the first time for modern readers.

A

$1.25 net (postage II cents)

THE AMERICAN COTTON INDUSTRY

A Study of Work and Workers, contributed to the Manchester "Guardian"
By T. M. YOUNG

With an Introduction by Elijah Helm, M.A., Secretary to the Manchester Chamber of Commerce

CONCISE, comprehensive and accurate description of the cotton manufacturing industry of this country, the result of a thorough, first-hand study of manufacturing centres in every part of the land by a broad, practical cotton man seeking information for British use. It constitutes an indispensable handbook for all who wish to know the facts and the figures, as well as the scope, actual condition and real importance of this great industry in America.

75 cents net

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, NEW YORK

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Calvert of Strathore

By CARTER GOODLOE AVERY original and mature

piece of work from an entirely new point of view, recreating the life of the American embassy at Paris during the French Revolution.

The great Americans, Jefferson and Morris, move through this dark and adventurous period, illuminating it with their clear intelligences.

With Christy frontispiece in color, $1.50

No Hero

E. W. HORNUNG'S NEW NOVEL

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HIS love story is brought into sharp relief against a background of fighting on both land and sea. The scenes are for the most part laid in and off Mobile during the Civil War, both the hero and heroine of the tale being natives of that city.

The plot is of absorbing interest.

Illustrated in color by
George Wright, $1.50

Charles Scribner's Sons, New York

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HE same quality of distinction notable in his former book, "The Monk and the Dancer," is conspicuous in these new stories, which are finished and polished with the nicest art, an art consisting in skillful presentation of subject and not at all in rhetorical decoration.

With Drawings by Maxfield Parrish. $1.25

Middle Age Love Stories

By JOSEPHINE DODGE DASKAM

THE TITLES

MRS. DUD'S SISTER
THE PHILANTHROPIST
A HOPE DEFERRED

THE COURTING OF LADY JANE
THE SHADOW OF THE VALLEY
REVERSION TO TYPE
JULIA THE APOSTATE

$1.50

SCRIBNER'S

Announcement

for

the Spring

includes these Eight Volumes of

FICTION

A

Girl of Ideas

By ANNIE FLINT

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Publisher after publisher rejects Elinor Day's manuscripts. Her money runs low. Refusing to accept defeat, she opens an office for the selling of ideas to established writers.

The scheme meets with instant success. She becomes à distinguished author-by proxy. Novelists, dramatists, essayists, poets, even, are made, if not born, in her office; and all goes on swimmingly, until Elinor makes a business mistake, seriously injuring the literary reputation of a well-known writer.

Many apparently complex situations Occur. How she extricates herself and him from the most embarrassing of all, when it has become unbearable to both, makes the climax of the book.

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$1.50

Charles Scribner's Sons, New York

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