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PIRATED MUSIC TO BE DESTROYED. the previous twelve months. Belgium will be POSTMASTER-General CHARLES EMORY SMITH

treated by Prof. Fredericq, Bohemia by Prof.

Holland by M. Crommelin, Hungary by M.
Brunetière, Germany by Hofrath Zimmermann,
Katscher, Italy by Commendatore Giacosa,
Poland by Dr. Belcikowski, Russia by Con-
stantine Balmont, and Spain by Don Rafael

Altamira.

COPYRIGHT MATTERS.

has issued an order changing the postal regula-Tille, Denmark by Dr. A. Ipsen, France by E. tions in regard to sheet music illegally sent into this country. Some of the Canadian music publishers frequently pirate music copyrighted in the United States, and then send it through the mails into the United States for sale. When such music has been discovered by the postal authorities it has been held for three months, and if the owner of the copyright did not institute proceedings for its forfeiture it was returned to the sender, who generally again sent it through the mails, and after repeated attempts often succeeded in putting it upon the market. Under the order issued June 28 the music, if not claimed by the holder of the copyright, will be destroyed at the end of three months. This order is based upon an opinion recently rendered by the Attorney-General. Music upon which a duty should be paid will be sent to the nearest collector of customs.

REGISTERED MAIL INDEMNITY.

value of the mail lost if less in value than $10,

NO COPYRIGHT IN“ MEMORY.” JUDGE W. K. TOWNSEND, of the U. S. District Court of Connecticut, on June 21 ruled adversely in the suit brought by Ida M. LarroueLoisette, the widow of the inventor of the system and sole beneficiary under his will, against Daniel O'Loughlin, of New Haven. It appears that Mrs. Loisette copyrighted in 1896 one of her husband's works, entitled "Assimilative Memory, or, how to attend and never forget." The action was brought to prevent O'Loughlin from selling a work entitled "Memory: a scientific, practical method of cultivating the faculties of attention, recollection, and retention." The plaintiff claimed not only a copyright but that Loisette retained the first rights to sign an agreement not to communicate his of publication, because he compelied his pupils

THE law passed by Congress in February, 1897, authorizing the Postmaster-General to indemnify the owners of registered mail for losses, to the amount of $10, or for the actual went into effect July 1. After an investiga-system to others under penalty of forfeiture of tion has been made by the inspectors in the tion of Loisette's works to his pupils amounted $500. Judge Townsend held that this distribucase of a lost registered article, the owner is to send an affidavit to the Fourth Assistant Post- to publication. The court found no copyright, master-General, who will, if the case is closed, breach of trust, her place to prosecute it was and said if complainant had cause of action for certify to the loss of the piece, and forward it in the courts of New York and not in the United

to the Third Assistant Postmaster-General, who will approve the claim if it is found that the claimant is entitled to payment.

JOURNALISTIC NOTES.

The Critic will hereafter be published monthly instead of weekly. The first number, JulyAugust, will appear July 25, the September number on or before September 1, and subsequent numbers on or before the first of each month.

J. M. DENT has not long remained in posses sion of The Idler. He bought it a few months ago, and has only just succeeded in making the change of control perceptible. But now he has sold it again to a young gentleman from the University of Oxford.

IN the July Century Jeremiah Curtin, whose translations have made the works of Sienkiewicz known to American readers, tells of his acquaintance with "The Author of 'Quo Vadis." Mr. Curtin visited Sienkiewicz at the latter's picturesque home in the Carpathians.

The Old Book Buyer's Guide is the title of a new "monthly journal devoted to old books and antiquarian researches," published by George Y. Jordan and John R. Inscho, (who are also the editors,) from 250 Race Street, Philadelphia, Pa. The first issue, dated June, contains articles on "The Pleasures of BookHunting," "An Old-Time Printer named Aitken," "The First English Catalogue," "Some Eccentric Bibles," etc. (16°, $1 a year.)

The [London] Athenæum in its issue for July 2, prints, as in previous years, a series of articles on the literature of the continent for

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NEW YORK CITY.-Thomas J. McBride & Son, the Arcade newsdealers, on June 22 opened their stand in the Empire Building, Broadway and Rector Street. They occupy the main booth in the hallway of the building, and the mahogany counters and book-shelves, screened with plate glass, offer a strong contrast to the rude fixtures of the stand which marked the beginning of their career on the same site twenty years ago. The main hall of the building has been connected with the platform for nortb-bound trains over the Sixth Avenue line of the Manhattan Railway, and is used as the Wall Street terminal of the line, as the old building was used by the bankers and brokers and lawyers, as well as the army of clerks who are employed in the big office buildings downtown.

NEW YORK CITY.-Lou H. Ostendorff, the wholesale book and newsdealer of 14 Ann Street, is closing out his business. Mr. Ostendorff for twenty-one years was connected with the American News Company and for five with Street & Smith, nearly all of this time in an executive capacity.

PHILADELPHIA, PA.-The partnership hitherto existing between Presley Blakiston and Kenneth M. Blakiston, under the firm-name of P. Blakiston, Son & Co., expired June 30, 1898,

on account of the death of the senior member. The business of publishing, importing, and dealing in medical and scientific books, as established in 1843, will be continued by Kenneth M. Blakiston, trading as P. Blakiston's Son & Co.

PLATTSMOUTH, NEB.-W. K. Fox has opened

a bookstore here.

SAN ANTONIO, TEX.-The following is a list of booksellers and newsdealers now actively engaged in business here: Nic. Tengg, books and news; Ls. Baldessarelli & Co., books and news; William Corner, books and news; Seng Brothers, books and news; T. B. Johnson, books and news; Ed. Green, books and news; A. Arstein, periodicals and news; Mrs. M. Bosshardt, periodicals and news; and H. A. Moos, second-hand books.

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.-Robson & Adee have purchased the entire stock of books and stationery of the late Boston Book Co., 299 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, and have removed it to their Congress Hall Book Store.

LITERARY AND TRADE NOTES.

E. P. DUTTON & Co. announce "Little Gervaise," by John Strange Winter, and "Our Soldier Boy," by G. Manville Fenn. Both of these books are for young people.

SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY, Boston, have in preparation a timely work on Spanish history by the Hon. Edward Henry Strobel, whose diplomatic career has brought him into close contact with Spain and Spanish-speaking countries.

HARPER & BROTHERS announce a new novel by Thomas A. Janvier, entitled "In the Sargasso Sea," which is said to be unlike anything that the author has ever written before-being full of excitement and adventure, and also of "almost ghostly incident."

A. T. QUILLER-COUCH, the Cornish novelist and essayist, has great difficulty in persuading people that his name is pronounced "Cooch," and says that, though he never invented the pronunciation, he can only prevail on a few friends (outside of Cornwall) to believe in it. The poet Cowper, who called himself Cooper, had a similar difficulty. "Couch" (Cooch), by It is the way, has nothing to do with repose.

a Celtic name and signifies" red."

GEORGE D. FEAREY, 606 Wyandotte Street, Kansas City, Mo., has for sale a few copies of a limited edition of a work entitled "The Provisional Government of Nebraska Territory," by William E. Connelly. The organization of this "Provisional Government" was the immediate cause of the introduction of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, which repealed the Missouri Compromise. The original constitution and a number of other original documents, lost for years, are published for the first time in this volume.

BOWDOIN COLLEGE has honored itself and the book trade by conferring, at its commencement on June 23, the degree of A.M. on Dana Estes, of Dana Estes & Co., of Boston. On the same occasion it conferred the degree of Litt.D. on Herbert Putnam, librarian of the Boston Public Library. This is the second time that Bowdoin has honored the book trade

and the Putnam family-George Haven Putnam having received the degree of A.M. two or three years ago. Bowdoin College will be remembered as the Alma Mater of Longfellow, Hawthorne, President Pierce, and William Pitt Fessenden, who were graduated in a single class, also of ex-Governor John A. Andrew, the present Chief Justice of the United States, Melville W. Fuller, and of many other distinguished men.

PICK-UPS.

DODD, MEAD & Co. announce an edition of ON THE SHELF.-" You really have no busiHamilton W. Mabie's "The Forest of Arden," ness here, my friend," said the book of verse with illustrations by Will H. Low. Early in to the paper-backed novel. "Oh! why not? the fall they will publish Prof. Harry Thurs-Well, to be frank, you are not literature." ton Peck's translation of part of the novel written by Petronius, which he calls "Trimalchio's Dinner."

MISS GERTRUDE HALL has translated the French play, "Cyrano de Bergerac," by Edmond Rostand, for Richard Mansfield, who will perform the play in New York this fall. In England Sir Henry Irving will give the play, and the text will be published in book form by Doubleday & McClure Co.

D. C. HEATH & Co. announce Our Feath ered Friends," a book upon birds, by Elizabeth and Joseph Grinnell, who make use of the results of accurate personal observation, and appeal to the fancy and imagination of children in such a way as to bring them into sympathetic touch with nature. The style is suited to children ten years of age.

HERBERT S. STONE & Co. will publish shortly a life of "Catherine Sforza," by Count Pier Desiderio Pasolini, translated by Paul Sylvester, and illustrated with reproductions of portraits; also, The Palmy Days of Nance Oldfield," by Edward Robins, which will contain some interesting copies of old prints pertaining to the theatre and its frequenters.

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But I am in my sixty-sixth thousand!"Pure Fables," in London Academy.

ENCOURAGING.-"Don't get discouraged, my boy," said the publisher, patronizingly; "there will always be a demand for good literature." I was afraid the demand for it was dying out," replied the high-browed youth. Not a bit of it-not a bit of it. There will never be a time when magazines are so crowded with advertisements that they won't have space for a few stories and poems and things."-Answers.

TREATING A BOOK.-Scribe: Why do you turn down a leaf when you stop reading? General Reader: To keep my place. Scribe: Don't borrow of me, then. That treatment of a real book is barbarous. Excuse my plain speech. It is vulgar, and reveals a lack of refining influences in the early education of the reader. You can tell what a man is by the way he handles a book-whether he has any different feeling for it from that he has for a newspaperand I hate to see even the newspaper torn and crumpled. Any print is worthy of some respect. But a book! Heavens, man, it has a soul!-though a lost one sometimes.-Editor's Drawer, Harper's Monthly.

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 advertise ments from non-subscribers, must be paid for at the rate of 10 cents per line.

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

Under the heading "Situations Wanted," subscribers are entitled to one free insertion of five lines. For repeated matter and advertisements of non-subscribers the charge is to cents per line.

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

Parties with whom we have no accounts must pay in advace, otherwise no notice will be taken of their com munications

Parties desiring to receive answers to their advertisements through this office must either call for them or enclose postage stamps with their orders for the insertion of such advertisements. In all cases we must have the full address of advertisers as a guarantee of good faith.

BOOKS WANTED.

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

Houses that are willing to deal only on a cashon-delivery basis will find it to their advantage to put after their firm-name the word [Cash].

Write your wants plainly and on one side of the sheet only. Illegibly-written “wants" will be considered as not having been received. The "Publishers' Weekly" does not hold itself responsible for errors.

It should be understood that the appearance of advertisements in this column, or elsewhere in the "Publishers' Weekly," does not furnish a guarantee of credit. While it is endeavored to safeguard these columns by withdrawing the privilege of their use from advertisers who are not "good pay," booksellers should take the usual precaution, as to advertisers not known to them, that they would take in making sales to any unknown parties.

A. M. Allen, 412 River St., Troy, N, Y. Massachusetts Life Insurance Reports, 1856, '57, '58, '66. History of Torrington, Connecticut, by Rev. S. Orcutt. The Alliance Pub. Co., 19 and 21 W. 31st 8t.. New York.

Heredity and Marriage, by Nesbitt.
Lao-Tse, Chalmers' translation.

American Baptist Publication Society, Chicago.
Patriot and Tory, by Julia McNair Wright.

L. H. Anderson, P. W. 38 Masonic Temple, Chicago, III.

Old books on health, hygiene, personal magnetism, selfculture, free thought, free love, and all reforms.

W. H. Baker & Co., 5 Hamilton Pl., Boston,
Mass.

Cowell's Thirty Years Among the Players.
The Manhattan Magazine for Oct. and Nov., 1884.

N. J. Bartlett & Co., 28 Cornhill, Boston, Mass.
Hitchcock's Life of Mary Lyon.
Abbey's Ballads of Good Deeds. Appleton, 1872.

W. E. Benjamin, 6 W. 22d 8t., N. Y. Carlyle's Hero-Worship, early American and English editions.

A. B. Blinn, 323 W. Fifth St., Cincinnati, O. World Subjects of Redemption, by Freemantle. Shedd's Hist. Christian Doctrine.

Guthrie, Thos., Works of, except Autobiog.; early im prints; good copies; give titles.

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The Boston Book Co., Freeman Place Chapel, Boston, Mass.

American Journal of Politics, Nov., 1893.
American Magazine of Civics, Jan., 1897.
Astronomy and Astro-Physics, no. 130.
Digest of Statutes Relating to Construction and Inspec-
tion of Buildings. Boston, 1892. Good price.
Boston Cheap Book Store, 506 11th St., N. W.,
Washington, D. G.
Jeannik. Louis Morin, Paris.

Le Cabaret de Puits-sans-vin, Louis Morin, Paris.
La Legende de Robert le Diable, Louis Morin, Paris.
Bancroft's History of Arizona and New Mexico, sheep.
Helper's Impending Crisis.

Brentano's, 218 Wabash Ave., Chicago, III.
Swales, Driving as I Have Found It.
Bardsley, English Surnames.

Morse, Japanese Homes. Ticknor.

Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow. Lotus Library. Brentano's, 1015 Penn. Ave., Washington, D. C. Field, A Xmas Tale. 1886.

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Symbol and the Saint.

Facts, Confessions, and Observations.

Tribute to the Memory of Ruth C. Gray.

An Introduction, H. S. Stone's 1st Edition of American Authors. Stone & Kimball, Cambridge, 1893.

Denver Primer.

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The Burrows Bros. Co., Cleveland, O. Benton, Story of Herkimer County in the Upper Mohawk Valley. 1856.

Walter 8. Butler, Selma, Ala. Motherwell's Poems.

J. W. Cadby, 181 Eagle St., Albany, N. Y. Atwater's Hist. of New Haven Colony. Transactions of American Society of Civil Engineers, any vols.

New England Magazine, Oct., 1891; Nov., '93; Jan., Feb., Sept., 94: Feb., March, May, '95.

Congregational Quarterly, Oct., 1864; Jan., '66; Jan., July, '76; Jan.. '78.

Chautauquan, Oct., 1880; Jan., June, Oct., '81; March, July, Oct., Nov., '82.

St. Nicholas, Nov., 1874.

Case Library, Cleveland, O. Harvard University Bibliographical Contributions, nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 35.

The Robert Olarke Oo., 31-39 E. 4th St., Oincinnati, O. Curling on Testes.

Henry T. Coates & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Mahan's Works, 1st eds.

Tanagra Figurines. Boston, 1879.

Lady Burton's edition of the Arabian Nights.
Earthworks Out of Tuscany.

Creasy, The Ottoman Turks, Bentley's ed.

T. E. Comba, 65 Fifth Avenue, New York, [Cash.]
Lucifer, v. 1 and 2.

Theosophical Review, Sept., 1897.
Theosophical Glossary, Blavatsky.

Congregational S. S. and Pub. Soo., Beacon and
Somerset Sts., Boston, Mass.

A Mountain White Heroine,' by Edmond Kirke, pap.
or cl.
Cushing & Co., 34 W. Baltimore St., Baltimore,
Md.
Hallock, Prairie Breaking.

BOOKS WANTED.—Continued.

De Wolfe, Fiske & Co., 361 Wash'n St., Beston, Mass

Smith, J., Married Women's Statutes. Clinton, 1884. Besant, Annie, Marriage as It Was, as It Is, and as It Should Be. N. Y., 1879.

Wells, Frank, Divorce in Massachusetts, Extracts from the 41st Registration Reports, 1882.

Lawrences's Disabilities of American Women Married Abroad, etc. N. Y., 1871.

Alcestis: a musical novel, Leisure Hour ser.

Dodd, Mead & Co., 149 and 151 Fifth Ave., N. Y.
English Grammar, by Morris, with copious notes criti-
cising other authors of English grammar.
Thirty-Three Years of Co-operation (The Rochdale
Pioneers), by Holyoke, a v.

The Culprit Fay, and Other Poems, by Drake, 8° ed.

G. Dunn & Co., 22 W. 6th St., St. Paul, Minn. Taylor's Diagesis: a critcism on the Bible.

A Hebrew Bible, second-hand.

Hume's History of England, v. 1, black cloth. Boston, 1854.

King James' Army List, by D'Alton.

E. P. Dutton & Co., 31 W. 23d St., N. Y. Lord's Beacon Lights of History.

Boats of the World Depicted and Described, by one of the Craft.

Little Minister, 2 v.

Eclectic Book Store, N. W. cor. Main and Second

Sts., Los Angeles, Cal. [Cash.]

Von Muller, On the Eucalyptus, 5 v.

Opposite the Universe, pap. ed.

Cottage Bible, a v.

Fifty Years in the Church of Rome, Chiniquy.

H. Falkenau, 46 Madison St., Chicago, III. The Forged Will, by Emerson Bennett. Story of Mary Dumont, by Lady Pollock. Habitations of Man, Viollet-le-Duc. Metal-Worker, 1880 to '90.

Opera Mathematica, Wallis, v. 3 or set. Oxonii, 1693.

Geo. D. Fearey, Kansas City, Mo. The Kabbala, by S. L. McGregor Mathews. London, Ballantyne Press. 1887; or the American ed. of the same, pub. in Philadelphia.

Atlantic, Nov., 1857; Oct.: '63; June, '65; July, 271; May and July, '72; April, May, and June, '78; Dec., '79, Jan., '85.

Sartain's, Nov. and Dec., 1849.

Field's Sabine Farm, large-pap.

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2d Book of Verse, large-pap. 1892.

Hans Breitmann Ballads. Phila., 1869.

P. K. Foley, 26 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. The Univercælum, N. Y., 1847-49, any vols. or nos. Spirit of the Age, N. Y., 1849-50,

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The Present, N. Y., 1843-44, any vols. or nos. Harbinger (Brook Farm Journal), any vols. or nos. New World, N. Y., 1842, extra series only.

Gimbel Brothers, Philadelphia, Pa.

One Month in Gastein.

F. E. Grant, 23 W. 42d 8t., N. Y. Four Years at Yale, by a Graduate of '69. C. C. Chatfield & Co., 1871.

The Story of Two Noble Lives, by A. J. C. Hare.
James, Account of Long's Expedition to the Rocky
Mountains from Pittsburg in 1823, etc.

V. 5 of Memoirs of Prince Metternich, Scribner ed.
Confessions of a Young Man, by George Moore.
Sander's Rhetorical Sixth Reader.

Jephtha's Daughter: a book of poems.

Treatise on Peace and Commerce, by Del Castillo.
English Translation of Obermann, by Senancourt.
Lange's History of Materialism.

Waring's Cycling in the Tyrol.

Jack Tier, Cooper; Townsend's ed., with Darley's il.
Milton's Prose Works, Pickering's ed.

A Shakespere Almanack, published by a Dr. Phillips, of
Jersey City, about twenty years ago.
Bernard Lisle, by Mrs. Jenny Clemens.
God's One-Half Acre Beautiful.

T. S. Gray Co., Milwaukee, Wis.
Moore's Anecdotes, Poetry, and Incidents of the War.
Arundel Co.

The Current Literature, Dec., 1888.

Wm. Beverley Harison, 3 and 5 W. 18th St., N. Y. Munson's Phrase-Book.

F. P. Harper, 17 E. 16th St., New York. Stringfellow's Life of a Confederate Scout; or, Inside the Enemy's Lines.

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Sun and Shade, v. 1, 2, 3. Illustrated America, v. 1-6.

Constitutions of the Several Independent States of
America. Philadelphia, 1781.

Bruno Hessling, 64 E. 12th St., New York.
Gotch, Renaissance, portfolio or bound.
Wornum, History of Ornament.

Redgrave, Details of Historical Ornament.

Hirschfeld Bros., 65 5th Ave., N. Y. Metropolitan Magazine, June, 1897.

Fisher, Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices.

Leigh Hunt Wallace, Private Instruction in the Science and Art of Organic Magnetism, last ed.

Clement, The Use of Enim in Plautus and Terence.
Fancy Drinks.

On Clay, by Henry R. Griffin.

All new or second-hand.

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Maurice Joly, 1037 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Ogden's Costumes of U. S.

Charles E. Lauriat Co., Successors to Estes &
Lauriat (Retall Dep't), 301 Washington St.,
Boston, Mass.

Art in Ancient Egypt, by Perrot and Chipiez, a vols.
No. 1, Contributions to the Flora of Mentone and to a
Winter Flora of the Riviera, including the Coast from
Marseilles to Genoa, by J. Traherne Moggridge.
No. 3, Monograph of Odontoglossum, a Genus of the
Vandeous Section of Orchidaceous Plants, by James
Bateman.

No. 7. Orchideis Les Plus Remarquables de l'Archipel.
Indien le du Japan, by Chas. L. de Blume, 2 vols.
Amsterdam, 1858.

No. 8, A Century of Orchidaceous Plants, by Hooker and Lyon. 1851.

No. 9, W. H. De Vriese, Illustrations d'Orchideis des Indes Orientales. The Hague, 1854.

No. 11, T. Moore, Illustrations of Orchidaceous Plants. London, 1857.

No. 12, Lindley, Sertum Orchidaceum. London, 18371842.

No. 13, A Manual of Orchidaceous Plants, by J. Virtch & Sons, 1887-1894.

No. 14, The Genus Masdevallia, by Miss Woodward and Herr Lehman. London, 1890.

No. 15, C. L. Blume, Flora Java Orchideæ, folio. Brussels, 1858.

No. 16, Breda, Genera et Species Orchidrarum Quas in Java Collegerunt Kuhl et Van Hasselt, folio. Ghent, 1827.

No. 17, Siebold et Zaccarini, Flora Japonica, folio. Leyden, 1835-1844.

Please report any works on orchids, binding, date, and price.

Philippine Islands, by Forman.

Travels in the Philippines, by Jager.

20 Years in the Philippines, by Gironiere.

Edwin Drood, Dickens, Globe ed. H., M. & Co.

Seeking His Fortune. Alger & Cheney.

Red Eric. R. M. Ballantyne.

Byron's Poems, 1-v. ed. Lippincott.

Queen of Pirate Isle. Bret Harte.

The Lawyers' Co-Operative Publishing Company, Rochester, N. Y.

Goold-Brown's Grammar of Grammars.

A good Latin dictionary.

Mark Twain's Works, any vols.

Pacific Reporter, vols. 32, 33, 42, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 50.
Northeastern Reporter, vols. 31, 33 to 37, 45, 46.

Leggat Bros., 81 Chambers St., New York. Vols. and 2, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 16, complete bound or in numbers; also no. 2 for v. 3, no. 3 for v. 4, no. 4 for v. 6, no. 1 for v. 7 of Cosmopolitan. Asphodel, cl.

Louisville Book Oo.. 356 Fourth Ave., Louisville, Ky.

Reminiscences of the Life and Character of Count Cavour. by William de la Rive; trans. from the French by Edward Romilly. London, Longmans, Green & Co., 1862.

Jasper's Secret, by Wilkie Collins.

W. H. Lowdermilk & Co., Washington, D. C. Bullock, Secret Service of Confederate States. Galaxy, vols. 16 and 17.

BOOKS WANTED.—Continued.

Geo. H. Rigby.—Continued.

Joseph McDonough, 53 and 56 State St., Albany, N. Y.

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Bryant and Gay, Hist. U. S.
Thompson's Hist. of Vermont.

Scott's Fair Maid of Perth, 2 vols., brown cl. Boston, about 1858.

P. F. Madigan, 4 Warren St., Glens Falls, N. Y. Works of Chas. Sumner, vols. 13, 14, and 15, Autograph ed., hf. yellow calf.

Mrs. Henry A. Martin, 27 Dudley St., Boston, Mass.

A Treasury of Pleasure Books for Young Peeple, new or second hand. Pub. by Hurd & Houghton, 401 Broadway, New York, in 1865.

Jas F Meegan, 23 Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga. Grove's Dict. of Music, 4 vols.

Dewitt Miller, P. O. Drawer 1612, Phila., Pa. [Cash.] Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. D. Appleton & Co., 1866.

In His Name, E. E. Hale. Roberts Bros., 1873.

Henry Miller, 122 Nassau 8t., N, Y.

Afloat and Ashore,

Ways of the Hour,

Heidenmauer,

Cooper. Darley Editions.

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Overland Monthly, 1886, n. s., v. 8, p. 561-575.

Journal Soc. Chem. Industry, 1890, v. 9, p. 153-158.

New Hampshire Bd. of Agril., 8th An. Rep., 1878.

New York State Agril. Soc'y, v. 30, 1870, and 50th An. Rep. 1890.

Virginia ad An. Rep. Com. of Agril., 1878.

Wisconsin Trans. State Agril. Col., v. 10, 1871.

Presb. Bd. of Pub, and 8. 8. Work, Wabash Ave. and Randolph St., Chicago, III.

Trench's Epistles to Seven Churches.

Brown's Second Coming of Christ.

G. P. Putnam's Sons, 27 W. 23d St., N. Y.

Hubert, Liberty and a Living.

Corning, Brain Rest.

Brain Exhaustion.

Illustrated American, no. 6. 1895.

O'Callaghan, New Netherlands.

Jebb, Growth and Influence of Greek Poetry.

The Minor Poems of Homer, trans. by Hale.

Dodge, Plains of Great West.

Our Wild Indians.

Audubon and Bachman's Quadrupeds of N. A., v. 3, text (Original issue)

Wheaton, Life, Writings, and Speeches of Pinkney.
Life of Wm. Pinkney, by Pinkney.

Kennedy's Life of Wirt.

Arguments of Wirt on Trial of Aaron Burr. Hinman, Early Settlers of Conn. Orcutt,

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Jarvis, Biog. Notice of Commo. J. D. Elliott.
Fry, Capt. Jos.. Life of, by Walker.

Notes on Naval Services of I.. M. Goldsborough.
Hull, Letters of Capt. Isaac Hull.

Wilson, Commo. Hull and the Constitution.
Minturn, From N. Y. to Delhi.

Spaulding, Hist'y of Legal Tender.

Lyman, Diplomacy of U.S.

Cutts. Treatise on Party Questions.

Meredith, Jump to Glory Jane.

Palmer, Caliph Haroun Alraschid.

Desert of the Exodus.

History of the Jewish Nation.
Outlines Scripture Geography.

Geo. H. Rigby, 1113 Arch St., Phila., Pa.

Youth of Shakespeare.

Swift's Works, Modern ed.

Viollet-le-Duc, Dictionaire Architecture.

Artistic Country Seats. Appleton.

66 Houses. Appleton.

Cooper, Oak Openings, Townsend ed.
Chainbearer,
Deerslayer,

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Architecture, some of finer large works. Guizot's France, 8 v., Eng. ed., cl. Book of Scoundrels.

Audubon's Birds, 8° ed.

1840.

Alison's History of Europe, v. 13.
Keene, Chas,, Our People.

Shaftesbury, Development of Chest.
Primeval World of Hebrew Tradition.
Penn, Wm., folio. por.

Dana, Mrs., How to Tell Flowers.
Forts of Penna.

Schreiber, Massage Treatment.
Weiser, Conrad, Life of.
Phila. Hospital Reports.

Am. Climatologial Ass'n Trans.
Bancroft's U. S., v. 6, 7, 8. 9 and 10.
Bonaparte's Birds, v. 4, 4th ed.
Century Dictionary.

Edwards, American Butterflies.
Freer, Mrs., Works of.

Ipswich, Mass., History of.

Janes, Owen, Initial Letters.

Meehan, Flowers and Ferns of U. S.

Motley's Works, Eng. ed., cl.

Ovid, Art of Love.

Patrick, Knapsack and Rifle.
Phila. Directory, 1814.
Elizabethan Architecture.

Symonds, John, Works of.

Sylvan City, The.

Jardine's Naturalist Library, odd vols.

Beaumont and Fletcher, v. 2 of 11-v. ed.
Pepys' Diary, v. 5. Jan., 1848.

Boswell's Tour to Hebrides, 8° ed.
Schoolcraft's Indians, 6 v.

Stone, First Ed. Am. Authors.

Randall, Life of Jefferson, N. Y., 1858.
Parton, Life of Jackson. N. Y., 1860.
Walpole's Letters, 9 v. Lond., 1857.

Army of U. S., col. pl., Ogden.
Franklin Institute. odd vols.
Sci. Am., Supp., odd vols.

Philip Roeder, 307 N. 4th St., St. Louis, Mo.
Burke, Encyclopædia of Heraldry and Armoury.
J. Francis Ruggles, Bronson, Mich.
Mayo's Political Sketches.

Monette's Valley of the Mississippi.
Kendall's Mexican War. N. Y., 1851.
Blackmar's Spanish Colonization in S. W.
Shea's Hist. Cath. Mission. N. Y., 1855.

W. S. Rusk, 604 8th Ave., N. Y.

Works of Paracelsus.

Miss Braddon's Black Band.

Allen's Organic Analysis.

Day's Colloquin.

Carlyle's Frederick and His Court.

Scrantom, Wetmore & Co., Rochester, N. Y. Mill, Hist'y British India, 10 vols. Higginson, Princess of Java.

J. C. Sickley, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.

Jeffries, Story of My Heart.

Stedman, Library of American Literature.
Nation, vols. 1 to 9 inclusive.

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