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ment; these last, it is explained, are "in order to show the masses the persons who have gained honor by their talents and genius." But the more practical reward was also suggested of granting to the authors or inventors the sole right to manufacture and sell their productions for a limited time.

OBITUARY NOTES.

THE announcement that the Rev. Dr. Cunningham Geikie, the author of "The Life and Words of Christ," etc., is dead, was a mistake. It is his brother, John Geikie, who is dead.

W. H. S. JORDAN, who was a member of the old firm of Weeks, Jordan & Co., booksellers in Boston about fifty years ago, died on the 30th ult., in Brookline, Mass. Since 1849, and until within a few years ago, Mr. Jordan was a member of the firm of Dobson & Jordan, insurance

brokers.

BLANCHE WILLIS HOWARD VON TEUFFEL died at Munich, Bavaria, on the 7th inst. She was born at Bangor, Me., in 1847, and was well known as a novelist by her maiden name, Blanche Willis Howard. She went abroad in 1878, and in 1890 was married to the late Dr. von Teuffel, at one time physician-in-ordinary to the King of Würtemberg. Most of Mme. von Teuffel's work consisted in delineation of American, and particularly New England, life and character. "One Summer" was her first work, and attracted much attention. Among her other works were "Seven on the Highway," "Aulnay Tower," "Tony the Maid," One Year Abroad," "Aunt Serena,' Guenn," and "The Open Door."

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JEREMIAH KEITH PRATT, familiarly known to the habitués of the old "trade sales" as "Jerry" Pratt, died at North Middleboro', Mass., September 26. Pratt was a member of an old North Middleboro' family, and was born there November 24, 1829. His family line is traced to Phineas Pratt, who landed at Plymouth in the Sparrow in 1622. When about seventeen years old Pratt went to Pittsburg, Pa., where he entered the employ of his older brother, Zebulon, who established a bookstore in that city in 1837. Benjamin F. Pratt, another brother, was a partner in the concern, and the three travelled extensively in the South and West for a number of years, holding book auction sales. For a few years, in the early fifties, he was a partner in the firm of Z. & B. F. Pratt, but afterwards he engaged in business for himself. Since 1860 he always appeared in Pittsburg during the winter months; at first he conducted auction sales only, but for many years he carried on a bookstore, being assisted by his brother, M. V. B. Pratt, and his sons Benjamin and Norman. For twenty-five years

Pratt acted as auctioneer at the book-trade

sales in New York City. He was esteemed by consignee as well as buyer for his ability and fairness of dealing. Pratt always made North Middleboro' his home, spending the spring months and a portion of the fall at his residence there, and the summers for many years at Cottage City.

THE death last week of Frank Campbell, superintendent of the press-room of D. Appleton & Co., means the loss of one who deserved to be called, in the best sense of the phrase, a

master workman. Born in England, October 6, 1840, Campbell came to this country in his boyhood, and found employment with Harper & Brothers in 1852. With his brother Joseph he was apprenticed as a pressman to Mr. John F. Trow. In 1861 he became a journeyman and was engaged for a short time in a large office in Boston. In 1863 he returned to New York, where he was employed for several years by Mr. Trow and other leading printers. About 1870 he became connected with the press-room of D. Appleton & Co, and after the death of Mr. Richard Dunne he was appointed superintendent of the press-room. Among printers Mr. Campbell's high rank was fully recognized, and millions of readers have enjoyed the beautiful results of his supervision laying and making ready, the accuracy of his of text and cuts. His superintendence of overjudgment, and the keenness of his perceptions,

have been shown in the manufacture of books which mount high into the tens of millions. A master of his craft, his thorough knowledge, his certainty, his unfailing good judgment and his absolute reliability gave him a position of constant dignity and unquestioned authority. His control of the large interests in his care was admirably maintained. While his authority was never in doubt, his composure in the exigencies of business, his kindliness and his loyalty, both to the Appleton Company and the employees of the press-room, were significant features of his daily life. A manly man, a faithful comrade, and a workman at the head of his guild, his life has set a high example for others, and his death is followed by a sense of deep personal loss.

JOURNALISTIC NOTES.

The Ledger, which has been published as a weekly paper since 1852, will, beginning with November 1, be issued every month. Though The Ledger will hereafter be much larger, that is, have many more pages, the size of the page will remain as it is now-folio.

JOSEPH SHAYLOR has many interesting things to say on "Books and Bookselling" in an interview with him which appears in the London Young Man for October. Mr. Shaylor has had thirty-four years experience with the firm of Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co., of which he is now one of the managing direc

tors.

The Century has secured for the opening season a war series of unusual interest. Rear-Admiral Sampson will write for it an account of the operations of the squadron under his command; Rear-Admiral Schley will describe the movements of the Flying Squadron formances of the Brooklyn at Santiago; Lieuin the search for the Spanish fleet and the perof his connection with the sinking of the Mertenant Hobson will give a complete narrative rimac and his experiences in the Spanish Commander Wainwright will tell, each from a prison, and Captain Sigsbee and Lieutenantpersonal point of view, the story of the loss of the Maine. Captain R. D. Evans will describe the Santiago fight as seen from the deck of the Iowa, and Captain H. C. Taylor, of the Indiana, will set forth his experiences. Other naval authorities connected with the work of the war will contribute to this series.

NOTES ON AUTHORS. EMILE ZOLA is occupied in writing a new work, entitled "Fecundity."

MARION CRAWFORD has written a new novel, which will appear serially next year in The Century. Its title is "Via Crucis, a romance of the second crusade." Its hero is Gilbert Warde, a young English knight, whose character approaches as nearly as possible that of a primitive Christian, and who is brought into

sudden contact with the tremendous social contrasts of the Middle Ages.

"THE KING'S MIRROR " is to be the title of Anthony Hope's new novel, the publication of which will begin after Christmas. "Born in the Purple," the title he had first selected, was relinquished on the ground that it had been used before. The hero of "The King's Mirror" is a clever boy, born to the throne of a kingdom as delightful as that of Ruritania. "His nurse," we are told, "imparts to him the greatness of his authority, the majesty of his privileges, as a king born. Next day she has occasion to spank him. He has difficulty in reconciling the two facts."

received with so much favor that the publisher has been encouraged to continue the work. The second volume, for 1897, will record 15,000 contributions to 400 German periodicals, with entries, supplementary to the volume for 1896, and an author index. An author index for the first volume is also promised.

The Monthly Bulletin of the Providence (R. I.) Public Library for September (vol. 4, No. 9) contains a reference list on William Makepeace Thackeray. The bibliography contains references to Thackeray's works, to biographical accounts, to Thackeray as a poet, humorist, and artist, and to portraits of Thackeray. The material was collected by Miss M. Isabel Emerson, of the Providence Library staff.

THE NEW YORK MEDICAL BOOK Co., 10 Clinton Place, New York, has just issued a cata1ogue of medical books and pamphlets, including medical journals and publications of the governments and learned societies, that will repay careful study. Besides the 1820 titles of the books kept in stock by the Medical Book Co., there are also given the titles of the medical books issued thus far in this country, and a subject index to the pamphlets on special subjects catalogued in the main alphabets.

CATALOGUES OF NEW AND SECOND-HAND

GEORGE HAVEN PUTNAM, the author of "Books and Their Makers During the Middle Ages," is engaged in the preparation of a historical sketch of the conception of literary BOOKS.-Francis P. Harper, 17 E. 16th St., N. property from the earliest times to the begin-Y., Americana, bibliography, musical works, ning of copyright law in Europe, with the enactment, in 1709, of the statute of Queen Anne. This sketch will be used in connection with the work of Samuel J. Elder, a leading lawyer of the Massachusetts Bar, who has for some years had in preparation a treatise on the present condition of copyright law. The volume when ready will probably bear the names of both authors. It will be issued by G. P. Putnam's

Sons.

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES.

D. VAN NOSTRAND COMPANY's new trade list contains the catalogue of military books which has been dropped from their lists for some time past.

HINRICH'S VERZEICHNISS DER BÜCHER, etc., celebrates this year its 100th anniversary. Two hundred volumes have been published since it first appeared in 1798. In its first year 168 pages sufficed for the record of the annual output of books in Germany. The last volume contained 872 closely printed pages of titles.

HUME & Co., Santiago de Chili, have just published a "Bibliografia Española de las Islas Filipinas, (1523-1810,)" by J. T. Medina. The bibliography was first published in vol. 97 of the "Anales de la Universidad de Chile." The bibliography contains 667 titles, to which is appended a very full index. (524+32 p. imp. 8°, pap. $2.50.)

THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION has published through the Government Printing Office at Washington the "Guiana and Venezuela Cartography," by P. Lee Phillips, superintendent of maps and charts in the Library of Congress, originally prepared for the Annual Report of the American Historical Association for 1897. (681-776 p. 8°.)

THE first volume of the "Bibliographie der deutschen Zeitschriften-Litteratur" has been

etc. (No. 81, 448 titles.)-E. W. Johnson, 2 E. 42d St., N. Y., Miscellaneous. (No. 18, 301 titles.)-Lemcke & Buechner, 812 Broadway, N. Y., Monthly Bulletin of World-Literature; teresting information a Bismarck bibliography. the supplement contains besides the usual in(No. 8, 2677-3051 titles.)—Noah Farnham Morrison, 877 Broad St., Newark, N. J., Miscellaneous. (No. 22, 791 titles.)-Bernard Quaritch, 15 Piccadilly, London, European philology, the occult sciences, witchcraft, alchemy, heterodoxy, Greek and Latin classics. (No. 182, 1418 titles.)-George H. Richmond & Co. (Barclay Dunham, manager), Americana, angling and sporting, etc. (No. 126, 228 titles.)-A. Twietmeyer, 18 Gellertstr., Leipzig, Theologie, prot. u. kath., philosophie, pædagogik. (No. 117, 2503 titles;) also, a catalogue of engravings and prints. (550 titles.)

PERSONAL NOTES.

B. W. BOND, at the request of the officers of The Century Co., has postponed his retirement from business and his trip abroad until after January 1 next.

G. W. NOBLE, formerly with A. C. McClurg & Co., has joined E. A. Weeks, taking equal interest. The new concern will be known as E. A. Weeks Company. Mr. Noble will manage the sales department. The company acts as Western representative for R. F. Fenno & Co., of New York.

Chicago, has resigned to manage one of the M. H. FISH, buyer for Fleming H. Revell Co., departments of Hayes, Cooke & Co.'s business.

In this connection the Chicago Bookseller reports that R. B. Hayes, Jr., has disposed of his interest to Mr. Cooke. The firm are about settled in their new quarters at 144 Wabash Avenue.

LITERARY AND TRADE NOTES.

THE FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COM

PANY, New York, will publish at once in their Forest and Stream Series "Hitting vs. Missing with the Shotgun," by S. T. Hammond, and "The Manual of the Canvas Canoe," by Com. F. R. Webb.

LEE & SHEPARD have just published Part II. of Everett T. Tomlinson's interesting and instructive Stories of the American Revolution;" also, "John Hancock, his book," by Abram English Brown, which has already been described by us. Both books are fully

illustrated.

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A. I. BRADLEY & Co., Boston, have just issued "Green Garry, a school-boy's story," by Marianne Kirlew;" When Hyacinths Bloom,' a story for young people, by Ida Jackson; and "Annice Wynkoop, artist," by Adelaide L. Rouse, which is pronounced by experts the best story Miss Rouse has yet written, with illustrations by E. B. Barry.

A. S. BARNES & Co. have just ready a work entitled "An American Cruiser in the East, travels and studies in the Far East," including the Aleutian Islands, Behring's Sea, Eastern Siberia, Japan, Korea, China, Formosa, Hong Kong, and the Philippine Islands, by John D. Ford, Fleet Engineer of the Pacific Station, U. S. N. The book contains numerous illustrations reproduced from photographs, and

three maps.

THE BROTHERS OF THE BOOK, of which Laurence C. Woodworth, Gouverneur, N. Y., acts as secretary, will publish late this month a limited edition (350 copies) of "The Golden Person in the Heart," a volume of verse, by Claude Fayette Bragdon, comprising metrical renderings from the Upanishads and other sacred books of the East, to which are added a number of shorter poems in a somewhat similar key. A few of these have appeared in The Chap-Book and other magazines, but the larger number will be published for the first time.

FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY publish today a volume entitled "Jerusalem the Holy," by Hoa. Edwin S. Wallace, U. S. Consul for Palestine during the last five years. The author has sought to collect all facts relating to the places of importance in "the city of sacred memories and holy sites," so that, while not a guide-book in the strict sense of the word, it will, nevertheless, prepare intending visitors for an intelligent comprehension of what they shall see when they arrive in the Holy City." At the same time it will appeal to the stay-at-homes by giving them a picture of what Jerusalem is to-day, and by telling the story of how it reached its present condition.

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declares that the autobiography will be found to contain no sensational disclosures, but to tions which Bismarck has left as a legacy to consist chiefly of grave thoughts and recollecthe German people.

HENRY HOLT & Co. publish this week, "Grammaire Française," by Baptiste Méras and Sigmon M. Stern, being a new volume in A New Modern - Language Series; "Modern sentative orations, edited, with notes and an American Oratory," containing seven repreessay on the theory of oratory, by Ralph Curtis Ringwalt; "An Introduction to Graphical Algebra for the use of high schools," by Prof. Francis E. Nipher, of Washington University; "La Bibliothèque de mon Oncle," by Rodolphe Töpffer, with introduction and notes by Robert L. Taylor, instructor in French in Yale University; Träumereien an französischen Kaminen," tales by Richard von Volkmann-Leander, with notes and vocabulary by Idelle B. Watson, teacher of German and French in Hartford High School.

THE third dinner given to its members by The Booksellers' League at the French Restaurant, J. B. G., III West 25th Street, on the evening of the 12th inst., was attended by upwards of forty members. After dinner twentyeight of the members remained to make up the progressive euchre party. Nine games were played, seven members making a uniform score six games won, three games lost. As the hands of the clock were pointing to eleven it was agreed to cut for the first and second prizes instead of playing off. The result was that Cass Richardson, of E. P. Dutton & Co., received the first prize, a pearl and gold scarf pin, and John A. Holden, of Thomas Whittaker, the second prize, gold sleeve links. The "booby," a negro doll, went to William J. Burkhardt, the son of the president, who succeeded in losing every game. Samuel Reis, of the American Tract Society, was a good second at the end of the race, winning but one out of the nine games played.

BUSINESS NOTES.

NEW YORK CITY.-G. P. Putnam's Sons have purchased the entire stock of books and stationery of John Ireland, 1192 Broadway. In order to reduce the stock the Putnams are offering it at a special sale at Mr. Ireland's store. By this transfer the Putnams also become the publishers of the books hitherto brought out by Mr. Ireland, including the popular volume, "What One Can Do with a Chafing Dish," by Miss H. L. Sawtelle, of which over 20,000 copies have already been sold. Mr. Ireland has taken a position in the retail department of the Putnams.

NEW YORK CITY.--The Consolidated Music Publishers' Association of New York City has recently been incorporated. Capital, $5000; directors, Isidor Sachs, of 86 Canal Street, and two others.

IT is announced that the family of Prince Bismarck has arranged for the publication in England and the United States of a portion of the Prince's autobiography, which he dictated some years ago. The first two volumes of the work will be published in this country by Harper & Brothers, some time before Christmas. No information can be given in regard to the third volume, of which the manuscript is said to be still in possession of the Bismarck family, and which the German agents could NORWICH, N. Y.-Homer H. Higley has not guarantee to the publishers of the first two bought the book and stationery business of the volumes. The Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung | late M. A. Whitcomb.

NORMAN, OKLA.-Ray Shanafelt has opened office building. Mr. Ray Shanafelt is a brother a book, news, and stationery store in the postof Mr. J. E. Shanafelt, of Perry.

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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 10 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 advance, otherwise no notice will be taken of their communications.

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. B. C., care of Publishers' Weekly, N. Y.
Chap-Book, v. 1, 2, and odd nos.
House Beautiful, v. 1 and odd nos.

Abraham & Straus, Brooklyn, N. Y.

James' Diary, cl. Appleton, 1853.

Almy, Bigelow & Washburn, Salem, Mass. Tompkins' Literary Interpretations. Appleton.

Paradoxical Philosophy, Stewart and Tait, octavo ed Macmillan.

MacPherson's History of the U. S. During the Rebellion Must be cheap.

American Baptist Publication Society, Chicago. Edith's Ministry, by McKeever.

The Bancroft Book Company, 1126 16th St. Denver, Colo.

St. Simon's Niece, cl., Frank Lee Benedict. Harper pub.

V. 3 only, Mommsen's Hist. of Rome, cl.

N. J. Bartlett & Co.. 28 Cornhill, Boston, Mass.

Lossing's Field Book of Am. Revolution, 2 v.

Upham's Madame Guyon.

Montaigne's Essays, Tudor Library.

Annual Am. Catalogue, 1896.

Lamb's Poems, Moxon, cl. 1836.

Bartlett's Book Store, 33 E. 22d St., N. Y. Schouler, History of United States.

W. L. Beekman, 55 East 5th St., St. Paul, Minn. Harper's Bazar, Sept. 1, 1894.

Spaulding's History of the Reformation.

Charles and St. Mary's County, Md., anything.
Argot and Slang.

Mag. Am. History, June, '84.

Cosmic Philosophy, Fiske.
Old-Time Song-Books,

Scribner's Mag., June, 1873, 4 copies.
Hist. of Kent County, Md.

City of the Great King.

Bonnell, Silver & Co., 24 W. 22d St., N. Y. Babelon, Handbook of Oriental Archæology.

Book Exchange, Toledo, O.

Ford's Hon. Peter Stirling, early ed.
Bourke's Popular Customs, Superstitions, etc.
Shufeldt's Indian Types of Beauty, 2 copies.
Metropolitan Magazine, Aug., 1896.
Puck, July 7, 1897.

The Book Shop, 171 Madison St., Chicago, Ill.
Shakespeariana, complete set.

Thomson, City of Dreadful Night.
House Beautiful, v. 2, no. 2.

Methodist in Search of the Church.
Lorenza Dow's Patent Sermons

Larned's History of Ready Reference.

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

N. A. Review, Jan., 1846; July. '48; April, '49; title and index to v. 9 (1819) and 68 ('49).

American Annual of Photography, 1889, '90, '95.
American Journal of Sociology, v. 3, or nos. 1, 3, 4, 5, 6.
American Association for Advancement of Science,
v. 5 and 7.

Boston Cheap Book Store, 506 11th St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
Winsor's Narrative and Critical Hist. of U. S.
7th-Day Baptists Memorials, pt. 2.

El Gringo, Davis.

Spanish Conquest of New Mexico, Davis.
Adventures in Apache Land, Ross Browne.

J. W. Bouton, 10 W. 28th St., N. Y.
Bible of Humanity, Michelet.

V. Higgins' Anacalypsis, 8 v.
Bible Studies, Wheeler.

Junius' Letters, 2 v., 8°, portraits, Bensley.
Reflections, Batchelder Greene. Putnams.

The Bowen-Merrill Co., Indianapolis, Ind. Washington and His Generals; or, Legends of the Revolution, by Lippard (Geo.).

The Ways and Means of Payment, a Full Analysis of the
Credit System, by Stephen Colwell. Lippincott, 1859.
Bowers & Loy, 10 Park Pl., N. Y.
Owl Creek Letters. 1848.

Essays for Summer Hours, Lanman.
Adventures in Rocky Mountains, Ruxton.
Meir, Expedition to Texas.
Allen's Organic Analysis, 8 v.

Morals and Maxims of Business, Hunt.
Newgate Calendar.

Brentano's, 31 Union Square, N. Y.
Our Wild Indians, illustrated. Dodge.
Doctor Antonio. McClurg.

Landolt's Refraction of the Eye.
Mal Moulee.

Brevity and Brilliance of Chess.

Secret Service Under Pitt.

Poems of Geo. Croly.

Poems of Aytoun.

History of Punch, Spielman.

The Iron Pirate. Cassell.

Tempest Tossed, Tilton.

Shakspere and His Friends, Williams.

Real Japan, Norman.

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C. N. Caspar Company, 437 East Water St., Milwaukee, Wis.

Hay, J., Pike County Ballads, 1871 ed.

The Robert Clarke Company, 31 E. 4th St., Cincinnati, O.

Nell, Wm. C., Colored Patriots at the Revolution. Boston, about 1855.

Tales of the Chesapeake, by Geo. Alfred Townsend.

W. B. Clarke Co., Park and Tremont Sts., Boston, Mass.

The Memorial History of the City of New York, from its
First Settlement to the Year 1892, V. 2, edited by James
Grant Wilson. New York History Co.
Tales and Sketches, by Disraeli. Pub, by Lippincott.

Henry T. Coates & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Derby, Fifty Years Among Authors and Publishers.
Phantasmagoria, by Lewis Carroll.

Thoughts for the Thoughtful.

Thoughts for Those Who Think.
Old Maid's Club, by Zangwill.

Savage, Wallingford.

Harris, Spiritual Sense of Dante's Divine Comedy.
Clarendon's History of the Rebellion, in 6 v.
Hutchinson's History of Mass.

The Fairfax Correspondence, 2 v.
Dixon's Life of Wm. Penn.

Wells' Fly Rods and Fly Tackle.

C. P. Cox. 628 3d Ave., N. Y.

Harper's Mag., 1st and 2d v., bound or unbound.
Letters of Lady Mary Montague.

Mrs. Jameson's Characteristics of Modern Woman.
7th v. Robt. Stevenson, Collier, hf. binding.
Spanish Inquisition. Chas. Buck.

The 11th Ten Thousand; or, The Law of Population. R. W. Crothers, 246 4th Ave., N. Y. [Cash.] Country Quarters, by Lady Blessington.

Cunningham, Curtiss & Welch, 319-323 Sansome St., San Francisco, Cal. (Cash.] Strickland's Lives of the Queens of Scotland and English Princes, 8 v. Harper Bros.

Cunningham & Sullivan, Dayton, O. [Cash.]
Second-hand:

Anderson's Short History of England.
Gardiner's Students' History of England.
Church's Story of Early Britain.

Hughes' Alfred the Great.

J. Evelyn's Diary and Correspondence.
Totten's Human Race, pt. 8.

Curts & Jennings, 220-222 W. 4th St., Cincinnati. O,

Report of Seybert's Commission on Spiritualism.
Cushing & Co., 34 W. Baltimore St., Baltimore,
Md.

Cradle Songs of Many Nations,
Peebles. Drifting and Steering.
Campbell, Philosophy of Rhetoric.

E. Darrow & Co., 235 E. Main St., Rochester,
N. Y

Hoffer, On Gutta Percha.

Scott's St. Ronan's Well, Ward & Lock's de luxe ed.

W. O. Davie & Co., 224 E. 4th St., Cincinnati, O. Smith's National Accountant, several copies.

Dodd, Mead & Co., 149 Fifth Ave., N. Y.

Any 1st eds. of William Gilmore Simms.

First Report of a Book Collector, 1st ed., by Arnold; pub. at $5.00.

Passage to India, by Walt Whitman. 1871. Irving's Works, Author's revised ed. 1863.

Life of Washington, or odd copies of v. 18, 20, 21.

William Doxey, 631 Market St., San Francisco,
Cal.

Harp with a Thousand Strings.
Money and Civilization.

The True American. by Joseph Coe. Pub. in 1840 by I.
S. Boyd, of Concord."

D. Dunn, 574 Fulton St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Supplements to Watts' Dictionary of Chemistry, old ed. Connelly, On Melting Points.

Work on Fusion Points, any.

Dunlap's Arts of Design. v. 1.

Manual of Queen of the Angels, O'Shea.

E. P. Dutton & Co., 31 W. 23d St., N. Y.

Doré Bible.

Wilberforce, On Incarnation.

Phemie, by A. S. Stephens.

Songs of the Soldiers, Frank Moore.

Lyrics of Loyalty,

Rebel Rhymes,

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White's Poetry of Civil War.

Butterworth's Songs of History.

Browne's Bugle Echoes.

Water Gypsies, L. T. Meade.

Revolutions de Constantinople en 1807-1808, 2 v., by Juchereau de St. Denys. Paris, 1819.

Rashdall, History of Universities of Europe During Middle Ages, 2 v. Oxford.

Bignon, Histoire de France, 1800-1813.

Harry Falkenau, 46 Madison St., Chicago, III. Burdett's Rise and Fall of a Moustache. Universal Masonic Library, complete set.

Warren's Treatise on Hernia.

Wm. Oxley, Egypt.

Legends of the West.

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