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JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS

THE MOST PERFECT OF PENS.

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Frontispiece.

The Early Career of Lord Brougham. Some of his Contemporaries.

Mrs. MARTHA J. LAMB. 441
ILLUSTRATIONS.-Portrait of Rev. Sydney Smith-Portrait of Francis Jeffrey-Holland House-
Portrait of Lord Holland.

Tribute to Hooper Cumming Van Voorst. Late President of the Holland Society.
GEORGE W. VAN SICLEN.
ILLUSTRATION.-Portrait of Hooper C. Van Voorst.
Story of Brave, Beautiful Margaret Schuyler. A Ballad. Hon. CHARLES C. NOTT.
The Drawings of a Navajo Artist,
R. W. SHUFFELDT.
ILLUSTRATIONS.-Portrait of Esta-Yeshi, the Mother of the Artist-Portrait of Choh, the Artist-
Choh's Locomotive.

Acrostic by John Quincy Adams.

ILLUSTRATION.-Fac-simile of Acrostic.

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ELLA M. M. NAVE.
The Sciota Purchase in 1787. Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel E. C. Dawes, U. S. V.
Private Contract Provision in Ordinance of 1787. How came it there?
Hon. WILLIAM P. CUTLER.
Lincoln's Restoration Policy for Virginia. The Broadside—Official Summons.
Rev. HORACE EDWIN HAYDEN.
Joseph Hawley, the Northampton Statesman. His Address to the Minute-men.
CHARLES LYMAN SHAW.

Fort Perrot, Wisconsin. Established in 1685 by Nicholas Perrot. Prof. T. H. KIRK.
First Editions of the Bible Printed in America.
General Grant and the French.

CLEMENT FURGESON.
THEODORE STANTON.

Original Documents.-Letter to Washington from Charles Carroll of Carrollton, in 1793-
Letter from Richard Henry Lee to Corbin Washington, in 1790-Letter from Stephen
King to his Brother, George King, in 1780.

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Notes.-The Earliest Book-making-Silas Wright, Governor of New York from 1833 to 1837-The Old-time Harp and Modern Fiddle-Meeting-house Seats Two Centuries Ago

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Queries.-The Massachusetts Staple-A Feather in One's Cap-The Famous Treaty with the Indians-Origin of Pin Money.

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Replies.-St. John de Crèvecœur.

Societies.-New York Historical Society-Rhode Island Historical Society-Oneida Historical Society-Biographical and Genealogical Society.

Historic and Social Jottings.

Book Notices.-Recollections of Mississippi and Mississippians, by Davis-An Appeal to Pharaoh―The Negro Problem-English Land Titles and Kings, by Mitchell-Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, by Stoddard-The Driver Family, by Mrs. Cooke-The Story of Boston, by Gilman-Michigan Pioneer Collections, Vols. XII, and XIII.-The Story of Vermont, by Heaton-The Lost Dispatch. Advertisements-Books, Schools, etc., 1 to 10-Periodicals and Miscellaneous, 11 to 20.

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BINDING THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY.-We can furnish Covers for Binding in dark green levant cloth, for 50 cents; sent by mail, postpaid. Back numbers exchanged, if in good condition, for bound volume in cloth (as above), $1.00: in half Turkey Morocco for $2.00-subscribers paying charges both ways. TERMS:-$5.00 a year, in advance; 50 cents a number. Postmasters receive subscriptions.

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JOSEPH JEFFERSON.

MAGAZINE

Entered upon a new volume with the issue of November, which contained the opening parts of several leading features of the year. In this number were printed the first chapters of the "Autobiography of Joseph Jefferson," in which the author relates the story of his life, from his first appearance on the stage as "property" baby, to within the past few years. His reminiscences and the portraits of actors and actresses with whom he has been associated-among them the elder Booth, the Wallacks, Forrest, and Charlotte Cushman-are especially interesting. His own experience in the pioneer West, in Mexico, Australia, South America, England, France, and the Southern and Eastern States, are related in a frank and charming manner. Mr. Jefferson writes as naturally as he acts. Serial stories by Frank R. Stockton and Amelia E. Barr also begin in the November number. During the year there will be printed other serials and a number of short stories by such well-known writers as H. S. Edwards, Sarah Orne Jewett, Richard M. Johnston, Octave Thanet, H. H. Boyesen, Arlo Bates, and others. The first of the Present-Day Papers" was printed in the November CENTURY. These are a series of discussions of timely social questions by prominent men who have associated for this purpose, among them Bishop Potter and the Hon. Seth Low, the new President of Columbia College. The December number contains the beginning of the series by Prof. Fisher of Yale, on "The Nature and Method of Revelation"; a number of hitherto unpublished letters of the Duke of Wellington; a history and description of the New Croton Aqueduct at New York; "The Paris Panorama of the Nineteenth Century," one of the features of the Paris Exposition, described by Alfred Stevens and Henri Gervex who conceived the project and under whose supervision it was executed. The number contains also poems by Edmund C. Stedman, Margaret Crosby, Frank Dempster Sherman, and others; short stories, etc. During the year there will be published popular science papers by Prof. Holden, describing the latest discoveries in astronomy at the Lick Observatory, and illustrated articles on " Prehistoric America," by Prof. Putnam of Harvard. A number of papers on Art will also be printed. In January THE CENTURY will contain an important illustrated paper by Miss Amelia B. Edwards, giving a full account of the recent astonishing discoveries at Bubastis, Egypt."

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THE CENTURY costs $4.00 a year; 35 cents a number. Subscriptions are taken by booksellers and postmasters, or remittance may be made by check, money-order, or in registered letter direct to the publishers, THE CENTURY Co., 33 East 17th Street, New York.

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No. 110.

THE STORY OF CREATION. A Plain Account of Evolution. Illustrated. By EDWARD CLODD. (Double Number, 30 cents)

No. III. THE PLEASURES OF LIFE. Part II. By Sir JOHN LUBBOCK, Bart. *No. 97 is Part I.

No. 112. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ATTENTION, BY TH. RIBOT. No. 113. HYPTONISM. Its History and Development. By FREDRIK BJORNSTROM. Translated from the Swedish by Baron Nils Posse, M.G. (Double Number, 30 cents.) No. 114. CHRISTIANITY AND AGNOSTICISM. A Controversy. Consisting of Papers by HENRY WACE, D.D., Prof. THOMAS H. HUXLEY, the BISHOP OF Peterborough, W. H. MULLOCK, and Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD. (Double Number, 30c.) No. 115. DARWINISM. An Exposition of the Theory of Natural Selection, with Some of its Applications. and Illustrations. Part I. By ALFRED RUSSEL WALLace, LL.D., F.L.S., etc. (Double Number, 30 cents.) No. 116. DARWINISM. An Exposition of the Theory of Natural Selection, with Some of its Applications. With Map and Illustrations. Part II. By ALFRED Russel Wallace, LL.D., F.L.S., etc. (Double Number, 30 cents.)

No. 117.

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THE AMERICAN RAILWAY.

Its Construction, Development, Management, and Appliances.

WRITTEN BY THE MOST EMINENT AUTHORITIES IN ALL BRANCHES OF RAILWAY WORK.

With 225 Illustrations, 13 Maps, 19 Charts, many being colored, and a full Index. Bound in half leather. 8vo, $6.00 net.

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For the first time there is presented in this book an adequate account of the American Railway, an industry representing over nine thousand million dollars in its 150,000 miles of road. The above enumeration of the subjects treated is sufficient to show its value and importance. Nothing has been left undone which might add to the lasting value and interest of the work.

"This is, beyond all compare, the greatest American work on railways. It is difficult to devise a question on railway construction or management for which the answer may not be found in this book. It is a great book, and remarkably handsome besides." -N. Y. Herald.

HISTORY OF THE UNITED
STATES.

By HENRY ADAMS. THE FIRST ADMINISTRATION
OF THOMAS JEFFERSON. 12mo, 2 vols., $4.00.

"The materials which Mr. Adams has had access to are such as have been at the disposal of no previous writer. It is fortunate that they have fallen in such hands. Of his abilities for investigation there can be no doubt. The book is in perfect taste. The style is admirable; it combines clearness with elegance, and simplicity with a dignity and a gravity worthy of the greatness of the subject."-N. Y. Times.

"The most important contribution to American history that has yet been made."-Chicago Herald.

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THE UNITED STATES:

ITS HISTORY AND CONSTITUTION. By Professor ALEX-
ANDER JOHNSTON. 12mo, $1.00.

Professor Johnston's work is unique in that it presents, in a single volume of about three hundred pages, a lucid, scholarly, wellordered narrative of the history of the United States from the earliest discoveries down to the present time. It is a masterly statement of the constitutional and political history of the country, comprehensive and adequate, yet wonderfully clear and compact. Its authority and decisiveness have been universally acknowledged, and taken altogether it is undoubtedly the best survey attainable in a single volume of the history of the United States, as well as one of the most brilliant and satisfactory historical works ever written.

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RELATING TO AMERICA, ITS HISTORY, GENERAL AND LOCAL, PARticularly the latter! Lives of Americans, obscure and illustrious, the former always preferred: Books throwing light, or claiming to throw light, on the misty origin and weird, romantic life of the Red Men-their ethnology, their tongues, their stone, metal, and earthen relics of past ages; Genealogy: Criminal Trials; The rude Rhymes illustrating the slow but sure growth of American Poetry; Narratives of Soldiers and Pioneers; and other odd, curious, and out-of-the-way things peculiar to America. These, with a willingness to sell them at fair prices, constitute the specialty of

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