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My Monthly Catalogues, which are sent to thousands of Public Libraries and Private Collectors throughout the World, enables me to give the highest market value for large or small collections of books. Persons living at a distance can send lists of what they have.

Address or call at

FRANCIS P. HARPER'S,

Importer and Publisher,

No. 17 EAST 16th STREET, Union Square West, NEW YORK. Just received, a private collection of fine prints for illustrating.

NGRAVINGS. For the largest list ever published of engrav

EN

ings on steel (over 300 are military portraits), suitable for illustrators and collectors of Americana, please send for catalogue to J. C. BUTTRE, 32 Cortlandt St., New York.

SEV

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS.

EVERAL thousand different kinds of periodicals kept on hand and for sale at low rates. A specialty made of supplying back numbers, volumes, and sets. The largest assortment of its kind in the world. Subscriptions taken upon the most favorable terms for any periodical, either American or foreign. Address

AMERICAN AND FOREIGN MAGAZINE DEPOT, 47 DEY ST., NEW YORK.

JOSEPH MCDONOUGH,

744 Broadway, NEW YORK, and

30 North Pearl St., ALBANY, N. Y.

Catalogue 60 AMERICANA mailed FREE.

Ye Olde Book Man

Back numbers of MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY supplied. Send list of numbers wanted.

A. S. CLARK, A Gleaner in the Byways of Literature.

BOOKSELLER,

34 Park Row, New York City.

Results of Gleaning found in Catalogues, issued
from time to time.

DAVID G. FRANCIS, 17 ASTOR PLACE, NEW YORK.

No. 27 NOW READY.

Dealer in NEW and OLD Books. Valuable

Second-hand Books constantly on sale. Priced and Descriptive Catalogues issued from time to time and SENT FREE TO ANY ADDRESS.

BOOKS!

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

CHARLES L. WOODWARD, 78 Nassau St., New York.

Catalogues for whoever wants them.

LONDON BOOKS.

A. L. LUYSTER,

Importer of London Books at London Prices. Old and New.

Catalogues issued regularly and sent gratis to any address.

98 NASSAU ST., NEW YORK.

10 SILVER ST., LONDON, ENG.

BANGS & CO., 739 and 741 Broadway, New York.

Regular Auction Sales of Libraries, Books, Coins, Autographs, and Library Property generally.

CATALOGUES MAILED UPON APPLICATION. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED.

Shedd's Natural Memory Method

INCLUDES OVER ONE THOUSAND PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS TO

ROMAN, GRECIAN, JEWISH, ENGLISH, GERMAN, AND AMERICAN HISTORY, HISTORY OF ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE.

Send for Descriptive Pamphlet Containing Opinions of Leading Educators.

SCHOOL OF MEMORY, 4 & 6 West 14th St., NEW YORK CITY.

THE CHINA DECORATOR,

A MAGAZINE FOR

AMERICAN

HOMES.

Handsomely Illustrated. Bright and Instructive.

The China Decorator is a monthly magazine devoted exclusively to the interests of professional and amateur china decorators. Each number contains twenty pages of instruction in the art, information on all subjects relating to the manufacture and decoration of PORCELAIN AND POTTERY, a department of DINING ROOM FURNISHINGS, LINEN, GLASSWARE, and TABLE DECORATIONS. Its pages are filled with valuable information. No household can afford to be without it.

The subscription price per annum is $3.00. Single copies. 30 cents each. Specimen copy, 15 cents.

THE CHINA DECORATOR PUBLISHING CO.,

23 University Place, New York.

STUDIES IN

HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE.

HERBERT B. ADAMS, Editor.

SERIES I.-Local Institutions. 479 PP. $4.00.
SERIES II.-Institutions and Economics. 629 pp. $4.00.
SERIES III.—Maryland, Virginia, and Washington. 595 pp.
$4.00.

SERIES IV.-Municipal Government and Land Tenure. 600

PP. $3.50.

SERIES V.-Municipal Government. History and Politics.

$3.50.

SERIES VI.-The History of Co-operation in the United States. $3.50.

SERIES VII.-Social Science, Education, and Government (1889). In Progress. Subscription, $3.00. EXTRA VOLUME ONE.-The Republic of New Haven. 342 pp. $2.00.

EXTRA VOLUME TWO. - Philadelphia 1681-1887. 444 PP. $3.00.

EXTRA VOLUME THREE.—Baltimore and the 19th of April, 1861. 176 pp. $1.00.

EXTRA VOLUMES FOUR AND FIVE.-Local Constitutional History of United States. (In press.)

A complete set of the Six Series, bound uniformly in an attractive Library Edition, can now be had for $18.00; with the Extra Volumes, "New Haven," "Baltimore," and "Philadelphia," altogether nine volumes, $22.00; with the current series, $25.00. All communications relating to subscriptions, exchanges, etc., should be addressed to the PUBLICATION AGENCY OF THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

HISTORY IN RHYME.

AN INVALUABLE AID TO THE MEMORY.

AMERICA, ENGLAND, AND FRANCE NOW READY.

SECOND EDITION. PRICE, 60 CENTS.

With rare and useful Genealogy, giving the Marriages and Children of all the Sovereigns, the claims of Lady Macbeth, of Bruce and Baliol, the rise of the Stuarts, the Houses

of Burgundy, Bourbon, Orleans, Savoy, Navarre, Bonaparte, etc.

By MRS. CHARLES H. GARDNER,

OF

Rev. DR. and MRS. CHARLES H. GARDNER'S

BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES,

No. 607 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.

GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL MONOGRAPHS.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Salisbury, of New Haven, Conn., are printing, "privately," a series of Genealogical and Biographical Monographs on the families of MCCURDY, PARMELEE MITCHELL, LORD, LEE, MARVIN, LYNDE, DIGRY, WILLOUGHBY, GRISWOLD, WOLCOTT, PITKIN, OGDEN, JOHNSON, and DIODATI, with notes on the BOARDMAN, LAY, DE WOLF, DRAKE, SWAYNE, BOND, and DUNBAR families. It is not a mere collection of names and dates, but a book of family-history as well as a genealogical record, full of new facts obtained in this country and abroad; a work of great and ever-increasing interest to present and future generations of these families and their allies; and also valuable to genealogists, and other antiquaries or students of history, generally. The Monographs will fill about 800 pages, in two volumes, 4to; and will be accompanied by 26 full chart-pedigrees, on bond-paper, with authenticated coats of arms and carefully prepared indexes of family-names.

Subscriptions are invited for copies at cost. The edition is 300 copies. There remain 150 for sale at $18 each, bound in beveled boards, cloth, gilt tops, with the pedigrees separately bound. No account is made of the labor or expenditures of the authors.

A few copies of the Chart-Pedigrees, without the text, are offered at $8 for the set.
These prices will be raised when the work is issued.

Mr. Salisbury offers the remainder of the edition of his "Family Memorials families of SALISBURY, ALDWORTH, ELBRIDGE, SEWALL, PYLREN-DUMMER, WALLEY, QUINCY, GOOKIN, WENDELL, BREESE, CHEVALIER, ANDERSON, and PHILLIPS, at $20 a copy; the pedigrees alone at $8; bound as above.

Application for copies may be made to the authors as above. Or to Editor of

MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY, 743 Broadway, New York City.

The Curtis School for (14) Boys,

BROOKFIELD CENTER, FAIRFIELD CO., CONN.,

HUNS singularity, yet it is certain that in many ways it is unique, and its methods peculiar to itself. It is not a preparatory school in the usual acceptation of the term, because it will not confine itself to any such special line of work. I choose my boys with the greatest care, and give individual attention to all details of their development. I take no boy older than fifteen; my best work is done with those who begin at ten or twelve. I write an unusually full circular to show what boys I desire, what the tone of the school life is, what advantages I offer, and, particularly, what mutual relations must exist between my patrons and myself.

No sickness has occurred in this school in its history of fourteen years. If you have a boy to send to school, let me mail you my circular.

$500 A YEAR.

FREDERICK S. CURTIS, Ph. B.

MRS. ROBERT H. GRISWOLD AND DAUGHTERS

In their Home-School at Lyme, Connecticut,

Are assisted by Miss MARY H. MORSE, from Wellesley College, and Miss LILIAN GRISWOLD, a recent teacher in the Black Hall School. Besides giving careful attention to English, and the usual elementary studies, they teach Latin, and the higher mathematics, and give special attention to History. Pupils can be fitted for college.

French and German are taught by Mad'lle EUGENIE ARNOLD, a French lady, from Paris.

These ladies offer unusual advantages for the piano, harp, guitar, singing, mechanical and free-hand drawing, and painting. They give instruction in rich and elegant styles of French embroidery, ancient and modern, not elsewhere taught in this country.

This school is recommended to young girls taking the ordinary course, to those who wish to pursue particular studies, and to graduated young ladies desirous of higher attainments in special branches. Terms moderate.

The very large, commodious, elegant old house is cool in summer, thoroughly warmed in winter, and very pleasantly and delightfully situated in large grounds, on a branch of the Connecticut River, near its mouth. With its refined influences it is a charming home for young girls of all ages, especially for those who have no permanent home of their own. They can remain in vacations. Few pupils being received, great care is taken of their health and mental and moral development.

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THE COLLECTOR,

A Monthly Magazine for Autograph Collectors. One Dollar a year.

I make a specialty of Revolutionary Letters and Historical Documents, and can furnish almost any desired name. Send for my price lists.

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