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everywhere. The Amsterdam police have cautioned the public against this firm in their official weekly."

H. S. NICHOLS & Co., of Soho Square, London, the well-known dealers in rare books, announce reprints of Radcliffe's "Ovid Travestie," of "The Thousand and One Quarters of an Hour," and the first complete and literal translation of the Carmina of Catullus," the joint

work of Sir Richard Burton and L. C. Smithers. A reproduction of Blake's portrait of Catullus has been etched for the frontispiece. The issue will be limited to subscribers only.

A NEWS agency has been formed in New York which will place on the Broadway cable cars a corps of a hundred boys to sell the new magazines and the latest books, in the same manner as is now being done on the railroad trains. If the scheme proves successful it will be extended to the other important surface lines in New York and in the other larger cities throughout the country. Just how the boys will find room in which to do business is, we suppose, the secret of the agency.

FREDERICK MÜLLER & Co., of Amsterdam, announce "Remarkable Maps of the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries," reproduced in their original size, of which the first part, comprising the Bodel Nyenhuis collection, has just been published. This publication will be of considerable interest to geographers. The first part contains 9 maps, accurately photographed, on 14 sheets of Van Gelder paper. The number of copies is limited to 100, all numbered. There will be six such parts or portfolios.

George Meredith has been giving his views of America and things American to a correspondent of the Idler. It is interesting to learn that "his somewhat late in life fame" came largely at first from the United States. Americans," Mr. Meredith is said to have remarked, "have a fine set of nerves, and a more

"The

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refined apprehension than we [the English] have. Their organization is more keen than ours. discern it in some of their writings and in some of their methods. I foresee a great literary and artistic product there."

THE SOUTH PLACE SOCIETY, in London, this year reaches its centenary. Moncure D. Conway has written a history of the society, and has included in a volume he is preparing some original letters relating to the early life of Robert Browning and other literary friends of William Johnson Fox, M. P., who was for thirty-five years minister of the society. Several portraits and other illustrations will appear in the book, together with a fac-simile of Mrs. Adams' autograph of the hymn, "Nearer, My God, to Thee," as originally written for the South Place Society. ELLIS & ELVEY, London, have just issued the first volume of the new edition of Dante Gabriel Rossetti's poems, which Mr. William Morris has been printing at his Kelmscott Press. It is called Ballads and Narrative Poems," and contains all of Rossetti's works that fall under this category, including "The Blessed Damozel," "The White Ship," "The King's Tragedy," "Jenny," etc. The second volume, which will not be ready until next spring, will contain the remainder of his poems, under the title of "Sonnets and Lyrical Poems." Only 300 copies of each volume are being printed.

GEORGE BELL & SONS promise a new edition of the "Works of Samuel Butler," edited by Brimley Johnson, who has also written a new life, containing, in addition to a formal bibliography, special notices of the various illustrations and imitations of "Hudibras" which have been published from time to time, together with some posed to have borrowed, The text of "Hudiaccount of the authors from whom Butler is supbras" has been thoroughly revised and reprinted for the first time from the last editions published during the author's lifetime, while all the

various readings of the earlier editions are also supplied by means of footnotes. A few poems, partly from MSS. in the British Museum, have been added to the edition known as “Genuine Remains of Butler."

SAMPSON LOW & Co. will publish immediately Dr. Henry Lansdell's account of his third expedition into the interior of Asia. On former occasions he traversed Siberia and the Russian Khanates. The goal of his latest journey was Lassa, which he failed to reach, though he carried with him a letter to the Grand Lama from the Archbishop of Canterbury. But he did explore Chinese Turkestan pretty thoroughly, approaching it from Kuldja by an ice-pass which he believes no European has crossed before; and then proceeded through Little Tibet into India. The book will be in two large volumes, with nearly a hundred illustrations. In appendices are given lists of the fauna collected by the author; and a bibliography of Chinese Central Asia, consisting of 742 titles, with an alphabetical catalogue of authors.

DENT & Co. have nearly ready for publication Gollancz's edition of Lamb's "Specimens_of in their Temple Library the long-expected I. Elizabethan Dramatists" and "Garrick Extracts." The volumes will include sixty-eight

Fragments" contributed by Lamb to" Hone's Day-Book," which have not yet found a place in any previous edition. The identification of these valuable "Fragments" has entailed much labor

on the editor. For the first time Lamb's text has been revised and corrected throughout, biblio

graphical and other errors have been removed, and the extracts chronologically rearranged; brief critical notes are appended to each volume. In addition to the ordinary small and large paper editions there is to be a limited edition, illustrated with portraits of dramatists and actors and with views of the theatres. Dent & Co. have also in preparation an edition of Sterne's works.

AMONG the books which William Morris is

preparing at the Kelmscott Press are an edition of "The Poetical Works of John Keats," and a two-volume folio edition of "The Chronycles of Syr John Froissart," reprinted from a 16th cenStory of King Florus and the Fair Jehane," an tury edition of Lord Berner's translation. "The early French romance, translated by William Morris, is very nearly ready for publication. Although not a sheet of the splendid edition of Chaucer which William Morris has in hand is yet printed, the eight vellum copies promised have already been sold at something over $600 each. Also nearly half of the 300 copies on hand-made paper have been subscribed for. Mr. Burne-Jones has finished a number of the drawings which he is to contribute to the edition, and hopes to produce one more every week until his task is ended. Mr. Morris himself is at work upon the full-page borders.

SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & Co. have in press an TERMS OF ADVERTISING important work by Miss Edith Simcox, who is Under the heading "Books Wanted," subscribers best known to the reading public by her "Natu- only are entitled to a free insertion of five lines ral Law." Its title will be "Primitive Civiliza- for books out of print, exclusive of address (in any issue except special numbers), to an extent tions," and its chief concern is to sketch the his- not exceeding 100 lines a year. If more than tory of ownership and agrarian and economic five lines are sent, the excess is at 10 cents per conditions among ancient Egyptians and Baby-line, and amount should be enclosed. Bids for current books and such as may be easily had from the lonians, ancient and modern Chinese, and some publishers, and repeated matter, as well as all advertisescattered stocks of apparently kindred origin.ments from non-subscribers, must be paid for at the rate The book, according to the London Literary World," is not designed to support any particular historic or economic theory, though the evidence it brings together does, as a matter of fact, tend to favor the views of a group of scholars who, on quite other grounds, assume a prehistoric connection between the men of China and Babylo-peated matter and advertisements of non-subscribers the

nia, and of Babylonia and Egypt. It at the same time tends to show that the stability of these primitive states was not unconnected with the character of their economic systems, which contained some fundamentally humane and democratic elements. This comparative study of their characteristic institutions throws curious light on questions of ethnographic relationship, and deals with such questions as marriage, the family, early law and custom."

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BIBLIOMANIA.-Here is the celebrated and exceedingly scarce edition of this author. You will find that on page 13 there are a number of typographical errors that do not appear in the ordinary issues of the work.-Fliegende Blätter. SOLD.-Auctioneer: "This book, gentlemen, is especially valuable, as it contains marginal notes in the handwriting of Alexander Von Humboldt. A hundred marks offered. Going -going-gone! It is yours, sir." (The autograph marginal note by the renowned scholar was as follows: "This book is not worth the paper it is printed on.")—Humor-Bacillen.

ON the evening of M. Zola's arrival in England the famous Frenchman was lingering over his coffee and cigars when a servant entered the room bearing a large basket of flowers, which he presented to M. Zola, saying: "Mr. Oscar Wilde, sir, sends these flowers, and asks if you will receive him for a few minutes." The words were roughly translated to M. Zola, who still seemed puzzled, and shook his head, exclaiming, "Oscawoile! Oscawoile! I don't know him." "What sort of an animal is that Oscawoile ?" inquired a famous journalist equally ignorant of English pronunciation. "Send back his cabbages and put him out!" cried another. Finally, M. Zola bethought him of looking at the gentleman's card, and at once a smile of intelligence lit up his features as he gasped out in repentant accents: "Mais nom de nom, c'est Monsieur Oscarre Veelde, l'auteur de Salomé, que nous connaissons tous ! Send him up at Oscarre Veelde !" shouted all the others; Why didn't you say so at first?"

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of 10 cents per line.

subscribers and non-subscribers is 10 cents per line for Under the heading "Books for Sale," the charge to each insertion. No deduction for repeated matter. Under the heading" Books for Exchange," the charge is 10 cents per line. No deduction for standing matter. Under the heading “Situations Wanted,” subscribers are entitled to one free insertion of five lines. For recharge is 10 cents per line.

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Leech's Pictures of Life and Character, 3d and 5th ser. Brinley Catalogue, pt. 1.

Poe, Raven and other poems. N. Y., 1845.

THE BOOK-SHOP, 113-115 STATE ST., CHICAGO, ILL. Murray's English Reader.

I

N. Y. Genealogical and Bio. Record, v. 5; also 1 and 2 of
v. 6.
Isis Unveiled.

THE BOOK-SHOP, 160 PUBLIC SQ., CLEVELAND, O.
Petrie's Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland.
Benton's Thirty Years' View, v. 2, cl.
Ashurst's Lurger, v. 3, 1st ed.

Lang's Ballads of Books, Coomb's ed.
Coaching Days and Coaching Ways. 1888.
BRENTANO'S, 1015 PA. Ave., WASHINGTON, D. C. [Cash.]
White's Shakespeare.

Political Science Quarterly.
Quar. Journal of Economics.

The 1st 4 v. of each, bound or in nos.
Poems of F. W. H. Myers.
66 Lord Houghton.
Owen Jones' Grammar of Ornament.

Rimmer, W., Art Anatomy.
BRIGGS' OLD BOOK-STORE, 34 COLUMBIA ST., UTICA, N. Y.
[Cash.]

History of Berkshire Co., Mass., prior to 1829.
Sheldon Magazine, or Genealogical List of the Sheldons
in America.

WILLIAM J. CAMPBELL, 1009 WALNUT ST., PHILA., PA.
Marshall, Majorities and Minorities. Lond., 1853.
Hare, The Machinery of Representation. Lond., 1857.
Fisher, The Degradation of Our Representative System.
Phila.. 1863.

Fisher, Reform in Out Municipal Elections. Phila., 1866.
Mill, Personal Representation. Lond., 1867.
Report of the Constitutional Convention of the State of
New York on Personal Representation. N. Y., 1867.
Droop, Political and Social Effects of Different Methods
of Electing Representatives. Lond., 1869.

Sessional Proceedings of the National Association for the

Promotion of Social Science, The School Board Elections. Lond., 1871.

Am. Social Science Assoc. Proceedings, Mr. Hare's Meth-
od of Voting. N. Y., 1871.
Anything in French or German, or rare pamphlets in
English on reform in voting.

G. H. COLBY & Co., LANCASTER, N. H. [Cash.] Appletons' Annuals, 1889 to date, in any whole bindings, Cheap copy Walsh's Written Arithmetic.

cheap.

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Life of Dr. Isaac Watts.

J. FRANCIS RUGGLES, BRONSON, MICH.
Martineau's Thirty Years of Peace.
Court and Camp of Bonaparte. Harper.
McNally's Geog., pt. 4, used 25 years ago.

W. S. RUSK, 604 8TH AVE., N. Y. [Cash.]
Tales of the Ocean, by Hawser or Martingale.
Salt Water Bubbles, pub. in Boston, Mass.
Popery as It Was and Is, by Hogan.

A. M. SMITH, 249 HENNEPIN AVE., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Set of Century Dictionary.

H. M. STARKE, Richmond, VA. [Cash.] Von Borcke's Memoirs of Confederate War of Indepen

dence.

E. STEIGER & Co., 25 PARK PL., N. Y. [Cash.] C. P. Krauth, Vocabulary of the Philosoph. Sciences. B. WESTERMANN & Co., 812 B'WAY, N. Y Presbyterian Review, v. 6, nos. 22, 23, April and July, 1885.

Princeton Review of Nov., 1884.

Methodist Quarterly Review of Jan., April and July, 1879; Oct., '80; Oct., '84.

Lutheran Church Review, v. 4, no. 1, 1885; v. 5, nos. 3 and 4, '86.

W. C. EDWARDS, 87 East Av., Rochester, N. Y. [Cash.] Quarterly Review, American ed. of Jan., 1875; V. 40, 80,

Through Colonial Doorways, limited ed.

Memoirs of Catherine 11, of Russia.

F. E. GRANT, 7 W. 42D ST., N. Y.

Comic trans, of Homer's Iliad.

Books on gems, ores, and opals.

Healthy Hospitals, by Sir Douglas Galton.
Bourne's Life of John Locke.

1st ed. of Le Gallienne's Book-Bills of Narcissus. Original issue of Harper's Weekly, from 1860 to '65. "Frank Leslie's Weekly, war period.

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Issue of the New York Illustrated News, war period as far as published.

Trans, of the Odyssey, by Philip Horsley.

Mechanical Theory of Heat, by Clausius, tr. by W. R. Brown.

Spherical Harmonics, Ferrars.

Uniplanar Kinematics, Minchin.
Thermodynamics, Tait.

Airy, Undulatory Theory of Light.

Differential Equations, Boole, supplementary vol.
Comtenay's Calculus.

Rink's Organ School Edition Without Pedal Obligato.
Edersheim's Manners and Customs of the Jews.
LEWIS S. HAYDEN, 1010 F ST., N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C.
The Balloting Book and Other Documents Relating to
Military Bounty Lands in the State of New York.
Packard & Van Benthuysen, Albany, 1825.

JERSEY CITY (N. J.) FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY. [Cash.]
Brinley Catalogue, pt. 1.
Journals of Congress, v. 12, Nov., 1786-Nov., 1787.

WARREN F. KELLOGG, 5 PARK SQ., Boston, Mass. Set of Blaine's Twenty Years, cl. New copy only.

G. KLEINTEICH, JR., 334 BEDFORD AVE., BROOKLYN, N. Y. [Cash.]

Poems of Whyte-Melville.

Owen Jones, 1001 Illuminated Initial Letters.

Report of U. S. S. Dolphin on Soundings of Atlantic Ocean.

LIBRARY OF AGR. COLLEGE, MANHATTAN, KAN.

N. A. Review, nos. 127, 129, 133, 140, 254.
Eclectic Magazine, v. 1, nos. 1, 4; v. 29, no. 3.
American Journal of Science, 1st ser., v. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15,

32, 49, 50.

LOVELL, GESTEFELD & Co., 125 E. 23D ST., N. Y. [Cash.]
Thomson, J. Cockburn, Bhagavad Gita.

W. H. LOWDERMILK & Co., WASHINGTON, D. C. [Cash.]
Colwell, Spirit of '76 in Rhode Island.
Shakespeariana, V. 2.

Cassell, Franco-German War, 2 v.

S. B. LUYSTER, 79 NASSAU ST., N. Y. [Cash.] Cervantes, Exemplary Novels. Count Hamilton's Fairy Tales. Bohn's extra vols., cl. Scrutton's The Influence of Roman Law upon the Law of England. Macmillan.

THOMAS B. MOSHER, 37 EXCHANGE ST., Portland, ME. [Cash.]

Swinburne's Poems and Ballads, Lovell Library, no. 412, pocket ed., pap.

Book-Mart, nos. for May, 1888; Feb., March, April, June, July, '89; August, Sept., Oct., Nov., '90.

PALMER, MEECH & Co., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. History of the Hartford Convention, by Theodore Dwight. PORTER & COATES, 900 CHESTNUT ST., PHILA., PA. Sullivan's Familiar Letters on Public Characters.

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, 27 W. 23D ST., N. Y.J
D. G. Mitchell's Battle Summer. 1852.
Millbrook, by Wood. Carter, 1868.
Geology, a poem by Rev. John Selby Watson,

and 160, complete.

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W. B. HARISON, 59 5TH AVE., N. Y.

50 each Barnes' History of Ancient and Modern France. Steel's 14 Weeks' Series.

Higginson's United States History.
Swinton's Standard Suppl. Readers.

25 each Anderson's New Man'l of General History.
Montgomery's Beginner's History.
Bloss Ancient History.

New Franklin Advanced Third Reader.

All new at 25 to 33% %% off, according to quantity ordered. 100 each Sheldon's Elem. Arith.

Shaw's New History of English Literature.
Reed's Intro. Language Work.

Reed and Kellogg's Elementary Grammar.
Hill's Elements of Rhetoric.

Montgomery's Beginner's History.

Brook's Higher Arithmetic.

Second-hand books at 50 to 60% off, according to quan- ̧ tity ordered.

J. M. KIRBY, FULTON, PEARL AND WILLOUGHBY STS., BROOKLYN, N. Y.

Harper's Mag., v. 1 to 73, hf, russ.

Scribner, v. 1 to 22, hf. russ.

All in A no. I condition. Make offer. Mag. Am. Hist., 1880, '81, '82, unbound, to cents per no.

SITUATIONS WANTED.

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COMPLETE SETS of all the leading Magazines and Reviews, and back numbers of some three thousand different periodicals, for sale, cheap, at the AMERICAN AND FOREIGN Magazine Depot, 47 Dey St., New York,

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A New Series of Genuine Imported Teachers' Bibles.

THE INTERNATIONAL TEACHERS' BIBLES.

THE SMALLEST LARGE-TYPE BIBLES PUBLISHED.

New Helps, New Maps, Fine Bindings, Clear Print, Minimum Size, Moderate Prices.

Following is a Partial List of Those who Assisted in the Prepa

ration of the New International Helps or Aids:

Rev. C. H. H. WRIGHT, D.D., M.A., Ph.D., Editor, England.

Rev. JAMES STALKER, D.D., author of "Imago Christi," Scotland.

Rev. PHILIP SCHAFF, D.D., LL.D., Union Theological Seminary, New York.

Rev. GEO. ADAM SMITH, M.A., Aberdeen.

Rev. A. E. DUNNING, D.D., Editor The Congregationalist, Boston.

Rev. A. R. FAUSSETT, D.D., Canon and Prebendary of York, England.

Bishop JOHN H. VINCENT, D.D., New York,

Rev. HUGH MCMILLAN, D.D., LL.D., F.R.S.E., Scotland.

Rev. ALFRED PLUMMER, M.A., D.D., formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, Eng. Rev. J. B. HEARD, M.A., Caius College, Cambridge, and Hulsean Lecturer in the University of Cambridge, England.

Rev. JESSE L. HURLBUT, D.D., Sunday-School Journal, New York.

THEOPHILUS G. PINCHES, M.R.A.S., British Museum, London.

WM. R. HARPER, Ph.D., President Chicago University, Chicago.
MAJOR D. WHITTLE, Evangelist, Philadelphia.

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