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*Halm, F:, [pseud. for Elegius Franz Joseph freiherr von Münch-Bellinghausen.] Griseldis, [a drama;] ed. with English notes, etc., by C: A. Buchheim. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 16°, (Buchheim's German classics.) cl., net, 90 c.

Halstead, W: Riley. Life on a backwoods farm; or, the boyhood of Reuben Rodney Blannerhassett. Cin., O., Cranston & Curts, 1894. C. 258 p. il. D. cl., $1.

Not a story after the stereotyped order, but a succession of incidents illustrating prominent features of pioneer life in the forests of Indiana fifty years ago. The author claims that it is "true to life rather than "to fact.

Hamilton, Allan McLane, M.D., Godkin, Lawrence, [and others.] A system of legal medicine. In 2 v. V. 1. N. Y., E. B. Treat, 1894. C. 5-657 p. il. O. cl., subs., per v., $5.50; shp., $6.50.

Contents: Medico-legal inspections and post-mortem examinations, by A. T. Bristow, M.D.; Death in its medico-legal aspects, by F A. Harris, M.D.: Blood and other stains-hair, by Prof. J. F. Babcock; Identity of the living, by Allan MeL. Hamilton, M.D. Identity and survivorship, by B. N. Cardozo; Homicide and wounds, by L: Balch, M.D.; Poisoning by inorganic substances, by C: E. Pellow; Poisoning by alkaloids and organic substances, by W. S. Haines, M.D.; The toxicologic importance of ptomaines and other putrefactive products, by Victor C. Vaughan, M.D.; The medical jurisprudence of life insurance, by B. Symonds, M.D.; Accidental insurance, by C. F. Bishop; The obligation of the insured and the insurer, by R. C. McMurtrie; Of certain legal relations of physicians and surgeons to their patients and one another, by W: A. Purrington; Indecent assault upon children, by W. Travis Gibb, M.D.

Hamilton, C. D. P. Modern scientific whist:

the principles of the modern game analyzed and extended; illustrated by over sixty critical endings and annotated games from actual play. N. Y., Brentano's, [1894.] c. 3-599 p. l. O. cl., $2.

This treatise on whist is based upon the system of leads known as "American leads." The principle underlying these leads is the invention of N B. Trist, of New Orleans; and as now extended and simplified the whist world is indebted to Mr. Henry Jones (Cavendish ") of London. The purpose of this volume is to present to the student of the game the rules and maxims of play as laid down by the authorities and practised by the strongest players; and an effort has been made to simplify and render clear the applications of the many rules and maxims by copious analyses and numerous illustrations. Much space is devoted to the play of second hand, the intricacies of end-play, the department of inference, and to the management of trumps.

Hamilton, F: W: The church and secular life. Bost., Universalist Pub. House, 1894. C. 4+225 p. D. cl., 75 c.

Eight lectures delivered at the Church of Our Father, Pawtucket, R. I., during the winter of 1893-94. They relate to the church in its relation to the life of men, to education, charity, business, labor, politics, reforms, and society.

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*Hamilton, Hutton C. Martha: a play. N. Y., G: P. Putnam's Sons, 1894. 16°, cl., $1. [Edition limited to 250 copies.] *Hamilton, Walter. Dated book-plates (ExLibris;) with a treatise on their origin and development. In 3 pts. Pt. 1, Introductory treatise on book-plates dated prior to 1700; with twenty il. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 4°, pap., net, $3.

*Hammer, Rev. Bonaventura, ed. The little prayer-book of the sacred heart: pravers and practices of blessed Margaret Mary Alacoque in honor of the sacred heart of Jesus. N. Y., Benziger Bros., 1894. 32°, various bindings, 40 c.-$2.

*Hammond, Joseph. English nonconformity and Christ's Christianity. N. Y., E. & J.

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B. Young & Co., 1893 [1894.] 16+268 p. 12°, cl., $2.

*Hamon, Rev. M. Meditation for all the days of the year: for the use of priests, religions, and the faithful; tr. from the 23d rev. ed., by Mrs. Annie R. Bennett-Gladstone; with an alphabetical index. N. Y., Benziger Bros., 1894. 5 v., 12°, cl., net, $5. Hampton, Randolph Gore, ["The Major," pseud.] The Major in Washington City, 2d series; some amusing and amazing letters from a southern standpoint. [Anon.] Chic., F. Tennyson Neely, 1894. c. 5-251 p. il. D. (Neely's popular lib., no. 24.) pap.,

25 c.

A series of papers which ran through the N. Y. Morning Advertiser; the writer represents an unconstructed rebel, who went to Washington City in 1893 to urge the payment by the Federal government of the southern war claims. His letters describe his experience and give his views on the battle flags, on the odiousness of Federal courts, on the negro in Alabama, on free speech, etc. He also visits New York, meets Richard Croker, and Mr. Dana of the Sun, and has other interesting experiences.

Hancock, Anson Uriel. Coitlan: a tale of the Inca world. Chic., Donohue, Henneberry & Co., 1893 [1894.] c. '93. 4-448 p. il. D. (Optimus ser., no. 30.) pap., 50 c. The time is the sixteenth century. The scene is Peru. Coitlan, an Inca princess, is the heroine. The story is founded on the incidents preceding and succeeding the Conquest of Peru by the Spaniards. The action of Pizarro is introduced. Quohitl, the lover of Coitlan, tells her romantic history, and describes the habits and customs of the Incas, and gives much of the incidental history of Peru.

C.

Hancock, Anson Uriel. A history of Chile. Chic., C: H. Sergel Co., 1893 [1894.] 4-471 p. por. maps, O. (Latin-American Republics ser.) cl., $2.50.

A complete, condensed history of Chile, from the time of Pizarro to the present. The writer says: “I have devoted considerable space to the late civil war in Chile and have cut somewhat short previous political wars. In the appendix are given the constitution of Chile, some statistics, and a list of authorities (3 p.) on Chilean history.

Handford, T: W., comp. Lamps of the temple: choice examples of the eloquence of the modern pulpit. Chic., Laird & Lee, [1894.] c. 3-374 p. por. D. cl., 50 c.; pap.,

25 c.

About seventy-five extracts from sermons by great preachers of every creed. Among them are Henry Ward Beecher, Rabbi Schindler, James Freeman Clarke, Theodore Parker, Phillips Brooks, Cardinal Gibbons, C. H. Spurgeon, Heber Newton, Bishop J. P. Newman, etc. The extracts cover chiefly the current social problems of the day.

Hansey, Jennie A. The century cook-book : a collection of carefully tested household recipes; containing [also] a practical medical family adviser. Chic., Laird & Lee, 1894. C. 11+353+14 blank p. il. D. (Pastime ser., no. 123.) pap., 25 c.

Harben, W: N. The Land of the Changing Sun. N. Y., The Merriam Co., [1894.] c. 233 p. il. S. cl., 75 c.

An English and America balloonist meet with an accident and fall to earth upon a lonely island. Their bonfire attracts the attention of the inhabitants of the "Land of the Changing Sun," and they are carried off by the peculiar vehicles into a land lighted by electricity, where time is told by color, where seasons are controlled and storms only allowed at great intervals to allow the people to realize the music of thunder, where there are no sick or unhappy people, and where all mechanism has reached perfection. Full of surprises and some practical moral lessons.

Hardinge, E. M. With the wild flowers, from pussy-willow to thistle-down: a rural chronicle of our flower friends and foes, describ

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ing them under their familiar English names. N. Y., The Baker & Taylor Co., [1894.] c. 11+271 p. il. S. cl., $1.

Most of the matter in this little book has appeared in articles contributed to Demorest's Family Magazine and to the New York Evening Post. The papers are free from technical terms, and are delightfully chatty, carrying the reader through the whole season with the wild flowers as they make their appearance. They are intended for those who love flowers as flowers, and who like to read about them without getting into too close contact with technical terms and classifications

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*Hardwicke, H: The art of winning cases or modern advocacy; a practical treatise on preparation for trial, and the conduct of cases in court. N. Y. and Alb., Banks & Bros., 1894. c. 4+694 p. O. shp., net, $5. *Hardwicke, W. W., D.D. The missing links of the (English religious) establishment: plain talks bearing on orders, jurisdiction, and the theory of continuity. N. Y., Benziger Bros., 1894. 16°, net, pap., 15 c.

Hardy, E. G. Christianity and the Roman government: a study in imperial administration. N. Y., Longmans, Green & Co., 1894. 11+208 p. D. cl., $1.50.

Hardy, T: Life's little ironies: a set of tales with some colloquial sketches, entitled A few crusted characters. N. Y., Harper, 1894. c. 2+268 p. D. cl., $1.25.

Short stories written from 1882 to 1893, comprising The son's veto; For conscience' sake; A tragedy of two ambitions; On the western circuit; To please his wife; The melancholy huzzar of the German legion; The fiddler of the reels; A tradition of 1804; A few crusted characters. Hardy draws real men and women and preserves his faculty of seeing the touch of humor in the most harrowing situations.

Hare, A: J: C. The story of two noble lives being memorials of Charlotte, Countess Canning, and Louisa, Marchioness of Waterford. N. Y., A. D. F. Randolph & Co., 1893 [1894.] 3 v., 6+381; 4+489; 3+495 p. pors. il. D. cl., $8.

The work begins in the third quarter of the eighteenth century, long before the "two noble lives" came into existence. Lady Hardwicke and Lady Stuart de Rothesay, the grandmother and mother of the two beautiful women designated by the title, contribute two charming collections of prefatory letters. Lady Hardwicke's husband was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland from 1801 to 1806, and she gives some amusing sketches of Dublin society of that time. Lady Stuart de Rothesay's letters are dated from the English Embassy at Paris, and are rich in reminiscences of men and events of the period. Her daughters, Lady Canning and Lady Waterford, belonged to the second quarter of the present century. Mr. Hare gives interesting details of their childhood in France and England and of their marriages. Lady Canning's married life was spent in India during the eventful period of the mutiny, her journal being full of the thrilling scenes there enacted and of accounts of the actors in them. Lady Waterford spent her long widowhood among her husband's tenants in Ireland. With many domestic details are anecdotes and recollections of some famous people. *Hare, Hobart Amory, M.D. A text-book of practical therapeutics; with especial reference to the application of remedial measures to disease and their employment upon a rational basis; with special chapters by G. E. De Schweinitz, M.D., E: Martin, M.D., and Barton C. Hirst, M.D. New 4th ed. rev. and enl. Phil., Lea Bros. & Co., 1894. 740 p. 8°, cl., $3.75; leath., $4.75. Harkness, Rev. N. J. Epworth Guards: a manual for the military division of the Epworth League. N. Y., Hunt & Eaton, 1894. C. 74 p. T. flex. cl., net, 25 c. Harland, Marion, [pseud. for Mrs. Mary Vir

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ginia Terhune.] Mr. Wayt's wife's sister. N. Y., The Cassell Pub. Co., [1894.] c. 4 +314 p. D. cl., $1.

Mr. Wayt is a minister with a great gift of oratory, unbounded self-appreciation, and total lack of consideration for his wife and five children. The wife adores him; his wife's sister keeps the house together during the many changes of parishes. At the time of the story he is settled in a New Jersey country parish. A crippled daughter is made a very interesting character. By chance the family skeleton is seen by the lover of Mr. Wayt's wife's sister. Two other stories are included: "A social success and "The articles of separation."

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Harland, Marion, [pseud. for Mrs. Mary Virginia Terhune.] Phemie's temptation: a novel. N. Y., G: W. Dillingham, 1889, [1894.] c. '69. 4-396 p. D. (Madison sq. ser., no. 73.) pap., 25 c.

Harland, Marion, [pseud. for Mrs. Mary Virginia H. Terhune.] The royal road; or, taking him at his word. N. Y., A. D. F. Randolph & Co., 1894. c. 2-377 p. O. cl., $1.50.

The story of a refined, proud woman, left, after seventeen years of married life, with six children dependent on a married brother. The husband and father, after posing for years as a misunderstood man too fine for daily work, absconds with a woman after embezzling money. Marion Harland teaches many of her helpful lessons to this family by means of nurses and clergymen. Her specialties of cooking and the physical and mental training of young girls are skilfully worked into this tale, of which the scene is first Brooklyn, later New Jersey.

Harlow, W: Burt. Columbia redeemed from slavery: the story of America's civil war. Buffalo, N. Y., C: Wells Moulton, 1894. C. 136 p. sq. S. pap., 75 c.

Describes in verse the principal events of the Civil

War.

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This little book is a modest attempt to secure better preparation for the language work of the high school by a scientific and thought-inspiring method of presenting English grammar, by a reduction of the number of facts presented, to the few actually essential, by increased emphasis on certain matters often neglected but essential to any real mastery of the subject, and by adapting the terminology and method of presentation more closely to that used in German and Latin grammars. These "Inductive studies" were printed three years ago, and bound for ready reference with the "Inductive Latin primer" of the same authors. They have been now carefully revised and somewhat enlarged.

Harraden, Beatrice. At the green dragon. N. Y., Optimus Printing Co., [1894.] c. 32 p. S. (Happy thought lib., no 31.) pap.,

25 c.

*Harraden, Beatrice.

N.

Bird of passage. Y., J. S. Ogilvie Pub. Co., 1894. 159 p. 12°, pap., 25 c. Harraden, Beatrice. In varying moods. American copyright ed. N. Y., G: P. Putnam's Sons, 1894. C. 6+286 p. S. cl., $1; pap., 50 c.

Seven stories by the author of "Ships that pass in the night." They are all of a somewhat sombre tint, and several are quite fantastic. The opening tale, "At

HARRADEN

the Green Dragon," gives a charming picture of domestic life in Shropshire; Hieronymus Howard, a literary man, is detained by an accident at the "Green Dragon"-a pleasant country inn-and a story grows up around him, which has an unconventional heroine and a sad ending; it is not, however, devoid of a certain grim humor. Besides this story are: "The painter and his picture," "The umbrella-mender," "A bird of passage," "The clockmaker and his wife," "Sorrow and joy," and "An idyl of London."

*Harraden, Beatrice. Ships that pass in the night. N. Y., J. S. Ogilvie Pub. Co., 1894. 150 p. 12°, рар., 25 c. Harraden, Beatrice. Ships that pass in the night. Authorized American ed. N. Y., G: P. Putnam's Sons, 1894. 7+235 p. S. cl., $1; new popular ed., 16°, pap., 50 c.

The story takes place at Petershof, a winter resort for consumptives, in the Swiss mountains. The chief -characters are Robert Allitsen, a rich young Englishman whose days are numbered, and Bernardine Holme, an intellectual young English girl, who has broken down under a strain of work in teaching, writing, etc. Their story is a simple, every-day one, the novelty being in the telling, and in the many shrewd and philosophical remarks of the writer, betraying a deep study of life and human nature. The apt title is taken from Longfellow-"Ships that pass in a night, and speak each other in passing," etc.

*Harraden, Beatrice. Ships that pass in the night. Chic., E. A. Weeks & Co., 1894. 12°, (The Marguerite ser., no. 21.) pap., 25 c.; cl., 50 c.

Harraden, Beatrice. Things will take a turn: a story for children; il. by J. H. Bacon. N. Y., C: Scribner's Sons, 1895 [1894.] 5163 p. il. D. cl., $1.

The characters are at first a little girl who lives with her grandfather the owner of a small second-hand book-store, and an old man who keeps a bird-shop, and has a parrot who has been taught to say "Things will take a turn." Business has been so bad, that money is very scarce in both shops, when things do take an unexpected turn. The little girl, in the absence of her grandfather, serves a customer who takes a great fancy to her, and makes her the companion of his invalid daughter; and though some sickness and trouble intervene, permanent prosperity is restored. *Harraden, Beatrice. The umbrella mender. N. Y., J. S. Ogilvie Pub. Co., 1894. 160 p. 12°, pap., 25 c. *Harrell, J: M. Brooks and Baxter war: a history of the reconstruction period in Arkansas. St. Louis, Slawson Pr. Co., 1894. c. 284 p. por. 8°, cl., $1.75; pap., $1.50. *Harris, C: N. Massachusetts statutory citations: a table of the statutes cited, expounded, and construed by the supreme judicial courts of Mass. from Quincy to 159 Mass. reports incl. Bost., Little, Brown & Co., 1894. C. 6+504 p. O. shp., net, $6. Harris, Frank. Elder Conklin, and other stories. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 2+277 p. D. cl., $1.25.

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Stories of the present, with their scene in the far west. "Elder Conklin" is a fine character-study and an odd combination of heroic qualities and petty meannesses. His daughter is beautiful and ignorant and vain. She throws herself at a young schoolmaster from Boston, boarding in her father's house, and when she realizes his contempt, elopes with a "flashy " elderly lawyer. The other stories are: The sheriff and his partner; A modern idyll; Satin Crow; The best man in Garotte; and Gulmore the Boss. The author is late editor of the Fortnightly Review.

*Harris, Ja. Rendel. Four lectures on the western text of the New Testament. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 96 p. 8°, cl., net, $1.25. *Harris, Ja. Rendel, ed. Newly recovered apology of Aristides. N. Y., Ja. Pott & Co., 1894. 112 p. il. 12°, cl., 50 c.

*Harris, Ja. Rendel. On the origin of the

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Ferrar-group: a lecture on the genealogical relations of New Testament mss. delivered at Mansfield College, Oxford, on Nov. 6, 1893. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 27 p. 16°, pap., net, 35 c.

Harris, Joel Chandler, ["Uncle Remus," pseud.] Little Mr. Thimblefinger and his queer country; what the children saw and heard there; il. by Oliver Herford. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. c. 2+230 p. sq. O. cl., $2.

A series of adventures of a small boy and girl, with a small black nurse, in the magical land in which Mrs. Meadows, Brer Rabbit, and Uncle Remus' other characters live. Mr. Herford's pictures are spirited and very funny. Of the stories the author says himself: "some of them were gathered from the negroes, some are Middle-Georgia folk-lore stories, and no doubt belong to England, and some are merely inventions." Harrison, Mrs. Constance Cary, [Mrs. Burton Harrison.] A bachelor maid; il. by Irving R. Wiles. N. Y., The Century Co., 1894.

c. 4+224 p. D. cl., $1.25.

A novel of contemporary New York society-" deliciously modern in its sketching of the everlasting woman's question." It has just been completed in the Century Magazine. It is the story of a pure and noble woman, animated by a desire to benefit her sex, and dazzled by the prospect of a higher womanhood, yet hardly understanding the things to be accomplished or the means of their accomplishment. The reader is introduced to fashionable New York drawingrooms, the "swell" clubs, and to the fads of metropolitan society.

Harrison, F: The meaning of history, and other historical pieces. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. C. 7+482 p. O. cl., $2.25.

The chapters on The meaning of history" occupy about one-half of this volume of collected historical essays. The author subdivides his subject into the use of history, the connection of history, some great books of history (giving a choice of books to be obtained in the English language which together give a comprehensive view of authentic history from the beginning of the human race), a criticism of the manner of teaching history at the universities and the French revolutions and their consequences. Many of the essays have appeared in The Forum and The Fortnightly Review The more important are four chapters on The city--ancient, medieval, modern, and ideal, essays of Constantinople, Paris, London, and the sacredness of ancient buildings.

*Harrop, Joseph. Harrop's monograph of formulas for the preparation of flavoring extracts, essences, syrups, and colorings, for the use of druggists. Columbus, O., O. Davie & Co., 1894. 12°, cl., $2. Harte, Fs. Bret. The bell-ringer of Angel's, and other stories. Bost., Houghton, Mittlin & Co., 1894. C. 2-334 p. D. cl.,$1.25.

Eight of the most recent stories of the author of "The luck of Roaring Camp," entitled: The bell-ringer of Angel's; Johnnyboy; Young Robin Gray; The sheriff of Siskyon; A rose of Glenbogie; The mystery of the Hacienda; Chu Chu; My first book.

*Harte, Fs. Bret. The luck of Roaring Camp. Portland ed. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. 16°, cl., 30 c.

Harte, Fs. Bret. A protégée of Jack Hamlin's, and other stories. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. c. 3+292 p. S. cl., $1.25. Contents: A protégée of Jack Hamlin's; An ingénue of the Sierras: The reformation of James Reddy; The heir of the McHulishes; An episode of West Woodlands; The home-coming of Jim Wilkes.

*Harte, Fs. Bret. A Sappho of Green Springs, and other stories. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. [c. '91.] 3+294 p. 12°, (Riverside pap. ser., no. 60.) pap., 50 c. *Harte, Walter Blackburne. Meditations in motley: [essays.] Bost., Arena Publishing Co., 1894. 12°, cl., $1.25.

*Hartland, Edwin S., ed. English fairy and

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folk tales; selected and ed. with an introd. by Edwin S. Hartland; il. by G. E. Brock. N. Y., imported by C: Scribner's Sons, 1894. 26+282 p. 12°, cl., $1.50. *Hartzler, Rev. H. B. Moody in Chicago; or, the World's Fair gospel campaign. N. Y. and Chic., Fleming H. Revell Co., 1894. 255 p. 12°, cl., net, $1.

*Hassall, Arthur, ed. Periods of European history. In 8 v. Period 5, Europe, 15981715, by H: Offley Wakeman. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 392 p. maps, 12°, cl., net, $1.40.

*Hatch, Edwin, D.D., Redpath, H: A., [and others.] Concordance to the Septuagint and the other Greek versions of the Old Testament, (including the Apocryphal books.) Pt. 3. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. F. pap., net, $5. Hatton, Jos.

Under the great seal. N. Y., Cassell Pub. Co., [1894.] c. '93. 4+406 p. D. (Cassell's sunshine ser., no. 156.) cl., $1; pap., 50 c.

See notice, "Annual Catalogue," 1893. *Hauff, W: The little glass man, and other stories; from the German. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 176 p. il. 16°, (Children's lib.) cl., 75 c. Haven, Erastus Otis (Bp.), ed. Columbus and American progress: a national handbook and reference manual of facts and figures from the discovery of America to the present time; historical, biographical, statistical, documentary, financial, political. New ed., enl. and rev. by T. E. Wilson and J. Sanderson. N. Y., E. B. Treat, 1892 [1894.] 600 p. l. 4°, cl., subs., $1.75.

Hawes, A. Clifford. The muse poetic. New Bedford, Mass., A. Clifford Hawes, 1893 [1894.] c. '93. 2-91 p. por. D. cl., $1. Disconnected verses on many subjects, written with much enthusiasm and somewhat less attention to rules of verse-making.

Hawes, Frank Mortimer. Rhymes of the centuries, and other verses. Bost., Damrell & Upham, 1894. c. 2-136 p. D. cl., 90 c.

Some sonnets and translations from Horace and Virgil are included in these "rhymes of the centuries," which relate to Columbus, Ponce De Leon, De Soto, etc.

*Hawkins, N. Maxims and instructions for the boiler-room. 4th ed. N. Y., Theodore Audel & Co., [1894.] 231 p. il. pl. O. cl., $2.50.

Hawthorne, Hildegarde. The fairest of the fair. Phil., H: Altemus, 1894. c. 2+293 p. il. S. cl., $1.25.

Vivid, picturesque notes on the recent fair at Chicago. Only salient points and novel features are dwelt upon-the human side of the fair receiving thorough appreciation. The author's style is fresh and attractive, while she possesses a keen perception for both the artistic and the humorous. The Midway" is well presented, with its many contrasting peoples, costumes, etc. The little book is gotten up in dainty style, with page and marginal pictures. *Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Blithedale romance; with an introd. by G: Parsons Lathrop. Salem ed. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. 16°, cl., 30 c. Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Blithedale romance; [and] The snow image, and other twice told tales. Phil., D: McKay, 1894. 4-229 p. D. (American classic ser.) cl., 75 c.; hf. cf., $1.50.

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Hawthorne, Nathaniel. A wonder-book for girls and boys; [and] True stories from history and biography. Phil., D: McKay, 1894. 3-241 p. D. (American classic ser.) cl., 75 c.; hf. cf., $1.50.

*Hay, H: Hanby. Created gold, and other poems. Phil., A. E: Newton & Co., 1893 [1894.] 143 p. 8°, hf. canvas, $2. Largepap. ed., $5.

*Hay, Mary Cecil. Old Myddelton's money. N. Y., Hurst & Co., 1894. 12°, (Hurst's lib. of pap.-covered novels.) pap., 25 c. *Hay, Mary Cecil. A wicked girl. N. Y., J: S. Ogilvie Pub. Co., 1894. 192 p. 16°, pap., 25 c.

Hayden, W: B: William Benjamin Hayden, for forty-two years a minister of the NewJerusalem Church: selected essays and discourses, with memorials of his life and services. Bost., Massachusetts New-Church Union, 1894. 3-319 p. por. O. cl., $1.25. "This memorial volume, containing eight sermons or lectures and four essays composed and delivered by the Rev. W: B: Hayden, prefaced by notices and addresses, relating to his character and work, written before and after his death, is presented to the attention of those who knew and loved Mr. Hayden, and to all who can appreciate clear and forcible expositions of the teachings and philosophy of the New Church."

Editorial Note.

Hayes, M. Horace. Among men and horses; il. by reproductions from photographs. N. Y., Dodd, Mead & Co., 1894. 10+358 p. por. il. O. cl., $4.

The life of Captain M. Horace Hayes, a well-known

English trainer and owner of horses, and also a writer The points of the horse," "Riding," "Veterinary notes," etc. His wife, also a skilled horsewoman and a writer on the subject, figures largely in the book. It begins with Hayes early life in Ireland, his experience afterward in India in the Royal Artillery, and also as a horse breaker and trainer; he travels back and forward from India to South Africa, and from England to China, his in terests being entirely among horses and turfmen; of these he tells innumerable anecdotes, at the same time giving interesting and valuable information to lovers of sport.

on the horse of such books as ..

Hayley, H. W. An introduction to the verse of Terence. Bost., Ginn & Co., 1894. c. 5+25 p. S. cl., 30 c.

Haynes, G: H. Representation and suffrage in Massachusetts, 1620-1691. Balt., Johns Hopkins Press, 1894. C. 90 p. O. (Johns Hopkins Univ. studies in hist. and pol. science, 12th ser., nos. 8, 9.) pap., 50 c. The author, who is professor of history in the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, traces the beginning of representation and suffrage from the days when Massachusetts was a religious oligarchy and church membership a condition of citizenship, through the manifold changes by which tolerance in religion at last found a footing among the pilgrims and the suffrage was given regardless of personal creed.

*Haywarden, R. T. Pilate's wife: a tale of the time of Christ. N. Y., Benziger Bros., 1894. 12°, cl., net, 70 c. *Hazard, Caroline.

Narragansett ballads, with songs and lyrics. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. 16°, cl., $1. *Hazell's annual for 1894: a cyclopædic record of men and topics of the day; rev. to Nov. 21, 1893, ed. by E. D. Price. Ninth year. N. Y., imported by C: Scribner's Sons, 1894. maps, 12°, cl., $1.50. Hazlitt, W: Essays selected from "The spirit of the age; or, contemporary portraits; with an introd. by Reginald Brimley JohnN. Y., G: P. Putnam's Sons, [1894.].

son.

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3+337+8 p. T. (Knickerbocker nuggets, no. 42.) hf. cl.. $1.

A sketch of William Hazlitt is followed by pen portraits of William Godwin, Coleridge, Rev. Mr. Irving, Scott, Byron, Southey, Wordsworth, Gifford, Jeffrey, Cobbett, Campbell and Crabbe, Thomas Moore, Leigh Hunt, "Elia" and Geoffry Crayon, and Knowles.

*Healy, G: P. A. Reminiscences of a portrait painter. Chic., A. C. McClurg & Co., 1894. 221 p. 12°, cl., $1.50.

Hearn, Lafcadio. Glimpses of unfamiliar Japan. Bost., Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1894. C. 2 v., 10+342; 3+343–699 p. il. O. cl., $4.

The volumes embrace twenty-seven sketches on unfamiliar Japan, the life of the un-Europeanized Japan which the author has studied for four years under specially advantageous conditions. He has given special attention to popular religious ideas, particularly to those derived from Buddhism, which he studies and compares with Christian creeds from the standpoint of an agnostic. Every day he has found more and more charm in the extraordinary goodness, the miraculous patience, the never-failing courtesy, and the intuitive charity of the great common people of

Japan.

*Heath, Christopher, M.D. Injuries and diseases of the jaws: the Jacksonian prize essay of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, 1867; ed. by H: Percy Dean. 4th ed. Phil., P. Blakiston Son & Co., 1894. 428 p. il. 8°, cl., $4.50.

*Heath, Christopher, M.D. A manual of minor surgery and bandaging. 10th ed. Phil., P. Blakiston, Son & Co., 1894. 389 p. 12°, cl., $2.

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A quiet story of English home life; the most sensational incident is the reappearance on the scene of a wife long supposed dead, after the husband has married a second time.

*Hector, Mrs. Annie F., [" Mrs. Alexander," pseud.] Forging the fetters. N. Y., J. S. Ogilvie, 1894. 192 p. 16°, pap., 25 c. *Hector, Mrs. Annie F., [" Mrs. Alexander," pseud.] A love match. N. Y., J: S. Ogilvie Pub. Co., 1894. 192 p. 16°, рар., 25 c. *Hector, Mrs. Annie F., [" Mrs. Alexander," pseud.] Maid, wife or widow. N. Y., J: S. Ogilvie Pub. Co., 1894. 192 p. 16°, pap.,

25 c.

83

Hector, Mrs. Annie F., [“ Mrs. Alexander," pseud.] A ward in chancery: a novel. N. Y., Appleton, 1894. C. 3+304 p. D. (Appleton's town and country lib., no. 134.) cl., $1; pap., 50 c.

A young girl, Andrée Nugent, of English and French parentage, is the "ward in chancery; her parents have been dead for several years, and she has been the barely tolerated inmate of a Bohemian pension, kept by her hard French aunt in Paris, when unexpectedly she finds herself heiress to a large fortune. Her English half-uncle, Mr. Landon, is the executor of the will, and she is obliged to go to London and live under his roof until she reaches her majority. The Landons are commonplace, respectable, well-to-do people, utterly out of harmony with Andrée's nature. The account of her uncongenial life among them, of her own special friends, her love-story, and Richard Landon's attempts to win her for her fortune, make up a quiet, readable story.

*Hedgcoth, H. L., comp. Veterans' memorial volume: being a series of original and collected sketches, anecdotes, etc., relative to the late war and that of Texan independ

ence.

HENSEL

Austin, Texas, H. P. N. Gammel, 1894. 600 p. 8°, cl., $3. *Hedges, Killingworth.

American electric street railways: their construction and equipment. N. Y., Spon & Chamberlain, 1894. 200 p. il. 4°, cl., $5.

*Hegel, G: W: F: Philosophy of mind; tr. from the "Encyclopædia of the philosophical sciences; with five introductory essays by W: Wallace. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 202 p. 8°, cl., net, $2.50. Hektoen, Ludvig, M.D. The technique of post-mortem examination. Chic., The W. T. Keener Co., 1894. c. '93. 8+172 p. il. O. cl., net, $2.

"The subject of post-mortem examination has been considered with especial reference to the technique prepared particularly for the guidance of the medical students who frequent the demonstrations in pathologic anatomy given by the author at the Cook County Hospital in Chicago."-Preface. *Helm, Elijah. The joint standard; a plain exposition of monetary principles and of the monetary controversy. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 221 p. 12°, cl., net, $1.10. Helm, Flora. Between two forces: a record of a theory and a passion. Bost., Arena Pub. Co., 1894. C. 2+238 p. D. (Arena lib ser., no. 38.) pap., 50 c.

Cecelia Honerick becomes an inmate of the Rencliffe household and a daily associate of Younod, the son of the house Shortly after this Cecelia is forced to be a mediator between Rencliffe and her cousin Leitz, when Rencliffe seeks to convince her of her inherent forces, and to use these in testing his psychological theories. Leitz brings about the unexpected ending of a story that deals with the supernatural, and touches on the labor question.

Hempel, C: Julius, M.D. The science of homœopathy; or, a critical and synthetical exposition of the doctrines of the homoeopathic school. 3d ed. Phil., Boericke & Tafel, 1894. c. '73. 50+180 p. por. O. cl., net, $1.40.

*Henderson, Ernest F. History of Germany in the middle ages. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 8°, cl., net, $2.60.

Henderson, W. J. Sea-yarns for boys, spun by an old salt. N. Y., Harper, 1895. c. '94. 6+195 p. il. D. cl., $1.25.

About nineteen humorous stories of the sea of marvellous detail and adventure. Originally published in The Young People.

es.

C.

Henning, Julia R. Geography of Virginia. 2d ed. Richmond, Va., B. F. Johnson Pub. Co., 1894. 2-32 p. sq. O. pap., 25 c. Henry, Caleb S., D.D. Satan as a moral philosopher; with other essays and sketchN. Y., T: Whittaker, [1894.] 5+296 p. D. (Whittaker's lib., no. 13.) pap., 50 c. Contents: Satan as a moral philosopher; An idyl of the vales and of the court; Dreams, presentiments, and visions; Philosophy of witchcraft: History and its philosophy; Judas, the betrayer; Testus, a type; A rational vindication of God the destroyer; Three royal birthdays; Jael and Sisera; The Rechabites; Moteseeing, sharp-sightedness, hypocrisy; On good manners; On the regulation of the temper: On the goodness of good amusements; On the love of country, etc.,

etc.

*Henry, Victor. Short comparative grammar of the English and German, as traced back to their common origin and contrasted with the classical languages; tr. by the author. N. Y., Macmillan & Co., 1894. 394 p. 12°, cl., net, $1.90.

Hensel, Julius. Macrobiotic; or, our diseases and our remedies: for practical physicians and people of culture; tr. from the 2d rev.

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