A Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2017 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Alternates https://archive.org/details/librarycatalogueOOminn Library Catalogue Good Time Law and the Rules of Government. — Minnesota State Prison, Still- water. ¥ ◄ 9 ► 1908 The Mirror Print I Ao_\ Oil'll \ VV\ u> u> t )~JL -IS 0 % -gjAP v £ » ' /~*-r [ S & v «**, ft ; V^< a- ’ . Minnesota State Prison OFFICIAL S January BOARD OF CONTROL. S. W. LEAVETT, - Litchfield L. A. ROSING, - Cannon Falls P. M. RINGDAHL, - Crookston RESIDENT OFFICIALS. HENRY WOLFER, Warden M. C. COLLIGAN, Deputy Warden HORACE W. DAVIS, Clerk B. J. MERRILL, Physician 19 0 8 S. J. KENNEDY, Protestant Chaplain CHARLES CORCORAN, Catholic Chaplain J. 1 . BARNCARD, State Agent, St. Paul TABLE OF CONTENTS. General Rules for the Government of Prisoners 1 Shop Rules 3 Cellhouse Rules 4 Dining Hall Rules 5 Chapel Rules 6 List of Offenses 7 Prison Agent 8 Restoration of Citizenship 10 Rules for the Parole and Grading System 10 The Grading Rules 11 Good Time Law 12 Discharge Allowance 13 Board of Pardons 13 Table for Computing Good Time 15 Rules Governing the Librarian 16 Library Rules 17 General Fiction 19 Historical Fiction 52 Humorous Fiction 58 Magazines 60 Biography 80 General Prose Literature and Art 88 Geography, Voyages, Travels, and Adventures 94 History 102 Poetry and Drama 121 Religion 124 Science - 132 Reference 139 Chautauqua Studies 146 French Books 150 German Books 152 Scandinavian Books 155 Appendix 158 General Rules For the Government of Prisoners. Your attention is directed to the following rules. Only by observing and obeying them can you make a good record as a prisoner and become eligible for parole and the diminu- tion of your sentence which the law allows : I. Your first duty is strict obedience to all rules, regula- tions and orders of the officer under whose charge you may be placed. II. Y ou must observe strict silence in all departments of the prison and while marching through the yard. III. Y ou must not speak to, give or receive from visitors anything except by permission of the Warden or Deputy. Gazing at visitors or strangers passing through the prison is strictly forbidden. IV. You are expected to apply yourself diligently to whatever labor you are assigned and after reasonable teach- ing to perform the same amount of work as would be required from you as a citizen. V. At every signal to fall in for marching take your place in line promptly. March with military step, attend to and promptly obey the orders of your officer. VI. You will be required to keep your person clean and your clothing tidy and in good order. You must not make any alterations in your clothing or cut your shoes ; if they do LIBRARY CATALOGUE. not fit or need repairs report the fact to your officer. You must not carry knives, tools of any kind, pencils, paper or any material whatever from your shop to your cell without permission in writing from the Warden or Deputy. Finding any of these things in your possession will be considered proof that you have violated this rule. Tinkering or writing notes to other convicts or carrying notes from one convict to another is strictly forbidden. VII. You are not allowed to have any money on your person or in your possession, neither are you permitted to trade nor purchase any article whatever. All of your business must be done through the Warden. VIII. You must approach an officer in a respectful man- ner. Always salute him before speaking. You must confine your conversation with him strictly to the business in hand. You must not address an officer on matters outside the prison. Insolence in any form to an officer, foreman or even to a fel- low convict will not be tolerated. IX. On entering the cellhouse, office of the Board of Control, Warden or Deputy, you must uncover unless your duties are such that you have special permission to remain covered. X. You are not compelled to attend religious service, but you are specially requested to do so believing that the moral support of religious instruction is necessary for all. XI. You are required to bathe once a week, and oftener if considered necessary, unless excused by the prison Physi- cian, the Warden or Deputy. XII. On entering the prison you will receive three tickets entitling you to the following privileges as long as you obey strictly all of the rules of the prison : First. — One ration of tobacco each week. Second. — Permission to write under grade rules. Third. — Permission to see friends once in four weeks. Newspapers. You are permitted to receive such weekly papers as the Warden may approve. No daily papers or sensational publications of any description will be admitted. Extra Letters. Written permission must be obtained from the Warden or Deputy in case it becomes necessary to write special letters. Mail Matter. Letters and papers of every description must be examined at the office under the direction of the Warden, before being mailed or delivered. f SHOP RULES GOVERNING PRISONERS. 3 SJhop Rviles. I. On entering the shop you will take off your coat, put on yonr apron and get at your work promptly. If you have any causes for complaint against keeper, foreman or others, you will be allowed to send application for an interview through your officer at any time to the Board of Control, W arden or Deputy. II. Communication between prisoners is strictly prohib- ited and will not be allowed at any time except by special permission of the officers in charge and then only when abso- lutely necessary. III. In talking with your foreman you are required to confine yourself strictly to your shop duties. You will not be allowed to talk with him upon matters pertaining to out- side news. IV. You will be required to approach your officer in a respectful manner. Always salute him before addressing him and make your wants known as briefly as possible. V. You will be required to give your individual attention to your work. Gazing about, at visitors passing through the shop or at other prisoners, will not be allowed. Y"ou must respectfully listen to and faithfully carry out all in- structions given to you by your foreman pertaining to your work. VI. You will not be allowed to leave your place of work except by permission of the officer in charge. VII. Y ou will not be allowed to brush against a fellow convict in passing, to get in each other’s way or otherwise trespass upon the rights of each other so as to provoke ill feeling. VIII. Careless or willful injury to your work or tools will be promptly reported. IX. You must always salute an officer on entering or retiring from your shop. You will not be permitted to leave shop or place of work under any circumstances, without first obtaining special permission of the officer in charge. X. If you are sick or unable to work report the fact to your officer and act as he may direct. If you desire to see 4 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . \ the physician give your name to yonr officer immediately after entering the shop in the morning. XI. All trading or bartering of whatsoever kind between prisoners or between citizens and prisoners, is strictly pro- hibited. You will not be allowed to give or receive any pres- ent or gift from a foreman or citizen under any condition. XII. If it becomes necessary to use a lead pencil about your work, apply to your officer who will supply you. Pencil must invariabty be returned to the officer every evening. Y T ou will not be allowed to cut off or appropriate any part of pencil. Celljhotise Rules. I. At the sound of the morning gong you must turn out promptly, wash, dress, clean your cuspidor, make up your bed neatly as instructed, and be ready to march out. At the signal open the door, step out, close the door without slam- ming, form in line as directed, and stand erect with pail in right hand until ordered to march. ^ II. Upon entering the cellhouse at noon, march to the dining room. After dinner march promptly to your cell. Close door after you without slamming, and remain stand- ing with your right hand on the door until the count is made. When count is correct you will be notified by the sound of the gong. III. Upon entering the cellhouse in the evening you will take your meal at the entrance and go to your cell promptly. You will remain standing with your hand on door until the double count is made, of which you will be notified by sound of gong same as at noon. IY. You will be required to keep your library books and cell furniture clean and in good order. Marking the walls, spitting on the cell floor, corridors or flags, will not be allowed. You will be permitted two library books each week. When change of book is desired place library slip on cell door even- ing before issue. Y. You will be required to place your writing and tobacco tickets on cell door immediately after breakfast Sun- day mornings (in plain view) otherwise these privileges will be withheld. You must return all writing material given you, whether used or not. Failure to do this will deprive you of your writing privilege. f \ DINING HALL RULES GOVERNING PRISONERS. 5 VI. You must not keep food in your cell except evening lunch which you are allowed to bring from dining room on Sundays and holidays. Immediately after supper you will be required to place any bread left on the crossbar of your cell door to be gathered up by waiter. You must not throw any food in your night bucket. YII. You will be required to scour your cups and wash- basin and keep them bright and clean and in their proper place at all times. You must make up your bed neatly and carefully according to instructions. Lounging upon your bed during noon hour is strictly forbidden. VIII. Strict silence must be observed in your cell at all times. Talking, laughing, reading aloud, shuffling of feet, drawing chair or night bucket across cell floor or talking from cell to cell is strictly prohibited. You must not tamper with your electric light. If it does not burn properly report the fact to the officer on duty. IX. You are entitled to the following cell furniture: 1 Bible, 2 cups, 1 mirror, 1 cuspidor, 1 spoon, 1 face towel, 1 dish towel, 1 piece laundry soap, 1 Gonib, blankets, sheets, pil- lowcases, mattress, bedstead and springs, 1 wooden chair in first and second grade, 1 earthern water jar with cover. 1 electric light, 1 small library shelf, 1 library catalogue and all the library and school books required. X. All prisoners attending school will be required to give close attention to their studies in the schoolroom and in their cell through the entire term of eight months commenc- ing September 15th, and ending April 15th, of each year un- less excused by the Warden or Physician. XI. At the sound of the gong three times at 9 p. in., you must undress quietly and immediately retire. If you have occasion to call the night officer tap on the cell door lightly, but this privilege must not be used unless really necessary. Dining Hall Rules. I. On entering the dining hall -take your seat promptly — position erect — arms folded with eyes to the front until the signal is given to commence eating. II. Strict silence must be observed during the meal. Staring at visitors, talking and laughing, fooling or gazing about the room is strictly forbidden. 6 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . III. Eating or drinking before or after the gong sounds, using vinegar in your drinking water, or putting meat on the table is prohibited. IV. Should you desire additional food make your wants known to the waiters in the following manner : If you want bread, hold up your right hand. Coffee or water, hold up your cup. Meat, hold up your fork." Soup, hold up your spoon. Vegetables, hold up your knife. If you desire to speak to an officer about food or service in dining hall hold up your left hand. V. Wasting food in any form will not be tolerated. You must not ask for or allow waiter to place on your plate more food than you can eat. When through with meal leave pieces of bread unmussed on left side of plate. Crusts and small pieces of bread must not be left on your pla/te. VI. After finishing your meal place knife, fork and spoon on right side of plate. Sit erect with arms folded. When the signal is given to arise, drop hands to your side. At the sec- ond signal of the gong march out and to your respective places in line in a prompt, quiet and orderly manner. VII. In passing to and from the dining hall you must not gaze into cells or loiter on the gallery. Walk erect with your eyes to the front. It is strictly against the rules to car- ry out any of the dining hall furnishings or to carry food to or from the dining hall at any time except on Sundays and holidays when you will be allowed to carry lunch to your cell for the evening meal. Chapel Rules. I. On entering the chapel you will march erect with arms by your side keeping step with the music. II. Y'ou will take your seat promptly as designated by the officers in charge and sit with arms folded during chapel service. III. The signal for rising and being seated will be the sound of the Deputy Warden’s gavel. When this signal is given you will rise promptly and remain standing until noti- fied to be seated. You will be allowed to drop arms to your side while standing. LIST OF OFFENSES , 7 IV. Strict attention must be given to the service. Yon must not gaze about the room at visitors or at fellow con- victs, but must sit erect in your seat facing the speaker. V. Beading, spitting on the floor, shuffling of the feet or any other unnecessary noise is strictly forbidden. Y I. Should you be taken sick during service or it becomes necessary for you to retire, raise your right hand to the offi- cer in charge who will excuse you if necessary. VII. After service you will sit erect with arms folded giv- ing strict attention to your officer until he gives the signal to rise when you will be required to rise promptly and march out of the chapel as directed, keeping time with the music. VIII. In marching to and from the chapel you will be required to keep in close order with face to the front and in as quiet and orderly manner as possible. Any willful violation of these rules will be promptly re- ported, and severely punished if necessary to enforce com- pliance. List of Offenses. Altering clothing. Bed not properly made. Clothing not in proper order. Communicating by signs. Defacing anything. Dilatory. Dirty cell or furnishings. Disorderly cell. Disobedience of orders. Disturbance in cellhouse. Fighting. Hands in pockets. Hands or face not clean. Hair not combed. Impertinence to visitors. Insolence to officers. Insolence to foreman. Insolence to fellow prisoners. Inattentive in line. Inattentive at work. Inattentive in school. Looking about the shop. Laughing and fooling. Loud talk in cell. Loud reading in cell. Malicious mischief. Neglect of study. Not out of bed promptly. Not at door for count. Not wearing outside shirt. Not promptly out of cell when brake is drawn. Out of place in shop or line. Profanity. Quarreling. Refusal to obey. Shirking. Spitting upon the floor. Staring at visitors. Stealing. Trading. Talking in chapel. Talking in line. Talking in school. Talking at work. Talking from cell to cell. Talking in corridor. Throwing away food. Yile language. Tohe Prison Agent. Rules and Regulations for the Government of the State Agent of the Minnesota State Prison and State Reformatory. Section 1. The Agent in the performance of his duties shall be under the direction of the Warden of the prison and the Superintendent of the reformatory. Section 2. It shall be his duty to procure suitable situations for all discharged and paroled prisoners from the State prison and reformatory who cannot obtain suitable situations for themselves or through their friends. It shall also be his duty to make careful investigations of all sit- uations procured by prisoners or their friends, and ascertain whether they are suitable. Section 3. In procuring or investigating situations the Agent shall, at all times, have in view the morals of the community, the surroundings to which the men will be subjected, and whether they are adapted to per- form the services that will be required of them. Section 4. He shall at the end of each month report in writing to the Warden of the State prison and Superintendent of the reformatory the number of prisoners for whom he has found employment who have been paroled or discharged from each institution. In this report shall be given in detail the name of each prisoner for whom work is obtained — the name of his employer — the kind of labor the prisoner is engaged in — the amount of compensation he is receiving, and what his surroundings are. Whether or not he is keeping away from saloons and bad company, together with such other facts as may be thought of value for the guidance of the Board RULES GOVERNING THE STATE AGENT. 9 in the management of those under their custody. In order to make such report as is hereby required, it shall be the duty of the State Agent to re- quire a written report from each prisoner on parole, certified to by his employer setting forth the aforementioned facts. A duplicate of this report , in all cases , must be sent by the prisoner directly to the Warden or Superintendent of the institution from which the prisoner was paroled. All such reports must be filed together with a report from the Agent with the Warden and Superintendent by the 28th day ofeach month. Section 5. The Agent shall investigate all grievances of discharged or paroled prisoners pertaining to their discharge from or inability to fill sit- uations procured for them, and shall see that they are protected and that they get what is justly their due. If, in the opinion of the Agent, it is for the best interests of the paroled prisoner to change his work or location, he shall report the fact to the Warden or Superintendent and act as he may direct. But when the nature of the case is such that it will not ad- mit of delay he shall make such changes as in his best judgment are necessary , subject to the approval of the Warden or Superintendent to whom he shall immediately report. In the event of a prisoner break- ing his parole, the State Agent shall have authority to arrest and return the prisoner to the institution from which he or she was paroled. Section 6. The Warden of the prison and Superintendent of the re- formatory shall furnish the Agent with the names of all prisoners for whom employment is wanted, their record, physical and mental condition, trade, etc., together with any other information which might aid the Agent in procuring suitable situations, a reasonable length of time before the pris- oner’s release. Section 7. The Agent shall have access to the State prison and re- formatory and shall visit each of these institutions at least once every month and see such prisoners before their release and ascertain personally from them their qualifications and wishes as to their future occupation. Section 8. The Agent shall maintain supervision over discharged and paroled prisoners for whom he has found employment, until their final dis- charge, and shall maintain temporary supervision as far as practicable over all prisoners aided by him, and shall embody the results of such supervision in his monthly reports. Section 9. In order to supply himself wfith the necessary assistance to successfully forward the work placed in his charge the Agent shall invite the co-operation of the public press and the clergyman of the state, and such other persons as are especially interested in the reformation of prison- ers. He shall have an office in the Capitol, and^as far as practicable have regular days when he can be found there. Aside from the time he is necessarily at his office and at the prison and reformatory, he shall be mov- ing about the state from place to place where paroled prisoners are located, making himself thoroughly acquainted with the conditions and surround-, ings of each one. He shall keep a daily record of his observations and a list 10 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . of the people he meets who are willing to aid him in his work. He shall furnish a copy of his diary, so kept, to the Warden and Superintendent as a part of his regular monthly reports. Section 10. The Agent shall be subject to suspension by the Warden and Superintendent for misconduct and inefficiency pending action by the Board of Control. Restoration of Citizenship. A convict who shall pass the entire period of his imprisonment without a violation of the rules and discipline, except such as the Warden or Board of Control shall excuse, shall upon his discharge from the prison be restored to the rights and privileges forfeited by his conviction, and shall receive from the Governor a certificate under the great seal of the State as evidence of such restoration, to be issued upon presentation to the Governor of a certificate of such conduct, which shall be furnished to such convict by the Warden. Rules for the Parole and Grading System. Established by Act o f the Minnesota Legislature March 27, 1893. Revised 1905. Chapter 105 of the Revised Laws for 1905. Section 20. Sentence Upon Reformatory Plan.— Whenever any person not less than seventeen nor more than thirty years old, who has never been sentenced to a state prison or reformatory, is convicted of an offense punishable by imprisonment in the state prison, the court, in its discretion, may sentence him to the state prison in like manner and on like conditions as are provided for sentence to the reformatory, designating the sentence to be upon the reformatory plan ; and in such cases paroles and releases shall be granted upon the same terms and conditions as from the reformatory. (’94, s. 7507.) Section 21. Parole of Prisoners. — The State Board of Control may parole any prisoner: Provided. 1. No convict shall be paroled who has previously been convicted of a felony other than the one for which he is serving sentence, either in this state or elsewhere. 2. No convict serving a time sentence shall be paroled until he shall have served at least one-half of his full term, not reckoning good time. 3. No convict serving a life sentence shall be paroled until he has served thirty-five years, less the diminution which would have been allowed for THE GRADING RULES. ii good conduct had his sentence been for thirty-five years, and then only by unanimous consent, in writing, of the members of the Board of Pardons. 4. Such convicts while on parole shall remain in the legal custody and under control of the Board of Control, subject at any time to be returned to the prison or reformatory, and the written order of said Board, certified by the Warden, shall be a sufficient warrant to any officer to retake and return to actual custody any such convict. Geographical limits wholly within the state may be fixed in each case, and the same enlarged or reduced according to the conduct of the prisoners. 5. In considering applications for parole said board shall not entertain any petition, receive any written communication, or hear any argument from any attorney or other person not connected with said prison, in favor of the parole of any prisoner, but it may institute inquiries by correspon- dence or otherwise as to the previous history or character of such prisoner. (’94, s. 7510; ’01, c. 232.) C36e Grading Rules. Section 1. The Board of Control, by virtue of the authority and power conferred upon them by Section 5 of an Act of the Minnesota Legis- lature, entitled “An Act to regulate the sentencing of prisoners convicted of felony and their subsequent release on parole” hereby establish three (3) grades of prisoners to be known and designated as the First, Second and Third Grades, together with a system of marks to be governed by the fol- lowing rules and regulations, which shall be in force and have effect from and after the official notification of the passage of said Act as certified by the Secretary of State under date of April 5th, 1893. All prisoners on arrival shall be entered in the Second Grade; they may earn nine credit marks each month and shall be marked on conduct, work, and mental advancement. Promotion from the Second to the First Grade shall be conditioned upon the earning of Fifty (50) out of the possible Fif- ty-four (54) credit marks within six (6) consecutive months. The loss of more than two (2) marks in any one month, shall cause the prisoner so offending to be reduced to the next lower grade. By a clear record of one (1) month and the earning of nine (9) credit marks, the prisoner shall be advanced to the next upper grade. Prisoners may lose their grades: First. By such violations of Prison Rules as shall necessarily subject them to solitary confinement. Second. For general disorderly conduct. Third. For habitual laziness, untidiness, or negligence. Section 2. First Grade. — First Grade men shall be dressed in a gray uniform and be entitled to the following privileges: To eat in a dining room, to be known and designated as a First Grade dining room, of which the table service and variety of food shall be distinctive features; to write one letter each week; receive visits from friends once in four weeks; to re- ceive such letters and weekly papers as the Warden may approve, and from 12 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . time to time such other and additional privileges and immunities not herein enumerated, as may be considered safe to concede, as a special reward for meritorious conduct, having in view at all times the best interests of discip- line and good order. Second Grade. — Second Grade men shall be dressed in a plaid suit and be entitled to the following privileges : To take their meals in a dining room to be known and designated as a Second Grade dining room. The service and variety of food shall not be as great as that allowed in the First Grade dining room, still, it shall have, as a special distinctive feature, a greater variety- of food and better service than that allowed Third Grade men. To receive visits from friends once a month; to receive such letters and weekly papers as the Warden may approve; to write once in two weeks. Third Grade. — Third Grade men shall be dressed in striped clothing; they shall be allowed to have in their respective cells a Bible, a library cata- logue and one good selected library book each week. All Third Grade prisoners shall be deprived of the following privileges allowed to other grades: To receive visits from friends or write or receive letters except on matters of the greatest importance, and then only by permission of the Warden; they shall not be allowed to receive newspapers or tobacco, nor to take their meals in the dining room, but shall be obliged to occupy and take their meals in cells set aside and designated as Third Grade cells; their food shall be plentiful and substantial but very plain and of less variety than that allowed Second Grade men ; they shall not receive any outside news of any kind, except by permission of the Warden; and they may be further deprived of such other privileges from time to time, as may be considered for the best interests of the grading and parole system. Section 3. At the discretion of the Board of Control, any prisoner who shall show a perfect record for six months after entering the Second Grade, may be considered as of the First Grade from the time he entered the prison. Section 4. The Warden shall submit to the Board of Control each month, at its regular meeting, a report in writing, showing the grade changes for the month, giving the names of all prisoners with the dates upon which they were degraded or promoted in their respective grades; and such other information as may be considered necessary to give the Board a more perfect knowledge of the discipline and general management of the prison. Good Time Law. Chapter 105 of the Revised Laws for 1905. Diminution of Sentence. — Every convict sentenced for a definite term other than life may diminish such term as follows: 1. For each month, commencing on the day of his arrival, during which DISCHARGE MONEY— BOARD OF PARDONS. 13 he has not violated any prison rule or discipline, and has labored with diligence and fidelity, five days. 2. After one year of such conduct, seven days for each month. 3. After two years of such conduct, nine days for each month. 4. After three years, ten days for each month for the entire time thereafter. Said Board, in view of the aggravated nature and frequency of offenses, may take away any or all of the good time previously gained, and, in con- sideration of mitigating circumstances or ignorance on the part of the con- vict, may afterwards restore him, in whole or in part, to the standing he possessed before such good time was taken away. Whenever a convict shall pass the entire period of his imprisonment without an unexcused violation of the rules or discipline, upon his discharge he shall be restored to his rights and privileges forfeited by conviction, and receive from the Governor a certificate, under the seal of the State, as evidence of such restoration. (’94, s. 7489.) Discharge Allowance. Chapter 105 of the Revised Laws for 1905. Upon discharge the Warden, at the expense of the State, shall furnish each convict released with one good serviceable suit of clothing and under- clothing, and, when released between October 1 and March 31 following, with a good, serviceable overcoat; and he shall pay to each convict, when released, $25 in money drawn from the current expense fund. (’94, ss. 7474, 7475; ’97, c. 243.) Board of Pardons. Chapter 104 of the Revised Laws for 1905. How Constituted — Powers. — The Board of Pardons shall consist of the Governor, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and the Attorney General. Said Board may gra.nt pardons and reprieves and commute the sentence of any person convicted of any offense against the laws of the State, in the manner and under the conditions and regulations hereinafter prescribed, but not otherwise. (’97, c. 23, s. 1.) Pardons — Reprieves — Unanimous Vote. — Such Board may grant an absolute or conditional pardon, but every conditional pardon shall state the terms and conditions upon which it was granted. A reprieve in a case where capital punishment has been imposed may be granted by any mem- ber of the Board, but for such time only as may be reasonably necessary to secure a meeting for the consideration of an application for pardon or com- mutation of sentence. Every pardon or commutation of sentence shall be in writing, and shall have no force or effect unless granted by a unanimous vote of the Board duly convened. (’97, c. 23, s 2.) *4 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. ■ \ Warrant — Return. — Such Board may issue its warrant under its seal to any proper officer to carry into effect any pardon, commutation, or reprieve. As soon as may be after the execution of the warrant, the officer to whom it is directed shall make return thereof, under his hand, with his doings thereon, to the Governor. Such officer shall also file with the clerk of the court in which the offender was convicted an attested copy of the warrant and return, a brief abstract of which such clerk shall subjoin to the record of the conviction. (’97, c. 23, ss. 2, 3.) Meetings. — The Board §hall hold regular meetings on the second Mon- day in January, April, July, and October of each year, and such other meet- ings as it shall deem expedient, and all shall be held in the executive chamber in the state capitol, or at such other place as may be ordered by the Board. (’97, c. 23, s. 4.) Application for Pardon. — Every application for a pardon or commu- tation of sentence shall be in writing, addressed to the Board of Pardons, signed by the convict or someone in his behalf, shall state concisely the grounds upon which the pardon or commutation is sought, and in addition shall contain the following facts : 1. The name under which the convict was indicted, and every alias by which he has been known. 2. The date and terms of sentence, and the names of the offense foi which it was imposed. 3. The name of the trial judge and of the county attorney who par- ticipated in the trial of the convict, together with that of the county in which he was tried. 4. A succint statement of the evidence adduced at the trial, with the indorsement of the judge or county attorney who tried the case that the same is substantially correct. If such statement and indorsement are not furnished, the reason thereof shall be stated. 5. The age, birthplace, parentage, and occupation and residence of convict during five years immediately preceding conviction. 6. A statement of other arrests, indictments, and convictions, if any, of the convict. (’97, c. 23, s. 5.) Action Upon Application. — Every such application shall be filed with the clerk of the board. But if an application for a pardon or commutation has been once heard and denied on the merits, no subsequent application shall be filed without the consent of two members of the Board indorsed thereon. Said clerk shall, immediately on receipt of any application, mail notice thereof, and of the time and place of hearing thereon, to the judge of the court wherein the applicant was tried and sentenced, and to the prose- cuting attorney who prosecuted the applicant, or his successor in office: Provided, that pardons or commutations of sentence of persons committed to a county jail or workhouse may be granted by said Board without notice. (’97, c. 23, s. 6.) Records — Seal — Additional Powers — Clerk. — The Board shall keep a record of every petition received, and of every pardon, reprieve, or com- mutation of sentence granted or refused, and the reasons assigned therefor 4 TABLE FOR COMPUTING GOOD TIME. 15 and shall have a seal, with which every pardon, reprieve, or commutation of sentence shall be attested. It may adopt such additional necessary and proper rules and regulations as are not inconsistent herewith. The Gov- ernor’s private secretary, or, in his absence, the executive clerk, shall be the clerk of the Board, and shall keep the records and perform the duties herein required of him, and such other duties as the Board may prescribe, without other compensation. The records and all files shall be kept and preserved in the office of the Governor, and shall be open to public inspection at all reasonable times. (’97, c. 23, ss. 5-7, 8.) Issuance of Process — Witnesses — Appropriation . — The Board may issue process requiring the presence of any person or officer before it, with or without books and papers, in any matter pending, and may take such reasonable steps in the matter as it may deem necessary to a proper de- termination thereof. Whenever any person is summoned before the Board by its authority, he may be allowed such compensation for travel and attendance as it may deem reasonable. The sum of $300 is hereby ap- propriated annually for carrying out the provisions of this subdivision. (’97, c. 23, ss, 8, 9.) Table for Computing Good Time. Original Sentence Good Time Earned Time Served Years . Months . Months . Days . Years . Months . Days . 6 1 S 1 2 1 O 1 .6 3 ... 12 1 .. 2 ...18 2 4 ....24 1 .. 7 ... 6 2 ...6 6 .. .. 18 1 .. 1 1 1 2 3 8 12 2 . .. 3 3 . 6 10 .... 1 2 2 7 ...18 4 12 12 2 .. 11 ...18 4 .6 14 1 2 3 3 ...18 5 1 6 1 2 3 1 .... ...18 5 18 1 2 3 11 .. ...18 6 20 ....12 4 .. 3 ...18 6 22 ... 12 . .. 4 7 ...18 7 24 ... 12 4 11 .. 18 7 : .6 26 .. ... 12 5 .. . 3 ...18 8 28 .. 12 7 .. 18 8 6 30 12 5 .. 11 ...18 9 32 12 6 .. 3 ...18 9 .6 34 . . 1 2 6 7 .. .18 10 36 ....12 6 .. 11 ...18 10 38 ....12 7 .. .. 3 ...18 11 40 ....12 7 , . 7 .. 18 11 42 ....12 7 . ....11 ...18 12 44 1 2 8 O , 18 12 46 ....12 8 . . .. 7 ...18 13 48 ... 12 8 .. . ii ... 18 .. .. 14 52 ....1 2 9 . 7 ... . 18 15 56 ....1 2 ... 1 0 .. 3 .. 18 16 60 1 2 10 1 1 18 .. 17 64 ....12 ... 11 . 7 . .. 1 8 18 68 1 2 12 3 ...18 19 72 .... 12 .... 12 . 11 18 . 20 76 ....12 ... 13 ... 7 .. 18 .. 21 80 12 14 .. 3 18 .. Add Eight Months for Every Subsequent Year. i6 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Rules Governing the Librarian. It is the duty, and the librarian and his assistant are hereby instructed that the following rules are in force from this date and must hereafter be carefully followed : All books must be catalogued before issue. All magazines and periodi- cals that may come to the librar\’ will be carefully checked and safely held there until instructions have been given for their disposal either by the Warden, the Deputy Warden, or the Cellhouse Keeper. All state magazines, and magazines contributed, shall hereafter be issued from the library under the instruction of the Warden, or the Deputy Warden, and always under the direction of the Cellhouse Keeper. These magazines shall be issued under the following conditions, viz: The Cellhouse Keeper shall provide a list of prisoners to whom the magazines shall be first issued and may be retained for three days, after which they will be returned to the magazine box provided as a receptacle to receive them. The librarian shall take charge of them, check them up, examining each magazine to see if it has been properly used, and then re- mark for another distribution. This process is to continue as long as it shall be decided to keep the magazines in circulation. When withdrawn from circulation the librarian shall check up each number and see that they have been properly and safely returned without ill-usage, and receive instructions as to the number that shall be classified for the bindery. The Keeper of the Cellhouse shall see that magazines are sent to the bindery and properly accounted for, and from there checked back into the library for circulation, after the volumes have been bound. It shall be the duty of the librarian to report any defacing, marking or cutting of magazines, and the Cellhouse Keeper shall report all such abuses. An3^ improper use or abuse of magazines will deprive the offender of li- brary privileges, and if wilfully done will be followed by severe punishment. All library books must be carefully examined when returned to the library, and it shall be the dut3 r of the librarian to report to the Cellhouse Keeper any marking, cutting, tearing, soiling or any other misuse or rough handling of library books, (natural wear and tear excepted) and by the Cellhouse Keeper reported in the ordinary way. Any improper use of library books will subject the offender to the with- holding of library privileges, and if wilfully done will result in severe punish- ment. It shall be the duty of the librarian, under the direction of the Cellhouse Keeper, to keep a list of all prisoners in the library who shall have, from time to time, been deprived of library privileges, giving the date of the de- privation and date when again restored. Library Rules, In ordering books the following directions must be care- fully adhered to : Write plainly upon your library slip your name, and cell number. Underneath place the numbers of fifteen or twenty books you prefer to read. Always take your library book with you when moving from one cell to another. Bear in mind that all books are charged to you and that you will be held strictly responsible for their preservation and return. Catalogue and all books charged to you must be accounted for on the day of your parole or discharge from prison. You will not be allowed to have a library book in your possession or in your cell except those that have been regu- larly charged up and come to you through the regular chan- nels. If you find a stray book in your cell you must turn it over to the Librarian at once. Failing to do this, the finding a stray library book in your cell, will be the means of depriv- ing you of all library privileges. You are accorded the utmost liberty in the selection of your reading matter, but it is hoped and it will be expected by the management that the library record ' will show that you have exercised due diligence and regard for your own best interests in the selection of books. The Warden, Chap- lain, Teachers or other officers will gladly advise you con- cerning the proper selection of reading matter. All library books, excepting books of reference, may be i8 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . retained two weeks. Books of reference may be held but one day. RULES FOR EXCHANGING PAPERS. 4 - Any prisoner wishing to exchange papers or periodicals with other prisoners may do so by observing the following rules : Mark the numbers of the cells to which you wish to send the paper or periodical plainly on the margin thereof, and drop it in the exchange box at the foot of the stairs as you go out with your bucket in the morning. After reading papers sent to you, scratch your number out and replace papers in the exchange box the following morning, but do not add any numbers to the list nor erase any but your own. Weekly and semi- weekly publications circulate ten days from the date of their issue ; monthly publications circulate during the month of their issue. Writing on, drawing pictures on, or in any way defacing exchanges is forbidden. Papers must be kept as clean as possible. LIBRARY SLIPS. The library slips are taken up by the night guards on the following evenings: On galleries one and two, Wednesday and Saturday. On number three gallery, Monday and Thursday. On number four, five and six galleries, Tuesday and Friday. The slips should be placed upon the crossbar of your door, on the nights designated, before the gong rings to retire. GENERAL FICTION . 19 General Fiction. Abbott, Mary The Beverleys 1 Adams, Andy The Outlet 2 Adams, H. C. Perils of the Transvaal and Zulu-Land ... 3 Adams, U. P. John Burt . 4 Aguilar, Grace The Days of Bruce f . . . . 5 “ Home Influence 6 “ • “ “• . 7 “ Home Scenes and Heart Studies 8 “ The Yale of Cedars 9 “ “ “ “ 10 “ “ “ “ 11 Aitken, Robert The Golden Horseshoe 12 Alcott, Louisa M. A 11 Old-Fashioned Girl 13 “ Under the Lilacs 14 “ Jo’s Bo.ys 15 Aldrich, T. B. The Story of a Bad Boy 16 “ Sea Turn and Other Matters 17 Alexander, Mrs. The Executor 18 “ The Wooing O’t 19 Alger, Horatio Paul the Peddler 20 Allen, Grant The Tents of Shem 21 Allen, James Lane A Kentucky Cardinal . 22 The Choir Invisible 23 U . ii << tt 24 “ “ d “ 25 “ Aftermath 26 “ The Reign of Law 27 “ The Blue Grass Region of Kentucky 28 Mettle of the Pasture 29 Altsheler, J. A. In Hostile Red 30 “ In Circling Camps 31 “ The Wilderness. Road 32 Andrews, Mrs. M. R. S. Bob and the Guides 33 “ The Militants 34 Arabian Nights’ Entertainments 35 Arthur, T. S. Golden Grains' 36 “ Heart Histories and Life Pictures 37 “ Ten Nights in a Barroom 39 “ True Riches 38 “ Light on Shadowed Paths 40 20 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Arthur, T. S. Woman to the Rescue Atherton, Gertrude Senator North “ The Ancestors “ The Conqueror Austin, Mary Isidro Bacheller, Irving Eben Holden “ Eben Holden’s Last Day a Fishing “ Silas Strong Baker, S. W. Cast Up by the Sea Balch, F. H. The Bridge of the Gods Balestier, Wolcott Benefits Forgot “ The Iron Cousin Ballantyne, R. M. The Fire Brigade Balzac, Honore de At the Sign of the Cat and Racket. . Barbour, A. M. At the Time Appointed “ The Award of Justice “ That Man waring Affair Barbour, R. H. The Land of Joy Baring-Gould, Sabine Domitia “ Pabo the Priest “ The Broom Squire “ The Book of Ghosts Barlow, J ane From the Land of Shamrock Barnard, Edna A. Maple Range Barr, Amelia E. Feet of Clay “ Friend Olivia “ The Household of McNeil “ Remember the Alamo “ The Maid of Maiden Lane “ The Belle of Bowling Green “ The Black Shilling “ The Heart of Jessy Laurie. Barr, Robert The Princess Tekla “ Jennie Baxter. Journalist “ The Speculations of John Steele Barrie, J. M. A Tillyloss Scandal and Life in a Country Manse “ The Little Minister : “ Sentimental Tommy “ Tommy and Grizel. Barrow, E. M. The King’s Rivals Baskett, J N. As the Light Led Bates, Eric The Madcap Cruise Beach, Rex The Spoilers Bell, Lilian As Seen by Me “ The Expatriates 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 GENERAL FICTION. 21 Bell, Lilian Hope Loring 87 Bellamy, Edward Looking Backward 88 “ “ “ “ 89 “ Equality. 90 Besant, Walter Armorel of Lyoness 91 “ Children of Gibeon 92 “ For Faith and Freedom 93 “ The tV orld Went Very Well Then 94 “ The Alabaster Box 95 The Fourth Generation 96 Bigot, Madame A Foreign Match 97 Bindloss, Harold The Dust of Conflict 98 “ Winston of the Prairie 99 Bjornson, Bjornstjerne Synnoye Solbakken 100 Black, Alexander The Girl and the Guardsman 101 Black, Clementina The Princess Desiree 102 Black, William Three Feathers 103 “ Yolande 104 “ “ 105 “ The Strange Adventures of a House-boat 106 “ The Strange Adventures of a Phaeton 107 “ That Beautiful Wretch 108 ' “ “ “ “ . . . . 109 “ A Daughter of Heth 110 - “ In Far Lochaber Ill “ Green Pastures and Piccadilly 112 In Silk Attire 113 u Judith Shakespeare 114 “ Kilmeny 115 “ McLeod of Dare 116 “ Madcap Violet 117 u Prince Fortunates 118 “ Sabina Zembra 119 “ Shandon Bells 120 “ h p21 “ Sunrise 122 a “ 123 “ White Heather 124 “ White Wings 125 “ Donald Ross of Heimra 126 Stand Fast, Craig-Royst on 127 u A Princess of Thule 128 Blackmore, D. R, Lorna Doone 129 “ “ .130 u Kit and Kitty 131 Blake, Paul My Friend and My Enemy 132 Bouvet, Marguerite William Sweet, . 133 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. 22 Boyles, Kate and Virgil Langford of the Three Bars. . 184 Braddon, Mary E. Phantom Fortune 135 Brady, Cyrus Townsend The Grip of Honor 136 “ The Blue Ocean’s Daughter 137 ££ The Southerners 188 “ The Two Captains 139 When Blades Are Out and Love’s Afield 140 ^ Brady- Peple Richard the Brazen 141 Braeme, Charlotte M. Put Asunder 142 Brebner, Percy The Knight of the Silver Star 143 Bresciani, Antonio Edmondo 144 Bronte, Charlotte Jane Eyre 145 ££ “ “ “ 146 “ “ “ ££ 147 ££ Villette... . ; 148 • •“ “ 149 Broughton, Rhoda Red as a Rose is She 150 ££ Second Thoughts 151 << 152 Brown, Alice The County Road 153 ££ Paradise 154 Brown, Caroline Knights in Fustian 155 Bryant, J. D. Paulina Seward 156 Bulwi^r-LyttOn, Sir Edward The Caxtons, The Coming Race and Leila 157 ££ The Caxtons, The Coming Race and Leila 158 “ Pelham 159 ££ Pelham and Lucretia 160 “ Ernest Malt ravers 161 Ernest Maltravers and Alice 162 “ Night and Morning and Godolphin 168 My Novel 164 “ “ 6 165 “ «« £< 166 <£ Paul Clifford 167 ££ Paul Clifford and Eugene Aram 168 “ Eugene Aram 169 “ The Coming Race 170 Burnett, Frances H. Little Lord Fauntleroy 171 £ ‘ In Connection with the l)e Willoughby Claim. 172 £ £ The Shuttle 173 Burnham, Clara L A Sane Lunatic 174 “ ££ u u u u 175 “ ££ u a u « 176 The Mistress of Beach Knoll 177 ■ “ ££ £k ££ “ ££ 178 i; Miss Pritchard’s W edding Trip 179 GENERAL FICTION. 23 Burr, Anna R. The Jessoy Bequest 180 Butler, Ellis P. Confessions of a Daddy.. . . 181 “ Pigs Is Pigs 182 Banner, E. L. Agnes Surriage 183 Caine, Hall The Deemster 18-1 “ The Christian 185 “ The Eternal City 186 “ The Prodigal Son 187 Calkins, F. W. The Wooing of Tokala 188 Cameron, Charles What Will the World Say?. 189 Carey, Rosa N. Uncle Max 190 “ The Household of Peter 191 “ “ « •“ “ 192 “ The Angels of Forgiveness 193 “ The Highway of Fate 194 Carleton Will Willy Reilly 195 “ The Black "Baronet 196 Carpenter, F. D. Y. Round About Rio 197 Carr, Sarah P. The Iron Way 198 Caskeoden, Charles The Forest Hearth 199 Cast Up by the Tide 200 Castle, Agnes and Egerton The Pride of Jennico 201 “ If Youth But Knew 202 Castle, Egerton Young April 203 Catherwood, Mary H. The Romance of Dollard 204 “ The Story of Tonty 205 Chambers, Robert W. The Conspirators 206 “ Cardigan... 207 “ The Fighting Chance 208 “ The Reckoning 209 “ The Younger Set 210 Chesebro, Caroline Isa: A Pilgrimage 211 Chestnut, Charles The Wife of His Youth 212 Cholmondeley, Mary Red Pott age 213 The Danvers Jewels and Sir Chas. Danvers 214 Christy Carew. 215 Churchill, Winston Spencer Savrola. 216 Clapp, Eya K. A Lucky Mishap ... 21 7 Clay, Bertha M. Dora Thorne 218 “ A Woman’s Temptation 219 “ “ “ “ 220 l ' Love Works Wonders 22 1 Lady Hutton’s Ward 222 “ Weaker than a Woman 223 “ Princess Nellie 224 Colest^ck, H. T. The Ministry of David Baldwin *. 225 Collins, Wilkie The Moonstone 226 24 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Collins, Wilkie After Dark and Other Stories 227 “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 228 “ The Law and the Lacty 229 “ Armadale -230 “ The New Magdalen 231 a an a 232 “ Basil 233 Connolly, J. B. Crested Seas 234 Connor, Ralph Black Rock 235 “ “ “ “ 236 “ The Doctor 237 “ The Man from Glengarry 238 “ The Sky Pilot 239 “ The Prospector 240 Conrad, Joseph The Typhoon 241 Cooke, J. E. Bonnybel Vane 242 Cooke, Rose T. Somebody’s Neighbors 243 “ Steadfast 244* Cooper, James Fenimore Precaution, and Sketch of the Author 245 “ Precaution and the Ways of the Hour 246 H ii “ “ it (( (( 247 The Spy .’.’. 7 . 7 . 7 .' 248 a a a 249 u “ “ * * .* .* ’ ' * . .* ! .* ’ ’ ! ’ . . ; ' .* 250 “ The Pioneers 25.1 “ • “ 252 “ “ “ 253 “ The Pilot 254 “ “ • 255 “ “ “ “ “ 1177 “ An Original Belle 1178 “ “ “ “ 1179 “ A Knight of the Nineteenth Century 1180 “ “ “ “ “ “ 1181 “ “ “ “ “ “ 1182 “ Nature’s Serial Story 1.183 u ( ( u a “J “ “ “ “ 1185 “ Near to Nature’s Heart ’ 1186 “ Opening a Chestnut Burr 1187 “ 1188 “ 1189 “ “ “ “ 1190 GENERAL FICTION . 45 Roe, E. P. What Can She Do 1191 tc u a ' it a a 1192 “ Without a Home 1 193 “ “ “ 1194 “ Found Yet Lost 1195 “ True to the Last- 1196 Ruffini, G. D. Doctor Antonio 1197 Ruhl, Arthur A Break in Training 1198 Runkle, Bertha The Helmet of Navarre 1199 Russell, Martha Sibyl Monroe 1200 Ryan, Marah E. For the Soul of Rafael 1201 “ A Pagan of the Alleghanies 1202 “ Told in the Hills 1203 S. W. P. Tim's Fairy Tales 1204 Sage, William The District Attorney 1205 “ Robert Tourney 1206 “ “ “ 1207 Saint Pterre, Bernardin de Paul and Virginia 1208 “ “ “ f? “ “ u 1209 “ “ “ “ u 1210 Sand, George The Bagpipers 1211 “ Consuelo 1212 “ The Countess of Rudolstadt 1213 “ Fanchon the Cricket 1214 Sanders, M. E. W. The Sarcasm of Destiny 1215 Saunders, Katherine Gideon’s Rock 1216 Savage, R. H. My Official Wife 1217 “ Captain Land on 1218 Schubin, Ossip “0 Thou, My Austria” 1219 Scott, John R. The Colonel of the Red Huzzars 1220 Scott, Leroy To Him that Hath 1221 Sears, Hamblen A Box of Matches 1222 “ None but the Brave 1223 Severance, M. S. Hammersmith, His Harvard Days . . 1224 Shaw, Flora L. Hector 1225 Shaw, Marian Queen Bess, or What’s in a Name 1226 Sheehan, P. A. My New Curate 1227 Sheldon, C. M. In His Steps 1228 (e a a u u . ^ 029 Sheldon, Mrs. Georgie Katherine’s Sheaves 1230 Sidney, Margaret An Adirondack Cabin 1231 Sienkiewicz, Henryk Hania 1232 “ Without Dogma 1233 Simms, W. Gilmore The Wigwam and the Cabin 1234 Sinclair, May The Divine Fire 1235 Sinclair, Upton The Jungle 1236 Smedes, Susan D. A Southern Planter 1237 46 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Smith, Alice P. Montlivet 1238 Smith, F. Hopkinson Caleb West, Master Diver 1239 “ The Fortunes of Oliver Horn 1240 “ The Romance of an Old-Fashioned Gentleman . 1241 “ The Wood Fire in No. 3 1242 Smith, Seba Way Down East 1243 Smollett, Tobias G. The Adventures of Gil Bias 1244 Somerville-Ross Some Experiences of an Irish R. M . . 1 245 Southworth, Emma I). E. N. The Bride of Llewellyn . .. 1246 “ “ “ 9 “ ... 1247 “ The Curse of Clifton 1248 “ The Artist’s Love 1249 ££ Eudora 1250 “ The Discarded Daughter 1251 “ “ “ 1252 “ The Bride’s Fate 1253 “ Fair Play 1254 “ “ 1255 “ u “ !!!!! 1250 ££ The Two Sisters 1257 “ The Lost Heiress 1258 ££ Retribution 1259 ££ ££ 1260 ££ The Mystery of Dark Hollow 1261 ££ A Noble Lord 1262 “ “ “ “ 1263 ££ The Crime and the Curse 1264 ££ The Family Doom 1265 ££ The Fatal Marriage 1266 ££ The Gypsy’s Prophecy 1267 ££ The Mother-in-Law 1268 ££ h “ 1269 ££ The Lost Heir of Linlithgow 1270 ££ The Specter Lover 1271 ££ The Prince of Darkness 1272 ££ The Island Princess 1273 ££ The Fortune Seekers 1274 ££ The Deserted Wife 1275 ££ Vivia 1276 ££ Tried for Her Life 1277 ££ The Changed Brides 1278 ££ India, or the Pearl of Pearl River 1279 ££ Ishmael *1280 ££ ££ 1281 ££ Self-Raised 1282 ££ A Beautiful Fiend 1283 ££ How He Won Her 1284 GENERAL FICTION. 47 Spearman, Frank H. The Nerve of Foley 1285 “ The Daughter of a Magnate 1286 “ Whispering Smith 1287 “ Dr. Bryson 1288 Stanley, Caroline A. A Modern Madonna 1289 Stephens, B. N. The Flight of Georgiana 1290 Stepniak, The Career of a Nihilist 1291 Stevans, J. Lucky Ten Bar 1292 Stevens, Mrs. A. S. Silent Struggles 1293 Stevenson, B. E. The Marathon Mystery 1294 Stevenson, Robert Louis The Silverado Squatters. . .. 1295 1 1 The M aster of Ballantrae and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde 1296 “ Treasure Island 1297 “ “ “ 1298 “ David Balfour 1299 “ The Dynamiter 1300 “ Kidnapped 1301 “ The Bottle Imp 1302 “ The Merry Men 1303 Stewart, Charles D. Partners of Providence 1304 Stockton, Frank R. The Hundreth Man, 2 Vols.— Vol. 1 1305 Volume 2.... 1306 “ The Merry Chanter 1307 “ A Bicycle of Cathay 1308 “ Kate Bonnet 1309 “ The Casting Away of Mrs. Leeks and Mrs. Aleshine 1310 “ The Squirrel Inn 1311 “ The Vizier of the Two Horned Alexander 1312 “ The Late Mrs. Null 1313 “ Afield and Afloat 1314 Stowe, Harriet B. Agnes of Sorrento 1315 “ Dred 1316 “ 1317 “ The Minister’s Wooing 1318 “ My Wife and I, or Harry Henderson’s History. 1319 “ Sam Lawson’s Oldtown Fireside Stories 1320 “ Oldtown Folks 1321 “ Poganuc People 1322 “ We and Our Neighbors 1323 a u i~i u u 1324 “ Uncle Tom’s Cabin 1325 “ « “ ££ July to October ’07. 2609 Railroad Man’s October '06 to January ’07 2610 “ “ February to May ’07 2611 Recreation August to December ’00. 2612 “ ' January to June ’01 2613 Red Rook November *03 to April ’04 2614 “ May to October '04 2615 “ “ “ 2616 “ November ’04 to April ’05 2617 “ “ ££ 2618 “ May to October ’05 2619 « “ 2620 £< November ’05 to April '06 2621 “ u u “ 2622 MAGAZINES. 77 Red Book May to October ’06 2623 p a ee u 2624 November ’06 to April ’07 *. ’ 2625 “ “ “ 2626 “ May to October ’07 2627 “ “ “ “ 2628 Review of Reviews August ’92 to January ’93 2629 “ “ February to June ’93 2630 “ “ July to December ’98 2631 “ “ January to June ’99 2632 “ “ January to June ’00 2633 “ “ Julv to December ’00 2634 “ “ “ “ “ 2635 “ “ January to June ’01 2636 “ “ “ u “ 2637 “ “ July to December ’01 2638 “ “ January to June ’03 2639 “ u July to December ’03 2640 “ “ January to June '04 2641 “ u July to' December ’04 2642 “ u January to June ’05 2643 u “ July to December ’05 2644 “ “ January to June ’06 2645 “ “ July to December ’06 2646 “ January to June ’07 2647 “ “ July to December ’07 2648 “ u Odd Numbers 2649 Scrap Book March to August ’06 2650 “ “ September ’06 to February ’07 2651 “ “ March to June ’07 2652 “ “ “ 2653 “ “ (New Edition— First Section) July to October ’07 2654 “ “ (New Edition— Fiction Section) July to October ’07 2655 Scribner’s January to June ’90 2656 “ July to December ; 90 2657 “ January to June ’91 2658 “ July to December ’91 2659 “ January to June ’00 2660 July to December ’00 2661 “ January to June ’01 2662 “ July to November ’01 2663 “ January to June ’02 2664 “ September ’02 to January ’03 2665 January to June ’03 2666 “ July to November ’03 2667 78 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Scribner’s July to November 4)3 2668 “ January to June ’04 2669 July to December ’04 2670 January to June ’05 2674 “ July to December ’05 2672 “ January to June ’06 2673 “ July to December ’06 2674 July to December ’07 2675 Self-Culture September ’99 to April ’00 2676 Smart Set January to April ’04 2677 “ May to October ’04 2678 “ September to December ’05 2679 “ May to October ’06 2680 “ January to April *07 2681 Smith’s June to December ’05 2682 “ October ’05 to March ’06 2683 “ April to September ’06 2684 “ October ’06 to March '07 2685 “ April to September ’07 2686 Strand August ’00 to January ’01 2687 “ August ’01 to January ’02 2688 “ February to June ’03 2689 “ “ “ “ , 2690 “ September ’03 to January ’04 2691 “ February to July ’04 2692 “ September ’04 to January ’05 2693 “ February to July ’05 2694 “ August ’05 to January ’06 2695 “ February to July ’06 2696 Sunset May to October ’05 2697 “ November ’06 to April ’07 2698 “ May to October ’07 2699 Technical World March to August ’06 2700 • “ “ September '06 to March '07 2701 “ “ March to August '07 2702 Theosophical Messenger Odd Numbers 2703 Fniversal Brotherhood Path April '00 to March ’01. 2704 “ “ “ Oct. ’01 to March ’02 . . 2705 “ “ “ April to September ’02 2706 u u cc tc a u 2707 “ £< <£ Odd Numbers 2708 “ “ “ ££ “ 2709 ££ <£ ££ ££ C£ 2710 “ ££ ££ u ££ 2711 Waifs’ Messenger January to December '00 2712 “ “ January to December ’01 2713 Watson’s Tom July to December ’05 2714 MAGAZINES. 79 Wayside Tales March to August ’06 2715 Weltmer's January to December ’02 2716 “ July ’03 to July ’04 2717 Western History November ’87 to April ’88 2718 “ “ May to October ’88 2719 W estminsteb. Review January to June ’03 2720 “ “ July to December ’03 2721 “ January to June ’04 2722 “ “ July to December ’04 2723 “ “ January to June ’05 2724 “ “ July to December ’05 2725 “ “ January to June ’06 2726 “ “ July to December ’06 2727 “ “ January to June '07 2728 • 11 “ July to December ’07 2729 Wide World January to April ’01 2730 “ November ’04 to April ’05 2731 “ “ May to October ’05 2732 “ “ November ’05 to April ’06 . . 2733 “ “ May to October ’06 2734 World To-Day January to June ’04 2735 “ “ July to December ’04 2736 u “ July to November ’05 2737 “ January to June ’06 2738 ' “ July to December ’06 2739 January to June ’07 2740 “ u July to December ’07 2741 World’s Work January to June ’03 2742 “ u May to October ’03 2743 “ “ November ’03 to April ’04 2744 “ December ’06 to April ’07 2745 u u May to October ’07 2746 8o LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Biography. Adams, John, Life of J. T. Morse 2747 Adams, J. Q., Life of W. H. Seward 2748 “ ' “ “ “ “ 2749 Adams, Samuel, Life of J. K. Hosmer 2750 Alexander The Great, Life of Jacob Abbott 2751 Alexander I., Memoirs of Emperor Comtesse DeChoi- seul-Gouffier 2752 American Hero Stories E. M. Tappan 2758 Arnold, Benedict, Life of I. N. Arnold. 2754 Barrington, Jonah, Sketches of Jonah Barrington. .. 2755 Beacon Lights of History Biographies of Distinguished Persons. John Lord. 5 Vols. Yol. 1. Antiquity 2756 Yol. 2. Middle Ages 2757 Yol. 8. Renaissance and Re- formation 2758 Yol. 4. Warriors & States- men 2759 Yol. 5. Great Women 2760 Benton, T. H.. Life of Theodore Roosevelt . . 2761 Biographies of Self-Made Men, J. P. Bates. 2762 Blaine, J. G., Life of C. W. Balestier 2768 “ “ “ Gail Hamilton 2764 Boone, Daniel, Life of C. B. Hartley 2765 ’ “ “ “ E. S. Ellis..'. 2766 Boy General,. The Mrs. E. B. Custer 2767 Bremer, Fredika, Autobiography of 2768 Brooks, Phillips, Life of M. A. Howe 2769 Bryant, William Cullen, Life of AY. A. Bradley 2770 Burke, Edmund, Life of John Morley • 2771 Burns, Robert, Life of Thomas Carlyle 2772 “ “ “ Principal Shairp 2773 Butler, Gen. B. E., Life of James Parton 2774 “ “ “ “ “ “ 2775 Gesar, Julius, Life of Janies Anthony Froude 2776 Calhoun, J. C., Life of Dr. H. von Holst 2777 “ “ “ « “ 2778 « “ “ “ tc 2779 Calvert, George and Cecilius, Lives of AA T . H. Browne 2780 Carlyle, James and Jane W., Lives of Tlios. Carlyle. . 2781 BIOGRAPHIES. Si Carson, Kit, Life of Charles Burdett 2782 Chatham, Life of Frederick Harrison . . . . : 2783 Children’s Stories of Great Scientists Henrietta C. Wright 2784 Clay, Henry, Life of Epes Sargent 2785 Coleridge, S. T;, Life of H. D. Traill. 2786 Columbus, Christopher, Life of Washington Irving. . 2787 “ “ “ F. A. Ober 2788 “ • “ “ Filson Young, 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Birth to End of Second Voyage 2789 Vol. 2. Third Voyage to Death 2790 Contemporary Biography, Studies in James Bryce.. . 2791 Cooke, Jay, Life of E. P. Oberholtzer, 2 Vols. • Vol. 1. Birth to 1865 2792 Vol. 2. 1865 to Death 2793 Cooper, James Fenimore, Life of T. II. Lounsburv ... 2794 Crayon Sketches, G. W. Bungay. . . . . 2795 Crockett, David, Life of E. S. Ellis 2796 Custer, Gen. G: A., Life and Army Services of E. Custer 2797 “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 2798 u u u u a u u 2799 a a u u u u u 2800 Cyrus The Great, Life of Jacob Abbott 2801 Dames & Daughters of Colonial Days, Geraldine Brooks 2802 Dames & Daugaters of the Young Republic, Geraldine Brooks 2803 Dames of High Degree, Thomson Willing 2804 Darius The' Great, Life of Jacob Abbott 2805 Darwin, Charles, Life and Letters of Francis Darwin 2 Vols.— Vol. 1. Life and Letters 2806 Vol. 2. Letters Continued, Botanical Letters 2807 Davis, C. K., Memorial Addresses on 2808 Davis, Jefferson, Life of 2809 Dewey, Admiral George, Life of Murat Halstead. . . . 2810 Dickens, Charles, Life of Phebe A. Hanaford 2811 “ “ “ G. K. Chesterton 2812 Douglass, Frederick, Autobiography of 2813 Douglass, S. A., Life of H. M. Flint 2814 Dow, Lorenzo, Life of Peggy Dow 2815 Drummond, Henry, Practical Life of * Cut hbert Lennox 2816 Elijah, Life of Rev. William Milligan 2817 Eliot, George, Life of G. W. Cooke 2818 Emerson, R. W., Life of 0. W. Holmes 2819 “ « tt a a 2820 Empress, The Martyrdom of an 2821 Famous Women, Esther Singleton 2822 Farragut, D. G., Life of Rev. P. C. Headley 2823 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. 82 Fessenden, W. P., Life of Francis Fessenden, 2 Vols. Volume 1. 1806 to 1865 . 2824 Volume 2. 1865 to Death 2825 Franklin, Benjamin, Autobiography of 2826 “ “ Life of Henry Mayhew 2827 Frederick The Great, Life of Francis Kugler 2828 “ “ “ “ T. B. Macauley 2829 Fulton, Robert, Life of T. W. Knox 2830 Gallatin, Albert, Life of J. A. Stevens 2831 Garfield, J. A., Life of E. E. Brown 2832 “ “ “ Horatio Alger, Jr 2833 Ghenghis, Khan, Life of Jacob Abbott 2834 George, Henry, Life of Henry George, Jr 2835 Geronimo’s Story of His Life, S. M. Barrett 2836 Gladstone, W. E., Life of John Morley, 3 Volumes. Volume 1. 1809 to 1859 . 2837 Volume 2. 1859 to 1880 .... 2838 Volume 3. 1880 to 1898 2839 “ W. E., Life of C. H. Jones 2840 Grant, Ulysses S., Military History of AdamBadeau, 2 Vols. Volume 1 2841 Volume 2 2842 “ “ Life of W. M. Thayer 2843 “ “ Memoirs of 2844 Gray, Thomas, Life of E. W. Gosse 2845 Great Authors, Home Life of H. T. Griswold 2846 Great Generals by Great Authors 2847 Greeley, Horace, Life of L. D. Ingersoll 2848 Grellet, Stephen, Memoirs of 2849 “ “ Life of William Guest.. 2850 Gustavus, Adolphus, Life of C. R. L. Fletcher 2851 Hamilton, Alexander, Life of H. C. Lodge 2852 “ “ “ “ “ 2853 Hannibal The Carthaginian, Jacob Abbott 2854 Hazen, Gen. W. B., Narrative of Military Service 2855 Healy, Christopher, Memoir of 2856 Hearn, Lafcadio, Life and Letters of Elizabeth Bis- lard, 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Life and Letters ’77- 5 89 2857 Vol. 2. Letters 1890-1904 2858 Henry, Patrick, The true George Morgan 2859 Herodotus, Life of G. C. Swavne 2860 Heroes of Chivalry E. C. Kindersley and R. Markham 2861 Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Life and Letters of J. T. Morse, 2 Volumes. Volume 1 2862 Volume 2 2863 Houston, Samuel, Memoir of J. E. Porter 2864 How They Succeeded Orison Swett Marden 2865 MAGAZINES Hutton, Laurence, Talks in a Library with I. Moore 2866 Ibsen, Henrik, Biography of Henrik Jaeger 2867 Irving, Henry, Public Life of 2868 Irving, Henry, Personal Reminiscenses of Brain Sto- ker, 2 Volumes. Volume 1 2869 Volume 2 . 2870 Irving, Washington, . . 2871 Jackson, Andrew, Life of Janies Part on, 3 Volumes. Volume 1. Ancestry 2872 2. Military History 2873 3. Civil History 2874 Jackson, Andrew, Life of W. G. Sumner 2875 “ “ “ Alexander Walker 2876 “ “ Story of, or When Men Grew Tall Alfred Henry Lewis 2877 Jefferson, Thomas, Life of J. T. Morse 2878 “ “ “ “ S. M Schmucker 2879 Jerrold, Douglas, Life of Blanchard Jerrold 2880 J oan of Arc, Life of Boulet de Monvel 2881 Johnson, Gen. R. W., Reminiscences of 2882 Jones, John Paul, Founder of the American Navy A.C. Volume 2 2884 Josephine, Wife of the First Consul. Imbert de Saint- Amand, 2885 Judson, Adoniram, Memoirsof Francis Wayland, 2 Vols. Volume 1. Parentage, England, Rangoon, etc. 2886 “ 2. Declining Health, Calcutta, etc 2887 Keller, Helen, Autobiography of 2888 Lamb, Charles, Life of Alfred Ainger 2889 Lanier, Sidney, Life of Edwin Mims 2890 Lee, Robert E., Life of H. A. White. . . 2891 Leland, Charles Godfrey, Life of Mrs. E. R. Pennell 2 Volumes. Volume 1. 1824-1876 2892 “ 2. 1876 to Death .... 2893 Leo XIII., Life and Letters of J. F. Talbot 2894 Life of a Hunter. Meshach Browning 2895 Lincoln, Abraham, Life of I. N. Arnold 2896 “ “ “ “ . 2897 a a ct u u “ “ J. T. Morse, 2 Volumes. Volume 1. 2899 “ “ Volume 2 2900 “ u Letters and Speeches of G. M. Van Buren 2901 “ ■“ Life of Noah Brooks 2902 “ “ Boys' Life of Helen Nicolay 2903 u “ Short Life of J. G. Nicolay 2904 84 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Lincoln, Abraham, Life of Carl Sc’hurz 2905 “ “ The Lawyer F. T. Hill 2906 “ “ Master of Men A Study in Character Alonzo Rothschild 2907 Livingston, David, Life of W. G. Blaikie 2908 “ “ “ “ “ 2909 Locke, Alton, Autobiography of 2910 Love, William F., Memorial Addresses on the Life of 2911 Lowell, J. R., Sketch of F. H. Underwood 2912 Madison, James, Life of S. H. Gay ; 2913 Mahomet and Oliver Goldsmith, Lives of Washington * Irving 2914 Making of an American, The Jacob Riis. 2915 Manning, Cardinal H. E., Life of A. W. Hutton 2916 Marie Antoinette, Life of Louise Campan . . 2917 Marie Louise, The Happy Days of the Empress Imbert de Saint-Amand 2918 Marion, Gen. Francis, Life of Peter Horry 2919 “ “ “ “ “ “ 2920 Marshall, John, Like of A. B.Magruder 2921 Mattson, Hans, Reminiscences of 2922 McAuley, Jerry, Life of R. M. Offord 2923 “ “ “ “ “ 2924 McKinley, Wtlliam, Life of Murat Halstead 2925 “ “ “ “ “ 2926 “ “ “ “ “ 2927 Men and Books, William Mathews 2928 Men of Business, W. O. Stoddard 2929 Men W ho Have Risen, Dr. Doran 2930 Monarchs Retired from Business, 2 Vols. Volume 1. 2931 “ “ “ “ “ 2. 2932 Monroe, James, Life of D. C. Gilman 2933 Moody, Dwight L., Life of Henry Drummond 2934 “ “ His Work and Workers, W. H. Daniels 2935 Morris, William, Life of Elizabeth L. Cary 2936 Mosby, J. S., War Reminiscences 2937 Mother, A Great Frances Willard 2938 Napoleon at St. Helena, J. S. C. Abbott 2939 a u a a 2940 ££ Life and Campaigns of Arnault-Panckoucke.. 2941 ££ Political and Military Life of J. C. Ropes... 2942 {< Camp Fires of H. C. Watson 2943 “ Life of T. A. Dodge, 4 Volumes. Volume 1. Volume 2. Marengo to Eylau 2945 “ 3. Spanish and Russian Campaigns. 2946 BIOGRAPHIES. 85 Napoleon, Life of T. A. Dodge, Volume 4. Lutzen to Waterloo “ King of Elba, Paul Gruyer “ Warrior and Euler, W. O’. C. Morris * “ Life of, with a Sketch of Josephine, Ida M. Tarbell Napoleon III., at the Height of His. Power, Imbert de Saint- Amand Nelson, Horatio Viscount, Life of W. 0. Russell Nero, Life of Jacob Abbott Nettleton, Rev. Asahal, Life of Bennet Tyler Newman. Cardinal, Life of R. H. Hutton Northway, Stephen A., Memorial Addresses on the Life of Oglethorpe, Gen. J. E., Life of Henry Bruce Orators of the Age, G. H. Francis Ossoli, Margaket Fuller, Life of T. W. Higginson. . Otis, James and James Oglethorpe, Lives of Francis Bowen Peabody, George, Life of Phebe A. Hanaford. Peace, Napoleons of Laura Richards Penn, William, Life and Writings of Peter the Great, Life of Jacob Abbott Poe, Edgar Allen, Life of G. E. Woodberrv Port rails of the Sixties, J ustin McCarthy Pyrrhus, Life of Jacob Abbott Queens ok Amkrican Society, Mrs. Ellet Queens of England Before the Norman Conquest, Mrs. Matthew Hall Queens of England, Lives of the Agnes Strickland 6 Vols. Vol. 1. Matilda of Flanders, to Mar- garet of Anjou, 1066-1482 “ 2. Elizabeth Woodville, to Mary I., 1464- 1558 “ 3. Elizabeth, 1558-1603 “ 4. Anne of Denmark, to Mary Beatrice of Modena, 1589-1685 “ 5. Mary Beatrice of Modena, 1685-1718, and Mary II., 1662-1689 “ 6. Mary II., to Anne, 1689-1714 Queens of England, Agnes Strickland 5 Vols. Vol. 1. Volume 2 “ 3 “ 4 7...... Randolph, John, Life of Hen^ Adams. . . . Ripley, George, Life of 0. B.Frothingham 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 2968 2969 2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 86 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Romulus, Life of Jacob Abbott 2983 Roosevelt, Theodore, Life of Jacob Ri is 2984 Sailor’s Log, A Robley I). Evans 2985 St. Patrick, Life of J. B. Bury 2986 Schiller, J. C. F. Von, Life of Thomas Carlyle 2987 Schurz, Carl, Reminiscences of 2 Vols. Vol. 1. 1829- 1852 2988 Volume 2. 1852-1863 2989 Scott, Rev.- Thomas, Life of Rev. John Scott 2990 Scott, Sir Walter, Life of Andrew Lang - 2991 Shakespeare, William,. Life of Caroline H. Dali 2992 Shelley, Percy Bysshe, Life of J. A. Symonds 2993 Sheridan, Gen. Philip EL. Life of P. C. Headley 2994 Sherman, Gen. W. T., Military Campaigns of Bowman- Irwin ; 2995 “ Memoirs of 2996 Sherman, John, Life of T. E. Burton 2997 Shipp, John, Memoirs of 2998 Simpkins, John, Memorial Addresses on the Life of. . . . 2999 Some Members of the Society of Friends, Jos. Walton 3000 Some Old-Time Beauties, Thomas Willing 3001 Standish, Miles> Life of Jacob Abbott 3002 “ “ “ Tudor Jenks 3003 Stephen, Leslie, Life and Letters of F. W. Maitland 3004 Sterling, John, Life of Thomas Carlyle 3005 Thomas, Theodore. Autobiography of 3006 Thoreau, H. D. , Life of F. B. Sanborn 3007 Undistinguished Americans, Stories of Hamilton Holt 3008 Victoria, Queen, Girlhood and Womanhood of Grace Greenwood 3009 “ “• “ “ “ 3010 Wallace, Lew, Autobiography of 2 Volumes. Vol. 1. 3011 Volume 2 3012 Washington, Booker, Autobiography of Up from Slavery 3013 Washington, George, Life of J. S. ('. Abbott 3014 “ “ “ Woodrow Wilson 3015 Washington and His Generals. J. T. Headley 3016 “ Life of 2 Volumes. He C. Lodge. “ Volume 1. From Birth to Time of Peace. . 3017 “ “2. Starting the Government to Last Y ears 3018 “ Life of 2 Volumes. Volume 1 3019 “ “ “ 2 3020 “ The Home of B. J. Lossing 3021 “ The Mother of, and Her Times. Mrs. Roger A. Prvor 3022 BIOGRAPHIES. 87 Washington, George, Life of Washington Irving 3023 Watt, James, Life of Andrew Carnegie 3024 Webster, Danifl, Memorials of H. J. Raymond 3025 “ “ and His Masterpieces. H. C. Lodge 3026 Wedgewood, Josiah, Life of Samuel Smiles 3027 Weed, Thurlow, Autobiography of 3028 “ “ “ 3029 “ “ Memoirs of T. W. Barnes 3030 “ “ ■ “ “ 3031 Wesley, John, Life of C. T. Winchester 3032 Whitman, Walt, His Life and Work. Bliss Perry 3033 Whittier, John G., Life of Bliss Perry 3034 Willis, N. P., Life of H. A. Beers. . 3035 Willard, Francis E., Life of Anna A. Gordon 3036 “ “ “ “ “ 3037 Women of the War. Frank Moore 3038 Xerxes the Great. Life of Jacob Abbott 3039 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . 88 General Prose Literature and Art. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. Backus, T. J., History of English Literature 3040 Bartlett, John, Familiar Quotations 3041 Fowler, II. W. and F. G., The King’s English 3042 Hunt, T. W., Literature: Its Principles and Problems. 3043 Meiklejohn, J. M. D., The English Language 3044 Stedman, E. C., Poets of America 3045 “ “ Victorian Poets 3046 Taine, H. A., History of English Literature 3047 Trent, W. P., History of American Literature 3048 Vincent, L. H., American Literary Masters 3049 Warner, C. D., Library of the World’s Best Literature. 31 Volumes. Volume 1. Abelard to Apuleius 3050 “ 2. Aquinas to Bagehot ^. . . 3051 “ 3. Baggesen to Berners 3052 “ 4. Besant to Brown 3053 “ 5. Browne to Caine 3054 “ 6. Calderon to Chrysostom 3055 “ 7. ( ’icero to Cuvier 3056 “ 8. Dahn to Drake 3057 “ 9. Draper to Emerson 3058 “ 10. Empedocles to Froissart 3059 “ 11. Fronde to Greek Anthology... 3060 “ 12. Greeley to Henry 3061 “ 13. Heraclitus to Huxley 3062 “ 14. Ibn Sina to Juvenal 3063 “ 15. Kabbalah to Lessing 3064 “ 16. Lever to Maine 3065 “ 17. De Maistre to Mommsen 3066 “ 18. ^lontague to Old Testament ... 3067 “ 19. Oliphant to Philemon 3068 “ 20. Phillips to Quintilian 3069 “ 21. Rabelais to Russian Poetry. . . . 3070 “ 22. Sachs to Shakespeare 3071 “ 23. Shakespeare to De Stael 3072 “ 24. Statius to the Talmud 3073 “ 25. Tasso to Turgeneff 3074 “ 26. Turgeneff to Watson 3075 GENERAL PROSE LITERATURE AND ART . 8g W arner, C.D. , Library of the W orld’s Best Literature. Vol. 27. Watson to Zorrilla 3076 “ 28. Songs, Hymns and Lyrics 3077 “ 29. Biographical Dictionary 3078 “ 30. Synopses of Books, General Index. .. 3079 “ 31. Guide to Systematic Readings 3080 Waters, Robert, Culture by Conversation 3081 Whitney, W. I)., The Life and Growth of Language. . 3082 .ESSAYS AND ORATIONS. Addison-Steele, The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers 3083 ‘‘ “ “ “ “ .... 3084 Barnes, Albert, Miscellaneous Essays and Review. . . 3085 Benson, A. C., From a College Window 3086 Bigelow, John, The Mystery of Sleep 3087 Blackie, J. S., On Self-Culture 3088 Burke, Edmund, Orations and Essays 3089 Carlyle, Thomas, Heroes, Hero Worship, and the Heroic in History 3090 “ “ “ “ “ “ .. 3091 “ u Sartor Resartus 3092 Crothers, S. M., The Pardoner’s Wallet 3093 Davis, Richard Harding, Real Soldiers of Fortune. . . 3094 Deland, Margaret, The Common Way 3095 Depew, Chauncey M., Life and Speeches 3096 Dunn, Mrs. M. B., Cicero in Maine and Other Essays. . 3097 Eltott, George, Essays, and Leaves from a Note-Book. . 3098 Emerson, R. W., Essays 3099 “ Essays. 2 Volumes. Volume 1. 3100 “ 2 3101 “ Representative Men 3102 “ Society and Solitude 3103 Fields, J. T., Underbrush 3104 Goldsmith, Oliver, Essays, Biographies and Criticisms. 3105 Grant, Robert, Search-Light Letters 3106 Great Essays by Montaigne, Milton and Others 3107 Great Orations by Famous Orators. 3108 Gregory, Eliot, The Ways of Men 3109 Higginson, T. W., Part of a Man’s Life 3110 Hillis, N. Dwight, Great Books as Life Teachers 3111 Hime, Col. W. L., Lucian, the Syrian Satirist 3112 Holmes, Oliver Wendell, The Autocrat of the Break- fast Table 3113 Hugo, Victor, The Letters of 3114 Johnson, Clifton, The Farmer’s Boy 3115 Jewett, D., Dialogues of Plato 3116 “ “ “ 3117 go LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Kennedy, Charles R.. Orations of Demosthenes and Cicero 3118 La Bbuyere, Extracts from the Morals of 3111) Lamb, Charles, Works of 3 Volumes. Vol. 1 Letters. 3120 Vol. 2. Miscellaneous Essays and Poems 3121 3. The Essays of Elia 3122 “ “ “ ,3123 Lamb, Charles and Mary, Tales from Shakespeare. . . 3124 Lang, Andrew, Essays in Little 3125 Lorimer, G. H., Letters from a Self-Made Merchant to His Son 3126 Lovell, John E., Exercises in Elocution 3127 Macauley, T. B., Critical, Historical, Miscellaneous Essays and Poems. 3 Volumes. Volume 1. 3128 Volume 2 3129 3.. . 3130 “ Essays and Poems. 2 Volumes Volume 1. 3131 Volume 2 3132 Mathews, William, Getting on in the World, or Hints on Success in Life 3133 “ Men, Places and Things 3134 Miller, Samuel, Letters from a Father to His Sons in College.. 3135 Muloch, Miss, Studies from Life 3136 Munger, T. T., On the Threshold 3137 Notes for Boys by an Old Boy 3138 Reed, Myrtle, Love affairs of Literary Men 3139 Repplier, Agnes, In Our Convent Days 3140 Roosevelt, Theodore, American Ideals 3141 Ruskin, John, Sesame and Lilies 3142 The Ethics of the Dust 3143 Shaw, Albert, The Outlook for the Average Man. . . . 3144 Smiles, Samuel, Self-Help 3145 Stevenson, Robert Louis, Across the Plains : With Other Memoirs and Essays 3146 Swing, David, Club Essays 3147 The Business of Life 3148 Thoreau, H. D., Familiar Letters of 3149 Titcomb, Timothy, Letters to Young People 3150 Wagner, Charles, The Simple Life 3151 Whiting, Lillian, The Outlook Beautiful 3152 Whitman, Walt, Complete Prose Works 3153 Wilder, M. I\, The Sunny Side of the Street 3154 World’s Best Orators, The 10 Volumes. Volume 1. Abelard to Benjamin 3155 “ 2. Benton to Burlingame. 3156 “ 3. Bushnell to Clay 3157 GENERAL PROSE LITERATURE AND ART . gi World’s Best Orators, The Volume 4. Clay to Daniel 3158 VolumeS. Danton to Emerson 3159 “ 6. Emmet to Harper 3160 “ 7. Hayes to Lynd hurst 3161 “ 8. Lysias to Pym 3162 “ 9. Quincy to Tyndall 3163 “ 10. Vallandigham to Zola 3164 USEFUL A RTS. Baldwin, W. J., Baldwin on Heating; or Steam Heat- ing for Buildings Revised 3165 Barnard, Charles, First Steps in Electricity 3166 Beeche r , H, W. , 1 ‘lain and 1 deasant Talk about Fruits, Flowers and Farming 3167 Brooke r-Slingo, Electrical Engineering ...... 3168 Boulger, G. S., Wood 3169 Burrell, Edward J., Elementary Building Construc- tion and Drawing . . . 3170 B\rn, Edward W., The Progress of Invention in the N ineteent h Centu ry 3171 Cochrane, C. H., Modern Industrial Progress 3172 Cochrane, Robert, The Romance of Industry and In- vention 3173 Coman, Katherine, industrial History of the United States 3174 Doubleday, Russell, Stories of Inventors 3175 Fletcher, S. W., Soils and How to Handle Them. ... 3176 Hall-Powell, Three Acres and Liberty 3177 Hammond, Adam, Practical Bricklaying 3178 Harwood, W. S., The New Earth: Modern Agriculture in America 3179 Hasluck, Paul N., Electric Bells 3180 Hodgson, F. T., Plaster and Plastering 3181 Iles, George, Inventors at Work 3182 Lawler, J. J., Modern Plumbing 3183 Moffett, Cleveland, Careers of Danger and Daring. . 3184 Munro, John, The Story of Electricity 3185 Rutledge, Robert, Discoveries and Inventions of the Nineteenth Century 3186 Shepardson, G. D., Electrical Catechism . 3187 Sloane, T. O’ C., Electric Toy Making 3188 Story, Alfred T., The Story of Photography 3189 Williams, Archibald, The Romance of Modern In- vention 3190 FINE ARTS. Baldwin, T. S., Picture Making for Pleasure and Profit. 3191 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. 92 Brownell, W. C., French Art 3192 Chapin, Anna A., Masters of Music 3193 Donald, R., Wonders of Architecture - 3L34 ' Elson, L. C., National Music of America and Its Sources. 3195 Finck, Henry T., Songs and Song Writers 3196 Guerber, H. A., Stories of Famous Operas 3197 “ “ Stories of Popular Operas 3198 “ “ ' Stories of the Wagner Opera ... 3199 Hasluck, Paul N., Wood Finishing 3200 Jackson, F. G., Wood Carving 3201 Lubke, Wilhelm, History of Art. 2 Volumes. Volume 1. Ancient and Medieval Art 3202 “ 2. Modern Art 3203 Racster, Olga, Chats on Violins. . . .’ 3204 Raphael (Newnes Art Gallery) 3205 Rowe, Eleanor, Practical Woodcarving 3206 Ruskin, John, The Seven Lamps of Architecture 3207 Streatfield, R. A., Modern Music and Musicians 3208 Sturgis, Russell, History of Architecture 3209 MISCELLANEOUS WORKS. A. L. 0. E., Fairy Know-A-Bit 3210 Antrim, Minna, A Book of Toasts 3211 Brookings-Ringwalt, Briefs for Debate 3212 Bulfinch, Thomas, The age of Fable 3213 Collins, Wilkie, My Miscellanies 3214 Finch, J. B., The People Versus the Liquor Traffic. . . 3215 Greenough, W. P., Canadian Folk-Life and Folk-Lore. 3217 Haines-Yaggy, The Royal Path of Life 3218 Half Hours with Great Novelists 3219 Hartmann, Franz, Magic White and Black 3220 Homes of American Authors 3221 Irving, Washington, Masterpieces of American Liter- ature 3222 Lucas, E. V., The Friendly Town 3223 Melville, Lewis, The Thackeray Country * • . .. 3224 Morris, Charles, Half Hours with The Best American Authors. 4 Volumes. Volume 1 3225 “ 2 3226 3 3227 “ 4 3228 “ Half Hours with the Best American Authors. 4 Volumes. Volume 1 3*229 “ 2 3230 “ 3 3231 “ 4 3232 GENERAL PROSE LITERATURE AND ART. 93 Spalding, Bishop J. L., Education and the Higher Life. 3233 Stedman, E. C., Specimens of American Prose 3234 Strickland, Agnes, Stories from History 3235 Teal, Cornelia A., Counting the Cost 3236 Thackeray, W. M., Roundabout Papers, and Second Funeral of Napoleon 3237 Roundabout Papers and the Four Georges 3238 Torrey, Bradford, Birds in the Bush 3239 Vincent, J. H., The Chautauqua Movement 3240 Walton, Izaak, The Complete Angler 3241 Waterman, Nixon, “Boy Wanted a Book of Cheer- ful Counsel 3242 White, C. A., Student’s Mythology 3243 Wood, E. J., The Wedding Day in all Ages and Coun- tries 3244 94 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Geography, Voyages, ^ Travels, and Adventures ARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC REGIONS. I)u Chaillu, Paul B., The Land of the Lohg Night . . . 3245 Franklin, Sir John, Thirty Years in the Arctic Re- gions 3246 Gilder, W. H., Ice-pack and Tundra 3247 Greely, A. W., Three Years of Arctic Service. 2 Vols. Volume 1 3248 “ 2 3249 Hartwig, G., The Polar World 3250 Hoare, J. P.. A,rctic Exploration 3251 M’Clintock. F. L., In the Arctic Seas 3252 “ 3253 Melville, G. W., In the Lena Delta 3254 Mill, H. R,, The Siege of the South Pole 3255 Nansen, Fridtjof, Farthest North. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1. Voyage to Second Autumn in the Ice 3256 “ 2. Sledge Expedition, Return 3257 Peary, R. E., Nearest the Pole 3258 Scott, Robert F., The Voyage of the ‘•Discovery” 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Preparations, Voyage to New Zealand, Winter Quarters. . . . 3259 Vol. 2. Farthest South, Return 3260 AFRICA Andersson, J. C., Notes of Travel 3261 Bacon, Lee, Our Houseboat on the Nile 3262 Bridgman, F. A., Winters in Algeria 3263 Btjlpett, C. W. L., A Picnic Party in Wildest Africa.. 3264 Pameron, V. L., In Savage Africa . . 3265 I )avis, Richard Harding, The Congo and African Coasts 3266 Du Chaillu, Paul B., Adventures in the Great Forest of Equatorial Africa 3267 “ The Country of the Dwarfs 3268 “ The world of the Great Forest 3269 Edwards, Amelia, A Thousand Miles Up the Nile.. . . . 3270 Ellis, William, Three Visits to Madagascar 3271 Geddie, John, The Lake Regions of Central Africa . . . 3272 GEOGRAPHY , VOYAGES, TRAVELS & ADVENTURES 95 Lanpor, H. S., Across Widest Africa. 2 Volumes. Volume 1. Abyssinia 3273 Volume 2. Soudan to Cape Verde 3274 Livingstone, David, Travels and Researches. . : 3275 Millard, David, Journal of Travels 3276 Schillings, C. G., Flashlights in the Jungle. 3277 Stanley, H. M., In Darkest Africa. 2 Volumes. V olume 1 327 8 “ 2 3279 In Darkest Africa. 2 Volumes. Volume 1. 3280 Volume 2 3281 Through the Dark Continent. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 3282 “ 2 3283 , Through the Dark Continent. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 3284 “ 2 3285 The Congo, and the Founding of Its Free State. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 3286 Volume 2 3287 Stevens, Thomas, Scouting for Stanley in East Africa 3288 Thomson, Joseph, Mungo Park and the Niger 3289 NORTH AMERICA ALASKA AND THE KLONDIKE Cook, I)r. Frederick, To the Top of the Continent .. 3290 McLain, J. S., Alaska and the Klondike 3291 Palmer, Frederick, In the Klondike 3292 CANADA Auer, Harry A., The North Country 3293 Browne, <1. W., The St. Lawrence River . . 3294 Duncan, Norman, Dr. Grenfell’s Parish 3295 Grenfell, W. T., The Harvest of the Sea 3296 Hornaday, W. T., Camp-Fires in the Canadian Rockies 3297 Morley, Margeret W., Down North and Up Along. . 3298 Thoreau, H. I)., A Yankee in Canada 3299 3300 White, Stewart Edward, The Forest 3301 Wilcox, W. D., The Rockies of Canada 3302 CENTRAL AMERICA Abbot, H. L., Problems of the Panama Canal 3303 Humbolt, Alexander von, Narrative of Travels. 2 V olumes. V olume 1 3304 “ 2 3305 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Stephens, J. L., Incidents of Travel in Yucatan. . — 3306 AValker, J. W., Ocean to Ocean 3307 MEXICO Ballou, M. M., Aztec Land 3308 Bishop, W. H., Mexico, California and Arizona 3309 Jackson, Julia N., A Winter Holiday in Summer Lands 3310 UNITED STATES Abbott, J. S. C., The Adventures of the Chevalier De La Salle 3311 Abbott, Katharine M., Old Paths and Legends of New England 3312 Austin, Mary, The Land of Little Rain 3313 Ballou, M. M., The New Eldorado 3314 Berghold, Alexander, The Indian’s Revenge 3315 Bowles, Samuel, Across the Continent 3316 Chittenden, H. M., The Yellowstone National Park. 3317 Davis, R. H., The West from a Car-Window 3318 I)e Chastellux, Marquis. Travels in North America. . 3319 Dickens, Charles, American Notes 3320 Glazier, Willard, Down the Great River. 3321 “ “ “ 3322 Hale, E. E., Tarry at Home Travels 3323 Hawthorne, Nathaniel, Passages from American Note Books 3324 Hines, Gustavas, Wild Life in Oregon 3325 Hosmer, J. K., The Expedition of Lewis and Clark. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 3326 “ 2 3327 James, G. W., In and Around the Grand Canyon 3328 “ W onders of the Colorado Desert. 2 V ols. Volume 1 3329 “ 2 3330 Johnson, Clifton, Highways and Byways of the Mis- sissippi Valley 3331 “ New England and Its Neighbors. . 3332 “Catharine” Letters from an Oregon Ranch 3333 Meyers, R. C. V., Life and Adventures of Lewis Wetzel. 3334 Mum, John, Our National Parks 3335 Munroe, Kirk, The Golden Days of ’49 3336 O’Rell, Max, Jonathan and His Continent 3337 Picturesque America, ( Edited by William Cullen Bry- ant 3338 Roberts, Edwards, Shoshone and other Western W on- ders 3339 Talbot, Ethelbert, My People of ihe Plains. 3340 GEOGRAPHY , VOYAGES, TRAVELS & ADVENTURES gy Wagner, Charles, My Impressions of America 3341 White, Stewart Edward, The Mountains 3342 “ “ The Pass 3343 WEST INDIES Aflalo, F. G., Sunshine and Sport in Florida and West Indies 3344 Ballou, M. M., Due South, or Cuba Past and Present. 3345 Dana, R. H., To Cuba and Back 3346 Hearn, Lafcadio, Two Years in the French West Indies. 3347 Kimball, R. B., In the Tropics 3348 Stoddard, C. A., Cruising among the Caribbees 3349 SOUTH AMERICA Arthur, Richard, Ten Thousand Miles in a Yacht. . . . 3350 Curtis, W. F., Between the Andes and the Ocean 3351 Fountain, Paul, The Great Mountains and Forests of South America 3352 Martin, Percy F., Through Five Republics of South America 3353 ASIA Allen-Sachtleben, Across Asia on a Bicycle 3354 Eliot, Sir C., Letters from the Far East 3355 Hilprecht, H. V., Explorations’ in Bible Lands 3356 Hornaday, W. T., Two Years in the Jungle 3357 Penfield, F. C., East of Suez 3358 Phelps, S. Dryden, Bible Lands 3359 Potter, H. C., The East of Today and Tomorrow 3360 Taylor, Bayard, India, China and Japan 3361 “ “ “ 3362 CHINA Bard, Emile, Chinese Life in Town and Country 3363 Carl, Katharine A., With the Empress Dowager 3364 Hardy, E. J., John Chinaman at Home 3365 Lee, Yan Phou, When I was a Boy in China 3366 Morse, E. S., Glimpses of China and Chinese Homes. . . 3367 Parsons, William Barclay, An American Engineer in China 1 368 Scidmore, E. R., China the Long-Lived Empire. ....... 3369 INDIA Compton, Herbert, Indian Life in Town arid Country 3370 Curtis, W. E., Modern India 3371 Hurst, J. F., Indika 3372 Workman, W. H., Through Town and Jungle 3373 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. g8 JAPAN Bacon, Alice M., In the Land of the Gods 33-74 Clement, E. W., Handbook of Modern Japan 3375 Fox, John, Following the Sun-Flag 3376 Hearn, Lafcadio, In Ghostly Japan 3377 Scidmore, E. R., Jinrikisha Days in Japan 3378 Tomes, Robert, The Americans in Japan 3379 PALESTINE Bell, Gertrude L., The Desert and the Sown 3380 Dunning, H. W., Today in Palestine 3381 THIBET Holdeich, Sir T. H., Thibet the Mysterious. 3382 Wilson, Andrew, The Abode of Snow 3383 “ ' “ “ ' 3384 “ “ “ 3385 EAST INDIES Adams, W. H. D., The Eastern Archipelago 3386 Dauncey, Mrs. Campbell, An Englishwoman in the Philippines 3387 De Wit, Augusta, Facts and Fancies About Java. . . 3388 Le Roy, J. A., Philippine Life in Town and Country. . 3389 AUSTRALASIA AND POLYNESIA Ballou, M. M., Under the Southern Cross 3390 Buley, E. C., Australian Life in Town and Country 3391 Chaney, G. L., Aloha, or a Trip to the Hawaiian Is- lands 3392 Grimshaw, Beatrice, Fiji and Its Possibilities 3393 Kingston, W. H. G., Twice Lost 3394 Lumholtz, Carl, Among Cannibals 3395 EUROPE Barry, J. P., At the Gates of the East 3396 Guerber, H. A., Myths of Northern Lands. 3397 Knox, T. W., Boy Travelers in Northern Europe 3398 Ninde, Mari L., We Two Alone in Europe. . 3399 Rodwell, G. F., Notes of Travel in Southern Europe. 3400 Taylor, Bayard, Byways of Europe 3401 AUSTRIA-HUNGARY Palmer, F. H. E., Austro-Hungarian- Life in Town and Country 3402 GEOGRAPHY , VOVA GES, ERA FEES & AD VENTURES gg BRITISH ISLES Bates, Katharine Lee, From Gretna Green to Land’s End.... 3403 Bradley, A. G., Highways and Byways in North Wales 3404 Duncan, Sara Jeannette, An American Girl in London. 3405 Hare, A. J. 0., Walks in London 3406 “ “ “ 3407 Hawthorne, Nathaniel, Our Old Home, and English Note-Books. 2 Volumes. Volume 1.. 3408 “• 2.. 3409 Howells, William Dean, Certain Delightful English Towns 3410 “ “ “ “ “ 3411 Johnson, Clifton, Among English Hedgerows 3412 “■ “ The Isle of the Shamrock 3413 “ The Land of Heather 3414 Lucas, E. V., A Wanderer in London 3415 White, B. G., England Without and Within 3416 DENMARK, NORWAY AND SWEDEN Ballou, M. M., Due North, or Glimpses of Scandinavia and Russia 3417 Brochner, Jessie, Danish Life in Town and Country. 3418 Caton, J. D., A Summer in Norway 3419 Curtis, W. E., Denmark, Norway and Sweden 3420 Du Chaillu, Paul B., The Land "of the Midnight Sun. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 3421 “ 2 3422 Edwards, W. S., Through Scandinavia to Moscow. . . 3423 Kneeland, Samuel, An American in Iceland 3424 FRANCE Betham-Edwards, Mtss, Home Life in France 3425 Dearmer, Percy, High way sand By way sin Normandy 3426 De Forest, Katharine, Paris as It Is 3427 Hare, A. J. C., Days near Paris 3428 Harper, Frederick, Tricolored Sketches in Paris 3429 Hawthorne, Nathaniel, Passages from French and Italian Note-Books . . .• 3430 Johnson, Clifton, Along French Byways 3431 Stevenson, R. L.. Travels with a Donkey 3432 Thackeray, W. M., The Paris Sketch Book . . 3433 Warner, Anna, Seeing France with Uncle John 3434 GERMANY Dawson, W. H., German Life in Town and Country. . . 3435 Eddy, D. C., The Alps and Rhine 3436 IOO LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Frafrie, F. R., Little Pilgrimages Among Bavarian Inns 3437 Norton, Minerva B., In and Around Berlin 3438 ITALY. Brockedon, William, Road-Book from London to Naples 3439 Dickens, Charles, Pictures from Italy, and American Notes 3440 Elliott, Maude, Two in Italy 3441 Gissing, George, By the Ionian Sea 3442 Hare, A. J. C., Walks in Rome 3443 Howells, William Dean, Italian Journeys 3444 Singleton, Esther, Rome, Described by Great Writers. 3445 Villari, Luigi, Italian Life in Town and Country. . . . 3446 Wharton, Mrs. A. H., Italian Days and Ways 3447 NETHERLANDS Hough, P. M., Dutch Life in Town and Country 3448 Waller, M. E., Through the Gates of the Netherlands. 3449 , RUSSI A Gowing, L. F., Five Thousand Miles in a Sledge 3450 Palmer, F. H. E. ? Russian Life in Town and Country. 3451 SPAIN Bates, Katharine Lee, Spanish Highways & Byways. 3452 Higgin, Louis, Spanish Life in Town and Country. . .. 3453 Irving, Washington, The Alhambra 3454 Lathrop, G. P., Spanish Yistas 3455 SWITZERLAN D Guerber, H. A., Legends of Switzerland 3456 Story, A. T., Swiss Life in Town and Country 3457 MISCELLANEOUS Ballou, M. M., Footprints of Travel 3458 Beehler, W. H., The Cruise of the Brooklyn 3459 Brassey, Mrs. A Voyage in the “ Sun beam" 3460 “ “ “ . “ “ 3461 Buel, J. W., The World’s Wonders as Seen by Great Explorers 3462 “ ... 3463 Burroughs, John, Camping and Tramping with Roosevelt 3464 Clarke, F. E. and Mrs. H. E., Our Journej^ Around the World 3465 Continental Sketches 3466 GEOGRAPHY , VOYAGES, TRAVELS & ADVENTURES ioi Conway, M. D., My Pilgrimage to the Wise Men of the East 3467 Curtis, W. E., Egypt, Burma and British Malaysia. . 3468 “ “ The Turk and His Lost Provinces 3469 Dana, Richard H., Two Years before the Mast 3470 Fraser, J. F., Round the World on a Wheel 3471 Frost, Thomas, Modern Explorers 3472 Heine, H., Pictures of Travel 3473 Hunt, Helen, Bits of Travel 3474 Hyrst, H. W. G., Adventures in the Great Forests. . . 3475 Jacobs, Joseph, The Story of Geographical Disco very. 3476 Kipling, Rudyard, From Sea to Sea 3477 Mandeville, Sir John, Voyages and Travels 3478 Reeve, C. McC., How We Went and What We Saw. . . 3479 Rhoades, H. E., Around the World with the Bluejackets 3480 a a a a a a a 3481 Roosevelt, Theodore, Hunting the Grisly 3482 “ “ Hunting Trips of a Ranchman 3483 “ “ “ “ on the Prairie 3484 “ “ The Wilderness Hunter 3485 Samuels, Samuel, From the Forecastle to the Cabin . . 3486 Slocum, Capt. J., Sailing Around the World. 3487 Smythe, Alexander, Travels and Scenes in Foreign Lands 3488 Stoddard, John L., His Lectures. 10 Volumes. Vol. 1. Norway, Switzerland, Athens & Venice 3489 “ 2. Constantinople, Jerusalem and Egypt.. 3490 “ 3. Japan and China 3491 “ 4. India— The Passion Play 3492 “ 5 Paris, La Belle France and Spain 3493 “ 6. Berlin, Vienna, St. Petersburg & Moscow 3494 “ 7. The Rhine, Belgium, Holland & Mexico 3495 “ 8. Florence, Naples and Rome 3496 “ 9. Scotland, England and London 3497 “ 10. California, Grand Canon and Yellow- stone Park 3498 Taylor, Bayard, Views Afoot 3499 “ “ Eldorado 3500 “ “ “ 3501 “ “ The Lands of the Saracen 3502 Tripp, Alonzo, Crests from the Ocean World 3503 Vincent, Frank, In and Out of Central America 3504 Williams, Archibald, The Romance of Modern Ex- ploration 3505 102 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. History. Ancient History. AFRICA Church, A. J., The Story of Carthage. 3506 Petrie, W. M. F., Ten Years Digging in Egypt ] 881-5)1 3507 Rawlinson, George, The Story of Ancient Egypt “ History of Ancient Egypt. 2 Yols. 3508 Yol. 1. The Land, Climate, and Productions: The People, Science, Religion, etc 3509. Yol. 2. Chronology, Old Empire, Dy- nasties, etc 3510 Wilkinson, J. G., The Manners and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians. 3 Yolumes. Yolumel. Origin, Casts, etc 3511 “ 2. Arts and Manufactures. .. . .. 3512 “ 3. Religious Ceremonies... 3513 AS I A Rawlinson, George, The Five Great Monarchies. 3 Yolumes. Yol. 1. Chaldea and Asyria. . .. 3514 Yol. 2. Asyria, Media and Babylonia. 3515 “ 3. Babylonia and Persia 3516 “ The Five Great Monarchies. 3 Yols. Yol. 1. Chaldea and Assyria 3517 “ 2. Assvia, Media, and Babylonia. 3518 “ 3. Babylonia and Persia 3519 ASSY Rl A Ragozin, Z. A., The Story of Assyria 3520 CHALDEA Ragozin, Z. A., The Story of Chaldea 3521 THE JEWS IIosmer, J. K., The Story of the Jews 3522 “ “ * “ 3523 Josephus, Flavius, The Antiquities, and the Wars of the Jews 3524 HISTORY. 103 PARTHIA Rawlinson, George, The Sixth Great Monarchy 3525 PE RSI A Benjamin, S. G. W., The Story of Persia 3526 Rawlinson, George, The Seventh Great Monarchy. . . 3527 PHOENICIA Rawlinson, George, The Story of Phoenicia 3528 TROY Benjamin, S. G. W., Its Legends, History and Litera- ture 3529 EUROPE GREECE Blumner, Hugo, Home Life of the Ancient Greeks. . . . 3530 ("ary, Henry, The Histories of Herodotus 3531 Cox, G. W., The Athenian Empire 3532 “ The Greeks and the Persians 3533 Curteis, A. M., Rise of the Macedonian Empire 3534 Dyer, T. H., Ancient Athens. 3535 Guerber, H. A., Myths of Greece and Rome 3536 Harrison, J. A., The Story of Greece .... 3537 Mahaffy, J. P., The Story of Alexander’s Empire. . . . 3538 Sankey, Charles, The Spartan and Theban Supremacies 3539 ROME Beesly, A. H., The Gracchi, Marius and Sulla 3540 (’apes. W. W., The Early Empire 3541 u The Roman Empire of the Second Cen- tury 3542 Crawford, F. Marion, Ave Roma Immortalis 3543 Gibbon, Edward, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. 6 Volumes. Volume 1. The Antonines 3544 Volume 2. Constantine the Great 3545 “ 3. Goths and Huns, Division of the Empire 3546 “ 4. Gothic Italy, and the Barbarian World 3547 “ 5. Rise of the Turks, Crusades, etc. . . 3548 “ 6. Tamerlane, Fall of Constantinople 3549 Gilman, Arthur, The Story of Rome 3550 Ihne, W., Early Rome 3551 Johnston, H. W., The Private Life of the Romans. . . 3552 Livius, Titus, Roman History 3553 Merivale, Charles, The Roman Triumvirates 3554 104 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Smith, R. B., Rome and Carthage 3555 Thalheimer, M. E., History of Rome 3556 Modern History AFRICA Browne, J. H. B., South Africa . . . , 3557 Churchill, Winston S., London to Ladysmith 3558 “ “ Ian Hamilton’s March 3559 Davis, Richard H., With Both Armies in South Africa 3560 Devereux, Roy, Sidelights on South Africa 3561 Ireland, A., The Anglo-Boer Conflict 3562 Steevens, G. W.j From Cape Town to Ladysmith. . . 3563 Van der Hoogt, C. W., The Story of the Boers 3564 44 44 44 44 44 44 44 3565 NORTH AMERICA Doyle, J. A., The English Colonies in America. 5Vols. Volume 1. Virginia, Maryland and the Carolines 3566 “ 2. Puritan Colonies. 3567 “ 3. “ “ Continued. 3568 “ 4. Middle Colonies 3569 “ 5. Colonies under the House of Hanover 3570 Fiske, John, The Discovery of America. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1. Ancient America, Voyage Columbus, etc. 3571 “ 2. Conquest of Mexico and Peru, etc 3572 Jenks, Tudor, When America was New 3573 Mattson, Hans, 250th Anniversary of the First Swed- ish Settlement 3574 “ 3575 “ “ V “ 3576 “ “ “ “ 3577 “ “ “ “ 3578 “ “ u ' u 3579 u 44 44 44 3580 Morris, ('harles, Heroes of Discovery in America. . . . ‘3581 Osgood, H. L., American Colonies in the 17th Century 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Virginia, Massachusetts and New England 3582 “ 2. Maryland, Carolina and Penn- sylvania 3583 “ 3. Imperial Control 3584 Parkman, Francis, The Conspiracy of Pontiac. 2 Vols. Volume!. 1755-1763 3585 “ 2. 1763-1769 3586 HISTORY. 105 Parkman, Francis, Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV 3587 “ “ A Half Century of Conflict. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Queen Anne’s War and the Outag- amie War 3588 “ 2. France in the West and Acadia. .. 3589 “ The Jesuits in North America 3590 “ # Montcalm and Wolfe. 2 Volumes. Volume 1. 1745-1757 3591 “ 2. 1757-1763..... 3592 “ The Old Regime in Canada 3593 “ Pioneers of France in the New W orld. 3594 Winsor, Justin, Narrative and Critical History of America. 8 Vols. Vol. 1. Aboriginal America — 3595 Vol. 2. Spanish Explorations and Settlements 3596 “ 3. English Explorations and Settlements 3597 “ 4. Portuguese, French, and Dutch Ex-. plorations and Settlements 3598 “ 5. The English and French in N orth Amer- ica. 1689-1763 3599 “ 6. The United States. Part 1 3600 “ 7. “ “ “II 3601 “ 8. Later History of British, Spanish, and Portuguese America . 3602 CANADA Fraser, J. F., Canada as It Is 3603 Parker-Bryan, Old Quebec 3604 Stewart, George, Canada under the Earl of Dufferin 3605 CUBA Halstead, Murat, The Story of Cuba 3606 “ “ “ “ 3607 “ u u «■ 3608 “ “ “ “ 3609 MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA Johnson, W. F., Four Centuries of the Panama Canal 3610 Martin, Percy F., Mexico of the Twentieth Century. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. General Description 3611 “ 2. Local Description 3612 Noll, A. H., A Short History of Mexico 3613 Prescott, W. H., The Conquest of Mexico. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Aztec Civilization, Discovery of Mex- ico, March to Mexico 3614 “ 2. March to Mexico, Residence in Mexico 3615 “ . 3. Siege and Surrender of Mexico 3616 io6 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Prescott, W. H. TheConquestof Mexico. 3 Vols. Vol. 1 3617 Vol. 2 3618 “ 3 3619 The Conquest of Mexico. 3 Volumes. Vol. 1 3620 Vol. 2 3621 “ 3 3622 Simmondes, W. E., The Nicaragua Canal 3623 Winter, N. 0., Mexico and Her People of 'Joday . . . . 3624 UNITED STATES Abbott, J. S. C., The Civil War in America 3625 Allen, P. L., America’s Awakening 3626 Ames, Mary C., Ten Years in Washington 3627 “ “ “ “ “ 3628 Analytical Reference. 6 Volumes. Vol. 1. Encyclo- pedic Dictionary of American History, A to M. 3629 Vol. 2. “ “ “ N to Z. 3630 “ 3. Addenda Dictionary 3631 “ 4. Discovery and Exploration 3632 “ 5. History to End Monroe’s Administra- tion 3633 “ 6. History from Election of Taylor to Present Day 3634 Bancroft, George, History of the United States. 6 Vols. Vol. 1. Colonial History, Revolution, etc. 3635 “ 2. Overthrow of the Colonial System 3636 “ 3. The American Revolution/. 3637 ‘‘4. “ “ Continued 3638 “ 5. “ “ “ 3639 “ 6. The Formation of the Constitu- tion 3640 Beach, S. C., Daughters of the Puritans 3641 Bennett, F. M., The Monitor and the Navy under Steam 3642 Blaine, J. G., Twenty Years of Congress. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. The Civil War 3643 “ 2. From Andrew Jackson to Garfield 3644 Blaine, J. G., Twenty Years of Congress 2 Vols. “ 1 ' 3645 “ 2 3646 “ Political Discussions, 1856-1886 3647 Bowe, John, With the 13th Minnesota in the Philip- 3648 pines Brady, Cyrus T., Revolutionary Fights and Fighters 3649 “ “ Colonial Fights and Fighters 3650 “ “ Border Fights and Fighters 3651 “ “ Indian Fights and Fighters 3652 HISTORY . loy Brooks, E. S., The American Soldier in War & Peace 3653 Brooks, Noah, First Across the Continent 3654 Brownson, O. A., , The American Republic 3655 Bryant, W. C. and S. H. Gay, History of the United States 3656 Burnett, P. H., Recollections and Opinions of an Old Pioneer 3657 Channing, Edward, History of the United States, 1000 to 1660 3658 Chestnut, Mary B., A Diary from Dixie 3659 Coffin, C. C., The Boys of 1861 3660 “ The Drum-Beat of the Nation 3661 Dodge, N. S., Stories of American History 3662 Earle, Alice M., Stage Coach and Tavern Days 3663 Eggleston, Edward, The Beginners of a Nation 3664 Eggleston, G. C., Our First Century 3665 Ellet, Elizabeth F., Domestic History of the Amer- ican Revolution 3666 Ellis, E. S., Primary History of the United States. . 3667 Elson, H. W., History of the United States of America 3668 Field, H. M., Bright Skies and Dark Shadows 3669 Fiske, John, Mississippi Valley in the Civil War 3670 Civil Government in the United States . 3671 “ The American Revolution. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1. The Beginnings to Saratoga 3672 “ 2. French Alliance to Yorktown 3673 “ The Critical Period of American History. .. 3674 “ The Dutch and Quaker Colonies in America 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Dutch 3675 “ 2. Quaker 3676 “ Essays, Historical and Literary 3677 “ Old Virginia and Her Neighbors. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Settlement to 1655 3678 “ 2. Coming of the Cavaliers to RevO- Forsyth, G. A., Thrilling Days in Army Life 3680 Gilman, Arthur, The American People 3681 “ “ “ “ “ 3682 Glazier, Willard, Battles for the Union 3683 Gordon, Gen. J. B., Reminiscences of the Civil War. . . 3684 Hamilton-Madison-Jay, The Federalist 3685 Harrison, P. D., The Stars and Stripes and other American Flags 3686 Headley, J. T., The Great Rebellion 3687 “ “ The Chaplains and Clergy of the Rev- olution 3688 Heard, I. V. D., The Sioux War 3689 io8 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Heard, T. V. D., The Sioux War 3690 Hickey, W., Analysis of the Constitution 3691 Hobson, R. P., The Sinking of the Merrimac 3692 Hosmer, J. K., The Appeal to Arms, 1861-1863 3693 “ “ The Outcome of the Civil War 3694 Johns, Henry S. , Life with the 49th Massachusetts V ol- unteers 3695 Johnson, Rossiter, The War of 1812-15 3690 “ “ “ “ “ 3697 Johnston, H. P., The Yorktown Campaign and the Surrender of Cornwallis 3698 Kieffer, H. M., Recollections of a Drummer-Boy 3699 Leroy-Beaulieu, Pierre, United States in the Twen- tieth Century 3700 Livermore, Mary A, My Story of the War 3701 Lodge-Roosevelt, Hero Tales from American History 3702 Logan, J. A., The Great Conspiracy 3703 Longstreet, Helen I)., Lee and Longstreet at High Tide 3704 Longstreet, James, From Manassas to Appomattox. 3705 Lossing, B. J., American Industries and Arts 3706 “ “ The Pictorial Field Book of the Revo- lution. 5 Volumes. Vol. 1 3707 “ 2 3708 Marks, Mary A. M., England and America. 2 Vols. Volume 1. 1763-1777 3709 “ 2. 1778-1783 3710 Merram, G. S., The Negro and the Nation 3711 Munsterberg, Hugo, American Traits 3712 Otis, James, The Boys of '98 3713 Parker, W. H., Recollections of a Naval Officer 3714 Patton, J. H., Four Hundred Years of American His- tory. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Discoveries, the Aborigines, Spanish, English and French Settlements. The Revolution. The United 'States to Jefferson’s Administra- tion 3715 Vol. 2. Madison’s Administration, the War of 1812. The War With Mexico, the Civil War, How We are Governed, etc 3716 Peck, H. T., Twenty Years of the Republic, 1885-1905. 3717 Rhodes, J. F., History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850. 7 Volumes Vol. 1. 1850-1854 3718 “ 2. 1854-1860 3719 “ 3. 1860-1862 3720 “ 4. 1862-1864 3721 HISTORY. iog Rhodes, J. F., History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850. 7 Volumes Vol. 5. 1864-1866 3722 “ 6. 1866-1872 3723 “ 7. 1872-1877 3724 Roosevelt, Theodore, Winning the West. 6 Vols. Vol. 1. The Spread of English-Speaking Peoples 3725 “ 2. In the Current of the Revolution 3726 “ 3. The War in the Northwest 3727 “ 4 3728 “ 5. St. Clair and Wayne 3729 . “ 6. Louisiana and Aaron Burr 3730 Sargent, Herbert H., The Campaign of Santiago de Cuba. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Cuban Insurrec- tion to Blockade of Santiago 3731 Vol. 2. Sailing of the 5th Corps to Destruction of Cervera’s Squadron 3732 “ 3. Siege of Santiago, General Comments. 3733 Sigsbee, Captain C. D., The Maine 3734 Singleton, Esther, Historic Landmarks of America 3735 Smith, Uriah, Our Country 3736 Spears, J. R., Short History of the American Navy. . 3737 Stockton, E. R., Buccaneersand Pirates of our Coast s 3738 Stratemeyer, Edward, Under Otife in the Philippines 3739 A Young Volunteer in Cuba 3740 Fighting in Cuban Waters 3741 “ The Campaign of the Jungle, or Under Lawton Through Luzon 3742 “ Under Dewey at Manila 3743 Thayer, W. M., A Youth’s History of the Rebellion. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Sumter to Roanoke 3744 “ 2. Roanoke to Murfreesboro .. . 3745 “ 3. Murfreesboro to Fort Pillow 3746 Thompson, Holland, From the Cotton Field to the Cotton Mill 3747 White, Trumbull, Our War with Spain * 3748 Wise, J. S., Recollections of Thirteen Presidents 3749 Woolsey, T. S., America’s Foreign Policy.. 3750 STATES AND LOCAL Bacon, Dolores, Old New England Churches 3751 Bacon, E. M., The Connecticut River and the Connec- ticut Valley 3752 Barrows, William, Oregon, the Struggle for Posses- sion 3753 Browne, W. H., Maryland, the History of a Palatinate 3754 1 10 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Cooke, J. E., Virginia, a History of the People 3755 Cooley, T. M., Michigan, A History of Governments. 3756 Curley, E. A., Nebraska, Its Advantages, Resources, and Drawbacks 3757 Dieck, Herman, The Johnstown Flood 3758 Flandrau, C. E., The History of Minnesota 3759 Folsom, W. H. C., Fifty Years in the Northwest 3760 “ “ << “ “ 3761 Hosmer, J. K., Short History of the Mississippi Valley 3762 Irving, Washington, New York, From the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty . 3763 Johnson, W. F., The Johnstown Flood. . . . 3764 Johnston, Alexander, ( Connecticut, a Commonwealth- Democracy ....... 3765 King, Grace, New Orleans, the Place and People 3766 Laut, Agnes C., Pathfinders of the West 3767 “ “ The Story of the Trapper 3768 Minnesota Historical Society Collections. 10 Vols. Vol. 1. Sketch of Society, Description of Minn- esota 3769 “ 2. Early French Forts, History of the Da- kotas 3770 “ 3. Fort Snelling Reminiscences 3771 “ 4. St. Paul ahcl Ramsey County, etc 3772 “ 5 . The Oj ib way N at ion , etc 3773 “ 6. Sources of the Mississippi, the Sioux Outbreak, etc 3774 “ 7. The Mississippi River and Its Source . . 3775 “ 8. Iron Ores of Minnesota. 3776 “ 9. Biographical Sketches of Old Settlers . . 3777 “ 10. The Hennepin Bi-Centenary 3778 Parrish, Randall, The Great Plains 3779 Reid, W. M., The Story of Old Fort Johnson 3780 Roberts, E. H., New York, the Planting and Growth Vol. 1. Before the Advent of the English 3781 “ 2. The Revolution to 1886 3782 Royce, Josiah, California, from the Conquest in 1846 to Second Vigilance Committee. . 3783 Schafer, Joseph, History of the Pacific Northwest . . 3784 Schaff, Morris, The Spirit of Old West Point 3785 Scudder, H. E., Boston Town 3786 Shaler, N. S., Kentucky, a Pioneer Commonwealth. 3787 Sheahan, J. W., and G. W. Upton, Chicago, its Past, Present and Future 3788 Spring, L. W., Kansas, "the prelude to the War for the Union 3789 HISTORY. iii Taggart, Joseph, The Early History of Maryland. . . 3790 White, Trumbull, The San Francisco Earthquake Horror 3791 Wilkinson, Rev. W., Memorials of Minnesota Forest Fires 3792 SOUTH AMERICA Hale, Albert, The South Americans 3793 BRAZIL Andrews, C..C., Brazil, Its Condition, and Prospects. 3794 PERU Allen, F. H., The Discovery and Conquest of Peru. . 3797 “ “ “ “ “ 3798 Prescott, W. H., The Conquest of Peru. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. The Incas, the Discovery and Conquest . 3799 “ 2. Conquest Continued, Civil Wars and Settlements f 3800 “ The Conquest of Peru. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 . . 3801 “ 2.. 3802 Ulloa, George and Anthony, Secret Expedition to Peru 3803 ASIA Bacon, G. B., Siam, the Land of the White Elephant. Douglas, R. K., A Short Story of China “ “ The Story of China Feudge, Fanny R., A Short History of India Gilman, Arthur, The Story of the Saracens Morris, J., Makers of Japan Sales, Lady, Disasters in Afghanistan Welsh, Herbert, The Other Man’s Country 3804 3805 3806 3807 3808 3809 3810 3811 EUROPE DENMARK, NORWAY AND SWEDEN Bain, R. N., Scandinavia: A Political History of Den- mark, Norway and Sweden 3812 Boyesen, H. H., The Story of Norway 3813 School History of Norway, Sweden and Denmark 3814 112 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. FRANCE Carlyle, Thomas, The French Revolution. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Death of Louis XV, Parliament of Par- is, States-General, Insurrection of Wom- en, etc 3815 ‘ ‘ 2. Feast of Pikes, Tuileries, Parliament 1st, the Marseillaise 3816 “ 3. September, Regicide, the Girond ins, Ter- ror, Civil War 3817 “ The French Revolution. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. From the Death of Louis XV., Tuil- eries 3818 “ 2. Varennes, the Guillotine, Terror, etc. 3819 Crane, E. A., The Second French Empire 3820 De Normand, Hugh, Stories from French History 3821 Guizot, F. P. G., History of France. 8 Vols. Vol. 1. Gaul Conquered by Julius Caesar, Char- lemagne, the Crusades, etc 3822 “ 2. The Hundred Years’ War, the States- General, Joan of Arc 3823 “ 3. Louis XI., Wars in Italy, Francis I., the Reformation, Henry II., etc 3824 “ 4. Henry IV. Mary de Medici, Cardinal Richelieu, Louis XIV., and Cardinal Mazarin 3825 “ 5. Last Years of Louis XIV., Louis XV., and the Seven Years’ War, Louis XVI., the Assembly of the States- General 3826 “ 6. The Constituent Assembly, and Louis XVI., the Civil War, the Directory. 3827 “ 7. The Consulate, the Empire under Na- poleon 3828 “ 8. Decline and Fall of Napoleon, Water- loo, Louis Philippe, the Revolution. 3829 “ History of France. 7 Vols. Vol. 1 3830 “ 2 3831 “ 3 3832 “ 4 3833 “ 5 3834 “ 6 3835 “ 7 3836 Ivitchin, G. W., History of France, 1624-1793 3837 Morris, W. 0. C., The French Revolution and First Empire 3838 Ropes, J. C., The Campaign of Waterloo :. 3839 HISTORY. **3 Scott, Sir Walter, Tales from French History 3840 Wendell, Barrett, France of Today 3841 GERMANY Baring-Gould, Sabine, The Story of Germany.' 3842 Gardiner, S. R., The Thirty Years’ War 3843 Howard, B. E., The German Empire 3844 Longman, F. W., The Seven Years’ War 3845 McCabe, J. IX, War Between Germany and France 3846 Schiller, Frederick von, The Thirty Years’ War. . . 3847 HUNGARY' Vambery, Arminius, The Story of Hungary 3848 ITALY Blashfield, E. H. and E. W., Italian Cities 2. Vols. Vol. 1. Ravenna, Siena, Florence, Parma 3849 “ 2. Perugia, Assisi, Rome, Mantua 3850 Gifford, Augusta, Italy, Her People & Their Story. . 3851 Sedgwick, H. IX, Short History of Italy 3852 NETHERLAN DS Motley, J. L., The Rise of the Dutch Republic. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Early History, Insurrection of Ghent, Philip II., William of Orange, Margaret of Parma, etc 3853 “ 2. Orange, Egmont and Horn, Invasion Under Alva, Orange in France, States Assembly 3854 “ 3. Internal Policy, Don John of Austria, Alexander of Parma 3855 “ The Rise of the Dutch Republic. 3 Vols. Volume 1 3856 “ 2... 3857 “ 3 3858 “ The Rise of the Dutch Republic. 3 Vols. Volume 1 3859 “ 2 3860 “ 3 3861 “ The United Netherlands. 4 Vols. Vol. 1 Murder of Orange, the Fall of Ghent, Parma’s Plan to Invade England, etc. 3862 Vol. 2. Military Plans, Martin Schenk, the Armada, 1588, etc 3863 “ 3. Maurice, Struggle against Spain, Barneveld, etc , 3864 1 14 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Motley, J. L., Volume 4. Battle of Nieuport, General Desire for Peace, etc 3865 “ The United Netherlands. 4 Vols. Vol. 1. 3866 Vol. 2 3867 “ 3 3868 “ 4 3869 “ The Life and Death of John of Barneveld. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. The Founder of the Republic, War Determined Upon, Weak- ness of the Rulers of France and England 3870 Vol. 2. The Alarm Sounded in German j, In- terview With Maurice, Imprisonment 'and Execution 3871 POLAND Brandes, George, Poland 3872 Morfil, W. R., The Story' of Poland. 3873 RUSSI A Bazan, Emilia P., Its People and its Literature 3874 Kennan, George, Siberia and the Exile System . 2 V ols. Vol. 1. From St. Petersburg to Perm. A Convict Barge, the Tomsk F orward- ing Prison, etc 3875 “ 2. Convict Mines in Kara, State Crim- inals, Condition of Prisons, etc 3876 Morfill, W. R., The Story of Russia 3877 Noble, Edmund, Russia and the Russians 3878 Rambaud, Alfred, A Popular History of Russia . 3 V ols. Vol. 1. The Primitive People, St. Vladimir A Iaroslaf, Ivan the Great, Ivan the Terrible, etc 3879 “ 2. Peter the Great, Catherine Land II., “ 3. Nicholas 1., the Crimean Warl853-’55, Alexander II., Turkish War, etc 3881 SPAIN Hale, E. E. and S., The Story of Spain 3882 Hume, M. A. S., The Story of Modern Spain 3883 Hutton, Edward, Cities of Spain 3884 Lane-Poole, Stanley, The Story of the Moors in Spain 3885 Prescott, W. H., The Reign of Ferdinand and Isa- bella. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Castile before the 15th Century, the Inquisition, the Moor- ish Wars, etc 3886 HISTORY. IT 5 Prescott, W. H., Vol. 2. Domestic Policy of Ferdinand and Isabella, War in Granada, etc. .. 3887 “ 3. Italian'War, Negotiations with France Columbus, etc 3888 “ The Eeign of Ferdinand and Isabella. 3 Vols. Vol. 1 3889 “ 2 3890 “ 3 3891 “ The Reign of Philip II. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Rise of the Spanish Empire, Early Days of Philip, English Alliance, Protestantism, etc 3892 “ 2. The Confederates, Freedom of Wor- ship, Duke of Alva, the Siege of Malta, etc 3893 “ 7. The Moors in Spain, War with the Turks, etc 3894 “ The Reign of Philip II. 3 Volumes. Vol. 1 . 3895 “ 2 3896 “ 3 3897 Robertson, William, The Reign of Charles V. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Progress 'of Society in Eufope, Birth of Charles V., etc. 3898 “ 2. Rivalry Between Charles V. & Francis I., War, Death of Luther, etc 3899 “ 3. The Pope & the Emperor, Abdication of the Emperor, etc 3900 “ The Reign of Charles V. 3 Volumes. Vol. 1. 3901 2 3902 “ 3 3903 SWITZERLAND Hug, Lina, and Richard Stead, The Story of Switzer- land 3904 Mackenzie, Harriet D. S., Switzerland 3905 “ “ “ “ 3906 McCrackan, W. D., Rise of the Swiss Republic 3907 TURKEY Menzies, S., The Ottoman Empire 3908 GREAT BRITAIN Creighton, Mandell, The Age of Elizabeth 3909 Dickens, Charles, A Child’s History of England 3910 Gairdner, James, The Houses of Lancaster & York.. 3911 Gardiner, S. R., The First Two Stuarts, and the Pur- itan Revolution 3912 n6 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Green, J. R., The English Peopie. 4 Vols. Vol. 1. Early England, Under Foreign Kings, the Charter, etc “ 2. The Monarchy, the Reformation “ 3. Puritan England, the Revolution “ 4. Revolution continued, Modern England “ Short History of the English People. 2 Vols. Voi. i : “ 2 Hale, Edward, The Fall of the Stuarts Hamilton, Lady Anne, Secret History of the Court of England. 2 Volumes. “ 1. Reign of George III. . . . “ 2. Reign of George IV . . . Hume, David, History of England. 6 Vols. Vol. 1. The Britons, Romans, Saxons, the Hep- tarchy, the Anglo-Saxons, William the Conqueror, etc “ 2. Henry III. to Edward III., Henry IV. to Richard III., etc “ 3. Henry VII., Henry VIII., the Reforma- tion in England, etc “ 4. Elizabeth, Affairs in Scotland, State of Ireland, Gunpowder Plot, etc “ 5. Charles I., State of the Kingdom, Meet- ing of the Long Parliament, Civil War, Oliver Cromwell, etc “ 6. Charles II., Act of Uniformity, James II., William and Mary, etc “ History of England. 5 Volumes. Vol. 1 “ 2 •“ 3'!!!!! “ 4 “ 5 “ History of England. 3 Volumes. Vol. 1 “ 2 “ 3.... 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928 3929 3930 3931 3932 3933 3934 3935 Jewett, S. 0., The Story of the Normans 3936 Lang, Andrew, History of Scotland. 4 Vols. Vol. 1. Roman Occupation to James V 3937 “ 2. Interregnum to James VI 3938 “ 3. Charles I. to William III 3939 “ 4. Massacre of Glencoe to End of Jacobi- tism, 1745 3940 Lingard, John, History of England. 12 Vols. Vol. 1. The Roman Invasion, the Britons, Re- ligion, Anglo-Saxons, Danes 3941 HISTORY. ii7 Lingard, Yol. 2. William the Conqueror, Henry I., Richard I. and the Third Crusade. . .. 3942 “ 3. King John, the Magna Charta, Hen- ry III., Edward I., Robert Bruce, etc 3943 “ 4. Edward III., War with Scotland, Henry IV., Statutes against the Lol- lards, etc 3944 “ 5. Henry V., Affairs of the Church, Hen- ry VII., etc 3945 “ 6. Henry VIII., State of Europe, Cardi- nal Wolsey, etc 3946 “ 7. Edward VI., Elizabeth, the Thirty- Nine Articles, etc 3947 “ 8. James I. Arrives in England, Union of England and Scotland, etc 3948 “ 9. Charles I., Rebellion in Ireland, the Commonwealth, etc 3949 “ 10. Cromwell Protector, Charles II., Great Fire in London, etc 3950 “11. The Character of the Cabal, the Duke of York, etc. 3951 “12. James II., Invasion by Argyle, Dis- pensing Power, etc 3952 Macaulay, T. B., History of England. 5 Volumes. Vol. 1. Under the Romans, the Saxons, the Norman Conquest, Population 1685, etc 3953 “ 2. James II., State of Scotland, William, Prince of Orange, Civil War, etc 3954 “ 3. William and Mary Crowned, State of Ireland, Bill of Rights, etc 3955 “ 4. William III. in Ireland, Foreign Policy of William III., etc 3956 “ 5. Plots against the Life of William IIP, Distress of the People, etc 3957 History of England. 5 Volumes. Vol. 1 “ 2 “ 3 “ 4 3958 3959 3960 3961 3962 History of England. 3 Volumes. Vol. 1 ' “ 2 “ 3 3963 3964 3965 ii8 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. McCarthy, Justin, A History of Our Own Times. 2 Vols Vol. 1. Death of William IV., Queen Victoria Crowned, Disraeli, Palmerston, Glad- stone, the Crimean War, etc 3966 “ 2. The Sepoy, the Civil War in America, the F enian Movements, Trades-Union, the Congress of Berlin, dtc 3967 “ A History of Our Own Times. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 3968 “ 2 3969 “ A History of Our Own Times. 5 Vols. Vol. 1. Accession of Victoria to End of Cri- mean War 3970 “ 2. Indian Mutiny to Congress of Berlin. 3971 “ 3. 1880 to Diamond Jubilee 3972 “ 4. Diamond Jubilee to 1899 3973 “ 5. 1899 to Accession of Edward VII 3974 “ The Epoch of Reform 3975 Moberly, C. E., The Early Tudors, Henry VII., Hen- ry VIII..' 3976 Morris, E. E., The Age of Anne 3977 “ “ “ “ 3978 “ “ The Early Hanoverians 3979 Stephenson, Henry T., Shakespeare’s London 3980 Stone, A. P., A History of England 3981 Strickland, Agnes, Tales from English History 3982 Stubbs, William, The Early Plantagenets 3983 Thalheimer, M. E., A History of England 3984 Warburton, William, Edward III 3985 IRELAND Cusack, Mary F., The Present Case of Ireland 3986 Moore, Thomas, The History of Ireland. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1. Celtic Origin of People, Earliest Su- perstitions, St. Patrick, Schools in Tenth Century, etc 3987 “ 2. King John, Henry III., Henry VII., “ The History of Ireland; 2 Vols. Vol. 1 . . . 3989 2... 3990 O’Reilly, Bernard, The Cause of Ireland 3991 Savage, John, ’98 and ’48 the Modern Revolutionary History 3992 Smith, Goldwin, Irish History and the Irish Question 3993 HISTORY . ug GENERAL HISTO RY Allen, E. A., History of Civilization. 4 Volumes. Vol. 1. Early Geological Periods, Men of the River Drift, Cave Men, Early Man in Europe and America 3994 “ 2. Races of Men, Ancient Society, Religion, Ancient Egypt, Semites, etc 3995 “ 3. Primitive Arians, Greek and Roman Civilization, Aryan Religion etc 3996 “ 4. Discoveries, Modem Europe and Amer- ica, Social & Political Institutions, etc. 3997 Anderson, J. J., Manual of General History 3998 Anderson, R. E., The Story of Extinct Civilizations. . 3999 Bulfinch, Thomas, Legends of Charlemagne. 4000 Church, R. W., The Beginning of the Middle Ages. .. . 4001 Clare, I. S., The World’s History. 8 Volumes. Volume 1. Ancient Oriental Nations 4002 “ 2. Ancient Oriental Nations & Greece. 4003 “ 3. Alexander’s Empire & Roman Empire 4004 “ 4. Medieval History 4005 “ 5. The Middle Ages & the Reformation 4006 “ 6. English Reformation to Fall of Pol- and 4007 “ 7. American Revolution to the Present. 4008 “ 8. Recent Foreign History 4009 Coe, Fannie E., Modern Europe 4010 Cox, G. W.. The Crusades 4011 Crane, Stephen, Great Battles of the World 4012 Creasy, Sir Edward, Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World 4013 u u u a u t y c 4 . 0 ^ 4 . Hallam, Henry, Europe During the Middle Ages. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. The Continent 4015 “ 2. England and Notes 4016 Johnson, A. H., The Normans in Europe 4017 Larned, J. N., History for Ready Reference. 6 Vols. Vol. 1. A to Electors 4018 “ 2. Electrical to Jerusia 4019 “ 3. Ges Tribes to New World 4020 “ 4. New York to Taprobane 4021 “ 5. Tapurians to Zyp 4022 “• 6. Recent History, 1894-1901, A to Z. . . 4023 Lee, Ida, The Coming of the British to Australia. . . . 4024 Seebohn, Frederic, The Era of the Protestant Revo- lution 4025 Steele, J. and E., History of Ancient, Mediaeval and Modern Peoples 4026 120 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Stevenson, R. L., A Footnote to History 4027 Strickland, Agnes, True Stories from Ancient His- tory 4028 “ True Stories from Modern History. 4029 Twombley, A. S., Hawaii and Its People. . 4030 Wallace, A. R., The Wonderful Century 4031 Wilberforce, Achibald, The Capitals of the Globe. . 4032 POETRY AND DRAMA. 121 Poetry and Drama. Alexander, Francesca, The Hidden Servants 403B Arnold, Matthew, Poems 4034 Bangs, J. K., The Bicyclers 4035 Browning, Elizabeth B., Poetical Works. 2 Volumes. Volume 1. A Drama of Exile, etc 4036 “ 2. The Seraphim, etc.. 4037 Bryant, W. C., Poetical Works 4038 “ “ “ “ 4039 “ “ The Family Library of Poetry and Song 4040 Burns, Robert, Poetical Works 4041 “ “ “ “ 4042 “ “ “ “ 4043 Byron, Lord, Poems and Dramas 4044 Campbell, Thomas, Complete Poetical Works 4045 Campbell, W. L., Civitas 4046 Carleton, Will, City Ballads 4047 “ “ City Legends 4048 “ “ Farm Legends 4019 “ “ V “ 4050 “ Farm Festivals 4051 “ “ Over the Hills to the Poor-House. . .. 4052 “ “ Rhymes of Our Planet. 4053 Chaucer, Geoffrey, Poetical Works 4054 Colcord, Millie, For thy Name’s Sake, and Other Poems 4055 Coleridge, S. T., Poetical Works 4056 Curry, S. S., Classic Selections 4057 Dante, Alighieri, The Divine Comedy 4058 Dunbar, Paul L., Poems of Cabin and Field 4059 Eliot, George, The Legend of Juba-1, & Other Poems. 4060 “ “ Poems, and Life 4061 Field, Eugene, A Little Book of Western Verse 4062 Goethe, J. W. Von, Faust 4063 “ “ Shorter Poems 4064 Goldsmith, Oliver, Poems and Plays 4065 Great Plays, by Marlowe, Johnson, Sheridan and Others 4066 Greek Dramas,' by Aeschylus, Sophocles and Others. .. 4067 Harte, Bret, Complete Poems 4068 Hay, John, Poems 4069 Heine, Heinrich, Poems and Ballads 4070 Henry, Mrs. S. M. I., Victoria, With Other Poems 4071 122 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Holland, J. G., Kathrina 4072 “ “ The Marble Prophecy, etc 4073 “ ££ Bitter-Sweet 4074 Holmes, O. W., Complete Poetical Works 4075 Homer, The Iliad 4076 “ ££ ££ 4077 “ ££ ££ 4078 ££ The Odyssey 4079 ££ ££ “ 4080 ££ •• ££ 4081 Hood, Thomas, Complete Poetical Works. 3 Volumes. Vol. 1. Lays of Humanity, Sonnets, Humorous 4082 ££ 2. Fairies, Ballads, Odes, Legends, etc. . . . 4083 ££ 3. Lamia, Comic Melodies, Miscellaneous. . 4084 ££ Poems 4085 Hows, J. W. S., Golden Leaves from American Poets 4086 ££ ££ Golden Leaves from British and Amer- ican Dramatic Poets 4087 Ingelow, Jean, Poetical Works 4088 Keats, John, Poetical Works 4089 Longfellow, H. W., The Song of Hiawatha 4090 ££ ££ ££ ££ ££ 4091 ££ ££ Evangeline 4092 ££ ££ Poetical Works. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1. Voices of the Night, Translations, etc. 4093 ££ 2. The Belfry of Bruges, etc 4094 Meredith, Owen, Lucile 4095 Miller, C. G., Chihuahua 4096 Milton, John, Poetical Works . 4097 Moore, Thomas, Poetical Works 4098 Muloch, Dinah M., Poems 4099 Ossian, Poems. Translated by James Macpherson . . 4100 Page, C. H., The Chief American Poets. 4101 Poe, E. A., Poems 4102 Pope, Alexander, Complete Poetical Works 4103 Riley, James Whitcomb, Morning 4104 ££ ££ ££ Neghborly Poems 4105 ££ ££ ££ , The Boys of the Old Glee Club . 4106 Ryan, A. J., Poems 4107 Saxe, John Godfrey, Clever Stories 4108 Schiller, J. C. F. von, Poems 4109 Scott, Sir Walter, Poetical Works 4110 “ “ “ “ 4111 “ “ “ “ 4112 Shakespeare, William, Complete W 7 orks. 6 Vols. Vol. 1. Comedies: The Tempest, Two Gentle- men of Verona, The Merry Wives of POETRY AND DRAMA. 123 Shakespeare, William, Volume 1 Continued Windsor, Measure for Measure, The Comedy of Errors, Much Ado About Nothing, Love's Labor’s Lost 4113 “ 2. Comedies: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, The Taming of the Shrew, All’s Well That Ends Well, Twelfth Night, The Winter’s Tale. . . . 4114 “ 3. Histories and Poems: King John, King Richard II., King Henry IV., King Henry V., King Henry VI., Parti 4115 “ 4. Histories and Poems: King Henry VI, Part II. and III., King Richard III., King Henry VIII., Venus and Adonis, Rape of Lucrece, Sonnets, Miscellane- ous Poems 4116 “ 5. Tragedies: Troilus andCressida, Cori- olanus, Titus Andronicus, Romeo and Juliet, Timon of Athens, Julius Cae- sar, Macbeth 4117 “ 6. Tragedies: Hamlet, King Lear, Othel- lo, A 11 phony and Cleopatra, Cymbe- line, Pericles 4118 “ Complete Works. 1 Vol 4119 u a u u 4120 Shelley, Percy B., Complete Poetical Works 4121 Spenser, Edmund, Poetical Works 4122 Stedman, E. C., A Victorian Anthology 4122% “ “ An American Anthology 4123 Stevenson, R. L., Complete Poems 4124 Stoddard, R. H., The Late English Poets 4125 Taylor, Henry, Philip Van Artevelde 4126 Tennison, Alfred, Complete Works 4127 “ “ Enoch Arden 4128 “ “ Locksley Hall 4129 Tupper, M. F., Proverbial Philosophy 4130 “ “ “ “ 4131 Wells, Carolyn, Satire Anthology 4132 “ “ Nonsence Anthology 4133 Whittier, J. G., Poetical Works 4134 “ “ Miriam, and Other Poems 4135 “ “ Tent on the Beach and Other Poems 4136 Wilbur, Jennie A., Songs of the West 4137 Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, How Salvator Won 4138 124 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Religion. BIBLES AND PRAYER BOOKS The Holy Bible, Containing Old and New Testament English 4139 German 4140 Norwegian. . 4141 Swedish 4142 The New Testament (Catholic) 4143 Protestant 4144 Player Book (Catholic) 4145 CATH OLIC DEVOTIONAL Boudreaux, F. J., The Happiness of Heaven 4146 Challoner, I)r., The Catholic Christian 4147 De Liguori Alphonsus, The Great Means of Salvation 4148 Faber, F. W., Growth in Holiness 4149 Furniss, J., Tracts for Spiritual Reading 4150 Gaume, Monsignor, The Sign of the Cross 4151 Noethen, Theodore, Short Meditations 4152 Phillipe, Brother, Meditations on Our Last End . . 4153 Roeggl, Aloysius, The Confessional 4154 The Voice of Jesus Suffering 4155 DOCTRINAL Capel, Monsignor, “Catholic” 4156 Conway, John, Rational Religion 4157 Darras, M. L’AbbeJ. E., History of the Catholic Church 4158 De Chateaubriand, Viscount, The Genius of Christi- anity 4159 Di Bruno, Joseph, Catholic Belief 4160 Donovan, John, The Ca techism of the Council of Trent 4161 Edward, Henry, The Eternal Priesthood 4162 Faber, F. W., The Creator and the Creature 4163 Gibbons, Cardinal, The Faith of Our Fathers 4164 Gother, John, The Papist Misrepresented, and Truly Represented 4165 Kinkhead, T. L., Explanation of the Baltimore Cate- chism 4166 RELIGION. 125 Langdon, Henry, Conferences of Key. Pere Lacordaire 4167 Manning, Cardinal, The Vatican Council 4168 “ “ Sin and Its Consequences 4169 “ “ Temporal Mission of the Holy Ghost 4170 “ “ The Internal Mission of the Holy Ghost 4171 Mannock, John, The Poor Man’s Catechism 4172 Milner, John, The End of Religious Controversy 4173 “ “ “ “ ' 4174 Nieremberg, Eusebius, A Treatise on the Difference Between Temporal and Eternal 4175 Pa\nter, H. M., The Holy Life 4176 “ “ The Holy Supper 4177 “ “ The Holy Death 4178 “ “ The Holy Resurrection 4179 Ricards, J. D., Aletheia, or the Outspoken Truth 4180 HISTO RY Balmes, J, European Civilization 4181 Bonaventure, St., Jesus Christ 4182 Businger, L. C., Christ in His Church 4183 Hagar, G. J., What the World Believes 4184 Hergenrother, Joseph, A Vindication of the Prerog- atives of the Holy See 4185 Ireland, Archbishop, The Church and Modern Socie- ty. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 4186 “ 2 4187 Schuster, I., Illustrated Bible History 4188 Spalding, Archbishop, Miscellanea, Reviews, etc 4189 “ The Protestant Reformation. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. In Germany and Switzerland 4190 “ 2. In England, Ireland, Scotland, Neth- erlands, France & Northern Europe 4191 Thebaud, A. J., The Church and the Gentile World. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Mosaic Dispensations to Chris- tianity in Arabia 4192 Vol. 2. In Asia, Rome, Western Europe etc . . . 4193 Vaughan, Archbishop, The Life and Labors of St. Thomas of Aquin 4194 Wiseman, Cardinal, Fabiola, or the Church of the Cat- acombs 4195 LECTURES AND SERMONS Burke, T. N., Lectures and Sermons 4196 Five Minute Sermons for Low Mass 4197 Gibbons, Cardinal, Our Christian Heritage 4198 i ( a ce <( (( 4199 126 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Lambert, L. A., Notes on Ingersoll 4200 “ “ Tactics of Infidels 4201 Merrick, D. A., Sermons for the Times 4202 O’Reilly, Bernard, True Men as We Need Them 4203 Preston, T. S., The Sacred Year 4204 “ “ Christ and the Church 4205 Thomas, Father, The Sufferings of Jesus 4206 Walworth, C., The Gentle Skeptic 4207 Weninger, F. X., Short and Practical Sermons 4208 “ << n a 4209 Wiseman, Cardinal, Twelve Lectures on the Connec- tion Between Science and Revealed Religi- on. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Languages, Natural History of the Human Race, Natural Sci- ence, etc 4210 Yol. 2. Early History, Archaeology, etc 4211 MISCELLANEOUS Alexander, Mrs., II Libro d’Oro 4212 Bugg, Lelia H., The Correct Thing for Catholics 4213 Burnett, P. H., The Path Which Led a Protestant Lawyer to the Catholic Church 4214 Clark, J. C. C., Man and His Divine Father 4215 Deschamps, Cardinal, An Appeal and a Defiance 4216 Egan, M. F., Disappearance of John Longworthy. . . . 4217 McDonnell, M., The Echo. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1 4218 “ 2 4219 “ The Echo. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1 4220 “ 2 4221 Manning, Cardinal, The Little Flowers of St. Francis of Assisi 4222 Vahey, J. W., Julia or Sister Agnes 4223 Vallejo, J. L, The Life of Saint Joseph 4224 P R OTEST A NT COMMENTS AND EXPLANATIONS Barber, J. W., The Bible Looking-Glass 4225 Bible Readings for the Home Circle 4226 Cruden, Alexander, A Complete Concordance to the Holy Scriptures 4227 Dods, Marcus, The Gospel of St. John. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Chapters 1 to 11 4228 “ 2. “ 11 to 21 4229 “ “ The Gospel of St. John. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4230 “ 2 4231 RELIGION. 127 Geikie, Cunningham, Hours with the Bible. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. From the Creation to the Judges. . . “ 2. From Samson to Hezekiah “ 3. From Manasseh to Malachi. Guthrie, Thomas, The Gospel in Ezekiel Hall, Isaac H., Revised Testament and History of Revision Peloubet, F. N. and M. A., Notes on Sunday School Lessons. 1886 “ “ “ '1887..., 1888 “ “ “ 1892 Robinson, Edward, A Harmony of the Gospels in Greek a u a a a Sampson, Ezra, Beauties of the Bible Smith, Uriah, Thoughts on the Book of Daniel “ “ Thoughts on the Books of Daniel and Revelation Trench, R. C., Notes on the Parables of Our Lord. . . 4232 4233 4234 4235 4236 4237 4238 4239 4240 4241 4242 4243 4244 4245 4246 EVIDENCES Barnes, Albert, The Evidences of Christianity ... 4247 Butler, Joseph, Analogy of Religion 4248 Doddridge, Philip, Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul 4249 God in His World 4250 James, Henry, Society, the Redeemed Form of Man.. 4251 Jenyns, Soame, A Reply to Infidels 4252 Leifchild, J., A Selection of Remarkable Facts 4253 Nelson, David, The Cause and Cure of Infidelity 4254 Paley, William, Natural Theology 4255 The Divine Plan of the Ages 4256 The Time is at Hand 4257 Thy Kingdom Come , 4258 Vallings, J. F., Jesus Christ the Divine Man 4259 HISTO RY Aquilar, Grace, The Women of Israel 4260 Belcher, Joseph, Baptist Pulpit of the United States 4261 Cobbett, William, The Reformation in England and Ireland 4262 Davis, John D., A Dictionary of the Bible 4263 Draper, J. W., History of the Conflict Between Reli- gion and Science 4264 Edwards, Jonathan, The Work of Redemption 4265 128 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Farrar, F. W., The Early Days of Christianity 4266 Fisher, G. P., The Beginnings of Christianity 4267 “ “ The Reformation 4268 Haftzler, H. B., Moody in Chicago. . . 4269 Houghton, W. R., The World’s Parliament of Reli- gions . . . , 4270 Kitto, John, An Illustrated History of the Holy Bible 4271 Matheson, George, The Distinctive Messages of the Old Religions 4272 Mortimer, F. L., The Captivity of Judah 4273 New Testament History 4274 Old Testament History 4275 Schonberg, Cotta Family, the 4276 a a “ ... 4277 “ “ “ ! . . . . . . . . . 4278 Sketches of the Women of Christendom 4279 Smith, William, A Dictionary of the Bible 4280 “ “ - “ “ 4281 “ u “ “ “ 4282 Tiffany, Osmond, Sacred Biography and History — 4283 Ward, J. H., The Church in Modern Society 4284 Worcester, Rev. Elwood, The Book of Genesis in the Light of Modern Knowledge 4285 Young Men of the Bible 4286 LECTURES AND SERMONS Beecher, H. W., Lectures to Young Men - 4287 Brooks, Phillips, The Candle of the Lord, and Other Sermons 4288 Chapman, J. W., “And Peter” 4289 Drummond, Professor, Addresses 4290 Kingsley, Charles, Sermons for the Times 4291 Moody, D. L., The Way to God 4292 “ “ “ “ 4293 “ “ Twelve Select Sermons 4294 Murray, Andrew, Absolute Surrender 4295 Outlines of Sermons 4296 “ “ on the Old Testament 4297 “ “ on the New Testament 4298 Swing, David, Motives of Life 4299 Wendling, G. R., Ingersollism 4300 Worcester, H. A., Sermons on the Lord’s Prayer 4301 MISSIONS AND MISSIONARIES Cady, Charles, Life and Times of Rev. Robert Dob- bins 4302 RELIGION. I2Q Cummings, Asa, A Memoir of Rev. Edward Payson. . . . 4303 Haldane, Robert and J. A., Memoirs of 4304 Haley, YV. D., Words for the Workers 4305 “ “ “ “ 4306 Harris, John, The Great Commission 4307 Home Evangelization 4308 Lambert, J. C., The Romance of Missionary Herbism. 4309 Nettleton, Asahel, The Night of Toil. . . . 4310 Robert Dawson, or the Brave Spirit 4311 Ryder, William, Life and Experiences 4312 Sargent, John, A Memoir of Rev. Henry Martyn 4313 Safford, Mrs. Daniel, Memoir of Daniel Safford 4314 Van Lennep, M. E., Memoirs of 4315 Waddington, John, John Penry, the Pilgrim Martyr. 4316 Welsh, William. Women Helpers in the Church 4317 W orcester, S. M., Life of Samuel. Worcester. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. 4318 “ 2 4319 PRACTICAL PIETY Alexander, Archibald, Thoughts on Religious Ex- perience 4320 Arthur, T. S., Steps Toward Heaven 4321 Bunyan, John, Pilgrim’s Progress 4322 “ “ “ “ 4323 “ “ “ “ 4324 “ “ “ “ 4325 “ “ “ “ 4326 Cheever, William, Practical Evangelism 4327 Clark, R. W., The Christian’s Gift 4328 Crossley, H T., Practical Talks on Important Themes 4329 Cuyler, T. L , Well-Built 4330 Daughters of the Cross 4331 Dix, Morgan, A Manual of Prayers 4332 Evans, Thomas, Examples of Youthful Piety 4333 Foster, H. 0., Songs Sacred and Devotional. . 4334 Girding on the Armor 4335 Gordon, A. J., The Ministry of the Spirit 4336 Hale, E. E., Ten Times One is Ten 4337 Headley, J. T., The Sacred Mountains 4338 Headley, P. C., The Harvest Work of the Holy Spirit 4339 Helps by the Way 4340 Hodge, Charles, Way of Life 4341 Hoyt, Wayland, Gleams from Paul's Prison 4342 McGovern, John, The Golden Censer 4343 Meyer, F. B., Light on Life’s Duties 4344 “ “ “ “ “ 4345 130 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Miller, J. R., Making the Most of Life 4346 Moody, I). L., Heaven, Where It Is 4347 “ “ Secret Power 4348 “ “ Sovereign Grace 4349 Murray, Andrew, The Ministry of Intercession 4350 Owen, Griffith, Materials for Thought 4351 Pike, J. G., Persuasives to Early Piety 4352 Prime, S. I , Power of Prayer 4353 Pulpit Prayers . 4354 Richards, Elizabeth B., The Heart’s Streamlet 4355 Riggle, H. M., The Kingdom of God 4356 “ “ “ “ “ 4357 Romaine, William, Letters of 4358 Rutty, Jennie C., Mothers’ Counsels to Their Sons . 4359 Schell, W. G., The Better Testament 4360 “ “ “ “ “ 4361 Smith, Hannah W., The Christian’s Secret of a Happy Life 4362 a « “ “ “ “ 4363 Smith, J. H., Gilead 4364 Spencer, I. S., A Pastor’s Sketches 4365 Spurgeon, C. H., All of Grace 4366 u u u (( 4367 The Cross-Bearer 4368 The Peep of Day 4369 The Story of a Pocket Bible 4370 Trine, R. W., In Tune with the Infinite 4371 “ “ What All the World’s A-Seeking 4372 Van Dyke, J. S., From Gloom to Gladness 4373 W. E. B., Jesus is Coming 4374 White, Ellen G., Christ’s Object Lessons 4375 “ “ “ “ “ 4376 Whittle, D. W., Gospel Pictures 4377 MISCELLANEOUS American Unitarian Tracts 4378 “ “ “ Continued 4379 “ “ “ “ 4380 Barclay, Robert, An Apology for the True Christian Divinity 4381 Baxter, Richard, A Call to the Unconverted 4382 Beginning and Growth of Christian Life 4383 Besant, Annie, The Ancient Wisdom 4384 “ “ Man and His Bodies 4385 “ “ The Path of Discipleship 4386 Blavatsky, H. P., Key to Theosophy 4387 Boyd, Robert, The WWld’s Hope 4388 RELIGION. I3 1 Buck, J. D., Nature and Aim of Theosophy 4389 Buckle*, J. M., Christian Science and Other Supersti- tions 4390 Byers, J. W., The Grace of Healing 4391 By rum, E. E., Divine Healing of Soul and Body 4392 “ “ The Secret of Salvation 4393 u a u i i i i 4394 Clarkson. Thomas, A Portraiture of Quakerism 4395 De Gasparin, Agenor, Happiness 4396 Dick, Thomas, The Christian Philosopher 4397 Eddy, Mary Baker G., Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. . . . 4398 “ “ “ “ “ 4399 “ “ Miscellaneous Writings 4400 Evans, Thomas, Account of the Society of Friends . . . 4401 Hall, Rev. John, The Earthly Footprints of Our Ris- en Lord 4402 Henderson, T. J., The Future Life 4403 Household Reading 4404 James, Henry, The Secret of Swedenborg 4405 Jones, Sam, Anecdotes and Illustrations 4406 Judge, William Q., The Ocean of Theosophy 4407 Moody, D. L., Anecdotes and Illustrations 4408 More, Hannah, Stories for the Young 4409 Olcott, H. S., Old Diary Leaves. 4410 Our Parish 4411 Prasad, Rama, Nature’s Finer Forces 4412 Sinnett, A. P., Esoteric Buddhism 4413 “ “ The Growth of the Soul 4414 “ “ The Occult World 4415 Swedenborg, Emanuel, The True Christian Religion . 4416 “ “ The Apocalypse Revealed 4417 “ “ Heaven and Hell 4418 The Spirit of the Pilgrims, 1832 4419 “ “ “ 4420 White, Mrs. E. G., Steps to Christ 4421 “ “ a 4422 Wilberforce, William, Religious Svstem of Chris- tians 4423 “ “ tt << 4424 Williams, Henry L., Boys of the Bible 4425 Yeager, George, The Garden of Eden 4426 132 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Science. Folsom, Moses, Treasures of Science 4427 Routledge, Robert, A History of Science 4428 Snyder, Carl, New Conceptions in Science 4429 MORAL Avebury, Lord, The Pleasures of Life 4430 Baldwin, J. M., The Story of the Mind 4431 Baker, James EL, Elementary Psychology 4432 Black, Hugh, The Practice of Self-Culture 4433 Call, Annie P., The Freedom of Life 4434 Dewey, John, Outlines of Ethics 4435 Fairchild, J. H., Moral Philosophy 4436 Great Work, The 4437 Hudson, T. J., The Law of Psychic Phenomena 4438 Huxley, Thomas H., Essays 4439 “ “ Darwiniana 4440 “ “ Evolution and Ethics 4441 “ “ Hume Essays 4442 “ “ Man’s Place in Nature 4443 “ “ Method and Results 4444 “ “ Science and Education 4445 “ “ Science and Christian Tradition. 4446 “ “ Science and Hebrew Tradition. . 4447 “ “ Lay Sermons 4448 Lewes, G. H., History of Philosophy 4149 Quackenbos, J. D., Hypnotism in Mental and Moral Culture 4450 Spencer, Herbert, The Principles of Psychology. 3 Vols. Vol. 1. Data, Inductions, Synthesis 4451 Vol. 2. Special Analysis 4452 “ 3. General Analysis, Congruities, Corol- laries 4453 “ The Principles of Ethics. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Data, Inductions, Ethics of Individ- ual Life 4454 “ 2. Justice, Negative and Positive Be- neficence 4455 Washington, Booker T., Character Building 4456 Wayland, Francis, Elements of Moral Science 4457 SCIENCE 133 NATURAL Allen, Grant, The Story of the Plants 4458 Archibald, D., The Story of the Atmosphere 4459 Austin, Mary H., The Flock 4460 Beebe, C. W., The Bird 4461 Blanchan, Neltje, Nature’s Garden 4462 “ “ Bird Neighbors 4463 Burroughs, John, Ways of Nature 4464 “ “ Far and Near 4465 Chambers, G. F., The Story of the Weather 4466 Clodd, Edward, The Story of Primitive Man 4467 Comstock, J. L., Outlines of Geology 4468 Darwin, Charles, Variation of Animals and Plants. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1 4469 “ 2 4470 “ Coral Reefs 4471 “ Descent of Man 4472 “ The Expressions of the Emotions in Man and Animals 4473 “ The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species 4 47 4 “ Geological Observations 4475 “ Journal of Researches into Natural His- tory 4476 “ The Power of Movement in Plants 4477 “ The Origin of Species. 2Vols Vol. 1.. 4478 “ 2.. 4479 “ The Formation of Vegetable Mould Through the Action of Worms 4480 Dickerson, Mary C., The Frog Book 4481 Donnelly, Ignatius, Atlantis, the Antediluvian World 4482 “ “ “ “ “ 4483 “ “ Ragnarok, the Age of Fire and Gravel 4484 Dugmore, A. R., Bird Homes 4485 Emerson, A. I., Our Trees: Dow to Know Them 4486 Figuier, Louis, The Ocean World 4487 The Vegetable World 4488 “ “ The Insect World 4489 “ “ Reptiles and Birds 4490 “ “ <• “ 4491 “ “ Mammalia 4492 “ “ The Human Race 4493 “ “ The World Before the Deluge 4494 Flammarion, Camille, The Unknown 4495 “ “ Thunder and Lightning 4496 Gosse, P. H., Evenings at the Microscope 4497 “ “ a (i < ( 4498 134 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Gray, Alonzo, Elements of Natural Philosophy 4499 Gray, Asa, Lessons in Botany 4500 “ “ “ “ 4501 Grinnell, E. and J., Birds of Song and Story 4502 Guiot, Arnold, The Earth and Man 4503 Haddon, A. C., The Study of Man 4504 Haeckel, Ernst, The Evolution of Man. 2 Vols. Vo!. 1 4505 “ 2 4506 Harwood, W. S., New 7 Creations in Plant Life .. . 4507 “ “ “ “ “ “ 4508 Henshaw, Julia W., Mountain Wild Flowers of America 4509 Herrick, F. H , The Home Life of Wild Birds 4510 Hickson, Sidney J., The Story of Life in the Seas 4511 Holland, W. J., The Butterfly Book 4512 Humboldt, Alexander von, Cosmos. 5 Vols. Vol. 1. Natural Phenomena. Comets, Earth- quakes, etc 4513 “ 2. The Ancients’ View r s of Nature, Discov- eries in the Heavens, etc 4514 “ 3. The Stars, Number and Motion, etc. . . 4515 “ 4. The Solar Region, Sun Spots, etc 4516 “ 5. Size and Form of the Earth, Gas- Springs, etc 4517 V iews of Nature 4518 “ “ “ 4519 Jefferies, Richard, The Open Air 4520 Jones, William, The Ocean and Some of Its Inhabit- ants * 4521 Jordan-Evermann, American Food and Game Fishes 4522 Ivnox, T. N., Life Below the Surface 4523 Lange, D., How to Know the Wild Birds of Minnesota 4524 Le Conte, Joseph, Evolution 4525 Long, W. J., Northern Trails 4526 McCarthy, Eugene, Familiar Fish 4527 McMillan, Conway, The Metasperriue of the Minnesota Valley 4528 Mivart, St. George, The Groundwork of Science 4529 Munro, John, The Story of the British Race 4530 Nicholson, H. A., Ancient Life-History of the Earth. 4531 Peckham, G. W. andE. G., Wasps, Social and Solitary 4532 Roberts, C. G. I)., Red Fox 4533 Rogers, Jclia E., The Tree Book 4534 Sargent, C. S., Manual of the Trees of North America 4535 Schmidt, Oscar, The Doctrine of Descent and Dar- winism 4.536 Seeley, H. G., The Story of the Earth 4537 SCIENCE 135 Vol. 1. Data, Induct ions, Evolution of Life 4538 “ 2. Morphological and Physiological Development, Laws of Multiplication. 4539 Tyndall, John, New Fragments 4540 “ Forms of Water in Clouds, Rivers, Ice and Glaciers 4541 “ Fragments of Science. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4542 “ 2 . .. 4543 “ Hours of Exercise 4544 “ Sound 4545 Yelvin, Ellen, Behind the Scenes with Wild Animals 4546 “ “ Wild-Animal Celebrities 4547 Wells, D. A., Natural Philosophy 4548 Wilkinson, F., The Story of the Cotton Plant 4549 Winchell, Alexander, Sketches of Creation 4550 “ “ “ “ 4551 “ Walks and Talks in the Geological Field 4552 Wright, G. F., Man and the Glacial Period 4553 Youmans, E. L., Correlation and Conservation of Forces 4554 ASTRONOMY Chambers, G. F., The Story of Eclipses 4555 u “ The Story of the Solar System 4556 “ “ The Story of the Stars 4 557 Flournoy, T., From India to the Planet Mars 4558 Martin, Martha E., The Friendly Stars . . /. 4559 Morse, Edward S., Mars and Its Mystery 4 560 Newcomb, Simon, Sidelights on Astronomy.. 4561 Parker, W. H., Familiar Talks on Astronomy 4 562 Proctor, R. A., Plurality of Worlds 4 563 Serviss, Garrett P., The Moon 4564 Young, C. A., The Sun 4 565 MECHANICS Beard, I). C., The American Boy’s Handy Book 4566 Dana, E. S., Elementary Mechanics 4567 Goodeye, T. M., Principles of Mechanics 4 568 “ “ The Elements of Mechanism 4569 Iles, George, Flame, Electricity and the Camera. . .. 4 570 Kelt-Frost, The Mechanic’s Text-Book 4571 Lanza, Gaetano, Applied Mechanics 4 572 Rose, Joshua, Mechanical Drawing Self-Taught 4 573 The Amateur Mechanic’s Workshop . 4574 Wood, De Volson, Principles of Elementary Mechan- ics 4575 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. '36 PHYSIOLOGY AND HYGIENE Cavanaegh, Francis, The Care of the Body 4576 Chittenden, R. H., The Nutrition of Man 4577 Conn, H. W., The Story of Germ Life. ... 4578 “ “ The Story of the Living Machine 4579 Cutter, Calvin, Anatonyy, Physiology and Hygiene.. 4580 Dadd, G. H., American Reformed Horse Book. ... 4581 Dalton, J. C., Physiology and Hygiene 4582 Eassie, William, Healthy Houses 4583 Francine, A. P., Pulmonary Tuberculosis 4584 Hancock, H. I., Physical Culture Life 4585 Jarvis, Edward, Practical Physiology 4586 Lectures on Health 4587 Palmer, C. F., Inebriety, Its Source, Prevention and Cure „ 4588 Spinney, W. A., Health Through Self-Control 4589 Steele, J. D., Hygienic Physiology 4590 Treloar, Albert, The Science of Muscular Develop- ment . . . 4591 SOCIAL AND POLITICAL Andrews, William, Punishments in the Olden Time. . 4592 Bancroft, Charles, Footprints of Time 4593 Bascom, John, Social Theory 4594 Blackstone, William, (Cooley’s Edition) Commentar- ies on the Laws of England. 2 Vols. Vol. 1. Study of Law, Rights of Persons, Rights of Things 4595 “ 2. Private Wrongs, Trial by Jury, Public Wrongs, Criminal Law 4596 Blair, H. W., The Temperance Movement 4597 Booth, Maud B., After Prison— What? 4598 Brooks, J. G., The Social Unrest 4599 Bryce, James, The American Commonwealth. 2 Yols. Vol. 1. The President, National Government, “ 2. Party System, Public Opinion, Social Institutions, etc 4601 “* The American Commonwealth. 2 Vols. Volume 1 4602 “ 2 :... 4603 Cable, G. W.; The Silent South and the Convict Lease System 4604 Coffin, E. G., Speeches and Essays 4605 Con ant, Charles A., History of Modern Banks of Issue 4606 Corporations and Public Welfare Addresses 4607 SCIENCE. J 37 Dawson, W. H., The German Workman 4608 De Tocqueville, Alexis, Democracy in America 4609 Democracy in America. 2 Yols. Yol. 1 4610 “ 2 4611 Drahms, August, The Criminal 4612 Ellis, Havelock, Man and Woman 4613 Ely, R. T. , The Labor Movement in America 4614 Socialism and Social Reform 4615 “ Monopolies and Trusts 4616 Ely-Wicker, Elementary Principles of Economics 4617 Ferri, Enrico, Criminal Sociology 4618 Gladden, Washington, Tools and the Man 4619 Hall, P. F., Immigration and Its Effects Upon the United States 4620 Harding, Burcham, Brotherhood: Nature’s Law 7 4621 “ “ “ “ 4622 Henderson, C R., Social Elements 4623 Jenks, J. W., The Trust Problem 4624 Kellor, Frances A., Out of Work 4625 Laughlin, J. S., Industrial America 4626 Lombroso, (Iesar, The Female Offender 4627 London, Jack, The War of the ( 'lasses 4628 Marques, A , The Human Aura. 4629 Morris, Charles, The Ary an Race 4630 Morrison, W. I)., Juvenile Offenders 4631 Nordau, Max, Degeneration 4632 Nordhoff, Charles, Politics for Young Americans 4633 “ “ “ “ “ 4634 Painter, F. V. N., A History of Education 4635 Parsons, Frank, The Heart of the Railroad Problem. 4636 Parsons, Theophilus, Personal and Property Rights of a Citizen of the United States 4637 Rosenkranz, J. K. F., The Philosophy of Education. . 4638 Ryan, J. A., A Living Wage 4639 Spencer, Herbert, Education 4640 “ “ Social Statics 4641 “ “ The Study of Sociology 4642 “ “ First Principles 4643 “ “ The Principles of Sociologv. 5 Vols Yol. 1 . Data 4644 “ 2. Inductions, Domestic Institutions. .. . 4645 “ 3. Ceremonial and Political Institutions. 4646 “ 4. Political and Ecclesiastical Institutions 4647 “ 5. Professional and Industrial Institu- tions 4648 Steiner, E. A., On the Trail of the Immigrant 4649 Sullivan, Sir Edward, Protection to Native Industry 4650 138 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Taft, W. H., Four Aspects of Civic Duty 4651 Ward, Lester F., Outlines of Sociology 4652 Ward, Mrs. H. 0., Social Ethics and Society Duties . 4653 Washington, Booker, T., Tuskegee and Its People. . . 4654 Webster, W. C., General History of Commerce 4655 Wines, F. H., Punishment and Reformation 4656 “ “ “ “ 4657 Wright, Carroll D., The Battles of Labor 4658 Wyckoff, Walter C., The Workers: The East 4659 “ “ The Workers: The West 4660 MEDICAL WORKS HOSPITAL LIBRARY: NOT FOR CIRCULATION. Bosworth, F. H., Diseases of the Nose and Throat. 2 Volumes. Volume 1 4661 “ 2 4662 Bradford-Lovett, Orthopedic Surgery 4663 Dennis, F. S., System of Surgery. 4 Vols. Vol. 1. . . . 4664 “ 2.... 4665 “ 3.... 4666 “ 4.... 4667 Fuchs, Ernest, Ophthalmology 4668 Gould, G. M., Illustrated Dictionary of Medicine. . . . 4669 Gray, Henry, Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical. . . 4670 Hamilton, D. J., Text-Book of Pathology 4671 Hare, H. A., Practical Therapeutics. 3 Vols. Vol. 1 4672 “ 2. 4673 “ 3. 4674 Keen-White, Text-Book of Surgery 4675 Landois-Stirling, Text-Book of Human Physiology 4676 Morrow, P. A., Genito-Urinary Diseases. 3 Vols. Volume 1 4677 “ 2 4678 “ 3 4679 Osler, William, Principles and Practice of Medicine. 4680 Politzer, Adam, Text-Book of Diseases of the Ear. . . 4681 Sternberg, G. M., Manual of Bacteriology 4682 Wood-Bache, The Dispensatory of the United States, 1877. 4683 “ “ “ “ “ “ 1890. 4684 REFERENCE. 139 Reference. Americanized Encyclopaedia Britannica. 10 Vols. Yol. 1. A to Aud 4685 “ 2. And to Can 4686 “ 3. Can to Dan 4687 “ 4. Dan to Fra 4688 “ 5. Fra to Hor 4689 “ 6. Hor to Lib 4690 “ 7. Lib to Obs 4691 “ 8. Obs to San 4692 “ 9. San to Tri 4698 “ 10. Tri to Zym 4694 Appleton’s Annual Cyclopaedia. A. I). 1877. A to Z 4695 :i 1878. A to W 4696 “ 1880. AtoW 4697 “■ 1881. AtoW 4698 “ 1883. AtoW 4699 “ 1884 AtoW 4700 Chambers’ Encyclopaedia, 10 Yols. Yol 1/ A to Bel 4701 “ 2. Bel to Chi 4702 “ 3. Chi to Ele 4708 “ 4 Ele to Gon 4704 “ 5. Goo to Lab 4705 ft 6. Lab to Num 4706 u 7. Num to Pue 4707 4 4 8. Pue to Sou . . 4708 “ 9. Sou to Vit. . 4709 “10. YittoZ . 4 4710 Cushing’s Manual of Parliamentary Practice 4711 Cyclopedic Review of Current History, 1898 4712 Cyclopedic Science Simplified, by J. H. Pepper 4718 Iowa, Report of Board of Control of, 1899 47 14 Johnson’s Universal Cyclopaedia. 8 Vols. Yol 1. A to C’ereus 4715 “ 2. Cerignola to Fazy 4716 “ 3. Feast to Herring 4717 “ 4. Herrnhut to Lighthouse . — 4718 u 5. Lighting to Onimus 4719 140 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Johnson’s Universal Cyclopaedia. 8 Volumes. Volume 6. Onion toSalt 4720 “ 7. Salta to Thoresby 4721 “ 8. Thoriidse to Z 4722 Journal of the Federal Convention, by James Madison 4723 Kansas, Report of Board of Agriculture of, 1883-1884 4724 National Conference of Charities and Correction, 1889 4725 “ “ “ “ 1891 4726 “ “ “ “ “ 4727 “ “ “ “ 1893 4728 “ “ “ “ 1895 4729 “ “ “ “ 1896 4730 “ << “ “ 1897 4731 “ “ “ “ 1898 4732 National Prison Association Report, 1887 4733 “ “ “ “ 1888 4734 “ “ “ “ 1889 4735 “ “ “ “ 1890 4736 “ “ “ “ 1891 4737 “ 1892 4738 “ “ “ “ 1893 4739 “ “ “ “ 1894 4740 “ “ “ “ 1895 4741 “ “ “ “ 1896 4742 “ “ “ “ 1896 4743 “ “ “ “ 1897 4744 “ “ “ “ 1898 4745 “ “ “ “ 1899 4746 New International Encyclopaedia. 21 Volumes. Vol. 1. A to Aristagoras 4747 “ 2. Aristarchus to Bessieres 4748 “ 3. Bessus to Cairns 4749 “ 4. Cairo to Classification of Ships 4750 “ 5. Classis to Da Vinci 4751 “ 6. Davioud to Ellery 4752 “ 7. Ellesmere to Fontanel 4753 “ 8. Fontanes to Goethe 4754 “ 9. Goethite to Heritable Jurisdictions. . . 4755 “ 10. Herjulfson to Ishpeming 4756 “11. Ishtar to Latitudinarians 4757 “12. Latium to Manna 4758 “13. Manna Group to Morganatic Marriage 4759 “ 14. Morgan City to Omul 4760 “ 15. Ona to Pickering 4761 “ 16. Pickersgill to Reidsville 4762 “ 17. Reifferscheid to Servian Wall 4763 “ 18. Service-Berry to Tagus 4764 REFERENCE. 1 4i New International Encyclopaedia. (Continued.) Vol. 19. Taharka to Vampire 4765 “ 20. Van to Zyrians 4766 “ 21. Courses of Reading and Study 4767 Practical Receipts, by A. J. Cooley 4768 Royal Commission on Liquor Traffic in Canada, Re- port of 4769 Royal Commission on Liquor Traffic: the United States, Report of 4770 Scientific American Cyclopedia 4771 Scientific American Reference Book 4772 Universal Gazetteer, J. R. M’Cullock 4772% Wisconsin, Blue Book of, 1895 4773 MINNESOTA REPORTS Auditor of State, 1892 4774 Board of Control, 1904 4775 Census of the State, Fourth Decennial, 1895 4776 Dairy Commissioner, 1889 4777 Flag Days of Twin City Public Schools 4778 Geological and Natural History Survey. 1882. 3 Vols. Vol. 1 4779 “ 2 4780 “ 3 4781 “ 1890 4782 “ 1891 4783 “ 1895-8. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4784 “ 2 4785 Legislative Manual, 1883 • 4786 “ “ 1885 4787 “ “ 1887 4788 “ “ 1889 4789 “ “ 1893 4790 Minnesota Executive Documents, 1889. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4791 “ 2 4792 “ 1890. 4 Vols. Vol. 1 4793 “ 2 4794 “ 3 4795 “ 4 ;... 4796 “ 1891 4797 “ 1892. 4 Vols. Vol. 1 4798 “ 2 4799 “ 3 4800 “ 4 4801 142 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Minnesota Legislature, House Journal, 1893 4802 “ 4803 “ “ “ “ 1895 4804 “ “ Senate Journal, 1895 4805 State Zoologist, Birds 4806 “ “ Mammals 4807 UNITED STATES REPORTS Agriculture, Commissioner of, 1869 “ Department of 1895 “ “ 1898 a u u “ and Fisheries, 1890 “ by Irrigation, 1890 “ ” “ 1898 Army, Legislative History of the General Staff “ Revised Regulations, 1861 Census, Eleventh. 2 Volumes. Vol. 1 “ 2 “ “ Abstract of Civil Service Commission, 1897 Convict Labor, 1886 Dedication of Chickamauga and Chattanooga Nation- al Park, 1895 Diseases of the Horse, 1889 Education, Commissioner of, 1884-1885 1897-1898. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 “ 2 Fish and Fisheries, Commissioner of, 1896. “ “ 1898 4808 4809 4810 4811 4812 4813 4814 4815 4816 4817 4818 4819 4820 4821 4822 4823 4824 4825 4826 4827 4828 4829 Geological Survey, 1881-1882 4830 “ 1898. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4831 “ 2 4832 Insular Cases, The 4833 Labor, Commissioner of, 1898. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4834 “ 2 4835 Metals, Production of Precious, 1899 4836 Mint, Director of, 1 900 4837 Philippine Commission, 1901 4838 Population, 1890. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4839 “ 2 4840 President’s Messages, 1893-1894 4841 “ “ IVnlc Y^rU 1 zlSJ.9 “ 2.... 4843 “ 3.... 4844 “ 4.... 4845 REFERENCE . 143 Smithsonian Institution, 1887, 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4846 “ 2 4847 1889. 2 Vols. Vol. 1 4848 “ 2 4849 War Department, 1898 4850 Weather Bureau, 1896-97 4851 STATE PRISON REPORTS Colorado, 1888 4852 “ 1896 4853 1898 4854 Connecticut, 1896 . . 4855 Elmira, New York, 1898 4856 Illinois, 1886 4857 1888 • 4858 “ 1890 4859 Illinois Reformatory, 1896-98 4860 Indiana, 1898 4861 “ Reformatory, 1897 4862 Kansas, 1885-1886 4863 “ 1887-1888 4864 “ 1889-1890 4865 Maine, 1884 4866 “ 1888 4867' Massachusetts, 1899 4868 Michigan, 1887-1888 4869 “ 1889-1890 4870 “ 1898 4871 Missouri, 1885-1886 4872 “ 1887-1888 4873 New Jersey, 1893 4874 “ “ 1898 4875 “ “ 1899 4876 New York, 1883 4877 “ “ 1888 4878 “ “ 1889 4879 “ “ 1890 4880 “ “ 1891 4881 “ “ 1893 4882 “ “ 1895 4883 “ “ 1896 4884 “ “ 1897 : 4885 “ “ 1898 4886 “ « 1899 4887 North Dakota, 1885-1886 4888 “ u 1887-1888 4889 Western Pennsylvania, 1889-1890. 4890 “ u 1897-1898 4891 144 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Wisconsin, 1893 4892 CONGRESSIONAL RECORDS 1900 December 4, 1899, to January 12 4893 January 15, to February 10 4894 February 11, to March 10 4895 March 11, to April 7 4896 April 8, to May 5 4897 May 6, to May 20 4898 May 21, to June 1 4899 June 2, to Close of Session 4900 December 3, to December 21 4901 1901 January 3, to January 12 . 4902 January 14, to January 26 4903 January 27, to February 24 4904 February 11, to February 24 4905 February 25, to Close of Session — 4906 1902 January 20, to February 1 4907 February 17, to March 1 . 4908 March 3, to March 15 4909 March 17, to March 28 4910 March 31, to April 10 4911 April 14, to April 24 4912 April 28, to May 10 4913 May 12, to May 23 4914 May .26, to June 7 4915 June 9, to June 20 4916 June 23, to July 8 4917 December 1, December 19 4918 1903 January 5, to January 17 4919 January 19, to February 4 .. 4920 February 2, to February 15 4921 February 16, to February 28 4922 March 1, to March 7 4923 November 9, to December 7 4924 December 7, to December 19 4925 1904 January 4, to January 15 4926 January 18, to January 30 4927 February 1, to February 12 492 8 February 15, to February 27. 4929 February 29, to March 12 v 4930 REFERENCE. 145 1904 March 14, to March 26 4931 March 28, to April 4 4932 • April 5, to April 13 4933 April 1 4, to April 21 4934 April 22, to April 28 4935 December 5, to December 21 4936 1905 January 4, to January 14 . 4937 January 16, to January 28 4938 January 30, to February 12 4939 February 27, to March 4 4940 December 4, to* December 21 4941 1906 January 4, to January 13 4942 January 15, to January 27 4943 January 29, to February 9 4944 February 12, to February 24 • .. 4945 February 26, to March 9 4946 March 12, to March 24 4947 March 26, to April 7 4948 April 9, to April 22 4949 April 23, to May 5 4950 May 7, to May 19 4951 May 21, to June 2 4952 J une 4, to J une 16 49o3 December 3, to December 20 4954 1907 January 3, to January 12 * 4955 January 14, to January 26 4956 January 28, to February 10 4957 February 11, to February 24 4958 February 25, to March 4 4959 146 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Chautauqua Studies. Adams, George B., The Growth of the French Nation. 6 Copies 4960 to 4965 Add ams, Jane, Newer Ideals of Peace. 6 Copies. .4966 to 4971 Bates, Katharine, L., American Literature. 6 Copies 4972 to 4977 Beers, H. A., Initial Studies in American Letters. 19 Copies 497 8 to 4996 “ English Literature, from Chaucer to Ten- nyson. 11 Copies 4997 to '5007 Brigham, A. P., Geographic Influences in American History. 6 Copies 5008 to 5013 Brownell, W. C., French Traits. 6 Copies 5014 to 5019 Bryce, James, Social Institutions of the United States 8 Copies 5020 to 5027 Burton, Richard, Literary Leaders of America. 6 Copies 5028 to 5033 Capp, Edward, Homer to Theocritus. 6 Copies. 5034 to 5039 Church, A. J., Callias 8 Copies 5040 to 5017 Coman-Kendall, The Growth of the English Nation. 6 Copies 5048 to 5053 Commons, J. R., Races and Immigrants in America. 6 Copies 5054 to 5059 Curtis, W. E., The United States and Foreign Powers. 8 Copies 5060 to 5067 Dawson, W. J., Literary Leaders of Modern England. 11 Copies 5068 to 5078 Ely, R. T., An Introduction to Political Economy. 6 Copies 5079 to 5084 “ Outline of Economics. 6 Copies 5085 to 5090 “ Strength and Weakness of Socialism. 6 Copies 5091 to 5096 “ Studies in the Evolution of Industrial Society. 6 Copies 5097 to 5102 Erckmann-Chatrian, The States General. 6 Copies. 5103 to 5108 Fisher, G. P., Manual of Christian Evidences. 8 Cop- ies 5109 to 5116 Fiske, H. S., Povincial Types in American Fiction. 12 Copies 5117 to 5128 CHAUTAUQUA STUDIES. 147 Fiske, John, Civil Government in the United States. 4 Copies 5 129 to 5132 Gaye, Selina, The Great World's Farm. 6 Copies. 5133 to 5138 Goodyear, W. H., Renaissance and Modern Art. 6 Copies 5139 to 5144 “ “ Roman and Medieval Art. 6 Copies. 5145 to 5150 Hale, Susan, Men and Manners of the 18th Century. 6 Copies 5151 to 5156 Hapgood, Isabel F.. A Survey of Russian Literature. 6 Copies .5157 to 5162 Henderson, C. R., The Social Spirit of America. 6 Copies 5163 to 5168 Hill, A. S., Our English. 6 Copies 5169 to 5174 Hochdoerfer, Richard, Studies in German Literature 5 Copies 5175 to 5179 Howe, Herbert A., A Study of the Sky. 4 Copies. 5180 to 5183 Hurst, J. F., A Short History of the Church in the United States. 6 Copies 5184 to 5189 Joy, J. R., Grecian History. 14 Copies 5190 to 5203 ‘ ‘ Rome and the Making of Modern Europe 6 Copies 5204 to 5209 “ An Outline History of England. 6 Cop- ies .....5210 to 5215 “ Ten Englishmen of the Nineteenth Cen- tury. 6 Copies 5216 to 5221 Joy-Latimer-Marriott, Men and Cities of Italy . 6 Cop- ies 5222 to 5227 Judson, H. P., Europe in the Nineteenth Century. 6 Copies 5228 to 5233 “ The Growth of the American Nation. 6 Copies 5234 to 5239 King, H. C., Rational Living. 6 Copies 5240 to 5245 Kinsley, W. W., Science and Prayer. SCopies 5246 to 5250 Lavell, C. F., Italian Cities. 6 Copies 5251 to 5256 Lawton, W. C., Ideals in Greek Literature. 6 Copies 5257 to 5262 Mahaffy, J. P., A Survey of Greek Civilization. 6 Copies 5263 to 5268 Mathews, S., The French Revolution. 10 Copies. 5269 to 5278 McClintock, W. D., Song and Legend from the Mid- dle Ages' 6 Copies 5279 to 5284 Merriam, Florence, Birds Through an Opera Glass. 6 Copies 5285 to 5290 148 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Miller-Ivuhns, Studies in the Poetry of Italy. 12 Copies 5291 to 5302 Mitchell-Muir, Two Old Faiths. 8 Copies . . 5303 to 5310 Montgomery, D. H., Leading Facts of American His- tory. 8 Copies . . .5311 to 5318 Moran, T. F., Theory and Practice of the English Gov- ernment. 6 Copies 5319 to 5324 Pellison, M., Roman Life in Pliny’s Time. 6 Copies , 5325 to 5330 Schurz, Carl, Life of Abraham Lincoln. 6 Copies. 5331 to 5336 Scripture, E. W., Thinking, Feeling, and Doing. 6 Copies 5337 to 5342 Sherman, L. A., What is Shakespeare? 6 Copies. . .5343 to 5348 Smith-Redford, Greek Architecture and Greek Sculp- ture. 8 Copies 5349 to 5356 Starr, Frederick, Some First Steps in Human Prog- ress. 6 Copies 5357 to 5362 Steele, J. D., Courses in Physics. 6 Copies 5363 to 5368 Tarbell, F. B., A History of Greek Art. 6 Copies. 5369 to 5374 Thatcher, 0. J., A Short History of Medieval Europe 6 Copies 5375 to 4380' Thorndike, Edward, Human Nature Club. 6 Copies. 5381 to 5386 Thorpe, F. N., The Story of the Constitution of the United States. 8 Copies 5387 to 5394 Townsend, L. T., The Bible and Other Ancient Litera- ture in the 19th Century. 4 Copies . 5395 to 5398 Van Dyke, J. C., How to Judge a Picture. 5 Copies. 5399 to 5403 Vincent-Joy, An Outline History of Rome. 6 Copies. 5404 to 5409 Warren, F. M., Ten Frenchmen of the Nineteenth Cen- tury. 6 Copies 5410 to 5415 Whitman, Sidney, Imperial Germany. 6 Copies. .5416 to 5421 Wilkinson, W. C., Classic Greek Course in English. 8 Copies 5422 to 5429 u Preparatory and College Latin Courses in English. 6 Copies 5430 to 5435 “ Classic Latin Course in English. 6 Copies. 5436 to 5441 “ Classic French Course in English. 6 Copies 5442 to 5447 “ Classic German Course in English. 8 Copies 5448 to 5455 CHAUTAUQUA STUDIES. 149 Winchell, Alexander, Walks and Talks in the Geo- Wright, C. IX, The Industrial Evolution of the Unit- ed States. 6 Copies 5467 to 5472 TEXT BOOKS Allen, J. H. and W. F., Latin Prose 5473 Andrews, E A., First Lessons in Latin 5474 “ Latin Grammar 5475 “ First Part Latin Reader 5476 Boise, J. R., First Lessons in Greek 5477 Bullions, Peter, Greek Grammar 5478 “ Greek Reader . . 5479 “ Latin Grammar 5480 “ Latin Reader 5481 Chodzko, A., Polish- English Dictionary 5482 Day, H. N., Elements of Psychology 5483 De Corella, J. L., Libro Primario (Spanish Reader). 5484 Donohue Bros. Complete Letter Writer 5485 Frost, John, School History of the United States 5486 Graham, G. F., English Synonymes 5487 Harkness, Albert, Second Latin Book.' .... 5488 Maxwell, W. H., Primary Lessons in Composition. .. 5489 Milne, William J., High School Algebra 5490 Pinney, Norman, Progressive French Reader 5491 Polish-English Dictionary 5492 Sadler. Peter, English French Exercises 5493 Spanish Course, Practical 5494 Tolhausen-Payn, Englisli-Spanish and Spanish-Eng- lish Dictionary 5495 Whately, Richard, Elements of Rhetoric 5496 White, J. W., First Lessons in Greek 5497 Whiton, J. M., First Lessons in Greek 5498 Worman-Bransby, Second Spanish Book 5499 Worman-Monsanto, First Spanish Book 5500 Xenophon, The Anabasis 5501 150 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. French BooKs. LIVRES FRANCAIS About, E,, La Mere de la Marquise 5502 Achard, A., Maurice de Treuil 5503 “ “ Les Petites-Filles D’Eve 5504 Balzac, H. de, Grandeur et Decadence de Cesar Birot- teau 5505 “ “ Eugenie Grandet .. . 5506 “ “ Le Presbytere 5507 Bernard, C. de, Un Homme Serieux 5508 “ Le Peau du Lion, et la Chasse aux Amants . 5509 Bertrand du Guesclin, Histoire de 5510 Bodin, C., Caliste 5511 Brehat, A. de, Les Amours d’une Noble Dame 5512 Bresciani, A., Le Juiide Verone 5513 Chateaubriand, Viscount de, Atala, Rene, et Les Nat- chez 5514 Cyr, N., Les Belles-Lettres 5515 Daudet, A., La Belle Nivernaise 5516 “ “ Le Siege de Berlin 5517 “ “ Numa Roumestan 5518 “ “ Sapho 5519 De Goncourt, E and J., La Patrie en Danger 5520 F. P. B., Devoirs du Chretien Envers Dieu 5521 France, J., La Baronne de Langis 5522 Greville, H., Perdue 5523 Hugo, Victor, Notre-Dame de Paris. 2 Tomes. T. 1 5524 T. 2 5525 Laboulaye, E., Abdallah: ou, le Trefie a Quatre Feu- illes 5526 La Fontaine, Jean de, Fables 5527 Leconte, L., LeCoeuret L’Honneur 5528 Lesage, A. R., Le Bachelier de Salamanque. 2 Tomes T. 1 5529 “ 2 5530 Linguet, S. N. H., Memoires sur La Bastille 5531 Magin, A., Histoire de France 5532 Moliere, J. P., Le Tartufe, et Le Depit Amoureux. . . 5533 Roussel, N., Mon Voyage en Algerie 5534 Saintine, X. B., Les Metamorphoses de la Femme. . . 5535 FRENCH BOOKS . 151 Sand, Gh, ElleetLui 5536 “ “ La Mare au Diable 5537 “ “ Valentine 5538 Shakespeare, W., Le Songe d’une Nuit d’Ete 5539 Souvestre, E., Le Mat de Cocagne. 5540 Sue, Eugene, Les Mysteres de Paris. 4 Tomes. T. 1 5541 “ 2 5542 “ 3 5543 “ 4 5544 Verne, Jules, Les Cinq Cents Millions de la Begum . . 5545 Voltaire, F. M. A. de, Theatre 5546 Wanostrocht, N., RecueilChoiside Traits Historiques 5547 152 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. German BooKs. DEUTSCHE BUECHE R NOVELLEN Armand, Die Alte’ Spanische Urkunde 5548 Auerbach, B., Schwarzwaelder Dorfgeschichten 5 Baende. Band 1-2. Der Tolpatsch, Die Kriegs- pfeife, Schlossbauers Vefele, etc 5549 Band 3-4. Die Frau Professorin, Luzifer 5550- “ 5-6 Der Lehnhold, Der Yiereckig oder die Amerikanische Kiste, Der Geig- erlex 5551 “ 7-8. Joseph im Schnee, Brosi und Moni 5552 “ 9-10 Des Lories Reinhard, Der Tolpatsch aus Amerika 5553 “ Schatzkaestlein des Gevattersmanns 5554 “ Waldfried 5555 Berkow, H., Frauenliebe 5556 Brachvogel, E. A., Der Kampf der Daemonen. 5557 Conway, H., Aus Nacht zum Licht 5558 Dedenroth, E. H. von, Die Baronin 5559 “ Gewagte^ Spiel. t 5560 “ Die Schuld der Yheter 5561 Ebers, Georg, Aegyptische Koenigstochter 5562 u “ “ u 5563 “ “ “ “ 5564 “ “ Homo Sum 5565 u “ Uarda 5566 u “ “ 5567 “ “ “ 5568 Fels, E., Die Weisze Frau von Greifenstein 5569 Ferry, G., Costal der Indianer 5570 Frankenstein, F. , Die Kronjuwelen 557 1 Friedrich, F., Nemesis 5572 Fuellborn, Georg, Die Diamant.en des Grafen St. Ger- main 5573 Gerstaecker,.F., Im Eckfenster 5574 “ Die Blauen und Gelben 5575 Hacklaender, F. W., Die Kainszeichen 5576 “ Der letzte Bombardier 5577 GERMAN BOOKS. 153 Haidheim, L., Im Tiefen Forst 5578 Hartwig, G., Der Buergermeister von Neisse 5579 Koenig, E. A., Auf der Bahn des Verbrechens 5580 Luetetsburg, A., Der Letzte Stern Erloschen 5581 May, K., Auf Hoher See Gefangen 5582 Moellhausen, A., Der Piratenlieutenant 5583 Bau, H., Der Raub Straszburg’s 5584 Richebourg, E., Fluchbeladen 5585 Roge, J., Ein Staatsgeheimnisz 5586 Rosen, M., Die Entfuehrung 5587 Samarow, G., Europaeische Minen und Gegenminen. . . 5588 “ “ “ “ « . .. 5589 “ Kreuz und Schwert 5590 “ Um Szepter und Kronen 5591 Schiller, Friedrich von, Gedichte 5592 “ Die Raeuber, Fiesco Kabale und Liebe . . . 5593 “ Don Carlos 5594 “ Wallenstein 5595 “ Abfall der Niederlande - 5596 “ Der Dreiszigjaehrige Krieg 5597 “ “ “ 5598 “ Wilhelm Tell, Braut von Messina 5599 “ Iphigenie in Aulis, Den Phoenizierinnen, Macbeth 5600 “ Turandot, Der Parasit, Der Neffe als Onkel, Phaedra 5601 “ Prosaische Schriften. 5602 Vollmar, A., Sibylle 5603 Winterfeld, A. von, Die Ehefrabrikanten 5604 “ Grosz-Busekow, und Mit Eiserner Hand.. 5605 RELIGION Ahrens, W., Betrachtungen Ueber die Biblische Ges- chichte 5606 Die Taufe im Lichte 5607 Barth, C. G., Die Altvaeter 5608 Der Arme Heinrich 5609 Geschichte der Christlichen Kirche 5610 “ Setma, das Tuerkische Maedchen 5611 Bogue, D., Versuch Ueber das Goettliche Ansehn 5612 Bran des, K., Der Heilige Petrus in Rom 5613 Breunig, G. A., Yon Rom nach Zion 5614 Bunyan, J., Die Pilgerreise 5615 Businger, L. C , Christus in Seiner Kirche 5616 Byrum, E. E., Goettliche Heilung 5617 Christlieb, T., Bekaempfung des Unglaubens 5618 154 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. D’Aubigne, J. H. M., Geschichte der Reformation. 5 Baende. Bd. 1 5619 “ 2 5620 “ 3 5621 “ 4 5622 “ 5 5623 Doddridge, P. Anfang und Fortgang der WahrenGot- tseligkeit 5624 Goszneb, J., Merkwuerdige Lebensgeschichte von Mar- tin Boos 5625 “ Der Uralte Katholische Glanbe 5626 Harris, Bischof, Die Lehre der Methodistenkirche. . . 5627 Hesz, J. J., Geschichte Moses 5628 “ Geschichte der Patriarchen 5629 Jacoby, L S., Christliche Geschichten. 2 Baende. Bd. 1 5620 “ 2 5631 “ Letzte Stun den 5632 Maurette, J. J., Der Papst und das Evangelium 5633 Nelson, D., Die Ursachen des Pnglaubens 5634 Schneider, W., Das Andere Leben 5635 Schubert, G. H. yon, Der Meeresstrom. 5636 Seibert, G. C., Das Heilige Land 5637 Stolz, A., Duerre Kraeuter 5638 Stretton, H., Des Hoechsten Koenigs Diener 5639 “ Jessika’s Erstes Gebet 5640 Wise, D., Der Weg des Lebens 5641 “ Der Abendmahls Gast 5642 “ Die Acht Seligkeiten 5643 “ Anneli, das Brave Fishermaedclien 5644 “ iVnmaszungen des Papstes 5645 “ Ben Holt’s Guter Name 5646 u Die Blaue Flagge 5647 “ Das Blockhaus in den Bergen 5648 “ Bluehende Hoffnungen 5649 u Colignv und Zwingli 5650 “ Elias der Thisbiter 5651 “ Leben des William Carvosso 5652 “ Leben des John Newton’s 5653 {i T.eben des Georg Whitefi eld 5654 u N acht und Morgen 5655 “ Protestantischer Maertyrer 5656 u Rudolph Buergi’s Leben 5657 tm Tractate Land 5658 Woernhart, P. L. H., Maria Mutter Gottes 5659 HIST O R I E Geschichte der Vereinigten Staaten 5660 SCANDINAVIAN BOOKS. 155 Scandinavian BooKs. NORSKE BOGER Aagaard, G., I Skygger og Lys 5661 “ “ En Spogelshistorie 5662 Balslev, B., Betragtninger for Syge 5663 Bergh, T. A., Fledige Stunder 5664 Bjornson, Bjornstjerne, Arne 5665 Bong, A., Fortaellinger for Folket 5666 Bunyan, John, Pilegrimens Bandring . 5667 “ “ “ “ 5668 C. G., Indbrudstyvenes Konge. 2 Banden. Bd. 1.. .. 5669 “ 2.... 5670 Dan, Adam, Kanaan . 5671 Enoch Roden’s Loereaar 5672 Funcke, O., Forvandlingerne 5673 “ “ Glsede, Lidelse, Arbeide i Evighedens Lys 5674 u “ Sj selekamp og Sjselef red 5675 “ “ Sporgsmaalstegn 5676 “ Vil dn blive Helbredet? 5677 “ u Kristelige Snaaftykker 5678 Gerhard, Johan, Betragtninger 5679 Glahn, Egede, Juletiden 5680 Gode Maend og Kvinder 5681 Gossner, J., Banken paa Menneskets 5682 “ “ Vei til Salighed 5683 Grundemann, N., Orienterende Oversigt 5684 Guldberg, N. S.,' Folkeloesning 5685 Hodder, E., Georg Weston 5686 Holmboe, H., Elisa 5687 Hoyer, Ant, Livets Vei 5688 Ibsen, Henrik, De Unges Forbund 5689 James, J. A., Veiledning og Trost 5690 “ “ Kjarlighed Overvinder Alt 5691 Krag, Vilhelm, Holmerne de Graa 5692 Laache, N. J., Husandagts-Bog 5693 “ u u “ 5694 Lassen, Albert, De nyere Europaeiske Staters His- torie • 5695 u “ De gamle Staters Hist orie 5696 “ “ Loerebog i den almindelige Historie 5697 Levetzkow, Cornelia, Forhaabninger 5698 ij6 LIBRARY CATALOGUE . Lind, Carl, Katekisationer 5699 Lutherske Vidnesbyrd 5700 M. J. A., Sir Evelyns Myndling 5701 Macduff, J. R., Morgen-og Aften-Vagter 5702 Marie, Ved Egen Kraft? 5703 Martyrerne i Roms Katakomber 5704 Matteson, J. E., Jesu Prosetier. 5705 Mau, E., Christelig Samler 5706 Missionsblad, Den Forenede Kirkes 5707 Moody, D. L., Seirende Bon 5708 Myhre-Mortenson, GjennemMorke til Lys 5709 Nelson, Thomas, Veien til Frelse og Fred 5710 Olaffen, O., Gjennem Dodens Dal 5711 Oxenden, A., Salighedens Vei 5712 Prentiss, E., Mod Himlen 5713 Rasmussen, R., Somanden paa Hav og i Havn 5714 “ “ N ordnesgutten 5715 Rosenius, C. 0., Raad og Hjaelp 5716 “ Fra Doden til Livet 5717 “ Klar og Usvigelig Veiled ning til Fred 5718 Scharling, Henrik, Min Hustru og jeg 5719 Skrefsrud, L. 0., Praedikener og Foredrag 5720 Smith, Uriah, Daniels bog og Aabenbaringen 5721 Staarup, B., Edmund 5722 Stein, Armin, Katharina of Bora 5723 Stor johann, D., Moody’s Liv 5724 “ John Afhworths Liv og Virksomhed. ... 5725 “ Det Store Livssporgsmaal . .......... 5726 Sturlason, Snorre, Heiinskringla eller Norges Konge- Sagaer 5727 Throndsen, K., Norsk Loesebog 5728 Underlige Haendelser paa Land og Sjo 5729 Walnum, S. B. H., Blot jeg blinerSalig 5730 Wayland. H. L., C. H. Spurgeon, Hans Tro og Gjer- ninger 5731 Widt, Birger, Togos Tapre Udlaending 5732 SVENSKA BOCKER A. D., En rost ur det Forborgade 5733 A. L. 0. E., Befrielsen ur Egypten 5734 “ Herdekonungen : 5735 “ Hogm odets Fangar „ 5736 “ Paa Hemwagen 5737 “ Land shy ktingar i Babylon 5738 Arthur, W., Kristendomens Sanna Kraft 5739 Besant, Annie, Doden — och Sedan? 5740 SCANDINAVIAN BOOKS. 157 • Beskow, B. von, Karl den Tolfte 5741 Bremer, Fredrika, Hemmen i nya Velden 5742 Bunyan, J., Kristens Besa ” 5743 Cervin-Steenhoff, N. T., Korsskola 5744 Enander, J. A., Forenta Staternas Historia 5745 “ Det Samma, II. Bandet 5746 Foster, R. S., Evangelii fulla Walsignelse 5747 Gaussen, L., Bibeln, Guds Bok 5748 Hagerup, E., Markwardiga Exempel af De Heliga Mar- ty rer 5749 Ingraham, J. H., Herren af Davids S'tam 5750 James, J. A., Wagledning och Trost . . . . 5751 Jobson, F. J., Salighetssanningar 5752 Joshas Bok och Andra Samuels Bok 5753 Mathews, W., Paa Lifvets Vadjobana 5754 May, A., Larobok i Engelska Spraket 5755 Moody, D. L., Vagen till Gud 5756 Nicholls, B. C., Hjelpreda wid Bibelns Lasning 5757 Nordenskiold, G., Fran Fjarran Yastern Minnen fran Amerika 5758 Palmblad, W. F., Palaestina 5759 Risberg, F., Bibel-Bilder 5760 Sinnet, A. P., Den Bolder Verlden. . . 5761 Smith, IL, Daniels Bok och Uppenbarelsen 5762 Spurgeon, C. H., Jaime Akermans Forelasningar . . . . 5 763 “ “ Mina Predikoutkast 5764 Starback, C. G., Engelbrekt Engelbrektsson 5 765 Stowe, Harriet B., Smastadslif 5 766 Tegner, Esaias, Samlade Skrifter. Del. 1-2 Bd. 1. Skrifter i Bunden Form .... 5767 “ 2. Skrifter pa Prosa. 5 768 Vollmar, A., Presthuset i Harz 5769 Waldenstrom, P. Herren ar From 5 770 “ “ Predikningar ofwer Svenska 5 771 “ “ Det Samma, II. Bandet 5 772 Wallis, E., Illustrerad Verldshistoria. 6 Banden Bd. 1. Egypten, Semiterna, Moderna och Perserna, Grekland, etc 5 773 “ 2. Det Romerska Eolkets Historia. 5 774 “ 3. Medeltidens Historia 5 775 u 4. Ny are Tidens Historia 5776 “ 5. Det Samma 5 777 “ 6. Det Samma, 181 5-1871 5778 Welander, B., Bibelns Kannedom 5779 Wesley, J., Femtiotre Predikningar 5 780 158 LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Appendix. Adams, F. U., John Henry Smith 5781 Alger, Horatio, Making His Way 5782 Bacon, Josephine D., The Domestic Adventurers 5783 Benson, B. K., Who Goes There? 5784 Clay, Bertha M., The Earle’s Atonement 5785 Coffin, C. C., Dan of Milbrook 5786 I)uer, Elizabeth, The Prince Goes Fishing 5787 Eastman, Charles A., Indian Boyhood 5788 “ “ Old Indian Days 5789 Groves', J. P., Anchor and Laurel 5790 Henty, G. A., Friends Though Divided 5791 Jones, Sam, Gospel Sermons 5792 O’Higgins, H. J., The Smoke-Eaters 5793 Kowley, Hugh, Puniana 5794 Saint-Amand, Imbert de, Citizeness Bonaparte 5795 Stowe, Harriet Beecher, The Pearl of Orr’s Island. 5796 Wallace, Dillon, Ungava Bob 5797 Watson, H. B. Marriott, A Midsummer Day’s Dream 5798 Wharton Edith, Sanctuary 5799 MAGAZINES Ainslee’s, February to July 1908 5800 “ “ “ “ 5801 All-Story, January to April 1908 5802 “ “ " 11 5803 American, November 1907 to April 1908 5804 “ “ “ “ “ 5805 Arena, January to June 1908 5806 Argosy, April to July 1908 5807 “ “ “ “ 5808 “ it it it 5809 Blue Book, December 1907 to April 1908 5810 Broadway, October 1907 to March 1908 5811 Century, November 1907 to April 1908 5812 Chautauqtjan, December 1907 to January 1908 5813 “ “ “ “ “ 5814 “ “ “ “ “ 5815 “ February to April 1908 5816 “ u u “ 5817 (t “ “ 5818 APPENDIX 159 Cosmopolitan, November 1907 to May 1908 5819 “ “ “ “ “ 5820 Country Life, December 1906 to April 1907 5821 “ “ May to October 1907 5822 “ November 1907 to April 1908 5823 Current Literature, January to June 1908 5824 Educational Review, January to June 1908 5825 Everybody’s, January to June 1908 5826 “ “ ' “ “ 5827 Field and Stream, Odd Numbers 5828 Forum, July 1907 to Junel 908. 5829 Harper’s, December 1907 to May 1908 5830 Independent, January to April 1908 5831 Lippincott’s, January to June 1908 5832 Literary Digest, January to June 1908 5833 McClure’s, November 1907 to April 1908 5834 “ “ “ “ “ 5835 Metropolitan, October 1907 to March 1908 5836 Munse^’s, October 1907 to March 1908 5837 “ “ “ “ 5838 Nineteenth Century, January to June 1908 5839 North American Review, January to June 1908 5840 Ocean, November 1907 to April 1908 5841 Outlook, January to June 1908 5842 Overland Monthly, January to June 1908 5843 Pacific Monthly, August to December 1907 5844 Pearson’s, January to June 1908 5845 “ “ “ “ 5846 People’s, January to April 1908 5847 Philistine, December 1907 to May 1908 5848 Popular, November 1907 to April 1908 5849 “ “ “ “ “ 5850 Popular Science Monthly, July to December 1907 . . 5851 “ “ “ January to June 1908 5852 Railroad Man’s, October 1907 to Januarv 1908. . . . 5853 “ “ “ “ “ " “ 5854 “ “ Februarv to Mav 1908 5855 u- u « " tt “ “ 5856 Sannigens-Folk (Swedish) January to December 1903 5857 “ u “ 1904 5858 Scientific American, January to December 1906 5859 Scrap Book (First. Section) January to June 1908 5860 u “ (Fiction Section) “ “ “ 5861 Scribner’s, January to June 1908 5862 Smart Set, January to April 1908 5863 Smith’s, October 1907 to March 1908 5864 Strand, August 1907 January 1908 58 65 i6o LIBRARY CATALOGUE. Sunset, November 1007 to April 1908 5 866 Teasafisk Tidskrift (Swedish) Jan. to Dec. 1903 5 867 “ “ “ “ “ 1904 5868 Technical World, September 1907 February 1908.. 5 869 Westminster Review, January to June 190 8 5 870 World Today, January to June 1908 5871 World’s Work, November 1907 to April 1908 5872 Congressional Record, Dec. 2 to Dec. 21, 1907 5 873 Jan. 6 to Jan 17, 1908 5874 “ 20 to “ 31, “ 5875 Feb. 3 to Feb. 15, “ 5 876 “ 17 to “ 29, “ 5 877 Mar. 2 to Mar. 14, “ 5 878 “ 16 to “ 28 “ 5879 “ 30 to Apr. 11 “ 5 880 SUMMARY Library Books Catalogued 5,8 8 0 Bibles 712 Hymn Books 132 New Testaments 8 9 Prayer Books 116 Dictionaries 147 School Books 1,507 Total 8,58 3