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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/17726-8.txt b/17726-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..28f86ee --- /dev/null +++ b/17726-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11668 @@ +Project Gutenberg's The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6, by Various + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6 + +Author: Various + +Release Date: February 9, 2006 [EBook #17726] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY *** + + + + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections) + + + + + + +[Illustration: Henry W. Paine] + + + + + + +THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. + +_A Massachusetts Magazine._ + +VOL. III. NOVEMBER, 1885. NO. VI. + + * * * * * + + + + +HENRY W. PAINE. + +BY PROF. WILLIAM MATHEWS, LL.D. + + +Among the callings acknowledged to be not only useful, but indispensable +to society, there is no one, except the medical, which has been oftener +the butt of vulgar ridicule and abuse than the legal. "Lawyers and +doctors," says a writer on Wit and Humor in the _British Quarterly +Review_, "are the chief objects of ridicule in the jest-books of all +ages." But whatever may be the disadvantages of the Law as a profession, +in spite of the aspersions cast upon it by disappointed suitors, +over-nice moralists, and malicious wits, it can boast of one signal +advantage over all other business callings,--that eminence in it is +always a test of ability and acquirement. While in every other +profession quackery and pretension may gain for men wealth and honor, +forensic renown can be won only by rare natural powers aided by profound +learning and varied experience in trying causes. The trickster and the +charlatan, who in medicine and even in the pulpit find it easy to dupe +their fellow-men, find at the bar that all attempts to make shallowness +pass for depth, impudence for wit, and fatal for wisdom, are instantly +baffled. Not only is an acute, sagacious, and austere bench a perilous +foe to the trickery of the ignorant or half-prepared advocate, but the +veteran practitioners around him are quick to detect every sign of +mental weakness, disingenuous artifice, or disposition to substitute +sham for reality. Forensic life is, to a large extent, life in the broad +glare of day, under the scrutiny of keen-eyed observers and merciless +critics. In every cause there are two attorneys engaged, of whom one is +a sentinel upon the other; and a blunder, a slip, an exaggeration, or a +misrepresentation, never escapes without instant exposure. The popular +reputation of a lawyer, it has been well said, is but the winnowed and +sifted judgment which reaches the world through the bar, and is +therefore made up after severe ordeal and upon standard proof. + +These observations are deemed not inappropriate as an introduction to a +sketch of the life of one of the most eminent lawyers of New England, +whose career may be regarded as signally worthy of imitation. + +HENRY WILLIAM PAINE was born August 30th, 1810, in Winslow, +Maine. His father, Lemuel Paine, a native of Foxborough, Mass., was a +graduate of Brown University, and a lawyer by profession, who began +practice in Winslow, Maine, in partnership with Gen. Ripley, afterwards +the hero of Lundy's Lane. Owing to poor health, Mr. Paine, sen., soon +abandoned the law for other pursuits. He was familiar with the +representative English authors, and specially fond of the Greek language +and literature, which he cultivated during his life. He had a tenacious +memory, and could quote Homer by the page. Henry Paine's mother, Jane +Thomson Warren, was the daughter of Ebenezer T. Warren, of Foxborough, +the brother of General Joseph Warren, who fell at Bunker Hill. Of the +three children of Lemuel and Jane T. (Warren) Paine, Henry William was +the second. + +After the usual preparatory education, Mr. Paine entered Waterville +College (now Colby University) in 1826, and graduated in 1830, at the +age of twenty, with the highest honor of his class. During the last year +of the college course, he was principal of Waterville Academy, then just +founded for the preparation of young men for college. He spent eight +hours a day in charge of his pupils, of whom there were eighty-two, and +at the same time kept up with his class in the college studies. As a +teacher he was greatly beloved and respected by his pupils, whose +affection was won by no lack of discipline, but by his kindly sympathy, +encouragement, and watchful aid in their studies. He had an eye that +could beam with tenderness, or dart lightnings; and it was a fine moral +spectacle, illustrating the superiority of mental over physical force, +to see a bully of the school, almost twice his size, and who, +apparently, could have crushed him if he chose, quail under his eagle +gaze, when arraigned at the principal's desk for a misdemeanor. It is +doubtful if ever he flogged a scholar; but he sometimes brought the +ruler down upon the desk with a force that made the schoolroom ring, and +inspired the lawless with a very wholesome respect for his authority. +The fact that from that day to this his office has always been a kind of +Mecca, to which his old pupils, whether dwellers in "Araby the Blest" or +in the sandy wastes of life, have made pious pilgrimages, shows how +deeply he was loved and how highly he was honored as a teacher. + +Immediately after graduation Mr. Paine was appointed a Tutor of +Waterville College, and discharged the duties of that office for a year. +He then began the study of law in the office of his uncle, the late +Samuel S. Warren, of China, Maine, and continued the study in the office +of William Clark, a noted lawyer in Hallowell, Maine, and, for a year, +in the Law School of Harvard University, where he was the classmate of +Charles Sumner, Wendell Phillips and B.F. Thomas. In the autumn of 1834, +he was admitted to the bar of Kennebec County, Maine. Beginning his +professional career at Hallowell, he prosecuted it there with signal +success till the summer of 1854, having for twenty years a practice not +surpassed by that of any member of the Maine bar. During the sessions of +1836, 1837, and again in that of 1853, he represented the citizens of +Hallowell in the lower house of the State Legislature. He was also for +five years Attorney for Kennebec County. During his stay in Maine, he +was repeatedly offered a seat on the bench of the Supreme Judicial Court +of that State; but, having an unconquerable aversion to office of every +kind, civil or political, he declined to accept the honor pressed upon +him. In 1853 he was offered by his political friends, then the dominant +party in the Legislature, a seat in the United States Senate; but he +refused to be nominated. In the summer of 1854, in accordance with a +long cherished resolve, which he had been prevented from executing +before by a promise to his father that he would not leave Maine during +that parent's lifetime, he removed to Cambridge, Mass., and opened a +law-office in Boston. Here he at once entered upon a large and lucrative +practice, both in the State and Federal courts, which kept steadily +increasing for over twenty years, till declining health and partial +deafness compelled him to withdraw from the courts of justice, and +confine himself to office business. During this period, his opinion on +abstruse and knotty points of law was often solicited by eminent counsel +living outside of Massachusetts, and he sent written opinions to +attorneys in nine different states. As Referee and Master in Chancery, +he was called upon to arbitrate in a great number of difficult and +complicated cases, involving the ownership and disposition of large +amounts of property. His decisions in these vexed cases, which often +involved the unravelling of tangled webs of testimony, and the +consideration of the nicest and most delicate questions of law, were +luminous and masterly, and so impartial withal, that the litigants must +have often been convinced of their justness, if not contented,--_etaim +contra quos statuit, aequos placatosque dimisit._ + +In 1863 and 1864 Mr. Paine was nominated, without his consent, by the +Democratic party of Massachusetts, a candidate for the office of +Governor. With much reluctance he accepted the nomination, but, as he +expected, and doubtless to his joy, failed of an election. In 1867, on +the resignation of Chief Justice Bigelow, the office of Chief Justice of +the Supreme Court of Massachusetts was offered by Governor Bullock to +Mr. Paine, who, not wishing to give up his large and profitable practice +at the bar, declined to accept. This decision, though a natural one, is +much to be regretted by the citizens of this state. Coming from an +eminently judicial mind, his decisions, had he sat on the bench, would +have been models of close, cogent reasoning, clearness, and brevity, +worthy of the best days of the Massachusetts judiciary. + +Shortly after his removal to this State Mr. Paine was associated with +Rufus Choate and F.O.J. Smith in the defence of Judge Woodbury Davis, of +Portland, Maine, who had been impeached by the Legislature of that State +for misconduct in his judicial office. In an editorial article upon the +trial, which appeared after its termination, in the Kennebec Journal, +published at Augusta, the Hon. James G. Blaine, the writer, declared +epigrammatically that, in the defence of Judge Chase, "Paine furnished +the logic, Choate the rhetoric, and Smith the slang." + +From 1872 to 1883 Mr. Paine was Lecturer on the Law of Real Property +at the Law School of the Boston University, an office whose duties he +performed with great credit to himself, and profit to those whom he +addressed. So thoroughly was he master of his subject, difficult and +intricate as it confessedly is, that in not a single instance, except +during the lectures of the last year, did he take a note or scrap of +memoranda into the class room. + +While he has always been a close and devoted student of the law, Mr. +Paine has yet found time for general reading, and has hung for many an +hour over the pages of the English classics with keen delight. For Homer +and Virgil he still retains the relish of his early days, and, in the +intervals of professional toil, has often slaked his thirst for the +waters of Helicon in long and copious draughts. How well he appreciated +the advantages of an acquaintance with literature, he showed early in a +suggestive and instructive lecture on "Reading," which we heard him +deliver before the Lyceum at Hallowell more than forty years ago. With +his lamented friend Judge B.F. Thomas, he believes that a man cannot be +a great lawyer who is nothing else,--that exclusive devotion to the +study and practice of the law tends to acumen rather than to breadth, to +subtlety rather than to strength. "The air is thin among the apices of +the law, as on the granite needles of the Alps. Men must find +refreshment and strength in the quiet valleys at their feet." + +With his brethren of the bar Mr. Paine has always held the friendliest +relations, and he has enjoyed their highest esteem. To none, even the +humblest of his fellow advocates, has he ever manifested any of the +haughtiness of a Pinkney, or any of that ruggedness and asperity which +gained for the morose and sullen Thurlow the nickname of _the +tiger_. Amid the fiercest janglings and hottest contentions of the +bar, he has never forgotten that courtesy which should mark the +collision, not less than the friendly intercourse, of cultivated and +polished minds. His victories, won easily by argumentative ability, +tact, and intellectual keenness, unaided by passion, have strikingly +contrasted with the costly victories of advocates less self-restrained. +Though naturally witty and quick at retort, he has never used the weapon +in a way to wound the feelings of an adversary. In examining and +cross-examining witnesses, he has assumed their veracity, whenever it +has been possible to do so; and though he has had the eye of a lynx and +the scent of a hound for prevarication in all its forms, yet he has +never sought by browbeating and other arts of the pettifogger, to +confuse, baffle, and bewilder a witness, or involve him in +self-contradiction. Adopting a quiet, gentle, and straightforward, +though full and careful examination, winning the good-will of the +witness, and inspiring confidence in the questioner, Mr. Paine has been +far more successful in extracting the truth, even from reluctant lips, +than the most artful legal bully. He knows that the manoeuvres and +devices which are best adapted to confuse an honest witness, are just +what the dishonest one is best prepared for. It was not for all the +blustering violence of the tempest, that the traveler would lay aside +his cloak. The result was brought about by the mild and genial warmth of +the sun. + +Few advocates have had more success with juries than the subject of this +sketch. The secret of this success has been, not more the admirable +lucidity and cogency of his addresses, than the confidence and trust +with which his reputation for fairness and truthfulness, and his +evident abhorrence of exaggeration, have inspired his hearers. Another +explanation is, that he has avoided that rock on which so many advocates +wreck their cases,--prolixity. Knowing that, as Sir James Scarlett once +said, when a lawyer exceeds a certain length of time, he is always doing +mischief to his client,--that, if he drives into the heads of the jury +unimportant matter, he drives out matter more important that he had +previously lodged there,--Mr. Paine has taken care to press home the +leading points of his case, giving slight attention to the others. + +That Mr. Paine has been animated in the pursuit of his profession by +higher motives than those which fire the zeal of the mere "hired master +of tongue-fence," is shown by the comparative smallness of his fees, +especially in cases exacting great labor. Great as has been his success +in winning verdicts, and sound as have been his opinions, it is doubtful +whether there is another lawyer living of equal eminence, whose charges +for legal service have been so uniformly moderate. + +Reference has been made to Mr. Paine's wit. Several striking examples +might be cited; but two must suffice. Some years ago, when he was County +Attorney, a man who had been indicted in Kennebec County for arson, was +tried, and acquitted by the jury on the ground that he was an _idiot_. +After the trial, the Judge before whom the case had been tried, sought +to reconcile Mr. Paine to the verdict by some explanatory remarks. "Oh, +I'm quite satisfied, your Honor," said Mr. Paine, "with the defendant's +acquittal. He has been tried by a jury of his _peers_"--On another +occasion, Mr. Paine was making a legal argument before an eminent judge, +when he was interrupted by the latter, who said: "Mr. Paine, you know +that that is not law." "I know it, your Honor," replied the advocate, +with a deferential bow; "but it _was_ law till your Honor just spoke." + +From 1849 to 1862, Mr. Paine was a member of the Board of Trustees of +Waterville College. In 1851, he was elected member of the Maine +Historical Society, and also of the American Academy. In 1854, his Alma +Mater conferred on him the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. + +In the relation of marriage, Mr. Paine has been very happy. In May. +1837, he was united to Miss Lucy E. Coffin, of Newburyport, a lady of +rare endowments, both of head and heart. + +Few men have started in a professional career with a more vigorous and +elastic constitution than Mr. Paine's. Endowed with an iron frame and +nerves of _lignum vitae_, he very naturally felt in youth that his +fund of physical energy was inexhaustible; but, like thousands of other +professional men in this fiery and impatient age, he finds himself in +the autumn of his life afflicted with bodily ills, which he feels that +with reasonable care he might have escaped. Toiling in his profession +year after year from January to December, with no recreation, no summer +vacation, no disposition to follow the wise advice of Horace to +Torquatus,-- + + rebus omissis + Atria servantem postico falle clientem, + +--working double tides, and crowding the work of eighty years into +forty, Mr. Paine finds that, large as was his bank account with Nature, +he has been overdrawing it for years, and that he has now to repay these +drafts with compound interest. The lesson he would have young +professional men learn from his experience, is, that they should account +no time or money wasted, that contributes in any way to their physical +health,--that gives tone to the stomach, or development to the muscles. +Let them understand that, though suffering does not follow instantly +upon the heels of transgression, yet Nature cannot be outraged with +impunity. Though a generous giver she is a hard bargainer, and a most +accurate bookkeeper, whose notice not the eighth part of a cent escapes; +and though the items with which she debits one, taken singly are +seemingly insignificant, and she seldom brings in "that little bill" +till a late day, yet, added up at the end of three score years and ten, +they may show a frightful balance against him, which can have no result +but physical bankruptcy. + +In Mr. Paine's physiognomy the most noticeable features are the broad, +massive, Websterian forehead, and the sparkling eyes. + +In summing up the characteristics of Mr. Paine as a lawyer and as a man, +the writer, who was his pupil at Waterville Academy, and has enjoyed his +friendship to this day, cannot do better than to cite the words of an +acute observer who has known him intimately for many years. Chief +Justice Appleton, of Maine, did not exaggerate, when he said: "He is a +gentleman of a high order of intellect; of superior culture; in private +life, one of the most genial of companions; in his profession, a +profound and learned lawyer, as well as an accomplished advocate." + +To conclude,--if the subject of this imperfect sketch has occasion to +regret his excessive devotion to his calling, he can have no other +regrets. At the close of a long, most useful, and most honorable career, +which has been marked throughout by the severest conscientiousness and +the most scrupulous discharge of every professional duty, he is happily +realizing that blessedness which Sir William Blackstone, when exchanging +the worship of the Muses for that of Themis, prayed might crown the +evening of his days:-- + + "Thus though my noon of life be past, + Yet let my setting sun at last + Find out the still, the rural cell, + Where sage Retirement loves to dwell! + There let me taste the homefelt bliss + Of innocence and inward peace; + Untainted by the guilty bribe, + Uncursed amid the harpy tribe; + No orphan cry to wound my ear, + My honor and my conscience clear; + Thus may I calmly meet my end, + Thus to the grave in peace descend." + + * * * * * + + + + +PICKETT'S CHARGE. + +BY CHARLES A. PATCH, MASS., VOLS. + + +In all great wars involving the destinies of nations, it is neither the +number of battles, nor the names, nor the loss of life, that remain +fixed in the mind of the masses; but simply the one decisive struggle +which either in its immediate or remote sequence closes the conflict. Of +the hundred battles of the great Napoleon, Waterloo alone lingers in the +memory. The Franco-Prussian War, so fraught with changes to Europe, +presents but one name that will never fade,--Sedan. Even in our own +country, how few battles of the Revolution can we enumerate; but is +there a child who does not know that Bunker Hill sounded the death-knell +of English rule in the land? And now, but twenty years since the +greatest conflict of modern times was closed at Appomattox, how few can +we readily recall of the scores of blood-stained battle-fields on which +our friends and neighbors fought and fell; but is there one, old or +young, cultured or ignorant, of the North or of the South, that cannot +speak of Gettysburg? But what is Gettysburg either in its first day's +Federal defeat, or its second day's terrible slaughter around Little +Round Top, without the _third_ day's immortal charge by Pickett and +his brave Virginians. In it we have the culmination of the Rebellion. It +took long years after to drain _all_ the life-blood from the foe, +but never again did the wave of Rebellion rise so gallantly high as when +it beat upon the crest of Cemetery Ridge. + +The storming of the heights of Inkerman, the charge of the noble Six +Hundred, the fearful onslaught of the Guards at Waterloo, the scaling of +Lookout Mountain,--have all been sung in story, and perhaps always will +be; but they all pale beside the glory that will ever enshroud the +heroes who, with perhaps not literally "cannon to right of them" and +"cannon to left of them," but with a hundred cannon belching forth death +in _front_ of them, hurled themselves into the centre of a great +army and had victory almost within their grasp. + +To describe this charge, we will go back to the evening of the 2nd of +July, and recall upon what basis the cautious Lee could undertake so +fearful a responsibility. The victorious Southrons fresh from their +triumphs at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville had entered the North +carrying consternation and dismay to every hamlet, with none to oppose; +their forward march was one of spoil, and it was not till the 1st of +July that they met their old foemen, the Army of the Potomac, in the +streets of Gettysburg, and after a fierce conflict drove them back. The +second day's conflict was a terrible slaughter, and at its close the +Federal Army, although holding its position, was to a certain extent +disheartened. Many of our best generals and commanding officers were +killed or wounded, scores of regiments and batteries were nearly wiped +out, Sickles' line was broken and driven in and its position was held by +Longstreet. Little Round Top, the key of the position, was held only at +a frightful loss of life, and Ewell upon the right had gained a footing +upon the Ridge. The Rebel army was joyful and expectant of victory. The +morning of the 3rd of July opened clear and bright, and one hundred +thousand men faced each other awaiting the signal of conflict; but, +except the pushing of Ewell from his position, the hours passed on +relieved only by the rumbling of artillery carriages as they were massed +by Lee upon Seminary Ridge, and by Meade upon Cemetery Ridge. At twelve +o'clock Lee ascended the cupola of the Pennsylvania College, in quiet +surveyed the Union lines, and decided to strike for Hancock's Centre. +Meanwhile, Pickett with his three Virginia brigades had arrived from +Chambersburg and taken cover in the woods of Seminary Ridge. What Lee's +feelings must have been, as he looked at the hundred death-dealing +cannon massed on Cemetery Hill, and the fifty thousand men waiting +patiently in front and behind them, men whose valor he knew well in many +a bitter struggle--and then looked at his handful of brave Virginians, +three, small, decimated brigades which he was about to hurl into that +vortex of death,--no one will ever know. The blunder that sent the +Light Brigade to death at Balaklava was bad enough, but here were +five thousand men waiting to seek victory where, only the day before +ten thousand had lost their lives or their limbs in the same futile +endeavor. Leaving the college, Lee called a council of his generals at +Longstreet's headquarters, and the plan of attack was formed. It is said +that the level-headed Longstreet opposed the plan, and if so it was but +in keeping with his remarkable generalship. The attack was to be opened +with artillery fire to demoralize and batter the Federal line, and was +to be opened by a signal of two shots from the Washington Artillery. At +half-past one the report of the first gun rang out on the still, summer +air, followed a minute later by the second, and then came the roar and +flash of one hundred and thirty-eight rebel cannon. Almost immediately +one hundred Federal guns responded and the battle had begun. Shot and +shell tore through the air, crashing through batteries, tearing men and +horses to pieces; the very earth seemed to shake and the hills to reel +as the terrible thunders re-echoed amongst them. For nearly an hour +every conceivable form of ordnance known to modern gunnery hissed and +shrieked, whistled and screamed, as it went forth on its death-mission +till exhausted by excitement and heat the gunners slackened their fire +and silence reigned again. + +Then Pickett and his brave legion stood up and formed for the +death-struggle; three remnants of brigades consisting of Garnett's +brigade:--the 8th, 18th, 19th, 28th, 56th Virginia; Armistead's +brigade:--the 9th, 14th, 38th, 53rd, 57th Virginia; Kempers's +brigade:--the 1st, 3rd, 7th, 11th, 24th Virginia. Their tattered flags +bore the scars of a score of battles and from their ranks the merciless +bullet had already taken two-thirds their number. In compact ranks, +their front scarcely covering two of Hancock's brigades, with flags +waving as if for a gala-day, Gen. Pickett saluted Longstreet and asked, +"Shall I go forward, sir?" but it was not in Longstreet's heart to send +those heroes of so many battles to certain death; and he turned away his +head,--when Pickett with that proud, impetuous air which has earned him +the title of the "Ney" of the Rebel army, exclaimed, "Sir! I _shall_ +lead my division forward!" The orders now rang out, "_Attention_! +_Attention_!" and the men, realizing the end was near, cried out to +their comrades, "Good-by, boys! good-by!" Suddenly rang on the air the +final order from Pickett himself, as his sabre flashed from its +scabbard,--"_column forward! guide centre_!" And the brigades of +Kemper, Garnett and Armistead moved towards Cemetery Ridge as one man. +Soon Pettigrew's division emerged from the woods and followed in echelon +on Pickett's left flank, and Wilcox with his Alabama division moved out +to support his right flank--in all about fifteen thousand men. The +selection of these supports shows a lack of judgment which it would +almost seem impossible for Lee to have made. Pettigrew's division was +composed mostly of new troops from North Carolina, and had been terribly +used up in the first day's fight, and were in no condition to form part +of a forlorn hope. Wilcox's troops had also received very severe +punishment in the second day's engagement in his attack on the Ridge and +should have been replaced by fresh well-tried brigades. But the movement +had now begun and Lee with his generals about him watched anxiously for +the result. + +[Illustration: MAJ. GEN. GEORGE E. PICKETT] + +It was nearly a mile to the Union lines, and as they advanced over the +open plain the Federal artillery opened again, ploughing great lanes +through their solid ranks, but they closed up to '_guide centre_' +as if upon dress-parade; when half way over Pickett halted his division +amidst a terrible fire of shot and shell, and changed his direction by +an oblique movement coolly and beautifully made. But here occurred the +greatest mistake of all. Wilcox paid no attention to this change of +movement, but kept straight on to the front, thus opening a tremendous +gap between the two columns and exposing Pickett's right to all the +mishaps that afterwards overtook it. To those who have ever faced +artillery fire it is marvellous and unexplainable how human beings could +have advanced a mile under the terrific fire of a hundred cannon, every +inch of air being laden with the missiles of death; but in splendid +formation they still came bravely on till within range of the musketry; +then the blue line of Hancock's corps arose and poured into their ranks +a murderous fire. With a wild yell the rebels pushed on, unfalteringly +crossed the Federal line and laid hands upon eleven cannon. + +Men fired in each others faces; there were bayonet thrusts, cutting with +sabres, hand to hand contests, oaths, curses, yells and hurrahs. The +second corps fell back behind the guns to allow the use of grape and +double canister, and as it tore through the rebel ranks at only a few +paces distant the dead and wounded were piled in ghastly heaps. Still on +they came up to the very muzzles of the guns; they were blown away from +the cannon's mouth but yet they did not waver. Pickett had taken the key +to the position and the glad shout of victory was heard, as, the very +impersonation of a soldier, he still forced his troops to the crest of +Cemetery Ridge. Kemper and Armistead broke through Hancock's line, +scaled the hill and planted their flags on its crest. Just before +Armistead was shot, he placed his flag upon a captured cannon and cried +"_Give them the cold steel, boys_!"; but valor could do no more, +the handful of braves had won immortality but could not conquer an army. +Pettigrew's weak division was broken fleeing and almost annihilated. +Wilcox, owing to his great mistake in separating his column was easily +routed, and Stannard's Vermonters thrown into the gap were creating +havoc on Pickett's flank. Pickett, seeing his supports gone, his +generals, Kemper, Armistead and Garnett killed or wounded, every field +officer of three brigades gone, three-fourths of his men killed or +captured, himself untouched but broken-hearted, gave the order for +retreat, but band of heroes as they were they fled not; but amidst that +still continuous, terrible fire they slowly, sullenly, recrossed the +plain,--all that was left of them, but few of five thousand. + +[Illustration: Position of troops at time of attack on left centre on +3rd day of battle of Gettysburg.] + +Thus ended the greatest charge known to modern warfare. Made in a +most unequal manner against a great army and amidst the most terrific +cannonade known in wars, and yet so perfect was the discipline, so +audacious the valor that had this handful of Virginians been properly +supported they would perhaps have rendered the Federal position +untenable, and possibly have established the Southern Confederacy. +While other battle-fields are upturned by the plough and covered with +waving grain, Cemetery Ridge will forever proudly uphold its monuments +telling of glory both to the Blue and the Gray, and our children's +children while standing upon its crest will rehearse again of Pickett's +wonderful charge. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PATRIOT, SAMUEL ADAMS. + +BY EDWARD P. GUILD. + + +[Illustration: SAMUEL ADAMS. FROM COPLEY'S PAINTING.[1]] + +Three years ago the old State House in Boston was restored to its +original architectural appearance. After having fallen a prey to the +ruthless hand of commerce, been surmounted with a "Mansard roof," +disfigured by a legion of business signs, made a hitching place for +scores of telegraph wires, and lastly been threatened with entire +demolition by the ever arrogant spirit of "business enterprise"; the +sentiment of patriotic veneration asserted itself and came to the +rescue. With an appropriation of $35,000 from the city, work was begun +in the fall of 1881, and by the following July the ancient building had +been restored to almost exactly its appearance in the last century. As +the Old State House now stands, it is identical with the Town House +which Boston first used for its town meeting May 13, 1713. This was nine +years before the birth of the man destined to become the foremost +character in the Boston town meeting of the eighteenth century--Samuel +Adams. Probably no other man who ever lived has been so identified with +the history of the Old State House as was he. The town meetings were +held in Faneuil Hall after 1742, but through the stormy years when the +Assembly met in the old building, Samuel Adams was in constant +attendance as clerk. His desk, on which he wrote the first sentences +ever ventured for American independence, and by which he arose, and, +with hands often tremulous with nervous energy, directed the exciting +debates, is to-day in the old Assembly chamber in the western end of the +building. In 1774 he went to Congress, but for a long period afterward +the Old State House was again his field of labor, as senator, as +lieutenant governor and then as governor. + +The life of Samuel Adams ought to be more familiar than it is to the +patriotic young men of to-day, but some excuse is found in the fact that +a popular, concise biography has, until lately, not been written. The +excellent three volume work of Mr. Wells, Adams' great grandson, +although admirable as an exhaustive biography, is too voluminous for the +common reader; but since the appearance of Prof. Hosmer's recent book[2] +there can be no reason why any schoolboy should not have a clear idea of +the life of the man who organized the Revolution. + +It is only as a patriot that Samuel Adams claims our attention. Although +college bred he was a man of letters only so far as his pen could write +patriotic resolutions and scathing letters against the government of +King George. These letters were printed for the most part in the "Boston +Gazette," published by Edes & Gill in Court Street. As a business man he +was never a success. For years he kept the old malt house on Purchase +Street, but he gave the business little thought, for his mind was +constantly engrossed in public matters, and at last he made no pretext +of attending to any matter of private business, depending for support +only upon his small salary as clerk of the assembly. No one will ever +accuse Samuel Adams of any selfish ambition, and, although his every act +will not bear the closest application of the square and rule, yet he +never deceived nor used a doubtful method in the least degree for +personal gain. + +Adams did not begin his public career early in life. In 1764 he was +chosen a member of the committee to instruct the representatives just +elected to the General Court, and the paper drafted on that occasion is +the first document from his pen of which we now have any trace, and is +memorable, moreover, because it contains the first public denial of the +authority of the Stamp Act. Adams was now forty-two, his hair was +already touched with gray, and "a peculiar tremulousness of the head and +hands made it seem as if he were already on the threshold of old age." +He had, however, a remarkably sound constitution, a medium sized, +muscular frame, and clear, steel-gray eyes. + +[Illustration: OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1793.] + +Among those closely connected with Adams in the public service, which, +from this time on, became his only thought, were John Hancock and James +Otis. Adams contrasted strongly with both of these men. Hancock was the +richest man in the province and as liberal as he was wealthy. In the +general jubilation that followed the repeal of the Stamp Act, he opened +a pipe of Madeira wine before his elegant mansion opposite the Common, +and so long as it lasted it was freely dispensed to the crowd. The dress +of Hancock when at home is described as a "red velvet cap, within which +was one of fine linen, the edge of this turned up over the velvet one, +two or three inches. He wore a blue damask gown lined with silk, a white +plaited stock, a white silk embroidered waistcoat, black silk +small-clothes, white silk stockings and red morocco slippers." Adams was +in marked contrast with Otis in temperament. The former, always cool and +collected and his words based on deliberate reason, was the extreme of +the other who carried his arguments in a flood of impetuous eloquence. +"Otis was a flame of fire," says Sewall. But although Otis was once +almost the ideal of the people, his erratic tendencies at last unfitted +him for a leader. + +One reason of Sam Adams' prestige with the masses was his common and +familiar intercourse with mechanics and artisans. Hancock, Otis, Bowdoin +and Curtis, on account of their wealth and ideas of aristocracy, kept +more or less aloof from the workmen; while Adams, plainly clad and with +familiar but dignified manner, was often found in the ship yards or at +the rope walks engaged in earnest conversation with the homely +craftsmen. Indeed, nothing pleased him more than to be talking with a +ship carpenter as they sat side by side on a block of oak, or with some +shopkeeper in a sheltered fence corner. Most of his writing was done in +a little room in his Purchase Street house where night after night his +busy mind and quill were kept at work on his trenchant letters for the +"Gazette," which were signed with significant nom de plumes in Latin. + +The year 1768 was made notable by the arrival in Boston from England of +the 14th and the 29th regiments. The main guard was quartered in King +(now State) Street, with the cannon pointed toward the State House, and +the troops occupied various houses in the vicinity. In the next year the +Governor, Bernard, was recalled, and Thomas Hutchinson, although +remaining nominally lieutenant governor, became acting chief magistrate. +He now appeared the most conspicuous figure among the royalists, and +Samuel Adams became more distinctly the leader of the patriots. +Neglecting all other affairs, he was content to live on a pittance, +which he was enabled to do by a frugal and helpful wife. + +Affairs were now approaching a crisis. A consignment of goods from +England, sent in defiance of the non-importation agreements, was not +allowed to land and had to be returned. One importer, a Scotchman, would +not sign the agreements, so after much remonstrance, Samuel Adams arose +in town meeting and grimly moved that the number present, about two +thousand, should resolve itself into a committee of the whole, wait upon +the obstinate merchant and use such persuasion as should be necessary to +secure a compliance. But no vote was needed, for the Scotchman was +present, and rushing to the front with knees trembling and in a +squeaking voice, rolling his r's like a well-played drum, exclaimed:-- +"Mr. Mode-r-r-rater, I agr-r-ree, I agr-r-ree!" greatly to the amusement +of the people. + +It was early in the next year, 1770, that the hostility between +towns-people and soldiers led for the first time to the shedding of +blood. In February a boy, Christopher Snyder, was shot and killed during +a disturbance, and in March occurred the "Boston Massacre." The story has +been many times told. Quarrels had grown frequent between the soldiers +and the rope-walk hands, the soldiers usually getting the worst of it. +On the evening of the 5th, an altercation began just below the Old State +House, between the sentinel of the guard and a crowd of townsfolk. An +alarm was rung from one of the steeples, and many citizens hurried to +the place, most of them thinking that a fire had broken out. A sentry +was at the corner of King and Exchange streets, where the Custom House +stood, and he was assaulted by the boys with snowballs. Captain Preston +with seven or eight men rushed to the scene, loaded their muskets and +made ready to fire. The mob hooted, struck their muskets and dared them +to fire. At last a volley came. Three were killed and eight wounded. +At once there was a tumult. The bells were all rung and the populace +hurried to and fro. The bodies of the slain lay on the ground which was +sprinkled with a light snow, serving to plainly reveal in the clear +moon-light the stains of blood. + +[Illustration: OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1801.] + +The 29th regiment repaired to the spot prepared for firing, and there +would have been a fierce contest but for the excellent conduct of the +acting governor, Hutchinson. He took Captain Preston severely to task +for firing at the people without the orders of a civil magistrate, and +then, quickly working his way to the State House, took his stand in the +balcony of the council-chamber looking down King Street, and made an +address promising that the law should prevail and justice should be done +to all. The next morning Hutchinson was waited upon by the selectmen who +informed him that there would be no peace until the soldiers should +depart. Hutchinson claimed, however, that the regiments were not under +his command. + +A mass meeting was soon held in Faneuil Hall, and was addressed by +Samuel Adams. It may readily be believed that he advocated no +compromise, and a committee of fifteen was immediately appointed of +which Adams was a member. According to instructions, they at once +repaired to the council chamber, and demanded the instant removal of the +troops. At three o'clock a regular town meeting assembled in Faneuil +Hall, but, owing to the great number present, adjourned to the Old South +Meeting House. Then the committee of fifteen appeared making their way +from the council-chamber to the meeting-house. Samuel Adams was at the +head, and as the crowd made way on either hand he bared his head, and, +inclining to the right and left, as he passed through the line, kept +repeating: "Both regiments or none!" "Both regiments or none!" + +[Illustration: STATUE IN ADAMS SQUARE.] + +In the presence of the dense multitude in the Old South, the governor's +reply was rendered: the 29th regiment should go to the castle, but the +14th must remain. Then the cry arose, "Both regiments or none!" and as +the shout echoed from every quarter it was plain that the people had +caught the meaning of the watchword, given shortly before by Adams. A +new committee, also including Adams, was appointed and sent back to the +governor, and as they stood in the council chamber the scene was one +that John Adams pronounced long after as worthy a historical painting. A +few sentences from Adams' address to Hutchinson are clear enough to show +the intense earnestness and patriotism of the man. + + "It is well known," he said, "that acting as governor of the Province, + you are by its charter the commander-in-chief of the military forces + within it; and as such, the troops now in the capital are subject to + your orders. If you, or Colonel Dalrymple under you, have the power to + remove one regiment, you have the power to remove both; and nothing + short of their total removal will satisfy the people or preserve the + peace of the Province. A Multitude highly incensed now wait the result + of this application. The voice of ten thousand freemen demands that + both regiments be forthwith removed. Their voice must be respected, + their demand obeyed. Fail not then at your peril to comply with this + requisition! On you alone rests the responsibility of this decision; + and if the just expectations of the people are disappointed, you must + be answerable to God and your country for the fatal consequences that + must ensue. The committee have discharged their duty, and it is for + you to discharge yours. They wait your final determination." + + +Hutchinson for a long time stood firm, but yielded at last and the +troops were removed. + +It is not the purpose of this paper to follow Samuel Adams through his +active career in the years of the Revolution and the succeeding period. +It is always Samuel Adams, the unswerving patriot, the adroit leader, +the man of the people. It had long been felt in England that his was the +most active spirit in the cause of the patriots, and there was much talk +of effecting his arrest and bringing him to trial on the charge of +treason, but the move was never made. Adams' courage never failed. He +had long given up the idea of any compromise between the colonies and +the Crown, and there is nothing conciliatory in his words or acts. When +the tea was emptied into Boston Harbor it was easily understood that +Adams was the real leader in the action. No one familiar with the life +of the great town meeting man, as Prof. Hosmer likes to call him, can +doubt that he had the essential qualities of an adroit strategist. +Cromwell once locked Parliament out, Adams once locked the Assembly in. +He had secured a majority of the members to vote for a Continental +Congress, but could the resolve be presented and brought to a final vote +before Governor Gage could prorogue the Assembly, as he would use all +speed to do, the instant the first knowledge of the scheme reached his +ears? On the 17th of June, just one year before the Battle of Bunker +Hill, that question was answered. The resolve was offered that day +providing for the appointment of delegates to such a congress. Tory +members at once essayed to leave the hall to dispatch the news to +the governor, but the bolts were fast, and Samuel Adams had the key +in his pocket. Two months later the delegates were on their way to +Philadelphia,--Thomas Cushing, Samuel and John Adams and Robert Treat +Paine. + +Events then transpired rapidly. So far, Samuel Adams was almost wholly +alone in the idea of independence, but it was declared by Congress less +than two years later. For more than twenty years longer, Adams continued +in public life, but his greatest work was before the Declaration of +Independence rather than after. There were times when the cause of the +patriots must have fallen through but for the nerve and skill of this +man. Bowdoin, Cushing, Hancock, Otis, and even John Adams could not have +been thoroughly trusted in the last years of the colony to bring affairs +to a successful issue. But Samuel Adams was fitted by intellect and +character, adroitness and courage, tireless energy and by never failing +devotion to the public good, to be the man for the time. + +When America had become a Republic, and Adams had returned from Congress +to his native town, he served as presiding officer of the Senate, then +as lieutenant governor, and, upon the death of Hancock, governor, to +which office he was several times chosen by the people. He died in 1803, +and his dust lies to-day in the old Granary Burying Ground, close by the +common grave of the four victims of the Boston Massacre. + +The statue in bronze now standing in Adams Square is noble in design, +and appropriate for situation. It is in almost the busiest position of +the great city, and daily across its shadow pass tens of thousands of +mechanics and artisans--the class of men with whom Samuel Adams used to +love to hold intercourse. The Old State House and Faneuil Hall are only +a stone's-throw distant from the statue, but the face is not looking in +the direction of either; it is turned directly toward the visible shaft +of granite on Bunker Hill--the monument which marks the first great +battle in the struggle for that Independence toward which, in all his +labors for so many years, the eyes of Samuel Adams were ever turned. + + +[Footnote 1: For the reproduction of the above portrait and the two +following views of the Old State House, we are indebted to the courtesy +of Messrs. Ticknor & Co., the well-known Boston publishers.--Ed.] + +[Footnote 2: Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer, 1 vol., 442 pp. American +Statesmen Series. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1883.] + + * * * * * + + + + +AUTHORITATIVE LITERATURE OF THE CIVIL WAR. + +BY GEORGE LOWELL AUSTIN. + + +II. + + + THE LIFE AND PUBLIC SERVICES OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, sixteenth + President of the United States: together with His State Papers, + including his Speeches, Addresses, Messages, Letters, and Proclamations, + and the closing Scenes connected with his life and death. By Henry J. + Raymond. To which are added Anecdotes and Personal Reminiscences of + President Lincoln, by Frank B. Carpenter, with a steel portrait, and + other illustrations, 1 vol. octavo, pp. 808. New York: Derby and Miller, + 1865. + + +During the Presidential canvass of 1864, the author of this volume +prepared a work upon the administration of President Lincoln. That +canvass resulted in the re-election of Mr. Lincoln, whose death occurred +soon after his second inauguration. As the editor of the _New York +Times_, Mr. Raymond possessed at the time ample facilities to prepare +such a book as was needed to interest the public in the life of one +whose work was at once as great as it was successful. Up to the day of +its publication, this book was the best and most authoritative that had +been published. Twenty years have since elapsed, and in many respects it +still maintains a just superiority and a historical value that cannot be +questioned. Its errors are of omission, rather than of commission; while +its merits are so great as to render it indispensable to all future +writers on the subject. Every public speech, message, letter, or +document of any sort of Mr. Lincoln's, so far as accessible in 1865, +will be found included in the volume. The rapidly occuring events of +the civil war, with much of their secret history, are tersely and +graphically described. The "Reminiscences" of Mr. Carpenter, covering +about thirty pages, add interest to the volume. + + + ABRAHAM LINCOLN: The True Story of a Great Life. Showing the + inner growth, special training and peculiar fitness of the Man for his + work. By William O. Stoddard. Illustrated. 1 vol. octavo, pp. 508. New + York: Fords, Howard & Hurlbert, 1884. + + +Mr. Stoddard was one of President Lincoln's secretaries during the civil +war, and very naturally his work ought to have strong claims upon the +interest and attention of American readers. His book is not of a +profound or critical character; but a singularly honest and candid and +strictly personal biography, simply written for readers of all ages and +degrees of intelligence. It sheds considerable light on the political +history of the civil war and on the events which led to it. With the +military history, it deals but little. Still its brief, vigorous and +vivid sketches furnish an exceedingly fascinating bird's eye view of the +great struggle. But its most valuable feature is the clearness with +which it depicts Lincoln, the man,--his sagacity and patience at +critical moments, his keen perception of "popular" sentiment and +disposition, his _individuality_, his distinctive fitness for the +tasks and burdens which fell upon him. This work, at once so accurate, +so comprehensive, so discriminating and so well written, is one for all +Americans, and particularly for younger readers. It has in it a charm +possessed but by very few biographies, and a fascination that but few +novels can surpass. To enjoy it and to profit by it, one need not always +coincide with the author's judgments of men and measures, or his +criticisms of military leaders and policies. + + + THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By Isaac N. Arnold. 1 vol. octavo, + pp. 462. Chicago: Jansen, McClurg & Co., 1885. + + +This work also possesses strong claims upon our attention. It was +completed only a few days before the death of its eminent author. +Furthermore, Mr. Arnold knew President Lincoln better than almost any +other man; they had been intimate friends for more than a quarter of a +century, thinking, conversing and working together during all that time. +When the civil war broke out, Mr. Arnold entered Congress; became one of +the most trusted advisers of the President; and no one better than he +knew and comprehended the latter's thoughts and intentions; even the +cabinet officers and the private secretaries never approached so near to +the heart and mind of President Lincoln as did his life long, trusted +and admired friend. In 1867, Mr. Arnold published a "History of Abraham +Lincoln and the Overthrow of Slavery" which is a work of rare interest +and of exceptional historic value. But this work, in the judgment of the +author, was unsatisfactory from the fact that, while it depicted well +enough the _times_, it failed to portray the _life_ of President +Lincoln. The later volume meets the deficiency, and in fact leaves +absolutely nothing to be desired. The spirit of tenderness broods over +its charmful pages. Singularly unpretentious, its very simplicity is +eloquent and inspiring, and makes the heart of the reader blend with the +grand and noble heart of its subject. Its accuracy is unmarred; it +explains all doubts that have ever existed in regard to Mr. Lincoln's +motives and acts; it asserts nothing without proving it; it tells the +plain, straightforward story, and leaves criticism to others. As a +_personal_ biography of Mr. Lincoln's life and character, this book +is not only unsurpassed, but it deserves to rank as one of the classics +in our native literature. + + + THE POLITICAL CONSPIRACIES PRECEDING THE REBELLION; or the True + Story of Sumter and Pickens, By Thomas M. Anderson, Lieut. Col. U.S.A. 1 + vol. quarto, pp. 100. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1883. + + +The author assumes that there were "a number of conspiracies" antedating +the immediate outbreak of the civil war, but makes no claim that the war +was the result of such conspiracies. His narrative, then, is merely +descriptive of the events which took place in the period between October +1860 and April 1861, purely _resume_ in character and wholly based +upon the disclosures of the Official Records. The author allows himself +to criticise men and acts rather freely, and at times captiously; and +has evidently intended his book to be a defence of his brother, the hero +of Sumter, against certain charges which were once made against him. The +old hero needs no defender, even if we suppose that he ever merited +criticism. The volume is a small one,--trustworthy as regards its +statements and valuable for reference. It may profitably be read in +conjunction with the second volume of Mr. Curtis's _Life_ of _James +Buchanan_, also with the small volume, by General Doubleday, entitled +_The Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Pickens in 1860-61_. + + + THE PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN OF GENERAL MCCLELLAN IN 1862. Papers read + before the Military Historical Society of Massachusetts in 1876-77-78 + and 80. Printed for the Society. Vol. I, octavo, pp. 249. Boston: James + R. Osgood and Company, 1881. + + +The Military Society of Massachusetts was organized in 1876, with the +object of investigating questions relating to the civil war. Up to the +date of the publication of this volume, about forty papers were read, +six of them being devoted to the Peninsular Campaign of 1862, eleven +to General Pope's campaign of 1862, three to the campaign of +Chancellorsville, three to the Antietam campaign, sixteen to the +campaign of 1864, and one each to the battle of Mobile Bay and Grouchy +controversy,--all, with the exception of the last two, bearing upon the +operations of the Army of the Potomac in 1862 and 1864, and including +discussions from different standpoints of the objects and general plans +of the several campaigns and battles in which it participated, and of +the controverted questions that have arisen concerning them. The first +printed volume of the Society contains the following papers:--"General +McClellan's Plans for the campaign of 1862, and the Alleged Interference +of the Government with them," by John C. Ropes, Esq: "The Siege of +Yorktown," by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. John C. Palfrey, U.S.A.: "The Period +which elapsed between the Fall of Yorktown and the Beginning of the +Seven-Days-Battles," by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. Francis W. Palfrey, U.S.V. "The +Seven-Days Battles--to Malvern Hill," by same author. "The Battle of +Malvern Hill," by same author; "Comments on the Peninsular Campaign," +by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. Charles A. Whittier, U.S.V. All of these are earnest +discussions,--but of unequal worth--of the various merits or demerits +of General McClellan in the Peninsular campaign, or the attitude of the +government toward him at that time. The ground is traversed as often +before; all the old arguments are again brought into comparison, and +a very small amount of _new_ evidence is discovered. What has +previously been said in many books and pamphlets and by a score of +writers, is here said in one volume by three writers. But nothing +appears to be _freshly_ said, and, as usual, the conclusions +reached are colored by the political likes or dislikes of their several +writers. The sole merit of the volume lies in the fact that its papers +embody a mass of very valuable material, gleaned from trustworthy +sources, for the future historian. It is very safe to assume, however, +that the future historian while expressing gratitude for their +investigations, will not be tempted to place much weight upon the +conclusions of the gentlemen who hold the monopoly of this volume but +have not solved a single mooted question. + + + LIFE OF JAMES BUCHANAN, Fifteenth President of the United + States. By George Ticknor Curtis. 2 vols. octavo, pp. 625, 707. New + York: Harper & Brothers, 1883. + + +The second volume of this exceedingly painstaking and meritorious +biography sheds much light upon the events preceding, and those +transpiring during, the civil war. As another writer has remarked, +"there is something very pitiable, something almost tragic, in the +figure of James Buchanan during the last months of his administration." +He found himself wavering between two factions, between Right and Wrong. +So long as he wavered, the South stood by him; when he ceased to be a +wary politician and manifested a decision of character such as the times +demanded, the South turned against him as one man. His biographer proves +conclusively that the weak and time-serving President was _opposed_ +to secession; but as positively proves without intending to do so, that +he favored it by his singular unfitness and indifference in emergencies. +When secession threatened, Mr. Buchanan took the ground that he would +not precipitate war by applying force to prevent a State from seceding, +but that he would defend the flag and property of the United States. +With this policy in his heart, he permitted public property to be +seized, without striking a blow; he discovered treason in his cabinet, +and coolly allowed the traitors to consummate their work and to depart. +The fact was, that he was a very weak man, and his biographer is the +best authority for the statement. The work is important; it will always, +as it richly merits, be consulted by students, and may be read with +interest and profit by all. + +(To be continued.) + + * * * * * + + + + +ASSESSMENT LIFE INSURANCE. + +BY SHEPPARD ROMANS. + + +Life insurance, by whatever system, plan or method, has, for its +fundamental basis, the laws governing the rates of mortality at the +different ages. These fundamental laws have been developed and made +clear by a vast amount of statistical data obtained from observations +among persons insured in life insurance companies among annuitants, +among inhabitants of various towns and cities, and among the whole +population in certain countries, notably in England and in Belgium. One +uniform, unvarying, certain law has been thus established, which is that +the rate of mortality, or in other words the cost of insurance, +increases as a man grows older. From this law there is no escape. We +must accept the inevitable. Hence any system of insurance which is not +in accordance with this first principle, this unalterable law of nature, +is unsound, and any company, whether charging level premiums or natural +premiums, which does not recognize and conform to this fundamental law +of nature, is doomed to disaster and wreck, sooner or later. + +There are two methods of life insurance worthy of the name, and two +only. The one is by payments accurately adjusted to the cost of +insurance at each actual age, and which inevitably, unavoidably and +inexorably, must increase with the age of the person insured, and the +other is by level, or uniform payments extending over the whole duration +of life or for a stated number of years. The first is the natural system +and has been adopted _in part_, and imperfectly, by assessment +companies; the second is the artificial system, and is the one which has +been offered exclusively until lately, by all the regular life insurance +companies. Properly carried out, the one is as sound in theory and as +safe in practice as the other. In fact, the artificial premiums are the +exact mathematical or commuted equivalents of the natural premiums. + +Until within the last decade, the level premium system was practically +the only one in use. Since then there have come into existence hundreds +of co-operative or assessment companies. These institutions have had a +wonderful growth. It is claimed that the number of members and the +amounts insured, double those, respectively, in the old or regular +companies. + +Assessment companies do not, strictly speaking, grant insurance. They +are rather agencies, or trust companies, and their functions or +covenants are to make assessments upon survivors when deaths occur, and +to pay over the proceeds of such assessments to the beneficiaries of the +deceased members. There is no definite promise to pay in full, and no +obligation to pay more than the assessments yield. There is no capital, +no risk, no _insurance!_ It is a voluntary association of +individuals. There is usually but little if any penalty for +discontinuance of membership, and the permanence of such institutions +depends mainly upon the volition of their members. They spring into +existence suddenly by the voluntary association of a few individuals +without capital or personal risk, and as suddenly they may go out of +existence by the voluntary act or withdrawal of their members. A breath +may create, a breath destroy. + +It must be evident then to the merest tyro, that the permanence and +success of assessment companies depend upon the most rigid observance of +those principles which science and sound business experience have +demonstrated to be fundamental. Among these principles may be mentioned +the following. + +1. Rates of assessments or payments adjusted to the cost of insurance at +the actual age of each person. These rates must inevitably and +inexorably increase with the age of the individual. + +2. The creation of a guaranty, or emergency fund, available not only to +meet extra mortality, but as a cement to secure cohesion among the +members, and prevent the exodus of the sound lives. + +3. An assessment in advance at issue of certificate, otherwise some +persons will be insured for nothing and the cost will fall on the +persistent members. + +As was well said by a contributor in your last number, assessment +insurance has its defects, and these are well known to the managers of +these institutions, and that great improvements have been made by the +National Convention of assessment companies, which is composed of +representatives from the best companies organized in almost every state. +They recognize existing defects, they point out the remedies, and yet, +but few seem to have the courage of their convictions. It is a fact +beyond dispute, that with perhaps a half-dozen exceptions, the rates of +assessment in every assessment company in the country remain constant as +at the age of entry. That is to say, a man entering at the age of forty, +pays the rate at forty only, as long as he remains a member. This is a +direct violation of the inexorable law of nature which says, that as a +man grows older the risk of dying, or in other words the cost of +insurance, increases. It is all nonsense to urge that the _average_ +age and the average cost will be kept down by the influx of new members. +The contract is made with the individual, and unless each person pays +enough to compensate the company for the indemnity or insurance +furnished to him, it follows of necessity, that others will be +overcharged in order to meet the deficiency so occasioned. And this evil +is intensified each year as the company grows older. When younger and +fresher men find that they are overcharged in order to meet deficiencies +arising from the act that older and inferior risks pay less than cost, +they will either not enter, or, if members, will speedily desert and +join an institution which is on a sounder and more equitable basis. No +institution can be permanently successful which does not observe equity. +I have no hesitation in saying that every assessment or corporation +company which violates this fundamental law of nature by not making its +rates of assessment increase with the age of the individuals insured, is +_doomed_, and that disaster and wreck is only a question of time. +This is not a new opinion. It's truth is attested by more than one wreck +in this country already. + +In every level, or uniform premium, there is a provision for the payment +to the company of the rate of insurance at the actual present age, (no +matter at what age the insurance was affected) on the net amount at +risk. + +The great danger for co-oporative or assessment companies lies in the +facility with which such institutions may be organized, and by men +without capital, character, experience or financial ability, who may +thus be ushered into corporate existence by the indulgent laws of +different states. + +The members of the National Association of assessment companies should +see to it that the laws of the different states should be so amended as +to require at least a small capital, say $25,000, as a guaranty of good +faith and ability on the part of the promoters, and that no company +should be admitted to membership unless its system was founded on sound +principles as demonstrated by science and business experience. + +The managers of assessment companies should be careful lest their claims +should prove to be unfounded. For instance, the writer of the article in +your last number boldly asserts that it "is susceptible of mathematical +demonstration that one or two million of dollars of reserve is adequate +to perpetuate any well-conducted assessment company for all time, +however large or small it may be, while the spectacle is presented to us +of level premium companies holding fifty to one hundred millions of +accumulations belonging to their policy holders, from which no possible +benefit, in most cases, will ever accrue to them." On reflection he must +see the absurdity of such statements. + +The level premium system is a combination of insurance and investments. +The hundred millions are _investments_, and are necessary for the +integrity of the level premium contracts. Any assessment company in +which the rates do not increase as the members grow older should be +compelled to have the full premium reserve required by state law and +actuarial science to be held on level premium contracts. This is capable +of mathematical demonstration. + +It must be borne in mind that the cost of insurance _proper_, that +is, the provision to meet current death claims alone, is quite as high +in the best assessment company as in a regular life insurance company, +for this cost depends on the careful selection of lives. The difference +in the two institutions is that the former dispenses with the investment +element, while the latter exacts it in connection with all their +contracts. Hence the price to be paid is greater. But is not the +_guarantee_ also greater? + +The beneficiary under a death claim in an assessment company has for her +security the _hope_, or promise if you please, that one thousand +men will pay ten dollars each for her account. The beneficiary under a +death claim in a regular life insurance company has for her security not +only the actual payments of ten dollars each by one thousand men, but +the definite promise to pay in full by an institution which has ample +capital, assets, and surplus to back its contracts. + +Assessment insurance is yet on trial, and its only hope of permanent +business lies in a rigid compliance with the laws of mortality and of +sound business experience. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE OLD STATE HOUSE. + +BY SIDNEY MAXWELL. + + + The Old State House! Within these antique walls + The early fathers of the hamlet met + And gravely argued of the town's affairs. + Another generation came; and in + This hall the Tory Council sat in state + While from the burning lips of Otis, or + The stem, defiant tongue of Adams sprang + That eloquence whose echoes thundered back + From Concord, Lexington, and Bunker's Hill! + Between those years and ours a century lies; + Those patriot's graves are deep with moss and mould, + And yet these walls--the same whose shadows fell + Athwart the crimson snow where Preston charged[3]-- + Still cast their shadows; not on troops, nor mob + Exasperated by their wrongs, but on + A jostling, hurrying throng--freeman each one, + Unless in bondage to himself. O Man: + Pass not all heedless by, nor imprecate + This aged relic of the past because + It lies across thy path! From avarice + Redeemed; restored unto its former self,-- + We hail thee, noble Sentry of the years, + And greet thee with a thousand loving cheers! + + +[Footnote 3: The "Boston Massacre," March 5th, 1770.] + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PRECIOUS METALS. + +BY DAVID N. BALFOUR. + + +From the earliest times to the commencement of the Christian Era, the +amount of the gold and silver obtained from the surface and mines of the +earth is estimated to be $5,084,000,000; from the latter event to the +epoch of the discovery of America, $4,363,374,000 were obtained; from +the date of the last event to the end of 1842, an addition of +$8,500,000,000 was made; the extensive working of the Russian gold mines +in 1843, and subsequent years, added to the close of 1852, +$1,400,000,000 more; the quadruple discovery of the California gold +mines in 1848, those of Australia in 1851, of New Zealand in 1861, and +the silver mines of Nevada and other countries bordering upon the +Pacific slope of the United States, added, at the close of 1884, +$7,093,626,000, making a grand total at the present time of +$26,441,000,000. + +The average loss by the attrition of coin is estimated by Prof. Bowen +at one-fortieth of one per cent, per annum; and the average loss by +consumption in the arts, and destruction by fire and shipwreck, at +$9,000,000 per annum. The amount of the precious metals in existence is +estimated to be $13,670,000,000, of which gold furnishes $8,166,000,000, +and silver $5,504,000,000. Of the amount now in existence, +$10,500,000,000 are estimated to be in coin and bullion, $2,000,000,000 +in watches, and the remainder in plate, jewelry, and ornaments. Of the +amount now in existence, $9,448,000,000 is estimated to have been +obtained from America, $1,908,000,000 from Asia (including Australia, +New Zealand, and Oceanica); $1,004,000,000 from Europe, and +$1,310,000,000 from Africa. + +The following statement will exhibit the product of the precious metals +throughout the world in 1884:-- + + + Countries. Gold. (America) Silver. Total. + Alaska, $300,000 $30,000 $320,000 + British Columbia, 2,000,000 80,000 2,080,000 + United States, 30,800,000 48,800,000 79,600,000 + Mexico, 1,000,000 30,000,000 31,000,000 + Guatemala, 40,000 200,000 240,000 + Honduras, 50,000 50,000 100,000 + San Salvador, 100,000 150,000 250,000 + Nicaragua, 100,000 100,000 200,000 + Costa Rica, 50,000 50,000 100,000 + Columbia, 1,900,000 500,000 2,400,000 + Venezuela, 3,000,000 200,000 3,200,000 + Guiana, 75,000 50,000 125,000 + Brazil, 400,000 50,000 450,000 + Bolivia, 50,000 12,980,000 13,030,000 + Chili, 60,000 5,000,000 5,060,000 + Argentine Republic, 50,000 200,000 250,000 + Patagonia, $10,000 $5,000 $10,000 + Other countries, 15,000 45,000 60,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Total, $40,000,000 $98,480,000 $138,480,000 + + + + EUROPE. + + Countries. Gold. (America) Silver. Total. + + Russia, $22,000,000 $300,000 $22,300,000 + Prussia, 900,000 8,000,000 8,900,000 + Spain, 70,000 2,500,000 2,570,000 + Austria, 950,000 1,500,000 2,450,000 + Norway, 60,000 300,000 360,000 + Other Countries, 20,000 320,000 340,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Total, $24,000,000 $12,920,000 $36,920,000 + + + ASIA. + + Countries. Gold. (America) Silver. Total. + + Borneo, $700,000 $470,000 $1,170,000 + China, 600,000 450,000 1,050,000 + Japan, 120,000 353,000 473,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Total, $1,420,000 $1,273,000 $2,693,000 + + Australia, $26,000,000 $80,000 $26,080,000 + New Zealand, 4,000,000 500,000 4,500,000 + Africa, 2,000,000 500,000 2,500,000 + Oceanica, 580,000 247,000 827,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Grand Total, $98,000,000 $114,000,000 $212,000,000 + + +The following statement will exhibit the annual product of the precious +metals at different periods:-- + + + Periods. Gold. Silver. Total. + + A.D. 14, $800,000 $4,200,000 $5,000,000 + A.D. 500, 200,000 2,800,000 3,000,000 + A.D. 1000, 120,000 880,000 1,000,000 + A.D. 1492, 100,000 150,000 250,000 + A.D. 1550, 800,000 3,200,000 4,000,000 + A.D. 1600, 2,000,000 9,000,000 11,000,000 + A.D. 1700, 5,000,000 18,000,000 23,000,000 + A.D. 1800, 17,000,000 38,000,000 55,000,000 + A.D. 1843, 52,000,000 42,000,000 94,000,000 + A.D. 1850, 106,000,000 47,000,000 153,000,000 + A.D. 1853, 236,000,000 49,000,000 285,000,000 + A.D. 1863, 208,000,000 63,000,000 271,000,000 + + +The following statement will exhibit the amount of the precious metals +estimated to be in existence at different periods: + + + Periods. Gold. Silver. Total. + + A.D. 14, $427,000,000 $909,000,000 $1,327,000,000 + A.D. 500, 100,000,000 400,000,000 500,000,000 + A.D. 1000, 65,000,000 200,000,000 265,000,000 + A.D. 1492, 57,000,000 135,000,000 192,000,000 + A.D. 1550. 76,000,000 284,000,000 360,000,000 + A.D. 1600, 105,000,000 391,000,000 496,000,000 + A.D. 1700, 351,000,000 1,410,000,000 1,761,000,000 + A.D. 1800, 1,125,000,000 3,622,000,000 4,747,000,000 + A.D. 1843, 1,975,000,000 5,040,000,000 7,015,000,000 + A.D. 1850, 2,368,000,000 4,963,000,000 7,331,000,000 + A.D. 1853, 2,942,000,000 4,945,000,000 7,887,000,000 + A.D. 1863, 5,107,000,000 4,945,000,000 10,052,000,000 + A.D. 1884, 8,166,000,000 5,504,000,000 13,670,000,000 + + +The following statement will exhibit the amount of the precious metals +estimated to have been obtained from the surface and mines of the earth, +from the earliest times to the close of 1884:-- + + + Periods. Gold. Silver. Total. + + A.C. $2,171,000,000 $2,913,000,000 $5,084,000,000 + A.D. to 1492, 3,842,374,000 521,000,000 4,363,374,000 + 1493 to 1842, 2,700,000,000 5,800,000,000 8,500,000,000 + 1843 to 1852, 900,000,000 500,000,000 1,400,000,000 + 1853 to 1862, 1,869,000,000 560,000,000 2,429,000,000 + 1863 to 1884, 3,145,626,000 1,519,000,000 4,664,626,000 + ______________ ______________ ______________ + Grand Total, $14,628,000,000 $11,813,000,000 $26,441,000,000 + + +During the first period (prior to the commencement of the Christian +Era,) the annual product of the precious metals was $2,000,000; during +the second period (prior to the discovery of America,) it was +$3,000,000; during the third period (prior to the extensive working of +the Russian gold mines, in 1843,) it was $26,000,000; during the fourth +period (prior to the double discovery of the California gold mines in +1858, and the Australia gold mines in 1851,) it was $140,000,000; during +the fifth period (which immediately succeeded afore-mentioned +discoveries,) it was $243,000,000; during the sixth period (immediately +succeeding the double discovery of the New Zealand gold mines in 1861, +and the silver mines of Nevada and other countries bordering on the +Pacific slope of the United States,) it was $212,000,000. The annual +products of the precious metals attained its acme in 1853, when it was +$285,000,000. The increase in the amount of the precious metals in +existence has been greater during the last forty-years than during the +previous two hundred and ninety-four. Of the amount ($6,441,000,000) of +the precious metals estimated to have been obtained from the surface and +mines of the earth, from the earliest times to the close of 1884, +$12,100,000,000 are estimated to have been obtained from America +$6,724,000,000 from Asia (including Australia, New Zealand and +Oceanica), $3,751,000,000 from Europe, and $2,866,000,000 from Africa. + + * * * * * + + + + +AMESBURY: THE HOME OF WHITTIER. + +BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK. + + +Amesbury is only a town. It has defects that would strike a stranger, +and beauties that one who has learned to love them never forgets; they +linger in glimpses of wood and hill and river and lake, and often rise +unbidden before the mind's eye. The poet Whittier says that those who +are born under the shadow of Powow Hill always return sometime, no +matter how far they may have wandered. He himself, though not Amesbury +born, has found it impossible to desert the old home, full of +associations and surrounded by old friends. He always votes in Amesbury, +and he often spends weeks at a time in his old home. The river that he +has sung, the lake that he has re-christened, the walks and drives with +which he is so familiar, all exercise their spell upon him; he loves +them, just as he loves the warm hearts that he has found there and +helped to make warm and true. + +But what a stranger would first notice in coming into town is, that the +houses, instead of being on land regularly laid out for building, seem +to have grown up here and there and everywhere, a good deal in +accordance with their own sweet wills, and without the smallest regard +to surroundings. + +But there are handsome houses in Amesbury, and these are growing more +numerous every year. The people themselves would assert that the walks +and drives about the village, the hills and the river are the things to +be longest remembered about the place. If they were inclined to +boasting, they might say also that they had as good a right as any +people in America to be considered of ancient stock, for some of the +names of the earliest settlers are the familiar names in the town +to-day, and few towns in America are older than Amesbury. The names +Barnard, Challis, Weed, Jones, and Hoyt, appear on the first board of +"Prudenshall," and that of Richard Currier as town clerk. This was in +April, 1668, the year after the new town was named. + +Early in 1735 the settlement of Newbury (then spelled Newberry) was +begun. In a little over three years a colony was sent out across the +Merrimac. The plantation was at first called merely from the name of the +river. In 1639 it was named Colchester by the General Court; but October +7, 1640, this name was changed to Salisbury, so that in 1638, almost two +hundred and fifty years ago, Salisbury began to be settled. It seemed as +if there was need of new settlements at that time to counteract the +depletions in the Old World, for the Thirty Years' War was still +impoverishing Germany; Richelieu was living to rule France in the name +of his royal master, Louis XIII; England was gathering up those forces +of good and evil which from resisting tyranny at last grew intoxicated +with power, and so came to play the tyrant and regicide. For it was +about that time that Charles I had disbanded his army, trusting to the +divinity that, in the eyes of the Stuarts, did ever hedge a king, and at +the same time thrown away his honor by pledging himself to what he never +meant to perform. While this farce, which preceded the tragedy, was +being set upon the stage of history, here, three thousand miles away, +nature had begun to build up the waste, and to prophesy growth. + +Salisbury, and afterwards Amesbury, were named from the two towns so +famous in England, the Salisbury Plain of Druidical memory, on which is +the celebrated Stonehenge, and near by, the Amesbury where was one of +the oldest monasteries in England. It is supposed that the towns were so +named because many of the new settlers came from those old English +towns. The latter name used to be spelled Ambresbury, and Tennyson in +his "Idylls of the King" spells Almesbury. After the discovery by Modred +of the guilt of King Arthur's fair and false wife, he says:-- + + "Queen Guinevere had fled the court and sat + There in the holyhouse at Almesbury + Weeping." + + +Describing her flight, he tells us that she sent Lancelot + + "Back to his land, but she to Almesbury + Fled all night long by glimmering waste and weald." + + +There Arthur sees her for the last time and mourns over her before he +goes forth to his last battle with Modred. + +On the whole, it is not strange, considering its associations, and +moreover the fact that this town in Massachusetts is the only Amesbury +in America while so many other names are duplicated, that the people of +Amesbury are not willing to merge the name of their town into that of +the elder sister, even when those parts called in each "the Mills" are +so closely united in interests and in appearance that no stranger could +recognize them as two towns. It is only the Powow that makes the +dividing line here. Blocks of offices and stores on both sides of the +street, among them the post-office, common to both towns, hide the +narrow stream at that point, and further up and down the towering walls +of the factories make it unobserved. It is not here that one sees the +Powow. But there is, or a little time ago there was, a place not far off +from this main street where the river is still harassed, yet as it slips +past in its silent toil with a few trees hanging low on the right, it +has a fascination in spite of its prosaic surroundings; it takes +naturally to picturesqueness and freedom. + +One of Whittier's early poems speaks of an Indian re-visiting the stream +that his forefathers loved, and standing on Powow Hill, where the chiefs +of the Naumkeaks, and of the other tribes held their powows. Here for a +moment, says the poem, a gleam of gladness came to him as he stooped to +drink of the fountain and seated himself under an oak. + + "Far behind was Ocean striving + With his chains of sand; + Southward, sunny glimpses giving + 'Twixt the swells of land, + Of its calm and silvery track + Rolled the tranquil Merrimack." + + +The Indian's feeling about "These bare hills, this conquered river," was +not strange. But to us it naturally occurs that we are more likely to +wake up with our scalps on our heads, instead of sleeping our last +sleep, while they dangle at a red man's girdle. Yet the very state of +warfare that at that time existed between the races showed that in the +settlers themselves was an element of savagery not yet eliminated. For +in all this fierce strife of the tomahawk and the gun, the Quaker +ancestors of the poet Whittier who met the Indians, armed only with +kindness and the high courage of their peaceful convictions, were +treated by the red men as friends and superiors. In the raids of general +devastation they were unmolested. Their descendant has a natural right +to express the pathos of the Indian's lot. + +There is a fine exhibition of human nature in the records of the first +settlement of Amesbury. The place was called "Salisbury new-town" until +1669, and was merely an offshoot of the latter, though much larger in +extent than it is today, for now it is only about six miles by three. +Then it reached up into what is now Newton, N.H. But why should not the +people of those days have been generous as to the size of townships, for +as to land, they had the continent before them where to choose? + +But in regard to the human nature. The settlers of Salisbury went at +first only beyond the salt marshes, their town being what is now East +Salisbury. The forests beyond had a threatening look, and were much +too near. It was determined, therefore, to drive them back by having +clearings and settlements across the Powow. So, December 26, 1642, about +three years after this little colony had crossed the Merrimack, a town +meeting was held in which it was voted:--"Yere shall thirtie families +remove to the west side of ye Powowas river." This motion was very easy +to carry. But it had not been voted what families were to move on beyond +the immediate protection of the small colony at East Salisbury. Who was +to go? Every man sat still in his place and nodded to his neighbor with +a "Thou art the man," in manner if not in words. It seems to us a very +little thing to give or take the advice, "Go West young man,--or woman." +But it was very different then. To do it meant, besides living encircled +by forests, to be obliged to go on Sunday through these forests, worse +than lonely, to the meeting-house at East Salisbury, and always with the +possibility of being at any moment obliged to flee all the distance to +that town for comparative safety, perhaps of being obliged to flee in +the night. Signals of alarm were arranged by the General Court. Alarm +was to be given "by distinctly discharging three muskets, or by +continual beat of the drum, or firing the beacon, or discharging a pesse +of ordnance, and every trained soldier is to take the alarm immediately +on paine of five pound." It was also ordered, "That every town provide a +sufficient place for retreat for their wives and children to repaire to, +as likewise to keepe safe the ammunition thereof." And also, "That all +watches throughout this country bee set at sunset at the beat of the +drums, & not bee discharged till the beate of the drum at sunne rising." + +But those old Puritans were not men to be bundled by any of the +weaknesses of human nature. In ten days, when it was found that nobody +had started "westward, ho!" another town-meeting was held, in which, in +spite of the dangers to be encountered by the new colony, the first vote +was re-affirmed, and it was decided that "the thirtie families be chosen +by ye seven men," probably the selectmen. And to ensure the matter, +it was determined that this vote should not be repealed except by the +consent of every freeman in the town. So, in the spring, this tiny +colony went out to Salisbury new-town. + +In 1647, a law was passed requiring every township of fifty families to +maintain a school. This is the way that the preamble reads:-- + +"It being one chiefe pr'ject of yt ould deluder, Satan, to keepe men +from ye knowledge of ye Scriptures, as in former times by keeping ym in +an unknown tongue, so in these latt'r times by pr'suading from ye use of +tongues yt so at least ye true sense & meaning of ye original might be +clouded by false glosses of saint-seeming deceivers, yt learning may not +be buried in ye grave of o'r fath'rs in ye church & commonwealth, the +Lord assisting our endeavor. It is therefore resolved," &c. + +It seems overturning the cornerstone of our forefathers' intentions to +banish from our schools the Scriptures, those finest examples of the +strength and beauty of the English language, to say nothing of their +lessons in individual self-government, which is the only foundation that +a republic can be built upon. + +From this old law have grown up all the public schools of Amesbury. +There is now a high school, and there are, of course, the required +number of small schools; some of these in the outlying districts having +very few scholars. + +Several years ago Mr. Whittier, who has the keenest sense of humor, told +a friend that in one of these the whole number of pupils was three, +average attendance one and a half! He was deeply interested in that half +child. + +Amesbury has among its attractions a Lion's Mouth! In the old days of +Indian ambushes it must have earned its right to the name. But now the +only existing danger is lest one should be eaten up--with kindness. +It is a short mile from the mills, and a pleasant walk in spite of its +ending! At last there comes a little hollow with a large farm-house on +the left, and a grass road winding past it at right angles with the main +road and leading into beautiful woods. These woods are the very jaws of +the lion; and it is very hard, on a hot summer's day, for those who go +into them to come out again. A few rods up the road from the hollow are +other houses. People bearing some of the earliest recorded names in +Amesbury, descendants of the brave pioneers, are to be found here, or +having departed this life, have left good records behind them. One of +these latter lived here in the pleasantest way. He and his wife carried +on their large farm in an ideal manner; everything was upon a generous +scale. There was money enough not to wear out life in petty economies, +and largeness of soul enough not to put the length of a bank account +against the beauties and refinements of life. The loss of their only +child, and a few years afterward of their grand-daughter, one of the +loveliest children earth ever held, was--not compensated for, that +can never be, but made much less dreary by a friendship of many years' +standing between them and their summer neighbors. In this case, too, the +gentleman is a native of Amesbury, proud and fond of his birthplace. +Every summer he comes to the cottage of this friend, a charming little +house only a few rods from the larger one, and spends the summer here +with his family and servants. He has made a great deal of money in New +York, but fortunately, not too much, for it has not built up a Chinese +wall around his heart; his new friends are dear, but his early friends +are still the dearest. + +Between the Mills and this formidable Mouth of the Lion, is the Quaker +Meeting House, a modest, sober-hued building on a triangular green, on +which, before it was fenced in, the boys delighted to play ball on the +days and at the hours (for the Quakers have meeting Thursday also) on +which the grave worshippers were not filing into what cannot fairly be +called the house of silence, because it has been known to echo to +exhortations as earnest, if not as vehement as one may hear from any +pulpit. Still, there are sometimes long intervals of silence, and then +the consciousness that silent self-examination is one purpose of the +coming together, gives an impressiveness to the simple surroundings. It +must have been here that Mr. Whittier learned to interpret so +wonderfully that silent prayer of Agassiz for guidance when he opened +his famous school from which he was so soon called to a higher life. + + "Then the Master in his place + Bowed his head a little space + And the leaves by soft airs stirred + Lapse of wave and cry of bird + Left the solemn hush unbroken + Of that wordless prayer unspoken + While its wish, on earth unsaid, + Rose to Heaven interpreted. + As in life's best hours we hear + By the spirit's finer ear + His low voice within us, thus + The All-Father heareth us: + And his holy ear we pain + With our noisy words and vain. + Not for him our violence + Storming at the gates of sense, + His the primal language, his + The eternal silences." + + +Mr. Whittier always goes to this meeting when he is well enough. The May +Quarterly Meetings of the Society of Friends are held at Amesbury. There +are a good many members of this Society in the town, and there is among +them a hospitality, a kindness, and a cordiality that added to their +quiet ways and the refined dress of the women makes them interesting. + +It goes without saying that Amesbury has also the allotment of churches +of other denominations usual to New England towns. + +Thirty years ago and more, the Amesbury and Salisbury Mills were two +distinct companies. The agent of the former mills, Mr. Joshua Aubin, +was a gentleman of fine presence. After he left Amesbury, he sent to +the town as a gift the nucleus of its present Public Library, which, +although not absolutely free has only a nominal subscription to pay the +services of the librarian, and for keeping the books in order. + +[Illustration: John G. Whittier] + +Mr. James Horton, agent of the Salisbury mills, was more of the +rough-and-ready type of man, a little bluff, but frank and kind-hearted. +Both gentlemen as it happened, lived in Amesbury and were of one mind in +regard to the character of their operatives. It was before the influx +of foreign labor, and the men and women in the mills belonged to +respectable, often well-to-do American families. Rowdyism was a thing +unknown to them, and as to drunkenness, if that fault was found once in +an operative, he was reprimanded; if it occurred again, he was at once +discharged. And so Amesbury, though a manufacturing town, was in its +neatness and orderliness an exquisite little village with the Powow Hill +at its back and the hem of its robe laved by two beautiful rivers. After +Mr. Aubin's ill health had made him resign his place, the father of +Prof. Langley, well-known to science, was agent for a time, and carried +on matters in the spirit of his predecessors. But there came a change, +the mills were united under one control, and an agent was sent to +Amesbury for the purpose of forcibly illustrating the fact that +corporations have no souls. He did it admirably. Work was started at +high pressure, there came a rush of foreigners into the place, many of +the old towns people moved away in disgust, and the new took the place +of the old as suddenly as if an evil magician had waved his wand +and cried: "Presto!" But this agent soon gave evidence that great +unscrupulousness doesn't pay, even as a financial investment. After +several other short regimes the present agent, Mr. Steere, came to +Amesbury, and the corporation has found it worth while to keep him. +The effect of the sudden influx of foreign population into Amesbury +has never done away with; it has its "Dublin" in a valley where the +corporation built houses for its operatives. And with what indifference +to cleanliness, or health these were built! The poor operatives were +crowded together in a way that would make neatness difficult to the most +fastidious. A physician in Amesbury who considered the poor, presented +this state of things so strongly and so persistently to the agent, spoke +so forcibly of the moral degradation that such herding increased, or +induced, that when it became necessary to build new tenements they were +much better arranged. Every manufacturing town in New England has now +its unwholesome because untaught population, a danger signal on the line +of progress of the republic. It is only popular education that can +remove this obstruction of ignorance. The foreign population of Amesbury +today is large, and although it gives hands to the mills, it adds +neither to the beauty nor the interest of the town. But it gives a +mission to those who believe in the possibilities of human nature, and +the right of every man to have a chance at life, even if the way he +takes it be not agreeable to his cultivated neighbor. + +The mills in the days of their greatest prosperity were all woolen mills: +now a part of them are cotton mills. They are all running, and, +although not with the remarkable success of a score of years ago, have a +future before them. + +The making of felt hats, now so important a business, was started here +a number of years ago by a gentleman who built a hat factory near his +house at the Ferry. He was a gentleman in that true sense in which, +added to his nerve and will (and he had abundance of both) were those +knightly qualities of generosity and kindliness that have made his +memory dear, while the Bayley Hat Company, called after him as its +founder, bears witness to his business ability. + +The great, oblong, many-windowed carriage manufactories meet one at +every turn, and often the smithy stands near with its clangor. This +business used to be confined to West Amesbury, now Merrimac. At the +beginning of the century it was started on an humble scale by two young +men, one a wood-worker, the other a plater, while another young man was +trimmer for them. One of the firm lived in West Amesbury, the other in +South Amesbury, now Merrimac Port, and after each had built his share of +the carriage, it was found a little difficult to bring the different +parts together. This was the beginning, and now Amesbury ships its +carriages over the world. One of the first to bring this business from +what was then West Amesbury to the Mills was a young man who in the +beginning of the war had been unfortunate in business. He gave his +creditors all he had, and went to the front. After serving his time +there he came home, went into the carriage business, made money this +time instead of losing it, and paid up his old creditors one hundred +cents on the dollar. He deserves a big factory and success. And he has +both. And he is not the only one of whom good things could be said. + +They have a Wallace G.A.R. Post in Amesbury, not in commemoration of the +Wallace of old Scottish fame, but of a man no less patriotic and brave +who lived among themselves, an Englishman, a shoemaker. He was lame, but +so anxious during the Rebellion to have his share in the struggle for +the Union that he tried to get a place on board a gunboat, saying that +he could "sit and shoot." As this was impossible, the town sent him to +Boston as its representative, and he was in the Legislature when the +members voted themselves an increase of pay. Mr. Wallace believed the +thing illegal. He took the money in trust. One day after his return to +Amesbury he limped up to his physician (the same one who had brought +about the better construction of the new corporation houses) and handed +him fifty dollars of this over pay, to be used at his discretion among +the poor, explaining as he did so where the money came from, that he +felt that it belonged to Amesbury, and that he returned a part through +this channel. + +Half way between the Mills and the Ferry stands an old well that a +native of Amesbury dug by the roadside for the benefit of travellers +because he had once been a captive in Arabian deserts, and had known the +torments of thirst. Here was a man to whom the uses of adversity had +been sweet, for they had taught him humanity. Mrs. Spofford has written +an appropriate poem upon this incident. + +The elms in Amesbury are very beautiful, and they are found everywhere; +but on the ferry road there are magnificent ones not far from the river. +They are growing on each side of the road, arching it over with their +graceful boughs. + +[Illustration: WHITTIER'S HOME, AMESBURY.] + +The Ferry proper near which was born Josiah Bartlett, one of the signers +of the Declaration of Independence, is at the foot of the street that +runs from the Mills down to the river. In old times there was a +veritable ferry here a few rods above where the Powow empties into the +Merrimack. This ferry is mentioned in the records, two years after the +town had been set upon its feet. In a book written about Amesbury by Mr. +Joseph Merrill, a native of the town, it is stated that the town +petitioned the general Court for leave to keep a Ferry over the river at +this place. This is the record from the same source:-- + +"The County Court held at Hampton, ye 13th of ye 8th month 1668, Mr. +Edward Goodwin being presented by ye Selectmen of ye town of Amesbury to +Court to keep ye Ferry over Merrimac river about ye mouth of ye Powow +river where ye said Goodwin now dwelleth, the Court do allow and approve +of ye sd person for one year next following and until ye Court shall +take further orders therein, and ye prices to be as followeth so, for +every single passenger two pence, for a horse and man six pence, and for +all great cattle four pence, for sheep and other small cattle under two +years old two pence per head." + +In 1791 there came up a question of a bridge being built across the +Merrimac. A town meeting was called to oppose the measure, and in this +it was argued that a bridge would throw into disuse the ferry with which +much pains had been taken. Precious old fogies! In those days, too, they +lived, for they were as old as the centuries. Nothing of the mushroom +about them. There is a tradition that once in Revolutionary days, +Washington was carried across this ferry. But it is impossible to say +what the tradition is founded upon, and how much it is worth. + +As to the river, there are rivers and rivers, as the saying is; at some +we marvel, some we fear and to some we make pilgrimages as to the Mecca +of the faithful. But the Merrimac is a river to be loved, and to be +loved the better the more familiar it is. What its poet, Whittier, says +about it must be literally true: + + "Our river by its valley born + Was never yet forgotten." + + +It is worth while to try to imagine it as he writes it in "Cobbler +Keezer's Vision" two hundred and more years ago, when that old fellow +was so amazed at the prospect of mirth and pleasure among the +descendants of the stern Puritans that he dropped his lapstone into the +water in bewilderment. + +This was the time when + + "Woodsy and wild and lonesome, + The swift stream wound away, + Through birches and scarlet maples + Flashing in foam and spray." + + "Down on the sharp-horned ledges + Plunging in steep cascade, + Tossing its white-maned waters + Against the hemlock's shade." + + "Woodsy and wild and lonesome, + East and west and north and south; + Only the village of fishers + Down at the river's mouth;" + + "Only here and there a clearing, + With its farm-house rude and new, + And tree-stumps, swart as Indians, + Where the scanty harvest grew." + + +What a picture that is! And then behind these tree-stumps, the great +forest with its possibilities of comfort and even of competence in its +giant timbers,--when they were fairly floored, but; as it stood, a +threatening foe with a worse enemy in its depths than the darkness of +its shadows, or the wild beasts. + +Several of Mr. Whittier's songs of the Merrimac were written for +picnics, given at the Laurels on the Newbury side of the river by a +gentlemen and his wife from Newburyport. They were early abolitionists, +friends and hosts of Garrison, of George Thompson and others of that +brave band, and of course friends of the poet. This hospitable couple +gave a picnic here every June for twenty years. The first was a little +party of perhaps half-a-dozen people, the twenty-first was a large +assembly. Mr. Whittier was present at these picnics whenever able, and, +as has been said, sometimes wrote a poem to be read there. He never +reads in public himself. + +Although the Powow river has been made so emphatically a stream of use, +there are glimpses of a native beauty in it that its hard fate has never +obliterated; these are still there, as one stands upon the little bridge +that spans its last few rods of individual life and looks up the stream +upon a wintry landscape, or upon summer fields, and longingly toward the +bend. + +Whether the Powow has any power to set in motion the wheels of fancy as +it does the wheels of the factories it is impossible to say, but this +much is certain; on its banks was born an artist who has made his name +known on the banks of the Seine. The father of Mr. Charles Davis, our +young artist of great promise and of no mean performance, was for years +a teacher in Amesbury, and the garden of the house where this son was +born bordered upon the Powow. + +[Illustration: THE OLD SANDY HILL MEETING HOUSE] + +At Pond Hills, between Amesbury and Merrimac, is lake Attitash, which, +before Mr. Whittier took pity upon it, rejoiced in the name of Kimball's +Pond. There is a slight suspicion that it is still occasionally called +by its old name. In dry seasons the water is used by the mills. But the +blue lake is as beautiful as if it were never useful. On its shore +enough grand old pines are left to dream under of forests primeval, of +Indian wigwams, and of canoes on the bright water; for the red men knew +very well the hiding places of the perch and of the pickerel. So did the +white men who chose the region of the Merrimac for their new home. In +the "Maids of Attitash" is described the lake where + + "In sky and wave the white clouds swam, + And the blue hills of Nottingham + Through gaps of leafy green + Across the lake were seen." + + +All these are still here, but one misses the maidens who ought to be +sitting there + + "In the shadow of the ash + That dreams its dream in Attitash." + + +No doubt they are about here somewhere, only it takes a poet's eye to +find them. And yet it was not very far from here that there lived a few +years ago a young girl, a descendant of one of the early settlers of +Amesbury, who on her engagement said to a friend proudly:--"I am going +to marry a poor man, and I am going to help him." And so she always +nobly did, in ways different from tawdry ambition. The courage of the +old Puritans has not died out here any more than the old beauty has +deserted the land. + + * * * * * + + + + +KATE FIELD'S NEW DEPARTURE. + +BY EDWARD INCREASE MATHER. + + +Miss Kate Field has been so exclusively identified with artistic and +literary success that her new departure as a lecturer on existing +political evils has excited no little surprise and comment. An +exceptional degree of public interest as well as of purely private and +personal regard has followed her almost, indeed, from childhood; partly +due, it may be, to a certain indefinable magnetism of temperament which +always makes the place where she chances to be at the time seem a social +centre, and somewhat, too, from a life that has not been without its +picturesque setting of scenery and circumstance. "Kate Field was started +right,"--remarked Miss Frances E. Willard of her one day. "As a child +Walter Savage Landor held her on his knee and taught her, and she grew +up in the atmosphere of Art." The chance observation made only _en +passant_, never the less touched a salient truth in that vital manner +in which Miss Willard's words are accustomed to touch truth. She was, +indeed, "started right." The only child of gifted parents, endowed with +a rare combination of intellectual and artistic talent; with a nobility +and genuineness of nature that has ever been one of her most marked +characteristics; attuned by temperament to all that is fine, and high, +and beautiful,--it is little wonder that her life has presented a series +of advancing achievements. She has studied, and read, and thought; she +has travelled, and "sipped the foam of many lives;" and a polished and +many-sided culture has added its charm to a woman singularly charming by +nature and possessed of the subtle gift of fascination. When very young +she studied music and modern languages abroad in Florence, and in +London. To music she especially devoted herself studying under Garcia +and under William Shakespeare, the great English tenor, whose favorite +pupil she is said to have been. Walter Savage Landor conceived a great +fondness for her, gave her lessons in Latin, and left her at his death a +valuable portfolio of old drawings. In some verses addressed "To K.F." +he alludes to her as:-- + + Modest as winged angels are, + And no less brave and no less fair. + + +[Illustration: MISS KATE FIELD.] + +His interest was richly repaid by the young girl who, after his death, +wrote reminiscences of Landor in a manner whose sympathetic brilliancy +of interpretation added an enduring lustre to his life and achievement. +In her early girlhood as, indeed, in her womanhood, her brilliancy and +charm won all hearts. It was in Florence that she met George Eliot, and +a moon-light evening at the Trollope villa, where Marion Lewes led the +girl, dream-enchanted, out on the fragrant and flowery terrace, left its +picture in her memory, and exquisitely did she portray it in a paper on +George Eliot at the time of her death. By temperament and cultivation +Miss Field is admirably adapted to interpret to the world its masters, +its artists. Her dramatic criticism on Ristori ranks among the finest +ever written of the stage; her "Pen Photographs of Dickens's Readings" +have permanently recorded that memorable tour. Her Life of Fechter wins +its praise from the highest literary authorities in our own country and +London. She has published a few books, made up from her fugitive +articles in the _Tribune_, the _London Times_, the _Athenæum_, and +the magazines, and more of this literature would be eminently refreshing +and acceptable. It is no exaggeration to say that among the American +writers of to-day no one has greater breadth, vigor, originality +and power than Kate Field. She is by virtue of wide outlook and +comprehension of important matters, entirely free from the tendency to +petty detail and trivial common-place that clogs the minds and pens of +many women-writers. Her foreign letters to the _Tribune_ discussed +questions of political significance and international interest. Miss +Field is a woman of so many resources that she has never made of her +writing a trade, but has used it as an art; and she never writes unless +she has something to say. This fact teaches a moral that the woman of +the period may do well to contemplate. + +Yet with all the varied charms of foreign life, passed in the most +cultivated and refined social circles of Europe, Kate Field never forgot +that she was an American, and patriotism grew to be a passion with her. +She became a student of English and American politics, and her +revelations of the ponderous machinery of the British Parliament, in a +series of strong and brilliant press letters, now collected into the +little volume called "Hap-Hazzard," was as fine and impressive in its +way as is her dramatic criticism or literary papers. All this, perhaps, +had paved the way for her to enter into a close and comprehensive study +of the subject which she is now so ably discussing in her notable +lectures on the social and the political crimes of Utah. The profound +and serious attention which she is now giving to this problem stamps her +lectures as among the most potent political influences of the time. Miss +Field's discussion of Mormonism is one of those events which seem +pre-determined by the law of the unconscious, and which seem to choose +the individual rather than to be chosen by him. In the summer of 1883, +by way of a change from continental travel, Miss Field determined to +hitch her wagon to a star and journey westward. She lingered for a month +in Denver where she received distinguished social attention and where, +by special request, she gave her lecture on an "Evening with Dickens" +and her charming "Musical Monologue." Of this Dickens' lecture a western +journal said:-- + + "Charles Dickens was the novelist of humanity, and Kate Field is, + to-day, his most sympathetic and intelligent interpreter. Those who + were so fortunate as to attend her reading last evening enjoyed an + intellectual pleasure not soon forgotten. They saw a slender, graceful + woman, dressed in creamy white, with soft laces falling about her; with + low, broad brow, and earnest, sympathetic eyes, under a cloud of soft + dark hair. With a rich and finely modulated voice of remarkable power + of expression, she held her audience for two hours spellbound by the + magic of her genius." + + +In Colorado Miss Field enjoyed an unique and picturesque holiday. +Picnics and excursions were gotten up in her honor; special trains were +run; she rode on horseback with gay parties of friends twenty-five miles +a day; she joined friends from New York who were camping out on "The +Needles," and she made a visit to the San Juan Silver-mining district. +Among other diversions she had the honor of naming a new watering place, +located on "The Divide," an hour by rail from Denver, to which, in honor +of General Palmer who has practically "made" that region, Miss Field +gave the name of Palmero, the Spanish for Palmer. + +How unconsciously Miss Field came to study the problem presented by the +peculiar institutions of Utah is curiously indicated in a letter from +Salt Lake City, under date of Jan. 16, 1884, which she wrote to the +Boston _Herald_, and which opens thus:-- + + "I know of nothing that would do Bostonians so much good as a prolonged + trip across this continent, giving themselves sufficient time to tarry + at different points and study the people. For myself--about half a + Bostonian--I became so ashamed of sailing east year after year, that + last summer I made up my mind to hitch my wagon to the star of empire + and learn as much of my own country as I knew of Europe. I started from + New York in July, expecting to be absent three months, and in that + period obtain an intelligent idea of the far West. After passing two + months and a half in wonderful Colorado and only seeing a fraction of + the Centennial state, I began to realize that in two years I might, + with diligence, get a tolerable idea of this republic west of the + Mississippi. Cold weather setting in, and the fall of snow rendering + mountain travelling in Colorado neither safe nor agreeable, I came to + Utah over the wonderful Denver & Rio Grande railroad, intending to + pass a week prior to visiting New Mexico and Arizona. My week expired + on the 22nd day of October and still I linger among the 'saints.' + I am regarded as more or less demented by eastern friends. If becoming + interested in a most extraordinary anomaly to such an extent as to + desire to study it and to be able to form an intelligent opinion + therein is being demented, then I am mad indeed, for I've not yet got + to the bottom of the Utah problem, and if I lived here years, there + would still be much to learn. Despite this last discouraging fact, + I have improved my opportunities and am able to paragraph what has + come under my own observation or been acquired by absorption of Mormon + and Gentile literature. If the commissioners sent here by Congress to + investigate the Mormon question, at an annual expense of forty thousand + dollars per annum, had studied this question as earnestly as I have, + they never would have told the country that polygamy is dying out. One + or two members of that commission know better, and sooner or later they + must tell the truth or stultify their own souls." + + +This extract reveals how deeply the anomaly of Mormon life had at once +impressed her. Miss Field was too keen and cultivated an observer not to +see beneath the surface of this phase of living a problem whose roots +struck deep into national prosperity and safety. The distinguished +essayist and critic, Mr. Edwin P. Whipple, said of her study of +Mormonism:-- + + She undertook a perfectly original method of arriving at the truth, by + intimate conversations with Mormon husbands and wives, as well as with + the most intelligent of the "Gentiles." She discarded from her mind + pre-conceptions and all prejudices which discolor and distort objects + which should be rigidly investigated, and looked at the mass of facts + before her in what Bacon calls "dry light." Cornelius Vanderbilt, the + elder, was accustomed to account for the failures and ruin of the + brilliant young brokers who tried to corner the stocks in which he had + an interest, by declaring that "these dashing young fellars didn't see + things as they be." Miss Field saw things in Utah "as they be." She + collected facts of personal observation, analyzed and generalized them, + and, by degrees, her sight became insight, and the passage from insight + to foresight is rapid. After thorough investigation, her insight + enabled her to penetrate into the secret of that "mystery of iniquity" + which Mormonism really is; while her foresight showed her what would + be the inevitable result of the growth and diffusion of such a horrible + creed. + + +The winter lapsed into spring and still she lingered in Salt Lake City. +She relinquished all pleasure for the real work of studying deeply the +anomaly of a Polygamous hierarchy thriving in the heart of the Republic. +Every facility was accorded to her by United States officials, military +officers, leading Gentiles and Apostates. Prominent "Latter Day Saints" +offered her marked courtesy. She pursued this research unremittingly for +eight months and when, at last, she left Salt Lake City, the leading +Gentile paper, the Tribune, devoted a leading editorial to Miss Field's +marvellously thorough study of Mormon conditions, and, on her departure, +said:-- + + "Miss Field is probably the best posted person, outside the high + Mormon church officials, and others who have been in the church, on + this institution, in the world, and its effects upon men, women and + governments. With a fixedness of purpose which nothing could swerve, + and with an energy which neither storm, mud, snow, cold looks, the + persuasions or even the loss of friends, could for a moment dampen, she + has held on her course. In the tabernacle, in the ward meeting house, + in the homes of high Mormons, and, when these were closed to her, in + the homes of the poor, she has worked upon the theme, while every scrap + of history which offered to give any light upon the Mormon organization + she has devoured. Mormonism has been to her like a fever. It has run + its course and now she is going away. If she proposes to lecture, she + ought to be able to prepare a better lecture on Mormonism than she has + ever yet delivered; if a book is in process of incubation it ought to + be of more value than any former book on this subject. Lecture or book + will be intense enough to satisfy all demands. The 'Tribune' gives the + world notice in advance that Miss Field has a most intimate knowledge + of the Mormon kingdom." + + +Returning to the East she stopped on the way in Missouri and at Nauvoo, +Illinois, looking up all the old camping-grounds of Mormonism, and +meeting and interviewing people who had been connected with it, +including two sons of Joseph Smith, Miss Field opened her course of +lectures on this subject in Boston last November, before a brilliant and +distinguished audience, including the Governor and other officials of +state, Harvard University professors, and men and women eminent in art, +literature and society. She dealt with the political crimes of the +Mormons, arguing that the great wrong was not, as many had believed, +polygamy, but treason! Polygamy, though "the cornerstone of the Mormon +church," was not inserted in its printed articles of faith and was not +taught until the unwary had been "gathered to Zion." The monstrosity of +the "revelation" on celestial marriage; the tragic unhappiness of Mormon +women; the elastic conscience of John Taylor, "prophet, seer and +revelator" to God's chosen people, were vividly depicted. Her extracts +from Brigham Young's sermons, and from those of his counsellors, are +forcible arguments on the Gentile side. Indeed, throughout her entire +discourse, Miss Field clinches every statement with Mormon proof, rarely +going to Gentile authorities for vital facts connected with her subject. +The lecturer's sense of humor betrayed itself now and then, when, with +fervor, she related an incident in her own experience, or quoted a "Song +of Zion." The refrain of one of these songs still rings in our ears: + + Then, oh, let us say + God bless the wife that strives + And aids her husband all she can + To obtain a dozen wives! + + +The prodigious contrast between the preaching and practice of polygamy +was fully displayed. Mormons claim that there is a vast difference +between bigamy and polygamy; that only good men are allowed to take +plural wives; that no saint takes more wives than he can support, and +that a muchly married "man of God" exercises the most rigid impartiality +in the bestowal of his affections upon his various women. Miss Field +upsets these beautiful theories by graphic pictures drawn from life, and +cited Brigham Young himself as "a bright and shining lie to the boast of +impartiality." Brigham Young's coup d'etat in granting woman suffrage in +1871 was illuminated, and emphasized by the assertions:--"A territory +that has abolished the right of dower, that proclaims polygamy to be +divine, that has no laws against bigamy and kindred crimes, that has no +just appreciation of woman, is unworthy of self-respecting humanity, +woman suffrage or no woman suffrage." Miss Field makes in these lectures +a telling exposition of the doctrine of blood atonement, passing on to +these Mormon missionaries and their methods, and the people who become +"fascinated with the idea of direct communication with heaven through +the medium of a prophet," and to whom the missionary brethren prudently +"leave the mysteries of polygamy to the imagination," while they +inculcate the importance of "gathering to Zion." She outlined the +educational status and the discouragement given by Brigham Young to all +educational progress. Of Mormon treason she says:-- + +"Five years after the United States had established the Territory of +Utah its people were in armed rebellion because the government dared to +send a Gentile governor and national troops to Utah." + +Nor does she spare the United States in its responsibility for these +crimes. "The United States to-day," said Miss Field, "is responsible for +thirty years' growth of polygamy, with its attendant degradation of +woman and brutalization of man." As an illustration of this conclusion, +she told a most interesting story of which Governor Harding of Utah, +Brigham Young, Benjamin Halliday, Postmaster General Blair, Abraham +Lincoln and William H. Seward were the characters. The story is a +dramatic and significant bit of Mormon history, related for the first +time. It led up to an earnest and eloquent peroration of which the final +words were: "'I'll believe polygamy is wrong when Congress breaks it up; +not before!' exclaims a plural wife. Men and women of New England! You +who forge public opinion; you who sounded the death knell of slavery, +what are you going to do about it!" + +William Lloyd Garrison used to tell his friends that it was worth an +admission fee just to see Kate Field on the platform, as she made so +lovely a picture. Her attitudes--for they are too spontaneous and +unconscious to be termed poses--are the impersonation of grace, and, +aside from the enjoyment of the intellectual quality and searching +political analysis of her lectures, is that of the artistic effect. +She gave a course of three lectures on this "Mormon Monster." They were +efforts whose invincible logic, graphic presentation and thrilling power +held spellbound her audience. They were a drama of social and political +life, and almost unprecedented on the lyceum platform was this eloquence +and splendor of oratory, combined with the trained thought, the +scholarly acquirement, and the finished eloquence of its delivery. This +course of lectures finished there was a popular call for Miss Field to +repeat one at Tremont Temple which, by invitation of Governor Robinson, +the Mayor and a number of distinguished citizens, she consented to do. +The triumph was repeated. From Boston she was invited to lecture in +Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Washington. Press and people were alike +enthusiastic. It is to the work of Miss Kate Field more than to any +other cause, that the present disintegration of Mormon treason is due. +Other travellers in Utah have made but the briefest stays, and have been +ready to gloss over the tale. Miss Field is telling the truth about it, +and she does it with a courage, a vigor, an honesty, and a power that +renders it one of the most potent influences in the national life of the +times. Kate Field holds to-day the first place on the Lyceum platform of +America. She has a rare combination of judicial and executive qualities. + +She is singularly free from exaggeration, and her sense of justice is +never deflected by personal feeling or emotional impulse. She has that +exceptional balance of the intellectual and artistic forces that enables +her to give to her lecture a superb literary quality, and to deliver it +with faultless grace of manner and an impressiveness of presence rarely +equalled. In Kate Field America has a woman worthy to be called an +orator. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE MONUMENT AND HOMESTEAD OF REBECCA NURSE. + +BY ELIZABETH PORTER GOULD. + + +Perhaps the greatest incentive to ideal living in a changing world is +the firmly held conviction that truth will finally vindicate itself. +When this vindication is made apparent, as in the case of Rebecca +Nurse, one of the most striking martyrs of the Salem witchcraft days of +1692, the cause of human progress seems assured. For it is thus seen +that truth has within itself a living seed which in its development +is destined to become man's guide to further knowledge and growth. +This idea was impressed upon me anew as I stood before the granite +monument, some eight and a half feet high, erected this past summer in +Danvers,--originally Salem,--to the memory of Mrs. Rebecca Nurse, by +her descendants. A carpet of green grass surrounded it, and a circle of +nearly twenty pine trees guarded it as sentinels. The pines were singing +their summer requiem as I read on the front of the monument these +words:-- + + REBECCA NURSE, + YARMOUTH, ENGLAND, + 1621. + SALEM, MASS., + 1692. + + O Christian martyr, who for Truth could die + When all about thee owned the hideous lie, + The world, redeemed from Superstition's sway, + Is breathing freer for thy sake to-day. + + +I lingered a moment over these fitting lines of Whittier, whose charming +home, "Oak Knoll," a short distance off, had just given me a restful +pleasure. Then I walked around to the other side of the monument, where +I read, with mingled feelings, the following words:-- + + Accused of witchcraft + She declared, + "I am innocent, and God will + clear my innocency." + + Once acquitted yet falsely + condemned, she suffered + death July 19, 1692. + + In loving memory of her + Christian character, + even then truly attested by + forty of her neighbors, + this monument is erected. + + +These last lines reminded me of the fact that the paper with its forty +signatures, testifying to the forty years' acquaintance of the good +character of Rebecca Nurse, was still in existence. Alas! why couldn't +such a testimony of neighbors and friends have saved her? But it was not +so to be. The government of the colony, the influence of the magistracy, +and public opinion elsewhere, overpowered all friendly and family help; +and on the 19th July, 1692, at the advanced age of seventy-one years, +Rebecca Nurse was hung on Gallows hill. + +As I left the monument, which is in the old family burying-ground, and +wandered up the time-honored lane towards the homestead where she was +living when arrested, the March before, my thoughts would go back to +those dreadful days. I thought of this venerable mother's surprise and +wonder, as she learned of the several distinct indictments against her, +four of which, for having practised "certain detestable acts called +witchcraft" upon Ann Putnam, Mary Walcot, Elizabeth Hubbard, and Abigail +Williams, were still to be found in the Salem records. I thought of the +feelings of this old and feeble woman as she was borne to the Salem +jail, then a month later sent off, with other prisoners, to the jail +in Boston (then a whole day's journey), to be sent back to Salem for +her final doom. I pictured her on trial, when, in the presence of her +accusers, the "afflicted girls," and the assembled crowd, she constantly +declared her innocence ("I am innocent, and God will clear my +innocency"), and showed a remarkable power in refuting the questions of +the magistrate. I thought of her Christian faith and courage, when, upon +seeing all the assembly, and even the magistrate, putting faith in the +"afflicted girls'" diabolical tantrums (what else can I call them?) as +there enacted, and now preserved in the records of the trial, she calmiy +said, "I have got nobody to look to but God." I again pictured her, as, +just before the horrors of execution, she was taken from the prison to +the meeting-house, by the sheriff and his men, to receive before a great +crowd of spectators the added disgrace of excommunication from the +Church. + +But I could picture no more. My heart rebelled. And as I had now reached +the old homestead on the hill I paused a moment, before entering, to +rest under the shade of the trees and to enjoy the extensive views of +the surrounding country. This comforted my troubled feelings, and +suggested the thought that in the fourteen years that Rebecca Nurse had +lived there she must have often come under the shade of the trees, +perhaps after hours of hard work and care, to commune alone with her +God. How could I help thinking so when there came up before me her +answer to the magistrate's question, "Have you familiarity with these +spirits?"--"No, I have none but with God alone." Surely, to one who knew +Him as she did, who in calm strength could declare her innocence when +many around her, as innocent as she, were frightened into doubt and +denial, the quiet and rest of nature must have been a necessary means of +courage and strength. + +Then what did not the old house, with its sloping roof, tell me, as it +still stood where Townsend Bishop had built it in 1636, upon receiving a +grant of three hundred acres? Yes, this old "Bishop's mansion," as the +deed calls it, had felt the joys and sorrows of our common human life +for almost two hundred and fifty years. It had known the friends whom +Townsend Bishop, as one of the accomplished men of Salem village, had +gathered about him in the few years that he had lived there. It must +have heard some of Hugh Peters' interesting experiences, since, as +pastor of the First Church those very years (1636-1641), he was a +frequent visitor. Why couldn't one think that Roger Williams had often +come to compare notes on house-building, since he owned the "old witch +house" (still standing on the corner of Essex and North streets) at the +same time that Mr. Bishop was building his house? It certainly was a +pleasure to remember that Governor Endicott once owned and lived on this +farm. He bought it in 1648, for one hundred and sixty pounds, of Henry +Checkering, to whom Mr. Bishop had sold it seven years before. + +I recalled many other things, that summer day, concerning this ancient +place. Shall I not tell them? While the Governor lived on it he +continued his good work for the general opening of the country around +about. Among other things he laid out the road that passes its +entrance-gate to-day. + +Here his son John brought his youthful Boston bride, and gave to her the +place as a "marriage-gift." Then, some years later, she, the widow of +John, having become the bride of a Mr. James Allen, gave it to him as a +"marriage-gift;" and upon her death, in 1673, he became the possessor. +Five years later he sold it to Francis Nurse, the husband of Rebecca, +for four hundred pounds. Mr. Nurse was an early settler of Salem, a +"tray-maker," whose articles were much used. He was a man of good +judgment, and respected by his neighbors. He was then fifty-eight years +of age, and his wife fifty-seven. They had four sons and four daughters. +The peculiar terms of the purchase had always seemed interesting to me; +for the purchase-money of four hundred pounds was not required to be +paid until the expiration of twenty-one years. In the meantime a +moderate rent of seven pounds a year for the first twelve years, and ten +pounds for each of the remaining nine years, was determined upon. +Suitable men were appointed to estimate the value of what Mr. Nurse +should add to the estate while living upon it, by clearing meadows, +erecting buildings, or making other improvements. This value over one +hundred and fifty pounds was to be paid to him. These various sums, if +paid over to Mr. Allen before the twenty-one years had expired, would +make a proportionate part of the farm at Mr. Nurse's disposal. + +The low rent and the industrious, frugal habits of Mr. Nurse and his +family, added to the fact that not a dollar was required to be paid down +at first, led to the making of such good improvements that before half +the time had elapsed a value was created large enough to pay the whole +four hundred pounds to Mr. Allen. When Mr. Nurse thus became owner of +this estate he gave to his children, who had already good homes within +its boundaries, the larger half of the farm, while he reserved for +himself the homestead and the rest of the land. By the deeds he gave +them, they were required to maintain a roadway to connect with the old +homestead and with the homes of each other. + +While the different members of the Nurse family were thus working hard +for the money to buy the place there was hanging over its owner the +shadow of litigation for its possession. But this was Mr. Allen's +affair, not theirs, so they went on their way in peace. Indeed, it has +been thought that their steady success in life was one cause of their +future trouble. They became objects of envy to those restless ones less +favored. And so, when the opportunity came to merely whisper a name for +the "afflicted girls" to take up, Rebecca Nurse's fate was in the hands +of an enemy. A striking example of the innocent suffering for the +guilty. Does not vicarious suffering seem to be an important factor in +the development of the race? Two years after, this faithful wife and +mother had been led from her peaceful home to suffer the agonies of +prisons, trials, and hanging. When the children had all married, the +father gave up the homestead to his son Samuel, and divided his +remaining property among his sons and daughters. He died soon after, +in 1695. He was a kind, true father, whose requests after death were +heeded. This homestead was in the Nurse name as late as 1784, when it +was owned by a great-grandson of Rebecca. He sold it to Phineas Putnam, +a descendant of old Nathaniel Putnam, who, in the hour of need, wrote +the paper for the forty signatures above mentioned. The estate descended +to the great-grandson of Phineas, Orin Putnam, who, in 1836, married the +daughter of Allen Nurse. And thus a direct descendant of Rebecca Nurse +was again placed to preside over the ancestral farm, and to their +descendants it belongs to-day. + +After thus thinking over this interesting history of the old place, +as I reclined under the shade of its trees, I was better prepared to +enjoy the kind hospitality which it then offered me. I felt a peculiar +pleasure in stepping into the same little front porch which Townsend +Bishop had built so many years ago. And upon ascending the stairs I +found myself lingering a while by the old original balusters, the +building of which Roger Williams had perhaps viewed with interest. Upon +reaching the attic it was a pleasure, indeed, to see in this new world +the frame-work of a house which for two hundred and fifty years had +stood so well the test of nature in all her moods. No saw was used in +shaping those oaken timbers. They knew only the broad-axe. From this +attic I descended to the sitting-room, to spend a while under the same +low beams which had greeted the first visitors of the house. Here I +imagined the Nurse family living in quiet and peace. Here I pictured the +son Samuel, as, later, he wondered over and over again how he could +remove the reproach which was on his mother's name. And I thought that +to him his descendants owed much, for it was mainly to his pleadings +that the General Court exonerated her in 1710, and the Church in 1712. + +While sitting there I learned of some alterations which had been made +from time to time: how the front of the house, before which the old +roadway used to be, had been widened by extending the western end beyond +the porch. + +As I came out of the house upon the green grass around it, I enjoyed +again the grand outlook over the surrounding country,--the same which in +the days of agony had strengthened human souls,--and then walked down +the hill, by the family burying-ground, out through the entrance-gate +into Collins street, the public thoroughfare. + +I left the monument and its interesting associations that August day of +1885 (it was dedicated only the July 30 before) with the feeling that as +the present descendants of Rebecca Nurse owe much to her son Samuel, so +their future descendants will be indebted to them for the appropriate +manner in which they have still further striven to vindicate before the +world the innocence of a much-wronged ancestor. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PRESENT RESOURCES OF MASSACHUSETTS. + +BY H.K.M. + + +Massachusetts is a busy state. The old time factory bell has not +entirely given way to the steam whistle, nor the simple village spire to +the more pretentious ecclesiastical tower of to-day, yet the energizing +force of material prosperity has quickened the blood in nearly every +hamlet, modernized the old, or built up a new, so that throughout the +state there is a substantial freshness indicative of progressive thrift. + +The Tenth Census of the United States classifies the entire +working population of the state in four divisions of labor as +follows:--Agriculture, 64,973; Professional and Personal services, +170,160; Trade and Transportation, 115,376; Mechanical, 370,265; with a +total population of 1,941,465.[4] The aggregate steam and water power in +1880 was 309,759 horse power; the motive power of 14,352 manufacturing +establishments having an invested capital of $303,806,185; paying +$128,315,362 in wages to 370,265 persons who produced a product value of +$631,135,284. These results, in proportion to area and population, place +Massachusetts first in the Union as a manufacturing state. In mechanical +science a complete cotton mill has been considered the cap stone of +human ingenuity. In 1790 Mr. Samuel Slater established in Pawtucket, +R.I., the first successful cotton mill in the United States, but the +saw gin, a Massachusetts invention of Mr. Eli Whitney in 1793, laid the +foundation of the cotton industry throughout the world. + +There are 956 cotton mills in the United States with an invested capital +of $208,280,346, with a wage account of $42,040,510. The relative +importance of the four leading states in the manufacture of cotton goods +is shown as follows:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 206 Mass. $74,118,801 $16,240,908 $74,780,835 + 133 R.I. 29,260,734 5,623,933 24,609,461 + 97 Conn. 21,104,200 3,750,017 17,050,126 + 41 N.H. 19,993,584 4,322,622 18,226,573 + + +As in cotton, so also in the manufacture of woolen goods has +Massachusetts maintained from the first the leading position. In 1794 +in Byfield parish, Newbury, Mass., the first woolen mill went into +successful operation. In 1804 a good quality of gray mixed broadcloth +was made at Pittsfield, Mass., and it is said that in 1808 President +Madison's inaugural suit of black broadcloth was made there. + +The five leading states in the production of woolen goods are thus +classified:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 167 Mass. $24,680,782 $7,457,115 $45,099,203 + 324 Penn. 18,780,604 5,254,328 32,341,291 + 78 Conn. 7,907,452 2,342,935 16,892,284 + 50 R.I. 8,448,700 2,480,907 15,410,450 + 159 N.Y. 8,266,878 1,774,143 9,874,973 + + +In its kindred industry, dyeing and finishing textiles, Massachusetts is +a controlling force; as seen in the classification of the three leading +states in this department of labor:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 28 Mass. $8,613,500 $1,815,431 $9,482,939 + 16 R.I. 5,912,500 1,093,727 6,874,254 + 60 Penn. 3,884,846 1,041,309 6,259,852 + + +Nearly one half of the entire American production of felt goods comes +from her, as indicated in the classification of the four leading +states:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 11 Mass. $820,000 $163,440 $1,627,320 + 6 N.J. 313,000 86,170 685,386 + 4 N.Y. 157,500 35,289 257,450 + 1 Penn. 150,000 80,000 450,000 + + +Massachusetts is also an all-important factor in the total production of +American carpets. The 59 mills in the United States made in 1880 a +wholesale product valued at $31,792,802. Massachusetts made the most +Brussels, 1,884,723 yards; Pennsylvania came next with 919,476 yards. +She came next to New York in yards of Tapestry, and next to Connecticut +in Wiltons, a good second in these important grades. The three leading +carpet states are thus classified:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 10 N.Y. $6,422,158 $1,952,391 $8,419,254 + 172 Penn. 7,210,483 3,035,971 14,304,660 + 7 Mass. 4,637,646 1,223,303 6,337,629 + + +In the manufacture of Boots and Shoes Massachusetts stands conspicuously +at the front; her position in this great industry is clearly seen in the +three states controlling this special product:-- + + No. of Capital Wages Value + Factories. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 982 Mass. $21,098,133 $24,875,106 $95,900,510 + 272 N.Y. 6,227,537 4,902,132 18,979,259 + 145 Penn. 3,627,840 2,820,976 9,590,002 + + +One evidence that Massachusetts is not sitting down all the time is the +fact that she stands up to manufacture so many chairs. From a small +beginning of wood and flag seated chairs, Mr. James M. Comee in 1805, +with his foot lathe, in one room of his dwelling in Gardner. Mass., laid +the foundation of this important industry, which has given the town of +Gardner, where over 1,000,000 of chairs are annually made, a world wide +reputation. + +The relative positions of the five leading chair states:-- + + No. of Capital Wages Value + Factories. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 62 Mass. $1,948,600 $1,028,087 $3,290,837 + 62 N.Y. 991,000 472,974 1,404,138 + 45 Penn. 111,700 143,037 437,010 + 37 Ohio 497,026 321,918 821,702 + 37 Ind. 395,850 232,005 632,746 + + +In the currying of leather Massachusetts is a notable leader:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + Establishments. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 194 Mass. $4,308,169 $1,939,122 $23,282,775 + 185 N.Y. 1,720,356 366,426 6,192,002 + 455 Penn. 2,570,969 334,950 7,852,177 + 56 N.J. 1,983,746 762,697 8,727,128 + 61 Wis. 1,299,425 281,412 4,496,729 + 18 Ill. 534,786 141,096 2,391,380 + + +Her position in the manufacturing of worsted goods is also an all +important one:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 23 Mass. $6,195,247 $1,870,030 $10,466,016 + 28 Penn. 4,959,639 1,473,958 10,072,473 + 11 R.I. 4,567,416 1,222,350 6,177,754 + + +Again we find her at the head of another very important industry, the +manufacture of paper. + +The five leading states in production are given their relative positions. + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 96 Mass. $11,722,046 $2,467,359 $15,188,196 + 168 N.Y. 6,859,565 1,217,580 8,524,279 + 60 Ohio 4,804,274 839,231 5,108,194 + 78 Penn. 4,099,000 752,151 5,355,912 + 65 Conn. 3,168,931 656,000 4,337,550 + + +In 1880 Massachusetts manufactured 27,638 tons of printing paper, 24,746 +tons of writing paper, 10,255 tons of wrapping paper, 945 tons of wall +paper, 3,706,010 pounds of colored paper, 255,000 pounds of bank note +paper, 878,000 pounds of tissue paper, and 27,607,706 pounds of all +other kinds of paper. + +She manufactures more shovels than any other state, about 120,000 dozen +annually. Rhode Island comes next with about one-half the quantity, and +Ohio stands third, her product being about 7,000 dozen annually. + +It also falls to her lot to manufacture more Hay and Straw cutters, +about 6,000 annually. In the manufacture of hard soap Massachusetts +falls a little behind some of her sister states, but she comes smilingly +to the front with her 16,000,000 pounds of soft soap, about one half of +the total production. New York brings her annual offering of about 5,000 +pounds. + +The 4,000 boats she annually builds constitute nearly one half of the +number built in the United States. + +There are 131,426 persons in the United States engaged in the fisheries. + +The prominent share of Massachusetts in this industry is seen in the +classification of the five leading states. + + State. No. of Capital Value + Persons Invested. of Product. + Employed. + + Mass. 20,117 $14,334,450 $8,141,750 + Md. 26,008 6,342,443 5,221,715 + N.Y. 7,266 2,629,585 4,380,565 + Me. 11,071 3,375,994 3,614,178 + Vir. 18,864 1,914,119 3,124,444 + + +She has invested:--Over $1,000,000 in the manufacture of Baskets and +Rattan goods; over $1,600,000 in the manufacture of Brick and Tile; over +$2,000,000 in the manufacture of Wagons and Carriages; over $5,000,000 +in the manufacture of Men's Clothing; over $1,500,000 in the manufacture +of Cordage and Twine; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Cutlery; +over $3,000,000 in the manufacture of Fire Arms; over $16,000,000 in the +Foundries and Machine Shops; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of +Furniture; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Iron Nails and Spikes; +over $6,000,000 in the manufacture of Iron and Steel; over $1,500,000 in +the manufacture of Jewelry; over $3,000,000 in the manufacture of +Liquors, Malt; over $3,000,000 in Slaughtering and Packing; over +$2,000,000 in Straw goods; over $2,000,000 in Sugar and Molasses, +refined; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Watches; over $2,000,000 +in the manufacture of Wire, and over $11,000,000 in unclassified +industries. + +The limitations of this article will only allow brief reference to a few +of the leading industries of Massachusetts. The facts presented give her +a commanding position in the sisterhood of manufacturing States, while +the condition of her operatives, their moral and intellectual character, +has no parallel in any other manufacturing district in the world. + +On her well known but dangerous coast special provisions are made to aid +the mariner; so likewise upon her more dangerous coast of sin we find +2,397 ministerial light houses whose concentrated spiritual lens-power +upon an area of 8,040 square miles, make the rocks of total depravity +loom up far above the white capped waves of theological doubt. The lower +law being less important than the higher, it takes but 1,984 lawyers to +successfully mystify the juries of the Commonwealth. Of physicians and +surgeons there are 2,845. It requires the constant services of 2,463 +persons to entertain us with music, and just one less, 2,462 barbers, +who are in daily tonsorial conflict with our hair, either rebuking it +where it does grow, or teasing it to come forth where heretofore the +dome has been hairless. + +Of the 4,000,000 farms of 536,081,835 acres in the United States, 38,406 +farms of 3,359,097 acres valued at $146,197,415 yielding an annual +income of $24,160,881 lie within the borders of the state. Her 150,435 +cows produce 29,662,953 gallons of milk, which is the foundation of her +annual product of 9,655,587 pounds of butter, and 829,528 pounds of +cheese. She would be unjust to her traditional sense of justice were she +to send her beans out into the world single handed, with true paternal +solicitude she provides them with the charmed society of 80,123 swine, +thus hand in hand Massachusetts' pork and beans stride up and down the +earth, supremely content in the joyous ecstasy of their Puritan conceit. +While Massachusetts has well known agricultural tendencies, and her +Agricultural college is one of the most important factors in her system +of practical instruction, it cannot be claimed that she is a controlling +element in the agricultural interests of the country. Of all her +influences for good, perhaps her educational interests would command the +greater prominence. She has ever regarded the instruction of her youth +as one of her most sacred trusts, and in all the details of her public +school system she ranks second to no state in the Union. + +In the various departments of technical instruction, she has a national +reputation. Her colleges and universities so richly endowed secure the +highest attainable advantages. These privileges supplemented by the free +public libraries of the state, place possibilities within the reach of +every young man or young woman, the value of which cannot be +approximated by human estimate. + +Six of the leading states are thus classified:-- + + Public School Sittings School + Schools. State. Buildings. Provided. Property. + + 6,604 Mass. 3,343 319,749 $21,660,392 + 15,203 Ill. 11,880 694,106 15,876,572 + 11,623 Ind. 9,679 437,050 11,907,541 + 18,615 N.Y. 11,927 763,817 31,235,401 + 16,473 Ohio 12,224 676,664 21,643,515 + 18,618 Penn. 12,857 961,074 25,919,397 + + +The following institutions for higher education have about $5,000,000 +invested in grounds and buildings, about $9,000,000 in endowments, +yielding an annual income of about $1,000,000, having about 4,000 +students and about 400,000 volumes in libraries, Universities and +Colleges. + + +UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. + + Amherst College, organized 1821 + Boston College, organized 1864 + Boston University, organized 1872 + College of the Holy Cross, organized 1843 + Tufts College, organized 1852 + Harvard College, organized 1636 + Williams College, organized 1793 + + COLLEGES FOR WOMEN. + + Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, organized 1837 + Sophia Smith College, organized 1872 + Wellesley College, organized 1874 + + THEOLOGICAL SCHOOLS. + + Andover Theological Seminary, organized 1808 + Boston University School of Theology, organized 1847 + Divinity School of Harvard University, organized 1816 + Episcopal Theological School, organized 1867 + Tufts College Divinity School, organized 1867 + Newton Theological Institution, organized 1825 + New Church Theological School, organized 1866 + + LAW SCHOOLS. + + Boston University School of Law, organized 1872 + Law School of Harvard University, organized 1817 + + SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE. + + Boston University School of Medicine, organized 1869 + Harvard Medical School, organized 1782 + New England Female Medical College, organized 1850 + Boston Dental College, organized 1868 + Dental School Harvard College, organized 1867 + Massachusetts College of Pharmacy, organized 1823 + + THE SCHOOLS OF SCIENCE. + + Massachusetts Agricultural College, organized 1867 + Massachusetts Institute of Technology, organized 1861 + Lawrence Scientific School, organized 1848 + Worcester County Free Institute of Industrial + Science, organized 1868 + + +While Massachusetts is a model state in all her educational interests, +we do not forget that there are 75,635 persons in the state who cannot +read, and 92,980 persons who cannot write, but of the 990,160 native +white persons of ten years and upwards only 6,933 are unable to write, +being seven-tenths of one per cent., the lowest ratio of any state. +Arkansas, per cent, being 25.0; Alabama, 24.7; Georgia, 22.9; Kentucky, +22.0; No. Carolina, 31.0; So. Carolina, 21.9; Tenn., 27.3; West +Virginia, 18.2; Connecticut, 5.5; Illinois, 5.9; New Hampshire 5; +Pennsylvania, 6.7; New York, 5.3. + +There are 15,416 colored persons in the state, of 10 years and upwards; +of this number 2,322 are unable to write, but from 10 to 14 years of +age, both inclusive, these being 1,504, but 31 persons are reported as +unable to write, or 2.1 per cent. South Carolina out of a colored +population of 75,981 between the same ages, reports 57,072 persons as +unable to write or 74.1 per cent. There are 1,886 colored persons in the +state between the ages of 15 and 20, and only 70 are reported as unable +to write, or 3.7 per cent.; we find this also the lowest ratio of any +state. + +South Carolina's per cent. being 71.9; Alabama, 64.9; Georgia, 76.4; +Texas, 69.2; and North Carolina, 68.5. + +Her density of population makes it exceedingly convenient for her 52,799 +domestic servants to compose notes over neighborly fences. Her 281,188 +dwelling houses house 379,710 families, placing 6.34 persons to the +credit of each dwelling, and 4.70 persons to each family. This density +gives her 221.78 persons to a square mile, a far greater ratio than any +state except Rhode Island. This neighborly proximity has its social +tendencies, which may account in part for the hospitable amenities which +are a rightful part of Massachusetts' well known loyalty to a higher +regard for the purest type of home, a comparative statement of the +density of population of a few states. + + State. Square Miles. Persons to Square Miles. + + Rhode Island, 1,085 254.87 + Massachusetts, 8,040 221.78 + Connecticut, 4,845 128.52 + Georgia, 58,980 26.15 + Illinois, 56,000 54.96 + Iowa, 55,475 29.29 + Maine, 29,895 21.71 + Michigan, 57,430 28.50 + New Hampshire, 9,005 38.53 + New York, 47,620 106.74 + Pennsylvania, 44,985 95.21 + West Virginia, 24,645 25.09 + + +As inseparable as night is from day, so also are the ills of life from +life itself. Massachusetts is no exception to the inexorable law which +defines the conditions of human society; but through her public and +private charities so wisely administered, she humanely softens the +asperities which shadow the life of her unfortunates. To her lot fall +1,733 idiotic persons, 978 deaf mutes, 5,127 insane, 1,500 of whom are +cared for at home, and 3,659 prisoners, 1,484 of whom are of foreign +birth. Human life teaches that the boundary lines of a smile and tear +are the same, for where happiness is, there sorrow dwells. In the +general estimate of 391,960 annual deaths in the United States, about +33,000 occur in Massachusetts. + +One evidence of her unswerving faith in the national credit is seen by +her holdings in U.S. registered bonds. The four leading states are +reported as follows:-- + + No. of Per cent. of + Persons. State. Bondholders. Amount. + + 16,885 Massachusetts, 23.05 $45,138,750 + 10,408 Pennsylvania, 14.23 40,223,050 + 14,803 New York, 20.24 210,264,250 + 4,130 Ohio, 5.65 16,445,050 + + +In the classification of the four leading states, of assessed valuation +and taxation, it appears that the assessed valuation of her personal +property exceeds that of any state. + +The four leading states are thus classified:-- + + Area Real Personal Total + State. Sq. M. Estate. Property. Total. Tax. + + N.Y. 47.620 $2,329,282,359 $323,657,647 $2,651,940,006 $56,392,975 + Penn. 44,985 1,540,007,657 143,451,059 1,683,459,016 28,604,334 + Mass. 8,040 1,111,160,072 473,596,730 1,584,756,802 24,326,877 + Ohio 40,760 1,093,677,705 440,682,803 1,534,360,508 25,756,658 + + +The grandest monument of human skill in modern railway science is +unquestionably the St. Gothard Tunnel which connects the valley of the +Reuss with the valley of the Ticino, which is from 5,000 to 6,500 feet +below the Alpine peaks of St. Gothard, being a little over 9-1/4 miles +in length, costing over $47,000,000, one-half of which was paid by the +governments of Italy, Germany, and Switzerland. Until its completion in +1880, there was but one railway tunnel, Mont Cenis, that outranked our +own Hoosac Tunnel of nearly 5 miles in length and costing about +$10,000,000. + +The service, equipment, and management of Massachusetts' railway system +is well nigh perfect. Out of 4,100 miles of track in the state, 2,453 +are laid with the steel rail. Including the 1,150 engines, 1,554 +passenger cars, 394 baggage cars, and 24,418 freight cars, the total +cost of railroad equipment in the state has been $178,862,870; from this +investment the total earnings in 1884 reached $33,020,816 from which +$4,568,274 were paid in dividends. The number of passengers carried were +57,589,200 and 17,258,726 tons of freight moved. One of the most +important elements in her system is the Boston and Albany. Its engine +service the past year was 5,680,060 miles, the company carried 94,721 +through passengers and 8,699,691 way, whose total earnings were +$8,148,713.34 and total expenses were $5,785,876.98. + +In this connection we would refer to the city and suburban tramway +service, which has taken an important part in the development of the +state. The total cost of the 336 miles of road and equipment, including +8,987 horses and 1,918 passenger cars is stated at $9,093,935. Number of +passengers carried in 1884 was 94,894,259, gross earnings $4,788,096, +operating expenses $3,985,617, total available income $924,440. When we +consider that the street railway service carried more than 37,000,000 +passengers in excess of the steam railways, we realize its importance. + +While there are 66,205 more females than males in the state, in the +wider distribution of the sexes their equality indicates that it could +not happen by chance, and that marriage of one man to one woman was +intended. + +An authentic estimate of the numerical proportions of the sexes is as +follows:-- + +United States, 983 women to 1,000 men; America, (at large) 980 women to +1,000 men; Scotland, 1,096 women to 1,000 men; Ireland, 1,050 women to +1,000 men; England and Wales, 1,054 women to 1,000 men; France, 1,007 +women to 1,000 men; Prussia, 1,030 women to 1,000 men; Greece, 940 women +to 1,000 men; Europe, (at large) 1,021 women to 1,000 men; Africa, +(estimated) 975 women to 1,000 men; Asia, 940 women to 1,000 men; +Australia, 985 women to 1,000 men. In an aggregate of 12,000 men there +is a surplus of about 161 women. + +Massachusetts has been making notable history ever since 1620, and in +picking out here and there a few of the influences which have tended to +develope her material resources, we would not be unmindful of those +Christian influences which are also a part of her imperishable history. + +To the lover of nature, perhaps no state in range of rugged coast and +water views blended with mountainous background, can offer more pleasing +bits of picturesque scenery. The historic hills of Berkshire and the +beautiful Connecticut River, with its 50 miles of sweep through the +state, ever hurrying on to the sea, have inspired the tireless shuttles +of descriptive imagery to weave some of the finest threads in American +thought. + +Nowhere within the range of human vision can the eye find a more +restful scene of quiet simplicity and softer blending of river, hill and +foliage, than in the valley of the Deerfield on any sunny summer day. +Let him who would have a sterner scene of majestic grandeur stand upon +the storm-beaten cliffs of some rock-fringed coast, while the +silver-crested sea and the dark, deep toned clouds, like mercy and +righteousness, kiss each other. + +To us who love Massachusetts, her principles, her institutions, her +hills, valleys and rocks, her future is but the lengthening out of a +perfect present; and at last, when the scroll of states is finally +rolled up, may her eternal record stand for the highest type of +Christian citizenship. + +[Footnote 4: Census of 1885.] + + * * * * * + + + + +ELIZABETH.[5] + +A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS. + +BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work." + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +A GRAVE DECISION. + + +After the greetings were over, Elizabeth, looking at Stephen Archdale, +realized fully the difficulties of her task. She was to go through with +it alone she perceived, for her father had turned away and taken up a +spyglass that had been brought him at the moment, and was absorbed in +looking through it at the new fascine battery. Evidently he expected her +to give Captain Archdale the history of the facts and conclusions that +had brought her father and herself to Louisburg. As she looked at the +young man in his strength, she felt more than ever the necessity for +speaking. He knew well enough that Mr. Edmonson hated him, and that was +necessary to be known. And yet, speech was hard, for even though he +could never imagine Edmonson's contemptible insinuations, still before +he believed in his own danger he might have to learn his enemy's foiled +purpose toward herself; and to be sought for her fortune was not a thing +that Elizabeth felt proud of. Her head drooped a little as the young man +stood watching her, and the color began to come into her face. Then the +courage that was in her, and the power that she had of rising above +petty considerations into grandeur, came upon her like an access of +physical strength. The strong necessity filled her, and the thought that +she might be bringing life where she had almost brought death, at least +death of joy, lighted her face. Still she hesitated for a moment, but it +was only to study how she should begin. Shall she give him Katie's +letter at once, and in her name warn him to take care of the life that +was of so much value to his betrothed? No, for with Katie's letter in +his hand, he could not listen carefully to Elizabeth's words, he could +think only of what was within. His thoughts would refuse to have to do +with danger; they would be busy with joy. That must wait. + +"We have come here, my father and I," she began, "to say one word to +you, Captain Archdale. We talked it over, and we saw no other way." + +"You are pale," cried Stephen suddenly. "You must be very tired. Let us +sit down here while you tell me." And he pointed to a coil of rope at +hand. But she shook her head. + +"I am not tired, thank you; I am disappointed that I can't go back +immediately, that I must wait until to-morrow, when the dispatches will +be ready." + +"You need not," he cried. "The General shall let you go if you wish it. +I will insist upon it. The dispatches can go some other way. If the +Governor wants news in such haste, he would do better to send us some +powder to make them out of. He was enough in a hurry to get us off, to +give us something to do after we are here." + +"I should think you had something to do," she said pointing to the +battlements of Louisburg which at that distance and from that angle +looked as if no shot had ever been fired against them. "But don't on any +account speak to the General. We are glad to do even so little for the +cause. And perhaps it's not that that makes me pale. I don't know. I +have a warning hard to deliver to you. I have come hundreds of miles to +do it. I will give it to you immediately, for you may need it at any +moment." She drew closer to him, and laid one hand upon his arm as if to +prevent his losing by any chance the words she had to say. Her gesture +had an impressiveness that made him realize as much as her face did how +terribly in earnest she was. + +"It must be something about Katie," he thought. And the vision of Lord +Bulchester rose before him clearly. + +"Listen," said Elizabeth absorbed in her attempt to make him feel what +she feared would seem incredible to him. "Stray shots have picked off +many superfluous kings in the world--and men and the world not been the +wiser. This is what some one said when the war was being talked of, said +at your house, and said in speaking of you." + +"Said it to you?" interposed Archdale with a quick breath. + +"Oh, no, but about you, I am sure, _sure_, though it has taken me +all this time to find it out. And,--oh, wait a moment,--the man who said +it was your guest then, and he is here now, else we should not have +come; he is here, perhaps he is close by you every day, and he,--he is +meaning the shot for you." She waited a moment drawing a breath of +relief that she had begun. "You know he is your enemy?" she went on with +a longing to be spared explanations. + +She was spared them. + +"I do know it," said Archdale looking at her, and as she met his eyes a +great relief swept over her. Her warning had been heard and believed, +she was sure of that. She heard Archdale thanking her, and assuring her +that he would give good heed to her warning. And she had not had to tell +why Edmonson hated him, she had not even been obliged to utter the name +that she was coming to hate. "Do you know?" she had asked wonderingly, +and he had told it to her. Did he know the man so thoroughly, then? And +were there other causes of hatred, possibly money causes, that had +spared her? + +She had told her listener more than she dreamed, far more than her +words. She had stood before him in the noblest guise a human being can +wear, that of a preserver from evil fate; she had looked at him out of +holy depths in her clear eyes, she had turned upon him a face in which +expression had marvellously brought out physical beauty. Also, in her +unconsciousness that he knew the reason of his danger, she had looked at +him with a wonder at his ready credulity before there had come her smile +of relief that she need speak no more. He knew Edmonson's story, knew +how this play at marriage between Elizabeth and himself had interfered +with the other's plans, guessed the further truth, looked at her, and +muttered under his breath:--"Poor fellow!" It was with his own eyes, and +not another man's that Archdale saw Elizabeth. Yet, it was not in human +nature that she should not seem the more interesting as she stood there, +since he had learned his own life to be in danger because another man +had found her so desirable, and so unapproachable. Watching Elizabeth, +he acquitted Edmonson of mercenary motives, whatever they might once +have been. His appreciation had no thought of appropriation in it. Katie +was his love. But comprehension of Elizabeth made him glad that their +mistake had saved her from Edmonson. And then again after a moment he +muttered under his breath:--"Poor fellow!" + +"You are very, very kind," he said to her. + +"Don't think me rude," she answered with a smile. "But, you know we must +have done this for any one. Only,"--and her voice became earnest again, +"I was very grateful that the least thing came to me for you and Katie. +I have not done with Katie yet" she added, "here is something that I +have brought you from her." And she handed him a letter. "She gave me +this as I was leaving," she said. + +"Thank you," he said again, and holding it clasped in his hand, stood +not looking at it, but as if he still had something to say. "Has +Bulchester gone yet, Mistress Royal?" he asked abruptly at last. + +"No. But I think that he must be very hard to send away, and Katie you +know hates to say anything unkind. She doesn't see that it is the +kindest way in the end. We shall not go until to-morrow, you know. If +you have any letters, we shall be so glad to take them." + +"Thank you once more." He stood still a moment. "The earl may be wise to +stay on the field," he said. "I may be swept off conveniently. Yes, he +is wise to wait and see what the fortunes of war will do for him." + +"Oh! Mr. Archdale," cried Elizabeth, between indignation and tears at +his want of faith. "How can you not trust her? Your letter that she was +so eager to send will prove how wrong you are." Here Mr. Royal sauntered +up, and the conversation turned upon the scene before them. + +But in the midst of Archdale's description of one of their skirmishes a +signal was given from the new battery. "They are signalling for me," he +said. "My place is in command of those guns. I am sorry to leave my +story half told, but I must go. I shall try to see you to-morrow." And +with a hasty farewell he sprang into the boat. As he was rowed away, +Elizabeth saw him put his hand into the pocket where he had slipped +Katie's letter, and draw this out. + +She sat down again in her favorite place on deck, laid her arms on the +railing of the schooner and her face upon them. Now that her errand was +done, she became aware that she was very tired. She sat so quiet that +she seemed to be asleep. But she was only in a day-dream in which the +thought of which she was most conscious was wonder that Archdale could +doubt Katie. Had she not always been a coquette? And had she not always +loved him? Yet Elizabeth wished that she could have said that Lord +Bulchester had gone, wished that she could have seen Stephen Archdale's +face brighten a little before he left them, perhaps forever; she had not +forgotten the danger of his post. Nancy softly drew her chair close. +But Elizabeth made no movement. She sat with her face still buried, +thinking, remembering, longing to be at home again, counting the hours +until they should probably sail. + +Suddenly she started up. For there had come light that she saw through +the dark folds that she had been pressing her eyes against. To her there +was a sound as if the heavens were being rent, and she felt a trembling +of the earth, as if it shook with terror at the spectacle. She stood a +moment bewildered. It seemed as if the light never paled at all, but +only changed its place sometimes; the roar was terrific, it never +ceased, or lulled, and the water beneath them tossed and hissed in rage +at its bed being so shaken. Nancy's hand sought her companion's with a +reassuring pressure, for speech was impossible. But Elizabeth had only +been unprepared. She recovered herself and smiled her thanks. Then she +sat down again with her face toward the city and watched this cannonade, +terrible to men grown grey in the service, as officers from the fleet +bore witness, and to the enemy deadly. + +For the fascine battery had opened fire. + +At midnight General Pepperell sent for Archdale to detail him for +special service the next day. + +"Why! what's the matter?" he cried, looking at the young man as he came +into the tent. + +"Nothing, General Pepperell. I am quite ready for service," replied +Stephen haughtily. + +"Ah!--Yes. Glad of that," returned the General, and he went on to give +his orders, watching the other's pale face as he did so, and reading +there strong emotion of some kind. + +When he was alone, and his dispatches had all been written, he sat +musing for a time, as little disturbed by the glare and the thunder +about him as if stillness were an unknown thing. His cogitations did not +seem satisfactory, for he frowned more than once. "What's the matter +with the fellow?" he muttered. "Something has gone wrong. I've seen an +uneasiness for a long time. Now the blow has fallen. Poor fellow! he +doesn't take life easy. The news is it, I wonder? or the letter?" He sat +for a while carefully nursing his left knee, while his thoughts +gradually went back to military matters, and worked there diligently. At +last he straightened himself, clapped this same knee with vigor, put +both feet to the ground and, rising, took up from his improvised +table--a log turned endwise,--a paper upon which he made a note with a +worn pencil from his pocket. "Yes," he cried, "I can do that. It's the +only thing I can do. And I need it so much they will not mind." He +finished by a smile. "Strange I hadn't thought of it before," he said. + +Then he threw himself down upon his bed of boughs and moss, and with the +terrific din about him slept the sleep of weariness. At sunrise, +according to his directions, an orderly roused him. + +Archdale had already gone with his reconnoitering party. His heart was +bitter against the conditions of his life, and he felt that it would be +no misfortune, perhaps quite the contrary, if Edmonson's plan were not +interfered with. "It's beyond her comprehension," he said to himself. +"How confident she was. What will she say when she knows?" + +In the morning, Elizabeth standing beside her father turned a tired face +toward the shore as she watched General Pepperell's approach. Sleep had +been impossible to her in the strangeness and terror of her surroundings. + +"You are very thoughtful to come to bid us good-bye," she said, giving +him her hand as he stepped on board. + +He smiled, and still holding it, asked after a moment's hesitation, +"Should you be very much disappointed if I begged you not to return this +morning?" + +She certainly looked so for a moment, before she answered: "If it will +help, if I can be of any use, I am ready to stay. Are there soldiers in +the hospitals? Can we do anything for them, Nancy and I?" + +He caught at the diversion readily. "The hospitals? Yes, I should be +very glad, infinitely obliged to you, if you would pay them a visit. +I've not a doubt that your suggestions would make the poor fellows more +comfortable, and there are a number of new ones there this morning. +I'm sorry to say our health record is discouraging. Not that I'm +discouraged, but I want to put this business through as quickly as +possible." Then he turned to Mr. Royal. "I must tell you both," he said, +"that I came to you this morning bent upon purposes of destruction, +(though, happily, not to yourselves,) and not purposes of health, except +of saving lives by making the work as short as possible. I should like +this schooner. I have an immediate use for it, and in two days, or, at +the outside, three, I'm going to send to Boston. Will you permit me to +take this as a fire-ship, and will you remain under my especial care +until this other vessel sails?" He turned to Elizabeth as he spoke. "If +you consent," he said to her, "I am quite sure your father will. It will +be a great favor to me, and I hope to the cause, if you do. But I won't +insist upon it. If you say so you shall go this morning." + +Elizabeth glanced at her father, "But I don't say so," she answered. +"I am compelled to stay if my father consents. It's not you that make +me but a stronger power. You won't be offended if I call patriotism a +stronger power?" And she smiled at him. + +"Thank you, my dear," he said with a gravity which showed that she had +touched him. "You shall not regret your sacrifice." + +In the course of conversation he told Mr. Royal that Archdale had been +sent off at dawn upon an exploring expedition. "I want to find out how +near to us the Indians are," he said, "they are hanging about somewhere. +You will not see him to-day." + +That morning, Elizabeth was rowed ashore with Nancy, and under an escort +they went to the hospitals; not for a visit of inspection, as it turned +out, but as workers. Nancy had had experience in illness, and Elizabeth +was an apt pupil. Before the day was over the poor fellows lying there +felt a change. There were no luxuries to be had for them, but their +beds were made a little softer with added moss and leaves, the relays +of fresh water from the brook running through the encampment were +increased. One dying man had closed his eyes in the conviction that the +last words he had sent to his mother would reach her; he had watched +Elizabeth write them down, and she had promised to put a lock of his +hair into the letter. He was sure that she would do it, and he died +happier for the thought. Altogether, in many ways the comfortless tents +grew less comfortless, for Elizabeth interpreted literally the general's +permission to do here what she chose. The eyes of the soldiers followed +both women with delight, and one rugged fellow, a backwoods man, whose +cheerfulness not even a broken leg and a great gash in his forehead +could destroy, volunteered the statement: "By George! whether in peace +or war we need our women." This was responded to by a cheer from the +inmates of his tent. The demonstration was all the more touching, +because its endeavor to be rousing was marred in the execution by the +physical weakness of the cheerers. + +They spent that night on shore. Elizabeth's tent was next her father's +and a few rods from the general quarters. As Mr. Royal left her, she +stood a moment at the swinging door of her strange room, and looked at +the stars and at the scene so new to her on which they were shining. +Then leaving it reluctantly, for it fascinated her, she laid down upon +the woodland couch prepared for her, and was soon as soundly asleep as +her maid near by, while around the tent patrolled the special guard set +by General Pepperell. + +The next day also was spent in the hospital. In the course of the +afternoon, Nancy, looking over the Bay in a vain search for the schooner +which had brought them, said; "I wonder how we really shall get home, +and when?" + +"As General Pepperell promised us," answered her mistress. "And probably +we shall leave to-morrow. I expect to hear from him about it then. So +does my father; he was speaking of it this morning." + +They were right; the next day the General told them that the +"Smithhurst" would sail that afternoon with prisoners of war from the +"Vigilant," a captured French vessel. "She is one of the ships that +Governor Shirley has sent for to guard the coast," he said to Elizabeth +speaking of the "Smithhurst." "She goes to Boston first to report and +discharge her prisoners. Be ready at four o'clock. If I can, I will take +you to the vessel myself; but if that is impossible, everything is +arranged for your comfort. Your father is at the battery, I have just +left him there. He is undeniably fond of powder. I've told him about +this." Elizabeth was in one of the hospital tents when Pepperell came to +her with this news. She staid there with Nancy all the morning, and at +noon when her father came and took her away for awhile to rest, she had +an earnest talk with him upon some subject that left her grave and +pleased. + +After a time she went back to the hospitals again. At the last moment +the General sent an escort with word that he had been detained. Just +before this message arrived, Elizabeth called her maid aside. + +"Nancy," she said, "you see how many of our soldiers are here, hundreds +of them, almost thousands. They are fighting for our homes, even if the +battle-ground is so far away. And see how many have been sent in, in the +short time we have been here. Do you want to desert them? Tell me how +you feel? Shall we go back to our comfortable home, and leave all this +suffering behind us, when we might do our little to help? Shall we, +Nancy? I have no right to insist upon your staying; but don't you think +we ought to stay? and won't you stay with me?" + +"Indeed I will," was the quick answer. "I hated to leave the poor +fellows, but I did not see what else to do. The General won't like it +one bit though. And your father, Mistress Elizabeth?" + +"The General has no authority over me. I'm not one of his soldiers. And +as to my father, it's all right with him." + +Yet she felt very desolate when the ship which was to have carried them +had gone with its companion vessel, and from the door of one of the +hospital tents she stood watching the white sails in the distance. But +it was not that resolution had failed her; for she would have made the +same decision over again if she had been called upon at the moment. + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +THE NIGHT ATTACK. + + +As Elizabeth stood at the door of the hospital tent looking after the +Smithhurst, General Pepperell came along, alone, in a brown study, his +brows knit and his face troubled. For though the French ship-of-war, +"Vigilant" had been captured, Louisburg had not, and every day was +adding to the list of soldiers in the hospitals. But when he saw her, he +stopped, and his expression, at first of surprise, changed to anger. + +"What does this mean?" he said abruptly. "The ship has sailed. I sent +you word in time." + +"Yes," she answered. + +"Then what does it mean?" he reiterated, "Why are you here?" + +"It means," she returned, resenting the authority of his tone, "that +when New England men are fighting and suffering and dying for their +country, New England women have not learned how to leave them in their +need, and sail away to happy homes. That's what it means, General +Pepperell." As she spoke she saw Archdale behind the General; he had +come up hastily as Pepperell stood there. + +"Thought you were in a desperate hurry to be off," said Pepperell dryly. + +Elizabeth blushed. She was convicted of changeableness, and she felt +that she had been impatient. "Forgive me," she said. "So I was. But I +did not realize then what I ought to do." + +"Um! Where's your father?" + +"Just gone out in the dispatch boat to the fleet." + +"Does he know of this--this enterprise? Of course, though," he corrected +himself, "since he has not sailed." + +"Yes, of course," she said. "He stays with me. But," she added, "I +suppose he expected me to ask you about it first." + +"And you knew I wouldn't consent--hey?" + +The girl smiled without speaking. "Mr. Royal is over-indulgent," he went +on decidedly. + +"Perhaps," answered Elizabeth, "He thinks that a little over-indulgence +in being useful will not be bad for me. You assured both Nancy and me +that we were doing good service, real service, and that you should be +sorry to lose us." + +"So you have done, and I shall be sorry to lose you, both personally and +for the cause. Nevertheless, I shall send you home at once. Your father +would never have consented to your staying if he had realized the +danger. I never know where the shells will burst. I'll stop work upon +that schooner that you came in, and send you home again in it. It's +fitting up now as a fire-ship, but it can be made fairly comfortable. +Your safety must be considered." + +"Why is my safety of any more importance than the soldiers'? No, +General, you have no right to send me away. I refuse to go. I am not +speaking of military right, understand, but of moral right." + +Pepperell gave a low whistle. + +"That's it, is it?" he said. "One thing, however; if you stay, you must +submit to my orders. You are under military law." + +"I surely will. And now thank you," she returned with a smile so winning +that, although for her own sake Pepperell had been angry, he relented. + +"Oh, of course, it's very good in you, my dear," he said. "Don't think I +forget that." + +Capt. Archdale had been standing a little apart looking out to sea +during a conversation in which he had no place. Now as he perceived the +General about to move on, he came forward and spoke to Elizabeth. "You +know that you are running a great risk?" he said to her gravely. + +"Yes," she answered him, "or at least somewhat of a risk. When did you +come back from your reconnoitering party?" + +"The night before last," he said, not pursuing a subject that she did +not wish to discuss with him. Elizabeth heard something hard in his +voice, and saw a new sternness in his face that made her wonder suddenly +if Katie's letter had lacked any kindness that Stephen deserved from her +as he stood in the midst of danger and death. Could she have shown +coquetry, or in any way teased him now? + +"Well, good-by for the present, my dear, and Heaven keep you," said the +General, giving her hand a cordial pressure. Archdale bowed, and the two +went on, Pepperell at first full of praises of Elizabeth's courage, +though he regretted her decision. But life and death hung upon his skill +and promptness, and he had little time for thoughts of anything but his +task. Henceforth he only took care that Mr. Royal and his daughter were +as well protected, and as well cared for as circumstances permitted. + +Yet, one evening soon afterward, he saw something which for the +moment interested him very much. Elizabeth, with Nancy Foster who was +now more companion than maid, was walking slowly toward her tent. Both +were looking at the gorgeous sunset. Its brilliancy, vying with that +of the deadly fireworks, offered a contrast all the more striking in +its restfulness and happy promise. The two women had grown somewhat +accustomed to the cannonade, and as they went on they seemed to be +talking without noticing it. Just then a figure in captain's uniform +came quickly up the slope toward them, and with a most respectful +salute, stood bare-headed before Elizabeth. + +"Edmonson," commented the General even before he caught sight of +his face. "Nobody else has that perfection of manner. Stephen won't +condescend to it. Edmonson is the most graceful fellow I know. And, upon +honor, I believe he is the most graceless. But his theories can't harm +that woman." Yet as Pepperell stood watching the young man's expression +now that it was turned toward him, and understood by his gestures the +eager flow of words that was greeting Elizabeth, he held his breath a +moment with a new perception, muttered a little, and stood staring with +the frown deepening on his face. He wanted to catch her answering look, +but she had turned about in speaking and her back was toward him. In an +impatient movement at this, he changed his own range of vision somewhat, +and all at once caught sight of another face, also bent upon Elizabeth +with eager curiosity to catch her expression. Pepperell turned away +delighted. "After all, he's not too much of a grand seigneur to have +a little human curiosity," he chuckled, watching the new figure. "Yes, +we'll do very well to go on a reconnoitering expedition together, you +and I, Captain Archdale!" And he laughed to himself as he slipped +quietly away, without having been perceived. "More news to write to +pretty Mistress Katie," he commented, still full of amusement. Then +his thoughts went back again to the problem that was growing daily +more perplexing. And as he was again becoming absorbed in it, he was +conscious of an undercurrent of wonder that he could ever have laughed. +The thing next to be done was to make an attack up Island Battery, the +one most serviceable to the enemy, most annoying to themselves. So long +as that belched forth its fires against them, Warren's fleet must remain +outside, and there could be no combined attack upon the city, and +Louisburg was still unconquerable. Any day might bring a French fleet to +its rescue, and then the game was up. Beyond question, Island Battery +must be attacked, but it was a difficult and dangerous attempt, and +Pepperell sat with his head upon his hand, thinking of the men that must +fall even if it were successful. Still, every day now some among the +soldiers were smitten down by disease and the French ships were nearer. +It was only a question of sacrificing a part of his army or the whole of +it. Warren was right to urge the measure, and it must be pressed upon +his Council. But Pepperell felt as if he were being asked to sign a +hundred death-warrants. + +It was not quite time for the members of his Council to assemble. He +went to the nearest battery where the firing was hottest, sighted the +direction of the guns, examined the state of the city walls where these +had been played upon by them, cheered the gunners with his praise, even +jested with one of them, and left the men more full of confidence in +him, more desirous than ever to please him, and, if possible, more +resolved to win the day. Not a trace of anxiety in his face or his tones +had betrayed the weight that was upon him. Then he went back to his +tent. The Council had assembled. When he took his place at the head, +he had forgotten the incident that a few minutes before had moved him +to laughter. + +Archdale stood motionless. The underbrush hid him from the speakers, and +he was too far off to hear a word. It seemed to him that Elizabeth +wished to shorten the interview, for soon Edmonson with another of his +inimitable bows retired and she passed on. As Stephen caught sight of +her face he saw that it was troubled. "He shall not persecute her," he +said to himself. Nancy had gone on while Edmonson was speaking to her +mistress, and now Elizabeth following was almost at the door of her +temporary home, when a hand was laid heavily upon Archdale's shoulder, +and Vaughan's hearty voice cried;-- + +"Come on! I'm going to speak to our charming, brave young lady there. +I want to tell her how proud of her courage I am. Come on! he repeated. +Stephen followed. He had not taken her determination in this way. He +thought her unwise and rash, and hated to have her there. And yet he +could not deny that the camp had seemed a different place since she had +entered it. + +"You take it that way," he said to Vaughan. "But I think we should be +feeling that she may get hit some of these days, or be down with fever." + +"We'll hope not," returned the other cheerfully. "Let us look on the +bright side. She is doing a work of mercy, and we will trust that a +merciful Providence will protect her. We were just talking about you, +Mistress Royal," he continued, striding up to Elizabeth and grasping her +hand warmly. "Stephen, here, says he's always thinking you'll get hit +somehow, or get a fever. I say, look on the bright side of things, +'trust in the Lord,' as old Cromwell used to put it." + +"'And keep your powder dry,'" finished Archdale. "It's not safe to quote +things by halves. Decidedly, this staying is not a prudent thing." + +"I didn't know that beseiging Louisburg could be called a prudent +thing," she returned. "And so we're all in the same boat." + +"Ha! ha!" laughed Vaughan. "You have him there, Mistress Royal. He's +always in the hottest places himself; he likes them best." + +"Somebody else likes them, too; somebody else who can capture Royal +Battery with thirteen men," said Elizabeth. "I knew long ago that you +were a genuine war-horse, Colonel Vaughan. Give me credit for my +discernment." + +"Yes, yes, I remember," assented the other with the embarrassment of +courage at finding itself commended. "But, really, against such a +cowardly crew as those fellows were, there's no credit at all to be +gained." + +She made him a bright reply, and Archdale listened in silence as they +talked. But she noticed his gloomy face, and secretly wondered if it +was anxiety about Edmonson that troubled him, or if possibly, he was +displeased with Katie. But she put away for the second time the latter +suggestion. The girl had never looked prettier or been more affectionate +than when she had said good-by to her and given her the letter for +"poor, brave Stephen," as she had tearfully called him. Archdale could +not help listening to Elizabeth; there seemed to be a witchery about her +whenever she opened her lips. It was probable that Edmonson felt it, he +thought. And he began to wonder how things would all end. Perhaps they +should all be shot and the affair wind up like some old tragedy where +the board is swept clean for the next players. For his part, too much +had gone from his life to make the rest of it of interest. Elizabeth +turned to him. + +"Are you busy?" she asked. "I mean are you on duty?" + +"No," he answered, wondering what was coming, and noticing that her +tall, slight figure seemed all the more elegant for the simplicity of +her dress. "Can I do anything for you?" he added. + +"Yes, thank you," she answered, "You can, if you are willing. I am going +to get some medicine that the doctors have asked me to keep, because it +is very powerful, and they were afraid lest some of the men would be +careless with it. Nancy is bringing the bandages. Here she is now. Thank +you," as the girl put a phial into her hand. "There is extra work to be +done to-day," she went on, turning again to Archdale, "and we are short +of hands. If you don't mind, and will come, we shall be glad of your +help." + +Captain Archdale playing at nurse with private soldiers! The young man +did not fancy the idea at all; he would much rather have led a forlorn +hope. + +But no forlorn hope offered, and this did. Of course he would do +anything for Mistress Royal, but this was not for her at all. He had +half a mind to excuse himself. As the suggestion came to him, he looked +into the steady eyes that were watching him fathoming his reluctance, +ready for approval or for scorning as the answer might be. His look took +in her whole appearance, and set him wondering if the privates, some of +whom had been even his neighbors and his boyish playfellows, could +offend his dignity more than hers? He began to wonder how her eyes would +change if they looked at him approvingly. + +"I will go with pleasure, if you'll put up with an awkward fellow," he +answered. And Colonel Vaughan who was looking on was not aware that he +had hesitated. + +Elizabeth's eyes darkened. She smiled and nodded her head slightly, as +if to say, "I knew you would do it." But after this the trace of a smile +lurked for a moment in the corners of her mouth, as if she might have +added: "I know, too, what it has cost you." But she said nothing at all +to Archdale. She bade good-by to Colonel Vaughan who protested that he +wished he was not upon duty, and turned again toward the hospital. +Suddenly Archdale thought that she might have been asking the same thing +of Edmonson when she had been talking with him just before. If she had, +it was very certain that Edmonson had found an engagement immediately. +Upon the whole, Archdale was satisfied to have done what the other would +not do. So that it was just as well he did not know that that other had +not been asked. + +Was there ever another woman in the world like this one, he asked +himself late that night, recalling that she had been for hours beside +him, treating him just as if he were a crook to raise a soldier's head, +if she wanted to rearrange his pillow, or a machine to reel off bandages +round that poor Melvin's shattered arm, or to do any other trying +service, and never even imagine that he would like to be thanked or +treated humanely, while every look and word and thought of hers was for +the soldiers. It was so different from what he had always found, and yet +there was the nobleness of self-forgetfulness in the difference. But for +all this vivid memory of those hours, it was imagination rather than +recollection that occupied him most with her when she had left him. For +he was picturing how she would look, and what she would say, when she +read the letter that he had slipped into her hand as she was going away. +He recalled her look of amazement, her beginning:--"Why, it's--" and +then breaking off abruptly, perceiving that only peculiar circumstances +could have made him give her Katie's letter to read, and perhaps +divining the truth. For she had suddenly became very grave and had +replied absently to his good-night, as on her father's she had turned +from the hospital. The young man, wondering how she would receive the +news of Katie's treachery, asked himself what she could find now in +excuse for the girl who had used her faithful friend as the unconscious +messenger of her broken plight? Stephen knew well enough that the old +glamour would come back, but to-night he was full only of indignation +against Katie. To have used Elizabeth as she had done was an added sin. + +"I wish Bulchester joy of her," he muttered, then with a sharp breath +recollected that this was only a respite, that he should not always feel +too scornful for pain. + +Three nights after this there was a silent and solemn procession down to +the shore. Island Battery was to be attacked. Here was Archdale's +forlorn hope ready for him, if he wanted it now. Every chance of success +depended upon secrecy. The venture was so desperate that the General +could not make up his mind to pick out the men himself, he called for +volunteers. They came forward readily, incited, not only by courage and +the desire to end the siege, but by ambition to be distinguished among +their comrades who stood about them in hushed expectation. Every soldier +off duty and able to crawl to the shore, and some who should not have +attempted it were there. Among this crowd stood two women, scarcely +apart from the others, and yet everywhere that they moved, given place +to with the unobtrusive courtesy that has always marked American men, so +that one woman in a host of them feels herself, should danger come, in +an army of protectors, and otherwise alone. Elizabeth had meant to be +here earlier, and to put herself by the General's side, for her father +had gone with dispatches to the fleet, but her duties had detained her, +and now she was separated from him by nearly a regiment. She stood +silent in an anxiety that did not lessen because she told herself that +it was foolish. + +Captain Brooks was to command the expedition, and the number of men +needed to accompany him was fast being made up from the eager +volunteers. In the dimness she recognized Archdale by an unconscious +haughtiness of bearing, and Edmonson's voice, though lowered to suit the +demands of the hour, made her shiver. Yet why? Of course they both were +here; volunteers were stepping out from the ranks of their companies. +But they themselves were not going, neither would they be left here +alone together. Boat after boat with scaling ladders was filled with +soldiers and shoved off, some of them out of sight in the dimness where +the men, lying on their oars, waited for their comrades. In this way +one after another disappeared. Things went on well. Elizabeth began +to be reassured, to be occupied with the scene about her, to remember +the importance of the expedition and how many times it had been +unsuccessfully attempted. She began to think of the attack, of the +result, and of the soldiers, to rejoice in them, to be proud of them, +and to tremble for them, as one who has no individual interest at stake. + +It was only at night that the attempt could be made, only in certain +states of the tide, and still at the best time it was a terrible +venture; the work was new for the troops; the walls were high, the enemy +was vigilant. With a sigh she saw another boat shove off to its fate. + +The volunteering slackened, either because so many of the men left were +aware that fatigue and illness had undermined their strength, or because +the night had grown lowering and the ominous roar of breakers reached +them from their landing place. Finally a distinct pause came in answer +to the call: "Who next?"--a pause that lasted a minute, and that, had it +lasted another, would have meant discouragement, and perhaps despair. + +"I," said a firm voice, and Elizabeth saw Stephen Archdale step into the +boat. A strange feeling came over her for a moment, then a wave of +admiration for his heroism. If he were to die, it would be a soldier's +death. Yet, there would be so many to mourn him. If he went to his death +in this way, how would Katie feel? General Pepperell started forward, as +if to prevent his embarking, then restrained himself. The men responded +rapidly after this example, until the boat needed only one more. Then +there fell upon Elizabeth's ears, a name more frightful to her than the +boom of the surf or the roar of cannon, and Edmonson stepped in and +seated himself opposite Archdale. + +"Two captains in one boat!" she heard a soldier remonstrate. + +"Nonsense! we're full. Shove off instantly, you laggards. Every minute +tells," said the newcomer in a hoarse undertone. + +Elizabeth sprang forward. "No, no," she cried impetuously, forgetting +everything but the terror. + +But the calling of the names was going on again, and her voice was +unheard, except by a few who stood near her. Before she could make her +way up to the General, the boat pulled by the vigorous strokes of the +men who had been taunted as laggards, had shot out of sight. "Oh! bring +them back, bring back that last boat," she implored Pepperell in such +distress that he, knowing her a woman not given to idle fears, felt a +sense of impending evil as he answered: + +"My dear, I cannot. No boat is sure of meeting it in the dark, and to +call would endanger the expedition." + +There was no use in explaining now. She would have occasion enough to do +it sometime, she feared; and then it would be useless. To-night she +could say nothing. All these days she had dreaded what might come, for +it did not seem to her that Captain Archdale took any care at all. +Still, in the camp, out of general action, and surrounded by others, +there had been comparative safety. + +Now the hour, the place, and the purpose had met. Through the darkness +Stephen Archdale was going to his doom. + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +A WOUNDED MAN. + + +The General sent Elizabeth away very kindly. She sent the weary Nancy to +bed and went back to the hospital. But anxiety mastered her so that she +could not keep her hands from trembling or her voice from faltering when +there was most need for steadiness. + +"You are exhausted, Mistress Royal, you ought not to be here," said one +of the surgeons sternly. "Go and rest." + +"Oh, please let me stay," she pleaded with a humility so new that he +looked at her with curiosity. + +"Hush!" said his assistant making an excuse to draw him aside. "Don't +you know she's been watching the men set out for the Fort?" + +Elizabeth found words of comfort for a soldier who was mourning because +his wife would have no one to look after her, if he died. "I will help +her," she said. And then, by the light of the flaring candle, she wrote +down the woman's address. She repeated verses of Scripture for some who +asked her for them, and found a little steadiness of voice in doing it. +But through everything she saw Archdale's vigorous form and heard +Edmonson's passionate voice and his words. With such a marksman, and at +such range, how could a shot stray! + +But she dreaded still more the time when the expedition should return. +To-night she bitterly regretted that the General had not been told her +errand, and saw that when Mr. Royal urged it, it had been the wish to +save her that had made Stephen Archdale ask him not to do it. + +Three hours after the start she heard that the expedition had failed. +All that was left was returning, the wounded would soon be brought in. +Her little strength deserted her for the moment She sank down helpless +in the shadow. Then she rose and went forward. + +As the boat lay rocking on the waves waiting for the others, Archdale +took his bearings. Leaning towards the stern, he said to one of his +men:-- + +"Greene will you change places with me?" If the man had thought the +request more than a whim, he would have supposed it to be because the +captain considered his new choice a more dangerous post. Archdale +seating himself again glanced toward the bow. He was now on the same +side with Edmonson and the fourth man from him. It would be somewhat +difficult to have the latter's gun go off by accident and be sure of its +mark, and Greene was safe so far as exemption from an enemy at hand was +concerned. Archdale would have preferred Edmonson's left hand but when +it came to disembarking, his enemy should precede him. + +"Better cushions?" asked Edmonson with a sneering laugh under which he +tried to hide his anger. "Can't see any other motive for your running +the risk of capsizing us." + +"It is very presumptuous to do anything for which Captain Edmonson +cannot see the motive," returned Archdale haughtily. + +"By Heavens!" cried Edmonson in another moment "You're bound to die in +character if it come to a question of dying and of course it will with +some of us." + +Stephen made no answer. He felt more strongly than ever that he needed +good eyes and firm nerves. To be killed like a rat in a trap! His blood +ran too warm in his veins to submit tamely to this. When the struggle +should come yonder it mattered little whether it was by Edmonson's shot +or another's, for if he fell in the heat of the conflict it would always +be said that he died a soldier's death. And if he lived to come back +Edmonson, should take boat first. He turned himself slightly toward his +foe, and sat silent and observant. + +Had Elizabeth noticed them enter the boat together? He had thought of +saying good-by, for his volunteering was no sudden resolve, but had been +his determination from the first. But if he died, what real difference +would that make to her? And if he came back, the leave taking would seem +an absurdity. He seemed still to see the outline of her slender figure, +as with her shawl wrapped about her like a mantle she had stood +bare-headed in the cold May evening. + +Had he dreamed that Edmonson had learned of Katie's desertion, and was +full of rage at every word of courtesy or interest that he spoke to +Elizabeth, he would have felt his chance of life still less. + +"Can't you hitch along, you fellow next me?" cried Edmonson. "I'm so +cramped here I can't move a muscle, and I suspect we shall want them all +in good order pretty soon. We are coming up to the old walls. Swift and +steady, boys. Every man be ready with his muskets." + +As he spoke, he took up his own weapon and examined it in the dimness. +Then, still holding it in his right hand, he laid that arm along the +edge of the boat as if to relieve it from the cramped position he had +complained of. Archdale saw that the muzzle was pointed directly at him +and that the hand which held it in apparent carelessness was working +almost imperceptibly towards the trigger. That would not be touched +quite yet, however, a shot now would alarm the garrison and be +inexcusable. The accident would happen in the excitement of landing. +Archdale's left hand that he with as great indifference as Edmonson's +laid upon the boat's edge was steady. He leaned forward a little to be +out of range, and they went on in silence. + +The clouds grew denser, the waves swelled more and more at the violence +of the wind, and the storm, nearer every minute, seemed about to unite +with the fiery storm that awaited the devoted band. + +"Look," said Archdale suddenly, "I believe they have discovered us." He +raised his left hand as he spoke, and pointed to the Battery. Lights +were glancing there, and something had given it an air of ponderous +observation, as if eyes were looking through the walls and movements +going on behind them. All the men scanned the battery earnestly except +the speaker whose eyes were watchfully turned upon his neighbor, and who +for reward saw Edmonson's fingers covertly placing themselves on the +trigger, while his face was still toward the fortifications. + +"Yes, it's all up with us," cried the latter, "we are discovered," +In the movement of speech he was turning to Archdale, preparatory to +dropping measuring eyes upon the musket, when the latter called out:-- + +"See! they are going to fire." And with the words he dropped his left +arm with a swift and accidental sweep by which his hand hitting forcibly +against Edmonson's which was unprepared, struck it off the boat into the +water. The pistol sent its ball spinning into the sea, running along +Archdale's sleeve as it passed. The pistol itself lay under the water +for the instant that Edmonson's hand rested there. The flintlock was +wet, the weapon was useless. + +Its owner turned upon his clumsy companion in a rage. But before he +could speak the guns of the battery blazed out, and in the iron shower +that followed there was no thought for anything but that of saving +themselves as much as possible. + +Round shot would have danced over the water and left them comparatively +safe; but in the deadly hail of langrage such escape was impossible. +Every moment of it inflicted torturing wounds or death. The boats were +beeched with all speed at the foot of the monster which belched forth +this red hot torrent wounding wherever it fell. But they had been thrown +into confusion, and while some of them struggled to the shore, the +occupants of others in their terror drew back out of harm's way, and +left their comrades to their fate. Edmonson's was not the only flintlock +wet, as the soldiers, weary and dispirited, toiled up from the surf. +They tried their scaling ladders, they fought for a time with that +desperate courage which never forsook them. Their captain cheered them +with his bravest words and deeds, and Archdale and Edmonson were +foremost in every post of danger until one fell badly wounded. + +But from the first the expedition was doomed. After an hour's conflict +the recall was sounded, and the remnant of the scaling party straggled +and staggered to their boats, some carrying wounded comrades, some +themselves wounded and faint. But many had been taken prisoners by the +French, and many lay dead and dying. Elizabeth stood waiting for the +wounded to be brought in, and for the roll of the dead. The first man +who came walking steadily toward her, turning about at every few steps +to see that the men behind him were carrying their burden on their +stretchers carefully, was Archdale. + +"You?" she said wonderingly. "I thought--I was afraid--." + +"Yes, I have come back," he answered; "and it is through your warning. +Such as my life is, you have saved it." + +[TO BE CONTINUED.] + +[Footnote 5: Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk.] + + * * * * * + + + + +EDITOR'S TABLE. + + +It is surprising how few people, comparatively speaking, are aware of +the fact, that the history of Boston has been treated as the history of +no other city in this country has been. The year 1880 was the two +hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its founding, and, commemorative of +that year, a work, in four beautiful quarto volumes, has been issued in +this city by Messrs. Ticknor and Company. The object of this work, and +the importance attached to it is what leads us to speak of it in this +place and at this time. This object is primarily to present the leading +historical phases of the town's and city's life and developement, +together with the traces of previous occupation, and the natural history +of the locality. To accomplish this almost herculean task, the sections +were assigned to writers well-known in their respective spheres,--many +of them of national reputation,--who from study and associations were +in a measure identified with their subjects. The entire work was +critically edited by Mr. Justin Winsor, Librarian of Harvard University, +with the co-operation of a committee appointed at a meeting of the +gentlemen interested, consisting of the Rev. Edward Everett Hale, +D.D., Samuel A. Green, M.D. and Charles Deane, LL.D. Now, it is not +our purpose to enter into any description of this carefully planned, +skilfully written, beautifully illustrated, printed and bound specimen +of the art of book-making; but rather, again to call attention to its +great merits and claims upon the interested public. The work deals +almost exclusively with facts, and impartially also, and these facts are +alike valuable to the man of letters, the man of science, the historian, +the student, and the vast public whose patriotism invites them to +seek the story of their city. A better conceived work has never been +published on this continent; but it is unnecessary to commend what +easily commends itself to the eye, the mind, and the purse of well-to-do +people. + + * * * * * + +There is need of a more careful study of politics on the part of the +people of this country. The recent elections in this State and in other +States again recalls this need, and have again shown that altogether too +many men cast their ballots, not in accordance with their intelligence +or with their convictions, but as they are told to cast them. The first +duty of an American citizen should be a thorough acquaintance with +American political institutions, their origin, their growth and +progress, their utility or their worthlessness. The right of suffrage is +one of the inalienable rights of the people. It is one of their most +sacred rights also, and ought not to be exercised except under most +careful, candid and conscientious conditions. + +One cannot suppose, even for a moment, that our people are not aware of +the accuracy of these assertions. We are not advocates of property +ownership as a qualification of voting, nor would we seek to lay down +any arbitrary _sine qua non_, to be rigidly adhered to in our +system of voting. But, is it enough that a man should know how to read +and write before he can cast a ballot? Do these qualifications comprise +everything that is necessary to a proper and safe exercise of the right +of suffrage? If so, then politics can never be formulated as a science, +and politicians can never be regarded other than what many of them seem +to be,--tricksters trading on the incredulity and ignorance of the +masses. It is only when people understand _how_ and _why_ they +vote, that they can vote intelligently. + +It may not be generally known that we have in this state, with allied +organizations in other states, a Society for "Political Education," +carrying on its work by furnishing and circulating at a low price sound +economic and political literature. Its aim is to publish at least four +pamphlets a year on subjects of vital importance. During the present +year, the "Standard Silver Dollar and the Coinage Law of 1878" has been +treated by Mr. Worthington C. Ford, secretary of the society; "Civil +Service Reform in Cities and States," by Edward M. Shepard; "What makes +the Rate of Wages," by Edward Atkinson, and others have also been +published,--in all sixteen pamphlets since the foundation of the +Society. + +The first Secretary of the Society was Richard L. Dugdale, the author of +the remarkable social study called "The Jukes." The twelfth number of +the Economic Tracts of the Society gives a sketch of his life, and from +it the following quotation is pertinent:-- + +"The education of the people in true politics, it seemed to Mr. Dugdale +and his associates, would not only greatly aid popular judgment on +political questions, but would be a necessary preliminary to the +election of public representatives and officers upon real issues. If +elections were so held, successful candidates would come generally to be +men competent to consider and expert in dealing with questions of state +and administration. And if legislators and executives were so competent +and expert, and were not merely men accomplished in intrigue or active +in party contests, we should have from them conscientious and +intelligent social reforms. Legislative committees, governors, mayors, +commissioners of charities and corrections, superintendents of prisons, +reformatories, almshouses, and hospitals, would then patiently listen +and intelligently act upon discussions and of the condition of the +extremely poor and the vicious, and especially of children and young men +and women not yet hopelessly hardened." + +Few persons will deny that such a work as this needs everywhere to be +done so that the charities of the country shall no longer be +administered in the interests of a party. + +The Society has been in active operation about four years, and its +success has thus far been most gratifying. It has already induced +hundreds of people to make a careful study of American history and +politics, and its influence is now felt throughout the length and +breadth of this land. The very fact of such an effort is one of the +encouraging signs of the times, and should be encouraged by all who aim +for the welfare of the Republic. + + * * * * * + +But there is still another open field for work in this direction, and +this perhaps lies more in the power of the people themselves. We allude +to the necessity of public lectures, in every community, on the great +themes pertaining to American politics and history. It must be evident +to every observer that our so-called "Lyceum Courses" are to-day sadly +deficient in efforts to educate the people. There is a perfect craze +at the present time for concerts, readings, and a similar order of +entertainments,--all of which are doubtless good enough of their kind +and are capable of exerting a certain moral influence that cannot be +questioned. But is it plausible that such pabulum meets all the needs of +those people who frequent these entertainments? If it does, the fault +lies with the people and not with those who are capable of amusing them. + +We would suggest to the public-spirited ladies and gentlemen living in +our towns and cities to try the following experiment;--Plan a _lecture_ +course, to be filled by public speakers residing in your own +communities. Establish a course of say four, six, eight, or a dozen +evenings, and let only those questions be discussed which pertain to +history, political economy, and politics. We venture the assertion that +such a course, conducted thoroughly in an unpartisan spirit, would be +well patronized, and would exert an influence for good. Never was there +a better time to try the experiment than now. + + * * * * * + +The death of GENERAL GEORGE B. MCCLELLAN at Newark, N.J., +October 29, reminds us how narrow is becoming the circle of living +generals who took part in the great Civil War. It is two decades only +since the struggle ceased; but, one by one, the famous leaders have +passed away, and now McClellan has gone--the first to follow his great +commander, Grant. + +It is not easy to comment upon the career of General McClellan without +evoking, either from his admirers or his censors, the criticism of being +unfair. To many, especially to the soldiers who fought under his +leadership, he became an ideal of soldierly virtue, and has always held +a warm place in their hearts; while to many others his military and +civil career alike have seemed worthy only of disapprobation. + +It was natural that General McClellan should have a large and devoted +following, for he was a man gifted with those personal qualities that +always win popularity to their possessor, so that among the soldiers of +the Army of the Potomac, and among those in civil life with whom he came +in contact, he was usually regarded with admiration. As a military +commander, it must be conceded by his most determined critics, even, +that he possessed certain qualities unsurpassed by those of any other +general in the war. This was true of his ability as an organizer of +volunteer troups, in which capacity he probably rendered more effectual +service than any other man in the Union army. He was also well versed +in the science of war, and was a strategist of a higher order than has +generally been conceded. As is often the case, he failed to receive just +recognition of his really great abilities, because he lacked the needed +complementary qualities. McClellan could admirably plan a campaign, +and could perhaps have carried it to a brilliant issue, had all the +circumstances conformed to his plan, but this not happening, he seemed +unable to adapt his plan to the circumstances. Other generals with +inferior plans would succeed by taking some sudden advantage at a +critical time; McClellan on the contrary must either carry out his +carefully arranged programme, or acknowledge himself foiled. + +That General McClellan was not a firm patriot is an assertion not +entitled to any weight whatever. He was devoted to the cause of the +Union, and in his career as a general we believe he should be given the +credit of performing his duty to the best of his ability. That he could +not triumph over unexpected obstacles was doubtless a cause of regret to +him more than to any one else. + +General McClellan has been accused of an undue ambition for political +preferment, and it must be admitted that he would have succeeded better +in those positions to which he attained, had he been less solicitous for +the future; but it is not yet proved that he ever enlisted unworthy or +dishonorable means in the cause of his personal advancement. + + * * * * * + + + + +HISTORICAL RECORD. + + +September 30.--Republican State Convention held in Springfield. The +following ticket was nominated: Governor, Geo. D. Robinson of Chicopee; +Lieut. Governor, Oliver Ames of Easton; Secretary of State, Henry B. +Pierce of Abington; Treasurer, A.W. Beard of Boston; Auditor, Chas. R. +Ladd of Springfield; Attorney General, Edgar J. Sherman of Lawrence. +With the exception of the office of treasurer, the ticket is the same as +that of last year. + +October 1.--The Converse Memorial library building was formerly +presented to the city of Malden by its donor, Hon. Elisha S. Converse. +Hon. John D. Long made the dedicatory address. The building cost +$100,000, and is one of the finest examples of architecture in the +state. + +October 7.--Democratic State Convention at Worcester. The following +ticket was nominated: Governor, Frederick O. Prince of Boston; +Lieutenant-Governor, H.H. Gilmore of Cambridge; Secretary of State, +Jeremiah Crowley of Lowell; Attorney General, Henry K. Braley of Fall +River; Treasurer, Henry M. Cross of Newburyport. + +October 8.--Eight monuments were unveiled upon the battle-field of +Gettysburg by Massachusetts veterans. The regiments which have erected +these monuments and the principal speakers upon the occasion, were as +follows:-- + +The Twelfth Infantry. The monument is on Seminary Ridge. Col. Cook of +Gloucester presided, George Kimball of Boston delivered the principal +address, and comrade Gilman read a poem. + +The Eleventh Infantry dedicated its monument on the Emmittsburg Road, +Capt. W.T. Monroe presided, and James H. Croft of Boston made the +address. + +The Nineteenth Infantry monument on Cemetery Ridge was dedicated; J.W. +Sawyer, presiding, Lieut. Geo. M. Barry and C.C. Coffin making +addresses. + +The Third Battery has erected a monument. Formal exercises were not held +here at this time, but the dedication was made with remarks by comrade +Patch. + +The First Battery dedicated a monument in the National Cemetery. Remarks +were made by G.H. Patch and H.I. Hall. + +The Eighteenth Infantry. The monument stands near the wheat field, and +was dedicated with an address by Col. Wm. B. White of Quincy. + +The Second Sharpshooters. The monument is in the form of a statue and +was dedicated. N.S. Sweet gave the address. + +The First Cavalry dedicated a monument near the Round Tops, Major Chas. +G. Davis, delivered the address. + +October 13-16.--Seventy-fifth anniversary of the American Board of +Commissioners for Foreign Missions observed in Boston. The annual sermon +was preached the 13th in Tremont Temple by Rev. Geo. Leon Walker D.D. of +Hartford. A special discourse was delivered the 14th in the same hall by +Rev. R.S. Storrs, D.D. of Brooklyn. The attendance was the largest in +the history of the Board, taxing the fullest capacity of Tremont Temple, +Music Hall, and various churches simultaneously. Over 10,000 people were +present on one evening and many were turned away. The Rev. Mark Hopkins, +D.D. was re-elected president of the Board. + + * * * * * + + + + +OBITUARY. + + +September 26.--HON. WALDO COLBURNE, a Justice of the Supreme +Judicial Court of Massachusetts, died at his home in Dedham, at the age +of 60 years. + +Judge Colburn was born in Dedham, Nov. 13, 1824, and at 15 years of age +he entered Phillips Academy at Andover, graduating therefrom in 1842 in +the "English Department and Teachers' Seminary," which at that time was +entirely distinct from the classical course. In the following year he +entered the classical department, where he remained until the summer of +1845, when he left the academy and for the two years following engaged +in various pursuits, chiefly, however, civil engineering and surveying. +On May 13, 1847, he entered the law office of Ira Cleveland, Esq., at +Dedham, and on May 3, 1850, was admitted to the Norfolk County Bar. In +the meantime he had spent some time at the Harvard Law School, and soon +took a leading position in Norfolk county, which he always maintained. +On May 27, 1875, he was appointed one of the Judges of the Superior +Court by Gov. Gaston, and on Nov. 10, 1882, Gov. Long selected him to +fill a vacancy existing in the Supreme Court. Judge Colburn was a +Democrat, and had filled several positions of trust and responsibility +in his native town. In 1853 and 1854 he represented Dedham in the +Massachusetts House of Representatives, and as Chairman of the committee +on Railroads earnestly opposed the loaning of the State's credit to the +Hoosac Tunnel scheme. In 1870 he was a member of the Senate from the +Second Norfolk District, and as a member of the Judiciary Committee +drafted the well-known corporation act. He was Chairman of the Board of +Selectmen of Dedham from 1855 to 1864, and during the war his services +were important and valuable. He was President of the Dedham Institution +for Savings and a director of the Dedham National Bank. + +Judge Colburn was naturally a man of robust constitution and excellent +health, and, until his prostration shortly before his death, had never +been obliged to neglect his official duties for a day on account of +sickness. + +October 6.--Hon. Thomas Talbot, Ex-Governor of Massachusetts, died at +this home in Billerica at the age of sixty-seven years. He was born at +Cambridge, N.Y. Sept. 7, 1818, and subsequently removed with the family +to Danby, Vt. After the death of the father, the family removed to +Northampton, Mass. and Thomas at the age of thirteen began work in a +woolen factory. In the winters of 1837 and 1838 he attended an academy +at Cummington. Soon after, he joined his father in North Billerica, and +the long manufactoring career of C.P. Talbot & Co. was begun. The firm +still continues in the manufacture of woolen flannels, employing between +two and three hundred hands. + +Mr. Talbot's first public service of note was as Representative from +Billerica in the Legislature of 1852, and he was a member of the +Constitutional Convention the following year. He was elected a member of +the Executive Council in 1864, and served five years in that honorable +capacity in association with Governors Andrew, Bullock and Claflin. In +1872 Mr. Talbot was elected by the Republicans as Lieutenant Governor +upon the same ticket with Hon. William B. Washburn, who was elected as +Governor. Re-elected with Governor Washburn in 1873, he became Acting +Governor when, during the legislative session of 1874, Governor Washburn +was elected as United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the +death of Hon. Charles Sumner. One of the first important acts of his +official life after this event was the approval of the "Ten-Hour bill." + +In the same year Mr. Talbot received the Republican nomination for +Governor but was defeated by Hon. William Gaston. In 1878 he again had +the nomination, and was elected over Gen. Butler, Judge Abbott and A.A. +Miner. + +He was presidential elector in 1876 and 1884, and was chairman of the +State Board of Health, Lunacy and Charity from its establishment in 1879 +to 1884. + +Mr. Talbot was strictly a temperance man and was a professed +Prohibitionist. + + * * * * * + + + + +AMONG THE BOOKS. + + +The preparation of elaborately illustrated editions of standard poems +especially for the holiday trade has become a very prominent feature of +the book publishing business. Every year seems to mark an increased +beauty and variety in the work which the artist contributes to these +holiday books, and many classic works of literature are read with +clearer meaning and vastly greater delight, by reason of the intelligent +interpretations often given in the illustrations of our best artists of +the day. + +Among the most tasteful as well as sumptuous art volumes of the last +three years have been James R. Osgood & Co.'s "The Lady of the Lake," +"The Princess," and "Marmion." For a similar book for this season, +Messrs, Ticknor & Co., the successors of the old firm, have taken as a +subject Lord Byron's _Childe Harold_.[6] Of the poem nothing need +be said here, for it is universally accepted as Byron's greatest and +best; but of the illustrations, pages of praise could easily be written. +The poem itself has been a fertile theme for the artists, for the scene +is made to shift from one to another of the most beautiful and romantic +localities of the Rhine, of Spain, Italy and Greece, and most of the +illustrations are true representations of castles, ruins, palaces and +natural scenery in these ancient countries. + +All of the illustrations in the volume are from wood, in the production +of which the most famous American artists and engravers have given their +best work, all of it having been under the supervision of Mr A.V.S. +Anthony. + + * * * * * + +Scarcely a year has elapsed since the appearance of the first volume of +Mr. BLAINE'S _Twenty Years in Congress_, which details the +history of our time from the outbreak of Secession to the death of +President Lincoln. To maintain the interest attached to that work, a +second and concluding volume ought to have been published ere this. +Indeed, the public had a right to expect it. But, now, another bid for +public consideration and favor has been put forth under the rather +attractive title of _Three Decades of Federal Legislation_.[7] The +author is the Hon. S.S. Cox of New York, at one time a formidable +opponent of Mr. BLAINE in the halls of Congress, and at the +present time American minister to Turkey. + +Mr. COX was a member of Congress for twenty-four years, his +four terms from an Ohio district covering the war and the period +immediately preceding it. As a politician, he was always ranked on the +Democratic side, and was universally regarded as one of the closest, +most competent and most conscientious observer of men and things. His +acknowledged literary skill and his passion for accuracy rendered it +almost certain that his history would be both fascinating and truthful. +Contemporary history is at the present moment in high favor. All +intelligent people realize that the records of the last fifty years are +of more vital importance to living Americans than are the annals of all +previous eras. Hence, when a man so thoroughly equipped with the gifts +of mind and of expression as Mr. Cox has shown himself to be in earlier +books from his pen,--we say when such a man sets out to relate the story +of his time, it follows without further argument that his work will not +only be sought but will be read. + +The narrative covers the eventful work of Congress for the past thirty +years, and gives a much fuller inside view of Federal legislation during +this period than can be obtained from Mr. BLAINE'S more pretentious +work. No period in our national history is so full of interest as the +times of which our author writes. The revolt from English rule and the +establishment of our national government was one of the grandest epochs +in history. In that period were determined the issue of national +independence; in this epoch of even greater magnitude, the issue of +national existence. Both periods alike witnessed the most terrible +conflicts of armies, of bloodshed and suffering in both periods was +shown the exercise of the highest and most brilliant statesmanship; +and in both periods the Federal Legislature was witness to events +scarcely less exciting and decisive than occurred on hundreds of bloody +battle-fields. The exciting period of Secession, the departure of +Senators and Representatives from Congress, the proclamation of war, the +call for troops, the great uprising of the people of all sections, North +and South, against each other, the act of Emancipation, the sanguinary +battles of, and the close of the war, the return of peace, the +assassination of President Lincoln, the election of Grant, the Electoral +Commission and the seating of Hayes, the resumption of specie payments +and a host of other equally impressive episodes and events, find in Mr. +Cox an impartial historian. Of the importance of such a work, there is +no need of saying anything, and it is quite enough to remark that the +book taken all in all, is perhaps the most important, because of its +impartiality and accuracy, that has so far been published during the +present year. + +We have alluded to the fact that the author was a prominent actor in +nearly all the legislation of this long period, and that he consequently +possesses that personal and absolute knowledge which comes from actual +participation. The following extract which is taken at random from page +117 of the volume discloses something of the author's happy faculty of +seeing and describing things as they occurred to him. He says:-- + +"Being upon the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of +Representatives when the Trent affair occurred, the writer attended a +dinner given by the Secretary at this then happy home. This was at a +time when men held their breath in trepidation, lest Great Britain and +the Powers of Europe might make the Trent matter the pretext to +consummate their recognition of Southern independence. Some feared that +a disparted Republic would have to give way before the jealous +encroachments of those who sought to divide our country as they +endeavored to imperialize Mexico. + +"The delightful interchanges of thought between the persons at that +dinner are not so important as the fact that transpired toward its +close. After the ceremonies of introduction, and the tenders of +politeness to Mrs. Frederick W. Seward and Miss Olive Risley--the +adopted daughter of the house--the guests who had been received by these +ladies moved to the hospitable dining-hall. On the right of Mr. Seward +was seated burly English heartiness incarnated in Mr. Anthony Trollope, +the novelist. His presence was almost a surprise, if not a satire on the +occasion, as it concluded. At the other end of the table sat John J. +Crittenden. He was then chairman of Foreign Affairs in the House. The +author was on his right, as he was nearer by sympathy to him than others +on the committee. He used to say to the writer: 'My young friend, when I +was of your age, I did all the work and the older members received the +merit marks. You may do the work, sir, and I will take the credit.' With +his grave humor and hearty confidence, he was wont to parcel out to the +writer no inconsiderable quantity of the work of this most arduous of +committees. Thus it happened that a bill for the relief of the owners of +the Perthshire, seized by us, came to the hand of the writer for a +report. The chairman was not a little astonished when he found that his +subbordinate, on the 17th of December, 1861, was dilating on the Trent +case, and quoting Robinson's Reports to justify the detention of the +contraband plenipotentiaries, upon British precedents and conduct." + +From the foregoing selection, it will readily be seen that the author's +style is strong, clear, rapid, and stimulating, his judgment sound and +unprejudiced, and his materials authentic. His condition, experiences, +and industry combine to throw new light on the events of the most +remarkable epoch in natural history, and the volume, independent of Mr. +Cox's reputation, is bound to be a success. It is at once the most +picturesque and harmonious political history of our times that has thus +far been written, and will, also, be generally looked upon as a solid +and substantial contribution to American literature. We feel that we +cannot commend it too highly. + + * * * * * + +In the Century magazine, last spring, Gen. George B. McClellan undertook +to present his explanation of the failure of the Army of the Potomac +while under his command. In his article, he assaulted the memories of +Lincoln and Stanton, and attempted much more than he accomplished,--at +least, so thinks the HON. WILLIAM D. KELLEY, who examines +McClellan's statements in a book recently published. It bears the simple +title, _Lincoln and Stanton_.[8] Of this volume, which for the +first time makes many fresh disclosures, we hope to have something to +say at another time. + +Senator SUMNER was once asked by Lord Brougham the origin and +meaning of "caucus," and he replied: "It is difficult to assign any +elementary to the word, but the most approved one referred its origin to +the very town, and about the time (1772), of his lordship's birth." +There is a tradition in Boston that "caucus" was a common word here +before the Revolutionary war broke out, and that it originated in a feud +between the British troops on the one side and the rope-walkers and +calkers on the other. Bloody collisions, it is said, occurred between +them. The latter held meetings in the _calkers' hall_ in the lower +part of the city, at which resolutions were adopted and speeches made +denouncing the soldiers, who, on their part deriding the wordy war +offered, sneeringly snubbed their opponents "The Calkers," which by an +easy corruption became "the caucus," and finally a term to denote the +meetings. + +Whether this be the origin or not of the word, one thing is certain--Mr. +George W. LAWTON has done a most commendable thing in the +publication of his little book on _The American Caucus System_.[9] +It is exceedingly useful, and the wonder is for us why some such work +has not earlier issued from the press, for it meets the requirements of +the multitudinous politicians and others who are never absent on "caucus +nights." The author begins at the beginning of his theme, and shows how +easily men, that is, mankind in general, choose to be controlled by +political power, and to bear its burdens; he then establishes the axiom +that the direction of political power is with the caucus, and goes on +still further to explain what gives the caucus its authority, to compare +caucus nominations with self-nominations, and then historically to trace +the growth of the caucus, and, lastly, to describe the proceedings of, +and how to conduct, a caucus meeting. From first to last, these pages +are suggestive, timely, and embody a great deal of good sound sense. + + * * * * * + +The late Mr. Walter Bagehot left behind him some materials for a book +which promised to make a landmark in the history of economics, by +separating the use of the older, or Ricardian, economic reasonings from +their abuse, and freeing them from the discredit into which they had +fallen through being often misapplied. Unfortunately he did not complete +more than the examination of two of their postulates, namely, the +transferability of capital and labor. These were originally published in +the _Fortnightly Review_, in 1876, and are now republished, with +some other materials for the author's proposed work, under the title of +_The Postulates of English Political Economy_.[10] These essays, +which emanated from a well-trained, scientific mind, an independent +thinker, and one who was perfectly free in his criticisms, deal almost +exclusively with one side of what the author wished and intended to say; +but as they stand, they prove that had he lived he would have shed much +light on the problem, how the rapid changes of modern city life may help +us to understand, by analogy and indirect inference, the slow changes of +a backward people. + + * * * * * + +The pathos and humor which have immortalized many of WILL CARLETON'S +earlier poems enter again into his _City Ballads_.[11] If ever a poet +comprehended the human heart and the mainspring of its responses, it is +he who gave us that wonderfully-common-place (by reason only of its +theme) but delightful versification, "Betsey and I are out." His new +collection embraces several pieces almost as striking in their +character; and their wholesomeness and truthfulness of sentiment will +win for them many readers. None of these poems are fanciful pictures of +life which does not exist; but they are, on the contrary, faithful to +the actualities of the living present. They portray metropolitan life +as in a mirror, and depict the mishaps of the inexperienced therein in +a way that is at once healthful and conducive to practical morality. +Every poem is a story, which carries within itself a lesson not easily +forgotten, and as a poem is almost invariably characterized by a +pleasant rhythm and animation. The illustrations--and they are +numerous--are excellent; indeed, one would not wish them to be better. +These poems and pictures will find entrance into many homes ere the +holiday season is ended. + + * * * * * + +One of the most astonishing successes, in a literary line, of recent +years is Col. Higginson's "Young Folks' History of the United States." +Published originally as a book for general readers, its superlative +merits commended themselves to teachers, then led to the introduction of +the work, as a text-book of history, into very many schools. No other +work of the kind, we believe, has met with such signal favor or so +richly deserves it. So far as it goes, it is by all odds the _ne plus +ultra_ for school use. + +The same author has recently published what he terms _A Larger History +of the United States_,[12] which, however, ends only with the close +of President Jackson's administration. So far we fail to discover any +_raison d'etre_ of the volume, unless its purpose is distinctly to +bring together in a re-arranged form the series of illustrated papers on +American history contributed by Mr. Higginson to Harper's Magazine +during the past two years. If such is the author's purpose, then we have +no fault to find with the work. But the term "_Larger_ History" is, +in this case, a misnomer. The book does _not_ contain as much +matter as the earlier work to which we have alluded, and it is not, so +far as we can make out, written for older readers. It does not strike +one as being a history at all,--that is, a straightforward, logical, and +continuous narrative coinciding with those exemplar types of historical +writing bequeathed to us by Macaulay or by Motley. The book ends, as we +have said, with the close of Jackson's administration; but we glean very +little concerning the _administration_ and we are told much +relative to "Old Hickory." + +Now, then, this may seem like finding fault with Mr. Higginson's book. +If so, we have plainly asserted our reasons. But with his subject +matter, and with his manner of treating it, everybody must be pleased. +We have never read more charmful essays on the First Americans, the +Visit of the Vikings, the Spanish Discoverers, the French Voyageurs, the +Dawning of Independence, and the Great Western March, than appear +between the covers of this beautiful volume. They are full of meat, and +have the savor of fresh and studious investigation, and we feel grateful +to their author for having provided so tempting a feast. What he says +and the way he says it make us the more to regret the unfortunate title +of his book. + +The illustrations, which are numerous, are veritable works of art, and +we do not believe that any other American book can exhibit a finer or +more valuable series of portraits of American statesmen. This feature +alone should commend it to lovers of fine books, of which the present +issue is decidedly one. We are not informed whether a second volume is +forthcoming. + + +[Footnote 6: Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. A Romance. By Lord Byron. +Boston: Ticknor & Co. Price, in cloth, $6.00.] + +[Footnote 7: Three Decades of Federal Legislation, from 1855 to 1885. By +the Hon. S.S. Cox, 1 vol. 8vo, pp. 726. Illustrated. Providence, R.I.; +J.A. & R.A. Reid, 1885. Price, $5.00, (sold only by subscription.)] + +[Footnote 8: LINCOLN AND STANTON. A study of the war +administration of 1861 and 1862, with special consideration of some +recent statements of Gen. George B. McClellan, By Wm. D. Kelley. 8vo, +pp. 88. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1885. Price, $1.00.] + +[Footnote 9: The American Caucus System; its origin, purpose, and +utility. By George W. Lawton. 1 vol. pp. 107. New York: G.P. Putnam's +Sons, 1885. Price, $1.00.] + +[Footnote 10: The Postulates of English Political Economy. By the late +Walter Bagehot, with a preface by Alfred Marshall. 1 vol. pp. 114. New +York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1885. Price $1.00.] + +[Footnote 11: CITY BALLADS. By Will Carleton, author of "Farm +Ballads," "Farm Legends," etc. Illustrated. Square 8vo, pp. 180. New +York: Harper & Brothers. Price $2.00.] + +[Footnote 12: A Larger History of the United States of America to the +close of President Jackson's administration. By Thomas Wentworth +Higginson. Illustrated by Maps, Plans, Portraits, and other Engravings. +1 vol. 8vo, pp. 470. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1886. Price, $3.00.] + + * * * * * + + + + +NOTES AND QUERIES. + +At the request of many of our readers, this new Department is initiated. +Please address all queries and answers simply,--EDITOR OF THE BAY STATE +MONTHLY, 43 Milk St., Boston. + + +1.--In one of the old Readers, I find a selection, not credited to any +author, and beginning as follows:--"Born, sir, in a land of liberty; +having early learned its value; having engaged in a perilous conflict +to defend it; having, in a word, devoted the best years of my life to +secure its permanent establishment in my country, my anxious +recollections, my sympathetic feelings, and my best wishes are +irresistibly excited, whensoever in any country, I see an oppressed +nation unfurl the banners of freedom." Will some one of your readers +inform me who was the author of these words, and what was the occasion +for their utterance?--W.T.D. + +2.--Sullivan, in his _Familiar Letters_, states (p. 26) that: +"General Washington is well known to have expressed his heartfelt +satisfaction that the important State of Massachusetts had acceded to +the Union. There is much _secret history_ as to the efforts made to +procure the rejection (of the constitution) on the one side, and the +adoption on the other." Where can I find the fullest account of this +"secret history?"--STUDENT. + +3.--Who was the first American woman to publicly espouse the cause of +Anti-Slavery? I have lately seen several names mentioned?--M.S. + +4.--"Where can I find the best account of the Know-Nothings, that +figured in American politics some years ago?" + +5.--The late Epes Sargent, in one of his sketches, says:-- + +"Semmes took a pinch of snuff, and replied,--'You remember _Mrs. +Glasse's_ well-known receipt for cooking a hare--First catch your +hare!'"--_Who was Mrs Glasse?_--LATIN SCHOOL. + +6.--Where can I find a full account of the history of the Indian tribes +of early Massachusetts? The various State Histories say but little about +them.--ANTIQUARY. + +7.--Has the life of Robert Rantoul Jr. ever been written? If so, by +whom?--H.A.D. + +8.--Most of our States have one capital; some have two--Providence and +Newport, in Rhode Island for instance. Why two? + +9.--In Chandler Robbins' "History of the Second Church," under date of +Oct. 7. 1762, occurs the following: "Voted that the singers sound the +base at the end of the lines whenever they think proper." What is the +explanation of this custom? + +10.--Bartlett does not give this: "To fleet the time carelessly, as they +did in the golden world." Where is it to be found?--ELHEGOS. + + * * * * * + +======================================================================= + + +"_Undoubtedly the most remarkable series of articles ever published +in a magazine, and their popularity is in, accord with their +merit_."--BROOKLYN EAGLE. + +_Of the numbers of_ THE CENTURY _from November, 1884 to April +1885, six issues, more than a million and a quarter copies have already +been published_. + + +THE WAR PAPERS IN THE CENTURY MAGAZINE. + +[Illustration] + + +With the number for November, 1884, the first issue of a new volume, +there began to appear in this magazine a series of separate papers, the +object of which is to tell in clear and graphic manner the stories of +the great battles of the War for the Union; the authors being leading +officers on both the Federal and Confederate sides, often the first in +command, and always a participant in the engagement under consideration. +The extraordinary increase in the circulation of the magazine since +these papers were begun, and the reception by the public and the press +of the material already printed, indicate the wide-spread popular +interest in the plan. + +THE NOVEMBER CENTURY contains the paper by General G.T. Beauregard, of +the Confederate army, describing "The Battle of Bull Run," with more +than twenty illustrations, including portraits of McDowell, Johnston, +"Stonewall" Jackson, and others. General Beauregard not only describes +the battle, but touches upon his relations with Mr. Jefferson Davis, and +the general conduct of the war. + +THE DECEMBER CENTURY contains the graphic description of "The Capture of +Fort Donelson," by General Lew Wallace, with portraits of Buckner, +Floyd, Pillow, and others among the illustrations, and a frontispiece +portrait of General Grant, from a little-known photograph; also an +autographic reproduction of General Grant's famous "Unconditional +Surrender" letter, written to the Confederate commander at Fort +Donelson. + +THE JANUARY CENTURY contains an illustrated article by Rear-Admiral +Walke, describing the "Operations of the Western Flotilla," including +engagements at Belmont, Fort Henry, Fort Pillow, Fort Donelson, Memphis, +and Island No. 10. Captain James B. Eads (who built the gun-boats) +contributes to the same number a paper on "Recollections of Foote and +the Gun-boats." + +_New readers of_ THE CENTURY _desiring to secure these three +numbers, November, December, and January, and thus begin the War Series +and Mr. Howells's new novel, "The Rise of Silas Lapham," can obtain them +for $1.00 of the publishers (who will send them to any address, +post-paid, on receipt of price), or of dealers everywhere. New editions +will be printed as rapidly as the demand requires. November is now in +its sixth edition._ + +THE FEBRUARY CENTURY, the Midwinter number, contains a remarkable list +of attractions, including a richly illustrated paper on "Winter Sports +in Canada," an illustrated story by Mark Twain, entitled "Royalty on +the Mississippi," etc., etc. In this issue appears THE FIRST OF GENERAL +GRANT'S ARTICLES in the war series, being his long-looked-for paper on +"The Battle of Shiloh." For reasons which he recounts in the opening of +the article, general Grant never made to the Government the usual full +report touching this engagement. The paper is a comprehensive treatment +of his relations to the battle, including much of picturesque and +personal interest concerning its progress and a discussion of the main +points of controversy, together with his own estimates of the military +character and services of certain of the leading officers in both the +Union and Confederate sides. + +THE CONFEDERATE SIDE AT "SHILOH" will be described in this February +number in two interesting articles, one by the son of the Confederate +leader, General Albert Sidney Johnston, killed at Shiloh, and the other +by Colonel Jordan, of general Beauregard's staff. These, with General +Grant's article, are among the most notable contributions ever made to +magazine literature. The illustrations are more than twenty-five in +number. + +======================================================================= + + +FURTHER PAPERS BY GENERAL GRANT. + +In his second paper General Grant will cover an entire year of his +service in the war, including the different campaigns against Vicksburg, +and its capitulation. In his third paper he will deal with the battle of +Chattanooga, including the strategy of the campaign from the time of his +assumption of the command. A fourth paper, on the Wilderness campaign, +will follow. + +While largely engaged with the main features of the campaigns described, +General Grant has not failed to take note of significant and +characteristic details. These papers will be illustrated with the same +regard for thoroughness and accuracy which has characterized the +illustrations of the articles in the war series already published. + + +THE "MONITOR" AND "MERRIMAC," IN THE MARCH CENTURY. + +[Illustration] + +The story of this famous fight is described in the March CENTURY by Col. +John Taylor Wood, fourth officer of the "Merrimac" in the second day's +fight, and now the senior surviving officer. Col. Wood was afterward +commander of the privateer "Tallahassee." The Federal side of the battle +is told by Commander S.D. Greene, U.S.N. (whose death has just +occurred), who was the executive officer of the "Monitor," and operated +the guns within the turret. General R.E. Colston, commander of the +Confederate forces opposite Newport News, contributes an eyewitness's +account of the same battle, describing, also, the "Merrimac's" +engagement with the Federal fleet before the arrival of the "Monitor." +A paper will soon appear on "THE MONITOR," BY CAPTAIN JOHN ERICSSON, +making record of the circumstances attending the invention of that +famous craft, and treating also of the engagement at Hampton Roads. +Readers of the articles in the March number will be especially +interested in the inventor's story. + +In the April CENTURY will be printed two important papers on THE CAPTURE +OF NEW ORLEANS, BY ADMIRAL PORTER AND GEORGE W. CABLE. + +Admiral Porter, with whom, as he relates, the expedition against New +Orleans originated, and who was in command of the mortar-fleet during +the action, describes the Federal side of "The Opening of the Lower +Mississippi"; while George W. Cable, the novelist, and at the time a +resident of New Orleans, writes of the condition of the city and the +circumstances attending its occupation. The illustrations will include +a number of battle-scenes from sketches made by Admiral Porter. + +In the May and June numbers the papers in the War Series will be largely +devoted to THE PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN BY GEN. G.B. McCLELLAN AND GEN. J.E. +JOHNSTON. + +General McClellan will contribute two papers, the first of a general +nature on the Peninsular Campaign, and the second (to appear later) on +the battle of Antietam, thus covering the period of his command of the +Army of the Potomac. General Joseph E. Johnston, who commanded the +entire Confederate forces opposed to McClellan in the Peninsular +engagements until the battle of Seven Pines, when in consequence of a +wound he was succeeded by General Lee, will cover, in his papers, the +period from Manassas to Seven Pines, dealing with both battles, and with +his relations and differences with the President of the Confederacy. The +engagements at Gaines's Mill and Malvern Hill, in this campaign, will be +described in papers by GEN. FITZ JOHN PORTER AND GEN. D.H. HILL, who +were prominently engaged against each other in both actions. These will +be well supplemented by the "Recollections of a Private." + +OTHER WAR PAPERS by Generals Longstreet, Pope, Gordon, Rosecrans, Buell, +Hunt, Pleasonton, Newton, and other prominent leaders, will appear in +later numbers. + +======================================================================= + + +THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE SERIES will receive the most careful attention, +and in this particular it is thought that the series will possess an +unequaled historical interest. THE CENTURY has at its disposal a very +large quantity of maps and plans, portraits of general officers of both +sides, authentic paintings and drawings, and especially photographs of +camp scenes, battle-fields, famous localities, etc. A strict regard for +accuracy will guide the preparation of the illustrations. + +In connection with this series is appearing a number of briefer +sketches, entitled "RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE," reflecting with +interesting and life-like details the experiences of the common soldier +from the time of enlistment to the muster-out: the drill, the march, the +bivouac, the skirmish, the charge, the pursuit, the retreat, etc., etc. +Auxiliary branches of the service will also be treated in this +supplementary way, and in several instances briefer supplementary papers +will chronicle special incidents or consider special phases of an +engagement. Personal reminiscences of several of the most prominent +military leaders, now dead, will also give variety to the scheme. + + * * * * * + +OTHER FEATURES OF "THE CENTURY" include W.D. Howells's new novel of an +American business man, "The Rise of Silas Lapham"; a novel, by Henry +James, "The Bostonians," begun in the February number; a series of +papers, by W.D. Howells, descriptive of some cities of Italy, +illustrated with reproductions of etchings, by Joseph Pennell; a series +of brilliantly illustrated articles on "The New Astronomy" (a paper in +this series appears in the March number); articles on "The New +North-west," on Architecture, History, French and American Art, etc., +etc., and short stories by the best writers--many of them to be +illustrated. The War Series will not be allowed to interfere in any way +with the general features of the magazine. + + * * * * * + +Subscriptions may begin at any time, but in order to get the +first chapters of Mr. W.D. Howells's novel, "The Rise of Silas Lapham," +and to commence the War Series, new subscribers should date from the +November number. The subscription price of THE CENTURY is $4.00 a year, +and single numbers can be purchased of book-sellers and news-dealers +everywhere at 35 cents each. All dealers receive subscriptions, or +remittance may be made direct to the publishers by postal or express +order, registered letter, bank check, or draft. + +THE CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: FROM "RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE."] + + +THE CENTURY _is beyond question the first among magazines in the +English language. The people of the South owe it especial thanks not +only for the fairness of its spirit toward this section, but because it +opened its pages to many of our best writers and made them known to the +world._--THE APPEAL, MEMPHIS, TENN. + +_The time has now come when this portion of our national history can be +discussed by the actors in it, whether they wore the blue or the gray, +and different versions can be judged without partiality._--ARGUS, +ALBANY, N.Y. + +_The great captains on both sides will make this series the most +notable historic contribution of the day._--CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA. + +_Every soldier should be a subscriber to_ THE CENTURY _for the +coming year._--COURIER-GAZETTE, ROCKLAND, MAINE. + +_In securing these articles from the leading generals of the great +struggle_, THE CENTURY _did the best piece of journalistic work +that has been done in this country for many a year._--THE CHRISTIAN +UNION, N.Y. + +_The wounds and passions of the late war are rapidly healing, but it +will never lose its interest to the students of history. These articles +cannot fail to be of great interest to all careful readers both North +and South._--PRESS, PARAGOULD, ARK. + +_A series of important papers, the like of which has never before been +attempted, and which possess the peculiar quality of interesting every +person in the land._--THE BEACON, BOSTON, MASS. + +_What a vast work for good in these several ways is the great +magazine-publishing house of_ THE CENTURY Co. _doing; what an +uplift is it giving to good taste, good morals, good politics, and good +manners, as well as to the dissemination of useful knowledge, to the +culture of "the masses," to the comfort and peace and pleasure of home, +to the welfare of society in general! No engine of the things that are +true and pure and good is more mighty than a work like this; we ought +all to be thankful that it is in such hands. Making money, of +course_, THE CENTURY Co. _are; we are glad of it; but they are also +making hearts happier, lives better, and homes brighter the world +over._--THE LITERARY WORLD, BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + +_The Century Co. are among the benefactors of the human race. It is +not too much to say that while "The Century" stands at the head of +current magazine literature, in "St. Nicholas" we have the best serial +publication for boys and girls the present generation has +seen._--THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN, ENGLAND. + + +"Driven Back to Eden," + +[Illustration] + +THE NEW SERIAL STORY + +BY E.P. ROE + +Author of "Barriers Burned Away," "Without a Home," Etc., Etc. + +PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED + +NOW APPEARING IN ST. NICHOLAS. + +Showing how a city family, inhabitants of a "flat," were led to move +into the freedom of a country home, and how the girls and boys all +became farmers on a small scale. This promises to be one of Mr. Roe's +best stories. It is only one of the many interesting current features of +ST. NICHOLAS, which include: + + "Recollections of a Boy-Page in the U.S. Senate," + "Historic Girls," serial papers by E.S. Brooks, + "Children of the Cold," a series by Lieut. Fred'k Schwatka, + "Ready for Business; Suggestions to Boys about to Choose an Occupation," + "Personally Conducted," by Frank R. Stockton, + Short Stories by Louisa M. Alcott and others. Etc., Etc. + + +Numbers issued on the 25th; for sale by all dealers; price 25 cents. +Subscription price, $3.00 a year. Subscriptions are taken by dealers and +postmasters, or remittance may be made direct to the publishers, THE +CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York. + + * * * * * + +_A Michigan mother (and competent critic) writes to the Editor of +"St. Nicholas": "I am convinced that no child who is without 'St. +Nicholas' can successfully compete in the race of life with those who +have had the benefit of its wonderful pages." And a prominent clergyman +of Chicago informs us that one of his parishioners recently said to him: +"'St. Nicholas' has saved my boy from ruin."_ + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES: + FOR ROAD USE; + + STANCH AND RELIABLE + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP + STRONG, GRACEFUL--EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE + + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE + THE POPE MFG. 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Weekly, $1.50 Per Annum. + + ==> SAMPLE COPIES FREE. + + The Evening Traveller is delivered by carriers in Boston and Suburbs for + 75 cents a month. Send orders to + + _R. WORTHINGTON & CO., Publishers_, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. + +======================================================================= + + + BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG + + [Illustration] + + Residents of, and visitors to Boston, should not miss seeing the + wonderful CYCLORAMA BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, now on exhibition at + + NO. 541 TREMONT STREET. + + The building is large and substantial, built of brick and iron, and is + fire-proof. It is circular in shape and is ornamented by turreted walls + and towers, constructed after the manner of the old feudal castles. + + The vestibule, parlors and offices at the entrance are decorated and + furnished in good style and all the appointments and accessories are in + keeping. + + The spectator passes through a narrow passage and up a winding stairway + to a circular platform in the centre of the structure, whence the + picture is seen. No words can adequately describe the wonderful effects + of this life-like portrayal of the great battle. It tells in the most + vivid manner possible the whole story of that dreadful afternoon _July + 3, 1863._ All around him are evidences of the terrible battle. Behind + fences, stone walls and trees, in trenches and in open fields are seen + soldiers of the blue and gray engaged in the awful struggle. + + The officers who were in command on that day are easily distinguished on + the canvas. Old soldiers who have seen the painting pronounce it as + accurate as if photographed on the field. + + Passing down another winding stairway we find ourselves in front of + another painting called the + + UPRISING OF THE NORTH, + representing the northern troops passing through Washington on their way + to the front, reviewed by President Lincoln, who stands on a marble + rostrum, surrounded by his associates in office, while the war governor, + John A. Andrew, superintends, the breaking of the fetters from the + slaves and arming them for the country's service. Near by are seen the + troops from New England, led by General B.F. Butler, while on all sides + mothers, sisters and friends are seen wishing them God speed. + + Both of these paintings are the work of the celebrated French artist, M. + Paul Philippoteaux, whose work every visitor to Paris has seen and will + remember. + +======================================================================= + + + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. + + WITH 40 MAPS. + + BY COL. HENRY B. CARRINGTON, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D. + + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. + + A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. + + + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:-- + + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.--_Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey_. + + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.--_Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y._ + + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.--_Henry Day, N.Y._ + + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.--_Geo. + Bancroft_. + + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.--_Benson J. Lossing_. + + The maps are just splendid.--_Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J._ + + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.--_Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y._ + + Of permanent standard authority.--_Gen. De Peister, N.Y._ + + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.--_Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris_. + + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.--_Z. Chandler_. + + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.--_B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis_. + + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.--_London Telegraph_. + + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.--_Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England_. + + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.--_Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State_. + + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.--_A. de + Rochambeau, Paris_. + + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.--_Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England_. + + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.--_Harper's + Magazine_. + + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.--_N.Y. Times_. + + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.--_The Nation_. + + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. + + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.--_Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J._ + + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.--_Gen. W.T. + Sherman_. +-------------------------------------- + + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. + + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. + + Published by A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York. + + + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. + + The RED Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. + + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. + + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." + + THE SECRETARY OF WAR has placed the "BATTLE MAPS AND CHARTS" at ARMY + POST SCHOOLS, at government expense. + + FIVE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF WASHINGTON accompany the volume. The ST. MEMIN + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also PEALE'S painting + (1772), HOUDON'S bust (1784). TRUMBULL'S painting (1792) and STUART'S + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. + + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. + + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. + + + NOTICES. + + Invaluable to the student of American History.--_Baltimore (Md.) + Herald_. + + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.--_Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.--_The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)_. + + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.--_N.Y. + Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.--_N.Y. Evening + Post_. + +======================================================================= + + + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE + + Is the name of a new process of + _ENGRAVING BY PHOTOGRAPHY_ + at less than + ONE-HALF THE COST OF WOOD ENGRAVING! + + The plates are equal to the finest wood cuts, and in point of depth, + superior. We furnish an electrotype all ready for the printer's use. + + We can do every description of work, Machinery, Furniture, Buildings, + Autograph Letters, Illustrations for Trade Catalogues, etc. + + For specimen sheet of our work and further particulars address + + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO., + 63 OLIVER STREET, BOSTON. + +-------------------------------------- + + _ANTIQUE_ + Views of Ye Town of Boston. + BY JAMES H. STARK. + + This is the title of one of the most valuable contributions to the + HISTORY of BOSTON that has been made in many years. It embraces a series + of upwards of ONE HUNDRED VIEWS of OLD BOSTON, that have been gathered + from private and public collections, and most faithfully reproduced by + the Photo-Electrotype Engraving Company's process of Boston. + + The Book is handsomely BOUND IN CLOTH. On the front cover is a view of + the Old State House, embossed in gold; on the back cover is a veneer + made from the Old Elm, on which is printed a view of the old tree, and + an autograph letter from Mayor Cobb (who was mayor of Boston at the time + of the destruction of the tree), certifying to its authenticity. It is a + book of 400 pages, imperial octavo, and a limited number is offered at + + $6.00 PER COPY. + + ADDRESS PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO., ... 63 OLIVER STREET, BOSTON. +-------------------------------------- + + STARK'S ILLUSTRATED + + BERMUDA GUIDE. + + The Bermuda Islands are coming more prominently before the public each + season, as a health resort and winter watering place. Although it is but + sixty-five hours' sail from New York to these coral islands, yet they + are strangely unfamiliar to most well informed Americans. Speaking our + own language, having the same origin, with manners and customs prevalent + in New England a century ago, it is only now that these islands and + their inhabitants have attracted much attention and led the public to + inquire concerning them. + + It is to satisfy this demand and also to bring to the notice of those + unacquainted with the beauties of these semi-tropical islands that the + writer has been led to issue this work, which is the first illustrated + guide-book and history of Burmuda yet published. The book contains two + hundred pages, and is embellished with sixteen photo-mechanical prints + made by a new process from negatives (taken by the author during the + past winter) of the finest scenery in Bermuda. This is a new feature in + the matter of book illustrations, and it makes the work both + + _BOUND IN CLOTH, PRICE $2.00, POST-PAID_ + + ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE COMPANY, + _No. 63 Oliver Street, Boston, Mass._ + +======================================================================= + + + THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. + Volume I.--1884. Bound in cloth, royal 8vo., + 420 pages. Price, $2.00. + WITH + 6 PORTRAITS ON STEEL, 10 MAPS, AND 107 ILLUSTRATIONS. + + * * * * * + + PRESS NOTICES. + + "A creditable addition to Massachusetts literature."--_Boston + Globe_. + + "The first six numbers form a volume of genuine historic value and + interest."--_Transcript_. + + "An admirable issue."--_Malden City Press_. + + "Replete with sketches which should be read in every + household."--_Winchendon Courier_. + + "Furnishing much valuable historical and biographical + matter."--_Boston Commonwealth_. + + "Working its way to popular favor."--_The Weekly News_. + + "The Bay State Monthly is just what is needed in New England."--_The + Gorham Mountaineer_. + + "New England societies will not be able to dispense with this + magazine."--_St. Paul Pioneer-Press_. + + "Crammed full of historic facts; should be in every + family."--_Brockton Eagle_. + + "A conspicuous article is 'Bunker Hill' (with map), by General + Carrington, U.S.A."--_Southbridge Journal._ + + "Has made a firm footing and held its ground well."--_Newport News and + Journal_. + + "Filled with instructive literary matter, and a very reliable + map."--_Essex Banner_. + + "One of the most popular in the list of monthlies."--_The Moniter + (Chatham)_. + + "Handsomely gotten up, and reading-matter is interesting."--_Holyoke + Herald_. + + "The steady improvement in this magazine is gratifying."--_Medford + Mercury_. + + "Deserves the support of every true American, and every Massachusetts + citizen."--_The Watchman_. + + "Edited ably, growing healthily, and presents features of peculiar + interest."--_Congregationalist_. + + "Improves with each number."--_New England Home Journal + (Worcester)_. + + "Should be in every household in Massachusetts,"--_Barre Gazette_. + + "One of the noted historical magazines of the day."--_Norfolk County + Register_. + + "Of that interest to the whole country that the cultured productions of + cultured Boston have usually been."--_Courier and Journal (Louisville, + Ky.)_. + + "An important blank in our periodical literature has been + filled."--_Chicago News_. + + "Destined to take place in the first rank."--_Watertown + Enterprise_. + + "Invites the support of Massachusetts people from Berkshire to + Barnstable."--_Lowell Morning Times_. + + "Already a success."--_Cape Cod Bee (Barnstable)_. + + "'The Rent Veil,' by Henry B. Carrington, is a strikingly fine + production, possessing a Miltonian stateliness, and breathing a spirit + of veneration."--_New York Times_. + + "Replete with choice literary productions."--_Gardner Record._ + + "Keeps up the character established by the first number."--_Vox Populi + (Lowell)_. + + "Should be in the hands of all who desire to know the Bay + State."--_Westborough Chronotype._ + + "Of special interest to the citizens of Massachusetts."--_Worcester + Spy_. + + "A distinctive Massachusetts magazine."--_Waltham Record_. + + "Both in appearance and contents creditable to the publishers."--_New + York Literary Times_. + + "Does credit to publishers and contributors."--_East Boston Argus._ + + "The list of contributors is enough to sell the magazine."--_Scituate + Herald_. + + "Is destined to be popular and a valuable addition to the literary + world."--_Home Journal_. + + "Rich in contents."--_Indianapolis Times._ + + "A worthy representative of the literary and typographical excellence of + cultured Boston."--_Weekly Advocate._ + + "Of fine appearance and high promise."--_Lawrence American_. + + "Replete with choice literary contributions."--_Salem Register_. + + "We predict a bright future for The Bay State Monthly."--_Norwood + Review_. + +======================================================================= + + + Globe Theatre. MR. JOHN STETSON,--Proprietor and Manager. + + THE MODEL THEATRE OF BOSTON. + + ALL THE LEADING ATTRACTIONS Presented during the season. + + _Best Seats, One Dollar._ +-------------------------------------- + + BOSTON THEATRE. + + TOMPKINS & HILL, Proprietors. EUGENE TOMPKINS, Manager. + + ALL GREAT ATTRACTIONS, + + Dramatic, Lyric, and Minstrelsy, + of the best class offered, in regular succession. + + _SEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS._ + +----- + + _German Opera Season_, WALTER DAMROSCH, Director, Beginning April 6. + + MONDAY, April 6--"The Prophet." Frl. Brandt, Frau Materna, Schott, + Koegel and Standigl. + + TUESDAY, April 7, and SATURDAY MATINEE, April 11--"Tannhauser." Frau + Materna, Frl. Slach, Schott, Robinson, and Koegel. + + WEDNESDAY, April 8--"Fidelio." Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach, Udvardy, + Standigl, Miller, and Kemlitz. + + THURSDAY, April 9--"Lohengrin." Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach, Schott, + Robinson and Koegel. + + FRIDAY, April 10--"La Juive." Frau Materna, Frl. Slach, Udvardy, Koegel, + Kemlitz. + + SATURDAY, April 11, Evening--"Gluck's Orpheus." (First time in America). + Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach and Frl. Hoch. Chorus largely augmented by + singers from local societies. + + _The New York Symphony Orchestra_, + + To begin at 7.45 P.M. Tickets now on sale, with reserved seats, at + $1.50, $2 and $3. +-------------------------------------- + + _Boston Museum_. + + Wednesday afternoon at 2 and Evening at 8, THE GUV'NOR, + Only times this season. +----- + + Thursday, FAST DAY, 2 performances, also Friday Evening at 8 and + Saturday Afternoon at 2, _Ticket of Leave Man_, with remarkable cast. +----- + + Saturday Evening at 8, benefit of Mr. Charles Barron, who will appear in + _The Three Guardsmen_ and A REGULAR FIX. + + Mr. Sol Smith Russell introducing his laughable specialties between the + two plays. +----- + + ==> Monday, April 6, Redmund-Barry Co. in + _A Midnight Marriage._ +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED. + Agents to secure subscriptions and advertisements for this magazine. + _EXCELLENT TERMS._ + ADDRESS BAY STATE MONTHLY, 31 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + ARTHUR P. DODGE + Attorney and Counsellor at Law, _31 MILK ST., ROOM 46_, + Notary Public. Commissioner for New Hampshire. +-------------------------------------- + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., + Publishers, Printers, Stereotypes, and Electrotypers, + 31 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. +----- + FINE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. + Reasonable Terms. + _ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED._ +----- + PUBLISHERS OF _THE BAY STATE MONTHLY_, A Massachusetts Magazine. + +======================================================================= + + + + +PUBLISHER'S DEPARTMENT. + + +The removal of the general office of the American Express Company to the +corner of Franklin and Hawley Streets, Boston, is an event in the +history of a famous corporation. From very small beginnings, the company +has built up a business which now extends into nearly every section of +the United States and Canada, covering about forty thousand miles of +railroad and having between five thousand and six thousand agencies, +besides interests in, and connections with many other expresses in +various parts of the country. + +The American Express Company began business in 1847. The United States +and Canada Express was founded in 1842, and the Eastern Express in 1854. +The American has now absorbed both of the other companies, besides +several smaller ones. The company's growth in the last few years has +been phenomenally rapid. Only five years ago the company employed only +twenty-four horses in Boston, now they have one hundred and twenty-five. +Boston now has equal express facilities with New York, and similar rates +are established from the two cities to points in the West, a fact which +Boston business men may well appreciate. A fast express is run through +to the West, which is of great value to shippers of goods and other +products requiring speedy delivery in season. Another result of the +efforts of this company is seen in the fact that a package may be sent +from a point in Maine or New Brunswick to Chicago at no higher rate than +was formerly charged to Boston. + +The new offices in this city occupy three floors fifty by one hundred +feet each, arranged with every facility for transacting the large +business from this point. + +The general offices of the company are in New York City, but among its +prominent directors is B.P. Cheney, Esq., who is well known as one of +New England's ablest financiers and managers. Many business men in +Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont are shareholders in the +company. The executive departments are ably filled by Mr. James +Eggleston, the General Superintendent for New England, assisted in +Boston by H.W. Dwight, Superintendent, of Boston; J.W. Baldwin, Office +Manager, and O.J. Freeborn, City Superintendent. Outside of Boston, Mr. +G.H. Babbitt of Bellows Falls, Vermont, is Assistant General +Superintendent of the United States and Canada division; Mr. F.W. Carr +of Bangor, Superintendent of Maine and New Brunswick division (Eastern +Express Company); J.G. Towne, Boston, Superintendent of Massachusetts +division; M.J. Pratt, Concord, New Hampshire, Superintendent of New +Hampshire division, and F. Richardson, St. Johnsbury, Vermont, +Superintendent of Vermont division, all of whom are gentlemen well and +favorably known to the public generally and men of long experience in +the express business. + +======================================================================= + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., + Publishers, Printers, Stereotypes, and Electrotypers, + 31 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. +----- + FINE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. + Reasonable Terms. + _ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED._ +----- + PUBLISHERS OF _THE BAY STATE MONTHLY_, A Massachusetts Magazine. +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED. + Agents to secure subscriptions and advertisements for this magazine. + _EXCELLENT TERMS._ + ADDRESS BAY STATE MONTHLY, 31 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + A few volumes 5, 6, and 7 of _Granite Monthly_ (a New Hampshire + magazine). Bound in Cloth. Price $2.00 each. Early volumes out of print. + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + Volumes 1 and 2 of BAY STATE MONTHLY bound in cloth. Price, $2.00 each. + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + ECONOMIST SUMMER COOK STOVE + + IS SAFE, ODORLESS, CLEANER, EASIER TO CONTROL, GIVES LESS HEAT IN + ROOM, & IS CHEAPER TO RUN THAN ANY OIL, GAS, OR GASOLINE STOVE MADE. + + BURNS COAL, WOOD, OR COKE. + + SEND FOR CIRCULARS. + + MADE ONLY BY HOBBS, GORDON & CO. CONCORD, N.H. Price $16. + +======================================================================= + + + THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. + + Volume I.--1884. Bound in cloth, royal 8vo., + + 420 pages. Price, $2.00. + + WITH + + 6 PORTRAITS ON STEEL, 10 MAPS, AND 107 ILLUSTRATIONS. + + * * * * * + + PRESS NOTICES. + + "A creditable addition to Massachusetts literature."--_Boston Globe_. + + "The first six numbers form a volume of genuine historic value and + interest."--_Transcript_. + + "An admirable issue."--_Malden City Press_. + + "Replete with sketches which should be read in every + household."--_Winchendon Courier_. + + "Furnishing much valuable historical and biographical + matter."--_Boston Commonwealth_. + + "Working its way to popular favor."--_The Weekly News_. + + "The Bay State Monthly is just what is needed in New England."--_The + Gorham Mountaineer_. + + "New England societies will not be able to dispense with this + magazine."--_St. Paul Pioneer-Press_. + + "Crammed full of historic facts; should be in every + family."--_Brockton Eagle_. + + "A conspicuous article is 'Bunker Hill' (with map), by General + Carrington, U.S.A."--_Southbridge Journal._ + + "Has made a firm footing and held its ground well."--_Newport News and + Journal_. + + "Filled with instructive literary matter, and a very reliable + map."--_Essex Banner_. + + "One of the most popular in the list of monthlies."--_The Moniter + (Chatham)_. + + "Handsomely gotten up, and reading-matter is interesting."--_Holyoke + Herald_. + + "The steady improvement in this magazine is gratifying."--_Medford + Mercury_. + + "Deserves the support of every true American, and every Massachusetts + citizen."--_The Watchman_. + + "Edited ably, growing healthily, and presents features of peculiar + interest."--_Congregationalist_. + + "Improves with each number."--_New England Home Journal + (Worcester)_. + + "Should be in every household in Massachusetts,"--_Barre Gazette_. + + "One of the noted historical magazines of the day."--_Norfolk County + Register_. + + "Of that interest to the whole country that the cultured productions of + cultured Boston have usually been."--_Courier and Journal (Louisville, + Ky.)_. + + "An important blank in our periodical literature has been + filled."--_Chicago News_. + + "Destined to take place in the first rank."--_Watertown + Enterprise_. + + "Invites the support of Massachusetts people from Berkshire to + Barnstable."--_Lowell Morning Times_. + + "Already a success."--_Cape Cod Bee (Barnstable)_. + + "'The Rent Veil,' by Henry B. Carrington, is a strikingly fine + production, possessing a Miltonian stateliness, and breathing a spirit + of veneration."--_New York Times_. + + "Replete with choice literary productions."--_Gardner Record._ + + "Keeps up the character established by the first number."--_Vox Populi + (Lowell)_. + + "Should be in the hands of all who desire to know the Bay + State."--_Westborough Chronotype._ + + "Of special interest to the citizens of Massachusetts."--_Worcester + Spy_. + + "A distinctive Massachusetts magazine."--_Waltham Record_. + + "Both in appearance and contents creditable to the publishers."--_New + York Literary Times_. + + "Does credit to publishers and contributors."--_East Boston Argus._ + + "The list of contributors is enough to sell the magazine."--_Scituate + Herald_. + + "Is destined to be popular and a valuable addition to the literary + world."--_Home Journal_. + + "Rich in contents."--_Indianapolis Times._ + + "A worthy representative of the literary and typographical excellence of + cultured Boston."--_Weekly Advocate._ + + "Of fine appearance and high promise."--_Lawrence American_. + + "Replete with choice literary contributions."--_Salem Register_. + + "We predict a bright future for The Bay State Monthly."--_Norwood + Review_. + +======================================================================= + + + BOSTON TRANSCRIPT. + + _DAILY AND WEEKLY._ + + QUARTO SHEET,--56 COLUMNS. + + THE LARGEST, CHEAPEST, AND BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER IN NEW ENGLAND. + + THE DAILY EVENING TRANSCRIPT has been carried on for nearly fifty-five + years as an _INDEPENDENT JOURNAL_, discussing and considering questions + of political and social interest, according to the best opinions and + convictions of its conductors in advocating the good, condemning the + bad, exposing the fallacies of mistaken policy, and promoting the + general welfare of the people. It aims at promptness in giving the news + of the day, and at completeness in all that should be features of a + first-class newspaper; endeavors in every department of reading matter + to maintain a judicious reputation for avoiding everything that may be + considered objectionable to good taste; seeks to favor progress, + promote public spirit, and to encourage enterprise. The perfect success + of the Transcript as a favorite New England journal, conducted according + to the above-sketched platform of ideas, gives its managers reasonable + assurance in believing that faith has been honestly kept by the + newspaper in meeting in those respects the expectations of its + wide-spread circle of patrons. + + The Daily Transcript is sent to mail subscribers for $9.00 per year in + advance, and $4.50 for six months. + + _Single Copies, Three Cents._ + + * * * * * + + THE WEEKLY TRANSCRIPT is published every Tuesday morning, in a Quarto + Form, comprising fifty-six columns, at Two DOLLARS per annum, including + postage. Single copies for mailing, five cents. It contains the choicest + LITERARY MISCELLANY, and is made up with special reference to the + varied tastes and requirements of the home circle. In a word, it is + a first-class FAMILY NEWSPAPER, giving, in addition to its literary + contents, the principal news of the week, stock reports etc., etc. + It is an excellent medium for advertisers to reach country patrons. + + _TERMS FOR WEEKLY_ + Subscriptions can begin when order is received. + One copy one year (in advance) $2.00 + Five copies to one address, one year (in advance) 7.50 + + _BOSTON TRANSCRIPT COMPANY_, + 324 Washington Street. WM. DURANT, _Treasurer_. + +======================================================================= + + + Globe Theatre. MR. JOHN STETSON,--Proprietor and Manager. + THE MODEL THEATRE OF BOSTON. + ALL THE LEADING ATTRACTIONS Presented during the season. + _Best Seats, One Dollar._ +-------------------------------------- + + "IT IS AN ACKNOWLEDGED FACT" THAT "THE CONCORD HARNESS," + MADE BY J.R. HILL & CO., + Concord N.H., are the best and cheapest harness for the money that are + made in this country. Order a sample and see for yourself. + + _Correspondence Solicited. J.B. HILL & CO., CONCORD, N.H._ +-------------------------------------- + + Facial Development. + +[Illustration] + + I will mail to you a code of rules for developing the muscles of the + cheeks and neck, making them look plump and rosy; also rules for using + dumb-bells to develop every muscle of arm and body, all for 50 cents. To + avoid mistake mention BAY STATE MONTHLY. PROF. E.L. DOWD. + + Home School for Physical Culture, 19 East 14th St., N.Y. City. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + Tailoring Done as it should be. + H.E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + A complete set of the _Granite Monthly_. Seven volumes, bound in + cloth; price $18.00 + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES: + FOR ROAD USE; + + STANCH AND RELIABLE + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP + STRONG, GRACEFUL--EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE + + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE + THE POPE MFG. CO. + 597 Washington St. Boston, Mass. + + "If I could not get another bicycle I would not give mine for its weight + in solid gold. For fifteen years I lost from three to eight days every + month with stubborn sick headache. Since I have been riding the bicycle + I have lost only two days from that cause, and I haven't spent a dollar + for a doctor." + + REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED, New England Town Histories in exchange for volumes I and + II of the "BAY STATE MONTHLY." +-------------------------------------- + + BOSTON THEATRE. + + TOMPKINS & HILL, Proprietors. EUGENE TOMPKINS, Manager. + + ALL GREAT ATTRACTIONS, + + Dramatic, Lyric, and Minstrelsy, + of the best class offered, in regular succession. + + _SEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS._ +-------------------------------------- + + ARTHUR P. DODGE + Attorney and Counsellor at Law, _31 MILK ST., ROOM 46_, + Notary Public. Commissioner for New Hampshire. + +======================================================================= + + +ALASKA: Its Southern Coast. And the Sitkan Archipelago. By Eliza Ruhamah +Scidmore. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. In this well-written and +exceedingly interesting volume the author opens up to us a country which +notwithstanding so much has been said of it, is yet very imperfectly +known. Although it is nine times as large as New England, and twice as +large as Texas, it is the popular impression that it is all a barren, +inhospitable region, wrapped in snow and ice the greater part of the +year, and that a visitor to its settlements must undergo perils almost +equal to those of the Greely relief expedition. Miss Scidmore in her +book dispels this illusion in the most summary manner. She spent two +summers in Alaska, and therefore speaks from personal knowledge. She +tells us that the winters at Sitka are milder than those in New York, +while the summers are delightfully cool and temperate. Some of the +grandest scenery of the continent is to be found along the Alaska coast, +in the region of the Alexander or Sitkan Archipelago, and the monthly +mail steamer is crowded with tourists during the summer season. It is +one of the easiest and most delightful trips to go up the coast by the +inside passage and cruise through the archipelago; and in voyaging past +the unbroken wilderness of the island shores, the tourist feels quite +like an explorer penetrating unknown lands. The mountain range that +walls the Pacific coast from the Antarctic to the Arctic gives a bold +and broken front to the mainland, and every one of the eleven hundred +islands of the archipelago is but a submerged spur or peak of the great +range. Many of the islands are larger than Massachusetts or New Jersey, +but none of them have been wholly explored, nor is the survey of their +shores completed. The Yosemite walls and cascades are repeated in mile +after mile of deep salt water channels, and from the deck of an ocean +steamer one views scenes not paralleled after long rides and climbs in +the heart of the Sierras. The gorges and cañons of Colorado are +surpassed; mountains that tower above Pike's Peak rise in steep incline +from the still level of the sea; and the shores are clad in forests and +undergrowth dense and impassable as the tangle of a Florida swamp. + +On her first visit to Sitka the author spent a week at Victoria, +Vancouver's Island, a place which she describes as a veritable paradise. +The drives about the town, she says, along the island shores, and +through the woods, are beautiful, and the heavy, London-built carriages +roll over hard and perfect English highways. Ferns were growing ten and +twelve feet high by the roadside. Wild rose-bushes are matted together +by the acre in the clearings about the town, and in June they weight the +air with their perfume, as they did a century ago, when Marchand, the +old French voyager, compared the region to the rose-covered slopes of +Bulgaria. The honeysuckle attains the greatest perfection in this +climate, and covers and smothers the cottages and trellises with +thickly-set blossoms. Even the currant-bushes grow to unusual height, +and in many gardens they are trained on arbors and hang their red, ripe +clusters high overhead. + +The old Russian town of Sitka, the most northern on the Pacific coast, +she describes as a straggling, peaceful sort of town, edging along shore +at the foot of high mountains, and sheltered from the surge and turmoil +of the ocean by a sea-wall of rocky, pine-covered islands. The moss has +grown greener and thicker on the roofs of the solid old wooden houses +that are relics of Russian days, the paint has worn thinner everywhere, +and a few more houses tumbling into ruins complete the scenes of +picturesque decay. Twenty years ago there were one hundred and +twenty-five buildings in the town proper, and it is doubtful if a dozen +have been erected since. + +Miss Scidmore's descriptions of the various places she visited and the +curious things she saw are vivid and picturesque, and one can learn more +of both from her pages than from all the official reports that have been +published. It is a book that ought to have a wide popularity. It is well +illustrated and contains a map reduced from the last general chart of +Alaska published by the Coast Survey. + + +BOY LIFE IN THE UNITED STATES NAVY. By a Naval Officer. Boston: D. +Lothrop & Co. Price $1.25. It is difficult to write a book of boy's +adventures without falling into what is popularly called sensational +writing, that is the description of improbable incidents to arouse and +excite the imagination without any purpose beyond that result. The +writer of the present volume, while making an intensely interesting +story, has avoided this danger, and his narrative gives a not overdrawn +description of the life of a boy on a vessel in the United States Navy. +Joe Bently is the son of a Maine farmer, with a strong distaste for the +life to which he has been brought up and an equally strong love for the +sea. His desire to become a sailor has always been repressed by his +father, who, though loving his son, has no sympathy with him in this one +respect. + +Mr. Bently at last gives his consent, and Joe enlists as an apprentice +in the Navy. The story of his journey, his examination, his experiences, +on board ship and his adventures while lying in foreign ports is very +graphically told, and the boy who reads it gets a clear and actual idea +of what a boy must go through on board a man-of-war before he can +graduate as an "able-bodied seaman." The writer shows a thorough +acquaintance with every thing on board ship, even to the minutest +details. The book ends with the promotion of Joe, and a promise to +continue his adventures in another volume. + + +THE EVOLUTION OF DODD. By W.H. Smith. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price +$1.00. Here is a book we should rejoice to see in the hands of every +teacher of youth in the country. It is a living, breathing protest +against certain features of the present school systems which obtain in +various parts of the country, from that of the kindergarten to the +grammar school. The points of the author are so well taken, that the +reader is forced not only to admit the reality of the evils he +denounces, but to acknowledge the justice of the conclusions at which he +arrives. + +In the evolution of character the public school has come to be a most +important factor. To it has been assigned a task equal to any other +agency that deals with human nature. But in multitudes of cases it has +become a mere mill for grinding out graduates. The "system" has largely +lost sight of the grandest thing in all the world--the individual soul. +It addresses itself to child-humanity collectively, as if characters +were manufactured, like pins, by the million, and all alike, and it +attempts to grind out this great mass, each individual like every other, +as if its members could be made interchangeable like the parts of a +government musket. + +To illustrate his ideas, the author selects a representative boy, Dodd +Weaver, the eldest son of a Methodist clergyman, and carries him through +the various schools and grades of schools from the time of his entrance +to his graduation. He does not make him a model boy to begin with, and +strive to show how he was spoiled by the school system. On the contrary +he endows him with a good many disagreeable qualities; he makes him +bright, sharp, and full of vitality, with a strong bent for mischief. He +is high-tempered, quarrelsome, and disobedient, and yet in the hands of +one who understands his mental peculiarities plastic as dough. It is the +aim of the author to show how utterly useless it is to treat such +boys--and our schools are full of them--in exactly the same manner as +those of different character and temperament, and to demand that +teachers have the right to adapt their methods according to individual +demands. He says: + +It is not a system--any set of rules or formularies--that can make our +school, any more than it is forms and ceremonies that make our churches. +These may all be well enough in their proper places, but there is +nothing, absolutely nothing, in them, _per se_. It is the +righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees in the one case, and the dry +bones of pedagogy in the other. + +The evil arises, in the schools as in the churches, from believing and +acting as if there were something in the system itself. + +If human nature were a fixed quantity, if any two children were alike, +or anywhere nearly alike, if a certain act done for a child always +brought forth the same result, then it might be possible to form an +absolute system of pedagogy, as, with fixed elements, there is formed +the science of chemistry. But the quick atoms of spirit that manifest +their affinities under the eye of that alchemist, the teacher, are far +more subtle than the elements that go into the crucible in any other of +Nature's laboratories. + +A chemist will distil for you the odor of a blown rose, or catch and +hold captive the breath of the morning meadow, and do it always just the +same, and ever with like results; but there is no art by which anything +analogous can be wrought in human life. Here a new element comes in that +entirely changes that economy of Nature in this regard. The +individuality of every human soul is this new factor, and because of it, +of its infinite variability--because no two atoms that are cast into the +crucible of life are ever the same, or can be wrought into character by +the same means--because of this, no fixed rules can ever be laid down +for evolving a definite result, in the realm of soul, by never-varying +means. + +And this is where many teachers are at fault. They put their faith in a +system, a mill through which all children shall be run, and in passing +through which each child shall receive the same treatment, and from +which they shall all emerge, stamped with the seal of the institution, +"uniformity." + +This is the prime idea that lies at the foundation of the popular system +of education--to make children uniform. This very thing that God and +Nature have set themselves against--no two faces, or forms, or statures; +no two minds, or hearts, or souls being alike, as designed by the +Creator, and as fashioned by Nature's hand--to make all these alike was +the aim of the system under which Dodd began to be evolved, and with +which he began to clash at once. + +But it is not the system only which is at fault. Hot with the +indignation bred from a discussion of its shortcomings, the author turns +suddenly upon the parents of the innumerable Dodds in the schools of the +country: + +And for you, who send your six-year-olds to school with a single hook, +and grumble because you have to buy even so much of an outfit, what are +you going to do about it when your boy drains all the life out of the +little volume in a couple of weeks or a month? He knows the stories by +heart, and after that he says them over, day by day, because he must, +and not in the least because he cares to. + +What are you going to do about this? It is largely your business. You +cannot shirk it and say that you send the boy to school, and it is the +teacher's business to take care of him. + +The remedy for the wrongs and faults of the system is, in his opinion, +to recognize the individuality of children in the schoolroom to study +the mental peculiarities and needs of each, and to do away with the +system so far as it interferes with the liberty of the teacher to adapt +his means to the proper ends to be attained. It is demanded that +teachers be selected on the sole ground of fitness and adaptability, and +not because of favoritism or the mere fact that their book education is +sufficient, and it is further insisted that parents interest themselves +to see and demand that the best that can be done is done for their +children. These are the means suggested in the way of reform, and they +seem adequate in a large degree to accomplish what is desired. We +commend the book to teachers and parents. + + +MONEY IN POLITICS. By J.K. Upton. With an introduction by Edward +Atkinson. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. The author of this +comprehensive and valuable work was for several years Assistant +Secretary of the United States Treasury, and in that responsible +position had admirable facilities for studying the question of money as +affected by congressional acts from the earliest history of the republic +down to the present, and he has made good use of his opportunities in +this book which is a succinct narration of the numerous changes made in +American money beginning with the continental issues, in fact, earlier, +the colonial money. The work is, therefore, a history of American coin +and the numerous issues of paper that served as money. To the student +there is in this book a fund of information extremely interesting, +particularly at this time when the popular will is likely to compel +farther legislation. A topic of present interest, is the silver dollar, +to which the author devotes a chapter historical in its character, and +another chapter concerning circulation of this coin. In the former +chapter he begins with the Spanish milled dollar, "the Mexican pillar +piece," which was the first silver dollar known in American commerce, +and had, in colonial times, 386.7-8 grains of pure silver. In 1785 the +American standard was fixed at 375.64 grains of pure silver which became +the unit of account, the standard dollar. In 1792, after a Congress of +the States was organized, the standard dollar was required to contain +371.25 grains of pure silver, or, with the admixture of baser metal, the +standard of silver coin 416 grains, the pure silver rated by itself as +before. These facts are of interest as showing the origin of the +American dollar recognized as the standard down to 1873. + +The chapters on "Circulation of the Silver Dollar" and "The Trade +Dollar" are interesting and timely, inasmuch as the questions considered +are now before Congress, or at least with the committees, and +legislation of some kind will be demanded within the next year. There +is, even now, a proposition embodied in a bill to suspend coinage of the +silver dollar, because it has been found impossible to put the great sum +coined directly in circulation. A great part of it has been made the +basis of silver certificates, a kind of currency that, by and by, will +bring distress to commercial interests if the issues are maintained, or +if they are materially increased. Mr. Upton treats all these matters +with very clear understanding of every question, and with certain +facility of expression that appeals directly to the reader who has only +common understanding of money affairs. From beginning to end the book is +a rich mine of facts, of historical matter, and of statements that have +undergone the scrutiny of the wisest financier during the critical +period between the appreciation of values, with the disturbing +influences of war, and the return of true values with resumption of +specie payment which was effected with gold. While the work must have +absorbing interest for that extended school of economists that has made +finance a special study in the past dozen years, it will prove very +useful to representatives in Congress, who may find here in compact form +facts of history with which they should have familiar acquaintance +before they attempt legislation intended to correct the errors +incorporated in our money system. + + +THE OLD STONE HOUSE. By Anne March (Constance Fenimore Woolson). Boston: +D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. This capital story, by one of the +brightest American writers of fiction, has been placed by the publishers +in their Young Folks' Library Series, where it ought to find a new lease +of popularity. The Old Stone House is the home of five young people, +representing three families. They are all orphans, and are living with a +widowed aunt, whose single and constant aim is to educate them into real +men and women. The young cousins, who dearly love each other, differ in +tastes and temperament, but not in such ways as to interfere with each +other's enjoyments. The younger ones are jolly and fun-loving, and no +occasion for having a good time is left unimproved. The main interest of +the story, however, lies with the eldest of the cousins, Sybil +Warrington, a girl of strong feelings but quiet exterior, whose ambition +to shine in society is held in check by a feeling that something higher +and better is required of her. The story of her struggles is quietly but +effectively told, and will have a peculiar interest for young girls. +Miss Woolson has written much, and her work has given her a very +enviable reputation both in this country and in Europe, but in all her +writings there is nothing more earnest. + + +HOW SUCCESS IS WON. By Mrs. Sarah K. Bolton. With Portraits. Boston: D. +Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. This handsome volume is made up of +biographies of twelve men who have achieved distinguished successes in +the various directions in which they turned their respective energies. +Mrs. Bolton not only rehearses the main incidents of their lives, but +shows that in every case the success and honors attained were the result +of industry, economy and high moral principle. Among those selected to +illustrate how success may be won under different circumstances are +Peter Cooper, John B. Gough, John G. Whittier, Henry M. Stanley and +Alexander H. Stephens. The several sketches are bright and pointed, and +the portraits which illustrate them add to their value. + +The Rochester (N.Y.) _Herald_ speaks of this extremely interesting +book as "a singular collection of names, wide apart in many respects, +but they represent men whom it is interesting to read about." + + +ANNA MARIA'S HOUSEKEEPING. By Mrs. S.D. Power. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. +Price $1.00. If we were asked to recommend any one single book to a +young housekeeper which should serve as a domestic guide, counsellor and +friend, we should unhesitatingly name _Anna Maria's Housekeeping_. +So far as our knowledge extends, there is no other book which so exactly +and thoroughly fulfils the needs implied in those titles. It is no mere +collection of receipts, but a complete and common-sense treatise on the +whole science of housekeeping, tersely and clearly written, with a +flavor of experience about it that makes one accept it as authoritative. +It is a staff upon which the young housekeeper may confidently lean, and +by the aid of which she may overcome obstacles which without it would +seem insurmountable. Mrs. Power does not believe in a house keeping +itself. It requires continual care and oversight, and a clear knowledge +of what is to be done. She believes, too, that a house can be well kept +as easily as badly kept, and that a bright, clean, well-ordered home has +a deal to do with molding the temper and even character of its members. +"It is no small thing," she says, "to stand at the head of affairs, and +be the motive power on which depend the welfare and credit, the health, +temper and spirit of the whole family. When in midlife you come to find +how essential the comfort of a well-kept home is to the bodily strength +and good conditions, to a sound mind and spirit, and useful days, you +will reverence the good housekeeper as I do, above poet or artist, +beauty or genius." In the opening chapter of the book the author +instructs Anna Maria in the art of "How to Make Home-work Easier." In +the succeeding chapters she takes up the various kinds of work there is +to be done about the house, and describes the easiest methods of doing +it. "No attitudinizing," she remarks, "no fine lady affectations over +the griddles and saucepans; instead, cultivate the fine character which +acts up to the need of the hour swiftly, promptly, but with quiet and +certainty." Her definition of "good food" is to the point. "It is not," +she says, "rich food, nor even the tolerable fare which is just +undercooked and flavorless enough to tax digestion more than it ought. +It is the best of everything cooked in the nicest possible way, and with +pleasant variety." Passing from the kitchen the care of the different +rooms of the house is taken up--the chambers, the sitting-room and the +storeroom; instructions are given for making "blue Monday" less blue; +the arts of starching and ironing are discussed; and a chapter is given +to the mending and darning basket. Other portions of the book are +devoted to "Company Days," "Shopping," "Sickness in the House," "Making +the best of Things," and "Helps that are Helps," the servant-girl +question forming the subject of the closing chapter. The volume is very +handsomely brought out, but even were it not, it would be worth its +weight in gold to the young and inexperienced housekeeper. + + +GERTRUDE'S DIARY. By Pansy. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price +60 cts. A new book by Pansy is always hailed with delight, and that +delight generally mingled with wonder can possibly write so much and yet +keep the freshness and brightness which runs through all her books. +Gertrude is a girl of fifteen, wide awake, full of life, generally good +tempered, and yet with as many faults as most girls of her age have; +faults which arise more from thoughtlessness than from intent. She is +one of four who agree to keep diaries, in accordance with a suggestion +made by their Sunday-school teacher, and she records with impartiality +all her good and bad times, her trials and her triumphs. Aside from its +interest, it contains suggestions which cannot fail to make an +impression upon the mind of any young girl who reads it, and to +strengthen her in like temptations and under the same conditions. A +pleasant story runs through the diary. + + +MANY COLORED THREADS. From the Writings of Goethe. Selected by Carrie +Adelaide Cooke. With an Introduction by Kev. Alexander McKenzie, D.D. +Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. No other volume of the Spare +Minute Series contains more real meat than this. Goethe was +epigrammatic, and his ideas took the concentrated form of bullets, +instead of scattering like shot. We doubt if there is another author, +always excepting Shakespeare, from whose books so many noble and +complete thoughts can be extracted. In the two hundred and fifty pages +of this volume are more than a thousand of these gems, each worth; its +setting. Dr. McKenzie says aptly of Goethe that he is able by virtue of +his own genius to set more than the common man and to put his visions +and his reflections in such form that others who would never have seen +the tilings for themselves or been able to think deeply upon them, can +have the benefit of his generous study and thought. He was many-sided. +His mind took a wide range and seemed almost equally at home in many +places. The real and the ideal both interested him and were cherished by +him. Science and art, philosophy and poetry, engaged his attention and +were enriched by his handiwork. In this versatility of his power and the +manifoldness of their application he was remarkable. Out of this breadth +of study came varied and large thoughts of the world and of human life. +He had the faculties with which nature and humanity and divine power +could breathe their inspiration for the world's instruction and delight, +and that they were fully employed no-one who turns over the pages of +this collection can doubt. A brief biography of Goethe takes the place +of a preface, and there is an index of subjects. + + * * * * * + + +MR. CHARLES LANMAN THE AUTHOR OF "THE LEADING MEN OF JAPAN." + +MARY COLE BAKER writes in the Washington (D.C.) _Republic:_ "Mr. +Lanman is well known both in England and America as the writer of some +of the most delightful descriptive books in the English language. To the +facile wielding of his pen he adds an equally adroit and skilful use of +the pencil, and his admirable results in these combined pursuits won for +him from his friend and brother of the quill, Washington Irving, the apt +and deserved soubriquet of 'the picturesque explorer of America.' To the +pleasure which Mr. Lanman derived from these pursuits he added a +sportsman's love for the field and took genuine delight in the +'contemplative art' of angling. He was the first American to cast the +artificial fly in the Saguenay region and to describe for the angler the +charms of that since famous locality. He has followed this sport in +nearly every State in the Union, never without his sketching materials, +which he used unstintingly. The results of these labors are many +hundreds of sketches of American scenery, invaluable now that the march +of civilization has so completely changed the face of a large part of +the country. It is delightful to find a man who has been able to get so +much good from life as has Mr. Lanman. One would think that the writing +and illustrating of more than thirty books, some of which are in two +large octavo volumes, was the work of a lifetime. But this has been to +Mr. Lanman his recreation. The fact that his books have been successful +pecuniarily has not prevented him from following the duties of the +various governmental positions in which he has been placed. No sinecures +they either--librarian at different times of the House of +Representatives, the War Department, of copyrights in the State +Department and of the Interior Department, secretary to Daniel Webster, +at the head of the returns of office of the Interior Department, and for +the last ten years the American Secretary to the Japanese Legation at +Washington. A lover of social intercourse, Mr. Lanman has led the +typical busy life of the American, untouched by the direful and +disastrous ills it is supposed to bring. He is now engaged in editing +fourteen of his books for reproduction in uniform style, and a new book, +_The Leading Men of Japan_, is ready for issue." 12mo, $1.50. +Boston: D. Lothrop, & Co., Publishers. + + * * * * * + + +COULDN'T BE BOUGHT: AND OTHER STORIES. By Faye Huntington. Illustrated. +Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price 75 cts. A delightful collection of short +stories for boys and girls, adapted to the Sunday-school library. The +volume takes its name from the leading story. The author has a pleasant +and attractive style, and her stories have a large amount of "telling" +force in them. + + +CHINA. By Prof. R.K. Douglas, of the British Museum. Edited by Arthur +Gilman, M.A. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. This +volume comes just at a time when there is a strong demand for something +brief, exact and authoritative in the way of Chinese history. Current +events have brought China before the world as one of the really great +powers, and one which in time will be able not only to defend herself +against the aggressions of other nations but will be perfectly able to +take the offensive should occasion require. In the arts of diplomacy the +Chinese are a match for the keenest statesman of Europe, and since the +beginning of the present troubles with France they have developed a +military talent which is perfectly surprising. With the growth of the +military spirit it would not be strange if, in the course of the next +generation China should hold as distinct and important a place among the +warlike powers as France or England. + +The author of the volume before us had exceptional advantages for making +such a book as just now the public demand and need. He was for several +years a resident of China in an official capacity, and studied the +people and their mode of life from actual observation. In preparing the +book he also freely availed himself of the labors of others where they +seemed capable of adding value to the narrative. In his preface he +acknowledges his indebtedness to Doctor Legge's "Chinese Classics," +Archdeacon Gray's work on "China," Doolittle's "Social Life of the +Chinese," Denys's "Chinese Folklore," Mayers's "Chinese Reader's +Manual," Sir John Davis's "Poetry of the Chinese," as well as to the +important linguistic, religious and topographical writings of Doctor +Edkins of Peking, and particularly to the late Professor S. Wells +Williams, of Yale College, whose work on the _Middle Kingdom_ +contains more information of value than any other single volume in our +language. + +The various chapters of the work deal with the history of the empire in +brief, its government, religions, its educational system, the nurture of +the young, superstitions, funeral and wedding rites, the language, food +and dress, honors, architecture, music, medicine and other subjects. It +has been critically read by the young Chinese scholar, Mr. Yan Phou Lee, +of Yale College, who has suggested a few notes. Its completeness is +added to by an analytic table of contents and an index. + +IN THE WOODS AND OUT. By Pansy. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. +Price $1.00. In the score or more of short stories which make up this +volume Pansy is at her best. She never writes for the mere sake of +filling up, but always, in the briefest of her sketches, she has +something worth telling and worth remembering. There isn't a thing in +the book which will not be read twice, and certain of the stones will be +perennial favorites with the younger class of readers. + + * * * * * + + +PHILOSOPHIÆ QUÆSTOR. + + +The seeker of philosophical truth, which is described as the shadowy +figure of a young girl, is, throughout, very expressive of desire and +appreciation. The impressions she receives are those to which such a +condition are most sensitive--the higher and more refined ones--and the +responsive thoughts concern the nature and character of what is heard or +felt. The elevation into classic importance of Concord, its +philosophers, and its School of Philosophy is due to the influence of +their history and teachings in American literature, and it is pleasant +to recognize in this work such reverence of their classicism. Mrs. +Anagnos has written a prose poem in which the last two sessions of the +Concord School of Philosophy, which include that in memory of Emerson, +and its lecturers excite her feeling and inspire her thought. It is sung +in lofty strains that resemble those of the sacred woods and fount, and +themselves are communicative of their spirit. It will be welcomed as an +appropriate souvenir.--_Boston Globe_. + + * * * * * + + +OUR NATIONAL FINANCES. + + +Mr. J.K. Upton used to be Assistant Secretary of the Treasury of the +United States. Few men, therefore, have had better opportunities to +inform themselves about our national finances. His volume, _Money in +Politics_, published by D. Lothrop & Co., price $1.25, is a full +history of the financial policy and legislation of this country. It is +of the utmost value as a record, a book of reference, and an expression +of sound theories. The intelligent reader cannot repress a feeling of +shame that our national history in respect to finance should have been +characterized by such continual bungling. The saddest feature in the +case is the crass ignorance which Congress usually has displayed. Much +of our legislation about money matters has been the merest +experimenting, if not worse than this--the deliberate effort to enrich +some one class of business men at the expense of the nation. + +He utters a solemn warning of the dangers to which we now are exposed +through our present acts of coinage and legal tender, whereby our gold +coin sooner or later must be driven from the country and our standard +must become a silver dollar of light weight and uncertain value. He also +shows conclusively the futility of legislation in causing two substances +to become and remain of the same value. Mr. Edward Atkinson has +furnished the introduction to the book, in which he commends it warmly. +While Congress continues to permit the coinage of $2,000,000 in silver a +month, for which there is no demand and the coinage of which merely +furnishes a market for the wares of a few owners of silver mines, it is +difficult to overstate the need that such books as this should be +circulated and studied attentively throughout the nation. Mr. Atkinson +makes an impressive comment, which we quote: + +"The productions of the hen-yards of the United States, according to the +census statistics, was, in 1879, 456,910,916 dozen eggs, and, if hens +have now increased in the ratio of population, it is now 500,000,000 +dozen, which at only ten cents a dozen, would exceed the value of the +products of the silver mines. + +"It would be vastly more reasonable for Congress to order the compulsory +purchase of two million dollars' worth of eggs per month," in order to +sustain the hen products of the United States, "than it is to buy two +million dollars' worth of silver; because the eggs could be used, or +else would rot, while the silver cannot be used, and is expensive to +store and to watch (pp. xvi-xvii)."--_Congregationalist_. + + * * * * * + + +ILLITERACY AND MORMONISM. + + +Of _Illiteracy and Mormonism_, a brochure from the pen of Doctor +Henry Randall Waite, just published by D. Lothrop & Co., the _Boston +Daily Transcript_ in an advance notice, says: + +"In view of the present great interest in the problems treated, and the +value of the material which it offers as an aid to their solution, the +book is especially timely. Doctor Waite, who was for some time editor of +the _International Review_, and whose work is well-known to readers +of the standard American periodicals, is one of the clearest-headed of +our younger writers on politico-economic subjects, and his views as here +set forth demand thoughtful consideration and respect. He brings to the +treatment of the subjects included in the title the special knowledge +gained in his important official position as statistician of the late +census, in charge of some of the most important branches, including +education, illiteracy and religious organizations." + +The Dover (N.H.) _Star_, says: + +"He makes the best argument for the Constitutionality of National Aid +[to education] which we have yet seen. It will bear careful +consideration by members of Congress." + +The _Boston Daily Herald_ refers to the author's views as follows: + +"One of the most original and valuable contributions yet made to the +discussion of the project of extending federal aid to common school +education in the States ... The moderation of its tone and the +conservatism of its suggestions will commend it to all thoughtful +students of this problem, while its statistics, many of which, in their +arrangement and application, are substantially new, should have a direct +influence in shaping the final action of Congress ... Mr. Waite has +given long and careful study to this subject in all its bearings, and he +writes with an equipment of information and reflection which has been +palpably lacking in much of the Senatorial discussion of it." + + * * * * * + + +ARCTIC EXPLORATIONS. + + +The _New York Independent_, after referring to the various books on +Arctic explorations and adventure--the narratives of Kane and Hayes and +Gilder and De Long--says of Dr. Nourse's work: "The field of Arctic +authorship was not yet, however, covered by any of these works, and it +is to the credit of Professor Nourse that he saw what remained to be +done. In the work before us he comes into no competition with the +literary workers who have preceded him. No one will be the less disposed +to read Dr. Kane's chapters, or to peruse Mr. Gilder's, for having read +Professor Nourse; nor, on the other hand, will these works prejudice +Professor Nourse's chance to be read. His book stands on ground of its +own, as the one complete and competent survey of what American explorers +have done in the polar zones.... Professor Nourse's volume is embellished +with numerous good illustrations, and provided with an excellent and +indispensable circumpolar map. It deserves the successful sale we +understand it is already receiving." + +The _Literary World_ in a review of the book says "it is an +encyclopaedic review of the whole subject of American enterprise in +Arctic seas," and adds: "Professor Nourse's book bears the credentials +of accuracy and authority, is well printed and bound, has numerous +engravings and useful maps, including some portraits on steel, has a +suitable index and table of contents, and furthermore is provided with a +bibliography of chief publications on Arctic research since 1818. In +every respect, then, it is a well-made book, a solid contribution to +popular reading." + + * * * * * + + +BACCALAUREATE SERMONS. + + +D. Lothrop & Co., of Boston, have published in book form nineteen +baccalaureate sermons preached at Harvard College, by Dr. A.P. Peabody, +the new Professor of Christian Morals. Dr. Peabody's reputation, as a +vigorous thinker and manly preacher, is as wide as this Republic; and +the volume of sermons before us is something more than a series of +homilies. It is a collection of addresses to young men--students just +ready to embark on the perilous sea of life--which may be profitably +read by every citizen of our country. The preacher does not address +himself to any single side of human life. He counsels the students in +their duties as men in all the relations of life. And in the selection +of themes he embraces a great variety of topics. In the discourse on +"Hebrew, Latin and Greek," for example, he takes the first-named tongue +as standing for religion, the second for beauty and the third for +strength. On this triad be formulates not only an intellectual cult but +a practical rule of life. Another notable sermon is on "The Sovereignty +of Law," an admirable disquisition on the supremacy of law in the +intellectual life, the physical existence, the domain of morals and in +every department of human activity. Dr. Peabody's style is forcible and +virile, and his compactness of statement, enables him to put "infinite +riches in a little room."--_Chicago Tribune._ + + * * * * * + + +A BOY'S WORKSHOP. + + +Every boy with a jack-knife in his pocket and his head full of plans +will fall to with delight on anything that gives him plenty to do in the +boyish line. This is the merit of a little manual just published by the +Messrs. D. Lothrop & Co., _A Boy's Workshop, with Plans and Designs +for Indoor and Outdoor Work_, by a "Boy and his Friends"; with an +introduction by Henry Randall Waite. The little manual goes to work +intelligibly, describing the shop, and the tools, giving hints and +accurate directions how to make a great variety of things whose uses +will be at once apparent to the boyish mind, and suggestions as to other +mysteries, the key to which makes any boy who possesses it a king among +his mates. + + * * * * * + + +HOW SUCCESS IS WON. + + +"How Success is Won," by Sarah K. Bolton (D. Lothrop & Co.), is a +collection of twelve brief biographies intended to make clear to the +young the character and conduct that have resulted in the success of +Peter Cooper, John B. Gough, John G. Whittier, John Wanamaker, Henry M. +Stanley, Johns Hopkins, William M. Hunt, Elias Howe, Jr., Alexander H. +Stephens, Thomas A. Edison, Dr. W.T.G. Morton and the Rev. John H. +Vincent. The sketches are gracefully and interestingly written, and the +little volume is in every way to be commended.--_N.Y. Com. Adv._ + + * * * * * + + +THE GRAY MASQUE. + + +The Gray Masque of Mrs. Mary Barker Dodge (D. Lothrop & Co., Boston) +has won a series of splendid notices; yet, so far as we know, sufficient +stress has not been laid upon the keynote of the volume. _Love_, +in its varying phases, sounds through the majority of the verses like +the refrain of a song. Sometimes sad, sometimes solemn, oftener gay and +hopeful, the differing themes take up, one after another, the burden +of the initial poem; and answer, in separate ways, the question there +propounded, until the many-sided revelation is found to be fittingly +illustrated on the cover by the winged boy, who throws aside the masque +of mortality, and, soaring aloft, leaves behind him every earthly +doubt and care. The "Dedication" and the concluding poem, the first +emotional in its simplicity, the last intellectual in its subtlety, +mark the breadth as well as the limits of Mrs. Dodge's poetical +expression.--_Baldwin's Monthly._ + +======================================================================= + + + Only $3.00 a Year. WIDE AWAKE. 25 cts. a number. + + The best, the largest, the most entertaining, the most beautifully + illustrated, and the widest in range, of all magazines for young people. + It is the official organ of the C.Y.F.R.U., and, as heretofore, will + publish the Required Readings, and all needed information for members of + the Union. The magazine proper will be even more brilliant and valuable + than before during the next year. + + Ideal literature and ideal art for young people and the family, for + entertainment, for the healthful training of the body and the liberal + education for the mind, fill this magazine each month from cover to + cover. It has won recognition from the American and English press as the + largest and best, the most beautiful and original, and the most ably + edited magazine of its class in the world. It gives each month original + music by eminent composers. + + "WIDE AWAKE" is the wonder of all the wonderfully beautiful children's + magazines and books of America. Without dispute the largest, handsomest, + most artistic and best young people's periodical ever issued. There is + no juvenile magazine published in the country so carefully + edited."--_Boston Transcript._ + + "A treasure of good morals."--_N.Y. Tribune._ + + "At the head of juvenile periodical stands WIDE AWAKE all the + time."--_Phil. Inquirer._ + + "A whole family library in itself."--_Putnam Patriot._ + + "Unsurpassed in skilful adaptation to young folks' needs."--_Chicago + Standard._ +-------------------------------------- + + THE PANSY Edited by Mrs. G.R. Alden (Pansy). + + _$1.00 a year; 10 cts. a number._ + + For both week-day and Sunday reading, THE PANSY holds the first place in + the hearts of the children, and in the approval of earnest-minded + parents. + + Among pictorial periodicals especially designed for Boys and Girls, it + stands royal leader, and as a Christian Home Magazine for young folks, + it is without question the best and the most attractive magazine in the + world. Pansy's own bright, quick-seeing spirit inspires all her + contributors. Very fully illustrated. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration: LOTHROP'S POPULAR ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINES.] + +-------------------------------------- + + Chautauqua Young Folks' Journal. + _75 cts. a year; 7 cts. a number._ + + This new periodical is intensely interesting to both old and young, as + well as practical. It contains the Course of the C.Y.F.R.U. Readings + (issued also in WIDE AWAKE) and additional features of varied interest. + Beginning with the December issue, the CHAUTAUQUA YOUNG FOLKS' JOURNAL + gives a fine illustrated historical serial story. It is a stirring tale + of old Knickerbocker New York, and its accounts are as true as they are + exciting. It is written by Elbridge S. Brooks, and is entitled, "In + Leisler's Time." Send for a circular giving full information about the + C.Y.F.R.U. Reading Course. +-------------------------------------- + + Our Little Men and Women. + _$1.00 a year; 10 cents a number._ + + For the youngest readers no magazine approaches this in number and + beauty of illustration (each volume containing 75 full-page pictures) + and in the peculiar fitness of the accompanying text. It is especially + adapted for use as Supplementary Reading in schools. It is always + bright, always fresh and attractive. +-------------------------------------- + + BABYLAND + _50 cents a year; 5 cents a number._ + The only periodical of its kind in the world. + + As for seven years past, this exquisite magazine for the nursery is + still unrivalled in its monthly merry-making for the wee folks. Large + pages, large pictures, large type. Each month its pictures are more + enticing, its stories are sweeter, its jingles gayer. +-------------------------------------- + + Splendid premiums for new subscriptions. Agents wanted. Liberal pay. + Send stamps for specimen copies. Circulars free. Address + + D. Lothrop & Co., Publishers, Franklin and Hawley Sts., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + LOTHROP'S SPARE MINUTE SERIES. + + "The significance of the name of this series is seen from the fact that + THOUGHTS THAT BREATHE, for instance, has 300 pages, and contains 273 + separately numbered and independent extracts. Thus a person can read one + or more of these at a time, and put the book down without breaking the + train of thought." 6 vols, 12mo, $6.00. 6 vols, imitation half calf. + $7.50. 6 vols, full imitation calf. $9.00. + + RIGHT TO THE POINT. From the writings of Theodore L. Cuyler, + D.D., selected by Mary Storrs Haynes. With an introduction by Rev. + Newman Hall. + + Pithy paragraphs on a wide range of subjects, not one of which but will + be found to contain some terse, sparkling truth worthy of thought and + attention. A spare ten minutes devoted to such readings can never be + wasted. + + THOUGHTS THAT BREATHE. From the writings of Dean Stanley. + Introduction by Rev. Phillips Brooks. The numerous admirers on this side + of the water of the late eloquent English churchman, will be grateful + for this volume, which contains some of his best utterances. 16mo, + cloth, $1.00. + + CHEERFUL WORDS. From George MacDonald. Introduction by James T. + Fields. + + THE MIGHT OF RIGHT. From Rt. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Introduction + by John D. Long. + + TRUE MANLINESS. From Thomas Hughes. Introduction by James + Russell Lowell. + + LIVING TRUTHS. From Charles Kingsley. Introduction by W.D. + Howells. + + + LOTHROP'S CHOICE NEW EDITIONS OF FAMOUS S.S. BOOKS IN SETS. + + "Bronckton Series." SO AS BY FIRE, by Margaret Sidney. A bright + story full of life and interest, as are all the writings by this popular + author. + + HALF YEAR AT BRONCKTON, by the same author. Earnest, yet lively, + this is just the book for all boys old enough to be subjected to the + temptations of school life. + + The other books of this series, "Tempter Behind," by John Saunders, "For + Mack's Sake," by S.J. Burke, and "Class of '70," by Helena V. Morrison, + are all worthy of a place in every Sunday-school library. + + Amaranth Library. 4 vols., 12mo, illust. $6.00 + Books by the author of Andy Luttrell. 6 vols., 12mo, illust. 7.50 + Julia A. Eastman's Books. 6 vols., 12mo, illust 7.50 + Ella Farman's Books. 9 vols., large 16mo, illust. 10.00 + Pansy Series. 4 vols. 3.00 + Mudge (Rev. Z.A.) Works. 3 vols. 3.75 + Porter (Mrs. A.E.) Books. 5 vols. 6.25 + Capron (M.J.) Books. 4 vols. 6.00 + Mrs. E.D. Kendall's Books. 3 vols., 12mo, illust. 3.75 + Our Boys' Library. 5 vols., illust. 6.25 + Our Girls' Library. 5 vols., illust. 6.25 + Mrs. A.E. Porter's Books. 5 vols., 12mo, illust. 6.25 + Snow Family Library. 5 vols., illust. 5.00 + Sturdy Jack Series. 6 vols., 12mo, illust. 4.50 + To-day Series. New and of extraordinary excellence. 6 vols., illust. 7.50 + Child Life Series. 26 vols., illust. Each 1.00 + Hill Rest Series. 3 vols., 16mo, illust. 3.75 + Uncle Max Series. 8 vols., illust. 6.00 + Yensie Walton Books. 5 vols., 12mo, illust. 7.50 + + + LOTHROP'S YOUNG FOLKS' LIBRARY. + + Nothing at once so good and cheap is anywhere to be found. These choice + 16mo volumes of 300 to 500 pages, clear type, carefully printed, with + handsome and durable covers of manilla paper, and embracing some of the + best stories by popular American authors, are published at the low price + of 25 cents per volume, and mailed postpaid. One number issued each + month. No second edition will be printed in this style. The regular + edition is issued in cloth bindings at $1,25 to $1.75 per volume. Among + the numbers already published at 25 cents each as above are + + 1. Tip Lewis and his Lamp, by PANSY. + 2. Margie's Mission, by MARIE OLIVER. + 3. Kitty Kent's Troubles, by JULIA A. EASTMAN. + 4. Mrs. Hurd's Niece, by ELLA FARMAN PRATT, Editor of WIDE AWAKE. + 5. Evening Rest, by REV. J.L. PRATT. + + Other equally charming stories will follow each month. The Library is + especially commended to Sunday-school superintendents or those + interested in securing choice Sunday-school books at lowest prices. + Attention is called to the necessity of early orders, as when the + present editions are exhausted, no more copies of the several volumes + can be had at the same price. + + + LOTHROP'S STANDARD BOOKS FOR YOUTHS. + Admirable books in history, biography and story. + + Fern Glen Series. 31 vols., illust. Each 1.25 + Young Folks' Series. 33 vols., illust. Each 1.50 + Popular Biographies. 18 vols., illust. Each 1.50 + Young Folks' Histories, by MISS YONGE and others. + 10 vols., illust. Each 1.50 + Yonge's Historical Stories. 4 vols., illust. Each 1.25 + The $1000 Prize Books. A fresh edition in new style of binding. + 16 vols., 12mo. 24.50 + The new $500 Prize Series. A fresh edition in new style of + binding. 13 vols., 12mo. 16.75 + The Original $500 Prize Series. A fresh edition in new style + of binding. 8 vols., 12mo. 12.00 + + + LOTHROP'S TEMPERANCE LIBRARY. + + No Sunday-school library is complete without some well-chosen volumes + showing the evils of intemperance, the great curse which good men and + women are everywhere endeavoring to remove. + + D. Lothrop & Co. publish among others the following admirable temperance + books. + + The only way Out. By J.W. Willing. $1.50 + John Bremm. By A.A. Hopkins. 1.25 + Sinner and Saint. By A.A. Hopkins. 1.25 + The Tempter Behind. By John Saunders. 1.25 + Good Work. By Mary D. Chellis. 1.50 + Mystery of the Lodge. By Mary D. Chellis. 1.50 + Finished or Not. By the author of "Fabrics." 1.50 + Modern Prophets. By Pansy and Faye Huntington. 1.50 + May Bell. By Hubert Newbury. 1.50 + + TEMPERANCE REFORMATION, The, and Its Claims upon the Christian + Church. By Rev. James Smith, of Scotland. 8vo. $2.50. + + Sunday-school teachers and superintendents will find the above books + admirably adapted to the purpose of teaching great moral lessons, while + they are also full of pleasure and interest to young readers. + + + LOTHROP'S POPULAR LOW-PRICE LIBRARIES. + + Among attractive and valuable Libraries issued in sets at prices which + place them not only beyond competition, but within the easy reach of + all, are + + Best Way Series. 3 vols., illust. $1.50 + Half Hour Library, by PANSY. 8 vols., illust. 3.20 + Little People's Home Library. 12 vols., illust. 3.00 + Little Pansy Series. 10 vols., illust. Cloth, $4.00; boards. 3.00 + Little May's Picture Library. 12 vols., illust. 2.40 + Mother's Boys and Girls, by PANSY. 12 vols., illust. 3.00 + Rainy Day Library. 8 vols., illust 4.00 + Spring Blossom. 12 vols., illust. 3.00 + Stories from the Bible, 1st and 2d Series. Each .15 + Twisty Clover Series. 6 vols., illust. 1.20 + Happy Thought Library. 6 vols., large 18mo. illust. 3.00 + Little Neighbor Series. 6 vols., large 18mo, illust. 1.50 + May and Tom Library. 5 vols., 18mo, illust. 3.00 + Sunny Dell Series. 6 vols., 18mo, illust. 3.60 + Side by Side Library. 3 vols., 16mo, illust. 1.80 + +======================================================================= + + + LOTHROP'S POPULAR PANSY BOOKS. + + The works of this popular author are universally acknowledged to be + among the very best of all books for Sunday-school reading. Earnest, + hopeful, practical, full of the spirit of Christian faith and courage, + they are also in the highest degree interesting. + + COMPLETE LIST OF THE PANSY BOOKS. + _Each volume, 12mo,_ $1.50. + + Chautauqua Girls at Home. + Divers Women. + Echoing and Re-echoing. + Endless Chain (An). + Ester Ried. + Ester Ried Yet Speaking. + Four Girls at Chautauqua. + From different Standpoints. + Hall in the Grove (The). + Household Puzzles. + Julia Ried. + King's Daughter (The). + Links in Rebecca's Life. + Mrs. Solomon Smith Looking On. + Modern Prophets. + Man of the House (The). + New Graft on the Family Tree (A). + Pocket Measure (The). + Ruth Erskine's Crosses. + Randolphs (The). + Sidney Martin's Christmas. + Those Boys. + Three People. + Tip Lewis and his Lamp. + Wise and Otherwise. + + _Each volume, 12mo_ $1.25. + + Cunning Workmen. + Dr. Deane's Way. + Grandpa's Darlings. + Miss Priscilla Hunter and my Daughter Susan. + Mrs. Deane's Way. + What she Said. + + _Each volume, 12mo,_ $1.25 + + Five Friends. + Mrs. Harry Harper's Awakening. + Next Things. + Pansy's Scrap Book, + Some young Heroines. + + _Each volume, 16mo._ 75 cents. + + Getting Ahead. + Mary Burton Abroad. + Pansies. + Six little Girls + That Boy Bob. + Two Boys. + + _Each volume 16mo,_ 75 cents. + + Bernie's White Chicken. + Docia's Journal. + Helen Lester. + Jessie Wells. + + MISCELLANEOUS. + + Hedge Fence (A)., 16mo, 60 c. + Side by Side, 16mo, 60 c. + Pansy's Picture Book. 4to, boards, 1.50; cloth 2.00 + The little Pansy Series. 10 vols., boards, 3.00; cloth 4.00 + Mother's Boys and Girls Library. 12 vols., quarto, boards. 3.00 + + + PANSY'S NEW BOOKS. + + Among the new books by this favorite author, which Sunday-school + Superintendents and all readers of her previous books will wish to + order, are + + A HEDGE FENCE. A story that will be particularly pleasing to + boys, most of whom will find in its hero a fair representation of + themselves, 16mo, 60 cents. + + AN ENDLESS CHAIN. From the introduction, on the first page, of + the new superintendent of the Packard Place Sabbath-school, to the end, + there is no flagging of interest in this bright, fresh, wholesome story. + Illustrated, 12mo, $1.50. + + SIDE BY SIDE. Short illustrated stories from Bible texts for the + help of boys and girls in their everyday duties. 16mo, cloth, 60 c. + + CHRISTIE'S CHRISTMAS. No more charming little heroine can be + found than the Christie of this volume, and the story of her journey to + spend Christmas, with the great variety of characters introduced, all of + them original and individual in their way, is perfectly novel and + interesting. + + As a guide to teachers, rich in suggestions and directions for methods + of teaching, etc., there is nothing better than PANSY'S SCRAP BOOK. + 12mo. Cloth, Illustrated $1.00. + + In fact all of Pansy's books have some special charm or attraction which + makes them a power for good whenever read. + + + LOTHROP'S SELECT SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARIES. + + _Every book in these marvellously cheap libraries will bear the + closest criticism_. Each is fresh and interesting in matter, + unexceptional in tone and excellent in literary style. These libraries + as a whole, considering their character and cost _have no + superiors_. + + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 12, 20 vols., $5.00 net. + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 9, 50 vols., $25.00 net. + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 10, 12 vols., $5.00 net. + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 11, 20 vols., $10.00 net. + Pansy's Primary Library, 30 vols., 7.50 net. + Select Primary Sunday-school Library, 36 vols., + in extra cloth binding, 5.50 net. + + + LOTHROP'S BOOKS FOR SUPERINTENDENTS. + + BIBLE READER, THE. By Rev. H.V. Dexter, D. D. 16mo., .50 + + BIBLE LESSONS FOR SUNDAY-SCHOOL CONCERTS AND ANNIVERSARIES. By + Edmund Clark, 18 numbers 5 cts. each. Bound in 16mo. vol, cloth, $1.00. + + BIBLE PICTURES. By Rev. Geo. B. Ide, D.D. 12mo, $2.00. + + FIFTY YEARS WITH THE SABBATH-SCHOOL. By Rev. Asa Bullard, D.D. + 12mo, cloth, $1.25. + + SELF-GIVING. A story of Christian missions. By Rev. W.F. + Bainbridge. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, $1.50. + + ROCK OF AGES. By Rev. S.F. Smith, D.D. A choice collection of + religious poems. 18mo, cloth, gilt edges, $1.25. + + STUDY OF NAHUM (A). By Professor Thom. H. Rich. 16mo, $.40 + + STORY OF THE PRAYERS OF CHRISTIAN HISTORY (The). By Hezekiah + Butterworth. 12mo. illustrated $1.50. + + WALK TO EMMAUS. By Rev. Nehemiah Adams. Charming specimens of + sermon literature. 12mo, $1.00. + + WARS OF THE JEWS. By Flavine Josephus. Translated by William + Whiston, M.A. 8vo, cloth, plain, $1.00. Extra cloth, gilt top, fully + illustrated, $1.50. + + WORK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT [The]; or, The New Birth. By Prof. Austin + Phelps, D.D. 16mo, $1.25. + + + LOTHROP'S BOOKS FOR ANNIVERSARIES AND CONCERTS. + + It is often a difficult matter to determine what to use for + Sunday-school anniversaries, etc. To those in doubt, we would suggest + the use of the following capital aids: + + BIBLE LESSONS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOLS, CONCERTS AND ANNIVERSARIES. By + Edmund Clark. 18 numbers, 5 cents each. Bound in one 16mo volume, cloth, + $1.00. + + HELP FOR SUNDAY-SCHOOL CONCERTS. By A.P. and M.T. Folsom. A + choice collection of poems. 16mo, $1.00. + + ENTERTAINMENTS. By Lizzie W. Champney. For concerts, exhibitions, + church festivals, etc. 15mo, Illustrated. $1.00 + + + A THOUSAND OTHER CHOICE BOOKS. + + The above, and a thousand other choice books which cannot be mentioned + here, make up a list from which superintendents and teachers can easily + select a VALUABLE LIBRARY at a low price. Send for full catalogue, + mailed free, and for special terms to those ordering any number of + volumes. Any book sent postage paid on receipt of price. + +======================================================================= + + + ELLA FARMAN'S BOOKS. + + Ella Farman is the editor of WIDE AWAKE, and her books are full of + sympathy with girl-life, always sunshiny and hopeful, always pointing + out new ways to do things and unexpected causes for happiness and + gladness. + + _9 vols. 12mo. Illust. $10.00._ + + Annie Maylie. + A Little Woman. + A Girl's Money. + A White Hand. + Grandma Crosby's Household. + Good-for-Nothing Polly. + How Two Girls Tried Farming. + Cooking Club of Tu-Whit Hollow. + Mrs. Hurd's Niece. + + JULIA A. EASTMAN'S BOOKS. + + Miss Eastman has a large circle of young admirers. She carries off the + palm as a writer of school-life stories, and teachers are always glad to + find their scholars reading her books. Miss Eastman's style is + characterized by quick movement, sparkling expression, and incisive + knowledge of human nature. + + _6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $7.50_ + + Kitty Kent. + Young Rick. + Romneys of Ridgemont, Short Comings and Long Goings. (The). + Striking for the Right. + School Days of Beulah Romney. + + REV. J.L. PRATT'S BOOKS. + + This set of books is valuable for its fitness to the needs of young + people who have come to the age when they begin to examine for + themselves into religious beliefs and opinions. They are interesting as + stories, abounding with beautiful descriptions and delicate portraitures + of character, and are everywhere favorites with the thoughtful and + meditative. + + _4 vols. 12mo. Illust. $6.00._ + + Evening Rest. + Bonnie Ærie. + Branches of Palm. + Broken Fetters. + + MRS. A.E. PORTER'S BOOKS. + + Mrs. Porter is a favorite author with adult readers, as well as with + children. Her stories, always dealing largely with home-life, are well + calculated to make truthfulness and steadfastness and Christian living + the subjects of youthful admiration and imitation. + + _5 vols. 12mo. Illust. $6.25._ + + This One Thing I Do. + Millie Lee. + Sunset Mountain. + My Hero. + Glencoe Parsonage. + + BY AUTHOR OF ANDY LUTTRELL + + Powerful books, dealing with knotty problems, and positive in their + religious teaching. They are perennial favorites with all classes of + readers. + + _6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $7.50._ + + Andy Luttrell. + Barbara. + Talbury Girls. + Strawberry Hill. + Silent Tom. + Hidden Treasure. + + MRS. E.D. KENDALL'S WORKS. + + Each full of earnestness of purpose, and impressing a life lesson on the + reader's mind. Excellent for boys. + + _3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $3.75._ + + Judge's Sons. + The Stanifords of Staniford's Folly. + Master and Pupil. + + MARY J. CAPRON'S BOOKS. + + These books are thoroughly healthy and stimulating, and admirably + adapted to put into the hands of thoughtful young people to lead them to + right ideas on the fundamental truths of the religious life. + + _4 vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00._ + + Plus and Minus. + Gold and Gilt. + Maybee's Stepping Stones. + Mrs. Thorne's Guests. + + REV. Z.A. MUDGE'S WORKS. + + This well known author's works are among the most popular in the + Sunday-school library. + + _3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $3.75._ + + Shell Cove. + Luck of Alden Farm. + Boat Builders. + + CHARLOTTE M. YONGE'S HISTORIES. + + Miss Yonge, while always boldly and continuously outlining the course of + historical events, has the knack of seizing upon incidents which reveal + the true character of historical personages. These histories are + attractive as romance and possess a peculiar power of impressing the + memory, being written from a Christian standpoint they are very + desirable books for Sunday-school libraries. + + _6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $9.00._ + + Young Folks' History of Germany. + Young Folks' History of Greece. + Young Folks' History of Rome. + Young Folks' History of England. + Young Folks' History of France. + Young Folks' Bible History. + + SPARE MINUTE SERIES + + These are bright and pithy and soul-stirring volumes, quickening the + intellect of the reader and warming the heart. + + _4 vols. 12mo. $4.00._ + + Thoughts that Breathe. _From_ Dean Stanley. Introduction by + Phillips Brooks. + + Cheerful Words. _From_ George MacDonald. Introduction by James T. + Fields. + + The Might of Right. _From_ Rt. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Introduction + by John D. Long. + + True Manliness. _From_ Thomas Hughes. Introduction by James Russell + Lowell. + + W.H.G. KINGSTON'S BOOKS. + + These stories are intensely interesting and graphic and enforce the + highest and most practical lessons. + + _3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $8.00._ + + Voyage of the Steadfast. + Charley Laurel. + Virginia. + Little Ben Hadden. + Young Whaler. + Fisher Boy. + Peter the Ship Boy. + Ralph and Dick. + + BUNGENER HISTORICAL SERIES. + + From the French of L.L.F. Bungener. These works are of thrilling + interest, illustrating the religious struggles, heroism and social life + of the times of Louis XIV. and XV. + + _4 Vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00._ + + Bourdaloue and Louis XIV. + Louis XV. and his Times. + Rabaut and Bridaine. + The Tower of Constancy. + + BANVARD'S AMERICAN HISTORY. + + Every library should be furnished with this series of American + Histories.--_New England Farmer_. + + No more interesting and instructive reading can be put into the hands of + youth.--_Portland Transcript_. + + Every American should own these books.--_Scientific American_. + + _5 vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00._ + + Southern Explorers. + Soldiers and Patriots. + Pioneers of the New World. + Plymouth and the Pilgrims. + First Explorers of North America. + + DR. NEHEMIAH ADAMS' WORKS. + + _12 vols. 12mo. $12.00._ + + At Eventide. + Agnes; or, the Litte Key. + Bertha. + Broadcast. + Christ a Friend. + Communion Sabbath. + Catherine. + Cross in the Cell. + Endless Punishment. + Evenings wish the Doctrines. + Friends of Christ. + Under the Mizzen-Mast. + + D. LOTHROP & CO., Publishers, 32 Franklin St., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + MARGARET SIDNEY'S BOOKS. + + The brightness and versatility of this charming writer are well shown in + the following stories which cover a wide range, and are attractive to + all ages, from wide awake schoolboys and eager schoolgirls to thoughtful + readers of maturer years. As a delineator of character, especially that + of the New England type, she has few superiors, and her pictures of + child life are especially pleasing. + + + FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS, AND HOW THEY GREW. + Extra cloth binding, very elegant die in colors and gold. + 12mo, illust. 1.50 + + PETTIBONE NAME (The). V.I.F. Series, + 12mo, cloth. 1.25 + + SO AS BY FIRE. + 12mo, illust. 1.25 + + WHO TOLD IT TO ME. + Double chromo cover, fully illustrated. 1.25; Extra cloth binding. 1.75 + + WHAT THE SEVEN DID. + Quarto, fully illustrated, board cover designed by J. Wells Champney, + 1.75; extra cloth, very elegant side and back stamp. 2.25 + + HALF YEAR AT BRONCKTON. + 16mo, illust. 1.25 + + HOW THEY WENT TO EUROPE. + 16mo, illust. 1.00 + + GOLDEN WEST (The), as seen by the Ridgway Club. + Quarto, illustrated, boards, 1.75; extra cloth binding. 2.25 + + (Nearly ready). + + + EDWARD A. RAND'S BOOKS. + + Mr. Rand's strong, helpful, interesting stories have made him such a + favorite among boys and among all other who read his books, as to make + comment upon them almost needless. The racy incidents and sparkling + style which characterize his stories, arouse interest at once, and there + is in them an under-current of earnestness, and an influence for good + which will remain after the stories are forgotten. + + + ALL ABOARD FOR SUNRISE LANDS. + Chromo board cover, 1.75; extra cloth binding. 2.25 + + BARK CABIN ON KEARSARGE. + 16mo, cloth, illust. 1.00 + + TENT IN THE NOTCH, THE. + 16mo, cloth, gilt. 1.00 + + ROY'S DORY AT THE SEASHORE. A sequel to "Pushing Ahead." + Large 16mo, cloth, illust. 1.25 + + ALL ABOARD FOR THE LAKES AND MOUNTAINS. + Boards, 1.75; extra cloth. 2.25 + + PUSHING AHEAD; or, Big Brother Dave. + 16mo. 1.25 + + LITTLE BROWN-TOP: and the People under It. + 12mo, illust. 1.25 + + + MARIE OLIVER'S STORIES. + + As a writer of fascinating stories for girls, Marie Oliver has a host of + admirers who watch eagerly for any new book from her pen, and find in + her a friendly and wise helper. + + MARIE OLIVER'S STORIES. + 4 volumes, 12mo, cloth, illustrated. 6.00 + + Margie's Mission. + Old and New Friends. + Ruby Hamilton. + Seba's Discipline. + + + THE BAINBRIDGE BOOKS. + + These books, written by the Rev. W.F. Bainbridge and his wife, are + the outcome of their experience in a trip around the world undertaken + because of their interest in Christian Missions. They not only abound + in interesting descriptions of the numerous places visited, but present + such a record of lofty purposes and noble endeavors as will furnish + inspiration to all readers. + + + AROUND THE WORLD TOUR OF CHRISTIAN MISSIONS. By W. F. BAINBRIDGE. + With maps of Prevailing Religions and all Leading Mission Stations. + 8vo, cloth. 2.00 + + ROUND THE WORLD LETTERS. By LUCY SEAMAN BAINBRIDGE. + 8vo, cloth, illustrated. 1.50 + + SELF-GIVING. A story of Christian Missions. By REV. W. F. BAINBRIDGE. + 12mo, cloth, illust. 1.50 + + + MRS. S.R. GRAHAM CLARK'S BOOKS. + + There is not a book on the list of Mrs. Clark's delightfully + entertaining writings which is not thoroughly good from whatever + point of view considered. + + YENSIE WALTON BOOKS. + 12mo, cloth, illust $1.50 each. 5 volumes. 7.50 + + Yensie Walton. + Our Street. + Yensie Walton's Womanhood. + The Triple E. + Achor. + + + MISS YONGE'S HISTORICAL STORIES. There are very many, especially + among the young, who are not attracted to the study of history, as + presented in ordinary historical works, but who are attracted to it + through the reading of books in which it is interwoven with romance. All + such will be charmed with Miss Yonge's Historical Stories, which + instruct while they interest, and are written in the fascinating style + which has made her one of the most popular writers of the day. + + YONGE'S HISTORICAL STORIES. + 4 vols, 12mo. 5.00 + + The Little Duke. + The Prince and the Page. + Lances of Lynwood. + Golden Deeds. + + + THE FAMILY FLIGHTS. + + By Rev. E.E. Hale and Miss Susan Hale. + + Fresh, piquant, graphic, full of delicate humor, marked by grace in + diction and thorough scholarship, these books are not only unsurpassed, + but unequalled by any books of similar character. They treat of the + interesting features of the various countries named, including history, + geography, natural scenery, popular characteristics and customs, and + much else that will prove of real interest and value to the reader. The + authors have drawn their material from original sources, the countries + referred to having been actually visited, and the descriptions embody + the results of personal observation. The illustrations are not only + numerous and excellent, but in perfect harmony with the text. While + specially attractive to the young, adult readers who have themselves + visited the lands described, are among the most appreciative and + enthusiastic readers of these books. + + A FAMILY FLIGHT AROUND HOME. + 8vo, cloth, gilt. 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT THROUGH FRANCE, GERMANY, NORWAY AND SWITZERLAND. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt. 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT OVER EGYPT AND SYRIA. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt. 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT THROUGH SPAIN. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt, 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT TO MEXICO. Uniform with the above. In preparation. + + + ABBY MORTON DIAZ'S BOOK. + + Bright and keen as steel, Mrs. Diaz invests all that she writes with a + peculiar charm, whether it be a fantastic story of kittens that will + make the little ones wild with glee, a series of "jolly" books for older + boys and girls, or a thoughtful treatise on the serious questions which + most interest the mothers in every home. + + CHRONICLES OF THE STIMPCETT FAMILY. + Quarto, chromo lithograph cover. 1.25 + + KING GRIMALKUM AND PUSSYANITA; or, The Cats' Arabian Nights. + Quarto, illust. 1.25 + + POLLY COLOGNE SERIES. 3 vols. 3.00 + + Polly Cologne. + The Jimmyjohns. + A Story Book for Children. + + WILLIAM HENRY BOOKS. 3 volumes. 3.00 + + William Henry Letters. + Lucy Maria. + William Henry and his Friends. + + DOMESTIC PROBLEMS: Work and Culture in the Household. 1.00 + +======================================================================= + + + D. LOTHROP & COMPANY'S BULLETIN OF NEW BOOKS. + + + History of China. + + By Robert K. Douglass. 12MO, CLOTH, ILLUSTRATED, $1.50. + + Until this book appeared, a thoroughly good one-volume history of the + "Walled Kingdom" for popular use, was not to be had. There have been + many works upon China and the Chinese, but of these few have attempted + to summarize the history of that great empire and its citizens in a + single comprehensive work, and none have done so with such success as to + meet the popular need. In this volume we have an authentic, scholarly + and most interesting summary of Chinese history from the earliest period + to the present time. In addition to the careful editing of Mr. Arthur + Gilman, the book has had the advantage of the critical abilities of the + young Chinese scholar, Mr. Yan Phou Lee, of Yale College. The volume is + richly illustrated with appropriate engravings, and will rank among + standard books. + + + Southern Alaska and the Sitkan Archipelago. + + By Eliza Ruhama Scidmore. FULLY ILLUSTRATED, 12MO, CLOTH, $1.50. + + No book yet published bears any comparison with this volume in respect + of valuable and authentic information relating to the history, + geography, topography, climate, natural scenery, inhabitants, and rich + resources of this wonderful _terra incognita_. The author, who is a + writer of well-known reputation, has had exceptional opportunities for + the preparation of her attractive work, having visited the regions + described, at different periods, under most favorable circumstances, and + having had access to the government documents relating to the history + and surveys of Alaska, aside from the kindly assistance of the experts + and scientists best acquainted with that marvellous region. Her book has + all of the interest of a delightfully written story of adventures in a + comparatively unknown region, and with the additional value which it + possesses as the only approach thus far made to trustworthy treatise + upon the history and resources of Alaska it will commend itself to all + persons interested in that country, either as students or + _voyageurs_. + + + Many Colored Threads. + + Selections from the writings of Goethe, edited by Carrie Adelaide + Cook. EXTRA CLOTH, $1.00. + + Those familiar with the writings of the great German author, and those + who know little of them, will be alike interested in this collection of + "best thoughts." Eloquence, pathos, romance, philosophy--a wide range of + sentiment and feeling, characteristic of the life of Goethe--are + revealed in these selections. The book is a worthy companion to the six + preceding volumes of the widely-circulated "Spare Minute + Series"--_Thoughts that Breathe_, Dean Stanley; _Cheerful + Words_, George MacDonald; _The Might of Right_, Gladstone; + _True Manliness_, Thos. Hughes; _Living Truths_, Charles + Kingsley; _Right to the Point_, Dr. Cuyler. + + + Wide Awake, Volume I. + + PLAIN CLOTH BINDING, $1.75; EXTRA BINDING, COVERS STAMPED IN COLORS AND + GOLD, $2.25. + + Including Charles Egbert Craddock's serial story "Down the Ravine," with + other serials by famous authors, and nearly three hundred original + illustrations by celebrated artists. + +======================================================================= + + + Baccalaureate Sermons. + By Rev. A.B. Peabody, D.D.LL.D. 12MO, $1.25. + + The sermons contained in this volume, delivered before the graduating + classes of Harvard University, it is safe to say are not excelled by any + productions of their kind. They are not only rarely appropriate, as + discourses addressed to educated young men upon the threshold of active + life, but are models of logical thought, and graceful rhetoric worthy + the study of all ministers. + + + Interrupted. + By Pansy (Mrs. G.R. Alden). EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, $1.50. + + It has all the charm of this most popular author's fascinating style, + grown riper each year, and possessing more of the peculiar power by + which she adapts herself to her varied audience. More than a hundred + thousand of Pansy's books are sold every year. + + + Within the Shadow. + By Dorothy Holroyd. 12MO, CLOTH, $1.25. + + "The most successful book of the year." "The plot is ingenious, yet not + improbable, the character drawing strong and vigorous, the story + throughout one of brilliancy and power." "The book cannot help making a + sensation."--_Boston Transcript._ "The author is an original and + vigorous writer, and at once takes rank with the best writers of + American fiction."--_Toledo Journal._ "A story of such brilliancy + and power as to at once entitle its author to recognition as a writer of + high ability."--_Journal Press_, St. Cloud. "The author has skill + in invention with the purest sentiment and good natural + style."--_Boston Globe._ + + + How Success is Won. + (Little Biographies. Third Series.) By Sarah K. Bolton. PRICE, $1. + + This is the best of the recent books of this popular class of biography; + all its "successful men" are Americans, and with two or three exceptions + they are living and in the full tide of business and power. In each + case, the facts have been furnished to the author by the subject of the + biography, or by family friends; and Mrs. Bolton has chosen from this + authentic material those incidents which most fully illustrate the + successive steps, and the ruling principles, by which success has been + gained. A portrait accompanies each biography. + + + In Case of Accident. + By Dr. D.A. Sargent. ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, 60 CENTS. + + This little handbook is worth its weight in gold, and should be found on + the most convenient shelf of every family library. The author is + connected with the Harvard College Gymnasium, and the contents of the + volume are made up of practical talks delivered before the ladies' class + of the Gymnasium. His aim is to give such practical information as will + aid to self-preservation in times of danger, and to teach a few of the + simplest methods of meeting the common accidents and emergencies of + life. The illustrations are numerous and excellent. + + + The Arnold Birthday Book. + Edited by his Daughters. $1.25. + + With an autograph introductory poem by Edwin Arnold, and choice + quotations from his poems for every day. The many admirers of the "Light + of Asia" will gladly welcome this graceful souvenir of the author, which + is handsomely illustrated and daintily finished. + +======================================================================= + + The Evolution of Dodd. + By William Hawley Smith. EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, $1.00. + + This remarkable book is destined to create as great a stir, in its way, + as "Ginx's Baby," although written in an entirely different style. It + treats of phases of young life as seen through the spectacles of a + keen-eyed man, sharp enough to let none of the intricacies of the newer + systems of education evade him. It should be read by every parent, + teacher, and public school officer in this or any other country. While + for pure amusement in watching Dodd's evolution, it is one of the + richest books of the season. + + + Red Letter Stories. + Translated from the German by Miss Lucy Wheelock. PRICE 60 CENTS. + + Madame Johanna Spyri is pronounced by competent critics the best living + German writer for children. Miss Lucy Wheelock of the Chauncy Hall + School, Boston, has gracefully translated some of her most charming + tales, under the above title. This delightful volume, prettily bound and + illustrated, is one of the best selling books of the season. + + + The Gray Masque and Other Poems. + By Mary B. Dodge. ILLUSTRATED, EXTRA CLOTH, $1.25. + + The name of this author, whose reputation is already established, will + be at once recognized in connection with some of the choicest bits of + poetry contributed to recent periodical literature, such as "Indian + Summer," "My Baby," "Frozen Crew," etc., all of which, with many new and + equally excellent poems, are offered to the public in this unusually + attractive volume. + + + Memorial of Rev. Warren H. Cudworth. + By His Sister; WITH PORTRAIT, 380 PAGES, $1.50. + + Simply told and remarkably interesting is this story of the life of one + of the most saintly of Christian men. It will be welcomed and read with + satisfaction by all who knew him, and to those who never saw him, it + will be full of suggestive thought. + + + Money in Politics. + By Hon. J.K. Upton. LATE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE UNITED STATES + TREASURY. EXTRA CLOTH, GILT TOP. 12MO, $1.25. + + This volume presents a complete history of money, or the circulating + medium, in the United States, from the colonial days to the present + time. Mr. Edward Atkinson, in his introduction, pronounces it the most + valuable work of the kind yet published. + + + Lift up Your Hearts. + Compiled and arranged by Rose Porter. 25 CENTS. + + Helpful thoughts for overcoming the world. A vest pocket volume, in + dainty, flexible covers, printed in sepia. Bound in red cloth. + + + A Romance of the Revolution. + (A Double Masquerade.) By Rev. Charles R. Talbot. EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, + $1.25. + + With illustrations by Share, Merrill and Taylor made from careful + studies. The portion describing the battle of Bunker Hill, as seen by + the boys, has been said to be one of the most graphic and telling + accounts ever written of that famous conflict. + +======================================================================= + + + Health at Home Library. + Or, Mental and Physical Hygiene. By J. Mortimer Granville. + 5 VOLS., 16MO, CLOTH, SOLD SEPARATELY, EACH SIXTY CENTS, + THE LIBRARY $3.00. + + I. THE SECRET OF A CLEAR HEAD, chapters on temperature, habits, + pleasures, etc. + + II. SLEEP AND SLEEPLESSNESS, chapters on the nature of sleep, going to + sleep, sleeping, awakening, sleeplessness, sleep and food. + + III. THE SECRET OF A GOOD MEMORY, chapters on what memory is, how it + works, taking in, storing, remembering, etc. + + IV. COMMON MIND TROUBLES, chapters on defects in memory, confusion of + thought, sleeplessness, hesitancy and errors in speech, low spirits, etc. + + V. HOW TO MAKE THE BEST OF LIFE, chapters on what constitutes health, on + feeling, breathing, drinking, eating, overwork, change, etc. + + + Philosophiæ Quæstor. + Or, Days at Concord. By Julia R. Anagnos. 12MO, 60 CENTS. + + In this interesting book Mrs. Anagnos, one of the accomplished daughters + of Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, presents under cover of a pleasing narrative, a + sketch of the memorable Emerson and other sessions of the Concord School + of Philosophy. It has for its frontispiece an excellent picture of the + building occupied by this renowned school. + + + Illiteracy and Mormonism. + By Henry Randall Waite, Ph.D., LATE STATISTICIAN UNITED STATES + CENSUS, SECRETARY INTER-STATE COMMISSION ON FEDERAL AID TO EDUCATION. + 12MO, ANTIQUE PAPER COVERS, 25 CENTS. + + These papers, as they appeared, in substance, in the _Princeton + Review_, attracted wide attention, and were characterized as "broad, + scholarly, and statesmanlike," and as "the most thoughtful and + conclusive arguments upon these subjects yet presented." "They demand + thoughtful consideration and respect."--_Boston Transcript_. + + + Stories from the Pansy. + SECOND SERIES, FULLY ILLUSTRATED, SIX VOLUMES IN A NEAT BOX, THE SET + $1.80. + + A library of delightful short stories in which instruction is pleasingly + blended with entertainment. These stories, culled from the writings of + well-known authors, will command the favor of parents seeking the best + books for their children, and of those who desire the most acceptable + books for Sunday-school libraries. + + + In the Woods and Out. + By Pansy. ILLUSTRATED, 12MO, CLOTH, $1.00. + + Here is a book admirably suited to the needs of that large class of + young folks who wish at times to read, or have read to them, the + choicest of short tales. Mothers and older sisters will make a note of + this, and for the twilight hour when the young folks clamor for "a + story," will provide themselves with "In the Woods and Out." + + + Couldn't be Bought. + A Book for the Sunday-school Library. By Faye Huntington. + 16MO, CLOTH, ILLUSTRATED, 75 CENTS. + + For genuine excellence in both manner and sentiment, few writers of + books for the young excel the author of this excellent character study. + It is a book which will be equally interesting and profitable. + +======================================================================= + + + _FALL TERM_ + OF THE + NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY + OF + Music begins Sept. 10,1885. + + NEW CLASSES + Will be formed for beginners as well as for advanced + + MUSIC Voice, Piano, Organ, Violin, Orchestral Instruments, + Harmony, Theory and Timing. + + ART Drawing, Painting, Portraiture, Modeling, Wood Carving + and Embroidery. + + ORATORY Vocal Technique, Elocution, Dramatic and Forensic Art + + LANGUAGES French, German and Italian. + + ENGLISH BRANCHES Arithmetic, Algebra, Grammar, Rhetoric, English + Literature and Latin. + + PHYSICAL CULTURE A well equipped Gymnasium. + + HOME Elegant accommodations for Lady Students, $4.50 to $7.50 per week, + including steam heat and electric light in every room, elevator, etc. + + Classes in Sight Singing, Church Music, Glees, Chorus Work, Analysis of + Symphonies, Lectures on Music, Art and Literature by eminent + specialists, concerts, recitals, etc., amounting in all to 180 hours per + term, _Free_ to all regular Students in any department. Send for + beautiful illustrated calendar, free, to + + E. TOURJEE, Director, _Franklin Sq., Boston, Mass._ +-------------------------------------- + + CHARLES K. WADHAM & CO., + + 166 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER OF BLANK BOOKS, + _Scrap Albums_ +----AND---- + _Fine Stationery._ + + A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS +----AND---- + GENERAL STATIONERS' GOODS + + _Pocket Books, Christmas Novelties in great variety._ +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + GLOBE LETTER FILING _CABINETS_. + _Most Perfect System Known._ + All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files. + Over $20,000 worth in use in Boston alone. + + _Quick Reference_. + _No Mutilation of Papers_. + _Rapid Filing_. + _Handsome Workmanship_. + + W.W. EDWARDS, SELLING AGENT, + _The Globe Files Company_, 166 Devonshire St., Boston. + + SCRAP FILES. ROLL TOP DESKS. + PAMPHLET CASES. CLOTH BOXES, all sizes. + DOCUMENT BOXES. LAWYERS FILING CASES. + NICKLE CLIP BOARDS. CASES for Price Lists, etc. + + ESTIMATES Furnished of filing devices for Banks, Railroads, + Mercantile Firms, Insurance Companies, etc. + + _N.B. Correspondence Solicited._ + +======================================================================= + +[Illustration] + + VICTOR L. CHANDLER + ENGRAVER ON WOOD + 43 MILK ST. BOSTON MASS. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES: + FOR ROAD USE; + + STANCH AND RELIABLE + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP + STRONG, GRACEFUL--EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE + + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE + THE POPE MFG. CO. + 597 Washington St. Boston, Mass. + + "If I could not get another bicycle I would not give mine for its weight + in solid gold. For fifteen years I lost from three to eight days every + month with stubborn sick headache. Since I have been riding the bicycle + I have lost only two days from that cause, and I haven't spent a dollar + for a doctor." + + REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST +-------------------------------------- + + RUBBER CLOTHING COMPANY. + + F.M. SHEPARD, _Pres_. J.A. MINOTT, _Sec_. + J. FRANCIS HAYWARD, _Manager_ + _at Boston._ + + _No. 160 Congress, cor. Franklin Street_, Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + CHARLES H. NORTH & CO. + PACKERS AND CURERS OF + PORK, BEEF, LARD, HAMS, BACON, LIVE AND DRESSED HOGS, ETC. + _33 & 34 NORTH MARKET ST._, + CHARLES H. NORTH, S. HENRY SKILTON, Boston, U.S.A. +-------------------------------------- + + ARTHUR P. DODGE + Attorney and Counsellor at Law, _31 MILK ST., ROOM 46_, + Notary Public. Commissioner for New Hampshire. +-------------------------------------- + +Bay State Monthly Company, Publishers and Printers, 43 Milk Street, Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + THE + + New England Business Directory + + _AND GAZETTEER_ + + For 1885. + + _A very Valuable Book of Reference to every Business Man._ + + CONTAINING CAREFULLY COLLECTED LISTS OF THE + + Merchants, Manufacturers, Professional and other Business Men + throughout the six New England States, classified by Business, Town, + and Post-Office. + + ALSO + + Banks, Savings Banks, Insurance, Manufacturing, Gas-Light and other + Incorporated Companies. Post-Offices, Newspapers, Colleges, Academies, + Expresses, Railroads, Together with other useful information often + required in the COUNTING-ROOM. + + A COMPLETE NEW ENGLAND GAZETTEER + + Is a prominent feature of this edition, comprising a concise description + of the Cities, Towns, Villages and Post-Offices, showing Population, + Telegraph and Railroad Stations, Money Order Offices, etc. + + _A Colored Map of New England Accompanies Each Book_. + + The whole forming a large Octavo Volume of 1892 pages, handsomely + printed on fine paper, and substantially bound. + + PRICE SIX DOLLARS. + + _Sampson, Murdoch, & Co._, + (Formerly Sampson, Davenport, & Co.) + PUBLISHERS, 155 FRANKLIN STREET, BOSTON. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. + WITH 40 MAPS. + + BY COL. HENRY B. CARRINGTON, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D. + + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. + + A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. + + + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:-- + + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.--_Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey_. + + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.--_Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y._ + + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.--_Henry Day, N.Y._ + + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.--_Geo. + Bancroft_. + + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.--_Benson J. Lossing_. + + The maps are just splendid.--_Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J._ + + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.--_Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y._ + + Of permanent standard authority.--_Gen. De Peister, N.Y._ + + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.--_Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris_. + + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.--_Z. Chandler_. + + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.--_B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis_. + + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.--_London Telegraph_. + + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.--_Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England_. + + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.--_Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State_. + + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.--_A. de + Rochambeau, Paris_. + + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.--_Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England_. + + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.--_Harper's + Magazine_. + + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.--_N.Y. Times_. + + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.--_The Nation_. + + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. + + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.--_Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J._ + + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.--_Gen. W.T. + Sherman_. +-------------------------------------- + + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. + + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. + + Published by A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York. + + + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. + + The RED Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. + + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. + + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." + + THE SECRETARY OF WAR has placed the "BATTLE MAPS AND CHARTS" at ARMY + POST SCHOOLS, at government expense. + + FIVE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF WASHINGTON accompany the volume. The ST. MEMIN + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also PEALE'S painting + (1772), HOUDON'S bust (1784). TRUMBULL'S painting (1792) and STUART'S + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. + + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. + + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. + + + NOTICES. + + Invaluable to the student of American History.--_Baltimore (Md.) + Herald_. + + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.--_Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.--_The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)_. + + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.--_N.Y. + Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.--_N.Y. Evening + Post_. + +======================================================================= + + + PERMANENT. + +[Illustration: CREOSOTE STAINS. Patented Apr. 29th, 1884. for Shingles, +Clapboards & other exterior woodwork. Sam'l Cabot Jr. Sole Manufacturer +70 Kilby St. Boston. 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HEBER SMITH, + _Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of + Medicine._ + + Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and + Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by + + _HOWARD BROS., Managers_, + 117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.) + + ==OR== + + GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York. + +======================================================================= + + + H.E. Abbott Insurance Agency. + FIRE AND MARINE. 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Branch + offices: _Advertiser Building, Boston, Mass._, Ocala, Fla., Atlanta, + Ga., Lamar, Mo., Huntsville, Ala., Raleigh, N.C., London, Eng. + +======================================================================= + + + CANTON BLEACH. + + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. + + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. + + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. + + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. + + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have _examined the_ + "_Canton Bleach_." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + _see the goods_; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, _to see if the stamp_ "Canton Bleach" is on it. + + NOTICE.--Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by MESSRS. C.F. HOVEY & CO., SHEPARD, + NORWELL & CO., HOGG, BROWN & TAYLOR, CHANDLER & CO., R.H. WHITE & CO., + JORDAN, MARSH & CO., and others. + + [Illustration: CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882] + + [Illustration: TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK] + + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. 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LITTLE, JR., Pres. + +======================================================================= + + + NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY + +[Illustration: New England Conservatory of Music Franklin Square Boston] + + _Largest and Best-Appointed School of Music, Literature and Art in the + World._ + + MUSIC is taught in all its departments, Instrumental and Vocal, + including Pianoforte, Organ, Violin, and all Orchestral and Band + Instruments, Voice Culture and Singing, Harmony, Theory and + Orchestration, Church Music, Oratorio and Chorus Practice, Art of + Conducting; also, Tuning and Repairing Pianos and Organs. All under the + very best teachers, in classes and private. + + SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS.--Drawing, Painting, and Modeling from Casts and + from Nature, in Crayon, Water and Oil Colors; Portraiture and China + Decorating with some of the best artists in the country. In classes and + private. + + COLLEGE OF ORATORY.--Vocal Technique, Elocution, Rhetorical Oratory, + Dramatic and Lyric Art. + + SCHOOL OF MODERN LANGUAGES.--French, German and Italian, under best + foreign professors.--Thorough course leading to Diploma. + + SCHOOL OF GENERAL LITERATURE.--Common and higher English branches, + Latin, Mathematics and Literature. + + THE NEW HOME is located in the heart of Boston, confessedly the Musical, + Literary and Artistic Centre of America. The beautiful park in front, + and the surrounding broad streets make it both healthful and delightful. + It is splendidly equipped for both Home and the Schools, furnishing Home + accommodations for 500 lady students, and Class Accommodations for 3000 + lady and gentleman students. + + COLLATERAL ADVANTAGES. Well equipped Gymnasium, resident physician, + large musical and general library; and free classes, lectures by eminent + specialists, recitals, concerts, etc., amounting to 180 hours per term. + + RECENT ADDITIONS TO THE FACULTIES.--The maestro Augusto Rotoli, the + great Italian Tenor and singing teacher; Herr Carl Faelten, foremost + pianist and teacher; Leandro Campanari, Violin Virtuoso teacher; Prof. + W. J. Rolfe, the eminent Shakespearean Scholar and Critic; Mr. William + Willard, the famous portrait painter; Mlle. Emilie Faller, artist from + Paris, and Mr. Jas. E. Phillips, steward and caterer, of 20 years' + experience. + + 2003 students, from 55 states, territories, British Provinces and + foreign countries in attendance last year. + + TUITION, $5 to $20 per Term. Board and room, $4.50 to $7.50 per week. + Steam heat and Electric light in all rooms. + + Fall Term Begins September 10, 1885. + + Send for new and beautifully illustrated Calendar, free, to, + E. TOURJEE, DIR., FRANKLIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + THE OLD CORNER BOOK STORE. + + The above illustration, especially prepared by Harper and Brothers for + George P. Lathrop's article on "Literary and Social Life in Boston," + that appeared in _Harper's Monthly Magazine_ for February, is a + good representation of the outward appearance of the quaint and + picturesque old building standing on the corner of Washington and School + Streets. + + Famous as the "Corner Store" is as an old landmark, it is justly more + famous as the intellectual birthplace of many of the best known works in + American literature, the firm of Ticknor & Fields--whose publishing + foresight and enterprise have imperishably connected their names with + American authors--having occupied it during one of the most brilliant + chapters of American literary history. + + Under the energetic auspices of Cupples, Upham & Co., it has become one + of the most complete retail book establishments in the country, and so + popular a resort that all Boston may with a little exaggeration be said + to pass through it in a day. To every stranger it is, from its present + literary attractiveness, a place not to be overlooked. The literary men + of Boston make it their lounging-place and chief rendezvous. To stroll + into the "Old Corner" for a chat, a glimpse at the last new book and + magazine, is with them a daily duty, as it is with the Bostonian + generally. It is a popular shopping-place with ladies, who patronize its + church department for works of devotion, prayer books, hymnals, and + Bibles. The reason of the extensive patronage which the establishment + receives from all classes of readers is due to its admirable department + system. It has a department for medical, scientific, and agricultural + works; another for maps, globes, and guide books; another for + theological literature; another for books in fine bindings, illustrated + works, etc; another for sporting and yachting books, and out-door + literature generally; one for juvenile books; another for English books, + as well as one for American miscellaneous works; and, lastly, special + counters for newspapers, periodicals, and novels. It is seldom without + the last "new thing" in English, French, or American literature. + + The firm does an extensive importing business, and pays special + attention to the supplying of Town Libraries and Clubs. + +======================================================================= + + + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. + WITH 40 MAPS. + + BY COL. HENRY B. CARRINGTON, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D. + + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. + + A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. + + + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:-- + + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.--_Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey_. + + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.--_Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y._ + + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.--_Henry Day, N.Y._ + + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.--_Geo. + Bancroft_. + + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.--_Benson J. Lossing_. + + The maps are just splendid.--_Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J._ + + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.--_Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y._ + + Of permanent standard authority.--_Gen. De Peister, N.Y._ + + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.--_Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris_. + + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.--_Z. Chandler_. + + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.--_B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis_. + + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.--_London Telegraph_. + + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.--_Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England_. + + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.--_Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State_. + + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.--_A. de + Rochambeau, Paris_. + + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.--_Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England_. + + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.--_Harper's + Magazine_. + + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.--_N.Y. Times_. + + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.--_The Nation_. + + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. + + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.--_Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J._ + + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.--_Gen. W.T. + Sherman_. + +-------------------------------------- + + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. + + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. + + Published by A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York. + + + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. + + The RED Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. + + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. + + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." + + THE SECRETARY OF WAR has placed the "BATTLE MAPS AND CHARTS" at ARMY + POST SCHOOLS, at government expense. + + FIVE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF WASHINGTON accompany the volume. The ST. MEMIN + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also PEALE'S painting + (1772), HOUDON'S bust (1784). TRUMBULL'S painting (1792) and STUART'S + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. + + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. + + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. + + + NOTICES. + + Invaluable to the student of American History.--_Baltimore (Md.) + Herald_. + + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.--_Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.--_The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)_. + + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.--_N.Y. + Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.--_N.Y. Evening + Post_. + +======================================================================= + + + ESTABLISHED 1871. + + THE SOUTH + A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress. + + The SOUTH is the oldest journal in the country devoted exclusively to + the developement of the Southern States, and is indispensable to + business men. + + Subscription Price, $3.00 a year. + + _The South Publishing Company_ 85 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. + +======================================================================= + + + S.M. 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It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. _SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS._ + + AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St., BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. 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RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. + + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. + + FAIRBANKS AND COLE, + _MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS_, + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + CANTON BLEACH. + + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. + + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. + + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. + + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. + + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have _examined the_ + "_Canton Bleach_." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + _see the goods_; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, _to see if the stamp_ "Canton Bleach" is on it. + + NOTICE.--Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by MESSRS. C.F. HOVEY & CO., SHEPARD, + NORWELL & CO., HOGG, BROWN & TAYLOR, CHANDLER & CO., R.H. WHITE & CO., + JORDAN, MARSH & CO., and others. + + [Illustration: CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882] + + [Illustration: TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK] + + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. + + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the + + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + EDWARD W. HOWE, Treas. + JAS. L. LITTLE, JR., Pres. + +======================================================================= + + + An Entirely New Edition of Lord Byron's + + CHILDE HAROLD, + + WITH NUMEROUS NEW AND BEAUTIFUL ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD. + + THE DRAWINGS BY + + Harry Fenn, F. Myruck, S.L. Smith, G.G. Harley, E.H. Garrett, G. Perkins, + F.B. Schell, J.D. Woodward, and L.S. Ipsen. + + _Drawn and Engraved under the Supervision of A.V.S. Anthony._ + + PRICE IN CLOTH, $6.00; IN ANTIQUE MOROCCO on TREE CALF, $10.00, IN + CRUSHED LEVANT, WITH SILK LININGS, $25.00. + + "CHILDE HAROLD" is the most famous of the poems of Lord Byron, and + abounds in the most picturesque and attractive scenes and subjects for + illustration; including the beautiful scenery of the Rhine, and of Italy + and Greece, and the rich treasures of art and history in the classic + countries around the Mediterranean. + + The best American artists have drawn these illustrations, _con + amore_, producing a great number of very choice examples of the high + perfection which wood-engraving has reached in the New World. The + general supervision of the work has devolved upon Mr. A.V.S. ANTHONY, + who held the same relation to the recent magnificent editions of + "Lucille" "The Lady of the Lake," "The Princess," and "Marmion;" thus + ensuring the utmost accuracy in study, taste in composition, and + elegance in finish. + + The Publishers believe that in this form and with this elegance of + finish the work will be widely welcomed as a Fine Art Edition, and + become the + + LEADING HOLIDAY GIFT-BOOK OF THE YEAR. + + "In every respect a beautiful book. It is printed from new plates and + its many illustrations have been furnished by artists famous in their + line. It is even more attractive than its handsome predecessors, the + 'Marmion' and the Lady of the Lake."--Boston Traveller. + + "The most talked of Book since 'Daniel Deronda.'" + + + The Rise of Silas Lapham. + By WILLIAM D. HOWELLS. 1 vol. 12mo. + + "No novel since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' has been so extensively read by + business men. Mr. Howell's literary work has broadened and deepened into + this, the latest and most important, and we think his best work,"--says + the _New Jerusalem Messenger_. + + + For a Woman. + By NORA TERRY, 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00. + + An admirable Story of modern life in America. + + "Her prose is always as charming as her poetry, which is saying a great + deal.--_Boston Transcript_. + + "Nora Perry is the only poet of pure passion in America."--D.A. WASSON, + in _Boston Transcript_. + + + Social Silhouettes. + By EDGAR FAWCETT. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "All Gotham is busy gossiping over Edgar Fawcett's series of social + Silhouettes,' and everybody has his pet theory as to whom is deliniated + in each portrait."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + + In Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery of New Orleans. + By WM. MILLER OWEN, First Lieutenant and Adjutant B.W.A. Illustrated + with 8 maps and four engravings. 8vo. $3.00. + + A stirring narrative of events during the late Civil War, from Bull Run + to Seven Pines, Antietam and Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, + Gettysburg, Chickamaugu, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomatox and Spanish + Fort. Compiled by the adjutant from his diary and from documents and + Orders. + + "It is indeed, the most interesting, authentic and reliable contribution + to our war literature yet seen."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + + The Haunted Adjutant; and Other Stories. + By EDMUND QUINCY. Edited by his son, Edmund Quincy. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Quincy possessed the Imaginative faculty, and the instructive + faculty in larger measure than any of his countrymen, Hawthorne, perhaps + excepted, and Hawthorne, if his equal, was not his superior."--_Boston + Traveller_. + + + Aulnay Tower. + By BLANCHE WILLIS HOWARD. 12mo. $1.50. + + "A story which, for absorbing interest, brilliancy of style, charm of + graphic character drawing, and exquisite literary quality, will hold its + rank among the best work in American fiction."--_Boston Traveller_. + + + Love; or, A Name. + By JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Hawthorne has a more powerful imagination than any contemporary + write of fiction."--_The Academy (London)_. + + + A Narrative of Military Service. + By Gen. W.B. HAZEN. 1 vol. 8vo. With Maps, Plans and Illustrations. + $3.00. + + "There can be no doubt, we think, that it will be eagerly read, + particularly by the brave soldiers whom he led at Shiloh, who held the + crest at Stone Ridge, who stood firm under his eye at Chickamauga, who + floated with him by night under the shadow of Lookout Mountain down to + Brown's Ferry, who received his order to climb the fence of Mission + Ridge who helped to take Atlanta, who marched to the sea, who swarmed + over the parapets of Fort McAllister, who made the triumphant campaign + of the Carolinas, and passed in review before the President."--_New + York Mail and Express_. + + _For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the + Publishers_. + + TICKNOR & CO., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + American History, Statesmanship, and Literature. + ====== + + American Commonwealths. + Edited by HORACE E. SCUDDER. + + "It is clear that this series will occupy an entirely new place in our + historical literature. Written by competent and aptly chosen authors, + from fresh materials, in convenient form, and with a due regard to + proportion and proper emphasis, they promise to supply most + satisfactorily a positive want."--_Boston Journal._ + + + I. _VIRGINIA_. By JOHN ESTEN COOKE. + II. _OREGON_. By WILLIAM BARROWS. + III. _MARYLAND_. By WILLIAM HAND BROWNE. + IV. _KENTUCKY_. By Prof. N.S. SHALER. + V. _MICHIGAN_. By Judge THOMAS M. COOLEY. + VI. _KANSAS_. By Prof. LEVERETT W. SPRING. + +(Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. + + + American Statesmen. + Edited by JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + + + I. _JOHN QUINCY ADAMS_. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + II. _ALEXANDER HAMILTON_. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. + III. _JOHN C. CALHOUN_. By Dr. H. VON HOLST. + IV. _ANDREW JACKSON_. By Pres. WM. G. SUMNER. + V. _JOHN RANDOLPH_. By HENRY ADAMS. + VI. _JAMES MONROE_. By Prof. D.C. GILMAN. + VII. _THOMAS JEFFERSON_. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + VIII. _DANIEL WEBSTER_. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. + IX. _ALBERT GALLATIN_. By JOHN AUSTIN STEVENS. + X. _JAMES MADISON_. By SYDNEY HOWARD GAY. + XI. _JOHN ADAMS_. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + XII. _JOHN MARSHALL_. By ALLAN B. MAGRUDER. + XIII. _SAMUEL ADAMS_. By JAMES K. HOSMER. + +(Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. + + + American Men of Letters. + Edited by CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER. + + + I. _WASHINGTON IRVING_. By CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER. + II. _NOAH WEBSTER_. By HORACE E. SCUDDER. + III. _HENRY D. THOREAU_. By FRANK B. SANBORN. + IV. _GEORGE RIPLEY_. By OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM. + V. _JAMES FENIMORE COOPER_. By Prof. T.R. LOUNSBURY. + VI. _MARGARET FULLER OSSOLI_. By T.W. HIGGINSON. + VII. _RALPH WALDO EMERSON_. By O.W. HOLMES. + VIII. _EDGAR ALLAN POE_. By G.E. WOODBERRY. + IX. _NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS_. By H.A. BEERS. + + (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, with portrait, 16mo, gilt + top, $1.25. + + + "Mr. Morse and Mr. Warner, through the enterprise of their Boston + publishers, are doing in their two biographical series a service to the + public, the full extent of which, while well rewarded in a commercial + sense, is doubtless not generally and rightfully appreciated. Honest and + truly important work it is that they and their colleagues are + doing."--_New York Times_. + + _For sale by Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by + the publishers_. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + TEN DOLLARS ENOUGH + ====== + AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF VOL. II, IN NOVEMBER, + + GOOD-HOUSEKEEPING + + Will appear in new type cut and cast expressly for its publishers, and + will have as a leading feature the first instalment of a new Serial by + CATHERINE OWEN, Author of "Culture and Cooking," and one of the most + practical writers of the day on Household Affairs, entitled: + + "Ten Dollars Enough." + + Keeping House Well on Ten Dollars a Week. + + HOW IT HAS BEEN DONE. HOW IT MAY BE DONE AGAIN. + + OUR PRIZE PAPERS. + + The awards of $500, for our Series of Prize Papers, the entries for + which closed September 1, are as follows:-- + + $250. "How to Eat, Drink, and Sleep as Christians Should." A + series of Six Papers. "MARGARET SIDNEY" (Mrs. D. Lothrop), Boston. One + of the most popular and promising writers of the day. + + $200. "Mistress Work and Maid Work.--Which is Mistress, and Which is + Servant." A Series of Six Papers. MRS. E.J. GURLEY, Waco, Texas. + + $50. "Bread: How to Make it Well and Economically, and How to Eat it + Healthfully." Mrs. HELEN CAMPBELL, Orange N.J. (Author of "The + Easiest Way in Housekeeping and in Cooking," and other valuable + household writings for the press.) + ====== + + These and the following will have prominent place in our regular + Semi-Monthly BILL-OF-FARE during the publication of the volume. + + "Fifty Recipes for Making all kinds of Bread." BY CATHERINE OWEN. + + "Puff Paste," Illustrated. By Mrs. EMMA P. EWING, Dean of the + School of Domestic Economy of the Iowa Agricultural College. + + "Visitor and Visited." By "MARION HARLAND." + + Besides the usual amount of interesting and instructive reading for + Household Entertainment and Instruction by well-known writers. + ====== + + SOME OF OUR CONTRIBUTORS, + + Many of whom are among the most noted and noteworthy writers or + housekeepers of our time:-- + + MARIA PARLOA, + "MARION HARLAND," + Mrs. ROSE TERRY COOKE, + Mrs. HATTIE TREMAINE TERRY, + Mrs. ELIZABETH ROBINSON SCOVIL, + Mrs. CARRIE W. BRONSON, + Mrs. H. ANNETTE POOLE, + MARY E. DEWEY, + "MARGARET SIDNEY," + ASSIS F. JUDD, + LUCRETIA P. HALE, + MARIAN S. DEVEREUX, + HESTER M. POOLE, + Mrs. FRONA E. WAIT, + Mrs. KATHARINE B. FOOT, + Mrs. CHRISTINE TERHUNE HERRICK, + Mrs. C.A.K. POORE, + DORA READ GOODALE, + JOSEPHINE CANNING, + Mrs. GEORGINANA H.S. HULL, + Mrs. D.H.R. GOODALS, + SARAH J. BLANCHARD. + Mrs. S.O. JOHNSON, + "ADELAIDE PRESTON," + Mrs. HELEN CAMPBELL, + "CATHERINE OWEN," + ANNA L. DAWES, + "SHIRLEY DARE," + Mrs. SUSAN TEALL PERRY, + Mrs. ELLEN BLISS HOOKER, + Mrs. MARGARET E. WHITE, + Mrs. AGNES B. ORMSBEE, + Mrs. ELLIS P. EWING, + Mrs. HENRIETTA DAVIS, + ANNA BARROWS, + "ELLA GUERNSEY," + Mrs. EVA M. NILES, + RUTH HALL, + Mrs. C.S. FOX, + Mrs. HARRIET H. ROBINSON, + Mrs. HELEN N. PACKARD, + Mrs. L.A. FRANCE, + MARGARET EVGINGE, + Mrs. SARAH DeW. GAMWELL, + Mrs. ELIZA R. PARKER, + AMELIA A. WHITFIELD, M.D. + LAVINIA S. GOODWIN, + Mrs. MARY CURRIER PARSONS, + E.C. GARDNER, + MILTON BRADLEY, + CLARK W. BRYAN, + Dr. S.W. BOWLES, + Rev. F.H. ROWLEY, + Wm. PAUL GERHARD, + J.H. CARMICHAEL, M.D. + NEWELL LOVEJOY, + Dr. F.M. HEXAMER. + ====== + + EVERY OTHER WEEK. $2.50 PER YEAR. + + Every yearly subscriber will receive a valuable premium post-paid. + Send 10 cents for Sample Copy with List of Premiums. + ====== + + CLARK W. BRYAN & CO., Publishers. HOLYOKE, MASS. + NEW YORK OFFICE, 111 BROADWAY. + FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS. + +======================================================================= + + + _OUR GREAT PREMIUM OFFER._ + + Every subscriber sending address together with $3.00 for one year's + subscription to the BAY STATE MONTHLY before January 1, 1886, may choose + one of the following valuable books, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive, as + a premium. In ordering from 1 to 30 inclusive, fifteen cents must be + added to pay postage; and in ordering a premium numbered 31, 32 or 33, + forty cents must be added to pay postage and extra cost of book. + + 1. Uncle Tom's Cabin. By Harriet Beecher Stowe, cloth, price, $1.00. + + + _American Commonwealths_. + _Edited by Horace E. Scudder_. + + A series of volumes narrating the history of such States of the Union as + have exerted a positive influence in the shaping of the national + government, or have a striking political, social, or economical history. + With Maps and indexes. Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 2. Virginia. By John Esten Cooke. + 3. Oregon. By Rev. William Barrows. + 4. Maryland. By William Hand Browne. + 5. Kentucky. By Prof. N.S. Shaler. + 6. Kansas. By Prof. Leverett W. Spring. + 7. Michigan. By Hon. T.M. Cooley. + + + _American Men of Letters_. + _Edited by Charles Dudley Warner_. + + A series of biographies of distinguished American authors, having all + the special interest of biography, and the larger interest and value + of illustrating the different phases of American literature, and the + social, political, and moral influences which have moulded these authors + and the generation to which they belonged. + + The volumes contain Portraits of their subjects. Each volume, uniform. + 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 8. Washington Irving. By C.D. Warner. + 9. Noah Webster. By Horace E. Scudder. + 10. Henry D. Thoreau. By F.B. Sanborn. + 11. George Ripley. By O.B. Frothingham. + 12. J.F. Cooper. By Prof. T.R. Lounsbury. + 13. Margaret F. Ossoli. By T.W. Higginson. + 14. Ralph W. Emerson. By O.W. Holmes. + 15. Edgar A. Poe. By Geo. E. Woodberry. + 16. Nathaniel P. Willis. By Henry A. Beers. + + + _American Statesmen_. + _Edited by John T. Morse, Jr._ + + The object of this series of lives of American Statesmen is to furnish + volumes which shall embody the compact result of extensive study of the + many influences which have combined to shape the political history of + our country. + + Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 17. John Quincy Adams. By J.T. Morse, Jr. + 18. Alexander Hamilton. By H.C. Lodge. + 19. John C. Calhoun. By Dr. H. Von Hoist. + 20. Andrew Jackson. By Prof. W.G. Sumner. + 21. John Randolph. By Henry Adams. + 22. James Monroe. By Pres. D.C. Gilman. + 23. Thomas Jefferson. By J.T. Morse, Jr. + 24. Daniel Webster. By H.C. Lodge. + 25. Albert Gallatin. By John A. Stevens. + 26. James Madison. By Sidney H. Gay. + 27. John Adams. John. T. Morse, Jr. + 28. John Marshall. By Allan B. Magruder. + 29. Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer. + 30. Martin Van Buren. By Wm. Dorsheimer. + 31. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips. By George L. Austin. + Price $1.50. + 32. The Life and Deeds of Gen. U.S. Grant. By P.C. Headly and G.L. + Austin. Price $1.50. + 33. The Life of Henry W. Longfellow. By Francis H. Underwood. + Price $1.50. + + + _Atlantic Portraits_. + + Life-size Portraits of the following American authors, lithographed in + the best manner, and suitable for the study or the school-room. Each + picture measures 34 by 30 inches, and is forwarded by mail, carefully + rolled. + + 34. Oliver Wendell Holmes. + 35. James Russell Lowell. + 36. William Cullen Bryant. + 37. John G. Whittier. + 38. Henry W. Longfellow. + 39. Nathaniel Hawthorne. + 40. Ralph Waldo Emerson. + + + These are real Steel Plate Portraits, superbly printed upon heavy fine + plate paper, 9 1-2 by 12 inches. Lowest cash price of each, 25 cents. + + 41. Four Elegant steel plate portraits to be selected from the + following list:-- + + The Great War Governor, John A. Andrew. + Ex-Governor John D. Long. + Ex-Governor William Gaston. + Gen. U.S. Grant. + President James A. Garfield. + President Grover Cleveland. + + + Any one or more of the above books or portraits will be sent by us + carriage free to any part of the United States or Provinces upon receipt + of Price. + + Remit by Post-Office order, draft, express or Registered Letter to + TREASURER, BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY, 43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + + COMMENTS OF THE PRESS. + + + The following expressions of editorial opinions are entirely from press + notices of the August and September (1885) numbers:-- + + Its portraits are excellent.--_Daily Gate City_ (Keokuk Ia.) + + Should be well patronized by people of this state.--_The Republic_ + (Boston) + + The whole magazine seems to us delightfully provincial.--_Chicago + Advance._ + + Now takes its place among the most important magazines.--_Philadelphia + Press._ + + The literary contents are brilliant and interesting.--_Washington_ + (D.C.) _Sunday Gazette._ + + It is a monthly that should be in every Massachusetts + home.--_Webster_ (Mass.) _Eagle_. + + The illustrations are drawn and engraved with admirable + clearness.--_Boston Evening Transcript._ + + Its ability and breadth of interest entitle it to a continent of + readers.--_Brooklyn Daily Times._ + + The articles (Sept.) are varied, carefully prepared and full of + interest.--_Boston Daily Advertiser._ + + For interesting, finely illustrated reading material this monthly is + unsurpassed.--_Times_ (Webster, Mass.) + + The illustrations are superior, among the best we have seen in any + magazine.--_Pittsburg Christian Advocate._ + + Full of reminiscences and history of the grand old New England + Commonwealth.--_Buffalo Christian Advocate._ + + If the _Bay State_ keeps up to the mark of this number (Sept.) it + will fairly rank with the best magazines.--_Philadelphia American._ + + We emphasize again, this magazine should be liberally supported for its + historical value.--_Dorchester Beacon_ (Boston.) + + It looks as though there was a bright future for this representative of + the literature of the old Bay State.--_Fall River_ (Mass.) + _Monitor._ + + It is an excellent magazine, beautifully printed, charmingly + illustrated, and always filled with attractive articles.--_Salem_ + (Mass.) _Register._ + + The Bay State Monthly has leaped into a first class magazine, in all + respects second to none in the country.--_Peabody_ (Mass.) + _Reporter._ + + This magazine has increased wonderfully in appearance as well as in text + ... is a credit to our state and should be well supported.--_Salem_ + (Mass.) _Observer._ + + The magazine deserves well of every one who would be informed of the + colonial history of New England.--_Newark_ (N.J.) _Daily + Advertiser._ + + The Bay State Monthly has a delightful New England flavor ... and is + taking more and more a hitherto unoccupied field.--_Boston Herald._ + + The Bay State Monthly steadily grows in usefulness and interest.... + This magazine deserves a generous support.--_N.E. Homestead_ + (Springfield Mass.) + + The Bay State fills a needed place in its local history and biography + and deserves the success that undoubtedly awaits it.--_Boston Evening + Traveller._ + + Several of its papers have sterling merit, and all are able and + entertaining and give promise to the magazine of an individuality that + will make it a power.--_Boston Daily Globe._ + + The Bay State Monthly has improved the most rapidly and attained the + highest rank of any similar venture in the history of American + periodical literature.--_Somerville Journal._ + + The Bay State Monthly is one of the standard publications of its class. + It is not surpassed by any of its elders in the matter of chaste + typography and beauty of illustration, while its literary conception and + display are of intrinsic worth.--_Gazette and Chronicle._ + (Pawtucket R.I.) + + We feel sure that all who read the September issue of this monthly will + unite in paying tribute to the excellent quality of the reading + material, the artistic merit of the wood engraving, the aptness of the + subjects chosen for presentation, and the earnestness and faithfulness + with which Editor and Publisher do their work.--_Providence + Journal._ + +======================================================================= + + + ESTABLISHED 1871. + + THE SOUTH + A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress. + + The SOUTH is the oldest journal in the country devoted exclusively to + the developement of the Southern States, and is indispensable to + business men. + + Subscription Price, $3.00 a year. + + _The South Publishing Company_ + 85 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + VICTOR L. CHANDLER + ENGRAVER ON WOOD + 43 MILK ST. BOSTON MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + Are You Out Of PAPER? Or Stationery Of Any Kind? + + If so come to our store. If you cannot do that conveniently, drop us a + postal and we will send you FREE a complete set of samples of the best + Foreign and American writing papers with prices, and full information as + to sheets to the pound, sizes, cost of envelopes to match, etc. Papers + from 17 cents to $1.00 per pound. By mail 17 cents per pound extra. + + WARD & GAY, + Paper Merchants AND Stationers, + 184 Devonshire St., Boston. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + Tailoring Done as it should be. + H.E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston + +======================================================================= + + + THE LARGEST AND BEST HOUSE TO BUY SHADE GOODS FROM. + + CUSHMAN BROS., AND CO., + + MANUFACTURERS OF + + [Illustration: CUSHMAN'S SELF-ACTING SHADE ROLLER] + + Shade Rollers, Window Shades, Brass and Nickel Shade Trimmings, + Hollands and Upholsterer's Hardware. + + IMPORTERS OF + + KING'S FIRST QUALITY SCOTCH HOLLANDS. + + 82, 84 & 86 HAWLEY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + ==> An inspection of our stock is cordially invited. +-------------------------------------- + + ARTISTS' MATERIALS. + + _Decorative Art Goods._ + Mathematical Instruments, + Architects' & Engineers Supplies, etc., etc. + ====== + + FROST AND ADAMS, IMPORTERS + No. 37 Cornhill, Boston. + + F.S. FROST. H.A. LAWRENCE. + + Illustrated catalogue free. Mention this magazine. +-------------------------------------- + + Mayo's Vegetable Anaesthetic. + ====== + + A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether, and all + other anaesthetics. Discovered by Dr. U.K. Mao, April, 1884, and since + administered by him and others in over 106,000 cases successfully. + Compounded from nervines which impart oxygen to sustain life, (Nitrous + oxide gas, as administered, is destitute of this and tends to produce + convulsions and suffocation). The youngest child, the most sensitive + lady, and those having heart disease and lung complaint, inhale this + vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation and builds up the + tissues. Recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous prostration. + Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families supplied. For + further information, pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to Dr. U.K. + MAYO, Dentist, 378 Tremont street, Boston, Mass. + ====== + + INDORSEMENT OF THE LATE DR. THORNDIKE. + + BOSTON, August 15, 1883. + + This certifies that I removed in the back of Mr. J.D. Moore a tumor + weighing two pounds and three-quarters. The time occupied was twenty-two + minutes. The patient was insensible during the whole operation, and came + out from the influence of the anaesthetic speedily and perfectly, + without nausea or any ill effects. The agent used was prepared by Dr. + U.K. Mayo, the dentist, a new discovery of his own. I consider this + anaesthetic the safest the world has yet seen. + + WM. H. THORNDIKE, M.D., 92 Boylston, Street. + +======================================================================= + + + S.M. SPENCER'S + STENCIL AND RUBBER STAMP WORKS, 112 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, MASS. + + SEAL PRESSES, + WAX SEALS, + STEEL STAMPS, + STEEL ALPHABETS and FIGURES, + BRASS ALPHABETS, + COMBINATION NUMBERING WHEELS, + BRUSHES, + INK, ALL COLORS, + INDELIBLE INK, + RUBBER STAMP INK, + SELF-INKING PADS, + KEY CHECKS, + BAGGAGE and HOTEL CHECKS, + BRASS CHECKS, + RUBBER STAMPS, (with 120 styles of letters to select from.) + SELF-INKING RUBBER STAMPS, (more than 30 different styles.) + DATING & RECEIPTING STAMPS, (10 different styles.) + PENCIL and POCKET STAMPS, + PRINTING WHEELS, + METAL BODIED RUBBER FACED TYPE, (for hand printing.) + SHOE LINING STAMPS, + AUTOMATIC NUMBERING STAMPS, + RUBBER NUMBERING STAMPS, + STENCIL DIES, + BURNING BRANDS. + + + AGENTS' OUTFITS For Stencils, Key Checks, and Rubber Stamp Work, and + all reliable goods connected with the business wholesale and retail. + + _Send for illustrated catalogue. All goods first-class and warranted + in every respect._ +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + GLOBE LETTER FILING _CABINETS_. + + _Most Perfect System Known._ + + All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files. + + Over $20,000 worth in use in Boston alone. + + _Quick Reference_. + _No Mutilation of Papers_. + _Rapid Filing_. + _Handsome Workmanship_. + + W.W. EDWARDS, SELLING AGENT, + _The Globe Files Company_, 166 Devonshire St., Boston. + + SCRAP FILES. ROLL TOP DESKS. + PAMPHLET CASES. CLOTH BOXES, all sizes. + DOCUMENT BOXES. LAWYERS FILING CASES. + NICKLE CLIP BOARDS. CASES for Price Lists, etc. + + ESTIMATES Furnished of filing devices for Banks, Railroads, + Mercantile Firms, Insurance Companies, etc. + + _N.B. Correspondence Solicited._ + +======================================================================= + + + THE NEW HIGH ARM DAVIS VERTICAL FEED _SEWING MACHINE_. + + [Illustration] + + Surprises and pleases all. + + A novice can produce work without basting, that skilled operators dare + not attempt on under-feed machines. + + No change is made in running, from finest muslin to heavy leather. + + It is readily applied to any specialties that cannot be handled by + others. + + Simplicity in construction is one of our important points, as we gain + strength and durability, and a perfect working machine at all times. + + Time and labor saved in dressmaking, as it has the largest variety and + most perfect working attachments. + + This feed is absolutely perfect, and no care is required on the part of + the operator in passing over seams or uneven places. + + Will not full or stretch the softest of fabrics. + + The stitch is very elastic, and the same on both sides. + + One-half hour spent at any of our offices will more than verify our + statements. + + Do not fail to examine the Davis before purchasing. + + BOSTON: 158 Tremont St. + CLEVELAND: 113-121 North Side Public Sq. + CHICAGO: 46-50 Jackson St. +-------------------------------------- + + HOLYOKE, MASS. WINDSOR HOTEL. + GEO. H. BOWKER, Proprietor, + + First-class in all its appointments. + Free carriage to and from all trains. +-------------------------------------- + + "IT STANDS AT THE HEAD." + The "Caligraph." + + [Illustration] + + The "Caligraph" received the only medal awarded type-bar writing + machines at the WORLD'S FAIR. To silence the assertions and claims of + our worthy competitor, we publish the following:-- + + + "New Orleans World's Fair, June 10, 1885 + + "To whom it may concern,--The 'Caligraph' manufactured by the American + Writing Co. received the medal. + + "L.D. CARROLL, Depart. of Awards." + + + "New Orleans, June 20, 1885. + + "The Remington type-writer received no award. + + "GUS. A. BREAUX, Chairman of Awards." + + + "New Orleans, June 30, 1885. + + "Jury on type-writers was Coleman, Cook and Thoens. Report published by + Remington is _unauthorized and not official_. + + "GUS. A. BREAUX, Chairman of Dep't of Awards." + ====== + + For circulars and specimens of writing, apply to THE AMERICAN WRITING + MACHINE CO., Hartford, Conn. + + New York Office, 237 Broadway. + W.M. BELCHER & CO. New England Agent, BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + THE MASSACHUSETTS RELIEF ASSOCIATION. + (Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts.) + 31 Milk (Elevator), 8 Hawley, 9 Arch Sts., Rooms 49 & 50, BOSTON. + JNO. F. WOOD, _Pres't_. R.T. RYDER, _Sec'y_. JOHN PEARCE, _Treas._ + ====== + + _Issue in one Certificate, Insurance as desired of from $1,000 to + $5,000, payable at Death, but covering Sickness, Accident and Total + Disability for Life._ + ====== + + SPECIAL FEATURES. + + In case of Sickness or Accident, the afflicted member is entitled to + from $5 to $25 per week, according to the amount of + Insurance, while totally incapacitated for work. + + If, from any cause, a member is totally disabled for life, the whole + amount of Insurance money, as in case of death, is paid at once to him + while living. + + This is just what has long been wanted. It covers all contingencies of + life and is not expensive. + + Full particulars how to become a member, together with blank forms will + be sent to any address upon application. + ====== + A FEW GOOD AGENTS ALWAYS WANTED. +-------------------------------------- + + REDUCTION OF FARE TO NEW YORK + VIA + FALL RIVER LINE. + + Only $3.00 For First Class Limited Tickets. + + Special express leaves Boston from OLD COLONY STATION week days + at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 + minutes with the steamers PILGRIM and BRISTOL. Annex + steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. + Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner + of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station. + + _J.R. KENDRICK, General Manager._ + _L.H. PALMER, Agent, 3 Old State House._ + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration: LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE.] + + _LACTART._ + (MILK ACID.) +----FOR---- + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain. + _A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY._ + + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or _ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE_. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. _SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS._ + + AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St., BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. + + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. + + FAIRBANKS AND COLE, + _MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS_, + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + SIMPSON SPRING WATER. + + SPRING HOUSE _AND_ Bottling Establishment_ + + SO. EASTON, MASS. + +[Illustration: Map] + + + This is the Purest and Most Effective of all Medicinal Spring Waters. + Possessing remarkable Curative Properties for diseases of the + _STOMACH_, _LIVER_, _KIDNEYS_ and _BLADDER_. + + A MILD CATHARTIC AND ACTIVE DIURETIC. + + PROF. RAPHAEL PUMPELLY, Chemist National Board of Health. + + [NOTE.--This analysis, with a letter of recommendation from Prof. + Pumpelly, was read before the Newport Sanitary Protective Society, + Jan. 12, 1884.] + + _PARTS IN 1,000,000_ + + Total Residue 44.6 + Silica 11.5 + Iron and Alumina 0.7 + Lime 10.5 + Magnesia 1.5 + Chlorine 4.6 + Ammonia 0.06 + Albumoid Ammonia 0.06 + + The above analysis shows a total residue of about 2.6 grains in one + gallon of 231 cubic inches. + + The object of the above analysis is to show the great purity of this + water. Its curative properties cannot be determined by a chemical + analysis. No combination of the above-mentioned minerals alone would + produce the same effects. The Spring possesses a peculiarity and an + individuality of its own which no one ever has been able to explain. + It is one of Nature's remedies. Its medicinal effects can only be + determined by a thorough trial. + + + Messrs. HOWARD BROS., + BOSTON, April 24, 1885. + + _Dear Sirs_,--"After many careful trials of the Simpson Spring + Water in urinary disorders, extending over one year, I am convinced + (despite my previous prejudices, excited by the extravagant claims made + for other Springs,) that its _properties_ are _characteristic_, and as + _clinically trustworthy_ as are those of terebinthina, lithia, or many + other of the partially proven drugs. I have found it surprisingly + gratifying as an adjuvant in the cure of albuminuria, and in lowering + the specific gravity of the urine in Saccharine Diabetes its action is + promptly and lastingly helpful. It is mildly cathartic and an active + diuretic." + + DR. J. HEBER SMITH, + _Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of + Medicine._ + + Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and + Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by + + _HOWARD BROS., Managers_, + 117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.) + ==OR== + GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York. + +======================================================================= + + + CANTON BLEACH. + + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. + + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. + + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. + + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. + + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have _examined the_ + "_Canton Bleach_." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + _see the goods_; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, _to see if the stamp_ "Canton Bleach" is on it. + + NOTICE.--Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by MESSRS. C.F. HOVEY & CO., SHEPARD, + NORWELL & CO., HOGG, BROWN & TAYLOR, CHANDLER & CO., R.H. WHITE & CO., + JORDAN, MARSH & CO., and others. + + [Illustration: CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882] + + [Illustration: TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK] + + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. + + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the + + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + EDWARD W. HOWE, Treas. + JAS. L. LITTLE, JR., Pres. + +======================================================================= + + + An Entirely New Edition of Lord Byron's + + CHILDE HAROLD, + + WITH NUMEROUS NEW AND BEAUTIFUL ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD. + + THE DRAWINGS BY + + Harry Fenn, F. Myruck, S.L. Smith, G.G. Harley, E.H. Garrett, G. Perkins, + F.B. Schell, J.D. Woodward, and L.S. Ipsen. + + _Drawn and Engraved under the Supervision of A.V.S. Anthony._ + + PRICE IN CLOTH, $6.00; IN ANTIQUE MOROCCO on TREE CALF, $10.00, IN + CRUSHED LEVANT, WITH SILK LININGS, $25.00. + + "CHILDE HAROLD" is the most famous of the poems of Lord Byron, and + abounds in the most picturesque and attractive scenes and subjects for + illustration; including the beautiful scenery of the Rhine, and of Italy + and Greece, and the rich treasures of art and history in the classic + countries around the Mediterranean. + + The best American artists have drawn these illustrations, _con + amore_, producing a great number of very choice examples of the high + perfection which wood-engraving has reached in the New World. The + general supervision of the work has devolved upon Mr. A.V.S. ANTHONY, + who held the same relation to the recent magnificent editions of + "Lucille" "The Lady of the Lake," "The Princess," and "Marmion;" thus + ensuring the utmost accuracy in study, taste in composition, and + elegance in finish. + + The Publishers believe that in this form and with this elegance of + finish the work will be widely welcomed as a Fine Art Edition, and + become the + + LEADING HOLIDAY GIFT-BOOK OF THE YEAR. + + "In every respect a beautiful book. It is printed from new plates and + its many illustrations have been furnished by artists famous in their + line. It is even more attractive than its handsome predecessors, the + 'Marmion' and the Lady of the Lake."--Boston Traveller. + + "The most talked of Book since 'Daniel Deronda.'" + + + The Rise of Silas Lapham. + By WILLIAM D. HOWELLS. 1 vol. 12mo. + + "No novel since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' has been so extensively read by + business men. Mr. Howell's literary work has broadened and deepened into + this, the latest and most important, and we think his best work,"--says + the _New Jerusalem Messenger_. + + + For a Woman. + By NORA TERRY, 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00. + + An admirable Story of modern life in America. + + "Her prose is always as charming as her poetry, which is saying a great + deal.--_Boston Transcript_. + + "Nora Perry is the only poet of pure passion in America."--D.A. WASSON, + in _Boston Transcript_. + + + Social Silhouettes. + By EDGAR FAWCETT. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "All Gotham is busy gossiping over Edgar Fawcett's series of social + Silhouettes,' and everybody has his pet theory as to whom is deliniated + in each portrait."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + In Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery of New Orleans. + + By WM. MILLER OWEN, First Lieutenant and Adjutant B.W.A. Illustrated + with 8 maps and four engravings. 8vo. $3.00. + + A stirring narrative of events during the late Civil War, from Bull Run + to Seven Pines, Antietam and Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, + Gettysburg, Chickamaugu, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomatox and Spanish + Fort. Compiled by the adjutant from his diary and from documents and + Orders. + + "It is indeed, the most interesting, authentic and reliable contribution + to our war literature yet seen."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + + The Haunted Adjutant; and Other Stories. + By EDMUND QUINCY. Edited by his son, Edmund Quincy. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Quincy possessed the Imaginative faculty, and the instructive + faculty in larger measure than any of his countrymen, Hawthorne, perhaps + excepted, and Hawthorne, if his equal, was not his superior."--_Boston + Traveller_. + + + Aulnay Tower. + By BLANCHE WILLIS HOWARD. 12mo. $1.50. + + "A story which, for absorbing interest, brilliancy of style, charm of + graphic character drawing, and exquisite literary quality, will hold its + rank among the best work in American fiction."--_Boston Traveller_. + + + Love; or, A Name. + By JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Hawthorne has a more powerful imagination than any contemporary + write of fiction."--_The Academy (London)_. + + + A Narrative of Military Service. + By Gen. W.B. HAZEN. 1 vol. 8vo. With Maps, Plans and Illustrations. + $3.00. + + "There can be no doubt, we think, that it will be eagerly read, + particularly by the brave soldiers whom he led at Shiloh, who held the + crest at Stone Ridge, who stood firm under his eye at Chickamauga, who + floated with him by night under the shadow of Lookout Mountain down to + Brown's Ferry, who received his order to climb the fence of Mission + Ridge who helped to take Atlanta, who marched to the sea, who swarmed + over the parapets of Fort McAllister, who made the triumphant campaign + of the Carolinas, and passed in review before the President."--_New + York Mail and Express_. + + _For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the + Publishers_. + + TICKNOR & CO., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + _OUR GREAT PREMIUM OFFER._ + + Every subscriber sending address together with $3.00 for one year's + subscription to the BAY STATE MONTHLY before January 1, 1886, may choose + one of the following valuable books, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive, as + a premium. In ordering from 1 to 30 inclusive, fifteen cents must be + added to pay postage; and in ordering a premium numbered 31, 32 or 33, + forty cents must be added to pay postage and extra cost of book. + + 1. Uncle Tom's Cabin. By Harriet Beecher Stowe, cloth, price, $1.00. + + _American Commonwealths_. + _Edited by Horace E. Scudder_. + + A series of volumes narrating the history of such States of the Union as + have exerted a positive influence in the shaping of the national + government, or have a striking political, social, or economical history. + With Maps and indexes. Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 2. Virginia. By John Esten Cooke. + 3. Oregon. By Rev. William Barrows. + 4. Maryland. By William Hand Browne. + 5. Kentucky. By Prof. N.S. Shaler. + 6. Kansas. By Prof. Leverett W. Spring. + 7. Michigan. By Hon. T.M. Cooley. + + + _American Men of Letters_. + _Edited by Charles Dudley Warner_. + + A series of biographies of distinguished American authors, having all + the special interest of biography, and the larger interest and value + of illustrating the different phases of American literature, and the + social, political, and moral influences which have moulded these authors + and the generation to which they belonged. + + The volumes contain Portraits of their subjects. 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Longfellow in His Library + At "Craigie House," Old Cambridge, Mass. + ====== + + The following are a few endorsements among many others of like high + character that have been given after a critical inspection of the + engraving, viz: + + _John. J. Platt, the poet says_: The likeness is an excellent one. + It represents our beloved and lamented poet in his most familiar + atmosphere. Longfellow was a poet of home and its affections, and this + engraving should be in every American home. + + _John B. Peaslee, Superintendent of Public Schools, Cincinnati, O., + says_: Beyond question, HOLLYER'S portrait of LONGFELLOW is the most + accurate and life-like that has appeared. It is a great work, and will + speedily find its way into our cultured American homes. + + _The Boston Daily Globe says_: HOLLYER has certainly achieved an + artistic triumph. The portrait of LONGFELLOW is one of _the best_ + that has been issued. + + _The Providence (R.I.) 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BISHOP, + + Author of "The House of a Merchant Prince." + + MR. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL + + Will write for THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY during 1886. + + MR. JOHN FISKE + + Will contribute six or more papers on United States History, covering + the period from the Revolution to the adoption of the Constitution. + These papers discuss a portion of American history very imperfectly + known, and cannot fail to be exceedingly engaging by reason of Mr. + Fiske's ample knowledge and perfectly clear style. + + MR. PHILIP GILBERT HAMERTON, + + The distinguished English writer, will furnish a series of articles + comparing French and English people, character, opinions, customs, etc. + Mr. Hamerton is peculiarly qualified, by his intimate knowledge of the + French as well as of his fellow-countrymen, to write on this subject. + + TERMS: $4.00 a year, in advance, POSTAGE FREE; 35 cents a number. With + superb life-size portrait of Hawthorne, Emerson, Longfellow, Bryant, + Whittier, Lowell, or Holmes, $5.00; each additional portrait, $1.00. + + _Postal notes and money are at the risk of the sender, and therefore + remittances should be made by money-order, draft, or registered letter + to_ + + HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, 4 PARK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK'S + Remarkable Stories. + ====== + + THE PROPHET OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS. + ==> _SEVENTH THOUSAND_. $1.25. + + This is one of the most noteworthy of American novels. The striking + figure and fate of "the prophet," the cave and stealthy operations of + the "moonshiners," and the engaging love story which runs as a golden + thread through it all, are depicted with great power and fascination. + ====== + + IN THE TENNESSEE MOUNTAINS. + + Eight short stories of marvellous power and beauty. $1.25. + ==> _THIRTEENTH EDITION._ + ====== + + DOWN THE RAVINE. + With Illustrations. $1.00. + + A very engaging story of East Tennessee life, equally interesting to + parents and children. +-------------------------------------- + + Life and Letters of Louis Agassiz. + + By Elizabeth C. Agassiz. With Portraits and several + Illustrations. 2 vols. crown 8vo, $4.00. + + Mrs. Agassiz has written in the most delightful manner the story of the + great naturalist's life, and has woven into the narrative a large number + of his letters, the whole forming a peculiarly attractive biography and + a work of remarkable value and interest to all students of Natural + History. + ====== + + THE BIGLOW PAPERS. + + By James Russell Lowell. First and Second Series. In the + Riverside Aldine Series. 2 vols. 16mo, $2.00. + + "The greatest of all American humorists is James Russell Lowell, and + greatest of all American books of humor is the Biglow + Papers."--_North British Review._ + ====== + + Two Years Before the Mast. + + Sailor Life in a Voyage around Cape Horn to and from San Francisco, and + in California. By Richard H. Dana, Jr. New Popular Edition. Price + reduced from $1.50 to $1.00. + ====== + + LARS: A Pastoral of Norway. + + By Bayard Taylor. In Riverside Literature Series. With a + Biographical Sketch and Notes. Paper, 15 cents. +-------------------------------------- + + _For sale by all Booksellers. Sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt + of price, by the Publishers_, HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston, Mass. + +======================================================================= + + + SPRINGER BROS., + + [Illustration] + + Respectfully invite the attention of Ladies to their extensive and + attractive display of + + Fashionable Cloaks, + Short Wraps, + Newmarkets, + Plush Sacques, + Walking-Jackets + + And Ladies Outside Garments of every description just opened at the + + NEW RETAIL DEPARTMENT FOR THE + Fall and Winter Season of 1885-86. + + Ladies who have never yet visited this establishment will be surprised + at the elegance of the spacious salesrooms and the superior grades of + goods therein displayed. + + SPRINGER BROS., + Importers, Wholesale and Retail Manufacturers. + Chauncy Street, Essex Street and Harrison Avenue, + (One Block from Washington Street.) BOSTON. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + ADAMSON'S BOTANIC COUGH BASALM + + _FOR THE CURE OF COUGHS, COLDS, SORE THROAT, HOARSENESS, CROUP, + ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, BLEEDING AND SORENESS OF LUNGS AND WHOOPING COUGH, + AND ALL DISEASES LEADING TO CONSUMPTION_. + + Pleasant, and Cures as by Magic. + + Sold by Druggists & Medicine Dealers Everywhere. Price, 10, 35 & 75 cts. + + F.W. Kinsman & Co., PROPRIETORS _343 4th Av. New York_ +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + RELIEF AND SHOULDER AND SKIRT SUPPORTING CORSETS + SOLD AND FITTED BY MRS. L. LANDON, 25 WINTER ST., ROOM 22, + FORMERLY WITH MME. GRISWOLD. + +======================================================================= + + + THE MASSACHUSETTS RELIEF ASSOCIATION. + (Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts.) + 31 Milk (Elevator), 8 Hawley, 9 Arch Sts., Rooms 49 & 50, BOSTON. + + JNO. F. WOOD, _Pres't_. R.T. RYDER, _Sec'y_. JOHN PEARCE, _Treas._ + + * * * * * + + _Issue in one Certificate, Insurance as desired of from $1,000 to + $5,000, payable at Death, but covering Sickness, Accident and Total + Disability for Life._ + + * * * * * + + SPECIAL FEATURES. + + In case of Sickness or Accident, the afflicted member is entitled to + from $5 to $25 per week, according to the amount of + Insurance, while totally incapacitated for work. + + If, from any cause, a member is totally disabled for life, the whole + amount of Insurance money, as in case of death, is paid at once to him + while living. + + This is just what has long been wanted. It covers all contingencies of + life and is not expensive. + + Full particulars how to become a member, together with blank forms will + be sent to any address upon application. + + A FEW GOOD AGENTS ALWAYS WANTED. +-------------------------------------- + + REDUCTION OF FARE TO NEW YORK + VIA + FALL RIVER LINE. + + Only $3.00 For First Class Limited Tickets. + + Special express leaves Boston from OLD COLONY STATION week days + at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 + minutes with the steamers PILGRIM and BRISTOL. Annex + steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. + Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner + of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station. + + _J.R. KENDRICK, General Manager._ + _L.H. PALMER, Agent, 3 Old State House._ + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration: LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE.] + + _LACTART._ + (MILK ACID.) + ====FOR==== + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain. + _A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY._ + + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or _ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE_. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. _SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS._ + + AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St., BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. + + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. + + FAIRBANKS AND COLE, + _MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS_, + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + A Splendid Christmas Gift! + Ladies Do Your Own Stamping! + + With our New ONE DOLLAR Outfit + You can _SAVE MONEY_ by doing your own Stamping + + You can _MAKE MONEY_ by doing it for others. + + Good $5 Stamping Outfit for $1.00 + + 35 Parchment Stamping Patterns full size, + retail price 10 c. each. $3.50 + 26 Initials, size 1-1/2 in. for Hatbands, Handkerchiefs, &c. .75 + 1 Illustrated Book of Instruction in Kensington Embroidery Work. .10 + 1 Felt Stamping Pad, imp, pat. .15 + 1 Box best Stamping Powder .15 + 1 Felt Tidy, with design stamped all ready to work, with 4 knots + of silk and needle .35 + ======== + Retail Value $5.00 + + Teaches also How to Stamp Plush Felt, &c. Teaches the Kensington, + Plush Ribbon and other stitches. Also How to Do Kensington, Lustre + Painting, &c. The patterns contained in this outfit are all useful and + desirable for stamping Hatbands, Lamp and Table-Mats, Tidies, Doylies + Towel Racks Lambrequins, Splashers, etc. + + 1 vine of Roses, 2-1/2 in. wide + 1 little Girl, 5 in. high + 1 Kitten, 3-1/2 in. high + 1 little Butterfly + 1 little Bird + 1 Bird, 4x5 inches + 1 design, Two Owls on Branch + 1 Star and Anchor + 1 design of Child's Face + 1 Sprig of Daisies, 4x5 in. + 1 single Rose and Bud, 2x2 in. + 1 bunch of Pansies, 4x5 in. + 1 bunch of Roses & Buds, 3x5 in. + 1 sprig of Golden Rod, 4 in. high + 1 sprig of Daisies, 4 in. high + 1 sprig of Smilax, 5 in. high + 1 single Buttercup, 2x2 in. + 1 sprig of Asters, 2x3-1/2 in. + 1 sprig of Barberries, 3 in. high + 1 vine of Leaves, 1-1/2 in. wide + 1 growing design of Violets, for Lambrequins, &c. 6 inches high + 1 single Daisy and Forget-me-not, 2x2 in. + 1 sprig of Bachelor's Button, 3-1/2 in. high + 1 cluster of Strawberries, 2-1/2x3 in. + 1 sprig of Forget-me-nots, 1-1/2x2 in. + 1 bouquet of Daisies and Forget-me-nots 5x6 in. + 1 vine of Daisies and Ferns, 5-1/2 in. wide + 1 vine of Point Russe Stitches, 1-1/4 in. wide + Snow-flake designs for Crazy Patchwork + 1 strip of Scallops for Skirts, Infant's Blanket &c + 1 vine with Scallop, 2-1/2 in. wide + 1 Braiding Vine, 2 in. wide + 1 Braiding Vine, 1-1/2 in. wide + Design for Crying Child for Tidy in outline + 1 outline design, Boy and Girl Skating, 7 in. high + + + With the Outfit You Can Learn the Art of the Kensington Embroidery. + You can learn Perforated Stamping, and do your own stamping. You can + adorn your house with hundreds of beautiful articles of Kensington + Embroidery. You can teach the art of Kensington Embroidery and Stamping + and do embroidery for others. Many young ladies who begin business with + our Embroidery Outfit, are now doing a very pretty and paying business + in their own houses. REMEMBER the entire Outfit will be sent in a box + for only ONE DOLLAR, TWO outfits $1.75, FOUR outfits for ONLY THREE + DOLLARS. Get three of your friends to send with you and get your own + OUTFIT FREE! Send Postal Note, Money Order or Registered Letter. + Postage Stamps taken. Send all orders to World Man'f'g Co. 122 Nassau + Street, New York. + + * * * * * + + _It is seldom that we have an opportunity to direct attention to + anything so really worthy of notice as this Complete Stamping Outfit. + While the price is almost ridiculously low for the entire outfit, the + number, excellence and variety of the articles furnished almost exceeds + belief. Even for a family to do its own stamping the outfit would be of + great service; but when it is realised, that by means of the + instruction, samples and materials that are included as "Outfits," any + lady can easily become a proficient in making choice Kensington Lace of + most elegant and graceful patterns, and become skilled in executing + every description of perforated stamping and thus make a nice addition + to her income in a very easy and pleasant way, it would seem that + scarcely anyone would neglect taking advantage of so favorable an + opportunity. These stamping outfits are particularly appropriate for + holiday presents and, in our opinion, well worthy of attentive, + consideration._ + +======================================================================= + + + THE PROVIDENT SAVINGS LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. + + OFFICE: BRYANT BUILDING, 55 LIBERTY STREET, NEW YORK. + + RENEWABLE TERM INSURANCE + + COMBINES THE CHEAPNESS AND CONVENIENCE AFFORDED BY THE BEST ASSESSMENT + SOCIETIES, WITH THE SECURITY AND PERMANENCE OF THE LEVEL PREMIUM LIFE + INSURANCE COMPANIES. + + THE SAFEST, MOST ECONOMICAL, AND MOST EQUITABLE LIFE INSURANCE + OBTAINABLE. + + SHEPPARD HOMANS, PRESIDENT. + WM. E. STEVENS, SECRETARY. + + ==> SEND FOR CIRCULAR, OR CALL IN PERSON. <== + +======================================================================= + + + "GET THE BEST!!" + + THE POPULAR EDUCATOR + + Used in Thousands of Schools, + + _Should be in the Hands of Every Live Teacher._ + + * * * * * + + MONTHLY, $1.00 A YEAR. + + * * * * * + + WHAT IS SAID OF IT. + + + PROF. W.H. PAYNE, _University of Michigan_. I have received copies + of the last EDUCATOR. I think it the best issue of an educational + journal I have ever seen. + + SUPT. JOHN JONES. JR., _Marengo, Iowa_. I believe the POPULAR + EDUCATOR equal to the best. We are very much pleased with it. + + SUPT. A.P. STONE, _Mass_. An excellent and needed paper. + + CHARLES F. KING., _Boston Manager, School of Methods, Saratoga + Springs, N.Y._ The POPULAR EDUCATOR shows in its beautiful type, + convenient size, attractive appearance of each page, the number and + completeness of each department, the work of the most thorough editorial + supervision. Its writers are selected from the best in the country and + each one is a live, wide-awake, practical teacher. + + W.A. COCHRAN, _Co. Supt. of Schools, Indiana, Pa._ Am highly + pleased with the paper. + + SUPT. M.E. HARD, _Gallipolis, Ohio._ It is the best paper for the + young teacher I have ever seen. + + S.D. ANGLIN, _Co. Supt., Warsaw, Ind._ It has the "True Ring." Shall + be pleased to see a copy in the hands of every teacher in this county. + + AMOS BURNS, _Co. Supt., Columbus, Ind._ Like it very much. + + PROF. A.P. BOURLAND, _So. Western University, Tenn._ From no other + school journal do I get so much valuable practical aid. + + Miss O.A. EVERS, _Principal, N.H. Training School, Manchester, + N.H._ You have "Out-Heroded Herod." It is the best of any educational + paper I have ever read. I cannot see how you get so much together, and + not a grain of chaff. + + LEROY T. WEEKS, _Portis, Kan_. Cannot do without it. Use it in the + school-room in many ways. + + AARON SHEELY, _Co. Supt. of Schools, Adams Co., Pa._ It is the + freshest, most practical and best educational journal published in this + country. +-------------------------------------- + + TEACHERS' HAND-BOOK SERIES. + Popular School-Room Helps. + + PRIMARY READING: How to teach it. 15 c. Boston Method. Arranged by + the Supervisors of the Boston schools. Price 15 cents. The most + practical work ever published on this subject. + + INFORMATION LESSONS: Nat. Hist. 15 c. Animals, Plants, Minerals, + Theory and practice combined, with model lessons for the school-room. + + ELEMENTARY SCIENCE: Model Lessons. 15 c. Practical and + progressive, yet simple and suggestive. + + NEW SCHOOL-ROOM SPEAKER. 15 c. New Dialogues, Declamations, and + Recitations. Especially suitable for use in the school-room. + + RECITATION CARDS. 10 c. Containing memory gems for Bands of Mercy, + Arbor Days, Temperance, &c. Also, Motion songs and Recitations for + distribution among the class. + + LANGUAGE LESSON CARDS. 12 c. Containing pictures of Animals, + Birds, Insects, &c., with suggestive questions, enclosed in strong + envelope. + + EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., 43 MILK STREET. +-------------------------------------- + + TO ADVERTISERS! + Read the Following Statement. + + Sept. 19, 1885. + + I hereby certify that the subscription list of the POPULAR EDUCATOR + has increased over a thousand names, each month, during the last + three months. + + C.M. LANDER, 50 Bromfield Street, Boston, Contractor for Mailing. + + + Suffolk, ss.: + + Personally appears before me at Boston, this nineteenth day of + September. 1885, C.M. Lander, who swears the forgoing statement, by him + made, to be true. + + RUFUS G. FAIRBANKS, Justice of the Peace. + + * * * * * + + Increase of circulation from October to November ... 800 + + Educational advertisers will find this live periodical a good medium. + The rates are very _low_. Samples and terms sent on application. + Address the + + EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., 43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + + HORACE PARTRIDGE & CO. + 497 & 499 Washington St. BOSTON. 51 to 57 Hanover St., + + HEADQUARTERS ==FOR== Toys, Games ==AND== Fancy Goods, + + Being the largest Importers of Toys and Games in the United States, with + a Branch House in Frankfort, Germany, our facilities for securing all + leading novelties as they appear in the European markets, and for + furnishing same to our customers at very lowest prices, are unsurpassed. + + HORACE PARTRIDGE & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + AN ARTISTIC VADE MECUM. + THE LADIES' COMPLETE GUIDE TO FANCY WORK + AND HOME DECORATION. + + The Most Complete Work of the Kind Ever Issued. + Over 500 Illustrations. Price only 25 Cents. + + The rules and patterns given are so clearly and plainly illustrated and + described that a very _small child_ can work many of them. With + this book as an aid, every home in the land, no matter how humble, may + be as handsomely embellished as the mansion of the most wealthy, and at + a Trifling Cost. Plain and concise directions are given for doing + Kensington and Outline Embroidery, Artistic Needlework, Painting on + Silk, Velvet, and Satin, China Decorating, Darned Lace, Knitted Luce, + Crazy Patchwork, Macreme Crochet, Java Canvas Work, Feather Work, Point + Russe, Cross Stitch, Indian Work, and Turkish Drapery, Wax Flowers, + etc., etc. Among the hundred of designs given are those for + + LAMBREQUINS, DOYLIES, WORK STANDS, + MONOGRAMS, TIDIES, SOFA PILLOWS, + INITIALS, OTTOMANS, PURSES, + BORDERS, WORK BASKETS, FOOTSTOOLS, + CORNERS, BABY'S BASKETS, PICTURE FRAMES, + NORMANDY LACE, SCRAP BASKETS, PILLOW CASES, + EDGINGS, BRUSH CASES, COUNTERPANES, + TABLE MATS, LAMP SCREENS, LETTER CASES, + LAMP MATS, TOILET CUSHIONS, HAND SCREENS, + HOODS, TOILET CASES, TOILET MIRRORS, + QUILTS, PENWIPERS, BANNERS, + VALANCES, THERMOMETERS, GLOVE SACHETS, + PIANO COVERS, NEEDLE CASES, PAPER FLOWERS, + PORTFOLIOS, HANDBAGS, RUSTIC WORK, + PANELS, Etc. JEWEL CASES, Etc. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6 + +Author: Various + +Release Date: February 9, 2006 [EBook #17726] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY *** + + + + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div style="height: 6em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<a name="image-0001"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/hwp412.jpg"><img src="images/hwp412.jpg" style="width:400px;" +alt="Henry W. Paine" /></a> +<br /> +Henry W. Paine +</div> + +<p> + <span class="pagenum"><a id="page391" name="page391"></a>[pg 391]</span> +</p> + +<a name="h2H_4_0001" id="h2H_4_0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<hr /> +<h1> + THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. +</h1> +<h2> + <i>A Massachusetts Magazine.</i> +</h2> +<h3> +VOL. III. NOVEMBER, 1885. NO. VI. +</h3> + +<hr /> +<h3>Contents</h3> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0002">HENRY W. PAINE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0003">PICKETT'S CHARGE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0004">THE PATRIOT, SAMUEL ADAMS.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0005">AUTHORITATIVE LITERATURE OF THE CIVIL WAR.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0006">ASSESSMENT LIFE INSURANCE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0007">THE OLD STATE HOUSE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0008">THE PRECIOUS METALS.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0009">AMESBURY: THE HOME OF WHITTIER.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0010">KATE FIELD'S NEW DEPARTURE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0011">THE MONUMENT AND HOMESTEAD OF REBECCA NURSE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0012">THE PRESENT RESOURCES OF MASSACHUSETTS.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0013">ELIZABETH.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0017">EDITOR'S TABLE.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0018">HISTORICAL RECORD.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0019">OBITUARY.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0020">AMONG THE BOOKS.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_NOTE">NOTES AND QUERIES.</a></p> +<p class="toc"><a href="#h2H_4_0022">PUBLISHER'S DEPARTMENT.</a></p> + +<hr /> + + +<a name="h2H_4_0002" id="h2H_4_0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + HENRY W. PAINE. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Prof. William Mathews, LL.D.</span> +</h3> +<p> +Among the callings acknowledged to be not only useful, but indispensable +to society, there is no one, except the medical, which has been oftener +the butt of vulgar ridicule and abuse than the legal. "Lawyers and +doctors," says a writer on Wit and Humor in the <i>British Quarterly +Review</i>, "are the chief objects of ridicule in the jest-books of all +ages." But whatever may be the disadvantages of the Law as a profession, +in spite of the aspersions cast upon it by disappointed suitors, +over-nice moralists, and malicious wits, it can boast of one signal +advantage over all other business callings,—that eminence in it is +always a test of ability and acquirement. While in every other +profession quackery and pretension may gain for men wealth and honor, +forensic renown can be won only by rare natural powers aided by profound +learning and varied experience in trying causes. The trickster and the +charlatan, who in medicine and even in the pulpit find it easy to dupe +their fellow-men, find at the bar that all attempts to make shallowness +pass for depth, impudence for wit, and fatal for wisdom, are instantly +baffled. Not only is an acute, sagacious, and austere bench a perilous +foe to the trickery of the ignorant or half-prepared advocate, but the +veteran practitioners around him are quick to detect every sign of +mental weakness, disingenuous artifice, or disposition to substitute +sham for reality. Forensic life is, to a large extent, life in the broad +glare of day, under the scrutiny of keen-eyed observers and merciless +critics. In every cause there are two attorneys engaged, of whom one is +a sentinel upon the other; and a blunder, a slip, an exaggeration, or a +misrepresentation, never escapes without instant exposure. The popular +reputation of a lawyer, it has been well said, is but the winnowed and +sifted judgment which reaches the world through the bar, and is +therefore made up after severe ordeal and upon standard proof. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page392" name="page392"></a>[pg 392]</span> +</p> +<p> +These observations are deemed not inappropriate as an introduction to a +sketch of the life of one of the most eminent lawyers of New England, +whose career may be regarded as signally worthy of imitation. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Henry William Paine</span> was born August 30th, 1810, in Winslow, +Maine. His father, Lemuel Paine, a native of Foxborough, Mass., was a +graduate of Brown University, and a lawyer by profession, who began +practice in Winslow, Maine, in partnership with Gen. Ripley, afterwards +the hero of Lundy's Lane. Owing to poor health, Mr. Paine, sen., soon +abandoned the law for other pursuits. He was familiar with the +representative English authors, and specially fond of the Greek language +and literature, which he cultivated during his life. He had a tenacious +memory, and could quote Homer by the page. Henry Paine's mother, Jane +Thomson Warren, was the daughter of Ebenezer T. Warren, of Foxborough, +the brother of General Joseph Warren, who fell at Bunker Hill. Of the +three children of Lemuel and Jane T. (Warren) Paine, Henry William was +the second. +</p> +<p> +After the usual preparatory education, Mr. Paine entered Waterville +College (now Colby University) in 1826, and graduated in 1830, at the +age of twenty, with the highest honor of his class. During the last year +of the college course, he was principal of Waterville Academy, then just +founded for the preparation of young men for college. He spent eight +hours a day in charge of his pupils, of whom there were eighty-two, and +at the same time kept up with his class in the college studies. As a +teacher he was greatly beloved and respected by his pupils, whose +affection was won by no lack of discipline, but by his kindly sympathy, +encouragement, and watchful aid in their studies. He had an eye that +could beam with tenderness, or dart lightnings; and it was a fine moral +spectacle, illustrating the superiority of mental over physical force, +to see a bully of the school, almost twice his size, and who, +apparently, could have crushed him if he chose, quail under his eagle +gaze, when arraigned at the principal's desk for a misdemeanor. It is +doubtful if ever he flogged a scholar; but he sometimes brought the +ruler down upon the desk with a force that made the schoolroom ring, and +inspired the lawless with a very wholesome respect for his authority. +The fact that from that day to this his office has always been a kind of +Mecca, to which his old pupils, whether dwellers in "Araby the Blest" or +in the sandy wastes of life, have made pious pilgrimages, shows how +deeply he was loved and how highly he was honored as a teacher. +</p> +<p> +Immediately after graduation Mr. Paine was appointed a Tutor of +Waterville College, and discharged the duties of that office for a year. +He then began the study of law in the office of his uncle, the late +Samuel S. Warren, of China, Maine, and continued the study in the office +of William Clark, a noted lawyer in Hallowell, Maine, and, for a year, +in the Law School of Harvard University, where he was the classmate of +Charles Sumner, Wendell Phillips and B.F. Thomas. In the autumn of 1834, +he was admitted to the bar of Kennebec County, Maine. Beginning his +professional career at Hallowell, he prosecuted it there with signal +success till the summer of 1854, having for twenty years a practice not +surpassed by that of any member of the Maine bar. During the sessions of +1836, 1837, and again in that of 1853, he represented the citizens of + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page393" name="page393"></a>[pg 393]</span> + + Hallowell in the lower house of the State Legislature. He was also for +five years Attorney for Kennebec County. During his stay in Maine, he +was repeatedly offered a seat on the bench of the Supreme Judicial Court +of that State; but, having an unconquerable aversion to office of every +kind, civil or political, he declined to accept the honor pressed upon +him. In 1853 he was offered by his political friends, then the dominant +party in the Legislature, a seat in the United States Senate; but he +refused to be nominated. In the summer of 1854, in accordance with a +long cherished resolve, which he had been prevented from executing +before by a promise to his father that he would not leave Maine during +that parent's lifetime, he removed to Cambridge, Mass., and opened a +law-office in Boston. Here he at once entered upon a large and lucrative +practice, both in the State and Federal courts, which kept steadily +increasing for over twenty years, till declining health and partial +deafness compelled him to withdraw from the courts of justice, and +confine himself to office business. During this period, his opinion on +abstruse and knotty points of law was often solicited by eminent counsel +living outside of Massachusetts, and he sent written opinions to +attorneys in nine different states. As Referee and Master in Chancery, +he was called upon to arbitrate in a great number of difficult and +complicated cases, involving the ownership and disposition of large +amounts of property. His decisions in these vexed cases, which often +involved the unravelling of tangled webs of testimony, and the +consideration of the nicest and most delicate questions of law, were +luminous and masterly, and so impartial withal, that the litigants must +have often been convinced of their justness, if not contented,—<i>etaim +contra quos statuit, aequos placatosque dimisit.</i> +</p> +<p> +In 1863 and 1864 Mr. Paine was nominated, without his consent, by the +Democratic party of Massachusetts, a candidate for the office of +Governor. With much reluctance he accepted the nomination, but, as he +expected, and doubtless to his joy, failed of an election. In 1867, on +the resignation of Chief Justice Bigelow, the office of Chief Justice of +the Supreme Court of Massachusetts was offered by Governor Bullock to +Mr. Paine, who, not wishing to give up his large and profitable practice +at the bar, declined to accept. This decision, though a natural one, is +much to be regretted by the citizens of this state. Coming from an +eminently judicial mind, his decisions, had he sat on the bench, would +have been models of close, cogent reasoning, clearness, and brevity, +worthy of the best days of the Massachusetts judiciary. +</p> +<p> +Shortly after his removal to this State Mr. Paine was associated with +Rufus Choate and F.O.J. Smith in the defence of Judge Woodbury Davis, of +Portland, Maine, who had been impeached by the Legislature of that State +for misconduct in his judicial office. In an editorial article upon the +trial, which appeared after its termination, in the Kennebec Journal, +published at Augusta, the Hon. James G. Blaine, the writer, declared +epigrammatically that, in the defence of Judge Chase, "Paine furnished +the logic, Choate the rhetoric, and Smith the slang." +</p> +<p> +From 1872 to 1883 Mr. Paine was Lecturer on the Law of Real Property at +the Law School of the Boston University, an office whose duties he +performed + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page394" name="page394"></a>[pg 394]</span> + + with great credit to himself, and profit to those whom he addressed. So +thoroughly was he master of his subject, difficult and intricate as it +confessedly is, that in not a single instance, except during the +lectures of the last year, did he take a note or scrap of memoranda into +the class room. +</p> +<p> +While he has always been a close and devoted student of the law, Mr. +Paine has yet found time for general reading, and has hung for many an +hour over the pages of the English classics with keen delight. For Homer +and Virgil he still retains the relish of his early days, and, in the +intervals of professional toil, has often slaked his thirst for the +waters of Helicon in long and copious draughts. How well he appreciated +the advantages of an acquaintance with literature, he showed early in a +suggestive and instructive lecture on "Reading," which we heard him +deliver before the Lyceum at Hallowell more than forty years ago. With +his lamented friend Judge B.F. Thomas, he believes that a man cannot be +a great lawyer who is nothing else,—that exclusive devotion to the +study and practice of the law tends to acumen rather than to breadth, to +subtlety rather than to strength. "The air is thin among the apices of +the law, as on the granite needles of the Alps. Men must find +refreshment and strength in the quiet valleys at their feet." +</p> +<p> +With his brethren of the bar Mr. Paine has always held the friendliest +relations, and he has enjoyed their highest esteem. To none, even the +humblest of his fellow advocates, has he ever manifested any of the +haughtiness of a Pinkney, or any of that ruggedness and asperity which +gained for the morose and sullen Thurlow the nickname of <i>the +tiger</i>. Amid the fiercest janglings and hottest contentions of the +bar, he has never forgotten that courtesy which should mark the +collision, not less than the friendly intercourse, of cultivated and +polished minds. His victories, won easily by argumentative ability, +tact, and intellectual keenness, unaided by passion, have strikingly +contrasted with the costly victories of advocates less self-restrained. +Though naturally witty and quick at retort, he has never used the weapon +in a way to wound the feelings of an adversary. In examining and +cross-examining witnesses, he has assumed their veracity, whenever it +has been possible to do so; and though he has had the eye of a lynx and +the scent of a hound for prevarication in all its forms, yet he has +never sought by browbeating and other arts of the pettifogger, to +confuse, baffle, and bewilder a witness, or involve him in +self-contradiction. Adopting a quiet, gentle, and straightforward, +though full and careful examination, winning the good-will of the +witness, and inspiring confidence in the questioner, Mr. Paine has been +far more successful in extracting the truth, even from reluctant lips, +than the most artful legal bully. He knows that the manoeuvres and +devices which are best adapted to confuse an honest witness, are just +what the dishonest one is best prepared for. It was not for all the +blustering violence of the tempest, that the traveler would lay aside +his cloak. The result was brought about by the mild and genial warmth of +the sun. +</p> +<p> +Few advocates have had more success with juries than the subject of this +sketch. The secret of this success has been, not more the admirable +lucidity and cogency of his addresses, than the confidence and trust +with which his + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page395" name="page395"></a>[pg 395]</span> + + reputation for fairness and truthfulness, and his evident abhorrence of +exaggeration, have inspired his hearers. Another explanation is, that he +has avoided that rock on which so many advocates wreck their +cases,—prolixity. Knowing that, as Sir James Scarlett once said, when a +lawyer exceeds a certain length of time, he is always doing mischief to +his client,—that, if he drives into the heads of the jury unimportant +matter, he drives out matter more important that he had previously +lodged there,—Mr. Paine has taken care to press home the leading points +of his case, giving slight attention to the others. +</p> +<p> +That Mr. Paine has been animated in the pursuit of his profession by +higher motives than those which fire the zeal of the mere "hired master +of tongue-fence," is shown by the comparative smallness of his fees, +especially in cases exacting great labor. Great as has been his success +in winning verdicts, and sound as have been his opinions, it is doubtful +whether there is another lawyer living of equal eminence, whose charges +for legal service have been so uniformly moderate. +</p> +<p> +Reference has been made to Mr. Paine's wit. Several striking examples +might be cited; but two must suffice. Some years ago, when he was County +Attorney, a man who had been indicted in Kennebec County for arson, was +tried, and acquitted by the jury on the ground that he was an <i>idiot</i>. +After the trial, the Judge before whom the case had been tried, sought +to reconcile Mr. Paine to the verdict by some explanatory remarks. "Oh, +I'm quite satisfied, your Honor," said Mr. Paine, "with the defendant's +acquittal. He has been tried by a jury of his <i>peers</i>"—On another +occasion, Mr. Paine was making a legal argument before an eminent judge, +when he was interrupted by the latter, who said: "Mr. Paine, you know +that that is not law." "I know it, your Honor," replied the advocate, +with a deferential bow; "but it <i>was</i> law till your Honor just spoke." +</p> +<p> +From 1849 to 1862, Mr. Paine was a member of the Board of Trustees of +Waterville College. In 1851, he was elected member of the Maine +Historical Society, and also of the American Academy. In 1854, his Alma +Mater conferred on him the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. +</p> +<p> +In the relation of marriage, Mr. Paine has been very happy. In May. +1837, he was united to Miss Lucy E. Coffin, of Newburyport, a lady of +rare endowments, both of head and heart. +</p> +<p> +Few men have started in a professional career with a more vigorous and +elastic constitution than Mr. Paine's. Endowed with an iron frame and +nerves of <i>lignum vitae</i>, he very naturally felt in youth that his +fund of physical energy was inexhaustible; but, like thousands of other +professional men in this fiery and impatient age, he finds himself in +the autumn of his life afflicted with bodily ills, which he feels that +with reasonable care he might have escaped. Toiling in his profession +year after year from January to December, with no recreation, no summer +vacation, no disposition to follow the wise advice of Horace to +Torquatus,— +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i12"> rebus omissis</p> +<p class="i2"> Atria servantem postico falle clientem,</p> +</div> +</div> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page396" name="page396"></a>[pg 396]</span> + +<p><br /> + —working double tides, and crowding the work of eighty years into +forty, Mr. Paine finds that, large as was his bank account with Nature, +he has been overdrawing it for years, and that he has now to repay these +drafts with compound interest. The lesson he would have young +professional men learn from his experience, is, that they should account +no time or money wasted, that contributes in any way to their physical +health,—that gives tone to the stomach, or development to the muscles. +Let them understand that, though suffering does not follow instantly +upon the heels of transgression, yet Nature cannot be outraged with +impunity. Though a generous giver she is a hard bargainer, and a most +accurate bookkeeper, whose notice not the eighth part of a cent escapes; +and though the items with which she debits one, taken singly are +seemingly insignificant, and she seldom brings in "that little bill" +till a late day, yet, added up at the end of three score years and ten, +they may show a frightful balance against him, which can have no result +but physical bankruptcy. +</p> +<p> +In Mr. Paine's physiognomy the most noticeable features are the broad, +massive, Websterian forehead, and the sparkling eyes. +</p> +<p> +In summing up the characteristics of Mr. Paine as a lawyer and as a man, +the writer, who was his pupil at Waterville Academy, and has enjoyed his +friendship to this day, cannot do better than to cite the words of an +acute observer who has known him intimately for many years. Chief +Justice Appleton, of Maine, did not exaggerate, when he said: "He is a +gentleman of a high order of intellect; of superior culture; in private +life, one of the most genial of companions; in his profession, a +profound and learned lawyer, as well as an accomplished advocate." +</p> +<p> +To conclude,—if the subject of this imperfect sketch has occasion to +regret his excessive devotion to his calling, he can have no other +regrets. At the close of a long, most useful, and most honorable career, +which has been marked throughout by the severest conscientiousness and +the most scrupulous discharge of every professional duty, he is happily +realizing that blessedness which Sir William Blackstone, when exchanging +the worship of the Muses for that of Themis, prayed might crown the +evening of his days:— +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Thus though my noon of life be past, </p> +<p class="i2"> Yet let my setting sun at last </p> +<p class="i2"> Find out the still, the rural cell, </p> +<p class="i2"> Where sage Retirement loves to dwell! </p> +<p class="i2"> There let me taste the homefelt bliss </p> +<p class="i2"> Of innocence and inward peace; </p> +<p class="i2"> Untainted by the guilty bribe, </p> +<p class="i2"> Uncursed amid the harpy tribe; </p> +<p class="i2"> No orphan cry to wound my ear, </p> +<p class="i2"> My honor and my conscience clear; </p> +<p class="i2"> Thus may I calmly meet my end, </p> +<p class="i2"> Thus to the grave in peace descend." </p> +</div> +</div> + + +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page397" name="page397"></a>[pg 397]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0003" id="h2H_4_0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + PICKETT'S CHARGE. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Charles A. Patch, Mass., Vols.</span> +</h3> +<p> +In all great wars involving the destinies of nations, it is neither the +number of battles, nor the names, nor the loss of life, that remain +fixed in the mind of the masses; but simply the one decisive struggle +which either in its immediate or remote sequence closes the conflict. Of +the hundred battles of the great Napoleon, Waterloo alone lingers in the +memory. The Franco-Prussian War, so fraught with changes to Europe, +presents but one name that will never fade,—Sedan. Even in our own +country, how few battles of the Revolution can we enumerate; but is +there a child who does not know that Bunker Hill sounded the death-knell +of English rule in the land? And now, but twenty years since the +greatest conflict of modern times was closed at Appomattox, how few can +we readily recall of the scores of blood-stained battle-fields on which +our friends and neighbors fought and fell; but is there one, old or +young, cultured or ignorant, of the North or of the South, that cannot +speak of Gettysburg? But what is Gettysburg either in its first day's +Federal defeat, or its second day's terrible slaughter around Little +Round Top, without the <i>third</i> day's immortal charge by Pickett and +his brave Virginians. In it we have the culmination of the Rebellion. It +took long years after to drain <i>all</i> the life-blood from the foe, +but never again did the wave of Rebellion rise so gallantly high as when +it beat upon the crest of Cemetery Ridge. +</p> +<p> +The storming of the heights of Inkerman, the charge of the noble Six +Hundred, the fearful onslaught of the Guards at Waterloo, the scaling of +Lookout Mountain,—have all been sung in story, and perhaps always will +be; but they all pale beside the glory that will ever enshroud the +heroes who, with perhaps not literally "cannon to right of them" and +"cannon to left of them," but with a hundred cannon belching forth death +in <i>front</i> of them, hurled themselves into the centre of a great +army and had victory almost within their grasp. +</p> +<p> +To describe this charge, we will go back to the evening of the 2nd of +July, and recall upon what basis the cautious Lee could undertake so +fearful a responsibility. The victorious Southrons fresh from their +triumphs at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville had entered the North +carrying consternation and dismay to every hamlet, with none to oppose; +their forward march was one of spoil, and it was not till the 1st of +July that they met their old foemen, the Army of the Potomac, in the +streets of Gettysburg, and after a fierce conflict drove them back. The +second day's conflict was a terrible slaughter, and at its close the +Federal Army, although holding its position, was to a certain extent +disheartened. Many of our best generals and commanding officers were +killed or wounded, scores of regiments and batteries were nearly wiped +out, Sickles' line was broken and driven in and its position was held by +Longstreet. Little Round Top, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page398" name="page398"></a>[pg 398]</span> + + the key of the position, was held only at a frightful loss of life, and +Ewell upon the right had gained a footing upon the Ridge. The Rebel army +was joyful and expectant of victory. The morning of the 3rd of July +opened clear and bright, and one hundred thousand men faced each other +awaiting the signal of conflict; but, except the pushing of Ewell from +his position, the hours passed on relieved only by the rumbling of +artillery carriages as they were massed by Lee upon Seminary Ridge, and +by Meade upon Cemetery Ridge. At twelve o'clock Lee ascended the cupola +of the Pennsylvania College, in quiet surveyed the Union lines, and +decided to strike for Hancock's Centre. Meanwhile, Pickett with his +three Virginia brigades had arrived from Chambersburg and taken cover in +the woods of Seminary Ridge. What Lee's feelings must have been, as he +looked at the hundred death-dealing cannon massed on Cemetery Hill, and +the fifty thousand men waiting patiently in front and behind them, men +whose valor he knew well in many a bitter struggle—and then looked at +his handful of brave Virginians, three, small, decimated brigades which +he was about to hurl into that vortex of death,—no one will ever know. +The blunder that sent the Light Brigade to death at Balaklava was bad +enough, but here were five thousand men waiting to seek victory where, +only the day before ten thousand had lost their lives or their limbs in +the same futile endeavor. Leaving the college, Lee called a council of +his generals at Longstreet's headquarters, and the plan of attack was +formed. It is said that the level-headed Longstreet opposed the plan, +and if so it was but in keeping with his remarkable generalship. The +attack was to be opened with artillery fire to demoralize and batter the +Federal line, and was to be opened by a signal of two shots from the +Washington Artillery. At half-past one the report of the first gun rang +out on the still, summer air, followed a minute later by the second, and +then came the roar and flash of one hundred and thirty-eight rebel +cannon. Almost immediately one hundred Federal guns responded and the +battle had begun. Shot and shell tore through the air, crashing through +batteries, tearing men and horses to pieces; the very earth seemed to +shake and the hills to reel as the terrible thunders re-echoed amongst +them. For nearly an hour every conceivable form of ordnance known to +modern gunnery hissed and shrieked, whistled and screamed, as it went +forth on its death-mission till exhausted by excitement and heat the +gunners slackened their fire and silence reigned again. +</p> +<p> +Then Pickett and his brave legion stood up and formed for the +death-struggle; three remnants of brigades consisting of Garnett's +brigade:—the 8th, 18th, 19th, 28th, 56th Virginia; Armistead's +brigade:—the 9th, 14th, 38th, 53rd, 57th Virginia; Kempers's +brigade:—the 1st, 3rd, 7th, 11th, 24th Virginia. Their tattered flags +bore the scars of a score of battles and from their ranks the merciless +bullet had already taken two-thirds their number. In compact ranks, +their front scarcely covering two of Hancock's brigades, with flags +waving as if for a gala-day, Gen. Pickett saluted Longstreet and asked, +"Shall I go forward, sir?" but it was not in Longstreet's heart to send +those heroes of so many battles to certain death; and he turned away his +head,—when Pickett with that proud, impetuous air which has earned him +the title of the "Ney" of the Rebel army, exclaimed, "Sir! I +<i>shall</i> lead my division forward!" The orders now + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page399" name="page399"></a>[pg 399]</span> + + rang out, "<i>Attention</i>! <i>Attention</i>!" and the men, realizing +the end was near, cried out to their comrades, "Good-by, boys! good-by!" +Suddenly rang on the air the final order from Pickett himself, as his +sabre flashed from its scabbard,—"<i>column forward! guide centre</i>!" +And the brigades of Kemper, Garnett and Armistead moved towards Cemetery +Ridge as one man. Soon Pettigrew's division emerged from the woods and +followed in echelon on Pickett's left flank, and Wilcox with his Alabama +division moved out to support his right flank—in all about fifteen +thousand men. The selection of these supports shows a lack of judgment +which it would almost seem impossible for Lee to have made. Pettigrew's +division was composed mostly of new troops from North Carolina, and had +been terribly used up in the first day's fight, and were in no condition +to form part of a forlorn hope. Wilcox's troops had also received very +severe punishment in the second day's engagement in his attack on the +Ridge and should have been replaced by fresh well-tried brigades. But +the movement had now begun and Lee with his generals about him watched +anxiously for the result. +</p> +<a name="image-0002"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:250px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/421.jpg"><img src="images/421.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="MAJ. GEN. GEORGE E. PICKETT" /></a> +<br /> +MAJ. GEN. GEORGE E. PICKETT +</div> +<p> +It was nearly a mile to the Union lines, and as they advanced over the +open plain the Federal artillery opened again, ploughing great lanes +through their solid ranks, but they closed up to '<i>guide centre</i>' +as if upon dress-parade; when half way over Pickett halted his division +amidst a terrible fire of shot and shell, and changed his direction by +an oblique movement coolly and beautifully made. But here occurred the +greatest mistake of all. Wilcox paid no attention to this change of +movement, but kept straight on to the front, thus opening a tremendous +gap between the two columns and exposing Pickett's right to all the +mishaps that afterwards overtook it. To those who have ever faced +artillery fire it is marvellous and unexplainable how human beings could +have advanced a mile under the terrific fire of a hundred cannon, every +inch of air being laden with the missiles of death; but in splendid +formation they still came bravely on till within range of the musketry; +then the blue line of Hancock's corps arose and poured into their + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page400" name="page400"></a>[pg 400]</span> + + ranks a murderous fire. With a wild yell the rebels pushed on, +unfalteringly crossed the Federal line and laid hands upon eleven +cannon. +</p> +<p> +Men fired in each others faces; there were bayonet thrusts, cutting with +sabres, hand to hand contests, oaths, curses, yells and hurrahs. The +second corps fell back behind the guns to allow the use of grape and +double canister, and as it tore through the rebel ranks at only a few +paces distant the dead and wounded were piled in ghastly heaps. Still on +they came up to the very muzzles of the guns; they were blown away from +the cannon's mouth but yet they did not waver. Pickett had taken the key +to the position and the glad shout of victory was heard, as, the very +impersonation of a soldier, he still forced his troops to the crest of +Cemetery Ridge. Kemper and Armistead broke through Hancock's line, +scaled the hill and planted their flags on its crest. Just before +Armistead was shot, he placed his flag upon a captured cannon and cried +"<i>Give them the cold steel, boys</i>!"; but valor could do no more, +the handful of braves had won immortality but could not conquer an army. +Pettigrew's weak division was broken fleeing and almost annihilated. +Wilcox, owing to his great mistake in separating his column was easily +routed, and Stannard's Vermonters thrown into the gap were creating +havoc on Pickett's flank. Pickett, seeing his supports gone, his +generals, Kemper, Armistead and Garnett killed or wounded, every field +officer of three brigades gone, three-fourths of his men killed or +captured, himself untouched but broken-hearted, gave the order for +retreat, but band of heroes as they were they fled not; but amidst that +still continuous, terrible fire they slowly, sullenly, recrossed the +plain,—all that was left of them, but few of five thousand. +</p> +<a name="image-0003"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:200px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/422.jpg"><img src="images/422.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="Position of troops at time of attack on left centre on 3rd day of battle of Gettysburg." /></a> +<br /> +Position of troops at time of attack on left centre on 3rd day of battle of Gettysburg. +</div> +<p> +Thus ended the greatest charge known to modern warfare. Made in a most +unequal manner against a great army and amidst the most terrific +cannonade known in wars, and yet so perfect was the discipline, so +audacious the valor that had this handful of Virginians been properly +supported they would perhaps + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page401" name="page401"></a>[pg 401]</span> + + have rendered the Federal position untenable, and possibly have +established the Southern Confederacy. While other battle-fields are +upturned by the plough and covered with waving grain, Cemetery Ridge +will forever proudly uphold its monuments telling of glory both to the +Blue and the Gray, and our children's children while standing upon its +crest will rehearse again of Pickett's wonderful charge. +</p> +<hr style="clear:both;" /> +<a name="h2H_4_0004" id="h2H_4_0004"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + THE PATRIOT, SAMUEL ADAMS. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Edward P. Guild.</span> +</h3> +<a name="image-0004"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/423.jpg"><img src="images/423.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="SAMUEL ADAMS. FROM COPLEY'S PAINTING." /></a> +<br /> +SAMUEL ADAMS. FROM COPLEY'S PAINTING.<a href="#note-1" name="noteref-1"><small>1</small></a> +</div> +<p> +Three years ago the old State House in Boston was restored to its +original architectural appearance. After having fallen a prey to the +ruthless hand of commerce, been surmounted with a "Mansard roof," +disfigured by a legion of business signs, made a hitching place for +scores of telegraph wires, and lastly been + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page402" name="page402"></a>[pg 402]</span> + + threatened with entire demolition by the ever arrogant spirit of +"business enterprise"; the sentiment of patriotic veneration asserted +itself and came to the rescue. With an appropriation of $35,000 from the +city, work was begun in the fall of 1881, and by the following July the +ancient building had been restored to almost exactly its appearance in +the last century. As the Old State House now stands, it is identical +with the Town House which Boston first used for its town meeting May 13, +1713. This was nine years before the birth of the man destined to become +the foremost character in the Boston town meeting of the eighteenth +century—Samuel Adams. Probably no other man who ever lived has been so +identified with the history of the Old State House as was he. The town +meetings were held in Faneuil Hall after 1742, but through the stormy +years when the Assembly met in the old building, Samuel Adams was in +constant attendance as clerk. His desk, on which he wrote the first +sentences ever ventured for American independence, and by which he +arose, and, with hands often tremulous with nervous energy, directed the +exciting debates, is to-day in the old Assembly chamber in the western +end of the building. In 1774 he went to Congress, but for a long period +afterward the Old State House was again his field of labor, as senator, +as lieutenant governor and then as governor. +</p> +<p> +The life of Samuel Adams ought to be more familiar than it is to the +patriotic young men of to-day, but some excuse is found in the fact that +a popular, concise biography has, until lately, not been written. The +excellent three volume work of Mr. Wells, Adams' great grandson, +although admirable as an exhaustive biography, is too voluminous for the +common reader; but since the appearance of Prof. Hosmer's recent book<a href="#note-2" name="noteref-2"><small>2</small></a> +there can be no reason why any schoolboy should not have a clear idea of +the life of the man who organized the Revolution. +</p> +<p> +It is only as a patriot that Samuel Adams claims our attention. Although +college bred he was a man of letters only so far as his pen could write +patriotic resolutions and scathing letters against the government of +King George. These letters were printed for the most part in the "Boston +Gazette," published by Edes & Gill in Court Street. As a business man he +was never a success. For years he kept the old malt house on Purchase +Street, but he gave the business little thought, for his mind was +constantly engrossed in public matters, and at last he made no pretext +of attending to any matter of private business, depending for support +only upon his small salary as clerk of the assembly. No one will ever +accuse Samuel Adams of any selfish ambition, and, although his every act +will not bear the closest application of the square and rule, yet he +never deceived nor used a doubtful method in the least degree for +personal gain. +</p> +<p> +Adams did not begin his public career early in life. In 1764 he was +chosen a member of the committee to instruct the representatives just +elected to the General Court, and the paper drafted on that occasion is +the first document from his pen of which we now have any trace, and is +memorable, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page403" name="page403"></a>[pg 403]</span> + + moreover, because it contains the first public denial of the authority +of the Stamp Act. Adams was now forty-two, his hair was already touched +with gray, and "a peculiar tremulousness of the head and hands made it +seem as if he were already on the threshold of old age." He had, +however, a remarkably sound constitution, a medium sized, muscular +frame, and clear, steel-gray eyes. +</p> +<a name="image-0005"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/425.jpg"><img src="images/425.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1793." /></a> +<br /> +OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1793. +</div> +<p> +Among those closely connected with Adams in the public service, which, +from this time on, became his only thought, were John Hancock and James +Otis. Adams contrasted strongly with both of these men. Hancock was the +richest man in the province and as liberal as he was wealthy. In the +general jubilation that followed the repeal of the Stamp Act, he opened +a pipe of Madeira wine before his elegant mansion opposite the Common, +and so long as it lasted it was freely dispensed to the crowd. The dress +of Hancock when at home is described as a "red velvet cap, within which +was one of fine linen, the edge of this turned up over the velvet one, +two or three inches. He wore a blue damask gown lined with silk, a white +plaited stock, a white silk embroidered waistcoat, black silk +small-clothes, white silk stockings and red morocco slippers." Adams was +in marked contrast with Otis in temperament. The former, always cool and +collected and his words based on deliberate reason, was the extreme of +the other who carried his arguments in a flood of impetuous eloquence. +"Otis was a flame of fire," says Sewall. But although Otis was once +almost the ideal of the people, his erratic tendencies at last unfitted +him for a leader. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page404" name="page404"></a>[pg 404]</span> +</p> +<p> +One reason of Sam Adams' prestige with the masses was his common and +familiar intercourse with mechanics and artisans. Hancock, Otis, Bowdoin +and Curtis, on account of their wealth and ideas of aristocracy, kept +more or less aloof from the workmen; while Adams, plainly clad and with +familiar but dignified manner, was often found in the ship yards or at +the rope walks engaged in earnest conversation with the homely +craftsmen. Indeed, nothing pleased him more than to be talking with a +ship carpenter as they sat side by side on a block of oak, or with some +shopkeeper in a sheltered fence corner. Most of his writing was done in +a little room in his Purchase Street house where night after night his +busy mind and quill were kept at work on his trenchant letters for the +"Gazette," which were signed with significant nom de plumes in Latin. +</p> +<p> +The year 1768 was made notable by the arrival in Boston from England of +the 14th and the 29th regiments. The main guard was quartered in King +(now State) Street, with the cannon pointed toward the State House, and +the troops occupied various houses in the vicinity. In the next year the +Governor, Bernard, was recalled, and Thomas Hutchinson, although +remaining nominally lieutenant governor, became acting chief magistrate. +He now appeared the most conspicuous figure among the royalists, and +Samuel Adams became more distinctly the leader of the patriots. +Neglecting all other affairs, he was content to live on a pittance, +which he was enabled to do by a frugal and helpful wife. +</p> +<p> +Affairs were now approaching a crisis. A consignment of goods from +England, sent in defiance of the non-importation agreements, was not +allowed to land and had to be returned. One importer, a Scotchman, would +not sign the agreements, so after much remonstrance, Samuel Adams arose +in town meeting and grimly moved that the number present, about two +thousand, should resolve itself into a committee of the whole, wait upon +the obstinate merchant and use such persuasion as should be necessary to +secure a compliance. But no vote was needed, for the Scotchman was +present, and rushing to the front with knees trembling and in a +squeaking voice, rolling his r's like a well-played drum, exclaimed:— +"Mr. Mode-r-r-rater, I agr-r-ree, I agr-r-ree!" greatly to the amusement +of the people. +</p> +<p> +It was early in the next year, 1770, that the hostility between +towns-people and soldiers led for the first time to the shedding of +blood. In February a boy, Christopher Snyder, was shot and killed during +a disturbance, and in March occurred the "Boston Massacre." The story has +been many times told. Quarrels had grown frequent between the soldiers +and the rope-walk hands, the soldiers usually getting the worst of it. +On the evening of the 5th, an altercation began just below the Old State +House, between the sentinel of the guard and a crowd of townsfolk. An +alarm was rung from one of the steeples, and many citizens hurried to +the place, most of them thinking that a fire had broken out. A sentry +was at the corner of King and Exchange streets, where the Custom House +stood, and he was assaulted by the boys with snowballs. Captain Preston +with seven or eight men rushed to the scene, loaded their muskets and +made ready to fire. The mob hooted, struck their muskets and dared them +to fire. At last a volley came. Three were killed and eight wounded. At +once there was a tumult. The + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page405" name="page405"></a>[pg 405]</span> + + bells were all rung and the populace hurried to and fro. The bodies of +the slain lay on the ground which was sprinkled with a light snow, +serving to plainly reveal in the clear moon-light the stains of blood. +</p> +<a name="image-0006"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/427.jpg"><img src="images/427.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1801." /></a> +<br /> +OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1801. +</div> +<p> +The 29th regiment repaired to the spot prepared for firing, and there +would have been a fierce contest but for the excellent conduct of the +acting governor, Hutchinson. He took Captain Preston severely to task +for firing at the people without the orders of a civil magistrate, and +then, quickly working his way to the State House, took his stand in the +balcony of the council-chamber looking down King Street, and made an +address promising that the law should prevail and justice should be done +to all. The next morning Hutchinson was waited upon by the selectmen who +informed him that there would be no peace until the soldiers should +depart. Hutchinson claimed, however, that the regiments were not under +his command. +</p> +<p> +A mass meeting was soon held in Faneuil Hall, and was addressed by +Samuel Adams. It may readily be believed that he advocated no +compromise, and a committee of fifteen was immediately appointed of +which Adams was a member. According to instructions, they at once +repaired to the council chamber, and demanded the instant removal of the +troops. At three o'clock a regular town meeting assembled in Faneuil +Hall, but, owing to the great number present, adjourned to the Old South +Meeting House. Then the committee of fifteen + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page406" name="page406"></a>[pg 406]</span> + + appeared making their way from the council-chamber to the meeting-house. +Samuel Adams was at the head, and as the crowd made way on either hand +he bared his head, and, inclining to the right and left, as he passed +through the line, kept repeating: "Both regiments or none!" "Both +regiments or none!" +</p> +<a name="image-0007"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:175px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/428.jpg"><img src="images/428.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="STATUE IN ADAMS SQUARE." /></a> +<br /> +STATUE IN ADAMS SQUARE. +</div> +<p> +In the presence of the dense multitude in the Old South, the governor's +reply was rendered: the 29th regiment should go to the castle, but the +14th must remain. Then the cry arose, "Both regiments or none!" and as +the shout echoed from every quarter it was plain that the people had +caught the meaning of the watchword, given shortly before by Adams. A +new committee, also including Adams, was appointed and sent back to the +governor, and as they stood in the council chamber the scene was one +that John Adams pronounced long after as worthy a historical painting. A +few sentences from Adams' address to Hutchinson are clear enough to show +the intense earnestness and patriotism of the man. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "It is well known," he said, "that acting as governor of the Province, + you are by its charter the commander-in-chief of the military forces + within it; and as such, the troops now in the capital are subject to + your orders. If you, or Colonel Dalrymple under you, have the power to + remove one regiment, you have the power to remove both; and nothing + short of their total removal will satisfy the people or preserve the + peace of the Province. A Multitude highly incensed now wait the result + of this application. The voice of ten thousand freemen demands that + both regiments be forthwith removed. Their voice must be respected, + their demand obeyed. Fail not then at your peril to comply with this + requisition! On you alone rests the responsibility of this decision; + and if the just expectations of the people are disappointed, you must + be answerable to God and your country for the fatal consequences that + must ensue. The committee have discharged their duty, and it is for + you to discharge yours. They wait your final determination." +</p> +<p> +Hutchinson for a long time stood firm, but yielded at last and the +troops were removed. +</p> +<p> +It is not the purpose of this paper to follow Samuel Adams through his +active career in the years of the Revolution and the succeeding period. +It is always Samuel Adams, the unswerving patriot, the adroit leader, +the man of the people. It had long been felt in England that his was the +most active spirit in the cause of the patriots, and there was much talk +of effecting his arrest and bringing him to trial on the charge of +treason, but the move was never made. Adams' courage never failed. He +had long given up the idea of any compromise between the colonies and +the Crown, and there is nothing conciliatory in his words or acts. When +the tea was emptied into Boston Harbor it was easily + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page407" name="page407"></a>[pg 407]</span> + + understood that Adams was the real leader in the action. No one familiar +with the life of the great town meeting man, as Prof. Hosmer likes to +call him, can doubt that he had the essential qualities of an adroit +strategist. Cromwell once locked Parliament out, Adams once locked the +Assembly in. He had secured a majority of the members to vote for a +Continental Congress, but could the resolve be presented and brought to +a final vote before Governor Gage could prorogue the Assembly, as he +would use all speed to do, the instant the first knowledge of the scheme +reached his ears? On the 17th of June, just one year before the Battle +of Bunker Hill, that question was answered. The resolve was offered that +day providing for the appointment of delegates to such a congress. Tory +members at once essayed to leave the hall to dispatch the news to the +governor, but the bolts were fast, and Samuel Adams had the key in his +pocket. Two months later the delegates were on their way to +Philadelphia,—Thomas Cushing, Samuel and John Adams and Robert Treat +Paine. +</p> +<p> +Events then transpired rapidly. So far, Samuel Adams was almost wholly +alone in the idea of independence, but it was declared by Congress less +than two years later. For more than twenty years longer, Adams continued +in public life, but his greatest work was before the Declaration of +Independence rather than after. There were times when the cause of the +patriots must have fallen through but for the nerve and skill of this +man. Bowdoin, Cushing, Hancock, Otis, and even John Adams could not have +been thoroughly trusted in the last years of the colony to bring affairs +to a successful issue. But Samuel Adams was fitted by intellect and +character, adroitness and courage, tireless energy and by never failing +devotion to the public good, to be the man for the time. +</p> +<p> +When America had become a Republic, and Adams had returned from Congress +to his native town, he served as presiding officer of the Senate, then +as lieutenant governor, and, upon the death of Hancock, governor, to +which office he was several times chosen by the people. He died in 1803, +and his dust lies to-day in the old Granary Burying Ground, close by the +common grave of the four victims of the Boston Massacre. +</p> +<p> +The statue in bronze now standing in Adams Square is noble in design, +and appropriate for situation. It is in almost the busiest position of +the great city, and daily across its shadow pass tens of thousands of +mechanics and artisans—the class of men with whom Samuel Adams used to +love to hold intercourse. The Old State House and Faneuil Hall are only +a stone's-throw distant from the statue, but the face is not looking in +the direction of either; it is turned directly toward the visible shaft +of granite on Bunker Hill—the monument which marks the first great +battle in the struggle for that Independence toward which, in all his +labors for so many years, the eyes of Samuel Adams were ever turned. +</p> + + +<a name="note-1"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>1</u> (<a href="#noteref-1">return</a>)<br /> +For the reproduction of the above portrait and the two +following views of the Old State House, we are indebted to the courtesy +of Messrs. Ticknor & Co., the well-known Boston publishers.—Ed. +</p> +<a name="note-2"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>2</u> (<a href="#noteref-2">return</a>)<br /> +Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer, 1 vol., 442 pp. American +Statesmen Series. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1883. +</p> +<hr /> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page408" name="page408"></a>[pg 408]</span> +</p> + +<a name="h2H_4_0005" id="h2H_4_0005"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + AUTHORITATIVE LITERATURE OF THE CIVIL WAR. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By George Lowell Austin.</span> +</h3> +<h4> +II. +</h4> + +<p class="quote"> + <span class="sc">The Life and Public Services of Abraham Lincoln</span>, sixteenth + President of the United States: together with His State Papers, + including his Speeches, Addresses, Messages, Letters, and Proclamations, + and the closing Scenes connected with his life and death. By Henry J. + Raymond. To which are added Anecdotes and Personal Reminiscences of + President Lincoln, by Frank B. Carpenter, with a steel portrait, and + other illustrations, 1 vol. octavo, pp. 808. New York: Derby and Miller, + 1865. +</p> + +<p> +During the Presidential canvass of 1864, the author of this volume +prepared a work upon the administration of President Lincoln. That +canvass resulted in the re-election of Mr. Lincoln, whose death occurred +soon after his second inauguration. As the editor of the <i>New York +Times</i>, Mr. Raymond possessed at the time ample facilities to prepare +such a book as was needed to interest the public in the life of one +whose work was at once as great as it was successful. Up to the day of +its publication, this book was the best and most authoritative that had +been published. Twenty years have since elapsed, and in many respects it +still maintains a just superiority and a historical value that cannot be +questioned. Its errors are of omission, rather than of commission; while +its merits are so great as to render it indispensable to all future +writers on the subject. Every public speech, message, letter, or +document of any sort of Mr. Lincoln's, so far as accessible in 1865, +will be found included in the volume. The rapidly occuring events of +the civil war, with much of their secret history, are tersely and +graphically described. The "Reminiscences" of Mr. Carpenter, covering +about thirty pages, add interest to the volume. +</p> + +<p class="quote"> +<span class="sc">Abraham Lincoln</span>: The True Story of a Great Life. Showing the +inner growth, special training and peculiar fitness of the Man for his +work. By William O. Stoddard. Illustrated. 1 vol. octavo, pp. 508. New +York: Fords, Howard & Hurlbert, 1884. +</p> + +<p> +Mr. Stoddard was one of President Lincoln's secretaries during the civil +war, and very naturally his work ought to have strong claims upon the +interest and attention of American readers. His book is not of a +profound or critical character; but a singularly honest and candid and +strictly personal biography, simply written for readers of all ages and +degrees of intelligence. It sheds considerable light on the political +history of the civil war and on the events which led to it. With the +military history, it deals but little. Still its brief, vigorous and +vivid sketches furnish an exceedingly fascinating bird's eye view of the +great struggle. But its most valuable feature is the clearness with +which it depicts Lincoln, the man,—his sagacity and patience at +critical moments, his keen perception of "popular" sentiment and +disposition, his <i>individuality</i>, his distinctive fitness for the +tasks and burdens which fell upon him. This work, at once so accurate, +so comprehensive, so discriminating and so well written, is one for all +Americans, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page409" name="page409"></a>[pg 409]</span> + + and particularly for younger readers. It has in it a charm possessed but +by very few biographies, and a fascination that but few novels can +surpass. To enjoy it and to profit by it, one need not always coincide +with the author's judgments of men and measures, or his criticisms of +military leaders and policies. +</p> + +<p> +<span class="sc">The Life of Abraham Lincoln</span>. By Isaac N. Arnold. 1 vol. octavo, +pp. 462. Chicago: Jansen, McClurg & Co., 1885. +</p> + +<p> +This work also possesses strong claims upon our attention. It was +completed only a few days before the death of its eminent author. +Furthermore, Mr. Arnold knew President Lincoln better than almost any +other man; they had been intimate friends for more than a quarter of a +century, thinking, conversing and working together during all that time. +When the civil war broke out, Mr. Arnold entered Congress; became one of +the most trusted advisers of the President; and no one better than he +knew and comprehended the latter's thoughts and intentions; even the +cabinet officers and the private secretaries never approached so near to +the heart and mind of President Lincoln as did his life long, trusted +and admired friend. In 1867, Mr. Arnold published a "History of Abraham +Lincoln and the Overthrow of Slavery" which is a work of rare interest +and of exceptional historic value. But this work, in the judgment of the +author, was unsatisfactory from the fact that, while it depicted well +enough the <i>times</i>, it failed to portray the <i>life</i> of President +Lincoln. The later volume meets the deficiency, and in fact leaves +absolutely nothing to be desired. The spirit of tenderness broods over +its charmful pages. Singularly unpretentious, its very simplicity is +eloquent and inspiring, and makes the heart of the reader blend with the +grand and noble heart of its subject. Its accuracy is unmarred; it +explains all doubts that have ever existed in regard to Mr. Lincoln's +motives and acts; it asserts nothing without proving it; it tells the +plain, straightforward story, and leaves criticism to others. As a +<i>personal</i> biography of Mr. Lincoln's life and character, this book +is not only unsurpassed, but it deserves to rank as one of the classics +in our native literature. +</p> + +<p class="quote"> +<span class="sc">The Political Conspiracies Preceding the Rebellion</span>; or the True +Story of Sumter and Pickens, By Thomas M. Anderson, Lieut. Col. U.S.A. 1 +vol. quarto, pp. 100. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1883. +</p> + +<p> +The author assumes that there were "a number of conspiracies" antedating +the immediate outbreak of the civil war, but makes no claim that the war +was the result of such conspiracies. His narrative, then, is merely +descriptive of the events which took place in the period between October +1860 and April 1861, purely <i>resume</i> in character and wholly based +upon the disclosures of the Official Records. The author allows himself +to criticise men and acts rather freely, and at times captiously; and +has evidently intended his book to be a defence of his brother, the hero +of Sumter, against certain charges which were once made against him. The +old hero needs no defender, even if we suppose that he ever merited +criticism. The volume is a small one,—trustworthy as regards its +statements and valuable for reference. It may profitably be read in +conjunction with the second volume of Mr. Curtis's <i>Life</i> of <i>James +Buchanan</i>, also with the small volume, by General Doubleday, entitled +<i>The Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Pickens in 1860-61</i>. +</p> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page410" name="page410"></a>[pg 410]</span> + +<p class="quote"> +<span class="sc">The Peninsular Campaign of General McClellan in 1862</span>. Papers read +before the Military Historical Society of Massachusetts in 1876-77-78 +and 80. Printed for the Society. Vol. I, octavo, pp. 249. Boston: James +R. Osgood and Company, 1881. +</p> + +<p> +The Military Society of Massachusetts was organized in 1876, with the +object of investigating questions relating to the civil war. Up to the +date of the publication of this volume, about forty papers were read, +six of them being devoted to the Peninsular Campaign of 1862, eleven +to General Pope's campaign of 1862, three to the campaign of +Chancellorsville, three to the Antietam campaign, sixteen to the +campaign of 1864, and one each to the battle of Mobile Bay and Grouchy +controversy,—all, with the exception of the last two, bearing upon the +operations of the Army of the Potomac in 1862 and 1864, and including +discussions from different standpoints of the objects and general plans +of the several campaigns and battles in which it participated, and of +the controverted questions that have arisen concerning them. The first +printed volume of the Society contains the following papers:—"General +McClellan's Plans for the campaign of 1862, and the Alleged Interference +of the Government with them," by John C. Ropes, Esq: "The Siege of +Yorktown," by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. John C. Palfrey, U.S.A.: "The Period +which elapsed between the Fall of Yorktown and the Beginning of the +Seven-Days-Battles," by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. Francis W. Palfrey, U.S.V. "The +Seven-Days Battles—to Malvern Hill," by same author. "The Battle of +Malvern Hill," by same author; "Comments on the Peninsular Campaign," +by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. Charles A. Whittier, U.S.V. All of these are earnest +discussions,—but of unequal worth—of the various merits or demerits +of General McClellan in the Peninsular campaign, or the attitude of the +government toward him at that time. The ground is traversed as often +before; all the old arguments are again brought into comparison, and +a very small amount of <i>new</i> evidence is discovered. What has +previously been said in many books and pamphlets and by a score of +writers, is here said in one volume by three writers. But nothing +appears to be <i>freshly</i> said, and, as usual, the conclusions +reached are colored by the political likes or dislikes of their several +writers. The sole merit of the volume lies in the fact that its papers +embody a mass of very valuable material, gleaned from trustworthy +sources, for the future historian. It is very safe to assume, however, +that the future historian while expressing gratitude for their +investigations, will not be tempted to place much weight upon the +conclusions of the gentlemen who hold the monopoly of this volume but +have not solved a single mooted question. +</p> + +<p class="quote"> +<span class="sc">Life of James Buchanan</span>, Fifteenth President of the United +States. By George Ticknor Curtis. 2 vols. octavo, pp. 625, 707. New +York: Harper & Brothers, 1883. +</p> + +<p> +The second volume of this exceedingly painstaking and meritorious +biography sheds much light upon the events preceding, and those +transpiring during, the civil war. As another writer has remarked, +"there is something very pitiable, something almost tragic, in the +figure of James Buchanan during the last months of his administration." +He found himself wavering between two factions, between Right and Wrong. +So long as he wavered, the South stood by him; + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page411" name="page411"></a>[pg 411]</span> + + when he ceased to be a wary politician and manifested a decision of +character such as the times demanded, the South turned against him as +one man. His biographer proves conclusively that the weak and +time-serving President was <i>opposed</i> to secession; but as +positively proves without intending to do so, that he favored it by his +singular unfitness and indifference in emergencies. When secession +threatened, Mr. Buchanan took the ground that he would not precipitate +war by applying force to prevent a State from seceding, but that he +would defend the flag and property of the United States. With this +policy in his heart, he permitted public property to be seized, without +striking a blow; he discovered treason in his cabinet, and coolly +allowed the traitors to consummate their work and to depart. The fact +was, that he was a very weak man, and his biographer is the best +authority for the statement. The work is important; it will always, as +it richly merits, be consulted by students, and may be read with +interest and profit by all. +</p> +<h4> +(To be continued.) +</h4> +<hr /> +<a name="h2H_4_0006" id="h2H_4_0006"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + ASSESSMENT LIFE INSURANCE. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Sheppard Romans.</span> +</h3> +<p> +Life insurance, by whatever system, plan or method, has, for its +fundamental basis, the laws governing the rates of mortality at the +different ages. These fundamental laws have been developed and made +clear by a vast amount of statistical data obtained from observations +among persons insured in life insurance companies among annuitants, +among inhabitants of various towns and cities, and among the whole +population in certain countries, notably in England and in Belgium. One +uniform, unvarying, certain law has been thus established, which is that +the rate of mortality, or in other words the cost of insurance, +increases as a man grows older. From this law there is no escape. We +must accept the inevitable. Hence any system of insurance which is not +in accordance with this first principle, this unalterable law of nature, +is unsound, and any company, whether charging level premiums or natural +premiums, which does not recognize and conform to this fundamental law +of nature, is doomed to disaster and wreck, sooner or later. +</p> +<p> +There are two methods of life insurance worthy of the name, and two +only. The one is by payments accurately adjusted to the cost of +insurance at each actual age, and which inevitably, unavoidably and +inexorably, must increase with the age of the person insured, and the +other is by level, or uniform payments extending over the whole duration +of life or for a stated number of years. The first is the natural system +and has been adopted <i>in part</i>, and imperfectly, by assessment +companies; the second is the artificial system, and is the one which has +been offered exclusively until lately, by all the regular life insurance +companies. Properly carried out, the one is as sound in theory and as +safe in practice as the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page412" name="page412"></a>[pg 412]</span> + + other. In fact, the artificial premiums are the exact mathematical or +commuted equivalents of the natural premiums. +</p> +<p> +Until within the last decade, the level premium system was practically +the only one in use. Since then there have come into existence hundreds +of co-operative or assessment companies. These institutions have had a +wonderful growth. It is claimed that the number of members and the +amounts insured, double those, respectively, in the old or regular +companies. +</p> +<p> +Assessment companies do not, strictly speaking, grant insurance. They +are rather agencies, or trust companies, and their functions or +covenants are to make assessments upon survivors when deaths occur, and +to pay over the proceeds of such assessments to the beneficiaries of the +deceased members. There is no definite promise to pay in full, and no +obligation to pay more than the assessments yield. There is no capital, +no risk, no <i>insurance!</i> It is a voluntary association of +individuals. There is usually but little if any penalty for +discontinuance of membership, and the permanence of such institutions +depends mainly upon the volition of their members. They spring into +existence suddenly by the voluntary association of a few individuals +without capital or personal risk, and as suddenly they may go out of +existence by the voluntary act or withdrawal of their members. A breath +may create, a breath destroy. +</p> +<p> +It must be evident then to the merest tyro, that the permanence and +success of assessment companies depend upon the most rigid observance of +those principles which science and sound business experience have +demonstrated to be fundamental. Among these principles may be mentioned +the following. +</p> +<p> +1. Rates of assessments or payments adjusted to the cost of insurance at +the actual age of each person. These rates must inevitably and +inexorably increase with the age of the individual. +</p> +<p> +2. The creation of a guaranty, or emergency fund, available not only to +meet extra mortality, but as a cement to secure cohesion among the +members, and prevent the exodus of the sound lives. +</p> +<p> +3. An assessment in advance at issue of certificate, otherwise some +persons will be insured for nothing and the cost will fall on the +persistent members. +</p> +<p> +As was well said by a contributor in your last number, assessment +insurance has its defects, and these are well known to the managers of +these institutions, and that great improvements have been made by the +National Convention of assessment companies, which is composed of +representatives from the best companies organized in almost every state. +They recognize existing defects, they point out the remedies, and yet, +but few seem to have the courage of their convictions. It is a fact +beyond dispute, that with perhaps a half-dozen exceptions, the rates of +assessment in every assessment company in the country remain constant as +at the age of entry. That is to say, a man entering at the age of forty, +pays the rate at forty only, as long as he remains a member. This is a +direct violation of the inexorable law of nature which says, that as a +man grows older the risk of dying, or in other words the cost of +insurance, increases. It is all nonsense to urge that the <i>average</i> +age and the average cost will be kept down by the influx of new members. +The contract is made with the individual, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page413" name="page413"></a>[pg 413]</span> + + and unless each person pays enough to compensate the company for the +indemnity or insurance furnished to him, it follows of necessity, that +others will be overcharged in order to meet the deficiency so +occasioned. And this evil is intensified each year as the company grows +older. When younger and fresher men find that they are overcharged in +order to meet deficiencies arising from the act that older and inferior +risks pay less than cost, they will either not enter, or, if members, +will speedily desert and join an institution which is on a sounder and +more equitable basis. No institution can be permanently successful which +does not observe equity. I have no hesitation in saying that every +assessment or corporation company which violates this fundamental law of +nature by not making its rates of assessment increase with the age of +the individuals insured, is <i>doomed</i>, and that disaster and wreck +is only a question of time. This is not a new opinion. It's truth is +attested by more than one wreck in this country already. +</p> +<p> +In every level, or uniform premium, there is a provision for the payment +to the company of the rate of insurance at the actual present age, (no +matter at what age the insurance was affected) on the net amount at +risk. +</p> +<p> +The great danger for co-oporative or assessment companies lies in the +facility with which such institutions may be organized, and by men +without capital, character, experience or financial ability, who may +thus be ushered into corporate existence by the indulgent laws of +different states. +</p> +<p> +The members of the National Association of assessment companies should +see to it that the laws of the different states should be so amended as +to require at least a small capital, say $25,000, as a guaranty of good +faith and ability on the part of the promoters, and that no company +should be admitted to membership unless its system was founded on sound +principles as demonstrated by science and business experience. +</p> +<p> +The managers of assessment companies should be careful lest their claims +should prove to be unfounded. For instance, the writer of the article in +your last number boldly asserts that it "is susceptible of mathematical +demonstration that one or two million of dollars of reserve is adequate +to perpetuate any well-conducted assessment company for all time, +however large or small it may be, while the spectacle is presented to us +of level premium companies holding fifty to one hundred millions of +accumulations belonging to their policy holders, from which no possible +benefit, in most cases, will ever accrue to them." On reflection he must +see the absurdity of such statements. +</p> +<p> +The level premium system is a combination of insurance and investments. +The hundred millions are <i>investments</i>, and are necessary for the +integrity of the level premium contracts. Any assessment company in +which the rates do not increase as the members grow older should be +compelled to have the full premium reserve required by state law and +actuarial science to be held on level premium contracts. This is capable +of mathematical demonstration. +</p> +<p> +It must be borne in mind that the cost of insurance <i>proper</i>, that +is, the provision to meet current death claims alone, is quite as high +in the best assessment company as in a regular life insurance company, +for this cost depends on the careful + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page414" name="page414"></a>[pg 414]</span> + + selection of lives. The difference in the two institutions is that the +former dispenses with the investment element, while the latter exacts it +in connection with all their contracts. Hence the price to be paid is +greater. But is not the <i>guarantee</i> also greater? +</p> +<p> +The beneficiary under a death claim in an assessment company has for her +security the <i>hope</i>, or promise if you please, that one thousand +men will pay ten dollars each for her account. The beneficiary under a +death claim in a regular life insurance company has for her security not +only the actual payments of ten dollars each by one thousand men, but +the definite promise to pay in full by an institution which has ample +capital, assets, and surplus to back its contracts. +</p> +<p> +Assessment insurance is yet on trial, and its only hope of permanent +business lies in a rigid compliance with the laws of mortality and of +sound business experience. +</p> +<hr /> +<a name="h2H_4_0007" id="h2H_4_0007"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + THE OLD STATE HOUSE. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Sidney Maxwell.</span> +</h3> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> The Old State House! Within these antique walls </p> +<p class="i2"> The early fathers of the hamlet met </p> +<p class="i2"> And gravely argued of the town's affairs. </p> +<p class="i2"> Another generation came; and in </p> +<p class="i2"> This hall the Tory Council sat in state </p> +<p class="i2"> While from the burning lips of Otis, or </p> +<p class="i2"> The stem, defiant tongue of Adams sprang </p> +<p class="i2"> That eloquence whose echoes thundered back </p> +<p class="i2"> From Concord, Lexington, and Bunker's Hill! </p> +<p class="i2"> Between those years and ours a century lies; </p> +<p class="i2"> Those patriot's graves are deep with moss and mould, </p> +<p class="i2"> And yet these walls—the same whose shadows fell </p> +<p class="i2"> Athwart the crimson snow where Preston charged<a href="#note-3" name="noteref-3"><small>3</small></a>— </p> +<p class="i2"> Still cast their shadows; not on troops, nor mob </p> +<p class="i2"> Exasperated by their wrongs, but on </p> +<p class="i2"> A jostling, hurrying throng—freeman each one, </p> +<p class="i2"> Unless in bondage to himself. O Man: </p> +<p class="i2"> Pass not all heedless by, nor imprecate </p> +<p class="i2"> This aged relic of the past because </p> +<p class="i2"> It lies across thy path! From avarice </p> +<p class="i2"> Redeemed; restored unto its former self,— </p> +<p class="i2"> We hail thee, noble Sentry of the years, </p> +<p class="i2"> And greet thee with a thousand loving cheers! </p> +</div> +</div> + +<a name="note-3"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>3</u> (<a href="#noteref-3">return</a>)<br /> +The "Boston Massacre," March 5th, 1770. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page415" name="page415"></a>[pg 415]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0008" id="h2H_4_0008"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + THE PRECIOUS METALS. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By David N. Balfour.</span> +</h3> +<p> +From the earliest times to the commencement of the Christian Era, the +amount of the gold and silver obtained from the surface and mines of the +earth is estimated to be $5,084,000,000; from the latter event to the +epoch of the discovery of America, $4,363,374,000 were obtained; from +the date of the last event to the end of 1842, an addition of +$8,500,000,000 was made; the extensive working of the Russian gold mines +in 1843, and subsequent years, added to the close of 1852, +$1,400,000,000 more; the quadruple discovery of the California gold +mines in 1848, those of Australia in 1851, of New Zealand in 1861, and +the silver mines of Nevada and other countries bordering upon the +Pacific slope of the United States, added, at the close of 1884, +$7,093,626,000, making a grand total at the present time of +$26,441,000,000. +</p> +<p> +The average loss by the attrition of coin is estimated by Prof. Bowen +at one-fortieth of one per cent, per annum; and the average loss by +consumption in the arts, and destruction by fire and shipwreck, at +$9,000,000 per annum. The amount of the precious metals in existence is +estimated to be $13,670,000,000, of which gold furnishes $8,166,000,000, +and silver $5,504,000,000. Of the amount now in existence, +$10,500,000,000 are estimated to be in coin and bullion, $2,000,000,000 +in watches, and the remainder in plate, jewelry, and ornaments. Of the +amount now in existence, $9,448,000,000 is estimated to have been +obtained from America, $1,908,000,000 from Asia (including Australia, +New Zealand, and Oceanica); $1,004,000,000 from Europe, and +$1,310,000,000 from Africa. +</p> +<p> +The following statement will exhibit the product of the precious metals +throughout the world in 1884:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Worldwide precious metal production, 1884"> +<tr><th>Countries. </th><th>Gold. (America) </th><th> Silver. </th><th> Total. </th></tr> +<tr><td>Alaska, </td><td align="right"> $300,000 </td><td align="right"> $30,000 </td><td align="right"> $320,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>British Columbia, </td><td align="right"> 2,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 80,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,080,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>United States, </td><td align="right"> 30,800,000 </td><td align="right"> 48,800,000 </td><td align="right"> 79,600,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Mexico, </td><td align="right"> 1,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 30,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 31,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Guatemala, </td><td align="right"> 40,000 </td><td align="right"> 200,000 </td><td align="right"> 240,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Honduras, </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>San Salvador, </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td><td align="right"> 150,000 </td><td align="right"> 250,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Nicaragua, </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td><td align="right"> 200,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Costa Rica, </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Columbia, </td><td align="right"> 1,900,000 </td><td align="right"> 500,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,400,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Venezuela, </td><td align="right"> 3,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 200,000 </td><td align="right"> 3,200,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Guiana, </td><td align="right"> 75,000 </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 125,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Brazil, </td><td align="right"> 400,000 </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 450,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Bolivia, </td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 12,980,000 </td><td align="right"> 13,030,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Chili, </td><td align="right"> 60,000 </td><td align="right"> 5,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 5,060,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Argentine Republic,</td><td align="right"> 50,000 </td><td align="right"> 200,000 </td><td align="right"> 250,000 </td></tr> + +<tr><td> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page416" name="page416"></a>[pg 416]</span> +</td></tr> + +<tr><td>Patagonia, </td><td align="right"> $10,000 </td><td align="right"> $5,000 </td><td align="right"> $10,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Other countries, </td><td align="right"> 15,000 </td><td align="right"> 45,000 </td><td align="right"> 60,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td></tr> +<tr><td>Total, </td><td align="right"> $40,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $98,480,000 </td><td align="right"> $138,480,000 </td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="4"><h3>EUROPE.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><th>Countries. </th><th>Gold. (America) </th><th> Silver. </th><th> Total. </th></tr> + +<tr><td>Russia, </td><td align="right"> $22,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $300,000 </td><td align="right">$22,300,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Prussia, </td><td align="right"> 900,000 </td><td align="right"> 8,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 8,900,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Spain, </td><td align="right"> 70,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,500,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,570,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Austria, </td><td align="right"> 950,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,500,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,450,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Norway, </td><td align="right"> 60,000 </td><td align="right"> 300,000 </td><td align="right"> 360,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Other Countries, </td><td align="right"> 20,000 </td><td align="right"> 320,000 </td><td align="right"> 340,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td></tr> +<tr><td>Total, </td><td align="right"> $24,000,000 </td><td align="right">$12,920,000 </td><td align="right">$36,920,000 </td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="4"><h3>ASIA.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><th>Countries. </th><th>Gold. (America) </th><th> Silver. </th><th> Total. </th></tr> + +<tr><td>Borneo, </td><td align="right"> $700,000 </td><td align="right"> $470,000 </td><td align="right">$1,170,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>China, </td><td align="right"> 600,000 </td><td align="right"> 450,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,050,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Japan, </td><td align="right"> 120,000 </td><td align="right"> 353,000 </td><td align="right"> 473,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td></tr> +<tr><td>Total, </td><td align="right"> $1,420,000 </td><td align="right">$1,273,000 </td><td align="right">$2,693,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Australia, </td><td align="right"> $26,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $80,000 </td><td align="right"> $26,080,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>New Zealand, </td><td align="right"> 4,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 500,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,500,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Africa, </td><td align="right"> 2,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 500,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,500,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Oceanica, </td><td align="right"> 580,000 </td><td align="right"> 247,000 </td><td align="right"> 827,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td></tr> +<tr><td>Grand Total, </td><td align="right"> $98,000,000 </td><td align="right">$114,000,000 </td><td align="right">$212,000,000 </td></tr> +</table> + + +<p> +The following statement will exhibit the annual product of the precious +metals at different periods:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Annual product of precious metals at different periods"> + +<tr><th>Periods. </th><th>Gold. </th><th> Silver. </th><th> Total. </th></tr> + +<tr><td>A.D. 14, </td><td align="right"> $800,000 </td><td align="right"> $4,200,000 </td><td align="right"> $5,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 500, </td><td align="right"> 200,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,800,000 </td><td align="right"> 3,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1000, </td><td align="right"> 120,000 </td><td align="right"> 880,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1492, </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td><td align="right"> 150,000 </td><td align="right"> 250,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1550, </td><td align="right"> 800,000 </td><td align="right"> 3,200,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1600, </td><td align="right"> 2,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 9,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 11,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1700, </td><td align="right"> 5,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 18,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 23,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1800, </td><td align="right"> 17,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 38,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 55,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1843, </td><td align="right"> 52,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 42,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 94,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1850, </td><td align="right"> 106,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 47,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 153,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1853, </td><td align="right"> 236,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 49,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 285,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1863, </td><td align="right"> 208,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 63,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 271,000,000 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page417" name="page417"></a>[pg 417]</span> +</p> + +<p> +The following statement will exhibit the amount of the precious metals +estimated to be in existence at different periods: +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Amount of precious metals estimated to be in existence at different periods"> + +<tr><th>Periods. </th><th>Gold. </th><th> Silver. </th><th> Total. </th></tr> + +<tr><td>A.D. 14, </td><td align="right"> $427,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $909,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $1,327,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 500, </td><td align="right"> 100,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 400,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 500,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1000, </td><td align="right"> 65,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 200,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 265,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1492, </td><td align="right"> 57,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 135,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 192,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1550. </td><td align="right"> 76,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 284,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 360,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1600, </td><td align="right"> 105,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 391,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 496,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1700, </td><td align="right"> 351,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,410,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,761,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1800, </td><td align="right"> 1,125,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 3,622,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,747,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1843, </td><td align="right"> 1,975,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 5,040,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 7,015,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1850, </td><td align="right"> 2,368,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,963,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 7,331,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1853, </td><td align="right"> 2,942,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,945,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 7,887,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1863, </td><td align="right"> 5,107,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,945,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 10,052,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. 1884, </td><td align="right"> 8,166,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 5,504,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 13,670,000,000 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +The following statement will exhibit the amount of the precious metals +estimated to have been obtained from the surface and mines of the earth, +from the earliest times to the close of 1884:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Amount of precious metals estimated to have been obtained from the earth's surface and mines, through 1884"> + +<tr><th>Periods. </th><th>Gold. </th><th> Silver. </th><th> Total. </th></tr> +<tr><td> A.C. </td><td align="right"> $2,171,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $2,913,000,000 </td><td align="right"> $5,084,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>A.D. to 1492, </td><td align="right"> 3,842,374,000 </td><td align="right"> 521,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,363,374,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>1493 to 1842, </td><td align="right"> 2,700,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 5,800,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 8,500,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>1843 to 1852, </td><td align="right"> 900,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 500,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,400,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>1853 to 1862, </td><td align="right"> 1,869,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 560,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 2,429,000,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td>1863 to 1884, </td><td align="right"> 3,145,626,000 </td><td align="right"> 1,519,000,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,664,626,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td><td align="right"> <hr class="full" /> </td></tr> +<tr><td>Grand Total, </td><td align="right"> $14,628,000,000 </td><td align="right">$11,813,000,000 </td><td align="right">$26,441,000,000 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +During the first period (prior to the commencement of the Christian +Era,) the annual product of the precious metals was $2,000,000; during +the second period (prior to the discovery of America,) it was +$3,000,000; during the third period (prior to the extensive working of +the Russian gold mines, in 1843,) it was $26,000,000; during the fourth +period (prior to the double discovery of the California gold mines in +1858, and the Australia gold mines in 1851,) it was $140,000,000; during +the fifth period (which immediately succeeded afore-mentioned +discoveries,) it was $243,000,000; during the sixth period (immediately +succeeding the double discovery of the New Zealand gold mines in 1861, +and the silver mines of Nevada and other countries bordering on the +Pacific slope of the United States,) it was $212,000,000. The annual +products of the precious metals attained its acme in 1853, when it was +$285,000,000. The increase in the amount of the precious metals in +existence has been greater during the last forty-years than during the +previous two hundred and ninety-four. Of the amount ($6,441,000,000) of +the precious metals estimated to have been obtained from the surface and +mines of the earth, from the earliest times to the close of 1884, +$12,100,000,000 are estimated to have been obtained from America +$6,724,000,000 from Asia (including Australia, New Zealand and +Oceanica), $3,751,000,000 from Europe, and $2,866,000,000 from Africa. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page418" name="page418"></a>[pg 418]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0009" id="h2H_4_0009"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + AMESBURY: THE HOME OF WHITTIER. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Frances C. Sparhawk.</span> +</h3> +<p> +Amesbury is only a town. It has defects that would strike a stranger, +and beauties that one who has learned to love them never forgets; they +linger in glimpses of wood and hill and river and lake, and often rise +unbidden before the mind's eye. The poet Whittier says that those who +are born under the shadow of Powow Hill always return sometime, no +matter how far they may have wandered. He himself, though not Amesbury +born, has found it impossible to desert the old home, full of +associations and surrounded by old friends. He always votes in Amesbury, +and he often spends weeks at a time in his old home. The river that he +has sung, the lake that he has re-christened, the walks and drives with +which he is so familiar, all exercise their spell upon him; he loves +them, just as he loves the warm hearts that he has found there and +helped to make warm and true. +</p> +<p> +But what a stranger would first notice in coming into town is, that the +houses, instead of being on land regularly laid out for building, seem +to have grown up here and there and everywhere, a good deal in +accordance with their own sweet wills, and without the smallest regard +to surroundings. +</p> +<p> +But there are handsome houses in Amesbury, and these are growing more +numerous every year. The people themselves would assert that the walks +and drives about the village, the hills and the river are the things to +be longest remembered about the place. If they were inclined to +boasting, they might say also that they had as good a right as any +people in America to be considered of ancient stock, for some of the +names of the earliest settlers are the familiar names in the town +to-day, and few towns in America are older than Amesbury. The names +Barnard, Challis, Weed, Jones, and Hoyt, appear on the first board of +"Prudenshall," and that of Richard Currier as town clerk. This was in +April, 1668, the year after the new town was named. +</p> +<p> +Early in 1735 the settlement of Newbury (then spelled Newberry) was +begun. In a little over three years a colony was sent out across the +Merrimac. The plantation was at first called merely from the name of the +river. In 1639 it was named Colchester by the General Court; but October +7, 1640, this name was changed to Salisbury, so that in 1638, almost two +hundred and fifty years ago, Salisbury began to be settled. It seemed as +if there was need of new settlements at that time to counteract the +depletions in the Old World, for the Thirty Years' War was still +impoverishing Germany; Richelieu was living to rule France in the name +of his royal master, Louis XIII; England was gathering up those forces +of good and evil which from resisting tyranny at last grew intoxicated +with power, and so came to play the tyrant and regicide. For it was +about that time that Charles I had disbanded his army, trusting to the +divinity that, in the eyes of the Stuarts, did ever hedge a king, and at +the same time thrown away his honor by + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page419" name="page419"></a>[pg 419]</span> + + pledging himself to what he never meant to perform. While this farce, +which preceded the tragedy, was being set upon the stage of history, +here, three thousand miles away, nature had begun to build up the waste, +and to prophesy growth. +</p> +<p> +Salisbury, and afterwards Amesbury, were named from the two towns so +famous in England, the Salisbury Plain of Druidical memory, on which is +the celebrated Stonehenge, and near by, the Amesbury where was one of +the oldest monasteries in England. It is supposed that the towns were so +named because many of the new settlers came from those old English +towns. The latter name used to be spelled Ambresbury, and Tennyson in +his "Idylls of the King" spells Almesbury. After the discovery by Modred +of the guilt of King Arthur's fair and false wife, he says:— +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Queen Guinevere had fled the court and sat </p> +<p class="i2"> There in the holyhouse at Almesbury </p> +<p class="i2"> Weeping." </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +Describing her flight, he tells us that she sent Lancelot +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Back to his land, but she to Almesbury</p> +<p class="i2"> Fled all night long by glimmering waste and weald."</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +There Arthur sees her for the last time and mourns over her before he +goes forth to his last battle with Modred. +</p> +<p> +On the whole, it is not strange, considering its associations, and +moreover the fact that this town in Massachusetts is the only Amesbury +in America while so many other names are duplicated, that the people of +Amesbury are not willing to merge the name of their town into that of +the elder sister, even when those parts called in each "the Mills" are +so closely united in interests and in appearance that no stranger could +recognize them as two towns. It is only the Powow that makes the +dividing line here. Blocks of offices and stores on both sides of the +street, among them the post-office, common to both towns, hide the +narrow stream at that point, and further up and down the towering walls +of the factories make it unobserved. It is not here that one sees the +Powow. But there is, or a little time ago there was, a place not far off +from this main street where the river is still harassed, yet as it slips +past in its silent toil with a few trees hanging low on the right, it +has a fascination in spite of its prosaic surroundings; it takes +naturally to picturesqueness and freedom. +</p> +<p> +One of Whittier's early poems speaks of an Indian re-visiting the stream +that his forefathers loved, and standing on Powow Hill, where the chiefs +of the Naumkeaks, and of the other tribes held their powows. Here for a +moment, says the poem, a gleam of gladness came to him as he stooped to +drink of the fountain and seated himself under an oak. +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Far behind was Ocean striving </p> +<p class="i4"> With his chains of sand; </p> +<p class="i2"> Southward, sunny glimpses giving </p> +<p class="i4"> 'Twixt the swells of land, </p> +<p class="i2"> Of its calm and silvery track </p> +<p class="i2"> Rolled the tranquil Merrimack." </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page420" name="page420"></a>[pg 420]</span> +</p> +<p> +The Indian's feeling about "These bare hills, this conquered river," was +not strange. But to us it naturally occurs that we are more likely to +wake up with our scalps on our heads, instead of sleeping our last +sleep, while they dangle at a red man's girdle. Yet the very state of +warfare that at that time existed between the races showed that in the +settlers themselves was an element of savagery not yet eliminated. For +in all this fierce strife of the tomahawk and the gun, the Quaker +ancestors of the poet Whittier who met the Indians, armed only with +kindness and the high courage of their peaceful convictions, were +treated by the red men as friends and superiors. In the raids of general +devastation they were unmolested. Their descendant has a natural right +to express the pathos of the Indian's lot. +</p> +<p> +There is a fine exhibition of human nature in the records of the first +settlement of Amesbury. The place was called "Salisbury new-town" until +1669, and was merely an offshoot of the latter, though much larger in +extent than it is today, for now it is only about six miles by three. +Then it reached up into what is now Newton, N.H. But why should not the +people of those days have been generous as to the size of townships, for +as to land, they had the continent before them where to choose? +</p> +<p> +But in regard to the human nature. The settlers of Salisbury went at +first only beyond the salt marshes, their town being what is now East +Salisbury. The forests beyond had a threatening look, and were much +too near. It was determined, therefore, to drive them back by having +clearings and settlements across the Powow. So, December 26, 1642, about +three years after this little colony had crossed the Merrimack, a town +meeting was held in which it was voted:—"Yere shall thirtie families +remove to the west side of ye Powowas river." This motion was very easy +to carry. But it had not been voted what families were to move on beyond +the immediate protection of the small colony at East Salisbury. Who was +to go? Every man sat still in his place and nodded to his neighbor with +a "Thou art the man," in manner if not in words. It seems to us a very +little thing to give or take the advice, "Go West young man,—or woman." +But it was very different then. To do it meant, besides living encircled +by forests, to be obliged to go on Sunday through these forests, worse +than lonely, to the meeting-house at East Salisbury, and always with the +possibility of being at any moment obliged to flee all the distance to +that town for comparative safety, perhaps of being obliged to flee in +the night. Signals of alarm were arranged by the General Court. Alarm +was to be given "by distinctly discharging three muskets, or by +continual beat of the drum, or firing the beacon, or discharging a pesse +of ordnance, and every trained soldier is to take the alarm immediately +on paine of five pound." It was also ordered, "That every town provide a +sufficient place for retreat for their wives and children to repaire to, +as likewise to keepe safe the ammunition thereof." And also, "That all +watches throughout this country bee set at sunset at the beat of the +drums, & not bee discharged till the beate of the drum at sunne rising." +</p> +<p> +But those old Puritans were not men to be bundled by any of the +weaknesses of human nature. In ten days, when it was found that nobody +had + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page421" name="page421"></a>[pg 421]</span> + + started "westward, ho!" another town-meeting was held, in which, in +spite of the dangers to be encountered by the new colony, the first vote +was re-affirmed, and it was decided that "the thirtie families be chosen +by ye seven men," probably the selectmen. And to ensure the matter, it +was determined that this vote should not be repealed except by the +consent of every freeman in the town. So, in the spring, this tiny +colony went out to Salisbury new-town. +</p> +<p> +In 1647, a law was passed requiring every township of fifty families to +maintain a school. This is the way that the preamble reads:— +</p> +<p> +"It being one chiefe pr'ject of y't ould deluder, Satan, to keepe men +from ye knowledge of ye Scriptures, as in former times by keeping ym in +an unknown tongue, so in these latt'r times by pr'suading from ye use of +tongues yt so at least ye true sense & meaning of ye original might be +clouded by false glosses of saint-seeming deceivers, yt learning may not +be buried in ye grave of o'r fath'rs in ye church & commonwealth, the +Lord assisting our endeavor. It is therefore resolved," &c. +</p> +<p> +It seems overturning the cornerstone of our forefathers' intentions to +banish from our schools the Scriptures, those finest examples of the +strength and beauty of the English language, to say nothing of their +lessons in individual self-government, which is the only foundation that +a republic can be built upon. +</p> +<p> +From this old law have grown up all the public schools of Amesbury. +There is now a high school, and there are, of course, the required +number of small schools; some of these in the outlying districts having +very few scholars. +</p> +<p> +Several years ago Mr. Whittier, who has the keenest sense of humor, told +a friend that in one of these the whole number of pupils was three, +average attendance one and a half! He was deeply interested in that half +child. +</p> +<p> +Amesbury has among its attractions a Lion's Mouth! In the old days of +Indian ambushes it must have earned its right to the name. But now the +only existing danger is lest one should be eaten up—with kindness. +It is a short mile from the mills, and a pleasant walk in spite of its +ending! At last there comes a little hollow with a large farm-house on +the left, and a grass road winding past it at right angles with the main +road and leading into beautiful woods. These woods are the very jaws of +the lion; and it is very hard, on a hot summer's day, for those who go +into them to come out again. A few rods up the road from the hollow are +other houses. People bearing some of the earliest recorded names in +Amesbury, descendants of the brave pioneers, are to be found here, or +having departed this life, have left good records behind them. One of +these latter lived here in the pleasantest way. He and his wife carried +on their large farm in an ideal manner; everything was upon a generous +scale. There was money enough not to wear out life in petty economies, +and largeness of soul enough not to put the length of a bank account +against the beauties and refinements of life. The loss of their only +child, and a few years afterward of their grand-daughter, one of the +loveliest children earth ever held, was—not compensated for, that +can never be, but made much less dreary by a friendship of many years' +standing between them and their summer neighbors. In this case, too, the +gentleman is a native of Amesbury, proud and fond of his birthplace. +Every + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page422" name="page422"></a>[pg 422]</span> + + summer he comes to the cottage of this friend, a charming little house +only a few rods from the larger one, and spends the summer here with his +family and servants. He has made a great deal of money in New York, but +fortunately, not too much, for it has not built up a Chinese wall around +his heart; his new friends are dear, but his early friends are still the +dearest. +</p> +<p> +Between the Mills and this formidable Mouth of the Lion, is the Quaker +Meeting House, a modest, sober-hued building on a triangular green, on +which, before it was fenced in, the boys delighted to play ball on the +days and at the hours (for the Quakers have meeting Thursday also) on +which the grave worshippers were not filing into what cannot fairly be +called the house of silence, because it has been known to echo to +exhortations as earnest, if not as vehement as one may hear from any +pulpit. Still, there are sometimes long intervals of silence, and then +the consciousness that silent self-examination is one purpose of the +coming together, gives an impressiveness to the simple surroundings. It +must have been here that Mr. Whittier learned to interpret so +wonderfully that silent prayer of Agassiz for guidance when he opened +his famous school from which he was so soon called to a higher life. +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Then the Master in his place </p> +<p class="i2"> Bowed his head a little space </p> +<p class="i2"> And the leaves by soft airs stirred </p> +<p class="i2"> Lapse of wave and cry of bird </p> +<p class="i2"> Left the solemn hush unbroken </p> +<p class="i2"> Of that wordless prayer unspoken </p> +<p class="i2"> While its wish, on earth unsaid, </p> +<p class="i6"> Rose to Heaven interpreted. </p> +<p class="i6"> As in life's best hours we hear </p> +<p class="i6"> By the spirit's finer ear </p> +<p class="i6"> His low voice within us, thus </p> +<p class="i6"> The All-Father heareth us: </p> +<p class="i6"> And his holy ear we pain </p> +<p class="i6"> With our noisy words and vain. </p> +<p class="i6"> Not for him our violence </p> +<p class="i6"> Storming at the gates of sense, </p> +<p class="i6"> His the primal language, his </p> +<p class="i6"> The eternal silences." </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +Mr. Whittier always goes to this meeting when he is well enough. The May +Quarterly Meetings of the Society of Friends are held at Amesbury. There +are a good many members of this Society in the town, and there is among +them a hospitality, a kindness, and a cordiality that added to their +quiet ways and the refined dress of the women makes them interesting. +</p> +<p> +It goes without saying that Amesbury has also the allotment of churches +of other denominations usual to New England towns. +</p> +<p> +Thirty years ago and more, the Amesbury and Salisbury Mills were two +distinct companies. The agent of the former mills, Mr. Joshua Aubin, was +a gentleman of fine presence. After he left Amesbury, he sent to the +town as a gift the nucleus of its present Public Library, which, +although not absolutely free + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page423" name="page423"></a>[pg 423]</span> + + has only a nominal subscription to pay the services of the librarian, +and for keeping the books in order. +</p> +<a name="image-0008"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:250px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/445.jpg"><img src="images/445.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="John G. Whittier" /></a> +<br /> +John G. Whittier +</div> +<p> +Mr. James Horton, agent of the Salisbury mills, was more of the +rough-and-ready type of man, a little bluff, but frank and kind-hearted. +Both gentlemen as it happened, lived in Amesbury and were of one mind in +regard to the character of their operatives. It was before the influx +of foreign labor, and the men and women in the mills belonged to +respectable, often well-to-do American families. Rowdyism was a thing +unknown to them, and as to drunkenness, if that fault was found once in +an operative, he was reprimanded; if it occurred again, he was at once +discharged. And so Amesbury, though a manufacturing town, was in its +neatness and orderliness an exquisite little village with the Powow Hill +at its back and the hem of its robe laved by two beautiful rivers. After +Mr. Aubin's ill health had made him resign his place, the father of +Prof. Langley, well-known to science, was agent for a time, and carried +on matters in the spirit of his predecessors. But there came a change, +the mills were united under one control, and an agent was sent to +Amesbury for the purpose of forcibly illustrating the fact that +corporations have no souls. He did it admirably. Work was started at +high pressure, there came a rush of foreigners into the place, many of +the old towns people moved away in disgust, and the new took the place +of the old as suddenly as if an evil magician had waved his wand +and cried: "Presto!" But this agent soon gave evidence that great +unscrupulousness doesn't pay, even as a financial investment. After +several other short regimes the present agent, Mr. Steere, came to +Amesbury, and the corporation has found it worth while to keep him. +The effect of the sudden influx of foreign population into Amesbury +has never done away with; it has its "Dublin" in a valley where the +corporation built houses for its operatives. And with what indifference +to cleanliness, or health these were built! The poor operatives were +crowded together in a way that would make neatness difficult to the most +fastidious. A physician in Amesbury + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page424" name="page424"></a>[pg 424]</span> + + who considered the poor, presented this state of things so strongly and +so persistently to the agent, spoke so forcibly of the moral degradation +that such herding increased, or induced, that when it became necessary +to build new tenements they were much better arranged. Every +manufacturing town in New England has now its unwholesome because +untaught population, a danger signal on the line of progress of the +republic. It is only popular education that can remove this obstruction +of ignorance. The foreign population of Amesbury today is large, and +although it gives hands to the mills, it adds neither to the beauty nor +the interest of the town. But it gives a mission to those who believe in +the possibilities of human nature, and the right of every man to have a +chance at life, even if the way he takes it be not agreeable to his +cultivated neighbor. +</p> +<p> +The mills in the days of their greatest prosperity were all woolen mills: +now a part of them are cotton mills. They are all running, and, +although not with the remarkable success of a score of years ago, have a +future before them. +</p> +<p> +The making of felt hats, now so important a business, was started here +a number of years ago by a gentleman who built a hat factory near his +house at the Ferry. He was a gentleman in that true sense in which, +added to his nerve and will (and he had abundance of both) were those +knightly qualities of generosity and kindliness that have made his +memory dear, while the Bayley Hat Company, called after him as its +founder, bears witness to his business ability. +</p> +<p> +The great, oblong, many-windowed carriage manufactories meet one at +every turn, and often the smithy stands near with its clangor. This +business used to be confined to West Amesbury, now Merrimac. At the +beginning of the century it was started on an humble scale by two young +men, one a wood-worker, the other a plater, while another young man was +trimmer for them. One of the firm lived in West Amesbury, the other in +South Amesbury, now Merrimac Port, and after each had built his share of +the carriage, it was found a little difficult to bring the different +parts together. This was the beginning, and now Amesbury ships its +carriages over the world. One of the first to bring this business from +what was then West Amesbury to the Mills was a young man who in the +beginning of the war had been unfortunate in business. He gave his +creditors all he had, and went to the front. After serving his time +there he came home, went into the carriage business, made money this +time instead of losing it, and paid up his old creditors one hundred +cents on the dollar. He deserves a big factory and success. And he has +both. And he is not the only one of whom good things could be said. +</p> +<p> +They have a Wallace G.A.R. Post in Amesbury, not in commemoration of the +Wallace of old Scottish fame, but of a man no less patriotic and brave +who lived among themselves, an Englishman, a shoemaker. He was lame, but +so anxious during the Rebellion to have his share in the struggle for +the Union that he tried to get a place on board a gunboat, saying that +he could "sit and shoot." As this was impossible, the town sent him to +Boston as its representative, and he was in the Legislature when the +members voted themselves an increase of pay. Mr. Wallace believed the +thing illegal. He took the money in trust. One day after his return to +Amesbury he limped up to his physician (the same one who + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page425" name="page425"></a>[pg 425]</span> + + had brought about the better construction of the new corporation houses) +and handed him fifty dollars of this over pay, to be used at his +discretion among the poor, explaining as he did so where the money came +from, that he felt that it belonged to Amesbury, and that he returned a +part through this channel. +</p> +<p> +Half way between the Mills and the Ferry stands an old well that a +native of Amesbury dug by the roadside for the benefit of travellers +because he had once been a captive in Arabian deserts, and had known the +torments of thirst. Here was a man to whom the uses of adversity had +been sweet, for they had taught him humanity. Mrs. Spofford has written +an appropriate poem upon this incident. +</p> +<p> +The elms in Amesbury are very beautiful, and they are found everywhere; +but on the ferry road there are magnificent ones not far from the river. +They are growing on each side of the road, arching it over with their +graceful boughs. +</p> +<a name="image-0009"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/447.jpg"><img src="images/447.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="WHITTIER'S HOME, AMESBURY." /></a> +<br /> +WHITTIER'S HOME, AMESBURY. +</div> +<p> +The Ferry proper near which was born Josiah Bartlett, one of the signers +of the Declaration of Independence, is at the foot of the street that +runs from the Mills down to the river. In old times there was a +veritable ferry here a few rods above where the Powow empties into the +Merrimack. This ferry is mentioned in the records, two years after the +town had been set upon its feet. In a book written about Amesbury by Mr. +Joseph Merrill, a native of the town, it is stated that the town +petitioned the general Court for leave to keep a Ferry over the river at +this place. This is the record from the same source:— +</p> +<p> +"The County Court held at Hampton, ye 13th of ye 8th month 1668, Mr. +Edward Goodwin being presented by ye Selectmen of ye town of Amesbury to +Court to keep ye Ferry over Merrimac river about ye mouth of ye Powow +river + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page426" name="page426"></a>[pg 426]</span> + + where ye said Goodwin now dwelleth, the Court do allow and approve of ye +sd person for one year next following and until ye Court shall take +further orders therein, and ye prices to be as followeth so, for every +single passenger two pence, for a horse and man six pence, and for all +great cattle four pence, for sheep and other small cattle under two +years old two pence per head." +</p> +<p> +In 1791 there came up a question of a bridge being built across the +Merrimac. A town meeting was called to oppose the measure, and in this +it was argued that a bridge would throw into disuse the ferry with which +much pains had been taken. Precious old fogies! In those days, too, they +lived, for they were as old as the centuries. Nothing of the mushroom +about them. There is a tradition that once in Revolutionary days, +Washington was carried across this ferry. But it is impossible to say +what the tradition is founded upon, and how much it is worth. +</p> +<p> +As to the river, there are rivers and rivers, as the saying is; at some +we marvel, some we fear and to some we make pilgrimages as to the Mecca +of the faithful. But the Merrimac is a river to be loved, and to be +loved the better the more familiar it is. What its poet, Whittier, says +about it must be literally true: +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Our river by its valley born</p> +<p class="i2"> Was never yet forgotten."</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +It is worth while to try to imagine it as he writes it in "Cobbler +Keezer's Vision" two hundred and more years ago, when that old fellow +was so amazed at the prospect of mirth and pleasure among the +descendants of the stern Puritans that he dropped his lapstone into the +water in bewilderment. +</p> +<p> +This was the time when +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Woodsy and wild and lonesome, </p> +<p class="i4"> The swift stream wound away, </p> +<p class="i2"> Through birches and scarlet maples </p> +<p class="i4"> Flashing in foam and spray." </p> +</div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Down on the sharp-horned ledges </p> +<p class="i4"> Plunging in steep cascade, </p> +<p class="i2"> Tossing its white-maned waters </p> +<p class="i4"> Against the hemlock's shade." </p> +</div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Woodsy and wild and lonesome, </p> +<p class="i4"> East and west and north and south; </p> +<p class="i2"> Only the village of fishers </p> +<p class="i4"> Down at the river's mouth;" </p> +</div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "Only here and there a clearing, </p> +<p class="i4"> With its farm-house rude and new, </p> +<p class="i2"> And tree-stumps, swart as Indians, </p> +<p class="i4"> Where the scanty harvest grew." </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +What a picture that is! And then behind these tree-stumps, the great +forest with its possibilities of comfort and even of competence in its +giant timbers,—when they were fairly floored, but; as it stood, a +threatening foe with a worse enemy in its depths than the darkness of +its shadows, or the wild beasts. +</p> +<p> +Several of Mr. Whittier's songs of the Merrimac were written for +picnics, given at the Laurels on the Newbury side of the river by a +gentlemen and his wife from Newburyport. They were early abolitionists, +friends and hosts of Garrison, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page427" name="page427"></a>[pg 427]</span> + + of George Thompson and others of that brave band, and of course friends +of the poet. This hospitable couple gave a picnic here every June for +twenty years. The first was a little party of perhaps half-a-dozen +people, the twenty-first was a large assembly. Mr. Whittier was present +at these picnics whenever able, and, as has been said, sometimes wrote a +poem to be read there. He never reads in public himself. +</p> +<p> +Although the Powow river has been made so emphatically a stream of use, +there are glimpses of a native beauty in it that its hard fate has never +obliterated; these are still there, as one stands upon the little bridge +that spans its last few rods of individual life and looks up the stream +upon a wintry landscape, or upon summer fields, and longingly toward the +bend. +</p> +<p> +Whether the Powow has any power to set in motion the wheels of fancy as +it does the wheels of the factories it is impossible to say, but this +much is certain; on its banks was born an artist who has made his name +known on the banks of the Seine. The father of Mr. Charles Davis, our +young artist of great promise and of no mean performance, was for years +a teacher in Amesbury, and the garden of the house where this son was +born bordered upon the Powow. +</p> +<a name="image-0010"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/449.jpg"><img src="images/449.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="THE OLD SANDY HILL MEETING HOUSE" /></a> +<br /> +THE OLD SANDY HILL MEETING HOUSE +</div> +<p> +At Pond Hills, between Amesbury and Merrimac, is lake Attitash, which, +before Mr. Whittier took pity upon it, rejoiced in the name of Kimball's +Pond. There is a slight suspicion that it is still occasionally called +by its old name. In dry seasons the water is used by the mills. But the +blue lake is as beautiful as if it were never useful. On its shore +enough grand old pines are left to dream under of forests primeval, of +Indian wigwams, and of canoes on the bright water; for the red men knew +very well the hiding places of the perch and of the pickerel. So did the +white men who chose the region of the Merrimac for their new home. In +the "Maids of Attitash" is described the lake where +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "In sky and wave the white clouds swam, </p> +<p class="i2"> And the blue hills of Nottingham </p> +<p class="i4"> Through gaps of leafy green </p> +<p class="i4"> Across the lake were seen." </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page428" name="page428"></a>[pg 428]</span> +</p> +<p> +All these are still here, but one misses the maidens who ought to be +sitting there +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> "In the shadow of the ash</p> +<p class="i2"> That dreams its dream in Attitash."</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +No doubt they are about here somewhere, only it takes a poet's eye to +find them. And yet it was not very far from here that there lived a few +years ago a young girl, a descendant of one of the early settlers of +Amesbury, who on her engagement said to a friend proudly:—"I am going +to marry a poor man, and I am going to help him." And so she always +nobly did, in ways different from tawdry ambition. The courage of the +old Puritans has not died out here any more than the old beauty has +deserted the land. +</p> +<hr /> +<a name="h2H_4_0010" id="h2H_4_0010"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + KATE FIELD'S NEW DEPARTURE. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Edward Increase Mather.</span> +</h3> +<p> +Miss Kate Field has been so exclusively identified with artistic and +literary success that her new departure as a lecturer on existing +political evils has excited no little surprise and comment. An +exceptional degree of public interest as well as of purely private and +personal regard has followed her almost, indeed, from childhood; partly +due, it may be, to a certain indefinable magnetism of temperament which +always makes the place where she chances to be at the time seem a social +centre, and somewhat, too, from a life that has not been without its +picturesque setting of scenery and circumstance. "Kate Field was started +right,"—remarked Miss Frances E. Willard of her one day. "As a child +Walter Savage Landor held her on his knee and taught her, and she grew +up in the atmosphere of Art." The chance observation made only <i>en +passant</i>, never the less touched a salient truth in that vital manner +in which Miss Willard's words are accustomed to touch truth. She was, +indeed, "started right." The only child of gifted parents, endowed with +a rare combination of intellectual and artistic talent; with a nobility +and genuineness of nature that has ever been one of her most marked +characteristics; attuned by temperament to all that is fine, and high, +and beautiful,—it is little wonder that her life has presented a series +of advancing achievements. She has studied, and read, and thought; she +has travelled, and "sipped the foam of many lives;" and a polished and +many-sided culture has added its charm to a woman singularly charming by +nature and possessed of the subtle gift of fascination. When very young +she studied music and modern languages abroad in Florence, and in +London. To music she especially devoted herself studying under Garcia +and under William Shakespeare, the great English tenor, whose favorite +pupil she is said to have been. Walter Savage Landor conceived a great +fondness for her, gave her lessons in Latin, and left her at his death a +valuable portfolio of old drawings. In some verses addressed "To K.F." +he alludes to her as:— +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> Modest as winged angels are, </p> +<p class="i2"> And no less brave and no less fair. </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page429" name="page429"></a>[pg 429]</span> +</p> +<a name="image-0011"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:250px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/451.jpg"><img src="images/451.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="MISS KATE FIELD." /></a> +<br /> +MISS KATE FIELD. +</div> +<p> +His interest was richly repaid by the young girl who, after his death, +wrote reminiscences of Landor in a manner whose sympathetic brilliancy +of interpretation added an enduring lustre to his life and achievement. +In her early girlhood as, indeed, in her womanhood, her brilliancy and +charm won all hearts. It was in Florence that she met George Eliot, and +a moon-light evening at the Trollope villa, where Marion Lewes led the +girl, dream-enchanted, out on the fragrant and flowery terrace, left its +picture in her memory, and exquisitely did she portray it in a paper on +George Eliot at the time of her death. By temperament and cultivation +Miss Field is admirably adapted to interpret to the world its masters, +its artists. Her dramatic criticism on Ristori ranks among the finest +ever written of the stage; her "Pen Photographs of Dickens's Readings" +have permanently recorded that memorable tour. Her Life of Fechter wins +its praise from the highest literary authorities in our own country and +London. She has published a few books, made up from her fugitive +articles in the <i>Tribune</i>, the <i>London Times</i>, the <i>Athenæum</i>, and +the magazines, and more of this literature would be eminently refreshing +and acceptable. It is no exaggeration to say that among the American +writers of to-day no one has greater breadth, vigor, originality +and power than Kate Field. She is by virtue of wide outlook and +comprehension of important matters, entirely free from the tendency to +petty detail and trivial common-place that clogs the minds and pens of +many women-writers. Her foreign letters to the <i>Tribune</i> discussed +questions of political significance and international interest. Miss +Field is a woman of so many resources that she has never made of her +writing a trade, but has used it as an art; and she never writes unless +she has something to say. This fact teaches a moral that the woman of +the period may do well to contemplate. +</p> +<p> +Yet with all the varied charms of foreign life, passed in the most +cultivated + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page430" name="page430"></a>[pg 430]</span> + + and refined social circles of Europe, Kate Field never forgot that she +was an American, and patriotism grew to be a passion with her. She +became a student of English and American politics, and her revelations +of the ponderous machinery of the British Parliament, in a series of +strong and brilliant press letters, now collected into the little volume +called "Hap-Hazzard," was as fine and impressive in its way as is her +dramatic criticism or literary papers. All this, perhaps, had paved the +way for her to enter into a close and comprehensive study of the subject +which she is now so ably discussing in her notable lectures on the +social and the political crimes of Utah. The profound and serious +attention which she is now giving to this problem stamps her lectures as +among the most potent political influences of the time. Miss Field's +discussion of Mormonism is one of those events which seem pre-determined +by the law of the unconscious, and which seem to choose the individual +rather than to be chosen by him. In the summer of 1883, by way of a +change from continental travel, Miss Field determined to hitch her wagon +to a star and journey westward. She lingered for a month in Denver where +she received distinguished social attention and where, by special +request, she gave her lecture on an "Evening with Dickens" and her +charming "Musical Monologue." Of this Dickens' lecture a western journal +said:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "Charles Dickens was the novelist of humanity, and Kate Field is, + to-day, his most sympathetic and intelligent interpreter. Those who + were so fortunate as to attend her reading last evening enjoyed an + intellectual pleasure not soon forgotten. They saw a slender, graceful + woman, dressed in creamy white, with soft laces falling about her; with + low, broad brow, and earnest, sympathetic eyes, under a cloud of soft + dark hair. With a rich and finely modulated voice of remarkable power + of expression, she held her audience for two hours spellbound by the + magic of her genius." +</p> +<p> +In Colorado Miss Field enjoyed an unique and picturesque holiday. +Picnics and excursions were gotten up in her honor; special trains were +run; she rode on horseback with gay parties of friends twenty-five miles +a day; she joined friends from New York who were camping out on "The +Needles," and she made a visit to the San Juan Silver-mining district. +Among other diversions she had the honor of naming a new watering place, +located on "The Divide," an hour by rail from Denver, to which, in honor +of General Palmer who has practically "made" that region, Miss Field +gave the name of Palmero, the Spanish for Palmer. +</p> +<p> +How unconsciously Miss Field came to study the problem presented by the +peculiar institutions of Utah is curiously indicated in a letter from +Salt Lake City, under date of Jan. 16, 1884, which she wrote to the +Boston <i>Herald</i>, and which opens thus:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "I know of nothing that would do Bostonians so much good as a prolonged + trip across this continent, giving themselves sufficient time to tarry + at different points and study the people. For myself—about half a + Bostonian—I became so ashamed of sailing east year after year, that + last summer I made up my mind to hitch my wagon to the star of empire + and learn as much of my own country as I knew of Europe. I started from + New York in July, expecting to be absent three months, and in that + period obtain an intelligent idea of the far West. After passing two + months and a half in wonderful Colorado and only seeing a fraction of + the Centennial state, I began to realize that in two years I might, + with diligence, get a tolerable idea of this republic + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page431" name="page431"></a>[pg 431]</span> + + west of the Mississippi. Cold weather setting in, and the fall of snow + rendering mountain travelling in Colorado neither safe nor agreeable, I + came to Utah over the wonderful Denver & Rio Grande railroad, intending + to pass a week prior to visiting New Mexico and Arizona. My + week expired on the 22nd day of October and still I linger among the + 'saints.' I am regarded as more or less demented by eastern friends. If + becoming interested in a most extraordinary anomaly to such an extent + as to desire to study it and to be able to form an intelligent opinion + therein is being demented, then I am mad indeed, for I've not yet got + to the bottom of the Utah problem, and if I lived here years, there + would still be much to learn. Despite this last discouraging fact, + I have improved my opportunities and am able to paragraph what has come + under my own observation or been acquired by absorption of Mormon and + Gentile literature. If the commissioners sent here by Congress to + investigate the Mormon question, at an annual expense of forty thousand + dollars per annum, had studied this question as earnestly as I have, + they never would have told the country that polygamy is dying out. One + or two members of that commission know better, and sooner or later they + must tell the truth or stultify their own souls." +</p> +<p> +This extract reveals how deeply the anomaly of Mormon life had at once +impressed her. Miss Field was too keen and cultivated an observer not to +see beneath the surface of this phase of living a problem whose roots +struck deep into national prosperity and safety. The distinguished +essayist and critic, Mr. Edwin P. Whipple, said of her study of +Mormonism:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + She undertook a perfectly original method of arriving at the truth, by + intimate conversations with Mormon husbands and wives, as well as with + the most intelligent of the "Gentiles." She discarded from her mind + pre-conceptions and all prejudices which discolor and distort objects + which should be rigidly investigated, and looked at the mass of facts + before her in what Bacon calls "dry light." Cornelius Vanderbilt, the + elder, was accustomed to account for the failures and ruin of the + brilliant young brokers who tried to corner the stocks in which he had + an interest, by declaring that "these dashing young fellars didn't see + things as they be." Miss Field saw things in Utah "as they be." She + collected facts of personal observation, analyzed and generalized them, + and, by degrees, her sight became insight, and the passage from insight + to foresight is rapid. After thorough investigation, her insight + enabled her to penetrate into the secret of that "mystery of iniquity" + which Mormonism really is; while her foresight showed her what would + be the inevitable result of the growth and diffusion of such a horrible + creed. +</p> +<p> +The winter lapsed into spring and still she lingered in Salt Lake City. +She relinquished all pleasure for the real work of studying deeply the +anomaly of a Polygamous hierarchy thriving in the heart of the Republic. +Every facility was accorded to her by United States officials, military +officers, leading Gentiles and Apostates. Prominent "Latter Day Saints" +offered her marked courtesy. She pursued this research unremittingly for +eight months and when, at last, she left Salt Lake City, the leading +Gentile paper, the Tribune, devoted a leading editorial to Miss Field's +marvellously thorough study of Mormon conditions, and, on her departure, +said:— +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "Miss Field is probably the best posted person, outside the high + Mormon church officials, and others who have been in the church, on + this institution, in the world, and its effects upon men, women and + governments. With a fixedness of purpose which nothing could swerve, + and with an energy which neither storm, mud, snow, cold looks, the + persuasions or even the loss of friends, could for a moment dampen, she + has held on her course. In the tabernacle, in the ward meeting house, + in the homes of high Mormons, and, when these were closed to her, in + the homes of the poor, she has worked upon the theme, while every scrap + of history which offered + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page432" name="page432"></a>[pg 432]</span> + + to give any light upon the Mormon organization she has devoured. + Mormonism has been to her like a fever. It has run its course and now + she is going away. If she proposes to lecture, she ought to be able to + prepare a better lecture on Mormonism than she has ever yet delivered; + if a book is in process of incubation it ought to be of more value than + any former book on this subject. Lecture or book will be intense enough + to satisfy all demands. The 'Tribune' gives the world notice in advance + that Miss Field has a most intimate knowledge of the Mormon kingdom." +</p> +<p> +Returning to the East she stopped on the way in Missouri and at Nauvoo, +Illinois, looking up all the old camping-grounds of Mormonism, and +meeting and interviewing people who had been connected with it, +including two sons of Joseph Smith, Miss Field opened her course of +lectures on this subject in Boston last November, before a brilliant and +distinguished audience, including the Governor and other officials of +state, Harvard University professors, and men and women eminent in art, +literature and society. She dealt with the political crimes of the +Mormons, arguing that the great wrong was not, as many had believed, +polygamy, but treason! Polygamy, though "the cornerstone of the Mormon +church," was not inserted in its printed articles of faith and was not +taught until the unwary had been "gathered to Zion." The monstrosity of +the "revelation" on celestial marriage; the tragic unhappiness of Mormon +women; the elastic conscience of John Taylor, "prophet, seer and +revelator" to God's chosen people, were vividly depicted. Her extracts +from Brigham Young's sermons, and from those of his counsellors, are +forcible arguments on the Gentile side. Indeed, throughout her entire +discourse, Miss Field clinches every statement with Mormon proof, rarely +going to Gentile authorities for vital facts connected with her subject. +The lecturer's sense of humor betrayed itself now and then, when, with +fervor, she related an incident in her own experience, or quoted a "Song +of Zion." The refrain of one of these songs still rings in our ears: +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> Then, oh, let us say </p> +<p class="i2"> God bless the wife that strives </p> +<p class="i2"> And aids her husband all she can </p> +<p class="i2"> To obtain a dozen wives! </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +The prodigious contrast between the preaching and practice of polygamy +was fully displayed. Mormons claim that there is a vast difference +between bigamy and polygamy; that only good men are allowed to take +plural wives; that no saint takes more wives than he can support, and +that a muchly married "man of God" exercises the most rigid impartiality +in the bestowal of his affections upon his various women. Miss Field +upsets these beautiful theories by graphic pictures drawn from life, and +cited Brigham Young himself as "a bright and shining lie to the boast of +impartiality." Brigham Young's coup d'etat in granting woman suffrage in +1871 was illuminated, and emphasized by the assertions:—"A territory +that has abolished the right of dower, that proclaims polygamy to be +divine, that has no laws against bigamy and kindred crimes, that has no +just appreciation of woman, is unworthy of self-respecting humanity, +woman suffrage or no woman suffrage." Miss Field makes in these lectures +a telling exposition of the doctrine of + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page433" name="page433"></a>[pg 433]</span> + + blood atonement, passing on to these Mormon missionaries and their +methods, and the people who become "fascinated with the idea of direct +communication with heaven through the medium of a prophet," and to whom +the missionary brethren prudently "leave the mysteries of polygamy to +the imagination," while they inculcate the importance of "gathering to +Zion." She outlined the educational status and the discouragement given +by Brigham Young to all educational progress. Of Mormon treason she +says:— +</p> +<p> +"Five years after the United States had established the Territory of +Utah its people were in armed rebellion because the government dared to +send a Gentile governor and national troops to Utah." +</p> +<p> +Nor does she spare the United States in its responsibility for these +crimes. "The United States to-day," said Miss Field, "is responsible for +thirty years' growth of polygamy, with its attendant degradation of +woman and brutalization of man." As an illustration of this conclusion, +she told a most interesting story of which Governor Harding of Utah, +Brigham Young, Benjamin Halliday, Postmaster General Blair, Abraham +Lincoln and William H. Seward were the characters. The story is a +dramatic and significant bit of Mormon history, related for the first +time. It led up to an earnest and eloquent peroration of which the final +words were: "'I'll believe polygamy is wrong when Congress breaks it up; +not before!' exclaims a plural wife. Men and women of New England! You +who forge public opinion; you who sounded the death knell of slavery, +what are you going to do about it!" +</p> +<p> +William Lloyd Garrison used to tell his friends that it was worth an +admission fee just to see Kate Field on the platform, as she made so +lovely a picture. Her attitudes—for they are too spontaneous and +unconscious to be termed poses—are the impersonation of grace, and, +aside from the enjoyment of the intellectual quality and searching +political analysis of her lectures, is that of the artistic effect. +She gave a course of three lectures on this "Mormon Monster." They were +efforts whose invincible logic, graphic presentation and thrilling power +held spellbound her audience. They were a drama of social and political +life, and almost unprecedented on the lyceum platform was this eloquence +and splendor of oratory, combined with the trained thought, the +scholarly acquirement, and the finished eloquence of its delivery. This +course of lectures finished there was a popular call for Miss Field to +repeat one at Tremont Temple which, by invitation of Governor Robinson, +the Mayor and a number of distinguished citizens, she consented to do. +The triumph was repeated. From Boston she was invited to lecture in +Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Washington. Press and people were alike +enthusiastic. It is to the work of Miss Kate Field more than to any +other cause, that the present disintegration of Mormon treason is due. +Other travellers in Utah have made but the briefest stays, and have been +ready to gloss over the tale. Miss Field is telling the truth about it, +and she does it with a courage, a vigor, an honesty, and a power that +renders it one of the most potent influences in the national life of the +times. Kate Field holds to-day the first place on the Lyceum platform of +America. She has a rare combination of judicial and executive qualities. +She is singularly free from exaggeration, and her + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page434" name="page434"></a>[pg 434]</span> + + sense of justice is never deflected by personal feeling or emotional +impulse. She has that exceptional balance of the intellectual and +artistic forces that enables her to give to her lecture a superb +literary quality, and to deliver it with faultless grace of manner and +an impressiveness of presence rarely equalled. In Kate Field America has +a woman worthy to be called an orator. +</p> +<hr /> +<a name="h2H_4_0011" id="h2H_4_0011"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + THE MONUMENT AND HOMESTEAD OF REBECCA NURSE. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Elizabeth Porter Gould.</span> +</h3> +<p> +Perhaps the greatest incentive to ideal living in a changing world is +the firmly held conviction that truth will finally vindicate itself. +When this vindication is made apparent, as in the case of Rebecca +Nurse, one of the most striking martyrs of the Salem witchcraft days of +1692, the cause of human progress seems assured. For it is thus seen +that truth has within itself a living seed which in its development +is destined to become man's guide to further knowledge and growth. +This idea was impressed upon me anew as I stood before the granite +monument, some eight and a half feet high, erected this past summer in +Danvers,—originally Salem,—to the memory of Mrs. Rebecca Nurse, by +her descendants. A carpet of green grass surrounded it, and a circle of +nearly twenty pine trees guarded it as sentinels. The pines were singing +their summer requiem as I read on the front of the monument these +words:— +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> REBECCA NURSE, </p> +<p class="i2"> YARMOUTH, ENGLAND, </p> +<p class="i2"> 1621. </p> +<p class="i2"> SALEM, MASS., </p> +<p class="i2"> 1692. </p> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> O Christian martyr, who for Truth could die </p> +<p class="i2"> When all about thee owned the hideous lie, </p> +<p class="i2"> The world, redeemed from Superstition's sway, </p> +<p class="i2"> Is breathing freer for thy sake to-day. </p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +I lingered a moment over these fitting lines of Whittier, whose charming +home, "Oak Knoll," a short distance off, had just given me a restful +pleasure. Then I walked around to the other side of the monument, where +I read, with mingled feelings, the following words:— +</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> Accused of witchcraft</p> +<p class="i4"> She declared,</p> +<p class="i2"> "I am innocent, and God will</p> +<p class="i4"> clear my innocency."</p> +</div> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page435" name="page435"></a>[pg 435]</span> + +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> Once acquitted yet falsely</p> +<p class="i2"> condemned, she suffered</p> +<p class="i4"> death July 19, 1692.</p> +</div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2"> In loving memory of her</p> +<p class="i4"> Christian character,</p> +<p class="i2"> even then truly attested by</p> +<p class="i4"> forty of her neighbors,</p> +<p class="i2"> this monument is erected.</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +These last lines reminded me of the fact that the paper with its forty +signatures, testifying to the forty years' acquaintance of the good +character of Rebecca Nurse, was still in existence. Alas! why couldn't +such a testimony of neighbors and friends have saved her? But it was not +so to be. The government of the colony, the influence of the magistracy, +and public opinion elsewhere, overpowered all friendly and family help; +and on the 19th July, 1692, at the advanced age of seventy-one years, +Rebecca Nurse was hung on Gallows hill. +</p> +<p> +As I left the monument, which is in the old family burying-ground, and +wandered up the time-honored lane towards the homestead where she was +living when arrested, the March before, my thoughts would go back to +those dreadful days. I thought of this venerable mother's surprise and +wonder, as she learned of the several distinct indictments against her, +four of which, for having practised "certain detestable acts called +witchcraft" upon Ann Putnam, Mary Walcot, Elizabeth Hubbard, and Abigail +Williams, were still to be found in the Salem records. I thought of the +feelings of this old and feeble woman as she was borne to the Salem +jail, then a month later sent off, with other prisoners, to the jail +in Boston (then a whole day's journey), to be sent back to Salem for +her final doom. I pictured her on trial, when, in the presence of her +accusers, the "afflicted girls," and the assembled crowd, she constantly +declared her innocence ("I am innocent, and God will clear my +innocency"), and showed a remarkable power in refuting the questions of +the magistrate. I thought of her Christian faith and courage, when, upon +seeing all the assembly, and even the magistrate, putting faith in the +"afflicted girls'" diabolical tantrums (what else can I call them?) as +there enacted, and now preserved in the records of the trial, she calmiy +said, "I have got nobody to look to but God." I again pictured her, as, +just before the horrors of execution, she was taken from the prison to +the meeting-house, by the sheriff and his men, to receive before a great +crowd of spectators the added disgrace of excommunication from the +Church. +</p> +<p> +But I could picture no more. My heart rebelled. And as I had now reached +the old homestead on the hill I paused a moment, before entering, to +rest under the shade of the trees and to enjoy the extensive views of +the surrounding country. This comforted my troubled feelings, and +suggested the thought that in the fourteen years that Rebecca Nurse had +lived there she must have often come under the shade of the trees, +perhaps after hours of hard work and care, to commune alone with her +God. How could I help + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page436" name="page436"></a>[pg 436]</span> + + thinking so when there came up before me her answer to the magistrate's +question, "Have you familiarity with these spirits?"—"No, I have none +but with God alone." Surely, to one who knew Him as she did, who in calm +strength could declare her innocence when many around her, as innocent +as she, were frightened into doubt and denial, the quiet and rest of +nature must have been a necessary means of courage and strength. +</p> +<p> +Then what did not the old house, with its sloping roof, tell me, as it +still stood where Townsend Bishop had built it in 1636, upon receiving a +grant of three hundred acres? Yes, this old "Bishop's mansion," as the +deed calls it, had felt the joys and sorrows of our common human life +for almost two hundred and fifty years. It had known the friends whom +Townsend Bishop, as one of the accomplished men of Salem village, had +gathered about him in the few years that he had lived there. It must +have heard some of Hugh Peters' interesting experiences, since, as +pastor of the First Church those very years (1636-1641), he was a +frequent visitor. Why couldn't one think that Roger Williams had often +come to compare notes on house-building, since he owned the "old witch +house" (still standing on the corner of Essex and North streets) at the +same time that Mr. Bishop was building his house? It certainly was a +pleasure to remember that Governor Endicott once owned and lived on this +farm. He bought it in 1648, for one hundred and sixty pounds, of Henry +Checkering, to whom Mr. Bishop had sold it seven years before. +</p> +<p> +I recalled many other things, that summer day, concerning this ancient +place. Shall I not tell them? While the Governor lived on it he +continued his good work for the general opening of the country around +about. Among other things he laid out the road that passes its +entrance-gate to-day. +</p> +<p> +Here his son John brought his youthful Boston bride, and gave to her the +place as a "marriage-gift." Then, some years later, she, the widow of +John, having become the bride of a Mr. James Allen, gave it to him as a +"marriage-gift;" and upon her death, in 1673, he became the possessor. +Five years later he sold it to Francis Nurse, the husband of Rebecca, +for four hundred pounds. Mr. Nurse was an early settler of Salem, a +"tray-maker," whose articles were much used. He was a man of good +judgment, and respected by his neighbors. He was then fifty-eight years +of age, and his wife fifty-seven. They had four sons and four daughters. +The peculiar terms of the purchase had always seemed interesting to me; +for the purchase-money of four hundred pounds was not required to be +paid until the expiration of twenty-one years. In the meantime a +moderate rent of seven pounds a year for the first twelve years, and ten +pounds for each of the remaining nine years, was determined upon. +Suitable men were appointed to estimate the value of what Mr. Nurse +should add to the estate while living upon it, by clearing meadows, +erecting buildings, or making other improvements. This value over one +hundred and fifty pounds was to be paid to him. These various sums, if +paid over to Mr. Allen before the twenty-one years had expired, would +make a proportionate part of the farm at Mr. Nurse's disposal. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page437" name="page437"></a>[pg 437]</span> +</p> +<p> +The low rent and the industrious, frugal habits of Mr. Nurse and his +family, added to the fact that not a dollar was required to be paid down +at first, led to the making of such good improvements that before half +the time had elapsed a value was created large enough to pay the whole +four hundred pounds to Mr. Allen. When Mr. Nurse thus became owner of +this estate he gave to his children, who had already good homes within +its boundaries, the larger half of the farm, while he reserved for +himself the homestead and the rest of the land. By the deeds he gave +them, they were required to maintain a roadway to connect with the old +homestead and with the homes of each other. +</p> +<p> +While the different members of the Nurse family were thus working hard +for the money to buy the place there was hanging over its owner the +shadow of litigation for its possession. But this was Mr. Allen's +affair, not theirs, so they went on their way in peace. Indeed, it has +been thought that their steady success in life was one cause of their +future trouble. They became objects of envy to those restless ones less +favored. And so, when the opportunity came to merely whisper a name for +the "afflicted girls" to take up, Rebecca Nurse's fate was in the hands +of an enemy. A striking example of the innocent suffering for the +guilty. Does not vicarious suffering seem to be an important factor in +the development of the race? Two years after, this faithful wife and +mother had been led from her peaceful home to suffer the agonies of +prisons, trials, and hanging. When the children had all married, the +father gave up the homestead to his son Samuel, and divided his +remaining property among his sons and daughters. He died soon after, +in 1695. He was a kind, true father, whose requests after death were +heeded. This homestead was in the Nurse name as late as 1784, when it +was owned by a great-grandson of Rebecca. He sold it to Phineas Putnam, +a descendant of old Nathaniel Putnam, who, in the hour of need, wrote +the paper for the forty signatures above mentioned. The estate descended +to the great-grandson of Phineas, Orin Putnam, who, in 1836, married the +daughter of Allen Nurse. And thus a direct descendant of Rebecca Nurse +was again placed to preside over the ancestral farm, and to their +descendants it belongs to-day. +</p> +<p> +After thus thinking over this interesting history of the old place, +as I reclined under the shade of its trees, I was better prepared to +enjoy the kind hospitality which it then offered me. I felt a peculiar +pleasure in stepping into the same little front porch which Townsend +Bishop had built so many years ago. And upon ascending the stairs I +found myself lingering a while by the old original balusters, the +building of which Roger Williams had perhaps viewed with interest. Upon +reaching the attic it was a pleasure, indeed, to see in this new world +the frame-work of a house which for two hundred and fifty years had +stood so well the test of nature in all her moods. No saw was used in +shaping those oaken timbers. They knew only the broad-axe. From this +attic I descended to the sitting-room, to spend a while under the same +low beams which had greeted the first visitors of the house. Here I +imagined the Nurse family living in quiet and peace. Here I + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page438" name="page438"></a>[pg 438]</span> + + pictured the son Samuel, as, later, he wondered over and over again how +he could remove the reproach which was on his mother's name. And I +thought that to him his descendants owed much, for it was mainly to his +pleadings that the General Court exonerated her in 1710, and the Church +in 1712. +</p> +<p> +While sitting there I learned of some alterations which had been made +from time to time: how the front of the house, before which the old +roadway used to be, had been widened by extending the western end beyond +the porch. +</p> +<p> +As I came out of the house upon the green grass around it, I enjoyed +again the grand outlook over the surrounding country,—the same which in +the days of agony had strengthened human souls,—and then walked down +the hill, by the family burying-ground, out through the entrance-gate +into Collins street, the public thoroughfare. +</p> +<p> +I left the monument and its interesting associations that August day of +1885 (it was dedicated only the July 30 before) with the feeling that as +the present descendants of Rebecca Nurse owe much to her son Samuel, so +their future descendants will be indebted to them for the appropriate +manner in which they have still further striven to vindicate before the +world the innocence of a much-wronged ancestor. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page439" name="page439"></a>[pg 439]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0012" id="h2H_4_0012"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + THE PRESENT RESOURCES OF MASSACHUSETTS. +</h2> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By H.K.M.</span> +</h3> +<p> +Massachusetts is a busy state. The old time factory bell has not +entirely given way to the steam whistle, nor the simple village spire to +the more pretentious ecclesiastical tower of to-day, yet the energizing +force of material prosperity has quickened the blood in nearly every +hamlet, modernized the old, or built up a new, so that throughout the +state there is a substantial freshness indicative of progressive thrift. +</p> +<p> +The Tenth Census of the United States classifies the entire +working population of the state in four divisions of labor as +follows:—Agriculture, 64,973; Professional and Personal services, +170,160; Trade and Transportation, 115,376; Mechanical, 370,265; with a +total population of 1,941,465.<a href="#note-4" name="noteref-4"><small>4</small></a> The aggregate steam and water power in +1880 was 309,759 horse power; the motive power of 14,352 manufacturing +establishments having an invested capital of $303,806,185; paying +$128,315,362 in wages to 370,265 persons who produced a product value of +$631,135,284. These results, in proportion to area and population, place +Massachusetts first in the Union as a manufacturing state. In mechanical +science a complete cotton mill has been considered the cap stone of +human ingenuity. In 1790 Mr. Samuel Slater established in Pawtucket, +R.I., the first successful cotton mill in the United States, but the +saw gin, a Massachusetts invention of Mr. Eli Whitney in 1793, laid the +foundation of the cotton industry throughout the world. +</p> +<p> +There are 956 cotton mills in the United States with an invested capital +of $208,280,346, with a wage account of $42,040,510. The relative +importance of the four leading states in the manufacture of cotton goods +is shown as follows:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Relative +importance of the four leading states in the manufacture of cotton goods"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 206 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$74,118,801 </td><td align="right">$16,240,908 </td><td align="right">$74,780,835 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 133 </td><td> R.I. </td><td align="right"> 29,260,734 </td><td align="right"> 5,623,933 </td><td align="right"> 24,609,461 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 97 </td><td> Conn. </td><td align="right"> 21,104,200 </td><td align="right"> 3,750,017 </td><td align="right"> 17,050,126 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 41 </td><td> N.H. </td><td align="right"> 19,993,584 </td><td align="right"> 4,322,622 </td><td align="right"> 18,226,573 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +As in cotton, so also in the manufacture of woolen goods has +Massachusetts maintained from the first the leading position. In 1794 +in Byfield parish, Newbury, Mass., the first woolen mill went into +successful operation. In 1804 a good quality of gray mixed broadcloth +was made at Pittsfield, Mass., and it is said that in 1808 President +Madison's inaugural suit of black broadcloth was made there. +</p> +<p> +The five leading states in the production of woolen goods are thus +classified:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="The five leading states in the production of woolen goods"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 167 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$24,680,782 </td><td align="right">$7,457,115 </td><td align="right">$45,099,203 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 324 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 18,780,604 </td><td align="right"> 5,254,328 </td><td align="right"> 32,341,291 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 78 </td><td> Conn. </td><td align="right"> 7,907,452 </td><td align="right"> 2,342,935 </td><td align="right"> 16,892,284 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 50 </td><td> R.I. </td><td align="right"> 8,448,700 </td><td align="right"> 2,480,907 </td><td align="right"> 15,410,450 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 159 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 8,266,878 </td><td align="right"> 1,774,143 </td><td align="right"> 9,874,973 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page440" name="page440"></a>[pg 440]</span> +</p> + +<p> +In its kindred industry, dyeing and finishing textiles, Massachusetts is +a controlling force; as seen in the classification of the three leading +states in this department of labor:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="classification of the three leading +states in dyeing and finishing textiles"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td>28 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$8,613,500 </td><td align="right">$1,815,431 </td><td align="right"> $9,482,939 </td></tr> +<tr><td>16 </td><td> R.I. </td><td align="right"> 5,912,500 </td><td align="right"> 1,093,727 </td><td align="right"> 6,874,254 </td></tr> +<tr><td>60 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 3,884,846 </td><td align="right"> 1,041,309 </td><td align="right"> 6,259,852 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +Nearly one half of the entire American production of felt goods comes +from her, as indicated in the classification of the four leading +states:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="American production of felt goods, four leading states"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td>11 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right"> $820,000 </td><td align="right">$163,440 </td><td align="right"> $1,627,320 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 6 </td><td> N.J. </td><td align="right"> 313,000 </td><td align="right"> 86,170 </td><td align="right"> 685,386 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 4 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 157,500 </td><td align="right"> 35,289 </td><td align="right"> 257,450 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 1 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 150,000 </td><td align="right"> 80,000 </td><td align="right"> 450,000 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +Massachusetts is also an all-important factor in the total production of +American carpets. The 59 mills in the United States made in 1880 a +wholesale product valued at $31,792,802. Massachusetts made the most +Brussels, 1,884,723 yards; Pennsylvania came next with 919,476 yards. +She came next to New York in yards of Tapestry, and next to Connecticut +in Wiltons, a good second in these important grades. The three leading +carpet states are thus classified:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Three leading carpet production states"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 10 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right">$6,422,158 </td><td align="right">$1,952,391 </td><td align="right"> $8,419,254 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 172 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 7,210,483 </td><td align="right"> 3,035,971 </td><td align="right"> 14,304,660 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 7 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right"> 4,637,646 </td><td align="right"> 1,223,303 </td><td align="right"> 6,337,629 </td></tr> +</table> + + +<p> +In the manufacture of Boots and Shoes Massachusetts stands conspicuously +at the front; her position in this great industry is clearly seen in the +three states controlling this special product:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Three states producing boots and shoes"> + +<tr><th> No. of Factories. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 982 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$21,098,133 </td><td align="right">$24,875,106 </td><td align="right">$95,900,510 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 272 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 6,227,537 </td><td align="right"> 4,902,132 </td><td align="right"> 18,979,259 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 145 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 3,627,840 </td><td align="right"> 2,820,976 </td><td align="right"> 9,590,002 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +One evidence that Massachusetts is not sitting down all the time is the +fact that she stands up to manufacture so many chairs. From a small +beginning of wood and flag seated chairs, Mr. James M. Comee in 1805, +with his foot lathe, in one room of his dwelling in Gardner. Mass., laid +the foundation of this important industry, which has given the town of +Gardner, where over 1,000,000 of chairs are annually made, a world wide +reputation. +</p> +<p> +The relative positions of the five leading chair states:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Five states leading chair manufacture"> + +<tr><th> No. of Factories. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 62 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$1,948,600 </td><td align="right">$1,028,087 </td><td align="right"> $3,290,837 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 62 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 991,000 </td><td align="right"> 472,974 </td><td align="right"> 1,404,138 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 45 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 111,700 </td><td align="right"> 143,037 </td><td align="right"> 437,010 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 37 </td><td> Ohio </td><td align="right"> 497,026 </td><td align="right"> 321,918 </td><td align="right"> 821,702 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 37 </td><td> Ind. </td><td align="right"> 395,850 </td><td align="right"> 232,005 </td><td align="right"> 632,746 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page441" name="page441"></a>[pg 441]</span> +</p> +<p> +In the currying of leather Massachusetts is a notable leader:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Currying of leather"> + +<tr><th> No. of Establishments. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 194 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$4,308,169 </td><td align="right">$1,939,122 </td><td align="right">$23,282,775 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 185 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 1,720,356 </td><td align="right"> 366,426 </td><td align="right"> 6,192,002 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 455 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 2,570,969 </td><td align="right"> 334,950 </td><td align="right"> 7,852,177 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 56 </td><td> N.J. </td><td align="right"> 1,983,746 </td><td align="right"> 762,697 </td><td align="right"> 8,727,128 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 61 </td><td> Wis. </td><td align="right"> 1,299,425 </td><td align="right"> 281,412 </td><td align="right"> 4,496,729 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 18 </td><td> Ill. </td><td align="right"> 534,786 </td><td align="right"> 141,096 </td><td align="right"> 2,391,380 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +Her position in the manufacturing of worsted goods is also an all +important one:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="manufacture of worsted goods"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 23 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$6,195,247 </td><td align="right">$1,870,030 </td><td align="right">$10,466,016 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 28 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 4,959,639 </td><td align="right"> 1,473,958 </td><td align="right"> 10,072,473 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 11 </td><td> R.I. </td><td align="right"> 4,567,416 </td><td align="right"> 1,222,350 </td><td align="right"> 6,177,754 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +Again we find her at the head of another very important industry, the +manufacture of paper. +</p> +<p> +The five leading states in production are given their relative positions. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Five leading paper production states"> + +<tr><th> No. of Mills. </th><th> State. </th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Wages Paid. </th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 96 </td><td> Mass. </td><td align="right">$11,722,046 </td><td align="right">$2,467,359 </td><td align="right">$15,188,196 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 168 </td><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 6,859,565 </td><td align="right"> 1,217,580 </td><td align="right"> 8,524,279 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 60 </td><td> Ohio </td><td align="right"> 4,804,274 </td><td align="right"> 839,231 </td><td align="right"> 5,108,194 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 78 </td><td> Penn. </td><td align="right"> 4,099,000 </td><td align="right"> 752,151 </td><td align="right"> 5,355,912 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 65 </td><td> Conn. </td><td align="right"> 3,168,931 </td><td align="right"> 656,000 </td><td align="right"> 4,337,550 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +In 1880 Massachusetts manufactured 27,638 tons of printing paper, 24,746 +tons of writing paper, 10,255 tons of wrapping paper, 945 tons of wall +paper, 3,706,010 pounds of colored paper, 255,000 pounds of bank note +paper, 878,000 pounds of tissue paper, and 27,607,706 pounds of all +other kinds of paper. +</p> +<p> +She manufactures more shovels than any other state, about 120,000 dozen +annually. Rhode Island comes next with about one-half the quantity, and +Ohio stands third, her product being about 7,000 dozen annually. +</p> +<p> +It also falls to her lot to manufacture more Hay and Straw cutters, +about 6,000 annually. In the manufacture of hard soap Massachusetts +falls a little behind some of her sister states, but she comes smilingly +to the front with her 16,000,000 pounds of soft soap, about one half of +the total production. New York brings her annual offering of about 5,000 +pounds. +</p> +<p> +The 4,000 boats she annually builds constitute nearly one half of the +number built in the United States. +</p> +<p> +There are 131,426 persons in the United States engaged in the fisheries. +</p> +<p> +The prominent share of Massachusetts in this industry is seen in the +classification of the five leading states. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Fishery production, five leading states"> + +<tr><th> State. </th><th>No. of Persons Employed.</th><th> Capital Invested.</th><th> Value of Product.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> Mass. </td><td align="right"> 20,117 </td><td align="right">$14,334,450 </td><td align="right"> $8,141,750 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Md. </td><td align="right"> 26,008 </td><td align="right"> 6,342,443 </td><td align="right"> 5,221,715 </td></tr> +<tr><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 7,266 </td><td align="right"> 2,629,585 </td><td align="right"> 4,380,565 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Me. </td><td align="right"> 11,071 </td><td align="right"> 3,375,994 </td><td align="right"> 3,614,178 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Vir. </td><td align="right"> 18,864 </td><td align="right"> 1,914,119 </td><td align="right"> 3,124,444 </td></tr> +</table> + + +<p> +She has invested:—Over $1,000,000 in the manufacture of Baskets and +Rattan goods; over $1,600,000 in the manufacture of Brick and Tile; over + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page442" name="page442"></a>[pg 442]</span> + + $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Wagons and Carriages; over $5,000,000 +in the manufacture of Men's Clothing; over $1,500,000 in the manufacture +of Cordage and Twine; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Cutlery; +over $3,000,000 in the manufacture of Fire Arms; over $16,000,000 in the +Foundries and Machine Shops; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of +Furniture; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Iron Nails and Spikes; +over $6,000,000 in the manufacture of Iron and Steel; over $1,500,000 in +the manufacture of Jewelry; over $3,000,000 in the manufacture of +Liquors, Malt; over $3,000,000 in Slaughtering and Packing; over +$2,000,000 in Straw goods; over $2,000,000 in Sugar and Molasses, +refined; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Watches; over $2,000,000 +in the manufacture of Wire, and over $11,000,000 in unclassified +industries. +</p> +<p> +The limitations of this article will only allow brief reference to a few +of the leading industries of Massachusetts. The facts presented give her +a commanding position in the sisterhood of manufacturing States, while +the condition of her operatives, their moral and intellectual character, +has no parallel in any other manufacturing district in the world. +</p> +<p> +On her well known but dangerous coast special provisions are made to aid +the mariner; so likewise upon her more dangerous coast of sin we find +2,397 ministerial light houses whose concentrated spiritual lens-power +upon an area of 8,040 square miles, make the rocks of total depravity +loom up far above the white capped waves of theological doubt. The lower +law being less important than the higher, it takes but 1,984 lawyers to +successfully mystify the juries of the Commonwealth. Of physicians and +surgeons there are 2,845. It requires the constant services of 2,463 +persons to entertain us with music, and just one less, 2,462 barbers, +who are in daily tonsorial conflict with our hair, either rebuking it +where it does grow, or teasing it to come forth where heretofore the +dome has been hairless. +</p> +<p> +Of the 4,000,000 farms of 536,081,835 acres in the United States, 38,406 +farms of 3,359,097 acres valued at $146,197,415 yielding an annual +income of $24,160,881 lie within the borders of the state. Her 150,435 +cows produce 29,662,953 gallons of milk, which is the foundation of her +annual product of 9,655,587 pounds of butter, and 829,528 pounds of +cheese. She would be unjust to her traditional sense of justice were she +to send her beans out into the world single handed, with true paternal +solicitude she provides them with the charmed society of 80,123 swine, +thus hand in hand Massachusetts' pork and beans stride up and down the +earth, supremely content in the joyous ecstasy of their Puritan conceit. +While Massachusetts has well known agricultural tendencies, and her +Agricultural college is one of the most important factors in her system +of practical instruction, it cannot be claimed that she is a controlling +element in the agricultural interests of the country. Of all her +influences for good, perhaps her educational interests would command the +greater prominence. She has ever regarded the instruction of her youth +as one of her most sacred trusts, and in all the details of her public +school system she ranks second to no state in the Union. +</p> +<p> +In the various departments of technical instruction, she has a national +reputation. Her colleges and universities so richly endowed secure the +highest + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page443" name="page443"></a>[pg 443]</span> + + attainable advantages. These privileges supplemented by the free public +libraries of the state, place possibilities within the reach of every +young man or young woman, the value of which cannot be approximated by +human estimate. +</p> +<p> +Six of the leading states are thus classified:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Schools, six leading states"> + +<tr><th> Public Schools. </th><th> State. </th><th> School Buildings. </th><th>Sittings Provided. </th><th> School Property.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> 6,604 </td><td>Mass. </td><td align="right"> 3,343 </td><td align="right"> 319,749 </td><td align="right">$21,660,392 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 15,203 </td><td>Ill. </td><td align="right"> 11,880 </td><td align="right"> 694,106 </td><td align="right"> 15,876,572 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 11,623 </td><td>Ind. </td><td align="right"> 9,679 </td><td align="right"> 437,050 </td><td align="right"> 11,907,541 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 18,615 </td><td>N.Y. </td><td align="right"> 11,927 </td><td align="right"> 763,817 </td><td align="right"> 31,235,401 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 16,473 </td><td>Ohio </td><td align="right"> 12,224 </td><td align="right"> 676,664 </td><td align="right"> 21,643,515 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 18,618 </td><td>Penn. </td><td align="right"> 12,857 </td><td align="right"> 961,074 </td><td align="right"> 25,919,397 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +The following institutions for higher education have about $5,000,000 +invested in grounds and buildings, about $9,000,000 in endowments, +yielding an annual income of about $1,000,000, having about 4,000 +students and about 400,000 volumes in libraries, Universities and +Colleges. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Institutions of higher education and their established dates"> + +<tr><td colspan="2"><h3> UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><td> Amherst College, organized </td><td>1821 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Boston College, organized </td><td>1864 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Boston University, organized </td><td>1872 </td></tr> +<tr><td> College of the Holy Cross, organized </td><td>1843 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Tufts College, organized </td><td>1852 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Harvard College, organized </td><td>1636 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Williams College, organized </td><td>1793 </td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"> <h3>COLLEGES FOR WOMEN.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><td> Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, organized </td><td>1837 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Sophia Smith College, organized </td><td>1872 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Wellesley College, organized </td><td>1874 </td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"> <h3>THEOLOGICAL SCHOOLS.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><td> Andover Theological Seminary, organized </td><td>1808 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Boston University School of Theology, organized </td><td>1847 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Divinity School of Harvard University, organized </td><td>1816 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Episcopal Theological School, organized </td><td>1867 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Tufts College Divinity School, organized </td><td>1867 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Newton Theological Institution, organized </td><td>1825 </td></tr> +<tr><td> New Church Theological School, organized </td><td>1866 </td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"> <h3>LAW SCHOOLS.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><td> Boston University School of Law, organized </td><td>1872 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Law School of Harvard University, organized </td><td>1817 </td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"> <h3>SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><td> Boston University School of Medicine, organized </td><td>1869 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Harvard Medical School, organized </td><td>1782 </td></tr> +<tr><td> New England Female Medical College, organized </td><td>1850 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Boston Dental College, organized </td><td>1868 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Dental School Harvard College, organized </td><td>1867 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Massachusetts College of Pharmacy, organized </td><td>1823 </td></tr> + +<tr><td> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page444" name="page444"></a>[pg 444]</span> +</td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"><h3>THE SCHOOLS OF SCIENCE.</h3></td></tr> + +<tr><td>Massachusetts Agricultural College, organized </td><td>1867 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Massachusetts Institute of Technology, organized </td><td>1861 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Lawrence Scientific School, organized </td><td>1848 </td></tr> +<tr><td>Worcester County Free Institute of Industrial + Science, organized </td><td>1868 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +While Massachusetts is a model state in all her educational interests, +we do not forget that there are 75,635 persons in the state who cannot +read, and 92,980 persons who cannot write, but of the 990,160 native +white persons of ten years and upwards only 6,933 are unable to write, +being seven-tenths of one per cent., the lowest ratio of any state. +Arkansas, per cent, being 25.0; Alabama, 24.7; Georgia, 22.9; Kentucky, +22.0; No. Carolina, 31.0; So. Carolina, 21.9; Tenn., 27.3; West +Virginia, 18.2; Connecticut, 5.5; Illinois, 5.9; New Hampshire 5; +Pennsylvania, 6.7; New York, 5.3. +</p> +<p> +There are 15,416 colored persons in the state, of 10 years and upwards; +of this number 2,322 are unable to write, but from 10 to 14 years of +age, both inclusive, these being 1,504, but 31 persons are reported as +unable to write, or 2.1 per cent. South Carolina out of a colored +population of 75,981 between the same ages, reports 57,072 persons as +unable to write or 74.1 per cent. There are 1,886 colored persons in the +state between the ages of 15 and 20, and only 70 are reported as unable +to write, or 3.7 per cent.; we find this also the lowest ratio of any +state. +</p> +<p> +South Carolina's per cent. being 71.9; Alabama, 64.9; Georgia, 76.4; +Texas, 69.2; and North Carolina, 68.5. +</p> +<p> +Her density of population makes it exceedingly convenient for her 52,799 +domestic servants to compose notes over neighborly fences. Her 281,188 +dwelling houses house 379,710 families, placing 6.34 persons to the +credit of each dwelling, and 4.70 persons to each family. This density +gives her 221.78 persons to a square mile, a far greater ratio than any +state except Rhode Island. This neighborly proximity has its social +tendencies, which may account in part for the hospitable amenities which +are a rightful part of Massachusetts' well known loyalty to a higher +regard for the purest type of home, a comparative statement of the +density of population of a few states. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="State population densities, per square mile"> + +<tr><th> State. </th><th>Square Miles. </th><th>Persons to Square Miles. </th></tr> + +<tr><td> Rhode Island, </td><td align="right"> 1,085 </td><td align="right">254.87 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Massachusetts, </td><td align="right"> 8,040 </td><td align="right">221.78 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Connecticut, </td><td align="right"> 4,845 </td><td align="right">128.52 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Georgia, </td><td align="right"> 58,980 </td><td align="right"> 26.15 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Illinois, </td><td align="right"> 56,000 </td><td align="right"> 54.96 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Iowa, </td><td align="right"> 55,475 </td><td align="right"> 29.29 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Maine, </td><td align="right"> 29,895 </td><td align="right"> 21.71 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Michigan, </td><td align="right"> 57,430 </td><td align="right"> 28.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> New Hampshire, </td><td align="right"> 9,005 </td><td align="right"> 38.53 </td></tr> +<tr><td> New York, </td><td align="right"> 47,620 </td><td align="right">106.74 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Pennsylvania, </td><td align="right"> 44,985 </td><td align="right"> 95.21 </td></tr> +<tr><td> West Virginia, </td><td align="right"> 24,645 </td><td align="right"> 25.09 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +As inseparable as night is from day, so also are the ills of life from +life itself. Massachusetts is no exception to the inexorable law which +defines the conditions + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page445" name="page445"></a>[pg 445]</span> + + of human society; but through her public and private charities so wisely +administered, she humanely softens the asperities which shadow the life +of her unfortunates. To her lot fall 1,733 idiotic persons, 978 deaf +mutes, 5,127 insane, 1,500 of whom are cared for at home, and 3,659 +prisoners, 1,484 of whom are of foreign birth. Human life teaches that +the boundary lines of a smile and tear are the same, for where happiness +is, there sorrow dwells. In the general estimate of 391,960 annual +deaths in the United States, about 33,000 occur in Massachusetts. +</p> +<p> +One evidence of her unswerving faith in the national credit is seen by +her holdings in U.S. registered bonds. The four leading states are +reported as follows:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Four leadings states holding U.S. registered bonds"> + +<tr><th> No. of Persons. </th><th> State. </th><th>Per cent. of Bondholders.</th><th>Amount.</th></tr> + +<tr><td align="right"> 16,885 </td><td>Massachusetts, </td><td align="right"> 23.05 </td><td align="right">$45,138,750 </td></tr> +<tr><td align="right"> 10,408 </td><td>Pennsylvania, </td><td align="right"> 14.23 </td><td align="right"> 40,223,050 </td></tr> +<tr><td align="right"> 14,803 </td><td>New York, </td><td align="right"> 20.24 </td><td align="right">210,264,250 </td></tr> +<tr><td align="right"> 4,130 </td><td>Ohio, </td><td align="right"> 5.65 </td><td align="right"> 16,445,050 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +In the classification of the four leading states, of assessed valuation +and taxation, it appears that the assessed valuation of her personal +property exceeds that of any state. +</p> +<p> +The four leading states are thus classified:— +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Four leading states in personal property evaluation"> + +<tr><th> State.</th><th> Area Sq. M. </th><th> Real Estate. </th><th>Personal Property. </th><th> Total. </th><th> Total Tax.</th></tr> + +<tr><td> N.Y. </td><td align="right">47.620 </td><td align="right">$2,329,282,359 </td><td align="right">$323,657,647 </td><td align="right">$2,651,940,006 </td><td align="right">$56,392,975 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Penn. </td><td align="right">44,985 </td><td align="right"> 1,540,007,657 </td><td align="right"> 143,451,059 </td><td align="right"> 1,683,459,016 </td><td align="right"> 28,604,334 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Mass. </td><td align="right"> 8,040 </td><td align="right"> 1,111,160,072 </td><td align="right"> 473,596,730 </td><td align="right"> 1,584,756,802 </td><td align="right"> 24,326,877 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Ohio </td><td align="right">40,760 </td><td align="right"> 1,093,677,705 </td><td align="right"> 440,682,803 </td><td align="right"> 1,534,360,508 </td><td align="right"> 25,756,658 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +The grandest monument of human skill in modern railway science is +unquestionably the St. Gothard Tunnel which connects the valley of the +Reuss with the valley of the Ticino, which is from 5,000 to 6,500 feet +below the Alpine peaks of St. Gothard, being a little over 9-¼ miles +in length, costing over $47,000,000, one-half of which was paid by the +governments of Italy, Germany, and Switzerland. Until its completion in +1880, there was but one railway tunnel, Mont Cenis, that outranked our +own Hoosac Tunnel of nearly 5 miles in length and costing about +$10,000,000. +</p> +<p> +The service, equipment, and management of Massachusetts' railway system +is well nigh perfect. Out of 4,100 miles of track in the state, 2,453 +are laid with the steel rail. Including the 1,150 engines, 1,554 +passenger cars, 394 baggage cars, and 24,418 freight cars, the total +cost of railroad equipment in the state has been $178,862,870; from this +investment the total earnings in 1884 reached $33,020,816 from which +$4,568,274 were paid in dividends. The number of passengers carried were +57,589,200 and 17,258,726 tons of freight moved. One of the most +important elements in her system is the Boston and Albany. Its engine +service the past year was 5,680,060 miles, the company carried 94,721 +through passengers and 8,699,691 way, whose total earnings were +$8,148,713.34 and total expenses were $5,785,876.98. +</p> +<p> +In this connection we would refer to the city and suburban tramway +service, which has taken an important part in the development of the +state. The total + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page446" name="page446"></a>[pg 446]</span> + + cost of the 336 miles of road and equipment, including 8,987 horses and +1,918 passenger cars is stated at $9,093,935. Number of passengers +carried in 1884 was 94,894,259, gross earnings $4,788,096, operating +expenses $3,985,617, total available income $924,440. When we consider +that the street railway service carried more than 37,000,000 passengers +in excess of the steam railways, we realize its importance. +</p> +<p> +While there are 66,205 more females than males in the state, in the +wider distribution of the sexes their equality indicates that it could +not happen by chance, and that marriage of one man to one woman was +intended. +</p> +<p> +An authentic estimate of the numerical proportions of the sexes is as +follows:— +</p> +<p> +United States, 983 women to 1,000 men; America, (at large) 980 women to +1,000 men; Scotland, 1,096 women to 1,000 men; Ireland, 1,050 women to +1,000 men; England and Wales, 1,054 women to 1,000 men; France, 1,007 +women to 1,000 men; Prussia, 1,030 women to 1,000 men; Greece, 940 women +to 1,000 men; Europe, (at large) 1,021 women to 1,000 men; Africa, +(estimated) 975 women to 1,000 men; Asia, 940 women to 1,000 men; +Australia, 985 women to 1,000 men. In an aggregate of 12,000 men there +is a surplus of about 161 women. +</p> +<p> +Massachusetts has been making notable history ever since 1620, and in +picking out here and there a few of the influences which have tended to +develope her material resources, we would not be unmindful of those +Christian influences which are also a part of her imperishable history. +</p> +<p> +To the lover of nature, perhaps no state in range of rugged coast and +water views blended with mountainous background, can offer more pleasing +bits of picturesque scenery. The historic hills of Berkshire and the +beautiful Connecticut River, with its 50 miles of sweep through the +state, ever hurrying on to the sea, have inspired the tireless shuttles +of descriptive imagery to weave some of the finest threads in American +thought. +</p> +<p> +Nowhere within the range of human vision can the eye find a more +restful scene of quiet simplicity and softer blending of river, hill and +foliage, than in the valley of the Deerfield on any sunny summer day. +Let him who would have a sterner scene of majestic grandeur stand upon +the storm-beaten cliffs of some rock-fringed coast, while the +silver-crested sea and the dark, deep toned clouds, like mercy and +righteousness, kiss each other. +</p> +<p> +To us who love Massachusetts, her principles, her institutions, her +hills, valleys and rocks, her future is but the lengthening out of a +perfect present; and at last, when the scroll of states is finally +rolled up, may her eternal record stand for the highest type of +Christian citizenship. +</p> + +<a name="note-4"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>4</u> (<a href="#noteref-4">return</a>)<br /> +Census of 1885. +</p> + +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page447" name="page447"></a>[pg 447]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0013" id="h2H_4_0013"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + ELIZABETH.<a href="#note-5" name="noteref-5"><small>5</small></a> +</h2> +<h4> + A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS. +</h4> +<h3> +<span class="sc">By Frances C. Sparhawk</span>, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work." +</h3> +<a name="h2HCH0001" id="h2HCH0001"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + CHAPTER XXVI. +</h2> +<h3> + A GRAVE DECISION. +</h3> +<p> +After the greetings were over, Elizabeth, looking at Stephen Archdale, +realized fully the difficulties of her task. She was to go through with +it alone she perceived, for her father had turned away and taken up a +spyglass that had been brought him at the moment, and was absorbed in +looking through it at the new fascine battery. Evidently he expected her +to give Captain Archdale the history of the facts and conclusions that +had brought her father and herself to Louisburg. As she looked at the +young man in his strength, she felt more than ever the necessity for +speaking. He knew well enough that Mr. Edmonson hated him, and that was +necessary to be known. And yet, speech was hard, for even though he +could never imagine Edmonson's contemptible insinuations, still before +he believed in his own danger he might have to learn his enemy's foiled +purpose toward herself; and to be sought for her fortune was not a thing +that Elizabeth felt proud of. Her head drooped a little as the young man +stood watching her, and the color began to come into her face. Then the +courage that was in her, and the power that she had of rising above +petty considerations into grandeur, came upon her like an access of +physical strength. The strong necessity filled her, and the thought that +she might be bringing life where she had almost brought death, at least +death of joy, lighted her face. Still she hesitated for a moment, but it +was only to study how she should begin. Shall she give him Katie's +letter at once, and in her name warn him to take care of the life that +was of so much value to his betrothed? No, for with Katie's letter in +his hand, he could not listen carefully to Elizabeth's words, he could +think only of what was within. His thoughts would refuse to have to do +with danger; they would be busy with joy. That must wait. +</p> +<p> +"We have come here, my father and I," she began, "to say one word to +you, Captain Archdale. We talked it over, and we saw no other way." +</p> +<p> +"You are pale," cried Stephen suddenly. "You must be very tired. Let us +sit down here while you tell me." And he pointed to a coil of rope at +hand. But she shook her head. +</p> +<p> +"I am not tired, thank you; I am disappointed that I can't go back +immediately, that I must wait until to-morrow, when the dispatches will +be ready." +</p> +<p> +"You need not," he cried. "The General shall let you go if you wish it. +I will insist upon it. The dispatches can go some other way. If the +Governor + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page448" name="page448"></a>[pg 448]</span> + + wants news in such haste, he would do better to send us some powder to +make them out of. He was enough in a hurry to get us off, to give us +something to do after we are here." +</p> +<p> +"I should think you had something to do," she said pointing to the +battlements of Louisburg which at that distance and from that angle +looked as if no shot had ever been fired against them. "But don't on any +account speak to the General. We are glad to do even so little for the +cause. And perhaps it's not that that makes me pale. I don't know. I +have a warning hard to deliver to you. I have come hundreds of miles to +do it. I will give it to you immediately, for you may need it at any +moment." She drew closer to him, and laid one hand upon his arm as if to +prevent his losing by any chance the words she had to say. Her gesture +had an impressiveness that made him realize as much as her face did how +terribly in earnest she was. +</p> +<p> +"It must be something about Katie," he thought. And the vision of Lord +Bulchester rose before him clearly. +</p> +<p> +"Listen," said Elizabeth absorbed in her attempt to make him feel what +she feared would seem incredible to him. "Stray shots have picked off +many superfluous kings in the world—and men and the world not been the +wiser. This is what some one said when the war was being talked of, said +at your house, and said in speaking of you." +</p> +<p> +"Said it to you?" interposed Archdale with a quick breath. +</p> +<p> +"Oh, no, but about you, I am sure, <i>sure</i>, though it has taken me +all this time to find it out. And,—oh, wait a moment,—the man who said +it was your guest then, and he is here now, else we should not have +come; he is here, perhaps he is close by you every day, and he,—he is +meaning the shot for you." She waited a moment drawing a breath of +relief that she had begun. "You know he is your enemy?" she went on with +a longing to be spared explanations. +</p> +<p> +She was spared them. +</p> +<p> +"I do know it," said Archdale looking at her, and as she met his eyes a +great relief swept over her. Her warning had been heard and believed, +she was sure of that. She heard Archdale thanking her, and assuring her +that he would give good heed to her warning. And she had not had to tell +why Edmonson hated him, she had not even been obliged to utter the name +that she was coming to hate. "Do you know?" she had asked wonderingly, +and he had told it to her. Did he know the man so thoroughly, then? And +were there other causes of hatred, possibly money causes, that had +spared her? +</p> +<p> +She had told her listener more than she dreamed, far more than her +words. She had stood before him in the noblest guise a human being can +wear, that of a preserver from evil fate; she had looked at him out of +holy depths in her clear eyes, she had turned upon him a face in which +expression had marvellously brought out physical beauty. Also, in her +unconsciousness that he knew the reason of his danger, she had looked at +him with a wonder at his ready credulity before there had come her smile +of relief that she need speak no more. He knew Edmonson's story, knew +how this play at marriage between Elizabeth and himself had interfered +with the other's plans, guessed the further truth, looked at + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page449" name="page449"></a>[pg 449]</span> + + her, and muttered under his breath:—"Poor fellow!" It was with his own +eyes, and not another man's that Archdale saw Elizabeth. Yet, it was not +in human nature that she should not seem the more interesting as she +stood there, since he had learned his own life to be in danger because +another man had found her so desirable, and so unapproachable. Watching +Elizabeth, he acquitted Edmonson of mercenary motives, whatever they +might once have been. His appreciation had no thought of appropriation +in it. Katie was his love. But comprehension of Elizabeth made him glad +that their mistake had saved her from Edmonson. And then again after a +moment he muttered under his breath:—"Poor fellow!" +</p> +<p> +"You are very, very kind," he said to her. +</p> +<p> +"Don't think me rude," she answered with a smile. "But, you know we must +have done this for any one. Only,"—and her voice became earnest again, +"I was very grateful that the least thing came to me for you and Katie. +I have not done with Katie yet" she added, "here is something that I +have brought you from her." And she handed him a letter. "She gave me +this as I was leaving," she said. +</p> +<p> +"Thank you," he said again, and holding it clasped in his hand, stood +not looking at it, but as if he still had something to say. "Has +Bulchester gone yet, Mistress Royal?" he asked abruptly at last. +</p> +<p> +"No. But I think that he must be very hard to send away, and Katie you +know hates to say anything unkind. She doesn't see that it is the +kindest way in the end. We shall not go until to-morrow, you know. If +you have any letters, we shall be so glad to take them." +</p> +<p> +"Thank you once more." He stood still a moment. "The earl may be wise to +stay on the field," he said. "I may be swept off conveniently. Yes, he +is wise to wait and see what the fortunes of war will do for him." +</p> +<p> +"Oh! Mr. Archdale," cried Elizabeth, between indignation and tears at +his want of faith. "How can you not trust her? Your letter that she was +so eager to send will prove how wrong you are." Here Mr. Royal sauntered +up, and the conversation turned upon the scene before them. +</p> +<p> +But in the midst of Archdale's description of one of their skirmishes a +signal was given from the new battery. "They are signalling for me," he +said. "My place is in command of those guns. I am sorry to leave my +story half told, but I must go. I shall try to see you to-morrow." And +with a hasty farewell he sprang into the boat. As he was rowed away, +Elizabeth saw him put his hand into the pocket where he had slipped +Katie's letter, and draw this out. +</p> +<p> +She sat down again in her favorite place on deck, laid her arms on the +railing of the schooner and her face upon them. Now that her errand was +done, she became aware that she was very tired. She sat so quiet that +she seemed to be asleep. But she was only in a day-dream in which the +thought of which she was most conscious was wonder that Archdale could +doubt Katie. Had she not always been a coquette? And had she not always +loved him? Yet Elizabeth wished that she could have said that Lord +Bulchester had gone, wished that she could have seen Stephen Archdale's +face brighten a little before he left them, perhaps forever; she had not +forgotten the danger of his post. Nancy softly drew + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page450" name="page450"></a>[pg 450]</span> + + her chair close. But Elizabeth made no movement. She sat with her face +still buried, thinking, remembering, longing to be at home again, +counting the hours until they should probably sail. +</p> +<p> +Suddenly she started up. For there had come light that she saw through +the dark folds that she had been pressing her eyes against. To her there +was a sound as if the heavens were being rent, and she felt a trembling +of the earth, as if it shook with terror at the spectacle. She stood a +moment bewildered. It seemed as if the light never paled at all, but +only changed its place sometimes; the roar was terrific, it never +ceased, or lulled, and the water beneath them tossed and hissed in rage +at its bed being so shaken. Nancy's hand sought her companion's with a +reassuring pressure, for speech was impossible. But Elizabeth had only +been unprepared. She recovered herself and smiled her thanks. Then she +sat down again with her face toward the city and watched this cannonade, +terrible to men grown grey in the service, as officers from the fleet +bore witness, and to the enemy deadly. +</p> +<p> +For the fascine battery had opened fire. +</p> +<p> +At midnight General Pepperell sent for Archdale to detail him for +special service the next day. +</p> +<p> +"Why! what's the matter?" he cried, looking at the young man as he came +into the tent. +</p> +<p> +"Nothing, General Pepperell. I am quite ready for service," replied +Stephen haughtily. +</p> +<p> +"Ah!—Yes. Glad of that," returned the General, and he went on to give +his orders, watching the other's pale face as he did so, and reading +there strong emotion of some kind. +</p> +<p> +When he was alone, and his dispatches had all been written, he sat +musing for a time, as little disturbed by the glare and the thunder +about him as if stillness were an unknown thing. His cogitations did not +seem satisfactory, for he frowned more than once. "What's the matter +with the fellow?" he muttered. "Something has gone wrong. I've seen an +uneasiness for a long time. Now the blow has fallen. Poor fellow! he +doesn't take life easy. The news is it, I wonder? or the letter?" He sat +for a while carefully nursing his left knee, while his thoughts +gradually went back to military matters, and worked there diligently. At +last he straightened himself, clapped this same knee with vigor, put +both feet to the ground and, rising, took up from his improvised +table—a log turned endwise,—a paper upon which he made a note with a +worn pencil from his pocket. "Yes," he cried, "I can do that. It's the +only thing I can do. And I need it so much they will not mind." He +finished by a smile. "Strange I hadn't thought of it before," he said. +</p> +<p> +Then he threw himself down upon his bed of boughs and moss, and with the +terrific din about him slept the sleep of weariness. At sunrise, +according to his directions, an orderly roused him. +</p> +<p> +Archdale had already gone with his reconnoitering party. His heart was +bitter against the conditions of his life, and he felt that it would be +no misfortune, perhaps quite the contrary, if Edmonson's plan were not +interfered with. "It's + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page451" name="page451"></a>[pg 451]</span> + + beyond her comprehension," he said to himself. "How confident she was. +What will she say when she knows?" +</p> +<p> +In the morning, Elizabeth standing beside her father turned a tired face +toward the shore as she watched General Pepperell's approach. Sleep had +been impossible to her in the strangeness and terror of her surroundings. +</p> +<p> +"You are very thoughtful to come to bid us good-bye," she said, giving +him her hand as he stepped on board. +</p> +<p> +He smiled, and still holding it, asked after a moment's hesitation, +"Should you be very much disappointed if I begged you not to return this +morning?" +</p> +<p> +She certainly looked so for a moment, before she answered: "If it will +help, if I can be of any use, I am ready to stay. Are there soldiers in +the hospitals? Can we do anything for them, Nancy and I?" +</p> +<p> +He caught at the diversion readily. "The hospitals? Yes, I should be +very glad, infinitely obliged to you, if you would pay them a visit. +I've not a doubt that your suggestions would make the poor fellows more +comfortable, and there are a number of new ones there this morning. +I'm sorry to say our health record is discouraging. Not that I'm +discouraged, but I want to put this business through as quickly as +possible." Then he turned to Mr. Royal. "I must tell you both," he said, +"that I came to you this morning bent upon purposes of destruction, +(though, happily, not to yourselves,) and not purposes of health, except +of saving lives by making the work as short as possible. I should like +this schooner. I have an immediate use for it, and in two days, or, at +the outside, three, I'm going to send to Boston. Will you permit me to +take this as a fire-ship, and will you remain under my especial care +until this other vessel sails?" He turned to Elizabeth as he spoke. "If +you consent," he said to her, "I am quite sure your father will. It will +be a great favor to me, and I hope to the cause, if you do. But I won't +insist upon it. If you say so you shall go this morning." +</p> +<p> +Elizabeth glanced at her father, "But I don't say so," she answered. +"I am compelled to stay if my father consents. It's not you that make +me but a stronger power. You won't be offended if I call patriotism a +stronger power?" And she smiled at him. +</p> +<p> +"Thank you, my dear," he said with a gravity which showed that she had +touched him. "You shall not regret your sacrifice." +</p> +<p> +In the course of conversation he told Mr. Royal that Archdale had been +sent off at dawn upon an exploring expedition. "I want to find out how +near to us the Indians are," he said, "they are hanging about somewhere. +You will not see him to-day." +</p> +<p> +That morning, Elizabeth was rowed ashore with Nancy, and under an escort +they went to the hospitals; not for a visit of inspection, as it turned +out, but as workers. Nancy had had experience in illness, and Elizabeth +was an apt pupil. Before the day was over the poor fellows lying there +felt a change. There were no luxuries to be had for them, but their beds +were made a little softer with added moss and leaves, the relays of +fresh water from the brook running through the encampment were +increased. One dying man had closed his eyes in the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page452" name="page452"></a>[pg 452]</span> + + conviction that the last words he had sent to his mother would reach +her; he had watched Elizabeth write them down, and she had promised to +put a lock of his hair into the letter. He was sure that she would do +it, and he died happier for the thought. Altogether, in many ways the +comfortless tents grew less comfortless, for Elizabeth interpreted +literally the general's permission to do here what she chose. The eyes +of the soldiers followed both women with delight, and one rugged fellow, +a backwoods man, whose cheerfulness not even a broken leg and a great +gash in his forehead could destroy, volunteered the statement: "By +George! whether in peace or war we need our women." This was responded +to by a cheer from the inmates of his tent. The demonstration was all +the more touching, because its endeavor to be rousing was marred in the +execution by the physical weakness of the cheerers. +</p> +<p> +They spent that night on shore. Elizabeth's tent was next her father's +and a few rods from the general quarters. As Mr. Royal left her, she +stood a moment at the swinging door of her strange room, and looked at +the stars and at the scene so new to her on which they were shining. +Then leaving it reluctantly, for it fascinated her, she laid down upon +the woodland couch prepared for her, and was soon as soundly asleep as +her maid near by, while around the tent patrolled the special guard set +by General Pepperell. +</p> +<p> +The next day also was spent in the hospital. In the course of the +afternoon, Nancy, looking over the Bay in a vain search for the schooner +which had brought them, said; "I wonder how we really shall get home, +and when?" +</p> +<p> +"As General Pepperell promised us," answered her mistress. "And probably +we shall leave to-morrow. I expect to hear from him about it then. So +does my father; he was speaking of it this morning." +</p> +<p> +They were right; the next day the General told them that the +"Smithhurst" would sail that afternoon with prisoners of war from the +"Vigilant," a captured French vessel. "She is one of the ships that +Governor Shirley has sent for to guard the coast," he said to Elizabeth +speaking of the "Smithhurst." "She goes to Boston first to report and +discharge her prisoners. Be ready at four o'clock. If I can, I will take +you to the vessel myself; but if that is impossible, everything is +arranged for your comfort. Your father is at the battery, I have just +left him there. He is undeniably fond of powder. I've told him about +this." Elizabeth was in one of the hospital tents when Pepperell came to +her with this news. She staid there with Nancy all the morning, and at +noon when her father came and took her away for awhile to rest, she had +an earnest talk with him upon some subject that left her grave and +pleased. +</p> +<p> +After a time she went back to the hospitals again. At the last moment +the General sent an escort with word that he had been detained. Just +before this message arrived, Elizabeth called her maid aside. +</p> +<p> +"Nancy," she said, "you see how many of our soldiers are here, hundreds +of them, almost thousands. They are fighting for our homes, even if the +battle-ground is so far away. And see how many have been sent in, in the +short time we have been here. Do you want to desert them? Tell me how +you feel? Shall we go back to our comfortable home, and leave all this +suffering behind us, + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page453" name="page453"></a>[pg 453]</span> + + when we might do our little to help? Shall we, Nancy? I have no right to +insist upon your staying; but don't you think we ought to stay? and +won't you stay with me?" +</p> +<p> +"Indeed I will," was the quick answer. "I hated to leave the poor +fellows, but I did not see what else to do. The General won't like it +one bit though. And your father, Mistress Elizabeth?" +</p> +<p> +"The General has no authority over me. I'm not one of his soldiers. And +as to my father, it's all right with him." +</p> +<p> +Yet she felt very desolate when the ship which was to have carried them +had gone with its companion vessel, and from the door of one of the +hospital tents she stood watching the white sails in the distance. But +it was not that resolution had failed her; for she would have made the +same decision over again if she had been called upon at the moment. +</p> +<a name="h2HCH0002" id="h2HCH0002"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + CHAPTER XXVII. +</h2> +<h3> + THE NIGHT ATTACK. +</h3> +<p> +As Elizabeth stood at the door of the hospital tent looking after the +Smithhurst, General Pepperell came along, alone, in a brown study, his +brows knit and his face troubled. For though the French ship-of-war, +"Vigilant" had been captured, Louisburg had not, and every day was +adding to the list of soldiers in the hospitals. But when he saw her, he +stopped, and his expression, at first of surprise, changed to anger. +</p> +<p> +"What does this mean?" he said abruptly. "The ship has sailed. I sent +you word in time." +</p> +<p> +"Yes," she answered. +</p> +<p> +"Then what does it mean?" he reiterated, "Why are you here?" +</p> +<p> +"It means," she returned, resenting the authority of his tone, "that +when New England men are fighting and suffering and dying for their +country, New England women have not learned how to leave them in their +need, and sail away to happy homes. That's what it means, General +Pepperell." As she spoke she saw Archdale behind the General; he had +come up hastily as Pepperell stood there. +</p> +<p> +"Thought you were in a desperate hurry to be off," said Pepperell dryly. +</p> +<p> +Elizabeth blushed. She was convicted of changeableness, and she felt +that she had been impatient. "Forgive me," she said. "So I was. But I +did not realize then what I ought to do." +</p> +<p> +"Um! Where's your father?" +</p> +<p> +"Just gone out in the dispatch boat to the fleet." +</p> +<p> +"Does he know of this—this enterprise? Of course, though," he corrected +himself, "since he has not sailed." +</p> +<p> +"Yes, of course," she said. "He stays with me. But," she added, "I +suppose he expected me to ask you about it first." +</p> +<p> +"And you knew I wouldn't consent—hey?" +</p> +<p> +The girl smiled without speaking. "Mr. Royal is over-indulgent," he went +on decidedly. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page454" name="page454"></a>[pg 454]</span> +</p> +<p> +"Perhaps," answered Elizabeth, "He thinks that a little over-indulgence +in being useful will not be bad for me. You assured both Nancy and me +that we were doing good service, real service, and that you should be +sorry to lose us." +</p> +<p> +"So you have done, and I shall be sorry to lose you, both personally and +for the cause. Nevertheless, I shall send you home at once. Your father +would never have consented to your staying if he had realized the +danger. I never know where the shells will burst. I'll stop work upon +that schooner that you came in, and send you home again in it. It's +fitting up now as a fire-ship, but it can be made fairly comfortable. +Your safety must be considered." +</p> +<p> +"Why is my safety of any more importance than the soldiers'? No, +General, you have no right to send me away. I refuse to go. I am not +speaking of military right, understand, but of moral right." +</p> +<p> +Pepperell gave a low whistle. +</p> +<p> +"That's it, is it?" he said. "One thing, however; if you stay, you must +submit to my orders. You are under military law." +</p> +<p> +"I surely will. And now thank you," she returned with a smile so winning +that, although for her own sake Pepperell had been angry, he relented. +</p> +<p> +"Oh, of course, it's very good in you, my dear," he said. "Don't think I +forget that." +</p> +<p> +Capt. Archdale had been standing a little apart looking out to sea +during a conversation in which he had no place. Now as he perceived the +General about to move on, he came forward and spoke to Elizabeth. "You +know that you are running a great risk?" he said to her gravely. +</p> +<p> +"Yes," she answered him, "or at least somewhat of a risk. When did you +come back from your reconnoitering party?" +</p> +<p> +"The night before last," he said, not pursuing a subject that she did +not wish to discuss with him. Elizabeth heard something hard in his +voice, and saw a new sternness in his face that made her wonder suddenly +if Katie's letter had lacked any kindness that Stephen deserved from her +as he stood in the midst of danger and death. Could she have shown +coquetry, or in any way teased him now? +</p> +<p> +"Well, good-by for the present, my dear, and Heaven keep you," said the +General, giving her hand a cordial pressure. Archdale bowed, and the two +went on, Pepperell at first full of praises of Elizabeth's courage, +though he regretted her decision. But life and death hung upon his skill +and promptness, and he had little time for thoughts of anything but his +task. Henceforth he only took care that Mr. Royal and his daughter were +as well protected, and as well cared for as circumstances permitted. +</p> +<p> +Yet, one evening soon afterward, he saw something which for the moment +interested him very much. Elizabeth, with Nancy Foster who was now more +companion than maid, was walking slowly toward her tent. Both were +looking at the gorgeous sunset. Its brilliancy, vying with that of the +deadly fireworks, offered a contrast all the more striking in its +restfulness and happy promise. The two women had grown somewhat +accustomed to the cannonade, and as they went on they seemed to be +talking without noticing it. Just then a figure in captain's + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page455" name="page455"></a>[pg 455]</span> + + uniform came quickly up the slope toward them, and with a most +respectful salute, stood bare-headed before Elizabeth. +</p> +<p> +"Edmonson," commented the General even before he caught sight of +his face. "Nobody else has that perfection of manner. Stephen won't +condescend to it. Edmonson is the most graceful fellow I know. And, upon +honor, I believe he is the most graceless. But his theories can't harm +that woman." Yet as Pepperell stood watching the young man's expression +now that it was turned toward him, and understood by his gestures the +eager flow of words that was greeting Elizabeth, he held his breath a +moment with a new perception, muttered a little, and stood staring with +the frown deepening on his face. He wanted to catch her answering look, +but she had turned about in speaking and her back was toward him. In an +impatient movement at this, he changed his own range of vision somewhat, +and all at once caught sight of another face, also bent upon Elizabeth +with eager curiosity to catch her expression. Pepperell turned away +delighted. "After all, he's not too much of a grand seigneur to have +a little human curiosity," he chuckled, watching the new figure. "Yes, +we'll do very well to go on a reconnoitering expedition together, you +and I, Captain Archdale!" And he laughed to himself as he slipped +quietly away, without having been perceived. "More news to write to +pretty Mistress Katie," he commented, still full of amusement. Then +his thoughts went back again to the problem that was growing daily +more perplexing. And as he was again becoming absorbed in it, he was +conscious of an undercurrent of wonder that he could ever have laughed. +The thing next to be done was to make an attack up Island Battery, the +one most serviceable to the enemy, most annoying to themselves. So long +as that belched forth its fires against them, Warren's fleet must remain +outside, and there could be no combined attack upon the city, and +Louisburg was still unconquerable. Any day might bring a French fleet to +its rescue, and then the game was up. Beyond question, Island Battery +must be attacked, but it was a difficult and dangerous attempt, and +Pepperell sat with his head upon his hand, thinking of the men that must +fall even if it were successful. Still, every day now some among the +soldiers were smitten down by disease and the French ships were nearer. +It was only a question of sacrificing a part of his army or the whole of +it. Warren was right to urge the measure, and it must be pressed upon +his Council. But Pepperell felt as if he were being asked to sign a +hundred death-warrants. +</p> +<p> +It was not quite time for the members of his Council to assemble. He +went to the nearest battery where the firing was hottest, sighted the +direction of the guns, examined the state of the city walls where these +had been played upon by them, cheered the gunners with his praise, even +jested with one of them, and left the men more full of confidence in +him, more desirous than ever to please him, and, if possible, more +resolved to win the day. Not a trace of anxiety in his face or his tones +had betrayed the weight that was upon him. Then he went back to his +tent. The Council had assembled. When he took his place at the head, +he had forgotten the incident that a few minutes before had moved him +to laughter. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page456" name="page456"></a>[pg 456]</span> +</p> +<p> +Archdale stood motionless. The underbrush hid him from the speakers, and +he was too far off to hear a word. It seemed to him that Elizabeth +wished to shorten the interview, for soon Edmonson with another of his +inimitable bows retired and she passed on. As Stephen caught sight of +her face he saw that it was troubled. "He shall not persecute her," he +said to himself. Nancy had gone on while Edmonson was speaking to her +mistress, and now Elizabeth following was almost at the door of her +temporary home, when a hand was laid heavily upon Archdale's shoulder, +and Vaughan's hearty voice cried;— +</p> +<p> +"Come on! I'm going to speak to our charming, brave young lady there. +I want to tell her how proud of her courage I am. Come on! he repeated. +Stephen followed. He had not taken her determination in this way. He +thought her unwise and rash, and hated to have her there. And yet he +could not deny that the camp had seemed a different place since she had +entered it. +</p> +<p> +"You take it that way," he said to Vaughan. "But I think we should be +feeling that she may get hit some of these days, or be down with fever." +</p> +<p> +"We'll hope not," returned the other cheerfully. "Let us look on the +bright side. She is doing a work of mercy, and we will trust that a +merciful Providence will protect her. We were just talking about you, +Mistress Royal," he continued, striding up to Elizabeth and grasping her +hand warmly. "Stephen, here, says he's always thinking you'll get hit +somehow, or get a fever. I say, look on the bright side of things, +'trust in the Lord,' as old Cromwell used to put it." +</p> +<p> +"'And keep your powder dry,'" finished Archdale. "It's not safe to quote +things by halves. Decidedly, this staying is not a prudent thing." +</p> +<p> +"I didn't know that beseiging Louisburg could be called a prudent +thing," she returned. "And so we're all in the same boat." +</p> +<p> +"Ha! ha!" laughed Vaughan. "You have him there, Mistress Royal. He's +always in the hottest places himself; he likes them best." +</p> +<p> +"Somebody else likes them, too; somebody else who can capture Royal +Battery with thirteen men," said Elizabeth. "I knew long ago that you +were a genuine war-horse, Colonel Vaughan. Give me credit for my +discernment." +</p> +<p> +"Yes, yes, I remember," assented the other with the embarrassment of +courage at finding itself commended. "But, really, against such a +cowardly crew as those fellows were, there's no credit at all to be +gained." +</p> +<p> +She made him a bright reply, and Archdale listened in silence as they +talked. But she noticed his gloomy face, and secretly wondered if it +was anxiety about Edmonson that troubled him, or if possibly, he was +displeased with Katie. But she put away for the second time the latter +suggestion. The girl had never looked prettier or been more affectionate +than when she had said good-by to her and given her the letter for +"poor, brave Stephen," as she had tearfully called him. Archdale could +not help listening to Elizabeth; there seemed to be a witchery about her +whenever she opened her lips. It was probable that Edmonson felt it, he +thought. And he began to wonder how things would all end. Perhaps they +should all be shot and the affair wind up like some old tragedy where +the board is swept clean for the next players. For his part, too much +had + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page457" name="page457"></a>[pg 457]</span> + + gone from his life to make the rest of it of interest. Elizabeth turned +to him. +</p> +<p> +"Are you busy?" she asked. "I mean are you on duty?" +</p> +<p> +"No," he answered, wondering what was coming, and noticing that her +tall, slight figure seemed all the more elegant for the simplicity of +her dress. "Can I do anything for you?" he added. +</p> +<p> +"Yes, thank you," she answered, "You can, if you are willing. I am going +to get some medicine that the doctors have asked me to keep, because it +is very powerful, and they were afraid lest some of the men would be +careless with it. Nancy is bringing the bandages. Here she is now. Thank +you," as the girl put a phial into her hand. "There is extra work to be +done to-day," she went on, turning again to Archdale, "and we are short +of hands. If you don't mind, and will come, we shall be glad of your +help." +</p> +<p> +Captain Archdale playing at nurse with private soldiers! The young man +did not fancy the idea at all; he would much rather have led a forlorn +hope. +</p> +<p> +But no forlorn hope offered, and this did. Of course he would do +anything for Mistress Royal, but this was not for her at all. He had +half a mind to excuse himself. As the suggestion came to him, he looked +into the steady eyes that were watching him fathoming his reluctance, +ready for approval or for scorning as the answer might be. His look took +in her whole appearance, and set him wondering if the privates, some of +whom had been even his neighbors and his boyish playfellows, could +offend his dignity more than hers? He began to wonder how her eyes would +change if they looked at him approvingly. +</p> +<p> +"I will go with pleasure, if you'll put up with an awkward fellow," he +answered. And Colonel Vaughan who was looking on was not aware that he +had hesitated. +</p> +<p> +Elizabeth's eyes darkened. She smiled and nodded her head slightly, as +if to say, "I knew you would do it." But after this the trace of a smile +lurked for a moment in the corners of her mouth, as if she might have +added: "I know, too, what it has cost you." But she said nothing at all +to Archdale. She bade good-by to Colonel Vaughan who protested that he +wished he was not upon duty, and turned again toward the hospital. +Suddenly Archdale thought that she might have been asking the same thing +of Edmonson when she had been talking with him just before. If she had, +it was very certain that Edmonson had found an engagement immediately. +Upon the whole, Archdale was satisfied to have done what the other would +not do. So that it was just as well he did not know that that other had +not been asked. +</p> +<p> +Was there ever another woman in the world like this one, he asked +himself late that night, recalling that she had been for hours beside +him, treating him just as if he were a crook to raise a soldier's head, +if she wanted to rearrange his pillow, or a machine to reel off bandages +round that poor Melvin's shattered arm, or to do any other trying +service, and never even imagine that he would like to be thanked or +treated humanely, while every look and word and thought of hers was for +the soldiers. It was so different from what he had always found, and yet +there was the nobleness of self-forgetfulness in the difference. But for +all this vivid memory of those hours, it was imagination rather than +recollection that + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page458" name="page458"></a>[pg 458]</span> + + occupied him most with her when she had left him. For he was picturing +how she would look, and what she would say, when she read the letter +that he had slipped into her hand as she was going away. He recalled her +look of amazement, her beginning:—"Why, it's—" and then breaking off +abruptly, perceiving that only peculiar circumstances could have made +him give her Katie's letter to read, and perhaps divining the truth. For +she had suddenly became very grave and had replied absently to his +good-night, as on her father's she had turned from the hospital. The +young man, wondering how she would receive the news of Katie's +treachery, asked himself what she could find now in excuse for the girl +who had used her faithful friend as the unconscious messenger of her +broken plight? Stephen knew well enough that the old glamour would come +back, but to-night he was full only of indignation against Katie. To +have used Elizabeth as she had done was an added sin. +</p> +<p> +"I wish Bulchester joy of her," he muttered, then with a sharp breath +recollected that this was only a respite, that he should not always feel +too scornful for pain. +</p> +<p> +Three nights after this there was a silent and solemn procession down to +the shore. Island Battery was to be attacked. Here was Archdale's +forlorn hope ready for him, if he wanted it now. Every chance of success +depended upon secrecy. The venture was so desperate that the General +could not make up his mind to pick out the men himself, he called for +volunteers. They came forward readily, incited, not only by courage and +the desire to end the siege, but by ambition to be distinguished among +their comrades who stood about them in hushed expectation. Every soldier +off duty and able to crawl to the shore, and some who should not have +attempted it were there. Among this crowd stood two women, scarcely +apart from the others, and yet everywhere that they moved, given place +to with the unobtrusive courtesy that has always marked American men, so +that one woman in a host of them feels herself, should danger come, in +an army of protectors, and otherwise alone. Elizabeth had meant to be +here earlier, and to put herself by the General's side, for her father +had gone with dispatches to the fleet, but her duties had detained her, +and now she was separated from him by nearly a regiment. She stood +silent in an anxiety that did not lessen because she told herself that +it was foolish. +</p> +<p> +Captain Brooks was to command the expedition, and the number of men +needed to accompany him was fast being made up from the eager +volunteers. In the dimness she recognized Archdale by an unconscious +haughtiness of bearing, and Edmonson's voice, though lowered to suit the +demands of the hour, made her shiver. Yet why? Of course they both were +here; volunteers were stepping out from the ranks of their companies. +But they themselves were not going, neither would they be left here +alone together. Boat after boat with scaling ladders was filled with +soldiers and shoved off, some of them out of sight in the dimness where +the men, lying on their oars, waited for their comrades. In this way one +after another disappeared. Things went on well. Elizabeth began to be +reassured, to be occupied with the scene about her, to remember the +importance of the expedition and how many times it had been +unsuccessfully + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page459" name="page459"></a>[pg 459]</span> + + attempted. She began to think of the attack, of the result, and of the +soldiers, to rejoice in them, to be proud of them, and to tremble for +them, as one who has no individual interest at stake. +</p> +<p> +It was only at night that the attempt could be made, only in certain +states of the tide, and still at the best time it was a terrible +venture; the work was new for the troops; the walls were high, the enemy +was vigilant. With a sigh she saw another boat shove off to its fate. +</p> +<p> +The volunteering slackened, either because so many of the men left were +aware that fatigue and illness had undermined their strength, or because +the night had grown lowering and the ominous roar of breakers reached +them from their landing place. Finally a distinct pause came in answer +to the call: "Who next?"—a pause that lasted a minute, and that, had it +lasted another, would have meant discouragement, and perhaps despair. +</p> +<p> +"I," said a firm voice, and Elizabeth saw Stephen Archdale step into the +boat. A strange feeling came over her for a moment, then a wave of +admiration for his heroism. If he were to die, it would be a soldier's +death. Yet, there would be so many to mourn him. If he went to his death +in this way, how would Katie feel? General Pepperell started forward, as +if to prevent his embarking, then restrained himself. The men responded +rapidly after this example, until the boat needed only one more. Then +there fell upon Elizabeth's ears, a name more frightful to her than the +boom of the surf or the roar of cannon, and Edmonson stepped in and +seated himself opposite Archdale. +</p> +<p> +"Two captains in one boat!" she heard a soldier remonstrate. +</p> +<p> +"Nonsense! we're full. Shove off instantly, you laggards. Every minute +tells," said the newcomer in a hoarse undertone. +</p> +<p> +Elizabeth sprang forward. "No, no," she cried impetuously, forgetting +everything but the terror. +</p> +<p> +But the calling of the names was going on again, and her voice was +unheard, except by a few who stood near her. Before she could make her +way up to the General, the boat pulled by the vigorous strokes of the +men who had been taunted as laggards, had shot out of sight. "Oh! bring +them back, bring back that last boat," she implored Pepperell in such +distress that he, knowing her a woman not given to idle fears, felt a +sense of impending evil as he answered: +</p> +<p> +"My dear, I cannot. No boat is sure of meeting it in the dark, and to +call would endanger the expedition." +</p> +<p> +There was no use in explaining now. She would have occasion enough to do +it sometime, she feared; and then it would be useless. To-night she +could say nothing. All these days she had dreaded what might come, for +it did not seem to her that Captain Archdale took any care at all. +Still, in the camp, out of general action, and surrounded by others, +there had been comparative safety. +</p> +<p> +Now the hour, the place, and the purpose had met. Through the darkness +Stephen Archdale was going to his doom. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page460" name="page460"></a>[pg 460]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2HCH0003" id="h2HCH0003"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + CHAPTER XXVIII. +</h2> +<h3> + A WOUNDED MAN. +</h3> +<p> +The General sent Elizabeth away very kindly. She sent the weary Nancy to +bed and went back to the hospital. But anxiety mastered her so that she +could not keep her hands from trembling or her voice from faltering when +there was most need for steadiness. +</p> +<p> +"You are exhausted, Mistress Royal, you ought not to be here," said one +of the surgeons sternly. "Go and rest." +</p> +<p> +"Oh, please let me stay," she pleaded with a humility so new that he +looked at her with curiosity. +</p> +<p> +"Hush!" said his assistant making an excuse to draw him aside. "Don't +you know she's been watching the men set out for the Fort?" +</p> +<p> +Elizabeth found words of comfort for a soldier who was mourning because +his wife would have no one to look after her, if he died. "I will help +her," she said. And then, by the light of the flaring candle, she wrote +down the woman's address. She repeated verses of Scripture for some who +asked her for them, and found a little steadiness of voice in doing it. +But through everything she saw Archdale's vigorous form and heard +Edmonson's passionate voice and his words. With such a marksman, and at +such range, how could a shot stray! +</p> +<p> +But she dreaded still more the time when the expedition should return. +To-night she bitterly regretted that the General had not been told her +errand, and saw that when Mr. Royal urged it, it had been the wish to +save her that had made Stephen Archdale ask him not to do it. +</p> +<p> +Three hours after the start she heard that the expedition had failed. +All that was left was returning, the wounded would soon be brought in. +Her little strength deserted her for the moment She sank down helpless +in the shadow. Then she rose and went forward. +</p> +<p> +As the boat lay rocking on the waves waiting for the others, Archdale +took his bearings. Leaning towards the stern, he said to one of his +men:— +</p> +<p> +"Greene will you change places with me?" If the man had thought the +request more than a whim, he would have supposed it to be because the +captain considered his new choice a more dangerous post. Archdale +seating himself again glanced toward the bow. He was now on the same +side with Edmonson and the fourth man from him. It would be somewhat +difficult to have the latter's gun go off by accident and be sure of its +mark, and Greene was safe so far as exemption from an enemy at hand was +concerned. Archdale would have preferred Edmonson's left hand but when +it came to disembarking, his enemy should precede him. +</p> +<p> +"Better cushions?" asked Edmonson with a sneering laugh under which he +tried to hide his anger. "Can't see any other motive for your running +the risk of capsizing us." +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page461" name="page461"></a>[pg 461]</span> +</p> +<p> +"It is very presumptuous to do anything for which Captain Edmonson +cannot see the motive," returned Archdale haughtily. +</p> +<p> +"By Heavens!" cried Edmonson in another moment "You're bound to die in +character if it come to a question of dying and of course it will with +some of us." +</p> +<p> +Stephen made no answer. He felt more strongly than ever that he needed +good eyes and firm nerves. To be killed like a rat in a trap! His blood +ran too warm in his veins to submit tamely to this. When the struggle +should come yonder it mattered little whether it was by Edmonson's shot +or another's, for if he fell in the heat of the conflict it would always +be said that he died a soldier's death. And if he lived to come back +Edmonson, should take boat first. He turned himself slightly toward his +foe, and sat silent and observant. +</p> +<p> +Had Elizabeth noticed them enter the boat together? He had thought of +saying good-by, for his volunteering was no sudden resolve, but had been +his determination from the first. But if he died, what real difference +would that make to her? And if he came back, the leave taking would seem +an absurdity. He seemed still to see the outline of her slender figure, +as with her shawl wrapped about her like a mantle she had stood +bare-headed in the cold May evening. +</p> +<p> +Had he dreamed that Edmonson had learned of Katie's desertion, and was +full of rage at every word of courtesy or interest that he spoke to +Elizabeth, he would have felt his chance of life still less. +</p> +<p> +"Can't you hitch along, you fellow next me?" cried Edmonson. "I'm so +cramped here I can't move a muscle, and I suspect we shall want them all +in good order pretty soon. We are coming up to the old walls. Swift and +steady, boys. Every man be ready with his muskets." +</p> +<p> +As he spoke, he took up his own weapon and examined it in the dimness. +Then, still holding it in his right hand, he laid that arm along the +edge of the boat as if to relieve it from the cramped position he had +complained of. Archdale saw that the muzzle was pointed directly at him +and that the hand which held it in apparent carelessness was working +almost imperceptibly towards the trigger. That would not be touched +quite yet, however, a shot now would alarm the garrison and be +inexcusable. The accident would happen in the excitement of landing. +Archdale's left hand that he with as great indifference as Edmonson's +laid upon the boat's edge was steady. He leaned forward a little to be +out of range, and they went on in silence. +</p> +<p> +The clouds grew denser, the waves swelled more and more at the violence +of the wind, and the storm, nearer every minute, seemed about to unite +with the fiery storm that awaited the devoted band. +</p> +<p> +"Look," said Archdale suddenly, "I believe they have discovered us." He +raised his left hand as he spoke, and pointed to the Battery. Lights +were glancing there, and something had given it an air of ponderous +observation, as if eyes were looking through the walls and movements +going on behind them. All the men scanned the battery earnestly except +the speaker whose eyes were watchfully turned upon his neighbor, and who +for reward saw Edmonson's fingers covertly placing themselves on the +trigger, while his face was still toward the fortifications. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page462" name="page462"></a>[pg 462]</span> +</p> +<p> +"Yes, it's all up with us," cried the latter, "we are discovered," +In the movement of speech he was turning to Archdale, preparatory to +dropping measuring eyes upon the musket, when the latter called out:— +</p> +<p> +"See! they are going to fire." And with the words he dropped his left +arm with a swift and accidental sweep by which his hand hitting forcibly +against Edmonson's which was unprepared, struck it off the boat into the +water. The pistol sent its ball spinning into the sea, running along +Archdale's sleeve as it passed. The pistol itself lay under the water +for the instant that Edmonson's hand rested there. The flintlock was +wet, the weapon was useless. +</p> +<p> +Its owner turned upon his clumsy companion in a rage. But before he +could speak the guns of the battery blazed out, and in the iron shower +that followed there was no thought for anything but that of saving +themselves as much as possible. +</p> +<p> +Round shot would have danced over the water and left them comparatively +safe; but in the deadly hail of langrage such escape was impossible. +Every moment of it inflicted torturing wounds or death. The boats were +beeched with all speed at the foot of the monster which belched forth +this red hot torrent wounding wherever it fell. But they had been thrown +into confusion, and while some of them struggled to the shore, the +occupants of others in their terror drew back out of harm's way, and +left their comrades to their fate. Edmonson's was not the only flintlock +wet, as the soldiers, weary and dispirited, toiled up from the surf. +They tried their scaling ladders, they fought for a time with that +desperate courage which never forsook them. Their captain cheered them +with his bravest words and deeds, and Archdale and Edmonson were +foremost in every post of danger until one fell badly wounded. +</p> +<p> +But from the first the expedition was doomed. After an hour's conflict +the recall was sounded, and the remnant of the scaling party straggled +and staggered to their boats, some carrying wounded comrades, some +themselves wounded and faint. But many had been taken prisoners by the +French, and many lay dead and dying. Elizabeth stood waiting for the +wounded to be brought in, and for the roll of the dead. The first man +who came walking steadily toward her, turning about at every few steps +to see that the men behind him were carrying their burden on their +stretchers carefully, was Archdale. +</p> +<p> +"You?" she said wonderingly. "I thought—I was afraid—." +</p> +<p> +"Yes, I have come back," he answered; "and it is through your warning. +Such as my life is, you have saved it." +</p> +<h4> +[TO BE CONTINUED.] +</h4> + +<a name="note-5"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>5</u> (<a href="#noteref-5">return</a>)<br /> +Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk. +</p> + +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page463" name="page463"></a>[pg 463]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0017" id="h2H_4_0017"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + EDITOR'S TABLE. +</h2> +<p> +It is surprising how few people, comparatively speaking, are aware of +the fact, that the history of Boston has been treated as the history of +no other city in this country has been. The year 1880 was the two +hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its founding, and, commemorative of +that year, a work, in four beautiful quarto volumes, has been issued in +this city by Messrs. Ticknor and Company. The object of this work, and +the importance attached to it is what leads us to speak of it in this +place and at this time. This object is primarily to present the leading +historical phases of the town's and city's life and developement, +together with the traces of previous occupation, and the natural history +of the locality. To accomplish this almost herculean task, the sections +were assigned to writers well-known in their respective spheres,—many +of them of national reputation,—who from study and associations were +in a measure identified with their subjects. The entire work was +critically edited by Mr. Justin Winsor, Librarian of Harvard University, +with the co-operation of a committee appointed at a meeting of the +gentlemen interested, consisting of the Rev. Edward Everett Hale, +D.D., Samuel A. Green, M.D. and Charles Deane, LL.D. Now, it is not +our purpose to enter into any description of this carefully planned, +skilfully written, beautifully illustrated, printed and bound specimen +of the art of book-making; but rather, again to call attention to its +great merits and claims upon the interested public. The work deals +almost exclusively with facts, and impartially also, and these facts are +alike valuable to the man of letters, the man of science, the historian, +the student, and the vast public whose patriotism invites them to +seek the story of their city. A better conceived work has never been +published on this continent; but it is unnecessary to commend what +easily commends itself to the eye, the mind, and the purse of well-to-do +people. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +There is need of a more careful study of politics on the part of the +people of this country. The recent elections in this State and in other +States again recalls this need, and have again shown that altogether too +many men cast their ballots, not in accordance with their intelligence +or with their convictions, but as they are told to cast them. The first +duty of an American citizen should be a thorough acquaintance with +American political institutions, their origin, their growth and +progress, their utility or their worthlessness. The right of suffrage is +one of the inalienable rights of the people. It is one of their most +sacred rights also, and ought not to be exercised except under most +careful, candid and conscientious conditions. +</p> +<p> +One cannot suppose, even for a moment, that our people are not aware of +the accuracy of these assertions. We are not advocates of property +ownership as a qualification of voting, nor would we seek to lay down +any arbitrary <i>sine qua non</i>, to be rigidly adhered to in our +system of voting. But, is it enough that a man should know how to read +and write before he can cast a ballot? Do these qualifications comprise +everything that is necessary to a proper and safe exercise of the right +of suffrage? If so, then politics can never be formulated as a science, +and politicians can never be regarded other than what many of them seem +to be,—tricksters trading on the incredulity and ignorance of the +masses. It is only when people understand <i>how</i> and <i>why</i> they +vote, that they can vote intelligently. +</p> +<p> +It may not be generally known that we have in this state, with allied +organizations in other states, a Society for "Political Education," +carrying on its work by furnishing and circulating at a low price sound +economic and political literature. Its aim is to publish at least four +pamphlets a year on subjects of vital importance. During the present +year, the "Standard Silver Dollar and the Coinage Law of 1878" has been +treated by Mr. Worthington C. Ford, secretary of the society; "Civil +Service Reform in Cities and States," by Edward M. Shepard; "What makes +the Rate of Wages," by Edward Atkinson, and others have also been +published,—in all sixteen pamphlets since the foundation of the +Society. +</p> +<p> +The first Secretary of the Society was Richard L. Dugdale, the author of +the remarkable + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page464" name="page464"></a>[pg 464]</span> + + social study called "The Jukes." The twelfth number of the Economic +Tracts of the Society gives a sketch of his life, and from it the +following quotation is pertinent:— +</p> +<p> +"The education of the people in true politics, it seemed to Mr. Dugdale +and his associates, would not only greatly aid popular judgment on +political questions, but would be a necessary preliminary to the +election of public representatives and officers upon real issues. If +elections were so held, successful candidates would come generally to be +men competent to consider and expert in dealing with questions of state +and administration. And if legislators and executives were so competent +and expert, and were not merely men accomplished in intrigue or active +in party contests, we should have from them conscientious and +intelligent social reforms. Legislative committees, governors, mayors, +commissioners of charities and corrections, superintendents of prisons, +reformatories, almshouses, and hospitals, would then patiently listen +and intelligently act upon discussions and of the condition of the +extremely poor and the vicious, and especially of children and young men +and women not yet hopelessly hardened." +</p> +<p> +Few persons will deny that such a work as this needs everywhere to be +done so that the charities of the country shall no longer be +administered in the interests of a party. +</p> +<p> +The Society has been in active operation about four years, and its +success has thus far been most gratifying. It has already induced +hundreds of people to make a careful study of American history and +politics, and its influence is now felt throughout the length and +breadth of this land. The very fact of such an effort is one of the +encouraging signs of the times, and should be encouraged by all who aim +for the welfare of the Republic. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +But there is still another open field for work in this direction, and +this perhaps lies more in the power of the people themselves. We allude +to the necessity of public lectures, in every community, on the great +themes pertaining to American politics and history. It must be evident +to every observer that our so-called "Lyceum Courses" are to-day sadly +deficient in efforts to educate the people. There is a perfect craze +at the present time for concerts, readings, and a similar order of +entertainments,—all of which are doubtless good enough of their kind +and are capable of exerting a certain moral influence that cannot be +questioned. But is it plausible that such pabulum meets all the needs of +those people who frequent these entertainments? If it does, the fault +lies with the people and not with those who are capable of amusing them. +</p> +<p> +We would suggest to the public-spirited ladies and gentlemen living in +our towns and cities to try the following experiment;—Plan a <i>lecture</i> +course, to be filled by public speakers residing in your own +communities. Establish a course of say four, six, eight, or a dozen +evenings, and let only those questions be discussed which pertain to +history, political economy, and politics. We venture the assertion that +such a course, conducted thoroughly in an unpartisan spirit, would be +well patronized, and would exert an influence for good. Never was there +a better time to try the experiment than now. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +The death of <span class="sc">General George B. McClellan</span> at Newark, N.J., +October 29, reminds us how narrow is becoming the circle of living +generals who took part in the great Civil War. It is two decades only +since the struggle ceased; but, one by one, the famous leaders have +passed away, and now McClellan has gone—the first to follow his great +commander, Grant. +</p> +<p> +It is not easy to comment upon the career of General McClellan without +evoking, either from his admirers or his censors, the criticism of being +unfair. To many, especially to the soldiers who fought under his +leadership, he became an ideal of soldierly virtue, and has always held +a warm place in their hearts; while to many others his military and +civil career alike have seemed worthy only of disapprobation. +</p> +<p> +It was natural that General McClellan should have a large and devoted +following, for he was a man gifted with those personal qualities that +always win popularity to their possessor, so that among the soldiers of +the Army of the Potomac, and among those in civil life with whom he came +in contact, he was usually regarded with admiration. As a military +commander, it must be conceded by his most determined critics, even, +that he possessed certain qualities unsurpassed by + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page465" name="page465"></a>[pg 465]</span> + + those of any other general in the war. This was true of his ability as +an organizer of volunteer troups, in which capacity he probably rendered +more effectual service than any other man in the Union army. He was also +well versed in the science of war, and was a strategist of a higher +order than has generally been conceded. As is often the case, he failed +to receive just recognition of his really great abilities, because he +lacked the needed complementary qualities. McClellan could admirably +plan a campaign, and could perhaps have carried it to a brilliant issue, +had all the circumstances conformed to his plan, but this not happening, +he seemed unable to adapt his plan to the circumstances. Other generals +with inferior plans would succeed by taking some sudden advantage at a +critical time; McClellan on the contrary must either carry out his +carefully arranged programme, or acknowledge himself foiled. +</p> +<p> +That General McClellan was not a firm patriot is an assertion not +entitled to any weight whatever. He was devoted to the cause of the +Union, and in his career as a general we believe he should be given the +credit of performing his duty to the best of his ability. That he could +not triumph over unexpected obstacles was doubtless a cause of regret to +him more than to any one else. +</p> +<p> +General McClellan has been accused of an undue ambition for political +preferment, and it must be admitted that he would have succeeded better +in those positions to which he attained, had he been less solicitous for +the future; but it is not yet proved that he ever enlisted unworthy or +dishonorable means in the cause of his personal advancement. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page466" name="page466"></a>[pg 466]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0018" id="h2H_4_0018"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + HISTORICAL RECORD. +</h2> +<p> +September 30.—Republican State Convention held in Springfield. The +following ticket was nominated: Governor, Geo. D. Robinson of Chicopee; +Lieut. Governor, Oliver Ames of Easton; Secretary of State, Henry B. +Pierce of Abington; Treasurer, A.W. Beard of Boston; Auditor, Chas. R. +Ladd of Springfield; Attorney General, Edgar J. Sherman of Lawrence. +With the exception of the office of treasurer, the ticket is the same as +that of last year. +</p> +<p> +October 1.—The Converse Memorial library building was formerly +presented to the city of Malden by its donor, Hon. Elisha S. Converse. +Hon. John D. Long made the dedicatory address. The building cost +$100,000, and is one of the finest examples of architecture in the +state. +</p> +<p> +October 7.—Democratic State Convention at Worcester. The following +ticket was nominated: Governor, Frederick O. Prince of Boston; +Lieutenant-Governor, H.H. Gilmore of Cambridge; Secretary of State, +Jeremiah Crowley of Lowell; Attorney General, Henry K. Braley of Fall +River; Treasurer, Henry M. Cross of Newburyport. +</p> +<p> +October 8.—Eight monuments were unveiled upon the battle-field of +Gettysburg by Massachusetts veterans. The regiments which have erected +these monuments and the principal speakers upon the occasion, were as +follows:— +</p> +<p> +The Twelfth Infantry. The monument is on Seminary Ridge. Col. Cook of +Gloucester presided, George Kimball of Boston delivered the principal +address, and comrade Gilman read a poem. +</p> +<p> +The Eleventh Infantry dedicated its monument on the Emmittsburg Road, +Capt. W.T. Monroe presided, and James H. Croft of Boston made the +address. +</p> +<p> +The Nineteenth Infantry monument on Cemetery Ridge was dedicated; J.W. +Sawyer, presiding, Lieut. Geo. M. Barry and C.C. Coffin making +addresses. +</p> +<p> +The Third Battery has erected a monument. Formal exercises were not held +here at this time, but the dedication was made with remarks by comrade +Patch. +</p> +<p> +The First Battery dedicated a monument in the National Cemetery. Remarks +were made by G.H. Patch and H.I. Hall. +</p> +<p> +The Eighteenth Infantry. The monument stands near the wheat field, and +was dedicated with an address by Col. Wm. B. White of Quincy. +</p> +<p> +The Second Sharpshooters. The monument is in the form of a statue and +was dedicated. N.S. Sweet gave the address. +</p> +<p> +The First Cavalry dedicated a monument near the Round Tops, Major Chas. +G. Davis, delivered the address. +</p> +<p> +October 13-16.—Seventy-fifth anniversary of the American Board of +Commissioners for Foreign Missions observed in Boston. The annual sermon +was preached the 13th in Tremont Temple by Rev. Geo. Leon Walker D.D. of +Hartford. A special discourse was delivered the 14th in the same hall by +Rev. R.S. Storrs, D.D. of Brooklyn. The attendance was the largest in +the history of the Board, taxing the fullest capacity of Tremont Temple, +Music Hall, and various churches simultaneously. Over 10,000 people were +present on one evening and many were turned away. The Rev. Mark Hopkins, +D.D. was re-elected president of the Board. +</p> +<hr /> +<a name="h2H_4_0019" id="h2H_4_0019"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + OBITUARY. +</h2> +<p> +September 26.—<span class="sc">Hon. Waldo Colburne</span>, a Justice of the Supreme +Judicial Court of Massachusetts, died at his home in Dedham, at the age +of 60 years. +</p> +<p> +Judge Colburn was born in Dedham, Nov. 13, 1824, and at 15 years of age +he entered Phillips Academy at Andover, graduating therefrom in 1842 in +the "English Department and + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page467" name="page467"></a>[pg 467]</span> + + Teachers' Seminary," which at that time was entirely distinct from the +classical course. In the following year he entered the classical +department, where he remained until the summer of 1845, when he left the +academy and for the two years following engaged in various pursuits, +chiefly, however, civil engineering and surveying. On May 13, 1847, he +entered the law office of Ira Cleveland, Esq., at Dedham, and on May 3, +1850, was admitted to the Norfolk County Bar. In the meantime he had +spent some time at the Harvard Law School, and soon took a leading +position in Norfolk county, which he always maintained. On May 27, 1875, +he was appointed one of the Judges of the Superior Court by Gov. Gaston, +and on Nov. 10, 1882, Gov. Long selected him to fill a vacancy existing +in the Supreme Court. Judge Colburn was a Democrat, and had filled +several positions of trust and responsibility in his native town. In +1853 and 1854 he represented Dedham in the Massachusetts House of +Representatives, and as Chairman of the committee on Railroads earnestly +opposed the loaning of the State's credit to the Hoosac Tunnel scheme. +In 1870 he was a member of the Senate from the Second Norfolk District, +and as a member of the Judiciary Committee drafted the well-known +corporation act. He was Chairman of the Board of Selectmen of Dedham +from 1855 to 1864, and during the war his services were important and +valuable. He was President of the Dedham Institution for Savings and a +director of the Dedham National Bank. +</p> +<p> +Judge Colburn was naturally a man of robust constitution and excellent +health, and, until his prostration shortly before his death, had never +been obliged to neglect his official duties for a day on account of +sickness. +</p> +<p> +October 6.—Hon. Thomas Talbot, Ex-Governor of Massachusetts, died at +this home in Billerica at the age of sixty-seven years. He was born at +Cambridge, N.Y. Sept. 7, 1818, and subsequently removed with the family +to Danby, Vt. After the death of the father, the family removed to +Northampton, Mass. and Thomas at the age of thirteen began work in a +woolen factory. In the winters of 1837 and 1838 he attended an academy +at Cummington. Soon after, he joined his father in North Billerica, and +the long manufactoring career of C.P. Talbot & Co. was begun. The firm +still continues in the manufacture of woolen flannels, employing between +two and three hundred hands. +</p> +<p> +Mr. Talbot's first public service of note was as Representative from +Billerica in the Legislature of 1852, and he was a member of the +Constitutional Convention the following year. He was elected a member of +the Executive Council in 1864, and served five years in that honorable +capacity in association with Governors Andrew, Bullock and Claflin. In +1872 Mr. Talbot was elected by the Republicans as Lieutenant Governor +upon the same ticket with Hon. William B. Washburn, who was elected as +Governor. Re-elected with Governor Washburn in 1873, he became Acting +Governor when, during the legislative session of 1874, Governor Washburn +was elected as United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the +death of Hon. Charles Sumner. One of the first important acts of his +official life after this event was the approval of the "Ten-Hour bill." +</p> +<p> +In the same year Mr. Talbot received the Republican nomination for +Governor but was defeated by Hon. William Gaston. In 1878 he again had +the nomination, and was elected over Gen. Butler, Judge Abbott and A.A. +Miner. +</p> +<p> +He was presidential elector in 1876 and 1884, and was chairman of the +State Board of Health, Lunacy and Charity from its establishment in 1879 +to 1884. +</p> +<p> +Mr. Talbot was strictly a temperance man and was a professed +Prohibitionist. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page468" name="page468"></a>[pg 468]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_4_0020" id="h2H_4_0020"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + AMONG THE BOOKS. +</h2> +<p> +The preparation of elaborately illustrated editions of standard poems +especially for the holiday trade has become a very prominent feature of +the book publishing business. Every year seems to mark an increased +beauty and variety in the work which the artist contributes to these +holiday books, and many classic works of literature are read with +clearer meaning and vastly greater delight, by reason of the intelligent +interpretations often given in the illustrations of our best artists of +the day. +</p> +<p> +Among the most tasteful as well as sumptuous art volumes of the last +three years have been James R. Osgood & Co.'s "The Lady of the Lake," +"The Princess," and "Marmion." For a similar book for this season, +Messrs, Ticknor & Co., the successors of the old firm, have taken as a +subject Lord Byron's <i>Childe Harold</i>.<a href="#note-6" name="noteref-6"><small>6</small></a> Of the poem nothing need +be said here, for it is universally accepted as Byron's greatest and +best; but of the illustrations, pages of praise could easily be written. +The poem itself has been a fertile theme for the artists, for the scene +is made to shift from one to another of the most beautiful and romantic +localities of the Rhine, of Spain, Italy and Greece, and most of the +illustrations are true representations of castles, ruins, palaces and +natural scenery in these ancient countries. +</p> +<p> +All of the illustrations in the volume are from wood, in the production +of which the most famous American artists and engravers have given their +best work, all of it having been under the supervision of Mr A.V.S. +Anthony. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +Scarcely a year has elapsed since the appearance of the first volume of +Mr. <span class="sc">Blaine's</span> <i>Twenty Years in Congress</i>, which details the +history of our time from the outbreak of Secession to the death of +President Lincoln. To maintain the interest attached to that work, a +second and concluding volume ought to have been published ere this. +Indeed, the public had a right to expect it. But, now, another bid for +public consideration and favor has been put forth under the rather +attractive title of <i>Three Decades of Federal Legislation</i>.<a href="#note-7" name="noteref-7"><small>7</small></a> The +author is the Hon. S.S. Cox of New York, at one time a formidable +opponent of Mr. <span class="sc">Blaine</span> in the halls of Congress, and at the +present time American minister to Turkey. +</p> +<p> +Mr. <span class="sc">Cox</span> was a member of Congress for twenty-four years, his +four terms from an Ohio district covering the war and the period +immediately preceding it. As a politician, he was always ranked on the +Democratic side, and was universally regarded as one of the closest, +most competent and most conscientious observer of men and things. His +acknowledged literary skill and his passion for accuracy rendered it +almost certain that his history would be both fascinating and truthful. +Contemporary history is at the present moment in high favor. All +intelligent people realize that the records of the last fifty years are +of more vital importance to living Americans than are the annals of all +previous eras. Hence, when a man so thoroughly equipped with the gifts +of mind and of expression as Mr. Cox has shown himself to be in earlier +books from his pen,—we say when such a man sets out to relate the story +of his time, it follows without further argument that his work will not +only be sought but will be read. +</p> +<p> +The narrative covers the eventful work of Congress for the past thirty +years, and gives a much fuller inside view of Federal legislation during +this period than can be obtained from Mr. <span class="sc">Blaine's</span> more pretentious +work. No period in our national history is so full of interest as the +times of which our author writes. The revolt from English rule and the +establishment of our national government was one of the grandest epochs +in history. In that period were determined the issue of national +independence; in this epoch of even greater magnitude, the issue of +national existence. Both periods alike witnessed the most terrible +conflicts of armies, of bloodshed and suffering in both periods was +shown the exercise of the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page469" name="page469"></a>[pg 469]</span> + + highest and most brilliant statesmanship; and in both periods the +Federal Legislature was witness to events scarcely less exciting and +decisive than occurred on hundreds of bloody battle-fields. The exciting +period of Secession, the departure of Senators and Representatives from +Congress, the proclamation of war, the call for troops, the great +uprising of the people of all sections, North and South, against each +other, the act of Emancipation, the sanguinary battles of, and the close +of the war, the return of peace, the assassination of President Lincoln, +the election of Grant, the Electoral Commission and the seating of +Hayes, the resumption of specie payments and a host of other equally +impressive episodes and events, find in Mr. Cox an impartial historian. +Of the importance of such a work, there is no need of saying anything, +and it is quite enough to remark that the book taken all in all, is +perhaps the most important, because of its impartiality and accuracy, +that has so far been published during the present year. +</p> +<p> +We have alluded to the fact that the author was a prominent actor in +nearly all the legislation of this long period, and that he consequently +possesses that personal and absolute knowledge which comes from actual +participation. The following extract which is taken at random from page +117 of the volume discloses something of the author's happy faculty of +seeing and describing things as they occurred to him. He says:— +</p> +<p> +"Being upon the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of +Representatives when the Trent affair occurred, the writer attended a +dinner given by the Secretary at this then happy home. This was at a +time when men held their breath in trepidation, lest Great Britain and +the Powers of Europe might make the Trent matter the pretext to +consummate their recognition of Southern independence. Some feared that +a disparted Republic would have to give way before the jealous +encroachments of those who sought to divide our country as they +endeavored to imperialize Mexico. +</p> +<p> +"The delightful interchanges of thought between the persons at that +dinner are not so important as the fact that transpired toward its +close. After the ceremonies of introduction, and the tenders of +politeness to Mrs. Frederick W. Seward and Miss Olive Risley—the +adopted daughter of the house—the guests who had been received by these +ladies moved to the hospitable dining-hall. On the right of Mr. Seward +was seated burly English heartiness incarnated in Mr. Anthony Trollope, +the novelist. His presence was almost a surprise, if not a satire on the +occasion, as it concluded. At the other end of the table sat John J. +Crittenden. He was then chairman of Foreign Affairs in the House. The +author was on his right, as he was nearer by sympathy to him than others +on the committee. He used to say to the writer: 'My young friend, when I +was of your age, I did all the work and the older members received the +merit marks. You may do the work, sir, and I will take the credit.' With +his grave humor and hearty confidence, he was wont to parcel out to the +writer no inconsiderable quantity of the work of this most arduous of +committees. Thus it happened that a bill for the relief of the owners of +the Perthshire, seized by us, came to the hand of the writer for a +report. The chairman was not a little astonished when he found that his +subbordinate, on the 17th of December, 1861, was dilating on the Trent +case, and quoting Robinson's Reports to justify the detention of the +contraband plenipotentiaries, upon British precedents and conduct." +</p> +<p> +From the foregoing selection, it will readily be seen that the author's +style is strong, clear, rapid, and stimulating, his judgment sound and +unprejudiced, and his materials authentic. His condition, experiences, +and industry combine to throw new light on the events of the most +remarkable epoch in natural history, and the volume, independent of Mr. +Cox's reputation, is bound to be a success. It is at once the most +picturesque and harmonious political history of our times that has thus +far been written, and will, also, be generally looked upon as a solid +and substantial contribution to American literature. We feel that we +cannot commend it too highly. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +In the Century magazine, last spring, Gen. George B. McClellan undertook +to present his explanation of the failure of the Army of the Potomac +while under his command. In his article, he assaulted the memories of +Lincoln and Stanton, and attempted much more than he accomplished,—at +least, so thinks the <span class="sc">Hon. William D. Kelley</span>, who examines McClellan's +statements in a book recently published. It bears the simple title, +<i>Lincoln</i> + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page470" name="page470"></a>[pg 470]</span> + +<i>and Stanton</i>.<a href="#note-8" name="noteref-8"><small>8</small></a> Of this volume, which for the first time makes +many fresh disclosures, we hope to have something to say at another +time. +</p> +<p> +Senator <span class="sc">Sumner</span> was once asked by Lord Brougham the origin and +meaning of "caucus," and he replied: "It is difficult to assign any +elementary to the word, but the most approved one referred its origin to +the very town, and about the time (1772), of his lordship's birth." +There is a tradition in Boston that "caucus" was a common word here +before the Revolutionary war broke out, and that it originated in a feud +between the British troops on the one side and the rope-walkers and +calkers on the other. Bloody collisions, it is said, occurred between +them. The latter held meetings in the <i>calkers' hall</i> in the lower +part of the city, at which resolutions were adopted and speeches made +denouncing the soldiers, who, on their part deriding the wordy war +offered, sneeringly snubbed their opponents "The Calkers," which by an +easy corruption became "the caucus," and finally a term to denote the +meetings. +</p> +<p> +Whether this be the origin or not of the word, one thing is certain—Mr. +George W. <span class="sc">Lawton</span> has done a most commendable thing in the +publication of his little book on <i>The American Caucus System</i>.<a href="#note-9" name="noteref-9"><small>9</small></a> +It is exceedingly useful, and the wonder is for us why some such work +has not earlier issued from the press, for it meets the requirements of +the multitudinous politicians and others who are never absent on "caucus +nights." The author begins at the beginning of his theme, and shows how +easily men, that is, mankind in general, choose to be controlled by +political power, and to bear its burdens; he then establishes the axiom +that the direction of political power is with the caucus, and goes on +still further to explain what gives the caucus its authority, to compare +caucus nominations with self-nominations, and then historically to trace +the growth of the caucus, and, lastly, to describe the proceedings of, +and how to conduct, a caucus meeting. From first to last, these pages +are suggestive, timely, and embody a great deal of good sound sense. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +The late Mr. Walter Bagehot left behind him some materials for a book +which promised to make a landmark in the history of economics, by +separating the use of the older, or Ricardian, economic reasonings from +their abuse, and freeing them from the discredit into which they had +fallen through being often misapplied. Unfortunately he did not complete +more than the examination of two of their postulates, namely, the +transferability of capital and labor. These were originally published in +the <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, in 1876, and are now republished, with +some other materials for the author's proposed work, under the title of +<i>The Postulates of English Political Economy</i>.<a href="#note-10" name="noteref-10"><small>10</small></a> These essays, +which emanated from a well-trained, scientific mind, an independent +thinker, and one who was perfectly free in his criticisms, deal almost +exclusively with one side of what the author wished and intended to say; +but as they stand, they prove that had he lived he would have shed much +light on the problem, how the rapid changes of modern city life may help +us to understand, by analogy and indirect inference, the slow changes of +a backward people. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +The pathos and humor which have immortalized many of <span class="sc">Will +Carleton's</span> earlier poems enter again into his <i>City +Ballads</i>.<a href="#note-11" name="noteref-11"><small>11</small></a> If ever a poet comprehended the human heart and the +mainspring of its responses, it is he who gave us that +wonderfully-common-place (by reason only of its theme) but delightful +versification, "Betsey and I are out." His new collection embraces +several pieces almost as striking in their character; and their +wholesomeness and truthfulness of sentiment will win for them many +readers. None of these poems are fanciful pictures of life which does +not exist; but they are, on the + +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page471" name="page471"></a>[pg 471]</span> + +contrary, faithful to the actualities of the living present. They +portray metropolitan life as in a mirror, and depict the mishaps of the +inexperienced therein in a way that is at once healthful and conducive +to practical morality. Every poem is a story, which carries within +itself a lesson not easily forgotten, and as a poem is almost invariably +characterized by a pleasant rhythm and animation. The illustrations—and +they are numerous—are excellent; indeed, one would not wish them to be +better. These poems and pictures will find entrance into many homes ere +the holiday season is ended. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +One of the most astonishing successes, in a literary line, of recent +years is Col. Higginson's "Young Folks' History of the United States." +Published originally as a book for general readers, its superlative +merits commended themselves to teachers, then led to the introduction of +the work, as a text-book of history, into very many schools. No other +work of the kind, we believe, has met with such signal favor or so +richly deserves it. So far as it goes, it is by all odds the <i>ne plus +ultra</i> for school use. +</p> +<p> +The same author has recently published what he terms <i>A Larger History +of the United States</i>,<a href="#note-12" name="noteref-12"><small>12</small></a> which, however, ends only with the close +of President Jackson's administration. So far we fail to discover any +<i>raison d'etre</i> of the volume, unless its purpose is distinctly to +bring together in a re-arranged form the series of illustrated papers on +American history contributed by Mr. Higginson to Harper's Magazine +during the past two years. If such is the author's purpose, then we have +no fault to find with the work. But the term "<i>Larger</i> History" is, +in this case, a misnomer. The book does <i>not</i> contain as much +matter as the earlier work to which we have alluded, and it is not, so +far as we can make out, written for older readers. It does not strike +one as being a history at all,—that is, a straightforward, logical, and +continuous narrative coinciding with those exemplar types of historical +writing bequeathed to us by Macaulay or by Motley. The book ends, as we +have said, with the close of Jackson's administration; but we glean very +little concerning the <i>administration</i> and we are told much +relative to "Old Hickory." +</p> +<p> +Now, then, this may seem like finding fault with Mr. Higginson's book. +If so, we have plainly asserted our reasons. But with his subject +matter, and with his manner of treating it, everybody must be pleased. +We have never read more charmful essays on the First Americans, the +Visit of the Vikings, the Spanish Discoverers, the French Voyageurs, the +Dawning of Independence, and the Great Western March, than appear +between the covers of this beautiful volume. They are full of meat, and +have the savor of fresh and studious investigation, and we feel grateful +to their author for having provided so tempting a feast. What he says +and the way he says it make us the more to regret the unfortunate title +of his book. +</p> +<p> +The illustrations, which are numerous, are veritable works of art, and +we do not believe that any other American book can exhibit a finer or +more valuable series of portraits of American statesmen. This feature +alone should commend it to lovers of fine books, of which the present +issue is decidedly one. We are not informed whether a second volume is +forthcoming. +</p> + +<a name="note-6"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>6</u> (<a href="#noteref-6">return</a>)<br /> +Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. A Romance. By Lord Byron. +Boston: Ticknor & Co. Price, in cloth, $6.00. +</p> +<a name="note-7"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>7</u> (<a href="#noteref-7">return</a>)<br /> +Three Decades of Federal Legislation, from 1855 to 1885. By +the Hon. S.S. Cox, 1 vol. 8vo, pp. 726. Illustrated. Providence, R.I.; +J.A. & R.A. Reid, 1885. Price, $5.00, (sold only by subscription.) +</p> +<a name="note-8"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>8</u> (<a href="#noteref-8">return</a>)<br /> +<span class="sc">Lincoln and Stanton</span>. A study of the war +administration of 1861 and 1862, with special consideration of some +recent statements of Gen. George B. McClellan, By Wm. D. Kelley. 8vo, +pp. 88. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1885. Price, $1.00. +</p> +<a name="note-9"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>9</u> (<a href="#noteref-9">return</a>)<br /> +The American Caucus System; its origin, purpose, and +utility. By George W. Lawton. 1 vol. pp. 107. New York: G.P. Putnam's +Sons, 1885. Price, $1.00. +</p> +<a name="note-10"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>10</u> (<a href="#noteref-10">return</a>)<br /> +The Postulates of English Political Economy. By the late +Walter Bagehot, with a preface by Alfred Marshall. 1 vol. pp. 114. New +York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1885. Price $1.00. +</p> +<a name="note-11"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>11</u> (<a href="#noteref-11">return</a>)<br /> +<span class="sc">City Ballads</span>. By Will Carleton, author of "Farm +Ballads," "Farm Legends," etc. Illustrated. Square 8 vo, pp. 180. New +York: Harper & Brothers. Price $2.00. +</p> +<a name="note-12"><!--Note--></a> +<p class="foot"> +<u>12</u> (<a href="#noteref-12">return</a>)<br /> +A Larger History of the United States of America to the +close of President Jackson's administration. By Thomas Wentworth +Higginson. Illustrated by Maps, Plans, Portraits, and other Engravings. +1 vol. 8vo, pp. 470. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1886. Price, $3.00. +</p> +<hr /> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page472" name="page472"></a>[pg 472]</span> +</p> +<a name="h2H_NOTE" id="h2H_NOTE"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + NOTES AND QUERIES. +</h2> +<p> +At the request of many of our readers, this new Department is initiated. +Please address all queries and answers simply,—<span class="sc">Editor of the Bay State +Monthly</span>, 43 Milk St., Boston. +</p> +<p> +1.—In one of the old Readers, I find a selection, not credited to any +author, and beginning as follows:—"Born, sir, in a land of liberty; +having early learned its value; having engaged in a perilous conflict +to defend it; having, in a word, devoted the best years of my life to +secure its permanent establishment in my country, my anxious +recollections, my sympathetic feelings, and my best wishes are +irresistibly excited, whensoever in any country, I see an oppressed +nation unfurl the banners of freedom." Will some one of your readers +inform me who was the author of these words, and what was the occasion +for their utterance?—W.T.D. +</p> +<p> +2.—Sullivan, in his <i>Familiar Letters</i>, states (p. 26) that: +"General Washington is well known to have expressed his heartfelt +satisfaction that the important State of Massachusetts had acceded to +the Union. There is much <i>secret history</i> as to the efforts made to +procure the rejection (of the constitution) on the one side, and the +adoption on the other." Where can I find the fullest account of this +"secret history?"—STUDENT. +</p> +<p> +3.—Who was the first American woman to publicly espouse the cause of +Anti-Slavery? I have lately seen several names mentioned?—M.S. +</p> +<p> +4.—"Where can I find the best account of the Know-Nothings, that +figured in American politics some years ago?" +</p> +<p> +5.—The late Epes Sargent, in one of his sketches, says:— +</p> +<p> +"Semmes took a pinch of snuff, and replied,—'You remember <i>Mrs. +Glasse's</i> well-known receipt for cooking a hare—First catch your +hare!'"—<i>Who was Mrs Glasse?</i>—LATIN SCHOOL. +</p> +<p> +6.—Where can I find a full account of the history of the Indian tribes +of early Massachusetts? The various State Histories say but little about +them.—ANTIQUARY. +</p> +<p> +7.—Has the life of Robert Rantoul Jr. ever been written? If so, by +whom?—H.A.D. +</p> +<p> +8.—Most of our States have one capital; some have two—Providence and +Newport, in Rhode Island for instance. Why two? +</p> +<p> +9.—In Chandler Robbins' "History of the Second Church," under date of +Oct. 7. 1762, occurs the following: "Voted that the singers sound the +base at the end of the lines whenever they think proper." What is the +explanation of this custom? +</p> +<p> +10.—Bartlett does not give this: "To fleet the time carelessly, as they +did in the golden world." Where is it to be found?—ELHEGOS. +</p> + +<hr class="full" /> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<!-- ADS BEGIN HERE --> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx1" name="pagexxx1"></a>[pg xxx1]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<p> +"<b><i>Undoubtedly the most remarkable series of articles ever published +in a magazine, and their popularity is in, accord with their +merit</i></b>."—<span class="sc">Brooklyn Eagle</span>. +</p> +<p style="border: thin solid black; padding: 1em;"> +<i>Of the numbers of</i> <span class="sc">The Century</span> <i>from November, 1884 to April +1885, six issues, more than a million and a quarter copies have already +been published</i>. +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE WAR PAPERS</b> +<br />IN +<br />THE CENTURY MAGAZINE. +</h2> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:125px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/ad001.jpg"><img src="images/ad001.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="" /></a> +</div> + +<p> +With the number for November, 1884, the first issue of a new volume, +there began to appear in this magazine a series of separate papers, the +object of which is to tell in clear and graphic manner the stories of +the great battles of the War for the Union; the authors being leading +officers on both the Federal and Confederate sides, often the first in +command, and always a participant in the engagement under consideration. +The extraordinary increase in the circulation of the magazine since +these papers were begun, and the reception by the public and the press +of the material already printed, indicate the wide-spread popular +interest in the plan. +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE NOVEMBER CENTURY</b> +</h2> +<p> +contains the paper by General G.T. Beauregard, of the Confederate +army, describing "The Battle of Bull Run," with more than twenty +illustrations, including portraits of McDowell, Johnston, "Stonewall" +Jackson, and others. General Beauregard not only describes the battle, +but touches upon his relations with Mr. Jefferson Davis, and the general +conduct of the war. +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE DECEMBER CENTURY</b> +</h2> +<p> +contains the graphic description of "The Capture of Fort Donelson," by +General Lew Wallace, with portraits of Buckner, Floyd, Pillow, and +others among the illustrations, and a frontispiece portrait of General +Grant, from a little-known photograph; also an autographic reproduction +of General Grant's famous "Unconditional Surrender" letter, written to +the Confederate commander at Fort Donelson. +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE JANUARY CENTURY</b> +</h2> +<p> +contains an illustrated article by Rear-Admiral Walke, describing the +"Operations of the Western Flotilla," including engagements at Belmont, +Fort Henry, Fort Pillow, Fort Donelson, Memphis, and Island No. 10. +Captain James B. Eads (who built the gun-boats) contributes to the same +number a paper on "Recollections of Foote and the Gun-boats." +</p> +<p> +<i>New readers of</i> <span class="sc">The Century</span> <i>desiring to secure these three +numbers, November, December, and January, and thus begin the War Series +and Mr. Howells's new novel, "The Rise of Silas Lapham," can obtain them +for $1.00 of the publishers (who will send them to any address, +post-paid, on receipt of price), or of dealers everywhere. New editions +will be printed as rapidly as the demand requires. November is now in +its sixth edition.</i> +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE FEBRUARY CENTURY,</b> +</h2> +<p> +the Midwinter number, contains a remarkable list of attractions, +including a richly illustrated paper on "Winter Sports in Canada," an +illustrated story by Mark Twain, entitled "Royalty on the Mississippi," +etc., etc. In this issue appears +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE FIRST OF GENERAL GRANT'S ARTICLES</b> +</h2> +<p> +in the war series, being his long-looked-for paper on "The Battle of +Shiloh." For reasons which he recounts in the opening of the article, +general Grant never made to the Government the usual full report +touching this engagement. The paper is a comprehensive treatment of his +relations to the battle, including much of picturesque and personal +interest concerning its progress and a discussion of the main points of +controversy, together with his own estimates of the military character +and services of certain of the leading officers in both the Union and +Confederate sides. +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE CONFEDERATE SIDE AT "SHILOH"</b> +</h2> +<p> +will be described in this February number in two interesting articles, +one by the son of the Confederate leader, General Albert Sidney +Johnston, killed at Shiloh, and the other by Colonel Jordan, of general +Beauregard's staff. These, with General Grant's article, are among the +most notable contributions ever made to magazine literature. The +illustrations are more than twenty-five in number. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx2" name="pagexxx2"></a>[pg xxx2]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>FURTHER PAPERS BY GENERAL GRANT.</b> +</h2> +<p> +In his second paper General Grant will cover an entire year of his +service in the war, including the different campaigns against Vicksburg, +and its capitulation. In his third paper he will deal with the battle of +Chattanooga, including the strategy of the campaign from the time of his +assumption of the command. A fourth paper, on the Wilderness campaign, +will follow. +</p> +<p> +While largely engaged with the main features of the campaigns described, +General Grant has not failed to take note of significant and +characteristic details. These papers will be illustrated with the same +regard for thoroughness and accuracy which has characterized the +illustrations of the articles in the war series already published. +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE "MONITOR" AND "MERRIMAC,"</b> +<br /> +IN +<br /> +<b>THE MARCH CENTURY.</b> +</h2> +<a name="image-0013"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:175px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/ad002.jpg"><img src="images/ad002.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="" /></a> +</div> +<p> +The story of this famous fight is described in the March <span class="sc">Century</span> by Col. +John Taylor Wood, fourth officer of the "Merrimac" in the second day's +fight, and now the senior surviving officer. Col. Wood was afterward +commander of the privateer "Tallahassee." The Federal side of the battle +is told by Commander S.D. Greene, U.S.N. (whose death has just +occurred), who was the executive officer of the "Monitor," and operated +the guns within the turret. General R.E. Colston, commander of the +Confederate forces opposite Newport News, contributes an eyewitness's +account of the same battle, describing, also, the "Merrimac's" +engagement with the Federal fleet before the arrival of the "Monitor." +A paper will soon appear on +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>"THE MONITOR," BY CAPTAIN JOHN ERICSSON,</b> +</h2> +<p> +making record of the circumstances attending the invention of that +famous craft, and treating also of the engagement at Hampton Roads. +Readers of the articles in the March number will be especially +interested in the inventor's story. +</p> +<p> +In the April <span class="sc">Century</span> will be printed two important papers on +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE CAPTURE OF NEW ORLEANS,</b> +<br /> +BY +<br /> +<b>ADMIRAL PORTER AND GEORGE W. CABLE.</b> +</h2> +<p> +Admiral Porter, with whom, as he relates, the expedition against New +Orleans originated, and who was in command of the mortar-fleet during +the action, describes the Federal side of "The Opening of the Lower +Mississippi"; while George W. Cable, the novelist, and at the time a +resident of New Orleans, writes of the condition of the city and the +circumstances attending its occupation. The illustrations will include a +number of battle-scenes from sketches made by Admiral Porter. +</p> +<p> +In the May and June numbers the papers in the War Series will be largely +devoted to +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN</b> +<br /> +BY +<br /> +<b>GEN. G.B. McCLELLAN AND GEN. J.E. JOHNSTON.</b> +</h2> +<p> +General McClellan will contribute two papers, the first of a general +nature on the Peninsular Campaign, and the second (to appear later) on +the battle of Antietam, thus covering the period of his command of the +Army of the Potomac. General Joseph E. Johnston, who commanded the +entire Confederate forces opposed to McClellan in the Peninsular +engagements until the battle of Seven Pines, when in consequence of a +wound he was succeeded by General Lee, will cover, in his papers, the +period from Manassas to Seven Pines, dealing with both battles, and with +his relations and differences with the President of the Confederacy. The +engagements at Gaines's Mill and Malvern Hill, in this campaign, will be +described in papers by +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>GEN. FITZ JOHN PORTER AND GEN. D.H. HILL,</b> +</h2> +<p> +who were prominently engaged against each other in both actions. These +will be well supplemented by the "Recollections of a Private." +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>OTHER WAR PAPERS</b> +</h2> +<p> +by Generals Longstreet, Pope, Gordon, Rosecrans, Buell, Hunt, +Pleasonton, Newton, and other prominent leaders, will appear in later +numbers. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx3" name="pagexxx3"></a>[pg xxx3]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE SERIES</b> +</h2> +<p> +will receive the most careful attention, and in this particular it is +thought that the series will possess an unequaled historical interest. +<span class="sc">The Century</span> has at its disposal a very large quantity of maps and plans, +portraits of general officers of both sides, authentic paintings and +drawings, and especially photographs of camp scenes, battle-fields, +famous localities, etc. A strict regard for accuracy will guide the +preparation of the illustrations. +</p> +<p> +In connection with this series is appearing a number of briefer +sketches, entitled +</p> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>"RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE,"</b> +</h2> +<p> +reflecting with interesting and life-like details the experiences of the +common soldier from the time of enlistment to the muster-out: the drill, +the march, the bivouac, the skirmish, the charge, the pursuit, the +retreat, etc., etc. Auxiliary branches of the service will also be +treated in this supplementary way, and in several instances briefer +supplementary papers will chronicle special incidents or consider +special phases of an engagement. Personal reminiscences of several of +the most prominent military leaders, now dead, will also give variety to +the scheme. +</p> +<hr /> +<h2 style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<b>OTHER FEATURES OF "THE CENTURY"</b> +</h2> +<p> +include W.D. Howells's new novel of an American business man, "The Rise +of Silas Lapham"; a novel, by Henry James, "The Bostonians," begun in +the February number; a series of papers, by W.D. Howells, descriptive +of some cities of Italy, illustrated with reproductions of etchings, +by Joseph Pennell; a series of brilliantly illustrated articles on +"The New Astronomy" (a paper in this series appears in the March number); +articles on "The New North-west," on Architecture, History, French and +American Art, etc., etc., and short stories by the best writers—many of +them to be illustrated. The War Series will not be allowed to interfere +in any way with the general features of the magazine. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<b>SUBSCRIPTIONS</b> may begin at any time, but in order to get the +first chapters of Mr. W.D. Howells's novel, "The Rise of Silas Lapham," +and to commence the War Series, new subscribers should date from the +November number. The subscription price of <span class="sc">The Century</span> is $4.00 a year, +and single numbers can be purchased of book-sellers and news-dealers +everywhere at 35 cents each. All dealers receive subscriptions, or +remittance may be made direct to the publishers by postal or express +order, registered letter, bank check, or draft. +</p> +<p style="text-align: right;"> +<b>THE CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York.</b> +</p> + +<hr /> + +<a name="image-0014"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:175px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/ad003.jpg"><img src="images/ad003.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="FROM 'RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE.'" /></a> +<br /> +FROM 'RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE.' +</div> +<p> +<span class="sc">The Century</span> <i>is beyond question the first among magazines in the +English language. The people of the South owe it especial thanks not +only for the fairness of its spirit toward this section, but because it +opened its pages to many of our best writers and made them known to the +world.</i>—THE APPEAL, MEMPHIS, TENN. +</p> +<p> +<i>The time has now come when this portion of our national history can +be discussed by the actors in it, whether they wore the blue or the +gray, and different versions can be judged without +partiality.</i>—ARGUS, ALBANY, N.Y. +</p> +<p> +<i>The great captains on both sides will make this series the most +notable historic contribution of the day.</i>—CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, +GA. +</p> +<p> +<i>Every soldier should be a subscriber to</i> <span class="sc">The Century</span> <i>for the +coming year.</i>—COURIER-GAZETTE, ROCKLAND, MAINE. +</p> +<p> +<i>In securing these articles from the leading generals of the great +struggle</i>, <span class="sc">The Century</span> <i>did the best piece of journalistic work +that has been done in this country for many a year.</i>—THE CHRISTIAN +UNION, N.Y. +</p> +<p> +<i>The wounds and passions of the late war are rapidly healing, but it +will never lose its interest to the students of history. These articles +cannot fail to be of great interest to all careful readers both North +and South.</i>—PRESS, PARAGOULD, ARK. +</p> +<p> +<i>A series of important papers, the like of which has never before been +attempted, and which possess the peculiar quality of interesting every +person in the land.</i>—THE BEACON, BOSTON, MASS. +</p> +<p> +<i>What a vast work for good in these several ways is the great +magazine-publishing house of</i> <span class="sc">The Century Co.</span> <i>doing; what an +uplift is it giving to good taste, good morals, good politics, and good +manners, as well as to the dissemination of useful knowledge, to the +culture of "the masses," to the comfort and peace and pleasure of home, +to the welfare of society in general! No engine of the things that are +true and pure and good is more mighty than a work like this; we ought +all to be thankful that it is in such hands. Making money, of +course</i>, <span class="sc">The Century Co.</span> <i>are; we are glad of it; but they are also +making hearts happier, lives better, and homes brighter the world +over.</i>—THE LITERARY WORLD, BOSTON, MASS. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx4" name="pagexxx4"></a>[pg xxx4]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<p> +<b><i>The Century Co. are among the benefactors of the human race. It is +not too much to say that while "The Century" stands at the head of +current magazine literature, in "St. Nicholas" we have the best serial +publication for boys and girls the present generation has +seen.</i></b>—THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN, ENGLAND. +</p> +<h1> +"Driven Back to Eden," +</h1> + +<a name="image-0015"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:175px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/ad004.jpg"><img src="images/ad004.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="" /></a> +</div> + +<center> +THE NEW<br /> SERIAL<br /> STORY +</center> +<center> +BY +</center> +<h2> +E.P. ROE +</h2> +<center> +Author of +<br /> +"Barriers Burned Away," "Without a Home," +<br /> +Etc., Etc. +</center> + +<center> +PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED +<br /> +NOW APPEARING IN +</center> +<h1 style="clear:both;"> +ST. NICHOLAS. +</h1> +<p> +Showing how a city family, inhabitants of a "flat," were led to move +into the freedom of a country home, and how the girls and boys all +became farmers on a small scale. This promises to be one of Mr. Roe's +best stories. It is only one of the many interesting current features of +<span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span>, which include: +</p> + +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>"Recollections of a Boy-Page in the U.S. Senate,"</li> +<li style="margin-left:1em;"> "Historic Girls," serial papers by E.S. Brooks,</li> +<li style="margin-left:2em;"> "Children of the Cold," a series by Lieut. Fred'k Schwatka,</li> +<li>"Ready for Business; Suggestions to Boys about to Choose an Occupation,"</li> +<li style="margin-left:1em;"> "Personally Conducted," by Frank R. Stockton,</li> +<li style="margin-left:2em;"> Short Stories by Louisa M. Alcott and others. Etc., Etc.</li> +</ul> + +<p> +Numbers issued on the 25th; for sale by all dealers; price 25 cents. +Subscription price, $3.00 a year. Subscriptions are taken by dealers and +postmasters, or remittance may be made direct to the publishers, <b>THE +CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York.</b> +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<b><i>A Michigan mother (and competent critic) writes to the Editor of +"St. Nicholas": "I am convinced that no child who is without 'St. +Nicholas' can successfully compete in the race of life with those who +have had the benefit of its wonderful pages." And a prominent clergyman +of Chicago informs us that one of his parishioners recently said to him: +"'St. Nicholas' has saved my boy from ruin."</i></b> +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx5" name="pagexxx5"></a>[pg xxx5]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/510a.jpg"><img src="images/510a.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES" /></a> +</div> +<h2> COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES:<br /> + FOR ROAD USE; +</h2> +<center> + STANCH AND RELIABLE<br /> + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE<br /> + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP<br /> + STRONG, GRACEFUL—EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE +</center><center> + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE<br /> + THE POPE MFG. CO.<br /> + 597 Washington St. Boston, Mass. +</center> +<p> + "If I could not get another bicycle I would not give mine for its weight + in solid gold. For fifteen years I lost from three to eight days every + month with stubborn sick headache. Since I have been riding the bicycle + I have lost only two days from that cause, and I haven't spent a dollar + for a doctor." + REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST" +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/507.jpg"><img src="images/507.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="ECONOMIST SUMMER COOK STOVE" /></a> +</div> +<h2> ECONOMIST SUMMER COOK STOVE </h2> +<center> + IS SAFE, ODORLESS, CLEANER,<br /> + EASIER TO CONTROL,<br /> + GIVES LESS HEAT IN ROOM,<br /> + & IS CHEAPER TO RUN THAN ANY<br /> + OIL, GAS, OR GASOLINE STOVE MADE.<br /> + <span style="font-size:150%;">BURNS COAL, WOOD, OR COKE.</span> +</center><center> + SEND FOR CIRCULARS.<br /> + MADE ONLY BY HOBBS, GORDON & CO. CONCORD, N.H.<br /> + Price $16. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<table border="0" width="100%" align="center" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="35%"> +<h2>BOSTON</h2> + +<h3>BRIDGE WORKS,</h3> + +<h4><i>D.H. ANDREWS, Engineer.</i></h4> +<p class="center"> +Builders of Wrought Iron Bridges and Roofs. +</p><p class="center"> +Office: <b>13 PEMBERTON SQ., BOSTON.</b> +</p><p class="center"> +Works: Cambridgeport, Mass. +</p> + +</td><td valign="top" width="65%"> + +<h3> + OWNERS OF HORSES +</h3> +<center> + Will find it to their advantage to use +<br /> + <b>Marden's Worm Destroyer.</b> +</center> +<p> + This medicine not only rids the horse of Worms and Bots, but also acts + as a Tonic and Blood Purifyer, improving the condition, and giving the + animal a shining coat. +</p> +<center> + <b>Price, $1.00 a Box.</b> +</center> +<center> + <i>W.P. UNDERHILL & CO.,</i><br /> + No. 132 No. Main St.,—CONCORD, N.H.<br /> + Wholesale agents for the United States. +</center> +</td></tr></table> + + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h3> + <i>E.H. ROLLINS & SON</i>, +<br /> + CONCORD, N.H., OFFER +<br /> + <i>REGISTERED</i> +<br /> + <b>10 Per Cent. County Warrants</b> +<br /> + <b>IN SUMS FROM $100 TO $500.</b> +</h3> +<p> + <span class="sc">Municipal Bonds</span>, School, Water, Funding and Public Building, paying + <b>6</b>, <b>7</b> and <b>8</b> per cent. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">Farm Mortgages</span> upon farms in Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado and Dakota + paying <b>8</b> per cent. Our Company will guarantee any of these loans + at <b>7</b> per cent. +</p> +<p> + We have now on hand some conservative County Bonds in sums of + <b>$100</b> and <b>$500</b>, which would make a good investment for + those desiring to invest a small sum. +</p> +<p> + "All our securities are taken and examined by members of our house in + the west. Principal and interest of all we sell payable at our office. + If desired one of our firm will visit you." +</p> +<p> + All questions promptly answered and papers sent for inspection. +</p> +<center> + <i>SEND FOR CIRCULAR</i> +<br /> + <b>7 BAILEY'S BLOCK, CONCORD, N.H.</b> +</center> +<p> + FEBRUARY 17, 1875. +</p> +</div> + + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx6" name="pagexxx6"></a>[pg xxx6]</span> +</p> + + +<div class="adpage"> + +<center> + <i>INCORPORATED 1830.</i> +<br /> + <b>New Hampshire Savings Bank,</b> +<br /> + IN CONCORD. +</center> +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="Assets"> +<tr><td> Deposits </td><td align="right">$360,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Guaranty Fund </td><td align="right"> 125,000 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Surplus </td><td align="right"> 100,000 </td></tr> +</table> +<p><span class="sc">Samuel S. Kimball</span>, Pres't. <span class="sc">W.P. Fiske</span>, Treas.</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>FOR SALE.</b> +</center> +<p> + A complete set of the <i>Granite Monthly</i>. Seven volumes, bound in + cloth; price $18.00. +</p> +<center> + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO.,<br /> + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>First National Bank,</b> +<br /> +CONCORD, N.H. +<br /> +United States Depository. Transacts a General Banking Business. +<br /> +<i>CAPITAL, $150,000. SURPLUS, $120,000.</i> +<br /> +<span class="sc">Wm. F. Thayer</span>, Pres't. <span class="sc">C. G. Remick</span>, Act'g Cash'r. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>H.C. BAILEY,</b> +<br /> +PHOTOGRAPHER +<br /> +DEPOT STREET, CONCORD, N.H., +<br /> +<b>Cards, Cabinets and Imperials,</b> +<br /> +made by the new instantaneous process exclusively. Permanent +engagement of a first-class operator. Every picture warranted. +Connected by telephone. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<p> +<b>HELP</b> for working people. Send 10 cents postage, and we will mail + you <i>free</i>, a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will put you + in the way of making more money in a few day than you ever thought + possible at any business. Capital not required. You can live at home and + work in spare time only, or all the time. All of both sexes, of all + ages, grandly successful. 50 cents to $5 easily earned every evening. + That all who want work may test the business, we make this unparalleled + offer: To all who are not well satisfied we will send $1 to pay for the + trouble of writing us. Full particulars, directions, etc., sent free. + Immense pay absolutely sure for all who start at once. Don't delay. + Address <span class="sc">Stinson & Co.</span>, Portland, Me. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>WOODWORTH, DOW & CO.,</b> +<br /> + <i>MANUFACTURERS OF MEAL</i> +<br /> +and Wholesale Dealers in +<br /> +<b>Flour, Groceries, Lime & Cement,</b> +<br /> +<b>Concord, N.H.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center><b>FOR SALE.</b></center> +<p class="center">Volumes 1 and 2 of BAY STATE MONTHLY bound in cloth. Price, $2.00 each.</p> +<center> +JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., +<br /> +31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>EDEN MUSEE,</b> 55 WEST 23D ST. +<br /> + NEW YORK. +<br /> +OPEN FROM 11 TO 11. SUNDAYS 1 TO 11. +<br /> +Lifelike Tableaux in Wax, Stereoscopes, Concerts. +<br /> + NEW ATTRACTIONS CONSTANTLY ADDED. +<br /> + MORLEY'S FATA MORGANA. +<br /> + Concerts Afternoon and Evening. +<br /> + Admission to all, 50 cents. Children, 25 cents. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<p><b>$200,000</b> <i>in presents given away.</i> Send us 5 cents postage, + and by mail you will get <i>free</i> a package of goods of large value, + that will start you in work that will at once bring you in money faster + than anything else in America. All about the $200,000 in presents with + each box. Agents wanted everywhere, of either sex, of all ages, for all + the time, or spare time only, to work for us at their own homes. + Fortunes for all workers absolutely assured. Don't delay. <span class="sc">H. + Hallett & Co.</span>, Portland, Maine. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<p> +<b>WANTED.</b> New England Town Histories in exchange for volumes I and II + of the "<span class="sc">Bay State Monthly</span>." +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>National State Capital Bank,</b> +<br /> + <i>CONCORD, N.H.</i> +<br /> + <i>Capital, $200,000. Surplus, $75,000.</i> +</center> +<p> + Collections made on liberal terms. Investment Securities bought and + sold. Safe Deposit Boxes for rent. +</p> +<center> +<span class="sc">L. Downing, Jr.</span>, Pres't. <span class="sc">J.E. Fernald</span>, Cashier. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<p> +<b>A Prize.</b> Send six cents for postage, and receive free, a costly + box of goods which will help you to more money right away than anything + else in this world. All, of either sex, succeed from first hour. The + broad road to fortune opens before the workers, absolutely sure. At once + address, <span class="sc">True & Co.</span>, Augusta, Maine. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>Loan and Trust Savings Bank,</b> +<br /> + <i>CONCORD, N.H.</i> +<br /> + <span class="sc">J.E. SARGENT</span>, President. <span class="sc">Geo. A. Fernald</span>, Treasurer. +<br /> + <span class="sc">Chartered 1872.</span> +<br /> + <i>Resources March 1, 1885, $1,687,203.95</i> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center><b>FOR SALE.</b></center> + +<p>A few volumes 5, 6, and 7 of <i>Granite Monthly</i> (a New Hampshire + magazine). Bound in Cloth. Price $2.00 each. Early volumes out of print. +</p> +<center> +JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., +<br /> + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>The Gillette Portrait Copying Co.,</b> +<br /> + (Formerly Boston, Mass.) +<br /> + <b>ARTISTIC PORTRAITS,</b> +</center> +<p> In Water Colors. Crayon, India Ink, Pastelle, Croetalevis, and Oil + Colors, from small likenesses of every description. Superior inducements + to soliciting agents. +</p> +<center><i>CONCORD, N.H.</i></center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<b>"BREAD PILLS: A Study of Mind-Cure."</b> +</center> +<p> Thousands of intelligent people throughout the country are anxious to + know what "CHRISTIAN SCIENCE" or modern "MIND-CURE" teachers, and how + the healing is done. +</p> +<center> +<b>Bread Pills: a Study of Mind-Cure,</b> +<br /> + BY C.M. BARROWS, +</center> +<p> Answers these questions satisfactorily, and gives just the information + which the public demands. +</p> +<center> +<b>THE BOOK OF THE SEASON.</b> +<br /> +Do not fail to read +<br /> + BREAD PILLS. +<br /> +For sale by all newsdealers, +<br /> + PRICE, 35 CENTS. +</center> +<p> Mailed to any address on receipt of 35 cents by <span class="sc">Mutual News + Co.</span>, Boston, Agents. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<p> <b>WIN</b> more money than at anything else by taking an agency for the + best selling book out. Beginners succeed grandly. None fail. Terms free. + <span class="sc">Hallett Book Co.</span>, Portland, Maine. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx7" name="pagexxx7"></a>[pg xxx7]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2><b>BOSTON TRAVELLER.</b></h2> +<h3> + THE BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER, +<br /> + AND +<br /> + <i>The Best Advertising Medium in New England.</i> +</h3> +<h4 style="padding:0;margin:0;"> BOSTON EVENING TRAVELLER,</h4><center>Five Editions Daily.</center> +<h4 style="padding:0;margin:0;"> BOSTON TRAVELLER,</h4><center> (Semi-Weekly), Tuesdays and Thursdays.</center> +<h4 style="padding:0;margin:0;"> AMERICAN TRAVELLER,</h4><center> Thursdays.</center> + +<center> + Daily, $9 Per Annum. Semi-Weekly, $3 Per Annum. Weekly, $1.50 Per Annum. +<br /> + <span style="font-size:170%;">☞ SAMPLE COPIES FREE.</span> +</center> +<p> + The Evening Traveller is delivered by carriers in Boston and Suburbs for + 75 cents a month. Send orders to +</p> +<center> + <i>R. WORTHINGTON & CO., Publishers</i>, <span class="sc">Boston, Mass.</span> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>STONINGTON LINE.</b> +<br /> + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH +<br /> + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, +<br /> + AND ALL POINTS +<br /> + <b>SOUTH AND WEST,</b> +<br /> + Avoiding Point Judith. +<br /> + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers +<br /> + <b>Stonington and Narraganset.</b> +</center> +<p> + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, +</p> +<center> + <b>DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.)</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + <i>early trains South and West.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES.</b> +<br /> + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at +<br /> + <b>214 Washington Street, corner of State,</b> +<br /> + AND AT +<br /> + <b>BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. +</p> +<center> + <span class="sc">A.A. Folsom</span>, Superintendent B. & P.R.R.<br /> + <span class="sc">F.W. Popple</span>, General Passenger Agent.<br /> + <span class="sc">J.W. Richardson</span>, Agent, Boston. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + COOLIDGE HOUSE, +<br /> + BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. +</center> +<p class="quote"> + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording <i>most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>COOLIDGE CAFE,</b> +<br /> + <b>EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." +</p> +<center> + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. +<br /> + <i>The Best Material, Cooking, and Service.</i> +<br /> + <b>I.N. ANDREWS & CO.</b> +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx8" name="pagexxx8"></a>[pg xxx8]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG </h2> + +<a name="image-xxx8"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/ad005.jpg"><img src="images/ad005.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="" /></a> +</div> + +<center> + Residents of, and visitors to Boston, should not miss seeing the + wonderful +<br /> + CYCLORAMA BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, +<br /> + now on exhibition at +<br /> + NO. 541 TREMONT STREET. +</center> +<p> + The building is large and substantial, built of brick and iron, and is + fire-proof. It is circular in shape and is ornamented by turreted walls + and towers, constructed after the manner of the old feudal castles. +</p> +<p> + The vestibule, parlors and offices at the entrance are decorated and + furnished in good style and all the appointments and accessories are in + keeping. +</p> +<p> + The spectator passes through a narrow passage and up a winding stairway + to a circular platform in the centre of the structure, whence the + picture is seen. No words can adequately describe the wonderful effects + of this life-like portrayal of the great battle. It tells in the most + vivid manner possible the whole story of that dreadful afternoon <i>July + 3, 1863.</i> All around him are evidences of the terrible battle. Behind + fences, stone walls and trees, in trenches and in open fields are seen + soldiers of the blue and gray engaged in the awful struggle. +</p> +<p> + The officers who were in command on that day are easily distinguished on + the canvas. Old soldiers who have seen the painting pronounce it as + accurate as if photographed on the field. +</p> +<p> + Passing down another winding stairway we find ourselves in front of + another painting called the +</p> +<h3> + UPRISING OF THE NORTH, +</h3> +<p> + representing the northern troops passing through Washington on their way + to the front, reviewed by President Lincoln, who stands on a marble + rostrum, surrounded by his associates in office, while the war governor, + John A. Andrew, superintends, the breaking of the fetters from the + slaves and arming them for the country's service. Near by are seen the + troops from New England, led by General B.F. Butler, while on all sides + mothers, sisters and friends are seen wishing them God speed. +</p> +<p> + Both of these paintings are the work of the celebrated French artist, M. + Paul Philippoteaux, whose work every visitor to Paris has seen and will + remember. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx9" name="pagexxx9"></a>[pg xxx9]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. +<br /> + WITH 40 MAPS. +</h2> +<h3> + <span class="sc">By Col. Henry B. Carrington, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D.</span> +</h3> +<center> + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. +</center> +<center> + <b>A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass.</b> +</center> + +<p> + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:— +</p> +<p> + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.—<i>Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey</i>. +</p> +<p> + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.—<i>Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.—<i>Henry Day, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.—<i>Geo. + Bancroft</i>. +</p> +<p> + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.—<i>Benson J. Lossing</i>. +</p> +<p> + The maps are just splendid.—<i>Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J.</i> +</p> +<p> + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.—<i>Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + Of permanent standard authority.—<i>Gen. De Peister, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.—<i>Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris</i>. +</p> +<p> + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.—<i>Z. Chandler</i>. +</p> +<p> + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.—<i>B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis</i>. +</p> +<p> + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.—<i>London Telegraph</i>. +</p> +<p> + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.—<i>Army and Navy Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.—<i>Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England</i>. +</p> +<p> + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.—<i>Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State</i>. +</p> +<p> + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.—<i>A. de + Rochambeau, Paris</i>. +</p> +<p> + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.—<i>Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England</i>. +</p> +<p> + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.—<i>Harper's + Magazine</i>. +</p> +<p> + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.—<i>N.Y. Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.—<i>The Nation</i>. +</p> +<p> + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. +</p> +<p> + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.—<i>Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J.</i> +</p> +<p> + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.—<i>Gen. W.T. + Sherman</i>. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. +</h2> +<h3> + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. +</h3> +<center> + Published by <b>A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York</b>. +</center> +<p> + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. +</p> +<p> + The <span class="sc">Red</span> Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. +</p> +<p> + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. +</p> +<p> + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">The Secretary of War</span> has placed the "<span class="sc">Battle Maps and Charts</span>" at <span class="sc">Army + Post Schools</span>, at government expense. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">Five Steel Engravings of Washington</span> accompany the volume. The <span class="sc">St. Memin</span> + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also <span class="sc">Peale's</span> painting + (1772), <span class="sc">Houdon's</span> bust (1784). <span class="sc">Trumbull's</span> painting (1792) and <span class="sc">Stuart's</span> + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. +</p> +<p> + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. +</p> +<p> + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. +</p> +<h3> + NOTICES. +</h3> +<p> + Invaluable to the student of American History.—<i>Baltimore (Md.) + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.—<i>Army and Navy Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.—<i>Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.—<i>The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)</i>. +</p> +<p> + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.—<i>N.Y. + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.—<i>N.Y. Evening + Post</i>. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx10" name="pagexxx10"></a>[pg xxx10]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2> + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE +</h2> +<center> + Is the name of a new process of +</center> +<h3> + <b><i>ENGRAVING BY PHOTOGRAPHY</i></b> +</h3> +<center> + <b>at less than</b> +</center> +<h4> + ONE-HALF THE COST OF WOOD ENGRAVING! +</h4> +<p> + The plates are equal to the finest wood cuts, and in point of depth, + superior. We furnish an electrotype all ready for the printer's use. +</p> +<p> + We can do every description of work, Machinery, Furniture, Buildings, + Autograph Letters, Illustrations for Trade Catalogues, etc. +</p> +<p> + For specimen sheet of our work and further particulars address +</p> +<center> + <b>PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO.,</b> +<br /> + <b>63 OLIVER STREET, BOSTON.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <b><i>ANTIQUE</i></b> +<br /> + <b>Views of Ye Town of Boston.</b> +</h2> +<h3> + BY JAMES H. STARK. +</h3> +<p> + This is the title of one of the most valuable contributions to the + HISTORY of BOSTON that has been made in many years. It embraces a series + of upwards of ONE HUNDRED VIEWS of OLD BOSTON, that have been gathered + from private and public collections, and most faithfully reproduced by + the Photo-Electrotype Engraving Company's process of Boston. +</p> +<p> + The Book is handsomely BOUND IN CLOTH. On the front cover is a view of + the Old State House, embossed in gold; on the back cover is a veneer + made from the Old Elm, on which is printed a view of the old tree, and + an autograph letter from Mayor Cobb (who was mayor of Boston at the time + of the destruction of the tree), certifying to its authenticity. It is a + book of 400 pages, imperial octavo, and a limited number is offered at +</p> +<center> + <b>$6.00 PER COPY.</b> +<br /> + ADDRESS PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO., ... 63 OLIVER STREET, BOSTON. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <span class="sc">Stark's Illustrated</span> +<br /> + <b>BERMUDA GUIDE.</b> +</h2> +<p> + The Bermuda Islands are coming more prominently before the public each + season, as a health resort and winter watering place. Although it is but + sixty-five hours' sail from New York to these coral islands, yet they + are strangely unfamiliar to most well informed Americans. Speaking our + own language, having the same origin, with manners and customs prevalent + in New England a century ago, it is only now that these islands and + their inhabitants have attracted much attention and led the public to + inquire concerning them. +</p> +<p> + It is to satisfy this demand and also to bring to the notice of those + unacquainted with the beauties of these semi-tropical islands that the + writer has been led to issue this work, which is the first illustrated + guide-book and history of Burmuda yet published. The book contains two + hundred pages, and is embellished with sixteen photo-mechanical prints + made by a new process from negatives (taken by the author during the + past winter) of the finest scenery in Bermuda. This is a new feature in + the matter of book illustrations, and it makes the work both +</p> +<center> + <i>BOUND IN CLOTH, PRICE $2.00, POST-PAID</i> +<br /> + ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO +</center> +<center> + <b>PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE COMPANY,</b> + <i>No. 63 Oliver Street, Boston, Mass.</i> +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx11" name="pagexxx11"></a>[pg xxx11]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2> + <b>THE BAY STATE MONTHLY.</b> +</h2> +<center> + Volume I.—1884. Bound in cloth, royal 8vo., +<br /> + 420 pages. Price, $2.00. +<br /> + <b>WITH</b> +<br /> + 6 PORTRAITS ON STEEL, 10 MAPS, AND 107 ILLUSTRATIONS. +</center> +<hr /> +<h3> + <b>PRESS NOTICES.</b> +</h3> +<p> + "A creditable addition to Massachusetts literature."—<i>Boston + Globe</i>. +</p> +<p> + "The first six numbers form a volume of genuine historic value and + interest."—<i>Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + "An admirable issue."—<i>Malden City Press</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Replete with sketches which should be read in every + household."—<i>Winchendon Courier</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Furnishing much valuable historical and biographical + matter."—<i>Boston Commonwealth</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Working its way to popular favor."—<i>The Weekly News</i>. +</p> +<p> + "The Bay State Monthly is just what is needed in New England."—<i>The + Gorham Mountaineer</i>. +</p> +<p> + "New England societies will not be able to dispense with this + magazine."—<i>St. Paul Pioneer-Press</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Crammed full of historic facts; should be in every + family."—<i>Brockton Eagle</i>. +</p> +<p> + "A conspicuous article is 'Bunker Hill' (with map), by General + Carrington, U.S.A."—<i>Southbridge Journal.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Has made a firm footing and held its ground well."—<i>Newport News and + Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Filled with instructive literary matter, and a very reliable + map."—<i>Essex Banner</i>. +</p> +<p> + "One of the most popular in the list of monthlies."—<i>The Moniter + (Chatham)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Handsomely gotten up, and reading-matter is interesting."—<i>Holyoke + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + "The steady improvement in this magazine is gratifying."—<i>Medford + Mercury</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Deserves the support of every true American, and every Massachusetts + citizen."—<i>The Watchman</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Edited ably, growing healthily, and presents features of peculiar + interest."—<i>Congregationalist</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Improves with each number."—<i>New England Home Journal + (Worcester)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Should be in every household in Massachusetts,"—<i>Barre Gazette</i>. +</p> +<p> + "One of the noted historical magazines of the day."—<i>Norfolk County + Register</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Of that interest to the whole country that the cultured productions of + cultured Boston have usually been."—<i>Courier and Journal (Louisville, + Ky.)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "An important blank in our periodical literature has been + filled."—<i>Chicago News</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Destined to take place in the first rank."—<i>Watertown + Enterprise</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Invites the support of Massachusetts people from Berkshire to + Barnstable."—<i>Lowell Morning Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Already a success."—<i>Cape Cod Bee (Barnstable)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "'The Rent Veil,' by Henry B. Carrington, is a strikingly fine + production, possessing a Miltonian stateliness, and breathing a spirit + of veneration."—<i>New York Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Replete with choice literary productions."—<i>Gardner Record.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Keeps up the character established by the first number."—<i>Vox Populi + (Lowell)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Should be in the hands of all who desire to know the Bay + State."—<i>Westborough Chronotype.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Of special interest to the citizens of Massachusetts."—<i>Worcester + Spy</i>. +</p> +<p> + "A distinctive Massachusetts magazine."—<i>Waltham Record</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Both in appearance and contents creditable to the publishers."—<i>New + York Literary Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Does credit to publishers and contributors."—<i>East Boston Argus.</i> +</p> +<p> + "The list of contributors is enough to sell the magazine."—<i>Scituate + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Is destined to be popular and a valuable addition to the literary + world."—<i>Home Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Rich in contents."—<i>Indianapolis Times.</i> +</p> +<p> + "A worthy representative of the literary and typographical excellence of + cultured Boston."—<i>Weekly Advocate.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Of fine appearance and high promise."—<i>Lawrence American</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Replete with choice literary contributions."—<i>Salem Register</i>. +</p> +<p> + "We predict a bright future for The Bay State Monthly."—<i>Norwood + Review</i>. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx12" name="pagexxx12"></a>[pg xxx12]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> <b>Globe Theatre.</b> </h2> +<center> MR. JOHN STETSON,—Proprietor and Manager.</center> +<h3> <b>THE MODEL THEATRE OF BOSTON.</b> </h3> +<center> + ALL THE<br /> + <span style="font-size: 200%;">LEADING<br />ATTRACTIONS</span><br /> + Presented during the season. +</center> +<center> <i>Best Seats, One Dollar.</i></center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + BOSTON THEATRE. +</h2> +<center> + TOMPKINS & HILL, Proprietors. + EUGENE TOMPKINS, Manager +</center> +<h3> + <b>ALL GREAT ATTRACTIONS,</b> +</h3> +<center> + <b>Dramatic, Lyric, and Minstrelsy,</b><br /> + of the best class offered, in regular succession. +<br /> + <i>SEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS.</i> +</center> +<hr /> +<center> + <i>German Opera Season</i>,<br /> + <span class="sc">Walter Damrosch</span>, Director,<br /> + <b>Beginning April 6.</b> +</center> +<p> + MONDAY, April 6—"The Prophet." Frl. Brandt, Frau Materna, Schott, + Koegel and Standigl. +</p> +<p> + TUESDAY, April 7, and SATURDAY MATINEE, April 11—"Tannhauser." Frau + Materna, Frl. Slach, Schott, Robinson, and Koegel. +</p> +<p> + WEDNESDAY, April 8—"Fidelio." Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach, Udvardy, + Standigl, Miller, and Kemlitz. +</p> +<p> + THURSDAY, April 9—"Lohengrin." Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach, Schott, + Robinson and Koegel. +</p> +<p> + FRIDAY, April 10—"La Juive." Frau Materna, Frl. Slach, Udvardy, Koegel, + Kemlitz. +</p> +<p> + SATURDAY, April 11, Evening—"Gluck's Orpheus." (First time in America). + Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach and Frl. Hoch. Chorus largely augmented by + singers from local societies. +</p> +<center> + <i>The New York Symphony Orchestra</i>, +</center> +<p> + To begin at 7.45 P.M. Tickets now on sale, with reserved seats, at + $1.50, $2 and $3. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <i>Boston Museum</i>. +</h2> +<center> + Wednesday afternoon at 2 and Evening at 8,<br /> + <span style="font-size:200%;"><b>THE GUV'NOR,</b></span><br /> + Only times this season. +</center> +<hr /> +<p> + Thursday, FAST DAY, 2 performances, also Friday Evening at 8 and + Saturday Afternoon at 2, +</p> +<center> <span style="font-size:200%;"> <i>Ticket of Leave Man</i>,</span><br /> + with remarkable cast. +</center> +<hr /> +<p> + Saturday Evening at 8, benefit of Mr. Charles Barron, who will appear in +</p> +<center> + <span style="font-size:200%;"><i>The Three Guardsmen</i></span><br /> + —and—<br /> + <span style="font-size:200%;">A REGULAR FIX,</span> +</center> +<p> + Mr. Sol Smith Russell introducing his laughable specialties between the + two plays. +</p> +<hr /> +<center> + ☞ Monday, April 6, Redmund-Barry Co. in<br /> + <span style="font-size:200%;"><i>A Midnight Marriage.</i></span> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <span style="font-size:200%;">WANTED.</span> +<br /> + Agents to secure subscriptions and advertisements for this magazine. +<br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <i>EXCELLENT TERMS.</i></span><br /> + ADDRESS<br /> + BAY STATE MONTHLY,<br /> + 31 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> ARTHUR P. DODGE</span> +<br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <b>Attorney and Counsellor at Law,</b></span><br /> + <i>31 MILK ST., ROOM 46</i>, +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Notary Public. +<br /> + Commissioner for New Hampshire. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <b>JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO.,</b></span><br /> + Publishers, Printers, Stereotypes, and Electrotypers,<br /> + 31 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. + <hr /> + <b>FINE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING.</b><br /> + <b>Reasonable Terms.</b><br /> + <i>ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED.</i> + <hr /> + PUBLISHERS OF<br /> + <i>THE BAY STATE MONTHLY,</i><br /> + A Massachusetts Magazine.<br /> +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page1" name="page1"></a>[pg 1]</span> +</p> + +<a name="h2H_4_0022" id="h2H_4_0022"><!-- H2 anchor --></a> + +<div style="height: 4em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + +<h2> + PUBLISHER'S DEPARTMENT. +</h2> +<p> +The removal of the general office of the American Express Company to the +corner of Franklin and Hawley Streets, Boston, is an event in the +history of a famous corporation. From very small beginnings, the company +has built up a business which now extends into nearly every section of +the United States and Canada, covering about forty thousand miles of +railroad and having between five thousand and six thousand agencies, +besides interests in, and connections with many other expresses in +various parts of the country. +</p> +<p> +The American Express Company began business in 1847. The United States +and Canada Express was founded in 1842, and the Eastern Express in 1854. +The American has now absorbed both of the other companies, besides +several smaller ones. The company's growth in the last few years has +been phenomenally rapid. Only five years ago the company employed only +twenty-four horses in Boston, now they have one hundred and twenty-five. +Boston now has equal express facilities with New York, and similar rates +are established from the two cities to points in the West, a fact which +Boston business men may well appreciate. A fast express is run through +to the West, which is of great value to shippers of goods and other +products requiring speedy delivery in season. Another result of the +efforts of this company is seen in the fact that a package may be sent +from a point in Maine or New Brunswick to Chicago at no higher rate than +was formerly charged to Boston. +</p> +<p> +The new offices in this city occupy three floors fifty by one hundred +feet each, arranged with every facility for transacting the large +business from this point. +</p> +<p> +The general offices of the company are in New York City, but among its +prominent directors is B.P. Cheney, Esq., who is well known as one of +New England's ablest financiers and managers. Many business men in +Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont are shareholders in the +company. The executive departments are ably filled by Mr. James +Eggleston, the General Superintendent for New England, assisted in +Boston by H.W. Dwight, Superintendent, of Boston; J.W. Baldwin, Office +Manager, and O.J. Freeborn, City Superintendent. Outside of Boston, Mr. +G.H. Babbitt of Bellows Falls, Vermont, is Assistant General +Superintendent of the United States and Canada division; Mr. F.W. Carr +of Bangor, Superintendent of Maine and New Brunswick division (Eastern +Express Company); J.G. Towne, Boston, Superintendent of Massachusetts +division; M.J. Pratt, Concord, New Hampshire, Superintendent of New +Hampshire division, and F. Richardson, St. Johnsbury, Vermont, +Superintendent of Vermont division, all of whom are gentlemen well and +favorably known to the public generally and men of long experience in +the express business. +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <b>JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO.,</b></span><br /> + Publishers, Printers, Stereotypes, and Electrotypers,<br /> + 31 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. + <hr /> + <b>FINE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING.</b><br /> + <b>Reasonable Terms.</b><br /> + <i>ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED.</i> + <hr /> + PUBLISHERS OF<br /> + <i>THE BAY STATE MONTHLY,</i><br /> + A Massachusetts Magazine.<br /> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <span style="font-size:200%;">WANTED.</span> +<br /> + Agents to secure subscriptions and advertisements for this magazine. +<br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <i>EXCELLENT TERMS.</i></span><br /> + ADDRESS<br /> + BAY STATE MONTHLY,<br /> + 31 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center><b>FOR SALE.</b></center> + +<p>A few volumes 5, 6, and 7 of <i>Granite Monthly</i> (a New Hampshire + magazine). Bound in Cloth. Price $2.00 each. Early volumes out of print. +</p> +<center> +JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., +<br /> + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center><b>FOR SALE.</b></center> +<p>Volumes 1 and 2 of BAY STATE MONTHLY bound in cloth. Price, $2.00 each.</p> +<center> +JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., +<br /> +31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/507.jpg"><img src="images/507.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="ECONOMIST SUMMER COOK STOVE" /></a> +</div> +<h2> ECONOMIST SUMMER COOK STOVE </h2> +<center> + IS SAFE, ODORLESS, CLEANER,<br /> + EASIER TO CONTROL,<br /> + GIVES LESS HEAT IN ROOM,<br /> + & IS CHEAPER TO RUN THAN ANY<br /> + OIL, GAS, OR GASOLINE STOVE MADE.<br /> + <span style="font-size:150%;">BURNS COAL, WOOD, OR COKE.</span> +</center><center> + SEND FOR CIRCULARS.<br /> + MADE ONLY BY HOBBS, GORDON & CO. CONCORD, N.H.<br /> + Price $16. +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page2" name="page2"></a>[pg 2]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2> + <b>THE BAY STATE MONTHLY.</b> +</h2> +<center> + Volume I.—1884. Bound in cloth, royal 8vo., +<br /> + 420 pages. Price, $2.00. +<br /> + <b>WITH</b> +<br /> + 6 PORTRAITS ON STEEL, 10 MAPS, AND 107 ILLUSTRATIONS. +</center> +<hr /> +<h3> + <b>PRESS NOTICES.</b> +</h3> +<p> + "A creditable addition to Massachusetts literature."—<i>Boston + Globe</i>. +</p> +<p> + "The first six numbers form a volume of genuine historic value and + interest."—<i>Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + "An admirable issue."—<i>Malden City Press</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Replete with sketches which should be read in every + household."—<i>Winchendon Courier</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Furnishing much valuable historical and biographical + matter."—<i>Boston Commonwealth</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Working its way to popular favor."—<i>The Weekly News</i>. +</p> +<p> + "The Bay State Monthly is just what is needed in New England."—<i>The + Gorham Mountaineer</i>. +</p> +<p> + "New England societies will not be able to dispense with this + magazine."—<i>St. Paul Pioneer-Press</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Crammed full of historic facts; should be in every + family."—<i>Brockton Eagle</i>. +</p> +<p> + "A conspicuous article is 'Bunker Hill' (with map), by General + Carrington, U.S.A."—<i>Southbridge Journal.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Has made a firm footing and held its ground well."—<i>Newport News and + Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Filled with instructive literary matter, and a very reliable + map."—<i>Essex Banner</i>. +</p> +<p> + "One of the most popular in the list of monthlies."—<i>The Moniter + (Chatham)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Handsomely gotten up, and reading-matter is interesting."—<i>Holyoke + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + "The steady improvement in this magazine is gratifying."—<i>Medford + Mercury</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Deserves the support of every true American, and every Massachusetts + citizen."—<i>The Watchman</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Edited ably, growing healthily, and presents features of peculiar + interest."—<i>Congregationalist</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Improves with each number."—<i>New England Home Journal + (Worcester)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Should be in every household in Massachusetts,"—<i>Barre Gazette</i>. +</p> +<p> + "One of the noted historical magazines of the day."—<i>Norfolk County + Register</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Of that interest to the whole country that the cultured productions of + cultured Boston have usually been."—<i>Courier and Journal (Louisville, + Ky.)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "An important blank in our periodical literature has been + filled."—<i>Chicago News</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Destined to take place in the first rank."—<i>Watertown + Enterprise</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Invites the support of Massachusetts people from Berkshire to + Barnstable."—<i>Lowell Morning Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Already a success."—<i>Cape Cod Bee (Barnstable)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "'The Rent Veil,' by Henry B. Carrington, is a strikingly fine + production, possessing a Miltonian stateliness, and breathing a spirit + of veneration."—<i>New York Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Replete with choice literary productions."—<i>Gardner Record.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Keeps up the character established by the first number."—<i>Vox Populi + (Lowell)</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Should be in the hands of all who desire to know the Bay + State."—<i>Westborough Chronotype.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Of special interest to the citizens of Massachusetts."—<i>Worcester + Spy</i>. +</p> +<p> + "A distinctive Massachusetts magazine."—<i>Waltham Record</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Both in appearance and contents creditable to the publishers."—<i>New + York Literary Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Does credit to publishers and contributors."—<i>East Boston Argus.</i> +</p> +<p> + "The list of contributors is enough to sell the magazine."—<i>Scituate + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Is destined to be popular and a valuable addition to the literary + world."—<i>Home Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Rich in contents."—<i>Indianapolis Times.</i> +</p> +<p> + "A worthy representative of the literary and typographical excellence of + cultured Boston."—<i>Weekly Advocate.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Of fine appearance and high promise."—<i>Lawrence American</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Replete with choice literary contributions."—<i>Salem Register</i>. +</p> +<p> + "We predict a bright future for The Bay State Monthly."—<i>Norwood + Review</i>. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page3" name="page3"></a>[pg 3]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> <b>BOSTON TRANSCRIPT.</b> </h2> +<h3> <b><i>DAILY AND WEEKLY.</i></b> </h3> +<h4> QUARTO SHEET,—56 COLUMNS. </h4> +<center> + THE LARGEST, CHEAPEST, AND BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER IN NEW ENGLAND. +</center> +<center> + <span style="font-size:150%;">THE DAILY EVENING TRANSCRIPT</span><br /> has been carried on for nearly fifty-five + years as an +<br /> + <i>INDEPENDENT JOURNAL</i>, +</center> +<p> + discussing and considering questions of political and social interest, + according to the best opinions and convictions of its conductors in + advocating the good, condemning the bad, exposing the fallacies of + mistaken policy, and promoting the general welfare of the people. It + aims at promptness in giving the news of the day, and at completeness in + all that should be features of a first-class newspaper; endeavors in + every department of reading matter to maintain a judicious reputation + for avoiding everything that may be considered objectionable to good + taste; seeks to favor progress, promote public spirit, and to encourage + enterprise. The perfect success of the Transcript as a favorite New + England journal, conducted according to the above-sketched platform of + ideas, gives its managers reasonable assurance in believing that faith + has been honestly kept by the newspaper in meeting in those respects the + expectations of its wide-spread circle of patrons. +</p> +<p> + The Daily Transcript is sent to mail subscribers for $9.00 per year in + advance, and $4.50 for six months. +</p> +<center> + <span style="font-size:150%;"><b><i>Single Copies, Three Cents.</i></b></span> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center><span style="font-size:150%;">THE WEEKLY TRANSCRIPT</span></center> +<p> +is published every Tuesday morning, in a Quarto Form, comprising +fifty-six columns, at Two DOLLARS per annum, including postage. Single +copies for mailing, five cents. It contains the choicest +</p> +<center><span style="font-size:150%;">LITERARY MISCELLANY,</span></center> +<p> +and is made up with special reference to the varied tastes and +requirements of the home circle. In a word, it is a first-class +</p> +<center><span style="font-size:150%;">FAMILY NEWSPAPER,</span></center> +<p> +giving, in addition to its literary contents, the principal news of the +week, stock reports etc., etc. It is an excellent medium for advertisers +to reach country patrons. +</p> +<center> <i>TERMS FOR WEEKLY</i></center> +<p> Subscriptions can begin when order is received.</p> +<table border="0" align="center" summary="prices"> +<tr><td> One copy one year (in advance) </td><td align="right">$2.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Five copies to one address, one year (in advance) </td><td align="right"> 7.50 </td></tr> +</table> + +<center> <i>BOSTON TRANSCRIPT COMPANY</i>,<br /> +324 Washington Street. WM. DURANT, <i>Treasurer</i>. +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page4" name="page4"></a>[pg 4]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> <b>Globe Theatre.</b> </h2> +<center> MR. JOHN STETSON,—Proprietor and Manager.</center> +<h3> <b>THE MODEL THEATRE OF BOSTON.</b> </h3> +<center> + ALL THE<br /> + <span style="font-size: 200%;">LEADING<br />ATTRACTIONS</span><br /> + Presented during the season. +</center> +<center> <i>Best Seats, One Dollar.</i></center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<span style="font-size:150%;"> "IT IS AN ACKNOWLEDGED FACT"</span><br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> THAT "THE CONCORD HARNESS,"<br /></span> +<span style="font-size:150%;"> <b>MADE BY J.R. HILL & CO.,</b></span> +</center> +<p> + Concord N.H., are the best and cheapest harness for the money that are made + in this country. Order a sample and see for yourself. +</p> +<center> + <i>Correspondence Solicited. J.B. HILL & CO., CONCORD, N.H.</i> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> <b>Facial Development.</b> </h2> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:75px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/510b.jpg"><img src="images/510b.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="" /></a> +</div> +<p> + I will mail to you a code of rules for developing the muscles of the + cheeks and neck, making them look plump and rosy; also rules for using + dumb-bells to develop every muscle of arm and body, all for 50 cents. To + avoid mistake mention <span class="sc">Bay State Monthly</span>. <span class="sc">Prof. E.L. Dowd</span>. +</p> +<center> + Home School for Physical Culture, 19 East 14th St., N.Y. City. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/510c.jpg"><img src="images/510c.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="Tailoring Done as it should be. H. E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston" /></a> +</div> +<h2> Tailoring </h2> +<center> Done as it should be.</center> +<h3> H. E. FALES & Co.</h3> +<center> 375 Washington Street<br /> + Boston</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>FOR SALE.</b> +</center> +<p> + A complete set of the <i>Granite Monthly</i>. Seven volumes, bound in + cloth; price $18.00. +</p> +<center> + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO.,<br /> + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/510a.jpg"><img src="images/510a.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES" /></a> +</div> +<h2> COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES:<br /> + FOR ROAD USE; +</h2> +<center> + STANCH AND RELIABLE<br /> + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE<br /> + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP<br /> + STRONG, GRACEFUL—EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE +</center><center> + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE<br /> + THE POPE MFG. CO.<br /> + 597 Washington St. Boston, Mass. +</center> +<p> + "If I could not get another bicycle I would not give mine for its weight + in solid gold. For fifteen years I lost from three to eight days every + month with stubborn sick headache. Since I have been riding the bicycle + I have lost only two days from that cause, and I haven't spent a dollar + for a doctor." + REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST" +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<p class="center"> + <b>WANTED</b>, New England Town Histories in exchange for volumes I and + II of the "<span class="sc">Bay State Monthly.</span>" +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + BOSTON THEATRE. +</h2> +<center> + TOMPKINS & HILL, Proprietors. + EUGENE TOMPKINS, Manager +</center> +<h3> + <b>ALL GREAT ATTRACTIONS,</b> +</h3> +<center> + <b>Dramatic, Lyric, and Minstrelsy,</b><br /> + of the best class offered, in regular succession. +<br /> + <i>SEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS.</i> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> ARTHUR P. DODGE</span> +<br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <b>Attorney and Counsellor at Law,</b></span><br /> + <i>31 MILK ST., ROOM 46</i>, +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Notary Public. +<br /> + Commissioner for New Hampshire. +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page5" name="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span> +</p> + + +<p> +<span class="sc">Alaska</span>: Its Southern Coast. And the Sitkan Archipelago. By Eliza Ruhamah +Scidmore. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. In this well-written and +exceedingly interesting volume the author opens up to us a country which +notwithstanding so much has been said of it, is yet very imperfectly +known. Although it is nine times as large as New England, and twice as +large as Texas, it is the popular impression that it is all a barren, +inhospitable region, wrapped in snow and ice the greater part of the +year, and that a visitor to its settlements must undergo perils almost +equal to those of the Greely relief expedition. Miss Scidmore in her +book dispels this illusion in the most summary manner. She spent two +summers in Alaska, and therefore speaks from personal knowledge. She +tells us that the winters at Sitka are milder than those in New York, +while the summers are delightfully cool and temperate. Some of the +grandest scenery of the continent is to be found along the Alaska coast, +in the region of the Alexander or Sitkan Archipelago, and the monthly +mail steamer is crowded with tourists during the summer season. It is +one of the easiest and most delightful trips to go up the coast by the +inside passage and cruise through the archipelago; and in voyaging past +the unbroken wilderness of the island shores, the tourist feels quite +like an explorer penetrating unknown lands. The mountain range that +walls the Pacific coast from the Antarctic to the Arctic gives a bold +and broken front to the mainland, and every one of the eleven hundred +islands of the archipelago is but a submerged spur or peak of the great +range. Many of the islands are larger than Massachusetts or New Jersey, +but none of them have been wholly explored, nor is the survey of their +shores completed. The Yosemite walls and cascades are repeated in mile +after mile of deep salt water channels, and from the deck of an ocean +steamer one views scenes not paralleled after long rides and climbs in +the heart of the Sierras. The gorges and cañons of Colorado are +surpassed; mountains that tower above Pike's Peak rise in steep incline +from the still level of the sea; and the shores are clad in forests and +undergrowth dense and impassable as the tangle of a Florida swamp. +</p> +<p> +On her first visit to Sitka the author spent a week at Victoria, +Vancouver's Island, a place which she describes as a veritable paradise. +The drives about the town, she says, along the island shores, and +through the woods, are beautiful, and the heavy, London-built carriages +roll over hard and perfect English highways. Ferns were growing ten and +twelve feet high by the roadside. Wild rose-bushes are matted together +by the acre in the clearings about the town, and in June they weight the +air with their perfume, as they did a century ago, when Marchand, the +old French voyager, compared the region to the rose-covered slopes of +Bulgaria. The honeysuckle attains the greatest perfection in this +climate, and covers and smothers the cottages and trellises with +thickly-set blossoms. Even the currant-bushes grow to unusual height, +and in many gardens they are trained on arbors and hang their red, ripe +clusters high overhead. +</p> +<p> +The old Russian town of Sitka, the most northern on the Pacific coast, +she describes as a straggling, peaceful sort of town, edging along shore +at the foot of high mountains, and sheltered from the surge and turmoil +of the ocean by a sea-wall of rocky, pine-covered islands. The moss has +grown greener and thicker on the roofs of the solid old wooden houses +that are relics of Russian days, the paint has worn thinner everywhere, +and a few more houses tumbling into ruins complete the scenes of +picturesque decay. Twenty years ago there were one hundred and +twenty-five buildings in the town proper, and it is doubtful if a dozen +have been erected since. +</p> +<p> +Miss Scidmore's descriptions of the various places she visited and the +curious things she saw are vivid and picturesque, and one can learn more +of both from her pages than from all the official reports that have been +published. It is a book that ought to have a wide popularity. It is well +illustrated and contains a map reduced from the last general chart of +Alaska published by the Coast Survey. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Boy Life in the United States Navy</span>. By a Naval Officer. Boston: D. +Lothrop & Co. Price $1.25. It is difficult to write a book of boy's +adventures without falling into what is popularly called sensational +writing, that is the description of improbable incidents to arouse and +excite the imagination without any purpose beyond that result. The +writer of the present volume, while making an intensely interesting +story, has avoided this danger, and his narrative gives a not overdrawn +description of the life of a boy on a vessel in the United States Navy. +Joe Bently is the son of a Maine farmer, with a strong distaste for the +life to which he has been brought up and an equally strong love for the +sea. His desire to become a sailor has always been repressed by his +father, who, though loving his son, has no sympathy with him in this one +respect. +</p> +<p> +Mr. Bently at last gives his consent, and Joe enlists as an apprentice +in the Navy. The story of his journey, his examination, his experiences, +on board ship and his adventures while lying in foreign ports is very +graphically told, and the boy who reads it gets a clear and actual idea +of what a boy must go through on board a man-of-war before he can +graduate as an "able-bodied seaman." The writer shows a thorough +acquaintance with every thing on board ship, even to the minutest +details. The book ends with the promotion of Joe, and a promise to +continue his adventures in another volume. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page6" name="page6"></a>[pg 6]</span> +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">The Evolution of Dodd</span>. By W.H. Smith. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price +$1.00. Here is a book we should rejoice to see in the hands of every +teacher of youth in the country. It is a living, breathing protest +against certain features of the present school systems which obtain in +various parts of the country, from that of the kindergarten to the +grammar school. The points of the author are so well taken, that the +reader is forced not only to admit the reality of the evils he +denounces, but to acknowledge the justice of the conclusions at which he +arrives. +</p> +<p> +In the evolution of character the public school has come to be a most +important factor. To it has been assigned a task equal to any other +agency that deals with human nature. But in multitudes of cases it has +become a mere mill for grinding out graduates. The "system" has largely +lost sight of the grandest thing in all the world—the individual soul. +It addresses itself to child-humanity collectively, as if characters +were manufactured, like pins, by the million, and all alike, and it +attempts to grind out this great mass, each individual like every other, +as if its members could be made interchangeable like the parts of a +government musket. +</p> +<p> +To illustrate his ideas, the author selects a representative boy, Dodd +Weaver, the eldest son of a Methodist clergyman, and carries him through +the various schools and grades of schools from the time of his entrance +to his graduation. He does not make him a model boy to begin with, and +strive to show how he was spoiled by the school system. On the contrary +he endows him with a good many disagreeable qualities; he makes him +bright, sharp, and full of vitality, with a strong bent for mischief. He +is high-tempered, quarrelsome, and disobedient, and yet in the hands of +one who understands his mental peculiarities plastic as dough. It is the +aim of the author to show how utterly useless it is to treat such +boys—and our schools are full of them—in exactly the same manner as +those of different character and temperament, and to demand that +teachers have the right to adapt their methods according to individual +demands. He says: +</p> +<p> +It is not a system—any set of rules or formularies—that can make our +school, any more than it is forms and ceremonies that make our churches. +These may all be well enough in their proper places, but there is +nothing, absolutely nothing, in them, <i>per se</i>. It is the +righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees in the one case, and the dry +bones of pedagogy in the other. +</p> +<p> +The evil arises, in the schools as in the churches, from believing and +acting as if there were something in the system itself. +</p> +<p> +If human nature were a fixed quantity, if any two children were alike, +or anywhere nearly alike, if a certain act done for a child always +brought forth the same result, then it might be possible to form an +absolute system of pedagogy, as, with fixed elements, there is formed +the science of chemistry. But the quick atoms of spirit that manifest +their affinities under the eye of that alchemist, the teacher, are far +more subtle than the elements that go into the crucible in any other of +Nature's laboratories. +</p> +<p> +A chemist will distil for you the odor of a blown rose, or catch and +hold captive the breath of the morning meadow, and do it always just the +same, and ever with like results; but there is no art by which anything +analogous can be wrought in human life. Here a new element comes in that +entirely changes that economy of Nature in this regard. The +individuality of every human soul is this new factor, and because of it, +of its infinite variability—because no two atoms that are cast into the +crucible of life are ever the same, or can be wrought into character by +the same means—because of this, no fixed rules can ever be laid down +for evolving a definite result, in the realm of soul, by never-varying +means. +</p> +<p> +And this is where many teachers are at fault. They put their faith in a +system, a mill through which all children shall be run, and in passing +through which each child shall receive the same treatment, and from +which they shall all emerge, stamped with the seal of the institution, +"uniformity." +</p> +<p> +This is the prime idea that lies at the foundation of the popular system +of education—to make children uniform. This very thing that God and +Nature have set themselves against—no two faces, or forms, or statures; +no two minds, or hearts, or souls being alike, as designed by the +Creator, and as fashioned by Nature's hand—to make all these alike was +the aim of the system under which Dodd began to be evolved, and with +which he began to clash at once. +</p> +<p> +But it is not the system only which is at fault. Hot with the +indignation bred from a discussion of its shortcomings, the author turns +suddenly upon the parents of the innumerable Dodds in the schools of the +country: +</p> +<p> +And for you, who send your six-year-olds to school with a single hook, +and grumble because you have to buy even so much of an outfit, what are +you going to do about it when your boy drains all the life out of the +little volume in a couple of weeks or a month? He knows the stories by +heart, and after that he says them over, day by day, because he must, +and not in the least because he cares to. +</p> +<p> +What are you going to do about this? It is largely your business. You +cannot shirk it and say that you send the boy to school, and it is the +teacher's business to take care of him. +</p> +<p> +The remedy for the wrongs and faults of the system is, in his opinion, +to recognize the individuality of children in the schoolroom to study +the mental peculiarities and needs of each, and to do away with the +system so far as it interferes with the liberty of the teacher to adapt +his means to the proper ends to be attained. It is demanded that +teachers be selected on the sole ground of fitness and adaptability, and +not because of favoritism or the mere fact that their book education is +sufficient, and it is further insisted that parents interest themselves +to see and demand that the best that can be done is done for their +children. These are the means suggested in the way of reform, and they +seem adequate in a large degree to accomplish what is desired. We +commend the book to teachers and parents. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page7" name="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span> +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Money in Politics</span>. By J.K. Upton. With an introduction by Edward +Atkinson. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. The author of this +comprehensive and valuable work was for several years Assistant +Secretary of the United States Treasury, and in that responsible +position had admirable facilities for studying the question of money as +affected by congressional acts from the earliest history of the republic +down to the present, and he has made good use of his opportunities in +this book which is a succinct narration of the numerous changes made in +American money beginning with the continental issues, in fact, earlier, +the colonial money. The work is, therefore, a history of American coin +and the numerous issues of paper that served as money. To the student +there is in this book a fund of information extremely interesting, +particularly at this time when the popular will is likely to compel +farther legislation. A topic of present interest, is the silver dollar, +to which the author devotes a chapter historical in its character, and +another chapter concerning circulation of this coin. In the former +chapter he begins with the Spanish milled dollar, "the Mexican pillar +piece," which was the first silver dollar known in American commerce, +and had, in colonial times, 386.7-8 grains of pure silver. In 1785 the +American standard was fixed at 375.64 grains of pure silver which became +the unit of account, the standard dollar. In 1792, after a Congress of +the States was organized, the standard dollar was required to contain +371.25 grains of pure silver, or, with the admixture of baser metal, the +standard of silver coin 416 grains, the pure silver rated by itself as +before. These facts are of interest as showing the origin of the +American dollar recognized as the standard down to 1873. +</p> +<p> +The chapters on "Circulation of the Silver Dollar" and "The Trade +Dollar" are interesting and timely, inasmuch as the questions considered +are now before Congress, or at least with the committees, and +legislation of some kind will be demanded within the next year. There +is, even now, a proposition embodied in a bill to suspend coinage of the +silver dollar, because it has been found impossible to put the great sum +coined directly in circulation. A great part of it has been made the +basis of silver certificates, a kind of currency that, by and by, will +bring distress to commercial interests if the issues are maintained, or +if they are materially increased. Mr. Upton treats all these matters +with very clear understanding of every question, and with certain +facility of expression that appeals directly to the reader who has only +common understanding of money affairs. From beginning to end the book is +a rich mine of facts, of historical matter, and of statements that have +undergone the scrutiny of the wisest financier during the critical +period between the appreciation of values, with the disturbing +influences of war, and the return of true values with resumption of +specie payment which was effected with gold. While the work must have +absorbing interest for that extended school of economists that has made +finance a special study in the past dozen years, it will prove very +useful to representatives in Congress, who may find here in compact form +facts of history with which they should have familiar acquaintance +before they attempt legislation intended to correct the errors +incorporated in our money system. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">The Old Stone House</span>. By Anne March (Constance Fenimore Woolson). Boston: +D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. This capital story, by one of the +brightest American writers of fiction, has been placed by the publishers +in their Young Folks' Library Series, where it ought to find a new lease +of popularity. The Old Stone House is the home of five young people, +representing three families. They are all orphans, and are living with a +widowed aunt, whose single and constant aim is to educate them into real +men and women. The young cousins, who dearly love each other, differ in +tastes and temperament, but not in such ways as to interfere with each +other's enjoyments. The younger ones are jolly and fun-loving, and no +occasion for having a good time is left unimproved. The main interest of +the story, however, lies with the eldest of the cousins, Sybil +Warrington, a girl of strong feelings but quiet exterior, whose ambition +to shine in society is held in check by a feeling that something higher +and better is required of her. The story of her struggles is quietly but +effectively told, and will have a peculiar interest for young girls. +Miss Woolson has written much, and her work has given her a very +enviable reputation both in this country and in Europe, but in all her +writings there is nothing more earnest. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">How Success is Won</span>. By Mrs. Sarah K. Bolton. With Portraits. Boston: D. +Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. This handsome volume is made up of +biographies of twelve men who have achieved distinguished successes in +the various directions in which they turned their respective energies. +Mrs. Bolton not only rehearses the main incidents of their lives, but +shows that in every case the success and honors attained were the result +of industry, economy and high moral principle. Among those selected to +illustrate how success may be won under different circumstances are +Peter Cooper, John B. Gough, John G. Whittier, Henry M. Stanley and +Alexander H. Stephens. The several sketches are bright and pointed, and +the portraits which illustrate them add to their value. +</p> +<p> +The Rochester (N.Y.) <i>Herald</i> speaks of this extremely interesting +book as "a singular collection of names, wide apart in many respects, +but they represent men whom it is interesting to read about." +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page8" name="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span> +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Anna Maria's Housekeeping</span>. By Mrs. S.D. Power. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. +Price $1.00. If we were asked to recommend any one single book to a +young housekeeper which should serve as a domestic guide, counsellor and +friend, we should unhesitatingly name <i>Anna Maria's Housekeeping</i>. +So far as our knowledge extends, there is no other book which so exactly +and thoroughly fulfils the needs implied in those titles. It is no mere +collection of receipts, but a complete and common-sense treatise on the +whole science of housekeeping, tersely and clearly written, with a +flavor of experience about it that makes one accept it as authoritative. +It is a staff upon which the young housekeeper may confidently lean, and +by the aid of which she may overcome obstacles which without it would +seem insurmountable. Mrs. Power does not believe in a house keeping +itself. It requires continual care and oversight, and a clear knowledge +of what is to be done. She believes, too, that a house can be well kept +as easily as badly kept, and that a bright, clean, well-ordered home has +a deal to do with molding the temper and even character of its members. +"It is no small thing," she says, "to stand at the head of affairs, and +be the motive power on which depend the welfare and credit, the health, +temper and spirit of the whole family. When in midlife you come to find +how essential the comfort of a well-kept home is to the bodily strength +and good conditions, to a sound mind and spirit, and useful days, you +will reverence the good housekeeper as I do, above poet or artist, +beauty or genius." In the opening chapter of the book the author +instructs Anna Maria in the art of "How to Make Home-work Easier." In +the succeeding chapters she takes up the various kinds of work there is +to be done about the house, and describes the easiest methods of doing +it. "No attitudinizing," she remarks, "no fine lady affectations over +the griddles and saucepans; instead, cultivate the fine character which +acts up to the need of the hour swiftly, promptly, but with quiet and +certainty." Her definition of "good food" is to the point. "It is not," +she says, "rich food, nor even the tolerable fare which is just +undercooked and flavorless enough to tax digestion more than it ought. +It is the best of everything cooked in the nicest possible way, and with +pleasant variety." Passing from the kitchen the care of the different +rooms of the house is taken up—the chambers, the sitting-room and the +storeroom; instructions are given for making "blue Monday" less blue; +the arts of starching and ironing are discussed; and a chapter is given +to the mending and darning basket. Other portions of the book are +devoted to "Company Days," "Shopping," "Sickness in the House," "Making +the best of Things," and "Helps that are Helps," the servant-girl +question forming the subject of the closing chapter. The volume is very +handsomely brought out, but even were it not, it would be worth its +weight in gold to the young and inexperienced housekeeper. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Gertrude's Diary</span>. By Pansy. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price +60 cts. A new book by Pansy is always hailed with delight, and that +delight generally mingled with wonder can possibly write so much and yet +keep the freshness and brightness which runs through all her books. +Gertrude is a girl of fifteen, wide awake, full of life, generally good +tempered, and yet with as many faults as most girls of her age have; +faults which arise more from thoughtlessness than from intent. She is +one of four who agree to keep diaries, in accordance with a suggestion +made by their Sunday-school teacher, and she records with impartiality +all her good and bad times, her trials and her triumphs. Aside from its +interest, it contains suggestions which cannot fail to make an +impression upon the mind of any young girl who reads it, and to +strengthen her in like temptations and under the same conditions. A +pleasant story runs through the diary. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Many Colored Threads</span>. From the Writings of Goethe. Selected by Carrie +Adelaide Cooke. With an Introduction by Kev. Alexander McKenzie, D.D. +Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. No other volume of the Spare +Minute Series contains more real meat than this. Goethe was +epigrammatic, and his ideas took the concentrated form of bullets, +instead of scattering like shot. We doubt if there is another author, +always excepting Shakespeare, from whose books so many noble and +complete thoughts can be extracted. In the two hundred and fifty pages +of this volume are more than a thousand of these gems, each worth; its +setting. Dr. McKenzie says aptly of Goethe that he is able by virtue of +his own genius to set more than the common man and to put his visions +and his reflections in such form that others who would never have seen +the tilings for themselves or been able to think deeply upon them, can +have the benefit of his generous study and thought. He was many-sided. +His mind took a wide range and seemed almost equally at home in many +places. The real and the ideal both interested him and were cherished by +him. Science and art, philosophy and poetry, engaged his attention and +were enriched by his handiwork. In this versatility of his power and the +manifoldness of their application he was remarkable. Out of this breadth +of study came varied and large thoughts of the world and of human life. +He had the faculties with which nature and humanity and divine power +could breathe their inspiration for the world's instruction and delight, +and that they were fully employed no-one who turns over the pages of +this collection can doubt. A brief biography of Goethe takes the place +of a preface, and there is an index of subjects. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page9" name="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span> +</p> +<h4> +MR. CHARLES LANMAN THE AUTHOR OF "THE LEADING MEN OF JAPAN." +</h4> +<p> +<span class="sc">Mary Cole Baker</span> writes in the Washington (D.C.) <i>Republic:</i> "Mr. +Lanman is well known both in England and America as the writer of some +of the most delightful descriptive books in the English language. To the +facile wielding of his pen he adds an equally adroit and skilful use of +the pencil, and his admirable results in these combined pursuits won for +him from his friend and brother of the quill, Washington Irving, the apt +and deserved soubriquet of 'the picturesque explorer of America.' To the +pleasure which Mr. Lanman derived from these pursuits he added a +sportsman's love for the field and took genuine delight in the +'contemplative art' of angling. He was the first American to cast the +artificial fly in the Saguenay region and to describe for the angler the +charms of that since famous locality. He has followed this sport in +nearly every State in the Union, never without his sketching materials, +which he used unstintingly. The results of these labors are many +hundreds of sketches of American scenery, invaluable now that the march +of civilization has so completely changed the face of a large part of +the country. It is delightful to find a man who has been able to get so +much good from life as has Mr. Lanman. One would think that the writing +and illustrating of more than thirty books, some of which are in two +large octavo volumes, was the work of a lifetime. But this has been to +Mr. Lanman his recreation. The fact that his books have been successful +pecuniarily has not prevented him from following the duties of the +various governmental positions in which he has been placed. No sinecures +they either—librarian at different times of the House of +Representatives, the War Department, of copyrights in the State +Department and of the Interior Department, secretary to Daniel Webster, +at the head of the returns of office of the Interior Department, and for +the last ten years the American Secretary to the Japanese Legation at +Washington. A lover of social intercourse, Mr. Lanman has led the +typical busy life of the American, untouched by the direful and +disastrous ills it is supposed to bring. He is now engaged in editing +fourteen of his books for reproduction in uniform style, and a new book, +<i>The Leading Men of Japan</i>, is ready for issue." 12mo, $1.50. +Boston: D. Lothrop, & Co., Publishers. +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<span class="sc">Couldn't be Bought: and Other Stories</span>. By Faye Huntington. Illustrated. +Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price 75 cts. A delightful collection of short +stories for boys and girls, adapted to the Sunday-school library. The +volume takes its name from the leading story. The author has a pleasant +and attractive style, and her stories have a large amount of "telling" +force in them. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">China</span>. By Prof. R.K. Douglas, of the British Museum. Edited by Arthur +Gilman, M.A. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. This +volume comes just at a time when there is a strong demand for something +brief, exact and authoritative in the way of Chinese history. Current +events have brought China before the world as one of the really great +powers, and one which in time will be able not only to defend herself +against the aggressions of other nations but will be perfectly able to +take the offensive should occasion require. In the arts of diplomacy the +Chinese are a match for the keenest statesman of Europe, and since the +beginning of the present troubles with France they have developed a +military talent which is perfectly surprising. With the growth of the +military spirit it would not be strange if, in the course of the next +generation China should hold as distinct and important a place among the +warlike powers as France or England. +</p> +<p> +The author of the volume before us had exceptional advantages for making +such a book as just now the public demand and need. He was for several +years a resident of China in an official capacity, and studied the +people and their mode of life from actual observation. In preparing the +book he also freely availed himself of the labors of others where they +seemed capable of adding value to the narrative. In his preface he +acknowledges his indebtedness to Doctor Legge's "Chinese Classics," +Archdeacon Gray's work on "China," Doolittle's "Social Life of the +Chinese," Denys's "Chinese Folklore," Mayers's "Chinese Reader's +Manual," Sir John Davis's "Poetry of the Chinese," as well as to the +important linguistic, religious and topographical writings of Doctor +Edkins of Peking, and particularly to the late Professor S. Wells +Williams, of Yale College, whose work on the <i>Middle Kingdom</i> +contains more information of value than any other single volume in our +language. +</p> +<p> +The various chapters of the work deal with the history of the empire in +brief, its government, religions, its educational system, the nurture of +the young, superstitions, funeral and wedding rites, the language, food +and dress, honors, architecture, music, medicine and other subjects. It +has been critically read by the young Chinese scholar, Mr. Yan Phou Lee, +of Yale College, who has suggested a few notes. Its completeness is +added to by an analytic table of contents and an index. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">In the Woods and Out</span>. By Pansy. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. +Price $1.00. In the score or more of short stories which make up this +volume Pansy is at her best. She never writes for the mere sake of +filling up, but always, in the briefest of her sketches, she has +something worth telling and worth remembering. There isn't a thing in +the book which will not be read twice, and certain of the stones will be +perennial favorites with the younger class of readers. +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page10" name="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span> +</p> +<h4> +PHILOSOPHIÆ QUÆSTOR. +</h4> +<p> +The seeker of philosophical truth, which is described as the shadowy +figure of a young girl, is, throughout, very expressive of desire and +appreciation. The impressions she receives are those to which such a +condition are most sensitive—the higher and more refined ones—and the +responsive thoughts concern the nature and character of what is heard or +felt. The elevation into classic importance of Concord, its +philosophers, and its School of Philosophy is due to the influence of +their history and teachings in American literature, and it is pleasant +to recognize in this work such reverence of their classicism. Mrs. +Anagnos has written a prose poem in which the last two sessions of the +Concord School of Philosophy, which include that in memory of Emerson, +and its lecturers excite her feeling and inspire her thought. It is sung +in lofty strains that resemble those of the sacred woods and fount, and +themselves are communicative of their spirit. It will be welcomed as an +appropriate souvenir.—<i>Boston Globe</i>. +</p> +<hr /> +<h4> +OUR NATIONAL FINANCES. +</h4> +<p> +Mr. J.K. Upton used to be Assistant Secretary of the Treasury of the +United States. Few men, therefore, have had better opportunities to +inform themselves about our national finances. His volume, <i>Money in +Politics</i>, published by D. Lothrop & Co., price $1.25, is a full +history of the financial policy and legislation of this country. It is +of the utmost value as a record, a book of reference, and an expression +of sound theories. The intelligent reader cannot repress a feeling of +shame that our national history in respect to finance should have been +characterized by such continual bungling. The saddest feature in the +case is the crass ignorance which Congress usually has displayed. Much +of our legislation about money matters has been the merest +experimenting, if not worse than this—the deliberate effort to enrich +some one class of business men at the expense of the nation. +</p> +<p> +He utters a solemn warning of the dangers to which we now are exposed +through our present acts of coinage and legal tender, whereby our gold +coin sooner or later must be driven from the country and our standard +must become a silver dollar of light weight and uncertain value. He also +shows conclusively the futility of legislation in causing two substances +to become and remain of the same value. Mr. Edward Atkinson has +furnished the introduction to the book, in which he commends it warmly. +While Congress continues to permit the coinage of $2,000,000 in silver a +month, for which there is no demand and the coinage of which merely +furnishes a market for the wares of a few owners of silver mines, it is +difficult to overstate the need that such books as this should be +circulated and studied attentively throughout the nation. Mr. Atkinson +makes an impressive comment, which we quote: +</p> +<p> +"The productions of the hen-yards of the United States, according to the +census statistics, was, in 1879, 456,910,916 dozen eggs, and, if hens +have now increased in the ratio of population, it is now 500,000,000 +dozen, which at only ten cents a dozen, would exceed the value of the +products of the silver mines. +</p> +<p> +"It would be vastly more reasonable for Congress to order the compulsory +purchase of two million dollars' worth of eggs per month," in order to +sustain the hen products of the United States, "than it is to buy two +million dollars' worth of silver; because the eggs could be used, or +else would rot, while the silver cannot be used, and is expensive to +store and to watch (pp. xvi-xvii)."—<i>Congregationalist</i>. +</p> +<hr /> +<h4> +ILLITERACY AND MORMONISM. +</h4> +<p> +Of <i>Illiteracy and Mormonism</i>, a brochure from the pen of Doctor +Henry Randall Waite, just published by D. Lothrop & Co., the <i>Boston +Daily Transcript</i> in an advance notice, says: +</p> +<p> +"In view of the present great interest in the problems treated, and the +value of the material which it offers as an aid to their solution, the +book is especially timely. Doctor Waite, who was for some time editor of +the <i>International Review</i>, and whose work is well-known to readers +of the standard American periodicals, is one of the clearest-headed of +our younger writers on politico-economic subjects, and his views as here +set forth demand thoughtful consideration and respect. He brings to the +treatment of the subjects included in the title the special knowledge +gained in his important official position as statistician of the late +census, in charge of some of the most important branches, including +education, illiteracy and religious organizations." +</p> +<p> +The Dover (N.H.) <i>Star</i>, says: +</p> +<p> +"He makes the best argument for the Constitutionality of National Aid +[to education] which we have yet seen. It will bear careful +consideration by members of Congress." +</p> +<p> +The <i>Boston Daily Herald</i> refers to the author's views as follows: +</p> +<p> +"One of the most original and valuable contributions yet made to the +discussion of the project of extending federal aid to common school +education in the States * * * The moderation of its tone and the +conservatism of its suggestions will commend it to all thoughtful +students of this problem, while its statistics, many of which, in their +arrangement and application, are substantially new, should have a direct +influence in shaping the final action of Congress * * * Mr. Waite has +given long and careful study to this subject in all its bearings, and he +writes with an equipment of information and reflection which has been +palpably lacking in much of the Senatorial discussion of it." +</p> +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page11" name="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span> +</p> +<h4> +ARCTIC EXPLORATIONS. +</h4> +<p> +The <i>New York Independent</i>, after referring to the various books on +Arctic explorations and adventure—the narratives of Kane and Hayes and +Gilder and De Long—says of Dr. Nourse's work: "The field of Arctic +authorship was not yet, however, covered by any of these works, and it +is to the credit of Professor Nourse that he saw what remained to be +done. In the work before us he comes into no competition with the +literary workers who have preceded him. No one will be the less disposed +to read Dr. Kane's chapters, or to peruse Mr. Gilder's, for having read +Professor Nourse; nor, on the other hand, will these works prejudice +Professor Nourse's chance to be read. His book stands on ground of its +own, as the one complete and competent survey of what American explorers +have done in the polar zones.... Professor Nourse's volume is embellished +with numerous good illustrations, and provided with an excellent and +indispensable circumpolar map. It deserves the successful sale we +understand it is already receiving." +</p> +<p> +The <i>Literary World</i> in a review of the book says "it is an +encyclopaedic review of the whole subject of American enterprise in +Arctic seas," and adds: "Professor Nourse's book bears the credentials +of accuracy and authority, is well printed and bound, has numerous +engravings and useful maps, including some portraits on steel, has a +suitable index and table of contents, and furthermore is provided with a +bibliography of chief publications on Arctic research since 1818. In +every respect, then, it is a well-made book, a solid contribution to +popular reading." +</p> +<hr /> +<h4> +BACCALAUREATE SERMONS. +</h4> +<p> +D. Lothrop & Co., of Boston, have published in book form nineteen +baccalaureate sermons preached at Harvard College, by Dr. A.P. Peabody, +the new Professor of Christian Morals. Dr. Peabody's reputation, as a +vigorous thinker and manly preacher, is as wide as this Republic; and +the volume of sermons before us is something more than a series of +homilies. It is a collection of addresses to young men—students just +ready to embark on the perilous sea of life—which may be profitably +read by every citizen of our country. The preacher does not address +himself to any single side of human life. He counsels the students in +their duties as men in all the relations of life. And in the selection +of themes he embraces a great variety of topics. In the discourse on +"Hebrew, Latin and Greek," for example, he takes the first-named tongue +as standing for religion, the second for beauty and the third for +strength. On this triad be formulates not only an intellectual cult but +a practical rule of life. Another notable sermon is on "The Sovereignty +of Law," an admirable disquisition on the supremacy of law in the +intellectual life, the physical existence, the domain of morals and in +every department of human activity. Dr. Peabody's style is forcible and +virile, and his compactness of statement, enables him to put "infinite +riches in a little room."—<i>Chicago Tribune.</i> +</p> +<hr /> +<h4> +A BOY'S WORKSHOP. +</h4> +<p> +Every boy with a jack-knife in his pocket and his head full of plans +will fall to with delight on anything that gives him plenty to do in the +boyish line. This is the merit of a little manual just published by the +Messrs. D. Lothrop & Co., <i>A Boy's Workshop, with Plans and Designs +for Indoor and Outdoor Work</i>, by a "Boy and his Friends"; with an +introduction by Henry Randall Waite. The little manual goes to work +intelligibly, describing the shop, and the tools, giving hints and +accurate directions how to make a great variety of things whose uses +will be at once apparent to the boyish mind, and suggestions as to other +mysteries, the key to which makes any boy who possesses it a king among +his mates. +</p> +<hr /> +<h4> +HOW SUCCESS IS WON. +</h4> +<p> +"How Success is Won," by Sarah K. Bolton (D. Lothrop & Co.), is a +collection of twelve brief biographies intended to make clear to the +young the character and conduct that have resulted in the success of +Peter Cooper, John B. Gough, John G. Whittier, John Wanamaker, Henry M. +Stanley, Johns Hopkins, William M. Hunt, Elias Howe, Jr., Alexander H. +Stephens, Thomas A. Edison, Dr. W.T.G. Morton and the Rev. John H. +Vincent. The sketches are gracefully and interestingly written, and the +little volume is in every way to be commended.—<i>N.Y. Com. Adv.</i> +</p> +<hr /> +<h4> +THE GRAY MASQUE. +</h4> +<p> +The Gray Masque of Mrs. Mary Barker Dodge (D. Lothrop & Co., Boston) has +won a series of splendid notices; yet, so far as we know, sufficient +stress has not been laid upon the keynote of the volume. <i>Love</i>, in +its varying phases, sounds through the majority of the verses like the +refrain of a song. Sometimes sad, sometimes solemn, oftener gay and +hopeful, the differing themes take up, one after another, the burden of +the initial poem; and answer, in separate ways, the question there +propounded, until the many-sided revelation is found to be fittingly +illustrated on the cover by the winged boy, who throws aside the masque +of mortality, and, soaring aloft, leaves behind him every earthly doubt +and care. The "Dedication" and the concluding poem, the first emotional +in its simplicity, the last intellectual in its subtlety, mark the +breadth as well as the limits of Mrs. Dodge's poetical +expression.—<i>Baldwin's Monthly.</i> +</p> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page12" name="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + + +<table border="0" summary="" width="100%"> + +<tr><td colspan="4"> + +<h2><b>WIDE AWAKE.</b></h2> +<center> Only $3.00 a Year. 25 cts. a number.</center> + +<p> + The best, the largest, the most entertaining, the most beautifully + illustrated, and the widest in range, of all magazines for young people. + It is the official organ of the C.Y.F.R.U., and, as heretofore, will + publish the Required Readings, and all needed information for members of + the Union. The magazine proper will be even more brilliant and valuable + than before during the next year. +</p> +<p> + Ideal literature and ideal art for young people and the family, for + entertainment, for the healthful training of the body and the liberal + education for the mind, fill this magazine each month from cover to + cover. It has won recognition from the American and English press as the + largest and best, the most beautiful and original, and the most ably + edited magazine of its class in the world. It gives each month original + music by eminent composers. +</p> +<p> + "<span class="sc">Wide Awake</span>" is the wonder of all the wonderfully beautiful children's + magazines and books of America. Without dispute the largest, handsomest, + most artistic and best young people's periodical ever issued. There is + no juvenile magazine published in the country so carefully + edited."—<i>Boston Transcript.</i> +</p> +<p> + "A treasure of good morals."—<i>N.Y. Tribune.</i> +</p> +<p> + "At the head of juvenile periodical stands <span class="sc">Wide Awake</span> all the + time."—<i>Phil. Inquirer.</i> +</p> +<p> + "A whole family library in itself."—<i>Putnam Patriot.</i> +</p> +<p> + "Unsurpassed in skilful adaptation to young folks' needs."—<i>Chicago + Standard.</i> +</p> +<hr class="full" /> +</td></tr> +<tr><td width="25%" valign="top"> + +<h2> <b>THE PANSY</b></h2> +<h3> + Edited by Mrs. G.R. Alden (Pansy). +</h3> +<center> + <i>$1.00 a year; 10 cts. a number.</i> +</center> +<p> + For both week-day and Sunday reading, <span class="sc">The Pansy</span> holds the first place in + the hearts of the children, and in the approval of earnest-minded + parents. +</p> +<p> + Among pictorial periodicals especially designed for Boys and Girls, it + stands royal leader, and as a Christian Home Magazine for young folks, + it is without question the best and the most attractive magazine in the + world. Pansy's own bright, quick-seeing spirit inspires all her + contributors. Very fully illustrated. +</p> + +</td><td colspan="2"> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/518.jpg"><img src="images/518.jpg" style="width:150px;" +alt="LOTHROP'S POPULAR ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINES." /></a> +</div> + +</td><td width="25%" valign="top"> + +<h2> + <b>Chautauqua Young Folks' Journal.</b> +</h2> +<p class="quote"> + <i>75 cts. a year; 7 cts. a number.</i> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + This new periodical is intensely interesting to both old and young, as + well as practical. It contains the Course of the C.Y.F.R.U. Readings + (issued also in <span class="sc">Wide Awake</span>) and additional features of varied interest. + Beginning with the December issue, the <span class="sc">Chautauqua Young Folks' Journal</span> + gives a fine illustrated historical serial story. It is a stirring tale + of old Knickerbocker New York, and its accounts are as true as they are + exciting. It is written by Elbridge S. Brooks, and is entitled, "In + Leisler's Time." Send for a circular giving full information about the + C.Y.F.R.U. Reading Course. +</p> +</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="4"><hr class="full" /></td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2" width="50%" valign="top"> + +<h2> + <b>Our Little Men and Women.</b> +</h2> +<center> + <i>$1.00 a year; 10 cents a number.</i> +</center> +<p> + For the youngest readers no magazine approaches this in number and + beauty of illustration (each volume containing 75 full-page pictures) + and in the peculiar fitness of the accompanying text. It is especially + adapted for use as Supplementary Reading in schools. It is always + bright, always fresh and attractive. +</p> + +</td><td colspan="2" width="50%" valign="top"> + +<h2> + <b>BABYLAND</b> +</h2> +<center> + <i>50 cents a year; 5 cents a number.</i> +</center> +<p> + The only periodical of its kind in the world. +</p> +<p> + As for seven years past, this exquisite magazine for the nursery is + still unrivalled in its monthly merry-making for the wee folks. Large + pages, large pictures, large type. Each month its pictures are more + enticing, its stories are sweeter, its jingles gayer. +</p> + +</td></tr></table> + +<p> + Splendid premiums for new subscriptions. Agents wanted. Liberal pay. + Send stamps for specimen copies. Circulars free. Address +</p> +<center> + <b>D. Lothrop & Co., Publishers, Franklin and Hawley Sts., Boston.</b> +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3>LOTHROP'S SPARE MINUTE SERIES.</h3> +<p> + "The significance of the name of this series is seen from the fact that + <span class="sc">Thoughts That Breathe</span>, for instance, has 300 pages, and contains 273 + separately numbered and independent extracts. Thus a person can read one + or more of these at a time, and put the book down without breaking the + train of thought." 6 vols, 12mo, $6.00. 6 vols, imitation half calf. + $7.50. 6 vols, full imitation calf. $9.00. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc"><u>Right to the Point.</u></span> From the writings of Theodore L. Cuyler, + D.D., selected by Mary Storrs Haynes. With an introduction by Rev. + Newman Hall. +</p> +<p> + Pithy paragraphs on a wide range of subjects, not one of which but will + be found to contain some terse, sparkling truth worthy of thought and + attention. A spare ten minutes devoted to such readings can never be + wasted. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc"><u>Thoughts That Breathe.</u></span> From the writings of Dean Stanley. + Introduction by Rev. Phillips Brooks. The numerous admirers on this side + of the water of the late eloquent English churchman, will be grateful + for this volume, which contains some of his best utterances. 16mo, + cloth, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc"><u>Cheerful Words.</u></span> From George MacDonald. Introduction by James T. + Fields. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc"><u>The Might of Right.</u></span> From Rt. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Introduction + by John D. Long. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc"><u>True Manliness.</u></span> From Thomas Hughes. Introduction by James + Russell Lowell. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc"><u>Living Truths.</u></span> From Charles Kingsley. Introduction by W.D. + Howells. +</p> + +<h3>LOTHROP'S CHOICE NEW EDITIONS OF FAMOUS S.S. BOOKS IN SETS.</h3> + +<p> +<u>"Bronckton Series."</u> <span class="sc">So as by Fire</span>, by Margaret Sidney. A bright +story full of life and interest, as are all the writings by this popular +author. +</p> +<p> +<span class="sc"><u>Half Year at Bronckton</u>,</span> by the same author. Earnest, yet lively, +this is just the book for all boys old enough to be subjected to the +temptations of school life. +</p> +<p> +The other books of this series, "Tempter Behind," by John Saunders, "For +Mack's Sake," by S.J. Burke, and "Class of '70," by Helena V. Morrison, +are all worthy of a place in every Sunday-school library. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="price list"> +<tr><td> Amaranth Library. 4 vols., 12mo, illust. </td><td align="right">$6.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Books by the author of Andy Luttrell. 6 vols., 12mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 7.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Julia A. Eastman's Books. 6 vols., 12mo, illust </td><td align="right"> 7.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Ella Farman's Books. 9 vols., large 16mo, illust. </td><td align="right">10.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Pansy Series. 4 vols. </td><td align="right"> 3.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Mudge (Rev. Z.A.) Works. 3 vols. </td><td align="right"> 3.75 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Porter (Mrs. A.E.) Books. 5 vols. </td><td align="right"> 6.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Capron (M.J.) Books. 4 vols. </td><td align="right"> 6.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Mrs. E.D. Kendall's Books. 3 vols., 12mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.75 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Our Boys' Library. 5 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 6.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Our Girls' Library. 5 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 6.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Mrs. A.E. Porter's Books. 5 vols., 12mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 6.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Snow Family Library. 5 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 5.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Sturdy Jack Series. 6 vols., 12mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 4.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> To-day Series. New and of extraordinary excellence. 6 vols., illust. </td><td align="right">7.50</td></tr> +<tr><td> Child Life Series. 26 vols., illust. Each </td><td align="right"> 1.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Hill Rest Series. 3 vols., 16mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.75 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Uncle Max Series. 8 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 6.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Yensie Walton Books. 5 vols., 12mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 7.50 </td></tr> + +</table> + +<h3>LOTHROP'S YOUNG FOLKS' LIBRARY.</h3> + +<p> + Nothing at once so good and cheap is anywhere to be found. These choice + 16mo volumes of 300 to 500 pages, clear type, carefully printed, with + handsome and durable covers of manilla paper, and embracing some of the + best stories by popular American authors, are published at the low price + of 25 cents per volume, and mailed postpaid. One number issued each + month. No second edition will be printed in this style. The regular + edition is issued in cloth bindings at $1,25 to $1.75 per volume. Among + the numbers already published at 25 cents each as above are +</p> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> 1. Tip Lewis and his Lamp, by <span class="sc">Pansy.</span></li> +<li> 2. Margie's Mission, by <span class="sc">Marie Oliver.</span></li> +<li> 3. Kitty Kent's Troubles, by <span class="sc">Julia A. Eastman.</span></li> +<li> 4. Mrs. Hurd's Niece, by <span class="sc">Ella Farman Pratt</span>, Editor of <span class="sc">Wide Awake.</span></li> +<li> 5. Evening Rest, by <span class="sc">Rev. J.L. Pratt.</span></li> +</ul> +<p> + Other equally charming stories will follow each month. The Library is + especially commended to Sunday-school superintendents or those + interested in securing choice Sunday-school books at lowest prices. + Attention is called to the necessity of early orders, as when the + present editions are exhausted, no more copies of the several volumes + can be had at the same price. +</p> + +<h3>LOTHROP'S STANDARD BOOKS FOR YOUTHS.</h3> + +<p> Admirable books in history, biography and story.</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="price list"> +<tr><td> Fern Glen Series. 31 vols., illust. Each </td><td align="right"> 1.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Young Folks' Series. 33 vols., illust. Each </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Popular Biographies. 18 vols., illust. Each </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Young Folks' Histories, by <span class="sc">Miss Yonge</span> and others. + 10 vols., illust. Each </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Yonge's Historical Stories. 4 vols., illust. Each </td><td align="right"> 1.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> The $1000 Prize Books. A fresh edition in new style of binding. + 16 vols., 12mo. </td><td align="right">24.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> The new $500 Prize Series. A fresh edition in new style of + binding. 13 vols., 12mo. </td><td align="right">16.75 </td></tr> +<tr><td> The Original $500 Prize Series. A fresh edition in new style + of binding. 8 vols., 12mo. </td><td align="right">12.00 </td></tr> +</table> + +<h3>LOTHROP'S TEMPERANCE LIBRARY.</h3> + +<p> +No Sunday-school library is complete without some well-chosen volumes +showing the evils of intemperance, the great curse which good men and +women are everywhere endeavoring to remove. +</p> +<p> +D. Lothrop & Co. publish among others the following admirable temperance +books. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="price list"> +<tr><td> The only way Out. By J.W. Willing. </td><td align="right">$1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> John Bremm. By A.A. Hopkins. </td><td align="right"> 1.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Sinner and Saint. By A.A. Hopkins. </td><td align="right"> 1.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> The Tempter Behind. By John Saunders. </td><td align="right"> 1.25 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Good Work. By Mary D. Chellis. </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Mystery of the Lodge. By Mary D. Chellis. </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Finished or Not. By the author of "Fabrics." </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Modern Prophets. By Pansy and Faye Huntington.</td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> May Bell. By Hubert Newbury. </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +<span class="sc"><u>Temperance Reformation,</u></span> The, and Its Claims upon the Christian +Church. By Rev. James Smith, of Scotland. 8 vo. $2.50. +</p> +<p> +Sunday-school teachers and superintendents will find the above books +admirably adapted to the purpose of teaching great moral lessons, while +they are also full of pleasure and interest to young readers. +</p> + +<h3>LOTHROP'S POPULAR LOW-PRICE LIBRARIES.</h3> +<p> +Among attractive and valuable Libraries issued in sets at prices which +place them not only beyond competition, but within the easy reach of +all, are +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="90%" summary="price list"> +<tr><td> Best Way Series. 3 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> $1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Half Hour Library, by <span class="sc">Pansy</span>. 8 vols., illust. </td><td align="right">3.20 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Little People's Home Library. 12 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Little Pansy Series. 10 vols., illust. Cloth, $4.00; boards.</td><td align="right"> 3.00</td></tr> +<tr><td> Little May's Picture Library. 12 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 2.40 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Mother's Boys and Girls, by <span class="sc">Pansy</span>. 12 vols., illust. </td><td align="right">3.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Rainy Day Library. 8 vols., illust </td><td align="right"> 4.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Spring Blossom. 12 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Stories from the Bible, 1st and 2d Series. Each </td><td align="right"> .15 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Twisty Clover Series. 6 vols., illust. </td><td align="right"> 1.20 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Happy Thought Library. 6 vols., large 18mo. illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Little Neighbor Series. 6 vols., large 18mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 1.50 </td></tr> +<tr><td> May and Tom Library. 5 vols., 18mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.00 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Sunny Dell Series. 6 vols., 18mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 3.60 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Side by Side Library. 3 vols., 16mo, illust. </td><td align="right"> 1.80 </td></tr> +</table> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page14" name="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h3> LOTHROP'S POPULAR PANSY BOOKS.</h3> +<p> + The works of this popular author are universally acknowledged to be + among the very best of all books for Sunday-school reading. Earnest, + hopeful, practical, full of the spirit of Christian faith and courage, + they are also in the highest degree interesting. +</p> + +<h3> COMPLETE LIST OF THE PANSY BOOKS. </h3> + +<center> <i>Each volume, 12mo,</i> $1.50. </center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Chautauqua Girls at Home.</li> +<li> Divers Women.</li> +<li> Echoing and Re-echoing.</li> +<li> Endless Chain (An).</li> +<li> Ester Ried.</li> +<li> Ester Ried Yet Speaking.</li> +<li> Four Girls at Chautauqua.</li> +<li> From different Standpoints.</li> +<li> Hall in the Grove (The).</li> +<li> Household Puzzles.</li> +<li> Julia Ried.</li> +<li> King's Daughter (The).</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Links in Rebecca's Life.</li> +<li> Mrs. Solomon Smith Looking On.</li> +<li> Modern Prophets.</li> +<li> Man of the House (The).</li> +<li> New Graft on the Family Tree (A).</li> +<li> Pocket Measure (The).</li> +<li> Ruth Erskine's Crosses.</li> +<li> Randolphs (The).</li> +<li> Sidney Martin's Christmas.</li> +<li> Those Boys.</li> +<li> Three People.</li> +<li> Tip Lewis and his Lamp.</li> +<li> Wise and Otherwise.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> <i>Each volume, 12mo</i> $1.25. </center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Cunning Workmen.</li> +<li> Dr. Deane's Way.</li> +<li> Grandpa's Darlings.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Miss Priscilla Hunter and my Daughter Susan.</li> +<li> Mrs. Deane's Way.</li> +<li> What she Said.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> <i>Each volume, 12mo,</i> $1.25</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Five Friends.</li> +<li> Mrs. Harry Harper's Awakening.</li> +<li> Next Things.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Pansy's Scrap Book,</li> +<li> Some young Heroines.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> <i>Each volume, 16mo.</i> 75 cents.</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Getting Ahead.</li> +<li> Mary Burton Abroad.</li> +<li> Pansies.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Six little Girls</li> +<li> That Boy Bob.</li> +<li> Two Boys.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> <i>Each volume 16mo,</i> 75 cents.</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Bernie's White Chicken.</li> +<li> Docia's Journal.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Helen Lester.</li> +<li> Jessie Wells.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> MISCELLANEOUS.</h3> + +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Hedge Fence (A)., 16mo, 60c.</li> +<li> Side by Side, 16mo, 60c.</li> +<li> Pansy's Picture Book. 4to, boards, 1.50; cloth 2.00</li> +<li> The little Pansy Series. 10 vols., boards, 3.00; cloth 4.00</li> +<li> Mother's Boys and Girls Library. 12 vols., quarto, boards. 3.00</li> +</ul> + +<h3> + PANSY'S NEW BOOKS. +</h3> +<p> + Among the new books by this favorite author, which Sunday-school + Superintendents and all readers of her previous books will wish to + order, are +</p> +<p> + <u>A HEDGE FENCE.</u> A story that will be particularly pleasing to + boys, most of whom will find in its hero a fair representation of + themselves, 16mo, 60 cents. +</p> +<p> + <u>AN ENDLESS CHAIN.</u> From the introduction, on the first page, of + the new superintendent of the Packard Place Sabbath-school, to the end, + there is no flagging of interest in this bright, fresh, wholesome story. + Illustrated, 12mo, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + <u>SIDE BY SIDE.</u> Short illustrated stories from Bible texts for the + help of boys and girls in their everyday duties. 16mo, cloth, 60 c. +</p> +<p> + <u>CHRISTIE'S CHRISTMAS.</u> No more charming little heroine can be + found than the Christie of this volume, and the story of her journey to + spend Christmas, with the great variety of characters introduced, all of + them original and individual in their way, is perfectly novel and + interesting. +</p> +<p> + As a guide to teachers, rich in suggestions and directions for methods + of teaching, etc., there is nothing better than PANSY'S SCRAP BOOK. + 12mo. Cloth, Illustrated $1.00. +</p> +<p> + In fact all of Pansy's books have some special charm or attraction which + makes them a power for good whenever read. +</p> +<h3> + LOTHROP'S SELECT SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARIES. +</h3> +<p> + <i>Every book in these marvellously cheap libraries will bear the + closest criticism</i>. Each is fresh and interesting in matter, + unexceptional in tone and excellent in literary style. These libraries + as a whole, considering their character and cost <i>have no + superiors</i>. +</p> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Select Sunday-school Library, No. 12, 20 vols., $5.00 net.</li> +<li> Select Sunday-school Library, No. 9, 50 vols., $25.00 net.</li> +<li> Select Sunday-school Library, No. 10, 12 vols., $5.00 net.</li> +<li> Select Sunday-school Library, No. 11, 20 vols., $10.00 net.</li> +<li> Pansy's Primary Library, 30 vols., 7.50 net.</li> +<li> Select Primary Sunday-school Library, 36 vols., in extra cloth binding, 5.50 net.</li> +</ul> + +<h3> + LOTHROP'S BOOKS FOR SUPERINTENDENTS. +</h3> +<p> + <u>BIBLE READER, THE.</u> By Rev. H. V. Dexter, D. D. 16mo., .50 +</p> +<p> + <u>BIBLE LESSONS FOR SUNDAY-SCHOOL CONCERTS AND ANNIVERSARIES.</u> By + Edmund Clark, 18 numbers 5 cts. each. Bound in 16mo. vol, cloth, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + <u>BIBLE PICTURES.</u> By Rev. Geo. B. Ide, D. D. 12mo, $2.00. +</p> +<p> + <u>FIFTY YEARS WITH THE SABBATH-SCHOOL.</u> By Rev. Asa Bullard, D.D. + 12mo, cloth, $1.25. +</p> +<p> + <u>SELF-GIVING.</u> A story of Christian missions. By Rev. W.F. + Bainbridge. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + <u>ROCK OF AGES.</u> By Rev. S.F. Smith, D.D. A choice collection of + religious poems. 18mo, cloth, gilt edges, $1.25. +</p> +<p> + <u>STUDY OF NAHUM (A).</u> By Professor Thom. H. Rich. 16mo, $.40 +</p> +<p> + <u>STORY OF THE PRAYERS OF CHRISTIAN HISTORY (The).</u> By Hezekiah + Butterworth. 12mo. illustrated $1.50. +</p> +<p> + <u>WALK TO EMMAUS.</u> By Rev. Nehemiah Adams. Charming specimens of + sermon literature. 12mo, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + <u>WARS OF THE JEWS.</u> By Flavine Josephus. Translated by William + Whiston, M.A. 8vo, cloth, plain, $1.00. Extra cloth, gilt top, fully + illustrated, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + <u>WORK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT [The];</u> or, The New Birth. By Prof. Austin + Phelps, D.D. 16mo, $1.25. +</p> + +<h3> + LOTHROP'S BOOKS FOR ANNIVERSARIES AND CONCERTS. +</h3> +<p> + It is often a difficult matter to determine what to use for + Sunday-school anniversaries, etc. To those in doubt, we would suggest + the use of the following capital aids: +</p> +<p> + <u>BIBLE LESSONS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOLS, CONCERTS AND ANNIVERSARIES.</u> By + Edmund Clark. 18 numbers, 5 cents each. Bound in one 16mo volume, cloth, + $1.00. +</p> +<p> + <u>HELP FOR SUNDAY-SCHOOL CONCERTS.</u> By A.P. and M.T. Folsom. A + choice collection of poems. 16mo, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + <u>ENTERTAINMENTS.</u> By Lizzie W. Champney. For concerts, exhibitions, + church festivals, etc. 15mo, Illustrated. $1.00 +</p> +<h3> + A THOUSAND OTHER CHOICE BOOKS. +</h3> +<p> + The above, and a thousand other choice books which cannot be mentioned + here, make up a list from which superintendents and teachers can easily + select a VALUABLE LIBRARY at a low price. Send for full catalogue, + mailed free, and for special terms to those ordering any number of + volumes. Any book sent postage paid on receipt of price. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> <b>ELLA FARMAN'S BOOKS.</b></h3> +<p> + Ella Farman is the editor of <span class="sc">Wide Awake</span>, and her books are full of + sympathy with girl-life, always sunshiny and hopeful, always pointing + out new ways to do things and unexpected causes for happiness and + gladness. +</p> +<center> + <i>9 vols. 12mo. Illust. $10.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Annie Maylie.</li> +<li> A Little Woman.</li> +<li> A Girl's Money.</li> +<li> A White Hand.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Grandma Crosby's Household.</li> +<li> Good-for-Nothing Polly.</li> +<li> How Two Girls Tried Farming.</li> +<li> Cooking Club of Tu-Whit Hollow.</li> +<li> Mrs. Hurd's Niece.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>JULIA A. EASTMAN'S BOOKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + Miss Eastman has a large circle of young admirers. She carries off the + palm as a writer of school-life stories, and teachers are always glad to + find their scholars reading her books. Miss Eastman's style is + characterized by quick movement, sparkling expression, and incisive + knowledge of human nature. +</p> +<center> + <i>6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $7.50</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Kitty Kent.</li> +<li> Young Rick.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Romneys of Ridgemont, Short Comings and Long Goings. (The).</li> +<li> Striking for the Right.</li> +<li> School Days of Beulah Romney.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>REV. J.L. PRATT'S BOOKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + This set of books is valuable for its fitness to the needs of young + people who have come to the age when they begin to examine for + themselves into religious beliefs and opinions. They are interesting as + stories, abounding with beautiful descriptions and delicate portraitures + of character, and are everywhere favorites with the thoughtful and + meditative. +</p> +<center> + <i>4 vols. 12mo. Illust. $6.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Evening Rest.</li> +<li> Bonnie Ærie.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Branches of Palm.</li> +<li> Broken Fetters.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>MRS. A. E. PORTER'S BOOKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + Mrs. Porter is a favorite author with adult readers, as well as with + children. Her stories, always dealing largely with home-life, are well + calculated to make truthfulness and steadfastness and Christian living + the subjects of youthful admiration and imitation. +</p> +<center> + <i>5 vols. 12mo. Illust. $6.25.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> This One Thing I Do.</li> +<li> Millie Lee.</li> +<li> Sunset Mountain.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> My Hero.</li> +<li> Glencoe Parsonage.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>BY AUTHOR OF ANDY LUTTRELL</b> +</h3> +<p> + Powerful books, dealing with knotty problems, and positive in their + religious teaching. They are perennial favorites with all classes of + readers. +</p> +<center> + <i>6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $7.50.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Andy Luttrell.</li> +<li> Barbara.</li> +<li> Talbury Girls.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Strawberry Hill.</li> +<li> Silent Tom.</li> +<li> Hidden Treasure.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>MRS. E.D. KENDALL'S WORKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + Each full of earnestness of purpose, and impressing a life lesson on the + reader's mind. Excellent for boys. +</p> +<center> + <i>3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $3.75.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Judge's Sons.</li> +<li> The Stanifords of Staniford's Folly.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Master and Pupil.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>MARY J. CAPRON'S BOOKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + These books are thoroughly healthy and stimulating, and admirably + adapted to put into the hands of thoughtful young people to lead them to + right ideas on the fundamental truths of the religious life. +</p> +<center> + <i>4 vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Plus and Minus.</li> +<li> Gold and Gilt.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Maybee's Stepping Stones.</li> +<li> Mrs. Thorne's Guests.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>REV. Z.A. MUDGE'S WORKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + This well known author's works are among the most popular in the + Sunday-school library. +</p> +<center> + <i>3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $3.75.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Shell Cove.</li> +<li> Luck of Alden Farm.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Boat Builders.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>CHARLOTTE M. YONGE'S HISTORIES.</b> +</h3> +<p> + Miss Yonge, while always boldly and continuously outlining the course of + historical events, has the knack of seizing upon incidents which reveal + the true character of historical personages. These histories are + attractive as romance and possess a peculiar power of impressing the + memory, being written from a Christian standpoint they are very + desirable books for Sunday-school libraries. +</p> +<center> + <i>6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $9.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Young Folks' History of Germany.</li> +<li> Young Folks' History of Greece.</li> +<li> Young Folks' History of Rome.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Young Folks' History of England.</li> +<li> Young Folks' History of France.</li> +<li> Young Folks' Bible History.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>SPARE MINUTE SERIES</b> +</h3> +<p> + These are bright and pithy and soul-stirring volumes, quickening the + intellect of the reader and warming the heart. +</p> +<center> + <i>4 vols. 12mo. $4.00.</i> +</center> +<p> + Thoughts that Breathe. <i>From</i> Dean Stanley. Introduction by + Phillips Brooks. +</p> +<p> + Cheerful Words. <i>From</i> George MacDonald. Introduction by James T. + Fields. +</p> +<p> + The Might of Right. <i>From</i> Rt. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Introduction + by John D. Long. +</p> +<p> + True Manliness. <i>From</i> Thomas Hughes. Introduction by James Russell + Lowell. +</p> +<h3> + <b>W.H.G. KINGSTON'S BOOKS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + These stories are intensely interesting and graphic and enforce the + highest and most practical lessons. +</p> +<center> + <i>3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $8.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Voyage of the Steadfast.</li> +<li> Charley Laurel.</li> +<li> Virginia.</li> +<li> Little Ben Hadden.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Young Whaler.</li> +<li> Fisher Boy.</li> +<li> Peter the Ship Boy.</li> +<li> Ralph and Dick.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>BUNGENER HISTORICAL SERIES.</b> +</h3> +<p> + From the French of L.L.F. Bungener. These works are of thrilling + interest, illustrating the religious struggles, heroism and social life + of the times of Louis XIV. and XV. +</p> +<center> + <i>4 Vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Bourdaloue and Louis XIV.</li> +<li> Louis XV. and his Times.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Rabaut and Bridaine.</li> +<li> The Tower of Constancy.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>BANVARD'S AMERICAN HISTORY.</b> +</h3> +<p> + Every library should be furnished with this series of American + Histories.—<i>New England Farmer</i>. +</p> +<p> + No more interesting and instructive reading can be put into the hands of + youth.—<i>Portland Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + Every American should own these books.—<i>Scientific American</i>. +</p> +<center> + <i>5 vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Southern Explorers.</li> +<li> Soldiers and Patriots.</li> +<li> Pioneers of the New World.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Plymouth and the Pilgrims.</li> +<li> First Explorers of North America.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3> + <b>DR. NEHEMIAH ADAMS' WORKS.</b> +</h3> +<center> + <i>12 vols. 12mo. $12.00.</i> +</center> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> At Eventide.</li> +<li> Agnes; or, the Litte Key.</li> +<li> Bertha.</li> +<li> Broadcast.</li> +<li> Christ a Friend.</li> +<li> Communion Sabbath.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Catherine.</li> +<li> Cross in the Cell.</li> +<li> Endless Punishment.</li> +<li> Evenings wish the Doctrines.</li> +<li> Friends of Christ.</li> +<li> Under the Mizzen-Mast.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> + D. LOTHROP & CO., Publishers, 32 Franklin St., Boston. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page16" name="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h3>MARGARET SIDNEY'S BOOKS.</h3> +<p> + The brightness and versatility of this charming writer are well shown in + the following stories which cover a wide range, and are attractive to + all ages, from wide awake schoolboys and eager schoolgirls to thoughtful + readers of maturer years. As a delineator of character, especially that + of the New England type, she has few superiors, and her pictures of + child life are especially pleasing. +</p> +<p> + FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS, AND HOW THEY GREW. + Extra cloth binding, very elegant die in colors and gold. + 12mo, illust. 1.50 +</p> +<p> + PETTIBONE NAME (The). V.I.F. Series, + 12mo, cloth. 1.25 +</p> +<p> + SO AS BY FIRE. + 12mo, illust. 1.25 +</p> +<p> + WHO TOLD IT TO ME. + Double chromo cover, fully illustrated. 1.25; Extra cloth binding. 1.75 +</p> +<p> + WHAT THE SEVEN DID. + Quarto, fully illustrated, board cover designed by J. Wells Champney, + 1.75; extra cloth, very elegant side and back stamp. 2.25 +</p> +<p> + HALF YEAR AT BRONCKTON. + 16mo, illust. 1.25 +</p> +<p> + HOW THEY WENT TO EUROPE. + 16mo, illust. 1.00 +</p> +<p> + GOLDEN WEST (The), as seen by the Ridgway Club. + Quarto, illustrated, boards, 1.75; extra cloth binding. 2.25 +</p> +<p> + (Nearly ready). +</p> +<h3>EDWARD A. RAND'S BOOKS.</h3> +<p> + Mr. Rand's strong, helpful, interesting stories have made him such a + favorite among boys and among all other who read his books, as to make + comment upon them almost needless. The racy incidents and sparkling + style which characterize his stories, arouse interest at once, and there + is in them an under-current of earnestness, and an influence for good + which will remain after the stories are forgotten. +</p> +<p> + ALL ABOARD FOR SUNRISE LANDS. + Chromo board cover, 1.75; extra cloth binding. 2.25 +</p> +<p> + BARK CABIN ON KEARSARGE. + 16mo, cloth, illust. 1.00 +</p> +<p> + TENT IN THE NOTCH, THE. + 16mo, cloth, gilt. 1.00 +</p> +<p> + ROY'S DORY AT THE SEASHORE. A sequel to "Pushing Ahead." + Large 16mo, cloth, illust. 1.25 +</p> +<p> + ALL ABOARD FOR THE LAKES AND MOUNTAINS. + Boards, 1.75; extra cloth. 2.25 +</p> +<p> + PUSHING AHEAD; or, Big Brother Dave. + 16mo. 1.25 +</p> +<p> + LITTLE BROWN-TOP: and the People under It. + 12mo, illust. 1.25 +</p> +<h3>MARIE OLIVER'S STORIES.</h3> +<p> + As a writer of fascinating stories for girls, Marie Oliver has a host of + admirers who watch eagerly for any new book from her pen, and find in + her a friendly and wise helper. +</p> +<p> + MARIE OLIVER'S STORIES. + 4 volumes, 12mo, cloth, illustrated. 6.00 +</p> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Margie's Mission.</li> +<li> Old and New Friends.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Ruby Hamilton.</li> +<li> Seba's Discipline.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3>THE BAINBRIDGE BOOKS.</h3> +<p> + These books, written by the Rev. W.F. Bainbridge and his wife, are + the outcome of their experience in a trip around the world undertaken + because of their interest in Christian Missions. They not only abound + in interesting descriptions of the numerous places visited, but present + such a record of lofty purposes and noble endeavors as will furnish + inspiration to all readers. +</p> +<p> + AROUND THE WORLD TOUR OF CHRISTIAN MISSIONS. By W. F. BAINBRIDGE. + With maps of Prevailing Religions and all Leading Mission Stations. + 8vo cloth. 2.00 +</p> +<p> + ROUND THE WORLD LETTERS. By LUCY SEAMAN BAINBRIDGE. + 8vo, cloth, illustrated. 1.50 +</p> +<p> + SELF-GIVING. A story of Christian Missions. By REV. W. F. BAINBRIDGE. + 12mo, cloth, illust. 1.50 +</p> +<h3>MRS. S.R. GRAHAM CLARK'S BOOKS.</h3> +<p> + There is not a book on the list of Mrs. Clark's delightfully + entertaining writings which is not thoroughly good from whatever + point of view considered. +</p> +<p> + YENSIE WALTON BOOKS. + 12mo, cloth, illust $1.50 each. 5 volumes. 7.50 +</p> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Yensie Walton.</li> +<li> Our Street.</li> +<li> Yensie Walton's Womanhood.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> The Triple E.</li> +<li> Achor.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3>MISS YONGE'S HISTORICAL STORIES.</h3> +<p> + There are very many, especially + among the young, who are not attracted to the study of history, as + presented in ordinary historical works, but who are attracted to it + through the reading of books in which it is interwoven with romance. All + such will be charmed with Miss Yonge's Historical Stories, which + instruct while they interest, and are written in the fascinating style + which has made her one of the most popular writers of the day. +</p> +<p> + YONGE'S HISTORICAL STORIES. + 4 vols, 12mo. 5.00 +</p> + +<table align="center" width="100%" border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> The Little Duke.</li> +<li> The Prince and the Page.</li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Lances of Lynwood.</li> +<li> Golden Deeds.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<h3>THE FAMILY FLIGHTS.</h3> +<center> + By Rev. E.E. Hale and Miss Susan Hale. +</center> +<p> + Fresh, piquant, graphic, full of delicate humor, marked by grace in + diction and thorough scholarship, these books are not only unsurpassed, + but unequalled by any books of similar character. They treat of the + interesting features of the various countries named, including history, + geography, natural scenery, popular characteristics and customs, and + much else that will prove of real interest and value to the reader. The + authors have drawn their material from original sources, the countries + referred to having been actually visited, and the descriptions embody + the results of personal observation. The illustrations are not only + numerous and excellent, but in perfect harmony with the text. While + specially attractive to the young, adult readers who have themselves + visited the lands described, are among the most appreciative and + enthusiastic readers of these books. +</p> +<p> + A FAMILY FLIGHT AROUND HOME. + 8vo, cloth, gilt. 2.50 +</p> +<p> + A FAMILY FLIGHT THROUGH FRANCE, GERMANY, NORWAY AND SWITZERLAND. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt. 2.50 +</p> +<p> + A FAMILY FLIGHT OVER EGYPT AND SYRIA. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt. 2.50 +</p> +<p> + A FAMILY FLIGHT THROUGH SPAIN. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt, 2.50 +</p> +<p> + A FAMILY FLIGHT TO MEXICO. Uniform with the above. In preparation. +</p> +<h3>ABBY MORTON DIAZ'S BOOK.</h3> +<p> + Bright and keen as steel, Mrs. Diaz invests all that she writes with a + peculiar charm, whether it be a fantastic story of kittens that will + make the little ones wild with glee, a series of "jolly" books for older + boys and girls, or a thoughtful treatise on the serious questions which + most interest the mothers in every home. +</p> +<p> + CHRONICLES OF THE STIMPCETT FAMILY. + Quarto, chromo lithograph cover. 1.25 +</p> +<p> + KING GRIMALKUM AND PUSSYANITA; or, The Cats' Arabian Nights. + Quarto, illust. 1.25 +</p> +<h3> + POLLY COLOGNE SERIES. 3 vols. 3.00 +</h3> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> Polly Cologne.</li> +<li> The Jimmyjohns.</li> +<li> A Story Book for Children.</li> +</ul> +<h3> WILLIAM HENRY BOOKS. 3 volumes. 3.00</h3> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> William Henry Letters.</li> +<li> Lucy Maria.</li> +<li> William Henry and his Friends.</li> +</ul> +<p> + DOMESTIC PROBLEMS: Work and Culture in the Household. 1.00 +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> D. LOTHROP & COMPANY'S</h3> +<h2> BULLETIN OF NEW BOOKS. </h2> +<hr /> +<h3> + History of China. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Robert K. Douglass.</b> 12MO, CLOTH, ILLUSTRATED, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + Until this book appeared, a thoroughly good one-volume history of the + "Walled Kingdom" for popular use, was not to be had. There have been + many works upon China and the Chinese, but of these few have attempted + to summarize the history of that great empire and its citizens in a + single comprehensive work, and none have done so with such success as to + meet the popular need. In this volume we have an authentic, scholarly + and most interesting summary of Chinese history from the earliest period + to the present time. In addition to the careful editing of Mr. Arthur + Gilman, the book has had the advantage of the critical abilities of the + young Chinese scholar, Mr. Yan Phou Lee, of Yale College. The volume is + richly illustrated with appropriate engravings, and will rank among + standard books. +</p> +<h3> + Southern Alaska and the Sitkan Archipelago. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Eliza Ruhama Scidmore.</b> FULLY ILLUSTRATED, 12MO, CLOTH, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + No book yet published bears any comparison with this volume in respect + of valuable and authentic information relating to the history, + geography, topography, climate, natural scenery, inhabitants, and rich + resources of this wonderful <i>terra incognita</i>. The author, who is a + writer of well-known reputation, has had exceptional opportunities for + the preparation of her attractive work, having visited the regions + described, at different periods, under most favorable circumstances, and + having had access to the government documents relating to the history + and surveys of Alaska, aside from the kindly assistance of the experts + and scientists best acquainted with that marvellous region. Her book has + all of the interest of a delightfully written story of adventures in a + comparatively unknown region, and with the additional value which it + possesses as the only approach thus far made to trustworthy treatise + upon the history and resources of Alaska it will commend itself to all + persons interested in that country, either as students or + <i>voyageurs</i>. +</p> +<h3> + Many Colored Threads. +</h3> +<p> + <b>Selections from the writings of Goethe, edited by Carrie Adelaide + Cook.</b> EXTRA CLOTH, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + Those familiar with the writings of the great German author, and those + who know little of them, will be alike interested in this collection of + "best thoughts." Eloquence, pathos, romance, philosophy—a wide range of + sentiment and feeling, characteristic of the life of Goethe—are + revealed in these selections. The book is a worthy companion to the six + preceding volumes of the widely-circulated "Spare Minute + Series"—<i>Thoughts that Breathe</i>, Dean Stanley; <i>Cheerful + Words</i>, George MacDonald; <i>The Might of Right</i>, Gladstone; + <i>True Manliness</i>, Thos. Hughes; <i>Living Truths</i>, Charles + Kingsley; <i>Right to the Point</i>, Dr. Cuyler. +</p> +<h3> + Wide Awake, Volume I. +</h3> +<p> + PLAIN CLOTH BINDING, $1.75; EXTRA BINDING, COVERS STAMPED IN COLORS AND + GOLD, $2.25. +</p> +<p> + Including Charles Egbert Craddock's serial story "Down the Ravine," with + other serials by famous authors, and nearly three hundred original + illustrations by celebrated artists. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + Baccalaureate Sermons. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Rev. A.B. Peabody, D.D.LL.D.</b> 12MO, $1.25. +</p> +<p> + The sermons contained in this volume, delivered before the graduating + classes of Harvard University, it is safe to say are not excelled by any + productions of their kind. They are not only rarely appropriate, as + discourses addressed to educated young men upon the threshold of active + life, but are models of logical thought, and graceful rhetoric worthy + the study of all ministers. +</p> +<h3> + Interrupted. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Pansy (Mrs. G.R. Alden).</b> EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + It has all the charm of this most popular author's fascinating style, + grown riper each year, and possessing more of the peculiar power by + which she adapts herself to her varied audience. More than a hundred + thousand of Pansy's books are sold every year. +</p> +<h3> + Within the Shadow. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Dorothy Holroyd.</b> 12MO, CLOTH, $1.25. +</p> +<p> + "The most successful book of the year." "The plot is ingenious, yet not + improbable, the character drawing strong and vigorous, the story + throughout one of brilliancy and power." "The book cannot help making a + sensation."—<i>Boston Transcript.</i> "The author is an original and + vigorous writer, and at once takes rank with the best writers of + American fiction."—<i>Toledo Journal.</i> "A story of such brilliancy + and power as to at once entitle its author to recognition as a writer of + high ability."—<i>Journal Press</i>, St. Cloud. "The author has skill + in invention with the purest sentiment and good natural + style."—<i>Boston Globe.</i> +</p> +<h3> + How Success is Won. +</h3> +<p> + <b>(Little Biographies. Third Series.) By Sarah K. Bolton.</b> PRICE, $1. +</p> +<p> + This is the best of the recent books of this popular class of biography; + all its "successful men" are Americans, and with two or three exceptions + they are living and in the full tide of business and power. In each + case, the facts have been furnished to the author by the subject of the + biography, or by family friends; and Mrs. Bolton has chosen from this + authentic material those incidents which most fully illustrate the + successive steps, and the ruling principles, by which success has been + gained. A portrait accompanies each biography. +</p> +<h3> + In Case of Accident. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Dr. D.A. Sargent.</b> ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, 60 CENTS. +</p> +<p> + This little handbook is worth its weight in gold, and should be found on + the most convenient shelf of every family library. The author is + connected with the Harvard College Gymnasium, and the contents of the + volume are made up of practical talks delivered before the ladies' class + of the Gymnasium. His aim is to give such practical information as will + aid to self-preservation in times of danger, and to teach a few of the + simplest methods of meeting the common accidents and emergencies of + life. The illustrations are numerous and excellent. +</p> +<h3> + The Arnold Birthday Book. +</h3> +<p> + <b>Edited by his Daughters.</b> $1.25. +</p> +<p> + With an autograph introductory poem by Edwin Arnold, and choice + quotations from his poems for every day. The many admirers of the "Light + of Asia" will gladly welcome this graceful souvenir of the author, which + is handsomely illustrated and daintily finished. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + The Evolution of Dodd. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By William Hawley Smith.</b> EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + This remarkable book is destined to create as great a stir, in its way, + as "Ginx's Baby," although written in an entirely different style. It + treats of phases of young life as seen through the spectacles of a + keen-eyed man, sharp enough to let none of the intricacies of the newer + systems of education evade him. It should be read by every parent, + teacher, and public school officer in this or any other country. While + for pure amusement in watching Dodd's evolution, it is one of the + richest books of the season. +</p> +<h3> + Red Letter Stories. +</h3> +<p> + <b>Translated from the German by Miss Lucy Wheelock.</b> PRICE 60 CENTS. +</p> +<p> + Madame Johanna Spyri is pronounced by competent critics the best living + German writer for children. Miss Lucy Wheelock of the Chauncy Hall + School, Boston, has gracefully translated some of her most charming + tales, under the above title. This delightful volume, prettily bound and + illustrated, is one of the best selling books of the season. +</p> +<h3> + The Gray Masque and Other Poems. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Mary B. Dodge.</b> ILLUSTRATED, EXTRA CLOTH, $1.25. +</p> +<p> + The name of this author, whose reputation is already established, will + be at once recognized in connection with some of the choicest bits of + poetry contributed to recent periodical literature, such as "Indian + Summer," "My Baby," "Frozen Crew," etc., all of which, with many new and + equally excellent poems, are offered to the public in this unusually + attractive volume. +</p> +<h3> + Memorial of Rev. Warren H. Cudworth. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By His Sister;</b> WITH PORTRAIT, 380 PAGES, $1.50. +</p> +<p> + Simply told and remarkably interesting is this story of the life of one + of the most saintly of Christian men. It will be welcomed and read with + satisfaction by all who knew him, and to those who never saw him, it + will be full of suggestive thought. +</p> +<h3> + Money in Politics. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Hon. J.K. Upton.</b> LATE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE UNITED STATES + TREASURY. EXTRA CLOTH, GILT TOP. 12MO, $1.25. +</p> +<p> + This volume presents a complete history of money, or the circulating + medium, in the United States, from the colonial days to the present + time. Mr. Edward Atkinson, in his introduction, pronounces it the most + valuable work of the kind yet published. +</p> +<h3> + Lift up Your Hearts. +</h3> +<p> + <b>Compiled and arranged by Rose Porter.</b> 25 CENTS. +</p> +<p> + Helpful thoughts for overcoming the world. A vest pocket volume, in + dainty, flexible covers, printed in sepia. Bound in red cloth. +</p> +<h3> + A Romance of the Revolution. +</h3> +<p> + <b>(A Double Masquerade.) By Rev. Charles R. Talbot.</b> EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, + $1.25. +</p> +<p> + With illustrations by Share, Merrill and Taylor made from careful + studies. The portion describing the battle of Bunker Hill, as seen by + the boys, has been said to be one of the most graphic and telling + accounts ever written of that famous conflict. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + Health at Home Library. +</h3> +<p> + <b>Or, Mental and Physical Hygiene. By J. Mortimer Granville.</b> +</p> +<p> + 5 VOLS., 16MO, CLOTH, SOLD SEPARATELY, EACH SIXTY CENTS, THE LIBRARY $3.00. +</p> +<p> + I. THE SECRET OF A CLEAR HEAD, chapters on temperature, habits, + pleasures, etc. +</p> +<p> + II. SLEEP AND SLEEPLESSNESS, chapters on the nature of sleep, going to + sleep, sleeping, awakening, sleeplessness, sleep and food. +</p> +<p> + III. THE SECRET OF A GOOD MEMORY, chapters on what memory is, how it + works, taking in, storing, remembering, etc. +</p> +<p> + IV. COMMON MIND TROUBLES, chapters on defects in memory, confusion of + thought, sleeplessness, hesitancy and errors in speech, low spirits, etc. +</p> +<p> + V. HOW TO MAKE THE BEST OF LIFE, chapters on what constitutes health, on + feeling, breathing, drinking, eating, overwork, change, etc. +</p> +<h3> + Philosophiæ Quæstor. +</h3> +<p> + <b>Or, Days at Concord. By Julia R. Anagnos.</b> 12MO, 60 CENTS. +</p> +<p> + In this interesting book Mrs. Anagnos, one of the accomplished daughters + of Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, presents under cover of a pleasing narrative, a + sketch of the memorable Emerson and other sessions of the Concord School + of Philosophy. It has for its frontispiece an excellent picture of the + building occupied by this renowned school. +</p> +<h3> + Illiteracy and Mormonism. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Henry Randall Waite, Ph.D.</b>, LATE STATISTICIAN UNITED STATES + CENSUS, SECRETARY INTER-STATE COMMISSION ON FEDERAL AID TO EDUCATION. + 12MO, ANTIQUE PAPER COVERS, 25 CENTS. +</p> +<p> + These papers, as they appeared, in substance, in the <i>Princeton + Review</i>, attracted wide attention, and were characterized as "broad, + scholarly, and statesmanlike," and as "the most thoughtful and + conclusive arguments upon these subjects yet presented." "They demand + thoughtful consideration and respect."—<i>Boston Transcript</i>. +</p> +<h3> + Stories from the Pansy. +</h3> +<p> + SECOND SERIES, FULLY ILLUSTRATED, SIX VOLUMES IN A NEAT BOX, THE SET + $1.80. +</p> +<p> + A library of delightful short stories in which instruction is pleasingly + blended with entertainment. These stories, culled from the writings of + well-known authors, will command the favor of parents seeking the best + books for their children, and of those who desire the most acceptable + books for Sunday-school libraries. +</p> +<h3> + In the Woods and Out. +</h3> +<p> + <b>By Pansy</b>. ILLUSTRATED, 12MO, CLOTH, $1.00. +</p> +<p> + Here is a book admirably suited to the needs of that large class of + young folks who wish at times to read, or have read to them, the + choicest of short tales. Mothers and older sisters will make a note of + this, and for the twilight hour when the young folks clamor for "a + story," will provide themselves with "In the Woods and Out." +</p> +<h3> + Couldn't be Bought. +</h3> +<p> + <b>A Book for the Sunday-school Library. By Faye Huntington</b>. +</p> +<p> + 16MO, CLOTH, ILLUSTRATED, 75 CENTS. +</p> +<p> + For genuine excellence in both manner and sentiment, few writers of + books for the young excel the author of this excellent character study. + It is a book which will be equally interesting and profitable. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx13" name="pagexxx13"></a>[pg xxx13]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h3> + <b><i>FALL TERM</i></b> +</h3> +<center> + OF THE +</center> +<h3> + <b>NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY</b> +</h3> +<center> + OF +<br /> + <b>Music begins Sept. 10,1885.</b> +<br /> + NEW CLASSES +<br /> + Will be formed for beginners as well as for advanced +</center> +<p> + MUSIC Voice, Piano, Organ, Violin, Orchestral Instruments, Harmony, + Theory and Timing. +</p> +<p> + ART Drawing, Painting, Portraiture, Modeling, Wood Carving and + Embroidery. +</p> +<p> + ORATORY Vocal Technique, Elocution, Dramatic and Forensic Art +</p> +<p> + LANGUAGES French, German and Italian. +</p> +<p> + ENGLISH BRANCHES Arithmetic, Algebra, Grammar, Rhetoric, English + Literature and Latin. +</p> +<p> + PHYSICAL CULTURE A well equipped Gymnasium. +</p> +<p> + HOME Elegant accommodations for Lady Students, $4.50 to $7.50 per week, + including steam heat and electric light in every room, elevator, etc. +</p> +<p> + Classes in Sight Singing, Church Music, Glees, Chorus Work, Analysis of + Symphonies, Lectures on Music, Art and Literature by eminent + specialists, concerts, recitals, etc., amounting in all to 180 hours per + term, <i>Free</i> to all regular Students in any department. Send for + beautiful illustrated calendar, free, to +</p> +<center> + <span style="font-size:150%;"><b>E. TOURJEE</b>, Director,</span><br /> + <i>Franklin Sq., Boston, Mass.</i> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h3> + CHARLES K. WADHAM & CO., +</h3> +<center> + 166 DEVONSHIRE STREET,<br /> + BOSTON, MASS. +<br /> + WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER OF +<br /> + <span style="font-size:150%;">BLANK BOOKS,</span> +</center> +<center> +<span style="font-size:150%;"> <i>Scrap Albums</i></span> +<br /> + ——AND—— +<br /> +<span style="font-size:150%;"> <i>Fine Stationery.</i></span><br /> +</center> +<center> + A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF<br /> +<span style="font-size:150%;"> PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS</span> +<br /> + ——AND—— +<br /> +<span style="font-size:150%;"> GENERAL STATIONERS' GOODS</span> +</center> +<p> + <i>Pocket Books, Christmas Novelties in great variety.</i> +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:175px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/527.jpg"><img src="images/527.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="GLOBE LETTER FILING CABINETS" /></a> +</div> +<h3>GLOBE LETTER FILING +<br /> +<i>CABINETS</i>.</h3> +<center><i>Most Perfect System Known.</i></center> +<p> All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files.</p> +<p>Over $20,000 worth in use <b>in Boston</b> alone.</p> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> <i>Quick Reference</i>.</li> +<li> <i>No Mutilation of Papers</i>.</li> +<li> <i>Rapid Filing</i>.</li> +<li> <i>Handsome Workmanship</i>.</li> +</ul> +<center> +<span style="font-size: 200%;"> W.W. EDWARDS,</span><br /> <b>SELLING AGENT,</b> +<br /> +<b><i>The Globe Files Company</i>, 166 Devonshire St., Boston.</b> +</center> +<table border="0" width="100%" align="center" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>SCRAP FILES.</li> +<li>PAMPHLET CASES.</li> +<li>DOCUMENT BOXES.</li> +<li>NICKLE CLIP BOARDS.</li> +</ul></td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>ROLL TOP DESKS.</li> +<li>CLOTH BOXES, all sizes.</li> +<li>LAWYERS FILING CASES.</li> +<li>CASES for Price Lists, etc.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> +<center> +<b>ESTIMATES</b> Furnished of filing devices for Banks, Railroads, +Mercantile Firms, Insurance Companies, etc. +<br /> +<i>N.B. Correspondence Solicited.</i> +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx14" name="pagexxx14"></a>[pg xxx14]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:175px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/528.jpg"><img src="images/528.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="VICTOR L. CHANDLER ENGRAVER ON WOOD" /></a> +</div> +<h2> +VICTOR L. CHANDLER <br /> +ENGRAVER ON WOOD </h2> +<h3> 43 MILK ST. <br /> +BOSTON <br /> +MASS. </h3> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/510a.jpg"><img src="images/510a.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES" /></a> +</div> +<h2> COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES:<br /> + FOR ROAD USE; +</h2> +<center> + STANCH AND RELIABLE<br /> + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE<br /> + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP<br /> + STRONG, GRACEFUL—EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE +</center><center> + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE<br /> + THE POPE MFG. CO.<br /> + 597 Washington St. Boston, Mass. +</center> +<p> + "If I could not get another bicycle I would not give mine for its weight + in solid gold. For fifteen years I lost from three to eight days every + month with stubborn sick headache. Since I have been riding the bicycle + I have lost only two days from that cause, and I haven't spent a dollar + for a doctor." + REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST" +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h3>RUBBER CLOTHING COMPANY.</h3> +<center> + F.M. SHEPARD, <i>Pres</i>. J.A. MINOTT, <i>Sec</i>.<br /> + J. FRANCIS HAYWARD, <i>Manager</i><br /> + <i>at Boston.</i> +<br /> + <i>No. 160 Congress, cor. Franklin Street</i>, +<br /> + <b>Boston, Mass.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h3> + CHARLES H. NORTH & CO. +</h3> +<center> + PACKERS AND CURERS OF +<br /> + PORK, BEEF, LARD, HAMS, BACON, LIVE AND DRESSED HOGS, ETC. +<br /> + <i>33 & 34 NORTH MARKET ST.</i>, +<br /> + CHARLES H. NORTH, S. HENRY SKILTON, <b>Boston, U.S.A.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> ARTHUR P. DODGE</span> +<br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> <b>Attorney and Counsellor at Law,</b></span><br /> + <i>31 MILK ST., ROOM 46</i>, +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Notary Public. +<br /> + Commissioner for New Hampshire. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> +Bay State Monthly Company, Publishers and Printers, 43 Milk Street, Boston. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx15" name="pagexxx15"></a>[pg xxx15]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> + THE +<br /> + New England Business Directory +<br /> + <i>AND GAZETTEER</i> +<br /> + For 1885. +</h2> +<center> + ☞ <i>A very Valuable Book of Reference to every Business Man.</i> ☜ +<br /> + CONTAINING CAREFULLY COLLECTED LISTS OF THE +<br /> + Merchants, Manufacturers, Professional and other Business Men throughout + the six New England States, classified by Business, Town, and Post-Office. +<br /> + ALSO +<br /> + Banks, Savings Banks, Insurance, Manufacturing, Gas-Light and other + Incorporated Companies. Post-Offices, Newspapers, Colleges, Academies, + Expresses, Railroads, Together with other useful information often + required in the COUNTING-ROOM. +</center> +<h3> + A COMPLETE NEW ENGLAND GAZETTEER +</h3> +<center> + Is a prominent feature of this edition, comprising a concise description + of the Cities, Towns, Villages and Post-Offices, showing Population, + Telegraph and Railroad Stations, Money Order Offices, etc. +<br /> + <i>A Colored Map of New England Accompanies Each Book</i>. +br /> + The whole forming a large Octavo Volume of 1892 pages, handsomely + printed on fine paper, and substantially bound. +<br /> + <b>PRICE SIX DOLLARS.</b> +<br /> +<span style="font-size:150%;"><b><i>Sampson, Murdoch, & Co.</i>,</b></span> +<br /> + (Formerly Sampson, Davenport, & Co.) +<br /> +<span style="font-size:125%;"><b>PUBLISHERS, 155 FRANKLIN STREET, BOSTON.</b></span> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + COOLIDGE HOUSE, +<br /> + BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. +</center> +<p class="quote"> + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording <i>most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>COOLIDGE CAFE,</b> +<br /> + <b>EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." +</p> +<center> + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. +<br /> + <i>The Best Material, Cooking, and Service.</i> +<br /> + <b>I.N. ANDREWS & CO.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>STONINGTON LINE.</b> +<br /> + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH +<br /> + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, +<br /> + AND ALL POINTS +<br /> + <b>SOUTH AND WEST,</b> +<br /> + Avoiding Point Judith. +<br /> + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers +<br /> + <b>Stonington and Narraganset.</b> +</center> +<p> + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, +</p> +<center> + <b>DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.)</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + <i>early trains South and West.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES.</b> +<br /> + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at +<br /> + <b>214 Washington Street, corner of State,</b> +<br /> + AND AT +<br /> + <b>BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. +</p> +<center> + <span class="sc">A.A. Folsom</span>, Superintendent B. & P.R.R.<br /> + <span class="sc">F.W. Popple</span>, General Passenger Agent.<br /> + <span class="sc">J.W. Richardson</span>, Agent, Boston. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx16" name="pagexxx16"></a>[pg xxx16]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. +<br /> + WITH 40 MAPS. +</h2> +<h3> + <span class="sc">By Col. Henry B. Carrington, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D.</span> +</h3> +<center> + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. +</center> +<center> + <b>A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass.</b> +</center> + +<p> + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:— +</p> +<p> + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.—<i>Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey</i>. +</p> +<p> + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.—<i>Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.—<i>Henry Day, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.—<i>Geo. + Bancroft</i>. +</p> +<p> + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.—<i>Benson J. Lossing</i>. +</p> +<p> + The maps are just splendid.—<i>Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J.</i> +</p> +<p> + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.—<i>Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + Of permanent standard authority.—<i>Gen. De Peister, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.—<i>Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris</i>. +</p> +<p> + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.—<i>Z. Chandler</i>. +</p> +<p> + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.—<i>B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis</i>. +</p> +<p> + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.—<i>London Telegraph</i>. +</p> +<p> + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.—<i>Army and Navy Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.—<i>Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England</i>. +</p> +<p> + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.—<i>Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State</i>. +</p> +<p> + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.—<i>A. de + Rochambeau, Paris</i>. +</p> +<p> + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.—<i>Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England</i>. +</p> +<p> + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.—<i>Harper's + Magazine</i>. +</p> +<p> + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.—<i>N.Y. Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.—<i>The Nation</i>. +</p> +<p> + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. +</p> +<p> + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.—<i>Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J.</i> +</p> +<p> + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.—<i>Gen. W.T. + Sherman</i>. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. +</h2> +<h3> + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. +</h3> +<center> + Published by <b>A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York</b>. +</center> +<p> + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. +</p> +<p> + The <span class="sc">Red</span> Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. +</p> +<p> + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. +</p> +<p> + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">The Secretary of War</span> has placed the "<span class="sc">Battle Maps and Charts</span>" at <span class="sc">Army + Post Schools</span>, at government expense. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">Five Steel Engravings of Washington</span> accompany the volume. The <span class="sc">St. Memin</span> + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also <span class="sc">Peale's</span> painting + (1772), <span class="sc">Houdon's</span> bust (1784). <span class="sc">Trumbull's</span> painting (1792) and <span class="sc">Stuart's</span> + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. +</p> +<p> + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. +</p> +<p> + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. +</p> +<h3> + NOTICES. +</h3> +<p> + Invaluable to the student of American History.—<i>Baltimore (Md.) + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.—<i>Army and Navy Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.—<i>Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.—<i>The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)</i>. +</p> +<p> + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.—<i>N.Y. + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.—<i>N.Y. Evening + Post</i>. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx17" name="pagexxx17"></a>[pg xxx17]</span> +</p> + + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/531.jpg"><img src="images/531.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="CREOSOTE STAINS." /></a> +</div> + +<!-- Intentionally commented out text from above image +<p> + CREOSOTE STAINS.<br /> + Patented Apr. 29th, 1884.<br /> + for<br /> + Shingles, Clapboards &<br /> + other exterior woodwork.<br /> + Sam'l Cabot Jr.<br /> + Sole Manufacturer<br /> + 70 Kilby St. Boston.<br /> + Descriptive Circular by mail on application. +</p> +<h2> ——CABOT'S—— +<br /> CREOSOTE STAINS</h2> +<center> ——ON——</center> +<h2> EXTERIOR WOOD WORK.</h2> +--> + +<p> + These Stains have been <i>Largely</i> and <i>Successfully</i> used + during the past few seasons. +</p> +<p> + Owing to the strange PRESERVATIVE POWER of the Creosote, wood treated + with this Stain <i>cannot decay</i> but simply wears away from the force + of the weather. +</p> +<p> + The Stain in weathering does not become shabby like paint; but the + surfaces assume weather beaten grays, very <i>soft</i> and + <i>harmonious</i>, and varying slightly according to the original hue. + The Stain may be renewed at any time with <i>little trouble</i> or + expense, as the natural hues which nature gives in combination with the + stain are allowed to stay. +</p> +<p> + Houses treated with these Stains may be seen at almost any of the + <i>seaside</i> and <i>suburban</i> resorts of NEW ENGLAND, and on the + NEW JERSEY and LONG ISLAND COASTS. +</p> +<center> + FOR ARTISTIC COLORING EFFECTS THEY ARE FAR SUPERIOR<br /> + TO PAINT, WHILE THEIR PRESERVATIVE POWER<br /> + MAKES THEM DOUBLY VALUABLE. +</center> +<hr /> +<center> + For full descriptive circular, samples and price-list, address +<br /> +<span style="font-size:200%;"> + SAMUEL CABOT,<br /> + 70 Kilby Street, Boston, Mass.</span> +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx18" name="pagexxx18"></a>[pg xxx18]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<!-- Intentionally commented out text content of following image +<h2> + SIMPSON<br /> + SPRING WATER. +</h2> +<h3> + SPRING HOUSE + <i>AND</i> + <b><i>Bottling Establishment</i></b> +</h3> +<center> + SO. EASTON, MASS. +</center> +--> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/532.jpg"><img src="images/532.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="Map" /></a> +</div> +<p> +This is the Purest and Most Effective of all Medicinal Spring Waters. +Possessing remarkable Curative Properties for diseases of the +<i>STOMACH</i>, <i>LIVER</i>, <i>KIDNEYS</i> and <i>BLADDER</i>. +</p> +<hr /> +<h3>A MILD CATHARTIC AND ACTIVE DIURETIC.</h3> +<center> +<b>PROF. RAPHAEL PUMPELLY</b>, Chemist National Board of Health. +</center> +<p> +[NOTE.—This analysis, with a letter of recommendation from Prof. +Pumpelly, was read before the Newport Sanitary Protective Society, +Jan. 12, 1884.] +</p> +<center> <i>PARTS IN 1,000,000</i></center> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="50%" summary="residue, parts per million"> +<tr><td> Total Residue </td><td align="right">44.6 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Silica </td><td align="right">11.5 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Iron and Alumina </td><td align="right"> 0.7 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Lime </td><td align="right">10.5 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Magnesia </td><td align="right"> 1.5 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Chlorine </td><td align="right"> 4.6 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Ammonia </td><td align="right"> 0.06 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Albumoid Ammonia </td><td align="right"> 0.06 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +The above analysis shows a total residue of about 2.6 grains in one +gallon of 231 cubic inches. +</p> +<p> +The object of the above analysis is to show the great purity of this +water. Its curative properties cannot be determined by a chemical +analysis. No combination of the above-mentioned minerals alone would +produce the same effects. The Spring possesses a peculiarity and an +individuality of its own which no one ever has been able to explain. It +is one of Nature's remedies. Its medicinal effects can only be +determined by a thorough trial. +</p> + +<p style="text-align: right;"> +BOSTON, April 24, 1885. +</p> +<p> + Messrs. HOWARD BROS., +</p> +<p> + <i>Dear Sirs</i>,—"After many careful trials of the Simpson Spring + Water in urinary disorders, extending over one year, I am convinced + (despite my previous prejudices, excited by the extravagant claims made + for other Springs,) that its <i>properties</i> are + <i>characteristic</i>, and as <i>clinically trustworthy</i> as are those + of terebinthina, lithia, or many other of the partially proven drugs. I + have found it surprisingly gratifying as an adjuvant in the cure of + albuminuria, and in lowering the specific gravity of the urine in + Saccharine Diabetes its action is promptly and lastingly helpful. It is + mildly cathartic and an active diuretic." +</p> +<p> + DR. J. HEBER SMITH,<br /> + <i>Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of Medicine.</i> +</p> +<p> + Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and + Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by +</p> +<center> + <b><i>HOWARD BROS., Managers</i>,</b><br /> + 117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.) +<br /> + —OR— +<br /> + GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York. +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx19" name="pagexxx19"></a>[pg xxx19]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<table summary="" width="100%" border="0" align="center"> +<tr><td valign="top" width="25%"> +<h3> FIRE AND MARINE. </h3> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<h2> H.E. Abbott <br /> +Insurance Agency. </h2> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="25%"> +<h3> LIFE AND ACCIDENT. </h3> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> THIS AGENCY REPRESENTS </center> + +<table summary="" width="100%" border="0" align="center"> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> ROYAL INSURANCE CO., of Liverpool </li> +<li> SUN FIRE OFFICE, of London </li> +<li> HANOVER, of New York </li> +<li> WASHINGTON, of Boston </li> +<li> QUINCY MUTUAL, of Quincy </li> +<li> NORTHERN, of London </li> +</ul> +</td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> FIRE ASSOCIATION, of Philadelphia </li> +<li> PENNSYLVANIA, of Philadelphia </li> +<li> TRADER'S, of Chicago </li> +<li> DORCHESTER MUTUAL of Boston </li> +<li> OLD WORCESTER MUTUAL, of Worcester. </li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> + +<center> +And other first-class Companies which have established a <i>reputation +second to none for liberal adjustment and prompt payment in case of loss.</i> +</center> +<center> +<span style="font-size: 150%;">OFFICES</span> <br /> +ADVERTISER BUILDING, BOSTON. <br /> +WASHINGTON STREET, BROOKLINE. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:100px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/533.jpg"><img src="images/533.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE." /></a> +</div> +<h2><i>LACTART.</i></h2> +<center> + (<b>MILK ACID.</b>)<br /> + ——FOR——<br /> + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain.<br /> + <i>A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY.</i> +</center> +<p> + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or <i>ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE</i>. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. <i>SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St.,<br /> BOSTON, MASS.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h3> + REMOVED TO 98 FRONT ST.<br /> + <i>Kyes and Woodbury</i>,<br /> + Designers and Wood Engravers,<br /> + WORCESTER, MASS. +</h3> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + Established by ISAIAH THOMAS in 1770.<br /> + The oldest Book and Job Printing Office in the United States. +</center> +<h3> + BOOK AND JOB PRINTING<br /> + OF EVERY DESCRIPTION +</h3> +<center> + <i>Neatly and Promptly Executed and at Fair Prices.</i> +<br /> + DANIEL SEAGRAVE,<br /> + 442 MAIN STREET, WORCESTER, MASS. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>CHARLES HAMILTON,</b><br /> + <i>BOOK, JOB & CARD PRINTER</i>,<br /> + 311 MAIN STREET,<br /> + WORCESTER, MASS. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + THE SOUTH. +</h2> +<h3> + <b>A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress.</b> +</h3> +<center> + <i>ESTABLISHED 1871.</i> +</center> +<p> + The South is conducted with candor and independence, and is invaluable + to all who are interested in the industrial developement of the Southern + States. +</p> +<p> + Published by the South Publishing Co., 85 Warren St., New York. Branch + offices: <i>Advertiser Building, Boston, Mass.</i>, Ocala, Fla., Atlanta, + Ga., Lamar, Mo., Huntsville, Ala., Raleigh, N.C., London, Eng. +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx20" name="pagexxx20"></a>[pg xxx20]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + CANTON BLEACH. +</h1> +<p> + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. +</p> +<p> + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. +</p> +<p> + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. +</p> +<p> + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. +</p> +<p> + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have <i>examined the</i> + "<i>Canton Bleach</i>." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + <i>see the goods</i>; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, <i>to see if the stamp</i> "Canton Bleach" is on it. +</p> +<p> + NOTICE.—Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by <span class="sc">Messrs. C.F. Hovey & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">Shepard, + Norwell & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">Hogg, Brown & Taylor</span>, <span class="sc">Chandler & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">R.H. White & Co.</span>, + <span class="sc">Jordan, Marsh & Co.</span>, and others. +</p> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/534.jpg"><img src="images/534.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882 + + TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK" /></a> +</div> + +<p> + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. +</p> +<p> + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the +</p> +<h3> + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY,<br /> + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</h3> +<center> + <span class="sc">Edward W. Howe</span>, Treas. + <span class="sc">Jas. L. Little, Jr.</span>, Pres. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx21" name="pagexxx21"></a>[pg xxx21]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<!-- +<h1> + NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY +</h1> +--> +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/535.jpg"><img src="images/535.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="New England Conservatory of Music Franklin Square Boston" /></a> +</div> +<!-- +<h3> + New England Conservatory of Music<br /> + Franklin Square Boston +</h3> +--> +<center> + <i>Largest and Best-Appointed School of Music, Literature and Art in the + World.</i> +</center> +<p> + MUSIC is taught in all its departments, Instrumental and Vocal, + including Pianoforte, Organ, Violin, and all Orchestral and Band + Instruments, Voice Culture and Singing, Harmony, Theory and + Orchestration, Church Music, Oratorio and Chorus Practice, Art of + Conducting; also, Tuning and Repairing Pianos and Organs. All under the + very best teachers, in classes and private. +</p> +<p> + SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS.—Drawing, Painting, and Modeling from Casts and + from Nature, in Crayon, Water and Oil Colors; Portraiture and China + Decorating with some of the best artists in the country. In classes and + private. +</p> +<p> + COLLEGE OF ORATORY.—Vocal Technique, Elocution, Rhetorical Oratory, + Dramatic and Lyric Art. +</p> +<p> + SCHOOL OF MODERN LANGUAGES.—French, German and Italian, under best + foreign professors.—Thorough course leading to Diploma. +</p> +<p> + SCHOOL OF GENERAL LITERATURE.—Common and higher English branches, + Latin, Mathematics and Literature. +</p> +<p> + THE NEW HOME is located in the heart of Boston, confessedly the Musical, + Literary and Artistic Centre of America. The beautiful park in front, + and the surrounding broad streets make it both healthful and delightful. + It is splendidly equipped for both Home and the Schools, furnishing Home + accommodations for 500 lady students, and Class Accommodations for 3000 + lady and gentleman students. +</p> +<p> + COLLATERAL ADVANTAGES. Well equipped Gymnasium, resident physician, + large musical and general library; and free classes, lectures by eminent + specialists, recitals, concerts, etc., amounting to 180 hours per term. +</p> +<p> + RECENT ADDITIONS TO THE FACULTIES.—The maestro Augusto Rotoli, the + great Italian Tenor and singing teacher; Herr Carl Faelten, foremost + pianist and teacher; Leandro Campanari, Violin Virtuoso teacher; Prof. + W. J. Rolfe, the eminent Shakespearean Scholar and Critic; Mr. William + Willard, the famous portrait painter; Mlle. Emilie Faller, artist from + Paris, and Mr. Jas. E. Phillips, steward and caterer, of 20 years' + experience. +</p> +<p> + 2003 students, from 55 states, territories, British Provinces and + foreign countries in attendance last year. +</p> +<p> + TUITION, $5 to $20 per Term. Board and room, $4.50 to $7.50 per week. + Steam heat and Electric light in all rooms. +</p> +<center> + <b>Fall Term Begins September 10, 1885.</b> +</center> +<p> + Send for new and beautifully illustrated Calendar, free, to, + E. TOURJEE, DIR., + FRANKLIN SQUARE, BOSTON. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx22" name="pagexxx22"></a>[pg xxx22]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/536.jpg"><img src="images/536.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="THE OLD CORNER BOOKSTORE" /></a> +</div> + +<h2> + THE OLD CORNER BOOK STORE. +</h2> +<p> + The above illustration, especially prepared by Harper and Brothers for + George P. Lathrop's article on "Literary and Social Life in Boston," + that appeared in <i>Harper's Monthly Magazine</i> for February, is a + good representation of the outward appearance of the quaint and + picturesque old building standing on the corner of Washington and School + Streets. +</p> +<p> + Famous as the "Corner Store" is as an old landmark, it is justly more + famous as the intellectual birthplace of many of the best known works in + American literature, the firm of Ticknor & Fields—whose publishing + foresight and enterprise have imperishably connected their names with + American authors—having occupied it during one of the most brilliant + chapters of American literary history. +</p> +<p> + Under the energetic auspices of Cupples, Upham & Co., it has become one + of the most complete retail book establishments in the country, and so + popular a resort that all Boston may with a little exaggeration be said + to pass through it in a day. To every stranger it is, from its present + literary attractiveness, a place not to be overlooked. The literary men + of Boston make it their lounging-place and chief rendezvous. To stroll + into the "Old Corner" for a chat, a glimpse at the last new book and + magazine, is with them a daily duty, as it is with the Bostonian + generally. It is a popular shopping-place with ladies, who patronize its + church department for works of devotion, prayer books, hymnals, and + Bibles. The reason of the extensive patronage which the establishment + receives from all classes of readers is due to its admirable department + system. It has a department for medical, scientific, and agricultural + works; another for maps, globes, and guide books; another for + theological literature; another for books in fine bindings, illustrated + works, etc; another for sporting and yachting books, and out-door + literature generally; one for juvenile books; another for English books, + as well as one for American miscellaneous works; and, lastly, special + counters for newspapers, periodicals, and novels. It is seldom without + the last "new thing" in English, French, or American literature. +</p> +<p> + The firm does an extensive importing business, and pays special + attention to the supplying of Town Libraries and Clubs. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx23" name="pagexxx23"></a>[pg xxx23]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. +<br /> + WITH 40 MAPS. +</h2> +<h3> + <span class="sc">By Col. Henry B. Carrington, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D.</span> +</h3> +<center> + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. +</center> +<center> + <b>A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass.</b> +</center> + +<p> + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:— +</p> +<p> + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.—<i>Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey</i>. +</p> +<p> + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.—<i>Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.—<i>Henry Day, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.—<i>Geo. + Bancroft</i>. +</p> +<p> + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.—<i>Benson J. Lossing</i>. +</p> +<p> + The maps are just splendid.—<i>Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J.</i> +</p> +<p> + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.—<i>Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + Of permanent standard authority.—<i>Gen. De Peister, N.Y.</i> +</p> +<p> + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.—<i>Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris</i>. +</p> +<p> + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.—<i>Z. Chandler</i>. +</p> +<p> + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.—<i>B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis</i>. +</p> +<p> + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.—<i>London Telegraph</i>. +</p> +<p> + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.—<i>Army and Navy Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.—<i>Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England</i>. +</p> +<p> + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.—<i>Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State</i>. +</p> +<p> + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.—<i>A. de + Rochambeau, Paris</i>. +</p> +<p> + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.—<i>Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England</i>. +</p> +<p> + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.—<i>Harper's + Magazine</i>. +</p> +<p> + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.—<i>N.Y. Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.—<i>The Nation</i>. +</p> +<p> + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. +</p> +<p> + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.—<i>Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J.</i> +</p> +<p> + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.—<i>Gen. W.T. + Sherman</i>. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. +</h2> +<h3> + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. +</h3> +<center> + Published by <b>A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York</b>. +</center> +<p> + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. +</p> +<p> + The <span class="sc">Red</span> Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. +</p> +<p> + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. +</p> +<p> + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">The Secretary of War</span> has placed the "<span class="sc">Battle Maps and Charts</span>" at <span class="sc">Army + Post Schools</span>, at government expense. +</p> +<p> + <span class="sc">Five Steel Engravings of Washington</span> accompany the volume. The <span class="sc">St. Memin</span> + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also <span class="sc">Peale's</span> painting + (1772), <span class="sc">Houdon's</span> bust (1784). <span class="sc">Trumbull's</span> painting (1792) and <span class="sc">Stuart's</span> + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. +</p> +<p> + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. +</p> +<p> + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. +</p> +<h3> + NOTICES. +</h3> +<p> + Invaluable to the student of American History.—<i>Baltimore (Md.) + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.—<i>Army and Navy Journal</i>. +</p> +<p> + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.—<i>Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.—<i>The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)</i>. +</p> +<p> + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.—<i>N.Y. + Herald</i>. +</p> +<p> + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.—<i>N.Y. Evening + Post</i>. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx24" name="pagexxx24"></a>[pg xxx24]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage" style="line-height: 300%;"> +<h3> + ESTABLISHED 1871. +</h3> +<h1> + THE SOUTH +</h1> +<h2> + <b>A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress</b>. +</h2> +<center> + The SOUTH is the oldest journal in the<br /> + country devoted exclusively to the<br /> + developement of the Southern States,<br /> + and is indispensable to<br /> + business men. +</center> +<center> + Subscription Price, $3.00 a year. +</center> +<h3> + <i>The South Publishing Company</i><br /> + 85 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. +</h3> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx25" name="pagexxx25"></a>[pg xxx25]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> S.M. SPENCER'S </h1> +<h2> <b>STENCIL AND RUBBER STAMP WORKS,</b> 112 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, MASS. </h2> + +<ul style="list-style:none;"> +<li>SEAL PRESSES,</li> +<li>WAX SEALS,</li> +<li>STEEL STAMPS,</li> +<li>STEEL ALPHABETS and FIGURES,</li> +<li>BRASS ALPHABETS,</li> +<li>COMBINATION NUMBERING WHEELS,</li> +<li>BRUSHES,</li> +<li>INK, ALL COLORS,</li> +<li>INDELIBLE INK,</li> +<li>RUBBER STAMP INK,</li> +<li>SELF-INKING PADS,</li> +<li>KEY CHECKS,</li> +<li>BAGGAGE and HOTEL CHECKS,</li> +<li>BRASS CHECKS,</li> +<li>RUBBER STAMPS, (with 120 styles of letters to select from.)</li> +<li>SELF-INKING RUBBER STAMPS, (more than 30 different styles.)</li> +<li>DATING & RECEIPTING STAMPS, (10 different styles.)</li> +<li>PENCIL and POCKET STAMPS,</li> +<li>PRINTING WHEELS,</li> +<li>METAL BODIED RUBBER FACED TYPE, (for hand printing.)</li> +<li>SHOE LINING STAMPS,</li> +<li>AUTOMATIC NUMBERING STAMPS,</li> +<li>RUBBER NUMBERING STAMPS,</li> +<li>STENCIL DIES,</li> +<li>BURNING BRANDS.</li> +</ul> + +<p> AGENTS' OUTFITS For Stencils, Key Checks, and Rubber Stamp Work, and +all reliable goods connected with the business wholesale and retail. +</p> + +<center> <i>Send for illustrated catalogue. All goods first-class and warranted +in every respect.</i> </center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:175px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/527.jpg"><img src="images/527.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="GLOBE LETTER FILING CABINETS" /></a> +</div> +<h3>GLOBE LETTER FILING +<br /> +<i>CABINETS</i>.</h3> +<center><i>Most Perfect System Known.</i></center> +<p> All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files.</p> +<p>Over $20,000 worth in use <b>in Boston</b> alone.</p> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> <i>Quick Reference</i>.</li> +<li> <i>No Mutilation of Papers</i>.</li> +<li> <i>Rapid Filing</i>.</li> +<li> <i>Handsome Workmanship</i>.</li> +</ul> +<center> +<span style="font-size: 200%;"> W.W. EDWARDS,</span><br /> <b>SELLING AGENT,</b> +<br /> +<b><i>The Globe Files Company</i>, 166 Devonshire St., Boston.</b> +</center> +<table border="0" width="100%" align="center" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>SCRAP FILES.</li> +<li>PAMPHLET CASES.</li> +<li>DOCUMENT BOXES.</li> +<li>NICKLE CLIP BOARDS.</li> +</ul></td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>ROLL TOP DESKS.</li> +<li>CLOTH BOXES, all sizes.</li> +<li>LAWYERS FILING CASES.</li> +<li>CASES for Price Lists, etc.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> +<center> +<b>ESTIMATES</b> Furnished of filing devices for Banks, Railroads, +Mercantile Firms, Insurance Companies, etc. +<br /> +<i>N.B. Correspondence Solicited.</i> +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx26" name="pagexxx26"></a>[pg xxx26]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + THE LARGEST AND BEST HOUSE TO BUY SHADE GOODS FROM. +</h3> +<h1> + CUSHMAN BROS., <span style="font-size:75%!important;">AND</span> CO., +</h1> +<center> + MANUFACTURERS OF +</center> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/540b.jpg"><img src="images/540b.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="CUSHMAN'S SELF-ACTING SHADE ROLLER." /></a> +</div> + +<center> + <b>Shade Rollers, Window Shades, Brass and Nickel Shade Trimmings, + Hollands and Upholsterer's Hardware.</b> +</center> +<center> + IMPORTERS OF +</center> +<h3> + KING'S FIRST QUALITY SCOTCH HOLLANDS. +</h3> +<center> + 82, 84 & 86 HAWLEY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</center> +<p> + ☞ An inspection of our stock is cordially invited. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <b>ARTISTS' MATERIALS.</b> +</h2> +<h3> + <i>Decorative Art Goods.</i><br /> + <b>Mathematical Instruments,</b><br /> + <b>Architects' & Engineers Supplies, etc., etc.</b> +</h3> +<hr /> +<h2> + FROST AND ADAMS, IMPORTERS +</h2> +<center> + <b>No. 37 Cornhill, Boston.</b> +<br /> + F.S. FROST. + H.A. LAWRENCE. +</center> +<p> + Illustrated catalogue free. + Mention this magazine. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h3> BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY</h3> +<h2> <b>Publishers</b><br /> AND<br /> <b>Printers,</b></h2> +<center> 43 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. </center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> ESTABLISHED 1884</center> +<div class="figure" style="width:150px; float:right;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/540a.jpg"><img src="images/540a.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="H.C. WHITCOMB & CO. ELECTROTYPERS, 42, ARCH STREET, BOSTON." /></a> +</div> + +<h2> + <b>ELECTROTYPES</b> +</h2> +<center> + FROM +<br /> + <b>Wood or Photo-Engraved Cuts and Type Forms.</b> +<br /> + Type Composition and Engraving for Electrotyping. +<br /> + <b>Telephone Connection. Passenger Elevator.</b> +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx27" name="pagexxx27"></a>[pg xxx27]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:100px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/533.jpg"><img src="images/533.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE." /></a> +</div> +<h2><i>LACTART.</i></h2> +<center> + (<b>MILK ACID.</b>)<br /> + ——FOR——<br /> + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain.<br /> + <i>A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY.</i> +</center> +<p> + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or <i>ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE</i>. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. <i>SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St.,<br /> BOSTON, MASS.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>STONINGTON LINE.</b> +<br /> + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH +<br /> + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, +<br /> + AND ALL POINTS +<br /> + <b>SOUTH AND WEST,</b> +<br /> + Avoiding Point Judith. +<br /> + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers +<br /> + <b>Stonington and Narraganset.</b> +</center> +<p> + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, +</p> +<center> + <b>DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.)</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + <i>early trains South and West.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES.</b> +<br /> + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at +<br /> + <b>214 Washington Street, corner of State,</b> +<br /> + AND AT +<br /> + <b>BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. +</p> +<center> + <span class="sc">A.A. Folsom</span>, Superintendent B. & P.R.R.<br /> + <span class="sc">F.W. Popple</span>, General Passenger Agent.<br /> + <span class="sc">J.W. Richardson</span>, Agent, Boston. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + COOLIDGE HOUSE, +<br /> + BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. +</center> +<p class="quote"> + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording <i>most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>COOLIDGE CAFE,</b> +<br /> + <b>EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." +</p> +<center> + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. +<br /> + <i>The Best Material, Cooking, and Service.</i> +<br /> + <b>I.N. ANDREWS & CO.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/541b.jpg"><img src="images/541b.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="Banjo" /></a> +</div> +<h3> + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. +</h3> +<p> + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. +</p> +<h2> <b>FAIRBANKS</b> AND <b>COLE,</b> </h2> +<center> + <i>MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS</i>,<br /> + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx28" name="pagexxx28"></a>[pg xxx28]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + CANTON BLEACH. +</h1> +<p> + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. +</p> +<p> + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. +</p> +<p> + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. +</p> +<p> + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. +</p> +<p> + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have <i>examined the</i> + "<i>Canton Bleach</i>." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + <i>see the goods</i>; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, <i>to see if the stamp</i> "Canton Bleach" is on it. +</p> +<p> + NOTICE.—Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by <span class="sc">Messrs. C.F. Hovey & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">Shepard, + Norwell & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">Hogg, Brown & Taylor</span>, <span class="sc">Chandler & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">R.H. White & Co.</span>, + <span class="sc">Jordan, Marsh & Co.</span>, and others. +</p> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/534.jpg"><img src="images/534.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882 + + TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK" /></a> +</div> + +<p> + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. +</p> +<p> + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the +</p> +<h3> + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY,<br /> + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</h3> +<center> + <span class="sc">Edward W. Howe</span>, Treas. + <span class="sc">Jas. L. Little, Jr.</span>, Pres. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx29" name="pagexxx29"></a>[pg xxx29]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2> An Entirely New Edition of Lord Byron's</h2> +<h1> CHILDE HAROLD,</h1> +<center><span class="sc">With Numerous New and Beautiful Illustrations on Wood.</span></center> +<center> + THE DRAWINGS BY +</center> +<p> + Harry Fenn, F. Myruck, S.L. Smith, G.G. Harley, E.H. Garrett, G. Perkins, + F.B. Schell, J.D. Woodward, and L.S. Ipsen. +</p> +<center><i>Drawn and Engraved under the Supervision of A.V.S. Anthony.</i></center> +<p> + <span class="sc">Price in Cloth, $6.00; in Antique Morocco on Tree Calf, $10.00, in + Crushed Levant, with Silk Linings, $25.00.</span> +</p> +<p> + "<span class="sc">Childe Harold</span>" is the most famous of the poems of Lord Byron, and + abounds in the most picturesque and attractive scenes and subjects for + illustration; including the beautiful scenery of the Rhine, and of Italy + and Greece, and the rich treasures of art and history in the classic + countries around the Mediterranean. +</p> +<p> + The best American artists have drawn these illustrations, <i>con + amore</i>, producing a great number of very choice examples of the high + perfection which wood-engraving has reached in the New World. The + general supervision of the work has devolved upon Mr. <span class="sc">A.V.S. Anthony</span>, + who held the same relation to the recent magnificent editions of + "Lucille" "The Lady of the Lake," "The Princess," and "Marmion;" thus + ensuring the utmost accuracy in study, taste in composition, and + elegance in finish. +</p> +<p> + The Publishers believe that in this form and with this elegance of + finish the work will be widely welcomed as a Fine Art Edition, and + become the +</p> +<h3> LEADING HOLIDAY GIFT-BOOK OF THE YEAR.</h3> +<p> + "In every respect a beautiful book. It is printed from new plates and + its many illustrations have been furnished by artists famous in their + line. It is even more attractive than its handsome predecessors, the + 'Marmion' and the Lady of the Lake."—Boston Traveller. +</p> +<p> + "The most talked of Book since 'Daniel Deronda.'" +</p> +<p> + <b>The Rise of Silas Lapham</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">William D. Howells</span>. 1 vol. 12mo. +</p> +<p> + "No novel since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' has been so extensively read by + business men. Mr. Howell's literary work has broadened and deepened into + this, the latest and most important, and we think his best work,"—says + the <i>New Jerusalem Messenger</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>For a Woman</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Nora Terry</span>, 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00. +</p> +<p> + An admirable Story of modern life in America. +</p> +<p> + "Her prose is always as charming as her poetry, which is saying a great + deal.—<i>Boston Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Nora Perry is the only poet of pure passion in America."—D.A. WASSON, + in <i>Boston Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>Social Silhouettes</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Edgar Fawcett</span>. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "All Gotham is busy gossiping over Edgar Fawcett's series of social + Silhouettes,' and everybody has his pet theory as to whom is deliniated + in each portrait."—<i>New Orleans Times Democrat</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>In Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery of New Orleans</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Wm. Miller Owen</span>, First Lieutenant and Adjutant B.W.A. Illustrated + with 8 maps and four engravings. 8 vo. $3.00. +</p> +<p> + A stirring narrative of events during the late Civil War, from Bull Run + to Seven Pines, Antietam and Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, + Gettysburg, Chickamaugu, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomatox and Spanish + Fort. Compiled by the adjutant from his diary and from documents and + Orders. +</p> +<p> + "It is indeed, the most interesting, authentic and reliable contribution + to our war literature yet seen."—<i>New Orleans Times Democrat</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>The Haunted Adjutant; and Other Stories</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Edmund Quincy</span>. Edited by his son, Edmund Quincy. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "Mr. Quincy possessed the Imaginative faculty, and the instructive + faculty in larger measure than any of his countrymen, Hawthorne, perhaps + excepted, and Hawthorne, if his equal, was not his superior."—<i>Boston + Traveller</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>Aulnay Tower</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Blanche Willis Howard</span>. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "A story which, for absorbing interest, brilliancy of style, charm of + graphic character drawing, and exquisite literary quality, will hold its + rank among the best work in American fiction."—<i>Boston Traveller</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>Love; or, A Name</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Julian Hawthorne</span>. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "Mr. Hawthorne has a more powerful imagination than any contemporary + write of fiction."—<i>The Academy (London)</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>A Narrative of Military Service</b>. +</p> +<p> + By Gen. <span class="sc">W.B. Hazen</span>. 1 vol. 8 vo. With Maps, Plans and Illustrations. + $3.00. +</p> +<p> + "There can be no doubt, we think, that it will be eagerly read, + particularly by the brave soldiers whom he led at Shiloh, who held the + crest at Stone Ridge, who stood firm under his eye at Chickamauga, who + floated with him by night under the shadow of Lookout Mountain down to + Brown's Ferry, who received his order to climb the fence of Mission + Ridge who helped to take Atlanta, who marched to the sea, who swarmed + over the parapets of Fort McAllister, who made the triumphant campaign + of the Carolinas, and passed in review before the President."—<i>New + York Mail and Express</i>. +</p> +<center> + <i>For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the + Publishers</i>. +</center> +<h2> + TICKNOR & CO., Boston. +</h2> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx30" name="pagexxx30"></a>[pg xxx30]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2> American History, Statesmanship, and Literature.</h2> +<hr /> +<h3> American Commonwealths.</h3> +<center> Edited by <span class="sc">Horace E. Scudder.</span></center> +<p> + "It is clear that this series will occupy an entirely new place in our + historical literature. Written by competent and aptly chosen authors, + from fresh materials, in convenient form, and with a due regard to + proportion and proper emphasis, they promise to supply most + satisfactorily a positive want."—<i>Boston Journal.</i> +</p> +<ul style="list-style:none;"> +<li> I. <i>VIRGINIA</i>. By JOHN ESTEN COOKE. </li> +<li> II. <i>OREGON</i>. By WILLIAM BARROWS. </li> +<li> III. <i>MARYLAND</i>. By WILLIAM HAND BROWNE. </li> +<li> IV. <i>KENTUCKY</i>. By Prof. N.S. SHALER. </li> +<li> V. <i>MICHIGAN</i>. By Judge THOMAS M. COOLEY. </li> +<li> VI. <i>KANSAS</i>. By Prof. LEVERETT W. SPRING. </li> +</ul> +<p> (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. </p> + +<h3> American Statesmen. </h3> +<center>Edited by <span class="sc">John T. Morse, Jr.</span></center> +<ul style="list-style:none;"> +<li> I. <i>JOHN QUINCY ADAMS</i>. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. </li> +<li> II. <i>ALEXANDER HAMILTON</i>. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. </li> +<li> III. <i>JOHN C. CALHOUN</i>. By Dr. H. VON HOLST. </li> +<li> IV. <i>ANDREW JACKSON</i>. By Pres. WM. G. SUMNER. </li> +<li> V. <i>JOHN RANDOLPH</i>. By HENRY ADAMS. </li> +<li> VI. <i>JAMES MONROE</i>. By Prof. D.C. GILMAN. </li> +<li> VII. <i>THOMAS JEFFERSON</i>. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. </li> +<li> VIII. <i>DANIEL WEBSTER</i>. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. </li> +<li> IX. <i>ALBERT GALLATIN</i>. By JOHN AUSTIN STEVENS. </li> +<li> X. <i>JAMES MADISON</i>. By SYDNEY HOWARD GAY. </li> +<li> XI. <i>JOHN ADAMS</i>. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. </li> +<li> XII. <i>JOHN MARSHALL</i>. By ALLAN B. MAGRUDER. </li> +<li> XIII. <i>SAMUEL ADAMS</i>. By JAMES K. HOSMER. </li> +</ul> +<p> (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. </p> + +<h3> American Men of Letters. </h3> +<center> Edited by <span class="sc">Charles Dudley Warner.</span> </center> +<ul style="list-style:none;"> +<li> I. <i>WASHINGTON IRVING</i>. By CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER. </li> +<li> II. <i>NOAH WEBSTER</i>. By HORACE E. SCUDDER. </li> +<li> III. <i>HENRY D. THOREAU</i>. By FRANK B. SANBORN. </li> +<li> IV. <i>GEORGE RIPLEY</i>. By OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM. </li> +<li> V. <i>JAMES FENIMORE COOPER</i>. By Prof. T.R. LOUNSBURY. </li> +<li> VI. <i>MARGARET FULLER OSSOLI</i>. By T.W. HIGGINSON. </li> +<li> VII. <i>RALPH WALDO EMERSON</i>. By O.W. HOLMES. </li> +<li> VIII. <i>EDGAR ALLAN POE</i>. By G.E. WOODBERRY. </li> +<li> IX. <i>NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS</i>. By H.A. BEERS. </li> +</ul> +<p> (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, with portrait, 16mo, gilt + top, $1.25. </p> + +<p> + "Mr. Morse and Mr. Warner, through the enterprise of their Boston + publishers, are doing in their two biographical series a service to the + public, the full extent of which, while well rewarded in a commercial + sense, is doubtless not generally and rightfully appreciated. Honest and + truly important work it is that they and their colleagues are + doing."—<i>New York Times</i>. +</p> +<p> + ⁂ <i>For sale by Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by + the publishers</i>. +</p> +<center> + HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx31" name="pagexxx31"></a>[pg xxx31]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1>TEN DOLLARS ENOUGH</h1> +<hr /> +<p class="center"> +AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF VOL. II, IN NOVEMBER, +</p> +<h2> GOOD-HOUSEKEEPING </h2> +<p class="center"> +Will appear in new type cut and cast expressly for its publishers, and +will have as a leading feature the first instalment of a new Serial by +CATHERINE OWEN, Author of "Culture and Cooking," and one of the most +practical writers of the day on Household Affairs, entitled: +</p> +<h1> "Ten Dollars Enough." </h1> +<p class="center"> <u>Keeping House Well on Ten Dollars a Week.</u> </p> + +<p class="center" style="font-family: sans-serif;"> +<u><b>HOW IT HAS BEEN DONE. HOW IT MAY BE DONE AGAIN.</b></u> +</p> + +<h2> OUR PRIZE PAPERS. </h2> +<p> +The awards of $500, for our Series of Prize Papers, the entries for +which closed September 1, are as follows:— +</p> +<p> +<span style="float:left; font-size: 200%;">$250.</span> "<b>How to Eat, Drink, and Sleep as Christians Should</b>." A +series of Six Papers. "<span class="sc">Margaret Sidney</span>" (Mrs. D. Lothrop), Boston. One +of the most popular and promising writers of the day. +</p> +<p> +<span style="float:left; font-size: 200%;">$200.</span> "<b>Mistress Work and Maid Work.—Which is Mistress, and Which is +Servant</b>." A Series of Six Papers. <span class="sc">Mrs. E.J. Gurley</span>, Waco, Texas. +</p> +<p> +<span style="float:left; font-size: 200%;">$50.</span> "<b>Bread: How to Make it Well and Economically, and How to Eat it +Healthfully</b>." Mrs. <span class="sc">Helen Campbell</span>, Orange N.J. (Author of "The +Easiest Way in Housekeeping and in Cooking," and other valuable +household writings for the press.) +</p> + +<hr /> + +<p class="center"> +These and the following will have prominent place in our regular +Semi-Monthly +</p> + +<p class="center"> <b>BILL-OF-FARE</b> <br /> +during the publication of the volume. +</p> +<p> +"<b>Fifty Recipes for Making all kinds of Bread</b>." <span class="sc">By Catherine Owen</span>. +</p> +<p> +"<b>Puff Paste</b>," Illustrated. By Mrs. <span class="sc">Emma P. Ewing</span>, Dean of the +School of Domestic Economy of the Iowa Agricultural College. +</p> +<p> +"<b>Visitor and Visited</b>." By "<span class="sc">Marion Harland</span>." +</p> +<p class="center"> +<b>Besides the usual amount of interesting and instructive reading for +Household Entertainment and Instruction by well-known writers.</b> +</p> + +<hr /> + +<h2> SOME OF OUR CONTRIBUTORS, </h2> + +<p class="center"> +<b>Many of whom are among the most noted and noteworthy writers or +housekeepers of our time</b>:— +</p> + +<table width="100%" border="0" align="center" summary="Some of our Contributors"> +<tr style="font-size:80%; font-variant:small-caps;"><td valign="top" width="33%"> + +<p>Maria Parloa, </p> +<p>"Marion Harland," </p> +<p>Mrs. Rose Terry Cooke, </p> +<p>Mrs. Hattie Tremaine Terry, </p> +<p>Mrs. Elizabeth Robinson Scovil, </p> +<p>Mrs. Carrie W. Bronson, </p> +<p>Mrs. H. Annette Poole, </p> +<p>Mary E. Dewey, </p> +<p>"Margaret Sidney," </p> +<p>Assis F. Judd, </p> +<p>Lucretia P. Hale, </p> +<p>Marian S. Devereux, </p> +<p>Hester M. Poole, </p> +<p>Mrs. Frona E. Wait, </p> +<p>Mrs. Katharine B. Foot, </p> +<p>Mrs. Christine Terhune Herrick, </p> +<p>Mrs. C.A.K. Poore, </p> +<p>Dora Read Goodale, </p> +<p>Josephine Canning, </p> +<p>Mrs. Georginana H.S. Hull, </p> + +</td><td valign="top" width="33%"> + +<p>Mrs. D.H.R. Goodals, </p> +<p>Sarah J. Blanchard. </p> +<p>Mrs. S.O. Johnson, </p> +<p>"Adelaide Preston," </p> +<p>Mrs. Helen Campbell, </p> +<p>"Catherine Owen," </p> +<p>Anna L. Dawes, </p> +<p>"Shirley Dare," </p> +<p>Mrs. Susan Teall Perry, </p> +<p>Mrs. Ellen Bliss Hooker, </p> +<p>Mrs. Margaret E. White, </p> +<p>Mrs. Agnes B. Ormsbee, </p> +<p>Mrs. Ellis P. Ewing, </p> +<p>Mrs. Henrietta Davis, </p> +<p>Anna Barrows, </p> +<p>"Ella Guernsey," </p> +<p>Mrs. Eva M. Niles, </p> +<p>Ruth Hall, </p> + +</td><td valign="top" width="33%"> + +<p>Mrs. C.S. Fox, </p> +<p>Mrs. Harriet H. Robinson, </p> +<p>Mrs. Helen N. Packard, </p> +<p>Mrs. L.A. France, </p> +<p>Margaret Evginge, </p> +<p>Mrs. Sarah DeW. Gamwell, </p> +<p>Mrs. Eliza R. Parker, </p> +<p>Amelia A. Whitfield, M.D. </p> +<p>Lavinia S. Goodwin, </p> +<p>Mrs. Mary Currier Parsons, </p> +<p>E.C. Gardner, </p> +<p>Milton Bradley, </p> +<p>Clark W. Bryan, </p> +<p>Dr. S.W. Bowles, </p> +<p>Rev. F.H. Rowley, </p> +<p>Wm. Paul Gerhard, </p> +<p>J.H. Carmichael, M.D. </p> +<p>Newell Lovejoy, </p> +<p>Dr. F.M. Hexamer. </p> + +</td></tr></table> + +<hr /> + +<h3> +EVERY OTHER WEEK. $2.50 PER YEAR. +</h3> +<p class="center"> +Every yearly subscriber will receive a valuable premium post-paid.<br /> +Send 10 cents for Sample Copy with List of Premiums. +</p> +<h2> +CLARK W. BRYAN & CO., Publishers.<br /> +HOLYOKE, MASS. +</h2> +<p> +NEW YORK OFFICE,<br /> 111 BROADWAY. +</p> +<p class="center"> +<b>FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS.</b> +</p> + + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx32" name="pagexxx32"></a>[pg xxx32]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + <b><i>OUR GREAT PREMIUM OFFER.</i></b> +</h1> +<p class="quote"> + Every subscriber sending address together with $3.00 for one year's + subscription to the <span class="sc">Bay State Monthly</span> before January 1, 1886, may choose + one of the following valuable books, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive, as + a premium. In ordering from 1 to 30 inclusive, fifteen cents must be + added to pay postage; and in ordering a premium numbered 31, 32 or 33, + forty cents must be added to pay postage and extra cost of book. +</p> +<table width="100%" align="center" summary="book price list"> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"> + 1. Uncle Tom's Cabin. By Harriet Beecher Stowe, cloth, price, $1.00. +</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> 2. Virginia. By John Esten Cooke.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="6" width="50%"> +<p class="center"> + <i>American Commonwealths</i>. +</p><p class="center"> + <i>Edited by Horace E. Scudder</i>. +</p> +<p> + A series of volumes narrating the history of such States of the Union as + have exerted a positive influence in the shaping of the national + government, or have a striking political, social, or economical history. + With Maps and indexes. Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. +</p> +</td></tr> + +<tr><td> 3. Oregon. By Rev. William Barrows.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 4. Maryland. By William Hand Browne.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 5. Kentucky. By Prof. N.S. Shaler.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 6. Kansas. By Prof. Leverett W. Spring.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 7. Michigan. By Hon. T.M. Cooley.</td></tr> + +<tr><td> 8. Washington Irving. By C.D. Warner.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="9"> +<p class="center"> + <i>American Men of Letters</i>. +</p><p class="center"> + <i>Edited by Charles Dudley Warner</i>. +</p><p> + A series of biographies of distinguished American authors, having all + the special interest of biography, and the larger interest and value + of illustrating the different phases of American literature, and the + social, political, and moral influences which have moulded these authors + and the generation to which they belonged. +</p><p> + The volumes contain Portraits of their subjects. Each volume, uniform. + 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. +</p></td></tr> +<tr><td> 9. Noah Webster. By Horace E. Scudder.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 10. Henry D. Thoreau. By F.B. Sanborn.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 11. George Ripley. By O.B. Frothingham.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 12. J.F. Cooper. By Prof. T.R. Lounsbury.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 13. Margaret F. Ossoli. By T.W. Higginson.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 14. Ralph W. Emerson. By O.W. Holmes.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 15. Edgar A. Poe. By Geo. E. Woodberry.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 16. Nathaniel P. Willis. By Henry A. Beers.</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td> 17. John Quincy Adams. By J.T. Morse, Jr.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="14"> +<p class="center"> + <i>American Statesmen</i>. +</p> +<p class="center"> + <i>Edited by John T. Morse, Jr.</i> +</p> +<p> + The object of this series of lives of American Statesmen is to furnish + volumes which shall embody the compact result of extensive study of the + many influences which have combined to shape the political history of + our country. +</p> +<p class="center"> + Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. +</p> +</td></tr> +<tr><td> 18. Alexander Hamilton. By H.C. Lodge.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 19. John C. Calhoun. By Dr. H. Von Hoist.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 20. Andrew Jackson. By Prof. W.G. Sumner.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 21. John Randolph. By Henry Adams.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 22. James Monroe. By Pres. D.C. Gilman.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 23. Thomas Jefferson. By J.T. Morse, Jr.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 24. Daniel Webster. By H.C. Lodge.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 25. Albert Gallatin. By John A. Stevens.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 26. James Madison. By Sidney H. Gay.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 27. John Adams. John. T. Morse, Jr.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 28. John Marshall. By Allan B. Magruder.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 29. Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 30. Martin Van Buren. By Wm. Dorsheimer.</td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"> 31. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips. By George L. Austin. Price $1.50</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2"> 32. The Life and Deeds of Gen. U.S. Grant. By P.C. Headly and G.L. Austin. Price $1.50</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2"> 33. The Life of Henry W. Longfellow. By Francis H. Underwood. Price $1.50</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td> 34. Oliver Wendell Holmes.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="7"> +<p class="center"> + <i>Atlantic Portraits</i>. +</p><p> + Life-size Portraits of the following American authors, lithographed in + the best manner, and suitable for the study or the school-room. Each + picture measures 34 by 30 inches, and is forwarded by mail, carefully + rolled. +</p> +</td></tr> +<tr><td> 35. James Russell Lowell.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 36. William Cullen Bryant.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 37. John G. Whittier.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 38. Henry W. Longfellow.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 39. Nathaniel Hawthorne.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 40. Ralph Waldo Emerson.</td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2">41. Four Elegant steel plate portraits to be selected from the following list:—</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td> The Great War Governor, John A. Andrew. </td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="6"> +These are real Steel Plate Portraits, superbly printed upon heavy fine +plate paper, 9 1-2 by 12 inches. Lowest cash price of each, 25 cents. +</td></tr> +<tr><td> Ex-Governor John D. Long. </td></tr> +<tr><td> Ex-Governor William Gaston. </td></tr> +<tr><td> Gen. U.S. Grant. </td></tr> +<tr><td> President James A. Garfield. </td></tr> +<tr><td> President Grover Cleveland. </td></tr> + +</table> + +<p> + Any one or more of the above books or portraits will be sent by us + carriage free to any part of the United States or Provinces upon receipt + of Price. +</p> +<p class="center"> + Remit by Post-Office order, draft, express or Registered Letter to +</p> +<p style="text-align:right;"> + TREASURER, BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY, + <br /> + <span class="sc">43 Milk Street, Boston.</span> +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx33" name="pagexxx33"></a>[pg xxx33]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + <b>COMMENTS OF THE PRESS.</b> +</h3> +<p> + The following expressions of editorial opinions are entirely from press + notices of the August and September (1885) numbers:— +</p> +<p> + Its portraits are excellent.—<i>Daily Gate City</i> (Keokuk Ia.) +</p> +<p> + Should be well patronized by people of this state.—<i>The Republic</i> + (Boston) +</p> +<p> + The whole magazine seems to us delightfully provincial.—<i>Chicago + Advance.</i> +</p> +<p> + Now takes its place among the most important magazines.—<i>Philadelphia + Press.</i> +</p> +<p> + The literary contents are brilliant and interesting.—<i>Washington</i> + (D.C.) <i>Sunday Gazette.</i> +</p> +<p> + It is a monthly that should be in every Massachusetts + home.—<i>Webster</i> (Mass.) <i>Eagle</i>. +</p> +<p> + The illustrations are drawn and engraved with admirable + clearness.—<i>Boston Evening Transcript.</i> +</p> +<p> + Its ability and breadth of interest entitle it to a continent of + readers.—<i>Brooklyn Daily Times.</i> +</p> +<p> + The articles (Sept.) are varied, carefully prepared and full of + interest.—<i>Boston Daily Advertiser.</i> +</p> +<p> + For interesting, finely illustrated reading material this monthly is + unsurpassed.—<i>Times</i> (Webster, Mass.) +</p> +<p> + The illustrations are superior, among the best we have seen in any + magazine.—<i>Pittsburg Christian Advocate.</i> +</p> +<p> + Full of reminiscences and history of the grand old New England + Commonwealth.—<i>Buffalo Christian Advocate.</i> +</p> +<p> + If the <i>Bay State</i> keeps up to the mark of this number (Sept.) it + will fairly rank with the best magazines.—<i>Philadelphia American.</i> +</p> +<p> + We emphasize again, this magazine should be liberally supported for its + historical value.—<i>Dorchester Beacon</i> (Boston.) +</p> +<p> + It looks as though there was a bright future for this representative of + the literature of the old Bay State.—<i>Fall River</i> (Mass.) + <i>Monitor.</i> +</p> +<p> + It is an excellent magazine, beautifully printed, charmingly + illustrated, and always filled with attractive articles.—<i>Salem</i> + (Mass.) <i>Register.</i> +</p> +<p> + The Bay State Monthly has leaped into a first class magazine, in all + respects second to none in the country.—<i>Peabody</i> (Mass.) + <i>Reporter.</i> +</p> +<p> + This magazine has increased wonderfully in appearance as well as in text + * * is a credit to our state and should be well supported.—<i>Salem</i> + (Mass.) <i>Observer.</i> +</p> +<p> + The magazine deserves well of every one who would be informed of the + colonial history of New England.—<i>Newark</i> (N.J.) <i>Daily + Advertiser.</i> +</p> +<p> + The Bay State Monthly has a delightful New England flavor * * and is + taking more and more a hitherto unoccupied field.—<i>Boston Herald.</i> +</p> +<p> + The Bay State Monthly steadily grows in usefulness and interest * *. + This magazine deserves a generous support.—<i>N.E. Homestead</i> + (Springfield Mass.) +</p> +<p> + The Bay State fills a needed place in its local history and biography + and deserves the success that undoubtedly awaits it.—<i>Boston Evening + Traveller.</i> +</p> +<p> + Several of its papers have sterling merit, and all are able and + entertaining and give promise to the magazine of an individuality that + will make it a power.—<i>Boston Daily Globe.</i> +</p> +<p> + The Bay State Monthly has improved the most rapidly and attained the + highest rank of any similar venture in the history of American + periodical literature.—<i>Somerville Journal.</i> +</p> +<p> + The Bay State Monthly is one of the standard publications of its class. + It is not surpassed by any of its elders in the matter of chaste + typography and beauty of illustration, while its literary conception and + display are of intrinsic worth.—<i>Gazette and Chronicle.</i> + (Pawtucket R.I.) +</p> +<p> + We feel sure that all who read the September issue of this monthly will + unite in paying tribute to the excellent quality of the reading + material, the artistic merit of the wood engraving, the aptness of the + subjects chosen for presentation, and the earnestness and faithfulness + with which Editor and Publisher do their work.—<i>Providence + Journal.</i> +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx34" name="pagexxx34"></a>[pg xxx34]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage" style="line-height: 300%;"> +<h3> + ESTABLISHED 1871. +</h3> +<h1> + THE SOUTH +</h1> +<h2> + <b>A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress</b>. +</h2> +<center> + The SOUTH is the oldest journal in the<br /> + country devoted exclusively to the<br /> + developement of the Southern States,<br /> + and is indispensable to<br /> + business men. +</center> +<center> + Subscription Price, $3.00 a year. +</center> +<h3> + <i>The South Publishing Company</i><br /> + 85 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. +</h3> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx35" name="pagexxx35"></a>[pg xxx35]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:175px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/528.jpg"><img src="images/528.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="VICTOR L. CHANDLER ENGRAVER ON WOOD" /></a> +</div> +<h2> +VICTOR L. CHANDLER <br /> +ENGRAVER ON WOOD </h2> +<h3> 43 MILK ST. <br /> +BOSTON <br /> +MASS. </h3> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + Are You Out Of <b>PAPER?</b> Or Stationery Of Any Kind? +</h2> +<p> + If so come to our store. If you cannot do that conveniently, drop us a + postal and we will send you FREE a complete set of samples of the best + Foreign and American writing papers with prices, and full information as + to sheets to the pound, sizes, cost of envelopes to match, etc. Papers + from 17 cents to $1.00 per pound. By mail 17 cents per pound extra. +</p> +<h3> WARD & GAY,</h3> +<center> + <b>Paper Merchants</b> AND <b>Stationers,</b><br /> + 184 Devonshire St., Boston. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/510c.jpg"><img src="images/510c.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="Tailoring Done as it should be. H. E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston" /></a> +</div> +<h2> Tailoring </h2> +<center> Done as it should be.</center> +<h3> H. E. FALES & Co.</h3> +<center> 375 Washington Street<br /> + Boston</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx36" name="pagexxx36"></a>[pg xxx36]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + THE LARGEST AND BEST HOUSE TO BUY SHADE GOODS FROM. +</h3> +<h1> + CUSHMAN BROS., AND CO., +</h1> +<center> + MANUFACTURERS OF +</center> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/540b.jpg"><img src="images/540b.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="CUSHMAN'S SELF-ACTING SHADE ROLLER." /></a> +</div> + +<center> + <b>Shade Rollers, Window Shades, Brass and Nickel Shade Trimmings, + Hollands and Upholsterer's Hardware.</b> +</center> +<center> + IMPORTERS OF +</center> +<h3> + KING'S FIRST QUALITY SCOTCH HOLLANDS. +</h3> +<center> + 82, 84 & 86 HAWLEY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</center> +<p> + ☞ An inspection of our stock is cordially invited. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <b>ARTISTS' MATERIALS.</b> +</h2> +<h3> + <i>Decorative Art Goods.</i><br /> + <b>Mathematical Instruments,</b><br /> + <b>Architects' & Engineers Supplies, etc., etc.</b> +</h3> +<hr /> +<h2> + FROST AND ADAMS, IMPORTERS +</h2> +<center> + <b>No. 37 Cornhill, Boston.</b> +<br /> + F.S. FROST. + H.A. LAWRENCE. +</center> +<p> + Illustrated catalogue free. + Mention this magazine. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <b>Mayo's Vegetable Anaesthetic.</b> +</h2> +<hr /> +<p> + A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether, and all + other anaesthetics. Discovered by Dr. U.K. Mao, April, 1884, and since + administered by him and others in over 106,000 cases successfully. + Compounded from nervines which impart oxygen to sustain life, (Nitrous + oxide gas, as administered, is destitute of this and tends to produce + convulsions and suffocation). The youngest child, the most sensitive + lady, and those having heart disease and lung complaint, inhale this + vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation and builds up the + tissues. Recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous prostration. + Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families supplied. For + further information, pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to Dr. U.K. + MAYO, Dentist, 378 Tremont street, Boston, Mass. +</p> +<hr /> +<center> + INDORSEMENT OF THE LATE DR. THORNDIKE. +</center> +<p> + BOSTON, August 15, 1883. +</p> +<p> + This certifies that I removed in the back of Mr. J.D. Moore a tumor + weighing two pounds and three-quarters. The time occupied was twenty-two + minutes. The patient was insensible during the whole operation, and came + out from the influence of the anaesthetic speedily and perfectly, + without nausea or any ill effects. The agent used was prepared by Dr. + U.K. Mayo, the dentist, a new discovery of his own. I consider this + anaesthetic the safest the world has yet seen. +</p> +<p> + WM. H. THORNDIKE, M.D., 92 Boylston, Street. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx37" name="pagexxx37"></a>[pg xxx37]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> S.M. SPENCER'S </h1> +<h2> <b>STENCIL AND RUBBER STAMP WORKS,</b> 112 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, MASS. </h2> + +<ul style="list-style:none;"> +<li>SEAL PRESSES,</li> +<li>WAX SEALS,</li> +<li>STEEL STAMPS,</li> +<li>STEEL ALPHABETS and FIGURES,</li> +<li>BRASS ALPHABETS,</li> +<li>COMBINATION NUMBERING WHEELS,</li> +<li>BRUSHES,</li> +<li>INK, ALL COLORS,</li> +<li>INDELIBLE INK,</li> +<li>RUBBER STAMP INK,</li> +<li>SELF-INKING PADS,</li> +<li>KEY CHECKS,</li> +<li>BAGGAGE and HOTEL CHECKS,</li> +<li>BRASS CHECKS,</li> +<li>RUBBER STAMPS, (with 120 styles of letters to select from.)</li> +<li>SELF-INKING RUBBER STAMPS, (more than 30 different styles.)</li> +<li>DATING & RECEIPTING STAMPS, (10 different styles.)</li> +<li>PENCIL and POCKET STAMPS,</li> +<li>PRINTING WHEELS,</li> +<li>METAL BODIED RUBBER FACED TYPE, (for hand printing.)</li> +<li>SHOE LINING STAMPS,</li> +<li>AUTOMATIC NUMBERING STAMPS,</li> +<li>RUBBER NUMBERING STAMPS,</li> +<li>STENCIL DIES,</li> +<li>BURNING BRANDS.</li> +</ul> + +<p> AGENTS' OUTFITS For Stencils, Key Checks, and Rubber Stamp Work, and +all reliable goods connected with the business wholesale and retail. +</p> + +<center> <i>Send for illustrated catalogue. All goods first-class and warranted +in every respect.</i> </center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:175px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/527.jpg"><img src="images/527.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="GLOBE LETTER FILING CABINETS" /></a> +</div> +<h3>GLOBE LETTER FILING +<br /> +<i>CABINETS</i>.</h3> +<center><i>Most Perfect System Known.</i></center> +<p> All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files.</p> +<p>Over $20,000 worth in use <b>in Boston</b> alone.</p> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li> <i>Quick Reference</i>.</li> +<li> <i>No Mutilation of Papers</i>.</li> +<li> <i>Rapid Filing</i>.</li> +<li> <i>Handsome Workmanship</i>.</li> +</ul> +<center> +<span style="font-size: 200%;"> W.W. EDWARDS,</span><br /> <b>SELLING AGENT,</b> +<br /> +<b><i>The Globe Files Company</i>, 166 Devonshire St., Boston.</b> +</center> +<table border="0" width="100%" align="center" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>SCRAP FILES.</li> +<li>PAMPHLET CASES.</li> +<li>DOCUMENT BOXES.</li> +<li>NICKLE CLIP BOARDS.</li> +</ul></td> +<td valign="top" width="50%"> +<ul style="list-style: none;"> +<li>ROLL TOP DESKS.</li> +<li>CLOTH BOXES, all sizes.</li> +<li>LAWYERS FILING CASES.</li> +<li>CASES for Price Lists, etc.</li> +</ul> +</td></tr></table> +<center> +<b>ESTIMATES</b> Furnished of filing devices for Banks, Railroads, +Mercantile Firms, Insurance Companies, etc. +<br /> +<i>N.B. Correspondence Solicited.</i> +</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx38" name="pagexxx38"></a>[pg xxx38]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="100%" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top"> +<p> +Surprises and pleases all. +</p> +<p> +A novice can produce work without basting, that skilled operators dare +not attempt on under-feed machines. +</p> +<p> +No change is made in running, from finest muslin to heavy leather. +</p> +<p> +It is readily applied to any specialties that cannot be handled by +others. +</p> +<p> +Simplicity in construction is one of our important points, as we gain +strength and durability, and a perfect working machine at all times. +</p> +</td> +<td valign="top"> +<h2> THE NEW HIGH ARM</h2> +<h1> DAVIS</h1> +<h2> VERTICAL FEED</h2> +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/552a.jpg"><img src="images/552a.jpg" style="width:200px;" +alt="" /></a> +</div> +</td> +<td valign="top"> +<p> +Time and labor saved in dressmaking, as it has the largest variety and +most perfect working attachments. +</p> +<p> +This feed is absolutely perfect, and no care is required on the part of +the operator in passing over seams or uneven places. +</p> +<p> +Will not full or stretch the softest of fabrics. +</p> +<p> +The stitch is very elastic, and the same on both sides. +</p> +<p> +One-half hour spent at any of our offices will more than verify our +statements. +</p> +<p> +Do not fail to examine the <b>Davis</b> before purchasing. +</p> +</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="3"><h1> <i>SEWING MACHINE</i>.</h1></td></tr> +<tr> +<td><p class="center"> BOSTON:<br/> 158 Tremont St. </p></td> +<td><p class="center"> CLEVELAND:<br /> 113-121 North Side Public Sq.</p></td> +<td><p class="center"> CHICAGO:<br /> 46-50 Jackson St. </p></td></tr> +</table> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2>HOLYOKE, MASS.</h2> +<h1> WINDSOR HOTEL.</h1> + +<p> GEO. H. BOWKER, Proprietor,</p> +<p style="text-align:right;"> First-class in all its appointments.</p> +<p> Free carriage to and from all trains.</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:200px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<h2>"IT STANDS AT THE HEAD."</h2> +<a href="images/552b.jpg"><img src="images/552b.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="IT STANDS AT THE HEAD -- The "Caligraph."" /></a> +</div> + +<p> +The "Caligraph" received the only medal awarded type-bar writing +machines at the WORLD'S FAIR. To silence the assertions and claims of +our worthy competitor, we publish the following:— +</p> + +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + "New Orleans World's Fair, June 10, 1885 +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "To whom it may concern,—The 'Caligraph' manufactured by the American + Writing Co. received the medal. +</p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + "L.D. CARROLL, Depart. of Awards." +</p> +<p> </p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + "New Orleans, June 20, 1885. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "The Remington type-writer received no award. +</p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + "GUS. A. BREAUX, Chairman of Awards." +</p> +<p> </p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + "New Orleans, June 30, 1885. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "Jury on type-writers was Coleman, Cook and Thoens. Report published by + Remington is <i>unauthorized and not official</i>. +</p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + "GUS. A. BREAUX, Chairman of Dep't of Awards." +</p> + +<hr /> + +<p class="center"> + For circulars and specimens of writing, apply to THE AMERICAN WRITING + MACHINE CO., Hartford, Conn. +</p> +<p class="center"> + New York Office, 237 Broadway. +</p> +<p class="center"> + <b>W.M. BELCHER & CO.</b> New England Agent, BOSTON, MASS. +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx39" name="pagexxx39"></a>[pg xxx39]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + THE<br /> MASSACHUSETTS RELIEF<br /> ASSOCIATION. +</h1> +<h2> + (Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts.) +</h2> +<h3> + 31 Milk <span style="font-size:75%;">(Elevator)</span>, 8 Hawley, 9 Arch Sts., Rooms 49 & 50, BOSTON. +</h3> +<h4> + JNO. F. WOOD, <i>Pres't</i>. R.T. RYDER, <i>Sec'y</i>. JOHN PEARCE, <i>Treas.</i> +</h4> +<hr /> +<p class="quote"> + <i>Issue in one Certificate, Insurance as desired of from $1,000 to + $5,000, payable at Death, but covering Sickness, Accident and Total + Disability for Life.</i> +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + <b>SPECIAL FEATURES</b>. +</h2> +<p class="quote"> + In case of Sickness or Accident, the afflicted member is entitled to + from <b>$5</b> to <b>$25</b> per week, according to the amount of + Insurance, while totally incapacitated for work. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + If, from any cause, a member is totally disabled for life, the whole + amount of Insurance money, as in case of death, is paid at once to him + while living. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + This is just what has long been wanted. It covers all contingencies of + life and is not expensive. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Full particulars how to become a member, together with blank forms will + be sent to any address upon application. +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + A FEW GOOD AGENTS ALWAYS WANTED. +</h2> + +<hr class="interad" /> + + <h1>REDUCTION OF FARE TO NEW YORK</h1> + <h3>VIA</h3> + <h2>FALL RIVER LINE.</h2> + +<h4> + <b>Only $3.00</b> For First Class Limited Tickets. +</h4> +<p class="quote"> + Special express leaves Boston from <b>OLD COLONY STATION</b> week days + at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 + minutes with the steamers <b>PILGRIM</b> and <b>BRISTOL</b>. Annex + steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. + Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner + of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b><i><span style="font-size:150%;">J.R. KENDRICK</span>, General Manager.</i></b> + <b><i><span style="font-size:150%;">L.H. PALMER</span>, Agent, 3 Old State House.</i></b> +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx40" name="pagexxx40"></a>[pg xxx40]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:100px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/533.jpg"><img src="images/533.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE." /></a> +</div> +<h2><i>LACTART.</i></h2> +<center> + (<b>MILK ACID.</b>)<br /> + ——FOR——<br /> + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain.<br /> + <i>A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY.</i> +</center> +<p> + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or <i>ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE</i>. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. <i>SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St.,<br /> BOSTON, MASS.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>STONINGTON LINE.</b> +<br /> + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH +<br /> + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, +<br /> + AND ALL POINTS +<br /> + <b>SOUTH AND WEST,</b> +<br /> + Avoiding Point Judith. +<br /> + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers +<br /> + <b>Stonington and Narraganset.</b> +</center> +<p> + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, +</p> +<center> + <b>DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.)</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + <i>early trains South and West.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES.</b> +<br /> + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at +<br /> + <b>214 Washington Street, corner of State,</b> +<br /> + AND AT +<br /> + <b>BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. +</p> +<center> + <span class="sc">A.A. Folsom</span>, Superintendent B. & P.R.R.<br /> + <span class="sc">F.W. Popple</span>, General Passenger Agent.<br /> + <span class="sc">J.W. Richardson</span>, Agent, Boston. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + COOLIDGE HOUSE, +<br /> + BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. +</center> +<p class="quote"> + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording <i>most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>COOLIDGE CAFE,</b> +<br /> + <b>EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." +</p> +<center> + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. +<br /> + <i>The Best Material, Cooking, and Service.</i> +<br /> + <b>I.N. ANDREWS & CO.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/541b.jpg"><img src="images/541b.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="Banjo" /></a> +</div> +<h3> + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. +</h3> +<p> + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. +</p> +<h2> <b>FAIRBANKS</b> AND <b>COLE,</b> </h2> +<center> + <i>MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS</i>,<br /> + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx41" name="pagexxx41"></a>[pg xxx41]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<!-- +<h2> + SIMPSON<br /> + SPRING WATER. +</h2> +<h3> + SPRING HOUSE + <i>AND</i> + <b><i>Bottling Establishment</i></b> +</h3> +<center> + SO. EASTON, MASS. +</center> +--> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/532.jpg"><img src="images/532.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="Map" /></a> +</div> +<p> +This is the Purest and Most Effective of all Medicinal Spring Waters. +Possessing remarkable Curative Properties for diseases of the +<i>STOMACH</i>, <i>LIVER</i>, <i>KIDNEYS</i> and <i>BLADDER</i>. +</p> +<hr /> +<h3>A MILD CATHARTIC AND ACTIVE DIURETIC.</h3> +<center> +<b>PROF. RAPHAEL PUMPELLY</b>, Chemist National Board of Health. +</center> +<p> +[NOTE.—This analysis, with a letter of recommendation from Prof. +Pumpelly, was read before the Newport Sanitary Protective Society, +Jan. 12, 1884.] +</p> +<center> <i>PARTS IN 1,000,000</i></center> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="50%" summary="residue, parts per million"> +<tr><td> Total Residue </td><td align="right">44.6 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Silica </td><td align="right">11.5 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Iron and Alumina </td><td align="right"> 0.7 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Lime </td><td align="right">10.5 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Magnesia </td><td align="right"> 1.5 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Chlorine </td><td align="right"> 4.6 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Ammonia </td><td align="right"> 0.06 </td></tr> +<tr><td> Albumoid Ammonia </td><td align="right"> 0.06 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +The above analysis shows a total residue of about 2.6 grains in one +gallon of 231 cubic inches. +</p> +<p> +The object of the above analysis is to show the great purity of this +water. Its curative properties cannot be determined by a chemical +analysis. No combination of the above-mentioned minerals alone would +produce the same effects. The Spring possesses a peculiarity and an +individuality of its own which no one ever has been able to explain. It +is one of Nature's remedies. Its medicinal effects can only be +determined by a thorough trial. +</p> + +<p> + Messrs. HOWARD BROS., BOSTON, April 24, 1885. +</p> +<p> + <i>Dear Sirs</i>,—"After many careful trials of the Simpson Spring + Water in urinary disorders, extending over one year, I am convinced + (despite my previous prejudices, excited by the extravagant claims made + for other Springs,) that its <i>properties</i> are + <i>characteristic</i>, and as <i>clinically trustworthy</i> as are those + of terebinthina, lithia, or many other of the partially proven drugs. I + have found it surprisingly gratifying as an adjuvant in the cure of + albuminuria, and in lowering the specific gravity of the urine in + Saccharine Diabetes its action is promptly and lastingly helpful. It is + mildly cathartic and an active diuretic." +</p> +<p> + DR. J. HEBER SMITH,<br /> + <i>Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of Medicine.</i> +</p> +<p> + Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and + Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by +</p> +<center> + <b><i>HOWARD BROS., Managers</i>,</b><br /> + 117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.) +<br /> + —OR— +<br /> + GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx42" name="pagexxx42"></a>[pg xxx42]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + CANTON BLEACH. +</h1> +<p> + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. +</p> +<p> + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. +</p> +<p> + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. +</p> +<p> + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. +</p> +<p> + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have <i>examined the</i> + "<i>Canton Bleach</i>." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + <i>see the goods</i>; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, <i>to see if the stamp</i> "Canton Bleach" is on it. +</p> +<p> + NOTICE.—Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by <span class="sc">Messrs. C.F. Hovey & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">Shepard, + Norwell & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">Hogg, Brown & Taylor</span>, <span class="sc">Chandler & Co.</span>, <span class="sc">R.H. White & Co.</span>, + <span class="sc">Jordan, Marsh & Co.</span>, and others. +</p> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/534.jpg"><img src="images/534.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882 + + TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK" /></a> +</div> + +<p> + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. +</p> +<p> + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the +</p> +<h3> + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY,<br /> + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</h3> +<center> + <span class="sc">Edward W. Howe</span>, Treas. + <span class="sc">Jas. L. Little, Jr.</span>, Pres. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx43" name="pagexxx43"></a>[pg xxx43]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> +<h2> An Entirely New Edition of Lord Byron's</h2> +<h1> CHILDE HAROLD,</h1> +<center><span class="sc">With Numerous New and Beautiful Illustrations on Wood.</span></center> +<center> + THE DRAWINGS BY +</center> +<p> + Harry Fenn, F. Myruck, S.L. Smith, G.G. Harley, E.H. Garrett, G. Perkins, + F.B. Schell, J.D. Woodward, and L.S. Ipsen. +</p> +<center><i>Drawn and Engraved under the Supervision of A.V.S. Anthony.</i></center> +<p> + <span class="sc">Price in Cloth, $6.00; in Antique Morocco on Tree Calf, $10.00, in + Crushed Levant, with Silk Linings, $25.00.</span> +</p> +<p> + "<span class="sc">Childe Harold</span>" is the most famous of the poems of Lord Byron, and + abounds in the most picturesque and attractive scenes and subjects for + illustration; including the beautiful scenery of the Rhine, and of Italy + and Greece, and the rich treasures of art and history in the classic + countries around the Mediterranean. +</p> +<p> + The best American artists have drawn these illustrations, <i>con + amore</i>, producing a great number of very choice examples of the high + perfection which wood-engraving has reached in the New World. The + general supervision of the work has devolved upon Mr. <span class="sc">A.V.S. Anthony</span>, + who held the same relation to the recent magnificent editions of + "Lucille" "The Lady of the Lake," "The Princess," and "Marmion;" thus + ensuring the utmost accuracy in study, taste in composition, and + elegance in finish. +</p> +<p> + The Publishers believe that in this form and with this elegance of + finish the work will be widely welcomed as a Fine Art Edition, and + become the +</p> +<h3> LEADING HOLIDAY GIFT-BOOK OF THE YEAR.</h3> +<p> + "In every respect a beautiful book. It is printed from new plates and + its many illustrations have been furnished by artists famous in their + line. It is even more attractive than its handsome predecessors, the + 'Marmion' and the Lady of the Lake."—Boston Traveller. +</p> +<p> + "The most talked of Book since 'Daniel Deronda.'" +</p> +<p> + <b>The Rise of Silas Lapham</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">William D. Howells</span>. 1 vol. 12mo. +</p> +<p> + "No novel since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' has been so extensively read by + business men. Mr. Howell's literary work has broadened and deepened into + this, the latest and most important, and we think his best work,"—says + the <i>New Jerusalem Messenger</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>For a Woman</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Nora Terry</span>, 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00. +</p> +<p> + An admirable Story of modern life in America. +</p> +<p> + "Her prose is always as charming as her poetry, which is saying a great + deal.—<i>Boston Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + "Nora Perry is the only poet of pure passion in America."—D.A. WASSON, + in <i>Boston Transcript</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>Social Silhouettes</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Edgar Fawcett</span>. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "All Gotham is busy gossiping over Edgar Fawcett's series of social + Silhouettes,' and everybody has his pet theory as to whom is deliniated + in each portrait."—<i>New Orleans Times Democrat</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>In Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery of New Orleans</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Wm. Miller Owen</span>, First Lieutenant and Adjutant B.W.A. Illustrated + with 8 maps and four engravings. 8 vo. $3.00. +</p> +<p> + A stirring narrative of events during the late Civil War, from Bull Run + to Seven Pines, Antietam and Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, + Gettysburg, Chickamaugu, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomatox and Spanish + Fort. Compiled by the adjutant from his diary and from documents and + Orders. +</p> +<p> + "It is indeed, the most interesting, authentic and reliable contribution + to our war literature yet seen."—<i>New Orleans Times Democrat</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>The Haunted Adjutant; and Other Stories</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Edmund Quincy</span>. Edited by his son, Edmund Quincy. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "Mr. Quincy possessed the Imaginative faculty, and the instructive + faculty in larger measure than any of his countrymen, Hawthorne, perhaps + excepted, and Hawthorne, if his equal, was not his superior."—<i>Boston + Traveller</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>Aulnay Tower</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Blanche Willis Howard</span>. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "A story which, for absorbing interest, brilliancy of style, charm of + graphic character drawing, and exquisite literary quality, will hold its + rank among the best work in American fiction."—<i>Boston Traveller</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>Love; or, A Name</b>. +</p> +<p> + By <span class="sc">Julian Hawthorne</span>. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. +</p> +<p> + "Mr. Hawthorne has a more powerful imagination than any contemporary + write of fiction."—<i>The Academy (London)</i>. +</p> +<p> + <b>A Narrative of Military Service</b>. +</p> +<p> + By Gen. <span class="sc">W.B. Hazen</span>. 1 vol. 8 vo. With Maps, Plans and Illustrations. + $3.00. +</p> +<p> + "There can be no doubt, we think, that it will be eagerly read, + particularly by the brave soldiers whom he led at Shiloh, who held the + crest at Stone Ridge, who stood firm under his eye at Chickamauga, who + floated with him by night under the shadow of Lookout Mountain down to + Brown's Ferry, who received his order to climb the fence of Mission + Ridge who helped to take Atlanta, who marched to the sea, who swarmed + over the parapets of Fort McAllister, who made the triumphant campaign + of the Carolinas, and passed in review before the President."—<i>New + York Mail and Express</i>. +</p> +<center> + <i>For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the + Publishers</i>. +</center> +<h2> + TICKNOR & CO., Boston. +</h2> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx44" name="pagexxx44"></a>[pg xxx44]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + <b><i>OUR GREAT PREMIUM OFFER.</i></b> +</h1> +<p class="quote"> + Every subscriber sending address together with $3.00 for one year's + subscription to the <span class="sc">Bay State Monthly</span> before January 1, 1886, may choose + one of the following valuable books, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive, as + a premium. In ordering from 1 to 30 inclusive, fifteen cents must be + added to pay postage; and in ordering a premium numbered 31, 32 or 33, + forty cents must be added to pay postage and extra cost of book. +</p> +<table width="100%" align="center" summary="book price list"> +<tr> +<td colspan="2"> + 1. Uncle Tom's Cabin. By Harriet Beecher Stowe, cloth, price, $1.00. +</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> 2. Virginia. By John Esten Cooke.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="6" width="50%"> +<p class="center"> + <i>American Commonwealths</i>. +</p><p class="center"> + <i>Edited by Horace E. Scudder</i>. +</p> +<p> + A series of volumes narrating the history of such States of the Union as + have exerted a positive influence in the shaping of the national + government, or have a striking political, social, or economical history. + With Maps and indexes. Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. +</p> +</td></tr> + +<tr><td> 3. Oregon. By Rev. William Barrows.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 4. Maryland. By William Hand Browne.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 5. Kentucky. By Prof. N.S. Shaler.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 6. Kansas. By Prof. Leverett W. Spring.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 7. Michigan. By Hon. T.M. Cooley.</td></tr> + +<tr><td> 8. Washington Irving. By C.D. Warner.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="9"> +<p class="center"> + <i>American Men of Letters</i>. +</p><p class="center"> + <i>Edited by Charles Dudley Warner</i>. +</p><p> + A series of biographies of distinguished American authors, having all + the special interest of biography, and the larger interest and value + of illustrating the different phases of American literature, and the + social, political, and moral influences which have moulded these authors + and the generation to which they belonged. +</p><p> + The volumes contain Portraits of their subjects. Each volume, uniform. + 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. +</p></td></tr> +<tr><td> 9. Noah Webster. By Horace E. Scudder.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 10. Henry D. Thoreau. By F.B. Sanborn.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 11. George Ripley. By O.B. Frothingham.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 12. J.F. Cooper. By Prof. T.R. Lounsbury.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 13. Margaret F. Ossoli. By T.W. Higginson.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 14. Ralph W. Emerson. By O.W. Holmes.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 15. Edgar A. Poe. By Geo. E. Woodberry.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 16. Nathaniel P. Willis. By Henry A. Beers.</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td> 17. John Quincy Adams. By J.T. Morse, Jr.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="14"> +<p class="center"> + <i>American Statesmen</i>. +</p> +<p class="center"> + <i>Edited by John T. Morse, Jr.</i> +</p> +<p> + The object of this series of lives of American Statesmen is to furnish + volumes which shall embody the compact result of extensive study of the + many influences which have combined to shape the political history of + our country. +</p> +<p class="center"> + Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. +</p> +</td></tr> +<tr><td> 18. Alexander Hamilton. By H.C. Lodge.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 19. John C. Calhoun. By Dr. H. Von Hoist.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 20. Andrew Jackson. By Prof. W.G. Sumner.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 21. John Randolph. By Henry Adams.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 22. James Monroe. By Pres. D.C. Gilman.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 23. Thomas Jefferson. By J.T. Morse, Jr.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 24. Daniel Webster. By H.C. Lodge.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 25. Albert Gallatin. By John A. Stevens.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 26. James Madison. By Sidney H. Gay.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 27. John Adams. John. T. Morse, Jr.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 28. John Marshall. By Allan B. Magruder.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 29. Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 30. Martin Van Buren. By Wm. Dorsheimer.</td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2"> 31. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips. By George L. Austin. Price $1.50</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2"> 32. The Life and Deeds of Gen. U.S. Grant. By P.C. Headly and G.L. Austin. Price $1.50</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2"> 33. The Life of Henry W. Longfellow. By Francis H. Underwood. Price $1.50</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td> 34. Oliver Wendell Holmes.</td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="7"> +<p class="center"> + <i>Atlantic Portraits</i>. +</p><p> + Life-size Portraits of the following American authors, lithographed in + the best manner, and suitable for the study or the school-room. Each + picture measures 34 by 30 inches, and is forwarded by mail, carefully + rolled. +</p> +</td></tr> +<tr><td> 35. James Russell Lowell.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 36. William Cullen Bryant.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 37. John G. Whittier.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 38. Henry W. Longfellow.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 39. Nathaniel Hawthorne.</td></tr> +<tr><td> 40. Ralph Waldo Emerson.</td></tr> + +<tr><td colspan="2">41. Four Elegant steel plate portraits to be selected from the following list:—</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td> The Great War Governor, John A. Andrew. </td> +<td valign="top" rowspan="6"> +These are real Steel Plate Portraits, superbly printed upon heavy fine +plate paper, 9 1-2 by 12 inches. Lowest cash price of each, 25 cents. +</td></tr> +<tr><td> Ex-Governor John D. Long. </td></tr> +<tr><td> Ex-Governor William Gaston. </td></tr> +<tr><td> Gen. U.S. Grant. </td></tr> +<tr><td> President James A. Garfield. </td></tr> +<tr><td> President Grover Cleveland. </td></tr> + +</table> + +<p> + Any one or more of the above books or portraits will be sent by us + carriage free to any part of the United States or Provinces upon receipt + of Price. +</p> +<p class="center"> + Remit by Post-Office order, draft, express or Registered Letter to +</p> +<p style="text-align:right;"> + TREASURER, BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY, + <br /> + <span class="sc">43 Milk Street, Boston.</span> +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx45" name="pagexxx45"></a>[pg xxx45]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2> + EXTRA SPECIAL NOTICE AND PREMIUM +</h2> +<h3> + TO THE READERS OF THIS MAGAZINE. +</h3> +<hr /> +<p class="center"> + We take much pleasure in announcing that arrangements have been made to + supply our readers with an extraordinary bargain, by offering to them a + <span class="sc">limited</span> number of Proof Impressions of +</p> +<p class="center" style="font-family: sans-serif;"> + HOLLYER'S LINE AND STIPPLE STEEL PLATE ENGRAVING +</p> +<p class="center"> + Of the late +</p> +<h1> + Henry W. Longfellow in His Library +</h1> +<p class="center"> + At "Craigie House," Old Cambridge, Mass. +</p> +<hr /> +<p class="quote"> + ⁂ <b>The following are a few endorsements among many others of like + high character that have been given after a critical inspection of the + engraving, viz:</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <i>John. J. Platt, the poet says</i>: The likeness is an excellent one. + It represents our beloved and lamented poet in his most familiar + atmosphere. Longfellow was a poet of home and its affections, and this + engraving should be in every American home. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <i>John B. Peaslee, Superintendent of Public Schools, Cincinnati, O., + says</i>: Beyond question, <span class="sc">Hollyer's</span> portrait of <span class="sc">Longfellow</span> is the most + accurate and life-like that has appeared. It is a great work, and will + speedily find its way into our cultured American homes. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <i>The Boston Daily Globe says</i>: <span class="sc">Hollyer</span> has certainly achieved an + artistic triumph. The portrait of <span class="sc">Longfellow</span> is one of <i>the best</i> + that has been issued. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <i>The Providence (R.I.) Evening Press says</i>: <span class="sc">Hollyer</span> has produced a + new, beautiful and <i>artistic steel plate engraving</i> of "<span class="sc">Longfellow + in His Library</span>," of which neither artist nor publisher need be ashamed. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <i>The Bridgeport (Conn.) Farmer says</i>: <span class="sc">Mr. Hollyer's Engravings</span> have + gained for him a wide fame in this country and in Europe, and in the + present work he has certainly not lost any of the vigor, strength and + power which characterized his earlier works. Every one who honors + <span class="sc">Longfellow</span> will want to possess this engraving. +</p> +<hr /> +<h3> + THE FOLLOWING ARE THE REGULAR PRICES OF THE ENGRAVING +</h3> +<p class="center"> + PUBLISHED BY +</p> +<h3>JOHN C. YORSTON & CO.</h3> +<p class="center"> + New York. Cincinnati. Chicago. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + ARTIST PROOFS, size 27x37 inches, printed on India Paper, <i>limited to + 125 impressions, </i>and numbered consecutively 1 to 125, and each + impression <i>signed</i> by the artist, each ... $50.00 +</p> +<p class="quote"> + PROOFS BEFORE LETTER, size 25x35 inches, printed on India Paper, + <i>limited to</i> 250 <i>impressions</i>, and numbered consecutively 1 + to 250, each ... 30.00 +</p> +<p class="quote"> + INDIA PROOFS, LETTERED, size 24x33 inches, <i>limited to</i> 500 + <i>impressions</i>, and numbered consecutively 1 to 500, each ... 15.00 +</p> +<p class="quote"> + PROOF IMPRESSIONS, size 24x32 inches, each ... 7.50 +</p> +<hr /> +<p class="quote"> + Any one sending us the name of a new subscriber, with $3.00, for one + year's subscription to <span class="sc">The Bay State Monthly</span>, before January 1, 1836, + may, if desired, order the above engraving (proof impression), instead + of any of the premiums described on the opposite page. +</p> +<p class="quote" style="font-family: sans-serif;"> + <b><i>THIS IS AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER, AS THESE ENGRAVINGS HAVE NEVER + BEFORE SEEN SOLD FOR LESS THAN $7.50 EACH.</i></b> +</p> +<hr /> +<p class="center"> + <i>We will sell a limited number of these engravings at the price of</i> + 85 <i>cents each.</i> +</p> +<h2> + BAY STATE MONTHLY CO., 43 Milk Street, Boston. +</h2> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx46" name="pagexxx46"></a>[pg xxx46]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + <b>THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY <span style="font-size:75%;">FOR</span> 1886</b> +</h1> +<h3> + <i>WILL CONTAIN SERIAL STORIES BY</i> +</h3> +<p class="center"> + <b>HENRY JAMES.</b> +<br /> + ["The Princess Casamassima" will continue until August, 1886.] +</p> +<p class="center"> + <b>CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK,</b> +<br /> + Author of "The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains," "In the Tennessee + Mountains," etc. +</p> +<p class="center"> + <b>WILLIAM H. BISHOP,</b> +<br /> + Author of "The House of a Merchant Prince." +</p> +<hr /> +<p class="center"> + <b>MR. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL</b> +<br /> + Will write for <span class="sc">The Atlantic Monthly</span> during 1886. +</p> +<p class="center"> + <b>MR. JOHN FISKE</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Will contribute six or more papers on United States History, covering + the period from the Revolution to the adoption of the Constitution. + These papers discuss a portion of American history very imperfectly + known, and cannot fail to be exceedingly engaging by reason of Mr. + Fiske's ample knowledge and perfectly clear style. +</p> +<p class="center"> + <b>MR. PHILIP GILBERT HAMERTON,</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + The distinguished English writer, will furnish a series of articles + comparing French and English people, character, opinions, customs, etc. + Mr. Hamerton is peculiarly qualified, by his intimate knowledge of the + French as well as of his fellow-countrymen, to write on this subject. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + TERMS: $4.00 a year, in advance, POSTAGE FREE; 35 cents a number. With + superb life-size portrait of Hawthorne, Emerson, Longfellow, Bryant, + Whittier, Lowell, or Holmes, $5.00; each additional portrait, $1.00. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <i>Postal notes and money are at the risk of the sender, and therefore + remittances should be made by money-order, draft, or registered letter + to</i> +</p> +<h2> HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY,</h2> +<h3> 4 PARK STREET, BOSTON, MASS.</h3> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<table summary="" align="center" border="0"> +<tr><td valign="top"> + +<h2> + CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK'S +</h2> +<h2> + Remarkable Stories. +</h2> +<hr /> +<h3> + THE PROPHET OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS. +</h3> +<p class="quote"> + <span style="font-size:200%;">☞</span> <i>SEVENTH THOUSAND</i>. $1.25. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + This is one of the most noteworthy of American novels. The striking + figure and fate of "the prophet," the cave and stealthy operations of + the "moonshiners," and the engaging love story which runs as a golden + thread through it all, are depicted with great power and fascination. +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + IN THE TENNESSEE MOUNTAINS. +</h2> +<p class="quote"> + Eight short stories of marvellous power and beauty. $1.25. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <span style="font-size:200%;">☞</span> <i>THIRTEENTH EDITION.</i> +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + DOWN THE RAVINE. +</h2> +<p class="quote"> + With Illustrations. $1.00. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + A very engaging story of East Tennessee life, equally interesting to + parents and children. +</p> + +</td><td valign="top"> + +<h3> + Life and Letters of Louis Agassiz. +</h3> +<p class="quote"> + By <b>Elizabeth C. Agassiz</b>. With Portraits and several + Illustrations. 2 vols. crown 8vo, $4.00. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Mrs. Agassiz has written in the most delightful manner the story of the + great naturalist's life, and has woven into the narrative a large number + of his letters, the whole forming a peculiarly attractive biography and + a work of remarkable value and interest to all students of Natural + History. +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + THE BIGLOW PAPERS. +</h2> +<p class="quote"> + By <b>James Russell Lowell.</b> First and Second Series. In the + Riverside Aldine Series. 2 vols. 16mo, $2.00. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + "The greatest of all American humorists is James Russell Lowell, and + greatest of all American books of humor is the Biglow + Papers."—<i>North British Review.</i> +</p> +<hr /> +<h3> + Two Years Before the Mast. +</h3> +<p class="quote"> + Sailor Life in a Voyage around Cape Horn to and from San Francisco, and + in California. By <b>Richard H. Dana, Jr.</b> New Popular Edition. Price + reduced from $1.50 to $1.00. +</p> +<hr /> +<h3> + LARS: A Pastoral of Norway. +</h3> +<p class="quote"> + By <b>Bayard Taylor</b>. In Riverside Literature Series. With a + Biographical Sketch and Notes. Paper, 15 cents. +</p> + +</td></tr></table> + +<p class="quote"> +⁂ <i>For sale by all Booksellers. Sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt + of price, by the Publishers</i>, +</p> +<h2> + <b>HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston, Mass.</b> +</h2> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx47" name="pagexxx47"></a>[pg xxx47]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + <b>SPRINGER BROS.,</b> +</h1> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left; clear:left;"> +<a href="images/561a.jpg"><img src="images/561a.jpg" style="width:200px;" alt="" /></a> +</div> + +<p> + Respectfully invite the attention of Ladies to their extensive and + attractive display of +</p> +<h2> + Fashionable Cloaks, +</h2> +<h3 style="text-align:left;"> + Short Wraps,<br /> + Newmarkets,<br /> + Plush Sacques,<br /> + Walking-Jackets +</h3> + +<p> + And Ladies Outside Garments of every description just opened at the +</p> +<h2> + NEW RETAIL DEPARTMENT<br /> + FOR THE<br /> + Fall and Winter Season of 1885-86. +</h2> +<hr /> +<p> + Ladies who have never yet visited this establishment will be surprised + at the elegance of the spacious salesrooms and the superior grades of + goods therein displayed. +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + SPRINGER BROS.,</h2> +<h4> Importers, Wholesale and Retail Manufacturers.</h4> +<h3> <b>Chauncy Street, Essex Street and Harrison Avenue,</b><br /> + (One Block from Washington Street.) <b>BOSTON</b>.</h3> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<table width="100%" summary=""> +<tr><td valign="top"> +<a name="image-0040"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/561b.jpg"><img src="images/561b.jpg" style="width:200px;" +alt="ADAMSON'S BOTANIC COUGH BALM + FOR THE CURE OF COUGHS, COLDS, SORE THROAT, HOARSENESS, CROUP, + ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, BLEEDING AND SORENESS OF LUNGS AND WHOOPING COUGH, + AND ALL DISEASES LEADING TO CONSUMPTION. + Pleasant, and Cures as by Magic. + Sold by Druggists & Medicine Dealers Everywhere. + Price, 10, 35 & 75 cts. + F.W. Kinsman & Co., PROPRIETORS 343 4th Av. New York" /></a> +</div> + +</td><td valign="top" style="border-left: thin solid black;"> + +<a name="image-0041"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure"> +<a href="images/561c.jpg"><img src="images/561c.jpg" style="width:200px;" +alt="RELIEF AND SHOULDER AND SKIRT SUPPORTING CORSETS" /></a> +</div> +<h3> SOLD AND FITTED BY MRS. L. LANDON,<br /> 25 WINTER ST., ROOM 22, </h3> +<h4> FORMERLY WITH<br /> MME. GRISWOLD. </h4> +</td> +</tr></table> + + +</div> + + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx48" name="pagexxx48"></a>[pg xxx48]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h1> + THE<br /> MASSACHUSETTS RELIEF<br /> ASSOCIATION. +</h1> +<h2> + (Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts.) +</h2> +<h3> + 31 Milk <span style="font-size:75%;">(Elevator)</span>, 8 Hawley, 9 Arch Sts., Rooms 49 & 50, BOSTON. +</h3> +<h4> + JNO. F. WOOD, <i>Pres't</i>. R.T. RYDER, <i>Sec'y</i>. JOHN PEARCE, <i>Treas.</i> +</h4> +<hr /> +<p class="quote"> + <i>Issue in one Certificate, Insurance as desired of from $1,000 to + $5,000, payable at Death, but covering Sickness, Accident and Total + Disability for Life.</i> +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + <b>SPECIAL FEATURES</b>. +</h2> +<p class="quote"> + In case of Sickness or Accident, the afflicted member is entitled to + from <b>$5</b> to <b>$25</b> per week, according to the amount of + Insurance, while totally incapacitated for work. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + If, from any cause, a member is totally disabled for life, the whole + amount of Insurance money, as in case of death, is paid at once to him + while living. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + This is just what has long been wanted. It covers all contingencies of + life and is not expensive. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Full particulars how to become a member, together with blank forms will + be sent to any address upon application. +</p> +<hr /> +<h2> + A FEW GOOD AGENTS ALWAYS WANTED. +</h2> + +<hr class="interad" /> + + <h1>REDUCTION OF FARE TO NEW YORK</h1> + <h3>VIA</h3> + <h2>FALL RIVER LINE.</h2> + +<h4> + <b>Only $3.00</b> For First Class Limited Tickets. +</h4> +<p class="quote"> + Special express leaves Boston from <b>OLD COLONY STATION</b> week days + at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 + minutes with the steamers <b>PILGRIM</b> and <b>BRISTOL</b>. Annex + steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. + Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner + of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b><i><span style="font-size:150%;">J.R. KENDRICK</span>, General Manager.</i></b> + <b><i><span style="font-size:150%;">L.H. PALMER</span>, Agent, 3 Old State House.</i></b> +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx49" name="pagexxx49"></a>[pg xxx49]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:100px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/533.jpg"><img src="images/533.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE." /></a> +</div> +<h2><i>LACTART.</i></h2> +<center> + (<b>MILK ACID.</b>)<br /> + ——FOR——<br /> + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain.<br /> + <i>A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY.</i> +</center> +<p> + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or <i>ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE</i>. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. <i>SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St.,<br /> BOSTON, MASS.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + <b>STONINGTON LINE.</b> +<br /> + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH +<br /> + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, +<br /> + AND ALL POINTS +<br /> + <b>SOUTH AND WEST,</b> +<br /> + Avoiding Point Judith. +<br /> + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers +<br /> + <b>Stonington and Narraganset.</b> +</center> +<p> + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, +</p> +<center> + <b>DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.)</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + <i>early trains South and West.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES.</b> +<br /> + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at +<br /> + <b>214 Washington Street, corner of State,</b> +<br /> + AND AT +<br /> + <b>BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. +</p> +<center> + <span class="sc">A.A. Folsom</span>, Superintendent B. & P.R.R.<br /> + <span class="sc">F.W. Popple</span>, General Passenger Agent.<br /> + <span class="sc">J.W. Richardson</span>, Agent, Boston. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<center> + COOLIDGE HOUSE, +<br /> + BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. +</center> +<p class="quote"> + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording <i>most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges.</i> +</p> +<center> + <b>COOLIDGE CAFE,</b> +<br /> + <b>EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN.</b> +</center> +<p class="quote"> + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." +</p> +<center> + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. +<br /> + <i>The Best Material, Cooking, and Service.</i> +<br /> + <b>I.N. ANDREWS & CO.</b> +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/541b.jpg"><img src="images/541b.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="Banjo" /></a> +</div> +<h3> + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. +</h3> +<p> + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. +</p> +<h2> <b>FAIRBANKS</b> AND <b>COLE,</b> </h2> +<center> + <i>MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS</i>,<br /> + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx50" name="pagexxx50"></a>[pg xxx50]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:100px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/564.jpg"><img src="images/564.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="(Flower)" /></a> +</div> + +<h2>A Splendid Christmas Gift!</h2> +<h1>Ladies Do Your Own Stamping!</h1> +<h3>With our New ONE DOLLAR Outfit</h3> +<h4>You can <i><b>SAVE MONEY</b></i> by doing your own Stamping</h4> +<h4>You can <i><b>MAKE MONEY</b></i> by doing it for others.</h4> +<h3>Good <b>$5</b> Stamping Outfit for <b>$1.00</b></h3> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="100%" summary="Kit contents and cost per item" style="clear:both;"> +<tr><td> 35 Parchment Stamping Patterns full size, retail price 10c each.</td><td> $3.50</td></tr> +<tr><td> 26 Initials, size 1-½ in. for Hatbands, Handkerchiefs, &c. </td><td> .75 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 1 Illustrated Book of Instruction in Kensington Embroidery Work.</td><td> .10 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 1 Felt Stamping Pad, imp, pat. </td><td> .15 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 1 Box best Stamping Powder </td><td> .15 </td></tr> +<tr><td> 1 Felt Tidy, with design stamped all ready to work, with 4 knots + of silk and needle </td><td> .35 </td></tr> +<tr><td></td><td><hr class="full" /></td></tr> +<tr><td> <b>Retail Value</b> </td><td>$5.00 </td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +Teaches also How to Stamp Plush Felt, &c. Teaches the <b>Kensington, +Plush Ribbon</b> and other stitches. Also How to Do Kensington, Lustre +Painting, &c. The patterns contained in this outfit are all useful and +desirable for stamping Hatbands, Lamp and Table-Mats, Tidies, Doylies +Towel Racks Lambrequins, Splashers, etc. +</p> + +<table border="0" align="center" width="100%" summary="Items"> +<tr><td width="40%" valign="top"> + +<p style="text-indent:0;"> +1 vine of Roses, 2-½ in. wide<br /> +1 little Girl, 5 in. high<br /> +1 Kitten, 3-½ in. high<br /> +1 little Butterfly<br /> +1 little Bird<br /> +1 Bird, 4x5 inches<br /> +1 design, Two Owls on Branch<br /> +1 Star and Anchor<br /> +1 design of Child's Face<br /> +1 Sprig of Daisies, 4x5 in.<br /> +1 single Rose and Bud, 2x2 in.<br /> +1 bunch of Pansies, 4x5 in.<br /> +1 bunch of Roses & Buds, 3x5 in.<br /> +1 sprig of Golden Rod, 4 in. high<br /> +1 sprig of Daisies, 4 in. high<br /> +1 sprig of Smilax, 5 in. high<br /> +1 single Buttercup, 2x2 in.<br /> +1 sprig of Asters, 2x3-½ in.<br /> +</p> +</td><td width="60%" valign="top"> +<p style="text-indent:0;"> +1 sprig of Barberries, 3 in. high<br /> +1 vine of Leaves, 1-½ in. wide<br /> +1 growing design of Violets, for Lambrequins, &c. 6 inches high<br /> +1 single Daisy and Forget-me-not, 2x2 in.<br /> +1 sprig of Bachelor's Button, 3-½ in. high<br /> +1 cluster of Strawberries, 2-½x3 in.<br /> +1 sprig of Forget-me-nots, 1-½x2 in.<br /> +1 bouquet of Daisies and Forget-me-nots 5x6 in.<br /> +1 vine of Daisies and Ferns, 5-½ in. wide<br /> +1 vine of Point Russe Stitches, 1-¼ in. wide<br /> +Snow-flake designs for Crazy Patchwork<br /> +1 strip of Scallops for Skirts, Infant's Blanket &c<br /> +1 vine with Scallop, 2-½ in. wide<br /> +1 Braiding Vine, 2 in. wide<br /> +1 Braiding Vine, 1-½ in. wide<br /> +Design for Crying Child for Tidy in outline<br /> +1 outline design, Boy and Girl Skating, 7 in. high +</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p> +<b>With the Outfit You Can Learn the Art of the Kensington +Embroidery.</b> You can learn <b>Perforated Stamping</b>, and do your +own stamping. You can adorn your house with hundreds of beautiful +articles of Kensington Embroidery. You can teach the art of Kensington +Embroidery and Stamping and do embroidery for others. Many young ladies +who begin business with our Embroidery Outfit, are now doing a very +pretty and paying business in their own houses. <b>REMEMBER</b> the +entire Outfit will be sent in a box for only <b>ONE DOLLAR</b>, +<b>TWO</b> outfits $1.75, <b>FOUR</b> outfits for <b>ONLY THREE +DOLLARS</b>. Get three of your friends to send with you and get your own +<b>OUTFIT FREE!</b> Send Postal Note, Money Order or Registered Letter. +Postage Stamps taken. Send all orders to <b>World Man'f'g Co. 122 Nassau +Street, New York.</b> +</p> +<hr /> +<p> +<i>It is seldom that we have an opportunity to direct attention to +anything so really worthy of notice as this Complete Stamping Outfit. +While the price is almost ridiculously low for the entire outfit, the +number, excellence and variety of the articles furnished almost exceeds +belief. Even for a family to do its own stamping the outfit would be of +great service; but when it is realised, that by means of the +instruction, samples and materials that are included as "Outfits," any +lady can easily become a proficient in making choice Kensington Lace of +most elegant and graceful patterns, and become skilled in executing +every description of perforated stamping and thus make a nice addition +to her income in a very easy and pleasant way, it would seem that +scarcely anyone would neglect taking advantage of so favorable an +opportunity. These stamping outfits are particularly appropriate for +holiday presents and, in our opinion, well worthy of attentive, +consideration.</i> +</p> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx51" name="pagexxx51"></a>[pg xxx51]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage" style="line-height: 2.5em;"> + +<h1> + THE +<br /> + <span class="sc">Provident Savings Life Assurance</span> +<br /> + <span class="sc">Society.</span> +</h1> + +<h3> + OFFICE: +<br /> + BRYANT BUILDING, 55 LIBERTY STREET, +</h3> +<center> + NEW YORK. +</center> +<center style="font-size:200%;"> + <u>RENEWABLE TERM INSURANCE</u> +</center> +<p style="line-height: 2.5em;"> + COMBINES THE CHEAPNESS AND CONVENIENCE AFFORDED BY THE BEST ASSESSMENT + SOCIETIES, WITH THE SECURITY AND PERMANENCE OF THE LEVEL PREMIUM LIFE + INSURANCE COMPANIES. +</p> +<p style="line-height: 2.5em;"> + THE SAFEST, MOST ECONOMICAL, AND MOST EQUITABLE LIFE INSURANCE + OBTAINABLE. +</p> + +<center> + <span class="sc">Sheppard Homans, president.</span> +<br /> + <span class="sc">Wm. E. Stevens, secretary.</span> +</center> +<hr /> +<center> + ☞ SEND FOR CIRCULAR, OR CALL IN PERSON. ☜ +</center> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx52" name="pagexxx52"></a>[pg xxx52]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h2 style="text-decoration: underline;"> + "GET THE BEST!!" +</h2> + +<h1> +<span style="text-decoration: underline; font-size: 50%;">THE</span> +POPULAR * * * * * +<br /> +* * * * * EDUCATOR +</h1> + +<h3> + Used in Thousands of Schools, +</h3> +<h2> + <b><i>Should be in the Hands of Every Live Teacher.</i></b> +</h2> +<hr /> +<h3> + MONTHLY, $1.00 A YEAR. +</h3> +<hr /> + +<h4> WHAT IS SAID OF IT. </h4> + +<p class="quote"> + PROF. W.H. PAYNE, <i>University of Michigan</i>. I have received copies + of the last EDUCATOR. I think it the best issue of an educational + journal I have ever seen. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + SUPT. JOHN JONES. JR., <i>Marengo, Iowa</i>. I believe the POPULAR + EDUCATOR equal to the best. We are very much pleased with it. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + SUPT. A.P. STONE, <i>Mass</i>. An excellent and needed paper. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + CHARLES F. KING., <i>Boston Manager, School of Methods, Saratoga + Springs, N.Y.</i> The POPULAR EDUCATOR shows in its beautiful type, + convenient size, attractive appearance of each page, the number and + completeness of each department, the work of the most thorough editorial + supervision. Its writers are selected from the best in the country and + each one is a live, wide-awake, practical teacher. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + W.A. COCHRAN, <i>Co. Supt. of Schools, Indiana, Pa.</i> Am highly + pleased with the paper. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + SUPT. M.E. HARD, <i>Gallipolis, Ohio.</i> It is the best paper for the + young teacher I have ever seen. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + S.D. ANGLIN, <i>Co. Supt., Warsaw, Ind.</i> It has the "True Ring." Shall + be pleased to see a copy in the hands of every teacher in this county. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + AMOS BURNS, <i>Co. Supt., Columbus, Ind.</i> Like it very much. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + PROF. A.P. BOURLAND, <i>So. Western University, Tenn.</i> From no other + school journal do I get so much valuable practical aid. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Miss O.A. EVERS, <i>Principal, N.H. Training School, Manchester, + N.H.</i> You have "Out-Heroded Herod." It is the best of any educational + paper I have ever read. I cannot see how you get so much together, and + not a grain of chaff. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + LEROY T. WEEKS, <i>Portis, Kan</i>. Cannot do without it. Use it in the + school-room in many ways. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + AARON SHEELY, <i>Co. Supt. of Schools, Adams Co., Pa.</i> It is the + freshest, most practical and best educational journal published in this + country. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<table border="0" summary=""> +<tr><td> +<h2> + <b>TEACHERS' HAND-BOOK SERIES.</b> +</h2> +<hr /> +<h3> + Popular School-Room Helps. +</h3> +<hr /> +<p class="quote"> + <b>PRIMARY READING: How to teach it.</b> 15c. Boston Method. Arranged by + the Supervisors of the Boston schools. Price 15 cents. The most + practical work ever published on this subject. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b>INFORMATION LESSONS: Nat. Hist.</b> 15c. Animals, Plants, Minerals, + Theory and practice combined, with model lessons for the school-room. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b>ELEMENTARY SCIENCE: Model Lessons.</b> 15c. Practical and + progressive, yet simple and suggestive. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b>NEW SCHOOL-ROOM SPEAKER. 15c.</b> New Dialogues, Declamations, and + Recitations. Especially suitable for use in the school-room. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b>RECITATION CARDS. 10c.</b> Containing memory gems for Bands of Mercy, + Arbor Days, Temperance, &c. Also, Motion songs and Recitations for + distribution among the class. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + <b>LANGUAGE LESSON CARDS.</b> 12c. Containing pictures of Animals, + Birds, Insects, &c., with suggestive questions, enclosed in strong + envelope. +</p> +<h3> + <b>EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.,<br /> 43 MILK STREET.</b> +</h3> + +</td><td> + +<h2> + <b>TO ADVERTISERS!</b> +</h2> +<hr /> +<h3> + <b>Read the Following Statement.</b> +</h3> +<hr /> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + Sept. 19, 1885. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + I hereby certify that the subscription list of the POPULAR EDUCATOR + has increased over a thousand names, each month, during the last + three months. +</p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + <span class="sc">C.M. Lander</span>,<br /> 50 Bromfield Street,<br /> Boston, Contractor for Mailing. +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Suffolk, ss.: +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Personally appears before me at Boston, this nineteenth day of + September. 1885, C.M. Lander, who swears the forgoing statement, by him + made, to be true. +</p> +<p class="quote" style="text-align:right;"> + <span class="sc">Rufus G. Fairbanks</span>,<br /> Justice of the Peace. +</p> +<hr /> +<p class="quote"> + Increase of circulation from October to November ... <b>800</b> +</p> +<p class="quote"> + Educational advertisers will find this live periodical a good medium. + The rates are very <i>low</i>. Samples and terms sent on application. + Address the +</p> +<h3> + <b>EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.,</b><br /> 43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. +</h3> +</td></tr></table> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx53" name="pagexxx53"></a>[pg xxx53]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + + +<h1> <b>HORACE PARTRIDGE & CO.</b> </h1> +<h2> 497 & 499 Washington St. <b>BOSTON</b>. 51 to 57 Hanover St., </h2> +<h2> HEADQUARTERS </h2> + +<h3> —FOR— </h3> + +<h1> TOYS, Games ==AND== Fancy Goods, </h1> + +<p> +Being the largest Importers of Toys and Games in the United States, with +a Branch House in Frankfort, Germany, our facilities for securing all +leading novelties as they appear in the European markets, and for +furnishing same to our customers at very lowest prices, are unsurpassed. +</p> + +<p style="text-align:right;"> HORACE PARTRIDGE & CO. </p> + +<hr /> + +<a name="image-0044"><!--IMG--></a> +<div class="figure" style="width:100px;float:left;"> +<a href="images/567.jpg"><img src="images/567.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="(doll)" /></a> +</div> + +<h3> <b>AN ARTISTIC VADE MECUM.</b> </h3> +<h1> <b>THE LADIES' COMPLETE GUIDE TO FANCY WORK</b> </h1> +<h3> <b>AND HOME DECORATION.</b> </h3> +<h2> The Most Complete Work of the Kind Ever Issued. </h2> +<h3> Over 500 Illustrations. Price only 25 Cents. </h3> + +<p> +The rules and patterns given are so clearly and plainly illustrated and +described that a very <i>small child</i> can work many of them. With +this book as an aid, every home in the land, no matter how humble, may +be as handsomely embellished as the mansion of the most wealthy, and at +a <b>Trifling Cost</b>. Plain and concise directions are given for doing +<b>Kensington and Outline Embroidery, Artistic Needlework, Painting on +Silk, Velvet, and Satin, China Decorating, Darned Lace, Knitted Luce, +Crazy Patchwork, Macreme Crochet, Java Canvas Work, Feather Work, Point +Russe, Cross Stitch, Indian Work, and Turkish Drapery, Wax Flowers, +etc., etc.</b> Among the hundred of designs given are those for +</p> + +<table border="0" width="90%" align="center" summary="List of items" > +<tr><td> +<p style="text-indent:0;"> LAMBREQUINS, <br /> MONOGRAMS, <br /> +INITIALS, <br /> BORDERS, <br /> CORNERS, <br /> NORMANDY LACE, <br /> +EDGINGS, <br /> TABLE MATS, <br /> LAMP MATS, <br /> HOODS, <br /> +QUILTS, <br /> VALANCES, <br /> PIANO COVERS, <br /> PORTFOLIOS, <br /> +PANELS, Etc. </p> +</td><td> +<p style="text-indent:0;"> DOYLIES, <br /> TIDIES, <br /> OTTOMANS, <br /> +WORK BASKETS, <br /> BABY'S BASKETS, <br /> SCRAP BASKETS, <br /> +BRUSH CASES, <br /> LAMP SCREENS, <br /> TOILET CUSHIONS, <br /> TOILET +CASES, <br /> PENWIPERS, <br /> THERMOMETERS, <br /> NEEDLE CASES, <br /> +HANDBAGS, <br /> JEWEL CASES, Etc. </p> +</td><td> +<p style="text-indent:0;"> WORK STANDS, <br /> SOFA PILLOWS, <br /> +PURSES, <br /> FOOTSTOOLS, <br /> PICTURE FRAMES, <br /> PILLOW CASES, +<br /> COUNTERPANES, <br /> LETTER CASES, <br /> HAND SCREENS, <br /> +TOILET MIRRORS, <br /> BANNERS, <br /> GLOVE SACHETS, <br /> PAPER +FLOWERS, <br /> RUSTIC WORK, <br /> COLLAR and CUFF BOXES. </p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p style="text-indent:0;"> +and many others. <b>Everything in the line of Fancy Work ever thought of +is represented</b>, and the satisfaction of every taste. +</p> +<p> +Aside from the fascination of "doing fancy work," <i>money can be +made</i> by selling the articles to Fancy Goods and Dry Goods Stores, or +by teaching others how to make them. In the large cities ladies pay a +high price for learning no more than this book will teach. Those +desiring <i>genteel employment</i> will find the "<b>LADIES' COMPLETE +GUIDE TO FANCY WORK</b>" a veritable friend. It is a handsome book, +printed on cream tinted super calendered paper. Sent postpaid for <b>25 +Cents. FIVE COPIES FOR ONE DOLLAR</b>. Get four friends to send with +you, and you get your book <b>FREE</b>. +</p> +<h3> + <b>Address, PEOPLES' PUB. CO., Boston, Mass.</b> +</h3> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx54" name="pagexxx54"></a>[pg xxx54]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<h3> + THE LARGEST AND BEST HOUSE TO BUY SHADE GOODS FROM. +</h3> +<h1> + CUSHMAN BROS., AND CO., +</h1> +<center> + MANUFACTURERS OF +</center> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/540b.jpg"><img src="images/540b.jpg" style="width:300px;" +alt="CUSHMAN'S SELF-ACTING SHADE ROLLER." /></a> +</div> + +<center> + <b>Shade Rollers, Window Shades, Brass and Nickel Shade Trimmings, + Hollands and Upholsterer's Hardware.</b> +</center> +<center> + IMPORTERS OF +</center> +<h3> + KING'S FIRST QUALITY SCOTCH HOLLANDS. +</h3> +<center> + 82, 84 & 86 HAWLEY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +</center> +<p> + ☞ An inspection of our stock is cordially invited. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <b>ARTISTS' MATERIALS.</b> +</h2> +<h3> + <i>Decorative Art Goods.</i><br /> + <b>Mathematical Instruments,</b><br /> + <b>Architects' & Engineers Supplies, etc., etc.</b> +</h3> +<hr /> +<h2> + FROST AND ADAMS, IMPORTERS +</h2> +<center> + <b>No. 37 Cornhill, Boston.</b> +<br /> + F.S. FROST. + H.A. LAWRENCE. +</center> +<p> + Illustrated catalogue free. + Mention this magazine. +</p> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + <b>Mayo's Vegetable Anaesthetic.</b> +</h2> +<hr /> +<p> + A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether, and all + other anaesthetics. Discovered by Dr. U.K. Mao, April, 1884, and since + administered by him and others in over 106,000 cases successfully. + Compounded from nervines which impart oxygen to sustain life, (Nitrous + oxide gas, as administered, is destitute of this and tends to produce + convulsions and suffocation). The youngest child, the most sensitive + lady, and those having heart disease and lung complaint, inhale this + vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation and builds up the + tissues. Recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous prostration. + Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families supplied. For + further information, pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to Dr. U.K. + MAYO, Dentist, 378 Tremont street, Boston, Mass. +</p> +<hr /> +<center> + INDORSEMENT OF THE LATE DR. THORNDIKE. +</center> +<p> + BOSTON, August 15, 1883. +</p> +<p> + This certifies that I removed in the back of Mr. J.D. Moore a tumor + weighing two pounds and three-quarters. The time occupied was twenty-two + minutes. The patient was insensible during the whole operation, and came + out from the influence of the anaesthetic speedily and perfectly, + without nausea or any ill effects. The agent used was prepared by Dr. + U.K. Mayo, the dentist, a new discovery of his own. I consider this + anaesthetic the safest the world has yet seen. +</p> +<p> + WM. H. THORNDIKE, M.D., 92 Boylston, Street. +</p> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx55" name="pagexxx55"></a>[pg xxx55]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" style="float:left;width:175px;margin-left:0;padding-left:0;"> +<a href="images/528.jpg"><img src="images/528.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="VICTOR L. CHANDLER ENGRAVER ON WOOD" /></a> +</div> +<h2> +VICTOR L. CHANDLER <br /> +ENGRAVER ON WOOD </h2> +<h3> 43 MILK ST. <br /> +BOSTON <br /> +MASS. </h3> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<h2> + Are You Out Of <b>PAPER?</b> Or Stationery Of Any Kind? +</h2> +<p> + If so come to our store. If you cannot do that conveniently, drop us a + postal and we will send you FREE a complete set of samples of the best + Foreign and American writing papers with prices, and full information as + to sheets to the pound, sizes, cost of envelopes to match, etc. Papers + from 17 cents to $1.00 per pound. By mail 17 cents per pound extra. +</p> +<h3> WARD & GAY,</h3> +<center> + <b>Paper Merchants</b> AND <b>Stationers,</b><br /> + 184 Devonshire St., Boston. +</center> + +<hr class="interad" /> + +<div class="figure" style="float:right;width:100px;margin-right:0;padding-right:0;"> +<a href="images/510c.jpg"><img src="images/510c.jpg" style="width:100%;" +alt="Tailoring Done as it should be. H. E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston" /></a> +</div> +<h2> Tailoring </h2> +<center> Done as it should be.</center> +<h3> H. E. FALES & Co.</h3> +<center> 375 Washington Street<br /> + Boston</center> + +</div> + +<p> +<span class="pagenum"><a id="pagexxx56" name="pagexxx56"></a>[pg xxx56]</span> +</p> + +<div class="adpage"> + +<div class="figure" > +<a href="images/570.jpg"><img src="images/570.jpg" style="width:350px;" +alt="" /></a> +</div> + +<!-- +<center> +IMPERIAL GRANUM, THE GREAT MEDICINAL FOOD. +</center> +<p> +SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. JOHN CARLE & SONS—New York. +</p> +<center> +THE SALVATOR FOR INVALIDS AND THE AGED. +</center> +<p> +AN INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT FOR THE GROWTH AND PROTECTION OF INFANTS AND +CHILDREN. +</p> +<center> +A SUPERIOR NUTRITIVE IN CONTINUED FEVERS. +</center> +<center> +A RELIABLE REMEDIAL AGENT IN ALL DISEASES OF THE STOMACH AND INTESTINES. +</center> +--> +</div> + +<div style="height: 6em;"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY *** + +***** This file should be named 17726-h.htm or 17726-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/7/2/17726/ + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6 + +Author: Various + +Release Date: February 9, 2006 [EBook #17726] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY *** + + + + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections) + + + + + + +[Illustration: Henry W. Paine] + + + + + + +THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. + +_A Massachusetts Magazine._ + +VOL. III. NOVEMBER, 1885. NO. VI. + + * * * * * + + + + +HENRY W. PAINE. + +BY PROF. WILLIAM MATHEWS, LL.D. + + +Among the callings acknowledged to be not only useful, but indispensable +to society, there is no one, except the medical, which has been oftener +the butt of vulgar ridicule and abuse than the legal. "Lawyers and +doctors," says a writer on Wit and Humor in the _British Quarterly +Review_, "are the chief objects of ridicule in the jest-books of all +ages." But whatever may be the disadvantages of the Law as a profession, +in spite of the aspersions cast upon it by disappointed suitors, +over-nice moralists, and malicious wits, it can boast of one signal +advantage over all other business callings,--that eminence in it is +always a test of ability and acquirement. While in every other +profession quackery and pretension may gain for men wealth and honor, +forensic renown can be won only by rare natural powers aided by profound +learning and varied experience in trying causes. The trickster and the +charlatan, who in medicine and even in the pulpit find it easy to dupe +their fellow-men, find at the bar that all attempts to make shallowness +pass for depth, impudence for wit, and fatal for wisdom, are instantly +baffled. Not only is an acute, sagacious, and austere bench a perilous +foe to the trickery of the ignorant or half-prepared advocate, but the +veteran practitioners around him are quick to detect every sign of +mental weakness, disingenuous artifice, or disposition to substitute +sham for reality. Forensic life is, to a large extent, life in the broad +glare of day, under the scrutiny of keen-eyed observers and merciless +critics. In every cause there are two attorneys engaged, of whom one is +a sentinel upon the other; and a blunder, a slip, an exaggeration, or a +misrepresentation, never escapes without instant exposure. The popular +reputation of a lawyer, it has been well said, is but the winnowed and +sifted judgment which reaches the world through the bar, and is +therefore made up after severe ordeal and upon standard proof. + +These observations are deemed not inappropriate as an introduction to a +sketch of the life of one of the most eminent lawyers of New England, +whose career may be regarded as signally worthy of imitation. + +HENRY WILLIAM PAINE was born August 30th, 1810, in Winslow, +Maine. His father, Lemuel Paine, a native of Foxborough, Mass., was a +graduate of Brown University, and a lawyer by profession, who began +practice in Winslow, Maine, in partnership with Gen. Ripley, afterwards +the hero of Lundy's Lane. Owing to poor health, Mr. Paine, sen., soon +abandoned the law for other pursuits. He was familiar with the +representative English authors, and specially fond of the Greek language +and literature, which he cultivated during his life. He had a tenacious +memory, and could quote Homer by the page. Henry Paine's mother, Jane +Thomson Warren, was the daughter of Ebenezer T. Warren, of Foxborough, +the brother of General Joseph Warren, who fell at Bunker Hill. Of the +three children of Lemuel and Jane T. (Warren) Paine, Henry William was +the second. + +After the usual preparatory education, Mr. Paine entered Waterville +College (now Colby University) in 1826, and graduated in 1830, at the +age of twenty, with the highest honor of his class. During the last year +of the college course, he was principal of Waterville Academy, then just +founded for the preparation of young men for college. He spent eight +hours a day in charge of his pupils, of whom there were eighty-two, and +at the same time kept up with his class in the college studies. As a +teacher he was greatly beloved and respected by his pupils, whose +affection was won by no lack of discipline, but by his kindly sympathy, +encouragement, and watchful aid in their studies. He had an eye that +could beam with tenderness, or dart lightnings; and it was a fine moral +spectacle, illustrating the superiority of mental over physical force, +to see a bully of the school, almost twice his size, and who, +apparently, could have crushed him if he chose, quail under his eagle +gaze, when arraigned at the principal's desk for a misdemeanor. It is +doubtful if ever he flogged a scholar; but he sometimes brought the +ruler down upon the desk with a force that made the schoolroom ring, and +inspired the lawless with a very wholesome respect for his authority. +The fact that from that day to this his office has always been a kind of +Mecca, to which his old pupils, whether dwellers in "Araby the Blest" or +in the sandy wastes of life, have made pious pilgrimages, shows how +deeply he was loved and how highly he was honored as a teacher. + +Immediately after graduation Mr. Paine was appointed a Tutor of +Waterville College, and discharged the duties of that office for a year. +He then began the study of law in the office of his uncle, the late +Samuel S. Warren, of China, Maine, and continued the study in the office +of William Clark, a noted lawyer in Hallowell, Maine, and, for a year, +in the Law School of Harvard University, where he was the classmate of +Charles Sumner, Wendell Phillips and B.F. Thomas. In the autumn of 1834, +he was admitted to the bar of Kennebec County, Maine. Beginning his +professional career at Hallowell, he prosecuted it there with signal +success till the summer of 1854, having for twenty years a practice not +surpassed by that of any member of the Maine bar. During the sessions of +1836, 1837, and again in that of 1853, he represented the citizens of +Hallowell in the lower house of the State Legislature. He was also for +five years Attorney for Kennebec County. During his stay in Maine, he +was repeatedly offered a seat on the bench of the Supreme Judicial Court +of that State; but, having an unconquerable aversion to office of every +kind, civil or political, he declined to accept the honor pressed upon +him. In 1853 he was offered by his political friends, then the dominant +party in the Legislature, a seat in the United States Senate; but he +refused to be nominated. In the summer of 1854, in accordance with a +long cherished resolve, which he had been prevented from executing +before by a promise to his father that he would not leave Maine during +that parent's lifetime, he removed to Cambridge, Mass., and opened a +law-office in Boston. Here he at once entered upon a large and lucrative +practice, both in the State and Federal courts, which kept steadily +increasing for over twenty years, till declining health and partial +deafness compelled him to withdraw from the courts of justice, and +confine himself to office business. During this period, his opinion on +abstruse and knotty points of law was often solicited by eminent counsel +living outside of Massachusetts, and he sent written opinions to +attorneys in nine different states. As Referee and Master in Chancery, +he was called upon to arbitrate in a great number of difficult and +complicated cases, involving the ownership and disposition of large +amounts of property. His decisions in these vexed cases, which often +involved the unravelling of tangled webs of testimony, and the +consideration of the nicest and most delicate questions of law, were +luminous and masterly, and so impartial withal, that the litigants must +have often been convinced of their justness, if not contented,--_etaim +contra quos statuit, aequos placatosque dimisit._ + +In 1863 and 1864 Mr. Paine was nominated, without his consent, by the +Democratic party of Massachusetts, a candidate for the office of +Governor. With much reluctance he accepted the nomination, but, as he +expected, and doubtless to his joy, failed of an election. In 1867, on +the resignation of Chief Justice Bigelow, the office of Chief Justice of +the Supreme Court of Massachusetts was offered by Governor Bullock to +Mr. Paine, who, not wishing to give up his large and profitable practice +at the bar, declined to accept. This decision, though a natural one, is +much to be regretted by the citizens of this state. Coming from an +eminently judicial mind, his decisions, had he sat on the bench, would +have been models of close, cogent reasoning, clearness, and brevity, +worthy of the best days of the Massachusetts judiciary. + +Shortly after his removal to this State Mr. Paine was associated with +Rufus Choate and F.O.J. Smith in the defence of Judge Woodbury Davis, of +Portland, Maine, who had been impeached by the Legislature of that State +for misconduct in his judicial office. In an editorial article upon the +trial, which appeared after its termination, in the Kennebec Journal, +published at Augusta, the Hon. James G. Blaine, the writer, declared +epigrammatically that, in the defence of Judge Chase, "Paine furnished +the logic, Choate the rhetoric, and Smith the slang." + +From 1872 to 1883 Mr. Paine was Lecturer on the Law of Real Property +at the Law School of the Boston University, an office whose duties he +performed with great credit to himself, and profit to those whom he +addressed. So thoroughly was he master of his subject, difficult and +intricate as it confessedly is, that in not a single instance, except +during the lectures of the last year, did he take a note or scrap of +memoranda into the class room. + +While he has always been a close and devoted student of the law, Mr. +Paine has yet found time for general reading, and has hung for many an +hour over the pages of the English classics with keen delight. For Homer +and Virgil he still retains the relish of his early days, and, in the +intervals of professional toil, has often slaked his thirst for the +waters of Helicon in long and copious draughts. How well he appreciated +the advantages of an acquaintance with literature, he showed early in a +suggestive and instructive lecture on "Reading," which we heard him +deliver before the Lyceum at Hallowell more than forty years ago. With +his lamented friend Judge B.F. Thomas, he believes that a man cannot be +a great lawyer who is nothing else,--that exclusive devotion to the +study and practice of the law tends to acumen rather than to breadth, to +subtlety rather than to strength. "The air is thin among the apices of +the law, as on the granite needles of the Alps. Men must find +refreshment and strength in the quiet valleys at their feet." + +With his brethren of the bar Mr. Paine has always held the friendliest +relations, and he has enjoyed their highest esteem. To none, even the +humblest of his fellow advocates, has he ever manifested any of the +haughtiness of a Pinkney, or any of that ruggedness and asperity which +gained for the morose and sullen Thurlow the nickname of _the +tiger_. Amid the fiercest janglings and hottest contentions of the +bar, he has never forgotten that courtesy which should mark the +collision, not less than the friendly intercourse, of cultivated and +polished minds. His victories, won easily by argumentative ability, +tact, and intellectual keenness, unaided by passion, have strikingly +contrasted with the costly victories of advocates less self-restrained. +Though naturally witty and quick at retort, he has never used the weapon +in a way to wound the feelings of an adversary. In examining and +cross-examining witnesses, he has assumed their veracity, whenever it +has been possible to do so; and though he has had the eye of a lynx and +the scent of a hound for prevarication in all its forms, yet he has +never sought by browbeating and other arts of the pettifogger, to +confuse, baffle, and bewilder a witness, or involve him in +self-contradiction. Adopting a quiet, gentle, and straightforward, +though full and careful examination, winning the good-will of the +witness, and inspiring confidence in the questioner, Mr. Paine has been +far more successful in extracting the truth, even from reluctant lips, +than the most artful legal bully. He knows that the manoeuvres and +devices which are best adapted to confuse an honest witness, are just +what the dishonest one is best prepared for. It was not for all the +blustering violence of the tempest, that the traveler would lay aside +his cloak. The result was brought about by the mild and genial warmth of +the sun. + +Few advocates have had more success with juries than the subject of this +sketch. The secret of this success has been, not more the admirable +lucidity and cogency of his addresses, than the confidence and trust +with which his reputation for fairness and truthfulness, and his +evident abhorrence of exaggeration, have inspired his hearers. Another +explanation is, that he has avoided that rock on which so many advocates +wreck their cases,--prolixity. Knowing that, as Sir James Scarlett once +said, when a lawyer exceeds a certain length of time, he is always doing +mischief to his client,--that, if he drives into the heads of the jury +unimportant matter, he drives out matter more important that he had +previously lodged there,--Mr. Paine has taken care to press home the +leading points of his case, giving slight attention to the others. + +That Mr. Paine has been animated in the pursuit of his profession by +higher motives than those which fire the zeal of the mere "hired master +of tongue-fence," is shown by the comparative smallness of his fees, +especially in cases exacting great labor. Great as has been his success +in winning verdicts, and sound as have been his opinions, it is doubtful +whether there is another lawyer living of equal eminence, whose charges +for legal service have been so uniformly moderate. + +Reference has been made to Mr. Paine's wit. Several striking examples +might be cited; but two must suffice. Some years ago, when he was County +Attorney, a man who had been indicted in Kennebec County for arson, was +tried, and acquitted by the jury on the ground that he was an _idiot_. +After the trial, the Judge before whom the case had been tried, sought +to reconcile Mr. Paine to the verdict by some explanatory remarks. "Oh, +I'm quite satisfied, your Honor," said Mr. Paine, "with the defendant's +acquittal. He has been tried by a jury of his _peers_"--On another +occasion, Mr. Paine was making a legal argument before an eminent judge, +when he was interrupted by the latter, who said: "Mr. Paine, you know +that that is not law." "I know it, your Honor," replied the advocate, +with a deferential bow; "but it _was_ law till your Honor just spoke." + +From 1849 to 1862, Mr. Paine was a member of the Board of Trustees of +Waterville College. In 1851, he was elected member of the Maine +Historical Society, and also of the American Academy. In 1854, his Alma +Mater conferred on him the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. + +In the relation of marriage, Mr. Paine has been very happy. In May. +1837, he was united to Miss Lucy E. Coffin, of Newburyport, a lady of +rare endowments, both of head and heart. + +Few men have started in a professional career with a more vigorous and +elastic constitution than Mr. Paine's. Endowed with an iron frame and +nerves of _lignum vitae_, he very naturally felt in youth that his +fund of physical energy was inexhaustible; but, like thousands of other +professional men in this fiery and impatient age, he finds himself in +the autumn of his life afflicted with bodily ills, which he feels that +with reasonable care he might have escaped. Toiling in his profession +year after year from January to December, with no recreation, no summer +vacation, no disposition to follow the wise advice of Horace to +Torquatus,-- + + rebus omissis + Atria servantem postico falle clientem, + +--working double tides, and crowding the work of eighty years into +forty, Mr. Paine finds that, large as was his bank account with Nature, +he has been overdrawing it for years, and that he has now to repay these +drafts with compound interest. The lesson he would have young +professional men learn from his experience, is, that they should account +no time or money wasted, that contributes in any way to their physical +health,--that gives tone to the stomach, or development to the muscles. +Let them understand that, though suffering does not follow instantly +upon the heels of transgression, yet Nature cannot be outraged with +impunity. Though a generous giver she is a hard bargainer, and a most +accurate bookkeeper, whose notice not the eighth part of a cent escapes; +and though the items with which she debits one, taken singly are +seemingly insignificant, and she seldom brings in "that little bill" +till a late day, yet, added up at the end of three score years and ten, +they may show a frightful balance against him, which can have no result +but physical bankruptcy. + +In Mr. Paine's physiognomy the most noticeable features are the broad, +massive, Websterian forehead, and the sparkling eyes. + +In summing up the characteristics of Mr. Paine as a lawyer and as a man, +the writer, who was his pupil at Waterville Academy, and has enjoyed his +friendship to this day, cannot do better than to cite the words of an +acute observer who has known him intimately for many years. Chief +Justice Appleton, of Maine, did not exaggerate, when he said: "He is a +gentleman of a high order of intellect; of superior culture; in private +life, one of the most genial of companions; in his profession, a +profound and learned lawyer, as well as an accomplished advocate." + +To conclude,--if the subject of this imperfect sketch has occasion to +regret his excessive devotion to his calling, he can have no other +regrets. At the close of a long, most useful, and most honorable career, +which has been marked throughout by the severest conscientiousness and +the most scrupulous discharge of every professional duty, he is happily +realizing that blessedness which Sir William Blackstone, when exchanging +the worship of the Muses for that of Themis, prayed might crown the +evening of his days:-- + + "Thus though my noon of life be past, + Yet let my setting sun at last + Find out the still, the rural cell, + Where sage Retirement loves to dwell! + There let me taste the homefelt bliss + Of innocence and inward peace; + Untainted by the guilty bribe, + Uncursed amid the harpy tribe; + No orphan cry to wound my ear, + My honor and my conscience clear; + Thus may I calmly meet my end, + Thus to the grave in peace descend." + + * * * * * + + + + +PICKETT'S CHARGE. + +BY CHARLES A. PATCH, MASS., VOLS. + + +In all great wars involving the destinies of nations, it is neither the +number of battles, nor the names, nor the loss of life, that remain +fixed in the mind of the masses; but simply the one decisive struggle +which either in its immediate or remote sequence closes the conflict. Of +the hundred battles of the great Napoleon, Waterloo alone lingers in the +memory. The Franco-Prussian War, so fraught with changes to Europe, +presents but one name that will never fade,--Sedan. Even in our own +country, how few battles of the Revolution can we enumerate; but is +there a child who does not know that Bunker Hill sounded the death-knell +of English rule in the land? And now, but twenty years since the +greatest conflict of modern times was closed at Appomattox, how few can +we readily recall of the scores of blood-stained battle-fields on which +our friends and neighbors fought and fell; but is there one, old or +young, cultured or ignorant, of the North or of the South, that cannot +speak of Gettysburg? But what is Gettysburg either in its first day's +Federal defeat, or its second day's terrible slaughter around Little +Round Top, without the _third_ day's immortal charge by Pickett and +his brave Virginians. In it we have the culmination of the Rebellion. It +took long years after to drain _all_ the life-blood from the foe, +but never again did the wave of Rebellion rise so gallantly high as when +it beat upon the crest of Cemetery Ridge. + +The storming of the heights of Inkerman, the charge of the noble Six +Hundred, the fearful onslaught of the Guards at Waterloo, the scaling of +Lookout Mountain,--have all been sung in story, and perhaps always will +be; but they all pale beside the glory that will ever enshroud the +heroes who, with perhaps not literally "cannon to right of them" and +"cannon to left of them," but with a hundred cannon belching forth death +in _front_ of them, hurled themselves into the centre of a great +army and had victory almost within their grasp. + +To describe this charge, we will go back to the evening of the 2nd of +July, and recall upon what basis the cautious Lee could undertake so +fearful a responsibility. The victorious Southrons fresh from their +triumphs at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville had entered the North +carrying consternation and dismay to every hamlet, with none to oppose; +their forward march was one of spoil, and it was not till the 1st of +July that they met their old foemen, the Army of the Potomac, in the +streets of Gettysburg, and after a fierce conflict drove them back. The +second day's conflict was a terrible slaughter, and at its close the +Federal Army, although holding its position, was to a certain extent +disheartened. Many of our best generals and commanding officers were +killed or wounded, scores of regiments and batteries were nearly wiped +out, Sickles' line was broken and driven in and its position was held by +Longstreet. Little Round Top, the key of the position, was held only at +a frightful loss of life, and Ewell upon the right had gained a footing +upon the Ridge. The Rebel army was joyful and expectant of victory. The +morning of the 3rd of July opened clear and bright, and one hundred +thousand men faced each other awaiting the signal of conflict; but, +except the pushing of Ewell from his position, the hours passed on +relieved only by the rumbling of artillery carriages as they were massed +by Lee upon Seminary Ridge, and by Meade upon Cemetery Ridge. At twelve +o'clock Lee ascended the cupola of the Pennsylvania College, in quiet +surveyed the Union lines, and decided to strike for Hancock's Centre. +Meanwhile, Pickett with his three Virginia brigades had arrived from +Chambersburg and taken cover in the woods of Seminary Ridge. What Lee's +feelings must have been, as he looked at the hundred death-dealing +cannon massed on Cemetery Hill, and the fifty thousand men waiting +patiently in front and behind them, men whose valor he knew well in many +a bitter struggle--and then looked at his handful of brave Virginians, +three, small, decimated brigades which he was about to hurl into that +vortex of death,--no one will ever know. The blunder that sent the +Light Brigade to death at Balaklava was bad enough, but here were +five thousand men waiting to seek victory where, only the day before +ten thousand had lost their lives or their limbs in the same futile +endeavor. Leaving the college, Lee called a council of his generals at +Longstreet's headquarters, and the plan of attack was formed. It is said +that the level-headed Longstreet opposed the plan, and if so it was but +in keeping with his remarkable generalship. The attack was to be opened +with artillery fire to demoralize and batter the Federal line, and was +to be opened by a signal of two shots from the Washington Artillery. At +half-past one the report of the first gun rang out on the still, summer +air, followed a minute later by the second, and then came the roar and +flash of one hundred and thirty-eight rebel cannon. Almost immediately +one hundred Federal guns responded and the battle had begun. Shot and +shell tore through the air, crashing through batteries, tearing men and +horses to pieces; the very earth seemed to shake and the hills to reel +as the terrible thunders re-echoed amongst them. For nearly an hour +every conceivable form of ordnance known to modern gunnery hissed and +shrieked, whistled and screamed, as it went forth on its death-mission +till exhausted by excitement and heat the gunners slackened their fire +and silence reigned again. + +Then Pickett and his brave legion stood up and formed for the +death-struggle; three remnants of brigades consisting of Garnett's +brigade:--the 8th, 18th, 19th, 28th, 56th Virginia; Armistead's +brigade:--the 9th, 14th, 38th, 53rd, 57th Virginia; Kempers's +brigade:--the 1st, 3rd, 7th, 11th, 24th Virginia. Their tattered flags +bore the scars of a score of battles and from their ranks the merciless +bullet had already taken two-thirds their number. In compact ranks, +their front scarcely covering two of Hancock's brigades, with flags +waving as if for a gala-day, Gen. Pickett saluted Longstreet and asked, +"Shall I go forward, sir?" but it was not in Longstreet's heart to send +those heroes of so many battles to certain death; and he turned away his +head,--when Pickett with that proud, impetuous air which has earned him +the title of the "Ney" of the Rebel army, exclaimed, "Sir! I _shall_ +lead my division forward!" The orders now rang out, "_Attention_! +_Attention_!" and the men, realizing the end was near, cried out to +their comrades, "Good-by, boys! good-by!" Suddenly rang on the air the +final order from Pickett himself, as his sabre flashed from its +scabbard,--"_column forward! guide centre_!" And the brigades of +Kemper, Garnett and Armistead moved towards Cemetery Ridge as one man. +Soon Pettigrew's division emerged from the woods and followed in echelon +on Pickett's left flank, and Wilcox with his Alabama division moved out +to support his right flank--in all about fifteen thousand men. The +selection of these supports shows a lack of judgment which it would +almost seem impossible for Lee to have made. Pettigrew's division was +composed mostly of new troops from North Carolina, and had been terribly +used up in the first day's fight, and were in no condition to form part +of a forlorn hope. Wilcox's troops had also received very severe +punishment in the second day's engagement in his attack on the Ridge and +should have been replaced by fresh well-tried brigades. But the movement +had now begun and Lee with his generals about him watched anxiously for +the result. + +[Illustration: MAJ. GEN. GEORGE E. PICKETT] + +It was nearly a mile to the Union lines, and as they advanced over the +open plain the Federal artillery opened again, ploughing great lanes +through their solid ranks, but they closed up to '_guide centre_' +as if upon dress-parade; when half way over Pickett halted his division +amidst a terrible fire of shot and shell, and changed his direction by +an oblique movement coolly and beautifully made. But here occurred the +greatest mistake of all. Wilcox paid no attention to this change of +movement, but kept straight on to the front, thus opening a tremendous +gap between the two columns and exposing Pickett's right to all the +mishaps that afterwards overtook it. To those who have ever faced +artillery fire it is marvellous and unexplainable how human beings could +have advanced a mile under the terrific fire of a hundred cannon, every +inch of air being laden with the missiles of death; but in splendid +formation they still came bravely on till within range of the musketry; +then the blue line of Hancock's corps arose and poured into their ranks +a murderous fire. With a wild yell the rebels pushed on, unfalteringly +crossed the Federal line and laid hands upon eleven cannon. + +Men fired in each others faces; there were bayonet thrusts, cutting with +sabres, hand to hand contests, oaths, curses, yells and hurrahs. The +second corps fell back behind the guns to allow the use of grape and +double canister, and as it tore through the rebel ranks at only a few +paces distant the dead and wounded were piled in ghastly heaps. Still on +they came up to the very muzzles of the guns; they were blown away from +the cannon's mouth but yet they did not waver. Pickett had taken the key +to the position and the glad shout of victory was heard, as, the very +impersonation of a soldier, he still forced his troops to the crest of +Cemetery Ridge. Kemper and Armistead broke through Hancock's line, +scaled the hill and planted their flags on its crest. Just before +Armistead was shot, he placed his flag upon a captured cannon and cried +"_Give them the cold steel, boys_!"; but valor could do no more, +the handful of braves had won immortality but could not conquer an army. +Pettigrew's weak division was broken fleeing and almost annihilated. +Wilcox, owing to his great mistake in separating his column was easily +routed, and Stannard's Vermonters thrown into the gap were creating +havoc on Pickett's flank. Pickett, seeing his supports gone, his +generals, Kemper, Armistead and Garnett killed or wounded, every field +officer of three brigades gone, three-fourths of his men killed or +captured, himself untouched but broken-hearted, gave the order for +retreat, but band of heroes as they were they fled not; but amidst that +still continuous, terrible fire they slowly, sullenly, recrossed the +plain,--all that was left of them, but few of five thousand. + +[Illustration: Position of troops at time of attack on left centre on +3rd day of battle of Gettysburg.] + +Thus ended the greatest charge known to modern warfare. Made in a +most unequal manner against a great army and amidst the most terrific +cannonade known in wars, and yet so perfect was the discipline, so +audacious the valor that had this handful of Virginians been properly +supported they would perhaps have rendered the Federal position +untenable, and possibly have established the Southern Confederacy. +While other battle-fields are upturned by the plough and covered with +waving grain, Cemetery Ridge will forever proudly uphold its monuments +telling of glory both to the Blue and the Gray, and our children's +children while standing upon its crest will rehearse again of Pickett's +wonderful charge. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PATRIOT, SAMUEL ADAMS. + +BY EDWARD P. GUILD. + + +[Illustration: SAMUEL ADAMS. FROM COPLEY'S PAINTING.[1]] + +Three years ago the old State House in Boston was restored to its +original architectural appearance. After having fallen a prey to the +ruthless hand of commerce, been surmounted with a "Mansard roof," +disfigured by a legion of business signs, made a hitching place for +scores of telegraph wires, and lastly been threatened with entire +demolition by the ever arrogant spirit of "business enterprise"; the +sentiment of patriotic veneration asserted itself and came to the +rescue. With an appropriation of $35,000 from the city, work was begun +in the fall of 1881, and by the following July the ancient building had +been restored to almost exactly its appearance in the last century. As +the Old State House now stands, it is identical with the Town House +which Boston first used for its town meeting May 13, 1713. This was nine +years before the birth of the man destined to become the foremost +character in the Boston town meeting of the eighteenth century--Samuel +Adams. Probably no other man who ever lived has been so identified with +the history of the Old State House as was he. The town meetings were +held in Faneuil Hall after 1742, but through the stormy years when the +Assembly met in the old building, Samuel Adams was in constant +attendance as clerk. His desk, on which he wrote the first sentences +ever ventured for American independence, and by which he arose, and, +with hands often tremulous with nervous energy, directed the exciting +debates, is to-day in the old Assembly chamber in the western end of the +building. In 1774 he went to Congress, but for a long period afterward +the Old State House was again his field of labor, as senator, as +lieutenant governor and then as governor. + +The life of Samuel Adams ought to be more familiar than it is to the +patriotic young men of to-day, but some excuse is found in the fact that +a popular, concise biography has, until lately, not been written. The +excellent three volume work of Mr. Wells, Adams' great grandson, +although admirable as an exhaustive biography, is too voluminous for the +common reader; but since the appearance of Prof. Hosmer's recent book[2] +there can be no reason why any schoolboy should not have a clear idea of +the life of the man who organized the Revolution. + +It is only as a patriot that Samuel Adams claims our attention. Although +college bred he was a man of letters only so far as his pen could write +patriotic resolutions and scathing letters against the government of +King George. These letters were printed for the most part in the "Boston +Gazette," published by Edes & Gill in Court Street. As a business man he +was never a success. For years he kept the old malt house on Purchase +Street, but he gave the business little thought, for his mind was +constantly engrossed in public matters, and at last he made no pretext +of attending to any matter of private business, depending for support +only upon his small salary as clerk of the assembly. No one will ever +accuse Samuel Adams of any selfish ambition, and, although his every act +will not bear the closest application of the square and rule, yet he +never deceived nor used a doubtful method in the least degree for +personal gain. + +Adams did not begin his public career early in life. In 1764 he was +chosen a member of the committee to instruct the representatives just +elected to the General Court, and the paper drafted on that occasion is +the first document from his pen of which we now have any trace, and is +memorable, moreover, because it contains the first public denial of the +authority of the Stamp Act. Adams was now forty-two, his hair was +already touched with gray, and "a peculiar tremulousness of the head and +hands made it seem as if he were already on the threshold of old age." +He had, however, a remarkably sound constitution, a medium sized, +muscular frame, and clear, steel-gray eyes. + +[Illustration: OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1793.] + +Among those closely connected with Adams in the public service, which, +from this time on, became his only thought, were John Hancock and James +Otis. Adams contrasted strongly with both of these men. Hancock was the +richest man in the province and as liberal as he was wealthy. In the +general jubilation that followed the repeal of the Stamp Act, he opened +a pipe of Madeira wine before his elegant mansion opposite the Common, +and so long as it lasted it was freely dispensed to the crowd. The dress +of Hancock when at home is described as a "red velvet cap, within which +was one of fine linen, the edge of this turned up over the velvet one, +two or three inches. He wore a blue damask gown lined with silk, a white +plaited stock, a white silk embroidered waistcoat, black silk +small-clothes, white silk stockings and red morocco slippers." Adams was +in marked contrast with Otis in temperament. The former, always cool and +collected and his words based on deliberate reason, was the extreme of +the other who carried his arguments in a flood of impetuous eloquence. +"Otis was a flame of fire," says Sewall. But although Otis was once +almost the ideal of the people, his erratic tendencies at last unfitted +him for a leader. + +One reason of Sam Adams' prestige with the masses was his common and +familiar intercourse with mechanics and artisans. Hancock, Otis, Bowdoin +and Curtis, on account of their wealth and ideas of aristocracy, kept +more or less aloof from the workmen; while Adams, plainly clad and with +familiar but dignified manner, was often found in the ship yards or at +the rope walks engaged in earnest conversation with the homely +craftsmen. Indeed, nothing pleased him more than to be talking with a +ship carpenter as they sat side by side on a block of oak, or with some +shopkeeper in a sheltered fence corner. Most of his writing was done in +a little room in his Purchase Street house where night after night his +busy mind and quill were kept at work on his trenchant letters for the +"Gazette," which were signed with significant nom de plumes in Latin. + +The year 1768 was made notable by the arrival in Boston from England of +the 14th and the 29th regiments. The main guard was quartered in King +(now State) Street, with the cannon pointed toward the State House, and +the troops occupied various houses in the vicinity. In the next year the +Governor, Bernard, was recalled, and Thomas Hutchinson, although +remaining nominally lieutenant governor, became acting chief magistrate. +He now appeared the most conspicuous figure among the royalists, and +Samuel Adams became more distinctly the leader of the patriots. +Neglecting all other affairs, he was content to live on a pittance, +which he was enabled to do by a frugal and helpful wife. + +Affairs were now approaching a crisis. A consignment of goods from +England, sent in defiance of the non-importation agreements, was not +allowed to land and had to be returned. One importer, a Scotchman, would +not sign the agreements, so after much remonstrance, Samuel Adams arose +in town meeting and grimly moved that the number present, about two +thousand, should resolve itself into a committee of the whole, wait upon +the obstinate merchant and use such persuasion as should be necessary to +secure a compliance. But no vote was needed, for the Scotchman was +present, and rushing to the front with knees trembling and in a +squeaking voice, rolling his r's like a well-played drum, exclaimed:-- +"Mr. Mode-r-r-rater, I agr-r-ree, I agr-r-ree!" greatly to the amusement +of the people. + +It was early in the next year, 1770, that the hostility between +towns-people and soldiers led for the first time to the shedding of +blood. In February a boy, Christopher Snyder, was shot and killed during +a disturbance, and in March occurred the "Boston Massacre." The story has +been many times told. Quarrels had grown frequent between the soldiers +and the rope-walk hands, the soldiers usually getting the worst of it. +On the evening of the 5th, an altercation began just below the Old State +House, between the sentinel of the guard and a crowd of townsfolk. An +alarm was rung from one of the steeples, and many citizens hurried to +the place, most of them thinking that a fire had broken out. A sentry +was at the corner of King and Exchange streets, where the Custom House +stood, and he was assaulted by the boys with snowballs. Captain Preston +with seven or eight men rushed to the scene, loaded their muskets and +made ready to fire. The mob hooted, struck their muskets and dared them +to fire. At last a volley came. Three were killed and eight wounded. +At once there was a tumult. The bells were all rung and the populace +hurried to and fro. The bodies of the slain lay on the ground which was +sprinkled with a light snow, serving to plainly reveal in the clear +moon-light the stains of blood. + +[Illustration: OLD STATE HOUSE IN 1801.] + +The 29th regiment repaired to the spot prepared for firing, and there +would have been a fierce contest but for the excellent conduct of the +acting governor, Hutchinson. He took Captain Preston severely to task +for firing at the people without the orders of a civil magistrate, and +then, quickly working his way to the State House, took his stand in the +balcony of the council-chamber looking down King Street, and made an +address promising that the law should prevail and justice should be done +to all. The next morning Hutchinson was waited upon by the selectmen who +informed him that there would be no peace until the soldiers should +depart. Hutchinson claimed, however, that the regiments were not under +his command. + +A mass meeting was soon held in Faneuil Hall, and was addressed by +Samuel Adams. It may readily be believed that he advocated no +compromise, and a committee of fifteen was immediately appointed of +which Adams was a member. According to instructions, they at once +repaired to the council chamber, and demanded the instant removal of the +troops. At three o'clock a regular town meeting assembled in Faneuil +Hall, but, owing to the great number present, adjourned to the Old South +Meeting House. Then the committee of fifteen appeared making their way +from the council-chamber to the meeting-house. Samuel Adams was at the +head, and as the crowd made way on either hand he bared his head, and, +inclining to the right and left, as he passed through the line, kept +repeating: "Both regiments or none!" "Both regiments or none!" + +[Illustration: STATUE IN ADAMS SQUARE.] + +In the presence of the dense multitude in the Old South, the governor's +reply was rendered: the 29th regiment should go to the castle, but the +14th must remain. Then the cry arose, "Both regiments or none!" and as +the shout echoed from every quarter it was plain that the people had +caught the meaning of the watchword, given shortly before by Adams. A +new committee, also including Adams, was appointed and sent back to the +governor, and as they stood in the council chamber the scene was one +that John Adams pronounced long after as worthy a historical painting. A +few sentences from Adams' address to Hutchinson are clear enough to show +the intense earnestness and patriotism of the man. + + "It is well known," he said, "that acting as governor of the Province, + you are by its charter the commander-in-chief of the military forces + within it; and as such, the troops now in the capital are subject to + your orders. If you, or Colonel Dalrymple under you, have the power to + remove one regiment, you have the power to remove both; and nothing + short of their total removal will satisfy the people or preserve the + peace of the Province. A Multitude highly incensed now wait the result + of this application. The voice of ten thousand freemen demands that + both regiments be forthwith removed. Their voice must be respected, + their demand obeyed. Fail not then at your peril to comply with this + requisition! On you alone rests the responsibility of this decision; + and if the just expectations of the people are disappointed, you must + be answerable to God and your country for the fatal consequences that + must ensue. The committee have discharged their duty, and it is for + you to discharge yours. They wait your final determination." + + +Hutchinson for a long time stood firm, but yielded at last and the +troops were removed. + +It is not the purpose of this paper to follow Samuel Adams through his +active career in the years of the Revolution and the succeeding period. +It is always Samuel Adams, the unswerving patriot, the adroit leader, +the man of the people. It had long been felt in England that his was the +most active spirit in the cause of the patriots, and there was much talk +of effecting his arrest and bringing him to trial on the charge of +treason, but the move was never made. Adams' courage never failed. He +had long given up the idea of any compromise between the colonies and +the Crown, and there is nothing conciliatory in his words or acts. When +the tea was emptied into Boston Harbor it was easily understood that +Adams was the real leader in the action. No one familiar with the life +of the great town meeting man, as Prof. Hosmer likes to call him, can +doubt that he had the essential qualities of an adroit strategist. +Cromwell once locked Parliament out, Adams once locked the Assembly in. +He had secured a majority of the members to vote for a Continental +Congress, but could the resolve be presented and brought to a final vote +before Governor Gage could prorogue the Assembly, as he would use all +speed to do, the instant the first knowledge of the scheme reached his +ears? On the 17th of June, just one year before the Battle of Bunker +Hill, that question was answered. The resolve was offered that day +providing for the appointment of delegates to such a congress. Tory +members at once essayed to leave the hall to dispatch the news to +the governor, but the bolts were fast, and Samuel Adams had the key +in his pocket. Two months later the delegates were on their way to +Philadelphia,--Thomas Cushing, Samuel and John Adams and Robert Treat +Paine. + +Events then transpired rapidly. So far, Samuel Adams was almost wholly +alone in the idea of independence, but it was declared by Congress less +than two years later. For more than twenty years longer, Adams continued +in public life, but his greatest work was before the Declaration of +Independence rather than after. There were times when the cause of the +patriots must have fallen through but for the nerve and skill of this +man. Bowdoin, Cushing, Hancock, Otis, and even John Adams could not have +been thoroughly trusted in the last years of the colony to bring affairs +to a successful issue. But Samuel Adams was fitted by intellect and +character, adroitness and courage, tireless energy and by never failing +devotion to the public good, to be the man for the time. + +When America had become a Republic, and Adams had returned from Congress +to his native town, he served as presiding officer of the Senate, then +as lieutenant governor, and, upon the death of Hancock, governor, to +which office he was several times chosen by the people. He died in 1803, +and his dust lies to-day in the old Granary Burying Ground, close by the +common grave of the four victims of the Boston Massacre. + +The statue in bronze now standing in Adams Square is noble in design, +and appropriate for situation. It is in almost the busiest position of +the great city, and daily across its shadow pass tens of thousands of +mechanics and artisans--the class of men with whom Samuel Adams used to +love to hold intercourse. The Old State House and Faneuil Hall are only +a stone's-throw distant from the statue, but the face is not looking in +the direction of either; it is turned directly toward the visible shaft +of granite on Bunker Hill--the monument which marks the first great +battle in the struggle for that Independence toward which, in all his +labors for so many years, the eyes of Samuel Adams were ever turned. + + +[Footnote 1: For the reproduction of the above portrait and the two +following views of the Old State House, we are indebted to the courtesy +of Messrs. Ticknor & Co., the well-known Boston publishers.--Ed.] + +[Footnote 2: Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer, 1 vol., 442 pp. American +Statesmen Series. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1883.] + + * * * * * + + + + +AUTHORITATIVE LITERATURE OF THE CIVIL WAR. + +BY GEORGE LOWELL AUSTIN. + + +II. + + + THE LIFE AND PUBLIC SERVICES OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, sixteenth + President of the United States: together with His State Papers, + including his Speeches, Addresses, Messages, Letters, and Proclamations, + and the closing Scenes connected with his life and death. By Henry J. + Raymond. To which are added Anecdotes and Personal Reminiscences of + President Lincoln, by Frank B. Carpenter, with a steel portrait, and + other illustrations, 1 vol. octavo, pp. 808. New York: Derby and Miller, + 1865. + + +During the Presidential canvass of 1864, the author of this volume +prepared a work upon the administration of President Lincoln. That +canvass resulted in the re-election of Mr. Lincoln, whose death occurred +soon after his second inauguration. As the editor of the _New York +Times_, Mr. Raymond possessed at the time ample facilities to prepare +such a book as was needed to interest the public in the life of one +whose work was at once as great as it was successful. Up to the day of +its publication, this book was the best and most authoritative that had +been published. Twenty years have since elapsed, and in many respects it +still maintains a just superiority and a historical value that cannot be +questioned. Its errors are of omission, rather than of commission; while +its merits are so great as to render it indispensable to all future +writers on the subject. Every public speech, message, letter, or +document of any sort of Mr. Lincoln's, so far as accessible in 1865, +will be found included in the volume. The rapidly occuring events of +the civil war, with much of their secret history, are tersely and +graphically described. The "Reminiscences" of Mr. Carpenter, covering +about thirty pages, add interest to the volume. + + + ABRAHAM LINCOLN: The True Story of a Great Life. Showing the + inner growth, special training and peculiar fitness of the Man for his + work. By William O. Stoddard. Illustrated. 1 vol. octavo, pp. 508. New + York: Fords, Howard & Hurlbert, 1884. + + +Mr. Stoddard was one of President Lincoln's secretaries during the civil +war, and very naturally his work ought to have strong claims upon the +interest and attention of American readers. His book is not of a +profound or critical character; but a singularly honest and candid and +strictly personal biography, simply written for readers of all ages and +degrees of intelligence. It sheds considerable light on the political +history of the civil war and on the events which led to it. With the +military history, it deals but little. Still its brief, vigorous and +vivid sketches furnish an exceedingly fascinating bird's eye view of the +great struggle. But its most valuable feature is the clearness with +which it depicts Lincoln, the man,--his sagacity and patience at +critical moments, his keen perception of "popular" sentiment and +disposition, his _individuality_, his distinctive fitness for the +tasks and burdens which fell upon him. This work, at once so accurate, +so comprehensive, so discriminating and so well written, is one for all +Americans, and particularly for younger readers. It has in it a charm +possessed but by very few biographies, and a fascination that but few +novels can surpass. To enjoy it and to profit by it, one need not always +coincide with the author's judgments of men and measures, or his +criticisms of military leaders and policies. + + + THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By Isaac N. Arnold. 1 vol. octavo, + pp. 462. Chicago: Jansen, McClurg & Co., 1885. + + +This work also possesses strong claims upon our attention. It was +completed only a few days before the death of its eminent author. +Furthermore, Mr. Arnold knew President Lincoln better than almost any +other man; they had been intimate friends for more than a quarter of a +century, thinking, conversing and working together during all that time. +When the civil war broke out, Mr. Arnold entered Congress; became one of +the most trusted advisers of the President; and no one better than he +knew and comprehended the latter's thoughts and intentions; even the +cabinet officers and the private secretaries never approached so near to +the heart and mind of President Lincoln as did his life long, trusted +and admired friend. In 1867, Mr. Arnold published a "History of Abraham +Lincoln and the Overthrow of Slavery" which is a work of rare interest +and of exceptional historic value. But this work, in the judgment of the +author, was unsatisfactory from the fact that, while it depicted well +enough the _times_, it failed to portray the _life_ of President +Lincoln. The later volume meets the deficiency, and in fact leaves +absolutely nothing to be desired. The spirit of tenderness broods over +its charmful pages. Singularly unpretentious, its very simplicity is +eloquent and inspiring, and makes the heart of the reader blend with the +grand and noble heart of its subject. Its accuracy is unmarred; it +explains all doubts that have ever existed in regard to Mr. Lincoln's +motives and acts; it asserts nothing without proving it; it tells the +plain, straightforward story, and leaves criticism to others. As a +_personal_ biography of Mr. Lincoln's life and character, this book +is not only unsurpassed, but it deserves to rank as one of the classics +in our native literature. + + + THE POLITICAL CONSPIRACIES PRECEDING THE REBELLION; or the True + Story of Sumter and Pickens, By Thomas M. Anderson, Lieut. Col. U.S.A. 1 + vol. quarto, pp. 100. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1883. + + +The author assumes that there were "a number of conspiracies" antedating +the immediate outbreak of the civil war, but makes no claim that the war +was the result of such conspiracies. His narrative, then, is merely +descriptive of the events which took place in the period between October +1860 and April 1861, purely _resume_ in character and wholly based +upon the disclosures of the Official Records. The author allows himself +to criticise men and acts rather freely, and at times captiously; and +has evidently intended his book to be a defence of his brother, the hero +of Sumter, against certain charges which were once made against him. The +old hero needs no defender, even if we suppose that he ever merited +criticism. The volume is a small one,--trustworthy as regards its +statements and valuable for reference. It may profitably be read in +conjunction with the second volume of Mr. Curtis's _Life_ of _James +Buchanan_, also with the small volume, by General Doubleday, entitled +_The Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Pickens in 1860-61_. + + + THE PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN OF GENERAL MCCLELLAN IN 1862. Papers read + before the Military Historical Society of Massachusetts in 1876-77-78 + and 80. Printed for the Society. Vol. I, octavo, pp. 249. Boston: James + R. Osgood and Company, 1881. + + +The Military Society of Massachusetts was organized in 1876, with the +object of investigating questions relating to the civil war. Up to the +date of the publication of this volume, about forty papers were read, +six of them being devoted to the Peninsular Campaign of 1862, eleven +to General Pope's campaign of 1862, three to the campaign of +Chancellorsville, three to the Antietam campaign, sixteen to the +campaign of 1864, and one each to the battle of Mobile Bay and Grouchy +controversy,--all, with the exception of the last two, bearing upon the +operations of the Army of the Potomac in 1862 and 1864, and including +discussions from different standpoints of the objects and general plans +of the several campaigns and battles in which it participated, and of +the controverted questions that have arisen concerning them. The first +printed volume of the Society contains the following papers:--"General +McClellan's Plans for the campaign of 1862, and the Alleged Interference +of the Government with them," by John C. Ropes, Esq: "The Siege of +Yorktown," by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. John C. Palfrey, U.S.A.: "The Period +which elapsed between the Fall of Yorktown and the Beginning of the +Seven-Days-Battles," by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. Francis W. Palfrey, U.S.V. "The +Seven-Days Battles--to Malvern Hill," by same author. "The Battle of +Malvern Hill," by same author; "Comments on the Peninsular Campaign," +by Bvt.-Brig.-Gen. Charles A. Whittier, U.S.V. All of these are earnest +discussions,--but of unequal worth--of the various merits or demerits +of General McClellan in the Peninsular campaign, or the attitude of the +government toward him at that time. The ground is traversed as often +before; all the old arguments are again brought into comparison, and +a very small amount of _new_ evidence is discovered. What has +previously been said in many books and pamphlets and by a score of +writers, is here said in one volume by three writers. But nothing +appears to be _freshly_ said, and, as usual, the conclusions +reached are colored by the political likes or dislikes of their several +writers. The sole merit of the volume lies in the fact that its papers +embody a mass of very valuable material, gleaned from trustworthy +sources, for the future historian. It is very safe to assume, however, +that the future historian while expressing gratitude for their +investigations, will not be tempted to place much weight upon the +conclusions of the gentlemen who hold the monopoly of this volume but +have not solved a single mooted question. + + + LIFE OF JAMES BUCHANAN, Fifteenth President of the United + States. By George Ticknor Curtis. 2 vols. octavo, pp. 625, 707. New + York: Harper & Brothers, 1883. + + +The second volume of this exceedingly painstaking and meritorious +biography sheds much light upon the events preceding, and those +transpiring during, the civil war. As another writer has remarked, +"there is something very pitiable, something almost tragic, in the +figure of James Buchanan during the last months of his administration." +He found himself wavering between two factions, between Right and Wrong. +So long as he wavered, the South stood by him; when he ceased to be a +wary politician and manifested a decision of character such as the times +demanded, the South turned against him as one man. His biographer proves +conclusively that the weak and time-serving President was _opposed_ +to secession; but as positively proves without intending to do so, that +he favored it by his singular unfitness and indifference in emergencies. +When secession threatened, Mr. Buchanan took the ground that he would +not precipitate war by applying force to prevent a State from seceding, +but that he would defend the flag and property of the United States. +With this policy in his heart, he permitted public property to be +seized, without striking a blow; he discovered treason in his cabinet, +and coolly allowed the traitors to consummate their work and to depart. +The fact was, that he was a very weak man, and his biographer is the +best authority for the statement. The work is important; it will always, +as it richly merits, be consulted by students, and may be read with +interest and profit by all. + +(To be continued.) + + * * * * * + + + + +ASSESSMENT LIFE INSURANCE. + +BY SHEPPARD ROMANS. + + +Life insurance, by whatever system, plan or method, has, for its +fundamental basis, the laws governing the rates of mortality at the +different ages. These fundamental laws have been developed and made +clear by a vast amount of statistical data obtained from observations +among persons insured in life insurance companies among annuitants, +among inhabitants of various towns and cities, and among the whole +population in certain countries, notably in England and in Belgium. One +uniform, unvarying, certain law has been thus established, which is that +the rate of mortality, or in other words the cost of insurance, +increases as a man grows older. From this law there is no escape. We +must accept the inevitable. Hence any system of insurance which is not +in accordance with this first principle, this unalterable law of nature, +is unsound, and any company, whether charging level premiums or natural +premiums, which does not recognize and conform to this fundamental law +of nature, is doomed to disaster and wreck, sooner or later. + +There are two methods of life insurance worthy of the name, and two +only. The one is by payments accurately adjusted to the cost of +insurance at each actual age, and which inevitably, unavoidably and +inexorably, must increase with the age of the person insured, and the +other is by level, or uniform payments extending over the whole duration +of life or for a stated number of years. The first is the natural system +and has been adopted _in part_, and imperfectly, by assessment +companies; the second is the artificial system, and is the one which has +been offered exclusively until lately, by all the regular life insurance +companies. Properly carried out, the one is as sound in theory and as +safe in practice as the other. In fact, the artificial premiums are the +exact mathematical or commuted equivalents of the natural premiums. + +Until within the last decade, the level premium system was practically +the only one in use. Since then there have come into existence hundreds +of co-operative or assessment companies. These institutions have had a +wonderful growth. It is claimed that the number of members and the +amounts insured, double those, respectively, in the old or regular +companies. + +Assessment companies do not, strictly speaking, grant insurance. They +are rather agencies, or trust companies, and their functions or +covenants are to make assessments upon survivors when deaths occur, and +to pay over the proceeds of such assessments to the beneficiaries of the +deceased members. There is no definite promise to pay in full, and no +obligation to pay more than the assessments yield. There is no capital, +no risk, no _insurance!_ It is a voluntary association of +individuals. There is usually but little if any penalty for +discontinuance of membership, and the permanence of such institutions +depends mainly upon the volition of their members. They spring into +existence suddenly by the voluntary association of a few individuals +without capital or personal risk, and as suddenly they may go out of +existence by the voluntary act or withdrawal of their members. A breath +may create, a breath destroy. + +It must be evident then to the merest tyro, that the permanence and +success of assessment companies depend upon the most rigid observance of +those principles which science and sound business experience have +demonstrated to be fundamental. Among these principles may be mentioned +the following. + +1. Rates of assessments or payments adjusted to the cost of insurance at +the actual age of each person. These rates must inevitably and +inexorably increase with the age of the individual. + +2. The creation of a guaranty, or emergency fund, available not only to +meet extra mortality, but as a cement to secure cohesion among the +members, and prevent the exodus of the sound lives. + +3. An assessment in advance at issue of certificate, otherwise some +persons will be insured for nothing and the cost will fall on the +persistent members. + +As was well said by a contributor in your last number, assessment +insurance has its defects, and these are well known to the managers of +these institutions, and that great improvements have been made by the +National Convention of assessment companies, which is composed of +representatives from the best companies organized in almost every state. +They recognize existing defects, they point out the remedies, and yet, +but few seem to have the courage of their convictions. It is a fact +beyond dispute, that with perhaps a half-dozen exceptions, the rates of +assessment in every assessment company in the country remain constant as +at the age of entry. That is to say, a man entering at the age of forty, +pays the rate at forty only, as long as he remains a member. This is a +direct violation of the inexorable law of nature which says, that as a +man grows older the risk of dying, or in other words the cost of +insurance, increases. It is all nonsense to urge that the _average_ +age and the average cost will be kept down by the influx of new members. +The contract is made with the individual, and unless each person pays +enough to compensate the company for the indemnity or insurance +furnished to him, it follows of necessity, that others will be +overcharged in order to meet the deficiency so occasioned. And this evil +is intensified each year as the company grows older. When younger and +fresher men find that they are overcharged in order to meet deficiencies +arising from the act that older and inferior risks pay less than cost, +they will either not enter, or, if members, will speedily desert and +join an institution which is on a sounder and more equitable basis. No +institution can be permanently successful which does not observe equity. +I have no hesitation in saying that every assessment or corporation +company which violates this fundamental law of nature by not making its +rates of assessment increase with the age of the individuals insured, is +_doomed_, and that disaster and wreck is only a question of time. +This is not a new opinion. It's truth is attested by more than one wreck +in this country already. + +In every level, or uniform premium, there is a provision for the payment +to the company of the rate of insurance at the actual present age, (no +matter at what age the insurance was affected) on the net amount at +risk. + +The great danger for co-oporative or assessment companies lies in the +facility with which such institutions may be organized, and by men +without capital, character, experience or financial ability, who may +thus be ushered into corporate existence by the indulgent laws of +different states. + +The members of the National Association of assessment companies should +see to it that the laws of the different states should be so amended as +to require at least a small capital, say $25,000, as a guaranty of good +faith and ability on the part of the promoters, and that no company +should be admitted to membership unless its system was founded on sound +principles as demonstrated by science and business experience. + +The managers of assessment companies should be careful lest their claims +should prove to be unfounded. For instance, the writer of the article in +your last number boldly asserts that it "is susceptible of mathematical +demonstration that one or two million of dollars of reserve is adequate +to perpetuate any well-conducted assessment company for all time, +however large or small it may be, while the spectacle is presented to us +of level premium companies holding fifty to one hundred millions of +accumulations belonging to their policy holders, from which no possible +benefit, in most cases, will ever accrue to them." On reflection he must +see the absurdity of such statements. + +The level premium system is a combination of insurance and investments. +The hundred millions are _investments_, and are necessary for the +integrity of the level premium contracts. Any assessment company in +which the rates do not increase as the members grow older should be +compelled to have the full premium reserve required by state law and +actuarial science to be held on level premium contracts. This is capable +of mathematical demonstration. + +It must be borne in mind that the cost of insurance _proper_, that +is, the provision to meet current death claims alone, is quite as high +in the best assessment company as in a regular life insurance company, +for this cost depends on the careful selection of lives. The difference +in the two institutions is that the former dispenses with the investment +element, while the latter exacts it in connection with all their +contracts. Hence the price to be paid is greater. But is not the +_guarantee_ also greater? + +The beneficiary under a death claim in an assessment company has for her +security the _hope_, or promise if you please, that one thousand +men will pay ten dollars each for her account. The beneficiary under a +death claim in a regular life insurance company has for her security not +only the actual payments of ten dollars each by one thousand men, but +the definite promise to pay in full by an institution which has ample +capital, assets, and surplus to back its contracts. + +Assessment insurance is yet on trial, and its only hope of permanent +business lies in a rigid compliance with the laws of mortality and of +sound business experience. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE OLD STATE HOUSE. + +BY SIDNEY MAXWELL. + + + The Old State House! Within these antique walls + The early fathers of the hamlet met + And gravely argued of the town's affairs. + Another generation came; and in + This hall the Tory Council sat in state + While from the burning lips of Otis, or + The stem, defiant tongue of Adams sprang + That eloquence whose echoes thundered back + From Concord, Lexington, and Bunker's Hill! + Between those years and ours a century lies; + Those patriot's graves are deep with moss and mould, + And yet these walls--the same whose shadows fell + Athwart the crimson snow where Preston charged[3]-- + Still cast their shadows; not on troops, nor mob + Exasperated by their wrongs, but on + A jostling, hurrying throng--freeman each one, + Unless in bondage to himself. O Man: + Pass not all heedless by, nor imprecate + This aged relic of the past because + It lies across thy path! From avarice + Redeemed; restored unto its former self,-- + We hail thee, noble Sentry of the years, + And greet thee with a thousand loving cheers! + + +[Footnote 3: The "Boston Massacre," March 5th, 1770.] + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PRECIOUS METALS. + +BY DAVID N. BALFOUR. + + +From the earliest times to the commencement of the Christian Era, the +amount of the gold and silver obtained from the surface and mines of the +earth is estimated to be $5,084,000,000; from the latter event to the +epoch of the discovery of America, $4,363,374,000 were obtained; from +the date of the last event to the end of 1842, an addition of +$8,500,000,000 was made; the extensive working of the Russian gold mines +in 1843, and subsequent years, added to the close of 1852, +$1,400,000,000 more; the quadruple discovery of the California gold +mines in 1848, those of Australia in 1851, of New Zealand in 1861, and +the silver mines of Nevada and other countries bordering upon the +Pacific slope of the United States, added, at the close of 1884, +$7,093,626,000, making a grand total at the present time of +$26,441,000,000. + +The average loss by the attrition of coin is estimated by Prof. Bowen +at one-fortieth of one per cent, per annum; and the average loss by +consumption in the arts, and destruction by fire and shipwreck, at +$9,000,000 per annum. The amount of the precious metals in existence is +estimated to be $13,670,000,000, of which gold furnishes $8,166,000,000, +and silver $5,504,000,000. Of the amount now in existence, +$10,500,000,000 are estimated to be in coin and bullion, $2,000,000,000 +in watches, and the remainder in plate, jewelry, and ornaments. Of the +amount now in existence, $9,448,000,000 is estimated to have been +obtained from America, $1,908,000,000 from Asia (including Australia, +New Zealand, and Oceanica); $1,004,000,000 from Europe, and +$1,310,000,000 from Africa. + +The following statement will exhibit the product of the precious metals +throughout the world in 1884:-- + + + Countries. Gold. (America) Silver. Total. + Alaska, $300,000 $30,000 $320,000 + British Columbia, 2,000,000 80,000 2,080,000 + United States, 30,800,000 48,800,000 79,600,000 + Mexico, 1,000,000 30,000,000 31,000,000 + Guatemala, 40,000 200,000 240,000 + Honduras, 50,000 50,000 100,000 + San Salvador, 100,000 150,000 250,000 + Nicaragua, 100,000 100,000 200,000 + Costa Rica, 50,000 50,000 100,000 + Columbia, 1,900,000 500,000 2,400,000 + Venezuela, 3,000,000 200,000 3,200,000 + Guiana, 75,000 50,000 125,000 + Brazil, 400,000 50,000 450,000 + Bolivia, 50,000 12,980,000 13,030,000 + Chili, 60,000 5,000,000 5,060,000 + Argentine Republic, 50,000 200,000 250,000 + Patagonia, $10,000 $5,000 $10,000 + Other countries, 15,000 45,000 60,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Total, $40,000,000 $98,480,000 $138,480,000 + + + + EUROPE. + + Countries. Gold. (America) Silver. Total. + + Russia, $22,000,000 $300,000 $22,300,000 + Prussia, 900,000 8,000,000 8,900,000 + Spain, 70,000 2,500,000 2,570,000 + Austria, 950,000 1,500,000 2,450,000 + Norway, 60,000 300,000 360,000 + Other Countries, 20,000 320,000 340,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Total, $24,000,000 $12,920,000 $36,920,000 + + + ASIA. + + Countries. Gold. (America) Silver. Total. + + Borneo, $700,000 $470,000 $1,170,000 + China, 600,000 450,000 1,050,000 + Japan, 120,000 353,000 473,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Total, $1,420,000 $1,273,000 $2,693,000 + + Australia, $26,000,000 $80,000 $26,080,000 + New Zealand, 4,000,000 500,000 4,500,000 + Africa, 2,000,000 500,000 2,500,000 + Oceanica, 580,000 247,000 827,000 + __________ __________ ___________ + Grand Total, $98,000,000 $114,000,000 $212,000,000 + + +The following statement will exhibit the annual product of the precious +metals at different periods:-- + + + Periods. Gold. Silver. Total. + + A.D. 14, $800,000 $4,200,000 $5,000,000 + A.D. 500, 200,000 2,800,000 3,000,000 + A.D. 1000, 120,000 880,000 1,000,000 + A.D. 1492, 100,000 150,000 250,000 + A.D. 1550, 800,000 3,200,000 4,000,000 + A.D. 1600, 2,000,000 9,000,000 11,000,000 + A.D. 1700, 5,000,000 18,000,000 23,000,000 + A.D. 1800, 17,000,000 38,000,000 55,000,000 + A.D. 1843, 52,000,000 42,000,000 94,000,000 + A.D. 1850, 106,000,000 47,000,000 153,000,000 + A.D. 1853, 236,000,000 49,000,000 285,000,000 + A.D. 1863, 208,000,000 63,000,000 271,000,000 + + +The following statement will exhibit the amount of the precious metals +estimated to be in existence at different periods: + + + Periods. Gold. Silver. Total. + + A.D. 14, $427,000,000 $909,000,000 $1,327,000,000 + A.D. 500, 100,000,000 400,000,000 500,000,000 + A.D. 1000, 65,000,000 200,000,000 265,000,000 + A.D. 1492, 57,000,000 135,000,000 192,000,000 + A.D. 1550. 76,000,000 284,000,000 360,000,000 + A.D. 1600, 105,000,000 391,000,000 496,000,000 + A.D. 1700, 351,000,000 1,410,000,000 1,761,000,000 + A.D. 1800, 1,125,000,000 3,622,000,000 4,747,000,000 + A.D. 1843, 1,975,000,000 5,040,000,000 7,015,000,000 + A.D. 1850, 2,368,000,000 4,963,000,000 7,331,000,000 + A.D. 1853, 2,942,000,000 4,945,000,000 7,887,000,000 + A.D. 1863, 5,107,000,000 4,945,000,000 10,052,000,000 + A.D. 1884, 8,166,000,000 5,504,000,000 13,670,000,000 + + +The following statement will exhibit the amount of the precious metals +estimated to have been obtained from the surface and mines of the earth, +from the earliest times to the close of 1884:-- + + + Periods. Gold. Silver. Total. + + A.C. $2,171,000,000 $2,913,000,000 $5,084,000,000 + A.D. to 1492, 3,842,374,000 521,000,000 4,363,374,000 + 1493 to 1842, 2,700,000,000 5,800,000,000 8,500,000,000 + 1843 to 1852, 900,000,000 500,000,000 1,400,000,000 + 1853 to 1862, 1,869,000,000 560,000,000 2,429,000,000 + 1863 to 1884, 3,145,626,000 1,519,000,000 4,664,626,000 + ______________ ______________ ______________ + Grand Total, $14,628,000,000 $11,813,000,000 $26,441,000,000 + + +During the first period (prior to the commencement of the Christian +Era,) the annual product of the precious metals was $2,000,000; during +the second period (prior to the discovery of America,) it was +$3,000,000; during the third period (prior to the extensive working of +the Russian gold mines, in 1843,) it was $26,000,000; during the fourth +period (prior to the double discovery of the California gold mines in +1858, and the Australia gold mines in 1851,) it was $140,000,000; during +the fifth period (which immediately succeeded afore-mentioned +discoveries,) it was $243,000,000; during the sixth period (immediately +succeeding the double discovery of the New Zealand gold mines in 1861, +and the silver mines of Nevada and other countries bordering on the +Pacific slope of the United States,) it was $212,000,000. The annual +products of the precious metals attained its acme in 1853, when it was +$285,000,000. The increase in the amount of the precious metals in +existence has been greater during the last forty-years than during the +previous two hundred and ninety-four. Of the amount ($6,441,000,000) of +the precious metals estimated to have been obtained from the surface and +mines of the earth, from the earliest times to the close of 1884, +$12,100,000,000 are estimated to have been obtained from America +$6,724,000,000 from Asia (including Australia, New Zealand and +Oceanica), $3,751,000,000 from Europe, and $2,866,000,000 from Africa. + + * * * * * + + + + +AMESBURY: THE HOME OF WHITTIER. + +BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK. + + +Amesbury is only a town. It has defects that would strike a stranger, +and beauties that one who has learned to love them never forgets; they +linger in glimpses of wood and hill and river and lake, and often rise +unbidden before the mind's eye. The poet Whittier says that those who +are born under the shadow of Powow Hill always return sometime, no +matter how far they may have wandered. He himself, though not Amesbury +born, has found it impossible to desert the old home, full of +associations and surrounded by old friends. He always votes in Amesbury, +and he often spends weeks at a time in his old home. The river that he +has sung, the lake that he has re-christened, the walks and drives with +which he is so familiar, all exercise their spell upon him; he loves +them, just as he loves the warm hearts that he has found there and +helped to make warm and true. + +But what a stranger would first notice in coming into town is, that the +houses, instead of being on land regularly laid out for building, seem +to have grown up here and there and everywhere, a good deal in +accordance with their own sweet wills, and without the smallest regard +to surroundings. + +But there are handsome houses in Amesbury, and these are growing more +numerous every year. The people themselves would assert that the walks +and drives about the village, the hills and the river are the things to +be longest remembered about the place. If they were inclined to +boasting, they might say also that they had as good a right as any +people in America to be considered of ancient stock, for some of the +names of the earliest settlers are the familiar names in the town +to-day, and few towns in America are older than Amesbury. The names +Barnard, Challis, Weed, Jones, and Hoyt, appear on the first board of +"Prudenshall," and that of Richard Currier as town clerk. This was in +April, 1668, the year after the new town was named. + +Early in 1735 the settlement of Newbury (then spelled Newberry) was +begun. In a little over three years a colony was sent out across the +Merrimac. The plantation was at first called merely from the name of the +river. In 1639 it was named Colchester by the General Court; but October +7, 1640, this name was changed to Salisbury, so that in 1638, almost two +hundred and fifty years ago, Salisbury began to be settled. It seemed as +if there was need of new settlements at that time to counteract the +depletions in the Old World, for the Thirty Years' War was still +impoverishing Germany; Richelieu was living to rule France in the name +of his royal master, Louis XIII; England was gathering up those forces +of good and evil which from resisting tyranny at last grew intoxicated +with power, and so came to play the tyrant and regicide. For it was +about that time that Charles I had disbanded his army, trusting to the +divinity that, in the eyes of the Stuarts, did ever hedge a king, and at +the same time thrown away his honor by pledging himself to what he never +meant to perform. While this farce, which preceded the tragedy, was +being set upon the stage of history, here, three thousand miles away, +nature had begun to build up the waste, and to prophesy growth. + +Salisbury, and afterwards Amesbury, were named from the two towns so +famous in England, the Salisbury Plain of Druidical memory, on which is +the celebrated Stonehenge, and near by, the Amesbury where was one of +the oldest monasteries in England. It is supposed that the towns were so +named because many of the new settlers came from those old English +towns. The latter name used to be spelled Ambresbury, and Tennyson in +his "Idylls of the King" spells Almesbury. After the discovery by Modred +of the guilt of King Arthur's fair and false wife, he says:-- + + "Queen Guinevere had fled the court and sat + There in the holyhouse at Almesbury + Weeping." + + +Describing her flight, he tells us that she sent Lancelot + + "Back to his land, but she to Almesbury + Fled all night long by glimmering waste and weald." + + +There Arthur sees her for the last time and mourns over her before he +goes forth to his last battle with Modred. + +On the whole, it is not strange, considering its associations, and +moreover the fact that this town in Massachusetts is the only Amesbury +in America while so many other names are duplicated, that the people of +Amesbury are not willing to merge the name of their town into that of +the elder sister, even when those parts called in each "the Mills" are +so closely united in interests and in appearance that no stranger could +recognize them as two towns. It is only the Powow that makes the +dividing line here. Blocks of offices and stores on both sides of the +street, among them the post-office, common to both towns, hide the +narrow stream at that point, and further up and down the towering walls +of the factories make it unobserved. It is not here that one sees the +Powow. But there is, or a little time ago there was, a place not far off +from this main street where the river is still harassed, yet as it slips +past in its silent toil with a few trees hanging low on the right, it +has a fascination in spite of its prosaic surroundings; it takes +naturally to picturesqueness and freedom. + +One of Whittier's early poems speaks of an Indian re-visiting the stream +that his forefathers loved, and standing on Powow Hill, where the chiefs +of the Naumkeaks, and of the other tribes held their powows. Here for a +moment, says the poem, a gleam of gladness came to him as he stooped to +drink of the fountain and seated himself under an oak. + + "Far behind was Ocean striving + With his chains of sand; + Southward, sunny glimpses giving + 'Twixt the swells of land, + Of its calm and silvery track + Rolled the tranquil Merrimack." + + +The Indian's feeling about "These bare hills, this conquered river," was +not strange. But to us it naturally occurs that we are more likely to +wake up with our scalps on our heads, instead of sleeping our last +sleep, while they dangle at a red man's girdle. Yet the very state of +warfare that at that time existed between the races showed that in the +settlers themselves was an element of savagery not yet eliminated. For +in all this fierce strife of the tomahawk and the gun, the Quaker +ancestors of the poet Whittier who met the Indians, armed only with +kindness and the high courage of their peaceful convictions, were +treated by the red men as friends and superiors. In the raids of general +devastation they were unmolested. Their descendant has a natural right +to express the pathos of the Indian's lot. + +There is a fine exhibition of human nature in the records of the first +settlement of Amesbury. The place was called "Salisbury new-town" until +1669, and was merely an offshoot of the latter, though much larger in +extent than it is today, for now it is only about six miles by three. +Then it reached up into what is now Newton, N.H. But why should not the +people of those days have been generous as to the size of townships, for +as to land, they had the continent before them where to choose? + +But in regard to the human nature. The settlers of Salisbury went at +first only beyond the salt marshes, their town being what is now East +Salisbury. The forests beyond had a threatening look, and were much +too near. It was determined, therefore, to drive them back by having +clearings and settlements across the Powow. So, December 26, 1642, about +three years after this little colony had crossed the Merrimack, a town +meeting was held in which it was voted:--"Yere shall thirtie families +remove to the west side of ye Powowas river." This motion was very easy +to carry. But it had not been voted what families were to move on beyond +the immediate protection of the small colony at East Salisbury. Who was +to go? Every man sat still in his place and nodded to his neighbor with +a "Thou art the man," in manner if not in words. It seems to us a very +little thing to give or take the advice, "Go West young man,--or woman." +But it was very different then. To do it meant, besides living encircled +by forests, to be obliged to go on Sunday through these forests, worse +than lonely, to the meeting-house at East Salisbury, and always with the +possibility of being at any moment obliged to flee all the distance to +that town for comparative safety, perhaps of being obliged to flee in +the night. Signals of alarm were arranged by the General Court. Alarm +was to be given "by distinctly discharging three muskets, or by +continual beat of the drum, or firing the beacon, or discharging a pesse +of ordnance, and every trained soldier is to take the alarm immediately +on paine of five pound." It was also ordered, "That every town provide a +sufficient place for retreat for their wives and children to repaire to, +as likewise to keepe safe the ammunition thereof." And also, "That all +watches throughout this country bee set at sunset at the beat of the +drums, & not bee discharged till the beate of the drum at sunne rising." + +But those old Puritans were not men to be bundled by any of the +weaknesses of human nature. In ten days, when it was found that nobody +had started "westward, ho!" another town-meeting was held, in which, in +spite of the dangers to be encountered by the new colony, the first vote +was re-affirmed, and it was decided that "the thirtie families be chosen +by ye seven men," probably the selectmen. And to ensure the matter, +it was determined that this vote should not be repealed except by the +consent of every freeman in the town. So, in the spring, this tiny +colony went out to Salisbury new-town. + +In 1647, a law was passed requiring every township of fifty families to +maintain a school. This is the way that the preamble reads:-- + +"It being one chiefe pr'ject of yt ould deluder, Satan, to keepe men +from ye knowledge of ye Scriptures, as in former times by keeping ym in +an unknown tongue, so in these latt'r times by pr'suading from ye use of +tongues yt so at least ye true sense & meaning of ye original might be +clouded by false glosses of saint-seeming deceivers, yt learning may not +be buried in ye grave of o'r fath'rs in ye church & commonwealth, the +Lord assisting our endeavor. It is therefore resolved," &c. + +It seems overturning the cornerstone of our forefathers' intentions to +banish from our schools the Scriptures, those finest examples of the +strength and beauty of the English language, to say nothing of their +lessons in individual self-government, which is the only foundation that +a republic can be built upon. + +From this old law have grown up all the public schools of Amesbury. +There is now a high school, and there are, of course, the required +number of small schools; some of these in the outlying districts having +very few scholars. + +Several years ago Mr. Whittier, who has the keenest sense of humor, told +a friend that in one of these the whole number of pupils was three, +average attendance one and a half! He was deeply interested in that half +child. + +Amesbury has among its attractions a Lion's Mouth! In the old days of +Indian ambushes it must have earned its right to the name. But now the +only existing danger is lest one should be eaten up--with kindness. +It is a short mile from the mills, and a pleasant walk in spite of its +ending! At last there comes a little hollow with a large farm-house on +the left, and a grass road winding past it at right angles with the main +road and leading into beautiful woods. These woods are the very jaws of +the lion; and it is very hard, on a hot summer's day, for those who go +into them to come out again. A few rods up the road from the hollow are +other houses. People bearing some of the earliest recorded names in +Amesbury, descendants of the brave pioneers, are to be found here, or +having departed this life, have left good records behind them. One of +these latter lived here in the pleasantest way. He and his wife carried +on their large farm in an ideal manner; everything was upon a generous +scale. There was money enough not to wear out life in petty economies, +and largeness of soul enough not to put the length of a bank account +against the beauties and refinements of life. The loss of their only +child, and a few years afterward of their grand-daughter, one of the +loveliest children earth ever held, was--not compensated for, that +can never be, but made much less dreary by a friendship of many years' +standing between them and their summer neighbors. In this case, too, the +gentleman is a native of Amesbury, proud and fond of his birthplace. +Every summer he comes to the cottage of this friend, a charming little +house only a few rods from the larger one, and spends the summer here +with his family and servants. He has made a great deal of money in New +York, but fortunately, not too much, for it has not built up a Chinese +wall around his heart; his new friends are dear, but his early friends +are still the dearest. + +Between the Mills and this formidable Mouth of the Lion, is the Quaker +Meeting House, a modest, sober-hued building on a triangular green, on +which, before it was fenced in, the boys delighted to play ball on the +days and at the hours (for the Quakers have meeting Thursday also) on +which the grave worshippers were not filing into what cannot fairly be +called the house of silence, because it has been known to echo to +exhortations as earnest, if not as vehement as one may hear from any +pulpit. Still, there are sometimes long intervals of silence, and then +the consciousness that silent self-examination is one purpose of the +coming together, gives an impressiveness to the simple surroundings. It +must have been here that Mr. Whittier learned to interpret so +wonderfully that silent prayer of Agassiz for guidance when he opened +his famous school from which he was so soon called to a higher life. + + "Then the Master in his place + Bowed his head a little space + And the leaves by soft airs stirred + Lapse of wave and cry of bird + Left the solemn hush unbroken + Of that wordless prayer unspoken + While its wish, on earth unsaid, + Rose to Heaven interpreted. + As in life's best hours we hear + By the spirit's finer ear + His low voice within us, thus + The All-Father heareth us: + And his holy ear we pain + With our noisy words and vain. + Not for him our violence + Storming at the gates of sense, + His the primal language, his + The eternal silences." + + +Mr. Whittier always goes to this meeting when he is well enough. The May +Quarterly Meetings of the Society of Friends are held at Amesbury. There +are a good many members of this Society in the town, and there is among +them a hospitality, a kindness, and a cordiality that added to their +quiet ways and the refined dress of the women makes them interesting. + +It goes without saying that Amesbury has also the allotment of churches +of other denominations usual to New England towns. + +Thirty years ago and more, the Amesbury and Salisbury Mills were two +distinct companies. The agent of the former mills, Mr. Joshua Aubin, +was a gentleman of fine presence. After he left Amesbury, he sent to +the town as a gift the nucleus of its present Public Library, which, +although not absolutely free has only a nominal subscription to pay the +services of the librarian, and for keeping the books in order. + +[Illustration: John G. Whittier] + +Mr. James Horton, agent of the Salisbury mills, was more of the +rough-and-ready type of man, a little bluff, but frank and kind-hearted. +Both gentlemen as it happened, lived in Amesbury and were of one mind in +regard to the character of their operatives. It was before the influx +of foreign labor, and the men and women in the mills belonged to +respectable, often well-to-do American families. Rowdyism was a thing +unknown to them, and as to drunkenness, if that fault was found once in +an operative, he was reprimanded; if it occurred again, he was at once +discharged. And so Amesbury, though a manufacturing town, was in its +neatness and orderliness an exquisite little village with the Powow Hill +at its back and the hem of its robe laved by two beautiful rivers. After +Mr. Aubin's ill health had made him resign his place, the father of +Prof. Langley, well-known to science, was agent for a time, and carried +on matters in the spirit of his predecessors. But there came a change, +the mills were united under one control, and an agent was sent to +Amesbury for the purpose of forcibly illustrating the fact that +corporations have no souls. He did it admirably. Work was started at +high pressure, there came a rush of foreigners into the place, many of +the old towns people moved away in disgust, and the new took the place +of the old as suddenly as if an evil magician had waved his wand +and cried: "Presto!" But this agent soon gave evidence that great +unscrupulousness doesn't pay, even as a financial investment. After +several other short regimes the present agent, Mr. Steere, came to +Amesbury, and the corporation has found it worth while to keep him. +The effect of the sudden influx of foreign population into Amesbury +has never done away with; it has its "Dublin" in a valley where the +corporation built houses for its operatives. And with what indifference +to cleanliness, or health these were built! The poor operatives were +crowded together in a way that would make neatness difficult to the most +fastidious. A physician in Amesbury who considered the poor, presented +this state of things so strongly and so persistently to the agent, spoke +so forcibly of the moral degradation that such herding increased, or +induced, that when it became necessary to build new tenements they were +much better arranged. Every manufacturing town in New England has now +its unwholesome because untaught population, a danger signal on the line +of progress of the republic. It is only popular education that can +remove this obstruction of ignorance. The foreign population of Amesbury +today is large, and although it gives hands to the mills, it adds +neither to the beauty nor the interest of the town. But it gives a +mission to those who believe in the possibilities of human nature, and +the right of every man to have a chance at life, even if the way he +takes it be not agreeable to his cultivated neighbor. + +The mills in the days of their greatest prosperity were all woolen mills: +now a part of them are cotton mills. They are all running, and, +although not with the remarkable success of a score of years ago, have a +future before them. + +The making of felt hats, now so important a business, was started here +a number of years ago by a gentleman who built a hat factory near his +house at the Ferry. He was a gentleman in that true sense in which, +added to his nerve and will (and he had abundance of both) were those +knightly qualities of generosity and kindliness that have made his +memory dear, while the Bayley Hat Company, called after him as its +founder, bears witness to his business ability. + +The great, oblong, many-windowed carriage manufactories meet one at +every turn, and often the smithy stands near with its clangor. This +business used to be confined to West Amesbury, now Merrimac. At the +beginning of the century it was started on an humble scale by two young +men, one a wood-worker, the other a plater, while another young man was +trimmer for them. One of the firm lived in West Amesbury, the other in +South Amesbury, now Merrimac Port, and after each had built his share of +the carriage, it was found a little difficult to bring the different +parts together. This was the beginning, and now Amesbury ships its +carriages over the world. One of the first to bring this business from +what was then West Amesbury to the Mills was a young man who in the +beginning of the war had been unfortunate in business. He gave his +creditors all he had, and went to the front. After serving his time +there he came home, went into the carriage business, made money this +time instead of losing it, and paid up his old creditors one hundred +cents on the dollar. He deserves a big factory and success. And he has +both. And he is not the only one of whom good things could be said. + +They have a Wallace G.A.R. Post in Amesbury, not in commemoration of the +Wallace of old Scottish fame, but of a man no less patriotic and brave +who lived among themselves, an Englishman, a shoemaker. He was lame, but +so anxious during the Rebellion to have his share in the struggle for +the Union that he tried to get a place on board a gunboat, saying that +he could "sit and shoot." As this was impossible, the town sent him to +Boston as its representative, and he was in the Legislature when the +members voted themselves an increase of pay. Mr. Wallace believed the +thing illegal. He took the money in trust. One day after his return to +Amesbury he limped up to his physician (the same one who had brought +about the better construction of the new corporation houses) and handed +him fifty dollars of this over pay, to be used at his discretion among +the poor, explaining as he did so where the money came from, that he +felt that it belonged to Amesbury, and that he returned a part through +this channel. + +Half way between the Mills and the Ferry stands an old well that a +native of Amesbury dug by the roadside for the benefit of travellers +because he had once been a captive in Arabian deserts, and had known the +torments of thirst. Here was a man to whom the uses of adversity had +been sweet, for they had taught him humanity. Mrs. Spofford has written +an appropriate poem upon this incident. + +The elms in Amesbury are very beautiful, and they are found everywhere; +but on the ferry road there are magnificent ones not far from the river. +They are growing on each side of the road, arching it over with their +graceful boughs. + +[Illustration: WHITTIER'S HOME, AMESBURY.] + +The Ferry proper near which was born Josiah Bartlett, one of the signers +of the Declaration of Independence, is at the foot of the street that +runs from the Mills down to the river. In old times there was a +veritable ferry here a few rods above where the Powow empties into the +Merrimack. This ferry is mentioned in the records, two years after the +town had been set upon its feet. In a book written about Amesbury by Mr. +Joseph Merrill, a native of the town, it is stated that the town +petitioned the general Court for leave to keep a Ferry over the river at +this place. This is the record from the same source:-- + +"The County Court held at Hampton, ye 13th of ye 8th month 1668, Mr. +Edward Goodwin being presented by ye Selectmen of ye town of Amesbury to +Court to keep ye Ferry over Merrimac river about ye mouth of ye Powow +river where ye said Goodwin now dwelleth, the Court do allow and approve +of ye sd person for one year next following and until ye Court shall +take further orders therein, and ye prices to be as followeth so, for +every single passenger two pence, for a horse and man six pence, and for +all great cattle four pence, for sheep and other small cattle under two +years old two pence per head." + +In 1791 there came up a question of a bridge being built across the +Merrimac. A town meeting was called to oppose the measure, and in this +it was argued that a bridge would throw into disuse the ferry with which +much pains had been taken. Precious old fogies! In those days, too, they +lived, for they were as old as the centuries. Nothing of the mushroom +about them. There is a tradition that once in Revolutionary days, +Washington was carried across this ferry. But it is impossible to say +what the tradition is founded upon, and how much it is worth. + +As to the river, there are rivers and rivers, as the saying is; at some +we marvel, some we fear and to some we make pilgrimages as to the Mecca +of the faithful. But the Merrimac is a river to be loved, and to be +loved the better the more familiar it is. What its poet, Whittier, says +about it must be literally true: + + "Our river by its valley born + Was never yet forgotten." + + +It is worth while to try to imagine it as he writes it in "Cobbler +Keezer's Vision" two hundred and more years ago, when that old fellow +was so amazed at the prospect of mirth and pleasure among the +descendants of the stern Puritans that he dropped his lapstone into the +water in bewilderment. + +This was the time when + + "Woodsy and wild and lonesome, + The swift stream wound away, + Through birches and scarlet maples + Flashing in foam and spray." + + "Down on the sharp-horned ledges + Plunging in steep cascade, + Tossing its white-maned waters + Against the hemlock's shade." + + "Woodsy and wild and lonesome, + East and west and north and south; + Only the village of fishers + Down at the river's mouth;" + + "Only here and there a clearing, + With its farm-house rude and new, + And tree-stumps, swart as Indians, + Where the scanty harvest grew." + + +What a picture that is! And then behind these tree-stumps, the great +forest with its possibilities of comfort and even of competence in its +giant timbers,--when they were fairly floored, but; as it stood, a +threatening foe with a worse enemy in its depths than the darkness of +its shadows, or the wild beasts. + +Several of Mr. Whittier's songs of the Merrimac were written for +picnics, given at the Laurels on the Newbury side of the river by a +gentlemen and his wife from Newburyport. They were early abolitionists, +friends and hosts of Garrison, of George Thompson and others of that +brave band, and of course friends of the poet. This hospitable couple +gave a picnic here every June for twenty years. The first was a little +party of perhaps half-a-dozen people, the twenty-first was a large +assembly. Mr. Whittier was present at these picnics whenever able, and, +as has been said, sometimes wrote a poem to be read there. He never +reads in public himself. + +Although the Powow river has been made so emphatically a stream of use, +there are glimpses of a native beauty in it that its hard fate has never +obliterated; these are still there, as one stands upon the little bridge +that spans its last few rods of individual life and looks up the stream +upon a wintry landscape, or upon summer fields, and longingly toward the +bend. + +Whether the Powow has any power to set in motion the wheels of fancy as +it does the wheels of the factories it is impossible to say, but this +much is certain; on its banks was born an artist who has made his name +known on the banks of the Seine. The father of Mr. Charles Davis, our +young artist of great promise and of no mean performance, was for years +a teacher in Amesbury, and the garden of the house where this son was +born bordered upon the Powow. + +[Illustration: THE OLD SANDY HILL MEETING HOUSE] + +At Pond Hills, between Amesbury and Merrimac, is lake Attitash, which, +before Mr. Whittier took pity upon it, rejoiced in the name of Kimball's +Pond. There is a slight suspicion that it is still occasionally called +by its old name. In dry seasons the water is used by the mills. But the +blue lake is as beautiful as if it were never useful. On its shore +enough grand old pines are left to dream under of forests primeval, of +Indian wigwams, and of canoes on the bright water; for the red men knew +very well the hiding places of the perch and of the pickerel. So did the +white men who chose the region of the Merrimac for their new home. In +the "Maids of Attitash" is described the lake where + + "In sky and wave the white clouds swam, + And the blue hills of Nottingham + Through gaps of leafy green + Across the lake were seen." + + +All these are still here, but one misses the maidens who ought to be +sitting there + + "In the shadow of the ash + That dreams its dream in Attitash." + + +No doubt they are about here somewhere, only it takes a poet's eye to +find them. And yet it was not very far from here that there lived a few +years ago a young girl, a descendant of one of the early settlers of +Amesbury, who on her engagement said to a friend proudly:--"I am going +to marry a poor man, and I am going to help him." And so she always +nobly did, in ways different from tawdry ambition. The courage of the +old Puritans has not died out here any more than the old beauty has +deserted the land. + + * * * * * + + + + +KATE FIELD'S NEW DEPARTURE. + +BY EDWARD INCREASE MATHER. + + +Miss Kate Field has been so exclusively identified with artistic and +literary success that her new departure as a lecturer on existing +political evils has excited no little surprise and comment. An +exceptional degree of public interest as well as of purely private and +personal regard has followed her almost, indeed, from childhood; partly +due, it may be, to a certain indefinable magnetism of temperament which +always makes the place where she chances to be at the time seem a social +centre, and somewhat, too, from a life that has not been without its +picturesque setting of scenery and circumstance. "Kate Field was started +right,"--remarked Miss Frances E. Willard of her one day. "As a child +Walter Savage Landor held her on his knee and taught her, and she grew +up in the atmosphere of Art." The chance observation made only _en +passant_, never the less touched a salient truth in that vital manner +in which Miss Willard's words are accustomed to touch truth. She was, +indeed, "started right." The only child of gifted parents, endowed with +a rare combination of intellectual and artistic talent; with a nobility +and genuineness of nature that has ever been one of her most marked +characteristics; attuned by temperament to all that is fine, and high, +and beautiful,--it is little wonder that her life has presented a series +of advancing achievements. She has studied, and read, and thought; she +has travelled, and "sipped the foam of many lives;" and a polished and +many-sided culture has added its charm to a woman singularly charming by +nature and possessed of the subtle gift of fascination. When very young +she studied music and modern languages abroad in Florence, and in +London. To music she especially devoted herself studying under Garcia +and under William Shakespeare, the great English tenor, whose favorite +pupil she is said to have been. Walter Savage Landor conceived a great +fondness for her, gave her lessons in Latin, and left her at his death a +valuable portfolio of old drawings. In some verses addressed "To K.F." +he alludes to her as:-- + + Modest as winged angels are, + And no less brave and no less fair. + + +[Illustration: MISS KATE FIELD.] + +His interest was richly repaid by the young girl who, after his death, +wrote reminiscences of Landor in a manner whose sympathetic brilliancy +of interpretation added an enduring lustre to his life and achievement. +In her early girlhood as, indeed, in her womanhood, her brilliancy and +charm won all hearts. It was in Florence that she met George Eliot, and +a moon-light evening at the Trollope villa, where Marion Lewes led the +girl, dream-enchanted, out on the fragrant and flowery terrace, left its +picture in her memory, and exquisitely did she portray it in a paper on +George Eliot at the time of her death. By temperament and cultivation +Miss Field is admirably adapted to interpret to the world its masters, +its artists. Her dramatic criticism on Ristori ranks among the finest +ever written of the stage; her "Pen Photographs of Dickens's Readings" +have permanently recorded that memorable tour. Her Life of Fechter wins +its praise from the highest literary authorities in our own country and +London. She has published a few books, made up from her fugitive +articles in the _Tribune_, the _London Times_, the _Athenaeum_, and +the magazines, and more of this literature would be eminently refreshing +and acceptable. It is no exaggeration to say that among the American +writers of to-day no one has greater breadth, vigor, originality +and power than Kate Field. She is by virtue of wide outlook and +comprehension of important matters, entirely free from the tendency to +petty detail and trivial common-place that clogs the minds and pens of +many women-writers. Her foreign letters to the _Tribune_ discussed +questions of political significance and international interest. Miss +Field is a woman of so many resources that she has never made of her +writing a trade, but has used it as an art; and she never writes unless +she has something to say. This fact teaches a moral that the woman of +the period may do well to contemplate. + +Yet with all the varied charms of foreign life, passed in the most +cultivated and refined social circles of Europe, Kate Field never forgot +that she was an American, and patriotism grew to be a passion with her. +She became a student of English and American politics, and her +revelations of the ponderous machinery of the British Parliament, in a +series of strong and brilliant press letters, now collected into the +little volume called "Hap-Hazzard," was as fine and impressive in its +way as is her dramatic criticism or literary papers. All this, perhaps, +had paved the way for her to enter into a close and comprehensive study +of the subject which she is now so ably discussing in her notable +lectures on the social and the political crimes of Utah. The profound +and serious attention which she is now giving to this problem stamps her +lectures as among the most potent political influences of the time. Miss +Field's discussion of Mormonism is one of those events which seem +pre-determined by the law of the unconscious, and which seem to choose +the individual rather than to be chosen by him. In the summer of 1883, +by way of a change from continental travel, Miss Field determined to +hitch her wagon to a star and journey westward. She lingered for a month +in Denver where she received distinguished social attention and where, +by special request, she gave her lecture on an "Evening with Dickens" +and her charming "Musical Monologue." Of this Dickens' lecture a western +journal said:-- + + "Charles Dickens was the novelist of humanity, and Kate Field is, + to-day, his most sympathetic and intelligent interpreter. Those who + were so fortunate as to attend her reading last evening enjoyed an + intellectual pleasure not soon forgotten. They saw a slender, graceful + woman, dressed in creamy white, with soft laces falling about her; with + low, broad brow, and earnest, sympathetic eyes, under a cloud of soft + dark hair. With a rich and finely modulated voice of remarkable power + of expression, she held her audience for two hours spellbound by the + magic of her genius." + + +In Colorado Miss Field enjoyed an unique and picturesque holiday. +Picnics and excursions were gotten up in her honor; special trains were +run; she rode on horseback with gay parties of friends twenty-five miles +a day; she joined friends from New York who were camping out on "The +Needles," and she made a visit to the San Juan Silver-mining district. +Among other diversions she had the honor of naming a new watering place, +located on "The Divide," an hour by rail from Denver, to which, in honor +of General Palmer who has practically "made" that region, Miss Field +gave the name of Palmero, the Spanish for Palmer. + +How unconsciously Miss Field came to study the problem presented by the +peculiar institutions of Utah is curiously indicated in a letter from +Salt Lake City, under date of Jan. 16, 1884, which she wrote to the +Boston _Herald_, and which opens thus:-- + + "I know of nothing that would do Bostonians so much good as a prolonged + trip across this continent, giving themselves sufficient time to tarry + at different points and study the people. For myself--about half a + Bostonian--I became so ashamed of sailing east year after year, that + last summer I made up my mind to hitch my wagon to the star of empire + and learn as much of my own country as I knew of Europe. I started from + New York in July, expecting to be absent three months, and in that + period obtain an intelligent idea of the far West. After passing two + months and a half in wonderful Colorado and only seeing a fraction of + the Centennial state, I began to realize that in two years I might, + with diligence, get a tolerable idea of this republic west of the + Mississippi. Cold weather setting in, and the fall of snow rendering + mountain travelling in Colorado neither safe nor agreeable, I came to + Utah over the wonderful Denver & Rio Grande railroad, intending to + pass a week prior to visiting New Mexico and Arizona. My week expired + on the 22nd day of October and still I linger among the 'saints.' + I am regarded as more or less demented by eastern friends. If becoming + interested in a most extraordinary anomaly to such an extent as to + desire to study it and to be able to form an intelligent opinion + therein is being demented, then I am mad indeed, for I've not yet got + to the bottom of the Utah problem, and if I lived here years, there + would still be much to learn. Despite this last discouraging fact, + I have improved my opportunities and am able to paragraph what has + come under my own observation or been acquired by absorption of Mormon + and Gentile literature. If the commissioners sent here by Congress to + investigate the Mormon question, at an annual expense of forty thousand + dollars per annum, had studied this question as earnestly as I have, + they never would have told the country that polygamy is dying out. One + or two members of that commission know better, and sooner or later they + must tell the truth or stultify their own souls." + + +This extract reveals how deeply the anomaly of Mormon life had at once +impressed her. Miss Field was too keen and cultivated an observer not to +see beneath the surface of this phase of living a problem whose roots +struck deep into national prosperity and safety. The distinguished +essayist and critic, Mr. Edwin P. Whipple, said of her study of +Mormonism:-- + + She undertook a perfectly original method of arriving at the truth, by + intimate conversations with Mormon husbands and wives, as well as with + the most intelligent of the "Gentiles." She discarded from her mind + pre-conceptions and all prejudices which discolor and distort objects + which should be rigidly investigated, and looked at the mass of facts + before her in what Bacon calls "dry light." Cornelius Vanderbilt, the + elder, was accustomed to account for the failures and ruin of the + brilliant young brokers who tried to corner the stocks in which he had + an interest, by declaring that "these dashing young fellars didn't see + things as they be." Miss Field saw things in Utah "as they be." She + collected facts of personal observation, analyzed and generalized them, + and, by degrees, her sight became insight, and the passage from insight + to foresight is rapid. After thorough investigation, her insight + enabled her to penetrate into the secret of that "mystery of iniquity" + which Mormonism really is; while her foresight showed her what would + be the inevitable result of the growth and diffusion of such a horrible + creed. + + +The winter lapsed into spring and still she lingered in Salt Lake City. +She relinquished all pleasure for the real work of studying deeply the +anomaly of a Polygamous hierarchy thriving in the heart of the Republic. +Every facility was accorded to her by United States officials, military +officers, leading Gentiles and Apostates. Prominent "Latter Day Saints" +offered her marked courtesy. She pursued this research unremittingly for +eight months and when, at last, she left Salt Lake City, the leading +Gentile paper, the Tribune, devoted a leading editorial to Miss Field's +marvellously thorough study of Mormon conditions, and, on her departure, +said:-- + + "Miss Field is probably the best posted person, outside the high + Mormon church officials, and others who have been in the church, on + this institution, in the world, and its effects upon men, women and + governments. With a fixedness of purpose which nothing could swerve, + and with an energy which neither storm, mud, snow, cold looks, the + persuasions or even the loss of friends, could for a moment dampen, she + has held on her course. In the tabernacle, in the ward meeting house, + in the homes of high Mormons, and, when these were closed to her, in + the homes of the poor, she has worked upon the theme, while every scrap + of history which offered to give any light upon the Mormon organization + she has devoured. Mormonism has been to her like a fever. It has run + its course and now she is going away. If she proposes to lecture, she + ought to be able to prepare a better lecture on Mormonism than she has + ever yet delivered; if a book is in process of incubation it ought to + be of more value than any former book on this subject. Lecture or book + will be intense enough to satisfy all demands. The 'Tribune' gives the + world notice in advance that Miss Field has a most intimate knowledge + of the Mormon kingdom." + + +Returning to the East she stopped on the way in Missouri and at Nauvoo, +Illinois, looking up all the old camping-grounds of Mormonism, and +meeting and interviewing people who had been connected with it, +including two sons of Joseph Smith, Miss Field opened her course of +lectures on this subject in Boston last November, before a brilliant and +distinguished audience, including the Governor and other officials of +state, Harvard University professors, and men and women eminent in art, +literature and society. She dealt with the political crimes of the +Mormons, arguing that the great wrong was not, as many had believed, +polygamy, but treason! Polygamy, though "the cornerstone of the Mormon +church," was not inserted in its printed articles of faith and was not +taught until the unwary had been "gathered to Zion." The monstrosity of +the "revelation" on celestial marriage; the tragic unhappiness of Mormon +women; the elastic conscience of John Taylor, "prophet, seer and +revelator" to God's chosen people, were vividly depicted. Her extracts +from Brigham Young's sermons, and from those of his counsellors, are +forcible arguments on the Gentile side. Indeed, throughout her entire +discourse, Miss Field clinches every statement with Mormon proof, rarely +going to Gentile authorities for vital facts connected with her subject. +The lecturer's sense of humor betrayed itself now and then, when, with +fervor, she related an incident in her own experience, or quoted a "Song +of Zion." The refrain of one of these songs still rings in our ears: + + Then, oh, let us say + God bless the wife that strives + And aids her husband all she can + To obtain a dozen wives! + + +The prodigious contrast between the preaching and practice of polygamy +was fully displayed. Mormons claim that there is a vast difference +between bigamy and polygamy; that only good men are allowed to take +plural wives; that no saint takes more wives than he can support, and +that a muchly married "man of God" exercises the most rigid impartiality +in the bestowal of his affections upon his various women. Miss Field +upsets these beautiful theories by graphic pictures drawn from life, and +cited Brigham Young himself as "a bright and shining lie to the boast of +impartiality." Brigham Young's coup d'etat in granting woman suffrage in +1871 was illuminated, and emphasized by the assertions:--"A territory +that has abolished the right of dower, that proclaims polygamy to be +divine, that has no laws against bigamy and kindred crimes, that has no +just appreciation of woman, is unworthy of self-respecting humanity, +woman suffrage or no woman suffrage." Miss Field makes in these lectures +a telling exposition of the doctrine of blood atonement, passing on to +these Mormon missionaries and their methods, and the people who become +"fascinated with the idea of direct communication with heaven through +the medium of a prophet," and to whom the missionary brethren prudently +"leave the mysteries of polygamy to the imagination," while they +inculcate the importance of "gathering to Zion." She outlined the +educational status and the discouragement given by Brigham Young to all +educational progress. Of Mormon treason she says:-- + +"Five years after the United States had established the Territory of +Utah its people were in armed rebellion because the government dared to +send a Gentile governor and national troops to Utah." + +Nor does she spare the United States in its responsibility for these +crimes. "The United States to-day," said Miss Field, "is responsible for +thirty years' growth of polygamy, with its attendant degradation of +woman and brutalization of man." As an illustration of this conclusion, +she told a most interesting story of which Governor Harding of Utah, +Brigham Young, Benjamin Halliday, Postmaster General Blair, Abraham +Lincoln and William H. Seward were the characters. The story is a +dramatic and significant bit of Mormon history, related for the first +time. It led up to an earnest and eloquent peroration of which the final +words were: "'I'll believe polygamy is wrong when Congress breaks it up; +not before!' exclaims a plural wife. Men and women of New England! You +who forge public opinion; you who sounded the death knell of slavery, +what are you going to do about it!" + +William Lloyd Garrison used to tell his friends that it was worth an +admission fee just to see Kate Field on the platform, as she made so +lovely a picture. Her attitudes--for they are too spontaneous and +unconscious to be termed poses--are the impersonation of grace, and, +aside from the enjoyment of the intellectual quality and searching +political analysis of her lectures, is that of the artistic effect. +She gave a course of three lectures on this "Mormon Monster." They were +efforts whose invincible logic, graphic presentation and thrilling power +held spellbound her audience. They were a drama of social and political +life, and almost unprecedented on the lyceum platform was this eloquence +and splendor of oratory, combined with the trained thought, the +scholarly acquirement, and the finished eloquence of its delivery. This +course of lectures finished there was a popular call for Miss Field to +repeat one at Tremont Temple which, by invitation of Governor Robinson, +the Mayor and a number of distinguished citizens, she consented to do. +The triumph was repeated. From Boston she was invited to lecture in +Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Washington. Press and people were alike +enthusiastic. It is to the work of Miss Kate Field more than to any +other cause, that the present disintegration of Mormon treason is due. +Other travellers in Utah have made but the briefest stays, and have been +ready to gloss over the tale. Miss Field is telling the truth about it, +and she does it with a courage, a vigor, an honesty, and a power that +renders it one of the most potent influences in the national life of the +times. Kate Field holds to-day the first place on the Lyceum platform of +America. She has a rare combination of judicial and executive qualities. + +She is singularly free from exaggeration, and her sense of justice is +never deflected by personal feeling or emotional impulse. She has that +exceptional balance of the intellectual and artistic forces that enables +her to give to her lecture a superb literary quality, and to deliver it +with faultless grace of manner and an impressiveness of presence rarely +equalled. In Kate Field America has a woman worthy to be called an +orator. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE MONUMENT AND HOMESTEAD OF REBECCA NURSE. + +BY ELIZABETH PORTER GOULD. + + +Perhaps the greatest incentive to ideal living in a changing world is +the firmly held conviction that truth will finally vindicate itself. +When this vindication is made apparent, as in the case of Rebecca +Nurse, one of the most striking martyrs of the Salem witchcraft days of +1692, the cause of human progress seems assured. For it is thus seen +that truth has within itself a living seed which in its development +is destined to become man's guide to further knowledge and growth. +This idea was impressed upon me anew as I stood before the granite +monument, some eight and a half feet high, erected this past summer in +Danvers,--originally Salem,--to the memory of Mrs. Rebecca Nurse, by +her descendants. A carpet of green grass surrounded it, and a circle of +nearly twenty pine trees guarded it as sentinels. The pines were singing +their summer requiem as I read on the front of the monument these +words:-- + + REBECCA NURSE, + YARMOUTH, ENGLAND, + 1621. + SALEM, MASS., + 1692. + + O Christian martyr, who for Truth could die + When all about thee owned the hideous lie, + The world, redeemed from Superstition's sway, + Is breathing freer for thy sake to-day. + + +I lingered a moment over these fitting lines of Whittier, whose charming +home, "Oak Knoll," a short distance off, had just given me a restful +pleasure. Then I walked around to the other side of the monument, where +I read, with mingled feelings, the following words:-- + + Accused of witchcraft + She declared, + "I am innocent, and God will + clear my innocency." + + Once acquitted yet falsely + condemned, she suffered + death July 19, 1692. + + In loving memory of her + Christian character, + even then truly attested by + forty of her neighbors, + this monument is erected. + + +These last lines reminded me of the fact that the paper with its forty +signatures, testifying to the forty years' acquaintance of the good +character of Rebecca Nurse, was still in existence. Alas! why couldn't +such a testimony of neighbors and friends have saved her? But it was not +so to be. The government of the colony, the influence of the magistracy, +and public opinion elsewhere, overpowered all friendly and family help; +and on the 19th July, 1692, at the advanced age of seventy-one years, +Rebecca Nurse was hung on Gallows hill. + +As I left the monument, which is in the old family burying-ground, and +wandered up the time-honored lane towards the homestead where she was +living when arrested, the March before, my thoughts would go back to +those dreadful days. I thought of this venerable mother's surprise and +wonder, as she learned of the several distinct indictments against her, +four of which, for having practised "certain detestable acts called +witchcraft" upon Ann Putnam, Mary Walcot, Elizabeth Hubbard, and Abigail +Williams, were still to be found in the Salem records. I thought of the +feelings of this old and feeble woman as she was borne to the Salem +jail, then a month later sent off, with other prisoners, to the jail +in Boston (then a whole day's journey), to be sent back to Salem for +her final doom. I pictured her on trial, when, in the presence of her +accusers, the "afflicted girls," and the assembled crowd, she constantly +declared her innocence ("I am innocent, and God will clear my +innocency"), and showed a remarkable power in refuting the questions of +the magistrate. I thought of her Christian faith and courage, when, upon +seeing all the assembly, and even the magistrate, putting faith in the +"afflicted girls'" diabolical tantrums (what else can I call them?) as +there enacted, and now preserved in the records of the trial, she calmiy +said, "I have got nobody to look to but God." I again pictured her, as, +just before the horrors of execution, she was taken from the prison to +the meeting-house, by the sheriff and his men, to receive before a great +crowd of spectators the added disgrace of excommunication from the +Church. + +But I could picture no more. My heart rebelled. And as I had now reached +the old homestead on the hill I paused a moment, before entering, to +rest under the shade of the trees and to enjoy the extensive views of +the surrounding country. This comforted my troubled feelings, and +suggested the thought that in the fourteen years that Rebecca Nurse had +lived there she must have often come under the shade of the trees, +perhaps after hours of hard work and care, to commune alone with her +God. How could I help thinking so when there came up before me her +answer to the magistrate's question, "Have you familiarity with these +spirits?"--"No, I have none but with God alone." Surely, to one who knew +Him as she did, who in calm strength could declare her innocence when +many around her, as innocent as she, were frightened into doubt and +denial, the quiet and rest of nature must have been a necessary means of +courage and strength. + +Then what did not the old house, with its sloping roof, tell me, as it +still stood where Townsend Bishop had built it in 1636, upon receiving a +grant of three hundred acres? Yes, this old "Bishop's mansion," as the +deed calls it, had felt the joys and sorrows of our common human life +for almost two hundred and fifty years. It had known the friends whom +Townsend Bishop, as one of the accomplished men of Salem village, had +gathered about him in the few years that he had lived there. It must +have heard some of Hugh Peters' interesting experiences, since, as +pastor of the First Church those very years (1636-1641), he was a +frequent visitor. Why couldn't one think that Roger Williams had often +come to compare notes on house-building, since he owned the "old witch +house" (still standing on the corner of Essex and North streets) at the +same time that Mr. Bishop was building his house? It certainly was a +pleasure to remember that Governor Endicott once owned and lived on this +farm. He bought it in 1648, for one hundred and sixty pounds, of Henry +Checkering, to whom Mr. Bishop had sold it seven years before. + +I recalled many other things, that summer day, concerning this ancient +place. Shall I not tell them? While the Governor lived on it he +continued his good work for the general opening of the country around +about. Among other things he laid out the road that passes its +entrance-gate to-day. + +Here his son John brought his youthful Boston bride, and gave to her the +place as a "marriage-gift." Then, some years later, she, the widow of +John, having become the bride of a Mr. James Allen, gave it to him as a +"marriage-gift;" and upon her death, in 1673, he became the possessor. +Five years later he sold it to Francis Nurse, the husband of Rebecca, +for four hundred pounds. Mr. Nurse was an early settler of Salem, a +"tray-maker," whose articles were much used. He was a man of good +judgment, and respected by his neighbors. He was then fifty-eight years +of age, and his wife fifty-seven. They had four sons and four daughters. +The peculiar terms of the purchase had always seemed interesting to me; +for the purchase-money of four hundred pounds was not required to be +paid until the expiration of twenty-one years. In the meantime a +moderate rent of seven pounds a year for the first twelve years, and ten +pounds for each of the remaining nine years, was determined upon. +Suitable men were appointed to estimate the value of what Mr. Nurse +should add to the estate while living upon it, by clearing meadows, +erecting buildings, or making other improvements. This value over one +hundred and fifty pounds was to be paid to him. These various sums, if +paid over to Mr. Allen before the twenty-one years had expired, would +make a proportionate part of the farm at Mr. Nurse's disposal. + +The low rent and the industrious, frugal habits of Mr. Nurse and his +family, added to the fact that not a dollar was required to be paid down +at first, led to the making of such good improvements that before half +the time had elapsed a value was created large enough to pay the whole +four hundred pounds to Mr. Allen. When Mr. Nurse thus became owner of +this estate he gave to his children, who had already good homes within +its boundaries, the larger half of the farm, while he reserved for +himself the homestead and the rest of the land. By the deeds he gave +them, they were required to maintain a roadway to connect with the old +homestead and with the homes of each other. + +While the different members of the Nurse family were thus working hard +for the money to buy the place there was hanging over its owner the +shadow of litigation for its possession. But this was Mr. Allen's +affair, not theirs, so they went on their way in peace. Indeed, it has +been thought that their steady success in life was one cause of their +future trouble. They became objects of envy to those restless ones less +favored. And so, when the opportunity came to merely whisper a name for +the "afflicted girls" to take up, Rebecca Nurse's fate was in the hands +of an enemy. A striking example of the innocent suffering for the +guilty. Does not vicarious suffering seem to be an important factor in +the development of the race? Two years after, this faithful wife and +mother had been led from her peaceful home to suffer the agonies of +prisons, trials, and hanging. When the children had all married, the +father gave up the homestead to his son Samuel, and divided his +remaining property among his sons and daughters. He died soon after, +in 1695. He was a kind, true father, whose requests after death were +heeded. This homestead was in the Nurse name as late as 1784, when it +was owned by a great-grandson of Rebecca. He sold it to Phineas Putnam, +a descendant of old Nathaniel Putnam, who, in the hour of need, wrote +the paper for the forty signatures above mentioned. The estate descended +to the great-grandson of Phineas, Orin Putnam, who, in 1836, married the +daughter of Allen Nurse. And thus a direct descendant of Rebecca Nurse +was again placed to preside over the ancestral farm, and to their +descendants it belongs to-day. + +After thus thinking over this interesting history of the old place, +as I reclined under the shade of its trees, I was better prepared to +enjoy the kind hospitality which it then offered me. I felt a peculiar +pleasure in stepping into the same little front porch which Townsend +Bishop had built so many years ago. And upon ascending the stairs I +found myself lingering a while by the old original balusters, the +building of which Roger Williams had perhaps viewed with interest. Upon +reaching the attic it was a pleasure, indeed, to see in this new world +the frame-work of a house which for two hundred and fifty years had +stood so well the test of nature in all her moods. No saw was used in +shaping those oaken timbers. They knew only the broad-axe. From this +attic I descended to the sitting-room, to spend a while under the same +low beams which had greeted the first visitors of the house. Here I +imagined the Nurse family living in quiet and peace. Here I pictured the +son Samuel, as, later, he wondered over and over again how he could +remove the reproach which was on his mother's name. And I thought that +to him his descendants owed much, for it was mainly to his pleadings +that the General Court exonerated her in 1710, and the Church in 1712. + +While sitting there I learned of some alterations which had been made +from time to time: how the front of the house, before which the old +roadway used to be, had been widened by extending the western end beyond +the porch. + +As I came out of the house upon the green grass around it, I enjoyed +again the grand outlook over the surrounding country,--the same which in +the days of agony had strengthened human souls,--and then walked down +the hill, by the family burying-ground, out through the entrance-gate +into Collins street, the public thoroughfare. + +I left the monument and its interesting associations that August day of +1885 (it was dedicated only the July 30 before) with the feeling that as +the present descendants of Rebecca Nurse owe much to her son Samuel, so +their future descendants will be indebted to them for the appropriate +manner in which they have still further striven to vindicate before the +world the innocence of a much-wronged ancestor. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE PRESENT RESOURCES OF MASSACHUSETTS. + +BY H.K.M. + + +Massachusetts is a busy state. The old time factory bell has not +entirely given way to the steam whistle, nor the simple village spire to +the more pretentious ecclesiastical tower of to-day, yet the energizing +force of material prosperity has quickened the blood in nearly every +hamlet, modernized the old, or built up a new, so that throughout the +state there is a substantial freshness indicative of progressive thrift. + +The Tenth Census of the United States classifies the entire +working population of the state in four divisions of labor as +follows:--Agriculture, 64,973; Professional and Personal services, +170,160; Trade and Transportation, 115,376; Mechanical, 370,265; with a +total population of 1,941,465.[4] The aggregate steam and water power in +1880 was 309,759 horse power; the motive power of 14,352 manufacturing +establishments having an invested capital of $303,806,185; paying +$128,315,362 in wages to 370,265 persons who produced a product value of +$631,135,284. These results, in proportion to area and population, place +Massachusetts first in the Union as a manufacturing state. In mechanical +science a complete cotton mill has been considered the cap stone of +human ingenuity. In 1790 Mr. Samuel Slater established in Pawtucket, +R.I., the first successful cotton mill in the United States, but the +saw gin, a Massachusetts invention of Mr. Eli Whitney in 1793, laid the +foundation of the cotton industry throughout the world. + +There are 956 cotton mills in the United States with an invested capital +of $208,280,346, with a wage account of $42,040,510. The relative +importance of the four leading states in the manufacture of cotton goods +is shown as follows:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 206 Mass. $74,118,801 $16,240,908 $74,780,835 + 133 R.I. 29,260,734 5,623,933 24,609,461 + 97 Conn. 21,104,200 3,750,017 17,050,126 + 41 N.H. 19,993,584 4,322,622 18,226,573 + + +As in cotton, so also in the manufacture of woolen goods has +Massachusetts maintained from the first the leading position. In 1794 +in Byfield parish, Newbury, Mass., the first woolen mill went into +successful operation. In 1804 a good quality of gray mixed broadcloth +was made at Pittsfield, Mass., and it is said that in 1808 President +Madison's inaugural suit of black broadcloth was made there. + +The five leading states in the production of woolen goods are thus +classified:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 167 Mass. $24,680,782 $7,457,115 $45,099,203 + 324 Penn. 18,780,604 5,254,328 32,341,291 + 78 Conn. 7,907,452 2,342,935 16,892,284 + 50 R.I. 8,448,700 2,480,907 15,410,450 + 159 N.Y. 8,266,878 1,774,143 9,874,973 + + +In its kindred industry, dyeing and finishing textiles, Massachusetts is +a controlling force; as seen in the classification of the three leading +states in this department of labor:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 28 Mass. $8,613,500 $1,815,431 $9,482,939 + 16 R.I. 5,912,500 1,093,727 6,874,254 + 60 Penn. 3,884,846 1,041,309 6,259,852 + + +Nearly one half of the entire American production of felt goods comes +from her, as indicated in the classification of the four leading +states:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 11 Mass. $820,000 $163,440 $1,627,320 + 6 N.J. 313,000 86,170 685,386 + 4 N.Y. 157,500 35,289 257,450 + 1 Penn. 150,000 80,000 450,000 + + +Massachusetts is also an all-important factor in the total production of +American carpets. The 59 mills in the United States made in 1880 a +wholesale product valued at $31,792,802. Massachusetts made the most +Brussels, 1,884,723 yards; Pennsylvania came next with 919,476 yards. +She came next to New York in yards of Tapestry, and next to Connecticut +in Wiltons, a good second in these important grades. The three leading +carpet states are thus classified:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 10 N.Y. $6,422,158 $1,952,391 $8,419,254 + 172 Penn. 7,210,483 3,035,971 14,304,660 + 7 Mass. 4,637,646 1,223,303 6,337,629 + + +In the manufacture of Boots and Shoes Massachusetts stands conspicuously +at the front; her position in this great industry is clearly seen in the +three states controlling this special product:-- + + No. of Capital Wages Value + Factories. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 982 Mass. $21,098,133 $24,875,106 $95,900,510 + 272 N.Y. 6,227,537 4,902,132 18,979,259 + 145 Penn. 3,627,840 2,820,976 9,590,002 + + +One evidence that Massachusetts is not sitting down all the time is the +fact that she stands up to manufacture so many chairs. From a small +beginning of wood and flag seated chairs, Mr. James M. Comee in 1805, +with his foot lathe, in one room of his dwelling in Gardner. Mass., laid +the foundation of this important industry, which has given the town of +Gardner, where over 1,000,000 of chairs are annually made, a world wide +reputation. + +The relative positions of the five leading chair states:-- + + No. of Capital Wages Value + Factories. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 62 Mass. $1,948,600 $1,028,087 $3,290,837 + 62 N.Y. 991,000 472,974 1,404,138 + 45 Penn. 111,700 143,037 437,010 + 37 Ohio 497,026 321,918 821,702 + 37 Ind. 395,850 232,005 632,746 + + +In the currying of leather Massachusetts is a notable leader:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + Establishments. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 194 Mass. $4,308,169 $1,939,122 $23,282,775 + 185 N.Y. 1,720,356 366,426 6,192,002 + 455 Penn. 2,570,969 334,950 7,852,177 + 56 N.J. 1,983,746 762,697 8,727,128 + 61 Wis. 1,299,425 281,412 4,496,729 + 18 Ill. 534,786 141,096 2,391,380 + + +Her position in the manufacturing of worsted goods is also an all +important one:-- + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 23 Mass. $6,195,247 $1,870,030 $10,466,016 + 28 Penn. 4,959,639 1,473,958 10,072,473 + 11 R.I. 4,567,416 1,222,350 6,177,754 + + +Again we find her at the head of another very important industry, the +manufacture of paper. + +The five leading states in production are given their relative positions. + + No. Capital Wages Value + of Mills. State. Invested. Paid. of Product. + + 96 Mass. $11,722,046 $2,467,359 $15,188,196 + 168 N.Y. 6,859,565 1,217,580 8,524,279 + 60 Ohio 4,804,274 839,231 5,108,194 + 78 Penn. 4,099,000 752,151 5,355,912 + 65 Conn. 3,168,931 656,000 4,337,550 + + +In 1880 Massachusetts manufactured 27,638 tons of printing paper, 24,746 +tons of writing paper, 10,255 tons of wrapping paper, 945 tons of wall +paper, 3,706,010 pounds of colored paper, 255,000 pounds of bank note +paper, 878,000 pounds of tissue paper, and 27,607,706 pounds of all +other kinds of paper. + +She manufactures more shovels than any other state, about 120,000 dozen +annually. Rhode Island comes next with about one-half the quantity, and +Ohio stands third, her product being about 7,000 dozen annually. + +It also falls to her lot to manufacture more Hay and Straw cutters, +about 6,000 annually. In the manufacture of hard soap Massachusetts +falls a little behind some of her sister states, but she comes smilingly +to the front with her 16,000,000 pounds of soft soap, about one half of +the total production. New York brings her annual offering of about 5,000 +pounds. + +The 4,000 boats she annually builds constitute nearly one half of the +number built in the United States. + +There are 131,426 persons in the United States engaged in the fisheries. + +The prominent share of Massachusetts in this industry is seen in the +classification of the five leading states. + + State. No. of Capital Value + Persons Invested. of Product. + Employed. + + Mass. 20,117 $14,334,450 $8,141,750 + Md. 26,008 6,342,443 5,221,715 + N.Y. 7,266 2,629,585 4,380,565 + Me. 11,071 3,375,994 3,614,178 + Vir. 18,864 1,914,119 3,124,444 + + +She has invested:--Over $1,000,000 in the manufacture of Baskets and +Rattan goods; over $1,600,000 in the manufacture of Brick and Tile; over +$2,000,000 in the manufacture of Wagons and Carriages; over $5,000,000 +in the manufacture of Men's Clothing; over $1,500,000 in the manufacture +of Cordage and Twine; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Cutlery; +over $3,000,000 in the manufacture of Fire Arms; over $16,000,000 in the +Foundries and Machine Shops; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of +Furniture; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Iron Nails and Spikes; +over $6,000,000 in the manufacture of Iron and Steel; over $1,500,000 in +the manufacture of Jewelry; over $3,000,000 in the manufacture of +Liquors, Malt; over $3,000,000 in Slaughtering and Packing; over +$2,000,000 in Straw goods; over $2,000,000 in Sugar and Molasses, +refined; over $2,000,000 in the manufacture of Watches; over $2,000,000 +in the manufacture of Wire, and over $11,000,000 in unclassified +industries. + +The limitations of this article will only allow brief reference to a few +of the leading industries of Massachusetts. The facts presented give her +a commanding position in the sisterhood of manufacturing States, while +the condition of her operatives, their moral and intellectual character, +has no parallel in any other manufacturing district in the world. + +On her well known but dangerous coast special provisions are made to aid +the mariner; so likewise upon her more dangerous coast of sin we find +2,397 ministerial light houses whose concentrated spiritual lens-power +upon an area of 8,040 square miles, make the rocks of total depravity +loom up far above the white capped waves of theological doubt. The lower +law being less important than the higher, it takes but 1,984 lawyers to +successfully mystify the juries of the Commonwealth. Of physicians and +surgeons there are 2,845. It requires the constant services of 2,463 +persons to entertain us with music, and just one less, 2,462 barbers, +who are in daily tonsorial conflict with our hair, either rebuking it +where it does grow, or teasing it to come forth where heretofore the +dome has been hairless. + +Of the 4,000,000 farms of 536,081,835 acres in the United States, 38,406 +farms of 3,359,097 acres valued at $146,197,415 yielding an annual +income of $24,160,881 lie within the borders of the state. Her 150,435 +cows produce 29,662,953 gallons of milk, which is the foundation of her +annual product of 9,655,587 pounds of butter, and 829,528 pounds of +cheese. She would be unjust to her traditional sense of justice were she +to send her beans out into the world single handed, with true paternal +solicitude she provides them with the charmed society of 80,123 swine, +thus hand in hand Massachusetts' pork and beans stride up and down the +earth, supremely content in the joyous ecstasy of their Puritan conceit. +While Massachusetts has well known agricultural tendencies, and her +Agricultural college is one of the most important factors in her system +of practical instruction, it cannot be claimed that she is a controlling +element in the agricultural interests of the country. Of all her +influences for good, perhaps her educational interests would command the +greater prominence. She has ever regarded the instruction of her youth +as one of her most sacred trusts, and in all the details of her public +school system she ranks second to no state in the Union. + +In the various departments of technical instruction, she has a national +reputation. Her colleges and universities so richly endowed secure the +highest attainable advantages. These privileges supplemented by the free +public libraries of the state, place possibilities within the reach of +every young man or young woman, the value of which cannot be +approximated by human estimate. + +Six of the leading states are thus classified:-- + + Public School Sittings School + Schools. State. Buildings. Provided. Property. + + 6,604 Mass. 3,343 319,749 $21,660,392 + 15,203 Ill. 11,880 694,106 15,876,572 + 11,623 Ind. 9,679 437,050 11,907,541 + 18,615 N.Y. 11,927 763,817 31,235,401 + 16,473 Ohio 12,224 676,664 21,643,515 + 18,618 Penn. 12,857 961,074 25,919,397 + + +The following institutions for higher education have about $5,000,000 +invested in grounds and buildings, about $9,000,000 in endowments, +yielding an annual income of about $1,000,000, having about 4,000 +students and about 400,000 volumes in libraries, Universities and +Colleges. + + +UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. + + Amherst College, organized 1821 + Boston College, organized 1864 + Boston University, organized 1872 + College of the Holy Cross, organized 1843 + Tufts College, organized 1852 + Harvard College, organized 1636 + Williams College, organized 1793 + + COLLEGES FOR WOMEN. + + Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, organized 1837 + Sophia Smith College, organized 1872 + Wellesley College, organized 1874 + + THEOLOGICAL SCHOOLS. + + Andover Theological Seminary, organized 1808 + Boston University School of Theology, organized 1847 + Divinity School of Harvard University, organized 1816 + Episcopal Theological School, organized 1867 + Tufts College Divinity School, organized 1867 + Newton Theological Institution, organized 1825 + New Church Theological School, organized 1866 + + LAW SCHOOLS. + + Boston University School of Law, organized 1872 + Law School of Harvard University, organized 1817 + + SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE. + + Boston University School of Medicine, organized 1869 + Harvard Medical School, organized 1782 + New England Female Medical College, organized 1850 + Boston Dental College, organized 1868 + Dental School Harvard College, organized 1867 + Massachusetts College of Pharmacy, organized 1823 + + THE SCHOOLS OF SCIENCE. + + Massachusetts Agricultural College, organized 1867 + Massachusetts Institute of Technology, organized 1861 + Lawrence Scientific School, organized 1848 + Worcester County Free Institute of Industrial + Science, organized 1868 + + +While Massachusetts is a model state in all her educational interests, +we do not forget that there are 75,635 persons in the state who cannot +read, and 92,980 persons who cannot write, but of the 990,160 native +white persons of ten years and upwards only 6,933 are unable to write, +being seven-tenths of one per cent., the lowest ratio of any state. +Arkansas, per cent, being 25.0; Alabama, 24.7; Georgia, 22.9; Kentucky, +22.0; No. Carolina, 31.0; So. Carolina, 21.9; Tenn., 27.3; West +Virginia, 18.2; Connecticut, 5.5; Illinois, 5.9; New Hampshire 5; +Pennsylvania, 6.7; New York, 5.3. + +There are 15,416 colored persons in the state, of 10 years and upwards; +of this number 2,322 are unable to write, but from 10 to 14 years of +age, both inclusive, these being 1,504, but 31 persons are reported as +unable to write, or 2.1 per cent. South Carolina out of a colored +population of 75,981 between the same ages, reports 57,072 persons as +unable to write or 74.1 per cent. There are 1,886 colored persons in the +state between the ages of 15 and 20, and only 70 are reported as unable +to write, or 3.7 per cent.; we find this also the lowest ratio of any +state. + +South Carolina's per cent. being 71.9; Alabama, 64.9; Georgia, 76.4; +Texas, 69.2; and North Carolina, 68.5. + +Her density of population makes it exceedingly convenient for her 52,799 +domestic servants to compose notes over neighborly fences. Her 281,188 +dwelling houses house 379,710 families, placing 6.34 persons to the +credit of each dwelling, and 4.70 persons to each family. This density +gives her 221.78 persons to a square mile, a far greater ratio than any +state except Rhode Island. This neighborly proximity has its social +tendencies, which may account in part for the hospitable amenities which +are a rightful part of Massachusetts' well known loyalty to a higher +regard for the purest type of home, a comparative statement of the +density of population of a few states. + + State. Square Miles. Persons to Square Miles. + + Rhode Island, 1,085 254.87 + Massachusetts, 8,040 221.78 + Connecticut, 4,845 128.52 + Georgia, 58,980 26.15 + Illinois, 56,000 54.96 + Iowa, 55,475 29.29 + Maine, 29,895 21.71 + Michigan, 57,430 28.50 + New Hampshire, 9,005 38.53 + New York, 47,620 106.74 + Pennsylvania, 44,985 95.21 + West Virginia, 24,645 25.09 + + +As inseparable as night is from day, so also are the ills of life from +life itself. Massachusetts is no exception to the inexorable law which +defines the conditions of human society; but through her public and +private charities so wisely administered, she humanely softens the +asperities which shadow the life of her unfortunates. To her lot fall +1,733 idiotic persons, 978 deaf mutes, 5,127 insane, 1,500 of whom are +cared for at home, and 3,659 prisoners, 1,484 of whom are of foreign +birth. Human life teaches that the boundary lines of a smile and tear +are the same, for where happiness is, there sorrow dwells. In the +general estimate of 391,960 annual deaths in the United States, about +33,000 occur in Massachusetts. + +One evidence of her unswerving faith in the national credit is seen by +her holdings in U.S. registered bonds. The four leading states are +reported as follows:-- + + No. of Per cent. of + Persons. State. Bondholders. Amount. + + 16,885 Massachusetts, 23.05 $45,138,750 + 10,408 Pennsylvania, 14.23 40,223,050 + 14,803 New York, 20.24 210,264,250 + 4,130 Ohio, 5.65 16,445,050 + + +In the classification of the four leading states, of assessed valuation +and taxation, it appears that the assessed valuation of her personal +property exceeds that of any state. + +The four leading states are thus classified:-- + + Area Real Personal Total + State. Sq. M. Estate. Property. Total. Tax. + + N.Y. 47.620 $2,329,282,359 $323,657,647 $2,651,940,006 $56,392,975 + Penn. 44,985 1,540,007,657 143,451,059 1,683,459,016 28,604,334 + Mass. 8,040 1,111,160,072 473,596,730 1,584,756,802 24,326,877 + Ohio 40,760 1,093,677,705 440,682,803 1,534,360,508 25,756,658 + + +The grandest monument of human skill in modern railway science is +unquestionably the St. Gothard Tunnel which connects the valley of the +Reuss with the valley of the Ticino, which is from 5,000 to 6,500 feet +below the Alpine peaks of St. Gothard, being a little over 9-1/4 miles +in length, costing over $47,000,000, one-half of which was paid by the +governments of Italy, Germany, and Switzerland. Until its completion in +1880, there was but one railway tunnel, Mont Cenis, that outranked our +own Hoosac Tunnel of nearly 5 miles in length and costing about +$10,000,000. + +The service, equipment, and management of Massachusetts' railway system +is well nigh perfect. Out of 4,100 miles of track in the state, 2,453 +are laid with the steel rail. Including the 1,150 engines, 1,554 +passenger cars, 394 baggage cars, and 24,418 freight cars, the total +cost of railroad equipment in the state has been $178,862,870; from this +investment the total earnings in 1884 reached $33,020,816 from which +$4,568,274 were paid in dividends. The number of passengers carried were +57,589,200 and 17,258,726 tons of freight moved. One of the most +important elements in her system is the Boston and Albany. Its engine +service the past year was 5,680,060 miles, the company carried 94,721 +through passengers and 8,699,691 way, whose total earnings were +$8,148,713.34 and total expenses were $5,785,876.98. + +In this connection we would refer to the city and suburban tramway +service, which has taken an important part in the development of the +state. The total cost of the 336 miles of road and equipment, including +8,987 horses and 1,918 passenger cars is stated at $9,093,935. Number of +passengers carried in 1884 was 94,894,259, gross earnings $4,788,096, +operating expenses $3,985,617, total available income $924,440. When we +consider that the street railway service carried more than 37,000,000 +passengers in excess of the steam railways, we realize its importance. + +While there are 66,205 more females than males in the state, in the +wider distribution of the sexes their equality indicates that it could +not happen by chance, and that marriage of one man to one woman was +intended. + +An authentic estimate of the numerical proportions of the sexes is as +follows:-- + +United States, 983 women to 1,000 men; America, (at large) 980 women to +1,000 men; Scotland, 1,096 women to 1,000 men; Ireland, 1,050 women to +1,000 men; England and Wales, 1,054 women to 1,000 men; France, 1,007 +women to 1,000 men; Prussia, 1,030 women to 1,000 men; Greece, 940 women +to 1,000 men; Europe, (at large) 1,021 women to 1,000 men; Africa, +(estimated) 975 women to 1,000 men; Asia, 940 women to 1,000 men; +Australia, 985 women to 1,000 men. In an aggregate of 12,000 men there +is a surplus of about 161 women. + +Massachusetts has been making notable history ever since 1620, and in +picking out here and there a few of the influences which have tended to +develope her material resources, we would not be unmindful of those +Christian influences which are also a part of her imperishable history. + +To the lover of nature, perhaps no state in range of rugged coast and +water views blended with mountainous background, can offer more pleasing +bits of picturesque scenery. The historic hills of Berkshire and the +beautiful Connecticut River, with its 50 miles of sweep through the +state, ever hurrying on to the sea, have inspired the tireless shuttles +of descriptive imagery to weave some of the finest threads in American +thought. + +Nowhere within the range of human vision can the eye find a more +restful scene of quiet simplicity and softer blending of river, hill and +foliage, than in the valley of the Deerfield on any sunny summer day. +Let him who would have a sterner scene of majestic grandeur stand upon +the storm-beaten cliffs of some rock-fringed coast, while the +silver-crested sea and the dark, deep toned clouds, like mercy and +righteousness, kiss each other. + +To us who love Massachusetts, her principles, her institutions, her +hills, valleys and rocks, her future is but the lengthening out of a +perfect present; and at last, when the scroll of states is finally +rolled up, may her eternal record stand for the highest type of +Christian citizenship. + +[Footnote 4: Census of 1885.] + + * * * * * + + + + +ELIZABETH.[5] + +A ROMANCE OF COLONIAL DAYS. + +BY FRANCES C. SPARHAWK, Author of "A Lazy Man's Work." + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +A GRAVE DECISION. + + +After the greetings were over, Elizabeth, looking at Stephen Archdale, +realized fully the difficulties of her task. She was to go through with +it alone she perceived, for her father had turned away and taken up a +spyglass that had been brought him at the moment, and was absorbed in +looking through it at the new fascine battery. Evidently he expected her +to give Captain Archdale the history of the facts and conclusions that +had brought her father and herself to Louisburg. As she looked at the +young man in his strength, she felt more than ever the necessity for +speaking. He knew well enough that Mr. Edmonson hated him, and that was +necessary to be known. And yet, speech was hard, for even though he +could never imagine Edmonson's contemptible insinuations, still before +he believed in his own danger he might have to learn his enemy's foiled +purpose toward herself; and to be sought for her fortune was not a thing +that Elizabeth felt proud of. Her head drooped a little as the young man +stood watching her, and the color began to come into her face. Then the +courage that was in her, and the power that she had of rising above +petty considerations into grandeur, came upon her like an access of +physical strength. The strong necessity filled her, and the thought that +she might be bringing life where she had almost brought death, at least +death of joy, lighted her face. Still she hesitated for a moment, but it +was only to study how she should begin. Shall she give him Katie's +letter at once, and in her name warn him to take care of the life that +was of so much value to his betrothed? No, for with Katie's letter in +his hand, he could not listen carefully to Elizabeth's words, he could +think only of what was within. His thoughts would refuse to have to do +with danger; they would be busy with joy. That must wait. + +"We have come here, my father and I," she began, "to say one word to +you, Captain Archdale. We talked it over, and we saw no other way." + +"You are pale," cried Stephen suddenly. "You must be very tired. Let us +sit down here while you tell me." And he pointed to a coil of rope at +hand. But she shook her head. + +"I am not tired, thank you; I am disappointed that I can't go back +immediately, that I must wait until to-morrow, when the dispatches will +be ready." + +"You need not," he cried. "The General shall let you go if you wish it. +I will insist upon it. The dispatches can go some other way. If the +Governor wants news in such haste, he would do better to send us some +powder to make them out of. He was enough in a hurry to get us off, to +give us something to do after we are here." + +"I should think you had something to do," she said pointing to the +battlements of Louisburg which at that distance and from that angle +looked as if no shot had ever been fired against them. "But don't on any +account speak to the General. We are glad to do even so little for the +cause. And perhaps it's not that that makes me pale. I don't know. I +have a warning hard to deliver to you. I have come hundreds of miles to +do it. I will give it to you immediately, for you may need it at any +moment." She drew closer to him, and laid one hand upon his arm as if to +prevent his losing by any chance the words she had to say. Her gesture +had an impressiveness that made him realize as much as her face did how +terribly in earnest she was. + +"It must be something about Katie," he thought. And the vision of Lord +Bulchester rose before him clearly. + +"Listen," said Elizabeth absorbed in her attempt to make him feel what +she feared would seem incredible to him. "Stray shots have picked off +many superfluous kings in the world--and men and the world not been the +wiser. This is what some one said when the war was being talked of, said +at your house, and said in speaking of you." + +"Said it to you?" interposed Archdale with a quick breath. + +"Oh, no, but about you, I am sure, _sure_, though it has taken me +all this time to find it out. And,--oh, wait a moment,--the man who said +it was your guest then, and he is here now, else we should not have +come; he is here, perhaps he is close by you every day, and he,--he is +meaning the shot for you." She waited a moment drawing a breath of +relief that she had begun. "You know he is your enemy?" she went on with +a longing to be spared explanations. + +She was spared them. + +"I do know it," said Archdale looking at her, and as she met his eyes a +great relief swept over her. Her warning had been heard and believed, +she was sure of that. She heard Archdale thanking her, and assuring her +that he would give good heed to her warning. And she had not had to tell +why Edmonson hated him, she had not even been obliged to utter the name +that she was coming to hate. "Do you know?" she had asked wonderingly, +and he had told it to her. Did he know the man so thoroughly, then? And +were there other causes of hatred, possibly money causes, that had +spared her? + +She had told her listener more than she dreamed, far more than her +words. She had stood before him in the noblest guise a human being can +wear, that of a preserver from evil fate; she had looked at him out of +holy depths in her clear eyes, she had turned upon him a face in which +expression had marvellously brought out physical beauty. Also, in her +unconsciousness that he knew the reason of his danger, she had looked at +him with a wonder at his ready credulity before there had come her smile +of relief that she need speak no more. He knew Edmonson's story, knew +how this play at marriage between Elizabeth and himself had interfered +with the other's plans, guessed the further truth, looked at her, and +muttered under his breath:--"Poor fellow!" It was with his own eyes, and +not another man's that Archdale saw Elizabeth. Yet, it was not in human +nature that she should not seem the more interesting as she stood there, +since he had learned his own life to be in danger because another man +had found her so desirable, and so unapproachable. Watching Elizabeth, +he acquitted Edmonson of mercenary motives, whatever they might once +have been. His appreciation had no thought of appropriation in it. Katie +was his love. But comprehension of Elizabeth made him glad that their +mistake had saved her from Edmonson. And then again after a moment he +muttered under his breath:--"Poor fellow!" + +"You are very, very kind," he said to her. + +"Don't think me rude," she answered with a smile. "But, you know we must +have done this for any one. Only,"--and her voice became earnest again, +"I was very grateful that the least thing came to me for you and Katie. +I have not done with Katie yet" she added, "here is something that I +have brought you from her." And she handed him a letter. "She gave me +this as I was leaving," she said. + +"Thank you," he said again, and holding it clasped in his hand, stood +not looking at it, but as if he still had something to say. "Has +Bulchester gone yet, Mistress Royal?" he asked abruptly at last. + +"No. But I think that he must be very hard to send away, and Katie you +know hates to say anything unkind. She doesn't see that it is the +kindest way in the end. We shall not go until to-morrow, you know. If +you have any letters, we shall be so glad to take them." + +"Thank you once more." He stood still a moment. "The earl may be wise to +stay on the field," he said. "I may be swept off conveniently. Yes, he +is wise to wait and see what the fortunes of war will do for him." + +"Oh! Mr. Archdale," cried Elizabeth, between indignation and tears at +his want of faith. "How can you not trust her? Your letter that she was +so eager to send will prove how wrong you are." Here Mr. Royal sauntered +up, and the conversation turned upon the scene before them. + +But in the midst of Archdale's description of one of their skirmishes a +signal was given from the new battery. "They are signalling for me," he +said. "My place is in command of those guns. I am sorry to leave my +story half told, but I must go. I shall try to see you to-morrow." And +with a hasty farewell he sprang into the boat. As he was rowed away, +Elizabeth saw him put his hand into the pocket where he had slipped +Katie's letter, and draw this out. + +She sat down again in her favorite place on deck, laid her arms on the +railing of the schooner and her face upon them. Now that her errand was +done, she became aware that she was very tired. She sat so quiet that +she seemed to be asleep. But she was only in a day-dream in which the +thought of which she was most conscious was wonder that Archdale could +doubt Katie. Had she not always been a coquette? And had she not always +loved him? Yet Elizabeth wished that she could have said that Lord +Bulchester had gone, wished that she could have seen Stephen Archdale's +face brighten a little before he left them, perhaps forever; she had not +forgotten the danger of his post. Nancy softly drew her chair close. +But Elizabeth made no movement. She sat with her face still buried, +thinking, remembering, longing to be at home again, counting the hours +until they should probably sail. + +Suddenly she started up. For there had come light that she saw through +the dark folds that she had been pressing her eyes against. To her there +was a sound as if the heavens were being rent, and she felt a trembling +of the earth, as if it shook with terror at the spectacle. She stood a +moment bewildered. It seemed as if the light never paled at all, but +only changed its place sometimes; the roar was terrific, it never +ceased, or lulled, and the water beneath them tossed and hissed in rage +at its bed being so shaken. Nancy's hand sought her companion's with a +reassuring pressure, for speech was impossible. But Elizabeth had only +been unprepared. She recovered herself and smiled her thanks. Then she +sat down again with her face toward the city and watched this cannonade, +terrible to men grown grey in the service, as officers from the fleet +bore witness, and to the enemy deadly. + +For the fascine battery had opened fire. + +At midnight General Pepperell sent for Archdale to detail him for +special service the next day. + +"Why! what's the matter?" he cried, looking at the young man as he came +into the tent. + +"Nothing, General Pepperell. I am quite ready for service," replied +Stephen haughtily. + +"Ah!--Yes. Glad of that," returned the General, and he went on to give +his orders, watching the other's pale face as he did so, and reading +there strong emotion of some kind. + +When he was alone, and his dispatches had all been written, he sat +musing for a time, as little disturbed by the glare and the thunder +about him as if stillness were an unknown thing. His cogitations did not +seem satisfactory, for he frowned more than once. "What's the matter +with the fellow?" he muttered. "Something has gone wrong. I've seen an +uneasiness for a long time. Now the blow has fallen. Poor fellow! he +doesn't take life easy. The news is it, I wonder? or the letter?" He sat +for a while carefully nursing his left knee, while his thoughts +gradually went back to military matters, and worked there diligently. At +last he straightened himself, clapped this same knee with vigor, put +both feet to the ground and, rising, took up from his improvised +table--a log turned endwise,--a paper upon which he made a note with a +worn pencil from his pocket. "Yes," he cried, "I can do that. It's the +only thing I can do. And I need it so much they will not mind." He +finished by a smile. "Strange I hadn't thought of it before," he said. + +Then he threw himself down upon his bed of boughs and moss, and with the +terrific din about him slept the sleep of weariness. At sunrise, +according to his directions, an orderly roused him. + +Archdale had already gone with his reconnoitering party. His heart was +bitter against the conditions of his life, and he felt that it would be +no misfortune, perhaps quite the contrary, if Edmonson's plan were not +interfered with. "It's beyond her comprehension," he said to himself. +"How confident she was. What will she say when she knows?" + +In the morning, Elizabeth standing beside her father turned a tired face +toward the shore as she watched General Pepperell's approach. Sleep had +been impossible to her in the strangeness and terror of her surroundings. + +"You are very thoughtful to come to bid us good-bye," she said, giving +him her hand as he stepped on board. + +He smiled, and still holding it, asked after a moment's hesitation, +"Should you be very much disappointed if I begged you not to return this +morning?" + +She certainly looked so for a moment, before she answered: "If it will +help, if I can be of any use, I am ready to stay. Are there soldiers in +the hospitals? Can we do anything for them, Nancy and I?" + +He caught at the diversion readily. "The hospitals? Yes, I should be +very glad, infinitely obliged to you, if you would pay them a visit. +I've not a doubt that your suggestions would make the poor fellows more +comfortable, and there are a number of new ones there this morning. +I'm sorry to say our health record is discouraging. Not that I'm +discouraged, but I want to put this business through as quickly as +possible." Then he turned to Mr. Royal. "I must tell you both," he said, +"that I came to you this morning bent upon purposes of destruction, +(though, happily, not to yourselves,) and not purposes of health, except +of saving lives by making the work as short as possible. I should like +this schooner. I have an immediate use for it, and in two days, or, at +the outside, three, I'm going to send to Boston. Will you permit me to +take this as a fire-ship, and will you remain under my especial care +until this other vessel sails?" He turned to Elizabeth as he spoke. "If +you consent," he said to her, "I am quite sure your father will. It will +be a great favor to me, and I hope to the cause, if you do. But I won't +insist upon it. If you say so you shall go this morning." + +Elizabeth glanced at her father, "But I don't say so," she answered. +"I am compelled to stay if my father consents. It's not you that make +me but a stronger power. You won't be offended if I call patriotism a +stronger power?" And she smiled at him. + +"Thank you, my dear," he said with a gravity which showed that she had +touched him. "You shall not regret your sacrifice." + +In the course of conversation he told Mr. Royal that Archdale had been +sent off at dawn upon an exploring expedition. "I want to find out how +near to us the Indians are," he said, "they are hanging about somewhere. +You will not see him to-day." + +That morning, Elizabeth was rowed ashore with Nancy, and under an escort +they went to the hospitals; not for a visit of inspection, as it turned +out, but as workers. Nancy had had experience in illness, and Elizabeth +was an apt pupil. Before the day was over the poor fellows lying there +felt a change. There were no luxuries to be had for them, but their +beds were made a little softer with added moss and leaves, the relays +of fresh water from the brook running through the encampment were +increased. One dying man had closed his eyes in the conviction that the +last words he had sent to his mother would reach her; he had watched +Elizabeth write them down, and she had promised to put a lock of his +hair into the letter. He was sure that she would do it, and he died +happier for the thought. Altogether, in many ways the comfortless tents +grew less comfortless, for Elizabeth interpreted literally the general's +permission to do here what she chose. The eyes of the soldiers followed +both women with delight, and one rugged fellow, a backwoods man, whose +cheerfulness not even a broken leg and a great gash in his forehead +could destroy, volunteered the statement: "By George! whether in peace +or war we need our women." This was responded to by a cheer from the +inmates of his tent. The demonstration was all the more touching, +because its endeavor to be rousing was marred in the execution by the +physical weakness of the cheerers. + +They spent that night on shore. Elizabeth's tent was next her father's +and a few rods from the general quarters. As Mr. Royal left her, she +stood a moment at the swinging door of her strange room, and looked at +the stars and at the scene so new to her on which they were shining. +Then leaving it reluctantly, for it fascinated her, she laid down upon +the woodland couch prepared for her, and was soon as soundly asleep as +her maid near by, while around the tent patrolled the special guard set +by General Pepperell. + +The next day also was spent in the hospital. In the course of the +afternoon, Nancy, looking over the Bay in a vain search for the schooner +which had brought them, said; "I wonder how we really shall get home, +and when?" + +"As General Pepperell promised us," answered her mistress. "And probably +we shall leave to-morrow. I expect to hear from him about it then. So +does my father; he was speaking of it this morning." + +They were right; the next day the General told them that the +"Smithhurst" would sail that afternoon with prisoners of war from the +"Vigilant," a captured French vessel. "She is one of the ships that +Governor Shirley has sent for to guard the coast," he said to Elizabeth +speaking of the "Smithhurst." "She goes to Boston first to report and +discharge her prisoners. Be ready at four o'clock. If I can, I will take +you to the vessel myself; but if that is impossible, everything is +arranged for your comfort. Your father is at the battery, I have just +left him there. He is undeniably fond of powder. I've told him about +this." Elizabeth was in one of the hospital tents when Pepperell came to +her with this news. She staid there with Nancy all the morning, and at +noon when her father came and took her away for awhile to rest, she had +an earnest talk with him upon some subject that left her grave and +pleased. + +After a time she went back to the hospitals again. At the last moment +the General sent an escort with word that he had been detained. Just +before this message arrived, Elizabeth called her maid aside. + +"Nancy," she said, "you see how many of our soldiers are here, hundreds +of them, almost thousands. They are fighting for our homes, even if the +battle-ground is so far away. And see how many have been sent in, in the +short time we have been here. Do you want to desert them? Tell me how +you feel? Shall we go back to our comfortable home, and leave all this +suffering behind us, when we might do our little to help? Shall we, +Nancy? I have no right to insist upon your staying; but don't you think +we ought to stay? and won't you stay with me?" + +"Indeed I will," was the quick answer. "I hated to leave the poor +fellows, but I did not see what else to do. The General won't like it +one bit though. And your father, Mistress Elizabeth?" + +"The General has no authority over me. I'm not one of his soldiers. And +as to my father, it's all right with him." + +Yet she felt very desolate when the ship which was to have carried them +had gone with its companion vessel, and from the door of one of the +hospital tents she stood watching the white sails in the distance. But +it was not that resolution had failed her; for she would have made the +same decision over again if she had been called upon at the moment. + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +THE NIGHT ATTACK. + + +As Elizabeth stood at the door of the hospital tent looking after the +Smithhurst, General Pepperell came along, alone, in a brown study, his +brows knit and his face troubled. For though the French ship-of-war, +"Vigilant" had been captured, Louisburg had not, and every day was +adding to the list of soldiers in the hospitals. But when he saw her, he +stopped, and his expression, at first of surprise, changed to anger. + +"What does this mean?" he said abruptly. "The ship has sailed. I sent +you word in time." + +"Yes," she answered. + +"Then what does it mean?" he reiterated, "Why are you here?" + +"It means," she returned, resenting the authority of his tone, "that +when New England men are fighting and suffering and dying for their +country, New England women have not learned how to leave them in their +need, and sail away to happy homes. That's what it means, General +Pepperell." As she spoke she saw Archdale behind the General; he had +come up hastily as Pepperell stood there. + +"Thought you were in a desperate hurry to be off," said Pepperell dryly. + +Elizabeth blushed. She was convicted of changeableness, and she felt +that she had been impatient. "Forgive me," she said. "So I was. But I +did not realize then what I ought to do." + +"Um! Where's your father?" + +"Just gone out in the dispatch boat to the fleet." + +"Does he know of this--this enterprise? Of course, though," he corrected +himself, "since he has not sailed." + +"Yes, of course," she said. "He stays with me. But," she added, "I +suppose he expected me to ask you about it first." + +"And you knew I wouldn't consent--hey?" + +The girl smiled without speaking. "Mr. Royal is over-indulgent," he went +on decidedly. + +"Perhaps," answered Elizabeth, "He thinks that a little over-indulgence +in being useful will not be bad for me. You assured both Nancy and me +that we were doing good service, real service, and that you should be +sorry to lose us." + +"So you have done, and I shall be sorry to lose you, both personally and +for the cause. Nevertheless, I shall send you home at once. Your father +would never have consented to your staying if he had realized the +danger. I never know where the shells will burst. I'll stop work upon +that schooner that you came in, and send you home again in it. It's +fitting up now as a fire-ship, but it can be made fairly comfortable. +Your safety must be considered." + +"Why is my safety of any more importance than the soldiers'? No, +General, you have no right to send me away. I refuse to go. I am not +speaking of military right, understand, but of moral right." + +Pepperell gave a low whistle. + +"That's it, is it?" he said. "One thing, however; if you stay, you must +submit to my orders. You are under military law." + +"I surely will. And now thank you," she returned with a smile so winning +that, although for her own sake Pepperell had been angry, he relented. + +"Oh, of course, it's very good in you, my dear," he said. "Don't think I +forget that." + +Capt. Archdale had been standing a little apart looking out to sea +during a conversation in which he had no place. Now as he perceived the +General about to move on, he came forward and spoke to Elizabeth. "You +know that you are running a great risk?" he said to her gravely. + +"Yes," she answered him, "or at least somewhat of a risk. When did you +come back from your reconnoitering party?" + +"The night before last," he said, not pursuing a subject that she did +not wish to discuss with him. Elizabeth heard something hard in his +voice, and saw a new sternness in his face that made her wonder suddenly +if Katie's letter had lacked any kindness that Stephen deserved from her +as he stood in the midst of danger and death. Could she have shown +coquetry, or in any way teased him now? + +"Well, good-by for the present, my dear, and Heaven keep you," said the +General, giving her hand a cordial pressure. Archdale bowed, and the two +went on, Pepperell at first full of praises of Elizabeth's courage, +though he regretted her decision. But life and death hung upon his skill +and promptness, and he had little time for thoughts of anything but his +task. Henceforth he only took care that Mr. Royal and his daughter were +as well protected, and as well cared for as circumstances permitted. + +Yet, one evening soon afterward, he saw something which for the +moment interested him very much. Elizabeth, with Nancy Foster who was +now more companion than maid, was walking slowly toward her tent. Both +were looking at the gorgeous sunset. Its brilliancy, vying with that +of the deadly fireworks, offered a contrast all the more striking in +its restfulness and happy promise. The two women had grown somewhat +accustomed to the cannonade, and as they went on they seemed to be +talking without noticing it. Just then a figure in captain's uniform +came quickly up the slope toward them, and with a most respectful +salute, stood bare-headed before Elizabeth. + +"Edmonson," commented the General even before he caught sight of +his face. "Nobody else has that perfection of manner. Stephen won't +condescend to it. Edmonson is the most graceful fellow I know. And, upon +honor, I believe he is the most graceless. But his theories can't harm +that woman." Yet as Pepperell stood watching the young man's expression +now that it was turned toward him, and understood by his gestures the +eager flow of words that was greeting Elizabeth, he held his breath a +moment with a new perception, muttered a little, and stood staring with +the frown deepening on his face. He wanted to catch her answering look, +but she had turned about in speaking and her back was toward him. In an +impatient movement at this, he changed his own range of vision somewhat, +and all at once caught sight of another face, also bent upon Elizabeth +with eager curiosity to catch her expression. Pepperell turned away +delighted. "After all, he's not too much of a grand seigneur to have +a little human curiosity," he chuckled, watching the new figure. "Yes, +we'll do very well to go on a reconnoitering expedition together, you +and I, Captain Archdale!" And he laughed to himself as he slipped +quietly away, without having been perceived. "More news to write to +pretty Mistress Katie," he commented, still full of amusement. Then +his thoughts went back again to the problem that was growing daily +more perplexing. And as he was again becoming absorbed in it, he was +conscious of an undercurrent of wonder that he could ever have laughed. +The thing next to be done was to make an attack up Island Battery, the +one most serviceable to the enemy, most annoying to themselves. So long +as that belched forth its fires against them, Warren's fleet must remain +outside, and there could be no combined attack upon the city, and +Louisburg was still unconquerable. Any day might bring a French fleet to +its rescue, and then the game was up. Beyond question, Island Battery +must be attacked, but it was a difficult and dangerous attempt, and +Pepperell sat with his head upon his hand, thinking of the men that must +fall even if it were successful. Still, every day now some among the +soldiers were smitten down by disease and the French ships were nearer. +It was only a question of sacrificing a part of his army or the whole of +it. Warren was right to urge the measure, and it must be pressed upon +his Council. But Pepperell felt as if he were being asked to sign a +hundred death-warrants. + +It was not quite time for the members of his Council to assemble. He +went to the nearest battery where the firing was hottest, sighted the +direction of the guns, examined the state of the city walls where these +had been played upon by them, cheered the gunners with his praise, even +jested with one of them, and left the men more full of confidence in +him, more desirous than ever to please him, and, if possible, more +resolved to win the day. Not a trace of anxiety in his face or his tones +had betrayed the weight that was upon him. Then he went back to his +tent. The Council had assembled. When he took his place at the head, +he had forgotten the incident that a few minutes before had moved him +to laughter. + +Archdale stood motionless. The underbrush hid him from the speakers, and +he was too far off to hear a word. It seemed to him that Elizabeth +wished to shorten the interview, for soon Edmonson with another of his +inimitable bows retired and she passed on. As Stephen caught sight of +her face he saw that it was troubled. "He shall not persecute her," he +said to himself. Nancy had gone on while Edmonson was speaking to her +mistress, and now Elizabeth following was almost at the door of her +temporary home, when a hand was laid heavily upon Archdale's shoulder, +and Vaughan's hearty voice cried;-- + +"Come on! I'm going to speak to our charming, brave young lady there. +I want to tell her how proud of her courage I am. Come on! he repeated. +Stephen followed. He had not taken her determination in this way. He +thought her unwise and rash, and hated to have her there. And yet he +could not deny that the camp had seemed a different place since she had +entered it. + +"You take it that way," he said to Vaughan. "But I think we should be +feeling that she may get hit some of these days, or be down with fever." + +"We'll hope not," returned the other cheerfully. "Let us look on the +bright side. She is doing a work of mercy, and we will trust that a +merciful Providence will protect her. We were just talking about you, +Mistress Royal," he continued, striding up to Elizabeth and grasping her +hand warmly. "Stephen, here, says he's always thinking you'll get hit +somehow, or get a fever. I say, look on the bright side of things, +'trust in the Lord,' as old Cromwell used to put it." + +"'And keep your powder dry,'" finished Archdale. "It's not safe to quote +things by halves. Decidedly, this staying is not a prudent thing." + +"I didn't know that beseiging Louisburg could be called a prudent +thing," she returned. "And so we're all in the same boat." + +"Ha! ha!" laughed Vaughan. "You have him there, Mistress Royal. He's +always in the hottest places himself; he likes them best." + +"Somebody else likes them, too; somebody else who can capture Royal +Battery with thirteen men," said Elizabeth. "I knew long ago that you +were a genuine war-horse, Colonel Vaughan. Give me credit for my +discernment." + +"Yes, yes, I remember," assented the other with the embarrassment of +courage at finding itself commended. "But, really, against such a +cowardly crew as those fellows were, there's no credit at all to be +gained." + +She made him a bright reply, and Archdale listened in silence as they +talked. But she noticed his gloomy face, and secretly wondered if it +was anxiety about Edmonson that troubled him, or if possibly, he was +displeased with Katie. But she put away for the second time the latter +suggestion. The girl had never looked prettier or been more affectionate +than when she had said good-by to her and given her the letter for +"poor, brave Stephen," as she had tearfully called him. Archdale could +not help listening to Elizabeth; there seemed to be a witchery about her +whenever she opened her lips. It was probable that Edmonson felt it, he +thought. And he began to wonder how things would all end. Perhaps they +should all be shot and the affair wind up like some old tragedy where +the board is swept clean for the next players. For his part, too much +had gone from his life to make the rest of it of interest. Elizabeth +turned to him. + +"Are you busy?" she asked. "I mean are you on duty?" + +"No," he answered, wondering what was coming, and noticing that her +tall, slight figure seemed all the more elegant for the simplicity of +her dress. "Can I do anything for you?" he added. + +"Yes, thank you," she answered, "You can, if you are willing. I am going +to get some medicine that the doctors have asked me to keep, because it +is very powerful, and they were afraid lest some of the men would be +careless with it. Nancy is bringing the bandages. Here she is now. Thank +you," as the girl put a phial into her hand. "There is extra work to be +done to-day," she went on, turning again to Archdale, "and we are short +of hands. If you don't mind, and will come, we shall be glad of your +help." + +Captain Archdale playing at nurse with private soldiers! The young man +did not fancy the idea at all; he would much rather have led a forlorn +hope. + +But no forlorn hope offered, and this did. Of course he would do +anything for Mistress Royal, but this was not for her at all. He had +half a mind to excuse himself. As the suggestion came to him, he looked +into the steady eyes that were watching him fathoming his reluctance, +ready for approval or for scorning as the answer might be. His look took +in her whole appearance, and set him wondering if the privates, some of +whom had been even his neighbors and his boyish playfellows, could +offend his dignity more than hers? He began to wonder how her eyes would +change if they looked at him approvingly. + +"I will go with pleasure, if you'll put up with an awkward fellow," he +answered. And Colonel Vaughan who was looking on was not aware that he +had hesitated. + +Elizabeth's eyes darkened. She smiled and nodded her head slightly, as +if to say, "I knew you would do it." But after this the trace of a smile +lurked for a moment in the corners of her mouth, as if she might have +added: "I know, too, what it has cost you." But she said nothing at all +to Archdale. She bade good-by to Colonel Vaughan who protested that he +wished he was not upon duty, and turned again toward the hospital. +Suddenly Archdale thought that she might have been asking the same thing +of Edmonson when she had been talking with him just before. If she had, +it was very certain that Edmonson had found an engagement immediately. +Upon the whole, Archdale was satisfied to have done what the other would +not do. So that it was just as well he did not know that that other had +not been asked. + +Was there ever another woman in the world like this one, he asked +himself late that night, recalling that she had been for hours beside +him, treating him just as if he were a crook to raise a soldier's head, +if she wanted to rearrange his pillow, or a machine to reel off bandages +round that poor Melvin's shattered arm, or to do any other trying +service, and never even imagine that he would like to be thanked or +treated humanely, while every look and word and thought of hers was for +the soldiers. It was so different from what he had always found, and yet +there was the nobleness of self-forgetfulness in the difference. But for +all this vivid memory of those hours, it was imagination rather than +recollection that occupied him most with her when she had left him. For +he was picturing how she would look, and what she would say, when she +read the letter that he had slipped into her hand as she was going away. +He recalled her look of amazement, her beginning:--"Why, it's--" and +then breaking off abruptly, perceiving that only peculiar circumstances +could have made him give her Katie's letter to read, and perhaps +divining the truth. For she had suddenly became very grave and had +replied absently to his good-night, as on her father's she had turned +from the hospital. The young man, wondering how she would receive the +news of Katie's treachery, asked himself what she could find now in +excuse for the girl who had used her faithful friend as the unconscious +messenger of her broken plight? Stephen knew well enough that the old +glamour would come back, but to-night he was full only of indignation +against Katie. To have used Elizabeth as she had done was an added sin. + +"I wish Bulchester joy of her," he muttered, then with a sharp breath +recollected that this was only a respite, that he should not always feel +too scornful for pain. + +Three nights after this there was a silent and solemn procession down to +the shore. Island Battery was to be attacked. Here was Archdale's +forlorn hope ready for him, if he wanted it now. Every chance of success +depended upon secrecy. The venture was so desperate that the General +could not make up his mind to pick out the men himself, he called for +volunteers. They came forward readily, incited, not only by courage and +the desire to end the siege, but by ambition to be distinguished among +their comrades who stood about them in hushed expectation. Every soldier +off duty and able to crawl to the shore, and some who should not have +attempted it were there. Among this crowd stood two women, scarcely +apart from the others, and yet everywhere that they moved, given place +to with the unobtrusive courtesy that has always marked American men, so +that one woman in a host of them feels herself, should danger come, in +an army of protectors, and otherwise alone. Elizabeth had meant to be +here earlier, and to put herself by the General's side, for her father +had gone with dispatches to the fleet, but her duties had detained her, +and now she was separated from him by nearly a regiment. She stood +silent in an anxiety that did not lessen because she told herself that +it was foolish. + +Captain Brooks was to command the expedition, and the number of men +needed to accompany him was fast being made up from the eager +volunteers. In the dimness she recognized Archdale by an unconscious +haughtiness of bearing, and Edmonson's voice, though lowered to suit the +demands of the hour, made her shiver. Yet why? Of course they both were +here; volunteers were stepping out from the ranks of their companies. +But they themselves were not going, neither would they be left here +alone together. Boat after boat with scaling ladders was filled with +soldiers and shoved off, some of them out of sight in the dimness where +the men, lying on their oars, waited for their comrades. In this way +one after another disappeared. Things went on well. Elizabeth began +to be reassured, to be occupied with the scene about her, to remember +the importance of the expedition and how many times it had been +unsuccessfully attempted. She began to think of the attack, of the +result, and of the soldiers, to rejoice in them, to be proud of them, +and to tremble for them, as one who has no individual interest at stake. + +It was only at night that the attempt could be made, only in certain +states of the tide, and still at the best time it was a terrible +venture; the work was new for the troops; the walls were high, the enemy +was vigilant. With a sigh she saw another boat shove off to its fate. + +The volunteering slackened, either because so many of the men left were +aware that fatigue and illness had undermined their strength, or because +the night had grown lowering and the ominous roar of breakers reached +them from their landing place. Finally a distinct pause came in answer +to the call: "Who next?"--a pause that lasted a minute, and that, had it +lasted another, would have meant discouragement, and perhaps despair. + +"I," said a firm voice, and Elizabeth saw Stephen Archdale step into the +boat. A strange feeling came over her for a moment, then a wave of +admiration for his heroism. If he were to die, it would be a soldier's +death. Yet, there would be so many to mourn him. If he went to his death +in this way, how would Katie feel? General Pepperell started forward, as +if to prevent his embarking, then restrained himself. The men responded +rapidly after this example, until the boat needed only one more. Then +there fell upon Elizabeth's ears, a name more frightful to her than the +boom of the surf or the roar of cannon, and Edmonson stepped in and +seated himself opposite Archdale. + +"Two captains in one boat!" she heard a soldier remonstrate. + +"Nonsense! we're full. Shove off instantly, you laggards. Every minute +tells," said the newcomer in a hoarse undertone. + +Elizabeth sprang forward. "No, no," she cried impetuously, forgetting +everything but the terror. + +But the calling of the names was going on again, and her voice was +unheard, except by a few who stood near her. Before she could make her +way up to the General, the boat pulled by the vigorous strokes of the +men who had been taunted as laggards, had shot out of sight. "Oh! bring +them back, bring back that last boat," she implored Pepperell in such +distress that he, knowing her a woman not given to idle fears, felt a +sense of impending evil as he answered: + +"My dear, I cannot. No boat is sure of meeting it in the dark, and to +call would endanger the expedition." + +There was no use in explaining now. She would have occasion enough to do +it sometime, she feared; and then it would be useless. To-night she +could say nothing. All these days she had dreaded what might come, for +it did not seem to her that Captain Archdale took any care at all. +Still, in the camp, out of general action, and surrounded by others, +there had been comparative safety. + +Now the hour, the place, and the purpose had met. Through the darkness +Stephen Archdale was going to his doom. + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +A WOUNDED MAN. + + +The General sent Elizabeth away very kindly. She sent the weary Nancy to +bed and went back to the hospital. But anxiety mastered her so that she +could not keep her hands from trembling or her voice from faltering when +there was most need for steadiness. + +"You are exhausted, Mistress Royal, you ought not to be here," said one +of the surgeons sternly. "Go and rest." + +"Oh, please let me stay," she pleaded with a humility so new that he +looked at her with curiosity. + +"Hush!" said his assistant making an excuse to draw him aside. "Don't +you know she's been watching the men set out for the Fort?" + +Elizabeth found words of comfort for a soldier who was mourning because +his wife would have no one to look after her, if he died. "I will help +her," she said. And then, by the light of the flaring candle, she wrote +down the woman's address. She repeated verses of Scripture for some who +asked her for them, and found a little steadiness of voice in doing it. +But through everything she saw Archdale's vigorous form and heard +Edmonson's passionate voice and his words. With such a marksman, and at +such range, how could a shot stray! + +But she dreaded still more the time when the expedition should return. +To-night she bitterly regretted that the General had not been told her +errand, and saw that when Mr. Royal urged it, it had been the wish to +save her that had made Stephen Archdale ask him not to do it. + +Three hours after the start she heard that the expedition had failed. +All that was left was returning, the wounded would soon be brought in. +Her little strength deserted her for the moment She sank down helpless +in the shadow. Then she rose and went forward. + +As the boat lay rocking on the waves waiting for the others, Archdale +took his bearings. Leaning towards the stern, he said to one of his +men:-- + +"Greene will you change places with me?" If the man had thought the +request more than a whim, he would have supposed it to be because the +captain considered his new choice a more dangerous post. Archdale +seating himself again glanced toward the bow. He was now on the same +side with Edmonson and the fourth man from him. It would be somewhat +difficult to have the latter's gun go off by accident and be sure of its +mark, and Greene was safe so far as exemption from an enemy at hand was +concerned. Archdale would have preferred Edmonson's left hand but when +it came to disembarking, his enemy should precede him. + +"Better cushions?" asked Edmonson with a sneering laugh under which he +tried to hide his anger. "Can't see any other motive for your running +the risk of capsizing us." + +"It is very presumptuous to do anything for which Captain Edmonson +cannot see the motive," returned Archdale haughtily. + +"By Heavens!" cried Edmonson in another moment "You're bound to die in +character if it come to a question of dying and of course it will with +some of us." + +Stephen made no answer. He felt more strongly than ever that he needed +good eyes and firm nerves. To be killed like a rat in a trap! His blood +ran too warm in his veins to submit tamely to this. When the struggle +should come yonder it mattered little whether it was by Edmonson's shot +or another's, for if he fell in the heat of the conflict it would always +be said that he died a soldier's death. And if he lived to come back +Edmonson, should take boat first. He turned himself slightly toward his +foe, and sat silent and observant. + +Had Elizabeth noticed them enter the boat together? He had thought of +saying good-by, for his volunteering was no sudden resolve, but had been +his determination from the first. But if he died, what real difference +would that make to her? And if he came back, the leave taking would seem +an absurdity. He seemed still to see the outline of her slender figure, +as with her shawl wrapped about her like a mantle she had stood +bare-headed in the cold May evening. + +Had he dreamed that Edmonson had learned of Katie's desertion, and was +full of rage at every word of courtesy or interest that he spoke to +Elizabeth, he would have felt his chance of life still less. + +"Can't you hitch along, you fellow next me?" cried Edmonson. "I'm so +cramped here I can't move a muscle, and I suspect we shall want them all +in good order pretty soon. We are coming up to the old walls. Swift and +steady, boys. Every man be ready with his muskets." + +As he spoke, he took up his own weapon and examined it in the dimness. +Then, still holding it in his right hand, he laid that arm along the +edge of the boat as if to relieve it from the cramped position he had +complained of. Archdale saw that the muzzle was pointed directly at him +and that the hand which held it in apparent carelessness was working +almost imperceptibly towards the trigger. That would not be touched +quite yet, however, a shot now would alarm the garrison and be +inexcusable. The accident would happen in the excitement of landing. +Archdale's left hand that he with as great indifference as Edmonson's +laid upon the boat's edge was steady. He leaned forward a little to be +out of range, and they went on in silence. + +The clouds grew denser, the waves swelled more and more at the violence +of the wind, and the storm, nearer every minute, seemed about to unite +with the fiery storm that awaited the devoted band. + +"Look," said Archdale suddenly, "I believe they have discovered us." He +raised his left hand as he spoke, and pointed to the Battery. Lights +were glancing there, and something had given it an air of ponderous +observation, as if eyes were looking through the walls and movements +going on behind them. All the men scanned the battery earnestly except +the speaker whose eyes were watchfully turned upon his neighbor, and who +for reward saw Edmonson's fingers covertly placing themselves on the +trigger, while his face was still toward the fortifications. + +"Yes, it's all up with us," cried the latter, "we are discovered," +In the movement of speech he was turning to Archdale, preparatory to +dropping measuring eyes upon the musket, when the latter called out:-- + +"See! they are going to fire." And with the words he dropped his left +arm with a swift and accidental sweep by which his hand hitting forcibly +against Edmonson's which was unprepared, struck it off the boat into the +water. The pistol sent its ball spinning into the sea, running along +Archdale's sleeve as it passed. The pistol itself lay under the water +for the instant that Edmonson's hand rested there. The flintlock was +wet, the weapon was useless. + +Its owner turned upon his clumsy companion in a rage. But before he +could speak the guns of the battery blazed out, and in the iron shower +that followed there was no thought for anything but that of saving +themselves as much as possible. + +Round shot would have danced over the water and left them comparatively +safe; but in the deadly hail of langrage such escape was impossible. +Every moment of it inflicted torturing wounds or death. The boats were +beeched with all speed at the foot of the monster which belched forth +this red hot torrent wounding wherever it fell. But they had been thrown +into confusion, and while some of them struggled to the shore, the +occupants of others in their terror drew back out of harm's way, and +left their comrades to their fate. Edmonson's was not the only flintlock +wet, as the soldiers, weary and dispirited, toiled up from the surf. +They tried their scaling ladders, they fought for a time with that +desperate courage which never forsook them. Their captain cheered them +with his bravest words and deeds, and Archdale and Edmonson were +foremost in every post of danger until one fell badly wounded. + +But from the first the expedition was doomed. After an hour's conflict +the recall was sounded, and the remnant of the scaling party straggled +and staggered to their boats, some carrying wounded comrades, some +themselves wounded and faint. But many had been taken prisoners by the +French, and many lay dead and dying. Elizabeth stood waiting for the +wounded to be brought in, and for the roll of the dead. The first man +who came walking steadily toward her, turning about at every few steps +to see that the men behind him were carrying their burden on their +stretchers carefully, was Archdale. + +"You?" she said wonderingly. "I thought--I was afraid--." + +"Yes, I have come back," he answered; "and it is through your warning. +Such as my life is, you have saved it." + +[TO BE CONTINUED.] + +[Footnote 5: Copyright, 1884, by Frances C. Sparhawk.] + + * * * * * + + + + +EDITOR'S TABLE. + + +It is surprising how few people, comparatively speaking, are aware of +the fact, that the history of Boston has been treated as the history of +no other city in this country has been. The year 1880 was the two +hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its founding, and, commemorative of +that year, a work, in four beautiful quarto volumes, has been issued in +this city by Messrs. Ticknor and Company. The object of this work, and +the importance attached to it is what leads us to speak of it in this +place and at this time. This object is primarily to present the leading +historical phases of the town's and city's life and developement, +together with the traces of previous occupation, and the natural history +of the locality. To accomplish this almost herculean task, the sections +were assigned to writers well-known in their respective spheres,--many +of them of national reputation,--who from study and associations were +in a measure identified with their subjects. The entire work was +critically edited by Mr. Justin Winsor, Librarian of Harvard University, +with the co-operation of a committee appointed at a meeting of the +gentlemen interested, consisting of the Rev. Edward Everett Hale, +D.D., Samuel A. Green, M.D. and Charles Deane, LL.D. Now, it is not +our purpose to enter into any description of this carefully planned, +skilfully written, beautifully illustrated, printed and bound specimen +of the art of book-making; but rather, again to call attention to its +great merits and claims upon the interested public. The work deals +almost exclusively with facts, and impartially also, and these facts are +alike valuable to the man of letters, the man of science, the historian, +the student, and the vast public whose patriotism invites them to +seek the story of their city. A better conceived work has never been +published on this continent; but it is unnecessary to commend what +easily commends itself to the eye, the mind, and the purse of well-to-do +people. + + * * * * * + +There is need of a more careful study of politics on the part of the +people of this country. The recent elections in this State and in other +States again recalls this need, and have again shown that altogether too +many men cast their ballots, not in accordance with their intelligence +or with their convictions, but as they are told to cast them. The first +duty of an American citizen should be a thorough acquaintance with +American political institutions, their origin, their growth and +progress, their utility or their worthlessness. The right of suffrage is +one of the inalienable rights of the people. It is one of their most +sacred rights also, and ought not to be exercised except under most +careful, candid and conscientious conditions. + +One cannot suppose, even for a moment, that our people are not aware of +the accuracy of these assertions. We are not advocates of property +ownership as a qualification of voting, nor would we seek to lay down +any arbitrary _sine qua non_, to be rigidly adhered to in our +system of voting. But, is it enough that a man should know how to read +and write before he can cast a ballot? Do these qualifications comprise +everything that is necessary to a proper and safe exercise of the right +of suffrage? If so, then politics can never be formulated as a science, +and politicians can never be regarded other than what many of them seem +to be,--tricksters trading on the incredulity and ignorance of the +masses. It is only when people understand _how_ and _why_ they +vote, that they can vote intelligently. + +It may not be generally known that we have in this state, with allied +organizations in other states, a Society for "Political Education," +carrying on its work by furnishing and circulating at a low price sound +economic and political literature. Its aim is to publish at least four +pamphlets a year on subjects of vital importance. During the present +year, the "Standard Silver Dollar and the Coinage Law of 1878" has been +treated by Mr. Worthington C. Ford, secretary of the society; "Civil +Service Reform in Cities and States," by Edward M. Shepard; "What makes +the Rate of Wages," by Edward Atkinson, and others have also been +published,--in all sixteen pamphlets since the foundation of the +Society. + +The first Secretary of the Society was Richard L. Dugdale, the author of +the remarkable social study called "The Jukes." The twelfth number of +the Economic Tracts of the Society gives a sketch of his life, and from +it the following quotation is pertinent:-- + +"The education of the people in true politics, it seemed to Mr. Dugdale +and his associates, would not only greatly aid popular judgment on +political questions, but would be a necessary preliminary to the +election of public representatives and officers upon real issues. If +elections were so held, successful candidates would come generally to be +men competent to consider and expert in dealing with questions of state +and administration. And if legislators and executives were so competent +and expert, and were not merely men accomplished in intrigue or active +in party contests, we should have from them conscientious and +intelligent social reforms. Legislative committees, governors, mayors, +commissioners of charities and corrections, superintendents of prisons, +reformatories, almshouses, and hospitals, would then patiently listen +and intelligently act upon discussions and of the condition of the +extremely poor and the vicious, and especially of children and young men +and women not yet hopelessly hardened." + +Few persons will deny that such a work as this needs everywhere to be +done so that the charities of the country shall no longer be +administered in the interests of a party. + +The Society has been in active operation about four years, and its +success has thus far been most gratifying. It has already induced +hundreds of people to make a careful study of American history and +politics, and its influence is now felt throughout the length and +breadth of this land. The very fact of such an effort is one of the +encouraging signs of the times, and should be encouraged by all who aim +for the welfare of the Republic. + + * * * * * + +But there is still another open field for work in this direction, and +this perhaps lies more in the power of the people themselves. We allude +to the necessity of public lectures, in every community, on the great +themes pertaining to American politics and history. It must be evident +to every observer that our so-called "Lyceum Courses" are to-day sadly +deficient in efforts to educate the people. There is a perfect craze +at the present time for concerts, readings, and a similar order of +entertainments,--all of which are doubtless good enough of their kind +and are capable of exerting a certain moral influence that cannot be +questioned. But is it plausible that such pabulum meets all the needs of +those people who frequent these entertainments? If it does, the fault +lies with the people and not with those who are capable of amusing them. + +We would suggest to the public-spirited ladies and gentlemen living in +our towns and cities to try the following experiment;--Plan a _lecture_ +course, to be filled by public speakers residing in your own +communities. Establish a course of say four, six, eight, or a dozen +evenings, and let only those questions be discussed which pertain to +history, political economy, and politics. We venture the assertion that +such a course, conducted thoroughly in an unpartisan spirit, would be +well patronized, and would exert an influence for good. Never was there +a better time to try the experiment than now. + + * * * * * + +The death of GENERAL GEORGE B. MCCLELLAN at Newark, N.J., +October 29, reminds us how narrow is becoming the circle of living +generals who took part in the great Civil War. It is two decades only +since the struggle ceased; but, one by one, the famous leaders have +passed away, and now McClellan has gone--the first to follow his great +commander, Grant. + +It is not easy to comment upon the career of General McClellan without +evoking, either from his admirers or his censors, the criticism of being +unfair. To many, especially to the soldiers who fought under his +leadership, he became an ideal of soldierly virtue, and has always held +a warm place in their hearts; while to many others his military and +civil career alike have seemed worthy only of disapprobation. + +It was natural that General McClellan should have a large and devoted +following, for he was a man gifted with those personal qualities that +always win popularity to their possessor, so that among the soldiers of +the Army of the Potomac, and among those in civil life with whom he came +in contact, he was usually regarded with admiration. As a military +commander, it must be conceded by his most determined critics, even, +that he possessed certain qualities unsurpassed by those of any other +general in the war. This was true of his ability as an organizer of +volunteer troups, in which capacity he probably rendered more effectual +service than any other man in the Union army. He was also well versed +in the science of war, and was a strategist of a higher order than has +generally been conceded. As is often the case, he failed to receive just +recognition of his really great abilities, because he lacked the needed +complementary qualities. McClellan could admirably plan a campaign, +and could perhaps have carried it to a brilliant issue, had all the +circumstances conformed to his plan, but this not happening, he seemed +unable to adapt his plan to the circumstances. Other generals with +inferior plans would succeed by taking some sudden advantage at a +critical time; McClellan on the contrary must either carry out his +carefully arranged programme, or acknowledge himself foiled. + +That General McClellan was not a firm patriot is an assertion not +entitled to any weight whatever. He was devoted to the cause of the +Union, and in his career as a general we believe he should be given the +credit of performing his duty to the best of his ability. That he could +not triumph over unexpected obstacles was doubtless a cause of regret to +him more than to any one else. + +General McClellan has been accused of an undue ambition for political +preferment, and it must be admitted that he would have succeeded better +in those positions to which he attained, had he been less solicitous for +the future; but it is not yet proved that he ever enlisted unworthy or +dishonorable means in the cause of his personal advancement. + + * * * * * + + + + +HISTORICAL RECORD. + + +September 30.--Republican State Convention held in Springfield. The +following ticket was nominated: Governor, Geo. D. Robinson of Chicopee; +Lieut. Governor, Oliver Ames of Easton; Secretary of State, Henry B. +Pierce of Abington; Treasurer, A.W. Beard of Boston; Auditor, Chas. R. +Ladd of Springfield; Attorney General, Edgar J. Sherman of Lawrence. +With the exception of the office of treasurer, the ticket is the same as +that of last year. + +October 1.--The Converse Memorial library building was formerly +presented to the city of Malden by its donor, Hon. Elisha S. Converse. +Hon. John D. Long made the dedicatory address. The building cost +$100,000, and is one of the finest examples of architecture in the +state. + +October 7.--Democratic State Convention at Worcester. The following +ticket was nominated: Governor, Frederick O. Prince of Boston; +Lieutenant-Governor, H.H. Gilmore of Cambridge; Secretary of State, +Jeremiah Crowley of Lowell; Attorney General, Henry K. Braley of Fall +River; Treasurer, Henry M. Cross of Newburyport. + +October 8.--Eight monuments were unveiled upon the battle-field of +Gettysburg by Massachusetts veterans. The regiments which have erected +these monuments and the principal speakers upon the occasion, were as +follows:-- + +The Twelfth Infantry. The monument is on Seminary Ridge. Col. Cook of +Gloucester presided, George Kimball of Boston delivered the principal +address, and comrade Gilman read a poem. + +The Eleventh Infantry dedicated its monument on the Emmittsburg Road, +Capt. W.T. Monroe presided, and James H. Croft of Boston made the +address. + +The Nineteenth Infantry monument on Cemetery Ridge was dedicated; J.W. +Sawyer, presiding, Lieut. Geo. M. Barry and C.C. Coffin making +addresses. + +The Third Battery has erected a monument. Formal exercises were not held +here at this time, but the dedication was made with remarks by comrade +Patch. + +The First Battery dedicated a monument in the National Cemetery. Remarks +were made by G.H. Patch and H.I. Hall. + +The Eighteenth Infantry. The monument stands near the wheat field, and +was dedicated with an address by Col. Wm. B. White of Quincy. + +The Second Sharpshooters. The monument is in the form of a statue and +was dedicated. N.S. Sweet gave the address. + +The First Cavalry dedicated a monument near the Round Tops, Major Chas. +G. Davis, delivered the address. + +October 13-16.--Seventy-fifth anniversary of the American Board of +Commissioners for Foreign Missions observed in Boston. The annual sermon +was preached the 13th in Tremont Temple by Rev. Geo. Leon Walker D.D. of +Hartford. A special discourse was delivered the 14th in the same hall by +Rev. R.S. Storrs, D.D. of Brooklyn. The attendance was the largest in +the history of the Board, taxing the fullest capacity of Tremont Temple, +Music Hall, and various churches simultaneously. Over 10,000 people were +present on one evening and many were turned away. The Rev. Mark Hopkins, +D.D. was re-elected president of the Board. + + * * * * * + + + + +OBITUARY. + + +September 26.--HON. WALDO COLBURNE, a Justice of the Supreme +Judicial Court of Massachusetts, died at his home in Dedham, at the age +of 60 years. + +Judge Colburn was born in Dedham, Nov. 13, 1824, and at 15 years of age +he entered Phillips Academy at Andover, graduating therefrom in 1842 in +the "English Department and Teachers' Seminary," which at that time was +entirely distinct from the classical course. In the following year he +entered the classical department, where he remained until the summer of +1845, when he left the academy and for the two years following engaged +in various pursuits, chiefly, however, civil engineering and surveying. +On May 13, 1847, he entered the law office of Ira Cleveland, Esq., at +Dedham, and on May 3, 1850, was admitted to the Norfolk County Bar. In +the meantime he had spent some time at the Harvard Law School, and soon +took a leading position in Norfolk county, which he always maintained. +On May 27, 1875, he was appointed one of the Judges of the Superior +Court by Gov. Gaston, and on Nov. 10, 1882, Gov. Long selected him to +fill a vacancy existing in the Supreme Court. Judge Colburn was a +Democrat, and had filled several positions of trust and responsibility +in his native town. In 1853 and 1854 he represented Dedham in the +Massachusetts House of Representatives, and as Chairman of the committee +on Railroads earnestly opposed the loaning of the State's credit to the +Hoosac Tunnel scheme. In 1870 he was a member of the Senate from the +Second Norfolk District, and as a member of the Judiciary Committee +drafted the well-known corporation act. He was Chairman of the Board of +Selectmen of Dedham from 1855 to 1864, and during the war his services +were important and valuable. He was President of the Dedham Institution +for Savings and a director of the Dedham National Bank. + +Judge Colburn was naturally a man of robust constitution and excellent +health, and, until his prostration shortly before his death, had never +been obliged to neglect his official duties for a day on account of +sickness. + +October 6.--Hon. Thomas Talbot, Ex-Governor of Massachusetts, died at +this home in Billerica at the age of sixty-seven years. He was born at +Cambridge, N.Y. Sept. 7, 1818, and subsequently removed with the family +to Danby, Vt. After the death of the father, the family removed to +Northampton, Mass. and Thomas at the age of thirteen began work in a +woolen factory. In the winters of 1837 and 1838 he attended an academy +at Cummington. Soon after, he joined his father in North Billerica, and +the long manufactoring career of C.P. Talbot & Co. was begun. The firm +still continues in the manufacture of woolen flannels, employing between +two and three hundred hands. + +Mr. Talbot's first public service of note was as Representative from +Billerica in the Legislature of 1852, and he was a member of the +Constitutional Convention the following year. He was elected a member of +the Executive Council in 1864, and served five years in that honorable +capacity in association with Governors Andrew, Bullock and Claflin. In +1872 Mr. Talbot was elected by the Republicans as Lieutenant Governor +upon the same ticket with Hon. William B. Washburn, who was elected as +Governor. Re-elected with Governor Washburn in 1873, he became Acting +Governor when, during the legislative session of 1874, Governor Washburn +was elected as United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the +death of Hon. Charles Sumner. One of the first important acts of his +official life after this event was the approval of the "Ten-Hour bill." + +In the same year Mr. Talbot received the Republican nomination for +Governor but was defeated by Hon. William Gaston. In 1878 he again had +the nomination, and was elected over Gen. Butler, Judge Abbott and A.A. +Miner. + +He was presidential elector in 1876 and 1884, and was chairman of the +State Board of Health, Lunacy and Charity from its establishment in 1879 +to 1884. + +Mr. Talbot was strictly a temperance man and was a professed +Prohibitionist. + + * * * * * + + + + +AMONG THE BOOKS. + + +The preparation of elaborately illustrated editions of standard poems +especially for the holiday trade has become a very prominent feature of +the book publishing business. Every year seems to mark an increased +beauty and variety in the work which the artist contributes to these +holiday books, and many classic works of literature are read with +clearer meaning and vastly greater delight, by reason of the intelligent +interpretations often given in the illustrations of our best artists of +the day. + +Among the most tasteful as well as sumptuous art volumes of the last +three years have been James R. Osgood & Co.'s "The Lady of the Lake," +"The Princess," and "Marmion." For a similar book for this season, +Messrs, Ticknor & Co., the successors of the old firm, have taken as a +subject Lord Byron's _Childe Harold_.[6] Of the poem nothing need +be said here, for it is universally accepted as Byron's greatest and +best; but of the illustrations, pages of praise could easily be written. +The poem itself has been a fertile theme for the artists, for the scene +is made to shift from one to another of the most beautiful and romantic +localities of the Rhine, of Spain, Italy and Greece, and most of the +illustrations are true representations of castles, ruins, palaces and +natural scenery in these ancient countries. + +All of the illustrations in the volume are from wood, in the production +of which the most famous American artists and engravers have given their +best work, all of it having been under the supervision of Mr A.V.S. +Anthony. + + * * * * * + +Scarcely a year has elapsed since the appearance of the first volume of +Mr. BLAINE'S _Twenty Years in Congress_, which details the +history of our time from the outbreak of Secession to the death of +President Lincoln. To maintain the interest attached to that work, a +second and concluding volume ought to have been published ere this. +Indeed, the public had a right to expect it. But, now, another bid for +public consideration and favor has been put forth under the rather +attractive title of _Three Decades of Federal Legislation_.[7] The +author is the Hon. S.S. Cox of New York, at one time a formidable +opponent of Mr. BLAINE in the halls of Congress, and at the +present time American minister to Turkey. + +Mr. COX was a member of Congress for twenty-four years, his +four terms from an Ohio district covering the war and the period +immediately preceding it. As a politician, he was always ranked on the +Democratic side, and was universally regarded as one of the closest, +most competent and most conscientious observer of men and things. His +acknowledged literary skill and his passion for accuracy rendered it +almost certain that his history would be both fascinating and truthful. +Contemporary history is at the present moment in high favor. All +intelligent people realize that the records of the last fifty years are +of more vital importance to living Americans than are the annals of all +previous eras. Hence, when a man so thoroughly equipped with the gifts +of mind and of expression as Mr. Cox has shown himself to be in earlier +books from his pen,--we say when such a man sets out to relate the story +of his time, it follows without further argument that his work will not +only be sought but will be read. + +The narrative covers the eventful work of Congress for the past thirty +years, and gives a much fuller inside view of Federal legislation during +this period than can be obtained from Mr. BLAINE'S more pretentious +work. No period in our national history is so full of interest as the +times of which our author writes. The revolt from English rule and the +establishment of our national government was one of the grandest epochs +in history. In that period were determined the issue of national +independence; in this epoch of even greater magnitude, the issue of +national existence. Both periods alike witnessed the most terrible +conflicts of armies, of bloodshed and suffering in both periods was +shown the exercise of the highest and most brilliant statesmanship; +and in both periods the Federal Legislature was witness to events +scarcely less exciting and decisive than occurred on hundreds of bloody +battle-fields. The exciting period of Secession, the departure of +Senators and Representatives from Congress, the proclamation of war, the +call for troops, the great uprising of the people of all sections, North +and South, against each other, the act of Emancipation, the sanguinary +battles of, and the close of the war, the return of peace, the +assassination of President Lincoln, the election of Grant, the Electoral +Commission and the seating of Hayes, the resumption of specie payments +and a host of other equally impressive episodes and events, find in Mr. +Cox an impartial historian. Of the importance of such a work, there is +no need of saying anything, and it is quite enough to remark that the +book taken all in all, is perhaps the most important, because of its +impartiality and accuracy, that has so far been published during the +present year. + +We have alluded to the fact that the author was a prominent actor in +nearly all the legislation of this long period, and that he consequently +possesses that personal and absolute knowledge which comes from actual +participation. The following extract which is taken at random from page +117 of the volume discloses something of the author's happy faculty of +seeing and describing things as they occurred to him. He says:-- + +"Being upon the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of +Representatives when the Trent affair occurred, the writer attended a +dinner given by the Secretary at this then happy home. This was at a +time when men held their breath in trepidation, lest Great Britain and +the Powers of Europe might make the Trent matter the pretext to +consummate their recognition of Southern independence. Some feared that +a disparted Republic would have to give way before the jealous +encroachments of those who sought to divide our country as they +endeavored to imperialize Mexico. + +"The delightful interchanges of thought between the persons at that +dinner are not so important as the fact that transpired toward its +close. After the ceremonies of introduction, and the tenders of +politeness to Mrs. Frederick W. Seward and Miss Olive Risley--the +adopted daughter of the house--the guests who had been received by these +ladies moved to the hospitable dining-hall. On the right of Mr. Seward +was seated burly English heartiness incarnated in Mr. Anthony Trollope, +the novelist. His presence was almost a surprise, if not a satire on the +occasion, as it concluded. At the other end of the table sat John J. +Crittenden. He was then chairman of Foreign Affairs in the House. The +author was on his right, as he was nearer by sympathy to him than others +on the committee. He used to say to the writer: 'My young friend, when I +was of your age, I did all the work and the older members received the +merit marks. You may do the work, sir, and I will take the credit.' With +his grave humor and hearty confidence, he was wont to parcel out to the +writer no inconsiderable quantity of the work of this most arduous of +committees. Thus it happened that a bill for the relief of the owners of +the Perthshire, seized by us, came to the hand of the writer for a +report. The chairman was not a little astonished when he found that his +subbordinate, on the 17th of December, 1861, was dilating on the Trent +case, and quoting Robinson's Reports to justify the detention of the +contraband plenipotentiaries, upon British precedents and conduct." + +From the foregoing selection, it will readily be seen that the author's +style is strong, clear, rapid, and stimulating, his judgment sound and +unprejudiced, and his materials authentic. His condition, experiences, +and industry combine to throw new light on the events of the most +remarkable epoch in natural history, and the volume, independent of Mr. +Cox's reputation, is bound to be a success. It is at once the most +picturesque and harmonious political history of our times that has thus +far been written, and will, also, be generally looked upon as a solid +and substantial contribution to American literature. We feel that we +cannot commend it too highly. + + * * * * * + +In the Century magazine, last spring, Gen. George B. McClellan undertook +to present his explanation of the failure of the Army of the Potomac +while under his command. In his article, he assaulted the memories of +Lincoln and Stanton, and attempted much more than he accomplished,--at +least, so thinks the HON. WILLIAM D. KELLEY, who examines +McClellan's statements in a book recently published. It bears the simple +title, _Lincoln and Stanton_.[8] Of this volume, which for the +first time makes many fresh disclosures, we hope to have something to +say at another time. + +Senator SUMNER was once asked by Lord Brougham the origin and +meaning of "caucus," and he replied: "It is difficult to assign any +elementary to the word, but the most approved one referred its origin to +the very town, and about the time (1772), of his lordship's birth." +There is a tradition in Boston that "caucus" was a common word here +before the Revolutionary war broke out, and that it originated in a feud +between the British troops on the one side and the rope-walkers and +calkers on the other. Bloody collisions, it is said, occurred between +them. The latter held meetings in the _calkers' hall_ in the lower +part of the city, at which resolutions were adopted and speeches made +denouncing the soldiers, who, on their part deriding the wordy war +offered, sneeringly snubbed their opponents "The Calkers," which by an +easy corruption became "the caucus," and finally a term to denote the +meetings. + +Whether this be the origin or not of the word, one thing is certain--Mr. +George W. LAWTON has done a most commendable thing in the +publication of his little book on _The American Caucus System_.[9] +It is exceedingly useful, and the wonder is for us why some such work +has not earlier issued from the press, for it meets the requirements of +the multitudinous politicians and others who are never absent on "caucus +nights." The author begins at the beginning of his theme, and shows how +easily men, that is, mankind in general, choose to be controlled by +political power, and to bear its burdens; he then establishes the axiom +that the direction of political power is with the caucus, and goes on +still further to explain what gives the caucus its authority, to compare +caucus nominations with self-nominations, and then historically to trace +the growth of the caucus, and, lastly, to describe the proceedings of, +and how to conduct, a caucus meeting. From first to last, these pages +are suggestive, timely, and embody a great deal of good sound sense. + + * * * * * + +The late Mr. Walter Bagehot left behind him some materials for a book +which promised to make a landmark in the history of economics, by +separating the use of the older, or Ricardian, economic reasonings from +their abuse, and freeing them from the discredit into which they had +fallen through being often misapplied. Unfortunately he did not complete +more than the examination of two of their postulates, namely, the +transferability of capital and labor. These were originally published in +the _Fortnightly Review_, in 1876, and are now republished, with +some other materials for the author's proposed work, under the title of +_The Postulates of English Political Economy_.[10] These essays, +which emanated from a well-trained, scientific mind, an independent +thinker, and one who was perfectly free in his criticisms, deal almost +exclusively with one side of what the author wished and intended to say; +but as they stand, they prove that had he lived he would have shed much +light on the problem, how the rapid changes of modern city life may help +us to understand, by analogy and indirect inference, the slow changes of +a backward people. + + * * * * * + +The pathos and humor which have immortalized many of WILL CARLETON'S +earlier poems enter again into his _City Ballads_.[11] If ever a poet +comprehended the human heart and the mainspring of its responses, it is +he who gave us that wonderfully-common-place (by reason only of its +theme) but delightful versification, "Betsey and I are out." His new +collection embraces several pieces almost as striking in their +character; and their wholesomeness and truthfulness of sentiment will +win for them many readers. None of these poems are fanciful pictures of +life which does not exist; but they are, on the contrary, faithful to +the actualities of the living present. They portray metropolitan life +as in a mirror, and depict the mishaps of the inexperienced therein in +a way that is at once healthful and conducive to practical morality. +Every poem is a story, which carries within itself a lesson not easily +forgotten, and as a poem is almost invariably characterized by a +pleasant rhythm and animation. The illustrations--and they are +numerous--are excellent; indeed, one would not wish them to be better. +These poems and pictures will find entrance into many homes ere the +holiday season is ended. + + * * * * * + +One of the most astonishing successes, in a literary line, of recent +years is Col. Higginson's "Young Folks' History of the United States." +Published originally as a book for general readers, its superlative +merits commended themselves to teachers, then led to the introduction of +the work, as a text-book of history, into very many schools. No other +work of the kind, we believe, has met with such signal favor or so +richly deserves it. So far as it goes, it is by all odds the _ne plus +ultra_ for school use. + +The same author has recently published what he terms _A Larger History +of the United States_,[12] which, however, ends only with the close +of President Jackson's administration. So far we fail to discover any +_raison d'etre_ of the volume, unless its purpose is distinctly to +bring together in a re-arranged form the series of illustrated papers on +American history contributed by Mr. Higginson to Harper's Magazine +during the past two years. If such is the author's purpose, then we have +no fault to find with the work. But the term "_Larger_ History" is, +in this case, a misnomer. The book does _not_ contain as much +matter as the earlier work to which we have alluded, and it is not, so +far as we can make out, written for older readers. It does not strike +one as being a history at all,--that is, a straightforward, logical, and +continuous narrative coinciding with those exemplar types of historical +writing bequeathed to us by Macaulay or by Motley. The book ends, as we +have said, with the close of Jackson's administration; but we glean very +little concerning the _administration_ and we are told much +relative to "Old Hickory." + +Now, then, this may seem like finding fault with Mr. Higginson's book. +If so, we have plainly asserted our reasons. But with his subject +matter, and with his manner of treating it, everybody must be pleased. +We have never read more charmful essays on the First Americans, the +Visit of the Vikings, the Spanish Discoverers, the French Voyageurs, the +Dawning of Independence, and the Great Western March, than appear +between the covers of this beautiful volume. They are full of meat, and +have the savor of fresh and studious investigation, and we feel grateful +to their author for having provided so tempting a feast. What he says +and the way he says it make us the more to regret the unfortunate title +of his book. + +The illustrations, which are numerous, are veritable works of art, and +we do not believe that any other American book can exhibit a finer or +more valuable series of portraits of American statesmen. This feature +alone should commend it to lovers of fine books, of which the present +issue is decidedly one. We are not informed whether a second volume is +forthcoming. + + +[Footnote 6: Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. A Romance. By Lord Byron. +Boston: Ticknor & Co. Price, in cloth, $6.00.] + +[Footnote 7: Three Decades of Federal Legislation, from 1855 to 1885. By +the Hon. S.S. Cox, 1 vol. 8vo, pp. 726. Illustrated. Providence, R.I.; +J.A. & R.A. Reid, 1885. Price, $5.00, (sold only by subscription.)] + +[Footnote 8: LINCOLN AND STANTON. A study of the war +administration of 1861 and 1862, with special consideration of some +recent statements of Gen. George B. McClellan, By Wm. D. Kelley. 8vo, +pp. 88. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1885. Price, $1.00.] + +[Footnote 9: The American Caucus System; its origin, purpose, and +utility. By George W. Lawton. 1 vol. pp. 107. New York: G.P. Putnam's +Sons, 1885. Price, $1.00.] + +[Footnote 10: The Postulates of English Political Economy. By the late +Walter Bagehot, with a preface by Alfred Marshall. 1 vol. pp. 114. New +York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1885. Price $1.00.] + +[Footnote 11: CITY BALLADS. By Will Carleton, author of "Farm +Ballads," "Farm Legends," etc. Illustrated. Square 8vo, pp. 180. New +York: Harper & Brothers. Price $2.00.] + +[Footnote 12: A Larger History of the United States of America to the +close of President Jackson's administration. By Thomas Wentworth +Higginson. Illustrated by Maps, Plans, Portraits, and other Engravings. +1 vol. 8vo, pp. 470. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1886. Price, $3.00.] + + * * * * * + + + + +NOTES AND QUERIES. + +At the request of many of our readers, this new Department is initiated. +Please address all queries and answers simply,--EDITOR OF THE BAY STATE +MONTHLY, 43 Milk St., Boston. + + +1.--In one of the old Readers, I find a selection, not credited to any +author, and beginning as follows:--"Born, sir, in a land of liberty; +having early learned its value; having engaged in a perilous conflict +to defend it; having, in a word, devoted the best years of my life to +secure its permanent establishment in my country, my anxious +recollections, my sympathetic feelings, and my best wishes are +irresistibly excited, whensoever in any country, I see an oppressed +nation unfurl the banners of freedom." Will some one of your readers +inform me who was the author of these words, and what was the occasion +for their utterance?--W.T.D. + +2.--Sullivan, in his _Familiar Letters_, states (p. 26) that: +"General Washington is well known to have expressed his heartfelt +satisfaction that the important State of Massachusetts had acceded to +the Union. There is much _secret history_ as to the efforts made to +procure the rejection (of the constitution) on the one side, and the +adoption on the other." Where can I find the fullest account of this +"secret history?"--STUDENT. + +3.--Who was the first American woman to publicly espouse the cause of +Anti-Slavery? I have lately seen several names mentioned?--M.S. + +4.--"Where can I find the best account of the Know-Nothings, that +figured in American politics some years ago?" + +5.--The late Epes Sargent, in one of his sketches, says:-- + +"Semmes took a pinch of snuff, and replied,--'You remember _Mrs. +Glasse's_ well-known receipt for cooking a hare--First catch your +hare!'"--_Who was Mrs Glasse?_--LATIN SCHOOL. + +6.--Where can I find a full account of the history of the Indian tribes +of early Massachusetts? The various State Histories say but little about +them.--ANTIQUARY. + +7.--Has the life of Robert Rantoul Jr. ever been written? If so, by +whom?--H.A.D. + +8.--Most of our States have one capital; some have two--Providence and +Newport, in Rhode Island for instance. Why two? + +9.--In Chandler Robbins' "History of the Second Church," under date of +Oct. 7. 1762, occurs the following: "Voted that the singers sound the +base at the end of the lines whenever they think proper." What is the +explanation of this custom? + +10.--Bartlett does not give this: "To fleet the time carelessly, as they +did in the golden world." Where is it to be found?--ELHEGOS. + + * * * * * + +======================================================================= + + +"_Undoubtedly the most remarkable series of articles ever published +in a magazine, and their popularity is in, accord with their +merit_."--BROOKLYN EAGLE. + +_Of the numbers of_ THE CENTURY _from November, 1884 to April +1885, six issues, more than a million and a quarter copies have already +been published_. + + +THE WAR PAPERS IN THE CENTURY MAGAZINE. + +[Illustration] + + +With the number for November, 1884, the first issue of a new volume, +there began to appear in this magazine a series of separate papers, the +object of which is to tell in clear and graphic manner the stories of +the great battles of the War for the Union; the authors being leading +officers on both the Federal and Confederate sides, often the first in +command, and always a participant in the engagement under consideration. +The extraordinary increase in the circulation of the magazine since +these papers were begun, and the reception by the public and the press +of the material already printed, indicate the wide-spread popular +interest in the plan. + +THE NOVEMBER CENTURY contains the paper by General G.T. Beauregard, of +the Confederate army, describing "The Battle of Bull Run," with more +than twenty illustrations, including portraits of McDowell, Johnston, +"Stonewall" Jackson, and others. General Beauregard not only describes +the battle, but touches upon his relations with Mr. Jefferson Davis, and +the general conduct of the war. + +THE DECEMBER CENTURY contains the graphic description of "The Capture of +Fort Donelson," by General Lew Wallace, with portraits of Buckner, +Floyd, Pillow, and others among the illustrations, and a frontispiece +portrait of General Grant, from a little-known photograph; also an +autographic reproduction of General Grant's famous "Unconditional +Surrender" letter, written to the Confederate commander at Fort +Donelson. + +THE JANUARY CENTURY contains an illustrated article by Rear-Admiral +Walke, describing the "Operations of the Western Flotilla," including +engagements at Belmont, Fort Henry, Fort Pillow, Fort Donelson, Memphis, +and Island No. 10. Captain James B. Eads (who built the gun-boats) +contributes to the same number a paper on "Recollections of Foote and +the Gun-boats." + +_New readers of_ THE CENTURY _desiring to secure these three +numbers, November, December, and January, and thus begin the War Series +and Mr. Howells's new novel, "The Rise of Silas Lapham," can obtain them +for $1.00 of the publishers (who will send them to any address, +post-paid, on receipt of price), or of dealers everywhere. New editions +will be printed as rapidly as the demand requires. November is now in +its sixth edition._ + +THE FEBRUARY CENTURY, the Midwinter number, contains a remarkable list +of attractions, including a richly illustrated paper on "Winter Sports +in Canada," an illustrated story by Mark Twain, entitled "Royalty on +the Mississippi," etc., etc. In this issue appears THE FIRST OF GENERAL +GRANT'S ARTICLES in the war series, being his long-looked-for paper on +"The Battle of Shiloh." For reasons which he recounts in the opening of +the article, general Grant never made to the Government the usual full +report touching this engagement. The paper is a comprehensive treatment +of his relations to the battle, including much of picturesque and +personal interest concerning its progress and a discussion of the main +points of controversy, together with his own estimates of the military +character and services of certain of the leading officers in both the +Union and Confederate sides. + +THE CONFEDERATE SIDE AT "SHILOH" will be described in this February +number in two interesting articles, one by the son of the Confederate +leader, General Albert Sidney Johnston, killed at Shiloh, and the other +by Colonel Jordan, of general Beauregard's staff. These, with General +Grant's article, are among the most notable contributions ever made to +magazine literature. The illustrations are more than twenty-five in +number. + +======================================================================= + + +FURTHER PAPERS BY GENERAL GRANT. + +In his second paper General Grant will cover an entire year of his +service in the war, including the different campaigns against Vicksburg, +and its capitulation. In his third paper he will deal with the battle of +Chattanooga, including the strategy of the campaign from the time of his +assumption of the command. A fourth paper, on the Wilderness campaign, +will follow. + +While largely engaged with the main features of the campaigns described, +General Grant has not failed to take note of significant and +characteristic details. These papers will be illustrated with the same +regard for thoroughness and accuracy which has characterized the +illustrations of the articles in the war series already published. + + +THE "MONITOR" AND "MERRIMAC," IN THE MARCH CENTURY. + +[Illustration] + +The story of this famous fight is described in the March CENTURY by Col. +John Taylor Wood, fourth officer of the "Merrimac" in the second day's +fight, and now the senior surviving officer. Col. Wood was afterward +commander of the privateer "Tallahassee." The Federal side of the battle +is told by Commander S.D. Greene, U.S.N. (whose death has just +occurred), who was the executive officer of the "Monitor," and operated +the guns within the turret. General R.E. Colston, commander of the +Confederate forces opposite Newport News, contributes an eyewitness's +account of the same battle, describing, also, the "Merrimac's" +engagement with the Federal fleet before the arrival of the "Monitor." +A paper will soon appear on "THE MONITOR," BY CAPTAIN JOHN ERICSSON, +making record of the circumstances attending the invention of that +famous craft, and treating also of the engagement at Hampton Roads. +Readers of the articles in the March number will be especially +interested in the inventor's story. + +In the April CENTURY will be printed two important papers on THE CAPTURE +OF NEW ORLEANS, BY ADMIRAL PORTER AND GEORGE W. CABLE. + +Admiral Porter, with whom, as he relates, the expedition against New +Orleans originated, and who was in command of the mortar-fleet during +the action, describes the Federal side of "The Opening of the Lower +Mississippi"; while George W. Cable, the novelist, and at the time a +resident of New Orleans, writes of the condition of the city and the +circumstances attending its occupation. The illustrations will include +a number of battle-scenes from sketches made by Admiral Porter. + +In the May and June numbers the papers in the War Series will be largely +devoted to THE PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN BY GEN. G.B. McCLELLAN AND GEN. J.E. +JOHNSTON. + +General McClellan will contribute two papers, the first of a general +nature on the Peninsular Campaign, and the second (to appear later) on +the battle of Antietam, thus covering the period of his command of the +Army of the Potomac. General Joseph E. Johnston, who commanded the +entire Confederate forces opposed to McClellan in the Peninsular +engagements until the battle of Seven Pines, when in consequence of a +wound he was succeeded by General Lee, will cover, in his papers, the +period from Manassas to Seven Pines, dealing with both battles, and with +his relations and differences with the President of the Confederacy. The +engagements at Gaines's Mill and Malvern Hill, in this campaign, will be +described in papers by GEN. FITZ JOHN PORTER AND GEN. D.H. HILL, who +were prominently engaged against each other in both actions. These will +be well supplemented by the "Recollections of a Private." + +OTHER WAR PAPERS by Generals Longstreet, Pope, Gordon, Rosecrans, Buell, +Hunt, Pleasonton, Newton, and other prominent leaders, will appear in +later numbers. + +======================================================================= + + +THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE SERIES will receive the most careful attention, +and in this particular it is thought that the series will possess an +unequaled historical interest. THE CENTURY has at its disposal a very +large quantity of maps and plans, portraits of general officers of both +sides, authentic paintings and drawings, and especially photographs of +camp scenes, battle-fields, famous localities, etc. A strict regard for +accuracy will guide the preparation of the illustrations. + +In connection with this series is appearing a number of briefer +sketches, entitled "RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE," reflecting with +interesting and life-like details the experiences of the common soldier +from the time of enlistment to the muster-out: the drill, the march, the +bivouac, the skirmish, the charge, the pursuit, the retreat, etc., etc. +Auxiliary branches of the service will also be treated in this +supplementary way, and in several instances briefer supplementary papers +will chronicle special incidents or consider special phases of an +engagement. Personal reminiscences of several of the most prominent +military leaders, now dead, will also give variety to the scheme. + + * * * * * + +OTHER FEATURES OF "THE CENTURY" include W.D. Howells's new novel of an +American business man, "The Rise of Silas Lapham"; a novel, by Henry +James, "The Bostonians," begun in the February number; a series of +papers, by W.D. Howells, descriptive of some cities of Italy, +illustrated with reproductions of etchings, by Joseph Pennell; a series +of brilliantly illustrated articles on "The New Astronomy" (a paper in +this series appears in the March number); articles on "The New +North-west," on Architecture, History, French and American Art, etc., +etc., and short stories by the best writers--many of them to be +illustrated. The War Series will not be allowed to interfere in any way +with the general features of the magazine. + + * * * * * + +Subscriptions may begin at any time, but in order to get the +first chapters of Mr. W.D. Howells's novel, "The Rise of Silas Lapham," +and to commence the War Series, new subscribers should date from the +November number. The subscription price of THE CENTURY is $4.00 a year, +and single numbers can be purchased of book-sellers and news-dealers +everywhere at 35 cents each. All dealers receive subscriptions, or +remittance may be made direct to the publishers by postal or express +order, registered letter, bank check, or draft. + +THE CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: FROM "RECOLLECTIONS OF A PRIVATE."] + + +THE CENTURY _is beyond question the first among magazines in the +English language. The people of the South owe it especial thanks not +only for the fairness of its spirit toward this section, but because it +opened its pages to many of our best writers and made them known to the +world._--THE APPEAL, MEMPHIS, TENN. + +_The time has now come when this portion of our national history can be +discussed by the actors in it, whether they wore the blue or the gray, +and different versions can be judged without partiality._--ARGUS, +ALBANY, N.Y. + +_The great captains on both sides will make this series the most +notable historic contribution of the day._--CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA. + +_Every soldier should be a subscriber to_ THE CENTURY _for the +coming year._--COURIER-GAZETTE, ROCKLAND, MAINE. + +_In securing these articles from the leading generals of the great +struggle_, THE CENTURY _did the best piece of journalistic work +that has been done in this country for many a year._--THE CHRISTIAN +UNION, N.Y. + +_The wounds and passions of the late war are rapidly healing, but it +will never lose its interest to the students of history. These articles +cannot fail to be of great interest to all careful readers both North +and South._--PRESS, PARAGOULD, ARK. + +_A series of important papers, the like of which has never before been +attempted, and which possess the peculiar quality of interesting every +person in the land._--THE BEACON, BOSTON, MASS. + +_What a vast work for good in these several ways is the great +magazine-publishing house of_ THE CENTURY Co. _doing; what an +uplift is it giving to good taste, good morals, good politics, and good +manners, as well as to the dissemination of useful knowledge, to the +culture of "the masses," to the comfort and peace and pleasure of home, +to the welfare of society in general! No engine of the things that are +true and pure and good is more mighty than a work like this; we ought +all to be thankful that it is in such hands. Making money, of +course_, THE CENTURY Co. _are; we are glad of it; but they are also +making hearts happier, lives better, and homes brighter the world +over._--THE LITERARY WORLD, BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + +_The Century Co. are among the benefactors of the human race. It is +not too much to say that while "The Century" stands at the head of +current magazine literature, in "St. Nicholas" we have the best serial +publication for boys and girls the present generation has +seen._--THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN, ENGLAND. + + +"Driven Back to Eden," + +[Illustration] + +THE NEW SERIAL STORY + +BY E.P. ROE + +Author of "Barriers Burned Away," "Without a Home," Etc., Etc. + +PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED + +NOW APPEARING IN ST. NICHOLAS. + +Showing how a city family, inhabitants of a "flat," were led to move +into the freedom of a country home, and how the girls and boys all +became farmers on a small scale. This promises to be one of Mr. Roe's +best stories. It is only one of the many interesting current features of +ST. NICHOLAS, which include: + + "Recollections of a Boy-Page in the U.S. Senate," + "Historic Girls," serial papers by E.S. Brooks, + "Children of the Cold," a series by Lieut. Fred'k Schwatka, + "Ready for Business; Suggestions to Boys about to Choose an Occupation," + "Personally Conducted," by Frank R. Stockton, + Short Stories by Louisa M. Alcott and others. Etc., Etc. + + +Numbers issued on the 25th; for sale by all dealers; price 25 cents. +Subscription price, $3.00 a year. Subscriptions are taken by dealers and +postmasters, or remittance may be made direct to the publishers, THE +CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street, New-York. + + * * * * * + +_A Michigan mother (and competent critic) writes to the Editor of +"St. Nicholas": "I am convinced that no child who is without 'St. +Nicholas' can successfully compete in the race of life with those who +have had the benefit of its wonderful pages." And a prominent clergyman +of Chicago informs us that one of his parishioners recently said to him: +"'St. Nicholas' has saved my boy from ruin."_ + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES: + FOR ROAD USE; + + STANCH AND RELIABLE + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP + STRONG, GRACEFUL--EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE + + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE + THE POPE MFG. 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McCLINTOCK & CO., + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + First National Bank, + CONCORD, N.H. + + United States Depository. Transacts a General Banking Business. + _CAPITAL, $150,000. SURPLUS, $120,000._ + + WM. F. THAYER, Pres't. C. G. REMICK, Act'g Cash'r. +-------------------------------------- + + H.C. BAILEY, + PHOTOGRAPHER + DEPOT STREET, CONCORD, N.H., + + Cards, Cabinets and Imperials, made by the new instantaneous process + exclusively. Permanent engagement of a first-class operator. Every + picture warranted. Connected by telephone. +-------------------------------------- + + HELP for working people. Send 10 cents postage, and we will mail + you _free_, a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will put you + in the way of making more money in a few day than you ever thought + possible at any business. Capital not required. You can live at home and + work in spare time only, or all the time. All of both sexes, of all + ages, grandly successful. 50 cents to $5 easily earned every evening. + That all who want work may test the business, we make this unparalleled + offer: To all who are not well satisfied we will send $1 to pay for the + trouble of writing us. Full particulars, directions, etc., sent free. + Immense pay absolutely sure for all who start at once. Don't delay. + Address STINSON & CO., Portland, Me. +-------------------------------------- + + WOODWORTH, DOW & CO., + _MANUFACTURERS OF MEAL_ + and Wholesale Dealers in + Flour, Groceries, Lime & Cement, + Concord, N.H. +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + Volumes 1 and 2 of BAY STATE MONTHLY bound in cloth. Price, $2.00 each. + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + EDEN MUSEE, 55 WEST 23D ST. NEW YORK. + + OPEN FROM 11 TO 11. SUNDAYS 1 TO 11. + + Lifelike Tableaux in Wax, Stereoscopes, Concerts. + NEW ATTRACTIONS CONSTANTLY ADDED. + MORLEY'S FATA MORGANA. + Concerts Afternoon and Evening. + Admission to all, 50 cents. Children, 25 cents. +-------------------------------------- + + $200,000 _in presents given away._ Send us 5 cents postage, + and by mail you will get _free_ a package of goods of large value, + that will start you in work that will at once bring you in money faster + than anything else in America. All about the $200,000 in presents with + each box. Agents wanted everywhere, of either sex, of all ages, for all + the time, or spare time only, to work for us at their own homes. + Fortunes for all workers absolutely assured. Don't delay. H. + HALLETT & CO., Portland, Maine. +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED. New England Town Histories in exchange for volumes I and II + of the "BAY STATE MONTHLY." +-------------------------------------- + + National State Capital Bank, + _CONCORD, N.H._ + _Capital, $200,000. Surplus, $75,000._ + + Collections made on liberal terms. Investment Securities bought and + sold. Safe Deposit Boxes for rent. + + L. DOWNING, JR., Pres't. J.E. FERNALD, Cashier. +-------------------------------------- + + A Prize. Send six cents for postage, and receive free, a costly + box of goods which will help you to more money right away than anything + else in this world. All, of either sex, succeed from first hour. The + broad road to fortune opens before the workers, absolutely sure. At once + address, TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine. +-------------------------------------- + + Loan and Trust Savings Bank, + _CONCORD, N.H._ + J.E. SARGENT, President. GEO. A. FERNALD, Treasurer. + CHARTERED 1872. + _Resources March 1, 1885, $1,687,203.95_ +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + + A few volumes 5, 6, and 7 of _Granite Monthly_ (a New Hampshire + magazine). Bound in Cloth. Price $2.00 each. Early volumes out of print. + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., + 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + The Gillette Portrait Copying Co., + (Formerly Boston, Mass.) + ARTISTIC PORTRAITS, + + In Water Colors. Crayon, India Ink, Pastelle, Croetalevis, and Oil + Colors, from small likenesses of every description. Superior inducements + to soliciting agents. + + _CONCORD, N.H._ +-------------------------------------- + + "BREAD PILLS: A Study of Mind-Cure." + + Thousands of intelligent people throughout the country are anxious to + know what "CHRISTIAN SCIENCE" or modern "MIND-CURE" teachers, and how + the healing is done. + + Bread Pills: a Study of Mind-Cure, BY C.M. BARROWS, + + Answers these questions satisfactorily, and gives just the information + which the public demands. + + THE BOOK OF THE SEASON. + + Do not fail to read BREAD PILLS. + + For sale by all newsdealers, PRICE, 35 CENTS. + + Mailed to any address on receipt of 35 cents by MUTUAL NEWS + CO., Boston, Agents. +-------------------------------------- + + WIN more money than at anything else by taking an agency for the + best selling book out. Beginners succeed grandly. None fail. Terms free. + HALLETT BOOK CO., Portland, Maine. + +======================================================================= + + + BOSTON TRAVELLER. + THE BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER, + AND + _The Best Advertising Medium in New England._ + + BOSTON EVENING TRAVELLER, Five Editions Daily. + BOSTON TRAVELLER, (Semi-Weekly), Tuesdays and Thursdays. + AMERICAN TRAVELLER, Thursdays. + + Daily, $9 Per Annum. Semi-Weekly, $3 Per Annum. Weekly, $1.50 Per Annum. + + ==> SAMPLE COPIES FREE. + + The Evening Traveller is delivered by carriers in Boston and Suburbs for + 75 cents a month. Send orders to + + _R. WORTHINGTON & CO., Publishers_, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. + +======================================================================= + + + BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG + + [Illustration] + + Residents of, and visitors to Boston, should not miss seeing the + wonderful CYCLORAMA BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, now on exhibition at + + NO. 541 TREMONT STREET. + + The building is large and substantial, built of brick and iron, and is + fire-proof. It is circular in shape and is ornamented by turreted walls + and towers, constructed after the manner of the old feudal castles. + + The vestibule, parlors and offices at the entrance are decorated and + furnished in good style and all the appointments and accessories are in + keeping. + + The spectator passes through a narrow passage and up a winding stairway + to a circular platform in the centre of the structure, whence the + picture is seen. No words can adequately describe the wonderful effects + of this life-like portrayal of the great battle. It tells in the most + vivid manner possible the whole story of that dreadful afternoon _July + 3, 1863._ All around him are evidences of the terrible battle. Behind + fences, stone walls and trees, in trenches and in open fields are seen + soldiers of the blue and gray engaged in the awful struggle. + + The officers who were in command on that day are easily distinguished on + the canvas. Old soldiers who have seen the painting pronounce it as + accurate as if photographed on the field. + + Passing down another winding stairway we find ourselves in front of + another painting called the + + UPRISING OF THE NORTH, + representing the northern troops passing through Washington on their way + to the front, reviewed by President Lincoln, who stands on a marble + rostrum, surrounded by his associates in office, while the war governor, + John A. Andrew, superintends, the breaking of the fetters from the + slaves and arming them for the country's service. Near by are seen the + troops from New England, led by General B.F. Butler, while on all sides + mothers, sisters and friends are seen wishing them God speed. + + Both of these paintings are the work of the celebrated French artist, M. + Paul Philippoteaux, whose work every visitor to Paris has seen and will + remember. + +======================================================================= + + + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. + + WITH 40 MAPS. + + BY COL. HENRY B. CARRINGTON, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D. + + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. + + A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. + + + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:-- + + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.--_Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey_. + + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.--_Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y._ + + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.--_Henry Day, N.Y._ + + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.--_Geo. + Bancroft_. + + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.--_Benson J. Lossing_. + + The maps are just splendid.--_Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J._ + + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.--_Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y._ + + Of permanent standard authority.--_Gen. De Peister, N.Y._ + + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.--_Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris_. + + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.--_Z. Chandler_. + + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.--_B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis_. + + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.--_London Telegraph_. + + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.--_Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England_. + + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.--_Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State_. + + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.--_A. de + Rochambeau, Paris_. + + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.--_Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England_. + + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.--_Harper's + Magazine_. + + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.--_N.Y. Times_. + + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.--_The Nation_. + + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. + + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.--_Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J._ + + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.--_Gen. W.T. + Sherman_. +-------------------------------------- + + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. + + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. + + Published by A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York. + + + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. + + The RED Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. + + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. + + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." + + THE SECRETARY OF WAR has placed the "BATTLE MAPS AND CHARTS" at ARMY + POST SCHOOLS, at government expense. + + FIVE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF WASHINGTON accompany the volume. The ST. MEMIN + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also PEALE'S painting + (1772), HOUDON'S bust (1784). TRUMBULL'S painting (1792) and STUART'S + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. + + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. + + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. + + + NOTICES. + + Invaluable to the student of American History.--_Baltimore (Md.) + Herald_. + + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.--_Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.--_The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)_. + + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.--_N.Y. + Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.--_N.Y. Evening + Post_. + +======================================================================= + + + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE + + Is the name of a new process of + _ENGRAVING BY PHOTOGRAPHY_ + at less than + ONE-HALF THE COST OF WOOD ENGRAVING! + + The plates are equal to the finest wood cuts, and in point of depth, + superior. We furnish an electrotype all ready for the printer's use. + + We can do every description of work, Machinery, Furniture, Buildings, + Autograph Letters, Illustrations for Trade Catalogues, etc. + + For specimen sheet of our work and further particulars address + + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO., + 63 OLIVER STREET, BOSTON. + +-------------------------------------- + + _ANTIQUE_ + Views of Ye Town of Boston. + BY JAMES H. STARK. + + This is the title of one of the most valuable contributions to the + HISTORY of BOSTON that has been made in many years. It embraces a series + of upwards of ONE HUNDRED VIEWS of OLD BOSTON, that have been gathered + from private and public collections, and most faithfully reproduced by + the Photo-Electrotype Engraving Company's process of Boston. + + The Book is handsomely BOUND IN CLOTH. On the front cover is a view of + the Old State House, embossed in gold; on the back cover is a veneer + made from the Old Elm, on which is printed a view of the old tree, and + an autograph letter from Mayor Cobb (who was mayor of Boston at the time + of the destruction of the tree), certifying to its authenticity. It is a + book of 400 pages, imperial octavo, and a limited number is offered at + + $6.00 PER COPY. + + ADDRESS PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO., ... 63 OLIVER STREET, BOSTON. +-------------------------------------- + + STARK'S ILLUSTRATED + + BERMUDA GUIDE. + + The Bermuda Islands are coming more prominently before the public each + season, as a health resort and winter watering place. Although it is but + sixty-five hours' sail from New York to these coral islands, yet they + are strangely unfamiliar to most well informed Americans. Speaking our + own language, having the same origin, with manners and customs prevalent + in New England a century ago, it is only now that these islands and + their inhabitants have attracted much attention and led the public to + inquire concerning them. + + It is to satisfy this demand and also to bring to the notice of those + unacquainted with the beauties of these semi-tropical islands that the + writer has been led to issue this work, which is the first illustrated + guide-book and history of Burmuda yet published. The book contains two + hundred pages, and is embellished with sixteen photo-mechanical prints + made by a new process from negatives (taken by the author during the + past winter) of the finest scenery in Bermuda. This is a new feature in + the matter of book illustrations, and it makes the work both + + _BOUND IN CLOTH, PRICE $2.00, POST-PAID_ + + ADDRESS ALL ORDERS TO + PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE COMPANY, + _No. 63 Oliver Street, Boston, Mass._ + +======================================================================= + + + THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. + Volume I.--1884. Bound in cloth, royal 8vo., + 420 pages. Price, $2.00. + WITH + 6 PORTRAITS ON STEEL, 10 MAPS, AND 107 ILLUSTRATIONS. + + * * * * * + + PRESS NOTICES. + + "A creditable addition to Massachusetts literature."--_Boston + Globe_. + + "The first six numbers form a volume of genuine historic value and + interest."--_Transcript_. + + "An admirable issue."--_Malden City Press_. + + "Replete with sketches which should be read in every + household."--_Winchendon Courier_. + + "Furnishing much valuable historical and biographical + matter."--_Boston Commonwealth_. + + "Working its way to popular favor."--_The Weekly News_. + + "The Bay State Monthly is just what is needed in New England."--_The + Gorham Mountaineer_. + + "New England societies will not be able to dispense with this + magazine."--_St. Paul Pioneer-Press_. + + "Crammed full of historic facts; should be in every + family."--_Brockton Eagle_. + + "A conspicuous article is 'Bunker Hill' (with map), by General + Carrington, U.S.A."--_Southbridge Journal._ + + "Has made a firm footing and held its ground well."--_Newport News and + Journal_. + + "Filled with instructive literary matter, and a very reliable + map."--_Essex Banner_. + + "One of the most popular in the list of monthlies."--_The Moniter + (Chatham)_. + + "Handsomely gotten up, and reading-matter is interesting."--_Holyoke + Herald_. + + "The steady improvement in this magazine is gratifying."--_Medford + Mercury_. + + "Deserves the support of every true American, and every Massachusetts + citizen."--_The Watchman_. + + "Edited ably, growing healthily, and presents features of peculiar + interest."--_Congregationalist_. + + "Improves with each number."--_New England Home Journal + (Worcester)_. + + "Should be in every household in Massachusetts,"--_Barre Gazette_. + + "One of the noted historical magazines of the day."--_Norfolk County + Register_. + + "Of that interest to the whole country that the cultured productions of + cultured Boston have usually been."--_Courier and Journal (Louisville, + Ky.)_. + + "An important blank in our periodical literature has been + filled."--_Chicago News_. + + "Destined to take place in the first rank."--_Watertown + Enterprise_. + + "Invites the support of Massachusetts people from Berkshire to + Barnstable."--_Lowell Morning Times_. + + "Already a success."--_Cape Cod Bee (Barnstable)_. + + "'The Rent Veil,' by Henry B. Carrington, is a strikingly fine + production, possessing a Miltonian stateliness, and breathing a spirit + of veneration."--_New York Times_. + + "Replete with choice literary productions."--_Gardner Record._ + + "Keeps up the character established by the first number."--_Vox Populi + (Lowell)_. + + "Should be in the hands of all who desire to know the Bay + State."--_Westborough Chronotype._ + + "Of special interest to the citizens of Massachusetts."--_Worcester + Spy_. + + "A distinctive Massachusetts magazine."--_Waltham Record_. + + "Both in appearance and contents creditable to the publishers."--_New + York Literary Times_. + + "Does credit to publishers and contributors."--_East Boston Argus._ + + "The list of contributors is enough to sell the magazine."--_Scituate + Herald_. + + "Is destined to be popular and a valuable addition to the literary + world."--_Home Journal_. + + "Rich in contents."--_Indianapolis Times._ + + "A worthy representative of the literary and typographical excellence of + cultured Boston."--_Weekly Advocate._ + + "Of fine appearance and high promise."--_Lawrence American_. + + "Replete with choice literary contributions."--_Salem Register_. + + "We predict a bright future for The Bay State Monthly."--_Norwood + Review_. + +======================================================================= + + + Globe Theatre. MR. JOHN STETSON,--Proprietor and Manager. + + THE MODEL THEATRE OF BOSTON. + + ALL THE LEADING ATTRACTIONS Presented during the season. + + _Best Seats, One Dollar._ +-------------------------------------- + + BOSTON THEATRE. + + TOMPKINS & HILL, Proprietors. EUGENE TOMPKINS, Manager. + + ALL GREAT ATTRACTIONS, + + Dramatic, Lyric, and Minstrelsy, + of the best class offered, in regular succession. + + _SEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS._ + +----- + + _German Opera Season_, WALTER DAMROSCH, Director, Beginning April 6. + + MONDAY, April 6--"The Prophet." Frl. Brandt, Frau Materna, Schott, + Koegel and Standigl. + + TUESDAY, April 7, and SATURDAY MATINEE, April 11--"Tannhauser." Frau + Materna, Frl. Slach, Schott, Robinson, and Koegel. + + WEDNESDAY, April 8--"Fidelio." Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach, Udvardy, + Standigl, Miller, and Kemlitz. + + THURSDAY, April 9--"Lohengrin." Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach, Schott, + Robinson and Koegel. + + FRIDAY, April 10--"La Juive." Frau Materna, Frl. Slach, Udvardy, Koegel, + Kemlitz. + + SATURDAY, April 11, Evening--"Gluck's Orpheus." (First time in America). + Frl. Brandt, Frl. Slach and Frl. Hoch. Chorus largely augmented by + singers from local societies. + + _The New York Symphony Orchestra_, + + To begin at 7.45 P.M. Tickets now on sale, with reserved seats, at + $1.50, $2 and $3. +-------------------------------------- + + _Boston Museum_. + + Wednesday afternoon at 2 and Evening at 8, THE GUV'NOR, + Only times this season. +----- + + Thursday, FAST DAY, 2 performances, also Friday Evening at 8 and + Saturday Afternoon at 2, _Ticket of Leave Man_, with remarkable cast. +----- + + Saturday Evening at 8, benefit of Mr. Charles Barron, who will appear in + _The Three Guardsmen_ and A REGULAR FIX. + + Mr. Sol Smith Russell introducing his laughable specialties between the + two plays. +----- + + ==> Monday, April 6, Redmund-Barry Co. in + _A Midnight Marriage._ +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED. + Agents to secure subscriptions and advertisements for this magazine. + _EXCELLENT TERMS._ + ADDRESS BAY STATE MONTHLY, 31 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + ARTHUR P. DODGE + Attorney and Counsellor at Law, _31 MILK ST., ROOM 46_, + Notary Public. Commissioner for New Hampshire. +-------------------------------------- + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., + Publishers, Printers, Stereotypes, and Electrotypers, + 31 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. +----- + FINE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. + Reasonable Terms. + _ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED._ +----- + PUBLISHERS OF _THE BAY STATE MONTHLY_, A Massachusetts Magazine. + +======================================================================= + + + + +PUBLISHER'S DEPARTMENT. + + +The removal of the general office of the American Express Company to the +corner of Franklin and Hawley Streets, Boston, is an event in the +history of a famous corporation. From very small beginnings, the company +has built up a business which now extends into nearly every section of +the United States and Canada, covering about forty thousand miles of +railroad and having between five thousand and six thousand agencies, +besides interests in, and connections with many other expresses in +various parts of the country. + +The American Express Company began business in 1847. The United States +and Canada Express was founded in 1842, and the Eastern Express in 1854. +The American has now absorbed both of the other companies, besides +several smaller ones. The company's growth in the last few years has +been phenomenally rapid. Only five years ago the company employed only +twenty-four horses in Boston, now they have one hundred and twenty-five. +Boston now has equal express facilities with New York, and similar rates +are established from the two cities to points in the West, a fact which +Boston business men may well appreciate. A fast express is run through +to the West, which is of great value to shippers of goods and other +products requiring speedy delivery in season. Another result of the +efforts of this company is seen in the fact that a package may be sent +from a point in Maine or New Brunswick to Chicago at no higher rate than +was formerly charged to Boston. + +The new offices in this city occupy three floors fifty by one hundred +feet each, arranged with every facility for transacting the large +business from this point. + +The general offices of the company are in New York City, but among its +prominent directors is B.P. Cheney, Esq., who is well known as one of +New England's ablest financiers and managers. Many business men in +Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont are shareholders in the +company. The executive departments are ably filled by Mr. James +Eggleston, the General Superintendent for New England, assisted in +Boston by H.W. Dwight, Superintendent, of Boston; J.W. Baldwin, Office +Manager, and O.J. Freeborn, City Superintendent. Outside of Boston, Mr. +G.H. Babbitt of Bellows Falls, Vermont, is Assistant General +Superintendent of the United States and Canada division; Mr. F.W. Carr +of Bangor, Superintendent of Maine and New Brunswick division (Eastern +Express Company); J.G. Towne, Boston, Superintendent of Massachusetts +division; M.J. Pratt, Concord, New Hampshire, Superintendent of New +Hampshire division, and F. Richardson, St. Johnsbury, Vermont, +Superintendent of Vermont division, all of whom are gentlemen well and +favorably known to the public generally and men of long experience in +the express business. + +======================================================================= + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., + Publishers, Printers, Stereotypes, and Electrotypers, + 31 MILK ST. BOSTON, MASS. +----- + FINE BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. + Reasonable Terms. + _ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED._ +----- + PUBLISHERS OF _THE BAY STATE MONTHLY_, A Massachusetts Magazine. +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED. + Agents to secure subscriptions and advertisements for this magazine. + _EXCELLENT TERMS._ + ADDRESS BAY STATE MONTHLY, 31 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + A few volumes 5, 6, and 7 of _Granite Monthly_ (a New Hampshire + magazine). Bound in Cloth. Price $2.00 each. Early volumes out of print. + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + Volumes 1 and 2 of BAY STATE MONTHLY bound in cloth. Price, $2.00 each. + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + ECONOMIST SUMMER COOK STOVE + + IS SAFE, ODORLESS, CLEANER, EASIER TO CONTROL, GIVES LESS HEAT IN + ROOM, & IS CHEAPER TO RUN THAN ANY OIL, GAS, OR GASOLINE STOVE MADE. + + BURNS COAL, WOOD, OR COKE. + + SEND FOR CIRCULARS. + + MADE ONLY BY HOBBS, GORDON & CO. CONCORD, N.H. Price $16. + +======================================================================= + + + THE BAY STATE MONTHLY. + + Volume I.--1884. Bound in cloth, royal 8vo., + + 420 pages. Price, $2.00. + + WITH + + 6 PORTRAITS ON STEEL, 10 MAPS, AND 107 ILLUSTRATIONS. + + * * * * * + + PRESS NOTICES. + + "A creditable addition to Massachusetts literature."--_Boston Globe_. + + "The first six numbers form a volume of genuine historic value and + interest."--_Transcript_. + + "An admirable issue."--_Malden City Press_. + + "Replete with sketches which should be read in every + household."--_Winchendon Courier_. + + "Furnishing much valuable historical and biographical + matter."--_Boston Commonwealth_. + + "Working its way to popular favor."--_The Weekly News_. + + "The Bay State Monthly is just what is needed in New England."--_The + Gorham Mountaineer_. + + "New England societies will not be able to dispense with this + magazine."--_St. Paul Pioneer-Press_. + + "Crammed full of historic facts; should be in every + family."--_Brockton Eagle_. + + "A conspicuous article is 'Bunker Hill' (with map), by General + Carrington, U.S.A."--_Southbridge Journal._ + + "Has made a firm footing and held its ground well."--_Newport News and + Journal_. + + "Filled with instructive literary matter, and a very reliable + map."--_Essex Banner_. + + "One of the most popular in the list of monthlies."--_The Moniter + (Chatham)_. + + "Handsomely gotten up, and reading-matter is interesting."--_Holyoke + Herald_. + + "The steady improvement in this magazine is gratifying."--_Medford + Mercury_. + + "Deserves the support of every true American, and every Massachusetts + citizen."--_The Watchman_. + + "Edited ably, growing healthily, and presents features of peculiar + interest."--_Congregationalist_. + + "Improves with each number."--_New England Home Journal + (Worcester)_. + + "Should be in every household in Massachusetts,"--_Barre Gazette_. + + "One of the noted historical magazines of the day."--_Norfolk County + Register_. + + "Of that interest to the whole country that the cultured productions of + cultured Boston have usually been."--_Courier and Journal (Louisville, + Ky.)_. + + "An important blank in our periodical literature has been + filled."--_Chicago News_. + + "Destined to take place in the first rank."--_Watertown + Enterprise_. + + "Invites the support of Massachusetts people from Berkshire to + Barnstable."--_Lowell Morning Times_. + + "Already a success."--_Cape Cod Bee (Barnstable)_. + + "'The Rent Veil,' by Henry B. Carrington, is a strikingly fine + production, possessing a Miltonian stateliness, and breathing a spirit + of veneration."--_New York Times_. + + "Replete with choice literary productions."--_Gardner Record._ + + "Keeps up the character established by the first number."--_Vox Populi + (Lowell)_. + + "Should be in the hands of all who desire to know the Bay + State."--_Westborough Chronotype._ + + "Of special interest to the citizens of Massachusetts."--_Worcester + Spy_. + + "A distinctive Massachusetts magazine."--_Waltham Record_. + + "Both in appearance and contents creditable to the publishers."--_New + York Literary Times_. + + "Does credit to publishers and contributors."--_East Boston Argus._ + + "The list of contributors is enough to sell the magazine."--_Scituate + Herald_. + + "Is destined to be popular and a valuable addition to the literary + world."--_Home Journal_. + + "Rich in contents."--_Indianapolis Times._ + + "A worthy representative of the literary and typographical excellence of + cultured Boston."--_Weekly Advocate._ + + "Of fine appearance and high promise."--_Lawrence American_. + + "Replete with choice literary contributions."--_Salem Register_. + + "We predict a bright future for The Bay State Monthly."--_Norwood + Review_. + +======================================================================= + + + BOSTON TRANSCRIPT. + + _DAILY AND WEEKLY._ + + QUARTO SHEET,--56 COLUMNS. + + THE LARGEST, CHEAPEST, AND BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER IN NEW ENGLAND. + + THE DAILY EVENING TRANSCRIPT has been carried on for nearly fifty-five + years as an _INDEPENDENT JOURNAL_, discussing and considering questions + of political and social interest, according to the best opinions and + convictions of its conductors in advocating the good, condemning the + bad, exposing the fallacies of mistaken policy, and promoting the + general welfare of the people. It aims at promptness in giving the news + of the day, and at completeness in all that should be features of a + first-class newspaper; endeavors in every department of reading matter + to maintain a judicious reputation for avoiding everything that may be + considered objectionable to good taste; seeks to favor progress, + promote public spirit, and to encourage enterprise. The perfect success + of the Transcript as a favorite New England journal, conducted according + to the above-sketched platform of ideas, gives its managers reasonable + assurance in believing that faith has been honestly kept by the + newspaper in meeting in those respects the expectations of its + wide-spread circle of patrons. + + The Daily Transcript is sent to mail subscribers for $9.00 per year in + advance, and $4.50 for six months. + + _Single Copies, Three Cents._ + + * * * * * + + THE WEEKLY TRANSCRIPT is published every Tuesday morning, in a Quarto + Form, comprising fifty-six columns, at Two DOLLARS per annum, including + postage. Single copies for mailing, five cents. It contains the choicest + LITERARY MISCELLANY, and is made up with special reference to the + varied tastes and requirements of the home circle. In a word, it is + a first-class FAMILY NEWSPAPER, giving, in addition to its literary + contents, the principal news of the week, stock reports etc., etc. + It is an excellent medium for advertisers to reach country patrons. + + _TERMS FOR WEEKLY_ + Subscriptions can begin when order is received. + One copy one year (in advance) $2.00 + Five copies to one address, one year (in advance) 7.50 + + _BOSTON TRANSCRIPT COMPANY_, + 324 Washington Street. WM. DURANT, _Treasurer_. + +======================================================================= + + + Globe Theatre. MR. JOHN STETSON,--Proprietor and Manager. + THE MODEL THEATRE OF BOSTON. + ALL THE LEADING ATTRACTIONS Presented during the season. + _Best Seats, One Dollar._ +-------------------------------------- + + "IT IS AN ACKNOWLEDGED FACT" THAT "THE CONCORD HARNESS," + MADE BY J.R. HILL & CO., + Concord N.H., are the best and cheapest harness for the money that are + made in this country. Order a sample and see for yourself. + + _Correspondence Solicited. J.B. HILL & CO., CONCORD, N.H._ +-------------------------------------- + + Facial Development. + +[Illustration] + + I will mail to you a code of rules for developing the muscles of the + cheeks and neck, making them look plump and rosy; also rules for using + dumb-bells to develop every muscle of arm and body, all for 50 cents. To + avoid mistake mention BAY STATE MONTHLY. PROF. E.L. DOWD. + + Home School for Physical Culture, 19 East 14th St., N.Y. City. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + Tailoring Done as it should be. + H.E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston +-------------------------------------- + + FOR SALE. + A complete set of the _Granite Monthly_. Seven volumes, bound in + cloth; price $18.00 + + JOHN N. McCLINTOCK & CO., 31 Milk St., Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + COLUMBIA BICYCLES and TRICYCLES: + FOR ROAD USE; + + STANCH AND RELIABLE + THE POPULAR STEEDS FOR BUSINESS AND PLEASURE + FINEST MATERIALS, SKILLFUL WORKMANSHIP + STRONG, GRACEFUL--EVERY PART INTERCHANGEABLE + + SEND 3 CENT STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED 36 PAGE CATALOGUE + THE POPE MFG. CO. + 597 Washington St. Boston, Mass. + + "If I could not get another bicycle I would not give mine for its weight + in solid gold. For fifteen years I lost from three to eight days every + month with stubborn sick headache. Since I have been riding the bicycle + I have lost only two days from that cause, and I haven't spent a dollar + for a doctor." + + REV. GEO. F. PENTECOST +-------------------------------------- + + WANTED, New England Town Histories in exchange for volumes I and + II of the "BAY STATE MONTHLY." +-------------------------------------- + + BOSTON THEATRE. + + TOMPKINS & HILL, Proprietors. EUGENE TOMPKINS, Manager. + + ALL GREAT ATTRACTIONS, + + Dramatic, Lyric, and Minstrelsy, + of the best class offered, in regular succession. + + _SEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS._ +-------------------------------------- + + ARTHUR P. DODGE + Attorney and Counsellor at Law, _31 MILK ST., ROOM 46_, + Notary Public. Commissioner for New Hampshire. + +======================================================================= + + +ALASKA: Its Southern Coast. And the Sitkan Archipelago. By Eliza Ruhamah +Scidmore. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. In this well-written and +exceedingly interesting volume the author opens up to us a country which +notwithstanding so much has been said of it, is yet very imperfectly +known. Although it is nine times as large as New England, and twice as +large as Texas, it is the popular impression that it is all a barren, +inhospitable region, wrapped in snow and ice the greater part of the +year, and that a visitor to its settlements must undergo perils almost +equal to those of the Greely relief expedition. Miss Scidmore in her +book dispels this illusion in the most summary manner. She spent two +summers in Alaska, and therefore speaks from personal knowledge. She +tells us that the winters at Sitka are milder than those in New York, +while the summers are delightfully cool and temperate. Some of the +grandest scenery of the continent is to be found along the Alaska coast, +in the region of the Alexander or Sitkan Archipelago, and the monthly +mail steamer is crowded with tourists during the summer season. It is +one of the easiest and most delightful trips to go up the coast by the +inside passage and cruise through the archipelago; and in voyaging past +the unbroken wilderness of the island shores, the tourist feels quite +like an explorer penetrating unknown lands. The mountain range that +walls the Pacific coast from the Antarctic to the Arctic gives a bold +and broken front to the mainland, and every one of the eleven hundred +islands of the archipelago is but a submerged spur or peak of the great +range. Many of the islands are larger than Massachusetts or New Jersey, +but none of them have been wholly explored, nor is the survey of their +shores completed. The Yosemite walls and cascades are repeated in mile +after mile of deep salt water channels, and from the deck of an ocean +steamer one views scenes not paralleled after long rides and climbs in +the heart of the Sierras. The gorges and canons of Colorado are +surpassed; mountains that tower above Pike's Peak rise in steep incline +from the still level of the sea; and the shores are clad in forests and +undergrowth dense and impassable as the tangle of a Florida swamp. + +On her first visit to Sitka the author spent a week at Victoria, +Vancouver's Island, a place which she describes as a veritable paradise. +The drives about the town, she says, along the island shores, and +through the woods, are beautiful, and the heavy, London-built carriages +roll over hard and perfect English highways. Ferns were growing ten and +twelve feet high by the roadside. Wild rose-bushes are matted together +by the acre in the clearings about the town, and in June they weight the +air with their perfume, as they did a century ago, when Marchand, the +old French voyager, compared the region to the rose-covered slopes of +Bulgaria. The honeysuckle attains the greatest perfection in this +climate, and covers and smothers the cottages and trellises with +thickly-set blossoms. Even the currant-bushes grow to unusual height, +and in many gardens they are trained on arbors and hang their red, ripe +clusters high overhead. + +The old Russian town of Sitka, the most northern on the Pacific coast, +she describes as a straggling, peaceful sort of town, edging along shore +at the foot of high mountains, and sheltered from the surge and turmoil +of the ocean by a sea-wall of rocky, pine-covered islands. The moss has +grown greener and thicker on the roofs of the solid old wooden houses +that are relics of Russian days, the paint has worn thinner everywhere, +and a few more houses tumbling into ruins complete the scenes of +picturesque decay. Twenty years ago there were one hundred and +twenty-five buildings in the town proper, and it is doubtful if a dozen +have been erected since. + +Miss Scidmore's descriptions of the various places she visited and the +curious things she saw are vivid and picturesque, and one can learn more +of both from her pages than from all the official reports that have been +published. It is a book that ought to have a wide popularity. It is well +illustrated and contains a map reduced from the last general chart of +Alaska published by the Coast Survey. + + +BOY LIFE IN THE UNITED STATES NAVY. By a Naval Officer. Boston: D. +Lothrop & Co. Price $1.25. It is difficult to write a book of boy's +adventures without falling into what is popularly called sensational +writing, that is the description of improbable incidents to arouse and +excite the imagination without any purpose beyond that result. The +writer of the present volume, while making an intensely interesting +story, has avoided this danger, and his narrative gives a not overdrawn +description of the life of a boy on a vessel in the United States Navy. +Joe Bently is the son of a Maine farmer, with a strong distaste for the +life to which he has been brought up and an equally strong love for the +sea. His desire to become a sailor has always been repressed by his +father, who, though loving his son, has no sympathy with him in this one +respect. + +Mr. Bently at last gives his consent, and Joe enlists as an apprentice +in the Navy. The story of his journey, his examination, his experiences, +on board ship and his adventures while lying in foreign ports is very +graphically told, and the boy who reads it gets a clear and actual idea +of what a boy must go through on board a man-of-war before he can +graduate as an "able-bodied seaman." The writer shows a thorough +acquaintance with every thing on board ship, even to the minutest +details. The book ends with the promotion of Joe, and a promise to +continue his adventures in another volume. + + +THE EVOLUTION OF DODD. By W.H. Smith. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price +$1.00. Here is a book we should rejoice to see in the hands of every +teacher of youth in the country. It is a living, breathing protest +against certain features of the present school systems which obtain in +various parts of the country, from that of the kindergarten to the +grammar school. The points of the author are so well taken, that the +reader is forced not only to admit the reality of the evils he +denounces, but to acknowledge the justice of the conclusions at which he +arrives. + +In the evolution of character the public school has come to be a most +important factor. To it has been assigned a task equal to any other +agency that deals with human nature. But in multitudes of cases it has +become a mere mill for grinding out graduates. The "system" has largely +lost sight of the grandest thing in all the world--the individual soul. +It addresses itself to child-humanity collectively, as if characters +were manufactured, like pins, by the million, and all alike, and it +attempts to grind out this great mass, each individual like every other, +as if its members could be made interchangeable like the parts of a +government musket. + +To illustrate his ideas, the author selects a representative boy, Dodd +Weaver, the eldest son of a Methodist clergyman, and carries him through +the various schools and grades of schools from the time of his entrance +to his graduation. He does not make him a model boy to begin with, and +strive to show how he was spoiled by the school system. On the contrary +he endows him with a good many disagreeable qualities; he makes him +bright, sharp, and full of vitality, with a strong bent for mischief. He +is high-tempered, quarrelsome, and disobedient, and yet in the hands of +one who understands his mental peculiarities plastic as dough. It is the +aim of the author to show how utterly useless it is to treat such +boys--and our schools are full of them--in exactly the same manner as +those of different character and temperament, and to demand that +teachers have the right to adapt their methods according to individual +demands. He says: + +It is not a system--any set of rules or formularies--that can make our +school, any more than it is forms and ceremonies that make our churches. +These may all be well enough in their proper places, but there is +nothing, absolutely nothing, in them, _per se_. It is the +righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees in the one case, and the dry +bones of pedagogy in the other. + +The evil arises, in the schools as in the churches, from believing and +acting as if there were something in the system itself. + +If human nature were a fixed quantity, if any two children were alike, +or anywhere nearly alike, if a certain act done for a child always +brought forth the same result, then it might be possible to form an +absolute system of pedagogy, as, with fixed elements, there is formed +the science of chemistry. But the quick atoms of spirit that manifest +their affinities under the eye of that alchemist, the teacher, are far +more subtle than the elements that go into the crucible in any other of +Nature's laboratories. + +A chemist will distil for you the odor of a blown rose, or catch and +hold captive the breath of the morning meadow, and do it always just the +same, and ever with like results; but there is no art by which anything +analogous can be wrought in human life. Here a new element comes in that +entirely changes that economy of Nature in this regard. The +individuality of every human soul is this new factor, and because of it, +of its infinite variability--because no two atoms that are cast into the +crucible of life are ever the same, or can be wrought into character by +the same means--because of this, no fixed rules can ever be laid down +for evolving a definite result, in the realm of soul, by never-varying +means. + +And this is where many teachers are at fault. They put their faith in a +system, a mill through which all children shall be run, and in passing +through which each child shall receive the same treatment, and from +which they shall all emerge, stamped with the seal of the institution, +"uniformity." + +This is the prime idea that lies at the foundation of the popular system +of education--to make children uniform. This very thing that God and +Nature have set themselves against--no two faces, or forms, or statures; +no two minds, or hearts, or souls being alike, as designed by the +Creator, and as fashioned by Nature's hand--to make all these alike was +the aim of the system under which Dodd began to be evolved, and with +which he began to clash at once. + +But it is not the system only which is at fault. Hot with the +indignation bred from a discussion of its shortcomings, the author turns +suddenly upon the parents of the innumerable Dodds in the schools of the +country: + +And for you, who send your six-year-olds to school with a single hook, +and grumble because you have to buy even so much of an outfit, what are +you going to do about it when your boy drains all the life out of the +little volume in a couple of weeks or a month? He knows the stories by +heart, and after that he says them over, day by day, because he must, +and not in the least because he cares to. + +What are you going to do about this? It is largely your business. You +cannot shirk it and say that you send the boy to school, and it is the +teacher's business to take care of him. + +The remedy for the wrongs and faults of the system is, in his opinion, +to recognize the individuality of children in the schoolroom to study +the mental peculiarities and needs of each, and to do away with the +system so far as it interferes with the liberty of the teacher to adapt +his means to the proper ends to be attained. It is demanded that +teachers be selected on the sole ground of fitness and adaptability, and +not because of favoritism or the mere fact that their book education is +sufficient, and it is further insisted that parents interest themselves +to see and demand that the best that can be done is done for their +children. These are the means suggested in the way of reform, and they +seem adequate in a large degree to accomplish what is desired. We +commend the book to teachers and parents. + + +MONEY IN POLITICS. By J.K. Upton. With an introduction by Edward +Atkinson. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. The author of this +comprehensive and valuable work was for several years Assistant +Secretary of the United States Treasury, and in that responsible +position had admirable facilities for studying the question of money as +affected by congressional acts from the earliest history of the republic +down to the present, and he has made good use of his opportunities in +this book which is a succinct narration of the numerous changes made in +American money beginning with the continental issues, in fact, earlier, +the colonial money. The work is, therefore, a history of American coin +and the numerous issues of paper that served as money. To the student +there is in this book a fund of information extremely interesting, +particularly at this time when the popular will is likely to compel +farther legislation. A topic of present interest, is the silver dollar, +to which the author devotes a chapter historical in its character, and +another chapter concerning circulation of this coin. In the former +chapter he begins with the Spanish milled dollar, "the Mexican pillar +piece," which was the first silver dollar known in American commerce, +and had, in colonial times, 386.7-8 grains of pure silver. In 1785 the +American standard was fixed at 375.64 grains of pure silver which became +the unit of account, the standard dollar. In 1792, after a Congress of +the States was organized, the standard dollar was required to contain +371.25 grains of pure silver, or, with the admixture of baser metal, the +standard of silver coin 416 grains, the pure silver rated by itself as +before. These facts are of interest as showing the origin of the +American dollar recognized as the standard down to 1873. + +The chapters on "Circulation of the Silver Dollar" and "The Trade +Dollar" are interesting and timely, inasmuch as the questions considered +are now before Congress, or at least with the committees, and +legislation of some kind will be demanded within the next year. There +is, even now, a proposition embodied in a bill to suspend coinage of the +silver dollar, because it has been found impossible to put the great sum +coined directly in circulation. A great part of it has been made the +basis of silver certificates, a kind of currency that, by and by, will +bring distress to commercial interests if the issues are maintained, or +if they are materially increased. Mr. Upton treats all these matters +with very clear understanding of every question, and with certain +facility of expression that appeals directly to the reader who has only +common understanding of money affairs. From beginning to end the book is +a rich mine of facts, of historical matter, and of statements that have +undergone the scrutiny of the wisest financier during the critical +period between the appreciation of values, with the disturbing +influences of war, and the return of true values with resumption of +specie payment which was effected with gold. While the work must have +absorbing interest for that extended school of economists that has made +finance a special study in the past dozen years, it will prove very +useful to representatives in Congress, who may find here in compact form +facts of history with which they should have familiar acquaintance +before they attempt legislation intended to correct the errors +incorporated in our money system. + + +THE OLD STONE HOUSE. By Anne March (Constance Fenimore Woolson). Boston: +D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. This capital story, by one of the +brightest American writers of fiction, has been placed by the publishers +in their Young Folks' Library Series, where it ought to find a new lease +of popularity. The Old Stone House is the home of five young people, +representing three families. They are all orphans, and are living with a +widowed aunt, whose single and constant aim is to educate them into real +men and women. The young cousins, who dearly love each other, differ in +tastes and temperament, but not in such ways as to interfere with each +other's enjoyments. The younger ones are jolly and fun-loving, and no +occasion for having a good time is left unimproved. The main interest of +the story, however, lies with the eldest of the cousins, Sybil +Warrington, a girl of strong feelings but quiet exterior, whose ambition +to shine in society is held in check by a feeling that something higher +and better is required of her. The story of her struggles is quietly but +effectively told, and will have a peculiar interest for young girls. +Miss Woolson has written much, and her work has given her a very +enviable reputation both in this country and in Europe, but in all her +writings there is nothing more earnest. + + +HOW SUCCESS IS WON. By Mrs. Sarah K. Bolton. With Portraits. Boston: D. +Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. This handsome volume is made up of +biographies of twelve men who have achieved distinguished successes in +the various directions in which they turned their respective energies. +Mrs. Bolton not only rehearses the main incidents of their lives, but +shows that in every case the success and honors attained were the result +of industry, economy and high moral principle. Among those selected to +illustrate how success may be won under different circumstances are +Peter Cooper, John B. Gough, John G. Whittier, Henry M. Stanley and +Alexander H. Stephens. The several sketches are bright and pointed, and +the portraits which illustrate them add to their value. + +The Rochester (N.Y.) _Herald_ speaks of this extremely interesting +book as "a singular collection of names, wide apart in many respects, +but they represent men whom it is interesting to read about." + + +ANNA MARIA'S HOUSEKEEPING. By Mrs. S.D. Power. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. +Price $1.00. If we were asked to recommend any one single book to a +young housekeeper which should serve as a domestic guide, counsellor and +friend, we should unhesitatingly name _Anna Maria's Housekeeping_. +So far as our knowledge extends, there is no other book which so exactly +and thoroughly fulfils the needs implied in those titles. It is no mere +collection of receipts, but a complete and common-sense treatise on the +whole science of housekeeping, tersely and clearly written, with a +flavor of experience about it that makes one accept it as authoritative. +It is a staff upon which the young housekeeper may confidently lean, and +by the aid of which she may overcome obstacles which without it would +seem insurmountable. Mrs. Power does not believe in a house keeping +itself. It requires continual care and oversight, and a clear knowledge +of what is to be done. She believes, too, that a house can be well kept +as easily as badly kept, and that a bright, clean, well-ordered home has +a deal to do with molding the temper and even character of its members. +"It is no small thing," she says, "to stand at the head of affairs, and +be the motive power on which depend the welfare and credit, the health, +temper and spirit of the whole family. When in midlife you come to find +how essential the comfort of a well-kept home is to the bodily strength +and good conditions, to a sound mind and spirit, and useful days, you +will reverence the good housekeeper as I do, above poet or artist, +beauty or genius." In the opening chapter of the book the author +instructs Anna Maria in the art of "How to Make Home-work Easier." In +the succeeding chapters she takes up the various kinds of work there is +to be done about the house, and describes the easiest methods of doing +it. "No attitudinizing," she remarks, "no fine lady affectations over +the griddles and saucepans; instead, cultivate the fine character which +acts up to the need of the hour swiftly, promptly, but with quiet and +certainty." Her definition of "good food" is to the point. "It is not," +she says, "rich food, nor even the tolerable fare which is just +undercooked and flavorless enough to tax digestion more than it ought. +It is the best of everything cooked in the nicest possible way, and with +pleasant variety." Passing from the kitchen the care of the different +rooms of the house is taken up--the chambers, the sitting-room and the +storeroom; instructions are given for making "blue Monday" less blue; +the arts of starching and ironing are discussed; and a chapter is given +to the mending and darning basket. Other portions of the book are +devoted to "Company Days," "Shopping," "Sickness in the House," "Making +the best of Things," and "Helps that are Helps," the servant-girl +question forming the subject of the closing chapter. The volume is very +handsomely brought out, but even were it not, it would be worth its +weight in gold to the young and inexperienced housekeeper. + + +GERTRUDE'S DIARY. By Pansy. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price +60 cts. A new book by Pansy is always hailed with delight, and that +delight generally mingled with wonder can possibly write so much and yet +keep the freshness and brightness which runs through all her books. +Gertrude is a girl of fifteen, wide awake, full of life, generally good +tempered, and yet with as many faults as most girls of her age have; +faults which arise more from thoughtlessness than from intent. She is +one of four who agree to keep diaries, in accordance with a suggestion +made by their Sunday-school teacher, and she records with impartiality +all her good and bad times, her trials and her triumphs. Aside from its +interest, it contains suggestions which cannot fail to make an +impression upon the mind of any young girl who reads it, and to +strengthen her in like temptations and under the same conditions. A +pleasant story runs through the diary. + + +MANY COLORED THREADS. From the Writings of Goethe. Selected by Carrie +Adelaide Cooke. With an Introduction by Kev. Alexander McKenzie, D.D. +Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.00. No other volume of the Spare +Minute Series contains more real meat than this. Goethe was +epigrammatic, and his ideas took the concentrated form of bullets, +instead of scattering like shot. We doubt if there is another author, +always excepting Shakespeare, from whose books so many noble and +complete thoughts can be extracted. In the two hundred and fifty pages +of this volume are more than a thousand of these gems, each worth; its +setting. Dr. McKenzie says aptly of Goethe that he is able by virtue of +his own genius to set more than the common man and to put his visions +and his reflections in such form that others who would never have seen +the tilings for themselves or been able to think deeply upon them, can +have the benefit of his generous study and thought. He was many-sided. +His mind took a wide range and seemed almost equally at home in many +places. The real and the ideal both interested him and were cherished by +him. Science and art, philosophy and poetry, engaged his attention and +were enriched by his handiwork. In this versatility of his power and the +manifoldness of their application he was remarkable. Out of this breadth +of study came varied and large thoughts of the world and of human life. +He had the faculties with which nature and humanity and divine power +could breathe their inspiration for the world's instruction and delight, +and that they were fully employed no-one who turns over the pages of +this collection can doubt. A brief biography of Goethe takes the place +of a preface, and there is an index of subjects. + + * * * * * + + +MR. CHARLES LANMAN THE AUTHOR OF "THE LEADING MEN OF JAPAN." + +MARY COLE BAKER writes in the Washington (D.C.) _Republic:_ "Mr. +Lanman is well known both in England and America as the writer of some +of the most delightful descriptive books in the English language. To the +facile wielding of his pen he adds an equally adroit and skilful use of +the pencil, and his admirable results in these combined pursuits won for +him from his friend and brother of the quill, Washington Irving, the apt +and deserved soubriquet of 'the picturesque explorer of America.' To the +pleasure which Mr. Lanman derived from these pursuits he added a +sportsman's love for the field and took genuine delight in the +'contemplative art' of angling. He was the first American to cast the +artificial fly in the Saguenay region and to describe for the angler the +charms of that since famous locality. He has followed this sport in +nearly every State in the Union, never without his sketching materials, +which he used unstintingly. The results of these labors are many +hundreds of sketches of American scenery, invaluable now that the march +of civilization has so completely changed the face of a large part of +the country. It is delightful to find a man who has been able to get so +much good from life as has Mr. Lanman. One would think that the writing +and illustrating of more than thirty books, some of which are in two +large octavo volumes, was the work of a lifetime. But this has been to +Mr. Lanman his recreation. The fact that his books have been successful +pecuniarily has not prevented him from following the duties of the +various governmental positions in which he has been placed. No sinecures +they either--librarian at different times of the House of +Representatives, the War Department, of copyrights in the State +Department and of the Interior Department, secretary to Daniel Webster, +at the head of the returns of office of the Interior Department, and for +the last ten years the American Secretary to the Japanese Legation at +Washington. A lover of social intercourse, Mr. Lanman has led the +typical busy life of the American, untouched by the direful and +disastrous ills it is supposed to bring. He is now engaged in editing +fourteen of his books for reproduction in uniform style, and a new book, +_The Leading Men of Japan_, is ready for issue." 12mo, $1.50. +Boston: D. Lothrop, & Co., Publishers. + + * * * * * + + +COULDN'T BE BOUGHT: AND OTHER STORIES. By Faye Huntington. Illustrated. +Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price 75 cts. A delightful collection of short +stories for boys and girls, adapted to the Sunday-school library. The +volume takes its name from the leading story. The author has a pleasant +and attractive style, and her stories have a large amount of "telling" +force in them. + + +CHINA. By Prof. R.K. Douglas, of the British Museum. Edited by Arthur +Gilman, M.A. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. Price $1.50. This +volume comes just at a time when there is a strong demand for something +brief, exact and authoritative in the way of Chinese history. Current +events have brought China before the world as one of the really great +powers, and one which in time will be able not only to defend herself +against the aggressions of other nations but will be perfectly able to +take the offensive should occasion require. In the arts of diplomacy the +Chinese are a match for the keenest statesman of Europe, and since the +beginning of the present troubles with France they have developed a +military talent which is perfectly surprising. With the growth of the +military spirit it would not be strange if, in the course of the next +generation China should hold as distinct and important a place among the +warlike powers as France or England. + +The author of the volume before us had exceptional advantages for making +such a book as just now the public demand and need. He was for several +years a resident of China in an official capacity, and studied the +people and their mode of life from actual observation. In preparing the +book he also freely availed himself of the labors of others where they +seemed capable of adding value to the narrative. In his preface he +acknowledges his indebtedness to Doctor Legge's "Chinese Classics," +Archdeacon Gray's work on "China," Doolittle's "Social Life of the +Chinese," Denys's "Chinese Folklore," Mayers's "Chinese Reader's +Manual," Sir John Davis's "Poetry of the Chinese," as well as to the +important linguistic, religious and topographical writings of Doctor +Edkins of Peking, and particularly to the late Professor S. Wells +Williams, of Yale College, whose work on the _Middle Kingdom_ +contains more information of value than any other single volume in our +language. + +The various chapters of the work deal with the history of the empire in +brief, its government, religions, its educational system, the nurture of +the young, superstitions, funeral and wedding rites, the language, food +and dress, honors, architecture, music, medicine and other subjects. It +has been critically read by the young Chinese scholar, Mr. Yan Phou Lee, +of Yale College, who has suggested a few notes. Its completeness is +added to by an analytic table of contents and an index. + +IN THE WOODS AND OUT. By Pansy. Illustrated. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. +Price $1.00. In the score or more of short stories which make up this +volume Pansy is at her best. She never writes for the mere sake of +filling up, but always, in the briefest of her sketches, she has +something worth telling and worth remembering. There isn't a thing in +the book which will not be read twice, and certain of the stones will be +perennial favorites with the younger class of readers. + + * * * * * + + +PHILOSOPHIAE QUAESTOR. + + +The seeker of philosophical truth, which is described as the shadowy +figure of a young girl, is, throughout, very expressive of desire and +appreciation. The impressions she receives are those to which such a +condition are most sensitive--the higher and more refined ones--and the +responsive thoughts concern the nature and character of what is heard or +felt. The elevation into classic importance of Concord, its +philosophers, and its School of Philosophy is due to the influence of +their history and teachings in American literature, and it is pleasant +to recognize in this work such reverence of their classicism. Mrs. +Anagnos has written a prose poem in which the last two sessions of the +Concord School of Philosophy, which include that in memory of Emerson, +and its lecturers excite her feeling and inspire her thought. It is sung +in lofty strains that resemble those of the sacred woods and fount, and +themselves are communicative of their spirit. It will be welcomed as an +appropriate souvenir.--_Boston Globe_. + + * * * * * + + +OUR NATIONAL FINANCES. + + +Mr. J.K. Upton used to be Assistant Secretary of the Treasury of the +United States. Few men, therefore, have had better opportunities to +inform themselves about our national finances. His volume, _Money in +Politics_, published by D. Lothrop & Co., price $1.25, is a full +history of the financial policy and legislation of this country. It is +of the utmost value as a record, a book of reference, and an expression +of sound theories. The intelligent reader cannot repress a feeling of +shame that our national history in respect to finance should have been +characterized by such continual bungling. The saddest feature in the +case is the crass ignorance which Congress usually has displayed. Much +of our legislation about money matters has been the merest +experimenting, if not worse than this--the deliberate effort to enrich +some one class of business men at the expense of the nation. + +He utters a solemn warning of the dangers to which we now are exposed +through our present acts of coinage and legal tender, whereby our gold +coin sooner or later must be driven from the country and our standard +must become a silver dollar of light weight and uncertain value. He also +shows conclusively the futility of legislation in causing two substances +to become and remain of the same value. Mr. Edward Atkinson has +furnished the introduction to the book, in which he commends it warmly. +While Congress continues to permit the coinage of $2,000,000 in silver a +month, for which there is no demand and the coinage of which merely +furnishes a market for the wares of a few owners of silver mines, it is +difficult to overstate the need that such books as this should be +circulated and studied attentively throughout the nation. Mr. Atkinson +makes an impressive comment, which we quote: + +"The productions of the hen-yards of the United States, according to the +census statistics, was, in 1879, 456,910,916 dozen eggs, and, if hens +have now increased in the ratio of population, it is now 500,000,000 +dozen, which at only ten cents a dozen, would exceed the value of the +products of the silver mines. + +"It would be vastly more reasonable for Congress to order the compulsory +purchase of two million dollars' worth of eggs per month," in order to +sustain the hen products of the United States, "than it is to buy two +million dollars' worth of silver; because the eggs could be used, or +else would rot, while the silver cannot be used, and is expensive to +store and to watch (pp. xvi-xvii)."--_Congregationalist_. + + * * * * * + + +ILLITERACY AND MORMONISM. + + +Of _Illiteracy and Mormonism_, a brochure from the pen of Doctor +Henry Randall Waite, just published by D. Lothrop & Co., the _Boston +Daily Transcript_ in an advance notice, says: + +"In view of the present great interest in the problems treated, and the +value of the material which it offers as an aid to their solution, the +book is especially timely. Doctor Waite, who was for some time editor of +the _International Review_, and whose work is well-known to readers +of the standard American periodicals, is one of the clearest-headed of +our younger writers on politico-economic subjects, and his views as here +set forth demand thoughtful consideration and respect. He brings to the +treatment of the subjects included in the title the special knowledge +gained in his important official position as statistician of the late +census, in charge of some of the most important branches, including +education, illiteracy and religious organizations." + +The Dover (N.H.) _Star_, says: + +"He makes the best argument for the Constitutionality of National Aid +[to education] which we have yet seen. It will bear careful +consideration by members of Congress." + +The _Boston Daily Herald_ refers to the author's views as follows: + +"One of the most original and valuable contributions yet made to the +discussion of the project of extending federal aid to common school +education in the States ... The moderation of its tone and the +conservatism of its suggestions will commend it to all thoughtful +students of this problem, while its statistics, many of which, in their +arrangement and application, are substantially new, should have a direct +influence in shaping the final action of Congress ... Mr. Waite has +given long and careful study to this subject in all its bearings, and he +writes with an equipment of information and reflection which has been +palpably lacking in much of the Senatorial discussion of it." + + * * * * * + + +ARCTIC EXPLORATIONS. + + +The _New York Independent_, after referring to the various books on +Arctic explorations and adventure--the narratives of Kane and Hayes and +Gilder and De Long--says of Dr. Nourse's work: "The field of Arctic +authorship was not yet, however, covered by any of these works, and it +is to the credit of Professor Nourse that he saw what remained to be +done. In the work before us he comes into no competition with the +literary workers who have preceded him. No one will be the less disposed +to read Dr. Kane's chapters, or to peruse Mr. Gilder's, for having read +Professor Nourse; nor, on the other hand, will these works prejudice +Professor Nourse's chance to be read. His book stands on ground of its +own, as the one complete and competent survey of what American explorers +have done in the polar zones.... Professor Nourse's volume is embellished +with numerous good illustrations, and provided with an excellent and +indispensable circumpolar map. It deserves the successful sale we +understand it is already receiving." + +The _Literary World_ in a review of the book says "it is an +encyclopaedic review of the whole subject of American enterprise in +Arctic seas," and adds: "Professor Nourse's book bears the credentials +of accuracy and authority, is well printed and bound, has numerous +engravings and useful maps, including some portraits on steel, has a +suitable index and table of contents, and furthermore is provided with a +bibliography of chief publications on Arctic research since 1818. In +every respect, then, it is a well-made book, a solid contribution to +popular reading." + + * * * * * + + +BACCALAUREATE SERMONS. + + +D. Lothrop & Co., of Boston, have published in book form nineteen +baccalaureate sermons preached at Harvard College, by Dr. A.P. Peabody, +the new Professor of Christian Morals. Dr. Peabody's reputation, as a +vigorous thinker and manly preacher, is as wide as this Republic; and +the volume of sermons before us is something more than a series of +homilies. It is a collection of addresses to young men--students just +ready to embark on the perilous sea of life--which may be profitably +read by every citizen of our country. The preacher does not address +himself to any single side of human life. He counsels the students in +their duties as men in all the relations of life. And in the selection +of themes he embraces a great variety of topics. In the discourse on +"Hebrew, Latin and Greek," for example, he takes the first-named tongue +as standing for religion, the second for beauty and the third for +strength. On this triad be formulates not only an intellectual cult but +a practical rule of life. Another notable sermon is on "The Sovereignty +of Law," an admirable disquisition on the supremacy of law in the +intellectual life, the physical existence, the domain of morals and in +every department of human activity. Dr. Peabody's style is forcible and +virile, and his compactness of statement, enables him to put "infinite +riches in a little room."--_Chicago Tribune._ + + * * * * * + + +A BOY'S WORKSHOP. + + +Every boy with a jack-knife in his pocket and his head full of plans +will fall to with delight on anything that gives him plenty to do in the +boyish line. This is the merit of a little manual just published by the +Messrs. D. Lothrop & Co., _A Boy's Workshop, with Plans and Designs +for Indoor and Outdoor Work_, by a "Boy and his Friends"; with an +introduction by Henry Randall Waite. The little manual goes to work +intelligibly, describing the shop, and the tools, giving hints and +accurate directions how to make a great variety of things whose uses +will be at once apparent to the boyish mind, and suggestions as to other +mysteries, the key to which makes any boy who possesses it a king among +his mates. + + * * * * * + + +HOW SUCCESS IS WON. + + +"How Success is Won," by Sarah K. Bolton (D. Lothrop & Co.), is a +collection of twelve brief biographies intended to make clear to the +young the character and conduct that have resulted in the success of +Peter Cooper, John B. Gough, John G. Whittier, John Wanamaker, Henry M. +Stanley, Johns Hopkins, William M. Hunt, Elias Howe, Jr., Alexander H. +Stephens, Thomas A. Edison, Dr. W.T.G. Morton and the Rev. John H. +Vincent. The sketches are gracefully and interestingly written, and the +little volume is in every way to be commended.--_N.Y. Com. Adv._ + + * * * * * + + +THE GRAY MASQUE. + + +The Gray Masque of Mrs. Mary Barker Dodge (D. Lothrop & Co., Boston) +has won a series of splendid notices; yet, so far as we know, sufficient +stress has not been laid upon the keynote of the volume. _Love_, +in its varying phases, sounds through the majority of the verses like +the refrain of a song. Sometimes sad, sometimes solemn, oftener gay and +hopeful, the differing themes take up, one after another, the burden +of the initial poem; and answer, in separate ways, the question there +propounded, until the many-sided revelation is found to be fittingly +illustrated on the cover by the winged boy, who throws aside the masque +of mortality, and, soaring aloft, leaves behind him every earthly +doubt and care. The "Dedication" and the concluding poem, the first +emotional in its simplicity, the last intellectual in its subtlety, +mark the breadth as well as the limits of Mrs. Dodge's poetical +expression.--_Baldwin's Monthly._ + +======================================================================= + + + Only $3.00 a Year. WIDE AWAKE. 25 cts. a number. + + The best, the largest, the most entertaining, the most beautifully + illustrated, and the widest in range, of all magazines for young people. + It is the official organ of the C.Y.F.R.U., and, as heretofore, will + publish the Required Readings, and all needed information for members of + the Union. The magazine proper will be even more brilliant and valuable + than before during the next year. + + Ideal literature and ideal art for young people and the family, for + entertainment, for the healthful training of the body and the liberal + education for the mind, fill this magazine each month from cover to + cover. It has won recognition from the American and English press as the + largest and best, the most beautiful and original, and the most ably + edited magazine of its class in the world. It gives each month original + music by eminent composers. + + "WIDE AWAKE" is the wonder of all the wonderfully beautiful children's + magazines and books of America. Without dispute the largest, handsomest, + most artistic and best young people's periodical ever issued. There is + no juvenile magazine published in the country so carefully + edited."--_Boston Transcript._ + + "A treasure of good morals."--_N.Y. Tribune._ + + "At the head of juvenile periodical stands WIDE AWAKE all the + time."--_Phil. Inquirer._ + + "A whole family library in itself."--_Putnam Patriot._ + + "Unsurpassed in skilful adaptation to young folks' needs."--_Chicago + Standard._ +-------------------------------------- + + THE PANSY Edited by Mrs. G.R. Alden (Pansy). + + _$1.00 a year; 10 cts. a number._ + + For both week-day and Sunday reading, THE PANSY holds the first place in + the hearts of the children, and in the approval of earnest-minded + parents. + + Among pictorial periodicals especially designed for Boys and Girls, it + stands royal leader, and as a Christian Home Magazine for young folks, + it is without question the best and the most attractive magazine in the + world. Pansy's own bright, quick-seeing spirit inspires all her + contributors. Very fully illustrated. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration: LOTHROP'S POPULAR ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINES.] + +-------------------------------------- + + Chautauqua Young Folks' Journal. + _75 cts. a year; 7 cts. a number._ + + This new periodical is intensely interesting to both old and young, as + well as practical. It contains the Course of the C.Y.F.R.U. Readings + (issued also in WIDE AWAKE) and additional features of varied interest. + Beginning with the December issue, the CHAUTAUQUA YOUNG FOLKS' JOURNAL + gives a fine illustrated historical serial story. It is a stirring tale + of old Knickerbocker New York, and its accounts are as true as they are + exciting. It is written by Elbridge S. Brooks, and is entitled, "In + Leisler's Time." Send for a circular giving full information about the + C.Y.F.R.U. Reading Course. +-------------------------------------- + + Our Little Men and Women. + _$1.00 a year; 10 cents a number._ + + For the youngest readers no magazine approaches this in number and + beauty of illustration (each volume containing 75 full-page pictures) + and in the peculiar fitness of the accompanying text. It is especially + adapted for use as Supplementary Reading in schools. It is always + bright, always fresh and attractive. +-------------------------------------- + + BABYLAND + _50 cents a year; 5 cents a number._ + The only periodical of its kind in the world. + + As for seven years past, this exquisite magazine for the nursery is + still unrivalled in its monthly merry-making for the wee folks. Large + pages, large pictures, large type. Each month its pictures are more + enticing, its stories are sweeter, its jingles gayer. +-------------------------------------- + + Splendid premiums for new subscriptions. Agents wanted. Liberal pay. + Send stamps for specimen copies. Circulars free. Address + + D. Lothrop & Co., Publishers, Franklin and Hawley Sts., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + LOTHROP'S SPARE MINUTE SERIES. + + "The significance of the name of this series is seen from the fact that + THOUGHTS THAT BREATHE, for instance, has 300 pages, and contains 273 + separately numbered and independent extracts. Thus a person can read one + or more of these at a time, and put the book down without breaking the + train of thought." 6 vols, 12mo, $6.00. 6 vols, imitation half calf. + $7.50. 6 vols, full imitation calf. $9.00. + + RIGHT TO THE POINT. From the writings of Theodore L. Cuyler, + D.D., selected by Mary Storrs Haynes. With an introduction by Rev. + Newman Hall. + + Pithy paragraphs on a wide range of subjects, not one of which but will + be found to contain some terse, sparkling truth worthy of thought and + attention. A spare ten minutes devoted to such readings can never be + wasted. + + THOUGHTS THAT BREATHE. From the writings of Dean Stanley. + Introduction by Rev. Phillips Brooks. The numerous admirers on this side + of the water of the late eloquent English churchman, will be grateful + for this volume, which contains some of his best utterances. 16mo, + cloth, $1.00. + + CHEERFUL WORDS. From George MacDonald. Introduction by James T. + Fields. + + THE MIGHT OF RIGHT. From Rt. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Introduction + by John D. Long. + + TRUE MANLINESS. From Thomas Hughes. Introduction by James + Russell Lowell. + + LIVING TRUTHS. From Charles Kingsley. Introduction by W.D. + Howells. + + + LOTHROP'S CHOICE NEW EDITIONS OF FAMOUS S.S. BOOKS IN SETS. + + "Bronckton Series." SO AS BY FIRE, by Margaret Sidney. A bright + story full of life and interest, as are all the writings by this popular + author. + + HALF YEAR AT BRONCKTON, by the same author. Earnest, yet lively, + this is just the book for all boys old enough to be subjected to the + temptations of school life. + + The other books of this series, "Tempter Behind," by John Saunders, "For + Mack's Sake," by S.J. Burke, and "Class of '70," by Helena V. Morrison, + are all worthy of a place in every Sunday-school library. + + Amaranth Library. 4 vols., 12mo, illust. $6.00 + Books by the author of Andy Luttrell. 6 vols., 12mo, illust. 7.50 + Julia A. Eastman's Books. 6 vols., 12mo, illust 7.50 + Ella Farman's Books. 9 vols., large 16mo, illust. 10.00 + Pansy Series. 4 vols. 3.00 + Mudge (Rev. Z.A.) Works. 3 vols. 3.75 + Porter (Mrs. A.E.) Books. 5 vols. 6.25 + Capron (M.J.) Books. 4 vols. 6.00 + Mrs. E.D. Kendall's Books. 3 vols., 12mo, illust. 3.75 + Our Boys' Library. 5 vols., illust. 6.25 + Our Girls' Library. 5 vols., illust. 6.25 + Mrs. A.E. Porter's Books. 5 vols., 12mo, illust. 6.25 + Snow Family Library. 5 vols., illust. 5.00 + Sturdy Jack Series. 6 vols., 12mo, illust. 4.50 + To-day Series. New and of extraordinary excellence. 6 vols., illust. 7.50 + Child Life Series. 26 vols., illust. Each 1.00 + Hill Rest Series. 3 vols., 16mo, illust. 3.75 + Uncle Max Series. 8 vols., illust. 6.00 + Yensie Walton Books. 5 vols., 12mo, illust. 7.50 + + + LOTHROP'S YOUNG FOLKS' LIBRARY. + + Nothing at once so good and cheap is anywhere to be found. These choice + 16mo volumes of 300 to 500 pages, clear type, carefully printed, with + handsome and durable covers of manilla paper, and embracing some of the + best stories by popular American authors, are published at the low price + of 25 cents per volume, and mailed postpaid. One number issued each + month. No second edition will be printed in this style. The regular + edition is issued in cloth bindings at $1,25 to $1.75 per volume. Among + the numbers already published at 25 cents each as above are + + 1. Tip Lewis and his Lamp, by PANSY. + 2. Margie's Mission, by MARIE OLIVER. + 3. Kitty Kent's Troubles, by JULIA A. EASTMAN. + 4. Mrs. Hurd's Niece, by ELLA FARMAN PRATT, Editor of WIDE AWAKE. + 5. Evening Rest, by REV. J.L. PRATT. + + Other equally charming stories will follow each month. The Library is + especially commended to Sunday-school superintendents or those + interested in securing choice Sunday-school books at lowest prices. + Attention is called to the necessity of early orders, as when the + present editions are exhausted, no more copies of the several volumes + can be had at the same price. + + + LOTHROP'S STANDARD BOOKS FOR YOUTHS. + Admirable books in history, biography and story. + + Fern Glen Series. 31 vols., illust. Each 1.25 + Young Folks' Series. 33 vols., illust. Each 1.50 + Popular Biographies. 18 vols., illust. Each 1.50 + Young Folks' Histories, by MISS YONGE and others. + 10 vols., illust. Each 1.50 + Yonge's Historical Stories. 4 vols., illust. Each 1.25 + The $1000 Prize Books. A fresh edition in new style of binding. + 16 vols., 12mo. 24.50 + The new $500 Prize Series. A fresh edition in new style of + binding. 13 vols., 12mo. 16.75 + The Original $500 Prize Series. A fresh edition in new style + of binding. 8 vols., 12mo. 12.00 + + + LOTHROP'S TEMPERANCE LIBRARY. + + No Sunday-school library is complete without some well-chosen volumes + showing the evils of intemperance, the great curse which good men and + women are everywhere endeavoring to remove. + + D. Lothrop & Co. publish among others the following admirable temperance + books. + + The only way Out. By J.W. Willing. $1.50 + John Bremm. By A.A. Hopkins. 1.25 + Sinner and Saint. By A.A. Hopkins. 1.25 + The Tempter Behind. By John Saunders. 1.25 + Good Work. By Mary D. Chellis. 1.50 + Mystery of the Lodge. By Mary D. Chellis. 1.50 + Finished or Not. By the author of "Fabrics." 1.50 + Modern Prophets. By Pansy and Faye Huntington. 1.50 + May Bell. By Hubert Newbury. 1.50 + + TEMPERANCE REFORMATION, The, and Its Claims upon the Christian + Church. By Rev. James Smith, of Scotland. 8vo. $2.50. + + Sunday-school teachers and superintendents will find the above books + admirably adapted to the purpose of teaching great moral lessons, while + they are also full of pleasure and interest to young readers. + + + LOTHROP'S POPULAR LOW-PRICE LIBRARIES. + + Among attractive and valuable Libraries issued in sets at prices which + place them not only beyond competition, but within the easy reach of + all, are + + Best Way Series. 3 vols., illust. $1.50 + Half Hour Library, by PANSY. 8 vols., illust. 3.20 + Little People's Home Library. 12 vols., illust. 3.00 + Little Pansy Series. 10 vols., illust. Cloth, $4.00; boards. 3.00 + Little May's Picture Library. 12 vols., illust. 2.40 + Mother's Boys and Girls, by PANSY. 12 vols., illust. 3.00 + Rainy Day Library. 8 vols., illust 4.00 + Spring Blossom. 12 vols., illust. 3.00 + Stories from the Bible, 1st and 2d Series. Each .15 + Twisty Clover Series. 6 vols., illust. 1.20 + Happy Thought Library. 6 vols., large 18mo. illust. 3.00 + Little Neighbor Series. 6 vols., large 18mo, illust. 1.50 + May and Tom Library. 5 vols., 18mo, illust. 3.00 + Sunny Dell Series. 6 vols., 18mo, illust. 3.60 + Side by Side Library. 3 vols., 16mo, illust. 1.80 + +======================================================================= + + + LOTHROP'S POPULAR PANSY BOOKS. + + The works of this popular author are universally acknowledged to be + among the very best of all books for Sunday-school reading. Earnest, + hopeful, practical, full of the spirit of Christian faith and courage, + they are also in the highest degree interesting. + + COMPLETE LIST OF THE PANSY BOOKS. + _Each volume, 12mo,_ $1.50. + + Chautauqua Girls at Home. + Divers Women. + Echoing and Re-echoing. + Endless Chain (An). + Ester Ried. + Ester Ried Yet Speaking. + Four Girls at Chautauqua. + From different Standpoints. + Hall in the Grove (The). + Household Puzzles. + Julia Ried. + King's Daughter (The). + Links in Rebecca's Life. + Mrs. Solomon Smith Looking On. + Modern Prophets. + Man of the House (The). + New Graft on the Family Tree (A). + Pocket Measure (The). + Ruth Erskine's Crosses. + Randolphs (The). + Sidney Martin's Christmas. + Those Boys. + Three People. + Tip Lewis and his Lamp. + Wise and Otherwise. + + _Each volume, 12mo_ $1.25. + + Cunning Workmen. + Dr. Deane's Way. + Grandpa's Darlings. + Miss Priscilla Hunter and my Daughter Susan. + Mrs. Deane's Way. + What she Said. + + _Each volume, 12mo,_ $1.25 + + Five Friends. + Mrs. Harry Harper's Awakening. + Next Things. + Pansy's Scrap Book, + Some young Heroines. + + _Each volume, 16mo._ 75 cents. + + Getting Ahead. + Mary Burton Abroad. + Pansies. + Six little Girls + That Boy Bob. + Two Boys. + + _Each volume 16mo,_ 75 cents. + + Bernie's White Chicken. + Docia's Journal. + Helen Lester. + Jessie Wells. + + MISCELLANEOUS. + + Hedge Fence (A)., 16mo, 60 c. + Side by Side, 16mo, 60 c. + Pansy's Picture Book. 4to, boards, 1.50; cloth 2.00 + The little Pansy Series. 10 vols., boards, 3.00; cloth 4.00 + Mother's Boys and Girls Library. 12 vols., quarto, boards. 3.00 + + + PANSY'S NEW BOOKS. + + Among the new books by this favorite author, which Sunday-school + Superintendents and all readers of her previous books will wish to + order, are + + A HEDGE FENCE. A story that will be particularly pleasing to + boys, most of whom will find in its hero a fair representation of + themselves, 16mo, 60 cents. + + AN ENDLESS CHAIN. From the introduction, on the first page, of + the new superintendent of the Packard Place Sabbath-school, to the end, + there is no flagging of interest in this bright, fresh, wholesome story. + Illustrated, 12mo, $1.50. + + SIDE BY SIDE. Short illustrated stories from Bible texts for the + help of boys and girls in their everyday duties. 16mo, cloth, 60 c. + + CHRISTIE'S CHRISTMAS. No more charming little heroine can be + found than the Christie of this volume, and the story of her journey to + spend Christmas, with the great variety of characters introduced, all of + them original and individual in their way, is perfectly novel and + interesting. + + As a guide to teachers, rich in suggestions and directions for methods + of teaching, etc., there is nothing better than PANSY'S SCRAP BOOK. + 12mo. Cloth, Illustrated $1.00. + + In fact all of Pansy's books have some special charm or attraction which + makes them a power for good whenever read. + + + LOTHROP'S SELECT SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARIES. + + _Every book in these marvellously cheap libraries will bear the + closest criticism_. Each is fresh and interesting in matter, + unexceptional in tone and excellent in literary style. These libraries + as a whole, considering their character and cost _have no + superiors_. + + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 12, 20 vols., $5.00 net. + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 9, 50 vols., $25.00 net. + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 10, 12 vols., $5.00 net. + Select Sunday-school Library, No. 11, 20 vols., $10.00 net. + Pansy's Primary Library, 30 vols., 7.50 net. + Select Primary Sunday-school Library, 36 vols., + in extra cloth binding, 5.50 net. + + + LOTHROP'S BOOKS FOR SUPERINTENDENTS. + + BIBLE READER, THE. By Rev. H.V. Dexter, D. D. 16mo., .50 + + BIBLE LESSONS FOR SUNDAY-SCHOOL CONCERTS AND ANNIVERSARIES. By + Edmund Clark, 18 numbers 5 cts. each. Bound in 16mo. vol, cloth, $1.00. + + BIBLE PICTURES. By Rev. Geo. B. Ide, D.D. 12mo, $2.00. + + FIFTY YEARS WITH THE SABBATH-SCHOOL. By Rev. Asa Bullard, D.D. + 12mo, cloth, $1.25. + + SELF-GIVING. A story of Christian missions. By Rev. W.F. + Bainbridge. 12mo, cloth, illustrated, $1.50. + + ROCK OF AGES. By Rev. S.F. Smith, D.D. A choice collection of + religious poems. 18mo, cloth, gilt edges, $1.25. + + STUDY OF NAHUM (A). By Professor Thom. H. Rich. 16mo, $.40 + + STORY OF THE PRAYERS OF CHRISTIAN HISTORY (The). By Hezekiah + Butterworth. 12mo. illustrated $1.50. + + WALK TO EMMAUS. By Rev. Nehemiah Adams. Charming specimens of + sermon literature. 12mo, $1.00. + + WARS OF THE JEWS. By Flavine Josephus. Translated by William + Whiston, M.A. 8vo, cloth, plain, $1.00. Extra cloth, gilt top, fully + illustrated, $1.50. + + WORK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT [The]; or, The New Birth. By Prof. Austin + Phelps, D.D. 16mo, $1.25. + + + LOTHROP'S BOOKS FOR ANNIVERSARIES AND CONCERTS. + + It is often a difficult matter to determine what to use for + Sunday-school anniversaries, etc. To those in doubt, we would suggest + the use of the following capital aids: + + BIBLE LESSONS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOLS, CONCERTS AND ANNIVERSARIES. By + Edmund Clark. 18 numbers, 5 cents each. Bound in one 16mo volume, cloth, + $1.00. + + HELP FOR SUNDAY-SCHOOL CONCERTS. By A.P. and M.T. Folsom. A + choice collection of poems. 16mo, $1.00. + + ENTERTAINMENTS. By Lizzie W. Champney. For concerts, exhibitions, + church festivals, etc. 15mo, Illustrated. $1.00 + + + A THOUSAND OTHER CHOICE BOOKS. + + The above, and a thousand other choice books which cannot be mentioned + here, make up a list from which superintendents and teachers can easily + select a VALUABLE LIBRARY at a low price. Send for full catalogue, + mailed free, and for special terms to those ordering any number of + volumes. Any book sent postage paid on receipt of price. + +======================================================================= + + + ELLA FARMAN'S BOOKS. + + Ella Farman is the editor of WIDE AWAKE, and her books are full of + sympathy with girl-life, always sunshiny and hopeful, always pointing + out new ways to do things and unexpected causes for happiness and + gladness. + + _9 vols. 12mo. Illust. $10.00._ + + Annie Maylie. + A Little Woman. + A Girl's Money. + A White Hand. + Grandma Crosby's Household. + Good-for-Nothing Polly. + How Two Girls Tried Farming. + Cooking Club of Tu-Whit Hollow. + Mrs. Hurd's Niece. + + JULIA A. EASTMAN'S BOOKS. + + Miss Eastman has a large circle of young admirers. She carries off the + palm as a writer of school-life stories, and teachers are always glad to + find their scholars reading her books. Miss Eastman's style is + characterized by quick movement, sparkling expression, and incisive + knowledge of human nature. + + _6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $7.50_ + + Kitty Kent. + Young Rick. + Romneys of Ridgemont, Short Comings and Long Goings. (The). + Striking for the Right. + School Days of Beulah Romney. + + REV. J.L. PRATT'S BOOKS. + + This set of books is valuable for its fitness to the needs of young + people who have come to the age when they begin to examine for + themselves into religious beliefs and opinions. They are interesting as + stories, abounding with beautiful descriptions and delicate portraitures + of character, and are everywhere favorites with the thoughtful and + meditative. + + _4 vols. 12mo. Illust. $6.00._ + + Evening Rest. + Bonnie AErie. + Branches of Palm. + Broken Fetters. + + MRS. A.E. PORTER'S BOOKS. + + Mrs. Porter is a favorite author with adult readers, as well as with + children. Her stories, always dealing largely with home-life, are well + calculated to make truthfulness and steadfastness and Christian living + the subjects of youthful admiration and imitation. + + _5 vols. 12mo. Illust. $6.25._ + + This One Thing I Do. + Millie Lee. + Sunset Mountain. + My Hero. + Glencoe Parsonage. + + BY AUTHOR OF ANDY LUTTRELL + + Powerful books, dealing with knotty problems, and positive in their + religious teaching. They are perennial favorites with all classes of + readers. + + _6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $7.50._ + + Andy Luttrell. + Barbara. + Talbury Girls. + Strawberry Hill. + Silent Tom. + Hidden Treasure. + + MRS. E.D. KENDALL'S WORKS. + + Each full of earnestness of purpose, and impressing a life lesson on the + reader's mind. Excellent for boys. + + _3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $3.75._ + + Judge's Sons. + The Stanifords of Staniford's Folly. + Master and Pupil. + + MARY J. CAPRON'S BOOKS. + + These books are thoroughly healthy and stimulating, and admirably + adapted to put into the hands of thoughtful young people to lead them to + right ideas on the fundamental truths of the religious life. + + _4 vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00._ + + Plus and Minus. + Gold and Gilt. + Maybee's Stepping Stones. + Mrs. Thorne's Guests. + + REV. Z.A. MUDGE'S WORKS. + + This well known author's works are among the most popular in the + Sunday-school library. + + _3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $3.75._ + + Shell Cove. + Luck of Alden Farm. + Boat Builders. + + CHARLOTTE M. YONGE'S HISTORIES. + + Miss Yonge, while always boldly and continuously outlining the course of + historical events, has the knack of seizing upon incidents which reveal + the true character of historical personages. These histories are + attractive as romance and possess a peculiar power of impressing the + memory, being written from a Christian standpoint they are very + desirable books for Sunday-school libraries. + + _6 vols. 12mo. Illust. $9.00._ + + Young Folks' History of Germany. + Young Folks' History of Greece. + Young Folks' History of Rome. + Young Folks' History of England. + Young Folks' History of France. + Young Folks' Bible History. + + SPARE MINUTE SERIES + + These are bright and pithy and soul-stirring volumes, quickening the + intellect of the reader and warming the heart. + + _4 vols. 12mo. $4.00._ + + Thoughts that Breathe. _From_ Dean Stanley. Introduction by + Phillips Brooks. + + Cheerful Words. _From_ George MacDonald. Introduction by James T. + Fields. + + The Might of Right. _From_ Rt. Hon. Wm. E. Gladstone. Introduction + by John D. Long. + + True Manliness. _From_ Thomas Hughes. Introduction by James Russell + Lowell. + + W.H.G. KINGSTON'S BOOKS. + + These stories are intensely interesting and graphic and enforce the + highest and most practical lessons. + + _3 vols. 12mo. Illust. $8.00._ + + Voyage of the Steadfast. + Charley Laurel. + Virginia. + Little Ben Hadden. + Young Whaler. + Fisher Boy. + Peter the Ship Boy. + Ralph and Dick. + + BUNGENER HISTORICAL SERIES. + + From the French of L.L.F. Bungener. These works are of thrilling + interest, illustrating the religious struggles, heroism and social life + of the times of Louis XIV. and XV. + + _4 Vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00._ + + Bourdaloue and Louis XIV. + Louis XV. and his Times. + Rabaut and Bridaine. + The Tower of Constancy. + + BANVARD'S AMERICAN HISTORY. + + Every library should be furnished with this series of American + Histories.--_New England Farmer_. + + No more interesting and instructive reading can be put into the hands of + youth.--_Portland Transcript_. + + Every American should own these books.--_Scientific American_. + + _5 vols. 12mo. Illust. $5.00._ + + Southern Explorers. + Soldiers and Patriots. + Pioneers of the New World. + Plymouth and the Pilgrims. + First Explorers of North America. + + DR. NEHEMIAH ADAMS' WORKS. + + _12 vols. 12mo. $12.00._ + + At Eventide. + Agnes; or, the Litte Key. + Bertha. + Broadcast. + Christ a Friend. + Communion Sabbath. + Catherine. + Cross in the Cell. + Endless Punishment. + Evenings wish the Doctrines. + Friends of Christ. + Under the Mizzen-Mast. + + D. LOTHROP & CO., Publishers, 32 Franklin St., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + MARGARET SIDNEY'S BOOKS. + + The brightness and versatility of this charming writer are well shown in + the following stories which cover a wide range, and are attractive to + all ages, from wide awake schoolboys and eager schoolgirls to thoughtful + readers of maturer years. As a delineator of character, especially that + of the New England type, she has few superiors, and her pictures of + child life are especially pleasing. + + + FIVE LITTLE PEPPERS, AND HOW THEY GREW. + Extra cloth binding, very elegant die in colors and gold. + 12mo, illust. 1.50 + + PETTIBONE NAME (The). V.I.F. Series, + 12mo, cloth. 1.25 + + SO AS BY FIRE. + 12mo, illust. 1.25 + + WHO TOLD IT TO ME. + Double chromo cover, fully illustrated. 1.25; Extra cloth binding. 1.75 + + WHAT THE SEVEN DID. + Quarto, fully illustrated, board cover designed by J. Wells Champney, + 1.75; extra cloth, very elegant side and back stamp. 2.25 + + HALF YEAR AT BRONCKTON. + 16mo, illust. 1.25 + + HOW THEY WENT TO EUROPE. + 16mo, illust. 1.00 + + GOLDEN WEST (The), as seen by the Ridgway Club. + Quarto, illustrated, boards, 1.75; extra cloth binding. 2.25 + + (Nearly ready). + + + EDWARD A. RAND'S BOOKS. + + Mr. Rand's strong, helpful, interesting stories have made him such a + favorite among boys and among all other who read his books, as to make + comment upon them almost needless. The racy incidents and sparkling + style which characterize his stories, arouse interest at once, and there + is in them an under-current of earnestness, and an influence for good + which will remain after the stories are forgotten. + + + ALL ABOARD FOR SUNRISE LANDS. + Chromo board cover, 1.75; extra cloth binding. 2.25 + + BARK CABIN ON KEARSARGE. + 16mo, cloth, illust. 1.00 + + TENT IN THE NOTCH, THE. + 16mo, cloth, gilt. 1.00 + + ROY'S DORY AT THE SEASHORE. A sequel to "Pushing Ahead." + Large 16mo, cloth, illust. 1.25 + + ALL ABOARD FOR THE LAKES AND MOUNTAINS. + Boards, 1.75; extra cloth. 2.25 + + PUSHING AHEAD; or, Big Brother Dave. + 16mo. 1.25 + + LITTLE BROWN-TOP: and the People under It. + 12mo, illust. 1.25 + + + MARIE OLIVER'S STORIES. + + As a writer of fascinating stories for girls, Marie Oliver has a host of + admirers who watch eagerly for any new book from her pen, and find in + her a friendly and wise helper. + + MARIE OLIVER'S STORIES. + 4 volumes, 12mo, cloth, illustrated. 6.00 + + Margie's Mission. + Old and New Friends. + Ruby Hamilton. + Seba's Discipline. + + + THE BAINBRIDGE BOOKS. + + These books, written by the Rev. W.F. Bainbridge and his wife, are + the outcome of their experience in a trip around the world undertaken + because of their interest in Christian Missions. They not only abound + in interesting descriptions of the numerous places visited, but present + such a record of lofty purposes and noble endeavors as will furnish + inspiration to all readers. + + + AROUND THE WORLD TOUR OF CHRISTIAN MISSIONS. By W. F. BAINBRIDGE. + With maps of Prevailing Religions and all Leading Mission Stations. + 8vo, cloth. 2.00 + + ROUND THE WORLD LETTERS. By LUCY SEAMAN BAINBRIDGE. + 8vo, cloth, illustrated. 1.50 + + SELF-GIVING. A story of Christian Missions. By REV. W. F. BAINBRIDGE. + 12mo, cloth, illust. 1.50 + + + MRS. S.R. GRAHAM CLARK'S BOOKS. + + There is not a book on the list of Mrs. Clark's delightfully + entertaining writings which is not thoroughly good from whatever + point of view considered. + + YENSIE WALTON BOOKS. + 12mo, cloth, illust $1.50 each. 5 volumes. 7.50 + + Yensie Walton. + Our Street. + Yensie Walton's Womanhood. + The Triple E. + Achor. + + + MISS YONGE'S HISTORICAL STORIES. There are very many, especially + among the young, who are not attracted to the study of history, as + presented in ordinary historical works, but who are attracted to it + through the reading of books in which it is interwoven with romance. All + such will be charmed with Miss Yonge's Historical Stories, which + instruct while they interest, and are written in the fascinating style + which has made her one of the most popular writers of the day. + + YONGE'S HISTORICAL STORIES. + 4 vols, 12mo. 5.00 + + The Little Duke. + The Prince and the Page. + Lances of Lynwood. + Golden Deeds. + + + THE FAMILY FLIGHTS. + + By Rev. E.E. Hale and Miss Susan Hale. + + Fresh, piquant, graphic, full of delicate humor, marked by grace in + diction and thorough scholarship, these books are not only unsurpassed, + but unequalled by any books of similar character. They treat of the + interesting features of the various countries named, including history, + geography, natural scenery, popular characteristics and customs, and + much else that will prove of real interest and value to the reader. The + authors have drawn their material from original sources, the countries + referred to having been actually visited, and the descriptions embody + the results of personal observation. The illustrations are not only + numerous and excellent, but in perfect harmony with the text. While + specially attractive to the young, adult readers who have themselves + visited the lands described, are among the most appreciative and + enthusiastic readers of these books. + + A FAMILY FLIGHT AROUND HOME. + 8vo, cloth, gilt. 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT THROUGH FRANCE, GERMANY, NORWAY AND SWITZERLAND. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt. 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT OVER EGYPT AND SYRIA. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt. 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT THROUGH SPAIN. + 8vo, illuminated board covers and linings, 2.00; extra cloth, gilt, 2.50 + + A FAMILY FLIGHT TO MEXICO. Uniform with the above. In preparation. + + + ABBY MORTON DIAZ'S BOOK. + + Bright and keen as steel, Mrs. Diaz invests all that she writes with a + peculiar charm, whether it be a fantastic story of kittens that will + make the little ones wild with glee, a series of "jolly" books for older + boys and girls, or a thoughtful treatise on the serious questions which + most interest the mothers in every home. + + CHRONICLES OF THE STIMPCETT FAMILY. + Quarto, chromo lithograph cover. 1.25 + + KING GRIMALKUM AND PUSSYANITA; or, The Cats' Arabian Nights. + Quarto, illust. 1.25 + + POLLY COLOGNE SERIES. 3 vols. 3.00 + + Polly Cologne. + The Jimmyjohns. + A Story Book for Children. + + WILLIAM HENRY BOOKS. 3 volumes. 3.00 + + William Henry Letters. + Lucy Maria. + William Henry and his Friends. + + DOMESTIC PROBLEMS: Work and Culture in the Household. 1.00 + +======================================================================= + + + D. LOTHROP & COMPANY'S BULLETIN OF NEW BOOKS. + + + History of China. + + By Robert K. Douglass. 12MO, CLOTH, ILLUSTRATED, $1.50. + + Until this book appeared, a thoroughly good one-volume history of the + "Walled Kingdom" for popular use, was not to be had. There have been + many works upon China and the Chinese, but of these few have attempted + to summarize the history of that great empire and its citizens in a + single comprehensive work, and none have done so with such success as to + meet the popular need. In this volume we have an authentic, scholarly + and most interesting summary of Chinese history from the earliest period + to the present time. In addition to the careful editing of Mr. Arthur + Gilman, the book has had the advantage of the critical abilities of the + young Chinese scholar, Mr. Yan Phou Lee, of Yale College. The volume is + richly illustrated with appropriate engravings, and will rank among + standard books. + + + Southern Alaska and the Sitkan Archipelago. + + By Eliza Ruhama Scidmore. FULLY ILLUSTRATED, 12MO, CLOTH, $1.50. + + No book yet published bears any comparison with this volume in respect + of valuable and authentic information relating to the history, + geography, topography, climate, natural scenery, inhabitants, and rich + resources of this wonderful _terra incognita_. The author, who is a + writer of well-known reputation, has had exceptional opportunities for + the preparation of her attractive work, having visited the regions + described, at different periods, under most favorable circumstances, and + having had access to the government documents relating to the history + and surveys of Alaska, aside from the kindly assistance of the experts + and scientists best acquainted with that marvellous region. Her book has + all of the interest of a delightfully written story of adventures in a + comparatively unknown region, and with the additional value which it + possesses as the only approach thus far made to trustworthy treatise + upon the history and resources of Alaska it will commend itself to all + persons interested in that country, either as students or + _voyageurs_. + + + Many Colored Threads. + + Selections from the writings of Goethe, edited by Carrie Adelaide + Cook. EXTRA CLOTH, $1.00. + + Those familiar with the writings of the great German author, and those + who know little of them, will be alike interested in this collection of + "best thoughts." Eloquence, pathos, romance, philosophy--a wide range of + sentiment and feeling, characteristic of the life of Goethe--are + revealed in these selections. The book is a worthy companion to the six + preceding volumes of the widely-circulated "Spare Minute + Series"--_Thoughts that Breathe_, Dean Stanley; _Cheerful + Words_, George MacDonald; _The Might of Right_, Gladstone; + _True Manliness_, Thos. Hughes; _Living Truths_, Charles + Kingsley; _Right to the Point_, Dr. Cuyler. + + + Wide Awake, Volume I. + + PLAIN CLOTH BINDING, $1.75; EXTRA BINDING, COVERS STAMPED IN COLORS AND + GOLD, $2.25. + + Including Charles Egbert Craddock's serial story "Down the Ravine," with + other serials by famous authors, and nearly three hundred original + illustrations by celebrated artists. + +======================================================================= + + + Baccalaureate Sermons. + By Rev. A.B. Peabody, D.D.LL.D. 12MO, $1.25. + + The sermons contained in this volume, delivered before the graduating + classes of Harvard University, it is safe to say are not excelled by any + productions of their kind. They are not only rarely appropriate, as + discourses addressed to educated young men upon the threshold of active + life, but are models of logical thought, and graceful rhetoric worthy + the study of all ministers. + + + Interrupted. + By Pansy (Mrs. G.R. Alden). EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, $1.50. + + It has all the charm of this most popular author's fascinating style, + grown riper each year, and possessing more of the peculiar power by + which she adapts herself to her varied audience. More than a hundred + thousand of Pansy's books are sold every year. + + + Within the Shadow. + By Dorothy Holroyd. 12MO, CLOTH, $1.25. + + "The most successful book of the year." "The plot is ingenious, yet not + improbable, the character drawing strong and vigorous, the story + throughout one of brilliancy and power." "The book cannot help making a + sensation."--_Boston Transcript._ "The author is an original and + vigorous writer, and at once takes rank with the best writers of + American fiction."--_Toledo Journal._ "A story of such brilliancy + and power as to at once entitle its author to recognition as a writer of + high ability."--_Journal Press_, St. Cloud. "The author has skill + in invention with the purest sentiment and good natural + style."--_Boston Globe._ + + + How Success is Won. + (Little Biographies. Third Series.) By Sarah K. Bolton. PRICE, $1. + + This is the best of the recent books of this popular class of biography; + all its "successful men" are Americans, and with two or three exceptions + they are living and in the full tide of business and power. In each + case, the facts have been furnished to the author by the subject of the + biography, or by family friends; and Mrs. Bolton has chosen from this + authentic material those incidents which most fully illustrate the + successive steps, and the ruling principles, by which success has been + gained. A portrait accompanies each biography. + + + In Case of Accident. + By Dr. D.A. Sargent. ILLUSTRATED. PRICE, 60 CENTS. + + This little handbook is worth its weight in gold, and should be found on + the most convenient shelf of every family library. The author is + connected with the Harvard College Gymnasium, and the contents of the + volume are made up of practical talks delivered before the ladies' class + of the Gymnasium. His aim is to give such practical information as will + aid to self-preservation in times of danger, and to teach a few of the + simplest methods of meeting the common accidents and emergencies of + life. The illustrations are numerous and excellent. + + + The Arnold Birthday Book. + Edited by his Daughters. $1.25. + + With an autograph introductory poem by Edwin Arnold, and choice + quotations from his poems for every day. The many admirers of the "Light + of Asia" will gladly welcome this graceful souvenir of the author, which + is handsomely illustrated and daintily finished. + +======================================================================= + + The Evolution of Dodd. + By William Hawley Smith. EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, $1.00. + + This remarkable book is destined to create as great a stir, in its way, + as "Ginx's Baby," although written in an entirely different style. It + treats of phases of young life as seen through the spectacles of a + keen-eyed man, sharp enough to let none of the intricacies of the newer + systems of education evade him. It should be read by every parent, + teacher, and public school officer in this or any other country. While + for pure amusement in watching Dodd's evolution, it is one of the + richest books of the season. + + + Red Letter Stories. + Translated from the German by Miss Lucy Wheelock. PRICE 60 CENTS. + + Madame Johanna Spyri is pronounced by competent critics the best living + German writer for children. Miss Lucy Wheelock of the Chauncy Hall + School, Boston, has gracefully translated some of her most charming + tales, under the above title. This delightful volume, prettily bound and + illustrated, is one of the best selling books of the season. + + + The Gray Masque and Other Poems. + By Mary B. Dodge. ILLUSTRATED, EXTRA CLOTH, $1.25. + + The name of this author, whose reputation is already established, will + be at once recognized in connection with some of the choicest bits of + poetry contributed to recent periodical literature, such as "Indian + Summer," "My Baby," "Frozen Crew," etc., all of which, with many new and + equally excellent poems, are offered to the public in this unusually + attractive volume. + + + Memorial of Rev. Warren H. Cudworth. + By His Sister; WITH PORTRAIT, 380 PAGES, $1.50. + + Simply told and remarkably interesting is this story of the life of one + of the most saintly of Christian men. It will be welcomed and read with + satisfaction by all who knew him, and to those who never saw him, it + will be full of suggestive thought. + + + Money in Politics. + By Hon. J.K. Upton. LATE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE UNITED STATES + TREASURY. EXTRA CLOTH, GILT TOP. 12MO, $1.25. + + This volume presents a complete history of money, or the circulating + medium, in the United States, from the colonial days to the present + time. Mr. Edward Atkinson, in his introduction, pronounces it the most + valuable work of the kind yet published. + + + Lift up Your Hearts. + Compiled and arranged by Rose Porter. 25 CENTS. + + Helpful thoughts for overcoming the world. A vest pocket volume, in + dainty, flexible covers, printed in sepia. Bound in red cloth. + + + A Romance of the Revolution. + (A Double Masquerade.) By Rev. Charles R. Talbot. EXTRA CLOTH, 12MO, + $1.25. + + With illustrations by Share, Merrill and Taylor made from careful + studies. The portion describing the battle of Bunker Hill, as seen by + the boys, has been said to be one of the most graphic and telling + accounts ever written of that famous conflict. + +======================================================================= + + + Health at Home Library. + Or, Mental and Physical Hygiene. By J. Mortimer Granville. + 5 VOLS., 16MO, CLOTH, SOLD SEPARATELY, EACH SIXTY CENTS, + THE LIBRARY $3.00. + + I. THE SECRET OF A CLEAR HEAD, chapters on temperature, habits, + pleasures, etc. + + II. SLEEP AND SLEEPLESSNESS, chapters on the nature of sleep, going to + sleep, sleeping, awakening, sleeplessness, sleep and food. + + III. THE SECRET OF A GOOD MEMORY, chapters on what memory is, how it + works, taking in, storing, remembering, etc. + + IV. COMMON MIND TROUBLES, chapters on defects in memory, confusion of + thought, sleeplessness, hesitancy and errors in speech, low spirits, etc. + + V. HOW TO MAKE THE BEST OF LIFE, chapters on what constitutes health, on + feeling, breathing, drinking, eating, overwork, change, etc. + + + Philosophiae Quaestor. + Or, Days at Concord. By Julia R. Anagnos. 12MO, 60 CENTS. + + In this interesting book Mrs. Anagnos, one of the accomplished daughters + of Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, presents under cover of a pleasing narrative, a + sketch of the memorable Emerson and other sessions of the Concord School + of Philosophy. It has for its frontispiece an excellent picture of the + building occupied by this renowned school. + + + Illiteracy and Mormonism. + By Henry Randall Waite, Ph.D., LATE STATISTICIAN UNITED STATES + CENSUS, SECRETARY INTER-STATE COMMISSION ON FEDERAL AID TO EDUCATION. + 12MO, ANTIQUE PAPER COVERS, 25 CENTS. + + These papers, as they appeared, in substance, in the _Princeton + Review_, attracted wide attention, and were characterized as "broad, + scholarly, and statesmanlike," and as "the most thoughtful and + conclusive arguments upon these subjects yet presented." "They demand + thoughtful consideration and respect."--_Boston Transcript_. + + + Stories from the Pansy. + SECOND SERIES, FULLY ILLUSTRATED, SIX VOLUMES IN A NEAT BOX, THE SET + $1.80. + + A library of delightful short stories in which instruction is pleasingly + blended with entertainment. These stories, culled from the writings of + well-known authors, will command the favor of parents seeking the best + books for their children, and of those who desire the most acceptable + books for Sunday-school libraries. + + + In the Woods and Out. + By Pansy. ILLUSTRATED, 12MO, CLOTH, $1.00. + + Here is a book admirably suited to the needs of that large class of + young folks who wish at times to read, or have read to them, the + choicest of short tales. Mothers and older sisters will make a note of + this, and for the twilight hour when the young folks clamor for "a + story," will provide themselves with "In the Woods and Out." + + + Couldn't be Bought. + A Book for the Sunday-school Library. By Faye Huntington. + 16MO, CLOTH, ILLUSTRATED, 75 CENTS. + + For genuine excellence in both manner and sentiment, few writers of + books for the young excel the author of this excellent character study. + It is a book which will be equally interesting and profitable. + +======================================================================= + + + _FALL TERM_ + OF THE + NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY + OF + Music begins Sept. 10,1885. + + NEW CLASSES + Will be formed for beginners as well as for advanced + + MUSIC Voice, Piano, Organ, Violin, Orchestral Instruments, + Harmony, Theory and Timing. + + ART Drawing, Painting, Portraiture, Modeling, Wood Carving + and Embroidery. + + ORATORY Vocal Technique, Elocution, Dramatic and Forensic Art + + LANGUAGES French, German and Italian. + + ENGLISH BRANCHES Arithmetic, Algebra, Grammar, Rhetoric, English + Literature and Latin. + + PHYSICAL CULTURE A well equipped Gymnasium. + + HOME Elegant accommodations for Lady Students, $4.50 to $7.50 per week, + including steam heat and electric light in every room, elevator, etc. + + Classes in Sight Singing, Church Music, Glees, Chorus Work, Analysis of + Symphonies, Lectures on Music, Art and Literature by eminent + specialists, concerts, recitals, etc., amounting in all to 180 hours per + term, _Free_ to all regular Students in any department. Send for + beautiful illustrated calendar, free, to + + E. TOURJEE, Director, _Franklin Sq., Boston, Mass._ +-------------------------------------- + + CHARLES K. WADHAM & CO., + + 166 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER OF BLANK BOOKS, + _Scrap Albums_ +----AND---- + _Fine Stationery._ + + A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS +----AND---- + GENERAL STATIONERS' GOODS + + _Pocket Books, Christmas Novelties in great variety._ +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + GLOBE LETTER FILING _CABINETS_. + _Most Perfect System Known._ + All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files. + Over $20,000 worth in use in Boston alone. + + _Quick Reference_. + _No Mutilation of Papers_. + _Rapid Filing_. + _Handsome Workmanship_. + + W.W. EDWARDS, SELLING AGENT, + _The Globe Files Company_, 166 Devonshire St., Boston. + + SCRAP FILES. ROLL TOP DESKS. + PAMPHLET CASES. CLOTH BOXES, all sizes. + DOCUMENT BOXES. 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Commissioner for New Hampshire. +-------------------------------------- + +Bay State Monthly Company, Publishers and Printers, 43 Milk Street, Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + THE + + New England Business Directory + + _AND GAZETTEER_ + + For 1885. + + _A very Valuable Book of Reference to every Business Man._ + + CONTAINING CAREFULLY COLLECTED LISTS OF THE + + Merchants, Manufacturers, Professional and other Business Men + throughout the six New England States, classified by Business, Town, + and Post-Office. + + ALSO + + Banks, Savings Banks, Insurance, Manufacturing, Gas-Light and other + Incorporated Companies. Post-Offices, Newspapers, Colleges, Academies, + Expresses, Railroads, Together with other useful information often + required in the COUNTING-ROOM. + + A COMPLETE NEW ENGLAND GAZETTEER + + Is a prominent feature of this edition, comprising a concise description + of the Cities, Towns, Villages and Post-Offices, showing Population, + Telegraph and Railroad Stations, Money Order Offices, etc. + + _A Colored Map of New England Accompanies Each Book_. + + The whole forming a large Octavo Volume of 1892 pages, handsomely + printed on fine paper, and substantially bound. + + PRICE SIX DOLLARS. + + _Sampson, Murdoch, & Co._, + (Formerly Sampson, Davenport, & Co.) + PUBLISHERS, 155 FRANKLIN STREET, BOSTON. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. + WITH 40 MAPS. + + BY COL. HENRY B. CARRINGTON, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D. + + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. + + A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. + + + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:-- + + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.--_Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey_. + + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.--_Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y._ + + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.--_Henry Day, N.Y._ + + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.--_Geo. + Bancroft_. + + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.--_Benson J. Lossing_. + + The maps are just splendid.--_Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J._ + + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.--_Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y._ + + Of permanent standard authority.--_Gen. De Peister, N.Y._ + + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.--_Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris_. + + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.--_Z. Chandler_. + + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.--_B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis_. + + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.--_London Telegraph_. + + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.--_Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England_. + + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.--_Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State_. + + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.--_A. de + Rochambeau, Paris_. + + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.--_Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England_. + + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.--_Harper's + Magazine_. + + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.--_N.Y. Times_. + + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.--_The Nation_. + + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. + + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.--_Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J._ + + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.--_Gen. W.T. + Sherman_. +-------------------------------------- + + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. + + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. + + Published by A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York. + + + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. + + The RED Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. + + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. + + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." + + THE SECRETARY OF WAR has placed the "BATTLE MAPS AND CHARTS" at ARMY + POST SCHOOLS, at government expense. + + FIVE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF WASHINGTON accompany the volume. The ST. MEMIN + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also PEALE'S painting + (1772), HOUDON'S bust (1784). TRUMBULL'S painting (1792) and STUART'S + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. + + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. + + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. + + + NOTICES. + + Invaluable to the student of American History.--_Baltimore (Md.) + Herald_. + + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.--_Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.--_The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)_. + + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.--_N.Y. + Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.--_N.Y. Evening + Post_. + +======================================================================= + + + PERMANENT. + +[Illustration: CREOSOTE STAINS. Patented Apr. 29th, 1884. for Shingles, +Clapboards & other exterior woodwork. Sam'l Cabot Jr. Sole Manufacturer +70 Kilby St. Boston. 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EASTON, MASS. + +[Illustration: Map] + + This is the Purest and Most Effective of all Medicinal Spring Waters. + Possessing remarkable Curative Properties for diseases of the + _STOMACH_, _LIVER_, _KIDNEYS_ and _BLADDER_. + + A MILD CATHARTIC AND ACTIVE DIURETIC. + + PROF. RAPHAEL PUMPELLY, Chemist National Board of Health. + + [NOTE.--This analysis, with a letter of recommendation from Prof. + Pumpelly, was read before the Newport Sanitary Protective Society, + Jan. 12, 1884.] + + _PARTS IN 1,000,000_ + + Total Residue 44.6 + Silica 11.5 + Iron and Alumina 0.7 + Lime 10.5 + Magnesia 1.5 + Chlorine 4.6 + Ammonia 0.06 + Albumoid Ammonia 0.06 + + The above analysis shows a total residue of about 2.6 grains in one + gallon of 231 cubic inches. + + The object of the above analysis is to show the great purity of this + water. Its curative properties cannot be determined by a chemical + analysis. No combination of the above-mentioned minerals alone would + produce the same effects. The Spring possesses a peculiarity and an + individuality of its own which no one ever has been able to explain. + It is one of Nature's remedies. Its medicinal effects can only be + determined by a thorough trial. + + + Messrs. HOWARD BROS., + BOSTON, April 24, 1885. + + _Dear Sirs_,--"After many careful trials of the Simpson Spring + Water in urinary disorders, extending over one year, I am convinced + (despite my previous prejudices, excited by the extravagant claims made + for other Springs,) that its _properties_ are + _characteristic_, and as _clinically trustworthy_ as are those + of terebinthina, lithia, or many other of the partially proven drugs. I + have found it surprisingly gratifying as an adjuvant in the cure of + albuminuria, and in lowering the specific gravity of the urine in + Saccharine Diabetes its action is promptly and lastingly helpful. It is + mildly cathartic and an active diuretic." + + DR. J. HEBER SMITH, + _Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of + Medicine._ + + Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and + Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by + + _HOWARD BROS., Managers_, + 117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.) + + ==OR== + + GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York. + +======================================================================= + + + H.E. Abbott Insurance Agency. + FIRE AND MARINE. LIFE AND ACCIDENT. + + THIS AGENCY REPRESENTS + + ROYAL INSURANCE CO., of Liverpool + SUN FIRE OFFICE, of London + HANOVER, of New York + WASHINGTON, of Boston + QUINCY MUTUAL, of Quincy + NORTHERN, of London + FIRE ASSOCIATION, of Philadelphia + PENNSYLVANIA, of Philadelphia + TRADER'S, of Chicago + DORCHESTER MUTUAL of Boston + OLD WORCESTER MUTUAL, of Worcester. + + And other first-class Companies which have established a _reputation + second to none for liberal adjustment and prompt payment in case of + loss._ + + OFFICES + ADVERTISER BUILDING, BOSTON. + WASHINGTON STREET, BROOKLINE. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration: LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE.] + + _LACTART._ + (MILK ACID.) +----FOR---- + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain. + _A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY._ + + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. 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See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. _SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS._ + + AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St., BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + REMOVED TO 98 FRONT ST. + _Kyes and Woodbury_, Designers and Wood Engravers, + WORCESTER, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + Established by ISAIAH THOMAS in 1770. + The oldest Book and Job Printing Office in the United States. + + BOOK AND JOB PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION + _Neatly and Promptly Executed and at Fair Prices._ + + DANIEL SEAGRAVE, 442 MAIN STREET, WORCESTER, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + CHARLES HAMILTON, _BOOK, JOB & CARD PRINTER_, + 311 MAIN STREET, WORCESTER, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + THE SOUTH. + A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress. + + _ESTABLISHED 1871._ + + The South is conducted with candor and independence, and is invaluable + to all who are interested in the industrial developement of the Southern + States. + + Published by the South Publishing Co., 85 Warren St., New York. Branch + offices: _Advertiser Building, Boston, Mass._, Ocala, Fla., Atlanta, + Ga., Lamar, Mo., Huntsville, Ala., Raleigh, N.C., London, Eng. + +======================================================================= + + + CANTON BLEACH. + + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. + + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. + + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. + + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. + + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have _examined the_ + "_Canton Bleach_." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + _see the goods_; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, _to see if the stamp_ "Canton Bleach" is on it. + + NOTICE.--Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by MESSRS. C.F. HOVEY & CO., SHEPARD, + NORWELL & CO., HOGG, BROWN & TAYLOR, CHANDLER & CO., R.H. WHITE & CO., + JORDAN, MARSH & CO., and others. + + [Illustration: CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882] + + [Illustration: TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK] + + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. + + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the + + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + EDWARD W. HOWE, Treas. JAS. L. LITTLE, JR., Pres. + +======================================================================= + + + NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY + +[Illustration: New England Conservatory of Music Franklin Square Boston] + + _Largest and Best-Appointed School of Music, Literature and Art in the + World._ + + MUSIC is taught in all its departments, Instrumental and Vocal, + including Pianoforte, Organ, Violin, and all Orchestral and Band + Instruments, Voice Culture and Singing, Harmony, Theory and + Orchestration, Church Music, Oratorio and Chorus Practice, Art of + Conducting; also, Tuning and Repairing Pianos and Organs. All under the + very best teachers, in classes and private. + + SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS.--Drawing, Painting, and Modeling from Casts and + from Nature, in Crayon, Water and Oil Colors; Portraiture and China + Decorating with some of the best artists in the country. In classes and + private. + + COLLEGE OF ORATORY.--Vocal Technique, Elocution, Rhetorical Oratory, + Dramatic and Lyric Art. + + SCHOOL OF MODERN LANGUAGES.--French, German and Italian, under best + foreign professors.--Thorough course leading to Diploma. + + SCHOOL OF GENERAL LITERATURE.--Common and higher English branches, + Latin, Mathematics and Literature. + + THE NEW HOME is located in the heart of Boston, confessedly the Musical, + Literary and Artistic Centre of America. The beautiful park in front, + and the surrounding broad streets make it both healthful and delightful. + It is splendidly equipped for both Home and the Schools, furnishing Home + accommodations for 500 lady students, and Class Accommodations for 3000 + lady and gentleman students. + + COLLATERAL ADVANTAGES. Well equipped Gymnasium, resident physician, + large musical and general library; and free classes, lectures by eminent + specialists, recitals, concerts, etc., amounting to 180 hours per term. + + RECENT ADDITIONS TO THE FACULTIES.--The maestro Augusto Rotoli, the + great Italian Tenor and singing teacher; Herr Carl Faelten, foremost + pianist and teacher; Leandro Campanari, Violin Virtuoso teacher; Prof. + W. J. Rolfe, the eminent Shakespearean Scholar and Critic; Mr. William + Willard, the famous portrait painter; Mlle. Emilie Faller, artist from + Paris, and Mr. Jas. E. Phillips, steward and caterer, of 20 years' + experience. + + 2003 students, from 55 states, territories, British Provinces and + foreign countries in attendance last year. + + TUITION, $5 to $20 per Term. Board and room, $4.50 to $7.50 per week. + Steam heat and Electric light in all rooms. + + Fall Term Begins September 10, 1885. + + Send for new and beautifully illustrated Calendar, free, to, + E. TOURJEE, DIR., FRANKLIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + THE OLD CORNER BOOK STORE. + + The above illustration, especially prepared by Harper and Brothers for + George P. Lathrop's article on "Literary and Social Life in Boston," + that appeared in _Harper's Monthly Magazine_ for February, is a + good representation of the outward appearance of the quaint and + picturesque old building standing on the corner of Washington and School + Streets. + + Famous as the "Corner Store" is as an old landmark, it is justly more + famous as the intellectual birthplace of many of the best known works in + American literature, the firm of Ticknor & Fields--whose publishing + foresight and enterprise have imperishably connected their names with + American authors--having occupied it during one of the most brilliant + chapters of American literary history. + + Under the energetic auspices of Cupples, Upham & Co., it has become one + of the most complete retail book establishments in the country, and so + popular a resort that all Boston may with a little exaggeration be said + to pass through it in a day. To every stranger it is, from its present + literary attractiveness, a place not to be overlooked. The literary men + of Boston make it their lounging-place and chief rendezvous. To stroll + into the "Old Corner" for a chat, a glimpse at the last new book and + magazine, is with them a daily duty, as it is with the Bostonian + generally. It is a popular shopping-place with ladies, who patronize its + church department for works of devotion, prayer books, hymnals, and + Bibles. The reason of the extensive patronage which the establishment + receives from all classes of readers is due to its admirable department + system. It has a department for medical, scientific, and agricultural + works; another for maps, globes, and guide books; another for + theological literature; another for books in fine bindings, illustrated + works, etc; another for sporting and yachting books, and out-door + literature generally; one for juvenile books; another for English books, + as well as one for American miscellaneous works; and, lastly, special + counters for newspapers, periodicals, and novels. It is seldom without + the last "new thing" in English, French, or American literature. + + The firm does an extensive importing business, and pays special + attention to the supplying of Town Libraries and Clubs. + +======================================================================= + + + CARRINGTON'S BATTLES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. + WITH 40 MAPS. + + BY COL. HENRY B. CARRINGTON, U.S.A., A.M., LL.D. + + Cloth, $6. Sheep, $7.50. Half Calf (various styles) or Half Mor., $9 + Half Russia or Full Mor., $12. + + A.S. Barnes & Co., Publishers, New York and Chicago. Author's + address, 32 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. + + + THE FOLLOWING ARE EXTRACTS FROM MORE THAN 1,000 ENDORSEMENTS OF THIS + VOLUME:-- + + To me at least, it will be an authority. A book of permanent value, not + milk for babes but strong meat for men.--_Ex-Pres. T.D. Woolsey_. + + Fills an important place in History, not before occupied.--_Wm. M. + Everts, N.Y._ + + The maps themselves are a History, invaluable, and never before + supplied.--_Henry Day, N.Y._ + + An entirely new field of Historical labor. A splendid volume, the result + of careful research, with the advantage of military experience.--_Geo. + Bancroft_. + + It is an absolute necessity in our literature. No one can understand the + philosophy of the old War for Independence, until he has made a careful + and thoughtful perusal of this work.--_Benson J. Lossing_. + + The maps are just splendid.--_Adj. Gen. W.L. Stryker, N.J._ + + The book is invaluable and should be in every library.--_Wm. L. Stone, + N.Y._ + + Of permanent standard authority.--_Gen. De Peister, N.Y._ + + Indicates such profound erudition and ability in the discussion as + leaves nothing to be desired.--_Sen. Oscar de La Fayette, Paris_. + + I have read the volume with pleasure and profit.--_Z. Chandler_. + + The volume is superb and will give the author enduring fame.--_B. + Gratz Brown, St. Louis_. + + It should have a place in every gentleman's library, and is just the + book which young men of Great Britain and America should know by + heart.--_London Telegraph_. + + The most impartial criticism on military affairs in this country which + the century has produced.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + Fills in a definite form that which has hitherto been a somewhat vague + period of military history.--_Col. Hamley, Pres., Queen's Staff + College, England_. + + A valuable addition to my library at Knowlsy.--_Lord Derby, late Brit. + Sec. of State_. + + A magnificent volume and a monument of national History.--_A. de + Rochambeau, Paris_. + + A godsend after reading Washington Irving's not very satisfactory Life + of Washington.--_Sir Jos. Hooker, Pres., Royal Society, England_. + + A book not only to be read, but to be studied.--_Harper's + Magazine_. + + The author at all times maintains an attitude of judicial + impartiality.--_N.Y. Times_. + + The record is accurate and impartial, and warrants the presumption that + the literature of the subject has been exhausted.--_The Nation_. + + Will stand hereafter in the front rank of our most valuable historical + treasures. + + The descriptions of battles are vivid. The actors seem to be alive, and + the actions real.--_Rev. Dr. Crane, N.J._ + + We are all indebted to you for the labor and expense of preparing this + volume, and I hope it will, in time, fully reimburse you.--_Gen. W.T. + Sherman_. + +-------------------------------------- + + Battle Maps and Charts of the American Revolution. + + By HENRY B. CARRINGTON, M.A., LL.D., U.S.A. + + Published by A.S. BARNES & CO., 111 & 113 William Street, New York. + + + The publishers issue this work for the use of teachers and scholars, as + well as for its fitness as a companion to all Histories of the United + States, with confidence that it will prove a valuable specialty to all. + + The RED Lettering represents British Movements and Leading Topics, for + the convenience of Teachers and Scholars. + + The ¶ and Page references to various School Histories, which mention the + Battles make it available for use by Teachers throughout the United + States. + + The volume contains the 41 maps which were the result of thirty years of + study, and are found in his standard volume, "Battles of the American + Revolution." + + THE SECRETARY OF WAR has placed the "BATTLE MAPS AND CHARTS" at ARMY + POST SCHOOLS, at government expense. + + FIVE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF WASHINGTON accompany the volume. The ST. MEMIN + (crayon) as frontispiece, engraved by Hall & Sons; also PEALE'S painting + (1772), HOUDON'S bust (1784). TRUMBULL'S painting (1792) and STUART'S + painting (1796) are furnished, in steel. + + Price, $1.25. Sent, post-paid, to School Superintendents and Teachers, + for introduction, upon receipt of $1.00. + + Liberal terms made with Schools, Military and Civil, Army Officers and + Posts, State Militia, and the Trade. + + + NOTICES. + + Invaluable to the student of American History.--_Baltimore (Md.) + Herald_. + + Deserves a welcome in every school district, as well as in every + historical library in the land.--_Army and Navy Journal_. + + In our opinion, General Carrington's work is an authority, showing great + labor and careful study, and it should become a national text-book, and + find a place in all public and private libraries.--_Indianapolis + (Ind.) Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied with a statement of the generals and number of + men engaged on both sides, to which is appended the reason for such + battle or engagement, with remarks by the author, who is excellent + authority in military matters.--_The Educator (New Haven, Ct.)_. + + A valuable compilation from the author's large work, and cannot fail to + make a more lasting impression upon the reader's mind than could be + derived from the perusal of many volumes of history.--_N.Y. + Herald_. + + Each map is accompanied by a page of text, arranged upon a compact and + original system, so as to present a singularly clear view of the history + and significance of the engagement in question, the names of the chief + and subordinate commanders, the forces, nominal and available, the + losses on each side, and the incidents of the battle.--_N.Y. Evening + Post_. + +======================================================================= + + + ESTABLISHED 1871. + + THE SOUTH + A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress. + + The SOUTH is the oldest journal in the country devoted exclusively to + the developement of the Southern States, and is indispensable to + business men. + + Subscription Price, $3.00 a year. + + _The South Publishing Company_ 85 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. + +======================================================================= + + + S.M. 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Mention this magazine. +-------------------------------------- + + BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY + Publishers AND Printers, + 43 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. +-------------------------------------- + + ESTABLISHED 1884 + +[Illustration: H.C. WHITCOMB & CO. + ELECTROTYPERS, + 42, ARCH STREET, + BOSTON.] + + ELECTROTYPES + + FROM + + Wood or Photo-Engraved Cuts and Type Forms. + Type Composition and Engraving for Electrotyping. + Telephone Connection. Passenger Elevator. + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration: LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE.] + + _LACTART._ + (MILK ACID.) +----FOR---- + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain. + _A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY._ + + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or _ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE_. 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RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. + + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. + + FAIRBANKS AND COLE, + _MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS_, + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + CANTON BLEACH. + + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. + + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. + + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. + + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. + + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have _examined the_ + "_Canton Bleach_." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + _see the goods_; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, _to see if the stamp_ "Canton Bleach" is on it. + + NOTICE.--Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by MESSRS. C.F. HOVEY & CO., SHEPARD, + NORWELL & CO., HOGG, BROWN & TAYLOR, CHANDLER & CO., R.H. WHITE & CO., + JORDAN, MARSH & CO., and others. + + [Illustration: CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882] + + [Illustration: TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK] + + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. + + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the + + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + EDWARD W. HOWE, Treas. + JAS. L. LITTLE, JR., Pres. + +======================================================================= + + + An Entirely New Edition of Lord Byron's + + CHILDE HAROLD, + + WITH NUMEROUS NEW AND BEAUTIFUL ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD. + + THE DRAWINGS BY + + Harry Fenn, F. Myruck, S.L. Smith, G.G. Harley, E.H. Garrett, G. Perkins, + F.B. Schell, J.D. Woodward, and L.S. Ipsen. + + _Drawn and Engraved under the Supervision of A.V.S. Anthony._ + + PRICE IN CLOTH, $6.00; IN ANTIQUE MOROCCO on TREE CALF, $10.00, IN + CRUSHED LEVANT, WITH SILK LININGS, $25.00. + + "CHILDE HAROLD" is the most famous of the poems of Lord Byron, and + abounds in the most picturesque and attractive scenes and subjects for + illustration; including the beautiful scenery of the Rhine, and of Italy + and Greece, and the rich treasures of art and history in the classic + countries around the Mediterranean. + + The best American artists have drawn these illustrations, _con + amore_, producing a great number of very choice examples of the high + perfection which wood-engraving has reached in the New World. The + general supervision of the work has devolved upon Mr. A.V.S. ANTHONY, + who held the same relation to the recent magnificent editions of + "Lucille" "The Lady of the Lake," "The Princess," and "Marmion;" thus + ensuring the utmost accuracy in study, taste in composition, and + elegance in finish. + + The Publishers believe that in this form and with this elegance of + finish the work will be widely welcomed as a Fine Art Edition, and + become the + + LEADING HOLIDAY GIFT-BOOK OF THE YEAR. + + "In every respect a beautiful book. It is printed from new plates and + its many illustrations have been furnished by artists famous in their + line. It is even more attractive than its handsome predecessors, the + 'Marmion' and the Lady of the Lake."--Boston Traveller. + + "The most talked of Book since 'Daniel Deronda.'" + + + The Rise of Silas Lapham. + By WILLIAM D. HOWELLS. 1 vol. 12mo. + + "No novel since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' has been so extensively read by + business men. Mr. Howell's literary work has broadened and deepened into + this, the latest and most important, and we think his best work,"--says + the _New Jerusalem Messenger_. + + + For a Woman. + By NORA TERRY, 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00. + + An admirable Story of modern life in America. + + "Her prose is always as charming as her poetry, which is saying a great + deal.--_Boston Transcript_. + + "Nora Perry is the only poet of pure passion in America."--D.A. WASSON, + in _Boston Transcript_. + + + Social Silhouettes. + By EDGAR FAWCETT. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "All Gotham is busy gossiping over Edgar Fawcett's series of social + Silhouettes,' and everybody has his pet theory as to whom is deliniated + in each portrait."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + + In Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery of New Orleans. + By WM. MILLER OWEN, First Lieutenant and Adjutant B.W.A. Illustrated + with 8 maps and four engravings. 8vo. $3.00. + + A stirring narrative of events during the late Civil War, from Bull Run + to Seven Pines, Antietam and Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, + Gettysburg, Chickamaugu, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomatox and Spanish + Fort. Compiled by the adjutant from his diary and from documents and + Orders. + + "It is indeed, the most interesting, authentic and reliable contribution + to our war literature yet seen."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + + The Haunted Adjutant; and Other Stories. + By EDMUND QUINCY. Edited by his son, Edmund Quincy. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Quincy possessed the Imaginative faculty, and the instructive + faculty in larger measure than any of his countrymen, Hawthorne, perhaps + excepted, and Hawthorne, if his equal, was not his superior."--_Boston + Traveller_. + + + Aulnay Tower. + By BLANCHE WILLIS HOWARD. 12mo. $1.50. + + "A story which, for absorbing interest, brilliancy of style, charm of + graphic character drawing, and exquisite literary quality, will hold its + rank among the best work in American fiction."--_Boston Traveller_. + + + Love; or, A Name. + By JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Hawthorne has a more powerful imagination than any contemporary + write of fiction."--_The Academy (London)_. + + + A Narrative of Military Service. + By Gen. W.B. HAZEN. 1 vol. 8vo. With Maps, Plans and Illustrations. + $3.00. + + "There can be no doubt, we think, that it will be eagerly read, + particularly by the brave soldiers whom he led at Shiloh, who held the + crest at Stone Ridge, who stood firm under his eye at Chickamauga, who + floated with him by night under the shadow of Lookout Mountain down to + Brown's Ferry, who received his order to climb the fence of Mission + Ridge who helped to take Atlanta, who marched to the sea, who swarmed + over the parapets of Fort McAllister, who made the triumphant campaign + of the Carolinas, and passed in review before the President."--_New + York Mail and Express_. + + _For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the + Publishers_. + + TICKNOR & CO., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + American History, Statesmanship, and Literature. + ====== + + American Commonwealths. + Edited by HORACE E. SCUDDER. + + "It is clear that this series will occupy an entirely new place in our + historical literature. Written by competent and aptly chosen authors, + from fresh materials, in convenient form, and with a due regard to + proportion and proper emphasis, they promise to supply most + satisfactorily a positive want."--_Boston Journal._ + + + I. _VIRGINIA_. By JOHN ESTEN COOKE. + II. _OREGON_. By WILLIAM BARROWS. + III. _MARYLAND_. By WILLIAM HAND BROWNE. + IV. _KENTUCKY_. By Prof. N.S. SHALER. + V. _MICHIGAN_. By Judge THOMAS M. COOLEY. + VI. _KANSAS_. By Prof. LEVERETT W. SPRING. + +(Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. + + + American Statesmen. + Edited by JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + + + I. _JOHN QUINCY ADAMS_. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + II. _ALEXANDER HAMILTON_. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. + III. _JOHN C. CALHOUN_. By Dr. H. VON HOLST. + IV. _ANDREW JACKSON_. By Pres. WM. G. SUMNER. + V. _JOHN RANDOLPH_. By HENRY ADAMS. + VI. _JAMES MONROE_. By Prof. D.C. GILMAN. + VII. _THOMAS JEFFERSON_. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + VIII. _DANIEL WEBSTER_. By HENRY CABOT LODGE. + IX. _ALBERT GALLATIN_. By JOHN AUSTIN STEVENS. + X. _JAMES MADISON_. By SYDNEY HOWARD GAY. + XI. _JOHN ADAMS_. By JOHN T. MORSE, JR. + XII. _JOHN MARSHALL_. By ALLAN B. MAGRUDER. + XIII. _SAMUEL ADAMS_. By JAMES K. HOSMER. + +(Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, 16mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.25. + + + American Men of Letters. + Edited by CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER. + + + I. _WASHINGTON IRVING_. By CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER. + II. _NOAH WEBSTER_. By HORACE E. SCUDDER. + III. _HENRY D. THOREAU_. By FRANK B. SANBORN. + IV. _GEORGE RIPLEY_. By OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM. + V. _JAMES FENIMORE COOPER_. By Prof. T.R. LOUNSBURY. + VI. _MARGARET FULLER OSSOLI_. By T.W. HIGGINSON. + VII. _RALPH WALDO EMERSON_. By O.W. HOLMES. + VIII. _EDGAR ALLAN POE_. By G.E. WOODBERRY. + IX. _NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS_. By H.A. BEERS. + + (Other volumes in preparation.) Each volume, with portrait, 16mo, gilt + top, $1.25. + + + "Mr. Morse and Mr. Warner, through the enterprise of their Boston + publishers, are doing in their two biographical series a service to the + public, the full extent of which, while well rewarded in a commercial + sense, is doubtless not generally and rightfully appreciated. Honest and + truly important work it is that they and their colleagues are + doing."--_New York Times_. + + _For sale by Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by + the publishers_. HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + TEN DOLLARS ENOUGH + ====== + AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF VOL. II, IN NOVEMBER, + + GOOD-HOUSEKEEPING + + Will appear in new type cut and cast expressly for its publishers, and + will have as a leading feature the first instalment of a new Serial by + CATHERINE OWEN, Author of "Culture and Cooking," and one of the most + practical writers of the day on Household Affairs, entitled: + + "Ten Dollars Enough." + + Keeping House Well on Ten Dollars a Week. + + HOW IT HAS BEEN DONE. HOW IT MAY BE DONE AGAIN. + + OUR PRIZE PAPERS. + + The awards of $500, for our Series of Prize Papers, the entries for + which closed September 1, are as follows:-- + + $250. "How to Eat, Drink, and Sleep as Christians Should." A + series of Six Papers. "MARGARET SIDNEY" (Mrs. D. Lothrop), Boston. One + of the most popular and promising writers of the day. + + $200. "Mistress Work and Maid Work.--Which is Mistress, and Which is + Servant." A Series of Six Papers. MRS. E.J. GURLEY, Waco, Texas. + + $50. "Bread: How to Make it Well and Economically, and How to Eat it + Healthfully." Mrs. HELEN CAMPBELL, Orange N.J. (Author of "The + Easiest Way in Housekeeping and in Cooking," and other valuable + household writings for the press.) + ====== + + These and the following will have prominent place in our regular + Semi-Monthly BILL-OF-FARE during the publication of the volume. + + "Fifty Recipes for Making all kinds of Bread." BY CATHERINE OWEN. + + "Puff Paste," Illustrated. By Mrs. EMMA P. EWING, Dean of the + School of Domestic Economy of the Iowa Agricultural College. + + "Visitor and Visited." By "MARION HARLAND." + + Besides the usual amount of interesting and instructive reading for + Household Entertainment and Instruction by well-known writers. + ====== + + SOME OF OUR CONTRIBUTORS, + + Many of whom are among the most noted and noteworthy writers or + housekeepers of our time:-- + + MARIA PARLOA, + "MARION HARLAND," + Mrs. ROSE TERRY COOKE, + Mrs. HATTIE TREMAINE TERRY, + Mrs. ELIZABETH ROBINSON SCOVIL, + Mrs. CARRIE W. BRONSON, + Mrs. H. ANNETTE POOLE, + MARY E. DEWEY, + "MARGARET SIDNEY," + ASSIS F. JUDD, + LUCRETIA P. HALE, + MARIAN S. DEVEREUX, + HESTER M. POOLE, + Mrs. FRONA E. WAIT, + Mrs. KATHARINE B. FOOT, + Mrs. CHRISTINE TERHUNE HERRICK, + Mrs. C.A.K. POORE, + DORA READ GOODALE, + JOSEPHINE CANNING, + Mrs. GEORGINANA H.S. HULL, + Mrs. D.H.R. GOODALS, + SARAH J. BLANCHARD. + Mrs. S.O. JOHNSON, + "ADELAIDE PRESTON," + Mrs. HELEN CAMPBELL, + "CATHERINE OWEN," + ANNA L. DAWES, + "SHIRLEY DARE," + Mrs. SUSAN TEALL PERRY, + Mrs. ELLEN BLISS HOOKER, + Mrs. MARGARET E. WHITE, + Mrs. AGNES B. ORMSBEE, + Mrs. ELLIS P. EWING, + Mrs. HENRIETTA DAVIS, + ANNA BARROWS, + "ELLA GUERNSEY," + Mrs. EVA M. NILES, + RUTH HALL, + Mrs. C.S. FOX, + Mrs. HARRIET H. ROBINSON, + Mrs. HELEN N. PACKARD, + Mrs. L.A. FRANCE, + MARGARET EVGINGE, + Mrs. SARAH DeW. GAMWELL, + Mrs. ELIZA R. PARKER, + AMELIA A. WHITFIELD, M.D. + LAVINIA S. GOODWIN, + Mrs. MARY CURRIER PARSONS, + E.C. GARDNER, + MILTON BRADLEY, + CLARK W. BRYAN, + Dr. S.W. BOWLES, + Rev. F.H. ROWLEY, + Wm. PAUL GERHARD, + J.H. CARMICHAEL, M.D. + NEWELL LOVEJOY, + Dr. F.M. HEXAMER. + ====== + + EVERY OTHER WEEK. $2.50 PER YEAR. + + Every yearly subscriber will receive a valuable premium post-paid. + Send 10 cents for Sample Copy with List of Premiums. + ====== + + CLARK W. BRYAN & CO., Publishers. HOLYOKE, MASS. + NEW YORK OFFICE, 111 BROADWAY. + FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS. + +======================================================================= + + + _OUR GREAT PREMIUM OFFER._ + + Every subscriber sending address together with $3.00 for one year's + subscription to the BAY STATE MONTHLY before January 1, 1886, may choose + one of the following valuable books, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive, as + a premium. In ordering from 1 to 30 inclusive, fifteen cents must be + added to pay postage; and in ordering a premium numbered 31, 32 or 33, + forty cents must be added to pay postage and extra cost of book. + + 1. Uncle Tom's Cabin. By Harriet Beecher Stowe, cloth, price, $1.00. + + + _American Commonwealths_. + _Edited by Horace E. Scudder_. + + A series of volumes narrating the history of such States of the Union as + have exerted a positive influence in the shaping of the national + government, or have a striking political, social, or economical history. + With Maps and indexes. Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 2. Virginia. By John Esten Cooke. + 3. Oregon. By Rev. William Barrows. + 4. Maryland. By William Hand Browne. + 5. Kentucky. By Prof. N.S. Shaler. + 6. Kansas. By Prof. Leverett W. Spring. + 7. Michigan. By Hon. T.M. Cooley. + + + _American Men of Letters_. + _Edited by Charles Dudley Warner_. + + A series of biographies of distinguished American authors, having all + the special interest of biography, and the larger interest and value + of illustrating the different phases of American literature, and the + social, political, and moral influences which have moulded these authors + and the generation to which they belonged. + + The volumes contain Portraits of their subjects. Each volume, uniform. + 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 8. Washington Irving. By C.D. Warner. + 9. Noah Webster. By Horace E. Scudder. + 10. Henry D. Thoreau. By F.B. Sanborn. + 11. George Ripley. By O.B. Frothingham. + 12. J.F. Cooper. By Prof. T.R. Lounsbury. + 13. Margaret F. Ossoli. By T.W. Higginson. + 14. Ralph W. Emerson. By O.W. Holmes. + 15. Edgar A. Poe. By Geo. E. Woodberry. + 16. Nathaniel P. Willis. By Henry A. Beers. + + + _American Statesmen_. + _Edited by John T. Morse, Jr._ + + The object of this series of lives of American Statesmen is to furnish + volumes which shall embody the compact result of extensive study of the + many influences which have combined to shape the political history of + our country. + + Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 17. John Quincy Adams. By J.T. Morse, Jr. + 18. Alexander Hamilton. By H.C. Lodge. + 19. John C. Calhoun. By Dr. H. Von Hoist. + 20. Andrew Jackson. By Prof. W.G. Sumner. + 21. John Randolph. By Henry Adams. + 22. James Monroe. By Pres. D.C. Gilman. + 23. Thomas Jefferson. By J.T. Morse, Jr. + 24. Daniel Webster. By H.C. Lodge. + 25. Albert Gallatin. By John A. Stevens. + 26. James Madison. By Sidney H. Gay. + 27. John Adams. John. T. Morse, Jr. + 28. John Marshall. By Allan B. Magruder. + 29. Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer. + 30. Martin Van Buren. By Wm. Dorsheimer. + 31. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips. By George L. Austin. + Price $1.50. + 32. The Life and Deeds of Gen. U.S. Grant. By P.C. Headly and G.L. + Austin. Price $1.50. + 33. The Life of Henry W. Longfellow. By Francis H. Underwood. + Price $1.50. + + + _Atlantic Portraits_. + + Life-size Portraits of the following American authors, lithographed in + the best manner, and suitable for the study or the school-room. Each + picture measures 34 by 30 inches, and is forwarded by mail, carefully + rolled. + + 34. Oliver Wendell Holmes. + 35. James Russell Lowell. + 36. William Cullen Bryant. + 37. John G. Whittier. + 38. Henry W. Longfellow. + 39. Nathaniel Hawthorne. + 40. Ralph Waldo Emerson. + + + These are real Steel Plate Portraits, superbly printed upon heavy fine + plate paper, 9 1-2 by 12 inches. Lowest cash price of each, 25 cents. + + 41. Four Elegant steel plate portraits to be selected from the + following list:-- + + The Great War Governor, John A. Andrew. + Ex-Governor John D. Long. + Ex-Governor William Gaston. + Gen. U.S. Grant. + President James A. Garfield. + President Grover Cleveland. + + + Any one or more of the above books or portraits will be sent by us + carriage free to any part of the United States or Provinces upon receipt + of Price. + + Remit by Post-Office order, draft, express or Registered Letter to + TREASURER, BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY, 43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + + COMMENTS OF THE PRESS. + + + The following expressions of editorial opinions are entirely from press + notices of the August and September (1885) numbers:-- + + Its portraits are excellent.--_Daily Gate City_ (Keokuk Ia.) + + Should be well patronized by people of this state.--_The Republic_ + (Boston) + + The whole magazine seems to us delightfully provincial.--_Chicago + Advance._ + + Now takes its place among the most important magazines.--_Philadelphia + Press._ + + The literary contents are brilliant and interesting.--_Washington_ + (D.C.) _Sunday Gazette._ + + It is a monthly that should be in every Massachusetts + home.--_Webster_ (Mass.) _Eagle_. + + The illustrations are drawn and engraved with admirable + clearness.--_Boston Evening Transcript._ + + Its ability and breadth of interest entitle it to a continent of + readers.--_Brooklyn Daily Times._ + + The articles (Sept.) are varied, carefully prepared and full of + interest.--_Boston Daily Advertiser._ + + For interesting, finely illustrated reading material this monthly is + unsurpassed.--_Times_ (Webster, Mass.) + + The illustrations are superior, among the best we have seen in any + magazine.--_Pittsburg Christian Advocate._ + + Full of reminiscences and history of the grand old New England + Commonwealth.--_Buffalo Christian Advocate._ + + If the _Bay State_ keeps up to the mark of this number (Sept.) it + will fairly rank with the best magazines.--_Philadelphia American._ + + We emphasize again, this magazine should be liberally supported for its + historical value.--_Dorchester Beacon_ (Boston.) + + It looks as though there was a bright future for this representative of + the literature of the old Bay State.--_Fall River_ (Mass.) + _Monitor._ + + It is an excellent magazine, beautifully printed, charmingly + illustrated, and always filled with attractive articles.--_Salem_ + (Mass.) _Register._ + + The Bay State Monthly has leaped into a first class magazine, in all + respects second to none in the country.--_Peabody_ (Mass.) + _Reporter._ + + This magazine has increased wonderfully in appearance as well as in text + ... is a credit to our state and should be well supported.--_Salem_ + (Mass.) _Observer._ + + The magazine deserves well of every one who would be informed of the + colonial history of New England.--_Newark_ (N.J.) _Daily + Advertiser._ + + The Bay State Monthly has a delightful New England flavor ... and is + taking more and more a hitherto unoccupied field.--_Boston Herald._ + + The Bay State Monthly steadily grows in usefulness and interest.... + This magazine deserves a generous support.--_N.E. Homestead_ + (Springfield Mass.) + + The Bay State fills a needed place in its local history and biography + and deserves the success that undoubtedly awaits it.--_Boston Evening + Traveller._ + + Several of its papers have sterling merit, and all are able and + entertaining and give promise to the magazine of an individuality that + will make it a power.--_Boston Daily Globe._ + + The Bay State Monthly has improved the most rapidly and attained the + highest rank of any similar venture in the history of American + periodical literature.--_Somerville Journal._ + + The Bay State Monthly is one of the standard publications of its class. + It is not surpassed by any of its elders in the matter of chaste + typography and beauty of illustration, while its literary conception and + display are of intrinsic worth.--_Gazette and Chronicle._ + (Pawtucket R.I.) + + We feel sure that all who read the September issue of this monthly will + unite in paying tribute to the excellent quality of the reading + material, the artistic merit of the wood engraving, the aptness of the + subjects chosen for presentation, and the earnestness and faithfulness + with which Editor and Publisher do their work.--_Providence + Journal._ + +======================================================================= + + + ESTABLISHED 1871. + + THE SOUTH + A Journal of Southern and Southwestern Progress. + + The SOUTH is the oldest journal in the country devoted exclusively to + the developement of the Southern States, and is indispensable to + business men. + + Subscription Price, $3.00 a year. + + _The South Publishing Company_ + 85 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + VICTOR L. CHANDLER + ENGRAVER ON WOOD + 43 MILK ST. BOSTON MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + Are You Out Of PAPER? Or Stationery Of Any Kind? + + If so come to our store. If you cannot do that conveniently, drop us a + postal and we will send you FREE a complete set of samples of the best + Foreign and American writing papers with prices, and full information as + to sheets to the pound, sizes, cost of envelopes to match, etc. Papers + from 17 cents to $1.00 per pound. By mail 17 cents per pound extra. + + WARD & GAY, + Paper Merchants AND Stationers, + 184 Devonshire St., Boston. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + Tailoring Done as it should be. + H.E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston + +======================================================================= + + + THE LARGEST AND BEST HOUSE TO BUY SHADE GOODS FROM. + + CUSHMAN BROS., AND CO., + + MANUFACTURERS OF + + [Illustration: CUSHMAN'S SELF-ACTING SHADE ROLLER] + + Shade Rollers, Window Shades, Brass and Nickel Shade Trimmings, + Hollands and Upholsterer's Hardware. + + IMPORTERS OF + + KING'S FIRST QUALITY SCOTCH HOLLANDS. + + 82, 84 & 86 HAWLEY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + ==> An inspection of our stock is cordially invited. +-------------------------------------- + + ARTISTS' MATERIALS. + + _Decorative Art Goods._ + Mathematical Instruments, + Architects' & Engineers Supplies, etc., etc. + ====== + + FROST AND ADAMS, IMPORTERS + No. 37 Cornhill, Boston. + + F.S. FROST. H.A. LAWRENCE. + + Illustrated catalogue free. Mention this magazine. +-------------------------------------- + + Mayo's Vegetable Anaesthetic. + ====== + + A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether, and all + other anaesthetics. Discovered by Dr. U.K. Mao, April, 1884, and since + administered by him and others in over 106,000 cases successfully. + Compounded from nervines which impart oxygen to sustain life, (Nitrous + oxide gas, as administered, is destitute of this and tends to produce + convulsions and suffocation). The youngest child, the most sensitive + lady, and those having heart disease and lung complaint, inhale this + vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation and builds up the + tissues. Recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous prostration. + Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families supplied. For + further information, pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to Dr. U.K. + MAYO, Dentist, 378 Tremont street, Boston, Mass. + ====== + + INDORSEMENT OF THE LATE DR. THORNDIKE. + + BOSTON, August 15, 1883. + + This certifies that I removed in the back of Mr. J.D. Moore a tumor + weighing two pounds and three-quarters. The time occupied was twenty-two + minutes. The patient was insensible during the whole operation, and came + out from the influence of the anaesthetic speedily and perfectly, + without nausea or any ill effects. The agent used was prepared by Dr. + U.K. Mayo, the dentist, a new discovery of his own. I consider this + anaesthetic the safest the world has yet seen. + + WM. H. THORNDIKE, M.D., 92 Boylston, Street. + +======================================================================= + + + S.M. SPENCER'S + STENCIL AND RUBBER STAMP WORKS, 112 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, MASS. + + SEAL PRESSES, + WAX SEALS, + STEEL STAMPS, + STEEL ALPHABETS and FIGURES, + BRASS ALPHABETS, + COMBINATION NUMBERING WHEELS, + BRUSHES, + INK, ALL COLORS, + INDELIBLE INK, + RUBBER STAMP INK, + SELF-INKING PADS, + KEY CHECKS, + BAGGAGE and HOTEL CHECKS, + BRASS CHECKS, + RUBBER STAMPS, (with 120 styles of letters to select from.) + SELF-INKING RUBBER STAMPS, (more than 30 different styles.) + DATING & RECEIPTING STAMPS, (10 different styles.) + PENCIL and POCKET STAMPS, + PRINTING WHEELS, + METAL BODIED RUBBER FACED TYPE, (for hand printing.) + SHOE LINING STAMPS, + AUTOMATIC NUMBERING STAMPS, + RUBBER NUMBERING STAMPS, + STENCIL DIES, + BURNING BRANDS. + + + AGENTS' OUTFITS For Stencils, Key Checks, and Rubber Stamp Work, and + all reliable goods connected with the business wholesale and retail. + + _Send for illustrated catalogue. All goods first-class and warranted + in every respect._ +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + GLOBE LETTER FILING _CABINETS_. + + _Most Perfect System Known._ + + All sizes Black Walnut Cabinets in stock, from 6 to 60 Files. + + Over $20,000 worth in use in Boston alone. + + _Quick Reference_. + _No Mutilation of Papers_. + _Rapid Filing_. + _Handsome Workmanship_. + + W.W. EDWARDS, SELLING AGENT, + _The Globe Files Company_, 166 Devonshire St., Boston. + + SCRAP FILES. ROLL TOP DESKS. + PAMPHLET CASES. CLOTH BOXES, all sizes. + DOCUMENT BOXES. LAWYERS FILING CASES. + NICKLE CLIP BOARDS. CASES for Price Lists, etc. + + ESTIMATES Furnished of filing devices for Banks, Railroads, + Mercantile Firms, Insurance Companies, etc. + + _N.B. Correspondence Solicited._ + +======================================================================= + + + THE NEW HIGH ARM DAVIS VERTICAL FEED _SEWING MACHINE_. + + [Illustration] + + Surprises and pleases all. + + A novice can produce work without basting, that skilled operators dare + not attempt on under-feed machines. + + No change is made in running, from finest muslin to heavy leather. + + It is readily applied to any specialties that cannot be handled by + others. + + Simplicity in construction is one of our important points, as we gain + strength and durability, and a perfect working machine at all times. + + Time and labor saved in dressmaking, as it has the largest variety and + most perfect working attachments. + + This feed is absolutely perfect, and no care is required on the part of + the operator in passing over seams or uneven places. + + Will not full or stretch the softest of fabrics. + + The stitch is very elastic, and the same on both sides. + + One-half hour spent at any of our offices will more than verify our + statements. + + Do not fail to examine the Davis before purchasing. + + BOSTON: 158 Tremont St. + CLEVELAND: 113-121 North Side Public Sq. + CHICAGO: 46-50 Jackson St. +-------------------------------------- + + HOLYOKE, MASS. WINDSOR HOTEL. + GEO. H. BOWKER, Proprietor, + + First-class in all its appointments. + Free carriage to and from all trains. +-------------------------------------- + + "IT STANDS AT THE HEAD." + The "Caligraph." + + [Illustration] + + The "Caligraph" received the only medal awarded type-bar writing + machines at the WORLD'S FAIR. To silence the assertions and claims of + our worthy competitor, we publish the following:-- + + + "New Orleans World's Fair, June 10, 1885 + + "To whom it may concern,--The 'Caligraph' manufactured by the American + Writing Co. received the medal. + + "L.D. CARROLL, Depart. of Awards." + + + "New Orleans, June 20, 1885. + + "The Remington type-writer received no award. + + "GUS. A. BREAUX, Chairman of Awards." + + + "New Orleans, June 30, 1885. + + "Jury on type-writers was Coleman, Cook and Thoens. Report published by + Remington is _unauthorized and not official_. + + "GUS. A. BREAUX, Chairman of Dep't of Awards." + ====== + + For circulars and specimens of writing, apply to THE AMERICAN WRITING + MACHINE CO., Hartford, Conn. + + New York Office, 237 Broadway. + W.M. BELCHER & CO. New England Agent, BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + THE MASSACHUSETTS RELIEF ASSOCIATION. + (Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts.) + 31 Milk (Elevator), 8 Hawley, 9 Arch Sts., Rooms 49 & 50, BOSTON. + JNO. F. WOOD, _Pres't_. R.T. RYDER, _Sec'y_. JOHN PEARCE, _Treas._ + ====== + + _Issue in one Certificate, Insurance as desired of from $1,000 to + $5,000, payable at Death, but covering Sickness, Accident and Total + Disability for Life._ + ====== + + SPECIAL FEATURES. + + In case of Sickness or Accident, the afflicted member is entitled to + from $5 to $25 per week, according to the amount of + Insurance, while totally incapacitated for work. + + If, from any cause, a member is totally disabled for life, the whole + amount of Insurance money, as in case of death, is paid at once to him + while living. + + This is just what has long been wanted. It covers all contingencies of + life and is not expensive. + + Full particulars how to become a member, together with blank forms will + be sent to any address upon application. + ====== + A FEW GOOD AGENTS ALWAYS WANTED. +-------------------------------------- + + REDUCTION OF FARE TO NEW YORK + VIA + FALL RIVER LINE. + + Only $3.00 For First Class Limited Tickets. + + Special express leaves Boston from OLD COLONY STATION week days + at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 + minutes with the steamers PILGRIM and BRISTOL. Annex + steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. + Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner + of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station. + + _J.R. KENDRICK, General Manager._ + _L.H. PALMER, Agent, 3 Old State House._ + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration: LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE.] + + _LACTART._ + (MILK ACID.) +----FOR---- + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain. + _A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY._ + + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or _ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE_. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. _SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS._ + + AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St., BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. + + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. + + FAIRBANKS AND COLE, + _MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS_, + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + SIMPSON SPRING WATER. + + SPRING HOUSE _AND_ Bottling Establishment_ + + SO. EASTON, MASS. + +[Illustration: Map] + + + This is the Purest and Most Effective of all Medicinal Spring Waters. + Possessing remarkable Curative Properties for diseases of the + _STOMACH_, _LIVER_, _KIDNEYS_ and _BLADDER_. + + A MILD CATHARTIC AND ACTIVE DIURETIC. + + PROF. RAPHAEL PUMPELLY, Chemist National Board of Health. + + [NOTE.--This analysis, with a letter of recommendation from Prof. + Pumpelly, was read before the Newport Sanitary Protective Society, + Jan. 12, 1884.] + + _PARTS IN 1,000,000_ + + Total Residue 44.6 + Silica 11.5 + Iron and Alumina 0.7 + Lime 10.5 + Magnesia 1.5 + Chlorine 4.6 + Ammonia 0.06 + Albumoid Ammonia 0.06 + + The above analysis shows a total residue of about 2.6 grains in one + gallon of 231 cubic inches. + + The object of the above analysis is to show the great purity of this + water. Its curative properties cannot be determined by a chemical + analysis. No combination of the above-mentioned minerals alone would + produce the same effects. The Spring possesses a peculiarity and an + individuality of its own which no one ever has been able to explain. + It is one of Nature's remedies. Its medicinal effects can only be + determined by a thorough trial. + + + Messrs. HOWARD BROS., + BOSTON, April 24, 1885. + + _Dear Sirs_,--"After many careful trials of the Simpson Spring + Water in urinary disorders, extending over one year, I am convinced + (despite my previous prejudices, excited by the extravagant claims made + for other Springs,) that its _properties_ are _characteristic_, and as + _clinically trustworthy_ as are those of terebinthina, lithia, or many + other of the partially proven drugs. I have found it surprisingly + gratifying as an adjuvant in the cure of albuminuria, and in lowering + the specific gravity of the urine in Saccharine Diabetes its action is + promptly and lastingly helpful. It is mildly cathartic and an active + diuretic." + + DR. J. HEBER SMITH, + _Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of + Medicine._ + + Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and + Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by + + _HOWARD BROS., Managers_, + 117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.) + ==OR== + GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York. + +======================================================================= + + + CANTON BLEACH. + + The goods are full strength; i.e., they are not injured by strong + chemicals, the coloring matter only being removed, and the fibre being + left uninjured. + + The goods are not artificially weighted; i.e., they contain nothing but + pure cotton, no sizing, clay, or chemicals to make it appear heavy, and + which all disappear when the cloth is washed. + + The goods have the softest and best finish; i.e., you can sew through + any number of thicknesses which you can get into the sewing-machine, the + needle passing through with ease. + + Needles and thread do not constantly break; no soaping of seams is + required; the goods not being overbleached will outwear goods bleached + by the old process. + + Do not purchase cotton goods until you have _examined the_ + "_Canton Bleach_." Be sure and demand of retailers generally to + _see the goods_; and do not fail, before purchasing a yard of + cotton goods, _to see if the stamp_ "Canton Bleach" is on it. + + NOTICE.--Your attention is called to this new bleach as seen on cotton + goods, which are now for sale by MESSRS. C.F. HOVEY & CO., SHEPARD, + NORWELL & CO., HOGG, BROWN & TAYLOR, CHANDLER & CO., R.H. WHITE & CO., + JORDAN, MARSH & CO., and others. + + [Illustration: CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, CANTON JUNCTION, MASS. + BLEACHED BY "TOPPAN PROCESS." + PATENTED AUG. 29, 1882] + + [Illustration: TRIUMPH SOAP + CANTON MAN'F'G CO + TRADEMARK] + + Contains no Rosin, Sal-Soda or Lime; is not made from Grease, and + contains nothing injurious to the skin or the finest fabric. Is entirely + pure. Will not full or harden woolens. Insures a pure and lasting white. + Used like any soap, and by everybody, even inexperienced hands, with + perfect success. Contains no bleaching powder or anything of like + nature, Removes easily all stains met with in the laundry. Is a true + odorless, antiseptic and sanitary soap, rendering it valuable for sick + rooms and hospitals. + + If you cannot get it of your grocer, send direct to the office of the + Company. Manufactured under Patent Jan. 23, 1877, and for sale by the + + CANTON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, + 160 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + EDWARD W. HOWE, Treas. + JAS. L. LITTLE, JR., Pres. + +======================================================================= + + + An Entirely New Edition of Lord Byron's + + CHILDE HAROLD, + + WITH NUMEROUS NEW AND BEAUTIFUL ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD. + + THE DRAWINGS BY + + Harry Fenn, F. Myruck, S.L. Smith, G.G. Harley, E.H. Garrett, G. Perkins, + F.B. Schell, J.D. Woodward, and L.S. Ipsen. + + _Drawn and Engraved under the Supervision of A.V.S. Anthony._ + + PRICE IN CLOTH, $6.00; IN ANTIQUE MOROCCO on TREE CALF, $10.00, IN + CRUSHED LEVANT, WITH SILK LININGS, $25.00. + + "CHILDE HAROLD" is the most famous of the poems of Lord Byron, and + abounds in the most picturesque and attractive scenes and subjects for + illustration; including the beautiful scenery of the Rhine, and of Italy + and Greece, and the rich treasures of art and history in the classic + countries around the Mediterranean. + + The best American artists have drawn these illustrations, _con + amore_, producing a great number of very choice examples of the high + perfection which wood-engraving has reached in the New World. The + general supervision of the work has devolved upon Mr. A.V.S. ANTHONY, + who held the same relation to the recent magnificent editions of + "Lucille" "The Lady of the Lake," "The Princess," and "Marmion;" thus + ensuring the utmost accuracy in study, taste in composition, and + elegance in finish. + + The Publishers believe that in this form and with this elegance of + finish the work will be widely welcomed as a Fine Art Edition, and + become the + + LEADING HOLIDAY GIFT-BOOK OF THE YEAR. + + "In every respect a beautiful book. It is printed from new plates and + its many illustrations have been furnished by artists famous in their + line. It is even more attractive than its handsome predecessors, the + 'Marmion' and the Lady of the Lake."--Boston Traveller. + + "The most talked of Book since 'Daniel Deronda.'" + + + The Rise of Silas Lapham. + By WILLIAM D. HOWELLS. 1 vol. 12mo. + + "No novel since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' has been so extensively read by + business men. Mr. Howell's literary work has broadened and deepened into + this, the latest and most important, and we think his best work,"--says + the _New Jerusalem Messenger_. + + + For a Woman. + By NORA TERRY, 1 vol. 16mo. $1.00. + + An admirable Story of modern life in America. + + "Her prose is always as charming as her poetry, which is saying a great + deal.--_Boston Transcript_. + + "Nora Perry is the only poet of pure passion in America."--D.A. WASSON, + in _Boston Transcript_. + + + Social Silhouettes. + By EDGAR FAWCETT. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "All Gotham is busy gossiping over Edgar Fawcett's series of social + Silhouettes,' and everybody has his pet theory as to whom is deliniated + in each portrait."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + In Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery of New Orleans. + + By WM. MILLER OWEN, First Lieutenant and Adjutant B.W.A. Illustrated + with 8 maps and four engravings. 8vo. $3.00. + + A stirring narrative of events during the late Civil War, from Bull Run + to Seven Pines, Antietam and Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, + Gettysburg, Chickamaugu, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomatox and Spanish + Fort. Compiled by the adjutant from his diary and from documents and + Orders. + + "It is indeed, the most interesting, authentic and reliable contribution + to our war literature yet seen."--_New Orleans Times Democrat_. + + + The Haunted Adjutant; and Other Stories. + By EDMUND QUINCY. Edited by his son, Edmund Quincy. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Quincy possessed the Imaginative faculty, and the instructive + faculty in larger measure than any of his countrymen, Hawthorne, perhaps + excepted, and Hawthorne, if his equal, was not his superior."--_Boston + Traveller_. + + + Aulnay Tower. + By BLANCHE WILLIS HOWARD. 12mo. $1.50. + + "A story which, for absorbing interest, brilliancy of style, charm of + graphic character drawing, and exquisite literary quality, will hold its + rank among the best work in American fiction."--_Boston Traveller_. + + + Love; or, A Name. + By JULIAN HAWTHORNE. 1 vol. 12mo. $1.50. + + "Mr. Hawthorne has a more powerful imagination than any contemporary + write of fiction."--_The Academy (London)_. + + + A Narrative of Military Service. + By Gen. W.B. HAZEN. 1 vol. 8vo. With Maps, Plans and Illustrations. + $3.00. + + "There can be no doubt, we think, that it will be eagerly read, + particularly by the brave soldiers whom he led at Shiloh, who held the + crest at Stone Ridge, who stood firm under his eye at Chickamauga, who + floated with him by night under the shadow of Lookout Mountain down to + Brown's Ferry, who received his order to climb the fence of Mission + Ridge who helped to take Atlanta, who marched to the sea, who swarmed + over the parapets of Fort McAllister, who made the triumphant campaign + of the Carolinas, and passed in review before the President."--_New + York Mail and Express_. + + _For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the + Publishers_. + + TICKNOR & CO., Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + _OUR GREAT PREMIUM OFFER._ + + Every subscriber sending address together with $3.00 for one year's + subscription to the BAY STATE MONTHLY before January 1, 1886, may choose + one of the following valuable books, numbered from 1 to 41 inclusive, as + a premium. In ordering from 1 to 30 inclusive, fifteen cents must be + added to pay postage; and in ordering a premium numbered 31, 32 or 33, + forty cents must be added to pay postage and extra cost of book. + + 1. Uncle Tom's Cabin. By Harriet Beecher Stowe, cloth, price, $1.00. + + _American Commonwealths_. + _Edited by Horace E. Scudder_. + + A series of volumes narrating the history of such States of the Union as + have exerted a positive influence in the shaping of the national + government, or have a striking political, social, or economical history. + With Maps and indexes. Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 2. Virginia. By John Esten Cooke. + 3. Oregon. By Rev. William Barrows. + 4. Maryland. By William Hand Browne. + 5. Kentucky. By Prof. N.S. Shaler. + 6. Kansas. By Prof. Leverett W. Spring. + 7. Michigan. By Hon. T.M. Cooley. + + + _American Men of Letters_. + _Edited by Charles Dudley Warner_. + + A series of biographies of distinguished American authors, having all + the special interest of biography, and the larger interest and value + of illustrating the different phases of American literature, and the + social, political, and moral influences which have moulded these authors + and the generation to which they belonged. + + The volumes contain Portraits of their subjects. Each volume, uniform. + 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 8. Washington Irving. By C.D. Warner. + 9. Noah Webster. By Horace E. Scudder. + 10. Henry D. Thoreau. By F.B. Sanborn. + 11. George Ripley. By O.B. Frothingham. + 12. J.F. Cooper. By Prof. T.R. Lounsbury. + 13. Margaret F. Ossoli. By T.W. Higginson. + 14. Ralph W. Emerson. By O.W. Holmes. + 15. Edgar A. Poe. By Geo. E. Woodberry. + 16. Nathaniel P. Willis. By Henry A. Beers. + + + _American Statesmen_. + _Edited by John T. Morse, Jr._ + + The object of this series of lives of American Statesmen is to furnish + volumes which shall embody the compact result of extensive study of the + many influences which have combined to shape the political history of + our country. + + Each volume, uniform, 16mo, gilt top, $1.25. + + 17. John Quincy Adams. By J.T. Morse, Jr. + 18. Alexander Hamilton. By H.C. Lodge. + 19. John C. Calhoun. By Dr. H. Von Hoist. + 20. Andrew Jackson. By Prof. W.G. Sumner. + 21. John Randolph. By Henry Adams. + 22. James Monroe. By Pres. D.C. Gilman. + 23. Thomas Jefferson. By J.T. Morse, Jr. + 24. Daniel Webster. By H.C. Lodge. + 25. Albert Gallatin. By John A. Stevens. + 26. James Madison. By Sidney H. Gay. + 27. John Adams. John. T. Morse, Jr. + 28. John Marshall. By Allan B. Magruder. + 29. Samuel Adams. By James K. Hosmer. + 30. Martin Van Buren. By Wm. Dorsheimer. + 31. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips. By George L. Austin. + Price $1.50 + 32. The Life and Deeds of Gen. U.S. Grant. By P.C. Headly and G.L. + Austin. Price $1.50 + 33. The Life of Henry W. Longfellow. By Francis H. Underwood. + Price $1.50 + + + _Atlantic Portraits_. + + Life-size Portraits of the following American authors, lithographed in + the best manner, and suitable for the study or the school-room. Each + picture measures 34 by 30 inches, and is forwarded by mail, carefully + rolled. + + 34. Oliver Wendell Holmes. + 35. James Russell Lowell. + 36. William Cullen Bryant. + 37. John G. Whittier. + 38. Henry W. Longfellow. + 39. Nathaniel Hawthorne. + 40. Ralph Waldo Emerson. + + + These are real Steel Plate Portraits, superbly printed upon heavy fine + plate paper, 9 1-2 by 12 inches. Lowest cash price of each, 25 cents. + + 41. Four Elegant steel plate portraits to be selected from the + following list:-- + + The Great War Governor, John A. Andrew. + Ex-Governor John D. Long. + Ex-Governor William Gaston. + Gen. U.S. Grant. + President James A. Garfield. + President Grover Cleveland. + + + Any one or more of the above books or portraits will be sent by us + carriage free to any part of the United States or Provinces upon receipt + of Price. + + Remit by Post-Office order, draft, express or Registered Letter to + TREASURER, BAY STATE MONTHLY COMPANY, 43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + + EXTRA SPECIAL NOTICE AND PREMIUM + TO THE READERS OF THIS MAGAZINE. + ====== + + We take much pleasure in announcing that arrangements have been made to + supply our readers with an extraordinary bargain, by offering to them a + LIMITED number of Proof Impressions of + + HOLLYER'S LINE AND STIPPLE STEEL PLATE ENGRAVING + Of the late Henry W. Longfellow in His Library + At "Craigie House," Old Cambridge, Mass. + ====== + + The following are a few endorsements among many others of like high + character that have been given after a critical inspection of the + engraving, viz: + + _John. J. Platt, the poet says_: The likeness is an excellent one. + It represents our beloved and lamented poet in his most familiar + atmosphere. Longfellow was a poet of home and its affections, and this + engraving should be in every American home. + + _John B. Peaslee, Superintendent of Public Schools, Cincinnati, O., + says_: Beyond question, HOLLYER'S portrait of LONGFELLOW is the most + accurate and life-like that has appeared. It is a great work, and will + speedily find its way into our cultured American homes. + + _The Boston Daily Globe says_: HOLLYER has certainly achieved an + artistic triumph. The portrait of LONGFELLOW is one of _the best_ + that has been issued. + + _The Providence (R.I.) Evening Press says_: HOLLYER has produced a + new, beautiful and _artistic steel plate engraving_ of "LONGFELLOW + IN HIS LIBRARY," of which neither artist nor publisher need be ashamed. + + _The Bridgeport (Conn.) Farmer says_: Mr. HOLLYER'S ENGRAVINGS have + gained for him a wide fame in this country and in Europe, and in the + present work he has certainly not lost any of the vigor, strength and + power which characterized his earlier works. Every one who honors + LONGFELLOW will want to possess this engraving. + ====== + + THE FOLLOWING ARE THE REGULAR PRICES OF THE ENGRAVING + + PUBLISHED BY JOHN C. YORSTON & CO. New York. Cincinnati. Chicago. + + ARTIST PROOFS, size 27x37 inches, printed on India Paper, _limited to + 125 impressions, _and numbered consecutively 1 to 125, and each + impression _signed_ by the artist, each ... $50.00 + + PROOFS BEFORE LETTER, size 25x35 inches, printed on India Paper, + _limited to_ 250 _impressions_, and numbered consecutively 1 + to 250, each ... 30.00 + + INDIA PROOFS, LETTERED, size 24x33 inches, _limited to_ 500 + _impressions_, and numbered consecutively 1 to 500, each ... 15.00 + + PROOF IMPRESSIONS, size 24x32 inches, each ... 7.50 + ====== + + Any one sending us the name of a new subscriber, with $3.00, for one + year's subscription to THE BAY STATE MONTHLY, before January 1, 1836, + may, if desired, order the above engraving (proof impression), instead + of any of the premiums described on the opposite page. + + _THIS IS AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER, AS THESE ENGRAVINGS HAVE NEVER + BEFORE SEEN SOLD FOR LESS THAN $7.50 EACH._ + ====== + + _We will sell a limited number of these engravings at the price of_ + 85 _cents each._ + + BAY STATE MONTHLY CO., 43 Milk Street, Boston. + +======================================================================= + + + THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY FOR 1886 + + _WILL CONTAIN SERIAL STORIES BY_ + + HENRY JAMES. + + ["The Princess Casamassima" will continue until August, 1886.] + + CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK, + + Author of "The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains," "In the Tennessee + Mountains," etc. + + WILLIAM H. BISHOP, + + Author of "The House of a Merchant Prince." + + MR. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL + + Will write for THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY during 1886. + + MR. JOHN FISKE + + Will contribute six or more papers on United States History, covering + the period from the Revolution to the adoption of the Constitution. + These papers discuss a portion of American history very imperfectly + known, and cannot fail to be exceedingly engaging by reason of Mr. + Fiske's ample knowledge and perfectly clear style. + + MR. PHILIP GILBERT HAMERTON, + + The distinguished English writer, will furnish a series of articles + comparing French and English people, character, opinions, customs, etc. + Mr. Hamerton is peculiarly qualified, by his intimate knowledge of the + French as well as of his fellow-countrymen, to write on this subject. + + TERMS: $4.00 a year, in advance, POSTAGE FREE; 35 cents a number. With + superb life-size portrait of Hawthorne, Emerson, Longfellow, Bryant, + Whittier, Lowell, or Holmes, $5.00; each additional portrait, $1.00. + + _Postal notes and money are at the risk of the sender, and therefore + remittances should be made by money-order, draft, or registered letter + to_ + + HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY, 4 PARK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK'S + Remarkable Stories. + ====== + + THE PROPHET OF THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS. + ==> _SEVENTH THOUSAND_. $1.25. + + This is one of the most noteworthy of American novels. The striking + figure and fate of "the prophet," the cave and stealthy operations of + the "moonshiners," and the engaging love story which runs as a golden + thread through it all, are depicted with great power and fascination. + ====== + + IN THE TENNESSEE MOUNTAINS. + + Eight short stories of marvellous power and beauty. $1.25. + ==> _THIRTEENTH EDITION._ + ====== + + DOWN THE RAVINE. + With Illustrations. $1.00. + + A very engaging story of East Tennessee life, equally interesting to + parents and children. +-------------------------------------- + + Life and Letters of Louis Agassiz. + + By Elizabeth C. Agassiz. With Portraits and several + Illustrations. 2 vols. crown 8vo, $4.00. + + Mrs. Agassiz has written in the most delightful manner the story of the + great naturalist's life, and has woven into the narrative a large number + of his letters, the whole forming a peculiarly attractive biography and + a work of remarkable value and interest to all students of Natural + History. + ====== + + THE BIGLOW PAPERS. + + By James Russell Lowell. First and Second Series. In the + Riverside Aldine Series. 2 vols. 16mo, $2.00. + + "The greatest of all American humorists is James Russell Lowell, and + greatest of all American books of humor is the Biglow + Papers."--_North British Review._ + ====== + + Two Years Before the Mast. + + Sailor Life in a Voyage around Cape Horn to and from San Francisco, and + in California. By Richard H. Dana, Jr. New Popular Edition. Price + reduced from $1.50 to $1.00. + ====== + + LARS: A Pastoral of Norway. + + By Bayard Taylor. In Riverside Literature Series. With a + Biographical Sketch and Notes. Paper, 15 cents. +-------------------------------------- + + _For sale by all Booksellers. Sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt + of price, by the Publishers_, HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston, Mass. + +======================================================================= + + + SPRINGER BROS., + + [Illustration] + + Respectfully invite the attention of Ladies to their extensive and + attractive display of + + Fashionable Cloaks, + Short Wraps, + Newmarkets, + Plush Sacques, + Walking-Jackets + + And Ladies Outside Garments of every description just opened at the + + NEW RETAIL DEPARTMENT FOR THE + Fall and Winter Season of 1885-86. + + Ladies who have never yet visited this establishment will be surprised + at the elegance of the spacious salesrooms and the superior grades of + goods therein displayed. + + SPRINGER BROS., + Importers, Wholesale and Retail Manufacturers. + Chauncy Street, Essex Street and Harrison Avenue, + (One Block from Washington Street.) BOSTON. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + ADAMSON'S BOTANIC COUGH BASALM + + _FOR THE CURE OF COUGHS, COLDS, SORE THROAT, HOARSENESS, CROUP, + ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, BLEEDING AND SORENESS OF LUNGS AND WHOOPING COUGH, + AND ALL DISEASES LEADING TO CONSUMPTION_. + + Pleasant, and Cures as by Magic. + + Sold by Druggists & Medicine Dealers Everywhere. Price, 10, 35 & 75 cts. + + F.W. Kinsman & Co., PROPRIETORS _343 4th Av. New York_ +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + RELIEF AND SHOULDER AND SKIRT SUPPORTING CORSETS + SOLD AND FITTED BY MRS. L. LANDON, 25 WINTER ST., ROOM 22, + FORMERLY WITH MME. GRISWOLD. + +======================================================================= + + + THE MASSACHUSETTS RELIEF ASSOCIATION. + (Incorporated under the laws of Massachusetts.) + 31 Milk (Elevator), 8 Hawley, 9 Arch Sts., Rooms 49 & 50, BOSTON. + + JNO. F. WOOD, _Pres't_. R.T. RYDER, _Sec'y_. JOHN PEARCE, _Treas._ + + * * * * * + + _Issue in one Certificate, Insurance as desired of from $1,000 to + $5,000, payable at Death, but covering Sickness, Accident and Total + Disability for Life._ + + * * * * * + + SPECIAL FEATURES. + + In case of Sickness or Accident, the afflicted member is entitled to + from $5 to $25 per week, according to the amount of + Insurance, while totally incapacitated for work. + + If, from any cause, a member is totally disabled for life, the whole + amount of Insurance money, as in case of death, is paid at once to him + while living. + + This is just what has long been wanted. It covers all contingencies of + life and is not expensive. + + Full particulars how to become a member, together with blank forms will + be sent to any address upon application. + + A FEW GOOD AGENTS ALWAYS WANTED. +-------------------------------------- + + REDUCTION OF FARE TO NEW YORK + VIA + FALL RIVER LINE. + + Only $3.00 For First Class Limited Tickets. + + Special express leaves Boston from OLD COLONY STATION week days + at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 + minutes with the steamers PILGRIM and BRISTOL. Annex + steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. + Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner + of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station. + + _J.R. KENDRICK, General Manager._ + _L.H. PALMER, Agent, 3 Old State House._ + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration: LACTART ACID OF MILK. A DELICIOUS BEVERAGE.] + + _LACTART._ + (MILK ACID.) + ====FOR==== + Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain. + _A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY._ + + Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water + and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical + than lemonade or _ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE_. It possesses remarkable + hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA + and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. + NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each + bottle or mailed on application. _SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS._ + + AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St., BOSTON, MASS. +-------------------------------------- + + STONINGTON LINE. + INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH + Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington, + AND ALL POINTS + SOUTH AND WEST, + + Avoiding Point Judith. + + Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers + Stonington and Narraganset. + + Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus + Avenue and Park Square, + + DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.) + + Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early + supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the + _early trains South and West._ + + AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES. + + Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at + 214 Washington Street, corner of State, + AND AT + BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION. + + Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the + Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample + time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains. + + A.A. FOLSOM, Superintendent B. & P.R.R. + F.W. POPPLE, General Passenger Agent. + J.W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. +-------------------------------------- + + COOLIDGE HOUSE, BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. + + The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable + Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, + Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries + and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement + of a private house; affording _most excellent accommodations at + moderate charges._ + + COOLIDGE CAFE, EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN. + + Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in + use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, + and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same + cooked on "The Silver Grill." + + A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect. + _The Best Material, Cooking, and Service._ + I.N. ANDREWS & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS. + + All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our + banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send + for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction. + + FAIRBANKS AND COLE, + _MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS_, + 121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS. + +======================================================================= + + + A Splendid Christmas Gift! + Ladies Do Your Own Stamping! + + With our New ONE DOLLAR Outfit + You can _SAVE MONEY_ by doing your own Stamping + + You can _MAKE MONEY_ by doing it for others. + + Good $5 Stamping Outfit for $1.00 + + 35 Parchment Stamping Patterns full size, + retail price 10 c. each. $3.50 + 26 Initials, size 1-1/2 in. for Hatbands, Handkerchiefs, &c. .75 + 1 Illustrated Book of Instruction in Kensington Embroidery Work. .10 + 1 Felt Stamping Pad, imp, pat. .15 + 1 Box best Stamping Powder .15 + 1 Felt Tidy, with design stamped all ready to work, with 4 knots + of silk and needle .35 + ======== + Retail Value $5.00 + + Teaches also How to Stamp Plush Felt, &c. Teaches the Kensington, + Plush Ribbon and other stitches. Also How to Do Kensington, Lustre + Painting, &c. The patterns contained in this outfit are all useful and + desirable for stamping Hatbands, Lamp and Table-Mats, Tidies, Doylies + Towel Racks Lambrequins, Splashers, etc. + + 1 vine of Roses, 2-1/2 in. wide + 1 little Girl, 5 in. high + 1 Kitten, 3-1/2 in. high + 1 little Butterfly + 1 little Bird + 1 Bird, 4x5 inches + 1 design, Two Owls on Branch + 1 Star and Anchor + 1 design of Child's Face + 1 Sprig of Daisies, 4x5 in. + 1 single Rose and Bud, 2x2 in. + 1 bunch of Pansies, 4x5 in. + 1 bunch of Roses & Buds, 3x5 in. + 1 sprig of Golden Rod, 4 in. high + 1 sprig of Daisies, 4 in. high + 1 sprig of Smilax, 5 in. high + 1 single Buttercup, 2x2 in. + 1 sprig of Asters, 2x3-1/2 in. + 1 sprig of Barberries, 3 in. high + 1 vine of Leaves, 1-1/2 in. wide + 1 growing design of Violets, for Lambrequins, &c. 6 inches high + 1 single Daisy and Forget-me-not, 2x2 in. + 1 sprig of Bachelor's Button, 3-1/2 in. high + 1 cluster of Strawberries, 2-1/2x3 in. + 1 sprig of Forget-me-nots, 1-1/2x2 in. + 1 bouquet of Daisies and Forget-me-nots 5x6 in. + 1 vine of Daisies and Ferns, 5-1/2 in. wide + 1 vine of Point Russe Stitches, 1-1/4 in. wide + Snow-flake designs for Crazy Patchwork + 1 strip of Scallops for Skirts, Infant's Blanket &c + 1 vine with Scallop, 2-1/2 in. wide + 1 Braiding Vine, 2 in. wide + 1 Braiding Vine, 1-1/2 in. wide + Design for Crying Child for Tidy in outline + 1 outline design, Boy and Girl Skating, 7 in. high + + + With the Outfit You Can Learn the Art of the Kensington Embroidery. + You can learn Perforated Stamping, and do your own stamping. You can + adorn your house with hundreds of beautiful articles of Kensington + Embroidery. You can teach the art of Kensington Embroidery and Stamping + and do embroidery for others. Many young ladies who begin business with + our Embroidery Outfit, are now doing a very pretty and paying business + in their own houses. REMEMBER the entire Outfit will be sent in a box + for only ONE DOLLAR, TWO outfits $1.75, FOUR outfits for ONLY THREE + DOLLARS. Get three of your friends to send with you and get your own + OUTFIT FREE! Send Postal Note, Money Order or Registered Letter. + Postage Stamps taken. Send all orders to World Man'f'g Co. 122 Nassau + Street, New York. + + * * * * * + + _It is seldom that we have an opportunity to direct attention to + anything so really worthy of notice as this Complete Stamping Outfit. + While the price is almost ridiculously low for the entire outfit, the + number, excellence and variety of the articles furnished almost exceeds + belief. Even for a family to do its own stamping the outfit would be of + great service; but when it is realised, that by means of the + instruction, samples and materials that are included as "Outfits," any + lady can easily become a proficient in making choice Kensington Lace of + most elegant and graceful patterns, and become skilled in executing + every description of perforated stamping and thus make a nice addition + to her income in a very easy and pleasant way, it would seem that + scarcely anyone would neglect taking advantage of so favorable an + opportunity. These stamping outfits are particularly appropriate for + holiday presents and, in our opinion, well worthy of attentive, + consideration._ + +======================================================================= + + + THE PROVIDENT SAVINGS LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. + + OFFICE: BRYANT BUILDING, 55 LIBERTY STREET, NEW YORK. + + RENEWABLE TERM INSURANCE + + COMBINES THE CHEAPNESS AND CONVENIENCE AFFORDED BY THE BEST ASSESSMENT + SOCIETIES, WITH THE SECURITY AND PERMANENCE OF THE LEVEL PREMIUM LIFE + INSURANCE COMPANIES. + + THE SAFEST, MOST ECONOMICAL, AND MOST EQUITABLE LIFE INSURANCE + OBTAINABLE. + + SHEPPARD HOMANS, PRESIDENT. + WM. E. STEVENS, SECRETARY. + + ==> SEND FOR CIRCULAR, OR CALL IN PERSON. <== + +======================================================================= + + + "GET THE BEST!!" + + THE POPULAR EDUCATOR + + Used in Thousands of Schools, + + _Should be in the Hands of Every Live Teacher._ + + * * * * * + + MONTHLY, $1.00 A YEAR. + + * * * * * + + WHAT IS SAID OF IT. + + + PROF. W.H. PAYNE, _University of Michigan_. I have received copies + of the last EDUCATOR. I think it the best issue of an educational + journal I have ever seen. + + SUPT. JOHN JONES. JR., _Marengo, Iowa_. I believe the POPULAR + EDUCATOR equal to the best. We are very much pleased with it. + + SUPT. A.P. STONE, _Mass_. An excellent and needed paper. + + CHARLES F. KING., _Boston Manager, School of Methods, Saratoga + Springs, N.Y._ The POPULAR EDUCATOR shows in its beautiful type, + convenient size, attractive appearance of each page, the number and + completeness of each department, the work of the most thorough editorial + supervision. Its writers are selected from the best in the country and + each one is a live, wide-awake, practical teacher. + + W.A. COCHRAN, _Co. Supt. of Schools, Indiana, Pa._ Am highly + pleased with the paper. + + SUPT. M.E. HARD, _Gallipolis, Ohio._ It is the best paper for the + young teacher I have ever seen. + + S.D. ANGLIN, _Co. Supt., Warsaw, Ind._ It has the "True Ring." Shall + be pleased to see a copy in the hands of every teacher in this county. + + AMOS BURNS, _Co. Supt., Columbus, Ind._ Like it very much. + + PROF. A.P. BOURLAND, _So. Western University, Tenn._ From no other + school journal do I get so much valuable practical aid. + + Miss O.A. EVERS, _Principal, N.H. Training School, Manchester, + N.H._ You have "Out-Heroded Herod." It is the best of any educational + paper I have ever read. I cannot see how you get so much together, and + not a grain of chaff. + + LEROY T. WEEKS, _Portis, Kan_. Cannot do without it. Use it in the + school-room in many ways. + + AARON SHEELY, _Co. Supt. of Schools, Adams Co., Pa._ It is the + freshest, most practical and best educational journal published in this + country. +-------------------------------------- + + TEACHERS' HAND-BOOK SERIES. + Popular School-Room Helps. + + PRIMARY READING: How to teach it. 15 c. Boston Method. Arranged by + the Supervisors of the Boston schools. Price 15 cents. The most + practical work ever published on this subject. + + INFORMATION LESSONS: Nat. Hist. 15 c. Animals, Plants, Minerals, + Theory and practice combined, with model lessons for the school-room. + + ELEMENTARY SCIENCE: Model Lessons. 15 c. Practical and + progressive, yet simple and suggestive. + + NEW SCHOOL-ROOM SPEAKER. 15 c. New Dialogues, Declamations, and + Recitations. Especially suitable for use in the school-room. + + RECITATION CARDS. 10 c. Containing memory gems for Bands of Mercy, + Arbor Days, Temperance, &c. Also, Motion songs and Recitations for + distribution among the class. + + LANGUAGE LESSON CARDS. 12 c. Containing pictures of Animals, + Birds, Insects, &c., with suggestive questions, enclosed in strong + envelope. + + EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., 43 MILK STREET. +-------------------------------------- + + TO ADVERTISERS! + Read the Following Statement. + + Sept. 19, 1885. + + I hereby certify that the subscription list of the POPULAR EDUCATOR + has increased over a thousand names, each month, during the last + three months. + + C.M. LANDER, 50 Bromfield Street, Boston, Contractor for Mailing. + + + Suffolk, ss.: + + Personally appears before me at Boston, this nineteenth day of + September. 1885, C.M. Lander, who swears the forgoing statement, by him + made, to be true. + + RUFUS G. FAIRBANKS, Justice of the Peace. + + * * * * * + + Increase of circulation from October to November ... 800 + + Educational advertisers will find this live periodical a good medium. + The rates are very _low_. Samples and terms sent on application. + Address the + + EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., 43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. + +======================================================================= + + + HORACE PARTRIDGE & CO. + 497 & 499 Washington St. BOSTON. 51 to 57 Hanover St., + + HEADQUARTERS ==FOR== Toys, Games ==AND== Fancy Goods, + + Being the largest Importers of Toys and Games in the United States, with + a Branch House in Frankfort, Germany, our facilities for securing all + leading novelties as they appear in the European markets, and for + furnishing same to our customers at very lowest prices, are unsurpassed. + + HORACE PARTRIDGE & CO. +-------------------------------------- + +[Illustration] + + AN ARTISTIC VADE MECUM. + THE LADIES' COMPLETE GUIDE TO FANCY WORK + AND HOME DECORATION. + + The Most Complete Work of the Kind Ever Issued. + Over 500 Illustrations. Price only 25 Cents. + + The rules and patterns given are so clearly and plainly illustrated and + described that a very _small child_ can work many of them. With + this book as an aid, every home in the land, no matter how humble, may + be as handsomely embellished as the mansion of the most wealthy, and at + a Trifling Cost. Plain and concise directions are given for doing + Kensington and Outline Embroidery, Artistic Needlework, Painting on + Silk, Velvet, and Satin, China Decorating, Darned Lace, Knitted Luce, + Crazy Patchwork, Macreme Crochet, Java Canvas Work, Feather Work, Point + Russe, Cross Stitch, Indian Work, and Turkish Drapery, Wax Flowers, + etc., etc. Among the hundred of designs given are those for + + LAMBREQUINS, DOYLIES, WORK STANDS, + MONOGRAMS, TIDIES, SOFA PILLOWS, + INITIALS, OTTOMANS, PURSES, + BORDERS, WORK BASKETS, FOOTSTOOLS, + CORNERS, BABY'S BASKETS, PICTURE FRAMES, + NORMANDY LACE, SCRAP BASKETS, PILLOW CASES, + EDGINGS, BRUSH CASES, COUNTERPANES, + TABLE MATS, LAMP SCREENS, LETTER CASES, + LAMP MATS, TOILET CUSHIONS, HAND SCREENS, + HOODS, TOILET CASES, TOILET MIRRORS, + QUILTS, PENWIPERS, BANNERS, + VALANCES, THERMOMETERS, GLOVE SACHETS, + PIANO COVERS, NEEDLE CASES, PAPER FLOWERS, + PORTFOLIOS, HANDBAGS, RUSTIC WORK, + PANELS, Etc. JEWEL CASES, Etc. COLLAR and CUFF BOXES. + + and many others. Everything in the line of Fancy Work ever thought + of is represented, and the satisfaction of every taste. + + Aside from the fascination of "doing fancy work," _money can be + made_ by selling the articles to Fancy Goods and Dry Goods Stores, or + by teaching others how to make them. In the large cities ladies pay a + high price for learning no more than this book will teach. Those + desiring _genteel employment_ will find the "LADIES' COMPLETE + GUIDE TO FANCY WORK" a veritable friend. It is a handsome book, + printed on cream tinted super calendered paper. Sent postpaid for 25 + Cents. FIVE COPIES FOR ONE DOLLAR. Get four friends to send with + you, and you get your book FREE. + + Address, PEOPLES' PUB. CO., Boston, Mass. + +======================================================================= + + + THE LARGEST AND BEST HOUSE TO BUY SHADE GOODS FROM. + + CUSHMAN BROS., AND CO., + + MANUFACTURERS OF + + [Illustration: CUSHMAN'S SELF-ACTING SHADE ROLLER] + + Shade Rollers, Window Shades, Brass and Nickel Shade Trimmings, + Hollands and Upholsterer's Hardware. + + IMPORTERS OF KING'S FIRST QUALITY SCOTCH HOLLANDS. + + 82, 84 & 86 HAWLEY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. + + ==> An inspection of our stock is cordially invited. +-------------------------------------- + + ARTISTS' MATERIALS. + + _Decorative Art Goods._ + Mathematical Instruments, + Architects' & Engineers Supplies, etc., etc. + + * * * * * + + FROST AND ADAMS, IMPORTERS + No. 37 Cornhill, Boston. + + F.S. FROST. H.A. LAWRENCE. + + Illustrated catalogue free. Mention this magazine. +-------------------------------------- + + Mayo's Vegetable Anaesthetic. + + * * * * * + + A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether, and all + other anaesthetics. Discovered by Dr. U.K. Mao, April, 1884, and since + administered by him and others in over 106,000 cases successfully. + Compounded from nervines which impart oxygen to sustain life, (Nitrous + oxide gas, as administered, is destitute of this and tends to produce + convulsions and suffocation). The youngest child, the most sensitive + lady, and those having heart disease and lung complaint, inhale this + vapor with impunity. It stimulates the circulation and builds up the + tissues. Recommended in midwifery and all cases of nervous prostration. + Physicians, surgeons, dentists and private families supplied. For + further information, pamphlets, testimonials, etc., apply to Dr. U.K. + MAYO, Dentist, 378 Tremont street, Boston, Mass. + + * * * * * + + INDORSEMENT OF THE LATE DR. THORNDIKE. + + BOSTON, August 15, 1883. + + This certifies that I removed in the back of Mr. J.D. Moore a tumor + weighing two pounds and three-quarters. The time occupied was twenty-two + minutes. The patient was insensible during the whole operation, and came + out from the influence of the anaesthetic speedily and perfectly, + without nausea or any ill effects. The agent used was prepared by Dr. + U.K. Mayo, the dentist, a new discovery of his own. I consider this + anaesthetic the safest the world has yet seen. + + WM. H. THORNDIKE, M.D., 92 Boylston, Street. + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + VICTOR L. CHANDLER + ENGRAVER ON WOOD + 43 MILK ST. BOSTON MASS. + + * * * * * + + Are You Out Of PAPER? Or Stationery Of Any Kind? + + If so come to our store. If you cannot do that conveniently, drop us a + postal and we will send you FREE a complete set of samples of the best + Foreign and American writing papers with prices, and full information as + to sheets to the pound, sizes, cost of envelopes to match, etc. Papers + from 17 cents to $1.00 per pound. By mail 17 cents per pound extra. + + WARD & GAY, + Paper Merchants AND Stationers, + 184 Devonshire St., Boston. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + + Tailoring Done as it should be. + H.E. FALES & Co. 375 Washington Street Boston + +======================================================================= + + +[Illustration] + + IMPERIAL GRANUM, THE GREAT MEDICINAL FOOD. + + SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. JOHN CARLE & SONS--New York. + + THE SALVATOR FOR INVALIDS AND THE AGED. + + AN INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT FOR THE GROWTH AND PROTECTION OF INFANTS + AND CHILDREN. + + A SUPERIOR NUTRITIVE IN CONTINUED FEVERS. + + A RELIABLE REMEDIAL AGENT IN ALL DISEASES OF THE STOMACH AND + INTESTINES. + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 6, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BAY STATE MONTHLY *** + +***** This file should be named 17726.txt or 17726.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/7/2/17726/ + +Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, David Garcia and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by Cornell University Digital Collections) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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