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Literary Notes

Literary Notes image
Parent Issue
Day
20
Month
November
Year
1890
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Harper's Bazar is a journal for the home. Giving the latest information with regard to the fashions, its numerous illustrations, fashion plates, and paltern-sheets supplements are indispensable alike to the home drest-muKer and the professional modiste. No expense is spared in making its ani.-nc attractiveness of the highest order. Is clever short stories, parlor plays and thoughtful essays satisl'y all taates, nd its last page is famous as a budget of wit and hutnor. In its weekly issues everyihing is includcd which is ut interett to the women. During 1891 Agnes B. Ormsbee will write a series of articles on The House Comfortable, Juliet Corson will treatof Sanitary Living, and an interesting sucepssion (f papers on Women in Art and Histor; ', superblv illusirated, will be furnisheu by ïheodor-i Child. The serial stories will be by VValter Besant and Thomas Hardy. Harper's Periodicals. Per year : Harper's Bazar, $4.00. Harper's Magazine,4.00. Harper's Weekly,$4.00. Haiper'sYoung People, $2.00. Postage free to all subscribers in the UniU-d States, Canada and Mexico. The volumes of the Bazar began with the first number for January of each year. VVhen no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the number current at time of receipt of order. Bound volumes of Harper's Bazar for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense, (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar peí volume), for $7.00 per volume. Cloth cases fur each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of $1.00 each. Kemittances shou'.d be made by nost-offlee money order or draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisenient without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Address, Harper & Broilier?, New York. The fifteenth volume of the Inler national Educaüon Serie treats of tliHigher Educalion of Women in Ku rope. It is written by Miss Helene Lange, the directress of the Victoria Lyceum for Young Ladies in Berlin. Dr. L. R, Klemm.the translator, whose book on the European Schools has been so well received, translates the work of Miss Lange, and adds some graphic charts and Btatistical tables in an introduction, showing the exact status of the movement in the United States. The ed'tor of the series, Mr. Harris. in his preface gives the philosophy of the moyement, explaining why the movement in favor of the higher éducation of women is so recent, and why it now promises totaiu rather than lose in fut'ire. D. Appleton & Co., New York. The Principies of Style is the title oí a rood sized pamphlet just prepared by Fred N. Scott, Ph. D., assistant professor of Rhetoric in the University of Michigan, and printed by the Register Publisliing Company. Besides a prefatory essay designed to give the student hls whereabouts ia the subject of higher rhe.oric, it contains topics for discuosion, and a full list of references, to books in the university library mainly, for the further study of each topic. The book is sure to be of value to all interested in literary criticism, since it arranges so systematically the parts of the subject, and gives some of the best references to be had upon them. Price 75 cents. Register Pub. Co. Dr. C. C. Abbott, whose delightful studies in natural history have become familiar to many readers, has written another eusgestive book, entitled Outings at Odd Times, which will be pubiished immediately by D. Applelon & Co., New York. Tice Book Buyer for November has for its biographical article a Sketch of Frantis Parkman.author of the Pioneers of France in the New World. The article is written by Alexander Young, Boston correspondent of the Critic. The Chrislma8 number promises to be especially full and attractive. Charles Seribner's Sons, New York. Harper & Brother announce the early publication of a sumptuotis volume of Selections from the Sonnets of WiUiam Woodsworth , with numerous illustrations from drawings by Alfred Parsons. The book is in every respect a work of art, and will compare favorably with the other well-known holiday gift books published in recent years by the same tiouse.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register