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Literary Notes

Literary Notes image
Parent Issue
Day
28
Month
September
Year
1893
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

, ,. _ „f Windelbands The translation of w .■History of l Lg P' oftheUniver81tyofCh1cago MsisUnt Profes ; Jh .u feP pub. Univemty a e teBQ_ tt';Jlrf .tot d York.N.Y. cipal features of the „ .lThe í?.r CU-de PbiUip, Champe Klysees, j ;n(jfV Sanbourne," by M. H. f Her. Sorth.Paiuter and Poet. j bHtHTSVo-" - Gift to the City oi J .,_ onumberiseBPe lustrationsofgreatva.m while the usual depa rt u t well sustaiued.-The Cas"el' K y 104andl06 4thAveTew York, The September Electie offer iureadlollowinK might be tion.ed=Te Argument for Belief. National . Re% e The Recent Solar Eclipse Fortnghtly Review; Life and Labor; New Kev.ew; Preachêrs and Sermons; Temple Bar; The Barometric MeasuremenU of The Future of Education; Oentlemen's Magazine; NineteenthCenturyEthics and the Struggle for Exwtence; Cortemporary Review; The Bram of Women; New Review.-Published by E. R. Pelton, 144 8th-Bt., New York. The leading feature of Harpers Weekly for September 23d is the first half of a Uo-part serial by Charles Egbert Craddock, entitled "The Moonshiners at Hoho-heebee Falle." The attractive department of Music and Drama, edited by Reginald De Koven, ia resumed; yachting receives a due share of attention in illustration and textand T. de Thulstrnp and W. A. Rogers contribuye striking full-page im pressions of the World's Fair. The methods of looking after the unemployed in the West, San Francisco's coming Midwinter Fair, and the great athletic meeting in Chicago are subjecte which also enrich and diversify an unusually attractive number.- Harper Bros., New York, N. Y. Littell'8 Living Age is appropriately named. It is a true representation of "the living age,"- the vast complexity of thouKhts, interests, aims, speculation?, imaginatione, knowledges, retrospections, of the contemporary world. lts weekly issues for September, among other excellent papere, contain the following: "A Visit to Prince Bismark," by Geo. W. Smalley "A Group of Naturalists," by Mrs. Andrew Crosee: "Amelia Opie": "A French Study of Burnb": "Tbe Religión of Letters, 17501850":"ReminiscencesofWilliamMake- peace Thackeray," by Francis St. John Thackeray: "Chapters from some Un■written Memorie- tin. Kemble," by Annie Ritchie: "The Fetish-Mountains of Krobo, by Hesketh J. Bell: "The Lives'and Loves of North American Birde," by John Worth: "The WonderingsóftheNorth Pole," by Sir Robert S. Ball: "The Abbe Gregaire and the French Kevolution": "Ethics and the StruggleoiExiBtence,"byLeslieStephen: "Whitlock's Swedieh Embassy," by Charles Edwards: "Old t_Fashioned Children,"by Frederic Adye, etc., besides several delightfal short stories by Buch noted writers as Augustus Jossopp, Lucy Clifford, Edward Laws, etc., etc., and some excellent poetry. Send 15 cents for a specimen copy and club rates with other magazines. Published by Little & Co., Boston, Mass.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register