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174 Box 3—Unsold. Box 4—Miss Benedict, Miss Works, Mrs. Works, Mrs. Benedict, Mrs. Wurtenburg, New Haven. Box 5—Miss H. Campbell, Philadel- phia; Miss H. Merrill, New Haven; Miss E. Rice, Northampton; Miss Temple, New Haven; Mrs. I. K. Blake, New Haven; Mrs. J. Campbell, Phila- delphia; W. M. Adriance, 1900; H. Speer, 1900; J. P. Rice, 1900. Box 6—Miss M. Woolverton, Albany ; Miss A. Manross, New Haven; Mrs. S. Penfield, New Haven; Mrs. R. Man- ross, New Haven; H. H. Read, 1901 S.; J. T. Ryerson, 1oo1 S. Box 7—The Misses Whittlesey and Miss Nettleton, New MHaven; Mrs. Steele, New Haven; G. H. Nettleton, A. M. Steele, D. I. Whittlesey and J. F. Whittlesey. Box 8—Miss M. Whaples, Hartford; Miss A. Larkin, Boston; Miss K. Hill, Waterbury; Mrs. J. Kellogg, Water- bury; Mrs. T. Russell, Hartford; Mrs. Chase, Waterbury; F. G. Mason, 1901; T. M. Russell, 1901; H. H. Whaples, IQOI. Box 9—Miss C. Clark, Neenah, Wis. ; Miss A. Hardenburgh, Kingston, N. Y.; Miss C. Cogswell, Albany; Miss H. Ludington, New York; Miss M. Bur- dick, Albany; Mrs. Wolfe, Albany; Mrs. C. Ludington, New York; G. W. Bab- cock, 1902; W. R. Teller, 1902; J. W. Burdick, 1902; A. C. Ludington, 1902. Box to—Miss G. Ballard, New York; ~ Miss C. Gunther, New York; Miss C. Edgar, New York; Miss L. Kline, Philadelphia; Miss M. Houston, Phila- delphia; Mrs. M. Kline, Philadelphia ; Mrs. F. Delafield, New York; Mrs. T. Fisher, New York; E. H. Fisher, 1go1 S.3 HH. Delafield. 1902; C. M. Kline, 7 ae aA TTT ANI ses se eogaen naan Sea ne ce fO0I >. ; 4D), Carey, x001- S,- CB. Francis, 1902. Box 11—Miss E. Macniel, Buffalo; Miss M. Johnson, Allegheny, Penn.; Miss L. Hayes, Buffalo; Mrs. F. Hayes, Buffalo; Mrs. S. Johnson, Allegheny, Penn.; M. P. Gould, 1900; J. C. Hum- bird, 1901 S.; P. H. Hayes, 1900. Box 12—Miss M. Mead, Cornwall, N. Y.;_ Mrs. St. John Wood, Brooklyn; W. S. Jarvis, 1901; J. G. Dettmer, roo1. Box 13—Unsold. Box 14—Miss Alice Wright, Miss Peck, Mrs. Wright, Mrs. Peck, Profes- sor H. P. Wright, Professor Tracy Peck, all of New Haven. Box 15—Miss Raymond, Cleveland, O.; Mrs. Raymond; A. S. Williams, IQOI. _ Box 16—Miss Helen T. Brown, Flush- ing, N. Y.; Miss T. D. Twichell, Hart- ford; Mrs. F. G. Brown; F. Gordon Brown, Jr., 1901; B. P. Twichell, 1901. Box 17—Miss Nina Barroll, Elizabeth, Nod. Miss MT. Thompson, New York; Miss Clara Ogden,- Brooklyn, N. Y.; Miss Helen C. Francis, Troy, N. Y.; Miss A. P. Hallock, Brooklyn; © Mrs. B. C. Barroll, Jr.; Mrs. Frederick T. Hill, New York; Mrs. C. S. Francis; Howard Richards, Jr., 1900S.; C. D. Wood, Jr., 1900 S.; G. Meredith Bar- roll, 1900 S. Box 18—Miss Jessie Van Wicklen, Brooklyn; Miss Alice H. Birdsall, Brooklyn; Miss A. Adenaw, New York; Miss Louise Lee, Brooklyn; Miss May Marckwald, Brooklyn; Mrs. A. V. Marckwald; Mrs. W. Linsley; Mrs. Birdsall ; F. M. Van Wicklen, 1901; Hastings Swenarton, 1900S.; Wilfred W. Linsly, 1901; A. H. Marckwald, TQOI. Box Mills, Philadelphia; 19—Miss NEW HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY The Dutch and Quaker Colonies in America. By JoHN Fiske. With 8 Maps. vols., crown 8vo, gilt top, $4.00. This important work traces the causes which Jed to the colonizing of New York by the Dutch, and Pennsylvania by the Quakers; and describes the gradual growth of these colonies to power. The story is told with the remarkable clearness and charm which make Mr. Fiske’s vol- umes of American History as delightful as they are important. The End of an Era By JOHN S, WIsE. Large crown 8vo, $2.00. Nees ‘From beginning to end this volume is perfectly delightful. historical interest and not a little histori- cal, value.:::* The End of an dra’ is un- rivalled as a picture of Virginia life just before and during the civil war.”—Boston flerald. Mrs. Howe’s Reminiscences By Jutta Warp Howe. With numerous Two portraits and other illustrations. 1I2mo, $2.50. 7 Mrs. Howe’s long and unusually rich experience, her acquaintance with illus- trious persons in America and Europe, her active interest in the great questions’ of her time, and her uncommon literary power, combine to make her Reminiscen- ces a. book of: intense «interest, - richly supplied with attractive portraits. Recollections of My Mother [Mrs. ANNE JEAN LYMAN.] Beinga picture of Domestic and Social Life in New Eng- land in the first half of the Nineteenth Century. By Susan I. Lestey. With Portraits and other illustrations. Large crown 8vo, $2.50, te eee An uncommonly interesting picture o New England family and village life in: Northampton, Mass., fifty years ago, as well as an extraordinarily charming ac- count of aremarkable woman. -«_. Memoirs of a Revolutionist By P. KropoTkin. With three portraits, Small 8vo, $2.50. A book of extraordinary interest. Hardly any man of this generation has had a more varied and adventurous life than Prince Kropotkin, the famous Rus- sian revolutionist. Aside from the fas- cination of the story, the book is of great value for its views of European social and political conditions. Life of Edwin M. Stanton ~ A work of remarkable interest on Lincoln’s great War Secretary, by GEORGE C. GorHAM. Illustrated. 2vols. 8vo, $6.00. It has also great. 1t16;; Salmon P. Chase By ALBERT BusHNELL Hart, Professor of History in Harvard University. In the series of American Statesmen. 16mo, with very full Index, $1.25. | Professor Hart, whose valuable works of American history command high res- pect, here describes adequately the great career of Mr. Chase as an anti-slavery leader, as United States Senator, Governor of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury in the Civil War, and Chief Justice of the Su- preme Court of the United States. Charles Francis Adams By his Son, CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS. In American Statesmen Series. 16mo, $1.25. An admirable account of Mr. Adams as a statesman, notably of his great service as Minister to. Great Britain during the War for the Union. Charles Sumner By MoorFfietp Storey. In American Statesmen Series. 16mo, $1.25. A strong and sympathetic description of Sumner’s public career, especially of his magnificent fight for Freedom and Justice in the United States Senate. Contemporaries Delightful papers on Emerson, Theodore *-<Parker, .Whittier, Whitman,*““H. Hi.” Garrison, Phillips, Sumner, etc., by THomMAsS: WENTWORTH HIGGINSON, au- _ thor of ‘Cheerful Yesterdays,” etc. I2mo, $2.00. Letters and Recollections of John M. Forbes 7 The story of a princely American. Edited by his Daughter, Saran F. HucGues. With : portraits, map, and facsimile. 2 vols. 8vo, $5.00. ° Horace Bushnell An admirable book on a great light of the American pulpit, by THEODORE T. MuncER, D.D. With two portraits. I2mo, $2.00. | James Russell Lowell and His Friends A fascinating book of biography and rem- iniscence by Epwarp EVERETT HALE, D.D. With 48 portraits and other illus- trations. 8vo, $3.00. Life of Charles Henry Davis, Rear Admiral, 1807-1877 By his Son, Captain Cuar.tes H. Davis, U.S. N. With a portrait. 8vo, $3.00. Letters from Ralph Waldo Emerson To a Friend. 1838-1853.. Edited by CHARLES ELLIOT NORTON. 16mo, $1.00, Sold by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston. . Haven: WEB LyYy Miss Eliza Hotchkiss and Miss Helen Hotchkiss, New Haven; Miss Denton, Paris; Miss Molly Townsend, New Haven; Mrs. W. K. Townsend; Mrs. Henry L. Hotchkiss; Raynham Town- shend, 1900S.; H. S. Hotchkiss, 1900 .; W. W. Hoppin, Jr., 1901; J. Layng Mills, root. Box 20—Miss E. Tyler, New Haven; Miss H. M. Lauder, Pittsburg, Pa.: Miss M. W. Carlisle, Washington; Miss Bigelow; Mrs. Carlisle; Mrs. Tyler; Ray Morris, 1901; C. W. Cady, 1901; J. M. Carlisle, 1901; R. P. Tyler, toor. Box 21—Miss Sally C. Coulthurst, Salem, Mass.; Miss Morris, Philadel- phia; Miss Stevenson, Chicago; Miss Howell, New York; Miss Aiken, New York; Mrs. Coulthurst; D. R. Francis, jt. lo A. Howell, R. Stevenson, Jz. W. B. Williams, all 1900. Box 22—Miss Strong, Hartford; Miss Kelly, West Superior, Wis.; Miss Grace; Miss Catlin, Bridgeport; Miss Wright, New Haven; Miss Emery, Bos- ton; Mrs. Strong; Trumbull Kelly, Charles T. Dudley, W. Roscoe Bassick, Edwin A. Strong, all 1900 S. Box 23—Miss Dominick, New York; Miss Chittenden. Detroit; Mrs. Cam- eron, Brooklyn; Alexander Cameron, Henry Chisholm, both root. Box 24—Miss Marie Lemoine, Phila- delphia; Miss Alice Hay, Washington; Miss Kneavels, New York; Miss Gould, New York; Miss Clark, New York; Mrs. H. D. Auchincloss; Mrs. H. H. Chittenden; Mrs. R. R. Hitt: L. M. Thomas, W R. Hitt, G. P. Chittenden, Hugh Auchincloss, all 1901. Box 25—Miss Nellie Winston, Minne- apolis; Miss E. Brown, Cleveland, O.: Miss Ethel S. Wolf, Gettysburg, Pa.; Mrs. Buehler, Lakeville, Conn.; Mrs. G. H. Christian, Minneapolis; Mrs. Hord, Cleveland; Mrs. Brown; John H. Hord, Warren J. Hoysradt, H. H. Christian, Philip Cheney, all root. Box 26—Miss Alice Gillespie, Stam- ford, Conn.; Miss Alice Jones, North- ampton; Miss Dane, Glen Ridge, N. J.; Miss Kate Carleton, Brooklyn; Miss Elsie E. Taylor, Philadelphia; Mrs. Carleton, Mrs. Gillespie, Mrs. Carver; F. W. Struby, H. P. Judd, A. H. Car- ver, Howard Carleton, and Ernest Haus- berg, all 1gor. Box 27—Miss M. Wheeler, New York City; Miss Jeane Capen, St. Louis, Mo.; Miss Mildred Wilson, New Miss Madeleine Cary, New York Gity;: Mrs, Bird Boston: GC. P. Capen, R. G. Keeney, Earle Alexander, and Laurence Van Dyke, all 1900. Box 28—Miss Mav Hasbrouck, New York City; Miss Frances Hinkley, Portland, Me.; Miss Grace Quinby, New York City; Miss Ethel Miller, New York City; Mrs. G. S. Hasbrouck, Mrs. J. R. Quinby, both of New York Cys) Bi. Clark; - to0o.S:3. Beck. Quinby, 1902 S.; C. G. Miller, 1001 S., and G. N. Crouse, 1900 S. Box 29 and 30—Miss Louise Otis, Rochester, N. Y.; Miss Harriet S. Gil- bert, Harrisburg, Pa.; Miss Anne Mc- Cormick, Harrisburg, Pa.; Miss Elenore Humbird, Pittsburg, Pa.; garet Vorhees, Philadelphia, Pa.; Miss Harriet I. Brown, Chicago; Miss Laura McGinley, Pittsburg, Pa.; Mrs. Frank Coler, Brooklyn, N .Y.; Mrs. Pollock, New York City; Miss Forest, Hart- ford, Conn.; Miss Emerline Brewster, Scranton, Pa.; Miss Elizabeth Com- stock, Syracuse, N. Y.; Miss Rebecca Knox, Pittsburg; Miss Gertrude Childs, Pittsburg; Mrs. Henry Belin, Jr., Rochester. N. Y.; Mrs. William Thayer Brown, Chicago, Ill.; Mrs. J. F. May- nard, Utica, N. Y.; Mrs. John R. Mc- Ginley, Pittsburg; Mrs. Philander Knox, Pittsburg; Mrs. James Speer, Pittsburg; Mrs. Spencer C. Gilbert, Harrisburg, Pa.; Coler Campbell, 1900 5.; A. C. Coxe, 1901; A. B. Maynard, 1900 S.; H. M. Hanna, Jr., Special; J. W. Morey, 1900S.; W. E. Dowd, Jr., 1900 S.;_ Horace S. Brown, 1900S.; Southard Hay, Special; Clinton L. Childs, J. H. Childs, F. S. Warmoth, Henderson Gilbert, C. A. Foster, and F. L. Belin, all 1oo1 S. Box 31—Miss Julie Mackey, Franklin, Pa.; Miss Helen Dean, St. Paul, Minn.; Miss Emily Winters, Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Kate Ayers, Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Ethel Spears, New York City; Miss Beatrice Bogart, New York City; Mrs. Miller, Franklin, Pa.; Mrs. Mel- len, New York City; Mrs. W. B. Dean, St. Paul, Minn.; F. H. Winters, W. C. Mackey, C. B. Spears, and S. B. Dean, all 1900. Box 32—Miss A. Dow, Jamestown, N. Y.; Miss Fellows, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Miss M. Montague, Chattanooga, Tenn. ; Miss Plum, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. H. H. Miss Mar-. Pittinger, Brooklyn; Mrs. C. M. Dow, Jamestown, N. Y.; H. P. Olcott, 1901; H. H. Pittinger, 1900 S.; T. L. Monta- gue, 1900 S., and C. M. Dow, Jr., 1900S. Box 33—Miss Lulli H. Keeth, Brock- ton, Mass.; Miss Queen Kendrick, Paterson, N. J.; Miss Whittaker, De- troit, Mich.; Mrs. W. K. Gowdy, Pater- son, Bis. > OW: 5. Pritchard. E. O. Vaile, Jr., R. E. Rogers, all 1901. Box 34—Miss Nora Iasigi, Boston, Mass.; Miss Mary E. Wade, Waterbury, Conn.; Miss Gertrude Harrison, New Haven, Conn.; Mrs. A. G. Iasigi; Mrs. H. L. Wade Waterbury, Conn.; Mrs. Huntington, Rome, N. Y.; J. G. Par- sons, 1900S.; W. H. White, 1900S., and G. L. White, Jr., 1oor. Box 35—Miss Jane B. Teller, Kings- ton, N. Y.; Miss Alice K. Twining, Morristown, N. J.; Miss Isabel Erhardt, New York City; Miss Field, Philadel- phia, Pa.; Miss Over, Pittsburg, Pa.; Mrs. Teller, Kingstown, N. Y.; Mrs. Twining, Morristown, N. J.; Mrs. Strong, New York City; Mrs. Merri- man, Waterbury, -Conn.; Mrs. R. P. Field, Philadelphia, Pa.; TIT. C. Carson, M. H. Merriman, Prentice Strong, W. P. Wattles, and A. A. Thomas, all 1901. Box 36—Miss Adele M. Bates, New York City; Miss Helen Stearns, De- troit, Mich.; Miss Nettie May Hewitt, Louisville, Ky.; Miss Marjorie Faul- coner, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. ag <a Hewett, Louisville, Ky.; Mrs. W. A. Butler. Jr., Detroit, Mich.; D. B. Laur- ence, E, K. Butler,A; D. Allen, C. B. Waterman, all Igor. Box 37—Miss C. M. Ocelrichs, New York City; Miss Lily Oelrichs; Miss Charlotte Whiting, Mrs. Oelrichs, H. QO. Havemeyer, Jr., and F..C. Have- meyer, both 1900. Box 38—Miss Liela Earle, New Ha- ven, Conn.; Miss Nellie Kitchen, Orange, N. J.; Miss Eiseman, St. Louis, Mo.; Miss Henry, Washington, D. C.; Miss Clara Goshorn, Cincinnati, O.; Mrs. Earle, New Haven, Conn.; Mrs. Bassett, New Haven; Mrs Francis A. Henry, Washington, D. C.; A. M. Hirsh, F. G. Harris, F. B. Eiseman, and G. G. Henry, all rgor. Box 390—Miss May Harrall, Bridge- port; Miss Ethel Barnes, Richfield Park, N. J.; Miss Marion H. Richards, North Attleborough, Mass.; Miss Elsie Fuller, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mrs. Herbert Betts, Brooklyn; Mrs. Ira Richards, North Attleborough, Mass.; Roland W. Betts, 1900S.: Charles C. McCord, 1900 S.; dra Richards, Jr. 1000 S. Box 40—Miss Carter, Miss Alice Car- ter, Titusville, O.; Miss Doudge, New York; Mrs. Doudge, New York; Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carter, Pittsburg; Mrs. J. J. Carter, Titusville; R. B. Hixon, 1001: Io Bs acter azoor;: B. T. Doudge, 1901. Box 41—The Misses Farnam, New Haven, and Miss Weir, New Haven; Mrs. Arthur T. Hadley, Mrs. J. F. Weir and Mrs. G. B. Farnam, New Haven: Prof. J. F. Weir, G. B. Farnam and President Arthur T. Hadley. Box 42—Miss Ada Butler, Miss Mabel Butler, Miss Sargent, New Haven; Miss Marie Mosle, New York; Miss Elsie Carr, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. G. Duns- combe, Mrs. Henry Sargent, New Ha- ven;. J. S. Eells, t901; T. S. Woolsey, IQOI. Box 43—Reserved for refreshments. Box 44—W. B. Howe, G. B. Kip, L. E. Fulton, H. S. Wallace, E. L. Jones, T. M. Robertson, R. M. Newport, G. V. Reynolds, C. B. .Woolsey, W. PP. Clyde, Jr., all of 1901. Box 45—Miss Grace L. Hall, Hart- ford; Miss Sarah Pratt, Saybrook, Conn.; Mrs. W. C. Skinner, Hartford; Mrs. CC. EB. Hand, New Haven: _E. Ac: Palmers tr and: J.-S. laintor, oor. Box 46—Miss Holland, St. Louis; Miss Woodward, Miss Wadsworth, Plainfield. N. J.; Mrs. Woodward, Mrs. Potter, Mrs. Wadsworth, Plainfield, N. J.; C. Potter, J. T. Wadsworth, 1901. Box 47—Miss Anna Ripley, Winches- ter, Mass.; Miss G. B. Whittemore, Naugatuck, Conn:; Miss Fisher, Mrs. Tuttle, Naugatuck, Conn.; E. E. David- son, C. E. Ordway, and C. B. Tuttle. Box 48—Miss Brock, Miss Watts, Miss Lippincott and Miss Rhodes, Phila- delphia; Mrs. Brock, Philadelphia, Pa.; J. P. Brock, J. M. Watts, both 1900. Box 49—Miss Nora Iasigi, Boston, Mass.; Miss Stoughton, Mrs. White, Waterbury, Conn.; Mrs. Barclay, Mrs. Montgomery, New Haven; Mrs. Phelps, A. H. Barclay, P. Montgomery, W. H. White, 1900 S. Box 50—Miss Loomis, Granby, Conn.; Miss Ives, Miss Burt, Mrs. Rogers, O. Crawford, J. L. Loomis, C. E. Rogers, Jr., and R. O. Wells, all roor.