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 *- 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