Hovghton, Mifflin & Co/s 



^NEW fiOOKS^ 



Memoirs of a Dcvolutionist. 



By P. Kropotkin. With a I'tjrtrait. S\o, 



$2.50. 



A book of extraordinary interest. Hardly any man of 

 this generation has had a more vaiied and adventurous 

 Hfe than Prince Kropotkin, the famous Russian revolu- 

 tionist. Aside from the fascination of the story, the book 

 is of great value for its views of European social and 

 political conditions. 



The Other Fellow. 



By F. HoPKiNSON Smith, author of "Caleb 



West, Master Di%'er," "Tom Grogan," etc. 



With Illustrations, izmo, $1.50. 



Mr. Smith's new book contains eleven stories, told with 

 the dash, the practiced skill, and the dramatic effect of 

 his other volumes ; and the fortunate hosts who have read 

 these will eagerly welcome this attractive volume. 



Squ2irc Pegs. 



With this characteristic story Mrs. A. D. T. 

 Whitney celebrated her seventy-fifth birthday 

 — a beautiful crowning of a beneficent life of 

 authorship. i2mo, $1.50. 



Contemporaries. 



By Thom.^s Wentworth Higgixson, author 



of "Cheerful Yesterdays," etc. i2mo, $2.00. 



Some of the subjects treated in this interesting volume 

 are Emerson, Alcott, Theodore Parker, Whittier, Whit- 

 man, Lanier, Helen Jackson (" H. H."), John Holmes, 

 A Visit to John Brown's Household, Garrison, Phillips, 

 Sumner, Dr. S. G. Howe, General Grant. 



How Much is Left of the 

 Old Doctrines? 



By Washington Gladden, D. D., author 



of "Who Wrote the Bible ? " etc. i6mo, ^1.25. 



A book of notable value, showing how the doctrines of 



the Christian Church have been modified by recent 



thought, yet all that is essential remains unshaken. 



The American in Holland. 



Sentimental Rambles in the Eleven Provinces 

 of the Netherlands. By William Elliot 

 Griffis, D. D., author of "Brave Little Hol- 

 land," " The Pilgiims in their Three Homes," 

 etc. With a Map and Illustrations. i2mo, 

 $2.00. 



Dr. Griffis has made five journeys in Holland, and in 

 this book he gives in an unconventional way the rich 

 results of his tours. 



Reminiscences. 



By Julia Ward Howe. With many Por- 

 traits. Crown 8vo, gilt top, $2.50. 



.Mrs. Howe's long and unusually rich experience, her 

 acquaintance with illustrious persons in America and 

 P'.urope, her active interest in the great questions of her 

 time, and her uncommon literary power, combine to make 

 her Reminiscences a book of intense interest. It is richly 

 supplied with attractive portiaits. 



Loveliness. 



A Story. By Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. 



With Illustrations. Square i2mo, attractively 



bound, $1.00. 



Loveliness is a silver Yorkshire terrier, adored by his 

 five-year-old mistrf-ss. He is stolen, and nearly falls a 

 victim to "scientific research." The charm of the dog, 

 his man J' virtues, the stealing, the search, the rescue — 

 all are depicted in Miss Phelps's most graphic style. 



A Century of Science, and 

 Other Essays. 



By John Fiske. Crown Svo, ^2.00. 



A book of uncommon value and charm, containing, 

 among other papers: A Centurj' of Science; The Doc- 

 trine of Evolution, its Scope and Purport ; Edward 

 Livingston Voumans ; The Part Played by Infancy in 

 the Evolution of Man; Sir Harry Vane ; The Arbitration 

 Treaty; Francis Parkman ; Edward Augustus Freeman ; 

 Irish Folktales. 



Horace Bushncll. 



The Life of one of the most famous preachers, 

 wisest theologians, most suggestive writers, and 

 noblest men America ever produced, by Dr. T. 

 T. MuNGER, author of "On the Thresho'd."' 

 With two Portraits. i2mo, $2.00. 



fieligio Pictoris. 



By Helen Bigelow Merriman, author of 

 " What Shall Make Us Whole ? " i2mo, $1.50. 

 Mrs. Merriman's book shows, from the standpoint of 

 the .Trtist, the fundamental unity between things material 

 :ind spiritual. It deals with the problems of life and re- 

 ligion in a profound and illuminating way. 



The End of an Era. 



By John S. Wise. i2mo, $2.00. 



The era here described is that which for the Southern 

 States came to an end with the surrender of General 

 Johnston to General Sherman in 1865. The book cives a 

 remarkably vivid and accurate inside view of the Confed- 

 eracy, and is at once verj' valuable and interesting. 



Sold hv all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, by 



HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston; 11 E. 17th Street, New YorK. 



