SCIENCE. 



[VuL. XI. No. 2-,i 



ALL TRAVELLERS WANT THEM! 



" Charming books for a 



woodland copsi 



" For the ho 



fiction that we c 



Home Journal. 



*' The cha 



, for the hammock. 



- White Mountai7t Echo. 



:ily 



Co., 



ng ' Paper Series ' of Ticknor 

 which has offered this year so many of our best 

 fiction." — Chicago Intcr-Ocean. 



*' The long-continued success of Ticknor's Paper Series 

 proves the sagacity of the scheme for providing the best 

 literature, in legible and dignified shape, and at a price 

 within the reach of all readers." — Boston Tran^ 

 script. 



No. I. The Story of Margaret Kent. By Henry Hayes. 



2. Guenn. By Blanche W. Howard. 



3. The Cruise of a Woman Hater. By G. De Mon- 



4. A Reverend Idol. 



5. A Nameless Nobleman. Bv Jane G. Austin. 



6. The Prelate. By Isaac Henderson. 



7. Eleanor Maitland, By Clara Erskine Clement. 



3. The House of the Musician. By Virginia W. 



Johnson. 

 9- Geraldine. 

 JO. The Duchess Emilia. By Barrett Wendell. 



11. Dr. Breen's Practice. By W. D. Howells. 



12. Tales of Three Cities. By Henry James, 



13. The House at High Bridge. By Edgar Fawcett. 



14. The Story of a Country Town. By E. W. Howe. 



15. Confessions of a Frivolous Girl. By Robert Grant. 



16. Culture's Garland. By Eugene Field. 



17. Patty's Perversities. By Arlo B.Mes. 



18. A Modern Instance. By W. D. Howells. 



19. Miss Ludington's Sister. By Edward Bellamy. 



20. Aunt Serena. By Blanche W. Howard. 



21. Damen's Ghost. By Edwin Lassetter Bynner. 



22. A Woman's Reason. By W, D. Howells. 



23. Nights with Uncle Remus. By Joel Chandler 



24. Mingo. ' By JoM Chandler Harris. 



25. A Tallahassee Girl. By Maurice Thompson. 



26. Beatrix Randolph. By Julian Hawthorne. 



27. A Fearful Responsibility. By W. D. Howells. 



28. Homoselle. By Mary F. Tiernan. 



29. A Moonlight Boy. By E. W. Howe. 



30. The Adventures of a Widow. By Edgar Fawcett. 



31. Indian Summer. By W. D. Howells. 



32. The Led- Horse Claim. By Mary Hallock Foote. 



33. Len Gansett. By Opie P. Read. 



34. Ne.-tt Door. By Clara Lousie Burnham. 



35. The iMinister's Charge. By W. D. Howells. 



The June volumes of TICK OR'S PAPER SERIES «'ill be 

 as follows : — 



No. 3S, SONS AND DAUGHTERS. By the author of 

 "The Story of Margafet Kent," and " Queen Money." 

 Ready June 2. 



Rebecca Hardinge Davis says of " Sons and Daugh- 

 ters " : "It certainly is the cleverest, most brilliant 

 society novel which I have read for many a year." 



"Entertaining from first to last. . . . Immensely 

 clever. . . . All that is here is so charming," says 

 the New York Telegram, 



No. 37, ASNES SURRIAGE. 



By Ed> 



•in L 



asset 



er Byn- 



ner. 





Ready 



lune 16. 



"The best novel that has CO 



me out of Bo, 



ton 





eration," says Kate Sanborn. 











" The most powerful work 



of crea 



ive 1 



terat 



ure that 



has come from Boston in yea 



rs 





Th 



: author 



touches the height of dr 



amatic 



inte 



slty 





Fascinating bits of description 



o( the 



slubb 



Drn c 



Id Puri- 



tan town," says The State. 











Price, per number, 50 cents. Anni 



lalSt 



•dSC 



iptions 



for 24 Numbers, $12 00. 



Issued Semi 



Moi 



ithly. 



Revised Guide Books 



OF 1888. 



New England, White Mountains, 



Maritime Provinces. 



" Every whit as good as ' Baedeker,' " — hidependeyit. 



"■ Admirably put together," — Rev. Dr. Prime^ inNeiv 

 York Obser-ver. 



" These books contain everything which the traveller 

 wants to know, in precisely the shape he wants to have 

 it." -Boston Joitrnal. 



" These Giiide-Books are much the best we ever had in 

 this country, and they can challenge comparison with 

 ' Baedeker's.' which are the best in Europe. The volume 

 devoted to the Whit- Mountains is full, precise, compact, 

 sensible, and honest."— 7V^70 York Tyibune. 



TICKNOR & CO., Boston. 



Schools. 



. THE BERLITZ School of languages. .-. 



SUMMMER COURSE 



AT ASBURY PARK, N. J., AND AT OLD ORCHARD BEACH, ME. 



The Berlitz Method is acknowledged by all first-cl.iss American and European authorities as the best ofallna- 

 nethods. Instruction will be given bv the regular professors of the Berlitz Schools, where only the best of 

 teachers are employed. 'I'heir long experience and unparalleled success in teaching languages will make iheir 

 :tion highly interesting and eminently practical. The course consists of numerous lessons, lectures, excursions, 

 continual practice in French and German conversation. The terms are very low. A special course for te.ach- 



nple pages of the French and the Ge 



I books, 



rculars, etc , apply to 

 BERLITZ & CO., W. Madison Square, N.Y 



SCHOOL OF MINES, 



— Columbia College — 



Summer School in Chemistrj. 



The Laboratories of the School of iMines will be open 

 from June isth, to September isth, for special students 

 in general chemistry, qualitative,, quantitative, and sani- 

 tary analysis. 



The fees are S50 for the three months, or S5 for each 

 week or part of a week. 



For further information apply to 



Registrar, School of Mines, 



49th St. and Madison Ave.. N. Y. City. 



THE SAUVEUR SUM.UER COL- 

 LEGE OF LANGUAGES. 



(Removed from Amherst, Mass., and Oswego, 

 N. Y., to BURLINGTON, Vermont.) 



THIRTEENTH SESSION, JULY gTH, TO AUGUST 17TH. 



BRANCHES TAUGHT : French, German, 

 Italian, Spanish, Modern Greek, the Rumance 

 Languages, Anglo-Saxon and Early English, 

 English Literal ure and Rhetoric, Latin and 

 Ancient Greek. 



Yor board and rooms address Mr. F. M Corse, 

 Burlington, Vt. 



For circulars address 



DR. L. SAUVEUR, 



Grand View House, Wernersville, Pa. 

 N. B. — Circulars of Dr. Sauveur's Educational Works 

 will be sent free to applicants. 

 (Mention this paper.) 



HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 



Courses of instruction will be given in the following 

 subjects during the summer vacation of i8S8 : — 



Botany, Chemistry, French, German, Geology, History, 

 Physics, Physical Training, Topography. 



For information apply to the Secretary of Harvard 

 University, Cambridge, Mass. 



New York, Roslyn, Long Island. 

 "^pHE BRYANT .^CHOOL.— A BOARDING 

 ■*■ school of the highest class for boys. Prim:fry, Inter- 

 mediate, and Academic Departments ; thorough Military 

 Organization and Discipline, with Systematic Physical 

 Training. School property representing an outlay of 

 over 8250,000: one of the finest in the United States, in 

 proximity to country-seat of the late William Cullen 



SU.MMER SCHOOL FOR BOYS. 



June 2ist to September ist 



" The best located and most successful of the Summer 



Schools for Boys. School property beautifully situated 



on saltwater. Every facility forstudy anH recreation. 



For catalogue of either session, apply to 



Geo. Bruce CoRTELVOtr, Principal. 



New York, Peekskill. 

 OUMMER SCHOOL FOR BOYS. — PEEKSKILL 

 *^ Military Academy, June 2Jth to September 5th, 'S8. 

 Send for circular. 



JOH.vj N. TiLDEN. A M., M.D., Peekskill, N.Y. 



AT MOQNT HOPE LADIES SEMINARY, 



Tarryto\vn-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., 

 $300 pays board and tuitions per school year. Mu 

 and art only extras. Best advantages with home ca 

 Opens Sept. 26th. 



ROBT. C. FLACK. A.M., Principal. 



TTNIVEkSITY OF VIRGINL-X SCIENTIFIC AND 

 '-' Engineering Schools. For catalogue, address, 



C. S. Venable, Chairman of Faculty, 



P.O., University ot Va., Va. 



Massachusetts, Amherst. 

 AMHERST COLLEGE. SUMMER SCHOOL OF 

 •'* Languages. Chemistry, Art, Mathematics, Pho- 

 netics, and Physical Training, 12th Session, July 2 to 

 Aug. 3. Lectures daily in French and German. For 

 programme address Prof. W. L. Montague. 



^fa>sach^setts. Boston, 152 Huntington Avenue. 

 ME. E. DECOMBES' FRENCH AND ENG 



Ii%h Home School for six girls, opens September 19, 

 , $1003 per year. No extras. Highest References. 



M 



Massachusetts, Plymouth. 

 TWrR. KNAPP'S HOME SCHOOL FOR BOYS 

 ^ (twenty-first year). — Begins September 22. 1888. 



Teachers, 



E MIRIAM COYRIERE. 

 • Introduces to Universities and Colleges Superior 

 Professors, Presidents. &c.. also provides Tutors, Gover- 

 nesses, and Teachers for every department cf instruction. 

 Can give the highest references. 



E. Mhjiam Coyrihre, 31 East 17th St., bet. Broadway 

 and 4th Ave 



Palaeontologist and maker of pen and ink 

 tific drawings, &c. Open for position in University, Col- 

 lege or scientific expedition. References best colleges in 

 Europe and America. Address, care 



E, Miriam Covriere, 31 East 17th St.. bet. Broadway 

 and 4th Ave. 



Investments, 



GUARANTY 

 INVESTMENT COMPANY, 



71 



Capital ,$250,000. ^ ( 



Guaranteed Farm Mortgages 1 ,0 



Professional n-ien and persons 

 living upon salaries will find these 

 carefully selected mortgages the 

 very best investment for their sur- 

 plus earnings. No loan is taken 

 for more than 40^, of a conserva- 

 tive valuation, and none where the 

 value of land is not increasing. 



A Monthly Bulletin is published giving full par- 

 ticulars about every 1 an 

 Address for circulars ad the Monthly Bulletin 



HENRY A. RILEY, 



General Eastern Manager, 



191 Broadway, New York. 



V FIRST MORTGAGESr" 7^ 



Upon carefully selected farm? in the most flourishing and 

 most rapidly growing parts of the West- 



(y^ Guaranteed .'Mortgages 6-? 

 6r^ Debenture Bonds 6>' 



Secured by similar m irtg.ages, anj also by the capital of 

 Ihe issuing Company. 



THE EASTERN BANKING COMP/»NY, 



43 MILK STREET, BOSTON. 

 Francis A. Osliorn. Hres. lidw. T. Merrihcw. Treas. 



Mann's Keterence Indexes. 



References lo and transcripts or translations of the lit- 

 T furnished by B: PICKMAN 



MANN, Washi; 

 Correspondenc 

 free 



