Metter Yerd | NEW FALL BOOKS | Mit.‘ 
MEMOIRS OF ot HEODORE THOMAS 
Large foley Tes pont naae, oa -00 Net 
a aa re and highly sympathetic account of the life of this great American composer and leader, 
“T ha she writes in the Sactaie ‘to confine my own part of the narrative to 
a simple Si of the sequence of ev events in his career and to occasional touches which might reveal some- 
me. 
baliy'o 
sional critics or musicians who personally attended the great musical events under his leadership, and wrote 
the articles I have Gheted while the impression created by them was still fresh and vivid in their minds.” 
MUND CLARENCE STEDM 
aha mo Laura Stedman and haps M. sever 
12 $1.50 
A collection of distinguished essays taken from the great tee y of material, the work of his maturity, 
left by Mr. Stedman at his death. The volume will begin with the ce seni sg ssay on Genius which w 
romaine by in the Deiaccion Raven th 1886, and occasioned so suite h discussion, and also contains essays on 
Keats, Blake, Landor, Whittier, R. "HL. Stoddard, "grea Dobson, Bryant, ir others. It is an invaluable 
an me ighly interesting v volu coe from every poin , one snail e up of the highest product ss Stedman’s 
genius, and hitherto unpublished i in book form ity Scions of ‘the lamentable ates of his dea’ 
THE GIFT OF SLEEP 
By BOLTON HALL, author of “Three Acres and Libert 
With an introduction by Professor Edward M. hfe al Washington met Bsc Collinge 
12mo. —— 
er theca writes the author in his Preface, ‘is inten oe no less for those who do sleep well than for 
those dee oats Many persons sleep well only because they are still like little children and — in the 
unconscious ae of life. That is the stage of the Natural Man and it is good in itself; but later the <n 
life awakes when consciousness of one’s self begins and examination of one’s own desires dev = tg If n 
a epee; or if not at least re — development brings anxiety, unrest, and disturbances not 
p and breaks the harmony of the whole n 
pe to attain this harmony we ae examine the means that we and others use to-gain rest and 
peace, some of w are unconscious and some conscious, and we must perceive why it is that these means 
work or fail to work in different c 
Dr. Wallace’s Great New Book 
A careers of Creative Power, Directive Mind, and coe ide saan 
RED RUSSEL WALLACE, O.M., F.R.S., D.L.C., 
Illustrated. $3.50 net. By mail, $3.70 
“The new hi ‘The World of Life,’ gives the author’s most mature thoughts on life in general, its 
meaning and c eing fon a work of iphiiosanky as — as science, it necessarily covers much debatable 
grouhd, but the inion tells us that in every case his opinions result from a careful study of the facts, an 
bacon correct or 4 “a et =. rate hog! the fru 1its of mere inclination or fancy. The ground covered is 
ah nor is it desirable that ‘fee should do so.”—T. D. A. Cockerell. 
THE INTERPRETATION OF HISTORY 
By MAX NORDAU 
pet $2.00 net. By mail, $2. 
This closely reasoned work will make a strong appeal to all ue students of history and philoso- 
phy. Beginning with the Rensecirs that history is only to a small extent included within written —s. 
that written history is not scientific; that it is not fsa’ Http that it oe no knowledge; that it does not 
help in the hia = existence; _ it corresponds with no natural requirement of the human mind; that, 
in a word, its pra purpose is to oppress and deceive the present with the assistance of the past; the cele- 
brated author, by a brilliant and ape fe cumulation of reasoning, concludes that, “te ah = appetrances 
and all delusions, th the re of history is outa to be the ee a of the life fo 
MOFFAT, YARD AND COMPANY, Union Square, New York 
