;; 



The Deserted Ship ; a Story of the Atlantic. 



By George Cupples, author of " The Green Hand." Hand- 

 somely bound in cloth, gilt, extra. i2mo. Illustrated. $1.25. 



" In these two absorbing sea stories — " The Deserted Ship," and " Driven to 

 Sea" — the peril and adventure of a sailor's life are graphically described, its ameni- 

 ties and allurements being skillfully offset by pictures of its hardships and exposures, 

 and the virtues of end_ur.^nce, fortitude, ndeliiy, and courage are portrayed with 

 rough and ready, and highly attractive effusiveness.'* — Harper^s Magazine. 



FI7 Fishing in Maine Lakes ; or, Camp Life in the Wilderness. 



By Maj. Charles W. Stevens, Commander of the Ancient 

 and Honorable Artillery Company, Boston. With colored 

 frontispiece of the best killing flies, and rubricated title-page. 

 Square i2mo. Cloth. 201 pages. $1.25. 



•' It is written as naturally and unaffectedly as if told over the pipe, around the 

 evening fire, to a circle of brother sportsmen." — Pittsburgh Telegraph. 



" The book is really very liv \y."—Cinci7inati Commercial. 



Hollo's Journey to Cambridge. 



Illustrations and illuminated cover by Francis G. Attwood. 

 T vol. Quarto. 50 cents. 



%* A satire upon Life at Harvard College in the form of a parody upon the 

 famous RuUo Story Books. Printed originally in the Harvard Lampoon, and later 

 compiled with the consent of the editors inio a sqaure octavo in ^^per covers. The 

 .cleverness of parody and satire and the familianty of the subject have made this'a 

 most decided hit. Already four editions have been exhausted, and the demand 

 promises to continue as long as Harvard College maintains its influence on surround- 

 ing social life, and humor continues to be an American characteristic. 



Bicycle Tour in England and Wales. 



By Capt. Sharpe and A. D. Chandler, President of tiie 

 Boston Bicycle Club. Illustrated by four large folding maps 

 and seventeen brightly finished albertype engravings. Small 

 quarto. Gilt. 164 pages. $2.00. 



*** The title gives not the slightest idea of the real contents. It is a work of 

 exquisite beauty, displaying rare taste and judgment, laboriously and elaborately 

 executed, which none but an intense devotee of the wheel could have carried out to 

 such an interesting degree. 



Southern Rambles : Florida. 



By O-w^ys Knox. Very profusely illustrated. 150 pages. 

 Square i2mo. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cents. 



%* An amusing and satirical account of a Winter's Trip to Florida, filled with 

 laughable incidents, character studies, descriptions of Southern Life, wholly devoid of 

 exaggeration, showing Florida as it struck the author, and not as the interested guide- 

 book-makers endeavor to prove it to be. 



Poetical and Prose Writings of Charles Sprague. 



Nev: edition, with a steel portrait and a biographical sketch, 

 i2mo. Cloth. 207 pages. $1.50. 



^ew England Interiors. 



By Arthur Little. A volume of sketches in eld New Eng- 

 land places. Thick oblong quarto. $5.00. 



%* " To those far distant, unfamiliar with the nooks and corners of New England, 

 and prone to consider the work of Puritanical colonists noticeable only for its lack of 

 taste, and conspicuous for green blinds and white painted walls, this work will be a 

 revelation." — Boston Daily Advertiser. 



The Land of Sold. 

 Bv George H. Spurr. A novel founded upon fact. Illustra- 

 tive" of pioneer life in California in '49. i2mo. Cloth. 270 

 pages. Illustrated. $1.50. 



