PUBLICATIONS OF J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 
What a Boy ! Problems Concerning Him. I. What 
shall we do with him? II. What will he do with himself? 
III. Who is to blame for the consequences? By Julia A. 
Willis. With Frontispiece. i2mo. Fine cloth. $1.50. 
“ Every member of the family will 
be sure to read it through, and after 
enjoying the author’s humor, will find 
themselves in possession of something 
solid to think about .”—New York 
Christum Union. 
“ There is a vein of practical sense 
running through the story which will 
be food for old and young readers, and 
the charming love scenes render the 
book one of absorbing interest, and 
the reader must be dull enough not to 
relish the book from beginning to end.” 
—Pittsburgh Commercial. 
The Nursery Rattle. For Little Folks. By Anne L. 
IIuker. With Twelve Chromo Illustrations. Small quarto. 
Extra cloth. $1.75. 
“ ' Nursery Rattle' is all the better 
because it generally does not pretend 
to carry meaning or moral with it, and 
it has a musical ring in it.”— Phila¬ 
delphia Inquirer. 
“The best collection of nursery songs 
I from one pen in the language. Sim- 
I plicity of idea, clearness of expression. 
I brevity of words, and fine humor and 
sympathy mark the * Nursery Rat¬ 
tle .’”—San Francisco Alta Califor¬ 
nia, 
e 
Diana Carew ; or, For a Woman's Sake. A Novel. 
By Mrs. Forrester, author of “Dolores,” “Fair Women,” 
etc. i2mo. Fine cloth. $1 50. 
” A story of great beauty and com- 1 admire a love-story of good society 
pletcinteresttoitsclo.se. ... It I and who especially admire case and 
has been to us in the reading one of naturalness in writing and character 
the most pleasant novels of the year, painting, will find in Mrs. Forrester’s 
and at no time during our perusal did latest novel a deep pleasure .”—Boston 
we feel the interest flagging in the j Traveller. 
slightest degree. . . . Those who ' 
Pemberton; or, One Hundred Years Ago. By 
Henry Peterson, author of “ The Modern Job,” etc. 121110. 
Extra cloth. $1.25. 
“ As a historical novel this work is 
a graphic representation of the Phila¬ 
delphia of the Revolution, and as a ro¬ 
mance it is well imagined and vividly 
related. The interest never flags; the 
characters arc living, human beings of 
the nobler sort, and the style is simple. 
chaste, and appropriate.”— Philadel¬ 
phia Evening Bulletin. 
“ The style is graceful, fluent, and 
natural, and the various conversations 
between the different characters aro 
marked with strong individuality.”— 
Philadelphia Ledger. 
Alide. A Romance of Goethe's Life. By Emma 
Lazarus, author of “ Admetus, and other Poems,” etc. 121110. 
Fine cloth. $1.25. 
“ A charming story beautifully told, 
having for its subject the romance of a 
life, the interest in which is and must 
for a long time be intense and all ab- 
soibing. 
“ This is a tender and touching love- 
story, with the best element in love- 
stories, truth. The story is very 
charmingly told, with rare grace and 
freshness of style .” — Boston Post. 
