THE LADIES' ELOliAI VABINET. 
B 0 OKS;':^XHORS*AK 1 ><ART. 
Literary Notes. : 
Timothy : Ills Neiglihors and his Friends. 
A novel by Mrs. Mary E. Ireland, and pub- 1 
tished by J. B. Lippincott & Co., Pliila-! 
delpliia, 13mo. cloth $1.50. ^ 
The'cliaracters in this pleasing little work 
are aU taken from real life, and although , 
' one sometimes ' loses sight of Timothy | 
. among so many neighbors and friends, the | 
incidents in the story are attractively nai- j 
ij rated, and are of sufficient interest to pi’ove 
ij a pleasant pastime m a leisure hour. 
A. S. B.vrnes & Co., New York, will soon 
publish a new historical work which is be¬ 
ing prepared by Mi's. Martha J. Lamb. Its 
title will be '‘New York BiograiAvy," and 
|! will be devoted to the prominent events and 
l| characters of the last fifty years. It will be 
fully illustrated, and is said to promise as 
/ much m origmal and masterly execution as 
/Tier History of New York. 
The Century for November has for its 
first article a description of Venice, which, 
as the writer intimates in his inti-dduction, 
is by no means a new theme, yet is treated 
in so attractive a manner that we are not 
surprised to find it is from the pen of Hemy 
James, Jr. It is followed by a portrait of 
him, and a sketch of his life and work as a 
writer, by W. D. Howells. Franklin H. 
North gives a description of the organization 
of the trainmg school for niu-ses, tmder the 
title of “A New Profession for Women,” 
showing the field that is open to those who 
are wilUng to cany on in oui' country, the 
work so gi'andly begun in England, by 
Florence Nightingale a portrait of whom 
is given as frontispiece. Edward Eggleston 
commences in this number a series of illus¬ 
trated papers, each to be upon a different 
topic, and of independent interest, forming 
together a History of Life in the Thii-teen 
Colonies, tliis first one having for its title 
The Begiiming of a Nation. With this 
issue the Century begins its second year 
under its new name. 
Among the interesting featimes of Har¬ 
per’s Magazine for November, is a very in¬ 
teresting article upon The Early Quakers in 
England and Pliiladelphia. An illustrated 
paper upon The Home of the Doones; 
^ Southern California illustrated; and the 
beginning of a serial by Miss Woolson, en¬ 
titled “For the Major” which promises to 
rneet the expectation aroused by the author’s 
first novel “Anne” which.recently appeared 
in its pages. 
St. Nicholas, so ably edited by Mrs. Mary 
Mapes Dodge, has this month, beside its 
usual attractions for young people, a veiy 
oddly illustrated poem which is a sort of 
sequel to Little Bo Peep; the first chapter 
of a serial from the pen of J. T. Trowbridge 
entitled “The Tinkham Brothers Tide-Mill.” 
Frank R. Stockton also begins in this 
number his “Story of Viteau.” 
BEAUTIFUL BOOKS FOR 
GIRLS. 
jizzieWChampney. 
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ESTES & LAURI/T, 
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Mention Ladies’ Floral Cabinet. Soule 
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Boston, Mass. 
UNIVERSAL FAVORITES. 
Minstrel Songs, old and new* 
Here, at last, we have nearly all the world famous, 
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“ Once rend this book and you will purchase it, and 
you will never regret the cost.**—Deiro/i Chronicle, ■ 
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rJut-Brown Cloth, Sl.OO. Mailed poet-paid hy 
FORDS, HOWARD & HURLBERT, Now York. 
Send for our catalogue of New Novels and illus¬ 
trated Standard Books. 
Water-Color Painting: 
Description of Materials, 
HY'/yy DIRECTIONS FOR THEIR USE IN 
EI.EMENTARV PR A CTICE. 
SKETCHING FROM NATURE IN WATER-COLOR. 
By H. W. HERRICK. Illustrated with two Diagrams 
printed in Coloi's. ISmo. square, li!5 pages, in 
cloth. General Edition, with the Diagrams print¬ 
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Diagrams printed in Colors, and 120 Examples of 
Water-Colors, washed by hand on Water-Color 
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The work is issued in two editions: one containing 
all of the text and two colored diagrams; the other— 
“ Artists’ Edition ’’—having in addition to the text 
and diagrams, examples washed in light and dark 
tones of ONE BuxnnED and twenty pigments, now in 
general use in Water-Color Art, being about forty 
more than are to be found in any list heretofore is¬ 
sued. The examples are washed from standard pig¬ 
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his immediate supervision, and include colon of 
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This book on Water-Color, a branch becoming high¬ 
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F. W. DEVOE& CO.,' 
Comer Fulton and William Streets, New Ybj’k, 
11 - 
