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The sun. [volume] (New York [N.Y.]) 1833-1916, December 18, 1905, Image 7

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THE SUN MONDAYDECEMBER 18 iDOL 7II
=
ETRUaiASPASSENGERSGROWlA
iII1 111J > wFINK I AN 1 ImT IOSIATlW
ATlW FINK DAYS HUNOne
One IMirngrr Um Hid From the Dootomill r
mill One at of Sickness Krpt thlllInarcer
Cimtnler at tjiiarantlnn All Nllhtnnllo
nnllo the OutfootPd HI Paul DocUrditiB
itiB Iunanlor Ktruria did not get to herdOl
dot k until hnlfi > uflt 8 yostorday mornInr
Inr although dim reached TompUlnuvlllat
at 3 1111 Saturday afternoon The pMeigir
pi WITP vmed jcclally such as womoil
on tit ir cay to tin East and anxious tot
CM t tli Hitunlny nhht tralim to Vancouvei
h Ih cf India
i u to cut < Kinijawt
1 ho nuMim irfvnn out on tho ship for thlto
i etr tvfusul to pans tho ship WAll thatwt
wluui i ho bNvrafio iiKsunKers wero countedIII
my H7 were produced while the reglaUhtn rhI
htn wii J3S Ton minutes after the doctorhad
had left tho inisfllng man waa found Hewa
was a man about 25 who had hidden hlirHif
Hif to csoapo tho InHjxjction which hoIma
hrJKinrxl to be Homcthing torrlblo and toI
I jsui < vi at all coot So far ILl tho PMn
rvngers could learn no effort was made torlIlIlh
nviill the doctor although it was then onlyllf
lalf put 4 No word waa sent to tho wallIng
InK friends on tho plor and tho possongwere
were utiAbla to oommunioato with thornOne
One litter pill waa that tho St Paul gottn
to lior doek uhoad of the English boat1hi
1hi Uniru had caught up to the St PaulA
nbuut 11 on Thursday morning had heldher
her I am and Loam all day and aU nightAnol
nn > l finally pulled away from her FridaniKht
night by steaming twentyone knots andlIIaklllg
making a run of 403 mlloa botwoon noorIn
In lay and noon Saturday tho beet theJtruria
Hruru has dono for years Tho bottlnion
on the Ltrurla wan anywhere from 20 toto 1
to HO to 1 that tho Etruria docked firsthen
When tho doctor camo on board agalijentcrday
jentcrday morning ho was accompanied byiiI
lr Doty the health officer Capt Potterhad
had the missing passenger ready for himholding
holding him ua a sort of prisoner In thetdloon
raloon gingway and requested that hoht
ht taken ashore and shot Dr Doty askeiIm
Im assistantfl to recount the passengershilo
whllo ho himself wont below with tho ahlpsdoctor
doctor to look at a case In the hospitalIpon
Ipon his return to tho deck Dr Doty utateto <
to TUB RUN reporter that the miscount oftho
tho passengers was only part of the dlfflciilty
ciilty about passing tho ship here being atmthor
rather suspicious case of sickness on boardwhich
which ho considered it best to leave untithu
thu morning so that he might be lure ItWli
was not cholera There was not tim holplalned
explained to determine this the nlgbt before
fore and had the circumstances been propirly
irly jplatned to the pallsengere he thoughtlwy
they would not have Lorn so indignant atIhe
the delay Tho passenger turned out tohave
have only dysenteryMr
Mr P Latham the tennis crack was not8mong
among tho passengers although his namiwas
was on the list Mme Kirkby Lunn thconcert <
concert singer Is hero for a ten weeks tOllrand
and will open In Chicago this week Shewill
will bo heard in New York at Carnegie Halin
in Tho Messiah In Christmas weekTbo
The Etruria had remarkably smootlweathor
weather probably because eha had amonfher
her paflwngors a man who Ik known totrnnatlantio
ronsatlantio captains as the mascot of thoAt1antlo
Atlantic a quiet looking man of aboufifty
fifty who curries tho burgoo of the SachemiHead
Head yacht Club in his cap Although hohI
Ins cnwsed more than ninety times ainoi
1873 and at all seasons of the year he baanevor
never seen a storm and the moment he eetifoot
foot on a steamers deck it seems to be aelgnal
signal for tho ocean to cease from troubling
and tho winds to take a restTIIIIKATKXS
IuIv TIIIIKATKXS FARMERIlroatun
Ilroatun Immigration llulra Keep IllrrFrom
From Ills Iarra In the M flItJohann
Johann Puetz a farmer of Luxemburglili
his wife Magdulena and their childrenMane
Mane Nicolaus Eliza and Peter whosongos
AgeS rango from 12 to 18 years are detainedat
at Ellis Island for deportation becauseNicolaus
Nicolaus who is li years old has boonpronounced
pronouncod an imbecile Physically hein
in In good condition and is capable of hardwork
work Farmer Puetz disposed of his littlefarm
farm in Luieinburg some time ago andH
ent the money he got for it to hit brotherinliw
inlaw who bought a big farm away out InPolk
Polk rourity Vis paying 2000 in cash forit
it The brotherinlaw recently sent wordto
to Puftz that tho farm had been stockedand
and wan merely awaiting its ownersThe
The family have their tickets to WIsron
ron m and somu money IwiidoB Theywore
wore wry much cast down when told theywould
would have to go bark to Luxemburg
IHiet says that if necessary he will send thefideit
fideit boy Peter to hl4 old home withNicolius
Nicolius If the immigration laws will notcnnit
permit him to tako care of the boy on theWiwoiHin
WiwoiHin farm Meanwhile ho has appealed
pealed tho ca o to Washingtontit
111 itui D WITH SHOPLIFTINGDauclilrr
Dauclilrr or One MaxmtlUns GtneraliIn
In all In San FranciscoSs
Ss FRANCISCO Dec nMrs Xlghtuicalo
calo daughter of Gen Mendosa one ofMuMmluina
MuMmluina staff is in jail charged withMiuplifttng
Miuplifttng The woman is an educatedand
and accomplished Mexican and had noncotl
ncotl to Meal as her husband is a man ofmoans
moanshho
She was caught late yesterday afternoonit
it w aliened at tho largest department storein
in the city hiding small articles in her waistIn
In her rooms a trunhful of goods was foundhearing
hearing price marks of din erent stormHT
HT liulmml is raid to have admitted thatno
lop knew of his wifes stealings but that hisprptots
prptots were fruitlessIhe
1 hr > woman seemed unable to understandtlif
tlif slmmo of her plight until her younglaughter
laughter came to the jailMrs
Mrs XiBhtlngalos father was Mendosawho
who accompanied Maximilian to Mexicothe
the second time Ho romalned faithful toInn
Inn Austrian and was sentenced to deathhut
hut c > caP < d bv paving a large ransomSrKK
SrKK MRS XAFTiLS JEWELRYIndications
Indications That a Third Suspect II BringLooked
Looked ForAMUIIY
AMUIIY pAnK N J Dec 1711le scenef
f > l nrtmn in connection with tho Xaftalni
ni irKr mystery is now transferred to NowiTK
York where tho detectives are looking forth
thf diamonds and jewelry stolen from MrsNnftal
Nnftal on the night of tho murder It isCPrtaui
frtain that Pordonl and Morris who arono
no A in the Froohold jail charged with thoimc
imc x iMtod tho metropolis the day aftertlio
tlio murdrr wher it is believed they disrK
rK 0d of the jewelrvf
From the Freehold jail It Is reportJlfl hatI
I rdoni is weaKenlng and his completeefmfiijif
efmfiijif I soon is pnxlicted Minor threw
If tno mvstery that indicate a third manro
are licmg followed up In Newarkny
UWIW ny nis OWN RULEntiirt
ntiirt Illoalrn Forced Others to quitItallrnailliiBat
ItallrnailliiBat os Must Now GoOn PensionPirrsriuiio
Pirrsriuiio Deo 17 Robert Pltoalrnipfrmtendent
ipfrmtendent of the Pittflburg division
If the Pennsylvania Railroad will soontin
r tin under the ago limit Ho succeededAndrew
Andrew Carnegie In charge of tho divtJii
Jii and has held the position since IMSntiviriR
ntiviriR Nptml ttfty yearn in constant earVIP
VIP with tho Pennsylvania RailroadHo
Ho was a messenger boy and telegraphoirator
oirator with Andrew Carnegie Mr PltJi
Ji m nd today I was tko author ofw1
w1 rule to retire men at 03 and I am now 70iHMnK
iHMnK forced others to emit 1 will haveto
to do tho sijijor myBeir
I r
ftsROYAL
ROYALBaking
Bakingthat
Powdertbat
that mmhoa theDelicious
Delicious BiscuitGriddle
Griddle Dakeand
and DoughnutNEW
NEW UOOKSTiehalkonskya
Tiehalkonskya LetterSome
Some time ago Mode te Tschilkowskbrother
brother of the famous Iluwslan composepublished
published a voluminous biography accompanied
panted by some 3000 letters of the deadmuslolan
musician Rosa Nowmarch has translateand
and edited this mass of information and husotlerod
offered It to English readers under the tillof
of Tbo Lifo and Letters of Peter IlIchTscholkowsky
Techaikoweky John Lane the IlodleHead
Head Mrs Nowmarch published a goodlittle
little book on the Russian wymphonist 11few
few years ago and she bays mode tly in herpreface
preface to the present work that nho had 10oonalder
consider whether sho would issue a newedition
edition of her own work or translate ModestTechalkowpkys
TechalkowpkysShe
She decided that she ought to do the lattoibut
but sho found that the Russian work wasentirely
entirely too large for English and Americaconsumption
consumption Con equently she has condensed
densed much of the original especially Inthe
the latter part Manyof the letters she hasreduced
reduced to two or three significant paragraphs
graphs and others she has IncorporateIn
In the narrative Her work has been admirably
ably done and thanks to her publisherreaders
readers of English now havo a full andauthoritative
authoritative life of one of tho acknowledged
edged masters of modern musicNo
No now light U thrown by Modesto Tsohalkowsky
kowsky on tho most painful episode of hiflbrothore
brothers life namely his marriage Althat
that appears from the story is that tho composer
poser mot a woman who was In lovo wltlhim
him and that ho imagined that ho oughnot
not to destroy her happiness So he aukeiher
her to be his wife and she accepted himThey
They were married and then they founcout
out that they woro wholly unsuited to onoanolber
another and separated That Is the entiristory
story but it hardly explains Tschalkowukyiarrival
arrival In Moscow immediately after leavIng
Ing his wife In such a state that his life orbl8
his reason was supposed to be in dangerMore
More cheerful reading will ho found Inthe
the diary which the composer kept whllion
on a brief visit to America at the invitatioiof
of Walter Damrooch at tho time of theopening
opening of Carnegie Hall Those who areacquainted
acquainted with the inner workings of themusical
musical world will find food for smiles inthe
the composers accounts of the lionizing
to which ho was unwillingly subjectedto
to his daily confession to himself that hewas
was homesick and utterly bored ly thesassiduous
assiduous Americans and most of all byhis
his narrative of the ceaseless nttentioruof
of an agent of a piano tnnkor who in tluend
end asked him to certify over his nignatunthat
that theirs was the best 1 lane made in thiicountry
country In spite of all the attentionTschaikownky
Tschaikownky would not RRIIThis
This rart of the book Is r lentifilly supplied
piled with cheerful chat about Willie vorSacha
Sacks who appears as De Sachs BruntOscar
Oscar Klein whose name reached themaster
master as Urummklein Max Vogrichwho
who to Tsclmikowpky was Wngrich JohrP
P Jackson Tretbar Reno Hyde Carnegieand
and many others Carnegie was immenseljtaken
taken with Tschaikowsky who In returnconceived
conceived a sincere regard for the man ofmany
many millions Rut the entire book Isrooclable
readable and of course its importance aca
a human and historical document Is greatThere
There are two Indexes ono of nnmeeand
and the other of TBclialkowskys corn options
ions the latter referring to the accountof
of them In the book This system of Indexing
ing Is rapidly becoming the fashion inbiographies
biographies of musicians and It is goodas
as far as It goes but it In inadequate Thereehould
should also be on Index of topics If rouI
wish to find out when Tschaikowsky WBIImalTled
I married or when he came to America thereIs
i Is nothing In the index to help you IIyou
you do not know tho name of Tscbalkowskywife
wife you cannot find her Writers of mumloal
oal biographies should make the Index olJames
James Hunekers Chopin their modelThat
That embraces names works and topicsAmerican
American ArchtoMonyIn
In the shape of an appendix to a reportof
of tho Bureau of American Ethnology tothe
the Smithsonian Institution the twentythird
third Government Printing Office Washington
ington comes the most complete and elaborate
orate description of the Zunl Indians thathas
has yet been published Mrs Matilda CoxoStevensons
Steven Ona The Zunl Indians TheirMythology
Mythology Esoteric Fraternities andCeremonials
Ceremonials over 000 large octavo almostquarto
quarto razes with a multitude of illustrations
ions 173 of them drawings photograi
and colored plates Mrs Stevenson hasexceptional
exceptional knowledge of these peopleSho
She was connected with the first expedition
tion pent to them in 1870 and has kept intouch
touch ever sinceShe
She wastes little tim on the labors of herpredecessors
predecessors In the field She bolns wiljha
a careful account of the Z ifll mythologyand
and of the calendar then describes elaborately
orately the priesthood and the ceremonialsAfter
After this she takes up tho history thncustoms
customs frames Industries with the medicalpractice
practice into which she goes very deeplyand
and with no lack of plain speaking Including
cluding of course witchcraft Sho windsup
up with a detailed account rf the Btrancofraternities
fraternities that exist amonx these Indianaand
and their ceremonials We doubt if anymore
more complete work on an Indian tribehas
has ever been writtenLikewise
Likewise from the Bureau of Ethnologybut
but In smaller form comes Bulletin 20 conrinurATios
rinurATiosThe u
o
The 7th DJJ BeforChriitmai
ChriitmaiThere p1YT
here are all kinds ofbooks
There books for everytaste
taste It is only foryou
you to selectWhy
Whynot
notBOOKS
BOOKSfor
for Christmas
I
PUBLICATIONS
U
nnnnIt
It Has Made a HitBack
0Back
Back HomeBy
By Eugene WoodThe
The demand for this bookhaa
q L haa been eteidiljr andrapidly
rapidly Increasing everInce
Ince It wal published this autumnIt
It hat now gone Into its thirdprinting
printing and we ajo getting morereordera
reorders from the dealers andmore
more direct mail order than everbefore
beforeU
beforeMr
U Mr Wood It the biographerof
of the American country boy I andhe
be never fail to atari the remlniacent
cent chuckle or bring the lump
Into the throat We bail him aione
one of the real American humorists
IsuN Y fvtnhf SunIlluttraled
Illustrated bv A 73 Prod IIeoMcClure
McClure Ph Hips Co
44 Eat 23d Street NEW YORKCooperation
Cooperation started bypoor
poor starving English strikersin
in 1844 to free themselvesfrom
I from the oppression of employersh
ployersh a s revolutionizedhome
home and businesslife inOreat
Great BritainBut
But in free America itihas
has so far proved a failureRussells
Russells Soldiers of thei
I
i Common Good in EveryI
bodys for Christmas tells thedramatic
dramatic story of a strugglefrom
from utter weakness intomagnificent
magnificent powerErtrjrbodyi
Ertrjrbodyi Utfidnt 15 ceutaft50
ft50 a ywrBpMtal
BpMtal mnmiUiM witl4 fir Evr4iiMSIIDI
MSIIDI u tmu 15 rt thus are no detlirsHow
How to Study PicturesBy
By Charles H CalllnOf
I Of isetimable service to tholover
lover and ttudent of artColitder
Colitder and Art CntieTHE
THE CENTURY CotalnlngHaidaTcxtsand
BR ENTANO SOPEN
OPEN EVENINOS
I UNTIL C1JRISTIIL4SUNION I IUNION
UNION SQUARE
I
I
taming Iialdn Texts and Myths SkldogatoDialect
Dialect by John H Swanton GovernmentPrinting
i Printing Office Washington They werecollected
I collected In the Queen Charlotte Islandsin
in British Columbia At the beginningare
are a few stories with interlinear translation
lation these are followed by others inwhich
which the Indians text faces the EnglishThe
The greater rart of the volume howeveris
is taken up by English renderings of Indianmyths
myths most of which are of con lrlorablolen
len fli and all extemely interesting Thenotes
notes appended by Mr Swanton are shortbut
but elucidative and to the pointTnitntmll
Tnitntmll Stlcknrya PoemsTho
TIle Poems of Trumbull Stickney arepublished
published by Houghton Mifflin Co Auotico
notice tells us that this poet was of NewEngland
England descent that he was born in Switzerland
erland In 171 that he was graduated fromHarvard
Harvard s 1th high classical honors In 1695that
that he llou in Paris for the better part ofeight
eight years that in 1003 the University ofParis
Paris gave him its great degree Doctorate
ea Lettres its highest gift never beforeconferred
conferred on on American in exchange forhis
his two theses printed tire same year LesSentence
Sentence dons la 10 Ale Grecque dHomre
mre a Euripido and Do Hermolai Barbari
bar Vita atque ingonlo dlssertationemthat
that he became an Instructor of Greek atHarvard
Harvard and that he died in Boston in 1904Tho
Tho poems make a volume of 300 pagesFrom
From the first entitled Kalypso we quoteAnd
I And Hill she paused Her solemn lips ponrwedII
II t thai ehy bought that comes before a songWere
Were bllcnt And be raised lilt languid armClasping
Clasping It all she turctd on him thenThe
The earnest heaven ot her desirous eyesDrew
Drew him about her feet against her kneesCloser
Closer and rested In bit hair one bandThe
The other alone moving so musicalThat
That her low notes were not more sonr than ItDescribed
Described the rerlon of the sinking moonlille
lille soft and even a most unhappy strainThe
The modulntlnn nf an endless griefflowed
flowed from her lips And tiredly she BangOver
Over his head she stooped Her odorous hairTell
Tell thickly oer his face She kitted himWith
With all the sleepy honeys of her soulHer
Her arms did sill along hIs neck his breastShe
She kissed him Inilly upon tho UdsAnd
languorously on the brow she kissed himTrembling
Trembling and flcry on tbe opened moutliA
A tuneful utterance and an explicit pictureand
I and certainly one venturesome and noticeable
able phrase Tbo sleepy honeys of hersoul
soul Wo have noticed a number of ratherventuresome
I venturesome rhymes To rhyme the sunwith
i with vermilion did not greatly disturb usfor
I for we are liberal but wo felt ourselvesrather
I rather sharply arrested when It came tobrass
I brass and was We noticed also thisciiriois
I ciiriois verse in which tho first and thirdand
and the sooond and fourth lines purportto
to rhymeAnd
And from the country evenlni scarce arisenOJt
OJt of the lowering oranges the breeteTie
Tie breeze will earn me to tbe horizon
To silencesNo
Newer before have we heard the edgeof
of the visible world rhymed with arisenIn
In the next verso air and were are madeto
to rhyme but wo have New England memories
ories and this has occasioned In us noparticular
particular sorrow and surpriseConcerning
Concerning the Man Front MaineThe
The Man from Maine by Frank CarlosGriffith
Griffith C M Clark Publishing CompanyIs
Is a burlesque of a book with a comic operaplot
plot put together In loose jointed fashionby
by an apprentice who hasnt learned tohandle
handle his tools oven in tho machine madebook
book trade and whose vocabulary is confined
fined for the most part to the commonslant
slant of tho boy In the streetTbe
Tbe Man from Mains a a country black
PUHUCAT10N8
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I PUnUCATlONH
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Ask to examine this work at your booksellersThe
The Artists Wayof
of WorkingBy iOy
By RUSSELL STURGISAuthor
Author of The Dictionary of ArchItecture > etcJ
a < J The plan for Illustration is very comprehensive There aronumerous
a halftone and pnotoKruvuro 0gravtiro
numerous tortcute and fully 100 full paie in
Kruvuro Tno book is most carefully printed with ample marginsand Ian
and linnilsonily boundCloth
a Cloth 8vo with over 200 illustrations 2 yale net 1500My I
One of the mOlt beautifully illuitrated
My L a d y S trated book at a llIu1I
price ever offeredCathedral
SlipperBy
By Cyrus Townsend BradyAuthor Cathedral Citiesof rAuthor
Author of For tho Freedom ofthe
the Sea etcHanJ 0 f E ng land
HanJ tnti tlustrjttJ hi MrsIf
a If ebtr Ditzler and printtdin By George Gilbert
in two eolirsA in alor byIV
60 tullpaze flatei c or yA
A light bteozy romance oftho
I tho time of Jo n Paul Jon > 8 Amoflt IV ir Coins R fHeEDlar
0 roost are ptnbl holidav bookSquare HeEDlar Edition Hro net tlSOEdition
Square Svo boxed net 150 Edition do teas toted net tinooOldFashioned
OldFashioned FlowersBy
By MAURICE MAETERLINCK
Illustrate in colon with ornamental decorationsThis
This beautifully Illustrate vilume will give a most stiltabeholiday
holiday fia b to tireo of Mact Tlinck B charming essays viz OUFashionis
Fashionis Fiowirs Field lows anl CtrysintheiwrnsLarge
Large 12mo net 120Dodd
Dodd Mead Company New York15he I
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a Intensely and insistently interesting Chicago Record HrrtitJEasily
II Easily the biggest and best thing Booth Tarldnsjtnn has duneIllustrated
CiRugo Ltritsg PonIlIuattatd
Illustrated Prlo 91 SOHARPER
HARPER 6 BnOTHER5 PUBLISHERS NEW YORKHEARTTHROBS
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HEARTTHROBSIs
Is one of the most remarkable books ever printed It isAN
AN ANTHOLOGY OF FAVORITESChosen
Chosen from the contributions of 50000 new lubcrlbers to the NationalMagazine
Magazine Each one of this 50000 has sent in the selection whetherproie
prose or verse which has struck home ° hardest to him or to her thewhole
whole making probably the most wonderful collection of human interest
I terest selections ever gotten together Invaluable for reference in anylibrary
library Charming for every lover of real literature which brightens thedays
days work and makes the heart beat fasterAdmiral
I
Admiral Dewey and Senator Allison made awards of 10003 for these selections4S4
i 4S4 Pages licautifully Hound if ith Illuminated Cover gilt top uncut edgesHEARTTHROBS
I HEARTTHROBS will be sent postpaid on receipt of price 150CHAPPLE
I CHAPPLE PUBLISHING CO Boston MassI
I
smith pent out IUI United State Consul to atoy
toy principality with make believe kingIn
In a far away country of South Africa ThodlstinguihliiiiR
dlstinguihliiiiR feature of the foolish narrative
rative is that von In this day of crudovrorkmanchip
workmanship Hilly absurdity and slnpdnhhvulgarity
vulgarity it is tho worst yet and may bocriticiHid
criticiHid only in tho lanRUige of the author
thor an beyond tho limit The countryb
b nckwnlth Rave santo prom l o of being acharacter
character before the author began trying towrite
write a story about him His definition ofcollateral
collateral is tlu bet thing in tho bookFortunately
Fortunately It Is on the sixth page and itihnt
further Collateral
ihnt necessary to road any
lateral according to Awt J King Is whntyou
you put up when you aint pot nothingThen
Then the other fellow glt together and thofolor
feVer that had the collateral gHo all Dieother
other fellers had and the new feller nrowhat
what they call a syndicate and rai o theprlcoon
price on iron and fish an1 hair oil and thatHwhcro
whero the swindle is in politicsrurnlturp
Emigilsit rurnlturpIn
In more compact nlmpo one naturally inIP
I ° > H detail than tho splendid account ofKiKlHh
KiKlHh furniture unit Mr Percy MnniuoKiis
is publishing nppearx the contribution oMr
Mr Frcdeiirk S Hoblnhon to tho Connoisseurs
noisheurV Lilrnry Encllh FurnitureMethtien
Methtien A Cilj O I l > ut omits SIMMIt
It ban tho ndwntugo of being arrangedIn
In perhaps more syMemntio form Whllathe
the earlier chapter ao chronologicalwith
with tho sixteenth nril seventeenth century
tury the author tulus each nrtlclo of furniture
ture and truces Its development
With the eighteenth century he takesup
up tho individual djitnlril riiippemlnKAdam
Adam Hepplewhito Sh raton The ulncteeiith
teeiith century naturally Is tho end ofart
I art nnd taste It IH an excellent accountof
of one form of collecting The typographyof
of the volume lile till tho so of the serlenis
is very handsome null the relegation oftho
tho plates to tho end seems to be in thiscase
case an excellent ideaTrees
Tree tit North AmericaTo
To the varlou elaborate books on natural
history published by Doubleday PageCo ACo
Co must bo added a quarto called TheTrocB
Trees by Julia Ellon Hoficrs A certainlack
lack of order In tho arrangement Is imidoup
up for by Bprightlinefw of style which is notwholly
wholly In place but the hand omo volutnoI
I certainly describes satisfactorily the t earof
I of North America When the author getsdown
I down to telling about each single speciesnho
I shin attends to business nnd does not endeavor
cleaver to be poetical or pplKnitnmntienlTho
I The Illustrations from photographs byA
A Rndclyffo Dngmoro are admirable nndnearly
nearly dispense with the need of wordslliere
I lliere nre 150 of them The colored picturesare
are Vvs sucrsfIli There are chapters oni
i forest ry m thi un of woods on lumberi
ling and on the lift of trees Tho book isbeautifully
beautifully pollen up nnd itt a dividedaddition
addition to pipular nature htmlyC
I
C Dorflinger Sons
ng In announce the expriLoncf
cf their lone in Januaij jt 1jnJ iand
and 5 West Qtli Street and tilediicontinuance
discontinuance of their uptownretail
retail binines During themonth
I
month of Deiemler the entiterixk
mdcx k on hand of cut gUiuiewill
will be otfertl E S d UcountIrom IIron
from the regular retail ptiiand s
t
0
and West Nineteenth Street
3 5 I
I
II
PVI1UOATIOMI I
WVPflflfltV1 LVfl
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A LAST WORD BEFORE CHRISTMASWE
WE HAVE ADVERTISED ALL OUR NEW BOOKSLIBERALLY
LIBERALLY IN THE MAGAZINES WEEKLIES ANDDAILY
DAILY PAPERS NOW AT THE LAST MOMENT WECALL
CALL ATTENTION TO TEN IN PARTICULAR WHICHARE
ARE UNIVERSALLY CONCEDED TO BE THE MOSTIMPORTANT
IMPORTANT PUBLICATIONS OP THE YEAR INTHEIR
THEIR RESPECTIVE FIELDSFWT10N
FWT10NThe
The House of Mirth Dr EDITH WIUIVTONlf
lf far the ilurM unrel ot the year duller with American llrennftis 0 l ZbCvaIll
III 1502OUTDOOn
2OUTDOOn LIFEOutdoor
Outdoor PaoMmos of an ny THEODORE ROOSEVELTAmerican
American Hunter ni 3oo nfl roat MCWAs
As a matter nf course It uhn llic lead of tbe open air book of the acaion HochttUrlltmocrat
lltmocrat Cttranlclc31LLVSTRATED
31LLVSTRATED GIFT BOOKSStevensons
Stevensons A Child Ill by JESSIE WILCOX SMITHGarden
Garden of Verses 250It
It will long eerve an a standard of the hlrhartof juvenile bookmallncV Y Erftilnatun
tuniANlMAL
iANlMAL BOOKSAnimal
Animal Heroes ny ERNEST THOMPSON SETONHe
lie ha many competlton for nm iae In 1m f tillr favor but seen > to hold Ills own againstthem
them all7Vi Intirlor lit 2pO5Mvrr
5Mvrr GIFT BOOKSThe
The Spirit of Christmas By HENnv VAN DYKEllchu
lie lIos perhaps more iifrfrrtly cirrrnnl the ICUC spirit of Chrl tmii than any other Writerof
of todayIOJl UtraM 76 > Cnllntl Post4ota6FOK
6FOK YOUNG PEOPLEA
A Little Princess By FRANCES HODGSON BUitNETTThe
The leading rhllrts hook of the year Rttttir ot Hitiitei 111 In color 2001ART
7ART BOOKSOur
Our Neighbors By CHARLES DANA GIBSONHe
He has set tin hlch water mark for American Art In tnls department CMcato Ricorilltrald
120 nil up eitraSF1CT10N
lltrald
8FICTION IN HOLIDAY DRESSThe
The Woodfire in No 3 By F HOPKINSON SMITHFull
Full of holiday fellowship aDd rood cheer will main fj iicellent ciirHlmat tlftTlii
Till Blot 1U In color 1600IIVMOROVS
0IIVMOROVS VERSEThe
The Fairy GodmothoHnLaw By OLIVER HERFORDThere
There la but one Ollvf Herfnrd and he ti alwara entertaining CMcato Inter OceanIU
IU 100 ceO Post 10 eta10EXPLORAT10N
10EXPLORAT10NThe
IThe
The Voyage of the Discovery By capt ROBERT F SCOTTThe
The ableM andmoM Interesting record ot travel to which the present century has rivenblrthLondon
birth London Spectator 111 2 vols 10 netCHARLES
CHARLES SCRIBNERS SONSBOOKS
p
BOOKS OF I1HPORTANCBLetters
I I
Letters of HenriH IbsenA
A striking utobiography With a portrait 250 net postage 18 centsMan
Man and tHe EartHBy
By Prof N S SHALER of lIuvard An eoonomio forecast 150 net postage lOoOld
Old Masters and NewBy
By KENYON COXA
A practical book of art criticism Illustrated > 250 net postage 18 wntfIN
IN HOLIDAY HUMORAt
At the Sign of the DollarBy
By WALLACE IRWIN Picture by KEMBLE Containing Tho Ballad of GrizzlQulch
Qulch Senator Coppers House etc etc 100More
More Misrepresentative Men
By Capt HAItRV GRAHAM author of Misropreeontatlvo Men 6th EditionPictures
Pictures by MALCOLM STRAUSS Including Andrew Carnegie Henry VUL WV
W Astor etc etc f 100flOOAS
BOOKS FOR OIFTSDrawings
Drawings by A B TRO5TIntroduction
Introduction by Joel Chandler Harris versos by Wallace Irwin 300Cranford
Cranford s A PlayBy
By MARGUERITE MERINOTON Frontispiece In color by EDWIN WALT XA
A comedy made from Mrs flaskellB famous novel 125Verses
Verses for JocK and JoanBy
By HELEN HAY WHITNEY Pictures in color by CHARLOTTE HARDINGPoems
Poems of Children tl50FOX
FOX DUFFIEU3SJ CO
36 EAST Z ST NEW YORKTHE
p
THE JOURNALA
LATROBEBy
OF IBy
By BENJAMIN HENRY LATROBE Reproductioai from the originalDrawing
Drawing by the author Large 8 To omamtntal cloth 330 actpottage
pottage additionalBenjamin
Benjamin Henry Latrobe was the architect of the Capitol
itol at Washington and of the White House He wasthe
the personal friend of George Washingtor nd otherearly
early great Americans His journal is his own accountof
of the life and social customs in this country from 1796to
to 1820 with descriptions of the men and rimesD
D APPLETON COMPANY PUBLISHERS NEW YORKOne
I
One of tho Matt Charming Holiday Books of the YearBy
lHEFlORENCEOFLANDORI IBy
I
I By ULIAN WHIT NCI
I
I
I CA striking picture of Florence doubly interesting becauseso
so many eminent persons appear in it Philadelphia LedgerThe
The work is of an excellence to make it of permanentueLos
ueLos Angeles TimesA
A handsome octavo volume with front piece portrait and i l fullpage
page illustrations in box 250 net Postpaid 2 jrPublished 1Published
Published LITTLE BROWN CO BOSTON opctsgjIors
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