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Writings of Oliver Wendell Holmes.

When grave, he charms us by his truth and manliness of feeling, and his sweetness of sentiment; when
us with the glance and play of the wildest wit and the richest humor.-George S. Hillard.

gay, he delights

Among the foremost and most especially national of American writers, displaying a peculiar delicacy of humor.-Satur-
ddy Review (London).

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Songs of Many Seasons. 16mo. $2.00; half calf,

$3.50; morocco, $4.50.

Dr. Holmes's place among poets is very high. We are not
sure that it is not the highest among Americans.
No poet was ever more versatile. Whether his poems are
for class dinners or church dedications; whether they wel-
come the Princes of Russia or France, China or Japan;
whether they greet a political, military, or mercantile hero;
whether they overflow with rollicking fun or touch the most
serious things in life; whether they eulogize the dead or in-
spire the living,-they are always exquisitely adapted to the
There is one other characteristic which Dr. Holmes

shares with all the distinguished poets, and prose writers, too,

of America, and that is entire purity.-Boston Advertiser.

A Superb Life-Size portrait of Dr. Holmes
has been prepared, and will be furnished for One Dollar
to Subscribers for any of the Periodicals published by
Messrs. H., O. & Co.

I welcome to my study the fine portrait of our well-beloved
and honored friend, Dr. Holmes. It seems to me a very suc-
cessful representation of the "Autocrat of the Breakfast
Table."-J. G. WHITTIER.

**For sale by all booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers,

HOUGHTON, OSGOOD & CO., BOSTON, MASS.

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STANDARD BOOKS FOR LIBRARIES.

The Life of the Rt. Hon. Wm. Ewart Gladstone, M. P., D. C. L., etc.

BY GEORGE BARNETT SMITH, author of "Shelley: a Critical Biography," "Poets and Novelists," etc. Octavo, with two
portraits engraved on steel, cloth extra.

Mr. Gladstone has been called the first citizen of England. The important positions he has held in the government of the

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of his time.

Studies in German Literature.

BY BAYARD TAYLOR. Edited by Marie Taylor. With an Introduction by Hon. Geo. H. Boker. 8vo, cloth, extra, $2.25.
CONTENTS: I. Earliest German Literature. II. The Minnesingers. III. The Medieval Epics. IV. The Niebelungen
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History of Political Economy in Europe.

BY JEROME ADOLPHE BLANQUI, member of the Institute and Professor of political economy. Translated by EMILY J. LEON-
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The principal subjects considered with reference to their economic effects, are: the institutions of Athens and of Sparta;
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A Forbidden Land; or, Voyages to the Corea.

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A Collection of Original and hitherto Unpublished Poems by the most distinguished living Poets, written specially for this book.

14 volumes, uniformly bound in black cloth, gilt and red-lettered, four-leaf clovers and horse-shoe devices price $1.00 per volume.

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Signor Monaldini's Niece.

The Colonel's Opera Cloak.

His Majesty, Myself.

Uniformly bound in green cloth, gilt and black lettered, four-leaf clovers and horse-shoe devices, price per volume, $1.00.

NOTICE TO LIBRARIANS.

The most intelligent critics in the land have characterized the "No NAME SERIES," as a most remarkable series of original novels. No library which pretends to keep up with the fiction of the day is complete without a set of these popular books. We will make special inducements to librarians who will order sets through us. Sold everywhere by all booksellers; mailed, post-paid, by the publishers,

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Lettered with title of periodical, free. Any size to order. In ordering, give length, width, and thickness of papers. Descriptive price-lists free by mail.

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Patentee and Sole Manufacturer,

No. 628 F STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C.

ECONOMY IS WEALTH.

To Librarians as well as to Students, Readers and Business Men.

Readers' and Writers' Economy

Club.

Reading, writing, recording

1. The Club.

Notes.

knowledge and communicating it, are processes which admit of very many economies of many kinds. Furniture, stationery, desk fittings, writing implements; comfortable chairs, convenient reading frames, ways of indexing, arrangements of pigeon-holes or other repositories of papers, the different ways of cataloging books; modes of alphabeting indexed matter; modes of preserving and referring to newspaper cuttings, systems of abbreviating entries, notes and records, the use of hand-stamps to save writing, contrivances for light and for protecting the eye,-all manner of devices for thinking, and for preserving, arranging and conveying thoughts, are at the present day greatly in demand, and their modes and uses are constantly made matter of experiment and improvement by many persons. A year or two ago, the proved usefulness of the co-operative and supply departments of the American Library Association occasioned the organization of the existing Readers' and Writers' Economy Club. This consists simply of a company of ladies and gentlemen all over the country who agree to contribute suggestions and information about improved methods and devices for reading, writing, and literary work generally. There is no payment, except of 25 cents a year for the ECONOMY NOTES, if taken; and no formality whatever except to send in one's name; and nobody is asked to send in any suggestion that he prefers to keep to himself.

Membership of this Club is recommended to everybody interested in its objects. If you like to be a member, write per postal card, saying so, and giving name and address. This will be considered a pledge to exchange suggestions as above, so far as may be practicable, during one year. The promise lasts no longer, and must be renewed annually.

ECONOMY CLUB, P. O. 260, Boston, Mass.

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The ECONOMY CLUB NOTES was established as a medium of thought. Exchange among the members of the Economy Club, and during 1879, it was furnished monthly gratis to all members of the Club. As however this proceeding became too expensive as the membership increased, the ECONOMY NOTES has been established as a continuation of the Economy Club Notes, on a separate business footing as an independent periodical, under the editorial management of Mr. F: B. Perkins, and such advertising and circulation has been secured to him as makes it practicable to place the price of the NOTES nearly at the actual cost of making and mailing, while its character as a genuine business concern gives it the benefit of the cheap postal rates for periodicals, known as the "pound rates." The subscription price thus charged is 50 cents a year, but to members of the Economy Club, half price, or 25 cents a year. To new subscribers these rates include a 40 cent Emerson Binder for current numbers; and bound volumes are exchanged for clean whole sets at the year's end for ten cents. Ten numbers a year are issued (none in July and August), to be in all from 150 to 200 pages. Subscriptions, correspondence, and suggestions of any kind, may be sent to

ECONOMY NOTES, P. O. 260, Boston, Mass.

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