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185 STEREOPTICON VIEWS.

THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. To the North Cape and Return.

Mrs. WILLIAM H. HOTCHKISS, a native of North Germany, who recently made a Tour through Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, as far as the North Cape, has prepared three Lectures, illustrated with 185 Stereopticon Views, suitable to be given as Parlor Entertainments, Charitable Entertainments, or in Schools.

Each Lecture is complete in itself, and can be given in English or German, as also, if desired, without the Views. Arrangements can be made by addressing

MRS. W. H. HOTCHKISS,

20 Elm Street, New Haven, Conn.

REFERENCES: Mr. W. L. KINGSLEY, Mrs. Dr. THOMAS P. GIBBONS, Dr. and Mrs. FRANCIS BACON, Mrs. Dr. W. H. CARMALT, Prof. GEORGE P. FISHER, Dr. and Mrs. EDWIN HARWOOD, Mrs. S. DENTON, Mrs. HARRY P. NICHOLS, Mr. and Mrs. MORRIS F. TYLER, Mrs. R. E. STILES.

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NEW ENGLANDER

AND

YALE REVIEW.

NULLIUS ADDICTUS JURARE IN VERBA MAGISTRI.

MARCH, 1889.

ART. I. How a New England Frontier Town Grew Up in the Old Colonial

Times.

II. The Why of Poverty.

William L. Kingsley, New Haven. George H. Hubbard, Norton, Mass. T. W. Hunt, Princeton, N. J.

III. Euphuism in Literature and Style.

IV. Ultimate Distinction in Philosophical Methods.

Rikizo Nakashima, Yale University.

UNIVERSITY TOPICS.

Classical and Philosophical Society of Yale College.
Yale University Bulletin.

CURRENT LITERATURE.

Lanciani's "Ancient Rome." By Rodolfo Lanciani.-History of the New Hampshire Constitutional Convention of 1788. By Joseph B. Walker.— Examination of Spencer's Philosophy. By Rev. W. D. Ground.-Scriptures, Hebrew and Christian. By Edward T. Bartlett, D.D., and John P. Peters, Ph.D.

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NEW ENGLANDER AND YALE REVIEW.

The NEW ENGLANDER AND YALE REVIEW is a Monthly Review, established in 1843, in New Haven, Conn., devoted to the discussion of all the questions of the day, in every department of Theology, Literature, and Politics. In each number there are notices of new publications.

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NEW ENGLANDER

AND

YALE REVIEW.

No. CCXXVIII.

MARCH, 1889.

ARTICLE I. - HOW A NEW ENGLAND FRONTIER TOWN GREW UP IN THE OLD COLONIAL TIMES.

Colonial Times on Buzzard's Bay. By WILLIAM ROOT BLISS. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 1888. 12mo. pp. 185.

THE object of the writer of the book whose title we have placed above has been to give the story of the settlement and growth of a New England town, in the old colonial times, with special reference to the social life of its inhabitants, in that age of homespun. The town is one for which the author evidently has a strong affection; and the book is one upon which he has bestowed the loving labor of years. We may add, also, that he has been so successful in what he has attempted that even those who have never seen the picturesque scenes which he describes the fine woodlands "with soft brown silence carpeted," the rivers and ponds, the sedgy field brooks—will read these

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