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In the Valley of Tophet. By Henry W. Nevinson, author of "Slum Stories of London." 18mo, pp. 276, gilt top, uncut. Henry Holt & Co. $1. Across an Ulster Bog. By M. Hamilton. gilt top. Edward Arnold. $1. A Winning Hazard. By Mrs. Alexander. 16mo, pp. 270. D. Appleton & Co. $1. The Dancer in Yellow. By W. E. Norris. 16mo, pp. 350. D. Appleton & Co. $1. Ruth Endicott's Way; or, Hargrave's Mission. By Lucy C. Lillie. Illus., 12mo, pp. 286. Henry T. Coates & Co. $1.25.

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Mathematical Papers Read at the International Mathematical Congress in Chicago, 1893. Edited by the Committee of the Congress. 8vo, uncut, pp. 411. Macmillan & Co. $4. Hypnotism, Mesmerism, and the New Witchcraft. By Ernest Hart. New edition, enlarged; illus., 12mo, pp. 212. D. Appleton & Co. $1.50.

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64

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POLITICS AND ECONOMICS.

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SCIENCE.

A Dictionary of Chemical Solubilities; Inorganic. By Arthur Messinger Comey, Ph.D. 8vo, uncut, pp. 515. Macmillan & Co. $5.

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WEIR OF HERMISTON. BY ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. 12mo, gilt top, $1.50.

Mr. STEVENSON said: "It will be my best work."

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THE LIFE OF JAMES MCCOSH. A Record Chiefly Autobiographical. Edited by Prof. WILLIAM MILLIGAN SLOANE. Illustrated with portraits. 8vo, $2.50 net.

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The essays composing this volume are of unique quality. They treat of Brummell, Count D'Orsay, George the Fourth, Cosmetics, and other topics allied by the common element of dandyism, and are written in a vein of exceedingly refined and elaborate literary dilettanteism. Mr. Beerbohm is first of all a literary artist, but his critical powers are proportionally keen, and his essays will be valued for their substance as well as favored for their style.

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THE DIAL

A Semi-Monthly Journal of Literary Criticism, Discussion, and Information.

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Vol. XX.

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BOOKS ABOUT BOOKS. Anna B. McMahan . . . 361
Matthews's Bookbindings Old and New.-Powell's
Excursions in Libraria.- Roberts's Rare Books and
their Prices. - Miss Labouchere's Ladies' Book-
Plates.

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THE DIAL'S SCORE OF VOLUMES.

If volumes meant years, THE DIAL would just now be entering upon the year of its majority. The present issue completes the twentieth volume of the review, and carries it well into the seventeenth year of its existence. This discrepancy between years and volumes results, of course, from the fact that THE DIAL began as a monthly, and became afterwards a semimonthly. The first stage of its career extended from 1880 to 1892; the second stage has now covered four years. Since each of its score of volumes includes twelve parts, this issue of June 16, 1896, is reckoned as the two hundred and fortieth, while the aggregate number of pages is about seven thousand.

Throughout all this period THE DIAL has remained under the same editorial management. During the first twelve years it bore the imprint of a well-known firm of bookpublishers; since then it has been issued by The Dial Company, incorporated in 1892 under the laws of Illinois. This transfer of publication meant, as our older readers are well aware, no essential changes in the character of the paper except those naturally resulting from enlarged opportunities and resources. Beginning with September 1, 1892, THE DIAL became a semi-monthly, and added several new features, the most noteworthy of them being the leading editorial articles that have since appeared with every issue. It was felt by the editors that a critical journal devoted to the interests of literature should have, no less than the political or religious publication, a standpoint of its own, and that the general field of literary discussion offered, no less than any other, opportunities for the enunciation and defense of important principles in criticism, education, and public affairs.

The editorial feature thus established was a new departure in critical periodicals of the class to which THE DIAL belongs, and abundant evidence of its acceptability has been afforded by private communications and public comment upon our leaders of the past four years. The The scope of this publication, broadly conceived, embraces many subjects besides those of strictly literary concern. Education, 369 library management, important art movements,

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