Sly Ballades in Harvard China.

By E. S. M.

Dainty and unique in style, it will provide bright and amusing Summer reading, appealing to the taste of cultivated people of society. The papers are quite unconventional, and are treated with a rare sense of humor. The versification has the genuine ring. The volume will undoubtedly make a hit.—Boston Saturday Evening Gazette.

Bright and full of fun.—Boston Globe.

Graceful in fancy, and bright in wit and spirit. The author's drollery is irresistible, and we should think young ladies would enjoy the book as much as the beings of the opposite sex.—Quebec Chronicle.

The author is anonymous—as usual, now-a-days—but he is known as one of the foremost of a band of clever young writers.—Springfield Republican.

Writes always like a gentleman.—N. Y. Mail.

The volume is of a high order.—Boston Herald.

Suggests Hood at his best.—Boston Journal.

One of the most charming of Summer books.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

Written in the approved modern Vers de Societie style, with a singular mixture of wit and deep feeling. Many of the verses would not be disowned by Praed, the master-genius of witty verse, or by Calverly, who wrote "Fly Leaves," a few years back.—Boston Advertiser.

Bret Harte created quite a sensation in London society by reading these verses in manuscript.—N. Y. Pub. Weekly.

The books contain some of the lightest and brightest bits of verse it has lately been our good fortune to lead.—The Critic.


Whence, What, Where?

A VIEW OF THE ORIGIN, NATURE, AND DESTINY OF MAN.

BY JAMES R. NICHOLS, M.D., A.M.

EXTRACTS FROM NOTICES BY THE PRESS.

From Forney's Philadelphia Press.

"Dr. Nichols' essays will be found stimulating reading. No one can take up the book without feeling the inclination to read further and to ponder on the all-important subjects which they present. Though it is not a religious book in the technical sense of the word, it is a book which calls for the exercise of the religious nature, and it is a book which in diffusing many sensible ideas will be good."

From Boston Commonwealth.

"The great value of the little book, 'Whence, What, Where?' by Dr. James R. Nichols, is in its suggestiveness. It is eminently provocative of thought. Its value is not to be tested by its bulk. It is full of clear thinking, and of accurate statement. Dr. Nichols is severely scientific, and, at the same time, devoutly spiritual. Its philosophy is largely that of Swedenborg, without Swedenborg's terrible diffusiveness. We have in it, concisely and clearly stated, all that the strictest scientific research warrants us in believing of man's origin, nature, and spiritual destiny. Science is shown to be not necessarily opposed to religion and to spirituality."

From Boston Christian Register.

"The book is written in a clear style, and the author's opinions are readily understood. It is refreshing to have such a work from a scientific layman, on topics which too many treat with a supercilious disdain, unbecoming both themselves and the subject."

From Boston Congregationalist.

"The topics discussed are handled with a good degree of candor, and give in a small space much interesting information and perhaps some profitable speculation."

From the Lowell Mail.

"Its truths may be received as a new revelation from which consolation and happiness may be derived by those who have been troubled with doubts and misgivings."