The third of the group is
GUY HERNDON OR "A TALE OF GETTYSBURG."
BY "ELAYNE."
Elayne, we know, is Miss Helen M. Graham, one of Morristown's Society girls who spends much of her time in New York.
This "Tale of Gettysburg" is the first venture of Miss Graham into the field of literature. Her choice of subject indicates that she is in touch with the growing realization among our novelists of how wide and fruitful a field is presented to them in the events of our civil war. The few graphic pictures already given by them of the social and other conditions of those stirring times, will be more and more valued by the present generation, and by those to come, as the years go on.
Other Novelists and Story Writers.
Among the poets, we have already mentioned as writers also of stories, many of them for children and young people,—
Mrs. M. Virginia Donaghe McClurg,
Miss Emma F. R. Campbell,
Miss Hannah More Johnson,
And Mr. William T. Meredith,
the last being the author of a summer novel, "Not of Her Father's Race".
Rev. James M. Freeman, D. D.,