Page:Historic towns of the middle states (IA historictownsofm02powe).pdf/483

This page needs to be proofread.

Historic Towns of New England

Edited by Lyman P. Powell. With introduction by George P. Morris. With 160 illustrations. 8^o, gilt top, $3.50.


Contents: Portland, by Samuel T. Pickard; Rutland, by Edwin D. Mead; Salem, by George D. Latimer; Boston, by Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Edward Everett Hale; Cambridge, by Samuel A. Eliot; Concord, by Frank A. Sanborn; Plymouth, by Ellen Watson; Cape Cod Towns, by Katharine Lee Bates; Deerfield, by George Sheldon; Newport, by Susan Coolidge; Providence, by William B. Weeden; Hartford, by Mary K. Talcott; New Haven, by Frederick Hull Cogswell. Historic Towns of the Middle States Edited by Lyman P. Powell. With introduction by Dr. Albert Shaw. With over 150 illustrations. 8^o, gilt top, $3.50. Contents: Albany, by W. W. Battershall; Saratoga, by Ellen H. Walworth; Schenectady, by Judson S. Landon; Newburgh, by Adelaide Skeel; Tarrytown, by H. W. Mabie; Brooklyn, by Harrington Putnam; New York, by J. B. Gilder; Buffalo, by Rowland B. Mahany; Pittsburgh, by S. H. Church; Philadelphia, by Talcott Williams; Princeton, by W. M. Sloane; Wilmington, by E. N. Vallandigham. Some Colonial Homesteads And Their Stories. By Marion Harland. Second impression. With 86 illustrations. 8^o, gilt top, $3.00. "A notable book, dealing with early American days. . . . The name of the author is a guarantee not only of the greatest possible accuracy as to facts, but of attractive treatment of themes absorbingly interesting in themselves, . . . the book is of rare elegance in paper, typography, and binding."—Rochester Democrat-Chronicle.


More Colonial Homesteads

And Their Stories. By Marion Harland. With over 70 illustrations. 8^o, gilt top.


Where Ghosts Walk

The Haunts of Familiar Characters in History and Literature. By Marion Harland, author of "Some Colonial Homesteads," etc. With 33 illustrations. 8^o, gilt top, $2.50.


"In this volume fascinating pictures are thrown upon the screen so rapidly that we have not time to have done with our admiration for one before the next one is encountered. . . . Travel of this kind does not weary. It fascinates."—New York Times.


G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, New York and London