PUBLICATIONS OF S. C. GRIGGS é CO., CHICAGO.
WIATHEWS-ORATORY AND ORATORS. By William
Mathews, LL.D. i vol. i2mo, cloth, $2.
MILLER-WHAT TOMMY DID. By Emily Huntington Miller. Illustrated. i6mo, paper covers, 50 cents; cloth, $1.
"If there is any other way in which fifty cents will purchase as much sus- tained and healthful amusement as is offered by this little book we should be glad to know it." — yo/in Habberton^ in the Christian Union.
"We laughed all the evening over the many funny things Tommy said and did. . . . We will warrant that no one, young or old, will lay it down until read through." — Northern Christian Advocate.
MISHAPS OF MR. EZEKIEL PELTER. Illustrated. $1.50.
"Immensely amusing." — Boston Coininonzvealih.
" If it be your desire 'to laugh and grow fat,' you will find The Mishaps of Ezekiel Pelter a great help." — American Christian Review^ Cincinnati.
ROBERT-RULES OF ORDER, for Deliberative Assem- blies. By Major Henry M. Robert, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A. Pocket size. Cloth, 75 cents.
"Robert's Rules of Order isa capital little book. I have given it a very critical examination. . . . For general use and application, I regard it the best book extant."— //<?«. James W. Husted, Speaker of the New York State Legislature.
"It is just such a guide as is needed by all presiding officers. . . . The table of rules relating to motions, and the cross references, which enable any one to find almost instantly anything in the book, give it almost inestimable value. "^ Nezv York Christian Advocate.
SMITH — PATMOS; or, The Kingdom and the Patience.
By J. A. Smith, D.D., Editor of The Standard. Cloth, $1.25.
"No one can read the nine chapters which this volume contains without receiving a new inspiration to faithful service in the cause of Christ." — Zion^s A dvocate.
TAYLOR-BETWEEN THE GATES. By Benj. F. Taylor, Author of "The World on Wheels," etc. etc. i2mo, cloth. Il- lustrated. $1.50.
" The light, feathery sketches in this volume glitter with all the colors of the rainbow and sparkle with the reflection of the morning dew. The reader of imagination and taste will delight in the subtle alchemy which transmutes gold into beauty, and changes the facts of common life into ideal visions. Mr. Taylor detects the enchantments of poetry in the most prosaic experiences, and the dusty highways of life are refreshed with the waters of Siloam, and bloom with the flowers of paradise." — New York Tribune.
"A series of verbal photographs of California characters and scenery that are exceedingly graphic, poetic and entertaining. . . . Picturesque and romantic in style, yet altogether accurate in fact." — Episcopal Register^ Philadelphia.
" Lively as a novel and accurate as a guide book." — Philadelphia Press.