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 Rh Collier Graham; " An English Missal," by Lizette Woodworth Reese; " John Greenleaf Whittier," by George Edward Woodberry; " In Memory of John Greenleaf Whittier, Dec. 17, 1807, to Sept. 7, 1892," by Oliver Wendell Holmes; "Whittier" (dying), by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps; " Don Orsino," XXV., XXVI., by F. Marion Crawford; " So ciology in the Higher Education of Women," by Samuel W. Dike. The contents of Scribner's Magazine for No vember are sufficiently varied and interesting to please all tastes. The most important article is "Conversations and Opinions of Victor Hugo " by Octave Uzanne, which is elaborately illustrated. Lovers of horses will find " Racing in Australia," by Sidney Dickinson, something after their own hearts. Henry James contributes a paper on •• The Grand Canal," and W. C. Brownell con tinues his sketches of " French Art." Kirk Munroe writes of " Sponge and Spongers of the Florida Reef." For fiction the number gives us " Miss Dangerlie's Roses," by Thomas Nelson Page; "Stoiies of a Western Town," IV., by Octave Thanet; and the conclusion of " Salem Kittredge, Theologue," by Bliss Perry.

Harper's Magazine closes its eighty-fifth vol ume with the November number. The issue is fully up to the standard of this excellent magazine. Charles Dudley Warner writes of "The Holy Places of Islam;" Theodore Child takes us " Along the Parisian Boulevards; " and F. D. Millet has a timely article on " The Designers of the Fair." These articles are all finely illustrated, as are also " The New Growth of St. Louis," by Julian Ralph, and "A Collection of Death-Masks " (third paper), by Laurence Hutton. There is plenty of fiction of a most readable character in the number.

The complete novel in Lippin'cott's Magazine for November, More than Kin," is from the well-known pen of Marion Harland. J. B. McCorniick, otherwise known as " Macon," carries on the Journalist Ser ies in a sketchy and readable article headed "The Sporting Editor." George Stuart Patterson, in the Athletic Series, gives an account of " Cricket in the United States," and C. Davis English lays down the law concerning

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"Form in Driving." Both these papers are illus trated, as is Mrs. Ellen Olney Kirk's Venetian sketch, " In a Gondola." Under the chapter, "Men of the Day," M. Crofton gossips about Dr. Pasteur, General Wolseley, and Secretary Foster. The legal profession as well as the general pub lic will be deeply interested in the article in the November Review of Reviews entitled " Ought Mrs. Maybrick to be Tortured to Death?" The controversy over her case has risen almost to the dignity of an official international question; and Mr. Stead, the English editor of the Review of Reviews, has now undertaken to investigate the matter, and comes out with a strong article, taking the American side of the case. He shows that Mrs. Maybrick was condemned on insufficient evi dence, and that her treatment is a scandal upon the name of English justice. Mrs. Maybrick is a young American woman, highly connected in this country; and her cause has been stoutly cham pioned by Mr. Blaine and all the leading people at Washington. The other contents of this num ber of this most admirable magazine are of unusual interest.

BOOK NOTICES. A Manual of Medical Jurisprudence and Toxi cology. By Henry C. Chapman, M.D. W. B. Saunders, Philadelphia, 1892. Cloth, $1.25 net. In this little work Dr. Chapman offers to both medical and legal students a valuable assistant in the study of a most important subject. Too little at tention is paid in our law schools, and in the medi cal schools as well, to the consideration of " Medical Jurisprudence," and yet there is no more interesting or important topic connected with the two profes sions. We have derived much pleasure and profit from the perusal of this book, and heartily commend it to all students and to the practising lawyer. Principles of the Law of Wills, with Selected Cases. By Stewart Chaplin. Baker, Voorhis & Co., New York, 1892. Law sheep, $4.50 net. This is another treatise designed for the use ot students, and is prepared upon the plan, now so much in vogue, of combining te«t explaining the