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Show do," translated and edited with an Introduction Intro-duction by George Parker Wlnshlp. Ah the first exploration of the. West, Coronado's expedition from the City of Mexico to the Buffalo plalnn of KansnH and Nebraska. 1D10-4U, form a chapter of history quite ns Important as tho voyage of Dc Soto, and is but little known. Doublcdny. Pago i: Co. aro finally com- j pletlng tho great Harrlmau Ahiskn work. They aro now publishing lho "largo volumes vol-umes S and 0, devoted respectively lo tho scientific consideration of the Insects nnd crustaceans of tho vnt northern terrl-torv. terrl-torv. The entire series of fourteen volumes vol-umes will form ono ot tho most beautiful and elaborate works ever published In this countrv on exploration, nnd the popular narrative of tills remarkable expedition by John Burroughs Is n very entertaining volume Indeed. To see ourselves as others see us Is not a disagreeable experience, but quite tho contrary, when tho observer fs as sympathetic sym-pathetic hr Henry W. Lucy, whose description de-scription of Washington. "A City of Magnificent Mag-nificent Distances," Is reprinted from tho Cornhlll Magazine In tho Living Ago for April :. Mr. Lucy' appreciation of President Pres-ident Roosevelt Is of tho heartiest. The Scrlbners have ready "The Literature Litera-ture of tho Highlands," by Magnus Maclean, Mac-lean, author of "The Literature of tho Cells." It is a succinct and popular nc-. nc-. count of tho Gaelic literature of the Highlands High-lands after tho Forty-five the golden age of Highland poetry, with Information from |