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authorities name the date of the founding of Providence as between the 20th and 25th of June, the committee is of the opinion that the 23d and 24th should be selected. This suggestion is made also in view of the fact that the 24th of June will be observed as a festival day by the French residents, and the Masonic Fraternity. It is proposed that the city appropriate $10,000 for the observance, and that the State legisla ture be requested to make a further appropriation of $5,000.

CONNECTICUT :

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Jan. 6. The Legislature organized by electing Stiles T. Stanton, President pro tem. of the Senate, and John T. Tibbets, of New London, as Speaker of the House.

The article on the Wayte family, in the January number of the NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE, has provoked much pleasant comment in Lyme, the birthplace and summer home of Chief Justice Waite, and New London, the residence of Hon. John T. Wait.

The History of Hartford County in two splendid volumes, press of Ticknor & Co., of Boston, is now being printed, and will be ready for delivery in a few weeks.

VERMONT :

Six young men, playing Spanish mandolins, guitars, and harps, says the Chicago Herald, Jan. 18, sat in the balcony of one of the banquet halls at Kinsley's last evening. Below the musicians, and seated at an E-shaped table were two hundred and fifty elderly gentlemen, members of the Illinois Association of the Sons of Vermont, who were destroying their ninth annual banquet. Pots filled with pork and beans, huge pumpkin pies, and large blocks of brown bread were spread before the banqueters. Glass fruit-dishes piled high with ruddy winter apples and little dishes overflowing with cracked hickory nuts came later, and then all these good things were washed down with cider and claret. The toasts were: "Vermont," H. N. Hibbard; "Clergymen of Vermont," Rev. G. N. Boardman; "Stumps of Vermont," E. B. Sherman; "The Star that never sets," W. W. Chandler. After the speech-making, Jules Lombard, robed in black and wearing a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles upon the breast of his Prince Albert coat, sang "America" and a pretty Scottish serenade. Among those present were E. G. Keith, H. P. Kellogg, O. S. A. Sprague, R. S. Smith, Gen. H. H. Thomas, H. N. Hibbard, George Chandler, Harvey Edgerton, Dr. C. N. Fitch, E. A. Jewett, Col. Arba N. Waterman, E. B. Sherman, John M. Thatcher, A. W. Butler, Frank Deinson, H. N. Nash, John M. Southworth, George W. Newcombe, and S. W. Burnham.

NECROLOGY.

December 15. Samuel Dyer, a pioneer in the anti-slavery movement, died at South Abington, Mass., aged seventy-eight years. He was intimately associated with Wendell Phillips and Garrison as an abolitionist, and at one time held the office of president of the anti-slavery society of Plymouth county. He was among the first to aid and assist Frederick Douglass. When George Thompson, of England, became identified with the anti-slavery movement, his intercourse with Mr. Dyer began, and they worked together in the cause for many years. He had been a prominent business man of the town and had held several public offices.

On the same day died at his home in Cambridge, Mass., James C. Fisk, ex-president of the Cambridge Railroad Company. He was born in Cambridge in 1825, and always lived in that city. He was President of the Fiskdale Mills, at Sturbridge, Mass. Mr. Fisk was president of the common council two years, 1858-9.

December 20.- Frederic Kidder died in Melrose, Mass., aged eightyone years. He was born in New Ipswich, N. H., and was formerly engaged in the cotton trade in Boston. He was a member of the New England Historic Genealogical Society, and published several historical works.

December 22. Rev. Daniel James Noyes, D. D., Professor Emeritus of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy and Political Economy at Dartmouth College, being in term of service next to the senior instructor in that institution, died at Chester, N. H. He was born in Springfield, Sept. 17, 1812; was fitted for college at Pembroke, and was graduated from Dartmouth in 1832; after graduation was a tutor at Columbian College at Washington; was graduated from the Andover Theological Seminary in 1836, and then for one year was a tutor at Dartmouth. In 1837 he was ordained to the ministry and installed pastor of the South Congregational Church in Concord. In 1849 he was dismissed in order to accept the Phillips Foundation Chair of Theology at Dartmouth, which he filled until 1869, when he was transferred to the chair which he held at the time of his death, having been Professor Emeritus since 1883. The University of Vermont conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1854.

December 29. Edwin D. Sanborn, LL.D., Winkley Professor Emeritus at Dartmouth College of Anglo-Saxon and English Language and Literature, died in New York. He was born at Gilmanton, N. H., May 14, 1808, and was the son of David Edwin and Harriet (Hook) Sanborn.

He was fitted at Gilmanton Academy, and was graduated from Dartmouth College in 1832. He gained reputation as a teacher in the acad emies at Derry and Topsfield, Mass., and at Gilmanton, being preceptor of the latter. In 1834 he declined a tutorship at Dartmouth, and at Meredith Bridge began the study of law, which he abandoned and entered the Andover Theological Seminary. In 1835 he was a tutor at Hanover; then Professor of Latin and Greek for two years, and later filled the chair of Latin alone from 1837 to 1859. Then he accepted the place of Professor of Latin and Classical Literature at Washington University, St. Louis, where he remained four years. In March, 1863, he returned to Hanover and became Professor of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres. In 1880 he took the Winkley chair. Since 1882 he had been Professor Emeritus, his failing health preventing him from performing the duties of that professorship. The deceased was licensed as a Congregational minister, Nov. 1, 1836. The University of Vermont in 1859 conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Laws. For many years he held most of the justice's courts in Hanover. In 1848 and '49 he represented the town in the Legislature and was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1850. In 1869 he was elected to the State Senate, but declined to serve. The deceased was widely known as an orator and literateur. In 1875 he published a history of New Hampshire. The death of Professor Sanborn is not only a great loss to Dartmouth College, but to the State and country at large.

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Jan. 3.-A. S. Roe, author of many popular stories, died in East Windsor, Conn., aged eighty-seven years.

On the same day Prof. Charles E. Hamlin, of the Harvard Museum of Natural History, died at Cambridge, Mass., aged sixty years.

Jan. 4.-Zuar Eldridge Jameson, died in Irasburg, Orleans County, Vt., aged fifty-one years. He was a well-known writer and lecturer on agricultural topics, whose initials, with transpositions, as well as other pseudonyms, are familiar to readers of the agricultural papers, particularly the New York Weekly Tribune, Albany, N. Y., Country Gentleman and Boston Cultivator. He was a member of the lower branch of the Vermont Legislature in 1878, and of the State Board of Agriculture in 1870-74, for many years Secretary of the Orleans County Agricultural Society, and for one or two years lecturer of the Vermont State Grange, Patrons of Husbandry. Aside from the large amount of purely agricultural matter written he was a frequent producer of short sketches of fiction, usually treating of rural life. He was associated with Dr. T. H. Hoskins in the editing of the old Vermont Farmer (not the present Vermont Farmer) at Newport, which was from a literary standpoint the most successful of Vermont agricultural journals.

Jan. 5. Death of Noble H. Hill, senior proprietor of the Boston

Theatre. He was born in Shoreham, Vt., in 1821; received a good education; came to Boston in 1840; was in active trade till 1867, being at that time a partner in the firm of Hill, Burrage & Co; in 1876 became a partner with Orlando Tompkins for conducting the Boston Theatre.

On the same day died Dr. James H. Whittemore, Superintendent of the Massachusetts General Hospital, aged 47 years.

Jan. 8. Death of the Hon. Nahum Capen, at Dorchester, Mass., aged eighty-two years. He was born in Canton in 1804. He came to Boston at the age of twenty-one, embarked in the publishing business in the firm of Marsh, Capen & Lyon, and afterward was connected with several of the leading publishing houses of this city. His tastes were always literary, and for the past forty years he has devoted himself to literature and study, except when he held the office of postmaster, 1857 to 1861. He was appointed postmaster by President Buchanan, and it was during his term of office that the postoffice was removed from the Merchant's Exchange building to Summer street at the corner of Chauncy street, where it remained for about a year and a half. He mapped out the free delivery system, and was the first postmaster in the country to establish the outside letter collection boxes. Mr. Capen has written (most of them anonymously) and has published many books, scientific and political, and was a very liberal contributor to the newspapers and magazines. He was a sound thinker and was considered an able writer. His last work, on which he has been engaged for twentyfive years, is a history of Democracy. The first volume has been published, and the remaining three have been written and are ready to be printed, except a portion of the last.

LITERATURE AND ART.

History of the Civil War in America.* The deep and widespread interest which is being felt in this country in all that relates to the late war is likely to receive increased stimulus from the appearance of recent instalments of the translation of the "History" of the Comte de Paris. The fact that the narrative is written by a foreigner, not so much for the information of American as of European readers, will in no way interfere with the profound interest Americans themselves must feel in what, when finished, will probably be, if not the most impartial yet the most accurate, comprehensive, complete, and reliable record of that long, lamentable and costly struggle. The interest in American affairs which Philadelphia: Porter & Coates.

has culminated in the production of this history had been a long-cherished
feeling with the author before he conceived the purpose which he
has so far executed so admirably. For years materials of all kinds
that promised to shed light upon his subject and assist him in his
undertaking had been industriously collected. He enjoyed, besides,
the great advantage of having personally served on the staff of
General McClellan, in this way attaching to himself many friends, who,
after his return to Europe, continued to keep him posted up in all that
related to the movements of the belligerents, and the incidents and
aspects of the conflict. These advantages, together with the count's
very thorough knowledge of military science, justified his attempting a
task which, as it approaches completion, promises to be a splendid suc-
cess, and which, so far as it has been carried out, has already received
high commendation from distinguished soldiers and statesmen both in
Europe and America. The work, though voluminous, is sure to find, as
it deserves, many readers. No American professing to be proud of his
country's struggles and achievements can well afford to be ignorant of its
contents. It may be as well to note that the Count fully confides in the
translator's ability to perform his task with care and accuracy.

INDEX TO PERIODICAL LITERATURE.

(First numeral refers to foot note and name of periodical. Second numeral to page. Date of
periodical is that of month preceeding this issue of the New England Magazine, unless otherwise
stated.)

AGRICULTURE. Questions in. 6, 18.

ANTHROPOLOGY AND ETHNOLOGY. Lo, the Poor Indian. Geo. F. Marshall. 3,
206.- Varieties of the Human Species. Horatio Hale. Illus. 5, 296.- Natural
Heirship, or the World Akin. Rev. Henry Kendall. 5, 377.- Race Characteristics of
the Jews. 5, 429.- Prehistoric Human Remains in Mexico. 5, 420.

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ART. "Famous Pictures and the Sermons they teach." Crit. art. on Reynolds'
painting of the infant Samuel. Rev. Robt. Maguire, D. D. 1, 1.- A French Painter
(M. Duran) and his Pupils. 7, 373.-A Broad View of Art. 7, 474.- The Lesson of
Greek Art. Charles Waldstein. 7, 397.- - Sir Joshua Reynolds. Frances C. Sparhawk.
BIOGRAPHY. Tribute to Thomas A. Hendricks. Hon. J. W. Gerard.
2, 18.-
Bishop Meade of Va. John Washington. James Bridger. 2, 93.- David Meade of
Ky. 2, 94.-John Breckenridge of Va. 2, 97.-B. F. Wade, the Judge. Hon. A. G.
Riddle. 3, 235.-Thomas Hoyne, Chicago. 3, 288.- Judge Stephenson Burke,
Cleveland, O. 3, 296.-Dr. Wm. Bushnell, Mansfield, O. 3, 306.-George Whittier
Jackson. David Hostetter, Pittsburg. 3, 258. Frank Buckland (Scientist). 5, 401.
-Guiseppi Verdi, Port. 7, 323-414.- Daniel Webster. Rogers. 8, 13. —Richard and
Gamaliel Wayte. A. T. Lovell. 8, 48.
BIOLOGY. Questions in. 6, 17.
EDUCATION. Early Education in Ohio. Jessie Cohen. 3, 217.-Can College Grad-
uates succeed in Business? 4, III. The Flower or the Leaf. Primary Education.
Mary Putnam Jacobi. 5, 325.1 Southern Women as Teachers of Colored Children.
7, 478. Education and a Philosophy of Life. J. C. Dana.
the Colored Race. Andrews. 10, 221.- Organization of Higher Education. Beale.
Education of Girls.
10, 233.
IO, 242. A Want, and How to Meet It.
Klemm.

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Fenelon.

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10, 215.

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Education of

10, 248.- Reports on Education. 10, 272. New Education. Livermore.
10, 290.- Overpressure in High Schools of Denmark. A. T. Smith.
cational Institutions. Brown University. R. A. Guild, LL. D. 8, 1.

10, 299.- Edu-

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