Claude Prescott. By Jas. E. Arnold. (Digby and Long.)—Here we
have the industrious and the idle apprentice going their ways and meeting with their appropriate reward. Of course, the in- dustrious one is slandered, and the father of his lady-love believes in the slander, and the lady-love herself refuses to believe, and all things come right, even the idle one shdwing, before he is disposed of, a certain redeeming quality.—Over the Waters, by Lieutenant F. T. Davis (same publishers), is a nautical tale which does not call for much notice, beyond the remark that the hero gets much more than he deserves. To reward such a fellow as Montague with the good things which Lieutenant Davis reserves for him is a little too much.