"There is hardly a page in which you may not find some bright, fresh thought; some little generalization full of the flavor of true wit, or some charming description, deliciously feminine, and running over with the spirit of poetry."--_Cincinnati Times._

"We have read this little book with great pleasure. * * * It frequently reminds us of Mr. Howell"s delicately constructed stories, and in it, as in a mirror, we see reflected that true refinement and culture of the author"s mind."--_New Haven Palladium._

MASON AND LALOR.--The Primer of Political Economy, in Sixteen Definitions and Forty Propositions, by A. B. Mason and J. J. Lalor.

"We know of no other work anywhere of sixty pages that begins to give the amount of information on the subject that has been put with such remarkable clearness into these sixty pages."--_Hartford Courant._

"For a short and comprehensive treatise, we know of nothing better than "The Primer of Political Economy." The information is conveyed in a very concise and happy manner. The style is perfectly transparent, and the ill.u.s.trations admirably chosen.



We venture to believe that not a quarter of the men in the Lower House of Congress know as much about Political Economy as can be learned from this compact and interesting little treatise."--_Christian Register._

MILLER.--First Fam"lies of the Sierras. A Novel; by Joaquin Miller.

A most graphic and realistic sketch of life in a mining canon in the very earliest days of California. The rough heroes and heroines are evidently drawn from life, and the dramatic scenes are full of thrilling interest. Bret. Harte has never worked this rich vein of American life to better advantage.

MuLLER.--Memories; A Story of German Love. Translated from the German of Max Muller, by Geo. P. Upton.

""Memories" is one of the prettiest and worthiest books of the year. The story is full of that indescribable half-naturalness, that effortless vraisemblance, which is so commonly a charm of German writers, and so seldom paralleled in English. * * *

Scarcely could there be drawn a more lovely figure than that of the invalid Princess, though it is so nearly pure spirit that earthly touch seems almost to profane her."--_Springfield (Ma.s.s.) Republican._

McLANDBURGH.--The Automaton-Ear and Other Sketches. By Miss Florence McLandburgh.

Any one of the many who have read "The Man at Crib," "The Automaton-Ear," or "The Anthem of Judea," which have been so widely copied in various periodicals, will look with the highest antic.i.p.ations to this author, who is no less gifted than she is original and eccentric.

SWING.--Truths for To-Day. _First Series._ By Professor David Swing.

"The preacher makes no display of his rich resources, but you are convinced that you are listening to a man of earnest thought, of rare culture, and of genuine humanity. His forte is evidently not that of doctrinal discussion. He deals in no nice distinctions of creed. He has no taste for hair-splitting subtleties, but presents a broad and generous view of human duty, appealing to the highest instincts and the purest motives of a lofty manhood."--_New York Tribune._

SWING.--Truths for To-Day. _Second Series._ By Professor David Swing.

This volume will contain the latest discourses of Prof. Swing, some of them preached at the Fourth Church, but most of them spoken at the Theatre to the New Central Church. It is universally conceded that these are the finest efforts he has ever made, and the general demand for their preservation in more permanent form than the newspaper reports, has led to their issue in this volume. They are selected, revised and arranged for publication by Prof. Swing himself.

SWING.--Trial of Prof. Swing. The _Official Report_ of this important trial.

"It const.i.tutes a complete record of one of the most remarkable ecclesiastical trials of modern times."--_Boston Journal._

"This volume will be a precious bit of history twenty-five years hence, and its pages will be read with mingled interest and surprise."--_Golden Age._

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