PUBLICATIONS OF Jansen, McClurg and Co.

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CATON.—A Summer in Norway, with Notes on the Industries, Habits, etc., of the People, the History of the Country, the Climate and Productions, and of the Red Deer, Reindeer, and Elk, by Hon. J. D. Caton, LL.D.

"The tone of the book is frank, almost colloquial, always communicative and leaves a favorable impression both of the intelligence and good nature with which the author pursued his way through unknown wilds. * * They are excellent specimens of terse and graphic composition, presenting a distinct image to the mind, without any superfluous details."—New York Tribune.

'The book of travels, which Judge Caton has presented to the public, is of a high order of merit, and sets forth the interesting natural phenomena and popular characteristics of the land of the 'unsetting sun' with great strength and clearness."—Boston Post.

"He is, as far as we know, the first foreign traveler who has given anything like a correct statement of the nature of the union between Norway and Sweden."—The Nation.

CHARD.—Across the Sea, and Other Poems. By Thos. S. Chard.

"This little gem of a book is one of the best instances of multum in parvo that has been furnished the reading public in a long time. * * The poetry is of a kind not often seen now-a-days; it is of the soul, and reads as though given by inspiration. * * There is a mysticism in the little book, which reminds us of the 'Lotus Eaters' or 'Festus.'"—The Alliance.

CLEVELAND.—Landscape Architecture, as applied to the wants of the West; with an Essay on Forest Planting on the Great Plains. By H. W. S. Cleveland, Landscape Architect.

"My object in these few pages is simply to show that, by whatever name it may be called, the subdivision and arrangement of land for the occupation of civilized men, is an art demanding the exercise of ingenuity, judgment and taste, and one which nearly concerns the interest of real estate proprietors, and the welfare and happiness of all future occupants."—Extract from Preface.

CRAWFORD.—A Few Thoughts for a Few Friends. By Miss Alice Arnold Crawford.

"There is about these poems an air of trusting faith, of gentle tenderness, as if of one who, soaring upon the confines of a better life, had longed to leave some sweet remembrance here. They stand forth from the way-side of poetic literature like some peaceful chapel robed in ivy, where the dead are strewn with flowers, and the living steal in the shadows of the evening to seek a rest from weariness and pain."—Inter-Ocean.

FOYE.—Tables for the Determination and Classification of Minerals Found in the United States. By James C. Foye, A.M., Professor of Chemistry and Physics, Lawrence University, Appleton, Wisconsin.

"Following Dana, our chief American authority, and gathering aid from various distinguished European writers, this brief manual aims to furnish the student with such help as is needed in order to determine and classify the minerals of the United States. Some useful hints as to apparatus, and suitable notes upon other matters, precede the tables."—Journal of Education.

GILES.—Out from the Shadows. A Novel; by Miss Ella A. Giles.

"Miss Giles' first work has had a very large sale, and has attracted the attention of readers and critics throughout the country. Her second book gives evidence of the ripening powers of the authoress, and shows the improvement which she has made as a writer, and a mastery of style and effect which are really uncommon."—Milwaukee News.

"The characters are all well conceived, and the story is pleasantly written." Inter-Ocean.

GILES.—Bachelor Ben. A Novel; by Miss Ella A. Giles.

"A story of great descriptive and analytic mastery. * * A master-piece of free and natural handling of human life, and marks a new departure in fiction, in that the hero never marries, and the author has attempted to group the sympathies of readers about an unconventional man."—Home Journal (New York).

"The book is refreshingly guiltless of all superfluous characters. The tone is good throughout. The moral apparent."—Chicago Times.

HALL.—Poems of the Farm and Fireside. By Eugene J. Hall.

"In vigor and pathos they are certainly equal—we should say superior—to Carleton's Farm Ballads; in humor scarcely inferior to the Biglow Papers."—Interior.

"There is a nobility of mind even among the toilers of the land too often overlooked, and for this reason we like the flavor of these poems, because they smell of the field and forest, as well as portray the inner life of society at the fireside."—Pittsburgh Commercial.

HEWITT.—"Our Bible." Three Lectures, delivered at Unity Church, Oak Park, Ill., by Rev. J. O. M. Hewitt.

"This volume is rich in erudition and conspicuously clear in the enunciation of the objections to the orthodox idea of an inspiration which makes it infallible in all particulars."—Chicago Journal.

LAMARTINE.—Graziella; a Story of Italian Love. Translated from the French of A. De Lamartine by James B. Runnion.

"'Graziella' is a poem in prose. The subject and the treatment are both eminently poetic. * * * It glows with love of the beautiful in all nature. * * * It is pure literature, a perfect story, couched in perfect words. The sentences have the rhythm and flow, the sweetness and tender fancy of the original. It is uniform with 'Memories,' the fifth edition of which has just been published, and it should stand side by side with that on the shelves of every lover of pure, strong thoughts put in pure, strong words. 'Graziella' is a book to be loved."—Tribune.

MASON.—Mae Madden. A Story; by Mrs. Mary Murdoch Mason, with an introductory poem by Joaquin Miller.

"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 illustrations 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 caÑon 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.

MÜLLER.—Memories; A Story of German Love. Translated from the German of Max MÜller, 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 (Mass.) 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 anticipations 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 constitutes 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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