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D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.

HE BEGINNERS OF A NATION.

THE

A History

of the Source and Rise of the Earliest English Settlements in America, with Special Reference to the Life and Character of the People. The first volume in A History of Life in the United States. By EDWARD Eggleston. Cloth, gilt top, uncut, with Maps, $1.50.

Small 8vo.

"Few works on the period which it covers can compare with this in point of mere literary attractiveness, and we fancy that many to whom its scholarly value will not ap peal will read the volume with interest and delight."-New York Evening Post.

"Written with a firm grasp of the theme, inspired by ample knowledge, and made attractive by a vigorous and resonant style, the book will receive much attention. It is a great theme the author has taken up, and he grasps it with the confidence of a master."-New York Times.

"Mr. Eggleston's 'Beginners' is unique. No similar historical study has, to our knowledge, ever been done in the same way. Mr. Eggleston is a reliable reporter of facts; but he is also an exceedingly keen critic. He writes history without the effort to merge the critic in the historian. His sense of humor is never dormant. He renders some of the dullest passages in colonial annals actually amusing by his witty treatment of them. He finds a laugh for his readers where most of his predecessors have found yawns. And with all this he does not sacrifice the dignity of history for an instant."— Boston Saturday Evening Gazette.

"The delightful style, the clear flow of the rarrative, the philosophical tone, and the able analysis of men and events will commend Mr. Eggleston's work to earnest students."-Philadelphia Public Ledger.

"The work is worthy of careful reading, not only because of the author's ability as a literary artist, but because of his conspicuous proficiency in interpreting the causes of and changes in American life and character."-Boston Journal.

"It is noticeable that Mr. Eggleston has followed no beaten track, but has drawn his own conclusions as to the early period, and they differ from the generally received version not a little. The book is stimulating and will prove of great value to the student of history."-Minneapolis Journal.

"A very interesting as well as a valuable book. .. A distinct advance upon most that has been written, particularly of the settlement of New England."-Newark Advertiser.

"One of the most important books of the year. It is a work of art as well as ot historical science, and its distinctive purpose is to give an insight into the real life and character of people. . . . The author's style is charming, and the history is fully as interesting as a novel."-Brooklyn Standard-Union.

"The value of Mr. Eggleston's work is in that it is really a history of 'life,' not merely a record of events. . . . The comprehensive purpose of his volume has been excellently performed. The book is eminently readable.”—Philadelphia Times.

New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.

THE

HE SUN. By C. A. YOUNG, Ph. D., LL. D., Professor of Astronomy in Princeton University. New and revised edition, with numerous Illustrations. 12mo. Cloth,

$2.00.

"In this book we see a master's hand. Professor Young has no superiors, if he has rivals, among astronomers in this country. . 'The Sun' is a book of facts and achievements, and not a discussion of theories, and it will be read and appreciated by all scientific students, and not by them alone. Being written in untechnical language, it is eq ally adapted to a large class of educated readers not engaged in scientific pursuits."- Journal of Education, Boston.

"Professor Young's work is essentially a record of facts and achievements, rather than of theories and attempts at the interpretation of mysteries: yet the great questions still remaining to be answered are of course discussed, and in a masterly manner "-Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.

"It is one of the best books of popular science ever written, and deserves a host of readers."-The Dial, Chicage.

"You feel throughout that a master is leading you amid the intricacies and mazes of one of the most absorbing of studies. Many a one whose views are hazy and dim will find here just that enlightenment, without an overburdened technicality, that will prove most useful. '-The Interior.

THE

HE STORY OF THE SUN. By Sir Robert S.
BALL, F. R. S., author of "An Atlas of Astronomy," "The
Cause of an I.e Age," etc. 8vo. Cloth, $5.00.

"Sir Robert Ball has the happy gift of making abstruse problems intelligible to the 'wayfaring man' by the aid of simple language and a few diagrams. Science moves so fast that there was room for a volume which should enlighten the general reader on the present state of knowledge about so'ar phenomena, and that place the present treatise admirably fills."-London Chronicle.

"As a specimen of the publisher's art it is superb. It is printed on paper which entices the reader to make marginal notes of reference to other books in his library, the type is large, the binding is excellent, and the volume is neither too large nor too small to handle without fatigue."-New York Herald.

AN

'N ATLAS OF ASTRONOMY. By Sir ROBERT S. BALL, F. R. S., Professor of Astronomy and Geometry at the University of Cambridge; author of " Starland," "The Cause of an Ice Age," etc. With 72 Plates, Explanatory Text, and Complete Index. Small 4to. Cloth, $4.00.

"The high reputation of Sir Robert Ball as a writer on astronomy at once popular and scientific is in itself more than sufficient recommendation of his newly published 'Atlas of Astronomy.' The plates are clear and well arranged, and those of them which represent the more striking aspects of the more important heavenly bodies are very beautifully executed. The introduction is written with Sir Robert Ball's well-known lucidity and simplicity of exposition, and altogether the Atlas is admirably adapted to meet the needs and smooth the difficulties of young and inexperienced students of astronomy, as well as materially to assist the researches of those that are more advanced." -London Times.

New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.

HANDBOOK OF BIRDS OF EASTERN

NORTH AMERICA. With Keys to the Species, Descriptions of their Plumages, Nests, etc.; their Distribution and Migration. Treating of all the birds, some five hundred and forty in number, which have been found east of the Mississippi River, and from the Arctic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico. By FRANK M. CHAPMAN Assistant Curator of Mammalogy and Ornithology, American Museum of Natural History. With over 200 Illustrations. 12mo. Library Edition, cloth, $3.00; Pocket Edition, flexible covers, $3.50.

The author's position has not only given him exceptional opportunities for the preparation of a work which may be considered as authoritative, but has brought him in direct contact with beginners in the study of birds whose wants he thus thoroughly understands. The technicalities so confusing to the amateur are avoided, and by the use of illustrations, concise descriptions, analytical keys, dates of migration, and remarks on distribution, haunts, notes, and characteristic habits, the problem of identification, either in the field or study, is reduced to its simplest terms.

OPINIONS OF ORNITHOLOGISTS AND THE PRESS.

"Written in simple, non-technical language, with special reference to the needs of amateurs and bird-lovers, yet with an accuracy of detail that makes it a standard authority on the birds of eastern North America.' -7. A. Allen, Editor of The Auk.

"I am delighted with the 'Handbook.' So entirely trustworthy and up to date that I can heartily recommend it. It seems to me the best all-around thing we have had yet."-Olive Thorne Miller.

"The Handbook' is destined to fill a place in ornithology similar to that held by Gray's 'Manual' in botany. One seldom finds so many good things in a single voĺume, and I can not recommend it too highly. Its conciseness and freedom from errors, together with its many original ideas, make it the standard work of its class."-John H. Sage, Secretary of the American Ornithologists' Union.

"Your charming and most useful little book. I had good reason to expect an excellent book of the kind from your pen, and certainly have not been disappointed. We receive here very many inquiries concerning a popular book on birds, or rather. I should say, a book so combining popular and scientific features as to render it both entertaining and instructive. To all such inquiries I have been obliged to reply that no such book existed. Now, however, the long-felt want' has been satisfactorily supplied; and it will give me great pleasure to answer such inquiries in future in a different way."-Robert Ridgway, United States National Museum, Washington, D. C. "A book so free from technicalities as to be intelligible to a fourteen-year-old boy, and so convenient and full of original information as to be indispensable to the working ornithologist. As a handbook of the birds of eastern North America it is bound to supersede all other works."--Science.

"The author has succeeded in presenting to the reader clearly and vividly a vast amount of useful information."-Philade phia Press.

"A valuable book, full of information compactly and conveniently arranged."New York Sun.

"A charming book, of interest to every naturalist or student of natural history."— Cincinnati Times-Star.

"The book will meet a want felt by nearly every bird observer."-Minneapolis Tribune.

New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.

THE LIBRARY OF USEFUL STORIES.

Each book complete in itself. By writers of authority in their various spheres. 16mo. Cloth, 40 cents per volume.

THE

NOW READY.

HE STORY OF THE STARS. By G. F. CHAM-
BERS, F. R. A. S., author of "Handbook of Descriptive and
Practical Astronomy," etc. With 24 Illustrations.

"The author presents his wonderful and at times bewildering facts in a bright and cheery spirit that makes the book doubly attractive."-Boston Home Journal.

THE

THE STORY OF "PRIMITIVE" MAN. By
EDWARD CLODD, author of "The Story of Creation," etc.

"No candid person will deny that Mr. Clodd has come as near as any one at this time is likely to come to an authentic exposition of all the information hitherto gained regarding the earlier stages in the evolution of mankind."-New York Sun.

THE

HE STORY OF THE PLANTS. By GRANT
ALLEN, author of "Flowers and their Pedigrees," etc.

"As fascinating in style as a first class story of fiction, and is a simple and clear exposition of plant life.”—Boston Hon e Journal.

HE STORY OF

THE

THE EARTH. By H. G. SEELEY, F. R. S., Professor of Geography in King's College, London. With Illustrations.

"It is doubtful if the fascinating story of the planet on which we live has been previously told so clearly and at the same time so comprehensively.""-Boston Advertiser.

THE STORY OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM. By

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G. F. CHAMBERS, F. R. A. S.

Any intelligent reader can get clear ideas of the movements of the worlds about us. Will impart a wise knowledge of astronomical wonders."-Chicago Inter-Ocean.

THE

HE STORY OF A PIECE OF COAL. By E.
A. MARTIN, F. G. S.

"The value and importance of this volume are out of all proportion to its size and outward appearance."-Chicago Record.

E STORY OF ELECTRICITY. By JOHN

HE STOR

THE

"The book is an excellent one, crammed full of facts, and deserves a place not alone on the desk of the student, but on the workbench of the practical electrician."New York Times.

THE

HE STORY OF EXTINCT CIVILIZATIONS OF THE EAST. By ROBERT ANDERSON, M. A., F. A. S., author of "Early England," "The Stuart Period," etc.

New York D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.

DEGENERATION. By Professor MAX NORDAU.

Translated from the second edition of the German work. 8vo.
Cloth, $3.50.

"A powerful, trenchant, savage attack on all the leading literary and artistic idols of the time by a man of great intellectual power, immense range of knowledge, and the possessor of a lucid style rare among German writers and becoming rarer everywhere, owing to the very influences which Nordau attacks with such unsparing energy, such eager hatred."-London Chronicle.

"The wit and learning, the literary ski'l and the scientific method, the righteous indignation, and the ungoverned prejudice displayed in Herr Max Nordau's treatise on 'Degeneration' attracted to it, on its first appearance in Germany, an attention that was partly admiring and partly astonished."-London Standard.

"Let us say at once that the English-reading public should be grateful for an English rendering of Max Nordau's polemic. It will provide society with a subject that may last as long as the present Government. We read the pages without finding one dull, sometimes in reluctant agreement, sometimes with amused content, sometimes with angry indignation."-London Saturday Review.

"Herr Nordau's book fills a void, not merely in the systems of Lombroso, as he says, but in all existing systems of English and American criticism with which we are acquainted. It is not literary criticism, pure and simple, though it is not lacking in literary qualities of a high order, but it is something which has long been needed, for of literary criticism, so called, good, bad, and indifferent, there is always an abundance; but it is scientific criticism-the penetration to and the interpretation of the spirit within the letter, the apprehension of motives as well as means, and the comprehension of temporal effects as well as final results, its explanation, classification, and largely condemnation, for it is not a healthy condition which he has studied, but its absence, its loss; it is degeneration. He has written a great book, which every thoughtful lover of art and literature and every serious student of sociology and morality should read carefully and ponder slowly and wisely."-Richard Henry Stoddard, in The Mail and Express.

"The book is one of more than ordinary interest. Nothing just like it has ever been written. Agree or disagree with its conclusions, wholly or in part, no one can fail to recognize the force of its argument and the timeliness of its injunctions."- Chicago Evening Post.

"A most absorbing book, and is likely to displace 'Trilby' as a subject of popular discussion."-Chicago Tribune.

"A ponderous volume whose every page is full of interest. So full is it in detail, so scientific in its method, so irresistible in its invitation to co troversy, that it must get the worlds of arts and letters by the ears."-New York Recorder.

"The intense interest currently shown in the subject treated in the book, the original ideas it offers, and the imperturbable spirit of the scientific investigator which animates and sustains the author, will unquestionably command for it in this country the attention it has received abroad; and it may be safely predicted that Degeneration already known here in literary circles, is destined to attain an immediate and widespread popularity."-Philadelphia Telegraph.

"This fascinating and most suggestive book gives a picture of the aesthetic manifestations of the times, drawn with rare adroitness, vigor, and command of satire, and it will be found to hold a place which has not been occupied."-Cincinnati CommercialGazette.

"Certain to arouse a storm of discussion."-Philadelphia Ledger.

"The interest which 'Degeneration' causes in the reader is intense."-New York Times.

New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.

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