Five Important Volumes Recently Published 



Abraham Lincoln: His Book 



A facsimile reproduction. Leather, i6mo, $l.OO net. 

 "I do not perceive," wrote Lincoln in 1858, " how I can express myself 

 more plainly than I have in the foregoing. I have expressly disclaimed all 

 intention to bring about social and political equality between the white and 

 black races. I have made it equally plain that I think the negro is included 

 in the word 'men' used in the Declaration of Independence." 



The Philippines: the war and the people 



Being a Record of Personal Observations and Experiences by 

 ALBERT G. ROBINSON. Cloth, large i2mo. $2.00. 

 This book constitutes one of the most important contributions to first- 

 hand sources of information concerning the Philippines. It is a clear, 

 connected and complete statement of what the author saw in the Philippines 

 and what he thinks about what he saw there. 



The Awakening of the East 



Bx PIERRE LEROT-BEAULIEU. With an Introduction by Henry Norman. 



Cloth, i2?no. $f.JO. 



Under the divisions Siberia, China and Japan, the author has traced the 

 development of Asia from their golden age of fong ago down to the modern 

 present. He treats comprehensivelv the evolution of Japan } the astonish- 

 ing development of Russia in Siberia, and the changes in China. 

 "Altogether^" savs the Nation, "this is a verv timely and very able book 

 by an author who gathers without prejudice his facts at first hand." 



An American Engineer in China 



By WILLIAM BARCLAY PARSONS. Cloth, i2mo. $1.50. 

 " Mr. Parsons writes with great clearness, simplicity and good sense, 

 and in a spirit of reasonableness that will commend his book to all serious 

 readers. It is full of first-hand information of a valuable character, enliv- 

 ened and brightened by touches of humor and by anecdotes that make it 

 readable throughout." — New York Commercial Advertiser. 



The Great Boer War 



By ./. CONAN DOYLE. Cloth, i2mo. $i.jo. 

 "A good view of the year's warfare, with vivid and not highly colored 

 battles, and with a discussion of the causes and probable outcome of the 

 war, which is moderate and generous in temper, judicial in praise and 

 blame, and without a trace of rancor or mere partisanship." — The Nation. 



fe5>McClure, Phillips & Co.,NewYork< 



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