The greatest and most scholarly work on the history of the Ancient World. 



The Passing of the Empires (Egypt, Assyria, Babylonia, Persia, 

 A | and Medea), 850 B. C. to 330 B. C. 



By Prof. G. Maspero, author of " The Dawn of Civilization " and " The Struggle of the 

 Nations." Edited by the Rev. Prof. A. H. Sayce. Translated by M. L. McClure. With 

 Maps and numerous Illustrations, including Three Colored Plates. Uniform Edition. 

 Quarto. Cloth, *7 50. 



P" With this magnificent volume Professor Maspero completes his great task, which has extended 

 over nearly seven years, of writing a history of the Oriental world from the earliest times down to the 

 death of Darius. The work has been great, as the progress of Oriental research has been so rapid, and 

 discoveries so numerous, that to attain any finality seemed impossible ; but the author has neglected 

 nothing, and indeed the footnotes to these volumes show an almost Herculean labor of research among 

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 beautifully produced, and the hundreds of illustrations are in the highest style, and drawn from all 

 sources. " — London Chronicle . 



The Principles of Biology. 



By Herbert Spencer. Complete in two volumes. New edition, revised and enlarged. 

 Entirely reset. 121110. Cloth, $2.00 per volume. 



The second volume of the " Biology," which has been reset like the first, is now offered to the pub- 

 lic, who will find that the rapid progress of biology in recent years has been recognized in this revised 

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 II. The final and definitive edition of the " Principles of Biology " is now placed before the public. 



Trusts and the Public. 



By George Gunton, author of "W'ealth and Progress," "Principles of Social Eco- 

 nomics," etc. nmo. Cloth, %\ 00 ; paper, 50 cents. 

 Almost every phase of the trust question is discussed in these pages, and while in the main the 



principle of trusts as an economic development is defended, the abuses of the trust principle are pointed 



out and criticised wjth equal frankness. 



A History of American Privateers. 



By Edgar Stanton Maclay, A. M., author of " A History of the United States Navy." 

 Uniform with "A History of the United States Navy." One volume. Illustrated. 8vo. 

 $3-5o. 

 " Every chapter is crowded with incident and adventure that it would be difficult for the novelist to 

 surpass in variety and invention." — Philadelphia Public Ledger. 



" It is hard to see what American his book could not fail to interest, from the admiral to the school- 

 boy." — The Churchman. 



Nj 



The Comparative Physiology and Morphology of Animals. 



By Prof. Joseph Le Conte. Illustrated. i2mo. Cloth, $2.00. 

 The work of Darwin on the derivation of species and the descent of man awakened a new interest in 

 the lower animals, and furnished additional evidence of their close kinship with ourselves. A fresh field 

 of study was thus opened up, embracing the likenesses and differences of action as well as structure 

 found throughout the animal kingdom. In this work Professor Le Conte gives us, in his well-known 

 clear and simple style and with the aid of numerous illustrations, an interesting outline of these 

 similarities and variations of function as displayed among the various classes of animals from the lowest 

 to the highest, man included. 



The Storied West Indies. 



By F. A. Ober. Appletons' Home-Peading Books. i2mo. Cloth, 75 cents. 

 Mr. Oberjirst visited the West Indies in 1877, when, as an ornithologist ardently in love with Nature, 

 he went there in search of birds. His self-imposed task took him into the forests and mountains, to 

 dwell with the Carib Indians and negroes, as well as with the white cultivators of the coast p'antations. 

 From them he obtained a great deal of information that seemed to be of value, aside from that relevant 

 to the subject of his investigations. All his original excursions were on his own initiative and personal 

 account entirely ; but in 1891 he received a commission from the Government to visit every is'and of 

 importance in the Antilles. His researches extended over a period of quite twenty years. They have 

 resulted in a mass of material, from which he has se.ected what appears to be the most interesting 

 events of Antillean history. 



