LITERATURE ANN UTKKARY PROGRESS IN 1807. 



Swinging Ilound the Cirkle, by Petroleum V. 

 i >. i:. Locke). IlluBtruted by Thomas 



SuiM/in:,' Hound tho Circle; or. Andy's Trip to 

 her with 11 J.ifi- of its II-ro, by 

 I'.-lr.ili inn \'. Nasby. 



I.ivtnrr i>n tin' Soun-i- of nil Civilisation and tho 

 .Mraii* !' I'iv>i-r\iiiu' our. Civil ninl Religious 

 . luiclor Kulisch, D. D. 



1~ Davii ;i Traitor; or, was Secession a Constitu- 

 tional Kiirht previous to the War of 1801 1 by 

 Albrrt Ta\ lor Bledsoe. 



Ki-niaii Catri-liisni, from the Vulgate of St. 

 reiMM '''Toole, for the use of the Fenian 

 SoKlii-r, at Homo and Abroad. 



Aililn -SS in Favor of I 'ni versa! Suffrage for tho 

 .tion..f Delegates to the Constitutional Con- 

 \fiition of New York, by Elizabeth Cady Stan- 

 ton. 



The Great Conspiracy. Full Account of tho As- 

 sassination Plot, Jo'hn II. Surratt and his Mother, 

 . 



Facts and Suggestions, Biographical, Historical, 

 Fir i Political, addressed to the People 



of the United States, bv Duff Green. 



Considerations touching ilr. Kandall's Bill for the 

 Suppn-*sion of the National Bunks, and for a 

 further Inflation of tho Currency, by George 

 Walker. 



Reconstruction of the Union, in a Letter to Hon. 

 E. D. Morgan, by Judge Edmonds. 



Echoes from the South, comprising the most Im- 

 portant Speeches, Proclamations, and Public 

 maiiuting from tho South during the late 

 War. 



Ki-y-Notcs of American Liberty : Comprising the 

 most Important Speeches, Proclamations, and 

 Acts of Congress, from the Foundation of the 

 Government to the Present Time, etc. 

 E Pluribus Unum. The Articles or Confederation 

 vs. the Constitution ; the Progress of Nationality 

 among the People and in the Government, by 

 L. Bradford Prince. 



Inquiry into the Origin and Course of Political 

 Parties in the United States, by Martin Van 

 Buron ; edited by his Sons. 



What is our True Policy ? It is herein Considered, 

 by a Virginian. 



Inland for the Irish. Rhymes and Reasons against 

 Landlordism, with a Preface on Fenianism and 

 Republicanism, by W. J. Linton. 



The Vision of Judgment ; or, tho South Church. 

 Ecclesiastical Councils viewed from Celestial 

 and Satanic Standpoints, by Queredo Redivivus, 

 Jr. 



The College, the Market, and the Court ; or, Wo- 

 man's Relation to Education, Labor, and Law, 

 by Carolina H. Dull. 



The People the Sovereigns : being a Comparison 

 of the Government or the United States with 

 those of Republics that have existed beforej by 

 James Monroe, ex-President of the U. S. Edited 

 by S. L. Gouverneur. 



Reflections on the Clionges which may seem neces- 

 y in the Present Constitution ot the State of 

 New York, by Francis Lieber, LL. D. 



The Report of the Committee on Municipal Reform 

 of the Union League Club of New York. 



No Treason. Nos. 1 and 2, by Lysander Spencer. 



American Equal Rights Proceedings, First Anni- 

 versary, New York, May, 1867. Report by H. M. 

 Parkhurst. 



Noioque : a Question for a Continent, by H. R. 

 Helper. 



Emancipation Oration and Poem on the Fourth 

 Anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, 

 by Ezra R. Johusou and James M. Whitefleld. 

 Son Francisco. 



Franc.-: in 1'n-sent Policy and Government, by 

 James F. Lyman. 



The Political Manual for 1867, by Edward McPher- 



. i-rsal Suffrage ; Female Suffrage, by a Repub- 

 lican (not a Radical). 



iy of tho Thirty-ninth Congress, by W. II. 

 BOOM. 



Davis and Lee: a Vindication of the Southern 

 Stati . by P. C. < 



Embers of tin- l'ar-t, i>\ \V. A. I'eten. 



Suggestion* n->|M i-tin^ tin- K'-vitiion of the Con- 

 iiioi, i,f .\,-\v York, !>y l)avi<l I)u.ll<-y Field. 



Southern Politics : What we are, and what we will 

 be. Considered in a It-tU-r from a Virginian to a 

 New Yorker, written by John H. Gilmer. 



War of Races : by whom it is sought to be brought 

 about ; in Two Letters, by John II. Gilmi-r. 



Tho Election of Ki pn-si-ntativcs, Parliamentary 

 and Municipal, by Thomas I i 



The Ni \v Republic} or, the Transition Complete, 

 with an Approaching Change of National Empire, 

 based upon the Commercial and Industrial Ex- 

 pansion of the Great West, etc., by L. U. Reavis. 



The Results of Emancipation in tho United States 

 of America, by a Committee of the Frcedmen's 

 Commission. 



Manual of tho Constitution of the United States, 

 by Timothy Farror. 



Official Report of the Investigating Committee on 

 the Management of tho Officials at the Fenian 

 Headquarters. N. Y. 



A Defence of Virginia and the South, in Recent 

 and Pending Contests against the Sectional 

 Party, by Prof. R. L. Dabney, D. D. 



Memorial on Personal Representation. Addressed 

 to the Constitutional Convention of the State of 

 New York, by the Personal Representative 

 Society. 



New York Convention Manual. Prepared by Dr. 

 F. B. Hough. 2 vols. 



Speeches and Papers relating to the Rebellion and 

 the Overthrow of Slavery, by George S. Bout- 

 well. 



The Interference Theory of Government, by C. A. 

 Bristed. 



Report to tho Constitutional Convention of New 

 York on Personal Representation, by Simon 

 Stern. 



Of the few MATHEMATICAL works of the year, 

 the following were the most important : 



Weights and Measures according to the Decimal 

 System, with Tables of Conversion for Commer- 

 cial Uses, etc., by B. F. Craig, M. D. 



The American Coast Pilot, by Edmund M. Blunt. 

 Twenty-first edition, by G. W. Blunt. 



The Crittenden Commercial Arithmetic and Busi- 

 ness Manual, by John Groesbeck, Esq. 



The Metric System of Weights and Measures, by 

 M. McVicar. 



Modern Mercantile Calculator: a Companion for 

 the Accountant and Book-keeper, by A. D. Y. 

 Henriques. 



Text-Book of Geometrical Drawing for Mechanics 

 and Schools, by Wm. Minifie. 



In the department of EDUCATIONAL WORKS, 

 the following were the most important general 

 treatises on educational topics : 



En Avant, Messieurs ! Being a Tutor's Counsel to 

 his Pupils, by Rev. G. H. D. Matthias. 



Popular Education Indispensable to the Life of a 

 Republic : an Address before the State Teachers' 

 Association and the Tennessee Legislature, by 

 Rev. T. E. Bliss. 



The Education of Deaf Mutes : Shall it be by Signs 

 or Articulation! By Gardiner G. Hubbard. 



Report of Testimony taken by a Committee of the 

 Massachusetts Legislature on Deaf-Mute Institu- 

 tions. 



