LITERATURE AND LITERARY PROGRESS IN 1873. 



423 



Eulers of England, Scotland, France, Germany, and 

 Spain. By C. 8. Halsey. 



Wanderings of a Vagabond. An Autobiography, 

 containing a History of Racing and Trotting, and 

 also a History of Gambling ; with an Exposition of 

 Sharpers and their Various Frauds practised under 

 the Cloak of Gambling. By John Morris. 



What Woman Should Know. A Woman's Book 

 about Women. By Mrs. E. B. Duffy. 



Motherly Talks with Young House-keepers. By 

 Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher. 



Miss Leslie's New Cook-Book. A Manual of Do- 

 mestic Cookery in all its Branches. 



A New Banking System. By Lysander Spooner. 



The Regulation of All Railroads through the 

 State-Ownership of One. By Charles Francis Adams, 

 Jr. 



Memorial of Horace Greelcy, with Portrait and 

 Illustrations. 



Education in Japan. A Series of Letters addressed 

 by Prominent Americans to Arinori Mori, Japanese 

 Minister. 



A Handbook of Hardy Trees. Shrubs, and Herba- 

 ceous Plants. . . . With Cultural Details', etc., based 

 on the French work of Dcciitsne and Naudin. By 

 W. B. Helmsley. With an Introduction by Edward 

 S. Rand, Jr. 



An Essay toward an Indian Bibliography. By 

 Thomas W. Field. 



A Series of Letters to a Young Married Couple. 

 By Julia C. R. Dorr. 



The Hereafter. A Scientific, Phenomenal, and 

 Biblical Demonstration of a Future Life. By Daniel 

 W. Hull. 



Which: Spiritualism or Christianity ? A Friendly 

 Correspondence between Moses Hull, Spiritualist, 

 and W. F. Parker, Christian. 



Quiddities of an Alaskan Trip. By W. H. Bell, 

 Captain C. 8., U. S. A. 



The Sportsman's Club in the Saddle. By Harry 

 Castlemon. The first of " The Sportsman's Club 

 Series." 



One Thousand and One Mistakes corrected. By 

 W. H. Larrabee. 



Good Morals and Gentle Manners. By Alex. M. 

 Gow. 



High Art: Pictures from the Poets. From the 

 Brush of Louis A. Roberts; and Sport, in Brief 

 Chapters from the Quill of Ikabod Izax. 



Behind the Scenes in Washington ; being an Ac- 

 count of the Credit Mobilier Investigation, Rings, 

 Political Intrigues, etc. By Edward Winslow Mar- 

 tin. 



The Irish Race. By Rev. Aug. J. TMbaud, 8. J. 



True Success in Life. By Ray Palmer, D. D. 



Men and Memories of San Francisco in the Spring 

 of '50. By T. A. Barry and B. A. Patton. 



Political Portraits. By an Eminent Journalist. 



Fifty Years in a Maryland Kitchen. By Mrs. B. C. 

 Howard. 



The Virginia Housewife, or Methodical Cook. By 

 Mrs. Mary Randolph. 



On Hare's Plan of Proportional Representation. 

 By a Yale Graduato. 



Marriage As It Is and as it Should Be. By J. 0. 

 Barrett. 



Thinkers and Thinking. By J. E. Garretson, 

 M. D. 



Hand-Book of English Synonyms, and Proverbs 

 and Phrases, from the Latin, French, Spanish, and 

 Italian Languages, with Tables of Weights and Meas- 

 ures, etc. 



The Spider and the Fly ; or, Tricks, Traps, and 

 Pitfalls of City Life. 



The Amateur Journalist's Companion. By Frank 

 Cropper. 



Pigeon Cove and Vicinity. By Henry C. Leonard. 



Sketches of Irish Soldiers in Every Land. By 

 Colonel James E. McGee. 



The Young Housewife's Counselor and Friend. 

 By Mrs. Mary Mason. 



Sparkles from Saratoga. By Sophie Sparkle. 



Presbyterian Cook-Book, compiled by the Ladies 

 of the First Presbyterian Church, Dayton, 0. 



My Satchel and I ; or, Literature on Foot. By 

 Ikabod Izak. 



Six Months under the Red Cross, with the French 

 Army. By George Halstead Bryland, M. D. 



Ocean's Story ; or, Triumphs of Thirty Centuries. 

 By F. B. Goodrich and E. Rowland. 



The Bazar-Book of Health. 



American Railroad Manual, for the United States 

 and the Dominion. Containing Full Particulars of 

 the Mileage, Capital Stock, Bonded Debtj Equip- 

 ments, Earnings, Expenses, and other Statistics of 

 Railroads as now built, and in Process of Construc- 

 tion. Compiled and edited by Edward Vernon. 



The Dew of Youth. Lectures to Young Men and 

 Young Women. By the Right Rev. Thomas M. 

 Clark, D. D., Bishop of Rhode Island. 



At Our Best. By Sumner Ellis. 



The Salary Grab. A Complete History of the 

 Great Congressional Theft of $1,250,000. With the 

 Yeas and Nays in both Houses, a Sketch of the De- 

 bates, and a Review of the Apologies. By W. 8. 

 Robinson. 



Politics and Mysteries of Life Insurance. By 

 Elizur Wright, Late Insurance Commissioner of 

 Massachusetts. 



Course of English Reading. By J. A. Spencer. 



The Best Reading. New edition, with Additions. 



Put to the Test. By Charles Chamberlain, Jr. 



Liberty and Law under Federative Government, 

 By Britton A. Hill. 



Mission of the North American People, Geologi- 

 cal, Social, and Political. By William Gilpin, late 

 Governor of Colorado. 



Monopolies and the People. By D. C. Cloud, 

 Muscatine, Iowa. 



Irish Emigration to the United States: What it 

 has been, and what it is. Facts and Reflections, 

 especially addressed to Irish People intending to 

 emigrate from their Native Land : and to those liv- 

 ing in the Largo Cities of Great Britain and of the 

 United States. By the Rev. Stephen Byrne, 0. S. D. 



The Alchemy of Happiness. By Mohammed Al 

 Ghazzali, the Mohammedan Philosopher. Trans- 

 lated from the Turkish by Henry A. Holmes, Libra- 

 rian of the [New York] State Library. 



Education Abroad, and other Papers. By Birdsey 

 Grant Northrop, LL. D. 



Technical Education ; What it is, and what Amer- 

 ican Schools should Teach. An Essay based on an 

 Examination of Methods and Results of Technical 

 Education in Europe, as shown by Official Reports. 

 By Charles B. Stetson. 



Singular Surnames. Collected by the Late Edward 

 D. Ingraham. Edited by Willinm Duane. 



The Prostrate State ; or, South Carolina under 

 Negro Government. By James S. Pike. 



Ten-Minute Talks on All Sorts of Topics. By Elihu 

 Burritt. With an Autobiography of tne Author. 



Our Currency. What it is, and what it should be. 

 By John G. Drew. 



What to Wear. By Elizabeth Stuart Phclps. 



Memories of Many Men and of Some Women, 

 being Personal Recollections of Emperors, Kings, 

 Queens, Princes. Presidents, Statesmen, Authors, 

 and Artists, at Home and Abroad, during the Last 

 Thirty Years. By Maunsell B. Field. 



What Shall We Do To-Night? or, Social Amuse- 

 ments for Evening Parties. By Leger D. Mayne. 



REPRINTS. Many repnblicationg of English 

 books are not reprints. From various causes 

 the manufacture of cheap books in England is 

 carried on not only for England but for the 

 United States and the colonies. In mention- 

 ing some of the more important English works 

 republished here, we make no attempt to dis- 

 tinguish the mode of reproduction, more espe- 



