The National Series of Standard School-Books. 



MATHEMATICS Continued. 



PECK'S HIGHER COURSE. 



Peck's Manual of Algebra, 



Bringing the methods of Bourdon within the range of the Academic Course. 



Peck's Manual of Geometry, 



By a method purely practical, and unembarrassed by the details which rather 

 confuse than simplify science. 



Peck's Practical Calculus, 

 Peck's Analytical Geometry^ 

 Peck's Elementary Mechanics, 

 Peck's Mechanics, with Calculus, 



The briefest treatises on these subjects now published. Adopted by the great 

 Universities; Yale, Harvard, Columbia, Princeton, Cornell, &c. 



ARITHMETICAL EXAMPLES. 

 Reuck's Examples in Denominate Numbers, 

 Reuck's Examples in Arithmetic, 



These volumes differ from the ordinary arithmetic in their peculiarly practical 

 character. They are composed mainly of examples, and afford the most severe and 

 thorough discipline for the mind. While a book which should contain a complete 

 treatise of theory and practice would be too cumbersome for every-day us, the 

 insufficiency of practical examples has been a source of complaint. 



HIGHER MATHEMATICS. 



Macnie's Algebraical Equations, 



Serving as a complement to the more advanced treatises on Algebra, giving spe- 

 cial attention to the analysis and solution of equations with numerical coefficients. 



Church's Elements of Calculus, 

 Church's Analytical Geometry, 

 Church's Descriptive Geometry, 2 vols.. 



These volumes constitute the "West Point Course" in their several department*. 



Courtenay's Elements of Calculus, 



A standard work of the very highest grade. 



Hackley's Trigonometry, 



With applications to navigation and surveying, nautical and practical geometry 

 and geodesy. 



