HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES 



From the Compromise of 1850 



By JAMES FORD RHODES 

 In Four Volumes. Cloth. 8vo. $10.00, net 



" It is the one work now within reach of the young American student of to-day in which 

 he may learn the connected story of the great battle that resulted in the overthrow of slavery 

 and the rededication of the republic to unsullied freedom. In no other publication are these 

 facts so concisely, so fully, and so well presented, and the student who makes careful study of 

 this work will fully understand, not only the actual causes which led to the war, but he will 

 know how gradually they were developed from year to year under varying political power, until 

 the nation was ripe for the revolution. . . . Taking the work all together, we regard it as the 

 most valuable political publication of the age, and the intelligent citizen who does not become 

 its careful student must do himself great injustice." The Times, Philadelphia, Pa. 



"There is the same abundant and almost exhaustive collation of material, the same sim- 

 plicity and directness of method, the same good judgment in the selection of topics for full 

 treatment or for sketchy notice, the same calmness of temper and absence of passionate partisan- 

 ship. He may fairly be said to be a pupil of the Gardiner school, and to have made the great 

 English historian a model in subordinating the literary element to the judicial." The Nation. 



A SHORT HISTORY OF GERMANY 



By ERNEST R HENDERSON 



A.B. (Trinity), M. A. (Harvard), PH.D. (Berlin) 

 Author of "A History of Germany in the Middle Ages" 



In Two Volumes. Cloth. 8vo. $4.00, net 



Vol. I. 9 A.D. tO 1648 A.D. 

 Vol. II. 1648 A.D. to 1871 A.D. 



"This work is in the form of a continuous narrative, unbroken by monographs on par- 

 ticular institutions or phases of Germany's development, but covering the whole subject with a 

 unity of treatment such as has seldom been attained by earlier writers in the same field. In 

 this respect, at least, the book is unique among popular histories of Germany in the English 

 language." Review of Reviews. 



" It has remained for Mr. Henderson to treat at all effectively in English in a short space 

 the development of the German nation as a progressive and ever mobile whole. And to 

 appreciate the difficulty of the task before him, we have only to glance at the powers and 

 forces that work out their expression if not their fulfilment, on German ground and through 

 German institutions." Commercial Advertiser, New York. 



" Of very decided importance. . . . We have never seen in English a more satisfactory 

 record of the story of Germany one that fulfilled as many requisites as does that under review. 

 Mr. Henderson writes in a straightforward, unstrained style which makes his work easy read- 

 ing." Baltimore Sun. 



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66 Fifth Avenue, New York 



