CATALOGUE OF BOOKS 



science, they become socialists, and the capitalists 

 who control most publishing houses naturally do 

 not want them to understand it. 



"The Evolution of Man" tells in full detail, in a 

 clear, simple style, illustrated by pictures, just how 

 the descent of man can be traced back through 

 monkeys, marsupials, amphibians, fishes, worms 

 and lower forms of life, down to the animals com- 

 posed each of a single cell. Moreover, it proves 

 that there is no such fixed line as was formerly 

 thought to exist between the organic and the inor- 

 ganic, but that the same life-force molds the crys- 

 tal that molds the cell. It is not only simple ; it is 

 up to date and gives the latest discoveries in 

 science. It is the book on the subject. 



BRENHOLTZ, Edwin Arnold, The Record- 

 ing Angel. Cloth, $1.00. 



An intense, dramatic story of the class struggle 

 between labor and capital in America. It deals 

 with a great strike by the workmen of the steel 

 trust. The president of the trust thinks it neces- 

 sary to have the leader of the strikers "removed," 

 and the "Recording Angel" is a machine used at 

 the proper moment to record the private conversa- 

 tion between the president and his attorney in 

 which the details of the "removal" are planned. 



There is socialism in the story, but not in the 



shape of large chunks of argument. The book 



is a graphic picture of our capitalist society, "ripe 



and rotten-ripe for change." It has a plot that 



will hold the attention of the careless reader, and 



an artistic style that will challenge the admiration 



of the most competent critic. 



BROOME, Isaac. The Last Days of the Rus- 



kin Co-operative Association. (Standard 



Socialist Series, No. 4.) Cloth, 50 cents. 



Socialism does not mean withdrawing from the 



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