CATALOGUE OF BOOKS 



FLINT, Sam. On the Road to the Lake. A 



Novel. Cloth, $1.00. 



The lake referred to is the one composed of fire 

 and brimstone. The story is a rather heated at- 

 tack upon the contrasts between the nominal and 

 the actual ethics of capitalism. It is illustrated 

 with numerous engravings from original wash 

 drawings. 



FOX, William R. By the Throat the Trusts 

 Have Seized the Farmer. (Madden Libra- 

 ry, No. 6.) Paper, 2 cents. 

 FRANKLIN, Charles Kendall. The Sociali- 

 zation of Humanity. Cloth, $2.00. 

 The Craftsman says : "The volume abounds in 

 definitions making it extremely easy to follow the 

 thought. However one may look upon its conclu- 

 sions, it must be admitted that they are logical 

 and fearlessly reached." The Boston Transcript 

 says : "This is the first materialism which has 

 faced the religious emotion, accepted it as a verit- 

 able power, and applied it to the welfare of the 

 race. The chapter on The Supreme Law of Eth- 

 ics' is a valuable addition to modern thought. As 

 a philosopher, Mr. Franklin is practical, as a so- 

 cialist he is philosophical. It is the first time phi- 

 losophy and socialism have joined hands." 



GENONE, Hudor. The Last Tenet Imposed 

 Upon the Khan of Thomatoz. Cloth, $1.00. 

 A remarkably clever and laughable story satir- 

 izing the orthodox theology. Illustrated with 

 original drawings. 

 GOODE, James Bryan. The Modern Banker. 



Paper, 25 cents. 



This is an entertaining novel, written by a Mis- 

 souri man in 1896, which has a distinct historical 



15 



