D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



THE ELEMENTS OF ECONOMICS. By Hexrt Dunning Macleod, M. 

 A., of Trinity College, Cambridge ; Lecturer on Political Economy in the Uni- 

 versity of Cambridge. Volumes I and II. 12mo. Cloth, $1.'75 each. 

 " The author attempts to establish an exact science of economics on a mathe- 

 matical basis — to establish ' a new inductive science ' ; and he presents what he 

 calls ' a new body of phenomena brought under the dominion of mathematics.' " — 

 New York World. 



PROGRESS AND POVERTY. An Inquiry into the Cause of Industrial 

 Depressions, and of Increase of Want with Increase of Wealth : The Remedy. 

 By Henry George. Cheap edition. 12mo. Cloth, .$1.00. 



" ' Progress and Poverty ' is not merely the most original, the most striking 

 and important contribution which political economy has yet received from America, 

 but it is not too much to say that in these respects it has had no equal since the 

 publication of ' The Wealth of Nations,' by Adam Smith, a century ago, or, at 

 least, since Malthus formulated his theory of population and Ricardo his theory of 

 rent. A more aggressive, not to say audacious, book was never written." — New 

 York Herald. 



" His book must be accounted the first adequate presentation in the English 

 language of that new economy which has found powerful champions in the Ger- 

 man universities, and which aims at a radical transformation of the science for- 

 mulated by Adam Smith, Ricardo, and J. S. Mill. Few books have, in recent years, 

 proceeded from any American pen which have more plainly borne the marks of 

 wide learning and strenuous thought, or which have brought to the expounding of 

 a serious theme a happier faculty of elucidation." — Neio York Sun. 



THE PRINCIPLES OF THE LAW. An Examination of the Law of 

 Personal Rights, to Discover the Principles of the Law, as ascertained from 

 the Practical Rules of the Law, and harmonized with the Nature of Social 

 Relations. By A. J. Willard. 8vo. Cloth, $2.50. 



" This is a philosophical and logical book, peculiarly appealing to scholars or 

 lawyers who love to linger rather with legal cause and worldly effect than reported 

 cases or legal principles applied to events. The author was formerly a member of 

 the New York bar, and lately Chief-Justice of South Carolina." — New York World. 



" The author takes the practical rules as they exist ; he concerns himself only 

 with their motive and harmony. He aims at treating Jurisprudence somewhat as 

 Emerson, Darwin, Spencer have written on ethics, nature, society." — New York 

 Times. 



CAPITAL AND POPULATION. A Study of the Economic Effects of their 

 Relations to Each Other. By Frederick B. IIawley. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



" It would be false modesty in me to seem unaware that the economit; law I 

 have attempted to establish equals in its influence upon economic conclusions any 

 hitherto ascertained. Granted its truth, it throws new and decisive light on nearly 

 all the unsolved problems of the science." — Extract from Preface. 



HERBERT SPENCER ON THE AMERICANS, AND THE 

 AMERICANS OxN HERBERT SPENCER. Being a full Report of 

 his Interview, and of the Proceedings at the Farewell Banquet (November 9, 

 1882), with the Speeches of Evarts, Spencer, Sumner, Schurz, Marsh, Fiske, 

 and Beecher, carefully revised by their authors. r2mo. Thick paper, 25 

 cents ; paper, 10 cents. 



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