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D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 

 ROM FLAG TO FLAG. A IVomans Adventures 



and Experiences in the South during the War, in Mexico, and 

 in Cuba. By Eliza McIIatton-Rii'Lky. i2mo. Cloth, $i.oo. 



The author of this book was the wife of a planter in Louisiana, and underwent some 

 re:narkable experiences in tlie first part of the war; later in Mexico, many vicissitudes 

 befell her; and of her life in Cuba, still later, she has a striking and unusual stury to tell. 



" In a word, the book is an account of personal adventures which would be called 

 extraordinary did not one remember that the civil war must have brought similar ones 

 to many. Her hardships are endured with the rarest pluck and good humor, and 

 her shifty way of meeting difficulties seems almost to point to a V'ankec strain in her 

 h\ooA."— The Nation. 



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'HE HISTORY OF A SLAVE. By H. U. John- 

 STON, author of " The Kilimanjaro Expedition, etc. With 47 

 full-page Illustrations, engraved fac-simile from the author's 

 Drawings. Large l2mo. Paper cover, 50 cents. 



" 'The History of a Slave' is a work of fiction based upon every-day occurrences 

 in the Dark Continent, and well calculated to bring home to the reader the social 

 condition of heathen and Mohammedan Africa, and the horrors of a domestic slave- 

 trade." — 'J'hc Athencemn. 



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HE MEMOIRS OF AN ARABIAN PRIN- 

 CESS. By Emily Ruete, nde Princess of Oman and Zanzibar. 

 Translated from the German. i2mo. Cloth, 75 cents. 



The author of this amusing autobiography is half-sister to the late Sultan of Zanzi> 

 bar, who some years ago married a Cerman merchant and settled at Hamburg. 



" A remarkably interesting little volume. ... As a picture of Oriental court life, 

 and manners and customs in the (Jrient, by one who is to the manor born, the book is 

 prolific in entertainment and edification." — Boston Gazette. 



^KETCHES FROM MY LIFE. By the late Admiral 

 *— ' HouART Pasha. With a Portrait. i2mo. Paper, 50 cents; 

 cloth, $1.00. 



" The sailor is nearly always an adventurous and enterprising variety of the human 

 species, and Hobart Pasha was about as fine an example as one could wish to see. . . . 

 The sketches of South American life are full of interest. The sport, the inevitable 

 entanglements of susceptible middies with beautiful Spanish girls and the sometimes 

 disastrous consequences, the duels, attempts at assassination, and other adventures and 

 amusements, arc described with much spirit. . . . The sketches abound in interesting 

 details of the American war." — London Athencrum. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., i, 3, & 5 Bond Street. 



