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D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S PUBLICATIONS. 



APPLETONS' HOME-READING BOOKS. 



Edited by W. T. HARRIS, A. M., LL D., 



U. S. Commissioner of Edttcation. 



A comprehensive series of books presenting upon a symmetrical plan the 

 best available literature in the various fields of human learning, selected 

 with a view to the needs of students of all grades in supplementing their 

 school studies and for home reading. It is believed that this project will 

 fully solve the long standing problem as to what kind of reading shall be 

 furnished to the young, and what will most benefit them intellectually as 

 well as morally. 



NOW READY. 



HE STOR Y OF THE BIRDS. By James New- 

 ton Baskett. 65 cents net. 



** Mr. Baskett's book is not 10 be easily disposed of in a few words ; it is out of the 

 common run of popular ornithology, and decidedly original. We attest the anthor's 

 competen-e for clear statement of facts, and the thorough readability ofhis whole book." 

 — The Nation. 



n^HE PLANT WORLD : lis Romances and Reali- 



ties. Compiled and edited by Frank Vincent, M. A„ author 



of " Actual Africa," etc. 60 cents net. 



" Its interest will extend to every member of the family, to every one who loves 

 Nature, for its information regarding the plant world will make the mysteries of spring- 

 time the more significant, the more beautiful." — Boston Times. 



HE STORY OF OLIVER TWIST. By Charles 



Dickens. Condensed for home and school reading by Ella 

 BoYCE Kirk. 60 cents net 



"The language is unchanged, expressions are not modified, but everything a child 

 would be likely to skip has been elided. The action is thus accelerated to suit the 

 most impatient reader." — Chicago Evening Post. 



N BROOK AND BAYOU ; or. Life in the Still 

 Waters. By Clara Kern Bayliss. 6o cents net. 



In this volume the author introduces her readers to some of the interesting inhabit- 

 ants of the microscopic wprld by the aid of numerous plates and full descriptive text. 

 The account of the evolution of these minute creatures and their struggle for existence 

 is given in a remarkably entertaining way, and makes the book as fascinating as a novel. 



IN PRESS. 



CURIOUS HOMES AND THEIR TENANTS. By James Carter 



Beard. 

 CRUSOE'S ISLAND. By F. A. Oeer. 

 UNCLE SAM'S SECRETS. By O. P. Austin. 

 NATURAL HISTORY READERS, 5 vols. By J. F. Troeger. 

 THE HALL OF SHELLS. By Mrs. A. S. Hardy. 

 (^Others in preparation.) 



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D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 



