BOOKS BY CY WARMAN. 



Snow on the Headlight. 



A Story of the Great Burlington Strike, i zmo. Cloth, ^1.25. 



" Mr. Warman holds a unique position among our tellers of tales, since he 

 alone is a practical railroad man, who knows the work, and has done it, in all 

 its details." — Neiu York Mail and Express. 



*' Plenty of close-range photographs, interior views, of the great Burlington 

 strike are to be found in Cy Warman's book." — Philadelphia Times. 



**It has the great virtue of being a plain story plainly told by one who 

 knows. Whatever other impression it may convey to the reader, it conveys 

 most strongly the impression of truth. And this plain truth, told in a plain 

 way, is a terrible thing. One can feel all the way through that half the tale — 

 and perhaps the worst half — is left untold, yet such as stands in print is 

 sufficient, and to the reader who cares for something more than the superficial 

 adventurous incident of the book It will not be without its instructive 

 influence." — Dewver Republican. 



"Told with all the freshness and vividness of an eyewitness." — Philadelphia 

 Call. 



"Will be read with interest by all railroad men." — Galesburg (III.) Mail. 



The Story of the Railroad. 



Illustrated. 1 2 mo. Cloth, ^1.50. 



'* Far more interesting than the average novel. . Mr. Warman's 

 volume makes us hear and feel the rush of modern civilization. It gives us 

 also the human side of the picture — the struggles of the frontiersman and his 

 family, the dismay and cruel wrath of the retreating savage, the heroism of 

 the advance guard of the railway builders, and the cutthroat struggles of com- 

 peting lines. He does not deal greatly with statistics, but the figures he uses 

 help make up the stunning effect of gigantic enterprise. There is not a dull 

 page in the book." — Ne'w Tork Evening Post. 



" Intensely interesting — a history that reads like a romance, and compared 

 with whose marvelous story indeed most modern romances will seem spiritless 

 and tame." — Charleston Ne-ivs and Courier. 



"Worthy to stand on the same shelf with Hough's Story of the Cow how" 

 --Mihvaukee Journal. 



D. APPI. ETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 



