D. APPLETON & CO/S PUBLICATIONS. 



{SOCIALISM NEW AND OLD. By Professor 

 ^ William Graham. i2ino. Cloth, $1.75. 



"Prof. Graham's book may be confidently recommended to all who are interested 

 in the study of socialism, and not so intoxicated with its promises of a new heaven and 

 a new earth as to be impatient of temperate and reasoned criticism." — London Times. 



" Altogether Mr. Graham has given us a useful discussion, and one that deserves to 

 be read by all who are interested in the subject." — Science. 



" Prof. Graham presents an outline of the successive schemes of three writers who 

 have chiefly influenced the development of socialism, and dwells at length upon the 

 system of Rousseau, that of St. Simon, and on that of Karl Marx, the founder of the 

 new socialism, 'which has gained favor with the working classes in all civilized coun- 

 tries/ which agrees with Rousseau's plan in being democratic, and with St. Simon's in 

 aiming at collective ownership. . . . The professor is an independent thinker, whose 

 endeavor to be clear has resulted in the statement of definite conclusions. The book 

 is a remarkably fair digest of the subject under coj\siAe.r3X\on," -^Philadelphia Ledger. 



r^YNAMIC SOCIOLOGY ; or, Applied Social Science, 



J~^ as based upon Statical Sociology and the less Complex Sciences, 



By Lester F. Ward, A. M. In 2 vols. i2mo. Cloth, $5.00. 



"A book that will amply repay perusal. . . . Recognizing the danger in which 

 sociology is, of falling into the class of dead sciences or polite amusements, Mr. Ward 

 has undertaken to 'point out a method by which the breath of life can be breadied into 

 its nostrils.' " — Rochester Post Express. 



" Mr. Ward has evidently put great labor and thought into his two volumes, and 

 has produced a work of interest and importance. He does not limit his effort to a con- 

 tribution to the science of sociology. . . . He believes that sociology has already 

 reached ihe point at which it can be and ought to be applied, treated as an art, and he 

 urges that 'the State' or Government now has a new, legitimate, and pecuHar field for 

 the exercise of intelligence to promote the welfare of men." — New York Times. 



*' A fundamental discussion of many of the most important questions of science and 

 philosophy in their bearings upon social economy and human af&irs in general. It 

 d«es not treat directly these current questions in any department, and yet it furnishes 

 the basis in science and in logic for the correct solution of nearly all of them. It is 

 therefore exceedingly opportune, as there has never been a period in which greater ac- 

 tivity existed in the direction of thoroughly working out and scientifically settling the 

 problems of social, national, and individual life," — IVashingtou Star, 



'PREELAND : A Social Anticipation. By Dr. Theo- 

 J- dor Hertzka. i2mo. Cloth, $1.00. 



"A treatise on social economics somewhat on the plan of Bellamy's *T.ooking 

 Packward.' Dr. Hertzka has actually founded a socialist colony in Afnca, upon the 

 lines laid down in this book, and ' Freeland ' is the imaginary history of the future of 

 the colony. It will doubtless be the cause of much comment and discussion." — San 

 FrajKisco Evening Post, 



"A politico-economic romance in which is elaborated a comprehensive and pliilo- 

 aophic scheme of social reorganization. Its author is a Viennese economist of^emi- 

 ne»ce. . . . Dr. Hertzka*s conception of an ideal social state, his 'Anticipation' is well 

 worth careful and sympathetic reading." — Detroit Tribune. 



"In the end Freehnd reaches a state of universal prosperity and contentment now 

 unheard of. Dr. Hertzka assures the reader that he has drawn no Utopia, but a prac- 

 ticable community, such as a sufficient number of vigorous men can establish in other 

 ehgible parts of the world as well as in the highlands of Africa."— Cz««««rt&' Times 

 Star. 



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