RECENT PUBLICATIONS. 



THE NATIVE RACES OF THE PACIFIC STATES. 



By Herbert H. Bancroft. To be completed in 5 vols. Vol. 1. novr 

 ready. Containing Wild Tribes : their Manners and Customs. 

 I vol., 8vo. Cloth, $6 ; sheep, $7. 



"We can only say that if the remaining volumes are executed in the same spirit of 

 Candid and careful investigation, the same untiring industry, and intelligent good sense, 

 which mark the volume before us, Mr. Bancroft's ' Native Races of the Pacific States 

 will form, as regards aboriginal America, an encyclopaedia of knowledge not only un 

 equaled but unapproached. A literary enterprise more deserving of a generous sym- 

 pathy and support has never been undertaken on this side of the Atlantic." — Francis 

 Parkman, in the North A merican Review. 



" The industry, sound judgment, and the excellent literary style displayed in this 

 work, cannot be too highly praised." — Boston Post, 



A BRIEF HISTORY OF CULTURE. 



By John S. Hittell. i vol., i2mo. Price, $1.50. 



" He writes in a popular style for popular use. He takes ground which has never 

 been fully occupied before, although the general subject has been treated more or less 

 distinctly by several writers. . . . Mr. Hittell's method is compact, embracing a wide 

 field in a few words, often presenting a mere hint, when a fuller treatment is craved by 

 the reader; but, although his book cannot be commended as a model of literary art, it 

 may be consulted to great advantage by every lover of free thought and novel sugges- 

 tions." — A 7 . V. Tribune. 



THE HISTOIIY OF THE CONFLICT BETWEEN RE- 

 LIGION AND SCIENCE. 



By John W. Draper, M. D., author of " The Intellectual Develop- 

 ment of Europe." 1 vol., i2mo. Cloth. Price, $1.75. 



"The conflict of which he treats has been a mighty tragedy of humanity that has 

 dragged nations into its vortex and involved the fate of empires. The work, though 

 small, is full of instruction regarding the rise of the great ideas of science and philos- 

 ophy ; and he describes in an impressive manner and with dramatic effect the way re- 

 ligious authority has employed the secular power to obstruct the progress of knowledge 

 and crush out the spirit of investigation. While there is not in his book a word of dis- 

 respect for things sacred, he writes with a directness of speech, and a vividness of char- 

 acterization and an unflinching fidelity to the facts, which show him to be in thorough 

 earnest with his work. The ' History of the Conflict between Religion and Science ' 

 is a fitting sequel to the 'History of the Intellectual Development of Europe,' and will 

 add to its author's already high reputation as a philosophic historian " — N. V. Tribune. 



THEOLOGY IN THE ENGLISH POETS. 



COWPER, COLERIDGE, WORDSWORTH, and BURNS. By 

 Rev. Stopford Brooke, i vol., i2mo. Price, $2. 



"Apart from its literary merits, the book maybe said to possess an independent 

 value, as tending to familiarize a certain section of the English public with more en- 

 lightened views of theology." — London Athenceum. 



BLOOMER'S COMMERCIAL CRYPTOGRAPH. 



A Telegraph Code and Double Index — Holocryptic Cipher. By J. G. 

 Bloomer, i vol., 8vo. Price, $5. 



By the use of this work, business communications of whatever nature may be tele 

 gTuphed with secrecy and economy. 



D. APPLE TON & CO., Publishers, New York. 



