PUBLICATIONS OF J. B. LIPPINCOTT <Sr> CO. 
Philosophers and Fools. A Study. By Julia Duhr- 
ing. Crown 8vo. Extra cloth. $2.00. 
“ Their author has thought much, 
teen a great deal, and read the best 
authors. She possesses a mind of in¬ 
trospective and analytical power, and 
the refined delicacy of her taste causes 
her to express the conclusions to which 
she has arrived in language at once at¬ 
tractive and forcible. We have derived 
great pleasure from her thoughtful and 
carefully studied essays. They discuss 
with fairness and ability that question 
which all persons love most to read 
about—themselves.”— Chicago Ini^r- 
Ocean. 
Gentlefolks and Others. By Julia Du bring, an thot 
of “ Philosophers and Fools.” i2mo. Extra cloth. $2.00. 
" For summer reading, and especial¬ 
ly for reading aloud among people of 
refinement and culture, there arc few 
more desirable books than this.”— 
Philada. Evening Bulletin. 
" The success of ‘ Philosophers and 
Fools'justified Miss Duhring in con¬ 
tinuing the papers that constituted 
that volume; and the thirteen essays 
in this will vindicate the praises that 
won."— Philada. North A merican. 
Scrambles Among the Alps in the Years 1860 - 69 . 
By Edward Whymper. Handsomely and profusely Illus¬ 
trated. 8vo. Extra cloth, gilt. $2.50. Full gilt. $3.00. 
“ Mr. Whympcr's volume is as fasci¬ 
nating as it is exact. It excels any 
recent novel in ‘ interest.' It gives us 
new information, and thrills us with 
vivid descriptions of mountain adven¬ 
ture. We cannot forecast the popu¬ 
larity of such a volume; but we are 
sure that if the great body of readers 
knew what was in it, there would be a 
scramble in the bookstores for these 
* Scrambles Among the Alps.' ” — Bos¬ 
ton Globe. 
"Alpine adventure and scenery have 
never been better portrayed.”— Phila¬ 
delphia Age. 
“Graphically described and elegantly 
illustrated.”— Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 
“ More beautiful, and at the same 
time faithful, Alpine woodcuts have 
never yet appeared. In one word, they 
are, with scarcely one or two excep¬ 
tions, admirable, and will be regarded 
as triumphs of this kind of art. No 
preceding publication on the same sub¬ 
ject surpasses it in general attractive¬ 
ness, and we are disposed to say none 
equals it as the work of one man.”— 
London Athenceum. 
Pen Pictures of Europe. Where and How We Went 
and What we Saw during a Seventeen Months’ Tour. 13 y 
Elizabeth Peake. Profusely and handsomely Illustrated. 
Crown 8vo. Extra cloth. $3.50. 
“ It has often been said that the in¬ 
telligent European traveler who should 
make a literal transcript of his im¬ 
pressions from day to day, without 
any attempt at originality, and with 
no pretense of literary excellence, could 
not fail to produce a valuable and at¬ 
tractive work. This is very nearly 
the character of the present volume.” 
—New York Tribune. 
“ Another very readable book of 
travcj is Pen Pictures of Europe, by 
Elizabeth Peake. The author tells the 
story of her journey in a series of let¬ 
ters, which are bright, entertaining, 
and suggestive, the result of keen and 
close observation, and of that intui¬ 
tive perception of things which is a 
part of woman’s nature.”— Baton 
Journal. 
“ This is a superb book. The illus¬ 
trations are excellent in every' respect, 
and the reading matter quite above 
the average of books of travel.”— 
Chicago Journal. 
