Part 12 (2/2)

The Protective Tariff: What it Does for Us. By HERMAN LIEB.

”It is clear in style and argument, taking strong ground for the immediate reduction of war taxes and the putting of the nation on a peace footing as regards the necessities of life for the common people.”--_Michigan Courier._

Life of Emperor William I., the Founder of the German Empire. By HERMAN LIEB.

”General Lieb has done historical literature a great service in giving it a life of one of the greatest rulers of the nineteenth century. It is printed on good paper, in clear type, and profusely ill.u.s.trated. An edition is also issued in the German language for those who want the history of their fatherland in their own tongue.”--_New London Telegram._

Henry Ward Beecher, Christian Philosopher, Pulpit Orator, Patriot, and Philanthropist. Ill.u.s.trated with a biographical sketch by THOS. W.

HANDFORD.

”As a pulpit orator he was during life the peer of any living, and his utterances will go on converting men, and fitting them for earth and heaven. As a patriot, loving his country, and willing to make any sacrifice for its sustenance and upbuilding, he was at all times conspicuous.”--_Chicago Inter-Ocean._

”It is much for a man worthy of a biography that he should fall into the hands of a congenial spirit, and that the biography should be a labor of love.”--_Chicago Herald._

Dinnerology. By ”Pan.”

Experiments in economical cooking, brightly and interestingly related.

Her Strange Fate. By CELIA LOGAN.

”'Her Strange Fate' belongs to that healthy sensational school, at the head of which stand the works of Chas. Reade, wherein the romantic and dramatic sides of real life are depicted.

There is no morbid a.n.a.lysis, no feverish imagination. No one who begins the book will be willing to lay it down until the last page is reached.”--_Philadelphia Press._

A Blue-Gra.s.s Thoroughbred. By ”TOM JOHNSON.”

A richly colored picture of a comparatively unknown but wonderfully interesting section of the United States, the Blue-gra.s.s region of Kentucky. From end to end the book is a rapidly moving panorama of brilliant pictures.

A Slave of Circ.u.mstance. By E. DE LANCEY PIERSON.

”An interesting work.”--_N. Y. Herald._

”A book well written; continually alluring, especially in the love scenes.”--_Was.h.i.+ngton National Republican._

”The very first paragraph of the book arouses the reader's interest, and that interest is maintained to the end.”--_Sunday News._

”It is extremely interesting, vividly national, and develops an unusually original idea.”--_Baltimore American._

The Shadow of the Bars. By E. DE LANCEY PIERSON.

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