THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICS. "There is no Free Trade teaching by example at all to be compared THE FREE TRADE STRUGGLE IN ENGLAND. BY GENERAL M. M. TRUMBULL. SECOND EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED. A timely book on the tariff question, of which Mr. Edward Atkinson says, in an article entitled "Common Sense Applied to the Tariff Question," (Pop. Sei. Mo., Aug. 1890): "Those who choose to discriminate between the leaders of the two parties of the present time may read the perversion of English history by James G. Blaine, in the North American Review; and the true picture which is given by Gen. M. M. Trumbull. "It would be well worth while for any one who has been misled by the common errors about the influences which brought Great Britain to reverse her policy in 1842, to read up the economic history of that period. All the facts are given by the radical Miss Martineau in her History of Fifty Years' Peace; by the Tory Sir Stafford Northcote, in his Twenty Years' Financial Policy, explaining the changes which Peel brought about; by the economist John Noble's Fiscal Legislation in Great Britain; or in Carlyle's Past and Present. The best summary is to be found in the little book published in Chicago in 1884, by Gen. M. M. Trumbull, entitled The American Lesson of the Free Trade Struggle in England. In this book will be found the whole record of the condition of England from 1838 to 1846. This history ought to be read by every man who desires to make up his mind how to act in this country at the present time. The logic of events is the same. We are repeating history." Cloth, prepaid, 75 cents; paper, 25 cents. THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING CO., 175 La Salle Street, CHICAGO. BOOKS FOR SUMMER READING. Cloth, $1,00, paper, 50c, THE GOLDEN CALF. A Novel, by H. H. BOYESEN. 12mo. Prof. Boyesen has left his favorite Scandinavian scenes to tell a story of modern American life, to point in a new and vivid way the old moral that the "love of money is the root of all evil. The blight of money-getting in those questionable forms which are known to modern business falls upon a young, generous, and naturally upright youth. It is not open disgrace, which so often in stories attends the wrongdoer, but moral degeneration that is made the subject of the author's study. While the book is by no means of the conventional Sunday school type, it teaches a lesson sorely needed in these days of material prosperity and eager pursuit of wealth. ALL HE KNEW (Sixth Edition). By JOHN HABBERTON, 12mo. Cloth, $1, paper, 500. In the field of fiction Mr. John Habberton's All He Knew gives evidence that the author of "Helen's Babies has deep sympathy with humanity. The story of a poor cobbler returning from the penitentiary to his village and living up to all he knew-a simple creed learned from the prison chaplain-is told in a straightforward, unpretentious fashion which conceals real art. 66 All He knew ought to be in every home and on every library shelf. Those who never read novels' should read this for the truth it contains."-Canadian Methodist Quarterly. "This is a religious story of unusual merit, and it cannot be circulated too broadly, for it will be an inspiration to all who read it. The story is cleverly written. The interest begins with the first page and is maintained to the end."-Central Christian Advocate. CALLIAS: An Historical Romance. By ALFRED J. CHURCH. 12mo. Cloth, ill., $1.50. "The book is written in a simple and fresh style, and cannot fail to give its readers a vivid sense of the reality of the old Greek life. The author, Mr. A. J. Church, is to be congratulated on the success of his undertaking, and The Chautauqua-Century Press on the handsome appearance of this volume." THE STORY OF GOTTLIEB. By DR. WM. F. WARREN, President of Boston University. With frontispiece, rubricated title page. Bound in white vellum. 16mo, 60e. The story has been told in the Arabic tongue to the mountaineers in Lebanon, and a German translation is now being prepared. "It is a strong book-strong in its simplicity, its truthfulness, in the impression it makes.— Presbyterian Observer. KATE THURSTON'S CHAUTAUQUA CIRCLES. By MARY H. FIELD. 16mo. $1. The bright little story of life in a California village is full of helpful suggestions. The book was not written so much to explain the Chautauqua Reading Circle, as to show how a sympathetic, energetic, and unselfish young girl made the Chautauqua plan serve her purpose to help those about her. For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price. The Chautauqua-Century Press, MEADVILLE, PA. |