INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS.
AMERICA AND EUROPE. A Study of International Relations.
I.—The United States and Great Britain: Their True Governmental and Commercial Relations. By David A. Wells.
II.—The Monroe Doctrine. By Edward J. Phelps, late Minister to Great Britain.
III.—Arbitration in International Disputes. By Carl Schurz.
(No. 87 in the "Questions of the Day" Series.)
Together, 1 vol. 8vo, 75 cents.
"This is an extremely interesting book, a book which should make for peace."
COMPARATIVE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW. An Analysis of the Administrative System, National and Local, of the United States, England, France, and Germany. By Frank J. Goodnow, Professor of Administrative Law in the University Faculty of Political Science, Columbia College in the City of New York. Two volumes, 8vo (each complete in itself, with index), price per volume, $2.50.
Volume I.—Organization. Volume II.—Legal Relations.
"A work of great learning and profound research ... remarkable alike for analytical power and lucidity of method ... unique and of permanent excellence."—New York Tribune.
OUTLINES OF ROMAN LAW. Comprising its Historical Growth and General Principles. By William C. Morey, Ph.D. 12mo, $1.75
"The work possesses more than ordinary interest, for it marks an epoch in American legal literature."—Albany Law Journal.
"The whole work is executed with care and accuracy, and shows a wide knowledge of modern scholarship."—Boston Advertiser.
THE FOREIGN POLICY OF GREAT BRITAIN. By Montague Burrows, Professor of Modern History, University of Oxford. 8vo, $3.00.
THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN EUROPE. From the Congress of Vienna to the Present Time. By Charles M. Andrews, Associate Professor of History in Bryn Mawr College. To be completed in two volumes. Sold separately. With maps. 8vo, gilt tops, per volume, $2.50.
Part I.—From 1815-1850.
Part II.—From 1850 to the Present Time. (In preparation.)
THE NICARAGUA CANAL AND THE MONROE DOCTRINE. A Political History of the Various Projects of Interoceanic Transit across the American Isthmus, with Special Reference to the Nicaragua Canal, and the Attitude of the United States Government Thereto. By Lindley M. Keasbey, Associate Professor of Political Science, Bryn Mawr College. With maps. 8vo.
INTERNATIONAL LAW. A simple statement of its Principles. By Herbert Wolcott Bowen, United States Consul-General at Barcelona, Spain. 12mo.