"We know of no manual that can take its place as a guide to the selector of a library."—Independent.
| The Library Companion. Annual Supplement to "The Best Reading." Five volumes, for 1877, 1878, 1879, 1880, and 1881, each | 50 |
| II.— | Hand-Book of Statistics of the United States. A Record of the Administrations and Events from the Organization of the United States Government to 1874. Comprising brief biographical data of the presidents, cabinet officers, the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and members of the Continental Congress, statements of finances under each administration, and other valuable material. 12mo, cloth | $1 00 |
"The book is of so comprehensive a character and so compact a form that it is especially valuable to the journalist or student."—N. Y. World.
| III.— | What to Eat. A Manual for the Housekeeper; giving a bill of fare for every day in the year. 134 pages, boards | 50 |
"It can hardly fail to prove a valuable aid to housekeepers who are brought to their wits' end to know what to get for the day's meals."—San Francisco Bulletin.
| IV.— | Till the Doctor Comes, and How to Help Him. By George H. Hope, M.D. Revised with additions by a New York physician. ⁂ A popular guide in all cases of accident and sudden illness. 12mo, 99 pages, boards | 50 |
"A most admirable treatise; short, concise, and practical."—Harper's Monthly (Editorial).
| V.— | Stimulants and Narcotics; Medically, Philosophically, and Morally Considered. By George M. Beard, M.D. 12mo, 155 pages, cloth | 75 |
"Dr. Beard has given the question of stimulants the first fair discussion in moderate compass that it has received in this country. * * * The book should be widely read."—N. Y. Independent.