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Show NEW PVBLXCATIONS. The "Aldi sb. "Among the most perfect illustrated periodical publications publica-tions of the world, the "Aldino1' takes foremost rank. A representative and ohampion of American art it challenges chal-lenges the admiration of all lovers of the beautiful by its superior engravings, while its letter press, a model of neatness neat-ness and perfection, is full of well written articles of interest and information. infor-mation. That this latter department is under the care of Richard Henry Stoddard, is, to those who know his standing in literature, sufficient guarantee guar-antee as to the choice attractions offered. During the coming year the publishers promise to continue to delight de-light their patrons with the choicest engravings, and with .contributions from the leading writers and poets ot the day. To the innumerable commendations com-mendations ef tbe press wo gladly add our own. As an extra and unusual inducement to subscribers the publishers publish-ers offer, for 1873, a pair of beautiful oil ehromos, froe. These alone are worth four or five times the cost of the "Aldine," which is ?5 a year. James Sutton & Co., New York, puhlih,ra. The ten laws of Health ; or. How Disease Dis-ease is produced and can be prevented, prevent-ed, by J. K. Black, M. D.; J. B. Lippiccott & Co, l'bilaU.Iphia ; cloth, 3ii2 pp, $1,75. for sale by Ous. M. Clark, Salt Lake City. This work comes to us wt!l oodorsed and is undoubtedly a valuable ontri bution to the literature upon the lawt; of health- Its aim U to preveot disease dis-ease rathur than to ea:c it It enlWcep the absolute necessity, among oilier things, of pure air.adeo.uate and wholo j seme iood and drink, proper out door exercise, sufficient rost of mind and j body, personal o'einline?8, and adequate ade-quate UDOonstiainiog covering. To prevent disease we must know what produces it Investigation ioto t'ui3, the preventive branch of medical :i- i ence, baa, of late years, demanded tho ! attentioo of physicians and physiologists physiolo-gists to a much greater extent than ever before. People begin to realixe tho advantage of understanding those laws which will cnabio them to cscapo disease, acd every contribution to such information is bure to meet the estimation estima-tion its content warrant UnderKronnd Treaurc5, How and where to God them, by JiUjC, Orion, ii r vrthinnton, I'ustin A" Co., ir-w Conn; cU,th' J:;T pp This work b intended to c nv.y, in .puome.tut general kuo,.0 Uc- eooe and no opponnnit, to become Acquainted with the various minerals aiid ores, manner of treating them, etc., etc., yet finds himself in a position posi-tion -where such information is necessary neces-sary without the delay consequent upon a scientific courso of study or years of labor in the mines. While it is not to bo expootod that the simple possession of this work is to make any person a practical miner or thoroughly acquainted with the knowledgo necessary neces-sary to become a successful prospeotor, yet there aro scarcely any of either class who will not find in it desirable information. Tho author is well known in scientific circles as professor of natural natu-ral history at Vassar college, and more generally as a member of professor Agassi z'a expedition to explore the valley of tha Amazon river, and as the author of "The Andes and the Amazon." Ama-zon." The Issue of American Politics; a discussion of tho principal questions incident to the Governmental Polity of tho United States, by Orrin Skinner, Skin-ner, of the New York bar; J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia; cloth 532, pp. For ealo by Gus. M. Ciark, Salt Lake This work requires more time for its consideration, in order to give it a proper review, than we can at present spare for it We quote from a two-column two-column review of tho New York "Tribune." "The traces of a thoughtful thought-ful and discriminating intellect, and of no common power of expression and illustration, aro plainly viable in the composition of this volume. It is marked by an unusual breadth of view in the disoussion of haokneyed topics, and if the ideas of the writer may not claim the merits of originality, they aro always presented in an original origi-nal light, combined with new relations, and enforced by fresh and unworn arguments. Although devoted to exclusively ex-clusively political themes, the work has tho character of a philosophical treatise, rather than a popular essay." |