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Show MEW PUBLICATIONS. Gbakji TKN-Kui:iTioy S.;znk in ! the U 1TK!) St atx-; or iimns.-A of lb. nn- dtt.-r tniitt-.-n y :ir aorond. liy U. Kull.-r. N w Y'.-kHi. W- farleUn t Co, 1ST'.. Sail Lai.' C:ty, Jaincj L wyer. Having town the author of this wurk in prerebcllion days as a fcprigiitly -NVw York editor, jand anl'St-'piei.t'y as au ardent, (partisan of the euiithern cau.ie, have turin-il ovi-r its paes with , iiitercnt. Abncnt fr,.m thw country i)T thirteen ytMr, in: notes especially the cliangi.-s wuich have come ovtr it during that time. Uruadway, New York, did not pre.-i-nt to him a single biniiliar object. Clieapness has givn place to inaiinilicence, in every department de-partment ol trade and enterprise. Tnc pre is not be and. Of the U.ratd Col. Fuller aay: "Ihe U-.r-alU is now issued from a marble palace, and the ton of tho founder, whotte birth was the, text for a witty leader written by the happy father, headed. 1 Arrival of le jeimc Kditor,' is now princeof the press, with a fortune of ten millions of dollars, more Or lets." The author criticises sharply the cisil right-) inll and tiniversal suf-rage. suf-rage. Nearly every current topic is vivai ioiibly, tliotigh sometimes flippantly flip-pantly handled, as they necessarily must be, owing to the fact that the book is made up Ironi habty letters sent to the London Ctmopoiilan. A great many pleasant personal reminiscences rem-iniscences arc given which are of general gen-eral interest. The dark as wed as the bright bide of tho country is portrayed the investment of $700,-UUO.UUO $700,-UUO.UUO in denominational institions, and our lull alius houses and prisons the numerous double-breasted women wo-men iu New York with very pttte tiinVs. Dr. Miller's Turkish baths iieceive flattering mention. Tho 1 Heeoher aeundul is spicily dished up. l'tie editor calis the- pastor of Fly-mouth Fly-mouth church simply a "pious fraud ," mlding: 'The last time I naw hie reverence he was silting in Uie Champ Eiyet-es, with a very red lace, bcr-ide a pretty cocotte, and a glass in his hand that, elevated to any sinner's lips, would have naturally and honestly passed for a gloss of 'B and S.'" Col. Fuller does not! think that tiie American drama, if such a thing exists, has mado much progress, either in respect to plays or actors, during tho last decade-. America, he says, except on the church question, has no more freedom free-dom than England. America is simply an extension of England. The book concludes with a variety of editorial edi-torial articles taken from the Loudon Cusmvpolilan. Tuk Vatican DKCaitHs.in their bearing bear-ing en Civil Allegiance: A Political Ex-pustulttlicti. Ex-pustulttlicti. Uy llio KijrhtHon. W. F. lilad-tonc, M. P. To winch are added A liistTy of tt.-e Vatican Council; together with ibu Lain and English text of the Papal fcivllabu and the Vatican Decrees, liy the Kov. Philip Sell all', D. D. New York, Uurper Sc Brothers, publisher, IS75. .Salt Lako City, James Dwyer. I'rico 70 cunts. Ttie documents contained in this pamphlet are of the first importance to every theological scholar, setting forth as they do, the position of the Cat'.oiic church in regard to modern society aud government. Tho Papal Svllabus of lijtit and fhe dogmatic decrees of the Vatican Council of 1S70. adhere to tie; text of those documents, but the history ot the council is a Protestant version. The Gladstone pamphlet nas become fa-mous.not fa-mous.not only from its own aggressive altitudr against Catholicism, but on account of the learned criticism it has encountered at tho hands of tho leading prelates of the English Catholic Cath-olic church. L ;r As; ray, or La Petite Comtco;o; t Lib Sphiny, or Julia de Treconir; Hkl-i.ah, Hkl-i.ah, by Octavo Feudist. Translat d from tl.o lata-t P-.vis editions bv 0. Vi-beu-. New York: G. W. Carletoa & Co., publishers. James D wyor, Salt Luke city. Hero in one volume wo have- three of Octave Feuillet's best stories, each of which alone ii worth the price of the whole book. For a keen analysis of the whims aud contradictions of the female character, Feuillet has no superior, and this is probably the true secret of the immense success of his novels among women. |