AHD LIBRARY^ CONGRESS. Shelf . C t PRESENTED BY \ O^l^- -^lii.-a._cwyLJL .UNITED STATES OrAMERICA. ADVERTISEMENT. Mr. W. A. Croffut's Writings. The Military and Civil History of Connecticut during the Rebellion. By W. A. Croffut in Collaboration with John M. Morris ; 891 pp.; Plates Iviii. Price, $5.00. Ledyard Bill, New York, publisher ; 18G9. " This is au admirable rooorcl of the career of our soldiers for f^nr years throngU mareU aiiil hospital, camp and battle, for which the thanks of the State are due you." — Goo. Buckiwjhatn. "Connecticut will be proud of this book and its exhibit." — Hartford Courant. " Au amazing claim is here made for Connecticut and ajiparently well suji- ported. The in'eface says : 'Not only Winthroj), Ellsworth, Lyon, Foote, Sedg- wick, Mansfield, Wadsworth, McGUllan, Mower, Wriglit, Terry, Ilawley, but William Tecuinseh Sherman and Ulysses S. Grant, sprang straight from the loins of our sturdy little commonwealth.' " — New Haven Palladium.. " * • * plain, comprehensive and coniijaet. While entering into many details of the co-operation of the common people, it is at once heroic and pa- thetic. • * * As any book dealing with the State's recent history must, it leaves brave Joe Ilawley way up on the front seat." — Korioich Bulletin. " What business has the Connecticut Legislature to rob the people of the State by subscribing for two thousand copies of such a book as i\\\si1"— Bridgeport Farmer ADVERTISEMENT. ivir. W. A. Croffut's Writings. A Helping Hand for American Homes. By W. A. Croffut in Collaboration with Dr. Lyman C. Draj^er, Secretary of the Wisconsin Historical Society; Introduction (7 pages) by Horace Greeley; 821 pages; 117 illus. Price, $4.00. Charles F. Wilstach & Co., Cincinnati, publishers ; 1870. " Invaluable in garden and kitchen." — American Farmer. " A mammoth compendium of the wisest and most valuable suggestions for the care of farm and home." — Rural New Yorker. " Greeley comes to the front again witli a lecture to our farmers and husband- men on certain points, expressed in his sledge-hammtr earnestness. It is illus- trated from his own practical experience at Chapauqua." — Prairie Farmer. " It can not be said that this bulky volume adds anything to the sum total of human knowledge, for neither Croffut nor Draper is a doctor, or a carpenter, or a floriculturist, or a husbandman, or even a cook as far as heard from, but this is a useful compilation in convenic nt form of twenty-five thousand important bits of human experience concerning these things, and Horace Greeley compli- ments the compilers by introducing their book to the public through several characteristic pages." — Mihoaukee Sentinel. ADVERTISEMENT. Mr. W. A. Croffut's Writings. Bourbon Ballads. Humorous political songs, one hundred in number, written by W. A. Croffut for the New York Tribune ; 1879. Second Ed., 10 cents. "There is a person oouuected with the staff of the N. Y. Tribune who is employed to blackguard everybody wlio differs from him, iu iufamoasly wretched doggerel."— A'. O. Times. "These 'Bourbon Ballads,' which for months have appeared at frequent in- tervals in the New York Tribune, have now been collected and published in a large edition. They are, without doubt, the most telling political thrusts that have ever appeared iu English rhyme."— CAicar/o Inter-Ocean. " This dreadful drivel is enough to make a horse sick and is ruining the Tribune's ancient reputation for good grammar and decency." — Cincinnati En- quirer. " Whitclaw Eeid ! Haul off your hireling slanderer ! "—Chicago Record. " Mr. Whitclaw Beid, the comic part of the Tribune, has ceased' to write any more of those fine, soul-stirring ballads which made his paper so popular with all Bourbons, and the Bourbon Secretary of the Senate has been compelled to discontinue it.'"— Donn Piatt. " Croffut's ballads are more (!opiid than anything that ever emanated from the combined pens of his maliguers. "Sorristown Herald. •' Even the satirized sub.jects of the " Bourbon Ballads ' have laughed over them." — Washington Star. ADVERTISEMENT. Mr. W. A. Croffut's Writings. Deseret; or ji Saint's AfflictioiLs; Au Opera. Libretto by \Y. A. Croftut ; music by Diidloy Buck. This comic opera on Mormonism was first produced witli a chorus of seventy singers, in Brooklyn, N. Y., in October, 1880. "Deseret, anew eomio ojiera, was performed last eveiiiug at Haverly's before a large aiidieuce, and was received with cou.siderablo favor. By i-easou of its l^retty imisic aud amusing story it is merry and entertaining, and last night it was much ajiplauded aud frequently interrupted with genuine and hearty laughter. Messrs. Buck aud Croflfut were called before the curtain almost prematurely, garlanded with flowers and ' speech ! ' ' speech ! ' vainly demanded of them."— jV. Y. Herald, Oct. 14, 1880. •' Mr. W. A. Croflfut, whoso brilliant ' Graphicalities ' gave the Graphic great popularity aud who has more recently made a national rei)utation through his clever 'Bourbon Ballads' in the Tribune, has filled with happy conceits the libretto of ' Deseret,' uow at the Brooklyn." — Ilome Journal. " Thanks to Mr. CrofFnt's bright aud original libi'ctto, and Mr. Dudley Buck's strong aud scholarly music, the oi)era coiild not be killed with kindness, aud it ended, at a late hour, with something vei'y like a genuine success. * * There arc fortunes in it for all concerned. All through the country it will draw crowded houses and be warmly praised." — Sj^lrit of the Times. "Deseret survived the amateurs on the stage aud the amateurs in front of the house, and it will make its mark and lead to a successful rivalry of Sullivan aud Gilbert, if not of Offenbach, Herve and Lecocq." — X Y. Daily Times. " Deseret goes back, rather, toward the genuine comic opera of older times, aud is after the French more than the modern English school." — jV. Y. Tribune. " The Mormon opera, Deseret, has captured success, and since leaving this city has been given in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Cincinnati, St. Louis and Chicago and is now in its eighth week."— X 1'. World. ADVERTISEMENT. Mr. W. A. Croffut's Writings. A Midsuinmer Lark. A book of travels in verse ; by W. A. Croffut. New York; Heury Holt & Co., 1883. IGmo., pp. xii, 25G. Price, $1.25. (Leisure Hour Series, No. 150.) " Both tho matter and the form of his book are well calculated to attract at- tentiou and to afford amusement. The whole of it, from dedication to fluis. is cast in rhyme, and it is altogether such a jolly, rollicking sort of a 'lark' that the worst tempered man in the world could not help laughing over it. It is genuinely and spontaneously bright and wi tty."-St. Paul Pioneer Press. "Old routes take ou new chiirms mider Mr. Croffut's lively haudliug."- Buffalo Courier. " This is a whimsical humorous story of the haps and mishaps of a party of merry travelers. The whole thing is a literary joke, strongly marked w,th the characteristics of the author, who is one of the wittiest and most farile writers connected with American journalism."— 3fm?icaj5oh8 Tribune. » One of the very jolliest books of the season, the best to take into Ui ■ country, to real aloud to those who are sick, and those who are blue, and with much sense, wisdom and pathos beneath its wit and humor. "-Z)«>/iorc.sr.s Xonthlii. " The most depressing of printed books."— Deiroif Free Press. " Crofifut has made a hit with this volume."— iV. F. World. " The book is unique— a fantastic conceit in rhyme. Even the preface, the running title and the foot-notes rhymn."— Indianapolis Journal. "Beginning the closely printed pages that have all the app .arance of prose pure and simple, the reader is surprised at the ringing measure and the rhythmic form straightway encountered, and as with mingled wit and easa and grace the recital glides and flows smoolhly on through chapter after chapter, never be- coming tedious, its unique style rather growing richer, its interest waxing fullcn surprise changes to amaze at the rare and peculiar ability the work displays. It i