Henry Holt & Co., 



29 W. 23d St., New York. 

 378 Wabash Av., Chicago. 



HA VE JUST PUBLISHED 



Schenck & Giirber's Outline of Human Physiology. 



Translated by Dr. William D. Zoethout. With Preface by Prof. Jaqubs Loeb of the University of Chicago. 



Illustrated 339 pp. 8vo, $1.75 net. 



A clear and compact statement of the important facts of the science in the light of the most recent scholar- 

 ship. While intended primarily for students of medicine, it is well fitted by its breadth of treatment for 

 undergraduate courses in physiology in non-professional colleges, especially when such courses are closely 

 related to work in general biology. The discussion of theories is avoided as far as possible, and detailed 

 anatomical and histological descriptions are omitted. 



Prof. Theodore Hough, Mass. Institute of Technology. — " A compend which for accuracy and comprehensiveness 

 is incomparably better than any similar work I know of." 



Prof. Henry B. Ward, University of Nebraska. — " It seems to me altogether the most scientific arrangement and 

 treatment of material of which I am acquainted in college text-books on this subject. I think we shall be able 

 to make use of it in our work next year." 



Prof. R. W. Tower, Brown University. — I have known this work since its appearance in the German. It is 

 certainly the best manual of Physiology that has yet been published, and this English translation cannot fail to be 

 of widespread use among students beginning the subject of physiology." 



Percival's Agricultural Botany. 



By Prof. John Percival of the Agricultural College, Wye England. Illustrated, xii -f 7118 pp. 12mo. S2.50, net. 

 Nation.— "Taken as a whole the book seems adapted to meet a large demand, and will, 110 doubt, prove acceptable 



to many." 

 Prof. J. M. Coulter in Botanical Gazette. — "The scope of the book is broad, and it includes the subjects of special 



interest to cultivators of plants. It certainly deserves to be received eagerly by agricultural schools and those 



engaged in agricultural pursuits." 



Reighard and Jennings's Anatomy of the Cat. 



By Prof. Jacob E. Reighakd, of the University of Michigan, and Herbert S. Jennings, of the University of 



Michigan. Illustrated. pp. 12mo. 



This volume aims to be clear, correct, and not too voluminous. It is an enlargement of an account of the 

 anatomy of the cat prepared by the author nine years ago, and since used in typewritten form, in University of 

 Michigan classes, as well as the Universities of Illinois, Nebraska, and West Virginia, and at Dartmouth College. 



Fact and Fable »* Psychology. 



By JOSEPH JASTROW, Professor of Psychology in the University of Wisconsin. 



Large crown octavo, gilt top, $2.00. 



TABLE OF CONTENTS: 



I. The Modern Occult. VII. The Natural History of Analogy. 



II. The Problems of "Psychical Research." VIII. The Mind's Eye. 



III. The Logic of Mental Telegraphy. IX. Mental Prepossession and Inertia. 



IV. The Psychology of Deception. X. A Study of Involuntary Movements. 

 V. The Psychology of Spiritualism. XL The Dreams of the Blind.* 



VI. Hypnotism and its Antecedents. (*Helen Keller figures in this chapter.) 



Prom the *' Providence Journal." 



"This collection of essays is a contribution of inestimable value to the literature of mental science. The 

 author takes strong ground against ail those delusions which the credulous public, restless and like the old Athe- 

 nians, is ever ready to accept. His exposure of the ' eternal gullible ' is couched in lucid and easy English; while 

 his style is sufficiently witty to make his topic popular with many persons who would probably look askance at 

 a heavier book. He has made a telling plea against superstition in whatever form it presents itself, and one can 

 only wish earnestly that his interesting volume may reach many readers and induce those who are hovering on 

 the borderland of the ' modern occult ' to return to the realms of common sense." 



The Biography of a Baby. 



By MILIOBrVT W. SHINN. l2mo, si.so. 



An important contribution to Child-Study. Miss Shinn reports her minute observa- 

 tions of her niece during the baby's first year. These cover the development of sensa- 

 tion and consciousness, of emotion and intelligence, of sight and hearing and speech, of 

 voluntary motion, and much besides. Miss Sliinn's uncommon familiarity with children 

 and with Psychology lends special value and attraction to her book. 



Sold by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, by 



H0UQHT0N, MIFFLIN & CO., BOSTON; II East 17th Street, NEW YORK. 



