THE MACMLLAN 

 COMPANY'S 



New Scientific Books. 



COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BIOLOGICAL SERIES. 



Edited by Henry F. Osborne and Edmund B. Wilson. 



Volume V. THE FOUNDATIONS OF ZOOLOGY. By William Keith Brooks, Ph. D., 

 LL. D., Professor of Zoology in the Johns Hopkins University. 



8vo. Cloth. Pp. viii + 339. Price, $2.50 net. 



Uniform with Osborne's From the Greeks to Darwin ; Willey's Amphioxus ; Dean's Fishes, etc., etc. 



Lectures on the Evolution of 

 Plants. 



By Douglas Houghton Campbell, Ph. D., Pro- 

 fessor of Botany in the Leland Stanford 

 Junior University. 



i2mo. Cloth. Pp. viii + 319. Price, $1.25. 



Intended not merely for botanists but for stu- 

 dents of the evolutionary theory in general. 



A History of Physics 



IN ITS ELEMENTARY BRANCHES, INCLUD 

 ING THE EVOLUTION OF PHYSI- 

 CAL LABORATORIES. 



By Florian Cajori, Colorado College. 



Cloth. Crown 8vo. Price, $1.60 net. 



. 



A HANDBOOK OF METALLURGY. 



By 



Carl Schnabel, 



of the Royal Academy of 



Mines, Clausthal. 



Two Volumes. 



Volume I. COPPER. LEAD. SILVER. GOLD. 

 Volume II. ZINC. CADMIUM. MERCURY. BISMUTH. 



TIN. ANTIMONY. ARSENIC. NICKEL. COBALT. 



PLATINUM. ALUMINIUM. 



Illustrated. Medium 8vo. $10.00 net. 



Translated by 



Henry Louis, Professor 



of Mining at the Durham 



College of Science. 



Just ready. 



A translation of Dr. Carl Schnabel's Hand- Book of Metallurgy. Edited by Henry Louis, Professor 



of Mining at the Durham College of Science. 



"It is a curious fact that there does not exist in the English language a single complete treatise on 

 Metallurgy. There are a number of smaller text-books mainly adapted to the use of students, which cover the 

 entire field, but make no pretense of describing it with any thoroughness of detail ; and there are a number of 

 very admirable works dedicated to the metallurgy of individual metals. . . . Such being the position of our 

 literature on this subject, I venture to think that I am rendering a distinct service in submitting a translation of 

 the most recent and most exhaustive work on the subject in any language from the pen of that eminent 

 metallurgical authority, Dr. Carl Schnabel, of Clausthal. The object of his work has been to give a complete 

 account of the metallurgical treatment of every one of the metals ordinarily employed, together with all the 

 recent improvements in the art, while, at the same time pointing out the scientific principles underlying each 

 process, and illustrating each by examples drawn from actual practice in various parts of the world." — From the 

 Author's Preface. 



New Volumes in THE RURAL SCIENCE SERIES, edited by Prof. BAILEY. 



By FRED W. CARD, R. I. Agric. College. 



BUSH-FRUITS. 



A Horticultural Monograph of Raspberries, Black- 

 berries, Dewberries, Currants, Gooseberries, 

 and Other Shrub-like Fruits. By Fred W. 

 Card, Rhode Island Agricultural College. 



537 pages. 113 Illustrations. Price, $1.50. 



By ED WARD B. VOORHEES, Rutgers College. 



FERTILIZERS. 



The Source, Character, and Composition of Natu- 

 ral, Home-made and Manufactured Fertilizers ; 

 and Suggestions as to their Use for Different 

 Crops and Conditions. By Edward B. Voor- 

 hees, A. M., Director N. J. Agric. Exp. Station. 

 i2mo. Cloth. Price, $1.00. 



THE 



PROFESSOR BAILEY'S LATEST BOOK. 



EVOLUTION OF OUR NATIVE FRUITS. 



By L. H. Bailey, Cornell University. In this entertaining volume the origin and development of fruits 

 peculiar to North America are inquired into, and the conclusions reached, the information presented, 

 and the suggestions as to future developments, can not but be valuable to any thoughtful fruit-grower. 



485 pages. 125 Illustrations. Price, $2.00. 



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