20 



THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



made a north and south section across the 

 island from Havana to Batabanos. Going 

 to Baiacoa, he examined the country west 

 of Yunque Mountain and east to Cape Maysi. 

 Having completed his work of an original 

 examination of the phenomena, uninfluenced 

 by preconceived hypotheses, he read what 

 others had written of Cuba, and was pleased 

 to find a general agreement between their 

 views and his. The notes are published by 

 the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zo- 

 ology. 



8elf Culture is the name of a monthly 

 magazine devoted to the interests of the 

 Home University League, edited by Edward 

 C. Towne and published by the Werner Com- 

 pany, Chicago and New York. Among the 

 subjects of articles in Vol. I, No. 2, are : Eli 



AVhitney, a Shakespeare of Invention ; The 

 Supposed Electrical Character of Vitality; 

 The Principle of Evolution in Nature ; Primi- 

 tive Man ; The Story of the Plague in History ; 

 The Genius of Shakespeare ; Diphtheria and 

 the Schools ; and Athletic Exercises in Uni- 

 versities. (Price, 30 cents ; $3 a year.) 



Under the title The JEnsential Man, an 

 argument in support of the belief in immor- 

 tality is presented by Gewge Croncell Cres- 

 set/ (Ellis, 15 cents). Among the circum- 

 stances which he deems indicative of a 

 future life are the great difference between 

 the mind of man and the material forces, 

 the fact that no force is ever destroyed, the 

 eventual cessation of all physical life on the 

 earth, and the general diffusion of the doc- 

 trine in one form or another. 



PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED. 



Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bulletins 

 and Reports. Delaware College. Tests of Sor- 

 ghum Varieties. By C. L. Penny. Pp. 24. Iowa : 

 Agricultural College. No. 28. Nine articles. Pp. 

 8. Nebraska : The Conservation of Soil Moisture 

 by Means of Subsoil Plowing. By T. L. Lyon. 

 Pp. 8, with Plates. North Dakota :" Weather and 

 Crop Report for September, 1894. Pp. 17. New 

 York : Rules concerning Gratuitous Chemical 

 Analysis. Pp. S. Strawberries, Raspberries, etc. 

 Pp. 20. Ohio : Report for 1894. Pp. 12 + xlii. 



Becker, George F. Reconnoissance of the 

 Gold Fields of the Southern Appalachians. Wash- 

 ington : Geological Survey. Pp. 85. 



Bolton, H. W., Editor. The Pulpit Herald. A 

 Monthly Magazine. Vol. I, No. 1. October, 

 1894. Chicago: F. W. Clement & Co. Pp. 40. 

 20 cents ; $2 a year. 



Baker, Frank Collins. The Naturalist in Mex- 

 ico. Chicago : David Oliphant. Pp. 145. 



Columbia College School of Mines. General 

 Information, 1895-'90. Pp. 28. 



Cornish, Vanghan. Practical P*roof8 of Chem- 

 ical Laws. London and New York : Longmans, 

 Green & Co. Pp. 92. 75 cents. 



Correspondence School of Technology, Cleve- 

 land, O. Announcement for 1895-'96. Pp. 59. 



Cramer, Frank. On the Cranial Characters of 

 the Genus Sebastodes (Rock Fish). Leland Stan- 

 ford, Jr., University, Palo Alto, Cal. Pp. 38. 35 

 cents. 



Crawford, P. Marion. Constantinople. Illus- 

 trated by E. L. Weeks. New York : Charles 

 Scribner's Sons. Pp. 79. $1.50. 



Defender, The. Tariff Facts for Speakers and 

 Students. New York : American Protective Tar- 

 iff League. Pp. 158. It) cents. 



Diller, J. S. Mount Shasta a Typical Volcano. 

 American Bcok Company. Pp. 32. 20 cents. 



Dreher. Julius D. Education in the South. 

 Some Difficulties and Encoiu-agements. Pp. 35. 



Eccles, A. Seymour. The Practice of Massage. 

 Its Physiological Effects and Therapeutic Uses. 

 London and New York : Macmillan & Co. Pp. 

 377. 



Bthnologisches Notizblatt (Ethnological No- 

 tices). Published under the Direction of the Royal 

 Museum fur VSlkerkunde of Berlin. No. 2. 

 Illustrated. Pp. 100, with Plates. 



Godard, Harlow. An Outline Study of United 

 States History Syracuse, N. Y.: C. W. Bardeen. 

 Pp. 146. 50 cents. 



Green, Mary B.,M.D. Food Products of the 

 World. Chicago : The Hotel World. Pp. 260. 

 $1.50. 



Guerber, H. A. Myths of Northern Lands- 

 American Book Company. Pp. 319. $1.50. 



Grimes, J. Stanley, Chicago. The Radiate 

 Theory of the Cause of Gravitation. Pp 9. 



Hale, E. M., M.D. Hydrostatic Heart Thera- 

 peutics. Chicago. Pp. 16. 



Holbrook, Dr. M. L. Physical, Intellectual, 

 and Moral Advantages of Chastity. New Yprk : 

 M. L. Holbrook & Co. London : L. N. Fowler 

 & Co. Pp. 120. $1. 



Iowa Geological Survey. Lemuel Calvin, State 

 Geologist. Third Annual Report, with accompa- 

 nying Papers. Dt s Moines. Pp. 407, with Maps. 



Jordan, David Starr, and others. The Fishes 

 of Sinaloa. Palo Alto, Cal. : Leland Stanford, Jr., 

 University. Pp. 48, with Plates. 



Lloyd, John Uri. Etidorhpa, or the End of 

 Earth. Cincinnati: John Uri Lloyd. Pp. 376. 



$4. 



Loudon, W. J., and McLennan, J. C. A. Labo- 

 ratory Course in Experimental Physics. New 

 York and London : Macmillan & Co. Pp. 302. 

 $1.00. 



MacDowall, Alex. B. Weather and Disease. 

 London : The Graphotone Company. Pp. 83. 



McClatchie, A. C. Flora of Pasadena and Vi- 

 cinity. Pp.44. 25 cents. 



Morley, Edward W. On the Densities of Oxy- 

 gen and Hydrogen, and on the Ratio of their 

 Atomic Weights. Smithsonian Institution. Pp. 

 117. 



New York Academy of Sciences. Transactions, 

 Vol. XIV, 1894-'95. J. F. Kemp, Recording Sec- 

 retary; and Catalogue of Exhibits, March 13, 1895. 

 Pp. 281. with 49 Plates + 54. 



Ostwald, Wilhelm. The Scientific Founda- 

 tions of Analytical Chemistry. Translated by 

 George McGowan. London and New York : 

 Macmillan & Co. Pp. 207. $1.60. 



Progress in School Reform. New York: Good 

 Govenmient Club "E," 145 East Eighth Street. 

 Pp. 53, with Tables. 



