LITERARY NOTICES. 



421 



Structures ; and two chapters on Hydraulics 

 constitute Part III. A list of examples fol- 

 lows each chapter, the total number being 

 over 250, and there are 377 diagrams in the 

 text. 



Under the title Cotton Facts, a compila- 

 tion of statistics is published by Alfred B. 

 Shepperson (New York), relating to the 

 crops, receipts, exports, stocks, home and for- 

 eign consumption, visible supply, prices and 

 acreage of cotton for a series of years, and 

 other related matters. The present edition 

 of the book continues to the close of the 

 cotton season of 1889-90 the statistics 

 contained in previous issues. Besides the 

 tables, there are several special articles in 

 the volume, one being on Cotton Culture in 

 Central Asia, by Henry G. Kittredge, editor 

 of the Journal of Commerce, Boston, and 

 others on the Cotton Caterpillar, and the 

 Cotton Season of 1889-'90. 



The purpose carried out in Christ and 

 Our Country, by Rev. John B. Robins 

 (Farnesworth Bros., Dalton, Ga., 75 cents), 

 is to combat some of the apprehensions ex- 

 pressed in Our Country, by Dr. Josiah 

 StroDg, and Modern Cities, by Samuel L. 

 Loomis. The author has strong hope that 

 Christianity will counteract the dangers that 

 these authors discern in immigration, in- 

 creasing wealth, Romanism, Mormonism, so- 

 cialism, city life, etc. 



A volume of satire in verse, entitled The 

 JDeviPs Visit, has just appeared, without the 

 author's name (Excelsior Publishing House, 

 $1). A marvelous variety of topics is touched 

 upon in this book, ranging from practical pol- 

 itics to the teaching of Greek, and from com- 

 munism to the deceptions of a woman's toilet. 

 Every reader will find the faults and follies 

 of many people he knows sharply touched 

 up, and, if he only succeeds in skipping the 

 part where his own weaknesses are similarly 

 treated, will doubtless get much enjoyment 

 from the volume. 



The American Patent System, by D. 

 Walter Brown (the' author, New York), is a 

 manual of direction and advice for inventors 

 in regard to obtaining patents, and in cor- 

 recting and transferring them. 



We have received from Brentano's a 

 fancifully got up volume entitled Gentle- 

 men, and divided into two parts, treating re- 



spectively of dress and " essential customs " 

 for gentlemen. From the former part we 

 learn that the monocle " is worn any time of 

 day," and in the latter we are informed 

 that no gentleman should ask for a lady's 

 picture " without first having met her at 

 least seven times." These quotations suffi- 

 ciently indicate the nature of the book. 

 (Price $1.50.) 



With its first number for the current 

 year, The Teacher began a new series, and 

 added several elements of strength to its al- 

 ready high character. Mrs. Mary Hargrove 

 Simpson remains the general editor, and now 

 has as associates the following well-known 

 educators : Louisa P. Hopkins, of Boston ; 

 Ellen E. Kenyon and Caroline B. Le Row, of 

 Brooklyn ; W. N. Hailmann, of La Porte, 

 Ind. ; B. A. Hinsdale, of Ann Arbor ; H. M. 

 Leipziger, of New York ; and C. M. Wood- 

 ward, of St. Louis. This journal has been 

 from the start an exponent of advanced 

 modern thought in the domain of education. 

 Its special purpose is to set forth the scien- 

 tific principles on which the art of teaching 

 is coming more and more to depend, and the 

 working out of which every teacher and 

 school officer must keep track of, if he 

 wishes to keep up with the progress of the 

 time in his profession. The departments of 

 The Teacher are Editorial and Miscellaneous, 

 Theory and Practice of Teaching, Corre- 

 spondence, Reviews, and Notes. Its articles 

 have the character expected in magazine ar- 

 ticles, and it may be questioned whether the 

 nature of the journal would not be better 

 indicated if it should adopt the magazine 

 form. (The Teacher Co., New York. $1 a 

 year.) 



PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED. 



Abbott, Francis A. The Scientific Method. Ap- 

 pletons. Pp. 27. 10 cents. 



Adler, Mrs. Helen. Scientific Observation and 

 Study of Children. New York : The Teacher Co. 

 Pp. 15. 



Agricultural Experiment Stations : Connecticut. 

 Bulletins on Cedar Apples. Pp. 6. Cornell Uni- 

 versity. Egg Plants. Pp. 26. Iowa Bulletin No. 

 12. Various Papers. Pp. 56. Massachusetts. An- 

 nual Report. Pp. 324. Mississippi. Injurious In- 

 sects. Pp. 41. Nebraska Sugar-Beet Series, No. II. 

 Pp. 98. New York. Laying Hens. Pp. 16; Coarse 

 Foods. Pp. 10. Storrs, Conn. Third Annual Re- 

 port. Pp. 200. 



American Chemical Society Journal. March. 

 Pp. 24. $5 a year. 



Aveling, Edward. Introduction to the Study of 

 Botany. Macmillan. Pp. 3G3. $1.10. 



Blaikie, James, and Thomson, W. A Text-book 



