134 



THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



Fiske, John. Civil Government In the United 

 States. Boston and New York : Houghton, Mifflin 

 & Co. Pp. 360. $1. 



Georgia, Department of Agriculture. Crop Re- 

 port. August 1, 1S90. Pp. 13. 



Gould, George M., M. D. The Relation of Eye- 

 Strain to General Medicine. Pp. 21. Philadelphia : 

 The Medical News. 



Griswold, W. M., Cambridge, Mass. Descriptive 

 List of Novels and Tales dealing with American 

 Country Life. 



Hale, Edwin M., M. D. Tachycardia Vaso-mo- 

 toria. Pp. 17. 



Harkness, Albert. An Easy Method for Begin- 

 ners in Latin. New York, etc. : American Book 

 Company. Pp. 34S. 



Hinds, J.I. D. "What? How? Why? Whither? 

 Nashville, Tenn.: Cumberland Presbyterian Pub- 

 lishing House. Pp. 51, with Blanks. 25 cents. 



Holyoake, George Jacob. What would follow 

 the Effacement of Christianity. Buffalo, N. Y. : H. 

 L. Green. Pp. 15. 10 cents. 



Indianapolis, City of. Report of the Board of 

 Health for 1889. J. N. Hurty. Pp. 24. 



IngersoIL Robert G. The Gods. Buffalo, N. Y. : 

 H. L. Green. Pp. 40. 20 cents. 



Iowa State Board of Health. Monthly Bulletin. 

 August, 1890. Pp. 16. 



James, William. The Principles of Psychology. 

 New York : Henry Holt &, Co. 2 volumes, l'p. 

 639 and 704. 



Kansas Experiment Station, Manhattan. Report 

 of the Botanical Department for 1839. Pp. 150. 



'Leffmann, Henry, and Beam, William. Progres- 

 sive Exercises in Practical Chemistry. Philadel- 

 phia : P. Blakistun, Son As Co. Pp. 104. 



Macfarlane, James. An American Geological 

 Railway Guide. Second edition. New York : D. 

 Appleton & Co. Pp. 426. $2.50. 



Marcou, J. Belknap. Bibliography of North 

 American Paleontology for 18S6. Washington : 

 Smithsonian Institution. Pp. 56. 



Mays, Thomas J., M D., Philadelphia. Address 

 in Hygiene. Pp. 13. 



Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Pros- 

 pectus of Art Schools for 1890-'91. Pp. 6. 



Mills, Wesley. A Text-book of Comparative 

 Physiology. Newlork: D. Appleton & Co. Pp. 

 636. $3. 



Minnesota, Public Health in. August, 1890. Red 

 Wing. Monthly. Pp.12. 50 cents a year. 



Nadaillac, Marquis de. Prehistoric America. 

 New York : G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp. 566. $2.-5. 



New York Agricultural Experiment Station. 

 Comparative Test of Cows, etc. Pp. 30. 



Northam, Henry C. A Manual of Civil Gov- 

 ernment. Missouri Edition. Syracuse, N. Y. : C. 

 W. Bardeen. Pp. 151. 



Oliver, Charles A., M. D., Philadelphia. Analy- 

 sis of Symptoms of General Paresis. Pp. 6. De- 

 scription of Tests for Color-blindness. Pp. 8. 



Ostwald, Wilhelm. Outlines of General Chemis- 

 try. London and New York : Macmillan &. Co. 

 Pp. 396. $3.50 net. 



Pentecost, Hugh O. Evolution and Social Re- 

 form. The Anarchistic Method. Boston : James 

 H. West. Pp. 16. 10 cents. 



Potts. William. Evolution and Social Reform. 

 The Socialistic Method. Boston : James H. West. 

 Pp. 16. 10 cents. 



Preble, Henry, and Parker, Charles P. Hand- 

 book of Latin Writing. Boston: Ginn & Co. Pp. 

 109. 55 cents. 



Pringle, Allen, Selby, Ontario. Foul Brood 

 among Bees. Pp. 30. 



Prudd-n, T. Mitchell, M. D. Dust and its Dan- 

 gers. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp. 111. 

 75 cents. 



Randall-Diehl, Mrs. Anna. A Practical Delsarte 

 Primer. Syracuse, N. Y. : C. W. Bardeen. Pp. 

 66. 



Redway, Jacques W. The Physical Geography 

 of the Mississippi River. Philadelphia. Pp.81. 



Schweinitz, E. A. V., Washington. Ptomaines 

 of Hog Cholera. Pp. 6. 



Storrs School Agricultural Experiment Station, 

 Storrs, Conn. Bulletin, August, 1890. Grass, For- 

 age Garden, and Legumes. Pp. 16. 



Thompson, Daniel Greenleaf. Evolution and 

 Social Reform. The Scientific Method. Boston : 

 James H. West. Pp. 16. 10 cents. 



United States National Museum, Washington. 

 Index to Proceedings. Vol. XII, 1889. Papers by 

 Alien Harrison on A New Species of Bat (Alapha 

 Semota). Pp. 3. A. K. Fisber. Occurrence of a 

 Young Crab-eater (Elecate Canada) in the Hudson 

 River Valley. P. 1. Gill, Theodore. Osteological 

 Characteristics of the Family Mursenosocidie. Pp. 

 4; do. of Anguillidae. Pp. 4; do. of Synaphobran- 

 chidse. Pp. 4; do. of Mursenida?. Pp. 6. Holm, 

 Theodore. Leaves of Liriodendron. Pp. 16, with 

 Six Plates. Proudflt. S. V. Stone Implements 

 from the District of Columbia. Pp. 10, with Five 

 Plates. Smith. Hugh M. Disappearance of the 

 Dick Cissel (Spiza Americana) from the District of 

 Columbia. Pp. 2. Smith, John B. Revision of 

 the Species Agrotis (Lepidoptera, Noetuidse). Pp. 

 220, with Plates.- Stearns, Robert E. C. New West 

 American Land, Fresh-water, and Marine Shells. 

 Pp. 20, with Two Plates Stejneger. Leonhard. 

 North American Lizards of the Genus Barissia. Pp. 

 8. New Genus and Species of Columbine Snakes. 

 Pp. 4 Snakes of the Genus Charina. Pp. 6. 

 Townsend, Charles H. Reptiles from Islands and 

 Gulf of California. Pp. 2. Birds from Coasts and 

 Islands of Western America. Pp. 12. True. Fred- 

 erick W. Life History of the Bottle-nose Porpoise. 

 Pp. 70. Two New Species of Mammals from Mount 

 Kilima-niaro. Pp. 8. Vasey, Dr. George, and Rose, 

 J. N. Plants collected in 18S9 at Socorro and Clar- 

 ion Islands, Pacific Ocean. Pp. 5. 



Wagner Free Institute of Science, Philadelphia. 

 Transactions. Vol. III. Pp. 200. 



Weeden, William B. Economic and Social His- 

 tory of New England. 1620-1789. Boston and New 

 York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 2 volumes. Pp. 

 964. 



Wiechmann, Ferdinand G. Sugar Analysis. 

 New York: John Wiley & Sons. Pp. 187. $2.50. 



POPULAR MISCELLANY. 



Folk-Lore. The American Folk-Lore So- 

 ciety will hold its annual meeting in New 

 York city, on November 28th and 29th, these 

 dates being the Friday and Saturday follow- 

 ing Thanksgiving-day. The sessions will be 

 held at Columbia College, Madison Avenue 

 and Forty-ninth Street. The Philadelphia 

 meeting held last year was signalized by 

 large attendance and the formation of a lo- 

 cal chapter of the national society which has 

 held meetings monthly throughout the win- 

 ter. Folk-lore has been defined as the col- 

 lective sum of the knowledge, beliefs, sto- 

 ries, customs, manners, dialects, expressions, 

 and usages of a community which arc peculiar 

 to itself, and which, taken together, constitute 

 its individuality when compared with other 

 communities. Folk-lore has been placed on 



