BOOKS RECEIVED 169 



sity, New York. Third Edition. London: G. Bell & Sons, 1918. (Pp. 

 xiv + 925.) Price 8s. 6d. net. 



A Laboratory Outline of College Chemistry. By Alexander Smith, Professor of 

 Chemistry and Head of the Department, Columbia University. London : 

 G. Bell & Sons, 191 8. (Pp. v + 206.) Price 3^. net. 



This is intended for use either with Prof. Smith's " Introduction to In- 

 organic Chemistry," or his " General Chemistry for Colleges," the three 

 volumes forming an excellent working library for the chemical student. 

 Cross references to the three volumes are given, and the book should prove 

 of great value to those teaching or learning inorganic chemistry. 



Lectures in the Principle of Symmetry and its Applications in all Natural 

 Sciences. By F. M. Jaeger, Ph.D., Professor of Inorganic and Physical 

 Chemistry in the University of Groningen, Holland. Amsterdam : Publish- 

 ing Company " Elservier," 1917. (Pp. xii + 33, with 170 diagrams.) 



What Industry owes to Chemical Science. By Richard B. Pilcher, Registrar and 

 Secretary of the Institute of Chemistry of Great Britain and Ireland, and 

 Frank Butler Jones, B.A. (Cantab.), A.I.C., Assistant, Laboratory of the 

 Department of Explosive Supplies, Ministry of Munitions. With an Intro- 

 duction by Sir George Beilby, LL.D., F.R.S., Past President of the Institute 

 of Chemistry and of the Society of Chemical Industry. London: Constable 

 & Co., 10, Orange Street, Leicester Square, W.C., 1918. (Pp. xiv + 150.) 

 Price 3-r. net. 



Cellulose. An Outline of the Chemistry of the Structural Elements of Plants 

 with reference to their Natural History and Industrial Uses. By Cross & 

 Bevan (C. F. Cross, E. J. Bevan, and C. Beadle). New Impression with a 

 Supplement. London : Longmans, Green & Co., 39, Paternoster Row, and 

 New York, Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras, 1918. (Pp. xviii + 348.) Price 

 14s. net. 



This is a new impression of the 1916 edition, with a Supplementary Chapter 

 dealing with the more important developments in the theory and applications 

 of the subject during the last two years. 



Organic Compounds of Arsenic and Antimony. By Gilbert T. Morgan, D.Sc, 

 F.R.S., F.I.C., M.R.I.A., A.R.C.Sc, Professor of Applied Chemistry, City 

 and Guilds Technical College, Finsbury, formerly Professor in the Faculty 

 of Applied Chemistry, Royal College of Science for Ireland, and Assistant 

 Professor in the Imperial College of Science and Technology ; Corresponding 

 Member of the Royal Dublin Society. London : Longmans, Green & Co., 

 39, Paternoster Row, and New York, Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras, 1918. 

 (Pp. xx + 376.) Price 16s. net. 



The Manufacture! of Intermediate Products for Dyes. By John Cannell Cain, 

 D.Sc. (Manchester), Editor of the Journal of the Chemical Society, Ex- 

 aminer in Coal-Tar Colouring Matters to the City and Guilds of London 

 Institute ; late Member of the Technical Committee of British Dyes, Ltd., 

 and Chief Chemist of the Dalton Works, Huddersfield. London : Macmillan 

 & Co., St. Martin's Street. (Pp. xi + 263.) Price \os. net. 



Edible Oils and Fats. By C. Ainsworth Mitchell, B.A, F.I.C. London : Long- 

 mans, Green & Co., 39, Paternoster Row, E.C., and New York, Calcutta, and 

 Madras, 1918. (Pp. xii + 160.) Price 6s. 6d. net. 



