UDorfcs tip tfjc ^amc SUutljor. 
THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO. The Land of the Orang- 
Utan and the Bird of Paradise. A Narrative of Travel, with 
Studies of Man and Nature With Maps and Illustrations. 
Third and cheaper edition. 12mo. $2.00. 
The result is a vivid picture of tropical life, which may he read with unflag¬ 
ging interest, and a sufficient amount of his scientific conclusions to stimulate 
our appetite without wearying us by detail. Indeed, we may safely say that 
we have never read a more agreeable book of its kind. — Saturday Hcvieiv. 
BAD TIMES. An Essay on the present Depression of Trade, 
tracing it to its source in enormous Foreign Loans, excessive 
War Expenditure, the increase of Speculation and of Million¬ 
aires, and the Depopulation of the Rural Districts. With sug¬ 
gested Remedies. I2mo. 75 cents. 
No intelligent reader of his book can fail to gain a better comprehension of 
the social problem of to-day, or fail to receive a certain inspiration from the sug¬ 
gestive treatment which Mr. Wallace has given to the subject. — Chicago Neivs. 
Scientific ItDorhsL 
NATURAL INHERITANCE. By Francis Gai.ton, F.R.S., 
author of “English Men of Science: their Nature and Nurture,” 
etc. 8vo. $2.50. 
BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 
ENGLISH MEN OF SCIENCE: their Nature and Nur¬ 
ture. 8vo. $3.00. 
INQUIRIES INTO HUMAN FACULTY AND ITS DE¬ 
VELOPMENT. With Illustrations and Plates. 8vo. $3.00. 
RECORD OF FAMILY FACULTIES. Consisting of Tabu¬ 
lar Forms and Directions for entering Data. 4to. DO cents. 
LIFE HISTORY ALBUM. Being a Personal Note-Book, a 
Register of Height, Weight, and other Anthropometrical Obser¬ 
vations, and a Record of Illnesses. 4to $1.25. 
GLEANINGS IN SCIENCE. A series of Popular Lectures on 
Scientific Subjects. By the Rev Gerald Molloy, D.I)., D.Sc., 
Rector of the Catholic University of Ireland, sometime Fellow 
of the Royal Society. With Illustrations 8vo. $2 25 
THE CIVILIZATION OF SWEDEN IN HEATHEN 
TIMES. By Oscar Montelius, Ph D. Translated from the 
Second Swedish Edition (revised and enlarged by the author), 
by Rev. F. II. Woods, B.D. With map and 205' Illustrations' 
8vo. $4.00. 
Although the book deals otdy with the progress of the early inhabitants of 
Sweden, it is not less interesting, as all archaeology tends to show that there 
has been a remarkably similar process of development, not only among Euro¬ 
pean peoples, but among all races of the world. Therefore the author’s clear 
and succinct account of the progress of this people will give the student a clear 
notion of the successive stages of civilization through which man has passed. 
Science. 
MACMILLAN & CO., NEW YORK. 
