276 



THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



dom. The writer places a high estimate on 

 the value of the Federal Union, but thinks 

 it would be worth more if it cost less. While 

 its benefits are inexpensive, its abuses are 

 costly. Free trade between the States, which 

 Mr. Barnett thinks the chief advantage of the 

 Federal Union, costs nothing ; while " pro- 

 tection" is more expensive than the govern- 

 ment itself. The tax policy of the Federal 

 Government, carried on by protection, he de- 

 clares to be bad in theory and even worse 

 in practice; and that few, of even public 

 men, have the faintest conception of how 

 bad it is. Mr. Barnett proclaims a very 

 important truth when he says that " nothing 

 short of a quantitative study of its imposi- 

 tions can properly expose them ; the pretty 

 fallacies of protection melt like wax in the 

 fire of quantitative analysis." The treat- 

 ment of the several topics is rather suggest- 

 ive than systematic, but the pages are full 

 of telling facts, and many hard blows are 

 dealt upon the system of organized corrup- 

 tion which shelters itself under the false 

 pretense of protection. 



" The Kansas City Review of Science and 

 . Industry." Edited by Theodore S. Case. 



Kansas City, Mo. : Monthly, 04 pp. Price, 



$2.50 a year. 



With its May number this magazine be- 

 gins its eighth year. The "Review" is 

 doing an excellent work in stimulating an 

 interest in science in the rapidly growing 

 country west of the Mississippi. But very 

 few of its articles are solely of local inter- 

 est ; a wide range of sciences is represented 

 in its pages, while manufactures and the 

 arts based upon science, including educa- 

 tion, are by no means neglected. 



" The Canadian Record of Natural His- 

 tory AND Geology, with Proceedings 

 OF the Natural History Society of 

 Montreal." Vol. I, No. 1. J. T. Don- 

 ALD, M. A., Editor. Montreal, January, 

 1884. 



This magazine takes the place of " The 

 Canadian Naturalist," until last June pub- 

 lished for the above-named society by the 

 Messrs. Dawson Brothers, The " Record " is 

 to be published quarterly, and, in addition to 

 the society's proceedings, will contain origi- 

 nal papers on scientific subjects by Cana- 

 dians, and reprints of scientific papers of 

 merit published elsewhere, which deal with 



Canadian subjects. The first number con- 

 tains a report of the second annual meeting 

 of the Royal Society of Canada, held at 

 Ottawa in May, 1883; two short papers on 

 geological subjects, by Principal J. W. 

 Dawson ; and an extended account of " The 

 Athabasca District of the Canadian North- 

 west Territory," by the Rev. Emile Petitot. 

 There are also three short papers by the 

 editor, and part of a memorial address on 

 the late James Richardson. 



A Text-Book of Inorganic Chemistry. By 

 Professor Victor von Richter, Univer- 

 sity of Breslau. Translated by Edgar F. 

 Smith, A. M., Ph. D. Philadelphia: P. 

 Blakiston, Son & Co. Pp.424. Price, $2. 

 Professor von Richter's treatment of 

 his subject is characterized by an effort to 

 show how the possession of a few facts leads 

 to the formation of scientific theories, and the 

 theories in turn show the investigator where 

 to look for new facts. " The Periodic System 

 of the Elements," or " MendelejefiE's Table," 

 is made the basis of the work, and con- 

 siderable attention is given to thermo-chem- 

 ical phenomena, the periodicity of which is 

 brought prominently forward. There is a 

 short chapter on " Crystallography," with 

 diagrams, and one on " Spectrum Analysis.' 

 The volume is illustrated with a colored plate 

 of spectra, and eighty-nine woodcuts. 



PUBLICATIONS EECEIVED. 



The Past and the Present of Political Kconomy. 

 By Pvichard T. Ely, Ph. L>. Baltimore : N. Murray. 

 Pp. 64. 



" The Journal of Physiology." Vol. V, No. 1. 

 Edited by Michael Foster, M. D. Baltimore : N. 

 Murray. Pp. xii-4S4. $5 a year. 



An Investigation locatin<r the Strongest of the 

 Bronzes. By W. H. Ernest H. Jobbirs, M. E. Pp. 

 43. 



Aneurism of the Femoral Artery, and "a Knife- 

 Wound of the Intestines. By W. O. Koberts, M. D. 

 Louisville, Ky. Pp. 11. 



Esploraziono di un Shell-mound Indiano presso 

 Nueva Orleans, Luisiana. (Exploration of a t«hell- 

 Mound near New Orleans, La.) By P. W. Shufeldt, 

 U. S. Army. Florence, Italy. Pp. 11. 



Studies from the Biological Laboratory of Johns 

 Hopkins University. H. Newell Martin. D. Sc.hnd 

 W. K. Brooks, Ph. D., Editors. Baltimore : N. 

 Murray. Pp. 4S, with Six Plates. 70 cents. 



The Glaci.1l Boundary in Ohio. Indiana, and 

 Kentucky. By Professor G. Frederick Wright. 

 Cleveland, Ohio: "Western Eeserve Historical So- 

 ciety. Pp. 86. 



The Determination of the Flashing Point of Pe- 

 troleum. By John T. Stoddard. Pp.6. 



What and Why. By Ch.irles E Pratt. Boston: 

 Pope Manufacturing Company. Pp. 72. 



The Mormon Question. By J. "W. Stillman. 

 Boston : J. P. Mendum. Pp. 40. 



