42 + 



THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



author's first work will lead many readers 

 to look to the promised volume with no 

 little expectation. 



" The Outlines of Psychology, with Special 

 Reference to the Theory of Education," by 

 James Sully, now in the press of D. Apple- 

 ton & Co., is the kind of book that has 

 been long wanted by all who are engaged 

 in the business of teaching and desire to 

 master its principles. In the first place, it 

 is an elaborate treatise on the human mind, 

 of independent merit as representing the 

 latest and best work of all schools of psy- 

 chological inquiry. But of equal impor- 

 tance, and what will be prized as a new 

 and most desirable feature of a work on 

 mental science, is the educational applica- 

 tions that are made throughout in separate 

 text and type, so that, with the explication 

 of mental phenomena, there comes at once 

 the application to the art of education. 



One of the most fascinating popular sci- 

 entific books ever written is Dr. Charles C. 

 Abbott's " Rambles about Home," soon to 

 be issued by D. Appleton & Co. Readers of 

 the early volumes of " The Popular Science 

 Monthly " know how interesting Dr. Abbott's 

 sketches are, and this book will surely im- 

 pel many to spend their first leisure hours 

 in the country in watching the animal Ufe 

 about them. 



Professor John Trowbridge, of Har- 

 vard University, has written a text-book for 

 schools, which D. Appleton & Co. have in 

 preparation. It is entitled " The New Phys- 

 ics," and admirably carries out the prin- 

 ciples of the new education, in requiring 

 the pupil to become familiar with the prop- 

 erties of matter and the phenomena of force 

 by performing experiments for himself. 



A NEW series of science text-books, each 

 of which is the work of an able specialist, 

 is being brought out by D. Appleton & Co. 

 The " Physiology," by Roger S. Tracy, M. D., 

 Sanitary Inspector of the Xew York City 

 Health Department, and the "Chemistry," 

 by Professor F. W. Clarke, Chemist of the U. 

 S. Geological Survey, are now ready. Be- 

 fore September 1st will be issued the "Zo- 

 ology," by C. F. Holder, and J. B. Holder, 

 M. D., Curator of Zoology of the American 

 Museum of Natural History, New York ; 

 and the " Geology," a new elementary boo'n, 



by Professor Joseph Le Conte, of the Uni- 

 versity of California. Other volumes are to 

 follow soon. 



PUBLICATIONS EKCEIVED. 



Proceedings, etc , of the Chaut.auqua Society of 

 History and JJatuial Science. William W. Hender- 

 son, Secretary. Jamestown, N. Y. Pp. 11. 



The Glacial Period in the Chautauqua Lake 

 Region. By Hon. Obed Edsou. Jamestown. N. 

 Y. : Chautauqua Society of History and Katural 

 Science. Pp. 13. 



Massachusetts State Agiicultural Experiment 

 Station. Bulletins Ko. T, S, and 9. Insects injuri- 

 ous to the Apple; Fodder and Fodder Analysis; 

 Insects iujuiious to Farm and Garden Crops. Pp. 

 12 each. 



Exhibition of Education at the 'World's Indus- 

 trial and Cotton Centennial Exposition. Prelimina- 

 ry Cii-cular. ^^■ashington : Government Printing- 

 Office. Pp. 11. 



Transactions of the New York Academy of 

 Sciences. Index to Vol. II. Albert E. Leeds, 

 Cerresponding Secrctan,-, Iloboken, N. J. Pp. 13. 



Dictionar}- of the Action of Heat upon Certain 

 Metallic Salts. J. W. Bairdand Professor A. B. Pres- 

 cott. New York : Bermingham k, Co. Pp. C8. 



Eeports of Bivision of Entomology, U. S. De- 

 partment of Agriculture. Washington : Govern- 

 ment Printing-Office. Pp. 102. 



Samuel Adams, the Man of the Town-Meetingr. 

 By James K. Hosmer. Baltimore : N. Murray. 

 Pp. 60. Price, 85 cents. 



Physiographic Conditions of Minnesota Agri- 

 culture. By Professor C. W. HaU. Minneapolis, 

 Minn. Pp. 15. 



Zoological Society, Philadelphia. Twelfth Aflnual 

 Eeports. Pp 25, with Plates. 



The Bible an Exact Science. By Philip T. "West. 

 Topeka, Kansas : George W. Crane & Co. Pp. 66. 



Alabama Weather Ser\ice, AprU, 1SS4. By E. 

 n. Mills, Jr., Director, Auburn. Pp. 6, with Charts. 



The Exhalation of Ozone bv Flowering Plants. 

 By J, M. Anders, M. D., Ph. Dl Pp. 14. 



Remarks on the Bag-Worm, pp. 83 ; Notes on 

 North American PsyllidiB, pp. 12; Ciinker-Wonns, 

 pp. 82; The Army-Worm, pp. Cs. By C. V. Eiley, 

 Ph. D., Washington. 



Principal Characters of American Jurassic Dino- 

 saurs; Parts VII and VIII. Pp. 8 and 12, with 

 Plates. Frinci|ial Characters of American Creta- 

 ceous Pterodactyls ; Part I. Pp. 4, with Plate. A 

 New Order of 'Extinct Jurassic I!ei)tiles. P. 1. 

 By Professor O. C. Marsh, Yale College, New 

 Haven, Conn. 



A New Theology. By the Eev. Philip S. Moxoin. 

 Pp. 20. 



On the Classification of the Sciences. By H. M. 

 Stanley. London. Pp. 10. 



Wages and Trade in Manufacturing Industries 

 in America and in Europe. Bj' J. Schuenhof. New 

 York : G. P. Putnam's Sons. Pp. 25. 15 cents. 



Eeport of Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Depart- 

 ment, TJ. S., October-December, 1SS3. "Washing- 

 ton : Government PrintingOffice. Pp. 160. 



Geology' of the Lead and Zinc Mining District of 

 Cherokee County, Kansas. By Erasmus Haworth. 

 Oskaloosa. Iowa : Herald Printing Co. Pp. 47. 



" American IMeteorological Journal," May. 1SS4. 

 lyionthlv. M. W. Harrington, Editor. Detroit, 

 Mich. : "W. H. Burr & Co. Pp. 3'J. $3 a year. 



Fire-Proof Buildings with Wooden Beams and 

 Girders and Dolman's Dampers. New York : Will- 

 lam H. Dolman. Pp. 18. 



On a Carboniferous Ammonite from Texas. By 

 Professor Angelo Ueilprin, Philadelphia. Pp. 3. 



