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425 



"Home Science," May, 1884. Monthly. New 



Tork : teldea R. Ilopkius. Pp. ll'i. $i;.00 a year. 



Report on the Cotton Production of Georpia. 



By E. H. Louffhridge, Ph. D., Berkeley, Cal. Pp. 



Ii4, with Litholog-ieal Maps. 



Eeeent Improvements in Astronomical Instru- 

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Coefficients for correcting Planetary Elements. 

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 Planetary Observations. Pp. iiO. Development of 

 the Perturbative Function. Pp. 200. Washing- 

 ton : Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department. 



Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and 

 Ethnology. Si.^Jteenth and Seventeenth Annual 

 Reports. Vol. Ill, N08. 8 and 4. Cambridge, 

 Mass. Pp. 284. 



Archa!oloffic.il Institute of America. Reports 

 ISS-S-'Si. Cambridge : John Wilson & Son. Pp. 

 118. 



Geological History of L.^ke Lahontan, Nevada. 

 By Israel Cook Russell. Washington : Govern- 

 ment Printing-office. Pp. 40. 



Synopsis of the Fishe.3 of North America. (Bul- 

 letin'U. S. National Museum.) By David 8. Jordan 

 and Charles H. Gilbert. WashUigton : Government 

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Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Kobalt-, Nickel- und 

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Beitrage zur Anatomic Aneylus fluviatalis (O. F. 

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 butions to the Anatomy of Aneylus, etc.). By Dr. 

 Benjamin Sharp, of Philadelphia. Wurzburg, Ger- 

 many. 



Medicinisch-Chirurgisches Corrospondenz-Blatt 

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Whirlwinds, Cyclones, and Tornadoes. By Will- 

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The Book of the Beginnings. By E. Hehor 

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 811. 40 cents. 



Geological Excursions. By Alexander Winehell, 



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Warren Colburn's First Lessons (in Arithmetic). 



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Lecture Notes on General Chemistry. By John 

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Truths and Untruths of Evolution. By John B. 

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POPULAR MISCELLANY. 



The Coming International Electrieal Ex- 

 hibition, — The Franklin Institute is mak- 

 ing arrangements for the most complete 

 representation of electrical appliances at the 

 International Electrical Exhibition, which is 

 to be held under its auspices in Philadel- 

 phia, from September 2d to October 11th. 

 A place is provided on its programme for 

 every kind of apparatus and application of 

 electricity, with the items so grouped and 

 arranged as to make prominent the sig- 

 nificance and value of each. Much inter- 

 est is attached to the historical collection of 

 all first and original electrical apparatus, 

 which will form a special department, and 

 which the committee are endeavoring to 

 make as complete as possible. A " Memo- 

 rial Library " is also to be secured, of all 

 publications in any way pertaining to elec- 

 trical science up to the date of the exhibi- 

 tion — to include not only books, but also 

 papers, reprints of articles, and notes on or 

 relating to electricity. 



Deprived of the Pleasnrcs of Taste. 



— A writer in the " Cornhili Magazine" 

 says of Harriet Martineau that "she had 

 no sense of taste whatever. 'Once,' she 

 told me with a smile, when I was express- 

 ing my pity for this deprivation of hers, ' I 

 tasted a leg of mutton, and it was delicious. 

 I was going out, as it happened, that day, 

 to dine with Mr. Marshall at Coniston, and 

 I am ashamed to say that I looked forward 

 to the pleasures of the table with consider- 

 able eagerness ; but nothing came of it, the 

 gift was withdrawn as suddenly as it came.' 

 The sense of smell was also denied her, as 

 it was to AVordsworth ; in his case, too, 

 curiously enough, it was vouchsafed to him, 

 she told me, upon one occasion only. ' He 

 once smelled a bean-field and thought it 

 heaven.' It has often struck me that this 

 deprivation of those external senses (for 

 she lost her hearing very early) may have 

 had considerable influence in forming Miss 

 Martineau's mental characteristics ; but if it 

 turned her attention to studies more or less 

 abstruse, and which are seldom pursued by 

 those of her own sex, it certainly never 

 ' hardened ' her." 



