P OP ULAR MIS CELL ANY. 



713 



Circular of Bureau of Education on Shorthand. 

 Wasiiing-ton : Govornment Friutiug-Otlice. Pp. 

 15a, with Plates. 



Illiteracy in the United States, by Charles 

 Warren, M. D. ; and National .Aid to Education, 

 by J. L. M. Curry, LL. L>. U. S. Bureau of Edu- 

 cation. Pp. y9. 



Mississippi State Board of Health. Biennial 

 Eeport, 16s-.'-'83. Jackson, Miss. Pp. 204. 



Hillocks of Angiilar Gravel and Disturbed Strati- 

 fication. By T. C. Chamberlain. Pp. 1-1. 



Report on the Cotton Production of the State of 

 Florida. By Eugene Allen Smith, Ph. t). Tusca- 

 loosa, Ala. Pp. 77, with Maps. 



Eep'jrt on the Cotton Production of the State of 

 Alabama. By Eugene Allen Smith, Ph. D. Tus- 

 caloosa. Pp. 163, with Maps. 



Diccionario Tecnologico (Technological Diction- 

 ary). Spanish and English. No. 7. New York : 

 Ne.'tor Ponce de Leon. Pp. 4S. 50 cents. 



Temperature of the Atmosphere and Earth's 

 Surfiice. By Professor William Ferrel. Washing- 

 ton : Government Printing-OlSce. Pp. G9. 



Notes on the Opium Habit. By Asa P. Mey- 

 lert, M. D. New York: G. P. Putnam'8 Sons. 

 Pp. 37. 40 cents. 



The University: What it should do and be. By 

 8. M. Clark. University of Iowa, Iowa City. Pp. 



The Science of Justice, etc. Bv Lysander Spoon- 

 er. Boston : Cupples, Upham & Co. Pp. 22. 



The Revelations of Fibrin. By Eollin R. Gregg, 

 jr. D. Buflfalo, N. Y. Pp. 7. 



Theories of Color-Perception. By Swan M. 

 Burnett, M. D. Wa.shington, D. C. Pp. 25. 



Premiere Application k Paris de I'Assainisse- 

 ment suivant le Systdme Waring (First Application 

 in Paris of Waring's System of Sanitation). By Er- 1 

 nest Pontzen. Paris. Pp. 2-2, with Plates. 



Geological and Natural Historv Survey of Min- 1 

 nesota, 1SS2. Bv N. H. Winchell. Minneapolis. 

 Pp. 220, with Maps. 



University of Minnesota. Calendar for lS83-'84. 

 Pp. 12s. 



Contributions to the Flora of Cincinnati. By 

 Joseph F. James. Pp. 14. 



The Minnesota Valley in the Ice Age. Pp.16; 

 Changes in the Currents of the Ice of tiie Last Gla- 

 cial Epoch in Eastern Minnesota. Pp. 4. By War- 

 ren Upham. Salem Press, Salem, Mass. 



Neglect of Bodilv Development of American 

 Youth. By A. Ri-inhard. Syracuse, N. Y'. : C. 

 AV. Bardeen. Pp. 16. 



The Bearing of certiin Determinations on the 

 Correlation of Eastern and Western Terminal Mo- 

 raines. By Professor T. 0. Chamberlain. Pp. 5. 



Property in Land. A Passage-.at-Arms between 

 the Duke of .Argyll and Henry George. New York : 

 Funk & Wagnalls. Pp. 77. 15 cents. 



To Mexico by Palace-Car. By James W. Steele. 

 Chicago : Jansen, McClurg & Co. Pp. 96. 25 cents. 



White Elephant Chimes. Selected by P T Bar- 

 num. Buflfalo, N. Y. : Courier Office. Pp.51. 



" Catholic " ; An Essential and E.xclusive Attri- 

 bute of the True Church. By Right Rev. Monsignor 

 Capel, D. D. New York : Wilcox & O'Donnel Com- 

 pany, and D. & J. Sadlier. Pp. 140. 60 cents. 



Modern Reproductive Graphic Processes. By 

 James 3. Pettit. New York : D. Tan Nostrand. 

 Pp. 127. 50 cents. 



Recent Progress in Dynamo-Electric Machines. 

 By Professor Sylvanns P! Thompson. New Y'ork : 

 D. Van Nostrand. Pp. U.S. 50 cents. 



Stadia Surveying. By Arthur Winslow. New 

 York : D. Van Nostrand. Pp. 14S. 50 cents. 



Lessons in Chemistry. By Wilham H. Greene, 

 M. D. Philadelphia : J. B. Lipplncott & Co. Pn, 

 857. $1.25. 



South Carolina : Resources .and Population ; Tn- 

 .stitutious and Industries. Published by the State 

 Board of Agriculture. Coluaibia. Pp.726. 



Systematic Mineral Record. By Edward M. 

 Shepard. New Y'ork and Chicago : A. 8. Barnes & 

 Co. Pp. 26. 



The Principles of Ventilation and Heating. By 

 John 8. BlDings, LL. 1>. New York : " The Sani- 

 tary Engineer." Pp. 216. ijgS. 



Commentaries on Law. By Francis Wharton, 

 LL. D. Philadelphia : Kay & Brother. Pp. ^56. 



The Book of Plant Descriptions and Record of 

 Plant Analysis. By George 0. GrolF, M. D. Lewis- 

 burg, Pa. : Science and Health Publishing Com- 

 pany. Pp. lOu. SO cents. 



Forestry in Noi'way. By John Croumbie Brown, 

 LL. D. Edinburgh : Oliver & Boyd ; Montreal : 

 Dawson Brothers. Pp. 227. 



POPULAR MISCELLANY. 



Instmction of tlic Deaf. — Mr. Alexander 

 Graham Bell addi-essed the Philosophical 

 Society of Washington at one of its recent 

 meetings on the subject of " Fallacies con- 

 cerning the Deaf, and the Influence of those 

 Fallacies in preventing the Amelioration of 

 their Condition." He condemned the com- 

 mon phrases " deaf and dumb " and '" deaf- 

 mutes," as expressing what is not true ; 

 showing that those whom we term " deaf- 

 mutes " have no other natural defect than 

 that of hearing, and that they are dumb not 

 on account of lack of hearing, but of lack 

 of instruction. No one teaches them to 

 speak. The gesture- language which such a 

 child may use is developed by him at home, 

 not because it is the only form of language 

 natural to one in his condition, but because 

 his parents and friends neglect to use the 

 English language in his presence in a clearly 

 visible form. The sign-language of our in- 

 stitutions is objected to as an artificial and 

 conventional language, so far from being 

 natural that it is not understood by deaf 

 children on their entrance to an institution, 

 and hearing persons can not be qualified to 

 teach it till after many years. Practice in 

 it hinders the acquisition of the English lan- 

 guage ; makes the deaf associate together 

 in adult life, and avoid the society of hear- 

 ing people ; and thus causes the intermar- 

 riage of the deaf and the propagation of 

 their physical defect. Dr. Bell holds that 

 written English can be taught to deaf chil- 

 dren so as to become their vernacular, and 

 that, when they have been made familiar 

 with it in cither its written or spoken form, 

 they can be taught to understand the utter- 



