564 



POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



The author of What is This* after a 

 brief discussion of the personality of 

 Jesus and the present degenerate condi- 

 tion of Christianity, goes on to say: "We 

 must liave another revelation, therefore. 

 It seems to be a necessity. But what 

 troubles me is this: can it be possible 

 that any part of this revelation can come 

 through one as humble as myself? 

 AVhat have I seen and what have I 

 heard? ... I have often pondered the 



great questions of man's origin and fu- 

 ture; never until now, never until I heard 

 this voice, have I had any glimmer of a 

 solution of this great puzzle. I know 

 I am nothing, but can not the Supreme 

 Being use a mere nothing to accomplish 

 his purpose? " Notwithstanding the au- 

 thor's avowed unworthiness, he seems 

 to have been selected, and we have from 

 his pen a new and considerably detailed 

 book of genesis. 



PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED. 



Acet.vlene Gas Journal. Monthly. Vol. 



I, No. 1. June, 1899. Buffalo, N. Y. Pp. 

 12. • 5 cents. 50 eeuts a year. 



Agricultural Experiment Stations. Bul- 

 letins and Reports. Delaware College: No. 

 4.3. Veterinary Studies, Milk Legislation, 

 and Basic Slag as a Fertilizer.— Michigan 

 State Agricultural College. No. 169. Notes 

 from the South Haven Sub-Station. By 

 L. U. Taft aud T. T. Lyon. Pp. 108; Nos. 

 170, 171. Vegetable Tests and Bush Fruits. 

 Pp. 42; Nos. 172, 173. Combating Disease- 

 producing Germs and Killing the Tubercle 

 Bacillus in Milk. Four authors. Pp. 30.— 

 Montana: No. 18. The Alkali Soils of Mon- 

 tana. Preliminary Bulletin. Pp. 30. — 

 United States Department of Agriculture: 

 No. 24. Proceedings of the Convention of 

 Weather-Bureau Officials, held at Omaha, 

 Neb., October 13 and 14, 1898. Pp. 184, 

 with plate. 



Anglo-American Magazine. Monthly. 

 May and June, 1899. Pp. 120 and 128. 25 

 cents. $2.50 a year. 



Blackman, William F. The Making of 

 Hawaii. A Study in Social Evolution. 

 New York: The Macmillan Company. Pp. 

 266. $2. 



Breese, B. B. On Inhibition. (Mono- 

 graph Supplement to the Psychological Re- 

 view.) New York: The Macmillan Com- 

 pany. Pp. 65. 



Bulletins, Reports, Transactions, etc. 

 Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadel- 

 phia, 1899. Part I. January, February, 

 and March. I'p. 216, with plates.— Ameri- 

 can Society of Naturalists: Records. Vol. 



II, Part IV. Providence, R. I. Pp. 36.— New 

 York Academy of Sciences: Annals. Vol. 

 XII, I'art I. Pp. 89.— New York State Re- 

 formatory, Elmira: Year-Book for 1898. 

 Pp. 126.— Soci6t6 Royale de Canada: Re- 

 port of the Geographical Society of Que- 

 l)ec. I'p. 2.— United States Department of 

 Labor: Bulletin No. 22. May, 1899. Pp. 

 42.— University of Tennessee: Record, Re- 

 view of 1898. Knoxville, Tenn. Pp. 56.— 

 Wyoming State Medical Society: Transac- 

 tions. May and June, 1899, E. Stuver, 

 Secretary. Pp. 75.— Zoological Society of 

 Philadelphia: Twenty-seventh Annual Re- 

 port of the Board of Directors. Pp. 25. 



Cragln, Belle S. Our Insect Friends 

 and Foes. New York: G. P. Putnam's 

 Sons. Pp. 377. $1.75. 



Dana, Charles A. Recollections of the 

 Civil War. New York: D. Appleton aud 

 Company. Pp. 296. $2. 



Davis, Lucius D. Ornamental Shrubs 

 for Garden, Lawn, and Park Planting. 

 New York: G. P. I'utuam's Sous. Pp. 338. 

 $3.50. 



Dexter, E. G. Conduct and the Weather. 

 (Monograph Supplement of the Psychologi- 

 cal Review.) New York: The Macmillan 

 Company. Pp. 101. $1. 



Erlingsson, Dr. Thorstein. Ruins of the 

 Saga Time. (Travels and Explorations in 

 Iceland.) London: David Nutt. Pp. 112, 

 with map. 



Fergusen, James. A New System of 

 Natural Philosophy. Book I. The Phys- 

 ical Universe. Published by the Author at 

 Talmage, Neb. Pp. 240. 



Field Columbian Museum, Chicago. 

 Publication No. 30. New Rodents from the 

 Olympic Mountains. By D. G. Elliot. Pp. 

 4.— No. 31. Cold-Blooded Vertebrates from 

 the Olympic Mouutaius. By S. E. Meek. Pp. 

 10.- No. 32. Catalogue of Mammals from 

 the Olympic Mountains, Washington. By 

 D. G. Elliot. Pp. 36, with plates.— No. 33. 

 The Ores of Colombia. By H. W. Nichols. 

 Pp. 56, with maps.— No. 34. The Myla- 

 gaulidse. An Extinct Family of Sciuro- 

 morph Rodents. By E. S. Riggs. Pp. 8.— 

 No. 35. A Fossil Egg from South Dakota. 

 By A. C. Farringtou. Pp. 8, with plates.— 

 No. .36. Contributions to the Paleontology 

 of the Upper Cretaceous Series. By W. N. 

 Logan. Pp. 16, with plates.— No. 37. Mam- 

 mals from Oklahoma Territory. By D. G. 

 Elliot. Pp. 4.— No. 38. Mammals from the 

 Indian Territory. By D. G. Elliot. Pp. 8. 



Ileilprin, Angelo. Alaska and the Klon- 

 dike. New York: D. Appleton and Com- 

 pany. Pp. 315. 



Hrdlicka, Dr. Ales. Anthropological In- 

 vestigations of Children in the New York 

 Juvenile Asylum. Pp. 86, with plates. 



Irish, Cyrus W. Qualitative Analysis 

 for Secondary Schools. American Book 

 Company. I'p. 100. 



James, Charles C. Practical Agricul- 

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 pany. I'p. 203. 80 cents. 



Jordan, David Starr. Imperial Democ- 

 racy. New York: D. Appleton and Com- 

 pany. Pp. 293. $1.50. 



Jordan, David Starr, Leonhard Stej- 

 ueger, and other (Mllcial Associates. The 

 Fur Seals and Fur-Seal Islands of the 

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 ton: Government Printing Office. Pp. 384, 

 with maps and plates. 



Keane, A. II. Man Past and Present. 

 Cambridge. England; New York: The Mac- 

 millan Company. I'p. 584. $3. 



Lavignac, Albert. Music and Musicians. 

 New York: Henry Holt & Co. Pp.504. $3. 



Miller, Olive Thorne. The First Book 

 of Birds. Boston and New York: Hough- 

 ton, Mifflin & Co. Pp. 149. 



