LITERARY NOTICES. 



419 



value of the lectures is given in a request 

 which was made by the editor of the " Sani- 

 tary Record," London, for permission to re- 

 publish them. 



The principal aim of Mr. Gerhard's book 

 is to instruct the householder respecting 

 the main features of a sanitary house-in- 

 spection, particularly in the matter of search- 

 ing for defects in the arrangements. First 

 is considered the inspection of city houses 

 as to their surroundings and soil, the cellar, 

 yard, structural details, sewerage and plumb- 

 ing, water-supply, method of garbage dis- 

 posal, arrangements for warming, gas-light- 

 ing, ventilation, for exclusion of bad odors, 

 prevention of dust, and for safety against 

 fire ; next, are articles on apartment-houses 

 and tenement -houses, on country-houses, 

 which, like city-houses, are treated in de- 

 tail, and on summer boarding-houses and 

 summer resorts. 



Marvels of Animal Life. By Charlks 

 Frederick IIoLDER. New York: Charles 

 Scribucr's Sons. Pp. 240, with Plates. 

 Price, §2. 



The aim of this inviting volume is to 

 interest youth in natural history by point- 

 ing out the attractive side and so presenting 

 its interesting features that they will go out 

 and become investigators for themselves. It 

 relates wholly to marine life. Many of the 

 observations chronicled in it, the author says, 

 " were made during a long residence upon 

 a coral reef or atoll, some while swimming 

 under water along the bristling coral banks 

 that formed a characteristic feature of our 

 tropical home, and others are the memories 

 of many practical collecting tours in vari- 

 ous localities." The author displays much 

 talent in presenting the brighter sides of 

 his pictures. 



Rudder Grange. By Frank R. Stockton. 

 Pp. 322. Price, 81.25. The Last Meet- 

 ing. By Brander Matthews. Pp. 268. 

 New York : Charles Scribner's Sons. 

 " Rudder Grange " is an amusing sketch 

 of experiments in housekeeping, rather fan- 

 jciful than real, we judge, which we have 

 read with much pleasure, and can commend 

 as all healthy and good for a leisure mo- 

 ment. "The Last Meeting" has a more 

 elaborate plot and greater variety of inci- 

 dent, and appears to deal witli sadder scenes. 



The Commonwealth op Georgia : The 

 Country, the People, and the Produc- 

 tions. Prepared under the direction of 

 J. T. Henderson, Commissioner of Agri- 

 culture. Atlanta : J. P. Harrison & Co. 

 Pp.379. With Fifteen Maps. Price, 81. 



In this work, which is published under 

 the authority of the State, as a hand-book, 

 the attempt is made to depict, by a series 

 of maps, in an intelligible and acceptable 

 way, the geology, agriculture, temperature 

 and rainfall, water -powers, forestry, min- 

 erals, and elevations of Georgia. In the 

 letterpress are given, with considerable de- 

 tail, descriptions of the population, public 

 institutions, government, educational estab- 

 lishments, newspapers, and of the fruit, 

 grass, garden, and field products. 



PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED. 



Natural Gas : Its Advantages, Use, and Econo- 

 mies. By George H. Thurston. 18^5. Pittsburg : 

 A. A. Anderson & Son, Printers. Pp. 32. 



Fifth Report of the Shellfish Commissioners of 

 the State of Connecticut to the General Assembly, 

 January, 1SS6. 1SS5. Middletown : Pelton & King, 

 Printers. Pp. 26. 



Report of the Proceedings of the Illinois State 

 Board of Health. Quarterly Meeting, Springfield, 

 October 29, 80, 1SS5. 



Geometrical Form of Volcanic Cones and the 

 Elastic Limit of Lava. By George F. Becker. Re- 

 print from the " American' Journal of Science.'' Pp. 

 11. 



A Contribution to the Vertebrate Paleontology 

 of Brazil, and Second Continuation of Researches 

 among the Batrachia of the Coal-Measures of Ohio. 

 By E. D. Cope. 18S5. Philadelphia : A. E. Foote. 



On Poly.'synthesis and Incorporation as Charac- 

 teris^tics of American Languas-es. By Daniel G. 

 Brinton, M. I). 1S;5. Philadelphia : McCalla & 

 Stavely. Pp. 41. 



The Physiologic.il and Pathological Effects of the 

 Use of Tobacco. By Hobart Amorv Hare, M. D. 

 lbS5. Philadelphia : P. Blakiston, Son & Co. Pp. 

 86. Illustrated. 



Index to the Literature of Uranium, ITSO-lSSa. 

 By H. Carrington Bolton. Ph. D. ISS.i. Washing- 

 ton : Government Printing-Office. Pp. 36. 



Remarks on a Supposed Fossil Fungus from 

 the Coal-Measuree. By Professor Joseph F. James. 

 Pp. 10. 



S.aratoga 'Winter and Summer : An Epitome of 

 the Early Hii'tory. Romance. Legends, and Charac- 

 teristics of the Greatest of American Resorts. By 

 Prentiss Ingraham. New York, 1S85. Pp. 110. 

 Illustrated. 



Forest Preservation in Can.ida. By A. T. Drtun- 

 mond. Montreal, IS-^. Pj) 1. 



Introspective Insanity. By Allan McLaac Ham- 

 ilton, M. 1). Reprint from the "American Journal 

 of the Medical Sciences." 1SS5. Pp. S. 



Free Cities in the Middle Ages. By L. E. 

 Klemm, Ph. D. Hamilton, Ohio. Pp. 23. 



Inaugural Kxercifes of the ITenry Sbaw School 

 of Botanv. Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. 

 1665. Pp. 24. 



Report of the Committee on indexing Chemieal 

 Literature. By H. Carrington Bolton. Pp. 5. 



Cervalces Americanus. A Fossil Moose or E^k 



