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MYTH AND SCIENCE. By Tito Vignoli. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



Contents: The Ideas and Sources of Myth; Animal Sensation and Percep- 

 tion ; Human Sensation and Perception ; Statement of the ProblL-m ; The Ani- 

 mal and Human Exercise of the Intellect iu the Perception of Thinss ; The 

 Intrinsic Law of the Faculty of Apprehension ; The Historical Evolution of 

 Mylh and Science ; Of Dreams, Illusions, Normal and Abnormal Hallucinations, 

 Delirium, and Madness. 



" His book is in2;enious ; . . . his theory of how science gradually differen- 

 tiated from and conquered myth is extremely well wrought out, and is probably in 

 essentials correct."— 6'a<!/rday Review. 



PHYSICAT. EDUCATION ; or, The Health L,aws of Nature. By 



Felix L. Oswald, M. D. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00. 



The greater part of the contents of this volume appeared in a series of 

 papers in "The Popular Science Monthly," where they attracted wide atten- 

 tion on account of the freshness of many of the ideas and the force with which 

 they were presented. No recent book on this subject is marked with so much 

 special learning, original illustration, and incisive argument. 



Contents: Diet; In-door Life; Out-door Life; Gymnastics; Clothing; 

 Sleep ; Recreation ; Remedial Education ; Hygienic Precautiins ; Popular Fal- 

 lacies. 



" The title would seem to point to a dry, technical essay, on a much-discussed 

 subject, but the reader who, entertaining that idea, passes it by, misses a strong, 

 pungent book, lull of common-sense suggestions, many of which, however, run 

 counter to the popular idea. The author believes that the principal cause of 

 human degeneration is the use of unnatural food." — Boston Transcript. 



" There is no question about the great value of these essays as instructors in 

 what is most healthful in diet, gymnastics, in-door and out-door sports, clothing, 

 Bleep, and recreation, and as furnishing hints on remedial education and hy- 

 gienic precautious."— C/iteca Herald. 



"Dr. Oswald is as epigrammatic as Emerson, as spicy as Montaigne, and as 

 caustic as Heine." — Philadelphia Press. 



HISTORY OF FRANCE. New volume in "History Primers," edited by 

 J. R. Green. By Charlotte M. Yonge. 18rao, cloth, flexible. 45 cents. 



THE SONG WAVE: A Collection of Choice Music, with Elementary 

 Instruction. For the School-Room, Institute-Hall, and Home Circle. 



<'ontaining a brief, practical, and comprehensive course of elementary in- 

 struction, with a great variety of selections, adapted to all occasions, including 

 standing favorites and many new songs. 8vo, boards, 80 cents. 



DIE ANNA-IilSE: A German Play by Hermann Hersch, with an 

 InterHnear Translation, and Directions for learning to read 

 German. By C. F. Kroeh, A. M., Professor of Modem Languages in the 

 Stevens Institute of Technology. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00. 



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