HUTCHINSON. — The Story of the Hills. A Book about Mountains 

 for General Readers and Supplementary Reading in Schools. By 

 H. N. Hutchinson, Author of "The Autobiography of the Earth," 

 etc. Illustrated. $1.50. 



" A book that has long been needed, one that gives a clear account of the 

 geological formation of mountains, and their various methods of origin, in 

 language so clear and untechnical that it will not confuse even the most 

 unscientific." — Boston Evening Transcript. 



" It is as interesting as a story, and full of the most instructive information, 

 which is given in a style that every one can comprehend. ..." 



— yotirnal of Education. 



INGERSOLL. — Wild Neighbors. A Book about Animals. By Ernest 

 Ingersoll. Illustrated. i6mo. Cloth. In Press. 



JAPP (A. H.). — Hours in My Garden, and Other Nature-sketches. 

 With 138 Illustrations. $ 1.75. 



" It is not a book to be described, but to be read in the spirit in which it is 

 written — carefully and lovingly." — Mail and Express. 



"It is a book to be read and enjoyed by both young and old." — Public 

 Opinioti. 



POTTS (W.). — From a New England Hillside. Notes from Under- 

 ledge. By William Potts. Macmillan's Miniature Series. i8mo. 

 75 cents. 



" But the attraction of Mr. Potts' book is not merely in its record of the 

 natural year. He has been building a house, and we have the humors and 

 the satisfactions, and hopes deferred, that usually attend that business. He has 

 been digging a well, and the truth which he has found at the bottom of that he 

 has duly set forth. . . , Then, too, his village is Farmington, Conn., and there 

 Miss Porter has her famous schools, and her young ladies flit across his page 

 and lend their brightness to the scene. And, moreover, he sometimes comes 

 back to the city, and he writes pleasantly of his New York club, the Century. 

 Last, but not least, there are lucubrations on a great many personal and social 

 topics, in which the touch is light and graceful and the philosophy is sound 

 and sweet." — Brooklyn Standard Union. 



WEED. — Life Histories of American Insects. By Prof. Clarence M. 

 Weed, New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mech. Arts. Fully 

 Illustrated. Cloth. In Press. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, 



66 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. 



