NEW BOOKS OF SPECIAL INTEREST. 



The Glaciers of the Alps. 



Being a Narrative of Excursions and Ascents. An Account of the Origin and Phenomena of Gla- 

 ciers, and an Exposition of the Physical Principles to which they are related. By John Tyn- 

 dall, P. R. S. New Edition. With 61 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, $2.50. 



Fear. 



By Angelo Mosso. Translated from the fifth edition of the Italian by E. Lough and F. Kiesow. 

 With 8 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, $1.75. 



*** This book deals with much more thar. is conveyed by the title, it is, in fact, a series of essays on the expression 

 of the emotions, dealing more especially with the painful emotions. Although the subject is treated in a measure scien- 

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" The number of medical specialists in these days naturally increases the number of books on medical specialties, one 

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The Life and Letters of George John Romanes. 



Written and Edited by his Wife. With Portrait and various Illustrations. 8vo, $4.00. 



"Mrs. Romanes deserves the warm thanks of a wide public for the picture which her book presents of the character, 

 the work, and the intellectual and spiritual development, throughout the course of his too brief life, of her distinguished 

 and lamented husband. It is a singularly attractive picture, with many elements of pathos. . . . Read alone, read still 

 more in conjunction with the ' Thoughts on Religion,' the Life of George Romanes is a book of intensest individual in- 

 terest, and, also, it is and must remain a singularly impressive illustration of an experience passed through (though, of 

 course, in very varying degrees) by many of the best spirits of the generation which was growing up when the 4 Origin 

 of Species , appeared.'" The Spectator, London. 



" Special interest attaches to the biography of Romanes, because it is the life history of a doubter, who became in the 

 end a believer. . . . The letters in this volume allude to many phases of the controversy that raged before Darwinism 

 was accepted, and then to the new controversies that arose among the sects into which Darwinism at once divided. In 

 advancing his theory of Physiological Selection, Romanes himaelf created a school. But on the whole, his work as a 

 Darwinist was efficient in keeping clearly before the minds of scientific workers the actual teachings of Darwin. 11 New 

 York Tribune. 



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