14 Mr. Edward Arnold's List of New Books 



A HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY. 



By Dr. HUGO BAUER, 



Royal Technical Institute, Stu itgakt. 



Translated by R. V. STANFORD, B.Sc. Lond., 



Priestley Research Scholar in the Univeksitv of Birmingham. 



Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. net. 



In the course of the historical development of chemistry there 

 have occurred definite periods completely dominated by some one 

 leading idea, and, as will be seen from the contents, it is upon these 

 periods that the arrangement of this book is based. 



CONTENTS.— Part I.— I. The Chemistry of the Ancients (to the fourth 

 century, a.d.) ; II. The Period of Alchemy (from the fourth to the sixteenth 

 centuries) ; III. The Period of latrochemistry (sixteenth and seventeenth cen- 

 turies) ; IV. The Period of Phlogistic Chemistry (1700 to 1774). 



Part II. — I. The Period of Lavoisier; II. The Period of the Development of 

 Organic Chemistry ; III. The Chemistry of the Present Day. Index. 



BOOKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED. 



A STAFF OFFICER'S SCRAP-BOOK 



During tbe "Kussosjapanesc "QClar. 



By Lieut.-Gexer.\l Sir IAN HAMILTON, K.C.B. 



Two Volumes, Demy Svo. With Illustrations, Maps, and Plans. 



1 8s. net each. 



LETTERS FROM THE FAR EAST. 



By Sir CHARLES ELIOT, K.C.M.G., 



Author of 'Turkey in- Europe,' 'The East Afkic.\. Protectorate,' etc 



Demy Svo. With Illustrations. 8s. 6d. net. 



SOME PROBLEMS OF EXISTENCE. 



By NORMAN PEARSON. 

 Demy Svo. 7s. 6d. net. 



