﻿SOME IMPORTANT 



BOOKS 



ON 



EDUCATION 



The School and Society. By John Dewey. (Third edition.) Supplemented 

 by a statement of the Laboratory School of the University of Chicago. 130 

 pp., i2mo, cloth. $1.00. 



The Prospects of the Small College. By President William R. Harper. 



50 pp., i2mo, paper. Net, $0.25. 



Report of the Educational Commission of the City of Chicago. The 



commission was appointed by Hon. Carter H. Harrison, January 19, 

 1898, and the report is edited by President William R. Harper. (Sec- 

 ond edition.) 250 pp., royal Svo, paper. Net^ ^i.oo. 



The Education of Business-Men. A View of the Organization and Courses 

 of Study in Commercial High Schools of Europe. By Edmund J. James. 

 232 pp., Svo, paper. Net^ ^0.50. 



The Philosophy of the Humanities. By Thomas I^itz-Hugh. 63 pp., 



royal Svo, paper, Net^ ;?o.50. 



FOR SALE BY BOOKDEALERS OR BY THE PUBLISHERS 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS, Chicago, Illinois 



— — A^i-r 



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.^■"^ 



ethods 



Plant 



Histology 



By CHARLES J. CHAMBERLAIN, A.M., Ph.D., Instructor in Botany in the University of Chicago 



F-^ -•"■^T^* 



CV~ ^^^ t 



CONSTANT HELP 



Teachers and Students of Botany 



CONTAINS DIRECTIONS FOR COLLECTING AND PREPARING 

 PLANT MATERIAL FOR MICROSCOPIC INVESTIGATION 



T is based upon a course in botanical micro-technique, and is the first complete manual to 

 be published on this subject. It is the result of several years' work with classes in residence 

 at the University of Chicago, and with University Extension classes away from the Uni- 

 versity. It aims, therefore, to meet the requirements, not only of the student who has the assist- 

 ance of an instructor in a fully equipped laboratory, but also the student who must work by himself 

 and with limited apparatus. Free-hand sectioning, the paraffin method, the collodion method, 

 and the glycerine method, are treated in considerable detail. In later chapters specific direc- 

 tions are given for making such preparations as are needed by those who wish to study the 

 plant kingdom from the algoe up to the flowering plants. Special attention is paid to the stain- 

 ing of karyokinetic figures, because the student who masters this problem will find little difficulty 

 in differentiating other structures. 



histological laboratory. 



P'ormulas are given for the reagents commonly used in the 



160 pp., 8vo, illustrated, cloth, {net) $1.50; postpaid $1.59 





For sale by dealers or by the publishers 



The University 



Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois 



7i 



