SCIENCE 



New Series. 

 Vol. III. No. 73. 



Friday, May' 22, 1896. 



Single Copies, 15 cts. 

 Annual Suesckiption, $5.00. 



Macmillan & C o/s New Publications 



Artistic and Scientific Taxidermy and Modelling. 



A Manual of Instructions in the methods of Preser%'ing and Reproducing the Correct Form of all Nat- 

 ural Objects, including a Chapter on the Modelling of Foliage. By MONTAGU Brown£, F.G.S., F.Z.S., 

 etc., Curator of the Leicester Corporation Museum and Art Gallery; author of "Practical Taxidermy," "The 

 Vertebrate Animals of Leicestershire and Rutland," etc. With 22 Full-page Illustrations and 11 Illustra- 



tions in the text. 



8vo, Cloth, Pp. XII + 463. Price, 96.50. 



Analytic Psychology. 



By G. F. Stout, Fellow of St. John's College, 

 Cambridge, University Lecturer in the Moral Sci- 

 ences. In Two Volumes. 



8vo, Cloth, Pp. (Vol. I.) XV + 289, (Vol. //.) 

 Pp. 314. Price, 9S.50 net. 



Analytical Chemistry. 



By N. Menschutkin, Professor in the University 

 of St. Petersburg. Translated from the Third Ger- 

 man Edition, under the Supervision of the Author, 

 by Jajies Locke. 



8vo, $4.00 NET. 



A Dictionary of Chemical Solubilities.— inorganic. 



By Arthur Messinger Comey, Ph.D., Formerly Professor of Chemistry, Tufts College. 



Svo, Cloth, SS.OO net. 



The Child and Childhood in 

 Folk=Thought. 



(The Child in Primitive Culture.) By Alexan- 

 der Francis Chamberlain, M.A., Ph.D., Lec- 

 turer on Anthropology in Clark University; sometinie 

 Fellow in Modern Languages in University College, 

 Toronto, Fellow of American Association for the 

 Advancement of Science, etc., etc. 



Svo, Cloth, $3.00 net. 



MEMOIR OF A GREAT NATURALIST. 



Life, Letters and Works of 

 Louis Agassiz. 



By Jules Marcou. 



WITH PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS. 

 2 Vols., Crown, Svo, $4.00. 



Text=Book of Comparative Anatomy. 



By Arnold Lang. Two Volumes. Illustrated. 

 Svo, Part I. S5.SO net. Part II. $3. SO net. 



" Professor Lang has here successfully carried out the very difficult task of selecting the most important results from 

 the bewildering mass of new material afforded by the extensive researches of the last decades and of combining them with 

 great judgment. Besides this he has, more than any former writer, utilized the comparative history of development in 

 explaining the structure of the animal body, and has endeavored always to give the phylogenetic significance of onto- 

 genetic facts." — Frotn Professor UaeckeVs Preface. 



MACMILLAN & CO., 66 Fifth Avenue, New York. 



