SCIENCE 



New Series. 

 Vol. III. No. 74. 



Friday, May 29, 1896. 



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The Child and Childhood in Folk-Thought. 



{THE CHILD IN PRIMITIVE CULTURE.) 

 By ALEXANDER FRANCIS CHAMBERLAIN, M. A., Ph. D., 



Lecturer on Anthropology in Clark University; sometime Fellow in Modern Languages in Unioeraity College, 

 Toronto ; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, etc., etc. 



8vo, Cloth, $3.00 net. 



OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 



"Mr. Chamberlain tells in a most graphic manner what 

 the child has done or said to have done in all the ages and 

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 •done or is said to have done, in alt ages and among alt 

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"Dr. Chamberlain has laid all accessible sources of infor- 

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Bell's Technology Handbooks. 



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The Number Concept. 



Its Origin and Development. By Levi Leonard Conant, 

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Cambridge Natural Science Manuals. 



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of Buildings. 



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The Elements of Physics. 



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Statistics and Sociology. 



^Science of Statistics. Part I. By Eichjiond Mayo-S-iiith, 

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