SCIENCE 



New Series. 

 Vol. III. No. 75. 



Friday, June' 5, 1896. 



Single Copies, 15 cts. 

 Annual Subscription, J5.00. 



AN IMPORTANT NEW BOOK OF TRAVEL AND EXPLORATION. 



THROUGH JUNGLE AND DESERT: 



Travels in Eastern Africa. 



By William AsTOR Chanler, A.M. (Harv.), F. R. G. S.; Honorary Member of the Imperial and Royal Geographical Society 

 of Vienna. With nuinerous Illustrations frorii Photographs taken by the Author, and Maps. Svo, cloth, $3.00. 

 ***Mr. William Astor Chanler's description of his travels and explorations in Eastern Africa forms one of the most 

 ^ieeply interesting books published in recent years. Mr. Chanler and his companion, Lieutenant von Hohnel. himself a 

 noted explorer, were the first white men to penetrate into many of the regions here described, and the account of their ad- 

 ventures and perils, their achievements and their misfortunes, forms a uarrative fascinating, not alone to the traveller and 

 the scientist, but also, and more especially, to the sportsman and to the lover of exciting romance. 



B O 0K8 FOR THE CO UNTR Y. 



BIRDCRAFT. 



A Field-Book of Two Hundred Song, Game, and Water Birds. By Mabel Osgood Weight, author of •' The Friendship of 

 Nature." With fuil-page Plates, containing 128 Birds in their Natural Colors, and Other Illustrations. 

 Small quarto, cloth, S3. 00 net. 

 "One of the most useful and beautiful hooks about Nature which have yet come from the press is Mabel Osgood Wright's 

 'Birdcraft.* The author of ' The Friendship of Nature ' has very appropriately followed up her general introduction to tlie 

 delights and the resources of companionship with Nature by a handbook of one of the most accessible and interesting sub- 

 divisions of natural life. This volume aims to do for birds what Mrs. Dana's book did for the wild flowers— to put into the 

 hands of every observer, either young or old, a handbook so clearly arranged as to afford the means of a swift identilication 

 and classification of every bird. . . . Such a book opens a new world of delight."— T/ie Outlook. 



BY THE SAME A VTHOR. 



THE FRIENDSHIP OF NATURE. 



A New England Chronicle of Birds and Flowers. By Mabel Osgood Weight. 18mo, cloth, gilt top, 75 cents. The same in 

 Macviillan's Miniature Series^ paper cover, 25 cents. 



The Rural Science Sei-ies. 



Its Nature, Relations, and Fundamental Principles of Man- 

 agement. By F. H. King, Professor of Agricultural 

 PhysicsinUniv. of Wis. With Illustrations. 12mo, cloth, 

 75 cents. 



THE SPRAYING OF PLANTS. 



A Succint Account of the History, Princii)les, and Practice of 

 the Application of Liquids and Powders to Plants for the 

 Purpose of Destroying Insects and Fungi. By E. G. 

 LoDEMAN, Instructor in Horticulture in the Cornell Uni- 

 versity. With Preface by B. T. Galloway. Uniform 

 with " The Soil." Very thoroughly illustrated. $1. GO. 



I'he Garden Craft Series. 

 THE HORTICULTURIST'S RULE BOOK. 



Compendium of Useful Information for Fruit-Growerg, 

 Truck-Gardeners, Florists, and Others. By L. H. Bailey, 

 Professor of Horticulture in the Cornell University. 

 Fourth Edition, with many additions. 12mo, 312 pages, 

 limp cloth, 75 cents. 



PLANT BREEDING. 



L. H. Bailey, Professor of Horticulture in the Cornell 

 University ; Editor of "The Bural Science Series," etc. 

 12mo, 293 pages, cloth, Sl.OO. 



INMATES OF MY HOUSE AND GARDEN. 



By Mrs. Beighiwen, author of " Wild Nature Won by Kindness." With Illustrations by Theo. Cabkeeas. 12mo, cloth, $1.25. 



HOURS IN MY GARDEN, 



And Other Nature Sketches. By Alexandee H. Japp, 

 LL. D., F. R. S. E., author of " Life of De Quincey," etc. 

 With 138 beautiful illustrations by W. H. F. Boot, A. W. 

 CooPEE, and other artists. Crown Svo, cloth, $1.75. 



FROM A NEW ENGLAND HILLSIDE. 

 Notes from Underledge. 



By William Pons. With Frontispiece. 24mo, cloth, 75 

 cents. (Miniature Series.) Paper cover, 25 cents. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, 66 Fifth Ave., N. Y. 



