7()2 



SCIENCE. 



[Vol. XVIII. No. 459 



— D. Appleton & Co. announce " AText-Book in Psychology," 

 translated from the German of Johann F. Herbart. The central 

 idea of the author's " attempt to found the science of psychology 

 on experience, metaphysics, and mathematics," is apperception 



recognition and comparison of features of an object with which 



we are familiar — in contradistinction to perception, in which an 

 object is merely presented to our senses. The book makes the 

 eighteenth volume in the International Education Series. 



— A. C. Armstrong & Son, in conjunction with Elliott Stock, 

 London, will publish the Camden Library, a series of volumes 

 "concerned with the antiquities of Great Britain," and edited by 

 G. Laurence Gomme and T. Fairman Ordish. The first volume, 

 just ready, deals with the "Antiquities and Curiosities of the 

 Exchequer," containing numerous illustrations from original MSS. 

 and the various records preserved in the Public Record Office. 

 Aatiquities of the stage will be looked after in " Old London 

 Theatres," and yet other volumes will be entitled "English 

 Homes in the Past," " Monastic Arrangement," "English Armor," 

 "Folk-Lore," "Church Plate," "The Streams of London," 

 " Miniature Portrait Painting," etc. 



— "Papers in Penology, second series," is a little pamphlet com- 

 piled by an inmate of the New York State Reformatory, and 

 printed and stitched by other inmates of the same institution. It 

 contains papers from various authors on the subject of prison re- 



form, most of which have been published in some form before. 

 It opens with three articles on the prisons of Great Britain, 

 originally contributed to the New York Times, by Jay. S. Butler; 

 and these are, perhaps, the most interesting in the whole 

 collection. The other papers are on various aspects of the prison; 

 reform question, and written by Charles A. Collin, William T. 

 Harris, Hamilton D. Wey, and Eugene Smith; while the last 

 one of all is an account of "the Elmira Reformatory of To-day," 

 by the editor of the pamphlet. This last is somewhat marred by 

 a peculiar and rather grandiloquent style, but otherwise it is an 

 excellent description of the reformatory methods now practised 

 under the prison laws of the State of New York. Some of the 

 writers carry their zeal for prison reform to an extravagant de- 

 gr-ee, and Mr. Collins in particular actually says in his last sentence 

 that "the object of criminal punishment is the improvement of 

 the offender." On the whole, however, the views here presented 

 are sensible, and persons interested in the subject will like to 

 possess the pamphlet. 



— Harper & Brothers have just published " Pharaohs, Fellahs,, 

 and Explorers," by Amelia B. Edwards; and "Sharp Eyes, a 

 Rambler's Calendar of Fifty-two Weeks among Insects, Birds, 

 and Flowers," written and illustrated by W. Hamilton Gibson. 



— Mr. J. H. T. McPherson has prepared a brief " History of 

 Liberia," which will doubtless be of interest to students of the 



Publications received at Editor's Office, 

 Nov. 4-17. 



Ball. R. S. Starland. Boston, Ginn. 876 p. 12°. 

 SI. 10. 



Papers in Penology. Blmira, N. Y., State Eeforma- 

 torv. 148 p. 16°. 



Pick, E. Pick's Method applied to Acquiring the 

 French Language. Syracuse, N. ?., Bardeen. 

 113 p. 1S°. SI. 



Poole, J. The Practical Telephone Handbook. 

 Ne-w York, Macmillan. 283 p. 12°. 75 cents. 



Pope, F. L. Modern Practice of the Electric Tele- 

 graph. (14th ed.) New York. 'Van Nostrand. 

 234 p. 8°. S1.60. 



Remondino, p. C. History of Circumcision from 

 the Earliest Times to the Present. Philadel- 

 phia, Davis. 346 p. 12°. $1.25. 



HANDBOOK OF METEOROLOGICAL TABLES. 



By Asst. Peof. H. A. Hazen. 

 127 pp. 8°. 



Professor Waldo says : "I heartily recom- 

 mend them to all workers in meteorology, 

 and do not see how any of our American 

 meteorologists can afford to be without a 

 copy." 



Professor Symons of London says : ' ' They 

 are unquestionably valuable helps, which 

 must be kept handy, and replaced when 

 worn out." 



Price, postpaid, $1. 



N. D. C. HODGES, 874 Broadway, New York. 



THE 



AMERICAN GEOLOGIST FOR 1891 



AND 



BIEN'S NEW ATLAS OF THE METROPOLI- 

 TAN DISTRICT, 



will be given to Kew Subscribers to the 

 Geologist for $25.00 (which is the regular 

 price of the Atlas alone) , if ordered through 

 the Geologist. 



For other premiums see the Geologist for 

 Nov., Dec, and Jan. Address 



THE GEOLOGICAL PUBLISHING COMPANY, 



IHinneapolls, mClnn. 



CALENDAR OF SOCIETIES. 



Philosophical Society, Washington. 



Nov. 7.— E. M. Gallaudet, Values in the 

 Education of the Deaf ; J. C. Gordon, The 

 New Departure at Kendall Green. 



Chemical Society of Washington. 



Nov. 12. — W. H. Krug, Estimation of 

 Iron, Alumina, and Phosphoric Acid ; H. W. 

 Wiley and W. H. Krug, The Occurrence of 

 Artificial Crystals of Calcium Phosphate; H. 

 W. Wiley and W. H. Krug, A New Butter 

 Adulterant; Cabel WTiitehead, The Uses of 

 Cadmium in Assaying Gold Bullion. 



Biological Society, Washington. 



Nov. 14.— T. S. Palmer, Winter Aspects 

 of the Mojave Desert Region ; V. A. Moore, 

 A Case of Echinococcus in Swine; C. W. 

 Stiles, Notes on Parasites : — Coccidium bi- 

 geminum Stiles; L. F. Ward, Haeckel's 

 Eadiolaria of the Challenger Expedition ; L. 

 F. Ward, Three Days in the Tropics. 



Engineer's Club of Philadelphia. 



Oct. 17.— B. E. Fernow, Tests of Timber 

 now being made under the auspices of the 

 Agricultural Department ; F. H. Lewis, Soft 

 Steel in Bridges. 



Boston Society of Natural History. 



Nov. 4.— G. L. Goodale, The Natury His 

 tory Museums of Australasia; Warren Up- 

 ham, Recent Fossils of the Harbor and Back 

 Bay, Boston. 



Nov. 18. — George Baur, A Visit to the 

 Galapagos Islands; W. M. Davis, The Cats 

 kill Delta in the Post-Glacial Hudson Estu- 

 ary. 



Appalachian Mountain Club, Boston. 



Nov. 11. — J. B. Harrison, Open Spaces for 

 Public Resort. 



Publications of the University of Pennsylvania. 



SERIES IN 



Philology, Literature and 

 Archaeology. 



Vol. I. now ready. 



1. Poetic and Yerse Criticism of the Reign of Eliza- 



beth. By Felix E Schelling, A.M., Assistant 

 Professor of English Literature. §1.00. 



2. A Fragment of the Babylonian '• Dibbarra''' Epic.. 

 By Morris Jastrow, Jr., Ph.D., Professor of 

 Arabic. 60 cents. 



3. a. npd? with the Accusative. 6. Note on a Pas^ 

 sage in the Antigone. By "William A. Lamberton 

 A.M., Professor of the G-reek Language and Lit- 

 erature. 50 cents. 



4. The Gambling Games of the Chinese in America.. 

 Pdn t^n and P^b bdp piii. By Stewart Culin, 

 Secretary of the Museum of Archieology and 

 Paleontology. 40 cents. 



In preparation. 

 The Terrace at Persepolis. By Morton W. Eastonv 



Ph.D., Professor of Comparative Philology. 

 An Aztec Manuscript. By Daniel Gr. Brinton, M.D., 



Professor of American Archseology and Linguis- 

 tics. 

 A Monograph on the Tempest. By Horace Howard 



Furness, Ph.D., LL.D. 

 Eecent Archaeological Explorations in New Jersey. 



By Charles C. Abbott, M.D , Curator of the 



American Collections. 

 ArchEeological Notes in Northern Morocco. By Tal- 



cott "Williams, A.M., Secretary of the Museum 



of Egyptian Antiquities. 

 a. On the Aristotelian Dative, h. On a Passage in 



Aristotle's Rhetoric. By William A. Lamberton, 



A.M., Professor of the Greek Language and 



Literature. 

 A Hebrew Bowl Inscription. By Morris Jastrow, 



Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Arabic. 

 The Life and Writings of George Gascoigne. By 



Felix E. Schelling, A.M., Assistant Professor of 



English Literature. 

 The Papers of this Series, prepared by Professors 

 and others connected with the University of Penn- 

 sylvania, will take the form of Monographs on the 

 subjects of Philology, Literature, and ArchEeology, 

 whereof about 200 or 250 pages will form a volume. 



The price to subscribers to the Series will be $1.50- 

 per volume; to others than subscribers, $2.00 per 

 volume. 



Each Monograph, however, is complete in itself, 

 and will be sold separately. 



It is the intention of the Cniversity to issue these 

 Monographs from time to time as they sha.^' be pre- 



ISr. 13. O. HODGES, 



874 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 



BOOKS: How tog-ettliem. If there is any 

 Book or pamphlet that you want, write to the Science- 

 book Agency, 874 Broadway, New York. 



