December 4, 1891.] 



SCIENCE. 



321 



the two hundredth anniversary of this remarkable delusion is 

 approaching. 



— Longman's, Green, & Co. will publish at once a curious book, 

 called "Japanese Letters." It is edited by Commander Hastings 

 Berkeley, and it contains the correspondence of Tokiwara and 

 Yashiri, giving the impressions and opinions of the former as he 

 visits Europe for the first time. 



■ — Houghton, Mifflin & Co. announce for immediate publica- 

 tion " Mastex-pieces of American Literature." This book contains 

 masterpieces from the works of the following thirteen authors of 

 America, with a biographical sketch of each : Longfellow, Whit- 

 tier, Irving, Bryant, Hawthorne, Franklin, Holmes, Thoreau, 

 O'Reilly, Lowell, Emerson, Everett and Webster. 



— The Government of Honduras has placed all the ancient ruins 

 wUhin the borders of the republic in the care of the Peabody 



Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology of Harvard 

 University for a period of ten years; giving to the museum not 

 only the charge of the antiquities of the country, but also the 

 exclusive right of exploration and the permission to take away 

 one-half of all the objects found during the excavations. The 

 museum, on its part, is to carry on explorations each year during 

 the term covered by the decree. Professor Putnam, the director 

 of the Honduras expedition, being unable to leave, is to be repre- 

 sented in the field this year (1891-1892) by two of his students — 

 M. II. Saville, a private student and an assistant in the museum, 

 and J. C. Owens, a student in the graduate school of Harvard, 

 taking the courbc of archaeology and ethnology under Professor 

 Putnam. The expedition is thoroughly equipped, and the inten- 

 tion is to carry on for ten years a thorough archaeological investi- 

 gation at this place. The material collected this year is to be ex- 

 hibited in Professor Putnam's department of the World's Colum- 

 bian Exposition. 



ATomc 



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