362 



SCIENCE. 



[Vol. XVIII. No. 464 



merits in its development. The open-air meetings of the Wesleyan 

 revivalists had their share; the old right of petition to the crown 

 for redress of any grievance, and the occasional waves of popular 

 clamor gave it a fitful existence until, at the time of the so called 

 "Wilkes Rebellion," it first became an organized political engine, 

 then and since acting as a perpetual check upon the party in 

 power. To the student of politics this book should prove of great 

 value and interest. It will be published by Macmillan & Co. early 

 in January. 



— Frederick Warne & Co., New York, will shortly issue at a 

 popular price " Electricity up to Date for Light, Power, and 

 Traction," clearly explained, with diagrams, etc., for non-scien- 

 tific readers, by John B. Verity, M.Inst. E.E. (London). The 

 same firm will shortly publish the new volume of " Barker's Facts 

 and Figures for the Year 1893," edited by Thomas Whittaker, 

 containing a large amount of information relating to commerce, 

 government, insurance, agriculture, population, education, 

 finance, health, wealth, religion, railways, etc., with special ref- 

 erence to those matters which concern the inhabitants of Great 

 Britain. 



— A "General Encyclopedia of the History and Science of the 

 Jews " has been undertaken by J. Singer, in Paris, and will com- 

 prise twelve large volumes, according to The New York Tribune. 

 The author hopes to present the main facts of Jewish history, and 



to show the effects of the Jewish race upon the various factors of 

 civilization, science, literature, commerce, industry, etc. The 

 work will not be finished for some time. 



— The trustees of the British Museum, we learn from The Pub- 

 lishers' Weekly, will shortly issue the second instalment of Dr. 

 Bezold's " Catalogue of the Cuneiform Tablets iu the Kouyun- 

 jik Collection." This volume will contain the descriptions of 

 nearly six thousand tablets and fragments which formed part 

 of the famous clay library preserved by the kings of Assyria 

 at Nineveh. This library was founded by Assurbanipal, B.C. 

 668-636, and contained official documents which had been 

 sent to Sargon and Sennacherib by the generals of the army and 

 others, as well as a series of works i-elating to every branch of 

 science known to the Assyrians, and copies of ancient classical 

 books and legends from Babylonia. In this volume will be found 

 a classification of omen, and astrological texts; a work vi-hich has 

 never before been attempted ; and a considerable number of impor- 

 tant extracts are printed in the cuneiform characters. 



— Hubert Howe Bancroft, who is spending the winter with his- 

 family in the City of Mexico, has been requested by Gen. Porfirio 

 Diaz, President of the Republic of Mexico, to write a book on the 

 resources and development of Mexico, to be published in Spanish 

 and in English, and to be a true and vivid representation of indus- 

 trial Mexico as it exists to-day, primarily for presentation at the 



BEO-DARWINISM AND NEO-LAMARCKISM. 



By LESTER F. WARD. 



Annual address of the President of the Biological 

 Society of Washington delivered Jan. 24, 1891. A 

 historical and critical review of modern scientific 

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HANDBOOK OF METEOROLOGICAL TABLES. 



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Professor Waldo says : "I heartily recom- 

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THE 



AMERICAN GEOLOGIST FOR 1891 



BIEFS NEW ATLAS OF THE METROPOLI- 

 TAN DISTRICT, 



will be given to New Subscribers to the 



Geologist for $25.00 (which is the regular 

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THE BOTANICAL GAZETTE. 



A monthly illustrated journal of botany in 



all its departments. 



25 cents a number, $2.50 a year. 



Address PUBLISHERS BOTANICAL GAZETTE, 



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CALENDAR OP SOCIETIES. 

 Chemical Society, Washington. 

 Dec. 10.— H. W. Wiley and W. H. Krug, 

 On so called Floridite; T. M. Chatard, Notes 

 on Analysis of Phosphate Rocks; I. T. 

 Davis, Meat Preservatives ; W. F. Hille- 

 brand and Wm. H. Melville, On the Isomor- 

 phism and Composition of Thorium and 

 Uranous Sulphates ; a paper on Midzu Ame 

 is proposed for the meeting of Jan. 14, 1893. 



Biological Society, Washington. 



Geo. Marx, On the Structure and Con- 

 struction of the Geometric Spider Web; 

 Chas. D. White, Some Peculiar Forms in an 

 Upland Carboniferous Flora; F. H. Knowl- 

 ton. Fruiting Ferns from the Laramie Groups 

 Frederick V. Coville, Review of Kuntze's 

 Revisio Generum Plantarum; C. W. Stiles, 

 Notes on Parasites : Spiroptera scutata. 



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For 1891-82 is for sale by F. W. Christern, 354 Fifth 

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PHYSICAL, MEASUREMENT. 



By HiROLD Whiting, Ph.D., formerly instructor. 

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