'^ t 2 



SCIENC 



New Series. 

 Vol. IV. No. ' 



Friday, November 13, 1896. 



Single Copies, 15 cts. 

 Annual Subscription, 55.00. 



THE MACMILLAN CO MPANY'S NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



A NOTABLE ART BOOK. 



EUROPEAN ARCHITECTURE. 



A Historical Study. By Russell Stuegis, A.M., Ph.D., F.A.I. A., President of the Fine Art Federation of New York; Past 

 President of the Architectural League of New York ; Vice-President of the National Sculptural Society ; Honorary 

 Member of the Mural Painters, etc., etc. Illustrated with 9 full-page Albert-type plates and 257 engravings, many of 

 them the full size of the page, and others printed in the text. 8vo, cloth, gilt top, ^4.00. 



In his book on European Architecture, Mr. Russell Sturgis deals exclusively with the facts, as they are visible in each 

 building to one who knows how to observe. The structure is described, and its meaning and the reasons for it sought out 

 and explained, and the decorative treatment which arises from the construction, and which was, in a sense, inevitable, is 

 analyzed. Then those decorative styles which have not arisen so naturally, and which are rather added to the building 

 than an integral part of it, such as the ornamentation of the Imperial Roman buildings, are also explained and criticised. 



A BOOK FOB SCULPTORS, PAINTERS AND TAXIDERMISTS. 



THE ART ANATOMY OF ANIMALS. 



Being a brief analysis of the visible forms of the more familiar Mammals and Birds, designed for the use of Sculptors, 

 Painters and'Taxidermists. By Ernest E. Seton Thompson. Illustrated with one hundred drawings by the Author. 

 Small folio, cloth, 110.00 net. 



Artists who devote their time to the reproduction of animal life, whether painters, sculptors or taxidermists, know 

 that to give a truthful representation of their subject requires a certain anatomical acquaintance of the same. Conveniently 

 collected and aptly arranged, Mr. E. G. Thompson lays before the reader of his Studies in the Art Anatomy of Animals 

 just that knowledge of the subject essential to the artist, for whom the book with its illustrations will be an invaluable 

 acquisition. It may be added that the book has been seen by several leading artists, including Mr. Briton Ri-vi6re, who have 

 expressed cordial approval of it. . 



A BOOK FOR ARTISTS AND ART STUDENTS. 



A HANDBOOK OF ANATOMY FOR ART STUDENTS. 



By Arthur Thomson, M.A., M.B., Professor of Human Anatomy in the University of Oxford ; and Lecturer on Anatomy m 

 the National Art-Training School, South Kensington. With twenty-nine full-page illustrations, many of them photo- 

 graphs from life, and also numerous cuts in the text. 8vo, cloth, S5.00 net. 



" The experience which I have had as a teacher, and my acquaintance and sympathy with the requirements of stu- 

 dents of Art, have led me to the conclusion that hitherto too much stress has been laid on the nomenclature and technical 

 details of Human Anatomy, and too little emphasis placed on the relation of these details to the surface forms. What the 

 student requires is not a minute description of every bone, muscle and joint, but only such an account as will enable him to 

 appreciate their influence on the modeling of the figure. Names convey little to his mmd, forms alone interest him. In 

 the following pages, which are based on the lecture which I have had the honor of giving at the Art School, South Ken- 

 sington, I have endeavored to carry out as far as possible these principles."— /Ve/ace. 



THE SURVIVAL OF THE UNLIKE. 



A Collection of Evolution Essays suggested by the Study of Domestic Plants. By. Professor L. H. Bailey, of Cor- 

 nell University and Experiment Station. Author of " The Horticulturist's Rule-Book," Plant-Breedmg,' etc.; editor 

 of the Rural Science Series, etc. Cloth, 16mo, $2.00. 



" The Study of domestic productions will rise immensely in values."— J)aru;m, Origin of Species. 

 "Botanists have generally neglected cultivated varieties as beneath their notice."--Da«t;w, Animals and Plants 



under Domestication. „^^^^„ 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



The Horticulturist's Rule Book 



A Compendium of Useful Information 

 for Fruit-Growers, Truck-Gardeners, 

 Florists, and Others. By L. H. 

 Bailey, Professor of Horticulture 

 in the Cornell University Third 

 Edition, thorougbly revised and re- 

 cast, with many additions. 12mo, 

 302 pages, limp cloth, 75 cents. {Ru- 

 ral Science Series.) 



The Nursery Book. 



A Complete Guide to the Multiplication 

 of Plants. By L. H. Bailey. Third 

 Edition, thoroughly revised and ex- 

 tended. Pages, 865. Illustrations, 

 152. Uniform with " Horticulturist's 

 Rule-Book" and "Plant-Breeding." 

 16mo, cloth, $1.00. {Garden Oraft 

 Series.) 



PIant=Breeding. 



By L. H. Bailey, Professor of Horticul- 

 ture in the Cornell University. 

 12mo, 293 pages, cloth, $1.00. Uni- 

 form with " The Horticulturist's 

 Rule-Book." (Garden Craft Series.) 



A Sketch of the Natural History of Australia. 



With some Notes on Sport. By Frederick G. Aflalo, F.R, 

 G.S., F.Z.S., etc. Author of "Sea-fishing, on the Eng- 

 lish Coast," "Hints and Wrinkles on Sea-fishing." Illus- 

 trated by F. Seth. 12mo, cloth, pp. xxv+307, 11.75. 



The Elements of Electro=Chemistry. 



By Max Le Blanc, Professor of Chemistry in the University 

 of Leipzig. Translated by W. R. Whitney, Instructor 

 of Chemistry in the Massachusetts Institute of Technol- 

 ogy of Boston, U.S.A. 12mo, cloth, pp.x-t-284,81.50 net. 



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