April 29, 1892.] 



SCIENCE. 



251 



AMONG THE PUBLISHERS. 



Babyhood continues in its May issue the medical articles on 

 catarrhal affections and their complications in children, and the 

 treatment of the headaches of childhood, 



— The recent discussion o^er Jewish immigration to this coun- 

 try imparts a timely interest to Mr. Joseph Pennell's volume enti- 

 tled " The Jew at Home." This artist has visited and studied the 

 Jewish towns of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the results of 

 his observations will be found both in his text and in a series of 

 illustrations. "The Jew at Home" will be published immediately 

 by D. Appleton & Co. 



— TJie Chautauquan for May presents the following among 

 other articles: "Physical Culture," IV., by J. M. Buckley, LL.D. ; 

 -"The United States Patent Office," Part I, by Helen Frances 



Shedd ; "The Natural History of Plants," II., by Gerald McCarthy; 

 "Flower Shows in the United States," by Samuel A. Wood; "Phre- 

 nology," by Garrett P. Serviss. 



— In Lippincott's Magazine for May, Mr. Floyd B. Wilson has 

 a paper on "Personal Economics in our Colleges," and Mr. Phile- 

 mon Hemsley, in "After-Dinner Botany," traces the relationship 

 between certain edible and other plants not usually connected in 

 our thoughts. 



— Professor Jowetfs translation of " The Dialogues of Plato," 

 the second edition of which has been for several years out of 

 print, will appear in May in the third edition, forming five 8vo 

 volumes. The work has been revised and corrected throughout 

 and in great part rewritten. Macmillan & Co , the publishers, 

 have copyrighted the new edition by resetting the entire work in 

 this country. 



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