154 



SCIENCE. 



[Vol. XVI. No. 397 



The Medical Press, July 30, 1890, says 

 that on July 26 a girl nineteen years old 

 died at Plaisance, near Paris. This girl 

 was of an enormous size. A year ago she 

 was weighed, and was found to exceed 470 

 pounds, and since then she had considera- 

 bly increased. Around her waist she meas- 

 ured two yards and a half, while the cir- 

 cumference of her arm exceeded one yard. 

 She succumbed to erysipelas. 



CATARKH. 



Catarrlial Deafness— Hay Fever, 



Sufferers are not generally aware that these 

 diseases are contagious, or that they are due to 

 the presence of living parasites in the lining 

 membrane of the nose and eustachian tubes. 

 Microscopic research, however, has proved this 

 to be a fact, and the result of this discovery is 

 that a simple remedy has been formulated where- 

 by catarrh, catarrhal deafness and hay fever are 

 permanently cured in from one to three simple 

 applications made at home by the patient once 

 in two weeks. 



N.B. — This treatment is not a snuff or an 

 ointment ; both have been discarded by repu- 

 table physicians as injurious. A pamphlet ex- 

 plaining this new treatment is sent free on 

 receipt of stamp to pay postage, by A. H. Dix- 

 on & Son, 337 and 339 West King Street. 

 Toronto, Canada. — Christian Advocate. 



Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should care- 

 - fully read the above. 



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PROTOPLASM AND LIFE. 



By C. F. Cox. 12*^. 75 cents. 

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THE TORNADO. 



By H. A. Hazen. 12°. $1. 



Professor Hazen is one of the prominent meteor- 

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THE CHEROKEES IN PRE-COLUMBIAN TIMES 



By Cyrus Thomas. 12°. §1. 

 Dr. Thomas in this work will reverse the usual 

 method of dealing with prehistoric subjects ; that is 

 to say, he will commence with the earliest recorded 

 history of the tribe as a basis, and tiace the chain 

 back step by step by the light of the mounds, tradi- 

 tions, and other evidence, as far as possible. He 

 has already presented to the public some reasons 

 for believing the Cherokees were mound-builders, 

 but additional evidence bearing on the subject has 

 been obtained. A more careful study of tbe Dela- 

 ware tradition respecting the Tallegwi satisfies him 

 that we have in the Bark Record (Walam Olum) 

 itself proof that they were Cherokees. He thinks 

 the mounds enable us to trace back their line of 

 migration even beyond their residence in Ohio to 

 the western bank of the Mississippi. The object is 

 therefore threefold: 1. An illustration of the re- 

 verse method of dealing with prehistoric subjects ; 

 2. Incidental proof that some of the Indians were 

 mound-builders ; 3. A study of a single tribe in the 

 light of the mound testimony. This work will be an 

 important contribution to the literature of the Co- 

 lumbian discovery which will doubtless appear 

 during the coming two years. 



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