i66 



SCIENCE. 



[Vol. XVI. No. 398 



means of subsistence, while beaver-skins, rum, and timber, all 

 contributed to swell the merchants' cargoes. The rise and growth 

 of manufactures receive due attention at ajl stages, and considera- 

 ble space is devoted to the details o£ foreign trade. In the appen- 

 dix there is a list of prices during each year of the period dealt 

 with, while a very full index adds to the value of the book. 



AMONG THE PUBLISHERS. 



The latest of the volumes treating of the "Famous Women of 

 the French Court," translated from the French of Imbert de Saint- 

 Armand by T. S. Perry, and issued by the Scribners, is entitled 

 "Citizeness Bonaparte.'' It sltetches the career of Josephine from 

 the time of her marriage to the period of Napoleon's consulship, 

 covering the most romantic and happy portion of her life; and 

 includes the campaign in Italy, the_ expedition to Egypt, and Na- 

 poleon's subsequent personal success and triumph at Paris. The 

 former volumes are entitled "The Wife of the First Consul," "The 

 Happy Days of tho Empress Marie Louise," and "Marie Antoinette 

 and the End of the Old Regime." 



— The Popular Science Monthly for October will contain a fur- 

 ther discussion of the fall of man and anthropology, by Dr. 

 Andrew D. White, in which he reviews the futile efforts of Arch- 

 bishop Whately and the Duke of Argyll to prove that the lowest 

 races of men have sunk from an earlier civilization, and the 

 equally successful attempts of certain church organizations in 

 recent years to silence professors of science who were teaching 

 the truths of evolution; a delightfully simple and practical talk to 

 mothers about interesting children in the study of nature, by^ 

 Mary Ailing Aber, under the title "Mothers and Natural Science,"' 

 in which the author points out the beneficial influence of scientific 

 ideas on the formation of character, and tells how mothers may 

 use the common things around them in teaching their children 

 how to question Nature, and how to interpret her answers; 



"Liquor Laws not Sumptuary," by G. F. Magoun, D.D. , being a 

 reply to an article by Dr. William A. Ham.mond on sumptuary laws 

 in an earlier number (Dr. Magoun quotes old colonial and recent 

 State laws to show that existing statutes against the liquor traffic 

 have not been made to enforce economy) ; and a copiously illustrated 

 account of ancient dwellings of the Rio Verde valley, in Arizona, by 

 Capt. Edgar A. Mearns, assistant surgeon, U.S.A., containing a- 

 description of ruined cliff-dwellings and pueblos explored by Dr. 

 Mearns, with plans showing the exact arrangement of the rooms 

 on the five floors of one of the former. 



— Professor George T. Ladd of Yale University has just com- 

 pleted an important work entitled "Introduction to Philosophy,'" 

 — a broad and comprehensive vieva of the whole field of philoso- 

 phy. It Wtll be published by the Scribners, who also have in 

 preparation an abridgment of Professor Ladd's "Physiological 

 Psychology. " 



— On Oct. 1 The Open Court Publishing Company of Chicago 

 will begin the publication of a new quarterly magazine of phi- 

 losophy, science, religion, and sociology, Tlie Monist. The first 

 number of this new magazine will contain articles by Professor 

 E. D. Cope of Philadelphia, Professor George J. Romanes of Lon- 

 don, M. Alfred Binet of Paris, Professor Ernst Mach of Prague, 

 Max Dessoir of Berlin, and Dr. Paul Carus of Chicago. The for- 

 eign correspondence and the departments for the general review 

 of foreign philosophical and scientific literature will be conducted, 

 for Italy, by Professor C. Lombroso, the criminologist ; for France, 

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 northern countries, by Professor Harald Hoffding of Copenhagen; 

 for Germany, by Professor F. Jodl of Prague, and others. Re- 

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 Articles will appear in The Monist by Professor Joseph Le Conte, 

 Professor William James, Charles S. Peirce, Professor Max Miiller, 

 Professor Ernst Haeckel, and Th. Ribot. The magazine will be 



eceived at Editor's Offic 

 Sept. 8-13.' 



Bardeen, C. R. Home Exercise for Realtli and 



Cure. Tr. from German ot D. &. E. Schreber, 



M.D. 23d ed. Syracuse, N.Y., C. W. Bardeen. 



91 p. 16». 

 FisKE, J. Civil Government in the United States 



considered with some Reference to its Origins. 



Boston and New York, Houghton, MitBin, & Co. 



360 p. 12°. SI. 

 Gallagher, G. W. One Man's Struggle. New York 



and London, Punk & Wagnalls. 169 p. 12°. gl. 

 GUYOT, A. The Earth and Man. Tr. by C. C. Fel- 



ton, LL.D. Revised ed. > ew York, Scribner. 



334 p. 12°. $1.75. 

 Harkness, a. An Easy Method for Beginners in 



Latin. New York, Cincinnati, and Chicago, 



Amor. Book Co. 348 p. 12°. 

 House and Pet Dogs; their Selection, Care and 



Training. New York, Forest and Stream Publ. 



Co. 115 p. 16°. 50 cents. 

 Macfarlane. J. An American Geological Railway 



Guide. 2d ed. New York. Appleton. 426 p. 8°. 



$2.50. 

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an Appendix containing three of the orator's 



masterpieces never before published in book 



form. New York and London, Funk & Wagnalls. 



600 p. 12°. $1.50. 

 OSTWALD, W. Outlines ot Gem 



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millan. 396 p. 8°. $3.60. 

 Preble, H.. and Parker. C. P. Handbook of Latin 



Writing. Revised ed. Boston. Ginn. 109 p. 



12°. .55 cents. 

 Prudden, T. M. Dust and its Dangers. New York 



and Loudon, Putnam. Ill p. 16°. 75 cents. 

 Sidney, Sir Philip. The Defense of Poesy: Other- 

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A. S Cook. Boston, Giuu. |43 p. 12°. 

 Smith, C. E. The World Lighted, a Study of the 



Apocalvpse. New York and London. Funk & 



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PRACTICAL 



ELECTRICAL NOTES 



AND DEFINITIONS. 



For the use of engineering students and practical 

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 Regulations to be observed in Electrical Installation 

 Work, with diagrams. 130 pages, 32mo, cloth, 60 cts. 

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READY SEPT. 20. 



RACES AND PEOPLES. 



By DANIEL G. BRINTON, M.D. 



This book is a review of the whole domain 

 of ethnography, with particular attention to 

 the white or European race, the Aryan 

 peoples, their origin and distribution. The 

 latest opinions of the leading European schol- 

 ars have been consulted, but the work is 

 largely the result of independent research, 

 and does not follow any especial school of 

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Price, postpaid, $1.50. 



N. D. C. HODGES, 



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JOURNAL OF MICROSCOPY AND 

 NATURAL SCIENCE: 



THE JOURNAL OF 



The Postal Nlicroscopical 



EDITED BY 



ALFRED MIEN and WILLIAM 

 SPIERS, Mi. F.G.S., Etc. 



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CONTENTS OF JULY NUMBER. 



Bacteria; a Study in Biology. 



The New Apochromatic Lens. 



Our British Plants. 



Microscopic Fauna of Kennett and Avon Canal 



Intelligence of Ants. 



On the Presence of a Tarsal Comb in Spiders. 



Paper . 



The Trees of the Wood. I.— Beech. 



Colorless Preparations of Plants. 



Dips into my Aquarium. 



Differential Staining of Saccaromyces. 



Among the Fylde Flowers — The Woodlands. 



Pencil for Writing on Glass. 



Aspect of the Heavens. 



Paste for Mounting Botanical Specimens. 



The Pine Destroyer. 



Wesley Naturalists' Society. 



Reviews. 



N. D. C. HODGES, 47 Lafayette Place, N.Y 



