September 26, 1890.] 



SCIENCE. 



i«i 



and their Ways,"' by Sir Samuel White Baker, author of •' Albert 

 Nyanza," etc.; "Physical and Political School Atlas," consisting 

 of 80 maps and complete index, by J. G. Bartholomew; Behaf^hel's 

 "The German Language," translated and adapted for the use of 

 English schools by Emil Trechmann ; "An Elementary Geography 

 of India, Burma, and Ceylon," by H. F. Blanford, late meteoro- 

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 ^'Elementary Manual of Applied Mechanics," by Professor J. H. 

 Cotterill and J. H. Slade; "Handbook of Field and General 

 Ornithology," a manual of the structure and classification of birds, 

 with instructions for collecting and preserving specimens, by Pro- 

 fessor Elliott Coues; "Maps and Map Drawing," by William A. 

 Elderton; " Elements of Physics for Public Schools." by C. Fes- 

 senden. High School, Napanee, Ontario, Canada; "A Text-Book 

 of Physiology," by Michael Foster; " Class Book of Geology," by 

 Archibald Geikie; "A Short Manual of Philology for Classical 

 Students," by P. Giles; "The Geometry of Position," by Robert 

 H. Graham, author of " Graphic and Analytical Statics; " " Elec- 

 tricity and Magnetism," by A. Guillemin, translated and edited by 

 Professor Silvanus Thompson; " Text-Book of Pathology," by D. 

 J. Hamilton; " The Elements of Solid Geometry," by. R. Baldwin 

 Hayward; "Mixed Metals and Metallic Alloys," by Arthur H. 

 Hiorns, author of "Practical Metallurgy and Assaying," "Ele- 

 mentary Metallurgy," " Iron and Steel Manufacture," etc. ; " Sound, 

 Light, and Heat: An Elementary Text-Book," by D. E. Jones, 

 author of "Examples in Physics," etc.; "The Book of the 45 

 Mornings," by Rudyard Kipling, author's edition; "Text-Book of 

 ■Comparative Anatomy," by Dr. Arnold Lang, professor of zoology 



in the University of Zurich, translated by Henry M. Bernard and 

 Matilda Betnard; " Euclid for Beginners," being an introduction 

 to the existing text-books, by the Rev. J. B. Lock; Lock and 

 Scott's American edition of the "Arithmetic for Schools; " "From 

 Charing Cross to St. Paul's," by Justin McCarthy; "The Greek 

 World under Roman Sway," forming a sequel to "Greek Life and 

 Thought," and " A History of Greek Literature," by Rev. J. P. 

 Mahafly; "Manual of Logarithms," by G. F. Matthews; "His- 

 tory of Chemistry," by Professor Ernst von Meyer, translated by 

 Dr. George MoGowan; "Story of the Greek Tragedians," by Dr. 

 Munk, translated by A. W. Ven-all ; "Outlines of General Chem- 

 istry," by Professor Ostwald, translated by Dr. James Walker; 

 " Lessons in Elementary Biology," by T. Jeffery Parker; " Chrono- 

 logical Outlines of English Literature," by F. Ryland; "The 

 Fossil Insects of North America," by Dr. Samuel H. Scudder; " Dr. 

 Schliemann's Excavations at Troy, Tiryns, Mycense, Orchomenos, 

 Ithaca, presented in the Light of Recent Knowledge," by Dr. Carl 

 Shuchhardt, translated by Miss Eugenie Sellers; "The Myology 

 ot the RsLveu (Corvus corax Siiiuatus): A Guide to the Study of 

 the Muscular System in Birds," by R. W. Sbufeldt; "Elements of 

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 James Sime; "A Hand-Book of Phonetics," by Miss Soames; 

 "Practical Physics," Vol. III. "Optics, Heat, and Sound," by 

 Balfour Stewart and W. W. H. Gee; "The Royal House of 

 Stuart, illustrated by a Series of Forty Plates in Colors, drawn 

 from the Relics of the Stuarts," by William Gibb, with an intro- 

 duction and notes by John Skelton; "Analysis of English His- 

 tory," based on Green's " Short History of the English People," 

 by C. W. A. Tait; "The Histories," edited with introduction and 

 commentary, by the Rev. W. A. Spooner, M. A. ; and " A System 

 of Sight-Singing from the Established Musical Notation," based on 

 the principle of tonic relation, and illustrated by extracts from 

 the works of the great masters, by Sedley Taylor, author of " Sound 

 and Music," etc. 



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