of Messrs W. H. Allen &= Co.'s Publications. 31 



G. H. KINAHAN. 

 ^ .?T-^"^y„^°°'^ °^ ^°^^ Names. Fc.ip. Svo, 4s 



^K'' Th*^"'"" '■.'';," ','!i°" ™'''*- "'• Kiaahan's litUo tool wl oSn make i aU 



n™ £/', '"^? 1°' '5? '"?"'"' '■°"=''«. "■"'I ""i ""■■<' P""-' d^ls with those reel™ which 

 ru^hn^hlhlT'""-, ""?"■' '°™?i"'"i™ of !«« tas been moBt generally uaert by he 

 author, lint ho has also given the M lorminatioos for Ihoso that like them The book 

 r^ L r !?i"''''"'?«l; f"-- " "»"' bo had, by ovory geologist , and as its siLeT'smafrit w" 

 aI ™/',X°«™S"' "o-^P"™"" '»'■ «>« ■"-" «-bo works over field and ™ua;;;."^' 



Professor E. LANKESTER. 

 The Uses of Animals in Relation lo the Industry of Man. New 

 Kihtion. Illustrated. Crown Svo, 4s. 

 Silk, Wool, Leather, Bone, Soap, Waste, Sponges, and Corals, Shell-fish Insects 



ssrfsr ^'-^h^^srA^^ii^"' ^"'■"''' ""'"■"'=^' =''" "-" ^^ "' '^« '"^- 



analysing each fresh sample of rejected material, and stating hiw each of iticom 

 ponent parts can be turned to the best account."— ^(/jenajiim. 

 Practical Physiology : A School Manual of Health. With numerous 

 Woodcuts. Sixth Edition. Fcap. Svo, 2s. 6d. 

 Contents. 



Constitution of the Human Body. Breathing, or the Function of Respira- 



Naturc of the Food supplied to the Human tion. 



„.^'"IY- j ,,. „ , ' Tbe Structure and Functions of the 



Digestion, and the Organs by which it is Skin. 



performed The Movements of the Human Body. 



Nature of Blood and its Circulation by the The Brain and Nerves. 



Heart. The Organs of the Senses. 



" Writing for schoolboys, Dr Lankester has been careful to consult their tastes. 

 There are passages in this little work which will make it popular, and the instructor 

 will probably be hailed by a name which is new to people of his class, that of a 

 ' regular brick.' " — Atfienwum. 



MRS LANKESTER. 

 Talks about Health : A Book for Boys and Girls. Being an Explana- 

 tion of all the Processes, by which Life is Sustained. Illustrated. 

 Small Svo, is. 



The Late EDWARD NEWMAN, F.Z.S. 

 British Butterflies. With many Illustrations. Super royal Svo, 7s. 6d. 

 " The British butterflies have found a good friend in Mr Newman, who has given 

 us a history of their lives— from larva, to imago, their habits and their whereabouts— 

 which is one of the most perfect things of the kind. And we arc jflad to read the 

 author's statement that his work has attained, while in progress, a sale that is almost 

 unattainable in English scientific works. Firstly, the work consists of a series of 

 notices to the young who may be disposed to go_ butterfly-hunting. And in them we 

 find the author's great experience, and we commend this part of his work to our 

 readers. The next part cteals with the subjects of anatomy, physiology, and embryo- 

 logy of the insects ; and fijially we come to the separate account of each species. This 

 latter is admirably given. First cornea a capital engraving, life size, of the species, 

 and then follows in order the life, history, time of appearance and locality, occupying 

 from a page to a page and a halt or two pages of a large quarto (or nearly so) volume. 

 All this is done well, as we might expect from the author ; it is clear, intelligible, and 

 devoid of much of the rubbish which abounds in books of this kind generally. We 

 must conclude by expressing the hope that all who are interested in insects will make 

 themselves aquainted with the volume." — Popular Sdpnee Review. 



Any Bookseller at Home and Abroad, 



