20 LIST OF BOOKS PUBLISHED BY DAVID DOUGLAS. 
STEVENSON — Christianity Confirmed by Jewish and 
Heathen Testimony, and the Deductions from Physical Science, etc. By Tomas 
Stevenson, F.R.S.E., F.G.S., Member of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 
Second Edition. Feap. 8vo, 3s. 6d. 
STRACHAN—What is Play ? 
A Physiological Inquiry. Its bearing upon Education and Training. By Joan 
StracHan, M.D., Jun. In 1 vol. feap., 1s. 
““We have great pleasure in directing the attention of our readers to this little 
work . . . bearing as it does on one of the most important aspects of physiological 
medicine, as well as on education in the highest sense of the word.”—Lancet. 
“A very interesting, and, in the main, a wise little book.”—Mind. 
“It is so seldom that so much sound sense, clear reasoning, and able develop- 
ment of ideas, which will probably be new to the majority of readers, are com- 
pressed into a hundred duodecimo pages, as Dr. Strachan has contrived to put 
into his little treatise on Play.”—Scotsman. e 
TATIT—Sketch of Thermodynamics. 
By 0. G. Tart, Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh. 
Second Edition, revised and extended, Crown 8vo, 5s. 
TEIGNMOUTH—Reminiscences of Many Years. 
By Lorp TercnmoutH. 2 vols., demy, 8vo, 28s. 
WILSON—The Botany of Three Historical Records: 
Pharaoh’s Dream, The Sower, and the King’s Measure. By A. STEPHEN WILSON. 
Crown 8vo, with 5 plates, 3s. 6d. 
“‘The book is useful as affording illustrations of Scripture incident and teach- 
ing.”—Inverness Courier. 
*‘The writer deserves credit for the pains he has taken in making his researches, 
and by means of well-designed woodcuts he has so illustrated the work as to make 
his arguments as,clear as is possible.”—Courant. 
WILSON—Reminiscences of Old Edinburgh. 
By Dante. Witson, LL.D., F.R.S.E., Professor of History and English Literature 
in University College, Toronto, Author of ‘‘ Prehistoric Annals of Scotland,” etc. 
etc. 2 vols. post 8vo, 15s. 
“‘We have only been able to single out some specimens at random from a book 
that is essentially discursive; but we have found the whole very enjoyable reading, 
and there is no lack of variety of incidents. The illustrations, which are after pen- 
and-ink sketches by the author where he is not indebted for them to the irre- 
pressible Mr. Sharpe, are equally clever and characteristic.” —Pall Mall Gazette. 
“Professor Wilson has given us a book for which we may be thankful, especially 
in these days of slipshod learning and superficial display. He knows his subject 
thoroughly, and writes about it with the ease of a master. We must not omit to 
notice the exceedingly graceful and accurate pen-and-ink sketches by the author 
himself, reproduced with rare fidelity by photozincography, and the two laughable 
caricature vignettes by C. K. Sharpe, which are exceedingly characteristic.”— 
Edinburgh Courant. : . 
WYLD—Christianity and Reason: 
Their necessary connection, By R. 8. Wyzp, LL.D. Extra feap, 8vo, 3s. 6d. 
