568 



THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY, 



real : Dawson Brothers. Pp. 283, with Plates and 

 Maps. 



Eccles, Robert G., M. D. Evolution of the Mind. 

 Boston : New Ideal Publishing Company. Pp. 24. 

 10 cents. 



Greely, A. W., Annual Eeport of the Chief Sig- 

 nal Officer of the Army, 1888. Washington: Govern- 

 ment Printing-Office. Pp. 418. 



Grimes, J. Stanley. Qeonomy : Creation of the 

 Continents by the Ocean Currents ; — and Kosmo- 

 nomia: The Growth of Worlds and the Causes of 

 Gravitation. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Com- 

 pany. Pp. 139. 50 cents. 



Grote, George, and Segur, Count. The Two 

 Great Retreats of History (of the Ten Thousand ; 

 and Napoleon's from Moscow). With Introduction 

 and Notes by D. H. M. Boston : Cinn & Co. Pp. 

 813. 60 cents. 



Grove, Sir George. A Dictionary of Music and 

 Musicians. Appendix. London and New York: 

 Macmillan & Co. Pp. 315. $2.25. 



Haferkorn, H. E., and Heise, Paul. Handy Lists 

 or Technical Literature. Parti. Pp.99. $1. With 

 Key. Pp. 12. 25 cents. 



Henderson, J. T., Commissioner of Agriculture. 

 Crop Report, Georgia, Juue. Atlanta. Pp. 16. 



Hill, R. T., Austin. A Portion of the Geological 

 Story of the Colorado River of Texas. Pp. 13. 



Holt, Henry, & Co. Supplementary Educational 

 Catalogue. New York. Pp. 22. 



Home Rule and Federation. London: E. True- 

 love. Pp.54. 2d. 



Illinois, University of. Agricultural Experiment 

 Station. Bulletin No. 5. Pp.24. 



Indiana University, Bloomington. David Starr 

 Jordan, President. Annual Catalogue for the Sev- 

 enty-fifth College Year. 1889. Pp. 95. 



Iowa Agricultural College. Experiment Station. 

 Bulletin Nos. 3, 4, and 5. Pp. 150. 



Jacksonville, Fla., Sanitary Association Report 

 of the Epidemic of 18S8. Pp. 350. 



James. Uriah Pierson, Cincinnati. Biography. 

 Pp. 7, with Portrait. 



Kansas State Agricultural College, E.M. Shelton. 

 Eeport of Experiment in Pig-Feeding. Pp. 19. 



Livermore, W. R., U. S. A. Classification of the 

 Atomic Weights in Two Ascending Series. Pp. 12. 



Loewy, Benjamin. A Graduated Course of 

 Natural Science. London and New York: Mac- 

 millan & Co. Pp. 151. 60 cents. 



Macloskie, Prof. G., Princeton College. The 

 Poison Apparatus of the Mosquito. Pp. 5. — Arrange- 

 ment of Analytical Keys. Pp. 3.— Concessions to 

 Science. Pp. 9. 



Massachusetts State Agricultural Experiment 

 Station. Bulletin No. 84. Pp. 16. 



Merriam, Florence. Birds through an Opera- 

 Glass. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin 

 & Co. Pp. 223. 75 cents. 



Mills, T. Wesley, M. D., Montreal. The Influence 

 of the Nervous System on Cell Life. Pp. 10. — 

 Physiological and Pathological Reversions. Pp. 15. 



Mooney, James, Washington, D. C. Folk-Lore 

 of the Carolina Mountains. Pp. 10. — The Holiday 

 Customs of Ireland. Pp. 50. 



New Jersey Geological Survey, Annual Report 

 of the State Geologist, 1838. G. H. Cook. Camden : 

 Linnickson Chew. Pp. 87. 



New York State Board of Charities. Thirty- 

 second Annual Report, 18S8. Pp. 608, with Plates. 



Nunes, Dr. Silva. De la Lobeline dans la thera- 

 peutique de l'Asthme. (On Lobeline in the Thera- 

 peutics of Asthma.) Rio de Janeiro. Pp. 36. 



Paige, J. B., V. 8., Montreal. A Case of Light- 

 ning-Shock with Recovery, with Remarks by F. 

 Buller and T. Wesley Mills. Pp. 16. 



Pickering, Edward C, Cambridge, Mass. The 

 Bruce Photographic Telescope. P. 1. — Meridian- 

 Circle Observations of Close Polar Stars. Pp. 26. 



Philadelphia, Zoological Society of. Annual Re- 

 port of the Board of Directors, 1889. Pp. 28. 



Putnam, Samuel P. The Glory of Infidelity. 

 San Francisco : Putnam and MacDonald. Pp. 22. 



Quarantine Conference, Montgomery, Ala., 

 March, 1889. Proceedings. Pp. 144. 



Sawyer, Rev. L. A., Whitesboro, N. Y. Intro- 

 duction to a New Edition of the Bible. Pp. 56. 



Shufeldt, R. W. Development of the Skull in 

 Neotoma Fuscipes. Pp. 28, with Plates. 



See, T. J. J.. University of Missouri Origin of 

 Binary Stars. Pp. 73. 



Smith, Eugene A., University of Alabama. On 

 the Tertiary and Cretaceous Strata of the Tuscaloosa, 

 Tombigbee, and Alabama Rivers. Pp. 187. 



Stevens, W. Le Conte, Brooklyn, N. Y. The 

 Diffraction of Sound. Pp. 12. 



Theosophical Book Company, Boston. Light on 

 the Path. Written down by M. C. Pp. 68. 80 

 cents. 



Thomas. Cyrus. The Problem of the Ohio 

 Mounds. Washington : Government Printing-Office. 

 Pp. 54. 



Thome, Juan M., Director, Cordoba. Resultados 

 del Observatorio Nacional Argentino. Vol. X, 1877. 

 Pp. 263. 



Todd, J. 8., M. D., Atlanta, Ga. Medicine and 

 Longevity. Pp. 15. 



Utah, Admission of. Report of the Committee 

 on Territories, H. R. Washington : Government 

 Printing-Office. Pp. 12. 



Wachsmuth, Charles, and Springer, Frank. Pa- 

 pers on Crinoids. Pp. 54, with Plates. 



Wallace, Alfred Russel. Darwinism : An Ex- 

 position of the Theory of Natural Selection, with 

 some of its Applications. London and New York : 

 Macmillan & Co. Pp. 494. $1.75. 



Washburn College Laboratory of Natural History 

 Bulletin. Topeka, Kansas : F. W. Cragin, Editor. 

 Pp.32. 



White, C. D. Carboniferous Glaciation in the 

 Southern and Eastern Hemispheres, etc. Pp. 82. 



Waterman, A. A., & Co. " Waterman's Journal." 

 Current Events and Books. Semi-monthly. Pp. 

 12. Each number, 10 cents ; $2 a year. 



Woodward, C. M. The Intellectual Value ol 

 Manual Training. New York : Simpson & Co. Pp. 

 19. 



Wright, G. Frederick. The Ice Age in North 

 America, and its Bearings on the Antiquity of Man. 

 New York: D. Appleton & Co. Pp. 622, with 

 Plates. $5. 



POPULAR MISCELLANY. 



Science-Teaching in Schools. — The re- 

 port of the Committee of American Natu- 

 ralists, on a scheme of instruction in natural 

 science to be recommended to the schools, 

 advises that instruction should begin in the 

 lowest grades of the primary schools, and con- 

 tinue through the whole course. It should 

 be chiefly by object-lessons in the lowest 

 grades, but should be more systematic in the 

 high schools ; and an elementary, but genu- 

 ine and practical, acquaintance with one or 

 more departments of natural science should 

 be required for admission to college. The 

 main part of the scientific work should be 

 given in the lower schools to the study of 



