At all the Libraries , 644 pp., price 10*. 6c?. 



The Stream of Life on our Globe : 



An attempt to reproduce, in the plainest language, some of the newest 

 and most interesting discoveries relating to the first Appearance of 

 Man upon Earth, and the gradual Growth and Laws of Life. 



■| By J. L. MILTON, M.R.C.S. 



Contents. 



9. The Laws of Life. 



) . Beginning of Life. 



2. First Dwellers on Earth. 



3. First Builders. 



4. First Wanderers. 



5. First Colonists of Sacred History, 



6. First Language. 



7. First Alphabet. -••*'• 



8. The Battle of Life. 



10. Life in the Blood. 



11. Life in the Nervesi 



12. Life of a Giant. 



1 3. Life of Men of G < < 



14. Life in the Water 



15. Life in the Stars. 



Crown Svo. cloth, price 6s. 



Holiday Papers. 



By 



HARRY JONES, M.A. 



Incumbent of St. Luke's, Berwick Street, Soho. 

 Containing 37 papers, amongst which are — 



Holidays. 

 Work. 



Looking Back. 

 Pond-Fishing, 

 Out of Town. 

 Garden Games. 



Sight-seeing. 



Sea-side Life. 



Dinner at Greenwich. 



Sea Bathing in France 



Waiters, 



Bretons v. Britons, 



School Treats. 



Mont St. Mu 



Short Cuts. 



Going Abroad* 



Mobs. 



Back Again. 





350pp., Crown Svo. cloth, fully illustrated, price 3$. 



Dr. Lankester on the Uses of Animals in 

 Relation to the Industry of Man. 



Part. I., One Shilling, contains: 

 Silk. 

 Wool. 

 Leather. 

 Bone. 

 §oap. 

 Waste. 



Part II., Eighteenpence, contains: 

 Sponges and Corals. 

 Shell-fish. 

 Insects. 

 Furs. 

 , Feathers, Horns, and Hair. 

 Animal Perfumes. 



400 pp., Crown Svo. cloth, fully illustrated, price 3*. 



Dr. Lankester on Pood. 



Part Ia One Shilling, contains : 

 Water. 

 Salt. 

 Heat - Givers — Oil, Butter, 



Fat. 

 Flesh-formers— Animal Food. 



Part II., Eighteenpencc, contains: 

 Alcohol. 



Wines, Spirits, and Beer. 

 Condiments and Spices. 

 Tea, Coffee, and Chocolate. 

 Tobacco and Opium. 





Full of sound science, curious anecdote, and quaint illustration. Dr. Lankester 

 has a singular power of illustrative keenness ; and in the discursive lessons which 

 he delivers on so many subjects, there is an overflowing wealth of minute collateral 

 information which is always brought to the level of the last achievements of science." 

 — Lancet, 



