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HARTMANN BROS. MFG. CO. 
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y., U.S. A. 
New York Office: 1123 Broadway 
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MANUFACTURERS OF 
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SCIENTIFIE€E 
1543 contains an 
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tests, 
S¢ AE N IFLE 
38 gives.the 
6 be used im concrete. 
SCIENTEFIC 
/ 
elaborate discussion by Lieut. 
various systems of 
crete, concrete construction, 
articles constitute 
f reinforced con 361 
better has been published. 
of the 
cations These 
text book on the subject 
crete Nothing 
SCIENTIFI(¢ 
in which practical notes 
SCIENTIFIC 
the making of concrete 
Newberry 
SCIENTIFIC 
1534 gives 
Each number of the 
cents. 
AMERICAN 
article 
The 
describes the proper composition and mixture 
of concrete and gives the results of elaborate 
AMERICAN 
proportion of gravel and sand 
AMERICAN SUPPLEMENTS 
1567, 1568}. 1569, 1570, and 
AMERICAN 
997 contains an article by Spencer Newberry way 
on the proper prepa 
ration of concrete are given. 
AMERICAN SUPPLEMENTS City 
1568 and 1569 present a helpful account of 
blocks by Spencer 
eke 
AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT 
a critical review 
ing value of reinforced concrete. 
SUPPLEMENT SCIENTIFIC 
article clearly 
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 
SUPPLEMENT orate 1564 contains an article by 
from your 
newsdealer 
concrete are analyzed. 
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 
1571 contain an 
Henry J. Jones 
reinforcing con- 
and their apphi- 
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& Co. 
Walter Loring Webb. 
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 
1573 contains an article by 
manufacture, illustrated. 
Broad- SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 
SUPPLEMENT 
New York SG Ti: NTIFIC 
Philip 1s 
farm purposes. ‘The paper 
depositing of concrete, 
of the engineer- forms, concrete sidew alks, 
Supplement costs A set of papers containing all 
or from 1551 contains the principles 
concrete with some practical illustrations by 
74 discusses steel for reinforced 
AMERICAN SUPPLEMENTS 
1576, and 1577 contain 
Wormley, Jr., on 
and concrete, their preparation 
exhaustively 
and concrete 
OO 
details of con- 
struction of reinforced concrete posts, ete. 
cement 
cusses the making of mortar 
facing concrete, 
AMERICAN SUPPLEMENTS 
on Concrete, by 1547 and 1548 give a resume in which the 
various systems of reinforced concrete 
struction are discussed and illustrated. 
SUPPLEMENT 
Lewis A. 
in which the merits and defects of reinforced 
SUPPLEMENT 
of reinforced 
Se 
Louis H. 
on the principles of success in concrete block 
SUPPLEMENT 
concrete, 
a paper by 
mortar 
and use for 
dis- 
the articles 
above mentioned will be mailed for $1.80. 
con- 
Hicks, 
Gibson 
June, 
NEW BOOKS 
The Bricklayer and Mason 
‘TWENTIETH CENTURY BRICKLAYER’S 
AND Mason’s AssIsTANT. By Fred. T. 
Hodgson. Chicago: Frederick J. Drake 
& Co. 1905. Pp. 309. Price, $3.00 net. 
Mr. Hodgson, whose practical handbooks 
have been more than once referred to with ap- 
probation in these pages, has added another to 
his long list of practical books, dealing this 
time with the actual labor of the bricklayer 
and the stone mason. His book is divided into 
two parts, each devoted to one of the two spe: 
cial themes of which he treats. “The text is 
thoroughly practical, concise and definite in its 
statements and describes the practical work of 
brick and stone laying with great minuteness. 
The illustrations are very numerous and ad- 
mirably supplement and explain the text. It 
is a book intended for the practical workman, 
and hence deals with practical subjects in a 
thoroughly practical way. 
English Abbeys 
THE RuINED ABBEYS OF GREAT BRITAIN. 
By Ralph Adams Cram. New York: 
James Pott & Co. Pp. 13+315. Price, 
$2.50 net. 
Mr. Cram is at once an architect and a 
writer, an unusual combination, which-has re- 
sulted in a deeply interesting book on the 
ruined abbeys of Great Britain. ‘That he is 
a consistent Churchman is apparent from his 
dedication and foreword, which he promptly 
follows up by a bitter attack on King Henry 
VIII. for his suppression and destruction of 
the monasteries. And indeed it was a cruel 
work, this dismantling of these great old 
churches, this destruction of some of England’s 
noblest work in the art of building. Mr. Cram 
tells the story of these priestless churches with 
reverential hand and depicts them in a series 
of beautiful photographs that add immensely 
to the interest of his book. “The book is a 
fascinating study in history and architecture, 
that well deserves the wide audience it will 
undoubtedly receive. 
The Ways of Nature 
Ways oF Nature. By John Burroughs. 
Boston and New York: Houghton, Mif- 
flin & Co., 1905. Pp. 10+280. Price, 
$1.10 net. 
Mr. Burroughs’s latest book is a stimulat- 
ing and interesting one. Its essays treat of 
the ever-interesting question, do animals rea- 
son? and is avowedly the result of the debate 
on this question which has engrossed the pub- 
lic for two years or more past and which was 
precipitated by the highly realistic accounts of 
the doings of animals served up as observed 
facts by skilful writers. Mr. Burroughs’s 
position in this controversy was long ago made 
clear in the most emphatic manner. He does 
not reproduce his famous essay in the Atlantic 
Monthly in the present volume, but he gath- 
ers a sheaf of papers that recapitulate his views 
and present his latest deductions. 
Heretofore, he writes, he has made the most 
of every gleam of intelligence of bird or four- 
footed beast that came under his observation, 
making, perhaps, too much of it and giving 
the wild creatures credit for more “sense” than 
they really possess. Some later nature writers, 
he adds, have so grossly exaggerated and mis- 
represented the every-day life of our fields and 
woods that their example has caused a strong 
reaction to take place in his mind, and has led 
him to set about examining the whole subject 
of animal life and instinct in a new way. 
This book has been written in the cautious 
spirit these words imply. It covers a wide 
range of subjects and presents a keenly ana- 
lytic summary of nature’s reasonings, its limits 
and its possibilities. It is not a book of con- 
1906 
THE 
