SCIENCE. -ADVERTISEM EN TS. 



vii 



For the Lover of Out=door Life and Adventure 



Professor H. L. Bailey's The Outlook to Nature 



Four lectures delivered in the Colonial Theatre, Boston, in January, 1905, as a part of the Uni- 

 versity Course. They are entitled: "The Realm of the Commonplace," " Country and City," 

 "The School of the Future," " Evolution : The Quest for Truth." 



Cloth, 12mo, $1.25 net (postage lie). 



Mrs. Peterson's How to Know Wild Fruits 



A Guide to Plants when not in Flower by Means of Fruit and Leaf. By Maude Gridley Petkr- 

 SON. Fully illustrated by Mary Elizabeth IIeki!ert. Cloth, |1. 50 wf< (postage 14c. ). 



" Here is a book that fills a gap heretofore left open in the list of nature publications 

 . . . that leaves no place for the guidance of the country-goer after the plants have ceased 

 to flower . . . a serviceable book." — Washington Star, 



Mrs. Ely's Another Hardy Garden Bool<: 



By Helena Ruthebfoud Fly, whose first "Hardy Garden Book," says The Independent, "was 

 deservedly popular, and this, its successor, shows the same intelligent, practical commonsense. 

 . . . But the charm of the work rests in the reader's companionship with an intelligent, agree- 

 able woman, who loves her garden." 



Cloth, illustrated, $1.75 net (postage 13c.). 



The Garden of a Commuter's Wife 



'' Altogether the most chariiiing book that we have seen. Its author must be indeed a 

 delightful person, for the rarest of all thing.s in books is charm."— T/ie Boston Herald. 



Eleventh edition, cloth, illustrated from photographs, fl.50. 



Antarctica, 



or Two Years Amongst the Ice of the South Pole 



By Dr. N. OTTO Q. NORDENSKJOLD and 



Dr. JOHAN GUNNER ANDERSSON 



With 288 illustrations and 4 maps, 688 pp., cloth, 8vo, illustrated, $5.00 net. 



A chapter almost unique in the fascinating history of later-day exploring expeditions. 

 The party under Ur. Nordenskjold was lelt as far southward as possible in the autumn of 1901, 

 expecting to be picked up in the next spring. But the relieving ship was then unable to pene- 

 trate as far as it had done the previous year. Dr. Anderson attempted to reach the place over 

 the ice and failed The ship attempted to force a way from the eastward and sank. All three 

 parlies isolated from each other were forced to spend a second winter there. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, 64-66 Fifth Ave., N. Y. 



