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The International Scientific Series.-(Continued.)

18. THE NATURE OF LIGHT, with a General Account of Physical Optics. By Dr. EUGENE LOMMEL. With 188 Illustrations and a Table of Spectra in Colors.

$2.00.

21. THE FIVE SENSES OF MAN. By Professor JULIUS BERNSTEIN, University of Halle. With 91 Illustrations. $1.75.

24. A HISTORY OF THE GROWTH OF THE STEAM-ENGINE. By Professor R. H. THURSTON, Cornell University. With 163 Illustrations. $2.50. 25. EDUCATION AS A SCIENCE. BY ALEXANDER BAIN, LL. D. $1.75. 26. STUDENTS' TEXT-BOOK OF COLOR; or, Modern Chromatics. With Applications to Art and Industry. By Professor OGDEN N. ROOD, Columbia College. With 130 Illustrations.

27. THE HUMAN SPECIES.

Natural History, Paris.

$2.00.

By Professor A. DE QUATREFAGES, Museum of $2.00.

28. THE CRAYFISH: An Introduction to the Study of Zoology. By T. H. HUXLEY, F. R. S. With 82 Illustrations. $1.75.

30. ANIMAL LIFE AS AFFECTED BY THE NATURAL CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE. By Professor KARL SEMPER, University of Würzburg. With 106 Illustrations and 2 Maps.

$2.00.

31. SIGHT: An Exposition of the Principles of Monocular and Binocular Vision. By Professor JOSEPH LE CONTE, LL. D., University of California. With 132 Illustrations. $1.50.

33. ILLUSIONS: A Psychological Study. By JAMES SULLY. $1.50.

34. THE SUN. By Professor C. A. YOUNG, College of New Jersey. With 83 Illustrations. $2.00.

35. VOLCANOES: What they Are and What they Teach. By Professor JOHN W. JUDD, F. R. S., Royal School of Mines. With 96 Illustrations. $2.00. 36. SUICIDE: An Essay in Comparative Moral Statistics. By Professor HENRY MORSELLI, M. D., Royal University, Turin. With 4 Statistical Maps. $1.75.

37. THE FORMATION OF VEGETABLE MOULD, THROUGH THE ACTION OF WORMS. With Observations on their Habits. By CHARLES DARWIN, LL. D., F. R. S. With 15 Illustrations. $1.50.

39. THE BRAIN AND ITS FUNCTIONS. By J. Luys, Hospice Salpêtrière Paris. With 6 Illustrations. $1.50.

40. MYTH AND SCIENCE. By Trro VIGNOLI.

$1.50.

42. ANTS, BEES, AND WASPS. A Record of Observations of the Habits of the Social Hymenoptera. By Sir JOHN LUBBOCK, Bart., F. R. S., etc. $2.00.

The International Scientific Series.-(Continued.)

44. ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE. BY GEORGE J. ROMANES, M. D., F. R. S. $1.75. 45. MAN BEFORE METALS. By Professor N. JOLY, Science Faculty of Toulouse. With 148 Illustrations. $1.75.

46. THE ORGANS OF SPEECH AND THEIR APPLICATION IN THE FORMATION OF ARTICULATE SOUNDS. By Professor G. H. vON MEYER, University of Zürich. With 47 Illustrations. $1.75.

48. ORIGIN OF CULTIVATED PLANTS. BY ALPHONSE DE CANDOLLE. $2.00. 50. THE COMMON SENSE OF THE EXACT SCIENCES. BY WILLIAM KINGDON CLIFFORD. With 100 Figures.

$1.50.

51. PHYSICAL EXPRESSION: Its Modes and Principles. By FRANCIS WARNER, M. D., Assistant Physician, London Hospital. With 51 Illustrations. $1.75.

52. ANTHROPOID APES. By Professor ROBERT HARTMANN, University of Berlin. With 63 Illustrations.

$1.75.

53. THE MAMMALIA IN THEIR RELATION TO PRIMEVAL TIMES. By Professor OSCAR SCHMIDT, University of Strasburg. With 51 Illustrations. $1.50.

54. COMPARATIVE LITERATURE. By Professor H. M. POSNETT, M. A., University College, Auckland. $1.75.

By Professor With 38 Figures.

55. EARTHQUAKES AND OTHER EARTH MOVEMENTS.
JOHN MILNE, Imperial College of Engineering, Tokio.
$1.75.

57. THE GEOGRAPHICAL AND GEOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION OF ANIMALS. By Professor ANGELO HEILPRIN, Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. $2.00.

59. ANIMAL MAGNETISM. By ALFRED BINET and CHARLES FERE, Assistant Physician, Hospice Salpêtrière, Paris. With 15 Figures. $1.50.

60. INTERNATIONAL LAW, with Materials for a Code of International Law. By Professor LEONE LEVI, King's College, London. $1.50.

62. ANTHROPOLOGY. An Introduction to the Study of Man and Civilization. By EDWARD B. TYLOR, D. C. L., F. R. S. With 78 Illustrations. $2.00.

63. THE ORIGIN OF FLORAL STRUCTURES, THROUGH INSECT AND OTHER AGENCIES. By the Rev. GEORGE HENSLOW, M. A., etc. With 88 Illustrations. $1.75.

64. THE SENSES, INSTINCTS, AND INTELLIGENCE OF ANIMALS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO INSECTS. By Sir JOHN LUBBOCK, Bart., F. R. S., etc. With 118 Illustrations. $1.75.

The International Scientific Series.-(Continued.)

66. PHYSIOLOGY OF BODILY EXERCISE. By F. LAGRANGE, M. D. $1.75. 67. THE COLORS OF ANIMALS: Their Meaning and Use. By EDWARD BAGNALL POULTON, F. R. S. With 36 Illustrations and 1 Colored Plate. $1.75.

68. SOCIALISM: New and Old. By Professor WILLIAM GRAHAM, M. A., Queen's College, Belfast. $1.75.

69. MAN AND THE GLACIAL PERIOD. By Professor G. FREDERICK WRIGHT, D. D., Oberlin Theological Seminary. With 108 Illustrations and 3 Maps.

$1.75.

71. A HISTORY OF CRUSTACEA.

Recent Malacostraca. By the Rev.

THOMAS R. R. STEBBING, M. A. With 51 Illustrations. $2.00.

73. MOVEMENT. By E. J. MAREY. M. B., B. Ch. (Oxon.).

Translated by ERIC PRITCHARD, M. A., With 200 Illustrations. $1.75.

75. WHAT IS ELECTRICITY? By JOHN TROWBRIDGE, S. D., Rumford Professor and Lecturer on the Applications of Science to the Useful Arts, Har vard University. Illustrated. $1.50.

76. THE EVOLUTION OF THE ART OF MUSIC. By C. HUBERT H. PARRY, D. C. L., M. A., etc. $1.75.

77. THE AURORA BOREALIS. BY ALFRED ANGOT, Honorary Meteorologist to the Central Meteorological Office of France. $1.75.

78. MEMORY AND ITS CULTIVATION. By F. W. EDRIDGE-GREEN, M. D., F. R. C. S. $1.50.

79. EVOLUTION BY ATROPHY. BY JEAN DEMOOR, JEAN Massart, and EMILE VANDERVELDE.

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK

Insect Life. (New Edition in Colors.)

By JOHN HENRY COMSTOCK, Professor of Entomology in Cornell University. With 12 full-page plates reproducing Butterflies and various Insects in their natural colors, and with many wood-engravings by Anna Botsford Comstock, Member of the Society of American Wood-Engravers. 8vo. Cloth, $1.75 net; postage, 20 cents additional.

"The arrangement of the lessons and experiments and the advice on collection and manipulation are only some of the very admirable features of a work that must take first place in the class to which it belongs."-Philadelphia Press.

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Any one who will go through the work with fidelity will be rewarded by a knowledge of insect life which will be of pleasure and benefit to him at all seasons, and will give an increased charm to the days or weeks spent each summer outside of the great cities. It is the best book of its class which has yet appeared."-New York Mail and Express.

The Art of Taxidermy.

By JOHN ROWLEY, Chief of the Department of Taxidermy in the American Museum of Natural History. Finely illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00.

CONTENTS.-Collecting. Tools and Materials. Casting. Birds. Mammals. Fish, Reptiles, and Crustaceans. Skeletons. The Reproduction of Foliage for Groups.

"Mr. Rowley will long be gratefully remembered by taxidermists, amateurs, and others, for the care he has used in thus meeting a longfelt want."-Bangor (Me.) Sportsman.

"The book is not an elaborate treatise upon the abstract principles which lie at the foundation of artistic taxidermy, but is rather a compendium full of practical hints and suggestions, recipes, and formulas for the working taxidermist."-The Dial.

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK.

How to Know the Butterflies.

By JOHN HENRY COMSTOCK, Professor of Ento mology in Cornell University, and ANNA BOTSFORD COMSTOCK, Lecturer in Nature Study in Cornell University. With 45 full-page colored plates, and many illustrations in the text. 8vo. Cloth, $2.25 net; postage additional.

This book is designed as a general treatise on butterflies and a manual of the species of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains. It is intended especially for beginners and for students of nature; but it will also serve as an introduction to a serious study of this group of insects. This book is richly illustrated, without a confusing array of figures of species from remote parts of our country; it contains brief descriptions of species, but sufficiently full that the reader can definitely determine the species studied; and it gives the more important facts of the lives of our butterflies.

"This book gives the unscientific reader a direct acquaintance with a large number of species, in such simple terms that classification is not difficult, and with the aid of profuse colored illustrations that excite the admiration of those who have contented themselves heretofore with viewing these beautiful creatures on the wing. Butterfly catching is regarded by many as a cruel pastime, but there are ways of capturing these ephemerals which may rightly be regarded as humane and decent, and the authors, filled with an abounding love of nature, recommend nothing that is not compatible with their beliefs. Notes of the habitat of each species and the facts of butterfly life are given abundantly, and, with the pictures, form an unusually important book, which is certain to widen the circle of those who know the joys of butterfly collecting."- The Washington Star.

"Such blending of tints would seem to be a task fit for the painter only instead of the printer. Investigation reveals the fact that the work is a veritable treasure-house of information—perhaps the most carefully prepared volume yet placed before the public dealing with the subject in hand."-St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

"One of the most interesting, valuable, and beautiful of all the nature books published this spring."-Brooklyn Standard-Union.

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK.

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