+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Front Matter

Front Matter

Date post: 07-Jan-2017
Category:
Upload: lyduong
View: 213 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
11
Front Matter Source: The Scientific Monthly, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Aug., 1932), pp. i-viii Published by: American Association for the Advancement of Science Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/15270 . Accessed: 03/05/2014 05:17 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . American Association for the Advancement of Science is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Scientific Monthly. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Transcript
Page 1: Front Matter

Front MatterSource: The Scientific Monthly, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Aug., 1932), pp. i-viiiPublished by: American Association for the Advancement of ScienceStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/15270 .

Accessed: 03/05/2014 05:17

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

American Association for the Advancement of Science is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve andextend access to The Scientific Monthly.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Front Matter

THE AUGUST

SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY

EDiTED BY J. McKEEN CATTELL

THE TIME SCALE ........................................................... 97

TIDES IN THE ATMOSPHERE. J. BARTELS ... ..... .... 110

THIS YEAR'S ECLIPSE OF THE SUN. JAMES STOKLEY ........................ 131

MODERN PSYCHOLOGY AND THE LAW. DR. PAUL C. SQUIRES ...... 138

THE VERDICT OF PSYCHOLOGISTS ON WAR INSTINCTS. PRO- FESSOR JOHN M. FLETCHER .................. .......................................... 142

ARIZONA THROUGH THE AGES. EDWIN D. McKEE .................................... 146

RARE BOOKS IN THE COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY LI- BRARY. HUGH H. HARTLEY .......................1.....5....................... . 153

THE PURPOSE OF TIDE OBSERVATIONS. H. A. MARMER .................. 162

THE CRIME OF ARCHEOLOGY-A STUDY OF WEATHERING. PROFESSOR HERDAM AN F. CLELAND ................................................................................... 169

SCIENCE SERVICE RADIO TALKS: THE UNITED STATES DURING THE ICE AGE. PROFESSOR

J HARLEN BRETZ .............................. ......1............4........ 174

SCIENCE-THE GUARDIAN OF THE FAMILY HEALTH. DR. HUNTINGTON WILLIAMS .................................. 177

OUR PATENT SYSTEM. DR. EDWIN J. PRINDLE . .......................................... 179

THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE: George Kimball Burgess; The First Syracuse Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Medal Day Meeting of the Franklin Institute; Forest Fire as a Rock Disinte- grating Agent .............................................................. 183

THE SCIENCE PRESS LANCASTER, PA--GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL, N. Y. CITY-GARRISON, N. Y.

Yearly Subscription $5.00 Single Copies 50 cents

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 3: Front Matter

NEW BOOKS OF SCIENTIFIC INTEREST Darwin among the Poets. LIONEL STEVENSON

vii + 357 pp. The University of Chicago Press.

This book forms a summary of pertinent poet!( philosophy in England during the past hundred years. The author has traced a definite development in the

assimilation of the Darwinian hypothesis, from at- tempted compromise to final tacit acceptance.

Behavior Aspects of Child Conduct. ESTHER L. RICHARDS. xv + 299 pp. $3.00. The Macmillan Company.

In this book the author treats behavior as an aspect of health, and health in relation to behavior. She emphasizes the fact that the mental health of the child should be the active concern of parents and teachers.

Meet the Sciences. WILLIAM M. MALISOFF. 196 pp. $2.50. Williams and Wilkins Company.

In this work the author gives a panoramic view of

the scielnces, and treats their major branches indi-

vidually. His purpose is to establish a clearer under-

standing of science and its human value.

Social Problems and Social Planning. CECIL C. NORTH. x + 409 pp. $3.50. The McGraw-Hill Book Company.

This volume, a textbook on social problems, pro-

vides a half-year's college course in general sociology.

It is not intended as a substitute for a more detailed

course, but rather as an introduction to such a course.

Essentials of College Chemistry. B. SMITH HoP- KINS. vi + 544 pp. Illustrated. $3.24. D. C. Heath and Company.

This is a textbook designed for students who desire a comprehensive survey of modern chemistry without too great detail. The author has attempted to pre- pare an outline of chemical study that is designed to be complete, concise, and stimulating.

Interrelations in the Behavior of Young Children. RUTH E. ARRINGTON. xviii + 156 pp. Teachers College, Columbia University.

A monograph presenting an investigation of various aspects of the social behavior of young children. It is one of a series of researches in experimental sociology, which demonstrates the possibility of reliable obser- vation of children in a given social situation.

The Machines We Are. ROBERT T. HANCE. xvi +382 pp. $3.00. Thomas Y. Crowell Company.

In this book the author, a professor of zoology, has attempted to arouse the interest and add to the knowl- edge of the general public in this field of science. The book is intended to indicate and describe the trends of our analysis of our own make-up and destinies.

The Open World. HERMAN WEYL. 84 pp. 5 figures. $1.50. Yale University Press.

The volume is based on the eighth series of lectures

delivered at Yale University under the auspices of the Terry Foundation, and contains three lectures on the

Metaphysical Implications of Science. The subjects are: God and the Universe; Casualty, and Infinity.

Oil Economics. CAMPBELL OSBORN. x + 402 pp. 32 figures. $4.00. McGraw-Hill Book Company.

The author's purpose is to give oil men and inves- tors a review of the main economic facts relative to oil, and a concise explanation of methods of analyzing and forecasting price movements. The text consists mainly of principles and the description of methods.

Obstetric Education. Report of the Subeommit- tee on Obstetric Teaching and Education. xviii? 302 pp. $3.50. The Century Company.

This is a discussion on Prenatal Care, which in- cludes recommendations offered to improve obstetric practice and to lower the present high maternity death-rate. The sub-committee advocates more ade- quate professional training.

The Unemployment Problem. THURBER M. SMITH. xix 1+218 pp. $2.00. The Bruce Publishing Com- pany.

A discussion of the unemployment problem from the view-points of ethics, history and social science. The author, a professor of philosophy, attempts to give a complete and scientific exposition of the ethical as- pects of unemployment and of its Christian connota- tions.

Health and Its Maintenance. BERTHA S. DYMENT. xvii + 472 pp. Illustrated. $3.50. Stanford Uni- versity Press.

A hygiene textbook that is intended for the use of college women and those preparing to become physical training teachers or trained nurses. It presents the essentials of the care of the body, with a working knowledge of its physiology and anatomy.

Growth and Development of the Child. Part III -Nutrition. White House Conference on Child Health and Protection. xx + 532 pp. $4.00. Cen- tury Company.

The topics in this study range from an appraisal of the national food supply to the feeding habits of chil- dren, and the psychological facts of nutrition. The extent of nutrition research is indicated, and gaps in existing knowledge pointed out.

Heroes of the Farthest North and Farthest South. Revised Edition. J. KENNEDY MACLEAN and CHELSEA FRASER. xiv + 472 pp. Illustrated. $2.50. Thomas Y. Crowell Company.

The author begins his story of adventure with the earliest dreams of polar explorations, and describes in turn the voyages of the later explorers down to the expeditions of Amundsen and Byrd and the final conquest of both poles.

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 4: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

Essays in te ll Hii l -_| - thstory of Me icine

By KARL SUDHOFF Professor of History of Medicine, University of Leipzig,

1895-1924

Tranislated by variouis hands and edited, al it. Foreword anyd BiogWraphical Sketch by

FIELDING H. GARRISON, M.D. Librarian, Wi. H. Welch Medical Libiary

FOR- the Eligli,sh reader whio wishes at oncee to become acquainted with the work of Sudhoff,

dean of medical historials and to gyet a generous initroductionl to the wide field of culture explored

Karl Sudh o ff by medical history, this volume is ideal.

A Diverse Assortment of Papers by the World's Leading Medical Historian

In the course of his long career as practicing physician and university professor Dr. Sudhoff has contributed more than 450 books and papers and upwards of 1800 reviews to his subject, anid for many years he has been the dominating international figure in the field of medical history. His erudition, however, does not clog the cultural and philosophical processes of his mind, and we find in this ''quasi-festschrift,II as Garrison calls it, a most diverse assortment of essays on philosophi- cal and literary, as well as technical subjects. There are thirty-eight essays in all, and we gain some idea of their absorbing variety from these few titles selected at random:

Aims and Value of Medical History Periods in the Development of Medical Science History and Epidemiology Disease Demonology and Healing Customs of the Teutons Female Generative Organs as Votive Offerings The Literary Remains of Paracelsus Hygiene Directions for Travelers During the Middle Ages

"Fascinating essays . .. covering all sorts of subjects, from prehistoric times to the pr-esent day--men, abstract considerations, strange medical practices of remote lands and times-all touched into life by a master hand, so that they hold the reader, like an exciting novel. WVe have never seen a book just like this one and we heartily recommend it to our readers."-Clinical Medicine and Surgery. ,LJ

Crown Octavo, XIII +-397 pages Illustrated Cloth, $5.00

MEDICAL LIFE PRESS 12 Mt. Morris Park, West, New York, N. Y.

ORDER FORM S.M.7

Medical Life Press, 12 Mt. Morris Park, W., New York, N. Y.

I enclose $5.00. Please send me, postpaid, a copy of SUDHOFF'S ESSAYS IN THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE

IName.| Address ................................................... Cty .State ..... _~~~ - - - - -

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 5: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

Vol. XXXV, No. 2 AUGUST, 1932 Whole No. 203

The Scientific Monthly An fllustrated Magazine Devoted to the Diffusion of Science

J. McKEEN CATTELL, Editor WARE CATTELL, Associate Editor Published by THE SCIENCE PRESS

LANCASTER, PA.-NEW YORE, N. Y., Grand Central Terminal-GARRISON, N. Y. Single Number, 50 cents Yearly Subscription, $5.00

COPYRIGHT 1932 BY THE SCIENCE PRESS Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Lancaster, Pa., July 18, 1923, under the Act of

March 3, 1879

RECENT BOOKS OF SCIENTIFIC INTEREST

The Development of Physiological Chemistry in the United States. RuSSELL H. CHITTENDEN. 427 pp. $4.50. Chemical Catalog Company.

The purpose of this book is to show something of the growth and development of physiological chem- istry in this country during the past half century. The volume is one in the American Chemical Society Monograph Series.

Can Science Explain Life? (1931 edition with 1932 supplement.) CARL F. KRAFFT. 98 pp. $1.00. Box 1421, Wash., D. C.

The author's spirazine theory, which he believes furnishes a satisfactory mechanistic explanation for heredity, has been combined with a new electrical theory in an effort to explain purposiveness.

The Story of Medicine. VICTOR ROBINSON. xii +

527 pp. $5.00Q Albert & Charles Boni.

The bulk of this volume deals with the progress of scientific medicine, but space is also devoted to magic, superstition, "quackery" anid mesmerism. In tracing the history of medicine from the time of the medicine man to the modern physician, the author devotes much space to the men who have been respon- sible for the development of the medical sciences.

Tucson, The Old Pueblo. FRANK C. LocKwoOD and DONALD W. PAGE. 94 pp. Illustrated. $1.50. Frank C. Lockwood.

The authors have traced back to its sources the

history of Tucson. Dr. Lockwood was professor of

English and dean of the college of letters, arts and

sciences at the Unilversity of Arizona.

Riddles of, Science. SIR J. ARTHLTR THOMSON. 387 pp. Illustrated. $3.50. Liveright, Incorporated.

The author's desire is to clarify and stimulate the layman's ideas about the beginnings of life, chromo- somes, the purpose in evolutioin, the reasons for dreaming and everything which goes into making the woinder of the world.

Wild Beasts To-Day. HAROLD J. SHEPSTONE. X + 254 pp. Illustrated. $4.00. Macmillan Company.

An account of the world's leading zoological gar- dens, the catching, transportation and doctoring of wild animals, the rearing of them on farms, and the work of conserving the rarer species in parks and reservations.

The Art of Bird Watching. E. M. NICHOLSON. 218 pp. Illustrated. $3.50. Charles Scribner 's Sons.

This is a manual for the guidance of ornithologists, students and others interested in bird life. It de- scribes the methods and equipment required for ob- servation and identification of birds, and tells how to interpret their behavior.

The Last Cruise of the Carnegie. J. HARLAND PAUL. xiii + 331 pp. Illustrated. $5.00. Williams and Wilkins Company.

The log of the world's only seagoing non-magnetic observatory, sent to investigate terrestrial magnetism, atmospheric electricity and other oceanographic prob- lems. It describes the discovery of submarine moun- tains, depths and ranges as well as the human aspects of the voyage.

Books previously announced will be given space six times on this page for $12.00

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 6: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTSii

IBER 0-AMERICANAV A Collection of Studies in Latin-American Cultures, native and transplanted, pre-European, colonial, and modern.

Editors: HERBERT E. BOLTON, A. L. KROEBER, C. 0. SAUER

No. 3. The Road to Cibola, by C. 0. SAuER The study here presented is a by-product of five field seasons spent in

Arizona, Sonora, Sinaloa, Nayarit, and Colima, during which by car, on horseback, and afoot, this great land route was examined. Initially a series of Indian trails, over which turquoise was transported south, the plumage of gay sub-tropical birds was carried north, along with buffalo skins, shells, pearls, metals, and other items of trade, it became the camino real of certain frontier Mexican provinces-au historic highway connecting the distant past with the modern present. Illustrated; 75' cents postpaid

Already issued: No. 2. The Comparative Ethnology of Northern Mexico before 1750,

by RALPH L. BEALS Illustrated; $1.25 postpaid

No. 1. Aztatlan, Prehistoric Mexican Frontier on the Pacific Coast, by C. 0. SAUER and D. D. BRAND. Illustrated; $2.00 postpaid

Unilversity ofI California Press Berkeley

A Complete, Copiously Illustrated C a ta1Io Iune

of Present and Forthcoming Publications Medical L'ife Press

Lay readers with a scientific bent and all progressive scientists, who take interest in the cultural background of the medical profession will find in this catalogue valuable information of the Medical Life Press' publications in medical history and biography. The catalogue lists works by a niumber of outstanding medical historians, including the dominating figure of them all, Sudhoff of Leipzig. The numerous illustrations enliven the descriptive material and serve to make the catalogue additionally valuable.

Send for a Free Copy A copy is yours f or thle asking. Please use the coupon below.

Medical Life Press 12 Mount Mforris Park West, New York, N. Y.

Medical Life Press, - -- -- - S.M. 1.2 Mt. Morris Park W., N. Y.

Gentlemen: Please send me gratis, as per your announcemient in THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY, a copy of your Catalogue of Publications.

city.................I...............State.........................

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 7: Front Matter

iv THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

THE COMSTOCK PUBLISHING COMPANY The following books published by the Comstock

Publishing Company have been recommended by a committee of The American Association for the Advancement of Science because they are "authentic and of especial interest to the general reader." Comstock, Mrs. A. B. Handbook of nature study for teachers and parents. 22d ed. 1931. $4.00. 942p. This standard work, many times reprinted, rep- resents fifteen years of successful teaching of normal school students. Much of it first appeared serially in the popular Cornell Nature Study leaflets. It is copiously illustrated with carefully chosen photo- graphs and drawings, and the style and arrange- ment are admirably adapted to amateur study. There is no similar work on so large a scale. Such a book, impelling one to get acquainted with nature through field work and specimens, has an important place in such a list as this. Comstock, J. H., Comstock, A. B., and Herrick, G. W. Manual for the study of insects. 401p.

19th ed. rev. 1930 $4.00 This standard manual by three distinguished Ameri- can entomologists is principally for teachers and students. The clearness and simplicity of the text and the beauty of the illustrations, together with the analytical keys, which make it possible for students to classify insects of all orders, render this the most useful textbook on American insects. Among the more than 5,000 students instructed by Professor Comstock since his first lectures in 1872, scores have gone out to become in turn eminent teachers and students of insect life. Gage, S. H. The microscope; an introduction to microscopic methods and to histology. 589p.

15th or Ultra-Violet Edition. 1932 $4.00 Designedl for mature students and investigators. This book, by a professor emeritus at Cornell, pre- sents the difflcult and fascinating subject of microscopy so that every one who desires to become master of the instrument for serious study will gain the training necessary. All forms of microscopes are discussed, a brief history of lenses and micro- scopes given, and a chapter has been added on the ultra-violet microscope. Fully illustrated.

Now Perkin 1932

Ready Kipping Edition

ORGAsNIC CJHEMIISTR Y

A niew version of the book that, in its earlier editions, has been the standard college text for years. The content has been completely reset, the subject mat- ter rearraniged for more effective teach- ing, anid the entire text modernized in every respeet. The same seholarly au- thenticity, the same eareful balance of reactions, description, and theory are maintained.

$3.50 List

J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY 1249-57 South Wabash Avenue

Chicago

CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON

is a research organization working in many fields. Its monographic publications are placed in the principal libraries of the world. Copies can be purchased at reason- able prices.

These publications comprise studies in the following fields:

Archaeology History Anthropology Literature Astronomny Mathematics Biology Nutrition Botany Palaeontology Chemistry Palaeography Ecology Philology Economics Physics Embryology Terrestrial Magnetism Genetics Zoology Geology

Descriptive lists and prices may be ob- tained by addressing:

CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON WASHINGTON. D. C.

Psychology in America

Address of the President of the Ninth International Congress of Psychology

By J. McKEEN CATTELL Formerly Prof essor of Psychology in the

University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University

With portraits of James, Hall, Ladd, Royce, Munsterberg, Titch- ener, XVundt and Galton.

12 graphs and 15 tables

50 cents, prepaid

THE SCIENCE PRESS Grand Central Terminal, New York

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 8: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS v

New Lea & Fehiger Publications New Work Jtst Ready

A MANUAL OF DISSECTION By GEORGE B. JENKINS, M.D.

Professor of Anatomy in, the George Washington University Medical School, Washington, D. C.

12mo, 298 pages. Limp binding, $3.00, net

The purpose of this manual is to direct the student's course in dissection, making it not only easier but more thorough and effective. It is not designed to supplant the regular text-book but to be used in conjunction with any standard anatomy. If systematically followed, the usual lost motion will be elimi- nated and a greater mastery of the subject assured. It will prove invaluable to practicing surgeons as a ready reference and a reliable guide to the proper surgical procedures in every field of operation.

New Work Just Ready

A TEXT-BOOK OF EMBRYOLOGY By MARY T. HARMAN, PH.D.

Professor of Zoology in the Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, Manhattan, Kansas

12mo, 476 pages, with 284 engravings. Cloth, $4.25, net

This book reflects eighteen years of successful experience in teaching embryology to premedical stu- dents and to students of home economics and physical education. It presents embryology as an anatomical subject but function as well as structure is emphasized throughout. It removes the student's difficulties in understanding the subject by supplying his lack of knowledge concerning the structure and the working of the fully formed organ or organism.

New Work Just Ready

A TEXT-BOOK ON HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY

For College Students By AUGUST KROGH, PH.D., LL.D.

Professor of Zoophysiology in Copenhagen University, Copenhagen, Denmark Revised and Edited

By KATHERINE R. DRINKER, A.B., M.D. Formiierly Research Assistant in Applied Physiology, Harvard Medical School, and Managing Editor,

Journal of Industrial Hygiene, Boston, Massachusetts

12mo, 233 pages, with 108 engravings. Cloth, $2.75, qnet This book, already famous abroad, has been entirely rewritten, revised, and adapted to meet the par-

ticular needs of American students of college grade. It fills the gap that has so long existed between the elementary texts for secondary schools and the larger and more advanced books designed for professional schools and graduate students. Its distinguished author presents his subject concisely, rigorously exclud- ing all unessential details.

L~~~i a

WashLnEgton Square LEA. &E FEBIGER. PHILADE~LPHIA Please send me books checked:

n Jenkins' Manual ........................ ... $3.00 D Krogh 's Physiology ....2.75................... $2.75 C1 Harman 's Embryology .......... ...... 4.25 n New Catalogue.

Name ......... Address . (SM. 8-32)

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 9: Front Matter

vi THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

NOW READY

LEADERS IN EDUCATION A BIOGRAPHICAL DIRE CTORY

Edited by J. McKEEN CATTELL The BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF LEADERS IN EDUCATION will take a place among

the most important works of reference. Material for the book has been in course of collection for a n-umber of years along the lines of the BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF AMERICAN MEN OF SCIENCE, which in successive editions has been a standard work for twenty-five years. The two directories are under the same editorship, as are also Science and School and Society, weekly journals, the former of which since 1895, the latter since 1915, have maintained the highest position in the fields of science and of education.

The BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF LEADERS IN EDUCATION contains biographies of over 11,000 of those in America who have done the most to advance education, whether by teach- ing, writing, research or administration, a careful selection from the million educational workers of the United States and Canada. They are those to whom daily reference is made in the press, from whom all positions of importance are filled. Tt is a work essential to all who have relations with those engaged in educational work necessary to every reference library.

LEADERS IN EDUCATION, like School and Society, aims to bring unity and common interest into educational work, covering the field from the nursery school and before to the university and after, including libraries, museums and social agencies as important factors in education. Like American Men of Science it is more than a compilation; it is a contribution to the advancement of education.

Not only on the editorial side but also in mechanical production, the book main- tains the standards of American Men of Science, being well printed and well bound, a book satisfactory for any student or any library to own, to show and to use.

Over 1,000 pages Over 11,000 biographies Price, $10.00

PUBLISHED BY

THE SCIENCE PRESS GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL, NEW YORK, N. Y. LANCASTER, PA.

To THE SCIENCE PRESS

Lancaster, Pennsylvania

Please send the BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF LEADERS IN

EDUCATION for which ten dollars will be remitted.

Name . .................................................................

A d d ress ...................................................................................................................................................

............................................................................................................................................................................

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 10: Front Matter

THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS vii

U

Numerical Mathematical Analysis By James B. Scarborough

THIS BOOK sets forth in logical order and as clearly as possible the most im- portant principles, methods, and processes used for obtaining numerical re- sults. Methods for estimating the accuracy of such results are given to show the soundness of the methods and processes described, and the reader is shown by a variety of examples just how to apply the processes and use the formulas connected with them. The limitations of the methods are pointed out, and the pitfalls connected with them are illustrated by appropriate examples. The book is designed to serve as a textbook and reference work for students and workers in mathematics, statistics, engineering, and the exact natural sciences; and for all others whose work leads to numerical results.

xiv+?116 pages. 25fgures. Crown Svo. Buckramn, $5.50

THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS BALTIMORE

THE CENTURY BIOLOGICAL SERIES B y--F AM

Edited by ROBERT HEGNER, PH.D.

RAY ETHAN TORREY, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Botany Massachusetts State College

GENERAL BOTANY FOR COLLEGES HIS book presents an articulated body of botanical knowledge, humanized through contact with universal principles. It is a protest and a challenge to the modern tendency to reject all such data as cannot be accurately mea-

sured. In the distribution of subject matter it follows the plan of the historical development of the science of botany, and attempts to tell a connected story of the development of plant anatomy as it may be studied today with the im- plication that the evolutionary course of plant development must have been a similar one. Dr. Torrey has adopted the homologous theory of alternation of generations in preference to the antithetic theory, and outlines modern opinion on this subject in such a way as to be intelligible to the beginner.

Royal 8vo, 526 pages

TriHE CENTURY CO* 353 Fourth Ave. 2126 Prairie Ave. THE CEN URNew York Chicago

PUBLISHERS OF THE NEW CENTURY DICTIONARY

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 11: Front Matter

v7iii THE SCIENTIFIC MONTHLY-ADVERTISEMENTS

1AA0 wo

HE MAY be downtown at the office or a hun- dred miles away .. . yet that happy, eager voice wings across the wires, straight into his heart.

It summons up a sudden, tender warmth. It sweeps away cares and worries. It brings sure, comforting knowledge that all is well at home.

Only a small voice, speaking into a tele- phone. But it can create a moment that colors the whole day.

If you stop to reflect, you will realize how immeasurably the telephone contrib- utes to your family's happiness and welfare. It is a fleet courier ... bearing messages of love, of friendship. A priceless helper . .

ready to aid in the task of running a house- hold. A vigilant guardian . . . always at hand when emergencies arise.

Security, convenience, contact with all the world-these things the telephone brings to your home. You cannot measure their value in money. You cannot determine the ultimate worth of telephone service.

But consider, for a moment, that your telephone is one of a country-wide system of nineteen million others -a system of many million miles of wire served by hundreds of thousands of employees. Yet you pay only a few cents a day for residen- tial use. And you enjoy the most nearly limitless service the world affords.

AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY

This content downloaded from 62.122.72.52 on Sat, 3 May 2014 05:17:25 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions


Recommended