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length. It was clear from an inspection of those most recently killed, that they had been killed by some animal for food. The flesh of all had at least been partly devoured, but it was observed that not a carapace nor a plastron was broken. The reptiles had been killed, apparently, by some sharp-beaked bird, by thrusting its beak between the joints of the reptile's armor, so to speak. The loon is clearly competent to do this, but Icons are seldom seen in this locality. Moreover these birds would hardly drag their prey so far inland to devour it, as was observed to be the case with many of the turtles. The blue heron is more abundant here than the loon, but still not abundant enough to be credited with so much destructive work on animals so large. I have never suspected him, either, of being a turtle-eater. The only other birds competent to do the work and sufficiently numerous and intelligent to be suspected, are crows. Several flocks of these were hovering about the locality, and though we were not able to approach the wary birds close enough to observe them feeding, our suspicions fell upon them. Has any reader of Science observed crows killing turtles ? If so, is this a well established babit of the bird or is it one which has been recently acquired? EDSON S. BASTIN. Chicago, Ill., 2421 Dearborn Street, June 14.

The Aurora.

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DR. VEEDER'S reply of June 2nd, is so objectionable on account of the positive way in which he closes his part of the argument (believing, as I do, that his facts are in fault) leaving it to be believed that at "no point throughout the research has there appeared to be even the slightest chance' for an alternaLet tive hypothesis," that I am once more tempted to reply. me, before passing on, emphasize the fact that we are not discussing the question of “magnetic storms" and sun-spots. I believe there is only one astronomer and physicist of any eminence who disbelieves in this association, so that as far as discussion of the question is concerned, we may consider it as practically closed; but, even if I held the contrary opinion with the majority, so long as an opponent of such eminence held out, I should consider it inadvisable to be as positive as Dr. Veeder in his last letter, on the subject of the aurora, where, I believe, I am not alone in supposing there is reason to doubt a connection between this display and areas of disturbance on the eastern limb of the sun. I have raised some well-known objections to this theory, and, as a rule, have teen met by Dr. Veeder with generalities (Science, April 7, 28, May 19 and June 2); it is unnecessary to mention them again here, so that I shall content myself with dis cussing this last contribution, which leaves me in such an uncomfortable position, apparently.

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The whole base and superstructure of this theory is erected upon a solar period of rotation of 27 days," and to quote from a letter which I have received from Dr. Veeder, dated March 16, 1892, the addition of "a few hours difference in the length of the period introduces a drift into the tables that becomes everywhere apparent" Surely this is a suspicious degree of perfection in the theory, as no one knows what the solar period of rotation is: such periods as have been determined from sun-spots (the only possible method so far) give values between 25 and 27} days, depending on the solar latitude of the spot; yet, the addition of a "few hours" can introduce a "drift which becomes everywhere apparent." when 24 days is left out of the tabulating without apparent effect, for, it is evident, that in considering the effects of the return to the eastern limb of a sun-spot or area of disturbance, that it is not a fixed rotational period that should be used, but the one belonging to the latitude of the spot under discussion.

This year auroras were visible here on the following days of the year: the 5th, 6th, 8th, 21st, 35th, 36th, 44th, 45th, 46th, 47th, 104th, 109th, 127th, 128th, 130th, 144th, 145th, 160th, 164th, 165th and 166th. If auroras are caused by a disturbed solar area at the easter limb, we should find, by adding the interval adopted by Dr. Veeder of 274 days to any of the above days, the probable dat of the returning display. What do we find in fact? That, of the52 periods obtained by adding this interval in succes

sion to the above days, up to the present date, there were only 10 of the days so determined on which displays took place; that is, 20 per cent of successes as against 80 per cent of failures. In illustration of the above, the aurora of the 5th day should have reappeared on the 321, 59, 86. 114 and 141; from the days of auroras given above, it will be seen it appeared on none of the required dates; nor did that of the 6th; that of the 8th reappeared twice out of five solar periods; the 21st, once out of five; the 35th, once out of four, and so on.

One more objection, previously overlooked, before passing on. I am of opinion (no one can be certain, failing the necessary observations), that there is practically no instance in which aurora displays are not taking place in one hemisphere or other of the earth; a large proportion should be observed co-incident with any other class of recurrent phenomena, and think it possible that "chance," which Dr. Veeder avoids the discussion of, is really an important element in our discussion, as I shall now, endeavor to prove this by his own admissions.

In a letter to me, dated May 4, 1892, he says: "The year 1879, selected for printing as an illustration of the results seen throughout the entire table, is one of profound minimum at which times solar disturbances are well separated from each other and the relation comes out distinctly although for the construction of such a table one year is just as good as another." (italics are mine.) This is a perfectly sound conclusion, and by it alone might this theory stand or fall if chance" is not, or is, as important as I maintain. On May 13th, Dr. Veeder writes: (This table of comparison between the phenomena being now printed) "It [1879] being a year of minimum the relation does not come out so strongly as when disturbances were more numerIn the next year (1880) the numbers would be much larger and the relation in every way more distinct.

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Scientific Words in the Century Dictionary. ALTHOUGH one of the most useful books published, the Century Dictionary is, of course, not faultless. The mention of a mistake in a recent issue of The Critic reminded me also of the following:

According to the latest edition of Foster's "Physiology," saliva "in a healthy subject is alkaline, especially when the secretion is abundant. When the saliva is scanty, or when the subject suffers from dyspepsia, the reaction of the mouth may be acid." According to the Century Dictionary, the saliva is a colorless ropy liquid which normally has an acid reaction."

The word " griffe," which is commonly used in Louisiana, is defined by the Century Dictionary as a "a mulatto-especially a mulatto woman." I have copied in a note-book from a lecture delivered in New Orleans by Hon. Charles Gayarré, the historian of Louisiana and authority on such matters, the following: "In Creole America there is a very mixed population Even in very early times there were these distinctions: European, or fresh white immigrant; Creole, or pure white American of European parentage; the aboriginal Indian; the griffe, or cross between Indian and negro; the mestizo, or mixed white and Indian; the mulatto, etc., etc." These may not be the exact words of the speaker, since I may have misunderstood or copied it wrongly, but I think the same statement may be found in one of his works. Griffe, no doubt, is from the Spanish grifos, meaning frizzled

hair. This is a peculiarity of many of the crosses between Indian and African. I need but mention the Cafusos, who, according to Tyler, "are remarkable for their hair, which rises in a curly mass, forming a natural periwig, which obliges the wearers to stoop low in passing through their but doors."

The word playa is not mentioned in the Century Dictionary, although, according to the Popular Science Monthly, vol xxii., p. 381, it has been adopted by geologists as a generic term, under which the various desiccated lake-basins of the West may be grouped."

Although the œse, or platinum-needle or loop, is the most important tool of the bacteriologist, both of these words have been omitted. The word œse is, of course, German, but is now much used in English books.

The common names, and often the scientific names, of wellknown plants have been omitted. The Amorphophallus titanum, a vegetable wonder of the Arum family, discovered in Sumatra in 1878 by Beccari, is not mentioned under its generic or common East Indian name of Krubut, although both of these appear under Rufflesia, the generic name of a remarkable plant which grows with it.

The word noctilucent is defined in the Century Dictionary, but the word noctilucence, a term sometimes applied to the light emitted by the Noctiluca, is omitted, although phosphorescence is the more common, but perhaps less accurate, term.

Many of the definitions are inaccurate and unsatisfactory. From the following definition of Carıb, one would conclude that they are all of a "native race" and that none are living in the Caribbean Islands at the present time: "One of a native race inhabiting certain portions of Central America and the north of South America, and formerly also the Caribbean Islands." According to the latest Handbook, in British Honduras, there are 2,200 Caribs who, "although to all appearance of true African origin, being a black and woolly-headed people, are a mixed race of the aboriginal Caribs, with a large percentage of African blood.” A few true Red Caribs and some Black Caribs still live in the Windward Islands. The true Caribs are not natives of Central America. They inhabited the northern part of South America and the Caribbean Islands, and, according to Dr. Brinton, their original home was south of the Amazon. JOHN GIFFORD. Swarthmore College, Pa.

A Peculiar Occurrence of Beeswax.

In Science for June 16, 1893, Mr. George C. Merrill, of the U. S. National Museum, has a request for information under the above heading concerning some beeswax forwarded to him from Portland, Oregon. He describes it as having all the elements and characteristics of beeswax, but says, "such it would have unhesitatingly been pronounced but for certain stated conditions relating to its mode of occurrence."

He says it occurs in the sand along the beach, at quite a depth in places, and in a fragment of sandstone, etc., and further says: "Tradition has it that many hundred years ago a foreign vessel (some say a Chinese junk) laden with wax was wrecked off this coast. This at first thought seems plausible, but aside from the difficulty of accounting for the presence in these waters and at that date of a vessel loaded with wax, it seems scarcely credible that the material could have been brought in a single cargo in such quantities nor buried so deeply over so large an area."

The first difficulty Mr. Merrill seems to encounter is the presence of a vessel of that supposed nation on our coast at so early a date. This should give him no difficulty whatever, for Hon. Horace Davis, of California, in an article before the American Antiquarian Society, April, 1892; Charles Walcott Brooks before the California Academy of Sciences, March 1, 1975, and Professor George Davidson, of the U. S. Coast Survey, for thirty years or more last past, have all been calling attention to the hundreds of known wrecks of Japanese (not Chinese) junks cast on the American shores, from Behring Sea to Peru, by the "Kuro Shiwo," or black stream of Japan

In both the articles mentioned above you will find an account of the beeswax junk" and so much information concerning it

that Mr. Merrill's doubts will be dissipated; if not, Professor Davidson, in the "Coast Pilot of California, Oregon and Washington Territory," 1869, describes this very junk and the very beeswax in question.

Mr. Merrill's informant, however, seems to have fallen into an error as to the quantity and locality of this wax; for no such quantities were ever found as those mentioned in Science; in fact, the story is this: At some recent-but prehistoric-time a Japanese junk loaded with beeswax was thrown ashore at or near Clatsop beach, Oregon, and the cargo was scattered along the sands and buried therein, where it is found even today in small quantities and that is all.

Mr. Merrill's letter to Science is published, he says, "in the hope of gaining more information on the subject," and I will be fully repaid if through the instrumentality of this note he shall have obtained that information.

Many Japanese wrecks have been thrown ashore on our coast, of which we have authentic information, all the proof of which has largely been collected by the eminent gentlemen quoted above. JAMES WICKERSHAM.

Tacoma, Washington, June 26.

Color Perception: A Correction.

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I HASTEN to send this note of correction to my paper on tance and Color Perception by Infants" in Science, April 28 — an error brought to my attention by a friend. In Tables I. and II. of that article (p. 231) I have taken the proportion of acceptances" to the entire number of cases the ratio after addN ing up the simple numbers for each color at all the distances. It is evident that the resulting percentages are wrong as representing comparative results for the different colors, since there are not an equal number of cases for each same color at different distances, nor for the different colors at each same distance. The proper method is, of course, to compound the percentages representing the relative attractiveness of each color at each distance. This gives the values in Table I.: Blue, .78; red, .75; white, .78; green, .68; brown, .43; and in Table II.: Newspaper, .76; color, .71. This brings white up to the level of blue and red. The R same correction should be made for the values but in the re

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I wish to add, also, that I do not consider the results relative to the individual colors of much value, since the cases are so tew. The experiments had to be broken off unexpectedly. I published the tables mainly to illustrate the working of the method of experimenting. For this reason I did not enter in my article into side considerations, such as color-brightness, fatigue, etc., which were duly provided for in the experiments themselves. I hope to discuss such points in the fuller treatment of the monograph on the infant's active life which I am preparing.

Princeton, N.J., June 30.

J. MARK BALDWIN.

Birds that Sing in the Night.

I have read with a great deal of interest the notes under this head as they have appeared in Science from time to time. While some species have been mentioned that I have not heard, there are also some not mentioned which are night singers in central Iowa, where I have spent many years studying the birds in their various moods and conditions.

The first in point of beauty of execution is the wood-thrush (Turdus mustelinus). Not only does he sing in the night, but his song is given at shorter intervals and more earnestly then than during the day. It is rarely that he sings at high noon, unless the day be dark and wet. Nor does he sing all night long; from midnight until after two, there is only an occasional burst of song or none at all.

Second in point of regularity and persistence is dickcissel (Spiya americana). Not only does he sing at short intervals alb

66

day long, but he prolongs his day far into the night. By day his song is not very musical, but at night it seems softened and subdued almost to sweetness. The country boys call him the sheep-sheep shear-shear-shear" bird, as an imitation of his The first two notes are uttered sharply with a considerable pause between them then, the last very rapidly nearly run together.

song.

Two other birds are not uncommon night singers the grasshopper and henslow's sparrows (Ammodramus s. passerinus and A. henslowi), especially the latter. His modest little song is so drowned out during the day by the larger birds that he must sing at night it he be heard at all. I have often heard his note well into the night.

There is one winter night singer, the chestnut-colored longspin (Calcarius ornatus). As one wanders over the snow-clad hills on some frosty night, he may near the clear chee-ho of this bird starting from the snow where he lies hidden.

Oberlin, Ohio.

The Earth as a Conductor.

LYNDS JONES.

In reference to the communication on the use of the ground in an electric circuit, June 16, you may allow me to say: The earth is not a conductor of electricity in any sense, only as a convention. All Du Moncel's measurements, and they were many, gave the resistance of the earth as about 100 ohms. This resistance is negligible in long circuits, telegraphic or telephonic, but not in short circuits.

On the principle of contact electricity (see Ayrton and Perry, Jenkins or Gorden) it was wrong to place a copper plate at one end and a tin plate at the other, as their contact or connection by wire would produce a current along the wire. Nor was it proper to put charcoal or carbon or iron around either plate on the same principle. Both plates, preferably, should be of copper surrounded by sulphate of copper. There is considerable resistance offered in the passage of a current from one kind of material to another (see Jenkin passim).

The earth may, for convenience, be called a reservoir of electricity, but its quantity is always constant and no electricity can be taken from it at one point without putting an equal quantity into it at another point. The action or roll of the earth in the circuit is like this. Consider a lake of large dimensions with a

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lift and force pump at A connected with a pipe which crosses the lake to B; the water lifted at A and forced over to B falls into the lake, but not a drop of it ever gets back to A.

If you will consider a ground wire in a large telegraph or telephone office with a number of circuits of variable resistances and different polarities attached to it you will see that it is absurd to say that a positive current from one battery goes down that ground wire and off to a distant point while at the same instant a positive current from a distant battery comes up the same wire. That is the common sense view of it, and it is supported by Kirchoff's law, Z C = 0, or the sum of all the EM F's or currents meeting in a point equals nothing. In fact, the ground wire in a large office may be cut (as I have often seen it done for experimental proof) without stopping communication. When three or more wires are joined to the same ground either one of the wires acts as a return wire for the others when the ground wire is cut. But when all are open at once, then the ground comes into play to form the circuit for the first one that closes. It is also useful as a regulator of current, but the manner of doing this is not properly introduceable here.

If nothing had been said of the use of tin at one end and copper at the other the resistance of 102 ohms as found would indieate a good ground. But as some current probably arose from

their use, doubt is cast upon the measurements. Still, on the whole, the ground was as good as is usually made.

One hundred ohms' resistance in the earth circuit under all circumstances should be reckoned on and may be regarded as a constant. D. FLANERY.

Memphis, Tenn., June 30.

On the Evolution of the Habit of Incubation.

IT may be stated as a general rule that harmless snakes produce their young by means of eggs, while poisonous serpents are viviparous, to which fact they probably owe their generic appelation of "vipers." The oviparous snakes, like most other reptiles, deposit their eggs in a sunny spot, and never trouble themselves about the incubation, but leave the eggs to hatch out as best they may under the influence of the sun's heat. There is, however, a very curious though authentic instance on record of a caged python, in the Jardin des Plantes, at Paris, which hatched out her own eggs. She laid fifteen in all, and then coiled herself around them, and so incubated thein in much the same manner as a setting hen, her temperature being observed to increase perceptibly during the period.

This strange fact, whether an anomaly or whether a natural habit of the pythons, seems to throw considerable light on the evolution of the habit of incubation, so universal among birds, for it must be remembered that the bird is closely allied to the reptile, and is in fact but a higher form of the type. This relationship is clearly shown by the study of the morphology of the bird's organs, for every part of a bird's body is but a modification of the corresponding part of the reptile; it is also shown by the fact that birds are found in geological strata immediately after the reptiles, and hence must have appeared upon the face of the earth at a later period. Were any further proof necessary, it is furnished in an irrefutable manner by the science of embryology, for the bird passes in the egg through all the reptilian stages of development before it is finally hatched out in its perfect form.

This being the case, we may rest assured that the habit of incubation has been evolved at some time during the evolution of reptiles into birds, and hence this case of the python hatching its own eggs acquires exceptional interest.

We may premise that the habit could never have been evolved unless it were of some value to the species, but we must at the same time admit that the incubated egg would in all cases hatch out far in advance of that heated only by the sun, hence those individuals which thus appeared earlier than their brothers ran a better chance of surviving in the struggle for existence. So far, so good, but how did the habit originate? What first led snakes or other reptiles to think of hatching out their eggs? That it was not intelligence we can safely assert, for all who have had any experience in keeping snakes, agree in stating that their intelligence is of the lowest order. I am therefore inclined to believe that what first led animals to incubate their eggs was the heat developed in the egg during the process of hatching. Snakes are exceedingly fond of heat, in fact I have known them to injure each other in cages in the attempt to retain the warmest places. Hence we can infer that if, when basking in the sun, a snake chances to lie near its eggs, especially if these have already begun to hatch, it will soon feel their heat and so be led to coil more closely about them, and while thus warming itself it will at the same time hasten the process of incubation.

The next question that arises is, how this habit of incubating her eggs, even when thus acquired, will be transmitted to the offspring, for if not transmitted, the habit could never become general.

So little is known of the principles of inheritance that we cannot hope to solve this problem at present. Even Darwin, who made a life-long study of the subject, and to whom we are indebted for the ingenious theory of pangenesis, was forced to admit our abject ignorance of the laws of transmission of characters from parents to children. We can, however, infer that those serpents most susceptible to the cold would be most likely to remain by their eggs, and this susceptibility to cold would tend to be inherited by the young

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Another Ancient Argillite Quarry Near Trenton,

ON the left bank of Neshaming "Creek," Bucks County, Pennsylvania, about three-fourths of a mile above the mouth of Labaska or Mill Creek, I discovered at the base of the cliffs of metamorphosed slate that there overhang the stream, on June 23, another ancient work-shop where blocks of argillite, lying in situ, have been chipped into turtle-backs."

A layer of chips, hammer-stones, and the now familiar rude leaf-shaped forms is laid bare for several hundred yards where the stream has worn away the margin. The blocks of workable stone in various instances show peckings upon their sides, as do similar specimens at Point Pleasant, inferably made by the ancient workmen to split them with the grain.

No search has yet been made for diggings and refuse-heaps higher up the slope, nor has excavation been made into the exposed layers: but thus far the story of the workings on Gaddis' Run, near Point Pleasant (Bucks County, Pennsylvania), discovered on May 22, seems to be repeated, though on a smaller scale. There we were twenty-five miles from Trenton; here we are but fifteen. H. C. MERCER.

Do Nestlings Drink.

This question suggested itself to my mind very lately, when I observed the following, and to me, entirely new fact:

A piazza-roof, on which my windows open, is provided with a

CALENDAR OF SOCIETIES.

Agassiz Scientific Society, Corvallis, Ore. June 14.-Dr. Pernot, Aphasia.

Reading Matter Notices.

Ripans Tabules cure hives.

Ripans Tabules cure dyspepsia.

shallow gutter, in which there is a considerable accumulation of the winged seeds from a neighboring tree. These were standing in shallow water, left there by the recent rains.

I observed a robin alight on the roof, and noticed that she picked from the gutter a bunch of those seeds, which she held in her bill while she seemed to be preparing to fly away.

Presently, apparently dissatisfied with what she had picked up, she dropped the seeds, and moving to a place where they were lying in a thicker bed, she gathered a much larger mass of them, about as many as her bill would hold together. After gathering them and satisfying herself that she had enough, she deliberately dipped the mass into the water and flew away with it to a distant tree. Perhaps some of your readers may suggest a truer explanation; but to me she seemed to be carrying a supply of water to her brood in what was no inadequate substitute for a sponge. FRANCIS PHILIP NASH.

Geneva, N. Y., June 28.

BOOK-REVIEWS.

Logarithmic Tables. By PROFESSOR G. W. JONES. Ames, Iowa, the Author.

THE title of this book does not exactly describe its contents. The strictly logarithmic tables are only about one-half of those given. The arrangement of the tables, of which there are eighteen, has been made to meet the wants of those who desire to have, in a handy form, tables to be used in computations covering a wide range. Table I. is a four-place, of numbers from 1 to 1,000, followed by one of the same accuracy giving the six principal trigonometric functions, and of the lengths of arcs in radians. The first five degrees of the quadrant are given to each five minutes, the following to each ten minutes, with differences for single minutes. A table giving the squares, cubes, square-roots, cube-roots, and reciprocals of the numbers 1, 2, 3, 99 is also given. Table III. is a six-place table of numbers, the side numbering being carried to only three figures instead of four, as is usual in

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such tables. In Table IV. will be found all of the useful constants used in mathematics, chemistry, engineering, physics, and weights and measures. This table is a very complete one, containing, as it does, reference to almost every standard and constant used in the arts and science. Table V. is a reprint of the Gaussian sixplace addition-subtraction logarithins. For determining trigonometric functions, there are two tables, the four-place already mentioned, and also a six-place table. The latter is a departure from the usual method. Generally, in a six-place table, the functions are given for each ten seconds. Professor Jones has made up the table for each minute of the quadrant, the proportional part being given for each second. The tables that follow those just explained consist of prime and composite numbers, squares, cubes, square-roots, cube-roots, reciprocals, and quarter-squares. Finally, we have Bissel's table of coefficients for interpellation, and a table containing the integral for finding the mean or probable error of a result in least squares. We judge from our examination that Professor Jones has prepared the tables with great care. seems exceedingly anxious to free them of all errors, and to induce that condition of things he offers a reward for an error found in the tables. We have not critically examined the tables, but we note a slight error in the text. On the first page the reference to the pages containing Table IX. should read 118-133 instead of 114-133. We would commend these tables to the computer as being a help to have on one's desk. G. A. H.

He

Pioneers of Science. BY OLIVER LODGE, F. R. S., Professor of Physics in Victoria University College, Liverpool, with Portraits and Illustrations. London, Macmillan & Co. 404 p. 8°. $2.50.

In this work, Dr. Lodge has given the general public and the student a very interesting and readable book. As he states in his preface the book had its origin in a course of lectures on the history and progress of astronomy, delivered by the author in 1887. As is often the case with books based on a course of lect

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will be published shortly by D. Appleton & Co. The book will be decorated with illustrations and maps, as well as portraits. The first part of the story, it is said, will in the main be told in Sir Richard's own words.

-The weekly paper known for the last twenty-five years as The Christian Union with its first issue for July changes its title to The Outlook. It will remain unchanged in other respects, except in the line of improvement and enlargement. It will be, as before, a family paper, non-denominational in religious matters, and giving large space to the current history of our times; to literature, economics and progressive movements of all sorts, and to home life. The Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott will remain as its editor-in-chief, with Mr. Hamilton W. Mabie as his associate, and an editorial staff of several members.

Exchanges.

[Free of charge to all, if of satisfactory character. Address N. D. C. Hodges, 874 Broadway, New York.]

I have a fire-proof safe, weight 1,150 pounds, which I will sell cheap or exchange for a gasoline engine or some other things that may happen to suit. The safe is nearly new, used a short time only. Make offers. A. Lagerstrom, Cannon Falls, Minn., Box 857.

For exchange.-Hudson River fossils in good condition from the vicinity of Moore's Hill, Ind., also land and fresh water shells. Desire fossils and shells from other groups and localities. Address Geo. C. Hubbar 1, Moore's Hill, Ind.

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HREE teachers wanted for a male and female

For sale at low price.-A fine old-fashioned photo-seminary in central New York. Typewriting,
graphic camera, rosewood box, one foot square,
lenses, four inches diameter, made by C. C. Harri- etc., languages, mathematics, sciences, et. al. Send
son. Plateholders, troughs, baths, etc., all in large stamp with and for particulars. Box 701, Hemp-
wooden case, formerly the property of the late stead, L. I.
President Moore, of Columbia College. This is a
fine example of an instrument of the best make for
the old wet-process methods, and valuable to any

A

Allays the thirst, aids diges-institution or amateur interested in the history of gagement, for either field or laboratory work.

tion, and relieves the lassitude so common in midsummer.

Dr. M. H. Henry, New York, says: "When completely tired out by prolonged wakefulness and overwork, it is of the greatest value to me. As a beverage it possesses charms beyond anything I know of in the form of medicine."

Descriptive pamphlet free.

photography in the U. S. Address M. S. Daniel,
236 W. 4th St., New York.

ZOOLOGICAL collector and taxidermist of ten years' experience in the field is now open to enReferences furnished. Address Taxidermist, Box 75, White Sulphur Springs, West Va.

land, fluviatile and marine, for a good microscope W Analysis, 4 vols. Vols. I, and II. particularly

I wish to exchange a collection of 7,000 shells,
1001 species and varieties, American and
and accessories. Address, with particulars, Dr.
Lorenzo G. Yates, Santa Barbara, California.
For exchange.-I wish to exchange Lepidoptera of

South Dakota and other sections, for Lepidoptera
of the worresponde purchase species of North Amer.

ica.
solicited, particularly with
collectors in the Rocky Mountains, Pacific coast
and Hudson's Bay regions. P. C. Truman, Volga,
Brooking county, South Dakota.

For sale. Wheatstone Bridge wire, made to
order, new and unused. Price, $10. W. A. Kobbe,

Fortress Monroe, Va.

tion of Watt's Dictionary of Chemistry, in fair conFor sale or exchange.-One latest complete edidition; one thirty volume edition (9th) of Allen's Encyclopædia Britannica, almost new. Will sell ftumford Chemical Works, Providence, R. I. cheap for cash or will exchange for physical or chemical apparatus. Address Prof. W. S. LeavenBeware of Substitutes and Imitations. worth, Ripon College, Ripon, Wis.

Exchange.-One celestial, one terrestrial globe, one lunatettis and charts, celestial maps, diagrams and ephemeris from 1830 to 1893, astronomical works, all in good condition. Will sell cheap or exchange. Make offer. C. H. Van Dorn, 79 Nassau St., New York.

WANTED.-A set of Allen's Commercial Organic desired. Condition not important, all leaves being present and in place. Address Charles Platt, 34 Lewis Block, Buffalo.

WANTED, as principal of a flourishing technical

school, a gentleman of education and experience who will be capable of supervising both mechanical and common school instruction. Special familiarity with some technical branch desirable. ingdale, Fifty-ninth street and Third avenue, N. Y. Address, giving age, qualifications, etc., J. B. Bloom

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