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PIONEERS OF EVOLUTION, from Thales to

Huxley. By EDWARD CLODD, President of the Folk-Lore
Society; Author of "The Story of Creation," "The Story of

'Primitive' Man," etc. With Portraits.

12mo. Cloth, $1.50.

...

"The mass of interesting material which Mr. Clodd has got together and woven into a symmetrical story of the progress from ignorance and theory to knowledge and the intelligent recording of fact is prodigious. . . . The 'goal' to which Mr. Clodd leads us in so masterly a fashion is but the starting point of fresh achievements, and, in due course, fresh theories. His book furnishes an important contribution to a liberal education."—London Daily Chronicle.

"We are always glad to meet Mr. Clodd. He is never dull; he is always well informed, and he says what he has to say with clearness and precision. . . . The interest intensifies as Mr. Clodd attempts to show the part really played in the growth of the doctrine of evolution by men like Wallace, Darwin, Huxley, and Spencer. . . . We commend the book to those who want to know what evolution really means."-London Times.

...

"This is a book which was needed. . . . Altogether, the book could hardly be better done. It is luminous, lucid, orderly, and temperate. Above all, it is entirely free from personal partisanship. Each chief actor is sympathetically treated, and friendship is seldom or never allowed to overweight sound judgment."-London Academy.

"We can assure the reader that he will find in this work a very useful guide to the lives and labors of leading evolutionists of the past and present. Especially serviceable is the account of Mr. Herbert Spencer and his share in rediscovering evolution, and illustrating its relations to the whole field of human knowledge. His forcible style and wealth of metaphor make all that Mr. Clodd writes arrestive and interesting."-London Literary World.

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"Can not but prove welcome to fair-minded men. have an object-lesson in the meaning of evolution. book on the subject for the general reader. . . . No one could go through the book without being both refreshed and newly instructed by its masterly survey of the growth of the most powerful idea of modern times.”—The Scotsman.

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK.

PIONEERS OF SCIENCE IN AMERICA.

Sketches of their Lives and Scientific Work. Edited and re

vised by WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS, M.D.

8vo. Cloth, $4.00.

With Portraits.

Impelled solely by an enthusiastic love of Nature, and neither asking nor receiving outside aid, these early workers opened the way and initiated the movement through which American science has reached its present commanding position. This book gives some account of these men, their early struggles, their scientific labors, and, whenever possible, something of their personal characteristics. This information, often very difficult to obtain, has been collected from a great variety of sources, with the utmost care to secure accuracy. It is presented in a series of sketches, some fifty in all, each with a single exception accompanied with a well-authenticated portrait.

"Fills a place that needed filling, and is likely to be widely read."-N. Y. Sun. "It is certainly a useful and convenient volume, and readable too, if we judge correctly of the degree of accuracy of the whole by critical examination of those cases in which our own knowledge enables us to form an opinion.. In general, it seems to us that the handy volume is specially to be commended for setting in just historical perspective many of the earlier scientists who are neither very generally nor very well known."-New York Evening Post.

"A wonderfully interesting volume. Many a young man will find it fascinating. The compilation of the book is a work well done, well worth the doing."-Philadelphia Press.

"One of the most valuable books which we have received."-Boston Advertiser. "A book of no little educational value. . . . An extremely valuable work of reference."-Boston Beacon.

"A valuable handbook for those whose work runs on these same lines, and is likely to prove of lasting interest to those for whom les documents humain' are second only to history in importance-nay, are a vital part of history."-Boston Transcript.

"A biographical history of science in America, noteworthy for its completeness and scope.... All of the sketches are excellently prepared and unusually interesting."Chicago Record.

"One of the most valuable contributions to American literature recently made. . . . The pleasing style in which these sketches are written, the plans taken to secure ac curacy, and the information conveyed, combine to give them great value and interest. No better or more inspiring reading could be placed in the hands of an intelligent and aspiring young man."-New York Christian Work.

"A book whose interest and value are not for to-day or to-morrow, but for indefinite time."-Rochester Herald.

"It is difficult to imagine a reader of ordinary intelligence who would not be entertained by the book.. Conciseness, exactness, urbanity of tone, and interestingness are the four qualities which chiefly impress the reader of these sketches."-Buffalo Express.

"Full of interesting and valuable matter."-The Churchman.

New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.

THE

THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL SERIES.

NOW READY.

HE BEGINNINGS OF ART. By ERNST
GROSSE, Professor of Philosophy in the University of Freiburg.

A new volume in the Anthropological Series, edited by Pro-
fessor Frederick Starr. Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.

"This book can not fail to interest students of every branch of art, while the genaral reader who will dare to take hold of it will have his mind broadened and enriched beyond what he would conceive a work of many times its dimensions might effect."Brooklyn Eagle.

"The volume is clearly written, and should prove a popular exposition of a deeply interesting theme."-Philadelphia Public Ledger.

WOM

OMAN'S SHARE IN PRIMITIVE CUL-
TURE. By OTIS TUFTON MASON, A. M., Curator of the
Department of Ethnology in the United States National Mu-
seum. With numerous Illustrations.
Cloth, $1.75.

12mo.

"A most interesting résumé of the revelations which science has made concerning the habits of human beings in primitive times, and especially as to the place, the duties, and the customs of women."-Philadelphia Inquirer.

HE PYGMIES.

THE

By A. DE QUATREFAGES, late

Professor of Anthropology at the Museum of Natural History,
Paris. With numerous Illustrations.

12mo. Cloth, $1.75.

"Probably no one was better equipped to illustrate the general subject than Quatrefages. While constantly occupied upon the anatomical and osseous phases of his subject, he was none the less well acquainted with what literature and history had to say concerning the pygmies..... This book ought to be in every divinity school in which man as well as God is studied, and from which missionaries go out to convert the human being of reality and not the man of rhetoric and text-books."-Boston Literary World.

THE BEGINNINGS OF WRITING. By W. J.

HOFFMAN, M. D. With numerous Illustrations. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.

"The author, as one of the foremost of our ethnologists, is well qualified for the inquiry, and the result of his labors is not only a monument to his industry, but a most valuable contribution to our national history as well. It is a book full of interest even to the general reader, white to the scientist it is a rich mine of facts."-Chicago Evening Post.

IN PREPARATION.

THE SOUTH SEA ISLANDERS. By Dr. SCHMEltz.

THE ZUNI. By FRANK HAMILTON CUSHING.

THE AZTECS.

By Mrs. ZELIA NUTTALL.

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK.

POPULAR SCIENCE

MONTHLY.

EDITED BY WILLIAM JAY YOUMANS.

$5.00 per annum; single copy, 50 cents.

APPLETONS' POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY is always prompt to present the expert treatment of important topics of the day, which are within the wide range of its interest. It deals particularly with those general and practical subjects which are of the greatest interest and importance to the people at large. All its articles are by writers of long practical acquaintance with their subjects, and are written in such a manner as to be readily understood.

In the last few months the magazine has offered Mr. MCPHERSON's lucid discussions of the Monetary and Banking Problem, and the studies of "The Social Functions of Wealth," by M. PAUL LEROY BEAULIEU. TO these articles, and to the series by the Hon. DAVID A. WELLS upon "The Principles of Taxation," not yet completed, it is possible now to add the announcement of a most important and timely study of "The Present Financial Problem," by Mr. WELLS, which will begin probably in the September number.

D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers,

72 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.

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