- CRIME AND INSANITY
By Dr C. A. MERCIER, F.R.C.P., F.R.C.S., Author of "Text-Book of In- sanity," etc- " Furnishes much valuable information from one occupying the highest position among medico-legal psychologists." Asylum NCVJS.
- PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
and thus what he has to say on thought-reading, hypnotism, telepathy, crystal- vision, spiritualism, divinings, and so on, will be read with avidity." Dundee
- ASTRONOMY
By A. R. HINKS, M.A., Chief Assistant, Cambridge Observatory. "Original in thought, eclectic in substance, and critical in treatment. . . . No better little book is available." School World.
- INTRODUCTION TO SCIENCE
By J. ARTHUR THOMSON, M.A., Regius Professor of Natural History, Aberdeen University. " Professor Thomson's delightful literary style is well known; and here he discourses freshly and easily on the methods of science and its relations with philosophy, art, religion, and practical life." Aberdeen Journal,
By H. N. DICKSON, D.Sc. Oxon., M.A., F.R.S.E., President of the Royal Meteorological Society; Professor of Geography in University College, Reading. (With Diagrams.) "The author has succeeded in presenting in a very lucid and agreeable manner the causes of the movement of the atmosphere and of the more stable winds." Manchester Guardian.
- ANTHROPOLOGY
By R R. MARETT, M.A., Reade "An absolutely perfect handboo fascinating and human that it bea
- THE PRINCIPLES OF PHYSIOLOGY
By Prof. J. G. McKENDRiCK, M.D. " It is a delightful and wonderfully com- prehensive handling of a subject which, while of importance to all, does not readily lend itself to untechnical explanation. . . . The little book is more than a mere repository of knowledge; upon every page of it is stamped the impress of a creative imagination." Glasgow Herald.
By R. R. MARETT, M.A., Reader in Social Anthropology in Oxford University. "An absolutely perfect handbook, so clear that a child could understand it, so fascinating and human that it beats fiction ' to a frazzle.' " Morning Leader.
- MATTER AND ENERGY
By F. SODDY, M.A., F.R.S. "A most fascinating and instructive account or the great facts of physical science, concerning which our knowledge, of later years, has made such wonderful progress." The Bookseller.