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No. 43. Darwin and Humboldt. By Prof. Huxley, Prof. Agassiz, and others.

No. 44. The Dawn of History. Part I. By G. F. Keary, of the British Museum.

No. 45. The Dawn of History. Part II. No. 46. The Diseases of Memory. By Th. Ribot. Translated from the French by J. Fitzgerald, M.A.

No. 47. The Childhood of Religion. By Edward Clodd, F.R.A.S.

No. 48. Life in Nature. (Illustrated). By James Hinton.

No. 49. The Sun: its Constitution, its Phenomena, its Condition. By Judge Nathan T. Carr.

No. 50. Money and the Mechanism of By Prof. W. Stanley Jevons, F.R.S. Part I.

Exchange.

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The Origin of Species. By Charles
Darwin. Part I. (Double number).

No. 59. The Origin of Species. Part II. (Double Number).

No. 60. The Childhood of the World. By Edward Clodd, F.R.A.S.

No. 61. Miscellaneous Essays. By Richard A. Proctor.

No. 62. The Religions of the Ancient World. By Prof. Geo. Rawlinson, Univ. of Oxford. (Double number).

No. 63. Progressive Morality. By Thomas Fowler, LL.D., President of Corpus Christi Coll., Oxford.

No. 64. The Distribution of Animals and Plants. By A. Russell Wallace and W. T. Thistleton Dyer.

No. 65. Conditions of Mental Development, and other Essays. By William Kingdon Clifford.

No. 66. Technical Education, and other Essays. By Thomas H. Huxley, F.R.S. No. 67. The Black Death. An account of the Great Pestilence of the 14th Century. By J. F. C. Hecker, M.D. Three Essays. By Herbert Spencer. Fetichism: A Contribution to Anthropology and the History of Reiigion. By Fritz Schultze, Ph. D. (Double number).

No. 68. No. 69.

No. 70. Essays Speculative and Practical. By Herbert Spencer.

No. 71. Anthropology. By Daniel Wilson, Ph. D. With Appendix on Archa ology. By E. B. Tylor, F.R.S.

No. 72. The Dancing Mania of the Middle Ages. By J. F. C. Hecker, M.D.

No. 73. Evolution in History, Language and Science. Four addresses delivered at the London Crystal Palace School of Art, Science and Literature.

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The Descent of Man, and Selec tion in Relation to Sex. (Numerous Illustrations). By Charles Darwin. Nos. 74, 75, 76 are single Nos.; No. 77 is a double No.

No. 78. Historical Sketch of the Dis tribution of Land in Eng land. By William Lloyd Birbeck, M.A.

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No. 79. Scientific Aspect of some Fan.. iar Things. By W. M. Williams, No. 80. Charles Darwin. His Life and Work. By Grant Allen. (Double Number).

No. 81. The Mystery of Matter, and the

Philosophy of Ignorance.

Two Essays by J. Allanson Picton. No. 82. Illusions of the Senses, and other Essays. By Richard A. Proctor.

No. 83. Profit-Sharing Between Capital and Labor. Six Essays. By Sedley Taylor, M.A.

No. 84. Studies of Animated Nature. Four Essays on Natural History. By W. S. Dallas, F.L.S., and Others.

No. 85. The Essential Nature of Religion. By J. Allanson Picton.

No. 86. The Unseen Universe, and the Philosophy of the Pure Sciences. By Prof. Wm. Kingdon Clifford, F.R.S.

No. 87. The Morphine Habit. By Dr. B. Ball, of the Paris Faculty of Medicine.

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No. 94. The Factors of Organic Evolution. By Herbert Spencer.

No 95. The Diseases of Personality. By Th. Ribot. Translated from the French by J. Fitzgerald, M.A.

No. 96. A Half-Century of Science. By Thomas H. Huxley, and Grant Allen.

No. 97. The Pleasures of Life. By Sir John Lubbock.

No. 98. Cosmic Emotion: Also the Teachings of Science. By William Kingdon Clifford.

No. 99. Nature Studies. By Prof. F. R. Eaton Lowe; Dr. Robert Brown, FL.S; Geo. G. Chisholm, F. R.G.S; and James Dallas, F.L.S.

No. 100. Science and Poetry, with other Essays. By Andrew Wilson, F.R.S.E.

No. 101. Esthetics; Dreams and Association of Ideas. By James Sully and Geo. Croom Robertson. Ultimate Finance; A True Theory of Co-opération. By William Nelson Black.

No. 102.

No. 103. The Coming Slavery: The Sins of Legislators; The Great Political Superstition. By Herbert Spencer.

No. 104. Tropical Africa. By Henry Drummond, F.R.S.

No. 105. Freedom in Science and Teaching, By Ernst Haeckel, of the University of Jena. With a prefatory Note by Prof. Huxley.

No. 106. Force and Energy. A Theory of Dynamics. By Grant Allen.

No. 107. Ultimate Finance. A True Theory of Wealth. By William Nelson Black.

No. 108. English, Past and Present. By Richard Chenevix Trench. Part I. (Double number).

No. 109. English, Past

Part II.

and Present.

No. 110. The Story of Creation. A Plain Account of Evolution. By Edward Clodd. (Double number). No. 111. The Pleasures of Life. Part II. By Sir John Lubbock.

By

No. 112. Psychology of Attention.
Th. Ribot. Translated from the
French by J. Fitzgerald, M.A.

No. 113. Hypnotism. Its History and Devel opment. By Fredrik Björnström, M.D., Head Physician of the Stock holm Hospital, Professor of Psychia try. Late Royal Swedish Medical Councillor. Authorized Translation from the Second Swedish Edition by Baron Nils Posse, M.G., Director of the Boston School of Gymnastics. (Double number).

No. 114. Christianity and Agnosticism. A Controversy. Consisting of papers contributed to The Nineteenth Century by Henry Wace, D.D., Prof. Thos. H. Huxley, The Bishop of Petersborough, W. H. Mallock, Mrs. Humphrey Ward. (Double number). No. 115. Darwinism: An Exposition of the Theory of Natural Selection, with some of its Applications. By Alfred Russel Wallace, LL.D., F.L.S., etc. Illustrated. Part I. (Double number). No. 116. Darwinism. Illustrated. Part II. (Double number).

No. 117. Modern Science and Modern Thought. By S. Laing. Illustrated. (Double number).

No. 118. Modern Science and Modern Thought. Part II.

No. 119. The Electric Light and The Stor ing of Electrical Energy. Illustrated. Gerald Molloy, D.D., D.Sc.

No. 120. The Modern Theory of Heat and The Sun as a Storehouse of Energy. Illustrated. Gerald Molloy, D.D., D.Sc.

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No. 132.

No. 133.

No. 134.

No. 135.

No. 136.

No. 137. No. 138. No. 139.

No. 131. The Origin of the Aryans. Part
II. (Double number).
The Evolution of Sex. By Prof.
P. Geddes and J. Arthur Thomson.
Illustrated. Part I. (Double number).
The Evolution of Sex. Part II.
(Double number).
The Law of Private Right. By
George H. Smith. (Double number).
Capital. A Critical Analysis of Cap-
italist Production. By Karl Marx.
Part I. (Double number).
Capital. Part II (Double number).
Capital. Part III. (Double number).
Capital. Part IV. (Double number).
Lightning. Thunder and Lightning
Conductors. Illustrated. By Gerald
Molloy, D D., D Sc.

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(No. 140. What is Music? With an appendix on How the Geometrical Lines have their Counterparts in Music. By Isaac L. Rice.

No. 141. Are the Effects of Use and Disuse Inherited? By William Platt Ball.

No. 142. A Vindication of the Rights of
Woman. By Mary Wollstonecraft.
With an Introduction by Mrs. Henry
Fawcet. Part I. (Double number).
No. 143. A Vindication of the Rights of
Woman. Part II. (Double num-
ber).
Civilization; Its Cause and
Cure. By Edward Carpenter

No. 162.

No. 163.

Modern Science; The Science of the Future. By Edward Carpenter. Studies in Pessimism. By Schop

enhauer.

Flowers, Fruits and Leaves. Illustrated. By Sir John Lubbock, F.R.S. (Double number). (Glimpses of Nature. Illustrated. By Dr. Andrew Wilson, F.R.S.E. Part I. (Double number).

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Glimpses of Nature. Part II. Problems of the Future.

By

Samuel Lang. Part I.

No. 167.

Problems of the Future. Part

II. (Double number).

No. 168.

Problems of the Future. Part III. (Double number).

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The Moral Teachings of Sclence. By Arabella B. Buckley. The Wisdom of Life. By Schopenhauer. (Double number).

The Mystery of Pain. By James
Hinton.

What is Property? An inquiry
into the Principle of Right and of
Government. By P. J. Proudhon.
(Four double numbers, $1.20).
The History and Scope of
Zoology. By E. Ray Lankester.
Evolution and Ethics. By Prof.
T. H. Huxley.

A NEW SERIES.

The Social Science Library.

No. 1. Six

OF THE BEST AUTHORS.

PUBLISHED MONTHLY AT POPULAR PRICES.

Paper Cover, 25 cents each; Cloth, extra, 75 cents each

NOW READY.

Centuries of Work and Wages. By James E. Thorold Rogers, M.P. Abridged, with charts and summary. By W. D. P. Bliss. Introduction by Prof. R. T. Ely. No. 2. The Socialism of John Stuart Mill. The only collection of Mill's Writings on Socialism.

No. 3. The Socialism and Unsocialism of Thomas Carlyle. A collection of Carlyle's social writings; together with Joseph Mazzini's famous essay protesting against Carlyle's views. Vol. I.

No. 4. The Socialism and Unsocialism of Thomas Carlyle. Vol. II.

No. 5. William Morris, Poet, Arust, Socialist. A selection from his. writings together with a sketch of the man. Edited by Francis Watts

Lee.

No. 6. The Fabian Essays. American' Edition, with Introduction and Notes by H. G. Wilshire.

The Economics

No. 7.

No. 8.

of Herbert Spencer. By W. C. Owen. The Communism of John Ruskin.

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"Should be re-read by every seeker after truth."-Rockland Independent. "Polished in style and very often exquisite in expression."-Natick Citizen. "The book is interesting throughout, and the more widely it is read the better."tion."-Twentieth Century.

"Shows profound research, original ideas, and what might be almost called inspiration."-Sunday Times (Tacoma).

"The effort is noble, and the author has not escaped saying many profound and true things."-Christian Union.

"One of a large number of 'reformatory' volumes now being printed, but it is better than many of them."-Truth Seeker.

"The book is from a widely-read man, and is written for a high end. In its intellectual and 'spiritual' aspects, it is educative and stimulating."-The New Ideal.

"The book before us is one of the signs of the times. It prophesies a new age, and exhorts to the life which shall further its coming."-New Church Messenger.

"The book is a natural product of the prophetic element of the times, which is reaching forward into the new economic age we are just entering."-Teacher's Outlook.

"The chapters on 'Natural and Social Selection' are among the most interesting in the book, and require close reading, to take in the whole drift of their meaning."-Detroit Tribune.

"It is a real contribution to original and advanced thought upon the highest themes of life and religion-of intellectual, moral, social, material and spiritual progress."-The Unitarian.

"There are many golden sentences in the chapter on Love, and the practical good sense shown in the treatment of the_marriage question would help many husbands and wives to live more happily together."-The Dawn.

"This a new and thoroughly original treatment of the subjects of morality, religion and human perfectibility, and furnishes a new ground for the treatment of all social questions. It is radical and unique."-The Northwestern.

"It is in no sense an ordinary work. It makes strong claims and attempts to carry out the largest purposes. Taking the standpoint of science, it attacks the gravest problems of the times with an endeavor to show that the most advanced science will enable us to reach the most satisfactory conclusions."-Chicago Inter-Ocean.

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'One of the most important recent works for those who are striving to rise into a nobler life, who are struggling to escape the thraldom of the present selfish and pessimistic age. Many passages in Mr. Peck's work strongly suggest the lofty teachings of those noblest of the ancient philosophers, the Stoics. Those who are hungering and thirsting after a nobler existence will find much inspiration in 'The Kingdom of the Unselfish."". The Arena.

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