“The publication carries the stamp of authentic value.”
+ + Int. Studio. 30: sup. 53. D ’06. 350w.
“The frontispiece represents the famous ‘Angelus’ and quite fails to translate its proper colors. As to the other plates, one feels as if the originals were before one. This is one of the finest art books of the season and is all the more welcome because Millet is better known by his oils than his drawings yet in them we seem to get closer to the man and the purposes that guided him in art.” Charles de Kay.
+ + – N. Y. Times. 11: 886. D. 22, ’06. 440w.
Millikan, Robert Andrews, and Gale, Henry Gordon. Laboratory course in physics for secondary schools. 40c. Ginn.
The fifty carefully arranged experiments which fill this little volume have been chosen with two aims in view, to make a continuous and inspiring laboratory study of physical phenomena; and to reduce apparatus to its simplest possible terms and yet to present a thoro course in laboratory physics. The experiments do not presuppose any previous study of the subject involved, or any antecedent knowledge of physics.
Mills, Lawrence Heyworth. Zarathushtra, Philo, the Achæmenides and Israel: being a treatise upon the antiquity and influence of the Avesta, delivered as university lectures. *$4. Open ct.
The first half of his book is given to a study of the Old Persian inscriptions as compared with those sections of the Bible concerned with the proclamation of Cyrus for the rebuilding of the temple at Jerusalem. The second half of the volume is devoted to the Avesta and its influence on the Jews of the exile. The final section discusses the debt of Judaism to the Avesta.
“Professor Mills’s book is the best study on the spiritual life of the Achaemenians which has so far been written. In a work so admirable it may seem ungracious to call attention to faults of detail, yet it must be said that the English style of Professor Mills’s book is not easy reading. Occasionally, also, there is a statement which is open to question.”