Part III. =Hydrostatics.= 216 pp. 3_s.
EXTRACTS FROM PRESS NOTICES.
“Schools and Colleges will certainly benefit by adopting this book for their students.” _Nature._
“Mr Glazebrook’s volumes on Heat and Light deal with these subjects from the experimental side and it is difficult to admire sufficiently the ingenuity and simplicity of many of the experiments without losing sight of the skill and judgment with which they are arranged.” _Saturday Review._
“The books almost cover the advanced stages of the South Kensington prospectus and their use can certainly be recommended to all who wish to study these subjects with intelligence and thoroughness.” _Schoolmaster._
“Mr Glazebrook’s great practical experience has enabled him to treat the experimental aspect of the book with unusual power and it is in this that the great value of the book as compared with most of the ordinary manuals consists.” _Educational Review._
“The book is very simply and concisely written, is clear and methodic in arrangement.... We recommend the book to the attention of all students and teachers of this branch of physical science.” _Educational News._
“We wish Mr Glazebrook every success on the extension of his practical system to all the Colleges and Schools of the country. It is the only way in which the interest of the student can be awakened and the study of the subject made popular and real.” _Technical World._
“It will be especially appreciated by teachers who possess the necessary apparatus for experimental illustrations.” _Athenæum._
“Text-books on this subject are generally too simple or too elaborate for a conception of elementary mechanical principles. This book cannot fail to recommend itself therefore for a first course preliminary to the study of physical science. No other book presents in the same space with the same clearness and exactness so large a range of mechanical principles.” _Physical Review._
“Marked ability has been shewn in the development of the subject of Statics in the present volume.... The collected examples for students’ exercises are excellent.” _Glasgow Herald._
General Editors: F. H. NEVILLE, M.A., F.R.S. and W. C. D. WHETHAM, M.A., F.R.S.
=Mechanics.= By JOHN COX, M.A., F.R.S.C., Macdonald Professor of Experimental Physics in McGill University, Montreal. Demy 8vo. pp. xiv + 332. 9_s._ Net.
_Athenæum._—“It may reasonably be hoped that this endeavour to bridge over the gulf which has hitherto separated theory from practice in respect of the principles of mechanics, by showing their intimate connexion, and to present the subject in a more living and attractive form, by drawing attention to the gradual stages and methods by which the early investigators discovered the laws which govern the science, will meet with the success which it deserves.”
=The Study of Chemical Composition.= An Account of its Method and Historical Development, with illustrative quotations. By IDA FREUND, Staff Lecturer and Associate of Newnham College. Demy 8vo. xvi + 650 pp. 18_s._ Net.
_Saturday Review._—“Written from a broad, philosophical standpoint, we know of no book more suited for the student of chemistry who has attained a sound general knowledge of the science, and is now ready to appreciate a critical discussion of the methods by which the results he has learnt have been built up, thereby fitting himself for the real world of investigation on his own account.”
=A Treatise on the Theory of Alternating Currents.= By ALEXANDER RUSSELL, M.A., M.I.E.E.
Vol. I. Demy 8vo. pp. 408. 12_s._ Net. Vol. II. In the Press.
_Scotsman._—“The volume is not only rich in its own substantive teaching, but well supplied with references to the more remote authorities upon its subject. It opens an important and valuable contribution to the theoretical literature of electrical engineering.”
=Radio-activity.= By E. RUTHERFORD, D.Sc., F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Macdonald Professor of Physics, McGill University, Montreal. Demy 8vo. pp. x + 400. 10s. 6_d._ Net.
_Athenæum._—“English students have had to wait till now for any connected and detailed account of this new branch of physics from the pen of one who has a first hand knowledge of it.”
_Nature._—“The arrangement of the matter and its treatment are throughout admirable.”
=The Theory of Experimental Electricity.= By W. C. D. WHETHAM, M.A., F.R.S., Fellow of Trinity College. Demy 8vo. 8_s._ Net.
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, C. F. CLAY, MANAGER, London: AVE MARIA LANE, Glasgow: 50, WELLINGTON STREET. ALSO London: H. K. LEWIS, 136, GOWER STREET, W.C.
● Transcriber’s Notes: ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant form was found in this book. ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
Text that was in bold face is enclosed by equals signs (=bold=).
○ Footnotes have been moved to follow the chapters in which they are referenced. ○ Formulae in the text have been rendered in text form, and in some cases there are unusual conventions used. The convention name^{expression} means that the expression is a subscript to the name, and name_{expression} means that expression is a subscript to the name. Many parentheses are added to allow an expression to be transcribed on one line.