Page:Science (journal) Volume 1 1883.djvu/10

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to introduce the study of the natural and physical sciences into public and private schools, by drawing attention in every possible way to the high importance of this measure, as well as by illustrated articles, plainly worded, prepared by skilful hands, to guide the efforts of the teachers.

Practical men will find in Science carefully written papers on the applications of the principles of mechanics and other branches of physics to all departments of industry and technology. The unprecedented recent advances in the application of electricity demand for them a prominent place ; while optics, acoustics, thermodynamics, mining, metallurgy, engineering, mechanical processes, and all forms of motive power, will receive their fair share of attention.

Science has secured in advance the good-will and active support of a large body of the most competent scientific men of the country, as will sufficiently appear upon the publication of a few numbers.

Communications will be welcomed from any quarter, and a fair price will be paid for such as are accepted; rejected manuscripts will be returned to the authors, provided the requisite amount of postage accompanies the manuscripts.

Secretaries of scientific societies all over the world, and authors and publishers of works on scientific subjects, are invited to send their pub1ications for notice to the editor as soon as possible after issue.

Science begins on Feb. 9, 1883; each issue will contain at least twenty-six large pages of reading matter [with illustrations], making for the year two volumes with a total of nearly 1,500 pages, apart from all advertisements, and carefully indexed. The subscription price will be $5.00 n year, postpaid in the United States and Canada; for other countries, $6.00 a year, postage prepaid. Single numbers, 15 cents. THE SCIENCE COMPANY, MOSES KING, Publisher.

Books and pamphlets for review, articles for Science, and all editorial correspondence relating thereto, should invariably be addressed: Editor of Science, Cambridge, Mass.

Advertisements, subscriptions, and all kinds of business correspondence, should be addressed: Moses King, Publisher, Cambridge, Mass.


THE SCIENCE COMPANY. Organized, 1883, under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

President: Daniel C. Gilman, Maltimore, Md.

Vice-President: Alexander Graham Bell, Washington, D.C.

Directors: Daniel C. Gilman of Baltimore: Alexander Graham Bell of Washington; Gardiner G. Hubbard of Washington; Othniel C. Marsh of New Haven. Treasurer: Samuel H. Scudder of Cambridge.

Offices of the Company, The Publisher, and the Editor: Cambridge, Mass.