great expense. After the Versailles Treaty, the Thomas slag of Lorraine was no longer available t o Germany for phosphate fertilization. Friiulein von Wrangell showed that German sails are not so deficient in phosphorus as had formerly been believed and that, by choosing the right crops, the proper accessory fertilizers, and suitable means of cultivation, the phosphorus resources could be mobilized. Her book on the phosphoric acid nutrition of plants was given wide publicity by the German press. and Fritz Haber hailed her discoveries as a great advance in agriculture. I n 1923 the new institute of plant nutrition was erected for her a t Hohenheim according to her own plans, and she became the first woman in Germany t o hold a full professorship. During the decade from 1920 t o 1930 she published twenty-six papers: on the phosphoric acid requirements of different plants; a rapid ~olorimetricmethod of determining phosphoric acid in very dilute solutions; the laws of solubility and their application to tertiary phosphates; the phosphoric acid content of natural soil solutions; phosphoric acid absorption and soil reaction; the solubility and availability of the phosphoric acid in the soil; determination of potassium in very dilute solutions such as those in the soil; the composition of soil solutions and the growth of plants in very dilute solutions; the speed of absorption of ions by plants; nitrogen fertilization and the color of flowers; atmospheric iodine and plants; and iodine as a plant food. Several of her relatives had been killed during the Russian Revolution and Prince TWladimir Andronikow was reported t o have been shot. One day she received an unsigned picture postcard from Serbia in his very familiar handwriting. The prince had read more than one qbituary of himself and had taken this means of letting her know, in spite of the strict censorship, that he was still among the living. After their msmage in 1928, she continued to direct the Institute of Plant Nutrition a t Hohenheim and the prince helped her prepare her great work on "The nutrition and fertilization of plants" for the press. I n a public lecture she once said. "Liebig's immortal thoughts still stand as the guiding star of German agriculture." MARYELVES WEEKS
ing vaporization phenomena. I t will serve as a reference to most outstanding research work on its subject. WALTERJ. PODBIELNIAK 8312 Sourn CHICAUOAVSNUG CHICAEO, ILLINO~J
FUNDAMENTALS OF BIOCHEMISTRY WITH LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS. Carl L. A. Schmidt, M.S., Ph.D., Professor of Biochemistry, University of California, and Frank Woiorlhington Allen, Ph.D., Instructor in Biochemistry, University of California. McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., New York City and London, 1938. xiv 388 pp. 29 figs. 13.5 X 20.5 cm. $3.00.
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This text provides laboratory instruction over a rather wide range of biochemical topics together with a background of discussion. There is a group of laboratory experiments intended for all students and another group of special, more advanced experiments for. groups of two or more students. The latter are intended. "to teach the student the sources of the facts of biochemistry, t o integrate information, t o carry out a weU-controlled experiment, and t o present the facts in a coordinated and logical manner." The discussion part of the text is not intended to replace a course of lectures. The text "does not aim t o cover all aspects of the field of h i e chemistry." Following a chapter of directions which includes an excellent description of the balance and the calorimeter and their use, the following subjects are considered: I. Biological Variation and the Analysis of Experimental Results; 11. Preparation of Standardized Solutions of Acid and Alkali; 111. Hydrogen Ion Concentration; IV. Neutrality Regulation in the Body; V. Enzymes; VI. Mineral Metabolism; VII. Vitamins; VIII. The Endocrines; IX. The Chemistry and Metabolism of the Lipids; X. Bile; XI. The Chemistry and Metabolism of the Carbohydrates; XII. Chemistry of Amino Acids and Proteins; XIII. The Metabolism of Proteins. Urine and Blood Analysis; and XIV. Energy Exchange. There is an appendix containing dietary, tables, problems, atomic weights and table of logarithms. There is also a well-prepared index. UNIYBBSlTY OF K*ns*s LAWRBNCB. KANSAS Students employing this text will require thorough preparation in general and organic chemistry and in quantitative analysis. If the text is used faithfully, they should acquire a fundamental knowledge of those phases of biochemistry which are covered by the text. I n addition, they should possess a highly desirable EBuuLroMETRY. Wojcieck Swietoslcwski, Professor of Physical acquaintance with the literature because one of the very admirChemistry a t the Polytechnic of Warsaw. Translated by S. able features of the text is an excellent list of suggested readings Partyka and A. T u n k m s k i . Chemical Publishing Company of a t the beginning of each subject with additional references for New York, Inc., New York City, 1937. Second edition. x each of the special experiments. The readings and references 204 pp. 53 figs. 13.5 X 21 cm. 53.00. include the best modem texts and reviews as well as citations t o orieinal oaoers in American and foreim iournals. This book is a comprehensive review of the theoretical and ex- -~ The text is concisely and c l e d y written and is well illustrated oerimental work of Professor Swietoslawski and his students and with chcrnical formulas and Ggurcs. l'hrrr are a fcw errors and collaborators at rhc Polgreclmic of Karsaw. since 1V21 runtinu- contradictions which will no douht be corrected in future editions ing ro dnte, on the detcrminntion and studs of vapor presrur~and There are some minor omissions and failures t o clarify terms boihng point chnrnctrrisricr of all types of solutions and mixtures, which would have t o be taken up in the supplementary lectures. including the development of a variety of experimental apparatus The maim omission is that of colloids, even the word colloid apfor exact measurements of these characteristics. parently having been studiously avoided. Professor Swietoslawski's researches, as presented in this book. L. S. P A L M ~ R are outstanding and might be termed classical in their fundamental approach and careful experimental investigation of what seems t o be a simple subject, but which actually is one of the most complicated and difficult when it is desired to derive exact relations between composition, vapor pressure, and boiling point under A BRIEF INTR~DUCT~ON TO TEE USE OF BEDATEIN'SHANDBUCH specific static, dynamic, and apparatus conditions. The results Den ORoANIscHeN CHEMIE. Ernest HamLin Huntress, Ph.D., of these resesrches, in the form of general relations, illuminating Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Second edition. explanations of actual mechanism of vaporization of complex 44 pp. John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York City, 1938. x and two-phase mixtures, apparatus and procedures for measuring 4 charts. 14.5 X 22.5 cm. $1.00 net. purities with great exactness, should be of considerable interest t o research workers dealing with distillation and rectification, It is human not to bother about schemes of classification unless and vaporization processes generally. one is forced to. Probably the majority of Beilstein users rely The b w k should be of educational value in advanced study principally on the volume labels and volume indexes. When of the physical chemistry of solutions, and in chemical engineering the general index appears they will turn t o that. This simple courses on distillation, evaporation, and similar processes iuvolv- plan answers surprisingly well, for the indexes are p w d ones.
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