xiv MESSRS CHURCHILL'S WORKS 



W. M. Ord 



NOTES ON COMPARATIVE ANATOMY: a Syllabus of 

 a Course of Lectures delivered at St. Thomas's Hospital. By WILLIAM 

 MILLER ORD, M.B. Lond., M.R.C.P., Assistant-Physician to the, Hospital, 



and Lecturer in its Medical School Crown 8vo, 53. 



Compact, lucid, and well arranged. ' ' We have gone through it carefully, and 



These Notes will, if well used, be valuable 



we are thoroughly satisfied with the manner 



to learners, perhaps still more so to in which the author has discharged his task." 

 teachers." Nature. \ Pop. Science Review. 



John Shea 

 A MANUAL OF ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY. With Appendix 



of Examination Questions. By JOHN SHEA, M.D., B.A. Lond. With 



numerous Engravings . Fcap. 8vo, 53. 6d. 



o 



VESTIGES of the NATURAL HISTORY OF CREATION. 



With 100 Engravings on Wood. Eleventh Edition . Post 8vo, 73. 6d. 



o 



Andrew Wilson 



THE STUDENT'S GUIDE TO ZOOLOGY. 

 By ANDREW WILSON, Author of <; Elements of Zoology,' 1 and Lecturer 

 on Zoology, Edinburgh. With Engravings . . .In November 



R. G. Mayne 



MEDICAL VOCABULARY : an Explanation of all Names, 

 Synonymes, Terms, and Phrases, used in Medicine and the Relative 

 Branches of Medical Science, giving their correct Derivation, Meaning, 

 Application, and Pronunciation. Intended specially as a Book of Reference 

 for the Young Student. Third Edition . . . Fcap 8vo, 8s. 6d. 



Botanical, and Pharmaceutical Terms are 

 to be found on almost every page." 



' ' We have referred to this work hundreds 

 of times, and have always obtained the in- 

 formation we required . . . Chemical, 



Chemist and Druggist. 



G. Dawson 



A MANUAL OF PHOTOGRAPHY. By GEORGE 



DAWSON, M.A., Ph.D., Lecturer on Photography in King's College, London. 

 Eighth Edition, with Engravings ". Fcap 8vo, 55. 6d. 



many new methods and materials which 



"The new edition of this excellent 

 manual, which is founded on and incorpo- 

 rates as much of Hardwich's ' Photographic 

 Chemistry ' as is valuable in the present 

 further advanced stage of the art, retains 

 its position as the best work on the subject 

 for amateurs, as well as professionals. The 



are so frequently being introduced, make it 

 essential that any book professing to keep 

 up to the times must be frequently revised, 

 and Dr. Dawson has in this work presented 

 the subject in its most advanced position." 

 Nature, May 29, 1873. 



