SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS. 



Prof. Aitken's Works— ( Confmiwd). 



OUTLINES OF THE SCIENCE AND 



PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. A Text-Book for Students. Second 

 Edition. Crown Svo, 12/6. 



" Students preparing for examinations will hail it as a perfect godsend for its concise- 

 ness." — A theiunun. 



"Well-digested, clear, and well-written, the work of a man conversant with every 

 detail of his subject, and a thorough master of the art of teaching." — BrMsh Medical 

 yonmal. 



"In respect of both the matter contained, and the manner in which it is conveyed, 

 our examination has convinced us that nothing could be better. . . . We know of 

 no summary of the use of Electricity as a means of diagnosis, equal to that contained in 

 the Section on Diseases of the Nervous System." — Medico-Chirurgical Review. 



THE GROWTH OF THE RECRUIT, 



and the Young Soldier, with a view to the Selection of "Growing Lads" 

 and their Training, 2/6. 



ANSTED (Prof., M.A., F.R.S.) : NATURAL 



HISTORY OF THE INANIMATE CREATION, recorded in the 

 Structure of the Earth, the Plants of the Field, and the Atmospheric 

 Phenomena. With numerous Illustrations. Large post Svo. Cloth, 8/6. 



BAIRD (W., M.D., F.L.S., late of the Brit. Mus.) : 



THE STUDENT'S NATURAL HISTORY ; a Dictionary of the 

 Natural Sciences : Botany, Conchology, Entomology, Geology, Miner- 

 alogy, PalcEontology, and Zoology. With a Zoological Chart, and over 

 250 Illustrations. Demy Svo. Cloth gilt, 10/6. 



"The work is a very useful one, and will contribute, by its cheapness and comprehen- 

 siveness, to foster the extending taste for Natural Science." — IVest'iiitister Review. 



BROWNE (Walter R., M.A., M. Inst. C.E., 



F.G.S., late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge) : 



THE STUDENT'S MECHANICS : An Introduction to the Study 

 of Force and motion. With Diagrams. Crown Svo. Cloth, 4/6. 



Contents. 



I. First Principles. 

 II. Statics. 

 III. Kinematics. 



IV. Dynamics. 



V. Axioms, Definitions, and Laws. 

 VI. Exami'les Worked & Unworked. 



" Clear in style and practical in method, "The Student's Mechanics," is cordially 

 to be recommended from all points of view. . . . Will be of great value to Students 

 desirous to gain full knowledge."— ^i';^«cw>;/. 



"The merits of the work are especially conspicuous in its clearness and brevity . . . 

 deserves the attention of all who have to teach or learn the elements of Mechanics 

 . . An excellent conception." — Westminster Review. 



FOUNDATIONS OF MECHANICS. 



Papers reprinted from the Engineer. In crown Svo, i/. 



FUEL AND WATER: A Manual for 



Users of Steam and Water. By Prof. Schwackhofer and W. R. 

 Browne, M.A. (See p. 16.) 



