LONGMANS, GREEN, ^ CO.' S PUBLICATIONS. 



EXPERIMENTAL CHEMISTRY FOR STUDENTS. 



By J. Emerson Reynolds, M.D., F.R.S., Professor of Chemistry, Uni- 

 versity of Dublin ; Examiner in Chemistry, University of London. Fcp. 

 8vo, with numerous Woodcuts. 

 Part I. Introductory. 45 cents. 



Part II. Non-Metals, with an Appendix on Systematic Testing for 

 Acids. 75 cents. 



Part III. Metals, and Allied Bodies. $1.05. 



Part IV. Carbon Compounds or Organic Chemistry. $1.20. 



Part I. contains 80 Experiments dealing with first principles and with the 

 chemistry of the typical elements, Hydrogen and Oxygen and their compounds. 

 With 50 Illustrations of Experiments and Apparatus. 157 pages. 



Part II. treats of the Non-Metals, and has an Appendix on Systematic Test- 

 ing for Acids ; it contains 267 Experiments and 60 Illustrations of Apparatus. 

 302 pages. 



Part III. treats of the Metals and Allied Bodies, and has an Appendix of 

 Analytical Tables for Qup-litative Analysis of Metallic Solutions. It contains 

 317 Experiments and 27 Illustrations, etc. 327 pages. 



Part IV. Chemistry of Carbon Compounds, or Organic Chemistry, with an 

 Appendix on Ultimate Organic Analysis ; 151 Experiments and 21 Illustrations 

 of Experiments and Apparatus. 396 pages. 



CHEMICAL LECTURE EXPERIMENTS: Non-Metallic Ele- 

 ments. 



By G. S. Newth, F.I.C., Chemical Lecture Demonstrator in the Royal Col- 

 lege of Science, South Kensington. With 224 Illustrations. 8vo. pp. 

 330, $3.00. 



The object of this book is twofold. First, it is intended to supply chemi- 

 ^1 lecturers and teachers with a useful repertoire of experiments, suitable for 

 illustrating upon the lecture-table the modes of preparation, and the properties, 

 of the non-metallic elements and their commoner and more important com- 

 pounds. The author has therefore given such full directions for the prepara- 

 tion and performance of the various experiments described as will enable any 

 experimenter to successfully repeat them. 



No account of any experiment has been introduced into the book upon the 

 authority solely of any verbal or printed description, but every experiment has 

 been the subject of the author's personal investigation, and illustrated in every 

 case, with the exception of three, by woodcuts made from original drawings. 



It has, also, been the author's object to furnish the chemical student with a 

 book which shall serve as a companion to the lectures he may attend — a book in 

 which he will find fully described most, if not all, of the experiments he is likely 

 to see performed upon the lecture table, and which will therefore relieve him 

 from the necessity of laboriously noting them, and often sketching the appa- 

 ratus used. In this way the student will be spared much unnecessary and dis- 

 tracting work during the lecture, and will therefore be better able to give his 

 undivided attention to the explanations or arguments of the lecturer. 



Further to meet the wants of the chemical student, the equations represent- 

 ing the various reactions which are described in the book are given ; and, al- 

 though this work is not designed to take the place of any existing text-book, it 

 has been so arranged that the student may learn from it the methods of prep- 

 aration and most of the important properties of the non-metallic elements and 

 their more common compounds. 



LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO., 15 East Sixteenth Street, New York. 



