L ONGMA NS, GREEN, cS- CO.'S F UBLICA TIONS. 



INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, THEORETICAL AND PRACTI- 

 CAL. With an Introduction to the Principles of Chemical Analysis, 

 Inorganic and Organic. 



By William Jago, F.C.S., F.I.C. 196 Experiments, with 49 Wood- 

 cuts, and numerous Questions and Exercises. i2mo. 350 pages. 80 

 cents. 



THE PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY. 



By D. Mendeleeff, Professor of Chemistry in the University of St. Peters- 

 burg. Translated by George Kamensky, A.R.S.M., of the Imperial 

 Mint, St. Petersburg, and Edited by A. J. Greenaway, F.I.C, Sub- 

 Editor of the Journal of the Chemical Society. 2 vols. 8vo. 1122 

 pages. $10.00. 



This book is written on a plan essentially different from that of the ordinary 

 text-books on chemistry. The text of the work deals with the main facts and 

 theories of the science in such a way as to be readily intelligible to a student 

 beginning the study of chemistry. Supplementing this, and intended for later 

 study, or for the use of advanced students, are the numerous footnotes, in 

 which is contained the bulk of the work. In these the details of the matter re- 

 ferred to in the text are described, and on debatable points the views held by 

 various authorities are collated and discussed. 



"... The book is eminently readable. It is written in an agreeable, 

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— The Nation, N. Y. 

 I 



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SOLUTIONS. 



By W. OsTWALD, Professor of Chemistry in the University of Leipzig. 

 Being the Fourth Book, with some additions, of the second edition of 

 Ostwald's " Lehrbuch der Allgemeinen Chemie. " Translated by M. 

 M. Pattison Muir, Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. 

 8vo. $3.00. 



' ' The work of translation by Mr. Muir is excellent. His style is clear and 

 scholarly throughout. The accuracy of the translation is insured by the fact 

 that Professor Ostwald has revised the proofs of the English edition. . . 

 This translation has appeared at an opportune moment. . . . The book 

 can be heartily recommended. . . ." — American Chemical yournal. 



" The work, like the parent treatise, is in all respects admirable ; in fact, it 

 would be difficult to point out a more suggestive treatment of any subject in 

 the whole domain of chemistry. Those chemists who do not read German will 

 certainly urge the translation of the entire v^-ovk."— Nation, N. Y. 



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