MATTHEWS. Syllabus of Lectures on PJiarmacology and Therapeu- 

 tics in the University of Michigan. Arranged Especially for th-t 

 Use of the Classes Taking the Work in Pharmacology and Thera- 

 peutics at the University of Michigan. By S. A. Matthews, M.D., 

 Assistant in Pharmacy and Thorapeutice, University of Michigan. 

 I2mo. 114 pages. $1.00. 



MEADER. Chronological Outline of Roman Literature. By C. L. 

 Meader, A.B., Instructor in Latin in University of Michigan. 

 Chart, 25 cents. 



MICHIGAN BOOK. The U. of M. Book. A Record of Student Life 

 and Student Organizations in the Un>versity of Michigan. Articles 

 contributed by members of the Faculty and by prominent Alumni. 

 $1.50. 



MONTGOMERY-SMITH. Laboratory Manual of Elementary Chem- 

 istry. By Jabez Montgomery, Ph.D., Professor of Natural Science, 

 Ann Arbor High School, and Roy B. Smith, Assistant Profes- 

 sor in Chemical Laboratory, Ann Arbor High School. 12 mo. 150 

 pages. Cloth, $1.00. 



This Work is intended as a laboratory guide to be used in connection with a good 

 text-book or course of leciures, and in its arrangement and scope ic is based upon 

 the practical experience of two instructors in the Ann Arbor High School. It is 

 therefore restricted to such work as may be done by the average high school pupil. 

 The experiments which are diiected are given more to enable the student to compre- 

 hend the methods of analytical chemistiy than to acquire particular pionciency in 

 the work of chemical analysis. '1 he work is charactei ized by minuteness of explan- 

 ation, a feature which will be appreciated by the beginner. fharmattULical Jbra. 



NETTO. The Theory of Substitutions and its Application to Algebra. 

 By Dr. Eugene Netto, Professor of Mathematics in the University of 

 Giessen. Revised by the author and translated with his permission, 

 by F. N. Cole, Ph.D., formerly Assistant Professor of Mathematics 

 in the University of Michigan, Professor of Mathematics, Columbia 

 University. 8 vo. 301 pages. Cloth. $3.00. 



NOVY. Laboratory Work in Physiological Chemistry. By Frederick G. 

 Novy, Sc.D., M.D., Junior Professor of Hygiene and Physiological 

 Chemistry, University of Michigan, Second edition, revised and 

 enlarged. With frontispiece and 24 illustrations. Octavo. Cloth, 



$2.00. 



This book is designed for directing laboratory work of medical students, and in 

 showing them how to study the physics and physiology of the digestive functions of 

 the blood, the urine and other substances wnich the body contains normally, or 

 which it speedily eliminates as effete material. The second ediiion has appeared 

 within a very short time after the publication of the first. The first chapters deal 

 with the facts, the carbohydrates and proteids. Then follow ethers upon the saliva, 

 the gastric juice, the pancreatic secretion, the bile, blood, milk, and urine, while the 

 closing chapter deals with a list of reagents. 



While the book is manifestly designed for the use of Dr. Novy's own students, we 

 doubt not that other teachers will hnu it a valuable aid in their work. At the close 

 of the volume are a number of illustrations of the various sedimentary substances 

 found in the urine, taken from the work of von Jaksch. Tho Th>rapeuttc uaztite 



This book, although now in its second edition, is practically unknown to British 

 readers. Up to the present, anyone wishing to find out how a particular analytical 

 method in physiological chemistry ought to be carried out, had of necessity to refer 



