WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



I. 

 DICTIONARY OF MEDICAL TERMS. 



Fourth Edition. 



NOTICES OF THE FIRST EDITION. 



" A work much wanted, and very ably executed." — London Medical Journal, 

 Sept. 1835. 



" This compendious volume is well adapted for the use of Students. It contains 

 a complete Glossary of the terms used in Medicine, — not only those in common use, 

 but also the more recent and less familiar names introduced by modern writers. The 

 introduction of tabular views of different subjects is at once comprehensive and 

 satisfactory. It must not however be supposed that the volume is a mere word- 

 book ; it is, on the contrary, an extremely interesting manual, beautifully printed, 

 containing much excellent matter in a little space, and is deserving of our strong 

 recommendation." — Medical Gazette, Sept. 1835. 



" Concise and ingenious." — Johnson's Medico-Chirurg, Journal, Oct. 1835. 



" It is a very learned, painstaking, complete, and useful work — a Dictionary 

 absolutely necessary in a medical library." — Spectator, Nov. 1, 1835. 



NOTICE OF THE SECOND EDITION. 



" We gave a very favourable account of this little book on its first appearance, 

 and we have only to repeat the same ivith emphasis. It is for its size decidedly the 

 best book of its kind, and ought to be in the possession of every student. Its plan 

 is sufficiently comprehensive ; and it contains an immense mass of necessary infor- 

 mation in a very small compass." — British and Foreign Medical Review. 



II. 



MANUAL OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. 



By COMSTOCK AND HOBLYN. 



Second Edition, fcap. Svo. (494 pp.), Steel Plate, and 281 wood-cuts. 

 6s. cloth, or 65. Qd. strongly bound. 



•* We can heartily recommend this work as being as good an introduction to ma- 

 thematical sciences as an unmathematical treatise can be." — Gentleman's Magazine. 



III. 



A MANUAL OF CHEMISTRY, 



Illustrated by Seventy-five Engravings. Fcap. Svo. cloth, is. 6d. 



"This is an excellent compendium, and is well calculated to confer benefit both 

 on the student and on the medical practitioner. It equally deserves our commen- 

 dation as an important guide to general education." — Lancet, 1841. 



"Mr. Hoblyn's ' Manual of Chemistry' is entitled to general praise, for the grasp 

 of its subject, the distinctness of its arrangement, the fulness of its matter, and the 

 clearness of its style, as well as for the force with which the points of the subject 

 are frequently impressed upon the mind by the selection of some striking fact." — 

 Spectator, 1841. 



IV. 



A MANUAL OF THE STEAM ENGINE. 



Illustrated by numerous Engravings on Steel and Wood. Fcap. Svo. 6s. 



" A work which, for cheapness and compactness, extensive range of subject, and 

 competent illustration, we can safely recommend to our readers as the best of the 

 day." — Railway Magazine, 1842. 



V. 



FIRST BOOKS IN SCIENCE. 



Price Is. each, 



1. ASTRONOMY. 



2. NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. 



3. HEAT, LIGHT, and ELECTRICITY. 



4. CHEMISTRY. 



