

UTKUATURE AND LITF.UAKY PROGRESS IN 1807. 



448 



r, Human Degeneracy; iU Na- 

 Kciiicdy, aa based on tin- 'KU-vutim.' 



oof Lif 



llilV 



bbpathy. Hy 1. .lenniiurs, M. D. 

 Diimtlirrin in tin- 1'ni: 



With an HiM"iical Account t' its Phenomena, 

 , and it.-. Homoeopathic Treatment, by 

 . Idl ..i.l, M. l>. 



uiatorny. A New Arrangement of the 



or, liy D. II. Airiicw. M. D. 

 Tli.- : Medicine mid Surgery npi.' 



tli. ".1 Accidents incident to Women, 



il. KNiicld, M. D. _'.! edition. Knlar-ed. 

 Inhalation; its Therapeutics and Practice. A 

 the Inhalation of Gases, Vapors, 



KiUiotheca c.. ..r Manual of Canadian 



tuiv, liy Henry .1. >! 



: the Tinted S t atCS CongTCM J by 

 Charles I. annum, third edition. 

 Willson'.s P n Ili-torieul Almanac for the 



1868. 



.'lean Annual Cyclopedia and Register for the 

 Year I860. 



Chainlier.-,' Kncvclopii'din, vol. 9. 

 Haydn's Dictionary of Dates. Edited by B. Vin- 

 eent ; with an American Supplement and Bio- 

 . al Index by G. P. Putnam. 



Tin- titluT am! larger stitxIivNion of statistic.-.l 

 works I'liihraccd almanacs of all kinds fai ' 



Nebulked Fluids, and Powders ; Illustrated ; by worK9 < l(ls ' "men , 



.en, M. D. mechanics', honsekeepen*, obfldren'i, ladies', 



Studies in Pathology and Therapeutics, by S. II. 



Dicksmi, M. J>. 

 A Popular Treatise on Colds and Affections of the 



Air Passages and Lungs, by Kobe A Hunter, 



M. D. 

 Practical Treatise on Shock after Surgical Opera- 



tions and Injuries, by E. Morris, M. 1). 

 Human Life Considered in its Present Condition 



in ul Future Developments, by W. Swcetser, 



M. D. 

 Headaches : their Causes and their Cure, by II. G. 



iit, M. D. 



Obstetric Clinic: a Practical Contribution to the 

 dv of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and 



Children, by G. T. Elliot, Jr., M. D. 

 Hysteria : Remote Causes of Diseases in General. 



Treatment of Disease by Tonic Agency. Local 



. ! - L^cal Forms of Hysteria, by F. C. Skey. 

 The Principle und Practice of Laryngoscopv and 



Khinoscopv in Diseases of the Throat and Nasal 



Passages, by Antoine Ruppaner, M. D. 

 The Cuttle Plague, by Amcdee Achard. 

 A Treatise on Emotional Disorders of the Sympa- 



thetic System of Nerves, by W. Murray, M. D. 

 The Quarterly Journal of Psychological Medicine 



and Jurisprudence, edited by W. A. Hammond, 



M. D. 

 The Family Physician and Household Companion, 



by W. L. Byfn, M. D. 



The works on PHILOLOGY, thougl? not numer- 

 ous, were of high merit. They were : 



The Vowel Elements in Speech ; a Phonological 



and Philological Essay, setting forth a New Sys- 



tem of the Vowel Sounds, by Samuel Porter. 

 A Dictionary of the English Language : Explana- 



tory, Pronouncing, Etymological, and Synony- 



mous ; with an Appendix. Mainly abridged from 



the 4to Dictionary of N. Webster, LL. D., by W. 



A. Wheeler. 

 Studies of our English ; or Glimpses of the Inner 



Life of our Language, by M. Schele de Vere, 



1. 1.. D. 

 The English of Shakespeare ; illustrated hi a Philo- 



logical Commentary on his Julius Caesar, by G. 



L. Cruik. Edited by W. J. Rolfe. 

 One Thousand Familiar Phrases in English and 



Romanized Japanese, by Rev. John Liggins. 

 Language and the Study of Language ; twelve Lec- 



tures on the Principles of Linguistic Science, by 



Prof. W. D. Whitney. 



In the department of STATISTICS, one subdi- 

 \i-i<m includes Cyclopaedias and J)ictionarie 

 not appertaining directly to philological science. 

 <>!' these the following are the most important 

 of the publications of the year : 



A Dictionary of Books relating to America, from 



covcry to the Present Time ; by Joseph 



Bobln. This valuable bibliographical work had 



readied its third part before the close of the 



year. 



pictorial, and descriptive; such special stati.-.- 

 tical almanacs as the "Tribune." "The Evening 

 Journal," "The World," "The Franklin," "The 

 Democratic Almanac and Political Compendi- 

 um," etc., etc. ; the two Family Christian Al- 

 manacs, and the almanacs of the different reli- 

 gious denominations, directories of every con- 

 siderable town and city in the Union, the State 

 Registers or manuals containing those facts and 

 statistics which are considered of interest and 

 importance to the members of the State Legisla- 

 tures, the Congressional Directory issued for 

 each session of Congress, the Corporation and 

 Legislative Manuals for the information of State 

 and municipal bodies, the Post-Office Direc- 

 tories, the Blue Books or Official United States 

 Registers, and the Mercantile Registers and 

 Mercantile Agency Directories. In addition to 

 these, the following works of this class demand 

 more specific notice: "The American Photo- 

 graphic Almanac," "The Bankers' Almanac for 

 1867," "The Phrenological Annual for 1867," 

 ""Woodward's Illustrated Horticulturists' Al- 

 manac for 1867," "The Agricultural and Horti- 

 cultural Annual, "Year Book of the Unitarian 

 Congregational Churches for 1867," " Census of 

 the State of New York for 1865," prepared 

 under direction of the Secretary of State, by 

 Dr. F. B. Hough ; " Census of the United States 

 and Territories, and of British America, by 

 Counties, with Population of Principal Towns," 

 compiled by J. Disturnell ; " Ashcrol't's Railway 

 Directory for 1867;" "Digest of the Canons 

 adopted in the General Conventions of the 

 Protestant Episcopal Church in 1859, 1862, and 

 1865, together with the Constitution;" "Pas- 

 tor's Register for Private Use," arranged by Rev. 

 \V. i . Beatty," " City Mission Document, No. 9," 

 Church Directory for New York City ; " The 

 Agent's Manual of Life Assurance : " " Index to 

 the Catalogue of Books in the Public Library 

 of the City of Boston ; " "A Record of the Me- 

 tropolitan Fair in Aid of the United States Sani- 

 tary Commission," New York, April, 1864, with 

 Photographs ; " Mackenzie's Ten Thousand Re- 

 ceipts in all the Useful and Domestic Arts," re- 

 vised and brought up to April 25, 1867; and 

 "The American Publisher and Bookseller," a 

 monthly publication. 



In the department of POETRY we place, in ac- 

 cordance with our usual arrangement, in the 

 first subdivision, those volumes of collected 

 lyrics, songs, or other poems selected from dif- 



