/// One Volume, Demy 8vo. Eighth Edition. Price \ 5 s. 



VETERINARY MEDICINES 



THEIR ACTIONS AND USES 



BY 



FINLAY DUN 



FORMERLY LECTURER ON MATERIA MEDICA AND DIETETICS AT THE EDINBURGH 



VETERINARY COLLEGE, AND EXAMINER IN CHEMISTRY IN THE ROYAL 



COLLEGE OF VETERINARY SUROKON8 



"All the latest information on the subject has been incorporated in the Volume, which is 

 certainly nn enduring monument to the indefatigable industry and encyclopedic attainments of its 

 gifted and highly respected author." North British Agriculturist. 



" The book is sure to maintain and enhance further its already high reputation." Glasgow Herald. 



" Remains a standard text-book of its subject." Scotsman. 



Noiv Ready, in One Volume^ Demy Svo. Price 55., post free. 



HORSES 



IN ACCIDENT AND DISEASE 



NOTES AND SKETCHES 

 BY J. ROALFE COX, F.KC.V.S. 



" To aid the veterinary student and horse amateur in distinguishing between different maladies 

 and mishaps, Mr. Cox, an able veterinary surgeon of long experience, has published, in which 

 verbal description is made altogether subordinate to the artistic delineation of twenty-eight cases 

 of particular diseases and accidents frequently met with. The figures, if somewhat roughly, are 

 yet strikingly portrayed, and in addition to being fairly well drawn, convey at a glance a capital 

 series of object lessons in clinical veterinary medicine and surgery which cannot fail to be in- 

 structive to those for whom they were produced." Lancet. 



In One Volume, Demy 8vo. Price gs. 



THE PROTECTION OF WOODLANDS 



A UTHORISED TRANSLATION FROM THE 

 GERMAN 



BY 



JOHN NISBET, D.GEc. 



OF THE INDIAN FOREST SERVICE, AUTHOR OK "BRITISH FOREST TREES, AND 

 THEIR SYLVICULTURAL CHARACTERISTICS AND TREATMENT" 



THIS work, a translation of the fourth edition of Kauschinger-Furst's Waldschutz, is intended to 

 supply a want concerning which frequent expression was given in the evidence laid before the 

 Select Parliamentary Committee on Forestry in 1886-87. 



Whilst making no pretence of treating any branch of the subject exhaustively, the various 

 portions are dealt with in a strictly scientific manner, though at the same time tersely, and from 

 a thoroughly practical standpoint. 



As there is no special work on Sylvicultural Entomology in English, the chapter on noxious 

 Forest Insects has been somewhat amplified, and it is hoped that, with the aid of the coloured 

 plates at the end of the book, the identification of the chief insect enemies of our woodlands will 

 be easily effected by students of Forestry and practical Sylviculturists. 



EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS, 10 CASTLE STREET 



