8 Valuable Works, fyc. 



II. CHEMISTRY APPLIED to the ARTS, on 



the basis of Gray's Operative Chemist. In 8vo. with nu- 

 merous plates. 



III. The PRINCIPLES and PRACTICE of 



MEDICINE, by SAMUEL JACKSQX, M. D. 



IV. EXAMINATION of MEDICAL DOC- 

 TRINES and SYSTEMS of NOSOLOGY, preceded by PRO- 

 POSITIONS containing the SUBSTANCE of PHYSIOLOGI- 

 CAL MEDICINE, by F. J. V. BUOUSSAIS, Officer of the 

 Royal order of the Leg-ion of Honour; Chief Physician and 

 First Professor in the Military Hospital for Instruction at Pa- 

 ris, &.c. &c. &c. Third edition. Translated from the French, 

 by ISAAC HAYS, M. D. and R. E. GRIFFITH, M. D. 



V. BECLARD'S GENERAL ANATOMY, in 1 



vol. 8vo. 



VI. FARRADAY'S CHEMICAL MANIPULA- 

 TION, first American, from the second London edition. 



VII. THOMPSON on INFLAMMATION, second 



American, from the second London edition. 



VIII. WILLIAMS on DISEASE of the LUNGS. 



IX. ARNOTT'S ELEMENTS of PHYSICS, or 

 NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, GENERAL and MEDICAL, ex- 

 plained independently of TECHNICAL MATHEMATICS 

 Second volume. 



X. A TREATISE ON FEVER. By SOUTHWOOD 

 SMITH, M. p. Physician to the London Fever Hospital. 



" For simplicity of arrangement, perspicuity of view, power of argument 

 and practical deduction, this Treatise on Fever stands without competition, at 

 the head of all that has been written on this abstruse disease." Westminster 

 Review, Jan. 



"Therein no man in actual practice in this metropolis, who should not pos- 

 sess himself of Dr. Smith's work." London Medical and Surgical Journal, Feb. 



" While the study of this work must be a matter of duty to the members of the 

 medical profession, the general reader will find it perfectly intelligible, and of 

 great practical utility." Monthly Repository, March. 



u With a mind so framed to accurate observation, and logical deduction, Dr. 

 Smith's delineations are peculiarly valuable." Medico-Chir, Jtev. March. 



XI. The MUSSULMAN, by R. R. MADDEN, Esq. 

 author of Travels in Turkey, Egypt, Nubia, and Palestine, in. 

 2 vols. 



** The portraiture of Turkish life and character, which this work exhibits, has 

 perhaps, never been equalled. The account of Mohamed Ali, the destruction 

 of ithe Mamelukes, the picture of Bedouin warfare, the description of the Der- 

 vish, and of the Arabian Astrologer, are indeed among-the most splendid deli- 

 neations ever introduced into the pages of fiction." Sun. 



. XII. The ARMENIANS, a Tale of Constantino- 

 ple, by J. MACFAtttAND, in 2 vols. 



" The author will appreciate our respect for his talents, when we say that he 

 has done more than any other man to complete the picture of the East, dashed 

 off by the bold pencil of the author of Anastasius." Edin. Lit. Journ. 



XIII. JOURNAL of the HEART, edited by the 

 Authoress of FLIRT ATIOX. 



" This is a most charming and feminine volume, one delightful for a woman 

 to read, and for a woman to have written; elegant language, kind and gentle 

 thoughts, a sweet and serious tone of religious feeling run through every page, 

 and any extract must do very scanty justice to the merit of the whole. *** 

 We most cordially recommend this Journal of the Heart, though we are unable 

 to do it justice by any selection of its beauties, which are too ultimately inter- 

 woven to admit of separation." Literary Gazette. 



