Richter's Chemistries. 



AUTHORIZED TRANSLATIONS. 



By EDGAR F. SMITH, M.A., Ph.D., 



Prof, of Chemistry in Wittenberg College, Springfield, Ohio; 

 formerly in the Laboratories of the University of Pennsylva- 

 nia and Muklenburg College; Member of the Lhemical 

 Societies of Berlin and P,iris , of the Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, etc., etc. 



EACH VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY. 



INORGANIC CHEMISTRY. Second American, 

 from the Fourth German Edition; thoroughly revised 

 and in many parts rewritten. With 89 Illustrations 

 and Colored Plate of Spectra. Cloth, $2.00 



THE CHEMISTRY OF THE CARBON COM- 

 POUNDS, or Organic Chemistry. First Ameri- 

 can, from Fourth German Edition. Illustrated. 



Cloth, $3.00 



The success attending the publication of the first edi- 

 tion of Richter's Inorganic Chemistry encourages the 

 translator and publishers to believe that the companion 

 volume will have an equally warm reception. Professor 

 Richter's methods of arrangement and teaching have 

 proved their superiority, abroad, by the very large sale 

 of his books all over the Continent, translations having 

 been made in Germany, Russia, Holland and Italy. 



From PROF. B SILLIMAN, Yale College, New Haven, Conn. 



" It is decidedly a good book, and in some respects the best 

 manual we have." 



From JOHN MARSHALL, M.D., NAT. sc. D. (Tubingen), Demonstra- 

 tor of Chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania, Medical 

 Department. 



"The work is of undoubted value. The theory of chemistry, 

 which is generally the bugbear of students, is, in this book, very 

 clearly explained, and the explanations are so well distributed 

 through the book that students are brought easily from the simplest 

 loathe most difficult problems. 



" That part descriptive of the elements and their compounds is 

 full and all that could be desired in a text-book, while the cuts, 

 with which the work is profusely illustrated, are an excellent aid to 

 the student. Altogether, it is one of our best modern works on 

 chemistry. " 



