10 Robert Hardwicke, 1!)2, Piccadilh/, w. 



Publications of the Ray Society— continued. 



Folio, price £\. 1 Is. 6d. 



The British Spiders. 



A History of the Spiders of Great Britain and Ireland. By Jonx Bi.acx-.vali., 

 F.L.S. Part I. with 110 Examples, coloured by hand. 



In 1 vol. imp. 4to. pp. 31g, with 22 Plates iSl.1 Is. 6d. 



Introduction to the Study of the Fora- 

 minifera. 



By W. B. Carpenter, M.D., F.R.S., F.L.S. , &c. ; assisted byW.K. Parker, 

 Esq., and T. Rupert Jo.nes, Esq., F.G.S. 



In 1 vol. 8vo. doth, pp. 506, with 65 Plates. .£'] . 5s. 6d. 



On the Germination, Development, and Fruc- 

 tification of the Higher Cryptogamia, and 

 on the Fructification of the Couiferee. 



By Dr. Wilhelm Hofmeister. Translated by Frederick Currey, M A., 

 F.R.S., Sec. L.S. 



Crown Bvo. cloth, price Is. Gd.,with Illustrations from Nature by 



Tvffen West. 



On Diseases of the Kidney and 

 Dropsy. 



By S. J. Goodfellow, M.D., F.R.C.P., Physician to the Middle- 

 sex Hospital. 



"A whole profession is elevated when such creditable works are produced by an v 

 one of its members." — Dobell's Lectures. 



" The work cannot fail to prove exceedingly instructive, either to the student or 

 to those members of the profession who have not had an opportunity of keeping up 

 their knowledge of the various discoveries which have been made of late years in renal 

 pathology and therapeutics. ... A very good digest of all that is known of any 

 practical value upon the subject ; and at the same time forms an excellent guide to 

 enable the practitioner to discriminate the different forms of ' Bright's disease ' 

 during life, and thereby put him in a position to conduct the treatment on the 

 soundest principles." — Glasgow Medical Journal. 



" To the student who desires to know what possible or presumable explanations 

 can at present be suggested of the origin of the various units in the complex scries of 

 morbid states therein included, Dr. Goodfellow's work may be recommended."— 

 Lancet. 



"We cannot but recommend it strongly to the profession as the result of 

 thoroughly conscientious hard work, embodied in a form very interesting to the 

 intelligent reader."— London Medical Review. 



