24 LEA & BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



CARPENTERS NEW WORK. 



MANUAL, OR ELEMENTS OF PHYSIOLOGY 



UTCLUDUTG PHYSIOLOGICAL Jl JT ATOJH 1% 



J 





FOR THE USE OF THE MEDICAL STUDENT. 



BY WILLIAM B. CARPENTER. M.D., F.R.S, 



FTJLLERIAN PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY IH THE ROYAL INSTITUTION OF GREAT BRITAIN, ETC. 



With one hundred and eighty illustrations. In one octavo volume of 566 pages. Elegantly printed to match 



his " Principles of Human Physiology." 



This work, though but a very short time published, has attracted much attention from all engaged in teach- 

 ing the science of medicine, and has been adopted as a text-book by many schools throughout the country. 

 The clearness and conciseness with which all the latest investigations are enunciated render it peculiarly 

 well suited for those commencing the study of medicine. It is profusely illustrated with beautiful wood en- 

 gravings, and is confidently presented as "among the best elementary text-books on Physiology in the lan- 

 guage. . . 



The merits of this work are of so high an order, and its arrangement and discussion of subjects so admi- 

 rably adapted to the wants of studenis, that we unhesitatingly commend it to their favorable notice inis 

 work studied first, and then followed by the more elaborate treatise of Dunglison.or Muller, or others ot similar 

 character, is decidedly the best course for the student of physiology.— The Western Lancet. 



CARPENTER'S HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY. 



PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY 



i 



WITH THEIR CHIEF APPLICATIONS TO 



PATHOLOGY, HYGIENE, AND FORENSIC MEDICINE. 



BY WILLIAM B. CARPENTER, M. D., F. R. S., &c. 



Second American, from a New and Revised London Edition. 



WITH NOTES AND ADDITIONS, 



BY MEREDITH CLYMER, M. D. 7 &c. 



With Two Hundred and Sixteen Wood-cuU and other IlluUration: 



In one octavo volume, of about 650 closely and beautifully printed pages. . 



The very rapid sale of a large impression of the first edition is an evidence of the merits of this va " UB0 '* 

 work and that it has been duly appreciated by the profession of this couniry The publishers hope in» i 

 present edition will be found still more worthy of approbation, not only from the additions of the uuin 

 editor, but also from its superior execution, and the abundance of its illustrations. No less than eig « y . 

 wood-cuts and another lithographic plate will be found to have been added, affording the most material *~ 

 ance to the student. . . __ nhv . 



" We have much satisfaction in declaring our opinion that this work is the best systematic treatr 8 * °" » ^ 

 sioloery in our own language, and the best adapted for the student existing in any language."— mtaxco-^ 

 col Review of London. . , PT hibits a 



"The work as it now stands is the only Treatise on Physiology in the English language wrncn ^'^-^ 

 clear and connected, and comprehensive view of the present condition of that science. 5 — Lonaon 

 burgh Monthly Journal. h 





SUPPLEMENT TO THE ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA, IIP TO THE YEAR 1847. 



ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA-Supplementary Vol. 



.1 POPULAR DICTIONARY „ o _ 



OF ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE. HISTORY, POLITICS \W 



BIOGRAPHY. 



VOL. XIV. 



i 



Edited by HENRY VETHAKE, LL.D., tiieonPo ii- 



Vice-Provost and Professor of Mathematics in the University of Pennsylvania, Author of "A Trea 



tical Economv." 



In Ow large Octavo Volume of over Six Hundred and Fifty double columned pages. 



~ ______ -. . , J . . ., . . 77 .#*k: i.,m« ran now pentr^ 



iole 



_ 1 "■•" **«» "mv wain a ivcyistci ui mc x*vciii8 Ui uie mo*. *-«»«.^-w-- - - obtain thii 



World, particularly embracing interesting scientific investigations and discoveries, c an ^^^ 



The numerous subscribers who have been waiting the completion of this volume can now Pi^£ 

 their acts, and all who want a Register of the Events of the last Fifteen Years, _">[™ K#n;n thii 



volume separately, price Two Dollars uncut in cloth, or Two Dollars and Fifty Cents 

 to match the styles in which the publishers have been selling sets. . . , Kn^-tores; 



Subscribers in the large cities can be supplied on application at any of the principal J*"\ f 



and persons residing in the country can have their sets matched by sending a volume in cm* 

 friends visiting the city. 



uC S* te ■ eu . furai «h_ed at very low prices in various bindings. ^ ^ . n ihe j„telli- 



J ° nt * " ... . licaland 



PwTy r MilSS&f ^ ■2* wh l? h ?«^«aUng readers require- "There is in the Jp«EE^^£55* 

 F^ciy scientiac, which was all the more acceptable to us that it was unexpected. 



