ANIMAL 



CROLOGY 



PRACTICAL EXERCISES IN MICROSCOPICAL METHODS 



By 



MICHAEL F.GUYER 



Professor of Zoology in The University 



of Cincinnati 



An indispensable book for teacher, 

 physician, student, or novice who wishes 

 to Jearn how to prepare his own mate- 

 rial for microscopical examination. There 

 are special chapters on the preparation 

 and examination of embryological ma- 

 terial, blood, bacteria, and objects of 

 general interest, and on the collection 

 and preparation of material for the 

 microscopical work in a course in element- 

 ary zoology. In an appendix nearly 

 three hundred tissues and organs with 

 directions for properly preparing them 

 for microscopical study are tabulated. 

 Sufficient account of the theoretical side 

 of microscopy is given to enable the 

 student to get satisfactory results from 

 his microscope, 



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A Laboratory Manual of Physiological 



Cliemistry 



By Ralph W. Webster, of the Department of Physiological 

 Chemistry, and WALDEMAR KOCH. of the Department of 

 Pharmacol og^y, of the University of Chicago. 



iitpages, interUai/ed,8vo,cio£h; net p^o, postpaid $1.63 



This manual Jsintendcd primarily for the use of stu- 

 dents in the laboratory, but contains also much valuable 

 information for those wishing to gain a sound general 

 knowledge of physiological processes. 



"A valuable laboratory course.**— y/i^ Outlook. 



"The experiments .... are clear and trustworthy in detail.'* 



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CHICAGO 

 NtWYORK 



The Botanical Gazette 



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NEW YORK 



Edited by John M, Coulter and C. R, Barnes^ 

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Monthly ; at least 80 pages. Devoted to the science of 

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An Indispensable Book for Students of Botany 



Methods in Plant Histology 



SE COND EDITION— ILL US TEA TED 



By Charles J. Chamberlain, Ph.D. 



Instructor in Botany in the University of Chicago 



HIS BOOK contains directions for collecting and preparing plant material 

 for microscopic investigation. It is based upon a course in botanical micro- 

 technique, and is the first complete manual to be published on this subject. 

 Free-hand sectioning, the paraffin method, the celloidin method, and the glycerine 

 method are treated in detail. In later chapters specific directions are given for 

 making such preparations as are needed by those who wish to study the plant 

 kingdom from the Algae up to the flowering plant. Special attention is paid to 

 the staining of karyokinetic figures, and formulas are given for the reagents 

 commonly used in the histological laboratory. In preparing the second edition the 

 author has kept in view the advance in the science since the book first appeared. 

 Professor Klebs's methods for securing the various reproductive phases in the 

 Algae and Fungi have been outlined in a practical way, and in general much 

 more attention has been given to collecting material. New chapters deal with 

 the Venetian turpentine method, microchemical tests, free-hand sections, special 

 methods, and the use of the microscope, 

 enlarged the volume from i68 to 272 pages. 



These changes and additions have 



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