Transactions of the Albany Institute, Vol. II, No. 1. 1834. pp. 



Cat. of Union College. From Prof. Joslin. 



Journal of the Franklin Institute, Aug. and Sept. 1834, Philadel- 

 phia. Exch. 



New Alphabet. From St. Louis. 



Flora Columbiana. From J. A. Brereton, U. S. Army. 



A paper on Irradiation, by B. E. Joslin, M. D. 1833. From 

 the author. 



Prof. A. D. Bache on the diurnal variation of the horizontal nee- 

 dle. Read to the Phil. Soc, Nov. 16, 1832. From the author. 



Eulogy on La Fayette, delivered at Faneuil Hall, by Hon. Edw. 

 Everett. From the author. 



Palfrey's Sermons on duties of private life. 8vo. pp. 368. Bos- 

 ton, 1834. From Abbot Lawrence, Esq. 



Proceedings of the Overseers of Harvard University. Aug. 25, 

 1834. From the President. 



Lecture on the teaching of arithmetic, delivered Aug. 1830, Bos- 

 ton, by the late Warren Colburn of Lowell, Mass. From Mrs. Col- 

 burn. 



Dr. J. R. Coxe on Dr. Harvey's claims to the discovery of the 

 circulation of the blood — vindication of Hippocrates against charges 

 of ignorance. Philadelphia, 1834. 8 vo. pp. 258. To Yale College 

 Library. From the author. 



Travels in the Equatorial Regions of South America, in 1832, by 

 Adrian R. Terry, M. D. From the author. 



Synopsis of the Organic Remains of the Cretaceous Group of the 

 United States, with 19 plates, by Dr. Samuel George Morton. From 

 the author. 



Thoughts on the impolicy of multiplying Schools of Medicine, by 

 Ciiarles Caldwell, M. D. From the author. 



On the mode of collecting and preserving objects of Natural His- 

 tory, with a view to the formation of a cabinet, &ic., by Dr. Rob. 

 Peter. From Dr. Caldwell. 



Sermons from the fowls of the air and the lilies of the field, by 

 Samuel Nott, Jr. Boston, 1804. From Dr. Hale of Boston. 



Life and Writings of the Rev. George Herbert, with the Syna- 

 gogue in imitation of Herbert, Lowell, Mass., 1834. From the pub- 

 lisher, George Woodward. 



Documents No. 2 accompanying the President's Message, at the 

 opening of the Second Session of the 23d Congress, Dec. 1834, be- 

 ing the Report of the Sec. of War. 358 pages. Two copies, one 

 from Hon. E. Jackson and one from Hon. Jos. Trumbull. 



Ancient Mineralogy, or an Inquiry respecting Mineral Substances, 

 mentioned by the Ancients, with occasional remarks on the uses to 

 which they v/ere applied, by Prof. N. E. Moore of Columbia Col- 

 lege, New York, LL. D. G. k, C. Carvill &; Co. From the au- 

 thor. 



