Miscellaneous Bibliography. 149 
e aim is manifestly a high and legitimate aim. 
A 
collections of costly implements shall have gone by, as i 
in Europe, and the principles upon which agricultural 
art depends come to be taught in a rational and methodical way 
of thought and investigation. Then the seed now L 
doubtless bring forth good fruit. It will be strange indeed if the 
: s 
promised at an early day ; while a fourth work on Stoc ing 
and Dairy Produce, considered from the point of view of chemical 
are produced within its limits books so sensible, so judicious and 
So learned as this first volume of the promised series unquestiona- 
bly is. It is a safe prediction that the reputation of the book 
not be confined to American soil. «wn. 
2. Outlines of Comparative Anatomy and Medical Zoology ; 
by Harrison Auten, M.D. Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott & Co. 
8vo. 1869,—In the first part of this work the author has given 3 
Stes s sreres compendium of the Comparative Anatomy of all 
lasses 0 imals. The defi L 
clear and accurate, although brief, and the arrangement of subjects 
very convenient. ‘ 
he second part is devoted to Medical Zoology, and contains 
detailed descriptions of all animals i co 
medical science, whether on account of their medicinal products, 
Venomous powers, or parasitis 1 
____ Worms will be found particularly use ee 
It is searcely to be expected that a work like this and covering 
; 80 wide a field would be pepe, is from errors or ingee 
Statements, yet in this there are er instances of these = 
Most works upon the same subject. Most of those noted are of . 
