The rules of aseptic and antiseptic surgery; a practical treatise for the use of students and the general practitioner . ehensivevolume is intended to rep-resent the present condi-tion of the science in itsmain facts and leadingprinciples, as demandedby the systematic chemicalstudent. We have here,probably, the best extanttext-book of organic chem-istry. Not only is it fulland comprehensive andremarkably clear and me-thodical, but it is up to thevery latest moment, and ithas been, moreover, pre-pared in a way to securethe greatest excellencesin such a treatise.—ThePopular Science Monthly, PRIN


The rules of aseptic and antiseptic surgery; a practical treatise for the use of students and the general practitioner . ehensivevolume is intended to rep-resent the present condi-tion of the science in itsmain facts and leadingprinciples, as demandedby the systematic chemicalstudent. We have here,probably, the best extanttext-book of organic chem-istry. Not only is it fulland comprehensive andremarkably clear and me-thodical, but it is up to thevery latest moment, and ithas been, moreover, pre-pared in a way to securethe greatest excellencesin such a treatise.—ThePopular Science Monthly, PRINCIPLES OF MENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, with their Applications to the Training and Discipline of the Mind and the Study ofits Morbid Conditions. By William B. Carpenter, M. D., LL. D., Reg-istrar of the University of London, etc. I vol., 8vo, 737 pp. Cloth, $ Among the numerous eminent writers this physiological research to the explanation of the mu-country has produced, none are more deserving of tual relations of the mind and body than Dr. Car-praise for having attempted to apply the results of penter.—The HEALTH. By VV. H. Corfield, Professor of Hygiene and Pul)lic Health at University College, vol., i2mo. Cloth, $ Few persons are better qualified than Dr. Cor-field to write intelligently upon the .subject of health,and it is not a matter for surprise, therefore, that hehas given us a volume remarkable for accuracy andinterest Commencing with general anatomy, thebones and muscles are given attention ; next, the circulation of the blood, then respiration, nutrition,the liver, and the execretoiy organs, the nervoussystem, organs of the senses, the health of the indi-vidual, air, foods and drinks, drinking-water, cli-mate, houses and towns, small-pox, and communi-cable diseases.—Philadelphia Item. D. APPLETON (&- CO:S MEDICAL WORKS. THE BRAIN AS AN ORGAN OF MIND. By H. Charlton Bastian, M. A., M. D., Fellow of the Royal College of Phy-sicians ; Professor


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1888