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OBSERVATORIES, EQUATORIAL TELESCOPES, ASTRONOMICAL CLOCKS, LEVELS, ETC.

T. COOKE & SONS,

Opticians to H.R.H. the late Prince Consort, the Royal Family, and Her Majesty's Home and Indian Governments

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Illustrated Catalogues of Observatories, Equatorial and all other descriptions of Telescopes, Astronomical Clocks, Theodolites, Levels,
Clinometers, Gold Band Aneroids, &c., manufactured by T. COOKE and SONS, may be had on application to the Works.

Just published in 2 vols. crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 24s.

A HANDBOOK OF BRITISH FUNGI,

With full Descriptions of all the Species, and Illustrations of the Genera.

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AT INDIES.

In 2 Vols. crown 8vo, price 215.,

LAST: A Christmas in the West By CHARLES KINGSLEY. With numerous Illustrations. "The book is both instructive and amusing. Mr. Kingsley's powers of observation and description are great, and both botanist and geologist will acknowledge that he has used eyes and brain to good account in order to produce this book, which will be very interesting and attractive alike to the scientific naturalist, the politician, and the general reader."-Globe.

"In this work Mr. Kingsley revels in the gorgeous wealth of West Indian vegetation, bringing before us one marvel after another, alternately sating and piquing our curiosity. Whether we climb the cliffs with him, and peer over into narrow bays which are being hollowed out by the trade surf, or wander through impenetrable forests, where the tops of the trees form a green cloud overhead, or gaze down glens which are watered by the clearest brooks, running through masses of pm and banana, and all the rich variety of foliage, we are equally delighted an amazed.'-Athenæum.

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MACMILLAN'S

MAGAZINE.

No. 143.

FOR SEPTEMBER.

PRICE IS.

CONTENTS OF THE NUMBER.

1.-"A Week in the West. From a Vagabond's Note Book."
2.-" Patty." Chapters XLVII.—LII.

3.-"Achiles and Lancelot." By Horace M. Moule.

4.-"Callimachus." A Sketch.

5.-"Cave-Hunting." By W. Boyd Dawkins, F.R.S. Part III.-The Caves of Yorkshire.

By John Richard Green.
Part I.-Paris.

6.-"Red Ties." By T. E. Kebbel.
7.-" Madrigal." By Alice Horton.
8.-" Edward Denison-In Memoriam."
9.-"A Victim of Paris and Versailles.'
Volumes I. to XXII. handsomely bound in cloth, price 75. 6d.
each, now ready.

MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

Sold by all Booksellers, Newsagents, and at all Railway Stations.

This day, crown 8vo, 4s. 6d.,

THE MODES of ORIGIN of LOWEST ORGANISMS, including a discussion of the Experiments of M. Pasteur, and a reply to some statements by Professors Huxley and Tyndall. By H. CHARLTON BASTIAN, M.D., F.R.S., Professor of Pathological Anatomy in University College, London.

"It is a work worthy of the highest respect, and places its writer in the very first class of scientific physicians. Such investigations lie at the basis of progress in the investigation of the nature and modes of disease, and it would be difficult to name an instance in which skill, knowledge, perseverance, and great reasoning power have been more happily applied to the investigation of a complex biological problem."-British Medical Journal.

"It is quite impossible to accept these experiments and to hold to the Germ Theory. Those who maintain it have first to displace the remarkable results recorded in Dr. Bastian's book."-Saturday Review. MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT and PILLS. -Obstacles Overcome.-The dyspeptic, low-spirited, consumptive, and al suffering from congestion or disordered action of any organ may be relieved of their maladies by the diligent use of these two inestimable remedies. The Ointment penetrates to the affected part, whether situated near to or remote from the skin, and acts most genially with the Pills in removing all obstruc tions to the free circulation of pure blood through the deranged organs, over which this Ointment should be rubbed as briskly as possible, and the desired results will follow without increasing pain, or producing one additional parg By this course every obstacle to circulation, secretion, and excretion will be overcome, and each function resume its natural state.

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CURRENT NUMBERS OF SCIENTIFIC PERIODICALS.

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Price 4s. 6d.,

Price 5d. every Friday-Annual Subscription, 245.

THE JOURNAL OF PHILOLOGY. THE BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL,

Edited by W. G CLARK. M.A., Fellow of Trinity College, John E. B.
MAYOR, M.A., Fellow of St. John's College, W. ALDIS WRIGHT, M.A.,
Trinity College, Cambridge.

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THE HARTLEY INSTITUTION, Southampton. The Prospectus of the Departments of General Literature, Engi

Being th Journal of the British Medical Association.
CONTENTS FOR AUGUST 19:

British Medical Association; Annual Meeting, 1871.

An Address delivered at the Opening of the Section of Surgery. Ey J. May, Esq., Mayor of Devonport, and President of the Section.

The Pathology and Treatment of Cholera. By G. Johnson, M.D., F.R.C.P., Professor of Medicine in King's College, &c.

Intemperance and Cholera. By R. Martin, M.D.

The Treatment of Aneurism by Compression. By R. Macnamara, M D., F.R S.I., Surgeon to the Meath Hospi al, &c.

Treatment of Hæmorrhage arising from Retention of Secundines after Abortion By J. G. Swayne, M.D., Physician-Accoucheur to the Bristol General Hospital.

Report of the Joint Committee of the British Medical and Social Science
Associations.

Report of the Thirty-ninth Meeting of the British Medical Association.
Meetings of Committee of Council.

LEADING ARTICLES. The Annual Meeting - Medical Reform - Our
Sister Society-The Utilisation of Sewage.

THE WEEK. Medical Items-The College of Physicians' LecturesMedical Qualifications-Small-pox in Brecon-Report d Asiatic Cholera in West Hartlepool-Memorial of the late Dr. Tanner-Seaboard Preparations for Cholera-Health of the amp at Shoeb ryness-The Introductory Addresses at the Lo: don Scho Is of Medicine-Diarrhoea in London-Guy's Hospital--Small pox in the Metropolis-Female Students in Prussia—Australian Meat-The Ladies and the Universities-The Use of Secondary Lymph -The Red Cross and Foreign Dec rations-Medical Experts in Cours of Law- Mr. Rich rd Wallace of Paris-Felse Cholera Alarm--Charges against the Managen ent of the Royal Orthopædic Hospital.

SCOTLAND.-Cholera on board a Dund-2-bound Ship-Infirmary and Dispensary for Stirling-The Aberdeen Royal Lunatic Asylum-The Glasgow Westera Infirmary - Leith: Precautions against Cholera.

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neering, and Technical Science, and Preliminary Medical Education, may be EXTRACT OF COCO A.

obtained on application to the Principal.

THE

REV. GEORGE HENSLOW, M.A, F.L.S., F.G.S., Lecturer on Botany to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, gives private Instruction in GEOLOGY, PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, MINERALOGY, and BOTANY.

N.B. FOURTEEN of the 35 Successful Candidates for the India Civil Service (1871), as well as several of the year 1870, were prepared by him in those subjects, besides many of the non-su cessful.

The Rev. G. H.'s Lectures are well illustrated by the collections of Dia grams of the late Professors Henslow and I rayley (of Lona. Inst.), 17, Colville Terrace West, Notting-hill, W.

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Just published, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s. DEFOE'S HISTORY of THE PLAGUE. -A New Edition, with Historical Notes by EDWARD W. BRAYLEY, F.S. A., OF THE GREAT FIRE IN LONDON, 1666, by Dr. HARVEY, with suitable woodcuts.

MICROSCOPIC OBJECTS (Mounted). with G. CRUIKSHANK's Illustrations; to which is added - SOME ACCOUNT

-Post free for 9 stamps each, Section of Juncus communis and scalariform tissue of Pteris aquilina –M. B., 3, Mount Pleasant Terrace, Upper Lewisham Road, S. E.-List of Objects, 2 stamps.

London: WILLIAM TEGG, Pancras Lane, Cheapside.

Printed by R. CLAY, SONS, & TAYLOR, at 7 and 8, Pread Street Hill, in the City of London, and published by MACMILLAN & Co., at the Office, 38, Bleecker Stre t, New York.-THURSDAY, August 24. 1871

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ST. MARY'S

Registered as a Newspaper at the General Post Office]

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON.

-Session 1871-72.-The SESSION of the FACULTY of MEDICINE will Commence on Monday, October 2. Introductory Lecture at 3 P.M.

The Session of the Faculty of Arts and Laws (including the Department of the Fine Arts) will begin on Tuesday, October 3. Introductory Lecture at 3 P.M., by Professor Kobinson Ellis. M.A. Inaugural Lecture for the Department of Fine Arts on Wednesday, Oct. 4, at 3 P.M., by Professor E. J. Poynter, A.R.A.

The Session of the Faculty of Science (including the Department of the Applied Sciences) will begin on Tuesday, October 3.

The Evening Classes for Classics, Modern Languages, Mathematics, the Natural Sciences, Shorthand, &c., will commence on Monday, October 9. The School for Boys between the ages of Seven and Sixteen will re-open on Tuesday, September 26.

Prospectuses of the various departments of the College, containing full information respecting classes, fees, days and hours of attendance, &c., and copies of the regulations relating to the entrance and other exhibitions, scholarships, and prizes open to competition by students of the several Faculties, may be obtained at the office of the College.

The Examination for the Medical Entrance Exhibitions, and also that for the Andrews Entrance Prizes (Faculties of Arts and Laws, and of Science), will be held at the College on the 28th and 29th September.

The College is close to the Gower Street Station of the Metropolitan Railway, and only a few minutes walk from the termini of the North-Western, Midland, and Great Northern Railways.

August, 1871.

JOHN ROBSON, B.A., Secretary to the Council.

THE HARTLEY INSTITUTION, Southampton.-The Prospectus of the Departments of General Literature, Engineering, and Technical Science, and Preliminary Medical Education, may be obtained on application to the Principal.

NOTICE. ROYAL SCHOOL of MINES, Jermyn Street, London.-The 21st SESSION will BEGIN on MONDAY, the 2nd of October. Prospectuses may be had on application,

TRENHAM REEKS, Registrar.

SCHOOL OF CHEMISTRY,

20, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET, LONDON, W.

DIRECTED BY ARTHUR VACHER.

In a few days, post 8vo, cloth,

HINTS ON SHORE SHOOTING; Including a chapter on Skinning and Preserving Birds. By J. E. HARTING, F.L.S., F.Z.S., Author of the "Birds of Middlesex," &c.

JOHN VAN VOORST, 1, Paternoster Row.

[All Rights are Reserved HOSPITAL MEDICAL SCHOOL, Paddington.-The Introductory Lecture by Dr. Alfred Meadows, October 2nd, 1871.

MEDICAL OFFICERS AND LECTURERS.
Consulting Officers-Dr. Chanıbers, Sir James Alderson, M.D., F.R.S.,
Dr. Sibson, F.R.S., Dr. Tyler Smith, Mr. Coulson, Mr. Lane, Mr
White Cooper.

Physicians-Dr. H. Jones, F. R.S., Dr. Sieveking, Dr. Broadbent.
Assistant-Physicians-Dr. Cheadle, Dr. Lawson, Dr. Nunneley.
Surgeons-Mr. Spencer Smith, Mr. Haynes Walton, Mr. J. R. Lane.
Assistant-Surgeons-Mr. Gascoyen, Mr. Norton, and Mr. Edmund Owen.
Physician-Accoucheur-Dr. Alfred Meadows.
Surgeon in Charge of the Ophthalmic Department-Mr. Haynes Walton.
Aural Surgeon-Mr. Allen.

Surgeon-Dentist-Mr. Howard Hayward.
Medical Tutor-Dr. J. Reginald Stocker.
Other Lecturers-Dr. Wright, Dr. Randall, Mr. Mivart, F.R.S., Dr. Trimen.
The course of teaching at this School ensures careful and complete prepa-
ration for all the Examining Boards and the Public Services, and the higher
University Examinations. A MEDICAL TUTOR has been appointed for the ex-
press purpose of assisting the Students in the practical portion of their studies.
Special instruction is provided (by separate courses) in Minor Surgery and
Bandaging Ophthalmic, Aural, and Dental Surgery, Comparative Anatomy,
Histology, and Pathological Anatomy. The Clinical System is so organised
that the training ef every individual student is supervised; there are also
departments for the Diseases of Women and Children, of the Eye and Ear,
of the Skin and of the Throat. The scientific teaching is mainly demon-
strative. All the Resident Medical Appointments (including the House-
Surgeoncies) are OPEN TO THE PUPILS without expense of any kind, and are
equivalent to Five Scholarships of the annual value of £50. The Resident
Registrarship is of the value of £100 a year, with board and lodging. A
Scholarship of £40 for three years, and an Exhibition of £20, are awarded
by open competition in Natural Science previous to entrance at the School:
and two Scholarships of £20 each to Students of the second and third years
respectively, with Prizes in each class, are awarded annually. The Pro-
spectus may be obtained on application to Mr. Knott, the Registrar, at the
Hospital, or to

W. R. CHEADLE, M.D., Dean of the School.

Now ready, 700 pp. 8vo, price 215.,

A SYNONYMIC CATALOGUE OF DIURNAL LEPIDOPTERA. By W. F. KIRBY, Author of "A Manual of European Butterflies." Containing the full synonymy of every species, and an alphabetical index of about 10,000 references.

JOHN VAN VOORST, 1, Paternosier Row.

Part 1, royal 8vo, with 2 plates, 2s. 6d.,

BIRD LIFE. By Dr. A. E. Brehm. Translated from the German by H. M. LABOUCHERE, F.Z.S., and W. JESSE, C.M.Z.S., Zoologist to the Abyssinian Expedition.

JOHN VAN VOORST, 1, Paternoster Row.

On Sept. 1st, price 2s. 6d., Part 1 of

GRIFFITH AND HENFREY'S MICROGRAPHIC DICTIONARY: a guide to the examination and investi Edited by J W. GRIFFITH, M.D., assisted by the Rev. M. J. BERKELEY gation of the structure and nature of Microscopic Objects. Third Edition, M.A., F.L.S., and Prof. T. RUPERT JONES, F.G.S.

JOHN VAN VOORST, 1, Paternoster Row.

LATHES, CHURCH AND TURRET CLOCKS, BELLS, &c.

T. COOKE AND SONS,

CLOCK AND LATHE MAKERS TO HER MAJESTY'S HOME AND INDIAN GOVERNMENTS, BUCKINGHAM WORKS, YORK.

Lists of Church, Turret, and other Clocks, made and erected, and Bells supplied and hung by T. COOKE and SONS. Also Illustrated Catalogues of Lathes, Planing, Sawing, Copying, and other Machines, may be had on application to the Works.

Just published in 2 vols. crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 24s.

A HANDBOOK OF BRITISH FUNGI,

With full Descriptions of all the Species, and Illustrations of the Genera.

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MACMILLAN & CO.'S NEW BOOKS.

This day, in 2 vols. crown 8vo, price 215.,

MEMOIR of CHARLES M. YOUNG, Tragedian. With Extracts from his Son's Journal. By JULIAN CHARLES YOUNG, M.A., Rector of Ilmington. With Portraits and Sketches.

"Mr. Young is one of those pleasant diarists who, it is to be feared, are rapidly becoming as extinct as the delightful letter-writers of a past age. In this budget of anecdotes, fables, and gossip, old and new, relative to Scott, Moore, Chalmers, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Croker, Matthews, the 3rd and 4th Georges, Bowles, Beckford, Lockhart, Wellington, Peel, Louis Napoleon, D'Orsay, Dickens, Thackeray, Louis Blanc, Gibson, Constable, and Stanfield (the list might be much extended), the reader must be hard indeed to please who cannot find entertainment."-Pall Mall Gazette.

TALES OF OLD JAPAN. By A. B. MITFORD, Second Secretary to the British Legation in Japan. With upwards of 30 full-page Illustrations, Drawn and Cut on Wood by Japanese Artists. Two vols., crown 8vo, handsomely bound, 215.

"We do not venture too high praise when we say that a strange country and people have never been the theme of a more entertaining work than

CONTENTS OF THE NUMBER.

1.-" A Week in the West. From a Vagabond's Note. Book."
2.-" Patty." Chapters XLVII.—LII.

3.-"Achilles and Lancelot." By Horace M. Moule.
4.-"Callimachus." A Sketch.

5.-" Cave-Hunting." By W. Boyd Dawkins, F.R.S. Part III.-The
Caves of Yorkshire.

6.-"Red Ties." By T. E. Kebbel.
7.-" Madrigal." By Alice Horton.

8.-"Edward Denison-In Memoriam." By John Richard Green.
9.-"A Victim of Paris and Versailles." Part I.-Paris.

each, now ready.

MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

"Tales of Old Japan.' This delightful work contains not only thrilling tales Volumes I. to XXII. handsomely bound in cloth, price 75. 6d.
of love and war, and amusing sermons, but some curious and very pretty fairy-
tales, some chapters on Japanese superstition and ceremonial, and a most
interesting though somewhat horrible paper on hara-kiri. The engravings
which illustrate the stories are drawn and cut on wood by Japanese Artists,
and, rude as they are. there is a flavour of the soil about them; they may
lack perspective, but they render the life and manners they are intended to
represent better, perhaps, than these could be represented by the most finished
works of a foreign pencil."-Times.

This day, 2 vols. crown 8vo, with Portraits, price 245.,
THE LIFE OF ANTHONY ASHLEY
COOPER, First Earl of Shaftesbury, 1621-1683. By W. D. CHRISTIE,
M.A., formerly Her Majesty's Minister to the Argentine Confederation and
to Brazil.

"There are few characters in English history better worth studying than that of the First Earl of Shaftesbury. Mr. Christie is no ordinary biographer. Acute, cultivated, zealous, industrious, scrupulously accurate, justly confident in his resources and his views, he possesses the marked advantage of a pecullar training for his task. He has held high appointments in the diplomatic service, and he was an active member of the House of Commons for some years."-Quarterly Review.

Just ready, in demy 8vo, price 16s., Vol. II. of PROFESSOR MASSON'S LIFE of MILTON. Narrated in Connection with the Political, Ecclesiastical, and Literary History of his Time. (Vol. I., 8vo, 185.)

THE RED RIVER EXPEDITION. By Captain G. L. HUYSHE, Rifle Brigade, late on the Staff of Colonel Sir Garnet Wolseley, C.B., Commander of the Expedition. 8vo, 10s, 6d., with Maps. Second Edition, revised and brought down to the Peace of Versailles, Feb. 28, 1871.

ANNALS of OUR TIME. A Diurnal of Events, Social and Political, Home and Foreign, from the Accession of Queen Victoria, June 30, 1837. By JOSEPH IRVING. 8vo, half-bound, 165.

Sold by all Booksellers, Newsagents, and at all Railway Stations.

Now Ready.

Second Edition, revised, to which notes have bee added in reference and reply to Darwin's "Descent of Man."

ON THE GENESIS OF SPECIES. By ST. GEORGE MIVART, F.R.S. With Numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 95.

"Mr. Mivart has succeeded in producing a work which will clear the ideas of biologists and theologians, and which treats the most delicate questions in a manner which throws light upon most of them, and clears away the barriers of intolerance on each side."-British Medical Journal.

This day, crown 8vo, 45. 6d.,

THE MODES of ORIGIN of LOWEST ORGANISMS, including a discussion of the Experiments of M. Pasteur, and a reply to some statements by Professors Huxley and Tyndall. By H. CHARLTON BASTIAN, M.D., F.R.S., Professor of Pathological Anatomy in University College, London.

"It is a work worthy of the highest respect, and places its writer in the very first class of scientific physicians. Such investigations lie at the basis of progress in the investigation of the nature and modes of disease, and it would be difficult to name an instance in which skill, knowledge, perseverance, and great reasoning power have been more happily applied to the investigation of a complex biological problem."-British Medical Journal.

The Times says:-"We have before us a trusty and ready guide to the "It is quite impossible to accept these experiments and to hold to the Germ events of the past thirty years, available equally for the statesman, the politi-able results recorded in Dr. Bastian's book.”—Saturday Review. Theory. Those who maintain it have first to displace the remarkcian, the public writer, and the general reader.'

MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

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