The diseases of the stomach : bring the third edition of the "Diagnosis and treatment of the varieties of dyspepsia" revised and enlarged / by Wilson Fox.
- Fox, Wilson.
- Date:
- 1872
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The diseases of the stomach : bring the third edition of the "Diagnosis and treatment of the varieties of dyspepsia" revised and enlarged / by Wilson Fox. Source: Wellcome Collection.
268/318 (page 10)
![Morgan.—A COLLECTION OF PROBLEMS AND EXAM- PLES IN MATHEMATICS. With Answers. By H. A. Morgan, M.A., Sadlerian and Mathematical Lecturer of Jesus College, Cambridge. Crown 8vo. cloth. 6j-. bd. This book contains a number of problems, chiefly elementary, in the Mathematical subjects usually read at Cambridge. They have been selected from the Papers set during late years at yesus College. Very Jew of them are to be met zvith in other collections, and by far the larger number are due to some of the most distinguished Mathe- maticians in the University. Newton's Principia.—4to. cloth. 31^-. dd. It is a sufficient guaj-antee of the reliability of this complete edition of Neiuton's Principia tJiat it has been printed for and under the care of Professor Sir William Thomson and Professor Blackburn, of Glasgma University. The follozving notice is prefixed:—'' Finding that all the editions of the Principia are now out of print, we have been induced to reprint Newton's last edition {of 1726] without note or comment, only introducing the ' Corrigenda' of the old copy and correcting typographical errors. The book is of a handsome size, -with large type, fine thick paper, and cleanly-cut figures, and is the only recent edition containing the whole of Newton's great work. Parkinson.—Works by S. Parkinson, D.D., F.R.S., Fellow and Tutor of St. John's College, Cambridge :— AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON MECHANICS. For the Use of the Junior Classes at the University and the Higher Classes in Schools. With a Collection of Examples. Fourth Edition, revised. Crown 8vo. cloth. 9J. 6d. In preparing a fourth edition of this %uork the author has kept the same object in viaxj as he had in the former editions—namely, to in- clude in it such portions of Theoretical Mechanics as can be con- veniently investigated withotit the use of the Differential Calculus, and so render it suitable as a manual for the jtmior classes in the University and the higher classes in Schools. With one or two short exceptions, the student is not presumed to require a knowledge of any branches of Mathematics b^ond the elements of Algebra, Geometry,](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b20403379_0270.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)