s, and Cooking. 50 cents.
HORSES: THEIR FEED AND THEIR FEET.--A manual of horse hygiene,
invaluable for the veteran or the novice, pointing out the causes of
"Malaria," "Glanders," "Pink Eye," "Distemper," etc., and how to
Prevent and Counteract them. By C. E. PAGE, M.D., with a Treatise and
Notes on Shoeing by Sir George Cox and Col. M. C. Weld. 150 pp. 12mo,
paper, 50 cents; extra cloth, 75 cents.
By mail, post-paid, on receipt of price. Address
FOWLER & WELLS CO., Publishers,
753 Broadway, New York
A NEW WORK.
_FRESH, SEASONABLE, ADVANCED._
BRAIN AND MIND;
OR
MENTAL SCIENCE CONSIDERED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PRINCIPLES OF
PHRENOLOGY, AND IN RELATION TO MODERN PHYSIOLOGY
By HENRY S. DRAYTON, A.M., and JAMES McNEILL.
Illustrated with over One Hundred Portraits and Diagrams.
12mo, extra cloth Price, $1.60.
This contribution to the science of mind has been made in response to
the demand of the time for a work embodying the grand principles of
Phrenology, as they are understood and applied to-day by the advanced
exponents of mental philosophy. The authors state in their Preface:
"In preparing this volume it has been the aim to meet an existing
want, viz. That of a treatise which not only gives the reader a
complete view of the system of mental science known as Phrenology, but
also exhibits its relation to anatomy and physiology as those sciences
are represented to-day by standard authority."
The work is divided into eighteen chapters, which are entitled as
follows:
CHAPTERS.
I. GENERAL PRINCIPLES.
II. OF THE TEMPERAMENTS.
III. STRUCTURE OF THE BRAIN AND SKULL.
IV. CLASSIFICATION OF THE FACULTIES.
V. THE PHYSICO-PRESERVATIVE, OR SELFISH ORGANS.
VI. OF THE INTELLECT.
VII. THE SEMI-INTELLECTUAL FACULTIES.
VIII. THE ORGANS OF THE SOCIAL FUNCTIONS.
IX. THE SELFISH SENTIMENTS.
X. THE MORAL AND RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS.
XI. HOW TO EXAMINE HEADS.
XII. HOW CHARACTER IS MANIFESTED.
XIII. THE ACTION OF THE FACULTIES.
XIV. THE RELATION OF PHRENOLOGY TO METAPHYSICS AND EDUCATION.
XV. VALUE OF PHRENOLOGY AS AN ART.
XVI. PHRENOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY.
XVII. OBJECTIONS AND CONFIRMATIONS BY THE PHYSIOLOGISTS.
XVIII. PHRENOLOGY IN GENERAL LITERATURE.
In style and treatment it is adapted to the general reader, and
abounds with valuable instruction expressed in clear, practical terms.
It is pr
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