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Les diagrammea suivants illustrent la mithode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 1.0 1.1 1.25 13^ 1*0 2.0 1.8 1.6 MICROCOPY RESOLUTIt J TEST CHART NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS STANDARD REFERENCE MATERIAL 1010a (ANSI and ISO TEST CHART No. 2) CATALOGUE of Medical Worr«$ PUBLISHED AND IMPORTED BY GEORGE N. MORANG (Sl COMPANY LIMITED 90 WELLINGTON ST. WEST. TORONTO TELEPHONE, MAIN. 2530 (ClTVc^ .'S?^) Kirkea' Hand-BooK of PHysiolo^ j& HAND-BOOK OF PHYSIOLOGY BY "W. D. HALLIBURTON. M.D.. F.R.S. Professor of Physiology, King's College, London Sixteenth Edition With upwards of six hundred and fifty Illustrations, including some colored plates. Extracts from the Author's Prefaces : Fourteenth Edition The present edition of thi* Hand-book has been re-arranged, and to a f^reat extent re-written. In fact, with the exception of numerous illustrations, and a few pag^es here and there, whicli treat of anatomical detail or describe instru- ments, and which have only been subjected to minor alterations, the boolt is a new one. In re-writinjj the book, I have endeavored to bear in mind, that it i* •'ntended for the use of medical students, and I have also retained what has always been one of its special features, namely, that it treats of Histology as well as of Physiology proper. Fifteenth Edition Considerable activity has characterized all branches of physiological re- search during the short time that has elapsed since the publication of the last edition of this Hand-book. All the important facts which have been thus dis- covered I have endeavored to incorporate in the present edition. I am much indebted to numerous correspondents in this country and in America for pointing out a number of minor errors, which escaped me when correcting the last edition for press ; these I have taken the opportunity to rectify. I have especially to thank Dr. Leonard Hill, who has given me much assistance in amplifying the chapter on the Circulation of the Blood. I have also modified the order in which the subjects are treated ; the Central Nervous System is now placed towards the end of the book. This step has been taken in response to the wishes of numer- ous teachers. Sixteenth Edition The rapid sale of the fifteenth edition has necessitated the issue of another. The present, the sixteenth edition, is, however, not a mere reprint, but where necessary the subject-matter has been brought fully up-to-date. Every chapter seems to have been brought up-to-date with equal care, and the volume stands not only as the most recent, but as one of the best books on Physiology extant. Tht Lancet. Demy 8vo. 896 Pages Price, Leather, $3.75 Cloth, 93.00 George N. Morang -J -I u a -< i a TELEPHONE: TWO-ONt-ONt-TMdH: 1 8TM STRUT. CATALOGUE OF MED'CAL WORKS AULDE. The Pocket Pharmacy, with Therapeutic Index. A Rtfsum^ of the Clinical Applications of Remedies adapted to t! e Pocket-Case, for the Treatment of Emergencies and Acute Diseases. BvJoHN AuLDE, M.D.. Member uf the American Mtdical Association; of the Medical Society of the State of Pennsylvania , of the Philadelphia County Medical Society, etc. ( Jth, $2.00. BAILEY. Accident and Injury ; Their Relations to Diseases of the Nervous System. By Pearce Bailey. A.M., M.D.. Attending Physician to the Depart- ment of Correction and to the Almshouse and Incurable Hospitals ; Assistant in Neurology, Columbia University ; Consulting Neurologist to St. Lukes Hospital. New York City. With S5 Illustrations. 8vo, 430 pages. Cloth. $=i.oo ; sheep. $6.00. Sold only by subscription. THE original inrpose of the author in this undertaking was to furnisii a systematic description of the nervous affections which result from injury and fright, and which, under the generally familiar term of " the traumatic neuroses," exist independently of any as yet demonstrated lesion m the nervous system. These disorders are of sufficiently common occurrence to constitute a comprehensive chapter '" 'n'e™a' medicine, and they have obtained a position of legal prominence from the frequency with which they are associated with questions of liability. Yet, in spite of their importance, that they are not always cleaily understood by physicians generally is shown by the contradictory views expressed concen.ing them when they become the subjects of litigation. " Pr. Bailey has performed a valuable work in bringing toget*- vvhat ii known about the fllation between injury and diseases of the nervous system."— Afontrea/ Medical Journal. . "Dr Bailey deserves the highest credit for having presented a work written with.m. pa=sion or oreiudice^ whichhe has clearly sUted facts, and brushed away so -ny of the fallacies which have KoJore atuched to i^edicclegal medicine along the line of ac. nts to the nervous system. - Medical Sentinel. D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S BARKER. The Nerrom Syttem and if Con« ttituent Neuroneg. Designed for the Use of Practitioner! of Medicine and of Students of Medi- cine and Psychology. By LEWtiLYS F. Barker, M. B., Tor., Associate Pro- fessor of Anatomy in the Johns Hopkins University and Assistant Resident Pa- thologist to the Johns Hopkins Hospital. With 2 Colored Pl-»es and 676 Illus- trations in the Text. 8vo, 1123 pages. Cloth. $6.00; sheep, $7.00. Sold only by subscription. 'pms book hM been written in the light of the revelatiou LiwEiLvs F. Ba-ikm, M. B. * of the most recent investigation! in neuropatholotry, and constitutes the most scientific and complete work on the sub- ject ever published, and one of inestimable value to the practitioner and student of medicine. •' Thin work is entirely original in purpose and execution It will doubtless do more than anvthine yet published to determine the present latitude and lor. ,itu'' of the neurone theory, and to stamp with the seal of authority what has been already acromplit'^ j, a.d making that theory the established basis of neuroloRical study. It deals with the fine- ratni. .nan the grosser constituents of the nervous system, and is not intended to, nor will it, displace other valuable works uron (grosser, reurolocical anatomy. It will however, amplify the histologic.il basis of all. and distinctly modernise and advance that of some of these textbooks, and wiU greatly add to the histological foundation of this line of study. — .Weaicai Age. I u" T*"'* 'l** ■"*?*«f'y evosition of a subject now awakening the interest of the general practitioner It has lone been a theme of most intense interest to the specialist and to one interested in nervous and psycholocical phenomena. ... The author has been wise in profusely illustrating his text, and he cor- rectly stiles that all expenence teaches that, in morphological studies especially, the former relati( ns are more ea-silv grasped from the examination of bo<«1 pictures and models than in any other way and that one wellchc«en illustration with a satisfactory legend is often of greater value to the student than many pages of laborious and exact description."- HahnemanHian Monthly. «„ !i,^^'i!'!!f '^."/""s' favorably impressed by the work, which is the most lucid and comprehensive on the subject which we hive seen m English. It is certainly destined to make its mark, and will have many purchasers, more especially from the ranks of neurologists and psychiatrists. The publishers have done everything which liberality and skill could do to make a handsome volume. The illustrations are particularly good and well brought out."— 5/. Louis Mtdtcal and Surgical Journal. " No man who desires to be abreast of the times should fail to read this book. The gradual devel- opmerit of the subject, new to many, makes it easy of comprehension. The publishers bring out the work in a lavish manner, sparing neither pains nor expense.''— CAar/o/Z/r Medical Journal. " .\ teature that at once attracts attention, and gives confidence in the book, is the evident thoroueli acquaintanceship the author has with the literature upon the subject. To say this is to say a great deal tor th literature upon the nervous system is now a most extensive one. It is apparent, however that no ore has been overlooked. ... It may be said of the work, what can be said of very few works that the best has been garnered from all fields •'—G»«ad'»a(. /Va, that a »econd Z.* demanded in three months, and that the other, liave (oi ..wed them in ripid lucceasion and been met by appre- ciative itudenu always. The author says, m hi» pre"« to this edition, that he has sought to malte it worthy of the approbation of his readers by increasing the practical re- sources of hU worli, devotintc his attention chiefly to the dini.al aspects of r-edicine, without overl<»kinK the ad- vancVs mad. in the Kientific branch. This b.«k. like the previous editions of the work, is the prr ict of a master lind an honored authority, and in its n.,- .orm, with such of the latest ideas as the author can conscientiously indorse or present for consideration, continues to hold its pace among the sundard text-books on all matters included in H."—Aortk Carolina Medical Journal. A Practical Treatise on Materia Medica and Therapeutics. By Roberts Bartholow, M. A., M. D.. LL.D.. Professor Emeritus of Materia Medica, General Therapeutics, and Hygiene, in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia ; Fellow of the College of Physicians ; Member of the American Phi'osophical Society ; Honorary Fellow of the Royal Medical Society of Edinburgh; Honorary Menjber of the Societe Medico-pratique de Paris, and of various National. State, and County Medical Societies ; Author of a Treatise on the Practice of Medicine; of a Treatise on Medical Electricity; of a Manual of Hypo- dermatic Medication; of the Russell and Jewett Prize Essays, and f^rize Essays of the American Medical Association and of the Rhode Island Medical Society, etc. Tenth edition, revised and enlarged. 8vo, 86b pages. Cloth, $s. 00; sheep, $6.00. .. In evidence of the esteem in which this work is held by the medical p •«'«^*°;> .fj"'""''- '' '^f^ ficfent to .lote that after twenty-three years Mnce the fir^t edition « .« '»"*^ -'« "^^""5 '"d*^';^iP^^'^ run through ten editions -the work yet maintains its place as one of the ,7°*' ;» "^''^,^/Xr work on if not, intfeed, the most practically u^ful work on the subject "'»" '^ ' ^^f" '^^t'/.j^''^'^^^^^^^ the subject of materia medica and therapeutics containing a p^*" ""•"^er °^ °'>^„7*'";"L'!7,'' the adnSistration of medicine,, which are based on clinical knowledge *?Ja^*."°* >"'*"" 'actical' This tenth edition of this work has an addeu chapter on Prescription W "«'"8-J*'"?,^ ■\''™' P"5»^*'' and contains valuable suggestions. Amon^ the newer dnigs we find only those whKh ha;« "^^mrd a recognized place in the physicians armamentarium, and which are not likely to be isplaced by the coming revision ol the pharmacopoeia."— CA/ira^o Clinical Keview. " There is food reason for saving this work by Dr. Bartholow comes as an old friend for a kindlv hand-shake. Tenth edition, and the first bea.ing date of .S7O. sh.,. . a P^.P"^^"// «'f » ^Id stHl sta^S criticism and in the realm of standard literature. . . . The tenth edition .s up to date, and still stands as a monument to the author's erudition and marvelous industry. —Lancet-i-nntc. D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S BASTIAN. Paralyses; Cerebral, Bulbar, and Spinal. A Manual of Diagnosis for Students and Practitioners. By H. Charl- ton Bastian, M. a., M. D.. F. R. S.. Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians ; Examiner in Medicine at the Royal College of Physicians ; Professor of Clinical Medicine and of Pathological Anatomy in Uni- versity College, London, etc. With 136 Illustrations. Small 8vo, 671 pages. Cloth, $4.50. .ffJrlon.li^j!!*?! k'*. ^** *''•*""• "** *S""" °°.' °°}y "'» '°"'' "*»•• <:»« ">e symptomatology of the affettions m hand, but passes m review all essential factors in the anatomy, physiology, and Mtholoev made dear, and m practice will be able to rest his prognosis and treatment in not a few of the forms of paralysis upon a firmer scientific bas.\s."-Amer^aH frattitiontr and News. A Treatise on Aphasia and Other Speech Defects. By H. Charlton Bastian, M. A., M. D. Lond., F. R. S., Author of "The Brain as an Organ of Mind," "Paralysis from Brain Disease. " etc. ; Emer- itus Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in University College, London, etc. With Illustrations. 8vo, 366 pages. Cloth, $4.00. T-HE work is a reproduction, with many additions, of the author's Lumleian Lectures, and represenU the views which long experience and study have led him to enterUin. The subjecU are treated in a more complete way than has hitherto been attempted by writers. The American Journal of Medical Science says : "Perhaps no one is better fitted to deal with speech defects than is the author of this book, and certainly no one has given us a more comprehensive view of the subject. Many of the chapters have appeared before in the columns of ' The Lancet,' but much new material has been added," Paralysis from Brain Disease in its Common Forms. By H. Charlton Bastian, M. A., M. D., Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians ; Professor of Pathological Anatomy in University College, London. With Illustrations. lamo, 340 pages. Cloth, $1.75. " These lectures were delivered in University College Hospital, at a time when I was doing duty for one of the senior physicians, and during the same year— after they had been reproduced from very full notes taken by my fnend Mr. John Tweedy— they appeared in the pages of ' The Lancet.' They are now republished at the request of many friends, though only after having undergone a very careful re- vision, during which a considerable quantity of new matter has been added. It would have been easy to have very much increased the sire of the book by the introduction of a larger number of illustrative cases, and by treatment of many of the subjects at greater length, but this the author has purposely abstained from doing, under the belfef that in its present form it is hkely to prove more acceptable to students, and also perhaps more useii;! to busy practitioners."— /fjr/ra^/' /row Pre/ace. The Brain as an Organ of Mind. By H. Charlton Bastian, M. A., M. D., Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians ; Professor of Pathological Anatomy in University College, London. With 184 Illustrations and an Index. lamo, 708 pages. Cloth. $2.50. . ." '^\ Bastian 's new book is one of great value and importance. The knowledge it gives is universal in Its claims and of moment to ever)body. It should be forthwith introduced as a manual into all colleges, high schools, and normal schools in the country ; not to be made a matter of ordinary mechan- ical recitations, but that its subject may arrest attention and rouse interest, and be lodged in the minds Of students in connection with observations and experimenU that will give reality to the knowledge n^nrti"— Popular Science Monthly. •. / v From Berkley's 'A Treatise on Mental Diseases." M i ,1 I' Fio. 43.— An IiiioT or the MACRooEpnALic Class. The head is larirc, symmetrical, though the cranial arch is unusually high. The circumference ia 5S ; tlie aiitero-ix>sterior meas- urement (with tope) is 35; over the arch is 3« centimetres. With the coiuj.asses the measurements are : nntero-postirior. 21 ; transverse. 10 ; piviuL' an index of :■;. Articu- late l:i:i|iuaire is limited to a few simple words. Th? hones of the inferior extremities show u nunilicr of i>osture distortion.s. The thyroid gland is palpable. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS HkNRV J. BERKLhV, M.D. BERKLEY. I A Treatise on Mental Diseases. Designed for the Use of Practitioners and Students of Medicine. By Henry J. Berkley, M. D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopitins Univer- sity ; Chief Visiting Physician to the City Insane Asyium, Baltimore. With Frontispiece, Lithographic Plates, and Illustrations in the Text. 8vo. 624 pages. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, $6.00. Sold only by subscription. T' HE absence of a comprehensive practical work in the English language on Mental Diseases -one adapted to the student and busy practitioner— has led the author to prepare this treatise embodying all the principal forms of 1 alienation. The work opens with a section containing the I most necessary points in the «ross anatomy and histology of the cerebrum from the modern standpoint, and in which especial attention is given to the all-important lymphatic ^ ""Si'"^c!!::^tition on the general pathology o, mental maladies, the lesions of the vascuUr % apparatus meeting with especial consideration. Next comes a clinical ^^i^'^fj^^V^oo pages Th.s comprises four distinct divisions, with numerous subdivisions, U bemg considered ''> ^"^^ « "'" ^j^^' » ! definite classification helps materiaUy to fix upon the mind the details of a disease, rather than to group all diseases having a common series of symptoms. " Practitioners should be delighted with this handsome and helpful work The authors compre- '^ » ?^iar aS^dut'o-n VSL «^Lf cSe7o^^^^.7.^^^^^^^^^ - ?„^t to AmSreXs having friends in the Philippines. Ano'^f/ s«r><''»g ^nd pract.c^^^^^^^^ '- dumTs that on cranial measurements and the stigmata of degeneration. "-/).r»r.r Medual 2,m,s. \ .. The work opens with a section containing the most n^es.=ary poinU in »^« KT^if"f*°;j'5'„'^^^ histology of thec^brum from the modern standpoint, and in "^ich especial attention sg^^^^^ all-important lymphatic circulation of the brain. Then ^^"^^^^^^^X^^Tfl^^^^^^^^'^^^i^ mental maladi«, the lesions of the vascular apparatus -"f <>"8 *."5^ «?Pf,^!,' ''^^r;"^^^ \ comes a clinical section of over 500 pages. Th-s comprise. f°"^;l'f *'""J "=^"'' ^ X "oTx °™n tl« i divisions, it being considered by the writer that a defini e classification hel^ materially to hx^pon tne ? mind the details of a disease rather that, to group all diseases ^=1""K^.X Zidln to mak^X sub- ' excitement of depression, for example -in one common class »"'',,P^^™''*''^™?"„o"te differs « groups according to what seems right in his own eyes Such an ''l-<'«fi"«l !fe7Ka °" °' J^"^ 3 Lms of insanity has hitherto been productive of untold confusion in '^e nomenc ature "' ■"™'*' ™«^^. ■ .lae among English-speaking people. The definite classification given by the author will unquestion ably do much to relieve the present disorder. . ^v.„\,^„\ fnnnHatinn the so- ••The groupings are: I. -Mental diseases without ascertainable pathologica f°""°f '°"' ,\7 ^ called idio^thic insanities. 11. Insanities f""o«i"K "'^amc lesion of the areb^^^^^^ !^n sanities of the psychical degenerate. IV States of retarded psychical development (idiocy, etc. - these main groups is appended a chapter on the Insanities of Childhood^ H^n,pntias the insanit "Some of the chapters, like those on the senile psychoses, the orf^n - <»*"'?. *■'. I, imnrmant followrng bacterial and^ toxalbumic poisoning, as "^eUj^ those on the febrUe psycho.es th^^^ syphilitil insanities, the psychoses following ursmia, diabetes, and autointoxication from the >n'^«'"a^ , SSal, treat of an almost*^ linexplored field of medicine. Descriptions "f the f '«^ .here the^find nS i of thi tissues in the various forms of mental disease have been given, and here ^d there «be^ finding 3 have been ill«=tratpd .ind confirmed bv experimental work. The illustrations have been caretuuy pre- i. pared."— Toltdo Medical and Surgical Reporttr. i D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S BILLINGS. The Relation of Animal Diseases to the Public Health, and their Prevention. With a Brief Historical Sketch of the Development of Veterinary Medicine from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time ; and a Critical Historical Sketch of the Leading Schools of the World, showing the Reasons which led to their Foundation, and with the Endeavor to draw from their Experiences Teachings of Value toward the Establishment of a General Veterinary Police-hygienic System and Veterinary Schools in this Country. By Frank S. Billings, Veterinary Surgeon, Graduate of the Royal Veterinary Institute, Berlin ; Member of the Royal Vet- erinary Association of the Province of Brandenburg, Prussia Honorary Member of the Veterinary Society of Montreal, Canada, etc. 8vo. Cloth, $4.00. " This handsome volume does great credit to its author and publishers. It is an excellent book in most respects, an extraordinary one in many, and an objectionable one in very few. It at the very least should be in the libraries of every national. State, city, town, and county Board of Health. It certainly should be studied by every teacher and scientific practitioner of veterinary medicine, and will be of great service to every stock and cattle holder and dealer. ... It is evidently written by a man of ability and high culture, well versed both in the literature and science as well as the practical bear- ings of his subject. Such a man has an inalienable right to have opinions of his own ; and he has them, and does not hesitate to express them. ... We hope and believe that the volume will be received by all, except perhaps by those especially atUcked, with the great welcome that its author and publishers must expect for it. It will take iU stand alongside of the popular treatises of Milliard and Robertson, and on all purely scientific matters will lead them. Either of these works, together with Dr. Billings's, will make almost a complete \\^nTy on veX.mna.Ty meAicinK."—yourHal 0/ Comparative Medicine amd Surgery. BILLROTH. General Surgical Pathology and Therapeutics. In Fifty-one Lectures. A Text-Book for Students and Physicians. By Dr. Theodor Billroth, Professor of Surgery in Vienna. With Addi- tions by Dr. Alexander von Winiwarter, Professor of Surgery in LQt- tich. Translated from the fourth German edition with the special permission of the Author, and revised from the tenth edition, by Charles E. Hackley, A. M., M. D., Physician to th' New York and Trinity Hospitals ; Member of the New York Counly Medical Society, etc. 8vo, 85s pages. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, $6.00. T N the present English edition, the articles which were in an appendix in the last edition, as well at various new matter, have been incorporated in the text or added on the ends of the appropriate chapters. It will be noticed that two German editions have appeared since Professor Billroth's vale- dictory, so that his successor has had an opportunity of going very thoroughly over the work and makinj: all the chanee? he thought advisable. It is believed that the present edition represents the existing state of knowledge in pathology. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS BOAS. Diseases of the Intestines. By Dr. I. Boas, Specialist for Gasao- Intestinal Diseases in Berlin. Author- ized Translation from the first German edition, with Special Additions, by Sey- mour Basch, M. D. BOYCE. A Text-Book of Morbid Histology. For Students and Practitioners. By RuBERT BoYCE, M. B., M. R. C. S., As- sistant Professor of Pathology in Uni- versity College, London. With 130 Colored Illustrations. 8vo, 477 pages. Cloth, $7. so. " The work is thoroughly up to date, helpful, and useful."- Dr. I. Boas. The .Xeu' Yor/k Medical Jcurnal. BRAMWELL. Diseases of the Heart and Thoracic Aorta. By Byrom Bramwell, M. D., F. R. C. P. Edin., Lecturer on the Princi- ples and Practice of Medicine and on Medical Diagnosis in the Extra- Academical School of Medicine, Edinburgh ; Pathologist to the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, etc. Illustrated with 226 Wood Engravings and 68 Lithograph Plates .shewing q\ Figures— in all, ^17 Illustrations. Svo. 783 pages. Clotii, $8.00; sheep, SQ-oo. " As it stands, it may fairly be taken as representing the standpoint at which we have arrived in cardiac physiology and pathology." — '/he Lancet. I BUCK. Contribution 3 to Repar:ttive Surgery. Showing its Applic:\tion to the Treatment of Deformities produced by a Destructive Disease or Inj- --y ; Congenital Defects from Arrest or Ex- 1 cess of Development; a. . Cicatricial Contractions following Burns. Illustrated by 30 Cases and fine Engravings. By Glrdon Blck. M. D. Svo, 237 pages. Cloth, S3. 00. '• .\ccuracy of description and clearness jf statement have been aim--! at in the following pages ; and if. in his endeavor to attain :his import.int end, the author has incurred the reproach of tediousness, the difficulty of the task must be his a^Xosy."— Extract /rem Ptejace. 8 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S BRYANT. Operative Surgery . By Joseph D. Bryant, M. 1 ., Professor of the Principles and Practice of Sur- gery, Operative and Clinical Surgery in the University and Bellevue Medical College; Consulting Surgeon to the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled; Visiting Surgeon to Bellevue and St. Vincent's Hospitals, etc. With i.soo Illustrations, loo of which are in Color. 2 vols., 8vo, over 1.5X) pages. Cloth, $s.oo; sheep, $6.00, each volume. Sold only by subscription. •yHIS editiondf Bryant'i "Operative Surgery "is virtu- ■*■ ally a r.ew work. The entire book has been rewritten, aiid much material that is ab<^olutely new has been added. Particularly is this true of the chapters on the Brain and Nervous System, the Abd' ninal Operations, and Visceral ^argery. The text is fresh, clear, and conspicuous for its simplicity. The illustrations are profuse, many ' them in colors, and by their number and the clear- ness of their execution they render effective aid in obtaining a grasp o( the subject. Half-tone illus- trations of the special instrument's required for various operations are a unique and valuable feature of the book, saving the time of the busy practitioner, who may determine at a glance the instruments needed. A practical clinical tone, derived from the author's wide experience, pervades the entire work. As it now stands this text book U without a rival in the field of operative surgery. " Bryant's 'Surgerv,' as presented in the previous editions, early achieved a merited popularity alike with practitioner, student, and teacher The new edition, practically a new work, combmes the indi- vidual excellence of former editions with an exhaustiveness that will give it front rank among American works on surgery."— Western Clinical Recorder. "This elegant and complete work contains the latest and best operative methods Jn thj practice of surgery. ... It is essentially a book for the general practitioner, and in it he will find ample guidance for all work in surgery which does not strictly belong to the gynaecologist or ophthalmologist.' —Colo- rado Medical yournal. " He has produced a work which may rank with the \xA."— Therapeutic Gazette. Joseph D. Bryant, M.P. BURT. Exploration of the Chest in Health and Disease. By Stephen S^"TH Burt, M. D., Professor of Clinical Medicine and Physical Diai is in the New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital; Physician to the Outdoor Department (Diseases of the Heart and Lungs), Bellevue Hospital. With Illustrations. 8vo, 210 pages. Cloth, $i.so. " A thorough, plain, well-presented manual on physical diagiiosis, clearly written, with understand- able illustrations, well printed and bound The author states that his manual is the outcome of re- quests from his students for an embodiment of his methods of instruction in physical diagnosis He recoKHizes the necessity of a thorough prfiiminary knowledge of analumy to the acquirement ot expert- ness in exploration of the chest, and, this premised, he discusses the physical methods of diagnosis, percussion, auscultation, diagnosis by physical signs of diseases of the lungs, etc." — Medical Age. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL IVORKS i BUTT-ER. The Diagnostics of Internal Medicine. By Glentworth Reeve Butler, A. M., M. D., Chief of the Second Medical Division, Methodist Episcopal Hospital; Attending Physician to the Brooklyn Hospital; Consulting Physician to the Bushwick Central Hospital ; formerly Associate Physician, Departments of Diseases of the Chest and Diseases of Children, St. Mary's Hospital. Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Fellow of the New York Academy cf Medicine ; Member of the Medical Society of the County of Kings, etc. CLINICAL treatise upon the recognized piinciples of medical diagnosis, prepared for the use of students and practitioners of medicine. iA CAMPBELL. The Language of Medicine. A Manual giving the Origin, Etymology, Pronunciation, and Meaning of the Technical Terms found in Medical Literature. By F. R. Camp- bell. A. M.. M. D., Professor of Materia Medina and Therapeutics, Medical Department of Niagara University. 8vo, 32^ pages. Cloth, S^oo. "This is not only a very interesting but a very instructive book, and fulP'.s the object intended by the author, to ' provide the medical student with a suitable means of ac.o.rmg the vocabulary of his science.' Like Shakespeare, the great majority of medical students havt but 'small Latm and less Greek ' It is not necessary for us to give a synopsis of the work, nor to dwell at length upon any par- ticular part. We can only advise our readers to procure the book and read it with care. We believe it will be useful to old and young, and especially to medical students. "- Co/«»f*«j Medical Journal. Disease in Children. CARMICHAEL. A Manual for Students and Practitioners. By James Carmichael, M. D., F. R. C. P. Edin , Physician Royal Hospital for Sick Children. Illus- t-ated with Thirty-one Charts. i2mo, 591 pages. (The Student.?' Series.) Cloth, $^oo. CARPENTER. Principles of Mental Physiology, With their Applications to the Training and Discipline of the Mind and the Study of its Morbid Conditions. By William B. Carpenter, M. D., LL. D., Registrar of the University of London, etc. 8vo, 737 pages. Cloth, $3.00. " An»ng the mimerous eminent writers this country has produceH, none are more deserving cf praise for having attempted to apply the results of physiological research to the explanation of the mu- tual relations of the mind and body than Dr. Carpenter."— 7"AtL«N. M. D. Cmncer of the Uterui. Its Pathology, Symptomatology, Diag- nosis, and Treatment. Also, the Pathol- ogy of l)ise;.ses of the Endometrium. By Thomas Stephen Cullen. Associate Professor of Gynaecology in the Johns Hopkins University. Illustrated by Max Brftdel and Hermann Becker. Complete in one royal octavo volume of about 700 pages. Twelve Colored Plates, and 300 Illustrations m the Text. 8vo. Cloth, $7. 50 ; half morocco. $8. 50. SolJ only by subscription. THIS work conuins a complete history of the develop- ment of Cancer of the Uteru.. gives in deuil the van- ous patholegicl conditions that have to be difTerentiatwl fwra cancer, and deal, fullr with the -wer ™ethods of srrat.L-Trrhe^i:nt';s"T;:.rn'r^^^^^^^^ 'Txhe aim of the author in presenting this worW ha. b^" ' to PvV^e ^;'"l![7S':';:„'aRno»« »' ^"naTurally appeah to the wants of the general hundred pages being devoted to this a!.,ne -^xs ^^J^^f^^^f ,his dread malady. To the sur- practitioner who frequently comes in contact ''•'^ """?f"'"f.ff^on ,nd the exhaustive consideration leon the newer methods of treatin-.nt, the ll?™"'"" "^^ 'I^^^ f Xrbkffl«l in making a diagnosis from excellent '«oi)l."- Medical Brie/, ^'»> >"'■* <^">- 12 D. AtPLETON AND COMPANY S CURRIER. The Menopauf. A Consideration of the Phenomena which occur to Women at the Close of the Childbearing Period, with Incidental Allusions to their Relationship to Menstruati' .1. Also a Particular Consideration of the Premature (especially the Artificial) Menopause. By Andrew F. Cur- rier, A. B., M. I)., New York City, lamo, 284 pages. Cloth. %2 00. "ThU li « re narkably intereMini; trraiiM upon a lubject bui icantily dealt with by writer, upon fenera. medicme. The author hai taken treat paini t.. make .■» thoiouRh study ,.| the topic and hio concluiion, are arrived ,. by logical method, of rea^mmg. He ,how», ,ha< many medical men have lonp ,u,p^te,l, tl,at the ..m.acteric i. not of itulf a cau . ..f di«a«., and that normally it pa««. by without obMr\able effect. "-.V<,r//i«'«/,r»yLa»«/. pa«« oy "Such a univerMlly important topic a.s (he menopau* deierves the extended con.iderallon riven it Jn th« volume The author takes the Rround that thU peri-xl of womai.', life i. n.>t h, fraught with danger as taught in previous work, on the subject. He al«, corrects the prevalent idea of an intin.ate reUt,uB.h.p between cancer and the menopause. Artificial menopau«> is carefully considered. It is a mo« valuable book, and should b« in the hand, of every physician. "-Aii/>»r,//, Journal o, Mtdicin. and surgery. DAVIDSON. Geographical Pathology. An Inquiry into the Geographical Distribution of Infective and Climatic Diseases. By Andrew Davidson, M. D., F. R. C. P. Ed.. late Visiting and Superintending Surgeon, Civil Hospital, Mauritius. Part I. Europe Northern and Western Asia, India, Ceylon, Burmah. Part II. Southl eastern Asia, Indian Archipelago, Australia, Polynesia, Africa, America 8vo, (005 pages. Cloth, $7. so. •n^" T'll'*'''^* "' ."'" *'°'^ '' '" ''"'*"'' ""^ geographical distribution of infectious and climatic disease, and at the same t.me to trace the influence of tem,*rature, rainfall, altitude, and soil conditions oti he,r prevalence, character, and epidemic spread The fulfillment of such a purp<.,e by the author Is the highest praise that can be given for patient research and widespread study. The system whUrh he has adopted has enabled him to present the subject in a light which can no. Lil to interest the phy.^! UrJlclL f .r Ll7 . ''^ -m a comprehensive scale can not fail of wide appreciation by a la ge c OSS of thoughtful readers. To such this adm.r.ble work appeals wuh striking force and novel de":rO/X/ X^r ^"" *"" '''""^'''■'' ' '" "'°'°"''''""=- °^ '^"^" - -mVehensiveness i„ DEXTER. T he Anatomy of the Peritonzum. By Franklin Dexter. M. D., Assistant Demnnstrntor of An.itomv Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, New York. With 39 Colored 'lllus- trations. j^mo. Cloth, $1.50. CATALOGUL OF MEDICAL U^URKS •J : EUWAUD BHAUrOKU DiNCH, M. U. DENCH. DUeases of the Ear. A Text-Book for Practitioners and Stu- dents of Medicine. By Edward Brad- ford Dench. Ph. B.. M. U.. Professor of O.ology in the University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College; Aural Sur- geon to the New York Eye and Ear In- firmary; Consulting Otologist to St. Luke's Hospital; Consulting Otologist to the New York Orthopxdic Dispen- sary and Hospital. Second edition, revised. With 8 Colored Plates and I ^2 Illustrations in the Text. 8vo, 64^ pages. Cloth, $s.oo; sheep, $6.00. SoU only by subscrtption. T. his work the author has endeavored to supply the I -ds of the general practitioner js well as those of the special surgeon. Minute pathology has therefore been ex- tensively considered, and for the benefi. of those unfamiliar with thf various manipulative procedures much space and attention are given to them. The importance of thorough functional examination of the ear is emphasised, and the lesults of the most recent ani reliable investigations are placed before the reader in a manner best suited to make them available and helpful in diagnoKis. The fact that many diseases of the ear are only local manifestations of systemic conditions is not lost sight of. Much attention is given to operative procedures upon the middle ear and to the gross pathological lesions of the conducting apparatus, and also to the variouj manipulative measures insti- tuted for their relief. The illustrations are numerous and well executed, and contribute largely to a clear understanding of the author's descriptions of operative measures aiid of normal and pathological conditions. In preparing the second edition of the work the author has carefully revised each chapter, correcting errors that may have existed and supplying omissions that may have occurred in the first edition, thereby placing the work abre^.^ the present state of knowledge of the science of otology. The work is confidently offered as a reliable guide to practitioners and as a text-book for students. " An examination of the contents will prove that this volume carries its raison d'ltrt. It embodies in a most satisfactory manner the known facts of otology, having incorporated most successfully, and with little bias, the recent advancements tliat have been made in this branch. Recognizing the aid which comes from a faithful reproduction of the anatomical structures concerned, and from showing the site of operative procedures, the plates have been prepared with all the care and precision of modern engraving art frc-m the specimens themselves. The high class of illustrations in the work is wortlij; of special praise. The text maintains a character that will rank the author as one of our test ololofiical writers. He has paid marked attention to tlie physiological basis of aural studies, and to the functional examination in cases of ear disea«^e. In mentioning treatment, he has gone into manipulative details that other writers have omitted, and yet which are very necessary to the student and practitioner who may never have had a chance to study and observe these matters in special aural clinics. The author is per- haps more fond of operative procedures in middle-ear disease than some of his colleagues, but he has given us what we have desired — a good, modem risumt on the benefits to be derived from such opera- tions " — Columbus Medical yournal. "This is a work o' and the student. The < with a clearness that l cal literature, and wil Clinic. xcellence. and well ad.ipted, as its name implies, for both the practitioner pters on Anatomy and Physiology are complete, and the facts are presented certainly aid the student. . . . The work is a valuable addition to otologi- o.eof great service to every practitioner and student." — Cincinnati Lancet- 14 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S DOTY. A Manual of Instruction in the Principles of Prompt Aid to the Injured. Including a Chapter on Hygiene and the Drill Regulations for the Hos- pital Corps, U. S. Army. Designed for Military and Civil Use. By Alvah H. Doty, M. D., Major and Surgeon, Ninth Regiment, N. G. S. N. Y. ; late Attending Surgeon to Bellevue Hospital Dispensary, New York. Third edition, revised. With 121 Illustrations lamo. Cloth, $1.50. 'T'HIS book has been thoroughly revised, and enlarged by the addition of chapters on Hygiene, Anti- ■*• septics, and Disinfection, and the substitution, by authority of the Surgeon-General, of the United States Ambulance Corps Drill, now in force in the Army, for the original chapter on Transportation of the Wounded. As it stands it is without doubt the best work of its kind now published, and is especially adapted to the needs of the Ambulance Corps of the National Guards of the United States. DOWN. Health Primers. Edited by J. Langdon Down, M. D., F. R. C. P. ; Henry Power, M. B., F. R. C. S. ; J. Mortimer-Granville, M. D. ; John Tweedy, F. R. C. S. In square i6mo volumes. Cloth, 40 cents each. I'HOUGH it is of the greatest imp'tance that books upon health should be in the highest degree trustworthy, it is notorious that most of the cheap i.iid popular kind are mere crude compilations of incompetent persons, and are often misleading and injurious. Impressed by these considerations, several eminent medical and scientific men of London have combined to prepare a series of Health Primers of a character that shall be entitled to the fullest confidence. They are to be brief, simple, and elementary in statement, filled with substantial and useful information suitable for the guidance of grown-up people. Each primer will be written by a gentleman specially competent to treat his subject, while the critical supervision of the books is in the hands of a committee who will act as editors. As these littls books are produced by English authors, they are naturally based very much upon English experience, but it matters little whence illustrations upon such subjects are drawn, because the essential conditions of avoiding disease and preserving health are to a great degree everywhere the same. Volumes now ready. I. Exercise and Training. U. Alcohol: Its Use and Abuse. III. Premature Death: Its Promotion and Prevention. IV. The House and its Surroundings. V. Per. soNAL Appearance in Health and Disease. VI. Baths and Bathing. VII. The Skin and its Troubles. VIII. The Heart and its Functions. IX. The Nervous System. EVANS. Handbook of Histo^.cal and Geographical Phthisiology, With Special Reference to the Distribution of Consumption in the United States. Compiled and arranged by George A. Evans, M. D., Member of the Medical Society of the County of Kings, New York ; Member of the American Medical Association, etc. 8vo, 294 pages. Cloth, $2.00. " This work of Dr. Evans's presents a comprehensive view of the subject of phthisis. The histor- ical sketch of the disease is complete and entertaininjr, the account of the geographical distribution, both in this country and abroad, very instructive, and the conclusions drawn are logical and concise. r.'^r.ci.Jprable ?pace i= jjiven to the ttipt-srjphv and mcteortuufry of different pans of the United Slates with reference to consumption. The book should meet with a large iaXe."—Fittsburg Medical Xeview. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS IS EVETZKY. The P hysiologfical and Therapeutical Action of Ergot. Being the Joseph Mather Smith Prize Essay for 1881. By Etienne EvETZKY, M. D. 8vo. Limp doth, $1.00. " In undertaking the present work my object was to present in a condensed manner all the thera- oeutic Dossibilities of ergot. In a task of this nature original research is out of the question. No man's evidence is sufficient to esUblish the merits of a drug considered in the manner indicated, and no one man's opportunities are sufficient to grasp the entire subject. Consequently it remained to gather from the volumes of past and current periodical literature the testimony of the multitude of physicians that had been led to use ergot in different morbid conditions. I have recorded everything that has come to mv notice I have grouped and classi6ed the immense material in our possession. In all cases in which the action of ergot could be explained I have attempted to do so, although this task is frequently difficult if not impossible. . . . The reader will see that ergot has been used in a large number of dis- eases • some of these uses have little or no practical value, yet it is very important to know them, as they serve to illustrate the therapeutic properties of the drug. They have been brought to the notice of the reader without any comments, but those that are essential and of the greatest practical importance have been dealt with more fully. Among the latter may be mentioned the use of ergot in inflamma- tion, aneurism, cardiac diseases, the post-parturient sUte, uterine fibroid tumors, rheumatism, etc."— From the Pre/ace. EWALD. The Diseases of the Stomach. By Dr. C. A. Ewald, Extraordinary Professor of Medicine at the Uni- versity of Berlin. Translated and edited, with numerous Additions, from the third German edition, by Morris Manges, A. M., M. D., Assist- ant Visiting Physician to Mount Sinai Hospital; Lecturer on 'General Medicine, New York Polyclinic, etc. Thoroughly revised, rearranged, largely rewritten, and brought up to date from the most recent lit- erature on the subject. 8vo, 602 pages. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, $6.00. Sold only by subscription. " This work as it now stands is the best on the subject of stomach diseases in the English language. No physician's library is complete without it. It is in every way well adapted to the requirements of the general practitioner, although complete enough to meet also the requirements of the specialist."— American Medico-Surgical Bulletin. " Dr. Ewald's book has met with a very cordial reception by the medical profession. Within a short period three editions have appeared, and translations published in Kngland, Spain, France, Italy, and the United States. To the present edition the author has not only added considerable new matter, but he has also entirely rewritten the work. The arrangement of the chapters has been somewhat changed, and many new personal observations and therapeutic experiences added. The desirability of surgical interference is carefully considered, and the pros and cons given so far as would be necessary to enable a physician to determine whether the aid of the surgeon might be required. The translator has done his work well, and nas incorporated much new matter into the text and footnotes." — Xorth American Journal of Homoeopathy. " Only commendation can be given this translation of the third edition of Trofefsor Ewald's work, as its high character is acknowledged as well in this country as in Europe. The subject is clearly and fully treated in accordance with the latest scientific views. The translator adds to the text all facts of interest brought forward since the German edition was published, thus bringing the work up to date. In these days when the field of the general practitioner is being so greatly limited by specialists, it be- comes necessaiy for ever>- physician to keep informed in regard to the advances being made both in diag- nosis and treatment in this important branch, lest it, too. be lost to him. For this reason, if for no other, this work should be in the library of every general practitioner. We can most heartily commend it." — Southern Medical Record. "The appearance of the first edition of this work in i8g2 by Professor Ewald acted as a stimulus to further and more general study of pathological conditions of the stomach. In this volume will be found much matter that is new and that is well illustrated, which brings the subject-matter down to date. The author directs special attention to the progress made during the past few years in gastric surgery, and discusses the variou-i diseases in which there are indications for operative interference. This work of Professor Fw.nld will hold its own as one of the most valuable of the monographs that can find a way to a physician's library." — Lancet-Clinic. i6 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S ,;:•>, FLINT. A Text-Book of Human Physiology. For the Us? of Students and Practi- tioners of Medicine. By Austin Flint, Jr., M. D., LL. D., Professor of Physiol- ogy and Physiological Anatomy in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, New York ; Fellow of the New York State Medical Association, etc. Fourth edition. Entirely rewritten. One large 8vo volume of 872 pages, elegantly printed on fine paper, and profusely illustrated with 2 Lithographic Plates and 316 Engravings on Wood. Cloth, $6.00 ; sheep, $7.00. " In general plan and scope the present edition does not differ from its predecessors, and it is not notably different in the arrangement of matter, but it presents the facts of human physiology as they are accepted at the present day, stated in such clear language and in such a natural sequence that it is easy for the student to make himself master of the subject. The author's many years of experience as a teacher of physio' 3gy in one of our largest medical schools have taught him to know just what the medical student and the medical practitioner want in a text-book of that science; they have enabled him to solve most judiciously the difficult question of drawing the line between the facts and doctrines neces- sary to be presented, and unnecessary details of methods and means of investigation that would add inconveniently to the bulk of such a book and prove little more than confusing to the reader. As it stands, this text-book, we think, has no superior in its proper field. It is trustworthy in its statements, sufficiently comprehensive, free from irrelevant and cumbersome matter, and easily understood. The publishers are to be commended for briuging it out in so Iiandsome a form. The excellence of their work shows both in the typ» York Medical Journal. Medicine of the Future. An Address prepared for the Annual Meeting of the British Medical Association in 1886. By Austin Flint, Sr., M. D., LL. D. With Steel i2mo, yi pages. Cloth, $1.00. Austin i lint, M. D. Engraving of the Author, " The late Dr. Austin Flint wcis appointed to read the address on Medicine before the British Medi- cal Association at its meeting in 1H86. The manuscript was found among his papers, and the address is printed precisely as it was written. The proof was reverently read by his son, who dedicates this, his father's last literary work, to the profession he so loved and admired. The book contains an excel- lent portrait of the late Dr. Flint It is a most fitting memorial volume. The address itself is a most scholarly work, and should be added to the library of every practitioner," — Buffalo Medical and Surgi- cal Journjl. The Source of Muscular Power . Arguments and Conclusions drawn from Observations upon the Human Subject under Conditions of Rest and of Muscular Exercise. By Austin Flint, Jr., M. D., LI. D , Professor of Physiology in the Bellevue Hos- pital Medical College, New York, etc. 8vo. lo^ pages. Cloth, $i.oo. "There are few questions relating to philosophy of greater interest and importance than the one which is the subject of this essay. I have attempted to present an accurate statement of my own ob- servations, and what seem to me to be the logical conclusions to be drawn from them, as well as from experiments made by others up-sn the human subject under Cunditions of re=l and of muscular exercise." — From the Fre/ace. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL IVORKS '7 FLINT. Medical Ethics and Etiquette. By Austin Flint, Sr., M. D. lamo. 60 cents. T-IIE Code of Ethics adopuM by the American Medical Association. Manual of Chemical Examination of the Urine in Disease. With Brief Directions for the Examination of the Most Common Varie- ties of Urinary Calculi, and an Appendix containing a Diet-Table tor Diabetics. By Alstin Flint, Jr. , M. D., LL. D., Professor of Physiology and Microscopy in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College; Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc. Fifth edition, revised and corrected. i2mo, 77 pages. Cloth, Si. 00. T-HF chief aim of this little work is to enable the busy practitioner to make for himself, rapidly and 1 eksilv all ordinary examinations of urine; to give him the benefit of the author', experience m eliminatinK little difficulties in the manipulations, and in reducing processes, of analysis to the utmost simplicity that is consistent with accuracy. On the Physiological Effects of Severe and Protracted Muscular Exercise : With special reference to its Influence upon the Excretion of Nitrogen. By Alstin Flint, Jr., M. D., LL. D. 8vo, 91 P-'ges. Cloth, Si-oo. THIS monograph on the relations of urea to exercise is the result of a thorough and careful investi- T",ron made in the case of Mr. Edward I'ayson Weston, the celebrated pedestr^n. The chemical anaW.es were made under the direction of R. O. Doremus, M. D.. Professor of Chemistry and Toxi- S'> in the HeUe^•ue Hospital Medical College, by Mr. Oscar Loew. his assistant The observations were made with the cooperation of professors of the Bellevue Hospital Medical College^ FOSTER. Reference-Book of Practical Therapeutics. By Various Authors. Edited by Frank P. Foster, M. D.. Editor of "The New York Medical Journal" and of Foster's "Encyclopaedic Medical Dictionary." In two large 8vo volumes. Cloth, $10.00; sheep, $12.00: half morocco, $1 ^.00. Sold only by subscription. THIS work is intended as a ready-reference book, in which the physician can find the most recent A information c .rning the uses and application of remedies ; their indications and counter.ndica- tions ; the varior conditions in which they are indicated ; the forms in which drugs are best used, their doses, and the n ethods of administration. .' It is essentially a book for the practitioner, and is an up-to-date ^vork of f f"f"'^f:. ""'^^".Jl^^^'nj of the phvsi,.lo,r.cal properties of drG.s. Iheir cheniical. mineralo, cal, ^"tan.cal, and z,k>1^^^^^^ as are of' direct bearinron their use in practice h.ive been considered m th* compilation of this work. ... The ambitious physician will be pleased with thi, work." -Ca«<7rfi,/« .Ved.cal ReaTd. .'Withthe second volume this excellent wor': is completed and i%^f,";'f«' '.'r™Si^\Xen"^^ hv means of the irenera' int'ex and index of diseases and remedies, as a book of theraptutic reierence. A^upp^emeno7nearvfi"v rages bears witness to the rapid strides in "-''«^=' ,f^'^"^%-";Vrk is wdl with matter relating to-knovl'edge acquired sin^e the appeaanoe o 'hefi;^t "'»'";■ J^ printed and well hound, and the brief articles on every subject relating to the treatment ot dia-ase are excellently written, and in the main sadsiact ny as lo the inlu. .nation tney impart. ->hdual R...'rd. i8 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S FOSTER. An Illustrated Encyclopgdic Medical Dictionary. Being a Dictionary of the Technical Terms uscu by Writers on Medicine and the Collateral Sciences, in the Latin, English, French, and German Languages. By Frank P. Foster, M. D., Editor of "The New York Medical Journal," Librarian of the New York Hospital. With the col- laboration of William C. Ayres, M. D., New Orleans; Edward B. Bron- son, M. D., New York; Charles Stedman Bull, M. D., New York; Henry C. Coe, M. D., M. R. C. S., L. R. C. P., New York; Andrew F. Currier, M. D.> New York; Alexander Duane, M. D. New York; Simon H. Gage, Ithaca, N. Y. ; Henry J. Garrigues, M. L., New York; Charles B. Kelsey, M. D., New York; Russell H. Nevins, M. D., New York; Burt G. Wilder, M. D., Ithaca, N. Y. Complete in Four Imperial Octavo Volumes of about 730 pages each. Illustrated with several hundred Original Wood Engravings and 4 Chroniolithographic Micro- scopical Plates. Per volume, cloth extra, $9.00; library leather, $10.00; half Turkey morocco, $j i.oo. Sold only by subscription. " There is no question about the position this worl will take among scholars. There has never been anything like it in any language, and though future editions will include new terms rendered necessary by the developments of science, the work already accomplished will stand the test of the severest criti- cism."— AVai york Medical Timet. " We hardly know whether to admire most the courage and public spirit which enabled the pub- lishers to face such a gigantic enterprise, the splendid organizing p<;wer of the chief editor, or the real and industry of his subordinates. All are admirable, and have resulted in the production of a work which will la.st as a standard one on the subject, and without which no medical library can be con.'id- ered complete.'' — Edinburgh Medical yournal. " It is without doubt the dictionary of medical dictionaries, and is one of the few books of which it can be said with truth that it is absolutely unsurpassed by any other work in medicine. Some medi- cal dictionaries give definition without pronunciation, while others sacrifice definition to pronunciation, or to derivation ; whereas, in Foster's work ever)thing that can be properly required of a dictinnary is offered to the reader. Such a book must ever be a classic in the literature of the world, and every means in our power should be used to give honor to its dirtinguished editor and his colleagues, not forgetting the publishers, who by their publication of the work have placed the profession under lasting obliga- tions." — Therapeutic Gazette. FOURNIER. Syphilis and Marriage. Lectures delivered at the St. Louis Hospital. Paris. By Alfred Four- NlER, Professeur .t la Faculte deMedecine de Paris; Medecin de I'Hopital Saint-Louis. Translated by P. Albert Morrow, M. I)., Physician to the Skill and Venereal Department, New York Dispensary, etc. 8vo. Cloth, S2.00; sheep, S3.00. " The book supplies a want long recognized in medical literature, and is based upon a very extended experience in the special hospitals for syphilis of Paris, which have furnished the author with a rich and rare store of clinical cases, utilized by him with great discriinination, originality, and clinical judgment. It exhibits a profound knowledge of its subject under all relations, united with marked skill and tact in treating the deli.?ate ?r JrvoU-.-d in ssirh a line nf inves.tigation. It is a t)Ook to buy, to keep, to read, to profit by, and to lend to o\.\\eTS."— Boston Afedical and Surgical yournal. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS '9 FRIEDLAENDER. Th. Use of the Microscope in C linical and FatholoRJcal Exam- inations. R. Mr Carl FRIEDLAENDER, Privut-Docent in Pathological Anatomy in R-:.?n Translated from the enlarged and improved second edition by Kry C Cof M tS . etc. With a Chromolithograph. With cop.ous Index. 1 2mo, 195 pages. Cloth. $1.00. 1 . .^ nr Friedlaender's little book make its appearance in hnglun " We are very much pleased to lee Dr. »^"™'*''J?f " „ "3i,io„ since its appearance, we can speak dress AS we have a pra: °/. 'P%^^„t itself. In the early chapters, the classification and relative frequency of the vanous tumors, their evolu- tion and transformations, and their etiology, are dealt with ; then, each class is ^'"^.'^.^ J" ^//^V ron chapter, in which the result of the author's work is compared with that of others, and the K^neral con- clusions are drawn which give to the book its gr-at practical value ; finaily, a chapter ,s devoted to dag- iiosis, one to treatmcnl, and one to the tumors in the mammary gland of the male. A,?a, i LrR Mea%- cal yournal. " .Mtogether, the work is one n more than ordinary interest to I'le surgeon, gyniecologist, and phy- sician." — Detroit Lancet. TT" iLXI -(»■£- "rSiUBI CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS 2\ GRUBER. A T^> »-«»»fe of the Diseas es of the Ear. ^ r nr losEF Gruber. Professor of Otology in the Imperial Royal Uni- vJrSlrViennTUslated from the second Gen.an edujon and Sd. with additions. ^- Edward Law M.D CM. Edm MR. C c Pna ind bv Co eman Jewell, M. U., C M. cam., m. iv. v. e Lond A-erSn edition.' With '^5 lUustrations an 70 colored Fig- ures on 2 Lithographic Plates. 8vo, 648 pages. Cloth, $6. so. .. The boo. is prominent, if not pre-inen.a.o„^an array of exceilent worUs.^ J„",^^•L',Tm:J ?»i.?ofut,randr;ia^ "-^-'^^^ ^•^^--^ >--'• _________ HAMMOND. A Tr eatise on Insanity, , ., M^Hir-,1 Relations By William A. Hammond, M. D., late Sur- in 'ts Medical Relations^ Dy ^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^.^^ ^^^ geon-General a S^ ^^y^^;™ post-Graduate Medical School; SntTtTe Llri^an^Nellogical Association, etc. 8vo. 7^7 pages. Cloth, es.oo ; sheep, $6.00. Therapeutic Gazette. A Tre atise on the Di— "f the Nervous System. ' \ T^ n^Txjt n lite Sureeon-General U. S. Aimy, By William A. Hammond, M D ^^J""^^' ^ in the SIT' --sirr^n^^^^^^^^^^ W. , ,8 Illustrations. 8vo, 932 pages. Cloth, §5-00 - sneep, ^ welcomed as its predecessors have g?"J- J ^..^.^a/ yjarna/. on the well-known publishers. —Montreal m.u i. j 22 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S HAMMOND. Clinical Lectures on Diseases of the Nenrous System, Delivered at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. By William A. Hammond, M. U.. late Professor of Diseases of the Mind and Nervot; System, etc. Edited, with Notes, by T. M. B. Cross, M. D., Assistant to the Chairs of Diseases of the Mind and Nervous System, etc. In one handsome volume of yx) pages. Cloth, $3. so. THESE lecture* have been reported in full, and together with the historiei of the cases, which wer prepared by the editor after careful study and prolonged observaiion, constitute a clinical volum • which, while it does not claim to be exhaustive, will nevertheless be found to contain many of the mor.i imporUnt affection* of the kind that are commonly met with in practice. As thes-a lectures were intended especially for the benefit of students, the author has confined him self to a full consideration of the symptoms, causes, and treatment of each affection, without attempt ing to enter into the pathology or moibid anatomy. HARVEY. First Lines of Therapeutics As Based on the Modes and the Processes of Healing as occurring spontaneously in Diseases ; and on the Modes and the Processes of Dying as resulting naturally from Disease. In a Series of Lectures. By Alexander Harvey, M. A., M. D., Emeritus Professor of Materia Medica in the University of Aberdeen, etc. lamo, 278 pages. Cloth. $1.50. "We may say that, as a contribution to the philosophy of medicine, this treatise, which may be profitably read during odd moments of leisure, has a happy method of statement and a refreshing free- dom from dogmaxum."— MeJicat Record. HIRT. Diseases of the Nervous System. A Text- Book for Physicians and Students. By Dr. Ludwig Hirt. Pro- fessor at the University of Breslau. Second American edition, trans- lated, with permission of the Author, and revised from the second German edition, by August Hoch, M. D., assisted by Frank R. Smith. A. M. (Cantab.), M. D., Assistant Physicians to the Johns Hopkins Hospital. With an Introduction by W .lliam Osier, M. D., F. R. C. P., Professor of Medicine in the Johns Hopkins University, and Physician in Chief to the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore. With 181 Illustra- tions. 8vo, 7 IS pages. Cloth, $s.oo; sheep, $6.00. T^HE book has been carefully and thoroughly revised from the second German edition ; many changes ■*■ and additions have been made, and the new discoveries in neurotherapeutics which have been made since the publication of the first edition have been introduced, including a section on osteoarthropathy. Several new illustrations have been added, and some of the original illustrations have been replaced by others of greater excellence. "The author of this volume has long been recognized as one of the ablest writers on neurology in Germany. This translation brings to the American reader one of the h>est studies of this subject for immediate reference. . . . The illustrations and type are excellent, and altogether this is one of the best works that can be placed in any working library." — Journal of Inebriety. " A delightful book to study, and of the utmost value to the general practitioner."— ^ t.*^ » •all K iJ o «! f I a > •st- ~i? e - 3 Mi •15 3 >n ir:- > =« = «3 « |_ - s * ? S 2 J 2- ■3 "k t. -^ ^nd CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS i} HOFMANN AND ULTZMANN. Analysis oftheUrine. - With Special Reference to the diseases of the G;"!^°-U""7 Organs. By K. B HOKMANN. i'rofessor in the University of Gra U and R L r/^ ^ 7w.nt in the University of Vienna. Translated by T. Barton Znc aTm a I'rSesL of the Practice of Medicine in the B.Uimore Poyclinic and Post-Graduate Medical School etc and H Horook Cunis. Ph.B.. M.D.. Fellow o^^e New Yor^Academ o Medicine, etc. Third edition, revised and enlarged. With 8 L.tho graphic Plates. 8vo. Uo pages. Cloth. $2.oo. HOLT. T h> niaeases of Infancy a nd Childhood. " For the Use of Students and Practi- tioners of Medicine. By L. Emmett Holt. A.M., M.D.. Professor of Dis- eases of Children in the New York Polyclinic ; Attending Physician to the Babies' Hospital and to the Nursery and Child's Hospit.'. New York; Con- sulting Physician to t.ie New York In- fant Asylum and to the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled. With 7 fuil" page Colored Plates and 203 Illustra- tions. Cloth. $6.00; sheep. $7-oo; half morocco, $7.50. Sold only by sub- scription. A WELL-KNOWN teache- in New York, on being A asked his opinion of a certain Enrlish work on Dis- eases of Children, published within the . - '^* y^^"* ^;! .= .. 1, is a most excellent book in the fiod wh.ch '» «^^*" • ^/^ „ ^he defect referred but it has one serious defect: ,J.etvr.ter-s ^f ''-'' ""-^^^ „^"^ rha, been the author's purpose, in to has been a common one in all recent works upon P^^'^^^^J^ Ze6e6-e. work in which full and the preparation of the present book, to ^"fP'^ *''*' ^J '°Mho^ " adequatVspace is given to the " Diseases of '"'^"^yj""^ ."^J,' ^„a young childhood, but, while the ThU work is devoted preeminently to '.he d'^^^^jf "verT young chiWren, it aims to cover the emphasis of the author is laid upon disease as .t .s ^«" '" "/^ j,^^,, but the space of the Ix^ok entire field of paediatrics. It «)n.ains "" -^aus" « ^^.c!^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^, practitioner is devoted to a consideration of tho^ subjects «h.ch are ot '^'^^ j experience. It is essen- and the radical student, b^.cause they are ^"f '""^J^";' .^^f '^tnee among young children, tially an original work, representing eleven years of ho pUal exper^ ^^ .^ ^^^ ■Mt is .eldom that we have experienced - --'L^if .^r^rien'^V meXal ^thorship. I'erhaps i,. .-,^ of this volume by Dr. Holt. The work ';• a credit ^,|je^^m3! experience with "tensive know ■ most prominent characteristic is its ^j'-''^ •;!''*f„'",^n"4ruencrthe reader feels that, m '»•« f 'Yttt^'e edee of and large use of p.-ediatnc literature. In consequci ^ell grounded views, but with the & latere him, he is made acquainted ""« °"'/Jl\';,\^'^„Cwho desirS to be fully aciuamted with generally accepted opinion also. . . ;.T^^!^^^„""'„^"afford to be without this volume. "-AMical .S^s. what American p.-ediatrics is accomp.ishing can not attora lo L. Emmett Holt, M. m 34 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S V % HOLT. The Care and Feeding of Children. A Catechism for the Use of Mothers and Children's Nurses. By L Emmett Holt, M. D.. Professor of Diseases of Children in the New Yon. Polyclinic ; Attending Physician to the Babies' Hospital and the Nurser and Child's Hospital. New York. Second edition, revised and enlarged lOmo. 108 pages. CIcth. so cents. • In th« matters diicutwd, it is the needs of the well child, not th« sick one. which have been con sulered Thi wel' ch Id muM in the great majority ..f case, be left to the care of the mother or nurse foJ wh..s«Iurdrnce and assistance thet. pa^e. ire iitendeU."-Ar<,« /*, Pre/ac* lo Ike sec.nd ,d,t,>n. HOWE. The Breath, and the Diseases which give it a Fetid Odor . With Directions for Treatment. By Joseph W. Howe, M. D., Clinical Professor of Surgery in the Medical Department of the University of New York, etc. Second edition, revised and corrected. lamo, 108 papes. Cloth, $1 00. "This little volume well deserves the attention of physicians, to whom we commend it most highly." —Chicas;o MtJical JvurHiil. " To any one sufferinf; from the affection, either in his own person or in that of his in«i^*e f^"J^"»; ances we ckn commend This volume as containing all that is known concerning t»-e subject, set forth in a pleasant ^\yW:'—Plii!aUD. T he Curability and Treatment of Pulm onary Phthisis. ~ Bv S lArroin. Professor of Medical Pathology to the Faculty of Paris; Member of the Academy of Mcdic.ne : Physician to the L.ir.bo.s.ere Hospit.l Paris, etc. Translated and edited by Montagu Lubbock. M. I). (London and Paris). M. R. C. P. (England), etc. 8vo. 407 pages. Cloth. S4-00- JOHNSTON. The Chemistry of Common Life. Bvthe late James F. W. Johnston. F.R.S.. ^'''^f'-^^"'- ,^\f ^'^^";;^^^^^^ the University of Durham. A new edition revised and brought down to the Present Time, by Arthi k Hirhcrt Chi rch, M. A.. Oxon. Illus- trated with Maps and numerous Engravings on Wood. i2mo, S92 pages. Cloth. S2.00. <;r»^flRV OF CO\TFXTS: The Air we Breathe. Th. Water we Drink. The Soil we Cul- .vau Th Pan we Reaf The Bread we Vat The Beef we Coo.. The H-ra.e. we n^.s. '.'he'sweets v.e Extract. The Liquors we Ferment. The Narcot.c. we nd^ge "- JJ-^J;"- - Select. The Odors we Enjoy. The Smells we D.shWe. iljf ^'^^^ ^^1"" The Circulation of uui Breathe for. What, How. and Why we OiRest. The K we «-neri,n. Matter. Botany, JOHNSTONE. A Concise Manual for Students of Medicine ^'''^ ^'''''''- Jy^'^": loHNSTONE F. G. S. With 164 Illustrations and a Series of Floral Dia- grams. i2mo, 260 pages. (The Students' Series.) Cloth, $1.75- 3 i 26 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S KELLY. Operative Gynecology. By Howard A. Kei.i.y, A. B., M. D., Fellow of the American Gynecological Society ; Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics in the Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, and Gynecologist and Obstet- rician to the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore ; formerly Associate Professor of Obstetrics in the University of Penn- sylvania ; Corresponding Member of the Societe Obstetticale et Gynccologique de Paris, and of the Gesellschaft fur Geburtshiilfe zu Leipzig. With 24 Plates and 5 so Original Illustrations. In 2 royal octavo volumes. Cloth, $is.oo; half morocco, $17.00. Sold oiilv by subscription. Howard A. Kelly, M. D. ,. _, ^ complete modem treatise extant on operative .^vnecoloe^ T^r^ay that the w(-rk fulfills the expectations ^^In^rai^of the iUustraticns ( ne can hardly say too much which it had aroused is no faint praise . . ; J" P™f„°^; i„at thev vere almcst tco profuse. But of If they were less instructive one migh ^e |empted to^y -^^t^ndanee, and their accuracy and such gcKxl work it would seem ungratef^ .1 '° ^y ''^^^^'7;;, ' ^^d go far in helping' to render clear some artistic value certainly much f "^ance >« ;aU« ° ^^^'; '^ak eland Med.cal Ga.ette. lithographs, but theillustrat.nnstoUr. Kelly s^^o^k can _^^^ examination, ari^sthes.a, ume includes sepsis, bacteriology. toP^e/fP"^ 'f ^ eiXwhood „f the vulva, vacina, cervix, ar.d blacdtr, plasticoperationsandsurgicalprocedure, m the r.eiMib^^^ ai d wide, ar.d he knows how to ccnvey and vaginal hysterectomy Dr. Kelly » '^:«*^";:„t^7,i". mating • Kellv's n ethcd' ar.d also total h>s- his ideas to others The b«a"'y ^ \^^^ -J^^'l^^his rema kable work.'- ^/'^"/' ^»/«'<-'''"' >«"«"'• terectomy for cancer are in keeping with the rest of this ema „„,„^b,,dlv the most impor- "The book, which is in two volumes, has now been >."'' '^f ^^ ^'^i', ""Tage N. t -nly the great tant Jork upon this subject which has yet beer, written m h^EnKl^sJiJanguag^^^^^^^ y excellence of the letterpress, but ^''"'',"'^^.^r'f„f"J^'^ American school of gvnecology and of the high it is furnished, render the work one w^ell worthy of » '^ f ■^*r'^''' ; ; impdJible to ^peak »"" ^'f^^^V- reputation of it. author. . .Of the pla es and '""^»\«^7^„^^yi, '("^^e congratulated not only on MLy of them are triumphs ''^ 'h« '""^•^^'°^^,.^^'^,_^r?lced "hi art Ms' drawing^ in such a remarkable his artists, but also upon his P"blj*hers. nnIio have reproducea ^ standard work upon the sub- -c^^7which•tK:^"r/sh.;f.dte i'^'fhfhaTds « ;:yn^eco,ogists and surgeons performing peKic °"";:;;o::::^Syswork.tothe pu^ucat^iof ^.-c^^e^enu^^f^ j-;^ ^!^^^!^rl^y=7^}^^^^S:!^Jr ''[ ,,„.,. .....emost .. VV cruder this work, so far as it goes, the most valuable, ^-^^^.r Tc^n '^iMo l^arn^soZ" advaned t!ut has vet »PPf "«» > V"; '^y„tw U;ht " ^/""^^^^^^^^ ">'•*''• thing new, 31 to fm a something old put ma new ii„m. a „, ,/■ i-,,„>,w •' Essentially a practical book in every sen^e of the word."-..W-r./ J^er.e,. of A- . mvs. .. J":i;;lL.;Hterary outfit is ccmple.e without this latest addition to surgical knowledge. - Fhilad^lt.'aa MtJical Journal. ^„„„, should not (or ready reference."- t'»«'«rj,/> Medical Magazine. From Kelly's " Operative Gynecoloi-y CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS 21 E. L. Keyes, M.D. KEYES. A Practical Treatise on the Surgical Diseases of the Genito-Urinary Organs, Including Syphilis. Designed as a Manual for Students and Practitioners. By E. L. Keyes, A. M., M. D., Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery, Syphilol- ogy, and Dermatology in Bellevue Hospital Medical College. Being a re- vision of a Treatise, bearing the same title, by Van Buren and Keyes. Second edition, thoroughly revised ai, larged. With Engravings. 8v pages. Cloth, $>oo ; .sheep, ^ .m. " Since 1874 the advances in the department of surgery included under the term genito-urinary have been so con- siderable that the work »«f"'«"/\VP"f''=''"y !,t^X''™w we may allude to litholapaxy, suprapubic ... To mention a few subjects that are essentially new «e^ methods of dealing C5-stotorav (the modified and revised "^"^'^'""^/^l'^;';*^;, challenge favorable comparison with hydrocele, and the radical f";;!,"' r^"ff<^,f^,^^^„'edTt\wi7nor i" all that is r^U^i^-aTetbKSlble^^^^^^^^^ —Afedical Record. The Tonic Treatment of Syphilis. Bv E. L. Keyes, A. M., M. D., Adjunct Professor of Surgery and Pro- fessor of Dermatology in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, etc. Second edition. 8vo. 8i pages. Cloth, $1.00. .. My studies in syphilitic blood have yjej^^d -suUs at once -^atifymg to me and - -nv--| as to the tonic influence of minute doses of ^"^"'^•^^f^VlvDMU by small (tonic doses of mercury. KINGSLEY. A Treatise on Oral Deformities, As a Branch of Mechanical Surgery. Pv Norman W. Kingsley M. D. S.. D D S , President of the Board of Censors of the State oi New York, laie Dean of the New York College of Dentistry and Professor of Dental Art and Mechanism, etc. With over 3S0 Illustrations. 8vo. Cloth. $s.oo; sheep, $6.00. "A casual glance at this work might impress t'fy-'|"j"''„;\«J^:S„''''''Biurr^^^^^^ more practical value to the dentist than to the ger- '''/Xt J,'Z ,aUer art^ms to be essential to the a mere work on dentistry, although a Poetical tnow^ge of the la Wr art ««^ deformities carrying out of the author's views regarding the c°"*^'°" "^ ^f A™ make particular reference to of WhicTi he treats. We would be doing injustice « the work did «* "°'^'^^f/,P?,7Jt is ^o thoroughly i the masterly chapter on the treatment of fractures of the ^vver a« . .^^' ^^''"t^^.e fr^'^res intelligently 38 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S LEGG. On the Bile. Jaundice, and Bilious Diseases. Bv J. W>cKHAM Lf.gg. M. D., F. R. C. S., Assistant Physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, and Lecturer on Pathological Anatomy m the Medical School. With llinsirations in Chromolithography. 8vo, 719 pages. Cloth, S'^.oo; ^;ep, $7-oo. LITTLE. Medical and Surgical Aspectb of In-Knee (Genu-Valgum) : its Relation to Rickets ; its Prevention : and its Treat- ment, with or without Surgical Operation. By W. J. Uttlf. M. D FRCP late Senior Physician to and Lecturer on Medicme at the London Hospital : Visiting Physician to the Infant Orphan Asylum at Wanstead ; the Earlswood Asylum for Idiots : Founder of the Royal Orthopitdic .lospital, etc. Assisted by E. Muirhead Little, M. R. C. b With complete Index, and. illustrated by upward of 50 Figures and Diagrams. 8vo, ibi pages. Cloth, $2.00. LORING. A Text-Book of Ophthalmoscopy. Bv Edwakd G. LoRiNG, M. I). Part I. The Normal Eye, Determina- TioN OF Refraction, and Diseases of the Media. With 131 Illustra- tions, and 4 Chromolithograph Plates containing 14 Figures. 8vo, 267 pages. Cloth, S>oo. Part U. Edited bv F. B. Lor.ng. M. D. Diseases of the Rf™^' ^^'^ Nerve, and Chorioid : Their Varieties and Complications. With lili ;- tration's and Chromolithographic Plate:. 8vo. Cloth, $5.00. .'Since the first part of this work appeared, the profession has looked forward to its completion .,, Z interest ^r it was known that the sudden death of the distinguished author would in no :2 Terl fw th iuapV^a" nee, as he had left the manuscript nearly ready for publication. This r^l^n sued under thrsupervision of his brother. Dr. I'. B. Loring. and c.msftutes the volume L or^us The%r.//.r/ trea^ of the normal eye, determ.nation of refraction, d.seases o the med.a Solocica op^cs, and theory of the ophthaimo.ope. The second fart ,the present volume , treats S dSs of the r tina. optic nerve, and chorioid. their varieties and complications, so that the subject o o^h'lm scopv is fully covered ; and, treated of in the lucid and attractive style of the author w th hs attend on to minute details, an abundance of original illustrations, and the hearty co-operat.on of a 5^ a publUher, a work of great excellence has been produced. It is the work of a master, he cro«-n- nTlab^." o a n,;,, of r.re .Lntif.c attainment. k.en perreption. discriminating jud.ment^ close obser- vation and large experience, combined with clearness of expression seldom seen; and .s a fitfng monument to his pre^ous work in this direction, which has made the Loring ophthalmoscope known wherever ophthalmology is practiced "-.l/.'«/A'> Journal o/ Medical Sciences. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL JVORKS 29 LUSK. The t^r.vn re and Art oi Midwifery. B, W.ii.AM Thompson Ll-sk.M. A.. M. D., late Professor of Ohstetncs nnd D seases of Women and Children in the Belleyue HospU.^ Med.cal CoUeee- Obstetric Surgeon to the Maternity and Emergency Hospitals a,;l i:;.coLgist to th'e Bellevu. Hospital, ^ew edU.on rev.sed and enlirged With :-46 Illustrations. 8vo. Cloth, $'..00, sheep, S<^ 00. .. To .he many famriur wi.h ^^^^1^^^^^^^!^:^^ Z7i::^i^^<^^^^'^^ ,ra.ific...ion which wjU be increased by n^^^^^ .^ ^^^ n.edical «:h,H.ls abroad was not revision of the entire book. Th'^.f ^"P'f '°" °^ ^uch to insist that in its present form it is the leading ,,,ededtc. stamp us value, and It IS not say^^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^^„^^ ^,f supereroKatio.. to again ;%r-u"tTpT:c;::;It'^orth'rnd^?s^lL^a%s^^^ maWe.up."-«,..,v .»/..../ .'.cor,.r. " .. This .ell-Wnown text-booU and b-U of reference nee^^^^^^ indor--nt from^us. It is «.neral^ ;;le"^''c':?eru"l^evi:ed°! s'oVatTt iTpW^ntd ly S^^ ^t^' essentia^iiy a new boo..' and fully up to ^l^^e_"— Maryland Medical Journal. ^^ LUYS. The Brain a nd its Func^'ons. ""bTTli-vs, Physician to the Hospice de la Salpetriere. With lUustra- tions. i2mo. Cloth, Si- so. MARKOE. A Treatis e on Diseases of the Bones. B,.jhovusM.Markoe,M. I)., Professor of Surgery in the College of P^.Iicrs and Surgeons, New York. etc. With b6 Plates and 34 Wood- flits 8vo, 416 pages. Cloth, $4.=io. CUIS,. ,^ Y ,:. on diseases of the bones, embracing their structural changes as THIS valuable work is a treatise on 'l'^^^" °';;^ includinc also an account of the various 1 affected by disease, their clinica. '^'-^^ ^^'^^t of^ b^^^^^^^^^^ i" i- scope, and no tumors which grow in or upon thtm. None the ,»p ^^.^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ine subject, and a valuable contribution to medical literature. ^ MATHEWS. A Treatise on Diseases of th e Rectum, Anus, and Sigmoid Flexure. ~ ^.^^^^^. ^_ I)., of Louisville, Ky.. Professor of the Pdncipes and Practice of Surgerv, and Clinical Lecturer on D 'senses of th Re urn in the Kentucky School of Medicine, etc. With 6 Chrorno- Jh^.phs'andn^rous^.us^^^ Svo =;;7Dac:es. Cloin, !}>-<. 00, snecp, D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S MAUDSLEY. Body and Mind. -.n Inquiry into their Connection and Mutual Influence, especially r, Reference to Mental Uiso.ders. An enlarged and revised edition t which are added Psychological Essays. By Henry Maudsiey. M. I) London. i2mo, 27s pages. Cloth, $1. so. , , . ^. ^ •„, ,, T-HF general plan of this work mnv be described as being to bring man. both m his physical ar T"J;„^:Uelations.asmuchaspos.Uewith.nthescopeofsc,ent.ficmqu,ry. .. Many and valuable. books have »-- ;'>'„\-,^J^:&!;^^^^^^^^ ITaSn^i ;'ubT^,\"^d^he':. forms of mental aberration. B"'^rn'V^^^"'^"l>l„d"n/ound minds are not matters of distinct inv. fore empirically. That the phenomena of «>"nd a^^ ^~" ^ ^^^j,^ ^ ^,„ ^ stated. Hu tigation. but inseparable parts ?L?' ursuJd %^^rlte"y Ind ^n in the hands of two distmct clas.. strange to say. they had always been P"^fX ^^P"f\7^''i"nal!y borrowed a stray fact from the abu. of investigators. The '"^'"^"^^""^...X^S.^e'^ Tu" tl^^XsUMan. on the other hand, had no theoretic, dant cases compiled by '^e nicd.cal authorme. but^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^„^^^^ ^^ „ clew to his observations beyond ^^^'"^""'"f,^',""^ „, Jh, mind, or rather to construct a basis for boti. The Physiology of the Mind. Being the First Part of a third edition, revised enlarged ^nd i" grea: part rewritten, of '"The Physiology and Pathology of the Mmd. B> Henry MAUDSLEY. M. I).. London. i2mo, S47 pages. Cloth, S2.00. COVrFVrS ■ Chapter I. On the Method of the Study of the Mind. II. The Mind and the Nen- ous^r m; Th/^inai ^^^ -j^^:::;^^:^^^^^^^ H^ S=S:^;rS -r^^I^Ac^atir^n.- IX. Memory a^ I^.na.on^ Responsibility in Mental Diseases. By Henry Maudsley, M. D., London. i2mo, 31.^ pages. Cloth, Si. so. "This book is a compact presentation of those facts and P""Fiples «hich squire to be taken mu —Popular Science .Vonthly. The Pathology of Mind. Being the third edition of the Second Part of the "Physiology and Pathology of Mind." Recast, enlarged, and rewritten. By Henri Maudsi.ey, M. D., London. i2mo, s8o pages. Cloth. S2.00. rOXTF\'TS- Chapter I. Sleeping and Preaming. II. Hypnotism, Somnambulism, and Alhed Statef m T^eCausItion and iLention of Insanity, ...Etiological. IV The. same continued ^The Causation and Prevention of Insanity; ,*. ''"«''°'°*^.-' /''.^i^'^^^Sc—^^^ VII. The Symptomatology of Insanity. VIIL The same continued ^^tm ntof V 't S.oHe" Disease. X. The Morbid Anatomy of Mental Derangement. M. The Trr.,tm.m ot .vem ^ THE new material includes chapters on " Dreaming." "Somnambulism and its AH,, d States, and A large additions in the chapters on the "Causation and Prevention of Insanity. . ^ ,. . " Dr Maudsley has had the courage to undertake and the skill to execute what is, at least m English, an original enterprise,"— /.<>«<'''"< Saturday Review. ,1 CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL IVORKS 3« McSHERRY. Health, and H ow to Promote it. • TTT' Mn Prnfp<;sor of Practice of Medicine, Uni- «tr i2mo 1 8s pages. Cloth, Si-2->. Baltimore Gazette. ^^^ -^ ■ MILLS. A T''-^-^ ""^^ of Comparative Physiology. P^, Students and Practitioners of Veterinary Medicine. By Wesley MiiLS M. A.,M. D. Cloth, $3-00. .. TM «o:U, though one of many on. the -^jec-^^rpCoro^ Yof S^^^^^ oosition'nX foremost rank, of authont.es on comFaramt P^;«^^"j ^er wonderful m.des. The ilK^tnlFnlsltt^y ^c^V-err%r;er„ 4s and diagrams, ..th .h.ch h. .or. a^SndV^6V«M.r» Med.cal Record. A Text-Book nf Animal Physiology. „, Reproducon or SMen« of Hum,„ . ^^^P.^ ,^ ^^^.^^ 5v,iv»:r»n" .t V..e;inan"con.ge, Montreal. Wi.h .0, ,n.,.ra- MORROW. A ^v,t,n. of Genito-Urinary D.s.»s», Syphilol.gy,.a;!d.D;rma: $22. SO : half morocco, S24.00. ^"^ - _ .^ ^^^i^j^^ to the specia_hst .n , . depanrnent^ llX'ities. wh'ohave aU cl Whatever well-marked cases may be .ua wun .n n.= ...^^. ..^. ^^^ .^ ^^.^^^^^^ ^ .,, .. As a complete and systematic treatise o"^^r^^'"%^„"t,J^taT feature of this work is the large 1, is in ever>- ^ense m.xiern and emment y pr^^^^^^^ number of excellently executed illustrations. 52 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S NEUMANN. Handbook of Skin Diseases. Bv Ur. IsiDOR Neumann, Lecturer on Skin Diseases in the Royal Univer- sity of Vienna. Translated from the second German edition, with Notes, by Lucius I). Bulkley, A. M., M. U., Surgeon to the New York Dis- pensary. Department of Venereal and Skin Diseases; Assistant to the Skin Clinic of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York. etc. 8vo, 467 pages. With bb Woodcuts. Cloth, $4.00: sheep, Ss.oo. NIEMEYEEl. A Text-Book of Practical Medicine. With Particular Reference to Physiology and Pathological Anatomy. Bv the late Dr. Felix von Nihmeyer, Professor of Pathology and Thera- peutics: Director of the Medical Clinic of the University of Tubingen. Translated from the eighth German edition, with special permission of the Author, by George H. Humphreys, M. D., one ol the Physicians to Trinity Intirmary, Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc., and Charles E. Hacklev, M. D., one of the Physicians to the New York Hospital and Trinity Intirmary, etc. Revised edition of 1880. 8vo, 1628 pages. Cloth, $g.oo: sheep, $11.00. " This new American edition o{ Niemever fully sustains the reputation of previous ones, and may be considered as to style and matter, superior to any translation that could have been made from the latest German edition. It will be recollected that since the death of Professor Niemeyer, m 1871, his work has been edited by Dr. EuRene Seitz. Although the latter gentleman has made many additions and changes, he has destroyed somewhat the individuality of the original. The American editors have wisely resolved to preser\e the stsle of the author, and adhere as closely as possible to his individual views and his par- ticular style. Extra articles have been inserted on chronic alcoholism, morphia-poisoning, paralysis agitans, scleroderma, elephantiasis, progressive pernicious anaemia, and a chapter on yellow fever. The work is well printed, as usual."— .V/^rf/fa/ Record. NIGHTINGALE. Notes on Nursing. What it is, and whn it is not. 140 pages. Cloth, 7s cents Bv Florence Nightingale. i2mo, THESE notes are meant to give hints for thought to those who have personal charge of the health of others Everyday sanitary knowledge, or the knowledge of nursing, or, in other words, of how to put the constitution in such a state that it will have „,, disease, or that it can recover from disease is recognized as the knowledge which every one ought to have-distinct from medical knowledge, which only a profession can have. CATALJGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS 33 William Oslkr, M. U. OSLER. Th> Principles and Pract ice of Medi- cine. Designed for the Use of Practitioners and rtudents of Medicine. By William OsLER, M. IX. Fellow of the Royal Col- . lege of Physicians, London ; Professor of Medicine in the Johns Hopkins Uni- versity and Physician in Chief to the Johns Hopkins Hospital. Baltimore; formerly Professor of the Institutes ot Medicine, McGill University. Montreal; and Professor of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania, Phila- delphia. Third edition, revised, re- written, reset, enlarged, and brought up to date in all departments. ■ o. Cloth, Ss.so; sheep. $b.so; half mo- place in the front rank of .ued.cal pract.ce ^xv'-Cincinnati Lancet- .. The first edition was «reat, the second greater, and this last Rreale. Clinic. , , , .;,.„_ ,,,jj. i„urnal, November ,^c, 1895, page six yeiti" -Therapeutic Gazette. Lectures on the n iatrnosis of Ab dominal Tumors. r-'phy^rn "-^ieno *: U^ HorRlns Hosp..,,. B^.i^ore. Small 8V0. Cloth, Si. =iO. • ,„nP, ,nd nature of abdominal tumors XHE sources to which we turn for eviden^ resp^tm^ the ex. t^ ^^^^^^ ^.^^^^^^^ .^ ,,, ,„„ ^ •, 1 are : The form and appearance presented to the e> « ■ J^y ^„e, ;„ ^ few instances the the resistance a..certained by pressure ; «he --ds e he, ed by pe^^^^^ ^^^ besides these local and sounds perceptible to the ear, either alone o by '^^^^^^'"^ „f ^^e various excretions, as render- ably correct diagnosis. J 34 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S OSLER. Lectures on Angina Pectoris and Allied States. Delivered to the GradiKiting Class in Medicine at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. By William Osler, M. D., Professor of Medicine, Johns Hopitins Ui.i -ersity, etc. With slight additions and corrections. Small 8vo. Cloth, $i. so. " The subject of angina, after passing through the stage of elaborate treatises, comes before us once more in the concise form of lectures in Professor Oslir's neat volume. Within a comparatively f.-w pages it is presented to us in that trree and yet attr -''ve style of which he is a master. He is ecjually known to us as a polishi-d writer, and as an enthusii in<|uirer into neglected cha|)ters of the history of medicine. In both directions he •■ is made ' e ' use of the opportunity with which his present subject furnishes YAm."~lirilish .Veaical Journal. OSWALD. Physical Education ; or, The Health Laws of Nature. By Felix L. Oswald, M. D. i2mo. Cloth, $1.00. " It is a good sign that books on physical training multiply in this age of mental straining. Dr. Felix I.. Oswald, author of the above book, may Ijc somewhat sweeping; in his statements and beliefs, but ei'ery writer who, li •■ him. clamors for simplicity, naturalness, and frugality in diet, for fresh air and copious exercise, is a benefactor. Let the dyspeptic, and those who are always troubling them- selves and their friends about their manifold ailments, take Dr. Oswald's advice, and look more to their aliments and their exercise." — Sno York Herald. PELLEW. A Manual of Practical Medical Chemistry. By Charles E. Pellew, E. M., Demonstrator of Chemistry and Physics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York. With Illustrations. i2mo. Cloth, $2.50. "Taken in its entirety, we consider the work before us an excellent guide for a laboratory course in medical c'lemistry. . . . The author has supplied a needed manual, and is to be congratulated over his success. The publishers have got the book up in excellent manner. The plates are splendid and the typography tne."— Buffalo Medical and Surgical Journal. PHELPS. Injuries of the Brain and its Membranes. With a Special Study of Pistol-Shot Wounds of the Head in their Medico-Legal and Surgical Relations. By Charles Phelps, M. D., Surgeon to Bellevue and St. Vincent's Hospitals. Second edition, revised and enlarged. With 49 Illustrations. 8vo, 616 pages. Cloth, $^.00. Sold only by subscrtption. "T^HIS work is based upon the author's observation of five hundred consecutive cases of brain injury from external violence, and is designed to be an exposition of the injuries which the brain suffers from such causes. The work is one that will interest not only the surgeon, but will prove of service to the general practitioner who occasionally finds himself in need of the aid to be derived from a wider clinical observation than his opportunities have afforded him. " We have no hesitation in saying that it is the most complete work on this division of brain surgery which has yet appeared in KrrxTKca.."— Journal of the American Medical Association. "The b:>ok, taken as a whole, is an exceptionally able one, and should be in the library of every practicing surgeon. It is rot a repetition, but an ailditional contribution to surgery. The author's style is clear and concise. " — International Medical Magazine. From Phtlpi's " Injuritx of Ik* Brain and its Mtmhrauit. Fip. >4.-o.j2Cal. Range, 3 ft. Free Powder Graini. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS 15 PIFFARD. A Practical Treatise on Diieasei of the Skin. By HhNRY G. I'iKKARD. A. M.. M. D.. Clinical I'rofessor of Dermatology. University of the City of New ■ ,; ; Surgeon in Charge of the New York Dispensary for Diseases of the Skin, etc. ; assisted by Robert M. Filler. M. D.. Lecturer on Dermatology. University of the City of New York, etc. With <^o full-page Original Plates and 11 Illustrations in the Text. 4to. H..lf morocco. $i s.oo. Sold only by subscription. " It is unqualifiedly the \»M photographic atlas of skin diseases which has been published and thU alone is sufti, irnl to comraend it to the favorable notice of every one pratticmB nieilicme. I he au hor h« demonstrated the fait that colored plates are not aUolutely essential to the pictorial representation o"kfn d^i^a^s The plates in this work are nemn of the photographic art, b.^ K raphy is m..sl excellent and clean, tne paf^r of the l)est. and the bindinic neat am - 1 he work should meet with a lar^e and ready sale, as it combines merit, value, anil iheapnes- seen."— iV. Ia'uu Mtdical and Surgical Journal. . manner seldom POMEROY. The Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases of the Ear. By Owen D. Pomkroy, M. D., Surgeon to the Manhattan Hye and Ear Hospital, etc. New edition, revised and enlarged. With loo Illustra- tions. 8vo. Cloth, Si.oo. " The several forms of aural disease are dealt with in a manner exceedinRly satisfactory. The work i. quite exhaustive ... its scope, and will represent a,, authority on th.s subject which we believe w.ll be duly appreciated bv the profession."— .>/<'./'f.re has written «h« monograph its moderate size can not be taken as an index either ..f the importance of the subject or of the amount^of investicaiion and personal experience which it represents. For a number of vears past the author has mI"e"'SienT'usror;xe;p7irnar":;pj;;Vu;^;;e;ior"a-practi^^^^^ ,...d critical stGdy of the operative treat- mem of deorm.ties of the lower liml^ I., several lesser co...ributions to literature "e has shown h.m- s^?f eminently clear-headed and fair in his estimation of facts, and his readers will not now be disap- 36 D. /1PPLET0N AND COMPANY'S QUAIN. Dictionary of Medicine. A Dictionary of Diseases : Their Eti- ology, Pathology, Symptoms, Diag- nosis, and Treatment. By Various Writers. Edited bv Sir Richard Quain, Bart., M. D., LL D., etc., late Physi- cian Extraordinary to Her Majesty the Queen ; Consulting Physician to the Hospital for Diseases of the Chest, Brompton, etc. Assisted by Frederick Thomas Roberts, M. D., B. Sc, and J. Mitchell Bruce, M. A., M. D., Fellows of the Royal College of Physicians, etc. With an American Appendix by Samuel Treat Armstrong, Ph. D., M. D., Visit- ing Physician to the Harlem, Willard Parker, and Riverside Hospitals, New York. New, thoroughly revised, and enlarged edition. In 2 volumes. Half morocco, $14.00. Sold only by subscriptioti. " It is not to he expected to find here an exhaustive account of any topic, but the salient and most important features are in shape to be easily and conveniently grasped." — American Lancet. "As a useful, practical reference book of medicine, Quain's 'Dictionary' must be regarded as a standard of the highest vaXue"— Atlanta Medical and Surgical Journal. '• It is by far the most complete dictionary of medicine in two volumes extant." — Buffalo Medical and Surgical Journal. Sir Richard Quain, M. D. RANNEY. The Applied Anatomy of the Nervous System. Being a Study of this Portion of the Human Body from a Standpoint of its General interest and Practical Utility. Designed for Use as a Text- Book and as a Work of Reference. By Ambrose L. Ranney, A.M., M. D., late Adjunct Professor of Anatomy and Lecturer on the Diseases of the Genito-Urinary Organs and on Minor Surgery in the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, etc. Second edition, thoroughly revised. Profusely illustrated. 8vo. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, S6.00. " When compared with the first edition, this is virtually a new work. We obser\-e. particularly with reference to the section on the brain, a p-eat deal of new matter, dealing with the recent progress made in the anatomy and physiology of this important organ. This volume is enlargid, and profusely illus- trated by many new cuts and diagrams.'which fully represent the author's methods of teacliing, and afford the student a most ready means of acquiring a thorough knowledge of neurological anatomy and physiology. In treating the present subject. Professor Ranney has simplified the most prclix depart- ment of medicine, viz., neuropathology. In the collection and arrangement of the material he seems to recognize that no anatomical or physiological fact is worthy of consideration unless possessed of some important practical bearing in medicine. Were all books on medicine written after this manner, we ui.uiU have less literature but more knowledge. We liave no hesitancy in pronouncing this the representative work in the English language on the applied anatomy of the nervous system. "—5'fffr<7- mento .Medical Times. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS yi REED. A Text-Book of Gynecology. Edited by Charles A. L. Reed, A. M.. M. D., Gynecologist and Lecturer on Diseases of Women at the Cincinnati Hospital; President of the American Medical Association (1900-1 901); Fel- low of the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; Fel- low of the British Gynecological So- ciety ; Corresponding Member of the National Academy of Medicine of Peru, etc. Illustrated with about 400 Original Drawings by Roy J. Hopkins. 8vo, 1000 pages. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, $6.00. Sold only by subscription. THIS work is an exposition of the practice of medicine, in its broadest sense, as applied to diseases peculiar to women. Nearly one half of the volume is from the pen of the editor, while the remainder is based upon contributions from distinguished British and American writers and teachers, not only of gyne- cology, but of the cognate subjects of pathology, bacteriology, neurology, dermatology, general surgery, and internal medicine. The various contributions, while duly accredited to their respective authors, do not appear as an aggregation of dissociated monographs, but are blended into a consecutive text, harmoniously arranged to fulfill in the highest degree the requirements of a comprehensive, practical, and up-to-date text-book for both practitioners and students. Charles A. RIBOT. Diseases of Memory : An Essay in the Positive Psychology. By Th. Ribot, Author of " Heredity," etc. Translated from the French by William Huntington Smith. i2mo. Cloth, $i.so. "'Memory,' savs M. Ribot, 'is a general function of the nervous system. It is based upon the faculty possessed by the nervous elements of conserving a received modification, and of forming asso- ciations.' And again : ' Memory is a biological fact. A rich and extensive memory is not a collection of impressions, but an accumulation of dynamical associations, very stable and ver>- responsive to proper stimuli. . . . The brain is like a laboratory, full of movement, where thousands of operations are going on all at once. Unconscious cerebration, not being subject to restrictions of time, operating, so to speak, only in space, may act in several directions at the same moment. Consciousness is the narrow gate through which a very small part of all this work is able to reach us.' M. Kibot thus reduces dis- eases of memory to law, and his treatise is of extraordinary \nUxes,\.."— Philadelphia Press. RICHARDSON. A Ministry of Health, and Other Addresses. By B. W. Richardson, M. D., M. A., F. R. S., etc. lamo, 354 pages. Cloth, $i.so. " The author is so widely and favorably known that any book which bears his name will receive respectful attention. He is one of those hiehlv educated vet practical, public-spirited gentlemen who adorn the profession of medicine and do far more than their share toward elevating its position before the public. This book, owing to the character of the matter considered and the author's attractive style, affords means for relaxation and instruction to every thoughtful person."— i/^rf/fa/ Gazette. J8 D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S -'I RICHARDSON. Diseases of Modem Life. By B. W. Richardson, M. D., M. A., F. R. S., etc. i2mo, 520 pages. Cloth, $2.00. " In this valuable and deeply interesting work Dr. Richardson treats the ner%ous system as the very principle of life, and he shows how men do it violence, yet expect immunity where the natural sentence is deaXYt."— Charleston Ccuiier. ROBERTS. Notes on the Modern Treatment of Fractures. By John B. Roberts, M. D., Professor of Surgery in the Philadelphi.i Polyclinic ; Mutter Lecturer on Surgical Pathology of the College ot Physicians of Philadelphia. With 39 Illustrations. Small 8vo, 162 pages. Cloth, $1.50. THIS book deals only with matters of practical interest to, and conditions that are likely to arise daily in, the work of the surgeon. It gives a terse yet clear exposition of the modem treatment of fractures, and enters into the practical details of varying conditions. The work gives evidence of intelligent and careful observation on the part of the author, and it will be found to be of great assist- ance to the general practitioner as well as to the surgeon. " It is a book which will prove of the highest interest to surgeons, and in which they will find many useful hints interspersed throughout the notes."— 6V. Louis Medical and Surgical Journal. " We think that the title alone of this book will make it sell, as there is no subject which will so appeal at once to the practitioner as the modern treatment of fractures. There are few duties to be performed by the medical man which require the exercise of so much judgment and common sense as the scientific setting of a fractured XmAi."— Canadian Journal of Medicine and Surgery. " This book is one of the most satisfactory treatises which has yet been written upon this important subject, and it should be in the library of every surgeon, practitioner, and student. . . . Physicians will be especially gratified at the simplicity everywhere urged, at the few and simple appliances recom- mended, and at the mildly sarcastic references to the complicated splints and devices which have hitherto been considered necessary by many surgeons, and which have been so little short of barbarous, that in many cases the treatment has been a much worse calamity than the fracture itself." — Journal 0/ Medi- cine and Science. " The work is modem in every respect, and the methods of treating different fractures are up to date, and such as physicians of to-day should know and carry out. . . . Every chapter is very impor- tant. The work is clearly and neatly printed and bound. ... It will be most valuable to all practicing physicians." — North Carolina Medical Journal. "The writer is fresh, clear, and practical, covering thoroughly, in the fullest manner, all that is known of real value on the subject of fractures. His methods are modern and contain much that is original, and his opinions are worthy of most careful consideration."— //a*«*m, cloth, $3.00. Part 11, doth, $3.00. Organic Chemistry. Vol. Ill, The Chemistry of the Hydrocarbons and their Derivatives— Part I, cloth, $5.00. Part 11, cloth, $s.oo. Part 111, cloth, $3.00. Part IV, cloth, $3.00. Part V, cloth, $3.00. "The authois are evidently bent on making their book the finest systematic treatise on modem chemistry ir the English language— an aim in which they are well seconded by their publishers, who spare neither pains nor cost in illustrating and otherwise setting forth the work of these distinguished Mental Evolution in Animals. With a Posthumous Essay on Instinct. By Charles Darwin Cloth, S3. 00. Mental Evolution in Man. Origin of Human Faculty. 8vo. Cloth, $^.00. Jelly-Fish, Star-Fish, and Sea-Urchins. Being a Research on Primitive Nervous Systems. (No. 49, International Scientific Scries.) i2mo. Cloth. $'. 7s. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS 4« SCHROEDER. A Manual of Midwifery. Including the Pathology of Pregnancy and the Puerperal State. By Dr Carl Schroeder, Professor of Midwifery and Director of the Lying- in Institution in the Univ* rsity of Erlangen. Translated from the third German edition by Charles H. Carter, B. A., M. D.. B. S. London, Member of the Royal College of Physicians, London. With 26 Engrav- ings on Wood. 8vo, 388 pages. Cloth, $3.50; sheep, $4.50. .. Th.. translator feeU that no apoloey is needed in offering to the profe^ion a translation of Schroe- 'The tra"s'*;°^/.^'?/"*N"°T-u'r^rk is well known in Germany, and extensively used as a text- the latest scientific researches on the subject. SCHULTZE. The Pathology and Treatment of Displacements of the Uterus. By Dr. B. S. Schultze, Professor of Gynaecology, Director of the Lying- in Institution, and of the Gynaecological Clinic, in Jena. Translated from the German by Jameson J. Macan, M. A., M. R. C. S. Eng., etc. ; and edited by Arthur V. Macan, M. B., M. Ch., etc.. Master of the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin. With 120 Illustrations. 8vo, 378 pages. Cloth, $3.50. SHAFFER. Brief Essays on Orthopgdic Surgery. Including a Consideration of its Relation to General Surgery, its Future Demands, and its Op.rative as well as its Mechanical Aspects, with Remarks on Specialism. By Newton M. Shaffer, M.D., Surgeon in Chief to the New York Orthopaedic Dispensary and Hospital, etc. i2mo, 81 pages. Cloth, $1.00. SHEILD. Surgical Anatomy for Students. By A. Marmadl'KE Sheu.d, M. B. (Cantab.), F. R. C. S., Senior Assistant Surgeon, Aural Surgeon, and Teacher of Operative Surgery, Charing Cross Hospital. i2mo, 226 pages. Cloth, $1.75- •yHE book is intended for students to use with the living model. .. The hnnk rei.r«<-nts a full diet of meat ; there are no side dishes. It represents the actual fa«s boiled down so that the residue is simply the facts and points in surgical anatomy most tersely and a^urately Mp°essed . We advise every medical student to purchase a copy and always keep it handy as a book of ready reference."— /.'"if<''-CV/«i'c. 4* D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S John V. Shoemaker, M. D. SHOEMAKER. A Text-Book of Diseases of the Skin. By John V. Shoemaker, A. M., M. D., Professor of Dermatology in the Medi- co-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. Third edition, revised and enlarged. With 8 Chromolithographs and nu- merous Engravings. 8vo, 894 pages. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, $6.00. "This large and elaborate work, which constitutes the third edition of the author's practical treatise of Diseases of the Skin, contains an enormous amount of well-arranged information regarding skin affections, and also gives a fair notion of the labor expended in its produaion."— i?i<^ Medical yournal. "Dr. Shoemaker's excellent work will be especially ac- ceptable to the profession as being free from cumbrous technicality, and as having been prepared to interest and instruct the practitioner, and not to embarrass him with burdensome details.''— CV>//d rewritten, and brought to date, is the outcome and represents the experience of a long and active professional life, the greater part of which has been spent in the treatment of the diseases of women. It is especially adapted to meet the wants of the general practitioner, by enabling him to recogniie this class of diseases as he meeu them in everyday practice and to treat them succes!>fully. " This work, which is one of the most pt.pular as well as one of the best text and reference books on the subject, has been thorouehly revised, and is now up to date in every particular. Professor Skene has the rare faculty of writing in an attractive strain as well as instructively, and he has excelled him- self in this last production."— */fA»K'»'/ Journal of Practice. "The style of Dr. Skene is terse, simple, and charming. He looks at things in a larce way, as is expected of a man who is a successful teacher, technical author, and at the same time capable of writing introspective novels. The third edition gives the latest views, theoretical and practical, of the surgical diseases of women."— /«-, i:; i'su "d to jupplemenl the third edition of my worlt on dneasen of women, m which the .ubjcct wai referred to, but alto.^ther too briefly discussed. . , .u .u a i •' Th- interest manifested by the profession in this subject, the employment of the new mahods of operating in other than (rynecolo^,'ica^ surgery, a number of recent improvemenU in instruinriit, and in KZic of operatin i^ and a larcer experience confirmatory of the value of the pnncp^e, and practice advocuJd; both prompted the underUkinK and raise the hope that the results will be acceptable to the profession."— /•><»»• Authors Preface. • No one can read the work and not recoRtiiie that the method has much tocorrimend it, and that it is appicable to a larc • class of cases. That it will ever supplant the liKature entirely one mu't doubt, but that it has a wide field of usefulness leemi evident. It is well worthy of every one s careful iXXtvi- \\on." —LaHctt-Clinic. "To one interested in the class of abdominal surRery and the surReiy of "">« or less inaccessible regions this work will appeal. It gives the technic to perfection, and one has only to read in oraer to understand."- W«/«-»f Medical Revieiv. " The reader will be well paid by a study of Dr. Skene's excellent monograph, for the variety of the operations to which electro- h^mostasis is adapted, and the certainty of its refults, justify us m predict- ing for the new method a wide adoption by the surgeons of the future.' —Medical Dial. "The book is one which will prove a most valuable adjunct to anv work on general disc j of women or general sur-ery, and we bespeak for the publisher! a large and comprehensive sale. -K.ana- dian Journal of Medicine and Surgery. '■ To the surgeon who does abdominal sections this b . will be found of Pr"|,j:f'"'-. Jj^! »^|r]^- ing, reading, working members of the profession are to he congratulated that Dr. Skene has perfected and presented this method of controlling haemorrhage in such a clear '"^^^"'y ?^,^"""j,f™Vuch cial pleading and declamations regarding its merits. 'A' P'^dict that this volume will be n much demand, es^ially by thnse who have the former work to which this is a supplement. -Georgia Jour- nal 0/ Medicine and Surgery. SMITH. Health: A Handbook for Households and Schools. I By Edw.\rd Smith, M P., F. R. S., Fellow of the Royal College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons of England, etc. Illustrated. i2mo, 198 pages. Cloth, $1.00. T is intended to inform the mind on the subjects involved in the word health, to show how health may be retained and ill-health avoided, and to add to the pleasure and usefulness of life. "The author of this manual has rendered a real service to families and teachere. It is "<"»«"« treatise on health, such as would be written by a medical professor for medical students ; no is it a treatise on the treatment of diseai=e. but a plain, common^sense essay on the Preventwn o most of he ills that flesh is heir to. There is no d.mbt that n.ucli of t.-.e ^><^tne.s «-it!: jh-.h h»J.ar,,u ,s a^^^^^^ is the result of ignorance, and proceeds from the use of improper food, f™">,-V and Tlierapeu ics. wit Memoranda and Valuable Tabit-s of Referen. A Pocket Fever Charts. Desi^'ned for the Use oi Studci tioners of Medicine. Bv R. Vm-^ h St..n. M. D ITolcssor of M eria Medica and Therapei. ics and Cliiical Meduine u, the Central Co ige of Physicians and Mirgeons. Ino'.anapolis; Physician to the Indiana Institute fc the Blind ; Consulting I" vsician to the Indianapolis City Hospital, etc. , > wallet-hook form, with pockets on each cover for Memoranda, Temperature Charts, etc Cloth. $2. so. "Thi» i» an abridged work in walU txH.k form, , *minK the more advanced views •'""J" ^ •uthorilies with reference to ^-enr.a! ^thalogy .ind th.r,.[«ut.cs . fhe work cmlain* a fund of u«^UnK".n culled from lb- best ,.u.hc«il«s u the Old and .ew WorM.' -( an^Ji, U« TAYLOR. The Law iu its Relations to Physicians. b. Arthur N. Iaylou, LI . B., of the New >rk R lamo Cloth. $2 00. THl (bjectof hi- work i=. to plac« within the reach of everr i li)»ician a syMemati- u th<«e questions it law with which he -. moit frequerilly confronted in his praiiice a., -. pi Fverv Galenist should -learly understaiv what this neat volume concise vunfoirt- Hi Practice Medicine and Surg, ry,' Contract o! l'hy«Ci > with Pa- .t. 'Coni ict of I' -«'">« J cian,' • Right, and Liabilitie .f I bird Partirs ' • kigl lo Compcn-^tion,' • K=covery of Cmi •Ciril MSpractice, including General Liabil.ty ■< i hysician to PatietU, Criminal ,ial> • Privilpged Communication*.' Indeed, the praci., .lu- of such kr, .wledge, eipeoai .nt; i lines, can hardly be overestimated. ' — Massacku^fi:^ •dical Journal. men' icia: and aacial THAYER. Lectures on the Malarial Fevers Bv WiLLiA Sydney Thayf' ... I).. Associ. e Professor of t! Johns Hopkins Univer-Uy. With 19 harts, and ; I Fi.iies .showing the Parasite if Trii. n, Quartan, ..nd ytstivo-. F vers Small 8\n. ;,26 pag.'s. Cloth, ^rr- THIS IS thf y work in the Knglish lar.:uage which ontains a full rrctJ and exposition lit lie lal the ■*■ jubie- •■ The w on this 5b ''ji- every pr<»i;n:s ■ This is u alalia. , valuable a^ beinR the clearest and most comprehensive book that has been pubUshed We cati cot too highly recommend it, at ' believe it will find a ri.ice in the libra^ry of e physician who has malarial fevers comin. under his obseri atior Medical Sfnlinfl. . u.^ ... ... . aestionably a rong .ind able j =enta' thi^ important abject, C( verin;; the ground c(im|ji-ehen^ ■ X. forceful manner, calculated to impress upon the er,: .; the conditions under which malaria prevails, rec f. rm in which the malarial parasite exists cutside of th- if the advance though ini! -aching iitxin V. if not exhaustively. : ly writt. n in ider the .salient ideas, '.!■■; wncr. in conMd- niies that we are absolutely igr, .rant of li.t rasiie cxisus ..ui»iuc u. »... ar.ian body, ^nd equally ignorant . t the man- ia ''•hich !t enters .A.> excellent study is given ot ts presence in the body. The wor»: is one of umsual interest to the advanced clinician." — Hahnemanntan. • This work contains 126 pages, and is probably one of the most valuable and rej>' in the librar>- which every physician finds whenever he has a case to treat, and where diet occupies a part in the treatment and the recuperation of the patient. ... It is complete in every department, each chapter being a model of conciseness and perfectness. With a book like this at hand many a day's sickness wil'. be prevented, by the attending physician being able to prescribe a proper diet." — Medical Current, W. Oilman Thompson, M. D. "^ CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL H^ORKS 49 THOMSON. Outlines of Zoology. By J. Arthur Thomson, M. A., F. R. S. E., Lecturer on ZoSlogy in the School of Medicine, Edinburgh, etc. With }2 full-page Illustrations. i2mo, 641 pages. Cloth, $3.00. (The Students' Series ) " This book is intended to serve as a manual for the use of students in the lecture room, museum, and laboratory, and as an accompaniment to certain other works. The first seven chapters treat of a general survey of the animal kingdom, physiology, morphology, reproduction and life history, paleon- tology, geographical distribution, and etiology ; the next seven chapters are devoted to the characters and classification of the invertebrates; the remaining chapters to the vertebrates."— J/^//«>A Medical and Sitrgical Journal. TRACY. Handbook of Sanitary Information for Householders. Containing Facts and Suggestions about Ventilation, Drainage, Care of Contagious Diseases, Disinfection, Food, and Water. With Appen- dices on Disinfectants and Plumbers' Materials. By Roger S. Tracy, M. D., Sanitary Inspector of the New York City Health Department. Second edition, revised. i6mo. Cloth, so cents. so D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S TUSON. Copley's Cyclopaedia of Practical Receipts, And Collateral Information in the Arts, Manufactures, Professions, and Trades, including Medicine, Pharmacy, and Domestic Economy. De- signed as a Comprehensive Supplement to the Pharmacopoeia, and General Book of Reference for the Manufacturer, Tradesman, Amateur, and Heads of Families. Sixth edition, revised and partly rewritten by Richard V. Tuson, Professor of Chemistry and Toxicology in the Royal Veterinary College. With Illustrations. Complete in Two Volumes, I7q6 pages. Cloth, $9.00. COOLEV'S " Cjdopjedia of Practical Receipts" has for many yeais enjoyed an extended repuution for its accuracy and comprehensiveness. The sixth edition is larger than the last by some six hun- dred pages. Much greater space than hitherto is devoted to hygiene (including sanitation, the composi- tion and adulteration of foods), as well as to the arts, pharmacy, manufacturing chemistry, and other subjects of importance to those for whom the woric is intended. The articles on what is commonly termed " household medicine " have been amplified and numerically increased. The design of this work is briefly but not completely expressed in its title-page. Independently of a reliable and comprehensive collection of formuke -ind processes in nearly all the industrial and useful arts, it contains a description of the leading properties and applications of the substances referred to, together with ample directions, hints, data, and allied information, calculated to facilitate the develop- ment of the practical value of the book in the shop, the laboratory, the factory, and the household. Notices of the substances embraced in the materia medica, in addition to the whole of their prepara- tions, and numerous other animal and vegetable substances employed in medicine, as weli as most of those used for food, clothing, and fuel, with their economic applications, have been included in the work. The synonyms and references are other additions which will prove invaluable to the reader. Lastly, there have been appended to all the principal articles referred to brief but clear directions for determining their purity and commercial value, and for detecting their presence and proportions in com- pounds. The indiscriminate adoption of matter, without examination, has been uniformly avoided, and in no instance has any formula or process been admitted into this work unless it rested on some well- known fact of science, had been sanctioned by usage, or come recommended by some respectable authority. TYNDALL. Essays on the Floating Matter of the Air, In Relation to Putrefaction and Infection. By Prof. John Tyndall, F. R. S. i2mo. Cloth. $i.=;o. COXTEXTS: Chapter I. On Dust and Disease. II. Optical Deportment of the Atmosphere in Relation to Putrefaction and Infection. III. Further Researches en Deportment and Vitality of Putre- factive Organisms. IV. Fermentation, and its Bearings on Surgery and Medicine. V. Spontaneous Generation. Appendix. " Professor Tyndall's book is a calm, patient, clear, and thorough treatment of all the questions and conditions of nature and society involved in this theme. The work is lucid and convmcing, yet not prolix or pedantic, but popular and really enjoyable. It is worthy of patient and renewed study."— Philadflphia Times. " In the book before us we have the minute details of hundreds of observations on infusions exposed to opticallv pure air : infusions of mutton, beef, haddock, hay, turnip, liver, hare, rabbit, srouse, pheas- ant, salmon, cod, etc. ; infusions heated by boiling water and by boiling oil. sometimes for a lew moments and sometimes for several hours, and. however varied the mf)de of procedure, the result was invariablv the same, with not even a shade of uncertainty. The fallacy of spontaneous generation and the probabilitv of the germ theory of disea.«e seem to us the inference, and the only mference, that can be drawn from the results of nearly ten thousand experiments performed by Professor Tyndall within the last two y tin."— Pittsburg Telegraph. " The matter contained in this work is not only presented in a very interesting way, but is of great value." — Boston Journal 0/ Commerce. CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS 5» ULTZMANN. Pyuria; or, Pus in the Urine, and its Treatment. Comprising the Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute and Chronic Urethritis, Prostatitis, Cystitis, and Pyelitis, with especial reference to their Local Treatment. By Dr. Robert Ultzmann, Professor of Genito- urinary Diseases in the Vienna Poliklinik. Translated, by permis- sion, by Dr. Walter B. Piatt, F. R. C. S. (Eng.), Baltimore, lamo. Cloth, $1.00. " Those of the profession who are familiar with the works of Professor UlUmann will welcome this translation as constituting a real addition to our literature on genito-urinary diseases. It can not be too hiphly recommended to the attention of the profession, not only on account of its scientific value, but alio for the many practical suggestions regarding treatment to be found in the chapter on Therapeutics. The translator is to be congratulated I'pon the excellent manner in which his work has been accoro- pUshed. The book is neatly and tastefully got up by the publishers."— J/af-yawrf Medical Journal. VAN BUREN. Lectures on the Principles of Surgery. Delivered at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. By the late W. H. Van Buren, M. D., LL. D. Edited by Dr. Lewis A. Stimson. 8vo, 588 pages. Cloth, $4.00; sheep, $5.00. " If we are to judge of the interesting style by the mere reading of these lectures, how greatly they must have been appreciated by those who heard them by the teacher ! There is nothing dry or prosy in them. The illustrations of principles are drawn from the clinical material of the teacher, and are always fresh and apropos. Past and present theories are compared in such a way as to give the student an interest in the work of older pathologists, and to point out progress made, without weaiying him with a dry narration at a time when he is not able to comprehend the underlying philosophy. Dr. Van Burcn's popularity as a teacher can be easily understood from a study of this volume. His manner is vivacious, his matter select, and his fullness of knowledge ea.sily discernible. He writes like one in authority, full of enthusiasm, and possessed of the skill of imparting to students just that sort of knowl- edge best suited to their future intellectual growth. The work is handsomely printed, with full-faced, clear type and leaded lines, and is in every way a credit to the publishers."— A'orr* Carohna Medtcal Journal. Lectures upon Diseases of the Rectum and the Surgery of the Lower BoweL Delivered at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. By the late W. H. Van Buren, M. D., Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, etc. Second edition, revised and enlarged. With 27 Illustrations and Complete Index. 8vo, 412 pages. Cloth, $3.00 ; sheep, $4.00. "The reviewer too often finds it a difficult task to discover points to praise in order that his criti- cisms may not seem one-sided and unjust. These lectures, however, place him upon the other hortj of the dilemma, vi«., to find somewhat to criticise severely enough to clear himself of the charge of indiscriminating laudation. Of course, the author upholds some views which conflict with other authori- ties, but he substantiates them by the most powerful of arguments, vir., a large experience, the results of « nich are enunciated by one who elsewhere shows that he can appreciate, and accord the due value to, the work and experience of others." — Archives 0/ Medicine. 5* D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S VON 7HSSL. Outlines of tie Pathology and Treatment of Syphilis and Allied Venereal Diseases. By Hermann von Zeissl, M. D., late Professor at the Imperial-Royal University of Vienna. Second edition, revised by Maximilian von Zeissl, M. D., Privat-Docent for Diseases of the Skin and Syphilis at the Imperial-Royal University of Vienna. Authorized edition. Translated, with Notes, by H. Raphael, M. D., Attending Physician for Diseases of the Genito-Urinary Organs and Syphilis, Bellevue Hospital Out-Patient Department, etc. 8vo, 402 pages. Cloth, $4.00; sheep, $5.00. "We regard the book as an excellent text-book for student or physician, and hope to hear of its adoption as such. In therapeutic detail the recot. mendations are all good." — Virginia Medical Monthly. " It is scarcely necessary to refer to the talented author of the above-named work, since his lifelont; labor as a teacher and writer upon venereal diseases has made him known and quoted wherever these affections exist and are XxtaxeA."— Polydinic. " It is a most thorough and practical manual, and translator and publishers both have done well in their respective capacities in thus issuing it." — Medical Press of Western New York. " The book is a most excellent one in every respect, and the translator has done his work well." — Celumbus Medical yournal, " Medical scit nee suffert-d a severe loss when, in September, 1884, Hermann von Zeissl died. Hap- pily for us, this master in his chosen specialty had embodied the results of his vast experience in a text-book on sy|ihili,s and venereal diseases and published it some years before his death. The book now before us is a second edition of the former book, revised and in large part rewritten by Maximilian varing iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, copper salts, lead and tin and their sahs, bismutli, line, zinc salts, cadmium, antimony, arsenic, mercurj', platinum, silver, gold, manganates, aluminium, and magnesium, are d«-Mnbed The ••nous applications of the voltaic current to electro metallurt.'y follow under this division. The i upa- ration of potash and siKia ■■alts, the manufacture of sulphuric arid afjd the recovery of sulphur from soda waste, of cf)urse oKupv prominent places in the consideritiiin .f rfiemiral manufacture^ It is difficult to OBflsestiniate tin raercantile value of Mond's prosess,. i^ weil is the many new and in.j-.rtant applications ot bwolphide of carbon. The manufaiture <«f snap will 1* found toimh.f? much detail. The technology ei gla.ss. stoneware, limiK. aiwi mortas wi£ preseoi muth ttf isAnesI o, the builder and engineer. The technolo>;y of vegetablt- fibers his. tieen iTjnsidered h- in< lude the (jreparation of flax, hfinn mttitn ^ urell as p^per-makincr '. whalp t%i»^ ^pplir^tio^ eJt v^j^^taKl*. ^.rivfurt^ ift'ill \v foiirwj m include sttgar-hniling, win. " This is the veij best little book it has been our pleasure to read for many a day. As its title indi- cates, it conUins directions to and outlines the duties of the nurse during the first month after child- birth. The author does this in a thorough, complete, and prartical way. His language is pointed, and his style has made the subject interesting. Though written for the student-nurse, the physician will Snd many useful suggestions in it, and fathers and mothers will be made better patents by its perusal." —tlempku Medical Monthly. " The author has succeeded in presenting a very excellent, readable, and practical little work, setting forth the principles of action in the order in which the nurse will need them, and telling what kind of service the physician and the patient have the right to expect from the monthly nurse."— College and Clinical Record. * WYETH. A Text-Book on Surgery; General, Operative, and Mechanical. By John A. Wyeth, M. D., Professor of General and Genito-Urinary Surgery in the New York Polyclinic ; Visiting Surgeon to Mount Sinai Hospital, etc. Third revised and enlarged .edition, entirely rewritten and reset. With 938 Illustrations. Large 8vo, 997 pages. Cloth, $7.00; sheep, $8.00. Sold only hy subscription. "T^HE author, who is an accomplished lurgeon of wide experience, and fully abreast of the highest attainments in surgical knowledge and scienco, presents to the student and practitioner a means of acquainting himself with mod- em surgery as it is taught and practiced by a master of the art, and will enable him to prepare himself for the intelli- gent performance of many operations and to treat many surgical lesions with which he may feel he is not sufficiently familiar. " The term ' revised,' as applied to a medical or surgical work, is only too often a mere advertising dodge. Not so with the present edition of Wyeth's 'Surgery.' Every chapter shows the imprint of a masterly revision. Wyeth's text-book has enjoyed a wide popularity, more especially beatuse of the evident conscientiousness of the author and the eminently practical character of his teaching. . . . Taken as a whole, there is no better guide for the student and practitioner of surgery than Wyeth's text-book." — Medicine. " Wveth's ' Surgery ' is too well and favorably known to require extended review. It has been a standard text-book ever since its first appearance twelve yfars ago. The third edition is more than one hundred pages larger than the previous edition. . . . The book is in all respects satisfactory, and wortVy of the time, skill, and care lavished upon it by author and p\ih\\s\teT."— Medical Ulandard. " Professor Wyeth's classical work continues to receive well-merited indorsement by all who make use of it. The first edition was arranged more particularly for general practitioners. . . . The author is always lucid and well-balanced, and shows thorough familiarity with every topic considered. The subject-matter is distributed in proper proportion on practical themes. Mechanically the book is a typo- graphic triumph."— Z»«»tw Medical Times. " Dr. Wyeth, being one of the foremost teachers and surgeons of America, therefore thoroughly underxtanrts bow and what to impress upon his reader:;. He realizes the importance of fully uiiiief- standing the cause of disease, and therefore devotes much space to the discussion of surgical pathology ; for it is upon this special part of surgery that most advances have been made, and its thorough com- prehension is necessary to the up-to-date surgeon."— 7>xaj Medical News. John A. Wyeth, M. D. INDEX Abortion. pj^r.r. Thomas. Lectures on Abortion 48 Aniesthesia. Cdrnino. Local Anzsthesia in General Medicine and Surgery 10 Anatomy. Barker. The Nervous System and its Con- stituent Neurones a Chauvkau. The Comparative Anatomy of Domesticated Animals 10 Dexter. The Anatomy of the Peritoneum. . la Huxley. The Anatomy of Vertebrated Ani- mals a5 Rannev. The Applied Anatomy of the Nervous System 36 Sheilr. Surgical Anatomy for Students 41 Thomson. Outlines of Zoology 49 Bacteriology. HuEPPE. The Methods of Bacteriological Investigation 34 Brain. Bastian. The Brain as an Organ of Mind. . 4 Berkley. A Treatise on Mental Diseases . . 5 Carpenter. Principles of Mental Physiology 9 CoRNiNO. A Treatise on Brain Exhaustion . 10 Hammond. A Treatise on Insanity ai Luvs. The Brain and its Functions 29 Maudsley. The Physiology of the Mind 30 Phelps. Injuries of the Brain and its Mem- branes 34 RiBOT. Diseases of Memory 37 Cancer. CuLLEN. Cancer of the Uterus ii Chemistry. Johnston. The Chemistry of Common Life 35 Pellew. A Manual of Practical Medical Chemistry 34 RoscoE AND Schorlemmer. A Treatise on Chemistry 39 WaOnkR. Manual of Chemical Technology. 52 WISLICENUS. Adolph Strecker's Short Text- Book of Organic Chemistry 46 Children's Diseases. ,^^, Carmichael. Disease in Children 9 Holt. Diseases of Infancy and Childhood. . 23 The Care and Feeding of Children 34 Steiner. Compendium of Children's Dis- eases 45 Dermatolcicy. Morrow. A System of Geniio-Urinary Dis- eases, Syphilology, antl Dermatology 31 Neumann. Handbook of Skin Diseases 3a Pjffard. a Practical Treatise on Diseases of the Skin 35 RoiilNSON. A Manual of Detroatology 38 Shoemaker. A Text-Book of Diseases of the Skin 4a Diagnosis. Burt. Exploration of the Chest in Health and Disease 8 Butler. The Diagnostics of Internal Med- icine 9 Gibson and Russell. Physical Diagnosis, ao Pomeroy. The Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases of the Ear. 35 Dictionaries. Campbell. The Language of Medicine 9 Foster. An Illustrated Encyclopedic Medi- cal Dictionary 18 Quain. Dictionary of Medicine 36 Dietetics. Holt. The Care and Feeding of Children. . 24 Smith. On Foods 45 Thompson. Practical Dietetics 48 Ear. Dench. Diseases of the E^r 13 Gruber. Text-Book of Diseases of the Ear. 21 POMEROV. The Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases of the Ear 35 Electricity. Skene. Electro- Hxmostasis in Operative Surgery 44 Emergencies. DoTV. A ManH,il nf Instruction in the Prin- ciples of Prompt Aid to the Injured 14 How E. Emergencies, and how to Treat Them 24 55 56 INDEX— {Continued) Ey«. JACK FucHs. A Text-Book of Ophthalmoloejr. ... 19 LoRiNO. A Text-Book of Uphtbalrooacopjr. . 38 aenlto-Urinary Diseases. GouLEV. Pisease* of the t'rinary Apparatiu ao KKYK.S. A Practical Treatise on the Surgical Di.sea.ies of the Genito-Urinary llrgani. . . 37 The Ionic Treatment of Syphilis 37 Morrow. A System of Genito-Urinary Dis- eases, Syphilology, and I )erroatology 31 Ultzmann. I'yuria; or, Pus in the Urine, and its Treatment St Von ZEIS.SL. Outlines of the PatholoRy and Treatment of Syphilis and Allied Vene- real Diseases S3 Qynecology. CuLi.EN. Cancer of the Uterus. 11 Currier. The Menopause 13 Kellv. Operative Gynecoli 36 REEt). A Text- Book of Gynecolojjy 37 ScHULTZE. The Patholo^ and Treatment of Displacements of the Uterus 41 Skene. A Treatise on the Diseases of Women 43 Medical Gynecology 43 Health. Billings. The Relation of Animal DLseases to the Public Health, and their Prevention 6 CoRFlELi). Health 10 Down. Health Primers. 14 McSherrv. Health, and How tn Promote it. 31 Richardson. A Ministry of Health 37 Smith. Health 44 Health Resorts. Walton. The Mineral Springs of the United States and Canada 53 Heart. Bramwell. Diseases of the Heart and Thoracic Aorta 7 OSLER. Lectures on Angina Pectoris and Allied States 34 intestines. Boas. Diseases of the Intestines 7 Manuals. Doty. A Manual of Instruction in the Prin- ciples of Prompt Aid to the Injured 14 Flint. Manual of Chemical Examination of the Urine in Disease 17 Pei.lew. a .Manual of Practical Medical Chemistry 34 Robinson. A Manual of Dermatology 38 i^THROEDER. A Manual of Midwifery 41 SuEiLn. Surgical An.it. imy for Students 41 Materia Medica and TherapMitica. ,^, AuLliC. The Pocket Pharmacy i Bartholow. a Practical Treatiae on Materia Medka and 1 herapeutka. 3 Ca.stko. Klements of Therapeutks and Prac- tice according to the Dosimetric Syitera . . 9 EVETZKY. The Physiological and Therapeu- tical Action of Ergot 15 Foster. Reference- Book of I'raclkal Thera- peutks 17 Harvey. First Lines of Therapeutks 33 Medicine. Bartholow. A Treatise on the Practke of Medidne 3 EwALD. The Diseases of the Stomach is Flint. Medicine of the Futur.* 16 Leog. On 'the Bile, Jaundice, and Bilious Diseases :8 Markoe. a Treatise on Diseases of the Bones 29 NiEMEYER. A Text-Book of Pracl cal Medi- cine 33 OsLER. The Principles and Prrctice of Medi- cine \i Roger. Introduction to the Study of Medicine 39 Roosevelt. In Sitkness and in I ealth 39 Stone. Elements of Modem Medi'iii ! 47 Strumpell. a Text-Pook o( Medicine 46 Microscopy. Frieclaender. The Use of the Micro* cope in Clinical and Pathological Examinations. 19 Nervous Diseases. Bailey. Accident and Injury i Barker. The Nervous System and its Con- stituent Neurones 3 Bastian. a Treatise on Aphasia and Other Speech Defects 4 Paralyses : Cerebral, Bulbar, and Spinal ... 4 Paralysis from Brain Disease in its Com- mon Forms 4 Bfrklev. A Treati.se on Mental Diseases . . j Hammond. A Treatise on the Diseases of the Nervous System 21 Clinical Lectures on Disea>-'es of the Nerv- ous System 22 HiRT. Diseases of the Nervous System 33 Rannev. The Applied Anatomy of the Nerv- ous System .>6 Rosenthal. General Physiology of Muscles and Nerves 40 Stevens. Functional Nervous Diseases 45 Weeper. A Treatise on Nervous Diseases. . 53 Nose and Throat. SiiiTRLY. A Treatise on the Diseases of the Nose and Throat 43 INDEX. —(Concluded) 57 I- if Nursing. ,*^, NlOHTlNOALC. Notei oo Nuning 3a Weeks-Shaw. A Text-Book o( Nursing. . . 53 Worcester. Monthly Nuising 54 Obstetrics. LUSK. The Science and Art of Midwif^n'.-- '9 SCHROEDER. A Manual of Midwifery 4» Orthopedics. Little. Medical and Surg:ical AipecU of In-Knee ^ PooRE. Ofteotomy and Osteoclasii 35 SHArrER. Essays on Orthopaedic Surgery.. 41 Patliolosy. Billroth. G«neral Surgical Pathology and Therapeutics ^ BovcE. A Text-Book of Morbid Histology. . 7 Davidson. Geographical Pathology la M AUDSLEY. The Pathology of Mind 30 ScHULTZE. The Pathology and Ireatment of Displacements of the Utenis 4' Von Zeissl. The Pathology and Treatment of Syphilis and AUied Ver ireal Diseases . . 53 Plitlilsls. Evans. Handbook of Historical aii'l Geo- graphical PhthisioloRy '4 Jaccoud. The Curability and Treatment of Pulmonary Phthisis 25 Pliyslology. ■; HPENTER. Principles of Men»al Physiology. 9 Ki.iNT. A Text-Book of Human Physiology. 16 The Physiological l.ffects of Severe and Protracted Muscular Kxercise 17 M.iuusLEY. The Physiology of the Mind.. . . 30 Mills. A Text- Book of Comparative Physi- ology 3' A Text-Book of Animal Physioto);y 3t RosF.NTllAL. General Physiology of Muscles and Nerves 4° Rectum. Mathews. A Treatise on Diseases of the Rectum, Anus, an ! Si^jniiid Flexure .... Van Burkn. IHseasc !>f the Rectum and the Surgery f>f the Lo\cr,r Rowel Surgery. ,^^, Gross. A Practical Treatise on Tumors of the Mammary Gland ao Keves. a Practical Treatise on the Surgical Diseases of the Genito-Urinary Organs. . . 27 KiNOSLEV. A Treatise on Oral I5eformities . 27 Roberts. Notes on the Modem Treatment of Fractures 3** Sheild. Surgical Anatomy for StudenU — 41 Skene. Electro- Himostasis in Operative Surgery 44 TiLLMANNs. T«xt-Book of General Surgery. 49 Van Burf.n. Lectures on the Principles of Surgery 5' Wyetii. a Text-Book on Surgery 54 Syptiilis. 3' 5a EWALD. Stomacli. The Diseases -.if the Stomach . Surgery. Bryant. Operative Surgery Bi.'CK. Contributions to R;p!..--i»ivp fiursery. Corning. Local Anaesthesia in General Medicine and Surgery Garmanv. Operative Surgf ry on the Cadaver 29 S< IS 8 7 10 19 Fournier. Syphilis and Marriage >8 Keves. The Tonic Treatment of Syphilis. . . 37 Morrow. A System of Genito-Urinary Dis- eases, Syphilology, and Dermatology Von Zeissl. The Pathology and Treatment of Syphilis and Allied Venereal Diseases . Urinalysis. Flint. Manual of Chemical Examination of the Urine in Disease 17 HoFMANN AND Ultzmann. Analysis of the Urine »3 Miscellaneous. Combe. The Management of Infancy 9 Cooley. Cyclopedia of Practical Rereints. . 50 Flint. The Source of Muscular Power 16 Flint. Medical Ethics and Etiquette 17 Gamgee. Yellow Fever a Nautical Disease. . 20 Howe. The Breath, and the Diseases which give it a Fetid Odor a4 Johnstone. Botany a5 Maudslfy. Body and Mind 3° Responsibility in Mental Diseases 30 OSLER. ""iie Diagnosis of Abdominal Tumors 33 Os\VAi.». Physical Education 34 Richardson. Di eases of Modem Life 38 Romanes. Animal Intelligence 4° Mental Evolution in Animals 4° Mental Evolution in Man 4° Jelly-Fish, Star-Fish and Sea-Urchins 40 StRahan. Marriage and nisea.<=e Taylor. The Law in its Relations to Physi- cians Thayer. Lectures on the Malarial Fevers. . . Tracy. Handbook of Sanitary Information for Householders Tyndali . Essays on the Floating Matter of the Air 46 47 47 49 SO THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY IN CANADA In tiNfO lar^« ▼oluiras. Royal 8vo., llanltod to S.OOO t amborod aots To (he preparation of this work the author devoted sixteen years. It is a monument ol Canadian research and industry. The two volumes (which are separaleiy indexed) together extend to more than two thousand pages, and contain four hundred and thirty-seven original engravings of great rarity and value. Prlco fl/ Sot. Cloth. - • 9.00 Prico df Sot. Molf LoatHor. S13.00 Travels and Adventures IN CANADA AND THE INDIAN TERRITORIES Between the years 1^60 and /^^6 BY ALEXANDER HENRY FUR TRADER New Edition, Edited with Azotes, Illustrative and Biographical, by JAMES BAIN, Chief Librarian, Toronto Public Library. 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