HENRY C. LEA'S PUBLICATIONS (Practice of Medic. 



15 



(AUSTIN), M.D., 



Professor of the Principle i in t> TYiMi'iv n/ ~>f"iii-:ni hi K//, r//, M, ,/.<:,//, y f , .\. 1 



A TREATISE ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OK 



MEDICINE; designed for the use of Students and Practitioners of Medicine. Fourth 



edition, revised and enlarged. In one large and closely printed octavo volume of about I Hill 



pages; cloth, $6 00 ; or strongly bound in leather, with raised bands, $7 00. (Ji/.\i /.////.) 



By common consent of the English and American medical press, this work ha- I -ned 



to the highest position as a complete and compendious text-book on the m <-( advance. I eon .lit ion 



of medical science. At the very moderate price at which it is offered it will be found one of the 



cheapest volumes now before the profession. 

 This excellent treatise on medicine has acquired 



for itself in the Hinted States a reputation similar to 



that enjoyed iu England by the admirable lectures 



of Sir Thomas Watson. It may not possess the same 



charm of style, but it has like solidity, the fruit of 



long and patient observation, and presents kindred 



moderation and eclecticism. We have referred in 



111 a. 11 y of the most important chapters, and find the re- 

 vision spoken of in the preface is a genuine one, and 



that the author has very fairly brought up his matter 



to the level of the knowledge of the preseu! day. The 



work Iris this great recommendation, that it is in one 



volume, and therefore will not be so terrifying to the 



student as the bulky volumes which several of our 



EuiTlish text-books of medicine have developed into. 



Bri1i*h '">'l Foreign Me.d.-Glnr. Rtv., JKU. 1>7< 



It is of course unnecessary tointrnduce or eulogize 

 this now standard treatise All the college- recom- 

 mend it as a text-book, and there are few libraries 

 in which one of its editions is not to be found. The 

 preseutedition has been enlarged and re vis, ,1 to bring 

 it np to the author's present level of experience and 

 reading. His own clinical studies and the latest con- 

 tributions to medical literature both in this country 

 and iu Europe, have received careful attention, so 

 that some portions have been entirely rewritten, and 

 about seventy pages of new matter have been, added. 

 Ctiicfign 3[>d Jnurn., June, 1873. 



Has never been surpassed as a text-book for stu- 



dents a ml a book of ready relVrem-e fur practi 

 Tim fiirei- 11 f its In^ic. its si in pie a ml pi-.x-iii-al teach- 

 ings, h* ve left it with. MI' a rival in the field .Y. 1'. 

 Med Record, Sept l.'i, ls:t 



Flint's Practice of Medicine ha she en me so fixed in 

 its position as an American texi bonk thai little n> ' d 

 be said beyond the announcem -nt ->i ,; new editii 

 It may, however, be proper to sa y ih it < h i utln.r 

 has improved the occasion t.i introduce tli li 

 contributions of medical literature together with the 

 results of his own continued clinic, ii -us. 



Not MI extended as many of the si a IP lard work* on 

 pi-Mi'tii'p, it still is sufficiently complete for all ordi- 

 nary reference, and we do no; know of a more con- 

 venient work for the \\n~v '.eneral pracriiiouer. 

 Cincinnati Lancet and '/'>/ ivc, June, 1^7.'i. 



Prof. Flint, in the fourth edition of his t -ret work, 

 has pprformed a labor reflecting much credit upon 

 h'inself, and conferring a lasting be neh't upon the pro- 

 fession. The whole work shows evidence of thoroi 

 revision, so that it appears like a new hook wiitteu 

 expressly for the times For thf general practitioner 

 and student of medicine, w ca i.imt reroiinni" d the 

 book in too strong terms A T . Y Mrii.J,mr . ^' pi '73. 

 It is given to very few men to tread in the steps of 

 Austin Flint, whose sirgle volume on medicine, 

 though here and there defective, is a m is;erpiece of 

 lucid condensation and of general grasp of an enor- 

 mously wide subject Lund. Practitioner, Dec. '11. 



T> 



i A 1 O *J-L> <JUx> OC/tV \ -iV 1 i \ Hi Jl TJ L' 1 \j I ^ EJ ^.^ LT 



PICS. In one very handsome royal 12mo. volume. Cloth, $1 38. (Just Issued.} 



-work comprises a number iifc.-'savs written etiology, prophylaxis, a, id t h.'rapeutics, and di\i 

 ime- fir nu-diral journals and s pieties. It is si-n. as exemplified in the natural history of 



Y TBE SAVE AUTHOR. 



ESSAYS ON CONSERVATIVE MEDICINE AND KINDRED 



TOPICS 



This little 

 at various time 



.-ary tosay ausihtin regard to the st\lein which 

 they are written, for Dr. Flint is familiar as a hou-e- 

 Imld uord to the profession. His name is a guarantee 

 that the subjects are treated in a masterly manner. The 

 folio wing subjects are dismissed: Conservative medicine. 

 : li -d to therapeutics and hygiene, medicine in the 



past, the ] iv-enl. and the future, alimentation in ilis- 

 f:i-e. tolerance of disease, on the agency of the mind in 



A more siiu'-eslive collection of topics it would be diffi- 

 cult to conceive The assay? <m c"ii-ervative m. 

 are peculiarly valuable. The author ill these takes a 

 very common-sense view of the treatment, of disease, 

 and' shows the nece-sity of conserving" to the ful.e-t 

 extent the strength of the sv>tcm in order to devi-e the 

 best rcsultstrom the </'.< medicatrix naturae. Peninsular 

 M 'I. Jnurn , Oct. 1&74. 



WATSON (THOMAS), M. D., &c. 



LECTURES ON THE PRINCIPLES 



AND PRACTICE OF 



PHYSIC. Delivered at King's College, London. A new American, from the Fifth re- 

 vised and enlarged English edition. Edited, with additions, and several hundred illu^tra- 

 ations by HENEY HARTSUORNE, M.D., Professor of Hygiene in the University of Pen nsylv 

 nia. In two large and han.lsome8vo.vols. Cloth, $900; leather, $11 00. (Lately Published.) 



_j r .. i r. .. _i, i\, i i i~^ fl.ot ih iu Kfnrpolv nerpssaiv to di 



It is a subject for congratulation and for thankful- 

 ness that Sir Thomas Watson, during a period of com- 

 parative leisure, after a long, laborious, and moK.t 

 honorable professional career, while retaining full 

 possession of his high mental faculties, should have 

 employed the opportunity t submit his Lectures to 

 a more thorough revision than was possible during 

 the earlier and busier period of his life. Carefully 

 passing in review some of the most intricate and im- 

 portant pathological and practical questions, there- 

 suits of his clear insight and his calm judgment are 

 now recorded for the benefit of mankind, in lacguag 

 which, for precision, vigor, and clai-si.-al elegance, hi 

 rarely been equalled, and never surpassed 

 vi-ion has evidently been most carefully done, and 

 the results appear iu almost every page Brit 

 Jnurn , Oct. 14, 1871. 



The lectures are so well known and so justly 



appreciated, that it \ scarcely neees,-, iy to do 

 more than call attention to the special advani j 

 nf the last over previous editions The aiuh.'i s 

 rare combinatior nf great scientitic attainments com- 

 bined with wnnderlul forensic eloquence has exerted 

 extraordinary influence over the last two generations 

 of physicians". His clinical descriptions ol most 



shave never been equalled: and on this sr.o.. 



as! his work will live long in the future. The 

 work will lie southt by all who appreciate a gi 

 I,,,,,!.. .AWT Jnurn. of SypMloffraphy, July, 1872. 

 Maturity of years, extensiv. und 



rcli ai,.i yet continuous enthusiasm, have com- 

 bined ti give us in this latest < diiiou a model of pro- 

 f,.ssioua .' . in teaching with i ' y i u 



the modf of communication. But tliis finxxic 01 

 no eulogium of ours. Chicago Med. Jnurn., July, 

 1872 



D 



UNGLISON, FORBES. TWEEDIE, AND CONOLLY. 



THE CYCLOPEDIA OF PRACTICAL MEDICINE: comprising 



Treatises on the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Materia Medica and Therapeutics, 

 Diseases of Women and Children, Medical Jurisprudence, <fcc. Ac. In four large super-royal 

 octavo volumes, of 3254 double-columned pages, strongly and handsomely bound in leather, 

 $15; cloth, $11. 



