SAUXDERS' BOOK'S ON 



Register's Fever Nursing Just issued 



A Text- Book on Practical Fever Nursing. By Edward C. 

 Register, M.Ij., Professor of the Practice of Medicine in the North 

 Carolina Medical College. Octavo of 350 pages. 



The work completely covers the field of practical fever nursing. Just sufficient of 

 pathology, symptoms, and treatment is given to enable the nurse to care for the 

 patient intelligently. The work is thoroughly practical and nurses will find it most 

 valuable. The illustrations show the nurse how to perform those measures that come 

 within her province ; such as bathing, hypodermoclysis, pulse and temperature 

 taking, etc. 



Hecker, Trumpp, and Abt on Children just Ready 



Atlas and Epitome of Diseases of Children. By Dr. R. 

 Hecker and Dr. J. Trumpp, of Munich. Edited, with additions, by 

 Isaac A. Abt, M.D., Assistant Professor of Diseases of Children, Rush 

 Medical College, Chicago. With 48 colored plates, 144 text-cuts, and 

 453 pages of text. Cloth, ^5.00 net. 



The many excellent lithographic plates represent cases seen in the authors' clinics, 

 and have been selected with great care, keeping constantly in mind the practical 

 needs of the general practitioner. These beautiful pictures are so true to nature that 

 their study is equivalent to actual clinical observation. The editor, Dr. Isaac A. 

 Abt, has added all new methods of treatment. 



Lewis* Anatomy and Physiology Recently issued 



Anatomy and Physiology for Nurses. By LeRoy Lewis, M.D,, 

 Surgeon to and Lecturer on Anatomy and Physiology for Nurses at the 

 Lewis Hospital, Bay City, Michigan, i2nio of 317 pages, with 146 

 illustrations. Cloth, $1.75 net. 



A demand for such a work as this, treating the subjects fro7ii the nurse's point of 

 vie-w has long existed. Dr. Lewis has based the plan and scope of this work on the 

 methods employed by him in teaching these branches, making the text unusually 

 simple and clear. 



" It is not in any sense rudimentary, but comprehensive in its treatment of the sub- 

 jects in hand. The application of the knowledge of anatomy in the care of the 

 patient is emphasized." — The Nurses Journal of the Pacific Coast. 



Friedenwald and Ruhrah's Dietetics Recently issued 



Dietetics for Nurses. By Julius Friedfnwai.d, M.D., Clinical 

 Professor of Diseases of the Stomach, and John Ruhrah, M.D., 

 Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children, College of Physicians and 

 Surgeons, Baltimore. i2mo volume of 365 pages. Cloth, ^1.50 net. 



This work has been prepared to meet the needs of the nurse, both in the training 

 school and after graduation. It aims to give the essentials of dietetics, considering 

 briefly the physiology of digestion and the various classes of foods and the part they 

 play in nutrition. 



" It is exactly the book for which nurses and others have long and vainly sought. 

 A simple manual of dietetics, which does not turn into a cook-book at the end of the 

 first or second chapter." — American Jour nal 0/ Nursing. 



