D. Appleton & Co?s Medical Publications. 27 



-. _ i 



VOGEL. 

 A Practical Treatise on the Diseases 



of Children. Second American from the Fourth 

 German Edition. Illustrated ly Six Lithographic 

 Plates. 



By ALFRED VOGEL, M. D., 



Professor of Clinical Medicine in the University of Dorpat, Kassia. 



TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY 



H. RAPHAEL, M. D., 



Late House Surgeon to Bellevue Hospital ; Physician to the Eastern Dispensary for ihe DlsecftS 

 of Children, etc., etc. 



1 vol., 8vo. 611 pp. Cloth, $4.50. 



The work is well up to the present state of pathological knowledge ; 

 complete without unnecessary prolixity; its symptomatology accurate, 

 evidently the result of careful observation of a competent and experi- 

 enced clinical practitioner. The diagnosis and differential reLitions of 

 diseases to each other are accurately described, and the therapeutics 

 judicious and discriminating. All polypharmacy is discarded, and only 

 the remedies which appeared useful to the author commended. 



It contains much that must gain for it the merited praise of all im- 

 partial judges, and prove it to be an invaluable text-book for the stu- 

 dent and practitioner, and a safe and useful guide in the difficult but all- 

 important department of Psediatrica. 



" Rapidly passing to a fourth edition in Germany, and translated into three 

 other languages, America now has the credit of presenting the first English ver- 

 sion of a book which must take a prominent, if not the leading, position among 

 works devoted to this class of disease." N. Y. Medical Journal. 



" The profession of this country are under many obligations to Dr. Raphael 

 for bringing, as he has dona, this truly valuable work to their notice." Medical 

 fiecord. 



"The translator has been more than ordinarily successful, and his labors 

 have resulted in what, in every sense, is a valuable contribution to medicaj 

 science." Psychological Journal. 



"We do not know of a compact text-book on the diseases of children more 

 complete, more comprehensive, more replete with practical remarks and scientific 

 facts, more in keeping with the development of modern medicine, and more 

 worthy of the attention of the profession, than that which has been the subject 

 of our remarks." -Journal of Obstetrics 



